i I fi iV V lUJULlLHII II"1 'HIIIUUU A Good Hair-Food Ayer's Hair Vigor, new im proved formula, is a genuine hair-food. It feeds, nourishes, builds up, strengthens, invigor ates. The hair grows more rapidly, keeps soft and smooth, and all dandruff disappears. Aid nature a little. Give your hair a good hair-food. Does not change the color of the half. A formula with each bottle Bhow It to your doctor iters Aik htm about It, then do heeay You need not hesitate about using this new Hair Vigorfrom anyfear of its chang ing the color of your hair. The new Ayer's Hair Vigor prevents premature crayness, but does not change the color of the hair even to the slightest degree. Mdo by the J. 0. Ayer Co., Lowell, Kui. 1 Wedding Bells. Ross-Roby. At tla' home of the bride's fathi'i'. Mr. K. W. Koss, on Wednesday morn ing, nccurcd the wedding of hisduugh ler, Miss Villa, to Mr. George Ar thur llohy. It was just the hour ut .seven when they entered the room to the strains of the Mendelssohn Wedding March, played by Miss Hthel Kenady. There they were met by Hew 1, W. Kinbivo of Superior, an old friend of the family, who made them usband and wife, using the beautiful and impressive ring cennony. After the congratulations and examination of the many and beautiful wedding presents received, all proceeded to the dining room, where they were served with a dainty four course breakfast. The table, was beautifully decorated lu pink and white carnations woven with smilax. The bride is well known in this city and loved by all who know her. She is a talented and accomp lished young lady, but, most of all, she possesses that charm of disposition which wins the hearts of all. On this ter wedding morn, she looked very pretty as she stood beside the man of her choice, tastefully gowned in her traveling suitof blue silk. The groom is also well known to us, having yrciwii to manhood in our midst and been one of us until his removal to Beatrice last year, where he has a lucrative position. He was one of our Toost promising young men and has a liost of friends to wish for his success and happiness in life. The happy cou ple departed on the morning train for their future home in Ileatrleo, show ered with rice and congratulations from their many friends who had gath ered to see them depart on the jour ney of life and express their regrets that we should lose two such estima ble young people from our midst. Heore Crabill. On Wednesday morning at H o'clock, t the home of Dr. Sexton in Lincoln, occurred the wedding of Miss Zella P. Moore of that city and Mr. Charles Crabill of Ued Cloud. Mrs. P. Hahn, mother of the bride, served an eight vourse breakfast at the Lindell hotel for the wedding party after the cere mony, and Mr. and Mrs. Crabill left it 10:30 for their future home in this thy. They arrived here at 8:110 in the evening and were driven directly to the home prepared by Mr. Crabill for his bride, at the southwest corner of fourth avenue and Seward street, where they were given a hearty re ception by the members of the Junior Whist Club. The bride is one of Lin coln's fairest daughters, and the groom who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Crabill, is one of our most promising young business men, being. the general manager of the Ued Cloud Street Rail way and Transfer Company. We ex tend our best wishes to the happy couple. Thomas Letson. rhe friends of Will Letson will be surprised as well as pleased to hear of his marriage last Wednesday to Miss Edna Thomas of Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The ceremony was performed at Og- den, Utah, and they will make their iome at Ely, Nevada, where Will has in important position with the Gug jvnheimer Copper Company. Thieules for the kidneys strengthen these organs and assist in drawing poison from the blood. Try them for rheumatism, kidney, bladder trouble, ov lumbago and tired worn out feel ing. They bring quick relief. Satis &cttan guaranteed. Sold by Henry .Cook's Drug Store. y,XM&toX$)t&tf&&&iili2&$ I Deaths and Funerals. miis3'- Mrs. S. F. Spokcsfleld. Sarah Prances Spokcsfleld, wife of S. P. Spokcsfleld, and one of the old est residents of Ued Cloud, died early last Sunday morning from cancer, with which she had been sutterlng for years. Puneral services were held at the family residence Sunday evening at f o'clock, conducted by Rev. A. A. Cressuian, pastor of the Congrega tional church. The Eastern Star, of which order Mrs. Spokeslield was a member, performed their ritualistic service for the dead. The remains were taken to Hebron Monday morn ing for burial. Mrs. Spokcsfleld was born near Des Moines, In., January 1, 1310, and was married to S. P. Spokcsfleld in 1803. She was an earnest Christian, having united with the Christian church when she was 1 1 years of age, and remained a member of that church to the time of her death. She is sur vived by her husband and several children. Charles Throckmorton. Charles Throckmorton, aged about IS years, died yesterday morning at 8 o'clock, after a lingering illness ex tending over a period of twelve or fif teen years. Puneral services were held this morning at 10 o'clock, at the home of his brother. Wesley Throckmorton, near North llrauch. Kev. Chits Smith, pastor of the Hrethren church in this city, conducted the services and inter ment was in the Waggoner cemetery. HANGING POSTPONED. Frank Barker Will Have Insanity Hear ing on June 25. One more breathing spell for Prank Marker, says the Star. The man who killed his brother as he slept, and the wife beside him, condemned to die on the gallows next Saturday, was on Tuesday morning allowed a stay of execution pending the sitting of a jury to determine his sanity, which Judge Holmes of the Lancaster county dis trict court has ordered for June -'5. It wns.on the application of Judge P. G. Hamer of Kearney that the death sentence was pushed ahead ten days. In a lengthy affidavit the judge de clared to the court that Marker is in sane, a degenerate, of mind erratic and likely at any moment to break forth into uncontrollable fury. Such a fury came on him when he killed his friends. Attorney General Thompson at the hearing contested the request of Mar ker's attorney. He declared that Judge Hamer has had two years in which to ask for a jury to try Marker's sanity. He has not used his opportunity, and now at the eleventh hour came in to take advantage of the law to secure another respite for the murderer. "It is the law's delay's that drive law-loving people to violence," said Mr. Thompson to Judge Holmes. "The time has come when the people have a right to know once for all how the men who kill are to be treated and if human life is to be safe." Judge Holmes granted the applica tion for the stay and set the hearing for June 2.". After the court order had been en tered, Judge Hamer said, when asked what his will was in regard to liar Iter's future: "I think that Marker can stay there and make brooms the rest of his life. He is insane, and if he had not been he would never have killed his brother. Under the constant guard maintained at the prison, he will be safe from further outbreaks." "Then you do not want him turned loose?" Judge Hamer looked astonished at such a question. "Why, I would not dare to go to sleep in his presence if he had any thing he could kill me with." Judge Hamer's application for the stay of execution was accompanied by affidavits from penitentiary guards, physicians and prison contractors, and all who have had an opportunity to watch the actions of the condemned man. Artists have no trouble In securing models. The famous beauties have discarded corsets and have become models in face and form since taking llollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents, tea or tablets. C. L. Cotting. CASTOR I A Tor Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Boars tho Signature of M&fo ' PIONEER COURT INCIDENTS. Free and Easy Manners In Early Illi nois Trials. Most of the early Illinois court houses were log built, but In Home dis tricts, says the author of "Lincoln, the Lawyer," the sessions were held In the barrooms of taverns, and the absence of nil formality in the proceedings Is best Illustrated by the fact that In the circuit court of Washington county, held by Judge John Reynolds, the sher iff usually heralded tils honor by sing ing out, "Come In, boys! Our John Is it-gotu to hold courtl" to which cordial Invitation those having business with the law responded. Another sheriff In Union county made laudable efforts to meet the require ments of the occasion by shouting out this singular announcement: "Oh, yes! Oh; yes! Oh, yes! The honorable Judge Is now opened 1" In one case a judge who desired to display his learning Instructed the Jury very fully, laying down the law with authority, but thu Jurors, after delib erating some hours, found themselves unable to agree. Finally the foreman rose and nsked for additional Instruc tions. "Judge, this 'ere Is the difficulty," he explained. "The Jury want to know If that thar what you told us was r'al'y the law, or on'y Jlst your notion." Youth's Companion. EMBROIDERED TRUTH. Mark Twain on His Own Reputation For Veracity. I am used to having my statement discounted. My mother began It before I was seven years old. Yet all through my life my facts have had a substra tum of truth, and therefore they were not without pieclousness. Any person who Is familiar with me knows how to strike my average and therefore knows how to get at the jewel of any fact of mine and dig It out of Its blue clay matrix. My mother knew that art. When I was seven or eight or ten or twelve years old along there a neigh bor said to her: "Do you ever bellevo anything that that boy Bays?" My mother said: "He Is the wcllspring of truth, hut you can't bring up the whole well with one bucket." And she added: "I know his average, therefore ho never de ceives me. I discount him 30 per cent for embroidery, and what Is left Is perfect and priceless truth without a flaw In It anywhere." Mark Twain'? Autobiography in North American Re view. The Fighting Lemming. If the lemming's powers were pro portioned to his pluck, the lemming would make things lively for thu hunter. It attacks with reckless fury the harmless passerby. One of theso creatures, smaller than a rat, will as sail without a second thought a couple of human beings weighing 150 pound-) apiece. It will spring to one's knees, barking and biting, and in purblind fury fall back "all ends up" to tho earth, only to renew the attack again and again. Ono duy while one lem ming was flying at mo another from beyond a small stream joined in the demonstration and presently Bwam across to get to close quarters. I was not quite sure that tho first fall Into the wnter was not accidental, but hardly think so, Blnce once there it enmo straight to the charge. "Wild Norway." Most Nearly Perfect Vacuum. It was Professor Dewnr's achieve ment In liquefying hydrogen that led to the discovery of an easy method of obtaining an almost perfect vacuum, and that In a single minute. When n glass tube filled with air and closed at one end has its open end dipped Into a cup of liquid hydrogen, the Intense cold condenses the air into a kind of snow that settles to the bottom. If, then, the upper part of the tube, from which tho solidified air has fallen, is removed by heating anil cooling It off It becomes a vacuum chamber so free from nlr that It is difficult to force an electric current through It. New York Herald. Hie Old Letters. A Wall street business man showed a visitor a bundle of old letters thut he was taking homo from his office to burn In his furnace. "I wasn't always so particular about these useless busi ness letters," ho said, "until I learned that tho women cleaners were sorting thorn out of tho wnstcbaskets and Bell ing them to certnln firms which mako a business of furnishing lists of names for various purposes, mostly to Bpecu Iatlvo concerns. Then I concluded that I owed It to my clients to protect them from tho nuisance that follows getting one's name on n mailing list." New York Sun. The Aye-aye. A very strange animal, related to the lemurs and peculiar to Madagascar, Is the nye-aye. It feeds on wood bor ing grubs that tunnel Into tho bark of trees. The beast cuts away tho outer hark with Its chlsel-llko teeth, and ns tho worm retreats to tho end of Its holo pokes after It with a flngor. This R ger Is n remarkable organ, evidently provided by nnture for this purpose, being abnormally long and armed with ahoqkshapcd cluw for dragging out ft fa fa GetR fa fa fa 1 FOR WARM fa (f Porto Ricans, $1 to m fa Sailors, 50c to $2.50 J fa fa fa in $ Take a look at our fa TJ lL - .,.. I fa 50 cents to $3. Be fa fa fa fa fa WmwM C4-A4vmr EVi? ram aiw Wants to Knew Why. Mi.adkn, Nkii., June 10. Editor Chief: When Webster county is so poor that it can not build u court housv, and has to store the county records any old place, how can it have money to give to the town of Mladen, located in a corner of the county, to have a fair that does no one any good but the town of Bladen and a few farmers around the town? Taxpaykii. The above inquiry was sent in by a well known resident of the north part of the county. We interviewed one of the county board on the subject this morning, and he informed us that it was the opinion of the board that the Illaden fair was a worthy enterprise and needed the money. Section 3010 of Cobbey's annotated statutes of Nebraska gives the county commis sioners authority to make an appro priation of this character equal to 3 cents for each inhabitant, and the commissioners believed that, as the Illaden fair was a new enterprise, it would be no more than right to help it along. Of course, the commission ers could have refused the request for aid, but as that would probably have meant the death of the only agricult ural exhibit held in this county they wisely appropriated the money. If the fair is as well patronized tills year as it was last, the association will pro bably be able to get along without county aid in the future. And we will undoubtedly get our new court house anyway sometime. Letter List. List of letters remaining uncalled for at postolllco at Rod Cloud, Nob, for tho wook oudiug Juno 111, 1907: Jncobs, Will Korlund, Ada Myors, Davo Smith, Claud M Theso will bo sent to tho dead letter olllco Juno 27, 1007, if not called for I boforo, Whon calling for above ploaso - suy "uilvortiHod." T. C. Uaokkk, Postmaster. Pay up now. w fa fa fa fa. fa fa fa fa fa m fa fa WEATHER Probably be hot later. You can get fa fa the best selection fa now and be ready (f r. J.... fa iui wai ill uoys. m fa fa fa fa fa fa m Tl ie Straw Hat fa line is very attract- fa fa ive this season. fi fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa fa Panamas $5.00 to $7.50 $3 fa line of Soft Shirts, U Cf. CL .. fa glad to show you. $ fa fa fa cy, clothier $ Here Is Relief for Women. Mother Gray, a nurse in New York, discovered an aromatic, pleasant herb cure for women's ills, called Australian Leaf. It is the only certain monthly regulator. Cures female weaknesses, backache, kidney, bladder and urinary troubles. At all druggists or by mail M cents. Sample free. Address, The Mother (J ray Co., Ley Roy, N. Y. Savinders Brothers RED CLOUD, - NEBR. Canon City, Sunnyside, and Genuine Nigger Head Maitland COAL You may bo particular or what some call "cranky," but OUR COAL will please you. Our coal is clean and wo deliver promptly. Boll Tel. GO. Rural Tel. 71 Mercer's Barber Shop Basement of Potter Block. Massaging a Specialty eady p fi t I v -rrNBtttJ' "Wt'" " .." ,.-k;4c-,w. -1"MU "WtM3XUl! VMWVWfMiMMUMICRM.3WM l(..jH1Wt, .