The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, January 09, 1896, Image 3

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    THE MEN ARE NAMED.
THE VENEZUELA COMMISSION
DECIDED UPON.
Jnde* Brewer It Chairman of the Same—
The Others nr® Richard L. OIney, Au*
drew D. White, Frederick K. Coadert
and Daniel G. Gilman—Political Com
plexion of the afcen Named.
Washington, Jan. 3. — President
Cleveland has announced the appoint
ment of the Venezuelan boundary
commission, as follows:
David J. Brewer of Kansas, justice
. United States Supreme court.
Richard II. Alvcy of Maryland, chief
justice of the Court of Appeals of the
District of Columbia.
Andrew D. White of New York.
Frederick R. Condert ,of New York.
Daniel C. Oilman of Maryland.
The commission is regarded here as
a very satisfactory one, whoso opin
ions and conclusions will be received
:> . by the American public with that con
fidence which the standing of the
members of the commission in the
public eye inspires.
Justice Brewer is a Republican in
politics, and about fifty-eight years of
;-y_" age. He is a graduate of Yale, and
has spent considerable time in the
practice of his profession in Kansas,
where he filled a number of judicial
offices. In 1884 he was appointed
Circuit court judge of the United
^ States for the Eighth district and was
appointed associate justice of the Su
preme court in December, 1889, by
President Harrison.
Richard H. Alvey is a Democrat in
politics and a man of marked legal
ability. It was the great reputation
he gained as judge in the Maryland
courts which led President Cleveland
in the absence of political influence on
Judge Alvey’s part, to appoint him to
the position of chief justice of the
Court of Appeals of this district. He
is about sixty years of age.
Andrew IX White is a Republican in
politics. He is one of the best known
men of letters in this country, and
perhaps iu the world; is an author and
historian and has been the president
of Cornell university. Mr. White was
appointed minister to Russia by Presi
dent Harrison and this position he
held through Harrison’s administra
tion and for a year or more during
Mr. Cleveland’s administration.
Frederick R. Coudert is a Democrat
in politics and is one of the best known
members of the bar in New York. Mr.
Coudert was.one of the counsel for the
United States on the Behring sea com
mission, and in that capacity made
one of the most eloquent and effective
speeches delivered in behalf of the
American contentions.
The last named member of the com
mission, Daniel C. Gilman, president
of Johns Hopkins university, is well
known as an authority in internation
al law. He was at one time president
of the University of California, and
was later called to take up the work
of the organization of the university
of which he is now at the head. He is
the author of a life of President Mon
roe. Mr. Gilman has never figured
prominently in politics. At the White
" house it is stated that be has no poli
tics. but his proclivities are under
stood to be Republican The two
great parties, it will be seen, are
equally represented on the commis
sion, with the fifth member having no
outspoken politics.
All of tlic above named persons will
accept the places to which they have
been appointed and are expected to
assemble in Washington as soon as
practicable, with a view to taking
the oat i and entering upon their work.
The appointments are made in com
pliance with a resolution of Congress
passed at the request of President
Cleveland, and the work of the com
missioners will ba to examine and
collect evidence with a view to deter
mining the true divisional line be
tween Venezuela and British Guiana.
The conclusion reached by the com
mission will be reported to the Presi
dent for his information in connection
with any further representations and
communications that may be made by
this government to Great Britain in
connection with the boundary line dis
pute between the latter country and
Veuezuelr_
PAINTER BL.A1K-S BAD END.
Formerly Famous and Wealthy, He Died
In a Home for Incurables.
Chicago, Jan. 3.—John B. Blair,
born in 18u0, and once famous and
wealthy, died yesterday at the home
for incurables. Blair was a famous
painter a half century ago. His skill
is attested by the fact that bis portrait
of President Taylor is in the White
house gallery. lie was one of the first
painters of war panoramas and the
first to paint any great panorama
in this country. His first was
a picture of birds of all the world,
and to accomplish this work he
circled the globe twice. He was
the inventor of the silk bag gas bal
loon, such as aeronauts of to-day cm
- ploy, and fifty years ago invented a
bicycle on the same lines as the present
•• safety. He added half a million of
wealth to a well known pencil manu
facturer by inventing the rubber tips
for pencils. He painted landscapes of
foreign countries and pictures of sheep
in almost endless numbers, and his
auction »sales of these were annual
events in art circles ajquarter of a cen
tury ago. _ Five years ago he was
stricken with paralysis and three years
later became blind and also lost the
strength of his mind. He was then '
placed in the home for incurables.
Atcnison to Moke Car Couplers.
Atchison, Kan., Jan. 3.—L. T.
Backus, C. T. Backus, C. W. Weller,
R. K. Herd and R. A. Park, have in
corporated the “Columbia Car Coupler
Company” for a term of fifty years.
Capital stock, #150,000; general offices,
Atchison.
That Zinc Smelter Deal.
Sf.oai.ia, Mo., Jan. 3.—Robert IT.
Lanyon, who returned from Chicago
yesterday, says the syndicate plans
for the purchase of all the zinc smel
ters in this section have not been con
summated, but that his ten furnace
smelter at this place and those of the
Lanyon Foundry at Pittsburg, Kan.,
have been sold to the syndicate. He
will give possession in about forty
days. It io presumed that the n.’.w
owners will continue the works here,
as they have ordered suspended fur
naces to be repaired for immediate
use.
ENGLAND THE BULLY.
Significant Remark* Made Recently by
Venezuela Com raia*loner Coudert.
Washington, Jim. 3.—Frederick R.
Coudert is the only one of the commis
sioners, who, in advance of his ap
pointment, expressed an* opinion on
the boundary controversy. Mr. Con
dert, while the country rang with the
Venezuela message, took occasion to
express his views of England. Now
that lie is a commissioner they become
significant and are presented as he
gave them some days ago:
“England has been the bully of the
world. Her policy has been one of
aggression. She holds Gibraltar and
by that means has Spain by the throat.
When France was tied up with Ger
many, England seized Egypt, as she
had practically seized Cyprus. In the
event of trouble between this country
and England. France would sweep into
Egypt and Russia would march upon
Constantinople. England, of course,
is responsible for the Armenian masa
cres. England will not permit Russia
to seize Constantinople and wipe the
unspeakable Turk off the face of the
earth, therefore thousands of Chris
tians must suffer death. John Bull
has no friends and Uncle Sam has. no
enemies. If there should be trouble
between America and England the
sympathy of all Europe would be with
us and the hand of every European
nation would be raised against Eng
land. The English government ap
preciates its friendliness and helpless
ness. Because of that fact there will
be no war. If war should come, the
map of Europe would be recast and
perhaps the map of Asia, too.”
A JUDGE KILLS A FOOTPAD
Justice Blume nf Chicago Houta Two
Attacking Thieves*
Chicago, Jan. 3.—Justice Jarvis
Blume of the West Chicago Avenue
police station was passing underneath
the Alley “L” structure at Thirteenth
street at 1:30 o'clock this morning on
his way home in company with his j
daughter May, when two masked men j
attacked the magistrate. One of them :
threw his arms about Mr. Blume's j
neck and tried to strangle him; the j
other made an attempt to find his !
pocketbook. I
Makings feint to assist the robbers, j
Blume drew his revolver and fired, j
One man uttered a cry of pain and fell |
with blood streaming from a wound
in his abdomen. Before the police ar
rived the man was dead.
When the. man fell Justice Blume
turned his revolver upon the other,
who was making haste to escape.
None of the bullets took effect.
After the shooting Justice Blume
and his daughter went to the Harrison I
street police station and told what had
occurred. The patrol wagon was sent
out at once and the man found dead.
The body was taken to the morgue.
Among the papers in his pocket was a
vaccination certificate made out to
John Kelly.
FREE COINAGE.
Sliver lien Are Preparing a Measure to
Supersede the Bond Bill*
Washington, Jan. 3. — The Senate
bill finance committ adjourned at 12:30
until to-morrow. No action was taken
and no vote was had. The bond bill
was discussed, but the tariff bill was
not taken up. Senators White and
Wolcott were not present.
Senator Vest was not present so the
silver men and anti-silver men were a
tie. It is uuderstood that the inten
tion of the silver men is to report
either a free coinage substitute or
amendment to the bond bill, probably
an amendment. After the regular
meeting of the committee the Repub
lican members held a conference in
the committee room and the Demo
crats conferred in the district commit
tee room. Senator Jones, .Populist,
of Nevada, went with the Democrats
at the conference. The silver men
have nnanimously decided to insist
upon an amendment in the nature of
an entire substitute providing for free
coinage of silver and the elimination
of all authority for the issuance of
bonds. Senator Jones of Arkansas
was delegated to prepare a message in
accordance with these views to be sub
mitted to a full meeting of the com
mittee as soon as it cun be completed.
SIX LIVES LOST IN A FIRE.
The Home nf a Wealthy Ohioan Burned—
Five Narrowly Escape.
Columbus, Ohio, Jan. 3.—At i o’clock
this morning the home of John 11.
Hibbard was discovered to be on fire.*
Mr. and Mrs. Hibbard, their son,
Allen, aged 3, and baby, Dorothy, Miss
Fay Hibbard and Mrs. Grace Hibbard
Dee, sisters, of Barnesville, Ohio, per
ished by suffocation although tlioir
bodies were more or less burned.
Mr. Hibbard was secretary of the
Central Ohio Natural Gas and Fuel
Company and was related by marriage
with the Deshlers, Huntingtons and
other of the wealthiest families of
Columbus. Four sous, less thaa 18
years of age, and the colored servant
narrowly escaped by jumping from
second-story windows.
A Resubmlsslon Newspaper.
Topeka, Kan., Jan. ' 3.—Simon
Greenspan, who married the widow of
Allen It. Sells, the wealthy ex-circus
man, is seeking to establish a resub
mission daily paper in Topeka. The
movement has not assumed definite
form yet, and will not be carried into
effect unless the National Liquor
Association will subscribe hberaiiy.
Greenspan is a pronounced opponent
of prohibition, and thinks the oppor
tunity is now ripe to begin a resub
mission campaign.
| Colorado Produces More Cold Than Silver,
|. Denver, Colo., Jan. 3.—For the first
t time in the history of the State the
; gold output for the year just closed
exceeded in value that of silver. The
most carefnl computation of the min
eral cut.put for the year from the sta
tistics attained shows the following:
Gold, $17,340,495; silver, 114,259,049;
lead. $2,953,1 14; copper, $877,492; total,
$35,432,150. For 1394 the output was:
Gold, $11,235,500; silver, $14,721,730
lead, $3,208,013; copper, $707,420; total,
$29,993,290. The increase in the pole1
production is almost wholly from the
j Cripple Creek district
THE HORSELESS VEHICLE
General Mile* Considering It* Utility la
Army Use—Would Be a Great Soring.
Washington, Jan. 1.—Gen. Miles ia
now making a study of the horseless
vehicle, with a view to determining its
utility in army use. The idea is to
uso it for the army trains. At each
of its forty-one military posts our
army employs two or more wag
ons, prescribed by tlio Quartermaster
General. The larger, the six-mule
wagon, is for transporting army sup
plies to and from railroad stations on
the frontier posts. The other, known
as the escort wagon, is pulled by two
or four mules, it is used in the more
thickly settled regions, for the same
purpose, as well as for official errands
Those wagons have been used in the
army since the war, with but little
alteration. The horseless vehicle, if
feasible, would be a big improvement
over them. Besides, it would be a
great saving.
Our small army of £.1,000 men em
ploys 0,500 horses and mules for uses
of the cavalry and artillery and for
general drafting purposes. The aver
age cost of these for the last fiscal
year, for instance, ranged from $95 to
$168 each, the cavalry horses costing
the least, even less than the Govern
ment mules, and draft horses the most.
Thus the array makes a great outlay
each year, not only for purchasing
horses, but for keeping them well fea
and groomed._
COPPING ER’S PROMOTION.
His Nomination to Bo a Brigadier' Still
Held lip.
Washington, Jan. 1.—The nomina
tion of Colonel Coppinger to be briga
dier general of the army is still held
up in the Senate. There is a hard
fight being made against his nomina
tion. This fight is being conducted by
the A. P. A. The most serious ob
jection to the distinguished soldier is
that he is a Cathcfeu in religion and
when a young man served in the Pope’s
zouaves.
Coppinger came to this country in
I860, entered the Union army, served
with distinction throughout the civil
war, has been wounded several times,
and received a commission in the reg
ular service and in the natural order
of things reached the command of his
regiment and was nominated by the
President to the grade of brigadier
general. Colonel Coppinger's wife was
the eldest daughter of the late James
O. Blaine, and it is said that one of the
reasons for the serious break between
the Blaine and Harrison families was
the refusal of President Harrison to
promote Coppinger to brigadier gen
eralship when requested to do so by
Mrs. Blaine. Last summer, when a
vacancy occurred in the grade of
brigadier general, Piesident Cleveland
promoted Coppinger.
A Modern William Tell.
Hot Springs, Ark., Jan. 1.—"Ari
zona Charley,” whoenjoys the distinc
tion of having conducted a week of
bull fighting at Cripple Creek, Col., in
spite of the opposition of the local
authorities and the governor, was acci
dentally shot and painfully wounded
last evening. He had too much con-’
fidence in the marksmanship of a
friend, whom he requested to shoot a
snow ball from the top of his head.
The friend’s nerve was bad and
Charley received a painful wound in
the forehead.
Small Operator* blear it.
Carthage, Mo. , Jan. 1.— Consider
able interest is manifested here as to
the probable outcome of the great
zinc combine. As its workings can
yet only be guessed, those interested
do not feel at liberty to express them
selves. The impression among many
miners and operators is that the re
sult will be simply to choke out of
existence all small enterprises and to
prevent any further efforts toward the
building of any additional smelting
works in this section.
LIVE STOCK ANU I'UUDUuK MARKETS
Quotation* from New York, Chicago, St.
Louis, Omaha and Llsewhere.
OMAHA.
Butter—Creamery separator..
Butter—Fair to good country.
i Kgs—Fresh.
Chickens—Dressed, per ft.
Ducks—Per lb.
Turkeys—Per ft.
Pruti'iechickens— Perdoz.5 GO
Geese —Per 1b. 7
Lemons—Choice Mess Inns.4 25
oranges—Per box .4 00
Apples—Per bbl.2 7S
Sweet potatoes -Good, per bbl 2 00 2 1
Potatoes—Per bu . 35
Beans—Navy, band-picked.bu 1 85
Cranberries—cape Cod, pr.bbl 9 00
llay—Upland, per ton. 8 50 © f
Onions—Per bu...,. 25 ©
Broom Corn—Green, per 1b. 2 ©
Hors—Mixed packing. 3 35 tit 3
Hogs—heavy Weights. 3 40 © ii
Beeves—Stockers and feeders. 2 75 @3
Beef Steers ;.. 3 00 © 4
Bulls. 2 00 @ 2
st ags.1 75 @ 2
Calves. 2 00 @5
Oxen. 2 90 "<.3
Cotvs . 1 80 © 2
Heifers. 1 75 © 3
Westerns. 2 15 © 3
iheep—Lambs. 3 75 @4
Sheep—Mixed natives. 2 50 © 2
CHICAGO.
Wheat—No. 2, spring. 56&©
Corn—Por bu... 25 ©
Oats—Per bu. 17 ©
Pork. 7 87H© 8
Lurd. 5 32 © 5
• attic-Common to ex beeves. 3 5 M
lloes—Averages. . 3 80 ©3
Sheep—Lambs. 3 60 ©4
Sheep—Westerns. 2 00 © 3
NEW YORK.
Wheat—No. 7, red winter. 60 ©
orn No. 2. 34 ©
Oats—No. 2. 23 ©
l ork—... 7 85 © 9
Lard—... G 60 © 6
8T. LOUIS.
Wheat—No. 2 red, cash. rs ©
Corn—Per bu. 23 ©
Oats—Per bu. 16 ©
Hogs—Mixed packing. 3 30 © 3
Cattle—Native besves.3 25 ©4
Sheep—Natives . 2 2> © 3
Lambs—.. 375 ©4
KANSAS CITY.
Wheat—No. 2 hard. . 5754©
Corn—No. 2. 22 ©
Oats—No. 2. 18 ©
Cattl —Stockersand feeders.. 2 40 @3
Hogs- Mixed Packers. 3 35 © 3
Sheep-Lambs. 3 Op ©4
Dented From Washington.
Washington, Jao. 1.—The report
that Iowa Indians hare leased 15,000
acres of land from the Kaw tribe, in
tending to lire off the rental of their
allotted lands to whites, is disputed
by Indian officials. All leases made
by or with Indians require the ap
proval of the Indian bureau, and In
dians cannot abandon their allotments
and more onto reservation lands only
by authority of an act of Congress.
This action has nerer been allowed
and the Indian bureau will not author
ize it cow.
HAPPY NEWSBOYS.
INCREASED. PAPER SALES BY
BRADFORD’S BOOM.
England'* Street* Echo with th* Lou
of Amorloan Manufacturer*—Increase
of •0,000,000 la Shipment* of Wonted
Coating*—Shoddy and Ran*.
Bradford, Dec. 20,1895.—Hush! Si
lence! What la that I hear? Not the
street urchin, carrying under his arm
his usual bundle of evening papers and
shouting in every one's ears the final
result of the morning or afternoon
races; but with a changed chorus he
rings forth most sonorously “Bradford
Trade With America! Heavy Business
Maintained.”
What better cry could the newsboy
have In his eagerness to sell his bundle
of news? None whatever, for nothing
touches the “quick” of Bradford's heart
. I.abor, Capital, and Protection,
. LABOR
Eamirig Capacity of,
1090 |9
avu uouars per
TH
400 Dollars pgr Ugor***
fj75
so
300 Dollars per ilear3**^
t.
275
25fl
200 Oollm per jjear
ITS—
I*
l
IffP Palters p»r Uear
..Increas* fZ
jiffon years «
39*. <4
sa
w
Overage annual flay to Ulage Eamerain
manufacturing Industries
CAPITOL
Earning Capacity of,
(8831894 V
J
Om Per Cent.
8~fonUn «nt nr cut
't
6 TnrtW^«m percent .
*
Vfatlinj tut percent'
»
,i
aiwtlwjfwtMrcwt
Decrease '
in Nina years
31% *
4
Net Ear nl'ngs of the Capital and Surplus fif
National Banks
sooner than to know what is her posi
tion in regard to her American trade.
If prosperous she will respond with a
smiling face; if the reverse then you
may expect a frown and a scowl. Hav
ing glanced through the American con
sul’s latest production, it was soon evi
dent that we were sailing still in deep
waters. However, let us take sound
ings and see how matters stand.
“Can I yet report any decline?” you
ask solemnly. None whatever; for Oc
tober returns step forth and claim a
third position. The occasions referred
to were July and August, when the to
tals were £534,301 and £606,880 respec
tively while October returns show a no
mean total of £517,279. But the reason
of the total exports of July and August
being so much In excess of those for
the past month is to be found in the
fact that Immense quantities of raw ma
terial were sent out in these months,
and, on this, of course, the labor em
ployed is infinitesimal as compared with
manufactured products.
This to a true hearted Yankee, with a
feeling of concern for his own domestic
factories, cannot be lightly passed over,
for in manufactured fabrics October
Jumps into the second place and not
the,third. Really it is in this depart
ment where all the weight of argument
comes in, for if one could see as large
an increase in the exportation of raw
materials, it would speak volumes for
your domestic makers; but the result
being the opposite—made-up fabrics—
instead of raw materials, it must tell
powerfully against domestic mills. I
say again, that while the principal
manufactured exports are below Au
gust, yet they are considerably above
July figures.
Look for a moment at worsted coat
ings, stuff goods and woolen goods. In
July there were sent to your side goods
of these descriptions to the value of
f360,110, In August £425,682, and
In October £408,540, And 1 make
bold to affirm that, If there had
been In October live Thursdays aud five ,
Fridays, as there were In August, Oc
tober shipments would have been the
biggest ever yet chronicled. Why Is
that, you ask? Simply because the
principal cargo vessels leave Liverpool
at the week’s end and on the two days
previous, Thursday and Friday, three
fourtha of the declared shipments are
made. This I know for a fact Is the
prevailing custom among our Anglo
American shippers.
Worsted coatings—and what an
amount of labor Is spent in producing
this class of wearing apparel—gives to
American makers another hard knock.
Last month’s shipments of this class of
goods is the largest since the new tariff
came into operation. Think of it, £182,
169 worth of goods in four weeks. This
means £45,542 worth per week, and
£6,747 per 27 working days declared.
If orders for this amount had to be
given out of 27 domestic factories It
would mean just a little In every de
partment of manufacture. The ship
ments of worsted coatings alone for,
each consecutive month are worthy of
recapitulation. Let every reader look at
them squarely and soberly and study
out what they mean.
Shipments of worsted coatings under
Gorman act, 1895:
£ s. d.
January .154,513 6 10
February .146,641 2 3
March .145,082 2 4
April ...........116,506 2 6
May .154,998 11. 11,
June .115,987 4 11
July .127,110 10 5
August .....160,986 0 1
September .172,484 15 2
October.182,169 1 4
Total ....1,478,478 17 9
Shipments of worsted coatings under
McKinley tariff, 1894:
£ s. d.
January . 17,608 8 4
February .'20,967 8 9
March . 19,667 17 3
April . 14,429 4 7
May .. 14,326 11 1
J une . 16,776 6 11
July . 22,186 12 8
August . 21,809 8 9
September .33,671 0 11
October. 67,187 19 5
Total .238,608 6 S
Gigantic increase of foreign ship
ments of worsted coatings alone in ten
months' time of £1,237,870 lls. Id.! But
in the words of the apostle of old I
would exclaim: And what shall 1 say
more? These have all obtained a good
consular report, have passed safely into
your markets to clothe the backs and
adorn the persons from whom your
domestic makers have the right to de
mand their first support and patronage.
YANKEE.
Clothing Trade Troubles,
"The past bIx weeks has witnessed the
failure of an unusually large number of
firms engaged in the cloaking and
clothing trado, and Indications point to
additional embarrassments before the
close of the present month. The col
lapses have also extended to a few dry
goods Jobbing houses."
The foregoing is from the Wool and
Cotton Reporter of Nov. 7. It points
out clearly the nature of the free trade
revival in business and confirms the re
ports of increasing trade failures that
have already been published. The
Wool and Cotton Reporter farther says,
that, “the present time is perhaps the
most critical one of all the year.” Pos
sibly the times will be even more criti
cal later in the year, or during 1898.
It also stated that “the banks appear
to be scrutinizing more closely than
ever those who apply to them” for
credit. This seems to be a little pecu
liar, because we have time and again
been assured by the free trade papers
of the country that all the weak coor
corns had gone to the wall during the
free trade panic of 1893 and 1894. Now,
it is the solid and sound concerns that
must be smashed, and, when the banks
are “scrutinizing more closely than
ever” the credit of the solid business
concerns that escaped the free trade
wreck of 1893 and 1894, it shows the
nature of a free trade business revival
and the effect of a policy of free trade
In wool. Bankers have no confidence
in either.
W*,n Broken, but Onto Cloeed.
fFWUQP
*H • Betnu Kmiwr.
The McKinley tariff law may have
not been perfect. No human law Is, and
yet there never waB a time during the
time it was in operation when the gov
ernment had to borrow money to pay
its running expenses.—The Repub
lican-Record, Carrollton, Mo.
Brlfluh Carpets Coming;*
The British carpet trade must be im
proving. The English sales to this
country were 112,300 yards to Septem
ber 30,1894, and 523,400 yards this year,
an increase of 411,100 yards. And this
was with our free wool policy.
Tb« Judge'* Musical Instrument.
A new typewriter story cornea front'
India. It appears that one of the Eng
lish judges in India was an expert on
the machine, and it occurred to him to
use it for the making of judicial notes.
The machine was conveyed into court*
when a certain novelty was imparted
to the proceedings by the elicit of ths ■
keys snd the tinkle of the bell which '
indicated that a line had been com
pleted. The prisoner was found guilty
and sentenced. Promptly he appealed,
on the ground that, instead of listen
ing to the evidence, the judge hod
whiled away hia time by playing on a -
musical instrument. This was a tech
nicality as well as a typewriter, and
quite a good enough reason for a bad
man to get a new trial.
Ii tin oUnt sod bssVIt wUI braab op aCaM mMa
«rmananythingsis*. HI* always rJluMa, TryU»
If you have both tracts and bredd to give
to the poor, give them the bread drat.
Woman want* dress; man wants ad
dress. _
We have not been without Pino's Cure for
Consumption for twenty yean.—Lusts
Fbrssl, Camp 8t, Harrisburg, Fa, Key 4,
The extent oi your trouble is the impor
tance which you attach to yourself.
Many s man who claims that charity be
gins at home lets his wife saw the wood.
I M KE**EDY'S
MDICALjiscovMy
££53?* «BMm, «4SS., '
|j“3 SSK/ '""My°b?"r„r2™°”
sursgKs#
s^*SfS."?Ti>3S2Sf •»'
**3sl <S 2&£*s$?.ES «•
*nc first bott i» ,'T*”5 e*perient
when the r?ehtPerfect cun
the *»__
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dH!C?35,®#lisSSS*
PKW(S I* m**J*2“wo©fXir
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TOK1IM
balsam
ICkm^iS hutUta. tb* _
I Promotes A huurianO growth.
1 Sever rails to Itatort Ony
I Heir to its Toothful
|Com ecmlp dir— — iTbalr
tor.MKHl.0B1
Full Business. Shorthand, Fen Art
mnd Telegraph course. Oldest, Largest
and Best in Nebraska Students- can
work for board. Beautiful Catalog free.
F. F. BOOSE, Pres, Omaha.
Money Sand
How# Furnish I u«a, _..
Mu-lc, Farnlshloy Good#, Notion, Jcntlry,
tp sending for o«r wlol—Ji
and retail prfc|p list of Dry
Goods, Cloth Inc, UroctriM,
Furniture, Ulothint, Piaaoeu
.r, LadW
_ S .<vuuao. ewweiij, i isiyee
***?& HAYDEN BROS., 0u!», Reh.
Gasman ts.
Ma STOVE REPAIR Works
Stove Resales far 4S*** Olf erea t asevea
asIraafH, l*»»H,sUaaSt.,Oa>ka4i«t
Moi
tor
Oft.
iivUm Habit Core.
30day*. Nopartill
t.J. STEPHENS; l-tbsiMi
Cored la 10
y till eared.
ebsnon.Oltie.
FI S O,S liltR B -FOR
tsaw
ma “e
4
CUKt}>
Bent Cuug'
. WHERE i__
;h Syrup. Tastre Good.
In time. Sold by iruyglata
CONSUMPTION
W. N. U., OMAHA—2—1896.
When writing to .advertisers, kindly =.
| mention this paper.