Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, October 09, 1904, EDITORIAL SHEET, Page 11, Image 11

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    TITE OMAIIA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1904.
AFTER DEFEAT AT THE POLLS
low it Feel to Be Beaten in the Bact for
' the Preiidency,
MOTIONS AS VARIED AS THE MEN
nv1n4 Went Fishing, Harrlsda
Sninrt His sleep, Better Was
Belligerent and Brran Per
soalfled Cilmacai.
The question hu often been asked, How
loes It feel to make a contest for the presl
flencr and then miss It sometimes by the
lndret of margin? Only one of the
Candidate now before the people can be
elected la November, the other mut be
defeated. How will the vanquished accept
their defeat?
In many Instances our prosldent have
tasted of both the bitter and .the aweet
f politics. They have known what it was
to so down In defeat, and they have also
experienced the emotion of victory. This
waa the case with John Qulncy Adams.
Martin Van Buren, Oeneral Benjamin Har
rison and drover Cleveland.
Theae men aeemcd td accept both victory
and defeat with philosophy. In other
countries an unsuccessful dush for a throne
la frequently followed by tragic conse
quence. Here It Is accepted as a regular
occurrence once In every four years.
It was Henry Clay who said that he
would rather be right than president. His
unsuccessful attempts to achieve hla dear
est ambition are known to every American.
After hla defeat by Andrew Jackson he
felt very bitter and did not attempt to
, conceal hla feelings. From that day until
the hour of hla death the possibility of
reaching the presidency at son-e time never
entirely deserted him, and even after his
defeat by Polk in 1844 he made a hard fight
arulnst Taylor in 184S-hla last great politi
cal battle.
Those who follow the fortunes of presi
dential candidates are sometimes consumed
with greater energy and feeling than their
chiefs. At the time that Jackson was
chosen for the presidency Mr. Scott, who
was then the sole representative of Mis
souri In tho lower house of congress, elected
to cast his vote for John Qulncy Adams.
Senator Benton, who wsj a violent partisan
of Old Hickory, denounced the act of Mr.
Bcott as a grave orlnio. and in the course
of a letter said to the offender:
"For nine years we have been closely
connected in our political course. At length
the connection la dissolved and dissolved
under circumstances which must mean ojr
everlasting separation. Tomorrow is the
day of your self-immolation. If you have
an enemy he may go and feed his eyes on
the scto Tour former friend will shun
the affecting spectacle."
Hancock Slept I'ndlstarbed.
Oeneral Winfleld Scott Hancock was one
of. the defeated presidential candidates who
accepted the result with great calmness.
His wife reported that at 1 o'clock on the
evening of the election he yielded to ex
treme weariness, after five months of hard
campaigning, and went to bed, begging
her not to disturb him, as the news of the
result could wait till th next morning.
At daylight he awoke and, turning to his
wife, asked for the newa. She ateeled her
self up to the ordeal, and said, aa quietly
aa possible;
"It has been a complete Waterloo for
you."
"That la all right," he answered, "I can
tand It."
And In another moment he was asleep
again. The only disappointment he gave
expression to waa concerning the difference j
hla defeat ' would make In the future to
many of his friends., He attended the In
auguration of his competitor, and, writing
to a friend on the eve of his departure for
the national capital, he said:
"Tee, I am going to Washington on the
td of March for a few days. General Sher
man, my commanding officer, has asked me
to be present. I have no right to any per
sonal feeling in the matter. It is clearly
my duty os a soldier to obey."
After some reference to other matters,
he adds:
"What I can do In Washington with dig
nity I will do. I do not espect to be In
advance of. or follow, the triumphal car,
either on foot or on horseback. I only
expect to do my level beet. I wonder how
they did these things In Rome? When 1
return from Washington I ca,n tell you
how the Amcrlcen people do it under the
new census. Fifty millions of. people have
a, way of their own, you know."
Blnlae's Good Grace.
, Terr few men came nearer the presldenoy
without obtaining the coveted prise than
James Q. Blaine, and yet he managed to
accept his fat with better ' grace than
Henry Clay, that other idol of his party.
It was in the convention of 187ft trat
Ingersoll made hla famoua "Plumed
Knight" apeech; but in aplte of that out'
burst of oratory Hayes waa the auccessful
man. Before the decisive vote had been
full counted Blaine was writing a letter
of congratulation to Hayes and assuring
him that Maine would give him as big a
majority as It would have given himself.
When Blaine did receive the nomination
he was confident of kls election. His de
feat must havi been a severe disappoint
ment; but If It waa, be controlled hla feel'
S33D "EEVtftKD TOR
JKHDCBJNaiart BB'IOTIKD.
TaiMraH -ap try Qatar at mini of aeeuturf
-f tesnatkaiM iesi ahitorm ares, a record
ssrcii as swaBstr-taiMedy far Use diseases)
and waaksBBssas peculiar to women ever
ettaia)il,.ttae OToprtetars sad eaakeca of Dr.
We see Mrnntte Preeeriptiesi aow feel
fulW warsaatsd tn afltrrns; to pay I500 in
tegil wast 7 Of the United States, (or any
aeeee&lMeorrtravJtattieie Weatoreea, Pre.
kroso, ar Ualluu f YVotab which they
oanaet car. All the?, ask is a fair sjai
mswrtseuiaalusf. bW aaeaaacafacam.
1T .-.i ' "V X
Wl MHft.hU rairnm Knw,l,l ka
wail-sod hepsy aid Uarr but km tay txprM
eace wit a aw. Kmri r-McrtfAMu.
writes Uivmsii aeamaiwof art J.smd au
AUM, - 'Mar nfn ) wsa sesTky
'! wsb xNuaaUaa and. Mnaw. ea
rl.oi)r uiuuld uupy. aj we barriaa
l me. bad mmii iWOuui ; rrnn K- and
Mtnrtysisill h4 rnaec ap say mind that
Um was 00 rentl as igbt far me. Asxaadei
tula Klid four ' fec4alnaarkauul ' mai
I euisMd lhaa' to give It a kuL 11' turn
fotf 1 si sii e far 1-was tinted eon.
eiiuui, aud ea.l to ate soar medicia for uw
oar luouta safe I eunj, but ehat a
bang it trout tit trom anair to hepptuaaa,
nuni iiinniy vi lb daiigbaiaU aalikaraUuf f-nil
4H lst-aiprbaah baiiiaa. KwuwlAool anair
Wck Icr a lauaaaad dijliasa Vour hwx.
tloa' U.. Maud ax limine r ai mil auJs
wsinairniBuU-oais qyUnridWmniJ -tv.
IHirnnla awi MAii
Advtsar, 4a paper bm isss, 1 seat rr 04
wmmyi i si cucr at aiamka.
am
Ings very successfully. The day following
the election, William Walter Phelps sent
him a telegram of condolence, ending with:
"Are you fairly wellT"
Blaine answered: "Never better In my
life."
Writing to Mr. Phelps afterward, he said:
"Our special misfortune waa the loes of
both New Jersey and Connecticut. I clss
them both as easily preventable accidents.
I was not sustained In tha canvass by
many who had personally a far greater
stake than I. They are likely to have
leisure for reflection. v
"If the country Is lost It will be some
satisfaction to realize that the class which
permitted It to be sacrificed will feel the
result most keenly. But I fear yoo will
think me ill-natured If I keep on. I am not,
and feel as placid as a summer's day.
"Personally I care less than my nearest
friends would believe, but foi'the cause and
my many friends I profoundly deplore the
result.'
The Greeley Traaedy,
Probably the most treglo episode In the
history of presidential elections was the
candidacy of Horace Greeley, followed by
the breaking down of his robust body and
mind, and by his death.
Quite different was the effect of defeat
upon Oeneral Benjamin F. Rutlor, who
might be termed the free lance candidate
for the presidency. He appealed to th ad
herents of the labor and greenbark party,
and when the votes were counted and It
waa found that he had been followed by a
very amall minority, he was as cheerful
and happy as It was possible for even a
successful candidate to be.
He Insisted at that time, and even up to
the time of h'is death, that Mr. Cleveland
was not legally elected. He contended that
there were enough votea cost for him sev
eral times over In New York state to have
prevented Mr. Cleveland's election, but
that In many of the polling places they
were not counted for him. but for Cleve
land. He said once: ,
"I Intended to have an Investigation made
with the aid of John Kelly, who was then
the Tammany boss and who waa opposed
to Mr. Cleveland, but after the election
Mr. Kelly took sick and remained bedfast
so long that I finally abandoned the Ides
of a contest."
No one ever knew Just how Samuel J.
Tllden felt over the result of the contest
In 1878. He was a bachelor and quite re
served In his personal habits, and hie tn
most thoughts and feelings were known to
very few men.
He waa practically a reclus after the
election and retired to his apartments and
was extremely cautious In all that he said
or did concerning the controversy of that
time.
General MeClellan was a very much dps
appointed man when he learned of the re
sulta of his political campaign, but he was
scarcely surprised at the result and had
very little to say about It, even to his In
timates.
Cleveland In Defeat.
Grover Cleveland received the announce
ment of the result in 1SSS with a stolidity of
countenance that amazed where it did not
Irritate his friends. They had gone into
the campaign in the btllef that it was a
sure thing; and when the returns of the
election were received they sustained a
shock from which they did not recover fur
many days.
But Cleveland himself received the re
turns with a calmness that would have
made the Sphinx look like a nervous and
irritable pile of rocks. Before dusk of the
day when the result was known he was
calmly arranging his plaps for one of his
favorite fishing trips.
This apparent Indifference to results was
also tru of Benjamin Harrison, who
thought that he would be elected In 1892.
He bad given a good administration and
times were fairly prosperous, but in spite
of that fact he went down to defeat. He
took the result like a stole, and Imme
diately ' began to make preparations for
lecturing: and for resuming his practice of
the law. .
William Jennings Bryan, while not show
ing the coldness and indifference of Cleve
land and Harrison, received the new of
hla two "defeats with a calmness which
was a proof of the self-control of the man.
He heard the news of the result of hla first
campaign at his home in Lincoln, Neb.,
with a smiling countenance, and if he felt
any chagrin he did not ahow It to those
who surrounded him. Hla auccessful com
petitor on each occasion had not ben
fairly Inaugurated before the champion ot
the sliver forces was laying out the, plans
for the contest four years from that time.
New York Sun.
Reflections of m Bachelor.
There isn't endugh frilling on facts for
women In a love affair.
Either a man support his wife's family
or they support him, nowadays.
When a man aqueezes a girl's hand un
der the table be should be careful it la not
some other girl'a.
The meanest thing a relative can do to
a woman Is to die and put her in mourn
ing right after aha haa bought a lot of
new clothes.
Some people ara so mean about money
mattera they would rather spend more do
fending lawsuits to make them pay their
bills than it would take to pay tham.
New York Press.
BELIGIOCS.
1 1 1
Trading stamps for punctuality and reg
ular attendance are now given by a Phila
delphia Sunday school.
The Congress of Sciences and Arts at th
St Louis exposition Includes religion within
its soups and in some respects correspond
to the Congress of Keliglons at th Colum
bian exposition,
Kt. Kev. John McKim, bishop of Tokio,
in a aeimon in Ciiivugo Uil fciuniiay sold:
"The Japanese ar not opposed to Chris
tianity and there are twelve Christian
cliapiuins in the imperial army."
Paul Moody, the youngest son of Evan-
? relist Moody, is conducting a series of serv
ces la the rooms of the Boston Vounjr
a r t. .. 1 .. . j .. i.... 11
wo. wuiiDudu wuv'iiuu, Diuuiar tu
those in which his lather so often aud so
long participated.
Th bishop-elect of th Protestant Epis
copal dioceM of Keutucky, Kev. Lr. Ariuur
S. Lloyd, la not yet bo years old, aud is
of southern birth, education and servloe.
He was a missionary lu the mountains of
Virginia for Ova years, and then for fllteen
Es was rector at St. Lukes, Norfolk,
s 11KM he haa been secretary of the
d of miMSlous at Mew York City.
When the Dominican Sisters leav their
convent lu the Hua da Charonne, Pari, an
Sort will be made to linii tho tomb and
skeleton of Cyrano de Uergerao, or to
give him hla full name, Savlmen de
Cyrano da Berber a, woo waa buried
them in I660. He cor da preserved la
tha convent, by th way, contradict the
leaanua that th poet was a Gascon and
that he had an abnormally long nose. In
fact, a portrait which is regarded as au
tiieutio shows him to have beeu a rather
good-looking num.
In all hla official correspondence the arch
bishop of Canterbury aigus himself "Han
dall Cantuar," the latter word being aa
abbreviation of "Cautuarta," tha ancient
nam of Canterbury Tbn arcublsliwp of
York'a signature la "WllloLm kibor." fbbor
(Kboracuui) is the ancient name of York.
Whau bishop of Winchester, lr. Liavldsou
signed himself "Randall Wlnton," Wlnton
b-eiua the old name o WinchMUr. Th nil
alMul tliuni aignaturen is to follow th
L'tirtatimn tuune or lujual or namaa or iui
iLils with tha ortainal name of tha bishop
no or lis abbreviation.
Rev. John L Scudder. pastor of the First
Cot:gregulional church at Jersey City, de
fends and advocates dancing. '"Dancing,"
be said lu a sermon Sunday nlsht. "I the
outward expression of Joyous lit. Proper
uancing is neaunruj ana moral ana should
be encouraged by the church. True r
llglon never objects to th young popl
having a good tlm. They IU hav
enough cara and sorrow and drudgeries
later on; Uien lei them frisk when they
!;! like It, if we older onee frisked a lit
t.e more It Would do ua eood and haln
us to forget our worrimeuts. It would help
maintain our youthful spirit longer and
maky us more eonipan(euable atpao-
HUGE EDUCATIONAL MACHINE
Extent and Cost of the Publio 8chool
Estem of Greater New York.
SBnavaanannnne
MILLIONS, PROVIDED ANNUALLY DISBURSED
Fireproof School Building; and Elab
orate Rqalpsaent The Enroll
ment, the Teachers au4
the Payroll.
The educational machine of Greater New
York 1 vast, complex and unrivaled. It
Is necessarily so, as It has to deal With
about 1.000,000 children of school age.
Nearly 600,000 were enrolled in the publio
schools on the opening day, a number far
beyond the capacity of the buildings. A
score of new buiMlngs are under construc
tion, but labor troubles have delayed the
work so that 80,000 children are put on half
time. Tho enrollment is divided up as
follows: Manhattan. 266,924; Bronx, 43,440;
Erooklyn, 137.197; Queens, 33.141; Richmond,
11.246.
This year there are 22,735 In the high
schools, 647,547 In the elementary schools
and 9T0 In the training schools. Those on
part time number 81.318, a net decrease
from last year of 6,806.
The number of teachers required to In
struct the pupils erop'.oyed by the city Is
over 12,noo. Besides these there are about
700 principals and thirty-five superintend
ents.
An Idea of the magnitude of the educa
tinnai .v.t.m of the metroDolls. its cost
and equipment, may be gleaned from the
following figures taken Irom uie ise'
York Tribune:
Mow Ynru bovs or rlrls may obtoi
almost any kind of education they desire
without the payment 01 tuition lees
nnnw fnr text bonks. After being grad
ated from the elementary sbhools they
may prepare for a business, a proree
Innal or an academic career in high
schools and colleges. There are more
than a score of high schools. In these
are about 23,000 students. Among tne nign
schools are some Intended to fit for busi
ness careers and for the trades of dress
making, millinery, wood turning, pattern
making, molding, forging and sheet metal
work. The charaoter of the' Instruction is
such that the graduates ar fitted to be
come foremen and forewomer. fh the
trades. For women the city maintains the
Normal ("nlles-n of the City of New York
and for men the College of the City of New
York, spending on th two more in
lioO.UOO a year.
Cost of Equipment.
The city is now building two manual
training schools whluh are practically trade
..hnni Thnv are the Brooklyn, which is
nearly completed, and the Stuyvesant. lu
Manhattan, .for which some 01 tne con
tracts have Just been awarded. Each of
.III r.ost about 1900.000. Of this sum
about $100,000 is to be spent for machinery
alone. In the new Stuyvesant High school,
TOhixh u to stand on a plot between Fif
teenth and Sixteenth streets, near First
avenue, there will be an auditorium, a
gymnasium, a lunch, room, a bath room,
ihr r.hamleal laboratories, nineteen shops,
three physical laboratories and three, lecture.
rooms, besides forty-nine oiass rooms. iu
n.r.iHimr room will be eaulpped with a cu
pola of one ton capacity for melting iron
and a brass furnace, in tne lorge room
will be a 250-pound steam hammer. There
will bo almost Innumerable steam engines
and electrio motors.
Vnr thoaa who cannot attend day schools
th rltv nrovides evening elementary and
high schools. Many foreigners who desire
to learn to use the English language, ana
manv who wish to creDare for civil serv
ice examinations make use of these schools.
About 1500,000 was spent on them last year.
The number enrolled was 76.JW, more xnan
one-third of the entire enrollment in even
ing schools in the United States.
ir.von th child who for any reason is
backward or is defective la specially cared
for. At present there are eighteen special
classes conducted for these.
Iwlmmlng Schools.
The city provides bath rooms for the use
of the publio in. jthe overcrowded tene
ment districts. Several schools are equipped
with annaratus for shower baths. At the
fifteen swimming pools last summer 1,652
boyB and girls took the required numDor ot
lessons and learned how to swim. At on
school 1,125 boys with unbounded Joy sub
mitted undeveloped forms to the prickly
streams of the shower baths In the course
of one afternoon.
There are 612 school houses In the city,
hi,w those which have not been com
pleted. The floor apace is upward of 330
acres, or nearly 150,000,000 aquare feet The
area of the outdoor yards is a third as
much in addition. Upward of 11,000.000 is
aram annually in renajra.
It Is estimated that the value of the
school pYoperty owned, by the city la JS0,
000,000.' , ,
There are between alxty and seventy fully
equipped gymnasiums in the New York
schools.
Hnare Pay Roll.
The operation of the school system will
noat thn taxcayers of New York this year
121,229,017. Of this amount $16,300,883.49 will
be paid to teachers in salaries, this being
the amount which will De raised py tne s
mlll tax Imposed by law for this purpose.
Since February (, 1899, the amount ap
propriated for the construction of school
Lowest Priced
Shoe In America when you consid
er that they are the BEST, moat
BTYLJSH, and, moat durable. Known
everywhere aa the
..ommod:.
Sold direct from MAKER to WEAR
EK, at
$3.50
For what othera ask PS. 00, and
$2.50
Tor what othera ask P.H
We have no branch stores tn Oman
you will find ua at the same
place.
oil n
Regent Shoe Cr.
YUJOAT LYMPH TREATMENT
V4 l-xo"o Atajla. aiKuaiautra,
ill W '""urouUos au4 OMMral fMUr, On
Ubtai torn. 11 koBn, W7T4V eeiTIiJi?
"t ' i St., t fur rasa j '-i 1
f houeea haa been f42,(o0,000, an average of
nearly $8,000,000 a year. This haa not all
been expended, as the school houses hare
not all been completed for which it was In
tended the receipts from this amount of
bonds would pay. Forty-flv corporate
schools are assisted out of th school fund.
Th superintendent Of schools reeeives
$8,000 a year. Each of the associate super
intendents receives $5,600. Teachers in a
high school may receive aa high as $3,000,
and a principal of a high school having
supervision of more than twenty-flv teach
ers geta $6,000.
Overwork ia Icheol.
The medical examiner for the New York
Board of Education testified recently that
T per cent of the young women In the train
ing schools for teachera became Incurably
diseased from overwork. At 18 these girls
were sitting up with their studies till 11
o'clock at night, were undergoing a strain
as eevere as comes upon the business man
at 40. The superintendent had no doubt
that It was just this school work that broke
them down, or that It explained the prev
alence of Bright s disease, heart disease
and spinal curvature among them.
"Her statements of fact will be accepted
without the slightest hesitation," comments
the Chicago Record-Herald, "and no one,
we imagine, would wholly reject her theory
concerning the cause ot so much sickness
among the students. But at th same time
a question may be raised whether, gener
ally speaking, too much application to
books is required .of the rising generation.
Certainly th caution against crowding Is
heard on every hand, and there are related
question to be considered because they
have a very important bearing on the sub
ject as a whole. Were the girls who broke
down in good health when they began?
Were they equal to the average in bright
ness or were they trying to make up by
their wills for what they lacked In Intel
lectual glftsT If they had spare time, did
they utilize It properly In exercise and out
door diversions, or did they remain In the
close atmosphere of their rooms? Did
they ure to excess such stimulants as tea
and coffee? Was their food Insufficient, or
was It perhaps rich' and unwholesome?
Did they have cause fyr worries and ner
vous excitement that was not connected
with their studies?
"We do not ask these questions to- sug
gest a defense for mental cramming, but
Imply to indicate how large the subject ia
Possibly many young people are credited
with overwork, when the amount of work
that they actually do would not trouble
them If their lives were differently ordered.
For the common saying that work never
hurt anybody applies to all kinds of work,
and la certainly true within the limits com
monly Implied. . But, of course, sitting up
till 12 o'clock at night Is not good, nor are
long hours which keep one fagged. There
should be rest and recreation, with com
plete and Invigorating change. But these
will leave time for much hard work that
may be pursued without Injury, and, after
all, the problem Is ultimately an Individual
one, which Is, solved by reference to the
native endowment of strength and Intel
lectual ability."
Home Visitor's Excursions Fair.
Tuesday in September and Oct, 11 Good
thirty Jav Half far plus $2. Many
points In Indiana. Ohio and Kentucky.
Inquire at th Nortbwef tern Line uni'
1401 and 1403 Farnam St., Omaha.
Alligators at the Pole.
"Some men seem to have such luck, you
n. iwaniv vears aao and when we got
know," sighed the passenger with the
double chin.
"T wna a member of a polar sea expedl-
back home -I hod much to tell. I never
B-nt hut one aood chance to talk, however,
and then I had hardly begun to' tell of
the big Icebergs and the intense coia wnen
a dinky little chap nteppea in ana Degan
to talk about alligators he had seen
at the south pole."
"But there are no alligators at tne soutn
pole."
"Of course not, but that was where his
luck came In. He was talking to a lot
of lawyers and doctors and they didn't
know at which pole alligatora nested."
Chlcagro Newa.
Orchard Wilhelm 2arpet 2o.
7J REMARKABLE COUGH SALE. Genuine bargains. Our special tale of
JTJL couches has been a most successful one the past week. The stock was so large we
could not hope to close it out in a day or week, and we continue the sale for another
week. 'Youxannot afford to miss taking advantage of the special prices we are making
on couches, if you are interested. j " e
Conch, regular prrlce $9.50 reduced
Couch, regular price $10.00 reduced
price '
Couch, regular prloe $13.40 reduced
price '
Couch, regular price $16.00 reduced
prloe
Couch, regular prlc $1U0 reduced
price '.
Couch, regular price $22.50 reduced
price
Couch, genuine leather, regular price $38.00-
reduced price
Couch, genuine leather, regular price $43.60
reduced price
Couch, genuine leather, regular price $48 00
reduced price
Couch, genuine leather, regular price $47.00
reduced price
Princess Dressers
In solid oak. French bevel mirrors, exceptional values at
$12 00. 113.00, $19 00 and up.
Solid Oak Dressers, French bevl mirror, starting at
$11.00, $12.75, $13.00 and up.
Brnsselg Curtains An unusually large assortment of
these goods was bought by us from an Importer nt a
price that enables us to sell them much below their
renl vnUuv-v ts-ben we sny thnt we show 25 styles,
every pair worth $5.00, the values are O QC
there and you can buy them special at, pr.we
$7.50 BrusaelH Curtains special per J? ay
ralr rl A kj
f22.tV) Saxony Brussels Curtains, In new, f y ESfl
up-to-date designs special per pair 1jCOv
Cluny and Arabian Curtains
Both White and Arabian Color
Cluny Curtains with linen
lace
net full siiw curtains per
pair .
Cluny Curtains with extra wide Insertion
and edge per pair
Other styles at per pair from $22.50 down gi
to $7.50 and U A J
Arabian Curtains with hand-made edge, French net
center goods that you usually pay $10 y ESfl
pair for special per pair JL tJJ
We eend expert drapers to give
absolutely free of charge. , , ,
Estimates on shades free. We sell only the best Nothing but Hartshorn rollers used In our maae-to-oraer
shades.
Q a varifor pood all wool two-ply Carpet standard 10330 warp-lo new and desirable patterns and colors
UOL l.'lnurai. than almilar- rnn?a ..r il.imUu anH ThMl ar the 11019 COOd WO haVS S60U adVftlB9(l M WO'in
$1.00 per yard. We think thev nre
something here on Carpjts.
Linoleum
Best printed Linoleum made price baped
on tbicknesa at 50c, 65c, 85c and 90c
per yard.
ffZS
BKTA3LE
MPOUND
CTHES STOMACH TROVBLB,
reg-ulatea the bowels perfectly, eur.s rheu
matism, catarrh, constipation smd stomach
trouble and digests food, so you can ;et
the full strena-th and nourishment of what
you eat. DO days' treatment 26o. All drug
gists. For Menstrual Suppression
PEN-TAN-GOT
told In Oswha br ! WeCaajMll tf 0.
Hall oran BJUd, Trail. pll4. Is boll I bans W
OHLY ORE WEEK LOHQER
ONE-WAY RATES
VIA
onion pacific
FROM
CI1SS0URI RIVER TERUIHALS
UCasta City to Uaadl Ham, JocJsjr.)
EVERY DAY
TO OCTOBER I3TH. 1004.
525.00 1
.398? fin iL
gQ,UU font
WB4
S25.H0
S22.00
to
CSta
(9 TfRMtdMH ia4 tffept
f0t) flf) ABfcera?)t
iPsCUiUU zzatag, to ail laUrm
CUt sttta 8m polatfc
con nn
QfcUtUU cit u4 latgrmftUat
(Uta 8m point ' ,
6.50
7.50
8.75
9.00
13.00
15.50
34.50
37.00
40.00
39.50
Drapery Department
$25.00 Arabian
per pair
$750 Mereerixer
pair
C20 00 cord and
and satin
pair
edge extra henry
2.95
5.00
i' - - . ...
Boblnet 45 inches wide white or Arabian
color-ier yard
suggestions how to treat your rooms
well worth 63o, and give our guarantee wnn oaon carpat soia.
ugs
tloa
your Inspeci
4-4 Olloloth
Rug-
-4 Oilcloth
Rug
BLBCTBIO SPTtlHGS HOTEL
An Ideal plac to spend the winter, Three
sprinlrs, all noted for their healthralvlna;
properties. Hot and oold baths tree. Kate
ll. 00 a day ,or $6 a month. W. M. LO
VERN, proprlator, Rogers, Ark.
DEPUTY STATU THTHRlNARIAH.
H. L RAMACCIOTTU D. V. S.
CITY TBTKKINARSAIf.
OI&AHA. NEB. Telephone m.
OfAee aad Inflrraary, KUt and aCaaoa Bta
64a SVtndgca tarn
Aof(e 6 Diego, gad
runwtt
rapping
tt4 BtstttJe).
t9 AJOOAM, BoMfttiTfl,
PtoK Alitor 4
tiAlpa, ioaladlxgj Uapcb
tip ta Oret on,
Boot tod totmnM
0. B. 2f . point
Special Showing of Dining
Room Furniture
In the lot arc a number of suits matched up complete tn
design and finish.
Weathered Oak Suit, consisting of Sideboard, China Cabi
net, Serring Table, Dining Table and six fCk A.f
ChaJrs-epeclil tt.f 3WfM
Weathered Oak Suit, consisting of Sideboard, China Cabi
net, Serving Table, Dining Table and six QO f0
Chairs, a little more massive in design 0"UV
Golden Oak Suit, matched up complete In design and finish,
consisting of Sidnboard, China Cabinet, QO
Serving Table, .DJnlng Table and six Chairs. Osia W
Arabian Curtains with band-made edge extra wide
also lnserti.r.1 and edge special per f T CS
pair 7 J. O
Curtains special
.17.50
Portieres
Portieres, all colors per
4.95
bind edge also new border Persian
tpeclal per
14.50
Couch Covers
CO Inch Bagdad Couch Cover 8 yards
long fringe nil around each aWeJaaf7
60-lnch Bagdad Conch Covers 3 yardg T"CS
long fringe all around each A A. J
Curtain Swiss 86 inches wide 15 styles
nor varrl ,u,, Isaiw
131q
and with what class of goods to
you can mrm
Oilcloth and Stove Rugs
Our new lino Is ready for
.40c
..85c
(-4 Olloloth
Rug
1-4 Oilcloth
Rug
.60c
.1.25
CDCCCOLD
f lalr.1
WATCH
This Watch haa Solid
Oold Laid EpjrreTed
Case, American Move
ment, warranted to keep
correct rime. Beual tm
appearance to Bond Gold'
Watch guaranteed at
years. We give It abso
lutely free to Bora aad
Girls or anyone selling to Cards of ear
useful Jewelry at lOo a card. Bend your
addreaa and we will send Jewelry, poat
pald. When eo'.d, send us U and we will
poaitlTely send you th Watch and Chain,
Pilgrim Jewelry Co., 4H Mlaoh "'- ig,
Providetioa, R. .
1 .
i
i
a--
Bold, by 6h.erman A UoCosaaU Qrug Csv
I
... . r