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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (April 25, 1903)
TUT: OMAITA DAILY SATTTHPAY, AntlL 25, 1003. ID I I 1211 yy i uiuiuuy u in III fit fnnr.Q III lvi y rauuuw orgQins Wool Challlt 10 pieces of floe Imported all wool Cbsllls an exceptional offering all Rp pretty patterns, worth 60c yd., at lUW PercaUs Extra quality heavy Percalea, all new and pretty and all colon, warrantee, to who, not fade, 32 lnchea wide, regu lar 10c goods, at yard 36-Inch Shirtings Imported Printed Madras! and Domestlo Percalea, all new and pretty patterne, warranted fast colon, worth 10 1 up to 25o yard, at yard IsnW 7iC Huck Towels 100 doien Hack Towels, bleached, all 'alias and kinds, worth from 6c to 20o each on special sale from 10 to 11 Qm a. m. at each WW Apron Ginghams The best grades of Apron Ginghams, in all colors and aires of check Saturday only at.., 42c Bed Spreads 10x4 whit crochet Bed Gpreads, clos weave, good quality, no starch Kflf or filling, regular S6o grade, at....aJwV EOTUIi. THIRD FLOOR SATURDAY SPECIAL- A rare bargain in a Kitchen Table Cabinet Table has bins for flour, cutting board and drawer, top has small compartments, drawers and undershelf, fitted with cup hooks, reg- l O K "flUW ular price ?7 '.48 for Saturday only each. ?7.50 Couches each , $13.00 Combination Bookcase .. $10.00 Sideboard , $10.00 Solid Oak Dressers .... Steel Folding Bed Couches Open front Folding Bed Mattresses full size soft top 5.65 10.90 12.78 7.65 5.98 5.98 2.10 Woven Wire Springs 1.18 Big Lino Fancy Rockers Go on Special Salo Saturday Visit the Cafo ATl'RDAT EVENING TABLE D'HOTE DINNER. Ik to eight o'clock. Price Oc Finest service la city. Satarday mornlnc, and a. loam: a. the .apply lasts, every eaatomer set. a ! half-tone tctare, 16x22, of President Roosevelt DECORATE. DECORATE. DECORATE ill prejt mm blmyi With this iti view every Bennett department vies with the other in letting prices down. Omaha must look its very best! Trade at Bennett's Saturday. The stirring bargains in fine goods, for the street or the meeting at the "DEN." Ribbons Orer one thousand pieces of wash taffeta ribbons, shades of blue, red, pink, rose, green, cream, white black and malw. Widths 30, 40, 00 and 80. This is an extra quality of ribbon and should be marked from 15c to 23c on sale Saturday morning 30 and 40, at 60 and 80, at .Sic 84c Women's Wash Waists Sale Saturday morning, while thry last, white and colored waists, lawn, madras India llnon damask, colored waists In cambrics, mercerized cloth. llnon effects. These waists were to sell at $1.00, $1.25, $1.45, $1.75, $1.08, $2.25, all go Saturday morning at 39 cents MILLINERY DEPARTMENT The white and burnt hats now taking the lead, we will show an entirely new assortment on Saturday. White chips which are the latest, trimmed in silks of rain bow shades with flowers to cor respond, the prettiest affects ever invented for millinery trim ming. The hats worth C fl( $8.00 for ....ViUU Burnt straws trimmed in flowers, foliages and velvet rib bon, the greatest bargains in fine millinery C flfl for UiUU Sporting Goods Biggest Stock of Reach Base Ball Goods in Omaha. All carefully se lected for your selection. These goods are endorsed by the most prominent leagues in America. OUR PRICES ARE NOT MATCHED FOR KEENNESS IN THE CITY AND IT MEANS MONEY IN YOUR POCKET TO BUY HAINJCSS StniETHINQ SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY A heavy Java express whip, threadcover, Jap nail head, loop snap, sold ordinarily at C 15c, Saturday.... Ob No matter what you're after in the harness or horse furnishing line you'll find it at Ben nett'a and it'll cost you less than anywhere else in town. Drapery Department THIRD FLOOR Here ts an opportunity no housekeeper can afford to let go by, as everybody can use curtains at half price. For Saturday only- all our 11.60, $2.00 curtains In Swiss and Nottingham will be sold at per pair Upholstering goods Just the thing for re-covering chairs couches at special prices and colors. Kxtenel on rods worth lfie special for Saturday-each 90c 71c Crockery Snaps For Saturday Quick Selling. We offer these genuine crockery bar gains, pretty goods, just what you'll like. Flow blue teas7)0)fli set of 6 iSIPIj Tumblers, each Decorated jet; tea value u Green and Gold dec- orated underglazed dinner plates, regular 15c goods PURE FOOD EXPOSITION. Granulated Sugar 20 lbs Bennett'! Bargain Boap a bars , Gelatine package Pumpkin can Baked Beans-can Herring, In tomato sauce 11. Ifti can Sardines-can Cream Cheese per lb Swiss Cheese per lb Fresh, Pure Salmon l-lb. can Baking Soda package Rle For lb Prunes California, Per lb Pickles Assorted, bottle Mustard bottl Worcester Bancs ' bottle Coods. OROCERIES-Rellable, 1.00 25c 10c ....7c c 5c CHEESE-Full Lino of the Best In the Market IA Hand Cheese J iZlC tach C2C 1ft Ror.l Luncheon I O IUc lUe BUTTER Large Shipments Received Dally 19c .4c ..6c ,.5c ..9c ..6c 10: Country Butter per lb Medium Sour Pickles pint Chow Chow Pickles pint luc 5c 10c Plclllll pint Olives pint German Dill Flckl each 7ic 121c ....Ic TEAS and COFFEES Best Values Offered at All Times. Tea 81ftlng 1 per lb. B. F. Japan, Gunpowder. Oolong, Eng lish Breakfast per lb 15c fs rt ASUc COFFERS Roasted Dally. Good drink IO per lb IUC Bennett's Capitol Coffee Q Q best In the market, lb bUC A handsome picture free to every ;ustomer at tea and coffee department. c CANDY-Salted Peanuts, 9c per lb. 9c A Large quantity tor this sale PEANUT BAR per lb Cream Mil Candy per lb Chocolate Creams per lb Assorted Caramels per lb Champion Mix per lb Mix Candy per lb... Pure Sugar Btlck Candy per package "ft" luc 15c 15c 12k 10c c 9c 9c f'hnrnlata PrntYi per package w w Toasted Marahniallows per package Plain Marsbmallowa per package Velvet taffy per package Sweet Chocolate cake Neopolitan Ice Cream quart bricks ER SQUARE 5 5c ...5c ..Os 6c 35c 5C PERFUWIERY-Colgate's Perfumes. Italian Violet per ounce La France Rose per ounce Sweet Pink per ounce Lily of the Valley per ounce Pansy Bloesom per ounce Eastman's Blue Rose per ounce CIGARS LILLIAN RU8SELL 9 for California Chewing Tobacco (Union made) 1 lb. for Plowboy Plug Cut Smok ing 1 lb. for Corncake 8moktng 1 lb. for Eastman's Crushed Roses per ounce Eastman's Cblo per ounce Eastman' Nile Carnation per ounce.... P.lcksecker s Golf Queen per ounce Rlcksecker's Ping Pong per ounce All the new French Pcrfumes Plnaud's, Plver's, Violets, etc. AND TOBACCOS. Porto Rico Stogies 25 tor Red Indian Smoking Tobacco, (M 3 Ec packages lor aj 60 CIGARS up from PIPES up from , 25c 25c 25c 25c 25c 40c I AN 25c 34c 48c 25c 48c 48c 48c 48c 48c 50c 50c Ic KAUFFGIAN'S ORCHESTRA PLAYS Oil SECOND FLOOR SATURDAY, 2 TO 5 AMD 7 TO 10 EVENING UNIQUE HASHERT ON WHEELS OJd and Loiely Occupation of Two Women ia the Black Eilli. SmmmnSi M GRIT OVERCOMES HARDSHIP AND FEAR Taste and Skill Surmounts Difficul ties and Makes a Attractive Oasis at a Railroad Station. Two ridges of bleak mountains, and be tween them a canyon where tbe snow blows In clouds to the dismal screaming and moaning of the winds in the canyon, on a siding, five railroad cars, without an engine and with narrow stairways leading to their doors from a long platform and this specter train In the loneliness ot the Black Hills of South Dakota Is the habitation and provides the unique vocation of two young women whose life In this desolate place has been filled with unusuaL, anx ieties and with dangers of a peculiar sort. The siding Is on the line of the Burling ton railroad running from Denver to Lead and Deadwood, 8. D., writes Harry Beards- ley In Leslie's Weekly. The englnelesi cars with the stairways leading to their doors are for the purpose of providing a dinner for thoae who travel In two trains over this line of railroad. And the young women conduct this unique, roadside eating house It Is a hotel on wheels, with a car for eating, another tor cooking, a third for the laundry, a -fourth for a storehouse and the lust for use as bedchambers. Ths low mountains rise abruptly on each side ot the long canyon In which "The Cars" are placed. They are forbidding hills In winter, spotted with stubby pine trees snd covered with snow. And such is the face of the country for many miles around. In the barren, empty hills some times a deer ts shot; occasionally a wolf Is seen loping lightly away across the snow, but the prevailing sound is the crying ot the coring air. 'when the winds are at rest the silence is intonse. You shout and your voice bounds back to you from a (toien answering mountain sides. There Is no other sound to mingle with that which came from your throat. And the hills seem eager to receive your voice, as though they had wearied with the silence; and they eall bark to you again and again, each call fainter and more distant than the last. And thus Is the impression of ab solute loneliness magnified. The bills seem desolate Indeed. ' , A Pleasant Diversion. Into this place, so wild and weird, came the two young women from their home In a city In one ot the western states. They thought the life among the hills would be a pie mm diversion. They came to It hen the mountain sides were green and when the water waa running very merrily In a brook near by. ' A few miles away was a village where the two women thought congenial acquaintances might be found. They pictured sunny summer mornings, when they would ramble among the green hills, with sunbonnets on their heads, picking wild strawberries, listening to the songs of birds, or fishing for trout In the mountain brook. And In the evening, after the trains had passed and the passengers had been fed, tbey dreamed of frolics under the summer moon with friends whom they would find In the village. Alas, for stern reality! In a month from August the cold weather' came; the snow began to fall and there were no happy rambles on the hillsides. Besides the work was arduous and the responsibility was great. And the village, not far away, was found to be only a mining town and Its Inhab itants mainly foreigner who labored In the mines. 80 the days became dara of loneliness and anxiety. "The Cars" are placed at a station caHed Rochford, twenty-five miles from Deadwood, 8. D. Near them Is a water tank and a telegraph office. There are no other buildings within miles. At 6:17 every afternoon the southbound passenger train from Deadwood to Denver arrives at the station and atops at the siding where the five cars are standing. The brakeman has announced "twenty minutes for dinner," and he has made a canvass of his train to learn how many propose to eat there. This he does soon after leaving Deadwood, and then he telegraphs ahead to the station at Rochford, giving the number who will dine, and the Information Is carried over to the young women who are preparing din ner. By this they know approximately how many will require food. Twenty Minatea for Dinner. THE PURE ukmiim vurrtc Even children drink Gr&ia-O twea-o thry liko It and tho doc tors hay it is good for them. Why bot ? It cooUins all of tLo nourish ment of the pure ferula and Bono of tha poisons of coffee. TRY IT TO-DAY. Asg.ni . sitmj rtm Ua. and Sta. pet socaage. N ff 1 When the train arrives the passengers hurry from their seats, and stepping out, crowd into on of the oars on the siding. These traveling people are usually very nervous and excited. They have prominently In their minds the fact that they have only twenty minutes la which to satisfy their appetites, and they are haunted by tbe fear that the train outside will quietly slip away, leaving them 1 behind. 80 they rush Into the eating bouse without ceremony and without observing some of the usual rules of etiquette. It Is not until they have begun to devour the food placed before them that they reallie that their dining room U most unusual. Then they beeln making remarks. wny, iook," one exclaims, "it's a re gular railway coach." And so It ts a railway coach with the seats removed and In their places tables that ex tend nearly acroas the ear, leaving only a narrow aisle at one side. This Is the din ing room of ' The Cars." Through a door at one end young womea enter hurriedly with steaming platters ot meats and vegetables. from the next apartment,, which ts aa old freight car and Is the kitchen of the estab lishment. Those who are crowding food Into themselves have time to observe that the light comes from lamps overhead Just like those la the usual railway coach. If they are Imaginative, the passengers could very easily believe that tbey simply had been tranaferred to another train and were still moving forward. But most ot the passengers under the circumstances are not In a frame ot mind for Interesting visions. They frequently look at their watches to see how much of tbe twenty minutes remains. They com plain that they are not waited on promptly enough. And In order to obtain their share of the food that la planod before them, they enter into the dinner with the fever of a coolest. There Is a tremendous clatter of dishes, dominating every other sound, Then sotxis one sees the conductor of the train, who haa beea eating with the pas sengers, rise and move toward the door. Immediately the others follow, so that soon the whole flock has risen and flown: the condutor has shouted, "All aboard;" the train outside moves away, and again there Is dead silence In "The cars." Another Rash. At 7:35 p. -m., a little more than two hours later, the north-bound train between Denver and Deadwood stops. Again there ts the rush of the hungry, again there la the clatter of eating In the dining room, again there is the struggle for food, the remarks, the looking at watches and the sudden flight of the diners when' tbe twenty minutes has expired; and' again there is tbe contrast afterward the utter stillness. Ths day's work Is over, but the young women are exhausted. At night they are filled with fear; for once they were robbed and once an attempt was made to burn this lonely habitation among the bills. Miss Tyra McCracken and her sister. Miss Alta, who is associated with her, are In direct charge of this un usual Institution. Under Miss McCracken's direction there are a cook, a laundress, a decrepit old German who has charge of the store car, and a boy, like the "tat boy" In the "Pickwick Papers." These last two pro vide little protection for the others. At night after the rush of the dinner is over and the loneliness of the hills settles about tbem, the young women become Oiled with apprehension. Tension on tho Nerves When the elder sister lost some money which she had left In her room she did not know who had taken It; she could only sus pect. And often' when the night bad be come black and she and her sister had re tired to their car, they could hear through the stillness the sound of men approaching. The steps reached the platform outside, a tread and rumble like a wagon and horses on a bridge. Tbe foreign laborers were re turning from the mines to their homes la the village, and some of them stopped, at tempting to peer into the windows of the cars. Sometime those who had been drinking were boisterous, and the young women inslds trembled. On night the stillness was broken by cries like those of a manlao. The Inhabitants of "The Cars" awoke with a shudder. The weird shouts continued, and then Miss McCracken, her revolver in her hand, opened the door and looked out. A drunken man was reeling along tbe platform outside. The young woman spoke to him and pointed with her hand down the track toward the village; and tho Inebriate ataggered away In that direction, shouting and cursing as he went. But that was not tbe worst. Clover Watch Doc It was nearly midnight soma days later when Miss McCracken heard ths barking ot ber little dog outside. This dog, the watch man of "The Cars," has none of the at tributes ot tha usual watchdog, excepting fidelity. He Is a email cocker spaniel, with silken brown hatr, a soft wriggling body and a look ot humility and gentleness In his eyes. But on this night ths Intensity ot his barking with a note ot alarm in It, aroused the two young women from their sleep. They talked with each other a mo ment, sitting up In their beds. The bark ing ot tha little spaniel became more ear nest. The aiaters arose and one of them peered cautiously out into the night. Ehe discovered at once a red light, and climbing down tbe stairway outside shs found that a was a mystery also to the young women. like the theft of their money. The anxiety to please the flock of railway passengers who settle so suddenly on them every day and the presence of these strange dangers combine with the loneliness of the hills to remove from the life in "The Care" all the aemblance of a holiday. Tet Miss McCracken, . very small, and dantlly made, does not lose her nerve. She is sustained by her younger sister, her dog and tha revolver. And this latter, by ths way. Is no plaything. It Is a big six-shooter, so heavy that the lltle woman must hold It In both bands when she shoots. And she has become adept In the use ot It. On the hillside she has a target which, at a good many paces she has learned to hit with astonishing frequency. In her room in tho "Pullman" of the stationary train the six-shooter, fully loaded, is always at hand. Convenience ot tho Cava. It ts surprising how convenient cars may be for tho purpose for which these are used. Four of them, all excepting the one In which the dinner tablea are set, are ordinary freight cars. 'At the extreme end Is the store car, where auplies for the table ot the sort that Is not perishable are kept on ahelvea and In boxes with the regularity of a neat grocery store. Here, also, ts a large refrigerator for the storing ot fresh meat. And tbe storekeeper Is "August, the old German. The laundry car is next, where the table linen Is washed and Ironed, and In one end ot It August and tha "fat boy" sleep. Tho kitchen car, which ad joins the laundry, is provided with a range and table and all other appliances for cook Ing. Water Is piped Into It from the nearby railway water tank and comes out through faucets In the sink In the car. Connecting with the kitchen through a vestibule Is the dining room car, already described. And adjoining this, being the other extreme ot the five cars, is ths bed room ear, divided midway by a partition, on room for the cook and laundress, the other room for the two young women who are In charge. In the hillside near the cars is a dug-out. small room eut out of tha earth and rock, and In this are kept the potatoes, turnips and other vegetables, for the frost does not penetrate Into this cellsr. Every night from fifty to seventy-five persons dine at "The Cars," tbe number being greatest during tbe tourist season. Then the women work with nervous haste The two sisters, the laundress, and even the "fat boy" wait on the tables when the crowds are largest; and when the hungry passengers are gone there is a sigh of relief from the little woman proprietor of "Tbe Cars." But the fame ot the table has spread far and wide. Those who have once eaten their dinner there do not miss an opportunity to do so again. Engineers of passing freights stop at "The Cars" for lunch sometimes, deserting their train until they have satisfied their hunger. But a Vew manager of the "Hotel Among the Hills" Is wanted. The two young women are anxious to take their "watch dog" and their revolver and go. ROMANCE OF A FAR0 GAME Pat Sheedy Spins Yarn Roaehlnai From Chicago to Constantinople. The holdest and beat known orofeenlon! fire had been kindled under the car In which J, eportlng man In th world sat la she had been sleeping. The heap of sticks 1 obb7 ' Arlington, a Dig. pieaa and brueh had only started burning and the I ant looking nan. with aa air about him of flames had not yet reached the timbers of Quiet dignity and force of character. The tb car. Tbe little brown spaniel was run- big man waa none other than Pat Eheedy, nlng back and forth frantically, barking Irish-born, American-reared, and If over Incessantly and keeping his face toward ths the narrative ot his Uf is written la full fire. A bucket of water extinguished the It will be of rare Interest, for he has bee flames, but ths fear and anxiety of the In many lands and many curious episodes tenants of "The Cars" Increased. The , have developed under bis eyes, origin of this attempt at their Aestructloa J "la UM," said Mr. 8hsedy, "I waa playing against a faro bank In Chicago. Luck was running against me hard, and I was just getting ready to leave, after having parted with $8,000. i acknowledged myself broke, whereupon an Ordinary looking fellow, a total stranger, and under the Influence ot the somewhat ardent, who bad been play. Ing with a drunken man's luck, threw me over 12.000 In big bills, telling me to go on, and If I lost I could come to him for more. told him I didn't want his money, that 1 did not accept help from people I didn't know. He aald that was all right and begged that, as a favor, I should play half of It for him. 80 persistent was lie that I finally took the money and began again. You know what happens to a man when he is up against an adverse atreak. To cut It short, 1 lost the $2,000, and, declining per emptorily to go further, went out accom panied by tha stranger. We went and bad a bite to eat. I owe you $2,000,' aald I to the man, whereupon ha laughed. 'Rest easy about that,' he aald. 'You will have money when I am broke, and aoms ot these days- you may do something for me.' He would give me no address and left m wondering greatly as to his Identity. Certainly ho was singular Individual. "In 1S88, just eighteen years after that Incident, I waa operating a place in Con stantinople, where gentlemen of sporting proclivities, mostly well fixed English and American tourists, could get diversion at baccarat or the wheel. One day a Turk In mi emoloy told me that a countryman of mine, who claimed to know me, was lying In prison tor some sharp trick, and might call on me for aid. The next day the man brought me a card on which was scribbled th words: 'Chicago, 18S0, faro, $2,000.' There was no signature, but I knew in a seooad who th writer waa. Sure enough. It was my turn to do the friendly act. 'Well, I aaw tha prisoner and recognised him aa my creditor. It took mors than $1,000 to aquar tb authorities, but never mind about that The man was tb per sonification ot gratitude. It would be too long a story to tail la all th details, but befor I got him out ot tb country I knew his entire record. The man was Adam Worth, the greatest criminal In his Una of th century, and who had during a career ot rascality coverlog a period of fifty years stolen not less than $2,000,000, or probably twice that. "Here comes tb next extraordinary part of th affair. Worth confessed to me that I It was b who had stolen th famed duchess of Devonshire portrait from the Agnew gallery la London twen'ty-two years before. How, la association with the Ptnkertons, I got him to restore It to the son of tbe owner would take too long to tell, and, besides, that Is another story." Washing ton Post. A. PROFITABLE LAND DEAL Government's Investment ts Already raylasr Ahoat Oao Hoadred Per Cent Annnnlly. Ths foresight which led It years ago to tb purchase of Alaska for $7,000,000 is at last coming to be realised, when th Treas ury books show that th Investment Is now paying 100 psr cent annually, with promise ot almost fabulous figures In the future. D. H. Jsrvis former lieutenant In th revenue cutter service, th present col lector ot customs at Sitka, Is In Washing ton conferring .with Treasury officials. Hs says: "The only trouble with Alaska is that th people of th foiled States do not know what a eouatry it Is. A campaign of education la the United States would add to tbe population ot Alaska by many thou sands, and would soon make It on of th grest countries of the world. The posslblll- tbe futur of tb country will be a brilli ant one in commerce, cattle raising, agricul ture and fishing. There Is tbe greatest Ignor ance about Alaska. Why, some ot the rich Islands of the territory are larger than several of tho small states of the United States. There Is a coast line to Alaska of 25,000 miles. Tbe people of the states as sociate Alaska with seals and Icebergs, and whenever Alaska Is mentioned that Is about th first and only thing that cornea to the mind, unless it is something remote about gold discoveries. All winter at Bltka the thermoneter never went below eight degrees above sera, I believe th weather reached that point a number of times laat winter In Washington. There are $,000 miles of coast In Southern Alaska where the temperature la never below eight degrees above sero, and where It 1 as mild In the dead of winter as In half of ths United States. Just think ot that! The grass In spring and summer grows tsmpt Ingly green, and cattle and sheep grow fat aad contented. At to vegetables, there is hardly a place In Alaska where tbey will not attain splendid growth. Of course, the' Interior of Alaska, far back from th eoaat. Is cold and the summers short, but there are hundreds snd thousands of th most fertile valleys In the Interior where vege tables will grow easily. Bltka ts no fur ther north than Glasgow, Edinburgh or Co penhagen, and Its climate ts more temper ate than any of them." New York Tribune. His Favorite. "Mr. Fenner," began Miss Gushlngtoa, who writes "poems" occasionally, "who is your favorlt poet?" "Chatterton," replied th editor promptly. "Ah! and what do you consider tha best thing he ever dldT" "The last thing be did." "Let me see. what waa that?" "Suicide." New York Weekly. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver PiUs. Sua r SlgntuM Wi tie of th territory are beyond comprehen sion. Leaving out mining for everybody , kaows that Alaska Is rich in gold and silver I Tory snal est a 01 take a gas. CARTERS rOI IL13ACIL ros Dixzixut. roi tiuosmts. F8I TORN) UVtl. fOI CQaSTIPATIGI. roi SAiitw jiii. rORTMCCOMPUJUei wirisv'fa .i THWIB BBStfJTirUL Antmni Tints, s eotiemble smocg tasb. .loueble wooita, are produced only by Imperial Hair Regenerator a-, the cleanest ana most lmtlne Run- Cnl ry?.. Clorl,, 18 easily applied, abmlctrly WXt 'rjbarmlees ana OltK APPLICATION ored tree. Bend tot Pamphlet. Imperial rhemlca: Co. LX W Ui tit.. M. k. Hold by unarm a McConoeU Drug Co., Omaha. Neb. Weak Nerves People cannot help worrying when their ncrvM are weak. That feeline of flsnguor, dullness and ehautioo is the (earful condition whlcn. often pre ordea insanity. The power to work or study dlmlnUhesanci despondency de presses the mind night and day. If yon are suffering the tortures of Nervous IteDilltv, there is no knowing bow soon you may decline to something more horrible. But yon can get well. The youthful strength, buoyancy and happiness can be restored by the use of Tbey here cured thousands, and we have so much confidence in them that we give aa iron clad guarantee with a lixOO order. Bentsnvwhereln plain pack are. f 1 00 per boa. f bases (or (6.00, Hook free. Tot sals by Kohs a Co., Omana. Lmlon'a Drua BXor. Moutta Omaha. LavU lmia Ua uouaoll ttiuoa, la. OR. SEMES reliable ulul In slL r mknJ beef Bo well and favor ably known aa the leading, most reliable ana aucaessiu SPECIALIST DIHEASi-B 07 Tbey have many yeara in estab Hulling tneir regula tion IN OMAHA for hanaat and hormmbl DEALING), and dally receive many let ters thanking them for the CURfcS p-r-(acted end the great good they are if for men. Tneir lire worn nas neee w voted, as epaciaJlsts, in treating all aia see of men. . . BE CEKTAiri OF A t:uwi or v-wfi-ULTINQ the BEST FIRST. UR. 8EARLE8 graduated at two of the best medical college and Is acknowledged the best EXPERIENCED and SKILLED BPEC1ALIM it. ci. dUeesee be treats. DR. SEARLiCS' Consultation and Advice are FREE, In person or by letter, and aarredly confidential In all disaes. Written Contracts given In all curable diseases of men or refund money paid. Many cases treated K oft per month. JO.SILTATIO KM K THKATMEHT HT MAIL. Call or address. Cor. t4th nonaries. DR. SEARLES & SEARLES OMAUA, HKU. r y eew PARKER'S Hair Balsam Prwuoies tue growth of tha hair and gives It th lustre and sllklAeas of youth. When th hair is gray or faded it BRINGS BACK THE YOUTHFUL COLOR. It prevents Dandruff and hair tailing and keeps tbe scalp clean and Bealtby. ma ICHITtft'W nklOM . pEflUYROYAL PILLS H -. ..ert4tlaaJ Oalr Itaa.i.. CUSf IICK HEA9ACH1 krn. I 4l .t rutw he fni(utrtUsT.N(.iiii la kt l u tiiri aw. k.Ma ! k.arlkWa Takaaaaw-r. Bra r-M(-r aW4llaliM aaS latlia tt-aa. S.J f iwi lr44iu. t mi . ia a4 K.HrfNr Uum. r luakill. It.tMiiatw.nu lata f ll.kMUc t ka.iaaJ ci -4