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CURRENT NEWS OF IOWA. ! More Telephone Prospects. COUNCIL - { trom his physician that he was suffering B l l IFF a im.m consumption he shot himselt | MINOR MENTION. Diavis sells drugs Expert watch .epa Bix photos 10 cents For rent, modern house. 719 Sixth avenue, Celebrated Metz beer on tap, Neumayer. Miss Edna Keeline left last evening on a visit to trienas In Chicago. 1§, Leffert, 409 B'y Carveth, 308 B'way. A taflor wanted at C. B, Steam Dye Works, 1013 West Broadway Harvey De Long is confined to his homs with a severe attack of malaria fever Dr, Frank Porte eld of Atlantie, la., was | in the city yesterday cailing on friends, New shipment of wood tor pyrographic | work. C. 1o Alexander & Co., 353 B way Real_estate in all parts of the city for sale. Thomas E. Casady, 265 Pearl street. Before paperini your rooms we want tu show you our clegant 1% designs. C. B Paint, Oll & Glaas Co The Ganymede Wheel club wil! celebrate its tentk anniversadts tonight with an old- fashioned entertalnment and banquet John Jay Frainey will entertain the atu- dents at St. Francis’ acndemy Mon' ay evening with a Shakespeurean lecture-re- cital A case of smallpox at 23) South Eighth street was reported to the Board of H.alta yesterd: \d the premises were promptl; quarantined Dr. T. B. Lacey has taken out a bullding permit for the tion of # two-story ad- diton to the Atkins residence o1 Sixth avenue, to cost $2,00 g For rent—number 726 Sixth avenue, - room house, modern in every way. in first class order. Apply to Leonard Ever- ett, 1§ Pear] stree Electriclan Bradley arrived home yesterday from Grand Rapids, Mich., wher ne attended the meeting of the head cump, | Wooamen of the World Schmidt's clegant new photos, very late shapes and sizes, $1.50, 32 and $2.50 dozen; large sizes, $ $3.50 dozen. - Flrst-class work guaranteed. Sehmidt, £l Broadway For sale, my residence, 26 Twelfth avenue; elght rooms, two closets and hall; well and cistern; frult trees and ghade; lo! 130 feet; two blocks from strest cars. W. | i, Rogers. . The eommittee on publicity of the' Com. | selecting a jury and the taking of evidence merciai club met last night and drafted ths pamphlet to be issued setting forth the ad- | vantages of Council Bluffs as a business ' and raflroad center. | The sult in which James Jacobsen secure 1 & judgment against E. L. Shugart for &, as damages tor Injurfes riceived in an vator accident in the Shugart-geno bu.ld. ing and which was to be taken to the ap- peal court was settled yesterday, Jacobsen | accepting $2.800 in full settiement. At the annual meeting of the Central Jowa Teachers' assoc.atlon at Carroll, March 19 to 21, Superintendent Cliffora of this city will act as leader of the round table in the city superintendent's depa ment. . County Superintendent McManus, will also attend the meeting and take part’| in the program. Otto Baar brought sult for divorce yes- terday from Bophla C. Saar, to w was married in this city November 1 He accuses his wife of treating him cruelly and'inhumanely and alleges that on more | than one occasion she eéssayed to carve him | ‘with a butcher knife. He as! for the cus tody of their two minor children. | Mrs. G, G. Balrd recelved word yesterday | of the déath of her sister, Mrs. Lillie Phil- | lips, at her home in Kidder, Mo., from ap- | pendicitis. Mra. Phillips’ husband died last | week from typhold fever. They leave thres| small children. The death of Mrs. Phil ips | makes the third in the family within a few months, a brother having died recently. County Superintendent McManus held ths |, annual ‘examination of candidates for sec- ond de teachers' certificates at the School for the Deaf yesterday. Under a new regulation of the State Board of Con- trol all persons teaching in any of the sfats Institutions must possess quailfications en- g.fltn. them to second Erade certificates. veral of .the senlor pupils who intend to teach after graduating took the examina- tion in addition to the teachers, N. Y. Plumbing Co., Fel. 250, Night, Fe67. Matters in Federal Court. The second trial of his $40,000 personal injury damage sult aghinst the Unfon Pa- eific raflroad in the federal court has again resulted disastrously for Lawrence Brown. The sealed verdlct returned Thursday even- ing by the jury, when opened by Judge Smith McPherson on convening court yes- terday morning, was found. to be for the defendant. The verdiot was based upon the belef of the jury (hat the accldent was caused partly, at least, by the imperfeot condition of the plank street crossing at the point of the accident, but for which the Unlon Pacific railroad was in no way re- sponsible. The trial of tha sult of Miss Myrtle Kes- ter against the Milwaukee rallway was be- gun yesterday morning. The plaintiff, who is 17 years of age, sues by ber father, E. E. Kester. She asks for $10,000 damages tor injurles received while boarding a train at Astor, Ia., December 2, 1901. It is al- leged that the sudden starting of the train threw the plaintiff onto the platform and from there under the train. Miss Kester's injuries are said to be permanent. W. C. McArthur, clerk of the court, h been appointed commissioper in the settle- ment of the case of L. Abt & Sons against Block & Heyman of Atlantic, Ia. For nt, a well improved forty-acre farm six miles from Coungil Bluffs. Rent only $120. Apply to Leonard Everett, 18 | Gregory, at least, was well known te be | someone else on what they beileved was a | Barker had been led to believe would have | The agitation in favor of the independ | ent telephone companies hae | the movement to organize { company. Attorney James E DEAL IS AIRED @regory Tells How He and Barker Were Worked for Sucker:, another Price Is said | FOOT-RACE | Charles of the company and is said to have several ! Des Motnes men Interested with him in the | Projsct. # 1t 1s understood that the com- ny when formed will seck a franchise in ! | Council Bluffs. The independent company | STAKEHOLDER DISAPPEARS WITH FUNDS | ; cinivea by 1. H. van Brunt, Atiorney | Emet Tinley and other business men of this city 1s also planning to go before the city council agaln with & proposition for a | tranchise. PLAYS HOB WITH REVENUE | | City Amthorities at a Loss to | Chartes Gregory and Willlam Barker of | Wilked 1o Cut Bawh: Size this city related on the witness stand in| the dis.rict court yesterday to a large and | | interested audience the story of how they | were played for suckers and Induced part with nearly $10,000 of their wealth That Two Were Looking For a “Sure Thing” and That the Other Fellow Heat | Them to It. Defense is Know pense BilL “One effect of County Attorney Kill- pack’'s order that the saloons of the vity on an alleged fake foot race at Webb City, | will have to conform with the mulct law Mo., in January of last yeer. They were | so far as the prevision ‘s concerned for the star witnesses for the state In the | closing on Sundd¥s and at 10 o'clock at | trial of Leon Lozler, a professional sprinter, | | and Ed Moore, also a resident of Council | Bluffs, who stand charged with conspiring | to defraud Gregory and Barker out of thel: | money. John Grimm, known to the sport- | ing fraternity as “Cash” Grimm, another | professional foot racer, wae indlcted with | Lozler and Moore, bu: his sprinting pro- clivities have up to date enabled him to night on week daye, will be that the city council will be unable to consider the re- departments that their pay be raised,” sald Mayor Morgan on arriving home yesterday norning from Grand Rapids, Mich. The mayor said that before he left the city last week County Attorney Killpack called on him and notified him of his in- keep clear of the ofcers and cvade ar-!tention to enforce the mulct law £o far as rest | the closing of saloons on Sundays and at The witnesses sworn for the state ara 10 o'clock on week nights was concerned. Frank Harris, J. W. Scott, Charles Gregory, ' When the mayor explained that such ..: Charles Gregory, jr., Alderman C. H. Huber, | Charles Nicholsan, Willlam Barker and | Charles Morse. The defense stated it would introduce no withesses except the two da- fendants. The morning.was occupled 'n with the city hnances, the county attorne suggested that the city council had right to increase the license imposed on saloon keepers and that by doing this the | saloons which continued in business could commerced after the noon recess. The |practically be made to pay the revenue case has attracted much attention and the | which the municipality would lose by those courtroom was filled with an interested | saloons which would have to quit business audience. * | under the new conditions. To this Mayor Counsel for the defendants in his open- | Morgan said, he refused to ing statement to the jury said he would |did not believe in imposing any extra hard- show that Gregory and ‘Barker were not|ship on the men who would continue in unsophisticated greenhorns; that in fact. business and conform to the order of the county attorney. backer of sporting events and that he would | Immediately on his return Mayor Morgan prove that both Gregory and Barker went ' held a conference with Aldermen Fleming, 10 Wb City with the Intentivn of beating | McDonald and Casper, the members of the finance committee, who are at present working on the appropriation ordinance, which has to be passed at the first meeting of the city council in April. That a material reduction will have to be made in next year's appropriation the | been the oase, counsel fof the dJefendants | committee realizes, but where to make tho 1014 fhe jury that the day of the race was{cut {s puzzling the aldermen. Both the | snowy and the track was slushy. Lozier, fire and police departments have been run | a veteran in the business, had the fore-|as economically as possible and the com- sight o take the precaution to grease his| mittee fails to see where any further de- ¥ “sure thing! but that instead they were the ones wh8 got the worst of the deal. Explaining how it was that Lozier won the race instead of Grimw, as Gregory and resuited in | local | to be the moving spirit in the organization | quest of the members of the fire and police | move would in all piobability work havoc | the lsten, as he | running shoes, which precaution Grimm fafled to take, and the fallure on h's part | lost him the race. Grimm's shoes hot | “balled” with the snow, while Lozler's, | owing to their being greased, did not. | Gregory Tells Story. | Charles Gregory, who in private lite fol- lows the occupation of a blacksmith and has made considerable money at his trade, was the first witness introduced by the #fate. His story of how he was induged to go to Webb City and part with his| wealth was substantially as follows: “‘One day Lozier,-Moore-and Grimm eame to my blacksmith ‘shop and began talking | about the wealthy men who cemprised the | membership of the Webb City Athletic club and how ready they were at all times 0 play ‘their money on # footrace. Then they told me that a race had been fixed between Lozier and Grimm and that the Webb City men were willing to put thefr money on Lozler. Moore said he had | ‘tried out’ the two men at the Driving | park rud it was a.dead sure thing for ! Grimm, and that Grimm would win ‘even it Lozier had to walk.' They wanted me to g0 to Webb City with them; Sut I de- clfned, telling them I would: not bet on a tootrace, and espectally on one in which Lozier was mixed up, as I knew him. Then they told me that they did not want me to bet my own money, but that they needed some responsible pdrson, one of financial standing, to represent them and bet the money they could get to put on the race. Barker happened to come into. the shop and I introduced him. Well, to make a long story short,” dfter several 'Inter- views Barker and I consented to go. . We went and were met at the depot at Webb City by Lozler, who told ‘us to go on to the next town and stop at the hotel there. We did as directed, and the next morning went back to Webb City by the etreet car. Well, we were given money to bet and the Webb City fellows, who were backing Lo- zler, kept doubling thelr bets, until sud- denly jt was sald that the stakeholder was short and had to make a showing. I had about 2,600 with me and Barker had some- Pearl street, Council Bluffs. Charged with Ro A stranger giving & Fa name of John the Stevenson was arrested yesterday afternoon, charged with yobbjng . J. Sampson, a farmer, in a Broadway saloon. Sampson ‘was badly intoxicated and was taken lnto & back room by Stevenson who, it is al- leged, was proceeding to go through his pocke! en discovered and tirmed over to the pol When searched at the city Jail Stevenson was found with $13,32 in his possession. He claimed that §10 of thia had been given him by Sampson, but this the latter denied. Sampson was locked up on a charge of being drunk. He had nearly $40_on him which Stevenson, it is alleged, was trying to appropriate when digoovered. For rent a well improved farm of 69 acres on the Hazel Dell road, % mile from town. Rent only §3 per acre. Apply to Leonard Bverett, 18 Pearl street, Council Bluffs, Plumbing and heating. Bixby & Son. Real Estate Tranafer: These transfers were fillod yesterday in the abstract. title and loan office of J. W Sauire, 101 Pearl street Mahald Halladay to Christman Young, lots 16 and 17, block 3, Hencock Jchn W. Peregoy and wife to Lura D. Barnard. w% lot 4, block 6, Bay- Ues' 1ot add, q © d. : B, Zarkowsky to L. Cherriss. n feet fot 7, block 1, Wiillams' sub of Mill Tot, W . J. Johnsen t new mwly 270 Mary A, Shoem Frank Morrow, part nelq 11-T4- acres, w d... ok F. J. Day and wite to Frank Morrow, ohneon, nig 5,000 Wiy 8% Nl sely el 144, w 4 0 County Treasurer to W. B. Tarking- ton. lot 17, Evars' 24 Bridge add to Avoc“lc d.. 1 A__C._Christsen and wite to Willlam Q. Blust, lot 6 Henjamin's 34 sub Avoca, w d...... 00 Orie B.' Bibbiis and wife to Tayior Woolsey, lot block 11, Baylis 170 o T R i e omas B. Andresen, 111 acres. in 14 and 37789, w 4 NS Y Bleven transfers, aggregsting 0,505 LEWIS CUTLER MORTICIAN. % Pearl 6. Council Blufts. ‘Phone ¥ thing over $1,000. We were induced by Moore to place this money with the stake- holder on the understanding that it was to be returned to us aftor the race. When the race came off Grimm fell and Lozier won. Then there was a commotign and the men who had backed Lozier eald that they were willing to have the race run again, as they did mot want to take ad- vantage of an accident. “Barker and I returned home to get more quent events made us believe that we had been victims of a blg swindle.” Barker's testimony was much the same as Gregory's, but on cross-examination he sald he went to Webb City simply to oblige Gregory and that he did not bet any money himself. He placed his money with | Gregory. When asked if he had ever gone by the name of Willlam Willard the wit- ne id he might have used that name in some tran tion. Gravel roofing. A. H. Read, 126 Main St. Bether: Nathan Betbe recently pa- roled from the penitentiary at Fort Mad- ison, will be taken back there this morn- ing to complete - his sentence. - The day Bethers returned home he became involve in trouble and was arrested for assaulting |a man. Before Justice Ouren he pleaded | | gullty and pald the- fine assessed against him. His arrest on this charge resulted m his parole belug revoked and he was | taken into custedy by Sheriff Cousins y terday. Bethers was sentenced to one year for the larceny of property of the water works company. When paroled he had less than two monts of his sentence to serve. ns to Pen. Quicker Than C -t James W. Wallace, whom the press dis- patches announce as haying commitied sul- cide at bis home in Seattle, Wash., was o son of Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Wallace of this city. He was mapager of the Lloyd Trans- fer company In Seattle. After leaving lowa | Mr. Wallace went to Tacoma, where he was cashier of the National Bank of Com- merce. Three years ago he moved to deat- tle and acquired a controlling interest n the Lloyd Transfer company. Learniog crease in expenses of these two depart- ments can be made. The streets and alleys tund, for which $6,000 was appropriated last year, will need $5,000 this coming year it the streets are to be kept at all clean. The committee is also confronted with ths fact that this year provision must be made | for the expenses of the city election to be held next March. The running expenses of the city govern- ment amounts to $70,000 a year, half of which is derived from the saloon licenses and police court fines. With the enforce- ment of the mulct law closing provisions, tHe eity authorities expect that from fifteen to twenty saloons will be forced out of business within the uext six moaths. Mayor Morgan, in discussing the situa- tion yesterday, said: “I have done all 1| could to regulate the saloons of this city without playing havoe with the city's rey- | enue. The city is exceptionally free from | crime and little or no trouble has been experienced from the saloons during the last year. They are well conducted. There Are no wine rooms and the objectionable | features which prevailed in the past have been ‘eliminated as far as they possibly can be in any city. If Council Bluffs was an inland city conditions might be different, but gituated as it is in close proximity to Omaha, it has to a great extent to be gov- erned. by the conditions and regulations prevailing across the river." — WRECK ON ILLINOIS CENTRAL Chair Car and Sleeper Leave Track, injuring Several of the H B ® K H ® March 13.—(Spectal Telegram.)—There was a wreck at Pomeroy on' the Illinos Central Thursday night. The | chair car and sleeper on the Chicago lim- | ited on the Sloux City llne left the track and the chair car was overturned, causing a number of slight injuries among the pas. sengers. Two. cars were thrown fifteen feet from the track. Only the fact that the ground where the cars struck was very soft and muddy prevented more serious Injurfes. No one in the sleeper was hurt. The train w: running at the rate of sixty miles an r‘nur when the accident occurred. Among the injured: Miss Ella Watson, Fore Dodge, head cut. Mrs. A. H. Peterson, Fort Dodge, back sprained and bruised. Unidentified woman, Rockford, TiL., head | out. monay to recover what we had lost. We| W. D. Hunt, St. Louls, hand eut and went back to Webb City with $5,000 and | brulsed. the second race resulted much the same ! J. T. Perry, New York, back hurt. as the first did. Lozler won. When we —_— asked for the return of our money the Scimitar and Fes. stukeholder was not to be found. Subse-| IOWA CITY, Ia., March 13.—The Univer- sity of Iowa enjoys the particular distinc- tion of having the only chapter of the fra- ternity of the Scimitar and Fez, an ord:r chartered by Abdul Hamid II, sultan of Turkey, In the United States. The mem- bers of the chapter are eight members of the senior class of the College of Liberal Arts. They appeared In chapel this morn- ing robed in long cloaks and wearing tur- bans. Thelr left cheeks were painted in kreen and gold and bore the scimitar, while on their right cheeks appeared the blood- red fes. In Hands of Recelver, MUSCATINE, 1a, March 13.—Charles Howard, general manager of the Muscatine North & South rallroad, extending from here to Elrick Junction, thirty miles south has ‘been appointed recelver of the prop. erty. The road was bullt two years ago a8 & feeder of the lowa Central. The re. celver, it is said, may extend the road to Burlington, with a view of selling it to the Burlington company. Accused of Rol ery. DES MOINES, March 18.—Tuck and Fred Codner have been arrested at Parker burg for the recent robbery of the postoffice safe and the llinols Central depot at that place. Approximately 31,200 was secured by t{he robbers. Bloodhounds wi taken to the scene and the trall followed by them led to tho Codner home. Hearst Will Attend Basguet. NEWTON, la, March 13.—(Special.)— Editor G. F. Rinehart of the Herald has received & letter from Willlam Randblph Hearst in which the latter shys he will be present in Des Moines Lo attend the Jeffer- w00 banquét tn Des Molnss April & ! | in the REACH PARTIAL AGREEMENT! Miners and Operator: Get Thgether on Scale for One Distr.ot. OTHERS IN PROCESS OF ADJUSTMENT Insurance Companies Bring Suit Break the Anti-Compact Law— Omahn Wln_‘ln Creamery Enterprise. ARt ' (From a ‘Staft'Correspondent.) DES MOINES, March 13.—(Special.)—The joint scale confiniftée of the coal miners and coal oparators reached a decision this | morning on the wage scale for mining coal ' in the First district, fixing it at $1.05 a ton for screen coal. At ‘present the scale calls for 95 cents a ton, 5o that in the first dic- trict the miners get'a raise of 10 cents a ton. This was for &drecn run measure, but the matter of mine run wages was laid over | until next week. -Off all classes' of ‘work- | men other than the miners the same pro- portionate Increase was agreed upon. The | first district comprises the minés in and | around Centerville and Albia in the south- | | to ern part of the state. The scale for the different districts varis slightly and each one is to be agreed upon separately. It is | now evident that the confercnce will con- | tinue during a part of next week. The fol- | lowing arc matters in general that have | been agreed upon: The size of the ton for all the subdis- tricts of district Thirizen shall remain a formerly 2,000 1bs., at the option of the operator as to screen or mine runm, but providing that only such coal as is sold as mine run shall be pald for on that bests, The screens of the different flelds shall remain as last ~year, viz, seventy-two square feet of superficial surface, with no obstructions and sufcient support and not more than twelve feet in length. For elght-foot entry work, $1.72 per yard tor subdistrict No. 1, an Increase of 19 cents; for twelve-foot entry work, an In- crease from $1.20 to $1.35; for fourteen- toot entry work, an increase from $1.15 to $1.30. Room turning and fourteen-foot doorway, each {ncreased from $2 to §2.25. For double shifting entries, increase trom 25 to 28 cents. “Skip” entry work and twenty-seven- foot doorway was left to & special subcom- | mittee. | The price to be pald for machine work in the Mystic and Centerville flelds, for which | the miners askel an increase of 10 cents | and for which the orerators wanted to grant an Increase of bnt 8 cents, was Ifl{[( to a special committee. ¢ Contract Let at Davenport. The State Board of Control has let the | contract for the building work at the State | Soldiers' Orphan home at Davenport to| the Capital City Brick and Pipe company | for $13,000, Tho contract Includes the building of a power plant and boiler house with chimney and the setting of the boil- ers. The other state work on which bids were invited will not be let for several days. Suit to Break = w. The insurapce combine in Towa has com- menced sult to haye declared unconstitu- tional the Towa law relating to combines 4and agrecments among Insurance companies as (o rates and commissions. The suit s brought in the name ot eleven domestic and | forelgn companies to restrain the state | auditor from enforeing the anti-combine law, and it 1s brought in the federal court rather than the state court, though the | Monhey to loan on Real lowest rates; funds on hand Mortgage Investments for sale. Call on or write us if you have money to invest, either in mortgages, bonds or real estate. Real property cared for. Small farm pear city at a bargain. DAY & HESS, House and lot Estate; L.ook for the Coupon Package. { in the penitentiary had it not been for the DAY & HESS, Council Blufis in Counell 4, 1903. Waiter’'s Smile 1f Quaker Oats the order be This Waiter's sure he'll get a fee, And so upon his face we see > Smile that won’t come off. ¢ Kilwaukee Ticket Office. «All the city ticket offices of the railroads entering Omabha, with one exception, are lined on Farnam Street, with the center of gravity heading for 16th and Farnam Streets.””—The Omaha Bee. Naturally! That is the location of the Milwaukee’s new office, and travel is headed toward the Milwaukee. Three fast trains to Chicago every day. They leave the Union' Station at 7.45 a. m.,, 5.45 p. m. and 8.05 p. m. F. A. NASH, ral Western Agent. 1524 Farnam Street, OMAHA. \ Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway. state insurance companies are equally in- terested in it. The companies rely on the dectsion of the federal court it having de- clarcd unconstitutional the Nebraska anti- compact law and for the same reason. Tho insurance companies of the state were never better organized than now for work- ing together in perfect harmony, as the | agents and all others have been formed | into clubs and assocfations all over the state and they are prepared to make a hard | | | | Round Trip Rates fight for the defeat of this law. TO: mii: st o ' 5 WEST AND NORTHWEST The matter of having one day at the state | falr this year set apart as Labor day will | be 1ald before the state federation meeting | at Davenport in May. It is proposed by the state fair people that one day shall be designated as Labor day and that a speclal | effort be made to secure the atiendance of the union labor eclement at the fair. A special program has been arranged and there will be features of Interest t) organ- ized labor. = —— The Union Pacific has extended ter- ritory to which round trip Home- 4 UNION seekers' Excur- sion tickets will be sold as follows FROM MISSOURI RIVER TERMINALS y Kennedy of the State Board of Health assisted in the prosecution of o “Dr.”" G. H. Heath at Boone, an itinerant doctor accused of the practice of medicine without securing a license to practice in the state. The doctor was bound over to | the, grand jury, and falling to give $200 bonds, he was sent to jail | Found His Son in Jail, To many points in Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado, W'yoming, Utah, Montana, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington, ONE FARE PLSS $2.00 FOR ROUND TRIP Tickets on sag March 17, Agr-l 7 and 21, May 5 and g, June 2 and 16, 1903. . City Ticket Offico, 1324 Farnam St. 'PHONE 316. James W. Mead of Sioux Falls, a prosner- | ous Scuth Dakota farmer, was in Des Molnes today in search of his son, Willlam, who disappeared from his home some months ago. The boy was found fn the county fall awalting trial on a charge of burglary, a crime sure to have landed him timely arrival of his father. Among the | indictments of a woek ago was one charg- | ing W. F. Mead with burglarizing a cloak | room at Highland Park collego and of steal- | smmmm————— \ng an overcoat and overshoes. He was ar . rested and placed in jail. Tais morning at the earnest solicitation of his father, Mead LOOD POISON CURED TO STAY CURED FOREVER wccount of its frightful hideousness Blood P dsoning 18 commonly called | (Continued on Ninth Page.) | FARM AND CITY PROPERTY If you want to buy or sell real es (he King of all Discases. 1t may be either hereditary 0.\ contracted. Onee the sye tate, . call .08 . or write us, giving tem afnied with' It e dlscase max manifes: itsel¢ In the form of Scrofula full information. We have the bar fCpera, Rheumati: Pains SUM or Swollén Joints krubtions or stored | f a4 would like to show them 8pots on_the Face or Body little Ulcers, in the Mouth or on the R Fheoat Swollen Tonalls, Faliing Out of Halr or Eyebrows. and fnal o 0. iike Decay of the Flesh and Bones _1f vou have any of those or gin We have customers for property foms, wei BEOWN & BLOOL CURE tmmediately, This Meatmen: i prc { article of tmpurit N every sign and symptom Alsegy\ears comyieiely and | COllflC“ B‘uffs arever. * The blond. the Uesue. the fica. the buned anc Tbe whols hyw'ni are § Cleaneed, pirified and resiored o perfect heal'h. and the patient preparcd anew | e the atties and: pleasurcy of Iifh, HROWN'S BLOOD 'CURE. 3280 " bottle, Bluffs cheap. MADE BY DR. BROV 93 Arch Street Fhilade Drug Co., 10th & Deyse Sta d —— lasts one month Sold uniy by Sherman & MoConneh [ S ————