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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE I8 Cents a Day! Why PayRent or Interest 'hen the NEBRASKA HOME C0. Chartered by the State Will furnish you the money to pay off your mortgage or buy a home in any locality, and give you sixteen years and eight months to pay it back, at the rate of $5.35 Per Month Without Interest. Monthly Payments before Maturity Monthly Payments After Maturity 5.35 10.70 16.05 Amount Subscribed For $1,000 2,000 3,000 Membership Fee | .00 | .00 | 9.00 | OFFICERS: GEO. A. NEAL, ex-U. 8. Atty., president; also president of the Home Co-Operative Co., Kansas City, Mo. SBAML. EPPSTEIN, Atty., secretary; also secretary of the Home Co-Operative Co., Kansas City, Mo. HARRY NOTT, Broker,-treasurer. MAIN OFFICE: 1710 Farnam St., Bee Bldg, Telephone 2152 You are invited to call at the office, 1710 FARNAM ST., and examine this plan. We will be pleased to answer any questions CALLS STATE CONVENTION Obairman Lindsay Officially Summons Republicans Together. MANDAMUS EXPECTED IN OMAHA CASE Indication that Decided t¢ ¥ Supreme Has A Court thority to Order ioverner Appoint Commisston. (From a Staft Correspondent.) LINCOLN, April 1.—(Special.)—Following is the text of the republican convention call tssued by State Chairman H. C. Lindsay 4 republicans of the state of hereby called to meet the Auditorium, in_the Wednesday, June 18 o'clock the afternoon, for the of placing in nomination candidates for the following ofti to be voted for at the election, to be held in the Nebraska November 4, 192, viz. Une governor, one lieutenant governor, one secretary of state, one auditor of publc accounts, one treasurer, one superinten- dent of public instruction, one attorney general, one commissioner of public lands and buildings, and for the transaction of such other business as may regularly come before said convention The basis of representation he Ne in_con- city ot 1902, ‘at 2 purpose Lincoln, of the sev- eral countles in sald convention shall "be | the wick vote cast for judge the regular election for of Hon. Samuel H. Sedg- the supreme court, at held on November 5, 191, giving one delegate for each 100 votes or major fraction thereof so cast for the sald®Samuel H. Sedgwick, and one dele- gate-at-large for each county. Sald appor- tlonment entities the several counties to the following representation in the sald con- vention: Adar Antelope Banner Blaine Boone Box Butte Jofferson Johnson 1 1| 2K 13| McPherson 4| Merrt Cheyenne Colfax Cuming Custer Dakota Dawes Dawson 12| Pawnee o/ Perkine 8 Phelps o| Plerce 13/Piatte Red Willow Richardson Roek 4[Saline 18|Barpy 10 Saunders 8'8cotts Bluff . 12 Seward . 3 Sheridan 4|Sherman »|Sioux 2(Stanton 6| Thay Douglas Dundy Filimore Franklin Frontier Furnas Gage Humilton Harlan Hayes Hitcheoek Holt Hooker Howard 18| Webster 1| Wheeler 10' York Total s recommended that no proxies be d In sald convention, but that the and explain to you the best plan on earth delegates present thereat be authorized to cast the full vote of the county represented by _them. Notice 1s hereby given that each of the WEDNESDAY o = APRII 1902 at this term of district court, which began yesterday with Judge Boyd on the bemch and adjourned this afternoon until June 9 The cases disposed of were of minor im- portance. YOUNG MACKENZIE MISSING Omaha Man Employed at Nebrasks City Makes Strange Dis- appearance. NEBRASKA CITY, Neb., Awril 1 clal egram.)—Willlam Mackenzie, agent for the J. E. Boyd Commission com pany, has left towrd and cannpt be located. Mackenzie came here about six monthe ago and took charge of the office of the Floyd J. Campbell Commission company of Omaha He retained that position until about a week ago, when he resigned to go to work for Boyd. He was married in November last and it s said recently had some trouble with his wife and she left him. It is reported that Mackenzie left a board bill of $50 and other unpaid accounts. The police have taken the matter up, but have been unable to locate him further than that he left Omaba for the west Sunday afternoon Mackenzle's home before going tc braska City was at 620 South Seventeenth street, in this city, where his brothers and sisters reside now. One of his brothers said last night that he had mot seen him re- cently and had no idea as to his present whereabouts. “Mr. Mackenzle's acccunts with the Boyd Commission compatiy,” said Thomas F Boyd, “were straight at the time be left We thought well of the yocng man and were sorry to lose Lim from our service.” Engine for Kearney. KEARNEY, Neb., April L—(Special Tele- gram.)—A new Corliss engine, ordered by the Kearney Electric company months ago, arrived today and will be-put in place at the power house as soon as the old engine can be removed. The new engine is of the most modern type, and of 250-horse power. New Cuts Throat on Delayed Train. MINOT, N. D.. April 1.—A. L. Colgrove, a professor in the college at Colfax, Wash cut hig throat with a razor on the first sec- tion of delayed eastbound train last night. 1 will recover. RAIN IS ON THE WAY EAST Omaha May Keep Clear Skies, but Rest of the State Likely to Get Soaked. WASHINGTON, April 1.—Forecast For Nebraska and Kansae—Fair Wednes- day, except rain in extreme west portions; Thursday, rain in west and central por- tions; fair in extreme east; variable winds, becoming northeast For lowa—Fair Wednesday, with warmer in west portion; Thursday, fair and warmer; light, variable winds For South and North Dakota—Fair and warmer Wednesday; Thursday, fair in east, rain in west portion; northeast winds. For Missouri—Fair and warmer Wednes- (8pe- Ne- | TIME T0 VOTE ON OLEO BILL Tomorrow Senate Will Follow Long Debate with Final Action, STEWART INTRODUCES HIS INDIAN BILL Mensure Pre es Nearly Milllon | lars Larger Appropriation the Tribes Than Hoeuse BiIL r Varlous April 1 WASHINGTON reached by the senate today on the pending oleomargarine bill before | adjournment next Thursday | Debate on the throughout today's 1daho opposed that indu An agreement was to vote continued | n. Mr. Heitfeld of | bill because he telieved proposed to drive the oleomargarine ¥ to the wall. He sirongly advocated the adoption of the substitute Mr. Gallinger of New Hampshire ad-| vocated the bill because it was a protest agalnst fraud and against an industry which depended for its success on duplicity and | dishonesty.” | Mr. Spoonsr of Wisconsin made an ex- | tended legal and constitutional argument in support of the measure. He sald such a tax as it imposed, in his opinion, was in| the Interest of the whole people. | M ne o was t Impudent Argument Mr. Gallinger, resuming his argument, eald: “The impudent proposition I ever heard is that of the hog and steer but- ter makers that they discovered the butter | color. You may color butter as you ple | and It is still butter, and you may color| oleomargarine as you please and it is still an butter.” | He declared that it the proposed tax of 10 cents a pound on colored oleomargarine | was not sufficient to deter the manufac- |turers from Imposing upon the consumers | congress in the future would have to find another remedy. Mr. Bailey of Texas maintained that it the purpose of the bill was to prevent fraud it was unnecessary, as the states of the union had ample power to do that. It was| |evident, he thought, that the real purpose | of the bill was to tax out of existence the oleomargarine industry. Mr. Stewart of Nevada reported the In- dian appropriation bill and gave notice that |be would call it up at an early date. Indian Appropriation Bill. most i As reported it carries a totas appropri tion of $9,415,339, a net increase of $973 834 over the total as the bill passed the house. The Increases are generally com- paratively small. The largest item of In- crease is $130,000 on account of the Dela- ware Indians. Authority is given to use the trust funds of various tribes of Indians to the aggregate extent of $1,031,191 for the settlement of obligations and other pur- poses. | The membership of sion 1s restored to the Dawes commis- four in number, the house having reduced It to three, and an amendment is inserted making final the bam, Ala,, also Secretary of the Pan-Amer- fcan History Company, writes application at my desk seemed to affect m tivity, while my appetite was on the decline and my general tone showed OUGH THE SPRING MONTHS. | CAN NOW WORK ™" Without Feeling Fatigued, Peruna me Perfect Health. sesecccccttcoccns has Given IF, 0. GOUD]NG 3 + ‘ ‘ . . . + ‘ . + + ‘ + + + + + + + + ‘ + i + + { + + ‘ + 4 4 ‘ + ‘ + . + . i 3 + + + B e OSALIE A. GOULDING, Washington, D. C., s Chief Vice Templar, Acme § Lodge, No. 3, I. 0. O. F., Birming- “Continued Hterary work and close Inst apring 1 moon found my usual mental and physical force giv- ing way and realizel that my bra A14 5ot Aot With 1ts WNRAL WORLEH RCs oot oo sooocet s tosnsotsess ease can find them as spirits and health as other the year Get a bottle of Peruna when lacguid feelings make themselve In the spring. Take it acco:ding elves at any excellent time ot me that I necded a change which he A e first busy life woald ‘-)vlrn"::‘ to th not allow at that time. for getting a home, odd numbered senatorial districts in the state is to select a member of the state committee to serve for the term of two years. By order of the state committee. H. C. LINDSAY, Chairman JOHN T. MALLALIEU, Becretary. Indicates Mandamus on Governor. decisions of the commiseion as to all mat- ters of appraisement and allottment of lands and also in all matters pertaining to the right of citizenship in any of the five civilized tribes. There is incorporated in the bill author- ity to open to settlement the Ulntah reser- vation in Utah with the consent of a ma- jority of the adult male Indians residing on the reservation. Eighty acres of frri- {gable land is to be first allotted to each Indian head of a family and forty acres to every other Indian HOUSE ON SUNDRY CIVIL FUNDS Lower Body Makes Big Inro Voluminous Appropriat BiIL. WASHINGTON, April 1.—The house to- | day made rapid progress with the sundry civil appropriation bill, completing ninety- three of the 139 pages of the bill. Efforts to amend the bill were successfully re- sisted as a rule, by Mr. Cannon, who was personally in charge of the measure. The proceedings were without incident. Mr. Bulzer of New York offered an amend- ment to the bill to appropriate $50,000 for lighting the torch of Bartholdi statue of liberty in New York harbor. Mr. Cannom sald that the pending bill carried $1,900,000 for lights, the expenditure of which, he sald, was entirely within the discretion of the lighthouse board. Mr. Cannon said the | appropriation committ had made some 901 investigation and had ascertained that the ‘0| light on the Bartholdi's statue was value- 00| less for commercial purposes. %] On a rising vote the amendment was car- 7 |ried, 43 to 33. Some New York school teachers in the gallery applauded voicifer- ously. Mr. Cannon immediately demanded tel- day; Thursday, probably fair; variable winds For Wyoming and Colorado—Rain late | Wednesday or Wednesday night, with cooler in west portions and warmer in east por- tions; Thursday, probably rain or smow; north winds “t doetided to take a to directions on the bottle Continu. treatment through t(he first months of spring. This of treatment ls mnot experiment; it is as positive in its results as any fact of science ean be. After you have tried it you will say runa is positively the be you have ever tried A great u year this remedy in this have demonstrated that ures, It you do not derive prompt and factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartpan, giving i full statemens of your case and he will be pleased to glve you hls valuable advice e and asked ® friendly druggist what he consid- ered the best, and this ours e answered, P runa is the one that Live Agents of Integrity and Push Wanted ever fails. “For three weeks I used it fafthfully and was very much pleased to find that it brought me strength, Pae t spring medicine Local Record. OFFICE OF THE WEATHER BUREAU, OMAHA, April 1.—Ofcial record of tem perature and precipitation compared with the co-responding day of the last three years: 1902. 1901. 1900. 1899, 44l 7 28 3 2 3 36 48 2 T 42 .0 d precipitation since March 1, That the supreme court has decided It has authority to mandamus the governor in the Omaha fire and police commission ca is inferred by attorneys from an announce- ment made from the bench by Chief Jus- tice Sullivan just before the noon recess of court today. This question was the first one considered by the court in the proceedings instituted by C. C. Wright to compel the governor to appoint a commis~ sion. To the attorneys in the case Judge Sulllvan satd: “If you have other questions than the jurisdictional one you desire to argue the court will hear you elther at this sitting or the next.” In the argument’ (wo weeks ago the at- torney general mal tained that the supreme court, being a c -ordinate branch of the government, was without authority to ex- ercise control over the executive branch. The court at that time made it understood that no other question would be considered until further argument was made, fcr it was admitted that if the court was without jurisdiction it would be useless to procecd further with the case. As the court has now signified a willingness to hear the a- torneys on the other issues It is conceded that it has decided to assume jurisdiction. The court must next determine whether or mot the governor should make the ap- | pointments. 1f it fs held that he should do 60 and that the court has jurisdiction a peremptory writ of mandamus will be fs- sued as prayed for in Mr. Wright's petition In the absence of the attorney general of extensive trial of ass of derangements there are no fail- “I can now work for honrs without feeling fatigued and am perfect health, convinced that ¥ able remedy. ROSALIE A. GOULDING. Any one can escape entirely the ill ef- fects of spring weather, and instead of gratis dragging drearily through weeks of bad Address Dr. Hartman, President of The feellngs and perhaps acquiring a fatal dis- Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, Ohio. ILLINOIS Che Dr. C. W. Walden, §. Rinaker. W. P. Nor- cross, W. C. Black, W. C. Dorsey, J. W. Burgess, R. R. Kyd, C. T. Peavey. Some of the men who figured in bringing about the sale of the paper had editorial man- agement of the Critic several years ago. It is generally believed that General Colby 1s a stockholder and will have considerable to say about the policy of the paper, al- though his name does not appear in the list of stockholders. The price paid for the plant was $6,500 DIES AFTER LEAVING RIVER Mrs. enjoying thoroughly runa in a perfectly GEORGE GOULD IS SET FREE ' ana o Judge Good Dacl;a: i{e Did Not Help § Wreck Bellwood Bank. NOT AN ABETTER OF Maximum temperature Minimum_temperature Mean temperature Precipitation . Record of te ature at Omaha for this day and 19023 Normal temperature . Deficlency for the day Total excess since Marc Normal precipitation Deficlency for the day Total precipitation since Deficlency since March 1 | Excess for cor. period, 101..... Deficlency for cor. perlod, i800..0... Reports from Stations at 7 p. m. sat's on the n BROTHER AMOS Wahoo Court Orders Prisoner's Re- lease from Custody of the Sheriff Writ of ‘Habeas arc FOERRg. T. F. Skeede of Seward Repents of Suicidal Attempt, but Cold Overcomes Her. DAVID CITY, Neb., April 1.—(Special.)— Bome time ago orge Gould was arrested on the charge of alding and abetting Amos H. Gould in forging notes and mortgages which cesulted in the wrecking of the Platte Valley State bank of Bellwood. The pre- liminary hearing was had before County Judge Skiles, and Gould was held to the district court under bonds in the sum of 2,000, Gould's attorneys immediately made application to Judge Good of Wahoo for a writ of habeas corpus Judge Good passed on the application lagt nmight. In an exhaustive opinion in which he carefully reviews all the evi- dence introduced before County Judge Skiles at the preliminary examination, on . “aamy ~esaduia) WOWXER SEWARD. Neb,, April 1.—(Special.)—Mrs. T. F. Skeede was found dead this morning on Second street in South Seward by Wil- lam Parrish. Her clothing was saturated with water and the supposition is that | she intended to drown herself and after- ward changed her mind. Mr. Parrish re. ports that about 2 o'clock this morning he heard a pecullar noise like a child erying. He called to one of his neighbors, but the | meighbor would not get up, so Mr. Parrish went back to bed and this morning on looking out of the window he saw the body Iying in the street. | Mrs. Skeede dressed herself In a long wm d L 1% _sumjesadwiay, CONDITION OF THB WEATHER p Rates to Minnesota and North Dakota. On March 4th, 11th, 18th and 26th, ¥ | April 1st and sth, especially low ons YOIV way rates will be made to nearly all ' oints in Minnesota and North Da- ota. THE GREAT NORTHWEST. Every day during March and April, spe- clal rates will pe In effect to points In Montana, ldaho, Washington, Oregon, ete. NOIS CENTRAL RAIL THE 101 ROAD, being the shortest line and operating -wopwdioaid | Omaha, partly cloudy Valentine, clear .. North Platte, clear Cheyenne, cloudy . Salt Lake City, clo Rapid City, partly Huron, cloudy ... Williston, Chicage St. Louis, Paul, PEORIA ST ST.LOULS udy . cloudy 0 which Judge Skiles held Gould to the dis- trict court for trial, and in which he re- viewed the law governing the crime charged against Gould, Judge Good held that there was not sufficient competent evidence show- Ing that anyone had aided, abetted or coun- soled Amos H. Gould in the commission black dress and went just above Boyes & Hulshizer's mill, where | tracks showed the she waded in. ably changed her mind and started back, but was chilled to death on the way home. to the Blue river | She prob- Mrs. Skeede had been In poor health for | the state’'s deputy attorney, Norris Brown, appeared in behalf of the governor and ked that the hearing be assigned for the next sitting of court. The request was granted * 0 00 0 nport, cloudy Kaneas City, clear Havre, cloudy ....... Helena, partiy cioudy Blsmarck, clear Galveston, clear . fon. rs. “You will have to carry this by tell- ers and aye and no vote before it is finally | adopted,” he declared emphatically. Great interest was taken in the vote by tellers. The pages scurried out to the restaurant and committee rooms to hring in absentees. morning and evening trains to St Pau where direct connectl are made with all Western lines, offers unexcelled facill- ties for reaching these points. Full particulars cheerfully given at City Ticket Ofce. No. 1402 Farnam St., or writé, W. H. BRILL, T indicates trace of precipitat 1 llinois Central R. K. Omaha, Neb. Hard Work to Find a Defendant. . WELSH, some time and attempted to take her life | When the vote was finally completed the Deputy Labor Commiesioner Local Forecast Officlal. | grg¢ yote reversed and the amendment of Marak Weather. | stood defeated, 61 to 67. D. P. A of the forgeries charged in the complaint upen which the examination was held, and that there was not sufficient competent evidence introduced before the county judge to show that George Gould by any act alded, abetted or counseled Amos H. Gould efther in the forging or uttering of forged paper. The evidence Juatity the detention ordered that eustody of the Summary Fair. being held insufficient to of Gould, the judge he be discharged from the sherift. Be itrice Express Is Sold. BEATRICE, Neb., April 1.—(Special Tel- egram.)—Negotiations which have been pending with Kilpatrick Bros. & Collins for the purchase of the capital stock and eorporate property of the Express Publish- ing company culminated today in the trans- fer of the stock and property to the new ALL CASES OF NU'SES? DEAFNESS OR HARD HEARINC ARE NOW CURABLE by our new invention. Only those born deaf arc incurable. HEAD NOISES CEASE IMMEDIATELY. %, when it came from the northwest at thirty-seven miles an hour. There was a heavy frost on March 5. last fall. She leaves a husband, who Watson s n poor health, and two little girls, x.ne]’""'"l’ d““!'fl:r-bk dificulty finding = 5 e | e ‘ 5 S and one 13 years of age. She carried|® defendant for his proposed man- nce the year 1870 there have been ju peaking to a proforma amendment, Mr. . 2 two months of March with mean tempera- g o $1,000 insurance. {damus proceedings to test the con-| {0 ™ figier " than that for the one just, Sulzer called attention to the necessity for & L stitutionality of the law requiring| past. ~in 1877 the mean temperature “for ' protecting the salmon fisheries of Alaska. Greater Boone County | county assessors to gather information for | that month was i desrees above zero In| Mr. Knox, chairman of the committee on ‘ 9 degrees, ve a ALBION, Neb. April 1.—(Special)—At |the State Bureau of Labor and Industrial | fegrees: This mean temperature s 6 de- | territories, agreed with much that Mr. Sul- the board meeting of the Boone County Statistics. The county attorney of Lan-|grees more than the mean for this month | zer had sald. He declared that if pre-. Agricultural association the dates for the |Caster says the law will not stand the test | for the lust thiriy7two vears, that fguve | served the Alaska fisheries would furnish fair were set for September 24, and |8nd the assessors, acting under his officlal | bt tne mean today **| the fish food supply of the United States 26 H. C. Kiester is president and H. L. P nion, have declined to take the :|orl‘ At the same time this March just Kl\llv:(fl\' the future. He contended that If the Brooks secretary. A new agricultural hail | Partment’s schedules from the office. They rm:r‘.-n'lv:lu‘;.:nxfi\:].‘l ‘\(,4?‘:::“::&.\)1 ""‘.{:L'::lf; presgnt laws were enforced the fisheries will be built, new fence put up, more am- |8y they intend to comply with the law,| above at oné time. On the %th it was 1| Would be protected phitheater room provided and other im- |but thus far none of them has done so.|degrees. The grvalfalrdhlll.} range was 3 Mr. Lacey of lowa also thought it was provements are contemplated. The asso- | This morning Mr. Watson was told that an | 3¢ v’;p,,"",_,?"\‘[";:"a ; the least dally range, | ymportant that congress should deal with clation bas $700 in its treasury and Is out |@aSsessor in a country precinct was willing| Only six days of the thirty-one were |this subject In time. of &abt [to be a defendant in his case, but when he | cl¢ar. nine more being cloudy and the bal- [ He offered an amendment to create a Z | drove four miles Into the country he found | Afce Partly cloudy, v S5 "e | funa of $10,000 for this purpose, but it was Fall on Sidewalk is Fata |the man very willing to comply with all precipitation yes ]:u inch. 1'1!.;] ‘;;ru::al r;(ul on !n huil.lhl of nr(h;r. ; WINSIDE, Neb., April 1.—(Special.)—Mrs. | the prov'sions of the law. Other as siderably less than the average, which| Mr. Knox, from the committes on terri- M. J. Stenner of p;f,(»., 'nh?who tell on | took the same position. AT Ve e B wind was torles, reported the bill for the admission shareholders. Among those interested as a defective sidewalk in Winside Tuenday.] Supplies for State Institution southesgt and Ite total movement nr::r:.or New Tim-'n, f;klfllmnlm m;:l,Amnm. and jnvestors and who will manage its affairs died last night at the home of Mrs. James Eres S BIEReS: Veis e pu Eave n‘:‘ 'l- “‘M e‘\':fl_y fl," t u:;lalhwm« are: J. H. Penner, M. V. Nichols, C. M Elliott, where she had been visiting, from convenisat time. At 608 . m. the buuss Hemler, A. H. Kidd, C. William Miller. the effects of the fall adjourne: The State Board of Purchase and Suppiles was in session all day censidering bids for CANCEROUS ULCERS | Are in many respects like other ulcers or sores, t and this resemblance often proves fatal. Valuable | time is lost in fruitless efforts to heal the sore with washes and salves, because the germs of Cancer that are multiplying in the | blood and the new Cancer cells which are con and at last sharp s S 1 sloughing stage, and a hideous, sickening cancer- |rado university de bl!f in this ecity. frritation and discharge, approach of the eating and ous sore begins it destructive work No ulcer or sore can exist without some pr«hspo.xing internal cause that has poisoned the blood, and the open dis- charging ulcer, or the festering sore on the lip, cheek or other part of the body will continue to spread and eat deeper into the flesh until the blood has bes matter eliminated from the circulation. S. S. S. cleanses the blood of all decaying effete matter. antidotal and purifying propertiles lha‘:‘:’x}n destroy tore blood to its matural condition: c s it e to the ulcer or sore the healing process discharge ceases and the place heal forms. S. 8. 8. SSS been purified and the Cancer stantly developing keep up the hooting pains announce the In February, 1899, I noticed a small | lump on my lower 1ip. The doctor cau- | terized it but another ca and broke furnishing supplies to state institutions during the ensuing quarter. The work will uot be completed until tomorrow after- noon Governor Savage and Mrs. Savage, ac- companied by ten members of the state military staff and thelr wives, will leave tomerrow afternoon for Kanusas City to attend the charity ball of the Knights Tem- plar, to be glven in the Auditorium of that city Thursday evering. They will return the following day and Friday evening the governor will pres'ds at the Nebraska-Colo- Horse E &er NEBRASKA CITY, Neb., April 1.—(Spe- | clal Telegram.)—Edward Meridith, a farmer tles the place signs of the disease have been ssen since. 'W. P. Brown, Hollands, 8. C. germs or morbid | It has great | the germs and poisons and | And when pure bl ¥ ! begins, the | s over and new skin is a strictly vegetable blood purificr containing no mercury or mineral of any description. 1f you have an uleer or chronic sore of any kind, write us about it, and medical advice will cost you nothing. Books on Cancer and other diseases of the blood will be sent free to all who desire them. THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., Atianta, Ga. ood is carried | eight miles southwest of town, was kicked in the head by a horse this afternoon and it is thought he will lose the left eye. He was brought to this city and taken to the new Nebraska City hospital for treatment. Vall Would Be ¢ ALBION, Neb., April 1.—(Special.)—H. C. Vail of Alblon announces himself as a can- didate for congress from this distric ject to the approval of the nominating con- vention. Mr, Vail is a young lawyer, a repubiican, and has been chairman of the county central committee. MADISON, Neb., April 1.—(Special Tele- gram.)—For the first time in the bistory of the county mot a jury case called —— e . ST.JAC CURKS ALL'BODI 0BS OIL LY PAIN SUCH AS RHEUMATISM, GOUT S ACTS LIKE PRAINS, SOREN:SS, SCIATICA, NEURALCIA MAGIC! CONQUERS PAIN The Grandest remedy in the world Established 66 yoars IT KiLLS PAIN INSTANTLY. 2h8c and 50c Sizes. F. A. WERMAN, OF BALTIMORE, SAYS: BALTIMORE, Md., March 30, 1g01. Gentlemen : — Being entirely cured of deafness. thanks to your treatment, | will now give you & full history of my case, 1o be used at your discretion. 3 About five years ago. my right ear began to sing, and this kept on getting worse, until I lost my hearing in this ear entirely. Tunderwent a treatment for catarrh, for three months. without any success, consulted a nume ber of physicians, among others, the most eminent car specialist of this city, who told me that ouiy an operation could help me, and even that only temporarily, that the hicad nolses would then cease, but the hearing in the affected ear would be lost forever 1then saw vour advertisement accidentally in a New York paper, and ordered your treat. ment. After I had used it only few days acording to your directions, the noises ccased. and to-day, after five weeks, my hearing in the diseased ear has been entirely restored. 1 thank yeu heartily and beg to remain Very truly yours. . ¥ A, WERMAN, 7308. Broadway, Baltimore, Md. Our treatment does not interfere with your usual occupation. =mestee 2 YOU CAN CURE YOURSELF AT HOME ™t ® fosi=t advice free cont. INTERNATIONAL AURAL CLINIC, 596 LA SALLE AVE., CHICAGD, ILL, CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH tor CHICHESTER'S EXGLIAR 14 MED aod Gl N auied This means just what | e -~ e ftsays. During 40 ysars' ractics I discovered an ntallible cure for Seminal wod Nervous Debility, and will send o full curative course of the Kemedy, lusting thres mouthe, to soy one ou trial, to be or 1f satistactory §7 sond your name s ellfleoevlc. Blood Poison tic Diseasos oo Addiess | FEMALE BEANS roat MOGILY 16Ky (aior ; strongeat, best, contain Ergot, louges:, most Ly No Cure, No Pay. Sim| address.’ Buflerers from Rupture, Kidney. Bladder aud Pro rite for my B Treatment | Ta.sy. Pennyroyal obetinate cases re Sherman & MoCor V3 WA “Laxaiive Bromo-Quinine rewes the remedy Lhst cnres & cold in oue day