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ar »Ia IE OMAHA DAILY BEE o W 3 — Preeminently the headquarters for Christmas buyers. A0 he en or attractive, 1319 Farnam, “ornamental and useful-—ever shown in Omaha. — Near 14th St. — R T The most unique and artistic collection of Holiday presents—sensible, Our stocks are the -:l'-argest, our varieties are the greatest and our prices always the lowest. Buy now and get FIRST CHOICE. S Big Bargains in Our Jewelry Dept.| GAMES, Etc. ELECT FROM IN TOYS, BOOKS, Kid Body Dolls. Baby rings, solid gold..... With Bisk Heads Solid gold set rings. .... .. - Solid gold set rings sensnssssenes LOO g 7y Fine chased gold rings vesevivevers s B0 | Sterling silver snake rings.....e..0.....25€ Gents' cuff buttons, per pair............49¢ Gents' cane shaped pins,..vvevevieeae.. . 28C Cearinas, for the neckei.iiscoecinscesscs @O0 Photograph Albums. Quarto size albums, high embossed, gilt edges, thirty leaves, script front,.......... 88¢ Photograph album, “Long- SOLID 'I'RATIN 16-inch 6-body dolls, kid bisk 25¢ for Santa Claus Sleigh filled with A B U Blocks. heads, curly hair. Fine kid body dolls, long curly for this Good Fire Engine filled with A B C Blocks. Elegantly dressed dolls, latest style, special fellow,” full plush, gilt edge, high embossed cover, script front, 99¢ thirty leaves.iccceeseiesnes Quarto full plush, size, fancy covers, flowered centers $1,69 Beautiful and Useful Presents in {008l rticles ona Foncy Goods sets, in plush boxes, Brush, comb and mirror satin lined,per set. ....cvvvve....49€ All celluloid cases, con- taining 3 pieces of the finest material, a regular 2 article.99¢ Work boxes at 25¢, 49c.99¢ Jewel cases, 49c, 69c, 8Bciandyi kv e s it 9 D0 New, usetul and inexpensive presents for gentlemen, including collar and cuff boxes, 25¢ forthis brizht lithographed traveling cases, whisk holders, smoking sets, poeket eutlery, ete., etc. Bagalello Table. THE NINETY-NINE-CENT STORE, WHERE WIND DOES ITS WORK Gentle Zephyrs Harnessed and Controlled by the Hand of Man. FUT TO USE IN THE UNION PACIFIC SHOPS Tuking the Place of Other Fower, Com- pressed Air Is Used for Many Purposes In the Great Workshops of the Overland System. “Thay are running the Union Pacific shops on wind,” said one boiler maker to another the other day, and the remark wi eemingly 80 out of keeping with the gen- eral broad-minded policy ~which ob- tains in the operation of the shops at Omaha -that an Investigation was determined upon, to ascertain if the criticism of the boiler maker was well founded. The result of a reporter's research in the causes which led to the words introducing this ar- ticle was startling, to say the least, for the Unlon Pacific shops are run on wind, the wind in this case being compressed air, and 80 wonderful are the uses to which this new force i belng applied that it is deemed worthy of an extended review. Very few people are aware of the many uses compressed air is belng put to in this country, and particularly as applied to nu- merous tools necessary in the construction of locomotives and cars, the Union Pacific people at this point making greater use of the force and having a more complete compressed air plant than any similar locomotive or car Bullding works in the United States, a fact in which the employes take a large amount of pride, as well as do the beads of the sev- eral departments. ¢ About four years ago a half dozen alr pumps, such as are applied to locomotives to furnish air for the air brake, furnished com- pressed air for the limited use of the Omaha shops. Now, however, as the adaptability of the force to modern implements began sug- gesting itself to the skilled workmen in the shops, It requires three large speclal com- prossors to furnish the necessary air to run the numerous machines driven by compressed alr, and within a very short time a fourth compressor will have to be added. The method s very simple when you once understand the. principle upon which these machines are worked. The air is Arawn Into the air cylinder and pumped into a receiver and compressed, seven atmospheres into one, or a pressure of about 105 pounds per square inch. Pipes leading from the recelvers sup- ply the power to operate the machines. WORKED BY UNSEEN POWER. The visitor to the car shops sces overhead an iron pipe, stretching from one end of the shop to the other; by following its tor- tuous windings you soon ascertain why it is there. At Intervals a smaller plpe is run down toward the floor and to this is at- tached the ordinary air brake hose coupling, familiar to all travelers on the railroad. Now that the sightseer about the shops has commenced to learn that he doesn't know it all by any means, and that already he has seen some strange machines acting as if directed by some unseen power, he may come upon two cast iron cylinders setting along the tracks In the yard and resembling beer kegs as much anything. While he stops to wonder at what the things are for and tries to reach the gray matter in his head by scratching that important member along come two men, and with what looks like & frelght house truck, and apparently without handling the reminiscent beer kegs, the truck picks up the machines and you next see them under the sills of a . _The hose from a steam pipo is pled to the cylinders and beofre you can brosthe twice the car Is raised two feet and the truck ready to be run out from under lh%.:u. Two wooden trestics are place: under the aills of the car, the alr is release: from the cylinders and the car rests on the trestles, And all this is done very much ::z'llfl“mlu'fl(ll‘ll dozen men would take to do the same work a half dozen years ago. You turn around and see g passenger car being raised the same way, Superintend- ent Molloy's car being in process of eleva- tion o that new wheels and journals might be put on the forward truck when the writer visited the shops last week. But your Investigations as to the uses of compressed air have just commenced. You notice two men holding a small ma- chine against the new siding on a passenger coach and wonder what new fangled thing it is anyhow. On examination you ascertain that it is a machine for sand-papering the surface of wood. A small hose is attached to it and closer inspection shows that it is about as big ‘round as a dinner plate and about four inches thick; on one side s a flat disc, about an elghth of an inch in diameter, to which is affixed a sheet of sand- paper. The natural inquiry is, does it make a smooth job? and in reply you are pointed to a coach just finished and varnished and 80 polished ‘Is the surface that on putting your face to the wood you are suprised to see your eyes, the color of them being almost as apparent as In a looking glass. Standing next to this coach is another that has been finished In the old way of cross planing, then planed up and down, finished with a steel scraper and finally rubbed down by hand with a plece of sandpaper. AS A CARPET CLEANER. You go back to the machine and ask the workman about its operation. He tells you the siding is put on as it comes from the wood-working machine. That after being put on the car it is not touched with a plane or scraper, the little machine mentioned above cutting down the surface and making it perfectly true end level, leaving no marks whatever. What makes it go? You are shown the inside and see a rotary fan, nothing more, except a shaft running through and fastened to the disc holding the sandpaper. Turn on your com- pressed air and the machine runs 5,000 Fevo- lutions per minute, and there you are, Wonders will never cease, you think as you come upon a man blowing dust out of a coach cushion, no pounding, no mental cuss words over the hard work that is part of a cushion beater's life. Inspect the thing that the workman holds in his hand and you will find a flat nozzle near the cushion, which is attached to a rubber hoss, and this in turn to the iron pipe running down the side of the car shop. The moment the com- pressed air is turned on the dust flows out of the cushion like water. He turns the cushion over and blows all the dust out from the Inside among the springs. Then he turns to you and goes up and down your clothing whisking the Omaha dust from overcoat and pantaloons, and done in a tenth of the time the old way made neces- sary. It cleans carpets just the same way and the carpet comes out from the force of compressed alr looking as bright and fresh as if just purchased from the carpet store. The workman does not stop here. He car- ries his hose into a passeoger coach, the windows are opened and then the dust be- glns to roll out of the seat backs, the cur- tains of the windows are treated to a dose of compressed air, the nozzle is held be- tween the windows along the woodwork and when the workman is done you have a brand new looking car that before its assoclation with compressed alr looked as If it had been traveling over the alkall wastes for years. HERE THEY SELL WIND. This feature of cleaning cars by compressed alr has been in operation about three years and a half at the shops here, and Is now In use 4n the shops at Council Bluffs, Kansas City, Denver, Cheyenne, Laramie, Salt Lake and Pocatello. At Council Blufts the Pull- man company pays the Union Pacific 25 cents per car for the use of air for each car, Think of selling wind for 25 cents per car! Pipes are also to be seen throughout the yards to which the hose is attached for the purpose of testing the air brakes on every car and adjusting them before they are sent out on the roud There are about two miles of pipes in the yards for carrying air to the different bulld- ings. In the foundry the elevator that raises the iron and coke to the cupola is driven by air. On your tour you notice a piece of elght- inch gas pipe hanging to a crane, and ask as to ite A man comes along, fastens a chailn to a casting, a string Is pulled, and the casting, welghing 4,600 pounds, is lifted up, easily and without any nolse, six feet from the ground, the crane is swung around and the casting is lowered to an out of the way place as easily and slowly as you desire. In the machine shops the pneumatic lifts are very much In evidence, every planer hav- ing one or more to lift wheels, axles and heavy castings, reducing to the minimum the manual labor of the skilled mechanic. The one over the large planer will lift 10,000 pounds, a child being able to manipulate the string that governs the compressed air coup- ling. They have in constant use a small machine running a drill, which cuts an inch hole in the frame of a locomotive rim, while an- other machine is used to roll the flues, or rather making them tight in the flue sheet, taking by means of this simple contrivance some twenty or thirty seconds to set a flue. Ask’ any boller maker how long it took by the old ‘method of man, muscle and hammer. Another of the mew fangled ideas which the Unjon Pacific people are introducing to save labor is attached to a rotary planer, which Is planing off the valve seat of a loco- motive, another is attached to a boring bar and is boring out a locomotive cylinder, and all run by compressed air. Then, again, one sees a small engine, weigh- ing about 160 pounds, fastened to an iron cart, One man is able to pull it about the shop, and it can be used to run any single machine, a lathe, planer, or drill, and all driven by compressed air. WIND INSTEAD OF STEAM. It has always been customary before put- ting the pistons in the cylinders of a loco- motive coming out of the shop to fire the engine in order to blow steam through the cylinder passages, thereby blowing out the dirt, chips or anything that might have fallen into the steam ports. After blowing out the ports, pistons were put in and the cngine was ready to run out of the shop. All this is entirely done away with in these closing century days. The boller under the new conditions is filled with air at 100 pounds pressure, and the ports blown out with alr instead of steam. After the engine 18 completed the boiler is dggin filled with alr and the engind run out of thé rlaching shop ntd thd rotlil Houge. Over each driving wheel lathe s an air- 1ift, which will raise a pair of driving wheels weighing 7,200 pounds from the floor. An- other attachment pulls them into the lathe or pushes them out. In the tin shop is a press operated by air which punches out and stamps tin or galvan- ized iron Into various shapes. Tho boller shop, too, s splendidly equipped for the use of air. All the stay bolt holes in the bollers are topped out with a machine driven by air, and the same machine screws them in. Another machine driven by air cuts them off, while still another calks the seams along the boiler In InfinitMy less time than under the old order of doing things. Outside the boller shop is a punch driven by alr, which will punch a one-inch hole through steel three-quarters of an inch thick, In the office all the letters are copied on a press operated by compressed air, while the transfer table s run by a small engine driven by alr. And yet the application of air to machinery tools is regarded as being in its swaddling clothes, Truly the Union Pacific shops are run on wind. "The boiler maker was right. g el 1] Omaha Guards Election, At thelr seml-annual meeting last Wednes- day evening the Omaha Guards had an ex- ceedingly lively time in electing a second lieutenant to fill the vacancy caused by the resignation of Mr. W. B. Teneyck, who goes to Albany, N. Y. Two candidates were up, Sergeant A. P. Cone and Corporal W. Broatch, the latter belng elected by just one vote. The next importaut officers to be elected were the board of directors and & company clerk. The board elected composed of Messrs. Cone, Brownlee, Sues and Wood, Mr, 0. Osborn belng elected clerk. Wednesday afternoon the Guards attended Sergeant Squire's wed- ding in a body and in full dress. Or Christmas eve a full dress party, limited strictly to the members of the com- pany and their ladies, will be given at The Madison, where refreshments will be served, the entertalnment further including dancing, billiards and cards. —_—— Oregon Kidney Tea cures all kidney trou- bles. Trial size, 26 cents, All druggists, The Weeden Steam En- glne with brass bollerand safoty valve, 830. Boys' Reins, 10, 2 NO“MOTHER BUSINESS” GOES Judge Scott's Reply to a Prisoner Who Re- fers to His 01d Home, TOO LATE AFTER A CAREER OF CRIME Convict Faints and #alls Into the Arms of the Balliffls—Other Parties Who Re- ceived Penitentiary Sentences— Sam Puyne Seut Up for Life. Max Freeman, who pleaded gullty to the charge of stealing two cloaks from H, Shultz, was sentenced to a term of five years yesterday. The prisoner, in offering a plea for a light sentence, referred to his mother. *Oh, yes,” replied the judge. “I know all about this mother business. It is very pressing at times like this. Strange that men wil' commit crimes, and then when the doors of the peoitentiary swing open for them, all of a sudden the thought of home and wife and mother comes in and is used to influence the courts and judges and jurie: for leniency. “The sentence of the court is that you be confined at hard labor in the penitentiary for three years on the first charge and two years on the second, and I don't think you will rob your employer again.” As the sentence wa$ pronounced Free- man fell in a dead faint and was caught by one of the balliffs and removed to the pris- oner's hench. He was almost in convul- sions, and the judge ordered him removed to the jail. As two of the sherif’s depu- ties were escorting Freeman from the room Judge Scott sald: “The of the trans- grdsser |s hard, and I will make it harder until crime is stopped in this city. This court has been busy since last February try ing criminal case, and still they go on. I propose to stop it." Arthur Brock, a bright looking young fel- low from South Dakota, was sentenced to the penitentiary for three years. He had pleaded gullty to the larceny of a bicycle. John White, alias Stewart, convicted of housebreaking, was sentenced to a term of sixty days in jail, and fined $300. John Evans and Hacry, Foster, for break- ing into a dwelling iqusg. in the day time were given the same sentgnce as John Whit Foster had pleaded gujity,; and his attornep asked for a light sentence. He was asked by the court where hb came from, and re- plied, “from Chicago." ' J ““What did you comd, hife for?" ““Looking for work."” 1 X 5.1 3 ou worked yourself ifito a man's house and stole his goods, Aifn*fyou?" “That's what they ghy* “That's what yau say, too, isn't it “No, sir, and I don’t gwopose to come up hero and look meek bethuse I was found gullty.” 0oaw *“Not another word ftorif"ou, sir,” said the court. “Now, I want fo give you some ad- vice: When you get ,oufinnd g0 back to Chicago, and decide to: cwane west again, go around Omaha. It's a bad place for your kind of people, and is going to get worse.” There was a bredk In lmit sentences when a big, good natued eolored fellow, Wil- llam Dooley, pleaded. guifty to a charge cf assault and battery: . Judge Seott began questioning the prisoner, and learned tha: he had been assaulted instead of having committed the offense. The trouble in a South Omaha saloon. Dooley had asked cradit for a package of cigarettes, and the barkeeper bhad knocked him down with a beer glass. Judge Scott refused to accept the plea of not gullty, and releaged Dooley on bonds until the next term of colrt, prom- ising to have an investigation of the case in the meantime. Louls Brown, a chicken thief, who had pleaded guilty ‘to petit larceny, was fined $100, and John ‘Barry was given & similar fine for haviug stolen'a stove. Sam Fayno Seatenced. Sam Payne was called up for sentence yes- terday. His attorneys offered arguments in 25¢ for Mother Goose reve someiy lithog support ‘of a motion’ for a new trial. The motion was overruled and Payne was sen- tenced by the court to imprisanment for life in_accordance with the verdict which found him guilty of the murder of Maud Rubel. His atforneys will at on take steps to present the case to the supreme court and ask. for a new trial. District Court Callingr. The jury was discharged yesterday and a new panel will be called Monday morning The Ramacclotti will case was continued until Monday. The trial will last several days yet. Judge Scott will spend his vacation in Texas. He will leave for Galveston early next week, and will not return until the opening of the February term of court. Ed F. Morearty, convicted of forgery, was granted a new trial. *He was released from Jail on a bond of $1,000 The Packers' Natlonal bank of South Omaha is suing C. S. Maly and Coffman, Smiley & Co. for $1,000, on a promissory note. Justice Cockrell, under a mandamus from Judge Ambrose, heard the ejectment suit yes- terday commenced by C. J. Smyth, on be- half of the Catholic authorities of the diocese against John Kowaleski and others for the possession of lot 3, in block 5, Summit Place, a portion of the property in dispute belong- ing to the Polish Catholic church., Cockrell had been threatened by Judge Scott with be- ing cited for contempt If he heard the case, and had, therefore, refused to do so. The defendants refused to take any part in the trial, and judgment was rendered for plaintiffs, An appeal will be taken. Skl LS, VILLAGE OF DUNDEE. Western Suburbs to Be Incorporated— Counnty Commissioners’ Meeting. At a méeting of the county commissioners yesterday afternoon the petition of J. N. H Patrick and fifty-elght others, residents of Dundee Place and Carthage, asking for the incorporation cf those suburbs as a village to be called Dundee Place, was granted The limits of the new village are defined as follows: Commencing at Dodge street and running thence to Forty-eighth street, then north to the county road, then west to Nevada street, then south t» Underwcod avenue, then west to Berlin street, then south to the county road. D. L. Johuson, W. L. Selby, J. B. Carmichael, B. R. Hun and J. N, H. Patrick were appointed trustzes to serve until the election of successors as provided by law Ruth Wright Ernest, the county and adopted by 8. J. Ernest, came up for ancther discussion. Ernest asked the board to eompensate him for legal expenses In his effort to retain possession of the child and thought that $198 would about cover it. The committee on charities re ommended that he be paid $75, and after ¢-n- siderable discussion the claim of $75 was allowed and the balance held in suspen- sion. The committee on charities reported ad- versely on the petition of a number of Omaha physicians of the homeopathic per- suasion for assistance in establishing free dispensiaries. The c-mmittee declined to establish a precedent, inasmuch as a number of free dispensaries were already in cpera- tion without -expense to elther patient or county. County the baby left with Clerk Sackett reported to boerd :that he had carefully looked Into the management of the county coal yard, cperated fcr the purpose of dispensing coal on account of charity, and that he found the showing a very satisfactory on month of November the v 237 tons of toal at a cost of af o-al.delivered amounted to Dan McCormick has petiti the county commissioners, asking them to devise ways and means by which he can get out of juil He was sont to the county jail on March 10 last because he was unable to pay Lizzie Newlands §10 per month for the support of an jufant of which be was convicted of belng the fatber. He claims that unless the board comes to his rellef he will be compelled to lie in Jail the rest of his natural life. The board placed his communication on fie. — Samonset Association. A speclal meeting of the Samoset associa- tion will.be held at the rooms in the Con- the The cost 7 per ton. tineatal block on Monday evening, December ! Howard Doaue, Crete; Mrs, J. N. Can- | strects, Now York. of the jury, | somely dressed, with to match, worth $2 Extra large size dre China Dept. Special bargains in fine decorated china, pl;\tes| saucers, bowls, sets, cream= ers, jugs, etc. 10, at 8 o'clock, to | ports and to discuss matters of vital | portance to the association. The atte of every member is earnestly desired. | L. Cartan, vice president, CO-OPERATIVE HOME BUILDING. of the Convention of the § guo of Mutual Associntions. The third anowal meeting of the Nebra State League of.kocal Loan and Building Asso- clations will be held at the Lincoln hot. Lincoln, on Tuesday, December 11, at 2 p. m. receive important re- im- dance David Program to Hon. Bugeno Maore, auditor of public ac- counts, in his biennial report to the governor says: “I wish to especlally emphasize the necessity of a vigorous law regarding bond investment companies. Nebraska has been flooded with ciruclars and representations of so-called bond investment companies offering alluring inducements to investors, The bank- Ing board has exerted all possible effort to rid the state of these swindlers, by resolu- tion and otherwise, and a stringent law on this subject will be of great good to all’ And again: “Our laws governing building and loan associations should be made more specific and less cumbersome the better to enable their correct interpretation and thereby enhance their usefulness.” Mr. Moore has been invited to address the meeting on the amendments to our law, and if it is impossible for him to do so doubtiess some representative from the banking de- partment will do £o in its behalf. In addition to the routine bus meeting addresses will lows: DBy the president, C “Dutie and Thomas J visability Maturity Sam A ess of the be delivered as fol- J. Pheips of S Responsibilities of D! Fitzmorris, Omala; of Issuance of Paid Up of and Rules reusdale, Fremont; “The Foreclosure as Applicable to Local elgn Building Associations,"” J. Omaha; “A Review of the Case of th ingston Loan and Building Ass tion Plattsmouth Against W. W, Drummond, Ad verse Decision by Judge Chapman,” D. B, Smith, president, and Henry R, Gering, sec retary Livingston Loan and Building as clati Amendmen to Law verning g and Loan Associati * Hon, C. A rand Island and C. F. Me anking rtment; “Practical in Maturin and Paying Off ries,” C. W. Brinniger, Grand Island; Definite Period Plan of Payment of Lo Preferable to a Gross or Net Pri M. Nattinger, Omaha It is earncstly hoped that as many of the local buillding assoclations as practicable will send delegates to this me ng whether mem- bers of the league or not, as matters of such importance will doubtle: come fore the meeting that all the associations in the state will be affected by the results The delegates of the Omaha associations are: Mutual, George Heimrod, W. N. Nason; Nebraska, J. W. ( Omaha Bryson, Bankers, F. M. Funkhousc George F. Gilmore, Cl Phoenix, M. M. Hamlin, C. chuyler ; ectors,"” Ad- ock on Sha Law of nd For W. Carr, of perience rics Weylande W. Delamater, ‘WILL NOT GIVE UP, Clerk Evans Will ifold on Uutil the Courts Order Him o Quit. Thera Is still a"ight on betwe Evans and his prospeetive successor, Higby, as to the possession of tho cer cate of election which the latter Is unable to acquire. Mr. says ing has a duty the council. Ha Mr At that ke - 1 that he rm as well as continue to divregard the orders of that body, and says that will nct deliver the cortificate unloas Is directod to do &) by tho courts. s ac in Lo he on Dolegal of names of Pes w i's Fede A partial list visitors to women's clubs (st Mrs. May G. Criswell 8. Buckley, Stromsbury Mrs. Ida P. Ingersoll, ilrs. Mrs. Lottle Hungate, Mrs, Steila Ib Mrs. M. E. Thorngate, Weeping Wate Mrs. J. W. Dawes, Mrs. D. I Perry, Mr ration eonye Johnson; Irs, H Waodfor Large dressed dolls, h: verning | nd- hat 99¢ ssed dolls, worth $5........$1.98 NEAR FOURTEENTH. fleld, Mis. W. E. Burlingum, Mrs. Sumner, Newman, Lincoln; Mrs. A, A. Hardy, Mrs. S. C. Langworthy, Mrs. D, fliip, Sewara Lucy Eads, Mrs, William i Mrs. 0. A, Abhott, Island; Mrs, Blla M, Hostelte lton; Mrs. W. B. Fisher, Mrs. R. 0. Fellows, Auburn; Mrs. W. \V. Harshy Tccumseh; Mrs. E. W. Martin, Mrs, W. H. Clemmons, Fremont; Mrs. Ida Brady, Kearney; Mrs. L. E. Scammon, Kansas Clty: et e For the W. A. McGuire, Hostetter, a well known citize McKay, Ohfo, is cf the opinion umzllr;wf: Is nothing as good for children troubled with colds or croup as Chamberlain’s Cough Rem- edy. He has used it in his family for eral years with the best results and always keeps a bottle of it in the house. After hay- ing la grippe he was himself troubled with a severe cough. He used other remedies Without benefit and then concluded to try the children’s medicine, and to his delight it soon cffected a permanent cure. AND ANSWERS, GORDON, Neb, Dec. 6.—To the Bditor. of The Bee: Please publish in your next Suns day Issue the date of the coal miners' strike at Rock Springs, Wyo., in which the mase sacre of Chinamen occurred.—Reader, The date of the massacre was Septeniber 2, 1885, and twenty-five Chinese were killed, A rumber perished in the hI's from wounds, starvation and exp At that time Camp Pilot Butte was and has been continued ever sine2, Tae garrison now consists of one officer ‘nty-five men, JEXETER, Neb, Dee. To the 13ditor of The Bee: ' Will ' you n me through the columns of th num- ber of United Presh: ches and | the number of Congregationalist churches in the United ler of The Bee, § United Presbyterian States, with 101,858 same year there were churches, with a mem- our pap an ch ches in_the bers 1 the Congregational T 491,95 —_— Was with the Iron Hall 24 Simpscn, treasurer of Iron Hall 11032, was arrested yesterday for the embez- zlement of $432. On being arraigned he de- clived to plead until he was permitted to see a lawyer. as “World certain almost any modest. It the sle ot deptl that st to m dell ming v, sst until It r usly I narrowing from [Tt achos a point of the matter 1s, of that the ring of a low-cut gown nking prussic acid are crimes belonging ¥ame . Fae doctor at- ributes no ¢ wa how umonla; bronchitis und early a froeks." Many ladies, when ning dress, nd if th shyudder, or take these plenss 5o agatnat any possible . Is & sure. preventiy s VROTEC With 50 At u can dre please with fnpunity, HUMPE * i BPRCIRIC YLDS, CATA Al hyglenic view in ih average . muct i ath to dec wppearing | vial of ¢ chill even 1 few n Cold taat pleasant peliols—fts your A USRS OF men! on Yos D or b for §1 HUMPUREX® corner Willlam und Jobm ©o.,