' 1 Mi, J5he BorvdrxQci a .... V Cy HALL CAIXE. SYNOPSIS R;ir!i'j.' 3.rviiMn w n the only daughter n nc . .ifii of Iceland. She tr l in Seve uc :i.:iirli-d an iditt. Stephen urry. Iter f-wt u: il other li..vi. fur her. anil In his r..rfi- I.e iIim.wih I her. Orry ran way it i if ihiss union a child btirli nwl k;-n"l r.ille.l liir.l Jason. SirJ fmert urr w::.-. neiir'i trooi la ihe l.sie ot ii-i", !-ro nit wh s:;in mniTH-l ann anu'.'u-r r.-iji was bo:ji. iiarhil died a be:i.":-l-ol,u woman. In.t lokl Jason of his Iji'aa'i acts. Jamo , vore to kill linn, if not bim, thi-ti to win. In the Bisuiit'!ii,. i.Vrry had d-Jc- I -.1 his ship and Sought refuse In the if-e of Man. He W:is sheiurvd by the govern. ,r of the Inland. A.nm Fairhrother. Orry went fn.ni huit to worse and man led a dissolute tvKin, and llii'lr chi'.il. rald Mifhiit-l Smitc-jki. v. in born. The woman died and. triy g-.-.rt Rnlocks to Adam Fairbroth-r. who ;id.,i-l. hlxn. and lie became the fclnym:-.(e o' the Rovraor's daughter, XirtK-iA. Time passed ami Adam Fair broth.ir and wife became estraniied, their Ave hoys srayinR with their mother on account of Michael Suniocks. Finally Sie Ihe, orry returned and Michael Suniocks etermin.'d to ifo to Iceland, his father's tone. Hi father confessed all to hiru. and Michael promised to find Rachel If possible and care for her. and. if dead, to nd her cbild and treat him as a brother. How long he sat there be did not know; he was thinking of his past, of lis bad life in Iceland, and his long expiation in the Isle of Man. In the ' Multitude of his sensations it seemed Impossible to his dazed mind to know which of these two had been the forst, or the jjtost foolish. Together they had left him a wreck. In the one he had thrown away the wife who loved him, to the other be had given up the son whom he loved. What was left to him? Nothing. He was a waif, despised and downtrodden. He thought of What might have happened to him if the chances of life had been different, and fa that first hour of his last bereave Kent all the softening influence of Bineteen years, the uplooking and up working, and the struggle towards his atonement, were as much gone from lira as if they had never been. Then lie thought of the money, and told himself that it was not now that he had lost his son for the first time; he had lost him fourteen yean ago, when he parted with him to the governor. Since then their relations had bee reversed. His little Sunlocks was his little Sun jfceks no longer. He felt humiliated, he ielt hardened, and by a strange im pulse, whereof be understood but little e cursed in his heart his sufferings more than his sins. They had been Vseiess, they had been wasted, and he tad been a fool not to live for himself. But In that moment, when the devil seemed to make havoc of good and evil together, God himself was doing noth ing. Stephen Ory wan drifting with the tide, when all at once he became con scious of the lapping of the water on atones near at hand, and of a bright light shed over the sea. Then he saw that h had drifted close to low ground off the Point of Ayre. He bare hard I belov the beach. He could bear the port and beat out to sea again. Very! suspense no longer, and hoisted sail soon the white water way was behind! to bear down on the schooner and warn aim: nothing was viable nave the dark' her. But the wind was strong by thif bull of the vessel going off towards j time, driving hard off the sea, and the the north, and nothing audible save the; tide ran faster than before, try of a few gulls that were fishing by Stephen Orry was now sime thirty the light of the flare. It had been the fathoms space.to the north of the bro work of three minutes only, but In that ken pier, and at that point the currenl time-one" Wvt mtpra-i ii '-' from "" Maughoid Head meets the if Stenhen's oreoccupied mind. T current going arrow tm . Zsils- The end of the old standalone pier had been battered down by a recent storm; the box that once held the light had gone down with ft, a pole had been thrust out at an angle from the over drawn stones, and from the end of this pole the light swung by a rope. No Idea connected itself with tbjs Impres ion, which lay low down behind other thoughts. The fog had lifted, but the night was !tlil very dark. Not a star was shln 1nr and no moon appeared. Yet Ste phen's eye the eye of a sailor accus tomed to the darkners of the sea at night could descry something that lay (to th north. The Irish brig had (lis Sappeared. Yes. her sails were now 4tone. But out at sea far out, half a 'league away what black thing was tihere? Oh, It must be a cloud, that ras all; and no doubt a storm was ifcrewtng. Yet no, it was looming langer and larger, and coming nearer and nearer. It was a call. Stephen could aee It plainly enough now against the leaden slty. It was a schooner; he could make out its two masts, with fore and aft sails. It was an Irish schooner: lie could recognize its heavy hull am! fcollowed cutwater. It was takln against wind and tide from tVie north east; it was a Dublin schooner and wan homeward bound from Iceland, having eaJltd at Whitehaven and now putting Ui at Ramsey. " Stephen Orry had been in the art of; putting about when this object caught fcie eye, but now a strange thing oc-j curred. AH at once his late troubles fcy; back hi his mind, and by a sort of tmconsrlous mechanical habit of Intel lect be began to put familiar Ideas to gether. This schooner that was coming from Iceland woutd be heavy laden; It Sfould have whalebone, and eider down, Md tallow. If It ran ashore and was 4ETtcfcd some of title cargo might be ( '-jut y aome one and sold for aome-?-Jt Trench smuggler that lay i;t3Ue tfce Chicken Rocas. That flare Vi Cm rBt of Ayr waa the only aea- i em t north coast of the island, Jtttrreromapole.:Tl i (7 hw tkett II, there tu not CMU. aandy headland for ycS-Zm ami the night was vary iv.l dt MM t aHephen n " ty ttart tf wt H 1 i li -3 rrr tfct 4b What power outside of himself was at work with him? Did anything tell him that'th s was the great moment of his life tiat his destiny hung or. It that the ordeal he had just gona thro' as as nothing to the ordeal that wai yet before him? As he sat in his boat, peering into the darkness at the blacK shadow on the horizon, did any voice whisper In his ear: "Stephen Orry. on the ship that is yonder there is one who hates you and has sworn to slay you? He is coming, he is coming, and he is flesh of your flesh.' He is your own son, and Rachel's !ft Stephen Orry fetched his boat away to leeward, and m two minutes more he had run down the light on the Point of Ayre. The light fell into the water, and then all was dark. Stephen Orry steered on over the freshening sea, and then slackened sail off to wait and to watch. All this time he had been sit ting 'at the tiller, never having risen from It since he stepped his mast by the side of. the brig. Kow he got on his feet to shorten sail, for the wind was rising and he meant to drift by the mlzzen. As he rose something fell with a clank to the boat's bottom from his lap or his pocket. It was the bap of money, which Michael Sunlockn had returned to him. Stephen Orry stooped down to pick it up; and having it in his hand he dropped back like a man who has beer dealt a blow. Then, indeed, a voice rang in his ears; he could hear it ove the wind that was rising, the plash of the white breakers on the beach, and the low boom of the deep sea outside. "Remember your promise, father. I have bought every hour of your life that's left." His heart seemed to stand stllifi He looked around in the dull agony of a fear that was new to him, turnlnglhis eyes first to the headland that showed faintly against the heavy sky. and then to the pier where no light now shone, and then to the black cloud of sail that grew larger every instant. One minute parsed two three. Meantime the black cloud of sail was drawing closer. There were living men aboacd of that ship, and they were running on to their death. Yes, there were men, living men men with wives who loved them, and children who climbed to their knees. But perhaps they had seen the light when It went down. Merciful heaven, let it be so let It be so! The soul of Stephen Orry was snake at length. Another minute he waited, andother and another, and the black shadow came yet nearer. At her next tack the ship would run on the land, and already Stephen seemed to heir the grating of her keel on the rocks way. Laboring in the heavy sea he could barely fetch about, but when at last he got head out to Pea he beijf.n to drive down on the schooner at a furious speed. He tried to run close along by her on the weather sde, but before 6e came within a hundred fath oms he saw that he waa In the full race of the north current, and strong sea man though he was, he could not get near. Then he shouted, hut the schoon er had gave no sign. In the darkness the 'dark vessel scudded paat him. He was now like a man pofsenfed. Fetching about he ran In before the wind, thinking to pass the schooner on her tack. He passed her Indeed, he wat shot far beyond her, shouting as he went, but again his voice was drowned In the n;ar of the sea. He was almost atop of the breakers now, yet he fetch ed ulx.nt onca mr;re, and shouted again and again. But the ship came on nd on, and no one heard the wild voice that rang oit between the dark sea and sky like the cry of a strung swimmer in his lazt agony. CHAPTER IX. THE COMING OF JASON. The schooner was the Peverll, home ward bound frim Reykjavik to Dub lin, with a hundred tons of tallow, fifty ba!?s If eider down, and fifty casks of cods' and sharks' oil. Leaving the Ire landlc capital on the morning afer Easttr Any, with a fair wind,' for the outer Hebrides, she had run through the North Channel by the middle of (he week, and put Into Whitehaven by the Friday. Nxt day she had stood out over the Irish Sea fair tV Inle of Man, Intending to lie off at Ramsey for contraband rum. Her skipper and mate were both Englishmen, and ber crew were all , Irish, except two, a Manxman and an Icelander. The Manxman was a prissled old eea dog, who had followed the Manx flsh erten twenty years and smuggling for twenty other years, and then turned eaman before the mast. Ms name waa Dnry Kerrulsh, and when folks naked If the Method lets had got hold of him that he had turned honest In his M age, he closed one rheumy yellow eye very knowingly, tfpned mm black thumb orer hts shoulder to where the govern ment mtun my ancnornl ontttdt, and Bid k tonshlag tote "AW, ws, haw, tai UJnUnf Qmti no place for a poor man when he's git tin' anyways ould." The Icelander was a brawny youo fellow of about twenty ,of great height and big muscles, and with long re. hair. He had ehipped at Reykjavik !n the room of an Irishman, who hac died on the outward trip and be r burled at sea off Engy Island. Hi was not a favorite among the crw he spoke English well, but wes no gaci at a yarn In the forecastle: he was el lent', gloomy, not too fond of wori. and "often the butt of his mates ir many a lumbering Jest he did not reei. to see. He had signed on the whai m the morning the schooner sailed, an ;he only kit he had brought aboard wa a rush cage with a canary. He hur; :he bird in the darkners above h! bunk, and it wa? all but his sole com panion. Now and again he spoke t old Kerrulfh, but harUly ever to th other men. "Och. roUum ard qliet lek," ol; Davy would say at the galley fire, "bu none so simple at all. Aw no, no, nr. and wonderful cur'ous about my owi hit of an Island vander." The Icelander was Jason, son of Ra chel and Stephen Orry. There Is not a more treacherous chan nel around the Biltlsh Isles than tha which lies between St. Bee's head, thi Mull of Galloway, and the Pon.t c Ayre, forfour strong currents mee' and fight in that neck of the Irish sea With a stiff breexe on the port quar ter, the Peveril hsd been driven due west from Whitehaven on the heav.i current from the Solway Frith, unti she had met the current from the Nnrt? Channel and then she had tacked to wards the Isle of Man. It was dirt by that time, and the skipper had lean sd over the starboard gangway untl he had sighted the light on the Polm of Ayre. Even tl-.pn he had been puz zled, for the light was feebler than h remembered it. "Can you make it out, Davy?" h( had said to old Kerrulsh. "Aw, y?s, though, p.nd plnln as plain,' said Davy; and then the pkippir had gone below. The Manxman had been at the h"lm and Jason, who wis on the Fame watch had sidled up to him at Intervals and held a conversation with him In match es, of which this Is the sum and sub ptancf; "Tt is the Isle of Man on the star board bow, Davy?" "I darn' say no, boy." "Lived there long. Davy?" "Aw, thirty years afors yriu werf born, maybe." "F.ter known any of my countrymei tn the iFlanu? "Just one, boy; Juft one." "What was he?" ' ' "A big chap, six feet six. If an Inch and ter'ble strong! and a fist at him like a sledge: snd a riUKh enough rtivll too, and ye darn spit afoj'e him; but quiet for all aw. yes. wonderful ouiet." "Who was he, Davy?" "A widda man these teent of years." "But what was his name?" "Paul? no! Peter? no! Chut, blew ye, it's clane gone at me; but it's one of the lot In the ruld book, any way.' "Was it Stephen?" "By gough, yes, and a mlddlln' gooi euess, too." "Stephen what?" ' .,- . "Stephen phoo. It's gone at me again What's that they're callln" the oul" king that's gone bury'n' down Lax-j way?" , "Orry?" ""Stepnen xrrry ;f iT rur?. T1"" it's like you knew him. boy?" "No tbaj Is no, no." "No relations?" "No. But Is he still alive?" "Aaw, yes. though. It's unknowneea to mn that he s dead, anyway. "Where Is he living now?" "Down Port Erin way, by the Sound, jome place." 'Davy, do we put Into the harbor at Ramsey?" "Aw, dlvjl a chance of that, boy. with perrlls comln' over the side quiet-lik in the night, you know, elghteen-penc a fiallon, and an much as you can drink for nothin'." 'How, far do .we lie outside?" "Maybe a biscuit throw or two. Wf never useder lie farther, boy." "that's nothing. Davy." (To be continued.) CHEAP TRAMS. There are many farmers who are no" Judge of horseflesh, who know llttl about the fine points of a horse an! have made no study of horse breed In or care. There are many omors wno cannot profitably raise "horses f t mar ket, thpy want only such as V.IU do their farm and road work. Such nif-r will find It profitable to keep only ordi nary geldings to do their work. I will not pay them to keep a team wortl a good hg price on their farm. Thi cheaper ones will usually do thelr'wors as well, will cost less, involve less r.V md less trouble too for the man who does not thoroughly enjoy using an; developing good horses. It Is all right for a farmer to keep a ISOO draft teair lf be likes that. kind and can s.ford It but it Is all wrong for him to takt such risk and expense otherwise. Cheap teams for farm worht when used by hired men or by unskilled owners, arc the most profitable la breeding Is not followed. In spite of repeated urging! from the pastor, some female members of th Methodist Eptsropsl church at Knights town,. Jnd., refused to remove (hel hats daring service. Then he directed that those who persisted In wearing their headgear must occupy reserved pews In the "amen corner." Now these pews bay regular occupants and there it a 'prospect that they will Increase In numbers, lor moat of the women want to wear their hats, although many yteHH to the aMtort arte. FARM NEWS NOTES. FEEDING COWS ON PASTURE. It haa bear -very definitely determined that no kind of feed nor any amount of feeding will Increase tae richness of the milk of a cow. One oow will give, .ay, 1 per cent milk and another milk that test 4 per cent, ancl no device of the feeder can Increate or diminish the per cent of butter fat In that cow's iiilk. Whether she gl.es a quart or ilx quarts the milk will be tho sime in its percentage nf butter fat. The only thing we can do to make a cow produce ;nore butter Is to to feed her that she ,vi.l give more milk. As the miik d.es lot change it follow that the mire niik a cow gives the more butter she will produce and up to a certain limit t is profitable to feed a cow m as ti timu!ale the flow of milk. We have never found it of any ad. vantage to feed rows grain, whole or ground, when the pasture is plentiful ind fresh in the tprlng, as grass Is the perfect feed for a dairy cow. But when the pasture gets short and dry and the lays hot, with the files bad, we find It profitable to give them all the nice, weet clover hay they would eat once a lay, and with this about four pounds of wheat bran. This with plenty of water that is fresh and cool will keep up the milk flow during the hot weather as well as anything we have evr tried. We let the cow stay In the field and lie in the shade until about 5 o'clock when we bring them up and put them In a shed on the shady side of the barn and feed them their hay, or green stuff. Wtien we milk In the evening we put the cows In the stable, which Is kept dark, and feed them two pounds of bran; In the morning we feed the ame quantity of bran and give them a bucket of freshly pumped water at tha aame time. Then tht-y eat until the sun gets too ;iot f ir comfort, when they retire to the hade and He there, sometimes until they are brought home in the evening. We have our cows come In in tbe fall, m they will ko dry about the begin ning of September and come In again ibout the middle of October. This gives the calves a chance to get a Btart be fore cold weather begins and gives us resh cows fir making butter about the time the price gets best In the ftill and through the winter. ,'IIB UNIVERSITY FARM BUILDING The new university farm build:ng is i two-story brick structure, one hun dred and eight feet long by fifty-five feet wide. The exterior is of plain ijrlck, but the lines of the building are pleasing. It will house the agricultural experi ment station and a portion of the school f agriculture not already housed In the dairy building on the farm. The ftrBt. floor Is for the use of the experi ment station and the remainder of the building Is to be devoted to the school. Connected with the building is a greenhouse arranged so that students can be taught tree setting and pruning during the winter months, when most jf the farm boys Ilnd it most conven ,ent to attend the school. In the base .nent of the building and connecting lth the greenhouse are the hortieul .ural work room, where budding and grafting are to be taught, and where spraying machines and other hor'.icul .ural Implements can be examined . Upstairs are the various laborateriet and class rooms. In the soil laboratory Students Will StUOy tne pivinrtiin i jjolls as affecting crop production. In .he entomological laboratory they learn the life history and habits of de jtruciive Insects, so that they may be ible to combat them successfully. Sim ilar practical results are attained in the botanical and chemical laborat ories. , The first floor la devoted to the offices ind laboratories of the experiment sta lon. This Is the Institution supported iy the government, which Is working ut the problems of the farmer and naklng It pofdlble to teach agriculture I n a practical way. The scientist t icre brought directly In contact with ractlcal farm operations and tests all heorles before adva-atlng them. The rection of this building last year larked a new eta in agricultural edu aiion In Nebraftka. HOG PROSPECTS. Those who are In position to Judge da iot anticipate large supplies and bad troaks In the hog market before th .penlng of the winter packing season, ovember 1. Reports from all over (he ouritry Indicate that numbers of hogs a be finished thl summer and fall ire not large. In spite of a big corn rop ahead It Is very likely that the .inter stason will open with hogs well hove the prices of last year; and moreover that prices duilng the coming vinter will average wejl. A bumper orn crop usually means very cheap iogs. but this condition promises to be nodlfled next winter by an excellent lemand for provisions. ' Definite calcu allons are Impossible at such long -arige; but there Is every indication of i heolthy hog market next winter, at irlces comparing favorably with values if corn. LOW PRICED CATTLE. Those who resd the representative tales of cattle In market will note that x good many sell at comparatively low prices, reason Is thst there Is no placa for which they are especially wanted. They an not fat enough to make de ilrable killers nor good enough to make Irnt-claa feeders. They are classed by talesmen as Vln-bet weens," and that1 very aptly describes them. Stuff of this kind must always sell at comparatively low prtoea There Is no special demand for tfeg "ajfltH la any ktai tt Uv DISORDERED KIDNEYS ARE RESPONSIBLE for more sickness and suflering lhan anything else. Kidney wkjwW'"' tbe nerves, makes one diwy, resiles-, slfei.le, Inl.able- maktr oue past water ift-n durinu !ay and compels one to get up during1 olgni; causes Dacm Z - U ..A sav-at tx u flay ay aci.e, lafces siumuon iioiu you; you gei CRAMER'S KIDNEY William Sweeny, cashier l'ark bank, Albany, N. Y., who hr-l been tronhled with his kUln-vs for soveral years took Cramers Kiiney Cure, it l.n iwht permanent r. lief and Mr. Bweer-y ba don as much as any otner m, i..rs.,n to unread I he ad vauiage of Cramer's Kidney and Liver Cure oe- tii.,Neh.. Jan. 1, 1000.-I JWy bHeve that I owe my life to Crnmcr'sKi.irey Cuie. For two yean. I suflere i with kidi.ey (rouble and cotiM llnu on reiiel nowhere. I Kpent hundreds ot tiol.ars on O0 mw, hi tu s. I irie,l Cii.tn-r'- Kidney ('ureas a t res- n MJd I wish I had I hud f liowed the savlee i f friends snouer. lu le-sthan four months It hart made a w-w man of rue. I am entirely well and I el ve all t M praise to Cramer's Kiduey Cure. 8AM I E h L. MORRI Is. Oi the Omal a l'oiice Force. UllfllllLM w ill wilt. I run - The most wonderful kidney medicine known; will give you etrengtn and bring color to your cneeke. It is a sure cure for kidney troubles. bold by all druggl.U. IvaUton Having Cramer's, $1 00 bottle, bottle for gS.OO. CRAMER MEDICAL COMPANY, Albany, n.y. - WEBSTER'S QAIIDY EIAII. We Also Buy and Sell New PI KIS I.M.T-.. Al ll' I'krrKA t. hu H . ..nl ,"rrt' lUciuri.. triwr - OUR NEW "LITTLE GIANT" U H. P. GASOLINE ENGINE. Worth IU Weight In Gold to Ererj Stocbnaa and Fvoir. How many of you have lout the prlceof this Engine In one dur on account of lasof BcIodi wind Ui operatu your wind mill. leavlDs vourator-k wttbnut wilier. Get one now to rto your pumplDir when tiwre Is no wind or to dolt reirulsrly. Weather does not affect lu work, not or cold, wet or dry. wind or calm. It Uall th una to till mat-nine. Will also holi corn, (rrlnd fe1. saw wood, clmrn botur and Is handy for a hundml other Jnbs. In the house or on the farm. Costs nothing to Seep when not working, and onlv 1 UilraiU prr hour when working. Khlppd completely ,( up. ready to run. no fouDdsiion n red Ml. a rw-at labor and moniy saver, luiulre. practically no alUntloD, and U abnolutely safe. We make all kls of Gasoline Engioei, from 1 u horw power. Write for circular and special prices. FAIRBANKS. MORSE & CO.. OMAHA. NEB. Menses surely orougnt on regularly, ruppresslons n.fg;Iwtil often result in blooil poisoning and quick consumption nd Is the direct cause of women's trou bles; therefore keep the mens, regula; with "Ie l tJue's Female Reg-ululor.' and women will be happy and healthy If It fails, Kl.ld Ur-uji Co., Kljtln, III., icnd free me-ilcine uiull relieved and fuli lured; 2 per package, or i tor ti, pei mall. Retail and wholesale of Myers 6 Dillon Drus Co., Omaha: M. A. Dillon South Omaha; Davis UruK Co., Councl Ulurfx; RIkk rharmacy, Lincoln; H. 8 Maker. Sioux City. A complete line ol rubber goods on hand; uk for what you want. The Russians navp a e.-iB oit.iii uf whom they are very proud. Mine. Orlav. in spite of her belnfr 95 years of ape, recently arpfai'd on the st3ge in a performance specially given In aid of a charitable Institution. Mme. Or lav has the distinction of having been the first actress to play Ldy Macbeth snd Ophelia In the Russian language. Why not doctor yourself? "Oonova1 Tablets are guaranteed by Kldd Drug Co.. Elgin, III., to cure all disease. Inflamma tlons, ulcerations of the urinary system, organs, bladder, etc.. r send free medi cine until cured if guaranteed lot fall An internal remedy with Injection com bined; the only one In America. Price, $3 or 2 for 15, sent per mall. Retail and wholesale of Myers & Dillon Drug Co., Omaha; M. A. Dillon, South Omaha; Da via Drug Co., Council Ulurfs; Rig Phar macy, IJncoln; H. 8. Haker, Hloux City Complete line of rubber goods; ask for what you want. m m m - Field Marshal Count Hlumenthal, the distinguished chief of the late Kmperor Frederick's general staff during the Austrian ona French wars, celebrated his ninetieth birthday on July a. lie and the klnr of tfaxony are the only officers of the (ir-nnan army of exulted rank still alive of those who took part -n the Franco-German .war. HOW'S TIMS? We offer One Hundred Dollars Tte ward for any case of Caiarrh that can not he cured by Hall's Caturrh Cure. K. J. CHENEY 4 CO., Props.. Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known K. J. Cheney for the last 15 years, and be lieve liim perfectly honorable In all buKlness transactions, and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm. WF.KT TRUAX. Wholesale Drug gists, Toledo, O. WARDING. KINNAN k. MARVIN. Wholesale Irrugglats, Toledo. O. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Inter nally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Price, 7uc per bo'.tle. Sold by all drug gists. Te.ilrnonlals free. Halfs Family Pills are the best The most comfortable way a woman can get his bread Is to Induce some man to earn It for ber. . Vital weakness ane nervous debility CM be cured. "Vlrtuama" Tablets ar. guar, knteed by KI44 Drug Co., Elgin, III., to cure all nervous diseases, debility and vi tal losses, or send free medicine until cured If guaranteed lot falla. Pale, thin emaclal ten. tremblnlg and nerreus moo I. should I: I try tbese tablets; arestset of nerve vou are not what von mi. hi tonics. If you are net what you ought te be. or want te be and can be, g1 thta one irtai awn yow win im tnem rnr ever, n a seckagei or I (or It, per nail. ReUII and whoUiaile of Mrsrs DliUis uu - - AND LIVER CURE- This in what I can do, and It don't make anydifferencewhether it in night or day, wet or dry, cold or warm, storm or calm, just call me and I will pump water, grind jieed, shell corn, separate cream, churn or grind bones, or any Work that is required of me. Call and see me at work at ALLEN P. ELY & CO.. 1 1 10 Douglas St., OMAHA, NEB. and Second-Hand Machinery. Taking Turkish, Vapor, cr Medicated Baths. Jill th.. trnirt,. if liiTsPr.JH,.tt)r"iit, Hli)l K for TIIKKECrXTKM.'. Th, .r. K fc I H L.-..-1 l:KPi;)k.sIINi. I.IVKS I'V UK T'l THU I1KM. Out i,r .J tiu.r..tl HIKKUAI. IUTH CASINKTi tr. I TOM ATH ALLlf w .inv-i.'i. th.t rn ro .tll'l-lf y orlf. H ir uk.DH .l-r ui4 !-". f--. VWTMHIT AX AV1TAT Our lVn IUlU l t4uf pr('r'. HKAl.HI, CI.LAM.IM.sS. VICHB u.J BEAI'TV. Wllr fcll ft M ATlMi. k P K AMI I A (,.,, I.r.ri,, g4 m.l.r... rilY.-iriANS r.i-a.w-M I t WOMsX'S '. ' .-. ...l-m .tr I HriBT'.! AI.I. THE M- rt-i' f.'.-.v.w . . Writ, for CulArn. f Wfip. a n.lh r.WnH, : VOKFM UHinids tt El.y WIIKUK. SUndarJ Dalh Cabisel Co, Teleae, Okie. KIMBALL BROS., MFCS. IOS1 tb St. COt' MCI I, 1ILIKK8, I A. DO YOU Wrlto about youmelf. I stammered from childhood. STAMMER wa perfectly cured rz year. hiio. Only the af litcted can anni-cHum the awful desire one Imi lo 1m; cured. If you arc afflicted, or have children who uro. write to me for lermi. literature, et,:. Addrms JULIA C.VAUGHN Pres't, RAMGE, BLOCK, Omaha. Nebrj SUMMER TOURS via the WABASH RAILROAD. On June 1st the Wabash will place on ale summer tourist tickets good to re turn until October Zlat, to all the sum. mer resorts of Canada and the East The Continental Limited Leaving Chicago at 12, noon; leaving St. Ixuls at it a. tn., which was so pop ular with thi traveling public last year, will run on same schedule time this season. For rates, time tables, or further In- KTinauoii in itrgnru i'j uipa r-ssi or to Europe, or a copy of our Humme Tours, ca.i on or Wilie, G. N. CLAYTON, N. W. P. Art., Room 405 N Y Life Bldg.. Omaha. Neb. Among the oldVst members of thi liiitlah larllament Is Mr. Charrlngtoa who represents the Mile End district of London. He Is rarely seen to talk to any onw and will occupy hl scat dally . for weeks without uttering a sound. Withal he Is a most charitable man and Is never d'-af lo a tale of woe. A Skin of Beauty Is a Joy Forever. DILT. IKLIX liOl It tl UOltlt:TAL CKMM.OIt MANU AL IIKAI TIKIKK a. well an IttMllM Ui StlS No other CO.UI.tlC will do It. Bemovim Tan, Plmpliw Moth I'tlchM. Ka.b Freckles and 8k In dlMaxes nd every lilemlnb on 1-Hiiiy. and defles dolee lion. It ha. stood lbs text of M urn. and s an harmless we taste it to be sure ll I. pro perly made. Accept no oounierfU of similar name. Dr. V. A. Rayre said tn a lady of tae bast-ton 'a patient): "A. you ladte. will see I hem. I recommend ftniiraiid'sCream' as tbe lewat harmful of all lbs Skin ureparstloa.'' For sale by all Druggists and Vsocy Goods Dealers In th. 11. ..Vaaada. and Kurote. VSSO T. aorKIM. rrw'r, flOrsat Jones ttrest, MF.W YORK. " J V k ' tit 11 1 " ;V i , ' - :.:--. 4 !"'