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p— 19, 1903. CENSURES THE (0AL BARONS Proacher Takes Big Btrike as Subject for “Pulpit Editerial" TALKS OF MAN'S RIGHTS WITH PROPERTY Argnes that Man on Earth s but a Steward and Points to Moral Senwe of Right and Wrong. Preceding his sermon Sunday morning, Rev. E. Comble 8mith of the First Methodist Eplscopal church read a pulpit editorial on the subject of the Joal Famine from an Ethical Standpoint.”” He laid the blame for the present situation on the large coal operators and scored them for the stand they had taken. “A man,” eald the preacher, “bas only & right to do what he ought with bis own. Under our present civilization our lives porlap and are dependent one on the oti, and a man can not do what e will wiB his property, because it is his. As far #¢ Qe legal right, there s latitude this sidg f% prison for men to damn them- selves gpss vuin their fellow-men. But there 18 & higeea moral sense of right and wrong which w. look for men to obey. In this fight between labor and capital, the former 1s doubtless making grave mistakes, but it 1s the consummate insolence of wealth, even towards the chief executive of this nation, which s the cause of all this trouble be- tween labor and capital. Men must learn & higher apiritual law, that there l6 no ab- solute ownership among men, .hat we are here only as stewards, and that wo must account for the way we have used the things in our charge here.” The sermon which followed was a eriti- clsm of critics, and held up to light the uselessness of those who were thinkers and dreamers without doing any practical good. Too many of us, he complained, live in contemplation. ‘““There is room for the dreamer,” he sald, “if after he has worked out his ideals and dreams he will come down to earth and realize them. I hold in contempt the mere critic; he who sits in an easy chair and criticizes for the periodicals and papers. He takes his pen and tears the church to pleces. Ho criticizes the mis- sfonaries of the gospel who are fighting hardships In every quarter of the globe. Then, when he has laid down his pen, what doen he do? Does he go out and accom- plish some practical good? Oh, no! He goes to hear Mrs. Patrick Campbell or Madame Pattl. Let us not be carpet knights. Let us be men of action.” FOUNDATION IS LAID IN TRUTH. o Says Rev. Jenks in Discussing Sue- cenn in Life, Rev. Bdward Hart Jenks, D, D., last even- ing at the First Presbyterian church deliv- ered his second address on “Getting a Start.” The theme was: “The Man Who Started and Fafled.” He sald: 1 am going te use Saul, the king of Iarael, to illustrate how men who promise well in life often end In failure. The Bible tells us that Saul was ‘a goodly young man.' In physical beauty none surpassed him. He stood a head taller than his fellows. When he first appears in the nar- rative he is hunting the lost asses of his father; it {s much to his credit to see him—soon to be king—honestly employed 1n an humble sphere and not ashamed of it. “Men are mot to be judged by appear- if they were, many & mighty man of the world would have to leave his pedea- tal of fame. ‘The Lord looketh on the heart.’ The difference botween success and failure is more often moral than men- tal. So with Saul. We must not think that his life of king was abortive. He ‘was for many years a great and successful eral and a Kking of great popularity. fs great faflure came through regarding the volce of popularity more than that of God. “We are mot free of such today. Saul made his first blunder at Gilgal. He waited for Samuel, the priest, to come and offer sacrifice untll, fearing for his people’s im- patience, he took upon himself the priestly office and offered the burnt offering. That act revealed that he had no religious prin- clple—it was all expediency—a fatal ele ment in any man's success. When religion 18 mere ceremony, moral principle becomes slack. And when moral principle is gone man's credit and power are gone too. “There arc plenty of men today who, it they could get present success in business, in politics, In any enterprise, would take thelr chances on the future. Douglas triea 1t with the homely, plain-dealing Lincoln. Sald Lincoln: ‘Douglas doesn't care whether elavery Is voted up or down; but God cares and I care’ Douglas gained the public ear at first, defeated Lincoln for the sen- atorship; but when the great volce of a roused consclence asked for a leader, 1n the days of the crisls, Lincoln was there to answer the call of God to the presidency. Men who go through the world with little regard: for the underlying principle of right- eousness have trodden under foot eternal realities - which will not down. No man can ignore truth mor be indifferent to the right. heaven might as well bid the stars cease to swing on high. “He whose foundation is laid in the truth, as it 1s in Jesus, will never be out of date, though perhaps out of barmony with the world-and in time or eternity ho shall succeed.’ TALK ON KINDNESS TO ANIMALS. Newton M. Mann preached a sermon on “Kindness to Animals” at Unity church Sunday morning. He sald fn part: “Kinduess to animals is an essentially modern sentiment. Beyond the verse from Proverbs which says, ‘The righteous man careth for his beast,’ the Bible shows no record of the love of God for animals. It was not thought amoug the Christians of early days that animals were deserving of any humane treatment. “The child is thoughtlessly cruel to aui- mals and only laws can keep the child as the man from being cruel to ani- Man {8 a progressive being In whom the progression is most rapid on the upper side and. especially in certain superfictal sentiments and aspirations, outruns the rest of the constitution. But life is often full of contradictions, fine mental powers and aesthetic feelings being linked with the outgrown passions of infirmity of will and the habits of the barbarian. This contradic- tion is most marked in the ages of the \Greatest progress, for then the elements that are the slowest to modify get the fur- thest behind and Jar most violently with the other facultie What Shall We Have for Dessert ? This question arises in the family every day. Let us answer it to-day, Try Jeli-0, adentious and healthful dessert, in two minutes. No boiling! no ! add boiling water and set to eool. Flavors:—Lemon, Orange, Rasp- berry and Strawberry. Get a package A& your grocers to-day, Iocts. R ke ittas. ta DAY the Tios or!hm‘" a week, at the age of 40 years, she PRIESTS OBJECT TO PENNIES| TALK IN HOTEL CORRIDORS ke Thelr for Shoving the Coppers. At the last mass at St. Michael's Roman Catholle church, Jersey Oity, Sunday, re- ports the New York Times, Rev. M. J. Duffy rebuked a portion of the congregation tor putting pennies in the plate. “I have spoken of this matter before," sald he, “and 1 hope I shall not have oc- casion to refer to it again. Most persons who make use of pennies throw them at organ grinders or put them into slot ma- chines. To bring them here and put them in the plate {s an Insult to the church. I wish It understood that 1 do not refer to persons who give a penny honestly because they cannot afford to give any more. They are robbing themselves, and should give nothing. The church does not need their money and does not want it. There are many hardworking girle who give 26 cents at every monthly collection. It is all they can afford. The class I refer to are men who put a penny or a mickel in the plate and after mass go to the nearest saloon and spend from 50 cents to $1, showing that they care more for the saloonkeeper than they do for the church.” Father Dufty prefaced his remarks by reading the annual report for 1002. It showed that the collections for the year amounted to $42,845, of which $20,000 had been applied to the payment of the church debt. Rev. P. F. Smythe of St. Joseph's Roman Catholic church also referred to the penny question. He sald that at the varlous masses on Sunflay, January 4, the collec- tions included 1,500 pennies. He belleved that each of the 1,600 persons who gave these pennies could have given a nickel and thereby have better shown their apprecia~ tion of the church, while at the same time thelr contributions would have been of much greater benefit. THIEVES MAKE A GOOD RAID Secure About m Thousand Dollars Worth of Plunder from Mra. Metealfe, While Bmma Metcalf and a companion were playing pool on the second floor of her hotel, the Central, on North Thirty- seventh street, Council Bluffs, a burglar or burglars, made away with between $800 and $1,000 worth of her personal property. The entrance was made by unlocking the front door with a skeleton key. This must have been donme shortly before mid- right. As soon as she discovered her loss she notified the police and the authorities in this city and South Omaha were asked to look for the stolen property, A seal- skin jacket, $150 in money, a long gold chain, a dlamond ring, diamond ecarrings and two dlamond brooshes were taken. PROMISES ELECTRIC ROAD E. C. Hurd Says Ohio Men Will Build Line from Omaha to Lincoln, Men Interested report that they have received word from E. C. Hurd, represent- ing Ohio capitalists, that the Omaha-Lin- coln electric raflroad, which the latter are backing, is assured of construction re- gardless of the similar project of rival in- terests. It is further stated that rooms in Lincoln to be used for a while as head- quarters have been eecured and furnished, with the undevstanding that Mr. Hurd is to be there next week. H. H. Wilson, one of the promoters, is quoted as telling Lincoln friends that the road s a certainty and that It other parties bulld there will be two roads, as his will not retire bocause of any prospective cempetition. SALOON MEN WILL ORGANIZE Meeting of Retall Dealers Will Be Held Next Wednesday Afternoon. A committee, the members of which are not named on the bill, has circulated a poster calling a mass meeting of the saloon- keepers of Omaha at Osthoff's hall, 517 North Sixteenth. street, next Wednesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The circular states that the object of the meeting is the form- ation of a local organization of the liquor interests, and that there “are many reasons why the liquor men should get together, all of which will be explained by represent. | atives of the trade,” at this called meeting. All retail dealers are promised a voice in the proceedings. DANDRUFF WON'T WASH OUT. The Germ that Causes It Has to He Destroyed to Cure Dandruff, week scouring her scalp, thinking scrubbing off the scurf will cure the dandruffl. Two has epent 260 days of 12 hours each, or two-thirds of & year of her life, In that valn hope; valn because you can't cure dandruft without killing the dandruff germ, and the only hair preparation on earth that will do that is Newbro's “Herpicide” —also a delightful hair dressing and thor- oughly antiseptic inst all contagion from use of other's hair brushes. Standing on His Rights, The next witness was a hard-fisted, reso- lute yeoman with a bristling chin beard. “Mr. Gigson," sald the attorney for the defense, “are you acquainted with the rep- utation of this man for truth and veracity in the neighborhood in which he lives?"" “I reckon I am,” replied the witne “I will ask you to state what it Is. “Well, his rep'tation fur truth ain't no good. His rep'tation fur vrassity—well, that's diff'runt. Some says he does, and some says he don't.” “Witness,” interposed the judge, “do you know the meaning of ‘veracity? * “I reckon I do." “What do you understand by the word The witness twirled his hat In his finger & few moments without replying. Then he looked up defiantly. “I refuse to answer that question, judge,” he sald, “on the ground that it might dis- criminate me."—Chicago Tribune. Rapid Calculatio; A, school teacher, in examining the class, questioned the youngest pupil, “Now, my little man, what do five and two make?" The little one remained silent. *“Well, suppose, now, I were to give you five rabbits today and two more tomorrow, how many rabbits would you have then?" “Elght," promptly answered the young- ster. “Elght! Why, how do you make that out? ‘Cause I've got one at home Little Chronicle. ready."’— it Excursions At very low rates via the Missouri Pa- cific rallway on Tuesday, January 20, to certaln points i1n Kansas, 8. W. Missourl, Oklahoma, Texas, etc. Both round trip and one-way tickets. For further informa- tion address or call at company's offices, 8. E. corner 14th and Douglas sts., Omaha, Objeot of Women's Auxiliary te Boosters' Olub of North Platte, TRAVELERS MAKE AND TELL SOME JOKES How Bell-Hop Turned In Guest's De- mand for Better Ventilation— Storekeeper at Fremont Makes Lucky Strike, “An editor out in our town got up & ‘boosters’ club,’ and mow the women are talking of organizing an auxiliary to it," eald Henry E. Ady, a stockman from near North Platte, at the Paxton hotel yester- day. “The auxiliary hasn’t got into operation yet, I guess, but it calculates to do busi- ness when it does. One of its notions, I und#rstand, is to make the councll or somebody pass an ordinance or law for- bidding men to spit on the sidewalk. 1 guess I could etand that, but some of the fellows out my way certainly would keep the cfficers busy making arrests uader those conditions. Wken a Neoraska rancher or one of the raflroad boys who has been chewing tobacco all his life runs up against that proposition I don’t want to be around.” The tmmaculate clothing drummer sniffed the moment he was conducted within the door, and said to the bellhop: “Boy, you hustle right down and tell that clerk that this room will have to have better ventila- tion if I use it. It's positively musty.” The dutiful bellhop went down to the clerk as bidden and sald: “De gemmen in 216 say tc send up anothah ventilation, cause de one up dere {s rusty and he can't | use it.” “Talk about your gold mines! A store- keeper named Blumenthal found one in his basement this week at Fremont,” sald E. Charles Chase of that city to a crowd around the Murray's desk yesterday. “Blumenthal sold out and was cleaning up for the people who are to come In after him. Among other things he had to move was a great lot of ashes down in the store basement. * When the men got to shoveling out, they uncovered a pile of hard coal. There must have been at least a ton and a half of it. Blumenthal says it got covered up last winter and while he moticed it at the time, he really forgot all about it this fall when winter set in, and so the find was lfke so much pure gain for him. Every- body in Fremont, I guess, has been spend- ing an hour or two rooting around in his own cellar since the story got out.” They were a pair of the real things and they were willing all should know it. When they were seated in the cafe the boy with the bangs asked: “Can we get beer in here?* The waiter admitted that they could, but added that he presumed they would want it with their lunch orders. The boy with the pompadour said, certainly they would want it with their lunch order. The waiter asked what they would have for lunch, and the real things pondered five minutes over the bill of fare. Then, to come with their beer, one ordered milk toast ond the other ordered buckwheat cakes. The waiter went out immediately. He was afrald they might change their minds and order caramel drops with Man- hattan cocktalls. “I want to get out to Geneva again be- fore long and see how they come out on their telephone franchise fight,” satd H. B. Harrison, a grocery salesman, stopping at the Schlitz. “When I was there this Iast week the ambitious little city was all up in the air because three companies weré trylng to get the inside track for ‘phone service there. One of them was a home concern and had most of the tacking, but two or three of the counciimen were for some Iowa or Illinois company, I can’t re- member which, and made speeches in the council meeting against the home company —and then there was the deuce to pay. The man who represented the home com- pany threatened to withdraw his propo- sition and the meeting had to adjourn untfl some future time. I suppose the new papers have taken sides and made it a real respectable corporation fight by this time.” “Poople this far east don’t realize how much snow there has been out west this winter,” said H. F. Arnold at the Murray yesterday. “I was stuck in a drift out this side of Cheyenne on the Union Pacific from ope Friday night until the next Sun- day night and every man of us took a turn at the shovels. Well, not every man, either. There were a dozen laborers and one dude who didn’t. The conductor got equare with those fellows by making them eat after the rest of us got through, when we finally got to a lunch counter. He told ihem if they were not well enough to work |like the rest ttey were not well enough Many a woman spends an hour twice a | to eat like the rest.” PENSION ASKED AND DECLINED Soldier Explains that He Merely Wanted to Establish His Right to One. The pension bureau has discovered an old soldier who has refused to accept a pension from the government after applying for it reports the St. Louis Republic, and Comml sioner Ware doesn't know exactly what to think of it, The veteran who has taken the unusual course 1s John A. Dafley of Topeka. But the next mail after the pension was allowed came a letter from the old soldie | in which he stated that he didn’t want & pension after all. He didn't care for it, he sald, and asked Commissioner Ware, as a personal favor, to remove his name from the pension list. | When Commissioner Ware received this communication he was dumfounded. He | concluded that Dailey was not of sound mind. S0 a special examiner was sent out to | Kansas to make a thorough’ examination |into Mr. Datley's sanity and the most re- | markable part of the whole affair was then | brought to light. The examiner discovered that the veteran was really in need of assistance from Uncle | Sam, and that, instead of being weak- | minded, he was particularly bright, in spite of his advanced age. Mr. Dalley, the ex- aminer reported, was bent nearly double from the effects of a disease contracted on the field of battle. He could not stand up- right and his entire form was twisted with pain. | Mr. Dailey gave a pecullar reason for re- fusing to take the pension, which had once | been his, although for a few days only. He | sald he wanted to proye to the people that he had been a soldier for the union and Qidn't care about the government's money, &8 the government already had to spend millions of dollars annually in pensions. When Commiesioner Ware received the report of the special examiner he was at a loss how tg proceed. There was no pre- cedent for such a thing and considerable time was taken in determining what action should be taken | At last Commissioner Ware wrote Mr. | Dailey & personal letter, in which he told the veteran that as a special favor his name would be removed from the pension list Neb. THOS. F. GODFREY, Pass. and Ticket Agent and no money would be sent to him. In relinquishing his pension after it had been allowed, Mr. Dalley wrote to the pen slon office follows “I have the honor to acknowledge the receipt of pension certificate No. 1,049,055, The award is generous and the result prompt. “My purpose in filing my application was to establish my claim, which, being done by the tssuance of the certificate and p ments made in mccordance therewith, may easily bo sald to be accomplished, ‘You are hereby directed and empowered to remove my name from the pension list and to discontinue the issuance of any tunds for payment of any claims under and by virtue of the above numbered certifi- cate.” Dafley was & soldier in the Fourteenth Indiana Infantry. The pension which he re- fused to accept amounted to $12 per month, Commissioner Ware says he will not be allowed to apply for an accumulated pension later, although he can again make appplica- tion for a pension to begin from the date ot the application. WHIRLPOOL FILLED WITH GOLD Tons of the Yellow Metal Believed to Rest on the Floor of Niaga: Awtul Pool. Tt has remained for Peter Nissen of Chicago to thrill the hearts of the residents of the Niagara locality with an opinion that there is gold in paying quantities at the bottom of the Niagara whirlpool, that river pocket that {s 50 full of mystery. Mr. Nissen {5 the man who twice boidly navi- gated the whirlpool rapids in a boat of his own construction and on his second visit to the whirlpool is alleged to have taken soundings in order to penctrate the mys- tery of Its depth, formation, etc. For over six hours Nissen floated helplessly about the pool, taking soundings when opportu- nity offered, and now, In an interview, he says the full importance of his discoveries of that eventful day did not come to him for six months. Here is what he says: “A little over a year ago I floated around in the whirlpool one day from 12 o'clock noon to 7:30 o'clock in the evening. 1 bobbed my lead against the hottom more than 100 times, but obtained no more than thirty-two good soundings. Besides these soundings I discovered the remarkable fact that the bottom of the pool is covered with sand. There was something so strange about this that I could not leave off thinking about it. The interpretation of it 414 not come to me till more than six months later. In order that you may fol- low my thought I want to tell you a few facts with which you may already be fa- millar. There was a time in the geologic history of America when the northeastern part of this country was entirely covered with fce. This is sometimes called the Labrador ice sheet, from the fact that it | covered the Labrador peninsula and came from that direction. Ite southern border crossed the Ohlo river near Cincinnati. It | extended through Ohfo, Indiana, Illinois | and west of the Great Lakes. “The ice continued to thaw at the south- ern and western extremities, while the frost and enow kept adding to it In the morth. This made it more like a mighty glacier across the rocks of Canada. Its immense welght and force ground and scoured these rocks and carried the debris southward, where It was deposited from place to place wherever circumstances per- mitted. Before this ice age there was a Niagara river but when, on accoutt of the warmer climate in this region, the ice re- ceded northward and the Niagara again began to flow, Its old bed from the whirl- pool to St. David's had been entirely filled up, #o that the riyer found an easier cut- lot toward Lewisto: ‘These facts..are woll known. Every student of Niagers is familiar with them. It s equally well.known that there s a belt of gold-bearing rock that extends all through the Labrador peninsula and north- west of the lakes. It has an area of over 200,000 square miles. In ‘his rock there are the gold mines at Hastings directly north of the falls. In this rock are also gold mines throughout Labrador, Quebec and Ontarlo. It is the very same rock in which Alaska gold is found. It is the de- bris of this rock that was carried down by the ice and deposited in which gold is found in the Chaudiere country, eouth of the St. Lawrence. It is in the debris of this rock, carried down in the same way, i which, according to ome well known geologist, ‘there {s gold everywhere in the United States from Canada to Florida.’ It is this same debris that has filled up the | St. David's channel, of which the whirl- pool of Niagara was a part. “When the river began to flow anew it was directed against this deposit, like the glant nozzles used for gold mining In the Out there they collect the gold sand | between the rails at the bottom of the flume while the water, sand and gravel flow on. The very same condition exists in the whiripool. The water has flowed for ages and washed out millions upon mil- lions of cublc feet of sand and gravel. Take | these facts in conjunction with my dis- covery that there is sand on the bottom of the whirlpool, would it then be unreason- sble to think that this {s gold-bearing sand?” GENEROUS ACTS OF ROBBER Admiring Missourian Tells a Story to the Credit of Cole Younger, The late Major Emory S. Foster of Springfield, Mo., although he was a gallant union soldier during the civil war, always “stood up” for Cole Younger. Lasting gratitude for gemerous treatment that he once recelved from the daring bandit caused him to do so. The story of the fu- cldent, as told by the old major himselt, to the Springfield Leader, is as follows: “He and bis regiment took part in the battle at Lone Jack, Mo. In the midst of the en- gagement, he was shot, and, as was thought, fatally wounded, The union troops were forced to retire, and leave their wounded on tha fleld. Foster and his brother lay, be- side each other in a hut when a young bushwhacker who had been their enemy at ‘Warrensburg before the war entered. He was half drunk, and had a pietol In each hand. He was swearing that he was going to kill the Fosters. ‘“He caught sight of us lying there, and rushed over,’ related Major Foster. “His eyes were flendish *‘Say your prayers, — you,' he shouted ‘You die this minute. “A young fellow suddenly rushed for- ward. “‘You d—a coward,’ he sald. “In & moment he hud seized the rowdy disarmed him and knocked him headlong through a window. Then he stood guard over us. “‘My name fs Cole Younger,' he said, ‘and 1 pledge my name for your security.’ ‘I thought I was mortally wounded and confided to Younger that I had some $700 and a watch and chain and my brother a considerable amount of money, which we would like to send to our mother in War- rensburg. Cole Younger took the money and valuables and four days later my mother recetved them.” “Major Foster never forgets this act of honor and kindness,” the Springfleld Leader to the family Foundation Food Above All. - Food that forms the vitality is the food that contains the greatest amount of strength-giving pr~perties. greatest fund , of The grain which muxes the flour which makes Uneeda Blscult must possess to a high degree the elements of nutrition. This is necessary, not only to reach the highest standard of food value, but to maintain the same degree of excellence without any devia- tion in each and every baking. ‘ For goodness that does good Uneeda Biscuit belongs of bread and meat. Sold in the In-er-seal Package with red and white seal— NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY' MARDI GRAS NEW ORLEANS, LA. February (Tth to 24th One Fare for Round Trip ——VIA— I1linois Central Railroad Long limit returning. Btopovers allowed enroute. Ask for full partiou- lars and copy of illustrated booklet, *NEW ORLEANS FOR THE TOURIST,” at 1402 Farnam 8t., Omaha, or address W. H. BRILL, Dist. Pass. Agent, Il Cent. R. R., Omaha. Last Barrier Gone. “Henry,” sald Mrs. Penhecker, “you have not yet told me what good resolve you have made for the new year." “Why, my dear,” protested Henry, “you know that I have no small vices or bad habits at all. Don't you know that you have induced me to stop swearing and smoking and drinking and going out nights, and everything else that I used to think that I wanted to do?" “Yes, love,” answered Mrs. Penhecker, sweetly, “but it sometimes seems to me that you read the advertisements of liquors and cigars with a sinful satisfaction. It would be better for you, spiritually, it you should sternly and firmly resolve to shun | them hereatter.” And poor Henry shrank further and fur- ther Into the nice new housecoat that she had made from her old dolman.—Judge, Lady Wants Position, A young lady with exceptional reference and ability wishes a position with good house as cashier or. office employe. Moderate salary if advancement 1is promised and position - permanent. Address T 62, Bee office. Low Rates South, Southwest and West, On January 20 and February 8 the Bur- lington offers special low one-way and round trip rates to many points south, southwest and west. City ticket office, 1502 Farnam st., tele- phone 260, or at passenger station, 10th and Mason sts. A Beautiful Calen The Milwaukee Rallway has gublished an artistic calendar for 1903. Six sheets, 10x13 inches, of beautiful reproductions in colors of pastel drawings by Bryson. Price, 25 cents. On sale at City Ticket Office, 1504 Farnam street. The Assumption of the Idle. Though you may toll your whole life through, Some man with lazy priae ay that he could do o tried ~~Washington Star. This Prove; —It! oter's sell it for less”” Bend In rs, but don't puy goods in drug line from anybody's catalogue— are back numbers. White Ribbon Remedy .. ¢ White Ribbon Remedy ....§7.26 3 | Whirling Syringe. Vinol 7 oD b Wright's Liguid Smoke Peruna—with stamp Peruna—without stamp o Both guaranteed genuine Pe-ru-n. $1.00 Plerce's Prescription o $10 Plerce's Medical Discovery $100 Sexine Pills e genuine Castoria...... > - These look staple, don’t they? $1.00 Tler's Malt Whiskey £ $1.00 Canadian Malt Whiskey—Gordon's §1.00 Duffy's Malt Whiskey Allcock's Porous Plasters $1.00 Hossack's Sarsapariila continues. “When the Youngers were de- nounced he defended them. When they were imprisoned he zealously sought a par- don for them, and when things looked blackest, he, at Cole's request, sent them his photograph. Cole framed it in his cell.” ajor Foster died at Oakland, Cai, the day before Christmas. The guaranteed blood and kin cure 2 Chester's genuine Pennyroyal Pills.$1.00 sc“‘EFEn’ CUT PRICE OPEN ALWAYS, hustling people but It means both time and money, and It Is proper to sk who is there who would not do his hest to that they are seldom vacant long. DRUG STORE | FOR COUGHS, COI SORE THROAT and HOARSENESS—TAKE Union Station, 10th and Marcy. The following needa ne 204 miles shorter to Salt Lake City 278 miles shorter to San Francisco 278 miles shorter lo Los Angeles 858 miles shorter to ._._ Portland 12 hours quicker to Sait Lake City 16 hours quicker to San Franoisco 16 hours quicker to . Los Angeles 16 hours quicker to . + . Portland Ofty Ticket Office, 1524 Farnam Street, "Phone 316 "Phone @9. me Nice Rooms for Ten Dollars Per Mon There are two rooms, which, though they are small, are in every way de- sirable, and only two at this price that-are now vacant, mand for these small rooms in THE BEE BUILDING When you rent an office in the Bes Bufld- ing it means that you have your office address in the best building in Omaha The rental price includes light, heat and janitor service. most_comfortable weather in which to move, if you want one you had better get it now, rather than take your chances later. R. C. PETERS & (0. RENTAL AGENTS, BEE BLDG. S HOWELL'S ANTI-KAWF Ask your druggist or send 26 cents to Howell Lrug Co., Usmaua, Neb. There is such & d While this is not the of these offices ) GROUND FLOOR,