THE OMAIIA DAILY BEE: THURSDAY, FEIVRUATtY 10, lt03. SAYS INTERVIEW IS A FAKE GoTerner Mickey Makes Absolute Denial of Story of Ooed'i Appointment. SORE SPOTS OVER PRIMARY RESULTS to be held la April at York against voting for any change lo the prerent system of asaeasment. It la aall that the Bradahaw camp did not favor any chant- York la nald to hay been tha Bnt camp la th state to organize against a change. Dtaorriti are Hoaefal a' Brian; Able te Laa the Kirli Board at tha Conine City Elec- tloa. PYnm a Staff Correspondent.)" LINCOLN. Feb. IS. (Special.) Gov ernor Mickey today denied that ha had given out aa Interview In which he atated that J. P. Coad. appointed member of the new water board, had atated that ha had Bot aupported Bryan In 1900 and that be had voted for Mickey last fall, aa waa pub llahed ta the World-Herald. ''I made no aucb statement to a corre spondent af tha World-Herald or to any one elae. The atatement la absolutely un true and waa manufactured out of whole cloth, Mr. Coad did not tell me that he had not aupported Bryan In 1900 and he did not tall me that ha had voted tr me laat rail. In fact I have not aeen .Mr. Coad aloce tha campaign and during It be did aot tell me that ha Intended to vote for m. When hla name waa mentioned to me for appointment I understood that he waa la Oklahoma. The entire atatement con. cernlng Mr. Coad hat not a syllable of truth la It, and It waa manufactured by the correspondent of the paper In which it waa published. Mr. Coad waa recom mended to me aa a democrat and aa auch I appointed him. A representative of tha World-Herald railed upon me In the in terest of other parties and did more than any an else to get me to name the man ha recommended. Heace the Interview published la that paper. I am pleased with the appointments made and from the ex pressions I have beard from Omaha tha peoftte there ars pleased with the new board. There Is not a man on the board la my estimation who la not thoroughly qualified for tha place." Gives Democrats Hope. The republican city primary held yes terday, which waa audi a landslide for the county machine and the Burlington railroad, which waa supporting Adams for mayor against tha present mayor, Wln nett, was divided on tha excise men and another primary will have to be held to determine the nominees. Wolfe, who Is In favor of a $1,000 aaloon license, re ceived the highest vote aad Harpham, who was In favor of a 11,600 license, waa the next highest. Hosklna, a $1,000 believer, was third and Wooda. a $ 1.5(H) man, waa fourth. Clary, the other $1,000 candidate, waa 'last. No man received a majority of the votes tast, necessitating another prl . mary. Today, however, there was some talk of a compromise, though It la not probable that thla will pull through. Tha $1,600 men are willing to take Harpham, Wolfe or Hoaklna. but the $1,000 men can not agree on their man. Wolfe having received the highest vote does not want to draw oft and Hoaklna. because he waa the labor candidate, doea not aee his way clear to get off the tlckeL The result of the primary, especially the defeat - of the labor union candidates for exciseman, has cheered . the democrats mightily and soma of them have hopea of at leaat landing the next excise board, if not the mayor.. There, is some talk today Dies af Heart D I . ALMA. Neb., Fab. IS (Special.) Alonto Wymore, a widower, age about 45 yeara, living with John Larson, on the Oeorge Joyce farm near Woodruff, Kaa.. waa found dead In bed thla morning by Mr. Larson, with whom he had been making hla home. From all appearances Mr. Wymore came to his death from heart trouble. On yester day he waa well and had been to Woodruff, and went to bed laat evening feeling aa well aa usual. Coroner Oaskell and Dr. 8. M. Baker were telephoned to come over and look after the remains. The deceased haa lived In that vicinity for over eight yeara and had many friends. nies aa Reaalt of Fall. PLATTSMOUTH. Neb.. Feb. 1$. (Special.) William Webber, while working wltn a gang of men on the Burlington bridge which apana the Missouri river at thla point, yeeterday fell to the Ice below, a distance of about seventy feet, and waa In jured so badly that be died laat night. He leaves a wife and three small children. On account of the aevere cold, 16 degrees below, the men did not work on the new bridge today. Retaras Verdlet af Larceny, BEATRICE, Neb., Feb. lg. (Special Tel egram.) After being out five hours tha Judge in a case of the State of Nebraska against Charles Cain, charged with robbing a Rock Island freight car here laat fall, returned tonight with a verdict finding tho defendant guilty of petit larceny. Judge Letton sentenced him to the county Jail for thirty daya at hard labor and or dered him to pay cost of proecutlon. SISTER IS A' STAR WITNESS Tells of Conversations She Had with Mrs. Lillie Alter Murder. CONCEALS DEALINGS WITH BROKERS Several Little Clrcamataaeea Broastht Oat Which Tend to Discredit tke Story of the Dr. lendaat. unlock the bedroom door so the blood houuds could be taken In and get the start again. The request waa granted willingly. Mardered Man's Slater Test I tics. Mrs. Clara Warren, sister of the muf dered man, waa the next witnesa. She waa not called at tbe preliminary hearing. She aaid. In part: , "I went to Mr. Llllie's on tbe morning of the murder, got there about 6 o'clock. Mra Llllle was In the bedroom downstairs. She waa standing In front of the dresser. They were Just starting to the hospital rlth Harvey. Mra. Llllle and I went to the hos pital. I had a converaatlon with Mrs. Lil- to Adam Kraeger of Cass county and Anna Schwab' of Otoe county, and to Louis Kamata of Jewell county, Kansas, an,d Celia M. Carpenter of Otoe county. CONFECTIONER PROVES EASY Robbed of Hla Savlnga by Coaltdeace Mrs with aa Old Game. LIQUOR BILL TO COMMITTEE Promlned Kxrltement In Sooth ksts Senate Falls to Materialise. Do- riERRK, 8. D., Feb. 18. (Special Tele gram.) The promised excitement in the aenate thla afternoon did not materialize, aenate bill 80, the liquor license bin, going back to the judiciary committee without debate, but with orders to re port it back not later than Saturday. The principal senate bill introduced waa by Wilson to establish a ninth judicial circuit of the counties of Beadle, Hand, Kingsbury and Miner. The aenate paased the house bill to es tablish a permanent militia camp ground at Lake Kampeaka: to Increase tbe salary of the deputy crmmlssloner of public In struction to $1,600 per year; to require heada of atate Institutions to keep for inspection lista of atate property under their control; and Increasing the pay of the county commissioners to $4 per day. Tbe senate bill paased by the senate was to fix the terms of court la the eighth circuit. The house committees reported favorably on the aenate bill to provide for the col lection of city taxea by the city treasurer; an unfavorable committee report on aa anti-compact insurance bill waa changed to a favorable report by vote of the bouse. The general oil inspection bill waa made a specisl order for Tebruary , 23. The principal bouse bills introduced were by . Moodle, to prevent the use of In democratic circles of taking ' up Hoe- force In vaccination; by Hayea, providing kins, the defeated labor candidate, and endorsing him la ratura for the republican labor vote. The democrats are talking of nominating William McLaughlin or Sam Whiting for a chief. The former is a very popular man and lias served time as a councilman from a republican ward and alao aa county treasurer. He haa a repu tation aa a conservative man and hla friends claim he would look well after the city's Interests. ' It Is probable that the democrata will nominate McLaughlin and a $1,000 excise board, thua uniting the democratic and republican liberal ele menta of the city. A ticket like thla. the democrats claim, would catch many of the republicans who do not like Adsms and who believe that he ia under too many obligations to carry on the city govern ment as the republicans would like to aee It conducted. The rank and file of the republicans, however; apprehend no auch calamity when It cornea to an election and belteva that the acre apots made In the preliminary campaign will be healed by that time and tbe republican nominees will be elected aa usual. Vark Woodmea Oppose t'kssgc. YORK, Neb.. Feb. 18. (Special.) At a meeting of the Modera Woodmen of thla clU ana of the largest camps la the atate, a resolution waa paased Inatructing tho delegates to the York oouoty convention penalties for any one who solicits a place as a Juryman and fixing cause of challenge of Jurors In civil and criminal cases. The first bill to come up for action In the house waa to provide a penalty of $100 fine and Imprisonment for Sabbath-breaking, which started a general discussion and waa finally amended by atrlklng out the Imprisonment clause and reducing the fine to $10 and paased. Bromley opposed the measure for the reason that It would be used to oppress those who took Sunday recreation and a number of others were with him, while Porter and Ooodard fa vored the bill. The principal 'house bills paased by the house were to give minors prior lien for labor. Tho peddler license bill In which an amndment was offered to allow patent right men to work without license, which failed, and providing for a board of con trol of three In place of the present board of five. Several attempta were made to amend thla metjure, but it waa finally puahed through aa it came from the com mittee. The women who have been circulating a petition asking for an amendment to the constitution by the referendum, presented their petition to the secretary of atate to day and Secretary Berg refused to file the same on the ground that auch ia petition waa not provided tor under the constitution. Established 1823. WELSQu OTBSKEY. Thai's All! lUsaara, UL y I To 'Many Points in To Many Points in the state of fiYill Oregon end Qaliforolart'Vtshington EVERY DAY Tha Union Pacific will eoll One-way Colonist Ticket at the following rate TROM MISSOURI RIVER TERMINALS Tickets aa tale fab. IS te lass IS. IMS $25X0 to San Francisco, Los Angeles ) and many other California points. J (20.C3 to Ogden and Salt Lake City. $20.C3 to Butte, Anaconda and Helena. I $22.50 to Spokane AWanatchee, Wash. T,,hu $25.00 to Everett, Fairhaven and NewVwis r.e. u Whatcom, via Huntington St Spokane. 123. CO to Portland, Tacoma & Seattle.V $25.00 to Ashland, Roseburg, Eugene, Alhajjv and Salem, via Portland. C1TT BM Farnaes St. 'Phone HI DAVID CITY. Neb., Feb. !. (Special.) Aa the trial of the Llllle murder caae progresses the Interest and attendance In creases. When court convenea at the morning session the crowd ia small, but long before the noon hour the room. Is well filled with spectatore. A. W. Richardson, who was reporter for Judge 8. H. Sedwick, repprted for Oeorge T. Coicoron today. Mra. Lillie presents an entirely different appearance than at the preliminary hear ing, la that ahe looks pale and careworn and no doubt fully appreciates the gravity of her situation. When court convened thla morning the cross-examination of Witnesa Louis C. Ren waa resumed, which elicited the fact that Mr. Ren was employed to assist the detectives in Investigating and trying to locate the pereon who committed the crime for which he received the sum of $55 from Butler county. The defense also attempted to show by the cross-examination of this witness that while he waa employed in the capacity of detective that he pretended to be a friend of Mrs. Lillie and made numerous attempta to get confessions from her. Witnesa continuing said: "I think I told Mr. Hill that the World Herald has misquoted me aa a detective. I was not a detective and never claimed to be, Do not think I said thla to Mrs. Llll'.e." ' On re-dlrect examination witness said: "I waa employed by Mr. Walling, county attorney, to assist In trying to apprehend the party or partlea wbo committed this crime. I waa Instructed to do everything In my power to run down the person or persons who committed the crime. I was not employed by any one to get evidence against this defendant. I thought if any one had any motive in murdering M. Lillie, that Mra. Lillie and her people had some idea who It waa and thla ia tbe rea son that I talked to Mra. Llllle frequently about it." i Defendant Talks to Sheriff. laaac J. West, sheriff of Butler county, waa the next witness. He said in part: "On the morning of the murder of Mr. Llllle, Mr. Taddlken, night police, called me to the telephone. I arrived at the Llllle realdcnce about 6 o'clock. Mi-- Tad dlken, Bert Hall and Doctor Stewart were there when I arrived. I waa down stairs from ten to fifteen minutes before I went to tbe bedroom up stalra where Mr. Llllle was. I looked at Mr. Lillie and tbe wound In hla head, then went and sat down by Mrs. Lillie and commenced talk ing to her. Mr. Lillie was lying on the west side of the bed, his head turned slightly to the west, from the perpendic ular bis head would be turned about one quarter to the. west, his head was from six to nine Inches from the head of the bed. "I had a converaatlon with Mrs. Lillie ss to how the shcoting occurred. I naked her if ahe saw any one In the room, and ahe said the man waa about the slae of Harvey, which waa a man about five feet, eight inchea tall. She could not tell aure, but thought he wore a hat with the front turned up. He waa of light complexion and light hair, that he was pointing a gun at her and ahe rolled oft the bed. I asked Mrs. Lillie If anything had been taken. I had heard aome way that money bad been atolcn, and she showed me the drawer and I discovered nothing in there only some clothing. "Mrs. Lillie said that tbe man was standing north of the stove .pipe and In a northwest direction from where tbey were were sleeping. She alao did thla by point lng to the place where tho man stood.' Witness here described the location as tes tided to by other wltcssses. , "The stovepipe comes up through the floor about two feet from the bed and near the middle of the bed lengthwise. "I went from there to the central tele phone office to have them notify all towns around of the occurrence. I returned to the Lillie residence between 10 and 11 o'clock, and went into the house and had a converaatlon with Mra. Llllle. I asked her if ahe could give me a better descrip tion of the man, and ahe said she did' not think ahe could. I aaked her about the money and where ahe got it, and ahe aaid for sewing. I aaked her from wfcom, and ahe aaid ahe did not know. I aaked her It ahe usually kept that much money in tbe bouae, and ahe aaid ahe usually had some money lu the bouae. "I went downtown again, but ta a few moments returned to the house again. Wil lis Westover and J. Ira Duncan went with me. We" looked tha room over and looked through tbe different rooms In the bouse, and tbe furniture In the bedroom was in the same position that it waa at ( o'clock In the morning." Witness here described tbe bullet bole and powder burns In tbe curtain, glaas snd screen as testified to by other wltneaaea. The direct examination waa not concluded at noon. At tbe afternoon session the direct exam ination of 8heriff West waa concluded. He said: CViaaaea glare the Harder. "When I. Mr. Westover and Mr. Duncan examined the. bed carefully I went out on the porch to aee If the acreen had been taken out, anj) it had not." Wltneaa examined , the acreen and said: "The hole in the screen is larger than It was when I first saw It; It is longer and wider. I also examined the window glaas that had a hole In it, and on the inaide it waa black around tbe hole. I alao exam ined the lace curtain, and there waa a powder mark on thla." Witness identified the window and iace curtain and aaid: "Tbe powder mark around the bole in the glass Is aot near aa black aa It was, and the bole la not aa neat aa it waa on October Zl; otherwise it is the same, and the powder burn ia not near aa plain on the curtain aa it waa. I got a padlock and locked up the bedroom In which Mr. Lillie waa shot. Dr. Stewart aad Mr. Derby were preaent at thla time. "I vent to tbe Llllle residence in tbe evening. J. A. Hell, a detective from Omaha, was with me. I Introduced him to Mrs. Lillie. and told her he was a detective. I had another converaatlon with Mra. Llllle the next morning in the presence of the detective, and aha described tbe man the same as she did tbe day before. She aaid at thla time that the man stood south of ths stovepipe and about a toot and a halt from tbe bed. We asked her if ahe aaw the party after ahe rolled oft tha bed. She aaid: 'No; I have no eyea In tha back of my head.' She indicated ta ua .he place here the bullet paased through the cur tains and screen, and they were oa a level ranging straight asst. Tbe place where ahe aaid tke burglar stood ia northweat of thla window. I have had several conversations with Mrs. Llllle since the ia order, and aha never sJd anything to me about the tad lac af the guilty person " The croaa-examioation elicited the fact that Mra. Ullle rtaaeetea the shana to CHICAGO. III., Feb. IS Charles Bar tholomew, a confectioner, was robbed of $1,$7S by confidence men, who led him to believe thai he waa arranging for the lis at the hospital. She wanted to go i ,d0pu0B 0f a oaughter of an Italian prince, home; said that ahe had valuable goods ; ,n(1 W,icj, ag eventually to net him $50, there. and that ahe must go home and , coo. look after. I told her I would do thla. I j rhe transaction took place In a downtown got back to Harvey's about 8 o'clock. While ; notP j,Bt nignt, and hslf an hour after at the hospital Mrs. Lillie also said she iPaTng the pseudo agents Bartholomew dls- must go home and get some more clothing covered that be had exchanged a bag con on. A woman at the hospital got her aome j talnlog the above amount for a bag filled DO YOU GET UP WITH A LAME BACK? clothing, and ahe did not go home Just then Mrs. Lillie came. bark home about tbe mid dle ot the forenoon. She waa around tho house there the same as all the rest of us. I did not aee anything especially that she did. I examined the kitchen door and the lock on both aides. The key was on the floor. The door was standing open, possi bly six Inches. I examined the keyhole from the outside, and thought that It bad not been disturbed, found dirt and cobwebs In the keyhole on the outside of tbe lock. I found pepper, a shoe heel and a n,atck on the floor. The pepper waa common table pepper. I found this on the floor on the eaat doorstep and on the threshold of the eaat door of the.aewlng room "Mra. Lillie described to me the manner In which Harvey was killed. She aaid ahe woke up and saw a man about the size of Harvey standing by tbe bod pointing a gun at her, and she rolled off the bed. After he shot the second tlmo she got up, went in and called the girls and went downstairs to tbe telephone to get help and could not get central. I have known Mrs. Lillie thir- wlth paper. A doien detectives searched the downtown streets In vsin for the perpetrators of tha fraud. FORECAST OF THE WEATHER Warmer Today., bat Probably Baovr la Nebraska aad Western Iowa. WASHINGTON, Feb. 18. Forecast: For Nebraska fartly cloudy and warmer Thursday; probably snow; Friday, fair. For Indiana and Illinois Fair, continued cold Thursday; Friday, Increasing cloudi ness and warmer, probably snow In south portion; frecb west winds, becoming varia ble. For Colorado and Wyoming Generally fair Thursday and Friday. For Montana Fair Thursday; warmer in east portion; Friday, fair. For North Dakota Warmer Thursday; Friday, fair. teen or fourteen years, and noticed that j For Iowa Fair, not so cold Thursday, ex. after she returned from the hospital and during all that day I could see no differ ence In her appearance andconduct from what It has always been. Mrs. Llllle and I went to the hospital af'er dinner and re mained there until Harvey died. After Harvey died both of us went back to Har vey's house. "I was at Mrs. Llllie's. the day the cor oner's Jury was there and had a conversa tion with her that day. She said they asked her a great many questions about their family affairs, and they asked her about her dealings with the Board of Trade, and she did not think it necessary to tell all; h.t It .m none of their buslneas. She asked m. to do her a favor. I did so. I "t took a letter to air. nunyon, me Droaer. Mean temperature for her. I think this was on Tuesday after the murder. Clnce Mrs. Llllie's arrest she told me that there waa several burned matched on the floor that morning, and that her father had aeen me pick them up. I did not pick up any burned matches there at any time." The cross-rumination, when court ad journed, had elicited nothing more. ' Opeai Heart aad ' Parse. YORK, Neb., Feb. 18. (Special.) Mr. Hellfly, a traveling man. early yesterday morning met a little girl near the post office who was not dressed very comfort ably, and on questioning the girl she oi htm her feet were cold. Hellfly at once took the little girl Into a shoe store and bought her a new pair of warm shoes. Jo dare Estelle In Sehrs.ka City. NEBRASKA CITY,' Neb.t 'Feb. 18. (Spe- elsl.r-rJudge Este'.le of Omaha la holding district court in this city for Judge Jessen. Judge Jessen Is disqualified in the case of Anna Bauer' against the Bankers' Union, having acted as attorney In the case be fore his election. SI! '1 t ll I . t - - ' . -. , 1U Omaha, partly cloudy Valentine, cloudy North Platte, partly cloudy Cheyenne, partly cloudy Bait Lake City, clear Kapld City, partly cloudy ... Huron, cloudy Chicago, clear St. Louis, clear St. Paul, clear 'NEBRASKA CITY, Neb.. Feb. 18.-(Spe- ! ttyLTitv 'cllaV clal.) James K. Alexander ana wiu nave cept possibly snow in extreme west por tlon; Friday, probably fair and warmer. For Missouri Pair Thursday, warmer in west portion; Friday," fair and warmer, ex cept possibly snow in extreme south por tion. For South Dakota Snow and warmer Thursday; Friday, fair. For Kansas Partly cloudy and warmer Thursday; Friday, generally fair. Local Record. OFFICE OF THE WEATHER BUREAU, OMAHA, Feb. 18. Official record of tem perature and P'eclpltatlon compared with the corresponding day of the last thr:a years: 1303. 1902. 1901. 13i. 2S 39 32 17 Z 11 I . 4 22 3- 22 precipitation . w .ou t .uu Record of temperature and precipitation at Omaha for thla day and alnce March 1. 1902: Normal temperature deficiency for the day Total excess alnce March 1.... Normal precipitation Deficiency for the day Precipitation since March 1.... t)"flcicncy since March 1 Deficiency for oor. period. 1902 Deficiency for cor. period, 1901 Have You Rheumatism, Liver or Bladder Trouble? To Prove what SWAMP-ROOT, the Great Kidney. Liver and Bladder Remedy, will do for YOU, all our Readers May Have a Sample Bottle Sent Free by Mail. 21 31 271 03 Inch 0 Inch .30.61 Inchea . .8 Inch . 8.50 Inches . .18 Inch Keporta troaa stations at T P. M. CONDITION OF THE WEATHER a)lt e l tie.1 3j ' c ? 3i 5 K : c ' : 3 : Valuable Farm Chaste. Hand. aold to Edward Andrews 320 acres ot land in township :iine In this county for 119.100. IMarrlaa-e Ureases la Otoe. 'NEBRASKA CITY, Neb., Feb. 18. (Spe cial.) Marriage licenses were Issued today Havre. cloudy- Helena, clear tlsmarck, clear ... "Galveston, cloudy 7 8 .00 li 16; .00 14. 161 T 261 341 .01 24 2X1 .) 161 20 .(XI 81 .00 4 s 24 l -l M til .01 10 . 6 . 8 .01 S .tkl 32 T til .01 41 " 56 T Indicates aero. T Indicates trace of precipitation. I,. A. WELSH. Local Forecart Official. Laundry Lesson Number Four, Explains its uses more and more 0 P A 9 tfSr contains nothing that will injure any fabric. Instead, it saves and softens the "clothes, . and cleans them, too. Swift & Company Cblore Kansas City Omaha bt Louis St. Paul Stjotcv Fl Worth Pride oao Pain or dull ache In the bach is unmis takable evl'dence ot kidney trouble. It is Nature's timely warning to show you that the track ot health is not clear. If these danger signals are unheeded, more serious results are sure to follow; Bright's disease, a-hlch Is the worst form of kidney trouble, may steal upon you. The mild and the extraordinary effect ot the world-famous kidney and bladder rem edy. Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, la soon realized. It atands the highest for its won derful cures of the most distressing cases. A trial will convince anyone and you may have a aample bottle free, by mail. Backache, trie Aald. aad t'rlaary Trouble. Dr. Kilmer A Co.. Blnghamton, N. T. Gentlemen: When I wrote you last March for a aample bottle of Swamp-Root, my wife was a great sufferer from back ache, rheumatism and urinary trouble, also excess of uric acid and liver trouble. After trying the sample bottle, she bought a large bottle here at the drug store. That did her so much good ahe bought more. The effect of- Swamp-Root whs wonderful and almost Immediate. She haa felt no return of tbe old trouble since) F. THOMAS. 427 Best 8t.. Buffalo. N. Y. Lame back Is only one symptom of Kid ney trouble one of many. Other symp toms showing that you need Swamp-Root are, being obliged to pass water often dur ing the day. and to get up many times st night, inability to hold your urine, smart ing or Irritation In pasalng, trli k dus' or sediment In the urine, catarrh of the blad der, uric acid, constant headache, diizlness, sleeplessness nervousness. Irregular heart beating, rheumatism, bloating. Irritability, wornout feeling., lack of ambition, leas of flesh, sallow complexion. , If your wster when allowed to remain undisturbed In a glass or bottle for twenty, four hours, forma a sediment or settling, or has a cloudy sppesrance. It Is evidence that your kidneys and bladder need Im mediate attention. In taking Swamp-Hoot you afford natural held to Nature, for Swamp-Root Is ths most perfect healer and gentle aid to the kidneys that Is known to medical science. Swsmp-Root is the great discovery ot Dr. Kilmer, the eminent kidney and blad der specialist. Hospitals use It with won derful success In both slight and aevere cases. Doctors recommend It to their patients and use it In their own families, because they recognize In Swamp-Root tho greatest and most successful remedy. If you have ' the slightest symptom's ot kidney or bladder trouble, or if there la a trace of It In your family history, send at once to Dr. Kilmer A Co., Blnghamton, N. Y., who will gladly send you free by mail, immediately, without cost to you, a aam ple bottle of Swamp-Root and a book of wonderful Swamp-Root testimonials. Be sure to say that you read thla generous offer In The Omaha Dally Bee. If you are already convinced that Swamp Root Is what you need, you em, purchsse the regulsr fifty-cent and one-dollar slzs bottlea at drug stores everywhere. Don't make any mistake, but remember Ihs name, Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's 8wamp-Root, and the address, Blnghamton, N. T., on every bottle. Why Wot Go Tourist? - It's the inexpensive juick comfortable way to erosa tha continent. Only 2Vi days, Kansas City to Los Angeles, via tha Rock Island's El Paso Line. Quickest time via any line.' Doable berth $5.00. Present rate to Pacific Coast points, ' California, Oregon, Washington, British Columbia Only $25.00 Proportionately low rates to Cub, Idaho and Montana. G. A. Rutherford, D. P. A. 1323 Farnim St., Omaha, f!sb. The Beo Want Ads Produce Results- en FtrttTbarsa, Xaans, (fet. 17. MOt. " I aarisidcr Wins o4 (Wwai sapetier to any aWr's mlohse I svar tsar4 aaU I kaow jhetwot I spaak. I wetorU hm Asm nsoaths wi snppreased msostruaHea which eotapieteJy prostrate, me. Ifeas wstaU atpot .threes, ar baa feefti gUe ad I vanU ha kWissj s4?tM. Mj lis weald rfdttki I waulef ted sa wsk I . . . 1 nUuralrr felt 4iasTa-eJ tag I gasman to U aayW sWkeAp cat fhjudatm, bit wise 4 CuA (Mat ia a Oess-ceai to we. I felt a cWige for the starr witWi a week. Afer irineUea aays areatsnrjet I saonstrwatea wttWai lufiemj tba affonias 1 usually did aad sooa aecasoe rapoiai ana without asm. , Wiae U Carvini is simply wonderful and 1 viak that ail it fC suffering woaaea. knew of its fie auoljtias, StlM'- tlx. 4vi asj edLtva asaa- Vsasaesff, assasssa staaaaesss laasjaa. BWLactee u the danger signals of ciio disease. Malarial neadseha predict feri-. BIHows safansai fbrssjsJk troubles. Saursiaic hemdaehe shows orenrarked norres. Periodical headaches toil ot fyroaia wea rrioas. Both wea and womea suffv fb in tow kmds at beadaefcea, but te last, penocaMta ewaaciia, safla mtf nwksoi wotnea and caautot fc mistake., far it ia tha uoamig si$a of irregular menatrnadon and aaaraag eW Mtoa. No woman need give aa aad aocapt a Mfo af suffering vnless she allows aersuif ta dee pair. Mrs. b&osr, fa bar fetter bows avery suflonnf wasaaa haw aot only aanricg cast a aroidsd bnt how weakness can ba otoqaerad aatd 14 Vest beeatb assaraa. one Mils, bow svan wavan ue vest msauau aia, isuea, iw at iwvu m wninn Uenrplstaly prostrated by ans month U tappreeaed meases, blinded by aeadaahea and aaekoj wU pain ha waa made a Strang and healthy woman again. One week of aappreMion ia a sanoas thmg. Bat nins) bios tb ! Think of it! Can voor snffenag be greater than hers? Mui your ease m mar aotvungiy aepeteaj r Ramamber witai Wine of Cardui no ease 11 hopeless ot of every twetrty case and never fails to baneat a easa of weakness help af phfsici . stye- Mrs. Snow's atta&tio was attracted to Wina -if aha hadn't bee, bevoad doctor Cardui. at yea ars diaconraaed and doctors have railed now. lUssnember that headachi Cure one and yon cure boia. Do zu postpone of Cardui, aad try it aa tha irreamtar low. Cure one and v Cardai todav. All drarft-iaU sell f.W battles af Wine af Oardni because this gitwasadyempsraaaaaJ of arresrular mensas, of Cardai wfeen ska wan discouraged and 'a help she probably nerar would hnvaoame) to tta Wipe C iled, thai is tbe best reason in tha works' o aWiaUkry ttkaa ies mean female weakness. Tbey are troaa the name eaoat tiausetseai ' day teases eyn (it wow cats, fieonre a bottle ef Win ct MRS. vTLKELMElA SSOW, V 42 1-2 Coefrai iareet. Partlsaa Etia sails laegaa. PtiDn4. Makec ju DGvl MS mm aT!T-r-;''J""Xa IJriaejti- r i a