* ; , * a'aB > " * J' ' > J g-jfoi. - < - " ' • • * " - nnTTTrir-r T rjri r T"r a : IK Wales' Tear-Old Grandson. | 1B The baby which may some day become - ' \ \ . come King of England Beems to have bBorne positlvo merits. There could bo \ % no nicer baby nor one more bright and j & forward , considering that he has just If completed his first year. Of course S4 | 4 he has already seen a good deal , and . te ' fl | always taken down to the drawing- \jk room twice a day. In the evening he f wears silk slips of different colors IS * covered with lace , and shoes to match. V * It is quite a sourse of amusement to & m the dwellers in York House , where its \ y parents live , that the baby is far more a * affable to its father than mother. InS - S | \ deed , the little fellow already shows 11 t likes and dislikes. When Mrs. Glad- n \ stone recently called he assaulted her jfjr with infantile violence , and notwith- JM standing all the coaxing entreaties of # H his nurse , dealt out blows with his tiny \ 5 fists. Mrs. Gladstone laughed heartily , > \ and tells the story as a capital one to J 1 her friends. Baby , by the way , is still rtjp accompanied on his walks by a police- JfrR \ man. ' Visitor * to Lincoln I'urk In Cltleaco 1 1 Will be dolijjhtod with the souvenir book &lr of this beautiful spot now being distributed gjj by the Chicago , Milwaukee & St. Paul lW % I Railway Company. Jt is a magnificent f > publicat'on of 1KJ pages full to overflowing * \ with delicious half tone pictures of one of I | Creation's most charming places of resort 'JL for citizens of the Great Republic. TR No stranger visiting Chicago should be iff\ without a copy of tlio "Souvenir of Lincoln If R \ Park. " It can onlv bo procured by enclos- Mlr \ ing twenty-five < 2o ) cents , in coin or post- KL / ago stamps , to Goo. H. Heafford. general * § # ? passenger agent , 410 Old Colony Building , \V/ Chicago. 111. Ho Wanted to Know. "Aro you the proprietor of this J restaurant ? " said the rn-n who had waited for his order until ho became sleepy. i i "Yes , sir. What can 1 do for you ? " ? H. "You can give me some inforraa- | lion. I want to kiuw whether you I have told the waiter to stay away so II that you can bring1 in a bill for lodg- | vv ing against ma" wET To Colorado Springs and Pueblo. I * Burlington ltontn via Denver. mh A through Sleeping car to Colorado I Jk , Springs and Pueblo via Denver is attached IJ to Burlincton Route dailv train leaving R * 5 3hi-ingol0C0p. m. Office , 211 Clark St. * " * Breezy Bits of Thought. ' China Is the biggest crop Japan has 1 ever harvested , j Turkey must he up and Bedouin to stop the looting of her Arabs. All the same , duck trousers are not the things to go into water with. ! The diplomat who knows something i should not open his mouth , for fear what he knows may escape. Indianapolis people want the horse- hitching posts removed from their streets. They have a country village appearance. Hall's Catarrh Cure I JL. Is taken internally. Price , 75c. I Jf Tite Yeixow Kid Magazoje is a new I W publication in New York , by Howard , T\ Anslee & Co. , 23S William street. It is M V published fortnightly at SI a year , or H * L sold at five cents a copy , the only mag- f azine in this country of its scope and d c K yp * originality at such a low price. The m $ * \ Yellow Kid is profusely illustrated and HH is original and entertaining through Hb out. It promises to become a highly H popular publication and to rapidly ac- K quire an immense circulation. A sam- HB' pie copy will start the laugh all along KK the line and bid defiance to the blues. jjEi Coe'n Couch Bnlmtra | y Is the oldest and best. It. wilt break np a cold quicker Hl % than anything else It Is always reliable. Try it. B A Yolnmlnoas and Intricate. m 7 "Ah , ha ! " said the old college man , as HH \ he picked up a sheet of paper and ex- Iw * amined it closely , "it's been a year since H I saw a table of logarithms. " Hb "That isn't a table of logarithms , " HjL said his friend , snatching the paper H 1 * away. "That's the score of this morn- fcing's cricket match. " HE S\ FAT " i.lTS RED STAK EXTRACT IS S / Thil ) . I all crorrrs will refund you. money If H m f j-ou are . it Batisued with It. H W Talked Religion to . a Sleepy Ilnsband. I I A South Dakota doctor got a divorce H S a few days ago at Yankton , because UlW when his wife became a member of the Hl church she proceeded to make life a PPt " burden to the doctor by trying to con- W \ vert him. It was related by him that L \ she would wake him up in the middle HI of the night to deliver sermons to him. B z' To Cnro Constipation Forever. | X Take Cascarcts Cannv Cathartic. 10c or 25a K \ IICCC. fail to cure. drucii&t& refund money. A Bnffalo Horror. V By the upsetting of a steam yacht in Afe * ' the .harbor at Buffalo , X. Y. , nine peo- KL' pie were drowned , all but two .of whom H\ . were business men of the city. The H * craft keeled over while turning around. b m tiWiiiiiiiLiSnTniiiiif ( iloiii i mi I mi iwmiiwwra WMM amu I mi iii i iini w n A Fair Invretment. "Hero , " complained the aggrieved father , "I have spent nearly $15,000 oz that girl's education , and now she goes and marries a J2,500-a-year clerk. " "Well , " said the friend of the family , "isn't that all of 15 per cent on your Investment ? What more do you want ? " Dancer Ahead. At this time of yenr the stomach and entire - tire digestive system is deranged causiug indigestion , weakness , drowiness and gen- orallndisposition. Don't go to sleep while there is danger ahead. Your system needs renovating to prevent fevers and other dangerous diseases. Take Dr. Kay's Ren ovator in time and we will guarantee you will not hove fever. It strikes to the root of the matter and removes the cause. It regulates the stomach , bowels and liver so gently and pleasantly and yet cures a larger per cent of cases than any remedy ever discovered. It cures the worst case * of indigestion , constipation and chronic diseases. It is pleasant and easy to take. Price , by mail , postage prepaid , 25cts. and 81. If your druggist docs not have it don't take some inferior article which he says is "just as good , " but send to us for the medicine or "Dr. Kay's Home Treatment. " a valuable OS-page free book with 50 recipes. Address Dr. B. J. Kay Medical Co. , Omaha , Neb. Marrying "n 8JS0 a Month. Yesterday a young man asked mo if it would be safe for him to marron $500 and a salary of $50 per month. I told him I could tell better when I saw the girl. There are girls who have grown up in ease and who have kicked great black and blue welts in the lap of luxury , yet who are more ready and willing to accept a little rough weather than the poor girl who has stood for eighteen years looking out through the soiled window of life waiting for the rain to rinse it off and let the sunlight through that she might see her approaching preaching lord. Bill Kye. Aliont French Journalism. The following , says the New York Sun , is the explanation given by the Paris correspondent of the Independ ence Beige for not sending to that pa per an account of a garden party at the residence of President Faure : "I must say a word , even if a day late , about the charming fete given yesterday at the Elysee by Mme. Felix Faure. I was there and I stayed there ; that is the rea son why I could not send any account of the function. That is my only ex cuse , and it is the strongest proof of the charm of the evening which we all passed there. " Enterprises of Great Pith and Moment Have , ere now. had their currents "turned awry , " as Hamlet says , by an attack ot dys pepsia. Napoleon failed to improve his ad vantage at Austerlitz in consequence , it is said , of Indigestion brought on by some in- dlscretion"in eating. In order to avoid dys pepsia abstain from over-indulgence , and precede the'meal with a wineglas ful of Hos- tetter's Stomach Bitters , more effective than any dietetic in Improving the tone of tha stomach. Liver complaint , chills and fever , and rheumatism are annihilated by the Bit ters. Try Graln-O. Ask your grocer today to show you a package of GRAIN-O , the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without injury as well as the adult. All who try it like it GRAIN-0 has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java , but it is made from pure grains , and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. % the price of coffee. 15 cents and 25 cents per package. Sold by all grocers. Tastes like cof fee. Looks like coffee. This Town Protects Cyclists. At last a place has been found where the poor bicyclist is protected. It is in the town of Chicopee , Mass. , and any person found throwing into the street ashes , glass , crockery , scrap-iron , tacks , nails or anything that might injure the ' tires of bicycles will be prosecuted. * Shako Into Your Shoe * . Allen's Foot-Ease , a powder for the feet. It cures painful , swollen , smart ing feet and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. It is the greatest comfort discovery of the age. Allen's Foot-Ease makes tight-fitting or new shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for sweating , callous and hot , tired , aching feet. Try it to-day. Sold by all druggists and slioe stores. By mail for 25c in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address Allen S. Olmsted , L * Key , N. Y. After Bloomers In Georgia. " The advent of bloomers has caused an old law to be dug up in Georgia , which prohibits men from wearing women's dresses and women from wearing men's clothes. Ko-To-Bac for Fifty Cents. Guaranteed tobacco habit cure.jiakea weak men strong , blood pure. 50c. CI. All druceista. "Without life , death wouldn 't be worth dying. 3Ir . Wlitilow'i Sothlne Sjrnp For rhildron teethinR.sof tens the sruos.rednces inflanv matiou , allays pain , cures wind colic 2a cents a bottle. Some men have corns on their souls and their bodies hurt them. t m\ j | How Old are You ? ip | & "STou need not answer the question , madam , C /P \ B tL lllil for * n yQur case age is not counted by years. It fp | | JHLS&f0k " alvra3TS be true that "a woman is as oldp v - fc \ fp | as she looks. " Nothing sets the seal of age fP | | deeply upon woman's beauty as gray hair. / \ It is natural , therefore , that every woman is | / anxious to preserve her hair in all its original S \ abundance and beauty ; or , that being denied the crowning gift of beautiful hair , she longs | | _ . to possess it. Nothing is easier than to attain g Btf' ( flU ° "s " or * ° Preserve it , if already mM ' H possessed. Ayer's Hair Vigor restores gray % / \ ll • " WM " or faded hair to its original color. It does this wgw H % * % by simply aiding nature , by supplying thepsv - - - Hp | nutrition necessary to health and growth. | | P V ' /f / % There is no better preparation for the hairp | \ f | ' j | AYER'S HAIR VIGOR. • H" - J - > , ; 1 . , jrkiif&ii8jfl | | ' - ' • - ' - M M Mi 1 FAYOES ANNEXATION. TREATY REPORTED BY SENATE COMMITTEE. General Understanding that Ther TVlll Be No KfTort to Secure Consideration of the Treaty llurlne ; the Present Session Expression of Members. Hawaiian Annexation. Washington , July 15. The Senate committee on foreign relations agreed to-day to report a resolution for the ratification of the Hawaiian annexa tion treaty without amendment. O' the eleven members of the comm - m * • onl3' beven were present. These w _ .Messrs. Davis , Cullom , Foraker , Clark , Morgan , Turpie and Daniel , and all of these but Messrs. Turpie and Danil cast their votes for the resolution of ratification. Mr. Frye ' s vote was also cast in that interest by Mr. Davis , Mr. Fryc having left in structions to that effect Messrs. Daniel and Turpie did not take a positive stand in opposition to the treat- , but both expressed the opinion that it was not expedient nor consistent with the vast importance of the subject that the treaty should be pressed to immediate consideration , and that if the Senate was not to take the subject up at the present session the better course would be to leave it in committee until the Senate should be prepared to proceed with its consid eration. Mr. Turpie expressed himself as in clined to favor the treaty , but thought it should be amended. He , however , withheld his amendments upon the suggestion that the majority would consider it preferable to have the amendments offered in the Senate. There was a general understanding that the committee should make no effort to secure the consideration of the treaty durinjr the present session. NO YOUNGER PARDON. Minnesota Pardon Hoard Declines to Re- leave the Missouri Outlaivs. St. Paul , Minn. , July 15. After an extended hearing on the petition for the pardon of Cole and Jim Younger , the surviving members of the Missouri outlaw ban 1 who attempted to raid a bank at Xorthfield , Minn. , in 1STG , the state board of pardons , consisting of the governor , attorney general and chief justice , yesterday afternoon re fused , by unanimous vote , to grant the requested relief , declaring their belief that the Youngdrs should com plete their term of life imprisonment. Contrary to expectations , the board gave out a statement of its reasons in denying pardon. It is as follows. A sensational feature of the proceed ings before the board yesterday after noon was an intimation that the Min nesota authorities still hoped to bring Frank James to trial. Several who protested against the pardon urged that the Younger boys might testify against their former comrades. If such evidence could be secured Un declared they would try to get a re quisition for Frank James and bring him to Minnesota to answer for his share of the Northfield raid. MANY CONSULS NAMED. The President Sends a Long : List of State Nominations to the Senate. "Washington , July 15. The Presi dent to-day sent the following nomi nations to the Senate : To be ministers William L. Merry of California , to Nicaragua , Costa Eica and San Salvador : H. N. Allen of Ohio , to Corea ; Perry M. DeLeon of Georgia , to Ecuador. To be consuls William L. Sewell of Ohio at Toronto , Ontario ; Edward H. Ozum of Minnesota at Stuttgart , Ger many ; Henry W. Diedrich of the Dis trict of Columbia at Madgeburg , Germany ; Charles W. Erdman of Ken tucky at Furth. Germany ; Samuel E Magill of Illinois at Tampico , Mexico ; George J. Corey of Illinois at Amster dam , Netherlands ; Genviile James of New York at Prescott. Ontario. Rad- eliffe H. Ford of Maine at Yarmouth. Nova Scotia ; Frederick W. Hossfeld of Iowa at Trieste , Austria ; John C. Co vert of Ohio at Lyons , France ; William K. Anderson of Michigan at Hanover , Germany. Mail Carriers Erozen to Death. Port Townsend , Wash. , July 15. A letter just received here from Alaska brings particulars of a terrible death of the three men , Blackstone , Bottcher and Mollique , who were frozen to death while endeavoring to carry mail from Sunrise City across the glacier to Prince William sound. Of forty-six horses taken to Cook's in let country last season for use in pack trains only four survived the winter. Mrs. Hay's Narrow Escape. London , July 15. Mrs. Hay , the wife of the United States ambassador , had a narrow escape from serious ac cident yesterday. While driving with Colonel Hay , the pole of an omnibus penetrated the panel of the carriage at a point where Mrs -Hay's head had rested only a moment before. Had she not shifted her position when she did a fatal iujury would have been almost unavoidable. The driver oi the omnibus has been arrested. BRYAN TO VISIT MEXICO. The Champion of Silver to See the Workings of Free Coinage. Sat.t Lake , * Utah. July 1 = 5. It is stated on excellent authority that W. J. Bryan , shortly after the adjourn ment of the Transmississippi congress , will make a tour of Mexico in com pany with some Texas friends. This tour will not be solely for pleasure , but will be for the purpose cf gather ing some data for use in the campaign for the free coinage of silver. > i iin in. i i. < in n nniimiin TiMWHTWiTMewpata1 1 OMAHA WON. The National Itepubllcan League Will Go to Nebraska. Detboit , Mich. , July 15. The Re publican league convention has se lected Omaha as the place for the next meeting. For president Leonard J. Crawford of Kentucky was chosen. The resolutions declare unfaltering allegiance "to the principles and pol icies of the party of protection , sound money , reciprocity and pa triotism , as expresssd in the St Louis platform , " and con tinue : "The faith which prompted the nomination and election of William McKinlej'and a Republican Congress has been justified , and we congratu late the country upon the evidences of returning prosperity. We pledgeanew the organized effort of league men throughout the Union of the party of Abraham Lincoln. " The platform commends the Presi dent and Congress in sending a mone tary commission to European nations ; for inaugurating measures for the an nexation of Hawaii and for an attitude upon the Cuban matter that has tend ed to lessen Spanish atrocities in that island President Cleveland's civil ser vice chances are vigorouslj * condemned and a modification of the rules and provisions of that law are favored in the "interest of good service and to correct the injustice' " alleged to have been thus psrpetrated. Restriction of immigration is favored and sympathy expressed with the miners and other Inhering men in their struggles for living wajjes. FRANK JAMES TALKS. Discusses the Yonncer Pardon Refusal The Result Not Unexpected. St. Louis , Mo. , July 15. Asked whether the alleged silence of the Youngers in the face of repeated ques tions about the killing of Cashier Hey- wood did not indicate that they were prejudicing their own case and prac tically sacrificing their liberty to pro tect some of their former associates , Frank James said that such an infer ence in his case would be unjust ; that he had been a law-abidintr citizen ever since his surrender and that any testi- mon3 * connecting his name with the robbery or murder was false. Mr. James idded : "Between Cole and Jim Younger and liberty was placed a barrier which to have crosse-d would have been dishonor in their own eyps. To them , imprisonment , with all of its sacrifices , was preferable tea a life in the open air , knowing that the price of that freedom was either the imprisonment of a friend or the desecration of the memory of a friend long dead. " The former bandit concluded that he had at no time thought that the broth ers would be pardoned and had so told Captain Uronausrh. C H EYENNES UNR U L Y. Indians Try to Assassinate a Montana Deputy Sheriff Miles Citt , Mont. , July 15. A num ber of Cheyenne Indians attacked the home of Matt Winter , near the reser vation , firing several shots into the house. Mrs. Winter and her children and a hired man. who were in the house , fled by the rear way and es caped without injury. Winter was one of the deputy shsr- ifts who accompanied Sheriff Gibbs to help arrest Little Whirlwind not long ago , and it was the general opinion at that time that he would be killed by the Cheyennes. WAR MAY BEGIN ANEW. Edhein Pasha and TnrkUh Officers Pre pare for Active Service. London , July lO. Advices from Con stantinople indicate that the sultan is obdurate regarding the acceptance of the peace proposals. Edhem Pasha is hastening back to Domokos and the furloughs of all Turkish officers have been canceled in readiness for a re newal of hostilities. The foreign ambassadors to Turkey are recognizing that further verbal re monstrance is useless and are not in clined to continue diplomatic proceed ings until they know in what way coercion is to be annliod THOS. D. HASTINGS DEAD. The Western Railroad Builder Passes Away Suddenly. Chicago , July 15. Thomas D. Hast ings of this city , who was summering at the Hotel Colorado , Glenwood Springs , Colo. , with his wife and two daughters , died suddenly there last night. He was a retired capitalist. Mr. Hastings was interested in rail road building all his life and con structed many of the roads west of the Missouri river. The town of Hastings. Neb. , was named after him. Previous to coming to this city he lived for many years in St. Joseph , Mo. . St. Louis and Kansas City , in which city he wa well known. Wool Importations Heavy. Washington , July 15. Reports re ceived at the treasury department show that the importations of raw wool at Boston , New York and Phila delphia , which ports enter about 0C per cent of all the wool brought into the United States , amounted during June to 33,2S 1,775 pounds , or 10,965.910 pounds less than in May , but 27,905 , - 590 pounds more than in June , 1896. MISSOURI'S A. P. A. SPLIT. Expelled Councils Organize a New Order at St. LjuIs Conspiracy Talk. St. Louis , Mo. , July 15. The A. P. A. councils expelled by the state judi ciary board decided not to appeal , and organized the True American league. The constitution affirms allegiance to the principles of the A. P. A. as enun ciated by its founder , H. F. Bowers , and by ex-President Traynor. The ioliowing officers were elected : Presi dent , Edward Upton ; vice president , F. W. Gifford of Kansas City ; secre tary , J. Leshman. A PEINCE IN DANGER r COREA'S HEJR APPARENT SAID TO BE IN PERIL. • Ttvo Men Sworn to Kill the Young Man Pursuing Him Unrelentingly Steel Armor Constantly Worn and Trusted Cnurds Always on Dnty. Assassins Seeking u Prince. New York , July IP. The Journal and Advertiser says : "Prince Euie Wha , heir apparent to the throne of Corea , is said to be in danger of losing his life. This young Corean arrived in America several months ago , osten sibly to complete his education in an American college ; in reality he came to avoid hired assassins , who have fol lowed him. Despite the fact that the United States offers to the prince a refuge far more secure than his native country , he is continually dodging men who are hired-by the Corean Pro gressive part } ' , which is against the present dynasty , to kill him. "The prince is believed to be in Washington at present. The mem bers of his suite go armed to the teeth. The secret service officers and the po lice of San Francisco and Washington and , possibly , New York , though this has been denied , have been instructed to look out for his safety. "The prince is the son of the king by a former union. The queen has been assassinated , the mother of the young man has been killed , and others interested in the royal family of Corea have gone to their last home on ac count of this youth. "A Japanese secret service officer , at present in New York , who is perfectly familiar with the affairs of Prince Euie Wha , tells the following story of the troubles of the young man : 'The young prince is a general favorite wherever he goes , and while in this city at the Waldorf he made many friends. But he has a marked pe culiarity ; he wears the look of a hunted man. Since his birth , in 1885 , assassins have tried to take his life. The king , believing he would be safer in the United btates than in Corea , sent him here , and he has been fol lowed by two men who have sworn to take his life , and if he gets back to Corea alive it will be be cause Corean assassins have lost their cunning. These would-be assassins are believed to be in San Francisco at present. Both are Coreans , although they pass themselves off for Japanese. One of them is a round-faced , heavil-- built man , with a very kindly expres sion of countenance. He is such a flu ent Japanese scholar as to deceive even the native Japanese , and his mis sion here is not suspected save by the detectives who have been informed of it. He was a fellow conspirator of the unfortunate Kim O Klum , who was lured to Shanghai shortly before the outbreak of the war between China and Japan and there murdered by an emissary from the Corean court named Hong , who is now colonel in the im perial body guard and vice minister of home affairs. He has a double object revenge the death of his friend as well as to put the prince out of the uav. The would-be assassin was at one time a cabinet minister of the Corean court The prince is in mortal dread of the minister ; he knows he is fol lowed , but he does not know who is following him. ne never leaves off his coat of mail , which is made of the very finest Corean steel wire , except when in bathing. It will not with stand the force of a bullet , but there is no knife that can pierce it , and it is only a knife that the prince is afraid of. The cause of this desire to end the career of the prince lies in the idea of the Progressive partv in Corea that the king and his son are too far behind the times. Undoubtedly , the king will be assassinated before long and the design is to have the young man out of the way when this comes to pass. ' GEN. FARNSWORTH DEAD. An Old Member of Congress and So ! dier , from Illinois. Passes Away. Washington. July 16. General John F. Farnsworth died here yesterday afternoon , aged 77 years. He was a Canadian by birth , but in early life re moved to Michigan , where he wa educated and admitted to the bar. Subsequently he went to Chicago and was elected to and ser. 'ed in Congress as a Republican from 1S. > 7 to 1SGJ. when he became colonel of the Eighth Hlinois cavalry. Later , by order of the war department , he raised the Seventeenth Illinois regiment and was commissioned brigadier general in No vember , 1S62 , but owing to injuries re ceived in the field was compelled U- resign from the army in March , 1eGs : He then went to St. Charles , 111. , and from 1863 to 1S73 was again a member of Congress. Since the latter date he bad been engaged in the practice of law in this city. A Cleveland Tin Plate .Mill Closed. Cleveland , O. , July 16. The Cres cent Tin Plate mill closed in every de partment this morning. The heaters refused to go to work and without them it was impossible to operate the mill All the heaters were taken into the Amalgamated Iron and Steel asso ciation last night. The mill may be closed until the settlement of the strike. Will Exhibit at 1'arls. Minneapolis , Minn. , July 16. The Association of American Colleges of Agricultural and Experimental Sta tions decided to make an exhibit at ' the. Paris exposition in 1900 and a com mittee was named to make the neces sary arrangements. Forger Commits Suicide. Ashland. Wis. , July 16. R. C. Heyd- lauff , arrested for forgery cf county orders , committed suicide by shootinj. himself yesterday morning. j ' " " " " * ' " " " ' " • - " - ' s B Coffin on a Trolley Car. | An unusual sight was wltntBed on | a Brooklyn trolley car heading toward | a cemetery. An employe of a well- | known undertaker was seen carrying | the body of a baby in a coffin , which I was wrapped In a blanket , on the car. | There was considerable excitement | among the pasencers for a while , but no attempt on the part ot the conductor was made to collect an additional fare. This is the cheapest funeral on record. j ; Dr. Kay's renovator is certain to cleanse and invigorate the whole hyhteiu. Trial sire , 125c. See advt. • Idleness is only the refuge of weak minds and the holiday of fools. For Luns and chest diseases PifO's Cure is the Lest inediciuo wo have iikh ! Mrs. J. L. Northcott , Windsor , OnC , Canada. Some of the feasts of Lucullus cost as much as 56,000. Kdocato Vour ISovrelc With Cascaret * . Candy Cathartic , cure constipation forever. I0c If C C. C. fail , druzcists refund money. Thomas Cosgate introduced the fork into England about 1010. \ The Bicycle Sensation ( 1897 GOLUKBIAS AT $75. ? S "Standard of the World. c < 1896 Golumbias . . . at $60. I I 1897 Hartfords. . . . at 50. i I Hartford Pattern2 . . .at 45. ) < Hartford Pattern I. . . at 40. ) 5 Hartford Patterns 5 and 6. at 30. ( j ) These are the new prices. S 5 They have set the whole S ' \ bicycle world talking S ; and buying. I I POPE MFG. CO. , Hartford , Conn. < y Catalog free from anjr 1'ulnmMi. tlaler , J ' JJ bjmall for a 2- < rut utmnp. V S100 Tojny Ian. WILL PAY SlOO FOR ANY CASE Of Vfeakneta in Men Tliey Treat and Fall to Care. Ac Omaha Company places for the first time before the public a Mauicm. Tkeat- mext for the cure of Lost Vitality Nervous and Sexual Weakness , and Melioration of Life Force in old and vomit' men No worn-out French remedy : contain no Phosphorous or other harmful drugs It is it WoxnERrci. Tiseatmkxtmagical in its effects positive in its cure. All readers , who are suffering from a weakness that blights their life , causing that mental and physical suffering peculiar to Lo- ; Man hood , should write to the STATE M EDICAL COMPANY , Omaha , Neb . and the } will send you absolutely FKEE , a valuable paper on these diseases , and positive proofs of their truly Maoical Treatment Thous ands of men , who have lost all hope of a cure , are being restored by them to a per fect condition. This Magical Treatment may be taken at home under their directions , or they will pay railroad fare and hotel bills to all who prefer to go there for treatment , if they fail to cure. They are perfectly reliable ; have no Free Prescriptions , Free Cure , Free Sample , or C O. D. fake They have $2r 0,000 capital , and guarantee to cure every case they treat or refund every dollar ; or their charges may bo deposited in a bank to be paid to thern when a cure is effected. Write thcui today Thro' Yellowstone Park on a Bicycle. Among the geysers , water falls , lakes and terraces of Yellowstone Park is where every true wheelman should spend his ' 97 holiday. Most delightful outiag Imagin- y i i. able. Less expensive than | fnJVj3MHBj a week at a fashionable yril summer resort. Good roads iHBolK fcyiffffffSI built by the government. jKnaapw ] Elegant hotels. Tine fish ing. Splendid air. Write for booklet contain ing a map of the Park as well as full information about the cost of the trip , what to take , what the roads are hke etc. J. Francis. Gen'l Pass'r Agent , Burlington Koute. Omaha. Neb. UNIVERSITY of NOTRE DAME , Notre Dame , Indiana. Classics , Letter * . Science , I iw , CiviL Jle- rhanical and KIec-trica.1 Knjjineeriug. Thorough Preparatory and Commercial Courses. Eccle iai-tifal student- fcpti-ial rat * * . Kooins Fri'C Jiimor or S-im/r } V r. Collegiate Courses. St. KfiuardV Hall , for t < ojnd r 12. TnelOTth Term li < > txa September 7th , 1897. Catalogue Free on api > iiration to Kev. A. .Morris-.ey. C. is. C , I'rcsident. { t& siJ ] CURE YOURSELF ! f y CDBEaN. | Vm I5i G for"unnatural / Xi l S < J ji.\ I diBcLarcef , in3imniations , lrr 1 Guarantied } J irritation ? or uloratiotll f ) l et " , UKls- of laucotiH raernlran * * . 1 1 " " * ceBt lmI'aiale . and Lot aatrin- l. 'gtuTHEtYAtsCHEaiau.CS. ? 't or t-olPonoiiH. T VciNClNKlTI.O.L i Sold by rtisrci t , \ \ U. E. A. / | or Fnt in plain wrapper , , % > w _ Sj\ I , lV xpr ? . prepaid , for "O * " " "S JO li f , 1 . ' " . < " ' 2lrfttl , | 2.7S. * * * % • * * Circular etat oz. request. Pi ! fP I * 1H U 6 Get your Pension EH HIH DOUBLE QUICK Write CAPT. O'FARRELL. Pension A ent , 1425 New York Avenue , WASHINGTON , D.C. D n fCI H f * The best Ked R ° Pe Rooejijtfor nLlllrlPSil lc-tr tq.lu. cap : and salla ln- l * * * " * * * ' nrt 'i Snb.t tu e * for Il ter Sample * free. Tk * txx'xxmujl uoofeh. cc.cac < itos i. f OODGV NEW DISCOVERY ; * . LPsfWa * B quickreliefan < icur > worst cnsi-s. Send tor book of te-timonUJs and IO days * treatment free. Br. U.U.DREl3SfcOS3.AUi3ta.a . CUBED AT HOMEnrf rtunip efiftiflFfffe # % 14ur9BCB HVe Bcllcilns , ' . Clucinunti , Ohio. W. N. U. OMAHA. No. 30. 1897. Whin writing to advertiser * kindly mea- ton this paper.