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D THE OMAHA DAILY e ————————————————————————————————————————————— CUT OFF FROM REST OF WORLD Oape Nome is Now a Frozen, Ioe-Looked Colony. 'NO MORE COMMUNICATION UNTIL MAY In Ample, How- Inbabitants Suffer from Ennul, | _Cape Nome 1s an fce-locked colony now | November G the last boat steamcd out of the bay and two days later tho frost king piaced his embargo upon traffic and cut the little community off from the rest of the world as effectually as though it were banished to one of the sister planets. As & penaity for its averice it has been ‘s up for 200 days,” yet its contrition is no especially marked; on the contrary, it Is more exclusive just now than New York's 400. Thera will be no communication with this {@utpost of civilization before the middle of next May. The government has made no provision for mail service and, unless some bardy band of natives undertake a trip southward from Nome via Skagway or some her moutheastern Alaskan point, the gold aiggers will keop thelr news in cold storage until the first ship touches there in the apring. But they will get along very well Amply provisioned and supplied with va- rlous appliances of pleasure, they will bid deflance to low temperature and there will Be sounds of revelry by night. Miss Kathryn M. Watson, 1622 Howard street, 1s the last of Omaha's argonauts to return from the Nome country. spending six months In this mecca of the morth she has come back much improved in health and with a great wealth of ob sorvatlon and experience, It not of gold, and even In the matter of preclous metal she bas no cause to be dissatisfied with her undertaking. 8he has staked out a claim on Bourbon creck and has several nuggets and little vials of dust to attest its richness. Bho says next spriog she will go back to work it. Long Ocean Voynge. “I left Omaba May 9, last, ud salled from Seattle May 24, arriving at Nome twenty-two days later. I was on board the Ohto thirty-two days in all, as we were ten days in quarantine at Egg sland after our arrival. The vessel carried 750 passongers. Our voyage was attended by no speclal incident worthy of note, save that wo developed one case of variolold and an- other of scarlet fever on the way, but the patlents were at once isolated in the lower Part of the vessel, 50 there was no danger of the disease spreading. We were com- pelled to stop for a few days at Dutch harbor, which {8 the half-way point, to permit the ive to clear away. “I was especially interested during this trip in the walrus and keal, which were observed in great numbers on the lce floes They would llo apparently asleep on the lce sald she, and, as the sun was beating down flercely, | they must have been almost roasting on one side and freezing on the other. The walrus wero the size of yearling cattle; the seal are ©f the ‘hair' variety and are not especially lued for thelr fur. For the fur-bearing seals one must go much farther north, But both these amphiblans seemed very plenti- ful. Every lceberg was crowded with them and as our vessel approached they would slip oft into the water, whence the walrus would flash thelr white tuska at us. “As to gold prospectirg In Nome, the sea- ®on of 1901 promises much more than did the one just closed. Last season every- thing, it scemed, was tied up in litigation People Tushed in and filed claims so Indis- eriminately that many Interests overlapped | were otherwise subjected to disputed ownership. Much of this chaos has been straightened out now, however, and by next | spring miners will be able to go to work without danger of being routed out by some rival claimant. The ‘excitement’ when 1 left there was tending toward Blue Run croek, near Port Clarence, elghty miles from Nome. “I staked out a claim on Bourbon creek which I have every reason to belleve con- tains pay dirt. The earth of this claim 18 called ‘tundra,’ being a mixture of rotten moss and black loam, which trembles like & bog when one walks over it. Free gold in the roots of this moss 1s separated by sluleing. Miners usually dig down from ono to fifty foet in quest of ‘pay streaks.’ Tidal Wave Sweeps Clty. °l “I was an eye-witness of the great tidal wave which swept over the lower portions of Nome City, September 13. A score or more of lighters or scows, which, laden with froight, had been towed up tho coast from Seattle and later were used for load- ng and unloading ships, were thrown up on the beach, buildings being razed and thousands of dollars’ worth of property troyed. A lMttle steamer out in the bay tossed a moment on the mountain- ke waves and then went down. Many perrons were swept into the water. It was & moment of terror, I can assure you, but still, it was not without its humorous frcidents. For instance, a man leaped into the surf and dragged to land a woman, who must surely have drowned it he hadn't come to her rescue, but instead of thank- ing him she wept and chided him with cowardice for refusing to go back and save hor ‘malimoote,’ which s & kind of dog used for hauling sledges “Another feature that Interested me was the sunsets as seen from Nome. On the night of June 15 I sat up all night to view this phenomenon and It was well worth the trouble. The sun, it seemed to me, barely passed beneath tho horlzon until it was up again and glaring flercely. It is After | oppressively hot during the day and the nights are too short to give the alr time to ccol. You never know when to get uj or when to o to bed in Nome. At mid night the streets are as busy as they are in mid-day and it never gets really dark there in the summertime. When the sun sets there I8 an hour or two of gray twl light and then, without any period of grad ual transition, it is broad daylight again | Miss Watson left Nome on her returr trip September 17, debarking on one of the first outgolng vessels. She expresses herself as highly pleased with her outing. | GOOD TIINGS FOR THANKSGIVING, 1| Valuable Suggestions to Housewives for Family Dinners. Turkey, which everywhere plays center L rush In th hanksgiving table foot ball is & good enough bird as he makes himself o may, however, be bettered in several fashions. One 18 by larding—espocially if he 1s young und to a degres overgrown Trim every trace of rust from four ounces of fat bacon, then cut it nto larding stripe two Inches long. Roll each strip in black pepper, then draw it through salad ofl ust well colorcd with musterd. Lard the breast moderately and the thighs and drumsticks both inside and out. Cut two Junces more of bacon into very small dice pepper them and mix them with the bredd erumbs for stuffing. Barely molsten the | erumbs with hot water. Stuft and tie the |body. Peel a large tart apple, core it |#tick a few cloves in it, then slip it under | the skin of the crop. Truss the bird firmly |and put in the oven, For gravy .boll the giblets tender In barely enough unsalted water to cover them. When done take up, mash fine and straln the liquor over them. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Brown a table #poonful of flour, mix it smooth in half a pint of warm claret, then add the mixture to the giblets and stir hard for two or three minutes In & bowl set over bolling wa In serving put a dab of apple on cach portion of stuffing. It one has an open fire, along with In finite pains and patience, then the Thanks |g1ving bird may be truly glorified. He |#hould not be over big, but plump and | tender. Draw, o und wash well, stuff | with dry bread crumbs ligatly dashed with | powdered sage, and lberally dotted with butter, and truss very firmly. Now thrust @ stout wooden skewer clean through, just ubove the thighs and below the wings Loop & cord over the projecting skewer euds and hang the bird where the fire will strike it full. Put a drip-pan underneath, | with an ounce of butter and a gill of claret |In it. Baste the turkey from the pan every |ten minutes. Twirl the string at each | burting 8o ms to keep the bird revolving ]lf It 18 over ten pounds in welght you |may need more claret before it s done |1e will require three to four hours' cook- 10g. The neck should hang lowest and in basting it is well to let some of the liquor {run inside. Halt an hour before serving pour a half pint of bolling water into the drip-pan to furnish gravy. Pumpkin Ple Like Mother Here 1s a pumpkin ple unlike those mother used to make. Begin by peeling and slicing two pounds of ripe, fleshy pumpkin, covering it with its own welght of sugar and setting it in the sun all day, or else In a warm place for six hours. Drain oft the sirup and mix It with its own bulk of the strongest possible ginger tea Boil and skim well, then add the strained Juice of two lemons. Boll up agaln, skim, cook five minutes longer, then drop in the pumpkin slices and let them cook slowly until cl This takes about three hours and produces a most delicious pumpkin- citron. For the ples, beat six eggs very light with three cups of sugar, one plut of rich sweet milk, one pint of stewed pumpkin, well strained, and one heaping cup of butter. Mix well, flavor with lemon or vanilla and pour into pans liued with rich puft paste. Fill them half an Inch deep, then drop dice of your pumpkin- citron all over the top. Press them down into the batter and bake. The ples may be covered with meringue, but regular frosting accords better with their taste. If a sucking pig or any sort of rcast plg 18 to make part of the Thanksglving feast, there should be fried pumpkin to accompany it. Stew sweet, ripe pumpkin very dry, let |1t get cold, then drop it by heaping spoon- fuls in a skillet full of fat from the roast Sprinkle 1t well with salt and pepper and stir vigorously over the fire until the pump- kin takes up all the fat. Serve very hot Since all stomachs will not tolerats plum pudding, here 15 a worthy substitute, ba- nana pudding. Beat the yolks of four eggs and whites of two very light, then add two coffee cups of sugar, one of creamed butter, one of stale sponge cake crumbled and one of rich sweet milk. Add the julce of a | lemon and two teaspoontuls lemon extract. Line a deep baking dish with good paste, pour in the pudding, then slice into it five largo ripe bananas. Bake in a quick oven, cover with meringue and serve with elther wine gauce or Russian sauce, which is made thus: Cream well half-a cup of butter, add a cup of sugar, the juice and grated yellow peel of a lemon and & small cup of very strong tea bofling bot. Set over bolling water and stir hard for five minutes, then put in two tabelspoonfuls of rum and stir two miuutes longer. The pudding fs rich enough for many palates without sauce of any sort. She Showed T Ch Post: The girl ¢ diplomat. 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Remembar there i no exposure, no C.0.D. or another sehemo o our doaling vith tho public: tite for m,‘;'.m’ Gharies ol man body, Our IURKEY IN TICKLISH TIMES Omaba Men Bpend Thanksgiving in Good Burroundings and IIL IEBELS INTERRUPT MAYOR MOORES' MEAL Intruders Are Served with a Shower of Bullets, However, the Feast Goea On—Murderer's Turkey Not Acceptab) Since Governor Bradford proclaimed a day as set apart to remder thanks unto the Lcrd men have eaten thelr Thanksgiving urkey In all sorts of good and evil con dition. Cltizens of Omaha have spent the lay with empty stomachs or have carved thelr wing and drumstick scarce out of range of the ememy's picket iine. Among ihe most memorable experiences. under zone on that day are related the following Mayor Frank E. Moores: “In the fall ot 1564 the good women of New York, Mas- achusetts and Pennsylvania sent Thanks giving dinners to all the northern soldiers whom they could reach. And what a dinner it was! Roast turkey, plum pudding, pumpkin ples, peach butter and other dell- cacles the half-starved soldiers hadn't seen for three years. And we ate dinner under diffioulties in the Shenandoah valley, where my regiment was at that time. 1 remember that my right arm was In & sling, rendered uscless by a rebel ball that came my way the day before. But I'll tell you how I came to get in tront of that rebel rifle. Several hundred ot our boys under the command of General Custer wandered away from camp and crossed a small stream which lay a short distance below where our tents were pitched. Meantime a crowd of Johnmies rot between Custer and our camp. That our men might get back over the creek we turned a couple of guns into the rebels and they beat a hasty retreat. But during the little skirmish a stallion ridden by one of our buglers became unmanageable and hreatened to back the boy over a preciplce I reached up to grab the horses' bridle I had scarcely raised my arm when it fell helpless to my side. Another man caught the horse and saved the boy, while I cared for a badly shattered arm, thankful that I wasn’t hurt any worse. “Well, that injured arm 414 not impair my appetite and dinner never looked so #00d to mo as when we spread those north- ern dainties out in our dog tents and started on our Thanksgiving feast. Before we had finished the first course an alarm came from the outposts and all the men grasped thelr rifles and wero ready to fight We thought that the encounter of the pre- vious day had scared all the rebels out of tho neighborhood, but now found ourselves face to face with & detachment of General Mosby's men, who had heard of the delica cles we had recelved and swooped down on us at @ time when they supposed most of the men were off their guard. Johnnies have a tooth for New England cooking, but instead of roast chicken and plumn pudding they got hot lead that day “It was at a time when the black flag was waving. Prisoners were seldom taken allve and it was remarkable how frequently guns were discharged in the hands of men who were placed as guards over prisoners Our men were not pleased at being dis- turbed In the midst of the spread and theit alm was deadly. Before the Mosby raiders could retreat a number of them were mowed down and their comrades fled with- out getting a taste of the Yankee sweet- meats. “In less than an hour the boys in blue resumed their dinmers as serencly as though nothing had happened. Celery and cranberry sauce Interested the boys more than tho dead rebels who had been im- polite cnough to disturb gentlemen at Palate for Murderer's Bird. J. J. Donahue, chief of police: *My most memorable Thanksglving was that of 1855 and it s fixed upon my memory because I came near eating a turkey that had been ordered by a murderer—or, more properly, by a man who became a murderer before he had an opportunity to eat it. It happened in Creston, Ia., fifteen years ago, when I wes & member of the police force in that town. “Al Hughes, the ‘bad man’ of the burg, and Nels Hoage were drinking Tom and Jerry in a saloon, when trouble aroso be- tween them over some trivial matter and Hongo slapped Hughes. Immediately the friends of Hoage slipped him out of the joint and were hustling him oft to a place of safety, as Hughes was notorlously ‘handy with a gun' and, moreover, it was not ex- pedient to have anything happen in those saloons that would attract the attentlon of the police, as, of course they were run- ning in violation of the prohibition law. They had walked less than & block, how- ever, when Hughes rushed up behind them with a double-barreled shotgun. ‘Nels,' he said, ‘I want to speak to you “Hoage turned, and just as he Ald so Hughes emptied both barrels of the weapon into his side. “The wounded man lived until about noon the next day, and taen, when nearly every- one clse in the city was thinking of sit- ting down to & Thanksgiving feast, he died It was a sad Thanksgiving for his family. #But I am getting ahead of my story That night about an hour after the shoot- ing amother officer and myself ar- rested Hughes and took him to Jall. Then I went home, stop- plng on my way to get a turkey I had ordered. Just as the butcher was wrap- ping up the bird, I saw him pull a tag from its legs and drop it to the floor. 1 plaked 1t up. It read: ‘Al Hughes, 1613 Mason street.’ “You see the butcher had taken it for granted that Hughes wouldn't need the turkey, be being in fail, and so thought he'd work it off on me, but I wouldu't stand for it. I made him give me another bird, which was a little more scrawny than the one Hughes had ordered, but it suited me beter.” Theatrical Record Broken, W. J. Burgess: My most memorable Thanksgiving was out in Salt Lake, when for the first time I fully realized that Thanksglving day 18 the harvest time for the theatrical manager. I had heard It stated many times and accepted it as an axiom, but I never really knew what it meant until that day. “Salt Lake is one of the best theater towns in the west, for Brigham Young ed- ucated the Mormons on the matter of the- ater-going. He built the first theater in the town and was his own architect. He waa a genius in that line and also designed the famous temple. As with the latter structure, the acoustic properties of his theater and the view of the stage are per- fect. He had the structural iron used in the building hauled by ox-teams from Omaha and the cost of the building was enormous, but it made Salt Lake as a theater town. The building is still stand- ing and is doing good business. “There was another family of Mormons In Salt Lake, Walker by name. They had troublo wi'h President Young and left the church. ~ The first thing they did to show their reseatment to Young was to build a theater. When the Gentiles came to Salt Lake this theater made a bid for their sup- port by dubbing itself the Gentilo the- ater. This was the house which I was called to manage about 1836. “The Mormon theater gave me hot com- petition until I secured the co-operation of BEE: an eastern circult which controlled the at- ractions. Then I had things coming my way. Religlous fancor by this time had subsided to such an extent that Mormons would patronize my house—in other words he show was the thing with them and they would attend regardless of the name of the theater, “Thanksglving, 1589, was one of the finest lays 1 ever saw. Tho morning was balmy and a summer zephyr stirred the pine reo tops. Many persons drove to the lake and all the town was on the streets. For that day 1 had billed Bronson How- ard's ‘Shenandoah,’ which was brought west that year for the first time by Froh- man. Business had not been very good in the early part of the season and I had no reason to hope for better things. It was late when I came down that mornisg and when 1 reached the theater I was struck ilzzy. Every seat was sold—both for mat- inee and night. When the curtaln went up In the afterncon men were standing in he alsles; when It went up in the evening women were standing In the gallery. That day was a record-breaker. I won't say how much we recelved, but it was emough to make the season look bright all the rest of the winter. Two other Thanksgiving days I have fone exceptional business—once at Creigh- ton's with ‘1492' in 1596 and last year with Modjeska; but the memorable day was when I broke the Salt Lake City record.” Hungry on Thunkegiving. J. Rush Bronson: “I wasn’t very thankful on my most memorable Thanksglving, but the next morning I was well satisfled to find that I was alive. It was in the fall ot 1895 and I was with a theatrical company which was making smaller towns in Illi- nols, The day before Thanksgiving it be- kan snowirg and turned cold. Tralns were thrown out and we missed the passenger train for our mext stand. There was only one traln a day for passengers over the road and the only way for us to get to our next point was to take one of the freights. These trains did not carry passengers, but by frequent and peremptory telegrams we finally succceded in getting permission to ake one of them. “Twenty persons, including elght women, piled Into the caboose and in our efforts to make oursclves comfortable we drove the train crew to the borders of insanity. Wo got settled about 4 o'clock in the morn- Ing. We were to arrive at our destination In the afternoon and we all went to sleep. It was about 12 o'clock Thanksgiving day when I awoke to find the nose of the engine shoved into a snowdrift and all telegraph wires down. About the same time the other members of the company woke up and began to discuss ways and means of getting out. Our talk did about as much £00d as the trainmen’s work. “As the winter sun shone for a moment from the west, every one on that car be- #an to realize that it was getting to be o long time between meals. None of us was ©quipped for an Arctic expedition and the dinnerpalls of the trainmen afforded us but three sandwiches. We decided to shake dice for the bread and meat, but had no dice. Our property man suggested that we fake up a set of dice from the coal box When we went there we found only tour pleces of coal and that wo depended upon to keep us from freezing for an Indefinite period of time. Water was the only thing we had in plenty and that had to be se- cured Ly melting snow. Night found us hungry, but with one accord we took refuge in sleep. In those hours we dreamed of tables groaning beneath their load of food; of green-seal and blue ribbon, “In the cold gray dawn of the next day we wero awakened by the jar of the train and found ourselves alongside of a rafl- road eating-house. This establishment was s barren as though visited by the iocusts of Egypt when our traln left for the next night's stand.” Judge D. M. Vinsonhaler: “My most memorable Thanksgiving 1s a good many years back, as_long ago as 1882. It is a pleasant reminiscence from the remote prospective of the present, although at the time the experience was anything but amus- ing, and it takes its interest simply In be- 1ng one of those escapades of boyhood in- variably associated in memory with Thanks- giving. 1 hafl two boon companlons among the boys of the neighborbood. Our families wero busy as possible In preparation for the aunual feast. They expected us boys to enjoy the spread with them fn the usual Wway, but we had planned to have a little Ihanksgiving celebration in accordance Wwith ideas of our own, 0 the invitation to Join the older folk in the customary dinner was declined and wo three were allowed, un- der many parental protests, to spend the ay s we choose. “Our {dea was, as I remember it, to take 4 jaunt into the woods and slay enough game for a Thanksgiving dinner in true hunter style. In the morning the trlo got an carly start, caught a farmer's wagon €olng fu the right direction and had a ride of five miles on the journey. When the river was reached we tramped along the banks five miles farther. In all this time there had not been #o much as a sign of beast or bird that might have become prey to our marksmanship. The thick timber for miles around was scoured without re- sulting in a single glimpse of game. It was then 1 o'clock. In tho supplies we had carried on our backs there was pepper and salt and matches, everything to prepare for the hunter's dinner that was plainly failing to materialize. Mentally pictured dinners at home with the jolity and abundance of £00d things to eat and drink brought the realization that tho Joke was on us, Finally It was decided to hunt another half hour and if in the iaterim nothing in the way of game presented itself to go home and get what we could find left from the feasts there. Each went in a different di- rection fn the hope of having better luck. In a few minutes there was the sound of & gunrhot. The three boys wet where ths #hot came from and found that one had brought down a horned owl. No one was sure the flesh of an owl was edible, because owls eat mice and slmilar things, but we declded to risk it. One of the group foraged In the neighboring fleld and secured some corn. A fire was bullt and over it the corn was parched and the owl roasted crisp. The feast over, we tramped home, 1 don't be- lieve we ate heartily, because by the time the home buildings were visible just ahead of us we were all 50 hungry that the pangs were positively painful. Our first care was to break into the pantries and make up for all we had missed by going In quest of the game. Thanksglving always brings mem- ories of that last Thanksgiving day hunt.” ARREST SUSPECTED BURGLAR OMeers Track Jim Diggs to His Room by Means of Hloodstain on the Snow. Jim Dirgs, colored, suspected of the rob- bery of Jullus Burster's saloon, 2402 Leav- enworth street, wWas run to earth yester- day according to methods more commonly employed by writers of fiction than by real flesh-and-blood detectives. In the first place, there was snow on the ground; in the ond, Diggs cut his wrist on the broken lass of the window and the blood dripped along ‘n the snow, forming an unbroken trall between 2402 Leavenworth street and 06 South Twenty-fifth street, where he rooms Nothing of value was stolen from the sa- loon. The theory of the police Is that Di was looking for money only, but was fright- e¢ned away before finding it, Bays Globe RNefining Company. LOUISVILLE, Ky. 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HUDYAN CURED JOHN O'BRIEN, FORT HUDYAN CURED MISS AMY NEWCOMB, MEADE, 8. D, ” SPRINGFIELD, 1L Dear Sirs:—I am again a well and hearty Dear Doctors:—I used to suffer with se- man, and this good health I owe to Hudyan. y vere headaches and was very nervous, all Hudyan cured me of Dyspepsia and Heart | due to Indigestion and Constipation. My Complication. I was greatly run down and “ appetite was poor, and I became thin, pale weak, and thought that I never could sur- | and weak. Hudyan relleved me within two | days, and it was but a short time until ev- ery symptom of my disorder had passed l away. I have a friend who Is taking Hudyan and it s benefitting her also. | MISS AMY NEWCOMB. WEAKNESS, EXHAUSTED NERVE VI« SSNESS, HEADACHE, DESPONDENCY, PTIC FITS, PALPITATION OF HEART, 10N, ALL FEMALE WEAKNESSESS, vive my troubles. I can assure you that Hudyan Is the greatest remedy on earth. 1 am tharkful for my recovery JOHN O'BRIEN. | HUDYAN CURES ALL DISEASES THE BLOOD AND NERVES, NERVOUSNE! TALITY, RHEUMATISM, SCIATICA, LOCOMOTOR ATAXIA, PARALYSIS, SLEEPLI MENTAL DEPRESSIO! TERIA, NEURALGIA, PAINS IN SIDE AND BACK, EPILI] NERVOUS DYSPEPSIA, I AL WORRY, EARLY DECAY, CONSTIF PALE AND SALLOW COMPL! HUDYAN s for sale by drugglsts—G0c A package, or six packages for $2.60. It your druggist does not keep HUDYAN, direct to the HUDYAN REMEDY COMPANY, Corner Stockton, Ellls and Market stree's, San Franclsco, Cal. YOU MAY CONSULT THE HUDYAN DOCTORS ABOUT YOUR CASE FREE OF CHARGE. 1 ol Drag O ilon Dreg Co, J. A. Fuller & Ce., Chas H. “”«':':lp.nv:»' i r':m.'..»u Blufl Drug Co., Sonth Omal WHY IT GURES MEN. Why the Frightful Tension of Stricture is Dissolved Like Smow Beneath the Sun—IN FIFTEEN DAYS. Why Weak Men Are Restored by the Magic St. James Treatment Applied Locally and Directly to the Affected Parts. We answer the que: Stricture tions briedy. 1f you cut an artery " in|In 16 days, without pain, injury or incon. your arm you do|venience. 'The bougles are inserted at not ~take ‘fnternal | pnight and act while you sleep. '‘Gran. medicine to stop the vent' removes every symptom of flow of blood. YOU ture, leaving the canal as healt! A end DEATH TO HAIR ROOT AND BRANCH New Discov. By The Misse: 1 A Trial Treatment FREE To Any One Afflicted With Hair on Face, Neck or Arms USE LOC PLICATIONS. 8im fliarly when the ure- thral ducts become weakened —and rc Iaxed it {s ridlcu- LT X TWIEF Llous to take Internal freatment, which must pass through the hen nalure formed 1t 'NO BRUL TING OR wfififl%}b e | BRANE, " NO TN AN A n‘i(tuumif:\o TOA RPN “Rirh HTOMAGH " The Be | Jumes treatment ia local, direct and posi- ive. Varicocele. M) Varicocele is an accumula t slug- [ We have at Iast made the discovery glsh blood In the véins of the serotum, which hos baffied chemists aud all others tate Gland, and are easily reached by LO- | due solely (o imperfect circulation, ln* for centuries —that of ubsolutely destroy. CAL TREATMENT. The St. James tr | has {ts origin in a diseas and torpl, ing superflous hair, root and brand ment s prepared In the form of cray Prostate Gland. Operations In this dis- entirely and d th very narrow, smooth, flexible and wholly ease are only temporary, and Yithout im soluble, which are inserted into the water | chanical device yet discovered has cured passuge at night, where they dissolve | a single case. = Gran-Solvent hea and deposit the ‘medication In its full |Prostaie and restores healthy cireul strength upon the | Varicocele disappears and the s Prostate (iland, #61 Bler ol S RavIane * Gontracting and strengthening the ducts, | 19346 men strictured, weak, wasting and 'OREVER STOPPING drains and emis’ | despondent wers cured and restored by py. | Lhe St James method last year. ‘A vast Carter's “Gran-Solvent'" le | army of men In whom the light ot Ut Bougies will dissolve, digest and furn\u“hvu penetrated the fearful nightmare of remove urethral striciure and seminal decay. Every Man Should Know Himseli. Bpace will not permit a complete description of the incel 3 able §t. James treatment in urethral diseases. Kvery su trom Btricture and its ofspring, Prostatitis and Seminal kneas, should write 10 the Ju Assoelution, Box 834, Oluoiuneil, Onfo, for thelr wonderful illustrated work showing tho purts of ihe in urethral ailmenis, which shey will seud seourely system involv ped in plain packuge, prapaid HOME TREATMENT ©4% %500 DT TAT DALIETAR o0 BEFORE DURING stomach and urine before it reaches the seat of disease. The seminal ducts project into the urethral canal through the Pros impo his discovery, or the guod and satis faction 1t wil ‘be to “those amicted ‘with on6 of the most disfiguriug and aggraval ink blemishos-—that of superfiuoun hnir on tho face of women, whether it bs & mus- tacho or growth on the neck, cheeks or arma, The Mises Bell have thoronghly tested its efMcacy and are deeirous that the full 8 of their treatmeut to which the ave viven the deacriptivename of “KILL ALL-HAIR" shall bo known to all aflicted, To this end & trial will be sent free of charges, to any lady who will write for it. Without & cent of cost you can bee for yourselves what the discovery fn; the idence of your own senses will' then nnnv!nm;uu that the treatwment “KILI ALL-HATR" will rid yon of ene o reatcat drawhacks to perfeot loveliness, e growth of superfiuous hair on the face or neck of women. Pleaso understand that a parsonal demon- stration of our treutment costs you nothing. A trial will bo sent you free, which You can use yourselt and prove our claims by seuding two stamps for malling. THE MISSES BELL, 78 & 8o Fitth Avenue, New York The Miases Beil's Complezion Tonlc 1s & mfiltll- liguid for exterual applicasion te rem outirely al moth, blackheads, pimples, and tan, oures eatirely sone and eczem| Deautifies the complexion. Price $1.00 bottle, three lfiu‘l'n)h:;lrl;:lly .-.-'.u-’&'. clear tha nom plerion) §2. The fl|l~vllll . & aturally reparation for E el golo oo to thel Renova is really ensand invigorates the hair in & natural s Skin Food is & soft, oreamy, oxquisitely scented ointment, fe id cases of roughi 1 moade from pure oll of Lambe' Wool. Price e ontptats ' toe of shove sz R compiote ) L World Famous Mariani Tonic| pre: T;T'o:u:v'?i«:l I:ntlrL - KU FOR BODY AND BRAIN| ™ mreertene No matter how youth. your face, gray file ages you. Friends gannot” help " noticing it, and thelr remark are unpleasant. None really admire gray halr,” though all try reconciling themselyves to it, by, saying It's becoming,” Inwardly knowing ' better. ~ In fact only a local condition, others will call premature grayness constitutional = weak- nens, etc. It docs make you look older than ou ‘feel, endangers your position and au- ority The remedy 1s simple; apply Juvenalls (means youthfulness). 1t's halr food: not oll, grease or dye. It feeds to thin, falling, fuding, splitting, brittie, weak hair, the ele: ments nature {nsufficlently supplies, thus pestortng color, nourlshing wnd promoting healthrul growth Bylvan Tollet Co, M'f'rs., Detrolt, Mich. Ask at Boston Btore for Juvenalls. inite and Pharmacists, Since 1863 Endorsed by Medical Profession. efficacious agreeable Refuse Substitutes. immediate lasting At Druggists Everywhere. WHEN IN DOUBT, TRY STRONG .y AGAIN!W vigor to the whole being. All draius and losses $i¢ roperty cured, their condition often worric Mailed sealed. Price §1 per box; 6 boxes, with iron-clad lo #8 mouey, e e, S-nd for (rer book, . A, 1& by Kubn & Co, 1ith and Douglas, and J, A. Fuller & Co., 14th and Douglas,