, - : : . 2 - - - ' _ ' . & . - _ _ _ - - ; ) - - . U - - - : - . : c - -7 . . . . . , . . , . " , ' , , ' . . . : : . r LE' ' : : : . ' . " ' ' ' _ " . , , , * . } . . , - . . . . . . . . - ' ' . . . . . . _ . . " . , - - . . - - : , - j' - . . . . . . - . . _ - - - - ' . . 4 , - - - - - - - 2 . \ . - - -----r - - - - - - TIE 01IAHA DAILY flEE : MONDAY , AUGUST 19 , lS { . I. I I ; , I ! I Pii1se of Western Progress. i "J"L = -I ' . ' - . A trlke of very rlcn ore Ie reported In the I road level at the BtanltY mine , lays an Idaho , Sprln l specIal to the Denver Republican , wh.rl Irlfog bas been carried on for a dIstance - tance of 2&OO feet The are body II very rIch In copper , led , fell and Iiver and there I said to be three feet of It , besldo three fet of m\ dirt , 'he valnes run Into the hunllrede of dollars to the ton For some lmo It ' 131 been known that the body of ore In this mine was very large , run- Ilng from five to eight feet wide , but very few people expected to bear of a ItrllC erich rIch , alhough In the old worllngs Il few ) 'ear4 ego the ere body under Clear Creek was running $2,000 to the ton and the ore on the north Ildo of the creek was very high gra'le On the south side the ground Is com. paratively now , and the prolent management Ilaalvely runnln a number of drifts Into the I ' mountain. Work Is progressing on the first , third , fifth , sixth and road : levels , and the minerai has continued In all 01 these. How- ever , the road level Is the one which line cut a wonderful mineral body , but \\'len the other leve1s reach the same distance there Is little doubt but that the same , are chute will . contnuo with dellth , ns Ins been hewn by all Ia other are bodies. I Is said that there Is enough ore blocked out for a ten-YEar re- serve antI the force Is continuing to Ille ) up the reMorvet Instead of stoplng It oul Devel- opulent work hi producing suclenl are to o\m mill continual running , Ilcql Lie Salsbury mi cuntnunl y beside the frt-clnsJ are shipped direct tu the smelter. . GOLD AT hIElEA. ( Thin rich discovery made by Clarence Akin on the Western Union 10te , at the head of MonItor gulch , says the Helena Independent , has created gomethln ot a stampede to that vicinity. Mr. AkIn had only attained a depth of three feet when he struck $300 ore " vein. John Urn'man and s. > ' In a seven-Inch ) . larry Tion own the adjoining claim , the Little Nellie , to the south , and they have also ' struck the continuation of the rich vein that was discovered In the Western Union. Some Helena men do not believe that gold has been discovered In this vicinity because of the fact that several mines have been worked six or seven years for silver , and they argue that these rich gold deposIts 'mlll not have - existed without such ehl. timers l II-I ? ioselnnuel , Lutrel and others knowing something about it. Hut Il Is averred , however , that the gold Is a tangible fact , and that It Is there In considerable quantitle. A portion of the D. & K. and Midnight ' mines , owned by C. L. Iarllng. C. E. Akin and , Jumes Swan rIses to the height of 2:0 the mountain. The feet on the wesl side of entire mountain from top to bottom Is cov- erel with slide rock composed of fire clay that assnys from $2 to $20 In gold per ton. pUTOI BASIN ISCOVlmy , Of all discoveries that have been made In that section none has caused so much excie' moot ni the fndlhg of the rIch PUlor basin whIch has for several years been the objective - jectvo Ilolnt of litany a prospector who has heard the tales l the great wealth there Is to il found there. The lucky finder Is a trapper ( who has been In that section for the last three years prospectng and trapping , nUll on his arrIval here for a load of provIsions - sions , says a Kendrlck Idaho , special to the Spolmne Spokesman-Hevlew he caused no lit- te exciement with the news of his rIch dls- co\'ery. The news has spread like wIldfire 'J over the mining country and prospectors and ' mlncrs are flocking that way tn herds. The rlchnpss of the find Is evident 'from the fact that the dirt washes from 15 to 35 cents per pan , with suFficient water to carryon exten- alvo mining operations. The basin , as usual , with its hidden treasures. whIch wlre only known to n few , car- vies with I some starting tales of the finding of skeletons and hideous sights I enough to make ono's blood run cold. J. S. VIncent let here some two months ago hnv- log made nn unsuccessful trip In search of the basin three years ago , carrying with him n mall , showing the basin's locton , given hini by a ntincr on hIs deathbed In Lewls- Ion about eight years ago , ns a rewnrd for ' 11 ' faithfulness In caring for him while sick. I Is callcil this miner left every spring ns Bon as the trails were In pa sable conll- ton for this basin and returned In a few months with sulclent wealth to maintain bun In luxury until the next season , when ho again would make his annual trip to this source of wealth alono. News from this section Is anxiously looked for ns the trap- per states that Mr. Vincent Is at the basin and believes that It Is the Puter basin , ns I agrees with his mal and details . HENDml IN ALASKA. Rov. Father Dalnum or San Jranclsco , n priest of the Roman Catholic church , has Just returned from the Upper Yukon , says the San Francisco Examiner , where for several - oral year ho has been laboring for the salva- tel ot the Esqullaux and less civilized In- diane of the Intorlor with a thermometer frequenty falling to 85 degree , below zero. He has while seeking to save the 'S. soul ot the Esqulnaux , also been doing en- , 4 ergeto missionary work for the reindeer and preaching a gospel or extermination so far as Alaska dogs ere concerned. Th03e little mongrels have , by the grace ot Arctic travelers - elers and their illustrators , come to be regarded - , gardell as n Part or every well-regulated I s'ullaux family. So long ns these dogs live , Father lalnum says , the reindeer cannot - not bo Introduced , and nil efforts In that direction - recton must end only In failure and heavy expense to the government. The Esqulmlx dogs are , according to the returned mis- sionary , a disgrace to the canine race , and , all travelers' tales to the contrary , share few of the conspicuous virtues that make the dog mnn's best frlelHI. They all have In them the wolf blood , ho says , and wolves wi ever male deer their prey. Hence It 15 that he has been doing his best to induce the - . Esqulmaux to kill oft their dogs. The reindeer - deer Is a bettor friend , and there 15 nothing to plovent its successful introduction so soon as the great Alaska country 15 rid of Its army of mongrel dogs . NEltASKA , Fullerton has purchased a new fire alarm ' boll weighing 1,280 pounds. C. H. Daniels of Fremont captured a Pale : rIver catfish weIghing sixty-seven pounds Pawnee City's new electric light plant Is practically completed and ready for opera- t tion. ton.Thutton county farmers are having a lively demand for hay for shipment to liii- . ' nois , ' 'I - The Norfolk beet sugar factory will usa crude oil for fuel the coming season Instead ot coal Mrs. Oeorgo Berg ot hsplnwol committed suicide while laboring under a fit of temporary - rary mental aberraton ! lurglar entered three storl In the town of Greenwood , Cass county , and carried away an asrtment ef plunder. htuniboldt Is ( lrplexed over the water sup- ply question , The wels have a strong tendency - dency to develop salt water Beaver City's enterprising citizens will send a carlcnd of Ftirnas county ploducts to the state fir In Iowa and Illinois . The Farmers Slate bank and the Dank of l'ialnviow. have consolidated and the former will hereafter do all the business. A stone twt'nty-two feet long three and - onahalf feet wide and two feet thick was ' quarried near Wymore last week. Two l'lattamonnth blcyclstl ! Incurred the displeasure of the boys of Murray and were Cotton egged aB they rode out of town The lodge county pioneer will hold theIr annual picnic at } 'remont on September 10 and a large gathering Is counted upon Mrs. C. U. Cateman of Table Rock took an overdose of morphine either by mistake or with wcldal ! Intent. Her life was saved. A boy who ran away from the State Industrial - , Iustrlal school at Kearney returned after a year's absence It's almost the only case au record. John Tann3hili . a Plate county farmer , will harvest 1,000 bushes : of apples nlls year. He ' % uses Irrigation on his trees and claims that ' I 113Y : . Willard l.shl- 7-year-od ! Heaver City boy , fell Into a pond and was drowned I before alatance. hI , little 1iaynatei could summon as- % ; Under muulclpll ownerJh'p of clctric Ightl t l relent will enJoy a reduction of rates The price for incandescent lamps In private rca- Iduncel Is 85 cents per month , where only one I uI.d , I two or more are used the cOlt will b. : O cents per month cac. Are ii.bU. " . ' . . . . . , - .1f' . . - . . . , - ' ' - ' . .J . ' - ' . ' _ - wi be furnished at the rate of $3 per month , unless the recommendation of the mayor to make It $5 I Itloptod. : Iu , Sarah A Haley , wIfe of the McCook engineer killed In the washout several monthl ago , bas Just recalvetl UOOO accIdent Incur- ance money , Farmers In the ylclnl ) . of old Hock lufs II CaB county are prospecting for coal. They put up the money necessary to put down the drill 200 feet A Pumas county farmer 76 years old haA planted and cultivated sixty acre of corn this year , and Furnad county corn IB pretty big this year , too. The leI maps of Nebraska ordered by the State Board of Transportation will show all the Irrigating ditches completed ns well as those under construction. constructon. The first carload of new wheat shipped out of Howard county this season was raised on Irrigated land , The owner threshed 612 butois from eighteen acres , Water lies been turned Into the now far- mere and merchants ditch In Dawson county. The engineering was so well done that no ad- .llonal work \ will be required. . The Inrtngton Herahl 15 responsible for lie statement that Arnol,1 , Irlchkoff , n Cedar ounty farmer , threshed 1,030 bushels of oats from a ten-acre piece of land. OrIn Moore of ockport fell head frt to the bottom of a forty-foot well. The water was deep enough to prevent him from being killed by the fail and he was rescued aU rlRht The Scribner creamery , which originally cost U,200 with two acres of land and a $700 residence , was sold at sheriff's sale the other dny a creditor buyIng the entire prop- erty for $1,000. Theron Able , R farmer living near Weeping Water , lost a span or horses through the enterprise - terprise of a couple of thieves. No trace of the horses or the men who stole them has been discovered The good people of Jamestown were so deeply shocked over the acton of a contractor In pushing work on the new school house on Slnday that the directors were com- peled to Inlerfere. The supervisors of Harlan county arc the frJt to comply with tie leI township orgnnl- I zaton law , reducing the number of super- ' visors' districts In each county They cast lots to determine which should drop out of i the board. I II. H , Kemper discovered a net of young I turkey buzzards near the town of Cheney , Lancaster county. The birds are exceedingly rare In Nebraska. They will be stuffed and I mounted for the State unh'ersty ! ornHholog- I leal collection. I Peter HcllEn , living on a farm three miles from Endicott , claIms to have struck a two- foot vein of gold.bearlng are thIrty feet from I the surface. His neighbors do nol belIeve that the stuff Is gold , but Mr. Hicken has I sent specimens to an assayer. A young hay named B lr , while under the influence of a temporary fit ot madness , assaulted - saulcd the telegraph operator nt Stela and cut a six-Inch gash across his face and lecll , barely Ilssng ! the jugular vein The boy has been placed Ln the Insane hospital at LIncoln. Puras county Is breaking a good many records this year. Milo J. Whieman , n farmer of that county , seeded a piece of land to rye In 1892. He had a fair crop In 1893 and In IS9 enough matured to seed tie land without rephanting. No attention was paid to It , as I was not thought worth cutting last year This last sprIng , however , I sprouted from the roots the thIrd year , and It has just been harvested and threshed . I yielded twelve bushels per acre. IOWA. Clnton' has raised a liberal bonus for the establishment of a wagon mnnufnctory. The new Iron and steel bridge over the Mississippi - slsslppl river al Davenport will weigh 8,770- 000 pounds Charles Flatter a Valley Junction fdrmer was robbed of $25 while stopping at a Des MoInes hotel David Daxtre , a well known farmer living I near Uaxtre , Iet of heart disease while drlv- log alone In a . I iiggy. "Igy. Clinton bicyclists will go to law to test the validity or the new city ordinance which compels - pels them to place lanterns ou their wheels at night. The enterprIsing citizens of Centen'le arc reaching out after a undry and machine shop now In In easter city , but seeking a wester locaton , henry Wlek , n farmer living near Correc- tlonvle , was killed while breaking In a span or young colts. They ran away , throwing him out of the wagon and breaking his neck The drug store war at Des Moines has reached the gift stngo. One druggist gives a loaf of bread with every G cent purchase. others are making presents of base bals , cigars and whisk brooms. William Todd , I Ioclt bland railroad engineer - Ineer , committed suicide while temporarily demented. He laId his head on the rail be- rai tween the wheels or a sleeping car standing In front of the Davenport dopot. Ils head was completely severed from his body. A West Branch woman vacated a house and left a skeleton In the cellar. The enterprIsIng - Ing coroner held an Inquest over the bones and compelled the woman to pay $42.10 C.15S. : Then she had the coroner arrested under the sepulcher law and he was placed under $1,000 bonds to await trial. He finally com- promised by payIng back the $42.10. I Michael McCarthy and Charles Krel , two Iowa City workmen , engaged In a friendly wresting match while waiting for the whistle to blow. On the third bout McCarthy was hurt so badly that he dIe of hemorrhage or the stomach eighteen hours later. Krel Is prostrated wIth grIef over the fatal results of the sllort. DurIng the lat two year the State Hospital for the Insane at Mount Pleasant treated 1,654 patients. Two hundred anti forty.slx recovered - covered and 170 were discharged nearly cured. I costs $ i per month per Inmate to treat and care for the patients. Since the establishment ef the hospital , 9,438 patents have been received. Of this number 8,668 have been discharged , 1,781 have died and thirteen proved to be not Insane. TIE DAKOTAS. The starch factory nt Harldnson. N D. . will be operated agaIn thIs fail. The company - pany 15 contracting with farmers for potatoes at 20 cents per bushel. A. D. Freehand of Onawa , S. D. . has been ranted the contract for furnlshlg Crow Creek and Lower Drule agencies with lumber and building materIal to the amount ot $ ,000. The Aberdeen GraIn Palace directory held a meeting and fixed upon September 30 to October 5 a the dates at the annual exhbl- ! tlon. One Important feature of the exposition this year Is to be the stock show. The chief musical attraction wi be the Chicago Marine band band.W. W. H. Rhodes. In company with a party from Elendale , N D. , started to make an overland trip for pleasure a short time ngo. While on the way he was overcome by the heat and was brought back home. lie lay for five das asleep , all eforts to arouse him beng ! futile. He awoke for a short time and fute. tme went to sleep again , and the latest reports have him Still In that condiio" . Dr. L. C. Smith of hattIe Creek , Mich. , has Just secured a divorce at Ysnkton. The testltony developed the fact that shortly after their marriage his wife bcame converted to the Seventh Day Advent theory , and from the moment of her conversion l'roceee(1 to make life I burden to her husband by trying to convert him , even going so far a to wake hm ! up In the middle of the night to deliver hIm Bemons. In addition to this she was of I very jealous dlsposttion . The two things coupled were more than Smith could stand and granted he asked for a divorce , which was COLORADO,1 Two assays from the Eva near Victor show $66CO and $13.40 per ton respectively. Copper ore from the vicinity of Fort Col- lns yields $2 per ton at the Argo smelter. The Longfellow Is the latest mine to di.- close I pay streak In the CrIpple Creek dis- trIct. In excavating for a cesspool at Victor the other day the Lynch brothers , at a depth of flve feet , caught a vein of over a foot of are that assays $52 per ton An Important strike on what II thought to b the Golden Wonder vein that carrie $80 , ' 00 ore was made on Gold hUh , says I Lake City report. The pay streak I now twelve Inches wide and contnty wlaewS ana er- \ _ . . , . . , , . . . . . . . .k . . . .L" . . " , , . . . . _ = I _ _ . rles both gold and . slver ! of over $0 In \'alue Over 100 tons of low grade ore running $ tO are already ) ' on the dump. The Specimen mine In the Cripple Creek district Is fat becoming one of the big pro- ducers. Sense of the are In the group shows fifteen ounces In gold to the tou The Ieerborn mine , one of Cripple Creek's early producers , Is being developed by a force of ten men. All told I has marketed IGOOOO worth of are , $ : ,000 of which was 1Icke , up on the surfnce. Tie work of sinking the big Independence shaft another 100 feet 1'1 Increase the ma- chine drillers' wages from $4 to $4.50 per d5) $ The Increase was not demanded , but Mr. Stratton thought the work was worth it. There bu been discovered In cross-cutting from the bottom of tie shaft In the Blue Jay , Cripple . Creek , a six-Inch streak of very rich ore Assays made on some of the picked pieces gave values of $13,720 to the ton ton.The discoverIes last year of high grade tellurium ores near the head of Maggie gulch , seven mlel above Slnrlon , caused much ex- element , and a large amount of work has since been done In this district. The veIns are not large , running from sx ! Inches to three feet In width , but from them countess assays liars been made that run from $200 to $2,400 per ton. One sample ran 1,760 ounces In silver and fifty ounces In gold per ton. In the early part of June n young man by the name at 1. W. Hunter commenced digging a tunnel In Newll gulch , about five miles west of Parker When asked what he was tryIng to do ho answered that he was dIgging for gold. People laugld and paBsed on , thinking the young fellow hal wheels. Several days ago he exposed a vein of min- ! eraI decomposed , and carrying fair quantities , of free gold. The rein Is 1ncreJslng In thickness . I ness with depth. The find has caused considerable - sldernble excitement The chief product of the county Is coal , says the Wnlspnburg World speaking : of the resources of H1ertano county. I Is estimated that we have hero not less than 30.000 acres of coal land , with an average ef IGOOOO tons to the acre ThIs seems big , but we are assured - sured that the estimate Is conservative. In n depth of 800 feet ere found twenty-seven separate all dLtnct veins , varying In thick- ness from six Inches to ten feet. Only the three upper ve'ns are worked These have nn I average thickness of three , five and ten feet the second being thirty feet below the frt and thc third forty feet below the second. WYOMING An application for ditch rights on 30,000 acres of land along the Big Her river Is made to the State Board of Control by an Omaha company. . h big strike was made by the Pennsyl- vania Mining company at Seminole. In a new shaf which they were sinking nn eighteen-Inch vein or free.mllng gold ore was struck that runs upward of 500 per ton. ton.Arer the water had been pumped from th ( shal at the No. 1 coal shaft south of Lara- nile , a drill was sunk to a depth of twenty- five inches Into the second vein , which has fve been discovered and It was round to be pure coal to the depth prospected. A fossil called Trlceratabus was recently discovered by Prof S.V. . Wilston of the Kansas university , about forty miles south of Lusll. The skull Is seven feel Ions five feet wIde and three feet thick , and weighed 2,600 pounds when packed to b3 shipped. Ialleryo" , advlces state that the rIch- est gold find In the South Pass mining die- trlct has recently been made by the lessees of the Franklin mine. On a drift at sixty feet n rich vein was uncovered which sampled to $10,000. The vein Is about six Inches wde. ! One of the largest coal contracts that has been awarded this season Is that landed by the Hock SprIngs Coal company ( Union Pacific ) , In which It undertakes to and will supply the Anaconda company wIth 1,000 tons a day. This means employment for ad- ditonal men at Hock SprIng and a measure of thrift that has not been experienced by this enterprising little city for years. ' OREGON. , \\'orl will begin September 1 on the cannery - nery to be erected at New Astoria Machinery has reached Phlcmath for a new roller mla there also for one at Alsea. I.eavcnworth boasts 01 n 'ead of lettuce measuring two feat In diameter and weighIng six pounds. A McMlnnvle grocery sore delivers goo'is hy bicycle ns bulky an article as a sack of tour being handled. The Oregon Central & Eastern has reduced the wages of carpenters In the service of the company from $2.75 to $2.50 , and helpers from $2.25 to $2. I Is said that between 10 and 120 teams unload straw at the Lebanon paper mils every day. The mills pay 10 cents per 100 pounds , and will store some 3,500 tons The latest bear story Is from Wliderviile. A large black bear came to the farm ot James Orlmes when the men talks were away , and jumped Into the pig pen and killed two good sized fat hogs , weighing about 100 pounds each , one or whIch the ben carried away Alma Davis of Harney found In the mountains - tame north of that town a flint-lock rile gun with the date " 1823" on It. The tock was rotten and the barrel was bent General sup- position Is that It was the property or the lost emigrants \0 ted : of the Duo Bucket mines. WIlliam Marders , says the Dales ChronIcle , baa a pipe of quaint devIce , a present from Waukiakus an Indian chief of the Klickitats. Itls of wood inlaid with silver and lead , and Instead of havIng a bowl , the piece I per- fectly straight. Mr. Marders intends to give the pipe to the Red Men's society , to be pro- served In Its archives. WASHINGTON. The host of grasshopper have nearly disappeared - penred from Lakee , In Asotn county. The Tacoma tde.lnnd plat has been completed - pleted a1 tl land wUI be offered for sate soon. soon.The Wii.'tcom County SoldIers' and Sailors' association wIll hold its encampment at New Whatcom August 28 and 29. The DelnghBm Day fair next month Is promising itself the finest poultry exhibIt ever brought together In the state. Sllnglt count has approprIate $6,000 to supplement the state approprLton ! of $4,000 for the construction of the water-front road from the Whatcm county line to Blanchard , Forest fires are sweeping the east side of the Olympic mountains , destroying mlons ! of feet of fine timber. Along the north sIde ot the straits and north of Hood canal the damage Is the greatest. The farmer around Oakesdalo are prepar- log to make an organized light agaInst the Chinese thistle. They claim the weed 15 brought by threher from Walls Wala and northern Oregon counties. The management of the Yakima fair , which Is to occur October 7 to 12 , Is completing arrangements - I rangements for what may be the last gather- i Ing of Indans ! In the northwest. I Is claimed , that over 4,000 IndIans will be present , headed by thei most noted chief and accompanied by their besl-tralned horses , to join In the races , war dance and barbecues. It la claimed , and the statement I corroborated - orated by several persons , that there was a tree recently burned down three miles from Beaver which measured a trine over slxty- four feet In circumference , or some tweuty- one feet In diameter. This tree was measured fifteen feet from the ground. There Is an- other one I the Bear creek valley which , however , Is but fifteen and one-hal feet In diameter and probably 250 fet high , MISCELLANEOUS. Foreat fires are now raging In the his adjacent - jacent to Ukalah. The vision Is obscured by dense clouds of smoke A sixth of Maryvilie' , population I em- ployed at the Mnryvle , Cal. , cannery at the present time. The pay roll will reach In excess of $500 this week. Mrs. hattie HuntIngton of Nlehnrt , Mont " I the possessor of a dwarf orange whose boughs are groaning beneath the weight of luclous fruIt and buds and blossoms . There are about thirty ripe oranges on hl tree , and 1 fruit profusion , of buds , blossoms and Immature Throughout northern Montana woler are returning to the towns and report their occupation - cuplton gone They utile that wolves are almolt extinct In that section of Montana , and the coyotes are ao few and do so little damare that It II not worth while payIng any atenton to them. In every county there II ---i . ' . " - - - : . - . - . - - . . . . . - still 1 goo surplus In the bounty fund ( , and stockmen sro well i4eid with the results or the new bounty II Two hundred bin ! lare employed at ant fruit drying cstR .I I/ent II Yuba City , 30 hands are enqloy (1 ( at the Yuba City cannery , and COO a't ' tl Marlvlo cannery Natural gas has ' discovered on Msry's Island , In the Saepatnento river , nine miles eat of Woodland , , I escapes under ! tong pressure from the ' J'r , and water , A funnel five Inches In dlaiet1 was placed over one of these pint of escape and the gas ignited , I burning steadiY , arid WIth Intcnde heat Much enthuslasn pro\'aIB at Eureka over the proposal of ; lso . California , Oregon & Idaho Railroad COIII\ny to build a broad gauge railroad from Eureka : to sense Point lu the Sacramento valley , at or near lIed Buf provided the people" ubserlbe $500,000 In first and second mdrt age bonds. Nearly $300,000 has already ben . subscrIbed N' 10m's , BILLiE UELI.Ew-ny W. E Norrl3 Cloth , 305 pages. Iarller & Dros. , New York. From Megeath Stationery company , Omahd. Mr. Norris has chosen for his central figure a young /al of a singularly unselfish nature , whose relations wIth two women form t'I' theme of the story. The scene Is lal.1 . at first In London , but after a few pages Is shifted , to northern Africa , and Includes a colony of health seeking Europeans. With a deft I.UId , Mr. Norris touches their foibles , their 1I'"ns- Planted intrigues , their sunburnt English fel- lures , their unconventional attire and their conventional social views WhEN VALMOND CAME TO l'ONTIAC- ( By Gilbert Pnrker. Cloth , ornamented , 222 pages. Stone & Kimball , Chlcngo. _ The romance of the alleged pan of NaPoleon - I'oleon Bonaparte . born on the Ilanll of St. helena , he arrives II Canadl\ worlls up a NapoleonIc sensation , stirs Napoleonic veterans ' crans with high enthlilam , and In the midst of initial success at recruling he dies , leav- log one heartbroken \oman and nn odmlr- lag populace. This lost Napoleon has about ns much substantial reality as the lost dough- ter , or the son of Louis XVI , who was , by some people , believed to have teen discovered In the person of Hev. Eeazer Williams of Green Day , \'iL , In 18:1nlmold Na- poleon's career , however , makes a good story. GAME BuIlDS AT IO m-Dy Theodore S. Van Dyke Cloth , $1.50. Iords , Howard & ' Hulbert , New York. . Without hell at all pretentiou . . this attractive - tractve Ito volume covers a great deal of ground , anti from its Illcturelque ) cover throughout its wel prlnteJ , while laid pages to the ell , I Is a book of pleasure and a book of proft To the sportsman these graphic narratives and valuable hInts from a veteran fIeld , shot must bo ot rare value , white rio mal , and perhaps even no woman , who loves the woods and ieii anti charms of animated nature , could fail 10 In,1 , genuine inspiration and much fresh knowlede of cut- knowled/e door beauty from a reading of it. / A I1ISTOItY Oi . ' TilE UNIVERSITY Ot " ISTOHY TIE UNI\ElSIfY NOTRE IAn" , Royal 8vo. 1ostllald , $1.15. University , Notre Dame , md. The story of the first fifty years In time life at the great Catholic : college of the west , whcse growlh has been so marvelous and whose Influence Is felt from ocean to ocean- and beyond the sea , for students flock to ! her from every lahll. The book contains the : lives of I.'ather Sorln , the foundel ot the university , of Father Granger and Colntet , who were his earliest associates In his chosen life work ; of Fathers Iiilon. Iemonnler , Cor- by all \\alsh , who nursed the infant college to maturity and saw It develop Into a great unh'erlt ) . . There are pictures , too , halftones tones of time buildings anti of the men who cleatc1 thEm. DQubly interesting to every one who has worm , 'ptre Dame's gold and blue , Il Is hardly less'50 to every Catholic In the country , for Jhel university's history Is the history of timc1 church In America , one with It and Insepable from it. I. BULLET AND , . SHEIL. Dy Major George F. Wlllianms. Cloth , $1.50. Fords , Howard & Hulbert , New York The republication of a popular war ro- mnnce that has alreat hall a large sale I Is an absorbingly ll < restn story , and will delight any mssan Iwhoook part In the war and any boy wlmc' ; ) s "tred by tales of nd- venture and romancel besides conveying an ndmlrablY clear idea or the causes , begin- nings , course nnl' ' clse of tIme great civil war. The luformatol conveyed In the narrative - rtve has been , endorsed as authentic by such authorities , us Generals Grant , Sher- 'mal anti McClelau : " . " . A NEW MON TAitY : SYSTEM . OR LABOR AND CAPITAL. By E'I\nrd ' Kellogg . Paper , 25 cents , United States nook company - pany , New York. The book 'Is a review or "Labor anti Capital - Ital , " by the same author , publshed In 1819. I proposes a varied form of the sUbtreasury scheme , the currency being redeemable In Interest-boarlng legal tender notes , and being loaned on ample security Ir time shape of productive properly. TIE INDUSTHAL Pr IARY. Dy A. hustler. Paper , 10 cents. Charles II. Kerr & Co" , Chicago. A. Hustler Is only a pseudonym , as might be inferred . but whoever he Is the prlmel with its attractive pictures brings home a vial truth concering the real causes of lard tImes and what to do as a remedy. BOOKS RECEIVED. A PASTORAL PLAYED OUT-Dr Mary L Pendered. Paper 50 cents. The Cassel Publshing company New York A MORMON Vi'IFE-By Grace Wilbur Front Paper , 25 cents. Charles H. Kerr & Co. , Chicago. MODERN AMERICAN DltlNhCS-hly George J. Kappeler. Cloth , $ The Merriam Co. , New Yifrk. TALES m' SOLDIERS AND CVIIANS- Dy Ambrose Pleree. PaJr , 50 ccnts. Lvel , Coryel & Co. , New York. THE STORY OF A MODERN WmIAN-Dy Ella Hepworth Dixon. Paper , ( cEnts. York. The Cassel Publishing company , New MAGAZINES HECEIVED. THE STATE'S DUTY-W. Ii. Moore , 106 and 108 Pine Street St. Louis , Mo. THE ESOTElC"Esolerlc Publishing Company - pany , Applegate , Cal THE SOUTHERN CULTIV\TOR-The Cul- tivator Publishing Con\any , Box 415 , At- lanta , Ga WESTERN GAME BIRD-Williams & Ru- pert , Scribner , Net IRRIGATED AMEItICA-Irrigatod AmerIca Company , 310 New York Lie BuUdlng , Omalma . MEEIIAN'S MONThILY-Tlmonsas eehan & Sons , Georgetown Philadelphia . 'FIlE AMERICAN PIILATEI.IC MAGAZINE -Parnmeiee , ! & Drown , I' . 0 Eox 860 , Omaha IIEALTI1-CU1TUItE-Time health-Culture Company , 30 East Fourteenth Street , New York. TIE NEW ENGLAND KITCHEN MAGA- ZINE-The New England Kitchen Publish- 11 Company , 7 Temple I'iace Doston. TIE BOOl BUYEH-Charles ScrIbner's Sons , Now York. . -S - Sisters 1)1171) " , 'ur"Iurt. . Although difficult to believe , says the Chi- cage Chronicle , It Is nevertheless true that the death af two ia1f-sisters , the daughter of the same father , .0rtrred 170 year apart . The grandfather tot , the BrItish minister , Charles Jam' ! Fctc , - Sir Stephen Fox , mar- ned In 165 , and h11ha daughter born to him In 1655. who dled'in the course ot the same year. He hol several other children , who grew up and marrled/ ' but all of them died before their father , and wIthout issue. fir Stephen , not wlahijigibis large fortune to fall Into the hands ofidlitant relatives , married again at a very adunelll age , and hla young- est daughter WIS born ! In 1727. She reached the age of 98 years al died In 1825 , that IB , 170 year after times d8th of 11"r oldest sister. She saw Queen Victoria when the later was a chid , while herihalf.sIster was carried In the antis of Olver Crm . wel. Don't you know thlt hood's Saraparila will overcome that tIred feeling and give you renewed vigor and vl Jlty1 Swam Iln n 11llt' linmideulTed , MartIn SUllIvan , I white sailor on the cruiser Minneapolis , now at time Norfolk navy yard , was ironed Saturday night for desertion. Ho escaped from his cell , re. latls the Washington 10"t , anti whie hanll- cured Jumped overboard and swam across the river to Blrkley , hal a mile away , He hid under , a raft while the cruiser swept the water with her search lights. When they were turned off he made his way to hlerlciey. where some negroes flied his handcuffs - curs off . He thll\ exchanged his unIform for citlzemm'mi dothes and engaged to work his paBaJ to New York ems a barge . When a launch from the yard II"II the barge quentl today hI captured. hid In a boiler a , but was subse. Pozzonl'l Complexion Powder produces a soft and beautiful akin : It combines every el& moot of beauty and purity , - HEROES IN BLUE AND allAY Marquis Eugene de Bemhnrnais : I nOon- federate Bloktle Runner PURSUERS FIND filM SLIPPERY AS AN EEL it'iiiiit'IUtblt' 1.I'lllll. . Pull uf iicim- Jer Ilt UnrllJ-\ ( ht'im.m'zl 1I'imo I'rn'l"t 1111 JulJht "lh 1'lllt Z.'ul-tHI"l' , , 'ur Ilchh'ut. . The career of Marquis leauharnals before and during the civil war matters of his- tory , says the San Francisco Exanmimier. He hns been living In puls and on his estates near Orleans for lany years and Is now visit- lag San Francisco for the nuL iimmie . ! tle. The Ilulot lIfe the marquis Is leading Is much In contrast to his doings \ \ hen the United Slates government \laced a re\arl of $80,000 on his heal1 The noted ex-confederate and nobleman L of gigantic size , staldng ! six feet or more II height and weighing 250 pounds. Ills hair 19 i somewhat gr.ty ali his large military moustache Is almost white. He was wounded before Hchmond anti was thel sent to Europe al n special embassy for the conf erdC ) ' . lie ran the blockade or Charleston harbJr many times wah cargoes of COtOl , thereby obtaining needed mOley for the nrmy. "One of my most rlmarkable expllencc . " sid he , "W3S wIth a valuable cargo of cotton - Ion which we had bought at 4 cents a Ilull ( and walted to get to the Bahammias We had made three attempts to Jet out of the harbor oil as many Ilght , but could not succ.ed. for the union war vessels were swarming about. On the fourth night the federal war- ships did not come tim so close and \\'e got out running the gauntlet : of seventeen war- shIps The enemy found out we were going , but too late. 'fhey fred thirty odd shots at us , but none hilt. Later , as we were 1)5slng one of the Udhama Islands , Admimlral'iikes shot Into 15 from his vessel three times. My ( leg , one arm , foot and ribs were broken by one of the shots. The cotton was , imowe't'r landed all right at Nassua , nnd for what we luld 4 cents a pound we got 62. "Ihmrlng a second atempl to reach the Bahamns from Charleston whim coton , Ad- mirl WIlkes was neal the entrance to the hal bar. I had $2,000,000 II confederate bonds In a tl box. 1 had good friends ali they got rime amid my box off. I vas put aboard a llrty.fout sponge schooner and we sailed right across time Bahama banks for Cuba , reaching Havana the second mmight. "All this time my broken leg was In boards. There wa mme doctor In Nassau. WIlkes steamed right Into the harbor of , Iuvnna after me. He shouted out , 'Now I I have Jot you , my boy , ' antI I replied , 'Come aboard and have breakfast. ' "lie lowered a boat with twelve or fifteen men In I to cut me off is hen I went ashore In mmiy boat Blt ) on Junn , manager of the lintel Cubanla , a good frIend of mnhmie . who had got nn Inklng of the admiral's Inten- ton , Informed the commandant , who rU3hl. fifty soldiers down , charged upon VIhlces' men , drove them back and rescued me lUHSUED DY DETECTIVES. "In 1863 the confederate government sent me to Framice I ran the blockade from Charleston , and In Havana foummd a Jleat many northerers and detectives. One ot th , Cunarder steamers , the Corsica , was to sail for New York , and I went on board In a covered boat , accompanied by a barber In these das I wore a heavy beun The barber shaved my beard off , leaving nothln but the moustache , and then he look red cosmetic anti rubbed my taco , nose all forehead - head till I looked like a drinking maim I was got up as a Cockney Englshman , ann I dropped all my h's In conversatIon. We proceeded on to New Yorll. Near the en. trance to the harbor a small cruIser canto along and a detective got aboard to look for me lie asked the captain I I was aboard , and he replied correctly that there was no- body of my name there. The edptaln was a brother Masomi and I had known him for a yea or two. The detective had a hand- drawing or mc. I never saw a betterhikeuess. "Disguised as I was he did not .Ikeness me. I asked the captain to let me sit beside the detective at the table , anti he gave me his plae I had previously ar- ranged two bottles of claret , the one for the detective being half whisky. An Euglsh lady , who was In the secret , sat on the other side of me. The detective began drinking. We dined a long time , and the drink had its effect. "We left the boat at 1 o'clocl In New York , and I and the English lady went to the Everett house , then the headquarters of all English people. I got Ihere Saturday , and from then until Wednesda , when I was to sail on the Cunard steamer Scotia for Europe , I kept driving all the time to the parks and various places. "The English lady hid In her dress my most precious doenments. The last evening I found my trunk broken open and searched and my cloUllng ripped. On Wednesday at 3 o'clock , when I went abroad , two detectives - Ive followed me , one disguised as a Quaker- ess and the other as a horse doctor. I wanted to get as close to them as I could , and I went up and got a match to light my cigar tram one of them. "I could hear them whlrpering. One said : 'He Is too big. ' I had made myself bigger by stufng m ) clothes Finally It came to a time when the pilot's tug on which they were to return was to cast oft , and just ns they got aboard this vessel and were starting away I went on deck and shouted out : " 'You were looking for Doauharnals , weren't you ? ' , , " ' . ' 'Yes. 'Yes. " ' \Vel , you've missed him. I am Deau- harnais. ' " . A SELF-MADE SOLIIEI1. Some people say , remarks ex.Congressman Champ Clark of Missouri , that Stonewall Jackson was the one PurItan soldier of our civil war. They speak without knowledge , says the Portland Oregonian. Stonewal was a Purian Indeed , worthy to have charged wih mighty Oliver at Nasthy , Iarston Moor and ) Inbar , shoutng , "Ood with ns ! " htmL so was Francis Marion Cockrehl . lie fought and prayed , and prayed and fought , and It remains - mains to this day a mooted question whether he fought more than he prayed or prayed more than he foughl. I Jackson was the superintendent - perintendent of a Sunday school at Lexington , Va. , Cockrel was engaged In the same way at Warrensburg Mo lie started as a private In Apri. 1861 ; he surrendered as a major gen- eral durIng the very last days of the war. lie was a volunteer wihout mlltnry trainIng - lug , and that fact deprived him of any par- tcular favor In the confederate war depnrt- ment , where the delusion prevailed that no mnn could be a great soldier unless he had Jrddl ted from West Point , which delusion seems to have 1revaled also In the federal war olhlce. Nevertheless events appear to Indicate that even with this handicap , hall the war lasted four years longer General Cock- roll would have rIsen to the highest com- mand General Cockrel , beIng a volunteer , evolved some original theories on war whIch are calculated to stun the typIcal mnartinets. For Instance , after the first battle In which ho fought , green as he was In things martial , ho would never permIt an army engineer to select his lne of battle for hIm. lie saul that as the duty of defending the line devolved - volved on hlm'he knew better than any engineer - glneer what was a defensible line and what was not. This may have Beemed presumptuous - tuous In a raw recruit , but his military history - tory furnishes his justification. Another timing that he sticks to to this day , and which will give the souls of the professIonals a rude shock , II that the mOlt effective weapon with which Infantry can b3 armed Is a double-barreled shotgun. He claims that It wi discount all the new- fargled rifles ever made. Ills logic runs a talows , ali to a civilian appears abso- lutely convincing One wounded man on the battlefield IB ever 50 much mere trouble than so many dead men Time double-har- relell shotgun I unequaled ns a producer of wounded men , therefore It Is the best thing to arm troops with. As a clincher he states thnt In a certain battle In \\'hth he was engaged when he was a colonel two com- panics of hll regiment were armed with double-barreled shotguns , the other fght wIth Enfel'l ' rifles , and that when the fight- log was over there were more dead and wounded mel In front of the two companies with shotguns than In front of the eight armed with rifles. mNEHAL SULLY'S MAHCI J , It , Dodd. , writIng to the Sheridan Jour- ash , refera i.e the time when , tlmlrty-two . _ ' --e-- - - - - - - - - What is Castoi'It is Dr. SanliLel Pitcher's preserIptIohL for Infiuits 811(1 Children. It COltIflhliS neRiter Optuzn , 1torp1aIne IIOr other Narcotic stibstaitec. it Is z ] miiriii1ci inibstRuto for l'arcgoi'Ic , 1)ropS , Sootliliig S3'rIil4 , 1111(1 Castor OH. It ; is 1'Ieztsiiat. : Itt4 gIIttrztfltCO Is thirty years' itso by illihIIon8 ofMotltcrs. Castorin. destroys W'oriiis note ! allays fe'crlsliiicss. Castoria 1)rc'Iits % 'olaltlilg Sotit' Curd , cures 1)1arr1in.a itud. W'iiul Colic. Castork relieves teething trolillet , cures ( 'OoSt1llttiOlt 1111(1 llutimleiicy. Castor'ia assiluhlates the food , regtllate3 the stoisiach 1111(1 1)OWCIS , giving health ) ' amid itattiral H1Ct2l ) . CflS. ' Mothcr' Friciati. torla Is the Clilltlron'e Pautteea-tlio Castoria. Castoria. a , Castoria it ; an excellent timedielno for dill' . ' Castria Li so well adapted to chmihtiren thai then. Motimem imavo repeatedly told mime of its rreommmmmmemmd It its mimmpurlor toany pmescmlptlon ' . timeir children. " " good elh'ct. upon knowmi to mmmc. bit , G. C. Osnoon , 11. A , Ancitsa , Iii. B. , Lowell , Mass. 111 So. Oxford St. . , Brooklyn , N , Y , a , Costorha is tim lcst rentedy for clmihtiren of " Our physicians in time chiitdron's ilepart. . which I am ncqumalmmk'd. I hopu time day Is miot nuent hmavo Chicken highly of their capon. far distant wimeti mnothut'rs wili eoutltler limo real emmee In tlmelr ommtslde Prmictieo with CitstorLs , Interest of their cimlldren , mmii mmso Castorla 1mm- mmcii altimommglt we only Imavo anmomug our stead of thmevanlousquacicnoetrmmnuswlmk'hmam imiedical , mmpplies elmat Is known ac regular destroying their loved ones , by forcingoplmmm , lmrodmmcts , yet wo are free to commfeM that the mnorphlno , soothing syrmmp aimil otimer hmumrlfmml mmienits of Castoris has won us to hook with agitate doan thmeir throats , thmerehy sending favontmpnn it. " theta to premature graves. " UtmTEu IIOSm'ITAL AND Imm'iNsemty , Bit. J. F. lmxcmism.oc , Ihotomi , Mas& Conway , Ark , Attax C. Ssm-nii , l'res. , The Centaur Company , T Murray Street , Now York City. -i E ICDjDLETI ! IEIJETJDLJ Li I ! U Health ill Your Vest R Pocket ! H .A box of Ripans Tabules costs only 50 cents , and may save you as D . . . - many dollar's worth of time. Rimiahma Tabtmles : Pold by druggIet , on by malt It tutu price ( ) cents a bx ) Ia ent to The RI- vans CmmemntcaI Comupanh , No. 10 t3pqmco et. , N , Y d fl ill UIirniiiiornjmiioi12 "ATRAININGINCLEANLINESSISA FORTUNE. " COMPLETE YOUR rDUCATION WiTH SAPOLJO years ago , lie was a soldier in Wyoming , tIme great chiaimge 1mm the state almico that Linus amid some of hIs early Iimdimmn experiences. Time followiimg is an interesting extract train his letter : "Thirty-two years ago General Sully itassed through thus coummtry , imlim line of march being miear the battlefield several miles mmorth of Sheridan , where brave General Custer anti hits army of heroes fell In reclaiming timIs magnificent country from savage warriors entrencimed in mountain fastnosses. It was in time beautiftml month of Juno , 1876 , milnetcemi years ago , that Custer and hue mcmi were overpowered. and out of hIs army but one man escaped to tell the story. " \Vlmeim General Smmlly passed ever this same territory thirty-two years ago time writer was a member of his army. The battle of Ku- deer Mountain , known In Indian nornencla. ture as 'Talkshmaoukuta , ' had at time close of three mlays' runmming fight resulted lit the tie. feat of Gray Eagle and his lieutenant , SlttItmg hull , their tribe being driven beyond time Manoa Terre of the Little MIssouri river , across Powder river , over Tongue river. down the valley of the BIg Ibm river and over to time west side of time Ycliou'stone. General Sully , intent on teaching time red skIns a lessnmm , imursuetl thmeni down thmo west elite of the Yellowstone river , crossing the Missouri and continuing tile cimase after them over on the Mouse river , In time liritishm posseasloima. "Iii the fail of the followIng year Gray Eagle rent a flag of truce to General Sully's headquarters. near old Fort hientimolti , suing for peace and making demand of the great father for a , regular supply of beef , blankets and supplies. In the course of hIs spec-cu , wimich was replete with bombast from he- ginning to end , lie informed General Sully that lie and imis anmmiy of braves cotmld 1mip time pale faces , if timey would only fight fair. lie told of imis own ceeds of mlanlmmg ammti of time scars timat furrowed his manly breast , and how little ime anti lmls warriors cared for our "big knives" ( salter , ) anmi "buffalo guns" ( curblnes ) , hilt lie threw time line at CaptaIn Jones' battery of Minnesota artillery , for his lieutenant , SittIng Dull , attempted - tempted to play wIth us time same game lie did with General Custer , anti the resmmlt was tlmat Captain Jones dropped seine shells aimmong them as they caine up a camiyamm to our roar that literally tore them to idecce , ponies and warriors alike , 'rule was thmeir first point of contact witim artillery , amid the way Gray Eagle threw the venom of his savage nature into his lamigimage , look and gesticulatiomme simowetl very plaimmly what ime macant when Imo saiti : ' 'You mliii not fight mae fair ; you tired loaded wagon wheels at my braves. " "Shompogamy seecimedo. " (1iimaIe'rhiml II' , . Colic , Cimolermi mmtitl Jlimrrhmoa'i lt'a'ai y This Is time best medicine in time world far bowel complaints. It acts quickly antI caim always be depended upon , Wimen reduced with water it is pleamuaimt to take. Try It , anti like many others , you wiii recomnimmeimil It to your friends. 25 mind 50 cents per bottle , I.tisliiir its I'niaimimirlt , ' . Ten thousand and eighty-five tourIsts vis- itemi Lucerne dtmrlng the mnontim of May last , 2,923 of whom were German , 2,717 Emmgllshm , 737 from the United States anti Canatia , 431 French , 80 from thue Netherlands , anti the rest , Inclumling 1,672 SwIss front otimor caim. bus , beIng. of varlomms imatiommaiitles , iii May , 1891 , the total was 11,205 , showIng a decrease this year of 1,120 , This will probably be more than made up during June , mis never mutt so mnany collective parties arrange to riiake Lucerne their center as this year , St'ii net Pe'a'r Mlgis Up , Time prevalence of scarlet fever or any oilmen comitagloua disease need not aiartmm you If you use Allen's llygletmio Fiulmi , It is the Ideal hireventative medIcIne-cleansing , itunifying and healing , No housolmold should be without - out it , . .dwy's Pills Always Reliable , Purely Yegetabl rerrectiy tasteless , elegantly coated , purge , regulate , purify , cleammee amid strengtfmen. ItAD- IVAY'S J'IhiiO ( or time cure of nil disorders of the . h'tomimach , 1ioi't'Imi , Kidneys , Bladder. Nor. .ous Lisetises , Dizziness , Vertigo , Costiveness , i'Ilcs. SICK hEADAChE , 1Jj'tI4t1ja COMI'LIsINTS , IIILLIOUSNESS , 4 ' ' INDIGES'I'IoN , DYSI'El'SIA , CONSTI PA'l'ION And All Dlrdci' of tlicLlver. Observe time fotlawimmg , ynmptoms resulting ( room .itsetses oC tIme digestive organs : ( 'onstipation , inward piles , tulhmmes of bmoo,1 jim tIme head acid. tty of the ittutimach , nausea , imearttium'n , disgust of fool , ( uIhmiee itt weight of the , , tiimnacim , sour Oructatitjne , sinking or mltmtterlng of the heart. cholcimmg or sullocatlmig semmeatlorma when In a iying positlorm , dinimmess of vision , dots or web. before time slglmt , ( over or dull ittmmm iii the imeati , deficiency of perspimatlon , ye1Ioansi , of due sum unt eyee , t'ulii In time side , cimet , iitrmhs and sudden hushes of heat , burnIng In miie hush. A few tioses of ICAI > WAY'S 1'LI.H will free the syittetmi of cii the atcmve nanieti dhsor.Ieru. l'RICI 2C A IJOX. iuorms IW titUUUpfl'3 On ' RF4T ! liv MAIL. flenii to DR. RA1)WAY & CO. , Lock Box 36 $ , New Yoric , for Shook of Advice. FLWD j 5ni-rii a ? i'rIma' , 800. 5t I & .ddI L I U ondaryorTee tlnnyiypiiumuapermnzmermtI Curo4 In 16 to 35 days. You can ho treated at home foe the rams pnico undcrmuauio gUaraiity , It youprefcrto comb hero we wig eoimtrsc $ to pay railroad iaro and hotel blilsand no chmargtt.if ume fall to cure. if you ha , . , taken moe' . cury , iodide potmiamim , and stIll immure e'hee and pains , Iii Ucouli J'atchaos In mouth , hnraTiiroat , t'lmplcs , ( Jopler Coiired Siotm ; , tflccre on my panloftho botly , Chair or JiyeiiromvS lailmn out , it Is this Sypimihitic ISLCJOI ) I'OISON lb uye guarantee it' cure. Wa solicit time tntIit obst data cases and cimmelmenge tue world for a cao we canimot cuss. 'jkii ( jf'Pa.e hits iw.ye bamed thc skIll of time most emmmineimtpimyat. Clans. .iO0,0OO capital behind our Unconmil. imonnI guarm.nty , 4tbmoliitojiroofe sent mealed ofl sppitctlon .atddraea COOi ( ItE3iIhftY (0 , , 4O3 1maaoWn 'Xemnule. EJULCJtUU. ILL. 41 I. ( Hw \ ULTL5 u'e PEPN Ie9JPs EVYWOMAN ' ornetint'mi eods a reliable ( ummommtlaiy rt'guiallmg mmieillcIno. I , , ' 6 DR. PEAL'S - . ' PENNYROYAL PILLS , . . -a Itrmnhtt. wito nnuleerthln In reruit. Time genu. lou Wr. l'eai'e ) imevcrdtamimmoint. entanymebcr si.oo _ fihermen & McConnell Drug Co. , 1513 Dodge street , Omaha. Nub. -