Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, December 12, 1892, Page 5, Image 5

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    THE OMAHA DAILY B1SE ; MfflfflAY , DECP.MnEU 12 , 1892.
iPDISE OF WESTERN PROGRESS
} A Local Oombino Reuses Indignation in
Wyoming and Utah.
MORE LAND FOR THE ' LANDLESS
X : lrnt nnil Viilnnuf WnMilngtnn'fl
Mliirr.ll Development * on nil Slilct
Sniiiinnry of tlio Work * * I'vont *
In tlio Nnrtliwr t.
According to tlio census of 1800 the
Jlocky mountain group , consisting of
the slates of the DakottiB , Mon
tana , \yyoming nnd Colorado nnd
the territories of Utah nnd Now Mexico ,
produced in 1889 a fraction ever 5,000-
000 tons of nodi. Wyoming's almro of
tlio total wns 1,883,017 tons nnd Utah's
output U .0,057 tons. T'.io coi : > l area of
the group is not known and is variously
estimated nt from 100,000 to 200,000
Bqunro miles , but this Is guess work.
It is c.laimod co.nl can bo found in
every county In Wyoming , and the
ntou which coal underlies is esti
mated nt 19,000,000 ucroa. The prin
cipal working mines uro in the vicinity
of Hock Springs , nearly nil owned by
the Union Pacific company. During
November the output of the mines ng-
prcpated 0,000 carloads , equal to 100,000
tons. Cotil mining on 11 smaller scale Is
carried on at Now Cnstlo , Larnmlo nnd
other points. The coal area In Utah la
estimated at 2,000 squuro mil OH. Opera
tions have not been carried forward on
a largo scale , owing to limited transpor
tation facilities , and the fuel that Rook
coal has the inside track to the
Springs
mill market.
In both Wyoming nnd Utah there is
nn nbundnnco of cheap fuel close at
hand for all inn-poses for ngos to come.
In view of this fact , it in astonishing to
leuni that in towns contiguous to the
mines and on the railroads , consumers
tare obliged to pny for fuel almost as
much an the same fuel costs laid down
in Omaha. The price of Rock Springs coal
in Laraiulols$5.COpor ton , or 81.40 loss
than iu Omaha. The people justly com
plain of this extortion , but are appa
rently unnblo to remedy the ovll. A
bomblne has been formed BO that prices
nre regulated by the miinngors rather
than by cost of production and transpor
tation.
Salt Luke Clvy complains of llko
pxtortiouuto treatment. Public in
dignation against the coal com-
blno hi'.s reached a high
pitch. Meetings have been hold and
measures considered to loosen the grip
of the extortioners. The most feasible
plan considered is the organization of a
company to build a coal road to the Coal-
vlllo mines or to Castle Valley , by moans
of which the city's fuel may bo obtained
nt a fun * advance over cost , or S2.CO pop
ton , as against $5 and 50 , the present
price.
The shortsighted policy of the coal
Combine is damaging to the material
prosperity of the people. The profes-
Bional desperado and highwayman sinks
'
into insignificance when his 'deeds are
contrasted with those of the combine.
Under color of law , the members not
only undermine the prosperity of a com
munity ; they lay cities under tribute
nnd compel its payment as audaciously
ns the mounted highwayman iu the sub
urbs of Chicago.
The temper of the people iq sucb that
they will soon find a means to disrupt
the odious combine.
I.siiHl for Sottlors.
The public domain is steadily widen
ing and Indian reservations decreasing
in proportion. The Pawnees have
coded their reservation of 300,000 ncrei
bordering upon the territory of Okla-
Imma. and two-thirds of it will soon bt
offered for sale by the government til
61.50 pur aero of arable hind. Aeon
Eidcniblo tract on the San Junn river ir
Utah , which was reserved long ago foi
i tndians who would net live upon it , ha
been restored to the public domain , tint
1 it will teen bo invaded by minors. Tin
i government has completed nogolin
tionb with tlio Comnnchos , Kiown
nnd Apuolio tribes for the rolin
quitmmcnt of their reservations , whicl
embr.ico 11,000,000 acres in the India. )
Territory ; ' but this great body of land
Svhioh is fertile and well watered , wil
not be opened to settlers until 1801. Ii
Southern Montana , nourly 2.000,00
ncrcH of land which formerly bolongoi
to the Crow reservation wore declare <
ppon on the 15th of October , nnd man ,
Bottlers have taken up claims thor
within the past six weeks. In Nort !
pakota , the Indian allotments o
1 Povil's Lnko reservation wore mud
last month , and the remainder of th
reservation was put at tho- disposal c
the government.
The commission appointed by Pros
dent Harrison to arrange a treaty wit
the NoPorco Indlr.us , under term
I
1 which ceded iv portion of that largo ro :
orvation in Idaho and winch may b
thrown open to settlement , has con
, monccd upon its task. Robert Schlo
chor of Lewiston , Idaho , has boo
' chosen chairman of the commlssior
which consists of three members , an
I ho intends to bring matters to n satli
I factory conclusion as quickly as poss :
[ lilo.An interpreter lias boon secure
I and the uhioftiiliu and tribal tyios ar
r now being rounded up fur a big councl
I The commission anticipates no untisut
| dllliculty in reaching an agreement wit
I the redskins , who will bo generously r <
! xnuuuratud for nil the land they glv
[ up. Fort Hull reservation will next 1
I thrown open to Bottlers , and then tl
I Lomhi reservation.
I A Suwmlll Country.
L The work of stripping1 the huge fo
I osts of western Washington is going (
[ nt a lively pace. The lumber trade i
I the country , particularly along tl
I Bound , is enormous , and steadily gro <
| ing. According to Into returns that
[ are now 22J sawmills in western Wasl
[ ington , with 11 daily aggregate cnpucli
[ of 0'JllOUO ) feet. If these mills we
I running full time , which would boaboi
[ 250 days In the year , allowing time f _ <
r repairs and the annual overhauling
the mil ti , the yearly output of the mi !
would bo about 1.07-1,000,001) ) foot , and
| that rule of cutting the present aupp
I of 6 tu ml ing timber would last over -
[ years , but tut. many of thu larger mills i
I not run more than half the time nnd
f number of the simtUor ones are sh
f down nltogutlior , it is probable that t
I consumption does not reach more th
f half of that. In any event , oven witli
I vastly increased output , there iu enouf
[ llr in western Warhington , without in
I InorcaBO In the growth , to last till
| long way into the twenty-first contu
I nnd probably till its close. It mubt nl
Y bo berne in mind that llr is a tree
rapid growth and isono ol the few eve
I croons that reproduce * Itsolf. Whti
I the tiues huva been gone ever anil i
| available timber has buun cut years n {
| in the onp y days of 1'uget sound , m
1 forests have sprung up and good nn
oh until bin timber is ngaiu reudyfor t
ax of thu logger.
' ( The total amount of the etandl
timber in western Washington has be
variously estimated by cruisora sent c
I by private llrma and corporations n
by government exports ut from 3D
000,000,000 font to 800,000,000,000 foot , I
nnd the exports' report of the treasury
on Internal commerce for 1890 , carefully
estimated by counties , gives u total of
370,250,000,000 foot , or an average of
about 2,1,000 feet to the aero on the
whole of 25.010 square mllca embraced
in western Washington.
At the present rate of stumpajro , 76
cents u thousand , this represents a total
value of ever 8276,000,000 , , but this prlco
will undoubtedly bo advanced very
shortly.
Iholy Tlmi-4 nt Slicrlilnn.
A special car from Omaha containing
A. B. Smith , assistant general freight
agent , Captain II. 15. Palmer , C. N.
Uoltz , II. F. Cndy , Nat Brown nnd
Mr. George W. Iloldrogo arrived in
Sheridan , Wyo. , the other day. The
weather was beautiful and all the visi
tors expressed themselves ns well
pleased with the climate and country
and did not hesitate to sny that they
thought that Sheridan hail u great fu
ture before It.
Improvement is the order of the day.
though somewhat hampurod by lack of
material , but the road is getting stuff
in us rapidly ns possible and the brick
yards are being worked to tholr full
capacity. The fame of Sheridan has
gone a'broad , nnd the .town is full of
Rtraugera with now arrivals every day.
lloalty is advancing in prlco , and there
is going to bo a lot of money made in
real estate investments in the no.xt
twelve months.
The most urgent necessity nt present
is hotel facilities. The Sheridan Land
company is building a $17,000 house. It
will contain sixty-tinco rooms nnd bo
heated by steam. Messrs. Klmball &
Walker of Omaha drew the plans.
This will answer until next year , when
an elegant hotel with 150 rooms will be
erected.
The Sheridan Land company is and
going to bo a grunt factor in the up
building of the city. The members of
the company are nil prominent nnd
well known men nnd are mapping out
and executing largo and comprehen
sive Improvements. Besides building
the hotel , they have graded in a first-
'
class way siivo'ral of the streets , have
changed'tho course of the Llttlo Goose
creek and built a straight canal with
bridccs ever it. They contemplate
further improvements that will make
their addition , which has COO acres in it
and embraces throe sides of the town ,
the most beautiful and valuable pi op-
orty in the. city.
Sheridan IH n'nu will bo the supply
point for 230 miles on every side. This
is a fact and can bo fully demonstrated
and proven to anyone who will take the
trouble to thoroughly investigate. Sit
uated ns she is contiguous to several
million acres of the finest agricultural
lands that can all bo irrigated , within
easy distance of mountains tilled with
the finest timber , coal and minerals , a
largo supply of the best water in the
world and backed up by the great Bur
lington road it is safe to say that she
will fully earn the name she has ac
cepted , "Tho Denver of the Northwest. "
The Madison Chronicle was twenty
years old last week.
Four nimrods of Edgar have gone to
Arkansas on a baar hunt.
Many hogs are reported dying of the
rholorn in the neighborhood ot Ster
ling.Madison
Madison citizens ha-vo votoa to issue
$ -V > 00 in bonds for an electric litrht
plant.
Thsj Methodists of Edgar are rebuild
ing their church cdiiico and doubling
its seating capacity.
Superior's starch factory is now in
process of construction , but it will not
bo completed until spring.
The Southern Nebraska Poultry and
Pot Stock association hold an interest
ing exhibition at Harvard last week.
George Godfrey , a Do-'go ' count )
farmer , raised ! ! 0,000 bushels of cert :
this year from 400 acres. It is worth
$7,500.
While hauling hay the team of Henry
Wohmcr , near Sterling , ran away and
Henry's loft log was broken between the
hip and knee.
Two Gibbon citizens who took coa'
from a passing train were arrested ant
fined. Several others who were engaged
gagod in the operation escaped.
Chancellor Croightpn and the trusted
of the Wosleyau university will visi
McCook Wednesday to investigate tha
city's proposition in the floiuinary mat
tor.
tor.J.
J. M. MeKissick , a Boone counti
farmer , received a premium of $25 fo"
sowing the largest acreage of winto
wheat in the county. Ho put in a lit
tie ever eighty-four acres.
Daniel Ellison , a well known Hitch
cock county farmer , was found dead it
Ills house by a party of hutitors who ha <
stopped there to got u drink. It is believed -
liovod ho was kicked by a horse am
died before ho could summon assistance
Jacob Wiggins of Hayes county , win
failed to bo olootod commissioner o
public lands and buildings becaus
there wns a shortage of democrats ii
the state , is now circulating a petltio
asking to bo appointed register of th
McCook land olllco.
Fred Novotny , a school district treasurer
uror in Hayes county , has boon boun
I ever to the district court on the charg
of embezzling $171. Ho claims th
cash was burned whou his house me
I destruction and thinks the distric
should stand tlio loss.
A 10-year-old Schttylor school bo
3 named John Irwin found the bank d <
posit book of a llttlo girl and tried t
draw $3 by presenting it at the ban !
The cashier told the lad ho would hnv
to have an order from his mother. 11
loft the bunk and soon returned with n
order , properly signed , for $ -1.78 , whic
amount was trlvon him. It was soni
f dayn before trace of the culprit could I
found , hut Cashier Folda got his eye a
him at lust and ho will probably bo soi
to the reform school.
Says the Weeping Water Uopubllcai
F. F. Roxford sold 708 budhoU of HO
glium seed gathered from hia crop >
fitly acres of cane. Ho received 35 con
per bushel on track here. The seed vi
very nearly pay for planting and cult
ruling the crop. At his Maple Gro\
sorghum works this year Mr. Raxfoi
maclo UK)0 ( ) trillions of the finest gnu
molnsbos. The works wuro In operatic
twenty-eight dnys. The proprietor
well ploused with hla venture , and hopi
next year , with the assistance of tl
farmorb in the country who may grow
crop of cane , to bo able to run doub
the number uf day.3 , and twice as nun
ah hours each day ; thus quadrupling tl
ay output , without a corrobponding inoron
y iu expenses.
a
y South Dakota ,
SO The Aberdeen Meteor wns sold to I
of Ford of Philadelphia for SOOO.
r- Brute county commissioners havocc
rj j ° traotod for three r.rtcHluu walla.
o Tlio Boml-inonihly clean up of t
w Ilomustaku Minlntr company for thoh
half of November represented the sn
r-
r10 sum of 3150,000.
The Welcome company shipped t
tons of ore , valued ut $20,000 , to t
HI Rapid chlorinntlon works during t
Ut month of November.
id A humming building boom is vlsll
in Sturfla. Waterworks Maso
temple , a Catholic seminary nnd a fac
tory building are rising evidences of the
town's progress and pluck.
The Black Hills mining congress
moots in Dondwood next Thursday.
Grndlng'on ttio Yankton < fc Norfolk
road is finished. Track laying la under
way.
Assays of ore specimens from the Two
Boar minus show a range of from seven to
sixty-five ounces of gold and from fourteen -
teen to 130 ounces ofsllvor.
Throe carloads of matte from the
Dondwood smelter , botng the result of
the run of the last week in November ,
was shipped to Aurora , III. , for refine
ment. The value of the shipment is
$10,000.
The accepted plans of the Deadwood
Masonic temple show a building of five
stories and high basement covering n
ground space 60 < rllO feet. The material
for the basement and first story is gray
stone , the remainder pressed brick and
ornamental torr.i cottu.
For November the Golden Reward
company cleaned up 2,7-11 ounces of gold ,
worth $10,302 , ut818 per ounce. Besides
this , a dorco bar is run nt end of each
month , composed of gold and lead not
obtained in weekly clean ups , which
represents about $1,500 in value , mak
ing total output $50,802 for the month.
Wyoming.
Kvanston's flouring mill , with a ca
pacity of fifty barrels a day , started up
last week.
Crook county has one flouring mill at
Boulnh , and is to have a second nt
Sundance.
A Sheridan county man has marketed
a steer that weighed 1,780 , pounds , and
brought $81.88.
The product of the Lander coal mines
shows rotnarKablo improvement as de
velopment proceeds. Specimens have
been sent to Omaha for analysis.
The War department has advertised
for bids for the construction of one set
of stone barracks at Fort Washakio.
The bids will bo opened December 15.
Star mail service ii established six'
times a week on the route from Rongis
by Brownsville , Lunston. Minors De
light nnd Atlantic Citv to South Puss
City , Wyo. , fiom January 10 , 1893 , to
Juno 30 , 1891. Star mail service on
route from Myorsvillo to South Pass
City will bo discontinued January 14.
Denver capitalists have organized a
company with $5,000,000 capital stock ,
$2-3,000 of which is paid up , for the de
velopment and settlement of Wyoming
lands. The name of the corporation is
the Green River Basin Land and Canal
company , and it has purchased the half
interest cf the Union Pacific railroad in
700,000 acres of land lying about the
junction of the Green river nnd the
Black Fork , the other half belonging to
the government.
Utah.
Ogden promises to issue bonds to the
amount ot 850,000 nnd invest in public
parks.
A snowslldo near Alta on the 5th
buried a miner named Peter L. Matt-
Eon , aged 45.
The Salt Lake Tribune gives currency
to a rumor that the Central Pacific is
about to absorb the Denver & Rio
Grande Western road.
About seventeen miles from Salt Lake
City E. Malquist , Joseph Pitts & Co.
have discovered a big ledge of mineral
paint of different colors , yellow ocher ,
dark brown and red , of an oily nature ,
which flows in abundance from the dif
ferent springs with the water into a
magnificent water power through the
same ground. It has boon examined by
loading painters , who say its value is
remarkable for oil paint and water
colors.
The records of the land office nt Salt
Lake City show entries for the year
comprising 229C6G acres. The total urea
surveyed in Utah wns 13,188,203 aoros.
The metal products taken from the
mines for 1891 in gold , silver , lead nnd
copper has an aggregate export value
of . $12.240,885. The mining companies
organized in the territory have an
aggregate capitalization of $ GOJ85,00 ( ]
and miscellaneous corporations a cap
italization of $52,110,500.
The United States filed an action
against the Union Pacific Railway com
pany in the Third district court in Salt
Lake last week , asking that the defend
ant's patent on certain valuable coal lands
in Summit county bo canceled. The plain
tiff alleges that the patent was issued
through inadvertence and mistake on
the part of the plaintiffs , but with full
knowledge of the defendants : that the
lands were not subject to selection undoi
the laws of the United States , and thai
the plaintiff is bound under said laws t <
confirm the lands mentioned to actun'
appropriators and applicants and t <
issue thorn patents therefor. *
Mniitunii.
Butte voted $100,000 in bonds for
school purposes.
The remnants of the collapsed Holoni
Journal wore sold by the sheriff fo :
821,000.
Talk of the Helena St Southern rail
road has subsided. jT/jo / projected rend
wns a capital IUOVO.JT c
If any diamonds are , being dug out of
the Missouri bottoms nonr Helena , the
news is zealously kapt * out of the papers.
The talk of "stealing1 Montana" is con
fined to space-writer's' for western or
gans. Montana Is < all right and Tom
Carter Is at homo , t
The Anaconda company has closed
three of its mines lnlutto. | The output
of the company's smelters hns fallen
from 150 to 80 car lontla per day.
Montana officers IiaVo captured a num
ber of train robbers. No fault will bo
found with the firmness shown In thus
violating a long -lino of precedents ,
though there may bo adverse comment
upon the gentleness with which it wns
combined. All the robbers wore taken
alive. _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Iilnhii ,
A chamber of commerce is the latest
institution in Pocatollo.
Two canals projected at Payotto will
reclaim nearly 100,000 acres of land.
An eastern syndicate is looking ever
the arid land near Niimpa , with u view
to the purchase and cultivation of
orchards.
An Idaho mna wont swimming in a
warm pool the other day and was de
voured by a sea sorpont. The quality
of the whisky in the neighborhood
needs no further endorsement.
Fred Bnclimann is exhibiting at Idaho
City some fine opals that ho got from his
mines on Snake river. They are valu
able gams , and ho sajs the ground Is
filled with them. Ho and partners have
lumber on the ground for building and
will carry on work vigorously through
the winter.
Although Idaho's bullion product for
thu year Is not up to expectations much
progress has been made. The quartz
mining interests are in u much more
healthy condition than they were at
this time last year , nnd the opinion that
they are permanent and rich has been
proven good.
The mining industry is rapidly growing.
Reports from various districts" to the
effect that work is being carried on to a
greater extent than at any time hereto
fore. New claims are proving profit
able , and the output of ore is on the in
crease. The addition of men in the
Couur d'Alenes ' is of general importance
iu the workings of that region.
AlniiR tlio CniiNt.
A boot sugar factory to cost $200,000
is to bo built at Fairllold , Wash.
A billion and a half ot cedar shingles
were shipped east from Wnshintrton this
year.
The area of the coal vein found at
Fairhavcn , Wash. , is estimated at 1,000
acres and believed to contain not less
10,000,000 tons of coal.
San Francisco gets her water from
Lake Tahoe , 150 miles distant , and her
whisky to mix with it ; from Kentucky ,
via Now York and Panama.
Three hundred andpovonty-nino cars
of cattle and thirty-five cars of sheep
wore reshipped from * " Reno , Nov. , dur
ing the months of Ocl&bcr and Novem
ber.
ber.Tho
The acquisition by a Santa Fo rail
road director of n largoiblbck of land at
Antioch , across the bay from San Fran
cisco , has revived gossip -about another
transcontinental railroad.
There are now in , Oregon thirty-six
nurseries , covering 1 570 acres , nnd con
taining 9,000,000 young trees , and or-
ohardists have upwards of 100,000 acres
of growing trees. One-half this acreage
is in prunes , in the production of which
Oregon is unsurpassed us to size nnd
quality of the fruit , one-fourth in apples ,
one-tenth in pears , and the remainder
in miscellaneous fruits.
After all the clamor about the failure
of the Tomoscal tin plate mines , the
English company has decided to in
crease the capital stock by 200,000
shares , at 5 snilhugs each. The En
glish 'export reports that the vein has
not been lost , but the minors reached
the bottom of the deposit. The lodo'is a
true fissure vein , nnd , according to all
experience , another deposit of equal
depth should bo found.
The grapevine of Mrs. Blanchnrd , in
Cnnemah , Ore. , bore this year about
1.200 pounds of fruit. The Orog.on City
Enterprise says : "Tho vine is of enor
mous proportions. It has a circumfer
ence near the ground of forty-seven
inches and at a height of about a foot
divides into two branches , one of which
at the point of division has a circum
ference of thirty-soven inches and the
other of twonty-fivo inches. The two
branches together have a length of ever
250 feet and some of the grapes are an
inch in diameter. The vine , of the
Isabella variety , was budded iu 1857 on
a California stock by J. P. Blnnchard.
Wine made from the grapes by Mrs.
Blanchard hns the Haver of choice port
In the same garden are second-crop
Bartlett pears almost ripe. "
Ignorance of the merits of Do Witt's Wttlo
Early Hisers is a misfortune. These little
pills regulate the liver , euro headache , dys
pepsia , bud breath , constipation and bilious
ness.
CleaningHouse.
House.
Hard work or easy
work , just as you
choose. If you find it
hard work , it's because you
won't use Pearline. You'd
rather waste your time and your
strength with that absurd rub
bing and scrubbing. Of course
it's hard that's wjiy Pearline
was invented that's ' why Pearl
ine is a household wordj J You don't
know .how easy it can be , .until you let
Pearline do the work. Then house-cleaning1 slips right
along. It is over before you know it.
Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you " this is ns good as"
j.i.\j. or "the same as Pearline. " IT'S FALSE Pearling'U never peddled ,
T > 1 and if your grocer sends you something in placa of Peatline. be
JDctCK honest tend it tack. 333 JAMKPyi.E. , New York.
lutiauiljr iu > i > a iliu uiuit oscruclatlnic | > aln > . It never falls to glTO ciuo to the auflercr ; It U truljr tlio gro
CONQUERER OF PAIN ,
nnd Ims done morn ( rood tlmn nnjr known roraedjr. For Hl'HAlNH , IIIIHIHKH. I1ACIIAC1IK , TAIN
THU CllKnT Oil HIIHCH. UKAIMCIlli , TOOTH AI'll K. or any olIliT oxternul I'A IN ; n tail nppllc
tloin , rubkril ( in tijr Iiulld , art llko manic , couilnu tlio palii Iu Initnntlr > tuu. Fur CONOKSTJO.s
INH.ANIMATIONS. HHKl MATISM , N ICUHAUii A , 1.U.MIIAO. ! HOI ATI CA I'AI
IN THIS eMrl , OP TI1K ll/M'K. moro ojiunded , luouor runtluuo4 ouit rauuatuil iipullcatloiii n
11- nocauarr. All INTiCKSU. PAINS , IH.UlUllti : 1. UVriBS I'KIIV , CO MO. rtl'ASSI' . 'N AtlHIC
KAI.Y1IM ) HI-KI.L4. NrfllVOUSNKm , BI.KK1M.KWNKS3 all lollevucl Inetantlr aod qiili-Klr curo4
taUriL'IriHirJIy M to CO Urout In half B tuaiblur of wntor.
With IIAOWA V'S I1M.S there Is no bolter I UHII or I'UKVIIXTI VK Of TKVKll OH AtiUK.
10 told t > r All Drui-Kl.i ; 6'J cent ! 1'ur llotllu.
St
Iff "IT IS IGNORANCE THAT WASTES
35 " SERVANTS USE
EFFORT. TRAINED
ie
to
lo
io
AVER'S
Sarsaparilla
Is superior to all oilier preparations
claiming to bo blood-puri lie rs. First
of nil , bccatiso the principal ingrcdi-
cnt used in it is tlio extract of gen-
nine 11 on d urns Sarsaparilla root , tlio
variety richest in medicinal proper-
Fnrpo PatarHi tlcs < Alsobo *
cuusc lllo yol.
low dock , being raised expressly for
tlio Company , is always frcsli ami
of tlio very best kind. With equal
discrimination and care , each of tlio
other ingredients arc selected nnd
compounded , It Is
THE
Superior Medicine
because it is always the same in ap
pearance , flavor , and effect , and , being -
ing highly concentrated , only small
doses arc needed. It is , therefore ,
the most economical blood-purifier
In existence. It
makes food notir-
ishing , work pleas-
anti glccp rcfrcs | , .
ing , and life enjoyable. It searches
out all impurities in the * system and
expels them harmlessly ! ) } * the natu
ral channels. AYEH'S Sarsaparilla
gives elasticity to the step , nnd im
parts to tlio aged and infirm , re
newed health , strength , and vitality.
AVER'S
Sarsaparilla
Prepared liy Dr..I. C. Aver ft Co. , Lowell , Man.
Bold by nil Druggists ; 1'rlccfl , MX bottle * , $5.
Cures others , will cure you
Does
Hope
Ever
Die ?
Wo liavo seen these from whom It
sconiod to have departed forever , They
were these unfortunate bolugs who
wcro holplcsa victims of
Neruoils ,
Chronic
-AND-
Private
Diseases ,
nnd who have tried scores of so-oallod
doctors without rocolvhiR tlio slightest
benefit or relief. Wo htivo seen these
sumo dcspnlrlnz mortals , after bolng
u lid or our skllllul troutmont a foir
weeks , become llllod with hope and
Joy , und
Health
slmno In tholr sparkling oyes. while
tholr stop was ( Inn and elastic , tholr
cliiiekjt like roses , and tholr volcoi
Etron ; and oloar. Tlioy had boon
CURED , by ourolTotts and our alfl.
If you are 0110 of tlio hopeless ones ,
conio and sliuro In the joy those re
stored and happy mortals fool.
Send 4 cents for n copy of thslr Illus
trated new book of 12U pages.
Consultation Free.
Call upon , or address with stamp ,
119 South 14th Street ,
NEB.
OMAHA , - -
DEFORMITY BRACES
Elastic Stocking's
Trusses ,
Crutches ,
Batteries ,
Water Bottles ,
Syringes ,
Atomizers ,
Medical Supplies
ALOE & PEHFOLD
114 S.tOtli St. ,
Next to Postofflee
DRUNKENNESS
Or tlio r.ltjuorlliihlti'ur Cure
lty + \ linliilntarlnulr , 1 1 it ( nun'
( inltluii Sjjoo/r/o.
It can bo given In ncuj | uroatliionr ton or In tO (
without tlio knowlailiniuftliu pullunt Itlinki
Intrli Imrmlem anil will utlutt u [ lurnmiont ai
HDoi'ily lure , nliclhur thu putlout U it inoileru
ilrlnkcT or an nlcaliullo wreck. It liun boon utvtm
UiouHttnUft nf cnvca nnd In overItiit * iice a porfc
euro linn fullnwcil it never falls Tlio y lc
oncu lni | > rvKmitti < l trill ) ttjuHpoclUc , U hocumoi i
utter Inipovtlblllty tor the liquor aitptultu to uxli
< ; < n , III.'N si-Kfirit ; no , , rroiu.uuciimuti.
43 jmiio book uf particular ! frdo. To bo liuil of
Kulin & t o. . l&lh unit liouulni Bt . VVliulen
lllnku , llruca & Co. , anil UlcuurUxm DruK L
Umilia. Nou.
RIPANB TABULE8 recuUI
,
;
thu Mtuiuacbltvrrunil fruit1 ! * , rurl
f y Itiu lilixxl. eru natu ami eu tctiul
the lwU mulldnu kuu n fur Lllluui
ntihS , tuiuUliatluli. djiinprlal fuu
breath , bf attache , hcurtlairu , long t >
apH U' , u duial iUjiruulon jalufu
dilution , plmploii , nallou
,
9 Impure blwxl.or a ( tllure by Ihe rtoioArli , llvrrur In
U-illaia to perform tlidrpruiwrfuntlluii. l'cr.c
Ygirttn to OUT eating &ruhunem < xlb ) UkliiLrcucafU
arhimuil. 1'rlcotir mall. 1 grow , lit i et-niiilo , tic.
HU'ANH CllUUfCAL , CO. , IPt-pruco bt. , Ne w Vort
WE WANT AT ONCE
( cute , ilon ? public reid , , iteidV otk I
2r " 70 A MONTH. SALARvii
Advanced Every IS Days ,
rftANCO-GCIMAN HICTB1C CO. Mn.inBMll , a
Another Blow
This is the time of
when the weather puts"
in its best licks. Some of
our contemporaries ap
parently are greatly af
fected by what the
weather does for they are
blowing at a great rate ,
but they can't sell
OVERCOATS
AT US LOW PRICES AS WE DO ,
OVRROOATB.
Full cheviot sack overcoats , with
and -without velvet collar , in
$2.75
gray and brown. They are
worth $4.78 , now . .
Fine chinchilla overcoats , in blue
and black ; yoke and sleeves
lined with silk , with an elegant
cashmere lining on the balance
worth $12.5O , now
All our kerseys , meltons , Irish
frieze , all sizes and imaginable
styles , some worth $15 , any of
them worth $1O to $12 , now
Beautiful Shetland frieze ulsters ,
in three different shades , extra
long , big collars and double-
breasted
Our Oxford gray ulster without
lining , double-faced , 54 inches
long , full length , is very desir
able at $7.5O , now
Genuine Sealskin Caps , worth from $10.00 to $18.00 , re
duced to $5.00 on account of broken sizes.
In no length of time these snap bargains
will be gone , so if you want one you must
come quick.
Columbia Clothing Co. ,
Cor. 13th and Farnam.
PERMANENTLY CJTTB.SB or IfO PAY
WE UEFEK. YOU TO 2,500 PATIENTS.
Financial Reference : Nal'l ' Hank of Commerce , Omaha.
No DKTKNTION from business. No Operation.
Iu vcstlsnto our Method , Written Riiarnnteo to abso
lutely C'uru nil kinds uf KDI'TUKEof botlisoxos.with-
out tlio lisa of Knlfo orsyrlnizu , no mattur of how long
standing.
standing.EXAMINATION FREE.
The 0. E. MILLER COMPANY ,
307-308 N. Y. LIFE BLDO. , OMAHA , NEB.
Bond for Circular.
The World's Fair Directors
Have 5,000,000 Souvenir Half Dollar Coins in ( heir treasury , the gift of
the American people by Act of Congress. The patriotic and historic features
of these Coins and their limited number , compared with the millions
who want them our population is 66,000,000 have combined to create
so great a demand for these World's Fair Souvenir Coins that they are
already quoted at large premiums. Liberal offers from speculators , who
wish to absorb them and reap enormous profits , have been rejected for the
reason that
This is the People's Fair = =
We Are the People's Servants = =
and ( i divided sense of duly confronts us
We need $5,000,000 to fully carry out our announced
plans , and
We have decided'to deal direct with the people '
; To whom we are directly responsible- among
. 4 $ whom an equitable distribution of these National
heirlooms should be made.
The World's Fair Offer to the American People :
That none of our plans for the people's profit be curtailed we mus ,
realize from the sale of 5,000,000 Souvenir World's Fair Fifty-cent Silver
Coins the sum of 5,000,000. This means $1.00 for each Coin , a much
smaller sum than the people would have to pay for them if purchased
through an indirect medium. Every patriotic man , woman and child
should endeavor to own and cherish one of these Coins , as they will be
valuable in future years a cherished object of family pride. 6
Remember that only 5,000,000 Coins must be divided among
66,000,000 people. These Coins could
be sold at a high premium to Syndi World's Fair
cates , but we have enough confidence in
the people to keep the price at a Dollar Souvenir Coin
for each Coin , as this will make us realize
5,000,000 the sum needed to open the for a Dollar.
Fair's gates on the people's broad plan.
HOW to Get ° * ° vour nearest Bank and subscribe for as many coins
. . as you need for your family and friends. These Sub-
I he Loins Agents of the World's Columbian Exposition will give
you their receipt for your money , as delivery of these coins will not
begin before December. There is no expense to you attending ( he distri
bution of the Souvenir Coins , as we send them to your local bank. If for
any reason it is inconvenient for you to subscribe send Postofllce or Express
Money Order or Registered Letter for as many coins as you wish with
instructions how to send them to you , to
®
TREASURER WORLD'SCOLUMBIAN EXPOSITION ,
> , CHICAGO , ILLS.
rdc/-i w III Be I'llleJ n the Order In which ( bey are Received.