C' i"vK-x bHP v-f . a , t - a t TJ- - ' r I N L ) i i. J ,. , m :v . Every housekeeper should know that if they will buy Defiance Cold Water Starch for laundry use the; will save not only time, because it never sticks to the iron, but because each package contains 16 oz. one full pound while all other Cold Water Starches are put up in -pound pack ages, and the price is the same. 10 cents. Then again because Defiance Starch is free from all injurious chem icals. If your grocer tries to sell you a 12-oz. package it is because he has a stock on hand which he wishes to dispose of before he puts in Defiance. He knows that Defiance Starch has printed on every package in large let ters and figures "10 ozs." Demand De fiance and save much time and money and the annoyance of the iron stick ing. Defiance never sticks. We have never yet seen a pretty girl with a swell figure who didn't try to find out if she was being rub bered at. What's in McClure's. The October McClure's is devoted pe culiarly to American life and activities Not a story in it. nor a speci.il article, nut concerns tlie real and immediate thing.s that move this country at large "a.slor Charles Wagner, the Trench clergyman-author of "The Simple Life." writes of his visit at the White 2Iou.sc, and with simple directness tell of the children and the household life of the president as he saw them, lie writes an interesting and important es timate of President Roosevelt as a man. "What Kansas lid to Standard Oil" concludes Miss Tar'tell's story of the oil war in Kansas, and tells excitingly of how the Kansuns rushed in and won. 'I'loncer Transportation in America" is the truthful lomaucc of trallic. an itbsorhingly interesting story full of curious information. In this first pa per Chniles F. I.ummis, foremost au thority on the subject, carries tratlic through America's heroic at,re up to tin; beginnings of the great days on the plains. Every time a man cheats the devil he knows in his heart that sooner or later the devil will get even. Seid a Fftstal for 'ktfPreseife Protect The Health of your families by insisting on Pure Food. When h Baking Powder, it means a sarin? of health and money if you use the standard article of purity and effi ciency the wonderful Kf BAKING W POWDER An absolutely pure baking; scientifically combined. 25 for 25 cents. Your grocer your money it you are isfied. Don t accept a t tute! They are impure and a men ace to health. the standard WINCHESTER "NEW RIVAL" BLACK POWDER SHELLS The most successful hunters shoot Winchester " New Rival " Factory Loaded Shotgun Shells, blue in color, because they can kill more game -with them. Try them and you will find that they are sure fire, give good pattern and penetration and are satisfactory in every way. Order Factory Loaded " New Rival" Shells. Don't accept any substitute. ALL DEALERS SELL TH PRICE. 25 Cts. TO CURE Tit GBP, IN ONE DAY ANItOHPIME &Z TiciioiapwftiajE lraisIwSMeHM;l3iraaWl LV fi KUBfcS WHLflfc AIL Elbt rAH.3. L-l E2 Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Uef9 Q tn time. Sola bv drnqrfcta. SI SAYS AMERICANS ARE LEARNING HOW TO EAT. In America, eating Is becoming more of a fine art as well as a pastime and accomplishment every day. Americans are learning how to eat. They have passed the stage of civilization where anything and every thing will go and are becoming par ticular eaters. Nothing but the white heart of the wheat berry (Pillsbury's Vitos) is NOW good enough for those who have tried this cereal breakfast food. It is the most economical and it is actually the "Meat of the Wheat" Sterilized nothing added nothing taken away; pure white in color, it serves an ap petizing breakfast dish, made in the greatest mills, of the best wheat, and by the oldest miller, PILLSBURY. This is your guarantee. Put up only in two pound, airtight packages. Look for the words, "Meat of the WhtaL" A package will make you twelve pounds of Substantial family food and can be purchased at your grocers. Price 15c. Rock Mountain territory 20c. Ask him to-day. He will gladly fill your order be cause he knows he sells you satisfac tion. Some people would worry them selves to death if they didn't have trouble to think about. Important to Mothors. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORI V, a safe and pure runedy for infants and children, and tee thai it Bean the Signature of r&o&j&tt la Uoo For Over SO Yearn. Tlie Kind You Uave Always Bought. Most people are satisfied with what they have. It's what they haven't that causes their dissatisfaction. If you allow your wife to have the last word the row will soon end. comes to powder ounces refunds ESMaj,rC3 -a CM1CA00 j, not sat -VMH mikHr- substi- Ask for K C, of quality. JAQUES MFG. CO. Chicago. M Dainty, Crisp, Dressy ojiinnimrflar klrt are a delight to the refined woman every where. In order to get this result see that the material is pood, that it is cot in the latest fashion and use in the lanndry. All three things are import ant, but the last is absolutely necessary. No matter how fine the material or how daintily made, bad starch and poor laundry work will spoil the effect and ruin the clothes. DEFIANCE STARCH is pure, will not rot the clothes nor cause them to crack. It sells at 10c a sixteen ounce pack age everywhere. Other starches, much in ferior, sell at 10c for twelve ounce pack age. Insist on getting DEFIANCE STARCH and be sure of results. Del lane SitaircEi ompatitiy, Omaha, Nebraska. EMU an Starielti ANTI-GRIPINE IS GUARANTEED TO CURE GRIP, IAD COLD, HEADACHE AND IEUIAL6IA. I won't sell AtUrlpIe to a dealer who won't Guarantee) It. Call for our MnSEV HACK IF IT JM.VT CUKE. f. W. Dtemter, M.n.,iUaaIaaUucr.SjrimgfieU, Mo. mat ro FOR FAKVEH5. nnj-theoS-ap- Oft and lf- SVn.l fur T.rtic iffll I" 1. " W. t-ond t.,r .rfivs Chicago Scale Co., Chicago, 111.' araawiM SIIV IMbMBM ft Eft WANf .. - . m M m -- - , TtoMjJota MVBkBlBVaVffBPa VaVaaP WKn.HU vr N LONDON there has just died a man known to gen u i n e philanthro pists and those people of reason whose gospel is the gospel of works as "The Father of Nobody's Chil dren." With the passing of bis lamp of life, the man who as founder and director of philanthropic insti tutions by which nearly sixty thou sand orpnan waits have been rescued, trained and ena bled to give good account of- them selves in life, end ed his stewardship and entered into trnl rest. Be cause this man has Kii7on; have been lived, useful raked out of the gutters and slums of London, and many of the theories con cerning original sin and total deprav ity have been severely punctured. His name Thomas John Barnardo is graven upon the hearts of thousands, uplifted because he lived and worked, and the world has been bettered be cause of him and his efforts. Born in Ireland in 1845, Thomas John Barnardo was of Spanish de scent A Protestant and nonconform ist, his education was obtained in pri vate schools, and at an age when the sons of well-to-do fathers begin to form in their own minds ideas as to their future, he decided to become a missionary. It was his ultimate in tention to spend his life in China, and, desiring to equip himself the bet ter for work abroad, he went to Lon don, where he began the study of med icine and upon the receipt of his de gree continued his studies in the hos pitals of London, Edinburgh and Paris. It was during his student days at the London hospital in Whitechapel road that he determined upon his career. How well he fulfilled his mis sion is now written in the history of the world's good deeds. His first term in the London hospi tal was in that gloomy, eventful and ominous year 1866. a period of politi cal agitation, commercial disturbance it was in May that the stoppage of the great discount establishment of Overend & Gurney produced'such con sternationand an outbreak of chol era, due to impurities in the water supply. Neither the political situation nor the commercial depression en grossed young Barnardo. He gave evidence this early of the philanthrop ic stuff within him. and although com paratively inexperienced, volunteered for the cholera service. He was glad ly accepted, for volunteers were few. Of his personal security he seemed never to think and made a house to house visitation of the East End poor, others refusing the service on the ground that it would be going into the jaws of death. When the scourge was over Dr. Bar nardo went back to the hospital and dissecting room. His work in the poor quarters had given him a new view of life, however, and he made up his mind that it was his duty to contribute something toward helping those who appeared unable to help themselves. As a beginning he estab lished a Ragged School in the very center 6f squalid Stepney, to which he devoted two nights each week and all of Sunday. Of this work he said some time before his death: "I was a young medical student when my attention was directed by the condition of a single little street arab, of whom I had then no knowl edge, to the necessities of the desti tute waifs and strays of London. Mv acquaintance wun mat boy about forty years ago led to a careful inves tigation of the great East Erfd prob lem. I began in a small way, knowing nobody, to do my work; had one poor little chap in my own lodging for two or three weeks, then two or three more, and then as I picked up more children I put them in lodgings. I had at one time as many as fifty chil dren, lodging them all about me, send ing them to the common day school during the day and providing for their wants through help from friends ard some of my fellow students, and. of course, what I could spare myself. "The first regular home came in 1S6S. It was a small and very poor affair; such a ramshackle, broken down place. We whitewashed the walls and scrubbed the floors our selves. I sent my first little boy to Canada in 1S67, so as far back as "that year I began Canadian emigration and continued to send occasional parties until 1SS2, when I started organized Recovering Lost Treasure. It was but a few years ago that a ship with $250,000 in gold was sunk not far from Shanghai and that divers were sent to the spot to recover the treasure. The ship lay at the depth of 160 feet, making it a work of ex treme difficulty and hazard, but day aner uaj uie uiei lauweu, laning up box after box through which the seaworms had already bored their tiny holes, until four-fifths of the gold was recovered. Then, one day, a fleet of pirate junks bore down upon them and it was only by the exertion of the most tremendous efforts that the par- ty escaped with what they had al- reaay recoereu. auu dncinuru mej j returned and completed the job and took out the very last box of gold! Truly, the age of romance is still with us. Technical World. Fasting to Reduce Weight. Alderman Moritz C. "Wuerz of Kan sas City started on a three weeks' fast with the vfew of reducing Ms weight. Before beginning his ordeal he tipped the beam at 250 pounds and ne 1S ueieruiiueu icuute uu uy . X JAA..M.ZMJ .. mm.. 4l.: 1 ' at least 100. mkm wwmwm niildiwioit mm 4P SL-I AiJksW&flbw araaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaUaaTBaaaaWm .-.BaaaVWaaaaaaaaV. - aaaalaaTVav BBBBirwrV -r llinl I illnBBBaKVaBia HI Barnardo 4Vb1Ib9B? aMnfa avaanHl m im, rw & KJPIMW. o JJP. J75C&-JC&7rJS&MZ2DO emigration on a large scale. Close upon 60,000 children have been res cued) from the streets. These have been educated and trained and placed out in life. Everybody knows the char acteristic features that make our work unique. Most orphanages and institutions have certain rules for the admission of candidates. Ours is only that a child must be destitute. We search for them; we don't wait foi them to come to us. We have a varying number of expert men and women always at work searching the common lodging houses, the streets and lanes of squalid parts of the great cities of England, and in most of the towns we have places where the doors are always open, our idea being that in every great center of popula tion there should be a door open at which the feeblest little knock or cry of a waif can be heard. None ever re fused if destitute; it does not matter what creed, sex, age, country, lan guage or what physical condition. They come to me deaf, dumb, blind, crippled, maimed for life, with their features horribly distorted, at times often with the hand of death upon them, so that I know they can be with us but a short time. Our doors are never closed against any little children. "The question of money never en ters, I mean to say that we accept a child whether there is any money at hand or not. I receive children when I have not a penny at hand. Funds or no funds, about eight cases are admit ted every twenty-four hours, and I al-waj-s have about 5,000 children under my care. And my boys and girls have done well in the world, too. Some of my girls have married persons of very superior ranks of life. I have boys who are clergymen, nonconformist unuisiers, lawyers, uoctors. une nas reached parliament. The rank and file of my boys are mechanics and I laborers. Of carpenters, blacksmiths, I printers, matmakers, tinsmiths and other trades I have an immense num ber. And would you believe it, less than 3 per cent of all the boys and girls of mine have gone to the bad?" A Christian whose Christianity was not of the ready made sort was Dr. Barnardo. He called himself "An humble servant of the Lord," and he practiced all his preaching. The great work of Dr. Barnardo, now known wherever men of benevo lence and charity aid their fellows, did not develop without trials and tribu lations. A Protestant Irishman, a nonconformist, he was at the first de nounced by the Church of Rome and the Church of England. He appeared many times as a defendant in the courts and so-called Christian socie ties fought him until finally he was obliged to enter a suit for libel in or der to vindicate himself and keep his work from failure. This cost him $40,000 and much anguish of spirit, but it won the day, for it brought to his assistance a late chief justice of England, who helped him with money and influence. Now that he is gone. Catholics. Protestants, men and wom en of all sects, are offering tributes to his memory, and Queen Alexandra herself, a patron of his society, is evincing a deep personal interest in its affairs. To-day in Canada and the United States there are twenty thousand men and women, industrious, law-abiding. God-fearing. They are graduates of the schools which Dr. Barnardo found ed and watched over with unceasing vigil, patient care and undiminishing sympathy. And they know, better than others can, that the world is poorer because out of it has been tak en "the father of nobody's children." Henry Barrett Chamberlin in Chi cago Record-Herald. Pearl Fishing in the United States. Pearl fishing in the United States has been carried on In many states, including Kentucky, Tennessee, Tex as. Wisconsin, Illinois, Arkansas, Mis souri. Georgia and Kansas. One pearl from a freshwater mussel was sold for $1,500, while a round pink pearl irum rennessee brought $650. One of the finest pearls ever collected in the United States was the "Queen " It had a beautiful luster and weighed ninety-three grains. It was found near Paterson, N. J., in 1857, and was sold to the Empress Eugenie for $2 - 500. To-day it is probably worth $10- 000. Randolph I. Geare, in the Sci" eniinc American. American Women in London Society. American women are much to the fore just now in the social life of Lon don. Mrs. Mackay, who has come to be known as "the silver queen," is among the best-known and most pop ular hostesses: Mrs. Chauncev is young, rich aad beautiful; Mrs. Adair is coming in for a good deal of atten tion and Lady Naylor-Leland 1ms hppn euienaimng .ngusn and foreign roy- !- n . . aity at Hyde Park house. " BtS22C!sl m r "' Tiny Elephant is Dined. "Jumbo Junior," a tiny elephant that is now the pet of London, was dined" by "some fair Americans" at a restaurant and afterwords "enter tained the company with favorite airs on the mouth organ." Lewis' "Single Binder" straight 5c dear. Price to dealers $36.00 per M. They cost some more than other brands, but no more than a good 5c cigar should cost. Lewis' Factory, Peoria, 111. Mike Sullivan: There are eight men in the vicinity of Solomon who are named Mike Sullivan. To distinguish them they are known as Mike Pete, Mike Bat, Smoky Bat, Prairie Mike, Mike Dan, Corner, Mike,-Wild Mike, Big Mike, Little Mike. Kansas City Journal. FARMS FOR RENT OR SALE OX CROP payments. J. MULHALL. Sioux City, la. Industries of Milan. The province of Milan is one of the important industrial centers of Italy. It contains 300 silk mills, giving em ployment to 40.000 workmen: 200 cotton mills, with 25.000 workmen, and twenty woolen mills, with 3,000 workmen. Ask Your Dealer for Allen's Foot-Etse A powder. It rest: the feet. Cures Swollen, Sore, Hot, Callous. Aching, Sweating Feel and Ingrowing Nails. At all Druggists ntul Shoe stores. 5 cents. Accept no substitute. S-imple mailed FREE. Address, Alleu 3 Olmsted, LeKoy, N. Y. To Keep Hands in Condition. Rub the hands with dry salt after having had them in water for a length ot time; afterward rinse them and wipe dry. If this- is done daily after the housework is finished it wiil keep the hands smooth, clean and white. Insist on Getting It. Some grocers say they don't keep Defiance Starch. This is because they have a stock on hand of other brands containing only 12 oz. in a package, which they won't be able to sell first, because Defiance contains 16 oz. for the same money. Do you want 16 oz. instead of 12 oz. for same money? Then buy Defiance Starch. Requires no cooking. The real Nemesis calls itself by the iame of "What-I-Might-Have-Done." Why It Is the Best is because made by an entirely differ ent process. Defiance Starch is un like any other, better and one-third more for 10 cents Don't be ashamed if you are poor Poverty Is no disgrace. Defiance Starch should be in every household, none so good, besides 4 oz. more for 10 cents than any other brand of cold water tarch. Don't be selfish. Don't live for your self alone. THE BEST COUGH CURE When offered something else instead of Kemp's Balsam stoo and consider: "Am I to get something as good as this best cough cure ? If not swe, what good reason is there for for taking chances in a matter that may have a direct bearing on my own or my family's health?" Sold by all dealers at 25c. and 50c. BnnauanKIo Kilts ALE APTOtfr "ALL THE !m LEST DEALERS XW0 A. J.TOWEI CQ.ESTABUSW 1636 aOSTON NCWYOIK CHICAGO WEI OMMM CO.UiW.TOlOlTO.aJI. W. L. Douglas 3 J?& 3i? SHOES'.?. W. L. Douglas S4.00 Ch. Edge Line cannot be equalled at any price. EataMishtd July. 1878. W.L.DOUCLAS MAKES AMO WELL atoar arc?" as.ao muor rtmm AMY OTHER AtAAHfFAOTVKEtL 1 (I AAA REWARD to anyone who cm tlUjUUU ditpron this statement. W. L.Doazla $3.50 shoes have by their ex- teNeat style, easy fitting, and Mreriorwearing- ytaUUet, achieved the largest tale of any $3.50 hoe M the world. They are last as good es thoae that coat yon $5.00 to $7.00 the onlv inference la the price. If I could take ou into my factory at Brockton, Mass., the largest fn the world uader one roof making men's fire thoes, and show you the care with which evrrr pair of Douglas shoes U made, ou woo Id realize why W. L. Dou7las $3.50 shoes are the best (hoes produce J in the world. If I could show you the difference between the noes ssaae in my factory and those of other makes. VOU would understand shv fViuolac I $3.50 shoes cost more to make, w hy they hoM ' ,pfL,m, , wear IOBter nd c' v"" "". "H my umer 3J.3U j oe on the market to-day. W.L. Ommmtmm WIrmnm Atmtlm Shmmmfar arsia, 32.SO, S2.0O. Bmy' 3chmi& I '.MO, 92. W1.7S.S1.RO CAUTION. Insist upon hivinc IV.L.Dnu;; a shoe. Take no nbtitnte. None genuine xithout his name and price stamped on bottom. WANTED. A shoe dealer in everv town whre IV. L. Douglas Shoes are not sold. "Full line of samples sent free for inspection upon terjuest. Fast Color Eyelets used; they will not uxor brassy. Write- for Illustrated Catalog of Fall Stvlea W. I DOVGUiS. Brocktou. Mass. PUTNAM Csttr brithter and fatter colors than any other eat itkaut rissiaa aatrt BmicTs-sy F' JSi Jpif PII1IC SaBkJiM 111 July. 1878. W.I.DOVQLAM MAKES AMO WELL WORKING WOMEN Their Hard Struggle Made Easier Interesting State ments by a Young Lady in Boston and One in Nashville, Tenn. bbLPbbbbbW. .bbbbbbbLLLLbW All women work; some , in their homes, some in church, and some in the whirl of society. And in stores, mills and shops tens of thousands are on the never-ceasing treadmill, earning their daily bread. All are subject to the same physical laws; all suffer alike from the same phj-sical disturbance, and the nature of their duties, in many cases, quickly drifts them into the horrors of all kinds of female complaints, ovarian troubles, ulceration, falling- and dis placements of the womb, leucorrhoja, or perhaps irregularity or suppression of "monthly periods,'' causing- back ache, nervousness, irritability and lassitude. Women who stand on their feet all dav are more susceptible to these troubles than others. They especially require an invigorat ing, sustaining medicine which will strengthen the female organism and enable them to bear easily the fatigues of the day. to sleep well at night, and to rise refreshed and cheerful. now distressinir to see a woman struggling to earn a livelihood or per form her household duties when her back and head are aching, she is so tired she can hardly drag about or stand up. and every movement causes pain, the origin of which is due to some derangement of the female or ganise. Miss F. Orser of 14 Warrenton Street, iYiU E. KMOaaft Vetttabk Cnvsisi SkccsJs Watre ftten HSu YOV NEED SUCH A TONIC Until Mull's Grape Tonic Was Brought to America, the Following Was Incurable. READ THESE STATISTICS 90.000 people die vearly from the results of Constipation ami Stomach Troubles and their attending ills. Nine in every ten I have it. Many Uon t know it, and a pood many who do know it neglect it until it is too late. Some get so bad they think it is incurable, and then they,resort to the physic or pill habit, where the real trouble begins. You and I know that Pills and Phjsic make us worse, we become a slave to them, and finally they lose their power and paralysis of the intestines occurs, and then slow death. Now Constipation and Stomach Trouble ae lust as curable as any other disease; we nav proved this fully by curing over 10,000 the last two years. Many of these were the most chronic, serious, compli cated kind in which all other remedies and doctors had failed and hope diapaired of. but our treatment cured them quickly and to stay cured. Mr. Thompson, of Piiiria, who had suf fered all his life and had given up hoje. was cured by 24 bottles. Dr. Dill, of St. Louis, whose health had been broken down, claims that several bottles cured him, that it is a splendid medicine for Stomach and Bowels, and the best general tonic be ever saw. Dr. iledrick. of Kansas City, who had constiation so badly that he verged upon nervous collapse, says to his great surprise after trying everything else was cured by Mull's Grape Tonic, he says it is the best thing for Stomach and Bowels and kindred ills, that has come to his attention in his professional career. Mrs. Alcoba, of Chicago, who was a con firmed invalid for years, after taking a thorough course of Mull's Grape Tonic says she was able to leave her bed after the third bottle, and is now enjoying good health. She had tried everything that came to her notice. Mr. Crow, of St. Lou s, had dyspepsia, liver and bowel trou ble for 85 years, which he contracted dur ing the Civil War. He said he never could get anything that even afforded him relief, but that a short treatment of Mull's Grape Tonic completely cured him. He recom mended it to old" soldiers so many of whom suffer with the same complaint. Mr. McCurdy, of Troy, Ohio, was one of the greatest sufferers that ever came to our attention. There apparently wasn't an organ of his body free from disease: Liver Trouble, Stomach and Kidney Trouble, terrible piles that kept him in agony. MOVED to our handsome new building, the most complete and most modern retail building in the west. A visit to Omaha is not complete without you spend a portion of your time looking through this fine new building, which Is completely filled with all the latest Ideas in Furniture, Jtugs. Carpets and Draperies. Orchard & Wilhelm Carpet Co. NOW AT 414. 4IC, 41H . ITII ST., OHAII. ETSID rVlf iflliflCfl troubled with His wculiar to ' their sex, used as a douche is marvelonsly toc" cessiui. xnorottcaiycieaases, kiiis diseasozenns, gtops discharges, heals infiammatioa and local soreness. Paxtine is in powder form to be dissolved in pore water, and U tar more cieansm?, realing. ccrmxulil and economical than liquid antiseptics for all TOILET AND WOMEN'S SPECIAL USES For sale at druggists, SO cents a box. Trial Box and Book of Instructions Pre. The a. Paxtom Company Boston. Mass. W. N. U. Omaha. No. 401905. FADELESS DYES r colors than any other dye. One 10c oackaae colors all fibers. They dye in cold water better than any other dye. Yay caa dia Write tor " booklet-How to Dye. Bleach aad Mia Colors. MOMOK DUQ T f rn7nfirT mtutmmZ dye. Boston, tells women How to avoid suck suffering ; she writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: "I suffered miserv for neveral years with irrezular menstruation. My back ached; C ha-l bearing down pains, and frequent head a'jhes; I couH not sloop and could hardly nr nroumL I consulted two phrsician without-relief, and as a last resort, I trii Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable iJompouni, ana to my surprise, every ache and pain left me. I gained ten pounds and am in perfect health.1 Miss Pearl Ackers of 327 North Snm mer Street, Nashville, Tenn., writes: Dear Mrs. Pinkham: " I suffered with jwinful periods, revere Kickache, hearing-down ins, pains arrow the abdomen; waa very nervous and irrita ble, and my trouble fcnsw worse every month. " My physician failed to help me and I decided to try Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable ComnountL I soon found it was doin? m jjooll All my pains and aclirts disappeared, and I no longer fear my monthly periods." Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com pound is the unfailing cure for all these troubles. It strengthens the proper muscles, and displacement with all its horrors will no more crush you. Backache, dizziness, fainting, bear ing down pains, disordered stomach, moodiness, dislike of friends and society all symptoms of the one cause will be quickly dispelled, and it will make yon strong and well. Yon can tell the story of your suf ferings to a woman, and receive help-' ful advice free of cost. Address Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn. Mass. ., WE CAN VERIFY TIEM: Bowels would not act for days, heart action bid, emaciated, run down and completely discouraged. He resorted to every known means, doctors, remedies, baths, etc., all to no avail. He says: "Soon after I started Mull's Grape Tonic mv bowels began to act regularly, the pain left me, and my general health built up rapidly. 1 heartily recom mend it as an absolute cure to which I am a living witness." These are only a few of the very worst eases of the thousands cured by Mull's Grape Tonic. We can cure you, no matter how bad off nd to prove it we will send you without cost a bottle of Mull's Grape Tonic and in structions how to use it. The digestive organs are strangely subject to the cura tive power ot Mull's drape Tonic. Thers is no scheme about this, but fair, square chance for you to test this Rrand treatment for yourself, in your own ome without cost. If you have Rheumatism, Stomach, Bowel, Kidney, Lung and Heart Trouble, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, cold, fever, diar rlMBa, loss of sleep and strength, run down. Piles, appendicitis, fistula, bad blood, diz ziness, bad complexion, etc., remember they arc the result of Constipation and Midi's Grape Tonic will cure you. It is splendid Tunic just as Dr. Dill states. Everybody should use it. Typhoid fever and apjtondicitis are unknown in familiea where Mull's Graps Tonic is used. You need such a Tonic, begin to-day. Don't wait but send now for this fres offer and get well. Good for ailing chil dren and nursing mothers. 123 FREE COUPON. I07S Send tta! coupon with your name anit address and your clrucuist'-. name, for a free bottle of Mull's Crape Tonic. Suunacn Tonic and Constipation Cure. Mull's Grape Tonic Co.. 148 Third Ave.. Rock Island. III. Give Full AMrtt ami Writ Plainly. The tl.00 bottle contains nearly three times the SOc size. At drug stores. The genuine has a date and number stamped on the label take no other from your druggist. "Fsllow the flat" Home Visitors Luorsioi November 30th To many points in Illinois, Indiana. Ohio. Kentucky. Western .Pennsylvan ia, New York and West Virginia, at GItKATI.Y ItKMUCKD RATKS. The WABASH has solid road-bed, rock ballast, ant. new equipment. Re clining o air cars iSi;ATS FREE.) For raW-. rca" and nil information call at Wabash City O.'iiee. 1601 Far nam St. or ;nW--s II tKIIV K. MOOIIES, G. A. P. D.. all. R. It , Omaha, Neb. When Answering Advertisements Kindly Mention This Paper. WMk H i I r ! fe n ;.1 1 ii 1 w rJ j