I K Mllllllllllllllllll"MMM" MM" * MM"W"M"Mi P f Antnran Calllnc Costume H f A TVcnch calling' costume is electric H "blue canvas cloth , made up aver bright B | / green bilk. The coat is of smoke-gray HE L cloth , its Quaker bobriety deliciousiy Ef relieved by tabs or minor velvet in a By gray-green peapod hue , surmounted by Bft a geometrical design in fine mixed cord. Ki These tabs are everywhere bound by H a narrow hem of sable , and the same K' < beautiful fur forms the Tudoresque H collar. A finishing touch of elegance H is given by , the charming old silver V . buttons with which it is adorned. Hi She Unci Mndo u Discovery. Hj | "I hope , " she said thoughtfully , H Hfl "that you won't have anything more Kr to say about the manner in which H women hunt bargains and get K # "Why not ? Don't you think your Hjr cx deserves it" H Hl ' 'Tin not going to discuss that point H V Even if we do deserve the criticism FjL it docs not come gracefully from a man f * who buys hair restorer regularly from H& ] a baldhcaded barber. " Washington Ht&n Star. B > i H y * T1ii < JIlsKiiis : Link. k l Pittsburg Chronicle : "The missing Bf § link is found ! " Bv The great scientist paced up and B . S down his room in great ecstasy , repeat- I Hp in Tit intervals the joyful announcc- P\ "The missing link is found ! " B lie was'very jubilant , and well he H | might be , for it had been three long Hf weeks since one of his link cuff but- n tons had rolled away into one of the H | darkest corners under the bureau. Hr * i' . / Cascarets stimulate liverkidneys and "bowels Never sicken , weaken or gripe. r Treating of the "Protection of Bank ji , Depositors , " the Hon. James H. Eckels , K ; comptroller of the currency , in the > , i North American Review for November , H K * declares that the proper conduct of a Hr4v. . hank must result more from the acts of Vl * those entrusted with its keeping than Bt from the acts of the officers of the law. B | If directors and " ollieers fail to pay H | i every attention to the conduct of the H' > hank's employes outside of office hours H K l as we as during them , they arc apt at Kj ; any time to encounter dishonesty and e f loss. Vf H "Mother's Crullers. mM < l l\lix. \ thoroughly together two cups of KT ( sugar , a tablespoonful of butter , half a B/ \ cup of milk , a scant teaspoonful of Kf' / soda dissolved in boiling water , two Vii/ ; teaspoonfuls of vinegar , the grated Kip rind of an orange , a little nutmeg and KpA flour enough to make a dough stiff Ki ' enough to roll out Cut in squares or pra circles and cook in boiling lard. When H ? f cooked and nearly cool sift powered 1i < 1 sucrar over them. Ladies' Home Jour- 3 i Origin of a Much-Quoted Saw. B't't Jl The origin of "A fool and his money V'XV are soon parted" has not been ascer- F 2h tained with certainty , but the follow- t is sometimes told ' ' j ing story : 'George $ Buchanan , tutor to James IV of Scot- H > L land , made a bet with a courtier that P ) r he could make a courser verse than the m ) ( courtier ; Buchanan rose and picking I K' -up the courtier's money walked elf H V with the remark , 'a fool and his money K ; ' { are soon parted. " ' Ladies' Home Jour- . Lack of Feeling- . / Gazing at the Gngers that had just W \ been claimed by the elusive circular T\ * * / " saw , he wept bitterly. H A "Alas , " he said , "my ambition was K k < | to become a poster artist , and now m RA ? now the best 1 can do is to become a B r shorthand writer ! " uv " However , in view of his morbid de- u M. sire it was , perhaps , just as well. New Kiv York Press v3\ A Defective Fruit Cover. v ; V Often a defective cover will be found BA' i V among the fruit jars and cannot be B , , f screwed down to make the jar tight Kr > , Put a little putty around between the H > i / cover and rubber , and when the cover - ' j | is screwed down as tightly as possible K f press the putty in around the crevice. 9 ' - When the putty becomes hard , the jar 8-V ( will be found airtight H \ \ P tg J Tlio Complexion. B f ) "Realist ! " she repeated. "Why. he m M > drew a straight flush that was so natural - B \ ' \ -ural it bluffed everybody out of the H 4 71 game ! " v ) They were at no pains to conceal fv ff their admiration for the slender man F"f in corduroy who drank absinth yonder. Hi& . ' Detroit Tribune. B W\ \ fi On Trial. K sk\ "JIarian , here ' s a dray stopping at B- * / our door with a piano , a sewing ma- -S chine and a parrot There must be a K , mistake in the number. " p * S * "No , dear , they belong to our new VV { cook. She ' s a graduate of the school B A of cooking and has kindly consented to B ( \ try us" Detroit Free Press. A \ Every economical woman's pet economy r V \ is to reduce her gas bill. f -fM/ ! A BOTTLE OF | 1 > 9 SB H p. g Might have Changed the = a Map of Europe. E IP - - _ AT thc 1 M # ' B > * I § | \ Battle | Wj 'S'r S L of Waterloo B ft I fSj | > B&M tilz ? rcat S Bf3r , " ® &r WNapokon. . . | By \ L3 l @ > "wasso prosa B P - h" trated from g B KS - j iX Nephritis. , g " H W'o . * ( Inflaaima- = K T 5 Kidneys ) . . | Bwf l that for more than an hour the battle S B B B 'was : * to subordinates , -with the § B B result that the fortunes of war went H B t Mj HE 3g3wst nlH ? F Iti * been known at the time , Napoleon j B5 - 1 S &ced not have been ill at such a V e S supreme moment , nor his star sufg B S fcred eclipse. g B fc ; ! § While all cannot be Napoleons , g B , P S all can be spared the illness which g B S resulted hi hb downfalL B Wt'-H Lane Lotilc. ur new style , smaller o = s , it your jg B XJ * H dnf ists- Bw * ) I'DR. TAIMGE'S SERKOR. 1 T tachln tea , D. C , Kcv. 15 , 1S9C Out of thia ctranso scene o Bible JmC3 Dr. Talmago , la his ocrnca to- Cay , dravra rcmarkablo lessens of good cheer and triumph. Hla subject is : "Wresilliijr with the Supernatural , " and the tcrt : Genesis 22:25 , 2C : "And when ho caw that bo prevailed not against him , ho touched the hollow of hlc thigh ; and the hello ? . ' of Jacob'3 thigh wa3 cut of jciat as ho wrestled • with him. And he said , Let me go , for the day brcakcth. And ho said , I will not let thco go oroogt tiou bless me. " There is a clcud of dust from a travel ing herd of cattle , and sheep , and goats , and camols. They arc the prcs- cent that Jacob sends to gain the good will of his offeadod brother. That night Jacob halts by the brook Jab- hok. But there is no rest for the weary man. No shining ladder to let ihe angels down into ais dream ; but a severe struggle , that lasts until morn ing , with an unknown visitor. They each try to throw the ether. The un known visitor , to reveal his superior power , by a touch wrenches Jacob's thigh-bone from it3 socket , perhaps maiming him for life. As on the morn ing sky the clusters of purple cloud Se- gin to ripen , Jacob sees it is an angel with whom he has been contending , and not one of his brother's coadju tors. "Let mo go , " cries the Angel , lifting himself up into Increasing light , "the day hreaketh. " You see , in the first place , that God allows good people sometimes to get into a terrible struggle. Jacob was a good man ; but here he is left alone in the midnight to wrestle with a tre mendous influence by the brook Jab- bok. For Joseph , a pit ; for Daniel , a wild beast den ; for David , dethrone ment and exile ; for John the Baptist , a wilderness diet and the executioner's axe ; for Peter , a prison ; for Paul , shipwreck ; for John , desolate Patmos ; for Christ , the cross. For whom the racks , the gibbets , the prisons , the thumbscrews ? For the sons and daughters of the Lord Almighty. Some one said to a Christian reformer , "The world is against you. " "Then , " he replied , "I am against the world. " I will to further , and say that every Christian has his struggle. With financial misfortune some of you have had the midnight wrestle. Red-hot disasters have dropped into your store from loft to cellar. What you bought you could not cell. Whom you trusted , fled. The help you expected would not come. Some giant panic , with long arms , and grip like death , took hold of you in awful wrestle , from which ycu have not yet escaped , and it is uncertain whether it will throw you , or you will throw it. Here is another soul , in struggle with some bad appe tite. He knew not how stealthily it was growing upon him. One hour he woke up. He said , "For the sake of my soul , of my family , of my children , and of my God , I must stop this ! " And behold , he found himself alone , by the brook of Jabbok ; and it was midnight. That evil appetite seized upon him , and he seized upon it ; and oh. the horror ror of the conflict ! When once a bad habit hath roused itself up to destroy a man , and the man has sworn that , by the help of the eternal God. he will destroy it , all heaven draws itself out in long line of light , to look from above , and all hell stretches itself in myrmidons of spite to look up from beneath. I have seen men rally them selves for a struggle ; and they have bitten their lip and clenched their fist , and cried with a blood-red earnestness , and a rain of scalding tears , "God help me ! " From a wrestle with habit , I have seen men fall back defeated. Calling for no help , but relying on their own resolutions , they have come into the struggle ; and for a time it seemed as if they were getting the upper hand of their habit ; but that habit rallied again its infernal power , and lifted the soul from its standing , and with a force bor rowed from the pit , hurled it into outer darkness. But , thank God , I have often seen a better termination than this. I have seen men prepare themselves for such a wrestling. They laid hold of God's help as they went into combat The giant habit , regaled by the cup of many dissipations , came out strong and de fiant. They clenched. There were the writhiggs and distortions of a fearful struggle. But the old giant began to waver ; and at last in the midnight alone , with none but God to witness , by the brook-Jabbok , the giant fell ; and the triumphant wrestler broke the darkness with the cry , "Thanks be un to God , who giveth us the victorj- , through our Lord Jesus Christ. " There is a widow's heart , that first was desolated by bereavement , and since , by the anxieties and trials that came in the support of a family. It is a sad thing to see a man contending for a livelihood under disadvantages ; but to see a delicate woman , with help less little ones at her back , fighting the giants of poverty and sorrow , is more affecting. It was a humble home ; and passers-by knew not that within those four walls were displays of cour age more admirable than that of Han nibal crossing the Alps , or in the Pass of Thermopylae , or at Balaklava , where "into the jaws of death rode the six hundred. " These heroes had the whole world to cheer them on ; hut there were none to applaud the struggle in that humble home. She fought for bread , for clothing , for fire , for shelter , with aching head , and weak side , and ex hausted strength , through the long night by the brook Jabbok. Could it be that none would give her help ? Had God forgotten to be gracious ? No ! con tending soul. The midnigiht air is full of wings , coming to the rescue. She tsars it cow. in the sough of the night • . . , . , . . . litis ' " " " .imAI.MLjUHWiWyvi. ' ' u li * . iij.i wi .JIIW 'umwmv ' imum ' wind , in the ripple of the brook Jab bok , the promise made bo long ago , ringing down the sky : "Thy fatherless children , I will preserve thorn alive ; and let viy widows trust in mo ! " Some cac said to a very poor woman , "Kow is it that in such distress ycu keep cheerful ? " She said , "I do it by what I call cross-prayers : When I had my rent to pay , and nothing to pay it with , and broad to buy and nothing to buy it with , I used to Bit down and cry. But now I do not get discouraged. If I go along the street , when I come tea a corner of the street , I say , 'The Lord help me ! ' I then go on until I come to another crossing of the street , and again I say , 'The Lord help me ! * And so I utter a prayer at every crossing ; and since I have got into the habit of saying these cross-prayers , I have been able to keep up my courage. " Learn again from this subject , that people sometimes are surprised to find cut that what they have been strug gling with in the darkness is really an "angel of blessing. " Jacob found in the morning that this strange person age was not an enemy but a God-des patched messenger to promise prosperi ty for him and for his children. And so , many a man , at the close of his trial , has found out that ho has been trying to throw down his own . bless ing. If you are a Christian man I will go back in your history and find that the grandest things that ever hap pened to you have been your trials. Nothing short of scourging , imprison ment , and shipwreck , could have made Paul what he was. When David was fleeing through the wilderness , pur sued by his own son , he was being pre pared to become the sweet singer of Israel. The pit and the dungeon were the best schools at which Joseph ever graduated. The hurricane that upset the tent , and killed Job's children , prepared the man of Uz to be the sub ject of the magnificent poem that has astounded the ages. There is no way to get the wheat out of the straw butte to thresh it. There is no way to purify the gold but to burn it. Look at the people who have always had it their own way. They are proud , discontent ed , useless , and unhappy. If you want to find cheerful folks , go among those who have been purified by the fire. Af ter Rossini had rendered "WilliamTell" the five hundredth time , a company of musicians came under his window in Paris and serenaded him. They put upon his brow a golden crown of laurel leaves ! But , amid all the applause and enthusiasm Rossini turned to a friend and said , "I would give ail this bril liant scene for a few days of youth and love. " Contrast the melancholy feeling of Rossini , who had everything that this world could give him , with the joyful experience of Isaac Watts , whose sorrows were great , when he says : The Kill of Ziou yields A thousand sacred sweets , Before we reach the heavenly fields Or walk the golden streets. Then let our songs abound , . And every tear be dry ; We're marching through Immanuel' ? ground To fairer worlds on high. It is prosperity that kills , and trou ble that saves. While the Israelites were on * he march , amid great priva tions and hardships , they behaved well. After awhile they prayed for meat ; and the sky darkened with a great flock of quails ; and these quails fell in great multitudes all about them ; and the Israelites ate and ate , and stuffed them selves until they died. Oh , my friends , it is not hardship , or trial , or starva tion that injures the soul , but abundant supply. It is not the vulture of trou ble that eats up the Christian's life ; it is the quails ! it is the quails ! You will yet find out that your midnight wrestle by the brook Jabbok is with an angel of God , come down to bless and to save. Learn again that , while our wrestling with trouble might be triumphant , we must expect that it will leave its mark upon us. Jacob prevailed , but the an gel touched him and his thigh-bone sprang from its socket , and the good man went limping on his way. We must carry through this world the mark of the combat. What ploughed these premature wrinkles in your face ? What whitened your hair before it was time for frost ? What silenced forever so much of the hilarity of your house hold ? Ah ! it is because the angei of trouble hath touched you that j-ou go limping on your way. You need not be surprised that those who have pass ed through the fire do not feel as gay as once they did. Do not be out of patience with those who come not out of their despondency. They may tri umph over their loss , and yet their gait shall tell you that they have been trouble-touched. Are we Stoics , that we can unmoved , see our cradle rifled of the bright eyes and the sweet lips ? Can we stand unmoved and see our gardens of earthly delight uprooted ? Will Jesus , who wept himself , be angry with us if we pour our tears into the graves that open to swallow down what we loved best ? Was Lazarus more dear to him than our beloved dead to us ? No. We have a right to weep. Our tears must come. You shall not drive them back to scald the heart. They fall into God's bottle. Afflicted ones have died because they could not weep. Thank God for the sweet , the mysterious relief that comes to us in tears ! Under this gentle rain the ! flowers of hope put forth their bloom , j God pity that dry , withered , parched , { all consuming grief that wrings its hands , and grinds its teeth , and bites ; its nails into the quick , but cannot j weep ! We may have found the comfort - I fort of the Cross , and yet ever after ! show that in the dark night , and by the ' brook Jabbok. we were trouble touched , j Again , we may take the idea of the text , and announce the approach of the day dawn. No cue wa3 over m6re glad to see the morning than wa3 Jacob after that night of struggle. It ia ap propriate for philanthropists and Chriatiana to cry out with this angel of the test. "Tho day hreaketh. " The wcrld'o prospects are brightening. Superstition has had ita strongest props knocked out. The tyrants of earth are falling fiat in the dust. The Church of Christ if. rising up in its strength to go forth , "fair as the morn , clear as the sun , and tcrriblo as an army with ban ners. " Clap your foands , ali ye people , "the day hreaketh. " As I look around about me , I see many who have passsd through waves of trouble that came up higher than their girdle. In God's name I proclaim cessation of hostilities. You shall not always go saddened and heart-broken. God will lift your burden. God will bring your dead to life. God will stanch the heart's bleeding. I know ho will. Like as a father pitieth his children , so the Lord pities you. The pains of earth will end. The tomb will burst. The dead will rioe. The morning star trembles on a brightening sky. The gates of the east begin to swing open. "The day hreaketh. " Luther and Melancthon were talking together gloomily about the prospects of the Church. They could see no hope of deliverance. After awhile , Lu ther got up and said to T.Ielancthon , "Come , Philip , let us sing the forty- sixth psalm , 'God is our refuge and strength in every time of trouble. ' " Death to many , nay , to all , is a strug gle and a wrestle. Y/e have many friends whom it would be hard to leave , I care not how bright our future hope is. It is a bitter thing to look upon this fair world , and know that we shall never again see its blossoming spring , its autumnal fruits , its spark ling streams , and to say farewell to those with whom we played in child hood or counselled in manhood. In that night , like Jacob , we may have to wrestle , but God will not leave us un blessed. It shall not be told in heaven that a dying soul cried unto God for help , but was not delivered. The lat tice may be turned to keep out the sun , or a book set to dim the light of the midnight taper ; or tl e room may be filled with the cries of orphanage or widowhood ; or the Church of Christ may mourn over cur going ; but , if Je sus calls , all is well. The strong wrest ling , by the brook will cease ; the hours of death's night will pass along ; one o'clock in the morning ; two o'clock in the morning ; four o'clock in the morn ing ; five o 'clock in the morning : "the day hreaketh. " So I would have it when I die. I am in no haste to be gone. I would like to stand here twenty years and preach this Gospel. I have no grudge against this world. The only fault I have to find with this world is , that it treats me too well. But when the time comes to go , I trust to be ready , my worldly affairs all settled. If I have wronged others , I want , then , to be sure of their forgiveness. In that last wrest ling , my arm enfeebled with sickness , and my head faint , I want Jesus be side me. If there be hands on this side of the flood stretched out to hold me back , I want the heavenly hands stretched out to draw me forward. Then. O Jesus , help me on , and help me up. Unfearing , undoubting , may I step right out into the light , and be able to look back to my kindred and friends , who would detain me here , ex claiming. Let me go let me go ! The dav hreaketh. STAGE WHISPERS. "She can do more in five socc-iuis with her eyes than Anthony Comtocc can undo in five years , " says Jamw G. Huneker of Anna Held , the Jaitst sei sation imported from Paris. An English comedian says the- only way to successfully spring a joke on British theater-goers is to first an nounce that a j&ke is about to be sprung , then to spring it , and lastly to explain that it has been sprung. "Cymbeline" is the tenth Shake spearean play elaborately revived by Henry Irving since he entered upon the management of the Lyceum , at the close of 1S7S , and the first in which the Roman element has been conspicuous. Clement Scott , the famous London critic , has a son playing in Daly's com pany in New York in "The Geisha. " A son of William Winter and a grand son of Tom Haddaway , the famous American comedian , are also in the same organisation. It is probable that "Tom Grogan , " which Augustus Thomas aided Hopkin- son Smith in making into a play , may not be produced this season after all. Considerable work has to be done on it to get it into shape , as the first draught was far from satisfactory. Boston is moving in the abolition of obstructive hats in theaters. One manager - ager sends an usher to every offending woman , just before the rise of the curtain - tain , to ask her to remove the nuisance , " and in nearly every case she complies - without ado. I Recent London papers have given j much commendation to a performance | j by Miss Keith Wakeman , an American J j actress , who was formerly in Lawrence i f Barrett's company , and who went to f England some time ago with that o2 y E. S. Yvillard. \ J. E. Dodson has discovered tha * : stage limelight and stage goodness have some occult connection. "Possi bly , were rectitude in real life pointed out by an extra bit of illumination. " philosophizes the clever character comedian , "heroes might be more plen- tiful. " Surroundings are never congenial for people who are not satisfied with ' themselves. A woman always appreciate a rising young man in a street car. Clothing Never Known ss Cheap. The receiver's sale of the Hello stock has been the tigest su'-cess ever I.nowii. We can't fill mail orders. You had better come yourself. Owiug to point ) goods dosed out wo will not substitute anvthiiig. Good Meult. Suits at fi' .SO. Boys' Jitiity 75 cents. Good Liued ilittenn nnd Gloves ut 15 cents. Good Heavy Overall at 25 cents each. Meu's Overconts from $1.90 , * .0U . ' .50 to $ . ' $ .00 , which are worth double. Come early while there is u variety to coose from. 1S15 Douglas street. Receiver Sule , Omaha , Neb. , between lflth und lGth streets. Table Talk. "The Food of the " - Anglo-Saxons , by- Dora M. Jlorrell , is the title of the leading article in the November issue af Table Talk. It touches upon the menus and special dishes eaten by the English in America , Australia , Canada and India , and is followed by "Some Old-Fashioued Thanksgiving Dainties , " by Eliza R. Parker. Miss Cornelia C. Bedford , gives an exhaustive and val uable article on "Bread ; " } liss K. Jlar- guritfc Lindley , on "Dress and Its Ef fects Upon Health and Mind. " Table Talk Publishing Company , Philadel phia , Pa. Piso's Cure for Consumption is the best of all cough cures. George W. Lot ? , l'n- bucher , La. , August 20,1S05. ltcnutlfiil Kvenliijj Gotrnn. For eveuing gowns net is being used in great profusion , but it is not treated in its most extravagant fashion with trimmings of steel or jewel or jet I met a lovely net gown in black , striped with lines of silver sequins set closely together in rows of five at intervals of about four inches. This had a bodice swathed round the figure with a birth of white tulle , and it had white tulle sleeves , while round the waist was a creselet of shaded green glace ribbon. IIo\r to Slake Cranberry , Iclly. To make cranberry jelly , wash care ! fully a quart of selected berries and out them in a porcelain-lined kettle with a small cup of water ana half a pound of good white sugar ; allow them to boil steadily for twenty minutes and then press through a jelly-bag into a raoula which haspreviously been rinsed with cold water. Set away in a cool place for several hours , when it will be ready to serve. This quantity should be sufficient for six persons. Ladies ' liome Journal. ; \ Harper ' s Weekly dated Nov. 7 will I contain the first chapters of a new- short serial of Scotch life , entitled "Lady Love , " bv S. R. Crockett , author of "The Gray Man"and "The Raiders. " There will be a four-page article , pro fusely illustrated , on historic New York houses. Boston's subway , by , which the street car traffic in the bus- j i iness portion of the city is to be put [ underground , will be described in text | and pictures. The great naval Sound Money parade in New York harbor [ will be depicted. i ij j Hesemnti's Camphor Ic i with Glyrcrlne. Cir3 Chapped Ilund-- and luce. Tender or Sort-IVft , Chilblains , Hies , &t : C. U VlniL Co. . New Hat en , Ct In a Ouiimlurr. j Boston Globe : Benson I'm almost j zrazy. I sent a letter to my broker , j asking him whether he thought I was ! a fool , and another one to Miss ! Willets , asking her to drive , and I ' don 't know which of them this telegram - ' gram is from. " Roberts What does ' it say ? Benson Simply 'yes. ' ' Just try a 10c box of Cascarets , the finest liver and bowel regulator ever made. i Fewer silk bats were bet on the rast elec tion than ever I efore. Gladness Comes With a better understanding of the transient nature of the many physical - \ ical ills , which vanish before proper efforts - forts gentle efforts pleasant efforts rightly directed. There is comfort in ; the knowledge , that so many forms of - sickness are not due to any actual disease - ease , but simply to a constipated condi tion of the system , which the pleasant family laxative , Syrup of Figs , prompt ly removes. That is why it is the only ( remedy with millions of families , and is ' everywhere esteemed so highly by ail ' who value good , health. Its beneficial i effects are due to the fact , that it is the I one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness without debilitating the ' ; organs on which it acts. It is therefore - all important , in order to get its bene . ficial effects , to note when you purchase - . ! I chase , that you have the genuine artii ce. , which is manufactured by the California - * fornia Fig Syrup Co. only and sold by i all reputable druggists. } If in the enjoyment of good health , < and the system "is regular , laxatives or [ other [ remedies are then not needed. If T afflicted ; with any actual disease , one ' . may : be commended to the most skillful j physicians , but if in need of a laxative , : one should have the best , and with the well-informed everywhere , Syrup of Figs ] stands highest and is most largely | used and gives most general satisfaction. ' I'orrot nit n Cavnlry trail or. H Who can doubt , then , that if Leo | had been provided With a reserve of H twenty thousand fresh cavalry , under | such tl leader as Forrest , ntGainen'tJ H Mill , or the second Manssas , or Chan- | cellorsvillc. the Army of the Potomac | would not have survived to fight H another battle ? For , unless Sheridan H bo expected , there was no cavalry | | general on either side in the war who H could equal Forrest in the pursuit of H : i defeated army. Lord Wolselcy nan H said , in his sketch of Forrest , that H "Forrest's sixty-mile pursuit of Sturgis - H gis after that battle was a most re- H tnarkable achievement and well worth H attention by military students. November - H vember Century. H The Faults nnd olllcB of the Ac < > HAre Are.numerous but of the Inttor nc no In H moiHridiculous than the promWci'ous ami H random use of a laxatlv.r till uml other H drastlecuthn.1 tics. Tlie o wrench coimiNo ' H mid v.ciikuii both the stomach uml the bow- ; H el" . If Hostcitor's > toma 'h Hitters , bo rseil j H lnste.idofthr.se no-rutnedh'S , the result It ; H accomplished without pain ntxi with rrcat j H luMio'it to the bowels , the htonuu'h and the s H liver. IJ.no this remedy when consttput on i H Is manifested , uml thereby prevent It from f H becoming chronic. i H i B Pumpkin l'lu YUtlmut lrZK- t M For one pie falte three heaping tallo- a l spoons sifted squash or pumpkin , ouo | heaping tablespoon Hour , and one and j l a half pints ricii milk. Mix squash or | pumpkin smooth with flour , add milk. ! H H Sweeten to taste , add a tiny pinch of H salt , flavor witli nutmeg. Pour into a H deep pic plate lined with treed piecrust - | crust and bake in a slow oven. Ladies'r l r liome Journal. ' - " 1 SlOO Kettunl. ! | The readers of this paper will ho pleaded it l t * learn that there i * at least otic urt.idcti I | distune that sclouco ha * been aMe to euro H H In all its stages , ami that iC'atarih. . j ' H Hall's Catarrh Cure U tli.on' .v positlvo i M cine now Iviiown to the niodic.il fraternity. ' H | Catarrh belli ; : a constitutional disease , re- ' B quirta , constitutional treatment , lli ll's * H Catarrh Cmo Is taken hit-rzi.tily. -"tin } : , H directly upon the hlood and muciious sur- H fa es of the system , there.detroying ' • 1 the foundation of the < ii-.ea- and giving , j H the patient streiiiMh i > y luiU'Un ; ; up the < H constitution and assKtiii : : nature In doing H its work The proprietor- , have so much H faith in its curative power- , that tliey H otl'er One Hundred Dollars f.ir anv -tso H that it falls to cure. : > eiid for lt-t of Tes- 1 Address. H ! ' . . ! . CHEXEV A. i o. . Toledo , O. Mold -old by Iirusgists. TTi rent * . ' ' | Mnry Cowden Clarke * i out sixteen years ' M on the "Concordance to - "hukeeare. ; . " H rum. "WiiinIoiv'K J oiithitr > nii i H ror'liildrcnteetliliiK.soflcii tieii'i - ' r"ilnee * lrlaiQ- ! i l matiunallays pain , ctiit * winij' oh. * * tfiifs.tji4tle. i l Fashionable society is crowded with | those who never pay until conn elleil to. ' H | The Woman. , | y.H | tiic Man , | JH I totjke Pill. / c She was a good woman. He > { H S > loved her. She w s his wife. v | < ) The pie was good ; his wife < H > made it ; he ate it. But the ( s | J , pie disagreed with him , and < ( H he disagreed with his wife. X H V Now he takes a pill after pie ? c H C and is kappSo is hi wife. S H > > The pill hcTtaker. is Ayer's. it H § Jloral : Avoid dyspepsia / > H V ) by using \ \ M lA3'er9s l\ \ | H s Cathartic Pills. | HH Comfort to H California.H / Ev ery Thursday inornlnjr.a l J H totirii > lefpirj ? c.r for hen- I H ver.ralt l.aku' ity.-ari i fan- . I H ci co.aiiu l./ Angeles leaves r 1 H Omaha.ml Lincoln via the a H Iurliitoi Koute. H it is carpeted , unholstcred e H in rattan , hapring statu 1 H and Luck * and i * provided ! H with curtains Lcidin ? tow- C H ? JC5 | rtgg3g ! ! els.soap.etVnexpentied H JlilfilMr'limi ' e\cur-ii , ; < cormti-'tor an i a _ H i teys32 ? * > c ! unifoiwuMj i uhiiitm p < rtrr _ H SSFlfTrt Jvi&vl arcuDitiaa v i * tnrou h to the H SfSlX'ijtbsJl ' i'acitic i east M . 3SBB2gK3C. | * While neither as e-pcn- • H sively finished nor as 0' c tc " H look at a * a palac siei pi r it | / H is jut as si.od to rule it. i-cc- H end das * tickets are honored H and the price of a herth.widu J M enough and b ; enough foi i9 M two , i * oniy r . \ H Tor a folder plvlng full * * H particular- write to „ . H J. Francis , Gea 'l I'ass'r A sent , OaiahaNeb. ta. M south ; PiCQDKDT I ! &cest IfiidttUbiiBB = The best fruit section in 'he .Vest No > ® | H drouths A fa.luie of crops never known. * | H jiltid ci.matc Prodact. e so- Abundance of V M gooii pure wafr. * | | For .Map. and Circulars " - . . , r. lull descrip- 85 H tion of the Hu-h Min -rai. I-r . .t and AiT cultj- M ral Lands in South V. eT .Mi = . otn. : write to y _ M JOHN K. i'lliDV. iMw.a _ . - 0'or tflf I ! . * oari h H Land ati'l Live Stock Coci' .aaj Neosho. Neww | % n Co. , Missouri. < * H 1J 0"a -JO 3. lb. * ! oli. hiIf r rrarl n TfcBjl tbo > L H . . L , • l. sf Senlm tp & 1 towr t prSte * . , ZA | * V'Cf'2fl ! I1" " ' * ! * liBinliniixxl bj l-f Uof • M vV , t3. OlCii.Uuiu ur- . : . i > , . . ! _ . - ; . inrjrir.rTT . et H = adrei.jcfBDe-lalt : st Jesstiia KnoUiii'-pricej viz : ' y H s-sir.5M rMais. SVi ! # - , Orr.l . P > * M , < id-r Jliltf , X H tarriltrta , Ilil ri-i. I. .rcm , Sjfr * . IU.ni. Slltt , ' J | Lfttrrrrrtvri , # vL'r.n , TrurL. , Anvil. , Ha * < -tlre , 7 H Vmslan tm. } VVM * . * i < * . V ill , . Kiwi ! ' ! * . H .an Tioncr % rr > { tVr 3i'iL. . torzr. . L = . : l.i. l > nmparlf. V H urnsh Ilris , llzcd ter : * , I.cr'rrf. I. n. ttir * War- . ( . | rnitnlnrSllN , tru * ' liarsai. . * ! - . . * lrfc . < lfllliir Jkf. * Za | ! = j , sioek. Elfftator. Itatlroai. P'itr-.rTn * i I Mcl r * < ALh ? . 2 | 151 B. Jtlerioa Ei. CHtCiCO 2 = A. E CO. . Clca < ; . .111. V _ H . c c - m 3f.RT D.RVnana ! ! ; ; bi-n in the ? r dnco t M UU ! rUfl ! 10 l . , . H > T. lur8Avars am wc ae- Coirm s = ton Merj .a * ! . f - < J'h trie wan'sof tr.o y j H cha' t. oriiaha. trau < * - > . , a ' 1' . . ' ut'vcano * tela V M ' . .tAXTKObb _ : ; . • : rr • > . An rr nipt Tl H Butter. T.ji- . I * ' > n' - n . 'liklr ri-turns.andre&pon- JE M try. .ara < - . v-a. . .h . . r. f"r < sc < - ; Ar.y tank vl M Hldt-b Etc. 'a 'lits'atc / H TiJif&Ci " j ta/fr * * TSSTEAD of sellinp yonr grain at h : ce ecru ! it to us i S > § H ! l Ajv-'c 1 a -arSSgg5' ' Ej > * X and save middleman's proflt. VV haveiiav ? d 3 V H J f. , JKyo rferS pt other-FsrmemThoniamli or Dollar * . Why \ $ > H I rblfe 4/ rZ. don t YOUtryitt Adirtsa tor tau particu irs , 4s H = ' | * > > . ! y s. xa. gy > es.xSiK/g . 3iw | X - - v- N f % . & % JXiF * - 43 * . t & - A. * * * . w. j&l. y . H fo , COUGHS , COLDS , LA GRIPPE and THROAT TROUBLES SPEEDILY CURED. A " < l y ? Miss Nellie Penoyer , l. > 35 * o Tenth St , Omsha Neb. writes HsiPtseu vcrD.V | H % Kay's Len * Balm forase pre ca' of La Or ppe. Two doses gav < re. c' Mv i as vtere - • < ( > H y very sore , and in talsin tae Ur Kay .s Lunj : B-.ra I foanJ that itt pp'dc v cm re to j CH /j coiujh at once. The soreness on mv lungs acd in lay bead soon . arjJ artIt -r54D • * ? - H * / pea : : ar.t at.d easy to tatce. and while it does no : cause -icn'-ss ut ti-s s orn ch , Ukt Q H , * ai3ny cough remedies , it cures quicUcr than any I have ever tried Av $ . , v H LJb \ h OdiiSl , v , i a S\ay LaUIlg | 4y It cures avary .kind of cough. Sold by tlrujrfrists or sent by mai1 for 2.3 ct = . p A | H AW It Is ptrfectly safe for aliases and a sure cur for all lunstroalpscnd iddress forXK • tg * | ybooklet : it has raany valuable reieipu and gives symptirns and treatment for n' arij p ' * > , , - H jfKall diseases , and many have said they vrou.d cot take Si 00 for it if they cou.d not "et > W A ! k sJiinother Address ( Western office ) Ur. B. .7. KAY Medical Co , Omaha Ne > * & - " 'V H < # # < # SULD BY DaDG61STS # * # * ' " (