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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (June 29, 1896)
( TMAITA DATT/V HIM/ * -AI/\-VTI- , SPECIRL NOTICES. Ailvi-rtlncnifiil" for Ilioou ccilniuim .P. It III IntnUrii nntll I'JlHO | i. in. for I IncvpnliiK' nnil until H p , in. for tlic tiiornlnu mill Sunitnjrilltton * . i-llMT , lij- r < Miir lliiK 11 niini- olirck , rnn IIHVI' mi'tTPrn nil- Ml f n iiiiiulii-rrd Irltrr In curr of Tinlice. . Atijnrrr * no iiililri'imril trill IIP ildlvrrcil on [ ircHfiitntlmi of 1ln > clu-ck on I- . It n I . , 1 ! - , : < ti Ttoril ftrxt linrrttoni 3o it uoril < li Tiifl T. \iittilnu tiilirn fur II-N * Hi n n ! : . - , < for llu * flrnt Inser tion. Thrn < - nilvtrtliiriiiiittn niliNt b Tim foinrriitlvrlr- VANTKI ) . AS' IDIIA ; WHO CAN THINK or fumi Mmplo thing to patent ? I'rutecl ycur I < 3 .i . tlity may bring you urcnltli.Vrltp Jolm Woi ] < ! rurn A Cu. . J > | it. V. , Patent Ai'iimr } * , Wellington , D. C. , for llwlr 41. V prlii" niter nd list of two hundred Inventions wantiM. S7S TO JIM A MONTH AND nxriN'SES PAIR rnltxmrn for clgari ; xp rl'-nc unnecessary ; timlaril fm < l.i ; Little Clerk cigar machine rre In rnch customer. lllnhop & Kline , Bt. lx > uli > . Tllo. HMHJy. . ; * _ VANTKD MHN TO 1.KA11N HA11UKK TIlAnrJ : cnn IIP fklllfol In two rmmthi ; complete mittlt of toiiln not only furnish" . ! fur iirartlco DM , but ilnnnlivl wind BrA'luale ; j-oun men flttM fcir end Kil riint''eil iMtuatlon ; constnnt jirnrtlre furnl hcil liy use of fre-e tlrkotn ; only InctUn- tlon of tl-e Itlnil In Hie world ; wacen pulil Snt- iinlny wlillc lenrnlnK. Clilcaso IUrlr School , 53 So. Clark St. , riilc KO. H-MGS5 I3 * sAI.BSMAN VOU NBU. AND IOWA. I.lljcral Vnlnry ; Hl o nldc line men. Kor pnrtlcu- lam aildrm * California Cider Co. , Chicago. 1I-M7M Jy5 * I--OH nio noitx MOUNTAINS. WyomliiR ; JI.75 Uny : free transportation. Kramer & O'Hearn. 1120 Knrnam t. II-.M7 : , ! ID * WANTED-I UXIMHIIN'I-I : ( > siioi : HAI.KS- men nl once. Huston Store , Omaha. C7-27 \VANTKli MIW ANI > WOMtJN MARK Jt TO tl to an hour. Imysi unit ulrla Mo t" 75c n tioiir ; lionKfOil.i. . new plan , no rink , no llccnru. firlKht finlil. outfit fr < e. money fent us niter tli" oroVrs are tnkcu. "Laundry Tablets" H n article nf merit. Klvrs sntlsfnctlon unil \ wantp'l ' by every liousfki-eper ; It Is the Irfrt pi.'llltlK Mo article on record ; thousands of tiack- H.ROH will l.o olJ In the next fuw nionthi and humlrnls of dollars nmile by ngrntn. One man took forty onler * the llrt day. und snys : "It Is the best * Hh > r I fvpr trle'l. " Address at once Tablet Depot. Cincinnati. O. 11-MTS4 30 \VA\Tiil \VANTil > . AT 71C N. 22D ST. girl for Kfncrnl housework ; references required. O 4H1 WANT-HI ) . A rOMl'KTKNT COOK. Al'l'I.Y MM Farnam St. . C M71I-50 WANTKIJ UCfll'OXSIIILn J.AJ1Y FOR 1'Ot- tlnn cf trubt and management. Ari'ltrss ' K 27 , Hep. . C M7CJ 30 \VANTBIvSTKNOOnAI'IIKIl : MVST HB BX- IxTltnceil nml comiwtent ; Mate salary requlieil , whli'h must be low. Aildreea S 2S. IJ > c. C-.M7C1 SO * KOIl HOUSES IN ALL. PA UTS OP TIIK C1TV. THE O. K. Davis Company , 1W3 Putnam. D-CT3 HOrsTs ! ilBNAWA & CO. , 10S N. 1JTH ST. U 4T73 MODBIIX HOUSES. C. A. STAIIR , 923 X.Y.MFC D C > IIOUHKS. WAI-LACK , IinOWX 11LK. 16 i Dou ? . D-r.sl FOR ItnXT. 6-IIOOM HOUSE. ALL , MODRRN convenience * ; south front iintl convenient to business. Inquire at 29)3 Half Howard. E-KOOSI , DETACHED. MODBIW HOUSE. J23. Wiaiilrc K21 Cnpltol nvenue. U. II. llobtson. D-CJ CHOICE HOUSES AND COTTAGES FOIl IlEN'T nJl over the city. IS to JM. Fidelity. 17'tt ' Far- nnm. A barculn. S-room house , all wodern. In One repair , 4111 Lafayette ave. , opp. Lafayette yiaee. D 575 TWO FINE HOt'SEW. ONE S , ONE 9 JtOO.Ms ! .157 und IK So. 16th t. ; all modern conx-cnl- etic.t' ; In-at rerldenc * part of the city. Imiu'ro ' Ot N. Y. Life ; telephone IWfi. D MW7 STEAII " "HEATED"srouls AND FLATS" Hou-iinl Kam-k. agent. HID Chicago street. D XI 5 roil KENT. MODERN S-HOOM HOUSE AT CU 1'ark ave. Inquire at Fuller drug store. 14th anil Douglas xt. D MS21 LIST OF HOUSES. THE IIYRON ItetM Co. , 212 S. 14th St. D MSS5 IIOrSES , I' . D. AVEAD , ICTH AND DOUGLAS. D MS33 Jyl TWO G-KOOM HOUSES. SCO SOUTH 22NIX D M979 JyG * 1IOPEL SIX IIOOM COTTAGE , LAWN AND cknile. I1I4 511am ! st. D CT HMALL HOUSE , 411 a. MTH AVE. D-CSS FOIl HUNT. MODHIIN FLATS. LANGE block. < Xl South 13th t. D MMa Jy2l SIX UOOJI cbTTAGB71i2roiIo ] st. Knqulre US Sonth ISth Bt D 672-Jl FOR RENT. 8 11OO.MS , CITY WATER , HATH. EUH. fiirnKe. kO ft. onr. hit. shade , eist fmnt. JK7.W. _ Shcrwon.l.423 _ N. Y. Life. p-MTMS * Iv-HOOM HOUSE : ALL MODERN IMPIIOVE- nic-nta. 1721 Dodge. Enquire next door or 1318 IVrnam. D M7SU M. COOLEST FURNISHED COTTAGE NEAR High school : rirly nppllrant , vacant hourc price. H 11. liee. D-M7.W ! D run UOO.MN. FURNISHED ROOMS , HOUSEKEEPING. JC20 St. Jlary'n. E-WS-Jy-5 FURNISHED ROOMS ; HOUSEKEEPING ; cliei-p. 2CU St. Mary'H. U < WT-Jyl FURNISHED ROOMS. M4 SOUTH 2JTH ST. FURNISHED ROOMS FOR LIGHT HOfSE- Douglas. E MUM M NICELY FURNISHED ROOMS cTlEAP 115 S. With. E-M7CO 2U IMJIl\ISIIin HOOMS AM ) IIOAICD. FHONT IIOO4I AND IIOAIU ) . 212 ROtTTH 2 > TH Btrwt. ! lll.MJ ! J U * BO. TllONT ALCOVn ItOOM ; IIOAHD. 10 D'llUlaa. F MC07 Jyai ) ALUANY ; jToOMS ; AVlTlTllOAlllTi TIIAN- cleiitK accomniotlatvd. : ill ( Douglas. ! ' 1IC03 M WANTED ROOMSI ATE ; SPECIAL INDUCE- menu to board youns lady that can iilay puinuj also two gentlemen. 11 North 19th. F HIS ) 25 * FOR RENT. ItOUMS WITH HOARD. TRAN- BlMit aTOonimoiUteil , Utopia , 1721 Denmrt | utri'et. F--4W Jj PLEASANT ROOMS WITH ISOAHD : RATES rraconuble. 11I2J IJodge. F 7:2-1 FURNISHED ROOMS , WITH OR WITHOUT b.Kir.1 ; ( runt nml Kiik | iitrlorn In tmlt or ulnsle , uUn barn for rent , lotely location for any one deulrlni ; u > | iuet hume. lite ) Nurth 21 Ml. F 74S-I8 SOUTHEAST FRONT llOOjiTT MODERN CON. \enlenee > ; lawn surround * house ; prlvatn fam ily. C22 S. lh t. F-M7J7 M' NICELY FURNISHED MODERN FRONT room , liny window , xxlth luard for two. HOW per month. 24W ! t'asa. F JII70 S0 FINK ROOM , WITH HOARD. DirTACHED rrnldencc , beautiful lawn , khude tiees ; refer uiici'S , 71 ! No. WU sU F-M7S2 rou uivri \ t CIIAVIIIIIHS VOU HUNT. MAN ANIJ . . . city walcr : vailo pipe. 919 N. ITIh BL BLQ7W OKFICJS FIRST CLASS DRii'K sruiiK ifuiLniM ! , icn Fariiam. three < : orlrin , ! twtment ; xtlll alter to aull tcnam ; low rent. 311 ut Nbfl irit bide. I ' BTORE. SITUATED IN HEART OF COMMIS Ion district , 121 > Hth. citron Hjuranl ; cue fl t and lit tl or. 314 Ut Nat'l ll'k Udj. ' FOR RENT. THE 4-STORT I1RICK UUILD1NO 'J. t > 1 < Farnam St. ThU LutlJInt b ti ilrriwo . < * mtnl basement complwa uteam l.fktlng 111 turei. xvalrr en all Hours , ca > , etc. Apidy at the cities of Th I'-tv. 1 JIO AC1ENT3 WANTED TO HELL "nOONE'S LICE. Mile anJ llt-.ll > uc Killer. " to kill thrs prits 01 1-oultry und In | > oullry IIOUM7S la 1W ixr muiith easily made. For nutleulara , write T , It. Iloonc & Civ , iWn rd. Neb. J-1KSJ s AUENT8 MAKE IS TO 111 A DAV INTRODUC Intf In * "Cumet. " the unly 11 nn | hot camera made , the crrnttst Mller ol the wntury , gun til ana luc l ttvnt anted all ux'er the world ( icIuilVK frrllury. writ * today ( or term * anc amplea. AU-n-GlcuKm Co. , L * . Cr < uVU. . J-X1WI \VA > THITO HI'\T. IF YOU WANT CJOOU TWNANTS FOH YOUR hour * * . Hit thm with ITtlrtlty , 1JW Paronm St. K-W WANTED. THRKB OH FOfll UNFURNISHED rwmtn In northf-rn jwrt of eltjr. mutable ( or light hntuwkveiflnc : If desired. Address S I , clvlnif location. K-tSI PACIFIC STORAGE AND WAREHOUSE CO. , 90S-SIO Jones. General morage and forwarding1. M-CS1 STORAGE. FRANK EWERS , 1Z1I HARNEf. Av.vvni : > To nrv. V FOUR TO EIGHT HORSE POWER OASO- line enelne. A-ldrr s M. T. Cummlncn. Ile- ntrlce , Nell. N W-27 roil s.i.n i FOR SALE OR EXCIIANOE. M. 7S OR t 0 Suites of Invlroom furniture ; nlso a x-nluable putenL AiMreas Prop'r. Colnnaila Hotel. Omaha. Neb. O-CM-30' rou SAMiioitsns AXIJ WAOO.-SS. NEW OR GOOD SECOND-HAND CARRIAGES nnd bUBgl'.i , cheap. 1(11 Dodge. P SO FOR SAr.n-.SltAt.L IMPORTED SHETLAND pony , phaeton , cart and lurnosa. Inquire P. Aarons. IJnaton Store. P MMS : -X > R SALE-PHAETON. fllEAP. CAM. AT SKJJ Charles t. Jno. Hnmlln. P 73-S3 * FIRST-CLASS FAMILY HORSE A 'D PI I An ton. 110 So. 21st. P MCM roit SALIMISCILLAMOIS. ! I1EST HARDWOOD IIOO AND CHICKEN fence ; nl.ij "all wire. " C. R. Lee. 501 Douulns. Q-69I ZD-HAND I1ICVCLES. JIO. J15 & 120. HICYCLES rented , repaired. Om. lllcy. Co. , 323 N. 14 st. 4 _ Q-71 FOR SALE , H.500.0)1JONDS RUNNINO 20 yearn nr.d bearlr.i ? 7 per cent lntere.it per nn- num ; there ( Kinds nre first-class In ex-ery res pect ; full parti.-nl.ira furnished ; mnke offer for cash only. Address S 10 , care of Dee. FOR SALE OLD LUMI1ER , CONSISTING OF 2x1 , 2x6 Mifvtirnr. rhlplnp. sldln ? . etc. ; aluo Humility old bricks. Apply Associated Chari ties , M7 Howard st. Tel. . 1816. Q-C6S-JH * ICB"FOU SALE , HY CAR LOAD ; CAN IXJAD on C. M. .1 St. P. . or C. R. I. & P. Rys. Ad dress Shotwell ( t D.ivls , Perry , la. la.Q M677 30 _ A : REMINGTON RICYfLE ALMOST NEW ; a bargain. L. E. Lucas , 2K15 Sherman Ave. tj M73S.3Q' CI.A1IIVOYAXTS. MRS. DR. II. WARREN. CLAIRVOYANT , RE- llable business metllum ; Sth year at 119 N. Kill. S ! THE WONDER OF THE AGE-PROF. AI.Y Mawry , the greatest fortune teller > f the world ; past , present , future told or no charge. 190 $ Famam st. 8 to 12 m. 2:50 : to 9:3H p. in. S M522 29' MASSAGK , IIATIIS , KTC. JIME. SMITH , 1121 DOUGLAS STREET. 5RD Monr. room 7. maa aRe , steam , alcohol and sul- phurlne bath ? . T 776 4 * MME. AUNES RATHS , MASSAGE. D07 SO. 13th st. . room 3. T Mfi23 ? J * MRS. DR. LEON. ELECTRIC MASSAGE PAM- lors. refrei'lilnc nnd curative ; don't fall to cnll. 417 S. llth st. . upstairs. T M76J Jy. S * I'liMlSOXAL. BATHS. MASSAGE. MME. POST. 310VJ 3. l..nt. u < 'j ; MISS VAN VALKENRUIiail DESTROYS PER- mancntly. by electricity , piipcrnuons hnlr , moles warts , etc. Room 416 N. Y. Life llldcU U CDS RUPTURE CURED : NO PAIN : NO DETEN- tlon from business : we refer to hundreds of patients cured. O. E. Miller Co. . SO" N. Y. Life bulldlnff. Omaha. Neb. U 07 VIAVl. A HOME TREATMENT FOR UTERINE troubles. Physician In attendance. Consulta tion or health book free. 340 lice Uldc. Uldc.U U C33 P.OSTON DRESS CUTTING ACADEMY , n 50.1. Karbach blk.learn : the licit systemno ; rcllttlns ; tcach'rs xvantcd ; circulars sent ; Mrs. G. Sheller. U 31 REWARD OFFERED-FOR INFORMATION AS Hi whereabouts of my * cn , Peter M < u > cr. who left home one week nso. Peter Is 10 years old , dark complexion and hair , with sllcht scar ox-er one eye and on one cheek ; he wore blue overalls , old hat and wn.t barefooted and xvnis ildlnc a bay ] xny ollshtly lame. A reward will ! offered for any Information concerning him. Thomas Mover , Randolph , Neb.U . U M752 29 WANTED BY PARTY WHO HAS A CARte to Salt Lake City to let jmrt of car a.t half regular rates tn or bcforo July 2' ) . Ad dress S 23. live. U M744 SO- _ _ THERMAL F.ATHS. MASSAGE : ONE FREE health restorer : r.Kln beautltler. 1C13 Chicago st. U M7S1 .1yl2 * MOXI3Y TO LOA\HIAL USTATK. ANTHONY LOAN & TRUST CO. . 315 TT. Y. L. Quick money at loxv rnten for choice farm loans In Jowa. northern Missouri , eastern Nebraska. W < W > CITY LOANS. C. A. STARR. 023 N. Y. LIFE. W 7W MONEY TO LOAN ON IMPROVED OMAHA real estate. Hrennan , Loxe Co. , Puztcn blk. W 701 LOANS ON IMPROVED UNIMPROVED CITY Property. W. Farnam Smllh & Co . 1320 FaiJiam. W 702 MONEY TO LOAN ON IMPROVED OMAHA property at D , WC nnd < Hi per cent. Pusey i Thomts. room 207 First National Hank llldu. W 71M MONEY TO LOAN ON CITY PROPERTY. JiOO.00 uji to Wl.tiCC.OO. Fidelity Trust Company. W 701 MONEY TO LOAN AT IXJW RATES. THE O. F. Daxls Co. . 1303 Farnam St. W TOO 6 PER CENT MONKY TO LOAN ON OMAHA real ictate A Neb. farms. W. 11. Melkle , Omaha W 707 F. D. WEAD. LOANS. 16TH AND DOUGLAS. W MS36 Jyl WE WILL HAVE A LARGE SPECIAL FUND to lonn on Improved Omaha proi rty In July and AucUBt at lowi-st rules ; apply now ; don't wait until your uld loan cx4ies. | Fidelity Tmst Company. W-M127 MOXHY 1XJ l.OAX CIIATTI2I.S. MONEY TO LOAN. 30 CO. 90 DAYS ; FFRNI- ture , pianos , tic. Dull Green.n-om S Uarker blk. MONEY TO U1AN ON FURNITLTiE. PIANOS hortei , xniBonj. etc. . nt lowest rntu In city ; no removal of Ko d : ctrlrtly A > nlldentlal ; y6u can nay thr lunn off at nny tlmi * or in uny an our.t. OMAHA MORTGAGE LOAN CO. M So. ICth St. X 709 'SIXn.tS Cll AXCUS , J2S ) INVESTED EARNS & 3 WEEKLY ; PROS- poctus. proofs , ( it . F. Daily , irjj llroadway , New YorH. Y MIJ6-JM * FOR SALE. AIluUT 2.0f. ) I.IW. MINION TYPE. 7W Its. iiBMle , COO Ibs. brevier t ie , 1W pair two thlld cases , 4' ' ) double Iron stands for two third cases. This material xvas u ed on The Omaha Ileo nnd Is In fairly seed condition. Will bo sold cheap In bulk or In quantities to Milt purchaser. Apply In perkon or by mull to The Ue Publishing On. . Omaha. Ntb. Y 715 FOR SALU LEASE ANP STWK OF ONB OF the U-st and moat centrally located liver- . lK.ardlnir and sale stables In Omahu ; have other hu > lnei-s that ivqulrrs ell my lime ; terms cash , or mlKht give time on part , with good KOcurlty. Address S 20. Omaha Dee. Y MOJ6 Jy 1 TO RENT OR SELL CENTRAL CITY HOTEL : U od building near U. P. depot. n < * wly | kilntod nnd papered : 27 roons partly ( urnUhed. Ad- ilrv s J. II. WhllteKen. Y MfflJ 30 FOH i\cii.ixfii : . 840 ACREfi OF GOOD U\ND IN CENTRAL Nebraska to exrhanxe for a hardxrara utock , luuilwr yard or UKX ! elevator. Address Ixick Hex > JJ , Dodge. Neb. _ fcSS-JyJ JS.OOO.W WOHTH CHOICE PROPERTY IN GAL- x'eiton to trade for merchandise. Address H I , nee. Z JC3 TO-EXCHANGE , FOR OMAHA PROPERTY ; A ( arm uf 2 0 acres In Smith county , Kansas Address Ilex SO , Smith Center. Kansas. Z MC39 Jyl roil SAI.IHI.U ; , KSTATU. HEAL ESTATE AND LOANS. William II. Crary. ei5 N. Y , Life bide. HK-C7I Jytt PARTIES WISHINO TO 1UY LOTS FOIl bulldlnc iKirixxes , houses and lots ( or homes , lanclinr In price ( rum XOD to IU.OuO.00. or acr. property ( or Investment , ihould riamlne our list before purchasing as x\e are pre pared to offer the bi that cn U liad at prices to suit the times. POTTEH i QRORGE COMPANY. 6. W , Cor , ICth and Fainam ill. ] t M913-M GOLD OU SILVfiR- Nlnetetn hundred dollars. Monthly payments. Hurs a beautiful collate In Walnut Hill. Omaha 1S * 1 Ejte | aud Trust company , m Soutb Ulb * U IliJ-MMJ FOH SAI.U ItlJAIj ( ContlmiM. ) A 1IOMB rO ANY ONIS. At .MOST NKW AND xry ehenp. Nlrrty d or tfil nrnl mmlcm In irftf < 'lM. . J. KennaiU * Son. sole nirenu , Urnwn Jrtfx-k. Tl 70K7 10 HLWJANT HOME FRONTINO OX 1IAN8COM imrk. 1-et ti < rh tv It to you. > 1. J. Kennnnl & Hon. rote ngvnts. 110 Itninn block.RK7M RK-7M J 10 HOUSE ON SOUTH WTH ST. , EAST FRONT , cowl property , nlee Khruht rjM. . J , Ken- n r l A Son. wle agents , 310 Hroxvn Mnck. IIK-7W J 10 AllSTRACTS. TUB IJYRON REED COMPANY. RE-7U A I1AROA1N. HANSCOM PLACE : AN ELK- Knnt vroom house , lot MxlM ft. ; upl'mllil lawn ; im Ideal home. Price X.ooa.00. ( Inrvln Urns. . 1C13 Farnam St. RE M74H-29 FARM LANDS. C. F. IIAIlUIPON. SU N. Y. Life. UK-M : J Jy27 IXSUItAXCK LOANS. MFB INS. POLICIKS NOUGHT ; I/JANS ON same. W. P. Holdcn. 1' . O. IJox a ; . Omaha. SCI Jy3 * IIICVCI.US. WEST'N IHCYCLE & OUN CO. , 2114 CUMINO. FOR M.M PER MONTH WE CLEAN. ADJUST , oil. repair ordinary punctures nnd keep In need repair your bicycle. Full llnof sundries Ak-Sar-I5en Cycle Co. . 119 8. 15th St. 0 ! * JS FURNITURE PACKED , fQUCHES MADE TO order. mattrcEKes made nnd renovated , chnlrs caned : cheap this month. M. S. Walklln. 2111 Cumins. Tel. 1331. 7H MUSIC , AUT AXIJ GEORGE F. GELLENriECK. BANJO AND BUltar teacher. 1815 Chicago St. 100 FINK HALE PIANO. J.V , ; NEW $ .150 SAMPLE piano , only J173. 31S McCnsue bulliHns. M772 JY4 STEAMSHIPS. LOWEST RATES TO OR FROM EUROPE. ALL lines. Thos. Cook & Son vacation tours. Harry E. Moore , 1415 Fajnam st. . Omaha ZS9 Jy7 HOIIS143 PASTtlllUU. GOOD GRASS. HOARD FENCE. SPRIXO xvater. A. W. Phclps & Son. 2y7 N. Y. Life. CIO J ) 0 * WANTED HORSES AND CATTLE ; AIJUND- ant Brass , xvater and shade ; terms x-ery reas- onnbla. Address Crescent Lr.nd Co. . Crescent , la. M 778 J30 IIUILDI.VG AM ) LO.VX ASSOCIATIONS. SHARES IN MUTUAL L. & U. ASii'N PAY 6 , 7. i per cent when 1 , 2. 3 years old ; nlxvays re deemable. 1704 Famam st. Na'.tlncr , Sec. 716 HOW TO GET A HOME OR SECURE GOOD Interest on savings. Apply to Omaha L. & U. Ass'n. 1704 Farnara G M. Nattlnser. Sec. 717 I'AAVMlHOICnUS. II. MAROWITZ LOANS MONEY. 41J N. 16J3T. MiiIC.VL. TUB PEOPLE'S DISPENSARY. 1522 DOUGLAS bt. . Is the only place where ladles ( ire sure to be relieved of all their troublesome diseases peculiar to their sex. This Is the oldest dis pensary In the city. Don't hezltate ; procrasti nation Is the thief of time and In another month your ailment may be Incurable : nil de layed courses nnd Irregulroltl restored , no matter from xthat cause : xve hax-e n line home If you need privacy ; all letters enclosing stamp ansxvered and medicine forwarded ; confine ments J10.00 and up. Jy-S- * DHISSSMAICIXr. . ENGAGEMENTS TO DO DRESSMAKING IN families solicited. Miss Sturdy , 2U17 Pavcn- port street. M 472 JylS SIIOHTIIAXU AXD TYPEWRITING. A. C. VAN SANTS SCHOOL. 613 N. Y. LIFE. LOST. LOST. GOLD WIRE RING , 2 STONES. NEAR M. U. church. Itcturn to 13ee orilce for rexvard. Lost r.S 29 TiiiuTi-i.vrii A.MJ Jti.MSb STHKUTS. 140 reoms. baths , steam heat and all modern conveniences , llatea , J1.M and StOJ per day. Table unexcelled. Special low rules to regular borders. FIIANK tULDlTCH. Jlcr. The Original and Best EVERY VVOMAF\ ! gouietixes nends a rcllnbl' montiily regulating inedicin DR. PEAL'S PENNYROYAL RILLS , AT3 prompt B..fe nnd certain in result. The ijtiiiv tae CDr.IVal'sj n x''di3.'iDUi > int Scuiaavwceri SHERMAN & MoCONNELL DRUG CO. . 1513 Dodge St. . Omaha. RAILWAI TIME CARD Leaves llfRLlNOTON ii Mu. RIVER.'Arrlves ' Omaha , UnlonDcput. _ luih & Mason bis. . cimahu k ' aam , T .7. . Denx'er Express . 9:5.'am i's-.pm.lUk Hills. Mont. & Puset Snd E-c. 4opm : 4-2flii . Henx-er Exprtts . 4ii. : > pin 7 : o.pm. Nebraska Loral ( except Sunday ) . 7:4ipm : Lincoln Local icicept Kvnid.o I. . .11 : Sam 2Mjim..Fii t Mall ( for LI.olni dally. . . . Lvaxi'9 iCHlCAOO , IIURLINIJTON A : iJ.iArrlvea Oinahailj'nlon Depot. 10th & Mumin Sts. Omnha j-uiinni Chicago Vestibule ! > : viiin 9-t.snm Chlcnso Kxpresa -:15pm ( * : li-pin..Clilcaiu ; und rtt. IxiuU Kxpresn. . StOJ.nn ii-jiam 1'aclllc Juncllcn Local 6:10pm Tust Mall S : pm Leave * CHICAUO. MIL. fc HT. l'AUL.Arrlv | ( Uiiaha t'nlim Depot , 10th & Mason rits. 1 Oniuha C:30pm : .7..Clilcaco Limited S:0j.im 11 : i.iin..Clilcaio Exprcus < ex. Hundsy ) . . . 3:2Spm : I axT " ! OHICAaO & NOUTHWK.ST'.V.IArrlves ' OmahalUnlon Depot. 10th & Mason tits. ] Omaha 10:5Sam Eastern Express 3:10inn 4-45nm Ventlbuled Limited n:45pm : Cl5pm : ' St. Paul Express 9SOam : S:40am : St. Paul Limited 9:0.pm : 7:30am..Carroll K Sioux City Local..11 : ! Cpm C:3opni : Omaha ChlraKo Special S : > am Missouri Valley Local 9:30am leaves CHICAOO. 11. 1. & PACIFIC. I Arrives OmtthalUnlon Depot. 10th & Mavm Sin.I Omaha IAST. C:43pm.Oktahoma : & Texas Ex ( ex. Sun. ) . IOMam II Coloraila Limited ( : iptn - - - j g Lenxe I i ! . , ST. P. , M. & O. ( Arrives Omahal Depot. 15fa end Webster Sts. I Omaha S.U.am. . . .Sioux Cliy Accommodation HMipra lt : ) pm..Hloux City Eiprejio ( ex. Sutw. . . lKam t ClJiim . . .St. _ Puul Limited . I ' ' ' ( Arrives" / Qmahal l Depot. 13th and Webtler Bt . I Omaha t "sOC'pm . Fust Mall and Express . sloOprn S : 0pm.ex. Bat. ) Wyo. Ex. < cx. Jinn. ) . . S:0vpm : 7Vum..Fremont : Lticul ( Sundays Only ) . . T.M.IUI . Norfolk Kxpnun ( ex. Sun * . . . .1025ain C.lSpm . St. Paul Express . . . . . tIOain ; Leaves Kc- * * ' J- ; , - - S ( Arrives Omaha Union Depot. Ibth & Mason HtH.f Omaha ! i : < Cum Kanfas City Day Express ( :10pm : 10Hym .K-PiNlEhtKji.vla V.I _ * . Trans. Caciam leaves I MISSOl'HI I'ACIKI < 7 I Arrives _ OmahaJJ e | ) t IStii andxb _ ter fits. | Omaha 3Jfipm. TTNVbrarka & K'nnsau Limited. . . .USpm ; VliVin Kaunas City Kxpress C:0uam ; 00pm . . .Nebraska Local ( ex. Sun. ) . . . . :00am : Onuiha Depot , lith nnd Webster Sts. | Omahn " " = L Vfi" | eiOUX CITY &T'A"ciFrc1. ] An-IveV OmahaJUnlbnl > rpot.l th Mason Sts. | Oiiialin tfam : ) . St. Paul Passenger . HilOprn 7:3am . Sluux City 1'auusnftr . VU : > pm tJ5pm : . St. Paul Limited . > :2tfam : Leaves ( UNION PACi FIO UrrlveiT " muhai Union Itrjoi. llrth & Maton SU.Omalio | _ " "s Cam . Kearney l > riire . 4:10pm 8:2uam : . Ovt-rUnd U tolled . 4iSpm : 3J'tlini.Heat'ce : & omih'K Ex. ( ex Sun.i0i3pni ) ; i:4i ] n..Ur nd Idand Extiresa ( ex. Sun..12 tpni FUJI Mall . l:4 : iini I eaxvi I WAUA.SH IIAILWAY lArrives jOnmlii Union Depot. Idlh.JJason . 6ts. | Omaim _ 4 i ipm Si IxuU cmn .n li'tll ' &inabaUnlon , iH'svol. l lh * Mancui tils.i fima IH O < u&bal Depot , lit J and Wcbatcr t . j Omaha Abiding Love. BY ANNA NICHOLAS. The woman who * * m critical render of magazines met her-friend , the writer of stories , In the little railroad station nt Murdock. In southern"Indiana. . The writer had just arrived from Indianapolis ; the other was waiting the northbound train. "What have you come to this dull , lonely , forlorn place for ? Not for literary material , surely ? My grandmother lives here , and I have known the town all my life. Nothing romantic ever happened to any ono here ; there are no Incidents , no tragedies , no characters worth studying ; the people sim ply vegetate. " "I never hunt for 'material' anywhere. " replied the woman who wrote. "It comes to me crowds Itself on me. I have been sent for by an Invalid colisln , nnd expect not to think of literary matters ; but It 1 were searching for themes I have no doubt I could find them , even hero. " "I am sure you could not. What , for Instance" hero the speaker's voice was lowered "what could you make out of that spiritless , meek , faded-out creature there ? She Is a resident here. I have seen her often ; but she Is so colorless I never had the curiosity to ask even her name. I am sure she never had n vivid emotion , never really lived In all her life. " "Perhaps not , " laughed the writer ; "but I believe she haa n story. I will find It out nnd tell It to you. " This Is the story she told n month later : Martin Davis did not look much like a man with aesthetic sentiment in his soul ns he left his plow In the furrow that afternoon In early April and drove his tired horses up the lane. His face was weather beaten , bis hands rough and hard , his clothIng - Ing cheap and coarse , hts high boots. Into which his jeans trousers were tucked , caked with mud. 13ut ho was young and vigorous ; his eyes were bright and eager , and he felt himself a man to be envied ; for had ho not llo wife waiting for him at the house a bride of a few weeks ? In the band of his rusty felt hat he had slipped a bunch of yellow violets. "I knew ye liked posies. Lizzie , " he said as he handed them to her at the kitchen door ; "and these are the first I've seen this season , 'thout It's the little white wind 8i i lowers ! that wilt while ye'ro plcUln' 'em. These yellow things are 'way ahead of lime. 1J I ' never found 'em before earlier than May ; they're not common hereabouts any how ; but I know of a spot down in the holler where they always flourish. " When she put them in a teacup and set them on the supper table ho wondered vaguely why he had never knoxrn before that flowers made a ropm look so cheerful almost as If the sun .were shining , though that luminary had sunk- behind the western hill. 1 : He did not know that the brightness was not of the Mowers , but was the light of love reflected from his 'heart and hers. It was but a brief time that his happiness lasted. That was the spring of 'Cl. and the country was even then calling upon her loyal sons. Martin Davis turned his horses Into the pasture , left his crops for others to harvest and went unhesitatingly to an swer the call. Ofi , the heroism of the myriads who thus .went out from borne , and peace , nnd love to the battlefield In those dreadful years. What If they did not know that the ninety days would lengthen until no- man could name the end , and that the slain would bo llko the leaves of the forest for numbers. What If they did go simply from1 a matter-of-fact sense ot duty and v.lth llltle feeling of risk and danger or because the. riotous spirit of youth yearned for adventure.-- , The fact remains the tremendous , Immutable faot > that they went by hundreds , 'by thousands , by tens and hundreds of thousands , and that they offered their lives. Greater love than this hath no man ; and j'et we , in this frivolous later day , which knows no war we dare sometimes speak lightly of those men and their sacrifices. It was a momentous nnd a hard life for the most part , that of a private soldier in the war for the union. Its story has been told In fragments at home firesides and by campflrcs , but never in literature an a whole for the world to know. I'erhaps it never will be. The veterans tell of bat tles and of victories and of stirring events ; but they do not. as a class , care to dwell upon their hardships and sufferings. The j experience cut deep , and the scars arc even I yet too near the surface to touch upon. | I Martin Davis' life was not different from j I the rest. There was the c5rill and the camp life , the picket duty , the marching , the digging of trenches and building of breast works , the skirmishing , the expectation of oncountci-s with the enemy all this for slow and weary months , and at last a great battle. . Lizzie , the young wife at home , waited from week to week and month to month tin women did in those days , with what show of patience and composure they could muster a proof of courage and patriotism iiot less than that of going to ' war. The soldiers' story may some time bo told ; but where is the historian who t shall describe the agony of the women's i waiting hearts , the suffering of unceri i talnty and suspense ? Who shall corapre- , bend the anguish of their tears ? Who j understand that tbo strain of constant dread of evil news from husband and brother i . and lover was greater than that felt by the | soldier before the enemy's guns that It left ! | unhcaled scars vhlch aged them before their | time ? i i 1 Lizzie Martin fared like the other women hoping nnd praying , living upon the letters - i ters that came at Irregular Intervals , going about her tasks by day , with heavy heart , ' and enduring long nights -with their visions ' of war and woe. In the little town , from which the flov.-er of the young men had , already gone , existence was not gny nt the beat of times , and was now moro monoto nous than over to the women , whoso part was to wait. There wcro few things to dis tract their minds from their own anxieties ; they were not the "new" women , with many and diverse activities , and so they sat ot home and thought of what might be. Mrs. Davis did not love her husband more than the other lonely women cared for theirs , J ! perhaps , but vithout him she was quite | i alone in the world , and It was natural thnt no event of the -war was Important In | ' which he had no rilce. * That brawny | , private , that long-lljnbtfd. awkward farmer boy was all the w < yl ) tto her. No future opened to her vision _ whlch ho did not share. She was , a , .commonplace little creature , narrow In. ljouglit and Intuited in capacity , but other and.greater women have found It all of life trj ] o\ft one man. Letters came to he trjam Tennessee now. ' Martin wrote tlmt It , Iqpji'ed as If some fightIng - Ing would be done vej-y soon that would ' ' scatter the rebels an' , end the war. Then came the fall of Foria Henry and Donelson , and ho wrote wlthristill greater certainty that the war was Bobn'-tl ' ) close. Men better Informed than he tliotqlht the same then. After that there wa parching across coun try , transportation by boat up the Tennessee , more marching , with rain and mud nnd cold as features of the travel all this described In fragmentary scrawls. One of them , dated April u and written on a scrap of paper while he stood In the rain with his company awaiting orders , said there would be fighting soon , and added : "Here's a yellow violet ; Just found It under a bank. Season's early down here. We're going to beat the rebs out of their boots. Goodby. " This note , and then silence. There had been n battle ; It wns Shlloh bloody Shlloh ! On Its gory field when the 7th of April dawned the dead lay by thousands the blue nnd the gray. Oh , Shlloh ! the waiting hearts thnt broke when your victory was won ! 1'rlvate Davis of company I ) wns num bered among the dead. A comrade wrote to Lizzie , telling her that Martin had died like a hero. A part of his regiment had faced about and retreated , broken In a panic be fore the confederates' furious onslaught ; but ho had remained , had seized the ling from the hand of the fleeing color bearer nnd gone on triumphantly to meet the coming foe. In the thick of the fight he was * e"ti to fall , "nnd. " said the writer , with no art at softening cruel truth , "he wns burled In a trench. " To the widow n realizing sense of the death did not come. H is often so when those absent from home arc taken ; to their families they seem still temporarily absent and likely to return at any hour. She nc- ceptod the situation dumbly , uncomplain ingly. She had no longer n keen Interest In life , and was without the strength of char acter to rise above her grief nnd force her self to accept new Interests. She was sim ply nn evcry-day woman who had loved her husband nnd continued to love and to think of him day and night , though he wns dead. She sold her farm to n rich neighbor , who took advantage of her ignornnce to pay her but half Its value , and she was deprived of n large share of the proceeds by n sharper to whom she Intrusted them for Investment. Then she settled down in the little town nnd became a neighborhood drudge. She sewed , nursed the sick , took care of the new babies , nnd was at the beck and call ot any house wife who needed her In domestic emer gencies. The years went on with little variety. The war ended and affairs settled into new grooves. A flood of prosperity swept over the country nnd nffected even thl3 quiet tov.-n , but made little difference in Mrs. Davis' plodding , uneventful ex istence. No ono pitied her especially for her lonely and hard-working life. She waw spoken of as "the widow Davis ; " but she was only one among ninny widows the war had created , and as she made no ado over her woes no one else thought to do it for her. They had their own troubles to thin1. : of. They did say at first that she didn't take Mart's death very hard. She "didn't make no funs. " they said , and tlijv " 'lowed" che wns "ruthcr shnller. " Afterward they virtually forgot him , and assumed that ? he had done the same. 13ut she never put elf her simple mourning garb : her mouth fixed itself in n pathetic little droop ; her brown hair faded early. And she would not marry ngaln. Ten years after Shiloh , Johu Holt , a thrifty widower , attracted by her quiet. Industrious ways , sought her ns n stepmother for his children. "No. Mr. Holt. " she said , "I cain't he your wife. Mnrtiu Davla Is dead ant ! burled ; but 1 cain't make him seem dead , nohow ; I never have , an' I don't reckon I over can. I fcc-1 as if he was gene jest on a trip ; an' I dream of him o' nights an' am always glad v/hcn night comes , be cause them dreams come. too. I'll go along by myself till the time comes for me to po and meet Martin but It's long , long. " And then , her self-pOESi-ssion overcome by the sudden compassion In the man's eyes , she bowed her head upon the table and sobbed and wept In the utter aban donment of a grief which knows no pre tense. John Holt went away thoughtful , and was afterward heard to ray It waa a "sing- 'lar dispensation o' Providence thnt took r man away from a wife like that an' let other men live whose wives wouldn't a-nionrned for them over night If they'd drownded thelrselvps. " More years went , until ono day Mrs Davis heard of an excursion that filled her patient soul with longing. Tula waa a trip bx boat to Shlloh battle ground. She had never been further from home than to Cin- cinna'tl , fifty miles away , where she had gone once when a girl ; but she determined to make the Journey. It was a great undcr- talcing , and she got ready for it xvlth an excitement such cs had not stirred her for years. he never thought of the south but as the rebels' country , and though she knexv there were no rebels now , there war do-vn in her heart n dull hatred of oil southerners , because but for them thcrr x\ould have been no xvar but for a certain ono of them who had. fired a fatal shot shi xvould not have been left In loneliness all these long years. Men and xvomen of the xx-orld xvho. through contact xvlth people of many localities , hax-c gained the ability to Judge their fellow- lelngs dispassionately find It diHlcult to comprehend the Hmi'atloiiB of one xvbo hc , but a single point of view. Lizzie Davis had but one great Interest In life , and had nox'nr bcon able to consider the outside xvorld In any other than its relation to hcr- self. The trip down the Ohio river , though novel , aroused no emotion ; once on the Tennessee she began to brighten. Martin had made this Journey not long before hU death. The xvar. noxv so far past , was brought close to her. The battle scorned but a little xvhllo back. On the wooded bluffs she could almost ace rebel skirmishers In hiding. Her meek , feminine soul , which had never before directed n cruel thought toward any Individual , suddenly throbbed with fierce resentment ; the slow , easy-going natives , xvho strolled down to the landings pnd leisurely carried their freight up the bank.In primitive faeblon seemed to her to represent a bloodthirsty , murderous people- she eyed them malevolently. Ono day the captain of the boat sa ; doxni by her aide on the deck. He was u mlddlo-agcd man of slow , soft speech and gentle manner as far removed from the typical bluff , gruff , profane , aggressive rlx-cr man of literature ns possible He had already won Mrs. Davis' confidence by hiH deferential courtesy and attentions , to which FIO was a stranger at home. There no ono was unkind , but certainly no one was noticeably considerate of the com fort of xvomen , especially these of no par ticular Importance. He narrated to her bits of history about the places along the river , with every foot of which he was familiar , and told anecdotes of the people half of whom he seemed to know by their Christian names. "How can you speak so kindly of them , ' an' you a soldier , too ? " she broke out nt last. "Rebels I reckon they were , moat of 'cm. an' killed our men. an' xvould do It again if they had a chance. " He turned to her sloxvly and without a sign of surprise ; she xvas not a new type to him. "Madam , these people along heah xvero mostly union sympathizers during the wah. I was a soldier In the confedehat ahmy. " Follow the directions , and'you'll ' get the best work from Pearline. Not that there's any harm to be feared from it , no matter how you use it or how much you use. But to make your washing and cleaning easiest , to save the most a rubbing , the most wear and tear , the most time and money keep to the directions given on every pack age of Pearline. If you'll do that with your flannels , for instance ( it's perfectly simple and easy , ) they'll keep beautifully soft , and without shrinking , 102 Itwan n fthnck. 15x-rpbrl lintl found tlirlf iray to Iho little vlllnRo lnco the war , but n good mmir norm imil Rene out from thrrc to flght ( or the union , nnf never In return ; ami those wnmlerrrs from the south were not ninilo welcome , but hail mostly drifted on to regions elsewhere In Iinllntis , where wcro frlendi nml She hntl never so much KB tnlkeO \vlth one before. Then he told hor. In a quiet , remlnla- rent xxay gome stories of his youth ami his fnr itoulhern horue ; of how the south was then all the rountry ho know and the north n far-off , cold region , whoso people cared only to buy and sell nnil to gubjtiRatp ami rob the south ; of how the war broke out and one by one his neigh bors Joined the army , then hts brothers and then himself , a bov of sixteen all tilled with fierce patriotism and the Wind belief that they were flshtlng for the rteht ; of how his brothers had liocn slain , nml how ho had gone home. x\hcn nt last the con flict xx RH over , to Dud thnt home dismantled , thi mother xvho had been Its center for ever gone , nnd he. yet n boy In years , lonely , disheartened nnd forlorn. It was n revelation to the woman of fexv Ideas thnt rebels rebels ! were creatures xvlth loves and sorrows llko her own. And they xvent on up the shining rlx-er. nnd a little of the peace and beauty of It entered Into her soul. U was May. and the fields ar > d forests were In freshest army. The gray preen willows , the rank xvnter maples nnd the glossy oaks that croxviled the rlx-er bank were fringed with under growth nnd their trunks lost In n tangle of hor.eysuckleB. gr--pe vines nnd Ivy. It xvas pr mltlvc wilderness , such ns the Indian must have lookefl on In his day. Then rainn Fort Henry. The boat , xvhlch stepped accommodatingly wherever n would1 bj traveler waved n handkerehlef , obligingly ninde fast while pasNengcrs climbed the hill ami wandered over the old earthworks that made the xvnlls of that famous fort. In the glamour of the moonlight and the softness of the shadows could almost bo seen the soldiers xvho hail once croxvded the place ; but trees had grown tip xxlthln the walls since that day and the soldiers where xvero they ? Then Plttsburg Landing nnd PliMoli. and the woman from the little Indiana town hail reached her Mecca. Troy wandered over the battlefield , those tourists ; they saw It almost as It looked on the fatal Sunday so long ago , only today the ] aim shone , and then the very heavens h.vl , xxrpt at the slpht bcloxv. They naxv the place i xvhero the tight xvns fiercest nnd most fu- rlous the "Hornet's Nest. " whore union men and confederates met hand to hand and the slaughter was so great that the dead lay in heaps. They saw the pool whose margin had been red with the blood of wounded men xvho had dragged themselves tin re to quench their raging thirst. Tod.iy cattle drank from It undisturbed. There were houses here nnd there prlml- tlvo structures , hardly mor- > than cab'Ts. ' Mrs. Davis stopped nt the door o' one to atk for xx-atcr. An old xx-oman came out , a | xvoman with n scant calico gown nnd clumsy shoes , and eyes blurred perhaps with ago. possibly xxlth tears , but kindly still. She grew garrulous In response to a timid ques tion. "Yes. she had lived hereabouts ex-ah slnco bcfo' the xx-ah. She on' her ole man was union , but their six boys couldn't no ways agree , an * three j'lned the union nhmy en' three the confederate. And yes yes , It's all done ended long ago ; but some days the time seems ylstlddy , an' It all comes back. Her ole man couldn'cpp ! out noways when the boys \tos gone , nn' he j'ineil , too. when General Sherman come along. An' yes , the boys iverc all killed ; three ut Dom-Ison , txvo here at Shlloh church nn' ono nt Chatta nooga. Their pap didn't live long after ; sort o' broke down like. An' If It wasn't that the boys who died here were burled In a con federate trench ( do you sen the rldgc over that away ? ) ahc reckoned sho'd dlsremembah vhlch xx-as union an * xvhlch wasn't. Such things doan' seem to innke no difference no how , when they alls Is gene to rest twel Judgment day. " The xvoman xvho had lost ono and the woman xvho had lost Keren looked In each other's eyes and knew the kinship of grief ; and somehoxv the visitor from the north felt .10 longer n personal resentment for her loss. Though It might have been a son of this -woman who rhot her Martin , he bad thought he was right and meant no evil. Then she catered the gates or the national cemetery , where the union dead are laid In long lines , with a granite block marking each resting place. The captain of the boat 'oinc-d her at the gate , and as ho passed In ho plucked a sprig of cedar. The sun shin ing through the branches of the great forest .recs flecked the grass upon the graves ; a soft May breeze scattered the leaves of the early blooming roses. Down between the rows of stonea they walked , and the captain , pausing at one bearing the nmil > er l.fiO" , lifted his bat reverently and laid the bit of "odar upon it. "I put a little posey there every time I come , " said he gently. "I reckoned that maybe the wife or mother of the boy lying ihere might like It. " The man lying there might be her Martin ihoucht the little widow ; nnd from that mo ment her heart ceased to cherish animosity toward any man who liaJ louyht on th < > other side. She stood on the bluff and looked down on the sparkling , glinting river. The panorama ofater und sky and hill stretching for miles before Ser was a vision fair to see. The flag of her coun try floated from the great staff above her ; the only sound was the singing of the birds , and the peace of God was over all. More years went by nnd the widow Davis plodded patiently through them , getting a little more weary as they passed and finding the burden of loneliness none the easier to bear as ago crept on. That visit to Shlloh had taught her some things , toleration among the rest ; but It had also taken away one thing which had been a secret source of comfort to her. Until that time cho had pictured to herBf-lf the return of her husband. She was n woman with but scant Imaginative power , but where even the dullest mind dwells much upon ono subject It weaves about It a network of fancy far different from reality. She had not seen her husband dead ; a battle wan a vague thing to her ; ho had simply gene away and had not come back. Perhaps he had been wounded , had lost a leg or an arm , and a prisoner In rebel hands was long in recovering. Then , perhaps here her fancy took a wild leap perhaps ho was told by some one that she was dead , had mar ried again , though uhe didn't quite see how ho could bellovo she could marry another man. But such things had happened she had read of them ; and supposing he had be lieved It , he would wander nway and never care to ruvlhlt hla old honu > until at last ho Homehow learned the truth anil hastened to her with Joy. Or It might be that he had escaped from his rebel prison , had reached the sea coast , had crept on board some foreign vessel and had been carried to far- off lands , whence lie would some day re turn. Vain linuglnlngs ; but lonely women dream strange things while they go half mechan ically about their monotonous dally tusks. Kvon the happlniss of happy women is half in this unreal Inner life. After this visit to Hhiloli these comfortlnst pictures were conjured up Jio more In Ltzzlo'a mind. It ivas all real now , the battle and the slaughter , and she had seen the graves where the soldiers luy ; her thoughts centered about " 1,607 , " where the captain's tribute rested , and she felt more and moro con vinced that Murtln blei't ' beneath that atone. It waa nearly thirty years , n lifetime , since he went , and he would comu to her now only after hoavcn'e gate had opened to let her In. Shi ) had mourned her lost love for thirty years. She , a little , common place woman , of whom no one would have thought as a heroine of romance. She would not have Known what the term "Krnntl passion" recant ; ho had been simply faithful to a memory In a quiet , undemon strative way ; her life had been bound up In sentiment , that wa all. One day In April It wa the thirtieth Sblloh nnniversary she waa at her little cottage , no neighbor needing her services as nurse or seanulrcss. It had been an early spring , and she went out In the garden to look at the slgufl of life among her few clifrUhed flowers. In a sunny corner wild violets BICW and had puttied green leavci above the mold ; but no buds ivero yet in sight. "I remember. " be said , speaking to a neighbor who had paused In pausing "I remember seeing violet flowers as early as this. " She wax thinking of tbosn stuck In the baud of Martin's hat that day BQ lo'is ago. when he came from the fldJ m as , he spolat * ho looked down the , , ' 3' Ki , < --t wonderlnc at the unusual bol't"rcusne-s of. the school children , They followed after ami jeered at a nun who ramo nlowly and hesitatingly along , M If uncertain of Ms way. Ills clothing wn * rough , hi * shoul ders limit nnd his gait gambling. On hi * head xxas a military cap , such as sonio old soldiers xtlll Insist 111011 wearing , and ott Its side was Mmrlhlng like a decoration on a woman's bonnet. It wai this that madfl the children Jeer. .Mrs. Onvls put her hand over her eyes and looked at It Intently. Hardly knowing what she did , she went out upon the walk and down the street to meet him. When she came closer she saw that the decoration was n bunch of yellow violets. She stopped before the man nnd looked at htm. She had never thought of her husband cr other than erect , and strong , and yours ; th > man was fecblt , i.ud dim-eyed , and oh ? , l.iit she knrw him. ' .Martin1' ! the said "Martin ! " and reached out her hands , forgetful of watching neigh- tors ami woidprlng children. Something like a miracle happened In that moment. The years fell away from her as a garment ; the flush In her cheek , the loVe light In her eyes transfigured her. "Mzzln ! " Bald the man , the dull , dazed expression clearing from his face "M lo , " nnd he fumbled nt his cap. "I I thought yo'd like some posies , an' came round by the holler an' got them. " She took him by the hand and led him into the house , her face still Illumined. The woman who wrote stories and the other who read them met agafn on the street of Murdook. Toward them came Lizzie Davis. She was the woman xxliu i had i been at the station weeks before ; but I she was like one born again. Her hair was faded. It Is true ; her complexion gray , her 1 clre.is old-fashioned and rusty ; but her t-yes were bright , her bearing -roct ami proud | , her face smiling. She stopped a moment i to speak to the woman who wroto. I "Jest think , Miss , " she said ; "Martin lived ] over In Jonesboro , Jest beyond tbo Ohio I line , and not fifty miles from hero , for 1 twenty years. I've jest seen n man from 1 there. Where ho had been before that 1 time the Lord knows. The man says that they all knowed something was the I matter with his head. Seemed to do his work well the farm but ' on , every now an' then ( he'd get uneasy nn' talk an' talk about some place he'd ought to go If ho could only Just j think of the name ; an' when he hcnnl any ono call 'Lizzie' ho always got worried nnd fidgety. Come spring , too , every year he'd 1 pick flowers nn' wear 'em In his hat. j' Then at last ono day his recollection seemeil to conio to him sudden , nnd he up an' started off , the man Raid , acting like a crazy lunatic. He found his way here , an * he's 1 getting to be moro like himself every day , an' It almost seems a If he'd never been 1 nway. " A glow was on her cheek llko the blush of a brldo ; the thirty years of loneliness were ns naught ; the children that might have 1 been hers , tbo happiness and peace she had missed worn forgotten. The mother heart In her went out to the broken- down man and was satisfied. Ho came shuilllng down the walk. "Pen how well he looks , " she said , ns she hastened toward him with n face through which love shone as It must shine on the faces of the angels In heaven. "You were wrong , you see , " softly said the woman who wrote , to her friend ; "you were wrong when you declared there was no romance here ; that the people merely vcgntatrcl. That woman has lived. " "Yes , " cald the other , "she has loved. " If you would always be healthy keep your blood pure with Hood's Sarsaparilla , the Ono True Illood Purifier. MW VOHIC'S KOOI ) SUIMM.V. KnoiiKli AHvny * on Ilnml < < > Com for < - nl > \VllliMliiiul KiHir-MouHin * Selne. "If the city of New York and the neigh boring district. " writes John Gllmcr Speed In July Ladles Homo Journal , "were to bo besieged or In some other way entirely cut off from the outside world , and thereby de prived of the food supplies which in normal times coino In dally in great quantities , how long would It bo before the pinch of hunger would be felt ? That is n very hard question to answer , for the reason that there are such Inequalities of purchasing capacity in New York society that some go hungry in times ot greatest prosperity for lack of means , while the great majority cat moro than is good for them. Undoubtedly the number of these who always go hungry would be Increased after two or three days of a siege , and then day by day this number would Increase until the public authorities would feel compelled to tao ! posseslon of the food supplies and distribute them among the people. With the exception of milk and some other things the supply of meat , poultry , hardy vegetables and fruits would last for two months as the present rate of consumption. If all the sup plies were taken charge of at the beginning ; of a siege and this could easily be done the food within New York could be made to last ' for four months at least. The slego of Paris ' lasted only four months. Deforo two months had passed , high nnd low , rich and poor , had learned what hunger was. And. as Is well known. the French are the most thrifty nnd economical people In the world. In the arrangement and disposition of food the Parisians j are specially distinguished. Hut the ; food supply in New York could be made to . last as long as the Paris siege lasted , and the people would be comfortable. " Mr. Speed declares that New Yorkers con sume t.0,000.000 dozen eggs per year ' for which they pay ? 1 1.400.000 ; 290,800 po'unils of butter per day , costing $18,200.000 per year ; i'97.000 gallons of milk. S.fiOO gallons ot cream and l.lKtO gallons of condensed milk dally , at a yearly outlay of JlO.SoO.OOO. In cluding cheese , tor which $10,000.000 per year is paid , the aggregate value of the dairy products consumed In New York City Is $1M50.000. Mr. Speed fixes the valuation of the meats of various Kinds sold to New Yorkers each year at about SIS.OOO.OOO. This does not Include poultry , from 200,000 to 400,000 head of which are sold weekly. Upon a conservative extirpate Mr. Speed places the quantity of fish consume yearly in New York nt 45,000,000 pounds , nut in cluding oysters , clamo. craba and otlur * licH fish. There are 24.000 bushels of pota toes sold In New York dally , the yield of a & 0.000-acre farm per year , the nggregnf value of the tubers being $13,000,000. Other vegetables arc consumed In like proportions , There are 70,000 bushels of wheat ( Hour ) , eaten every week , besides large quantities ot oat meal , buckwheat flour and corn meal. The quantities of provender always on hanii ( the perishable goods being kept In cold- storage warehouses ) leads Mr. Speed to conclude that wcro Now York cut off from all the from whence points her food aup- plles are drawn , her people could live In plenty for four montliH , and even manage to got along for half a year , without emulat ing the Chinese appetites for rats. Voi'aliiiliiry of OIKWord. . "I shall never forget my first visit to Madrid , " xaid a woman to the Now York Sun man. "I was the only member of our party who know any Spanish , and I knew but one word , that one being 'lecho' milk- but by means of gestures we managed to get along until breakfast was served. Then , as luck would have It. the maid brought my coffee without any mlllt , and , also an luck would have It , I promptly forgot the ouo word of Spanish that I know , and which of all words was the one most wanted at that moment. This time neither gestures nor yelling wcro of any avail , BO , at last , In dcBperatlon , I seized a piece of paper and a pencil and drew a jiicturo of a co\v. Where * upon the maid tripped off and came back with three tickets to the bull flglit. " When wo consider that the Imesllncs nr about five times as long as tbo body wo can realize the Intense suffering experienced when they become Inflamed. DoWitt'a Colic and Cholera Cure subdues inflamma tion at once and completely removes tbo A SriiNOii of KovriiKm , The two clrla were on a shopping tour , relate * the Washington Star "You didn't apeak very courteously to th clerk , " said one of them. "I'm sure 1 didn't mean to be Inconsid erate , " wan the reply. "I don't neo that there was any occasion to bo elaborately deferential. " "Well. It's Just as well to be very careful Indeed at this time of year. There Un't any telling who is going to b ; the only man at the summer resort your father Insists on vUItlns. " _ _ _ _ _ _ We are anxious to do a little good In thl world ami can think of no pleasantur or better way to do It than liy recommending One Minute Cough Cure a a preventive ot pneumonia , consumption and other tcrlouu lung troubles tbat follow neglected cold * .