THE TRIBUNE. NORTH PLATTE, - NEBRASKA. We .-upjKe that preen poods sharpi -.vill continue to ply their trade as Jonp as they can find people who are preen enouph to buy tneir goods. A Sax Kkancisco attorney has thrashed a witness who had insulted him. If the rule ean he made to work both ways there can le no objection to its adoption. Captain Hi v;atks suce -ss in liv imr ix years in Xew York undetected is. another reminder that hunted men are often be.-t able to conceal them selves in a crowd. A' ti:siN; to late reports I.i Hunp Chang ha lot all of his feather.-, his nnder-jack'its. yellow and otherwi.-e. and hz job at the ame time It's a hard year on incumbents. Tin: hipnnMit of a large coiiMgn ine.nl of corn from Alabama to Chica go i oni"tliinp of a novelty in the movement of grain, lint it isn't .-ending coal- to Newcastle this vear. FOE BOYS AND GIBLS. USEFLX IXFOHMATIOX THE YOCXG. FOIl THE SnKsrntlan and Rule for the Hoy Who Would Like to be nn Archer A Wonderful Fowl A Brave Girl The Uoic mid the Uuclor. For hringing into play all the mus cles of the body there is scarcely any. outdoor sport equal to archery. Then, too.there.is a fascination about it which few persons, after having once learned to shoot accurately with the bow and. arrow, can resist. If blunt arrows are used there is little or no danger of per sonal Injury, while for hunting if the bow is used with pointed shafts, it is, at close range, fully as effective and al most as accurate as the rifle. Bows are of various "weights." By, this Is meant the number of pounds in stieugth required to bend One not the weight of the bow literally. A thirty-pound bow is about ripht for boy of ten or twelve. "irls should use one somewhat lighter. A lad of six teen or eighteen will find a tifty-pound. bow quite heavy enough. There are higher weights, runninj' up to eighty and one hundred pounds. These are powerful weapons sutlicicnt ptish firmly with the left hancl until the arrow-head rests on the left fore finger. Look straight and hard at the center of the target, but do not try to sight along the arrow. Direct It entire ly by the sense of feeling. Let go. The first few shots will probably fly wild, but very little practice ie neces sary toMearn to shoot, and shoot well. WheaJthrough shooting, even for an hour, unstring the bow. Allow It to rest. Never put it away strung. After each day's shooting rub and polish it with oil, or. better still. Avith a mixture of oil and wax. A good bow requires even more attention than a rifle. It will do better service if kept wrapped in oil-skin or green baize. The object is to prevent all moisture entering the grain and libre of the wood. I'j:-iikn j- of Vienna made a de mand for universal Miffrauv. and so far seventy of them have pone to jail, while a free an 1 enlightened govern meat hn hop -- of catching the re-t. Tin: Curb 'It-Fit Simmons paper prize. lli;lit gos merrily on with not the lighlc-t sign of a knock-out on either ide. If the two pugili-t;- u.-e their lists with u much facility as they do their pens the mill between them, if it -hould ever come oil', would have to Oe a pugili.-tic continued story. Li'I:n.-K is always to lx conceded to a poet who engages in the work of describing a beautiful painting, but the writer who says: "Her ehe.-tnut hair i neatly braided down her back." ha not improved upon the more familiar line of the vaudeville .-ong: "And her golden hair was hanging down her back." ()vi:i; liOO men entered the fresh man ela- at Yale: the real elas. not the special-. Tlii- i- e.pial in number to the entire lot of .-tudents in the college, .-ay twenty year.- ago. It is extremely unlikely that the old-fa.-h-ioned da.-.- feeling, which hn always been a great feature at Yale, can be preserved now that the cla--s are -o large. Now that the changes have been pretty well wrung on the old fad of cancer-producing tomatoes, the other extreme is being resorted to by the adoption of all sorts of commonplace vegetables as antidotes. Hed clover is being put forth as a sure cancer cure. In many parts of the country any abnormal swelling is at once looked upon a? a minor of the malig nant type, and rod clover eating- at oilce urged. Tin: estate of the late John Stein berger has long been distributed in the belief that no will existed. Now a will has been filed bequeathing the property, to others than the. ones hold ing it. The circumstance mini tya. in teresting to Tawyei-s, qufc ir"hejtwo sets of claimants are of an economical turn they will relinquish every right and be happy to learn that the estate will cover the certain legal and possi ble judicial fee. Patkiotism in -Japan animates all ranks of the people, the mendicant, priests and nuns contribute their mites to the war fund, while the empress and the ladies of the nobility give their jewels and prepare with their own hands lint and other assuagements for the wounded. This patriotic spirit in vites the admiration of all the world except China, and may not be without appreciation even in that torpid and insensible land, which has the best of reason for being interested in it. The pugilist ie controversy has reached the farcical stage. Kitzsim mons complains that Corbet t. as cham pion of the world. inut accept a chal lenge from him: yet declares that if he. Kitzsimmon-. gains the champion ship he will refuse to light I'eter Jack son on account of color, though Jack son is perhaps the one man who can defeat him. As long as I'it.simnions maintains this attitude toward Jack son so long will Corbet t have a loop hole of e-eape in popular opinion. "- in.i.-A rivi; busine and iiiaiiu- facturing enterpri-es have a record of .many failure- in this country, but in Kngland they appear to have lieen more uniformly miccc ful. in twentv 'year- ending with ix:l the numlier of co-operative societies in 1'ivat Britain increa-ed from 71(1 to It;.')!;, their capi tal from 1-'.;07.I)0 to !?"(!. 1 1 1.170. the annual sales from $17.:'ls.oiiii to si'l I. COS. is.",, and the annual prolit from $..:':'. on to f':...71. P.m. What Fnglish ncn of bu.-ine.-.- can do American- should be aide to repeat under like conditions and with equal ly satisfactory re.-u'.t-. Si.vn dwelling house- in l'dask:. Russian l'oland. where cholera ir. rag . ing. have b -en de-troyed by tire, to gether with many inmate-. That wa. ' "a cruel and co-tly method of wiping u.ont" tbe plague but it wa- probably ,f vflevtive within the burned district. The Arc-lier'M Oulfit. to bring down a deer, a bear, or other large game, and entirely too heavy for target use. The old English rule that a bow's length should equal the height i of the person using it is a good one to i follow. ) Arrows vary in length to suit the bow. J from sixteen inches to three feet. The point or head is called the "pile; tne shaft is termed the "stede:" the notch at the feathered end the "neck." Not only the bow. but arrows, quiv er and entire outfit may be made at home. For the bow choose a straight, well-seasoned springy piece .of wood free from knots. It is not necessary to use any one particular kind. Mulberry, hickory and red oak are all suitable, and good bows have been made from hazel, white ma ple, and even poplar. The writer once got an excellent one out of the broken tongue of a mowing machine, which was of tough white ash; another from an old sleigh shaft, which was either oak or hickory, so old and brown it was hard to determine which. Trim down the stick selected, mak ing the back of the bow flat and the inside round, taking care of the wood. The ends should taper a little. Test the bow occasionally, until it bends with sufficient ease. The tips should be made flat on both sides, with a notch for the string. Around the middle glue a hand-piece of felt or velvet. The string must be about six inches shorter than the bow. Strong thread, like that used by shoeinakers.doubled and twisted several times, makes a very good bow-string. Make a loop in the ends, fastening them with a "fig ure 8." or similar knot which will not slip. The bow. however, should never be strung except when in use. An Indian bow is made broad and flat instead of rounded, except where the hand rests. This portion must be whittled round and left rather large. The bow should be about two inches wide above and below the hand-space, and narrow gradually towards tbe ends. The back! may be ornamented with .red, black and 'yelloir palnt with, the heads of brass tacks or with any other appropriate decoration. The most difficult thing In making arrows Is to get them perfectly straight. Rolling hem over a flat sur face will generally show any imper fection in this respect. After whittling them to the desired thickness, scrape and sand paper well, liuishing off with emery paper until smooth. Lead points may be moulded on after first cutting a notch around the end of the shaft. A better plau. however, is to use an empty cartridge shell weighted with af ew drops of lead. For sharp points use a nail. After driving it into place, tile off the head. This gives weight enough without adding lead. To make an arrow fly straight it must be flattened. Select the largest quills obtainable and carefully pare off the feathered portion. At equal distances around the shaft glue the strips of feathers and trim off until een. Hair cloth or stiff paper may be used if feathers are not to be had. A quiver or case for holding the ar rows, may be made of a cylinder. An equally good, though icss handsome, The Engineer Story "It was just a year ago,' said the old engineer to the reporter of a West ern paper, "that I was running my 'coinmodation train on the Knoxville & .lellico. down in North Carolina. Kver licen there V Guess ye don't know, then, how the tracks snake round the Carolina mountains. Too steep to run straight down, ye see land ye in day after to-morrow -so ye have to crawl down from the Swannanuoa divide, in an out. half a dozen loops on one hillside. And ye dassent run any too fast, neither, 'count o' the Sand slide that's may be waitin' fur ye just round the next bend. "Well, it was a nasty kind o' day. anyhow. Sleetin and blowin". and the clouds hung down in front of me like curtains. I lost time, too, at As'jeville. waitin' fur a pesky freight' to get out o the way; so I was in a tearin' hurry and not the sweetest temper, you can bet. Towards evening I was whizzin' her along, tliiukin about Round Knob and a hot cup of coffee, when, some ways ahead. I spied a sheep in th? cut. There she lay. right across the track, with two lambs snuggled und -r her. 1 whistled, but she never budged Well. I was in a hurry, and I wouldn' 'a' mil ded the old sheep so much, but them little white lambs soni'hoiv put me in mind of my baby, the cutest chap ye ever see. and it went across the grain to run 'em down. Had to slaw up. any how: it was right at a bend, and I yelled to my fireman to shove 'em off the track. Well, ye never see a whiter face than that man came running back with. "Stop hr, Jim. Stop her short! he hollered. And if you'll believe it, just around that bend was the biggest sandslide I eer want to come ncrost. Took us a good hour aud a half to shovel it off down the hillside.' A Wonderful Fowl. i 0; 1m THE CAFE OF DEATH. THB "DRINKING SHOP I.NGNESS." OF XOTH- for the morgue, where bodies are "hung j of the dirty slum-life, which they erfed!' up In pictures on their $!, M tongs. In verses, and in reeitailons. The pub lic taste will soon revolt against the Cafe de la Mort: and when It disap pears the others will have disappeared before. A GreTTHoitie Development of Fin de Sleele Effort, Where Collins Do Duty Tallica nnd Walter Are Dreed to Henenihle tndertaker Men nt n Funeral. On the tough, artistic Boulevard de CJihy. a few blocks north of the great brulevard and half way up the Mont martre Hill the qua t n- of the Mou lin Konge and the ltat Mort, of journal ists and artists and models is located the Cafe de la Mort. says a writ r in the New York Sun. The front is paint ed black. A boy in modruig stands upon the sidvw.'.lk to distribute invita tl", cauls: HorClods of Pust! blinded bv pride, ccirupted : nd rotted by passion and vices of all kinds! Wretches, tremble! And if there be still time. Come to Me. and perhaps my sp 'ctacle. by its Reality, may make you better and open to you the only horizon, the sole end of all things here below -and that isNothingness. I wait for you. Death. The door is hidden by black hang ings sown with silver tears. You push the hangings by and step into the spa cious darkened room, where a few candies give an impressive twilight. A great voice calls: "Soyezle bieuvciiu a la .Mert Maccabee!' A dozn coffins on supports replace the ordinal y cafe tables. It is the Cafe of Death, the latest thing in Talis of the I'm de siecle order. Thursday nights are les'rved for the grand monde. each glass of beer is '2 francs and you may kiss the under taker free. On ordinary nights the bock is l.'J sous. There are well-to-do and worthy people living in the quar ter, but. nevertheless, the atmosphere is that of touchncss. The Boulevard de t'lichy is both wide aud shaded. The promenade at night is thronged with girls and bullies. Tramps sleep up, because it is m the Mout-d 1'iete or pawn shop of dead bodies, where they are put on deposit, just as we say, "I have hung up my watch." So here In the Cafe of Death, after liv min utes' sitting in the twilight by the coffins, you will hear a voice call from the black hall in the corner: "Come, now, you consumptives and tuberculous morgue slabs, unredeemed tickets, descend from your hooks, heap yourselves up in the charnel-house, the one great equalizer!" In the fhumber of TrmihllKiiratlon. ; With your beer you have received a ! ticket for the other world. The crowd j moves onward underneath an archway j into a black, vaulted passage. Here; women often have attacks of nerves: for as the alley widens into what looks ' like a burial cellar underneath a church. ' there strike upon the vision scenes in the far-off perspective underneath the arches and between the pillows, vague ! glimpses of gray skeletons engaged in . conversation or the dance. The pass- narrows ami tr.ere is tne tioor. ; SAILS HER OWN YACHT. age t I You knock. A bell strik s three. There ' is a voice: "What do you se-k. my brother':" You respond: "I wish to ; die." There is a rattling of chains, ) . and you are in the Chamber of Trans-1 Li MOST i SaidReginald. Jitz-Green. "I have never, never seen A chicken so astonishingly tall!" Hv murdering historians whoso works do not Hatter the present con trol of affairs the government of Sal vador may save its peace of mind for a time, but future historians, who can not be so muzzled, w ill see that the debt i repaid with interest. Now that business is reviving and the jieople have more money to spare, they will be able to purchase that ar ticle, the advertisement of which has caught their eyes .-o often. The spirit has been willing- all along, but the cash has been short. The ocean passage from Liverpool to New York has been reduced to five days seven hours and forty-seven min utes. A live days" ocean passage is slowly but surely coming-, as is the two minutes" trotter. The latter is likely to come in first. The Correct I'onlllou. quiver may be made from a piece of tin pipe two feet in length and closed at one eud with a piece of wood. The shoulder strap may be attached by cutting holes in the tin. or the case may be covered with cloth and the strap sewn to this. If purchased in the store goods, well finished bows of second-growth ash. aud other American woods cost from $1 to .'. Bows of lancewood. snake wood, yew and other foreign growths cost from 52 to $8. Target arrows range in price according to length from $l.;"i0 to f."i a dozen. Hunting arrows with barbed heads are still higher, while birding arrows . with pewter points, are somewhat less expensive. Bow strings coat from '20 to .'0 cents, and a quiver with belt from $1 to S'2. There is but one way to shoot well, and it is best to adopt that at the out set. First, string the bow. Then put the arrow "nock," on the string with the right hand while the left grasps the handle of the bow, holding it horizon tally. Hook the first, second and third fingers around the string, taking the arrow between the first and second. Now turn the bow until it stands per pendicularly, the left hand extended toward the target. Draw the right and But when he'd round To the other side, he found That it wasn't so peculiar after all! I'olHeiiesa Won the Day. A gentleman from the West told a good story the other day of a meeting between his dog and an organ-grinder's monkey that will bear repeating: One day an Italian organ-griixler, accompanied by a trained monkey, wandered into our town, and the man stopped before my house to play. The monkey was an intelligent little fellow aud was attired in a jacket and cap. While his master was grinding out the music the monkey hopped down from the organ where he had been sitting, and jumping the fence, eame up Into my yard. He was at once spied by a foxterrier of mine, and the dog made a rush at him. The monkey awaited the onset with such undisturbed tran quility that the dog halted within a few feet of hiin to reconnoitre. Both animals took a long, steady stare at each other, when suddenly the monkey raised his paw and gracefully saluted his enemy by raising his hat. The ef fect was magical. The dog's head aud tail dropped, and he sneaked off into the house, and would not leave it un til satisfied that his polite but myster ious guest had departed." The .lumping- Merrythought. Here is an interesting suggestion. When the turkey has b. eu duly s?rved and nothing is left but a pile of bones, pick out the "merrythought," the bone which is shap"d like the one shown in the illustration. Stretch across the bone a double string, aud twist the String around a piece of stick which just reaches to the top of the bone. On this point place a bit of soft pitch, or any very sticky substance strong enough to grip the end of the sdck; then place the "mer rythought" on the table, and when the twisted string has overcome the resist ance of the pitch the bone will jump high into the air. On this principle "jumping frogs" are made. "Orjtfin "f the t'nfe lie In Mort. on the benches. Workinginen in blouses saunter in the evening, smoking pipes. And through the mingled throng of Paris scum and exp'-rts in the art aud rich folks up to see th sights, the hon est and religious lower-middle class wives, mothers and 'laughters of the quarter stroll to take the air, uncon .cerned by all the noise aud disorder. Innumerable cafes and drinking shops make, the scene bright. The Moulin RoUge's blood-red winJmill arms go rouM and rouud like a set piece, of Jte(xifcv, aad thft-re are -vagrant strains of .rhusic from tie concevts. One of these concerts Is the Concert TJsbonne, formerly the so-called Cafe.des Con cierges. Its proprietor, a bad old com munist, has just obtained some :0.0tX) francs from Max I.ebaudy. the youth ful spendthrift inillionaiu.'. with which to fit his venture up anew. The Mir liton of Aristide Bruaut, the poet of the shuns, is just below. The Carillon, around the corner, tries to give old fashioned songs and recitations of a more decent character than has been the vogue for some vears past. The Chat Noir has just failed. The Head Rat. just across thi avenue, is well, a very special restaurant It is 'mugh ti s:,y that the cafe of death is by all odds the most decent establishment along the line. Toned Uovrn hy the Poller. The i-aine of this c-tablishiu"ht is not letlly the Cafe de la Mort. although all Paris calls it so. When first opened it was under that name that they gave yon beer to drink from imitation skulls. But the police paid th in a visit, or dered that drink should be servd in plrin glioses, and suppress. -d the name of death. So now its title is. ollicially. the Cab..ict (or drinking sh ipi du Ne anr. Niant is French for nothingness. You sit beside your coffin in the big. black room, anil you see sitting here and time in philosophic attitudes big skeletons that yawn and snap thiir jaws at it.tervals. Death scenes and midnight orgies decorate th walls. Above the door of the black Chamber of Transfiguration are the words: "Mors ultima ratio." Lastly, to provide for all things, there is the suggestive sign: "Tiie lady clients are desired to scream tout doucenient," that is. yery gently, very softly. You sit beside your coffin and demand a glass of beer, un verre de bicre. "One coffin maggot, por un deses pere de la vie'." the eroque-niort waiter calls monotonously to the beer boy, "on telle autre m.iladle qu'll voiis plaira." It is a pun on verfro) de biere verre. glass; ver." worm, and biere. beer or bier. Fn asticot de cercueil!" Asticot is fishers slang for bait. The saucer on which tfle glass is Handed you is marked ".Microbes." The waiters are costumed as under takers' men in black coats of an anient cut. tall oilcloth hats and with black bauds of crepe lied ro itid their a-ms. Such men in real lif-. have th- n 4-.e of croque-morts ("bit.Mlead" front i.v ancient duty which they had of biting each dead man's toe befo-e the -ottin ' lid was nailed down to make sure the body was not merely in a trance. I And so. to be consistent, th -se imita tion croque-morts of the Cabaret du Neant u." throughout their harangues to the clients and their horried conver sations with each other the regulation Paris cioque-niort slang, the jargon of the domestic servants of the grave. All customers are Maccabees, or dead men merely, though a wcll-d rested per son is a "salmon" in particular, just as a poor man is a "mackerel" and a little child a "smelt." Jn this slang of the grave the name of Maccabee was formerly applied exclusively to the bodies of men found hanged or drown ed: Ce gros machabee. horrible pendn. Sur la dalle froide, on vient de l'eten die. And the word "dalle." for morgue slab, came from the fish market, where ' dead fish were laid on cool stone slabs. The Clou des Ma eta bees the 'peg" or "hook" of Maccabees is an expression ' figuration. The attendants are clothed in monks robes, with hoods. You take your seat. The niasfr stands before a curtain, saying: "Kings, pork butchers, journalists, nrtists. cures, ministers, deputies and i day laborers, all you who. having ar rived at the age of reason, continue on your crazy courses, your mre or less ! chimerical ambitions, who live on like j animals, who know nothing, forgetting i too often that the Tarpeian rock is J near the capitol (!). look in the box of J dominoes and reflect:" j The curtain is drawn asi le. Down a j long vista, brightly lighted, is seen an : open coffin standing on one end. They j ask a Maccabee de bonne volonte to : sacrifice himself for the others. j 'The origin of death." continues the ! gr::e-digger. "is lost in the dim shades I of the most remote antiquity. In every ; age man has kicked the bucket (devisse son billiard, tot on tardi. sooner or later, at the age of DtK years, like Me thuselah, or immediateiv on arriving under the nightcap of the heavens. it toiiows tneii mat we siioum con tinue this sweet habit, if only for the j annoying of deputy sheriffs, lardlords and other parasites who constitute the despair of a good half of humanity!" , One of the spectators steps out. half ashamed, half smiling, half repugnant, two-thirds curious, and three-fourths anxious to shine in the eyes of the com- ' muuity. He is led off. to reappear be-; side the coffin in the distance. A par lor organ strikes up a distressing hviiin tune as ihey make the man stand in the coffin. Fndoulitedly it is the same man. smiling in a sickly fashion to his I friends down iu the audience. The transformation in him that will soon take place is hrought about by magic lantern effects, as in dissolving views. The man stands in the coffin, and they tuck a sheet around him. leaving onlv his face uncovered. The attendant dis appears. The man looks at you from his coffin: as he looks at you his face grows whiter. Often enough the sub ject is an adventurous girl. The hor rid parlor organ goes on with its horrid hymn. Crceu lights begin to play. There is a smell of pli'iui and old! bones. A Nerve-TrylliK Spectacle. Sonic-times a girl or woman in the J audience has a crises de nerfs at this ! point Mid is led off sobbing, but the spectators for the most part sit still. : staring blankly at the white face in the coffin. The face takes on a greenish yellow tint, it softens, seems to decom- 1 pose, then hardens, as the eyes grow , big and black. The body, covered by . the sheet, begins to shine through ' dimly, a yellow mass Miat loses flesh. ' that shows it bones. The sheet is dis- j appearing. The light grows more in tense. The coffin holds a rigid, bo'.-y ! skeleton and nothing more. The man ' who had stepped up so jauntily from i out the audience to get into the coffin j lie is gone. 1 he girl who looked so timid, so pathetic, so pitiful, so pitiable, yes. and so lovable because the while light paled and purified her miserable little face the girl is gone. All that is left is that dread thing of bones. The voice of the grave-digger speaks of death in a dogmatic tone: "We shall not fear it if we look It In the face." I here is an awlui silence, l he s tators rise up. one by one out. stumbling to the street. The Cafe de la Mo.-t is not a mis sii nary enterprise. They only charge yoi for the beer. They lake up no col ieeticn. Yet the parlor irgan. wi'h its hymn tunes, has a strangely famih-ir s-.imd to those of us w ho had our early days iu country villages in far away America. After the instil ing laugu.ige if the waiters and the showman, as j they call us 'morgue-slabs." "Seine-rot." "phthisiques." aud "tuberc-ileux" brirg i n faint remembrance of nor altogether ' dbsimilar expressions hurled at audi ences or breathed in prav-ir on Sunday ' mornings or on Wedu s lay evenings iu ; the old sb.ne church or in the wooden i chapel. We were 'nfo.-uied that all 1 our righleousu'ss was dirty rags and that we were wounds and putrefjing sores. Albert freniieux. iu the Jour, tells . how he visited the place in the com pany of a young friend of hiriy years ' of age. a ehannant gaivo'.i. with a , ruddy, laughing face, a young man. strong, alert aud resolute, who. under the mask of an amiable irony, coii'-caled . Mr. Sehenley. an Knicllftliwontnn, Who la Clever at the Tiller. Yachting is a common pastime among Englishwomen, few among whom, however, have become so expert in the delightful sport as Mrs. G. A. Schen ley. who Is generally regarded as the cleverest woman at the tiller in all Great Britain. Her father, for many years an ardent yachtsman, taught her the rudiments of boat sailing ami found his pupil so apt that ere long he was unable to tell her anything she did not already know. Since 1SS!. when she j first entered for a race as skipper, she j has owned several smart yachts, all of I which she sailed herself, blow high. ! blow low. At present her favorite craft is the Flat Fish, a five-rater, said to have been designed in a night and built iu an incredibly short space of time, and is her chief delight, having When Others Fail Hoo'd's Sarsiparill builds up tho shat tered ystera, by giving vigorous action t- the digestive organs, creating ta uppet:: and purifying the blood. It Is prepare 1 by.moderu methods, possesses the greatest curative powers, and lias the most womler ful record of actual cures of any medicine In existence. Be sure to get oulj Hood's. j-joocTs Sarsa-parilla Cures " Hood's Sarsaparilla Is the best nicdiciue I tiftvp pwp tnkpn for n. blood purifier. I had a tired feeling, and was restless at n.jht. I feel much better since taking Hiod's Sarsaparilla. I have taken a great many other medicines, but they have given me no relief. My wife aud children have a! o taken Hood's Sarsaparilla for parifving the blood with beneficial results." Ivmii. Kocn, Beecher, 111. Get only Hood'. Hood's Pills are purely vegetables. iSc. The Marked Success of Scott's Emulsion in consump tion, scrofula and other fonr.i of hercditarv disease is due to its powerful food properties. inoisioii rapidly creates healthy flesh proper weight. Heredttary taints develop only when the system becomes weakened. Scott's Nothing in ihe world of medicine has been so successid in dis eases that are most menacing to life. Phy sicians everywhere prescribe it. Prprl bySen't .t tVurn.X Y .ll'ni!riritt. 31 r. t;. . Je!iei ley. won every race In Aviiieh she has been entered. To sail a boat iu all sorts of weather requires courage, and nerve, no less than ability and skill. More over, it needs a strong constitution. There are many thorough soakings to be endured, not to mention an occa sional copsi'.e aud an F.nglish summer is not of that temperature which makes an involuntary bath a pleasure. And. however good a swimmer v- mau or woman may be. an immersion is not without serious peril when incased In oilskins or entangled in rigging or sail. Mrs. Schenley is equally at home with the ritle as with the tiller. In the wiu ter she has the opportunity of exhibit ing her proficiency in that line. In Al bania Mrs. Schenley has stopped niany deer and several wild boar, aud in Hol land she has made good shooting with punt and cannon among the wild fowl. THE LARGEST FLOWER. W. L Douglas CUtET IS THE BEST. VflVU NO SQUEAKING. ?5. CORDOVAN, FRENCH&ENAMEliEOCALT 4-..5.5-0FlNECAlf&KVIAK'a $35.P0LICE,3 Soles. f" EXTRA FINE. $2.I7J BoysSchoolShces. -LADIES 550SP $1 75 "V"BEkTDNG0M. W'L'DOUCUS, BROCKTON. MASS. Yob enn ware money by wearinf tho W. I.. Jlouslan 93.00 hor. Itccnime. ice arc the largest manufacturer of this gradoot shoes In the world, anil guarantee their -value by stamping tho name and price -m th bottom, which protect you npalnst high price ami the middleman's profits. Our sboet e-jn-il uMoru work In Btyle, easy fittlnf? end wearing .ti.i:ittes. We have them sold every where at lower prices for the value (riven than any other make. Tt ni 'ub (Ututc. If your dealer cannot supply yo-j. we can. mm a It In 'I'll 1 rt -i n t- Indie In Iltiiniolcr anil I lie Cup Hold Six ln:trt.. The wonderful ilower in the -cut is that of the Uatllesia Arnoldi. a plant discovered by Dr. Arnold in the Island of Sumatra some eighty years ago. The various species now known are all parasitic, not. however, to the branches of other plauts. but to the roots. J'ntirely destitute of leaves and green in color. thee Miigular vegeta bles are provided with scales or bracts, which conceal and envelop the flower previous to the opening. A swelling beneath the bark of some huge, surface, appearing root of a large tive announces the coming- of a flower. Soon the bark splits, and a bud. re sembling the head of a young cabbage, """r "COLCHESTER" SPADING BOOT. BEST IN MARKET. I5LSTIV FIT BEST IN WEAICEJG I Ql'AUTV. . . i Deo"reror(.ititii!Ar .'-J down t tho heel, mo tel-ting the boot in Ur pinir and in other hard work. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR THEM and don't be p-it oS with inferior goVds. COLCIlESTKlt KTBIIKIt CO. ( pec- iml step j V MAILED, FREE Polrr of the 'ifr lie la Mort. a spirit skeptical an. I fearles. They came, they saw. At the hist moment, when the patioii was declaiming. "We shall i:ot fear it if we look it often in the face." he says: "We still lauglfd. but we laughed grill" Then they walked out. Alyiost withone ac-ord the l'aris imii'it.-iHsls tbelare ibat this tafe of Death is the last word, the finishing touch and the extinguisher of all the now effete go-called "artistic cafes" and "hn de siecle cabarets which have been flourishing for year-:. In it i founded the legitimate conclusion of all their progressive exploitation of gigolettcs and .-ouu 'Ui!"' thieves, as-aas.-ins. anarchists, -iad all the horrors ICnlUc-iin riiolill. bursts, showing live great lobes, which open and roll back slightly on the edges. Then a circular ring appears, sur rounding a deep cup. in the center of which is the ovary. Below the edges is a kind of gallery, wherein are numer ous stamen-;, in which is located the pollen. The remarkable feature of the flower is its colossal si.e. the largest species being thirty-nine inches in diameter. The central cup holds six quarts of liquid, and the total weight of the flower is over fifteen pounds. An Actor Wlio I'nwiieit Jliiut-lf. A curious story Is told of Gustarus Hronke. th- celebrated tragedian. Al ways fond of a frolic, ami often Ij.-ing without money, he '-onee'ived the notion of "raising the wind" on one occasion by piwning himself. His bi netit was 1 aiiiiouueid. and a big gathering was expected at the theater at whi -h he was engaged. He knew that Kichard HI. could not be p'ayel with "Kichaid" ; on ihe -helves of a pa wnhop. and so he walked into a pawnbroker's shop, ex plained who he wa. and pi dged him self for C2. The pawnbroker ticketed the trage dian, and deposited him in a corner of his sh p. P. 'for. he "retired" th actor wrote a note to his manager, in forming him of the circumsram e. and j itiMrucled the pawnbroker to deliver it ! at the theater an hou after the per formance should have commenced. 1 The manager was in a state, of great ! consternation. The tragedian could not be found in any of his :re ustoncd haunts, and he wa obliged to apolo gize to tin' audience and start the even ing with a fare ins cad of a tragedy. .lust as the farce was enuring to an end the manager received Uiooke's note. and. taking a cab. found the at tor at the pawnbroker's munching bread and cheese. he manager at once re deemed ill,-' human pledge and returne 1 to the theater. London Answers. DEE Pt. Band, Iron Hoop OAK BASKET. Katlet You Cn Water Yi.-tr II., -., no ilo:o Than Any Other kn:,. . STAND h Cor ?v,CI51FORD-,'",Hlov latent Atfvll.U Fst. w anhini;tori. O.t':. tl.ev wihrwui-j prompt rrp!. CHEAP FARMS I IN VIRGINIA. Uoud Karmin? t-u.l n 1 . oi nar g'toil t.n fiom 111)0 prr unr .v, .Tpi in, it-nuht l!i, l ;:irri-t n,t !jmrnrr. Clne tt Katr 11 -nnrel- i-p Kuumt Iip l:lr- .. ami luolt atUiul.. lor nt of ianii- ami p'tli-j. lar aililor?s E. B. FOPE. western PassV Agt. C. & 0. R. R. ST. LOUIS, MO. OMAHA RHEUMATIC lief In r,0 tiny .Tin Tne Metn L- Mt'u ( . ' OLD HATS Business Houses. KINtJ . Wa - ,tr, r tl. IUih a Mil rm cn- f.f u r r an itiiv t I1 wi . u v i- ii' ref linnet 1 ar tc:i;arfr,. ..14 . ."Cth t I niaiM. Mnile new. no matter what ror. ditfon tbey aie In. NEB. llAf itlr"G. CO:. -07 oith. llta Mnmt to Soil, Anyhuir. Book Agent- I have a hook here which actually cost ?." to publish, and I am selling it for $L net. Prospective Purchaser How canyon afford to do that? Book Agent The ed bv the author. book was publish- ' "Ji1 S?stove repairs 0mha Stoe Repair Works. 1209 Douglas St. Oman CLOTHING iT"D? a suit write for our nur imiX Catalogue, containing- i&mples of cloth. NEBRASKA CLOTHING CO.t Cor. HUi and T)f,iii7t. a? iy . BRUSHES ot ui: work. Thr . M. Gl'V KACL TO.. Mfrv aDdJoUtersof Brusue bec.a. Mt!n1!nr. Iirtirt tit ,,rrf,. ilEV to lKlv so. ittL it. , Ozuiill. to any rarm-r or Farm? t's Y ,f- Up to Date Dairying- consainirc full instruction how to io Higher Grade Products. nu jnOBE BUTTER i.-BETTER. PBIGE tmiwith Less Labor get Hore Money tmi Normandy (rmcNc,) System. Danish Dairy system Elgin Separator System MchliaYel)roi:;fit pwptr.ryar.ilr.jse tot: - j --fcroirr. IVrite for t' ; Wiia! V lf, rmatirn. Vi - f THI Fen rp'"on. K.n ! y :l .... i,w.,.,r.- 1-nuet l.oon io,. i R. LOSPINASSE. " Ft. Sre v CoTuml., , .1- 249W.LMCST Ulinoit Dauy A . u uu.um. g H ( c (.Q Patents. Trade-Marks. Eiaminarir.n and A.Iviir t. la:u'uhilitv of Invrntion. Sr.n fi.r"li,,i,tri. uil-. orH loOrt IF'---'CANNOTHEAR klwK