Capital city courier. (Lincoln, Neb.) 1885-1893, April 23, 1892, Page 2, Image 2

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    CAPITAL CITY COURIER, SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 189?
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i
SECOND - TKlpMT TALK.
t-4,
HOW CERTAIN 8e4aTOR8 VIEW HAR
RISON'S RENOMINATION.
"1trrllitH, Clmmlp from thi Cloakrooms.
Wlirni L'ai.illdalrs Art Mad unit Un
Marin and l'arty rnllrlra I'nrmnlateil.
Discussing Hid Ucinocrallo Candidates.
(Hclal CorrcKudcuce.
Warhinoton, April 81. Tho kom)i
of tlio senate cloakrooms. Hint Is what
wc nil llko to Kot. Wo llko to hour
what tlio senators nru talking about
Among thcimclves while sitliiiK on tlit'lr
easy chairs or reollnltiK on their luxu
rious sofas In tlio privacy of tliulr senate
retiring rooms. In these iiiinrttiiontH
majority of tho senntor spend DKwt of
their time. Tlio company there In con
genial, tho stories good, tho cigars fra
grant, tho gossip fresh and Interesting.
Hero tho progress of legislation, tho
movements of parties, tho ambition of
mit;i ro dlsoussod us nowhoro olao in
this countryby tW inon thomsolvos
cuid by tho leaders nut I makers of part ion
nil nominations. These cloakroom
are tho nown center of tho United
States. They aro a clearing house of In
formation, of tittle-tattle. These son
torn nro for tho most part big mon in
their Btotcs. Each and overy ono of
them linn hundreds of tho lient informed
men in his part of tho country writing
him lottorn till tho tinio or minding him
hints as to tho state of public feeling
and an to what is going on in tho grcnt
world of tho iieoplo,
Members of tlio houno, ns a pile, owe
a certain sort of nlleginnco to tho sena
torn from their states, and nro howern
of fact and carrion of intelligence foi
them. Naturally under these, circum
stances tho senators who infest the
cloakrooms hnvo a great many things
to talk about. Republican Mutators
mA Democratic senators mix togothor.
. They do not have many secret one
from another. lam told that tho poor
est place in tho world to keep a secret
to the cloakroom of tho senate. It may
aot get beyond tho smoko tinted walls
of these privato corridors, for there ia a
senatorial tradition that what is uttered
thero must not lie repented outsldo, but
la on hour or two a now story or u
fresh bit of gossip is known all over
tH Mcnate.
"A few day b ago I spent an ovoning
with a prominent senator. "Tell mo
omo of tho gossip of your cloakrooms,"
aid I. "For instanco, whom aro you
MTaatorn nominating for president and
rice president nowadays? And who is
going to bo elected?"
"You want to know too much," audi-
Jgly replied my senatorial friend; "yon
ant to know more than wo know. But
I will tell you n few of tho things wo are
tying up thero in the cloakrooms, when
wo ait around and smoko and ozcluingo
toriea and ideas. We hnvo come to tho
conclusion that President Harrison will
be renominated without opposition at
Minneapolis. On this wo have no differ
aces of opinion. Moreover, tho ticket.
Will bo tho old ticket over again Hor
rison and Morton. I supposo you know
that Mr. Harrison is not popular in the
ennte. Even among tho Republican
senators there is a strong disposition to
aay unkind nnd sharp things about him.
Many of these sonators don't want Mr,
Harrison renominated, and thoy have
tried their best to rind a way to beat him.
But thoy havo now given up all hopo of
being able to do so. Dlaino was thoir
hut chance. Had Dlaino consented to
ran I can tell yon as a bit of insido new
that President Harrison would not havo
permitted hia namo to go lioforo tho con
ventioa. The president is not nearly as
ager for another term as some peoplo
think he is. If there was any serious
opposition to him I am told ho would
aot take tho trouble to tight for a second
peculiar characteristics. Ho hasn't nay
faculty for doing things in a amoctli
ntid pleasant way. Ho mnkes peoplo
who mil on him nlmtit nptsvliittiiont
feel uncomfortable. Ho Is a suspicious
man.
"I hnvo It'mrd n scoro of senators nay
thnt whereas Arthur and other presi
dents could deny n mini's request in
such n way as to make tho man 11 friend,
Mr. Harrison is so unfortunate ns not to
bo nblo to grant n request in such n way
as to attach tho benellclnry to him. Thla
is n matter of temperament and noth
ing else. Wo nil agree, Democrats as
well ns Republicans, thnt Harrison has
made n good president. Ho is a man of
remarkable Insight and analysis. He
has the power of sustained labor ami
study. Ho has leen clean and Htrong.
Ills chief weakness has been in his per
sonal contact with men his strange In
ability to get on smoothly with them,
"Ono thing I ndmlro him for is his
frank stubbornness ulmut this thing. Ho
knows his weakness, but defies It. To
those who havo advised him to make an
effort to change ho has said that ho is
too old n dog to lenrn now tricks, and
thnt ns ho is so must ho continue. Ho
said ho would despise himself if ho wore
to try to change the habits of a lifetimo
for tho sake of winning a few more
friends. What sonat ;rs complain most
of in the president is his abruptness. Ho
has n way of dismissing them or mop
ping u subject in which they nro very
much interested so suddenly us to bo
rather shocking. Ho doesn't menu to
givo offense, but does just tho nnmo. Ho
is just ns abrupt to members of his fam
ily, but they know him.
"An instance of this was told mo a
dny or two ago by a friend of tho presi
dent's who was nt dinner recently in
tho White House. Two or three mom
born of tho family had a littlo conversa
tion about an otllcinl matter. Thoy had
thoir opinions nliout it and wero not
afraid to express them, though their
opinions did not hnrmoulzo with thoso
of tlio man who sat nt tho head of tho
tnblo. The president evidently thought
tho ladles of his household wero trying
to givo him some advice, for ho snid,
Tho iieoplo elected mo president, not
my family.'"
Thon the conversation was changed to
another topic.
"Filling tho offices Is tho bane of every
man who occupies tho presidential
chnlr," continued tho senntor, "and 1
will tell you thnt in tho sennto cloak
rooms wo hnvo como to the conclusion
that on account of tho friction mid trou
ble arising from this source tho day U
near at hand when tho presidency will
bo a ono term office. Either tho count'.
tutlon will bo changed so us to prohibit
a second term, or it will become tho un
written law thnt n man ia not to lmvf
two terms, just ns it ia now the nnwi it
ton law that thero shall not bo u third
term."
"lint yon haven't told mo whom the
Democrats will nomlnato for preside:.!
at Chicago?"
"I can't tell you. In tho senntu cloak
rooms, where wo presume to settle to
many big questions, wo haven't any to.
of an idea on this point. All the suvf.ici
Indications point to Mr. Cleveland. B,;:t
hero again comes in this saino thing .!
friction nlxmt tho spoils. If Mr. Clow
land wore as jwpular as ho is with tin
masses ot his party, and had never been
president, ho would surely bo nominated.
No power on earth could stop it. Du'
tho leading men of tho Democrat!
party nro afraid ho has sor.ianyeneinle.".
men who liccamo angered nt him while
he was in the White House, that ho can
not bo elected. Added to tills, they say,
la tho bitterness between tho Hill mid
Cleveland factions in Now York. As a
result of theso conditions wo havo huge
numbers of tho party throughout tho
country crying for Cleveland, while th
leaders in Washington are trying t
AN ABLE JOURNALIST.
urrpn tinon snmit other -nim. How it
nomination. But when Blaine declined wiu Bn corae out Is more than finlto man
it left the field so clear that all tho nresl
dent bad to do was to sit still and take
what came to him without effort on his
part
"Tho Republican senators who don't
want Harrison nominated have been
trying in every way In their power to
et up a man who could beat him. They
have discussed the strength and avail
ability of about a score of possible
rivals, but without reaching any agroo
tavsat They have talked of Alger, of
Oallom, of McKinley, of Gresham, of
Allison, of Piatt, the senator from Con
aecticut, and a lot more. But to every
asaa proposed some objection has been
arged, and they havo finally settled
4own into a feeling of hopelessness.
Their last programme was to send word
throughout the country that unin
attracted delegates should be sent to tho
Minneapolis convention; that conserva
tive sien were to be chosen to represent
the party ia the national convention.
Their hope was that when tho conven
tion met, If a majority of its members
were unlnstructed and unpledged, ma
nipulation and combination could bo de
pended upon to And a way to boat tho
president Even this plan has not
worked; it is clear that a large ma
jority of the delegates to the" Minne
apolis convention will be for Harrison.
Not one of tho senators of whom I speak
has a hope any more that the president
will be defeated."
"What is tlie trouble between the
president and these senators of his own
party why have they uot got on well
together?"
"It all comes from tho friction inci
daat to the distribution of patronage.
That fa all there is to it. Thepresldont
oae of the most stubborn and inde
jsadent men we have ever had In the
White House. He has bad his own way
about everything. Sometimes he has
dose what the senators wanted him to
do and sometimes he hasn't. There is
always trouble between a president and
the senators of bis party about filling
tha oAces. 1 have been in Washington
aWeagh half a dosen administrations
aad I never saw the time when the chief
aaveattv and members of the senate
war aot at loggerheads about some ap
pointments or,, southing incidental to
iHWWia.,. v-wur rnmuBui.
a has bad snore trouble thaa
(Of his prediosssats because of his
can foresee."
"Ono troublo nltout agreeing upon
man to beat Cleveland with is that ia.
many of tho men who want to defeat
Cleveland want to be president them
selves. As soon as ono of their number
begins forging to the front tho other"
begin tenriu; him down. In this way
the field is kept divided up, with not
much hope of uniting it anywhere. The
mosses of tho party stop shouting for
Cleveland long enough to hear the lead
ers tell them Cleveland can't bo elected.
Then they nk who can. And when a
Babel of voices answer them that this
man can, and this muu can't, they be
come confused and go back to thoir idol.
mat is mo way 11 is going now. in me
cloakrooms I hear Democratic senators
shaking their heads and saying it looks
much llko Cloveland.
"Senntor Hill's friends are not nearly
so hopeful us thoy were, and I hear thnt
tho Hill strength will bo thrown to Sen
ator Palmer, of Illinois. Senator. Brice.
of Ohio, says Palmer can bo elected.
But just as soon as the Palmer move
ment begins to make headway Oorman,
Morrison, Cnrlislo and othors go over to
Cloveland in order to head Pa'mor off.
The tickot most talked about In Wash
ington just now, in opposition to Cleve
land, Is Palmer and Flower. Tho cham
pions of this ticket arguo that it could
carry Indiana and New York if any
ticket could, and fiossibly Illinois. It Is
also said that Senator Hill has deter
ullned todefeut the nomination of Clove
land at any cost, and that it he can't du
it with Palmer he will try a new combi
nation. "Until recently ex-Secretary Whitney
has uot been very warm for Cloveland,
but he has recently announced a return
to his old allegiance. Washington ob
servers take this as meaning that (lie
New Yorkers who are not followers ot
Hill have concluded that tho nomination
of the ex-president is Inevitable, and
that while some of them question the
wisdom ot it they have decided to ac
cept that which they can't prevent and
make tho most of It If amid all these
perplexities and complications it is pos
sible to have a belief as to what tho out
come will be, 1 should say the beltcl
most oftn expressed in the senate cloak
rooms is that Cloveland will be nominal.
e4 aad that the fight of 18W will be tin
fight of leftover again."
Walter Wbixmav.
John C. Itrld linn Unit an Interesting
mill tUrfnl Career.
IHpeclnl t'orresiilonco.l
Nkw H.vvk.4, April SI. Mr. John 0.
Reld, who has recently nasuincd tho
management of tho Now Huron Palla
dium, was for many years sji Important
figure In tho nownpniwr life of Now
York city. For a long wlillo Reld was
regarded as in somo respects tho ablest
news and managing editor in tho me
tropolis, nnd when the New York Times
was under his management In Its news
department It was regarded unlivery
great newspaper.
Mr. Reld came from tho west to the
office of The Times, ns so many other
men who havo iniulu successes in New
York iournnllsin havo done. Ho wan a
soldier in tho Union army during tho
war, and had learned tho printers' trade,
no that nfter tho war ended ho was nblo
to secure employment In tho office of
Tho Times while Henry J. Raymond,
tho founder of that paimr, was living.
Mr. Reid's ability was very soon recog
nized, and ho was made tho assistant of
Louis J. Jennings, now a memlier of tho
British parliament, but for several years
the editor of Tho Times after Mr. Ray
mond's death. It was Mr. Jennings,
nlded by Mr. Reld, who made tho ex
posures which resulted in tho nrrost
nnd imprisonment of Willlnm M.Tweed
nnd tho downfall of tho Tammany to-
clety, ns It was controlled by Mr. Tweed
and his associates.
After Mr. Jennings retired from the
Now York Times Mr. Reld liccumd the
executive manager of that paper. He
was responsible for nown, nnd his re
sponsibility wnn ndmlrnbly fulfilled.
Perhaps tho most conspicuous achieve
ment, looking at It purely from tho jour
nalistic point of view, wns his announce
ment in The Times on tho morning nfter
the November election of 1870 thnt Mr.
Tiltlon wns not elected, but thnt Mr.
Hayes would have a majority of one
voto in tho electoral college. Every
other nownpnper in tho country had con
ceded the election of Tildon. Tho ex
citement which followed tho announce
ment of The Times is a mutter of his-
,tory, nnd without going Into tho merits
of thnt disputed election It Is sufficient
to sny thnt Mr. Hayes was seated. This
was n great journalistic triumph for The
Times.
In 1880, nfter Garfield becamo presi
dent, ho ottered to Mr. Reld tho iost of
United States marshal for tho district in
which Now York is Included, but ho de
clined tho honor. Mr. Reid was nlwnys
an ardent Republican In politics, and
when Tlio Times deemed it best to sup
port the candidate of the Democratic
party in 1884, Mr. Reld submitted to the
views of his employers, but ho felt that
his usefulness wns very greatly im
paired, nnd nfter awhile resigned from
tho paper. Ho was employed by James
Gordon Bennett to tako charge of the
London edition of tho Now York Herald,
and when that venture proved to lie a
failure for Mr. Bennett, Mr. Reid re
turned to Now York and for a time was
employed in executive capacities by the
Now York Recorder and The World.
His political lxdicfs nro so strong,
howover, that he did uot find congenial
relations, nnd wlillo ho wus offered a
numlxir of imixirtnut posts ho would not
accept them. In Connecticut the feel
ing has lieen that tho party in which
Mr. Reld has given such dovoted service
needed a uewspnper organ, and when
Tho Palladium changed hands Mr. Reid
wus at once offered tho post of editorial
manager. That pnper had been fov
many years ono of tho two lending
organs in the state of the party, the
Hartford Courant being tho other. Able
journalists havo been connected with it.
James F. Babcock, who was a politician
nnd editor of great influence, owned tho
paper for many years. Cyrus Northrop,
now president of the Minnesota State
university, and for a number of yearn
professor of English literature nt Yale,
was Its editor for awhile. Win. H. Crof
tut, tho well known nowspiipor corre
spondent, wns nlso for u brief period
editor of It, And Georgo C. Holt, ono of
tho Ablest young lawyers of New York
city, conducted it for a year or two.
E. F. James.
In llPRnr-l to Hf.uiti.fr.
A middle axed man with a complexion
like n parsley omelet wandered Into a
Dunne street restaurant altotit 2 p. in., se
lected a sent, and plutiKed Into a bill of fare
m If It had Ix-eu a dime novel. After pro
longed nttciilliijuro tlio catalogue of till
Lies he lieckotu-il to a waiter
" 'Bpt-Hu you've everything tlint's down
on the list, hain't yerf"
"Reckon we lint, 1ks)."
"Ain't cold or dried up, are they?"
"No, sab. What's yo' order?"
"I see you've ko 'country siuisuger
down here In big type."
"Yes, will."
"Good At NisMiiKe?"
"Flint rate."
".Jersey metHiige, perhaps?"
"Diiuiio, sah. Make the order sausage!'
"What makes oii call It 'country?"
pursued the customer, disregarding tin
oucrv.
"Iteekou localise- 'taln't made la New
York," rejoined the waiter Impatiently.
"Well, I don't place no order fer sassag
tell I git a toler'lilegrlpnu the place it mi
built In. There's Hank 1'vters up in
Greene county where I live, runs a sasmigi
mill three miles from me, and the fellei
that had eat some of that sassage, anil
then seed the Inside of the mill, would
swoller three times nnd die. When 1 lo
cute where your sassages was milled I'll
order, but your line of sassage may Iw
hls'u, nnd I hain't traveled all the way
from Greene county to load up on Hank
Peters' snssages."
"I reckon wc don't use his, sah," said the
waiter soothingly.
"Don't hey? Will yer make nn afl'er
davit?"
"Sah?"
"I say, will you swear? I was a trustiu,
quiet man till I seed Hank Peters' machine
workln, and now when you say 'sassage' I
can rip and snort and paw. Hear me?"
New York Tribune.
IN IT ALONE.
Now We Cut Profits in Two
Having
purchased the interest of Mr. Sanderson in the
late firm of Parker & Sanderson, which ended with the old
I have decided to offer
year,
in al
SPECIAL BARGAINS
lines of goods
for the next Thirty days.
Ladies will do well to look up our bargains
Street Wear and Party Goods. Remember the old
at the old stand.
BARE? PARKER,
iooo O SIR RET.
in
Fine
reliable
Ihicoimt'lniiftly Committed.
Tho htishaud stood before tho mirror
with his face screwed Into a horrible gri
mace. He was shaving himself. The wife
lingered nt the opposite side of the room
with her mouth full of pins. She wns just
finishing her toilet.
"M-iii-m-ump," observed she.
"Wah-'nw-nh-oo, in-in," he replied.
The husband took n new twist in his lips
In order to stretch taut his cheek and facil
itate the work on hand. Tho wife removed
one pin from her mouth and put live more
In Its place.
"lloe-r-soo-r-r, m-uinp," she proceeded,
with n careless air.
"lt-nt-nt. m-uinp," ho promptly rejoined.
There was a moment's silence, during
which time the tire crackled In the grate
nnd the lace curtains rustled gently. The
wife was the first to speak again.
"Er-ah-in-m-in," she remarked with
some animation; "pnh-ow-m-ump."
"M-uinp," quietly answered he.
The lady, standing there in her statu
esque iR'iuity, hastily ejected the pins upon
the table and stared In evident astonish
ment. "And you consent without n murmur,"
she exclaimed at last, and her eyes swam
with tears of joy.
The gentleman, proud in the conscious
ness of strength, suddenly pulled his face
Into shape and stared likewise.
"Consent to what?" he weakly demand
ed, ns if with a foreboding of evil.
"To my having a new sealskin. 1 had no
Idea you would say yes so soon. Oh, you
dear old darling."
She threw herself upon his bosom ami
got some soap on her nose. He silently
acquiesced, but remained in a fitful,
moody abstraction for hours, like one who
has sustained a great and unexpected blow
through no fault of his own. Detroit
Tribune
Tllf- Newly KugaKeri.
G. A. RAYMER &CO.
COAI
CANON,
ROCK-SPRINGS,
PERFECTION,
DUQUOIN,
JACKSON,
HICKORY BLOCK,
tttt A
COLOR.
NEWCA
m
BEST GRADE OF HARD COAL.
Telephone 390. Office 1 134 O Strttt.
EXPERTS CLAIM THEY ARE THE BEST
"THE RAMBLER" "MS THEM ALL
Wichita. Kn , Feb. 15, 1KM.--Durlw- Inst fall nml this winter I exam
ined into the comtructlon nnd principles of the different inakei of wheals
with tlio Intention or buying ono. nnd ns I urn sonit-u lint Urge, welghlnr
230 pounds the merhunlciil Mrueture. innteilHl nnd strength of a wheal
hits been a series of features which t hitve reirnrded carefully. The reiult
of, my Investigation Is simply this! I hnvo found so many mpcrlor points
In the mcchnnlcallconstrucllon of the Humbler (asldo iriim Its superior
beauty, nrnmizenient or wheels nnd tho n miner nf milking frame) that I
nm lully convinced thnt It Is thn very best wheel on tho market, nnd tha
only tnnko I desire to trust under my weight I bnck this statement up
by plnclngmy ordor with yon for n No. 1 Inflated 'lire ltnmbler: desiring
this tire In somo respects, over the pniiemiitlc; but think the ntmcniatlo
the best In tho class made. I nm. yours very truly. Wit. J. Hutohims.
E. I?. GUTHRIE,
Sole Agent In Lincoln. 1545 O Street.
rue Hoatl tc
Health
GREATEST TOWN ON EARTH.
Wpi','
Thla Designation Applies to Very Many
Northwest Cltlea.
LSpeclnl Correspondence.
Tacoma, Wash., April 16. Ono of the
things which strikes a stranger wit'
great force on his first visit to Pug.
sound Is the very decided and positive
way in which tlio inhabitants of each
town declare that their city is the largest
and best, Is possessed uot only of all the
natural advantages, hut that they hold
u monopoly of all the favors of Divine
Providence.
Tho strangor Is a little mystified and
bewildered at first and wonders how
naturo anil I'rovidenco camo to bo so
prodigal of gifts at this point. Very
soon, however, tho story becomes an
old and oft repeated one, the only
change and variation being tho namo of
tho town under discussion and the per
son of tho narrator.
Each towu Insists that It has the best
harlwr, Is tho most advantageously situ
ated to shorten the land or sea distance
to some k.iown or unknown part of the
world, that it lies under tlio softest
shadow oil tho Olympic range; that it
has the uost gorgeous bunbets; that
from no other point can so good a view
of tho coJcudes be obtained: that it hau
had the most phenomenal growth; that
it has done a larger banking business
and more shipping in a month than any
other, and so oii ud infinitum.
When tho people in one city aro told
that their neighbors in a sister city lay
claim to the same natural and acquired
advantages with perhaps a few addi
tional ones, they not only accuse their
neighbors of lying, but deelaro that they
know thoy nro lying, their neighbors In
turn, saying tho same thing of them. It
makes on) wonder If tho people hero are
not a little like those of southern France,
of whoiu Daudet said, "Thoy feel an
honest necessity for lying of which the
people living in temperate climutw
know nothing." Li ura D. Stahr.
She There's no poetry in a kiss. It's
like a trunk.
Hi I.Ike a trunk
She You can always find a man to ex
press It, and it's wiser to check it if you
don't want it to go too far. Life.
BRONZE
Oxfords and Slippers
Are Correct for all Party and Dress Occasions
-
See Them at
ED. G. YKTES,
1129 O STREET
llesmii Knoiigli.
Sunday School Superintendent Now
will some little boy tell me what is meant
in the lesson by the words "filthy lucre"
Alderman's Hoy Money.
Superintendent Yes, money Is one form
of lucre. Why Is It called filthy
Prairie Avenue Hoy 'Cause lots of It li
bandied by people that ain't nice. Chlca
go Tribune.
A Helping Hand.
Mrs. Wangle You must have been quite
111 to be visited by your doctor twice a day.
Mrs. Polkadot Oh, no. Hut ho is a
friend of ours just starting out and I
wanted to encourage him all I could.
Harper's Hazar.
Saint and Sinner.
Half hidden In tho pew, alio sits.
A truant sunbeam softly lilts
Across her modest, snlntllko face.
As If tlio nnuels thought to trace
Upon thosu features that they love
An Kaster blessing from above.
Demure, with modest e)es downcast,
Sly angel sits. Ah, I would fust
For forty days for just one look
- From those sweet o)es bout on tho book;
And If she'd givo mo three or four,
I'd be content to out no more.
:in TiiotmiiTs.
Those hoi rid nlsles (that dress Is brown),
I wish those ople would sit down.
Now, where could she have got that fan
Oh, I supposo some silly man.
Dear. dear, that choir boy baa u rold.
How that man stares He's really bold.
My bounelt Can it havo a crook?
I wish I'd taken ono more look.
Umphl who Is that with the 1'ratts?
What sights they are In thoso new hats)
There's Percy won't ho bo enraged
When Clara tells him she's engaged?
My I what a fright Ilcss is In bluet
It cost her ninety dollars ton.
Well. I paid eighty ( hut a muss!
But then pa iiIwujb makes n fuss).
Oh, my! (hero's 8mitby-such a face!
(Those horrid inlins! I've lot my place.)
I hope his sermon won't be long; ' '
The poor, dear fellow Isn't strong.
Why, there Is Fred! Dear me, what uext?
I hope 1 won't forget the text.
Tom Mumn In Ufa.
I
1892-:-SPRING-:-1892
Next week our new line of beautiful effects In
SPBIM IILLHEEY
Will be open for jour inspection and we invite every lady In
Lincoln to call and see the goods
ON FANCY PRICES
Hut the sain: low figures will prevail as does In nil our other departments.
Come and sec for yourself.
THE LEADER,
Great Cheap More
1211 0 Street
H. W. BROWN
DRUGGISTHIBOOKSELLER
Has the New Books soon ns issued. A choice line of
Perfumes and Fancy Goods.
127 South Eleventh Street.
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