SIDE LIGHTS OX HUNTINGTON Anecdotes and Maxims Illustrating His Characteristics and Peculiarities. TIPS FOR AMBITIOUS YOUNG MEN 'IV ha I llr Tlmiitthi of "The Mnn viltli ' Hoc MlH-rnl Mtm rr Kt l'uctfi riip iiiiiiiiiiRtiiu .M nil mi 1 1' ii 111, The old Rrlm reaper Mays havoc with the nopesnnd ambitions of rantikln.l. Hp Is no iMpccicr of persons, erecds or eondltlons. lio enters the portals of tho wealthy us un ceremoniously as ho knockH at poverty's ooor ami tho mortal bidden t0 follow has no alternative. Men plan to do certain things to tuko life easy when ttiolr mcanH have reached u liberal figure, yet when tho goal u reached the spirit rrles for more, Others work tho human machine to tho limit uud winder when tho break ocrjru. Still others nap out their future as though It wore wholly in their keeping, in tho end such planning prove- to bo whul Solomon de scribed as -vanity and vexation of spirit." Tho late Collla P. Hlintlnirtnti i-nllrnnrt kln and millionaire, hoped and planned to mc iwj years and leavo a fortune of $1,000, 000 for every yrr of bin life. Ho lived 7 jrears. ii ib expectations as to his fortune were probably fullllled. His estate Is cstl mated as high ub JSO.OOO.OOO. Hut ho lacked a score of jvars of reachlnc the ecnturv mark and thq summons came to him with the swiftness of u lightning flash while m the enjoyment, apparently, of robust health. nuntlflKton's life forma a fnmlllnr Hn.l extensive, chapter of the hlntory of the west and southwest. Ills achievements ns a rail oad builder and as monarch of transtiorta- 'Hon lines on the I'acllle coast are known to all. The private and fociul side of his life mb cuaruciensucs anil peculiarities were known only to his associates and friends inrt his death brings them Into public print. These present tho man In a light different from that In which ho appeared as a railroad Jdng. A .St'roitK Friend. Huntington vim n man of strong likes and dislikes. Ho never forgave an enemy or one whom he thought had proved1 false to iiitn. r or u friend ho would do any thine. in fact, make sacrlllcea of both tlmo and money, two things he valued very much, man who had riono a service for him In western leglalaturo was up before a grand jury. He went to Huntington for assist nnce. The latter knew nothing of the affair wnich brought tho man beforo the lnmilal- tortal body. Huntington's friends, even his favorite nephew, II. T. Huntington, begged hlra not to mix In tho affair. "That man 'was my friend when 1 needed one," replied 'the magnate. "I'll reciprocate now that he ays ho needs my friendship. " At thn Palace hotel, San I'ranrlsco, Mr. Huntington went to the desk and called at fentlon to an overcharge of JI5 cents In his bill. "Oh, well," said tho clerk with a smile :ns ho took up a pen and corrected the error, "I guess two bltH doesn't make much differ euro to you anyway, Mr. Huntington." "Young man," answered the millionaire nharply, "you'll never bu able to trace mc through llfo by tho two-bit pieces I've dropped." Whl'o tho International road was In process of construction In Mexico the com pan; opened noinii coal mlucH it owned. The superintendent had been instructed by Mr H'lntlngton to employ native labor only, or rither to prefer native labor, when possible At the end of a year the superintendent complained that tho natives were no good at Jill. They wore too slow, ho said. Mr. Huntington replied: "Have patience with them. Show them how and try them twenty years lonKcr." There was no, special hurry with the work and then tho natives labored for wages on which on At'jcrlcan workman would starve to death. lie had his own notions of the humorous too, and tie Indulged himself after tho fash 1on of tho mikado In the comic opera, to whom tolling a man In oil had Its' humorous side. To a friend who feared disaster from a pcsslldo fall In stocks, Mr. Huntington nnryj remarked- "Of course there'll bo fal'.. Tho wind Is In tho northwest!" Tip for You ti u Men. An a successful llmincler tho life of Hunt 'Ington has often been pointed out ns model for American youth who seek to carve out their own fortunes. As the mcl lownoss of ago tempered tho railroad mag nate's usually caustic demeanor to outsid ers he became fond of enunciating aphor isms for tho guidance of his Juniors. Fol lowing are samples: , "Apprcclnto the value of today." "Don't worry about tomorrow and don't go ngalnat r.ho tide." "Command what you are worth and al ways try to better yourself." "Tho chances are as good today as over .they were; even better." "I novnr leave ray game to ploy another fellow's." "It In not posslblo for one to follow In the footsteps of another. Kach must work out his own destiny." ' "When you can't go on horseback go on foo' ." "I never work hard. I work easy." "All honest work is honorable work." "Work at anything to get enough money Tilth which to buy a meal. If you earn 3 When babv conies to the home it will tiind the wife closer to the husband, or it will gradually tend to cut her ofT from Ilia cotnpanship. A sickly mother loses in physical chnrm, and often in temper niul disposition. A fretful child Is a trial, even to loving parents. The use of Dr. Tierce's Favorite Prescription prepares the wife for motherhood. It strengthens the Ixxly, and induces n healthy condition of mind, free from nnxiety or fcur. It makes the baby's advent practically painless, The mother l)ciiiK healthy her child is healthy, and a healthy child is n happy child, ft joy to the parents, linking tficm together with a new bond of affection. There is no opium, cocaine or other narcotic in " Favorite Prescription." " t read what your medicine has done for othtr pcoplJ,'' wrftti Mrs. ldwii II, Gardner, of nrrrlnvoiKi, Norfolk Co.. Mjm., Iloi 70. " thought I would try It, and I found It , hlrsiine to me ami family. I took your iiiedlclue a year when I had a ten puimd girl. I hjd the rislett time I ever had with uny of my tlireo children, and I have been very well eer since. I took three Urttles of ' Favorite PretcrliUion,' three of '('.olden Medical Discovery,' ami three vials of ' relicts.' Jleforc I took your medicine 1 only weighed lis pounds, and now I weigh 173 pounds." Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure siCk headache. cents only ?pend on of thim. then see to It that you are never without money after ward." "Stand In a porjb at night; sleep In a packago box, but. -never become a pauper." !ln ufl,,r It won t run Hftcr you." "The vast ip-jjorlty of young men spend too many ;t.s of tholr youth in the class room." "It 'iocs no good to cram the mind full of Vtinw ledge that will not help a young tn'n In tho work he Is fitted to do." boy who his the push to succeed In llfo will succeed without tho higher education." There Is growing un a wall of caste, with honest labor on the one sldo and frivolous gentility on the other." His maxim In trade was this: Anything thut can be bought for less than the rost jit production, that is not perishable and that Is an article In general use, is worth buying and holding. An anecdote will Illustrate this. He once bought a lot of bar steel nt time when thtre wns no manufacturing In California. Nobody wanted It at I cent a pound. For four years he stored It In hlj back yard uuder old sails; but when quartl was at last reached everybody wanted steel, and he sold the major part of It at a dollar pound and his dogged patience had Its reward. He ttfed to say that nothing could beat him waiting except tho Catholic church. linn m llh tin- Hoe, During nH first year of self-support ho earned $S4, his board and clothing being In cluded, and saved eery cent of It. Tho youth fathered tho man. Mr. Huntington has told us so: "At tho end of that year I was as mush a capitalist as I havo ever been since. Start two young men upon tho road of llfo. If ono earns $f tho first year and saves $J0 of It, and the other, earning tho winio amount, saves nothing, It bceins an easy problem to figure out the probable difference at the end of twenty years. Nothing U more hurprlslng than the result, for while In tho second Instance the twenty years will havo produced no growth, In the other tho habit of economy and of saving the pen nies becomes the most finely-tempered and useful tool In his possession and tho growing capital Is a hervant which from a child grows Into a giant for his masters advancement. Tho great secret of success Ih laying by a nest egg and adding to your little store, never ependlng more than you mako and being strictly economical. A young man does not want to bother over what rumor says about him. I havo never cared a cent what any human being thought or said about me or my action, so long as I wis satisfied. It was my Idea that n man'H business should be his llrst thought. It has alwnys been mine. In consequence, I supposo there are a great many things about which 1 know less than the average man, but, on the other hand, I am very certain that there Is nobody who known any more nboul my own busi ness! than I do myself. I never leave my game to play another fellow's. A great deal of sorrow has been caused by men who Insisted on meddling with a game about which tbey know nothing. "Finally, false pride is an enormous ob stacle. I know young men In New York City who would not carry a trunk along Fifth avenue for all the frontage they could pass, bocauso they would be afraid they might meet sme girl that they knew." "The Mini with the Hoe." Although devoted to business Mr. Hunt ington found tlmo to read books. He was very fond of good books and had a largo library whoso volumes were bound with extraordinarily handsome covers. Strangely enough, poetry appealed strongly to this practical man of affairs. Ho always kept at his desk n set of George Crabbe's poems and In his moments of relaxation he would draw tho book from his desk and run over It. It was Huntington who, under the nom do plumo of "Responsibility," offered through the New York Sun, lust year, prizes amounting to $700 for one or more poeins expressing a truer Industrial phllosphy than Is contained In Markham's "Man with the Hoe." His letter accom panying the offer, published In tho Sun nt that time, sharply criticised Mark ham's Idea of a workingmnn. Ho wrote: "Hither the 'Man with the Hoe' la a typa of tho great mass of thoso who use fanning Implements for a living, or else he Is nn exception. If tho latter, then tho strength of the sentiment uttered lies In the con cealment of Its wenkness; nnd, If the for mer, then the poem does wrong to a most respectable and nblebodled multltudo of cltlzcnR, every ono of whom ought to resent Mr. Markham's attempt to throw 'tho emptiness of ages In his face," nnd cer tainly deserves better of tho poet than to be called a 'monstrous thing' and 'brother to tho ox.' "What nbout the man wltlwut the hoc? ho who can not get work, or having tho op portunity to lubor, won't do It? There nro thousands of young men In thlB country who have been educated up to the point whero the honest and healthful occuputlon of their fathers In the field has becomo distasteful to them, and In many cases they havo grown to bo nshamed of It nnd of their parents. In European countries. particularly, there are multitudes of young men, tho youngest sons of titled people, for Instance, who have been taught that com mon labor or work In the trades Is beneath them. They must havo money, but they rauBt cam It only In a 'genteel' way. "Theso are the men without the hoc the real brothers of tho ox. Who shall tell their story? Who shall best sing the bit ter song of the Incapablrs who walk tho earth, driven hither and thither like beasts by tho Implacable sentiment of n false social education, suffering the tortures of tho d d nnd bringing distress upon thoso dependent on them bucnuso they have lost Hint true Independence of soul that comes to him who dares to lnbor with his hands who wields the hon aud is the master of his destiny?" I lie l,Bl Cinllr. The tomb In which tho remains of tho railroad monarch now rests was started twelve years ngo nnd required five years to build. It was constructed on plans which remind one of tho ambitions of Kgyptlan kings. Unless It Is destroyed by vandals or by an earthquake, this huge pile of granite on ('Impel Hill, in Wood lawn cemetery, will remain Intact for ages after Huntington and nil his wealth will have been ilUHt nnd his name forgotten. No building In tho new world can eom paro with this tomb In strength, masslve- nosa nnd durability, nnch tier of the steps In the fifty feet of solid rock from the roadway to the door of the mausoleum Is liown from u single piece- of granite. The main platform Ib u single forty-ton stone. Its foundation Is sixteen feet under ground. The maivtoleuni Is forty-two feet long. twenty-olght feet wldo and twenty-four feet high. Tho gates are of bronze and the Interior Is of Italian marble. Thcro nro sixteen catacombs. In tho structure there Is not a stono weighing less th.n eighteen tons ' Over the door In sovcro letters Is tho single word ''Huntington." l'rr cii.cil 11 Trnueily. Tlraoly Information glyen Sirs. Oeorgo Long of Now Straltsvllle, 0 saved two lives. A frightful cough had long kept hrr awake every night. She had tried many remedies and doctors but steadily grew u'orso until urged to try Dr. King's New Discovery. Ono bottle wholly cured her. nnd she writes, this marvelous medlelno also cured Mr Long of n severe attack of pneumonia. Such cures are positive proof of Its power to euro all throat, chest and lung troubles, Only 50e and Jl 00, Guar anteed. Trial bottles free at Kuhn & Co 's drug store. THi: OM All A DATLT UK 72: SITXDAV, AUGUST 10, 1000. MAKE IT UNSAFE FOR BANDITS Train Pobbcrs Find the Union Pacific a Hard Proposition! R0A0 ALWAYS HUNTS THEM DOWN Clinic l .rirr Almiiiloiiril t ntll the Otitlnvtn Arc Klllicr IM-hU or l!t-hliiil the llai-n. A widespread and deeply rooted senti ment exists among the gentry whoso avoca tion It is to hold up overland trains and re lieve passengers of their valuables, that It Is neither safe nor profitable for them to ply their trade alt.ng the lino of tho Union Pacific railroad. 'J lie vigilance wim " train robbers who have committed depreda Hons on this Hue hmc been hunted down and either put to denth or sentenced to the penitentiary In the last few years has been tho wonder and admiration of officials of other roads. The laBt notable example of this kind has but Intensified this Interest and it Is believed that It will serve as an object lesson to aspiring train robbers that will cnusc them to seek elsewhcro In quest of a continuation of their employment. Nine years ago the special service depart ment of the I'nlon Pacific railroad was or ganized as h branch of tho system, separate and distinct from everything else. Previ ous to that time special service had been performed by special agents In charge of di vision superintendents. June I. ISM, act ing upon the suggestion of Geueial Manager Dicklnton and General Counsel Kelly, the special service department was inaugurated under direction of V. T. Canada. Since that time tho work of running down crimi nals who havo committed offences agalust tho I'nlon I'acllle railroad. Its employes or natrons, has been conducted with slgual success. It haB mattered not what the enormity of the offence, every wrong-doer has been hunted down with tho same per sistence, tho solo and only motto of the de partment being. "Let not the guilty cscupe." During the period of tho department's ex istence there havo been five notable eases, four of them train robberies and the other station safe blowing. Of the twelve par tlclpants In thefo cases bIx nrc serving terms In different penal Institutions, four were UUIcd while resisting capture and two are yet at large. "To what do 1 attribute tho success of the special service department'.'" said Special Agent Canada In response to a reportorlal Inquiry. "Chlclly to this one fact: the Union Pacific spares no money in running down guilty culprits and leaves no stone unturned In bringing them to Justice. The moment one of our trains ,1s rubbed and the report reaches the main olfices poHses are Immediately orgunlzed. Tho best men that it Is rorslble to get hold of are employed and large rewards are olfered for the apprehen sion of tho robbers. The enormous expense of these pursuits and the rewards ottered and paid Is Justified In the feeling of safety felt by our pnshcngers. They know tLit train on tho Union Pacific will only be tackled by a robber who Is desperate, for his end is as sure as fate itself. In these pro.i perous times there are not many train rob bers who arc reduced to such traits, so our passengers uro virtually us safe as though they were sleeping In their own trundle beds. Of course, tho Union Pacific has had many robberies since Its organisation, but tho robbers are Invariably captured. Today there are only two men at largo who have been mixed up In robberies on our road, and they had a hand in the Wilcox hold-up. They will be captured If they stay on top of ttie ground If men and money can get them Mmrt s,lf fur llnnilltN. The first train robbery that came under his attention after tho organization of his de partment was In tho spring of 1S92. At Jersey, n suburb of Denver, a eouplo of masked men boarded a train and started to hold up tho passengers. One man only wns relieved of his possessions nnd he netted the robbers 75 cents. When they had finished him a passenger who wns in the rear of tho car, Jubilantly Intoxicated caught tho spirit of excitement Incident to tho occasion, nnd discharged a revolver he chanced to have. He nimeil II at noth Ing in particular and tho bullet Hew wil: but it had the effect of gearing the rob bers completely out of their wits. They beat a hasty retreat, alighting from the train whllo It wns In motion. They wcro followed Into Kansas for a distance of 1R0 miles, captured, brought back to Denver, stood trial and each sentenced to n terra of fourteen years In tho penitentiary. The next Union Pacific train robbery was on August 21, IS?:.. A brace of bandits made their way into tho express car when tho train was threo and one-half miles east of Brady Island at u point called Huttcrmllk hill. Dynamite was applied to tho safe and n smnll safe was blown open but tho through safo remained Intact The robbers got away with J2S In money and somo valueless paper nnd tickets Threo days after tho commission of tho robbery tho bandits were captured at Mason City, Neb., to which point they had been followed by a posse organized at Ilrady Island. In their haste to escapo they had had no opportunity to spend uny of tho money nnd tho $28 wore re covered. Tho men were taken to North Platte, whero they proved to bo tho Knud Ben brothers. Knut and Henry. They wcro tried and sentenced to ten years each In the penitentiary. For a cnuplo of years afterward the Union Pacific wus tabooed by tho train robbers and Specinl Agent Canada had nothing more exciting to do than to breal up a gang of safo blowers, which had been oporatlng through the country, paying especial heed to railroad station safes "Dig Mike." tho lender of tho gnng, wns arrested In May, 1S!7, after nn attempt to hold up tho night operator at North Hend. Neb., and was sentenced to six years In tho penitentiary. Wlleux Holdup llec iilletl. June I, 1K99, the Wilcox. Wye-., hold-up occurred. The stirring details of this nf fair, the murder of ono of the pursuers by a Iko'ng bandit, the long and vigilant tearch for the guilty culprits nnd the final tragic endings of three of the five participants lire still eomewhat fresh In the minds of the reading public. The first section of I'nlon Pacific No. I. westbound, was tpeedliiK H'-rct-H the state of Wyoming toward Chey enne on the morning of Juno 2. Tho morn ing wus haidly more thun an hour old when 11 red light ut Wilcox brought the train to a standstill. Five men boarded It. They were (Icorgo Curry, Hob le, alias Hob Curry; lcwls I-osiui, nllas IJti Curry, and two others. They Immediately assumed command of tho train, the eloquenco or their murderous looking firearms completely cowing the trainmen. They cut off the express and baggage 1 nr from tho rest of tho train and ran ncrns a bridge. Under this brldgn they placed a charge of dyna mite and set It off In niCer to prevent a pursuing train from easily overtaking them. Tho bridge was damaged considerably, but Its repair was accomplished without great difficulty. The robbers took from the safo $3. too in unsigned currency, which was being shipped 1 from the Treasury department at Washing- ' ton to tho First National bank of Portland; 1 also oue other money bag that was in the afo containing $'.'0 and some cheap W4tche. nnd Jewelry The haul was by no mean. such as tho robbers expected A posi.e wa L. T u . . " " UB ra'nl" as posslblo and tho bandits wero followed to Ca.rer, Wyo,, where they eroned the North Platte rler. When the posse started In pursuit the robbers were eight hours ahead of them and they had gained only thirty-five miles on their pursuers when Casper was reached Meantime tho Union Pacific Issued 11 nctlee of reward, coupled with the Pacific Kxpress company, oflcrlng 2.0o0 each for the men. deud or alive. The government added I1.0U0 each for the. cap. ture of tho men. About thirty miles out of Casper the posse ran upon the robbers and exchanged shots with them ut long distance. The next day a pan of the poise struck their trail on Casper creek among ihc rocks and canyons, where the country was so rough that It was almost Impossible to follow the lead. The robbers fired upon them from ambush nnd Joe Hiizen. sheriff of Comcrso county, Wyo., was struck. He was wounded In the Intes tinal region and tiled from the effects later at his home In Douglas. Tbo country thereabouts waj rough and tho slight traces erf a trail that had existed wero blotted away by the continuous rains and snows. The men in pursuit were strangers, whllo the robbers knew evcrv fcot of the ground over which they were fleeing. Hcsldes they liHd many friends and were uble to secure fresh horses. Conse quently after some three weeks of a fruit less pursuit the chase was abandoned and a still hunt Inaugurated. Deteellten tit't .Ven flue. Six months later a couple of rouch-look- Ing characters entered tho Stockman's Na tional bank nt Fort Denton, Mont., and presented some $ll0 bills for redemption. Tho currency looked to be mutilated, pre Mimnbly from the dynamite explositn when the express car at Wilcox was blown up. The Union Pacific knew of this transaction before the day was over and spciul ngents were soon on the scene. They found that tho money had come from a couple of rough-looking individuals, who ran a sa loon at Harlem, Mont., under the name of the Curry brothers. These proved to bo Lewis Logan nnd Hob Lcc, but beforo the officers could get nt them to make an ar rest they Jumped the country. After fol lowing their trail through Washington. Montana nnd Colorado, Lewis Logan was flnnlly located at Dodson, Mo., eighteen miles from Kansas City. He was btoimlne at the house of a Mrs. Lee. mother of II ib Lee. A posso of officers repaired lo 1I1U residence, on tho morning of February 2S and undertook to surround (he house for the purposo of arresting Logan. Ho saw them coming, however, and ran out of the house. Seeing it virtually surrounded nnd nil means of escapo cut off he whipped out 'Us gun and showed light, but ho was shot down before he was able to fire his weapon. On tho very same day that Lewis Logan came to this tragic end his partner In crime was arrested In a gambling house at Cripple Creek. Ho was later tried be fore tho United States court at Cheyenne, charged with attempted robbery of tho United States mall, and May 27 was sen tenced to ten years In the Wyoming peni tentiary. Tho end of the career ol tho notorious George Curry, the lender of this gang, camo soon after. Juno 17 Inst, Curry was killed whllo resisting an attempted arrest made by Sheriffs Tyler and Priest of Utah. Since that time Sheriff Tyler has been as sassinated, his death coming nt the hands of a gang of cattle rustlers on the Green river, near where Curry was killed. I'lll'' DCHtll Atl'MKI'll. After tho lapso of moro than a jear's tlmo the Union Pacific was once more made the object of 11 train robbery this month and tho two fellows who made ihe attempt will never again do the like, because both aro dead. This last robbery took plui o Sunday, August C, when an enstbound Union Pacific train was held up helwccn Hugo nnd Lyman, Colo. Tho robbers got away with but 22.G0, a gold watch and a little Jewelry, hut the' enormity of their crime was that It developed Into u murder, W. J. Faye of California, ono of the pas sengers on tho train, being fired upon and killed. The news of this holdup was received In Omaha Sunday morning about 10 otioil; and Immediately the wires wore put in motion. Every office within 150 miles of the ccene of the affair was notified und as complete a description us posslblo of the men was telegraphed. General Manager Dickinson offered a reward of $1,000 each for the men dead or alive. These facts wero telegraphed every railroad agent, telegraph office, sheriff, marshal nnd police within 150 miles of Hugo by noon of that day. Tho Idea was to completely surround the bandits so that they could not escape In any direction. Tho robbers got as far as Goodland, Kan., nr.d put up on Bartholomew's rauch They wero fatigued and their horses showed the offects of hard riding, but they explained that they wcro prospectors on their way to California. Two days after tho robbers arrived, by a clover ruse, Sheriff William Walker of Goodland, who had been informed of the proscuco of two strangers at tho Bartholomew ranch, rode out without exciting suspicion. Ono of tho robbers was killed Just as he was on tho point of shooting at a member of thn posse who had Inadvertently exposed his gun. Tho other escaped Into tho house. Then followed a desporato struggle be tween tho lone robber, having tho house for protection, and tho posse without. Two of the members of the posse were wounded and thon Sheriff Walker decided upon a bit of strategy. Waiting until nightfall hid his movements ho procured some dyna mite aud set the houso ufire. Tho next morning tho charred remains of the outlaw who occupied It were found. Tho robber who was shot had letters and papors Indicating that ho wns a Mexican, Tlodora Arattano, probably from Arrayn Secccs Taos, N. M os that was tho plai 0 from whence his letters came Thero was no mistake in his identity as ono of the bandits, for a wntch ho wore corresponded In numbers to ono tho robbers secured In tho holdup. "I am a switchman." writes A. J. Jen ncs3e, of 9201 Duller St., Chicago, "anil am out In all kinds of weather. I took a cold which settled In my kidney nnd wui. In very bad shape. 1 tried several advertised nudlelnes with no benefit until I was reiommended to fake Foley's Kidney Pure Two-thirds of a bottle cured mo" STRONG PLEA FOR THE HORSE NelirnnKn Illumine Miclelj KnteiH I'm. cl AkmIiiM Cruel I hp of the ( lieeU. Iteln, OMAHA, Aug. lS.-To tho lMltor of The nee: In this day and ago when 1.0 many good people throughout our land aro not only willing but glad to enlist tholr services In tho relief of their fellow crenturcs, why is It that tho great majority of theso sumo good people ore tjulto oblivious to tho cry fur mercy at their very door? Whllo they aro out on tholr errands of charity their horses only too frequently may be seen sinndlng outsido suffering tor tures while they wait l ho tonureH in flicted by the bivcrlty of u high check. Strange to say many women who profess themselves lovers of horsea seem not to appreciate In the least tho sutfcrlng cn lulled by this small check rein nnd one was iciently heard to remark thut alio had al vuys thought "horsos looked so much moro ftyllsh with their hcuds held up high nnd had never considered for a moment the cl.ert upon the poor beasts " Many another who has felt some iom pumtlon on tho bubjci t has had miagUings nnleted bv tho usual nssuran, r tii.it n horse naturally carries hit head high when, I traveling nut who has eor knoun n J torse to hold his head continuously at tne j A WEEK Of unparalleled values in parlor furniture, Handsome parlor pieces at a FKACTIOX of thoir value. Goods that can bo (topeutto l upon for satisfaction. If you want to take advantage of the lowest prices over made on high grade parlor furni ture pieces, COM 10 MONDAY. Don't put it off expecting to lind these goods here u week later. Our quick moving prices will sell them all oil this week. Monday the ban ner day. The Sale comprise three and live piece parlor Suits odd pieces Parlorohairs, Davenport Sofas, Morris Chairs, Easy Chairs one of a kind that must go at once, we must have the room for new goods and complete suits arriving daily, therefore these wonderfully low price. We mention a, few of the bargains taken at random going through the stock. 1).00 Parlor Chair, mahogany inlaid back, very rich and art it tie design, silk uphols tered sea), on sale .Monday :il tfltf.OO Ann Parlor Chair, finished somely polished, a very choice design, upholstered in figured tdlk, sale price . $1 1.00 Ann Parlor 'hair, mahogany in laid back, upholstered in fine silk, at . . . 17.00 Handsome mahogany Parlor Chair, very choice rich design, elegantly upholster- Q Qrt etl in silk damask, on sale Monday uiuU SIM).(M) Solitl Mahogany Parlor Chair, beautiful design, hand carved and hautl polished JO Qr a reprodii'-tiou and a bargain, at .... IZiOu Ll.()() Solid Mahogany Parlor Chair, with arms inlaid with satin wood and pearl, Q 7r line silk damask upholstery, price. . . . J( J !?;K).00 Solid Mahogany Ann very choice piece, elegantly upholster ed, hand polished, a big value, at . . . . ;; Morns Chair, spring seat and ft I nn back, high grade, upholstering, price. tbUU 10.00 Morris Chair, silk upholstering, inlaid lines, hand polished, mahogany finish if) rn frame, sale price IZiuU l.oO Morris Chair, made of select oak or birch mahogany polish linisli. extraordi nary value, ut sale price These aro all bona tide reductions and ronreaent onlv u few we offer you during this sale. V O " ' w 'iuv HWIU J UUUll ORCHARD & WSLHELM CARPET CO., Wfcea otkiw fan cmsbxs DOCTOR SEARLES & SEARLES OMAHA. mm mm & mim mum op MEN SPECIALIST t cuurantce to euro all casta curablt ot WEAK MEN SYPHILIS SK.UALLY. Cured (or Ufe. Night ICmlsolunc, IvOSt Manhood, Hydrocele. Verlccele, Gonorrhoea, ulcot, Syphilid Stricture, Hit. KUtula and Hectal Ulcori and ull I'rltato OliieniiPB and Disorders of Htu Strict u.'r nnd tJleet Cured nt Home. Consultation Free. Call on or addrei int. si:ahli:s a oiiahlks. no auuiu itu ut. omaul CHICAGO and EAST. LEAVE TOO A. II I.K P. M -7.15 P M ST. PAUL and MINNEAPOLIS, I, HAVE CM A. M.-7.35 P. M. HOT SPRINGS DEADWOOD LEAVE 3:00 V. M Cit-f Offices, (401-03 Farnam samp IiIku anglo for hours at it tune. tthutliiT trotting. wulkiiiR or nt rest, tinlcaB fori ccl lo It by tho cliuiV' And If anyone doubts tho ti'rrililp nervous strain lnllktcd by Biich nn unnatural nml mntlntioiiH ten sion of tho muse Ich. lot him throw Ills own head tin1 fnutlon of nn lnih further hark than Ih habitual with 111 111 nnd ho will llnd ho can maintain this position not moro than tlvt minutes before his nerves begin to protest most unpleasantly. Then let him Imagine what this would menn eon tlnued tho length of tlmo u horso Is usually Kept In hurncss, not to mention tho ex ocllons of a moro or less heavy load to pull. In England tho high overhead check was abolished by law years ago aud why do we, a most progressive nation, btlll cling to It In all Its severity? Surely horses havo cnmiKh to suffer from numberless other causeH, to bo spnrcd tho cruel tyranny of tho cheek. To sen theso patient beasts which servo us so faithfully subjected to this dully torture, to see them tobsing tholr heads from sldo to sldo In the vain attempt to enso their poor nchlng neclts, Is a muto appeal which ought not to puss undceiled. It Ih such a simple matter to lengthen tho chrdi by a few Inches, and vhnt un told relief would It not bring to many of thoee noble animals. NKIIHASKA IH'MNE SOCJKTY. Millions vull on spent In politics tbli year Wo can't l.erp the campaign going '.ithout mr y uny mor thun wo can keep the bodv ilgoius withou' t ni Lyspcp- ti- used to staiv- themscHtb Now Kodol r-ysr p m Cure digests what you eat and allowt. you to r.u all the uood food jou want, it radically cures stomach trouble.. Fancy Odd Pieces and Parlor Chairs, S.0l) Tui'lor Chair, very prettx design, liautl polished frame made of birch, mahogany linisli. silk damask up- ft i Q C bolstering on sale Monday OtiUU S.fH) Tai'lor Chair, silk damask upholstering, artistically hand curved buck, finely polished mahogany finish, QC flfl very rich design, on sale .Monday OwlUU $l-.00 Parlor Chair, exact repioduct on of a French piece made two hundred years 115:0, very graceful design and ft "7 QC line upholstery, mahogany hand polished. Monday . Q Qj 5.90 green, hand ii. hand- 7.65 8.65 Parlor Chair, 16.00 - 7 QC I iJj We must have the room. Come HAYDEN'S PIANOS fy If jou want to see the largest line of Standard Pianos in this western country, visit our phmo department we will he pleased to show them to you. You will see the Checkering, Fischer, Franklin, Jacob Doll, Haines, Keller, Bihr Dies., and twenf.v-one other makes. Slightly used pianos j-oing at half their net mil value. Square pianos at $20.00. SUJi.OO, S.'iV.00 and $10.00. We handle Kurdetto au l Newman Hros. organs. Second hand organs at $10.00, $112.50, $lfi.00, $20.00 and $2.1.00. Xew pi anos for rent. Pianos moved, tuned and repaired. Tel. UiS: HAYDEN BROS You Can Take a stitch In tlmr and fsve end. ess work and worry Women's pe culiar ills should nlway. be at tenlcd to wh-n th first symp tom of romcthlnR wrong i no ticed Hull's Pioneer Cure for female troubles will always . provo a safeguard A dollar draft In each 11 "0 box guiran anteei n cure Ank your druit K.rt or write confidentially to The Lightning Medicine Co., Muscatine, Iowa. KILL THAT PAIN with Mull's LUhtning Pnln Killer, r.e & Me, r tTT in mm i ni-wm i it r mh ti I or tmlc by nil uruKKltstH. .Ilex. WlliNl'iM'a MinllilllK frriip lias been Ufed for over FIFTY YKATtS by MILLIONS of MOTMEItS for their C1IIL IJltLN Wiril.i: TKETIIINO, with PEP,. FKCT SUCCESS. IT SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the OL'MS ALLAYS all PAIN, CUKES WIND COLIC, and Is tho best rem edy for DlAItftllOKA. Sold by Druggists in every part or iic. world lie burn and ask for Airs Wlnslnw's S' othlni Syrup," and take no otner kind. Twenty-tlvo cenu a bollie. Wilcox TAHSY PILLS Fit ' tnith fr f Hit , kVrinnto ltKllllltor tt hti t iHo t.Oi'tet iihu Ida A iini(,tU, rty il l'r rt .Moqlcal la) T M. pst- rmu., r. lieutui.-Mcf ilim Di ul' Co.. ana Sherman & McConncU Uruw Cu( I Hold hi I in $55.00 Solid Mahogany Parlor Suit, of two-piece sofa aud arn. chair, has satiuwood COR inlaid lines, hand carved. 1 pieces Mon. . $100 Solid Mahogany .'-piece Parlor Suit, this is a very choice high grade suit, richly hand carved and hand polished, silk damask ft DO upholstery, a bargain, Monday vUu $110 It-pieec Solid Mahogany Suit, handsomely upholstered in silk tapestry, carving 075 is hand work, piano polish finish, bargain Q J Davenport Sofas. $152 Daveuport Sofa, oriental figured upholstery best steel tempered springs, supporting hair tilled cushions, it's a wonderful 1 rrt bargain at TlrwU $03 Davenport Sofa, hnndomoly carvouclav foot, solid ma hogany ftume, elegantly upholstering In u prom sliado of greon. cxtruordhmry vnluo A snlo price "VAat IQ $110 Daronport Sofn, frames of solid mahogany, heniitlfullv Inlaid, is finely hund cftt vod, Afl flft silk upholstered, prico UwiUU 8180 Turkish Dnvcnoort Sofu. vory soft nnd luxurious, best nair mioa cusiiion, nnoiy upholstcroil, has full Turkish spring scat, buck nnd arms, QA OA salo price Monday OfatUU of the ninnv -.mrulm-fiii vnnn Monday. 1414, 1416 and 1518, Douglas Street HAYDEN'S Trrrf Tk Strengthens MARIANI WINE) HivcH power tit tlir lira In, Hti'tni(fti nml ulaHticity to thv mutivlf.H, aiiif ririnvss to thv. btooit. It in ii jn'omoter offootl hvultli ami loiiycvity. Mnrlnni Wine is in,-,,!- xiiible.foroi'cvu'orl.'vit mnn, del. tuate women ami nivhly vhilil rett. It Honthvn, frcnfhent ami HUntahiH thn H'jstrnt, .11 a i bv. talion in hoiIu water as a ton iV. With chijnirtl ire. it in re fresh iiiff ami orui'i'om un ttcbit it(t in warm weather. Sold by nil driiKKli". Hefuse suhMltulrs. A dSense A monthly publication full of good thing, tersely told That ou may become ac ((iiii.nied send it dine coin or stamps' for sample copy If ou ve already teen It you want t ynu 11 get it for a year If you .end a dollar to Ad beaic, Fifth Ave,, Chlcaa.