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THE OMAIIA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY, JANUARY 12, 1901, For Men’s $1.00 White and | Mens Linen Lollars J’. || Men’s 50c_White Unlaundered Ladies’ $2.50 Waists 50c¢ Men’s $5 Shoes on Bar- Colored Laundered Shirts— To close out 1,000 dozen | Shirts 15¢. All of our Black Flannel gain Squares Saturday Raturday we make the greatest clear- men’s all linen collars and To close out .nl our men's s vt | at $1.98—We place on sale ir fe of hists ever ki a i | I tnal a h hite 1 and Brilliantine Waists, Saturd \ ' 1 ¢ sale of men's shirts ever known in » sludi g | white under, ts, white laun- | : f aturday on bargain gquares, culfs, including .xll the Sared shitts and Wplofed abirs, that tucked and braided, includ & 1 Omaba. We give you choice of every broken lot and odd o e B bave In any way become mussed of ing mercerized tucked (on main floor), 800 pairs of men's high grade shoes. ‘l\in‘ lot of all our men’s white laundered shirts of every de sh uptm,‘nr. all eoiled from being on the shelves or in | ol . lot includes men's finest patent leather and Russia calf | seription that we sold up to $1.25, and your choice of all sizes. go "g‘ 2 the show window, wo give you sateen waists, bright colors, | shoes and range in value up to $5.00 a pair. Uvery m.lnl our men’s colored laundered shirts, with collars and cuffs | | x'hn'('-'l ‘f‘]‘,‘lt::‘. | that takes advantage of ”‘il“ offer will Il“”" reason to re- ( attached and detached-—they include every size and all the | All Linen Cuffs— 7 Saturd “y ‘ b lllt‘ g ‘ member it for many months to come, as they are very good | newest patterns—your choice for 25¢. | per pair... - C il | qualities. You'll find all sizes in the lot (,hou,c $| 08, I | We set a pace that others cannot and dare not follow. Our supremacy in the mercantile world of the great west is unquestioned. Saturday we assert it with greater force than ever. We're determined to clear out our immense stocks of winter goods, and to bring about the result we haye made radical reductions in all lines, We gquote a few instances of how we are slashing the privw, 'I‘]u»y are but an index to those in force thronghout our entire establishment. We challenge competition to duplicate the values, BOSTOX::-STORE %‘g'(';’t{“ffj;g% e L Rl Grand Clearing Sale of Cloaks ,,':}‘;,‘?L(;V,;,C'ea’““‘e 25¢ hats for men’s high grade pants that have i" Basement | These Values are Unmatchable—We Challenge Comparison. Kid Gloves . . 4= . k. imulated from our men's suit they are mostly - n sale Saturday—odd lots of ladies' In order to close out every | ono pair of a kind, but the quantity is so large we can fit Pre—— % I$5.O(i) L:!dlles Jd:.kfits‘_f()r $il.()() $ Kid Gloves | ’,"“l‘,,, aur Rolldny malcs 4 . everyhody-—most of them are worth up to $5.00. We alsc n order to close out all of our low some are slightly sofled and sizes bt In oue milinery department | foegots moct ot hem et worchup o 8. We o Chailenge Prices ‘ priced jacketa in kersey, black, navy blue and tan, broken. Theso —fincluding | that we have sold up to $3.60 pair—your choice Satur- boucle cloth, beaver, ete., many of them satin lined ur many importe | day at pair . ITTTTTIeeIvn Largo size, embroidered edge 1 throughout, choice Saturday at ... D R ed patterm oo s h i C black nats, princi | $7.50 Young Men’s and LR SRR T, Ladies’ $10 Tailor- \ndc Suits L1 ey rally blacks, | Boys’ Long Pants Suits— Striotly all wool faced eiders for $1.08—In order to close ”“‘ all ,,[ yort trimmed with | Saturday we place on sale 500 y our priced suits, pri & line with mercerized sateen 1zes—In this clearin g yard, on sale 8t ...e.eieei.n $1000, skirt und’ Jacket—skirt lned with percaline, jacket flowers wnd | young men’s and boys’ suits, Tmitation French Flan sale at ostrich fea rangin . ) " 5 1 T fro 12 to 19 years. They include EEERNNEER | nill rempants, worth 15¢ . : ' s ere, choice fine worsteds, cassimeres,light and dark cheviots, yard, on sale at. C $5.00 Golf Capes $1.80 Bl Rt all well made, and worth up to $7.60, but for this All of our low priced Golf Capes, Bou 100 Infants’ Eiderdown Short clearing sale they all go o . Blush Capes, worih rm,.l.so tun, drab and navy blue, 69C“ ‘ , ‘ S FCo 3 o 4 SZ 50 comforts SI 25 1 5 gale at < on sale at ... i and children's Cashmere and \ stten War # cece Lined Gloves, worth Saturday is Your Last Chance e ‘,.“;;l',"'i..'.,l”“'"”1‘5 5‘ . 1-50 it Aeasaate/or bestin s WA ‘ socse e s v 1QQ = = the popular storm collars, good furs, some 50c and 75c Leggings 19¢ pair, \ To buy the clothes from our great Chicago | | o0 tnd filled =ith with tab fronts, trimmed with tails, — - S fine white cotton, $2-°3 Poceis aniny o gr s o Underwear Clearance around hottom—stylish ef- Boys' Boys', girls’ and ladies' Logging purchase. If you value your dollars you | | goat all wool heavy knit, nll Won't mias:tt g L Pair—clearing salo price - " S 1 50 values .3 plain and heavy ribbed, fleece lined i Men 5 $10 Suits tor $3.00— Blanket Samples 2c each. $3 .50 For Ladies’ Jackets worth $12.50 ? o up to 8 c | G ] and girls' Winter Underwear, and extra heavy wool, worth up to 76e, ilk and satin lined garments-—in clearing sale pri All the odd lots of ladies’, chil- q ; Lo @ ¢ Best grade white or gray An- Kerseys and cheviote appliqued and 0 an do it Of ] c ¢ gora yarn, worth 15¢ ball, _braided effects, 1n.~, are actually 5 10 15 | dren's and mon's fast black SC bougnt them ; from the clearing prive, balls o 10 and 81250 garments—choic i C, C, C u 3 torfals . 4 9 % | are ch 156 pair, goat......... ety - the i inieh el e Zephyr Yarn, all colors, .50 Yor Ladies’ Box Coats. Worth 6 jac Box Coats. We are clearing out all ladies' me- Ladies’, men's and boys’ medium per lap Tl I L TE L dlum welght jersey and heuy wolght, soam- Men’s $12 and $15 Suits for $6.00— e {13 the bovs stvlon and onoicost mator | ribbed Uaion sules, G0 :w This offer also hel ‘World $ 5 ']l'x\h\clul (¢ hl“lh Squares—for rials in the lot—lined with silk or satin—all colors— WORHL 890, Bt gO at. i Beater” class, These sults were inchid- arge size tables, Como and see them and vou will find the valuees irre- % TAAliN fne THAMWAE, (1 Heat Sietible 0 garments for $6.60 | Ladies' fine Underwear, avy Jer- Kb BN B0 noktan-"caaiAiite This' explain the greatness of “th 8t INtibier{i13) BRtmentE/ 10" S0 \ t ( ¥ Antrakhan Jacket £ 3 & S sey ribbed cotton, plain fleece lined i [0 36 g SR o e e Scalloped Shelf Oil $|2 50 : ed in the transaction mentioned ubove de of good pelts, curly fur, heavy yt0 760 & & . 1 i : “tc. They ‘are lined. with Oloth. vard Anteed st i stitched Intertaing - B | e e —gOAt. v, . 312 10 §15 values, for » Ay Jloth, yard. .......... large collar and revere, $26.00 values for §12.50, LR Clearing price DINE T00 WELL AT TIMES| o roeuas wou wetanicn xff“"",“«i‘h'fillll\Y BRING 0\' A STRll\Flf.??'k\?.ilfI thn elbe il Anohine” was stored with household g phone and asked to have the ambulance | |css was complete. There is no clue to the at the Windsor. He and P. J rr are | L. nt out | incendiary. - - delegates from te City lodge No. 14 of — | Prickly Ash Bitters cures the kidneys, Afaine ! | Under the influence of restoratives Knop 4 Omaha. Lt 3 y . regulates the liver and purifies the bowels. “Major,” » 8t Boroard, Rescues Injured | ., "ot i ined consclousne vt | PAY FOR COMPTROLLERS MEN | How Eoldiers Work COonductors on the | Judge Dickinson's Ruling in the Oase of | A valuable system tonic Man from Bnow Pile, | soon lapsed into a lethargic condition, from Dining Cam. NO STATE | the Erickluyan. R | which it has been impossible to rouse him. Actio sary in Case PR THIS MAN HAS ki ||N HONOR OF JOHN MARSHALL | At the police station the city physiclan | Councll L Them | solomen MXcwight. Do Know G. C. KNOPFEL SUSTAINS FRACTURED SKULL | eave his injuries a temporary "»r"r“l"k]' "";' SCHEME TO PUT AN END TO PRACTICE Whether He Lives in Ne- }MAKES RIVALRY FOR CONTRACTS BRISK | chicago v & Celebration sides the fractured skull, it was found tha N ¥ his ears, nose and fingers were frostbitte In case the city council sees fit to o NERSKN; 0¥ 10Wh. | g ia tion: ot ¥alls Upon the Ground and he must certainly bave frozen had he [a salary ordinance which does not include | Limit on Fifty-Cent Meals Contracted | fora §s a man who Is likely to esc Independent Brick Work Contractors bl Have Frosen but for the Timely laid there another hour | the city comptroller’s employes it will be For by the Gov « Munst payment of a $300 obligation through the Will Be Given au Opening Which | . 4 of Mr lrl Major is now the hero of the hour at the | necessary to devise some means of paying Not He Easastsd A S asno% ot the ORIk Muday! to bHATEG the | May Out Dows Wages of CHICAGO, Jan. 11.—Civie and military them. The council will meet this morn- tha Heiace, g anigriel R e b the Wotkicen authorities, the judiclary, the clergy and o directly from great shaggy bed ing and it ured that the original ained by monks in the Alps to save human | ordinance will be amended in such a man- —_— Big Dog. | Britt home. Though he traces his 1i students and scholars of local and forelgn distinction will unite with others fn the legally determine Knight Is a resic whether Solomon M nt of Iowa or Nebrask G. C. Knoptel, a muslc teacher, 63 years | lives, this Iy (he first opportunity l:~ )‘viw ner lKh:y‘ all ;lI:;mrvern'; x‘ru\l‘lwl rur‘llm The commissary general of the Ilv[m;" No one kmows in the eyes of the la | There is a warm fight within the ranks of :1:1]|‘;“'::“('|:’|I:' ',""‘l““f"“‘:: ':‘I:i‘:‘:l“jsr";"f l'("': old, is now at the Clarkson hospital suf-|had In that line, and he has made the [ the gemeral fund will be paid save the|ment of the Missouri is attempting to solve | which of the two states his farm les, o e R ) sary of the induc o office of tering from a fractured skull and from | most of it | comptroller's oftice. a problem which has confronted all chiefs | ¢ fs this uncertainty that may result in g ‘;"_ klaysee® unign, Nou 4.ef ‘Omals, . and .(_.:lm Marshall, the first chief justice of the 1ong exposure to the cold. The attendants| The house surgeon at the Clarksen hos- | Councilman Hascall says that no clerieal | of ‘the commissary department since the | money lender's loss of $300 and cause Mc- | [T Present appearances it seems that | United States. say he may live. If he does he will have | pital is now considering the advisability of | salar 1 be paid to that office in exc close of the civil war, and which has been | Knight to be ahead that sum [May 1 will not pass without a strike tn | l."|1m arrangements of the celebration ause to he grateful to a St. Bernard dog | trephining Knopfel's skull, a heroic remedy wlv-x the §5.000 allowed by the charter, but | aggravaied since the breaking out of the | In 1856 the Missourl river flowed over the | that trade. The trouble dates back to the | NAVe been completed by Adolph Moses, sec- umed Major, the property of C. W. Britt. | but the only one that promises success in | Suggests that the council might secure the | Spanish war [ strip of grouna where MeKnight's farm 1a | signing of tho last contract between tne | FCATY. S the National John Maraball Day A Knopfe) roomed at Mr. BritU’s house, 708 | the treatment of his case. | pay for the clerks who are affected by | ‘The government has contract with the | now located. The farm was the river's bed. | ynion and the brick contractors: wsoclation, and 1n charge of the Chicago South Eighteenth strect. Shortly after mid- | The injured man bas no relatives in the | making them officials. OMces may be cre- | companies op n ar ntra ssocia- | prog 'he cxerclses will begin wi ting the dining car service [ At the present time the stream runs a good associa- | program. The exerclses will begin with an Various lints of railrond by which | alstance to. the cust. o that an observer | oM bY the terms of which the members |Oration to be delivered at the Auditorium il enlisted men are supplied With | unacquainted with the vagaries of the | Of the union pledged themselves to work rm‘ IT'G":‘I'"' "j_H;y Cabot_Lodge of Mas- meals at 50 cents vach. The companies, |stream would say that the is a part | no contractor not a member of the masters' sachusetts at 2:30 p. m. February 4. All right yestorday he came ome, and, | west. His wife and two children were | 2ted at will by the council and Mr. Hascall | on th climbing n Night of steps to the porch, was | crushed under falling walls during the | S of the opinion that it would be wise to | oficer | groping his way in the half darkness to | great Chicago fire. Knopfel is sald to have | create titles for these clerks and thus avold the door, when he slipped on the icy boards | been a planist of rare ability the charter pr n, with the consent of the commissary depart- | of Nebraska. A few y ago McKnight | g ation. \‘lx“:’zr;‘:l“ln\hv ‘hv?:‘l']l "'l:v (.i-y*.nvr‘ the celebra- and fell to the ground below, a distance of | her—— Sl o roller Westberg maintains that | ment, have prepared a special bill of fare | borrowed §100 from J. J. Gravatte, agreeing | This worked all right for a short time. | ehe senools and collegon, o> ¢ s fly six feet. In the fall his head struck _For a Culd in the Heae. t oL the iutention of the charter that| for the soldiers, which is better than that | to pay $400 in the event the law had to be | John to 5 a0t a membor of the as. | B8, scno0ls and colleges !y)m-vmu and he sustained a fractured | LAXATIVE BROMO-QNININE TABLETS. | his deputy should be considered a clerk | of the ave DAY:AIA0 13 300 gvelu N | dotn X “HALte. dx member of the 8s- | “mpo celebration will conclude with a age hotel, but not so good as the | invoked to secure payment y of Deputy Sharpe | best the service affords. Besides this, the | prought 1 to that of other | grder of the Westberg's authority | article this statement 15 a decision which Judge | Whor Suit was | gociati | | and insists tnat the sal For seven hours he lay upon the ground MARRIAGE |s Hls LONG sul"‘ should not be add: unconscious. Al this time snow was fall- | | clerical employes. Mr tng. It obliterated his footprints on the | pgijee 1 He desired to employ union men | panquet at the Auditorium hot ua the obligation is long overdus. |and the unlon refused to supply them. Bo- | ag ok, Arthur J TdA 'I“:,'f"“:;"" soldier must be limited to one | Notice was served on McKnight in Ne- | fore Juc ecured a writ en- r. Toasts and s len q.:.nm:n h heading on the bill | braska. His attorneys contend that he is ociation from en . | braska. clatlc or John Marsha Judg S. Gromscup: walg G dgetiille oo 0 Marshall,”" Judge P. S. Grosscup; e Dickinson b | toastmas under \ a recr jointng the master: o resident of Towa. If this is true the serv- | fop as ng that provision of the contract, and | ok Into Complaint of tew | t st | - walk and veranda and covered his inert S8 ARMIINE B ‘TI"-\“'“ of the Nebraska supreme court|place of destiration he is supplied with or- | jee is lllegal and the case must be d1s- | the men in his employ thought the matter | an.::‘ ‘\mu“",,, 'l“l‘v’llnl"":mllwn I.Vuxh.;l 8 form with a white mantle Pyt rendered in n caso brought by Attorney |ders on the dining car company for the | missed without recovery for the plaintiff. |was settled and that as union men thoy | delphia; “The Natlanal Jadioe sl Philas Meanwhile Major, a magnificent specimen s Ger Willlam Lee An act was | number of meals he will require enroute,| Judge Vinsonhalor heard the aMdavit of | could work wherever work could be found. | Quarles of \Wisconsie. or wiary, " Joha V of the St. Bernard species, who Lad been | The police have investigated the complaint | Passed which prevented Leese from having | each meal being represented by a separate | 3, D. Patterson of Papillion at yesterday's this they were mistaken, for the first | Chicago: “Illinote 18" the Notoas Tk locked in the house over night, was acting | of Charles Lentz, the scptuagenarian, to | 80Y money for clerical hire in his office. | order. The Iutention of the contracting | session of court, specifying that he was the | thing the union did at its next meeting was | ment. o Henry D Henoorat Govern- strangely. From the hour of 1, when the | the effect that an employment | He set up the clalm that a deputy was not | parties s that the officer or soldier shall | county surveyor of Sarpy county for a good | (o jeyy a fine upon all of the employes of | “Contonnial ‘M e -'[‘“;"- Ohloagal accident happened, until nearly daylight, he | Thirteenth DAUATRE: Atoes a clerk and was sustained in his position. | make himself known to the conductor of th ;,,;. 1y years and that he knows the Harte, the fines ranging from $10 to $2 R, ARhuienin 18l Bk PRl | would trot up and down the hall, snufl at | frauded him of $10 under pretence of finding L2 3 o g ar d receive th pecial bill of fare. | ch. 1 its course gradually, The imy his fine did not cau: men to quit work | - ) the front door and utter short *“woofs!” to | him a wife, and have learned that the old | DO ¥0U Want a stenographer? A Bee [ Nuny of,the recruits do this, but a ,,,,,,,1’(.”,‘ of the assertion Is that if it can be W o R R THES HALIR BRUSH, i express his v suspense. Several | man's wrongs are Imaginary. H. Mann-| W88t add will secure you one number have been in the habit of golng | proved the stream did not change its chan- | creused from 5 to 100 per cent. The men | Breeds D CWhieh Caus - [ times Mr. Britt arose to chastise him, as he | weiler, proprietor of the agency, says the into the dining car and ordering a meal | pel very quickly the court, If it follows the | (1 at work and at the proper time, | ing Hade and Finally Bald | Velieved tho dog's peculiar conduct was due | ineident Lentz seems to have in mind oc-| SCHOOL BOARD COMMITTEES gard to the limit, and the finost | decision of the supreme court In the East | (ney say, they will plead the fajunction of | Prot. Unua, Hamburg, Germany, Buropean to the presence of some cur prowling out- | curred over two years ago. At that tim nd cigars in the buffet | Omaha will hold that farm is a Dick reason why the fines | Authority on skin diseases, says that dand 5 side, but Major persisted in his restle corian n g tiations which Inviuded the fi Presid C. 8. Ha wrd Mak |-..|.-‘ Gets His D or Fivat, part of this state. If the change was a | 865 Bane! | ruft is as contaglous as any other malevolont A ness. Finally, about daybreak, Mr. Britt | ing of a wife for the old man were pending e His Distribution of ' At (ite had been satisfied and | T@PId one the farm is a part of Towa. The | This polic arried out, may result in | disease, and that one common sourco of the ¢ went to a front window and looked out to | between them, but were pever closed, be- | Pluces. i ) tarts to make hia wol. | cOUT Teserved his decision until next week. | (o complete abrogation of the contract bo- | Sbread of daudruff 1s the uss of the same see It anything wis umiss Lentz failed to put in an appear- | — | {sAE 38 SORHTHGE A S ”““; e e tween the masters and the journeymen, as | hair brush by diferent persons. The way Dok 1x Released. {ance cn (he day stipulated, and in the mean- | President C. S Hayward of the Doard of | 1o (o e G e DEMAND FOR SMALL HOUSES | i sormer much welght in the pro- | to &vold catehing dandruft or any other The moonlight cnabled him (o examine the | timo the wowan had engaged herselt to [ Education has determined upon the mem- | o 1 He shve [ia: cilnoany Bl vision mak them the exclusive employers | 9 from another's brush, is to fnsiat on but all he could see was an | anothe bership of the various committees for the | iy yiv il e o 1he meal and | Buslding Outlook for the Next Season | of unfon labor, as it kept the work of the | (he o's Herpicide. It not only unbroken coatfug of snow. Then he declded | It was further learned by the police that | ensuing year. Today he made publie the | g o B asks bim what he ix Reported Unusually city within the ership of thelr asso- | ki!lls th germ, but it 13 also an to le. the dog out | is sl hunting for a wife. Thurs-|result of the attention he has glven this |, T in AD shent 1t an A ha tadans iation. If it Is found that its terms can- | Antlser will prevent the catching of The animal sniffed about a moment, then terngon he made inquiries in a | matter by naming the following commit- | v SO 1€ 19 SBORE 1 ernment and | | not be enforced a reduction of wages may | 80y diseaso whatever through contaglon of went stralght elongated mound on the loon at Thirteenth & Douglas streets, | te B ndane tan i e iaey, Top SN S ALl B and Traders'’ Exchan be attempted in the spring upon the plea | Another's brush. ground ide the porch under the rooms oceu; by the agency Houndaries—Howard Teal, Theodore | ¢ne conductor can do 18 to see that he s not | the membors forward to the | Mr. Britt arriy t fog was pawing | and was glven the address of an aged widow | Johnson | worked {05 A3 tha anh-os tae et pro- | spring of 1901 po of much build - . the snow and was horrificd to find what | named Martha Howe, who lives under the Buildings and Property—Barnard, Levy, | test is sent to the lquarters of the de- | 10& for Omaha » present time the - ) ho supposed must be the dead body of a | Eleventh street viaduct. Lentz hobbled | Stubbendorf, Thodore Johnson, W. F. Johii- | partment. but the government can do noth. | 15 Bot so much talk of large structures as E FORF DURING AFTFR man. Closer investigation showed that to this place, 1 found an old | son, | pprtmen but the government can do noth - -4 b ibg in the matter | there wass at this Mme last year, but it is unfortunate was his tenant, the old mu 1 her 1 living in a| Claims—Stubbendorf, ~W. F. Johnson, | Major Wilson thinks that he has solved | believed that some of the hou < wretched room, without almost | Howard the question. As each Tecruit is sent out | then, but not constructed will be o furniture. Instead of buying coal,| Finance—Funkhouser, Wood, Black | be is given a letter of instructions in which | Way this spring how Leatz spent the fow cents ho had | Heating and Ventilatlon—Robert Smith, | b ution 13 volunteered that if he| There is good prospect of ¢ enera e I I ! pckets for beer, and was still under | Levy, Funkhouser, Maynard, Teal undertakes to get a better meal than that|way of small residences rangt e O S influence of several “cans” when he| High School—W. F. Johnson, Funkhouser, the contractors and approved | from $2,000 to $5,000. These build ags will called at the station to complain st the | Barnard, Robert Smith, Wood 1 | by the government the conductor will re- | mainly be constructed by home owners in employment agency. Lentz ha h| Judiclary—J. J. Smith, Funkhouser, Bar- | port the case, together with the n of | the suburbs of the city, along the line of is timo during the last few years at|nard the soldier, and the cost of the meal will | street car T"m e . county peoor farm, and it is believed Kindergarten—Wood w ) Johnson, be taken out of his first month's pay. me of the rental agencies re - per, Leisure and that his mind is not entirely sound. Theodore Johnson, Teal, Maynard { —~ s havo wnder fontemlaion (ho ero | ‘nergy by the [ Mortality Statistics. Ruiss—~Risck, th, Christio WILL DEMAND LODGE FUNDS ‘on of apartment houses io cost approxi housekeepeor who | The fyllowing deaths and births were pe- Salarie ‘m"‘:’\';z . ’1"'“" 'l J ""'" mately "i',‘m“ b b SR neglected to use | the twenty-four hours ending at noon | Supplies—Levy, Robert Smith, Christie, ‘:,,,_"p“, o “\n,. Rt g | apartme | “Deéaths—Petor Joseph Wolto, 358 Dodge, | HOWard, Stubbendort. Ban WL Me | T | | | aged ¢ Smith, 2202 Sherman nve:| Teachers and aminations—Maynard, | | bt | Blie, agea 15 Jul niy, Immanuel hos- | Wood, Robert Smith, Levy, Stubbendort, nal of the members of tho | ; World Famous Mariani Tonlc i D DUST | -”l! ”k‘“ Pifty-first and B Text |"~;”k 1.“|h ‘Juw- »V-"lmw:w Barnard, | § wud Daughters of Protection, who | i i TH s N | Howard, Black Smith. ote igaln the amalgamation f the : [ pr gainat nalgamation o [ o R BODY D BRAI boy: F 4 Nich b V. MR N & o g A | o, s 5B " |l a8 i 1 FOR BODY AND BRAIN | uye v ¥ Crowl 20 North A system regulator s a medicin that t 1 Wednesday, January 16, when " Thirty-sixth,” girl; " Willlam *~ Harseh 3 | strengthens and stimulates the liver, kid will meet in delegate convention FRAL ndinry Attemnt Succecds, | Bitters 18 a superior system regulator. It muking a formal demand upon the Insurance | of st w crfb 1 ! A kecond attempt made to burn the barn |drives out all unhealthy conditions, pro- commissioner for the funds of the lodge | Jhiq o e mne nf the finest Lheciim 212 . : i s g | ik iy 8 Mo il | otes activiy of body and brain, restoren depusited by tho offcers. who transterrad | hative sarviiy : immediate lasting efficacious agreeable |y morning. The first atiempt was made | 8004 appetite, sound slecp @ud cheerful roclety with the Bankers Union, will oceur | /¢ AR ATt L Lhiat ek 1 M) P 3 { wt about the same hour Thursday morning, | spirits. Howard, the leader of the persons who re- | GltEter A8t E O ess. . m duty | At Drugaists Everywhere, Jiefuse Substitutes,