?ARM DEPARTMENT. USEFUL INFORMATION FOR AMERICAN FARMERS. etentlQe Method! of Managing the | Modern Form and Unrden—Diva I Stock, Foultry, Dairy, Apiary aod 1 Orchard. Potatoes Made Itlch by [A correspon lent of the Inter Ocean, riting from Waupaca, Wis., says: [The man who is “too poor to eat po toes’’ is not a* great a curiosity as was once reputed to he. Potatoes something of a 1 usury at 98 cents ashel while flour is from 83 to $5 a pel, and a poor man can better af« to eat the white bread of aristoc ' than to tnrn to the poor food of and and try to live on a potato There is one small section of consin whieh might be termed the kto patch of the state. This potato ch takes in the greater part of Jupaca and Portage counties, where some years the light sandy soil tzled the farmers as to how they Ire to get a paying crop from it. hoaf. war a failura and so wan n.nrn. it when the farmers began to grow tatoes they began to lift their ortgages and cultivate bank ac mnts. In the whole state of Wis insin they raise 11,000,000 bushels of otatoes and 5,000,000 bushels are own here in this sandy potato patch, ne year after another these have 'ought 40 cents a bushel delivered at ;e warehouses in Waupaca, Stevens >int, Plainfield, and a dozen other sail railroad stations, so that they ive been worth 82,000,000. There ere 3,500 car loads, or 1,350,000 ishels of potatoes shipped from Wau ica alone last year, about 1,000 car ads from Plainfield, 800 from Scan navia, and in all 8,000 car loads from iis potato district, which is forty tiles long and twenty miles wide, 'his year it is estimated that the ship lents will reach 10,000 car loads, and he crop will be worth something uore than $3,000,000. The cultivation of 5,000,000 bushels if potatoes has made that the princi isl business of Waupaca. The town >as no manufacturing, but the two lanks of the place in the winter of 8t»3 and ’93 paid out $1,350,000 to the 'armers who were potato growers, uast year the crop was short, and the Doney paid out by the Waupaci banks ell below $1,000,000. This year the rop planted is large and it is in fine ondition at present, so that they hope or a big crop, but fear that the prices rill be lower than they have been for many years, and that the net profits will be correspondingly lower. That fche farmers have made money in this business is very apparent to any one traveling about the country and not ing the farm houses and barns and the general air of prosperity. There are no great potato plantations. Few of the farmers have more than twenty acres in potatoes, while their farms run from eighty to ICO acres. They have learned that it pays to fertilize and pre pare their land especially for this crop. They put in a crop of potatoes one yeait follow that with a crop of oats and clover the next year, and the third year plow the clover under to fertilize the soil for another potato crop. By alternating the crops and moving the potato patch from one part of the farm to another each year they have not only produced big crops of potatoes but have kept their land in excellent condition and better ferti lized each year. They regard 100 bush els to the acre as an average crop and from twenty acres expect to raise 3,000 bushels, which will pay them from $800 to $1,000 lor their crop. It does not require much help to cultivate twenty acres of potatoes and Ihe farmer who has one or two boys can attend the potato patch as well as the corn fields and look after other gen eral farming. The children can help keep off the potato bugs by sprinkling the vines with paris green, and the potatoes become the money crop of the farm. They have prospered and the banks of Waupaca have an average of $300,000 in farmers’ deposits Nearly all these farmers started in poor and had to mortgage their land. They began this industry about twenty years ago in a small way, and those who engaged in it prospered so that others followed their example. The mortgages have been lifted from the farms, new houses and larger barns built, potato warehouses and cellars nreDared. so as to enable the farmers to hold their crops for a winter or spring market, and potato has become king in Waupaca county. It sustains farmers, bankers and business in half a dozen small citiea It gives the drug* gists a big business in paris green, ana this year those in Waupaca expect to sell 100,000 pounds oi this poison, which will be fed to the potato bugs. They ship paris green into this city by the car load and sell it by the bushel. In the winter season the potato takes possession of the market and makes business for buyers, shippers, ware* housemen, the railroads, and the speculators. The buying and selling of 1,250,uOO bushels of potatoes in a small city of 2,500 population gives work to many people. It puts more than a million dollars in circulation and gives business to the railroads. The Burbank is the prime favorite and constitutes about half the crop. It is a good-sized potato, firm, without deep eyes, and is considered the most reliable, as it is also the best selling potato in the market The Beauty of Hebron comes next and after that the Bose and the Peerless. The po 1 ato has made fertile farms, rich farm ers, farmers who have retired on a competence and have moved to town to educate their children, sustained bankers, general business, and two railroads that run through this potato patch. i BujtIbb ~inn From the Farmers' Review; The article from the pen of C. R. WoodV.a in your last issue was a most interest* mg' one, giving as It did so many ex* cellent “pointers” relative to the buy* ing of sound horses. There are, how ever, some points not touched upon in that article that it would be well to remember. If the reader will refer to Dr. Wood’s article (page 374, June 13), he will see that the propel examination of a horse commences at the head as described, and search is or should bs made for the diseases, blemishes, etc., mentioned. Taking as correct the statements made by Dr. Wood, the writer will simply add some points omitted, commencing at the head and running over the body. Com mencing at the head never forget to closely examine the mouth, noting the horse's eye and observing whether he is a “cribber” or “parrot mouthed,” also catch a whiff of his breath and note whether it is sweet or not; foul breath is not uncommon and suggests a decayed tooth, chronic catarrh, etc. The mouth, too, is sometimes so tender that the horse is a bad Ano tn 1*1 irn■ /ah incta nn.l fVin o nrrlaa may be lacerated or calloused or the bone injured in the lower jaw at the seat where the bit presses. As to the eye, recollect that wrinkled eye brows are suspicious, as are very prominent or depressed eyes; the wrinkles are usually the relic of periodic ophthalmia. Examine the nostrils for discharge or ulcers; it is a mistake to purchase a horse that is running at the nose. Pass the huger into the false nostril to see that no tumor is present. Coming to the shoulder the farmer should make a very thorough examination as“atrophy of the muscles,'’ “sweeny” is not the only trouble of that region. The shoulders should be free from sores, abraded places, old callouses, deep seated abscesses or fribroid tumors, and all of these are easily discovered. Now as to the feet. It is not alone necessary that the foot should be free from the troubles set down by Dr. Wood. It should be sound in texture and conformation, free from abnormal growths following founder, should be natural in condition and shape, not opened out at the heels nor contracted at the point. In examining for sound ness, too, the professional man will in passing his hand down the leg from knee to hoof usually be able to detect whether the horse has been “un nerved” or not, and is surely an import ant point to decide; corns should not be forgotten when examining a foot, coming to the hind quarters, never ne glect to examine the scrotum of geld ings as quite frequently horses have a running sore and tumor, due to care less castration; we refer to what is technically termed “schirrous cord,” which certainly renders a horse un sound. If the animal examined be a mare, see that she is not torn from vulva to anus i. e. a “gill flirt,” for mares so lacerated are most unpleas ant animals to work. In examining the region of the back remember to look for curb, which in all horses ex pected to haul heavy loads is a serious defect; thoroughpin, too, is practic ally incurable and easily detected. Occult spavin mentioned by Dr. Wood, can not be detected by farmers; but they can at once recognize “mallen ders” and “sallenders,” “grease” and “grease heel,” and tell whether or not a horse interferes, either in front or behind. Taken in conjunction with Dr. Wood’s remarks the foregoing will, we trust, prove useful to farmer in detecting unsoundness and defects in horsea—V. 8., Cook County, 111. Electricity vs. Horsea* A party who writes a good deal un der the nom de plume of “St George,” has compiled some interesting sta tistics regarding the number of horses which have been displaced by elec tricity and the bicycle. He reasons from his figures that the sudden trans formation of travel from the horse to the electric car, and from the buggy to the bicycle, has had a great deal to do in precipitating the financial disas ter in this country. It will be sur prising to many people to know, he says, that these modifications in travel have thrown out of employment twenty-four horses to every 1,000 in habitants. That is, the number of horses in the United States which , have lost jobs on account of the intro duction of the electric car and bicycle amounts to more than 1,000,000. It required $100,000,000 a year to buy oat*, corn, hay and bedding for these horses, and $12,000,000 to shoe them, and $12,000,000 for harness and repair* inf; harness. It required 200,000 men to groom and drive them, and to feed and hire this army of men required an annual expenditure of $73,000,000; then there was an outlay of $30,000, 000 a year to keep up the supply of horses. The $100,000,000 worth of oats, corn and hay that have not been consumed has made a surplus, and con sequently a shrinkage in value in these products in the United States to the amount of $30,000,000. The losa in the sale of buggies, carriages and other vehicles is probably $5,000,000 a year, lie next gives a statement as to the amount of money that has been taken from the circulation on account of sudden change in the methods of travel, and estimates that this condi tion of things has been going on for five years. One million horses fed, each a year $100, $500,000,000; $12 for shoeing each horse a > year for five years, $00,000,000; $12 for each pair of harness a year for five years, $60,000, 000; 200.000 men at $365 a man for five years, $365,000,000; $30,000,000 a year for purchasing horses for five years, $150,000,000; shrinkage in pro vender a year, $30,000,000, for five years, $150,000,000; value of horse stock, tal, *1,285,000,00a REPUBLICAN MATTERS OUR DICTATORS. Southern Democrats lltnt on Dnlrujrlni Dullness In the North nml Went. Democratic comments call atten tion to the fact that the final recon struction of the tariff bid is in trusted to a conference committee of which almost every Democratic mem ber is from the South. But com plaint is out of place. It has been a sectional measure from the start, aimed at Northern industries and Northern capital, and intended to cripple the prosperity and growth of the Northern states. In the house Messrs. Wilson of West Virginia, Bieeklnridge of Arkansas, MoMillln of Tennessee and Turner of (leorgia are appointed, and in the sonato Messrs. Voorhees of Indiana, Jones of Arkansas, Vest of Missouri and Harris of Tennessee. Those eight men rnuko the tariff, and Mr. Voor hees, who has been a mere dummy wuairiuuu i/uruuguuut. not evon UOiO to control his own vote or trusted with charge of tho bill, is the only one of the eight from a Northern state. • Practically the same men have dic tated all tho changes made in either house, says tho New York Tribune. Framed by Southern men tho bill has been shaped at every point to serve the interests of that section. Its constant discrimination agaiust Northern, and in fuvor of Southern, interests, has been so outrageously sectional that many Democrats have indignantly protested, but to no purpose. Tho South is in the saddle, and controls the Democratic caucus; it elected Speaker Crisp, of Georgia; dictated committee appointments in the houso, and gave nearly all Im portant business to the control of Southern men. In the senate the caucus was controlled by Southern senators, and framed the committees with the same sectionalism. The bill of sale and surrender is a South ern product Exactly as in old plantation days, the crack of the overseers’ lash drives Northern doughfaces to vote as the South di rects. Out of 12,000,003 votes cast at tho last presidential election only 3,403, 000 were cast in all the sixteen Southern states—a little more than a quarter. Northern states east of Indiana cast 4,400,003 votes in the same election, and have notning to do with framing the one measure of all others which most seriously af fects their industry. Other Northern states west of Ohio cast 4,200,000 votes in the same election, and their only part in shaping the bill has been the pitiable incapacity of Voor hees. That he docs not represent his own state the votes cast this year provo beyond question, and iio does not represent his own declared convictions early in the session. He it was who vociferated that ho would never—no, never—consent to grant a protective duty for the sugar monopolists, and but fo- his vote in favor of it the surrender to the sugar trust could not have been re ported, nor could it have passed the senate. With less stillness of principle and manhood than a wet dish rag, this one senator is the sole senator or representative to stand for Northern Democracy in the fram ing of the tariff bill. Have the 3,400,000 votes of the South a natural and inherent righ't to rule the 8,603,033 votes of the North? is that Democratic doctrine now, as it was in the days when Southern chivalry sneered at ••Northern mudsills and greasy me chanics”? Or do the Southorn brig adiers consider that the triumphant Confederacy has conquered the right to make laws for two great sections, each casting about a million more votes than tho South? It is true that Northern men of any party may well thank their stars if they are not in any way responsible for a bill so disgraceful, so foul with corrup tion, and so sure to bring disaster upon its authors. But when dough face Democrats of the North vote for and pass a bill which Southern sec tionalism dictates, millions will re member how clearly it was predicted in 1892 that a victory for Mr. Cleve land’s party would subject all North ern industries and interests to tho absolute dictation of a vindictive and sectional South. Tho men thought, the prediction prompted by frantic partisanship. Now they find that the partisan fanaticism and the shameless sectionalism are both on the Southern side. This one trial of Southern dicta tion ought to last for half a century. The insolent domination of sectional chivalry in the fifties taught North ern mudsills what Democratic dough faces were, and exiled the Democracy from power for thirty-two years. This time the frightful reverses in business, and the disasters to indus try, and the sufferings and the losses of labor, have driven the lesson deeper, and the mechanics of 1894 ] have roason to remember even j longer than their fathers of 1860. ' Oh, Tammany, fewest Tammany. Thai was a sweet message which the agent of the So.id South deliv ered to the criminal organization of Tammany in its Wigwam on the Fourth of July. We know not, we ask not, if guilt's In thy heart, We know that wc love the? whatever thou art Beautiful! No matter how guilty the st arlet woman of Tainmany may be the Democracy of the South is ready to fo-givo and embrace. Tam many is useful to the Solid South. And the poor, stricken dear, by spe cial request, rests on the bosom of Dixie.—N. Y. Advertiser. Coming Soon. The time will come when Mr. Cleveland and other prominent Dem ocrats will be held responsible for their incendiary utterances in the last campaign. They preached the .V doctrine of discontent and taught workingmen to boliove that manu* faotui'ors were their enomics. Time they arrayed olass'against class, and a great deal of the trouble whioh has prevailed in different parts of tho country is tho legitimate result of this antagonism.—Denver Republican. ■ A WILP TEAM. Mis Cleveland's Vain llforts to Handle Ills Clinotiu Party. Mr. Harrison proved to be a prophet in tho declaration that Mr. Cleveland would have a wild team to handlo during his administration. Mr. Cleveland has held tho reins for over a year, and his driving has been as disastrous as that of tho am* bitiousyouth who undertook to guide the horses of Hallos. Ho has brought ruin alike upon his administration and upon tho country. It is not surprising. There are many discordant elements in the llomiiAnnt l/l nnntif nn>l 4 It In., lr 1VIH Cleveland assumed was that of keep ing: all these elements in harmony with one anothor. He was compelled to try to reconcile tho half Populist spirit in some of tho Democrats of the Southwest with tho cold and selfish feeling1 which prompts tho Democrats of New York and other far Kastorn states. With the latter he has sympathized and this has made him do things that have been ob noxious to the Democrats of the re mainder of tho country. Hut at the same time he has tried to satisfy the latter, and whenever ho has made that attempt ho has brought down upon himself the wrath of tho New Yorkers. In regard to tho money question, tho two groat sections of tho Dem ocracy differ in the way above men tioned. In regard to the tariff there is moro seeming harmony. But it Is on the surface only. As a matter of fact tho Democrats do not themselves know what they want in tho way of tariff legislation, says the Denver Republican Some of them are out and nut free tradars, while others are genuine protectionists. Thoso elements may agree during a cam paign, but when it comos to legisla tion they are wide apart. This dif ference has been one of tho sources of trouble in the attempt to pass the tariff bill, and it has added greatly to Mr. Cleveland’s difficulties. But what more than anything else makes it difficult for Mr. Cleveland to drive his wild team is the fact that the Democratic party is without a definite purpose or policy. It is a party of principle only to the extent that a declaration of principles aids it in getting offices. It is not a party of ideas. There is nothing aggres sive about it, and when it is con fronted with the duty of conducting the government, it is unahio to do anything, for the reason that it does not know what it wants. Mr. Clove lands horses are not broken to har ness. He cannot drive them, becauso in the first place ho himself is not an experienced driver, and, in the sec ond, because they have not been trainea to pull together. It will be well for the country when both driver and team are discharged. The Sugar-Cored Congress. How de ir to our hearts is our Democratic con toss As hopeless inaction presents It to view: The bill o( poor WlLon, the deep tangled tariff And every mad pledge that their lunacy knew. The wide spread depression, the mills that closed by It, The rock of free silver where great Grover fell They've bustod our count ry. no use to deny it, And darn the old party, It's busted as well This G Cleveland congress. This Queen Lilly congress, This wild free trade congress We all love so well Their mois-covercd pledges we no longer treasure, For often at noon when out hunting a job We find that instead of the corn they had promised. They've given ijis nothing—not even a cob. How ardent we've cussed'em with Ups over flowing With the sulphurous blessings as great swear words fell. The emblems of hunger, free trade and free sil ver. Are sounding In sorrow the workin. man's knell. This hank breaking congress, This mill closing congress, This starvation congress We all love so well. How swoet from their eloquent lips to receive it. “Cursed tariff protection no longer uphold." We listened and voted our dinner palls empty. The factories silent, the furnaces cold. And now far removed from our lost situations, The tear of regret doth intrusively swell, We yearn for Republican administrations, And sigh for the congress that served us so well. This fifty-third congress. This Democratic congress, This sugar-cured congress. We wish was in—well —Clermount Courier The Democratic IncubiiH. * In one year of reciprocity our ex-, ports to Cuba were nearly doubled,! but the hostility of the party in power to that policy has already caused the introduction into the Spanish courts of a bill imposing an ad valorem duty of twenty-four per cent upon all products imported from the United States. The Demo cratic efforts to extend our trade are mush like those of the man who sawod off the tree under the bough on which be sat. In on the Groti'itl Floor. The collar and cull schedule sur vives “unhurt amid the war of ele ments, the wreck of matter and the crush of worlds.” and the junior sen ator from New York is not to be ex pected to arraign his party for what it hasn’t done. Mr. Murphy is one of those Democrats who view the desertion of the Chicago plat form with equanimity. The Scientific American has figureo it out that the energy- exerted b / a railroad train traveling seventy-five miles an hour is nearly twice that of a 2,000-pound shot fired from a lOJ-ton Armstrong gun. Highest of all in leavening strength.—Utoot 0.8. Got, Food loport. Baking Powder ABSOLUTELY pure Economy requires that in every receipt calling 4 for baking powder the Royal shall be used. It will go further and make the food lighter, sweeter* of finer flavor, more digestible and wholesome. | ROYAL BAKING POWDER 00., 10# WALL BT., NEW YORK. Probably Not. Old*Mr. Williams wns subject to fits of what he cnllccl ‘•righteous anger” on slight provocation, and at such times, as he was naturally talkative, his tonguo often ran away with him. “There's Square l’oters’ son," he roared to his gentle little wife. "Wuth less feller t’ bo wrltln books about fur rin lands 'stid o' stayin' t' hum, whnr ho b'longs. The square showed me one o' his books t'other day—all about Spain ’twas; bound in red silk and sprinkled thick with pieters. ‘Edition do hooks,’ the square called it, an' 1 reckon there’s more looks than sense in it, true enough.” “I tell ye what ’tis.” concluded Mr. Williams, roaring still louder as his wife remained silent. “I ain't got no opinion o’ sech goin's on. Eight dol lars wns the price o’ that book, an’ I wouldn’t buy it. Why," said the old man, bringing his hand down on the urm of his chair, “I wouldn’t buy that book if I was starvin’ I No, sir!”— Youth's Companion. On the Sate Side. Evorybt dy known this 1» n good place to lie, but everybody does not take mousuros to be thoro. An efficient iirovontlvo place* ns on the sufo side of Incipient disease, and there Is no one more reliable than Hostet ler’s Stomach Bitters In cases where the kid neys arc Inactive, which Is but the prelimi nary to various destru tlve maladies, which disregarded havo a fatal termination. Bright's disease, diabetes, dropsy, (edema, are but the outgrowths of neglected Inaction of the kidneys and bladder. They should be checked nt the outset with tho Bitters, which will prevent tlielr progress by arous ing the renal organs to uctlvlty, and thus place those who resort to this saving medi cine on the safe side. This preservative of safety ulsoconouursconstlpuilon, liver com plaint, mulurlul fever, nervousness and dys pepsia. _ Boys and Girls. Dr. J. A. Gilbert of the Yale psyco logical laboratory, has just completed some tests regarding the mental and physical developments of the pupils of the New Haven public schools, show ing that boys are more sensitive to weight discriminations, that girls can tell the difference in color shades bet ter than boys, and that boys can think quicker than the other sex. To Clennse the System Effectually yet gently, when costive or bilious, or when the blood is impure or sluggish, to permanently cure habitual constipation, to awaken the kidneys and liver to a healthy activity without irritating or weakening them, to dispel headaches, colds or fevers use Syrup of Figs. How Bloch It Cost Him. ‘Briggs—I see you had your picture in the Spouter this week. Have to pay anything for it? Griggs—The editor wanted me to pay 850, but I refused. Then he wanted me to take 100 copies, but 1 wouldn’t do that. Brigs—What did you do? Griggs—I lent him 91.—New York Herald. Hall’s Catarrh Core j Is taken internally, Price, 75c. If we take Egypt’s cattle we will have to I have her shepherds. Were Too Ever South In Summer? It is no hotter in Tennessee, Alabama or Georgia than here, and it is positively de lightful on the Gulf Coast of Mississippi and West Florida. If you are looking for a location in the south go down now and see for yourself. The Louisville & Nash ville railroad and connections will sell tickets to all points south for trains of Aug. 7 at one fare round trip. Ask your ticket agent about it, and if he cannot sell you excursion tickets write to C. P. Atmore, general passenger agent, Louisville, Kr. “ Is the young man safe?" Not while his father is taking crooked steps. The Famous Flathead Talley. • Investors and home seekers should inves tigate the chances for making homes and money in Western Montana, with its fertile farming lands, surrounded and interlaced with line forests, large rivers and lakes, and mines of precious metals, iron and coal. Splendid climate and scenery. No blizzards and cyclones. Kalispell is county seat and headquarters of Great Northern Railway; has a,300 people, Waterworks, Electric Lights, Mills, etc. For printed matter and information address, C. £. Coxbap, Kalis pcll, Mont. PIERCE A CORE to every nervous, delicate woman, suffering from ‘‘female complaint,” irregularity, or weakness. In every exhausted condition of the female system. Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is an invigorating restorative tonic, fitted to the needs of nursing mothers, and women approaching confinement. South Bend, Paciflc Co., fToth. Dm B. V. Franca, Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sir—I began tak tup jour ruvuruu rre ■oription” the first month of pregnancy, and have continued taking It since confinement. I did not experience tbo nausea or any ot the ali ments due to pregnan cy, after I began taking ■your “Prescription.” I was only in labor a short time, and the physician Mm. Bakcb. usually well.. We think it (need me ■ greet deal of euf fering. I wet troubled a great deal with leu oorrbeaalao, and It haa done a world of good for me. A Land of KxtmVHffnnrr. Every one has heard that mahogany "sleepers," as the English contractors call railroad ties, arc used very largely In Mexico, but I don't beliave that many people realize that on one of the lines the ties are of ebony, and that a low errade of silvor ore Is absolutely used for ballast. Of course the ex planation is that the ore did not pay to work, but this does not remove the ex pression of lavish extravagance which the first glance at this luxurious road bed creates. More remarkable still, perhaps, is the beauty of some of the marble used in bridge construction. Mexico is a counntry of magnificent surprises and untold wealth, and amen sees more wusted material on a day's journey than seotns to be within the range of possibility.—St. Louis Ulobe Democrat. Karl's Clover Hoot Tea, Tn«|rr*»«t. PHmhI purlfUr.K I vow frcihlimniiitnil rl*n.rn*tfc tk> Complexion uml vurvaConMlipullou* uruiiin iiupreMioit. We nre all tatooed in our cradleii with the beliefa of our tribes. The record ■nay seem superficial, but It is indeil* ble. You cannot educate a man wholly out of the superstitious fears which were implanted In his Imagination, no matter how utterly his reason may re ject them.—O. W. Holmes. Valley, Plain and Pealc, i t An art book of North western scenes, from photogruphs, over 100 vlows, with descriptive matter, elegantly printed, sent with other publications of much interest to investors und homoscokers, for 10 cents in postuge. Equal to gift books sold for a dollar, with much less information and beauty. Address t\ I. WaiTKsr, O. P. St T. A., Great Northern Hullway, St. Paul, Minn.___ Society is what people are when they know they are watched. The American Medical College association at its last meeting passed a resolution adopting the four years graded course. Wo are pleased to And that our own Omaha Medical college is a member of this okho.lo tion and had anticipated this move by de ciding on four years requirements to com mence in the season of 'ifo-'llri. This college is making rapid strides iu its efforts to excel, and we doubt if there is a medical college in the west better equipped to fur nish a thorough medical education. Tbo new building recently constructed gives op portunities for a large class, and is a credit to the entire trans-Missouri country. Omaha is rapidly developing as a medical center. _ If big sermons could save the world tha devil would soon be discouraged. ((•(•man’s Camphor ■••wilt* Glycerin*. Cures Cimpited Hands and Face. Tender or Sore Keet, Chilblains, Plies, Ac. C.U. Clark Co., Hew Haven, Ct» We are all immortal In the unseen influ ences set in motion. The flower crushed, lives in its fragrance. “ lion son’s Single Corn naive." Warranted to riire or it,.mey refunded. Ask your t druggist tor it. Prico 13 rents. It costs less to be contented than it does to be unhappy. ‘ Billiard Table, second-hand. For sain cheap. Apply to or address, H. C. Akin, J ftll 8. Pith 8t.. Omaha. Ne t * ffSH BR^ Thl« Trade Mark la on the beat WATERPROOF COAT BlaSSS4 In the World t A. J. TOWER. BOSTON. MASS. UICC CANNOT SEE HOW TOO DO JI'C IT AND PAT FREIGHT. rClA Dura our 3draw*? walnut mt oak (» J ▼ * fpror«*A Ulfk Ana Slafaraewlnr roacblaa A finely tiai*h«ii, nickel platad, adapt«5 to ||«hl ld4 n*a*y work} puaranUad for 10 i«ur«| wills IaleautlcBobbin WliHltr.fclMlntiiliat Cilln \*r ftbuttla. R(lf.3rUln| K**dl« and a t< aplits ♦tef BUHItiMhariUiibii'M any wb#r* ow i/sy* I rial, no mon-y rsquirw ia advasc*. 79,000dow (• DM. World'# Fair J*d mac;.!a* andat’.ach* B»ota Bay from factory and uvi dsaUr’D aad agent’* profit*. Pnr[ Cat ThliOot and send to-day for marHa* or lav* fr«o rnCC cat*loco*, »«*ttmon