6 fer to' Strangers" A Foil Dollar's Worth nee THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, XOVl-MM.U 13. 1004. Of My F You Pay Nothing I want no references no nocurity. The poor have the same opportunity as the rich. To one and all I say "Merely write and ask." I will send you an order on your druggist. He will give you free, the full dollar jmckage. .This offer in only for strangers to my remedy. To those who have not heard, or hearing have not tried it. ,My offer is as broad as humanity itself. For sick ness knows no distinction in its ravages. And the restless, patient on a downy couch is no more welcome than the wasting sufferer who frets through the lag ging hours in a dismal hovel. I want strangers EVEHYwhere to test my remedy. f Inside Nerves! Only on out of ererr M tie perfect health, of the 97 airs fines, some are rd-rlllen. lomt I r li.ilf sick, snf loltn are only rlull end Itatleea. But must of the slrkneia rome from ft rommon rau. The' nrrven are weak Xot the nervea you ordi narily iMnk bom not th- nervea that euv-rn jrour moremcnts and your thoughts. But tha nerves that, ungulrlea end unknown, nlRlit and day, keep your heart In motion oontrol your digestive apparatus res, ulete your liver operate your kldncjre. Three an tha nerves that wear out and break down, U doea no good to treat the ailing organ the Irregular heart the dlaonlered llvei the rebellloua etomanh the deranged kidneys. They are not to Mame. But go bark to the nervre thai control them. There you will find the aeat of the trouble. Tb.-re le nothing new about th.li nothing any phy plcian would dispute. But It remained for Dr. Snoop to apply tlilj knowledge to put It to practical nee. lr. Slioop'a Iteatorailve la the reeuit of a quarter century of endeavor along thia very line. It doea not dose the organ or deaden the pain but It doea, go at once to the nerve the Inside nerve the power nerve and builds It up, and strengthens it and makes tt well. For Stomach Troubles Th stomach ! controlled by a del lent nrv riUMl th mlar pltiua. frtz flghUra know that a blow ever th stomach a solar plexua blow mean sure knockout, for this nr Is ten times as sanaltlre as the pupil of your eye. Yet the solar pleius Is only one of the centers of the great Inilde nerve the power nerve. It Is one of the master nerrea. Thft stomach Is HS slave. Practically all stomach trouble la nerve trouble Inside nerve trouble eoler plexus trouble. Dr. Bhoop's Restorative BtrenRtheua the Inside nerves strengthens tha solar plenus an tb stomach trouble disappears, - , KOT A LINE TO THE COAST Northwestera's Nw Project Commented on by Eailroad Man. anaaBaBBaanxan, f TAPS RICH STOCK AND MINERAL SECTION Sngar Contlnnea to Advance In Price and that Staple) la Rapidly A. proachlngt the Point of Luxury. An Impression obtatni that tha announce tnent of the Northweiitern. aa published Friday, to extend its line from Caliper to ande.' in Wyoming, means the beginning ot a road through to the' coast. "Whatever Intentions the Northwestern may, have with regard to the future. & line to the coast is not the preiwnt in tention of the company and does not enter Into the plans of the proposed extension, ' tsuya a local railroad official. "Thd coun try which the Northwestern pre pones to tap Is one of the richest wool-producing terri tories of the west. Home of thW territory hag been reached by the Burlington, but at present wool has to be hauled for miles. Isiicep alBo have to be driver, miles to reach a landing place. The Idea of build ing Intu tills country- has been under con sideration by the Northwestern for years, but dellnlle action has been deferred from AN OBJECT LESSON In a Restaurant. A physician puts tno iiuery; Have you ntrmt noticed tn any large reit.iurant at lunch or dint. it tint the large number of hearty, vigor ua old rn-n at tha t'.blen; men whwo a.es run from sixty to eighty years; many Of them bald and all pemaps gray, but none of them feebie or sonllo? Perhaps tin apecUiclj is ao common as to have escaped your observation or com ment, tut nuvtrtlieleas It Is an object Iseaoa which means sumetlimg. If you vlU no Lit o wuui these hearty old fellow aio eating, yuu will obterta thai they an uoi munching bran crackers or gingerly picking tbilr way through a menu card of new tangled health foods; on the contrary they seem to preler a Juicy roast of beef, a properly turned loin of inuttoo, aad even the deadly btoljeU lobster la not altogther ignored. The point ot all of this Is that a vigorous old age depends upjn good digestion ana plenty of wholesome food and not upon dieting and an endeavor to live upon bran crackers. There Is a certain class of food cranks, who seem to believe that meat, coffee and many other good tilings are rank poisons, but theB cadaverous sickly looking In dividuals are a walking condemnation of their own theories. The matter In a nutshell Is that if the stomach secretes tht natural digestive juices in sufficient quantity, any whole some food will be promptly digested; if the stomach does not do so, and certain food v-susa distress, one or two of Btuart'a Dys pepsia Tablets after each meal will remove all difficulty, because they supply Just what every weak stomach lacks, pepsin, hydro-chlorio acid, diastase and nux. Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets do not act upon the bowels snd in fact ars not strict ly a medicine, aa they act almost entirely upon the food eaten, digesting It thorough ly and thus giving tha stomach a much needed rest and an appetite tor the next meal. Of people who travel, nine out of n use Btuart'a Dyspepsia Tablets, knovring them to be perfectly safe to use at any time and also having found out by' ex perience that they are a safesruard 'avnlnat Indigestion In any form, and eating aa they have to. at all hours and all kinds W food, tha traveling publlo for years lia pinned their faith to Btuart'a Tablet All druggists sell tbem at S cents for full-sised packsges and any draggut from Muine to California. U hla r.nlon were asked, will say that BtuartN Dyspepsia, Tablets is the most popular cd successful remedy fur any atom:w:h t:ubla Or A Bond of Sympathy Tha Inside nerve srsteni la plainly tha. moat Im portant system tn th human -od. Our life rests on the action of the vital oraans. While they work we live When they Slop we die. While they per form their duties properly we are well. When they perform their duties poorly we are III. And the I vital organs, each snd every one, depend upon the 1 Inside arrve system, for It not only regulates the ra it operates ad controls them. I The work of the Inside nerves li not only the moat Important It Is the most laborious. For our other nerve are eierted only at will. Wa think and talk aad exercle only aa we feel Inclined, and when we are tired we rest Out the stomach, the heart, the liver, the kidneys, must constantly and continu ously day and night freah or tired perform their neceeaary duties. Wa have no way of knowing even tha they are tired or at fault save the weakening of the organs they supply. But this strong bond of sympathy has a useful PurpoM. Kor It shows us clearly that all are j branches of one great system that If we make tha Ijncrn sfirrtng wm uvugi uga wvwry unmu. . why ao many ailments can be cured by one form of treatment For almost all sickness Is nerve sickness Inside serve sickness and other kinds of slcknens, such as purely organic derangements are frequently due to la ok of proper Inside nerve treatment. For -Kidney Troubles The Kidneys lire tha blood filters. They are op erated solely by tha Inalde nerves. The brsncb. which operates them and regulates them Is railed the renal plexus. When the renal pleiua Is weak or Irregular, the kidneys become clogged with the very poisons they should throw off. No kidney treat ment can olean them out or cure them, and one atage leads Into another until sfter a while the kld neya themselves begin to break down and dissolve. There Is only one way to reach kidney trouble that la through the Inside nerrea that control them, which Dr. Bhoop's Restorative alone strengthens snd restores. one time to another until the question of the Uintah reservation opening cam up. About 1,600,000 acres of land are to be thrown open to the public for settlement next July and thousands of faces will turn in that direction when the time comes. It was the Intention to throw open the land to aettlement last spring and at that time tha question of extending the ., N,prthwestern wna brought up. " Tha opening." liowiSver," was delayed and tha proposed extension was postponed. " "Besides a fine agricultural and grazing country the terr.tory also is exceed:ngly rich in mineral wealth. Oil abounds; there Is coal In abundance and gold and silver ore is known to exist upon the reservation, but could not be prospected. One of the most valuable mines that has been marked off and which will be taken by tha discov erers when the time comes is a mica mine. Mica, owing to the Bcarclty of the commodity. Is worth almost Its weight In gold." guitar Sttll Oolnar I P. If sugar continues to climb as it has In the past few weeks It will soon take on the characteristic of a luxury. Friday it again advanced three points in the open market. Thla is only one of a series of advances since the announcement several weeks ago that the supply is short. Raw sugar wa the first to experience the advance. A scarolty in sugar beets has resulted in a shortage in saccharine and a corresponding increase in the price of tha manufactured article. On Baturday sugar was kuoted at $5.76, with the expectation that it would show a further increase by Monday. Southern re fining sugars have been drawn from the market entirely, and in London raw sugar is quoted Vt cent higher than in this coun try. Beet sugar has followed the eastern market, which practically governs the prices for the United States, although the New York figures are based upon the quo tations of the New Orleans market. While the 20-cent rate between New Or leans and Missouri river points is still in force, It is expected the transportation com panies will get together about the first of the year and restore tha former price of S3 cents. PROCEEDS 0FJTHE TAX SALES Over Twenty-Flvo Thousand Dollars Thna Far Realised Under tha Seavenaver Law, The lands sold under the scavenger law so far have been knocked down at a total figure of 125,641. 81. The sale began Novem ber I and the total includes the business of Saturday morning.' Farm lands delinquent and unanswered for have been disposed ot and so have the unplatted lands in tha limits of Omaha and South Omaha and the lota In the original city of Omaha and In the additions the names of which begin with A. The B additions have been reached and tha sales today Included Baker's addi tion. 4 The sale Monday will begin at 9:30 o'clock with Batair Place and will continue through Begley'a, Park addiUon to South Omaha. The sale went better Saturday morning and forty-oiie pieces of real estate were sold. City Attorney Wright wants it well un derstood that the scavenger tax law soles are. working out to tha entire satisfaction ot the city. "Thousands of dollars are being received Into the treasury dally and the bidding la brisk and competition keen," he says. He anticipates the sale will last at least one month longer. He thinks the law Is proving a success and resulting In great bemflt to the city. "It any Idea has gained ground that the scavenger law sales are not going well. It should be corrected," said Mr. Wright. "The city teela very well satisfied with the sales as far aa they have gone. Them la a great deal of competition in bidding and many persona are going In and buying property next to their own. In compara tively few cases has tha city had to bid In property In order that It would not be disposed of at a lose. If people wlnh to protect their property they ahould effect settlements without delay before tha prop erty is reached In tha alphabetical order ot You Promise Nothing There is no catch in my offer no mystery in my remedy. I can explain my treatment to you as easily as 1 can tell you why cold freezes water and why heat melts ice. Nor do I claim a discovery. For every de tail of my treatment is based on truths so funda mental that none can deny them. And every ingre dient of my medicine is as old as the hills it grows on. I simply applied the truths and combined the ingre dients into a remedy that is practicaly certain. But my years of patient exjeriment will avail you nothing if you do not accept my offer. For facts and reason and even belief will not cure. Only the remedy can do that. Many Ailments-One Cure I have called these tha Inalde nerves for tni plfrlty's sake. Their usual name Is tha "sympa thetic nerves. Physicians call them by this name because they are ao closely allied because each is In such close sympathy with the others. The result Is that when one branch Is allowed to become Im paired, the others weaken. That Is why one kind of sleknena leads Into another. That Is why cases become "complicated." For this delicate nerve )s the most nenaltlve part of the human system. Doea thla not explain to you some of tha uncer tain tie of medicine Is It not a good reason to your mind why other kinds of treatment may have failed? Don't yon see that THIS Is NEW In medicine? That this la NOT the mere patchwork of a stimu lant the mere soothing of a narcotic? Don't you sea that It goea right to tba root of the trouble and eradicates the cause? But I do not ask you to take a tingle statement of mine I do not ask yon to believe a word I say until you bave tried my medicine In your own home at my expense absolutely. Could I offer you n full dollar'a worth free if there were any misrepresenta tion? Could I let you go to your druggist whom yon know and pick out any bottle he has on hla ahelvea of my medicine were tt not UNIFORMLY helpful? Could I AFFORD to do this if 1 were not reasonably SURE that my medicine will help you? For Heart Trouble Your heart beats more than ten thousand times day. And every heart beat Is" ,sn Impulas of the Inside nerve branch called the csrdlao pleius. The hesrt Is s muscle, but It Is the nerve thst mskes the muscle do the work. An Irregular or weak heart la, almoit In every Instance, the direct reeuit of s week or Irregular nerve Inilde nerrs. To cure hesrt trouble, restore the nerve to normal. Dr. 8hoop'a Restorative will restors the cardiac pleiua. Just aa It restores the solar plexus snd the renal plexus. Kor all are equal psrts of the great Inside nerve system the power nerves the master nerves. aooiD the sale, or should be present to bid It In. "County Treasurer Fink is doing excep tionally good work in the tax sales and should be given part of the credit for the success of the experiment" GENERAL BINGHAM IN OMAHA One ot the Oldest Members of Con gress, from Philadelphia! Visits Daniel Banna. H. H. Bingham of Philadelphia arrived in Omaha Saturday morning and will be tha guest of Daniel Baum, 104 North Thirty first Btreet, for a few days. General Bingham enjoys the distinction of being one of the oldest members In the national congress, having JuBt been re-elected for another term In the great republican land slide. He Is popularly known as Oeneral "Harry" Bingham, and, aside from hla long service in congress from tha First Philadelphia district, he Is a veteran of the War of the Rebellion. He entered the service as a second lieutenant and was brevetted a brigadier general for meritori ous services at the battle of Gettysburg. He later became postmaster of Phila delphia. Tuesday General Bingham was re elected to congress for the fourteenth time, whlnh will unnn Its. r-nmnlMInn alva him I twenty-eight years as a national legislator. General Bingham's visit to the west Is simply for rest and recreation after his arduous labors .n contributing to the elec tion of Prosldent Roosevelt, of whom he is a most warm and ardent admirer. COMMERCIAL CLUB GROWING Membership Steadily Expands and Plans tor Improvements Are Pro gressing" Favorably, Matters In connection with tha plans of the Commercial club for enlarged member ship, Improved catering factliles and refur nishing club rooms are progressing encour agingly. Saturday three members handed In twenty-seven applications for member ship. It Is understood that when 600 mem bers are secured an Initiation of $25 will be asked, and but fifty members are needed to reach this limit. Tha house commutes met Friday night and considered the plana for refurnishing, which will be on an elaborate scale. The restaurant will be opened from 12 noon to 12 midnight, with a regular dinner and a la carte for the rest of the day. There is some talk of adding regular dlnnera one or two evenings in each week. Plans for the formation of a dinner club after the styl of the Knife and Fork club of Kansas City, the Sunset of Chicago and other famous dining coteries have been con sidered and may be pushed to actuality. Cares Grip and While Dr. Humphreye' "Heventy-seven" Is a apeclflo cure for Orlp and scrloua Colds that "hunr on." Its widest sphere of use Is to "break up'' as common, every day Gold, beginning with the sniffles and ending on the cheat. "IT" curea by restoring the checked cir. euluUon of tha blood to all the vital organs, that they may perform their functions naturally, wtthout unnecessary effort. At drogdnts, H cents, or mailed. Humphreys' Medicine Co., Cor. William and John fiu-eeta, New York. Evidence Lane, Idaho, June Md. I writ you this letter to let you know that I here been entirely cured of Dlabetee through the use of your Restorative. I sm now in good heelth snd sm doing hard work all the time. I shall always keep the Kestorative on hand, for It is the flnrt thing I should think of If I did not feel well. W. 8. O'BRIEN. Atlantic City, N. J . June .nth. 104. Tour Kestorative has been s great bles-lns In my family; to my mother, my baby and myself My baby I feel quite sure would not be living now had It not been for your Dr. Bhoop's Restorative. As It Is, he ta a big, strong looking boy for his age. At nine months when he began taking the Restorative he wss st death' a door. MRS. CHAS. HAVENS. Chllllcothe, Ohio, July 1st, 1904. It Is with pleasure that 1 announce to you the cure of my terrible suffering of heart trouble. I am now years old, and I sm tending to s large garden. I feel quite well now, and It la due to Dr. Snoop's Reatorstlve I felt better sfter tsklng the r-t bottle snd recommended this remedy to ell suffering sgsd people. MR. JAKB REDMAN. For Liver Troubles The liver, Ilk the kidneys. Is also blood titer. It Is regulsted snd controlled by a branch of the stomach nerves. Nine out of ten suffer st some time with liver trouble. The Insids nerves which sctuste It are delicate snd sensitive. The slightest strain, euch ss overheating, etc.. Is llkety to weaken the nerves. The result In dullness snd laislttuda and biliousness which breed other Illness. Then take Dr. Bhoop's Restorstlve. a- few doses of which will suffi ciently strengthen the control nerves to set the ailing orgsn right. Liver pills snd other ordinary reme dies can give ao permanent relief. OMAHA INDIANS GET LAND warded Ownership of Blackbird Island Part of Reservation. MUNGER DECIDES LONG FOUGHT CASE Verdict Is that Tract Belongs to Nebraska, aad Filing; Waa Noth ing; bat Aet ot Trespass. Judge Munger of the federal court haa Just handed down a decision in ths Black bird island case. In which he adjudges the island is a part of the Omaha Indian reser vation and consequently tho homestead filings of Messrs. PhllllpB and Johnson are Invalid, and that they had no right to denude the Island of timber. The case is one that has been occupying the attention of the courts for nearly a year. The defendants, Phillips and John son, filed on the land a year or more ago through the land office at Des Moihes, on the ground that the land was a part of Iowa and not of Nebraska. They at once proceeded to denude the island ot its valu able timber with tho avowed purpose of preparing it for agricultural purposes. The Omaha Indians had long held thnt the Island was a part of the Omaha Indian reservation of Nebraska and that the de fendants were trespassers. The island was named after one of the old Omaha chiefs, and John Blackbird, a son of the old chief, waa one of the principal witnesses In behalf of the Indians. The testimony In the case was taken be fore a special master commissioner In Omaha last summer and the cuse was sub mitted for argument before Judge Munger Monday. The contention of the defendants was that the island was public land, not Included In any Indian reservation, and was open to entry under the general lund laws, and that It was a part of the territory of Iowa, and not of Nebraska. In the Interval between the taking of the testi mony In the case and the urgument a re survey ot the island had been made and it was ascertained that It lay In Nebraska territory and was a part of the Omalm Indian reservation. The land is quite valu able and the Indians put up a strong fight for their rights The decision does not state that the In dians shall receive any compensation for the timber already destroyed. However, the nature, of the decision leaves the field open for a damage suit against the defend ants, which may be filed later. SMITH DOES NOT ENTHUSE Street Railway Manager Takes Little Interest In Proposition for "See lug; Omaha" Car. The proposition originating with W. J. C. Kenyon regarding the introduction by the Omaha & Council Bluffs Street Railroad company of a "Seeing Omaha" car service and being forwarded by Commissioner Mc Vann ot the Commercial ciub, Is exciting some interest. Mr. McV'ann is ot the opinion that It would be a good thing, and he has arranged a proposed route and asked General Manager Smith ot the street car company to consider the matter and place a rate on the service suggested. The proposed route is from tha Tenth atreet stations via Harney and Fourteenth, Vinton and Twenty-fourth atreeta to South Omaha; thence to Florence via Vinton, Twenty-fourth and Thirteenth, returning to the atartlng point via Sherman avenue, Fourteenth and Harney to Tenth. General Manager Smith ia not especially favorable to the project, for the reason that be does not consider Omaha a tourist town, and therefore he doubts the success of the venture still he would not be at all averse to making rates for any service demanded. Commissioner McVann claims Omaha has many strangers within its gates every day, coming by the roads without through con nections and awaiting afternoon trains on the Rock Island, Union Pacific and Burling- You Deposit Nothing .No one else has ever tried so hard to remove every possible excuse for doubt. In eighty thousand communities in more than a million homes Dr. Shoop's Kestorative is known. There are those all around you your friends and neighbors, perhaps whose suffering it has relieved. There is not a physician anywhere who dares tell you I am wrong in the new medical principles which I apply. And for six solid years my reuiedy has stood the severest test a medicine was ever put to I have said "If it fail it is free" and it has never failed where there- was a possible chance for it to Bucceed. Evidence 135 Lincoln Ave., Allegheny, Fs . June Jnd. 104. I hsve tsken six bottles of your Dr. Snoop s Re storstlve and am completely cured. No more Dye pepsls, no more headache, no more pains. That la to any. l reel perfectly wen. MRS. PH. D. nESJARDINS. Fsrettevllle, Wis., May :4th. In4. T was sick for a year with Kidney comolalnt. Tried two doctors. They did not helo me sny. I could not go to church ner sny plsre. I Would hsve to get up ten times throiien the night. I got two bottles of your Restorative at the drug store. I rould see a change the first week. I took four bottles In all. f am well today, and tt Is one yenr ago now sine I got it. I can sleep all night and won't have to get up. 1 know your remedy saved my Ills. Sincerely yours, v ROBERT CHENEY. No. Platte, Neb., Feb. sth. 1"4. I went to tell you what your Or Bhoop's Restora tive has done for my Heart trouble. My suffering waa so Intense that I bed to close school one day, and It was then thst my mother urged me to tke your medicine. I felt beneficial results from the first day I took It, and now feci entirely well. NELLIE O. LOVESTEDT. For Overworked Men The worries of business, the strslns of overwork, the pensltles of excess, each manifest their first effecta on the lnelde nerves. This is evident when you realise that these nervea are the very source of hu man vitality and power. There Is no other way to restore human vitality than by strengthening Its fountain Seed 4he Inside nerves. For every organ, every act ol lite, depends oa them. Thsy ars the maiters the argens their slaves. Dr. Bhoop's Re storsttve Is the mast effective remedy known In oases of thia kind. It has stood the teat of time. No other remedy even claims to reach the Inside nervea. ton, who would be only too glad to see Omaha if such a service was arranged. EXHIBITS GO TO PORTLAND Nebraska rn rnd Grain at St. Loots Will Be .' as i Oregon Ex ,...lon. The Nebraska grain and grass exhibits at St. Louis are to be preserved for use at the Portland Lewis and Clark exposi tion. The county commissioner."! have agreed to take care of the specimens properly this winter at the county hospital. A letter was read from E. W. Hervey .secretary of the State Agricultural socie.y. He sug gested, as the exhibits were the best that could be grown anywhere In the world, they should be preserve.) for use In the weBt. The commissioners approved his suggestion. They can be housed at alight cost. The commissioners authorised bids for grading 1.C00 cubic yards of dirt on the road between the Florence boulevard and Forest Lawn cemetery. They also au thorized advertising for similar grading work for 3,000 yards on the Link road in Millard precinct. Thepe bids ore to opened next Saturday. - A forty-fcot wooden bridge was authorized In Jefferson. The contract of C. B. Havens frr sleam coal at the county hospital waa approved. Ad vertisements will be made for the county supplies for the coming year. These last bids are to be opened December 17. YOUNG FOOTPADS GET BOLD Make Repeated Attacks on Women and Vigilance Committee Is Being Aft'ltated. There Is a strong inclination to organise a vigilance committee up near Twenty sixth and Harney streets for protection against the depredations of a gang of young footpads who are making life a misery to young women in that neighbor hood. About ten days ago a young woman was assaulted by a couple of boys 17 or 18 years of age and commanded to surrender her purse. She went at the thelves with a hatpin and scared them to cover. Last Monday night another young woman UvLlfuuL UJJuiJAl U IS Several rears ago jj what the doctors called Sciatic Rheutna- r- UBIU, VI MUIUUVqU, i e tense airony at uuica, a to tny bd about a year, although four of f'. tViehear nrivairiana fnne nf whom was mv laiacrj aueuueu on uunog mj iiincss. They could give me only temporary relief, and I think they tried about all the remedies known to medical science, dosing me with strong medicine until tny stomach got into auch a condition that I could digest nothing, and neither myself nor my friends had any hope of my recovery. I waa persuaded to try 8. 8. 8., and before finishing the first bottle I found that I bad the right remedy. I continued to take it until it cured me perfectly. Thia waa about nine years ago, and I bave been in splendid health ever since. Murfreesboro, Tenn. J. D, Hanson Fiery liniments, drawing: plasters and penetrating oils sever cured a case of Rheumatism; because it is not a local or skin disease, but a disease of the blood caused by a sour, acid condition of that vital fluid. The kidneys and bowels get weak, the liver torpid, and the poisonous accumulations that should pass off through the usual channels of nature are absorbed by the blood and distributed into the muscles, joint and nerves through the circu lation, producing inflammation and swelling of these parts, excitement of the nerves and other painful and disa greeable symptoms of the disease. Rheumatism sufferers look with dread upon the winter season with its damp, cold, changing weather, for the firbt slight exposure is liable to bring on an attack, and the sharp, cutting pains and feverish, swollen joints and muscles make life miserable with almost unbearable torture. Local applications will ash or other harmful minerals, but is purely vegetable and is recognized everywhere as the surest and safest blood purifier. Our special book on Rheumatism will be mailed free to all who write, and our physicians will give medical advice to all sufferers, without cfaargf. nr SWtFT SPECIFIC COMPANY, A TLANTA. OA. You But my liberality is of no avail to those who shut their eyes and doze away in doubt. For doubt U harder to overcome than disease. I cannot cure those who lack the faith to try. So now I have made this offer. I disregard the evi dence. I lay aside the fact that mine is the largest medical practice in the world, And come to you as a stranger. I ask you to believe not one word that I say till you have proven it for yourself. I offer to give you outright a full dollar's worth of. Dr.'Shoop's Bestora tive. It is the utmost my unbounded confidence can suggest. It's open ami frank and fair. It is the su preme test of my limitless belief. ' Evidence Everywhere I could fill thla whole pegs with such letters as these. But why multiply the evidence Tour own physician will tell you that the Inside nerves the sympathetic nerves the power nerves control the vital organs. Tour own common sense will tell yn to treat not the ailing organ, but the nerve that controls It. And In almost every community In the linked fttatea you will find men and women who have used Dr. ShooD'a Restorative who will beer slad testi mony that It cured THEIR ailments, relieved THKlll aufferlng. brousht berk the color to TRR1R rneeks. msde THEIR lives happy and wholesome aad helpful. Yet I hsve not nuked you to tske my word or your physlclsn's word, or your neighbor's word or the word even of your awn common sens. I hsve merely asked you to let me buy you a full dolisr bottle for which you are to par nothing either new or Inter. It le simply a tree gift because I know that It It helps you. you will learn to rely on It yon will tell your friends and the their neigh bors. I am risking my business my life work my repu tation. I sm depending on your own honest opinion sfter your own test In your own home. I cannot profit unless my medicine succeeds. Could I aflerd thla If I were not sure? For Womanly Troubles Almost all or the troubles thst sre peculiar to woman are caused by wesknsss of the Inside nerves. There Is no need to doctor or doee an ailing organ when It depends alone for Its supply of energy on the Inside nerves. Instde nerve weakueaa. If not attended to, will spread The common name for the Inside nervea la the "flvmpaihetlo Nerves." Bach oenter Is In close aympsthy with the other, and when one be comes deranged, general weakness and derangement frequently ensue. Or. Bhoop's Restorative gently tones up the Inside nerves and removes tha causa of weakness, safely and surely. ativ was robbed Of her purae and $8 in cash. Wednesday evening two boys answering the general description ot the thieves as saulted a young woman and succeeded In getting her purse away from her. It con tained but a small amount of money, how ever. WOULD BE UP TO 1NGERS0LL Missouri Gone Republican and He , Could Hare Chance to Become Christian. ' ' Astonished and bewildered by the strange fact that Missouri went republican, along with nearly all the rest of the country, Tuesday, people throughout the United States doubtless havo been too busy trying to get over the shock to pause and reflect on what a once-famous man said he would do if Missouri ever went republican. "When Missouri goes republican, then will I become a Christian," once declared Colonel Robert G. Ingersotl, when being prodded by friends to change his convic tions on this great subject. "What would the colonel do If he were living?" is being asked by many thoughtful ones now, and the Invariable, answer is, "Become a Christian, for he was pre eminently a man of his word." And in, the same connection much Is being said of providential Intercession, PRINCE ON HIS WAY EAST Hero ot Nanshnn Hill, Mikado's Cousin, and Party Will Be In Onuba. It is expected his Imperial htgnesa, Lieu tenant General Prince Sadauara Fushiml, the cousin of the emperor of Japan nd hero of the battle of Nanshan hill, will reach Omaha at 6:30 Sunday evening. 'He left San Francisco. Thursday evening on No. 6 over the Southern Pacific, and It will take about throe days to complete the Journey as far as this city. Prince Fushlmi, who is regarded almost an Idol by the soldiery of his country, wll be accompanied by Mr. A. Sato, grand master of the royal household. Sato was educated at Harvard and also acts as In terpreter for the prince. Other dlstln- NOT A SiaU DISEASE. I waa afflicted with I was terribly afflicted with Rheuma tism for eighteen months, and during my -J i J .i.:it j SUUbllUg .us I. physicians, all of whom pronounced my f)J cose hopeless. I waa for a year in such a ' anu ueinif vunuucu helpless condition areas or leea myself. I baa hi lea at -if- I ki7: ZJ"i ferent times ss creacrirrtiona furcested '"Gs'TPS by friends, none of them giving ma any relief. I finally da cided to include 8. 8. 6., and took the first dose while hob bling about on crutches. After taking two bottles I found so much relief I was able to relinquish the use of one crutch, aad a faithful continuance of the medicine relieved ma of the other crutch, and shortly afterwards enabled me to go to my work. I have had ao return of Rheumatism, although thia was fire years ago. J. O'Maixsv, 2135 N. Senate Are. Indianapolis, Ind. oiten give reuel lor a little wniie, dui can ao no permanent good, because the trouble is not within their reach; and even while the Symptoms are being re lieved by such treatment the blood is becoming more heavily charged with the uric acid poison, and the next attack will be more severe. S. S. S. cure, this dis ease by arousing to proper action all the sluggish organs and going into the blood, driving out all the acid and poisonous matter, renewing and strengthen ing: it. and toni nsr up the entire system by its fine tonic effect. It contains no Pot Risk Nothing Simply Write Me The Bret free bottle msy he enough to effect cure but 1 do not promise thst. Nor do I tear a loss of possible profit If It doea. for such a test will surely convince the cured one bynnd doubt, or dis pute, or disbelief, that every word I ssy Is true. The offer Is open to everyone, everywhere, se has not tried my remedy. Hut you miu write MB tor the free dollar bottle order. All druggleta do not grant the teat. I will then direct you to one thai doea He will pass It down to you from hla stock as freely aa though your dollar laid before him. Write for the order toaay. l ne oner may not remain open, i win r. yon thai book you ssk tor beside, tt la tree. It will hstp you ta understand your case. What more can I do to convince you el my Interest ot my sincerity f - For a free nrder for a full dolisr bottle you must address Dr. fchoop, Has Hit, Ka rlns, wis. State which book you wait. Rook 1 on Dyspepsia. Rook I on the Heart. Rook 1 on the Kidney. Book 4 for Women. Honk i for Mta. Rook ( an Rheumatism, Mild eases are often cured with one or two bottles. For ssle at forty thousand drug eta roe. For the Home Keep Dr. Bhoop's Restorstlve In the hams against the little troubles that ao frequently arise. It Is sn emergency remedy, because It goes direst to the seal of most all forms of Illness the Insids nerves, t'hronlc complslnta atsrt frfom Utile Illnesses wateh could have been easily checked In their early utsges. Dr. Bhoop's Restorative will brighten many a dull day. will freshen tha spirits and increase ths appe tite. It Is not a cure-all. It does not pretend to da miracles. It reaches only the Inalde nervea. Bui these nerves ao thoroughly control the vital tuna Hone last Boat alaeaaea vlil reeAUy yield ta It. guished men In the party are Count 8. Terhaslma, Major Minora, master ot oara monies; Dr. Bokkaku, physician of his im perial highness, and tha attendants of tha prince. The party will not stop In thia city, but will go dlreot to Chicago, where a atop of three hours will ba made. THREE - YEARS AT LINCOLN at.A.u bT.bV. mask VITItl ..nlasa Kt uwrgiv vvHstavai iistvvi v v ava Mall at State Capital For Some Little Time. ': . - .. George Johnson ' has been sentenced to three years in the penitentiary. Ha. waa accused of robbing Carl . Clements last October and when arraigned pleaded not guilty, but later threw himself oh tha mercy of the court. Johnson la a oolored man, who came here from tha west and was arrested a few days after his arrival. Wesley Thomas was arraigned on a charge of grand larceny and pleaded not guilty. John G. Noss, who had been held on a charge of Belling land without title with the purpose of defrauding, waa Ala missed, as there was not sufficient evidence to noia mm, nooeri jonnson was taken before Judge Day on a charge of stabbing with , intent to wound and pleaded not guilty. lie was held on taoa ball. ONE MORE INJUNCTION SUIT Western t Inlon Seeks to Enjoin County from Taxing; Its Franchise. The Western Union Telegraph company, ia the latest party to an Injunction suit against the county of Douglas and Robert O. Fink, Its treasurer. Judge Troup signed the temporary order. The company cornea Into coiirtbaryisjga its franchise haa bien appraised at 137, 091.39 and It has been, aascs ed laxea thereon to the amount of $477. The company tayt -It has no franchise given by the state ct Nebraska or any of Its counties, but does business under right cf the United States' grant. It further avers the tlx Is illegal for other reasons. The company prays for an Injunction forbidding any collecting or levying of taxes before' the court heard the matter. U&Ijuu P that I waa unable to ff mm .1 I Mt -a.