f URNAWNAL PRESS ASSOCIATION. BY PC ft MISSION OF HAND. MSN ALLY & CO.. {CHAPTER II.—Contixukd). She hesitated a moment; her glance fell upon the corner of a letter project lag; from the pocket of his torn and -dusty uniform; that might give her his address; she leaned forward and took it gently out. The address was, “Will iam Cavendish, Esquire; The Admiral ty. Whitehall;” the seal was unbroken. The truth broke In on her Instantly; -she called to the coachman and the car riage stopped. ■"Home!” she cried, imperatively: the horses were wheeled round. "Drlvo fast!” she added, and they quickened • their pace. In a few minutes they stopped in feont of No. 23 Bedford square. Dick -< -opened his eyes. “Are you there?” he asked; “I have a letter—" "Tes,” she said, gently, "I know; it , shall be delivered at once; but now you must come in with me.” He obeyed, moving slowly and with pain; she did not offer him help from herself or her servants, for which he «aa dimly grateful. In the hall stood the colonel, bland as ever, and looking as If he saw nothing unusual in Dick's appearance or costume. Camilla has tily- explained the case, Dick standing hy silently the while, giving his whole attention to controlling any expression of the pain In his head, which was be coming more and more severe. “Perhaps,” said the colonel, “Capt. Kstcourt will do me the honor of mak ing use of my room In whloh to rest from the fatigue of hta gallant struggle r against superior numbers?” Dick followed him upstairs, but stopped short at the top of the .first .Aght. “I have a letter to deliver,” he re seated In a tone of helpless obstinacy; „ *11 will be too late.” “If you will Intrust it sweat of his manner and the brightness of hts eyes that he was by no means out the wood yeti He expressed his gr&t itade (or.her timely rescue, and his ad WiiraUon of the skill and courage with which she had brought under control ; *■» excited and disorderly a crowd. She ;; -laughed, and put the matter lightly on ehe aide. “It Is my brother-in-law come back,” yr- she said, in a tone of perfectly counter Mted unconcern Dick looked fixedly at her! in his eyes «V -were dumb reproach and the Sadness of cam unspoken farewell; about his mouth gathered the lines of resolution, and, - dor a moment, the curve of bitterness. .She flushed, and all her manner --changed Instantly, “bon1* misunder stand me.” she cried Impulsively. "I know what you have done, and loyalty ;• never fall of sympathy from me!” '(Dm colonel's step was heard ascend ing the stairs; She heard Dick stiffen Nwisetf to bear the news of his unwel «xne fortune, and felt, with a quick y - wenae of surprise at her'own weakness, that she was too much Interested to ”, /stay and see him face the ordeal. She made some incoherent excuse and as the • door opened she passed the colonel hur riedly and ran toward her own room ' • Breathless and confused. But she was ' -stayed In mid-course by a cry from M. —dr Mon taut and the sound of a bell staging violently downstairs. She ; -fcirned halt round; the colonel came out y.-. *mm to the stairs. “t regret to say," he began, with ex .asperating politeness and deliberation, c y. «ghat disappointment at the news of • > •which 1 was the unwilling bearer has ••rostrated our gallant friend with an . attack of fever. What professional en , >i > ifeuaiaam!” he continued, with a half ; c -wmlle. "One may doubt whether my * tards have this time favored the better naan.”' > .: She rooked as If two might doubt that, t taat answered nothing, and the colonel -•stunted to Ms patient CHAPTER III. who was called In, . without delay, to ; attend to Dick's In juries pronounced them to be slight In themselves; but for the feverish condi tion to which they had given rise he prescribed Im mediate rest and f . 'm. i ht . quiet. ne loonea a 4Uto doubtfully at each of hie lUten im turn take said thkrt inquired Camilla, "that mered for the present?” the reply, "of course it \L BY HENRY MZWBOLT might be managed, but It Is a risk, and If you could, without too much Incon venience keep him for a couple of nights at any rate—” “Oh!” cried the colonel. Interrupting, “do not think twice about It; conven ience is nothing In a case of urgency, and Capt. Estcourt Is a valued friend of ours.” The surgeon looked relieved, and went away promising to return the same evening. Camilla for herself approved the ar rangement made by her brother-in-law, but she was at the same time surprised at it. Ho had not only spoken of Dick, with whom he was In no way Intimate, as “a valued friend”.—that was, per haps, only a piece, of his habitual po liteness—but he had also readily en tered Into a plan which did in fact^ln volve a considerable Inconvenience, and this was by no means so usual a thing for him. At least, he always had a personal motive for such acts, and she was at a loss to see an adequate one here; for the difficulty which he had thus brought upon himself was no slight one. The patient had been taken from the drawing-room Into a spare-room adjoining it on the same floor, and separated from it only by a partition wall of slight construction, through which the sound of conversation was by no means Inaudible. Now, it happened by 111 fortune that on this very evening matters were to be spoken of in that drawing-room which must not be over heard by any living ear. The meeting vtos one which could not be postponed, and' no other room in the house was suitable for It, for it was to be In ap pearance a merely social gathering. And all this the colonel knew as well as she did. mey sai ac ainner sne anuaea to the question while the servants were absent from th« room. “Yes," replied M. de Montaut. “It Is unfortunate, but It would be Inhuman to move our poor friend; his safety may depend on his remaining; quiet." "On his remaining quiet!” said Ca milla. “Our safety will certainly depend on that, if he does overhear us.” “Eh bien, then we will remain quiet.” “It will be his duty to Inform against us,’ ’she replied. “As an officer, true,” said her compan ion, cooly; "but on this occasion the gallant captain will not fulfill that duty, for he has another more Imperative.” She looked at him In doubt. “The duty, I mean, of a loyal cheva lier.” "I know him better!” was the exclam ation on her lips, but she checked It, and hesitated for an answer. “In reality,” he said, "we need fear no such complication. I have Just recol lected that the doctor said he Intended to give his patient a composing draught at an early hour this evening, so he will hear no treason after all." “You are sure?” she asked; "Bure, I mean, that he will give It, and that It will be effectual?” “I will see to It myself, if you wish,” he replied; "but I am surprised to find you bo apprehensive for our security. You used to think no risk too great to run for the good cause.” "In that,” she said, hotly, “I shall never change; it is not that I am luke warm, as you will see tonight!” He bowed, and rose from the table to open the door for her. Before they had been In the drawing-room half an hour the surgeon returned. He brought with him the sleeping draught. “That la a good Idea of yours," said Camilla, as he produced It. "To Colonel de Montaut belongs the credit of suggesting It." was the reply, "Really?” she said; "I should not have suspected that.” The colonel looked a little confused. Within five minutes of the doctor's departure the bell rang twice In rapid succession, and three gentlemen were ushered Into the drawing-room, where Madame de Montaut was waiting to re ceive them. A conversation on the most general subjects at once began, but there was an air of expectation In the manner of all, and when the colonel entered eve'ry one turned to him as though with an unspoken Inquiry. He greeted the two newcomers, and turned to Madame de Montaut. "I think we may begin now,” he said. She looked at him and raised her eyebrows interrogatively. He nodded to signify that Dick was fast asleep, and sat down at a small table, laying a bundle of papers upon It. “My friends,” he said, "I have sum moned you to-night to propose a fresh I attempt.” t ne looxea at me races around him and observed that Camilla was similar ly occupied. His hearers showed by their looks that they perfectly under stood his meaning, but were either re served or unenthuslastic In the matter. "M. Carnac," he continued, with grave politeness, bowing to the elderly gentleman who sat nearest to him, “it Is from you that we have learned to ex pect a critical judgment. Are you not of opinion that the time has come for renewed activity?” ‘‘It has come again and again,” re plied the person addressed, "but al ways without result.” “No doubt,” said the colonel; ‘‘but that has been solely due to a want of forethought and energy, which must not occur again.”. “Yes, Indeed!” exclaimed a short gen tleman, with a beard, who was evi dently an Englishman; “there have been good enough plans laid, but no one fit to be trusted with their execu tion.” The third of the visitors turned upon the speaker. “You will pardon me," he said, with some acrimony, “If I differ entirely; It is, In my opinion, the stay-at-homes who are to blame. In devising impossi ble methods of which they take' the credit and others the danger!" “Gentlemen,” said the colonel. In a soothing tone, “you are both right, but you both speak only according to your own experience. You, Mr. Holmes, de served success, but your subordinates tailed, yoa. You.- M. le Comte, followed your instructions with a courage and loyalty whleh would have secured a triumph If your directors had not made a cruel mistake in their calculations. These two fatal forms of error must be avoided. We must think and act wfth equal certainty, and all will be well.” Mr. Holmes shook his head In sulky silence. The Comte de Rabodanges ex claimed, fiercely, "It Is too much to ex pect; the cat does not offer her paw a second time!” During this altercation Camilla had sat silent, but with growing Impatience; her eyes flashed and her cheeks were flery-red. The colonel, always ready to turn the force of others to account for his own purpose, hastened to give the final impulse to her pent-up indigna tion. He looked at her, and raised hla shoulders and eyebrows In a. gesture of resignation. "You!” she cried; "you too despair at the eleventh hour? What do these doubts and recriminations mean? Do none of you any more remember the greatness of the cause you serve? Have you begun to forget the emper or?” As the lightning of this word flashed upon them her hearers started violent ly. “Ah!” she went on, with quickening breath, “there Is magic in the name! It is perhaps because you whisper it so seldom that it has ceased of late to stir you; let us be bolder in speech and braver in action!” “Madame,” replied M. Carnac, depre catingly, and with a bow of genuine ad miration, "your enthusiasm is heroic, but it is not prudent; the boldness that you preach is likely to bring discomfi ture upon us all."' "Discomfiture!” she cried with ringing scorn. "What, then, does the timidity you practice bring upon the emperor? Are we to preserve our own freedom at the price of his captivity, and amid the luxury of a great capital to shut our eyes to the misery of his exile on a lone ly rock unfit for human habitation?” There was an awkward silence. After a moment's pause she went on again in a more pleading tone. *• MO IUI an AiiJ3ia.HL 1UOK uaCK, she said earnestly, "upon the splendor of his past career, and then consider to what the rancor, of his enemies has brought him. The man of aotion, for whose deeds Europe was not wide enough, confined within a circuit of a dozen miles! The man of genius re fused even the companionship of his best-loved books! The commander of armies with but a pair of lackeys at his call; the maker and dethroner of kings denied his royal title! Do you not - know,” she cried, and her voice rang deep again with anger, "do you riot know that his house is but a molderlng Jail, and his allowance a prisoner's pit tance? Himself the most magnificently generous of men, he has been driven by sordid necessity to melt his plate; he Buffers in health, he Is In danger. He— Just heaven!—from the Inspiration of whose life we drew the spirit that ani mates our pwn!” , “Well spoken!” cried the colonel, skillfully following up the advantage she had gained for him: “well spoken! And all that we then had shall soon be ours again; is it not worth one more effort my friends?” “It is. Indeed," murmured M. Carnac, with a sigh. The Comte de Rabodanges grumbled, “If only it were the last.” Mr. Holmes settled himself in hls chair. “Well,” he said, bluntly, "let’s hear your plan, if you've got one.” The colonel untied his bundle of papers and spread them out upon the table in front of him. (TO BB CONTINUED.) ACCIDENTALLY HANQED, A Philadelphia Child Meets with a Carious Mishap—strangled by Her Clothes. Hanging from a hole In the wicker coach in which she bad been sleeping. Mrs. Jeremiah J. Buck yesterday even-* lng found her Hi-month-old daughter. Jessie, dead, but with the warmth of life still lingering In her tiny body, says the Philadelphia Record. Mrs. Buck lives with her husband at No. 2664 Tioga Street, and it was when her husband had returned from his work that the mother went to awaken the child and discovered the accident. Her screams quickly brought assistance, and an In vestigation disclosed the fact that the baby’s death was the result of one of the most peculiar accidents on record. The little one had been placed in' the old coach during the afternoon to take a nap. The coach was In the second story front room, and for some time had been the baby’s sleeping place. It was about six o’clock when Mr. Buck re turned home from his work and asked for Jessie. Mrs. Buck completed her preparations for supper and went up stairs to waken the child. To her sur prise the coach seemed empty, and she called Jessie, thinking she had gone to hide, as she had done before. Receiving no reply she looked closer, and In the dim light saw what seemed to be a bun dle protruding from a hole in the wick erwork at one end of the coach. The now frightened mother hastily procured a light and to her terror found that what she supposed was a bundle was the naked body of her baby girl, hang ing by her arm pits. Her clothing, bun dled dp about her head-, had evidently smothered her, while preventing the en tire body from slipping through the hole. The child had probably been rest less In her sleep and had gradually worked her body through the broken wickerwork until stopped by the cloth ing. The little one’s arms were stretched above her head and she had evidently been prevented from making an outcry that could be heard. Snatching the still warm body in her arms Mrs. Buck ran screaming down stairs. Neighbors sent for Dr. Schwartz, and the little one’s body was bathed In mustard water. Artittcial respiration was also tried, but all efforts'were useless. The child was dead. Jessie was a very pretty, golden haired girl, the pet pt the neighborhood, and her tragic death created quite a sensatlon. It Wm “Elevator Knee." A woman who made her initial at tempt recently to ride a wheel was dis couraged to And that her knees seemed stiff and very quickly tired of the effort to work the pedals. Speaking to her physician about it, he told her she was undoubtedly affected with what is known as "elevator knee." This was a hitherto unknown malady to her, but it has been referred to before in public prints, and is a recognised affection not uncommon with those whose life in a "lift" apartment house almost does away with the use of those knee muscles exercised in going up and down stairs. GRAND OLD PARTY. THE PROTECTIVE IDEA IS THE SOUND ONE. If We Furchase Iev-Frlred Foreign Goods of Course Our Gold Will Con tinue to Flow Outward—Sons* Se lections. r The Bounty Monnollsta. Representatives of the Atlantic coast shipping interests met in Philadelphia July 3, to take action toward “securing equitable protection, through national legislation, for agriculture and ship ping.” Among the resolutions passed #as the following: "Resolved, That since neither of the two great unprotected industries can derive any benefit from a tariff on im ports, we call upon Congress to equal ize the protection system by extending to agricultural staples and American shipping in the foreign trade that just measure of protection to which they are entitled, as long as protection Is the controlling and public policy of this nation, and that this be done by an ex port bounty on the Btaples of agricul ture and to American shipping in the ! foreign trade, either by a bounty on I tonnage or a differential duty which I shall discriminate in favor of American ! and against foreign ships, all to the end that a restoration may be brought i about of our merchant marine and that the independent land-owning I farmers of the nation may not be driven into bankruptcy and ruin by the ; competition of the cheap land and j labor countries of the world.” ! This resolution is Incorrect. Both the agricultural * and shipping industries j can derive benefit from a tariff on im- ; port3. It was by a tariff on imports, a ; discriminating tariff, that the Amer- j lean shipping interests were once so prosperous. By a similar tariff on im- ■ ports, a discriminating tariff, Amer- : lean shipping can again be restored, j And we are heartily in favor of tho renewal of this policy, which is so simple and thoroughly effective. j To say that the agricultural indus tries of the country derive no benefit i from a tariff on imports is equally un- ' true. What has been the experience of farmers who grow wool or hops for in- ' stance? The necessity for a protect ive tariff on foreign farm products will become more and more apparent with I each coming year as the farm supplies of India, Austria, South America and Russia increase in quantity and seek markets' for their surplus. We believe in giving both to agricul ture and to shipping “that just meas ure of protection to which they are en titled,” but we do not believe in doing so to the exclusion of the products of our forests, our mines or our factories, all of which were totally ignored by the shipping and agricultural representa tives at Philadelphia. ' Our farm products are the finest in the world, as are the products of opr shipyards, the manufactures of our shipbuilders. Mr. Charles H. Cramp, the great ship manufacturer of Phila delphia, does not believe it would be a good thing if the United States were a manufacturing country alone. We quite agree with Mr. Cramp and we are glad that we are able to produce almost every article of consumption that is a necessity and a comfort to our daily life. As Mr. Cramp well knows, .we can build in tbls country steamships second to none In the world. It is equally ' true ot our sailing vessels. The idea that we cannot build irop vessels Is rubbish. We have the iron and we have the steel in abundance and of the best quality. It was not so much the superiority of the iron and steel vessels that caused the English shipyards to give up building wooden vessels as it was their inability to secure an abund ant supply of the proper kind of timber needed in shipbuilding at as low a cost as they could procure the iron and steel. The English shipbuilders were look ing for cheapness In construction. That was the general reason why they abandoned wooden ships and gave the preference to those built of iron and steel. Without protection to our iron and steel interests Mr. Cramp would not today be ablet to manufacture the splendid specimens of naval architect ure of which his shipping yards are capable.—American Economist. Twenty •»®v«n WUe Men of Mnnchmter. A wholesome lesson may bo learned, even at this distance, Irorn a brief rela tion of what befell twenty-seven un wise silk manufacturers of Manchester, Eng., something more than a quarter of a century ago. , Tariff revisionists (downward) may also find a note of warning in the following bit of politico economical history which has come to us through a valued English contem porary : Prior to the adoption of the Cobden idea in England the silk manufacturers of that country were protected .and fos tered by fairly adequate duties imposed upon foreign imports, which duties were, about 1S50, made the subject of a memorial by twenty-seven of the prin cipal manufacturers of Manchester to Disraeli (then Chancellor of the Ex chequer), who, with the strange blind ness ot the froge who invited King Stork to come a::d reign over them, prayed that the duty on foreign manu factured silks might be at onco abol ished. They complained in their me morial that their trade was in a de pressed condition and their workpeople not fully employed; regrettable facts which they ascribed to the limited na ture of the foreign demand for their goods, “and that this limitation is at tributable to the protective duty im posed on foreign silks imported into this country, the effect of such duty being to create an impression in the markets of the world that England is unable to compete with the Continental manufacturer in the production of silk goods, and thus to throw the export trade almost entirely into the hands of their French and Swiss competitors.” The frogs were hotly impatient to be ruled by King Stork. The twenty-seven Manchester manufacturers were no less impatient for their doom. They begged in the same memorial that the duty might “be not partially and gradually but totally and immediately repealed, and thus to proclaim to the world that the Manchester silk manufacturer de nounced the so-called protection and every aid a government can give; that he is prepared to depend solely on his own merits, and that he avows himself capable of taking a higher position in the race of competition, unfettered by protection, than he has hitherto at tained under its fostering care.” Quos Deus vult perdure, prius de mentat. This memorial was presented in 1852; the duty was totally repealed in I860, and one of the most remarkable results was that every one of twenty seven firms was extinguished, not one being left to tell the horrid tale or to draw a parallel between the fate of the malcontent manufacturers and that of the fretful frogs.—The American Silk Journal. ' " Tlie Tariff on Barley. In 1832 a duty of 15 per cent ad va lorem was placed upon foreign barley, and It was fixed at 20 cents a bushel In 1842. It was subsequently lowered to 10 cents, but advanced to 30 cents In 1890, and the result was that our imports of barley fell off from 10,000,000 bushels to less than 2,000,000 bushels. The 30 per cent rate given barley in 1894 is only 14 cents specific. The pro duction of barley in the United States increased nearly 118 per cent in the past twenty years, from 32,000,000 bushels in 1873 to 69,869,000 bushels in 1893. The result has clearly .proven that our protective policy in favor of this important agricultural product was wise in the interests of the farmers who were annually increasing the do mestic output. By increasing the duty on barley in 1890 we lost only about half a million of revenue, in return for which our farmers increased their prod ucts 15,000,000 bushels over the average for eight years. This increase in one year was worth at least $6,200,000, mak ing the loss of revenue of trifling com parative importance. The tendency was to draw farmers away from wheat and corn, just as the raising of beets for sugar would draw them away from cotton in Kentucky, Georgia, North and South Carolina and Alabama. The gain in domestic bar ley pi oduct, since the extra encourage ment given it in 1890, ought to have guarded it. Was the duty lowered in 1894 in the interest of Russian and Canadian producers? It certainly was a piece of legislation that the farmers cannot regard with favor. This subject was of concern to those who framed our first tariff law in 1789. At that time, when the subject of plac ing a proper rate of duty on ale,beer and porter was under consideration, Mr. Fitzsimmons thought the manufacture of those liquors “highly deserving of encouragement,” as calculated to im prove the morals of the people as fos tering home manufacture. Mr. Law rence favored a duty on them high enough to give a decided preference to American beer, as it “would tend to en courage agriculture, because the malt and hops consumed in their manufac ture were the produce of our own soil.” Mr. Sinnickson favored a protective duty in order to increase the manufac ture and t lessen the price, and inas much as the raw material was produced in this country, the agricultural inter ests would be advanced. Mr. Madison moved a duty of 8 cents on beer." He did not think this would give a monop oly, but hoped it would be such en couragement as to induce the manu facture to take deep root in this coun try, in which case it would produce the collateral good (agriculture) hinted at by Mr. Sinnickson—the increase of bar ley «and hops. Not a word was said about revenue from agricultural prod ucts. That was never a consideration with the true democracy.—American Economist. Mrs. tirice gave a garaen party at Newport Wednesday in which there were trick dogs, a hypnotist, acrobats, and fortune tellers. Mrs. Brice may have furnished excellent entertainment for her guests, but it was not to be compared to the garden party given by Senator Brice at Springfield, Ohio, the same day. The senator seems to have played the part of Svengali himself at the Ohio convention and the silver men were the fortune tellers predicting de feat November. There were many democratic jicrobats present to turn double somersaults.—Inter Ocean. The coincidence of the starting up of all the English cotton and woolen man ufactories upon the passage of the Gor man-Wilson tariff bill is hard for tho' democracy to explain to the satisfac tion of American workingmen.—Salt Lake Tribune. The country may be in debt to Mr. Cleveland, but it also owes a great deal more of a national debt through its ! misguided infatuation for the same gen tleman.—St. Louis Star-Sayings. | WHAT WOMEN ARE DOING. Mrs. George Lewis of Boston think* she is the youngest grandmother in America. Her age is 32 years. John Oliver Hobbs (Mrs. Cragie) has been elected president of the society of women journalists of London. v> Sarah Bernhardt is to begin her first tour of Germany next fall at the ex piration of her American engagement. Miss E. Thornton Clark, the sculp tor, is said to be fond of pets of all sorts, and her prime favorite is a mouse. Three persons were recently saved from drowning gt Hythe, England, by the courage and skill of Miss Evans, a girl of 21. Mrs. Bertha Welch, of San Francisco, has given more than $150,000 in the last four years to St. Ignatius’ church of that city. Miss Alice French ("Octave Thanet”) is a Yankee by birth (partly of Vir ginia lineage), an Iowan by adoption and a southerner by choice. An American woman is about to make a tour of the mikado’s realm on a bicycle. She will publish a book called "Unpunctured Tires in Japan.” Miss Douglas, th' champion amateur markswoman of England, recently scored fifty-seven bull’s-eyes in suc cession with a revolver at twenty yards’ range. A bust of Charles Sumner, made by the colored woman sculptor, Elmondla Lewis, will be one of the attractive exhibits of the negro-building at the Atlanta exposition. It is expected that Lady Betty, wife of Chief Secretary Balfour, will do her best to make his Irish administra tion popular. She is a woman of great talent and social tact. Lady Haberton, inventor of the di vided skirt, is said to have a new fad. She contends that female servants should wear knickerbockers, as such costume facilitates movements. ■ Mrs. Frank Weldon, wife of Frank Weldon of the Atlanta Constitution, is in correspondence with the Princess Nazle, of Cairo, Egypt, in reference to exhibits at the cotton fair next fall. Aluminum heel tips are coming in vogue. Easily pleased—the man who is satisfied with himself. The inventor of barbs on fence wire re ceives a royalty of $120,000 a year. Peculiar In combination, proportion and process, Hood’s Sarsaparilla possesses peculiar cura tlve powers unknown to any other prepara tion. This Is why It has a record of cures unequalled In the history of medicine. It acts directly upon the blood and by making It pure, rich and healthy it cures disease and gives good health. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the only true blood purifier promlnent ly in the public eyS today. $1; six for $5. HnnH’c Pi lie cur9 habitual const! * O * 11 US patlon. Price23cent*. ★ A-SK. YUUK OKUUUIOI rUK x »' ★ The BEST ★ ^Nursing Mothers,Infants^ CHILDREN ★ JOHN CARLE A SONS. New York. * WELL MACHINERY Illustrated catalogue showing WELL .DKAULIO A AUGERS, ROOK DRILLS, H YDRAULI AND JETTING MACHINERY, etc. Sent Fan. Have been Mated and all warranted. Sioux City Engine and Iron Works, Successors to Pech Slfg. Co. _ Sioux city. Iowa. XiiE RoweLI. & Chase Machinery Co., — ^ lilt Wost Eleventh Street,’Kansas City Ho. DR. WINCHELL’S TEETHING SYRUP TO tTio hnot rnnslSslMs __ _ n a■ . _ _ J?$}e best medicine for all diseases incident to «nndrn.™.Itifeglillat:esth.0 bowels: assists dcuti 5*°“' c4fes diarrhea and dysentery In the worst forms:cures cunker colic. ’ sleepless nlshts when It iswithin your reaeh to cure your child and save your own strength. _. ■— •’ ~ ono.iKut. Dr. Jaque,s German Warm Cakes destroy worms & remove them from the system Prepared by Emmert Proprietary Co., Chicago, IIL SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. .. PARKER’S _ HAIR BALSAM Cleanses and beautifies the hair. Promotes a luxuriant growth. JifT?r .*“}}» Beatore Gray Hair to ita Youthful ColorT Cures scalp diseases It hair tailing. _JtX^am^lUun at Druggists ^ Free Catalogue. Geo. K. * u Her, Box2146, Rochester,N, Y. LIMBS PATENTS fltSQ fi’jiSklrTf'"'1 ,OT “,0° Inwnlten. W.B. • •» ■ ■ W ted.” Edgar Tate & Company, ¥45 Broadway, H.Tm t DR. McGREW IS THE ONLY SPECIALIST WHO TREATS AI.L PRIVATE DISEASES Weakness and 8eore» Disorders of MEN ONLY Every our© guaranteed, years' experience. 8 jears in umaha. Hook Free 14th A Farnaa Iti. OMAHA, NEB. Zachary T. Lindsey, Whole sale RUBBER GOODS D«*Ier» send for Catalogues, Omaha, Noh>-4^ 3 Omaha STOVE REPAIR Works •tor* repair* for 40.000 OMforeat atarn a&U ruiea. Utt Dougina It, Ouaka, tit.