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1909 NOVEMBER MON 1 SUN TUE WED THu 282930 Have Moot Print It. ¥ (L] 23456 78 95101011213 i4 1516 §7 18 19 20 ¢ 21222324252627 | 1909 sar R. P. Swoboda—Osrtifiod Accountant. Rinehart, Photographer, 15th & Lighting Fixtures, Burgess Granden Co. Heyn, photo, removed (o 16th & Howard Bquitable Life—Polisies sight drafts at Fa BRIEF CITY NEWS | ARMY TOURNEY OMARA'S YET| “It Will Come, I Confidently Be. lieve,” Says Senator Brown. YES, INSURGING WILL GO ON STILL J Asserts Determined but De- This Seasion of or Nebraska Senator " Wil Be cent in Congresy. Senator Norrls Brown part of Monday In Omaha, rolng from here |to St. Paul, Minn., where he wil an address Tuesday evening before the Soclety of Colonlal Wars, Wednesday he will spend with his mother in Des Molnes and from there he will proceed to Wash epent the larger m. ington. Mrs. Brown i& now in Des MoWes maturity. H. D, Neely, nanager, Omaha. |and will go on to Washinzton with her J. A. Gentieman Co., Undertakers—New | husband. PBoth of the senator's daughters ’ location, 1614 Chicago St ‘Both phones. "lrf‘ attending the university and will not | Coal Hil Ooal Company—Large Nut,|80 to Washington this winter #5 per ton. Good dooking coal. Tel. D. 079 ‘ We will bring that mi’itary tournament Will Study Prophot Isalah—The study | !0 Omaha next year, I confidently believe. of Prophet Isalah will be begun (Tuesday) evening's class at Temple Israel Berryman Bays New House P bought a Thirty-third and Martha streets, lian McGraw, paying $6,000 for Jerryman has new The Burest Way to Save is to follow al sted that Omaha should have definite plan of saving o much a | tournament.” Nebraska . Board of Trade Bidg. Go to Bes Deore Factories—Under the | auspices of the John Deere Plow company Moline, company fixed week and or month an Ass soe fifteen dealers to view the factories that place. Tk will December 4. have gone to of the return t n at ting of the Bible | Edwa houte from 1 it. T o0 Oma Violation of Postal Laws—Thomas Marshall was arralgn States Commissioner Ande: t Jeged tion of some technical n of the postal laws and gave bond for 3,0% for his appearance in New York. visited the home of Sam Adler, ney street, Surday perhaps, he fce eream, a lttle dinner party fce cream, left Adler will be had before Bpeclal Exami Pearsall at the matter of the 2-cent the case of the Rock Island at of Judge W. T the case. St. Andrew's Day Oelebration evening being the anniversary of of Scotland’'s patron saint, St. \ Clan Gordon will hold open hoy \ ‘ dance with refreshments } Colonel Willlam Kennedy, Clan Gordon, evening. at past mercial Trayelers of Nebraska have peti ‘ tioned the State Railway commission to adopt some scheme whereby a man with a permit may ride on all freight trains in the state. The traveling men suggest that this permit be issued at a price of §5 a year and that it will allow the bearer ride on any train when accompanied by regular transportation, D by H. Dirr, who killed undertaking rooms. Moines, Samuel & brother of the victim, new developments in the case. every evidence that Dirr to take his own life. Stockmen Sue Bailsends—Sui line road, the Northwestern fendants, with the Northern for damages, alleged to have transportation over these Kennedy will hear the ecase. taken rooms at the Paxton. in trict eourt. P and milk dealers. clty hefore on a rear porch home, were taken, and nothing else. Two-Cent Rate Up Again—A despondency lines. or 1 an featu ‘Thieves Steal Ioce Cream - The thief who e H y evening, evidently liked wanted to spoil because six gallons ot | the ot ner C. 10 o'clock Tuesday morning in passenger rate the off McHugh. The hearing will be for the purpose of taking testimony in Tuesday the bi this | *a3d the senator Savings United hearing | “To &v may Involve of an order already made circumstances of the e are favorable to laims f this city. Senator Burkett and self, tlwith the house will do Ll | thing that can be done to have carried out which we are told ex- the 1910 the setting aside | but the tifted down ard case, the m, members, | the tactt agreem Will the insurging go on when congress { convenes? With a twinkle In his | make Joe Cannon jealous nior senator replied: “Right from the jump, my fu a decent, consistent manner. dcavor will be to have things made as ear right as possible, to meet western |sentiment, which, after ail sane and | sersible to a degree at base. Original Legisintion, Too. There will original legislat under the direction of President Taft. He has a well defined, positive policy for the securing of equitable rates on the rail roads for commodity shipments. This policy includes a change in the law so |that the Interstate Commerce commission can, of its own volition, without waiting for a complaint, make rates that are proper |according to the individual case. That will {be a long step toward straightening out |some abuses that are known to still exist in the rate making field.” Of the possible developments in the polit- {ical situation in Nebraska Senator Brown said he did not care o be quoted at this time. At another point In the conversa- | tlon, however, he gave the impression th lie does not look for much organized op- position to the candidacy of Senator Bur- kett for re-election that would Nebraska eye the " a h boy; but The en G al- res be o0 ar W n loe rth Andrew, use chief will make the address of the ‘Would Ride Preight Trains—The Com- Puneral of Self-Blayer—The funeral of himself Thursday cutting his throat with a razor in his room, §28 South Nineteenth street, was held Monday afternoon from Heafey & Heafey's Dirr of Des came take charge of the burlal and to look after | his brother's effects. Thére have been no| there being caused t in a trict court Involving the Union Pacific rail and the cago, Milwaukee & St. Paul raliroad, as de- P Wiscon Cattle company as complainants, will begin | Tuesday fnorning. The stockmen are suing | been s tained by the loss by death of sheep by | Judge A seore of HONG KONG TEA COMPANY witnesses are present in the city ahd have The occasion will take the form of a soclal and intervals Diamonds—FRENZER—15th and Dodge. of Some Hotels .Give Bonus to Cabby for Guests Practice Causes Trouble and Free Bus Line May Yet Be One Re- sult of War. to | Al Is not lovaly within the ranks of the Omaha Hotel Men's association. A big storm is brewing and it is liable to burst forth with fury any time. The dlscovery has been made that some hotels are paying bonuses to drivers of hacks and’’buses to get them to bring strangers to the hotels. Tney pay 25 cents to the driver for each guest who registers. The driver accompanies the guest into the lobby and to the desk and stays until he gets recognition and {s | the clerk holds up his hand to signify " | how many the hackman is to be paid for. | The matter will be taken up at the of the Hotel Clerks’ association and if the gullty parties do not stop the practice one at least of the hote's intends to put on a free automobile 'bus line be- tween the stations and that hotel, tof hi- | | meeting sin | us- Watches—FRENZER—15th and Dodge. Warrant Charges Nels W. W. Carson with Embeszslement of Large um Collected by Him. It was careless of Nels W. Carson, col- money. | Maybe that would not have been so |bad If he hadn't, in the same spirit of the charge except that the petition-itseif Office again after telling his sad, sad ) was sworn to and entered as an atfidavit, | *'0rY With 8o many sincere tears. Regardless of the realities in the case Why Have Asthmat —It has recently very it £ystem. Full disca information About this ery can be had absolutel charge by addressing Mr. C. E. Williams, | No. 18 Fulton Street, N. Y City.—(Adv.) | mont, Neb. been discovered by prominent European physician, that Asthma is no longer Incurable as he has covered by a combination of drugs that an be complgtely eradicated from the N wonderful | y free | whatever they may be, and perhaps with- of out proper appreciation Mr. Carson's | histrionic talent. G. C. Stovall, manager |for the tea company, has brewed a bitter cup for the unhappy and absent Nels. In |Justice Eastman’s court he has caused |the issuance of a warrant, charging em- bezzlement of the said sum of §119.52 Justice Eastman has taken the proper Of | steps to secure the service of the warrant on Carson, who Is believed to be at Fre- Woman’s Power Qver Man Woman's most glorious endowment is the power to awaken and hold the pure and honest love of o ‘When she loses it and still loves on, 0o one in the wide world can know the heart she’endures. The woman who suffers from weak- ness and derangement of her special womanly or genism soon loses the power to sway the heart of @ man. Her general health suffers and she loscs sttroctiveness, her amiability s womaan. Dr. R.V, Pieree, of Buffalo, N. the assistance of his steff of able physicians worthy man. ber good looks, h and her power and prestig thousands of women. lates, strengthens and heals. He bas devised a successiul remedy for woman's ments. It is known as Dr. Pieree's Favorite [Irescription. It is. specific for the weaknesscs and disorders peculiar to women. : Medicine dealers sell i wdvise you to aceept substitute in order to m IT MAKES WEAK WOMEN STRONG, ony Y., with has preseribed for and cured many positive It purifies, regu- No henes! dealer will « little larger profit, SICK WOMEN WELL. Dr. Plerce’s Pleasant Pellets regulate and streagthea Stomach, Liver and Bowels. PREPARING FOR CORN SHOW VISITORS Keep your eyes open for the best offerings in groceries and meats. No. 1 Flour, sack Sweet Corn, doz. cans New Tomatoes, dox. cans New Peas, dos. cans New_Potatoes. bushel ( cholce of Blend, Ib | New Head Rice, finest for 78e, or 5-lbs. . | No. 1 Hams, Ib., ... No. 1 Badom, Ib.... Pot Roasts, ib. Rib Roasts, 1b. 60c quality, 10-1bs every- | | SEEKS MISSING EMPLOYE | Attack on MUk Ordinance in Court—A | sult to have declared invalid the milk sales ordinances of Omaha is before Judge Troup The hearing s on the ptiion for an injuntion brought by Anton | Grobeck and forty-nine other dalrymen ! There has been & MNttle |1€ctor for the Hong Kong Tea company, to evidence introduced, but the case is largely | ¥t held up just on that evening when he one of argument, which began Monday aft. | NAPPened to have §1%.82 of his employer's erncen with John A. Rine speaking for the The petition contained an aftack on Health Commissioner Congell, but no evi- | dence has been Introduced to substantlate Carelessness, failed to show up at the Some Things Yo The American Congress—The War Congress. | The story Is the most Aramatic tory of the national session began on of the Thirty-sixth congress chapter in the his- legle'ature. Tts first December 5. 1569, and it ended when aham Lincoln was In- augurated president of the United States Before fts stormy career was over, six of the southern states had scceded and had formed the Confederates States of Amer fca. Jetferson was a president of the confederacy February 161 Only a few weeks before he had bade farewell to the Tiniled States sen ate In a specch of profound pathos. Other southern senators and representatives left the congress as thelr states seceded from the un and at the end the Thirty- sixth cress was wimost a purely tional body ery effort ongress to would again flict. John Kentucky the war of 1€12 s early 1516, Davis igurat on on possible was made by that device a compromise which postpone inevitabie con- Crittenden, a senator from whose public service began In nd who entered congress earned the respect of congress and the pralse of history for his efforts to cffect a peacefu! compromise, but his work was vain. Peace was im- possible. That congress opened with the | house so evenly dividea between the op- | posing factions that two months elapsed | betore it was possible to elect a speaker | Willlam Pennington of New Jersey finally was elected. the vote of Henry Winter Davis of Maryland, a “southern American," | | | giving the republicans victory after the |long. long struggle. But the regular re- pub'ican candidate, John Sherman, could not win because his name had been signed to an endorsement of Iielper's book, ‘“The Tm: ding Crisis." Pennington was a new member and his strength was alto- gethér In his weakness—he was unknown |and had no enemles. In the senate the chair was occupled by John C. Breckinridge of Kentucky, vice president, and the candidate of the south- |ern wing of democratic party for presi- dent. He witnessed the departure of his political followers and supporters as th left the senate; but he kept his seat, presided over the count of the votes and he declared Abraham and Hannibal and vice president A ttle later he was a general the armies of the confederate states. The senate during this congress honored Jesse D. Bright of Indiana by electing him president pfo tempore of « that august body; In the next congress it expelled him on a charge of treason. The history of the Thirty-sixth congress {= important cnly because of its dramatic {ncident. It @id littls or nothing affecting the permanent status of the country. It engaged itself in vain, but patriotic, en- deavors to avert the storm that i= now believed to have been Inevitable. But in thore days men still hoped for reconcilia- tion. There was a strong union sentiment both north and south, and in both sec- tions there was an element which flouted the constitution. The extreme secession parly, supreme in South Carolina, blazed the way for disunion. Yet Alexander H Stephens, Zebulon B. Vance and men of thelr kind opposed secession. When their states decided to leave the union the vast majority held to~the doctrine of state soverelgnty and ga¥e their allegiancs to the state rather than to the nation. At the north the extreme abolitionists had denounced the constitution as “a league with death and & covenant with hell.” There was by no mesns a sufficient anti- slavery semtiment in the north to justify a battle upon that issue. The north made “The Union" its shibboleth, Of the men who made up the Thirty- sixth congress, but few are living. Perhaps the only survivors are General Daniel E. Sickles and Judge Roger A. Pryor. Both were democrats, Sickles from New York and Pryor from Virginia. Sickles became a major-general In the federal army, Pryor was & member of the confederate congress. Both now live in New York. The Thirty-seventh congress met first in special session on July 4, 1861, at the call of President Lincoln. The eivil war nha then begun, but as yet no one expected it to last lon and no one dreamed what | four years would bring. Nine of the se- ceding states had no representation, the he electoral Lincoln Hamlin elected president of the United States. n | loyal portions of Virginia and Tennessas sending both senators and representa- tives, Galusha A. Grow of Pennsylvania was elected speaker of the house, but Thad- deus Stevens assumed the position of par- Mamentary learder of the republican party and became, In fact, the master of the | house. The speaker reflected his will, ana he drove the house to an acceptance of his decrees. A man whose private life and personal mannerisms were such that he could never attain genuine popularity, he | u Want to Know ruled by sheer force of intellect He wis & master of vitriolic sarcasm, and he con- | vieted every man who opposed him treason. Only Lincoln and. at & later date | Grant, were too mighty to stand without | falling before his vindictive distrust As the chief foe of slavery he naturally at- | tracted the strength of the abolition sentt | ment which, when the war had actually | begun, expanded enormously throughout the north. Stevens was the logical leader of the house { The Thirty-eighth congress met first in | Detember, 154 Lincoln had not #pecial session, even in that mig of the history of the nation not always in sympathy the elections ealled ¥ nEress was with Lincoln, and house of representatives chosen at the in 1862 contained a element opposed to the administration a small section opposed even to the The war democrats were always suspiclon. But Mr. Lineoln ed them full faith and that the union could unléss the north was was meverely a respectable and war. u always a for sa be His 't those credl knew t ne united. pol condemned by some republicans in congress who belleved that a democrat was a rebel, wherever he might be found, or whatever he might say or do to the contrary. The dislovalty of the ‘copperheads” lent color to this view. The position of the war democrat was mos uncomfortable, especlally If he was member of congress. And It is interesting to note that Pennsylvania, Ohlo, New Jer- sey, Illinois, Michigan and other states of the north sent many more democrats to congress In the clection of 1862 than they did in the election of 1908. Speaker Grow was retired to private life In that election, and he was succeeded ak speaker of the hou of Indiana, who was completely under the domination of Stevens Schuyler Colfax During the sessions of the Thirty-eighth congress opposition to Lincoln'n views concerning the tremtment of the south became more pronounced, and Stevens opposed the re-nomination of Lin- coln for the presidency. But the cong: stonal party could not stand agalnst the influence in the north of the great vie- tories being gained by the federal army Victory united the north as it had not been united before. But Lincoln feared he would be defeated, and an appeal was made to the war democrats by nominating for vice | president Andrew Johnson o# Tennessee, | Stevens, at the convention, complained that | he didn't see why the party had to go “down into those damned rebel provinces™ for a candidate. The Thirty-ninth congress was elected | in November, 1864, at the same time Lin- | coln and Johnson were elected. But it did | not meet until the regular sessjon, begin- | ning in December, 1865. Then the war over, Lincoln had been assassinated, and there was a democratic president in the White House. The congress, under the leadership of Stevens in the house and | Benjamin F. Wade of Ohio in the senate, | already had manifested sirong opposition to Mr. Lincoln's policy in bringing about the restoration of the southérn states With & liberal policy shorn of the great prestige of Lincoln’s name, and welghted with the personal and partisan unpopularity of Johnson, it was inevitable that the radi- cal policy would be adopted. Even had Lin- coln lived it is to be doubted whether he would have been able to oppose *he radical sentiment which pervaded the Thirty-ninth congress. Johnson could neither persuade nor n- timidate the congress and-the battle was | on. The struggle to mafntam the unlon had been victorious, now ¢ame the strug- gle to maintain the supremacy of the r publican party. However much one may feel constrained to condemn the bitterness of Thaddeus Stevens, he can but admit| that in those days of rife it was I]”’! ficult for the men who had fought for the union to witness with equanimity the | return of the southern states into the | union on a basis of equality, bringing a | certain democratic section Into congress which would, with the northern demo- crats, drive the republicans from power Aslde from the measures growing out of the war, the chief accomplishment of the war congresses was the enactment, in the Thirty-seventh congress, of the home- stead law, by which the public domain was | E | | | opened up to settlement, in small tracts, by actual farmers.. It is perhaps one of the greatest benefits of the rule of the republican party in the nation, The last of the war congresses, elected during the war, but which did not meet until after it was over, took up the task of restoring the Union. The results of its labors stil! control the political destinies of the country. By FREDERIC J. MASKINS. Tomorrow- AMERICAN CONGRESS. Johnson Against Congress, Ballinger’s Plan Stirs Club Men Commercial Men Aroused Over Recom- mendation to Discontinue In- dian Supply Depots. The recommenaation of Secretary Bal- linger that Indian supply depots be dis- continued in western oitles, including { Omaha, Chicago, St. Louis and San Fran- has set thq Omaba Commercial club action. “I eannot understand how the secretary can say houses Is based upou uncommercial princl- for it surely is on commercial line sald J. M. Guild, commissioner of the locs club, hese cities are all natural dis cise | to | tributing points because of thelr proximity, | center. and Omaha is escpecially The Indian supply system ls now worked out the same a¥ quartermaster posts, which supply the soldiers. “The present system is the result of de- velopment. All the work was done in New York twenty years ago, Just as the secre- tary recommends. Flfeen years ago & depot was placed at Chicago. Ten yvears 480 & depot was established at Omaha, and then St Louls and .San Franciseo. It Is the natural evolution and was brought | about by conditions regulating that state |of affairs. With the supply stations Scat- tered transportation, which is one of the | big items, is greatly reduced.” MEXICAN BAND DREW CROWDS Musie Coming to Omn’ | “for the Chicago Land Ex- position. now since s Harvison C '‘arker, general manager of fhe United States Land and Irrigation ex- | position, recently held in Chicago, is In Omaha. the guest of E. L. Lomax. The | exposition was conducted by the Chicago Tribune under the direction of Mr. Parker who was until recently advertising manager of that newspaper. The exposition was re- markably successful “The Mexican National band which you that the supplying through ware- | adapted for a ,wm have here during the Corn exposition,” sald Mr. Parker, “helped most materially in drawing the daily thousands to the | Coliseum and it will prove equally mag- | | netic in Omah: beyond any doubt.” t in the Aect and arrested by Dr. King's New Lite Pills, | | billous headache quits and liver and bowels | “afl right. 2c. For sale by Beaton Drug | Co. | i — | |JUDGE ESTELLE AND COUNTY | COMMISSIONERS LOCK HORNS | | Jurist Takes Exception to Trainor | - Plekard Attitade Toward | Detention Home. | Friction brewing oetween Judge l.re[ stelle and County Commissioners |ard and Trainor s getting hotter | commissioners and Judge Estelle disagreed about the Detention home. “If | they (Pickard and Tratnor) think they can run the juvenile court better than |1 can,” declared Judge Estelle, “let them | ! come on over The idea of their talking of the expenses of the juvenile court with theirs before them!" Friday last Judge Pustelle whole board of county commissioners held a conference with regard to the dvercrowding of the Detention home, as alleged by Commissioners Trainor and Bruning. The conference was highly amicable. Later the board sitting in- com- mittee of the whole voted on & proposition to allew an assistant at the home. Scott Bruning and Bedford voted for it and Pickard and Trainor against. Plck- The have | and try and the So Pure It's Good —For catarrh, bay fever, sore throst! gives fus SaTeare. Wilte us or g Sample Free . keep tacdy o Tube 10 1h4 Louse or pocket. CATARRHAL SJELELY | exhibits for the National Corn exposition SENIORS STRANDED 1IN MU ]‘_ High School Misses and Misters Walk in from Benson. “Overcoat Week” Commences today with exceptional values at every price SLEET TIES UP THE STREET CARS Along in the Wee Hours of Another Day They Manage to Get Home, Bespattered and This entire week will be known as Cold. “Overcoat Week” at this store, a . we've prepared a special showing of The waves dashed high on a stern and the newest and nobbiest overcoats to rock bound coast.” | be seen west of Chicago Hush! Just imagine we're all ship- | We've included every style, fabgic wrecked or pattern that's new and popular, and every one tittered, maybe one Presently the ripple of Then they girl merely giggled that cauld possibly suit your taste They're made by our own Artist-tafl- merriment thawed them out and the class | ors, so we'll simply say that thelr vell of the Omaha HIgN Sohoo! seniors Tome tailoring and finieh could mot be bet- from twenty healthy throats tered at double the price The merry company was returning from | We mention especiall: the new a ‘‘Mother Goose” party at the home of a “‘Gonvertible” and Military”’ styles, friend at Benson Saturday night. The sleet in the new gray fabrics that are now m stalled the car away out there in “all the rage” in the east 2 ol e B SRS to be found here in greater variety of chored pattern than in any western store, and One brave girl and her timid escort, who'| at any price from hed reached Forty-fifth and Lake strests came to a drug store some blocks away through the storm. She telephoned to papa who sent-a cab for her. It was just 1:3) to n. m. The escort got home, but much ater The rest of ghe laughing youngsters lin- Note our special window display gered the car a time and then set | All Week. forth in the driving sleet. It was 1:38) o'clock when they came upon a ear about Fortieth and Hamilton, after they had walked a mile or two. This fickle vehicle carried them but two blocks toward their | homes \‘.;‘ it, too. =~x‘wr;|m:¢d to ;m ““The House Of storm and the m, d with saddening e Eroan of the helpless wheel (| High Merit” The rest of the way the voung peopl tofled through the mud and ice. They left behind them much of millinery and several | pairs of rubbers to tell the tale of thei distress. There was a lot of fireside treat- | ment for colds when they got to their . homes. | “But It was such a romantie adventure,” | gurgled one of the jolly senior gils after | the ordeal was over. “We had almost as much fun as at the party.” BECAUSE OF GOOD DIGESTION White Woman Crys for Black Husband cine did no good. 1 trd out numerous remedies, with a like result. 1 wa+ at the end of my string, my pocketbook emptied, and I was in a worse condition than eve I gave up in despalr; there seemed to he An interesting interview was recently obtained with L. T. Cooper, whose theory and medicines have created such a sensa tion during the pagt year. Wife of Ed Burke, Negro, Makes| Mr. Cooper, in speaking of the remark- | able success of his medicine, had this to no hope left, and I was completely dis- B e say on the subject: “My medicine regu- | courage: Goes to Pen. lates the stomach. That is why it is suc-| *A friend-came to me and urged me cessful. The human stomach today has|to try Cooper's New Discovery medicine. There was quite a scene at the Burlington | bécome degenerate, and is the cause for ; l)ml“ tp my hmnl» ‘n disgust—what station just as the mofning train pulled |most ill health. In the horse, the dog, and a% ‘l"'r"*' i ”';. “l:n"rll\ impressed me, out for Lincoln. Big Ed Burke, the col- |tHe Wild animals gererally, you see no|ahd ally decided {0 tak -anattie ored man sentenced to sérve two years in (M€rve exhaustion, mo chronic debility.|TIRACE, and Bought one bottle of the New the peMitentiary for highway robbery, was |They are not shut up day after day with | DRcovery 1 r.m‘n.. idea that it would forced to part from the white woman who |Practically no exercise, and they are not|help me. but it aid \ claims to be his wite. able to stuff themselves with food when rom the first day I could notice an The woman created a scene by clinging | their bodies have not had erough work to improvement, and by the time the firat to the big calored prisoner as he was led |Justify it. The human race has been do- | bottle had h‘z:"n emptied there was a very off to the train Jailer Osborne, She |INg this for years, and look at the result— fnoticeable change for the better. My cried violently and her loud moans at- half the people are complaining of poor |bowels were thoroughly cleansed, my tracted considerable 'attention, When the health, not real {liness—iust @ half-sick, Stomach felt easier and retained food, and officer had succeeded in loading his burly |tired, droopy feeling. They don’t really My digestive organs began to perform prisoner aboard the car she insisted upon |Know what is the matter with them. | their functions properly. My sleep became - d reshin develo going with him. but friends led her away “I know that all the trouble is caused [F°Stful and refreshing. 1 developed a by weak, overworked stomachs. I have good appetite, and soon discovered that TWO FREE EXHIBIT CARS IN |proved this with my medicine to many |} could eat anvthing I cared for and as much as I wanted, distress afterward “Imagine how good everything tasted to a man who had hesn on the verge of |starvation for fou# yeArs. ‘My ‘strength soon returned, and I continued until T had taken four bottles. I am now entirely welj —never felt better in my life. All my former trouble has disappeared. 1 owe At all to Cooper's New Discovery, and would be ungrateful, indeed, if I failed to give praise where it is due. “I make this statement purely sense of duty ing in any way without a thought of | thousands of people In most of the leading leities of the country. This is the real |reason for the demand for my prepara- tion." ‘ Among those who have recently been it8-two |onverted to Cooper's theory is Mr. 8, W laden with | Beckham of Aberdeen, Miss., who says: “I have just spent four miserable years | asking and seaching for rellef from Indi- from as far south as Centralia, I, picking |gestion and stomach trouble. I can not up exhibits enroute. |describe the suffering I have been The Illinois Central is in the midst of a [through. My health was undermined big advertising campalgn to let all the land I could see myself rap'dly failing. I people along its lines know of the Omaha |could neither eat, sleep or work. The exposition. Contracts have been placed |little food I did manage to swallow gave with 600 newspapers to run quarter page |[me the greatest distress. ads telling of the corn show. Illinois Central Brings Corn Show Products from Way Down Ilinol The Tilinols Central has landed free baggage cars in Omaha They were loaded to the limit and came from a To any one who is suffer- from stomach trouble I can recommend this Cooper medicine, Cooper's new Discovery is sold by all “I consulted physicians, but their medi-|druggists everywhere. HOME FURNITURE CO SOUTH OMAHA SELLS FURNITURE 209, BELOW OMAHA PRICES GET OUR PRICES on CARPETS and RUGS 9x12 Brussels Rug 9x12 Velvet Rug 9x12 Axminster Rug ' Well made, full sized Steel Couch . Combination Bookcase and Desk-- Empire Finish With Mirror Range, 4-hole . 6-hole