11.|; ,\Nl> SIEVE®. r ,.RY OF THE CONVEN *"|0N BOLTERS. .. m the l’eople of the United i„ Appeal to the Country for i, ,.,,, „f Their Action—Ulruet ,,,.,-hii'etl the Oreat Political 1 the Colorado Senator j it. Ablest Champion. ,i;u.r I, the Battle Cry. . nature Fred X Dubois of i; |‘. lVitigrew of South Da i . ,!. Cannon of Utah, Con ,.H Charles H. Hartman of nil Hen K. Rich, Clarence E. \ s. Robertson, A. C. (Jleve v,.;iis Sweet, Amasa U. Camp M. Stevenson, Enoch .lames M. Downing, Charles seustein. Thomas Kearns, C. J. i..tilelon l’riee, Jacob J. Elliott, >B.i,bury, J. Vt. Overton, Frank lU,;y. .loliu F. Vivian, J. W. Rockc „ Hubert \V. Boynge, John M. i,ami M. Earl, the free sil ts.-(rates who walked out of the na. convention, signed this morn a declaration of independence !, m‘‘„ forth their principles and uiM'iulcd that all parlies and libations opposed to the gold iaul unite in supporting1 Senator >[■ for I’resident. A strong effort made to get delegates from r -lutes who did not withdrew the eouvention to sign this a ration. i, the joint belief of all who have r,insulted from the far West that e ,nl! not he a successful Repub i e.eetor in the West outside of l am! possibly Minnesota. They her believe that there will not be mu id man elected South of the nine and the Ohio rivers. A mein* of the Montana delegation sug eii that the ibattle ground would i l.lciois and Indiana, and that U -. Indiana, Iowa, Minnesota, I,:.an, West Virginia, Maryland, i are, Xviv Jersey and Connect! v i se doubtful states and tlie Re 1 cm party would have to carry L'f 'hem in order to succeed. i.;:m;i!,u. fusion figured on. Iirrc have been conferences with I nc representatives of the Popu s aim of the liimetallic league to I: *'* them to work for the indorse 1; id' Teller, and have such a strong '■n against the gold standard as to u r the Democratic national con '. ' ii also to indorse Toller as the Ini candidate for President. They i c nferred with ex-liovernor Fran nf Missouri and Democratic free :r advocates, and were invited to u representatives to tne Uerno national convention at Chicago £’ month to confer with the party, 'iie silver men say that Senator a t* is the man in their opinion on mu ail the anti-gold men could ho. but that they are willing to co 11 to wherever they can consist h ibso to defeat the gold stand 1. and they are not seeking to press 1u:"r Teller so much as they are to me relief from the power of the 1-1 men. I-<*y have issued the following ad fs-,. ri.EA TO THE PEOPLE. ‘lo the People of the United States: e';inn the call of duty and justified ll;e common citizenship of this re ihitc. we address this eommunica )d to the people and the forthcom f conventions of the United States, do ng so we claim uo authority or fht other than that which belongs eve,7 tuan to express personal con ations: but we respectfully solicit e co-operation of all who believe t,,e has come for a return the simpler and more direct method naming men for national service an has obtained in recent years, lout leal party oriranizat.inn in >wy, because without it the indi *ua. \oter is dumb, but the party is ;; ti,e means, not the end. It is the ’ 0 and not the sense. As the world •in'-cs in this wonderful epoch of ■•..eanni development and physical c'ement, there is constant rc ^i1!uh!^f fT b*tter thiD?s- The in ■ ai feels that requirement and '1 ’ or in life's endeavors. ‘f’jt't must also obey the same law. '"lluivs, therefore that . therefore, that the moment L •' 'liaU choose to stand still or ■ii.eree.T’ 11 ,is Blso inefficient to ■u..... le®n>« sake of ex nbaiissinr,611,11 establishes insincere "ie of power partisan rule for IXDKPExriESTS IX POI.lTloa ■Plcndid a h-nff the Tah,e and the ,ies in .,ai;hleve'nents of political par irevet >n ^0Untpy» as elsewhere, vve tore tv °“s rained to believe that for ilk-niii' , l"'euty years no one of ^ needs nfCn eQtirely sufficient foj Jre“” better tl?eOP,e- The *reat Jeart anri ' tlllaS8 resting in the )e‘n stavetiParP°Se °* a11 men' has ll'H'eneratifUriln? the latler part of ’■ on by the failure of par n t.Ka ! >• ««u:_r_a_ ;!es'oexpres°,niby,ih? failure of Par lr*e hi ,ss ln fbeir achievements 1 “°pe and asDiratinn of t.h> ;)e‘, , u i-neir achievements fc»Moi tho *ope,and aspiration of the parties. A„ e 'vll° constitute the ia this count- ^ere bas been growing re"urt,;n,je o*,V with each ereat mass ° * ?ational election—a anling within itseli ’ bas gravitated between tb( parties. s>inA. .i <__a ■Publican -u Darts. .1 A“ 1873 ttle '? 1 “Ic the ?.e*ecte(l the Presidenl 6 ecl,°i: in iKs,??1.ocracy elaimed th '.. in'^Republican part ‘voted; ... in iwti RePublican part !D the rt„_ i1!1.® democrats electei ,e I)tmopr.rv“,';fta8 elected; in I»v clh!n a few wee'kt)‘U Va“ “een co! elect. ' »* ims oeen coi Republicans woO whi ni* year k ailon of a mass hunself t# s e.r^ man ■^tfver if u , * he has been £*j*)d. It is a mistaken idea that a man who works hard must eat rich food. Three-quarters of a pound of beef, costing 10 cents, one quart of milk, costing 5 cents, and five ounces of wheat, costing three-quarters of a cent, are equal in nourishing ma terial. One pound of cheese is equal to two and a half pounds of beef. There is no better diet to work hard on than cheese and potatoes, and there is no diet more digestible. Wheat bread Is not a well-balanced food, but bread well buttered is very nutritious. Skim milk and oatmeal are valuable foods. Black Langfthans. In your issue of April 15 Charley Ramsey of Hardin County, Ohio, asks If any of the readers of the Review can tell him anything about the BlackLang shans. Mr. Ramsey in the latter part of his request for information states that he would like to know what the writers on poultry subjects think of them. As we do not pretend to be a writer on poultry subjects perhaps any thing we might say would have no in fluence with the gentleman. However, as we have been a breeder of this splen did fowl for a number of years we will give our opinion and let it go for what it is worth. The Langshan is a dis tinct breed (no make up), coming origi nally from Chinese Tartary. The plum age should be black, not a dull black, but glistening black, with reflections of green. The legs and bottom of the feet should show a pink color—no yellow. The legs should be feathered, but not so heavily as the cochins. Weight should be, cocks, 8 to 9% lbs.; hens, 7 to 8%. In disposition they are very gentle, easily confined, and so far as my experience has gone, the best of all winter layers. There are two distinct types. The low, heavily-bodied and the tall, majestic appearing, which one can not see without saying, “Blood will tell.” As sitters and mothers the hens are first-class. As a table fowl I don’t think they are excelled by any other breed. In saying this I know the con sensus of opinion is against me. Still we deny that the color of the skin has anything to do with the eating qualities of a bird. W. A. Cbatterton. Profit In Ughoroa. I have been keeping poultry for the last fourteen years, both hens and tur keys. I have quite a number of breeds, I but think there is more profit in the I Leghorn breeeds than in any others. ; My fowls have a warm house in the win | ter and free range in the yard all day. II feed plenty of corn in winter, and I when the ground is bare I throw out | some oats and wheat as a change. We always sell at home and never run risk ot shipping. We do not get na many eggs In winter as In summer, but get quite a per cent of them during the winter. We seldom lose fowls from lice or disease, but lose more from hawks than In any other way. We keep a few of the laiije breeds for the purpose of hatching. We generally let them run at lnrge after a few days ns we think they do better. I have never tried doctoring hens but have turkeys. I tried several remedies for dysentery, but nothing did any good till I tried camphor. It cured them. I think there Is no fowl I ever hntidled that will pro duce more eggs than the Leghorn. They also mature very quickly. For a heavy fowl the Plymouth Rock matures early. I do not make poultry raising my sole occupation. I raise what I can in the poultry line and attend to my other business. I raise eighty to one hun dred chickens In a year and thirty-five turkeys, and besides I sell as many eggs as my neighbors do. Mrs. Robert Dinning. rig roinu. It coats at least one-third more to produce a pound of pork after the flrnt year than before. If a pig does not pny a profit by the time It Is ten months old It will hardly do so after It passes that age. oYung pork is not only the beet and cheapest, but brings the highest price in the market. With a majority of our farmers the hog pays the grocer, the physician, the taxes, the interest, clothes the family and practically sup plies the table with meat. With all young stock it is an important item to secure a good growth from the stnrt. It is easier and more economical to keep an animal growing than to allow it to become stunted and then attempt to feed up Into a good condition. It is a Bure way to have diseases among the hogs when they must rely upon slop as drinking water. They require pure water the same as do other animals, and when deprived of it will not thrive, —West Lake Herald. WynmlottcMi mxl Keel Cap*. We have been keeping poultry for eight years. During that time we have had the Wyandottes, Plymouth Rock, Urown Leghorns, Lnngshans and Black Spanish. For general purposes the Wyandottes are best, for laying, the Red Caps. I feed principally corn, wheat and oats. In disposing of our eggs we have always sold to a peddler who pays from 8 to 26 cents per dozen. We obtain most of our eggs during the winter. We have lost a good many birds from diseases and some from prowling animals. When we flrst began raising broods we had good success but the longer we keep in the business the poorer success we have. We have alsc tried doctoring fowls and have used from twenty to thirty remedies, but none Of them proved of any value. William Buschlng. White I.eKhnri» end riymontli Rocha. I have bred the Plymouth Hocks, White Leghorns, Black Spanish, Brahma and Wyandottes, but I like the White Leghorns and Plymouth Rocks best. For winter quarters I have » good house, well-boarded, with tarred paper over that and over that siding and then three coats of paint. In the summer they pick up nearly their own living, as they have the range of the whole farm. In the winter they get corn, oats, wheat and cooked veg etables. We sell our eggs to parties having a cold storage house in Owaton na. In this cold climate we do not get many eggs in winter. For the farm I like Plymouth Rocks best as they look after themselves mostly. As for lay ing, White Leghorns have done th« best for me. W. O. Buffum. Dairy Form.—There seems to be an inclination to scoff at what is called dairy form. But all experience goes to show that dairy form is a sure in dex of the character of a milk cow. There are two points that stand out prominently and that should not bs lost sight of in selecting a dairy cow. The flrst of these is a big paunch; the second is a concave thigh. The latter denotes lack of ability to lay on flesh. The former tells us that the cow is a great consumer. Then the rest is plain; is she eats a great deal and does not turn it into flesh and fat, she must needs turn it into milk. We doubt If this rule ever fails. Pekin Ducks.—There are the Peklns, a grand breed, pure white, with a plumage that Is thick and heavy, but fine in texture, a breed of ducks that is older than the history of civilization, that comes to us from over-populated China, where, doubtless, they are raised among the flags and lilies that bedeck the floating homes of the river-dwellers, people that are born, live and die on the water, with only a brief, occasional experience on dry land; for the river and inland lakes of China, we are told, are populated as well as the land, and whole villages are made up of floating population that extend for miles on the water.—Ex. _ Keeping Butter.—If you would keep butter for use at a time when you are not making any, pack it solidly down In stone jars, put a cloth on top and one third inch of salt, keep an inch depth of water over all, and the cover on the jar, and all in the butter cellar. I have kept butter in this way perfectly sweet and good from October until June. The pans, pails an#all appliances about but ter making must be kept clean by scald ing in boiling water after being washed in water with soap in it as often as they are emptied from use.—Ex. A Questionable Practice.—Too many farmers have formed the practice of selling their calves for veal. With the present demand for beef and dairy cat tle would it not be more profitable to keep the calves and sell them at ma turity? The prospect la good for the There are days when the road seems ! to bo all up-hill. > Th« Modern Branty Thrive* on good food and sunshine,. ' | With plenty of exercise In the open air. Her form glows with health and her J/ face blooms with Its beauty. If her sys tem needs the cleansing notion of a lax ative remedy she uses the gentle and plensnnt Syrup of Figs. Made by .the California Fig Syrup Company. Popular Fabrics for Hummer Gowns. ' Now anil striking efforts In the way of cotton gowns always appear after the first of May. Now cotton crepes, organdies, dimities and piques delight i lie eyes of evory one able to woar cot ton gowns I say “able," for many women from climate, health or occupa tion are debarred from wearing any but woolen gowna liven heavy Irian linen has been taken for midsummer r wear, und gold lace appears on grace linen. __ Coe's Cough Balsam In t.lir olilnxt mill best. It will break up a Cold quleb> er Uian a uy thins also. It la always reliable. Try It, A Hon Wanted. A newspupor published In an Okla homa town where the women recently carried tho election sent the following ordur to n supply house: “1’lease send us one small cut of a hen. Women carried the election hare, and I sup pose we will have to awing out a hen instead of a rooster.”—New York Tribune. For lung and chest diseases, Mho's Cure Is the host medicine we hare used.—Mrs. J. U Nortbrott, Windsor, Ont., Canada. An empty head and a rattling tongue go well together.__ Crushing a rose makes it bigger than It was before._ . PITS -All Fits stopped rree by Or. K line’s Orest h'.rvn Restorer. NoKItuKlirriliallmilay’sins. Marvelous cures. Treat Iso ami 02 trral bottle free Is t It casus, ttsud to Or. Kllue.llSl Area Ht-.ruila., hs There 1h much of the devil's work that cou only be done by tbe hypocrite. It the Ualty is Cutting lasts. Issues and uss that old and will* triad remedy, Sll, ,; Wutst^w's SooTUixs STttur for OUldran TssIMng. The character of lore is tbe same' In every country and climate. Pure Clood is essential to health. Now la the time to purify end enrich tho blood, and thus give vigor and vitality, by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier All druggists. |1* Mood’s Pills cure all l.lver ill). 2fi coats. The Greatest Hedleal Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. 0MAU> KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, NASS. . Has discovered in one of our common ^ pasture weeds a remedy that cures every kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. He has tried it in over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in two cases (both thunder humor). He has now in his possession over two hundred certificates of its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is war ranted when the right quantity is taken. When the lungs are affected it causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them: the same with the Liver or Bowels. Tiiis is caused by the ducts being sh >pped, and always disappears ift a week after taking it. Read the label. If (lie stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. No change of diet ever necessary. Eat the best you can get, and enough of It Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed time. Sold by all Druggists. Of course it’s imitated— 4 anything good always is— that’s endorsement, not a pleasant kind, but still en dorsement. HIRES Root beer is imitated. lUd* on It hr Thr Churl-* K. Hir«* Cn., Philadelphia. A 2ic. jiiwiagu nukc-i 6 pailum. Sold cTvpva hero. DROPSY THEATKO FREE* Positively Cured with Vegetable Remedial Have cured thourands of case*. Cure case* pro nounced h<>pele-s by best physician*. From flint doe symptom* disappear, in ten day* at leontt tw«>-thirds all Mjinot hii* removed. Send for free book t»*timo» nlale of miraculous cure*. Ten day’s treatment tree by mail. If you order trial send IOo In stamps to pay postage. l>n. H. If. «ixkkx A Rons, Atlanta, Q*. If you order trial return tbU advertisement to us. A journey to the center of the earth. No, not quite. Enough like it, though, to give you a good idea of what the real thing is— the trip to the “Garden of Eden," Wind Cave—near Hot Springs, So. Dakota. Book about Hot Springs free if 70a write to J. Francis, Gen'l Pass'r Agent, Burlington Route, Omaha, Neb. Patents. Trade-Marks. Examination and Advice as to Patentability of hventloa. a+nd for “ luvoutors’ Guide, or How to Got • Patent." FlRZCZ OTAISSLL. WA8HDWTQE. IlO. ‘‘IS'StttU? j Thompson’s Eyo Wstor. LINDSEY ^ OMAHA RUBBERS! W. N. U„ OMAHA—26—1890 When writing to advertisers, kindly mention this paper. PISO ■? CURL r OR 'ur BCUfltS WKttt ALL tut Best Cough Syrup. Taatea _ In time. (Sold by drag ONSUMPTI C N