WINTER TOURIST RATES. SPECIAL Tour* to Florida, Key West, Cuba, Bermuda, Old Mexico and the Mediterranean and Orient. HALT Rales .or the round trip to many points south on sale first and third Tuesday each month. iRATES To Hot Springs, Ark., the fa mous water resort of America, on sale every day In the year. Tickets now on sale to all the winter resorts of the south, good returning until June 1st. 1901. Fcr rates, descriptive mat ter, pamphlets and all other Information, call at C. & St. L. R. R. Cttv Ticket Office, H15 Farnam st. (Paxton Hotel Bldg) or write MARRY E. nOORES, C. P. & T. A., Omaha, Neb. Marrying for weatli is a good deal like going to the hornet for honey. Piso's Cure cannot be u>o highly spoken of as «cough cure.—J. \V. O Hunts. Third Ave., N., Minneapolis, Minn.. Jau. 6. Idea The greatest stand ever made for civilization was the inkstand. You Can Get Allen's Fool-Ease FREE. Write today to Allen S. Olmsted, Roy, N. Y., for a free sample of Allen's Foot-Ease. It cures Chilblains, sweat ing. damp, swollen, aching feet. It makes New or tight shoes easy. A cer tain cure for Corns and Bunions. All Druggists and Shoe stores sell it; 25c. You can’t always tell what's in a bottle by reading the label. If you have not tried Magnetic Starch try it now. You will then use no other. AVegcfable Prepamtionfor As similating IhcFoodandRegula ling the Stomachs and Bowels of ■ * ■ ■ I'NKV Nil S ^(HII.DHLN Promotes Digcslion.CheerfuI ness and Rest.Contains neither Shum,Morphine nor Mineral. OT NA1ICOTIC. MmfieofOUDrSANLTLPtTCiaii Seat' Mx Senna * AUA.v/, Ua Aiwv . W e htrrpSeed CtanfuxtMimr Vftjdbn/rrwi rUmr Apcrfecl Remedy forConslipa Tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea Worms .Convulsions .Fcven sh ness and Loss of Sleep. Facsimile Signature of NEW YORK. u*-'■ ^4 b hs^oltf * i m s EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. [he Kind You Have Always Bought Thirty Years PATENT STEEL-CUT HEWTENsrm-cin warden NEWTDH. IOWA USA wjFwms^usEaam^m All the Year ’Round You can eat j^k without tiring of it. Made in ,ml Iowa of choicest Iowa wheat by a patent process, rendering it easily digestible, nutritious, strengthening. Nature’s Own Breakfast Food for all the family all the time. Easy to prepare— easy to eat. Coupons in each package. Save them and get valuable premiums free. 2-lb. package 15c. Two for 25c. Sold by Up=to=Date Grocers. A Clean Shirt well laundered is a thin)? of beauty, but you cannot do pood laundry work with inferior starches. MAGNETIC STARCH is prepared especially for use in the Home and to en able the housekeeper to get up the linen equally as well as the best steam laundries. Try a package. All grocers sell it at 10c. <:m to open toaettlement. Subscribe for '1 UK KIOWA CHIEF, demoted to Infor mation about these lands. One year. $1.00. Single copy, 10c. Subscribers receive free lllnatrated book on Oklahorm. Morgan’* Manual (210 page Settler*’ Guide) with fine aactlonal map. $1.00 Map 25c. All above, |l.?5. Addreaa Dick T. Morgan, Perry, O. T 7* ’7* 7rt A $3000.00 STOCK BOOK FREE. We will mail yon a ropy Free, fFPOSTAOK PREPAID* if fron write U9 and answer 4 questions: lst-Did yon ever u*o “International Stock Food” for Horae*. Cattle. Sheep or Hog*? gild -1* it for sale in i your town in 25>lh. nails? 3rd— How man/ head of stock do you own? 4th—Name this paper. Our hook is 9H by 6H, and rover is in 6 color*. It contains 1H3 large colored engravings of Horwee, Cattle. Sheep, Hog*. Poultry, etc , with a description of the different breed*. It also contain* a very finely illustrated and valuable Veterinary l>eiu»rtnicnt. * The engravings in this book cost us 93000.00. WE WILL GIVE YOU $14. WORTH OF "INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD" IF BOOK IS NOT AS STATED. 4 “International Stock Food” lea *afe vegetable stimulatingtonir and blood purifier. It fattens C attle, Tings or Sheep in 30 day*’ lean time and saves grain by aiding digestion and assimilation. 1* oxtraarood for breeding animals. , 000.009 fanners endorse it. Many uas 2000 lbs ner year. It make* Colts, C'nJves, I,anibs and Pigs grow very rapidlynnd * only costs IF3 Feeds for One Ont.-fc* Guaranteed to make Hogs weigh 300 lbs. at O months. It will Save your llogs from Cholera, became it stimulate* and permanently strengthen* the entire srstem. * It won highest award and medal at Paris 1900. Your money will be refunded in any ease of failure. , OUR 20,0<») DEALERS GIVE THIS BOOK 1*811 WITH " INTERNATIONAL STOCK FOOD” IN 36 LB. PAILS. TLarged Stock Food Factory In the World, j INTERNATIONAL. ROOD C0e [ °*«op7 13 fl»on, *tao 100a!S feet c«rh. [ Capita! Paid In $300,000.00. I MINNEAPOLIS MINN USA I And nor new addition, 6 floorati$s‘2i* rack. J Our Stallions Button wood 2:17 by Nutwood -800) and International Stock Food by Hartford <3674ioat*‘l 8 F." ' every day. We own the Big Horse that is 19 hands and weigh*SHOT) nt 4 year*. We own the Big Cow that l* 6 feet tall, 10 feet long and weighed 2970 at 8 years. Our Big 8hojrt-Horn Steer weighed 3100 at 9 years >V« have fed ••Interna- 1 tlonal Stock Food” for years to our stallions, brood mares, colts cattle and hog* Beware of cheap imitations. a. Ak. Ak Ak. iV Aw. Alj A. iA //. i/ i/ i/, i/. i/, dJf. i/. i/. i/. i/ aM. ) AT EAST LAVINOTUN. Ths Grave of Car.Ilnal Manning'* Wife I» Moglertcd, Some interesting passages In the j early life of Cardinal Manning ar« recalled by a writer in the Sunday Strand. We are tola that to the end of his life Manning had flowers sent to him every spring and summer from a little village In Sussex- East living ton by name. “Why (asks the writer) should the great cardinal receive flow ers from this little place? The an swer lies in the fact that from the early summer of 1833 to the end of 1S50 he was rector of the parish, and that for four of these years (1833-37) he enjoyed a married life there so per fectly happy that from the day his wife died down to that upon which he himself folded his hands and closed his eyes for the last time on earth, he could never even trust himself to breathe her name to a living soul.” Mrs. Manning was Caroline, the third of the four daughters of the Rev. John Sargent. One of her sisters was wife of the Rev. Samuel Wilbcrforce, after wards the well-known bishop. This grave is neglected today. It is almost, the writer says, the only one in the little churchyard that has neither stone nor cross upon it, and ?.ts t|ff is fast moldering away: "It was Manning’s wish that it should be so. Irte In life he told his friend and biographer—the late Edmund Purcell —that he had received a letter from the churchwardens announcing that the grave was falling Into decay, and asking for instructions as to putting it and keeping it in order. His reply was: ‘It is best so. La< it be. Time effaces all things.’ But he was mis taken. Time had not effaced, nor will it efface, the memory of that brief idyll.” The house at Lavington— which was Manning's home—is now occupied by Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Wil berforce and their family. It was Mrs. Wilbcrforce who, in old age. sent the cardinal day by day flowers from Irv ington. GIRLS FELL VICTIMS. A Romance of the I’laRiie In Perthshire, Scotland. The last time the plague visited Glasgow with excessive virulence was in August, 1645. Then, on the. 16th of that month, the Marquis of Montrose, who fought under the standard of Charles I„ signally defeated the Cove nanters under Gen. Bailie at Kilsyth. Thereupon the provost and corpora tion of the pestilence stricken city sent envoys with a message of congratula tion to the marquis and a warm invi tation to him and his soldiers to par take of Glasgow's hospitality. Mont rose, at the head of his troops, entered the city and was sumptuously enter tained, but would not stay on account of the epidemic. However, as a mat ter of business, apart from sentiment, he lervied a heavy tax for supplies upon his Glaswegian hosts, to their huge disgust. A memento of a pathetic ro mance connected with the 1645 plague visitation in Scotland is a railed en closure on the bank of the Almond, in the parish of Methven, Perthshire. It marks the spot where lie interred the hapless “Bessie Bell and Mary Gray,” famed in Scotch song. Daughters re spectively of the laird of Kinvaid and the laird of Lynedoeh, the maidens were much attachod to each otheT, and when they heard of the ravages of the plague they retired to a bower near the Almond and dwelt in perfect seclu sion. The fair recluses, however, had their place of retreat discovered by a yoifcig man of their acquaintance, who supplied the twain with provisions. He caught the plague himself, unluckily, and communicated infection to Bessie and Mary, to which the girls fell vic tims. According to the stern custom of the time their bodies were not al lowed interment in Methven kirkyard, so they were buried together in a si>ot contiguous to the bower.—The London Chronicle. Good Cause of Action. In Louisiana, if a creditor finds that his debtor intends to leave the state and stay away he can, without further •bothering, get out an attachment and seize whatever property the unfortun ate may have, says the Chicago Jour nal. A creditor, who wras one of Col. Proudfoot’s clients, performed this op eration one morning and the debtor was so hurt about it that he fell dea i. The debtor’s heirs went to law later and claimed the property on the grounds that the death made the seiz ure invalid. “The law In this case, gentlemen, is very clear,” said the colonel, when his clianoe came. “It says that if a man is about to leave the state permanently his property may be seized. If our late lamented friend was not about to leave the state permanently I never want to handle another case.” Syria'* Flr»tl.unatlc A*ylum. There has recently been opened on one of the lower slopes of Mount Le banon, Syria, near the road from Beirut to Damascus, a newly built hospital for the insane. Its founder Is Mr. Theophllus Waldmeler, a veteran missionary in Abyssinia and Syria. A considerable area of land and gardens for the growth of wheat, olives and other fruit surrounds the buildings. It Is the first organized lunatic asylum in Syria, where the need for such In stitutions is said to be great. Long ExUteure of Hand, The Hawaiian band of Honolulu has Just completed thirty years of continu ous existence, and the present band ! master, Captain Henri Berger, has been in charge of the organization during twenty-eight years of that pe riod. A NARROW ESCAPE. A GRATEFUL WOMAN. WHS. I*. J. LYNCH. GRAND RATIOS. MICH. Mrs. F. J. L.yneh, 324 South Division street. Grand Rapids, Mich., writ«M The Peruna Medlcino Company, Columbus, Ohio: Gentlemen:—“/ earnestly recommend Peruna to any suffering women as it cures quickly. I had a most persistent cough which nothing seemed to cure. Two bottles of Peruna did more for mo than all the doctors seemed to do. In a couple of weeks I found myself in excellent health, and have been enjoying It ever s/nca Hence I look on Peruna as a true friend to women.” MRS. F. J. LYNCH. Chronic Coughs and Colds Are Catarrhal Diseases. Catarrh Is the Continual Scourge of Christendom. Catarrh hovers ominously over every city, and nestles treacherously in every hamlet. It flies with vampire wings from country to country and castB a black shadow of despair over all lands. Its stealthy approueh and Its lingering stay makes It a dread to tho physician and a pest to the patient. It changea the merry laugh of child hood to the wheezy breathing of croup, and the song of the blushing maiden to the hollow cough of con sumption. In its withering grasp the rounded form of the fond wife and mother becomes gaunt and spectral, and the healthy flush of manhood turns to the sallow, haggard visage of the Invalid. Cough takes the place of conversa tion, speech gives way to spitting, the repulsive odors of chronic catarrh poison the kiss of the fondest lovers, and thickened membranes bedim sight, impair hearing and destroy taste. Like the plague-stricken Egyptian* a cry of distress has gone out from every household, and the mildew of woe clings to every hearthstone. Catarrh in some form, catarrh ia some stage lurks as an enemy in th* slightest cough or cold and finishes its fiendish work in heart disease an* consumption. No tissue, function, or organ of th* body escapes its ravages; muscle* wither, nerves shatter, and secretion* dry up under its blighting presence So stubborn and difficult of cure la this disease that to invent a remedy to cure chronic catarrh lias been th* ambition of tho greatest minds in all ages. Is it therefore any wonder tbs* the vast multitude of people who hav* been cured of chronic catarrh by Pa runa are so lavish in their praiae of this remedy? That the discovery o# Peruna has made the cure of catarrkt a practical certainty is not only t.h* testimony of the people, but manj) medical men declare it to be true. As a drug store in this age of th* world is incomplete without Peruiu^ it can be obtained anywhere with di rections for use. A complete guld* for the prevention and cure of oa tarrh and ail diseases of winter, seni free by The Peruna Medicine Oo* Columbus. Ohio. THE OPEN-TOE CAR CHILILITLI. The very newost thing in railway car architecture is a passenger car for ateam roads, built very much on the lines of the summer trolley oar, except that this car can open up the top as well as the sides. The car was built toy the Pullman Company for the Am erican Tourist Association, of Chicago, and was intended as an observation car in the great canons of mountainous mountains could be enjoyed to fn* fullest extent would be from a caa without sides or top. The following season a coal, or gondola oar, with board scats, was attached to the A men. lean Tourist Association train, ang every traveler on fiat train clirabeg Into It. Afterwards the Mexican go*» eminent prohibited the carrying pa** sengers In freight cars, and ths coal Mexico. The car was invented by Reau Campbell, the Mexican traveler, and oamo about as follows: Some years ago when Mr. Campbell was traveling through the great Ta moeopo Canon, he had a seat on the side of the car next to the mountain, the rocks of the cliff were within two feet of the window, and of course he could get not even a glimpse of the canon, as all the windows on the other side of the car were taken up by the occupants of the adjoining seats. De termined to view the magnificence of the canon, Mr. Campbell returned to Las Canoas, and through the courtesy of railway officials made the world famous ride on board what the super intendent called his "trolley,” an open car with seats for eight persons, and with this ride came the Idea that the only way the magnificence of Mexieo’3 car had to go. Then the building od a passenger car without a top was de cided on, and the Ohililitli cam# in -evolution from a work car to tha coal car, and to the consummation at Itself. The Chililitll became famous and from an observation car went on duty as a pavilion by the sea, and n roof garden, lor it is electric lighted, and has an outfit of Chinese lanterns. But the favorite is also remembered as a dining car of the tropics, attached to a special train, that, during meal hours, could stand still or run Just fast enough to secure a breeze, and not raise a dust. The Chililitll Is tha largest observation or dining car «rw built. There are seats (reversible aa in a coach) for 68 people, and when tha tables are in place 66 persons may mt down to dinner. DcBnlTs COUCH SYRUP Cures a Cough or Cold at once. | Conquers Croup. W hooping-Cough. Bronchitis, Grippe and Consumption Quick, sure results. Dr. UtfJU'f Pills cure Constipation. 50 pills 10c, ^Mention this paper to Advertisers. W. N. U_OMAHA. No. 40-190* &L3 Sri