r? It Tin: omatta srxnAY tjkk: xovkmhkr cn. mm. VAST WEALTH GOES UP STREET ; an island of murderers RAILROADING IN THE ANDES!- Utfr Tumi) Thnnsanil I illkrralt ' . . Omaha National Transfer Million and "! ibieir, i.o.i.rd i .he ' A Movine Picture of Wonder at Fif n tea mm lain ! 1 nan uasu. i - ARMED GUARDS PROTECT MONEY! The f l.nc'iirh prisons ; m. If 1 ", contain ntorc tna Incident Dri'ari tn Mar thr Mor't:ic convict population inrnl Irani the tlld llank Rnllat ins l thr Nfw Muirlrri of thr Hank. Tvrr re 11 million dollars? No.' Too bad then, because.- ou missel our chance this afternoon. The Oriuibu .National bank tjlinlv curt lt d a tool inlllion up the alloy troin 1 I'll tecnth 1 luimitcs. I. ut if me Andaman iv'-iiu- on l'l -t aMy cm teds JO.'"", anil yet is Ui ait intents and piii p-t s on-' cici inuus WJol, uaith-d on every title- b leagues ol .- Iia ; k -1 11 I t 1 1 l n ;i tct. 'am Andaman inlands 1 1 r in t.te i " i f of I lentil, hIjo. n K miles fioin Calcutta and Ki from KanKoon. Tney ni-ir otlKin.Tll ! Innahlie.d l a trlin- of small lil.irk pt oplc. teen Cents a Mile. BLUNDERS OF THE BUILDERS DIKfrfnrn In .auKr I out act T ft err t hanar r 1 ar I'n luht and I'mtrnicr Tariff Hit ..f Maht. 'd.iv ix ho lemrtnlter the ' to Seventeenth streitn anil tin- money is now I !1V ""'' and treacherous t i a dcntce. and nestling alone side of .y0.on) more, w Inch , 1 " '" was conveyed up the alley lrldav evening "' unlu-!: ship that happened t The I I.OK'.oOO a kept to meet current I u tt a upon Hip ihlckly wooded whores, business demands Saturday morning, but j Thi w.i one or the reasons wbv t.ic no ono wished to borrow a million, j Islands v.c-te pi. ked nut so Ioiik bim a-, v hose credit n good for that sum. the '"''' trr a penal "Ulometit. Hut after a money liai been transferred to the vaults j few years the unhealthy illuiate and con- Tin; elders of t jubilant note ttvit ll.e I'nited State w 'nn the "shores of the I Aland - nnd the la Ifi were Joined with uncos o: ere'i. tiilrtv-ninc vrars aco. can ni"ni v, the line is run at a los. And till its f.rlglit iste? are cut in haf will the real be of any p-artital use ha te er. It sc. ms tVit all efforts have been i mi plovpil to ihfer that hnppv lav. Tiom:i liie IT'.ilian and Atiienttnian roads !:ac siloptnl the Sp.inl'i aause. the Ttans. Andean is nun h narrower. Con-eqncntI ou mii?t ciiance rr twice in froliiK f' nm ocean to ore.n. S. inut f'etiih.t. At the frontier the customs insocctor-i hold up tie train three hours. A'l in all. thi st'eUhes out the trip to tnirt-e'nht horn p. A transcontinental train starts from each terminus In the tnornlntf three limes a week atul reaches lis il.-s (nation late tue pntnraifii li'.roiiRnuui ..p :n the new quarters. Also Ilil.onO.'KM or tll.O'O.tvj In securities was shipped up t li street. Ktjnt. trouble with the imilv settlement to bo abandoned. In IKu tho government of India caused tl Idk da . Uonilerfol Mi-rnerj. Thus far ti'.e passenger i'ftce been St nth Ampri'ar.a artists. rerbaps. and the jieople of Chile atel AtKetitln.; fin'bners of rural splendor, but so thorouchl tbi completion of a railroad ovir the Andes j familiar with their countiy that they never mo'jntains. D ouble to look out the t ar w ItuIow . Ve:, The railivad was formally opened last I Rood liemvena! w hat aeiier ! And what a April, and then eauie a South American in ana eating tue new o, r.iy ar,,roclate thrills fell and rxires-cd r.e i b.-i I ,. throw wa- . ctuallv. the rnstam-e l"- i al iay loutnex . As you to up. ad eet'cciai'x when on have p isel tile 7.l-foo( h rl. oil feel a Mrat'ne sensation. Nion rows more ai ut--. The air W thin i ilcer and won drous1' lsht. It pvoibues a sort of In- ' toxlcation. a delicion sni - et tiso t.iat :1s ahs lutel oluptuous. ' At IMi'-nte b-l incu, whiih is s-i named , because of a natural bridge worn in the rock b the tnM-ont. tlte road becms I" ilnmber al-'iia up the mountainside to t'.ie Cumbre tunnel. Coming; out. on bid farew ell to grand j horizons. You enter a goro, at .he ot ! torn of which r ais the AconcaBoa. a slieam that run all foaming. Yo.i fol low It all the wav to los Andes. ie pic Itute has chfiiged completely, though Its ' alit red rharactcr Is no Ies tiirilling In Us grim severity. klrllna thr t llffs. Here the railway runs along the very face of an almost perpendicular cliff, and lOiuisMs foi- some J""! miles i.t new ra-1- w.ixs, EiiHiHtiteed b tie state, and toe liini'pal se. lions of the Chilean iailwav sxsteni are soon to be electrified j And In no u-spect need Chile i-nvy the best fa voted countries. What ihaim on earth is nunc thrilling than the "Soldier s leap.1" A few bouts from there, nature j snubs beneath the softest and sweetest of southern skies. So that really the day d'eam cher'shed on the shore of the I'm- fie is neither so foolish nor so ambi tious a ni ght at fitst appear. WHAT WOMEN ARE DOING. It went up In expiess company wason. euImIiioI the great mutiny, found th.H it tnov Ins: pen t h tnre of II The express company furnished it couple of drivers and the police department sent along two plain clothes men for each wafon. in t!io Interest of the eternal verities it may not be said they were armed to the teeth, and while one renreta this departure from conventional expression, tlio truin must prevail. Ti.a armament Hupp :J ehort at the shoulder from which revolver hostlers weru strapped, other revolvers In hip pockets and sawed off tdioiguns. which were worn on th bias acii'ss the knees completed Iho arsenui of t-uch man unless a toothpick, which oue driver chewed be deemed the eipilvab nl ot the kntfu held In lh teeth. n I ulovsraid liicltlenl. Tiie trip up town was vvlthou: untovvaid incident and the money was bestowed In the vaults under direction of Vice President Wltllain Wallace, who na the most un concerned niuu present. A million Is not Just uu uivy bagitello to Mr. Wallace, but IIh transfer under heavy guard cojld scarcely b- a matter of worrlinctil to the inun who durltiK lite civil war tarried Just by himself $l5D,mn In paper money from louisvlllc, Ky.. to Columbus, O. Also recently Mr. Wallace waa In the vaults of the Chemical .National bank, of New York and an official of that tiank handed Mm to bold for a minute a neat little bundle about two human hands high which contained exactly 5,i.n. OUOv. No bill In this paekme was less than I10,(XX. fco Mr. Wallace, while not exactly blaae as rt-Rarus money, could scarcely be expected to throw any throes over this transfer of 91 .&M.000 In cash. The Omaha, National moved Its books and papers during the afternoon and will open for burlness Monday morning in Its new home. The public is invited to Inspect the new qunrtera next Wednesday. WOMEN V0TEAS EXPERIMENT Hero Man Observed Some Fanny Incidents at the I'lMsbursj; lloolbs. There were many amusing incidents of the women's experimental voting Monday In Pittsburg. reLatea the Pittsburg Ills patch. At the noon hour a young woman who had evidently been coached by ome Impossible brother came and Insisted on voting, but with the understanding that she be permitted to substitute the name ot liana Wag-ner aa her choice for governor. Not only waa the privilege of voting for the "Flying Dutchman" denied to this young woman, . but ahe did not get the right to vote at al Just for being frivolous. At another time five or six women came back to the polling place together and asked to have another look at their ballots, saying they had forgotten tho name of the man they voted for and they would surely be questioned at home. All day long tea and cake were served In the American ln-poslt and Trnst company building, w here votes were cast. Motor car moved merrily at n'l hours Irving to get out the vole. The totali would seem to Indicate, however, that the average Pittsburg woman la not ready to vote. The first vote of the day for governor was cast by Mrs. Mary I-ove. 75 jeais old. A blunder by some one made trouble In the fashionable Kaat Knd district. Mon day, as always, many fashionable women refused to get up before noon. They had sent word they would not open the polla until after noon. Some persona announced In the morning paiers that the polls would open at o'clock In the morning and there was a great scrambling In the Kast End lust about that time. A acore of women tried to get Into the polling places, but the election officers refused to come and open the polls. While most of the early bird voters r turned home In disgust others motored downtown to the main polling place and cast their ballots there. had on lis hn.ulK thousands of dangerou cb.iiii'ii i a for whom there was not even room In local pilsons. It was determined to chip thi in to the Andnmans. and In the following year the Pott lilalr penal Mt-ttle-tm nt w;is once more established. Today the Andaman Islands, which have an area about cpial to that of Devonshire, uro almost tnlirely rettled by convicts who an- brought touettiei- front every part ol our Indian empire. You rind there CIukii le.so inuidercrs. Uuimese l'acults. HenKa.ee scJltloii-moni;ers, and fierce Hillmen from Ine wilds of tho nighty Himalayas. The Krcut l.-land prison Is not only the larftst In the world, but in many reFpoct tho best. The object In view is to reform the criminal and turn him Inln a slcllhd laborer or art's.m. l"or the firs! six months of his seiiti nee n prisoner does "separates." Just as he does In Kngland. lie works uletie In bis cell, under a rigid regime. Then. If he has behaved himself, he is stnt to a station, where he vorls with a ganst under the direction of expert officials, nnd for a year and a half does hard and unpaid lubur. but Is well ?cd, housed and cared for. If hla condurt Is satisfactory he now inters on lather lighter labor, for which l.e receives' a small 'amount of p.iy. He can use this to buy luxuries, or to put In tho savings bank. At lust, after serving ten years, comes n big change In his condition. He gets a tlcket-of-leave. If he has a wlfo ho can now send for her, if ho Is a bachelor be cm get permission to marry. The women convlcte are kopt on another Island. The Would-be benedict, havln; made his proper application to the authorl ln. Is ferried over thero on a Saturday afternoon, and finds the Indies who desire to procure htmbands drawn up In a long bnc. Ho walks past, and seeing one who ti kes bis funcy. points her out and says: "I like her looks. I'll have her please." Ten to one ohe Jumps nt the chance. Put If Bho objects and nays; "No. he's an ugly fellow, nnd I don't like tho looks of him." tho tlcket-of-leave man hns lo try nciln and make a second choice. Pc-nmon's Wee'iC'y. field for the sportsman! winter, with its row blockades mid count- I The configuration of the rocks makes le.-s other troubles piled up o.v. the rpw I tbf summits easily accessible. And during mountain the. Hut tie sieiurv I differ-'"0 mini season ine general neigni or in. hav Inn I n,.-. iti, -iirriiiini - i Its t..-.-n i I crests does not expose the tourists to ligorous cold At many points aulonio bl'ing would be possible, even easy. These lovely solitudes are waiting for the visitor, and when an inquisitive tourist ventures that way he has no difficulty In believ ing that all these marvels were created for him alone. The trip from Mendoza to Juncal. for in stance, offers spectacles never to be for gotten, even though one has long known the most famous acenery In Switzerland. Leaving Buenos Ayres. you travel all day through endless, dusty, monotonous plain, spend a night in a comfortable bunk, and reach Mendoza at dawn. There you take the Trans-Andean train. At the start, it skirts the city, then runs at the foot of h'lls covered with vines and fruit trees, and courses through vallevs, made fertile by an Ingenious system of Irrigation. As It climbs higher, you look out upon the Argentinian pampa. which keeps spreading wider and v.bbr. lis horizon melts awny like the horixon of a misty sea. When you raeh the flank Of the CoYdil lerns, the picture suddenly assumes a huge splendor. You look down upon a superb landscape drowned In the vapors of morning. An lair Gaah should be covered with clean bandages sat urated with Bucklin's Arnica galve. Heals burns, wounds, sores, piles. 2bo. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. A WOMAN OF MANY CLUBS Membership la One tlandr4 Oraanl satioaa the Olstlnctlon of a ew Yorker. ;id. the count rv , the neeomniodations and the fare i o-nes from a r-'rem-h correspondent, translated by the Hoston Transcript. The w rltr says: "The r ad shortcut) th ciiitance across the rontl-inent from twelve to two days, abolishes the route through the Straits of Magellun and opens a new realm to the tourist. I "Tl e bllilililisr of the rosd thrnnuh Arcrpn- f Una was easy, compared to the work on the Chilean side, as the former section fol lows gradual slopes to the entrance to the International tunnel, which la at an alti tude of nearly le.OOl feet. The tunnel Itself is nearly two utiles long. "Now the altitude of 10.000 feet is start ling, and people who admire sheer feets of engineering e 111 admire this successful stroke. Nevertheless, ahe tunnel, proposed and rejected, would have prevented the danger from nvalancbes. HeshlcK. the wagon road, though open only nine months a year. Is more audacious than the sky high tunnel. It crosses the divide at tin altitude t-f rear 1.1,000 feet. At that point of the frontier, there has been erected a colossal statute of Christ the Uedeemer to commemorate the settling of a dispute be tween the two countries by King Edward In 190T You realize, of course, that a road at such an altitude Is extremely precarious. So the railway, however Imperfect you may call It, represents, great progress. ProhibMlvr Fares. ' Hut how Is the railway to pay for Itself? Local passenger traffic amounts to prac tically nothing, while the fares are almost prohibitive. It was built solely for the rich. A gentleman who is willing to pay $400 for a pasnage to Europe won't stick at paying. $70 for u railway ticket, even If he knows he is being gouged. For the fares are really ridiculous. From Santiago you pay 16 cents a mile, while if you go third class (they call It second! you the still paying more than what a first class tariff would reeiulre In any other country on earth. And your baggage In volves new and more shocking extortion. Hecause of these rates, no Chilian goes to Mendoza by the railway, nor does any Argentinian go to Chill, instead of mak- Mar a .Mitchell, professor pf ast-ononw at Yat-sar college, has had an ohservatorv reeled in her honor al Nantucket. Thccitv governments of I'ublin. (llasgow. l'nnilee and North Herwiek have id unanimously to petition Parliament In favor of the pending woman suffrage bill. l'r. lidith M. Hall has returned lo her duties In Mount Holvoke college after snendinn s;x months in the work of e- the slight Jutting ridge that supports the nloraiion In Crete. Miss Kmlly lloffineter roadbed Is scarcely iiercenttoie Heneat h i a ml Miss Hernlce Cortland have been at - .1. io .,,. -ui, ! pointed as her asslalanls In the enormous slab of fallen rock. The train spins from tunnel lo liinnel with a merrl- tnent that takes vour breath away when I what obstacles have been over- The Mountain limit. Then the road turns abruptly, and yon der looms the range of the Cordilleras. You have seen the last of the plain. You have already gone up 3.000 feet and more. From here onward, the light Is dazzling, so bril liant that the eyes cn hardly bear it. The snow-clad summits of the nearer moun tains gleam with a blinding Intensity and reflect all the colors of the rainbow. And still the train la climbing, climbing. Now the volcano Tupungato tosses Its head 13,000 feet into the clouds. And hero are the ranges of the Penltentes. watched over by fantastic stone colossi that sadden the valley with their purple mass. Next appears the summit of the volcano Aconca gua, more than 21,000 feet high and one of the giants of the Andes. P.ut. despite their appalling elevation, these crests are so clearly seen through the limpid, glowing air that they appear to be only a stone's art de partment. The State Federation of Women s Clubs of Michigan voted two to one In f avor of woman suffrage at Its annual tneet'ng recently held In Hattle Creek The resolu- Here even the steeadlest heads go it ion favoring votes for women was intro- IlllCeil last year 111 llie I eoei n i.ou mrruim and tabled to await until this year, when each delegate came instructed to vote for or agalnt It. Miss M A. Smeelon of the Toronto (len- M ss M. S. Kundte of St Hart holomew s hospital. London, nave Inst won the Isabel Hampton llobb scholar ships nt Teachers' college. Livingston scholarships were won bv Miss Kane I'me awa of St. Margaret's school. Tokio. anil Miss lorothv I'jiton of Chihuahua. Mexico. The fellowships and scholarships In Teach ers college now number sixty-two. A g.rl of six In Melbourne may be one of the musical wonders of the age. Iter name is Vlda Mauley nnd tOie reloices In a sort of cactus peculiar to the I throat unutue In Its formation. Doctors iano musicians w no iuie rxwniineo in.- child are amazed to find that her throat Is different from that of any other human being. When she was 2 years of aire she suddenly started warbllnir like a canary. hiiiI ever since has retained at command tlv-- eeuhar t'ovver. Now she trills I he a T- 'til also, and sings like no other 1 on'strcss. according to d. snatches li .1 - .iioiirne. As yet she ha not been . si i by anv publicity and warbles awav cheerfully and unconsciously. Her parents are not in the least musical and have a number of equally unmus'ca' children. you reallz rente. dizzy. And this sensation only Increases during the descent, when in two hours you plunge fi.i feet down Into the vnlley. This part of the road Is among those most difficult to build. At Rio Hlanco cral hospital and twenty-elgh corpses were recovered from the Aconcagua In a single week. From the Por tills station you see a lltltts lake that gleams like an opal. This Is the 1-agnna del Inca. enclosed as in a cup, within the narrow valley. A little filrther down, the rucks begin to be covered with a timid vegetation, it grows bolder. Soon It becomes luxuriant. And you see gigantic "kigcos" a Andes lifting their spiny stems elubteen feet In the air and all flaming with scar let blossoms. You might believe joiiraclf racing through tome wlerd, antediluvian landscape. Then nature grows Jolly. Though there were no birds in those high atitudes, these are birds in good plenty bete. The trees are alive with them. And villages appear, with primitive carts rumbling slowly through their streets. In the plain, you begin to see Irrigation canals, evidence of the most advanced farming methods. And now you reach Chile. The Glad Hand. The amiability of the first Chilean offi cials you come in contact with makes you fall In love wit tithe country, for those cav alleros of the customs service have charm ing' manners and welcome travelers most graciously. They are studying their roll of affable hosts, which they mean soon to play when their beautiful country has be come a favorite rendezvous for tourists. For this is Chile's daydream. She aspires one day to attract the elite of all the world to her shores and mountains. She Is get ting ready to welcome them and to make travel easy and agreeable. She remembers, not without pride, that in 1S49 she built the first railway in South America. Since then, she has tried to keep ahead of all her neighbors In this respect, and now she is more than ever determined to lead them. A few days before he left his country, never to return. President Montt placed D B ui F (Uitx r Sanatorium This Institution Is the only ona In the central wont with separata buildings situated In their own atnplo grounds, yrt entirely dis tinct and rendering It possible to classify cases. The one building being fitted for and devoted to the treatment of noncontagious and nonrnental dlsoaaos. no others be ing admitted. The other. Rest Cottage, being designed for and devoted to the exclusive treatment of select mental cases, requiring for a time watchful cars) and spe tial nursing. M Thst Awful Gas Did you hear It? How erohr rassinji!;. Thesestoraach aoiwftamake you wish you could sink through the floor. You imagine evryoti hears thetn. Keep ft box of CAS CARBTS in your purse or pocket and take part of one after eating. ' It will relieve the stomach of ga. tn, CASCARBTS lOo a bes fee a is rreatniOTit. AildrtMrslsts. BtsvaetsaUer In the world million bosaa a aMatk, ESP"" A BEE WANT AD will rent .ial vaoant hoa frrf those Taoaat rooma, er somr boarders en short not.oa, at ver? small eoat ta you. Try It. The greatest crisis In ft woman's life Is when first she becomes a mother. All the physical strength of her nature is demanded at such times, and it is necessary that her system he thoroughly prepared for the event, in order that her health he preserved for future years. Mother's Friend Is woman's safest reliance; it is a medicine for external use, composed of oils and other ingredients which assist nature in all necessary physical changes of the system. Its regular use before the coming of baby prepares the muscles and tendons for the unusual strain, aids in expanding the skin and flesh fibres, and strengthens all the membranes and tissues. Mother's Friend lessens the pain and danger at the crisis, and leaves the mother in such healthful con dition that her recovery la always rapid and natural. Mother's Friend Is sold at drug stores. Write for our free book for expectant mothers. BBADFIELD EEQULATOR CO., Atlanta, Oa. Mother' LS Some women belong to one club. A few belong to many clubs. Only one In afl the world belongs to 100 clubs. This woman is Mrs. William Todd Helniuth of New York, one lime president of Sorosls and the State Federation and at present active In a dozen different ot ganlxatlons. There are people who might think mem bership In 100 clubs was an empty glory. For tin- benefit of these It may be as well to explain that the collection of insignia which Mrs. Helmuth sometimes wears on a broad, white sash, has been valued at llO.jne. The l-orosis medal alone a letter S." made entirely of diamonds must be worth about MO. The last club of which Mrs. Ilelmuth was made an honorary member, thus completing the even 1". Is the Svdney Women's club of Australia. The reverberations of this crowning glory bad sent a New York World reporter forth to see lier and hear about It. "But the medals nre worth far more than flO.OOa to ine." she explained, "and the knowledge 1 have gained through my club lift Is worth more than the medals." "Win; has club life taught you?" I aaked. "TIiitu things. Club life has taught me the value of tsentlenetts, generosity and Juslioe. And the greatest of these Is jus- flee. Almost anyone tan be- gentlo or gen-' emus, if they only try. but it means some thing to be Juet. One of the best things that can happen to a selfish, self-centered woman Is Ij Join one of our good modem c'.ubs. "The club teaches her restraint-mat there are other opinion In the world as worthy of connhlei atlun a her own. It tacbes her to listen !u what other women have to say. Club life Is one of the few broadening Influences a sheltered women luav have" SHE KNEW ALL ABOUT MILK Massachusetts Woman's "acceae Founded oat One Pare Bred Jersey Calf. Her husband says their troubles all started when some kind soul promised his bride at the wedding a pure-bred Jersey calf. The scene Is now the famous Wnrelands dairy at Norfolk, Mass.; the principal actor Is Mrs. Charlotte Harrell Ware, who has achieved two notable results. Her inter esting dairy is the furthest fling yet made toward solving the clean milk question, and her unique summer school Is the first and only thing of Its kind in the country. Some time ago, when a school teacher, relates Human Life, Mrs. Ware had her dream about "a life In the open." On her marriage she purchased Warelands. which her ancestors had owned In colonial days. The picturesque homestead, built In 17u3. she restored, and then, wltn "that pure bred Jersey calf" she started In to make her dreams come true. The story is too long for the spinning here, but Mrs. Ware's farm became In time a large milk producer and she herself became the pioneer In the fight for clean milk. It was she who pro posed and put through the "certification'' idea which the state of Massachusetts has adopted, and the product of Warelands was the first to be "certified." Her summer school Is the latest develop ment. This year students were present from Harvard, Wellesley, Clark, Corti"ll and the Carnegie Technical schools, stu dents who were specialising In milk as one of the most Important funds affecting pub lic health. This, of course, is one of the most vital problems of the times, con nected as It Is with the great question of Infant mortality. For six happy weeks, under Ideal out-of-door living conditions, the students cover all the aspecta of the milk problem, chemical, physiological, eco nomic, social. With Its camp-fire ts'.ks, its excursions, Its spirit of fellowship; Its piopaganda of tying culture and country work together, the thing smacks atti ac tively of Arcadia, of Brook Farm, of "where are you going, my pretty maid?" etc: IT It lAHKSCflVIM Oil w E offer for this week specials for which the purchasing public can be truly thankful. Articles of unusual value and merit, at prices and on terms that are within the reach of all. A Special Thanksgiving offer of Dining Room Furniture. A handsome china closet, a very massive sideboard, an excellent extension table, serviceable rug and six solid oak dining room chairs, each offered on unusually low terms of $1.00 down. We want you lo open an account with us and make special indurements in order that you will do so. TREATMENT WHI!H HAS KEVER YET FAILED Kvery Vm of Liquor Drinking litis IWii Hurcessfully Treated. 'I ha Harky Head to Tillr. "loes Mile cjtpcit to marry tna cuunl T' "Not immediately There ara three vUct ions lo b; set fed first." What arc they?" ' "He must i-rove that he Is a count." "Well. II. ul would settle It. wouldn't It?' ' o Ho must also prove that he isn't atari led " We!!?" "Then he must prove ttiat ha wints to marry Marie." Cleveland Plain Lx-aJr. In t lie beautiful cily of Omana at 1502 South Tenth St.. is the home of the Neal Three Hay Liquor Cure, which 1 known far and wide as tha most successful treatment In tho world for all form., of drunkenness. Just think of It'. The Neal . treatment has never yet failed In a single case to make a eura and It never will, for it Is a perfect antidote for alcoholic poisoning and alcohol la Just as deadly a poison any of the strong acids, only It acta more. slow ly. Of all tha liquor cures kix the Neal la the only one thst claims, even, to make u cure. In three days' time, and without hypodermic Injection or In- Jurlo'ls drugs. il makes no difference how patient baa been drinking, l ow how little, or what be drinks, the ichuII la always the fume. Not only Is all era .. ; Ing for alcoholic drink colnplrt'y ties- Iroyt-d but In addition Hie patient a r.io- ; Idly restored, mentally and ph alt-ally to I a normal stale. Tha Institute in this illy lias been taxed lu i's full capacity during recent 1 mouths and to take care of Iti lucreu,lng number of patients, a branch Neal Insti tute lias been established at Grand Island, Nek., In chargti of lr. Wm. I', putun, who a ree-ogulxed nt one of toe leading physicians of this slate, where the Mime li-ealineiit and uccoiuudat lona csn be secured us at lite patent or head i C i) gg sPecial increments in order that you will do so. MlilJiifalM flRsiff Our Terms ' -ttt Our Prices $P iS a"e'" ciHfc'"1"" iiri ii- f IJJJLLJU UiU: Thaothe Than the fall f. M VmfQM Easiest Wffl Lowest Sgp Chairs g I China Closet This Rug C ioro i iw u ' long the (fa much or , i:, Kiactly like lllus trat Ion, made of selected quarter tawed, richly fiiilshed In golden or early English; lias removable shelves and largo mirror on top, bent doors and ends. An unusual value at oit Thanks giving SHU' price KH. DO Ibiiwi anil I.H) a .Mt.nl li. $16.95 A set of six of those ex cellent quaner-i--aweil oak chairs, upholstered In gen uine leather our full box stat construction ai tliu ridiciilout-ly low nricp, Bel ,-if si- . . . 1.(M Hovmi aii! ftl.uo Moiillily. S17.50 A large room-size Kras sels rug. A production of t lie best mills in the coun try. The colorings are guaranteed as well as its durability. O-ir Thanks- glviiiR aale price .... DII.IIO llimn ami 8 1 ,H a Monlli. g This Ex tension Table $13,50 Mado of selected j t; u rt e J' savved o:il:, liai l.'.-ituh circular top, finished in rich golden or early him lirili; easily a aiuc; our ThauliB givinK sule price Ml. Oil Hum n and t.llO Monthly $12.75 D N!"G fa ROOM CHAIRS This, inatjuif iieiil eiiair. made of Feinted quuner tavv.'l cak It i on i;l.oiil. nrd upholstered In I he In nt grade of i;euiilno leather, has full box hi hi. French finished in tally Kiiclish golden i;tr'.'';'..S21.50 !. 1 ow ii ami l.r,( Mmit lily M This Sideboard is made of M'-lee'cd quartcr MRwed oak an I finWhed lu rich golden, lilted .villi large. Kreneh bevel mirror, linen drawer and lare drawer for sihf .wnre; .j,,,- p ,;rv;1:,K..i.SlB.75 iH.liO I low ii anil Ijil.OO Monthly. 8 I 1513-15 Howard St. 1513-15 Howard St. 1