THE OMAIIA DAILY BKE: RATTTRDAT. SEPTEM HER 23, 10115. Splendid Furnishing Goods Eargalni Saturdj Special Shoe Sale Saturday v Women's fine $3.50 Shoos, tan or black $1.96 Men's $3.50 and $4.00 Regent Shoes $2.25 Men's, bojV and youths' $1.50 satin lace shoes 93c "Women's, misses' and child's $1.50 vici kid lace shoes 98c Children's $1 vici kid and patent leather, lace or button. .69c Women's $2.50 odd sire Julietts 39c We are showing all the New Styles in shiny leathers and the new Demo-Calf Shoes, priced within the reach of all. 26 styles of the Grover Soft Shoes for Tender Feet carried in stock. Agents for the Stetson and Crossett Shoes for men. IVe Guarantee Satisfaction In All Mail Orders Save Money by Ordering here nn All Mail Orders Promptly Filled Except in Hour Sales, Fresh Fruits and Where Other wise Specified fjvery item a value which y every one then come and see you won't be disappointed. ou cannot afford to miss, read the goods. We enn guarantee Men's All Wool Shirts and Draw ersWorth up to $2.00, broken lots and sizes, but greatest val ues ever shown at, per Q garment U JC Ladies' Underwear In fall and win ter weights, worth up to "ZC 76c per garment, at. . . . JC Men's and ladles' nigh Orade Vnder wear The best values and most complete stock ever shown in the west at per narnipnt, $1.50 Ladles' 60c Ribbed Vests and Pants, special value Saturday, 1C. at ZjC Ladles' 89c Heavy Ribbed Vest and Fauts, special Saturday, Lndles' Natural Wool Vests and THE RELIABLE STORE. Ladies' Ribbed Vests and rants, LadirV Combination HuMs, made Pants, regular $1.00 75. values, at from the finest Egyptian cotton, Fleece Lined Vests and Pants for Misses and ChUdren, sizes 16 to worth 60c, special value, 39c at 34, regular 25c quality, at 15c 35c NEW NECKWEAR 12 f-2c. Saturday morning trrlns ur bl SPF-CIAL NECKWEAR BAi-, Tw fancy Btocks, Turnovers and T NwVwwr, In the newest styles, worth 26o and Kc each, at- J2iC Al'mlt of four' pieces to aach eua-torr.tr. EXTRA SPECIAL SATURDAY. IOC Silk Belts at o Jbo 811k Velllnga at 8C lie liabrolderles for corset covers at, yard lo 80c Ribbons, yard "to J5o Tooth Brushes at THo SOc. Pura Bilk Ribbon (washable) at lOo 16c Pvarl Buttons at. dozen !Ha SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT. Beginning Monday, Sept. 25th, until the Horse Show, Oct. 9th, we will sell all Real Laces at 25 Per Cent Discount from regular prices. Don't miss this opportunity. We are showing the finest line ever seen in the west. FURNITURE FURNITURE Here Price Pleas tho Purse) Thoee who are making homes can here Bare when earing means bo much. Thoee with slender means can hare comfort, style and Quality at small expense. We offer you here a solid oak chair with a good cane seat, brace arms, three stretchers In front, neatly carved back, good golden finish for 83c. Regular $1.25 quality. Large Oak Arm Rocker High back, neatly carved, leather cobbler seat. A good looking, well con structed rocker, golden fin ish. Regular price $3.00, sale price $1.85 ANOTHER SNAP IN CHAIRS. After our last sale we find we have several patterns of chairs, running from one up to three of a kind. These go now below cost. All jruar untfd oak, tine rhnlrs. $2.60 Chairs three of a kind now fl.BO $2 76 Chairs three of a kind now. .C1.7S $2.60 Chairs two of a kind now fl.BO $1.96 Chairs two of a kind now $1.25 A lot of chairs at 91.00, 83c and 75c one and two of a kind. Just in a fine uew line of Extension Tables. II US? it mm. mmmkm mm m t t t GRAND OPENING OF Autumn Millinery Saturday SO CARDS RARE TYPES OF ARTISTIC ELEGANCE THIS IS THE FASHION EVENT OF THE SEASON. NO CURDS IN EXQUISITE FRENCH MILLINERY DISTINCTIVE, ORIGINAL, EXCLUSIVE The thoughts of the masters whom all the world recognise as authors of the moat charming millinery models have ben oonocntmted In our present displays. Thus It Is that the united efforts of the beat talent In the great style sources give to our' display that distinctive originality and exdusiveness which Is so essential In hata for theater wear, receptions and suoh other formal functions aa ara uppermost In the minds of Fashion's devotees. For opening day we will offer ail our Parla pattern Paris Model Hats, $15.00, $17.50, $20.00, $25.00 OPENING DAY SPECIAL Pattern Hats at $7.50, $10.00 and $12.50 i From A till 10 A. M. Men's high grade madras shirts In neat fall pattorns. worth up to $1.00, choice Satur- -1Q day for one hour. . . . C r'roi 10 U!l 11 A. M. Men's Fleece Ltnod I'nderwear, in all sizes, good values at 60c, for this one hour, choice, per If garment JQ, These are hats copied from the Paris hats, and should sell for double the price wa ask. Medium Priced Millinery Copies of Pattern Hats$H.9S It has always been our aim to give the best values possi ble at this price. This season we come forth with a collec tion of styles far vuperlor In workmanship and materials than any ever offered here or elsewhere. We Invite your Inspection. Tailored Suit Hats at $3.98 Our assortment of suit hata la the largest and most com plete to be found In the city. hats at about half their original cost to Import. A FEW SPECIALS FOR OPENING DAY $3.00 Hand-Made Silk Hats $1.9S 1.98 Twenty-five doien ladles' fine hand-made tucked Japanese suk nats. naae on nucxram rramee. They come In large flaring shapes and continental block brown, navy and champagne Hand-Made Silk Velvet Hats. $1A9 Made of Paon velvets. A limited number will be sold at this price. ' Ladlas' la I Turban 11.49 ChUirtn't and mutt' Ctp$ 25c and Me , HAYDEN BROS.' MILLINERY DEPARTMENT. MISS BELLE KN0WLT0H, Proprialor. WE HAVE SECURED THE SERVICES of an expert optician. Your eyes will be properly fitted and glasses faultlessly fitted at the very lowest prices. Visit Our Optical Department. MEN'S HATS rS ALL THE NEW FALL STYLES. It's always the quality that counts with the shrewd buyer. The haU we place on special sale Saturday are bound to please for the quality Is there. Don't fall to see them. Stiff or soft bats in all the latest style. $2.00 and $2.60 HaU J JJQ $1.00 and $1.25 1 OO I 'L0 " c Cfl Hats at IUU I Hats at 3UC Boys' and Cbildrsn's Caps In fancy Scotch flannel cashmere, blue serge, In yacht, auto IP and golf styles, 50o and 39c values at. . aaJC The Derby Hat in all the most stylish brims and crowns, Dunlap and Kaox blocks, 2 50 SEE OUR CORSETS We're always glad to show you the newest styles in corsets, whether you buy or not. We want you to know that our stock Includes a complete line of the most popular and best makes on the market. A8 SATURDAY SPECIALS we ara showing 60c and T6o ooraets and girdles that have become slightly soiled from handling, but Of enceptlonal values, choice. f BEE THE NEW MODELS In R. a., Kabo. Warner's, W. B.. Royat Worcester. La Oroque and La Marguerite Corsets, best on earth, at tlO.OO down 7 00 WARNER'S ' RUST ' PROOF COR SETS (Just Ilka out.) A most comfortable and satisfactory gar ment, long hips and two sets of hose supporters, sises It to 36, drab or white, 1 sn at. Hi DON'T MISS THESE Hosiery Specials Ladies' Fancy Embroidered Hose, in blacks and colors, regular 39c values, at Ladies' and Misses' Hose, in plain and fancy colors, worth 19c and 25c, at Boys' Bicycle Hose Very heavy ribbed with double knee, heel and toe, regular 25c values. -2C .121c SATURDAY Drug Specials Rubber Gloves, Violet Talcum Powder, box 2 "William's or Colgate's Shaving Soap, r per cake JC Venetian Tooth f r Paste 13 C Beef, "Wine and Cohd Cream, f Cl b0X.... IaC Read This- SO lbs Purs Cans Granulated Sugar 1.00 10 bars best brand Laundry Boap 2 48-lb. sack Fancy High Patent Minnesota Flour, nothing better for family use.... 91.85 The best Pearl Tapioca, Bago or Barley, lb c Choice Japan Rice, per lb 4e Jello, Jellycon or Advo JelL per pkg TX 1-lb. cans Rex Pork and Beans, .so Largs bottles purs Tomato Catsup fftte Means Money Saved on Your Living Expenses. The best Laundry Starch, lb. ..c 1-lb. pkg. best Cornstarch 4c The best Soda or Oyster Crackers per lb 6Ue 1-lb. cans Assorted Soups. ...7Hc 1-lb cans Golden Table Syrup 7 Ho The best Pickling Spices, lb. . .BOc lC-os. can Condensed Cream THo BUTTER AND CHEESE PRICES. Choice Dairy Butter, per lb..leVs Fancy Dairy Table Butter, lb. 18o Extra eholos Creamery Butter, per lb 21o Fancy Separator Creamery Butter, per lb 23o Fancy Brick or Llmburger Cheeas, per lb 15c Fanoy New York Whits Cheese, per lb 15c Fancy Wisconsin Cream Cheese, per lb 15c FRUIT t FRUIT! FRUIT! 1-bushel boxes of fancy Kefer Pears for canning, nothing finer $1.T5 Fanoy California Freestone Peaches, per crate 75c I measures fresh roasted Peanuts lOe 1-lb. rack facoy Colorado Honey . . . . 10c Beautiful Garments for Fall Wear The greatest display of enticing values ever shown In the city. 12B Handsome Tailor Suits Just received in time for Saturday's selling. The very newest designs, made especially for Hayden Bros. Stylish Suits, in fancy mixed and plain fabrics In two different styles, have 4G-ln. coats with inlaid velvet collars, would be considered Rood values at $16.00, very special values Saturday g J) Handsome Tailor Suits, with full or medium length coat, satin or taffeta lined and silk stitched, good value at $20.00, Saturday, gQ Elegant Tailor Suits, made of Lyman's wool Chev iot, in light, medium or dark colore, lined throughout with fine taffeta or guaranteed satin. good values at $36.00, special Satur day at, choice 24.90 GREAT BALE OF CRAVENETTE COATS. A manufacturer hard pressed for money sold us his entire stock at about half price. You get the benefit. $9.00 Cravenettes in medium and dark castors, size 32 to 44, $12.00 and $16.00 Cravenettes in seven different styles, grays, browns, blues, greens, castors, all handsome up-to-date styles, your n aa choice Saturday (j,Jt STYLISH SKIRTS Ladles' Walking Skirts, worth regularly up to $6.00, special, at The New Butterfly Skirts, In all colors, special bargains at Elegant Walking and Dress Skirts, the greatest variety and best values shown in Omaha, at $12.60, $10, $7.60 and. Women's Waists In prettily embroidered linen, $2.60 values, Saturday Fins Sicilian and Nun's Veiling Waists in the newest styles, great values, 2.98 3.98 greatest 5.00 1.49 at 2.98 Children's Early Fall Coats, ages 3 to 12 years, worth from $6.00 to $7.00, choice f no Saturday at $2.98 and I. JO From 8 tiU 10 A. M. Women's $1.00 Wrappers, at '. From 9 till 11 A. M Flannelette Dress ing Sacques 59c 39c Far Lined Coat Special Saturday we will sell fur lined coats, worth $18.60. at 12.50 Saturday's Meat Specials Hens, per pound 12o Fresh Dressed Spring Chickens, per pound 12c Shoulder Roast, fancy, per pound Syc Shoulder Steak, fancy, per pound fiic Hound Steak, fancy, per pound 8Vc Veal Stew, per pound SVjC Boil Beef, per pound 2Vc Corn Beef, per pound 2o HUNTING "FANTOM" MOOSE MjiUrioui Animal that Holds Sway in a ' Mostaia Forest, CRACK SHOTS FAIL TO MAKE A HIT Hundreds of Men om Its Track at Different Ttmea la Forty Years Wlerd Story of Frontier Kaprrlrnre. Every man who has lived in southern Montana for any length of time, especially If ha enjoys the hunting stories told hy the old-timers, has heard of the "fantom moose" whlrh makes his home at the head of Wlae river and has defied the e (Torts of all the hunters of Montana to slay htm. For forty years or more this animal has held undisputed sway In the forest surrounding- the head of Wise river and not one of the hundreds of hunters who have sworn to slay him has ever had tha satis faction of seeing the animal turn a hair or falter In his step, no matter how many shots might be fired at him, how near the distance or deadly the aim. Many a real- dent of Butte has Journeyed Into the head waters of the Wise river before the open season against moose was yollflhed In an effort to bring back the head of the old timer, adorned with the greatest "shovels" ever worn by a monarch of the forest, bark to town. All of these efforts have beon failures, and still the old boy, who, be cause no one ever was able to place a fatal shot in his carcass. Is known as the "fan tom moose," roams the hills surrounding: the head of Wise river, unafraid of man or any of the modern weapons he carries. Just recently the hunting fever was de veloped in Butte by the unnatural cold weather which prevailed, and around a steam register In a popular resort a crowd had gathered, and among other things the story of the famous moose of the head of the Wise river came up for discussion, and It was up to a man who has been a resi dent of Montana for over forty years to tell the following story concerning the famous animal. "I have been in Montana." he said, "ever slnoe the discovery of gold in Grasshopper gulch In 1S62 attracted the gold hunters to the southern part of he state. Wa called It Idaho at that time and the place we ara now living In was known as a part of Oregon. As you all know. I have been In ordinately fond of hunting; I would rather wallow through the snows of the mountains when the hunting season Is open than eat J ' J' S 1 . Mf Ifs and end's were pots and pans, there'd be no trade for tinkers." it i If all the shoe wearers were -J content with uncomforta ble shoes there'd be no chance for a. thoughtful ly designed shoe like the CROSSETT. BUT People nowadays ti7 Insist on comfortable footweelr and theft's where we come in. CROSSETT 3-S0 SHOE '4. MAKES LIFE'S WALK EASY tlAOSMAKS) If treir aWeUr sVs net kes) tham, w will .n my style an roistof price with So. a4dttlertal to pay forwMa.Uig charges. LCF!? & CROSSETT, nc, NORTH ABIN3TON. HaSS. even at the present time. In tha early days I had the passion, and the years which have passed over my head, while they have not cooled my ardor, have sapped the strength from my limbs so that I can no longer follow a trail for a long distance aa I did many years ago. Bis' Game Plentlfnl. "When Bannack was first founded; when the gravel bars and rtmrock along Grass hopper creek were turning out thousands of dollars every day, I saw an opportunity of making my livelihood with my rifle and I forsook the diggings of the gold seekers and established a camp near the warm springs which are at the heat) of the Grass hopper. These days they call my camp the Elk horn springs, so named because of the hundreds of elkhorns which I left there and which came from the animals which I killed in order to help supply the miners of Bannack with fresh meat. "It Is needless to tell you of the hunts I had during those days. Elk and deer oould be had for the shooting, and It was seldom necessary to travel far from camp to find all that could be loaded on a pack train, and. In spite of that fact that we had noth ing but old muzzle-loading, single-shot rifles as our weapons, the game oould be killed easily. "Moose were comparatively plentiful, and It was no unusual thing, to And a cow and a bull living happily together In the marshes which surrounded one of the tributaries of the Wisdom liver, as it was then called, and which haa since been changed to. the Big Hole in honor of the big basin which surrounds Its headwaters. Afterward, when It was learned that Lewis and Clark had named the branch 'Wise river,' the title was retained, and until today the stream la known by that name. Track of the Mooae. "But I am getting away from my story. I had scarcely made more than one or two hunts in the mountains which divide the head of the Grasshopper from the Wise river, until I found the track of a big bull moose, which made a track in the soft ground as big as aa ordinary work ox of those days. From Its aotlons I knew It was the biggest moose that ever went un willed, and my ambition ,was to slay that animal, let the cost be as much toll as It may. Day after day I tracked that animal through the forests and the marshes and willows which abound at the head of the river, but every time my efforts proved a failure and, though occasionally 1 oould get a fleeting glimpse of the animal aa he lunged through some thicket of brush. Invariably he would get away, leaving nothing save a red hot trail to comfort me as a result of my long bunt "One day when I was tha least expecting It, I found the big bull and his consort wallowing in a swamp less than a hundred yards away. Taking as good aim aa pos sible with my old muule-loajlag rifle, which, by the way, was loaded with a bul let patched with buckskin. I pulled the hair trigger, and whan tha smoke roiled away there was aa animal floundering to the maxan, and whea I ran te It wlUt a ory of exultation, I found It was the cow, who at the Instan I had pulled the trigger hsd Interposed her bulk between me and my quarry. She gave up her life to save the one who had lorded It over her. "I was bitterly disappointed. It is true, I had no meat, but I wanted that big bull with the shovel horns, which were fully a foot across. But I dressed the piece of meat which fate Insisted should be mine, and In a day or two It was gracing the tables of the miners of Bannack. When I was In the town thst trip one of the store keepers showed me a Henry rifle. It was the first development of the modern maga slne gun to be brought to the diggings, and aa It looked to have great possibilities In the matter of quick firing, I bought it and paid five ounces of gold dust for It and 100 rounds of ammunition. Armed with this gun I felt morally certain that I could get the old moose which had evaded death by a scratch a few days before. "Two days later I was at the swamp where I had killed the cow. hiding In the willows less than 100 yards away, for the signs told me that the old bull had returned and was grieving around the offal, which was all that remained of his companion of many a wandering through the timber and swamps of the Wise river. The Walt and the Shot. "For fully six hours I waited Impatiently for the old bull to come to the trysting place, and when my patience was almost gone far In the distance came the plaintive cry of a moose calling for Its mate. Nearer and nearer came the sound and with Its approach I trained my rifle upon a clump of hushes through which I felt morally certain the bull would come as he approached the swamp. Presently I could hear the snapping of twigs and the goose- flesh fairly raced up and down my back an Instant later aa the biggest moose I had ever aeen In my life pushed his way through the willows, calling piteously all of the while, and stood for a moment, broadside on, less than 100 yards away. Only for a moment did he hesitate and then stepped forward to where the skull of his mate was lying and he licked It fondly with his tongue as if he could bring life back into the aenseless brainpan. Then It was that I realised that I was there to shoot this monarch of tha forest and I pulled the trigger. "Intuition told me that something was wrong. All that I could see was a flash of fire and a roar of artillery. Consciousness faded away and I knew nothing for a apace which seemed an eternity. Finally I became conscious of an intense pain and when I opened my eyes there was darkness on every hand and through the trees above me a glimmering of starlight told me that night had fallen upon the earth. My right arm waa useless by my side 'and my head was torn and painful and dried blood upon It showed that 1 had been sorely hurt. With extreme difficulty I moved myself and found that oiy right arm waa broken at the elbow, there was a lump under my right ear big as an apple, my light eye waa Dearly turn from Us sooast sad iu gun had been through an explosion It had been burst from muzzle to breech. Every cartridge In the magazine had exploded at the time when I attempted to shoot the old moose, with disastrous results to myself. "Doing the best I could. I made a fire out of pine needles, feeding It with the dry branches near by until morning, and then. I weakly crawled back to my camp, ten miles away, where I was nursed hack to strength and health by a companion. But surgery was primitive In those days, and to this day I have a crooked arm as a result of my hunt after that moose. Ill Lark of Hunters. "Other hunters who lived in the valley of the Grasshopper heard of my experience with the 'king moose,' as we called him then, and all tried to hunt him down snd kill him. But III luck befell all these hunt ers. One man found him and, being In a thicket of brush In such close quarters that he could not retreat, after one shot the old bull turned upon him and stamped him to death with his sharp hoofs, his body not being found until weeks afterward. An other man fell off a ledge of rock and broke a leg. lying out In the timber until I he nearly died of hunger and thirst before he was found. Still another man waa lost In the timber at the head of tha river, and there he wandered until his mind gave way and when he was found he was almost dead, and from that day until the day he died he babbled Incessantly about a devil moose which continually haunted his foot steps through the forest. "After the lapse of two or three years Bannack became practically deserted and there was no more need to hunt, as In the early days, and the story or the 'king moose' became an almost forgotten one. Later, however, fully twenty years from the time these tragedies befell the hunters, the old moose again stepped Into the lime light. He waa known by a peculiar spot of white on one of his shoulders, which had ever been In evidence from the time I first saw him. "Hunter after hunter who went Into the mountains reported seeing his track and occasionally someone would get a shot at him as he lumbered through the marshes. But these shots were generally fleeting ones and no one could tell for a certainty .whether or not the; had taken effect. Oftce or twice a shot which was fired polntblank at bis carcass seemed to pass through It and tear up the dust on IU opposite side without causing a tremor to the animal or making him move from his tracks, and from thla he became known as the fantom moose. Another Knllore Boored. "Just two years ago I took my last hunt after the animal. I found where he had been wallowing In :he swamp where he and I had met forty years ago, and there I re solved I would meet Him again and have out the grudge which I had cherished so long against his big carcass. It was In the time of the harvest moon, when the nlgbta were flooded with a brilliancy that waa almost equal - to the day. la the same Uiiuk.eC of willows) where J oa4 hidden many years ago I took my stand, this time being srmed with a an-) smokeless, as deadly a weapon as Is known today. I did not have long to wait. "Darkness had scarcely fallen and the moon had Just assumed her brilliancy, when far away I heard the plaintive cry of the moose calling for Its mate. Nearer and and nearer It came, until finally the noble animal stood not fifty yards away from me, broadside In the moonlight. Carefully I took aim and flred. but still the moose stood there, calling piteously. "Time after time I fired, until all my cartridges were gone, but still the moose stood unharmed, and then, after he was satisfied that he could not find his mate In that swamp, he turned and re-entered the willows, calling, calling, calling for the answer whic h never came, and then I knew that the story told me by the hunters of the Wise river of a moose living there which waa a fantom one, which could not be killed by man or beast, was a true one, and that the noble old animal, still true to his lost mate, wandered the hills and swamps and meadows of the Wise river, ever look ing for the mate which gave her life to save his own over forty yeara ao." Ana conda Standard. RAID ON OPIUM RESORTS Cnnnaeatlna; Ronndap is Made by Police Officers of Third Ward Joints. Thursday night Sergeant Vanous and De tectives Heltfeld and McDonald made a raid on two suspected opium Joints, ar resting seven colored people at 314 North Thirteenth street and 1307 Cass street. From the first mentioned address Lee Wil liams waa taken un4er the charge of maintaining an opium Joint, while Richard Heese and Robert Anderson were charged with being inmates. From the second ad dress Jack Ragga was arrested as keeper and Charlei Taylor. Mamie Hicks and George Johnson as Inmates. Several opium outfits were confiscated. All parties furnished bond for appearance In police court Tuesday morning for trial. the Imported knocker. Everybody raves over the spread eagle Russian knocker, which comes In beautiful hammered brass, and everybody likes the beautiful cherubs whlci lie prone against the white woodwork of the doorway, with the. knocker part sus pended beneath. Since the eta of apart ment living we have repeated orders for knockers. The doorway of a pretty, artis tic apartment house Is Just about complete when a knocker Is hung on the door. I never met the person yet. especially the woman, who did not like the knocker." The "Meanest Woman. Miss Carolina Towell of Boston said one day that she had heard that morning of the meanest woman In the world. "She called before breakfast at the home of a neighbor and said: 'Madam, I see that you have advertised In the papers for a cook. ' " 'Yes. I have,' returned the other; "but surely you are not after the place?' " 'No,' said the stranger, 'but I only live two blocks away from you. and since I r.eed a cook myself. I thought you might send me all the applicants you reject.' New York Tribune. DIARRHOEA end similar diseases in their worst forms can be promptlj cured by MOST POPULAR COW PUNCHER Tom McDonald, Who Won World's Fair Trip from Wyomlna, Brings Cattle to Omaha. Tom McDonald of Casper. Wyo.. was calling on his friend, Frank Dewey, book keeper for County Clerk Drexel. Friday morning. Mr. McDonald came to Omaha with several cars of cattle and disposed of his four-footed property at a good rate. He has the distinction of being voted the most populor cowboy Irr Wyoming last yesr. having been sent to the St. Louis exposi tion by a vote of all the cow punchers In his district. Knockers In fashion. The brass knocker la again coming into fashion and a decorator says of II: "The eieotrlo bell Is all very well In Its way. bat U Is not la it lor artistic beauty wlU) ! WAKEFIELD'S BLACKBERRY BALSAM, It never fails. 60 years the leading remedj. A.11 druggists sell it. DOCTOR GEARLE9 AND SEARLES mm! VARICOCELE -' HYDROCELE We use our own oana In our business; yo know who you are doled business with. Censullstlea Pres. a M.fhnd new. without pals or iui-v. -,--.,,..a lr.vu I f time. njn ."". I ni , n , nrveny cured for life, soon even DUuUJ ru'dun (ign. symptom (sores oa body. In mouth, tongue, throat, heir snd eyebrows failing out) disappear completely forever. Weak. Nertouj, Men lttZ, ftlE nervous debllty, early decline, Isck of vigor snd itrength. CRINARY. Kidney and Bladder Trouble. Weak Back, Kurnlng L'rlne, Frauuency ol I'rlnatlng, L'rlne High Colored or with Milky bedlment on standing. Treatment by msll. It y tare OF SUYU CEbbrLL PRACTICE IN OMAHA. Cwe M4 4 iU au4 Iula Kse a