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« 4 [ THE BEE: { Real Reason for Resigning from State Board Matter of Interest. MY DID PATRICK QUIT?) | C. R. SHERMAN HOPES FOR X'I'; TThinks Now Senator i Ought that o the Sarpy the Speelty Ohjections. County Hoard He to His R. Sherman. the State Board of tutes fof the Blind Omaha member of fitrol of the Insti- and the Deaf and Dumb, when asked If he knew the real Teason why former Senator Patrick Sarpy county resigned the boarq, had little to sa “Senator Patrick's letter of resignation epeaks for ftself,”” sald Mr. Sherman. “He intimates that in his opinion most of the state institutions of ministered under a viclous system. While we may not all go that far, perhaps there is some cause for erfticism of our methods | n_managing institutions such as those charge of the board from which Mr. rick has resigned. “Patriek was a member of the board a wvery short time, a Mttle over two months, 1 think, but he seems to have found some- thing that offended his sense of the fit ness of things. 1 note that he does not criticlse anybody personally, or by name, #0 it 18 ifficult to surmise just what point of administration or particular officlals he has in mind. No one has cver raised any question of the entire fitness of superin- tendent Abbott of the School for the Blind, and I belleve it Is generally admitted that Superintendent rt of the Institute for the Deaf and Dumb is a competent | man “Now that Senator Patrick has cut loose | from his connection with the board, per- haps he will feel free to become specific in his erfticism, since his letter of resigna- | tion says that he wants to be in a posi- tion to express his real sentiments on the entire matter. r from Nebraska are ad- in Pat- | Stev Text of the Letter. Following is the text of the letter sent | to Governor Shallenberger under date by | Mr. Patrick In tendering his resignation: | Dear Governor: In my judgment, the| present system of administering most of our state institutions Is viclous in principle and abhorrently wrong In fact, and that | 1 may feel fres to criticise as I see fit, 1 respectfully request that you accept my resignation as member of the board of| trustees for the sehools for the deaf and blind. To my mind, it 1s a sad reflection upon the Intelligence of the people of this great tate that they have thus long tolerated a condition which imposes upon the un- fortunate and helpless wards of the ktate the supervision of those selected because of their partisan politics or political influ- ence, rather than on account of a peculiar fitness to discharge the duties, and capa- bly meet the responsibilities of their re- #pective trusts. Under present conditions these institutions are but part of the political machine of the party in power and it is but natural that in the selection of the numero polniees preference be given to those w past political service {18 thought worthy of reward at the ex- | pense of the state, whose political Influ- !cnn is desired in future political contests. |, With partisan politios eliminated from v-g- ocontrol of those public institutions, elr management would fall under the Bupervision of men and women of specal ualifications and fitness for the positions, there could be no great incentive for f selection. The permancy of their Pposition would depend upon their efficiency d_the standard of service rendered. Such change (n conditions would undoubtedly Fesult in care and bett 182" tRe nd er treatment ffi.lr , a8 well as In great savin Ia profit the tax ers of the state. i 1 sincerely hope that you will strenuously {urge upon the next legislature the neces. !" of divorcing all state institutions en- tro t v Trom DA PAM R, PATRIGK™ Watohes—FRENZER—16th and Dodge. WHICH IS THE REAL, HEIR? ( 'Wife and Woman Calling Herself a Niece Claim Joseph Lipps’ Insurance. ‘Which. of two women shall recetve $1,000 nsurance is belng fought out before Judge Sears in district court. One clatmant is Mrs. Mary M. Goff, who says she Is a nlece of Joseph Lipps and his intended beneficlary. The other is Mrs. Joseph Lipps, who had not seen Lipps for fifteen years before his death and who says Mrs. Goff s no niece of her late husband and that I never had a niece. re. Goff is plaintiff against the supreme lodge of the Royal Achates and Mrs. Lipps 1s an Intervenor. The Royal Achates which is the defendant, had refused to pay Mrs. Goff on the ground that she is not ® relative, us beneficiaries of the Royal Achates must be Makes Snow-White Suds LENOX SOAP IS YELLOW, butitmalies a snow- white suds—a suds that malies clothe pots and pans as cl as sunshine. TRY IT! THE PRICE IS LOW-—but not too low. IF IT WERE LOWER, couldn’t—be as good as it is. TRY IT! Lenox Soap—Just fits the hand IF¥ YOU SEE IT IN Sale Continues We Are Still Otfering the Mawhinney & Ryan Stock at Faclory Prices Everything goes in this sale excepting American made watches and sterling flatware at phenomenal pri afford to miss this opportunity. W New goods from the new firm arriving daily. RYAN JEWELRY CO. h Successor to Mawh! ’ 15th and Douglas Sts. : was | cculdn’t have anything of value and dishes and OMAHA, FRIDAY, DECEMBER County Hospital |IUDICIAL GRIST 1S (OSTLY Attendant Finds : Money on Paticnt} Al Larson Might Have Kept Four:SPECIm CAl Hundred Dollars, for Owner May | Die, but He Didn't Do It. Expense of Douglas District Court is Greater Than Total Judgments, SE NOW ON TRIAL Twenty-Five Days Required Cane 1,605, st to the County of $1,420, to Try Involving at a « Al Lareon is an humble stienaant at tne poor and enppled. He unfortunate in his time and is w past the meridian of life without any | « of material prosperity Al La is an honest Hugh a man of past 50 year admitted to the county hospital an order from Dr. Swoboda It is the Invariable tendent Elsasser to have all patients ba and clothed in fresh, clean garments admitted and the rule was applied in the | case of this octogenarian. His clothes were particularly worn and solled. It is an-|Ba other custom in such to destroy | Dis such garments by fire outside. McKay was taken to his Larsor. started with his tatt to the lot to burn them 1 guess a man as whose clothing 1s as been is Trial of cases in Aistrict court is costing the county and state more money than the tot udgments recovered. The fact is | astonishing, but the are irrefuta- It has been calculated that the actual | aaily « of running the courts of the 11 The figure Is when man figures custom of Super reached as salary per ar srapher, sala o8 3,000 500 nnum $ 8,200 the district clerk is | reached as follows: The total expense of ftice Is $15,000 a year. This covers seven courts, and to get the figure for one judge there should be a division by 7. This total of $5,200 covers thirty-tive | and Alf oo The figures on ed garments | ana | the poor as he | ragged and dirty | in them,” mused Larson. “But anyway, would see. He found a dollar in one pocket weeks of the year during which trials are “That's all,’ he sald to himself and|held. One thirty-fifth of the figure Is §235. started again for the fire Trials are held five days a week and the But he observed & lump in one part of |dally expense is thus one-fifth of $2%, or the vest. He ripped open the dingy thing|$7. To this $7 must be added $24—32 each and there found 339240 sewed up. for twelvt jurors—making a dally ‘What do you think of this old fellow | pense of §71 having $%240 In his vest?” Larson Now take claimed, running into the superintendent which as if he had enriched himself any McKay is old and so feeble stvan dle. Larson might have kept hid his secret and no one have been the wiser But It wasn't my money and I don't want what isn't mine," said the old attendant as he laid the money down on Superintendent Elsasser's desk. taken approximately twenty days of actual MYSTERY ABOUT DEATH OF |trian. Multiply 411 by twants and tne prod- GUS LINDEN AT HOSPITAL uct s o This is only $245 less than the total sued for, and it Is no safe assumption that a He Was Found Sick on Car, but Did Not Give Hospltal People verdict will be rendered for any amount Information. (gross) he ex- ex- this into consideration with a is before Judge Kennedy, not means the most dilatory judge of the In fact, many people consider him the most energetic. This case s the suit for $1,666 of Hans Christiansen against the Omaha Ice and | cora company. Tt began Novem- {ber 11 and has gone on without intermis- sion of any kind. It will not be concluded until the end of this week and will have case by that he the would may money, ever Storage honest at all. These are the facts. easy to announce. The remedy Is less Mystery surrounds the death at St. Jo- seph's hospital Wednesday night of Gus Linden, a stone quarry employe at Loui ville. All efforts by the hospital to ascer- tain what caused Linden's death have been without result, and a postmortem examina- tion will be necessary. Linden's only in- formation at the hospital was to the ef- | fect that he had sustained a fall. He was very weak and died in less than two hours. Linden was noticed by a passenger on a | street car to be acting queerly, as though sick, and the stranger offered to assist him to a hospital. It was 7 o'clock When Linden was recefved at the institution and at §:46 he was dead. Coroner Heafey notified and en- deavored to find out something concerning Linden from Louisville, but was unsue- cessful. The man sald he was Swedish and his age was apparently about 8 vears. There are three stone quarries at Louls- ville and the coroner is now endeavoring to ascertain at which one Linden was em- ployed and whether or not he met with some injury there. An examination of his body at the morgue showed not a single bruise or abrasion. Had he sustained in- ternal dnjuries it 1s belleved & hemorrhage would have followed, but there is no evi- dence of such action. The time for the inquest has not been set, but it will likely be Friday morning. COLONEL FANNING’'S HEART BROKEN A SECOND TIME Prise Plece of Pavement in City is Being Torn Up in Bullding New Sewer. {Pancino is Now Set at Liberty Falsely Accused and Wrongly Identi- fied, He is Released by the Omaha Police. After being held at the city jail for sev- eral days as a suspect in a murder case, Vincent Pancino, charged with the murder of a man in Monnock, Pa., some five or six years ago and who was positively iden- titled by some of his fellow countrymen here, but exonerated by Angelo Constanzo, a cousin of the murdered man, has been released from custody. Detective Captain Savage says he is convinced the local |Ttallans who identified Pancino were gullty of a mistaken fdentity. Constanzo, the cousin of the man mur- dered {n Pennsylvania, has ben following the murderer, Louis Sacco, ever since the commission of the crime, and he at once informed the police Pandgino was not, the murderer.” It had been {ntended to awalt further identification, but falling to hear from the Monnock authorities, the man was released. SERIOUS STORM IS CAUSE OF TWO DAMAGE SUITS Church is Sued by People Injured by Falling Chimney Blown Down by Wind. Suits filed In county court will recall vividly to mind the great storm of Jan- | uary 28, of this year, when the wind | howled down from the north at eighty miles an hour, when plate glass fronts were blown In, poles knocked down and 50 on. These When Governor Shallenberger signed the 8 o'clock closing law, Colonel Charles E. Fanning's heart not made nearly so sad as it 1s today. Ever since he laid the brick pavement on South Eighteenth street, from Farnam to Leavenworth, he has| enjoyed the satisfaction of having it pointed | sults are filed against out as the best plece of pavement in the | Swedish Methodist Episcopal church of city of Omaha. Today it is shot full of | Omaha. One is by Miss May McNamara holes, because the new court house re-|who asks $1,000, and the other, by the Quired an enlarged sewer, and the county | people with whom she lived, Mr. and Mrs. commissioners are joining with the city | aficnael Sulley, of Nineteenth and Cuming In paying for the same. The city Jumped | gy cots. They seek $00. I:‘hl”‘h' “"’l:l"cs to :""'"“" f"“ NeW BEWer, | y i) be recalled that the wind caught |1t ‘:m ‘"n,e: o u"f'm;’ ‘:" ARSh :'“’ | a brick chimney on the church next door | o relleve the heavy rush of |, ine Sulley home and deposited the water that comes from the west during | 4 : | chimney on the roof of the home. It dia heavy rains, as well as caring for the | not stay on the roof, but went on down {oRY yequrymishty, through and Miss McNamara awoke to find herself enveloped by quilts and blankets of brick and mortar. Both petitions charge that the chimney was made of defective material. Miss Mc- Namara recites that her good looks re- celved permanent injuries through half a dozen scars, which remain on her face. The Sulleys asserts that their furniture was injured and that they themselves re- celved a considerable nervous shock OCCUPATION _ TAX RETURNS City Offiel Expect to Hear from Public Service Corporations in Few Days. “We are looking for returns from the the First| ( 1 egroes| [Sheriff S;ich Two Homes of | Litigation Over Sale of Certain Prop- erty to Colored Man Calls Forth Order from Court. | | Sherift Brailey has possession of the two | residences in Prairie Park which were re- | cently sold by Richard and Ada Moore to | | Mr. and Mrs. James Jewell, a colored palr | The sheriff took order of | | Judge Redick of district coust. Pending | settlement of the litigation the court the will remain in charge of sherift. The charge of the Prairle Trust company that the sale was In the nature of a put job, that Mr. and Mre. Moore had entered into a conspiracy with the colorcd pair stirred up real estate men to degree. Without faith of this sale, dealers anxious that the practi | shall not become establ | It is notorious that in Chicago, New York |and other cities, the “shaking down" of property owners by selling nearby land or residences to negroes, possession by houses the | | 1 has an unusuai | on the good they of oter citt hed here. | reflecting say are has been a regular | | business and one exceedingly hard to be - | Interesting developments in the Moore- | | Prairfe Trust case are promised by at- | torneys for the plaintift. Patriots Forget | National Song| Exclusive Sons and Daughters of Rev- olution Did Not Know Star- Spangled Banner. A droll incident meeting of the Daughters and Sons of the American Revolution at the Rome hotel Tuesday evening showing that even the ultra ex- | clusive patriotic organizations are a trifle | rusty in the rendering of patriotic songs The “Star Spangled Banner,” the gen erally accepted American anthem, was called for. In the attempt to sing it most of the patriots had either forgotten the words or did not know them and a book had to be hunted up containing the words. | Even then there was considerable confu- sion as to the application of the words to the tune with the assistance of the orches- tra. But the singers managed to get through with it In a way. But what a shock it must have been to Francis Scott Key, could he have heard it from the spirit world. Michaelis Aide to General Morton happened at the gumt‘\ state societies of the | | First Lieutenant of Sixteenth Infan- try Will Succeed Lieutenant Troup Miller. Aprointment of First Lisutenant Otho E. Michaells of the Sixteenth infantry at Fort Crook, has been announced as aide- de-camp to Brigadier General Charles Mor- ton, commanding the Department of Mis- | sourl, Lieutenant Michaelis; will succeed | Lieutenant Troup Mlller,iwid has held the | position of aide-de-camp Io.irn(-rll Morton | since the latter has bee} il command of | the department. Lieutenant Miller will leave for his old | home in Georgia December 15, on a two months’ leave of absence, after which he | will join his regiment, the Seventh cavalry, | at Fort Riley | IMPLEMENT MEN'S PROGRAM | What Will Be Done at Mid-West As- sociution’s Anmual Conven- tion in Omaha. | The first annual convention of the Mid West Implement association will be held In | Omaha, December 14, 15 and 16. The con- vention is held during the Corn show, so | that more people might be interested in | attending and that the convention | might be the largest of its kindi ever held In the weste. The meetings will be held in Creighton hall and all retall| dealers, jobbers and manufacturers have | been invited to attend. Program will be: Tuesday, December 14th, 10 a. m. Address of Welcome—Mayor Dahiman Response—W. H. Green, Creighton, Neb. Announcements. Address E President—Willlam Krotter. Report of Secretary—C. Van Zyl | Report of Treasurer—C. A. Wagner | Appointment of Committees—Committee | on nominations by the association; other | committees by the president. ‘Address—Joseph G. Baker, | the National Federation ot Dealers’ assoclations | “Adjournment. No afterndon or evening sessions will be held, giving dealers an opportunity to visit the National Corn exposition, the imple- | ment exhibits, ete. | | “Theater party at the Orpheum, Wednes- | day evening. Get tickets at room 30, Pax- Wednesday, December 15th, 10 A. M. Matters of Mutual Interest to Manufac- turer, Jobber and Retaller—W. 8. Thomas, Springfield, O. | “'Association Membership & Good Asset—A. | | Spooner, Mondamin, Ia. | | president of Implement Repori of committee on membership Announcements. T THE COIN| Omaha public service corporations, as re- | by the occupation 10th of the month,” sald City Comp- Lobeck. “Officials of some of the companies have sent me word that they be able to make up their reports by that time. quired tax ordinance, by troller sparhiles and glitters and woodworlk and bright will ¢ & whistle and A moment's consideration will show that impossible for these cqmpanies to have their reports in by the first of any given month. Books are not made up in a moment, and it is well along In the middle of the following month before any business institution can figure its previous month’s business and get a trial balan ready In the case of the occupation tax, with discount date running to the 10th and as late as the 20th will have to be satis fled with the best report that ean be made | under the circumstances, for the present Later, when we get in shape to check up | closely, and have the new accounting sys- tem put In working form, I have no doubt the ity will get every penny ing to 1t." it is Lenox Soap wouldn't— a we that is com- OFFICER'S BODY SENT EAST OUR AD, IT'S SO. ”». Lieutenant Otto B. Grimm to Sleep in National Cemetery at Arling- ton, Virginia. The body of the late First Otto B. Grimm, Signal sopr States army, has been disinterred at Forest | Lawn cemetery, and wilk be sent to Ar- lington Natlonal cemetery, Virginia, for permanent burial. Lieutenant Grimm was | formerly adjutant and ordnance officer at | Fort Omaha. He dled while on sick leave | of absence in California, about eighteen month ago, and his body was brought to Omaha, and was buried with military hon- ors (n Forest Lawn cemetery. Lieutenant ces. The Christmas shopper cannot e cordially invite your inspection— inney & Ryan Co., Same Location United | |ANYWAY, BOY GO Iy Accusation Against J. A. is Being Investigated by the Police, J. A. Lytle, who rooms 611 North | | Eighteenth street, is held at police head- | | quarters, pending an investigation charges preferred by of | girls who live at the same Lytle, lis aleged, attempted to the girls Into his room, whereat a brother, the polic | were informed, interfered. Ly it al- {leged, gave the boy t to disclose the affeir, but after getting the $20 the youth | made his escape and Lytle was arrested Lytle clalms It is & holdup game, and | that he gave the boy the $20 because the| youth threatened to shoot him. The po- | lice are investigating. | |MANY SUITS ON NEW STREET | | Creighton Asks $22,000 Dumages for | Opening Twenty-Fourth from Burt to Cass. v ytle at into | a’ coup place. foree youn Crelghton university thinks the grading of Twenty-fourth street from Burt to Cass will injure it to the extent of $200 and | has brought suit in district court against | the eity for that sum | r the same cause F. J. Burkley asks | and Louisa M. Leary $1205 me | time ago F. J. Phillipl filed suit for $7.000 and there are other cases to come. | The university's petition recites the fact that the councll committee estimated the damages which would accrue at §700. To Dissol the Union of stomach, liver and kidney troubles afa cure billousness and malaria, take Electrie Bitters. Guaranteed. b0c. For sale h;l Beaton Drug Co. | tor action.” |not been heard from on the quesiion now | his local rival for the democratic gubcrna- It Will YOU Accept This Instant —Enough for several days' trestment. —Enough to prove to you conclusively that it Is the most marvelous remedy for catarrh, the pleasantest, safest, most soothing_and "healing method for the treatmerf of this foul disease —Kondon's Catarrhal Jelly is applied directly on the raw surfaces. —Reduces the thickened membranes, stops abnormal discharges, clears the nasal passages for easy, natural breath- ing.and permits the air to pass through the lungs over healthy surfaces That Is the logical way to cure ca- tarrh—Dr. Kondon's way. —You would not apply salt water to a wound—nor spray it with a violent medi- END us your name on a postal We will mail you a sample Kondon's Catarrhal Je At All Pruggis 25c and 50c Sanitary Tubes, or of FREE Relief ~—The blessed relief that even the free sample will bring you will encourage you to continue its use until a complete cure is effected. —You cannot afford to neglect nasal catarrh even in its earliest stages. It will not get better of Itsell. Neglect of cold in the head opens the way for the attack of the catarrh germs. —Over 10,000,000 packages of this won+ derful remedy have been sold in 16 years. Thousands have testified to its merits in unsolicited letters, Read this: Seattle, Wash. Gentlemen:—1 have had a bad cold and catarrh in the head for months. 1 have Ask Your Physician or Druggist cine which would burn, itch and irritate the raw places; —TFor the same reason you should stop the use of sprays, snuffs, douches and atomizers for catarrh The delicate lining of the nasal passages is raw, in- flamed—sore fronr the action of the ca- tarrh germs. —Kondon's Catarrhal Jelly is soothing, healing, pleasant and cooling. Apply it once and you will have instant relief Continued use, three times a day, will effect a permanent, safe and speedy cdre of Catarrh, Catarrhal Deafness, Hay Fever, Asthma, Cold in the Head, Ca- tarrh of the Stomach, or any complica- tion resulting from chronic nasalcatarrh. Kondon Mig. Co., i |quired to make things go atong #moothly | in the administration of state affairs. If |at the next election tHe people express OPPOSED TO EXTRA SESSI0 | themselves in favor of the initiative and | Omaha Democrats Look Askance at referendum and send legislators to Lincoln in favor of it that will be time enough to Chance for More Trouble. tH6 it up’ 165 RELIOEN BOSS TOM FLYNN TALKS BLUNTLY | Jewelry—FRENZLR-1sth and Dodge. | BOXES OF APPEAL PAPERS | Wagonload of Transcripts in Baum- Bennett Case Goes to the Supreme Court. | City Comptroller Lobeck and City Clerk Bu Great Demand for a Ses- { r Insist There is No | sion Now. A wagonload of boxes filled with papers, No democratit city officlal can be found |books and other exhibits left the office | who Is in favor of an extra session of the Thursday of the clerk of the distriet court. legislature at this time. | It was the appeal of J. E. and D. A. Baum “That bunch ought not to be called to-|to the supreme court in the Baum-Bennett gether any oftener than is absolutely neces- | case. sar said Tom' Fiynn, the big boss of | The bill of exceptions itsslf is 15,000 pages the Dahlman democracy. “If ‘they everjof typewritten matter and the appeal in- | get in session again they wlll probably |cludes all the exhibits in the case, which put Omaha off the map altogether, or|fill four or five large boxes with books annex it to Clontarf precinct |and other printed matter. | City Clerk Butler lets it be known that, | Quantitatively at least the appeal is the | while he favors the Initiative and refer- |jargest in the history of Nebraska. Ac- | endum fn a general way, he is mnot incompanying the boxes were Neil Farren of | favor of a special session. “It's t00 late.” | tne office of the district clerk, a repre- says Mr. Butler, While they N gentative of the Bennett company and a seesion the legislature did not make the representative of Baldrige & DeBard, who | statute book shine with great law are making the appea! for the Baums. the contrary, There is no great d at this time, among the ordinary citizens, | a H for the Initiative and referendum Tln-‘WRONG TURNER IS ARRESTED | next regular will_be enough were session sgon Florence Man Pleked Promptly Let Uncle Sam. and s | Up io by Councllman Brucker Is flatly against the initfative and referendum propos tlon. “What's the use of having clections and picking officers for a municipality if ev: | Frank Turner of Florence was arrested crank who nurses a grievance can get out |by United States officers Wednesday even- with a petition and keep the whole city in |ing charged with being wanted in lowa a turmoil continually?” under an indictment from the northern Mayor Dahlman, being out of town, Towa federal district for selling liquor with- |out a license. | It was evidently a case of mistaken iden- tity owing to the similarity of names with | the man really wantea. Turner gave bond |for his appearance before United States Commissioner Anderson Thursday morning, | and it was conclusively shown that he was | not the man wanted, but that he had been | mistaken for Fred Turner, the man for | whom the Towa warrant was issued. Fred Turner is now In Colorado | Frank Turner was promptly relcased from custody. has confronting Governor Shallenberger, but 1 torial nomination, City Comptroller Lobeck, sald: “‘Personaliy T am in favor of the init'a- tive and referendum, but have gotten along for forty years in Nebraska without and I can see no great need at this time for calling the legislature iIn special ses- sion. Every two years is often enough for the lezislature to mect, and they have ample time then to pass all the laws re- | committe: been to a good doctor and had it treated, but did not get much relief, 8o I heard of arrhal Jelly and have used it s, and feel fine in the head. send me a free sam; B.O —Remember, that Kondon's Catarrhal Jelly is sold by over 85,000 druggists in the United States—but if yours does not have it, send to us for 25c or B0c tube (stamps or coin), and we will mail at once, postpaid. The 5c size contains three times as much as the 2bc size. Every package is sold under our abso- lute guarantee of satisfaction or money refunded. Send for free sample tod: Al Keenan 1s Again Active in Court House Bar Committee Insists He Be Chasec Out and Pickard Goes After Him. Moved by the fact that A! Keenan has been actively buying claims and warrants in the court house, Attorneys Frank L. Weaver and Jacob L. Kaley visited the office of the Board of County Commis- sioners and entered a protest. They met Commissioners Trainor and Pickard and these members of the board declared that they would fssuo an order to Georse Stryker, custodian of the court house ,to tel. Keenan to keep out of the bullding. Commissioner Pickard went in arch of Stryker to notify him, but did not find Stryker in his room. “Kcenan Is as active as ever warrants,” sald one of the in talking to jurors, and this is violation of the or of th commis- last spring, but his own trial alleged attempted jury-bribing is soon come up, I understand.' Messrs. Weaver and Kaley form a speclal of the Douglas County Bar ur:m‘lusg to sce the county commissioners to get fee shavers excluded from the court house. They interviewed the board last spring and the resolution was passed. For sometime it was obeyed, but recently Al Keenan has been an every-day visitor at the court house, The Bar association meets Saturday night and since there has been considerable talk of Keenan's renewed activity, the two members of the speclal committee probably have been partially moved to act by the necessity of making a report. “The Keenan trial will come up In the course of & few weeks' sald County Attorney English. “We shall get at it as soon as we can. No. there is no thought of abandoning the prosecution. Nobody is Too Old to learn that the sure way to cure a cough or cold Is with Dr. King's New Discovery. 50c and §1.00. For sale by Beaton Drug in buylng “and not only wyer: in sioners for assoclation The Badge of Honesty Is on every wra ery becau?:: a f\fir in plain English. its superior worth as a blood-purifier and invigorating tonic the cure of stomach disorders and all liver ills. It builds up er of Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov- list of ingredients composing it is printed there More than forty years of experience has proven for the run-down system as no other tonic can in which alcohol is used. The active medicinal principles of native roots such as Gol den Seal and Queen’s root, Stone root and Mandrake root, Bloodroot and Black Cherrybark are extracted and preserved by the use of chemically pure, triple-refined glycerine. Send to Dr. R. V. Pierce at Buffalo, N. Y., for which quotes extracts from well-recognized medical lfree booklet authorities such as Drs. Bartholow, King, Scudder, Coe, Ellingwood and a host of others, showing that these roots can be depended upon for their curative action in all weak states of the stomach, accom- panied by indi% complaints ans flesh and gradual running down of the strength and system. estion or dyspepsia as well as in all bilious or liver in all “wasting diseases” where there is loss of The *““Golden Medical Discovery’ makes rich, pure blood and so invigorates and regulates the stomach, liver and bowels, and through them, the whole system. Thus all skin affections, blotches, pimples and eruptions as well as scrofulous swellings and old open running sores or ulcers are cured and healed. In treating old running sores, or ulcers, it is well to insure their healing to a Dr. Pierce’s All-Healing Salve. stock, send fifty cents in gical Institute, Buffalo, you by return post, If your dry, ostage stamps to %ist don’t happen to have t . R. V. Pierce, Invalids’ Hotel and Sur- Y., and a large box of the * All- ly to them El?s Salve . in Healing Salve” will reach You can’t afford to accept a secret nostrum as a substitute for this non-alcoholic, medicine OF KNOWN COMPOSITION, not even thou h the urgent dealer may thereby make a little bigger profit. Though he offers the substitute for a less price you can't afford to experiment with your health. Go where they give you what you ‘ask for without argument. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels, Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take as candy.