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THIS MEANS YOU DURING ALL THIS HUBBUB AND UPROAR, WHILE THE OMAHA FAIR and GRAND ARMY BOYS ARE HAVING A GOOD TINE, Just Take a Few Moments for a Rest and a Ride and Call at the Real Estate Office of E. T. GADD & SON 1923 Farnam-st., Omaha. And They Will Furnish You a Horse and Carriage to .Examine All the Property You May Want to Look At. They will take special pains to drive you to South Omaha, and show you a City that will surprise you. | REMEMBER, ETERYTHING IS FREE. ECHOES FROM THE ANTE-ROOM News and Gossip ofr the Various Secrot Orders of the State. THE INSTITUTION OF MASONRY. Doings of the A, O U; W.—The Order of R. O.—Items frem the Odd Fellows — Geme Pyth- lan News. The BEE is desirowa of making this column one of interest to the members of the secret orders of this state. To this end it is urged upon the officers and members of the different organizations to send in, each week, items which may be pertinent and of interest to their rspective orders. The Olaims of Omaha The position of supreme kecper of records and seals of the order of Knights of Pythians was made vacant by the re- cent death of Hon. R. E. Cowan, of St. Louis. This position is a very important one, and the permanent location of the office is & matter which will be carefully considered. This prosperous order is to-day not confined to certain and lim- ited sections, So thoroughly has it pros- vered that from a geographical center of the United States a line can hardly be drawn in any direction but what it will terminate in the Castle hall of a prosperous lodge of this order. Itis apparent therefore, that a position so important as the 8. K. ot R. and 8.,and one with which every lodge in every jurisdiction may have at some time direct business relation,should be lo- cated at apointas nearthe great Pythian center as is possibleto select. In deter- mining upon a point, it is us natural as itis just that the labors of that locality for the good of the order should be. taken into thoughtful consideration. The achievements of asection, which in spite of serious difficulties and embarassments, have been little less than unparalleled in the history of any secret order, have a right to be recognized in a substantial mauner. In selecting among the many willing places a permanent location for this office, the claim of Omaha, the central city of the United States, could not be passed idly by,but on the contrary would be certain to be met, 1f properly pre- sented, with the most serious and thoughtful consideration. Of all the cities of the unioa where Pythian ranks have swelled and pros- pered, there is none in which the growth and progress of the order has been as reat and comgluta as in the city of maha. The fact and, history of " this firowth is to no one better known than to the powers that be in Pythian circles. The position.of S. K, of R. and S. will soon be filled and the office permanently located. The strong, claims of Omaha must be presented soon to be successful, and if presented in, a proper manner there is no reason why Omaba should not secure the office. Inthe army of Pyth- ians in Nebraska there are veterans in the cause every way worthy of the honor and fully capable of discharging its im- portant duties, By those who appreciate the requisites for this position, the ability of none is held in higher estcem than that possessed l;¥ E. E. French, grand K. of R. and S. of the order in Nebraska. In the en- dorsement of Mr, French, the knights in Nebraska would be thrice armed, claim- ing recognition on the achievements of their jurisdiction, the location of their city and the sterling qualities of their candidate, The Institution of Masonry. The institution of Masonry is said to be the parent of sccret societies, and its claim to this distinction has perhaps never been refuted. It is undoubtedly true, as claimed by those who have mvestigated the mysterious chambers of the order, that a true Mason is as near a verfect man as is possible for mortal to be. The teachings of the order are not unknown to the world. They tend to elevate and sustain weak humanity, and have done as much to promote the cause of christian excellence as any sect or institution in existence. Bound by ties unknown to those of outer worlds, their members are stimulated to earnest labor, not alone in behalf of each other, but as well to suffering mortals wherever they be on the great path of life, Only in part can the stranger without appreciute the instruction within; only 1n a small degree can he knew the value of those lessons and the sublimity of those rinciples inculcated on human minds rom the entered apprentice to the highest round of the Masonic ladder. But like all principles and teachings which tend to ennuble mankind, these, the heritage of Masonic origin, shine brightly forth, illuminating the path of ilgrims of the outer world, and teach- ng them that the instruction and princi- ples imparted within those gates are those which make strong men of weak mortals, To the entered apprentice who is just starting on his voyage through Masonry, the path must surely appear long and diflicult, but it is said tie sparkling gems, finlhered h{ the wayside, toeming with istorical information and lessons of truth and right, do much to wipe away the tediousness of the journey; and as step by step he penetrates the bezuties of those portals, his thirst for greater re- search increases; his appreciation of morality and truth is thorough; his knowledge of the duty of man to man complete. And when he ascends the Inst m\rlh}y round in Masonic temples, with gratification he can look back upon a well-spent life; a career which has amply fitted him for the presence of the Master of the universe. Briefly stated, THE ORDERS _IN ¥REEMASONRY are as follows: The symbolic degrees which are conferred in the blue or sub- ordinate lodge, which ¢onsist of the entered apprentice, fellow craft and master masons. The Chapter is the next finde of advancement, and confers the egrees of mark, past and most excel- lent masters, and the royal arch degree. By some_this is considered the summit of ancient Masounry, The Council, which confers the degrees of royal and select master, is the next step, and ie followed by the Commandery or Knights Templars, which is known as Chivalric Masonry. An interesting his- tory is given of this order. It originated in the eleventh and twelfth centuries, when the piety or superstition of the period induced many people to visit the Saviour’s sepulcher at Jerusalem. Many of these devotees were defenseless, and to ward off the hordes of Arabs, who, after the capture of Jerusalem by the Christinns, continued to infast the sea- coast of Palestine and the road to the cn[ivn-l. in 1118, nine knights formed a military brothe,hood and entered into a compact to aid each other in defending the Dll*l‘iml in their passage to the hol; cit; 'wo of these knights were Hugh de Payens and Godfrey de St. Aldemar, but the names of the other seven are now unknown. The youngest of the Masonic orders is THE SCOTT/SH x} over which a conglderab ¥y controvers; Lus been had of late. . his order was instituted in 1801, and ite bodies are s follows: The Lodge of Perfection, of which the degrees are seoret master, perfect master, inlimate secretary, pro- yost and_fudge, intendant of the build- ing, elected knight of the nine, illustrious eleot of the fifteen, sublime knights elect of the twelve, grand master architect, knight of the ninth arch or royal arch of Solomon, grand elect perfect and sub- lime Mason, council of princes of Joru« salem, knight of the east, prince of Jerusalem, chapter of Rose Croix, knights of the eust and west and Prince Rose Croix, council of Kadosh, grand pontiff, rand master of symbolic ?o«lru, loachiti or Prussian knight, and knight of e royal axe, or prince of Libanus, chief of the tubernacle, prinee of the tabernacle, knight of the brazen serpen prince of mercy, knight commander of the temple, knight of the sun or prince adept, grand Scottish knight of St. An- drows and knight Kadosh, The Con- sistory embraces the inspector (n?u(sllor commander and the sublime prince of the royal secret. Probably to no one 18 the Masonic fra- ternity indebted for valuable information on the history of the order more than to Dr. Mackey, who in his ‘‘Encyclopedia of Freemasonry" suys: ‘‘Years ago I was led to place the organization of Freemasonry, as it now exists, to the building of King Solomon's temple. Many years of subsequent research have led me to modify these views. I cannot find any incontrovertible evidence that would trace Masonry, a8 now organized, beyond the building corporations of the middle ages. 1n this view I speak of it only as an architectural brotherhood dis- tinguished by signs, words and brotherly ties which have not been essentially ehnngcu, and b; sgombols and legends which have only been developed and extended, while the association has un- dergone a transformation from an ope! tive art to a speculative science. I main- tain that 1n 1ts present peculiar organiza- tion it is the successor with certainty of the building organizations of the middle ages, and through them, with less cer- tainty but with great probability, of the Roman College of Artificers. "its con- nection with the temple of Solomon, as its birthplace, may have been accidental —a mere arbitrary selection by its in- ventors—and bears, therefore, only an allegorical meaning; or it may be hi torical and to be explained by the fru- quent communications that at one time .took place between the Jows and the Greeks and the Romans, and I am in- clined to view the Temple of Jerusalem and the traditions connected with it as a part of the great allegory of Masonry. As a brotherhood, composed of symbolic masters, and fellows, and apprentices, its age may not exceed five or six hundred years; but as a secret association, con- taining within itself the symbolio ex- pression of a religious idea, it connects itself with the ancient mysteries. The body of Masonry came out of the middle ages, but its spirit is to be traced to a far remoter period."” Writers of Masonic history have attributed its origin to the 1ollowin§ sources: The patriarchal re- ligion, the ancient Pagan mysterics, the 'l‘empfe of Solomon, the Crusaders, the Knights Templars, the Roman College of Artincers, the Operative Masons of the middle ages, the Rosecrucians of the sixteenth century, to Oliver Cromwell, to the Pretender, to Sir Christopher Wren at the building of St. Paul’s Cathe- dral, and to Dr. Desaquliers and his asso- ciates in the year 1717. Dr. Mackey dis- poses of these theories in the article already quoted. The enemies of the order claim that it 18 antagonistic to religion. Dr, Mackey says on this point: ‘‘Masonry is exceeding}iy tolerant in re- spect to creeds, but it does require that every caudidate for initiation shall be- lieve in the cxistence of a God as a superintending power in a future hfe. No inquiry is m#e as to the forms of religious belief. No atheist or deist can become a member of the fraternity.’’ The order in Nebraska has prospered since its introduction here, a succinct review of which will be made hereafter. It 18 now the duty of the Knights of Pythias in Nebraska to at once put their shoulder to the wheel and secure the lo- cation in Omaha of the 8. K. of R. and 8. Mr. French will make a candidate with whom they can claim and expect suc- cess;: A meeting should be called at once of all interested and the proper steps taken to score another triumph for Pythianism in Nebraska. If a committee 18 appointed to personally visit the su- preme chancellor, who makes the ap- vointments ad interim, and that com- mittee presents the great claims of Omaha and its candidate in a proper manner, the result will be undoubtedly satisfactory. An appointment of a well qualified man from a diserving section by the supreme chancellor will without question result in an election of the same man by the supreme lodge, which meets in June, 1888, Now‘is the time to act. *u A VERY prosperous lodge of the 1. O. 0. F. is Goodrich No. 144, which meets in the hall, corner Twenlfv-fuur\h and Paul streets in this city. This lodge was instituted November 9, 1886, and has met with wonderful success sines its organiza- tion. The lack of accommodation for such assemblies in that portion of the city prompted the members to take steps toward securing a building of their own and the result of that determination has been more than satis- On Monday, August 29, contract was let an the building is to be completed by De- cember 28. ~ The structure will be u three story brick and when completed will cost $30,000. In size it will be 66x80; on the tirst floor will be store rooms; the second will be used as a public hall and the lodge rooms will be fitted up in an elegant style on the third floor. When completed this building will be a credit to the order as well as to the city. Good- rich lodge is not a large one, but its ample membership is made up of men who are devoted to their order and its interests; and the results they have ac- complished will redound greatly to their benetfit and the continued success of their lodge. 0 P CRYSTAL LODGE No. 59, 1. O. G. T,, in- stalled the following officers at their last meeting: chief templar, J. W. Munn; vice templar, Mrs. H. L. Tostevin, tinan- tial secretary, W Massey; treasurer, Miss Nellie Jenkins; recording secretary, H. L. Tostevin; chaplain, iss Nora Kendall; marshal,E. Jones; inside guard, Mrs. J. W. Munn; sentinel, Miss Lizzie Jenkins; lodge deputy, D. W. Parker. With the advent of cooler weather the interest in temperance work increases. The various good templar lodges of the city, and the prohibition club will make an effort in the coming election to poll the entire temperance vote. While they don’texpect to elect any of their candi- dates they will endeavor to show that they are strong enough to receive some recognition in the a!gm‘s affairs. s THERE ARE eighty-five lodges of Knights of Pythias in the state of Ne- braska. The representatives of these, together with the many members of the order from different” sections of the country who will be present at the meet~ ing of “the Nebraska grand lodge in Omaha, October 11, will constitute an enormous crowd. This, the first session of the grand lodge 1n Omaha will be fruught with interesting events. Six thousand dollars in prizes have been offered to divisions I:lull perfect in arill. oo Pine_Lovge, K. of P, at Long Pine, Neb,, is anxiously searching for one of its members, Henry Norris, who has diluwwurml and is thought to be deranged, Vhen last seen he wore an old stift hat faded green, a coat without vest and a checkered shirt. He loft Lon, Pine July 1. He has dark hair streaked with grey, 8 dark mustache and_blue eyes, 18 five feet mue inches high. Mem- bers of the order are requested to look out for him, and report any information they may have to Pir.m Lodge. B UMAHA COUNCIL flm 820, Amcrican Legion of Honor, will hereufter hold their meollngn every first and third Wedlnes- day at 8 o’clock p. m., at their hall, cor- hirteenth and Douglas streets, over maha Savings bank. Companions are especially requested to attend next meet- g, September 7, as business of impor- tance will be dhposgd of. w'e Enterrrisk Lovge K. of P, South Omaha had an _interesting meeting Thursday night, Upon that occasion one member was initiated 1nto the mysteries of the rank of page, and atthe same time introduced to the beauties of the armorial rank of esquire. Following this seven esquires were put through the chivalric rank of knight. Th{s is & good showing. s A COMMITTEE has been appointed by Goodrich lodge No. 144 . 0. O.F. to con- fer with the sovereign grand lodge which convenes 1n Denver, to secure the pres- ence of that body at the laying of the corner-stone_of the new hall of Good- rich lodge. If their presence is secured, the grnnd lodge will be here about Sep- tember 28, on which date the impressive ceremony will take place. 4y *"e Tae preNtc and excursion given Wed- nesday 13 the Harry Gilmore division No. 120, Order of Railway Conductors, was a perfect success. All the partici- Epnta enjoyed themselves thoruuthly. his organization will figure largely in the snciety of the coming scason, and many pleasant events will take place un- der its auspices. *y OMAHA WILL soon have another divi- sion of the U. R. Knights of Pythias. Rubezal is to be the name and the num- ber 19. This will be the tenth division in this city. This division is to be exclu- sively German, and its origin and organ- ization will be due to the earnest lal of Licutenant Auderson, of Douglas division No. 5. * * A LODGE of A. O U. W. has been insti- tuted at Harrison, Neb. A meeting was held in the district clerk’s office in that town Thursday eveninfi of last week, and the petition was signed by sixteen persons. This lodge will start with twenty-five members, all enterprisin, citizens of Harrison, and the interests of lge order will be properly cared for by them. » ™ AT ORD & lodge of Knights of Pythias 'was instituted, starting with very favora- ble prospects. Dr. H. C. Miller, James Reynard, Bert Brewster, Will Hooper, M. Cohn, Ralph Horth, H. B. Wilson, Frank Collins and G. A. Dexter, members of the Grand Island lodEe. were present and assisted in the work. *"x At THE last two meetings of George A. Custer post, No. 7, G. A. R., twenty-four recruits were mustered in. This is a pretty good showing for the old vets and with continued work at this rate the Custer post will be one of the foremost in the order. * e THE TROUBLE between the lowa Grand Lodge A. O. U. W, and the Supreme lodge of the order has been '“'1».’“1‘{ set- tles b{ngudiolal decision, in which the court hoids that, according to the rules of the order, the Grand lodge has never been suspended. = e THE FIRST public n{}pcnvance of Trojan division U. R., K. of I, was on Thursday afternoon on Cnpiml avenue. The mem- bers showed to good advantage, and Captain Spencer clearly proved his ef- ficienoy as a commn:nlinz officer. % StATE LopGE No. 10, 1. O. O. F., will on Monday evening confer the initiatory degrea on four candidates, All members should be present and witness the now excellent degree staff of this lodge confer this very impressive :legree. e ON FRrIDAY, September 9, the A. O. H, band will give their sixth annual ball at Cunningham’s hall. The affair promises to be a complete success. OrtoLe Lobee, K. of P., now lias a membership of ninety, and has increased its admission fee to §20. GRAND VICE CHANCELLOR J. B, Char- MAN, of the K. of P., was in Omaha the past week. * e DEPARTMENT COMMANDER RUSSELL of the G. A. R. of Nebraska, was in Omaba during the past week, A 1opGE of the "Ancient Order of Woodmen will be instituted at Grand Island. -‘V SPRINGFIELD IS to have a new lodge of Knights of Pythias which will soon be instituted there. A New division of the U. R. Knights of Pythias will be shortly instituted at Falls City. %, » h l{mzhls of Pythias, at ml:l! its own, a*y EvERGREEN LobGE No. 50, K. of P., of Weeping Water, gave a nic last week. D Storm Calendar and Weather Fore- casts for 1888, by Rev. Irl R. Hicks. with explanations of the ‘‘Great Jovian Period,"” upon which our Planet is now entering, mailed to any address, on re- ceipt of & two cent postage stamp., Write lainly your Name, Postoffice and State. R‘m: k. J. H. MCLEAN MEDICINE Co, St, Louis, Mo, —— Where the Best Coffee Grows. New York World: At the coffee ex- change recently several well known speculators were discussing the new boom in that market when the subject of the Mexican product came up. Said one broker: *‘Probablv the best coffee in the world is raised about Salapa, butit never reaches the markets of the United State: for the reason that it is bought up se sons in advance by resident English bu, ers for the English market. The resident German buyers contract for three or four ears in advance for crops raised in the states of Vera Cruz, To- basco, Colima, Michoacan and Guerrero. The little state of Colima has probably exported more rich coffee beans than all the other Mexican states put to- gether, and at the astounding price of 70z per pound. A friend of mine went down to try to secure some of this d cious product, even at the price men- tioned, hut he found himself forestalled by the English, Freneh and German resi- dent buyers, who watch with hawk-like glance that the letter and spirit of their contracts with the Mexican planters are carried out, even to the extent of a single vound of the bean, “Jalapa is connected with Vera Cruz by!a steel railway sixty miles long, and this country he describes as an Eden, The coffee plantations are intoresting and alwaysslope toward the east. When the plants are one year old they are transplanted into squares ten foet apart, with banana plants in between, s0 as to protect the coffee shrubs from the fierce rays of the sun. At this age they are about two feet high, and they are never permitted to attain a growth of over six feet. The plant boars from the age of three years, and unless blighted, con- tinues 1o yield up to its fifteenth’ year, when it iy usevally uprooted and sup- planted by u one-year-old sprig ““T'he leaf i olive-green in color, the blossum white, and the berry itself a peas ArorLo Long Lincoln, has a t groen. Each berry contains two bean whicn, when ripe for picking, turn mine. The average earnin, 0 year-old coffec chrubs are a plant between twelve and of age yields from §1 to “‘Lfl worth of beans yearly. Coffee is picked much a§ cotton or hops, and the peons eatn about 25 cents per dicm during the season. Up- on the eoffee &nnu\llunl bananas and castor-oil rries rased be- tween the ooffee to shelter it are sold at absurdly low vrices. Last ear the value of coffee tx rted from Vera Cruz was $1,900,000; Colima, $240, e oents, & fteen ye 000; Chinpas, $06,000; Guerr Michoncan, $153,000; Morelos, Tabasco, i«m.ooe, and Oaxaca, e Na; we don't know in New York what really good coftee is. Coffee at 70 cents a pound on the plantation would cost & nrf'uy venny here, even if we could get R —— CHURCH NOTICES. Trinity Cathedr: apitol avenue and Eighteenth street. Services to-day (Sunday)t Holy communion at 8 and 10:30 . m,; even- ing services at 7:30 p. m, The dean’s bibl class at 13:15 m. Dean Gardner whil preach at the 10:30 a. m. and 7:80 m. sel vices, Strangers are always cordially wel« come at the cathedral. Competent ushers in attendance. AttheSa. m. and the 7:30 p. m, services all seats are absolutaly free, Central United Presbyterian church, Sevs mnmmhglrwl between Dodge and Capitol avenue—Services at 10:30 o, m, and_8 p.m. Services conducted by Rev. J. N. Boyd. Weekly upmyor meeting on Wednesday even- Ings At 8 o'clock. Young veovle’s “prayer meeting on Sunday evenings at 7:15. All are invited, Park Avenue United Presbyterian Church, corner Park avenue and Grant streets— Preaching by the pastor, Rev. J. A. Hender- son. Morning service at 10:30 a.m.; evens ing servicoat 8 p. m.; Sabbath school at noon. You are invited. South-West Presbyterian Church—Corner Leavenworth and ‘Twenieth strects. Rev. David R. Kerr, pastor. Services at 10:30 a, m. and 8 p. m, " Sabbath school at 12:15 p. m. Young people’s meeting at 7:15 p. m. Geh- eral prayer mecting, Wednesday at Sp. m., Subject, *'Korea, Japan and the Japaunese in America.” Walnut Hill Cynthia Chapel—Rev. J. K. Reld will preach at 11 a. m. 3:30 p. m. Rev. R. Moffet, corresponding secretary of the enoral missionary society will wddress the hristian people of that community on the subject of an organization in that place, Al who desire to sée an organization comple are requested to be present. Dr. Moffet will preach at 8 in the evening, ‘The public ar cordially invited. Dr. ¥oy, of the Firs Christian church, will assist” Dr. Moffet in the organization. Unity Church—Seryices will be resumed on Sunday, September 11. Beth-Eden Baptist Church~Rev. H.1.. Housa pastor. Recognition services at 4:15 p. m, at St. Mary’s avenue Congregational church. Sunday school at 3 o'clock p. m. Prayet meeting Thursday evening at 8 o’clock. Strangers welcome. Presbyterlan Church, corner Dodgo and Seventeenth street—Services at \a:goxn. and 8 p. m. Ppreaching morning and even- ing by the pastor, Rev. W. J. Harsha. Sunday school at close of morning worship, Yonung people’s meeting at 7:15 p. m. North = Presbyterian Church, Saunders street—Rev. Willlam R. Henderson, pastor, will conduct service a: 10:30 a. m, and 7:50 p. m, Sunday school at noon. Young peo- le’s meeting at 6:30 p. m. ‘Herod, or the "ower of Conscience,” 18 the subject of the evening sermon, Strangers madeé welcome all the services. St Mmgr’s avenue Congregational—Rev. Willard Scott pastor. Morning service at 10:80, preaching by Reyv. Mr. Holt. Na evening service. Servico overy Sunday morning. West Hamilton Street Presbyterian Church —Preaching services at 4 p. w. by Rev. llens derson. Sabbath school at 3 p. m. Welsh Presbyterian—Services will be held at the residence of Mr. James_Grifliths, 1713 Dodue street. _Preaching at 7:30 p, m., by the Rev. D. Edwards, of Wales, Suunday school at 2:30 p. m. First Baptist Church, corner Fifteenth and Davenport streets—Rev. A . Lamar, pas- tor. Preaching at 10:! and 8 p.m, Sabbath school at 12 m. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening at 8 p. m. "All are cor- dially invited. Seats free. Sunday school will be held in the little church, ‘corner Thirty-second and Casd streots, to-day at 3 p. m, All persons living in Park Place and Hillside adaitions are in- vited to attend. Cherry H1ill Congregational Church—Ser. vices at 4 o’clock, Immudlnu-!l after Sunday school. The pastor, Rev. J. A. Milligan, hag returned from his vacation trip and will preach. The subject will be “Cuarity.” All are invited. 8, Barnabos, Free Church—Plain celebras bration at 7:30 a, m.; choral celebration at 11 & m.;even song at 7:30 p.m. A cordial welcome extended to all strangers abiding or sojourning within the city. John Wil liams, rector. —— ‘The Thompson-Houston company is making small machines spin in Provi- dence, and 18 running lathes, coffee mills and stone cutting and polishing ma- chines, The price is from $100 to $150 per year. R Germany, witha population of 45,000,000, has twenty-one universities. Our country, with a population of a little more thafl 50,000,000, has 125 universities. A SURE CURE OR NO PAY. OUR MAGIC REMEDY ‘Wi Posrrivery Cure Ann SyrRILITIO Disgases oF Recent or Lona BraNDING IN FROM Fiva 10 TN Davs, NOOTHER REMEDY ON EARTH Will in All Cases Cure This Dis¢ true Spocinc for Nt for hut never AGIC REME o that I )40 pectalist or chem years ural quiet way fn cases merora could got no very known rein- akiliful’ physicians in unecd Llese cases no fnan mist, who only' used it fn ing to his notice where hough thoroughly t edy and eniploying the {he land. wiio lisd uitima ad d orl| |1 uls purchased of his Jre have posses- nat will care & TRUR BPECIPIO—ONE THAT mployed every other kuown rem- odh Wi bemas sHOUId iv< ua & a0 cure Al noexpenac (0 patient [n any wiy. NOT FOR SALM. Il the Remedy, or sead 1t out, uader eou Uil tages of this disease st our Dis- iends et il AT W alist o1 st expert ence, If you are one' of the aMicted. These Physl clans k e mo remedy with which they 1ilie, and will, as 8 ) effect & por NTEE & CURE OB NO FAT {an will do this, You know from time (han {8 required for th any othier known remedy | wo I {nvestigation sollo: diug and veracity. COOK REMEDY CO., OMAHA, NEBRASKA. Duerxsany, Roow 11, HELLMAN BUiLbixe.