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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Feb. 16, 1907)
4 Till OMAHA feUNDAY BEE: FEBKUARY 17, 1907. A Ann n n u n n n n uo zooinie'-woirocofl Guaranteed fT" Y,a UruSarth x Food and jp $fy Drug? Act slgV (jr June so, looe. cv JSXvvk BW9BB tXTUCT Vw, i I i yrgSf A A ' Remedy iMl. , lrVY V J World., . V "j m n!i milk vii m nil ' T?" i; TTrm? tCj EconomicaL I ffl M Zftl 11 1 V! twi mot apraovto I J ' I uji m ft k WW nil llll J ' ALTtMATIWC, TONIO. AND I Q I If I Wl llll II ff I iooa-rumrvtN RiMioit i ? inn I ti l I'll IS fw fM 111 fl f- - or TMt vcoctmli uu II ( if f will 1ft I I U t wnooom. Doses I If llll flit a I Ml M K ll I ! " rysr?Cl! Dollar. if if It f llll i ill nraii Mtf at I HI llll (HI D 41 (ill llll il V II III I w . . nil JAPS DISLIKE SEW BILL Bmtriotion of InunUrttion Fot Platac to object i of Mikado. C. J. Hood Co., Uwtll, Mmn , V 9 A flUlllMTIID A positive specific for all troubles of the blood, stomach, liver and kidneys. Its fame has spread around the world. It is endorsed by physicians, by druggists, and, best of all, by the thousands of people whom it has cured. Cures scrofula, eczema, all eruptions and humors, indigestion, dyspepsia, rheumatism, catarrh, kidney and liver difficulties and all troubles arising from or promoted by impure blood or a low condition of the system. Its merits, its substantiated claims, its cures, entitle it to your perfect confidence. Buy a bottle and begin to take it today. 3narnmondertheFoodandDroa Act June M.1J04. No. tat. It depends not upon what we say, but upon what the people who have used it say, for its reputation and its record. SdrScltfibS re H(Kk1' 8arBaprilla in tablet form. Have identically the same curative properties. Sold by all druggists or mailed on receipt of prioe, $1, by C. I. Hood Co., Lowell, Mass. PATTON CALLED BT DEFENSE Hud of Prlooeton Theological Seminary May Toitify for Harry Ihtw. FIGHT AGAINST INSANITY COMMISSION Attnrners for Thaw W1U Do All In Their Powor to Keen Special Body from Consider I aia Came. NEW YORK, Fab. l.Funeral service (or Mra. Joseph B. Bolton, wife of one ot the jurymen In the Thaw . trial, were held today. Mr. Bolton will take hla place with the other eleven Jurors on Monday. Thaw has had a lone; conference with A. Russell Feabody, one of hla oounsel, re garding the reporta that District Attorney Jerome was paving the way to apply for a commission In lunacy, "Counsel for the defense," aald Mr. Pea body, "will fight In every way possible any attempt that the district attorney may make for a special commission." The names of two new probable wit i esses have been made public One la Dr. Francis L. Patton, president of Princeton Theological seminary, the other la Dr. Frank P. McOulre. the Tombs physician. The forn.er will appear for the defense and McOulre, It la aald, will appear for the prosecution. Both are expected to give Piles Cured Broken Down with Twenty Years' buffering, Masaachuactta Man - Cored by Wonderful Pyramid Pile Cure. Important testimony regarding the pris oner' aanlty about the time of the tragedy. Through Dr. Patton the defense hopea to get In evidence a letter written by the prisoner soon after his arrest 1 Through Dr. McOulre, it la stated, the district at torney expects to lay the foundation for the opinion of alienists that Thaw was sane on the. night ot June 26, when he killed Stanford White. Business Letters Ready. PITTSBURG, Feb. 18. J. Dennlston Lyon, vine president of the Union National bank, has a bundle of letters written by Harry K. Thaw to the bank ready to forward to William N. Penny, criminal court's building. New York, which he promised to do at the court's direction. It la said District Attor ney Jerome hopes to be able to prove by these letters that Thaw was sane during the period In which he wrote them, the let ters dating back three years and covering correspondence to the present time. 'We have not finished our search,", said Mr. Lyon, "aud I think it will be Monday before we can forward the papers. They will be sealed In a package to be opened, I presume, at the direction of the court They belong to the court and I would not let Mr. Jerome or anyone from his office see them If they should so request. I can not say how many we will send, but there are a large number." Trial raoaage Free toAllra meanest. ' "I tried the sample of your cure you sent to me. I used It and then bought a tOo box. The results were Immediate and surprising to me. I assure you, I had been to a doien ot the best doctors and paid much money to them with no results whatever. I had this affliction tor 10 yeara. I was In a hospital for a long time," and I left' It BUILDING CANNOT BE MOVED Old Itrnetare Too Iaaeear to Stand the Strata of TTs.ni portatloau When housemovers began Saturday morn ing to move a one-stosy building at the southeast corner of Sixteenth and Daven port streets, occupied by a saloon, they decided the building could not be moved, which supports Building Inspector Wlth nell's contention made In the city council a few weeks ago. Notwithstanding Mr. Wlthnell's advice to the eouncilmea the latter adopted a resolution authorising that the saloon be moved to rne street to await completion of the Cohn block. The building is an old structure and leased by the Lemp Brewing company. tndent Hart la crlmmaare. UPPER ALTON. 111.. Feb. 11-Durlng students scrimmage lor possession of fruitcake last night In the dormitory of physically broken 'hloago, U peare old, a divinity student, dawn, I have been .a h.d f, ,0l. !' oauuice. ana leu backwards from . .i . 1 aiairway, landing- on Ills Read and shoul iu f uuaeie 10 wu. ll V- j aers lour floors below. The scrimmage at Ing a friend who loet his life by an per- ! onc atopped and Klahlelgh was carried un- atlon. I desisted from ever hvln .h-. I " ui ami pnys cians sum experiment tried on me. I owe you u debt or gratitude. I believe that piles would be banished from humanity and become an unknown thing,, were every ene afflicted with them to . but spend from too to 11.00 for Pyramid Pile Cure. Ita speody action also makes it extreme ly favorable for Impatient papple. I am, yours slneerely, George IL Bartlett. Mat tapan, Mass." . Why should this man be cured and you left to surfer? Why should you endure the torture ot an operation when thous ands of t-ass of the utmost severity have been Instautly remedied by our method? The pyramid Pile Cure Is Nature's nethpd of curing plies. The little sup osttorles Immediately reduce all congee trn and swelling, heal the fevered and air red parts and bring the rectum back f Its normal condition. - It costs you absolutely nothing to try this treatment We will gladly send you a free trial package of the Pyramid Pile Cure In a plain sealed wrapper without any expnruM to you If you will send apur name and address to Pyramid Drug Co, 10 Pyramid Bldg., Marshall. Mich. When you have need the sample of the ' Pyramid rile Cure, you can get the same remedy at any druggists at It cants per tea. moned. Several herahorraaes of the brain occurred during the night and little hope uurwim looay lor nia recovery. LOCAL BREVITIES. The women of Lowe Avenue Presbyterian church will give dinners at Myrtle luill Tuesday. Wednesday, Thursday and Friday during the conveutlon at the Auditorium. For the benefit of the Child's Saving in stitute a rummage sale will be held Tues day at 14 Vinton street by some of the women of Omaha Interested In this char itable work. Damage to the extent of about $400 was done by fire about p. in. Friday to the two-story residence of Anna FahUn. X2i6-Z7 Dodge street. The Are started (ruu some unknown origin In the first floor of the building and quickly spread to the attic The loss Is paxtiaily covered by Insurance. The dwelling was used as a boarding bouse. Marina B. WUon Bled suit In district court Saturday against Abraham I. Kula kofaky, proprietor of the Midland laundry, asking !t.(U damages for Injur tee which she received while at work In the laundry, fche was feeding clothes Into a mangle, when ber fingers were caught between the rollers and so badly mangled that three had to be amputated. The creditors of E. W. Hall A Co., mer chants of Culberlsua, have petitioned the United Btataa district court that the Arm may ne declared bankrupt. The petitlonine creditors are: Bwaiiaoo Bros. Dry Goods company, UMJ4; Damon-Campbell com pany. M47; D. J. O Brien company. C12.M; Robert Johns A Noyee, l&.Siu, and liie Nornui cUiee company, l.la WEATHER AS IS WEATHER Brand of Pare Winter Turned Loose In Maine Does a Few Capers. It does certainly get cold In MaJne now and then, and as the wind occasionally blows at the rate of forty miles an hour, when the mercury Is between 30 and 40 degrees below aero, it seems colder than it is. A light smart snap always brings out a batch of stories. John Pierce says that up In the Stevens logging camp It stayed cold so long last week that a small trout pond near the Job frose solid and the men were' able to chop out all the flab the camp needed. Some of the trout dug Into the mud to save them selves, but this also froze. So Intensely cold were the fish that they cooled a pall of scalding water without Umbering up. When "Long Jim" Weston came In the other day with his whiskers off and his hair still down to his shoulders, folks thought It queer until he explained. Jim aald that a few nlghta ago he drove against a head wind to get a doctor and that It was this trip which cost hlra hla luxuriant beard. It was about 40 below aero, but be thought little of this as his fur coat and whiskers kept him warm, ile was Jogging along at a fair rate when be began to get amaxlngly thirsty. This was because he ate salt macerel for supper. Finally he could stand It no longer and, coming to a brook, he got out of hla sleigh, bent over and took a long drink. Then he got back Into the sleigh and drove along. It wasn't many minutes before his whis kers felt stiff and putting his hand to his face he found that they had dipped Into the brook and frosen solid. This didn't bother him because he knew he could thaw them out. He would have If, while hitching his horse, the doctor's dog hadn't startled the animal. The horse ran. Bill pitched forward on his face and the brittle whis kers broke off close to his chin. A few spears on the sides wars saved, but he had to cut them off to match the rest of his face. When "Hen" Carson heard this story he told of an Incident he feared to relate be fore because he thought no one would be lieve It He bought a new dog at Christ mas and next morning found It worrying a coupls of cows In his barnyard. The bovlnes were backed up to the watering trough, where with lowered heads they made passes at the dog. Their talis sunk through the Ice hole the hired man rut In the trough Just before the dog got looee, and while the animals were standing there the water frose solid. Finally the dog tried a flank movement and the cows turned suddenly. As they turned Hen saw that they were moored so securely by ths tails that If he didn't hurry they would drag off the trough. H got an ax an cut out the tails Just In time to save the frantic cows from Injur ing themselves. Hen says It was only 36 below when this happened. He has seen It go to 47. New York World. OFFICIAL JAPAN IS NOT NOW EXCITID aa Fraaelse Islanders Make trwasT Appeal to Native Ralera to Pro test Against the Pend ing" Lesrtslatioa. TOKIO, Feb. I. (Afternoon) The pro jected amendments to the American Immi gration law Involving a restriction upon Japanese labor Immigration to the United States from the Hawaiian islands are nat urally received here with great displeasure, but the well-informed fall, under existing circumstances, to find grounds for com plaint at this action of the American gov ernment The council of elder statesmen and cabinet ministers today showed no con cern whatever over the diplomatic situation. Public opinion, however. Is decidedly op posed to a solution of the San Francisco school problem on the basis of the restric tion of the admission of Japanese laborers Into the United States. No official state ment has yet been made on this subject and the correspondent of ths Press was unable today, owing to the fact that It is a holiday, to Interview the officials most concerned. It Is generally admitted, how ever, that a solution on the basis men tioned will arouse strong opposition throughout the Japanese empire. Bltnatloa Hot Understood, The relations between the federal gov ernment at Washington and the govern ments of the Various states of the union are not well understood here and a re striction of the admission In the face of the treatment of which the Japanese in San "Francisco complain. The limited few who are well posted on the actual state of affairs are not excited and even they do not see why the San Francisco school difficulty could not be solved apart from the labor question. An appeal couched In strong words has been cabled from the Japanese In Ban Francisco asking for na tional support against solving the San Fran cisco affair by restricting the admission of laborers Into the United States. In view of the state of public feeling here It would not be surprising If the Japanese government did not agree to a settlement on the basis of the restriction of the Immi gration of Japanese to the United States. Mayor gphmlts Talks. WASHINGTON, Feb. H. "The California delegation, which came here to confer with the president on the Japanese question, hots not conceded any of Its rights. ' State sovereignty was absolutely Insisted upon," declared Mayor Schmltx of 8an Francisco, tcday. Yet, he said, a complete agreement had been reached on all points of difference, the ..nly thing remaining to be done being the incorporation by congress of the ex clusion amendment Into the Immigration bill. This, it la expected, will be done by the senate today. As the matter stands now, he said, all parties will be satisfied. Mayor Bchmlts, however, said that there wer some features of the case which had not been touched upon by the press, but these could not be disclosed until It was an established fact that the exclusion amendment had passed. He declared that the discussion with the president took tho form of an endeavor to arrive at a mlddlo ground and this he said, had been done. "State rights were strongly adhered to," he said, "and in this connection he reiterated his declaration made yesterday that there had never been considered any proposition looking to the establishment of separate Japanese school a There wns no Intention, he said, to abolish the Oriental school which Orientals, Asiatics and Mon golians had been In the habit of attending for the past twenty years." Pleased with Conference. He said further that the conferences of the school board and himself with the president and Becreta'ry Root had . no relation whatever to any thing this gov ernment might do In the way of negotiating a new treaty with Japan. The present treaty, he said, would not expire for five years, but nevertheless the school board had come here In a friendly spirit In the, expectation of adjusting matters satisfac torily to all concerned and yet wlthcut surrendering any of California's rights and this he declared had been accomplished. The agreement between the California com mittee and the president had been drawn up ready for signature and as soon as the exclusion amendment passes the senate it will be made public. x- Bee Want Ads for Business Boosters. This Mna Is limn Cntd. Frank M. Kemis, traveling man for a Michigan furniture bouse. Is to be pitied, for he ts afflicted with a strange dtseam which the doctors ars unable te enre, and which renders ft ImprwetVe for him to keep warm, even during the hottest days of the summer. The year around he Is obliged to wear five salts of underclothing, a heavy over coat a large pair of boots, and sevei pairs of socks. Despite all of this, he la always cold. He rarely contracts a cold and possesses a hearty appetite. He sleeps trader eight blankets, a number of quilts, and does not take off his clothes. Not withstanding this, he ts none too warm. Detroit Free Press. If you have anything to trade advertise It In the For Exchange column of The Bee Want Ad page. MAN PREACHES BOY'S FUNERAL Father of Tommy Votava Delivers the Onh Srrraon Over His Bon. With simple funeral services nt the family residence. 8188 South Fifteenth street, the body of Tommy Votava, the 14-year-old boy who was crushed to death by a freight elevator Thursday afternoon at the store of the Megeath Stationery company, was laid at rest at the Bohemian National cemetery Saturday afternoon. The ser vices at the residence were held at 2 p. m. and consisted of a few words spoken by the bereaved father, as no clergyman was called or desired by the family. Jf you have anything to trade advertise ft la the For Fxrtiange column of The Bee Want Ad page. FOOD QUESTION ettled With Perfect Satisfaction by a Dysoeptlo. It'a not an easy matter to satisfy all the members of -the family at meal time as every housewife knows. And when the husband has dyspepsia and can't eat the simplest ordinary food without causing trouble, the food ques tion becomes doubly annoying. An 111. woman writes: "My husband's health was poor, he had no appetite for anything I could get for him, it seemed. . "He was hardly able to work, was taking medicine continually, and as soon as he would feel better would go to work again only to give up in a few weeks. He suffered severely with stomach trouble. "Tired fit everything I had been able to get for him to eat, one day seeing an advertisement about Orape-Nuta, I got some for him to try for breakfast the next morning. W all thought It was pretty good although we had no Idea of using It regularly. But when my husband canvn home at night ha naked for flrape-Nuts. 'It was the same next day and I had tp get It right along, because when we would get to ths table the question, 'Have you any Grape-Nuts' was a regular riling. So I began to buy U by the doxan pkgs- Tdy husband's health began to Improve right along. I sometimes felt offended when I'd make something I thought he would ilka for a change, and still hear the same old question, 'Have you any Grape-Nuts?" "lie vt so well that for the last two years ha has hardly lost a day from his work, and we are still using Grape-Nuts. " Name given by Poauim Co., Battle Creek, IJleh. Read the book, "The Road to WeUvllle," In pkgs. "There s a WES am ii ft. r - -- , . vJr-'T, t v vym uwni 7 OBE!S fast 21 GOLD YESTERDAY, MORE WILL DE GOLD TOMORROW The large amount of damages by the Railroad company on the three carloads of pianos slightly marred in the wreck on the Belt Line, with the liberal discount by the fac tories on out spot cash purchase has placed us in a position to make prices and terms on high grade pianos never before quoted in Nebraska. You can save fully from $100 to $150 on the purchase of an upright piano. Twenty-four upright pianos of various standard makes, in all the latest designs and rich, fancy wood cases sold by dealers" regularly for $350, $400, $450 and $500. Our special price $122, $142, $172 and up. Terms, $3, $4 and $5 per month.Six used upright pianos at half value, $75, $85, $95 and up. Used square pianos $35, $45, $55 and up. Organs, all makes, $15, $18, $22 and up. No pianos sold to dealers during this sale. Every instrument fully guaranteed. We carry the largest stock of high grade pianos in the West. Our prices are always thejowest. Call or write for catalogue, terms, etc., and be convinced. KtHnway, Ilardman, Stcjror, Emerson, Stock, A. B. Cliaxc, Ktirtzman, Mcriiall, and many other standard makes to select from. If you want a good piano at the loweet price ever quoted In Omaha, don't delay longer. 1 n.n m (m n n re (UJILILI& ij y bud mi ELLEi iZ! PIANO COMPANY The Largest Piano House in the West. 1313-1515 Farnam Street. Established 1859 Telephone Douglas 1625 i' 1' 1 1 s ft i nrnwmam wmifuwsr inrvwiryor; ' .armory RIP VAN WINKLES IN LIFE Many People Who Hare Biraled the Outcast of the Catakilli, DOCTORS PUZZLED BY LONG SLEEPS Strnnare Tases In Flesh and Blood Reported from AH Parts of the World Peculiar ities Noted. Possibly the closest rival that nip Van Winkle has had In flesh and blood Is Her srhell Orlder, who, at Rowena, Ky., Is calmly enjoying; a nap which began twelve yenrs airo. When he went to Bleep orie flay It was not because of a convivial encounter with gnomes of the wood, nor was his slumber attended by any unusual circumstance. He simply arose from the dinner table, stretched his arms, yawned and casually remarked that he guessed he'd go and lie down for about ten minutes. But it ap pears tht his conception of a minute was all wrong. Fed liquid nourishment twice a day, he holds his own physically, his limbs remain supple; he seems In no danger of dying soon. His Is but another strange case of pro longed elpep, a queer malady, which, in various forms, has puisled the best physi cians of modern times. While history seems to show no other continuous nap of the same duration, there are others as re markable in some respects. Many Chnnirea Noted. It would be an odd thing for a man to lose a dozen years out of his Ufa Think what It would mean to him. When he went to sleep Orover Cleveland was president of the United States. How could he grasp the fact that In the meantime a president had been assassinated and that another has taken his place? For the sake or popular interest, if not of science. It would be Interesting to see aged Mr. Orlder awake, but the physicians say it Is quite unlikely that he ever will, unless he should experience a brief con sciousness preceding death. Seldom have victims of prolonged sleep ing been awakened. In Africa some mys terious element in the atmosphere or vege tation, spread by the bite of a fly, causes what Is called "sleeping sickness." In once instance recently In the United States a man did awake after a three months' sleep and what he told about bla experience In the Land of Nod will prove of interest to science. He was William Schnable, 36 years old, who returned to his home In Philadelphia after having been Injured on the head at Denver and a few days afterward fell into his long sleep. When he awoke in the Philadelphia hos pital he asked the nurse confusedly. "la It too late to go to work?" After a while he recalled many things that had occurred during hla nap, but was unable to separate the actualities from bis dreams. In another instance, reported by Dr. Scull. a specialist on the brain, a man of 27 awoke after having been asleep fifteen months. The first emotion he betrsyed was anxiety about a field of oats which was Just sprouting when ha went to sleep. He was greatly astonished to learn that the oats had been harvested and the same field was then knee deep with corn. After coming out of hla aleep he grew rapidly worse with phthisic and died In eighteen months. Nap Lasted Months. The University of Pennsylvania hospital In Philadelphia some yeara aTo furnished a curious case, that of Clara Gilchrist, a victim of hysteria, who took a nap luting several months. (The was finally aroused by being beaten with wet towels and soon afterward returned to ber home In Ireland apparently well. The form of sleeping most often encoun tered In America Is not associated by physi cians with the. African malady. It is be lieved to be caused usually by a secretion In the kidneys which gets Into the Mood and by acting on the white corpuscle creates somnolence. An Interesting case la that of a patient who took nourishment, even sitting up In bed occasionally to drink a cup of coffee. But throughout It all there was no awaken ing. en where no especial effects are noticed It Is not uncommon for a person so afflicted to fail asleep In a chair or even standing; up at frequent Intervals. In this respect Mrk wtck's fat boy was no visionary character. When t'e trouble takes the form of pro longed sotnnulecce It la attended by tniereit. Uig phenomena. Tickling of Uhe feet, apply ing electricity, thrusting aeadlea Into tbm flesh to the bone and sound shaking have no effect whatever. The. patients can usually hear and can respond to suggestions, though apparently Insensible to painful Impressions, and do not appear to smell, taste or see. The eyes are sometimes closed, sometimes opened; the pupils are turned backward and contracted as In normal sleep. i Usually the Jaws are Bet so firmly that It Is necessary to extract a tooth. If one be not missing. In order to apply liquid nour ishment. At times, however, a rubber tube Is Inserted in the patient's nostrils, which serves the same purpose. That eminent physician and literary man Dr. 8. Wler Mitchell of Philadelphia has taken part in the Investigation of eighteen cases of protracted sleep, the longest last ing six months. All of these persons were under middle age. Hemarkable . Cases Reported Eight of the patients recovered easily and completely, two recovered with loss of In tellect, one fell a victim of apoplexy four months after recovery, one recovered with Insomnia as a sequel and four died In Bleep. I One recovered after atx months of con tinuous slumber and resumed the train of conversation where he had been Interrupted by the nap. Fright has been known to cause pro longed sleeping. A case In point Is that of a woman of 45, a seamstress, who after having undergone a narrow escape from death in a gale fell Into a sleep which lasted till death. Dr. Jones of New Orleans related a case of a girl of 27 who had been asleep for eighteen years, only waking at regular In tervals and remaining awake for not more than ten minutes at a time. The sleep began when she was 9 years old, after she had taken repeated doees of quinine and morphine. Her case waa especially peculiar in that her periods of waking were regular and uniform. 8he would wake at 6 a. m. and every hour thereafter until noon; again at 8 o'clock; again at sunset; next at o'clock, and once or twice thereafter before morning. A Spanish soldier in the military hospi tal at San Ambrosio, Cuba, remained in a cataleptic state for fourteen months. Hla body would, like a Jointed doll's, remain In any position in which It waa placed. Maria Cvetskens, a maiden of Stevene werth, Holland, waa asleep for 220 days In 1K96. Her case puzxled hundreds ot phy sicians. It was agreed that there could be absolutely no deception. The parents of the girl were eminently respectable and never tried to profit by her unnatural state. From France comes an Instance of a girl who slept four years. There is a record In medical works on this subject of a man near Rochester, N. Y., who slept five years, never waking more than sixteen hours at a time, and that only at intervals of six weeks or more, when soiled by the trance ha weighed 160 pounds, and he dwindled to ninety pounds. No treatment availed; ha died. Dr. Baludet, a French specialist In nerva and brain diseases, la authority1 for In formation relating to a girl who fell aaleep the day after her marriage In her twen tieth year, and slept for fifty days. Four years later she sgaln became InaenslMa and remained so for twelve months, with the exception of one day, when she arose, ate dinner with her husband and again lapsed Into what proved a sleep of death. During her first sleep It was necessary t pull a tooth In order to give her nourish ment, but this ordeal never disturbed her slumbers. Chicago Chronicle. , For twenty days we will sell everything In the paint line at prices at least 20 per cent lower than regular prices. Kennard Glass and Paint company, 15th and DoJge streets. Bookkeeper Cnarired with Ureesy. NEW YORK, Feb. Philip Kleet, 2t years old, a bookkeeper and stenographer, waa arrested in Brooklyn last night on a charge of grand larceny. Kleet Is said by the police to be also wanted in Ban Fran cisco. Kleet Is a member of the Brooklyn Young Men's Christian association, with which association the police say he has been connected In other cities. SSotnN. -The Whiskey r with a j ' y-''tj-XS-1)i'-:''-y. Reputation99 e TN T! r? Quaker M ' TT aid-my e WINNER OF THREE STRAIGHT PRIZES St. Louis. 1904 Paris. 1905 Portland. 1903 Can this leave any possible doubt in yonr mind as to which Whiskey is the best f For salt it all tint-class ban, eafet and drug ttortt S. HIRSCII & CO., Kansas City, Mo. D. A. Sampson, General Sales Agent, Omaha