The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917, January 18, 1901, Image 6

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    MEDICAL EXAMINER
Of tlie U. S. Treasury Recommends
Peruna.
Dr Llewellyn Jordan
Dr. Llewellyn Jordan, Medical Examiner
•f U. 8. Treasury Department, graduate of
Columbia College, and who served three
year* at West I’oint, has the following to
•ay of Peruna:
** Allow me to express my gratitude
to you for the benefit derived from
your wonderful remedy. One short
month has brought forth a vast change
and I now consider my seif a well man
after months of suffering. Pellow
sufferers, Peruna will CLre you.”
Catarrh ii a systemic disease curabl*
only by systematic treatment. A remedy
that cures catarrh must aim directly at |
the depressed nerve centers. This is what
Peruna does. Peruna immediately invigor
ates the nerve-centers which give vitality to
the mucous membranes. Then catarrh dis
appears. Then catarrh is iK-rmanentiy cured.
Peruna cures catarrh wherever located.
Peruna is not a guess nor an experiment—it
is an absolute scientific certainly. Peruna
ha* no substitute*—no rivals. Insist upon
having Peruna.
A free book written by Dr. Hartman,
on the subject of catarrh in its differ
ent phasesand stages, will be sent free
to any address by I lie Peruna Medi
cine Co.. Columbus, Ohio.
^SALTER'S* S EEDsfl
WILL MAKE YOU RICH” P
TM»i»ftdarlng[statement,tmtSoi- b
B |wf&rC ^ gor'BPPP'l* it out every-tiina» P
Comblnat’on Con>* , I
Wrify Or*vit^8t<‘oriu> ’i arth.\Vji^)Oflt!YcTY H
I rcvointlDDi/ecorn growing. gr
' Billion OollarOrasB.
niarv**l of i lie wire.
■ VVSfy ^ I* ton® of liay poraere. First
I crop fix wet kb alter Bowing
Whatls It?.?"
CatalognetHlla.
TOR IBo. STAMPS
. ..a lbI. NOTICE w. m.lt
* big noed CBtal.'f, 10 Gr.-\!n
hampltai Inc lading »l- ▼#, t>loo I
_ *. V Bjralu (10 bu. p«r A.) (‘ata, I
■ W (2d0 buvhel per A.) _ .
Q B«r./,(l7Sbu.{isTA) PmuaI, etc.\Vortit$10.tO|tt»Blrt.
B ^°^,nL
■% | TPftlVA nnnoi TFEE
Hi A 9 la Fy S T4 imiIcbi* MinTsilul
m* B fL* IV y at ■ s»*ni iIdi* njtton;
■ ■ ■ ■ m and get fr«e opinion.
■ MILO II. HTEVLNS «& TO., Ktital. I»H
Dir. 2. ^*17 — 14tIt 8trf*et, tYANfl I.NCJTOJN, l).C.
Dranch offices: Chicago, Cleveland and Detroit.
A TOUR OF THE WORLD
BY YOUR OWN FIRESIDE
The Stoddard Illus
trated Lectures**** Ten
Superb Volumes** **
4.000 Victos.
This work has had an enormous sale;
•old on easy payment*.
—
Geo. L. Shuman & Co.
315 Dearborn StreetJ<-Chicago
FREE ELECTRIC SELT OFFER
HflTHTIN DAY'S FREE WEARING
TRIAL IQ y**urown home, we
fur Utah the tfenuino and
only IlKirkLRKItU Al.TKRYAT
nun.'KILL\T LLFCIRU BKLT3
to any reader of this paper.
_ No nmofT In advanrrt
eogl: i)"«lll»e(rnertrli e. COSTS
... . „ kW „ t ALMOST NOTHING t ompan J
with moat all other treatmei.iD. lur** whca till other elee.
trie bell*!, appllanr** mm* rewrdlee fall. QUICK CURE for
more than bOallmenta. ONLY SIUKCLUEfor allnerroua
diseases, weaknesses and disorders. For com pi eta
sealed confidential ratalotfuo, CLlthla adout andmil. ton*.
8EARS, ROEBUCK & CO., Chicago.
IN 3 OR 4 YEARS
AN INDEPENDENCE ASSURED
If you take up your
homo* in Western Cun
rrilu. the luml of plenty,
illustrated pimphlrts,
trivine experiences of
farmers who have be
come wealthy in grow
ing wheat, reports of
delegates, etc., and full
liuonnation as to reduced railway rates can be
had on application to the Superintendent of
Immigration, Department of Interior, Ottawa,
Canada, or to W. V. Dennett, bdl N. Y. Life
Dldg., Omaha, Neb.
The Job of police court Judge 13 cer
tainly a trying situation.
Your clothes will not crack If you
use Magnetic Starch.
Exemplifying duty is better than ex
plaining It.
- “ }
Try Graln-OI Try Graln-OI
Ask your Grocer today to show you a
package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink
that takes tho place of cotfoe. The children
may drink it without injury as well as the
adult. All who try it, like it. GRAIN-O has
that rich seal brawn of Mocha or Java, but
it is made from pure grains, and tho most
delicate stomach re-eives it without dis
tress. the price of coffee. 15c and -Gets,
per package. Bold by all grocers.
In order to live long it is necessary
£o live slowly.
Millions Use Carter’s Ink
which Is sure proof of Its excellent qunllty. Is
made chemically accurate. Therefore the best.
A girl’s lover is a poor suitor if he
does not suit her.
If you have not tried Magnetic Starch
try it now. You will then use no other.
Don’t run if you want to catch
your breath.
GARFIELD TEA IS AN HERB MEDI
CINE; it is of Inestimable value In all
cases of stomach, liver, kidney and bowel
disorders; it promotes a healthy action of
all these organs.
An event is a circumstance that sel
dom happens.
A woman Is never satisfied so long
as there is anything she can’t get.
The Champeny Creamery company,
a syndicate that operated seventeen
plants in Wisconsin, Iowa and South
Dakota, went into bankruptcy. A
receiver was appointed by the United
States court. No statement of assets
and liabilities were filed.
Try Magnetic Starch—it will last
longer than any other.
Many a married man who isn’t ex
actly smart is shrewd.
In the game of life clubs are always
trumps iu a policeman’s hand.
Talk Is cheap—especially if a man
patronizes a 5-cent barber shop.
The baker may not want for bread,
but he ha3 his hour of knead.
After nine days of wonder the puppy
gets his eyes opened.
TOUR OF ALL MEXICO.
In Pullman's finest Compartment
Drawing Room, Library, Observation
and Dining Cara—all Vestlbuled—with
the celebrated
OPEN TOP CAR "CHILILITLI”
for Observation in the Mountains and
Canyons and Dining Car in the Trop
ica.
A delightful trip of 38 days with
Three Circle Tours in the Tropics of
the South of Mexico and a visit to the
Ruined Cities.
All exclusive features of these Itin
eraries of leisurely travel and long
stops—The Special Train starts Tues
day, January 22, from Chicago.
TOUR OF PUERTO RICO.
Special Pullman Cars leave Chicago
Thursday, January 17, and Thursday,
February 14, at 9:30 a. m., connecting
with the splendid new steamships
Ponce and San Juan sailing from New
York the second day following. In
dividual Tickets sold for other sailing
dates, alternate Saturdays,
i TICKETS INCLUDE ALL EXPENSES
EVERYWHERE
These select limited parties will be
under the special escort and manage
ment of The American Tourist Asso
ciation. Reau Campbell, General
Manager, 1423 Mar«kette Building,
Chicago.
Itineraries. Maps and Tickets can bo
had on application to Agents of the
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul rail
way.
DrBull’s
Cures all Throat and Lung Affections.
COUGH SYRUP
Get the treuuiue. Refuse substitute
BS SURE
Solvation oil cures Rheumatism. 15 A jg cts.
For Top Price* Ship Tour
d A 3ft K AN II HOI LTHY
To Headquarter*
W Irk**!! tk i o 1111*1%:iy.
Baiter, hggM, Veai, Hide* and rur*. Potato#,
Onion* lu cartoad Lola.
«>u»ulm, Xrbrtuika.
HPHDQVNEW DISCOVERY; giro#
l/lmwi W# ■ quick relief and cure* worst
rases. Book of testimonials and 10 pays* treatment
rum. PR. II. II. CHIkKVS SONS, Box V, Aiixctx, Ua.
l.A.A.A.A.A.A.A.A .A.A.A..A.A.A.A.A.A.
■WMMiNCHESTE
] Vv FACTORY LOADED ‘SHOTGUN SHELLS
; “NewRival, 99 “Leader,99and “Repeater99 ;
, Insist BpOB having them, take no others and yon will get the best shells that money can boy. ,
ALL DEALERS KEEP THEM. ►
I . 'll
A Clean
Shirt
well laxmdered i» a thing
of beauty, but you cannot
do good 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
■ell it at 10c.
'^^^TRAUL MARK
1 >►*>»*
««:j Requires no Cooking^**
MAKES COLLARS CUf FsTonTpOUnIToF THIS STARCH
STIFF»»0 NICE A' WHEN WIllGOASFAR AS A POUND
FIRST BOUGHT NEW AND A HALF OF ANY OTHER
PREPARED FOR LAUNDRY PURPOSESONLY
MANUFACTURED ONLY BY
MAGNETIC STARCH MANUFACTURING CO.
OMAHA. NEB.
LOVE IS BEST J* *
By Florence HodjjKJnjon m
CHAPTER III.
Poverty presses harder on a man’s
pride generally than on a woman’s
perhaps because most women cart
more for persons than for things; and
while those near and dear to them
are well and happy, the pin pricks oi
having to go without many things
their neighbors have are not so keenly
felt, while to a man each is a morti
fication.
Harold Dynevor was a good son, and
a brave man; but poverty tried him
sorely, and there was a constant
chafing at the injustice of circum
stances which made his life harder
than It might have been, but which
those who knew his story thought
only natural.
Harold was a gentleman farmer. He
worked quite as hard as many farm
ers who did not own the prefix; but
he was the last male representative of
a good old county family, who had
been known In Sussex for many gen
erations. He was popular wherever he
went, his mother was devoted to him,
his pretty sister, Kitty, looked up to
him with fervent admiration; but
Harold Dynevor could not be called
a happy man. He had inherited a
grievance, and the recollection of it
marred his content.
“You’re tired out, Harold,” said
Kitty gently. "I’m sure you work as
hard as any of your own men. Sit
down in your armchair, and l’U go
and hurry tea.”
“All right, dear,” he said gratefully.
“It may do mo good, for I’ve a split
ting headache.”
Mrs. Dynevor waited till her daugh
ter was out of hearing, then she asked
anxiously:
is lucre any uiing wrong, naroia:
You were going in to Marton; did you
see Mr. Proctor?”
“I saw him, mother, and got a re
ceipt in full. There’s bad news. I
meant to keep it from you, but I can
see I've betrayed there’s something
wrong, so I’d better tell you the
truth, for fear you think it worse
than it is.”
“You don’t mean that the mortgagee
wants to foreclose. Harold?”
Poor lady! that was the bugbear of
her life. Uplands, the land which her
son farmed, wa3 her very own. It
had been her wedding portion, and the
home of her married life. When bad
seasons came, and expenses multi
plied, with her full consent her hus
band raised a mortgage on the farm.
They had thought lightly of it then
—a few good harvests w'ould soon en
able them to pay off the debt; but it
had never been paid off in all those
years. It hung like an incubus about
them, and Mrs. Dynevor’s one dread
was that some day the mortgagee
would foreclose, and, if they could not
find the £5,000 due to him, they
would have to leave their beloved
home.
"No, mother,” said Harold quietly,
“it’s not so bad as that; but you will
like the news as little as I do. It
seems Mr. King has been settling his
affairs, and he has transferred the
mortgage on the Uplands to some one
else. Proctor told me the interest
was still to be paid to him. so we
shall have no personal dealings with
our new creditor.”
“Then I don’t see that it matters,”
said Mrs. Dynevor. “Your dear father
always said Mr. King was a very hon
est man. Do you mean that you have
heard a bad account of the new mort
gagee?"
“He is a man we both have cause to
fear and dislike, mother—Eustace Lin
don!”
Mrs. Dynevor had grcfSTii white even
to her lips—nothing could have ter
rified her more; but she wras a brave
woman, and she knew, besides, where
help and strength were to be found.
One silent prayer to heaven, and she
answered calmly:
“There is only one thing for It, Har
old—we mu3t raise the £5,000 and pay
off the mortgage. To be at that man’s
mercy is more than I can hear!”
i uuu l now we re 10 cio it,
said Harold, gloomily. "There’s no
money in the bank, and we must spend
a good sum on the farm this year, for
everything wants renewing. The blow
couldn't have come at a worse time."
"I w'onder what hi3 object is?” said
Mrs. Dynevor quickly. "He has never
once been near this place since he left
it with your poor Aunt Nina Just after
their wedding. Not a year after he:
death he let the Manor to General Cra
ven for fourteen years, and, except
pocketing the money from the esta!^
he has taken not the least interest ic
the property since.”
"Proctor says he has married again
and thinks he means to settle at thf
Manor. The general’s lease expire*
year, and he has refused to renew it.’
"If he means to live here, of coursf
he would want to get rid of us first,’
said Mrs. Dynevor quietly, “for mer
never like the near presence of those
they have wronged.”
Now, according to the strict letter o
the law. Eustace Lindon could no
have been said to have wronged th<
Dynevors, yet every one for mile:
around Dynevor Manor regarded hin
as their despoiler.
It was a sad little story, so wei
known that every villager could havi
repeated it. When Mrs. Dynevor mar
ried and settled at the Uplands, he
husband had an elder brother, Frank
who was ’squire of Dene, and thi
largest land owner for miles round
Frank Dynevor was devoted to th
young couple at the Uplands. A goo<
deal older than his brother. Charles
and a very studious, reserved man. h
had reached the age of 40 withou
[ marrying. People were beginping to
! look on him as a confirmed bachelor,
I and to regard the little boy at the farm
| as the heir of tha Manor, when, be
j fore Harold was 5 years old, his uncle
i suddenly returned fr^m a summer hol
iday with a wife of 18.
There was not the least mystery
j about his young wife's antecedents.
She was an officer's daughter, and had
! been brought up in an orphan asylum,
which found her a situation as soon as
i she w’as old enough. She had been
| in it just six months when Mr. Dyne
I vor came on a visit to her employer,
and converted their little nursery gov
• erness into the mistress of the Manor,
i If the family at the Uplands were
disappointed, they made no sign, and
welcomed the bride warmly. Frank
Dynevor told his brother he meant to
settle a small fortune on little Harold,
“in case farming failed;” but he wras
not a businesslike man, and, being in
sound health, no doubt he thought
there was no hurry, and he might well
wait till his nephew was out of the
j nursery.
The baby w’ho arrived at the Manor
j within a year of the wedding was a
1 girl. She was 2 years old when her
i father took it Into his head to go out
to Australia to hunt up some informa
tion for a book he was writing. Nina
dreaded the sea, so he left her and her
little girl at home. From that voyage
he never returned. He died at sea.
And Mr. Eustace Lindon. a fellow pas
senger, w’ho had beefi with him a great
deal at the last, brought the news to
the poor little widow at Easthill.
CHAPTER IV.
There was consternation at the Man
or and the Uplands; but when Frank
Dynevor’s will was read, his brother
J was amazed to find there was no men
tion whatever of his promise to secure
Harold's future. It had been made Im
mediately after the birth of little Lil
| lian, and It left everything in trust to
his wife for her daughter, and if the
child died before reaching the age of
21 her mother inherited everything,
with power to bequeath it to whom
she pleased.
No wonder the Charles Dynevors
were aggrieved. They would not have
grudged the estate to Lillian; but that
it should revert to her mother, that a
girl who had never seen the old house
three years before should have power,
| if her child died, to leave it away from
| the family who had owned it for
centuries—it was terrible!
Perhaps their sense of injustice made
j the Charles Dynevors keep aloof from
; the young widow, and so they did not
J realize how quickly her acquaintance
with Eustace Lindon ripened into in
timacy; and it came ou them like a
thunderbolt when, a year and a day
after her husband’s death, Nina mar
ried the specious adventurer and went
abroad with him.
Very little news of her reached
Easthlll. That she had a second child
( —another daughter—and that her
; health failed so rapidly she was obliged
to live always in the south of France,
was all the Dynevors heard in the first
few years. Then there came a formal
letter from Eustace Lindon, acquaint
! ing them with his stepdaughter's
death; and, barely six months later,
another to announce that his wife had
passed away.
“She will have left him all the ready
money; but she can’t be so base as to
bequeath him the Manor," Charles
Dynevor said to his wife.
“I don’t know. She was perfectly
infatuated with him, and I suppose she
would think of her child,” replied Mrs.
j Dynevor.
But there was no mention of her
| child in the will. Mr. Dynevor paid
half a guinea for a copy of It. It had
been made immediately after the death
| of her firstborn, and it simply be
queathed “all property of which I may
j die possessed, mil or personal, of
j every description whatever, to my dear
; husband, Eustace Lindon.”
It had been drawn up by an English
i lawyer, and witnessed by the doctor
j and nurse who attended little Lillian
| in her last illness. Everything was
! perfectly in form. Mr. Proctor, the
leading solicitor of Marton, who had
been at school with Harold Dynevor,
j and remained his close friend, said
that to upset it would be quite im
! possible.
So Eustace Lindon enjoyed his thou
sands and the Dynevors grew poorer
every year. The father lived till his
only son was old enough to take up
the burden he had borne so bravely.
His dying words charged HaKMd to
be good to his mother and Kitty, and
never, if he could help it, accept any
favor at the hands of Eustace Lindon.
“I can’t explain it to you, my boy,”
said the dying man, solemnly, “but I
have thought a great deal about the
■ past since my illness began. I would
| not say a word to your mother, lest
. j she should brood over it; but I can’t
i j help feeling Lindon did not play
i | straight. Youc Aunt Nina was little
more than a child'when he married
I her; but she was singularly frank
s and true. Knowing as she did that
Dynevor Manor had been in our fam
• ily for centuries. I can’t believe she
would have left it away from the old
» nam.9 willingly.”
"Do you mean you think the will was
> a forgery?” asked Harold.
I ‘‘No; I believe it was obtained from
her by undue influence. When she
' was very ill he must have worked on
t her fears in some way or other. 1
can’t explain what I think, Harold;
but I seem to know Nina Llndon never
did us such a wrong willingly.”
’ I could understand it better If she
had left anything to her child,” said
Harold. “The Injustice to us would
J have been the same, but it would bare
been more natural."
Mr. Dynevor shook his head.
"It's a mystery we shan't fathom
here, my boy. Only, with the instinct
God sends sometimes to the dying, J
seem to feel that Llndon is to blame.
If he comes to live at the Manor, avoid
him by every means in your power.”
And that was the story of the past.
It was not strange that, remembering
i his father's last words, It was torture
to Harold Dynevor to think that the
mortgage on his mother’s home was
| held by Eustace Llndon.
Kitty and the tea traj' flame In to
gether. There was a capable woman
j servant at the Uplands, but she had
J her hands pretty full; and both Mrs.
| Dynevor and her daughter were thor
! oughly domesticated, sweet, home
keeping women both of them, not
learned in 'ologies and science, per
haps, but well gifted to make those
j about them happy.
Harold felt quite refreshed after his
tea, and asked his sister cheerfully if
any one had been there that afternoon.
“Only Helen Craven. She wants us
to go to dinner there next week. I
said Tuesday would suit you best."
| When the Cravens settled at Dyne
vor Manor they made it perfectly clear
to the family at the Uplands that they
regarded them as friends and equals.
The young Dynevors had spent some
! of their happiest days at the Manor,
I and Helen Craven was Kitty’s closest
friend.
“Tuesday will do nicely,” said Har
old. “I shall be glad of a little talk
with the general. He may be able to
tell me something about his landlord.”
“Helen was quite radiant,” went on
KUty. “It seems Alick is coming home
next week on leave, and is going to
bring his friend Captain Tempest with
him.”
She spoke with studied carelessness,
and yet the speech had cost her an
effort. Kitty and her mother were both
dreadfully afraid Harold cared for
Helen Craven. Ixn-ing him as they
did, they were of course persuaded he
could have won the general’s daughter
had he only made up his mind to w'oo.
Both believed* only his poverty and
pride had kept him silent, and it had
come on them as a blow when they
discovered the great interest Helen
took in the visits of her brother’s
chum, and they w.re forced to see that
Captain Tempest was already more to
her than Hayold had ever been. So
Kitty made this remark tentatively, as
a sort of breaking the news to Harold
! that if he entered the lists he would
be too late.
Dynevor never guessed Kitty’s sus
picions. He smiled quite cheerfully as
| he said:
“Sets the wind in that direction?
Well, you will miss Helen dreadfully,
; Kitty, if ehe marries; but she is 22,
so I suppose it’s time she began to
i think of such a thing, and Jack Tem
; pie is a right down good fellow. I took
j a great fancy to him when he was
j here at Christmas. I only hope you’ll
have as good fortune, Miss Kitty, when
your time comes.”
Kitty and her mother exchanged
congratulatory glances, which seemed
to say: “He does not mind! be could
not have cared for her really after all.”
(To be continued.)
NOBLE RED MAN.
Difficult for the Indian to Become Self
Supporting.
How to make the Indian self-sup
porting is a problem which William L.
Brown tackles in the Southern Work
man. He would solve the problem by
making the red men a race of goat
herders. He says: “The question of
self-support for Indians is a difficult
one. The limitations imposed upon
them by the nature of the country In
which they live and the lack of an in
herited habit of work, together with
j the pauperizing tendency of the ration
system, make it difficult for them to
progress very rapidly toward self-sup
port. And since a training having this
! end in view should be one of the fac
j tors in their education the question is
one in which the schools should be
particularly interested. It has been
suggested that goat culture might of
fer a solution of the difficulty In some
localities. The Indians’ familiarity
with and love for animals makes herd
ing a natural calling for them, and
they can therefore be easily trained In
the care of stock. Then. too. goats can
sustain life where cattle cannot. That
goat culture may be made profitable
there is little doubt, since there ap
pears to be a ready market for the
various products. Statistics show that
the importation of the skins, from
which the chief value is derived, in
creased 28 per cent In the fiscal year of
1898 as compared with 1897. Most of
the goat skins used in this country are
imported. It has been estimated that
the market value of the importation
of these skins amounts to twenty mil
lion dollars.”
Parent* I,lability for Child** Farr.
A parent entering a railroad train
with a child non sui juris, but old
enough to be required to pay fare, is
held, in Braun vs. Northern Pacific
Railroad company (Minn.), 49 I* R.
A. 319,tto be under an implied contract
to pay the child's fare and, on refusal
to do so, liable to be expelled from
the train with the child, even though
the parent offers to pay his own fare
or on refunding it to him if hn has
, paid it.
Time waits for no man—unless he
| is carrying the ticket for his watch.
Rtibmnrln« Trip to Europe.
Holland, the submarine boat man,
proposes to cross the Atlantic in a
new craft which will live under water
or travel like an ordinary, respecta
ble steamer. Just as the owner desires.
He has planned the itinerary and de
clares there is no more to be feared
in making this experiment than when
he first took a dive in the original
Holand boat. His new invention will
go first to the Bermudas, thence to
the Azores, Lisbon and Cadiz, Spam.
Much of the trip will be made under
wjater, he says.
Biidftpp.t’. Up to-Date Service.
A new telephone service has been
established at Budapest, the object of
the scheme being to supply subscrib
ers with reports of all the Important
occurrences which are ordinarily
chronicled in the daily papers. The
service has a main line 168 miles in
length, and it is connected with pri
vate houses and various public re
sorts. Between 7:30 a. m. and 9:30
p. m. twenty-eight editions of news
are spoken into the transmitter by
ten leather-lunged individuals, whs
work in shifts of two.
e
Virtue eventually manages to get the
laugh on those who throw mud at her.
In 1S90 the mineral production of
the United States amounted to $619,
000,000 and in 1899 to $976,000,000.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter’s
Little Liver Pills.
Must Bear Signature of
See Fac-SImlle Wrapper Below.
I Ter/ email and a* easy
to take as sugar.
FOR HEADACHE.
FOR DIZZINESS.
FOR BILIOUSNESS.
FOR TORPID LIVER.
FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
FOR THECOMPLEXIOI
[i(CmO I Purely
t. i. nu-jL4<iaomiu ■■■
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
WINTER. TOURIST RATES.
SPECIAL To u/s to Florida, Key West.
Cuba, Bermuda, Old Mexico
and the Mediterranean and
Orient.
HALF Ratos for the round trip to
many points south on sale first
and third Tuesday each month.
RATES To Hot Springs. Ark., tile 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. Frr rates, descriptive mat
ter, pamphlets and all other Information,
call at C. & St. L. R. K. City Ticket
Office. 1415 Farnam St. (Paxton Hotel
Bids) or write
HARRY E. HOORES,
C. P. & T. A., Omaha, Neb.
W. N. U—OMAHA. No. 3-iqoi
m „ CUfitS WHEftfc ALT ELStF AILS.
M Best ( <>ugh Syrup. Tastes Good. Use P9!
m_In time. Hold by druytftnn. I&l