Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, April 30, 1904, PART I, Page 7, Image 7

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    THE OMAIIA DAILY BEB: SATURDAY, AfRIL 80, 1001.
rlr'
An Arctic Nerve Cure
By William Bradford Alien. ,
(Copyright. 1904. by William Bradford
Allen.)
"My wife and Mri. Hills ud to think a
tieap of each other; that n when Sarah
Imagined she bad hay fevtr, and told Mn.
Hills every day how poorly aha felt. Now
they don't speak, ahd It'a all on account
of floating around on an iceberg."
Mr. Abner Bpencer atlrrad up the blaalng
frigs in hia fireplace and amlled remlnls
cently. 1 expressed my Ignorance and
Interest
Mr. Bpencer'a 6fllcs, In which we were
seated, waa not a busy place, but then Mr.
Spencer waa not busy man. His bankers
could vouch that he had no need to be.
His office waa for him an asylum to which
he could go every morning and read the
thus adding to his sense of Importance
and avoiding domestic worries at the same
time.
"You never met Mre. BpencerT" her hue
band Inquired. I had not.
"Well, my wife ia a capable woman; yes,
air, as capable woman aa there la in the
tate of Connecticut; but It wasn't always
that way. For a spell she uaed to think
she had hay fever every year from the
time the grass turned green in the sprint
an (11 furnace time In the fall, and it took
a good sized iceberg to make her agree she
was mistaken."
. Mr. Spencer drew hia chair a trifle
Bearer to the Are. A amlle that started
In a twinkle In hia eyes spread Itself over
his smooth-shaven cheeks, hesitated for
an Instant In his short gray beard, and
following the bulging curve of his waist
coat waa finally lost In the tips of his
square toed shoes.
"When I come to think of all the things
that happened they do seem funny," he
said In explanation. "The doctors and we
had considerably many of them take it
first and last all told Barah that there
wasn't anything really the matter with her
except nerves. But she wouldn't believe
any of them, and It finally came to a
point where something had to be done.
There wasn't much fun living in the same
house with a woman who waa ' grunting
all the time the way my Barah .was, so
I got desperate and said to the doctor we
had then that things had got to atop some
how. We talked the matter all over and
we both came to the conclusion that as
long aa Sarah really thought she waa sick
and you couldn't beat It out of her that
she didn't have hay fever the only thing
to do waa to make believe she waa right,
and then to pretend to cure her. So we
decided that I waa to take her to aome
place where she couldn't have hay fever
aven If ahe wanted to.
"That evening I took out the map and I
studied It like when I was a boy at school.
I looked all over North and South America,
and they wouldn't do green grsss grow
ing everywhere; then I tackled Europe and
Vela and Africa and Australia and the
(Wands In the . sea and. by Jinks! they
wouldn't do either. Every single place was
full of flowers and weeds In summer, and
the only plare that looked aa If it might
So barring the ocean, and I never cared
much for aea trips was Greenland. So I
aald to my wife, Just as naturally as If
I'd said 'Sarah, we'll have enmed beef
for dinner tomorrow,' I said, 'We'll spend
the summer In Greenland.'
" 'Greenland?' ahe answered. 'You mean
Swltserland, Abner. There's where Mrs.
Hills Is going. She wss telling me about
It only yesterday all about the mountains
and everything she was going to sre. It'll
be nice to go along with her.'
" "Mrs. Hills may be going to Swltser
land, but that's no place for folks with hay
fever,' I said. "There's nothing but edel
weiss crawling all over the hills there ami
that makes It pretty bad for people who
are sick the wsy you sre.' I was taking
thancea. otid though I didn't rellfh the idea
Df cooping myself up in Greenlsnd all sum
mer, I waa bound to try to make Sarah
think she was cured.
"I guess what I aald about that edelweiss
Impressed Sarah aome, for the next day
when Mra Hills came In to talk about
Swltserland Sarah got back at her about
the advantagee of Greenland, about It be
Ing more romantic to go to places everyone
didn't go to, and all that sort of talk.' It
Bnally got so hot that it wasn't safe to talk
at foreign travel when those two were to-
(ether.
"Well, along the first of June we got
started. How did we go? Oh. that
tasy enough. I fixed it up with the captain
tt a whaling steamer sailing from New
t Bedford that he'd take us up and leave us
while be wept whale fishing for a couple
of months, and then he'd call for ua In Sep
tember and hrlna us back.
"So we packed up everything we could
think e canned stuff and tea and flour.
nu m pui in my rtetver hat In
rase we should meet any swell people, end
she put In her blark silk dress. And we
took along oil rooking stoves to cook on
and cook books to read. Then we bought
a house. It all oame to pieces so It would
travel easy and the sailors could put it to
gether for ua to live In. The captain Hid
me we couldn't wear our regular clothes
up there, but his wife, who had been In
Greenland wttk aim and waa Just Barah' a
site, agreed to lend her come of her things
that weren't worn a speck, and he arranged
to have some made to fit me.
"When the day earns for sailing the
whole family traveled with us down to
New Bedford to see us off. They said
good bye and 'come back well and strong.'
snd we said good bye and don't let the
children those were our grandchildren
eat green apple,' and we started.
"You've taken a sea trip? Then there's
no special use telling you of ours. Of
course we were seasick some, but that
didn't last long, and we enjoyed the trip
better than I thought we would. On:y
Sarah waa all the time curious sbout those
slothes of the captain s wife she waa going
to wear.
" 'Are you sure they'll fit and be stylish 7
she kept asking him.
He. told her that she and Ma wife were
aa much alike as twlna. and ths clothes
would he sure to fit. and aa far aa style
went, the people up In Greenland didn't
change fashions very often, and he tried
to ease her mind. Barah wanted to see
them and try them on. but they were way
down In the ship's cellar and couldn't be
got at easy, so she had to believe the cap
tain, seelrf there was no other way. We
AND BUS GAVE MRS. HILLS ONE LOOK.
kept on sailing for a long time, and thsn j
ono morning there was Greenland Just
ahead of us, and I'l be Jiggered if It
wasn't green, too, with grass growing the
way it does here at home.
"Naturally I was disappointed, seeing
we'd come so far to run away from grow
Ing things, and after we'd sailed along all
day we came to a place where there waa
knothlng but rocks and Ice.
I " 'I guess we'll stop here.' I said to the
captain. 'It doean't look exactly Inviting,
but if we don't catch our death of rheuma
tism or pneumonia we ought to get cured
from hay fever.'
The captain looked sort of surprised
that I'd pick out Just that place for a
aummer resort, but I was paying him to
do as I wanted, so he stopped the ship,
and the next morning the sailors com
menced to take our things aahore. Sarah
was sort of disappointed when she saw
the place by daylight. Not that It wasn't
daylight all May and all night up there at
that time of the year, but she was sleepy
the night before and hadn't taken a good
took. ,
" "Why. I don't sea any neighbors up
here,' she said.
"'No,' the captain answered; 'and you
won't see any wherever you look all over
Greenland, unless Its Esquimaux or polar
bears. Neighbors don't grow thick around
these parts.'
'But what ahall I do without folks to
talk to and toll them how I'm feeling
today?' ahe asked.
"The captain said something that
sounded like swearing, but Sarah didn't
hear, or else I'd have talked to him
straight, because I won't let any man
swear when my wife Is around. Between
us all we got Sarah into a rowboat, and
the sailors put up our house where I
told them to right out on a point stick
ing out Into, the sea and covered with Ice,
where there wss sure to be no hay fever.
They put all the things we had brought
to eat in the house, so If there were any
polar bears around they wouldn't Steal
thlncs: and, aselng there wasn't much room
left in the house, they put the trunk
holding our clothes underneath a stone
heap in back. And then the ship sailed
away, the captain saying he'd call for us
In September.
"I noticed that Sarah was uneasy alt
the time the men were working, and I
naturally thought It waa because we were
going to he left alone. But Just as soon
as the ship started off, 'I'm glad they're
gone,' she said. 'Now I can try on those
things tho captain's wife lent me.'
" 'Well,' I thought. 'Borah's hay fever
la better If she thinks of clothes at this
time.' But I opened the trunk and
brought her a bundle marked 'For Mrs,
Spencer.' There waa another bundle
marked for me. and we each started to
put our new clothes on.
"Mine were made of fur, and they were
rut sort of queer, but I didn't think much
sbout It until Sarah yelled out, 'Abner,
that woman aent me a pair of panta to
wear!' Well, you should have even my
wife, leastwise no men except her husband
should have seen tier, becauso she was
dressed In a fur Jacket Just like mine and
fur pants Just like mine, too. Gracious,
If Sarah hadn't been so mad It'd have been
funny." Mr. Sixncer leaned bark and
laughed at the remembrance.
"And the captain's wife expected Mra
Spencer to wear pan that la, trousers?"
I inquired.
"That's Just what she did. and come to
think about tt, that's what the books say
the Esquimaux women do wear; but my
Sarah In a pair of furry panta, with her
bonnet with feathera In It on her head and
spectacles on her nose, and she the mother
of three children and the grandmother of
els more! Gracious. I was glad I was ths
only ono to see tier. 'Abner Spencer.' she
said, It makes ana blush to look at myeeif.
You ought to be ashamed to stand there
and laugh. Dear, oh, dear,' ehe aald:
'what do I look tlker
"Well, for the life of me X couldn't tell
her. because she didn't look like anything
I'd ever eecn before. Do you know I had
the hardest time to keep that womaa from
changing back to the thlnga she wore on
the shlpT But I saw we were taking
chance enough from lumbago and quinsy
sore throat a It waa, so I made her keep
on the things, teeing there was nobody
there to see her except me, and I'd seen
her already.
"If I should tell you how we worked to
get things fitted up in our house lt d take
till supper time, and there'd be no sense
In It anyway. We got things aa we wanted
them at last, with everything to eat aafe
Indoors and the clothes we weren't wearing
In the trunk under the heap of atones
back of the house, and we had supper and
went to bed dead tired out. It seemed
foolish to go to sleep when the son was
chining, but I figured that we'd have to
wait a month or two before It set, to we
pulled the curtalna to make It aa dark aa
we could, and It wasn't long before we
were anorlng.
"The first thing we knew after that It
seemed as If an earthquake had struck
us. Everything waa going humplty bump
Ity, and there was the scariest, ripping,
roaring noise, and It wasn't until I stuck
my head out of the window that I saw
what waa the matter. We were afloat.
Yes, sir. afloat; bobbing around on n Ice
berg with the wind blowing us further
and further from the land. The whole
point we took for rocks covered with Ice
had broken off Just back of our house,
leaving our trunk under the stones 'behind;
and there we two wi a.
-Knowing sarans nerves I waa
scarea 10 aeaui to ten ner what was
the matter, thinking she'd have a fit; but,
do you know, when I saw there waa no use
keeping things a secret and I did tell her,
breaking the news easy, she waa aa pleased
as possible,
" 'Now,' she said, 'I'll have adventurea
to tell that Hills woman that'll make any
thing she does seem like staying at home.'
"Even when I told her that the trunk
had been left behind, she didn't seem to
care a bit. That woman, who, even If she
was my wife, waa grunting all tho time
from June to November every year, cheered
right up the minute she had really some
thing to complain about.
"The wind kept blowing us south. I'd
have been scared to death, floating around
the way we were. But Sarah kept laugh
ing and cooking buckwheat cakes on the
oil stove Just aa if nothing had happened.
so I didn't have the nerve to complain.
Every morning as we kept floating south I
hoisted a sheet on a pole on top of the Ice
berg, so if a ahlp did happen to come our
way It would see it and atop, but I didn't
have much faith In It. Every day tha wind
kept coming from the north, and It was
lucky we had on clothes like the Esqui
maux wear, or we'd have been frosen
stiff. All the time Sarah was Just aa happy
and pleased, and a big alght more eo, as
If we'd been safe In our house on Main
street. What, with the housekeeping and
cooking to attend to, her time waa pretty
well taken up, but after I'd hoisted tha
sheet for the day all I had to do waa to
write In my diary and eat my meals.
"But, after all, it was sort of grand, with
the sea Just as blue aa If some one had
dumped a million bottles of bluing Into it,
and wind blowing off the tops of the wavea
now and then and making them look as
white as napkins on a clothesline. And the
Iceberg itsel. that waa the grandest of
all; so big and solemn and white and cold.
It made you have the shivers to look at it
all and think how small you were compared
to everything around you. I used to get
sort of brooding, and then Sarah'd cook me
some griddle cakes and I'd feel better.
"The only living thing In sight, barring
Barah and me, were the whales. Some
times they come up to the top and roll.
with their sides all white and shiny, ar.d
blow little squirts of water. Sarah and
I would stand in our front door and watch
them. She used to say how nice It waa
not to have the wind blow her clothes
around, and she began pitying the women
who had to follow the styles and wear
puffed-up sleeves and skirts made Juat
so. She began to look better, too. When
I got downxplrlted she'd cheer me up. and
say how nice It would be if some day the
wind changed a little and blew us up the
river and landed us safe and sound at
home.
"Tha Iceberg waa melting pretty fast,
though, and It wasn't more than half the
site It was when we started out on It six
weeks before, when one morning I saw
amoks.
" 'There's a steamer coming,' I shouted
to Barah, 'and we're saved!'
" 'Tint's too bad,' she said, 'and Just
as we're commencing to enjoy ourselves
so much, too.'
"I looked at her with my 'mouth open
as if she wss crasy, and then I made up
my mind that I'd be saved, whatever she
thought, and I waved the sheet and yelled
aa loud aa I cou!4. The steamer kept
coming nearer and nearer It was a big
one wtih three chimneys and bye and by
the folks on board of It saw us and they
stopped, and some mea got Into a boat
and rowed to us.
" 'What are you doing thecal the man
who wss steering yelled out. I waa mad
enough to say we were picking flowers, but
I didn't; i told Mra Instead that we wanted
to go to New Tork with Mm.
" 'Who's the man with youf ha yelled
back, pointing to Sarah, who waa washing
dlshee Just aa If nothing had happened.
" That's no man; that's my wife,' I
yeiled back. You ahould have heard those
men laugh, especially when Sarah went
Into the house and came out again with
her bon.tet tied on good and tight
"I saw it was no time to get Into a fight,
so I made Sarah get Into the boat and we
rowed to the steamer. All the passengers
were at the rail aa we came up, and they
were all talking and asking questions at
once. The ship teemed aa high aa a moun
tain, but I managed to climb up the rope
lndder some way, helping Sarah at the
same time, and when we got on deck one
of the passengers I had been looking at
because she looked as If I knew her and
then again she didn't, with a big French
hat on her head and wearing foreign-looking
clothes, gave a yell.
" 'Why, If It ain't Mrs. Abner Spencer,
there In those pants,' she said. 'It's the
most disgraceful sight I ever saw In all
my life,' she kept on.
"Barah wiped the sea water off her spec
tacles and put her hands In her pockets
oh, yes, she learned that on the Iceberg
and she gave Mra Hills one look for tt
wss Mrs. Hills coming back from Swltser
land who said those things and ahe an
swered Just as quiet aa If things like that
happened every day: 'I think the woman
has been drinking. It's such a shame,
a woman of her age, too.' And Sarah
and Mrs. Hills haven't spoken to each
other since.
"Before I went down stairs I looked back
and there was that Iceberg going blbbltty
bobbltty In the sea, and perhaps It's float
ing yet with the barter Sarah wss making
for cakes, standing next to the stove.
"Well, we got back home safe and sound.
Yes, sir; the people on board the steamer
tent us some clothes to wear. Sarah hasn't
had a nervous turn since, nor an attack of
hay fever either. And I sometimes think
that If people with nerves would stop doc
toring and go sailing on Iqebergs they'd
be better and the doctors would b poorer."
Mr. Spencer paused and looked at his
watch. "Why, It's nearly time for lunch,"
he said. "I'll be glad if you'd come up and
meet my wife and take a bite with us.
Only don't say anything about fur clothes,
for that'a the only thing she's a might
touchy about."
ABOUT LEFT JjANDED PEOPLE
Some Peculiarities Extracted by a
itady of Statistics of Varloas
Coaatrles.
"As Is universally known, we use the
right hand very much more commonly
than the left, the number of persons who
are more agile with the left hand being
comparatively small. They are ordinarily
found among women, children and savages,
and they were more numerous In ages
past than they are now. Much has been
written of these persons, but, as no one
has heretofore tried to determine their fre
quency by means of statistics, I decided
to undertake that task with the aid of my
friend, Prof. Marro," says Prof. Cesare
Lombroso in the North American Re
view. "Among 1,029 operatives and soldiers I
fpund a proportion of 4 per cent In men
and S to 8 per cent in women. Among
lunatics the proportions ars not much dif
ferent. On the other hand, studying a cer
tain number of criminals, the quota of left
handedness waa found more than tripled in
men, IS per cent, and nearly quintupled In
women, 12 per cent. Some particular kinds
of criminals, however, as, for example,
swindlers, offered me again a much larger
proportion, S3 per cent, while murderers and
ravlahera give lees from 9 to 10 per bent.
At all events, this Is a new characteristic,
which connects criminals with savages, and
differentiates them from sane people, aa
well as lunatics.
"As appetite comes In eating (according
to the proverb), so, once In the midst of
these first discoveries, I wished to see
If I cculd not go further In my re
searches. until now, I thought, left-
handednets only has been studied. Would
it not be worth the trouble to search If
there be not, also, what one may call
'left-sldedness' aa applied to the senses
that Is, If there be not men who have a
greater sensibility on the left than on the
right side? With this Idea Instituted a
kind of physiological surveillance over
number of my friends and colleagues, and
over some worklngmen.
"As a result, I found that left-sldedness
Is In much larger proportion than left
handedness, showing Itself In no less than
J8 per cent of normal people. The curious
fact appeared alao that left-handed people
do not have more of this sensitive left-
meaner man Tisni"rintlu people, ana not
even as much, at least In tha sens of
touch, ns criminals, who average 37 per
cent, although they show a difference In
the Intensity of the sense of touch. The
proportion of sensltlvs left-stded people
among criminals, however, becomes very
much more If one takes Into aocount the
sensibility to pain, which they have more
highly developed In the left aide, and visual
sharpntss, which, according to the calcula
tions of Dr. Bono. Is not only greater In
them than In honest men, but Is more ac
centuated In the left eye than In the right.
In lunatics, aa is revealed by ths researches
of Tonnlnl and Amadel, this sensitive left
sldedness Is almost more the rule than the
exception, rising as high as 44 per cent.
It appears, then, that left-handed people
are more numerous among criminals, and
sensitive left-sided people among lunatics,
"Here I will note a curious thing. Long
before I, after much technical observation,
came to this conclusion, the people of the
provinces of Emilia, Lornbardy and Tus-
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You get what you
hoy, both in flavor
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cany had already declared the aama when
they framed and used the aaylng, 'He
la left-haaded,' to express the idea that
a person Is untrustworthy."
LIVING HEART IS SEWED UP
Taea. It Is Pat la Its Proper Place
ad the Pattest Will prekably
arvlve,
Sa far as can be Judged from Ms con
dition at this time Thomas Emerson, the
Philadelphia negro who was stabbed In
tha heart by Levlna Anderson, a white
woman, will recover.
Emerson was stabbed and walked
without assistance to the Jeffer
son hospital at Tenth and Sansom streets,
a distance of more than five squares. He
climbed the short flight of stone stairs to
the hospital and sat down on a chair In
tha receiving ward.
The orderly had no Idea that his case
waa particularly pressing, and there was
no great haata in calling down a resident
physician.
When the doctor did coma and stripped
the man's breast he knew immediately
that the wound was serious. If not fatal.
Blood spurted out with every pulsation
of the heart More time waa lost In tele
phoning for one of tha senior surgeons,
and finally Dr. Francis T. Stewart, chief
of the clinic, was called to operate.
Aa soon as Emerson could be got under
the Influence of ether his heart waa ex
posed by a long incision, which necessi
tated the breaking of several ribs. The
covering, or flap, waa laid back, the tower
border corresponding to the sixth Inter-
Space, the Inner border to the left border
of the sternum, and the upper border to
the second Interspace. The cartilages of
the corresponding ribs were divided and
the flap raised, separated from the pleura,
and turned outward by fracturing tha
ribs.
The pleura was then separated from tha
pericardium, beginning toward the me-
dlan line. The pericardium waa Incised
and the accumulated blood evacuated, the
pulse responding quickly to this relief.
Dr. Stewart then Inserted two fingers
below and behind the apex and lifted out
the heart. It waa drawn clean out of the
trunk, yet It went on with Ita work with
almost normal steadiness and regularity.
Tha cut was an unusually large one and
had penetrated to tha Interior. It required
alx stitches.
As soon as the chest cavity was exposed
Dr. Stewart saw that the left lung had
been wounded also and was collapsed. On
opening the pleura he discovered that the
lung was filled with blood, but no suture
waa necessary here. He merely scooped
out the blood with his hand.
Then the pericardium was closed, the
pleura and heart replaced, and the flap
sutured In position.
SEAS0IA6LE FASHIOXS
LADIES' PELERINE CAPE.
No. 8026 The fanciful capes with stole
effect, which have been so popular, are on
the list in spring styles. These capes may
be worn as a shoulder covering for cool
daya and also as coat or costume garni
tures. Made of cloth or silk with plain or
elaborate trimming, they are Just the thing
for extra warmth with a voile dress, and
oh! so much cheaper than a Jacket, besides
being more fashionable. The cape is de
signed to give breadth and dignity to the
figure without detracting from the height,
and making one look "dumpy" In any way.
The pattern requires only a yard and a half
of material, an amount one Is very apt to
have left over from something, or perhaps
can utilise an old Silk or cloth skirt In mak
ing a charming wrap. The trimming Is
such a small matter that It is not worth
talking about. For occasions accordion-
pleated chiffon or liberty silk ruffles are
dainty.
Sixes small, medium and large.
For the accomodation of The Bee read
era these patterns, which usually retail at
from 19 to 80 cents, will be furnished at a
nominal price, 10 cents, which covers all ex
pense. In order to get a pattern enclose 10
cents and address Pattern Dep't, Bee,
Omaha, Neb.
BAGOD TEA
In Japan. Why?
2
DIRECT from Japan.
No manipulating In
any way. JUST
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Just what you have
been using for
years. ALWAYS
THE SAME.
routr
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TEA
A BIG OFFER !
Omaha Clothing Co.,
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GREEN TRADING STAMPS
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GALL EARLY AHD MAKE A GOOD SELECTION,
BOOKS I N0VELS given
FREE
SATURDAY
yt aui iii aitu a iiaiiouutb
doth bound Novel besides. Look over the titles of the
books and any novel is yours if you come Saturday.
Famous Books by Famous
Authors.
All Aboard
Dog of Flanders
English Woman's hove Letters
Fnr from tho Maddening Crowd. ..
Idle Thoughts oC an Idle Fellow
Ishmael, or In the Depths
L&iit Iays of Pompeii
Last of the Mohicans
Ixiina Puone
Love letters of a Wordly Woman
The Lost Heiress
Lucilu
Mlrah Clark
idacarla
Brttuuntha at B.irntofta
Torn Hrown at Oxford
The Three Ouarditnirn
What Will the World 8ny?
What Would You Do, Ixive?
Zoo Author of
Every one placing a Want Ad in Th B;e on
Saturday, April 30, under the classifications For Rent
Rooms, Help Wanted, For Sale Miscellaneous, Personal,
Wanted to Buy, or Wanted to Rent will be presented
with one of the books on the list above,
RATES:
Bee Want Ads
Bring: Best Returns.
01
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blNns. 1 Minors farm, solars.
protrads, n If nslctd, ulcru, becosi
ln wi Mrtntit and psiufnl. To tars them
ualrslr " sislul m
INJECTION MALYDOR.
laiunt reltrf Cans Is x-rl as;.
At druilUU. Ct I ff
er ssitt with rriea for D I I V V
i Malydor Utg. Co.. Lancaster. 0., U.S.A.
Sold ps racfnaindrd hi Mi cum" Jt ,M. '
i'ICU i n.. or. mill unit imik-. i mn.
otjDxtrNfrvjrasVi
IT'S TEN CENTS
What To Eat SoiTiSS!
Band for copy. 10 oenut or f Luo u.
Reliable Health Articles. Table Stores
Jests, i'oetna. Clever Touts. A food
( i lend to brighten your le sure mo
ments. Pull of novel susTSeatlons tot
entertaining.
nw lave . BalwCIa av-"Oar koM
vaeie h haiftaiar eaS hmvpur if the teenies
Var ( Oil, wunbr pufclli-ftUos."
WHAT TO BAT (Mentaiy sUfestss
huU(Im m. mm ras Asm, Ca
We have included our best
goods in this big sale. We sell
Htrouse & Uros. High Art Cloth
ing. A. Kirsehbaum & Sons' Cloth
Ing.
Alfred Benjamin's N. Y. Cloth
ing, etc., etc. the best goods
in the U. 8.
SgtS.OO In Green
IJcJJ Trading Stamps
With every hat sold at $2.50.
SQ.OO In Green
U II Trading Stamps
Tor every $10 suit.
Men's All Wool Suits $7.48.
Men's Black Worsted Suits,
$3.48.
Strouse & Bros. $18.00 Suits
now $13.73.
Kirschbaum's Cravanettes,
$13.75.
Boys' and Children's
Dept. How Open
CREDIT !
AWAY WITH
BEE WANT ADS
GET what you want with a
Oliver Optlo
"Ouida"
Laurence Hausman
....Thomas Hardy.
Jerome K. Jerome
E. D. E. N. Southworth '
Uulwer Lytton
J. Fennlmore Cooper
K. D. Blarkmors
Mrs. W. K. Clifford
K. 1). E. N. Eouthworth
Owen Meredith
A. c'onon Doyle
AuguHta J. F.vnna
Mniietta Holloy
Tliomns Hutches
Alexander Dumas
Mrs. Holmes
Mra. Holmes
Laddie and Toosey's Mission
One cent per word per Insertion, Dally or
Sunday, oo above classifications. No adver
tisement taken for leaa than 20 cents.
SEALRES & SEARLES
Omaha. Neb.
Cures' fiuarinteii
QT'ICKEIl and for
LK88 MUS'EV THAN
ALL OTHEK3
rures all special dltusm
nf men kidney, Uladdir
kud UImiiumm ut wuuti
R'find PnitflB rured for life, soou every slale
j , aww ejrmptom. sores ou luuy, in
mouih. tongue, throat, hair and eyeUrom,
tmijiiitf ouu unuppwir cumineieiy luivvtr.
irlCACI Waist ruoturvd, enlerifeil aud koof
BllbUtfl I Ell) y vulus curcll vllLoulum
Unt. pain ur' loss vf time,. Never fulls.
Quickest cms In tbe world.
VVaalf NeriAIll 111 'rum eUustlon. wait-
, ,..-, ........ ,ug w.uno,,, nervous
I debility, eurl uevllnv. lack of vigor and
eirei.gWi. Tieulmtnl by mall. 14 years
I OF feXCCEiSSfXX tKACriClfi IN UiUlU
-Corner of liio and Ltouiilus streets.
For Menstrual Suppression
j Cr..u: PEN -TAN -GOT
Mitail Sous, M. Ss is is sk kr luiau
I aUtosMU drus be. kUU tSase Slue. trsAe kimUsI
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