WEEKLY HISKALDr'1,'i'Mlluu in''Alj:j,?lvaLClk''1, uu ' UAJ ' lfc "I hdda 5 BLANKET See for yourself how 5 Blan kets wear and other makes tear. FRE Get from your dealer free, the iIJook. It has handsome iicture.s and ralu ihlo information about horses. Two or thiee dollars for a 5 a Horse Elanket will make your horne worth mure tiid eat less to keep warm. 5A Five f&te 5A Bess Stafc'.o Ask for 5A Electric 5A Extra Test " SOother styfes at prices 10 b uv ev..-j- tody. If you can't get them lroni youi dealer, write ua. ANKE ONE GENUINE WITHOUTTHE B'A LABEL JtiiufM y Wm. Ayhks & Sons, 1'hllada., who HiaV.o the famous Horse Brand i:a!;i-r l'.lankeli Tiierk are -1 427 new post offices that have b-en established during therescnt fear. No year of the Cleveland admini stration came anywhere near equaling it. Tim worst advances caused by the Mc-, Kinley tariff bill ii the advances made upon the citadel of truth by a united democratic press. A lie twice told be comes a palpable truth, is now the most popular democratic motto. Another objection to the McKinley h.ll is the fact that large numbers of working men hava been discharged from factories in England, and Germany on account of the effsct over there of the new measure. Of course the market will be supplied, but it will be at the binds of the American workman, and in the words of Bryan at Weeping Wat r, 'too much has already been done for the shop man." How do wage workers like the democratic doctrine. The third party prohibitionists in Kansas have suddenly been awakened to ihe real situation in that state. The recent decision of the courts which nulli fies the present law and makes neccessary the passing of a new one, has sent the third party crowd scampering and clamoring to get in out of the wet; they lave already abandoned their high moral plane, and will elect a straight republican governor and legislature, as that is the only way for prohibition to succeed in Kansas. "The condition of trade. There is a yery pronounced gain in the volume of trade distribution. An enlarged traue is reDorted in dry goods, clothing, boots and shoes, groceries iron and steel." The above are the headlines of the commer cial column in the World -Herald of Sun day . The editorial columns of the same dav trive a doleful picture of how we jre robbed, and an indication of the v.,ni-,i,inr that is near at hand. The iaunt uj'.uj two editors should get together and the commercial editor witn his tacts ana data should enlighten the darkened soul yf the editor in-chief. The old adage that "when rogues fall 3'it. honest men get their dues" is being ovnerienced in a striking manner in .,i, rwi;n:i. The democratic ranks have been divided: two democratic tick t-ts are in th field, and as a result the time methods of intimidation and .bulldozing of the bourbon faction will not woik, and as a consequent result. v,;r..r nre assuming a caloric tempera .. .nminnn i-wn in South Carolina. iltic, UU " -- . m. i,.ata ni vinlcnfle and intention to ignore the election laws by the bourbons iTmet with a firm front by the opposi-.-. a n termination to have for liuu aun i v . tncc a squp deal. The Oxuaru sugar factory only pays $4 a ton for beets. The governments, 'state and national, pay him $7.13 for workine them up. uugm But it would be only reasonauie 101 - nard to pay the farmer as much as the it would be only reasonauie iur cm m ll.C.-flv liOUUlV. vjiai . be reasonable encouragement for the most infantile industry. So says our esteemed fnena ainouu f the Lincoln Democrat, it is aa n ul , n i.o . fi-PP trader when he lor a ieuow -- - la built that way, but for him to let par :-t,i mn awav with his good judg stent and make him throw mud at one .v- -,-.f mmieine industries for Ne- braska that has ever been fostered by a government is indeed unfortunate. For every dollar the state advances to the Bar industry in its infancy, the great 5uTte of Nebraska will receive hundreds ef dollars in return- Let us not tear down; let us build up. FALSE IN ONE. FALSE IN ALL. The Herald lias had occasion to mention the Bryan grist of chestnuts several times lateij ; but at Omaha tho oth'T uiht ha stated with all the im pros-iyenees that he could command that the McKiuley bill diced a bounty on silks that the rich miyht not be taxed and that it placed a tariff on all woolens that the farmers had to wear. He re-peat.-d the iine statement at Weeping Water Saturday. Now a man must have a superabundance of gall to make a statement whose truthfullness can be so easily disproved. Dut 1-rytin appeals to ha vi.- a plethora of ail with a minimum of brains. Tin; fact is there is no bounty ..n any pilk material ,,f :'"' de-ei iption vh vtc-vcr. and the tariff is a- follow.--- "Silk partially mmufaetuml from co crma or from waste .-ilk, a;id nt further r.dvanced or niruirif icttircl than carded or combed silk, 50c per pound. Thrown silk, not more advanced th;ui in-d.?. tram, or-rnrizine, sewing silk. twist, floss, spun silk, and silk threads or . - yarns 01 every uescriinum, .-u j. valorem Webbinss, gorings, braces, be.tiugs. bindings, braid, galoons, fringes, cords and tassels, any of the foregoing which are elastic or non-elastic, buttons ana ornaments made of silk, or of which silk is the component material of chief value 0 per cent ad valorem. Laces and embroideries, handkerchiefs neck rufilings and ruehings, clothing ready made, and articles of wearing ap parel of every description, including knit irooda. made no or manulacturcd wholly or in part by the tailor, seam stress or manufacturer, composed ol silk or of which silk is the component ma terial of chief value, not specially provided for in this act, t0 per cent ad valorem. All manufactures of siik, or of which silk is the component material of chief value, not specially provided for in this act, 50 per cent ad valorem; provided that; all such manufactures which wool or the hair of the camel, goat or other like animals is a component material, shall be classified as manufactures ox wool. On the free list is found raw silk, silk cocoons, silk waste and silk worms' eggs. The bounty business is like much other stuff which the windy Bryan imposes up on his hearers whom he seems to think are unable to read. When young Mr. Bryan said he was tired of hearing of taws made for the benefit of men who work in shops he probably hoped to make himself solid with the farmers who composed the bulk of the crowd that he was addressing But the farmers of Nebraska know better than to attack the prosperity of the men who consume a larger part of their products, and will not be wheedled into the support of a system of tariff that will forever make them the slaves of foreign manufacturing nations. Th:y know that the farm, the truck patch and the factory should be as near together as possible, in order to facilitate an ex change of commodities without making nscesary the payment of large sums for long hauls to distant markets. Farmers who have been in Nebraska for ten years know how much they have been benefit ed by the establishment of pork packing houses in Omaha, Lincoln and Nebraska City. These establishments have paid them practically as much for their hogs as the Chicago packers, and the saving to the farmers ha3 been the difference between the haul of a few miles to the home markets and the haul of 500 miles and more to Chicago. A leading east ern financier ascribes much of the pros perity of the state of Nebraska to the building of these home factories which save to our people the cost of double transportation on many commodities, and cause to be paid out in wages large sums that formerly went to enrich the city of Chicago. The republican national policy is a broader application of the same principle. Bring over the factories to this side of the water whenever we can manufacture here to as good advantage as on the other side. It will save freight, make the nation richer, and contribute to the wealth of every man who owns land or tills it for his subsistance. State Jour nal. GALL. "The ring of railroad politicians that have controlled this state have thorough ly disgusted the people," says the ij t , piatts mouth Journal and yet that organ mnnorts Mr." Brvan, junior member of the firm of Talbot & Bryan, the Lincoln I ttornevs of the Missouri Pacific railway lawyw & g beeQ arrayed Ui uia '.. . . wainst railroad corporations, especially the Union Pacific. Don t attempt to . . .. . . . . ork any anti-railroad racket cn us this w year. Mr. Sherman, your candidates from the state ticket to the legislative can not afford to invite criticism of that kind, and you may depend upon it you will be called down on any attempt to pettifog and deceive the people. Gall may be a good thing but you are overloaded. E, A. Stophkr is an easy winner. His opponent will be more than 300 votes behind him. P. S. Barnes is a good republican that ought to be, and we believe will, be elected to the legislature. The outlook for the election of a re publican ticket in this county never wa bctt r than at the present time. Mil. Bryan of Illinois is a very prom -hiu" ;$-vear old and may pan out all rirht after he bccom:s aciuunU-a and identified with Nebr:?kn intero!?. X KNDOKSK til-; Ugar IliUliiti' S ;;s 01. e d the brst laws eyer past d. W. J. Cou nt !! at Wei-p:ng Water. Y' s, anl so does I'Vci-y ft her puhlie spiriifd patriotic ei'iz' n who is tint a hide i n'Ui:d n.".:reHV minded p'Mticai. tlnit thinks, more of the English money iuiii-i.-hed him by the Cobd.-n Clnb than he does of the pro.-peiity of his own coun try. A paragraph from the London Times telegraphed to the New York Herald, mentions a significant result of the !Me Kinley bill. Two directors of the silk plush firm of Listner & Co., of Bradford, which has a capital of .$10,000,000, gives employment to over 5.000 men and main tains works whose walls are over a mile in circumference, took passage th;; u-v day f:r the purpo-c of looking up a site for a new mill in the United St:it- s. All over the kingdom the wealthy ni.tauine- turers who have been hit by the ;. v.- duties are preparing to t ike tit- s-.n. cours'.'. A CHICAGO traveling man for a whole sale tea house called on M. B. Murpln the other day and tried to sc-H him some tea, lie carried a nice line of samples, but prices were higher than heretofore, to which Mr. Murphy objected, and en quired the cause. "It's entirely on ac count of the recent passage of the M.: Kinley bill," earnestly remarked th drummer, "which increased the tariff en teas." Mr. Murphy could not st;md that, he said to the tea man that '-when you take me for a sucker you mike me tired; you want to enquire what a mn's politics are before you spring that chest nut on him. I know, and you ought to know, that tea has been on the free lif t for years, and I would not buy any of your tea now at half price; you want to go somewhere else and catch a chump." The drummer could say but little and soon started for greener pastures. He probably sold a small quantity of his tea to Sherman of the Journal. Louisville Letter. From Saturday's Daily. The farmers alliance and Knights of Labor joined hands at Louisville the oth er evening and listened to a speech from the Moses of Douglas county who is anxious for the job of leading the farmers of Nebraska out of the wilder ness of "despondency and want." To hanker and run after so difficult a task beset on every hand with -temptations and hardships by a man so old and fee ble seems very strange indeed. That sterling old democratic war horse Syives ter Johnson presided at the meeting, but you need not put him down as voting anything but the democratic ;i kit, Sj -vester may mean all right and a week or two before the elec tion might talk alliance but we know him ton well; he will be one of the hardest workers for democratic sue cess at the polls on election day, and his tendencies just now wont fool anybody. Allen Root and L. G. Todd should be harnessed up together, they arc two of a kind and make the same speech trying to pull out dead issues that have been settled and acquiesced in years ago. He spends much of his time figting the nat ional banks, which the old time bitter enemy of those institutions, the demo cratic party has censed to object to, and now defen:ls. Those who heard Mr. Hoot and Mr. Bigler, of unbiased minds, were of opinion that they had better re main or the farm if they could give no b-tter excuse of the f.- itli that v.j-s in them than they gave here. Tl.ej.- d not turn a single vcte. The gaufral euthn k for republican success in this precinct never was better, though a few of the guiding spirits in the last republican convention will not support the entire ticket, but as they never have, it can not be considered as a loss. Yours for suc cess. . Ayer's Pills, being converient, effi cacious, nd safe, are the best cahartic whcther'on land or sea, in city or country. For constipation, sick headache, indiges- i tion, and torpid liver, they never fail, try J a box of them; they are sugar-coated. When Baby was sick, gave hr Castoria. When she Tras & Child, she cried for Castoria When the became Hisa, she clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave thera Cast oria, . Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. THE OCTOROON. (Couthiuei from ThlrU I'aeJ OWn IIULlO, C7 "u eiivsi.... e . this haunt of crime were to cIIuk to me in death ; but 1 will not die without a struggle. Whoever the tenant of thin house may he, there may be one amount them who yet retains one spark of pity there may i) ono who would not hear a woman's voice uplifu.'d In distress with out one attempt to sueeor." As 6 he npok bhe p-reeivod a gather ing look of alarm in tho face of Augustus Ilorton. That leok determined her. Come tho worst, " t-ho cried, "I will make the appeal !" "Beware ! ' h- eiied. 'The people h-m are not reru 'e.ious. "I eare uit ! ' i-lf an.-ivercd. "I ea:i but die !" "But you .-1 claimed the '!-, a'Vl el;:', gra peil t he . ... Jiu v. as it o through the I il Mleilcr '. ex- Hid ante)', :;i.i:iv-:iiUr to tho i.a::d whu-h i ; e r voiro ivii a bin ill anil :,iki,l: pie: . i i : t " pcrra : :i. I n i he Cii'tn i; y :.ie sound seemed mui:i echoes. It vihra'eu in tin t! J-ht tlial thousand .1 lun.he:-t corner of the eeli.'iee. To the planter's terrified ear it aeemed tis if tho whole city of New Orleans must have been arou.-eel by that ono woman's cry. Desperate and infuriated ho snatched the dapper fiom C'andliia's grafip, aud placisg Ids hand upon her mouth, was about to bury tho weapon in her breast,, when the door wad Lrckon open by a tremendous blow from without, and three men burst into the room. Those three men were Captain Tren dendll. of the schooner Amazon, the 6ailor who had carrietl Paul's letter to Camiliia, and Paul Liidruou himself. "So," exelaiftied the Captain, "we're right, are we? This is where the noir-o can.e from. What do you niean by it., you thundering landlubber? How is it that a gentleman can't tuke a fling at the diee without being disturbed by a woman's squeal?" Boi'Oi-e Augustus could answer, Taul Li.-imon pusnc u aside the. Captain and clasped C.uuillia in his arms. .".Mv Camiliia," be cried; "my beloved, how is thi-i that I lind you here here, in a gambling-houEO at this hour of the night?" "Ask me no question.-;," mutiered tho gpQnich k'iii, "only take me from this place. My brain is bewildered by what I have undergone." "But this man has he dared to insult you to entrap you hither?' asked Paul, pointing to Augustus Horton, who stood at bay, while the Captain and the sailor threatened him with their drawn cut lasses. "He has." "You hear this fainting girl," ex claimed Taul, still holding Camiliia clasped in his left arm, while with his right he felt for a pistol In the pocket ol his waistcoat I'rcndrgills Joe ! you are wit nesses of the place in which wo have found the only daughter of Don Juan Moraquitos ! There is some foul plot here, and that man, Augustus Ilorton, is the mover of it. Tomorrow, air, you shall aeeount tome for this." The planter laughed mockingly. "Ac count to you, Mr. Paul Lisimon ; to you a thief! an escaped felon ' Tho citi zens of Louisiana do not cross swords with such as you. You would have done wiser to keep cloar of Now Orleans. Above all it would havo been better foi you had you refrained from crossing mj path." He touched a bell in the wall behinc him, und it rang through the house witt a shrill peal. "Now, Mr, Lislmon," ho said, "w( are quits." A party of about twenty men crowded into the room. The bell had summoned them from the gaming-table. "Gentlemen," cried Augustus Horton; "I call upon you as citizens of New Or leans to secure the persons of these thre men who have this noment made a mur derous attack upon my life, and endeav ored to carry away this lady, who is hert under my protection. One of them ii an escaped felon from the jail of thh city." The gamblers, who were almost all ii Borne degree intoxicated, made a rush at Paul and his companions, but they wen many of them unarmed, and those wh( carried knives flourished them without aim or purpose. "Prendergills Jes I" oxclalmecT List, tnon, "follow mo. Eemember, it is foi life or death." Then flinging the slender form of Ca miliia across his shoulder, the young Mexican flung himself In the midst of the infuriated crowd, and pistol in hand, oomiy rrrauo ior me door. This point gained, he stood upon tha threshold with his back to the passage, defending the ground inch by inch, until joined bv Prendergills and Joe. The rest was comparatively easy. The three men fought their way back ward along the passage, down the wind ing staircase to the street door. Here they were for a moment baffled by the mystery of the spring which closed the entrance. But they were not to bo so easily foiled ; the captain of the Amazon flung his gigantic frame against the door, the wooden panels cracked ns if they had been made- of glass, and the spring was burst asunder. The door which was used all the night through for the entrance and egress of tho gamblers who frequented the house was only fastened by this spring, and therefore yielded to force more easily than an ordinary barrier. Onee in the street, Paul and his friends were Kale. The gamblers dared not pursue them another step, for to do so would have been to reveal the secret of the gaming house, which, es the reader knows, held its ground in defiance of the laws of Louisiana. Mad with baffled raga and fury, Augustus Horton returned to his own house to await the coming of the mor row which would perhaps dawn upon a deadly encounter between himself and Don Juan Moraqultos. To his surprise, he received no tidings from the Spaniard, but a little after noon hi3 mulatto valet handed hiro two let ters. One was in the handwriting of Camiliia Moraqultos. It breathed the contempt which a noble mind feels for the coward ice of a dastard. It ran thus : "As the life of a beloved father is far too valuable to be risked in an encounter with a wretch 60 degraded as yourself, Don Juan will never be told the true his tory of the events ol last night. Rest therefore in security beneath contempt, too low for revenue." The second letter was from Paul Llsi cnon. It was even briefer than that of Camiliia. You shall yet answer to toe for the outrage committed on one who la dearer to me than life. For today you triumph ; but a day of reckoning will come ere lonf . t wait. , CHAPTER XXIII. HE bullet wound which had pros trated Gilbert Margrave In tho forest at Iber ville, was ii very bei ions one. l'or many days and nights he lay . 9 4 1. . .ii. - - in on ; ui f I r.pai tn.ents. o f the Pavilion, intchi'.rlrain. in a mate eu'.iM-iv without danger. near Lake l1 which w.i-. not But he 1 nd thi ! evt medical utleu Oilciiis eouhl a fiord, e:,:-.- v. t:;eh af-'ect ion e ,! .'e . ou hieh It da net Willi N v ! . i - -1 Hlid ti e can t--e lavishes N iuht, 1'iukuto lie lor ti its wi-a.: ii und s'ave i'oi. 1.e-!i. h.'d b and -Id-. tllH th w.d. pillow of ; ho WoitilOf l llli.' It v. i:.- they and they a tened to the wanderiii lone, Wi.O lii- r i.eeenls o delirium ; t h lo.ted in tl who cheere danirer was ey who sooth'-d and com es hour of sum-ring; they 1 and animated when tho ;t. and tho first faint elimpses of i oiu rn:ng nei xlUx le-niuinirieu . . . . i i i lite cheek of llie Inahd. Gerald Leslie was away from homo. When the boat carrying Gilbert Mar grave, Cora, Mortimer and Toby reached the Pavilion, the planter had already de parted for Kw York, leuving a few brief lines uddresbod to his daughter, telliu her only that urgent business bad called him from tho South. The father and daughter had there fore nover met since that hour in which the Octoroon had accused Gerald Leslie of being the cause of her mother's death. The two months for which the bill, for a hundred thousand dollars due to Silas Ciaig, had been renewed, were rapidly gliding away, and every day made the position of Gerald Lesiio more alarming. Cora knew nothing of these pecuniary troubles. She thought that her father had deserted his home rather than to endure her reproaches, and she bitterly upbraided herself for tho cruel words sho had spoken to one whoso fault. wero rather those of circumstances, than in clination. Gilbert Margrave recovered; but ho still lingered beneath Gerald L. 'she's roof; for tha planter had wrilten to him from New York, thanking him earnestly for his championship of Cora, and im ploring him to remain at Lake Poutchar train until his return. Gilbert waited, therefore, until the presence of Mr. Leslie might enable him to make the necessary arrangements for his marriage with the Octoroon. It was now upon the eve of the date upon which tho dreaded bill of exchange was to fall due, and at eleven o'clock up on the night preceding the fatal day, Gerald Leslie returned to the Pavilion upon the borders of Lake Pontchartrain. Cora had retired to rest when her father arrived, but Gilbert Margrave was walking along upon the terrace, overlooking the lake upon which the moonbeams shed thair soft luster. He was, therefore, the first to wel come Mr. Lesiio, and he was not long in perceiving that some heavy trouble was weighing upon the mind of Cora's father. "You must be fatigued after your long Journey, Mr. Leslie, said Gilbert. "I feel called upon to play tho host under your own roof. Pray let us go in. Toby will prepare you some refreshments." "No, no, "Mr. Margrave," answered Gerald; "I want nothing. I am too much excited to require even ropose. Let us remain here here we can con verse freely. Toby is a faithful fellow, but he knows too much already of my misfortunes. Where is Cora?:' "She has retired to rest." "That is well. Poor girl! poor girl!" He sighed heavily, and relapsed into silence. The two men walked side by side up and down the terrace for some minutes without uttering a word. Gilbert Mar grave was the fir6t to 6peak. "Pardon me, Mr. Leslie," he said, "but I fear you have some causo for un happiness. Eemember how dear you and yours are to me, and do not scruple to confide in me, do not hesitate to com mand my services. They are yours ta tho death." " My noble boy, you havo already proved that," exclaimed Gerald Leslie " Gilbert Margrave, I am a ruined man My journey to New York has been a useless one. I went to endeavor ta raise a sum of money which would fre me rrom mv embarrassment, but 1 found trad in a 6tate of convulsion from the threatened war between the North and South, and my mission failed. I have now but one hope. The house of BIchardson, of Broadway, have promis ed, if possible to advance the sum 1 require. The money Is to arrive by the next steamer. But even this la a forlorn hope, for. when I left New York, dark rumors were afloat of the approach ing bankruptcy of that very firm. If this 6hould happen, I am utterly lost. I Ehall remain to the very last to struggle against evil fortune, but I must remain alone. Tell me then, Mr. Margrave, do you still persist in your proposal for my daughter's hand?" " Can vou doubt it?" "With" a perfect knowledge of her story -remembering that she is the off spring of a sdave that sho is an Octoroon !" "I remember nothing but that I love her, and would havo her no other than 6De is." " 1 was not mistaken in you. Gilbert Margrave." replied Mr. Leslie, with sup pressed emotion. " you are a man ol honor, and it is to that honor I confide. You must fly from New Orleans with Cora, Wo must not expose her to the violonce of a populace, furious against her because of her fatal birth because 6he is a slave. The word does not cause you the horror it inspires in me, jet you To be Continued. l Keep Constantly on hand a full line of DM. ; MEDICINES, : PAINTS, : OILS : etc ' And afu'l line of Druciiists Sundries. Careful attention giyen to the prescription Department. Great care has been given our Wall Paper department We have placed our order with one ot the largest Eastern Factories for our Spring stock and we guarantee you al the latest styles and designs. Wild man & Fuller. m t whh chrome re.,.-.Um Inx t d,r!,rs. ...t.w.M Ima' V lr il w. Oil. jiuvo ! 7iV vi:y r riivvi-itH. . LuZ ic Csv, rvHfauai.. Cure THE GOCL C6lrZG2 OF: 14 veil illustrated In CViT.nTvthft rhlef yn.r.U;ittr !N,f'.l& which U, en i 7 - -l f Otini'TJl II WIIW'J I'""'.'. S -V sr .i.,.V,.nrsoofthe ricrvo 3 I'll " 1 t-U Jiiffins CHI CT.r.licd frequently, will euio NEUKALGI A.. J ws taLen Willi B''" ,nUDMu, doo FinlVr.-i 0 ii:oi.t!jf. I was Riven UP" uu U.. but wa, cured by StL McOINN. At Drl-guim-s and PnAixits. IKE CHARLES A. VOGJELER CO.. B.UimoM. U I II U FIGUItr. - o." Iha flcui eO in our dates w'll mnke a ..onff tUf. Jo man or woman now living will cvor dat v Jocumcnt without using the figure 0. It sun. In the third place in 1800. where it. will remain t,,, yoi.rs nn'l then move p to b 'eon,! VUno in 1000, tt h.-re it will rest l r one htr.!r: .1 yenrs. There is another which hasuUo coir.o to S.ay. it ;., unlike th- fU-ure Din c:s .lutes in tho respect ;.l ..; haa ah.--Jy ...o.-.: t., Url ;.luc. whero tt will iermiiieii' 1 v romidn. H is called tho V V. 'h Ann V.'h-.l. r t V.'ilo:i .'-'win;; M'tch.ne. Th-'-Xo. i." wns er.0or.cd f.r llrst Ice by th'! r.vrx rts of i.;.roi at th'i I:iri Kx.wditien of lH-.. ,!. r.' r.f'. T :i ': u-. - l with t!u le:lini; ma--"i:;( s of the v. c.i it w:ii aw;nle.d tho ouiy Cr t1 T'r'"- "iven to f: !:.:iv rev.inir midlines, nil ,W r, cn e;rii!l r ived iow.T awards ol mel i'-, i-.'.-.. Tho fi-u.'h Government Uoo r.":-r.i!-' ...!liU.-.:i.i .!: y' the d -emit ion Mr. X:it::Hiii: i V.':.viel, i'.-c.-iJeuto. tho couipati', v illi the Cro. a of the L..';;io,i of Honor. Tiic "'o. ) i not :ia old ir.:i'--hirie imriroveJ ut.on. but an entirely ucw maehiiw, nnd rho tiViirid I'rize a Purin w:i.; r.-.v:Tled it. as the grnn.1 L-itadvuiiee in cwi:i wuai.iuo ineolmuism of lh:i Ve. 1 Iiose w!:.i buy 11. cnn r'.-.i. ossureu, re, of hav-iiK t never v tale t ana ot'bu vTIIEELjIII & WILSON TTF'G CO., 185- and 157 Waht-sh. J ve., Chicoa Dealer Yfatedev ! j CLARK'S HOG REFtlEDY Clark's Poultry Ilemedy. BEST IN THE WORKD. For sale by O, II. yMDEK, DruSgist, Plattsmouth, Neb. 5E.HO FC3 OURCATP.LOGUEano PRICES ATLAS EKSlSE" WORKS, iNDlANAPOLiS, IND. f . t