Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 26, 1909, Page 6

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THE BEE: OMAHA, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER [ math Falls Prize Winners, Klamath Falls, n - Do "y , [0t contral Caltornia. What Fresno pro |U. P. LANDS GREAT EXRIBITS fuce i+ st - sy e ity | 15§10 &1l | Overland Route Gets Fresno and Kla- :Xr.::v;;; \',:;:;' pennants and two world's DOUGLAS DOUGLAS STREET Wash., is the eenter of most fertile country and will have addi- | TO CORN SHOW |tional fruit and grains of excellent quality | | [E— | Colonization Al'n; MeDonangh s-n,Strcc[ Arab BuyS Displays that Wonm at Yukon- | m . | Red Cross Stamps ORK.S ADVANCE NOTICE |BRINGS BOTH STREET Supporters, Trusses, Crutches, Invalid Chairs, Batteries, Elastic Stockings | Seattle Are Now Enroute | to Oma The Union Pacific 1s golng to have an |Urchin Tenders Ticket in Payment ot Water Bottles, Fountain Syringes, Deformity Braces. l'llh‘l-“l”n" the .V)YIV:;\’I!| h(;; rn'e\rollllon ror US‘ick!"“ to Please Hl' H.J. PENFOLD @ CO. | |&mm i taie iy Wiy Sont of A Great Clearance Sale that took first prize at the Yukon-Seattle exposition and the Klamath Falls exhibit | that aia the same thing for Washingion | George L. McDonough, colonization agent |for the Union Pacifiec, has been quietly arranging these concessions for weeks and ‘T want five of those little red stamps,” sald a tattered street Arab, standing at the | counter of a Farnam street stationer's shop. Ho 1aid a street car ticket down and waited patiently for the ‘tlerk to hand over The Largest lnvalid and Hospital Sopply House---1410-12 Harney Street. Beginning Saturday morning at 8 o'clock. This great sale, coming as it does right in the heart of the season, will be has received word that both are now en- [the stamps. | route to Omaha. | *“That is not legal tender,” the ch-rk'lz--i the talk of Omaha‘ | It required no small effort to sccure gan, but then changed his mind. “What | " — these displays, for there were demands |did you want them for, my little man?"’ v . . f d . { for them elsewhere, but Mr. McDonough he asked. { Watch Frlday evening papers for Advertisement. 1909 NOVEMBER 1909 went after them with genuine Union Pa- lster's slck and I spent all my money cific zeal and landed them. Corn officials are most enthusiastic over both these exhibits. 1 Fresno colleetion SUN MON TUE WED THU FRI sAT r e 2 |to get her a pleture book,” confided the |urehin. “So I want some of those pretty | red things to put on it.” | [ includes the eholce spechnens of raising, | The lad got the stamps, and his lone | 1 7 8 9 Io " lz '3 Japan’s Ship Subsidies. fruit, grain and alfaifa raised in the won- |street car ticket went Into the fund for { BOSTON, ., Nov. 22—To the Editor |[derful San Joaquin valley, California, and |the tuberculosis fight along with the [ subsidies of Japan, on which you comment | FTesno is the geographical center of the other holiday givers. The sale of the Red Zl Zz 23 24 25 26 27 editorially as proot that such nat aig [state of California and it lsmoreover, the Cross stamps for the holiday season shows | ‘j does mnot always increase commerce, is|CeNter, the hub, of the great ralsin, fruit|the general understanding of the purpose l 28 29 30 very misleading In its figures. The com. |2Nd Wheat belts—the metrosolls. in fact—|of the campuign. e enjoys going 1060 Dhé Business the i e eeed | PATI®ON cOmes down only to 1906-1907. Up | s —_— —_— | Have Root Print It. to that time the subsidized Japanese lines same way that a child likes dressing . up in grown-up clothes—it's just as if she had a new toy. Why? You'll find out in a clever article in the December R. ¥. Swoboda—~ertified Accountant. Rinehart, Photographer, 18th & Farnam. Lighting Pixtures, Burgess Granden Co. Heyn, photo, remaved to 16th & Howard. | J. A, Gentleman Co., Undertakers. New o locatlon 1614 Chicago St. Both phones. { Equitable Life—Policles sight drafts at had not yet succeeded In driving Amerlcan 1 ships off the Pacific ocean, all the largest and efficlent carrlers were | still flying the American flag Now all but one of the American steam ers out of Puget sound have succumbed t this unequal compelition, and a comparatiy and Some Things You Want to Know most The American Congress—The Revolution of 1801. ; maturity. H. D. Neely,-manager, Omaha, |latement of the usefulness of Japanes Good Coal il Coal ~= Large Nut, |Subsidies to Japanese commerce would| . oatt : ) " . s o " H L] e O e S T e iteant o, o O |1, MR revelutin accompahed on 1ol by tho federaist parey ana_ e Housekeeping \ BOVIAgS Asobuilly 45 tha Mebranka: Sav.| Orient-Ban Frascists loe, Severa) 1t arch 4, 1301, when Thomas Jefferson was ast made up of that exclusive aristoc | ng 3 ka B inaugurated president of the United Stat: racy which laid the foundations of the Magazine : iugs and Loan Ass'n. earn § per cent per |fast American steamers are stil running. |y o republican majority in congr to great American republic. The congress | | ahgum, Eredited seml-anhuslly. Oue dollar|It should be. understood —that —Amerioan | guppart him, was in fact the beginning of met for the fist time at Washington. The| ( ) starts an account. 1608 Farnam St. freight shippers and American and Euro- | American political institutions as we know National Iptelligencer was established in | - Visitors' Day &% Soclal Bettlemen—The|Pean passcngers prefer American ships, |them now. Before that time the constitu- the new capital eity by Samuel Harrison | The s lrlt of chrlstmas Litde Girly' Kindergarten housckeeping |and the American management of a steam- [ tion was heid in light esteem, the unlon Smith, a friend and supporter of Jefferson class of the Soclal Settlement will have |ship line is unquestionably more exact, ef- [ was only an experiment, many conserv- Jefferson was vice-president and from his 3 . . st B : @ visitors' day next Monday between §|ficlent and economical than foreign man- |atives still hoped for a monarchy, the re- chalr in the senate chamber he directed is in every article in this issue. Other exceptional features are: und 5 o'elock. xnx.-m.-qum San Francisco line, for ex- [ publican form of government was not his campaign for the presidency. Puneral of Fred L. Balrd—The funerallample, belng run by an American naval [firmly established. Already the two Jefferson had inspired the Kentucky and of Fred L. u.fr‘.]‘, whose death occurred [ officer, a gentleman of marked force and |schools of interpretation of the constitu- Virginia resolutions of 1788 and the right “The Healin Miracles” Holiday Fun Tuesday of Intestinal trouble at Twenty-| executive ability, comparable with one of | tion had challenged each other to combat, of congress to enact laws against the first and Howard streets, will be hela(our great rallroad men. But for these|but the division had not yet become lv\'m ot m; states fv\:zj q\lel’:tumvd, In 179 Eight superb Photggraphs posed by ]olly new parties, games, stunts, etc., I'riday atterncon, with Interment in Mount | Natural advantages, which Japanese sub- | Keokraphicai. wh Su0nd. Bet. of . Heatuxiy resalutions. = i i Hope cemetery. Baird, who was 24 years |sldles have only slowly overcome, the| Thus far the entire political machinery those not written by Jetferson, boldly Walter Hampden, the actor for winter evenings of age, is survived by infant child. Charged With Robbing Man in Her Room Helen Walls Is a prisoner at the elty jail, charged with robbing M. Greenfield at her room, 208 North Hleventh street Wednesday night, of $%0. Greentield, who Is SOpPINg av the Bt. James hotel, will ap- pear in court Friday morning to offer his testimony. ~ Appeal for Train Robbers—Arrange- ments have been completed by J. M. Mao- FFarland and H. B. Fleharty for the con- victed train robbers to carry the case to the United States circult court of appeals. Both uttorneys profess to feel confident that their bill of exceptions, based upon the insutficioney of evidence,” will result 1 & reversal of the case for at least three of their clients. , Two Men Go to Penitensiary—Willard K tockwood and Nels Jensen, who pleaded ulity t Geyrt to robbing a pawn shop 8 {Mber’ B, were taken to the tate perientiary Thureday morning to be- thelr thrie and one-half year term. ihig men were In custody of Deputy Sherift stichard Flanigan, They ate their Thanks- - giwung dlpner behind the stone walls ‘of Uie Laneaster institution, Remedies for Disease. proclaimed the right of nullification, after- his wife and an wards undertaken by New England In 1505, | by South Carolina In 18 and forever de- | stroyed by the great civil war. Speaker Sedgwick belleved it to be his duty to save the nation such outrageous radicalism. The Natlonal Intelligencer | reported, without comment, the fact that | the speaker had made an error in an- nouncing the vote on a question of ad- journment, and had been corrected by a | recount. For that heinous offense the | editor, Mr. Smith, was barred from the house and refussed admittance to the gal- lcries. The speaker said to him. “In my | opinion your conduct has had no other object than to disgrace me and the govern- ment. The object of my order was to| prevent you from giving any further state- | ments of the procedings of the house. | You must not discuss any pending busi- ness and must make no report of a proceeding until the fpuse has finally passed upon it " house divided equally on a motion' to, readmit Smith to the gallerles and the , speaker cast the deciding vote rgainst it. { Jefferson and Burr each received | seventy-three electoral votes for president, dams sixty-fiye, Pinckney sixty-four and Jay one. The voters intended to choose | Jetferson for president and Burr for vice American flag would long since have been swept completely off the Pacific ocean. The United States has never tried subsidies. It has tried mall contracts, and the practical results wherever American steamship lines run are a splendid vindica- tion of that policy. There are strong mail lines under the American flag from Atlantic ports to the West Indles and Mexico. Wherever they go American trade overtops European trade, and s growing in far greater proportion. The principal American West India line, which began with three or four small | 8hips, now has more than a dozen fine, great, American-bullt steamers—so that the traveler in West Indlan ports frequently sees his country's fiag floating, as it ought, at the staffs of the best vessels In those waters, Mail contracts have done this. The bill before Congress—a mail and not a subsidy | bill—proposes to_ extend. this policy to| South America and across the Ocean. If your people of Nebraska saw the shipping question face to face, as we of the seacoast it, President Taft would be as heartily sustained in his ocean mall policy by the representatives of your own and neighboring states as he Is by the representatives of Maine or Massachusctts or Californik or Washington, had been in the hands of a certaln aris- tocracy based on birth, wea'th and political traditions. Every state had its political tamilies and cl In the highest so- clety, which controlled the opinions of the respective partiss or factions. There was no such thing as a leader sprung from among the people. One wing of the arlstocracy became more and more impatient with the radicalism of the people, more and more disgusted with France and the French sympathizers, more and more Inclined to return to a love of England and a reverence for English ini- stitutions. At the head of this faction was John Adams, who became president in 1797. Another faction of this aristocracy be- lievad firmly In the future of the country, hoped to bulld up its industries, establish its credit and make a great American na- tion out uf the thirteen states which wer loosely strung together “as a rope of sand.” This section hoped to lead the péople in politienl activlty, rather than to' permit the people to lead them. At the head of this wing stood the great constructive statesman, Alexander Hamilton. Yet a third section of the aristocracy was aflame with self-lmmoating passion for the masses. Aristocrats soclally ‘and financially, these men denounced the rule of the upper classes and demanded that all “A Forbidden Christmas ” A fascinating story of love-making in the old Puritan days Get It Today—15 Cents—All News Stands THE PHELPS PUBLISHING CO., NEW.YORF N, Y- Homemade Candy Recipes and directions for the best ever made—by Catherine Owen several Springfield, Massachusetts Pay-as-you-enter Cars sec In view of the fact that this Company will place Pay-As-You-Enter cars on the Farnam line within a few days, we want to say a few words to passengers on the subject. ' g Pay-As-You-Enter cars differ from other cars in that the passenger Nature pownr of government be vested In the President, but under the old rule of vot- | nvakity Ga it < on the rear platform as he enters the car, Nature provides ‘Hhore effedtive remedies WINTHROP L. MARVIN, |popular majority. “Equal rights for all, Ing for two candidutes, the highest to be pay -'h} fare to the LO"d.“dm' th ol s S e bon o] { the roote apd herbs of the field than | Former Secretary, Merchant Marine Com- |special privieges for none was their president and the second vice president, | obtaining at the same time a transfer, if one is desired; also in the fac 1\ ‘ were ever produced from drugs. | mission. rallying cry. Young swells of the rich the republican candidates were tied. The that there are two separate doors at the rear of the car, one for the Thirty wears ago' Lydia BE.' Pinkham of e S ——— families dressed themselves In French tie vote cast the electlon in the house. | . Lynn, Mass., discovered and gave to the [ . No Case on Record. fashion, aped the manners of the revolu- The choice being limited by the constitu- entrance of passengers and one for the exit, and that the door at the front v.omen of the World & remedy made from | 17" I8 RO case on recorc of a coush or|(jon and haled each other as “Citizen, €0ld resulting in pneumonta or consumption tion to the two highest names on the llux.; end of the car is used as an exit only. | roots ®nd herbs, which has proved more 5 # abolishing the aristocratic title of “MIster.” the federallst majority in the house Was 3 el i ; efflcacious In- curlg women's diseases | Sy ‘;:‘:}R;"‘“x"x’;"y("‘u“r"m'fi:; o poeen | Older men of the same families WorshipDed forced to choose between two radical re- The advantages of this type of car are: s i than any other medlclne the World has ever | un“yiur cold guickly. Refase any oo ":’: :‘:'“M“l"“)‘-“l“h';:-fl ’f\m“";“":‘ :")‘““x':'.":o publican candidates. Jeftersoiwas feared | First: That the conductor is on the rear platform at all times in a krown, and today Lydla E. PInkham's | gunuine Foley's Honey and Tar fh o o was to the The Age ot Reasc the more, and a conspiracy to elect Burr | i : R4 . : Vegetable Compound fs looked upon every- | buckape. Containg wy wasin and b sory | head of this branch of the aristocracy Was yuy conagoted, with Sedswick as one of | position to see that the step is clear b.efom he gives the signal to start Wwhero as the standard remedy for moman's land sure. Sold by &Il druggists- o, @ by Hamiton ana '8 1eaders. The house went Into contin: | the car, thus insuring passengers against accident; s, e Friside : uous session to ballot for president. Eight | S g Y ssity of the conductor pushing his way MOVEMENTS OF OUEAN STEAMSHrps.|Adame, firmly and sincerely believed that [0 SCwiom 1o BIEEE for Presiqents Tehe Second: Avoiding tl.le necessity K v I g y ( Boyer Poultry Show, i~ ghmved Salied, Jetteraon and his republicans Would 'Wiwsk " by s s’ vwevo “Blisix, “thefe Bathg an eved through a crowded car, jostling passengers in doing so; q. y P NEW Al ent, estroy liglc Lol 3 . Ps . . BN e A ALY fi"‘;"“‘""{ffi""fl:‘ TORE e e e s mrie: division in the delegations from Vermont | Third: The ecars load and unload simultaniously, thereby avoiding fifth anpual oxh of the Royer Vallay 4 soston e ekl e e tooby and Maryland. The speaker tried many b s y Pouliry acgoclation will bo held at Dun- | ROTTERDAN... Rissia the torror had~becn In France, The repub- (ot BEIVERE IS SPeaker tried many the usual delay at busy corners. ngh, Deapcbabcli-Kh e Braiima e the | CIVERRGSI 1) Moo, oo Piiosind L |lloans were as firmly oonvinoed Wt the biyiisee, and to throw ihe advantags o Fourth: Avoiding the possibility of a second demand for fare, inas- sssoclation are bpen for competliion 1o the | SOUTHAMPTON Il Adriatie federalists contemplated the overthrowing g0 “ 0 0 FUEE EIC D republicsn o 5 1 theve can be st £ ] warld | squrinairrox. | iz K. P Cocatie. | of the republic and the establishment of a b7 ML WIAOUL avil One republicin much as passengers pay when they enter, and there can be no question o ) NPPSEATTAROREO SO SN PR 1 P . | Monazchy. :p“‘l:" party belleving that ° (he house three miles through a heavy their having paid. of the republic depended upon its sue- : Rl 4 : . » coss. the omtle raged fioroely. AWhen SPOW Storm, but ho did not falter. Finally, | The Pay-As-You-Enter system has been put in sueccessful operation bR, James A. Bayard of Delaware, founder of i A o e 9 A v Washington left the preaidency the fiood "¢ "0 (00T B 2 CRATE (OHA0CY of in New York, Chicago, St. Louis and other large cities of the country, and of angry political passions so long re. O ETC FOTIEL RETE, AUEEAed o, P & il strained by his majestic personality burst ,:,"m,‘ :,[.. l:‘\.. n:xl \flrl“ ln.:mlnj‘l::,.lnlmr i is well liked wherever introduced. forth. The federallsts had possession of 5 . ; We ask the public to co-operate with us in having their fare ready before they board the cars. Omaha & Council Bluffs After it had become appa: that the republicans would contrel the next admin- istratign, President Adais resolved to save the urfon it he could. The Alien and Se- dition laws were to explre by limitation with the Adams administration. But Adams | had recourse to his power of appointment. A new judicial was paseed increasing the federal judiclary and Adams appointed | eng congress by & narrow margin, and the split between Adams and Hamilton early mani- tested itself. Jefferson was the acknowl- edged leader of the republicans, and Burr was prominent only as a supporter of the great Virginian, The republicans did not sympathize with attitude of the admipistration toward the . France and refused to vote for the equip- ;o0 pyt strong federalists to the bench. $ Lenox Soap is Good Ualue ment to prosecute & War, The republican Tocn he nemed Jonn Marenats tr e treet ariwa (o) — | s sympathized with France, and many ;. 0i0e of the supreme court, thereby as. L4 | opposition papers were conducted by £0r- suring the control of the final supreme | THAT IS THE POINT we wish to emphasize— [eloners. Whereupon the Allen act WAS youor (o the conservatives. Marshall sat g passed, giving the president the right 0 on ' (ne bench for thirty-four years and [ that Lenox Soap is worth what it costs. e e ewaly Practically St wrought mightily. He found the constitu- 7 ! nis was followed by Sedition I IT WILL DO ANYTHING that more expensive Act, which prencribed. severa penaities for Lo i UBIMerpreted documont which mIN Ty ans | SOME INGENIOUS BOYS TAKE |owners. Several ownors nave mimses oot | scaps will do; and, at the same time, it costs so |uttering or publishing lbels upon the 'yt OIEE M :4.1,-“ o 1o I’"rm'h :m ear to ! catn, ¢ | UNDUE LIBERTY WITH AUTOS ::‘:f':"f";‘g"::"_'!'”“:"" l’:“‘""u:.':" _':""rl"vil'hl-: ot i little thet you cen use it freely without feeling |sovernment, the president, or offioers In pyng ang llumined by the light of his He Seeks Police! — [ton was started to fina qut ‘who tne L1 |authority. This gave the federal courts yo..i..iniiieo Study Electricity at the Expense of |piy $yi- that you are wasteful or extravagant. Jurisaleth ARk e TR a ’ " |prits were. Boys called at one of the large ronght e g B el S&%e8, 814 when congress mot in 10L, thers was 8| the Deglers in the Busy |#arages Wednesday and asked for soms ¥ BUY A CANE. Compare it with the scep you are ';_::‘ht‘:h’r‘:l‘"n““m:I;“"f': :“:‘“':: ""' ‘:'";‘D"’P new leglslative ers. The aristocrats were | Charles Wandles Staggers Into Sta- Carts. {ola storage batteries which had been east } now using—with any soap you have ever used. the law with rigor, and the whole country So" people #ere in & majority in | tion and Drops at Door of aside. Inquiry proved these boys had been | ; grinsd o iajority they have ever lice 8 | The American boy is surely one who |taking the eleciric light bulbs and then, MAHKE ALLOWANCE for the difference in price “:;n:;',"""“: ,‘2:," . ‘:‘::f“;l "‘;;“,‘:\:mufl "; The aristocrats were | Police Surgeon. |strives after knowledge. In Omaha some [bY &ttaching these old storage batterios g hew Lyon, & republican member of (, hold (he presidency for many years boys are doing it entirely at the expense | Which they had fastened together, the. i and size and you will find, as tens of thousands congress from Vermont, was Imprisoned uuiii the advent of Jagkecn, but e ne| Charles Wandles, man apparently of other people. £ R | had & eomplete elcctric light plant. o 4 of houseKeepers have done, that Lenox Soap at for Ipubl:lsh :x ‘n{vouer njrcuml‘u( POt dl- gresy was no longer theirs. The federalist | about 3 years of age, st red into !he‘ A scheme has been discovered whereby | A8 fectly, but by inference, President Adams party naq received its moital wound | police station at 10 o'clock Thursday some boys are learning about electriclty at| Bee Want Ads Are the B 1sine } #Rpeiee, \s-Ragies 1R anrather sosp. |of bpsscssing “an unbounded thirst foi fi had r:..fmm hed to the :,.:u..“n: 'n..Af:‘ :',u'm\ g and fell prone in front of the|the expense of the wutomobile dealers y--,m | Boosters. cadbe oo o d i ridieulous pomp, foolish adulation and sel- oia) \wicaom Hamilton ¢ it had as- |police surgeon’s door. Dr. Harris found ( 2 f Lenox Joap'duStfits the ha”d :‘:‘g:x‘n::. - :;y:;x v\'m:n u:m n;-h:.;\: .;n sured to the future constitutionsl wisdom |the man to have n.un! trouble. It was | R e - e = l’ FRIEYe . posasssed of such’ e r e of Marshall It had failed to | thought he would die, but prompt atten-| E ‘would mot be his humble advocate gestroy the power of democracy. The |tion was given aud it was Announced m-r‘MAKES KIDNEYS ACT FIN ENDING 0 Rather mild, as things have gone since good it did lived after it, its ovil was | he might live. Wandles was then taken to | y - that day, but it was enough o put. Lyon buried with its bones St. Joseph's hospital LAME BACK AND BLADDER MISERY i |!n Jall for four months. He was reelected Tne new congress chose Nathanicl Ma-| A statement was found in his pocket to | Several doses will regulate your out- World. which will effest no thorough and ‘: Loz from jail, and “F Went 0 con of North Carolina to be speaker and | the effect he had been a patient at St, of-order Kidneys and make | prompt & cure aw a fifty-cent treatment ¥ entucky where he was more certain of ymmediately set itseif to do the will of its | Joseph's hospital, under the care of Dr. " |of Pape's Diuretic, which any drugglst ! & big republican majority. master in the White House. From tha: |B. M. Riley from November 11 to 17. There you feel fine. can supply. { The republicans, of course, attacked the day until this the people, the congress and | was a ticket from Omaha to Leavenworth, | A real surprise awaits every -ufler»r‘ It 18 needless to feel mikerable @na d Sedition act as unconstitutional and as an ¢he preside by common consent, have|Kan, in his pocket. purchased on the |from kidney or bladder trouble who takes | worrled, because this unusual prepara- }‘ abridgement of the rights of free speech reused to keep parate the legislative and | day he entered the hospital | several doses of Pape's Diuretie. Misery | tlon goes at once to the cut-of-order kid- [ » 804 & Dree prems. The federalists declared . ocuiive branches of the government. Jef. in the back, sides or loins, sick headache, | neys and urinary system, distributing iis 2 |t was neceasary to prevent repubiican g P ol - Florida Slecping Car Through from | nervousness, rheumatism pains, heart pal- | cleansing, heeling and strengthening in mewspapers from attacking the policy of oo WA% the first president to take an Chicago. | pitations, dizsiness, inflamed or swollen | fluence directly upon the urgans and the government, as it was apparent that 2C'iV¢ and controlling hand in the shaping Every day over Pennsylvania Short Line | evelids, lack of energy and all symptoms | glands affected, and completes the cure republican sugsess would destroy not only Of leSisiative policles. ~Fortunately hel, . "cionngii and L. & N. Leaves Chir|of out-of-order kidneys stmply vanish before you realize it the government, but religion, property W& backed sympathetic congresses ) oy, 5.5 p. m., arrives Knoxville 4:81 p. m.| Uncontroliable urination (especislly at| Your physiclan, pharmacist, bgnker or ‘and oiher workmmasutnd ot peiess lowit then senally und everthing else worth while. Jefferson Which rejolced to do his bidding. But,ijante 10 p. m., Jacksquville 8:6 s. m. |night), amarting, offensive and m-rulnrad‘-ny mercantile agency will tell you that ; prevail elsewhere. was “an athelst in religlon and a fanatic the precedent was then established which | seqiy in dining car. Return service | water and other bladder misery ends Pape, Thompson & Pape, of Cincinnati, s o 2l ROOT. INMATID in politics.” His followers were cobins, has led to many b conflicts botween | hrough from Jacksonville to Chicago over| The moment you suspect kidney or uri- | & large and responsible medicine concern, 1210-1212 Howard St. Phone D. 1604 Th words “populisi” and soclalis had the o ess and the White House | same rou For further Information ad-| nary disorder, or feel any rheumatism, | thoroughly worthy of your confidence been invented in those early day. By Frederic J. Maskin. |@ress W. H. Rowland, Traveling Passenger | bogin taking this harmless medicine, with | Aoccept only Pape's Diuretic—f{ifty-cent [Fheodore Sedgwick was cecled wpepker Tomormow—The Ameriosn Congress— |Agent, Room A3 Board of Trade BIdg., |the knowledge that there is no other rem- | treatment—any drug tore. anywhere in of the house, in the last cougress con- ghe Fight on the Bank | omans edy, &t any price, made wnywhere in the | the world.—Adv. )

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