THE ANSWER. A row. In tatter on the garden path, Cried out to 0d and murmured 'gainst hla wrath, Because a sudden wind at twilight's hush Had snapped her stem alone of all the bush. And God, who hears both sun-dried dust and sun, Had pity, whispering to that luckless one, "Slater, in that thou sayest we did not well What voice nearest thou when thy peU ala fell?" And the rose answered: "In that evil hour A voice said, 'Father; wherefore fall'st the flower? For lo, the very gossamers are still." And a voice answered, 'Sown, by Allah's will.' " Then softly, as the rain-mist on the sward. Came to the rose the answer of the Lord: "Sister, before we smote the dark In twain; Ere yet the stars saw one another plain, Time, tide, and space, we bound unto the task That thou shouldn't fall, and such an one should ask." Whereat the withered flower, all con tent. Died as they died whose days are inno cent; While he who questioned why the flow er fell Caught hold of God and saved his soul from hell. Rudyard Kipling. DOROTHY'S LUNCH. Dorothy Willis settled back Jn her seat, as the train started with the sigh of content. She was actually on her way to the city for a whole day s fun and shopping. She had been looking forward to this trip all the long, busy summer. It was to be her one outing for the year, for the heavy mortgage on the Willis farm made mere pleasure Impossible. But there was shopping that must be done In the city, and mother had said that Dorothy should be the one to go, so she had been saving up her pennies for It all summer. She had found time to pick some berries, and she had gather ed chestnuts to sell. She had a little money In one comer of her purse "Just or reckless extravagance," she ssJd. "I know that you will think I am dreadfully foollBh," she said to her mother, early In the summer, but If I can save money enough I'm going into Delaney's to lunch." Delaneys was the most aristocratic place In the city, and charged accordingly. You almost had to pay for the privilege of passing on the sidewalk. "I've seen people going In. and It looks so lovely. It smells so good, too, clear out on the Street. Somehow a put-up lunch goes down dreadfully hard after that. I'd like once in my life to play I was rich, and could have Just what I wanted." "Very well, my dear," andswered her mother, "do . s you please. We should be more than glad to give you all you want. It hurts us both to the quick, my daughter, to have you work so hard nd be denied so many things, but" "Don't you say another word. Mother Willis," cried Dorothy. "You know I'm happy as the day Is long most of the time, and I'd work ten times harder and lv on potatoes and salt before I'd sap my blessed father and mother for any millionaires on the face of the earth. I nly want to be foolish once for half an hour or bo." So Dorothy had picked berries, and gotten up early to tramp oft after chest, nuts, and ail by Itself In one corner of her purse was a crisp, new dollar bill for folly. She had amused herself and family planning her lunch. "If you don't come home, Dorothy," aid her brother Tom, "we shall know Just what the trouble Is you've died of indigestion. I should expect to If 1 put any such conglomeration Into my stomach." "I am pretty healthy," laughed Doro thy. "I guess I can stand It for once." But now the long-looked-for day had come Dorothy was really on her way! It was Just 9 o'clock when she reach ed the city and started on her shopping. Such a long list as she had, and there was so much running about, to be sure and get the best. bargains! "I shall have fine appetite," she thought, for she had been much too excited to eat her breakfast properly. At half-past eleven she decided she should go to lunch at 12, for she want ed to be there In the busiest time. It would be such fun to see the crowd, and be one of them for once. She had Just been getting woolen stockings for father and Tom, and was waiting for her change, when she no ticed a little girl, not far from her, eyeing a pile cf men's cardigans very wistfully. Such a forlorn little mite as he was! Her dross was scant and faded, and her face was so thin and old. Dorothy felt as If she would like to put her arms around her and kiss her, she looked so pitiful. Perhaps she showed her loving sympathy in her face, for soon the child came towards her, "How much do you s'pose them Jack ets be?" she asked timidly. "Oh, yes, ma'am! Mother and me, we've been trying to earn enough all summer to buy one, for father got such a cough, and he Is so cold at work In winter. Mother hasn't used a bit of sugar or milk In her tea, and I haven't bad any butter on my bread for so long! We've saved M-f-t-y cents! Do you think that will buy one?" Dorothy felt a If there was a great lump In her throat, and somehow she couldn't see to count her change which had Just come. t "I hop so, dear," she said. "I'll go over with you and see." liAk thank VAU I Mother couldn't VU t,f--- r spend time to come, because she has to etw every minute." ' It wu Dorothy that Inquired the "One dollar and a half." answer the clerk, "and a biff bargain, too." For an Instant Dorothy did not dar look at the child beside her. Poor little thing! Her bright look e expectation had faded, the tears wer running down her cheeks, and she look ed at the half-dollar in her hand In sor rowful surprise. It had been such hap work to get it, and It bad seemed sud wealth. "We never can get one," she sal with a sob, "and father will get mor oold and be sick, I'm afraid." "Give her your lunch money," sail conscience to Dorothy. "Can you b so mean and selfish and horrid as 0 go and get that foolish lunch when thl money would do so much good to thes poor folks?" "But I worked so hard to get it, art I've anticipated It so much," pleadei Dorothy. "It Isn't as if I had lot 0 pleasures." "The first mouthful ought to chok you to death," sale conscience, remorse lessly. It took only a minute less, If any thing for Dorothy to think all this, t fight the little battle, and, thank God to come off conqueror. "Don't cry, dear," she said. "I'v got some money that I don't need. I'l put it with yours, and we will get th cardigan together. Then every time yoi see your father put It on you can thin) of me. Won't that be nice?" The look on the child's face repalf Dorothy a thousand times for her llttl sacrifice. Indeed, it warmed her hear so that she slipped a quarter into thi child's hand as they parted. "Get some sugar and milk for you) mother's tea and butter for your breai tonight," she paid. "I don't need that ribbon for my hat the old one will do well enough," sin said to herself. "Well, did you have your wonderfif lunch, and did you enjoy It as much aj you expected?" asked Tom at night. "More. I never enjoyed anything w much In my life. I didn't get Just wha I planned, but It was even more lndlge tlble If anything," replied Dorothy, wltl a happy little laugh; and that was ar she would ever,say about It. "It may have been filling at the time but it doesn't seem to have stayed bi you very well," said Tom, dryly, as b watched Dorothy eat her supper. HERE IS A MORAL STORY. Perhaps the young woman who wroU this moral story had read about thai nice girl who always looked pleasant ai the deaf and dumb man and found herself heiress to his property when his will was probated. This is only a supposition, of course. The story speaks for Itself, as the reader will Bee Mabel was a beautiful girl, Jusl dawning Into womanhood, and she ran a typewriter. She helped support hei widowed mother.her father having been lost at sea many years previous to th beginning of this tele. Mabel oculd earn but little wages with her type writer, because she was obliged to an swer the telephone and she couldn't expect typewriter wages for doing that But she did not complain. Every day when she rode down town In the electric cars she noticed an elderly gentleman whose clothes were old-fashioned and pretty shabby. He had a good face but she could not help seeing that hl trousers bagged at the knees a great deal. Other people noticed It, too, and snickered and made remarks and even called him "Old Baggy Knees," but Mabel never did. She was too well brought up for one thing, and, besides. she had a good heart. 'Whenever she could she made room on the seat fot the old man, and once when there was no room to make she stood up and ave him her seat. After a while he talked with her and found out who she was and where she lived. One day she missed him. In fact, she saw him no more. It may have been a week ot so when there came a heavy rap at the door. It was a man with a pack age. The address was "Miss Mabel Plnkllngton, No. 792 Skidmore place," and Mabel opened It with nervoui haste. All It contained was a pair ol much worn trousers and a card whlcll reach: "For the little woman who nevet called me baggy knees, from her sincere admirer, John Tewksbury." Mabel laughed, but her mother shook out the garment and said: "That's a funny present." She felt In the pockets, but there was nothing there. Then Bh threw the trousers across a chair and plaintively said; "You know, Mabel, dear, that we cannot make the last pay ment on this home tomorrow, and we will lose It" Mabel sighed end answered, "Yes, mother, we will lose it." Just then her mother, who had been looking at the trousers Idly, said: "I don't think I ever saw such baggy knees on a human person. They look fairly solid." She came a little closet and felt of them, "I declare, they are," she ecltedly said. She turned them In. side out, and, lo! two huge wads ol $20 bills fell on the floor, one from each knee. When they counted them up they found there was H.180 In the two bunches. O, but that was a happy household! And next morning when the cruel agent came for his money he was given It before he could ask for It. All of which shows that It always pays to be good and respectful to old persons. Cleveland Plain Dealer. The actual area of , Greater New York Is stated by the board of Im provements to be as follows: Manhat. tan Borough, or Manhattan Island, 13,. 4W acres; borough of the Bronx, or an nexed district, 26.270 acres; borough of Richmond, or fltaten Island, 24,001 acres; borough of Brooklyn, 42.0N acres; borough of Queens, 79,247 acres. The official total area of Oreater New York la tot square mllea, with an estimated population of l.M,MA RACING WARSHIPS. When the American fleet left Martin ique, its squadron evolutions must have presented a curious sight to those or shore. For it was here that the swift est ships of the fleet gathered for theii great handicap race to Dominica, an event officially designated as a mer speed trial. The engines on each shlj were subjected to a four hours' trial al full speed, the first two hours to be on natural draft and the last two on forced draft. The starting point wa oi a line seven miles off the lighthouse ol St. Pierre, and was crossed by eacl ihlp gqlng at full speed ahead. Th better to "curb all attempts at racing,' the slowest vessels crossed the line wltk a good start in their favor, thus even ing matter's, after the maoser of a reg ular handicap race. For days and weeks before, the sail ors and stokers aboard the dlfferenl hlps had staked the better part of theli pay on the outcome of this speed trial Greatest was the rivalry between th men of the New York and Brooklyn, since the relative speed of these twe vessels has been an open question evei since the day when the New York strove to overhaul the Brooklyn In hei chase after the fleeing Cristobal Colon For several hourB, while the ship were getting up steam, they circled about each other like huge white birdt of the sea hovering over the brine. Tc those aboard the Brooklyn and New York it seemed as if the two swift cruisers were eyeing each other, and measuring points in anticipation of th coming race. The Indiana got under way first, and crossed the line at a twelve-knot clip, with a trail of dense black smoke mark Ing her course northward to Dominica. As the slowest of the five entries In the race, she was allowed to take a long start, and her smokestacks had nearly disappeared under the horizon before the Massachusetts slipped hei leash. Of all the five ships, the Massa :husetts was best prepared for the race, having been overhauled but lately, so that her engineers declared her to be all ilicked and primed for Just such a race ind laid their wagers accordingly. Aft r the Massachusetts was well on her way after the Indiana, Captain Slgsbee started In pursuit of both with a fine ourst of speed from the Texas. On the Urength of the little Texas' perform mce on July 3 of last year, when she managed to maintain the killing pace et by the Oregon In the great record run after the Cristobal Colon, Captain Slgsbee's men had high hopes of win ding back some of the money they lost n the day of the recent regatta In Ha eana Harbor. With this pack in full ;ry ahead, the Brooklyn and New York tot under way within twenty minutes if each other, the flagship starting al icratch. The race became most exciting during ihe last two hours of the speed trial, when all the ships were going under forced draught. Then It was that the N'ew York overhauled one ship after tnother, finally crossing the finish line )ff Dominica barely a ship's length ihoad of the Indiana, and nearly even ith the Massachusetts. Close behind aer came the panting Brooklyn, and lor behind, her hulk barely rising above the horizon line, came the vanquished Texas. Captain Slgsbee's long protract d Btay In the foul waters of Havana tarbor had proved her undoing. Edwin Smerson, Jr., in Collier's Weekly. About Cats. ' The bent of the cat's mind was pleas intly defined a few years ago by a writer In the London Spectator, who laid there could be no doubt as to the lew Puss took of the philosophy of na ure and life. She is quite satisfied that .he world and everything In It was nade and exists for cats. This appears n all that well bred and cared-for cats lo, and In every accent and tone of .heir voice. Puss possesses herself with .he air of a proprietor of the best place ind the best food; expects to be walled jpon; demands a share of every dish, ind looks upon us at once as her Provl-k-nce and her servant. Cats are not demonstrative like dogs, ind do not submit to training like the aorse. The dog has been credited with jnbounded affections, and the horse with almost human sagacity; but the :at still suffers under the bad character that Buffon who cannot have been ac quainted with any reputable specimens of the race gave her. She Is said to oe selfish, Bplteful, cruel, crafty, treach erous, loving places and not persons, nd in every way unworthy of fellow ihlp In the household. J. G. Wood an. iwers these accusations by saying thai the cats with which he has been most familiar "have been as docile, tractablt and good tempered as any dog could be, and displayed an amount of Intel lectual power which would be equalled by very few dogs, and surpassed bj pone." To all persons who have giver, their confidence to Puss and received bers In return, they need no answer. Than Came Silence. In the train sat a queer old Quaker ess. She wore a silver gray dress nowy collar and a gray bonnet. Sh was a large and handsome woman, an on her quiet face was peace. Two smart commercial travelers stepped Into th same coach, and after they had dls cussed the spirit and tobacco trade f while, they loked around at the Qua kercss. Then they looked at eacl other, smiled, and one remarked In at undertone; "Billy, I guess the old lady Is Inflate with Quaker yeast." Without lifting her eyes, the old lad aid In a clear voice that could b beard all over the car: "If thy father and mother had con umed more tweet Quaker yeast an less beer and tobacco, thee would havi been better raised and better bred." Then It was so silent that you coali bear the engine pump. APHORISMS. Ability Is a poor man's wealth. M. Wren. Avarice is the vice of declining years. Bancroft. Candor is the brightest gem of citl clsm. Disraeli. We enjoy thoroughly only the pleas ure that we give. Dumas. Advice Is seldom welcome. Those who need It most like It least. Johnson. Accuracy Is the twin brother of hon esty; Inaccuracy of dishonesty. C. Simmons. Title and ancestry render a good man more Illustrious, but an 111 one more contemptible. Addison. Affectation lights a candle to our de fects and though it may gratify our selves Its disgusts all others. Lavater. The shortest and surest way to live with honor In the world is to be in real ity what we would appear to be. So crates. In activity we must find our Joy as well as glory; and labor, like every thing else that is good, is its own re ward. E. P. Whipple. Few persons have sufficient wisdom to prefer censure which is useful to praise which deceives them. Roche foucauld. There Is a maxim of unfailing truth, that nobody ever pries into another man's concerns but with a design to do, or to be able to do, him a mischief. South. Call on a business man only at busl oess times, and on business; transact four business, and go about your busl ,ess, In order to give him time to finish lis business. Wellington. FEMININE CHATTER. Is there any one who suffered from writers' cramp because of Indorsing :hecks? No man looks so tired as he who wns a small boy who Is old enough lo ask "why." It always makes a woman awfully mad to. have some one say the bright '.hings which she was Just about to otter. Just as soon as a woman fails to care when a man scolds her you can rest issured she Is beginning not to care for him. The college bred girl is ill-bred when ihe thinks that her extra learning war rants her being impertinent to her mother. Just when a woman manages to get er hair trained Into a nice pompadour, Jie rumor that bangs are returning re luces her to despair. A bird In the hand may be worth two in the bush, but It doesn't com pare with the one on the hat, Judging fty the price of millinery thus adorned. Just as soon as you begin to think shat there is no one quite as fine as fourself, then at that moment you can test assured that there are others. Te craze for securing something for BoV'nB makes a woman forget fatigue when she stands an hour In line to jet a biscuit that her husband wouldn't 'iat If Bhe made it The person who knows the plot of i play and tells It audibly to his aelghbor Is not so numerous as for merly, because, perhaps, there are so few plots that any one can discover' In the up-to-date play. War correspondents were employed is far back as the time of Edward II. Scribes, specially commissioned, were lent up with the English army which Invaded Scotland at that time. But, In credible as It may sound, not one of the London newspapers was specially represented at the battle of Waterloo. Courage, like cowardice. Is undoubt dly contagious, but some persons are not liable to catch it. G. D. Prentice. GREAT THOUGHTS. Justice Is truth In action. Disraeli. Our only greatness is that we aspire. Jean Ingelow. What has been done can be done again. Disraeli. Conduct Is three-fourths of life. Matthew Arnold. Judgment Is forced upon us by ex perience. Johnson. . Age, like woman, requires fit sur roundings. Emerson. Houses are like the human beings who Inhabit them. Hugo. Money makes up In a measure all other wants in men. Wyeherley. Take hope from the heart of man and you make him a beast of prey. Oulda, The refusal of praise Is only the wish to be praised twice. La Rochefou cauld. COUNTRY PUBLISHERS' COMP'Y OMAHA. NO. 251899. fov. we 1 114 of 114 If tor as, i I r f r f i -jii ifft: I neat Cinih Bvrue, TUMI Ouud. V I I STRAY PICKINGS. The way to get rich Is to spend! less than you earn. No man can climb higher than bis highest Ideal. No one can disgrace us but our selves. J. G. Holland. If a man could have his wishes, be would double his trouble. Back of every sorrow liee some Joy, as back of the cloud the sun. Vice we can learn ourselves, but vir tue and wisdom require a tutor. Praise is the handmaid of virtue, but the maid is much oftener wooed than the mistress. There is enough salt In the sea to cover seven million square miles of land with a layer one mile in thisk hess. "Although you count yourself a brighter fellow than I am, yet I can come round you," as the earth said to the Bun. There Is a law preventing the crying of newspapers on the streets of Wash ington on Sundays and on week days after nightfall. "I never saw a man so afraid of fire as Slchenstein?" "Is he?" Yes. He always prefers an assignment." Cleve land Plain Dealer. As showing the keenness of the their scent, it is said that the vulture and carrion crow can smell their food for a distance of forty miles. But then it must be taken into account that the food has a somewhat penetrating flavor. The fact that skeleton remains of elephants are so rarely found In any part of Africa is explained by an ex plorer who states that as soon as the bones become brittle from climatic in fluences they are eaten in lieu of salt by various ruminant animals. One of the strangest streams in the world Is In Eafrt Africa. It flows In the direction of the sea, but never reaches It. Just north of the equator, and when only a few miles from the Indian Ocean, It flows into a desert, when it suddenly and completely disappears. $100 Reward, $100. "There are many men who wouldn't marry for money," growled the savage misogynist, "If they could get the mon ey any other way." The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all Its stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is the only positive cure known to the medical fraternity. Catarrh being a constitutional disease, requires a con stitutional treatment Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucouB surfaces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the dlseasa, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing Its work. The proprietors have so much faith In its curative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that It falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address, F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O. Sold by Druggists, 75c Hall's Family Pills are the best A wife certainly has no cause for complaint If her husband doesn't love her any more providing he doesn't love her any less. If wives were as nice to their hus bands as female clerks are to their male customers but few matrimonial failures would be recorded. EXCURSION to DETROIT Via the WABASH RAILROAD. For the Y. P. S. C. E. Convention July 5th to 10th. all lines will sell tick ets on July 3rd, 4th and 5th via the Wabash. The short line from CHI CAGO or ST. LOIUS to DETROIT, side trips to Niagara Falls, Toronto, Montreal, Mackinac, and many other points at a very low rate via lake or rail have been arranged. Parties con templating a trip east should call on or write for rates and fulders giving list of side trips, etc. Also a beautiful sou venir entitled "Lake and Sea." G. R. CLAYTON, Room 802, Karbach Blk., Omaha, Neb. HOME BUTTER MAKERS WILL FIND THAT THE... Doe Away With the Nerelty For a Which Are Usually EiMentlal for the As a cream ciparator It Is perfect. Employs only the principles of canst and effect. In construction It Is as simple as an ordinary milk can. Ooa well wHter (In cquitl proportion to your milk) Is all that Is necessary to a cure all the butter fat the milk contains in the warmest of weather. Farmers engaged In thesrtleof cream to creameries will And the Reetor AutomaUe Cream Separator superior to any other, but thoe who think themselves bat 111 prepared to hand 10 their milk and butter will find In the Reetor Separata all the benefits and advantages which they could have hoped to get Out ol expensive equipments. The Hector Heparator have been in use nearly twe years among the most progressive farmers In Iowa. Missouri and othef states, giving in each and every instance complete satisfaction. The house wife will And Its usage as simple as a milk can nd the results as good, at better, than those attained from the most powerful centrifugal machines In order to Introduce the Vector Separator Into Nebraska, the regular price of 17,00 has been reduced, for a limited time, to t4.9A, delivered free of aH freight charges at your station. All letters of Inquiry will be cheerfully answered and uch other Information given as may be required. Write yoI name and address plainly. Address all communications to B. H. PICKEN, Ottumwa, Iowa. TO JM! OF ALL TRADES OUR NEW "LITTLE GIANT" H. P. GASOLINE ENGINE, WORTH ITS WEIGHT IN GOLD TO EVERT STOCKMAN AND FARMER. How many of you have lost the price of this Engine In one day on account of hi sufficient wind to operate your wind mills, leaving your stock without water, dec oaa now to do your pumping when there Is no wind or to do it regularly. Weather does oat alToct Its work, hot or cold, wet or dry, lnd or calm. It Is all the same to this machine. Will also shell corn, grind feed, saw wood, ehurn butter and Is handy for a hundred othaa Jobs, In the house or on the furm. Costs nothing to keep when not working, and only I to i cents per hour when working. Shipped completely set up, ready to run, ho founds, tion needed, a great la lor and money saver. Requires practically no attention, and h absolutely safe. We make all sizes of Gasoline Engines, from 1H to 76 horse power. Write for circular and special prices. FAIRBANKS, MORSE & CO., OmAHfl, NEB. Rev. D. C. HoDSOfl. Pastor M. E. Church, Wauneta, Neb. writes: "After years of constipation and stomach disorder, Dr. Kay's Henovetor has removed the constipation and made my stomach almost new, I could not hear a watch tick with it close to my right ear, and but a very short distance from my left one. I can now hear one quite a distance from my right ear, and a loaf distance from ay left one, and the thiok, heavy feelinf oetween mj eyes, to my Br. Kay's Kenovator is tTone, Dr. Kay's Catarrh Cure did It give raraa mit Bases, treatise a uf nil ana sena iree isr. kbt pases, treating all aliment common te Iks auaea drua - iiats do not have our remedies don't take toe navs ual. They caa be had, prepaid Dr, Kay's fcbir SS eta . and II SO or BS1S arena far SLSBt fhit.nS I Dr. B. J. Kay Medical Co., Seretate flprtaas, M. f . : Gcrmozono Cures Eczema, It also cures anything la the Datura el wounds, eruptions, discharges, or lnnss mation of the skin or mucous membraas Not a soap or ointment but s soothlne. healing lotion, giving Immediate renal from itching or burning, and insuring 4 rapid cure. . BHos s4 msseuHsse ens' ether issasla poisoAlvy, tires, sweMsef end IjiHsmss tost, ehaflna, and other skin disorders peculiar to the summer season, instant!) relieved by Germoaene. Give Germs zone ten says' Mel. If not found aa tirely satisfactory, return the onuaet portion to us and we will promptly re fund your money. Trial size, 10s; large stse, 60o postpafcf, Geo. H. Lee Chsnlexl C., Omaha, Neb, er Murray at. New Vara. THE Chicago, Milwaukee A St. Paul Ry. for Chicago and the Ernst. Short Urns between Omaha and Chicago. Electrl lighted, steam heated, solid vestibule! trains depart dally from Union Depot Omaha. Dining cars operated "a la carte" plan pay a reasonable price fof what you order only. T. A. NASH, General Western Agent, IBM Famam St., Omaha. WHAT TEMPERATURE? JUST RIGHT--960 The water GREATPLUNGE In the at Hot Springs. South Dakota a) Just right tor bathing at any time of the year, without shock totes bather and without application of urtinciai neat. If sick, you can be cured. If crippled with rheumatism, you can be caret If tired, you need rest, and the place to go is Hot Springs, South Dakota, Low rate tickets on sale every day , Mucb cheaper than to other resorts. Climate, water, scenery and hotels are unexcelled. Any agent "NORTH - WESTERN LINE" or J. H. GABLE, Traveling Passenger Agent, Des Moines, la, can tell you more about It. J. R. BUCHANAN. General Passenger Agent, OMAHA, NEB, SPECIAL RATES SOUTH la PORT ARTHUR ROUTE. Half fare round trip (plus J2.00) oa first and third Tuesdays of each month. Quickest and best line to St. Louis, the East and South, via Omaha ft St Louis and Wabash. Fast mail leaves Omaha 4:60 p. m., Council Bluffs 6:10 p. m., ar rives St. Louis 7 a. m., returning leave St. Louis 7:30 p. m., arrives Omaha 8:36 a. m. dally. All Information at, Port Aruthr Route Office, 1415 Farnaos street (Paxton hotel block) or write Harry E. Moores, C. P. ft T. A., Omaha, Neb. Hon. W. A. Paxton, President of the Union Stock Yards, Omaha, Neb., sayM "I believe the great remedies of Dr. Kay's Renovator and Dr. Kay's Lung Balm are worthy of the public's confi dence." Dr. Kay Medical Co., Saratoga, N. T. RECTOR CREAQ SEPARATOR Great Many Einennlve Conveniences Profitable Handling of Milk and Buttwc ...... It li the beat thine I erer trial." s m ky rstara bmIL si t :