GRAND OLD PARTY. THE REPUBLICAN THE PARTY OF THE FUTURE. tt«» Only One Tlmt (nn Mnnngre the Nation'll Flnanro*—International Arhl trntlun — Free Wool an Important Fartor In the Itnln of Cotton. The Only National Party. Talking about politics tho other ■Spay a Virginia Democrat luttl this to *say, among othor things: "I am a Democrat, but I hope that we shall have a Republican president ami con gress two years honco. Wo business men have "to admit that the Republi can party is the only one that ean . manage tho flnaneos of tho country successfully. That explains why so many of us want to see your party restored to power. Democracy has made a signal failure of financial ad ministration.” Vet ho added: “1 cannot bo a Re publican until tho nigger qnostion is settled." This is u striking oxampla j r of prejudice eclipsing principle, of a distorted and morbid phantasm driv ing men against their honest convic tions. tint this statement of the .Southern Democrat is none the loss significant, of the weakness of Democracy. It shows that nothing but prejudice holds the party togethor. The .Southorn section Is ready to fall to pieces as soon as "the nigger ques tion” is settled. Kvonts are rapidly working out tho solution of that prob lem by infusing into tho campaigns in Southern states issues which divido the whites on local affairs and y’’ also divido the colored vote. "Tho nigger question” did not cut much of a figure in the North Carolina elec tion Inst Novemlior,says the Cincinnati Tlmos Star. It did nut visibly enter into West Virginia polities. In Ton : " nersee it was largely eliminated, and to a loss extent in Alabama and Louisiana. There seems good reason lor believing that another your, or two will so fur diminish the importunco of this local Issue, as compared with the necessity, recognized by this Vir I; y ginlu Democrat, for restoring tho Republican party to power in national affairs, that tho "solid South” broken in several places lust year, will dis solve, most of the states becoming Republican on tho pluttorm of pro tection and sound finance, malting the triumphant. Republican party tho only real national party in Amorlca. International Arbitration. . 'Hie subject of international arbitra tion is the one that may well engage the attention of European powers, but America has nothing to gain by be coming a party to the proposed agree ment. The principle of arbitration for the settlement of international disputes was inaugurated by the United States, and tlioro is no ques tion that future disputes not involv ing long settled policies would ad Justed in the samo way. TVith iuropean affairs American govern ments have nothing to da t ' The United Sfutcs in particular has ever held aloof from complications of all sorts involving the interests of tho countries of tho old world, it has long since given notice to tho world that it will suffer no encroachments by tho nations of tho old world on this side. This policy has become a feat ure of American independence that 1*. hold dear by all our people. To re treat from the position at this time would be an in justice to liberty loving people who hold no claim whatever upon the fatherlands, principalities or powers beyond tho seas. Wo simply aslt to bo lot alone .in tho enjoyment of our rights and privileges within the boundaries of our own land. Tho United Stntos has nothing whatever to gain by bocoming in volved in a binding agreement to a joint protectorate of the old world. So far as affairs of this side, aro con cerned it would be but a submission of American intorosts to the control V •' u t, U1 l nr f.urUjH’itll OOUUU’AUS. xuo pres ent administration at Washington has shown itsoif to bo sufficiently un American to give encouragement to the scheme brought: to our shores with a parliamentary indorsement but the pcopie will. hwv® something to say bofoi-o it will be possible to com mit the country to it. It is not a political question,, nor is it likely to bo made the subject of par tisan contest. We can bid the powers mainly concerned in the proposition Hod speed in the success of their ef forts at home, but further than that Americans should uot go.—Kansas City Journal. Another Whirl In 1800. “I go to r:nd Kissoll, with whom I •hall go to drink the health of the newly married-” So wroto Grover Cleveland to William Sumner Wyse. That was when Mr. Cleveland was sheriff of Krio county and Bissell was one of his saloon cronies. Now Mr. Cleveland is president, Mr. Bissell is in bis cabinet and Mr. Wyse is in the divorce court. The whirligig of time keeps a whirling.—Now York Adver tiser. *1 o l*e Followed bf Vigoroiu Voting* Scores of people who approve the president’s [dan of saddling an enor mous bonded indebtedness upon the country in time of peace are sending him telegrams and letters. The millions who do not approvo of it are sending no messages, but they are doing a largo amount of vigorous thinking. Ic still ; Sven. It is no small satisfaction to learn on the authority of the American con sul at l ur.iiif, Wales, that the tin plate industry in the I'nited States, warmed into life by tho MoKinloy tar iff, stilt lives and bids fair to nourish. This information is all tho more agreeable for the reason that, from ... i a 1 the passage of the tariff of 1800 down i to the campaign of 1802, the tin plate | provarieutor never ceased to declare that the industry never hud existed in the country, did not then ex let In a commercial sen.-to, and never could exist. ‘ Wool. « otroti, mid floor. A conviction that tho removal ot the wool tariff and of the bounty on sugar has been potent factors in producing the ruinous decline in the price of cotton has grown quite strong among rollouting men in tho .South. Hcforo tho Hood of cheap foreign wool was turned loose by the passage of the Wilson bill, a vast amount of cot’ ton was manufactured into under clothing, and found ready sale among the working people. A largo amoim*. of it wus also made into a cheap gradfl of working garments, cither atono or mixed with cheap wool. Now those garments are being made to a great extent of cheap wool alone, and the cotton is not wanted. This lias a Mo rions effect on he great agricultural Industry of tho South, and the South erners who thought they were getting a fine little rovenge on the North by taking off the protection on wool are now paying dearly for their fun. The sugar bounty had begun to stimulate the raising of cane on land previously devoted to cotton, and tho overpro duction of tho latter was thereby greatly chcckod. The repeal of the bounty caused tho lund to revert to cotton raising, and tho consequence is an Ineroaso in the crop of the latter amounting to more than u million boles. Thus tho two features of the Wilson law out off a tremendous de mund for cotton, and at the samo time greatly Increusod tho product. It may bo alleged that there is a compensa tion for this in giving the poor people of tho North woolen garments instead of cotton onos. But when tho quality of tho wool and the garments that are mndo of it Is considered there is nothing gained. Hood cotton gar ments are liotter than tho miserable trasli made from the cheap wool, bo ing fully as warm and a great deal more durable, and tho working peoplo who buy and wear the latter will gain nothing by tho change. — Detroit Tribune. i V .John IM St^von*. Now that ex-minister to Hawaii John L. Stevens is dead lot it be re mombored to his overlasting credit that ho nevor hauled down tho stars and stripes or gavo an order to any one to perform thut act. And let It ' also bo remembered in justice to him and to his posterity that the hauling down of our tlag at Honolulu excited his contempt and angor, and that he placed himself on rocord to that ef fect. In future years, whon Hawaii is a part of the United States, ana i the inhabitants thereof are slowly but surely loarning the arts and cus : toms of civilization, Mr. Stevens’ | olTorts to bring about that result will : be remembered with more gratitude than is felt for them in these cuckoo times. Peace to his patriotic ashes.— Philadelphia Inquirer. i Another Tariff r Tboro aro about 18,000,000 do/.on of eggs handled in thp United States. A tax of throe cents a dozen is levied on those imported from Canada.. Tho I freight from that dominion to Now ! York is $60 a car. white from the West | it runs to about $130. Canada will [ koep on soiling us eggs.—St. Louis : Star-Sayings. No Democrat, to liuil Dot. The Washington Post reads Mr. McKinloy out of the list of presiden tial possibilities, and the Philadel phia Times does the same service for Mr. Reed. If somo mugwump or Democratic organ will now oust* Mr. Harrison tho lanors of, thio. next Re publican convention will be much simplified. — • r.nfiiitliiir tn llet KavAfl^ Jififw.V*-' Senator Poller, of course, feels | sorry for $ie government-, n^ijas .long | as It profew -M> flounder.desperately j and hopelessly, instead of coming to | the fountainhead of financial 'Wisdom i for relief, lie is forced tO tho con.vic tion that ltde servos its fate!—Kansas City. Journal. Or m Tsn* Ranch. It has been suggested that oyorj man should keep a small-sized ceme tery in which to bury the faults of his friends, but it would bo necessary to buy an old-time plantation before that Oould be done with the Fifty-third congress. A U.marktble Coincidence. The story that tho California cli mate agreos with Mrs. Lease is capa ble of two constructions. It may mean that the climate is willing to do anything to avoid trouble, or it may mean simply a remarkable coinci dence. When Tom Head Carries It. Referring to his own smooth-pated portraits ex-speaker Reed says: "It is impossible to got any expression into a bald hoad.” It is easy to get strik ; ing expressions out of it, though, when Tom Reed happens to be carry ing it Mr. Htl *4 Great Secret. Senator Hill says he thoroughly de spises men who 9eek political promi ncnco without purjxtso to do some thing for the public good. Senator ! Hill’s good purpose is unfortunately still a profound secret. Too Mach Clover. The proposition to increase the term of tho president to eight years is in I opportune. That is more clover than : anybody would care for at this timo. i ___ | One of the curiosities of the Stink i iug-wator canyon, Wyoming, is th< alum watorcave. The cave appears | to be an extinct geyser, and is about 1 tifteen feet across and easily accessi I blc. The alum is aloDg the sides a id 1 about six feet in thickness. r*' . -«• r DAIRY AND POULTRY INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. Raw SucrrHuful Farmer* Operate Till Department of the Homestead—Hlnta •a to the Care of Lire Slock and Poultry. _ Care and Management of Poultry. [Condensed from F armors' Review btcao frnphlc Report. At the Champaign County, (111.) Farmers’ institute, D. P. McCracken made some interesting remarks on the care and management of poultry. In substance he said: The care and man agement of every kind of stock is largely a bugbear unless the man that undertakes them has a love for the bus iness. For instance, my father Bays that no chicken is worth more than 85 cents, but we find him paying #10 for a parrot, #25 for a pup,and #300 for a driv ing horse. What I am getting at is that a man must have some love for a lien if he would keep poultry. I have Been a woman go out of doors in winter, call a flock of poultry from the trees, fences and like places, and feed them enough table scraps to make them lay eggs, were they housed as well as the farm wagon. I raised 1,000 birds in 1888, using sixty-four hens, and sold them for 40 cents per chick on the market. The entire cost of those chicks to me was 18 cents each, delivered on the market. Q.—What objection is there to the poultry going to the corn crib? I say give them all they will eat and the best. A.—When I came in you were dis cussing feeding steers, and the drift of the talk was that animals had to be fed fora purpose. When we want to raise a better fowl for the table we should feed her corn, but not if we want to get eggs. Mr. Swigert—I feed my cattle near the house, and my hens go to the feed trough and get all they want. As a re sult we have the fattest hens and the fewest eggs in the county. Q.—Have you. had any experience with incubators? n.—a nave iiau a little experience, but not much. I bought one and ran it for threo years and got 45 per cent in chickens hatched. We did not handle it very well. Some of my neighbors have raised as high as 00 per cent, but they lost a good many after they were hatched. J. C. Ware—Poultry has beeh one of my hobbies for a good many years, not only for profit, but for enjoyment. We as farmers hardly realize the im portance of the poultry question. We sometimes find that we have fed our steers all winter and lost money, while our wives have fed a few dozen hens and come out ahead. The poultrybusiness is far greater than we have any idea of. When Ohio was the third pork producing state in the Union, her poultry brought more money than her pork. Any farmer * wife that, admires .any one . breed, should select that breed And keep only that. There will then be a uniformity in the flock, that can be got in no other way. A good flock of any breed will add as much to the appearance of the farm as anything I know of. It is a great mistake not to give the poultry interest the! attention it deserves. We do not buUd such poultry houses as we should have. We ought to build them houses in all ways suitable. It does not pay to have them roosting around the barn, or laying eggs under the barn., Keep them as carefully as you would any other stock and then feed therh. I have built three different hen houses in my experience. I am very wel 1 satisfied with the present .one.. ■ 1 have my roosts over an incline. The dippings fall on this incline and run down into boxes below it. That auas to me capacity oi tbe ben bouse, forhack of that incline is the place for the nests. To keep vermin out I satu rate the roasts with kerosene. Mites do'not stay on the hens during the day.} i; Some say bum sulphur to keep’ :Out lice, but I know that it'. .-Will • not work. I tried it once and Will give yon iny ex perience. 1 pnt a great deal: of sul phur in six pots and burned it. I did the work thoroughly, but it did not kill the mites. A Farmer—I have a recipe for mites. Take half a bushel of lime and slake it. Then mix with it 25 cents’ worth of sulphur, and' add to that three ounoes of carbolic acid. The whole should be allowed to be come as dry as dust. Then go into the hen house and throw it around and get out as quick as you can. [ This would appear to be a rather danger ous proceeding, as the person doing the work might inhale the dust.— P. R.] Mr. Ware—I do not think there is anything better than whitewashing the hen house, but generally the work is not done well. 1 have an easy way of doing the work. I put my white wash into my sprayer and put it on that way. The work is soon done and the whitewash will go where you can’t get it with a brush. If you do it that way once, you will do it again, but when you put it on the old way you are not likely to soon again under take the job. Q.—Are your chickens ever troubled with roup? Mr. McCracken—I have had no trouble with the roup, at least for twelve years, since I stopped dampness and draught. Q.—What breed of chickens would you recommend? A.—I have tried twenty-two varie ties, and, while I don’t think the corn crib is the breed, I think that care and management are almost the breed. Light Brahmas are good, for they are rustlers, and while they don’t mature so fast as some others, they give good results. Mr. Ware—I think roup is due to dampness. I set some hens in my cel lar, and they died largely from roup. It is a very contagious disease. In order to get winter eggs the birds must ; be brought to maturity early in the season. The light Brahmas will lay is many eggs as the smaller breeds will,but they do not get to maturity so early. An Eighty Acre Dairy Farm. A. X. Hyatt writes as follows to Farm and Dairy: You ask my opinion as to “How many cows can be profitably kept on an 80-acre farm adapted to dairy purposes?” In this great dairy country it runs from fifteen to twenty-five. Many keeping twenty or more get larger yields and more profit from a cow than those keeping less. The late lion. Hiram Smith of this county said he should never be satisfied until he kept one good cow for every acre of tillable land. I think he got up to nearly one hundred cows on his 300 acres, but some dry years he bought considerable feed. I have kept ninety two head, including horses and young cattle, and sold some feed, on my 310 acres. I understand that horses are to be kept to work the eighty acres, and calves raised to replace old, dead or disabled cows. I will tell you how twenty cows were kept on an 80 acre farm, that gave four tons of milk each that netted 81 a hundred pounds. These cows were dry two months in midwinter. The farm furnished all the feed for the stock except some three tons of oil meal, and old cows, calves, potatoes, hogs, pigs, etc., were sold that brought over six hun dred dollars, lie planted fifteen acres corn, fifteen of oats, had twenty acres of pasture and woodland, fifteen of meadow, twenty-five in roots, five in potatoes. He sowed five acres of stout growingoats thick on ground specially prepared, to feed green. He sowed two acres of turnips broadcast (weeds having been nearly annihilated) the last of May, to feed with tops in Au gust and September. He planted five acres of sweet corn and ten of field corn in check rows, and the last of | July sowed in turnip seed. He had j iiuxx ui vsaxsvsi half acres sugar beets,one acre swedes, two acres mangolds, three acres more of turnips. lie cut his oats quite green and took care of it as he would his hay. Straw and stalks were all sweet and under cover. He cut and wet (mixing in sliced roots, oat meal, corn and cob meal, and a little oil meal and salt) most of his feed in win ter. He prepared his box of feed some twelve hours before feeding it. The first four weqjcs his cows were dry they were fed the mixed feed minus the oat and corn meal, but as calving time was ap proaching grain enough was added to give them a full udder. None were milked before they calved. All had some of the first mess and ate of the placenta if they wished. The calf was generally left with the cow until she had cleaned—from four to eight hours. Salt was never forgotten—and he never forgot that cows dry or nearly dry were not very tender creatures, and that the air of no stable was ever so pure but it was purer outside. He allowed his dry cows to go eighty rods to a spring in the hollow rather than to give them their water in the barn yard. The weather had to be severe for them to stop at the water in the yard. If all herds were like this one, one cow doctor in Wisconsin would be plenty. No garget—no nothing to dis tress or annoy—in this herd. It is needless to add that he was as much a Christian among his cows and calves as at church or Sunday school. “Ho unto others as you would be done by,” he believed, and he included even his pigs. Hut the maximum number of cows that can be profitably kept on an poses is more than twenty or twenty live, when we become exact and high class farmers. My neighbor, the late Uon. Hiram Smith, declared the time would come when one good cow would be well fed from every acre of land—on our best farms. An official statement from the British parliament tells of a man who had four acres who raised in one year forty-two bushels of wheat, 250 of potatoes and ten of barley, and kept two cows and four pigs. The cows were kept good and nothing bought during the year. They report ed that five persons and two cows were sustained on three acres of land. He had - one half acre of pasture, one half acre and eight rods in wheat, one quarter acre in oats. The rest was green feed for the cows—cabbages, clover, mangolds, turnips, etc. During the winter he fed roots and straw and they did very well. The committee further stated that thirty cows, five horses, a bull and four calves were fed all summer from a 15-acre pasture of clover. The field was irrigated with liquid manure diluted with water, and each cow gave an income of $05. Of course the clover was cut and fed. So we see it is difficult to say how many cows can be kept well on an 80 acre farm. If I could be kept along as was Adam or Methuselah, in good shape for business, I would see if I could not yet keep 216 cows on my 216 acres.__ Fowls at the Babx.—We can learn a lesson by observing the fowls in the barn and stable. Why do they love the barn? First, a barn is usually warm and comfortable, and next, the hens find plenty of scratching and picking in the refuse hay and hayseed. The same thing can be given them in the hen house. Have it warm and closed at night, but something like an open shed during the day, so that the sun can send his warmth upon them, and provide some chopped hay, or find reiuse for them to scratch in, and the result will be that the hens will be more contented, and will not fail to do as well as those that seem to lay at the barn.—Ex. A Vegetable Manure. Wisconsin Agriculturist: Here is a formula or a manure that has been successfully used by a New Jersey gar dener for vegetables:' One thousand pounds cottonseed meal or bonemeal, both costing about $30 a ton: 500 pounds boneblack, costing $33 a ton, and 300 pounds of muriate of potash, costing $43 to $45 a ton. This makes one ton of first-class manure, costing about $30. This gardener says in American Gar dening: “I have had better results from this formula than from $40 special ma nures from the manufacturer. 1 used the above formula on two acres of sweet potatoes last season, making a fine crop of about sixty barrels to the acre. I put 1,300 pounds of the $30 fer tilizer on each acre, costing about $18 an acre. _ Btatk of Ohio, City of Toledo, I Lccas County. | ss Frank J. Cheney makes oath that he is the senior partner of the firm of F. J. Che ney & Co., doing business in the City of Toledo, County and State aforesaid, and that said firm will pay the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOLLARS for each and every case of Catarrh that can not be cured by the use of Hall's Catarrh Cure. Bworn to before me and subscribed in my iresence this 6th day of December, A. D. .886. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken internally and acts directly on the blood and mucous sur faces of the system. Bend for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., __ Toledo, O. jy Sold by Druggists, 73c. Hall’s Family Pills, 25c. Milliner—I hope you will find that hat perfectly satisfactory. Miss de Fashion—Yes, indeed. Sev eral persons left the theatre on account of it last night.—Chicago Inter-Ocean. FRANK J. CHENEY. A. W. GLEASON, Notary Public. •etdtj THB CHEAT GERMAN COF^ Coffee at one cent a pound that • it costs to grow it,good coffee say that it is better than iu we know, while in Europe CL in searoh of seed novelties u drank this in hotels in Fran* ' land and Germany. Le' Thirty-five packages earliest . seeds, #1.00, not 3 cents per nl'f US Largest growers of • oats, grass and clover, corn i J toes, etc., in the world. Earl yielding vegetables our specialty If You Will Cut This Out ^ with 15c postage to the John a * Seed company, LaCrosse, Wis. -a get free a package of their a«mL? Berry seed and their catalogue. l^J Flsiarlin. , “« ell. some people have a rail _J Pro Bono Publico. ® ’ **^1 “What is the troubleb” asked v I tas. ^1 “Here is somebody writing to J P“P?” over my signature.’’-Brook^l Om*i Covgh BaluM la the oldest and best. It will break no kvm I er than anything else. itianlwnya ■3iJ'iffllgS| ^No man does his best whotrorksonlyJ mistake! never from .] Ibelieve Pisos Cure for ConauattJ saved my boy’s life last summer“Sfl Allie Douglass, LeRoy, Mich,, Oct.'j, M Oliver Wendell homes says that a m.1 would better be seventy years voum- I forty years old. J I "Hanson’s Xaglo Corn^alvs." . Warranted to cure or money refunded. .0 druggist for it. Price 15 cent*. *** The cheerful giver is always theone.L gives much. " I Makes Pure Blood I These three words tell the whole story of the wonderful cures by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. When the blood is impure it is fertile soil for all kinds of disease germs, and such troubles as scrofula, salt rheum, rheumatism, catarrh, grip, and typhoid fever are likely to appear. Weak nerves indicate as surely as any physical symptom shows any. thing, that the organs and tissuesol the body are not satisfied with their nourishment. They draw their sus tenance from the blood, and if the blood is thin, impure or insufficient, they are in a state of revolt. Hood’s Sarsaparilla I Purifies the blood and thus cures these diseases by removing their cause. No other preparation has ever accomplished the remarkable cures which have followed the use of Hood’s Sarsaparilla. U a 9 r>*lf tliearter-dinner pill flood s r ills &",,iy ™th»r To purify and vitalize the blood, and thus supply the nourishment which is needed. Those who keep their blood pure with Hood’s Sarsaparills have no trouble with weak nerves. Therefore take Hood’s now. ' Hood’s Pills easy to buy, wi to take, easy In « feet. 25c. See that Lump? That»s Lorillard’s CLIMAX PLUG. It's Much the Best Sold everywhere. Made only by the P. Lo«t* lard Company. The oldest tobacco manure* America, and the largest in the world. turers in , UULUHtSTcn SPADING BOOT. BEST IN MARKET. BEST IN FIT. BEST IN WEARING l QUALITY, j The outer or tap sole ex | tends the whole length down to the heel, pro tecting the boot in dig ging and In other hard work. ASK TOUR DEALER , FOR THEM and don't be put'* off with Inferior goods. GOliCHISTER RUBBER CO. _ UNCLE SAM’S Condition Powder Is the best medicine for Horses, Cattle, Hogs and Sheep. It purities the blood, prevents dis ease and cures Coughs. Colds.Colic, Hidebound, Worms, Distemper, etc. Nothing equals it for Hog Cholera. Honest and reliable, in honest 35 and 50 cent packages: used and warranted for over twenty years. Every one owning a horse or cattle should give it a trial. Made by Emjuert Proprietary Co., Chicago, 111. Uncle Sam’s Nerve and Bone Liniment for Sprains, Bruises, Rheumatism. Stiff Joints, etc. Goes right to the spot of pain. Nothing else so good for Man and Animal Try it. ■ AAV for »ur announcement In MEVT issue of this LVUR paper. It will ahow a cut HU I of 1 style of DAVIS CRUM SEPARATORS H would take several pa^es to give details about these peerless machines. Hr-'. .. ** * Mailed Free. W Ac _ DAVIS 4l RANKIN BLDO. AND MFQ. OO. _Sole Manufacturers, Chicago* landsome Illustrated Pamphlet Agents Wanted. TUMIKTUMU.V USED LOCALLY vim Insufflator. M. *Mtr JURE CURE 0#.. H. UXTON RUB., CHIOMM hold b/ all brag^isu. BEAUTIFUL WY0MIN6HANCH FOR SALE. At the foot of Laramie Peak. 160 acres, commanding the use of 1,000 acres. Good buildings and fences. Living water running through land. Fine for cattle or horse raising PRICE, 84,000. J. H. INGRAHAM, Sll 8. 18th St.. Omaha. I THOSE WHO HAVE U ■■ against the Government Washington, D. C., they wtllreci CLAIMS -.—iBtAtVy, 914 F St.. they will receive a prompt reply* W. L. DOUCLAS $3 SHOErSfS."* 9. COKDOywj, FRENCH MNAMELIEO CALF. [4.*3.sp Fine C/ilf&K*#*® $3.50 POLICE,3S0LES. I *059*2-WORKINeWENs 1 W3*. EXTRA FINE- * /*2.*l.7-? BOYS'SCHOHSiS ■ ladies* J.ffgS'ioEf* BROC tCTON,>^S' vvcrvnc miiiiuu W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Sloes All our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the beet value for the money. They equal custom ahoee In style and Their wearing qualities are unsuroaMM The prices are uniform,—-stamped oneeu Prom $■ to *3 saved over other m«K“. If your dealer cannot supply you we caa WALTER BAKERM The Largest -- wMTwwj wsssrsm FI EXPOSITIONS, In Europe and Amenca. rnliketh* Dojeh 1MIw W2 £ lice or other them r»" I lice or other Cherjir.o- ^* need in *?!. of their waV •OLD BY OBOCEBS EVERYWHERE WALTER BAKER* CO. Beeman’s Pepsin THE PERrtti|u" - CHEWING Gli» A Delicious R« For all l' ,ro" ot INDIGESTION. CATTIO>-^,0b*elS lam-- Beem»“ s Trapper. -miulD!0?” Lath uli 'w"rI(t» groin pure Pej2%«i»»| (turn c^rnot from dealers. »—"ffiSBafr issBaugsBi.*