EXTRACT OF BEEF We use the best lean beef , get all the essence from it , and concentrate it to the uttermost. In an ounce of our Ex tract there is all the nutrition of many pounds of beef. To get more nutriment to the ounce is impossible. Libby's Atlas of the World , with 32 new maps , size 8xii inches , sent any where for 10 cts. in stamps. Our Book let , "How to Make Good Things to Eat , " mailed free. Libby , McNeill & Libby , : CHICAGO. IN THE WORLD _ BEARS THIS TRAPE MARK 5 THOUGH OfTEKMITATED A3 A SAME COAT 'SS0 * ITHASNOEjJUAl ! EVER T * " FRLt " SHOWING FUkb UNC Of GARMENTS AND HATS. A.J.TOWSR. CO. , BOSTON. MASS. < Warranted Waterproof. Made to Etand hard linocka end rough work. Look for tho trado mar ! : . your cal r hasn't them , vrtte for dialogue to EAWTEHA&OS , Sole Vfri. Emit CuBbrUg , H u. NEW DISCOVERY ; gives qulckrcltefandcurcBWoret cases. Book of testimonials and 10 DAYS' treatment VHEE. DR. H. II. CREEK'S BOSS. Bo * K. ItlttU. G * . I FARN TO BE A DETECTIVE , : : f ; LLnlll 1 competent Secret Sen ice operators far exceeds tlie supply. Complete Instruction can be had by correspondence.Vhy not take up this noble pro fession ? Write for prospectus. Doland Secret r Service College , Security Building , Chicago. FREE Pnll-Glf 9 $1 Treatment of Or. O. r Phelps Drown'8 Great Remedy for Fits. Epilepsy and all Nervous Diseases. Address O. PHKtPS BROWN , 98 Brotdntj. Sewbnrjfc , S.T. OO . M UNION MADE. w I If or More Than a Quarter of a Century The reputation of W. L. Douglas S3.00 and $3.50 shoes for style , comfort and wear has excelled all other makes sold at these prices. This excellent reputation has been won by merit alone. "W L. Douglas aboes have to give better satisfaction than other S3.00 and § 3.50 shoes because his reputation for the best 53.00 and 53.60 thoes must be maintained. The standard lias always been placed so high that the wearer receives more value for his money in the W. L. Douglas 53.00 and § 3.50 ohoes than he can get elsewhere. W. Ii. Douglas Sells more S3.00 and S3.50 shoes than any other two manuf aoturers. W. L Douglas $4.00 Qilt Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. _ . . . . . . . . . * * * MV * r rff * * lt Jl I I .It * - ! " - - - - - . -L. OougSos $3.QO and $3.5O sfiocc aro mado of the same hfgh rryatfc featftcps used ! In $ B and $ B shoes and a.-o fast us good * Sold by the best shoe dealers everywhere. Insist upon having IV. I Douglas shoes crith name and price stamped on bottom. How to Onler by Mnil. If W. L. Douglas rtioea arc not told In your town , send order direct to factory. Slices * ent anywhere on receipt or price and . , . ' . ' " ' i- * ? ? [ v - - v5 cts. additional for carriape. My ustom department will make yon a wairtliat will equal S5 and S3 cus- U > m made shoes , in style , fit and ' wear. Take measurements of foot as shown on model ; state style desired ; size and width usually vrorn ; plain or cap toe ; heavy , ined- " mm or light soles. A fit guaranteed. Try a pair. Fust Color Eycleti otp < t ; : free. IV. . Bouclan , JJrocUton , Jtiuufl. I Wo want an agent In every county tf sell memorials. Our nfrents average frort _ 8100 to esoo per montt seJlInsthom to farmers. They so from house to house ani SitheralUtof those ivho have died In each fnmilyanc EiabtT thei3 mori l5prq T < l t for ttraiSiigtail > cwer itU lira. J iSlJ Uj c ° " < llnno tcM . for fi.rt ! T particular * . addrti i CAMPBELL & CO. , 69 Plum Street , Elgin , III When Answering Advertisements Kindl ) Mention This Taper. W.N. U OAIAHA No. 41 1901 PISO'S CURE FOR , GURtS WHEKE ALL ELSE FAILS. Best Cough Syrup. Tuetea Good. Dee In time. Sold by d.-wtlstt. C O N S-UJM P T10 N Columbia Wins Three Straight and the American Oup "Will Stay , UPTON VERY MUCH DISAPPOINTED I > ast Knco Proves Hardest of All Sham rock I < eads Most of the Way Outdone , However by Time Allowance Lipton Gives Three Cheers for Columbia. NEW YORK , Oct. 5. With victory flags flowing from its towering mast heads and the ends of its spreaders in honor of its concluding triumph in the cup races of 1901 , the gallant sloop Columbia returned to its anchorage under the escort of the entire excur sion fleet. It completed its defense of the honored trophy in another , stir ring race with Shamrock II over a lee ward and windward race of thirty miles , crossing the finish line two sec onds behind its antagonist , but win ning on time allowance conceded by Liptons' boat by forty-one seconds. For the second time it has now suc cessfully foiled the attempt of the Irish knight to wrest from our posses sion the cup that means the yachting supremacy of Jthe world. And plucky Sir Thomas Lipton , standing on the bridge of Erin , led his guests in three hearty hurrahs for the successful de fender. "Columbia is the better boat , " he eald , "and deserves to be cheered. " The series of races just closed will always be memorial as the closest ever sailed for the cup and Sir Thomas , al though defeated , will go home with the satisfaction of knowing that his golden yacht is the ablest foreign boat that ever crossed the western ocean. During both series of races not an untoward incident has occurred and Sir Thomas will return to England far the most popular of all th'e for eigners who have challenged for the Americas' trophy. Yesterday's race on paper was the closest of the series , but because of the flunking of the wind on the beat Home as a contest of the relative merits of the yachts it is not to be0comffafe3 with the magnificent , truly-run and royally fought battles of Saturday and those 'of Thursday last. The condi tions of the race at the starTyesterday were very similar to those of Thurs day. The wind was strong and from the shore embroidering the sea with foam and piling up no swell ideal conditions for the challenger. The racers were sent away before the wind , each carrying penalty for crossing the line after the handicap gun. No official record is kept of the time after that gun is fired , but the experts with stop watches estimated Columbia's handicap at fifteen seconds and Shamrock's at thirty seconds. The contest of the yacht's fleeing before the following wind was picturesque , buC not exciting. The big racers , like gulls , with outstretched pinions , had every inch of canvas spread , all of their light sails , Including bulging spinnakers and balloon jib topsails. While taking his defeat gamely , Sir Thomas Lipton made no attenipT to conceal the honest disappointment when he talked about the races on the Erin. "I am very disappointed , " he said. "I cant' hide that. I thought within fifteen minutes of the finish that we had won. I was sure as my life tnat we had won. When I look ed around the situation had changed and we had lost. It was a hard blow to be so near winning and then to lose. I should like to 'have got one race , just by way oi consolation. It is a very hard thing to be beaten by a breath by a few beats of the pulse. Churchill Startles Them. LONDON , Oct. 5. Winston Spencer Churchill , speaking last night at Old- ham , delivered himself of another se vere censure of the war policy of the government. He declared that the military situation in South Africa was now "not less momentous than when the Boer armies threw themselves into Natal at the beginning of the war , " and that the empire today "confronts difficulties and dangers more embar rassing than those which hung over it in the black week of December , 1898. " VChite' and Singers Arrive. NEW YORK , Oct. 5. Andrew D. White , ambassador of the United States to Germany , was a passenger on the steamship Auguste Victoria , which arrived in port tonight from Hamburg , Southampton and Cherbourg. Also on board the Auguste Victoria comes Mme. Sembrich , grand opera soprano. Injured by Horse .Falling : . LONG PINE , Neb. , Oct. 5. For three days , S. Rumolfson , a hard work ing and prosperous ranchman , living north of totwn , has been unconscious as the result of a fall while riding a horse. Call for liank Statement. WASHINGTON , Oct. 5. The comp troller of the currency today issued a call for a statement of the condition of all national banks at the close ol business on Monday , September 30. MAKES WAR ON BEET SUGAR Big Company Cuts Prices in Territory Where it is Produced. NEW YORK , Oct. 4 The Journal of Commerce says : President H. 0. Havemeyer of the American Sugar Re fining company was at his office this week for the first time since his ill ness , and it has been learned that one of his first official acts was to author ize one of the most spectacular reducf- tions in refined sugar prices that has ever before been made. This was ! the reduction announced in Tuesday's dispatches. It applies only to the sec tions of the country in which beet su gar competes. The cut in price at Missouri river points was to 2y2 cents per pound net for granulated. On Tuesday the net quotation was 5.03 cents. In other words , Mr. Havemeyer has authorized a cut slightly in excess of 1 % cents per pound. To understand the importance of this cut to beet sugar manufacturers it should be mentioned that the prac tice of the beet sugar people is to make contracts for their entire pro duction at prices based on the selling price of the sugar combine on the date of delivery. The beet people have heretofore been easily able to dispose of all their sugar at a dis count of 10 points from the American Sugar Refining company's figures. This means , if the beet people live up to their contracts , that they will receive 32-5 cents per pound for their pro duct. It is understood , however , that the beet sugar people will refuse to recognize the cut made by the Amer ican Sugar Refining company on the technical ground that it is in re straint of trade. The beet sugar re finers of Utah , Colorado , California and Nebraska are the refiners con cerned. It is expected that this cut will have an unsettling influence upon the local market , but it is not ex pected that it will be followed by any important cut in prices in the eastern market. No change was made in the sugar combine's prices for eastern markets yesterday ( Wednesday ) and the differ ence of 1.10 cents per pound still holds between the price of the raw and the manufactured article. The American Sugar Refining com pany people claim that beet sugar manufacturers can produce granulated sugar at 21cents per pound and that there is , therefore , a good profit , even at 3 cents a pound. This is de nied by the beet people. SECOND BOUT IS YANKEE'S. Columbia Wins Another Race .Prom Shamrock by Over Three Minutes. NEW YORK , Oct. 4. Columbia won in the second of the series of races with the Shamrock. Columbia went over the course in 3 hours , 13 minutes and 18 seconds. Shamrock's time was 3 hours , 16 minutes and ten seconds. Over the first two legs the Sham rock was ahead , due to the fact that she crossed the starting line first. The race was in a wind blowing at from twenty-two to twenty-four knots and was a lively and inspiring con test. Strikers Same as Rebels. WASHINGTON , Oct. 4. A striking example of the manner In which Rus sian authorities deal with strikes and strikers is afforded in a report at the state department from United States Consul Miller at Niu Chwang , under date of July 30. The men in the Niu Chwang oil factories stopped work for several days , striking for an in crease in wages. The Russian civil administrator of the port immediately issued edicts giving notice that he had arrested and punished the leaders of the strike and that any of the men who refused to begin work the follow ing morning would be arrested and ex pelled from the port. Indian Massacre Reported. - DENVER , Oct. 4. A special to the Republican from Albuquerque , N. M. , says : Word was received that a ren egade band of-Apache Indians from the San Carlos reservation are in the Mogollon mountains , south of this city , and that five persons have been killed by them on Willow creek , near the old Warpatch a few years ago. No particulars of the outbreak have been received. Schley Invited to Chicago. CHICAGO , Oct. 4. Admiral Sch'ley is to be invited to come to Chicago and be the guest of the Maryland so ciety of Chicago at a banquet in his honor. The banquet will take place after the court of inquiry at Washing ton has adjourned. Mrs. Roosevelt Cheeses Church. WASHINGTON , Oct. 4 It was stated at the white house that here after Mrs. Roosevelt will occupy the president's pew at St. John's Protest ant church at Sixteenth and H streets. This is one of the oldest and one of the smallest Episcopal churches In Washington and for many years one of the most desirable. Pews in it have been reserved for the family of the president of the United States whenever he should worship there. Governor Savage and Party Boy ally Wel comed to the Pan-American. STATE EXECUTIVE MAKES SPEECH Tells the Throng Something of the Re sources and Accomplishments of the Mlshouri Valley Exercises in Temple of Music. BUFFALO , Oct. 4. In observance of Nebraska day at the Pan-Americau exposition public exercises took place yesterday in the Temple of Music , where songs and instrumental num bers were given by residents of Ne braska and others. Officials of the ex position and the mayor of Buffalo made speeches of welcome , and Gov ernor Savage responded for the state. "With his full staff and a number oi other distinguished citizens of Nebras ka , Governor Savage spent the day at the exposition. The day was beauti ful , the attendance large'and the re ception accorded the western visitors hearty and demonstrative. In his speech Governor Savage paid tribute to his state , saying : "One thousand miles to the west ward there is a commonwealth young in years but rich in natural resources" It lies in what is known as the great Missouri valley. It is a state popu lated by the industrial classes. Fa vored by a vast area of productive soil and a climate well calculated to conserve vegetable and animal life , in no other place in this broad domain is industry more certain of reward or is life or health afforded a better safeguard. It has 2,000,000 of pros perous and contented people well pro vided with the necessaries of life , not the least of which , in our estima tion , is a thorough moral and intellec tual training. "Though less than two score years a state , it has large and well diversi fied commercial centers , the third larg est live stock market in the world , a complete system of railroads , affording direct communication between the pro ducer and consumer , and it annually produces for export more than $150- 000,000 worth of agricultural products. It has a most complete system of public schools and in addition it has a number of public and private col leges , in x which are taught all the higher branches , and that , too , by the most cultured talent in the-land. No hamlet is without its house of worship , nor is there a community without facilities for the mental and moral culture of its people. "Our code of laws by which we are governed , and which regulates our domestic affairs , represents the high est ideals in jurisprudence. Justice , pure and undefiled , is the spirit of every enactment incorporated therein. This state has no bonded debt , but has in its treasury nearly $4,500,000 in prime mercantile paper , which it holds as a permanent school fund. Its bank assets are far in excess of the standard per capita and its wealth is more equally and equitably apportion ed among its citizens than can be truthfully said of any other state in the union. Its high order of citizen ship is attested by its religious , char itable and educational institutions , by its numerous cities and towns well provided with all modern improve ments and by its hundreds of thou sands of well-fenced , well-tilled and well-improved farms. Its standard of Intelligence is higher , and its per cent of illiteracy is lower , than that of any. other state. This scene of hap piness , contentment , intelligence and wealth is the commonwealth of Ne braska. "As chief executive of Nebraska , permit me to bear unto you the best wishes and happy congratulations of the people of that state. That com munity of interest which intertwines and unites the people of all the states is as-strongly entrenched in the senti ment of the people of Nebraska as it is anywhere else. While jealous of our sovereign autonomy , we are not unmindful of the fact that we are but a fraction of what constitutes the federation. We love our country and its institutions. Found Near McKInluy Vault. AKRON , O. , Oct. 4. A man , badly hurt from a gunshot wound , was found in the tall grass near the woods at Mogadore , north of Canton. Friends removed him toward Cuya- hoga Falls before he could be identi fied. It is supposed he was shot dur ing the supposed attack upon the Mc- Kinley vault. Troubles at Election. BUDA PESTH , Oct. 4 Although the newspapers here publish congrat ulatory articles on the orderliness and fairness of the parliamentary general elections yesterday , which resulted in the return of a large liberal majority for the government , the fact remains that there were serious encounters in many districts , necessitating military intervention , during which the troops fired and killed or wounded numbers of people. V * t. A- Mrs. Ellen Ladies Aid . Ripley , Chaplain , Grand Army of the Republic , No. 7 , 222 loth Ave. , N. E. , Minneapolis , Minn. , Strongly Endorses Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. " DEAR MRS. PINKHAM : Your Vegetable Compound cured me of ulceration of the womb , and getting such a complete cure I felt that the medicine had genuine merit and was well worth recommending to other sick women. " For fifteen years I have been your friend. I have never written you before , but I have advised hundreds of women to take your medicine , in fact it is the only real reliable remedy I know of for a sick woman. " I have not yet found a case of ovarian or womb trouble which has not been relieved or cured by the faithful use of Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound. " You have brought health to hundreds of women in Minneapolis as you have no doubt to others over the country. " MRS. ELLEN RIPLEY. $500O FORFEIT IF THE ABOVE LETTER IS NOT GENUINE. When women are troubled with irregular or painful menstruation , weakness , leucorrhcea , displacement or ulceration of the womb , that bear ing-down feeling , inflammation of the ovaries , backache , flatulence , general debility , indigestion , and nervous prostration , they should remember there is one tried and true remedy. I ydia E. Pinkhain's Vegetable Compoiind at once removes such troubles. No other medicine in the world has received such widespread and unqualified endorsement. No other medicine has such a record of cures of female troubles. Refuse to buy any other medicine. Good for Bad Teeth Not Bad for Good Teeth Sozodont - Sozodcmt TootK Powder Large Liquid andPowder - 75c. All stores or by mail for the price. Sample for the postage , 30. Nebraska Business and Shorthand College. Hoycl Building. Omaha. Neb. The most thoroughly equipped institu tion in the west. Send for free catalogue. A. C. ONG , A. M.f L.L.B. , Prest. A man can never be a true gentle man in manner until he is a true gen tleman at heart. Charles Dickens. Brooklyn , N. Y. , Sept. 6th. GARFIELD HEADACHE POWDERS HAVE GAIN ED THE RIGHT OF WAY ! They are the kind people want simple , harmless and ALWAYS effective. The Garfield Tea Co. of this city will send sample powders upon request. The Home of Cremation. Japan is the country where the cre mation of corpses is practiced on the largest scale. The custom dates back about 1,200 years. A GREAT COUNTRY The eyes of all America are turned to ward North Dakota's magnificent crops , just harvested. Over 80,000,000 bushels oC wheat and 19,000,090 bushels of flax , good corn and abundant grasses. Thousands of farmers raised 14 to 18 bushels of flax per acre on new breaking , now bringing them $1.25 a bushel. Think of. your get ting free government land and realizing $25 per acre for the first breaking ! There is plenty of good government land left , but It is being taken up fast. Also excellent chances to go into any business in new towns on the "Soo" Line. If you want free land , or are looking for good business locations , write D. W. Casseday , Laud Agent , "Soo" Line , MinneapolisMinn If afflictedwith ' [ Thompson's Eyt Waiir core eye * , use CARTRIDGES IN ALL CALIBERS „ from .22 to .50 loaded with either Black or Smokeless Powder always give entire satisfaction. They are made end loaded in a ' modern manner , by exact machinery operated by skilled experts. | THEY SHOOT WHERE YOU HOLD * ALWAYS ASK FOR THEM H PRIZES : _ We pay this amount in Cash Prizes to our solicitors besides giving them 40 % commission. Men.Women , Boys and Girls have the chance of a lifetime McKINLEY MEMORIAL PICTURES ON CREDIT. Send your name and addresswrite us agreeing to sell them and return us the money less your commission , and-we will send you the pictures free , all charges prepaid. 1st GRAND PRIZE 51,000 ; 2nd PRIZE , $500 ; 3rd PRIZE , $250. Full particulars of other prizes sent with the pictures. Write to-day. It may mean $1,000 to you. HOUSEHOLD GUEST CO. , DepL B , CHICAGO , ILL. "Defiance" Starch gives a beautiful , stiff and lasting finish to the goods and makes them look like new. A cold water starch needs no cooking easy to use. Does not stick does not streak on colored goods. If your grocer does not keep it send us his name and we will send you a trial pack age free. At Wholesale by McCord-BraLdy Co. and Paxton & Gallagher , O mother Nebraska.