TIIE OMAHA' DAILY BEEr SATTJKDAY, JUNE 18, 1904. 13 CLUES THAT FAILED BY CRITTENDEN MARRIOTT. ' If the average detective wrote the story Who besides Mr. Wilton has acoeas to of Ms life the longest chapter would be devoted to clues that fulled. The watch word of the beet detective la mysterjr. He tiever lets the public know what he really thinks Most detectives sar they can't talk be cause It might alarm their qurry. If they know their buainee.fi they refuse to talk so as to avoid committing themselves until they're certain they've made no mis take. Sherlock Holmes did not tell his cases to Dr. Watson until they had worked out1! Who knows how many mistakes he cnade? Every detective must make them. Her is a case In point: " Borne years ago, shortly before Uncle Bam became a world power, he was very nearly involved in war with the republlo pf well, it's better not to mention names Say, the republic .of C . C had gotten Its back up for reasons too long to re hearse, and had been acting like a spoiled child, presuming on the unwillingness of the president to proceed to extreme meas ure . Al I matter of fact It was quite safe in this presumption, for every dlnpatch sent by our State department to the Amer ican minister at the capital of C carried the same burden; "Do your best to make C behave, but don't do anything that night lead te war; the political situation at borne won't stand it Just now." Our minister at the capital of C was an old-fashioned western man with a repu tation for being able to win three times in tour with an ace high against an ace full, and it certainly seemed from his ca blegrams that he was bluffing to the limit But It was no use. ' C - guessed him every time and he had to back down as gracefully as he could. Buch knowledge of the political situation at home on the part of an unimportant government was amaalng. The minister Oould rot explain, and the secretary of tat couldn't understand it at all. If the C premier had been reading our every ' dlspatoh over the minister's shoulder he couldn't have managed his game better. It was too amazing to be natural, and after a while the. State department came to the conoluslon that somebody was betrayjng ua. As soon- as It began- to suspect this good earnest It cabled to me to run over from a neighboring country where I was on 'duty to Investigate. ver I went, hot foot; and, once arrived, it didn't take ma very long to fix on the guilty man. The department's cipher code -is worked thusi It .consists of a Jot of phrases and words and letters, each of which Is represented by a certain number. Any particular message Is translated Into these numbers, which are then cabled In the ordinary way to the minister, who translates them back into their original form by means of a copy of the code in his possession. To guard against the signifi cance of any of the numbers becoming known the department also has a key number- which it changes from time to time, and this controls all the other num bers. For Instance: Suppose the key num ber today Is "plua three"; that means that before translating a code .dispatch the minister must add three to each number In it. Similarly before sending a code mes sage ha must substract three from each number aa ahown by his book. By the time a foreign government has learned enough of our code to make use of It the . key number is changed, and hey, presto! all Its work has to be done over again. ' Of course C could got copies of all our lTateheSMn one way or another from the cable company; but these would do it no good without the code and the code, the de : partment felt pretty sure, C did not lave, especially as the key number had recently been changed. The theory was that each Individual message must have been betrayed by someone in the legation,' after the translation had been made. No' one but the minister and the secre tary or tne legation is ever supposed to touch the code book;' both It and the trans lations of the dispatches are kept In a ' safe, the combination of which Is known ' only to the minister himself; all translat ing must be done In the Inner room of the .legation, close to the safe; and the room must never be left by both minister and secretary at once, except when the code and the dfepatchea are carefully locked up. In brief, it Is Impossible for dispatches to become known, except by the carelessness or criminality of some of our representa tive,. . , ; How, our representatives abroad are nearly alwaya honest, but they are also ; very liable to be fascinated by the foreign women. Our men especially our western i men are not used to the sort of women they meet over, the water. They rever ' ence women ao ' highly that It never oc curs to them to Imagine that a highly i born, titled aristocrat, with all the money i she wants, would descend fo play with ; them for the express purpose of wheedling r j government secrets out of them. I In dlplomatlo cases abroad I always seek j tha women first of all. Therefore, when I : found that the secretary of legation, V, Fred j Wilton, was ' head-over-heels In loveVlth " the Countess Rlocardo, daughter of the i premier, I was satisfied that it was he , wno pernapa without knowing It himself ..was giving him government away day after day. . i , rase before him. It seemed so clear to me ; that only my Ufe-long habit of not com ! mltttng myself prevented me from making a direct charge against Wilton; as it was, there was no mistaking my suspicions.- In fact I did net try to hide them. 1 , The minister listened to me with his Ira .; passive poker face, which I thought would t never change, until I mentioned tha Coun ' tesa Rlocardo aa the probable woman In the case. Then he fired up. "Mis Sax," he said In tones that trem . bled in spite of his efforts to keep them - Steady, "you are making a serious mls- taka when you Accuse the countess. I . have the honor of that lady's acquaintance and I beg to assure you that she Is utterly 'Incapable of an underhand action. As for ; Mr. Wilton, he may or may not love her' '-(tha old fellow's voice trembled a little as ae saia tnis -nut wnetiter he does or hot, he Is too careful and conscientious to permit himself to be led Into any such fault.'1 , s "Perhaps so, Mr, Minister," I replied. Tt somebody Is stealing these dispatches. rIMPk S. t-Ve-fe mi -til i j fr INVALIDS Fresh milk is good j fresh milk and Mcllin's Food is better. Try it with your baby. Whether roe aura yeor baby ar Me tl lias fu4 yeu will Una our baak, ' 1 Care and Feeding af Ihlanta,' Very aaa( Mel- he tuuiply write luf u. U wiil aa JdSXtlri'i IPOCD CO, SOBTOM. fclASaV them! "No one! No one at all, except myself. of course! .If they have been stolen and I .,.. .1,., . .m car- ..I- i. .i .hi. rj' " tain it was before they reached this office.' "Who translates them?" "Usually Wilton; sometimes myself. We follow the regulations scrupulously. The work Is always dr.ne at 'that desk yonder, and the translations 'are never taken from the room." , Just at this point In came the colored messenger with a cablegram which had Just been brought from the cable office. Here waa my chance. I took from my porket a fake dispatch which I had fixed up In the code and got the minister to ar range to turn It over to -Wilton to trans late in the place of the one Just received, of the arrival of which. I knew the C government would be well informed. After 'JOB, I SAID, "MR. WILTON'S DESK NEEDS A FRESH BLOTTER, GET ONE AT ONCE." giving; it to Wilton the minister was to go out, saying that ho wouldn't be back till late. Meanwhile I was to lock myself up In a big closet In the roorrf and watoh proceed ings. v ' In a very few rnWtes I waa watching Wilton pegging away at the dispatch, while the minister had disappeared. 1 I could easily see the every movement of Wilton, and. pretty soon I noticed he waa getting excited. Well he might. All former dispatchea had been conciliatory in the ex treme; this one waa the reverse. , It waa red-hot; no one could read it without be-lleva-ig that Unole Sam meant war with out further parley. Summed up it ordered the minister to demand- his passport the next day at neon unless ji our demands had been granted by that time. It was a dispateh calculated to cause an earth quake at the palace, if it ever got there which, of course, it couldn't, unless it waa stolen from the, legation, aa tha minister understood1 thoroughly that it waa ficti tious. But Wilson did not know It was fictitious and his eyes kept ' getting rounder and rounder. Finally he Jammed the meeaage In his pocket, pitched the books and papers In the safe and dashed out af tha room. ' I started to follow him, and actually had the closet door partly open when the darkey came In to straighten up the room. He kept me fuming for ten minutes, and when I finally made my escape Wilton was gone. I knew pretty well where to laok for Mm, however, and went at once to the plaza, where the rank and fashion of the town were acoustomed to drive and talk every afternoon. The countess was sue to be there with her duenna, and' I felt cer tain that where she was Wilton would be also. But it was not he whom I saw first, but the minister. There he stood large as life, with his foot resting on the step af tha countess' carriage. She was a pretty little thing, not ovetsl IS at the most, vivacious like most of her countrywomen, and undeniably fascinating. After watching her for a few minutes I aaw quite clearly what the minister had meant what he said that no one who knew her could believe her capable of de ceit. There- was an aroma of honesty about her that oould not fail to Impress the most casual observer. The minister was talking to h.er earnestly, while her duenna' was similarly engaged with someone on the other side of the car riage. I watched his face, and gradually saw the smile die out of It and, a look of hopeless despondency take its place,. In a moment I Jumped to a conoluslon. The minister was In love with the girl himself for all hla 60 years, and aba had Just re fused him. Pretty soon he turned away, . looking glummer than aver, and a few minutes later Wilton appeared in bis place. I had pressed closer by now and waa listening with all my eara "You won't forget. Countess," he said earnestly, "not even If I have to go away for a long time" "But, no, surely not, Benor," she re turned. "I will" Just then the duenna, who didn't seem to like Wiltoa, ' inter rupted. "Your chief el mlnlstro was Just here, Senor, she said. Instantly Wilton waa recalled to his duty. "A thousand thanks, Senora," he returned. "I wish to find him. Which way did he gof" A moment later the lad waa tearing along the square after the minister, while 1 waa making my way back to tfce lega tion, pondering astd smfllng te myself. Everything waa clear now and had been for aoaaa tlzae, for that matter. At the legation I found tha minister. iHssfaoe waa white. . "My God, Bail" be exclaimed, "yea were right. Wlltun must have bean betraying aa. Look at thia note from the palace." X looked at It It granted aO aur de mand; flared everyUiUig wa aaked. I never aaw a mora complete' conapse tn'my life. It waa Just such a note aa might be expected If tha O government had learned the contents of that fake cable and had decided to climb down before the shoot ing began so that It could assert that it had not acted under duress. Tha minister, who knew the contents of the fictitious message, appeared to feel sure that, this action proved Wilton's dishonesty. But by that time I had a pretty good ne on the situation. "Excuse me. Mr. I Minister," I said. "I r must remind you that I never accused Wilton of betraying us. What I said was that for his own sake It was necessary to put him under observa tion, and I waa right. Now, if you will call him In I'll engage to find the rascal In the case for you." It wasn't necessary to call him, how ever, for Just then he came rushing In In gr?at excitement. "Thank heaven, you are back, sir!" he exclaimed. "That dis patch you gave me was awfully important. Here It Is." He paused and glanced afine. "Tea, I know," answered the minister wearily. I thought. "It doesn't matter Just now. This gentleman haa something to say to you, Wilton." "Well, sir?" The boy turned to me In- quiringly. He was a fine looking young fellow and my heart warmed to him. "Mr. Wilton," said I, "I am a secret serv ice man sent over here to find out who has been betraying our official dispatches to the C-4 government and ' enabling them to checkmate us. Well, I've found the man. Now, Just to oblige me, will you sit down and write a few lines on the paper lying on your desk yonder?" . ' I pointed to the desk where he had done the translating. . The young fellow looked at me aa long that I thought he was going to refuse, but at last he aat down. "What shall I writer he asked. "Oh, anything. Jusjt a line or two." He wrote and looked up. Then I turned to the minister. "Now will you add a few words, Mr. Minister?" I asked. "IV Even the request startled him. "If you kindly will." Tha old man hesitated longer than Wil ton had. but he wrote at last Then I touched the bell and the .negro messenger- entered. I turned to him. "Joe," I said, "Mr. Wilton's desk needa a fresh blotter. Get one at once," y The fellow's yellow face grew ashen. "Taka oil that top blotter and get a fresh one," I commanded, menacingly. "Tea suh; in a mlnit, sub." He turned and rushed out of the room. A moment later I heard the outer door .slam, and turned to tha minister and smiled. "You'll never see him again," I said. "He's tha thief. Look here." -1 lifted the top blotter from the desk and there, between H and the lower cite, waa a big aheet of white paper and a big aheet of carbon impression paper, so ar ranged that anyone writing heavily on top of tha desk with a pencil as Wilton always did would inevitably leave a copy of his writings beneath, somewhat cris crossed. of course, but still legible. I had seen the man extract the sheet bear ing the last message while he waa straight ening up the room and I was in the closet We let him go, of course, because we couldn't well manage to punish him. I got quite a reputation by my skill In solving that problem so qulokly. Yet I waa wrong until almost the very end.. I asked both tha minister and Wilton to write to aee which wrote hard enough to make the Impression through that thick blotter. It was Wilton; the minister wrote so lightly that ha made almost no marks on the ooncealed paper. V And tha oountess?N She married tha min uter a month later and came back to the United - States with him. I was wrong, you see, even about the refusal on the Plata. , Tea Take Ho AJslt III using Dr. King's New Discovery for Consumption, Coughs and Celda. It cures all lung troublea or no pay. 60c ILOO. For aJe by Kuhn Om. i HINB aULLIOS ACRES GoToraaseat I.anale for Homesteaders. In western Nebraska near the Union Pa clflo railroad in aeotlon lota of MO acres each, for almost nothing. Tha salubrity of these lands Is soraethlug remarkable. Dis tance from railroad la from three to thirty mllea There will be a grand rush of homesteaders. This is the last distribution of free homes the United States government will ever make In Nehraaka. Writ for pamphlet teUinc w the lands can be ac quired, w&ea entry should be made and ether information. Free oa apiUioatlim te any Union Pacific agent or city Uofce f floe. laSi.Famam atraat. 'Phone ttt. Kill 0aew4 OOlrats PimN, Colo.. June 17 William TBI. Har mful, city nmrahel of Pitkin, and deputy sheriff of Qunniaon county, baa been abut and instantly killed by Ttm Sullivan, whom he was Called te arveat fur Uireateirfng Ills wife. (Sullivan oauajied, but -Oitlouia axe oa .hla track. ' 1 1 BANDIT RAISOOU'S HOSTAGE HotrpiUlitj Diipansad br ft Wealthy Amer ican in lforoooo. VISIT TO Th HOME OF ION PERDtCARIS pietaree af Lnrurlea Cosa forts i Strange Settings Way He IJves There mm Hla Works. It waa several years ago that the Spec tator was dropped Into the Arabian Nights at Tangier. Through dirt, donkeys, beg gars, water sellers, porters and veiled women he had passed from the beach up through the narrow, winding way to the startling civilisation of a modern hotel. And then came the call from Mr. Perdl carls. We had met him In America, and he was kind enough to remember us; and down to the hotel he rode aa soon as he heard of our arrival, and aa we came to the door we found him mounted on a splen did Arab horse, with Mrs. Perdicaris on a big, white donkey at his side. We were strangers among the strangest of earth's readily accessible creatures, and he asked if he could not take us in. No, that In vitation we ought not to accept, but we would gladly avail ourselves of his offer to see the sights of the city under hi." escort. And it ended by our really spend ing most of our waking hours with the Perdicaris family during the three days that we were upon tha soil of Morocco. An Amerloan Gentleman. Mr. Perdicaris is an American gentleman, born, in Athens during the term of his fath er's consul generalship In the Greek capi tal. At one time ha lived In Trenton, N. J., but he haa spent nearly half of hla life (and he must be about 70 years of age) in Tangier, living in a charming fashion, sur rounded by his children, who have grown up and married, entertaining delightfully, the acknowledged dean . of tha American colony. The day after our arrival in Tangier Mr. Perdicaris mounted uson Arab stallions and wo were shown the wonders of the town. Mrs. Perdicaris said that we were to come to the house at neon for some bread and butter. And ao we came, and the bread and butter waa . served in seven courses by & French butler In evening dress, assisted by a Moor in a resplendent gold embroidered Jacket and short, red trousers, his legs bare to the knee. The house was a delight. The dimensions of tha drawing and muslo room were 48x24 feet, and it was full af rare rugs, hangings, porcelains and all that wealth could furnish. After we had seen the conservatory and Mrs. Perdicaris' own particular rooms, fall of Moorish curi osities, her pet monkeys were brought in for our Inspection Brazilian apes, mother and son. ' They sat on Mrs. Spectator's lap and ate the orange blossoms out of her belt with great enjoyment, and when the son proved too greedy the mother cuffed him into good manners. Then two great hounds stalked into the room, gentle and affectionate. One of them had been owned by a monk who had been shot down by an assassin, and when the man's body waa found three day after the dog waa guard ing It. Aa wa aat there in the drawing room the Moors outside In the market place were having their "powder play," and when the hound heard the report of the gun he whined and barked. He had always dona so since hla master's death three years be fore. tery at m Picture. . Tha celling of the drawing room waa twenty-six feet high and at one end it ran up twelve feet higher to accommodate a great picture which Mr. Perdl carta had painted. This waf familiar, and we remem bered the night when the picture waa first revealed to a New York audience. Mr. Perdicaris waa not only a painter, but a writer, and aome years before he bad writ ten a play for hla stepdaughter, who wanted to go on the stage. He brought her to America, hired the Fifth Avenue theater and a supporting oompany and produced a drama, n which tha ploture, aa big aa a drop curtain, bore an important part Tha play waa not a auccess. It ran from Mon day until Thursday nignt and tha experi ment is said to hava been a costly one for the painter-dramatist. So the picture went back te Tangier and took its place in tha great drawing- room. Seeaea la Straajg SrtHaga. Wa were in Mr. Perdicaris' town house, situated just outside the city gat a After luncheon wa were given fresh mounts and set out for a rlJe to tha vitya where tha family war Bring when tha brigands came la upon teem a few evenings ago and bore off Mr., Perdloarta and hla stepson to their mountain retreat. We rede through the city, arewdael tha Ujr with Moore -who had ocrma In from an Oie omintry round for aa anxrcal religious feast, and we aooa found oursetvaa la a dtoue throng of jxksn. women, little children, donkeye, horse and camela And tha "powder play" waa at Its liveliest. Mr. Perdicaris remarked reassur ingly to Mrs. Spectator, "Your horse Jumps a little at the guns, , but ha doesn't mean anything." Once free of the city and climb ing the mountain wa came to an occasional level where the horses would break Into a wild run, and ao on, with snatches of a glorious sea view, over tha mountain's crest and down a little on the further alope to the alt of tha villa. It waa closed then, but wa walked around and admired the house and the view, and enjoyed the breese which blew in from tha ecean and the strait On tha way back Mr. Perdicaris urged us to let our, Moorish steeds show thslr breeding by going at a full gallop down the gullied and rock-lined steeps. Their breeding was all right it was ours only that waa at fault and Mrs. Spectator was glad to lie down for an anteprandial siesta when we reached our host'a home. Why He Lived There. After dinner other members of Mr. Perdi caris' family came in, and there was music and merriment "Why do you live here," we asked, "ao far away from civilisation and educational facilities and the old flag?" Well, It was hard to say chiefly because he bad lived in Tangier so long that his roots were far down. The children had grown up and were around him, and there were so many people chiefly natives who had come to be dependent upon him. No, he could not leave them. We learned from others that Mr. Perdi caris had done a great deal of good In Tan gier, so much good that It Is hard to be lieve that any of the natives, even brigands, would cause him suffering. He haa alwaya been on the side of tha poor and oppressed. He has helped to Improve the sanitary con dition of the city; he has visited those who were sick and in prison that terrible Tan gier prison and he has been the good angel of the only town in Morocco that could possibly appreciate a good angel If It had one. And to be carried away by a man who had been his guest and to whom he had always been kind! After all, It is a good thing to live under the Immediate pro tection of the old flag. The Outlook. A REVOLUTION IN MECHANICS Steam Turbine Gradnally ' Super seding the Reciprocating; Engine. "It Is probable," says the American Monthly Review of Reviews, "that the last great reciprocating engine-driven power plant has been ordered. Hereafter, the steam turbine will be tho prime mover ofc the new installations." The average man haa heard of the tur bine, and his idea of it is that It may possibly become the steam engine of the future. As a "matter of fact, the turbine Is emphatically the engine of the pres ent time. Already its 'use is world wide. It Is working in the DeBeers diamond mines in Africa. It is driving passenger vessels across the English channel. The two new twenty-five-knot Cunarders are to be turbine driven. In Chicago the Commonwealth Electrlo company has the largest steam turbine plant in the world, of 80,000 horse-power. What is a steam, turbine? Technically It is a spindle or rotor fitted with grad uated rings of projecting blades, which, under the impact of steam, causa the spindle to revolve within a close fitting cylllndef or stator. To use a familiar illus tration, It is Ilka an air fan driven round ft' ' m BORAXOLQGY Don't sigh for a good complexion get one. That flower of the cheek is the beauty of die wash basin and Boras If you'll wash your face every night in warm Borax water you'll find that Nature will respond your skin will become softer and your complexion clearer and pinker. It's neces sary to get par? Borax Ask for, 20-MULE-TEAM BRAND. For salt at drug and grocery stores every where. A Vi and Mb. packages. ThefaauMi "AMERICAN GIRL PICTURES FREE to fwrduuen of 2O-Male-Te0i Borax." Al itores ef sent bat BOX TOt and 4a, la lUmpa, Pacifc Coast Borax Co New York Chicago, San Francisco. Twenty Hale Team When fait paMenger train service acrosi the con tinent was adopUid by tha UNION PACIFIC (ha flrst train was named Th. Overland Fly.r" dally train; the second was named "The Golden Oat. 8polai" weekly train. These trains have given way to a great transcontinental train, !TIIE OVERUKD LIMITED" ILCCTRie LISHTIO running tvtry day n (h ytar This famous train via Omaha reaebet the faclfte Coast sixteen hours quicker than an eotapetltors. ineuies o CTTT TICKET OFFICE, pfaon. IK. ta Favraai by tha application steam to tha bladea. While tha application of tha turbines seems to be limitless In possibility, their special field of service u in motive power for steam vessels, and for driving elec trlo generators whether afloat or ashore. But when that Is said practically all I said, for wa do nearly everything by elec tr.'clty except the driving of steam ves sala. Even the steam railroads are adopting the newer force. A genera1 tlon hence," Bays the Review, "tha steam locomotive may be aa much of a rarity as the horse car now Is In large cities." This tremendous revolution in mechanics means that twenty years of practical ex perlence behind the turbine is to supplant 100 years of experience behind all other forms of steam engine practice. The DrinclDlea of the turbine are aa old as the hills Hero of Alexandria described reaction turbine as far back as 130 B. C and Giovanni Brajica of Italy Invented the Impact, turbine in 1629 but, Its commercial Importance haa become imperative only wimin ine lost nan ooko ycais. Most new things In mechanics come when we are ready for them. Twenty-five years ago we would not have been ready for the steam turbine. It Is electricity that haa forced Its development; electricity that has furnished the means for Its appllca- tlon. With a turbine It la possible to ob tain from . an electrical generator an amount of energy heretofore given only by a machine many times lta else. Hence the supplanting of the piston by the rotating spindle. The turbine haa many other ad van tag over the familiar reciprocating engine. There is nothing to wear It out; there is economy of space and saving of time in Installation; no such expensive foundations are required as there is no "thrust," or vibration; they work wifh either a oon atant load or with sudden variation, and take care of themselves. The most significant fact about th.e tur blno is the greatest engine builders in the world, whose reciprocating engines are everywhere regarded as among the marvels of tho Industrial world, have gone into tha manufacture at Milwaukee of the turbine on an Immense scale. Not only this, but the same company, for the same reason. also enters the electrical field. The lesson Is obvious. The builder of steam turbines must build electrlo gener ators; henceforth the turbine and the dy namo are practically inseparable. Chicago Inter-Ocean. Do Kot Walt t'ntil Yon Need It. The season Is again at hand when diar rhoea anddysentery are prevalent. Do not wMt until sirie of your family Is taken with a violent attack, but be prepared. A bottle of Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy at hand when needed has saved many a life.- Procure It at one, Hameseelrars' Rates to worth Dakota, Every Tuesday until October 2S the Chi cago Great Western railway will sell round trip ticket to points In the above named state at a great reduction from the usual fare. For further information apply to Geo. F. Thomas, general agent, 1SU Far- Dam street Omaha, Neb. Indian Territory for Parker. DTTRANT, I. T., June 17. The democratlo territorial convention adjourned after mid night after selecting R. 1 Williams of Durant for national committeeman. There was a bitter contest for the ofllce. The six delegates to St. Louis, the last of whom was selected after midnight were uninstructea, but favored lamer. Oar Trade Mark. 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Complete treatment for every humour, consisting of Cuticura Soap to cleanse the skin, Cuticura Ointment to heal the skin, and Cutlcjura Resolvent Pills to cool and cleanse the blood may now be had for one dollar. A single set Is often sufficient to cure the most torturing, disfiguring, Itching, burning and scaly humours, eczema, rashes ana irrita tions, fronT infancy to age, when all else falls. Sold throughout th. world, cuticura Be solvont, 60c, (in form of Chocolate Coated Pills, 2Sc per vial of Ointment, 50o, Boap, too. Depots: london, H Charter house Sq.; Paris, I Rue de la Palx; Boston, V.rt Columbus Ave. Potter Irug and Chem. Corp., 8olo Proprietors. Bend for "How to Cur. Every Humour." NURSING MOTHERS will find nothing equal for tntlk pro duclng qualities. ' - CABINET has always been recommended by phy sicians for Its milk producing qualities. It is Invariably used .at the . . INFANT IRCUBATORS throughout the country because of its unequaled milk producing qualities. old oa Dlnlagr and Buffet Cars. Fred Kims Brewing Co. Oaaaka'a af oWl wwmj. -telephone 420. OMAHA. SEARLES & SEARLES Omaha. Nab. CURES GUARANTEED ' Quicker and for ' LESS MONEY than other SPECIALIST. eurea all peotal jlseaisi el men kiiioey, bUill; and diseases of worn it Blood Poison aMu"rru'o?,.K mouth, tongue, tnroat. hair and eyebrow iraiiino d unnuLr oomDletely forever. Varicose Viloi tSiX- tang, pain ur loss or tune- never uua Quickest Cure In the world. Weak, Nsriout U.i lWJ" Aebllity, earUr oeoliaa. lack of Vigor aad Strength. ' Treatment by mall, 14 years OF 8UCN CmiBi'UL, PRACTICE IN OMAHA Cor bar of 14th and tiougiaa. f&rs ti T2uuf All dbfiT DR. r.lcCREW SPECIALIST. Treats (I rare af DISEASES Of MEN ONLY AnatHcal aUpcrt. U Years Experleaca. it Yaar Omaha. Near M.0M Cam Cafe. Taftoooala. Hrarwala, BlaoS Toimn, rW4 Uat. henoaa baalllty, torn H aa viwm mr ana an forma at aarau. aiian Tfaatmaut af KalL Call r writ BSB Safe var U S. ait l Waa in, , MENANDWOMErj. Cm Big (or anoataral dixhargaf.uiBaaiiaatioua, lrntatloaa if uloaratloaa of in u oon ni.aibranaa, FalulaM, aad nut aatria. gent ar polconons Bmlm r im gaiita, r tent la pUla wrappce. iif .7 pro., prapald. tat il Wl. or boltl. J.7. Circular mm ci taaaaat RECOMMENDED BY PrtYSICIAMS AINU CONNOISSEURS co.co SERVED EVERYWHERE r-rrs TEN CENTS What To Eat JS,? laod for 1 oetrr. M eeata or tl M a year. fcalltbla HaaJU AMua, Ttbae Suar. ou. rmuM, Clever Ttiaata. A i a. CI arv4 irua te brtgntea rwar leisure mi- meats, full of novel suae ttona xr ntal-tainln. am Bnrl Sajllarai awe ,"0a tm I Waaal a kaauan aa4 haa at Mat fcj aial ear. iaii. mt thla van!, piiallaaOaa.' WHAT TO BUT (Montfily Maaa Waaaiiytt ha. aaaf rlua A iatiieja DO-CTB-RS af . 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