loi9 City Nortfcwestera 3 W. BUR1XXGH. LCUJ» CITY I Z 7 I FOR Busy MAH MIWI EPtTOME THAT CAN SOON BE COMPASSED. MANY EVENTS ARE MENTIONED Horae and Fs*nj* Intel gt-ce C-ft Ct'.K i Into Two and F cur Line Paragraphs. f xd|n St nor N . u iv. trta president of lsraa.il. gate a bangoe* to William Jen t : . - .'ryan, a: wha-h lt> Aiefita# taaasadur. Irving HL ImmII-:• and Mrs. ■ iMfe>y and tbe member* o! the era ’ Hr*) ante present. Canada has read bet* , - a tbe lines •A H'orxran divpatrbes that a tariff war with tbe t c.'rd Stales It mevita- , Me and baa accepted tbe situatha. The experts on is that on April 1. Ca lac m good* w ill be assessed a ZZ per text surtax, and that soon afterward* Canada will levy a S3 1-3 per cent, tax ow Am-1. an . net ..mag -nto Canada. 4 year and a half have elapsed »'«xe an «*®cjh stale act was publish 'd aaa>»«nc.iag the annexation of Bus ta and * and the grant of a donstitiiUtm to those provinces. Now the »&;*:«: ha* gt>t his sanction to it:* constitution, which, after long ne fxA'.aXitm* betwren The Austrian and Hungarian (uirraacBU. is at length agreed upon Crown Prince William open.-d the American art exhibition at Berlin- He •an with a large stair to the galleries v'. the Royal academy, where several hundred persons distinguished in the ufieial. mistk and social life of Ber lin awaited the prior view by royalty b»-t< ;ar.as to gtve cx-Vioe PTt fid- at FarCtks a hearty welcome Senator Cummins spoke against the admit . tratum railroad bill in the Senate Se»T**3-y Balling-T :a his £t. Paul speech said the people are conserva tion nad Prt-i. ri Ur* if of the United Ylinc kork<>. bel - res a str.ke an be averted. Unset Jcs'i e Fti'J- r is to act as ar btrator in the Costa Rica-Panama boundary dispute. John C Mahrar and members of h - fans were convicted at Council 1‘lsfs of sw tndling !*o««se icsnrreati r»-^c: that they d-d not. while ti • y had the upportiv any. cost Cannon as speaker. Yb off. ial ii! and program for th? Nebraska conservation and state de v. x...a.t! congress has !*•. r. issued. H ft’. Barker, a state senator, has apn'-un—d his candidacy for the fe publtcan nominaikiti for governor of \Y sronsia rb «- bat* on the administration RI! in the s«aate was one of the snarpest ever heard on the subject The railroads are much concerned over the amount paid by the govern ment for the transportation of the na;R Tsm e« i!u tu banker \\ also, now ra the federal pris m at Leavenworth. La- Boi improved since his in career jtiioa. \ general strike oi leather workers oa horse goods, involving It'd cities and about 4.«o«i r».'t. was ordered in Ckicago. A petition praying for the independ ence of the Philippine islanders was presented to the senate by Senator Crane. The legislative. executive and judi eial hiil. carrying appropriations of nearly $34.ht)«.dM.« has been passed by t hr house. Fk rt. n hundred laymen sat down to a banquet in Omaha in the interest of foreign missions. President Taft's cabinet ate cookies made oat of cottonseed flour. Secre tary Dickinson provided the feast. It cane* to him from his nephew in Kn nis. Tex. There is big demand for babies in New Orleans, and another carload will tie shipped there from New York. \Y s-.un. the iwdesirian. is now hik ing through Kansas. Ians Paulhan. angered at the pat ent infringement suits against him. has packed up and prepared to return to France. William A. Bonsack. of St. Louis, mdhoaaire president of the Bonsack laimber company, was drowned while yachting in Lake FVmaehartrain at New Orleans. Town elections in New York show many democratic gains. Glen Falls. Dolceville and Waterloo elected demo cratic mayors. Hugh Brown, owner of the hotel at Cheyenne and a large land owner, fell dead, overcome by heat while fighting a prairie fire at his ranch three miles from the city. The battleship Louisiana exceeded til her previous performances in a test of speed in Cuban waters, where the vessels of the A lantic fleet are maneuvering. John V. Heflin, a private in the T,n:h company, coos: artillery. died *• she Presidio hospotal from injuries received in a h »xin.= match v. ish Pri vate waits Elder a Port Baker. * JUrch C Prediction# are made of early change* in President Taft'# cabinet. Peary'* claim to honors received still another setback before the house committee W 1. Parks of the Cnion Pacific has been elected vice president of the Illinois Centra. In a s;*~—-h full of bitterness. Speak er Cannon denounced the insurgents, who caused his undoing. The Transvaal government has de < ded to give a first contribution of for t lishni'nt of a Traii-vaa! agricultural university. rani Lamport; Om finww sing .ng t. j h«--. died in Berlin. 11< was T" ears old and had trained many fa *u- tigers, including line. Seiu brich. The let., e committee on naval af fa.--- h. - favorably reported a bill ap r> ;• :;g 15 ■ •> to raise the wreck «.f -ae battleship Maine in Ha vana* harbor. J : a# Frank H Your.g o.' Lincoln. \ei>. was boarding a train for home e wa» -■ rved with a summons in a breach of promise suit for ten thou sand dollars damages. An agreement has been reached by the conferees on what is known as the “White Slave" bill and the meas ure * .11 become a law as soon as it is signed by the president. One hundred dollars per head was paid at Fort Worth. Texas, for a nerd of 450 Oklahoma fed beef cattle. This is said to be the highest price for this class of cattle ever paid in the Cnited States. The condition of Cnited States Sea ■tor Daniel of Virginia, who has been liegring between life and death for some days as the result of a stroke of paraiyis. is somewhat improved. Cnited States Commissioner Mark A Foot*- ordered the deportation of Bob L*-ocg of El Paso. Tex., convicted last summer before Judge Landis of smuggling Chinese into this country. By an equally divided court the su preme court of the Cnited States af firmed the decision of the federal court of California which held the grazing of sheep w ithout permission on forest reserves was not a violation of the law. Following closely on the failure of the Kentucky legislature at its re c-nt s*ss.oa to accede to his request that ifce Lincoin memorial farm be ex empt d from taxation came Governor Willson's veto of a bill appropriating SIS."■ for improvements to be made .n th- birthplace of Jefferson Davis in Todd county. Kentucky. The oldest woman in the world cele brated the l“5th anniversary of her birth recently at Posen. She is Frau Dutkiewiez. ana although she is bent and feeble, almost blind and deaf, she not bedridden. Frau Dutkiewiez re members the Napoleonic wars and fall of the Little Corporal. Washington. Satisfied that the present methods of operating its smelters by the Ana oada Copper Mining company are not only destructive in a widespread de gree to the surrounding natural for ests. but unnecessary. Attorney-Gen eral Wiekersham caused- a bill in equity to be filed at Helena, Mont., against the company. The bill asks for a permanent injunction to compel the company to operate its plant at Anaconda in such a manner as to end the destruction complained of. Continued denials that the American ri- at lackers' association discussed or a 'empted to fix prices in any way were made by George 1_ McCarthy, pul Usher of the National Provisioner and secretary of the association, in, < hiding his testimony before the senate high cost of living committee today. i he prince regent of China, accord ing to > :hcia! advices from Pek’ti. has issued an edict reiterating in the strongest terms of the former, de claration that a constitutional govern ment and a parliament shall he open.'d in China at the end of the nine year period of preparation fixed I by the late < mpress dowager. Postmaster General Hitchcock au thorized the exhibition of a large sec tion of the postal museum at the Ohio valley -'xposition to be held in Cincinnati, next autumn. The last chapter in the postofllce scandals of 1?<>3 was written when i j United Sta.es Attorney Raker nolle 1 pressed the remaining ttndisposed tn I indictments. Baker told the court that George W Reavers, former super intendent of salaries and allowances, j J and August \V. Machen. superintend eni of rural free delivery, had served s. ntences for similar offenses and that the government had no desire to further prosecute them. Defending cold storage methods, James F. Oyster, a Washington mer chant. testified before the senate high cost of living committee that they kept the price more uniform the year , round. He declared that if it had not been for cold storage, eggs might have sold as high as 75 cents and 51 a dozen last fall. Personal. The construction placed on Con gressman Hitchcock’s statement is that Bryan is to never again seek office. Speaker Cannon is quoted as saying he prefers defeat to any compromise with the insurgents. Strike troubles in Philadelphia ap pear far from settlement. President Taft declared he would take no hand in the house fight. Ex-President Roosevelt will not get home until some time in June. In an address at Rochester Presi dent Taft said he had hope that con gress will yet do something. Frank B. Kellogg arraigned the Standard Dil company before the su preme court. Politics iu New York will be allow ed to simmer until Roosevelt returns. Private Edward I_ Simpkins, sta tioned at Fort Russell. Wyo.. shot and killed himself at St. Eouis. President Taft called Senators Bur kett and Brown to learn their attitude on the pending railroad bill. Harmony was the keynote of the annual convention of the Illinois Re publican Editorial Association, held I in Springfield. Irene Storrs Wells, formerly on the i stage as Irene Bishop, has sued hcr I husband's parents for 550O.WOJ fur the ! alii nation of his affections. GORDON’S TESTI MONY PROVES INTERESTING v nanes w . uoraon, w nose picture is given above, is agec-t for the Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company in Ogdensburg, X. Y., and resides at 78 King street, that city. In giving testimony regard ing his own case, Mr. Gordon recently made the following statement: "Some time ago, while suffering from stomach catarrh, I was advised to take Cooper's Xew Discovery, and did so, two bottles of the preparation putting my stomach Into good condition. Pre vious to my taking the New Discovery I could not eat a meal without expe riencing pain and discomfort after ward. “I had been In this condition for a long time, although I had tried many different remedies in search of relief, and al last reached the conclusion that I had exhausted every available re source. Cooper's Xew Discovery was therefore to me almost a heaven-sent blessing, and the work of the medi cine was so permanent and lasting that I have had no recurrence of my former trouble whatever. “I can eat anything I care for with out noticing any bad effects afterward. I have recommended Cooper's Xew Discovery to many persons of my ac quaintance. and it never fails to give satisfactory results. It reaches the seat of stomach trouble in mighty short order." Cooper's Xew Discovery is 6old by all druggists. If your druggist can not supply you, we will forward you the name of a druggist in your city who will. Don’t accept "something just as good.”—The Cooper Medicine Co., Dayton, Ohio. The Right Spirit. Apropos of Valentine's day, a pas senger on the Bermudian said: "Mark Twain once told us. in a little Valentine day speech on this boat, of an Irish wooer who had the right Valentine spirit. Acceptance or re jection he could take with equal grace. “ ’Will ye be my valentine?' he said, on February 14, to the girl he loved. " 'No,' she replied; ‘1 am another's.’ "He heaved a sigh and said: “ 'Sure. thin, darlin', I wish ye was twins, so that I couhl have at laste the half of ye.'" Airing the Poodie. The messenger boy towed the lead ing lady's pet poodle in front of the big ventilation fan and tied him. "Great Scott, boy! " exclaimed a by stander. excitedly. "Do you want to blow that dog away? Why, that fan Is worse than a cyclone." “Xaw!” snapped the messenger boy with a pout. "Let him stay the-e and get aired. That blooming actress hire s me two hours every day to air her blooming kihoodle. and I want him to get enough of it.” Desperate Remedy. "Yes." said the musician in a remi niscent mood. "mv wife fell in love with me and married me when 1 was 'earning to play the cornet." "Are you sure." asked his friend, "that she married you because she loved you. or to make you stop prac ticing on the cornet?" Easily Explained. "Strange." murmured the editor, "that this anecdote of George Wash ington has never been in print be fore." "Not at ail," explained the occasion al contributor. *'l only thought of it last night." Tne Point of View. Newlywed.—What. $30 for a hat! Why. iCs simply ridiculous, my dear. Mrs. Newlywed—That's what I thought. Harold: but you said it was ail we could afford—Lippincott's. A LITTLE THING Changes the Home Feeling. Coffee blots out the sunshine from many a home by making the mother, or some other member of the house hold. dyspeptic, nervous and irritable. There are thousands of cases whore the proof is absolutely undeniable. Here is one. A Wis. mother writes: "l was taught to drtuk coffee at an early age. and also at an early age be came a victim to headaches, and as l grew to womanhood these headaches became a part of me, as 1 was scarcely ever free from them. “About five years ago a friend urged me to try Postum. 1 made the trial o tine which he had been s> nteneed to pay in July. 190,'.. for carrying a pistol. FIREMENS DISPUTE SETTLED. Differences Are Compromised with Western Railroad Managers. Chicago.—All questions in dispute between the 27,000 fir.'men on west ern railroads and the railroad man agers will be amicably settled, accord ins to an arrangement reached through the aid of United States Com missioner of 1-abor C. 1'. N il), it was agreed by \V. S. Carter, presi dent of the Brotherhood of Locomo tive Firemen and Knginemen. and his committee, and the general managers* committee, representing the forty seven railroads involved, to settle the Death List Grow's. Marshalltown, la.—identification of the dead, care of the injured and an attempt to place the responsibility for the disastrous wreck of the Bock Island “Twin City Express'* occupied officials of the road, the Iowa beard of railway commissioners and scores of volunteer assistants here Tuesday. The list of the dead in the wreck has grown to forty-se'cn. several passen gers having died as the result of in juries, while other deaths are ex pected hourly. Many of the injured have been taken to other cities. Cudahy Case Is Dismissed. Kansas City.—The ease growing out of the assault made hy J. l\ Cud ahy. the packer, on .lere Lillis, the banker, was dismissed in the municb , pal court here by Daniel Howell, as sistant city attorney. Mr. Howell made no comment further than to say the ease should not have been brought in the municipal court. Un derwood, the patrolman who was called to the Cudahy home the night Lillis was attacked, was the only wit ness to appear. The case has been contlnud twice before. Commission for Chamberlain. Chamberlain. S. D.—Chamberlain adopted the commission form of city government by a majority of fifty-five. Vacation* In Postofbees. Washington—Senator Burkett Intro duced an amendment which he will urge to the general postoffice appro priation bill providing “that hereafter alT employed in postoffices havtng city delivery shall be granted thirty days' leave of absence during each finer 1 year with full pay.'* IT LOSE LICENSES STATE AUDITOR’S WARNING TO INSURANC ECOMPANIES. THE TESTIN6 OF SEED CORN __ Superintendent Bishcp Sending Out a Bulletin Advising as to How the Work Can Be Done. State Auditor Br.rt.in recently pub lished a letter in which ne stated that if rate wars did not cease among tire Insurance companies of This state he would revoke he licenses of companies that sell insurance for less money in one town than in another of the same class. His desk is stacked high with letters called forth by this statement and in it most of the insurance offi cials assert that they are always op posed to rate wars but they cannot control their agents. The replies are so nearly uniform that they have caused some little amusement at the auditor's office. While the rate war may be justified by the necessities of competition in one town, says the auditor, it is evi dent that it works a discrimination against the other towns. Moreover, the auditor does not believe that fire insurance companies can afford to sell insurance as cheap as they frequently do and he thinks that the rule might work toward the conserving of life in surance funds. Tests on Seed Corn. Superintendent Bishop is now send ing out a bulletin advising school su perintendents and teachers how to test seed corn. The school men are advised to get together classes that will handle the testing of seed corn. They are admon ished to “be sure that the test is so accurate and thorough that the owner of the seed corn may rely upon the result as indication of the actual condition of his seed corn as to ger minating power.” Blanks are enclosed, so that inter ested school men may send in notice of their needs in the way of copies of instruction. GtUriGt W. NOnriiS Tho Nebraska congressman wao was central figure in the great revolu tionary moeement in congress. Un expectedly to the regulars of the RepuhHcan organisation, he put over a resolution of the highest constitu stitutional privilege, changing the rules of the house so tar ns the com position of its committee on rules is concerned by creating a commit tee of fitteen to be selected from various geographical divisions among the membership and elimi nating the speak -r from the com mit.ee. The confusion attd conster nation which that resolution created is history. Out for Senator. William U. Price of Lincoln, a pro nounced county option!st, has issued a formal statement announcing himself a candidate for the United Sta.cs sen ate on the democratic and (Htpulist. or people's independent tickets. Petition to the Governor. Governor ShaUcnbcrgcr has received a pet tion for the removal of a house of ill repute which is said to be lo cated half way between Wymore and i Glue Springs. The petition is signed by fifty-two persons, many of them women. Making Room in State House. Rids from contractors will shortly be received by the state railway earn mission for putting the basement un der .he commission rooms in shat>e to house a pare of tho office force. Too commission is now crowded and the physical valuation department, now housed on the second Moor, must give 1 up its quarters as s»v>u as the next log- | islature meets. The basemen; under the commission rooms will be fur.her excavated, a cement floor wilt be laid, the walls will he plastered and deco rated. Wants Suit Dismissed. Tito Union Pacific has decided that it does not or.re to exchange trans portation for advertising when this is _ done under pain of prosecution, but It does not care, if possible, to ae-1 knowledge that the nc.. is illegal. K.’ti son Rich, attorney tor the Union Pa ctfie. called on the state railway com mission. hoping to have tho suit now missed. The commission conferred | with Attorney General Thompson. It 1 was decided ilia; the ease would not be dismissed at once. Corn About Gathered. Farmers coming to Lincoln from towns out In the state report that most of the corn caught by the early snows last winter has been gathered, or "picked" as they say. it is in bad condition. Huskers are compelled to 60-1 the grain as they gather it. throw ing into one part of the wagon the ears which have lain under the snow all winter, and Into another part of the wagon those ears w-hieh stood up wdl. This latter part Is marketable, bet the "down" corn has to be fed to the stock. ! Follow this advice. Quaker Oats is the best of all foods; It is also the cheapest. When suoh men as Prof. Fisher of Yale University and Sir James Crichton Browne, LJ. D., F.R.S. of I,ondon spend the best part of their lives in studying the great question of the nourishing and strengthening qualities of differ ent foods, it is certain that their ad vice is absolutely safe to follow. Professor Fisher found in his ex periments for testing the strength and endurance of athletes that the meat eaters were exhausted long before the men who were fed on such food as Quaker Oats. The powers of endur ance of the non-meat eaters were about eight times those of the meat eaters. Sir James Crichton Browne sayB— eat more oatmeal, eat plenty of it and eat it frequently. 59 COULD NT SPEAK. i noy now spoaK as tney puss by, They both keep mum; K«> r.t't'd to ask the reason why— They’re deaf and dumb. A Big Shortage in Seeds. Prom almost all sections comes the re port of frightful shortages In seed corns; also in some varieties of seed barley, oats, rye, wheat, tiax, clovers and the early varieties of potatoes. Tills is particularly noticeable in the great corn and oat and potato growing states. Thus: The great states of Nebraska and Iowa are suffering from a dearth of seed corn as never before. The wide-awake farmers in these and other states are placing their orders earlv for above seeds In ord« r to be on til* safe side, and wo inn but urge farmers to write at once to the John A. Salzer Seed Co.. Box is:. I .a Crosse. Wis., for their farm seed and corn catalogue. The magnitude of the business ef this long established firm can be somewhat estimated when one knows that In ordi nary years they sell: oO.flUO bushels of elegant seed corn. ltAfVW busltc Is ef seed potatoes. IbXOOO bushels of seed oats. 5G,tHX> bushels of seed wheat. 100,00) bushels of pure clover and timo thy seeds, together with an endless amount of other farm six-ds and vege table seeds, such as onions, eabh igis, car rots, peas, beans, lettuce, radishes, toma toes. etc. There is one thing about the Salxer firm —they never disappoint. They always till your order on account of the enormous stocks they curry. Sind them S cents for a package of their great $W0 rrixe Corn and Catalogue. Ad dress. John A. Salxer Seed Co., Box PC. Ba Crosse, Wls. His Sole Resting Place. A precise Boston teacher spent a quarter of an hour in impressing upon her class the right pronunciation of the word vase. Next day, hoping to reap the fruits of her labor, she asked; "Now, John nie, toll me! What do you see ou the raantlepiecc at home?" And Johnnie piped forth. "Father's feet, ma’am."—Harper's Bazar. Beware of Ointments for Catarrh that Contain Mercury, m tiHfrury v. fU r??v:r xtt^frvy the rr-**v ItfM cocr. t'N' y Orrjk'.'ce th ' v»ho*e Mrtrm whrh «">t rlns it throng* tN' pwvs FurfArrx swh srt.v.es $&cult nex t bo vvxl excm c*» r*e-x‘rr>« tK'ii» ftxvn > iAmWim it* the 0 ?v**r they wi.i to is t vi fvV l - x thv' t\>vt \\ ;i etui ptN'Mv xS> ru * ftosn tN"'v list's 1'iVxrrh * . :xnf xvttrrexi by F\ A, x *>'-• x* A i\v, TtvNM«v O cx>rt *; rv-t *-x» r.—r~ cvrv\ a' l is ub« r.T'n si y, *rtR'c xltrwtty th» Hxvl -s" 1 "rxxrvsxus «urtuor** ot tV >Tste»*, la buyt'\< n ;>» tsux’-rh iMrt* br» «* :v you $xv tlj* p,vu;:-v\ It ts txv rtternu'x v nv* e in UMeti* Obhv bv 1' i ri- v A t\v Ur*v. ' »vix4* tit*. SNxt b\- On:c* "tx rrhv, t,v twr bottN\ Tlfcc IIa Vs KamOy m^s for cwvjuralho. The difference betwt on slorder and . skinny women is a matter ttt' dollars rather than sense ru s u Ki n ?\ t> I'm t' ivws, r.tXO OlN M FM ' c •»'.»• » » - .t' \ ,«*■** X't tix'b'VK. HUnxl, PixWmg or Ow iruxi 14 |\«v> *u b to U x*uy > or u»x'»u'> rvOuxiod. ,xv It's difficult to eonvineo a woman that other women are as £\vts' r.trvKiu vk «rb*'H th»»rv-i O'y ruhb \i rvliew* ' * x-r.x jr^l t>r n-s in >',«!'• x v wi.v'.-N 0\xx» >v> x\i' m' u ir\ v* s'x US,cvxah' mixns, luxr*v bx»e«» A V rhvfcl'x'*-* Kitther Time was probably nursed x ht the lapse of apes WOMEN OF MIDDLE _AGE Need Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Brookfield, Mo—"TVo years apo I was unable to do any kina of work and nnlv weighed 118 rounds. Mv trouble dates back to the time that wo me n may expect nature tobring on them the Change of life. I got a bottle of Lydia E. Finkham's Vegetable Com pound and it made me feel much bet ter. ami I have contin ued its use. 1 am Ycry grateful to you for the good health 1 am now enjoying;"—Airs, svarah Lorsioxovr. 414 S. Livingston Street, Brookfield, Mo. The Change of Life is the most criti cal period of a woman’s existence, and neglect of health at this time invites disease and pain. Women everywhere should remem ber that there is po othpv remedy known to medicine that will so suc cessfully carry women fhronrh this trying period as Lydia E. Fmkham's Vegetable Compound, made from na tive roots and herbs. For 80 years ft has been curing wo men from the worst forms of female ills—inflammation, ulceratioD. dis placements. fibroid tumors, irregulari ties, periodic pains, Backache, and nervous prostration. If you would like special advice about your case write a confiden tial letter to Mrs. Pinkhani. at Lynn, Mass. Her advice is irect and always helpful. The Array of Constipation b Growing Smaller Ewqr Day. CARTER’S LITTLE LIVER PILLS are responsible—they \ only giro relief—j they permanently^ care Caaatiaa*. tm. M3-. Horn ore then for Bilion nesa, Uigtafim, Sick HeadacW, SaBov Xa SMALL PILL SMALL DCSE. SMALL PRICE GENUINE must bear signature: I Cured Right at Borne _ 1 WFSTFVN KUCTKOroaK o\ I MiUs.iaoteSl. lwAt(riw.(U. Bad BLOOD “Before I began using Cascareta I Ltd a Kul complexion, pimples oa rt; v face, an*! my food was :tot digested as it sbot:‘d have Iwn. Now I am entirely well,, «d the pimples have all disappeared rvm me face l car. truthfully stay that Cmcarets are iu-U aa advertised; I haw taken ealy two boxes of them.” Clarence R. GrifKc. Sherid.',n. ltd. F\*a««*t. rv.ataMr. Tvteet. Vasco C.ovU IV'lV v! N rerS.vxen.VYottTr, , v • v 1 ■ . x Jte \ i-o-r . a N>i*k Tr* sNwt hw UNet sUrijvA C O C, OuaauM*,',? » - one »» war!»,«.'( NtcA. X.'' Hay's Hair-Health Jrvrt tvtu to K.'Moro tioav U*«r re It, >»t»rel t'oloe nil XT i”;i. i»l iv..'.w;< v .w-. tv, h‘' ,r I, • I'VT. Kl'lUXi' *1 Kxt.wtxx *1 O' Kniies Xv M*t tV« > ■ 4list Wnta Hat Sere. l\v, Xs.i k, N } . V X A W. N. 1).. OMAHA. NO. t.t ItW I ALCOHOI.-3 PER CENT 'J» ! AYegetabIc Preparation for As te-! simtlalmg the Food ami Re^uk • ting the Stomachs ami lfcnutn W' ^ Promotes Dtgeslion.Chrerful ?: nessandRcsl Contains wither !j Opium.Morphine nor Mineral $j; Nor Nare otic ^ JQrprW'ftM/>S*\l£f Arimf }{.' : Av*<' AW* >! i - \ ;:i I \ . I <1M5 ttwW*** ,01m w • &> —: ,;'3 A perfect Remedy I'ort'rtnsNps lien. Smir Stomach.lhatrhoe*. y<5 Worms .Convulsions .Feverish ;Vv5 ness and LOSS OF SLEEP 3<:-:-. Fac Simile Signature of id^tfxaz T»re Ckstauw Cownwr. N1W VOKK .HmwmI ^$Owarnntee3 under the FeTodaij Bluet Copy of Wmpparw cm Forloftmtsan^CMldwm The Kind You Hava I Thirty Years GASTQRI mwmmihmm «wnmw»