Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 14, 1903, Page 12

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: PALMER'S SUN GOES DOWY Brilliant Oareer of Former Omahan Comes to Budden Olosing CREDITORS ATTACH FINE SHOW HORSES Owes One Kansas City Haberdasher Three Handred Dol for Neck- tles and Has Many Other Unnettled Bills. George E. Palmer, well known as a wealthy horee exhibitor and soclety man in Omaha, Denver, Kansas City and other western citles, has disappeared. Creditors have already attached much of the stock and other property on the Wornall farm near Kansas City, which Palmer leased two years ago and converted Into a luxurious country place. He was known best by his exbibitions and appearances at horse shows, where he invariably cut a wide ewath with the ald of fine clothing, blooded and fearless driving. Palmer began his career in Omaha about ten years ago as a clerk in a packing houso at South Omaha. He is now only 31 years old, but his rise was a rapid one, and he spent much money on the ascent, most of the cash belng acquired through a marriago with a rich widow of Denver named Mrs Salle. Palmer is well remembered in Omaba, and it was only in 1500 that he made his advantageous match, gave up a good position as salesman for Swift and Company and changed his residence from this city. Engaged to Omaha Woman. While here he cut the same kind of figure a8 he did in Denver and Kansas City, but on a smaller scale. Before going with Swift's he worked for the Cudahys and rose rapldly ip the service. Without much effort his handsome appearance and genial man- ners made him a favorite, not exactly in soclety, but with people who had money and who followed more or less of a pace. Before leaving here he bécame engaged to & young woman who stands high in general | estimation. Her friends did not favor the engagement. One day Palmer wert out to Colorado and not long afterward a message reached the Omaha girl that her flancee had married Mrs. Salle. The woman took the matter much to heart and contemplated bringing a suit for breach of promise, but the matter was dropped. Mrs. Salle’s first husband had acquired various mining properties near Cripple ‘Creek and Idaho Springs which were esti- mated to be worth from $40,000 to $2,000,000. Palmer became the manager of his wite's wealth and Wi money. The couple came to Omaha in the summer of 1900, shortly after they were married, and stayed a while at the Millard hotel. As Manager of Mine. The owners of the Lord Byron mine at Tdaho Springs, who are Omaha men, made him the manager of the property, but he did not prove a success and was relieved a few months later. Two years ago Palmer and his wite went to Kansas City and he leased the Wornall farm and branched out in the fancy horse business, acquiring many valuable animals which won prizes at various exhibitions. He jolned the Kansas City Driving club and other organizations and posed as a wealthy mine owner. Mrs. Salle died suddenly about a year ago and was burled in Denver, where her parents live. Some of the show horses that have been | levied on by creditors are Parader, Creigh- ton, Timber Topper, MacDonald, Melan- choly, Mose and Cephas, all prize winners. R. H. Willlams, a Kansas City grocer, secured an attachment to cover a loan of $3,000 made last summer; a well known Kansas City horseman replevined more than $1,000 worth of property, while the C. W. Kimball vehicle firm of Chicago levied on the property for a $1,100 debt. Tt is said that Palmer owes one Kansas City furnish- Ing house $300 for meckties. Every bit of his personal property, Including thirty horses and valuable household furnishings, has been attached. OMAHA BOY HELD FOR MURDER Oharge is that He Gave Man “Knock- out” Drops with Fatal Result. A former bell boy in the Murray hotel named Hill, who was wanted here for the theft of 380 from a guest at the hotel, has been arrested In St. Louis on a charge of murder. He is alleged to have given a man “knockout drops” with fatal result. In- fofmation concerning ais arrest has been recelved by Chief Donahue. Hill was wanted in St. Paul, Minneapolis, Detroit, Buffalo and other cities at the time he was arrested in St. Louls. A Mistake. To the average man it seems childish to doctor a cold, and unless it becomes par- tieularly annoying to him little or no atten- tion is given it. Often a cold contracted In the winter 1s allowed to run until the open- ing of spring. This is a grave mistake, as even though the warm weather may bring velief, the system is thereby weakened and rendered susceptible to disease. A cold hould never be neglected, whether it be a hild or an adult who is aficted, as health and often life is risked. A bottle of Cham- berlain's Cough Remedy, costing but a small amount, will bring speedy relief and all dangerous consequences will be avolded, Publish you in The Weekly Bee. Teelphone 23 eri 1 noties animals | Omaha | reputed to be making | | CALL MEMBERS ON THE CARPET | Action of Douglas Delegation is Ex- | posing the Rallrond Tentacles of I the Mercerite Machine, | All the republican members of the Doug- las county delegation in the legislature have been mmoned to return to Omaha for a confere tonight with the political managers whoe claim the credit of having nominated them last fall The immediate subject for discussion is the attitude of these senators and representatives on the bills for equal taxation of railroad prop- erty for city purposes. The delegation from this county et Lincoln was expected to lay up political capital for the Mercer | machine to be used in wresting the mu- | nicipal government from the present ||yi administration in the coming spring cam- paign, but the bosses have discovered that | their indifference to the demands of Omaha taxpayers for legislation that will put an end to rallroad tax-shirking 1s opening the people’s eyes to the fact that the Mercer machine is really a railroad annmex de- vised to give the rallroads control of all the official machinery of this city and | county. How to counteract this sentim | ! without alienating their railroad support s | what the politicians are trying to figure MILLIONAIRE IN FANCY ONLY Uncle Jokn Flanagan's Yellow Journal Reputation Not Sustained by Faocts. MAY BE WORTH TWO THOUSAND DOLLARS Virginian Who is Reported to Be Coming Omaha to Accept “Milllons” Will Be Sadly Disappointed. to The Bee is in receipt of & telegram from a correspondent at Richmond, Va., stating that John Bowles Flasagan of King and Queen county has started to Omaha upon invitation of John Flanagan, colored, of | Omaha, who has promieed to turn over to him property “‘worth millions,” which prop- v was given him (the negro) years ago ¢ a party of western settlers for services | rendered, and title to which he has just had quieted by the courts, The colored man referred to is “Uncle John" Flanagan, resident in a two-room hut with his wife on Thirty-first street at its intersection with the Belt Line tracks— the same “Uncle John" who has been 103 ! out “Our fellows down at Lincoln have simply | got to make a better stand In this ta matter or they will queer us all through sald one of the most active workers in the | anti ranks, “That bad-break made by Hall | in introducing the bill ‘by speclal request’ | | has done us a whole lot of damage. Then, | too, not a single member of the delegation | has yet come out in the open with any ev- | 1sdence of a vigorous fight for Omaha's rights. 1 hear people everywhere saying | that the Douglas delegetion seems to be | able to get whatever it wants; that it put through the postponement of the city elec~ | tion and passed the water works bill with- | out any trouble, and that if they fall down |in the tax matter 1t will be because they | are not in earnest for it. If this proves to | | be the truth we will never hear the end | of 1t. That's what we have called them on | the carpet for. They have already put us | in a hole and they will bave to pull us out again.” [SELLING TOBACCO TO MINORS School Hoard's Attorney Wants William Stein Prosecuted on the Chi Upon the request of Carl Herring, at- torney for the school board, City Prosecutor Thomas has made another complaint against Willlam Stein, tobacco dealer on | Hamilton street. Stein was 'recently ar- rested and charged with selling tobacco to minors, but was released upon the advice of the prosecutor, who held that Stein could not be convicted under the com- plaint. He maintained that Stein's convic- .. years old for elght years past; who has been in the courts ever since time began and in the newspapers almost as long; whose cause was aired in Gothic type and Impossible cuts by Presidential Candidate W. R. Hearst and who has been persuaded by all this notoriety that he must really be what some other people have called him—'"the mil.' lionaire slave.” Flanagan's Attorney Talks. His attorney, C. W. Haller, yesterday fmplied very broadly that if John Bowles Flanagan is coming to Omaha expecting to get “millions” there is a severe jolt of dis- appointment awaiting bim. Mr. Haller sald: “‘Uncle John was a slave down south, and, judging by what he says, was once owned by the father of this John Bowles Flana- gan, now an undertaker at Richmond. Years ago Uncle John worked for E. B. Tay- lor, proprietor of the Omaha Republican, and was given by Taylor in payment of $170 wage account forty acres of swamp land bounded by Thirtieth street on the east, Ames avenue on the north, Sprague on the south and Thirty-third on the west. In the boom days he sold the west twenty acres to E. G. Cochran for $14,000 and spent the money in litigation and otherwise, with- out real benefit to himself. “Of the other or east twenty acres he s0ld part and part was acquired by other | parties by adverse possession, so that there remain thirty lots, title to which was claimed by various parties, including former Governor Boyd. We took these lots into court and last June Judge Dickinson quieted title to them in Uncle John. What Land is Really Worth. tion could only be secured on evidence | proving that he had sold cigarette papers | or cigarettes to minors. Attorney Herring holds differently. He proposes to test the | case, as he considers the evidence against Steln worthy of belng submitted. Stein will be taken into custody. Announcements of the Theaters. Tho Orpheum will give matinee and evening performances today which will close the engagement of the Orpheum Road Show. The bill opening sthe week with a matince tomorrow includes Will | M. Cressey and Blanch Dayne in a new sketch entitled “Bill Biffin’s Baby,” which is sald to be as brimful of wholesome humor and elevating touches of nature any of its predecessors. Another prom- inent feature will be Miss Edith Helena, who has created a sensation With the ex- | traordinary range of her soprano voice, it | being clalmed to extend a note higher than Ellen Beach Ya Others are Zazell and Vernon, comedy horizontal bar experts; Wood and Bates, instrumentalists; the three Livingstons, high-class society | acrobats; Lizzie Wilson, comedienne and the Kinodrome. Just one week from Monday night the Elks' entertainment and’ masquerade ball occurs at tho Ak-Sar-Ben den. Great preparations are being made for it and | the evidences are now that the place will be crowded and that it will be the most brilllant social event of that magnitude | ever held in Omaha. Every Elk has two tickets for sale and almost all of the down town drug stores have them on sale. Mirth, melody and music is the keynote of the performance’ to be given by the famous Black Patt! Troubadours at the Boyd, Sunday matinee and night. Those sweet singers and ehony-colored fun makers of Dixie Land have been recog- nized for years as a high-class standara | attraction and one that has scored a phe. nomenal popular success with theater- goers in all sections of the country. Among the people in its ranks are to be found the most talented of Afro-American sing- ers, dancers and comedlans. Season tickets for the Wagner Teachers' Course at the Unity church now on sale at Sherman & McCounell's drug store. Price, | one dollar. | DIED. ossle, daughter of Captain P. February 13. 2010 Spruce street, at ment In Holy Sepulcher cemetery. BERG—Henry, at 232 Cass street. Funeral nofice later. CONGLETON—Mr. John M., February 13, aged 69 year Funeral Baturday, February 14, from resi- dence, 2113 Maple street PEIIIIIIIIIIIIIIILEIIIL AL L L] GREAT SPECIAL TODAY (SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14.) Store Open Until 10 Tonight FREE! A handsome ornament, as a Valentine, to every purchaser of a full quart bottle of HILLFR'S OLD PRIVATE STOCK. Your cholce of a beautiful Ink Stand, Match Safe, Toothpick Holder, Pipe Rack or Cigar Holder mounted on natural wood and decorated with handsome colored Indian head. (SEE OUR ONLY ONE ORNAMENT TO A CUSTOMER Hiller's Old Private Stoc $1.00 for a Full Quart , bottled wnder our own supervision, A FEW SPECIALS FOR TODAY: Guaranteed PURE, OLD. mellow, 25 e e PORT WINE. per bottle CLARET WINE, per bottle OLD CROW, #1 bottles *‘if it comes from Hiller’s it must be good.” Mail orders solicited. FREE! WINDOWS) Pure Ry | Bros., “They are worth from $200 to $400 each and if they were unencumbered, and if Uncle John would permit them to be sold at those figures, he would be in very good circumstances, but all are encumbered with accumulated taxes amounting to as much as $200 on some of the lots, and he further retards progress by declining to sell at less than $600 and $700 each. In addition, sales have been tied up by the action of the defendants in the above suits, who have appealed to the supreme court for a reversal of the Dickinson decision. “The result of all this is that the courts won't let Uncle John sell; that even if the courts were williug, he wouldn’t sell for what he can get, and, lastly, If he did sell, his net receipts, after paying taxes and all costs of litigation, wouldn't be more than $2,000. That figure shows exactly how near he is to being the ‘millionaire slave' that Mr Hearst's paper called him. It shows, too, what sort of disappointment is in store for Mr. John Bowles Flanagan when he arrives from Richmond. Uncle John has wanted to send for him for some time, but 1 have advised against it, knowing there could be only a disappointment.” ED HOWELL'S INCONSISTENCY City Ofcial Recalls How “Raflroad Joker” Got Into the Omaha Charter. “Consistency thou art a jewel,' repeated | City Comptroller Westberg yesterday. “That quotation is brought to my mind by the oration deliveréd by Ed Howell in sup- port’ of house roll 171 before the First Ward democratic club last night. This | does mot coincide with the action of Mr. Howell In 1897 when he was a state sena- tor from Douglas county. I am told on the best of authority by the man who drew up most of the other portions of the charter that the objectionable clause in section 98, | which house roll 171 seeks to repeal, was placed in the charter by Senator Howell That 1s, he injected these wory ‘Pro- vided, That the tax commissioner shall take the valuation and assessment of railroad property within the city limits from the returns made by the State Board of Equali- zation to the county clerk.’ “At the time I protestcd to Howell and others that the clause was not falr to the people of Omaha, but the senator who fathered it laughed at me and told me that such would not be the case. I remember | these things too distinetly not to contrast them with the declarations made by Mr. Howell Thursday nigh STATISTICS OF DRAUGHT BEER Thirsty Omahans Have the Oppor- tunity to Play in Large Repertoire, Clerk W. I Kierstead of the Board of Fire and Police Commissioners has com- piled a statement showing certain informa tion regarding saloons to which licenses have been granted for 1303. In the re- capitulation the kinds of beer on draught is shown by saloons as follows: Metz 50; Storz, 46; Krug, 42; Schlitz, 40; Anbeuser-Busch, 14; Val Blats, 6; Jetter, 6; Pabst, Lemp, 6; Willow Springs, 5; Schoenhofen, 3; Gettelman, 1. There are thirteen wholesale concerns that retail liquor and sell no beer, making a total of 236. KILL THE DANDRUFF GERM Or Your Hair Will Fall Out Till You Become Bald. Modern science has discovered that dan- druff is caused by a germ that digs up the scalp in scales, as It burrows down to the roots of the hair, where it destroys the bair's vitality, causing falling hair, and, ultimately, baldness. After Prof, Unna, of Hemburg, Germany, discovered the dan- druff germ, all efforts to find a remedy failed until the great laboratory discovery HILLER'S PURE RYE. full qt. MARACHINA CHERRIES ROCK & RYE, 81 bottles . e 1309 FARNAM y Phone 1241 Send for catalogue. | f-‘“wwwwwwwwwzw TP e TIIIEFTITITITIIIIET % was made which resulted in Newbro's Herpicide. It alone of all other hair prep- arations kills the dandruff germ, Without dandruff, bair grows luxuriantly. * the cause, you remove the effect.” i1 Mty 8 The following births and deaths have been reported to the Board of Health for the last twenty-four hours, ending at noon lfi;i?n Births—Phillp Newdel, 1214 Plerce, girl; William Rudnly{ 2629 Sherman a J:ue, girl; Rudolph h 114 North Sixteenth, boy: Victor Beck, 3016 S8eward, boy; Henry Ludi; , 837 South Eighteenth, boy; John F. Dickens, 1470 South Eixteenth. girl Deaths—Josephine K. Mostyn. 2010 Spruc n:,‘u‘:n-lt ll Ahrl 1d. dle&lhl: dwuxa Iem:- rial hospital, home at rd, Kan., ; ~— Bchwalm, Twenty-Ath and Oak. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1903. 1 will buy your choice of near- ly 1,000 chil- dren’s $2 and $2.50 knee pants suits, 1,000 vestees, Norfolks and dou- ble-breasted suits for boys, ages 8 to 16, accumulated odd and ends, strictly all wool materials, before s/ BRANDEIS, TODAY ANOTHER GREAT CUT Overcoats and Siits cutto A Most Remarkable Clothing Sale. Sole Agents Rogers, Peet & Co's. Clothing. 3.90 TO clear away our winter clothing in the shortest possible period we an- nounce for today a special and as- tonishing cut in price. MEN'S SUITS AND OVERCOATS THAT HAVE SOLD EARLIER IN THE SEASON AT $10 AND SOME AT $12.50, GO ON SALE AT $3.90. Overcoats come in short and long styles. They are the highest grades of Washington ker. 90 seys, oxfords, etc. Suits plain and fancy cheviots, o] cassimeres & meltons, at Choice of any $ overcoat or suit inthe house at. ... ODAY you can get unrestricted choice of any suit or overcoat in the house (Rogers, Peet & Co's. makes ez- cluded) for $10. © This includes all our 815, 818, $20 and 325 suits and overcoats. The Sfabrics, the colors and patterns are the most attractive and popular of the year. Every detarl of making is thovoughly reliable. As long asthey last your choice of this array at TEN DOLLARS S RIS Special Announcement On account of the immense increase of business in our children's and boys' clothing department, we are obliged to have more room both for the display and selling in the same. In a short time we will open ON OUR THIRD FLOOR, the finest and most up-to-date children's clothing department in America, In the meantime we will start today A Clearing Sale Of every child’s, boys' and youths' garment In our entire stock. We will make & clean sweep of every- thing at present in our boys' clothing de- partment so as to open up the new depart- ment on the third floor with an absolutely removing to our children's depart- ment on the third floor. Your cholce of these $2.50 and $2.00 values at $1.00. All our 50c and 760 ‘wool knee pants, in our removal sale .. strictly all .29c¢c All our $1.00 and $1.25 finest knee pants, during our 450 e 1 removal sale ... new summer stock —new all through. For tomorrow we will ofer the choice of all our $3.50, $4 and §6 Children’s Knee Pant Suits REEFERS AND OVERCOATS at $1.95 SURPRISE TO COFFEE JOBBERS Price Goes Up Nespite Widely Circu-| lated Reportp of Over- l‘ Production. | Qa There was an_advance in the price of | coftee this week and it 1s said the prico will go still higher. For three months | coffee factors and market news bureaus bave been sending out reports of the large visible supply, it being claimed that there was enough coffee In sight to last for two | years with the crop to be harvested this season. Columns were written to prove that the price must decline to a point below which it had been for many years and many persons supposed to be familiar | with the situation had let stocks decline, expecting to buy at a lower figure. Then came strange news from Brazil. There was a sudden shrinkage of 500.000[ bags in the visible supply. Green coffee dvanced from 15 to 20 points and the roasters of package coffee advanced prices | one-half cent a pound. Other roasters have been compelled to meet the advance on account of the reports from the coffee- producing regions and it is now sald that the market will go higher rather than lower. “It seems,’” sald a local jobber, “that the dealers in coffeo have been made the victims of designing factors. One coffee | report, which s usually correct, told of bear conditions last week and it mow de- velops that the publisher is a buyer for the sugar trust and other coffee roasters. A good many were taken in by the deal and no one knows where the market will go to.” H Very Low Ri To points in Montana, Idaho, Washington, Oregon, British Columbia, Utah and Colo- rado, in effect daily from February 15 to April 30, via Chicago Great Western rail- way. Write to J. P. Elmer, G. P, A, Chi- cago, for full particulars. This Season's ¥lorida Service Via Pennsylvan Lines Leaves Chicago Union Station 8:40 p. m. dally, running vis Louisville, Lexington, Atlanta and Macon to Jacksonville and St. Augustine. Get posted by consulting H. R. Dering, A. G. P. Agt, 248 South Clark St., Chicago, by telegram or letter, POOR ART FOR WINTER TIME Decision of Prosccutor Thomas After| Hurried Peep Into Two Ple- ture Machines. City Prosecutor B. F. Thomas, & modest man more schooled in law than in art, took one hurried peep into two picture machines yesterday and decided what he was go- ing to do to the proprietors of the places wherein they were selzed by the police. | One of the places was 511 South Sixteenth and the other 1312 Farnam, and Charles Cannon and Charles Bridenbecker, the pro- prietors, are to ¢ prosecuted in police court. Mr. Thomas' “jmspection” was a most trying ordeal. Only & sense of his respon- sibility to the com nunity sustained him. When he bad finished he said to the blush- ing policemen who st0od about him: “Gentlemen, this may be art, but it's a| poor art for the winter months. My good- pess, if 1 didn't wear any more clothes than some in those pictures I'd have a cold all the time. I don't believe in encouraging such fashions.” Our Boys' $1.50 Shoes Are belng worn by more Omaha boys than all other kinds of boys' shoes put together—No one ever buys an- other kind after having once worn these—They are made right—from good stock—and consequently give the most wear and the greatest satisfaction. Bring the boys in urday and let us show you what a nice shoe this is. We are having a special sale on misses’ and children's high cut box calf shoes at $1.%, ,$1.3, $1.50—that the regular price is $1.50, §L.75 and $2.2. We are continuing the sale on misses and_children's extra high cut. best grade, box calf shoes at $1.25, §1.35 and egular $1.50, $2.00 and $2.50 shoes. DREXEL SHOE CO. Omaha's Up-to-Date Shoe House 1419 FARNAM STREET. NO POISON Has Ever Been Found in the Enamel of AGATE NICKEL-STEEL Kitchen Utensils The BLUE LABEL Protected by Decision of United States Court Pasted on Every Piece PROVES IT. If substitutes are offered, write us This trade-mark is on every plece of genuine Agate Ware. $01d by First-class Department and House- furnishing Stores. Send for new Booklet. LALANCE & GROSJEAN MFG. CO, HEW YORK BosTON CHICAGO ODAY, Saturday, exhibition a most nary preparations have son to obtain absolutely new flaring flange brim, lar this season. . the late shapes. “Stetson 600 and 76c. the men's hat department. e the latest and snappiest styles. that the market produces. elties is the New Fedora, with its low crown and for Men. First Showing Saturday is our opening day in We will place on exclusive gathering of all Extraordi- been made by us this sea- the best and latest styles Among the latest nove which will be very popu- The new Derbys we show in all Our assortment of ‘‘Stetson hats' this seasou is a wonderfully complete one. Our $3. 50 Stiff Hat” Is equal to any $5 hatshown. Not alone are we sat- isfied to offer you the latest creations, but we guar- antee you an absolute saving of from 50¢ on the cheaper grades to $2 on the better qualities. We welcome inspection. We court criticism. We invite comparisons, and we don’t want any man’s hat money until he is satisfied that we give him more for it than he can get elsewhere. e e — Sale of Boys’ Knee Pants. Saturday morning we will place on special sale in our boys’ department all our small lots of knee pants that sold regularly for 85c, 46c, In order to sell them in one day, we have marked your choice. . . 29C ALBERT EDHOLM, JEWELER, 107 North 16th Street. Opp. P.O. Wateh Inspector for U, P. R. R. Oo. WATCH REPAIRING. ‘When your wateh needs repairing—just give us a trial. Fine adjusted American s Watches, and complicated Split Second Chronoy efully repaired by a watchmaker skilled in high Come now, let us loek your mouth over. Tooth troubles is our business. BAILEY, THE DENTIST 3rd Floor Paxton Block. JEWELERS AND WATCHMAKERS We_have a very complete line Ladies' tham, Hamilton, Howard and other movements of all of a watch or want yours repaired, give ‘We sell on very small margin and can by purchasing anything in the jewelry and Gents' Watches, with Eigin, Wal- grades. 1f you are in need us a call and we guaintee you satisfaction, assure you that we can save you money line from us. P. E. FLODMAN & CO., JEWELERS. s Phone 1574. 1514 Capitol Ave, Not Gummy or Sticky— HOWELL'S ANTI-CHAPPIN Ask your drugglst for it or at our store, Sixteenth and Capitol Avenue. A NEW IDEA oA Tew {BRANRE!S. Visiting Cards Printed While You Wait. 100 Fine Visiting Cards Printed in Script or English Type, With a Handsome Aluminum Card Case for FRIDAY and the 13th and the Day Valentine Day. Talk_sbout the left bind foot of & x 1T et s uck gt ‘sversbody 'don't & e A o Tault of Surs -cause we 470 saiing Fentiny N opiy ‘Sil Omaha; but some of ours T e a0 the. other letlows mus B8 w2 oo "MERE ARE A FEW INTERE g e CoMPALE THEM WITH 80 GALLY NG e GATALOGUES AND REVISED List o Genuiue Peruna, with stamp p $1% Genuine Teruas, with ‘out stamp p B astoris, net hmltation - p ook Plarcers Medical Discovery “ Fovarite Proscription Aol " Taver OB ek %o e Allcock's Flasters. e Wisard Ol Before : 3 2 Whirling Spray Syringe [P Fennyroyal Pilla SCHAEFER'S 5ild™STie. OVEN ALWAYS. a—T47 and 707. and Chicage Sta. .0 The Best Shoes for Boys and Girls the St B $1.50 Our girls' $1.50 shoe is Ju as good value as the We also have a great line of $2 shoes for boys and girls e of a high grade leathe ad put together very strongly but neatly floished and mad. on a stylish and easy last Whatever you want for y girls, we have it and at prices RY SHOE co, 6 00GLASE arly $1.50 the the everybody shoe for boys best in the price; that it ger war and shoe any other shoe boys Business Stimulaters BEE WANT ADS P USSR iTWENTIETH CENTURY FARIEE Makes Most Userul Present.

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