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B ~— / ( —~ i THE OMAHA DAILY B SATURDAY, F EBRUARY 15, 1902, This dainty young lady finds nothing will do For cleansing the hair like a WOOL SOAP Use Swift's Pride Soap in the Laundry. SWIFT & CO. AFFAIRS AT SOUTH OMAHA prame Wfl”‘":jl Have to AN LITIGATION | ABOUT- SIX YEARS Taxpayers’ Leéague Sehool L Wil Meet To t to Propose Candidates for the Board of Eduecation. The Driscoll claim has again been called to the atténtion of the public by the recent decision of the supreme court. This claim was flled a number of years ago and at- tracted considerable attention at the time. It was alleged that Catherine Driscoll had suffered permanent injuries and she sued the. oity fr $8,000, This case fought through the ocurts for six years and now the decision has come that the city will bave to pay the judgment, which now amounts with interest to 34500 or a little ove: a . It s assérted that the city has failed to look ‘after its intérests in this case. Along -back in June City Attorney Lambert asked the counefl for, the. appointment of a spe- clal attorney to try the case and look after the matter, stating at the time that he had been ome.of the attorneys bringing . the original sult. . This was of course before his appolntmént as city attorney. The council galfi Ao attention to the communica- tion and the-case went by the board and Judgment has been renfiered against the city with orders to thé council to make a levy specially for ‘the purpose of paying this clatm, City oMiclals asserted iast night that an effort would: be made to have the pressure of the clalnr’ deferred until the next amnual levy. A special levy. will' cost not less than $500,.and on this &ccount an agree- ment may be reached for the settlement of the clatm, wheli, there is money in the judg- ment oy It is -anséreéd that the city councll s to blame for allowing the case to go to the supreme court without the eity having filed any_answer. -Some that if this Dot Boan e e orier taaoed micht have been deferred indefinitely. | Naoking for Candidates. "&-m.-m Heciire Suitable men for f three positions on the Beard of Educa- tio a m of 'the Taxpayers' leagus and the School Jeague will be held. tonight at Woodmap hall. Notices of this meeting have been sent out by postal card and those who are interested expect that there will be a large attendance, ‘There seems to be a desire among the people. who' Bive'schildren attending the public scheols to secure business men for members of the Boafi: Quite.a number of well-known republicans, have been sug- gusted. gs possible eandidates, but the fact that no salazy .je.attached to the positions is ene drawback. One republican who has boent auggested.as a possible candidate sald to & ‘Bes representative last night that he could mot afford to give one night a week to such a hoard unless there was some sal- Bry dttached. -Other ‘business men feel the eame way, and it may be dificult to find business men who will accept the respon- bty Miller Home Ag: ©. W. Miller, member of the Natlonal Letter Carrie soclation, is home again from an -urwp’. which occupled over ® month. Mr. ler 1s one of the execu- tive committes and has been east a greater portion of the time for the Jast fiye months. Recent sessions of the executive board were deld in New.York, Washington and other Jarge cities. In speaking of his last trip Mr. Miller sald that a few days ago there was & meeting of mall carriers at Chicago, which he ‘attended, and 1,400 carriers were In attendance. 5 After spending & few days at home Mr. Miller will make &n inspection tour of the | johar’ v, state, and them will return to his ‘duti, o at Lafge lce Harvest. Packers have gbout gompleted the cutting bt ice in the yicinity of Omaba and South Omaha. One “packef sald yesterday that the total crop harvested by the local pack- ors would amount to not less than 300,000 Jons. This supply insures plenty of fce for next summer, but nothing ‘is said so far about the prices to be charged. Al of the packing houses use large amounts of chopped Ice for refrigerating cars, but what is left will be sold to local dealers. Delay About Swift Improvements. Tt was stated yesterday by officials of Swift and Company that no definite ar- rangements had been made yet for the erection of an addition to the plant. Sur- veys for extensive improvements were made some time ago, mention of the same being made-in The Bee at the time. The plans are being drawn in Chicago, and while there is almost constant correspond- ence on the subject, no definite orders for the work will be given until spring. An officer of Swift and Company sald yeste day that he expected that the improvements contemplated would be made this year, but that nothing would be done until the ground thaws out. Preparing for Muster. In order to prepare for the muster which is billed for nmext week the South Omaha Cavalry troop drilled for two hours last night under the instructions of Company Quartermaster Sergeant Campbell. = Camp- bell has had over twenty-five years' ex- perience In the regular army, and is con- sidered by the troop an excellent drill- master. An announcement was made &t the drill last night that applications for membership in the troop should be for- warded to Captain Holland on or before the muster, which will, it is expected, be held on Tuesday. Magie City Gossip. The next big sale of fancy stock here will be held on February 21. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Burness hav turned from an eastern trip. v Spike” Kennedy hay purchased an in- terest in the Bradford Lumber company. Charles Hill Is in jail, charged with steal- {ng & couple of overcoats from a local din- ing hall. , Sam Shrigley has announced himselt a_candidate for city clerk on the demo- cratic ticket. Tom McDevitt has returned from a trip to New Mexico.' He {s the guest of his brother, W. P. McDevitt. Burglars broke into Sawyer's blacksmith shop on L street Thursday morning and stole a quantity of tools. Rector Foster of 8t. Martin's church will deliver confirmation lectures at the church at 3 o'clock every Bunday afternoon during i p re- At 3 o'clock Sunday afternoon Bmith and Colburn will hold revival meetings at the First Methodist church, Twenty-third and reets. A short session of the Ant{-8aloon league was held last night at the' First Presby- terian church. A number of matters of im. portance were discussed. ““The Story of the Cross" will be ren- dered by an organist and choir at 8t. Mar- tin's Eplscopal church at 4 o'clock every Bunday afternoon during Lent. Telegrams from Toledo yesterday indi- cated that the recent issue of bonds had been accepted by the attorneys for the bankers purchasing the securities, Attorney A. H. Murdock sald yesterday that he will not be a candidate for member of the Board of Education. Further he as- serts that he will not be a candidate for city attorney. Jt was rumored yesterday that the Union Btock Yards company would on eom- mence the .erection of another sheep barn. The present barn has a capacity of 15,000 head, but this is not considered large enough. An independent republican club has been organized, with George Reed as president, Georme Hughes vice president, George HardIng secretary and Joseph = Mitohell treasurer, The club now has thirty-seven members and meets at 3034 R street every Saturday night GREAT WESTERN CONTRACTS ate Ones. Many rallroad contractors of the west assembled in Omaha last night at the open- ing of bids for grading preliminary to the comstruction of the Great Western ral road. Winston Brothers of Minneapolis hold the contract from Council Blufts to Harlan, and sub-let the contract as fol- lows r miles out of Council Bluffs, and , Hall Construction company five miles, Phelan & Shirley of Omaha. Next ‘three miles, Butler & Ryan of Min- neapolis, LNext five miles, Vaughn & Conroy of 8t. uls. Next seven mlles, James O'Connor of Underwood, Ia. Last twelve miles, E. A. Wickham of Counell Bluffs, The competition was keen and a great many bidders went away disappoliute « lower 1s l Brittany and the nees still sell their hair at the annual fairs. Ps you are wearing some ale-hair ! Better spend ‘your money on Ayer’s Hair Vigor -and have an abundance ‘of your own hair It yom".lm'r is turning gray and to look a little Hair Vigor will surely "bring back to it all the dark, rich color of 'youth. ST e y. Tused Ayer's age, my hair has the had when kwas 17.” Shenandoah Junction, DECLARATION AND COLONIE John L. Webster Again Expounds the Jufferaenian Documen NO BAR PLACED AGAINST EXPANSION Immortal Embodiment of Funda- met Facts Does Not Forbid United States to Acquire or Govern New Territory, Before the Unity club at Unity church Inst night John L. Webster delivered an address on the Declaration of Ivdepend- ence in the light of the allegation that it forblds the United States to govera colonies. Mr. Webster prefaced his argument on the Declaration of Independence by a some- what exhaustive review of events leading up to the adoption of the historical docu- ment. His object in this was to show that the revoited subjects of King George IIL. were satisfied to remain under colonial government and had no thought of separa- tion from the mother country. Corre- spondence and public addresses, Inetruc- tions to delegates sent to the continental congress and other utterances were freely quoted in support of this position. George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin and John Ran- dolph were among the witnesses ecalled upon. “It was mot until May, 1776, sald Mr. Webster, “that George Washington be- came satisfled that reconcillation was im- practicable and spoke in favor of indepen- dence. * * It was not untll the clash of arms had resounded for a year, when the utilon of the colonies had been cemented by blood poured out in their common de- tense and when the hosts of the British armies were assembled on . their shores, when the British navy rode lordly on their coast, discharging on their unprotected an troops that the fond hope reconciliafion fled. Then it was, and not before, that one colony after another came to the full realization of the fact that the time had come to declare to the world that Great Briain bad for- feited all obligation of alleglance on the part of the colonies and that they should be free and independent’ states. Decl on and Expausion. Having laid the foundation, Mr. Webster proceeded to the question of whether the Declaration of Independence in any way operates to limit the right of the United States to malntaln a government over col- onles. He We search the Declaration of Indepen- dence in vain for any words ' agal colonlal governments, as such, or against the rights of an established government to acquire and govern colonies or provinces, 1n the Instrument itself is found the solemn declaration “that, as free and iridependent states, they have full power to levy war, copclude peace, contract alliances, estab- lish commerce, and to do all other acts and things which independent states may of right do." All other acts and things which indepen- dent s may of right do was an all- comprel ve expression, including the exercise of powers which belong to estab- lished governments, and which have been recognized by the law of nations essen- tial elements of sovereignty. It must have been the purpose, and it was thus the de- clared purpose, that the new state should the powers which attach to other independent nations, in addition to those of declaring war, concluding peace, contract- ing alliances, of establishing commerce. As other Independent nations have through all times exercised the power of acquirin tory . and governing provinces ang colonles, 80 it was one of the powers which that declaration as belonging to the United States. “Consent of the Govermed.” Following this lise of argument M. Web- ster proceeded with quotationd from Alex- ander Hamilton and others of the earlier American statesman to support his posi- tion. On the mooted polnt of the consent of the governed he sald: But it may be suggested that the clause that governments derive “‘their just from the consent of the governed” forbids the acquiring, holding and governing of colonles and provinces. Neither this, hor the declaration “that all men equal” were understood at the time as giv- ing all men an equal tight to participate in the actual affairs of government, nor that @ government should not exercise powers to which all the Jeople had not consented. The men of that day had in their minds an government, perfect in form, in which all should be equal and all should be sover- elgn. At the same time they were practical knew there were inequalities of intellect, of h: communi in government some must be rulers and others must be obedient to the restraints f paw, ~They knew the imperfection of humanity, and that in times of commotion and excitement there must be & controlling power over the turbulent. They knew that man had not reached a state of wisdom and self-control when a government .could endure without limitations, and that it should not be thrown off without just cause and provocation. Clinging to their notions of ideal government they put about it re- straints_and limitations decmed. essent to its practical success and perpetuity. Mr, Webster quoted from a draft of a constitution prepared by Thomas Jefferson In June, 1776, in which the great Vir- ginlan placed a property-holding qualifica- tion on the voter. He followed this with an enumeration of the conditions which were prescribed in the several colonies gov: ing the franchise. In all b lew Jersey the holding of property .was a condition necessary. After thirty-one yoars New Jer- ot | 8¢y changed its constitution on the point. Jefterson's ordinance for the governing of Territory by the United States was also drawn upon as affording an {llustration of the interpretation placed on the consent of the governed clause by | the author of the documen In this case not sought by the congress of the United States. Whe Deserve Independence. He emphatically dented that the Filipinos have the right to assert their independence. Under the Jeftersonian document he as- serted that those only may declare their independence ““who are capable of assum- ing among the powers of the earth a sep- arate and equal station. None but a people e strong enough in ail the essential qualifications of maintaining a stable gov- ernment among the recognized powers of the world, and only such are included in the language of the declaration.” He con- Liberty does not find fts definition in filttering generalfties. " 1t ls practical in ts scope and purposes. It Is not the same in all times and’ all places, and with all ples. It means. the largest (ndividual om, consistent with the welfare of all. and’ the ability to maintain it. Wherever the American flag has gone it nel) vent attended with the great pi les of liberty. - For 100 years this nation been growing and expanding and-acquiring territorv an peoples, and over he ven the most un- done 80 not be- lared tury and a quarter ago, not because they Were written on parchment, not because they are guaranteed in thé constitution, but because they are written on the hearts of the American people, and they wiil tho inhabitants of these lsl [ Western seas their due share of this destructible heritage of humanity; and this they would do, even though the Declara- tion of Independence were blotted from the memory of man. TO MANAGE KUBELIK CONCERT Bokemian Citizens of Omaba Select Executive Committee of Nine Members, The following executive committee has been appointed to take charge of the en- gagement of Jan Kubellk, the famous Bo- hemian violinist, in this city on March John Rosicky, Rev. J.' Vranek, 8. L. Kas- torys, Vao Buresh, 8. B. Beranek, Mrs. Nellle Svoboda, Mrs. V. Buresh, Joe Mik and C. F, Hermanek. A large number of tickets for the con- cert have already been disposed of, many orders for eeats coming from -eut of tha eity. n —————— LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD, & Thousand Photo- &raphs from Nature. Once upon a time geographies and books of natural history were illustrated with ple- tures of wild beasts that never were on ®ea or land. They bore the names of actual animals, but were evelved—like the German professor’'s elephant—from the ar- tist's inner comsclousness. When museums of natural history came fnto being these grotesque fancy sketches gave place to pic- tures made from stuffed specimens, which were less interesting than the. old wood culs, but truer to the life—as true to lite the picture of a dead beast could pos- bly be. Then came the artist, who was & hunter also, and could draw s wolf, for instance, that the wolf's famfly would praise for its likenees and crities who had mever seen a wolf would admire as a spir- ited work of art. Witness the rise of Seton-Thompson and the vogue of “Wild Animals I Have Known.”" But now comes the photographer with ‘his kodak and ‘the snapshot, showing the stag At bay, the wildcat leaping, the rattlesnake coiled to strike, bids fair to supplant, for practical purposes, the handiwork of the cleverest artist. So mighty a nimrod as President Roosevelt has come out in favor ‘of the hunter who hunts with the camera only, especially in the United States, where the big game that was once abundant is now on the highroad to exterminatl It is the use of the camera that gives its great and unique value to “Living Animals of the World,” a popular work en natural history, of which Messrs, Dodd, Mead & Co. have just begun the publication. The text of this elaborate work, though sclen- tifically accurate, is written in a thor- oughly popular style, but its ‘nterest’ is dwarfed by the extraordinary attractive- ness of the {lustrations. Each' of the twenty-four sections is to have a colored cover and frontisplece, several full-page half-tone plates and many smaller pic- tures, all reproducing photograpis taken direct from the birds, beasts and fishes they portray. To have filled a' volume with plctures of domestic animals only would have been a simple task, but many members of the cat family, of the dog tamily and of other subdivisions of the world’s fauna exist only in a wild state and have had to be’ tracked to thelr re- spective lairs. The South Sea fslands, the interfor of the Australian’continemt, the jungles of India, the wilds of South Amer- ica, the plains and mountains of the United States and the desolate wastes of Arctic America have been visited by the devotees of sclence and sport, who have returried laden not only with pelts and car- casses, but dry plates and film: The eupply of photographic 'material drawn upon for thls monumental work was virtually unlimited. The duchess of Bedford was among the most liberal con- tributors to it and so was Hon, ‘Walter Rothachild, for whom' photographs ha been made in all parts of the world. One of the pictures shows Mr. Rothschild him- self with a silk hat on his head, riding one of his enormous tortolsesi another shows his four-in-band of zebras broken to harness. Several of the views of ‘wiid ani- mals taken by Lord 'Deldmere in ‘Affica with a telephoto lens gives vivid glimpses of life in the jungle. <7 (i ooy ‘There is somethlng néw’dnd ‘Wiartling 1n the sight of llons, ‘leoptirds. baboons, ‘gl- raffes, rhinoceroses’ and’ §ébPhe caught Tn the' act, as it were, In_(fe heart of their native wilds. Not tne leaat ‘ourioys and valuable of the pitures are those of fisl in their natural surroundings,” sétually taken from water, in sea gnd stream. For these the editor {s indebted to Dr, R. W. Shufeldt of Washington. = Some of the best plates were made at the New York “zoo;” others at’the Eng- lish and continental zoological gardens, while others still were obtained. from the owners of private game preserves and from the dlrectors of the public collections of Burope. An element of humor appears in the plctures of, Carl Hagenbeck's trained animals _performing . thelr. feats and of orang-outangs and other. apes at play. Though the strength of the work may be said to lle In its presentation of wild ani- mals photographed in their habitat, the ed- itor has not disdained to introdfice museum specimens where pictures of living crea- tures were not to be had. In this way the work has a completeness which otherwise could not have been obtained. At it stands it is an unrivalled portrait gallery of furred, finped and feathered animals. The fllustrious number 1,000 and fill, with the text, 850 quarto pages. The work will be iseued in twenty-four weekly parts at the nomisal price of 10 cents per sectlon,” or 15 cents by mail. Parts 1, 2 and 3 now ready at the office of The Omaha Bee. CENTRAL BOULEVARDIS SURE Bewerage and Grading Will Begin Soen as @round is Fit. ALL OBSTACLES NOW OUT OF THE WAY City Attorney Connell Says All Larger ve Been Dismissed Can ““The Central boulevard project has passed the uncertain stage, and that the improve- ment will be made I8 now an assured fact. Work upon the sewerage and the grading will begin simultaneously as soon as the frost is out of the ground,” sald City At- torney Connell yesterday morning. “With oge exception,” he resumed, “‘all of the larger property holders who ap- pealed from tho returns made by the ap- praisers have signed.stipulations dismiss- Ing thelr appeals and consenting to the awards made, and I think that the one ex- ception will fall in line all right within & few days. Several of thess appeais wers dismissed today and eeveral others will be dismissed Monday. “The total amount of the awards Is $49,- 590, leaving a margin of only $410 before reaching the charter limit of $50,000, which, it exceeded, would render vold all of the proceedings. Public Spirit Prevails, “The parties representing the largest amounts in the appeals are the Byron Reed company, General J. C. Cowin, George E. Barker, John I. Redick, Benjamin Folsom and Reuben Roes. Taese, with several others, have viewed the matter from a pub- lic-spirited standpoint, and, rather than see the project fail, have signed stipulations withdrawing their appeals. Only a small number of appeal cases remain and as these are for umall amounts, I shall push them to trial unless the parties voluntarily with- draw them. “The plans for the sewer have already been perfected by the engineering depart- ment. Where the line of the sewer and that of the boulevard are common, as is the case over most of the route, the sewer work will have to be dome befere the grading, but in several instances the boule- vard diverges from the sewer, the latter taking a more direct course, and at all of these points the work of sewer building and that of grading can be carried on at the same time. The sewer will be a valu- able feature of this improvement. The boulevard, which will be about seven miles in length, will extend from Hanscom park to Burt street, traversing much lew ground where drainage 1s essential. In the neigh- borhood of Thirty-first and Farnam streets, for instance, the property is virtually with- out drainage and must have remained so for some years had it not been for this project. Some e Donations. “Hon. J. M. Woolworth, owner of Oak- hurst addition, has deeded to the city what will_amount to about twenty-five lots of this very desirable tract, to be used for boulevard and park purposes. Directly op- posite this property, at Thirty-fourth and Poppleton avenue, there is a bluff .about thirty feet high. This bluff might be graded down, but it would leave a steep acclivity in the boulevard, which would be objection- able, 8o it'is proposed to wind the bouls vard through Oakhurst addition, forming a series of beautiful curves in the general design of an ox-bow. By this means the steep hill is avolded and the beauty of the improvement greatly - enhanced. Mingling With the curves at this point ‘Wil be nu- merous ‘little paseos, plots of grass, foot- paths and breathing spots. The boulevard in some places here will be 500 feet wide. “Charles Turner has donated thirty lots north of Farnam street between Thirtleth and ' Thirty-first. streets for the same pur- pose, the tract to be known as-the Curtiss Turner par The park commissioners express them- selves highly pleased with the situation and declare that they will begin work as soon as the frost is out of the ground. The improvement _contemplates & connecting link between Riverview and Bemis parks, LIEBIG COMPANY’'S EXTRACT of Beef stands for health in the home and economy in the kitchen OmesavO’ matism with Omega Oil If you hit your thumb with a hammer, you rub on some soothing, healing remedy, wrap it up and let Nature do the rest. That's just exactly what you ought to do for Rheumatism. There is no more sense in swallowing medicines for Rheumatism than there is in swallow- ing medicines for a bruised thumb. Rub your Rheu- every night and morning. Nature will do the rest, and between Omega Oil and Nature you will be cured. cines out of your stomach. Keep those strong medi- Pk NERVOUS PROSTRATION.. Miss W, Chflds-Bla—cRum, Secretary of the Rock Island Literary and Art Society, ‘Writes a Special Letter to Mrs. Pink- ham Telling How She Was Cured. The relation of woman's nerves and generative organa is very alose ; sone sequently nine tenths of the nervous prostration, nervous despondeney and nervous Irritability of women arise from some derangement of the ism which makes her & woman. Herein we grems conelusively that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound will quickly relieve all this trouble, Y IJ‘! Vi 7 AN UNN (& 7 \ 2 N o ) ICXT AN s S =2 . K 5% =2\ 77 MISS W. CHILDS-BLACKBURN. “Drar Mrs. Pinknas:—I take pleasure in acknowledging the effects of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. In my estima- tion there is no female remedy to equal it. eakness not properly attended to, together with the close confinement at my desk brought on nervous prostration,so much so that fora year I doctored continually. I tried different remedies which only succeeded in poisoning my xmm, and my stomach refused food. A neighbor who h: suffered with ovarian troubles and was perfectly cured, called my attention to your Vegetab lo Compound, and I made up my mind to give it a two months’ fair trial. However, before ons month had passed I was like a new woman, and after six weeks faithful use of the Compound I was in perfect health. It certainly is of great benefit to women, and I wish every poor suffering ‘woman could have a chance to try it. Yours very truly, Miss W, CarLps~ Bracksurx, 2922 Fifth Ave., Rock Island, I1L” Nothing will relieve this distressing condition so surely as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ; it soothes, strengthens, heals and tones up the delicate female organism. It is a positive cure for ull kinds of female complaints ; that bearing down feeling, backache, displacement of the womb, inflammation of the ovaries and is invaluable during the change of life. How Mrs. Pinkham helped Ilrs. Borst. “DeAr Mrs. Pixcnax:— When I wrote to you some time ago for advice I really thought my days were numbered. I was so ill that I could not stand on my feet for fifteen minutes at a time. I had female troubles in many of their worst forms ; inflammation and ulceration of the womb; leucorrheea ; bearing down pains; headache and backache; nervous prostration. L{v kidneys were out of order and blood in a } condition. Everyone, and even my doctor thought I was going into consumption. I followed Your advice faithfully for six months with the mulctgtlhmmm a well woman, and it cost me much less than a doc- tor’s bill. I feel that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound saved my life.” — Mzs. SamverL Borst, 7 Cozy Ave., Oneonta, N. Y. - The above letter shows how unerring is the advice which Mrs. Pinkham gives to women who write her about their sickness; as the advice is free and always helpful it isnot strange that she advises more than one hundred thousand sick women every year. Her address is Lynn, Muss. . — We have deposited with the National Oity Bank of Lynn, 85000, !fi.! 31“2« ,...‘w.:; ,.m. Who can find that the abave tortimenia ) itors are not genwine, or were published before obtaining tho writer's special per- mission E. Pinkham Medlcine Co., Lynn, Mass. - PART 4 The Living Animals of the World - NOW READY At The Bee Office Price 10 cents—By mail 15 cents LOOD POISON CURED TO STAY CURED FOREVER tful hideousness, Blood is commonly called the King of ai} Disease ot scn. "1 may be either he reditar e contracted. Once the mystem 1 fod with it, the disease may manifest itself in the form of Berotuln, Kcwema: Taatio Paing. BUM or Bwollen Joints, Hruptions of Copper_ Colorel Spots on the 'ace itle Uloers in the Mouth or on the Tongue Sore Throat, Swollen Roemis Polllig ot of the Hai of Byebrows. and fnally s Leprous- like Decay of the nd If you have any of these or similar sy t Bl BLOOD CURE_ tmmediately. This tr ot s et It oentains no us drugs or inj A very bottom of the and forces out every particle - sign and symptom di completely and forever. The fpe fiesh, the bones and the whole system i Pt I and the t prepared anew for the dutiés and pleasures of iife. WN' RE, Y é&o c;u." rman & MoConmell Ca., 16th and Dodge Sta, Omahe Chartered by the State, Oall or state case by mall, for FREE HOME TREATMENT, Aévass Dr. La CROIX, A HOME PRODUCT Better than tmported. Cook’s Imperial EXTRA DR’ Absolutely pure. ural s, WOMEN::% Bhormas & MoLoLuoll diugglais, ik aud Lodse s