THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SATURDAY, JULY 2S, 1901' SBE525JV OUR GREAT WATEK DAMAGE SALE THE MOST ATTRACTIVE BARGAIN EVENT EVER KNOWN ; i The new bargain opportunities offered each succeeding day of this great sale, the splendid values in very slightly damaged and entirely un damaged merchandise has kept the buying enthusiasm at fever heat Those who come once come again and yet again, impelled by the desire to make the most of the grandest money saving chance known in Omaha nn Ln. THE RCllSAOLC CTOnC THE nCLlAOLC CTORC. U - ' i 9 "CD A DAY OF GREAT BARGAIN OPPORTUNITIES In Our ladies' Suit Department ' A tremendous assortment of unmatched values hu bm shown In ttata Wrt during this aale. but none to aurpaaa, and few to equal, the offering for Saturday. Come . - - - .A ik .. IK mnnAm mrill tiwivii n 11 irk 1 V . cony, as uv uicbo v " . Women' ureaa Burra, in noo tuh, fetaa and fancy mixed materials, J Q E $15 to $18 values at i Women' Waists, that sold at '! tQ. $1.80, choice Saturday ........ .J J WomraSt Waiatu, that sold at CIC, $2.00. choice Saturday ,. J JC $6.00 China Bilk Waista, In Sat- -IOC urday'sa&le .'. . . lJf Fine Dressing: Smjaea, regular $5.00 and. $60 valuea, in Saturday's f Q C sal ....... ... SAITODAY BVEMNQ SFBC1AU3 Prom 7 till 8 P. M. Women's Wrappers, slightly aoiled, worth no to Q $1.60, choice ..... . . . . J From, 7:80 till 8:80 P. M. Woman's Dressing Saqu.es, regular $1.00 OQ . values at '. mJC Prom 8 till 9 P. M. Women's $1.25. Wash Undershirt, all clean, perfect CC j.... 3.00 WbMe Waah Drfnw Bllgnuy soil ed, the greatest bargains ever offered, at, sale price. tJ Lad'.ea' Hilk Waist, rrorth regularly Crt IT.tO, in Saturday's sale IJU Children's Wash Drosses,, that sold f up to $3.00, Saturday, choice. .. . O C Children's Kimonoe, slightly BoUedlA Saturday, at UC Women's Silk Petticoat, worth regularly up to $10.00, in 8 lots, Saturday at. . . -Women's (15 and $20 White Princes , Dresses, absolutely unsoiled, P . f A ' 'beautifully trimmed, Saturday. , J UU cuii,( uhita TirvxKpi. trimmed with fine Val. L,ace, ail clean ana periecx .garments, regular $25 values.. $2 and $30 Tailor Suits, more or leas rimiarpri hv water, creat assortment ol colors and. materials, will o at, choice, . jo 8.90 3.95 goods, choice Millinery Bargain Surprises $10 and $12 Black Trimmed Hats, $5. We have just received from the east an elepant lino of Black Hats, made of fine braids, trimmed with plumes, wings, roses, chiffon, ornaments, etc., in the very latest fall styles. These hats would sell ordi- g S narily from $10 to $12 our special sale (! Du B price Saturday W All Straw Hats must go, and every purchase made hero Saturday means a saving of $1 to $5 to you. The trim mings alone are in many cases worth twice the prices asked. . , . Cntrlmmod Silk Hat, worth up to $2.60, at, choloe.. BOc Un trimmed Straw Hat, worth up to $5.00, at, choice $1.25 Trimmed Ilatn, worth up to $3.60, at, choice. ....... .08c rrimmed Rata, worth up to $6.00, will go at. $1.50 All Summer Flowers and Foilage at Half Price., Rw, Greatest Bargains Ever J! Plain and Silki Bf3 Water Damage Shoe Sale A chance of a lifetime to buy good shoes for one-half price or less. Women '8 shoes, worth up to $3.50, mostly all sizes ...$1.00 Women's $3.50 and $4.00 Oxfords, gun metal, patent and kid :$2.00 Misses' fine $2.25 kid, patent colt and wax calf welt shoes $1.00 Children's $1.25 and $1.50 tan and black button or law shoos with largo rib bon ties 75c Misses' $1.50 and $1.75 Oxfords and Gibson Ties 75c Women's $1.50 and $1.75 Oxfords $1.00 Men's Stetson, Orossett and Heinskarap $3.50 and $5.00 shoes $2.50 Men's $3.00 box calf and kangaroo calf bluchers and bals $2.00 Men's $2.00 and $2.25 satin calf, quilted sole dressy work shoes, $1.00 and75o Youths' and little gents' satin calf and dongola $1.50 shoes, at. .$1.00 and 75o Boys' $2.25 and $2.50 kid and calf shoes $1.50 All polish and silk Oxford Ties One-Half Price A splendid chanoe for our many Grover customers to shoe up for some time to come as it is only once in a lifetime you can get snaps in Grover shoes. Thw easiest shoe ever put on a woman's foot. Ask the woman!! easi DRUG DEPARTMENT Blackberry Cordial, . per bottle. . ...... c Eeef, Wine and Iron, per bottle. , Absorbent Cotton, package 5 c 25c 21c Dr. Woodbury's Soaps, J 2 Dr. Woodbury's Powder, 2'( Colgate's and William's Shaving Boapa. per "" cake J v Dr.. Graves' .Tooth (t Powder, at . . i . : v v Rubber Brushes, each ......... 8c Grand Handkerchief Sale Every soiled or ven slightly wusaed Handkerchief from the Groat Sale will be cloned out Saturday at JUST HALF BEGULAU PttlCES. Lot 3 A great line of lOe embroidered handker- Lot 1 A fine line of ladies' and children's handker- chiefs, at, choice. . . . .2x2c Lot 2 Fancy embroidered and initial handkerchiefs, 1 at, choice 30 " 50c Slik VtUlngs. 12 l-2e Saturday morning . we will . place on sale 100' bolts, of the very finest All Silk Veilings. Newest patterns, In" blacks, " browns, blues and . white', all silk, full . width and regular 50c quality . your choice, per . , ITl- yai-d..... j m $VwWWiMMw chiefs, at, choice. ..... .5c Lot 4 Embroidered and plain linen handkerchiefs, in great variety, at...7C Set , Then Sptclals . 50c FANCY SILK BELTS, . Qq ' 20c all 'siLk 'ribbons) "". Tic yarn;. .......... . . . i . . ....... a 60c "AIR BRUSHES... - . .. QQg JJc SILK WINDSOR TIES, . . Ka each. i i ,u" 5e LADIES' NECKWEAR, r-. ; fe rhnlr. VW 80c FANCY RIBBONS, - 1 at.'. .............,..vtI FOUR HOSIERY SPECIALS that win be of special interest to a bargain-loving public. Every item a rouser. Ladira' Fancy Hone, in plain black, gauce, lisle and fancy lace patterna, 33c and 50c quail- 1 ( Uea, at -UKt Ladlra' Famcy Hose, In black and colors, worth up to 26c, in two lots, at 12 He lQc Mieeea' 5c Fine Bibbed and Drop Stitrh Hoee, Friday, at. pair tjt Children's Hoee. heavy ribbed, worth double, Saturday at 12 He, 10c and ,6c Get a Grip on the bargain proposition in our Trunk Depart ment and save a neat little sum on the purchase price of your Vacation Trip Necessities. Going on Your Vacation? You'll probably need a Suit ' Cane or Satchel. Our special display of traveling necessities will Interest you. Bee those handsome Leather Suit Cones, 93 Trunks at $3.98, $4.93 and $5.93 that will give you all kinds of satisfactory service. Omaha's Greatest Grocery Department Freshest Goods, Lovest Prices and Highest Quality 10-lb. sack brut Granulated Commeal. 6 lba. beat hand picked Navy Beana. 6-lb.. pails Pure Fruit Jelly 5 lbs. beat Bulk Oatmeal - IS bars beet brands Laundry Soap.... Oil Sardines, per can ., Potted Meats, per can l ib. can Fancy Alaska Salmon...... 1-lb. package Seeded Ralslni.... 1-lb. package Macaroni 1- lb.. package beet Corn Starch 2- lb.'can best Sweet Sugar Corn..... S-lbv can Ho it on Baked Veins.. 1-lb. can Boston Baked Beans Xcelo Breakfast Food, per package, Xc ..19c ..16c ..15c ..15c ...So ...8c ..10c .7Hc .8V4o ...c . . 6c .THc ...4C ...6c The beat Soda Crackers, per lb c Fresh, crtap Glnicer Pnaps, per lb 5c S packages Uneeda Biscuits for 10c Porto Rico Blend Coffee, per lb 2o Fancy Santos Coffee, per lb 15c Choice Tea Blftlngs, per lb Fancy B. F. or Buri Dried Japan Tea. per lb &c BTTTTEft AND CHEESES SALE. Fancy Dairy Butter, per lb 16c Fancy Separator Creamery Butter, per lb 1 Baylea' After Dinner Cheasa, per Jar. c Sap Bago Cheeee.i each THc Neufchatel Cheese, each tc Fancy Domestic Swiss Cheese, per lb lf'c Imported Roqueford Cheese, per lb....&a FRUITS. Fancy large dox Fancy Elberta basket FRUITS. FRUITS. Messina Lemons, per 10o Freestone Peachee. per Fancy Sweet Oranges, per doi loc 2 measures Fresh Roasted Peanuts 5o Ijltsx heads Cabbage, each 3c Irgn baskets Fancy Ripe Tomatoes. .15o 2 heads Fresh Kalamazoo Celery for. ...6c Splendid Furnishing Bargains Arc always the assured thing as Mayden'a, especially la this true a tha prea mnt tlms whea we're forcing; oat all summer goodi to maka room tot tba aw fall stock of furnishing. Von Can't AfforA to Miss These Bpoolals. Men's Half Hoae, In plain and Ladies' 50c Union Suits, Jersey ribbed, in all slaos, (J great snap, at 3C Lndles' Venta and Pants, in fine lisle, Jersey ribbed, vests have long sleeves and high neck, pants are lace trimmed, worth up to ROc garment, j" sale price Saturday ajC Ladles' Lisle Gauze Vests, worth fully double Satur- 7 day's price 2C Infanta' Skirts and Dremes, broken lots, in the newest styles, daintily trimmed, worth up to 11.50, your choice I Saturday.... 50c fancy colore, worth up to 8flo, in 3 lota, at 19c, Ift. 12Vc and 1UC Ladlea' Corset Covers and Chemise, nicely trimmed with laces, em broideries and washable - rib bons, in 8 lots Saturday, worth fully double, at, 60c. . 39c and JC Men's Shirts, all new, stylish pat" terns, with or without collars attached, regular 75c aad $1.00 values. In 2 lota, at JCi. 89o and Z,ZC Men's Underwear, in plain and fancy colors, regular Cf fl values, Saturday. ... .OUC aasSssaasssjiassssjssBs Omaha's Leading Meat Market Spring Chicken, guar anteed fresh, lb. . . . Shoulder Roast, lb 20c ...'..Sic Shoulder Steak, C 1 lb ...J2C ..8c Round Steak, lb., 10c and Sirloin Steak, lb., 12c and JC Boiling Beef, lb ...4C Picnic Hams, lb All klnda of Sausage, lb 1 mm ...:..9Jc y .6!c I MAN HIDES WAD AND STARVES . a Old -Citiisn Imainet ' Spirits of Dead ' Bltivei Seek, HU Money. . , -UVES IN ROOM WITH DOG AND NO FOOD bora know he haa no kin- In- this country. The man .will be cared for at police hestl quirters until ''some ' other arrangements re made for him, ., . , ' J Police Ftnd Him Miserable Spectacle of Neglect and Administer ' . Aid that Gives Him . ' ' " ' Strength. Because he imagined' the spirits of his departed relatives were haunting him .for his money Oeorge A. We ygnld of 2322 Hick ory street locked himself In his room and may have starved to death had It not been that his dog aroused other occupants of the house Friday morning by barking in a dis tressful manner. The police were notified and . Patrol .Conductor Fahey had .to .break a wiadow. to gain entrance to Weygold's room. On entering Fahey found Weygold helpless under a bench. The dog licked the big .policeman's hand and directed the way to his master's position under the bench. - Weygold was literally starving to death through fear of. spirits he Imagined he saw peering in at the windows and sitting' In the chairs of his room. The man hid his face under the bench through fright. One side of his face was black with dead flies. Weygold, who la 71 years of age, was removed to the porlce station and revived by Surgeon Flynn. The old man has lived thirty-nine years In Omaha and acquired the property where, be was found Friday morning. A year ag he sold the; place for H.500 and, according to his own state rnrni, ild the money, living since the sale in a room of his former home, with his dog as his only companion. Friday morn ing the police tried to get Weygold to say whre.-ha hid the 11,500. that the money might be put In a safe place for him, but nothing would persuade the msn to reveal the. hiding ' place. His. hallucination ap- paared to be that the spirits of his late relatives have been haunting him to get the money, and rather than allow them to get tha hnrde he determined to starve to death under tha bench where he was found. A mora -neglected-looklng specimen of humanity, than Weygold appeared Friday morning was not seen In the police station for many a day. . Weygold Is single and came from Ger many forty-five years ago. So far as netvh- KANSAS WANTS V. CONEY', IN Ssslewer' Grtsd ' Arnr Mti Have Candidate for Commander-in-Chief, ' The Kansas department.' Grand'. Army of the Republic, Is making strenuous efforts to secure the -election of Captain Patrick Henry, Coney, department commander , of thafstate, 'to the postlon of commander-In-chief of the Grand Army of, the Re publics the national encampment at Min neapolis, August 13 to it.' ' H. . ' , Captala .Coney waa' endorsed . for .'.that position by the department . encampment held at SHllna, Knn., In June.' His can didacy Is also endorsed by. many- of tha Grand Army posts of Kaeisaa.- He Is at present commander of the Kansas depart ment," having been re-elected to that posi tion In June. He entered the army during the1 clvH war us a -member of Company H. One Hundred and Eleventh New York Infantry',' and . participated -in .the battle of Gettysburg. EpottsyWanla and those of the Petersburg campalng, - being severely wounded at the battle of Peach 'Orchard,' In' front of Petersburg. Va.,- June IS. 1S64. He waa finally discharged from the army October 5, 1W5. He has been a resident of Kansas since 1S6T and has been protn Inently Identified with Kansas Interests hi me then. He Is at present a resident of Topeka, SECOND MORTGAGE FOR LOAN Proposition Advanced by Directors of Auditorium as Mean a of Raising: Balance. Owing to the excessive warmijh of Fri day afternoon a quorum of the board of directors of the Auditorium failed to put In an appearance at the meeting called for 4 o'clock. Only sixteen of the board were present, seventeen, members being requisite for a .quorum. However, the Auditorium . indebtedness matter Waa dis cussed and. It . was .decided to .recommend to the advisory executive committees to take up tile proposition of giving a sec ond mortgage on the building as security for a $50,000 loon to complete the build ing and. naycffall outstanding claims. Another meeting will be held Thursday afternoon" to work out the details of the proposition. The general opinion waa that. In view of the prevailing prosperity ' In the city, the $50,000 ought to be raised without much difficulty.- .. HEAL5 OLD SORES QUESTIONS F0R CANDIDATES Katlonal Cltlsens' Alliance Proposes to Bound Them on Their Tendencies. i To check the political ambitions of the labor union ' leaders, the National Citizens'. Industrial association .in. submitting to po. Utlcal candidate throughout the country two questions: ' . , "Have ,ypu. pledged your support to the labor trust or to any other trust, organiza tion or corporation seeking special legisla tion? . "Will you or will you not represent the citizens as a whole and seek to protect them from class legislation whether by organized capital or organized lnbor when such legis lation Is In the interests of the few to give power over the many?" The plan provides that the names of can didates who stand - for labor ' or capital trusts shall be supplied to the different Citizens' associations now organized In over 600 towns and cities In order that citizens of all parties who are opposed to class legislation and organized trust methods of seeking to control legislation can vote for anti-trust candidates at - the coming elections. The citizens propose to support public men 'of either party who stand free from pledges to any organization. They refer to the effort of labor leaders to Becure the passage of an antl-injunctlon. bill as a direct step towards anarchy and an effort to take away the power of the courts and transfer It to the labor trust or capital trust, whichever might choose to revenge Itself on worklngnien.. To strip the courts of power to restrain organizations from at tacking men or property would place citi zens and communities in Jropardy from any organization, either of labor, or capital, which might chooss to use violence. Ijibor In Its proposed attacks upon other workmen anj property; capital if it ahould see fit to hire men to attack union workmen. This movement of cltlsens Is based upon the theory of government that the com munity must protect Its members from con trol of the people by any organization, class or trust. NEW TOOTH fOR MUCK RAKE Zone of. Operations Ma j Be Extended to Cfficeof' Comptroller. SO FAR THIS DEPARTMENT IS LEFT OUT It Is Pointed Oat that Since Comp troller la Disbar sing- Officer of City'" Investigation Would Be All Right. ' Every old sore exists because of a polluted condition of the blood. This vital fluid is infected with some genu or old taint, or perhaps has been left in an unhealthy condition from a long spell of sickness, or the trouble may be inherited. The poisonous gems and matter with which the blood is sat urated force as outlet on the face, arms, legs or other part f the body and tora a sore or ulcer. This being continually fed by a polluted blood supply, grows red and angry, festers and eats into the surrounding flesh until it becomes what is very aptly termed an "old sore." The relief produced by external treatment ia only temporary. The only treatment that can do any nral good is a blood purifier that goes to the very root of the trouble and re moves the cause, and for this purpose nothing equals S. S. S. It drives out from the circulation all morbid matter and gerrus 'even' reaching, down to hereditary taints, and by cleansing the blood heals Id sores permanently. S..S. S. not only removes all taints and poisons from the blood but builds it up by supplying it with the rich, health-sustaining properties it needs to Veep the system in health. S. S. S. makes pure blood and a sore must heal if the blood is pure and healthy. Book -on Sores aad Ulcers aad .radical advice free. J7f SWIFT SPCCinO CO., A TtAMTAt 'CAs' RIGHT OF COUNCIL DENIED Sew Attack Made by Prltchctt en Motion for Retrial of Gas Tank Case. The motion for a new trial In the suit brought by the Omaha Gas company to compel Building Inspector Wlthnell to Is sue a permit for the erection of a gas holder at Twentieth and Center streets was submitted to Judge Day and will be decided Tuesday. George E. Prltchett, for the gas company, has attacked the council ordinance on new grounds In his argument for a new hearing. He contends that, though the council might have the-power to prohibit the building of gas holders aitogeter, or In cegtaln dis tricts. It has no power to delegate the right to say whether or not they shall be built to people living In the neighborhood. ST.aS to Minneapolis and Rtlsrs Via Chicago Great Western Railway. Aeoount of G. A. R. encampment, August ISth to lth. Tickets on sale after August 11th. Tot further Information apply to H. H Churchill, O.' A-. iill Farnam fu. Omaha. The democratlo muck raxe at the city hall may have a new tooth added. It has been tailed to attention that in the plans for checking over the fiscal afTnlis of the city for a few years back to ascertain if all Is right the comptroller's office seems to have been ' left!' out of calculations. Whether Jhia Is because the comptroller for, the last three years haa been a demo crat or it was sjpposed the auditing de partment had nothliip almut It to go wrong and merely audited, is not cried to the winds. But In all the talk about checking up the other departments the comptroller's office was not ome mentioned. And the resolution hiring Expert Accountant J. M. Gilchrist directs tha' he shall work under the direction of the mayor and comptroller. When Mayor Dahiman returns from the Black Hills be Is to be asked to have the comptroller's office Included In the muck rake zone. There are people In the city hall, too, who ace hunts enough to hint that muck may be found there. The comptroller's office, as operated at the city hull, Is not .exclusively an auditing agency by any means. All the appropria tion ordinances are made up there, all tho wrrrants for payments of all kinds made out and Issued, claims and bills of all kinds received and passed on and through It every bit of supplies used by the city Is ordered. Business of Treasurer. It is the business of the treasurer to puy all warrants properly issued and signed and not to inquire into the propriety of the payments. ' The only counterbalance the comptroller has Is the finance committee of the-counciL This committee used to spend a few hours a week in the office mechan ically checking over the appropriation or dinance sheets with the pay rolls of the various departments. So far as known no clerical errors were discovered by this process. ' Oepu'y Comptroller t'osgrove hss not yet completed checking over the books of the clerk of the police court. What progress or discoveries he has made have not been made public, it was presumed that the expert accountant a first task would be at the police court, but. Instead, he was set to the Job of Investigating the treasurer's office, which Is admitted to he the least likely of any to be wrong. Blmply keeping the dally routine up to standard would ab. stilutely guard against crooked work by the treasurer or his employes. "There is Just as much need for check ing up the comptrollers office as there Is for inquiring Into any other at the city hall," said a man who has filled places in the municipal building for years. "As long as the comptroller Is the disbursing officer his 'accounts should be watched as carefully as those of the treasurer. I, for one, should 'like to know why his office seems, to have been omitted from the scheme." GUARDIAN FOR A SPENDER Cnstodlnn Asked to Save Mone Which Edward C. Gates Cannot Keep. Application for the appointment of a guardian of KUward C. Gates, a bookseller and stationer at 1615 Farnam street, on the grounds he is a spendthrift was made in county court ' Friday afternoon. The petition fcays Mr. Gales came Into pos session of about 15,j00 worth of property by the death of his father, Amos Gates of Bart y county, in August, 11KI5, and has already gone through with about half of It. It states ho has spent all of the cash, amountlhg to S,liO, and the proceeds of a mortgage amounting to $1.4 0, and If he con tinues his family will become charges on the county. The appointment of J. M. Gates, his older brother, as guardian is asked. Gates Is now in the county Jail with an Insanity complaint agalnut him. The Insanity comnilhslon began the hear ing of evidence under the complaint yester day afternoon. Several physicians and members of Mr,. Gates' family testified he had be n drinking heavily during the last year and appeared unable to control his appetite?'- for whisky. Mr. Gates Is making a strenuous fight to keep from being taken to the asylum. He Is represented by A. H. Muidock. while his relatives are repre sented by J. H. Van Uusen. TJie complaint Is under the dipsomaniac law. CITY PLANT TO KILL TRUST Municipal Ice Factor Advocated as Meant of Combating Combine. kS OLi and YVELL-TRIKI) REMEDY. roa over sixty YCAna KM. WXH"Z,OW'S SOOTaTIMO TstUT, k.s twa um4 fcr or SIXTY TEAKS br MILLIONS I MU1HKKS (or (ti.lr I HILI'KKN WHILK TCBTH- Ing. with pkkuci t sucks, it souTHi tt CHlLll. SOrrtNS tb GIMS, ALLAYS all IAIN, rlRfcs WIKU I'OUC, sna tti Ml iBlr tot IrtARaMogA ton r Dmsiitu Is mrr tut at thr voris B iur aoa aak lor 1K3. Wl.VSLOU 'is SOOTHING SYRl'P 44 use as etaw kJ4. M eaU a kauia ROYAL BAND QUITS TONIGHT Hawaiian Maslcinns Are Concluding Week of Successful Concerts at the Auditorium. The Royal Hawaiian band and Glee cluh Is concluding Its successful engage ment at the Auditorium with Increasing evidences of popularity. Another enthu siastic gathering listened last evening to the natice players and singers from the bosom of the Pacific and cheered time and again to the soothing and Inspiring manic The dance has proven a great factor of Interest. Miss Let I.ehua and John S. Kills won many meeds of applause last evening and had to respond to several encores. The Glee club was In particular favor. The charm of the Glee club's ren dition of the Hawaiian som,- and native music la irresistible. It Is something dis tinctly new In these parts. The engage ment will close today, with an afternoon and evening program. A big dance will be a feature of the last concert. CAPITOL AVENUE MARKET HOUSE PLACE Proposition Will Be Presented to Mayor Dahiman on His Re torn from the Black Mills. A municipal ice manufacturing piant, to be located In the deserted Capitol avenue market house. Is a proposition that will be submitted to Mayor Dahiman and possibly tho city council. It is pointed out that the market house has been standing Idle for months and that the city, by owning a plant, could always be In a position to protect small consumers from exorbitant prices. The friends of the movement in bist that none of the product be sold to the large consumers, such as saloons and meat markets, but go directly to the householder. Equipped in this way, the city would care little whether there waa an Ice trust or hot, for the product would come to- them at cost.- ' ' , " " The plan in founded on the advice of Premier Ward of New Zealand, - who said while In the United States that If an lea trust menaced his country the govern ment would go Into the business and de stroy It by competition. Consumers as Witnesses. Prominent consumers of Ice will be called before County Attorney Slnbaugh to give evidence In the Ice trust Investigation. Judge Slabaugh believes some of the saloon and soda fountain men who bay largo quantities of ice might have some Infor mation to disclose that would be of in terest. In-their dealings with the ice com panies they may have found evidence of an agreement among the dealers, and County Attorney Blabaugh will try to IIikI out what they know. No more witnesses were examined Fri day. County Attorney Slahaugh has made a public request for nil persona having in formation on the subject to communicate with him. '. ' If you have anything to trad advertise It in the For Exchange column Of The Bee Want Ad rage, ' DOCTORS FOR.RflE'W. . ; I '. I Villi 4 km i j .. .; 's- ..'V-- - - Superb BerTlce, splendid Scenery, enroute to Niagara Falls, Muskoka and Kawartha Lakes, Georgian Bay and Te magaml Region, Bt. Lawrence River and Rapids, Thousand Islands. Algonquin Na tional Park. White Mountains and Atlantic tea coast resorts, via Grand Trunk Kail way Eyetem. Double track Chicago to Montreal and Niagara Falls, N. T. For copies of tour'.st publications and de scriptive pamphlets apply to Geo. W. Vaux, A- O. P. A. T. A.. 136 Adams St., Chicago. Marrlaae Licenses. The following marriage license haa been issued : Name and Address. Age. John F. Williams. Omsha 21 Jennie Casual. Chlcagti. Ill 24 Frank O Conrad. Omaha S Kdna McCullough. Missouri Valley, la.. 13 CIAJaONJpg-Ed&olm, litn aad iiane. The Reliable Specialists n mm puna) m 9 xIany of you are suffering from physical weaknen and lose I "2 Li kvl of sexual vigor, your nervous system Is being depleted and your UB E-- B3 mind weakened and Impaired Life is not what It ahould be iMrspondrncy and gloomy f ureucKllngs have taken the place of bright prospects and happy ambition. You no longtr enjoy your dally labors or dutias; your nights are restless and unrefreshlng and each morning you awaken aain to the cheerless realisation of your physical impediments and weaknesses and you have neither the ambition nor the power to maintain your position among your fellow men. In many cases abusive habits, night losses and day drains are the oauae of your condition, while in others it is some secret diseases. Gonorrhoea or contagious HI nod Poison, or frequently the results of neglected or Improperly treated private diseases, which cause Stricture, Varicocele. Prostatic. Kidney and Bladder Diseases. These diseases (or symptoms of disease) cannot be cured until first their cause is removed and cured. Men, don t dslay. Don't give up If others have failed yoa. Come today to the MEN 8 TRUE SPE CIALISTS and learn your true condition. Get the right treatment first and be cored safely and thoroughly. . f For a safe cure of the disease that so Insidiously destroy the Intellect, n strength and very manhood, secure the services of the eminent spedallsre of y h tii MMtinal lnatitme Thvv will stoD these unnatural drains, with their II terrible results and restore to health the plttsbl victim of Nervo-Besual Debil ity, brain fatigue and wrecked manhood. We cure safely and thoroughly. Stricture, Varicocele, Emissions, Nervo-Sexual Debility, Impotency, Blood Poison (Syphilis), Eectal,. '. Kidney and Urinary Diseases and all diseases and weaknesses of men due to evil habits, exoesses or tha re sult of specific or private diseases. FREE CONSULTATIOM AND EXAMINATION. J . "' STATE MEDICAL INSTITUTE 1303 Farnara St., Between ISth and 14th Sts., Omaha, Neb.