Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE BEE: OMAHA, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1910. OUAA BOWLERS TRIVMPH Home Teams Put it Over on Both St. Joseph and Lincoln, SOME GOOD MATCHES AHEAD Contests Slated for T! Week Have Important Bearing on Chances of the Commerel, e Pennant Race, Suceens x Schedule for the Week. OMAHA LEAGUE. (Francisco Alleys.) Tuesday—Storz against Luxus. Wednesday—No game. Thursday—Dreshiers a aing Co. Alnst Omaha Bed- Friday—McCord-Brad: Advos against Hospe Co. COMMERCIAL (LEAGUE. (Keyt Alleys.) Tuesday—Loch's Willow Springs against Glendales, Wednesday—B#bdegaard Crowns against Dreibus Candy Co. Thursday—Chabot Shoe O'Brien’s ‘Monte Christos. METROPOLITAN LEAGUE. (Keyt Cellar Alleys.) Tuesday—Daily News against Bungalows Wednesday—Excelsiors against Hollys. Thursday—French Way against West- sldes. Friday—Traecy's T. B. C. against Hussle Acorns, BOOSTER LEAGUE. (Francisco Alleys.) ‘;'uflodny—l'nl(m Pacific against West- sides. Wednesday—Sprague Pills against Cud- Co. agalins! ar:svs hursday—Yousem's Colts against Sprague Pl clTiday—People's Store againat Cream City. MERCANTILE LEAGUE. (Francisco Alieys.) Thureday—Midland P. and G. Co. against Q. M. D. Wednesday—Equitable Life against Omaha Gas Thursday—Gate City against Capitol Bolers. Friday—Carpenter Paper Co, against Kamos. That the bowlers of Omaha can shoot #ome ten pins was clearly shown in the contests which took place on the alleys Sunday. The Columblas of St. Joe were defeated in two of thelr thres games against the Omaha teams, while the Lincoln team was unable to win In either of thelr two matches. The defeats were all decisive. Of course shooting upon home alleys was to the advantage of the Omaha boys, yet thelr bowling was the best they have done this year in mixed contests. If they can continue In tHly form while at Detrolt it will land them In a high position. Henry Clay, the ex-Omaha bowler, was easily the star of the St. Joe crowd, and with a,_little better luck would have made quite & total. Big Kinneman s one of the largest men seen upon the alley In a long time, he has a very fine dellvery and shoots a very speedy ball, which usually lands right. The ball he used has three holes Instend of the usual two. Siemens, the Mid-west champlon, got off Six DozenGoodLaughs ““Ireland isn’t Ireland any more’’ would tickle you to death even if you'd never smiled before in your life. " 1t's one of the longest Am- berols ever made and there’s real fun in every inch of it. February Amberol Record No. 354 for the Edison TPhonograph Get complete list of Februs Records fr our dealer. or write to N ational Phonog,snn Lompany. 751, Avenue, Orange. M., Nebraska Cyele Co. repre- sents the National Phono- graph Co in Nebraska and carries huge stocks of Kdi- son phonographs, including the models mentioned in the National Phonograph Co.’s announcement on this page today, as well as a stock of over 100,000 records. Nebraska | Cycle Co. Geo. E. Mickel, Manager. | 15th and Harney Sts., Omaha, Neb, 834 DBroadway, Council Blaffs, Ia. A Wonderful Remedy for all Diseases caused by URIC ACID IN THE BLOOD These pills cleanse the whole system and bring about sensc of health and strength. The manufacturers, Belden & Copp Co., Minneapolis, will send you a sample ab- wolutely free. The regular |lenge game with the | day’ afternoon in which the Stellings won | the nicely in his first serles, but kept getting tewer as he went along. However, It must be acknowledged that he has a very ef- fective ball and It's no wonder he gets six hundreds right along. “Duffy” Perkins and Lambert i fairly well, but didn’t show the class of the other three members of the team. Some very good matches will be bowled in the different leagues this week, The Glendales will shoot six games against the Loch's Willow Springs this evening. The outeome of these matches will have a great deal to do with the ultimate chances of either team to win the pennant in the Commereial league. The Metz and Stors teams both have hard games on their hands the first two nighte of the week The People’s Store will shoot against the Cream Citys, the winner of which will crawl out of last place in the Booster league. Four out of the five men on the Colum- bles shoot a hook ball; guess the hooks atill Jead. Neale and Blakeney both bowled very nicely in thefr two-men mateh against the 8t. Joe cracks, also Francisco and Ander- son, the only difference being that the St Joe team went better when shooting the latter two. BOWLERS DEFEATED | VISITING Men from St. Joseph Lose In Two Contests, Win Ome. Af Francisco's allleys the Bt Joseph teAm defeated a picked team of Omaha | men Sunday, and was in turn defeated by | the Metz team. In the two-men game the B8t Joe| bowlers also lost to Omaha. Following are the scores of the three games: PICKED TEAM—~OMAHA. 24 8d4. Total Grotte . 172 174 621 | Wiley F O < Conrad 170 178 518 | Chandler . 183 157 1m 519 G. O. Francisco. 189 170 152 511 876 866 2,604 24, 84. Total. | Lambert 176 181 532 Seimens . 170 180 537 Kinneman 226 170 159 84 | Perkine . 208 169 660 | Clay ... m 195 680 | L9065 x4 o4 2,798 BROS. 1st. 24, 38 Total, | Neale . 202 227 182 621 | Sprague 154 226 677 | Hartley . 105 18 45| Blakeney 200 1 68 Huntington TR W oW 2™ 24. 8d. 179 208 w7 0% Kinneman 198 180 Perkins . 164 169 Clay 187 188 Totals ¥ 0% 20 5. Tot. Kinneman 163 903 Clay 139 796 Totals 02 1,609 5. Tot. 168 970 171 964 Totals 368, 463 354 410 3% 1,084 The Sea Dogs won two games from the Night Mailing last night on the basement alleys. Lough had high honors for the evening, with 180 for single game and 481 for total. J NIGHT MAILING. 1st. 2d. 34. Total Spetman 17 11 1R 462 Glass /7108 141 406 Gallup 68 173 13 T Total 604 432 400 136 SEA DOGS. | 1st. 2d4. 3. Total Waage #5154 126 4 Criss 160 13 M4 M7 Lough 180 157 144 481 Totals 485 464 414 1,363 LINCOLN BOWLERS DEFEATED Picked Team from Commercial League W Three Games. Sunday afternoon on the Metropolitan alleys a picked team from the Commercial league took two out of three games from the Lincoln boys in a special match game and_beat out the Lin- coln team by 26 total pins. The Omaha boys will go to Lincoln for a return game Saturday afternoon. The Loch's Willow Springs team also beat the Lincoln bunch three games after the picked team had bowled. LINCOLN 1st. 2d. 84. Total Rehder a2 168 188 493 Hellwig 126 182 49 Dyer . 168 186 606 Carlson B0 182 4% Galladay 149 136 a7 Totals ...... Aoind WL 819 2002 2. 3. Total | Baehr 00 129 g Solomon 1 14 50 Latey 179 168 4“8 Godensal 2 18 6 Hull 163 180 5% Totals 94 T 5008 BOWLING AT SOUTH OMAHA | Stellings’ Squad Wi Challenge Match by Four Pins, Beselin's bowling squad played a chal Ted Stellings yester- the totals by a lead of four pins. Score: BESELIN. st 2. 3. Total Beselln ... LU 1 14T D. Schneider W 18 18 6» Cole . M 14 19 48 Dworak W 16 14 4w B. Schnelder 0 U8 & Totals o s 4. 3. Total, Spowen .. 18 207 66| Vollsteat P T Zeek W 16 M Koll ... 128 18 M| Winter . 176 L4 Tota 0 2| KLING sue | Base B 1 Catcher Says He Will Not | Start Action for $40,000. KANSAS CITY, Mo., Feb. 14.—"It Is very | be.” said John Kiing, the base ball catoher, | today when shown the dispatch to the ef- fect that it was reported he contemplated a sult for $40.000 against the members of National commission if they do not allow him te play ball for “There is absolutely no truth in that re- port,” sald Kling. | Kane Will Sure Be Here. friend In_Pittsburg, who called on Jim Kane, first baseman of the Omaha team, 21, the hospital where he Is now quartered. | hospital because of the Injury to his eve In @ basket ball game and while the doc- | tors will not permit him to read or write, | his eye surely be all right by the opening of the base ball season, a Eligible, Feb. 14.—(Special)— ity of Iowa sprinter, | has been declared eligible by the faculty. | He was absent from two final examinations | on the last day of the semester, which, ac- | Tallman Decl | JOWA CITY, I Tallman, the Unt priceis $1 a box, For sale by Dillon Drug Co. cording to faculty regulations, bars a man from tl hletic team: taken the examination: eligibl Weak Lungs Ask your doctor fo name the best f me .H,l-:n:_-. Seventy years of experience with Ayer’s Cherry confidence in it. mgl'y. mend it for coughs, colds, bronchitis, weak throats, and weak lungs. It pre- seak vents, It,protects. It soothes. Itheals. e’ Just the help nature needs. ral have given us great We recom- | Plans kind of the newspapers to keep me In.| formed of what my future actions are to| four years. | | , Brother Dave has recelved word from a | says that while Kane is still in the | Is doing nicely and that he wili | Pa Rourke Goes to Chicago to Finish Team Will Attend Western League Meet- ing and Browse Around Among the Trading Stables. President W. A. Rourke of the Omaha team has gone to Chicago primarily to attend the meeting of the Western league magnates, who will determine upon the playing schedule for 1910. This meeting will begin Wednesday. But Pa will nose around into several other confabs while In the Base Ball Hub, The American association holds its an- nual mecting while he fs there and the American league will have a hen on, and the base ball men of the universe will be In and out of Chicago all week. The up- shot of this will be many trades and ex- changes of players, and Pa expects to finger in these enough to come away from the city at the end of the week prepared, If he should choose, to announce his line- up for the season. While in the main, his team fis picked, he yet has several chances to strengthen it, ang of these he means to avall himseif. He needs a good, strong, enduring pitch- | Ing staff, and proposes to get it before he starts Into the season. He and every other team owner In the Western league recog- nize the fact that this year Is going to be A strenuous one, and that the elub winning the pennant will have to go at a fast and regular clip. Omaha’s untimely loss of the pennant in 1908, when It had, In fact, won it, and its close shave last year have put a very de- termined spirit Into Pa Rourke, and if it lles within his power to bring back that flag which he put away {n Omaha in 1907 he's going to get it. University Wrestlers Fix Date. JOWA CITY, Ia., Feb. 14.—(Special.)— for the annual home wrestling tournament of the University of Iowa have been completed and the date is definitely fixed for the week bef‘lnnlnx February 2i. Jesse Reimer, the big Des Moines grappler, has written his consent to referee the matches. His presence Is expected to be a big attraction. A new feature of the tourna- ment this year wiil be the addition of thc featherweight class. Last year the light- welght class was too big, containing men of welghts varying too much. The contests will be held under the rules of the Amateur Athletic unfon. Medals will be awarded the winners of the different classes. Tucker Ends Lovers’ Quarrel by Suicide Lincoln Man Shoots Himself After Dispute with Girl He Wonl'd Marry, Robert A. Tucker of Lincoln committed sulcide Sunday at 8 o'clock at the corner of Twelfth and Center streets, shooting himself through the head. . The shooting is belleved to be the result of a lover's quarrel. The woman In the case Is Miss Laura Mowrie of Aladdin, Wyo. Tucker and Miss Mowrey recently came to Omaha and lived at the Oma hotel, where the woman was known as Mrs. Tucker. Sunday -evening the couple took dinner at a cafe near the Burlington station, After the dinner they took a walk and Miss Mowrie says they discussed their relations and the prospects for the future Quite earnestly. She urged him to marry her, as he had promised, but he was in- clined to defer the nuptials. They finally concluded to separate and nad actually parted company when Tucker drew a re- volver and shot himself in the head. Miss Mowrie, who was about a half block ay when she heard the shot, and she imediately ran to his assistance. Several wen passed but refused to render her any assistance, but others came and the police were notified. Tucker was taken to St. Joseph's hospital, where he dled at 10 o'clock. Miss Mowrle is quite preposess- ing in appearance. She is a Wyoming girl, the daughter of a prominent ranchman residing near Aladdin, in Crook county, and is 28 years old. Tucker is a member of the firm of Tucker Brothers of Lincoln, well-known veterinary surgeons. His father was also a veterinary surgeon and was at one time prominent in his profession in Nebraska. The young man has been making his home with his mother at 720 South Fourteenth street in Pincoln. Immediately after the shooting the particulars of the affair were sent to Tucker's relatives in Lincoln. Tucker was 26 years of age and killed himself on his birthday. | The inquest will bé held at 2 p. m. Tu day. Miss Mowrle is being held at the police station as a witnes: CONVICT HEIR TO FORTUNE Duluth Saflor Found Guilty Murder Will Use Legmey to Perfect Appeal. DULUTH, Minn.,, Feb. 14.—Jackson Me- Pherson, a saltwater sailor, who has been for the last two seasons on the Great Lakes, and who was yesterday convicted of second degree murder In this city for killing a shipmate, Otto Frey, on the ship Northlake last September, today announced that he hall fallen helr to approximately $81,00. He displayed letters of proof, to- gether with a draft of £52, which was in- terest money on part of his property. The money, according to McPherson, and the letters, was left him by the late Thomas Smith of Edenburgh, an uncle of the con- victed man. McPherson says he will carry his case to the supreme court. He claims to have killed Frey in self-defense. DR. AND MRS. COOK IN CHILE Arrives Explorer at Valdivia' om German Steamer Osciris from Montevideo. VALDIVIA, Chile, Feb. 14.—Dr, Frederick { A. Cook, the explorer, and his wife, arrived here on board the German steamer Oscirls, | having taken a cabin at Montevideo. Dr. | Cook traveled under the name of T. Cralg. He and his wife arrived today. He de- | elined to be interviewed. The steamer salled from Hamburg Jan- |uary 1, and from Antwerp January 8, for Callao. Presumably It touched at Monte- video, where the Cooks are sald to have boarded R, but its call there has not been reported. | FIRE FLASH AT NEW THEATER the Department, Part of the staging about the main en- trance of the new Brandels theater caught fire from a salamander about 9 o'clock Sunday evening. Men employed about the bullding extinguished the blase with a hand hose. Former Mayor Bemis, who was passing, turned In an alarm, but the fire was out when the department arrived. MANY CONFLICTS IN CERMANY Riots at Meetings of Socialists to Pro- test Against Suffrage Bill. WORST AFFAIR IN HOLSTEIN One Man Mértally Wo Maimed—Police, Met with Vol leys of Stones, Use Their Sabers. BERLIN, Feb. 14.~Demonstrations by the soclalists throughout the kingdom, after mass meetings yesterday, to protest against the suffrage bill, resulted In serious con- flicts between the demonstrators and the police at many places. In Berlin several policemen were severely wounded by stones thrown by rioters, and scores of socialist supporters recelved serlous Injuries from the sabers of the police. Reports from places outside of Berlin give a number of casualties. The worst affair of the day oc- curred at Nuemnester, in Holsteln, where a workingman was mortally wounded by a knife through the lungs, another's hand was cut off and a third lost an ear. At Halle, after the close of the meetings, about 2,000 soclalists attacked the police, Wwho drew their sabers and wounded many. At Koenigsberg, where the socialists re- turned in a body from the suburban meet- ings, the police, In attempting to divert the crowds into the sidestreets, used thelr sidearms. They also made a namber of ar- rests. At Dulsberg, on the Rhine, the socialists, in a series of street demonstrations after the meetings, came into collision with the po- llce. The latter used their sabers and sev- eral of the manifestants wero cut and brufsed. At Colongne huge crowds assembled In Cathedral square, intending to march in | order to the meeting places In the suburbs, but strong cordons of police held the chief thoroughfares and forced the crowds to take to the sidestreets. The meetings were 80 largely attended that the authorities closed the halls after they were filled In order to prevent overcrowding. The speak- ers urged the sociallsts not to offer resist- ance- to the police, Sharply worded resolu- tions of protest were adopted. In b Berlin about forty meetings were held In crowded halls. The majority of them were peacably conducted, but In Rixdorf, a southern suburb, the population of which numbers nearly 100,000, an Immense crowd gathered In the public square and listened to speeches by several leaders. A police lleutenant called on the people to disperse, but they refused to obey. The police thereupon tried to break up CLARKE BROS. & CO. ‘THE INEST BEER " EVER BREWED: et fe Absolutely Pure Rye Whiskey 0f The Highest Quality. Sold By All First-Class Bars, Clubs and Cafes. BOTTLED IN BOND - 100 PROOF., ALWAYS ASK FOR IT. DISTILLERS. PEORIA, ILL. the meeting and some of the crowd re- sponded with a shower of stones, slightly wounding the lleutenant and a policeman. After the meetings large crowds paraded through the principal suburban streets, Some of them tried to reach the central sections about the Schloss Platz, but the police held all the approaches, and dis- culty. Later in the afternoon the police ordered a crowd composed largely of half-grown youths at the Kronprinsen bridge to dis- perse, but were greeted with shouts of “bloodhounds” and a shower of stones. An officer ordered the men to charge with drawn arms and several of the rioters were wounded. At Essen several soclalists or their sup- porters recelved cuts from the sabers of the police, but no’sne was dangerously In- Jured. ‘Inquiry Will Be Made Into Price of Hogs Government Will Try to Determine if Market Values Are Fixed by Agreement, CHICAGO, Feb. 14.—Whether or not any agreement has existed to keep down the price of hogs when bought from the farm- ers by the packing houses is to be the line of inquiry whe nthe federal grand jury to- morrow resumes its hearing of the govern- ment's investigation of the meat industry. Employes of Schwarzschild & Sulzburger company from Chicago and from western cities are to be question as to the methods of their firm, which 1s known as an “in- dependent.” At the same time the books of the other packers are to be gone over to ascertain the prices of hogs for the last five years. Oliver E. Pagin, the government's indict- ment expert, Is sald to have formulated important data to be forwarded to the at- torney general at Washington. WALL OF FAGENBUSCH’S FOLLY BLOWN DOWN Elements at Denver Pay No Atten-| tion to Restraining Order of Court, DENVER, Feb. 14.—One of the walls of the old People’s theater, known for years as “Fagenbusch's Folly,” fell In yester- day. Court Injunctions that prevented the tearing down of the bullding were not ef- fective In restraining the elementa. The theater was bullt by Charles Fagen- busch, a soldier of fortune, who struck it rich in California mines. Desiring’ to startle Denver with his wealth, he had the theater bullt on the lines of a Spanish castle, with the most flamboyant and grotesque decorations. Several years ago the Interfor was burned out and the walls passed to the estate of H. A. W. Tabor. TRACK WALKER GIVES a LIFE TO SAVE TRAIN John Lewis of Walla Walla Flags | ngine on Curve in Time to | Prevent Wreck. WALLA WALLA, Wash,, Feb. 13.—John Lewls, track walker for the Oregon Ralil- road and Navigation company, gave his life today to prevent passenger train No. 4 from crashing Into a landslide near Star- buck. Lewls discovered the slide and ran up the track to glve warning. He met the train on the curve and was unable to jump asidé before the engine struck him. The train was stopped within a few feet of the slide. WRECK AT WOODSIDE, Pual UTAH n Car Rolls Down Embank. ment Inte Price River—Seven Persons Hurt. | SALT LAKE CITY, Feb. l4—Denver & Rio Grande passenger train No. 2, east- bound, was deralled at Woodside, twenty- six miles west of Green River, Utah, last night. The Puliman’ rolled down the em- bankment into the Price river. Seven p: sen| in the sleeper were Injured . mentation during HOPE FOR CURING. CANCER singing the workingmen's Marsetilaise. | NéeW York Expert Reports on Experi- ments in Inoculation. persed the crowd without serious aitri-| MANY ANIMALS VACCINATED Ench Repetition of Process Height- enk Power of Resistance—Disease Prevalent in Many Forms in Fish. ALBANY, N. Y., Feb. 14.—A strong hope of curing cancer, or at least of greatly ameliorating the suffering of ocancer pa- tients by means of inoculation, s held out in the report of Harvey R. Gaylord, director of the cancer laboratory of the State Department of Health at Buffalo. This hope is based on extended experi- the last year In the inoculation or vaccination of various ani- mals, mainly rats, with the cancer virus. “It appears,” says the report, “that whero the resistance of the animal is not suffi- clently awakened by the inoculation of the tumor, this resistance can be heightened by repeated doses, and, in a considerable proportion of ca immunty can be raised to a point which will bring about a cure. It is needless to point out that this process of repeated vaccination which has cured in the proportion of 25 to 40 in rats might well be applied to those cases of late cancer in human beings In which surgery has nothing to offer and the outlook Is hopeless. “As we strongly urged the legislature in previous reports, the time has come when we should begin experimentation with hu- man beings. To do so it Is necessary that & number of patients should be maintained for this purpose. Funds sufficlent to main- tain ten patients is the least amount which can be of value it this work Is to be undertaken." “It 1s a very remarkable coincidence,” says the report, “‘that the area of the United States which includes the greatest collection of human cancer cases Is al- most identical with the area through which the varlous members of the trout family are distributed.” Statistics are given to show that cancer continues to increase. The report shows that In the United States it has Increased from nine per 100,000 population in 1860 to forty-three in 180, an average of about sixty-five in 1901 and an average of more than seventy in 1906, Sixteen Persons Overcome by Gas Series . of Accidents in Chicago Due to Defective Pipes. CHICAGO, Feb. 14.—Sixteen people were overcome by flluminating gas and a woman was killed by inhaling gas here yesterday. At the home of Henry Kolkey twelve people, who remained over night after at tending a party, were saved from death by the cry of a babe. The family and the visitors had retired after dancing until almost daylight. While they slept a de crowded quarters. The gas became 50 dense that the sleepers were still unaroused at 1 o'clock In the afterncon. At that time a baby, sleeping in another room by a window, became hungry and volced its protest against the prolonged inactivity of the household in a loud wadl This aroused Henry Kolkey, the only one in the house not completely overcome. In a daged condition he managed to crawl to a window and call into the street for help. Outsiders soon battered open the door, They found the members of the Kolkey family and thelr visitors all un- consclous, some of themr apparently dead. They were taken to & vospital, where it was thought they would recover. At one house a mother, son and two daughters, unconsclous in a gas-filled room, were found dying by nelghbors, who raved them from death. In a hotel the poiice found Annie Miller, 24 years old, dead from the effects of gas and Emma Evans In the same room dying. Papers found on Among them were Lilllan D. Sinclair of Boston, slightly injured, internally, and Herbert P. Russell of Worcester, Mass,, whose right knee was brulsed. The in- | Jured were taken to Denve: | A broken rall caused the accident the Evans woman indicated that she lived at Oklahoma City, Okl, and that ghe was & member of a female minstrel troupe traveling from Cineinnatl. Persistent Advertising 1s the road to Big Returns Anniversary of Destruction of the Maine Memorial Services for Viotims of Disaster to, Battleship to Be Held 'This Week. WASHINGTON, Feb. 14.—The twelfth an- niversary of the destruction of the battlo- ship Maine in Havana harbor, Tuesday next, is to be made the occasion for mem- orlal services extending over several days in this city and at other points through- out the country where a movement to erect at Arlington National cemetery a suitable monument to the sallors who lost their lves In the explosion Is under way. The services began In this city tonight at the First Congregational church when a meeting arranged by patriotic organiza- tions was held. Rear Admiral Charles D. Sigsbee of the navy, commander of the Maine on the night of the explosion, made the principal address. On Tuesday services will be held at Arlington, when the Cuban minister, Senor Don Carlos Garcia Veles, 1s expected to be one of the speakers. On February 2 a Maine memorial meet- ing 1s to held at Carnegie hall, New York, with Joseph Choate as the presiding of- ficer, and Admiral Sigsbee as one of the speakers. Admiral Sigsbee is now the president of the Maine Monument assocla- tion and the matter of erecting a suitable memorial is to be actively pushed. The plans for a national subscription have been | pertected and headquarters for the receipt of contributions by mall and otherwise have been established In the Evans bulld- ing In this city. One hundred and sixty of the Maine's dend are buried at Arlington. The membership fee in the memorial as- soclation has been fixed at $1 for which the subscriber receives a certificate of membership and a black silk navy cap rib- bon on which, Instead of the name of & ship there is worked in gold wire the in- scription “Member Malne, M. A." The names of all members of the assoclation will be enclosed In the cornerstone of the monument. The work of obtaining members and dls- tributing the ribbons has been taken up by prominent women in Washington, New York and elsewhere, and in the schools. Mets BDotiied Beer, Call Douglas 119, Ind. A-2119, same 'phone numbers for METZ Bottled Beer to home | consumers. Prompt delivery and same | prices guaranteed. Wm. J. Boeckhotf, re- | tall dealer, 503 8. 7th St. | | SS | Oatarrh comes s a result of im circulation, and i3 o disease that only attacks mucous membrane, OF CATARRH FTER the dentist has re- paired the damage yo i teeth have suffered through neglect, the daily use of Dr. Lyon’s ERFECT Tooth Pow will cleanse, preserve and beautify tjlem, without ' in-. ,alllx?fm;rnanc; to the my Y éays New York i1s Graveyard For Preachers Dr. William Carter Calls Attention to Vacant Pulpits and Broken Down Ministers. NEW YORK, Feb. 14—'This city is a graveyard for preachers,” sald Rev. Dr. William Carter, pastor of the Madison Avenue Reformed church in his sermon yesterday. “After two years' work, I had to go abroad for a year's rest, broken down. I met there three other New York pastors abroad for the same reason, and one of them took his life from melancholia, “Three of the prominent Fifth Avenua churches paying the largest salaries are without pastors, after extending call after call. Clergymen are avoiding rather than soeking New York. The reason for it is that a minister here 1s compelled to bear his whole burden alone. Te congregation says in effect: ‘We're paying your salary, now go ahead.' “There must be active co-operation be- tween pastor and congregation if the church s to do its best work." q " | —ee Take Warning. Don't Jet stomach, liver nor kidney trouble you can quickly down them S0c. For sale by down you wi with E etric Bitters. Beaton Drug Co. STEM purities and morbid matter in the The entiro inner portion of the body is lined with a delicate skin or coverin, of soft, sonsitive flesh. throughout this mucous surface, and " membrane receives its nourishment and is kept ‘When, howoever, the blood becomes infected wltg fective gas pipp poured fumes into the | ‘tigguos becomo diseased and Oatarrh gots a footho! | oar}{ | stu feeling in the head, watery eyes, tial deafness and often difficult breath: | are merely symptoms, ment may tom blood is purified of the exciting causo, the blood of all impure catarrhal matt tion and attacks the disease at its head, and removes eves Then the mucous linin, ead otfe catarrhal impurity, pure blood, and allowed to heal, inst of irritation by tho catarrhal matter, medicaladvice free, Thousands of tiny blood vessels are interlace: it is through these that the innor in healthful condition. catarrhal impurities t} 1d in the system., The stages of Catarrh aro characterized by such symptoms as a tight, buzzing noises in the ears, with par- ing and chronio hoarseness. Thees and while sprays, inhalations and other local treat= rarily relieve them, Oatarrh cannot be cured until the 8.8, 8. cures Oatarrh by cleansing or. It goos down into the circulb= ry particle of the are all supplied with fresh, ing kept in a constant state Special book on O tarrh and any THE SWIFT SPECIFIC CO., A LANTA, GA, Better Health Means Greater Success Come to the leaders of medical specialism. eands of dollars spent in researches and sclentific Investigation have made expert and proficient. 1f you need a physiclan, get a good | your future health and happiness by neglect or experiment with uncertain unreliable treatment. Years of close study, thous j us one. You cannot afford to jeopardize Are you suffering with Rheumatism, Goiter, Gall Stones, Catarrh, Bpil- epsy, Paralys! 1!0!09 i DR. SEARLES & SEARLES, 118 Stomach Trouble, Liver or Kidney disease, or any of tje | dred chronic and nervous diseases which afflict both men and wo! n- i South (4th St Omaha, Febs é ! v o Y e~ ’