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| Mayor’s Supporter | Pardoned by Jim is Back in Jail L. C. Thompson (;en Ten .Days on 0ld Charge of Abusing His Wife. PLAN HOR BRIGHTER OMAHA Scheme Evolved from Ginger Club to Spread Over City. UNTFORMITY 1S THE KEYNOTE! —— | | Proposed to Assess Business Men to | RAuy Ornamental and Services able Light Pow the Streets, Ten daye in jail was the sentence Police Judge Crawford gave Tuesday morning to { 1. C. Thompson of 202 Biondo street, the man arrested twice within week for belng drunk and abusing his wife and who was pardoned from a five-day jall sentence the first time by Mayor Dahiman, who is sald to prize Thompson as a political sup- porter “Not another drop of whisky vn me," declared Thompson before he was sentenced. “It's the drink- ing that's the cause of it all. I'm all right when I'm sober. Four witnesses appeared in police court and testitied Thompson's habits of drunkenness and wife abuse. They were Mrs. Thompson, Mre. E. A. Berviey, who dives with Mrs. Thompson; Rev. L. R. De Wolf, 2 Grace street, pastor of the Seward Street Methodist church, and Patrolman Robay, who arrested Thompson Bunday. “He called me all sorts ef vile names that would be insulting to any woman,” said Mrs. Thompson. The police- man declared that Thompson had observed Sunday by imbibing “‘plenty of baoze,” and Mrs. Berviey added in a general way 1o tha testimony agaiost Thompson. Rev. Mr. De Wolf sald he had known for some time of the conditions in the ‘Thompson. household and knew that they were not of the best. Thompson and his | wite, who says married him as the result of a matrimonial advertisement, pro- fessed conversion six months ago, accerd- Ing to the minister, and they were taken into the church on probation. Colonel Maher « ideas Are “emtching” as well as Ipox shown by the proposition the cipal affairs committee of the Com- | mercial club Is to make to the ety cqun- | following in the footsteps of the ‘500" | ginger club, for more. Jights The first move was ‘made when David | chairman of the gpmmittes, and some f his associates, asked the council commit- tee of the whole to Ke¢p in mind, what- ever is done to imprové the lighting of the clty, uniformity, which the committee he- leves is necessary L is proposed to ssess houses something ifke $1.60 to 82 per foot, payable in several years, to and serviceable 1ight posts with brackets, supporting five lights, Pax~ ton & Vierling, who made the “Welcome™ are working en @ design These posts will by et every seventy- five feet—three to # block, in all the busi- ness district—if the plan s carried out, while a similar post will be used in the close in residence distriet, except that the residence district posiéiwill have one light instead of five | When the business houses have Installed the the electricity will be put on One will keep the large ning all night for light. asked to pay for the cur this light. The four smaller lights on each post will be on another efr- it that may be turned off at midnight or. carlier they will be for fiiumination. The business houses In the block will be asked to subscribe to a fund to pay the actual cost of this lllumination. Hy using this plan it is argued that the city will not only have an economical sys- tem, but the business men will expend less for supporting the lights on the posts than | they are now paying for iights in thelr Places of business, which do not make a very good showing because of the lack of uniformity. The “50" block boosters intend to Install such lights whether other blocka do or not, nd the municipal affairs committee will ke it a business to take advantage of ! opportunity and lMght Omaha as a | meiropolitan city deserves to be lighted, as | well as illuminate it in the evenings for the | rative effect and spirit of enterpirse | the abundance of lights Inspires Mrs. Banner Will Not Fight Divorce| a will go in court, Cole as to the business front buy ornamantal arch, posts g1 At the t The cit will be she as Spanish War Hero Thinks He is the Strongest Democratic Candi- date for Senator. m John G. Maher, whose headquarters are now at ldncoln, spent Tuesday In Omaha, following his attendance at the banquet of the Spanish war vetsrans Monday night “I have stmply been talking among | friends 1 have here regarding the chances | of Richard L. Metcalfe to secure the demo- | cratic nomination for United States s ator,” said Colonel Maher. "l am opinion the democrats of Omaha will sup port Mr. Metcalfe in preference (o any other democratic candidate. Metcalfe comes right out will make the race—and there ls little doubt that he does intend to run—he will receive strong backing not only in Omaha e cc which Coes to Newport to Live and Too Weary of Trials to Contend with Husband. lar, but out In the state as well.” Mre. Atta Banner, found. not | gullty e Sty s . Rewpor | Remarry After where: she will make her home with her N Six Years Apart recently sister, who is the editor of a paper there. Mrs. Banner's departure is interpreted on good authority meaning that she will | not_contgst the divorce suit filed by her | rugband 1§ Rannen g E Lk Lty txvm":‘.-u Per boffabd i fhe aivorce | ¥ progecdings, admitted as much Tuesday moming M court while does as co Couple from Missouri Come to Omaha "' “to Bury the Hatchet at the Alta: i Banner |s somewhat weary of room vroceedings,” sald he, “and| could fight ghe case successtully, | ot care Lo undergo the strain of Seven months of diverced life proved enough for Cecil M. Bowen of Unionvile, Mo., and Florence R. Bowen, hid former | wite. remembered, filed his | that the ending of thelr tiff would attract on n Monday afternoon | less attention if they came to Omaha for vigwing the Satdrday night on which | the second ceremony, than if they remalned Are. Hanner wa. aequitted. Mre. Banner |at home. They seoured the license Tuesday eptied with an an¥wer and ‘cross petition | morning. A daughter of & years will be a ‘he nekt day. | witness of her parents’ wedding. ! she Anothe Ban will b petition for divoye e e | If.you are a woman and you have this symptom get Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound without delay. "Backache seemsan invention of the evil one to try woman’s souls, - Only those who suffer this way can understand the wearing, ceaseless misery. ! We ask all such women to read the two foJowing letters for proof that Mrs. Pinkham's medicine cures backache caused: by female diseases. Brooklyn, N. Y. —*I have been a great sufferer with a con- stant pain in my back. I was advised to use Lydia E. Pinkham’ Vegetable Compound for it, and the pain has disappeared. I feel like 8 new woman since that awful pain has gone, and may God bless the discoverer of that great and wonderful remedy. Mrs. Peter Gaffney, 548 Marcey Ave,, Brooklyn, N, Y. —%Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- 1| woman, and I would like to tell the world about it. \lll(lcimt!l from female troubles and fearful pains in my "I had the best doctors and they all advised an operation. Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound made me a well ‘woman aiid I have no more backache. I am ready to tell every one what.this medicine has done for me.” —Mrs. Emma Imse, 833 First 8t., Milwaukee, Wis. I.ydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound has made thousands of cures of such cases. You notice we say has cured thougands of cases. That means that we are telling you what it kas done, not what we think it will do. We are stating facts, not guesses. We challenge the world to name another remedy for fe- male ills which has been so successful or received so many testimonials as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound. : rs Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable g’ ’l?n!l . bien the standard remedy for 1 ills, No sick woman does justice to herself who will mot try this (:.mn?d“.im%‘s’d“:i from roots a erbs, an mmwenm to its credit. Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her advice, She has od thousands to health free of charge. Address Mrs, Plukbham, Lynn, Mass. h “ Picks Metcalfe| of the | Whenever | and says he| | and Lincoln, where he is also very popu- | They decided to remarry and thought | |HILL BUILDS IN WYOMING Burlington Prepares for Resumption | of Work at Worland. | SURVEYORS NOW IN THE FIELD! General Manager Holdrege Hopes to Do the Grading This Sw Though Appropriation to Come. The Burlington rallroad i preparing to resume the bullding of new lines in Wyo ming and work is expected to begin soon from Worland to make line across the he line south jon second Burlington the ate | G. W. Holdrege, general manager of the Burlington, sald Tuesday morning that surveyors were still active in the field, trying to decide upon the best water grade, and (hat although no appropriation had been made by the Burlington for grading he hoped to do the work this summer. | While Mr. Holdrege said the route had | not bean decided upon, it is rumored the line will run south from Worland and tun- nel through the divide between No-Water and the head of Bridger creek and then | | build south to the Nortfiwestern and use ilhn’ line as far east as Orin Junction until | such time as the Burlington can bulld a | line of its own. The Colorado & Bouthern, owned by the Burlington, now has a line | trom Cheyenne to Orin Junetien. | | The Burlington needs this line not only | [to handle the through business which is| now being turned over to the read at Bill- ngs by the Great Northern and the North- | ern Pacific, but also to assist in its scheme | of development of the resources of Wyo- ming Millions of dollars are belng spent work on mines around Copper mountain and the new line will provide an outlet for | the ore. n EXTENSION OF NORTHWESTERN | Date Set for Running 1L Train te C ron. { The Northwestern rallroad has set May | 23 as the date for extending the mileage | en its second train to the northwest, so| that after that date the train which now | stops at Long Pine will be run to Chadron. OMAHA BOY GETS BIG PLACE! | Rodney 3. Durkee 1s Appointed| Auditor of the Nevada Northern. | Rodney §. Durkee, son of W. P. Durkee, | auditor of the Burlington rallread, has| been appointed auditor of the Nevada | Northern raliroad. Friends of Mr. Durkee | are delighted at his promotion, as the posi- | tion 18 n most responsible one for a man of Mr. Durkee's age ORYT TOOTS | Minor Matters of ~t Who Ran the Trains. R. L. Huntley, chlef engineer of the Union Pacifio, and Edson Rich, general at- | torney for the road In Nebraska, have re- iluru-d from St. Paul, where they went to consult with Horace G. Burt, president of the Chicago Great Western, in reference to the establishment of an interlocking switch connecting the two roads at Omaha. | Lewis W. HUl, president of the Great | Northern, has undertaken one of the great- est traffic feats on record. He has con- tracted to move 1,000,000 bales of cotton from Mobile, Ala, to Yokohama, Japan, this year. Packed tightly in forty-foot cars the shipment, If moved at one time, would make a train 165 miles long. “The fifteen-day tours of Yellowstone park, which were vo popular last vear, will | be repeated again this summer, said W | H. Murray, assistant general senger | | agent of the Union Paclfic Tuesday. | “Tours will be started each Saturday from Chicago during June, July and August. The Union Pacific will have a twenty-five-day California tour, which will be personally conducted Two other twenty-five-day { tours, personally conducted by S8am Hutoh- | | ison, are arranged for the Seattie exposi- | tion."" | Practically all the western rafiroads have ( served notice they will adopt the recom- | | mendation of the executive committee | of the Western Passenger associa- | tlon that stopovers of ten days be allowed | at Omaha on all one-way and round trip | tickets within the final return limit of the round trip tickets. The McKeen motor cars have been so suc- ocessful in California that several of the Wranch lines of the Union Pacific and the Oregon Raflway and Navigation company | branch lines in the northwest are to be | equipped with these care | Bdson Rich, general attorney | Unlon Pacific In Nebraska, California on & short trip | The Milwaukea will receive freight for | through shipment over its new line to the | Pacific northwest on and after June 1, | “\mlvni unforeseen difficulties arise. Local passenger service will be installed west of | Butte the last of July, but there will be no | through passenger service to the coast this vear. In preparation for the new business Miiwaukee is working all its shops full | and forty new freight cars are being urned out every day. i It has been announced that the general offices of the Chicago Great Western wili | not be moved to Chicage as long | rond remains n the hands of the receivers A conference recently held n the receivers of the road and representatives af elreuit court, at which It was de. ed that the headquarters could not be moved beyond the jurisdiction of the court. | LOOKS LIKE LEGISLATURE HAD WIPED OUT ANY SUCH NEED | Demoerats Do All that Need Be Done for Success of the Re- ablican Jack Martin, an attorne: tral Chy | was In Omaha Tuesday on his way to Lin- coln to attend the meeting of the lican state committee. 1 not know whether there is any work for a political committee to do during | this campaign,” sald Mr. Martin, “for it | looks to me as though the late legislature have practically wiped out the need of a | committes at present. 1 have idea what actien the com- mittee will take on the question of testing | constitutionality of the non-parti law. The matter I supposed will tulked over at the meeling.” |GLAD TO GET LAND OPEN ng People Rejolce tha lowstone Territory is Availa for Entry. { The restoration of the Yellowstene land | to entry is causing & vast amount of re- joloing in central Wyoming, as all recent withdrawals along the Wind river have heen restored to entry by order of the sec- retary of the interior. Some tme ago Mr. Pinchot saw fit to use his Influence to have & large part of the Wind reservation declared & forest reserve and thus withdraw the land from settl ment. It is estimated that of the 196,000,60 acres of forest reserves in the western | states probably one-half or more will be restored to entry within the next few montha to Men i for the has gone to as the was betwee \ \ [ \ { [ [ repub- do the Judiciary be el | | he had come from South Omaha and on { southern CLUB WOMEN AND INSTITUTE | P, WEDNESDAY Two Hundred Thousand Dollars in Checks Lost| Bank Package Left on Street C_u, but is Found in a Little While, | The loss of a $218,000 package of checks | Tuesday morning belonging o the South Omaha National bank caused considerab! anxisty in bank circles, but the speedy re- covery of the package soon set the bank ofticers and others at ease South Omaha banks clea- through the | Omaha Clearing house and Tuesday morn- ing the bank messenger, John Pinnell, was enroute from South Omaha to Omaha with the checks of the bank when he left the package on a Sherman avenue car. Instead of reporting his loss the boy walted until the return of the car on which which he had left the package. The con- ductor is said to have told the boy that a man, who was sitting beside the boy, got oft the car and took the package with him. The matter was then reported to the clearing house and the police notifled When the carmen reached Twenty-fourth and Vinton streets they turned the pack- e over to the foreman of the barn. The oconducter on the car was 8. W. Barker. When Barker saw the passenger pick up the package and walk out of the car with it he supposed it was his and thought nothing more of it until the report of the loss came. | Planck Has His 5 Farm Nailed Down| | | 1 Returns from Rosebud, Where He| Has Taken a Tripp County Claim, | Just because Jack Holt got “cold r-u'l and returned from the Rosebud country without' seeing the government land opened to entry and not even setting foot | on Tripp county sofl, there was no reason why Frank Planck should not file, and he came home with a homestead all nalled down. Mr. Planck mays that the Tripp county South Dakota, land is as good as any; that it will raise magnificent crops, and that he expects to become a bloated hondholde: in o few years. He planted his elderberry and red haws bushes on his claim in the part of the county, and while he says he was the only who took | along a nursery stock, and thereby at tracted considerable attention, he Is not sorry, for he will have a start of the other homesteaders. | Mr. Planck expects to return to his claim about the middle of July and get a shanty | bullt and preparations made for winter be fore time to harvest his corn, which he has | hired planted. He engaged a man to break forty acres of his 160-acre tract, and this | will be put into corn. He believes he can live next winter on corn bread and wine made from his elderberry bushes, and next year he will begin farming in earnest. one Cement Pavements Laid in Ralston| P s s | Bids Are Asked and Property Owners | Signed Up for the New | Work. | Bids are being asked and property own- | ers signed up for laying 9,000 feet of cement | walks in Ralston, where a full-fledged town will soon be running, with st black- smith shop, lumber yards and other neces- | sitles of seml-urban life. Some of these are already establisied and four buildings are just being completed, one started. Petitions are being circulated for a post office, and it is believed the citizens of the new town will be successful, as more than seventy men are now employed in the stove works, which opened there last fall. { The car line will be opened for servico| next Menday morning, when it will be pos- | sible 0 go to the town from Omaha by | street car. Thus far the resldents have | been dependent on the local trains of the | Burlington and the Missourl Pacific rail- | ways. our steam shovels, a camp of graders and mules are at work on the grading and | excavations for the Ralston car Some building material, including erable steel, has already arrived store | with | shops. 1 consid- | | | Wednesday W i ons Be Day for Orga to Help Swell Child Saving Fund. Child Saving Institute iast report two largest belng $100 each and B. B. Davis. Wednesday | Women's Club Day for the in- and a number of prominent women agreed to take th d In the matier The list of subscriptions to the $624.86 Is as follows. Previously W. Be B. B. Davis Nursery comniittee B, F. Marshall 8outh Omaha Home (o A Friend First Conkregation day school D. Arnolal Cash : The Charmonte club 8. R. Rush Ida V Tilden Mrs. K. R. Jack rs. H. D. Foy Emily T. McKell A. Donahue R. C. Hoyt B. F. Martl Mrs. L. F. Beymer A. Huirisch Mrs. Willlam C. Englash Luthern Bouth Omaha Kings Daughters, Presbytery Omaha Mission Sunday 1. Dumaont fund of w an n $024.86 since are inced w will the Buebe stit hav acknowledged ., $51,864.00 3 ¥ 100.00 100,00 90.70 y 50.00 Ing sale.. Chureh Sun- Flgtan Sunday school South scheol A Friend Olivet Baptist Sunday school Dora Peterson Leonard Peterson el Carpenter Sunday scheol J Reynolds Miss Seidel i Grace Baptist Sunday school Thomas Grace . Mrs. A Cagley Bighteen names Total Mr. F. G. ¥rits, “My little girl taking Foley's ¢ greatly benefited by | ino Laxative, and T think ' it ts the best remedy for conatipation and liver trouble.” Foley's Orino Laxative is best for women and children, as it 1s mild, pleasant and effective. and is a splendid spring medicine, as It cleanses the system and clears the complexion. Baid by, all druguista APRIT | and Detective Vizzard of the | customary express bill game. | tween the two is in the amounts and names | used | Detectives Ferris and | Potts | on appeal 28, TW0 CROOKS ARE IDENTIFIED | Confidence Men Sustain Blow to Their Business in Arrest. SAID TO BE OLD OFFENDERS | Their s, but d to Cateh Vietims W Have Fat Rells Money. me No ot That a great step toward the ultimate | killing of the business of confidence men in Nebraska hae been taken with the cap- ture by Omaha detectives of Andy Potts and Charles Osborn, is believed by County Attorney J. C. Cook and Sherift “Dutoh” | Bauman of Dodge county, the Omaha police and the railroad detectives, who have been working on such ca for months. The men have been positively identifled by Dreesler and Willlam Moore, a Pacifio train porter, the men wanted | by the police. The Omaha police say that both Petts and Osborn are old time con fidence men and crooks, with pictures in many rogues' galleries. “We will push this case to the limit and ought to break up the confidence men in Nebraska by the prosecution, sald At torney Cook, who spent several hours in Omaha Tuesday morning. He secured statements from both men and & detailed account from Dressler of how he was buncoed and aiso held a long consuitation with Chler of Detectives Savage of the Omaha police, Chief Canada Union Pa- cific secret service and Sheriff Bauman ot Fremont. The confidence game was played in that town and the sheriff came Omaha Tuesday morning to take back prisoners He was accompanied Evans, former county Dodge county. Unton | as to the Al of by commissloner Same Pair, Looks Like. The $500 bogus draft which Dressler re- celved for his $20 in currency, is almost identical with the $1,00 draft given O, C Hoffman of Merna at Grand Island, when the swindlers secured 3% from him on the Both drafts are supposedly drawn on the | Traders’ National bank of New York City by the cashier of the Beaver City National bank of Beaver City, Okl, and both are numbered 1185. The only difference be- During his examination by County Attor- ney Cook Tuesday morning, Potts sald that he had recently been in the city jall here under the name of A. H. Potts. Investiga- tion showed that a man of that name was arrested on April 10, with Eddie Mack, who Is sald to be one of the country's most famous confidence men and plckpockets. Dunn, who helped make the arrests Monday night, were tho arresting officers on the first occasion was sentenced to thirty days and Mack to sixty days in the county jail, from which they were released a few days later bonds. COURT RULES HUSBAND DID BEST HE COULD FOR WIFE And on That Theory Judge Redick Refuses Divorce to the Wom Mrs. Mabel Morgan cannot get a decree of divorce on the ground that her husband is not a good provider. Mrs, Morgan sued alleging nonsuppert, but her husband. Mal- Jory Morgan, did the best he could, s0 Judge Redick holds. The sult was heard some days ago and after consideration Judge Redick has now ruled refusing the decree prayed for, though granting Mrs. Morgan the custody | of the two chjldren and ordering Morgan to pay her $i0 a month Morgan formerly ran a small Towa weekly and Mrs. Morgan was led to marry him through a matrimonial ad. DRAINAGE FOR Ditch Survey in the Bottums North is Completed by riek. FLORENCE | Up Assistant City Engineer John P. Crick has completed the survey for drainage Alteh across the Florence bottoms and work was begun Tuesday Fdward Turner Is the contractor and the work will cost about $4,000. The ditch will be about 1,800 feet long, twelve feet deep and sixty-five feet wide. A steam ‘‘clam” shovel is being used and the soil will be piled along one side, making a high roadway twenty feet wide. The | lteh will drain the country in the vicinity of Miller park and the amount of earth which will be removed will make a high and dry speedway which will be the de- 1ight of the autoists. | street, Correct Dress for Men and Bovs Your Price? About how much do you want to pay for a Spring Suit? Name your price and we'll show you a suit that will more than meet your expectations. Selling more clothing than any other store in town, we carry a much bigger assortment and you chance for selection. Economy may cause you to make the most of a $10.00 suit; or you may be a little more lav- ish and choose a suit at $15, $20, $25 or $35. have here a better No matter what grade you select the same style and goodness of tailoring is there and we give you ‘“‘the most” your money can buy. Our Clothes Are Perfect The garments show every mark of expert workmanship in all the little devices which cause garments to retain their style and to look well to to the very last day they are worn. The home of Kuppenheimer Clothes, John B. Stetson Hats, Man- hattan Shirts, for men and women. Carhart Work Clothes, Everwear Guaranteed Hosiery s e e et e o T L T Old Man Defies Thugs With Gun Stuck in His Face!: Erik Peter is pa pretty good 207 North years yet. son, st60 man 1 ‘Twenty-third but he's a There are two men In Omaha who would be willing to attest this fact, but they are not available Monday was golng lodge meetin night just now about o his home. On Dodge 11:30 Mr. He had been to street, Peterson between Seventeenth and Eighteenth, two thugs ac- costed Mr. P volver In his >eterson. Une face. thrust a re- ‘hrow up your hands!" commanded the coward with the gun. Mr. Peterson's reply was a blow on the man’ “I'll not t held up by you," Coward No. to stylke Mr. ing him to t This all the commoti neighborhood ran away. hrow up my head with his umbrella. hands, nor be he declared. summoned ¢ urage enough Petersion in the face, knock- re ground. . aused some on attracted to the scene e people and the thugs ommotion, in and the Mr, Peterson gave no alarm to the police, nor any ness office to Insert a and that is t known. “My only l¢ the loss of n other alarm. He ca The Bee ad for of want he way »8s or damage,' eye glasses.” ny Tuesday his the affair came me to the busi- morning lost to be sald he, “was JUST AS HIS NAME SAYS Edward Sti for Edward St right and wrong ckler in the Propriet Things. fekler s of a a st transaction Truly a Stickler tes of fckler for the and wants it knowh that he will not stand for having his mates. He had them ar clothes pawned by his room- rested Monday night as suspiclous characters, but after a hearing in pollce co Tuesday they were discharged, as nothing definite was estab- lished agains They are Lou Harry Sudin whom Stickler had street until t them. Soloman, g and George roomed he decided to Walter George, Willeg, with at 1905 Dodge leave to save glasses | his wardrobe. Hls present address is tha Dewey hotel. Some of his goods were found in the pockets of one of the men when they were searched at the police station, and Stickler claimed that they had pawned his overcoat, which he needed uring the breesy weather that prevailed Monday night. {Workmen Shy at Job on Old Jail Some difficuity s being experianced ' in getting men to work ou the demolition of the old Dougias county jail. All the prisoners have, of courss, been | removed, but not, say the workmed, all | the inhabitants of the ancient buflding by several million. The upper story and one wing of the building have been torn down and its being razed to the ground is now only a matter of a few days. That done, | the firm of Lamoreau & Peterson will v: cate in favor of Caldwell & Drake, whose first work will be to bulld a’retaining wail on the south side of the old court houss. |COLLINS. ALLEGED FORGER Three Complaints Filed Against Him and He Walves Preliminary Examination, | Three forgery complainta were filed in | police court Tuesday morning against Jim il‘n”lmfi the man whose reputation as a {check artist came to a sudden and severe | ending Baturday night. He walved exami- nation and was bound over to the district court by Judge Crawford on eaeh com- plaint, the bond being fixed at 30 in each case Collins is 1 to have made his home in South Omaha, but most of his victirhs are Omaha storekeepers. Those who hed the three checks specified in the commplaints are George Wachtler, a grocer; Owcar Peter- son, a cigar dealer, and O. E. Johnson, a grocer. Two of the checks were drawn on the Omaha National bank and one on the First National. They were for $10, 312 and $14. The Yellow Peril. Jaundice—malaria—bilousnes vanishes when Dr. King's New Life Pllis are taken. Guaranteed. %c. For sale by Beaton Drug Co. The Modesty of Women Naturally makes them shrink from the indelicate questions, the ob- noxious examinations, and unpleasant local treatments, which some hysicians consider essential in the treatment of diseases of women. et, if help can be had, it is better to submit to this ordeal than let the disease grow and spread. The trouble is that so often the wom- an undergoes all the annoyance and shame for nothing. Thousands of women who have been cured by Dr. Pierce’s Favorite Prescrip- tion write in appreciation of the cure which dispenses with the exam- inations and local treatments. There is no other medicine so sure and safe for delicate women as ‘‘ Favorite Prescription. debilitating drains, ircregularity and female weakness. almost always cures. = It " It cures It always helps. “ Favorite Prescription’ is strictly non-alcoholic, non.secret, all its ingredients being printed on Its bottle-wrapper; con» tains no deleterious or habit-forming drugs, and every native medicinal root entering into its composition has the tull ens dorsement of those most eminent In the several schools of medical practice. Some of the numerous and strongest of professional endorsements ot its ingredi- ents will be found in a mailed free on request, amphlet Dr. R wra B S ‘;Jpcd around the bottle, also in » booklet ierce, of Buffalo, N. Y. These profes sional endorsements should have far more weight than any amount of the ordi- nary lay, or non-professional testimonials. The most intelligent women now-a~da{ medicine instead of openin their down whatever is offered them. POSITION. mouths s insist on knowing what they take as ike a lot of young birds and gulping ‘‘ Favorite Prescription’’ is of KNOWN COM- It makes weak women strong and sick women well. Dr. Pierce’s Medical Adviser is sent free on receipt of stampsvto pay ex- pense of mailing only. stamps for cloth-bound copy. f sick consult the Doctor, free of charge, by letter. tions are held sacredly confidential. Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Pellets invigorate and regulate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules, easy to take as candy, Send to Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y., 31 one-cent All such communica-