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Don’t pay 25c. for a toilet soap when the best costs but 10c. You might as well pay a quarter for a dime. The costliest soap is no better than Jap Rose (rmane wannl Soap This is Kirk's best soap. Made of pure vegetable oil and gly- cerin. Delightfully perfumed. So pure that it is transparent. Yet it costs but a From a Methodist Preacher! ]. C. BOONE dime a cake. ey 1. C. BOONE, Clay City, Ind., Writes: Pepsin Syrur CoMPANY, Monticello, Ill. It affords me great pleasure to speak in praise of your most excellent medicine. I have suffered quite a great deal from sick headache, the result of seden- tary habits and sluggish liver and bowels. Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pep- sin corrects these troubles and my headaches are stopped. J. C. BOONE, Pastor M. E. Church Gentiemen: SOLD BY A1l Druggists, Wholesale and Retail. SPAIN'S OFFICERS LEAVING All Have Beon Recalled from the Philippines | by Their Government. MACARTHUR COUNSELS CONSERVATIVES Advises Them Promote the Inland by Avolding Agitation. that They « MANILA, Peb All the Spanish mill tary officers in the Philippine islands have been ordered, through the Spanieh consul general, Senor Marina, to return to Spain There are probably seventy of these off who on account of business inte permitted to remain in islands af! the Spanish troops werc ent home. They received & salary from the Spantsh govern ment A band of seventy armed insurgents at tacked the town of Suog, in the provii:e of South Ilocos, Luzon, where they killed one native and abducted five. At midnight of the same day they attacked the town of Santa Maria, buruing fifty houses The Insurgents were repulsed by the Amerfcans, who had one man wounded; one native scout and two civiliaus were killed, The insurgents retrea‘ed to tho mountains closely pursued; their losses were not learned The projectors of the conservative party have asked the American Philippines com- misslon to inspect their platform, but Judge Taft postponed action in the matter untit Tuesday. They subsequently visited Gen- eral MacArthur and outlined to him thetr program, saying that the ultimate views of the party would be submitted later and would in no way conflict with (he principle of American soverelgnty General MacArthur responded that any Philippine party, under the present cir- cumstances, should have tbe establishment of peace throughout the island for its primary object and advised the avoiding of the discussion of other political prin ciples until peace should be declared. Ho sald the situation today did not permit the encouragement of extreme party ideas The conservatives are apparently recely lug enccuragement from those church au thorities Wwho oppose the federal party. The news that the Spoomer amendment prohibits the sale of land, timber and min- ers, w —————————— PERSUNAL>, Mrs. E. P. Green has recovered from an attack of the grip at Canaseraga, N. Y., by the use of Dr. Miles' Pain Pills. Among the victims of the grip epidemio now so prevalent, F. Coyle Is now recover- ing at Canton, O., by the use of Dr. Miles' Nervine and Pills. W. E. Nihells of St. Louis, Mo., who was down with grip, ie reported much improved He used Dr. Miles' Nervine and Pills, The friends of Mrs. L. Denison will be pleased 1o learn of her recovery from grip at her home in Bay City, Mich., through the use of Dr. Miles' Nervine und Pills Everybody says that J. W. Udy is looking splendid’ since his recovery from the grip at his home in Des Moines, la. They all know that Dr. Miles' Nervino was what cured him. Prosecuting Attorney Charles L. De Waele, who has passed the three-score milestone, had a time with the grip, but when seen at his home in Roscommon Mich, the other day he sald Dr. Miles' Nervine was what cured him At nearly three score and ten Mrs. Galen Humphrey was fghting against odds when the grip attacked her, but she took Dr Miles' Nervine and now her neighobrs in Wareham, Mass., remark on how well she 15 looking. After an tliness of five weeks from the grip Mrs. Harriet Jackson is again about and looking fine. She began taking Dr Miles' Nervine after the fourth week. Her bome 18 in Bowling Green, Mo. | lions of government ing concessions has alarmed those here who are dependent upon such concessions for their business success. Three chambers of commerce of Manila, the International, the Spanish ard the American, are wiring protests “‘After suffering for iwo months from a severe attack of grip I found quick relief and a lasting cure by using Dr. Miles' Nerv- ine, Pain Pills and Heart Cure. Harry Abbott, Cincinnati, 0. DEATH RECORD. Harry Hodgkin of Bartley. BARTLEY, Neb., Feb. 28.—(Speclal.) Harry Hodgiin, youngest son of C. W. Hodgkin, died at his father's house yester- day morning of typhold fever. He leaves a wife and icfant son. The funeral was from the Methodist church this afternoon, Rev. E. B. Crippen officiating. Masons took charge of the funeral exercises at the cem- etery. Veteran of Wisconsin, ORLEANS, Neb., Feb. 28.—(Special.)—~ George M. Pope, late of Company C, Tenth Wisconsin volunteer infantry, was buried today under direction of the Grand Army of the Republic. He was 84 years old and died of paralysis Harvard Boy HARVARD, “Neb., Feb (Special.)— Clyde Gardner, only son of Mr. and Mrs, C. W. Gardner, among the first settlers of Har- vard, died last night at the home of his parents, aged 15, of inflammatory rheuma- tism. Dies. Fatal delays are caused oy experimenting with cough and cold cures. Foley's Honey and Tar will prevent a cold from resulting in pneumcnia. Myers-Dilon Drug Co., Omaha; Dillon’s drug store, South Omaha Carrie 1 KANSAS CITY, Mrs. Carrie Na- tion afternoc k tonight for Topekn would release 1 and go back to jall when she opeka Three of The chief of American promoters of io- day, and the most daring and resourceful of the flcek, is J. Pierpont Morgan of New York. In all the mighty combinations per fected in recent times, embracing irans- portation lines, fuel supply and manufac- turing, he has been a glant factor, and the ramification of his financial power over- leaps the boundaries of the nation The absorption of the Southern Pucific by the Union Pacific railrond is classed as & Morgan triumph, and that is followed by the combination of steel manufacturers. “Mr. Morgan is the organizer of these two mammoth combinations of capital,” writes A Wall street correspondent of the Iudian- apolis Press, “and though he acts as the ugent or broker, he does not hesitate to stake on tha final result his reputation for sound judgment and financial Integrity. His will is of steel and thousands of majority shureholdess have placed their property unreservedly in his hauds. The minority interests are told that they must yleld un- qualificdly. No means exist of sscertain ing the size of the minority, but 10 per cent would not be an excessive estimate. So we see that the wishes of men repre senting §176,000,000 of capital are wholly ig nored or overridden. This is characteristic of the new order of thirgs on Wall street where ‘corners,’ ‘bear ralds' and ‘bull panics’ have been the fair and henest thing for more than a generatlon. “The changed conditions are due alwost wholly to the last war and the three bil money (hat has been poured out through the extravagance of congress and the general feellng that the United Staies must become a conquering nation. Everybody is cngeged in u mad scrumble for wealth and ‘the public,' as the merchants and swall tradesmen of | the country ave called, is now in the mar Ket up to its ears. The big, wily specu Iators wee that the market is near its natural top and they are willing to el their holdings (gathered up before the last clection at very much lower figures), to the greedy hoarders of money who now Leading Public THE OMAIIA DAILY NEW BOOKS AND MACAZINES e for March Much Interesting Matter. Contain ENTERTAINNG ARRAY OF NEW FICTION Numerous Articles o ples of the Day—Ey ment of Most Timely y Depart. March magazines which have been coming | to hand this week are generally attractive in appearance and their contents are equally good, as will be found from examination Bestdes the usual fiction there are a lar number of interesting and instructive a cles on general topics, travel, blographi historical, scientific Almost every part of the globe is repre« sented iu Scribner's Magazine for March and in every case by some well-known etc writer who has actually visited the country | which he describes. Four of the contrib utors are distinguished correspondents who have had many romantic experfences. Their articles in this number have to do with the changing conditions brought about by r cent upheavals. Richard Harding Davis leads the number with an account of & journey “Along the East Coast of Africa.” #1opping at those strange, half-barbaric and half-civilized ports that mark the fringe of progress In Afriea. Thomas F. Millard, whose previous articles on the “Armies In China and the Campaign of Revenge' have attracted so much attention, contributes to this number a concluding article on “The Settlement in China."” Henry Norman's Rugsian article in this number is of unusual timeliness in that it deals with the per- ronality and the achievements of the great est administrator in Russia, the famous minister of finance, M. de Witte all these articles which show the polit changes is an illuminating paper on Transtormation of the Map (1825-1800)," Joseph Sohn. The comparative maps, pre- pared under the author's direction, show at a glance the tremendous changes of the last century The March number of Frank Leslie's Popular Monthly will be very generally regarded as the best issue in the history of the magazine. We can remember no better number. A striking article. “Farther North Than Nansen,” gives the first adequate ac- count that has appeared on this side of the water of the heroic dash for the pole which | has placed the name of Abruzzl at the head of the list of Arctlc explorers. Everybody who remembers Nansen's wonderful story will read with eagerness of this yet more marvelous exploit. The tale is tull of the keenest human interest and shows what men may attain when energy is directed by | method and courage matched with skill The World's Work for March touches every continent, has something new to say on practically every general topic of in- terest, sketches the men who are doing some of the great things, in fact retails everything that the world has done well during the last month. The magazine lives up to its name in its variety, and then vivifies the workaday world with keen, progressive, American spirit. The list of contents {s too long to be entirely detalled, but some of the most important articles are: “The Rule of the English-Speaking Folk,” (the race that rules on every com- tinent but one) as viewed at the close of the Victorian era; a strikingly fine story of the work of old St. George's parish, New York, by Mr. Jacob Riis; Intimately per- sonal sketches of Genmeral Dewet, Alfred Harmsworth and the late Philip Armour. Next fall there will be observed in Eng- land very extensively the thousandth an- niversary of the death of King Alfred. A movement is also under way in America to participate in this celebration, and certainly Americans are equal sharers in what Sir Walter Besant calls *“The Heritage of King Alfred.” In an article with this title, printed in the March magazine number of the Outlook, Sir Walter pays an earnest tribute to the achlevements of Alfred In establishing law, clearing the land of evil and encouraging scholarship and the arts. The March Modern Culture a charmingly written and beautifully {llustruted article on the “Social and Domestic Lite of the Modern Greek,” by B. F. Fisher, in which the author com- pares the character, customs and achleve- ments of the Greeks with those of the Itallans of our day, and draws a picture much to the advantage of the former. Three short illustrated articles follow on “The Chinese Quarter of San Franclsco,” “Two Features of German University Lite" and “Sugar Making—the Festival of Spring.” In which the variety of subjects is accentuated by dissimilarity of style and treatment. Marion Harland in the third in- stallment of “In Our County,” describes “An Episode of a Summer at the Spa, drawing with vigorous pen-strokes a picture of lfe at a Virginia watering place full of subtle shadings and emphatic contrasts. The March number of the Smart Set opens with a novelette by Mrs. Burton Har- rison, entitled “The Unwelcome Mrs Hatch.” This is perhaps the strongest and most dramatic story Mrs. Harrison has a Kind insist in prosperity. Many of the boldest men In the have confessedly lost their heads Morgan, for example, acts in his like a buccaneer of the Spunish matn. All that is wanting to make him hterally ter- ritying in these days is a cutlass and a smoking blunderbuss.” opens with having a share in the general street Mr office From salesman in a country store at §5 a week to the presidency of the grestest steel manufacturing concern in the world with & salary unparalleled in the business world and about $50,000,000 in stocks and bonds, Is the record of Charles M. Schwab, who {5 the head of the new $1,000,000,000 Steel trust formed by J. Pierpont Morgan Carnegle and ot All this came within less than twenty years In Willlamsburg, Blair Schwab was born years later the Loretto, on the county, Pa February 18, 1862, Ten hwab family moved to crest of the Alleghany mountains, where “Charley was sent to & college there He fancied engineering and took a sclentific course. At the age of 18 he left the institution to make his liv ing and came to Braddock. where some friends from Loretto had located He ob- tained employment in Dinkey's general store, which was not far from the Carnegie steel works. Past the store on his way to and from the mills came Captain Willlam R. Jones at the time general manager of the works He stopped in the store to buy tobacco and noticed young Schwab. The Intter scized the opportunity of acquaintance with Captain Jones and the latter oftered him a position In 1881 Schwab was made chiet englucer and assistan( manager of the Braddock fur nace and steel works, and held the place until 1887, when he was sent over to Home stead as superintendent He was there when the first Homestead strike occurred in 1889 When John G. A. Leishman, at present minister to Turkey, resigned as president of the Carnegie company in 1897, Mr Nir Allfed to | BEE: FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1901. written, and from Arst to last it s vibrant with emotional interest Mrs. Hatch 18 & haracter in whom the elements of strength and weakness are strangely mingled; she is impulsive, generous and fascinating, and loves wi b that feminine intensity that leads either to the helghts of happiness or the depths of despair. A leader of fashionable society in New York, she fs neglected by her | husband, whom she adores, and in a fit of | pique and jealousy commits a folly that be- comes the lustrument of her undoing in the hands of her relentless husband. Under the of “Mre. Hatch,”" which she has as sumed, «he falls into the company of the man engaged to her daughter, both being Ignorant of their prospective relationship. | name The leading article in McClure's Maga- 2ine for March is a character study of Ed- ward VII, written by George W. Smalley, the American correspondent of the London Times, and fllustrated by a remarkabie col- lection of photographs. “Life Portraits of Queen Victoria” | another feature. The serles 1s made up of reproductions from photographs and paintings, and it is of notable historical value. They eover the life of the queen from Infancy to old age and are sccompanied by a descriptive text Theodcre Roosevelt, vite president-elect of the Unites States, contributes an article en- Utled. “Reform Through Social Work." “Disbanding the Union Army" is the title of an article by Tda M. Tarbell. This fully detcribes the extraordinary feat accom- | plished by the federal government at the close of the civil war, when, without any disaster, 1,000,000 soldiers wera returned to quiet pursuits. The article 1s elaborately tlustrated “The Anecdotal Side of Theodore Roose- velt' gives sharp, clear views of the stren- uous life of our many-sided vice president- elect in the March Ladies' Home Journal These anecdotes reveal the characteristics of his remarkable personality, and are freshly told by his closest friends. The witching “Widow and Her Friends” of Charles Dana Gibson's creation are vivified Into stage personages and introduced in a | two-act comedy by Marguerite Merington - a Gibson play with Gibson men and women and Gitaon fllustrations. *The Only Ameri- | can Girl Who Ever Married a King" recalls the almost forgotten romance of a New England girl who came near to wearing a crown, and “The Loveliest of All Kentucky GIrls"" recourts the social triumphs of a southern beauty. Edward Bok writes on toples of widespread interest and Helen Watterson Moody discusses “Girls Who ‘Go In' for Something." The February issue of Cram's Magazine contains a number of articles of the sort | that one having read puts away for future reference. Among these may specially be noted “Our Useful Conifers”” by Prof. Charles E. Aaron; a brief but graphic his tory of “William 11T of England.” by Mil- ton Reeve: w very clear and entertaining account of the bloodless “Toledo War," by E. F. Watrous; a oumber ot little known points regarding “Edward VII of Great Brit- ain,” by Spencer Townsend, and some in- teresting statistics regarding the “Growth of Churches in the Nineteenth Century.” The Improvement noted i recent num- bers of Everybody's Magazine is still more conspicuous in the March fssue. This Is a first-rate magazine, brimful of individuality, containing remarkably strong stories and articles of distinct interest and readable- ness. ‘Among the 10-cent monthiles it 18 rapidly forging to the front, and ft bids fair to contest the supremacy of its most widely circulated contemporaries. Two contributions of immediate interest in Alnsles’s for March are “The Mliles-Cor- bin Feud,” by L. A. Coblldge, and “Yellow Journals.” by Allen Sangree. The first of these is a remarkably frank account of the long-continued friction in the War depart ment. The article on “'Yellow Journ tells how these papers are made, and aims to explain why they are made as they are. “Uruguay's Progressive Ruler,”” by Dougl White, {8 a portrait study of Cuestas, who is a unique exception among South Amerl can presidents. “The Decay of Manners, by John Gilmer Speed, Is an earnest pro- test in exceedingly readable form the decline of American politen: After-Dinner Humorlsts,” by George Barry Mallon, is an anecdotal sketch of the best after-dinner speakers, with enjoyable ex- amples from their speeches. The March number of the Woman's Home Companion has many features of more than ordinary interest. Some of them that will prove very interesting are ‘‘Father John, the Greek Miracle Worker,"”” by Edward Page Gaston; “Tho Goddess of Excelstor,” by Bret Harte; “A Great Athletic Club for Both Sexes,” by Bertha Damaris Knobe; “America's Greatest Social Function,” by Waldon Fawcett; “The Most Richly Fur- nished Home in America,” by Haryot Holt Cahoon. The fiction in this number Is especially strong, belng contributed by such authors as John Kendrick Bangs, Mrs. Spofford and Bret Harte. ' The art featur are decidedly superior to anything that h heretofore appeared In a magazine. There fs a magnificent reproduction of Sir Lau- rence Alma-Tadema's great painting, ‘“The | Village Festival,"” besides fine paintings by W. Frank Calderon, Herman Kaulbach, Karl Gustay Hellgvist and J. Cleminson. ““The Balloonist” is the hero of Cleve- land Moffett's third paper on ‘‘Careers of Danger and Daring.”” which appears in the J. Pierpont Morgan, Charles Schwab and Charles T. Yerkes. Schwab, who had been elected a member of the board of managers of the company the preceding year, was chosen president. At that time H. C. Frick was chairman of the board of directors and the active head of the company. When Frick left Mr. Schwab was given the chalrman's duties. He filled them so successfully that when the business was reorganized last spring Schwab was elected president of the Carnegie company, the capltal stock of which has been Increased to $160,000,000, Schwab llves on a property for which he paid $175,000 cash. He is married, but has no children Charles 'T. Yerkes, boss of the Chicago Street railway lines and owner of the Chi- cago Inter Ocean, has disposed of his in- terest in the former property and to all intents has shaken the dust and soot of Chicago from his brogans, carrying his pile to New York. The career of Yerkes is thus summarized by the Chronicle 1968 Financlal agent for the ety of Phil- adelphia 1571 Failed rosecuted in Phila- delphia the penitentlary. after serving less than two years, t his friends' confidence. rled the second time; had no Went to the northwest to start life Penniless. tock and bond broker in Fargo, St and Minneapolis. 1883~ Went to Chicago with $40,000, 1884 Began business as a stock and grain broker 1886—-Organized a syndicate with $1,600,000 to buy the North and West Side Street rail- Ways. 1690 Bullt the e Street Elevated 15 Presented {o the Chicago university the Yerkes telescope, cost $500,000. 1500 Built the Union Elevated loop. 150-80ld the North and West side lines to the Union Traction company, recelving $10.000,000 for his holdings. Bold the Con- solidated Tractlon company, trolley feeders the North and West Sides to the Unfon Traction company 1900—-Went to London and chise of underground 1901—80ld bought rallway clevated ~ properties—the vest levated, the Lake Btreet ted and the Union loop. Mr, Yerkes' Lt wealth 1s estimated at $30,000,000, fran- 1y Harburger, Homan & Co., Manufacturers. McCord, Brady Co., Distributers March number of St. Nicholas. Strange to say, the life of the man who trusts himself to the tender mercies of the air does not impress the reader as more hazardous than that of the diver or the steeple-climber, as previously described by the same pic- turesque writer. Mrs. Josephine who has accompanied her husband oh se eral of his Arctic expeditions, in an illu trated article entitled “‘Ahnighito,” tells of the infancy ard early childhood of her own | daughter, Marie, who was born within the Arctie Circle, and revisited her birthplace on Lieutenant Peary's voyage after the monster meteorite he had discovered. | Fiction readers will turn first, in the March Century, to the opening pages of a new story by Irving Bacheller, author of the record-breaking ‘'Eben Holden.” The title is “D'rl and the general theme is American border life at the time of the war of 1812 and the leading characters are Colonel Raymon Bell, U. S. A a south-| erner, and Darius, a typlcal Yankee. Con- | tinuing his Webster series, Prof. McMaster considers this month his hero's experience as a leader of the opposition in congress. It will surprise most readers of the Century to learn that the flight of the empress dowager from Pekin did not occur till the city was actually in the hands of the “foreign devil It was on August 15 that she, with the emperor, empress and heir apparent, set forth, each in a separate cart, toward Tal Yuan Fu. Luella Miner, an American missionary, who describes this hegira, has drawn her Information from a hitherto unpublished account written by a Chinese gentleman of high standing whose authority Is unimpeachable. As a com- panion paper to this may be taken Bishop Potter's “Impressions of Japan,” the third of his series on the “East of Today and Tomorrow.” This is quite as incisive and suggestive as the articles on “‘China and the Philippines,” which preceded it The March Atlantic prints a vigorous edi- torial call upon the president to “Give the Country the Facts” about the Philippines; Henry B. F. Macfarland, the famous Wash- ington representative of the Boston Herald, contributes a striking analysis of ““Mr. Me- Kinley President.”” Woodrow Wilson discusses “Democracy and Efficiency’'—can | our democracy hold its own against the | present reaction towards monarchy? W. E Du Bois writes instructively concernini ‘The Freedmen's Bureau;” J. W. Root di cu the lessons of “‘British Contfede: tion; W. C. Dreher In “A Letter from Ger- many" gives the vear's achlevements of that mation; J. B. Thayer sketches “John Marshall,” our famous supreme court chief justice. Mrs. Wiggin and Miss Jewett con- tinue thelr attractive serials; Roy R. Gil son, Charles B. Loomls, Dora L. Hastin and others contribute lively stories an sketches; Edith Thomas, R. U. Johnson and Willlam P. Foster add attractive poems, and a brilllant contributore’ club and the At lantic's farewell tribute to Queen Victorla round out & notable number. Lincoln's famous phrase, “Of the people, by the people and for the people,” aseribed by Mr. George F. Parker in the February Review of Reviews to Thomas Cooper, an elghteenth century writer, does not seem to have been pecullar to any one writer or speaker. In the March Review are pub- lished several suggestions from correspond- ents, each of whom hints at a separate possible source of the form of words in question. Judge Story and Danlel Webster are two authorities cited as employing very nearly the same ideas, In similar phrase- ology. A letter from Mr. John White Chad- wick, however, seems to prove conclusively that Lincoln got the phrase from one of Theodore Parker's anti-slavery addresses Parker wrote: “Democracy is direct self- government, over all the people, by all the people, for all the people.” Willam H Herndon, Lincoln's law partner, says that Lincoln read and marked this passage with @ pencil The above books are for sale by Megeath Stationery Co., 1308 Farnam St the The books reviewed on this page can b had of Barkalow Bros.' “Bookshop,” 1612 Farnam street and Unlon Station Veterans of Shiloh Reun COLUMBUS, Neb., Feb. 28.—(Special.) The seventh annual reunion of the Veterans of Shiloh, which organizatiun owes its ori- in to a few Nebraska survivors, will be in this city, April 9 and 10. Al whether they took part in that memorable battle or not, are invited, and the commit- tee expects a large attendance. It was orlg inally lntended to bold this reunion April the anniversary of the battle, but as Sunday Interfered the date was changed “Failing to find rellef from the grip with | old methods, 1 took Dr. Miles' Pain Pills, Nervine and Nerve and Liver Pllls and was permanently cured.”—Gust. Egan, Jackson, Peary, soldiers, | +eeccece sosoescrces One of strongest allies is stationery (i. e, good stationery. and that which comes from our counters is particularly feteh- You'll find the prices just right— just what they should be for good stationery. WE MAKE A SPECIALTY OF FINE CARD ENCRAVING -WEDDING INVITATIONS ISTIC WORK. Megeath Stationery Co. t 1308 FARNAM STREET ing, artistic and dainty. | WE DO ART CONFESSES HE HEARD THEM Ooastguardam:a Acknowledges Rio's Distress Signals. Hearing CAPTAIN BEATS AND CHOKES HIM Frenzied Officer of Life-Saving Stat Takes Hanty Revenge for Sub- ordinate’'s Disgracing the Crew. SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. Ellingson, the coastguardsman connected with the Fort Point life-saving station who was on duty at the time of the wreck of the steamer Rio de Janeiro, February 23, has confessed that he heard the Rlo's signals of distress, but attached no importance to them, and for that reason falled to arouse the life- saving crew. Captaln Hodgson, in charge of the station, has suspended Ellingson and will' make a thorough investigation It has been claimed by people who were on the wrecked steamer and by others that If the life crew had been made aware of the disaster many lives would have been saved. Immediately afier the wreck Ellingson denled flatly that he heard the Rio's whis- tles and he persisted in that denial until be confessed te Hodgson When Ellingsen made his confession to Captain Hodgeson the latter became Infuri- ated and seized the guard and, besides giv- ing him a sound thrashing, choked him se- verely in his anger. Captain Hodgeson is so chagrined at the disgrace cast upon the station that he can hardly falk of the mat- ter. Ellingsen has disappeared and the men at the life-siving station believe that he has made away with himself Most People— know a good thing when they see it-—it doesn’t take an expert shoe man to see the value that we give in our misses' $1.50 shoes—made of light weight calf and heavy dongola uppers—with a sole that is just thick enough to keep the feet dry and warm and at the time have a neat, dressy appearanc made with the popular toes on the ot form last gives them the wearing com fort of the higher priced shoes. Drexel Shoe Co., same Kimball Pianos — Need no introduction to anybody, thelr reputation is world wide—They are en- [ dorsed and used by the most eminent | urtists in the world- For tone, elegance durability are unquestionably the finest made. | the various styles in the most of workmauship and they All costly veneers can be seen at our salesroois. We will make ments in terms on these planos. | fine tuning, moving. you some special induce We do and repairing, pollshis A. HOSPE, Woslo ad At 1613 Dougiea, S R ] Cupid’s § MORE MILWAUKEE ROAD STOCK | Report in New York That the Direce tors will Issue Ten Per Cent Additionnl, NEW YORK, Feb. 28.—A Wall street news bureau says (kat the directors of the Chi- cago, Milwaukeo & Paul Railway com- pany has decided to issue 10 per cent ad- ditional capital stock at par to stockholders on record March 11, The amount is to b 4,200,000, and is to puy for the Kansas City cut-off ow Rate t CHICAGO, nounced color points ine. he Unlon Pacific an- intention of making a from Missourl ri north Pacific coast points. The rate already enjoyed by Chicago, via Paul, will be effective till April 1, and is of importance chiefly to Missouri and lows points. today its rate of § o Casenrine nt AN Druggiste. Cures biliousness, constipation and dys- pepsia, or money refunded. Price 50 cents, Book explaining cause and cure mailed frw, Rea Bros. & Co., Minneapolis, Minn. ® S A NSWORTH nt Feb aworth, Special,) = ck cars of p belonging Bartow & Mitchell of Gordon, were unloaded here today, the bal- ance golng to Stuart. The sheep were taken to the Joe Davison feed yards south of town, where Bartow & Mitchell will feed them. Brown county's corn crop makes it an object for western stockmen to ship here and feed. Ne Frost Bites und Chublains quickly cured br Banner Salve, the mont healing remedy in the world. Myers-Dil~ lon Drug Co., Omaha; Dillon's drug store, South Omaha )