8 Tim OMAHA SUNDAY BEE: AFRIL 21, 1907. Pining Room Furniture Our New Spring Stock of DINING ROOM FURNI TURE surpasses all previous efforts in this direction, con sisting of all the different woods and their various finishes, such as Mahogany, Early English Oak and Weathered Oak and Fumed Oak, and the latest finish, the STRATFORD. ' To sell for less is necessary to buy for less and quantity always governs price. The price concessions we obtain by this immense pur chase is reflected on every article and we intend to give each purchaser the benefit of our good fortune. We herewith quote a few of the good values: EXTENSION TABLES Solid Oak, G-ft. Tedestal Table for $17.50 Quartersawed, golden oak Ped estal Table $20.00 Early English round oak Table, 54-in. in diameter .,. .$30.00 Solid mahogany round Table, 48-in. in diameter . . .$42.00 BUFFETS AND SIDEBOARDS Quartered sawed, golden oak, Buffet, polished $24.00. Polished oak, quarter sawed, Buffet $30.00 Polished oak Sideboard, very fine $28.50 Early English Oak Buffet $27.00 CHINA CAEINETS Early English oak China Cabinet, leaded glass. . .$30.00 Solid mahogany China Cabinet, very massive $40.00 Quarter sawed oak China Cabinet, bent glass ends $17.50 Full swell polished oak China Cabinet $20.50 DINING CHAIRS Solid oak, leather box seat Dining Chair $2.75 Polished oak, leather box seat Dining Chair $3.75 Weathered oak, leather box seat Dining Chair $4.00 Solid mahogany, leather box seat Dining Chair $6.75 Miller,tewart & Beaton 413-1547 South 16th Street 1 dh ivnr III i I . 1 VjaV.'' s I T II 1 It -F V X V l.-v X 'III klnirii and quwni. lto for the trumps, total 17". In another 2 and ISO, total 390. Now, all these methods cannot re right, and anion them It would seem that the election of the true one would be to find that which In In accord with the spirit of the same. In ord.r to be tonslstent la all the melds and to follow out the same prin ciple In one that Is Insisted on In another we shall find that the correct values for the melds which are commonly disputed In modern pinochle when played three or four hand should be as follows: Kor four kings and queens 23) Kor the trump sequence 130 For both these together J70 No other values will conform to the rules which have been shown to be Inherent to the game. A fresh card for each meld, for aa mnny melds as can be made by adding to the cards already on the table. Mwimn itM, wr JtaaajiT, DonTbrJi'uTy wftif not get a niee eu&ta eaS'met pi that jPiebent? one wM ornament. the (tome and ntake Ufa, one to whom you we it haftjjy thee timeb a day. fyiom t& you eon Say a eby&ta eaSind. fd u4 td unUtt yoa home. Ufa, hornet we junih ae awayb happy horned, everything pi Ufa, home at oaX &toe. you PiuCy mM&i &tewat & Seaton. MODERN PINOCHLE MELDS Points of the Game an Which Playtri Often lisagm. CHANGES OF THE LAST TEN YEARS Frlnclples on Which It "Was Orl v Inally Baaed Correct Value of X Disputed Melda and the Heasons Therefor. Probably tew games have undergone such radical changes In a ahort time aa pinochlo, and thero Is certainly no game of cards about which there la so much diversity of opinion us to the correct rules and so little technical knowledge aa to right principles. In the absence of any stunuard authority (or the game, any recognized code of rules, it has been loft to muny separate and dis tinct groupa of players to make their own. This haa been done without consultation with players other than those In their own set, and Is. of course, aa fair for one aa (or another; but It Is not pinochle. No matter where or how ha has been taught, the good pinochle player will be on par with any other good player as soon aa the cards are up and the melds are on the elate. It Is never the play that makes the difference In the. game, because perfec tion In that la arrived at by practice and experience. It Is the value of the declara tions or melda that leads to so many dis putes. Every card game is based on certain fundamental principles which distinguish It from other games. It Is on these princi ples alone that the rules should be based, and most disputes concerning pinochle arise from lack of familiarity with these principles. Compared to Bealqae. Until about ten years ago pinochle was very much like bezique. The principal dlf. (erencaovas that In bezique the four kings or queena might be of any suits; they hod to be of different suits In pinochle. The minor difference was In the value of the two principal melda. In bezique the trump sequence waa worth. 250; In pinochle, 1U) only. The double bezique was worth 600; double pinochle, SuO only. In pinochle eight aces used to be worth 1.000; eight kings 800, and so on. These melds were Impossible In beaique, because after winning a trick the bezique player had only seven cards in his hand. Even In rublcan bezique, In which nine cards are dealt, and the four spade queens and four diamond jacks are worth 4.500. It does not eem to have ever occurred to players to make eight aces worth 1.000, and there Is no score for eight of a kind. Catting; Away the Melds. One of the first, and probably one of the most Important, changes In pinochle was 'cutting out these big scores, the first to go being the melds for eight of a kind. It was found that the habit of holding on desperately to six or seven cards of a kind In the hope of going game In one meld completely spoiled the play of the ha tula and made pinochle nothing but a specula tion on the draw, to win or lose everything on a single card. As now played, eight aces are worth only 200; eight kings are worth 100, and so on. The next change was to cut down the meld for double pinochle In the same way, and In the American game double pinochle la now worth only 80. But there Is one Im portant tiling to be remembered in connec tion with these melda, which is that they are still considered aa single melds, just as they were In the old game. This Is a point frequently overlooked In playing two hand. The rule is that there shall be only one meld made for each trick taken, and under this rule some persons Imagine that only one pinochle can be melded at a time, even If the player holda them both; but such Is not the case. The player Is at llbtrty to lay down eight kings or double pinochle at once. Just as he did in the old game, and call either of them a single meld. The change is not that the old meld haa been cut Into two melds, but that the value of the meld Itself has been cut down. When the Argsmest Starts. The majority of the misunderstandings and disputes at pinochle are with regard to the melding of double combinations. Theso are the cases In which several melda are grouped together as one, and are set down as a lump sum. They occur only In three or four hand, but In order to understand thoroughly the principles underlying the rules by such melds it Is necessary to go back to the original game, because no matter what changes we may make In the value we at tach to a meld, whether we call It worth 2T,0 polnta or 150 or 15, the fundamental principles of the game must be adhered to in making the meld itself or we are not playing pinochle. Pinochle, like bezique, was originally a game for two players only, and the law for melding, the principle upon which all melds were based, was extremely simple. After winning a trick the player who won It could make any single meld he had In hla hand before he drew a card from the stock. This meld had to be one of five things, a marriage, a sequence In trumps, a pinochle, a dlx, or four of a kind. Under no circumstances was it allowed to meld two marriages at the same time, or marriage and sequence together. It the player held a combination meld. It was necessary for him to win a separate trick for each separate part of that combination, or he could not score It at alL It was also necefsary for all the cards that went to make up the combination to be still on the table when the meld was scored. The best example of the way this rule worked In the original game la that of the four kings and four queens. Upon winning a trick, the player holding this combination could lay It all down at once, but he could actually score only one part of It,, so he usually began with eighty kings. On win ning another trick, he would score his sixty queens, and then as he won other tricks he would gradually score hla marriages, until he had made 240 points out of the combina tion. Birth of a Rule. This system of holding over scores to be made good by winning subsequent tricks led to a great d-al of confusion, and although it is still allowed In bezique. it haa been abolished for many years in pinochle. It often happened that a player who had one or two scores In abeyance on the table BE82FfiffJ Is an ordeal which ail women approach witbj indescribable, fear, for nothing compare with pain and horror of -birth. The thought of the suffering and danger in store for her, rob the expectant mother -1 1 1 1 -' r . , . . 1 ui an picasani anucipauons 01 uie coining event, ana casts oyer her a shadow of gloom which cannot be shaken off.. Thousands of women have found that the use of Mother' Friend during pregnancy robs confinement of all pain and danger, and insures safety to life of mother and child. This scientific liniment is a god-send to all women at the time of their most critical trial. Not only does Mother's Friend carry women safely through the perils of child-birth, but it use gently prepares the system for the coming event, prevents "morning sickness," and other dis- comforts of tb.ii period. "I ""I 'SfflSTFF fj H FTD Sold by "druggist, at UUJtUJ U tKl LLLRi L fl.oo per bottle. Book Vl containing valuable information free. fF '"J f fTm 7 1 H ' FTf) TU Brad (Id Re0ldUr C.. Atlanta, G. U LilULZmL U 111) would get something more valuable to score In the meantime, and then there would be disputes as to how much of the meld on the table had been scored, and whether or not some of it had been scored twice over or not at all. This led to the formulation of one of the most Important and useful rules In pinochle, the rule which marks out most clearly the distinction between pinochle and bezique. It is this: For every fresh meld at least one fresh card must be laid out from the hand of the player. ' ' ' Under this rule It was no longer possible to lay upon the table a number of melds at the same time, hoping to score them aa tricks were taken later. If the player held four kings and four queens he had to meld his four kings first. Upon winning another trick, he would add the queen of trumps and score tho royal marriage. On winning another trick he could meld a plain suit marriage, and with a fourth trick another marriage. When it came to the fifth trick there re mained In his hand only one coxd belong ing to the combination, and he hod to choose whether to meld it as four queens or a fourth marriage. It could not be used for both melds, and aa one must be lost the sixty queens was chosen. There being no fresh card to be played from the hand for the last marriage, that score waa let go, leaving a total of 220 for the whnlo five melds In combination. Precisely in the same way the player holding the trump sequence would meld the marriage first, afterward adding to It the A J 10, scoring 40 for the marriage, and then 150 for the sequence, a total of 190 for the combination. If the trump sequence was laid down first the marriage waa lout, because there waa no fresh card to play I from the hand. Rale Often Violated. There is also a minor rule which pre- vents a player from taking cards away from a meld to form other melds of lees ralue In the same class. Marriages and sequence are In the same class, and this Is the only class affected by this rule. Should a player have melded trump ; sequence without melding the marriage first and have another king of trumps he I catinot meld the marriage with the new I king, because he would have tq take tho queen away from the other meld, which is In the same class and of greater value. In melding pinochle in the old days If the player held double pinochle in his hand he melded the single pinochle first and scored 40 for It When he won another trick, he added the two fresh cards from his hand to the two on the table and melded double pinochle, scoring S00 more, so that he made it worth 840 altogether, for the combination, Just as he Increased the trump marriage to the trump sequence. But there Is no longer any such score as 300 for Jfouble pinochle, so that the player holding It may as well lay it down at once for eighty. We come now to the connecting link between the original or two-hand game and the modern three or four-hand game. In two-hand, as long as there remained cards in the stock to draw from the players could meld, because the rule was that a player must meld after winning a trlofc and before drawing from the stock. When there was no longer any stock to draw from the melds ceased. While the players were making their melds and drawing from the stock It waa not necessary to follow suit to anything, not even to trumps, and the second player was not obliged to win a trick unless he wanted to. But as soon as the melds were all made and the stock was exhausted It became Imperative for the second player on each trick not only to follow suit but to win the trick if he could, no matter what was led. Fnndnmentala of the Game. This would seem to show that the fun damental principles of the game of pinochle are these: For every meld there must be at least one fresh card from the hand, as many melds being allowed as can be made by adding fresh cards to previous melds which are stll1. on the table. No melds good until after winning a trick. Obligatory to follow auit when there is no stock to draw from. These were the principles of the two band game. When people began to play three-hand, each for himself, or four-hsnd as partners, there were not cards enough In the park to make the game Interesting with a stock, so they dealt out all the cards Xa the players at once and turned up the last of the dealer's cards for the trump. This left no stock to draw from, and therefore no chance to get any melds but those originally held by the players. As each trick played reduced the number of cards held, without any other cards to take their places, it was evident that all the melds In the hand should be made be fore a card was played, and that these melda should be considered good If the player took a trick: . '' ':' In melding the correct principles of the original game were strictly carried out, fresh card from the hand being demanded for each meld laid on the table, and ail melds to be lost If the player did not win a trick.' ' ' What May Be Achieved. It was therefore ' still possible for the player who held four kings and four'quee i to score 220 for them by laying them down In proper order. He could also secure 190 for the trump Sequence by laying down the marriage first and adding the three fresh cards to make the sequence after- ward. It was also possible to secure everything contained In larger combinations of melds. urn as mis: Kriadca beine iramn th. : player melds 80 kings; then spade mar- rlage. 40; then 40 pinochle with the Jack of diamonds; then 20 clubs and 20 diamond then 60 queens; then 150 trumps with the ace, Jack and ten added to the spade mar rlage already on the table, and finally the aix, worth 10 more. All these melds have been made In strict accordance with the rules, and all ot them win oe goad If the player wins a trick. The i combination of twelve cards la worth 420 point. Simple as this'princlple may appear, you will find many who play three and four- hand pinochle who do not understand It and who insist that four kings and four queens are worth 240. You may ask them to show you how they meld It and mav demonstrate that it Is Impossible with eight caras. wnicn the game Is two-hand, mree-nand or four-hand. What Is still more strange Is that the same players who insist on scoring 240 for this comblantlon will tell you that the trump sequence Is not worfb more than 150. because you have to lay an the cards down at once. Others, again, who score the four king: uu iour queens correctly as worth 220 only, m three or four hand, will not allow you to add more than 110 for the remainder of the trump sequence, If It is In the same hand, because, they say, you would be using the same cards twice over; yet they have used all the kings and three of the queens twice over 'already. Others, again, probably the most un reasonable of all. Insist that if you meld the trump sequence, you cannot score forty for the royal marriage, because you will De using the same cards twice over, and for the same reason, they will tell you you cannot score eighty kings and sixty queens in the same hand with the trump sequence. What the Wise Ones Mean. What they mean Is that you cannot score the marriage because It Is trumps, neither can you score the king and queen belong ing to the marriage, because you have not been allowed to score them as trumps; yet you can score both these cards twice over If yeu have no trump sequence once to make the four of a kind and once more to make the marriage. The common reason assigned for not per mitting certain melds is that you must not use the same card twice over, yet the very players who object to this will use some cards, such as the queen of spade, three or four times over, without serin? any In consistency iA their application of the rule. Nothing la so astonishing as the diversity of the values attached to the four kings and four queens, especially In connection with the trump sequence. In one plaice you will find the four kings and queens worth 220, in another 40. In another 140 only, no marriages being allowed. The trump sequence is worth 150 in some places, 190 in others. In combination with the four kings and queers it is worth only 210, which is ar rived at by calling the sequence 150 and the three marriages 0, no four of a kind being allowed. In another they call it worth 250, made up of 19U for the trumps and 60 tor the marriages In plain suits. Then again you find 240 for the kings and queens and 110 only for the trumps, a total ot iM. In anvtuer place It Is tit for the FROM THE BLIND WHO READ Lives Brightened by Mrs. T.legler's Maaaslne aad Patriotism Fostered. One result of the publication of the Ma tilda Ziegler magazine for the blind has been the sending of many letters to tho publishers from the blind subscribers. Laettere have come from nearly every state of the union, written by persons of all conditions of life. A blind clergyman writes, stating his conviction that the broader his range of reading the wider his possibilities of work. On the otter hand, a young wunan In re ligious fervor declares It her duty as a recent convert to forego the magazine as one of the vanities of life to be renounced. A rich western man nsks to be allowed to pay for his subscription, while a south ern woman says that In thirty years she has had but two books to read, part of the lilble and a history of the L'nlted States. From the weet came three letters from convicts confined in penitentiaries, signed with their prison numbers. A letter from New England farm was accompanied by two cakes of home-made maple sugar as a sweet testimonial from a younj woman. The desire of the blind to be treited as normal beings manifests Itself repeatedly. "We have always longed for a perlodlcul like those our seeing friends enjoy," writes one. Another says, we ao noi want matter relative to our afflictions, but material of that kind and quality which will take our thoughts away from our selfish tendencies and make us nee life Just as It Is viewed by the seeing people." "I am deprived of both sight and hear ing," writes a woman from New Hamp shire. "No one can read aloud to me. I am delighted to read something like the magazines that seeing folks have. That Is what we want" "It cannot but be a source of gratifica tion to the sightless to realize that they are not excluded from the rapid march of progress which marks this century," writes Santiago A. Butler. "The libraries which we now enjoy, the growing Interest which has developed in the ad vancement of the blind and now the pub lication of this magazine, which will fill a long felt need, are not the least Indica tions of the spirit of progress which ani mates and distinguishes the present era. To those who, like the blind, are In so many ways dependent upon the kindness of others an opportunity to become the con tributor of pleasure Is doubly welcome The Joy of ono who has for years heard news from the outside world only as read or repeated by patient friends, but now finds himself able to entertain and In struct others, cannot be overestimated by those to whom reading aloud is a dally affair of no special interest. "It Is Indeed a great privilege," says a Vermont man. "to have stories and poems to read to your sighted friends." And a woman from Pennsylvania voices the same sentiment, saying: "The reading of the publication to others of my family has proved an interesting pleasure to them also." The poem, "Your Flag and My Flag and How it Files Today," with a cut of the Stars and Stripes In raised lines, appeals to many readers who had no previous de finite conception of the flag. "It looks quite natural to my mind's eye," says one, "for there I see Its beautl ful colors shining out fair and bright as I pass my fingers over the embossed stars ad stripes. The verses below the flag are pretty, too, and I think they help to In crease the enthusiasm of every patriotic breast at the sight of our national banner that has beefi carried through so many wars ever victorious. My earnest prayer Is that it may long wave in triumph over a free land and a prosperous people." Home Rna Wins Bride. When John J. Fltzhenry made his famous home run In the ninth Innlr.g last season It won the game. But he won much more, The charming Miss Orace Butler, a base ball fanette, and Fltzhenry were married at Jersey City last week. The bride Is cer tain Fltzhenry will make only home runs now. The Rochesters and the Jersey Cttys of the Eastern League were playing In Jer sey City; the score was t to 3. Two Rochester men were out in the last half of the ninth inning when the sturdy Fltz henry, the left fielder, strode to the plate. Mack, the Jersey City pitcher, put on his most puzzling curve. "Strike," yelled the umpire. The palpitating Miss Butler found the ecstatic chorus. "Strike two!" again Miss Butler shrieked with Joy. "Swat!" Fltzhenry hit the next ball Before Its meteor-like flight was finished Fits had crossed the home plate. "The man who won that game can win me," thought Miss Butler enthusiastically in the same admiring spirit that Venus flirted with Mars. She and Fltzhenry met at a social affair soon after; he caught her true affections on the fly. Fltzhenry, a graduate of Man hattan college in civil engineering. Is em ployed on one of the Hudson river tunnels. KKLIG1UIS ISOThlS. Rev. Thomas Spurgeon has resignd the pastorate of Metropolitan temple, Irtd n, on account of ill he:ilth. He succeeded his father, the Rev. Charles H. Spurgeon, In 1891 At Spokane, Wash., plana are being made by the Methodist Kplscopal Ministers' n eurlatlon to erect a mammoth temporary tabernacle for revival purpoties within the next two nvntlis. The archblrthop of Montreal, Mgr. Bru chast, haa addressed a letter of protest to the city authorities of Mumtreal aulniit the admiBtion In the public library of works that mock at religion and are a menace to Christian morals. 1 Tired of the pleasures of life. Joseph Dwlght, son of I'rof. Thomas Dwight of the Harvard Medical school, has become a monk and has entered the Trapplst nion- HKiM-y oi uur Liiiuy ui me V alley at Latma dale, R. I. Tho Temple Baptist church of Iaos An geles, of which Rev. Robert J. Burdette, poet and humorlM. Is naator. unite a church, office building und playhouse under one roof, and the rental Income pays all expenses. It is built of reinforced con .rete Added to the Interest attaching to every one cf Burdctte's sermons Is the mutr rendered from that great organ one of the largest In the world, that is built Into the auditorium. The organ Is one of the three largest and finest In the world and has sixty slops and iiuO pipes. disease Every Known ; cum Without the Use of Medicine an r I I ( C. I. TIIACITER, M. T. There Is no such thing as an Incurable disease. I make this statement just as broad, sweeping and all-lncluslve a: I know how. Man's ability to cure disease is limited only to the extent ot his knowledge of nature's laws. When I say there are no Incurable diseases, I moan every word I say. Every word of It Is true. I know It to bo true, because In the past quarter of a century I have proved It to my own satisfaction, and to the Joyful satisfaction of thousands of others. I am constantly on the lookout for other diseases to prove It on. I can prove it to anybody In fact, I want to prove It to everybody. I do not care what the disease Is, nor how severe It Is, nor how many other diseases are complicated wfth It. I can show you parallel cases that have been cured by my famous Magnetic Shields, and they are sound and well today, as living monuments to the grand, revitalizing power of magnetism. These Magnetic Shields keep the body bathed In a constant stream of magnetism, which floods the whole system with life and energy. Patients are often told that they have Incurable diseases. I want to tell you right here that nearly all these cases can be cured, and I will prove it to you. More than seventy-five per cent of all my patients that have been cured were first given up as beyond all hope by the physicians treating the cases, and they have been made sound and well by applying magnetism according to my Instructions. All I ask you Is to send me a full statement of your case, so that t may give It a careful study, and I will advise you fully by letter Just what can be done for you, and how It can be done. I'll agree to tell you all about It and prove to you, In any way you want, that all I say la true. I'll point you to cases of paralysis, consumption, diabetes, Brlght's disease, locomotor ataxia, Insanity, dyspepsia, rheumatism, nervous pros tration, tumors, obesity nnd a hundred and one other diseases doctors call Incurable. I can show you the most Incontestable proofs that I have cured them. I have cured these cases after the patients have been given up to die. When you write, don't be afraid that I am going to sell you some thing. I know that If I can prove to your satisfaction all I say, you will want Thacher's Magnetic Shields without any urging from me, because I prove that they will do Just what I say they will do. There la nothing elue on earth to take their place, and do as much aB they can do. Read the evidence in these letters from grateful patrons who have been cured. SUCH EVIDENCE IS INDISPUTABLE Serious Complications, Resulting From Smallpox, Quickly Cured J09 R. Thomas Ave, Shenandoah, la., April 6, 1907. Thacher Magnetic Shield Co., Chicago, 111.: Gentleman While In India two years Hgo, I had a severe attack of small pox, which was followed by Ijysentery. I wan treated by four Kuropean physi cians, all of whom considered my can hopeless and ordered me to America at once. On arriving In America my caso waa taken by two good physicians. I took 60 grans of Hlmnuth (30 grs. sub-gallnte and i!0 grs. mib-nltratc i dallv, besides other drugs. Confined to my bed most of the time, I continued to grow worse. The physicians said 1 would not live until spring. Learning of your shields, I ordered and put on a milt Sept. 25th, '0, at the name time leaving off all drugs. January 1st, '07, I was ablo to take up regular work and have continued to Improve In health ever since. It Is six months today since I put the shields on. You remarked that they would make another man of me In this time. I can freely say they Vave done so. I recommend your shields to all the suffering ones I can. Yours very sincerely, F. E. MOORE, k 309 E. Thomas St., Shenandoah, la. Was Pronounced Incurable-Diabetes and Nervous Prostration Dr. Thacher: . tear Sir In 188 one of your agents sold me a Mngnetle Belt, Leggings and Lung Shields when I had been given up to die with diabetes of the kid neys. 1 had suffered with kidney and stomach trouble and nervous prostra tion until I had become so weak and helplevs that 1 could not walk erect without a cane. '1 he doctors, my family ami I had given up the struggle, and I expected to be In my grave within sixty days. 1 was no discouraged 1 did not wish to try the Shields, but my son finally Induced me to do so, and the first night I had a peaceful sleep for the first time In years. I am now able to give vigorous attention to the bUBlnens con nected with our company. I have not worn the Magnetic Belt for some years until last fall, when I had become run down and my stomach wus troubling me. I put flie Belt, Leg gings and Lung Shield back on und within a week or two wus as vigorous as ever. Since flst putting them on I have felt a deep sense of gratitude toward you for saving my life, and there is not a week passes thut I do not recom mend them to some sick person I meet. Yours very truly, BENSON BID WELL, President Bid well Electrics Co., 1505 Humboldt Blvd., Chicago, 111. I have thousands more Just such letters. People write me from Maine to California that I have cured them of almost every known dis ease after they had been given up as Incurable. Write to me and let me prove that I can cure you, no matter If you have been told that you have an Incurable disease. I wan to say right here that the majority of so-called Incurable diseases can be cured, as more than seventy-five per cent of all the cases I have cured were given up as Incurable before they adopted my method of treatment. Do not give up hope. There is no guesswork or child's play about magnetism. Simply write me fully regarding your case, and I will take tho same careful pains to consider your trouble, and will advise you by letter what shields will be required to cure you, Just the same as If you could call at my office and have a talk with me. I will ulso send you free my new book, "A Plain Koad to Health," by C. I. Thacher, M. D., containing much valuable Information on the subject of Magnetism that can be obtained from no other source. Thacher Magnetic Shield Co. Suite 54, 169 Wabash Avenue, Chicago, III. 3S3 DR. McGREWSROO WILL CURE YOU for u PAV WHAT YOU CAN and begin your treatment now. Men, I have a treatment especially adapted to all your ailments; 31 years' experience makes It possible for ms to cure where all others fail 25 yean la Omaha. Treatment by mail. Office hours all day to 8:30 p. in. Bus day, 8 to 1. Call or write. Dcz 766. Office, t!5 South Fourteenth Bl, Omaha, Neb. Bee Want Ads Produce Results