FELLING MEST MONARCH J Activities of Lumber Campi In ths Woodi of the Northwest. METHODS OF CUTTING AND TRANSPORTING r I'niKrm of the Hi Oflara Iron (amp and Mill to Market (iron Wailt fnlness Dae to Cheapness. SKATTI.K. Wanh., Aug. 24. Corrsspon'l of The Bee.) When Georfo Washing;, i .m cut down the proverbial cherry tree he rulal)ly thouKht that he had done a food jub, and finished It In short order. If In id r.f the cherry Wee he had made his I.n-t essay at lumbering; on a Washington r.,lar there would have probably been a d.ffen-nt version of the story, and his father would hate had no cause to auk Mm that embarrassing; Question. To be I lain: about the matter, the cedar of the northwest Is absolutely lacking In every n;y of any Inducement for the amateur vwM.dsmun of the Washington type. It Is l,ue and massy, rough and scaly, and ti.wffs up to such unheard of heights that It takes the wooden heart of a lumber jm k to survey Its downfall without a tremor of fear. It Is no easy task to cut a trunk through which four or five men would have difficulty In hugging, or letting dr.wrt gently a monstrous shaft of timber vltuatcd, as It often Is, on the steep side nt a mountain. It requires all the patience, fklll and daring of professional men' of the wood to accomplish such a result. When a lumber camp has moved Into a diHtrlct that Is to be cleared, the trees re at once selected which He In the best cituatlon for removal. ' The work usually l.i'Klns in the Immediate neighborhood of the camp and extends back day by day until it tften ' happens that the felling f.rcurs at a' great distance; this, of course, Involves the Immense difficulty of trans, porting the logs over an uneven ground, priNt sloughs and .swamps, around hills and over gullies. It IS the duty of the skilled boss of the lumber camp to so select his site that It affords the best facilities for clearing that can be had. When' the site lias one a been decided upon, the men go to work constructing out of all sorts of lumber the shacks that they are to live In till the work In that region la done. These shacks usually consist of a mere framework of boards, which are often only split from, a straight-grained oedar log, and ore lacking for the most part in all modern improvements. They have no bath room, with enamel tub In a- lumber jack "Vamp, und they never think of such a thing- a city water;, they have no lawns to squirt and consequently do not need It. Electrio lights are, tabooed, and the only gas used is the brand furnished by the men them selves. Delicacies In the Woods. A lumber Jack camp Is always to be Jfrnown by the variety of tin cans that one ""finds In its vicinity; these cans are of all sizes and shapes and denote more forcibly than mere words can do the adamantine - stomachs that lumber Jacks possess, stom- yicng wnicn certainly are very much akin "to that of O'Orady s goat, which esteemed oyster cans a luxury. This Is not meant in any sense as a reflection on the lumber Jack; any man that can stand uncomplain ing y the petrified beans and preserved doughnuts, the custard that would make even a lumber Jack cuss, and the amalga mated essence of beef Is not a person to be lightly scoffed at, for he has about him a strength and ruggedness which would have done credit to an old Philistine. lis is easentltily a man of the w.oods, and to Illustrate Jww foHj hsr baa become, ac customed to the unbroken ways of the forest, they te-11 the story of the lumber Jack thnt blazed his way through Seattle by notching all the telephone posts he met. I(e finally landed In Jail, a place his blazed trail certainly would- not have led him to had he not encountered the guidance of an unusually wide-awake policeman. When a tree Is to be felled the lumber Jack whets up his axe and with a few 1 notches a little above the place where the - '" Is held, to bo worthless on account Jf either 4ecsy or settling of sap. He then takes a board, shod at ons end with what SfPtns a horseshoe, and places this In the hole he hns cut, with the corks of the shoo turned up and pressing upon the upper side of the notch. A shnrp stamp upon the board settles the corks Into the wood and the lumber Jack has a platform to stand on while performing tho rest of t bo task. Real Work of Fellln. As soon us the platform Is finished the long cross-cut snw Is seised by men on opposlde sides, of the tree and the real work of felling the monster begins. It Is sometimes a long Job to saw through a cedar nine feet across, but tho lumber Jack is. a putlent man and he sends the saw bark and forth until the weight of the tree settling upon It sticks It too fast to be moved. It Is at this point that the most danger Is experienced, for the great tree, towering so far Into the air, is easily overbalanced when sawed so frtr through and may fall at any time or In any direc tion. As the saw passes closer and closer to the other side, the lumber Jack grows more and more careful und by a system of well driven wedges contrives to direct the fall according to his wlsnts. At last the supreme moment aril,i-, there Is a gentle swaying of the vast cidar, the men clear away and with long poles gently force tha vast trunk In the direction it Is to fall; for a second it seem to hnng poised on the edge of Its stump, then with a grinding roar It wheels half around and falls like mif thunderbolt to the earth beneath. The Jfround shakes under the Impact and the 'y air Is filled with the rising dust. been finished, the fallen trunk Is sawed TIIE OMATJA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, AUOUST 29. 1901. 15 Into-sites Inst can be bandied and the men prepare to transport It bodily to the saw mill, whlrh very often lies some distance way. These logs are Invariably of such great weight that they cannot be lifted without the aid of a crane, and as a steam crane Is an Impossible thing in many lo calities It Is the duty and task of the lum berman to haul the trunk to Its destination. He does this In a rather Ingenious way; when the haul Is to be a long one a skid road It constructed. This Is a road made of logs from ten to twelve feet wide, which re placed some distance apart, and hoi lowed slightly against the grain. The log to be famed to the mill Is rolled over to the ekldroad and placed upon It; the noicnes in tne supporting logs are well greased, a cable la attached to the end of the tree trunk, the donkey engine far down the way Is started and the bunch of future planks and two by fours proceeds merrily on Its way. In some cases no engine Is to be bad; its place it supplied by able-bodied horses, but the strain upon them Is so hard and the road they have to travel so difficult they soon become worthiest for this kind of work. la the Mill. When the log reaches the mill It Is usu ally thrown Into a pond and left floating there until ready to be sawed. In which case It Is guided over .o the shute, grasped by an endless chain and drawn up onto the floor of the mill; a steel arm readies out and thrusts It Into place and large Iron knees block It down upon the log-carriage. The whole carriage moves back and forth pressing the log against tho bandsaw ac cording to the guiding hand of the opera tor. When the trees to be cut are situated upon a steep hillside at the foot of which flows a river, a different system Is employed In transporting them. A long shute is built up to the camp, and the logs are rolled Upon It and sent hurtling down many feet Into the river beneath. This is a very effec tive and easy method of disposing of them, for the river la always willing to do Its hare in carrying the logs on to the mills below. It sometimes happens that the trees are cut In such a bad position that It would cost more to convey them to the mill than they are worth, the lumber-Jack then re sorts to the following method of getting them out. It Is nearly always possible to And a good flow of water in any of the mountain bordering on the Cascades. The stream or series of springs is darned In some convenient place and the water turned Into a flume leading , down the mountain side. This flume Is nothing more than a wide trough deep enough to admit the pas sage of what the lumber men call. shingle bolts, that Is, one-quarter of a section of log which has been sawed off to a shingle length. When the water la flooding down the flume, the men haul the shingle bolts to It from far and near and send them darting down to the level below. The speed at which they travel Is at times terrific, they shoot over chasms and around bends, disappear in the dark of the woods and dart Into the light again, and Anally amid a shower of spray dive Into the receiving lake or river. Here they are . gathered to gether in a series- of booms and either towed or shoved to the neighborhood of the mill. Of course this means of transporta tion can be used only in the case of shingle lumber, but a a vast amount of the Wash ington cedar becomes shingles, no hesitancy is felt In employing It where the situation does not warrsnt another method. Desertion and Desolation. At first sight a person would naturally accuse the lumberman of gross wasteful ness, for, after a camp has divested a claim of Its trees It moves away and invariably leaves after 1 hundreds of prostrate trunks which contain thousands of feet of valua ble lumber. The skid-roads are never torn up, the very houses themselves are left as they" are to be the future. home of tramps and wanderers; Over the whole claim the stumps of the trees rise up In close succes sion, sometimes reaching to the height of twenty feet. There seems to be no need for such extravagance, but a little exami nation of conditions suffices to show that by . doing Just as they did the lumberman saved -both money and labor. In the first place, as far as the houses are concerned, It it of no matter what become of them when they . have served their turn. Lumber Is to cheap and they are built so easily and crudely that It would not pay to transport them elsewhere. It would cost something to tear them down, so the cheapest thing to be done Is to leave them as they are. The stumps that rise over the fields are of some value, but not for the purposes of the lumberman and his mills. They are all rich In pitch and sooner or later a company will be organized to extract this from them to the lumberman this pitch Ss of no- value, but rather a positive Injury. It Is in fields of stumps such as these that the vast forest fires usually begin. The branches of the cedars and fir are left where they are lopped off, and the stumps dry out till they are as crisp as tinder, Thrown In such a place as this a Are finds plenty of chance to grow, and seldom falls to make the most of its opportunity. It gives one a rather desolate feeling to ride for miles through clearings of this sort and see everywhere the signs of fire; It Is only recently that the public ha awakened to the value of the timber and efforts are being made to preserve It. J. BURKE-EGAN, '"Nebraska State fair, Lincoln. August 29 to (September 1." silencing the Jndge. Last week a strapping negro woman was up before a magistrate, charged with un mercifully beating her boy. "I don't understand how you can have the heart to treat your own child so cru elly," said the magistrate. "Jed go, has you been a parent of a wuflless yollcr boy like dat ar cub of mine?" "Never no, neverl" (with great vehe mence, and getting red In the face). "Den don't talk; you don't know nuffln about It." Philadelphia Ledger. LIGHT SI1INES IN DETAIL Essence of Success in Writing Want Ads ' Folly Eiplained. TIPS FROM THE BOOK OF EXPERIENCE The Best Way to del the (ialekest Retails' for the Money Import aace of Selecting the night Medium. . till Homo' Made K o'ot .Nearly. 9o food Mt L Deborah la th best bocana It is mads of pare mineral water because the right th '"' rr- r."t "o It oecanM w know bow to make tt DEBQRAH Ro ot Deer Kara you ever noticed the difference between home root-beer and Deborah Root BeerT Deborah, not only taste better, but Is better. It' our business to make Root-Beer all the time w have made It a study and know how. The Beet Bear flat tattts Ilk awe. Deborth Mmeral Springs? Council Bluff a lowa. to There are anomalies In the want ad of the dally newspaper. Through so many of the classifications of the want ad the purpose of the advertiser Is to catch and claim the attention of the Individual or firm most In terested In the thing advert'aed by the ad vertiser. The writer of the ad does not care If 10,000 uninterested ones read it and comment upon It. He Is seeking a definite result. If he Is advertising for a position as a bookkeeper he does not care If a thousand men wanting a porter should read every line of his matter. And the employer who is advertising for a porter has no In terest In the statement that a thousand bookkeepers may see and read his want. Ordinarily the person who is seeking a flat reads every line In the classification of "Flats to Kent" and sees nothing else on the whole page. In the same manner the man who Is seeking money to loan or an In vestment for his savings In real estate studies these departments to the exclusion of everything else. The woman who want to hire a maid seeks the one corner of the paper where her one want Is touched upon and is done with the sheet In a moment after. Position Gives Opportunity. But on a second thought, the layman will see another side to these conditions. lie will realise that no matter in what field the patron of the want ad goes searching, It .Is the one definite thing prompted by a one definite want. His attentions will not be distracted by anything In any other por tion of the paper. There Is no reading mat ter to tempt him to turn aside. There aro no attractive half-tones on Interesting sub jects to divide his thoughts. All of which bring to the user of the classified columns of the newspaper the fact that, small as his contribution my be to the sum total of the column, tt has a position of advantage that not even the display advertising of the biggest firms can claim. This points at once to the necessity for consideration of style and directness and effectiveness In 'the want ad. For two reasons the want ad has been slighted In Its makeup. On the part of the big advertiser who uses It. the Idea pre vails that as It docs not cost much It Is not worthy especial attention from the advertisement writer. On the part of hun dreds of Individuals without business ex perlence, there Is a lack of knowledge of everything that In these days Is making advertisement writing a business and an art Set Expressions Kill Effort. The ordinary young man who may de cide to put an ad In a paper asking for a situation as clerk, for Instance, Blmply announces In the most desultory way that A clerk Is out of A position and would like A Job with A house that'wlll pay him A salary that suffices his needs. To the man who may want a clerk for a certain position, a group of such ads reads a good deal like an announcement that 200 clerks, wanting places somewhere, are standing In a bunch at a certain street corner. He does not want to go Into a crowd to be mobbed; he does not feel like reading forty or fifty want ads all alike and summoning the forty or fifty individuals Into his of fice, where a hurried choice would have to be made under difficulties. Yet he may decide that'lt Is Impossible to? attempt a' selection of an Individual from the classi fied wants. ' Why T It Is not because there are not compe tent men who would suit him In this list. It is because good and bad and Indifferent Individuals have followed the same lines of expression in. stating the set condi tions of the ordinary man who Is out of a Job. In a long, dead level of such ad vertisements, one well written want, hav ing In It the color of the Individual and perhaps three or four words In a striking phrase, may attract fifty offers of employ ment where a dosen other might not have a single answer. Select Yonr Own Employer, Not long ago a friend camr-to me asking for a suggestion In wording a want. We took the subject up and discussed It. I knew him and he knew himself. Between us we wrote an advertisement that cost perhaps three times the average price of the small want ad., but In the returns he received sixty-one answers, and Instead of being a seeker after a Job he became arse, lecter of his employer from the many. There are excuses for the average person who Is seeking a position, if his want Is not clear and full of meaning for the possible patron.'. There Is no excuse for some of the big firms In Chicago which take small In tcrest lu the wording of the small ad. Just because It la cheap. ... Real Estate Ads- Confuse. The real estate-firm is one of those which should see better things In the small ad. Ordinarily the name, of the firm Is made to stand out In prominent type. Telephone numbers aro played up Jn the reading mat ter and perhaps, the suggestion that the firm is one of the oldest and largest and busiest In the city.' Following this will be a directory list of bargains in real estate, the clearest things in It being the dimen sions in foet of' the properties. These ads, are supposed to appeal to the men who have perhaps 150,000 On which to retire from business life. The 3 per cent of the savings bank is not enough for living expenses for the family and the man with this savings Is appealed to by the real estate firm to make Investments In property. To the ordinary man of the type these dl menslons . of lots . and their prices mean nothing. The man likely is a stranger. He knows nothing of property values. He kr.ows nothing of neighborhoods. The longer this mere directory list Is the more confusing It may be to him. Give m Clear Conception. Manifestly, the thing to do is to advertise the Individual property In a' clear and con vincing manner. The Idea of conveying to a possible stranger the mere length of a real estate list is like a store' advertising such a confusing profusion of merchandise that the purchaser cannot hope to make an Intelligent choice. xast spring 'a rnena of mine rented a south side flat. It was the first flat he went to look at. lie closed with the agency In an hour after he and his wife had seen It. Yet he found track of the place In a Tribune want ad. It was anything but the conven tional ad, however. The agent knew Just what kind of a flat he bad and he gave the Impression of It In the ad. It was away from noise, and light beyond the possibility of a new wall's darkening It on any side; It was cool In summer and thl janitor made certain of its being warm In winter; and It was within walking distance of downtown on any bracing morning. To my friend It was tne only ad In the list that held hi attention for a half minute. Details appeal more strong:y to the reader of the real estate columns, perhaps, than to any other department In classified adver tising. The Interested reader frequently la a seeker after a home. As all things in the home are secondary to the establish. ment of the home, Whether as a rented apartment or a a purchased mansion, so Interest is first In flxtng Upon the bablta tlon. There I strong evidence In support of the Idea that a well described piece of prop erty for sale or for rent by an established Arm serve a double purpose in advertising. A man reading for something he may want discovers an accurate description of Some thing he does not want. He compares the one with the advertisement of other things that are meaningless, but which he might want, and he makes the mental note that at least one real estate firm knows its busi ness. The firm's nam Is not forgotten. Before he I done with the want ads he may gravitate to the concern' place of business In personal Inquiry- Good Valae In Dally. The cleverly worded advertisement Is not all. however. It must be placed where it will be seen by the probable constituency of the advertiser. For this reason the adver tisement In the daily paper may show re sults approacblng the Sunday issues. The A In the week dsy Issue catches the busi ness man beyond the ad In the Sunday paper, when the man of business may be resting or out of town. Again, the cost of the Insertion In a pa per Is no gauge of the paper's worth as a medium. An insertion In one sheet at I cents a line may be doubly dearer than to pay 25 cents In another. If a solid business man is to be reached through the mean of either a small or large ad the advertiser unquestionably must choose a paper that Is read by the solid man of business. Other wise he Is a Simple Simon, fishing for whalese In a pall of water. R. K. Strauss man In Chicago Tribune. PRATTLE OF TUB VOl XU8TERS. Mamma Don't you know that King Bolo man said "Spare the ted and spoil the child?" Tommy Yes, but he never said it while he was a boy. Small Elsie-Papa, I want to ask you an Important question. Tapa Well, what U It, dear? Small Elsie If a man eats too much pie will he become piebald? Mamma Margie, I'm surprised to hear you talk so rudely and order Stella about so when she has come to play with you. Margie Oh, It's Juct make believe, mam ma. We are playing she's a real lady and I am her new cook. Secretary Shaw told a story the other day of a small boy at a country Christmas tree party who found a pair of trousers on the tree for him. He examined the gar ment csrefully and, turning to bis mother, shouted: . - "Oh, mamma, those pants must be all new. Papa never had a suit like that." A small boy was telling his mother of a mishap which had occurred to a playmate of his. The youngster, It appeared, had been regaling nlmself with one of those large, marble like candles which are a particular delight of childhood, and In a moment of excitement It slipped down and stuck In his throat. But, said the nar rator, they succeeded In relieving him. "Oh," said hi mother, "you got It out. did you?" ' "Naw," was the Impatient answer, "wo shoved It down; tt was his, wasn't It?" Marlon Is a precocious little tot of 4 years who has been spending the summer at a Long Island resort. Country folks as well as city ones have had their share of rain these past few weeks, and Marlon objected to the cooping up that the storms necessi tated. One day last week she decided to Ignore the rain and go for a walk on her own -account. She evaded her nurse and mother "and without hat or coat started for the highway. Just: then her mother discovered her and the runaway's trip was cut short. "Marlon; what do you think you'll get for this caper?' asked her mother, In her se verest tones. "I dess I'll get an umbrella." was the nonchalant reply. Brooklyn Eagle. Orchard & Wilhelm Garpet go. Closing Out All Drop Patterns Monday IT'S AN orPOKTJ'MTY ON" DESIRABLK PIECES OK FUUMTIHE THAT YOU MAY NOT HAVE OFFEKED AOAIN. Those Rrwxls tllsplnypfl on mnln floor and Mnnrtnr positively the lust mica day. They are priced at Just half the regular selling price I nrl tides LADIES' WMTINU DESKS. BOX COUCHES, MANTEL FOLDING BEDS. TABLOH FUHMTUBE IN SUITS, DIVANS, AHM CHAIRS AND SMALL CHAIRS. DRESS ING TABLE IN MAHOGANY, ANTIQUE DESIGN, CHEVAL GLASS MAHOGANY, MAHOGANY BOOK CASE, CHIFFONIER, LIBRARY CHAIRS AND LIBRARY TABLES IN MAHOGANY AND WEATHERED OAK. ALSO HALL CLOCKS, MAGAZINE AND READING TABLES IN WEATHERED OAK. AT HALF. "ODD LOTS OF DINING CHAIRS AT HALF. WOOD BEDS AT LESS THAN HALF. GO-CARTS IN THIS SALU HALF TRICE. Monday Last Day of Sample Rocker Sale Closing out of Wilkinson & Eastwood and B. L. Marble Chair Co. samples Monday. Au excellent opportunity to secure some Vflrpalna. ARTISTIC VERNIS MARTIN CHAIRS AND ROCKERS. RICH AND ATTRACTIVE PIECES IN KOOKWOOD. LARGE, COMFORT ROCKERS AND CHAIRS IN ALL WOODS AND FINISHES IN THIS SALE MONDAY. YOU SAVE ONE THIRD FROM REGULAR TRICE. - , . Stock Rugs We hare about 300 Stork RuRa made from remnants of carpets, suitable for all size rooms, made fluting the dull season to enable u to dispose of the remnants. All qualities of carpeta made up, aud at auch extremely low prices that you cannot afford to misa the opportunity. S-3xl0-J Wilton 12R.0O 8-3x10-3 Wilton 121.00 8-3x10 Ex Axmlnster f 124 00 8-3x11-6 Body Brussels tao.00 8-10x11-8 Body Brunsels 127. SO 8-3x11 Ex Axmlnster 121.00 8-3x8-3 Ex Axmlnster 114.00 8-3x10-3 Wilton l.n.00 8-3x10-3 Wilton 121.00 7- 6x8-3 Wilton ilt.OO 7x8-3 Body Brussels 814 M 8- 3x9 I tort v Brussels...., .122.60 8-8x8-3 Wilton 114.00 8-3x8-3 Wilton $18 60 8-Jx7-5 Wilton $13 110 8-3x11-8 Wilton $6.00 8-3x7-1 8-3x- l-xl3 Mx-a Wilton 8-3x9-3 Sax. Axmlnster l-txlO-8 Brussels 8-1x8-3 Ex Axmlnster Brussels Velvet Body Brussels 10-6x13-6 Kx Axmlnster.... 10-6x18- Tap. Brussels 10-6x12 Bundhar Wilton... 10-6x11-7 Brussels 8- 6x10-8 Pmlth Wilton 9- 8x10-8 Wilton 10- 6x12 Wilton 10-6x10-3 Body Brussels... 10-6x12-6 WHton 10-6x13 Wilton .$18. SO .$14.23 .$16.50 .$20.00 .$11 SO .$1780 .$.. U0 .HO 00 .$18 50 $42.60 .$16.00 .$21.00 .$!.. SO m. .$ oo .$.t7.R0 .$28.00 10-6x12 Seattle Wilton.. 9x10-8 Body Brussels... 9x10-6 Wilton 9x11-9 Ex Axmlnster... 10-6x12 Wilton 10-6x12 Wilton 10-6x11-6 Wlltrm 10-6x12 Wilton 9x12 Ex Axmlnster 9x13 Ex Axmlnster 10-6x12 Velvet 8-3x10-3 Wilton i -8x11 Wilton -Sxll-l Wilton -8xtO-3 Wilton J-3x10 Axmlnster $-3x11-6 Kx Axmlnster. .$(880 .$21.50 .$17.50 $100 ta oo .$29 73 .$21.50 .$17.50 .$22 50 .L'4 00 .J29.76 .$is so .$24.50 .130. 00 .$26.28 .$18.00 .te.oo Qouch Covers We are now showlnpr a full assortment of couch covers, all sizes and colors Oriental stripe, reversible, 50 Ins. wide, 3 yards long, fringe all around, each $2.80 Terslan covers, good, heavy and serviceable, 50 Ins. wide, 8 yds. long, fringe all around, each $3.50 Reversible Ferslan cross stripe, extra heavy, 60 Ins. wide, 3 yds. long, knotted fringe all around, each $4.25 Reversible Persian cross stripe, extra heavy, 72 Ins. wide, 3 yards long, special, each $6.50 . Kellme design couch covers, extra heavy, M Ins. wide, 3 yards long, special, each $5.00 Extra Kellme reversible, exact copies of antique Kellraes, special $9.50 Portieres This Pall's Goods Choice stripe curtains, Negres and Bagdad designs, special, per pair , Mercerized and Tapestry effects, fringe top and bottom, special, per pair Extra quality of mercerized two-t ne, fringe and cord edge, all colors, special, per pair.. Bordered curtains, plain rep center, special, per pair '. Other 'Styles, $8.75, f 11.50 to $35.00. French velour portieres, complete, with band edge, all new patterns, regular $50 curtain special for Monday only, per pair, hung $55.00 , $3.50 $3.95 45.25 $6 75 Lace Curtains $10 curtains, Arabian, Irish Tolnt, Brussels and Cluny, 150 styles to select from everyone a $10 curtain special, per pair $15 curtain, big assortment, choice designs, all new styles special, per pair Boblnette, white and Arabian color, special, per yard 30-In. Curtain Swiss, special, per yard .' Battenberg edge, white or Arabian, per yard , Battenberg Insertion, white or Arabian, per yard A good window shade, 3x0, each ., A good extension rod, 30x54, no sag, each . $6.75 $10.00 . IJ.Sc 12tfc ...7Ho ...25c ... 19c WTniiik. LOTION s4inTH For Qsnerrhas, Oltet. Lsuoorrhoa. Spermstor. rhoei, Piles sn6 All Unheslthj Sexual DisehsrgM. No Pain. No stain. -No Stricture, free syrinqc. ITl Bar IfravwatlT mt Disease." At Drus-fUM. or nut to sny sddrsu (or 1. MAIVDOR MFC CO., Lancaster, O., U.S.A. f tm I tan.9 I CufulM U 0 f b.i u Mrtmn. MEN AND WOMERe I'h Bl (or ssDstarsI tlKbsrsM.isllsmaistioBs, Irriutioso it uloorstleas of m no ess msmbrsaos. PtlsUit, sad not attrio old ay Orasvlst. r stat Is wrap ' br ;!, artpala, ttt tl.M. ortboitUaSl.Tt. ClrauU sob HSSl. TWENTIETH CENTURY FARMER The Best Farm Paper. i 2. Relieve Kidney a auwuer troublet at once. Cures In1 48 Hour a" URINARY DISCHARGES I far)! 4 Rewarw of i.teVw counterfeit!. ft. ' - CXrzra.jtmamt 5 it a. . -L . , a, - , I WABA LANDS YOU AT WORLD'S FAIR. NO OTHER LINE CAN. Round Trio Rates: $8.50 & VTS $13.80 Sold Daily FAST TRAINS DAILY READ DOWN READ UP 745 A. M. 6:30 P. M. Lv. Omaha Arr. 8:20 A. M. 9:00 P.- M. 8:00 A. M. 6:45 P. M. Lv. Council Bluffs Arr. 8:05 A. M. 8:45 P. M. 7:35 P. M. 7:00 A. M. Arr. World's Fair Station Lv. 7:45 P. M. 9:15 A. M. 7:50 P. VL 7:15 A. M. Arr. St. Louis Lv. 7:30 P. M. 9:00 A. M. P Gomparo This Tlmo With Other Llnoo. ALL WORLD'S FAIR MAPS SHOW WADA8H STATION AT MAIN ENTRANCE. WE HAVE OTHERS. CALL AT WABASH CITY OFFICE 1601 FARNAM. OR ADDRESS HARRY E. M00RES, G. A. P. D. Omaha,, Neb. TT D