Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 7, 1902, Page 7

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THE ( 1AHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY DECEMBER 7. 1902 TALK OF TRFFIC ALLIANCE Vilvzankee-U don Pavific Oombination Ex- rates Xuch Comment. ATTITUDE OF THE NORTHWESTERN LINE Theors: That Vanderbilt Roa onnection with the Un Pactfic in Not May Serer nerally Ae- cepted in Omaha, Superintendent Buckinghan and Assist- wnt General Passenger Agent For( have re- turned from their trip to Salt Lake City, where they attended the conference of Unfon Pacific, Southern Pacific and Mil- waukee officials, at which the traffic alli- mnce between the Unfom Facific and Mil- waukee, glving the latter road through service on a.par with the Northwestern to (he Paeific coast, was perfected and | formally adepted. They returned with J C. Stubbs und the officfals of the Milwau- kee over (he Kaneas division of the Union | Pacific, President Burt remained behind 1o irvestigate conditions of the company's motsve power along the road. ‘The. Unlon Pacific officlals had nothing vew to add to what has been published regarding the alliance. They merely con- the report that this alliance was a fact gained considerable ground As o Live Stock Ra The Assoclated Press report from Chi- | Qommissioner Eastman Proposes to Prohibit eago that the Santa Fe had proposed cempeting lines that live stock rates fro Missouri river points be advanced from cents per 100 pounds to 18% cents calls for considerable discussion in Omaha. The action of the Santa Fe is generally re- garded as an effort to gét the rates ba to their mormal basis and squirm out an unpleasant position as gracefully possible. 8o far none of the freight m here have received official advice respect- ing this matter. The rates on live stock from Omaha, from other Misscurl river pointe, are 23%4 conts a hundred. Last August when t Great Western lowered rates on packi house products th Santa Fe cut the li stock rate from 1% to 12 cents, but t other roads failed to follow euit entirely. It had no full endorsement at Omaha and it is not likely, freight men say, that a action the Santa Fe may inaugurate wi vitally affect conditions here. The rat doubtless will not be disturbed SHIPPERS MAKE ¥ that cago Are ther Incompetent or Unfair. e Grain Inspectors nt ”".i | WOULD EXTEND HERD LAW Hm Free Range for Stook. 12 - FORCING MORE SCHOOL ck Cattlemen, on Other Hand, Argue that | o 70 C 0 quarters today of | Would Discourage Fencing Inspector General—F. A. Walsh, Mil- as d Make Leasing Less Prof able Than at Present. en as ho | —Commisssioner of ng Lands Ea School and he | T ern side of the river, should be extendel ny Over the state, thus covering the cattl il country weet of the river where the free es | Tange has been in vogue The reason he assigns for such recom- | lands are | adciphia, relieved at his own request CHARGES | m°t al! leased in the western portion of e b He doubtless considers that the adoption of the herd law would result in the stockmen belng forced to lease more ot | York; Charl the school lands than they do under the On the other hand, stocks mendation is that the state | the state. | present system. LEASES | Thomas J. Stewart, commander-in-chiet of HOT SPRINGS, §. D., Dec. 6.—(Special) | J. Cory Winans, Troy, N. ¥ Publie man has thrown a bomb among vo the stockmen west of the Missouri river by ommending in his annual report that the herd law, which prevails on the east- G.” A. R. HONORS John L pointed to Seat om mittee, IOWA MAN Blufts Ap- om- ot Coune HARRISBURG, Pa., Dec. 6.—General the Grand Army of the Republic, announced the following appointments in an order | waukee Judge Advocate General Bridgeport, Conn Senlor Alde-de-Camp and Chief of Staft— Albert Beers, Executive Committee of the National Council of Administration—Willlam K. | Armetrong, Indianapolis, Thomas W. Scott, | Fairfield, 01.; Thomas G. Sample, All gheny; Nelson Viall, Howard, R. I.; Wil- | a | Nam R. Shafter, San Francisco, A. A} , | Taylor, Cambridge, O.; S. C. Jones, Cen- | terville, la. | B. B. Brown of Zanesville, O., has been | appointed chairman of the commitiee on pensions, vice Gemeral R. B. Beatty, Phil The committee Is composed of: John Lindt, Council Bluffs; John Paimer, New G. Burton, Nevada, M John C. Linehan, Peacock, N. H.; John C Black, Chicago, and H. E. Taintor, Hart- Waunkegan Oitigen Seek | court judge available, the citizens of Wau- {18 pot popular with the people of Wau- | FIGHT RAILWAY WITH WATER Keep Tracks from Streots with Fire Hose. MAYOR AND JUDGE ARE BOTH MISSING Injunction & Falling That | Drive Workmen Away Till Court | Can 8it and Adjudicate in Cawe. | CHICAGO, Dec. 6.—~Unable to find the mayor of their town, and with no circuit kegan, Ill, this afternoon took matters into their own hands, and with the ald ot a fireplug and a line of hose routed a gang of street rallway laborers who were | trying to lay a track on the streets. i The track was being placed by the Chi- cago & Milwaukee Electric company, which Kkegan. , When the laborers started this afternoon o lay more track a call was made on the mayor to have him put a stop | to the work. The mayor could not be tound. An injunction was sought, but mo judge was in the city and then the oiti- zens rushed for the hose. Buy Now If you are going to buy Xmas gifts why not select such articles as give lasting sat- isfaction and comfort. You will find many articles that would make suitable presents. Make your selection now and we will hold goods for you. v Massive 8tde \ Ladies' desks in gold Boards, o gak cr mahogany ford, Conn. highly polished, bevel- Briacd (0o stntoment of Milwauhes ofciale men argue that the adoption of the herd (no mirror), handsome A stream was turned on the workmen, o that the latter had ‘“‘secured every con cesslon from the Union Pacific asked which gives the Milwaukee faclities equal to those of the Northwestern There 18 a theory, which, however, is not #eneral, that the success of the Milwaukee in securing everything it asked from the | .oen were made by A. W. Llovd. travel- Unfon Pacific must be taken as the eignal Ing representative of the Illinois Grain of defeat for the Northwestern and that, | | Deaters’ association at a meeting between %o regarding it, the Northwestern may de- | Gommigajoner A. L. French, James Neville elde to construct i's own road to the Pa- | and a committee representing dealers from eifc coast. all parts of the state It is dificult to reconclle guch & view | phe gealers appeared before the commis- mnd it Is still more difficult to reconcile sion to complain of the rigld requirements ""‘;I ”";""'Y that ";"IT""";‘"":';‘ ““'[‘“’ of the Chicago grain inspection office on will suffer material injury from this union | g wn as No. 2 corn. They sub- | 1q 3 Between the Milwaukee, its arch-rival, ani :l:':l‘nfl"rnt::’pl::l ehew that Sithough prac- :»;.:‘.‘: "'i:.‘h'f ’\'”"’,:;:"‘1:“' - ,""“'.“f"“:‘"’ . the Union' Padifc, ifs old conteaerats. TG | yicatly the same grade of torn W Delnk | re o ie Sianien oo they Dot 1t 1e fact that the Vanderbilts control (B |gnipped into the city as formerly, It 18 | jands must be fenced: to be safely and Northweatern and own exiensive shares of | being ingpected as No. 3, fnstend ot No. ' picatoy“renced, they must be leased for Unlon Paciflc_stock, it Is generally ad- |y o the disadvantage of the dealers who | 0" \ermy of years; thereforo It the board mitted, does mot lend substance to thik|gre thus unable to fill thelr contracts. | wichos to encourage the leasing of these fdea of the Northwestern being thus im- At the conclusion of the interview the ! yooac™ O o e it Nnflumflfl 5 Taoe posed upon The gencral Impression hat | ommissioners said they would talk With | (hem! in other words, the board must e Ol per o A o the inspectors and do everything possible | “lflki‘. time leases at E;I(h rental a"!; for Interest in the Unfon Paclfic has|; give the shippers the desired relief. |, gumcient length of time that stock been great . enough to enable them to X & stockman keep Horace G. Burt in the president’s i can afford to fence them office. As the Rockefellers are supposed RAMSEY PUTS HIS FOOT DOWN | ““Tue minimum at prosent fa 5 cents per to be the dominant parties In the Mil- re per year, and 7 cents per acre per Telln waukee it is not thought, with these facts law would result in disaster, not only to the cattle industry west of the river, but to the interests of the state as well. In support of their argument they point | out that the western part of the state is | entirely a stock country, excepting small | tracts that may be irrigated and farmed. | That to cut off the free range privilege and compel stockmen to herd would prac- tically wipe out the cattle industry, for with the scant growth of grass nobody | would think of fencing sufficient ground | to run their cattle in pasture the year round. They maintain that the more of the state lands are not leased fe that the Board of School and Public CHICAGO, Dea. 6.—Charges reflecting on the competency of employes of the state rafiroad and warehouse commission and allegations that during the Chicago corner on corn last July, country shippers were discriminated against the inspection of Wabaxh Strikers to Accept reason | who stood it for a few minutes and then ran The attorney of the railway company | came along. He held his hand in the alr and sald: | “I demand peace.” | They gave him water and he was nearly drowned before he could get out of the CANNOT AWAKEN SLEEPER Physiclans Try to Rouse Woman Who Stumbers for Forty-Three Hours ST. LOUIS, Dec. 6.—For forty-three | TrOWRCT DRIOTS hours Mrs. James Abernathy, aged 57, has | FCAch of the stream. been asleep And cAmnot be awakened, The workmen were then driven entirely | An electric battery caused her to open|{rom the street and tonight pickets are | B even 8 moment, but she at once re.|Posted to keep the railroad company from sumed her slumber, | stealing a march and laying the track { " While reading a paper yesterday morning, The matter will be fought out in the she suddenly fell asleep. Her pulse Is| COUFts on Monday. g strong and regular and her temperature READJUSTMENT IS OPPOSED| | normal. Webster City Camp of Modern Wood- | men Votes Against Change | DEATH RECORD. Margaret A. McCoy. in the Rate. At 4:30 yesterday morning Mrs. Mar-| garet A. McCoy, widow of the late Geore | A. McCoy, dled at her home, 5712 Florence boulevard, from senile debility, aged 84| WEBSTER CITY, Ia, Dec. 6.—(Special | Telegram.)—The first authorized debate upon the proposed plan of readjustment of years. | the Modern Woodman rate held in Iowa Mrs. McCoy was one of the old settlers | \.curred in this city last night. of Douglas county and was identified brom- |~ yo\ " jorry S. Green of Davenport op- inently with the early life of Omaha. She | posed the plan and J. D. Denison of Clarion was born in New London, O., JADUSry 25.|yoiia year for five years. It is hard to imag- in mind, that the Northwestern is coming out of the deal very much if any loser. Terms or Loxe Their Places Per nently. ine,” sald a prominent stockman today “a policy more likely to discourage the |at Wellsville, 0., where she was raised .| 1819, and was married to George A. McCoy The latter claimed that existing rates did not pay expenses. Green favored a reasonable emergency fund, but no re- | time lease and consequently the profitable occupation of these lands. A few years SPRINGFIELD, IIl, Dec. 6.—Mr. Ram- [ ago, to induce stockmen to lease and fence sey, president of the Wabash, issued an |these lands, they were offered ‘n tracts ultimatum today giving the striking shop- | of three sections or more, at 3 cents per men until Monday to accept his offer of [acre per year for five years. Many took an advance and to return to work. If the | advantage of this rate and fenced bodies strikers do not elect to return on that date | of these lands. Since then the rate has other men will be Imported to fill their | steadily increased and the lessee now con- cific oficlals regard the new compact as | dlaces. tronts a situation where he cannot af- noessarily detrimental to the former road. | The message further says that all the (ford to re-lease, neither can he let go Doubtless the Northwestern would just as | strikers will be considered as dischareed | and abandon his fence. He is between the soon have seen the agreement fall through | If they do not comply with the command. | devil and the deep sea. The average or never entered into, because of Its natural | The strike leaders here at once com- |school section in this county, when fenced, potentialitles of rivalry, but that the North- [ munfcated ~ with the strikwrs in Fort | will not winter pasture to cxceed fifty western fears serious injury now that the | Wayne, Ind., and Moberly, Mo., and meet- head of stock. If the state would offer agreement has been adopted, the officlals | ings will be held in those cities and in | them lands for a term of ten years at a rofuse to admit. On the otber hand the | Epringfield tomorrow to consider what will | minimum rate of 5 cents per acre per M waukee men are feeling mighty good | be done. year, the present rate for one-year leases, over it. —— much more of it would be leased and there A Unfon Pacific official takes this view | NEW ROAD TO ENTER CHICAGO of the situation:* blow at one of the leading industries of “I look upon this matter not as a triumph | Pere Marquette Rallrond Will Now | the Black Hills, as Mr. Eastman does for the Milwaukee mor a defeat for the et Wedvia to Windy when he proposes the adoption of the hera Northwestern, but simply as a regular step oity law."” in the matural courke of events which point s A G ik GEORGIA MADMAN RUNS AMUCK ‘to the opening of the Omaha gateway to all of the Pere Marquette by the newly formed roads. Whatever the actual facts in the case | syndicate the road will, within a few days, | Kills Marshal and Wounds Three Be- may be, those who are responsible for the | formally take over the Lake Erie & De- fore Being Jailed to Escape triumph and defeat theory may find ground | troit, and that property will be developed SRS upon which (o stand in the fact that prior | into a trunk line between Lake Michigan . " 1o the Union Pacific's agreement to give the | points and Buffalo. It will have an en- —_— Milwaukee through facilities equal to those | trance into Chicago over its own tracks | NICHOLAS, Ga., Dec. 6.—Lee Cribb, a of the Northwestern the Milwaukee had |and cross the Niagara river over a bridge | white man, ran amuck today, killing the authorized a new issue of $25,000,000 and | to be erected near Tonawenda, N. Y. town marshal and seriously wounded a allowed the report to go abroad that it| The members of the dircctorate interested | boy and two others. would construct a line of its own to the | in the syndicate are sald to be Nathaniel | Cribb was captured after much difficulty. coast or make a satisfactory alllance with | Thayer and F. H. Prince of Boston and | There was much talk of a lvnching bee, some other road. In fact, it did enter Into | Thomas F. Ryan and Mark T. Cox of New | but the man was hurried oft to jall at negotiations with the Missouri Pacific, and ' York. | Doustass And as to the Northwestern's intention of building a line to the coast aé & means of retaliation, it must be sald that it is an unpopular. theory In Omaha, where there fs more than ordinary Interest over this affair Not Detrimental to Northwestern. Nelther the Northwestern nor Union Pa. ,»-’.1‘ ) Kowdros 4 Lo T h 77 NEWBRO’S HERPICIDE Don’t blame the dog for not finding this bottle in ti me to save his master’s hair, for the microbic grow th that denuded the hunter's scalp was planted there years before the dog was born. What an authority says. A retired army officer’s experience. “Baldness Is a contaglous disease caused by a mi- | NIFUFI %ome tme past 1 hate beem tmluhl;d will‘xl 4 coung, and increases with age, | dandruff, and with hair falling out. My head itche erobe. It b".""l' in ";“' T e rapidly o Such s e | continuaily, while my hair appeared lusterless and dead. sometimes slowly and sometimes rapidly A I tried several remedies without any permanent relief, :;l::::tf;uwl::'d ":.'f‘?;::- 'uI:“l‘lr'- ";‘(‘“;“rl“‘,‘,‘,““,“",,:,fl"ff and had about reconciled myself to premature baldness. ed author and or. e ¥ « After using a_ bottle of your treatment, I have been microble growth in the scalp to !llflkhlcre ;huuln-fl]r. DUt | very greatly benefited. The hair has stopped falling its appeurance shows that the work of destruct ;';l S | out, the itching has ceased, no more dandruff forms on well advanced and that Newbro's Herpicide should be | the'sealp, my hair is coming in thick and soft and has a used at once. Read what nA\n-u kmfl\u‘x x-I))rll(l'lfllll*':‘-}:“- fine, glossy appearance. What yate can you make me “I have l!l':“dh S::;‘.::‘::h‘l‘l:;ho‘m;‘l:fl.:mll‘:t“nln:;\n gn"nl on one-fourth dozen bottles?” ( hnu-d; o 3 troubled w C C. D OWSLEY, deal of dandruff. Since using your preparation both of Colonel W. N. f.‘ Mil- these symptoms have disappeared. I assure yon that I will prescribe it in eases where I think it can be used successfully.” (Signed) A. O. JOHNSON, M. D. Kansas City, Mo. Makes modern colffure effects easily possibl Lieut. U. 8. Army, waokee, Wis. A Delightful Hair Dressing. indispensable for the toilet table. Retired, Keeps th:oo_nlp:y_;ng, _pure and wholesome. IT STOPS THE ITCHING OF THE SCALP ALMOST INSTANTLY. WA RN NG! Get & Sample Direct from the Factory. mm e T R R b C 206, CUT THIS OUT. Merpicide has caused the o th so- SAket 19 o Sogded With & I Inclose 10 cents In stamps to pay postage and packing upon a sample of Newbros would then be no excuse for striking a | November 25, 1834. She moved to Cincin- nati, O., in 1844 and to Omaha in 1856. That 4 voted unanimously for Green's plan. year Mrs. McCoy organized the first Sunday | Green says that the sentiment, as he has school in the village, which met in her | | found it in Jowa and other states, is as house. She was a devoted member of the | | strong against the proposed plan as is the | Methodist Episcopal church and showed | webster City camp her faith by her works. After the organi- | - e zation of the Sunday school in Omaha she | BRIDE DRINKS FATAL DOSE organized the first Sunday school at Tecum- | s seh and assisted at the organization of sim- | flar schools at Nebraska City, Saratoga, |n“ gerve fund. At the corclusion the camp lows Carbolic Aecld for Cough Syrup and Leaves Groom Shinn's addition to Omaha, near the present site of the Seward Street Methodist church. | and at Redman school house. one mile | west of Fort Omaha. While the work sho did in the Sunday cchool field brought her into more prominent attention, it was in her opinfon the work she did among the poor which was her greatest glory. The | mother of nine children, she adopted four others, whom she raised. Mrs. McCoy had been ill but a short time. | At the funeral of the late A. D. Jones she | was present and there met a large number of the old citizens who had known her in the early days. Two weeks ago she planned 10 g0 to St. Louls, as was her usual cus- tom in the winter, to spend a number of months with her daughter. She was unable to travel and the next day was confined to | her bed, from which she never arose. ASKS DAMAGES OR FRANCHISE Of her niae children three survive— | Colonel A. A. McCoy of Ballte, Wyo., Charles L. McCoy of this city and Mrs. { John P. Shipman of St. Louis. Colonel Me- Coy started to the bedside of his mother | when he heard of her,fliness, but was com- | pelled to return home, being too Il to | travel. Mre. Shipman, who was visiting | her mother a month ago, was compelled to | return to St. Louls on account of sickness | and 1s now in a hospital in that city. | | The funeral will take place Monday after- noon at 2 o'clock from Trinity Methodist church, corner of Twenty-first and Binney streets, interment at Prospect Hill ceme- tery. Mourning. EUREKA SPRINGS, Ark., Dec. 6.—Mrs. Stella Lawrence of Danville, 111, a bride of three weeks, died today after taking half an ounce of carbolic acid by mistake. She died without having been able to make any statement. J. C. Lawrence, her husband, said that he had just left the house when he heard an outcry, and returning, found his wife prostrate on the bedroom floor. His in- vestigation showed that she had drunk halt the contents of a bottle of earbolic acld, mistaking it for cough syrup in the darkness. Colored Lawyer Falls to Get Vote, So | Brings Suit for Cash Instead. RICHMOND, Va., Dec, 6.—James Hayes, | a colored lawyer and conferee of John S. Wise In the recent attack on the new con- stitution, today prepared papers in forty- eight suits for $5,000 damages each against | members of the constitutional convention. The sults are brought under the com- | mon law. P —— Bad Wreck on Canadian ! TRURO, N. 8, Dee, 16—The Canadian Reothe Miysy Btecked oh the international Tallway near George Meyer of the Dunsany, South|Belmont station. Four persons were killed | Tenth street, for thirty-one years an en- | And several passengers and one brakeman | gineer on the Unlon Pacific, died suddenly| | at his home Friday night of heart disease. P 5 ‘ Mr. Meyer had worked Thursday as usual A CAUSE OF HEADACHE. and returned to bis home In the evening apparently well. None of his friends had | heard him complain of feeling sick during the day. His death occurred shortly after { be retired. Headache is a symptom, an indication of | Mr. Meycr, who was ome of the most |derangement or disease in some organ, and familiar figures around the Union station | the cause of the headache is difficult to lo- for years, where for a long time he run|cate because so many diseases have head- one of the depot engines, leaves a wifo |ache as a prominent symptom; derange- and son, the latter being employed at|ment of the stomach and liver, heart the Union station. trouble, kidney disease, lung trouble, eye strain or i1l fitting glasses all produce head- | Thomas Jonas. aches, and it we could always locate the KANSAS CITY, Dec. 6.—Thomas Jonas, a | O'88n Which is at fault the cure of ob- well known local lawyer, was found dead | StiDate headaches would be a much simpler in bed here. The coroner decided that ho | Matter. dled from natural causes. Mr. Jonas was| HOWever, for the form of headache called born in St. Lawrence county, New York, | rontal headache, pain back of the eyes and In 1859. At the time of his death he was | 0 forehead, the cause is now known to be vice president of the World's Christian | CAtarrh of the head and throat; when the Endeavor association, and formerly was | headache is located in back of head ani president of the Missouri assoclation. His | Deck it Is often caused from catarrh of tie mother lives in St. Francis coupty, New | stomach or liver. | York, and he has brothers in New York| At any rate catarrh is the most common City and Utica, N. Y. cause of such headaches and the cure of the catarrh causes o prompt disappearance of the headaches. acific, | | One Very Common Cause, Generally Overlooked. | William H. Hothing. } There is at present no treatment for Hams H Hothing dieg b7 (Speclal) =Wl | gptarrh 80 convenient and eftective as home of his son, J. 8. Hothing, near Crom. | SLUart's Catarrh ¥ablets, a new internal well yesterday. He was just 91 years of age | 'S4y In tablet form, composed of ans- and one of the best known residents of the | ¢Pic® llke red gum blood root which act ounty. Funera) servicee it pote .ot '€ | upon the blood and cause the elimination of posanios the catarrhal poison from the through the natural channels. Mies Cora Aivsley, a prominent school | teacher In one of our normal schools, speaks of her experience with catarrhal | headaches and eulogizes Stuart's Catarrh | Tablets as a cure for them. She says: “I | suffered dally from severe frontal headache | and pain in and back of the eyes, at times so intensely as to incapacitate me in my dally duties. I had suffered from catarrh more or less for years, but never 'asought it was the cause of my headaches, but finally ON, Dec. 6.—Advices received | became convinced that such was the case bere announce that Mre. Hegry G. Davis, | because the headaches were always worse | wife of the ex-senator from West Virginia, | whenever 1 had & cold or fresh attack of and mother-in-law of Senator Elkins, died | catarrh. " her summer home at Elk-| “Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets were highly today. recommended to me as a safe and pleasant catarrh cure, and after using a few G0-cent boxes, which 1 procured from my druggist's, 1 was surprised and delighted to find that system Andrew B. Hovey. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Dec. 6.—Andrew B. | Hovey, former receiver of the Northrup Banking company In Kansas City, Kan. fell in the street in a fit today and died on the way to the hospital. Mr, Hovey was 56 years old. and for many years was & leading business man. . Davis. SUSQUEHANNA, Dec. 6.—Mrs. Fanny factory results from some- thing _the druggist assured Street andNo ... of Herpicide ~at barber s hop s City State . called dandruff germ de- Herpleide. ou Wi “Just as good." fous druggiats never 1.00 st leading dru or direct from TH stroyers. Don't expect satis- recommend substitutes. Ap- DE CO., Detro Mich. Address The Herpicide Co., Detroit,Mich. me.- rrrrereessesescd ABeaithy Hair, 1estroy the cause—you remove the effect. author of a number of books on religion and temperance. D. B. Chase, is dead at Hallstead. She | both the catarrh and headaches had gone was the first national president of the | for good.” Woman's Christian Temperance unfon and | Stuart’s Catarrh Tablets are sold by drug- Mra. Alice Freeman Palmer. CHICAGO, Deec. 6.—Mrs. Alice Freeman Palmer, former dean of women at the Uni- versity of Chicago, and well known in edu- cational circles throughout the country, lll-l suddenly iu Parls today, glsts at 50 cents per package, under the guarantee of the proprietors that they con- tain absolutely no cocalne (found in so many catarrh cures), no oplum (so common in cheap cough cures), nor any harmful drug. They contain simply the wholesome antiseptics necessary to destroy and drive from the system the germs of catarrhal disease, Morris chair in many sty patterns and finishes, oak Mahogany finish Morrls chafra— ‘worth $15.00-on sale o i 975 for . . o Big sale . couches full size, massive head, worth $20 00—on sale tomorrow Combination (not like o P cases t) plano ish, French edge tomor: The People ed plate mirror, ewell arawer. bost work, worth , 320, sale of tomorrow.! On sale tomorrow twenty- bev five couches with the new sanitary construction, Big sale of odd divans in as- pattern plate mirror, sorted coverings, frames of pol- eau tiful ished mahogany fin designs, 1475 Ish, worth $15— sale price Labielt interior Attings, plano 19.50 £ 975 morrow all led cdge’ ¥ wirror, 975 i tomorrow High Chairs in great variety, on 95 sale tomor- row, at..... C 875 Furnitare and Carpet Co. The Great Alteration Sale On account of the great alterutions still going on in our building, we are compelled to move our cloak and suit stock before the 25th of December, and will therefore sell during the next 20 days any article in this department at half and less than half. Allour Laceand Point de Spret Skirts over silk drop lining that were marked to sell $35-840 Ladles’ Monte Carlo Coats—in black and colors, that were marked to sell for 5 98 . $12.60—at........ Monte Carlo Coats that were marked to gell at $15, $17.50, $20, at.8' 98 45 and 50-inch Long Coats with fur reveres and collar, that were marked $22.50 and 9 98 $25.00, at .... All Our High Class Monte Carlos and Long Du Barry Coats, vel- vets, silks, etc., at less than half price. Silk Skirls ~handsome taffeta or peau Jde soie skirts, with drop lining and beautifully fin- ished, that were marked to sell and 300, 1. 10. 98 $19 Fur Scarfs—genuine marten scarfs with six tails, and prime selected skins, ;}{1{".{}?‘,{?..4. 98 45-in. Long Sable Oppossum Scarfs, with two heavy brush tail ends, were marked to sell $15 7.50 Best Quality of Isabella or Sable Fox Scarfs, that were marked to sell at $17.50 and $20.00, at9‘ 98 A New Silk Waist—We are showing the only exclusive Monte Carlo Waist in the city—in black taffeta only, at the low price.of .. .. 5.98 Millinery Monday in our Millinery Department we will place on sale every trimmed hat for prices from $5.00 to $15.00. 2.50. These hats range in This is positively the last sale in the millinery department this season. A complete line of Christmas Angora Caps in all colors at 49¢ and T5c. Our Btreet Hats go at 25¢.

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