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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 25, 1906)
2o. ioor. A OMAHA SUXDA XOVUMBKR WW . 1 S I I V I l.e-r 1 1 IV. J r sT 1 v-VV 'T4A " . , j' ijF.SM k. S i r ,-VJKl gv 1 5 . .vTi ; ii2 i JO tfcdl , .yAW3M..T,Y M wmmzmm .A ....... ... riT;m?mm T m'MMfamt : place cards WMiM mvAW!ffimim "SET . lfflraw7 livv.. t r v.t ss.i.r.i Waists, Furs, Etc. ladles' Wool Shirt Waist Sale at 89c J We )iHvr nhont.200 Waists, in "llaiu ami fancy mohairs, nuns' veil ing, all wool French batistes, check ed and plaid flannels and novelty worsteds, that sold at $2.50, $3.00, $;j.75 and $4.95; some have a bishop .sleeves that can easily be reversed; beautiful materials in light, medium :aud dark colors: your choice of the Jot. worth up to $4.9o, Monday at Vach S9 Ladies' Fur Scarfs and Sets v Everything In Boas, Scarfs, Ties and .Thrown, In all the light and dark furs. Genuine Blended Squirrel nud Southern Beaver Stocks, Skinner satin lined, spe cial Monday at $3.50 Ladies' Scarfs and Muffs to match, a set, from $100 down to $4.20 Special Monday We will- sell either a Boa or Stock, with uew lllow-shaied muff to match, in pretty sahled fur, ser complete at $4.20 Coys' Waists at 19c Boys Fleeced Waist. In "Mother's Friend" and blouse styles, good dark colors, suitable for school wear, regular 3Uc value, special Monday at 19t Heavy All Wool Flannel Waists, in red, nuvy and gray, waists that have sold at itKc. To close them out, special Monday atx 480 Outing Flannel Gowns Fancy striped heavy outing, in dainty col . ors. extra full and long, trimmed ' In pretty finishing braids, regular $J.OO quality, special Monday. ... . . LINENS You know about the great Linen Sale we held last week. We hope you took advantage of it. If not, we are going to give you another chance to do so. The 25 per cent discount will continue for one week more, and no one should miss it. Tf in oar superb assortment of fine Hand Embroidered and Drawn Irish Linens there is one thing you need, come to us and satisfy your every wish. A Proclamation From the Daylight Store. In conformity with his official priv ilege his Excellency, Theodore Roosevelt. President of the United States, has set apart Thursday, November 30, as a day for TURKEY AND DRESSING. If you will look after the turkey we will look after the dressing table and otherwise. 39c Monday's Values in the Money-Saving Case ment Salesroom 36-lnch heavy Brown Sheeting, worth 7c yard, at, yard ' -4? Heavy Outing Flannel, worth 7c yard. at, yard -4H? Gray Plaid Suitings, worth 10c yard, at, yard 4 H Best quality White and Marble Oilcloth at, yard 15c Extra heavy sewed Bed Comforts, worth $1.00, each G9 25c Fancy Ticking, will hold feathers, at 140 1,000 pafrs Cotton Bed Blankets, worth up to $1.50 a pair, $1, C9c and 500 Best quality Calico at yard. 3Ht? A Great Silk Sale Yard Monday we place on sale our entire stock of fine Radi um Peau de Lagne. This silk is soft and clingy with a very high lustre and in the most complete color range ever shown. You have paid 75e for a similar silk not as good value as we offer you Monday at 39. A Deep Cut in Black Taffeta SilksSee our big window dis play on Howard Street of our wear guaranteed 27-inch black taffeta. Regular price $1.25, on sale Monday, at ... 89 c Monday will be an exceptional busy day in our Colored Dress Goods As usual, our values there are so fully appreciated that we find it dif ficult at times to fully satisfy our patrons with the proper attention. Great Thanksgiving Sale of China and Cooking Utensils Everything for the preparing and dainty serving of the Thanksgiving dinner will be found at our attractive prices in our base ment salesroom. Dinner Sets Special prices for this week. 100-plece White Dinner Set&r-best English or American goods $7.03 100-plece Dinner Sets, In floral or gold decorations $10.03 100-plece fine Decorated Austrian China Dinner Sets, at $14.95 100-plece White Havlland Dinner Sets t -. $27.50 100-plece Decorated Havlland Dinner Seta at $29.00 Others up to, set $49.00 Large Platters (turkey size), 65c and. 45 Cat Glass Rare bargains In fine Cut Glass. 8-inch Cut Glass Salad Bowls, equal to any $5 bowl in the city, at, each 3.95 Carving Sets Pudding Pan tit lOc Gray Ensmelea Pudding Pan?., all sizes up to 10 Inches In diameter, each !() Great Reduclion Sale Monday of Exquisite Dress Trimmings Cleanlng-up sale of broken lots of fln Imported Dress Trimmings, in large Medal lions. Festoons, Appliques, Bauds and Edges. Cream and white, Irish crochet. Baby Irish, point gauze, batiste, Venice, oriental nets; worth to $0.00 yard, divided into two big lots Lot 1 consists of uOc to $1.50 values, at only, yard 250 Lot 2 consists of $1.50 to $6.00 values, at only,, yard 750 Drews Net and Allovera 4 5-Inch Fancy Dotted Dresfe Nets, in white and black. Heavy Venice Allover Laces in cream and white, worth $1.00 and $1.25 a yard, all in this lot Monday for, per yard 090 Warm GlovesLadles', misses' and boys' knitted worsted and mercerized Golf Gloves, all the plain shades and novelty mixtures, and Black Mittens, worth 35c the pair, onr sale price, the pair. . -250 Tapestry Couch Cover A great value, shewn on main floor and worth $1.50, , Monday, your choice for.. -980 New silk voile just arrived. The pret tiest fabric this season for real dressy, gowns and skirts, a sheer, soft clingy substance. The material par excel lence for evenirr; wear plain light blue, pearl gray, navy blue, cream and black, at , ......1.25 Checks and cluster stripes, in light blue, pearl gray, tan, French blue, navy and black, a yard . . .$1.50 Black Dress-Goods 55-inch Black Chiffon Panamas and excellent cloth for suits and separate skirts; dust proof our regular $1.50 quality Monday, per yard . . . . . . . .1.00 Cloakings 54 and 5G-in. fall and win ter cloakings, overplaids, fancy checks, broken plaids and shaded plaids, all new, clean and up-to-date regular price $2, $2.50 and $3 Monday only, yd., $1.50, $1.75... 2 125 pieces of all wool new challies, dark and light grounds with polka dots, small figures, checks, Persian effects and stripes all desirable patterns worth up to 85c a yard Monday only, per yard ..'....39 ' 45-inch Black Panama, crisp finish, firm texture, sold regularly at 65c yard Monday, at, yard ... ; . . .39 -- - i Full assortment of ' the Landera-Frary A Clark's justly celebrated carvers, from 112.50 down to 050 Special This Week A three-piece Carving Set. knife, fork and steel, with stag handle $2.95 All the good styles Lisk Enameled Savory Roaster and Double Sheet. Iron Pans Roasting Pana ..290 Special Double Sheet Iron Roasting Pans, size 10x15 Inches, with an inside tray, at, each w 290 Drug Sundries Suited AlmondH Packed in half pound tns 39i Salted Pecans Packed in tins, half pound packages 39 Stuffed iiaixliiH With almonds, walnuts and pecans, half pound packages. . .390 Imported Stuffed Dates With blanched almonds, pecans and English walnuts, one pound package...., 48c Sugared Dates Stuffed with English wal nuts and pecans, V4 -pound pkg. . . -250 Crystallized Canton Ginger Packed In tin, 1 pound, 4 pound and M pound pack ages, 48c. 25c and. 1Q Crystallized Canton Orange Packed iu 1-lb. and a-lb. boxes, 50c and.... 350 Crystallized Pineapple Packed in tin, 1 pound and pound pkgs., 50c and. 350 AT REST l.l tht U Morta: of Dintinsruisheji t'iaancitr Liei at Foreit Lawn. j FUNERAL SERVICES HELD AT TRINITY ' ' UUhop Wllllama, Rvv. John William and Itn Brecher Condacl the ' Ceremony of the Kpla enpal Church. Tli body of Hermnn Kounlze wbd liid t r-M Baturdav afternoon nt Forett Lalvn cenieterj' aftw lmpre.)ve service jut Trinity cathedral, attended by u multitude of friouda and liuslneux asinclntes of tlin man who had l'ei one of tlie main fuctnra In IhO growth of Onixlm Tli aervlcea at the cht'reh were open to the public, many Inking MdvaiitaF? of the opportunity (o piy t)i'.- :tnt rcpec.n. . Tlw decorations in the church neie lin t'onlnS hot not elalornte, an no floweia were In eiidsoca exoop. ihoae which were en Iwtnea with evergreen imd covered thc llttr rail tu a floral drapery. A few pulma vera uxed t ducutnte tho hIuu', but the runaiialtr of ihe many hundru:ne and elab wati? rionU plei-ta wero ki'. ul the family rexldenca vn South Tenth a'nt. All floral m1 plefi und (liKluim Were tnken direct from the reaudeoce to the cemetery and placed w.'i'Und the Kive. while the bou quets. laiK') ni amH, and cut flowers were d'.utt Minted Saturday oft-rnoon to the dlf-f-jiei't JiopittU of the Mlty. Relative of Mr. Kounlae and Intimate ftie'idit ;.' tin- luoilly were seated linme dlflt ! :i ft. nit of the altar rail at the c.aiheUrnl. whlU ent were renerved for the employeK of tt Ilrt National bank, of hlch Mr. lvoutliie hud been president for so many years, who mot at the bank and attended the funeral In a body. While Mr. Kountxe was a member of many fraternal organizations, including the Mxsor.s und Kntghte Templar, none of these wrvs represented in an official capacity, al though many of the Individual members were present to pay their regpecta In a private capacity. Form of Service. Thesi were the uhero at the cathedral: C. C. Chase, Milton Darling, W. M. BurgefcBt N. P. Dodge, Jr.. F. S. CowglU and A. C. Smith. . After a processional anthem, rendered by the ful! choir of the cathedraJ, Rev. John Wllllama opened the aervloea by reciting the first few sentences of the burial ritual of the Episcopal church. Dean Beeoher, rector of Trinity cathedral, read the lesson and Right Reverend A. L Williams, bl?hop coadjutor of the diocese, of Nebraska, com pleted the services at th church, singing tho psalms reeponelvely with the choir and offering the closing prayers and the bene diction. The rcsket. which was a handsome red cedar, copper-Jined and coveredwllh broad cloth, was borne from the cathedral to the heurite by the active pallbearers: S. D. Barkalow, CI. M. Hitchcock. E. P. Peck. Charles Mets. W. S. Poppleton, I. E. Cong don, J. R. Iehmer and R. W. Patrick, and was closely followed by the honorary pall bearers: B. K. Bruce, Ceunt John A. Cielghton, V. J. Broach. O. W. Doane, George Hoagland, Q. V. Holdrege, P. K Her. O. W. I.lnlnger, C. W. I.yruan. Ocoi-ge U Miller, W. A. P.jtton. C. K. Weller, H. W. Yates, J. A. McShane, J. McKenna, C. E Tost and E M. Morsmun. At the cemetery the burial services were In charge of Bishop Williams, who delivered the committal service of :he church, as sisted by Rev. John William. tlon of land from Mr. Kountae for $10 per acre, and when they had this paid for tbty bought a third quarter section, for which Utsy paid Mr. Kountze $H per acre, as the land fcad then increased in value. Today they mm three quarter sections of land and all .paid for, which is now at least worth 125 per acre and they certainly feel grateful to Mr. Kountxe for It was his generosity which gave them the start while they were new beginners." Luci en Stephens of the Stag Stores, one of Omaha's -popular young business men. ( ' RECOGNITION OF A. W. KIM) DKKDS One of the most popular colors Just now is brown. New York is golug "daffy" over it We have Juat received some exqulblte pat terns, varying from the lighter to the dark cigar brown shades. Ours are exclusive sultU'i? Just one length of each pattern. First-class Imported suits to or der, ninde la the MaiCarthy-Wil-sou faultless style. to 50. MacCARTIIY.TVILSON TAILORING CO. Pbo Dovig lt M 8. 18th BU Neat Door to Wabash Ticket Office. Johnson Tells How Sir. Kountae Helped Ills Family. A. W. Johnson of the firm of Johnson & Danforth, In speaking of the late Herman Kountae, says: "I have had .many dealings with Mr. Kohjntse, and he certainly '.was the iiios'., llberul of any business man I ever came In contact wlui. I shall never forget the' generosity which he showed my folks sev eral years ago when they purchased' from; Chicago colonization com puny some land In Texas of which Mr. Kountze was the owner. The colonization company lndute.1 my folks to buy five, quarter sections of taml st (7.60 per acre, making a total In vestment of W.eofli ' The y paid ISo. or 1 per uote rash to the colonization ympany. "Tim company feerame bankrupt a few months .lsten and the $o which my folks had . paid was never delivered to ' Mr. Kountze.' Notwithstanding t!ie fact that Mr. Kountze rocelved no part of thh money, yet he agreed to credit It the s:-.ie c.B if received. "When the notes became due and they could not rax. then he allowed a year's cz tenslon and st the end of that time, when thoy could not pay, he agreed to apply on on of the quarter section of land the IMX) which they had paid to the colonization eoniiany, partly covering the five quarter sections of land. The contracts covering the other four quarter sections wsrs then surrendered to Mr. Kountze and the JX balance on the one quarter was pal, which was all the money he ever received for his quarter section, 'though ?t was actually worth ll.jro. I "My folks were at that time llvlns: In Iowa on a rented farm and If Mr. Kountze had taken the land swav from them, us he could have done, and as most men would have done, then they would still be living on rented farm; but the generous treat ment of Mr. Kountse. enabled them to get a riio1 farm in Texas When they had this 1 :ild lor the bought "another quarter sec- COLOR LINE A WORLD ISSUE Snores of the Japanese la tbe I,ate War Arouses Many People. The negro problem )n America Is but a local phase of a world problem. "The problem of the twentieth century Is the problem of the color line." Many smile incredulously at such a proposition, but let us 'sec. T(ie tendency of the great 'nations of the day Is territorial, political and economic expansion, but In every rase this has brought them In contact with darker peo ples, so that we have today England, France. Holland, Belgium. Italy, Portugal and the t'nlted States In clos. contact with brown and black peoples and Russia snd Austria In contact with the yellow. The older idea was that the whites would eventually displace the native races and Inherit their lands, but this idea has been rudely shaken. In the Increase of American negroes, the experience of the English In Africa, India and -the West Indies snd the development of South America. The pol icy of expansion, then, simply means world problems of the color line. The color ques tion enters Into European Imperial politics and floods our continents from Alaska to Patagonia. Thla is not all. Since 732. when Charles Martel beat back the Euracens at Tours, the white races have had the hegemony of civilization so far so that "white and civil ized" have become synonymous in everyday speech and men have forgotten where civ ilization started. For the first time In a thousand years a great white nuttpn has measured arms with a colored nation and has been found wanting. The Russo-Japanese war has marked an epoch. The maglo of the word "white" Is already broken and the color line in civili sation has been -crossed In modern times as It w;as In the great past. The awaken ing of the yellow . races 'la certain. That the awakening of the brown and. black races will follow fn time no unprejudiced student of history can doubt.- Shall the awakening of these sleepy millions be In accordance with and aided by the great Ideula of white civilization or in spite of thein and against thsm? This Is the' problem of the color tine. Force and fear have "hitherto marked the white attitude toward 'darker .races; shall this continue or be replaced by free dom and friendship? ColPer's Weekly. MORE RECORDS IDENTIFIED! Signatures to Filings from Alliance Land (ffioe EecoeniMd by Beeistrar. BRUCE WILCOX WITNESS IN BIG TRIAL Jaror Bodes Recovers and Will Cos tlnue; .service to End Case Goes Over I utU Mon day Morning;. The trial of the Richards and Comstock land case wus resumed iu the United States district cuuil Saturday morning. The health of Juror lioden is much im proved and it la now deemed quite probable lie will be able to. .Continue with the trial to the. end. The first witness on Saturday morning was Bruce Wilcox, registrar of the land office at AIHudco. lie arrived ahead of the records ot ' tho "Alliance "office - and hence the records could not be Introduced In evidence. However, Mr,'" Wilcox ' was able to Identify his signature to the sev eral filing paptrs, (luclnratury statements and affidavits In the tilings made at his office. The er.tlre morning was taken up with his identification of these papers. They are about twenty-five In number and re late to filings under the Klnkald act In the vicinity of Ellsworth, the headquarters of the Spade ranch. Aqullla Trlplett figures frequently as agent In ; these filings, as does Ami Todd. '. , Practically all of the testimony produced during the day Is of a formal and technical character and Is merely to lay the techni cal foundation for the more detailed ex amination of the entrymtn who made the alleged unlawful filings. The trial was continued over the noon hour until 1 o'clock, when a recess was taken until a. m. Monday. Australian Gold Mines. Although most of the Australian gold is now nhtulned from depths of hundreds md thousands pf feet, it Is llll oosilble to ac. qo're a respectable nuguet by pick and sso cl close to the surface. The At her day some workmen were maklnsr a drain near thr rll.v haH of Rendlgn, when the pick of one of the rebounded after having struck something hard. 'TNit ni'st be a nucgel." remarked a jocular hvstandrr. "I'll I hW." said the workman. Jiri the n--xt momnt ha had a lump of quartz thickly studded vlth gold In bis hands. Then the earth that hxd been thrown out In the making of the drain was "cleaned up." as tNe miners say. and smaller gold specimens wete secured. And now. tf the Isw permits, a shaft lata be sunk in 'he back yard of a hotel dose by. New York. Trlin tie. lire Want Ad luoilure reso.its. Tales of Thaddeas Stevens. Many a Joke ts credited to Thnddeus Stevens, who led the republicans in con, gress during the Civil war and reconstruc tion periods, relates the Washington Star. One of the very keenest of his Jests, which Is undoubtedly authentic, Is so com monplace In sound (that one might easily be forgiven for failing to take In its mean ing. In. his last days David Reese and John Chaunccy. two employes of the house of representatives, used to carry hint In a large arm-chair from his lodgings across the public grounds, up the broad stairs of the capltol. "Who," he iHld to them one day, "will be so good to me, and bear me In their strong arms, when you two mighty men are gone?" Such a question Implied nothing short of a sense of Intellectual Immortullly. Wheu he had taken to his bed for the '.ami time a vitdtor told !ilm he was looking well. "ph. John.'.' was the quick reply, "It not my appearance, but my disappe jance that troubles inel" . "O air, It. was 76 rents."" "You don't say so!" he replied; putting a five dollar bill In her hand. "And how wonderfu,'.- it Is-that I should have found what, you lostl"" WHIMS OF HUMAN NATURE Reflections on Man's Habit of Taking; v Drink After He Has Bonaht a Blew Hat. "So you don't like It." said a man who wes wearing for the first . time a newly purchased hat. . "No more do I, but in time I shall love It, and w-hen I havs to part with it it will be with the same sor row with whloh I would part with an old friend. . . , 'That Is not a peculiarity of mine. It 1 a phaseof human nature. Man admires his new trousers, ... with their vertical cre.-uen, as accurate as if made, with the aid of a plumb line. He la glad to get rid of the familiar wrinkles qt the old gar ment and to don the shapely new one; but In the matter of hats , the wrinkles are dear to him and the tmoothness of new ness Is an offense. "But that U a small .matter,", the man went 011. with .a gesture , of dismissal. "What Interests me now, and has Inter ested me ever since I haye been buying hats for myself. Is. a sociological question. "In these northern states Jjia disappear ance of men's summer huts is regulated by the dicta, of certain authorities other than the .almanac. Wall street custom governs New Yok all but Coney Island, where tha Mardl Oras puts the finishing touches to any lingering straw hat on the wind-swept avenue, "The line between the fall hat and ths winter headgear Is drawn lees distinctly; but between tho middle of September and tho midwinter holidays are two changer of ha is. and In that period annually, comes up a question that ha puzzled philoso pher and everybody else but sociologists--nothing puzzles sociologists since the In suguratlon of the men's hat Industry. Why does the average man, after buying a new hat, go and take a drink? Says the poet: "Drink, and the world drinks with Swear off, and you drink alone. "But whether a man Is a drinker or . swear-off makes no difference. If the for mer, he wets his hat; If the latter, his hat and everybody but himself, so far as he has his say, remains dry. But he does not forget to remember himself, The explanation has been offered that the average man Is so pleased with his u ppe Or am se in his new hat that he feels like ;aklrg something in honor of his Improved appearance. But It la surely not the cus tom of women to take even s sip of cordial In her boudoir when she tiles on the new hat that has been sent homo to her. The ill-natured explanation that there Is not the price of a pony of cordial In the house after the hat has been paid for Is unworthy of consideration. ."Another attempt to tell why a man takes a drink after buying a new hat Is ! that he at first feels so uncomfortable and J fancies that he looks so odd In the new arry of the old solutions of the problem, much less to Venture new ones, but it Is not Improbable that an. awakening of pub lic Interested in tbe. matter would spur some sociologist to dig up the root of the mat ter, if that has qot already been done by sociology and to point out the way, ot avoiding the extra " .outlay of 10 or 15 cents, according to the location In which tho purchase Is made, every time the average, man buys a new hat." Washing ton Post. HUGE METEORS SEEN AT SEA Thrilling; Speetaele Observed Ship's Crew Off the Coast of '' Newfoundland. you; One d..v . memher f .h. v,,,. s-ai. " i un me rase ami ., , . , , homely appropriateness of the old resentatives. who was noted for his uncer certain course on all questions, and who confessed that he never Investigated a point under dlscuslotr without finding him self a neutral, ssksd for leave of absence. "Mr. Speaker." said Stevens. "1 do not ise to objert, but to suggest that the hon orable member need not ask this favor, for he can easily pair off with himself." One anecdote always remembered In con nection wilU Strvens Illustrates his un ostentatious charity. A beggar woman met him one morning as he was limping to the house. "O air," she said, "I have Just lost all ths money I had In . the worldl" "And bow much wss t-- " ' ' ' ' to seek oblivion that he in strong Is Impelled drink. "But evidently this Is not the true. ex planation, for if It were the lean who b-iy a new hat would take two or more drinks, and statistics. If any there were, would show that he does not buy two or more drinks unless he buys two or more hats "The deluging of hats won on election bets Is one of the phenomena of American civilization and it need not be considered In the sober-mlnde4 view of the phase ol human nature. The flsya n( Hie election won hat. unless It be 1 sou'wester, are brief and Its esreer- bas no bearing upon question under consideration. do cot wish ts effsr for acceptance 1 brief the "1 A great meteor hissing through a murky sky startled the officers and crew of tho Phoenix Line freighter St. Andrew last Tuesday afternoon about sixty miles north east of Cape Race, Newfoundland. Just before the giant shooting star appeared. First Officer V. Spencer, who had charge of the bridge, saw several miles dead ahead three meteors rip fiery lines almost from zenith to horizon through the vapor curtain In' the west. The greatest of the trio, Spencer said, would have made a dazzling Illumination at night. While he was looking at it he heard a hissing far away on the port beam. The chief engineer, who had come out on deck, called to Spencer to look to port. The first officer has sailed In many seas and has seen marvellous marine and meteorological phenomena; he even has had the distinc tion of reporting something akin to a sea serpent, but ths spectacle that met his eyes when he turned them to port almost knocked him off his feet. Stretching far Into the air a reddish white trail of flame twenty feet or more In diameter. Below, zigzagging toward the surface of a lumpy sea, was the giant meteor that had made the evanescent scar of Are on the face of the sky. "I have seen many meteors, chiefly at night, but I never hsVe seen any act l.k? this one "Spencer said. "When it was within half mile of the sea It be gan rocking and swinging, if you like; anyhow, going from side to side, and leav ing a slg-zag trail. It was btggrr than my cabin, which la twelve feet wide, .md it must have weighed tons. It was lews than a mile away to the southward on the port beam, and when It struck the sea It must have cooked a million fish all uround. 1 he water boiled up to a height of twenty feet or more and the vapor created by the steam spread over a space wldjr than the I haven't itny doubt we would have seen hundreds, near and far." New York Sun. When the Dear Mrs Vote. Ernest Lamson tells of a Colorado woman, who presented herself one day at the reg-. Istration booth of a town In that state for the purpose of qualifying to vote upon the school question at the next election. "With what political party d.i you af filiate?" asked the clerk. The woman blushed and otherwise exhibited confusion of manner. "Is It obligatory that I answer that ques tion?" she Inquired. "Certainly, madam; the law requires It." "Then raid the . woman, "I don't think I care to vote If I must mention the party's name. However, I don't mind saying that he is one of the nicest men I've ever met." New York Times. Catarrh Bad Breath. K'Hawking and Spitting Quickly Cured Fill Out Fca ' Coupon Below. -'-:H''"I "My Hew Discovery Quickly Cures catsi 1 a. ' (j. b. ass. only danseruus, but It rauses bad breath, ulceration, death and Catarrh la not lengtn 01 tms snip, ana mat is more than 1 decay of bones, loss of thlnktna and rea- 660 feet. It was nearly half a minute be- I soiling power, kills ambition and energy, fore the sea went down. I often causes lo&e of appetite, indigestion, , . . w . I. , i dyspepsia, raw throat and reaches a gen- "The captain and I talked over the ; erl4i' Q,bli:ty, Idiocy and insanity, it n'.-us meteor afterwaid. He didn't see It, as .e attention at once. Cure It with' Gauss' had turned in for a nap, but It caused Him ! Catarrh Cure. It la quick, radical, per. to make some observstlon. on the perl, of life at sea. We concluded that meteors Iu order to prove to all who aie suffer- exDlalned the disappearance of a number ng from this dangerous and lothsome of vessels. Including several liners that had run under a shower of meteors. Suppose that great mass of metal, consuming the ' air all around It. had hit our ship? Sup pose it had struck us amidships? Why, every soul aboard would have been roasted to death before t!e meteor had pierced the ship like a bolt of lightning, tearing a great hole through It or melting It In two as if It had been subjected to the force of i blast iuinaee "Why shouldn't a rostaor. in ths season when meteors fall, strike a ship Just ss a lliutiderbnlt might? Ws might have been under ths very spot wheru that big fellow fell. 1 tell you I believe the niysitry of many missing ships rsn be sccnunted for by meteors. We saw four within a month rail Into the ocean snd I have no douht that other ships will report more off New- 1 fyundjand. If it had not been daylight diseasa that llauss' Catarrh Cure will actually cure any case of catairh quickly, no matter how lung standing or how bad, I will send a trial package by mail fie of all coat. Fend us your name and ad dress today and the treatment will be sent you by return mall. Try It! It will positively cure so that you will be wel come Instead of shunned by your friends. C. E. GAL'.SM. 11 Main Hi., Marshall, Mich. Fill out coupon below. FREE This coupon is good for one trial package of tUiusa' Combined Calarrb Cure, mailed free in plain package. Pimply till in your name and address dotted line below uio rrmjl La a K. aitrts. Ma atala mtft v Mares all. Mask. 00