I ft 1 7 ftflllMawMMMiMMMMMMMMBMaeWBIMa i 1 t v m f m 5he Boadmaa a j 1 SF 1 Goattaned v L I M 5 By HALL CAXNE Story W 1 Sat V I 1ft j SYNOPSIS rafrir Jorgensen was the only daughter xeE cfwr srovernor of Iceland She fell In iwnz and married an idlef Stephen Orry 2Esr Xxtber had other hopes for her and m bis anger he disowned her Orry ran ssasaCF sea Of this union a child was fciOCT and Rachel called him Jason Ste gtkojL Orry was heard from In the Isle of lfaiK where he was again married and naCfiar son was born Rachel died a Eecart brokeh woman but told Jason of frftg aihers acts Jason swore to kill Eciaat and i not him then his son In the caesisaJme Orry had deserted his ship and ssoicsjtt refuge In the Isle of Man He was absltered by the governor of the Ushnd Adam Fairbrother Orry went iSrnnfcbd to worse and married a dissolute And their child called Michael unlocks was horn The woman died and Orry gave Sunlocks to Adam Fairbrother cfe adopted him and he became the lssrzaie of the governors daughter GBoeba Time passed and Adam Fair Vteother and wife became estranged their fii boys staying with their mother on snrxxsanL of Michael Sunlocks Finally Ste EJes Orry returned and Michael Sunlocks aeteniicusi ta go to Iceland his fathers 531 the week through since their sad tttEfcoa Easter Day old Adam had af CecfefS a wondrous cheerfulness and rtMyar I laughed mightily as they rode akue and winked his gray eyes know fiasfe Eike a happy childs until some Cffcces from one cause or other the big 2rpps came into them The morning tees fresh and sweet with the earth 22a2 csZ gladness and the air of song Oaisgfr Michael Sunlocks was little tHsebsa by its beauty and thought it e feaaviest he had yet seen But Jt3gja told how the spring was toward fly lambs In fold and the heifers TffarsgEag and how the April rain would Steios potatoes down to sixpence a and letch up the grass in such a zrcfr that the old island would rise xxhsr jaoi ha ha ha to the opulence position -of a state fiszi xattle on as he would he could banish the heavy looks of Mi- n7tFli nor make light the waasy iieart he bore himself So he be- Sam fi rally the lad and say how little e acaaJd have thought of a trip to Ice- 2xadL is his old days at Guinea that it nscas Kzxly a hop skip and a jump after jzZh and bless his old soul If he would- xz cc across some day to see him Srefejreea Tynwald and midsummer 2zsxl znzny a true word was said in jest Saaa they came to Rushen Abbey at JEszSasxMa and then old Adam could Ebj fvcle no longer what he had come TcaU see your father before you saaS Jjs said and Im thinking hell jgSse cm a better reason for going than ISe bzs given to me but if not and SESjSsxsjs Petersen and the Latin school Ssr all his end and intention remember narseod Manx saying that learning is ffiras clothes to the rich man and riches tS Cfac poor one And that reminds me J32S st53 plunging deep into his pocket IsC sstofher good Manx saying that tfcre are 5ust two bad pays pay be- SSrenfesiui and no pay at all so to save Ssifom both who have earned neither put this old paper into Snarolj and God bless ye Sb sayms he thrust into the lads TosimSL Toll of fifty Manx pound notes aaEbn seemed about to whip away 23b Michael Sunlocks had him by the fesrac before he could turn his horses ISicaS Bless -me yourself the lad said SZAxiE thsn Adam Fijirbrother with all TSis issaroT baiikrupt whimseys gone from Eais Trpturned face now streaming wet dzsS sriih Jils white hair gently lifted by tSssr sott morning breeze rose in the saddle and laid his hand on Michaels drooping head and blessed him And so tlaesr parted not soon to meet again car TnrtTl many a strange chance had a31en both Tt was on the morning of the day Eowins that Michael Sunlocks rode into If he could have re- rneTOfaered how he had left it as an 2saztin his fathers arms perhaps the ac te had set himself would have Eje n easier one He was trying to jCTri2 flown his -shame and it was very J2car2 io -do He -was thinking that go ta would he must henceforth toear his fathers -name Sgpen Orry was waiting for him Savimj heen there three days not liv gtjsrfiai the little hut but washing it sSfexriimj St drying it airing it and TkinSEng fires to it that by such close ISaSfssr of half -a -week it might be worthy trs -son should cross its threshold Cor trXTf an hour He had never slept 2x1 itsitsee he had nailed up the door HE32tsr tfee death of Liza ICllley and as 2u Trriblessed place It had been safe ram he intrusion of others 3fe saw Michael Sunlocks riding up and raised his cap to him as he saying Sir to him and bowing as JE25a so There were deep scars on sfe ace head his hands were casnschfefi discolored his cheeks v VEEC tisntrwed with wrinkles and about J2i3s wSole person there was a strong nador of tobacco tar and bilge water T shall not have ought to ask you TZessz tfiiriie said tin his broken Eng- daSZi aB Michael the lad answered 3cn3 Siesrwent into -the hut 2he Yp2ce -was not -much more cheer rStilttSraa of old but dark damp 5Eis and Michael Sunlocks at tfiae tSrought that -he himself had been om there and that his mother had esssE her shameful life and died her dis Ewssxced death there found the gall ua fa his throat E bave -something that I shall have csssyttoyeu said Stephen Orry but IS sE03at well speak English Not all Sc jrars through T never shall have iSfeern it And then as If by a sudden thought he spoke six words in his na tive Icelandic and glanced quickly into the face of Michael Sunlocks At the next instant the great rude fellow was crying like a child He had seen that Michael understood him And Michael on his part seemed at the sound of those words to find something melt at his heart something to fall- from his eyes something rise to his throat Call me michael he said once more I am your son and they talked to gether Stephen Orry in the Icelandic Michael Sunlocks In English Ive not been a good father to you Michael never coming to see you all these years But I wanted you to grow up a better man than your father be fore you A man may be bad but he doesnt like his son to feel ashamed of him And I was afraid to see it in your face Michael Thats why I stayed away But many a year I felt hungry after my little lad that 1 loved so dear and nursed so long like any mother might And hearing of him sometimes and how well he looked and how tall he grew maybe I didnt think the less about him for not coming down upon him to shame him Stop father stop said Michael Sunlocks My son said Stephen Orry are you going back to your fathers coun try Its nineteen years since he left it and he hadnt lived a good life there Youll meet many a one your father knew and maybe some your father did wrong by He cant undo the bad work now Theres a sort of wrong doing theres no mending once its done and thats the sort his was It was against a woman Some people seem to be sent into this world to be pun ished for the sins of others Women are mostly that way though there are those that are not but she was one of them Itll be made up to them in the other world and If she has gone there she has taken some of my sins along with her own If she had any and I never heard tell of any But If she is still in this world perhaps it can be partly made up to her here Only it Is not for me to do it seeing what has happened since Michael that why you are going to my country now Tell me everything said Michael Then Stephen Orry his deep voice breaking and his gray eyes burning with the slow fire that had lain nine teen years asleep at the bottom of them told his son the story of his life of Rachel and her father and of her fath ers curse of what she had given up and suffered for him and of how he had repaid her with neglect with his mothers contempt and with his own blow Then of her threat and his flight and his coming to that island of his meeting with Liza of his base mar riage with the woman and the evil days they spent together of their childs birth and his own awful resolve in his wretchedness and despair and then of the womans death wherein the Al mighty God had surely turned to mercy what was meant for vengeance All this he told and more than this1 sparing himself not at all And Michael listen ed with a bewildered sense of fear and shame and love and sorrow that may not be described growing hot and cold by turns rising from his seat and sink ing back again looking about the walls with a chili terror as the scenes they had witnessed seemed to come back to them before his eyes feeling at one moment a great horror of the man be fore him and at the next a great pity and then clutching his fathers huge hands in his own nervous fingers Now you know all said Stephen Orry and why it is not for me to go back to her There is another woman between us God forgive me and dead though she is that woman will be htere forever But she who is yonder in my own country if she is living is my wife And heaven pity her she is where I left her down down down among the dregs of life She has no one to prptect and none to help her She is deserted for her fathers sake and despised for mine Michael will you go to her The sudden question recalled the lad from a painful reverie He had been thinking of his own position and that even his fathers name which an hour ago he had been ashamed to bear was not his own to claim But Stephen Or ry had never once thought of this or that the dead woman who stood be tween him and Rachel also stood be tween Rachel and her son Promise me promise me he cried seeing only one thing that Michael was his son that his son was as himself and that the woman who was dead had been as a curse to both of them But Michael Sunlocks made him no answer Ive gone from bad to worse I know that Michael Ive done in cold blood what Id haye trembled at when she was by me Maybe I was thinking sometimes of my boy even then and saying to myself how some day hed go back for me to my own country when I had made the money to send him Michael trembled visibly And how look for her and find her and save her if she was alive And if she wasnt if she was dead poor girl with all her troubles over how hed look for the child that was to come when I left her my child and hers and find it where it would surely - - MilWalftlMMrTWrPtiT be In wantand dirt ana misery and then save it for It mothers sakerand mine Michael will ypuf go But still Michael Sunoclej made him no answer Its fourteen years since God spared your life to me just fourteen years to night Michael I remembered it and thats why we are here now When 1 brought you back In my arms she was there at my feet lying dead who had been my rod and punishment Then 1 vowed as I should answer to theXord at the last day that if I could hot tjo back you should Michael covered his face with his hands My son my son Michael my little Sunlocks I want to keep my vow vVil you go i Yes yes cried Michael rising sud denly His doubt and pride and shame were gone He felt only a great ten derness now for the big rude man who had sinned deeply and suffered -much and found that all he could do alone would avail him nothing Father where is she I left her at Reykjavik but I dont know where she is now NO matter I will hunt the world over until I find her and when I have found her I will De as a son to her and she shall be as a mother to me My boy my boy cried Stephen If she should die and we should never meet I will hunt the world over until I find her child and when I have found It I will be as a brother to it for fathers sake My son my son cried Stephen And in the exultation of that moment when he tried to speak but no words would come and only his rugged cheeks glistened and his red eyes shone it seemed to Stephen Orry that the bur den of twenty years had been lifted away -- To be continued FEEDING THE MONKEYS At a time when reports of famine are brought from India and our sympathies are so heavily drawn upon for the suf fering poor we cannot help feeling how hard the lack of food must fall on the wild creatures as well To understand how directly the life of the jungle is dependent upon the life of the town we need only to read such accounts as this which is given by an English lady from Dumraon India We drove some distanpe into the jun gle and stopped at a sort of stone erection at four cross roads We went up several steps and the gardener gave a loud call of Ow Ow Ow and from all directions came running monkeys some about three feet high and several mothers with tiny babies in their arms The monkeys were in distinct tribes and those on one side would not go near those on the other We threw them grain which they rapidly picked up and at last I could not resist going down to see if they would feed out of my hands They crouched round me and to my surprise a few of the big ones came up and with one little hand held mine while with the other they picked food from my palm All the time they looked anxiously into my face but if I squeezed their fingers never so little they gave a screech and bounded off showing all their teeth at me One little female trotted along by my side for a long way holding to my finger I was shocked to see the bad man ners of the gentlemen who smacked the ladies heads and knocked over the little ones in their eagerness to get at the grain I was sorry when the food wa sail gone but every day while we were at Dumraon we paid the mon keys a visit 9 MARRYING A MAN Itwas in a Duluth court and the witness was a Swede who was per haps not so stupid as he seemed to be The cross examining attorney was a smart young man whose object was to disconcert the witness and discredit his testimony What did you say your name was was the first question Yahn very deliberately Peter son John Peterson eh Old man Peters son I suppose Well John where do you live Where Ah live In Dulut Now Peterson answer this question carefully Are you a married man Ah tank so Ah was married So you think because you got mar ried you are a married man do you Thats funny Now tell the gentlemen of this exceptionally intelligent jury who you married Who Ah married Ah married a voman See here sir Dont you know any better than to trifle with this court What do you mean sir You married a woman Of course you married a wo man Did you ever hear of any one marrying a man Yes man sister did GREAT SPEED An extract from the New York Even ing Post of October 2 1807 may afford some amusement to travelers by wa ter in this last year of the nineteenth century Mr Fultons new invented steamboat which is fitted up in a neat style for passengers and is intended to run from New York to Albany as a packet left here this noon with ninety passengers against a strong headwind Notwith standing which it was judged that she moved through the waters at the rate of six miles an hour STRAPPING And what thlnkest thou of our daughter asked the king with an easy affectation of nonchalance A strapping girl forsooth replied the prince who had talked of marrying Into the family - LADIES COLUMN WOMEN AND WAR - fc rf By -Ella Wheeler Wilcox We women teach our little sons how wrone And how ignoble blows are school and church Support our precepts and inoculate The growing minds with thoughts of love and peace Let dogs delight to bark and bite we sa But human beings with immortal souls Must rise above the methods of a brute And walk with reason und with self control And then dear God you men you wise strong men Our self announced superiors in brain Our peers in judgment you go forth to war You leap at one another mutilate And starve and kill your fellow men and ask The worlds applause for such heroic deeds You boast and strut and if no song is sung No laudatory epic writ in blood Telling how many widows you have made Why then perforce you say Our bards are dead And inspiration sleeps to wake no more And we the women we whose liven you are What can we do but sit in silent homes And wait and suffer Not for us the blare Of trumpets and the bugles call to aims For us no waving banenrs no supreme Triumphant hour of conquest Ours the slow Dead torture of uncertainty each day The bootless battle with the same de spair And when at best yotfr victories reach our ears There reaches with them to our pitying hearts The thought of countless homes made desolate And other women weeping for their dead O men wise men superior beings say Is there no substitute for war In this Great age and era If you answer No Then let us rear our children to be wolves And teach them from the cradle how to kill Why should we women waste our time and words In talking peace when men declare for war DISHES FOR THE TABLE Pudding Boil one pint of milk Mix one fourth cup of sugar and one half cup of flour and wet it to a smooth paste with one fourth cup of cold milk Stir it into the boiling milk and cook about ten minutes stir ring constantly Add one fourth of a cup of butter and when well mixed set away to cool Half an hour before serving beat the yolks of four eggs until light colored and thick and the whites until stiff and dry Mix the yolks thoroughly with the thickened milk and mix in the whites lightly Turn into a shallow pudding dish well buttered place the dish in a pan of hot water in the oven and bake about twenty five minutes Serve the mo ment it comes from the over To be eatenwith sauce Sauce Rub one fourth of a cup of butter in a warm bowl until thick like cream Gradually beat into it one half a cup of powdered sugar Add one half of a cup of cream slow ly and flavor with one teaspoonful of vanilla and a few drops of almond or with four tablespoonfuls of peach or strawberry syrup Serve it on any hot delicate pudding Sardine Mustard Carefully remove the bones from six sardines and pound the flesh to a paste together with the yolks of four hard boiled eggs Add a finely minced shallot or onion also two tablespoonfuls of good mustard mixed to a paste with vinegar and salad oil Add salt and cayenne pepper to suit the taste and work all together till it is quite smooth Clam Soup Half peck clams In the shell salt to taste I saltspoon pepper 1 4 saltspoon cayenne 1 tablespoon chopped onion 1 tablespoon chopped parsley 1 heaping tablespoon butter 2 tablespoons corn starch 1 pint milk or cream Prepare the clams by boiling in the shells cutting off the black end and chopping the hard part or strap fine keeping the soft part separate from the hard Pour off one quart of the clam liquor after it settles being careful not to take any of the sedi ment put it on to boil and remove the scum Add one pint of hot water and season to taste with salt pepper cayenne onion and parsley Put in the hard part of the clams Simmer fifteen minutes strain and boil again and when boiling thicken with the corn starch cooked in butter add the hot milk or cream and the soft part of the clams Serve at once with crackers and pickles Salad Sandwiches One cup cold chicken 1 cup cold boiled tongue teaspoonful celery salt 1 saltspoonful cayenne mayonnaise to moisten Chop the meat very fine then rub with a pes tle till fine like meal Add the season ing and enough cream or mayonnaise dressing to make it moist enough to spread easily Put it between thin rounds of bread Roll baking powder biscuit dough as thin as pastry spread with butter roll another layer and put on- Cut out and bake quickly Pull apart and spread with the mix ture Sweetbread Salad Parboil twenty minutes cool remove fat and veins separate Into small pieces or cut into dice Fix them with an equal amount of fine cucumber Season with Mayon naise or boiled cream dressing Serve on -a bed of shred lettuce and garnish with shrimps m No good can come to woman more than to any class of - male mortals while each alms at doing the highest kind of work which ought rather to be held in sanctity as what only the few can do well George Eliot - v 33 FRILLS OF FASHION The collars of gownsaretobe lovrer a fashion which can readily be adopted with audacious confidence by the young A new twilled cloth slightly Tough of surface manufactured for the making of smart traveling and walking cos tumes resembles the weave of French Vicuna Handsome dualities of lightweight Venetian cloth In blues pansy and rich fruit colors including red will be much used for the first wool cbstume3 of next season Costumes In solid colors are the nov elties of the hour everything to match a rather expensive fashion but al ways a desirable one and indicative often of the well dressed woman Huge artificial flowers of chiffon won derfully tinted are among the new millinery novelties and in many cases have jeweled centers They will be re markably effective on the lace tulle and chiffon evening toques that are to be worn N The earliest importations of autumn dress goods showed smooth finished surfaces but now there is an incomr ing wave of sifeline goods with very rough surfaces Many of these materi als show pronounced white hairs on dark backgrounds Hats to be worn with youthful cos tumes of tweed and cheviot this fall are Ladysmith models of rough felt Sanglier felts they are called Upon them quills and stiff feathers are se cured with knots of brilliant gladiolus red or equally brilliant nasturtium yel low velvet The fancy for combining blue with certain shades of green still prevails though it has been worn so much that many have tired of It The newer rho dodendron blending of pink and blue Is apt to form mauve and is therefore not generally becoming though much ad mired on those who are fair enough to wear it The plain black velvet slippers may be as authorities announce the decreed mode for winter wear but shoemakers are- certainly turning out shoes that are far from plain and are veritable works of art Jeweled buckles are de cidedly in evidence and jeweled em broidery also appears A low white shoe with a deep instep flap has both flap and toe embroidered in gold and a gold and paste buckle joins the vamp sides The popularity of the Ian shoe for womens wear is a thing of the past according to the statements of Lynn manufacturers who have made a spe cialty of their production of late years Without exception the makers report a marked falling off in the demand for them and some of the concerns have not sent out any samples of them for this season Tan shoes for women were always regarded by shrewd men in the shoe business as more or less of a fad and were not expected to become an established feature of the business TALK ABOUT WOMEN Lady Gwendolen Cecil the unmar ried daughter who now presides over the household of Lord Salisbury the British premier is esteemed as one of the foremost of English mathematicians Mrs Delilah George of Lancaster N Y is said to be sthe oldest woman in that state outside of New York City The other day she celebrated her 104th birthday in full possession of her health and faculties Ella Wheeler Wilcox regards it as a significant coincidence that from her early childhood her favorite gem has been a topaz which she found out only some years after this fondness began to be her birthstone Miss Helen Hay daughter of the sec retary of state is about to publish a new boqkcalled The Little Boy Book a collection of humorous verses for children Miss Hays first book Some Verses was a collection of serious poems Miss Louise Truax a 17-year-old great-great-grandniece of Ethan Allen has captivated New York society with her ability as a whistler and imitator of birds She has just received a flat tering offer to go to London and whis tle for fashionable Mayfair Mis Mary Jane Hoopes 94 years old who recently died at Hollidaysburg Pa was a cousin of Henry Clay and was a witness of many historical oc currences including the bombardment of Fort McHenry by the British in 1814 and the scenes attending Lafay ettes visit to America in 1814 She was a passenger on the first train running into Philadelphia from Chester REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR Contentment is ambitions undertaker The only thing that can cure a man of love is to have it bad enough Women have more ways of loving than a man but men have the most love to love with Love with a woman has no rival It is always either the biggest thing or the smallest thing in life Down in her heart every woman thinks a man ought to begin proposing to her by apologizing for daring to fall in lovff with her The world will forgive a woman fol everything except what she cant help After all love is nothing but a game of solitaire between you and yourself When a man leaves his heart in the hands of a woman he always finds it again with callous spots on It When a girl lends a book to a man to read she always marks the things in It that she thinks look the deepest Tell a man a woman loves him and the first question he asks is Who Tel la woman a man loves her and the first question she asks is Which A man cant -please all women part of the time or one woman all of the time but he can always smile at all of their babies - HOME VISITS TWO SPECIAL EXCURSIONS The Fremont Elkhorn Mo Valley R R Co NOHTH W13STEBX MNE Offers all Nebraskans an rpportunity id friends in any visit their old homes or their of the following named states tto TTinTifisnta Illinois Wis east of the consin South Dakota Missouri River and Missouri on and North of St L and S F R R at the ver low rate of ONE FARE PLUS 200 for the Round Trip Dates of Sale Sept 10 and 26 Limit October 31 1900 Rate One Fare plus 200 Tickets sold to Chicago or St Louis will require execution by a Joint Agent and pay ment of 25 cents fee but those to other points will be executed by the regular rail road agent without additional charge DATES SEPTEMBER 10 AND 26 Take this opportunity to visit the East and tell your friends of the good things NEBRASKA has to offer the farmer the merchant and laborer They will then become you neighbors and thus you will help build ap our grand state X JR BUCHANAN General Pass Agent PE 31VBB Omaha Neb nn VOM Write about yourself I UJ WW stammered from childhood 1 II II r II Was perfectly cured 13 ST I fl hi m r n yars 0nly tbe af I rill Ill I1 B Meted can appreciate the awful desire one has to be cured It you are afflicted or have children who aro write to me for terms lltnrature etc Address JULIA E VAUGHN Prest OMAHA aTAMMERINQ INSTITUTE RAMGE BLOCK Omaha Nhr MAGNETIC OSTEOPATHY The above is the name of the new method of scientific treatment originat ed by Prof Theo Kharas 15J5 17 Chi cago street Omaha Neb You may have a free copy of a large catalogue which will tell you all about this new way of curing old chronic diseases with out drugs medicines or surgery Ad dress Prof Kharas Omaha Neb Chicago Tribune Your wife seems to have taken a violent dislike to Meechem Yes When he was at the house the other day he leaned his head against one of the- ornamented tidies she keeps on the rocking chairs Menses surely tirougnt on regularlj suppressions neglected often result in blotid poisoning and quick consumption and is the direct cause of womens trou bles therefore keep the menses regular with De Le Dues Female Regulator and women will be happy and healthy If it fails Kidd Drug Co Elgin 111 send free medicine until relieved and fully cured 2 per package or 3 ror 5 per mail Retail and wholesale of Myers Dillon Drug Co Omaha M A Dillon South Omaha Davi3 Drug Co Council Blurts Riggs Pharmacy Lincoln H S Baker Sioux City A complete line of rubber goods on hand ask for what you want Harpers Bazar Papa What Is you objection to Mr Hewy Hes a fine fel low He pulled in the Yale crew Agnes I dont care if he did I read in the paper about a New London po liceman who pulled in nearly the whole university HOWS THIS We offer One Hundred Dollars Re ward for any case of Catarrh that can not be cured by Halls Catarrh Cure F J CHENEY CO Props Toledo O We the undersigned have known F J Cheney for the last 15 years and be lieve him perfectly honorable In all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligation made by their firm WEST TRUAX Wholesale Drug gists Toledo O WALDING KINNAN MARVTV Wholesale Druggists Toledo O Halls Catarrh Cure is taken inter nally acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system Price 7oc per bottle Sold by all drug gists Testimonials free Halls Family puis are the best Detnot Journal The palmist was oov itive that I should have the deSTS LLD bestowed upon me 137 times An the lines indicated this But whether you are to be ambassador to England or a mere savant I do not know saii the palmist frankly - Why not doctor yourself Gonova Tablets are guaranteed by Kidd DruJo Elgin 111 to cure all diseases lnua5rS tions ulcerations of the uriSry SSeS organs bladder etc or send fre f m cine until cured if guaranteed lot aUS An internal remedy with injection blned the only one in America Price com or 2 for fe sent per mall Retan aSd wholesale of Myers Dillon Druir r Omaha M A Dillon South t vis Drug Co Council Bluffs RteS PW macy Lincoln H S Baker SioS rn Complete line of rabber goods- 6 as kf what you want Philadelphia Press If bustne5 got slack in the weather dSKKSS remarked the South Wind I could ily get a job in the theatrical businS as a frost preventive Me too orfflf the Western Cyclone Think whSf scene shifter I would make cure an Tie mi inttpq it aan4 - ouu vi cured omii if guaranteed lot flute rale thin should try these tabfetaf KiSaw10 tonics ii you are not whatvm cjtv be or want to be and SbJ rfiW to one trial and you will urai4 tera Tni1 ever 2 a package ii o 3 f o7 o daj m -moil for Drug Co Omaha M A Dm glllon Omaha Davis Drug Co cS out Riggs Pharmacy Incoln w11 llus Sioux City Full line T of BaJer ask for what you wilt rubber sooda xl i - V i N f 1