Worn Oat Id Harness. . I» the harness of every day buiinesi work Men and vnuinn w«ir mit •• •en and women wear out prematurely1, "ifor «y, for others, again. It •ome of us it Ik not easy, »ur unwn, again. it feimPS^lb,e f° K«t. out of harness. It is tho ^flexible yoke, the strongly forge i un* ;2J**%kaWe shackle of imperative servitude 5*®®!*“ '° ourselves i nd those most dear t» ?*; The weight of it often bows many of ua Into the grave before our time, but it Is un doubtedly true that there is u means of ren oerjMg the burthen less onorous, and of mit igating the ailments that unremitting toll— especially of a sedentary kind—has a tend ency to produce. Over worked clerks in counting houses, mill operatives, book keepers. type writers and others testify to Hf®, restorative effects of Hostet lers Stomach Hitters, and its power of re •••.win, ohm ub punvr mx re newlng physical and mental energy when sked and on the wane. ' ' ' »«« wane- Hyspepsia, failing vigor, rheumatic, bowel and kid ney complaints yield to this beneficent med icine, which is a preventive of malaria znd counteracts the effects of exposure in in clsmont weather. v Singular Climatic Effects. . Says the Denver (Col.) Great West.' It is a singular fact that almost every body loses flesh on coming here from the East. The average loss in weight sustained is about one-eighth. For in stance, in the course of two or three months a 200-pound mm loses twenty , five pounds and becomes a 175-pounder. This is due to the high altitude of Den ver—a mile above the sea to the dry and light atmosphere, to the scarcity of vegi ‘ tation and the comparative abundance of oxygen, which consumes the tissues ' and taxes the vital functions to a greater extent than on lower altitudes. Higher up it is much worse than here. At Lead ville, for instance, which is two miles above the sea level, the diminution in weight does not generally fall short of a sixth or seventh, and it takes place ; much more rapidly than here. In that high altitude, too, lung diseases, such as pneumonia, very frequently set in, and they prove fatal in about 30 per cent, of the cases attacked. But very tew dogs, except hounds, can live in Leadvifle, and no cats survive there. In Denver, however we have a multitude of both dogs and cats, and they appear to perlenoe no special difficulty about liv • mg and getting fat. Yet it is a notacgatlg fact that animals and men toge a share of their tlrength afi£r 'doming here. After being here two or three . months their muscular power is not near so great as in the East. Eight hours of continuous labor does more to exhaust and prostrate a man here than ten hours in Illinois or Wisconsin. And when worn out and prostrated a feeling of las situde and drowsiness that it is very dif ficult to dispel comes over one. In such instances many hours of rest are requi site to repair and rebuild the wasted en ergies, Mental labor is even more ex hausting than physical. A healthy man may do manual labor for eight or ten hours a day and experience therefrom no special evil effects j but let mental labor be pursued with like assiduity and the nervous system becomes weakened and irritable. In time the physical powers become disordered and weakened by sympathy and by the strain upon them to supply the brain waste. These facts are more predicable of new-comers than of those who have resided for a year or more at high altitudes. Persons and an imals thoroughly acclimated do not ex perience these drawbacks. Indeed, these could not look better anywhere than they appear here. The great difficulty is in getting acclimated. Ball’s Catarrh Cora Is a Constitutional cure. Price, 75. Magistrate—“It seems, prisoner, that you took 15 pence from the prose cutor’s till. Now, I put it to you seri ously ; was it worth your while to risk your character, your liberty, your whole future for such a trifle?* Prisoner— “ Certainly not, your Worship; but I did not know there was not more m the till .—I took all there was.” Billiard Table, second-hand. For sale cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Asm, ill B. 12th St., Omaha, Neb. By the State Comptroller’s report of 1879, it appears that the colored people , of Georgia own 541,199 acres of land, which is equal to six and one-tenth acres per poll. This is an increase in holding by colored people from 338,769 acres in 1873, and snows a rapid growth in their wealth. KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live bet ter than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting In the form most acceptable and pleas ant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect lax ative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently coring constipation. . It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kid neys, Liver and Bowels without weak ening them and it is perfectly free from ■ every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all drn;j 'gists in 60c and $1 bottles, but it is man ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, 8yrup of Figs, end being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered. COOK BOOK %FREE l'* •eo rM»S-lkUJ*TRflTM. Ohof tlM UqoH and Boot COOK Books puMUtaad. Mslloi U nrHop twM Urn Lira knSs oat from Uoa ■“"So JteSrtT 8*0. IN MKMORIAM. Tt» rhythmic beat of a thousand feet Come Boatlnif uj> from the crowded street Whore floes are gaily arching. Ana proud as the day they went away. But crlopled and robbed of their brave array, The boys growa gray are marching. grom the window there, with a heart stale stare Her fair face full of a deep despair. A woman loans lonym.’ly over: Out of the gloom that tills the room % fee re comes the thought of an unknown tomb. Where lie her heart and her lover. —W. H Hereford. BLIND JUSTICE. BY HELEN B. MATHERS. CHAPTER XIV—Continced, Surely no man had ever a nicer calculation to make, or one requiring more judgment or medical knowl edge. than I had then, for though I telt myself morally justified in push ing my experiment and his endurance to the utmost limit, I knew that I was actually guilty of murder if he died under the tost And the skilled intelligence that could have lifted the heavy burden from my shoulders tarried yet, so that twice I sent Stephen in searoh of Dr. Cripps, and1 was now awaiting his second return. With a bitter sense of powerlessness I felt myself reduced to one of two oourses; to restore the man’s poison to him, and with it his life, or to withhold it, and so inflict on him death, and, as a natural consequence, On Judith, also. How long, I asked myself impo tently, mignt a man writhe in unre lieved tortures not to be surpassed by any in Dante's Inferno, and yet retain life in his racked bodyP Would not his resolution by infinitesimal degrees give way, and that confes- j sion spring to hia lips which would Ujt him frem thg pajps q{ purgatory into the £eace of h'£ar£if I hav| since fought that it might have done, had not Stephen heofl present to keep alive in him the jeal ous hatred that devoured him. And to this day I believe that if Judith’s love had been an ordinary fisherman, instead of in the likeness of a young Greek god, the Styrlan would have gone his way with that raging devil uqaroused in him, which even prompted self-slaughter, rather than the surrender of her to one so infin itely his superior. But my blunder in bringing the two men together was on a par with my other mistakes, and, like them, irreclaimable. And I began to think that ray latest achievement in en gaging the Styrian in a duel of wills, out of which, dead or alive, he must emerge victorious, was but the big gest mistake of alL And truly I could not but feel ad miration for this wretch (who put me forcibly in mind of the fabled boy who suffered the fox to knaw at his heart rather than cry out whose heroic absence of sound or word (since once he had taken his resolve) only impressed the more vividly his agony upon me, and yet I sat there watching like a stone, or a devil, with the means of relieving it lying idle to my hand. If he died, would his death be proof presumptive that Seth Treloar died in the same way, not from the effects of the poison but from the cessation of it? Suddenly it struck on me like a chili blow that this man had been my guest, that I had no one to bring forward as witness that he adminis tered the arsenic to himself, that the box was even then in my possession, and, if he were found dead, I should be in precisely the same position-as Judith had filled, and possibly found guilty, as she had been, of a crime I had never committed. True, Dr. Cripps knew the circumstance, but he could only quote my unsupported testimony, which would go for noth ing. And as all these things dawned upon me I said to myself that verily the Styrian’s revenge upon me, as upon Judith, would be complete in deed. A man s guilt—and very often his success—is decided by the way he ! rises to an emergency or quails be- ! fore it, and 1 must confess that I failed before this one, and did not think or do any one of the hundred things that an heroic man would ; have done easily in my place. I just j waited in a sort of sullen stupor for : events to take their course, for Dr Cripps to turn up, or for the man to think better of his suicidal obstinacy, or for some command from my in nermost self that I dared not dis obey, but neither Cripps, nor the Styrian’s repentance, nor my spir itual orders arrived, though some thing else did, with all the swiftness of a genuine catastrophe. A long, convulsive shiver suddenly passed through the Styrlan’s body, then his head fell forward above#the arms clenched across his heart, and he was still. Cold as the dead, I gazed, and all the irrevocableness of my deed rushed upon me. I knew then the sensations of the murderer, whose hand has in one moment substituted death for life, and who stands ap palled at the awful image he has created. Like him, I would have flown from the sight that will never leave him more by night nor by day, but an inward power compelled me, and making my way to the Styrian, I threw myself down l>eside the hud dled up, stirless figure. I touched his hands, they were ice —his heart, aud could find no beat; then an awful sense of his presence, of being alone with this murdered spirit, we two apart, and forever face to face, while heaven and earth fell away, seized me, and with a cry in my ears of “Whore is now thy j brother Abel?” 1 fell downwards ! across the Styrlan's feet. CHAPTER XV. What happened after was such a confused medley of fact and imagine tion, that I find it difficult to do scribe what really happened. I thought I fell headlong down a pit of darkness to have my throat I seized by strong hands, that choked ! my gasping breath as it rose, while i my temples seemed bursting with | the waves of blood that surged up I wards, until a dull stupor crept over I me, in which 1 felt no pain. Sud denly, 1 was dragged out of it by a | vigorous wrench that set me free of j thoso iron fingers, and I was flung | aside, scarce knowing if I were the victim of a realistic dream, or awake, and roughly treated in very | prosaic fashion indeed. But even as I lay there, stunned and stupid, the lightning conscious ness of what I had done flashed through my mind, and I covered my j face with my arms and groaned aloud. Immediately I felt a touch on my shoulder, and Steve's voice sounded in my ear. ‘•Be ’ee much hurt?” he inquirod anxiously; “yon devil war dose ’pon flnishin' 'ee oft when I corned in. What Ivor made ’ee go a’nigst un?” I dragged myself up and saw—O God! a sight that made me the hap piest man alive. For there, the liv idness gone from his face, and the raging agony of his eyes changed to an expression of mocking triumph sat the man of whom I had believed myself to be the murderer for the few most awful moments of my life. “Thank God!" 1 cried, forgetful of Judith, forgetful of everything, save that 1 was not to be followed by the accursed shadow of blood guiltiness for the rest of my days. “Tss,” said Stephen, “’ee may well say that Him have robbed ’ee too—he’m got the box ’ee set so much store ’pon, an’ swallowed some dbe inside,” . I uttered ad exclamation, and looked at the Styrlan. Ay, by artifice he had overcome me. and obtained the mediaine that was his life, and healthy vigor once more flowed through his blood, and showed in his natural fresh color, and for a considerable time, at least, he could defy me. He laughed as our eyes met and a glow of intense triumph overspread his features. “You are beaten,” he said, “con fess it and let me go in peace. You will hardly care to go through the experience of last night again, and I see you have scruples about taking a man's life. I had none whatever about relieving you of yours, and if yonder fellow had not returned—” he paused significantly, and I per fectly understood him. “I should have out my cords with your pocket knife,” he continued coolly, “and walked out Curse that interfering fool," and he darted a savage look at Stephen. “And now you will do nothing of the sort." I said; “it will be easy enough to take that box from you, and I have plenty of time, I can af ford to wait until you tire of this game.” His face fell, and I saw that he bad not expected my stubbornness to hold out any longer. “So be it," he said with affected indifference, “but living you will no more be able to drag a word from me than dead. She alone can make me speak, but if she will not—” he shrugged his shoulders .in comple tion of the sentence. I left him, and went to the open door, for my head was still giddy, and my throat sore from the Styr ian’s grasp. Dawn was breaking in sober guise, a chilly wind blew up from the sea, as I gazed abroad methought the spirit of spring had folded her wings and stolen away in the night, taking with her the warm hopes that ran riot but yesterday in my breast. I felt helpless as a derelict that drifts hither and thither at the mer cy of the waves, for I had no power within to guide myself or others. Yesterday I had regarded myself as master of the situation, to-day I knew that the Styrlan held the key of it. and would indifferently live or die with it in his possession. Involuntarily I took the way that led to Dr. Cripp's house, and arrived at his gate just in time to see him driving up in his shabby cart, look-! ing thoroughly jaded and lagged out. ■ “Well, man,” he said, irascibly, as I opened my lips to speak, “what do you want with me at this hour?’’ “Want with you?” I said indig nantly in my turn, “why. you forget that man, you promised to watch him with me last night, and—” “Promised a fiddlestick.” he said, tnrowing the reins to a Cornish lad who hurried up, “I’ve had other fish to fry. A dozen killed, five and thirty mangled in the worst railway accident we ever had hereabouts, what time do you think I'have had to bother about your Styrian. , And he walked stifily into the house, pausing inside to call back: “I must get some sleep and then I’ll come down. Is the man dead?” “No, but I’ll bet my night has been a worse one than yours ” I thought I heard a fierce grumble in the distance as I moved away, bitterly disappointed, but yet with a wholesome sense of correction that helped to brace . up my unstrung I nerves. i set myself resolutely to walk, and so transfer my trouble of mind to faticrue of" muscles, and soon felt the desired effect; my mind grew calm, the strain upon me relaxed, I regarded the night and its events dispassionately, asking myself in what better way I could have acted, and whether indeed I had not been imposed upon and hoaxed by a con summate actor. But no, the Styrian’s sufferings had been very real, and I could not but believe that, though he so cleverly simulated death as to 1 out-match me, yet that death itself i trod hard on the heels of bis cow,-1 / terfeit, and only by a hair's breadth had I escaped a crime. It was, I thought, natural enough that he should try to take tho life ot a man who had in cold blood almost taken his, and I bore him no malloe, and possibly thought that It would have been nobody's loss, nor mine either, it he had. And then my thoughts turned to Judith, and ot how, through the long night, life must have bockoned her with alluring linger, bidding her turn away from death and with Stephen to tultill her allotted span, and to find peace, ay, and even hap* piness, as time slowly blotted out the past. But alasl tor Judith, she was no time server, no trader in love, but one who threw down her one queen ly gltt in all its integrity and had no power to take from or add to It more. CHAPTER XVI. I could not face the house and my triumphant nrisonor, and remained abroad till I saw Dr. Crlpns’ rotund person climbing tho path, far more rapidly, too, than usual, as I thought Even at the distance I was, 1 por oeived a beaming cheerfulness in his broad face that distinctly irritated me. “It is all very well for you," I growled to myself, “who have been doing your duty nobly all night, and since slept like a top for some hours, and eaten a good breakfast, but I've done none of these things, and boon made a fool of into the bargain. ’’ When a few hundred yards distant he spied me. and brandished in the air something that looked yellow or pink, shouting out “Hurrah!" at the same time, as loudly as his scarcity of breath would permit, “I Wondered w&at he found to hurrah at, as I advanced to meet him, but my ill-humor gave way to rapture as he shouted out, “Judith is saved, man, saved! Read this, and this," and h? thrust several tel egraphfo sheets into my hand. ••There’s a good fellow for you," he said, “only got my letter at 8, answer here by 9, and a boy has walked two miles with it from the telegraphic office. Evidently deeply interested, and thinks me a fool, of Course, but bow’s a poor devil in the desert to keep up with all the new discoveries in town.” The message—it was a long one— ran tnus: “In 1875, at the forty-eighth an nual meeting of the German society of naturalists and ' physicians, which was held at Gratz, Or. Knapp, prac tising in Styria, introduced two male arsenlo eaters to the assembly. One of these men consumed in their presence above six grains of white arsenic—that is, enough to poison three men — without suffering the slightest incon venience: he stated he had been ac customed to this sort of thing for years, and that it was a practice common among ox-herds and shep herds in fcjtyrla. One peculiarity of arsenic eating is this, that, when a man has once begun to indulge in it. he must oontlnue to indulge, for, if he ceases, the arsenic in his system poisons him, or, as it is popularly expressed, the last dose kills him. Indeed, the arsenic eater must not only continue in his indulgence, he must also increase the quantity of the drug, so that it is extremely dif ficult to stop the habit, for, as sud den cessation causes death, the gradual cessation produces suoh a terrible heart-gnawing, that it may probably be said that no genuine arsenic eater ever ceased to eat arse nio while life lasted. The fact is unprecedented in the annals of toxic ology; and though incredible, it is true that our bodies, which may be annihilated with two grains of a white powder, may be so far changed as to require, nay, even crave for, a dose of this same poison. In Styria this arsenic poison goes by the name of 'Henri.’ Full medical report fol lows by post” [TO BE CONTINUED. J Help for Malarial Neighborhoods. People who are unfortunate enough to live in damp houses, particularly near undrained land, are apt to think there is no help for them save in re moval. They are mistaken. Suc cessful experiments have shown that it is quite possible to materially im prove the atmosphere in such neigh borhoods in a very simple manner— by the planting of the laurel and the sunflower. The laurel gives off an abundance of ozone, while the “soul ful eyed” sunflower is potent in destroying the malarial condition. These two, if planted on ‘the most restricted scale in a garden close to the house will be found to speedily Increase the dryness and salubrity of the atmosphere, and rheumatism, if it does not entirely become a memory of the past, will be largely alleviated ' The Banker’s Hon. When Mr. Goscheh was chancel lot of the exchequer and all alive with his scheme for the introduction of one-pound notes.be met Mr. ■•Kughie" Drummond at dinner one evening. “Hughie” was introduced as a bank er's son and a member of the stock exchange, and Mr. Goscben at once began to question him as to what that institution thought of his idea of the paper money. “Oh, we don’t think much of it,” replied Mr. “Hughie." “Indeed, and why not, pray P” asked Mr. Goschen, somewhat taken aback. “Well, you see, you can toss with a sovereign, but a flimsy is no good to anybody.”— Argonaut Had Him Tkm Lawyer—When were you born? Witness—I can’t tell you. You told me a while ago that I must only say what I knew myself, and not what I heard other people say. I didn't look at the almanac when 1 was born.—Texas Siftings Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. & Govt Report NT "v;r,; Bakins Powder ‘ 1 -1 4B&owmv PURE I si Tramp* mmI Their Sign** Jim Ward, who signs himsel^*Ghiof,” writes to the Troy Times: I have just returned to your oil after a tour of exploration down South lasting several months, and reading in your paper an artiole on tramp* and their marks, I desire to be allowed, as an old veteran of that "honorable” body known as "the tramp organisation,” to correct a few mistakes. I claim that the tramps were the originators of the myatlo marks which nave so frequently adorned fences, gate posts and doors, although it is possible that soap agents—mem bers of another branoh of the tramp organisation—have since adopted these marks for business purposes. When tramping was good—and that waa some years ago—it was understood by us that all houses where the inmates were good for food, olothing or money were to be marked in order to give us little trou ble when we wanted anything. Where only a meal oould be obtained, this fact was indicated by a small square; where a fellow would get the grand bounce an X expressed it, and for olothing he was direoted by XX. Money house* were marked t; a house where the inmates were friendly, but the dog unfriendly, was mttked by l great big D. But at the present day tramps are not guided by these marks, as there are few houses where tramps are regularly fed. The tramp bore is now played out, but whatever may be said against the tramp it oannot be denied that he has made his mark in this world. A (tad Death. A minister van summoned to the bed aide of a dying twin. Tlie man who lay, gradually obeying the grave summons, gasped and groaned. The minister moved to the bedside and held the hand of the victim. The wife, wild with grief, sank to the floor. “My friend,” said the minister, “you are a man whose prosperous condition in tliia life has allowed you much time tor devotional exercises. Your dear lit tle children, your wife informs me, are visiting relatives. They will not see their father die. How many children haveyou ?" “Thirteen,” gasped the dying man. “ I had no idea that yon nod so many. Poor little ones. Your poor wife looks as though she will die. Judging from your number of children I should think that you had been married more than cnee. How many wives has the good Lord granted you ?’* “ Fifteen," groaned the man. “ Surely not so many,” said the min ister. “ Think of this matter seriously. How many timos have you been mar ried?” “Fourteen,” and the victim fell book exhausted. , “ Are you willing to die?” asked the minister, after a pause. c “ Move three up, six down and eight to the left 1” “ Are you prepared to share the glo rious territory of Abraham’s bosom ?" “ Move ten up 1” “Have you made your peace with your Savior?” “Simplest thing in the world—move nine down 1” “ Take your mind from the confused arithmetic of the world and place it on heaven's holy algebra. Are you willing to stand before the great throne?” “ Three.” “ Can you go fearlessly V “Eleven.” “ After life’s desperate struggle, what have you accomplished ?” “Thirteen, fifteen, fourteen,” and the man was dead.—Little Mock Gazette. DOES IT PAY TO THIN GOBNT It iiu been urged by some that it is best to plant many more kernels than are wanted for a stand, then thinning the corn when 'of proper size, say six to fourteen inches high, being careful to remove the weaker stalks. In order to compare the results of this method with that of planting only so many ker nels as will give the desired number of stalks per acre without thinning, the Ohio university conducted the follow ing experiment: Four-fifths of an acre of land from which the soil had been removed some years previous for mak ing brick, was measured and divided into four equal parts. A strip of uniform width across the plats was laid out, giving an equal amount in each plat. Melilotus or sweet clover was grown on the land the four seasons of 1888 to 1891 inclu sive. The melilotus was not cut, but was allowed to go down each year and re-seed the land. A crop of wheat was cut from this land in 1893. Aside from any effect which the melilotus may have had the land was practically uni form in quality and condition. Two plats were planted at the rate of one grain per foot in the rows. The seed was excellent and almost every grain grew. These plats were not thinned. Two plats were planted at the rate of three grains per foot in the rows, and were thinned to practically the same number of stalks per acre as were then on the plats not thinned. The thin ning was done July 7, just four weeks after planting, and the corn ranged from one to two feet high. The plats which were thinned yielded 690 pounds of ear corn, while those which were not thinned yielded 813 pounds, a decrease of 14 per cent, due to the thinning. This was an exceptionally dry season. The thinning probably caused more in jury than would ordinarily result Indisputable. Why spend 81 for a bottle of medicine when one box of Beecham’s pills, costing only 35 cents, (annual sale exceeds 6,000,000 boxes) will cure most diseases? This Is be cause constipation is the cause of most ail ments and Beecham's pills cure constipa tion. A valuable book of knowledge mailed free, on request, by B. F. Allen Co., 866 Ca nal St., New York. Caupobxia has a perpetual skating pond. There is a lake on the Haw Tooth mountain, at an altitude of 12,000 feet, which is constantly frozen. The English language is rich in syn onymous terms, A mechanic in scorch of work is "out of a job;" a clerk in the same predicament is “ disengaged,” and a professional man similarly placed is “ at leisure,” The mechanic gets work, the clerk “ connects ” himself with some establishment, and the professional i " resumes " practice. Tbs Syoran and Ot'enberg railway bridge across the river Volga, Russia, which is just finished, cost |fi|o00,000, Where the bridge is built the river is more than a mile wide. The fourteen piers which support the girders are 100 feet above the main level of the waters and the girders ore 804 feet long and SO feet wide, __ SfS'jf Kiri'* Clover scoot, Hood purifier,five* frtwhneMendoleMPOOH The irreat r-„ totheComplexiou end cures CouatipaUou. t5ti.JDo.4L Obxbt Protbctobb. —One of the best obeet protectors on a cold, blustering day, when one is riding, is a newspa per, folded so as to have three or four thicknesses, and placed over the chest and buttoned unaer tLe overcoat, cloak or sacque. OmS Voa|k Balaam i -irilS I, tbs oldest and last. It will brook so a Col UP than anythin! 00. It to always rnuablo. aColdooUm fria A man OS years old has been fonnd is Harrington, Me., who has been ontof. the State only onoe, has been on a steamboat only once, and never was in a city until be visited Portland, which he "reckoned wasn't much of-a place tot farms.” _ :;vv ■ 0 r'm. « Hbnnr'i Nagle Corh Halvas9* Warranted u» our* or tnou*y rutunded. Am* yo*f inifff ikt for it. Prlc* 15 uunts. The Marquis of Bute intends to ereel a Roman Oatholie monastery for English monks on his property in Jerusalem, and plans for an oratory have been pre pared. the building to cost $20,000. O' r s Perfectly at Hama Tbs Irrigated lands of Idaho pomace that peculiar qualification which la perfectly adapted to the raising ef' apples, apricots, peaches, cherries, pears, plums grapes prunes hops, alfalfa, corn and«potatoes which always find a ready market and bring good price. You can't overstock the United Btatee with these commodities We’ll tend our advertising matter on application E L. Lomax, G. P. 4T. 4., Omaha, Neb, ■! Whkn Preauieut Aonooin was i a ted in 1866, his family being left in needy dreumttanoes, the late Marshall O. Roberta quietly sent Mrs. Lincoln $10,000 as his contribution toward a proposed fund of $100,000. ram very Tuim for children extracts—ragar-coatad. dew la a con-active, a laxative. —Doctor Horan PlMMQt Peltate. They’re to tiny, oo Nifljr taken, in the war they not — no dUn •net, no unplaae Won afterword, .They’re made tf 'nothing bit re fined and ooneen , troted vegetable One of then at • regulator, a gratia - $ m ■ & nun toumi unci w niKnnw « indigestion, take one of these littlePeUetai ■ They go right to the (pot They absolutely and permanently mm< 1 * A Constipation, Sour Stomach, Dirtiness, Blok or Bilious Headaches, and every derange ment of the liver, (tomach, and bowel* i i Almoet never doee Dr. Sage'e Catarrh ,!S Remedy fail to cure the very wont oaeti > of chronic Catarrh. You cun judge of the chances of it from the mature’ offer. They!! guarantee it in every earn. . 4 Do yon Travel? YES! ■W M 1 -v BIG FOUR ROUTE BEST LINE EAST M :W, rX:M Mountains, bakes and Seashore* Vestibule trains to New York and Boston*.. ;3 AIK roa TICKETS YU THE BIG FOUR ROUTE a. o. McCormick, d. b maktib, fo**- IMh n***c*r. O**. Pu*. **d T. a., CINCINNATI m takearest to VIA THE GO EAST Luce Shore Route AMERICA’S BEST RAILWAY. •it « HSIT SOME ol th* DELIGHT PUL MOUNT. V AIN. LAKE *r SEA SHORE RESORTS *f th* EAST. A PULL UST *1 WHICH WITH ROUTES AND RATES WILL BE FURNISHED ON APPLICATION. SEND lOo. IH STAMPS or sllvar for >•*«• tiful Uths-Wttw Color Vlow of tk* “ FAMOUS EXPOSITION PLY IN,** th* foot** t Ion* dl»t«Tic* trola «Yor C. K. WILBER, West. P. A* ■A H. N. |J.. Own ha—VS. IBM. k Wh* siawsmii AuvsrUhsmsuis AssutAoo m > thU raw.