, KANSAS—N EBfiASKA. {:? V-'-r *A. : •■■■ ...... ARE NO LONGER THE HOT BED cOR’WILirEY ED THEORISTS. |i! % i ' findR>I1j D*wa t* tk« Con 4Mm Onlalaxl by tha Lava of ' BaUla—Tba Btataa Will Rllfht tha OaAaalaas had Vota Republican Ticket. Nebraska will be one of the battle •centers In this national campaign. Ne braaka la the home state of Bryan. Because of his nomination for the presidency, all the hysterical and nerv •oua mind force of his Nebraska follow en will be aroused to its utmost ten* sin from now until election day. So far ao Bryan’s followers are able to anako It so, the campaign will be Ben national. Bryan himself being tho very -embodiment of sensation, tin his atti tudes and in his oratorical effects, and the doctrines which he preaches being much as to appeal to the hysterical and nervous mind force of the community, the'campaign will undoubtedly be one •of the most exciting ever witnessed In the country; and Nebraska wilt be tone of the centers of this excitement. * Not only is Bryan himself a- breeder •Of political hysteria on general frip -dples, In his attitudes and In the ef fects which his oratory produces, and "not only is the attitude of the demo ' -cratic party in espousing so suddenly the free ellver cause, heavily charged with sensationalism, but populism, which Is the very essence of eensatlon mliam, being now merged with Bryan Ism and this new democracy, the whole •at on e becomes a complete aggregation of nil the sensational fads that have •characterised the last decade In Aflaori •can politics. i r, ‘ Until recent yean the mind force 1n farming communities has been sup posed to be phlegmatic In its character, -•low In action, and more than any other -class of people, farmers have been fudged as conservative and deliberate. For the last few years, farmers,la, 'Nebraska and Kansas have exhibited the v##y reverse of conservatism to a "degree almost alarming. People la. th£, -east, have been unable to account |o| thh| universal activity of the mind force In'these western farm communities, and especially their tendency toward aensatlonal doctrines. In 5»e old world the cities lore the xestlng places of sensation. The unus tutt mental activity of the farmers of ■Kansas and Nebraska Is undoubtedly due to the physical conditions; the ■clear, bracing atmosphere, the healthy and nourishing food, the high altitude •and the electrical conditions which spouse the mental force to the utmost Mission, all combine to make them the snout active and bright minded people -an the face of the earth. It Is as Impos sible for the mind force of Kansas and Nebraska people to be dull and phleg ■mtlc as It Is for the mind force of the people of the south to be bright 'Whoever comes from an eastern state ah# spends a week In Nebraska will Cggsrupon hie own person and in his mdatal faculties this same exhilarating tone. There la no brighter minded boy In the world than the Nebraska bpy. It la said, by those who understand that a map in both mind and body le the product of the physical conditions Irtish surround him, that the future wfttl show In the western prairie states -flOlgh altitude, the brightest minded jpfc and women in the world. This ruhuaual mental activity, peculiar., to 'tTlhpnu AVI/) VahraeWe mairswi mha. Kansas and Nebraska, makes the'peo* jple quick to grasp at a new ldcja anti Ihplfl to espouse a new cause. This quickness to act In a new cause, while indicates the bright mental facul ttatfof the people, also indlcatea a reck* Imsdcss which would be alarming, were (ft hot understood that the community Jls bow, that there Is gathered on these {Wsatern prairies a heterogeneous mass iOf‘ men from all sections of the coun* !*ry, blending all the Isms of s dozen ’IMfcreut types and civilisation, not yet {fully settled down Into conditions of wuii tuia narmony susceptible of the ilielit leadership. Any declaimer who jkad a piece to apeakcould got aft aif I S " ■-- BY* •**» to Nebraska; shy orator who had m mmaatlonal speech to deliver could net applause; and any theorist who had plausible scheme could find ready and water followers, 111 the last six year* jhpwever, Nebraska and Kansas have |%ad much experience. The farmers ffofye listened to many orators and fawny lams have been expounded and •exploded. The two per cent per annum {government loan proposition which cnnght the farmers of Kansas like wild six years ago has run its race and ■«lp n dead cause. The doctrine of the itnerumit ownership of railroads no •longer arouses the enthusiasm that'It ^ld a few years ago, and only plays t perfunctory part in giving body to n populist platform. The bitter and relentless attack of a w. years ago on railroads, telephones, •telegraphs, banks, and all manner ol fdorporations for which these western —*xtee were famous, has subsided, and >w the populist United States e'eaa* >r, congressman, member of the 10# 'ature and the populist official of . wtever rank, rides on a railroad pass -prhenever he can get one with as much < ^nonchalance as the most confirmed r tom-poller of the old parties. v In the earlier history of the populist :A-»arty. each county and state platform U 'dtanounced the politician and office iker, and each orator declaimed with i ^«n»cUmonioua unction on the evil el '^teote of personal ——■ - - -ambition and offici ■i ameklng. •• All this to at an end to Kansas am Jtebraska. Now,the populist orator bold tasserts the doctrine that to the vie a. belong the apoils, and to the eoun Xr and state conventions they Joetl iwept other to greedy scramble far plac .Jjpa* power, without rebuke from th m • Ml 1 1'r.p'ilkt press or protest from the rank and file. The present campaign will be excit ing and Nebraska will be one of the centers of battle, but let it be under stood that the bright mind force of these prairie farmers han passed upon the sophistries of popuiiem, and it will be rejected in this year as it was six years, four years, and two years ago. The voting population of Nebraska has been subject to the Bryan windmill for six years. Every light grain, every shriveled kernel, and every empty hull has been blown out into the populist chaff pile. The republican wheat which re mained after tho campaign of elx years ago, four years ago, and two years ago, remains still, and there is enough of it to make a good round majority for McKinley and protection. Free Trade and Free Silver. . When Hamlet was about to commit suicide he reasoned with himself as to whether it was better for a man to be dead than alive. When Plato showed him how it Was impossible for him to destroy himself, that he would live on In the next world, and that there would be trouble there, just as there is trou ble here, he. hesitated, saying, "Aye, there’s tbe rub.’’ ,... . viauj m vutur uieso umiea siatee who hn» ItatAneri kindly to th« silvery vole# of the free silver orator.®will pause before he drops the ballot, and say to hhnSelf, “Ay, there’s the rub.” When we have shuffled off the gold bug and the plutocrat, when we have dismissed the trained minds from the councils of the nation, when theboy orator lo in the presidential chair, and when all the other *ree silver orators attain the seats of congress, when the . s6b«r. experienced business mind of the republic has been dethroned and the inexperienced, experimental mind is enthroned in power, what Ills may come to the American people? Will Altgeld, Tillman, Waite, and Peffer, Whispering in the ears of the boy presi i ?hat other new Isms will be evolved by the inventive gehiUB of these new and inventive statesmen when they sit down In council to doctor the financial system of this country? As they have roamed about among the people like strolling minstrels, each has sung his ' own particular aong and each has start led hie audiences with doctrines unique and original. But when they get into congress, these men of new ideas, un der the stimulating influence of compe tition, what neW and yet unheard of experiments will they not bring forth? When populism, had control in Kan sas it enacted stay laws which were intended to make every borrower a dis honest repudiator, which drove out of the state every dollar of conservative low-rate money and cost the borrowers of the state 12,000,000 annually in ad vanced Interest. They defied the laws of the state and surrounded the state capital with armed, soldiery. The elec tion or Bryan and a Bryan lied con gress may mean to re-enact these Kan sas scenes at Washington. It is not, so much the Intent of £**6 free silver oratpiffc to hie revolutionary that makes them dangerous, but rather the reck lessness with which they invent new doctrines and their Inability to agree among themselves as to Just what they do want and as to Just how to bring It about. It was two years and three months from the time Cleveland took Ms seat until the Wilson bill was passed. It Will be three years from now before a free silver law can be enacted. Whal" will happen in the meantime?# 5 ' Decllee at PsyaiUB. ' Now that the populist party has been swallowed bodily by the democratic, party, It la interesting to go back to Its earlier history and see how far. tg has drifted from Its original moorings,' Kansas was Its chief besting place when it made its famous9 campaign in • that state six years ago. Then it had for ita, chief corner stone the doctrine •that the government should issue un limited quantities, of paper fiat money and should loan this money to the farmers of the country, |2,500 on each quarter section of land, at two per'cent per annum. 1 , ' ** This proposition la regarded now an absurd and impractical even among the" populist farmers themselves; and yet only six years ago it was the one par tlbuler doctrine whloh more than' any* other was uiked of In the fenner^ meetings and advocated aa a safe and practical,measure. ** At Uu*t time Frawh McGrath, of Be lolt, KaS., then the state president of •tlie Kansas Farmers’ alliance;-was con tinually deluged with letters from Kan «« *ad Ne»t«m^tar»erfe Inquiring a» to the two per cent per annum scheme. In these letters President Mc Grath was urged to hurry the matter forward with all possible haste, and in ipome of them strong personal appeala Were made on the ground that the writ-, Sr’s mortgage was nearing maturity and that he was exceedingly anxious to change his rate qf interest from aev en per cent per annum to two per cent per annum, and to shift his debt from some grasping NSw England creditor to the government itself. Frank Mo^rath, who ia a strong, self reliant, practical man, had opposed the two per cent government loan scheme In the populist state convention at To peka. and H was the greediness with which he saw this doctrine devoured • I 1 I .*** • • ■' . v-* >v i h rf,. : • ■ . ..yfyJNi * **• *■ eh»-.! g What Frank McGrath feared six iyears ago has come to pasn All 'the hysterical mind force of the American people has been aroused by these catchy doctrines and organized into one mighty impulse to do—what? Does it know What it will "do? ; Jiist no% this Impulse Is for free and unlimited coin age of silver. Six years ago It was for the free and unlimited coinage of gov ernment farm loans. What wUl it de-, mand next year? Should it get into power, this impulsive mind force, when will it enact this ffee coinage law? When Bryan is elected and when his triumph has swept into thb hfttfnai congress ill these nervous and unsta ble minds, when will they agree on a |tee coinage law? And what other dan gerous and unpractical measured’ will be gathered in by this mighty drag net, this organization of disorganized mind force, this aggregation of visionary and unpricticsi men? I ’ i / ] ms: ■ | ? * i - I i ri ! f THB MAREMMA. j Tract of Inasluhrlotu land Dor derlng on tlaa Moilltcrronoon. The name of Maremma ta given to a large extent of lnaalubrloue land which borders the Mediterranean, whether Insalubrious because uncultivated, or Uncultivated because Insalubrious la a problem which has not yet been solved, Says Good Words. Though both mod ern science and Quickened national en terprise 'have of late years been applied %o its solution, the results accomplished have been unconvincing. The Tuscan part of the Maremma stretches inland nearly to Siena; beginning at the north a few miles from Leghorn, It extends to the ancient frontier of the pontifical states, from whence the same Immense tract of sparsely cultivated and malari al tertftbft continues under the name of the Roman Maremma and Campagna to the gates of Rome. There Is no hard and-fast border line between the healthy and the unhealthy land but the transformation Is a gradual one, the villages become rarer, the cultivated land diminishes, stretches of wood and bog are more frequent until we no long er eee any houses b* the roadside but only here and there in the distance some small gray hamlet perched on the top of a rocky hill, "like roosting falcoh musing oa the chase.’* On the hillside near such oases some field, a few olive trees and th'dn again begins the woodland, large forest trees, then groves of beeches and oaks looped con tinually for firewood, tfce forest full of dangers and alarms, with Its ponds and bogs and labyrinthB, a hiding place or anything from a ghost to a brigand— In short, the typical forest of the Maremma.. Towaad the Mediterranean coast the hills become less abrupt and along the shore aadjip the broader .val leys which diverge from it stretch im1 rnense extents of undulating grass1 lands, * Seemingly *■ uncultivated but'" which really are sown piece by piece Id1 regular rotation every ten yearn hoe lun,Tn_’tin W t-t W & * i? > : . V«* T f * * v Napoleon After the Battle of Dreodea' The night of the Tth was - spent. In Indecision f • to any one or all of these ideas but id active preparation for the1 retreat; any contingency might be met or a Resolve taken when the necessity! arose. I>uHng that night the emperoi* took two warm baths. The habit of drinking strong coffee to prevent drew-1 siness had induced attacks of nsrvoua-, ness, and?these’ were sot diminished by hie load of care. To allay these and1 other ailments he had recourse fori some time to, frequent tepid baths.' Much has been written about a mys-i terlous malady which had been stead-) ily increasing, but the burden of testl-l mony from the emperor’s closest asso ciates at this time indicates that In the main he had enjoyed excellent health throughout the second Saxon cam paign. There were certainly intervals of self-indulgence and of lassitude, of excessive emotion and depressing self examination, which seemed to require the offset of a physical stimulus; bat on the whole natural causes, complex but not inexplicable^ sufficiently ac count, for the subsequent disasters.— Century. •' v DAIRY AND POULTRY. _ | INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. Bov Sneeviofol Fwrmvao Oporato This Doportnol of tho Farm—-A Few Hints M to the Cere of Lin Stock end Poultry. T this time ©f year it is somewhat difficult to keep the milk that goes to the factory in prime condition, where it is strained into large delivery cans, seventy - five to eighty pounds to the ean.unless thor oughly aerated as It goes into the can, or is afterwards done, il can hardly be kept In lit condi tion by the use of water alone, writes C. H. Everett In Wisconsin Agricul turist. It may seem to be sweet in the morning, as it starts for the fac tory, but if it has far to go, and is ex posed to the hot sun on the way, or if the morning’s milk is added to the milk of the night before, by the time It reaches its destination it Is not good milk, and it is not to the interest of the patron, especially If it be a co operative factory, to have the milk in any other than prime condition. I do not know of a single farmer in my neighborhood besides myself that uses the aerators; some of them set the cans in the stock tank over night, but that 'method is frequently of no benefit, as the water in the tank this hot weather Is often nearly as warm as the milk. And is really' a detriment, as the milk la kept warm tnrougnoui and more than that the covers are re moved from the cans and the foul odors of the barnyard find their way ln*.o the milk. Others use a small tank 'through which the water flows from the pump to the stock tank. That Method is better, but necessitates ex ercise at the pump handle many a night when there is no wind to turn Sie wheel, and the farmer Is tired and Shklous for his well-earned rest,so that the milk is often neglected. Some men strain the milk Into the delivery cans mid allow it to set In the stable dur ing the night. If I were boss at the fac tory I would send such milk back; it is not lit for butter nor cheese. It seems strange to me that men will resort to 'all methods but the one that Is the 'cheapest, the easiest executed, the one 'that will give the best results and re turn the greatest benefit. A milk aerator does not cost much, say $2; it Ifits the top of the delivery can, the Strainer fits the top of the aerator, or {can easily be made to. Set the can in •the pure air, pour the milk in at the 'top, It runs through ' in fine small streams, and every particle comes in 'contact with pure air. When handled jln this way it requires but little water, land much of the time not any. The milk Is always sweet and wholesome. [Bun the morning’s milk through In the same way. This is very easy to accom jpllsh. No extra work but to wash the 'aerator, and no worfy and bother about the milk. The man who draws the milk will not have word that the butter-maker says your milk was sour and he wouldn’t take it, Milk aerators are made by all firms of dairy supply goods. An aerator that will do fine work may be made by fitting a small tin tube on to a common house bel lows, such as is used to start a fire. Have the tinner make a tube two feet long that will fit the nose of the bel lows tightly. When the can is filled with milk Insert the tube clear to the bottom and work the bellows vigorous ly for a few moments. This will drive pure air all through the milk. Re peat the operation in twenty to thirty minutes. Have a cork for each end of the tube; fill it with boiling water and shake well to wash it. These simple things put into practice often make men successful. Another reason milk Is often in bad condition cqines from filthy cans, improperly made and washed. Cans should be emptied lust as soon as they arrive from the fac tory, and not allowed to stand in the Not sun full of sour milk until night. They should be thoroughly washed With cold water and then scalded with boiling water, after which they are ready to be placed in the sun. When ; buying cans it is well to examine them , inside, and if there are open seams itake them to the tinner and have the .{seams filled with solder. Indigestion nnd Cholera. The Farmers’ Review frequently re ceives from its readers reports on the diseases of their fowls, in which chol-. era is spoken of. Now, we would like to ask this. “How do you know it is cholera?” It is not to be doubted that in a majority of cases the disease that is called cholera is nothing but indi gestion, The two are so much alike in many of their symptoms, that even |the scientists connected with the Bu reau of Animal Industry at Washing ton have been mistaken sometimes and j have experimented for cholera with i fowls sick with indigestion. This may not be the case today, but it was so some years ago, at the beginning of their work in that line. If veterinar ians can be fooled by the symptoms, what can we expect of the ordinary farmer and poultry raiser? It is a very excusable mistake. • • • Now, we are convinced that indlgee I tion is a trouble that carries off a great ; many fowls, and is due directly to a too severe system of feeding. The di gestive organs qf the birds are not capable of sustaining the tax put upon them for a great many months. In their wild state the birds eat part s grain, part insects, part leaves and grass, so that the work required to di gest them is comparatively light. But l in a domestic state the birds find more : *-'r* : - . ■ • .... . • -j-t' - f..'! i ■ • • • « > , ■■■■ ■ \ work put upon the same organa. They are fed corn, oat*, wheat, rye and bar- ' ley. The work of grinding done by j the gizzard must be very great In the course of a year. The glands must j also work to their highest capacity to * furnish the solvents necessary to put ; the food In a condition where it can be | used for the elaboration of blood, j This we think is largely the cause of Indigestion, since exhaustion ia any animal must lead to indigestion as a partial result. • • • The indigestion first makes itselt manifest in the fowl by the suspension of activity by the organs of digestion. It is not at that time noticeable by the farmer, who, if he notices any thing, will see only a disposition on the part of the bird to rest and refrain from activity. The comb is still red, and the feathers are smooth. ’ The organa have ceased active work from .exhaustion, the food becomes often times Impacted in the digestive canals, and this is called constipation. As a of the organs recommence activ ity, the residue of the food is ex creted, but in a form that Indicates great derangement of the organs. The constipated condition ia followed by diarrhoea, and moat frequently the °7“er °f th» Poultry declares that his Diras have cholera and wanta to know what to do for it. Some nostrum la recommended, and. he begins to use it, without, however, stopping the feed ing of the grain ration. If the bird gets well, the organs are again asked to undertake- for another year the enormous task of grinding grain and elaborating blood from the same ma terials that caused the trouble at first. • • * nave the run of the farm should not be troubled with Indiges tion In the summer time, since they are enabled to live largely on grass and insects, thus lessening the tax on the digestive system. And it is a fact very noticeable that such fowls are seldom afflicted in the manner men tioned. On such farms the trouble comes in late winter or early spring. On farms where the birds are kept shut up through the summer months and on all farms in the winter, the rem edy would seem to be to feed cooked food for a part of the ration. * * * The cooking does not perhaps add to the digestibility of the food in the way of getting mord from it or of do ing the work in less time, though this is doubtless sometimes the case. The : benefit lies in the way of lessening the aggregate work to be done by the or gans of digestion. It is evident that if the food is fed in a cooked form the force to grind it in the gizzard will be nil. ' This leaves so much more force to be applied in other directions. Cooking food need not be an expensive affair. There is no necessity of put ting the kettle on the stove and stand ing over it to keep the meal or ground feed from burning down. If the quan tity is more than a gallon, it will be easy to cook it quite thoroughly in an other manner. Heat the water to a boiling point, and see that it is boiling not only in the middle of the kettle, but all over. This gives the total liquid a heat of 212 degrees. This water poured into the mess to be cooked and left standing over night, will do the work. Those who have say 60 hens, can heat a teakettle of water in the morning and scald the meal to be used at night. At night they can scald the mess that is to be fed the next morning. Of course, the larger the amount of feed to be cooked the better will the cooking be done, for the longer will the heat remain at a cooking point. Such feed seems greatly to aid the health of the fowls. ; ■ • • This health question is a great one, for the number of fowls lost every year is incalculable. This means the cut ting down of the profits very materi ally. This in itself is sufficient reason for every progressive farmer owning some kind of an appliance for heating water for the use of the stock. It is cheaper to keep the stock healthy than to cure them after they are sick, and this is especially true of poultry.. Doctoring poultry is a very discourag ing business. Happy is the man who knows how to keep them in a condi tion where drugs and medicines are not needed.—Farmers’ Review. U* . The Family Horse. ,, A horse that is difficult to find, and one that is in constant demand, is one that can be guaranteed to be safe for family use. At any place where horse sales are held, one cannot but bo Im pressed by the large numbbr of search ers after horses suitable for family use. For this purpose a horse must hot only be sound ind good looking, but he must be absolutely safe in the strictest sense of the word. He must be afraid of nothing, and must be possessed of sense enough to behave under circum stances which to the average horse would mean a runaway. He must be safe for a woman to drive, and in many oases the woman will know little about driving and absolutely nothing about what should be done in .case of an accident. In view of the dependency that mrist necessarily be placed on the family horse, it is not to be wondered at that horseB suitable for that purpose are scarce, and also that they com* mand a high price whenever they are offered. The only wonder is that some enterprising man does not make a specialty of high-class, reliable family horses.—Horse World. Effects of Filled Cheese Law—One of the buyers of the Utica board yester day took 860 boxeB of cheese on orders from the south. This is one result of the filled cheese bill, and others are sure to follow. The same buyer has orders for 1,400 boxes more to be filled within a reasonable time. No such ord ers as these have been received in sev eral years, and they would not be here now if filled cheese makers felt at lib erty to push their goods. This law must make a great difference in the sale of. genuine goods the coming fall.—Ex. ♦ Trillt W Do With Bird-Balled Eggs. A man sent his danfrhter to bay four eggs- Shi bought them and he pot them*in a aance pan to boil, laying to hii wife: “Just look at those egga, will yon and take them out when they are done.” Ue Went away and came back in half ■ an hour. Finding the eggs still boil ing, he cooly took them off, put them cold water, dried them and said to hie daughter: “Take those eggs back and say yon wanted docks’ eggs, and if they hare no docks' eggs, bring the money back.” A Wonderful Phenomenon. The man who should pass through life without experiencing twinge of Indigestion, might be fitly regarded as a wonderful phe nomenon. he doubt if such a privileged mortal has ever existed. If so, we have never seen him. But thousands are known to be daily relieved of dyspepsia by Hostet ter’s Stomach Bitters, the popular remedy for that truly national complaint, as well ae for fever and ague, debflitv. constipation rheumatism and kidney troubles. s What a Broken Chain Qld. A broken bicycle chain stopped the operation of an entire street railway system in Chicago recently. The chain' parted and fell from a wheel with one end in the slot of an underground trol ley line. One end of the chain touched the trolley wire, and the other re- • ’ mained outside, forming a short cir cuit. All the cars suddenly refused to _ work. The trouble was finally dis covered by a track-walker, who saw n bine flame where the chain and track were crossed. When the chain was removed the operation of the cars wae 1 returned.—Exchange. Two bottles of Piso’s Cure for Consump* tion cured me of a bad lung trouble.—Mrs. J. Nichols, Princeton, Ind. March 36, 1806k A Ceuta* Experience. In the recent census of the county of London, the occupier of a tenement handed ) & ’t&P VELVETEEN 5KIRT BINDINO by asking and insisting? & & BIAS 5 _ If your dealer WILL NOT supply you we will. Samples showing labels and materials mailed frei. “ Homo Dressmaking Made Easy,” a sew 72 Pago beokby Miss EmmaM. Hooper,oftheLadles' Home Journal, tells in plain words how to make dresses s' home without previous training; mailed for 25c. S. H.dhM. Co., P. O. Box 699, N. Y. City. 1 HUDTJO-A.TIOKTA.Li, U OmahaBosinsssS CoITere, Fatt Tfcrm Sept. 1. Board for throe hour's work. " .taloicue and specimen*Ire* THE UNIVERSITY CF NOTRE DAME. Aatre Dame, Indiana. Tall Coartes In Classics, L*ticrs, sl>nee, Law, CUII, Ms* •fcsaleal and KIsetries! Ksg Isscritag. Tksra«|h I’rspsrttsry Mid Coamwrelsl Courses. K sou it b‘re*> to all stud eats who hare complete i the studies lequired Cor admission into the Junior or Senior Year, of any of the Collegial* Courses. A limited number of Candidates tor tb* Ecclesiastical state will be received at apeclal rites. ■L Mwaad’s Hall, or boys u dor 15 year*.’ is unique in completeness . f *ta equipments The lftfttt Term sill open September tth, INC. CstalaRi* Bent Tree on appli cation to VKBY MKT. A. »OBlUkSKY, C. M. C«, frtiiiHl, 10THK lilt, II*. —r—• SOUTH WEST MISSOURI. The best fruit section In the West. No drouths A failure of crops never known. Ulld climate Productive soil. Abundance of food pure water. For Maps and Circulars wiving full descrin- > ' 1. Fruit anJ -• tloo of the Blch 'Mineral. Fruit and Agricultu ral Lands in South WeRt Missouri, write to JOHN M. PCRDV. Manager of the Missouri Land and Live Stouk Company, Neosho, New ton Co., Missouri. STEADY WORK WE PAY CASII WEEKLY and want men everywhere to SEL1* STARK TREES ?,u"on’te‘ ed. proven •‘absolutely best. ’’Superb outfits, new system. 8TAT