HE GETS A SCORING. COL. BRECKENRIDGE’S CODE OP MORALS DENOUNCED. j 0,, st.cdard far Baa aad Waaaaa—Will j-0ll»rd> Leading Could Foul Hat 1 ghot loto the Defense Set Vp by the i (oionrt for BlaueU aad Bla Attorneys —A strong Plea far a Higher aad Xo | birr Womanhood. The Brecksarldge Cue. ; Washisgtox, April 14.—Judge Jere jl Wilson was complimented to-day ky the presence of a large audience of |k'is colleagues of the legal profession t,nd if n.embers of congress to hear closing argument in the Pollard Breckinridge breach of promise ease ind to i.sten to his reply to the attacks „( ('.i.onel Phil Thompson upon his Iclicut and the eloquent appeals of Mr. Butterworth. >lr Wilson’s voice was low and im- ; fjressire as he told the jury that it was hi, duty to reply to all the defendant tad sa.d as a witness and through his iconnse!. A startling thing has been orged in his behalf—that this case iwiih ail its revelations should not have been brought. “He thinks,” he went on, “speaking through \ counsel that this case should have never been brought; that it is spread ing pi liution throughout the conn- ‘ try. and 1 do not wonder. 1 am sorry that my friend, Ben Bntterworth, is not here. He has said that we sre to blame for spreading this pollu tion through the country. If what this defendant hu confessed on the stand be true, is it possible that such j things are to be redressed? Is it pos- 1 sihle that in the sunlight of our civili zation there is no redress? Yon can oot tie a millstone around his neck attd sink him in the sea for the fishes to feed upon him; yon cannot shut him in a cage and double-lock it to keep him from polluting the women of the country: you cannot do that, bnt you can severe the redress that the laws of the land have provided.” Major Butterworth, Mr. Wilson went on. had spoken of the revulsion of feeling abroad*against this, case, but k had forgotten that in weal Britain, when such things became a stench in the Anglo-Saxon nostrils, peers and nobles bad their black skeletons dragged from closets snd hsd been condemned, had been banished—aye, ‘•bright stars,” ms had been said, had been dragged from the firmament. THE SAME 8TAXDAKD FOB AI-I "Even if this were the first ease,” thundered Mr. Wilson, “I would be proud of my part in condemning snch conduct. My friend Carlisle and I took this responsibility and we take it willingly, even proudly. I suppose my friend Bntterworth would say that if the third count in this indictment be true he would banish the woman aod send the man to congress I stand bore for higher womanhood. I stand here to demand the same standard from woman and man. I stand against such sentiments as this defendant has ottered, that such baseness injures the man but destroyes the woman. Would the jury say that this defend ant was to be admitted to their parlors and the outer gate locked and barred against the woman?” It had pleased Mr. Butterworth, Mr. 1 Wilson continued, to declaim pyro- ; technically that the womanhood of the land was arrayed in behalf of the defendant. No, a thousand times no. He had said that the country girls of the country did not need chaperones and he (Mr. Wilson) had expected to 1 bear it said that gray haired men of , b needed body-guards. Here Mr. Wilson produced a sheet 1 of letter paper and said that he could imagine the mothers of the land sit ting up writing such letters as the im aginary one he would read. Of course j >t was simply imaginary, he said, bnt : (very one could see the feminine hand- ! writing- as he held it up, and every l one knew that it was one letter from the correspondence he had received ouring the trial. It was in part as i follows: I --- me uc*r yuuug Kiris. t wuuui uat was worth lirlnt for. I have lived a J”™ "fe, because I early took the Lord for puide. and it I had not clung close to Him *“ *“!' would have been very hard. rim. THOMPSON ANSWERED. Mr. Wilson said that the jury tad beard a most remarkable argil* ttht from one of the defendant's cho&en friends. Colonel Phil Thomp lon- It was in substance that as all ■>en are bad, as that all men were snares, why should the defend* •nt be condemned? He was no worse i than the rest. Solomon and David had been held np as parallels of the pendant. It had been said that "avid was a man of great education; he not have practiced law all his !“e- but he had been educated in the schools of his land, he had a . ery tongue, he was a man of pas f'on; but Israel had come from his t!Js and he had not been condemned hfu therefore why should the defend h°t be condemned? One story had hten overlooked in his biblical re •cyohes. That was the story of Tamar, no was a country girl, and of Am* °t°n. who was a man of passion. That Pisode had ended in a tragedy, “ere were no juries in those days. ut smee then the Prince of Peace had °me. There were methods of peace nd juries provided, and those methods t.ere being followed by the plaintiff, nt when juries failed to do their duty °fe violent methods were resorted v 7 an outraged people—the first old "Aarons methods .,*7 re were some things which show o the character of the defendant in . 's suit and Mr. Wilson spoke of the of h 'baracter of Mrs. Blackburn and . now Colonel Thompson had slurred r f' He next referred to the flings of none l Thompson at the female doc JJ8- There had been a time when m men were merely the drudges of th»n».ba*' they were fast working to ,i Ir°nt and the higher they came 8 better for the world, tio r' W‘‘son said that the denuncia* ■ “ r,f the plaintiff as a woman of I,,, ’-baracter bordered upon the ‘“'•■crons * ■- - , she jit. '•‘■crons when it was recollected that was was due to the defend } Jam's poor plea, after jhg_fall, h*d not saved him from being through all ages a van of bad repate. The JUDGE CHECKS lMramwixff Mr. Wilson asserted that the colonel had taken Miss Pollard from the house of Mrs. Thomas to visit his Kentucky friends, but at this state ment the heads of the Breckinridge contingent began to shake in nega tion, whereupon Mr. Wilson said: -If there is to be any shaking of heads over this I will call your attention to the testimony of Mr. Francis, and Will remind you that when 1 asked the defendant about it he did not deny it." vu, uui i aia aeny it," spoke gp the defendant and his council sec onded him. Judge Bradley rapped with his pen cil in the desk, saying: “If there is any correction to be It should be made by the eounfeL" “Then I withdraw it all, I don't care a snap about it," said Mr. Wilson, mistaking the intention of the judge. ! “I referred to the correction by Mr. ! Breckinridge,” the court explained. ! Breckinridge leaned forward and in- I quired: “Does your honor say that 1 cannot correct errors?” “You are represented by counsel whose duty it is to do that,” responded the judge. “But it is my constitutional right to represent myself,” protested the de fendant. “Does your honor rule on that?” Judge Bradley kept on writing and made no response. Mr. Wilson held that the secret marriage was no defense against the promises made after it. The secret marriage constituted in itself a breach of the contract- Had the scene i n Major Moor’s office occurred in the state of New York it would hare made the plaintiff the wife of the defendant. SENATE PROCEEDINGS. Senior .Peffer’* Third Installment on His Tariff Speech. Washington, April 14.—Both sides of the chamber showed a very good attendance when the senate met yes terday. During the transaction of the routine morning business. Senator Kyle of South Dakota, introduced a joint resolution proposing a constitu tional amendment relative to mar riage and divorces, which was re ferred to the committee on judiciarv. At 1 o’clock Mr. Peffer was recog nized and delivered the third install ment of his speech on the tariff bill. He announced his purpose of offering at the proper time a substitute for the pending biU based on the principle of taxing the articles used by the rich while exempting those articles of prime necessity nsed by the poor, whether manufactured abroad or not. He would relieve the poor of all taxa tion and put the tax on articles used by the rich, so the burden of tariff taxation would rest chiefly on those who were best able to bear it. He defended the Coxey army and outlined his plan for the amelioration of the condition of the people. Re ferring to the approaching army, he exclaimed: “We are coming. Father Abraham, although the van guard is snowbound, I understand.” [Laugh ter.] He referred to the entrance into Washington last Saturday night of a band of forty men who were im mediately arrested without commit ting any offense. “They hed as much right to come here as the president of the New York Central railway company or any other citizen.” As congress was not bound down by such restrictions, he continued, he would insist on congress passing a bill obliging the president to furnish em ployment for all men and women of the country. It would not be in the way of building good roads, bat he would set them to building a straight double track railroad from the Atlan tic to the Pacific and another from the great lakes to the gulf. Then the dark clouds would roll away and be dissipated in the morning mist. “I am now pleading with you manu facturers," he said, earnestly (turning to the Republican side), “to be fair with us. If you demand protection against goods which come into compe tition with yours, give ns those pro tective duties which we ask for:” Senator Gallinger inquired whether he (Mr. Peffer) believed that manu factures could continue on a free trade basis. “I am not looking1 after the manu facturing interests.” declared Mr. Peffer. “I am looking after the men of the West and South. Kansas can stand free trade better thaD the peo ple you represent.” He went on to argue for a duty on wool and for free sugar, when Mr. Gallinger assured him that the people of New England were with him on those two questions, and he thought they were with him on all reasonable demands. ‘‘And when we ask anything which you do not want to give, you call us unreasonable?” replied Mr. Peffer. At 5 o'clock Mr. Peffer had not fin ished, and according to the agreement the tariff bill was laid aside, and the argent deficiency bill was again taken up. An amendment to the clause for paying special assessments to United States attorneys, changing the amount from S30.000 to $40,240, of which $10, 340 should be available for deficiencies for the years 1303 and 1893 was agreed to. At 6 o’clock the senate adjourned. TO DOCK ALL ABSENTEES. The Democrats of the House Decide la Census Vpon a Radical Coarse. Washington, April 14.—The Demo cratic caucus met immediately after the adjournment of the house. Mr. Bland suggested as a remedy for ab senteeism the enforcement of section 40 of the revised statutes, which pre rides for “docking” members on such days as they may be absent. The suggestion was unanimously adopted. A Populist Protest. Ain.DE, Kan., April 14.—The Dick inson county Farmers' alliance adopt ed special resolutions on Judge Fos ter’s retirement They say: “We consider that be ought to hare saved enough to maintain his family,” and “in view of the number of unem ployed and homeless, the government ought to economize." The Kansas delegation is urged to try and defeat the bill retiring Foster on a pension of $3,500 on this account DAVID DUDLY FIELD DEAD. *• *■»<■—« Lawyer rinn A««r Vary MMf. Sew Tone. April 1L—David Dudley field, the eminent lawyer, died my suddenly today at his home, So. J Gratnmercy place. He returned from Italy only last Wednesday on the Columbia, having- gone abroad to take Christmas dinner with bis only child. Lady Miugnte, widow of Sir Anthony Mu&grave, late governor of Queens land. Australia, and to attend the list birthday celebration of his eldest garnd son, Dudley Field Musgrave. He was stricken with pnuemonia Wednesday night and the disease rapidly sapped his life. ©SR or A REMARKABK FAMILY. David Dudley Field lived eighty* nine years and two months Strangely Use 13th was the day of his birth and on the 13th he died. He was older than either of the three grand old men of Europe, Gladstone, Bismarck and Pope Leo, and had witnessed the rise of the great American republic almost from its infancy, and at least from one of its earliest periods. His family is one of the most noted in all the United States, and four such brothers as David Dudley, Cyras \V., Henry M., and Stephen J.,have rarely been of one family generation. Each attained distinction in his own way. Cyrus XV. Field passed away some months ago, and now that ho has been followed by the eldest of tho brothers, Steph J. Field of the United States supreme court, the second son, and Henry Martyn Field, clergyman, theologian and author, the fourth son, alone remain. The first American representative of the family. Zach ariah Field, landed in Massachusetts in 1930 or 1632. Mr. Field's father, David Dudley Field was a man of scholarly attain ments and the author of quite a num ber of books—in the main historical. The son received a thorough education and on graduating from Williams col lege in 1331 he began the study of law at Albany. Seven years later he be gan to practice in New York city. Sixty years is the period of many noted men's entire lives,yet this is only the term of Mr. Field's active service in the legal profession. Nearly fifty of these years were given to a modifica tion of the United States laws, and it is upon this great work that his fame will rest. His new system of civil procedure has been adopted in twenty four states and territories and was the base of the recent judicature act in England and of the practice in several British colonies. His revised criminal code is now in effect in eigh teen states and territories. In 183? Mr. Field was appointed by the state of New York the head of a commission to prepare a civil and a criminal code. These, with the two codes of procedure named, were de signed to supercede the unwritten or common law. The work was com pleted in 1865. The state cf New York has adopted only the penal code, bat other states have drawn largely from the civil code in their legislation and California and the Dakotas have adopted all the codes in full. At the meeting of the British association for the promotion of social science at Man chester in 1866, Mr. Field proposed a general revision and codification of international laws and secured the ap pointment of a commission of distin guished jurists to do the work. The commission was unable to act in con cert and Mr. Field took the whole matter on himself and after a lapse of seven years presented to the social science congress his “Outlines of the International Code.” This attracted much attention in all parts of the civilized world, was translated into several languages and drew from an eminent English chancellor the re mark: “David Dudley Field has done more for the reform of laws than any other man living.” The result of the code was the formation of an associa tion for the reform and codification of the law of nations and Mr. Field was elected first president. Mr. Field had always taken an ac tive interest in politics. Originally a Democrat, he voted with that party, although he opposed its pro-slavery policy, until the nomination of John C. Fremont in 1836, whom he support ed. Daring the civil war he staunchly defended the administration and was active with both pen and voice. For eight weeks ia 1876 he filled the unex pired term of Congressman Smith Ely, who had been elected mayor of New York. He then acted with the Demo cratic party and favored Mr. Tilden,in the belief that the decision of the electoral commission had done a great wrong. Mr. Field has been married three times, but with the exception of his daughter, Jennie L. Field, now Lady Anthony Musgrave, and her son and his two surviving brothers, he was Without immediate relatives. Mr. Field attributed his long life, first, to a good robust constitution, and secondly, to plenty of exercise and much hard work. He, further more, never abused himself with to bacco or strong drink. A PICNIC FOR THE "ARMY." Western ••Industrialists” Hiding on n 8 pec Ini Train—Plenty of Food. Cheyexxb, Wyo., April 14.—The “Industrial Army," under “General" Kelly, breakfasted to-day at Ked Buttes, the first station east of Lara* mie. Cheyenne will supply the next meal. All the bakers in town have been working all night baking bread, and 1,500 loaves and three beeves will be given to the army when it reaches here. The general* desire of the army is to be taken to Denver, and while the route after leaving here has not been definitely decided, it is prob able that Denver will be the objective point. Dispatches from Union Pacific officers who are on the industrial “spe cial train” state the men are orderly. Kelly's “army” decided to go to Den ver and stop one day and then go to Kansas City, where they expect help from Populists. The Whipping Post Recommended* Sedaua, Mo', April 14.—The grand jury, which adjourned yesterday after a ten days’ session,' recommended the adoption of the whipping post as sug gested by Judge Ryland in his instruc tions to the jury, as a punishment for minor offenses. The jury also recom mended the submission of a proposi tion to the voters of the county to bnild a $35,000 jail Agriculture. Warms Sorts.—It has bees demon strated that 100 poudi of sand will absorb SS ponds of water; 100 pounds of loam, 44 ponds; 100 pounds day | loam. SO pounds; 100 pounds of clay, i 70 pounds This explains why same i soils always appear drier than others, | and why after a shower some soils be i come like a thick paste, while others | are only comoaratirely damp.—Ex. Scirus Crt-rrvATios.—The whole theory of modern cultivation Is that crops do better when they sre given surface cultivation throughout the season. This process is much easier j than the old-fashioned deep cultiva tion, and it can be dene in half the ! time. By it the surface soil is kept loose ana moist all through the season, and this keeps the moisture near the roots of the plants. The loose top soil acts as a mulch to the plants, and is invaluable in dry seasons. More and i more every season are farmers coming to ace that fineness of surface soil en i courages moisture and consequently nitrification, by capillary attraction, which largely increases the crops in dry weather, and as there is scarcely a summer without dry spells, it is ad visable to prepare for these aa early in the season as possible.—Ex. CoaOltlaa st Oar Solis. The Minnesota Experiment Station has published bulletin thirty, contain ing the results of their investigations ss to the deterioration of our common soils under the present unsystematic methods of cropping. The summary of the bulletin is as follows: 1. The continued cropping of soils to grain crops only without any system of rotation or other treatment is tell ing severely upon the original stock of half decomposed animal and vegetable matters and nitrogen. Soils which have produced grain craps, ex clusively, for ten or fifteen years con tain from a third to a half less humus and nitrogen than adjoining soils that have never been plowed. 2. Soils which have been cropped until the organic matters and humus have been materially decreased, retain less water and dry out more readily than when there is a larger amount of organic matter present in the soil 3. Soils which are rich in humus contain a larger amount of phosphates associated with them in available forms than the soils that are poor in humus. 4 Soils which are rich in homos and organic matters produce a larger amount of carbon dioxide that acta as a solvent upon the soil particles and aids the roots in procuring food. 5. One-half of a sandy knoll, heavily manured with well rotted manure, contained nearly a quarter more water during a six weeks' drought than toe other half that received no manure, 5. The supply of organic matter in the soil must be kept up because it takes such an important part, indi t recUy, in keeping np the fertility of | the soil. A good system of rotation, ! including sod crops- and well prepared | farm manures, will do this, and will i avoid the introduction and use of cofai | mercial fertilizers which are now cost j ing the farmers of the United States i over thirty-five million dollars an ! Dually. It will not do to wait until I this question forces itself upon us. i 7. A rotation of crops will soon be ; necessary on account of the peculiar | composition of some of the soils and the corresponding subsoils, especially those in which the surface soils are richer in phosphates and nitrogen I while the subsoils are richer in j^tish | and lime. By means of rotation the | full benefits of the strong points of | both the top soils and the subsoil will | be secured. ■•U Exhaustion. The richest soils in the world, if badly used, will produce but few crops, after which they become less and less productive, until in the end the fields are left barren or to weeds, says “In dian Agriculturist.” This has hap pened in the most fertile places, where wheat-growing has been followed with a persistency that may well be termed heroic, the result being that any one who now desires to make a living on one of these “worn-out” farms must undertake a settled course of improve ment of the land. Fortunately, the soil is really inexhaustible. It may be misused and reduced in natural fertility in part, but only so far as the plow has penetrated hitherto. Below this will be found the virgin soil, cold and coy it may be, but yet susceptible of awakening into the warmth of vigor ous life and of becoming as productive as the upper soil which preceded it. It is a common belief that land regains fertility by rest, and especially if the fallows be well stirred. This is as old as the ancient Romans, whose writers, taking as eager an interest in agri culture as we do at this day, often referred to the land resting, and be ing improved by the rest. And this is true, for the soil is made np of earthy particles that are slowly soluble, and, as time passes, the water and the air together cause these to decay, and let loose the fertility they have held locked up. But this is not a civilized way to manage the land, and neither is it the most profitable. It is an aboriginal method, and not a scientific one. The exhaustion of the land is more economically prevented by the action of vegetable growth upon it This may be weeds only, but this is nature's course, which she enforces when man neglects his duty and leaves it to slow recovery; the better way is to cultivate and sow it, and make it produce something profitable while it is recovering. It has come to this, that if farmers can not grow wheat except by bare fallowing, then wheat growing will have to be given up after the virgin land has been cropped a few times, for the simple reason that the cost of maintaining fertility by this process is greater than the crops produced will pay for. Early Potatoes. Western Plowman gives tnis p.an to secure early potatoes: We take a lot of old tin cans and put them in the stove long enough to unsolder them. This leaves only the rim of the can. This rim Is filled with good rich dirt, and a part or a whole of a potato -jlanted in it. Keep the rim together by tying a string around it and place the cans where they will be kept warm, watering them with lukewarm water frequently. When the sprouts appear above the froaad they should be ex poued to the mi m much m pousible. when the proper tUpe nas ar rired for traasplaatlng, prepare your hilta, cot the itnin around the era and joa will find the earth in a compact m»n ready for transplanting. The potatoes will grow right along without noticing the change and you will hare early pota toes for your own table, and nice ones too, if you hare attended to them properly. This may not be practicable in raising early potatoes to sell, bat for home use we cun recommend it, and at this date, while the ground Is covered with snow, we hare new pota toes well under way. Om4 Draft >»m«. At t (mot institute B. Throaaei said: Men who genera ly use good judgment in other things sometimes exhibit the poorest in breeding. Thera here been first-class stallions in this country for a great many years, bnt they haee not done as much as the in ferior ones for the last few years. The only way to account for this is by the difference in the priee of their service fee. Thus the good horses gradually gave way to horses not so good, and it is a deplorable fact that in so many cases the good hare yielded their places to the bad, because they would Dot justify their owners in keeping them. Men are often fooled by breed ing to a good horse and a poor one at the same time to experiment. They find when the colts come that the one from the cheap stallion looks as well as the one from the imported sire. They instantly resolve that they will no longer pay $15 for a eolt, when, aa they say, they can get as good a one for $5. They certainly have failed to observe nature's law with reference to offspring. Had they done so, they would have noticed that the superi ority in blood asserts itself more de cidedly aa the animal nears ma turity; that the full blooded Texas calf is as fine at two months old as that from the Durham, but no one will admit that it matures into so fine an animal when it is fully developed. A ping looks better at a very early age than ever after, and this induces many to breed back to the plug sire before they have discovered their mistake. It is too bad that after twenty yean breeding we have made so little real progress, but we can yet remedy the evil. It can only be done, however, in one way. The first step in this dl-, rection It to sort out the plugs, Give* them away if they will not self. The harder they are todUpoee of, furnishes us still further evidence of the fact that they should be gotten rid of. Do not allow a mare on yonr farm that ia not a good one. When you get her keep her if she breeds right, if not, sell her. See that she is brad to the best horse yon can get each year, even though it costs you a little more to do it than It would to breed her to the scrub. There is only one straight and narrow way to reach the desired point. Puisne this course, and in n few years you will have the satisfac tion of owning nothing bnt good horses. You will then be n better Christian and the world in general will look brighter and more promising to yon. The next thing I wnnt to con sider is, will it justify us to breed good horses? It certainly will, and now ia the time to do it- it takes four years to raise a horse, and who knows bnt what the price of good horses will then be very high? They alwnys have been, and it is reasonable to suppose that they always will be, in demand. They are as indispensable to this coun try as the farm wagon or the plow. We must have them, and the time has come when those who use them appre ciate good horses. Electricity may ruin the sale of the light horse, but the large, heavy draft horse is partially se cure from such competition. The price of good horses has not fluctuated ns much as one would think, and at least has only followed the general decline brought about by the existing condi tions. When Isay raise good noraes, I mean good ones. Not what we thought were good ones ten years ago, but ones that would be considered good at the present time. People have learned something in the last few years. They have at least discovered that a low down, heavy horse is the kind for draft purposes. It is bnt a principle of mechanics they should have learned at school, but it seems we learn the lessons of this lifer only by experience. They now want the draft horse heavy, because they want him strong and for the purpose of draft work only. They want him low down because the day light under him does not add anything to his strength. They want him blocky because he will keep fat on half the feed that a long rangy horse will, and the farmer wants him the same way because the eastern buyer does, and for the further reason that he has to feed him only three yean to mature him, instead of five, as he used to the long, lank horses of the past.—Farmers' Review. Gnowise Cabbage.—No vegetable does wall on a stiff or clayey subsoil. Pulverise the soil well with a plow and harrow. Many prefer spading, but for me, not much. Too much work, and besides I can do better work with a good plow and team of horses. I am satisfied that it is a good plan to plow the cabbage ground in the fall, if not, in fact, all the garden. It turns the soil up to be pulverized by the action of the frost and also turns up many in sects (the eggs and larva;) to be des troyed by the same agent. Manure thoroughly and evenly about two or three inches deep. Cow and horse ma nure mixed and well rotted can not be beat Horse manure alone is not what is wanted, as it heats so violently. PATRIOTIC. “How’d O'Shaughneasy come to give up his job on the police force?” “The captain assigned him to a beat in the park with instructions to see that people didn’t wear away the grass by walking on it” “What was wrong with an assign ment like that? It strikes me as being dead easy.” “Oh, it was easy enough, but O'Shaughnessy was too much of an Irishman to keep anybody from wear in* of the «rreen ”—Host on Transcript A qVKSTIOH OP ECONOMY. Cbolly (at the Samoan village)—If you give that fellow 5 cents he'll rub two sticks of wood together till they make fire. Fweddy—Five cents? It’s a wascally swindle. Five cents will buy two bawxes of matches, bah Jove. W. W. FUmiltoi, Jr. Omki«. Quo. A Mere Skeleton Vtry Much Rtduowi After Ttf Crip Mote's SafsaiMrtta toon Govo An* ;1,| tlto ate Moalthy Plgoatlon. "C. L Hood * CO, Lowv'll, Mul: •• CMoOmmq: — to Dwite tut. I *u Mrtekw dowa with tbs grip, aad eaaaatsxprsss ay Hfittti. Whoa tho tern Ml dm, t waa weak and had mala hope af raeovary. I waa waa a mors dnhMi; had ao appetite. aad Ivory thing I A to Diatrooote Mo. My wtfa called mg atttattea to Hood* Sarsapa rilla. I laid tin doctor I Om(M I aroaM begta to take it, and be aald It ailght do an good. to 1 began, aad the drat doae of Hood's garaapa rtlta aeeiaad to giro aaa a desire lor food. I coo Hood’s1^ Cures ttouad to Inprove, and. to make a long story abort. I was aeon able to attend to ay boatoess. I owe an to Hood's Sarsaparilla, aad think It afcoald ha kept la every haase.” r.W.Vossst in, Ja.. 1SS Brooklyn St. Oerelaad.Otika. Hood's tel* are the beat after-dinner pills, t«M dlcestloa. core headerh* owe eer hair. Driwe tin Bnta at the expense of the Body. . While we drive j the brain we i must build up 'l tbe bodjr- Ex- : ercise, pure air —foods that make healthy flesh—refreshing sleep—such are methods. When loss of flesh, strength and nerve become apparent your physician £ will doubtless tell you that the quickest builder of all three is Scott’s Emulsion of Cqd Liver Oil, which not only creates flesh of and in itself, but stimulates the appetite for other foods. “COLCHESTER" ' Spading Boot§ For K»rroer»,Mmer»,tLK.H*am FOKhUBJE * MAklX, Cincinnati, Otltb OMAHA Business Houses. NEBRASKA CL0TH.R6 COMPARY^^ lima k nadr- It eoui 70a Bothies. Writ, for U. Hotel arowt nreturn 11th tod rent am. RUlep 4 Wil kins, I*rop n Depot bt cat* pm tbedoor. CROSS GUN CO Wholesale and Retail ^portABen'l Seppltes. Write tor prices, 11S8. Uth 'Srrr DYE WORKS Council Blnte, la, k till raraateSk, TRUSSES,; Optical Ooo*a, Pbyatclank' Supplier. .» 1UUI MtitNUdM. AJo* AtNmfoldOo.MOi ruualt King Paper Go WlAPftsa pa ran, Twisia Kto. Utt-IAA Howard Street, Bank and OfBee Furniture a tpeda’.tr. S. M. QUAIALL, IMP Be. 1SU mu S£I Ship or writ* tor prices to 2 ROBT. PURVIS Established 1870. 1216 Harney Omaha Hotel Dellone ^ ^ * Omaha, cor. l«th Capitol Are., Ik fro Beet MM a day boose In the iti BSXB db CAtlT, Proprietors. Omaha ear lines, booae In the stale. Fire proof id BOOKS TU 40 Books, i To Introduce our Page. Illustrated term Eight a and literary paper we el ve away 40 Books, postage paid, to all new sub scribers. Semple copy end List of books Free Write this week. Homes teed Co., SU do. 13th St, taehe Neb. tl. O per jeer. FREE ENGINE Second Hand, M Horae. Will be sold et e greet liar gala. Write H. C. AKIN. 511 So. 13th 8V, Omaha. Neb. In porter, and Job bing grocers. Ask _ for our "TIA uur brand of tee. "GATE CITY" brand of Can ned tlooda. "MEXICAN BLEND" Coder. Nothin* Imt produced. Every package guaranteed. Do yo* - * "OMAHA DAJLYBKB" Cisarl It la a Paxton&Gallagher;