Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, November 20, 1904, NEWS SECTION, Page 5, Image 5

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    TIIE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 20. 1904.
Hie
II
a mother should
a source of
danger incident to the ordeal makes its ant ici nation ent of miser v.
Mother Friend is the only remedy which relieves women of the great
pain and danger of maternity ; this hour which i dreaded as woman's
severest trial fa not only made painless, but all the danger is aroided
by its use. Those who use this remedy are no longer despondent or
gloomy ; nervousness, nausea and other distressing conditions are
overcome, the system is made ready for the coming event, and the
serious accidents so common to trie critical
hour are obviated by the use of Mother's
!-fiend. "It is worth its weight
says many who have used ,t.
bottle at drug stores. Book containing
valuable information of interest to
be sent to any address free upon
BRADFIUJ REGULATOR OO.,
"CLAVERING AND
A REMARKABLE NOVEL,
THE
MART
1
A MAGA- l
rue B
FOR DECEMBER.
Z05 3o.lS:atreet.
BB3aEB33K35383Da
YOUNG MEN
We have observed the terribly blighting Influences of abuses and Indiscre
tions In the young and middle-aged; sapping the vital forces; undermining the
foundations of munhood; clouding the brightest minds and destroying all noble
thoughts and aspirations; family circles disrupted and the poisonous fangs
reaching out and blighting even suuci eonis nerulloi-e.
There are thousands of partially and totally Wrecked constitutions among
young men today from abuses and lgted energies tell a pitiable story. Multi
vitality, shattered nerves and exhaundtscretlons In early life. Their weakened
tude have brought upon themselves tho horrors of a life-long direise or
weakness through excesses, abimeH and unnatural drains, which sup the very
foundations or life, destroying thelrhealth and strength, leaving them a men
tal, ph steal and sexual wreck.
Are you one of tne muny thousands of WEAK MEN, and do you wish to be
cured? We have deoted many years exclusively to treating this class of trou
bles, attended with the greatest success, and we are thus enabled to glva
this class of sufferers the benefit of our extended experience In treating dis
eases of this nuture. The specialists connected with the State Med oal Institute
are eminently qualified to advls , direct and treat such cases. We are thor
oughly conversant with every minute detail connected with such cases, and en
courage and counsel the patient by good advice while skill and medicine re
store him back to health, strength and happiness.
We have Investigated and tested all known method, for the treatment and
cure of private ll-eaes and weaknesses of men. which gives us the right to
judge Detween the false and the true between shallow pretense and solid
worth between sulmtnnce and shadow. Musty theories cannot' stand out
against our mode of treatment, against progressive medical science, new dis
coveries and undisputed facts of disease cured to stay cured by our method,
of treatment.
WE CURE QUICKLY, SAFELY AND THOROUGHLY .
Stricture, Varicocele Emissions, Nervo-Sexua! Debility,
Impotency, Blood Poison (Syphilis), Rectal,
Kidney and trinary Diseases,
and all diseases and weaknesses of men due to Inheritance, evil habit., self
abuse, excesses or the result of specific or private diseases.
rnuCIII TJTIflU FRPP If you cannot call, write for symptom blank.
VUnaUL IMIUil rntC Offloe Houre-s a. m. to $ p. m. Sunduys, 10 to 1 only.
STATE MEDICAL INSTITUTE
i
US Farm ft
Btt. Utti.nl
IHIMSMUll3tBXlIJXL..MISa
Cheap Rates
Southwest
There isn't a section of the globe where a man
with a little money and a big capacity for work
can do as well a section that he can visit,
investigate and satisfy himself of its worth so
easily and cheaplyas the Southwest.
On November 22 the Rock Island System will
offer an unusually low round trip rate to Texas
and New Mexico points; also low round trip
rates to all Oklahoma and Indian Territory and
Kansas points.
. Several hours quickest line to Oklahoma and
Texas points.
Send for literature.
E-erj mother fecit
great dread of tha pain
and danger attendant apon
the most critical period
of her life. Becoming
tor to
all, but the suffering and
looter's
in gold,"
11.00 per
all women, will
S Friend
application
AUantm. O
HIS DAUGHTER"
OF WASHINGTON LIFE. IN
or
CLE
Just Out.
V E R HBfl
...ONIMOD...
Best Shoes" for Men.
Style. Quality. Workmanship.
$3.50 2 $2.50
Always Satisfactory. Always Fit.
Only denulne with Onlmod
Trademark.
JVlAKtR TO WEARER.
for . ED
Youth In prone to weakness, and weakness,
allied with Ignorance of the consequence,
which are sure to follow makes indiscre
tion., nnil fnllv Inevitable.
l4tS 3tr.t. Onahi. N..
F. P. RUTHERFORD, 0. P. A.
1323 Farnam St., Omaha.
WRIGHT TO URGE REFORMS
GoTernmeit Inspsctor Makes Sweeping
Report on Indian OitTagss.
GOES AFTER THE LEADING GRAFTERS
Kasnlac of These necommeadat leas
for Their rrosecatloa Reserratloa
OslUfii Are "aid to Hare
tnncnrteel Sehell Charge.
According to Information said to be en
tirely authentic, A. O. Wright, special In
spector of the government, will recommend
to I'ncle Bam that he vigorously prosecute
Father Schell'a wholesale charges of fraud
and corruption preferred against boot
lrggers and grafters on the Winnebago
Indian reservation.
Parties claiming to know positively
whereof they speak declare that Inspector
Wright has fully prepared, after ex
haustive Investigation, a rfport to Wash
ington confirming the repeated allegations
that the Indians were being systematically
defrauded and debased, recommending the
tieccssary reforms and urging the prosecu
tion of ringleaders In this carnival of pted
atory crime. The declaration Is that Mr.
Wright's report dots not urge so much
the prosecution of the "little fellows" who
have simply been the tools in the hands
of the big culprits as has ben dona In
previous cases but urges that the govern
ment go right after the big grafter, who
have grown fat off this nefarious traffic.
Tramp I'p Charge on Sehell.
"Knowing of Inspector Wright', report,"
says The Bee". Informant, "these grafters
have put up this Job against Father Sehell,
whose persistent warfare has uncovered so
extensively the glaring details of their
corruption as .to compel prosecution of it.
They have decided, as a last resort, to
seek revenge against this priest, whose
work has been honorable and above board,
and to this end have trumped up this
charge of forgery against him. hoping by
this means to be able to discredit the
reports of Father Sehell at Washington.
"That these grafters are In a state of
tho utmost desperation over the fear of
being finally driven to the wall and con
victed of their hlgh-handfd outrages, car
ried on for years, is unquestionable, and
they are not going to die without a hard
fight."
It Is said Inspector Wright's recom
mendations, if carried out, will make it
very uncomfortable for some of the po
litical factors held responsible for protect
ing these grafters and outlaw. In their
outrageous impositions upon the poor
Indians.
INDOOR FOOT BALL IN OMAHA
Game to Be Played at Aadltorlnm
Tliankaa-lTlna: Between luteal
and Coucnll Bluffs Teams.
Omaha is to have In-door foot ball. The
Auditorium . Thanksgiving day is to be
used by the team, of the Dodge Light
Guards of Council Bluffs and the Otn.i.ia
Commercial college. There Is also to be a
wrestling match between Patrick Cannon
of iht collega and Captain Baelir of "o
Thur.rt.r Rifles.
N-iver before have tne HFldents of this
part of the country been alle to see n
hvaooi game. They jre i-omnrin tnougn
.n Chicago and the cast, but Omaha naj
not heretofore had a large enough build
ing. Sawdust and dirt to the thickness of
two inches are to be pneked over tho Audi
torium floor and the posts padded so that
no one may be accidentally Injured by
striking wood The arena la not the regu
lation size, but games have been played In
much smaller space.
The Light guards team Is practically the
same a. the one which defeated Crelghton
last Thanksgiving. Richmond, Deltrick and
Rutherford are still In the line-up. The
Commercial college team has played In
Omaha only once this year, when It de
feated Woodbine. Frank Capell la coach
ing the Council Bluffs aggregation and
Charley L. Thomas the Omaha team. The
game will be called at t o'clock.
The first bout In the wrestling match
will be called before the game and the
second during the Intermission. If neither
man get. two fall, the third will come
after the close of the game.
THREE YEARS FOR ROBBERY
i
Sentence Lessened Beranee Negro
Bora Record of Being Hard
Working Man.
Jame. Wilson, colored, was sentenced
to three year. In the state prison for high
way robbery. He wa. tried some day. ago
on a charge of robbing Frank Gilchrist of
$40. The jury found him guilty. The
AN OBJECT LESSON
In a Restaurant.
A Physician puts tne query: Have you
never noticed la any large restaurant at
lunch or dinner time the large number of
hearty, vigorous old nun at the table.;
men whose aes run from sixty to eUhty
year.; many of them bald and all pernap.
gray, but none of them leebie or aenlle?
Perhap. the apectacle 1. .0 common a.
to have escaped your observation or com
ment, but nevertheless It 1. an object legion
which mean, sometiimg.
If you will notice what these hearty olj
fellow, are eating, you will observe that
they are not munching bran cracker, or
gingerly picking thtlr way through a menu
card ot new tangled health foods, on the
contrary they seem to preler a Juicy roaat
of beef, a properly turned loin of mutton,
and even the deadly bioheu lubster la
not altogther Ignored.
The point of all of this 1. that a vlgoroua
old age depends upon good d.geat.on and
plenty of wholesome food and not upon
dieting and an endeavor to live upon bran
crackers.
There 1. certain class of food crank.,
who seem to believe that moat, coffee and
many other good thing, are rank poisons,
but these cadaverou. sickly looking in
dividual, are a walking condemnation of
their own tbeorle..
The matter in a nutshell 1. that If the
stomach secrete, the natural, digestive
Juice. In sufflcien quantity, any whole
ome food will be promptly digested If the
stomach does not do so, and certain food
.cause dlstre... one or two of Stuart'. Dys
pepsia Tablets after each meal will remove
all difficulty, because they supply just
what every weak stomach lacks, pepsin,
bydro-chlorlo scld, diastase and nux.
Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets do not act
upon the bowel, and In fact are not strict
ly a medicine, a. they set almo.t entirely
upon the food eaten, digesting it thorough
ly and thus giving the stomach a much
needed rest and an appetite for the next
meal.
Ot people who travel, nine out of tea
use Stuart'. Dyspepsia Tablets, knowing
them to be perfectly sife to use at any
time and also having found out by ex
perience that they are a safeguard against
indigestion In sny form, and eating as they
have to, at all hour, and all kind, of food,
the traveling public for year, have pinned
their faith to Stuart'. Tablets
All druggists sell them at U cents for
full-slsed packages and any druggist from
Maine to California. If his . opinion Were
sked, will say that Stuart's - Dyspepsia
Tablet. Is the most popular and successful
remedy (or any stomach trouble.
robbery occurred at dusk outside of the
Mlnoon at Thirteenth and Chicago streets
and Gilchrist and several small boys testi
fied to the prisoner being the guilty man.
Wll.on has had the reputation of being a
hard-working man and the sen t nee was
the minimum.
GREAT WESTERN DEPOT DONE
Stlekneya Sew Freight Hoase le
Cosaaleteel and Ready
for Baslaess.
Freight will be received by the Chicago
Great Western at its new freight depot.
east of the Sixteenth street viaduct, Mon
day.
The announcement was officially given
out this morning that the company Is
ready to receive freight over It. own ter
minal In this city and that the depot will
be opened Monday for business. Switches
and other trackage are In and the freight
depot is completed. The department will
be In charge of II. M. Murray, a former
employe of the Burlington. Mr. Murray
left the road about a year ago to accept
a position with the Hydraulic Pressed
Brick company.
His chief clerk will be Wllllsm Brown.
Messrs Feehan and Adams have been em
ployed as clerks. Four freight handler,
will be employed In the freight house for
the present. Entrance to the new depot
will be obtained from Seventeenth street
for the present. The permanent entrance
Is to be on Sixteenth street, but this en
trance Is not yet ready and considerable
work will have to bo done before It can
be used. Freight will be taken from the
main tracks over six team tracks and two
house tracks. This is more than enough
to supply the business demands for the
present. There Is still considerable filling
and grading to be done, but thin part of
the work can now be carried on without
interfering with the transaction of busi
ness. Kahn on Investigation.
J. A. Kuhn, assistant general freight and
passenger agent of the Northwestern, has
returned from Chicago, where he has been
a witness before the Interstate Commerce
commission, which has been Investigating
the charges of high rates brought by the
stockmen of the west and south.
It is expected that the Investigation will
close with the examination of the railroad
witnesses at Chicago. The testimony of
the stockmen was takec at the meetings
held by the commission at Denver and St.
Louis.
Mr. Kuhn .aid:
"The portion taken by the stock raisers
is that the rates are too high, especially
In the shipment of cattle from Tex'as to the
northern ranges and from there to the mar
ket. The stock raisers did not testify at
Chicago. Their testimony was taken at
the previous meeU.igs of the commission.
The railroads take the position that the
rates are not too high In consideration of
the service necessary for this class of
freight
"The live stock rates ore lower than any
other commodity compared to the service
and the extraordinary expense. Incurred by
the railroads. The business forces us to
maintain stockyards, scales and reservoirs.
No other freight can be shipped back In
the cars used for this class of freight and
the result is that the cars have to be re
turned empty. A better service Is required.
Sometimes livestock has to have the right-
of-way over papscnger trains. The nsks
arc greater In hauling live stock and If
cattle die on the way the railroad receives
a claim for damages, although the com
pany mny be .In no way responsible for tho
shrinkage. '
"If the commission decide, the railroads
have been charging too much for hauling
this freight and the companies believe In
spite of the finding their rate? are reason
able, the matter -may be carried into the
court, for final settlement. While the ac
tion Is brought against cue line, nearly alt
the western roads carrying this class of
freight are named as defendants."
. Oranges for World's Fair.
A large shipment of orange, is on the
way from California to St. Louis over the
Union Pacific. The fruit, which Is from
the famous Sacramento valley and is to be
exhibited at the exj Ofltlrn orange day, 1.
furnished by the Sacramento Development
association. It is estimated there are
over 10,000 oranges In the haul, which in
clude, other California fruits. . The ahlp
ment I. considered an unusually heavy one
for this tlm.. a. it Is out of the regular
season for oranges. It is a fact, however,
that owing to peculiar climatic condition,
fruit ripens sooner In the Sacramento val
ley thun in lower California.
PLAN TO BOOST ARBITRATION
Proponed Reaolatloa Beat Oat by Lake
Motion u Conference to Be '
Generally Adopted.
The Lake Mohonk (N. Y.) arbitration con
ference haa forwarded resolutions which
It aska the Omaha Commercial club to
adopt. The Mohonk organization Includes
gome of the most prominent Americana In
the international arbitration work. The
resolutions say:
The Commercial club irlves its emphatic
endorsement snd support to the efforts
now being- put forth to secure ratification
of arbitration treaties between the United
States and other nations. It believes that,
with only such exceptions s may be abso
lutely necessary, all International difficul
ties, not capable of diplomatic settlement,
should be settled by arbitration."
A request Is made that a copy of the
resolutions be sent to the two" United
States st-rators from the state; the p real
dent, secretary of state and to the chair
man on foreign relations.
A few years ago the Commercial club
appointed a committee on international ar
bitration, to which the communication will
be referred for action. On this committee,
of which E. A. Benson is chairman, la
Gennral C. F. Manderson. who la a mem
ber of the International Law association,
which devoted much time to the considera
tion of this subject, and which was largely
instrumental irr bringing about the Hague
conference. General Manderson Is also
a member of the committee on Interna
tional law of the. American Bar assoclae
tlon, which for years haa had the sub
ject of arbitration before It with gratify.
Ing results.
A report on the request of the Lake Mo
honk conference will be made at the next
meeting of the executive committee of the
Commercial club.
BOX OF BLACKING EXPLODES
Baa Polish Goea OsT a ad Hits Owgei
ia fererul loots' at
Onee.
Denver Cummlngs, proprietor of a shoo
shining stand at Thirteenth and Farnam
streets, sustained slight burns on his head,
face and one hand aa the result of the ex
plosion of a can, cf blacking that had been
placed In a can of water being heated by
Cummlngs. One "of Cummlngs' employes
had put the blacking In the water to soften
the polish and Cummlngs did not see the
blacking when ho placed the water on the
stove. Tho water was being heated on
small gasoline atovo and the force of the
explosion caused the flames to' Ignite with
the stand. The fire waa extinguished by
tho department before It Jia4 gained much
headway. Cummlngs was able to go un
attended to a nearby drug store to have hU
burns dressed.
A Full Dollar's Worth Free
t will fltdlr ft nr trk one a full dollar t
worth of m.T rtmrdy to trut .
I k no riVposttt no prom it. Thtro Is nnthlni
to pay, either now or later. The dollar bottle ts
fr-.
I went no ffren ( no nerurlty. Th tr
have the same opportunity an th rich. To one
and all ! ear "Merflv writ- and a-k." T will fsxid
yn an order on ynnr aniCKiit. He will live roe
fr the full dollar parka.
Th.i PTTer li only frr BTrn;er to me remeflv.
To thn who have not heard, or hearing, have
not tried u.
Mv offer in as brosd sn humanity Itself. For
Ir-knere known no dlstlnrttoTi In Me ravacen.
And tho reetleee put lent on a downy rourh. le no
more welrome than the want inn eufferer mho fret
through the laar'n hour In a dtamal hovel.
I want strangers RVERYwhere to teet my
remedy.
There It ae mrttery no miracle, I sen rx-
Inside Nerves!
Only ene out of every tt has perfect health.
Of the 7 sick ones, some are bed-ridden, some
are half sick, snd some ere only dull and Hat
leaa. But most of the sickness comes from a
common csuho. The nerves are weak. Not the
nerves you ordinarily think sbout not the nerves
thst govern your movements snd your thoughts.
But the nerves that ungulded and unknown.
Dlaht snd lay. keen your heart In motion con
trol your dlgeetlvo apparatus regulate your liver
operate your kidneys.
These are the nerves that wear out and break
down.
It does no good to treat the siting organ the
Irregular heart the disordered liver the rebellious
stomach the deranged kidneys. They lire not
to blame. But go back to the nerves that con
trot them. There you will nod the seat of the
trouble.
There Is nothing new about this nothing sny
physician would dispute. But It remained for
Dr. Snoop to apply thi knowledge to put it to
practical use. Dr. Snoop" a Restorative In the
result of a quarter century of endeavor slung
this very line. It does not dose the organ or
deaden the pain but It doea go at once to the
nrve the Inelrte nervethe power uerve and
builds U up, and strengthens it and makea It
well.
For Stomach Troubles
Th ntnmsoh 1 controlled bjr a delicts nerve
rilled the olr nleiu.. Prlte IlKhtere know that
a blow orer (he itonm-ll eolar plexua Mow
meana m eure knock-out. For thle nerve la ten
tlmca aa lenaltlre aa the pupil ot your eye. Yet
the eolar plmul la only one of the centers of
the ereat lnlde nenre the power nerre. It l
one of the nuMer nerrea. The atnmach la Ita
alave. Practically all atomach trouble la nerre
trouble Inalde nerre trouble eolar plexul trouble.
Hr 8hoop- RoMoratlre etrengthena the Inflde
nerrea atrengthena the eolar plextie and the
stomach trouble dteeppeara.
Dr.
REDS GIVE SCHELL OVATION
Indian. Manifest Confidence and Esteem
for Their Detoted Friend.
GREET PRIEST AT FEDERAL BUILDING
As He Enierares from Grand Jnry
Room Father la Cheered by
' Aborigines and Scoffed
by Graftera.
Father Sehell was again a witness before
the federal grand jury yesterday in the
Winnebago bootlegging cases, having re
turned from Pender Friday night Al
most the entire morning was devoted to his
testimony. '
After he had completed his testimony
Father Sehell came out into the corridor
and was given a veritable ovation by hiss!
Indian friends, both men and women. It
was evident Father Sehell was regarded by
the Indians as their sincere friend, while
at the same time he was greeted with
vicious acowls by a number of white men
who are blterly opposed to him and his
methods.
Not all the white men summoned here as
witnesses are enemies of Father Sehell.
In fact, there la a number of white men
who heartily endorse his every action up
there.
Asked In reference to any difficulty he
had In procuring a bond at Pender Fri
day In the trumped-up forgery case for
which l e was arrested and hurried to
Pender Thursday evening. Father Hchell
said:
"I did not have the slightest trouble.
Though that was the first time I was ever
In Pender and I did not know a man
there:' A bystander, overhearing the re
mark, said: "And what is more, he could
have given a bond for $60,000."
Poatofltce Clerk Indicted.
Preston C. Brooks, Jr., clerk In the post
office at Fort Robinson, was one of the
parties against whom tndlctments were
returned by the federal grand Jury Friday
evening. He was indicted on three counts,
being charged with embezzling three let
ters from the poetoffice at that point and
appropriating the contents, amounting In
the aggregate to about $15, to his own use.
He was bound over to the federal grand
Jury by the United 8tates commissioner at
Crawford in May last and has since been
Shoop s
Six years ago I became afflicted with a
severe sore leg which continued to grow
worse, gradually, until tho entire leg
from the knee to the foot waa one solid
ore, which waa very offensive. I spent
over lirooo.oo on two tria to not Sprinzs,
and variotM local paysiciaas treated Bsc to no purpose. I had
bout come to tha conclusioa to have aay leg amputated when
friend induced me to try 6. S. &., saying if I would take it
constantly for year ana it did not benefit tne he would pay
for the medicine. I began to take your medicine, and in the
short apace of seven month it completely and thoroughly
cured me. I consider S. S. S. tbe grandest medicine the world
has ever kmrwn. My leg ia witness today as to what S. S. S.
will do when taken regularly.
Box 245, Winona, lilt. J. B. Talbbxt.
A great running aore, or deep offensive ulcer may develop from a slight scratch, bruise or pimple a harm
less looking little boil or slightly swollen gland may soon be an ulcerating mass that will develop into a cancerous
ulcer, dangerous and destructive. Middle-aged and old people are the most frequent sufferers from old sores snd
chronic ulcers, but the young, even children, who have inherited weak constitutions or had them contaminated
and tainted by Malaria, or other sickness, are afflicted in the same way. These chronic sores and ulcers are a
constant drain on the Eystem, sapping the vitality and strength. They depress the energy with their foul pollu
tion, and are sure signs that the blood is charged with poisonous matters which in its weak, sluggish condition it
is unable to throw off. Salves, washes, powders, etc., can never be of any permanent service in the treatment of
its vegetable properties, and tones up every organ while effecting the cure.
cure, and is guaranteed entirely vegetable. Send for our social book on Sores
vou wish. We make no charge lor this. rf SWIFT SPECIFIC
Can any Ailing
plain my treatment to yon aa eailr aa I can tell
you why lold frccrca water and why heat melta f
toe. Nor do 1 claim a dtucorery. For everv ;
detail of my treatment le baed on trutha o j
f undant'ntal that none can ilrii them. And I
eifry Ingredient of my medicine la aa old aa the
hllla It rrowa on. I almnlr applied the trutha
and comhlned the Ingredient. Into a remedy that
I ia practically certain. The paraarapha below will ;
,how yo-.i the rr-epon why j
I Fut mr yeara of patient erperlmet't will arnl!
I mil nothing If you do mtt acrept my offer. For i
I facte and rearona and even belief will not cure.
Onlr the remedy can do that. i
j In elahty thousand i onnnunl !e. in trnre than I
I 1 million home rir Shoo'si Reetor.it ive ,
I known. There are those all around vM-yeur
frlende and tiele'ihorp. perhape whoee euTerlna H ;
haa relieved There la not phielclan anywhere I
who dare, tell vnn 1 am wrong In the new wied- J
leal prliulplea which I apply.. And for alt aolld I
Many Ailments One Cure
t bare called theae the Inalde nenree for elm
pllrlty'a sake. Their ueual name la the "aym
pathetic' nervea. Fhyetolana call them br thla
name bqrauee they are ao cloeely allied becaui
each la In auch cloaa aynipathy with the othera.
The reault la that when one branch la allowed
to become Impaired the othera weaken That la
why one kind of alckneaa leeda Into another. That
la why caeca become "complicated." For thla
delicate nerve ta the tnoet een.ltlve part of the
human ayatem.
Doea title not eiplaln to you anme of the un
rertalntlea of medicine la It not a good reaenn
to vottr mind why other kinda of treatment may
hare failed?
Don't you eee thai THIS la NF.W In medicine?
That thla la NOT the mere patchwork of a atlmu
lent the mere toothing or a narcotic? Ih.n't
vou eee that It goea right to the root of the
trniihle and eradlcatea the cauee?
But I do not ak you to take aingle etate
ment of mine 1 do rot ask ynu to believe a word
I aay until vou have tried my medicine In your
own home at my cirense alieolutely. Could I
offer vou a full dollar a worth free If there were
nr ml.rei.reeentatlun? fould I let you go to
vour drugglat whom you know and nick cut any
bottle he h on Ilia ehelvee of my medicine were
It not VNIFOKM1.V helrful? fould I AFFORD
In d.i thla If 1 were pot reasonably Pl'RK that my
medicine will help you?
For Kidney Troubles
The kldneva are the blood flllera. They are
operated solely h the Inalde nervea. The branch
which operatea them and regulatea them Is called
the renal plexun. When the renal pleaua la
weak nr Irregular, the kldneye become clogged
with the very polpone they ahould throw off. No
kidney treatment can clean them out or cure
them and one etage leeda Into another until after
a while the kldneye Ihrmeelree begin to break
down and dlaanlre. There la onlr one way to
reach kidney trouble that la through the Inalde
nerves that control them, which Mr. Snoop' e Ke
atoratlve alone atrengthena and reatorea.
confined in the Douglas county jail in de
fault of ball. Yesterday ho pleaded
guilty and was sentenced to eighteen
months In the federal prison at Sioux
Falls.
William Johnson, white, and Frank De
hart, colored, were bound over to the fed
eral grand Jury In $5C0 by United States
Commissioner Anderson on the charge of
giving to and buying liquor for Indians.
SLABAUGH NAMES DEPUTIES
County Attorney-Elect Appoints Those
Who Will Assist Him la
His New office.
County Attorney-elect Slabaugh has an
nounced the appointments of his assistants
in his office, who will assume the duties
with him when he takes charge In January
They are:
A. H. Murdock, deputy, of South Omaha,
former city attorney there, who began his
study of law in Judge Slabaugh's office.
Frank A. Shotwell, deputy, Omaha, a
graduate of the Ohio State university, ad
mitted to the bar by the examining board
of Ohio, ranking eleventh in a class of 280.
Mr. Shotwell has been associated with
Jefferls & Howell. Mr. Shotwell recently
has movel from South Omaha to the Sixth
ward in Omaha.
Frank W. Fitch, deputy, of Omaha, a
graduate of the Ohio State university; ad
mitted to the bar in Douglas county in lSSU.
Charles E. Foster, deputy, of Omaha, a
native of Nebraska and graduate of the
University of Nebraska law department ill
1900.
Oeorgo B. Sherwood, messenger, of South
Omaha, formerly bailiff of the district
court under Judge Baxter and more lately
under Judge Bartlett.
Miss Blanche Zlmman, stenographer, ot
Omaha.
This gives South Omaha two places out
of six at the disposal of Judge Slabaugh.
The deputyshlpg carry a salary of $100 a
month, the messenger $75 and the ste
nographer $50.
Try Gooden's antlseptlo barber shop for
first-class work. Under Meluher'a drug
tore.
Mortality Statistics.
The following births and deaths have
been reported to the Board of Health dur
ing the twenty-four hours ending at noon
Suturday :
Births S. S. Itnyon, 2920 Farnam, boy;
Harvey J. Weeth, 1U13 Kyner avenue, boy;
Gus Vnn Moorleghen, 1914 Dorcas, boy.
Deaths Rev. John Doxncher, St. Joseph's
hospital, 0; Josephine lierold, 2003 Cum
Vaxdosta,
Swift bpecinc Co., Atlanta, Ua.
Dear Sirs I want to tell yon
my case and the good
me. Something like
my Instep, very small
painful, and I could
sores and ulcers, because the trouble is not on the outside, but in the blood,
and as long as it circulates through tbe body in its impoverished and poisoned
condition tbe trouble will grow worse. The need is a remedy that will cleanse th
blood of all poisons and impurities, build it up from its weakened state, increase)
ita vigor and strengthen the whole system. S. S. S. does this, and is the only
blood purifier that does. Rich blood is carried to the diseased parts, which forms
new tissues and allows the 6ore or ulcer to heal. It works with nature because of
one Refuse?
yeara my remedr baa etood the eevereat tet a.
medicine waa ever put to 1 hare aald "It It
fall. It la free" and It haa never failed where
there waa a poealMe chance for It to aucceed.
Hut thla mountain of ertdence ta of no trail le
th.iee who ehut their eyea and dote away In,
douht. For doubt le harder to orercome than 4ia
eae. 1 cannot cure thoee who lack the faith te
trv.
? now I bare made thla offer I diaregatrl tbe
evMen.e. I lay a.l.le the fact that mine la the
lurgeet medical practice In the world, and com
to inn aa a atranaer. I aek yow to believe ant
one word that I eay till you hare proren It for
youraelf. I offer to give you outright a ftltt dol
lar' worth of Or. pMionp'i Reetoratlre. Na nnw
ee baa ever tried en hard to remove everr poealhlg
eicuec for doubt It la the utmnet mr unbounded,
confluence can euggcet. H'e open end frank ant
fair. It la the supreme teal ot my llmltlata ballet.
Simply . Write Me
The fleet free bottle liar be enough to effect
cure but I do not promlee that. Nor de I fear
a loaa of pnaelbie prolll If tt doee. For auch
teat will eurely convince the cured one beyond
doubt, or dispute, er dlabellrf. than every word 1
aay la true. ''"..
The offer la open to ereryone everywhere, whe
haa not tried my remedy. ' ' '
But ynu murt write ME for the free .dollar, bot
tle order All druggleta do not grant ,the teet.
I will then direct you to one that doe. He win
Pa It down to you from hie wtock aa freely
though your dollar laid before him. Write foe
the order today. The offer may not remain open.
I will eend yon the book you aak for bealde.
It la free It will help you to noderatand lour
cae. What more cen I do to convince you of mr
Intereat niy sincerity?
For g free order for Book 1 an Iyapepel.
a full dollar bottle Hook I on the Heart:-
you mul addreaa Ir. Book 3 on the Kidneys.
Minor. Bol 7r.7b. Ra- Book 4 for Women. . ,
cine, Wle. "-late which Book I for Men.
book you want. Book ou HbeunuMara.
Mild caaea are often cured with one or leg
bottlea. For sale at lofty thousand drug atoreg.-
For Heart Trouble
Your heert beata more than ten thousand timet
a dev. And every heart heat la gn impulee- of
the Inalde nerre branch called the cardiac plexne.
The heart la a muecle. hot It la the nerre that
makea the muecle do the work. An Irregular o
weak heart In. elmoat In erery Inetanre. the di
rect result of a weak or Irregular nerve Inatdg)
nerve. To cure heart trouble, reetsra the nerve,
to normal. Dr. Fhoop'a Reatoeatlve will restore)
the rardlao pleiua Just aa It reatoreg the eolar Pteiug
and the rengl pleius. For all are equal parte of the
great Inside gerre ayatem the power nervea the)
matter nervea.
estorative
ing 44: Olga Marie Nlenisn, 1946 South)
Eleventh. S; John Clifford Kalen, 2620 De-.
catur, 6; Annie Hansen, 968 North Twenty
seventh avenue, 29.
More Election Expenses.
Election expense accounts were filed wit H
County Clerk Drexcl by H.i T. Clarke, Jr,
who swears to having spent $77.8i; I C.
Gibson, who turns in the total of $121: and
J. P. English, who returns expenses to
taling J. H. Jones has tiled htsr ac
count for campaign expenses in hi race
for county commissioner. The total If
$275.
LOCAL-BREVITIES. -v:
Anna M. Palmer has brought a ult fo '
divorce against Charles H..-Palmer.. Thej
pair was married In Denver durlnfr l0o
and the suit, is brought on the ground' of
nonsupport. '
Patrick Hopkins Is another who wlshei
a Judicial severance of his matrmonlal
bonds. Annie Hopkins, whom he mnrrtea
in April, 19ii3, at St. Louis, he charges
with abandonment.
Burglars are reported to have entered
the home of Fred Nelson, , 1106 . North
Twentieth street, Friday night. After ran
sacking the place they were frightened
away by Mrs. Nelson, who lighted a lamp
and made a rush for her rolling pin.
The county commissioners awarded tho
contract for grading the main road from
Florence road to Forest Lawn cemetery
to F. C. Jackson & Co. The commissioners
moved to discontinue the work of tho
road machine. The commissioners ap
proved the regular budget.
The members of the family nf J. N.
Marsh, 3821 North Twentieth street, aro
prepared for any and all burglars who
may In the future call at the Marsh fire
side. It is reported Thursday and Fri
day nights burglars succeeded In getting
into the house, out on each occasion were
frightened away before they bad succeeded
In securing any plunder. ,
The breaking of a chip from a steel
rasp makea Charles W. Partridge defend
ant In a suit for $15,000. He la sued fur
that amount by Edgar Vanderpool. Van
derpool sues because the chip entered hla
left eye and destroyed, the sight thereof.
Ho was an employe of Partrldpe and
was working for him at the rebuilding of
Allen Bros', warehouse at Ninth und Jones
atreets. v
Rev. Charles W. Savldge, pastor of tho
People's church, announces his church will
provide dinners for, the poor and needy
Thanksgiving night, as has been the cus
tom of the church for years. This year
the church expects to provide for at least
1,000. Rev. Mr. Savldge is anxious for tt)
names of all who will not be In a position
to have a good dinner on tha day - when
nearly every one gives the Inner man a
treat.
Edward Malone wants. $600 as damage
for his recent arrest in Bouth Omaha as a
suspicious character. He has begun a
suit In the district court against Phillip H.
Shields, captain of police In South Omalfa.
snd his bondsmen, the Title Ouuranteo ana
Trust company. Malone sets out he waa
arrested by Shields October ,7 last ' and
thrown Into Jail and Imprisoned for tho
term of one day and three hours. . He antra
the captain had no right to do thru thing
and therefore he wants damages. y j
Ga., September, 1900.
,821' -1
ae on V ' -ii CJ
8. S. S. haa
rising came
at first, not at all Vii l 1 i
wear my hoe with-
V m Hi' ar i
out any trouble. But as it grew larger and began' to pain me
I consulted a doctor, but in spite of all he could do the sore
got worse and began to discharge; then other sores came until
the whole top of my foot waa one large mass of sores and I
could not walk. Then my husband, who had been cured of
Scrofula by the use of S. S. S., said he believed it would cure
me. I began taking it and eight bottle cured me; my foot
healed up nicely. I believe I would have been a cripple for
life but for S. S. 8. Mrs. C. H. Kino.,
It brings a safe as well as a permanent
and Ulcers, and write for any advica
COMPANY, ATLANTA. GA.