TIIE BEE; OMAHA, SATUKPAY, MARCH 5. 1910. 1612 & TABNAM &YDEETS. OMAHA. (The Peoples Furniture h Carpet Co. .Established 1U87.) A Complete Showing of the Hew Suit "S. &H." Crecn Trading Stamps IViih Each Purchase For Saturday's Belling we offer for your selection a largo assortment of the newest spring styles made In the favored materials. All the popular styles and materials are shown. Prices range from $40.00 on down to And Doable ". k H." Orts Trifling Stamps. New Jackets for Spring In Broadcloth and plain or fancy Covert mater lals tan or gray Jackets made In this sea son's latest styles and that you would expect to pay at least $10 . for, on sale Saturday, at , And Double "B. ft H." Green Trading Stamps. o o o Silk Petticoats Black and colors, tailored flounce; $10.00 values, Saturday, only And Bonbl "S. ft H." Oram Trading Stamps, Saturday Specials in Our Men's Clothing Department $19.50 mxm $6.95 m t $3.95 finS I 1 1 ' 4fr Men's New Suits for Spring Wear. Tir t i - - .. . . . " ouowing Dy iar me nnest ana largest line of men's and boys' spring and Easter X clothing that we have ever had. Men's suits X that' are .finely tailor made and Aja aa V that will give the best of wear, II III) at prices from $35 down to ..... ,V VwVV ado. uonuie sj. ft K." OtMn Trading- tamps. n I M.I.L.. Ci- ' n li-.ii n. ! - ouys rood apnng uomomanon aims With two pair of knlckerbpcker a av pants and cap to Watch. Specially lL Jill $ priced for Saturday's selling, only. . V w v And Double "8. ft H." Green Trading Stamps. In all leathers, latest styles, high and low cut. Prices from $2.00 to And Bonbl "S. ft II. " Orn Trading Stamps. Men's and Women's Shoes $5.00 ! t 5c t Special for Saturday E00 donen of our Celebrated Men's Black and Tan Hose, at, pair , (Limit of Three Pairs.) Some Things You Want to Know Curing the Insane. Trains Collide in Fog and One ' : Man is Hurt Passenger and Freight Trains Collide , in the Fog, Injuring One Man. Fog was responsible for the wreck of the Kansas City and St. Louis express of the Missouri 1'aclflc railroad early Friday morning; near the Martha street crossing, when the passenger train was struck by a double-header freight train of the Union Pacific lines. C. P. Truelson of Kansas City, fireman on the Missouri Pacific locomotive, was the only person Injured. He was badly scalded about the back, neck and arms by escaping steam. After being attended by Dr. W. H. Ramsey the man was able to go to his room. None of the passengers was Injured. One woman was believed to have been seri ously hurt, but sho was seen to leave the train, walking away uninjured, and did not report the case. ' ,The Missouri Pacific locomotive and the baggago car were badly damaged and win dows In the day coach were broken by the force of the collision. There was consid erable excitement for a time aboard the train. ' After the locomotive and baggage car had been detached the train was hauled Into Union station by a switch engine. The Bmashup Is termed by railroad nun a "side-swipe." Union Paclflo and Mis souri Pacific tracks cross near Marcy street. Both trains were running at a slow rate of speed. The passenger train from Kansas City was eaatbound and the freight train was northbound from South Omaha. There Is not the lease danger in giving Chamberlain's Cough Remedy to children, as It contains no harmful drug. PERSONAL PARAGRAPHS Miss Ida V. Jonti of the Omaha Asso ciated Charities la in Kansas City, where she will remain over Sunday. Miu Jonts was the principal speaker Thursday even ing at a Joint meeting of the Associated Charities of the two Kansas CItys held on the Kansas side. She will examine Into means and methods employed by the char ity workers today and tomorrow. NO INDIGESTION OR STOMACH DISORDER A little Diapepsin will make you feel fine in five minutes. There would not be a case of Indigestion here If readers who are subject to Stomach trouble knew the tremendous anti-ferment and digestive virtue' contained In Diapep sin. This harmless preparation will digest a heavy meal without the slightest fuss or discomfort, and relieve the sourest, acid stomach In five minutes, besides overcom ing all foul, Nauseous odors from the breath. Ask your pharmacist to show you the formula plainly printed on each 50-cent case of rape's Plapepsln, then you will readily understand why this promptly sures Indigestion and removes such, symp toms as Heartburn, a feeling like a lump of lead In the stomach. Belching and Gas and Eructations of undigested food, water brash. Nausea, Headache, BUUousness and many other bad symptoms; and, besides, you will not need laxatives to keep your stomach, liver and intestines clean and fresh. It your stomach Is sour and full of gas or your food doesn't digest, and your meals don't seem to fit, why not get a 60-cent case from your druggist and make life worth livlngT Absolute relief from Stomach misery and perfect digestion of anything you eat Is sure to follow five minutes after, and, besides, one case Is sufficient to cure a whole family of such trouble. Surely, a harmless, Inexpensive prepar ation like Diapepsin, which will always, either at daytime or during night, relieve your stomach misery and digest your meals, Is about as handy and valuable a thing as you could have In the house. The cure of mental derangement by the sudden pronunciation of a single word Is the achievement of Dr. Fhepherd Ivory Frans, who Is In charge of the psycholo gical laboratory of the government hos pital for the Insane at Washington. He succeeds by working on the theory that there are thousands of cases of Insanity which can be successfully treated If the cause of the mental disease can be ascer tained, and the explanation made to the patirnts that their unhenlhy thought have no foundation In fact. There was sent to him recently a young man who had an overpowering fear of open places, the outdoors or any unen closed place, and who was under the domi nation of this terror to such an extent that he could be made to leave his bedroom only by physical compulsion. Dr. Frans took him Into the "treatment room" of the laboratory, where there Is very little light and no noise. Seating the patient In a comfortable easy chair, the doctor told him to relax himself and try not to think of anything. After a dead alienee of sev eral minutes the doctor began to pronounce with sudden emphasis single words which he thought might produce In the man's mind some Idea having a bearing on the cause of his delusions. Every time he pronounced a word he leaned over and struck the patient sharply on the knee. He went through more than 100 words without getting any results. Finally, when he said "hole," the man paused a moment before making an Irrelevant answer. That pause encouraged Franz. His next word, accompanied by the tap on the knee, was "trench." From this he got results, and gradually, with infln te patience, hi briugiit out the story of what has unseated the patient's mind. It was this: One morning he had been running at the top of his speed to overtake a moving Btrect car, and the chase had carried him halfway down tho next block. Just as he was about to grasp the handle bar of the car and swing himself aboard, he looked down and saw yawning at his feet a freshly dug sewer trench. Ono more step and he would have had a fall of eight feet, but he man aged to bring himself up short. At the first experience had had no appre ciable effect, but such shocks to the brain work gradually. In a few weeks he felt an aversion to walking In open fields. Next he disliked to cross the street, and this went so far that, he could not be prevailed to do so unless he was accompanied by a guide. After a while longer he refused to walk across the yard from his house to that of his next-door neighbor, and the final stage of the disease was that he was afraid to leave his room. Dr. Frans, having established all this by his theory of suggesting to the patient tho real trouble by the use of words calculated to bring the mental pictures back to him, had com paratively little difficulty In explaining that the dread was founded on fiction and that there was really nothing to fear. The man's complete recovery followed, and h again occupies a prominent place in the business world. These peculiar cases of insanity are classed under the general title of "phobias." The man who feared the open places was an agoraphoblac. Another case Dr. Franx had was that of a, pyrophobla the fear of fire. This was a woman who dreaded fire, and at various periods In the day Imagined that she waa enveloped In flames. At such time she suffered as much as If she had been actually on fire. On very bright, sunny days, the brilliance of the sun persuaded her that the world was burn ing up. The doctor was successful with her on the third word, which was "matches." That reminded her dimly of her baby having been burned to death as the result of playing with matches. Gradu ally, he made her understand that the child's death was no reason for her to think she was on fire or to believe that fire was to be dreaded all the time. It Is difficult to trace there "phobias" to their true causes because, as was pointed out In the case of the agoraphoblac, the effects of the shock to the brain do not appear at once, but come out long after wards. The families of the patients are often unable to assign any reasons for the mental breakdown. The asylum had one amusing case. This was a mysophoblac, a man who feared dirt as ordinary people fall away from pesti lence. His mania for washing his hands was never satisfied, and the hospital at tendants finally agreed to let him go through these ablutions eight times a day. On one occasion he was allowed to go Into the lavatory unwatched, and when he was found forty minutes later, he had used seventy towels. It was later discovered that his trouble had come from his seeing on the street a man who appeared to be particularly unkempt and dirty looking. At the time this patient's companion had been a physician, who had pointed out the probabilities of the tramp spreading dis ease. Through some peculiar, kink In his brain, the patient hud dwelt on that re- At Soda Fountains or Elsewhere Get the Original and Genuine mark and hnd allowed It to become the dominant thought In his life, resulting In his having no other desire than to take baths and wash his hands. While thin In cident can be related briefly. It Is Illustra tive of the doctor's patient methods that he had to use more than 6.000 words In the course of many treatments before he set the man's mind to thinking of the actual cause of the trouble. The successful word was "doctor," although such words as "germ" and "disease" had failed to make any substantial suggestion to the patient's mind. One of Dr. Frans" patients was a beaut iful young woman who was taken to him because sho had a fear of anything rod. Red curtains, re'd carpets or anything of that color threw her Into what amounted to convulsions of fear. He took her Into the darkened, fulet room. It was a sum mer afternoon, and nothing could be heard but the smooth hum of an electrlo fan on the table. He allowed her to sit perfectly quiet for more than five minutes. Then he leaned forward, and, tapping her on the knee, said sharply: "Suicide!" "Yes, yes," she said, and hesitated a moment Then she continued: "It was at a ball." "Pistol!" exclaimed tho doctor. That brought back the whole story of how she had been at a gcrman one evening and had seen a man commit suicide In a con servatory by shooting himself In the tem ple. The sight of the blood on the suicldo's shirt front had beon the starting point of her delusion. She was cured In two weeks. A peculiar case was that of a man who had suddenly forgotten his own Identity, and had traveled through six different states without knowing who he was. He was picked up In the streets of Washing ton and sent to the hospital for the Insane. There was nothing to suggest who he was, absolutely no clue of his home, his occu pation or his name. It afterwards de veloped that he had been away from home eight months, and had been going down hill all the time until he looked like the most miserable of tramps. The doctor aw the futility of trying to suggest to htm his Identity by using all the names he had ever heard. Accordingly, he tried the employment line. None of the ordinary professions brought any response. Mention of doctors, lawyers, journalists or ministers gave no result. The same was true of all the words referring to such avocations as plumbers, bricklayers, carpenters and team sters. Finally the doctor said: "I am look ing for somebody to tune my piano." It proved to be the right cue. The patient was a piano tuner from one of the middle western states. After three weeks of ques tioning and prompting, the doctor retraced with' the man all his wanderings, made him remember his name and restored to htm the complete mastery of all hit mental faculties. One of the most baffling cases Franx ever had was the man who was not only frightened every lime he saw a horseshoe, but who was constantly possessed of the idea that It would be used as a means of killing him. Of course, the natural assump tion was that he had been, kicked by a horse or run over by one, and that the shock of the accident had unseated his reason. ' Working on this theory, the doc tor wasted many precious sittings and used up hundreds of worlls' without mak-1 lng any. progress towird discovering the true cause of the trouble! It finally de veloped that the fellow had been struck on the head by a horseshoe, which had been nailed over a door for "good luck," and which had fallen on, him as he entered a friend's house. A direct opposite of the man who feared the open places was the woman who dreaded all closed or dark places. She had claustrophobia, and had developed the mania of staying out-of-doors, sleeping out-of-doors and never entering the house unless compelled to do so. As is often the case with mothers, her trouble had come from an accident to her child. She had seen It, while playing In a big linen closet, have Its hand caught and crushed by the closing of a heavy door, and the shock of the child's suffering preyed on her mind until she had come to fear anything with doors. The "phobias" are the most troublesome curable cases with which the psychiatrist or alienist has to deal. If any of these patients had died while In the worst stages of their mental derangements, the autop sies hnd been performed on them, their brains would have appeared perfectly nor mal. Their sufferings do not come from any decay or desease of the brain tissues, and it has been demonstrated that were It not for the "word treatment," alt that could be done for them would be to allow them to suffer for months and months, perhaps years, before they could recover. With the new method, however, they are often cured In marvelously short time. BY rBXSEKIO J. BAgXXV. Singer Will Not . Produce in Omaha Story that He Would Proves to Be a Pipe Dream of a Press Agent. and Miss Sophie Grau will talk on the graded Junior work. Most Wonderful Healing;. After suffering many years with a sore, Amos King, Port Byron, N. Y., was cured by Bucklen's Arnica Salve. 25c For 'sale by Beaton Drug Co. IT JU mum v Tho Food-Drink for All Ages. Rich milk, mailed gram, in powder form. More healthful than tea or coffee. For infants, invalid wid growing chilJi en. Agrees with the weakest digestion, Putenutrkion.upbuiidingthewholebody. Keep it on your sideboard at home. Invigorates nursing mothers sod the aged. A quick lunch prepared in a minute. Sample sent free. Address HORLICK'S, Racine, Wis, Take no substitute. Ask for HORLICK'S. Thursday afternoon The Bee published a statement to the effect that Mr. Mort Singer of Chicago, the musical comedy producer, would assemble one of his or ganizations in this city during August, and produce a new musical comedy at the Brandels theater, after rehearsing here for some weeks. This statement was made on the authority of one Zack Harris, who Is In the employ of Mr. Blnger as a press agent. Mr. Harris also said that Mr. linger was In Omaha for the purpose of attending the opening of the Brandels theater and to consult with Messrs. Burgess and Wood ward. It transpires that Mr. Singer was not In the city, that he has had no negotiations with Messrs. Burgess and Woodward, and that so far as these gentlemen know, no likelihood exists of a musical comedy com pany being organised and rehearsed at the Brandels during the summer. The only truth In the statement made by Mr. Harris Is that he la agent for the Singer attractions. G. G. WALLACE AT Y. W. C. A. He Will Speak to the Sunday School Workers on Bandar School Work. "An Advanced Step In Sunday School Work for Sunday School Workers." Is the subject of an addrexs to be made by a. G. Wallace before the Sunday school teachers' clans In connection with the regular pro gram of the weekly meeting to be held Saturday at t p. m. at the Toung Women's Christian association. The Sunday school lesson Is to be re viewed by Mlti Theodste Wilson. The WOrS OK mo gi.uou ft111111' udii uiiem will bt dlscunsed by Miss Carrls Nelson I MISS RIVES WRITES A HEW NOVEL In "The Kingdom of Slender Swords, Her latest Xovel, the Author of "Sa tan Sanderson" and "Hearts Coura geous" Gives Further I 'roof of Her Uenlus and Versatility. For two years and more In fact, ever since she murrled Post Wheeler and went to Japan to live, llallie trim me kiv has been busy with her pencil and note book writing her recent novel, 'The King dom of Slender Swords." As wife of the secretary to the Amerl can embassy at Tokio, Halite Ermlnle vllves (to use her maiden name, wnlrh la also her non de auerre) has enjoyed exceptional opportunities for acquainting herself with the natives In all ranks of life, from the fascinating geishas to the great damols. And she has taken full advantage of every onnortunlty. "The Kinadom of Slender Swords" has Just been published by the Bobbs-Mer- rill company, and is Deauuruuy itius trated by A. B. Wenzell. Toledo Blade. The Above Book and All Late Books Published 0a Sale at BENNETT CO. BOOK DEPARTMENT. :- This Book and All the Other New Other New Publications on Sale at DRANDEIS STORES Doolc Dept. A 4 4 tant to .Buyers! Piano iimpor A PIANO SALE BEYOND COMPARISON Burning March 5th at 8 A. M. Sharp, We Will Olfer For Sale 21S Mlcjlfo Grade Pianos At Prices Wlilcli Are Less TTinn Cost Values fop $237.50 This sale will mako all previous sales fade !nto Insignificance; It will stagger competition. Read thea few lines, nnd we feel sure that you wl 11 be convinced thnt this Is not a fake sale of a lot of cheap, worthless stencil pianos. , ... , We were forced to close out . , G BRANCH PIANO STORES Located at COX.TTMBT7S, 1TEB.J FX.ATTSMOXTTK, MIB. SAJtBTTBT, HEB.J DATESPOBT, IttB.I ROCK RAPIDS, These branch etures'were closed because of the lncr Iowa for the agencies for our artistic Hand Mailo ttclimoll We closed these branch stores In the above oltlea 01 Omaha wnreroonin. 1S1 1-1313 Knrnnm street, then lurnoi KEB.E IS OUB PBEDIOAMCNT Before making the heavy purchases from the great eastern factories, anil no ( compelled to either rent additional floor space or nacrlfl--. We Drefer the later. alvlnB- to the people of Omaha i piano purchasing opportunity, as we know that It will Mueller, although it means a direct loss of thousanus or reaslng deninnd of retail piano dealers In Nebraska and Her & Mueller and our oilier lines of pianos. )nly, and moved all (he highest grade pianos here to our ad the require. I territory over to ogr wholesale department, s above decision we had augmented our regular stock with it having enmipli room to storo these ptnnos, we will bs '.en largo portion of these piano storks. anil me mmme west mo ixMietii l'i nun imi'rri-puriiiru 1 make thoMKniida tif ftlti,l lor iIig kmtst of Sclunoller ik dollars to us. istf artirS', V-. I ' ' " mm Off J DO HOT SAT TOTJ CAHTTOT AFFORD A PIAHO TOTT CAST' WT WTLIi PROVE XT. Here Is a lint of Just a few of the fine piano bargains offered In this sale THREE PUTS BAMPZiE PIANOS, $63.00, 980.00 and 985.00 EACH. $235.00 Light & Co., Mahogany case Sale price $95.00 $250.00 Standard, Rosewood case Sale price $100.00 $275.00 Erbe & Co., Mahogany case Sale price $115.00 $450.00 Knabe, Rosewood case Sale price $125.00 $300.00 Victoria, Ebony case Sale price $135.00 $500.00 Knabe, unrepaired Sale price $145.00 $400.00 Decker Bros, Ebony case Sale price $160.00 $350.00 Fenwick, Golden Oak case Sale price : $172.00 $375.00 Fisher, Mahogany case Sale price $185.00 ' $400.00, Steger, Golden Oak case . . . ; v . . . . r.. Sale price j.. i . $195.00 $500.00 Decker Bros., Mahogany case . Sale price ' .......... ... . . . . . $225.00 $550.00 Emerson, Mahogany case. .......... Sale price . . .$250.00 $600.00 Chickering, new Sale price .$375.00 $500.00 Chase, Walnut case Sale price $285.00 $375.00 Krakauer. Walnut case Sale price 1 $175.00 $350.00 Adam Schaaf, Oak case Sale price $225.00 $325.00 Kurtzman, Walnut case Sale price $215.00 $500.00 Steger, Mahogany case Sale price $290.00 $750.00 Steinway & Sons Sale price $420.00 $800.00 Hardman, Parlor Grand Sale price $400.00 $750.00 Emerson Grand, Mahogany case Sale price $450.00 $800.00 Steger Player, Mahogany case Sale price $415.00 $1,500.00 Steinway Concert Grand Sale price $450.00 $750.00 Berry Wood Electric Piano Sale price $540.00 Square Pianos, Including Btelnway, Vose. Emerson, Ohlokerlng, Knabe and all other makes, 918, $35, 93S and up. ORGANS, Including Mason a) Hamlin, Hlmball, Estey ft Co., and many others, 910, 915. $30 and up Remember you take no chances. We have been selling planoa and organs to your neighbors throughout Ne braska, Iowa, South Dakota and the middle west for over fifty years Our record bears investigation. Every piano sold under a guarantee of absolute satisfaction or money cheerfully refunded. XT TTOV ARB GOXNGr TO BTTT A PIANO ABTT TXMB WITHIN THE NEXT PEW TEARS THIS IS TOTTR OPPORTUKTTY. CAX.& AT OUB WARE-ROOMS AND WTVESTIOATE THE BE UNHEARD OF PIANO BARGAINS Jnst think, in this great sale we will offer $500 pianos for 9337.50 400 pianos for 9195 9360 pianos for 9L65 9300 pianos for 9147.609360 pianos for 9135.35. x You are cordially invited to call at our ware-rooms, select the piano you want, pay for it your own way Ws let Th'ls'great sale wlTrbegn" promptly at 8 o'clock, March 5. If you cannot call, write for full particulars and com plete price list All mall orders given Immediate attentl on. Schmoller & Mueller Piano Company 1311-1313 Farnom Street, Omaha, Nebraska. i PIANOS TUNED AND REPAIRED 8T 8X3X.&ES PXAVO EXPERTS Seeks Medicine, He Takes Poison Aged Man's Mistake Comei Near to Costing His Life by Dose of Acid. A mistake In medicine bottles came near costing Charles Swanson, 60 years old, his life Friday morning when he swallowed a teaspoonful of carbollo acid. Mr. Swanson called for help when he discovered his mistake. Police Surgeons Thomas and DeWltt answered the emerg ency call and arrived In time to prevent serious results from the poison. Th aired man has been taking a cer tain remedy for asthma for years. His un- iteadv hand grasped the wrong bottle ri- day morning and he took the poison with out reading the label. live there In their ease and comfort and now they want Omaha to build this viaduct over the tracks so they won't have to stop their automobiles when they come to that crossing. "That's what I call gall! "Then ask these same Dundee people to become a part of Greater Omaha and they exclaim, 'Not much; we've got too big a snap.' , "And In truth they have a snap that gives them all the comforts and luxuries of the city without bearing their share of' olty government." Stora Bottled Deer. Phone your order for FTOHZ BOTTLED DEER to Chas. Storz, next door north of Stors Brewery. Phones Wobster :2fi0, Ind. B-1261. Prompt delivery guaranteed same prices cs formerly. Persistent Advertising la the road to Big Returns. MIKE LEE SCOLDS DUNDEE FOR ITS GALL AND SELFISHNESS Thinks Its Demand for Viaduct on Dodge Street Caps the Climax. "The gall of Dundee as viewed by Mike Lee." This Is not Intended as an offense against poetry, but It's an epigram of that eloquent and epl grammatical statesman, Mike Lee, who went down In the legislature history of Nebraska as "Fattier of the Greater Omaha Bill" In the session of 1906. Mr. Lee. first, last and all the time for Omaha Greater Omaha Is provoked to this stricture sgalnst the fashionable suburb to the west by its attempt to force the city of Omaha to build u viaduct over the Belt line on Dodge street. "Omaha has put this community on the map; has given It sewerage, electrlo lights, street cars, gas, paved Dodge street lead ing up to It, sends Its fire apparatus In emergency cases and beats the Dundee bantam engine to the fire at that and, In fact, has given snd Is giving it everyth ng that makes It possible for tu people u This Marvelous Relieves Suffering Health Vibrator Cures Disease When you hurt yourself you rob the spot. When your head aches you rub your temples. Why? Eecauto vibration Is Nature's own romody, and rubbing Is Na ture's crude way of creating vibration and starting the blood to going. Dlteaiio Is only another name for con geation. Where there Is diseate or pain there you will find the blood congested and stagnant. There can bo no pain or dltease where the red blood flows In a rich and steady stream, uoou circulation moans good health. Congested circulation means dis ease and pain. The Lambert Snyder VIBRATOR TW h Osly Om DISEASE. CwtMlha 1W a Oalf Ost CURB, OrcUma Is ths greatest dltcovery of the Twentlrjih Century, It Is capable of giving from V.UiU l 1S.UU0 vibrations per minulu-luu timet inuri than Is possible with the niot export mini, r ol massage. It is a litrht, compart Initruinent, stun !,. int rninrii cin be ooerated by vourelf with one hand by moving the bead over the rigid steel rod, and can be placed In contact with any part of tho body. It Is Nature's own remedy developed and concentrated, and with ono mlnut' uso sends U0 red blooa running uuo mo cuugoaiea pari, reiuuvm u ujbvudu uuu . WHAT IT DOES TO DISEASE AND PAIN. RhMmatUaa, Sciatica, Lambaso. Coat, etc.. are caused by nrlo acid In the Mood In the form of urate ol soda. This acid, through poor circulation at somo particular part, gets stopped on Its way through the tyatem and, coovregatlng, cuunns pain. Apply the Vibrator to the spot, and you will relievo Ihocongeatlon autluet relief ut once. DaofnoM, Heoa Nuum, Riiu la the Eon. in tuoit canes, are caused by Iho thirkeoing ol the inner membrane through catarrh or colds. To euro tlilt vibration U the only thing, as It ) the only way to roach the Inner eardrum and loieu up the bard was or forolgn matter, so sound may penetrate to the drum. Stomach Tiwublo, Uoisaotion, CoaotirwtioB. c. are cauued by the food not properly digesting: It lack oocoasary saliva and gastrlo Juice, tbua creating con umtion In the stomachs forming gases, causing paint, bad breath, etc. Apply the Vibrator to the ttomach. It tettlot the food clown, rcleatcs the gatet, reguUtut tiie ScUod and brings about relief iuttontly. For a Limited Tune, $2.50. Regular Price, $3.00 MAIL " , Mom ramW if Itot tUflmd. Fr livuklmt ORDERS Tor sale In Omaha by sjbermaa fc KoConnell, Hole Agents. r"-'-SD Metal Htarnptng Co., New Tork, belling Agents.