-.. j..Tjw)"iTf mnitii'-'XT V Death Lurks In Every Breeze especially these cold winter breeies, when you're so subject to coughs and coids. A little cold neglected now III cause serious trouble later. iere's but one safeguard DR.D.JAYNE'S EXPECTORANT Keep it in your home all the time then you'll be ready for the battle. Dr. D. Jayne's Expectorant removes the cause of colds, coughs, bronchitis, asthma, inflammation of lungs and chest, that's why it is the aafest and turtil remedy known. It' sold coerywhetc In three tlze bottle SI. 00, 50c, 25c Munyon's Cold rtemocly Relieves tho head, throat mid 'uugs nlmost Immediate ly. Chuck ruvo'.M, stops Discharges of the nose, taktM uu.7 nil nches mid pains caused by colds. It cures Grip and ob stinate Coughs and prevents l'ueuwoula. . 1'rleo 25c. Have you stiff or Bwollcn Joints, no mat ter how chronic? Abk your druggist for Munyon's Ilheumatls'm Itemedy nnd sco bow quickly you will bo cured. If you have any kidney or bladder trou ble get Munyon'n Kidney Itemedy. Munyon's Vltallzor mokes weak men Irons: and restores tost powers. Prof. Munyon bus Jnnt Issued a Magazine Altnnnnc, -which will be sent free to auy per son who addresses The Muuyon Company, Philadelphia. 320 Acres ofWhoot Land IN WESTERN CANADA WILL MAKE YOU RICH Fifty bushels per acre have been grown. General uveragcgrcnterthnn in any other part of the continent. Under new regulations it is possible to secure n homestead of 160 acres freehand additional 160 acres at $3 per acre. " 'The development of the country has made jr marvelous strides. It In u revelation, u rec- ' nprl .f............. 1 ... m. l. 1 - CURED IN ONE BAY Si - u. luiiijuc&i uy Bciucincni lliui is rcmuiK- ' able." Extract from correspondence of J NMloml cjttor, vmo visitcj cjnjjj in August ust. The grain crop of 1908 will net many farmers $20.00 to $25.00 per acre. Grain rulslnii, mixed farming and dairying are the principal industries. Climate is excel lent; social conditions the best; railway ad vantages unequalled; schools, churches and markets close at hand. Land may also be purchased from railway and land companies. For "Lost Dest West" pamphlets, maps and Information as to now to secure lowest rail way rates, apply to Superintendent of Immi gration, Ottawa, Canada, or the authorised Canadian Government Acent: W. V. DENNETT. 83 1 New fork Lite Bulldlm, Omaha, Ntbrsska. S2S A Big Garden for 1 6c r.renrbo.lT lores eartleat veccUbtM and brilliant donor. Therefore to eula you as a customer no effort 1000 kernels Fine Onion Seed. 1000 " Rich Carrot Seed. 1000 " Celery, 100 Parsley. 1000 Juicy Radish Seed. 1500 " Buttery Lettuce Seed. 1500 " Tender Turnip Seed. 1500 " Sweet Rut abaca Seed. 100 Melons, 100 Tomato, lino nrilllnnt Flowerlne Annuals. In nil 10,000 krrnel.of warranto! northern crown s4Kii.weii worm si.vuonnr man money wuc.uu in lllff CatAloelallDoitDalilforhutlOelnlitamDa. Atiovo exl will ewillr prtxlure 900.00 worth of rlcn TOBOiauieo anu ueauurui uoworfl. Ami ir you rntl SOo weaddapoclcagoot Larllest I'oep O'Uay fiwrtt'orn. OALZER'S seco AND plant CATAtOQ Mont nrlelniOetHl liook urer uublliihrO. Ilrlm full of bristling sel thoughts. Ulailly mailed to all la- leaning uuyersrreei wruaiouay. .John A. Seizor Sood Co. u BoxW. I Crosse, Wit. I POSITIVELY CURE RUPTURE IN A FEW OAV8 1 bay. a treatment for Its euro of Ituptur which U safe ana l conyenlcnt to take, at no time Is lost. I am zt '."... r im. .t.toni anil tbo only phyitclan who I EowVunlUd 8Ute. latent to-ni.tW for a Kup.ur. curswh ch has rcimr " doctor will Uo this. When taking my treatment paj l.tsmuiteoniotoroy office. Inferences. U. 8. J.at'1 ijnk.Oinaha. wriioorian, FRANTZ H. WRAY, Ms D, 306 Boo Building, ONI AH A DEFIANCE SYfiRGH-1 TaK 'AV.CChE1rluPERQUPAlTy.,, z&Qgmpz 'Msmma&ga&mwsiaBEBSE nasi a) year. All oinri n'v'" , 1 I I'aVinotWBBforiuiU.asroy faculty Is the CurlnB nf H until re, J " Pron uas doubts, lust fut the In & IMIIK IUU I.I -I'vil ... . .. . HIGH HONOR PAID 1 NATION'S MEN OF WORTH IN TRIBUTE TO ABRA HAM LINCOLN. PRESIDENT MAKES ADDRESS Qualities and Deeds of the Great Pres ident Set Forth by the Chief Exec utlve In Impressive Speech Im mense Concourse Gathered to Wit ness Exercises In Connection with Laying of Corner Stone of Memo rial Hall. Hodgcnvlllc, Ky. Tho corner stono of the splendid memorial to bo erected to the memory of Abraham Lincoln was laid by President Roosevelt. Tho exercises wero participated In by many of tho nation's leading men, Cardinal Gibbons and ex-Gov. Polk of Missouri being uniong tlioso who ntntlo ad dresses. From nil points, by train and over roads not particularly smooth at this season of the year, tho people gatheied to tho exorcises. A building four times tho size of tho tent provided could not bavo uccommodated tho crowd. Tho corner Btono of tho Memorial hall was laid by President Hoosoveit. In an Impressive address tho chief ex ocutlvo eulogized tho Hfo and work of tho great statesman. Ho spoko as fol lows: "Wo have met hero to o-olebrntc the ono hundredth anniversary of tho birth of ono of tho two greatest Americans; of ono of the two or three greatest men of tho nlnotccntli century; of one of tho trsatest men In the world's history. This rail splitter, this boy who passed his un Ctlnly youth In the dlro poverty of tho poorest of the frontier folk, whose rlso was by weary and paln.ul labor, lived to lead his people through tho burning flames of a struggle from which tho na tion emerged, purified us by tire, born anow to n loftier life. After long years of Iron effort, and of failure that camo moro often than victory, ho nt last roso to the leadership of tho republic nt tho moment when thnt leadership had becomo tho stupendous world-tnsk of tho time. Ho grew to know greatness, but never ease. Success camo to him, but never happiness, savo that which springs from doing well n painful and n vital task. Power was his, but not pleasure. Tho furrows deepened on his brow, but his eyes wero undlmmed by cither hato or fear. Ills gaunt shoulders wero bowed, but his steel thews never faltered as ho boro for a burden tho destinies of his people. Ills great and tender heart shrank from giving pnln; and tho task allotted him was to pour out like water tho life-blood of tho young men, and to feel In hln every fiber tho sorrow of tho women. Disaster snddened but never dis mayed him. As tho red years of war went by they found him ever doing his duty In the present, even facing tho fu ture with fearless front, high of heart, and dauntless of soul. Unbroken by ha tred, unshaken by scorn, he worked nnd suffered for the people. Triumph was his at tho last; and barely had ho tasted It beforo murder found him, nnd tho kind ly, patient, fearless eyes wero closed for ever. Washington and Lincoln. "As a people we nre Indeed beyond measuro fortunnte In tho chnractcrs of tho two greatest of our public men, Washington nnd Lincoln. Widely though thoy differed In externals, tho Virginia landed gentleman and tho Kentucky backwoodsmnn, they wero allko In es sentials, thoy wero allko In tho great qualities which rendered each ublo to m WIN WfVwwvwMMMwwwMywwwysvw ABRAHAM Born February 12, 1809 WVVWVWVWVAWWWVVWVS render service to ills nation nnd to nil mankind such ns no other man of his generation could or did render. Uach hnd lofty Ideals, but each In striving to attain theso lofty Ideals was guided by tho soundest common senso. Knch possessed Inflexible courage In adversity, and a soul wholly unspoiled by prosperity. Kach possessed nil tho gentler virtues common ly exhibited by good men who lack rug ged strength of character. Each pos sessed also all the strong qualities com taonly exhibited by those towering mas- ters of mankind who have too often shown themselves devoid of so much lis tho understanding of tho words by which wo signify tho qualities of duty, of merry, of devotion to tho tight, of lofty dlstlnterestcdncss In battling for tho Rood of others. There have been other men us Rreat and other men as Rood, but In nil tho history of mankind there tiro no other two Rrent men ns good ns these, no other two good men ns Rrent. Wide ly thoilRh tho problems of to-day differ from tho problems set for solution to Washington when he founded this nnllon, to Lincoln when ho saved It and freed tho slave, yet the qualities they showed In meeting these problems nro exactly the same ns those we should show In doing our work to-day. Lincoln's Deep Foresight. "Lincoln saw Into tho future with the prophetic Imagination usually vouchsafed only to the poet nnd the seer, llo lmd In him nil tho lift toward greatness of tho visionary, without nny of tho vision ary's fanaticism or egotism, without nny of the visional' 's narrow Jealousy of tho practical mnn and Inability to strlvo in practical fashluu for tho leallzntlon of Kp J n 1 n r ft PlMili WJr Jm CfH'iitiiiiiiiiiiiiiM yty KlrnlrWLuj vv ' Imi (If .iwiiiHiiiuiiiimiiiiuiii'" . tlfJrlfyfyj TV -Zjt- y' jStKiB"1"! iiotiiMiiiinoiHiitiiiiiitiiitiiiiiiniiiiN sffiMftftlif'lflUf 4Vj' ' "ffllEY 5WaiiiiMii,.iiitiiiiiiniiiiiii'jiiiiiiir JffnMifllU6nlJffjf ,. . Jiabr . f Jim jsramimminuiinamniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;u' llMir ttPS- jJa. t ff jilBwranmisniaisiMtufMtiiwiiiMitiiiiiitwuritiini' Wc&Cffip mfeaTtWS nr Jp'ww'iwiii'iiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiitiiiiii.'ii' r K8!) v jLjJmiHinifiiwiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiii rzf&w88gmO .It 'im fflWiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJiiiiiJiiiii'' 'SaPnjijii i-1"-. xfT I LINCOLN CsSd-Jf r ' MEMORIAL jf J--" y nn Idenl. lie Imrl tho practical man's hard common senso nnd willingness to adapt means to ends, but there wns In him none of that morbid growth of mind nnd soul which blinds so many practical men to tho higher things of life. No moro practical mnn over lived than this homely backwoods Idealist; but ho hnd nothing In common with tlioso prnctlcal men whoso consciences are warped until they fnll to distinguish between good and evil, fall to understand thnt strength, ability, shrewdness, whether In tho woild of business or of politics, only servo to mako their possessor n moro noxious, n more evil member of tho community, If thoy nro not guided nnd controlled by u lino nnd high inorul sense. Lessons from Lincoln's Life. "We of this day must try to solve many soclnl und Industrial problems, requiring to nn especial degree tho combination of Indomttnblo resolution with cool-hendcd sanity. Wo can prollt by the wny In which Lincoln used both theso traits ns ho strove for reform. Wo can lenrn much of vnluo from tho very attacks which following that course LINCOLN Died April IS, 186S MAAiMitAMMAAAAMWMVWVVVWVWVNAWVVI brought upon Ills head, attacks allko by the extremists of revolution nnd by tho extremists of reaction, He never win crcd In devotion to his principles, In his love for the union, nnd In his abhor rence of slavery. Timid nnd lukewarm peoplo wero always denouncing him be cause ho was extreme; hut its a matter of fact ho never went to extremes, ho worked step by tstep, and because of this th extremists hated nnd denounced him with a fervor which now seems to us fan tastic in Its delllcatlon of the unreal and ' the Impossible. At the. very tlmo when 0110 side was holding him up an ths apostle of soclul revolution becauso ha was against slivcry. the leading abo litionist denounced him as tho "slava hound of Illinois " When he was tho sec ond time candidate fot president, the ma jority of his opponents attacked him be cause of what they termed his extreme radicalism, while a minority threatened to bolt Ills nomination bt cause ho was not null ml enough. Me hnd continually to check thono who wished to go forward too fast, at tho very tlmo that ho over rode the opposition of those who wished not to go forward at all Tho goal was never dim before his M011. but ho picked his way cautiously, without cither halt or hurry, ns ho strode towatd It. through such 11 morass of dltllciilty that no mnn of less courngo would hno attempted It, whllo It would surely lunn ovciw helmed nny man of Judgment l.s sciene. Man of Great Toleration. "Yet, perhaps the most wonderful thlnn of all, and, from the standpoint of tho American of to-day nnd of tho future, the most ltally Important, was tho extraordinary wav In which Lincoln could fight vnllnntly ngnlnst what he deemed wrong, nnd yet preserve undi minished his Invo nnd respect for tho brother from whom ho differed. In tho hour of a triumph that would have turned nny wenkor man's head, In tho heat of a struggle which spurred many a good man to dreadful vlndli'tlvoness, ho snld truthfully that so long as he had been In his odlcn he had never willingly planted a thorn In nny man's bosom, and besought his supporters to study tho Incidents of tho trial through which they wero passing as philosophy from which to learn wisdom nnd not ns wrongs to be avenged; ending with tho solemn exhorta tion that, ns tho strlfo was over, all should reunite In a common offort to savo their common country. .Strong Sense of Justice. "Iln lived In dnys that wero great nnd terrible, when brother fought ngnlnst brother for whnt each slnceroly deemed to bo tho right. In a contest so grim the Btrong men who nlono can enrry It through nro rarely nblo to do justice to tho deep convictions of those with whom they grapple In mortal strlfo. At such times men sco through n glass dark ly; to only tliu rurcst and loftiest spirits Is vouchsafed that clear vision which gradually comes to all, oven to the lesser, as tho struggle fades Into distance, nnd wounds nro forgotten, and peace creeps back to tho hearts that worn hurt. Ilut Lincoln was given this supremo vision. He did not hate tho man from whom ho differed. Weakness wns ns foreign ns wicked to his strong, gcutlo nature, but his courage was of a quality so high that It needed no bolstering of dark pas sion. Ho snw clearly that the sumo high qunlltles, tho snmo courage, nnd willingness for self-sacrlflco. nnd dnvo--tlon to tho right as It was given them to see tho right, belonged both to tho men of the north and to thu men of tho south. As tho years roll by, nnd as all of us, wherever wo dwell, grow to feel an equal prldo In the valor and self-devotion, nllko of tho men who woro tho blue nnd tho men who wore tho gray, so this whole nation will grow to feel n pocullnr senso of prldo In tho mightiest 'of the mighty men who mastered tho mighty days; tho lover of his country nnd of all mankind; tho man whoso blood was shed for tho union of hh) people, nnd for tho freedom of a rnco, Abraham Lincoln." Bishop Butler's Generosity. So mnny examples of episcopal cu pidity have been cited In tho Office Window of lato that tho average read er may bo excused for believing tho bishop of a century or so ngo to havo been an Incarnation of greed. Hut against tho I.uxmorcs, tho Watsons nnd tho Portcouses may bo Bot tho saintly Butler, whoso "Annlogy" Is still used as a text-book for clerical exam inations. Hutlor kept opon house at Durham, whoro ho dispensed hospi tality with a luvlBh hand. On ono oc casion a man called at tho palaco so liciting a subscription for some charl tablo object. "How much money Is thoro In tho house?" asked llutler of his socrotary. Tho secretary, after In vestigation, roplled thnt thoro woro 500. "GIvo It to him. then," replied tho philosopher bishop, "for It la a shamo that a bishop should havo so much." London Chronicle. Poo-Ban In Real Life. A countorpnrt of l'oo-llah hns been found In Now Jersey. Tho town of Hovorly has elected a now coiiBtablo whoso pay Is to bo J5 a month. In addition to his constabulary work, tho Incumbent of this overpaid sine cure must nlso servo ns pound-kcopor, harbor mastor and ovorseor of tho poor. This "multiim In parvo" Job must ho looked upon as ono of great hopor, as thero woro sis applicants for It. The Exceptional Equipment of the California Fig Syrup Co. and the scientific attainments of its chemists have rendered possible the production of Syrup of Tigs and Klixir of Senna, in all of its excellence, by obtaining the pure medic inal principles of plants known to act most beneficially nnd combining them most skillfully, in the right proportions, with its wholesome and refreshing Syrup of California Figs. As there is only one genuine Syrup of Figs and F.lixir of Senna and ns tho gen uine is manufactured by nn original method known to tbe California Fig Syrup Co. only, it is nlwnys necessary to buy the genuine to gt its beneficial effects. A knowledge of the above facts enables one to decline imitations or to return (hem if, upon viewing the package, the full name of the California Fig Syrup Co. U not found printed on the front thereof. NOT FOR HIM. "Now, boy, thin Is Important! It's an Invitation to dinner'" "Thanks, boss. Hut I can't accept, Mo dress suit's in hock!" IN AGONY WITH ECZEMA. Whole Body a Mass of Raw, Bleeding, Torturing Humor Hoped Death Would End Fearful Suffering. In Despair; Cured by Cutlcura. "WortlB cannot describe, tho torrlblo eczema I Hiiffcrod with. It broke- out on my hond und kept spreading until it covorcd my wholo body. I wns almost a solid mass of sores from head to foot. I looked moro liko a plcco of raw beef than a human ho lng. Tho pain and asony endured scorned moro than I could bear. Mood and ptia oozed from tho great soro on my scalp, from under my linger nails, and ncurly nil over my body. My cara woro so crusted and Bwollen I waB afraid they would break off. Every hair In my head fell out. I could not Bit down, for my clothes would stick to tho raw nnd bleeding flesh, making mo cry out from tho pain. My family doctor did all ho could, but I got worao and worse. My condition was awful. I did not think I could live, nnd 'wanted death to come and end my frightful sufferings. "In this condition my mother-in-law bogged mo to try tho Cutlcura Rem edies. I said I would, but hnd no hopo of recovery. Hut oh, what blessed ro lief I experienced after applying Cutl cura Ointment. It cooled tho bleeding nnd Itching flesh nnd brought mo tho first real sleep I had had In weeks. It was ns grateful as ico to a burning tongue. I would batho with warm water nnd Cutlcura Soup, then apply tho Ointment freely. I also took Cutl cura Resolvent for tho blood. In a short tlmo tho sores stopped running, tho flesh began to heal, and I know I was to get well again. Then tho hair on my head began to grow, nnd in n short tlmo I was completely cured. I wish I could tell overybody who has eczoma to uso Cutlcura. Mrs. Win. Hunt, 13'G Thomas St., Newurk, N J., Sept. 28, 1908." I'ottar Drug1 & Chcm. Corp., Solo I'rops., Uostoa One Spider's Doings. Tho entire flro nlarm system ol Bayonno, N. J., was recently thrown out of ordor by a slnglo spider. Tho Insect hnd got caught whoro all tho wires of tho transmitter room con vergo together, nnd Its body hung In bucIi a way as to short-circuit tho wholo Bystem. Thoro aro four advantages In tak ing Munyon's Homeopathic Itomedles. First, they aro positively harmless. Second, they aro pleasant to take. Third, thoy rollovo quickly. Fourth, they cost nothing unless thoy glvo eat Isfactlon. Prof. Munyon has Just Issued a Magi nzIno-Almnnac, which will bo sent freq to nny person who addresses The Munyon Compnny, Philadelphia. Small-minded mon regard faith as a theory; largc-mlndod men uso It as a practical working power to got things done and dono right. Ruskln. Great Home Eyo Remedy, for nil dit-eaces of the eye, quick relief from using PKTTIT'S KVK SALVK. All (lrugBibts or Howard Ihos., UuiTalo, N. Y. Somo peoplo spend so much tlmo handing out ndvlco that thoy havo no tlmo to accomplish anything. For Hoarseness nnd Coughs "Ilrown's Hronchlal Troches" nro wonderfully ef fectlvi'. 25 cents a box. Samples sent freo by John I. llrown & Son, IJoslon, Mass, Wlso men mako proverb3 that fools may mlsquoto them, VU.V.H CtmiCO IN O TO II HAYS. PAZO OINTJUSNT Is gimmntet-d to euro any caw nf Ititilnu, mind, llloistlnic or I'rotruaiiig I'lleslu 6 to It Un) or monuy refunded. Wo. It Isn't tho knocker who gains ad mission to our conlldouco, Lewis' Singlo Binder costs moro than other Ec cigars. Smokers know why. Your denier or Lewis' Factor)', Peoria, III. Women wouldn't bo so talkatlvo It they only spoko their minds. Weddlng-vells owo tholr origin to tho old Anglo-Saxon custom of hold ing n square plrco of cloth over th lunula of the htldo and bridegroom whllo they were being married. In one year the main whcol of a wafeh makes -IfiO revolutions, tho cen tral wheel S.7H0, the third whcol 70, 080. the fourth na&.GOi) and tho os cape wheel "IM.SCO. ... 11 f Edward Ought to Know. Ilarrliuau says that the boy who. enters the railroad business must not expect an easy life. KINDNESS TO PARENTS. Kindness to parents is a nuttier Hiat too many young people these days too often overlook. George T. Augell, tho veteran editor of Our Dumb Animals, speaks of his good old mother onco saying to him, "Oeorgo, you will never want for money because .you hnvo been so kind to your mother." Thoro Is nothing that indicates nobility of character more clearly than klndnesn In word and deed to parents n hid nest that does not permit of tho tiso of the words "tho old man" or "tho old woman" In speaking of father or mother. Many u father and mother have gone to their graves heart bioken because of the ttuklnilness of their ehllilten. It should never be. It Ih low, 'man, eiuel, eonleinptlblo. Westboto (Miihh.) Chronotypo. Improving Hlo Time. A lonchor In ono of tin- puhllo schools tif Washington was nffortllm: the- principal some Informal Ion as to llu nitM'liH nnd ili-mui'lts or tho vari ous youngsters in her charge when r.ho nintli' this observation touching ono ef them: "There is ono of my brightest hoys hitting on the bench In tho corner of tho yiud, writing, whllo his com panions nro wauling their time In idlo play. No doubt ho Is writing his lessons out for tomoiroy. Here, Clar ence," bIio ndded, as slio approached tho youngster, "lot us bco what you nro writing." I Clarence demurred. "No, ma'am,'! said ho; "I would rather not." I "ModoRt," said the teacher to th principal. 'Come, Clarence, let u read It." Much against his will, Clnrenco surrendered tho paper he was com posing. This Is wh' t he had written: "1'leaso oxcuso my son Clarenco from school today, as ho Is needed at ho ." Mpplncotts. Selma Lagerlof. The frightful devastation of Sicily, which has Just occurred has aroused! the Interest of tho world In this beau tiful laud, and Its picturesque people. Hooks on the country nro eagerly sought, but none so faithfully palnU Its natural beauties und tho wonderful charm of Its climate us docs the book: by Sulma Lagerof, entitled "The Mir acles of Antichrist." Shu bus depicted with the Insight of genius the qiinlus superstitions, the picturesque pover ty, tho fierce vlndlctlvoness nnd th Impulsive devotion of tho Sicilians and her word plctifes of the Island ItselC will always stand nB toinnrkablo des criptions of a region whoso beauty In now a mattor of memory. Messrs. Lit tle, llrown & Company, who publish, tho book, nro bringing out u now ed ition In February. Ono of tho best things written of Edgar Allen Poo apropos of tho re cent centennial anniversary was In tho Chicago Post. It said: "Somo peoplo, seem to know more about what Edgar! Allan Pou drank than they do about! what ho wrote." Hut with all woman's resourcefu'-; iiess she has not yet llgured out iV way to keep both hands in her muff nnd nt the mime tlmo to hold up her Bklrt. Indianapolis News. ' Poultry raisers must wish their liens wero white nnts. A scientist nnnounces that one of the latter lays, 80,000 eggs a day. At that rate tho owners would scon havo the rating of Standard OH maguatcs. Photographs ttiken from alr-shlp or balloons have long slnco been con sidered n read method or learning tho whereabouts of an enemy's forces or fortifications In tlmo of war, but snap-shots by a rnmern attached to a pigeon nro nn nltogether now Idea. This minute photographic apparatus' Is an Invention of a German. Doctor Neubronner, and has Just been patent ed. Tho little camera weighs only two and one-half ounces, and as many. as thirty snap shots can bo taken automatically. Out of tho fi8R locomotives now working on tho i all ways of Houmanlal 127 nro using petroleum residue as a combustible. Tho Chlnoso rarely Indulge In nl cohollc drinks, hut aro addicted to tho, use of opium. Tho Koreans shun op-, linn, but are tor.d of an occasional al coholic Jntr. At the present ratio of progress, soventy years will olnpso beforo tho! ruins of Pompeii are entirely uncov-: orod. Day. on Money weight Scales Vanguard Most Slicing Machlnei Temnlntois Computing Choeso Cutters. MONP.YwmailT SCAl.1! CO., II. II. Marshall, Mgr.,817 V Street; Lincoln, Nebniska. Beatrice Creamery Company Pays tho hlgliost prlco for CUE&Wi I i sjsssi ii s isi ill assini iiisssisssi Please call on our Receiving Agent HERBERT E.GOOCH CO. lIUOKI'.ltS ANU DKALUKS Grain, Provisions, Stocks, Cotton Main Olllce, 304-205 Prnternlty Uldg. Lincoln, Nehruska. Holl Phono 512 Auto Phono 24J9 I.nrKCst IIouBfi lu State f f i ? 1 in ii M H i, j . f .. '. b ,r h H . tr. ft I . k - - . r v-ij .i-gt,t-MWfSBaigltti1im,mmgayrim. 'MrrryH7.jil;lljij;l;,'jjgV;