" DuiM Webster’s Humor. ©Miel Webster was a grim humorist. On one occasion, when aSenator who was P^nntiy said. The honorable gentleman may proceed to qurt® from ‘Crabbe's Synonyms,’ *™m 3*£er Md Webster-*” »\Jt “»d Webster," ejolaimed the Senate^ from Massaciiusms, “ f«w **■« auflior-M'S ffla? disagree'” i* * E»r wkr.rt vk — ^ the be fte Senate clock be te ®tnk/- and- it had strucA continuously for about fourteen or fifteen times, Mr. Webster stopped and said to the presidiug officer, “That °Iock„w ®«t cf order, sir—I liave the flaw. The occupant of the chair looked rebukingly at the refractory time piece, but in defiance of the officers and rules of the house it struck about forty before the Sergeant-at-Arms could stop it; Mr. Webster standing silent, while every one else waa laughing. On another occasion, while Mr. Web ster was addressing the Senate in pre senting a memorial, a clerical-looking person in one of the galleries arose and shouted, “ Mv friends, the country is on the brink of destruction ! Be sure that you act on correct principles. I warn you to act as your conscience may ap prove. God is looking down upon you and if you act on correct principles you will get safely through.” He then de liberately stepped back, and retired from the gallery before officers of the Senate could reach him. Hr. Webster was, of course, surprised at this ex traordinary interruption; but, when the shrill voice of the enthusiast had ceased, he coolly resumed his remarks, saying, “ As the gentleman in the gal lery has concluded I will proceed.” Western American Scenery. The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul R’j has now ready for distribution a sixteei page portfolio of scenes along its line’ hat tones, of the size of the World's Fair port folios lately issued. They are only ten centi each and can be obtained without delay bj remitting the amount to Geo. H. He afford General Pass. Agent, Chicago, Til Courage is something that a coward can only imitate. YES! BIG FOUR ROUTE | BEST LINE EAST Mountains, L>akes and Seashore. Vestibule trains to New York and Boston. ASK FOR TICKETS VIA THE BIG FOUR ROUTE. *• o. McCormick, d. b mart nr. Pass, traffic Manager. Gen. Pas*, and T. A., ?V CINCINNATI. TOURIST TRAVEL To COLORADO RESORTS Will wt In early ttaia year, and the Great Rook Island Rout# baa already ample and perfect i rMnnmtDU to transport the many who will take In r»n(«m«DU to transport tne the lovely cool ef Colorado’* HIGH ALTITUDES. The Track A Serfeftt, and doable ever HOKtat I Divlatoas. jYAla EmManent the very brtt.tCi'U solid | VeetibnlmTWitt calWfi the BIO FIVK Chicago : dally at It p. m. and arrives second hferiUffig at Denver ! or Colorado Springs for breakfast. > Any Coupon Ticket Agent can jrtft yon rate*, ana farther information will be cbettftlly and quickly re- | apondcd to by addressing SEBASTIAN. General Pueenger Agent, Chicago. ; ■KPMOIAtHOHS W.ROHHI8, IKIlOlUll Washington, D.C. ■*Successfully Prosecutes Claims. ■ Late Principal Examiner U.B. Pension Bureau. B 3yrsiu * 13yrsiu last war, 15 abdicating claim*, atty since. AM All A Business Urn An A Houses. Bicycle Rep&hlng and Bicycle Sundries. A. H. PE Hit GO A CO.. 1212 Douglas St.. Omaha. Catalogue mailed tree. ROOFING TAR. GRAVEL, and SLATE. Es timates promp'ly furnished. Omaha Slate & Roofing Go. 614 S. 14th WANTED. AGENT?—To take contracts for Fine Merchant Tailoring. Watches, Diamonds, t-urnlture. ect.. on tiie Club Plan. For full particulars ad dress Omaha Co-operative Supply Co , Paxton Blk. Billiard and Poo) Tables, QAI AAM Bar Glassware. Send (or catalogue, hate city pavvunPA Billiard TableCo.Omaha r IX I URES m. coyer, Mcuoy&uo,,^ Bo. Omaha. 1 It© Stock I'enalH on Merchants. Oorreapondeuce atiUcitod. Market quocaoioaa tacoe. OBERFEtDER & Co. I Wholesale Ktflorders promptly filled, special cash discount inery Cil CCUCU on fiIrtt.BIIOIo wnLtOBItn 0150 per month, to sell California wines. Send 1 pos tage-stamp forfull particulars. M.J. MAXIX, lttlO »awn am street, uasba K«b. Cameras^ 5n“PHOTOHET/ ^ ^^weUrhileA tnmlA waach«lze, loaded _ _ for 3ft view* Caialov free. Hey n Phot,* Supply C o.. Exclusive a . nts. 1215 > aro; A CABBY. “ Omaha, ©or. Utb and Capitol Are., H blk from both Council Bluffs 4t Omaha car lines. Proprietors. Wall Paper 4c Roil Only SlJhl) required to paper valla of room 13x15, Including border. Send lOe postage and get i-itict, loo beautiful sam ples. and guide how to paper. A gents' larga sample hook Sl.OOi ritKU with a HiM order. Write qnlck. HENRY LEHMANN, mo-1614 ll—Staa at.. • OMAHA. WEB. McCREW 18 THE OXLT SPECIALIST WHO TREATS ALL 'PRIVATE DISEASES, I Weaknes* and Secret. Disorders©? MEN ONLY. Every cure humMhI, 10 years experience, .fennanently located U ■Omaha- Book free. I 14th and I'araam St*.. r OMAHA, • 1KB. Tb« Ratter Cow. Recently In an address It. G Adams ®l Wisconsin said: The modern dairy cow in her best form is . a long ways from cow nature as it existed in the tiiuvS of Abraham, no doubt She is highly artificial. The more artificial j she is the bvtt r she is. The men who worry and theorize about our getting I away from nature, in order to be ion sis tent, never should milk, they should leave that to the calves. We put shoes on horses and clotbes on children, and slap nature in the face every time we shave. The dairy cow has been made over by the hand and brain of man for a perfectly natural purpose—making money. And if she does sometimes have milk fever and many other dis eases unknown to wild cattle, she to day possesses greater vital force than her unpampered ancestors, who were supposed to be hardy, but all of whom would have died in a week if compelled to exert the vital force necessary to elaborate in . their organism milk enough to make fourteen pounds of butter in that time. We have not de stroyed vital forces, we have changed their currents. The average cow and the average farmer are being driven from their fields—to better ones. In herited notions are giving way to the logic of facts. An old farmer in my state says: “Feed makes the cow.” Prof. Henry, at the experiment sta tion, says nothing, and feeds a. mm mon cow, a grade Jersey and a thorough-bred Jersey a 17-cent ration, each the same, in the same barn, With the same care, for a week, and from the common cow he gets one pound of butter, from the grade one pound and five ounces, and from the thoroughbred one pound and fifteen ounces. A farmer in New Jersey by grading, without special change of feed, raised his butter average in a large herd, in ten years, from 135 pounds to 275 pounds. I test the cows in my own herd and find them rang ing from six to seventeen pounds of butter per week on the same feed. Does feed make the cow? Good blood lies at the foundation of dairy success. The average farmer has enough of it when electrified by thought; his cows do not. Outside of his often thought less disregard of his own business in terests, the average fanner commands both our love and our respect, lie has made these western states. Through his modest and sometimes unnoticed toil have come railroads and schools and pleasant villages and cities rich in beauty and commercial life, and in his quiet country home he has bred the men who to-day control the business and political destinies of this nation. We may criticise his business methods in order to improve them, but we never forget that the average farmer is more than an average good citizen and more than an average patriot. And in the great contest which is to come be tween the socialist, anarchist and com munistic enemies of all government and this government, he will be the rock upon which this government jhall stand. N'Otes oh Milkihg.—It is a blessed sight easier to keep the, dirt and ill flavor out of the milk than to take it out of the butter, says “Farm Journal.” Any delay in setting the milk, lessens the quality of cream obtained. To se cure the best results in cream raising, let the mi.k be strained and put at rest at once when it is drawn from the cow. To test this, strain one-half of the cow's milk into a pan as soon as you get up from the milk stool, and strain the other half into another pan half an hour later and note the difference in results. The old-time method of cov ering the milk pan with a strainer doth, laying a clean clam shell in the depression and milking in the clam shell, is not one which modern dairy men need to laugh at. The practice is excellent. It allows straining the milk Instantly, and does not permit the streams to force filth through the‘ strainer, as their force is expended upon the hard and odorless clam shell, or other like substance. In milking a cow with sore teats always wet them first, also place the hand so the sore will come in the palm of the band. Do not expect to pound milk out of a cow with the stool, and hallooing is no bet ter than pounding. HYDROPHOBIA IN A HOUSE.—Recently a case of hydrophobia in a two-year old colt was developed on the (arm of Eric Anderson near Nordaess. The tenant on the farm went out in the morning and found the colt in the pig pens chasing the pigs around. In at tempting to drive the colt out the man was bitten on the arm, but luckily the teeth did not penetrate the akin, only tore it loose, and 4 is expected no bad results will follow. The animal ran all over the place, chasing other stock, biting itself, and trying to bite the others, and acting in other ways as a mad dog acts. It was allowed to con tinue until exhausted is order to see it in all stages of its madness, and finally fell and died with every symp tom of a genuine case of hydrophobia. The above facts are supplied by Dr. Whitbeck, who went to Nordness to ex amide the ease.—Decorah Republi The Horse Buyer.—The eastern buyer is very uncompromising. He accepts your horse as he finds it. He can not afford to pay you a first-class price for. your horse simply because you have the best one in the neighbor hood. By comparison with some horses yours may be good, and yet might be found wanting by other com parisons The eastern buyer to-day wants the best. Any of them will tell us that they would rather pay S150 for what they call a first class horse than $30 for a plug, and now comes the question, what constitutes a first-class hone and how can we get him? A first-class horse of to-day means some* thing. To fill the measure of this term at present, a better horse la re quired than ever before, Just when the market demands the best hones it haa ever required, we find ourselves with the poorest lot to offer. Just when we ought not to hare any in ferior horses on hand, we find that they are about the only kind we hare _*>_ What Kivd of Hobsks-.'—'There are thousands of small breeders in the north who are debating In tlielr own minds what kinds of horses they can breed with a reasonable chance of making the business profit** bio. Many of them have already reached the con clusion that good gentlemen's road sters are the sort for them. Others hare decided to raise large, handsome carriage horses, lloth of these classes, like the best of trotters, are always in demand, and are likely to be for sev eral years at least. There is probably leas risk of failure in breeding car riage horses than gentleman’s road sters. There is greater fascination, however, for the thorough horseman in raising the latter. The profits, too, in cases of success may be greater. The probabilities of success in either case depend largely upon the judg ment used in selecting brood mares. The general characteristics of the mares are quite as important as their blood linea—American Horse Breeder. Fens for Lambing Ewes.—It has been our experience that light,strong, close pens, say 4 feet square and 214 feet square, are best for lambing ewes. They can be carried by one man and placed over a ewe in the shed, yard or pasture. They will be found very handy and always ready for use. A sick sheep can be treated readily in such a pen. In addition to putting ewes to lamb in a flock by themselves, as fast as they come in they should be put in the “lambed flock’’ and receive ceive appropriate attention. If the quarters are crowded they may still be divided by putting ewes with strong lambs, say a week old, into a flock by themselves and given a daily run in a field of growing rye or wheat. Here they will receive some green feed and have plenty of milk for their lambs. The lambs, too, will soon begin to nibble fresh green 6hoots and grow off beautifully. — South Dakota Farmer. Costof Wool.—A writer in the “Ohio Farmer” says: Our experimentstations ought to' come to our assistance and work out for us the cost of producing a pound of wool. Very much has been expended in investigating the Cost of beef, pork and butter, and wool has been left to the fostering care of the politician. Now that they have de serted it, will not the scientists give it some encouragement? It is the seventh largest industry of the United States, and is certainly an indispensable one to the whole people. With Ohio lead ing in th? ind"«try it «re**’s that oui experiment station ought to do sqm* work with sheep. If it can hot be done at the station they might enlist some farmers of the state for experi menting. The contests at the expo sition proved that we have something to learn yet either in breeding or feed ing, or both. Feathered Economizers.-Fowls are great economizers by natural inclina tion, for they gather much for their own sustenance, that would, were it not for their industrious habits, be lost. Not a kernel of scattered grain that lies within their reach, escapes their vigilance, and they gather every crumb that may be thrown out. with the utmost frugality. Besides, the bugs and insects which so annoy the farmer bv the ravages they make on his crops, are excellent food for poul try and they gather these diligently. Beally it is because deprived of such food in winter, that fowls need greater variety in the daily rations which we provide for them. It is plain then that while gathering avalauble article of food for themselves, they are rid ding their owners of a great nuisance. —Ex. Winter Daimeing.—This winter dairying movement is a step in the. right direction. Ct has saved oar peo ple from the disastrous effects of the world-wide depression, which is felt to such a marked degree hy our neigh bors across the line. Winter dairying is just what is needed to keep up the dairyman’s income the year round. There should be no break between the last batch of cheese in the fall and the first pack of winter butter. These two great dairy products must go hand in hand, thus keeping up a continuous cash income, besides furnishing pro fitable labor on the farms and in the factories during the winter months. The production of cheese, butter, beef, bacon and poultry must be the aim of the future.—Prof. J. W. Rob ertson. PotTLEBr Investment.—Does poultry keeping pay? is always an open ques tion for discussion among farmers. One way to decide this for yourself would be to invest say 940, the price of a good cow, in good fowls, and then take as much care of them as you would of the cow and keep aoeount of the expenses and receipts; but remem ber that yoa would not let she cow's stable go a month without being cleaned, nor would you expect it to pick np its own living. Poultry-keep ingdoes pay, but how well depends upon the man and his methods The Lima Beam.—The Lima bean has been so called for a hundred years, and, as Its name indicates, Kerns to have first been known in South America. The common kidney bean seems to have first been known to the ancient Peruvians. i The Cause «r ffheepiug Cough. In 1871, Dr. Ludwig Letxcriek began microecopio investigation as to the ranee of the disease. He showed for the drat time that'the phlegm coughed np in the early atagea of the diaeaae contained eliptical-shaped brownish red fungna «pores. This discovery gave a dew to ita true nature, and to a new channel of treat ment. Those spores are lodged by inflection inder tho toe cue, whore lhey remain until ti>oy germinate and spread along the aides of tho tongue and backward until they reach the larynx and pharynx. 'When the growth has extended thus far, the full whoop is eetsWi'd’"J. Small elevations or lumps be scca under the tongue before the patient begins whooping. The time required for the germination of the spores is from nine to fifteen days, varying in different persons. Dr. Letzeriek proved his theory by intro ducing spores into the traonia of yonng rabbits, in which he produced all the StomR of the disease. As qninine ly kills all fnngua plants, it ia found to be an efficient remedy, the speaker said. In administering this the immediate result is good, the patient usually not whoOptng more than once a day. The best way to ad minister it is to place a powder upon the tongue and let it gradually dissolve, bat, as children object to the bitter taste, it oan be given in other ways, bnt alwavs so as to be dissolved in the mouth. The Watch*! of the Night When of tha repented kind experienced by person! troubled with tnsnmnlu. soon bring about an nlarmlnir condition of the nervous system. The slut king Imnd. confusion of the brain, lapses of memory and loss of upi.otlio Indicate, with terrible precision, the ruv uttes produced by loss of sleep, which If un remedied must destroy mental equilibrium altogether. No better and thorough nerv ine exists than Hostetler's Stomach Hitters. Common sense and experience point to its early und steady use (a cases or Insomnia. It. strengthens weak and relaxes the tension of overstrained nerves, which, by the way. a resort, to unmedlcated stimulants will never do permanently, while the after effect of such e cltants Is most prejudicial. I,'tiller the Influence of thl benign invlgorant.ap fietlte. digestion and sleep return, and coa ly comfort and health are alike promoted It. Is Invaluable In chills and fever, liver complaint, constipation, rheumatic and Sid ney trouble. Wealth Not Omnipotent. Wealth is potent in its own sphere, but impotent beyond it. It can put a telegraph under the sea and cover the land with a network of wires as with a spider’s web. It can build railroads and bridge oceans. It con buy houses and lands and every material advantage; but here its power stops. It cannot pur chase goodness, or justice, or gentleness, or patience, or love, or true friendship. It cannot make character stronger, or life sweeter. It can say to the minister, I will feed yon and clothe you while you are mating men better, and to the teacher, I will take care of you while you are making men wiser, but it can do nothing without the brain of wisdom or the heart of goodness. It can build railroads, hut it is powerless to build men. CONDUCTOR E. D. LOOMIS. Detroit, Mich., says: “The effect of Hall’s Catsnh Cure is wonderful.” Write him shout It Sold by Druggists, 78c. youia. The/e is nothing like youth. The snnBhi..,s streams upon the flowers. The blood rushes wildly through the veins. The air is full of music, and echoes uf happy laughter are borne on every creeze. All the world seems wrapped in golden mist, and hope, s white-winged angel, shines in the rosy heaven of the future. For age, the rustle of the dead leaves! For sorrow, the wail of the autumn wind, the sad November twilight, and the lonesome splashing of the rain 1 What have age and sorrow to do with life? Let them thrust away their doleful gloom—while for youth and beanty, and love and mirth, the silver bells ring, the wine sparkles, and the earth is strewn with roses.—William Winter. The World's Columbian Exposition Will be of value to the world by illus trating the improvements in the me chanical arts and eminent physicians will tell you that the progress in med icinal agents, has been of equal impor tance, and as a strengthening laxative that f-'yrup of Figs is far in advance of all others. me wim« or uumas. Brunettes deceive—blondes betray. Give money, bat never lend it. Giv ing it only makes a man ungratelol; lending it makes him an enemy. If men would spend in doing good to others a quarter oi the money they spend in doing harm to themselves, misery would vanish from the earth. Man was created to utilize everything —even sorrow. A woman’s venality is the punishment of the man that buys her. The only thing I am astonished at is that people are astonished at anything. Corns CtJSTABD.—Make a good, strong extract of coffee—by dripping it as slowly as possible—for ten people you' will want two cupfuls; take eight of the same measures of milk, and beat into the milk yelk of six eggs; add three ounees of powdered sugar; mix into this the two cupfuls of coffee; as coffee differs in strength, better taste to see that is sweet enough; pour the mixture into cups, and put the cups in a not-too-deep pan with boiling water; the level of the water ought not to stand higher than thecup; do not try and boil the water too hard; about IS minutea of boiling is necessary. Vtegoatan'uCsmpltnr ImwIOi Glycerin*. The original and only genuine. Cures Chapped Hands and Face, Cold Sores, Ac. C. G. Clark Co^N.Haveu.Cr Is ragedeaf as the sea; Pasty as the fire. —Shakespeare. Man Is the merriest species of the crea tion.—Addison. sRunn'i Slagle Cera Salve.** Warranted to cure ur u.uury rufautloU. Auk roar drass**i fur it. Pri.-u iSc.uts. Never attempt to compliment a a«u when be knows he has made a lailare. You want the Best r^M A ‘ ' 1 4 ' f ■ ■ ■ • ' f\ Royal Baking Powder never disappoints; lijpf never make* sour, soggy, or husky food; never spoils good materials ; never leaves lumps of alkali in the biscuit or cake; .while i all these things do happen with the best of cooks who cling to the old-fashioned ' t ! methods, or who use other baking powders. - 1 ’I If you want the best food, ROYAL ; - Baking Powder Is indispensable. ! < y * ■.» 1 V I ( M»»l DANIN. rowDCN CO., IOC MALI »T., Ntw-IORK. We should try to And the golden mean, and neither be lavish nor stingy. He hue his money best spent who has the best wife. The husband may earn money, but only the wife can save it. "A wise woman buildeth her house.” The wife, it seems, according to Solo mon, is the builder or the real puller down. A man con not prosper till he gets his wife's leave, A thrifty house wife is better than a great income. A | good wife and health are man’s ^est wealth.—Charles It. Spurf/con. Shiloh's Consumption 1‘srs on n frtmrante*. It fiimi Jnnpisnt romMimpi Umi. it n U* beta. Coualt Cura. Vcta.fiOvia. Parsnips, carrots, Bwedirh turnips and especially mangel-wurzel, will all fatten pigs. These roots ought not to be given in a raw state, but always cooked and mixed with beans, peas, Indian corn, oats or barley, all of which must be ground into meal. When pigs j are fed on such cooked food as we have stated, the pork acquires a peculiarly rich flavor, and is much esteemed, es pocially for family use. Bkecham’s Pills are a wonderful medi cine for nny bilious or nervous disorder, such as sick headache, etc. Price, li.i cents a box. _|_ Oliver Wendell Holmes contends that true greatness has never yet been able to master a pretty hand in pen manship. The Bound must seem an e.ho to the sense.—Pope. , from kitchen to Threats We.read of peculiar thing* happening in life, end e wise men aboaU he ear* prised et nothing. In like meaner a comely end modest women hen often found e fortune in her feoo if she known how beauty should become her. To wit: During the troubles in the reign of King Charles L, e country girl cam* up to London in search of a place an servant maid; but, not sucoeeoing, aha applied herself to carrying ont bear from a brew-house, and was one of thoan then-called tub-women. The brewot* observing a well-looking girl in thin low oooupation, took her into hie luaily as a servant, and, after a while, aha bn having with so muoh prudence and is* corum, he married her; he died whan she waa yet a young woman and left her a large fortune. The business of thn brewery was dropped, and the yooaff woman waa recommended to Mr. Bydn as a gentleman of skill in the law tn settle her affairs. Hyde (who waa after* ward the great Earl of Clarendon), flaw ing the widow's fortune very considera ble, married her. Of thu marriagn there was no other issue than a daugh ter, who was afterward the wife of James II., and mother of Mary anil Anne, Queens of England.—Land and ' Water. Tumors are healthful for finteaa. They ahonld be out in slices, or, what in better, pulped finely and mixed with a little meal and some salt. Rntabogaa are better than white turnips. At subject of the above portrait is the Rev. Chas. Prosser, a much beloved and most devout minister of the gospel at Mount Car mel, Northumberland Co., Pa. Mr. Prosser’s usefulness, was, for a long time, greatly im paired by a distressing, obstinate disease. Bow his malady was finally conquered we will let him tell in bis own language. He says: “ I was a great sufferer from dyspep sia, and I had suffered so long that I was a wreck ; life was rendered undesirable and it seemed death was near ; but 1 came in contact with Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery and his1 Pleasant Pellets.’ I took twelve bottles of ' Discovery,’ and several bottles of the ‘Pellets,’ and followed the hygenic advice of Dr. Pierce, and I am happy to say it was indeed a cure, for life is worth living now.” For dyspepsia, or indigestion, “ liver com plaint,” or torpid liver, biliousness, constipa tion, chronic diarrhea and all derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels. Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery effects perfect cures when all other medicines fail. It has a specific tonic effect upon the lining membranes of the stomach ana bowels. As an invigorating, restorative tonic it giv strength to the whole system and buiku up solid flesh to the healthy standard, when re duced by “ wasting diseases.” Mr. J. F. Hudson, a prominent lawyer of Whilchervllie, Sebastian Co., Ark., writes: “ Having suffered severely, for a long time, from a torpid liver, indigestion, constipa tion, nervousness and general debility, and finding no relief in my efforts to regain my health, I was induced to try Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery and * Pleasant Pellets.’ Under this treatment, I improved very much and in a few months was ablate itlssil to my professional duties* Yours truly, / To purify, enrioh and vitalize the blond, and thereby invigorate the liver and diges tive organs, brace up the nerves, and put the system in order generally ; also to build up both solid flesh sad strength after lite '* ' proantuar pneumonia, fevers and other diseases, "Golden Medical Discovery” tee |uai. It does not woke fat people ana noeqi coi mlent, but builds up tolid, wMamee Do you feel dull, languid, low - have fulineeeor bloating aftereatin: coated, bitter or bad taste in lor appetite, frequent headaches, "BoattaW IfB" hnfnnt mvm nArvnua nrrwdrw^g^ specks ” before eyes, nervous prostrations drowsiness after meals I If you have aay considerable trambar ef these symptoms, you are suffering fre torpid liver, associated with dyspepate. indigestion. The more complicated yo_ disease the greater the Bomber of symptom*. No matter what stage it has reached, Dev Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery will ante* due it. i Nervousness, aleephasnesa. nervous proa* tration, nervous debility, and kindled din turbanoes are generally due to impoverished blood. The nervous system suffers for wanfc of pure, rich blood to nourish and aoslnim it. Purify, enrich and vitalize the blood hr taking “Golden Medical Discovery" and aft. these nervous troubles vanish. The “ Golden Medical Discovery " fa far better for this purpose than the mneh ad vertised nervines and other compounds, sn loudly recommended for nervous prastrattoa, as they •* put the nerves to sleep," bat d» not invigorate, brace up and so strengthen the nervous system as does the “ Discovery," thus giving permanent benefit and a verffoaf cure. Buy of reliable dialers. With aay others^ something else that pays them better probably be urged aa “ Just as good." naps it is. for Uiewe; but It can’t oe, for yoa A Book (130 pages) treating of the fore going diseases and pointing out succeafnl mean* of home cure, also containing vat numbers of testimonials, (with ptaototyp* portraits of writers), references and ouaar valuable information, will be sent on nniyt of six cents, to pay postage. A irtrses, World’s Dispensary Medical Association. Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute, Otm Main Street, Buffalo, N. Y. CURES PROMPTLY SWELLINGS, * * BACK-ACHE, '1 SORENESS. 800THES, 8UBDUE8, CURES. LAMENESS. I frees; ! ■M.k.m lp£n*. FACE BLEI6H A l'pr*< laUa* ihafart t hat ikwu* <4 lUkm •flbe I'.S.kiriMliaMl tmy F»r« Urw^w »«w« «*!**»• wfcL-a IP $* pm W*>U. H« la «r4«p ikal all mmy pt ** a hlr a«|, 1 r will «r*4 a HampW feuU.aaMj >wlt< att. * ckarfw prrpaiJ, an rnt-fft •# tic. PACK l BLEACH rrnatM i«4 n:ra a* pi lafcl» aft I frrrkka. piuiplw, aMHh, bUckbwA^ alia ' a«a. irM, d'imm, wriakka^ «ia^hM4 •kla.a»<( brMtiBw Ua com alas I—. MAaa miiT(< e. i «th at.,M.«jQMa