DJU FALL’S TROUBLKS * i '? - TftJCtVC^ THE formal pre sentment CIVEN OUT. CrantHiilaiiM 'Wolf Appears as the Com plalnaet—-Inconi potency, Insubordi nation and Disrespectful Conduct Alleged, With HpeclAcattons Bet Forth. Feeble Minded Institute Difficulty. The board of public lands and build ings has allowed the public to iuspecl .lie charges brought agninst Dr. 0. 1*. Fall for misconduct as superintendent of the institute for feeble minded at ^Beatrice. They read as follows: LtKCOt.N. May 7.--To the Board of Public Lands and Buildings of the State of Nebras ka: Gentlemen—I hereby charge I)r. P. Fall, superintendent of the Nebraska Insti tute for feeble minded youth, with Incompe tcncy, insuliordlnatlon and dlsresnectful conduct and malfeasance In office. Further specifying wherein he has neon guilty of the same. I would state the following: Inoonipotency: I. The said C. P Fall has shown nlmselr unable and Incompetent as superintendent of said Institute to conduct the same In a suitable and satisfactory man ner, nnd has shown himself unable to cor.'iuct She said Institute In such manner ns to pro mote harmony among the employes theroof. 2. He has shown himself incompetent to properly rare for the children placed In said Institution and under his care and as a result Vwo of said children hare lost their lives while he has been In charge of the said Insti tution. Insubordination. 1. The said C. P. FalI as superintendent of said Institution has failed and refused to comply wllli the orders and directions of the board of public, lands nnd hullnlngs In the following particulars, viz.: (a) M. .1. Kennedy of Norfolk was designated tiy said hoard on Fob. 12, 1897. as a night watchman for said Institution, hut the said O. P. Fall has failed nnd refused to permit the said M. J. Kennedy to enter upon his work, (b) Fred Allen of Butler county was on February 12. 1897, selected by the said board ns supervisor In said institution, hut the said C. P. Fall soon thereafter reduced the said Fred Allen to a position ns attendant at a less salary than that of supervisor and placed In said institution as supervisor a citizen of Glen wood. la., all without tho knowledge or con sent of said hoWrd. (c) The lioard of public luuds nnd buildings on February 12. 1897 ordered that the steward In said Institution Should keep the books thereof, but the sals C. P. Fall, In violation of said order, refused V> permit the steward to keep said books, hut. without the knowledge or consout of the board cl public lands nnd buildings employed H. Bush to act as ltookkeepcr for said Institu tion. (d) On May 8. 1897. said C. P. Fall re fused to permit C. W. Phelps, who lins there tofore been duly chosen by said board nt steward for said Institution, to enter sale building for the pumoso of performing hit duties as such steward, (e) On the 5th day MajrrlSW, the said C. P. Fall refused to per mit J. V. Wolfe, chairman of the board at public .lands and buildings, to entor'sald building or to go through the sumo tr. his official capacity, but attempted to cycle.''* hint tlurcftom. Disrespectful conduct : 1. On May it, the-wgld O. P. Fall did attempt to exclude C. V. Wolfe, chairman of the board of public lands and buildings, from said Institution, and did cause, Incite nnd permit tho other employes and ntlendants at such Institution to use disrespectful language toward - • t t ' > : ■ • ' y'- ■ Bask at Bradshaw Closss. V* The other morning as the buslneii men and. citizens appeared on tli . street theirattentlon was drawn to placard tacked to the door of th Bradshaw bank beaming notice t theefeetthst the Institution was i th? hands of the state banking boarc Particulars at this time are unattaii able, but as the concern has alway .been conducted in a careful and coi eervative manner it is believed thi the assets will eqnal the liability Hard times and poor collections aj IPWSesd to be the cause. — -j . ■ A* ■■■ jS h 4 .: . : ' 11 ’ i THE UNION PACIFIC. Nothing Certain a* to Wlian the Road Will He Sold. General Solicitor Kelly of the Union Pacific system will return within the next few days from New York City, says the Omaha lice, where he has been engaged for a month in legal matters connected with the foreclosure of tile government's lien on the U. P. railway. Considerable testimony has been taken in regard to the interests involved in the foreclosure before Judge Cornish, special master in Chancery for the Union Pacific Receiv erships. In regard to the time of the actual foreclosure sale, there have been all kinds of conjectures. Guesses on the date ranging all the way from May 10, next Monday, until January next, have been made and printed. It was a Bos ton publication that started the story about the sale’s being set for May 10, and cited Messers. Mink and Ames as authority for the statement. It is evi dent now that the report was a pure canard, and was directed at the time by those familiar with Union Pacific matters. Said a man who is in a position to judge of the progress that is being made toward foreclosure to a Bee re porter: “In my opinion it’s a good, safe bet that the foreclosure of the Union Pacific railway will not take place this year. But my opinion is no better than yours or that of any one else. It's all a matter of conjecture and one man's guess is as good as an other. Every few days a statement setting the time of the sale is pub lished, but as a matter of fact there is not a man under heaven who. can tell when the foreclosure will take place. “I understand that Master-in-Chan cery Cornish has been in New York taking testimony from holders of vari ous liens against the Union Pacific other than that of the government’s. Now, after all that testimony has been taken, its going to be some time before the master will give his report on the cases to the court. Even if these re ports were accepted by all parties con concerned and at once confirmed by the federal courts it would take a month or more, but it is pretty well understood that there will be no pro tests from the holders of certain liens. It is natural in a case like this, where their intererts might be adversely affected, that there should arise objec tions. These disagreements will cause more delay and even after that there are a half dozen legal processes neces sary before the sale can take place, in cluding the advertising of the sale for sixty days. "That's the reason I seriously doubt if there will be any foreclosure this year. But one guess is as good as an other. There are even those who are aiuiuni. muni# 10 wager mat tne lore closure sale of the Union Pacific rail way will never take place at all. The receivership may, they argue, be ter minated within a year, or possibly somewhat less time, but the road will be operated by the owners in the way they think the most profitable. If any man tells you when the foreclosure proceedings will be terminated, you may politely tell him he is mistaken, for there is no one, absolutely none, who can do anything more than hazard a guess on it. There are as many legal points in the foreclosure proceedings as there are points to a pineapple, and it will take some time to solve them all. That's why I say one guess is as good as another.” Beet Sugar Interest. Washington dispatch: The beet sugar interests are here in full *force. represented by Henry T. Oxnard of Nebraska, and are working for the abrogation of the reciprocity treaty with Hawaii, which admits Hawaiian sugar free into this contry and thus competes with domestic grown sugars. Mr. Oxnard, who is one of the shrewd est managers in the sugar interests in Washington, is strongly opposed to any annexation of Hawaii, because it is a sugar-producing country, whose pro ducts might come in competition with those grown on our soil. For the same reason he is working vigorously to secure an amendment to the tariff whiffh Won 1H rlnfnaf tVw* feaa sdtnSocinn of sugar under existing treaties. Mr. Oxnard printed a long and interesting statement in the Post a few days ago showing that the treaty was a lopsided arrangement by which'Hawaii received most of the advantages and the United States all of the- disadvantages. He is very confident that when the tariff bijl is reported from the finance com mittee that the Hawaiian treaty will be one of the subjects discussed and that enough republican members of the senate will be found to secure its abrogation. Mr. Oxnard is indefatigable in inter viewing senators and representatives and has spent the greatest part of the winter in working upon the sugar schedule. He is known as an expert and with his assistant. E. Ham. for merly Representative Laird’s private secretary and private messenger for Senator Mandcrson, has prepared and printed many of the ablest arguments and pamphlets presented to the house and senate in favor pf the high duty upon sugars and proper protection for American refineries. ; Honors for an Ex-Nebraskan. Port Townsend (Wash.) dispatch: Private advices from Washington indi cate that C. S. Johnson of Alaska will be the next governor of the district. He was sent from Nebraska to Alaska 1 during Harrison's administration to fill the position of United States at i torney for Alaska, and is very popular. Joseph Herrod of North Platte has lost several head of cattle on his farm , south of town by a disease which ap | pears, in the shape of running sores on , the hind legs, followed by a dropping off of the hoofs and later by the death of the animal. A Favorable Indication. The mortgage record In Buffalo county, says the Kearney Hub, is not t what it used to be. Formerly the re j cord showed principally filings and few i released, but now the order is reversed » and the releases exceed the filings by j about four to one. During the month i of April the actual farm releases ex ceeded the new filings by more than . thirteen thousand dollars, and during i the same period the actual releases of . mortgageson city property exceeded t the new filing by about twelve thousand dollars. In the matter of chattel mortgages the proportion of releases is still greater. GROWTH OF CHICORY BULLETIN FROM THE NEBRAS KA EXPERIMENT STATION. Bow to Obtain tho Beat Result*—Prepa ration of tho Ground—Kind of Boll Necessary—Planting and Cultl , . T**!®!—Information of Gen* ;i 'i"-i ■ f' Interrat. 1 ‘ • T ■ . J—7 . I f,j, k Tho Chicory lh . ,-s The Nebraska experiment ■ statist has put forth a bulletin concerning chicory cultivation in this state, fron which some extracts are here taken. The soil best adapted to raising chicory is a sandy loam, provided there is a sufficient water supply. In verj dry seasons heavier soils have beer more productive, owing' to the facl that they retain moisture better thar those of a sandy nature. It is particu larly desirable that the subsoil be loose and friable, having no underly ing liardpan or gumbo. Such a forma tion prevents the downward growth o1 the tap root. The question as to whether bottom land or upland is best adapted to chic ory culture is simply one of water sup' ply. Chicory will thrive where there is a very small amount of water in the sou, but cannot produce as much sub stance as when this element is present in normal, proportion. On the other hand a soil overcharged with water will not only retard the early growth of the root, but will prevent a normal ripening. The super-saturated soil is, without doubt, the greater of the two evils. Land that is ordinarily too .wet for small grain is likewise too wet for chicory. • Land that is too dry for small grain may produce a good cron of chicory root. What is usually termed rich soil is desirable, provided it is not newly broken. New land should never be planted in chicory, as it induces a Woody growth. FALL PLOWING. The importance of fall plowing of the land cannot be too strongly empha sized.. The time for starting the pre paration of the soil will depend some what upon the nature of the crop pre ceding. If this be some small grain plow the stubble and weeds under soon after the grain has been removed. If the season is dry, there is a distinct advantage in plowing immediately after taking off the grain, as the soil is more moist than after standing ex posed in the sun for several days, and is consequently more easily worked. . RICH SOIL NECESSARY. Unless the land is very rich it will need manure. Spread the manure -— piuwiug. uie manure should be well rotted. Subsoil and surface plow in the fall, or, if that can not be done, plow as deep as possible. If rotted manure is not available, it is advisable to keep fresh manure piled during1 the winter, instead of spread ing it in the fall. Keep the pile moist enough to prevent its overheating (flre-fanging) while standing. In order to have water convenient, the heap should be made within easy reach of a pump. Do ndt have the manure too wet, or decomposure will be retarded. There are very obvious advantages to be obtained from the fall prepara tion of land. In the first place, it leaves the ground much cleaner, espec rally if it be plowed early. It exposes a large surface of soil to the action of tho frost during the winter, and this leaves it in excellent tilth in the spring. The ground, being broken up, holds the rain and melted snowwater, and, when the temperature is favor able, undergoes the chemical action before spoken of. PLANTING AND CULTIVATING. Planting should not begin until the soil is properly warmed and the dan ger from heavy frost is passed. Ordi narily from the 1st to the 20th of May is the best time. Seed at the rate of one and'one-half pounds to the acre. The seed should not be placed.more than three-fourths of an inch below the surface of the ground,- and in case the soil is wet, one-half inch is suffl ** piuuwu uw[jt*r me youngf plants will not have strength enough to reach the surface. The planting is best done by means of a garden drill. The greatest care must be taken not to crack the seed, aiftt a drill that will avoid this will be selected. The planter. should drop about four seed at a time. SEPARATING OR THINNING OUT. When the plants attain a size suffi cient to admit of their being pulled conveniently, they must bo removed so tts to leave only plant standing from from four to six inches apart in the row. If the stand is thick when they first come up it will be easier to cut them out in bunches by hand. If two plants are left together their roots combined will not weigh as much as one properly developed. It will also Increase the labor of topping. The operation of thinning out should be completed before the plants have ton leaves. If this k not attended to when the plants are young the removal of the roots will injure the one it is in tended to leave. A day or two after the first plants are up it may be judged whether the stand Is good or poor. If the latter the bare spaces in the. rowi should be replanted. HARVESTING. The implement best adapted to har vesting the root is the beet loosener. This breaks the connection of the roof with the soil, and so they can be pulled by hand. Another way, but not GB convenient, is to run a plow beside the row so as to expose the root on on* side. The tops are cut off the leaves at th« base of the bottom set of leaves. A corn knife isf generally used for this purpose. GENERA I. REMARKS. Chicory is a crop requiring careful attention and considerable labor foi successful culture. The cost of raising an acre of root! is about $30, allowing for the labor o: a man and team at $3 per day. that o a man alone at $1.50 per day. Righi tons of roots may be regarded as at average yield, although fifteen or six teen tons are within range of possi bility. f ■ • The leaves! of the plant make a fail cattle food, but should not be cut o: pastured off before harvesting. The; should not be fed to milch cows ai they make the milk bitter. The county commissioners through out the state are getting in their vrorl on the bridges, most o2 which suffcrei from the flood. t * t - • \ ♦- -Y NEBRASKA TOBACCO. ' Experts Bar tba Weed Can Be Cultivated. In the State with Proltt. A cigar made in Nebraska and ol Nebraska grown tobacco, says the , Omaha Bee. may cause the inveterate ' smoker to shrug his shoulders in con templation, but there are such things, and it is said they are not bad ones, either. There are any number of cigar factories in this state and a fair qual ity of tobacco is grown here. H. Rosenstock of this city purchased within the last few days about 7,000 pounds of Nebraska grown tobaccoT. , The men who raised it are C. R. Chase and Wells.«fc Neiman all of Schuyler. 1 itiis' true that . Wells & Neiman culti 1 v-ate the product more for pleasure than for profit, but it is .said by those 1 who are competent to ‘judge that to bacco can be raised at a profit in Nebraska. Mr. Rosenstock says that the state Wisconsin raises about 90,000 cases of tobacco each year, which is about 300,— 000 pounds. Any tobacco which can be used at all is worth 5 cents a pound, while the greater portion of it will easily bring 10 cents. This state is as favorably located as Wisconsin and Mr. Rosenstock pays the question is, why cannot that amount of tobacco be cultivated here as well as in the state further east? The cultivation of tobacco, like the cultivation of beets, requires constant attention. It must be kept clean and worms must be guarded against. The soil around the plant must also be kept loose, and in fact, the crop re quires constant attention until it is harvested. Then it must be cut at the right time and have a proper place for seasoning. This requires carefully built sheds for that purpose. Mr. Rosenstock says that a farmer with two or three boys to do the work can care for about three acres of tobacco. He cannot afford to pay high-priced labor to care for the crop. Any boy old epough to handle a hoe is old enough to care for the crop, and farmers after a little study and investi gation of the plant will soon learn how to direct operations. That portion of the tobacco used for wrappers is the most valuable, while the binders are next in value, with fillers last. The better care the crop receives the more wrappers will be gathered, and therein lies the profit. It is estimated that about 1,300 pounds of tobacco can be cut from ~ n acre, which at the lowest price wi.i bring 860. This result, it is predicted, would be improved each year, just as in the raising of sugar beets, according to the advancement the farmer makes in the knowledge of how to cultivate the plant. Limuiwuua, lUUUCCU IS like a great many other crops, in that it cannot prosper under a dry season, nor under one that is wet. its worst enemies are the tobacco worm, which ,can be guarded against by careful watching, and the hail, which no one can control. Wells & Neiman at Schuyler culti vate a good deal of tobacco each year, but, as mentioned above, they do so more from an interest in it that a de sire to profit from their work. Jt is said that their plant is about as com plete as any on the larger tobacco farms in Kentucky. They have all the facilities for the successful operation of the business and employ nearly all the work they require in securing a crop. They find a ready sale for their product, but their expense is said to be so large that the returns do not leave them any margin on the investment, unless the pleasure of smoking the Nebraska-made cigar of Nebraska grown tobacco furnishes the remunera tion. Interest In the Kxposltton. Manager Rosewater, of the depart ment of publicity of the Trans-Missis sippi exposition, has returned from an extended trip to New York- and other large eastern cities in the interest of the exposition. He reports consider able success in the business which carried the members of the committee east.' They had numerous conferences with the heads of large railway cor porations. and were given every as surance oi substantial interest on the pnrt of railroads in the exposition in the way of liberal stock subscriptions. George M. Pullman, president of the Pullman palace car company, also promised to aid the exposition with a liberal subscription, and the same Suc cess was met with from the Western Union telegraph company. Francis C. Gable, _ a former resident of Omaha, subscribed $500 for the Edgemant company of 'Edgemont, S. D., and promised a further subscription when he had an opportunity to lay the mat ter before the directors.- . Insurance Companies Object. Last year the Security Mutual insur ance company of Fremont, the Lincoln life company of Lincoln, and the Equit able insurance company of Grand Is land incorporated urder the insurance laws of the state, paying State Auditor Moore the fee of $10 each for such in corporation. The present insurance commissioner has notified the com panies that the fee should have been $50 for each, and has made a demand for the balance, the attorney general having decided from his construction of the law that the full amount should be paid. The Fremont and Lincoln com panies have refused to pay the balance, j claiming that a $10 fee was all the law called for. The Grand Island company has not yet been heard from. The Bankers’ Reserve and the Bankers' Guaranty companies of Omaha have in corporated under the same law this, year, and paid the full fee. The two objecting companies have consulted attorneys add will contest the demand made by t)ie commissioner. The summer school for the teachers of Sheridan county will open June 7. Good instructors have been secured by Supt. Briggs, and it promises to be one of the most interesting institutes ever held in the county. War Veteran Shoots Himself. 1 Cyrus Sellers of Syracuse committed ■ 'suicide by shooting himself over the i right ear with a 33-calibre revolver. His body was found in the barn of Mr: Tuttle, with whom he was living. The deceased was once a member of company I, Eight regiment, Illinois infantry, and had an application for a pension pending. He leaves a family > of four small children. His wife died last December; No cause but general despondency is assigned. t Hon. W, J. Bryan, now in Lincoln, is 11 gradually recovering from the Injuries * he received in the south. ELECTRICITY ON CANALS. Towfag TmuIi by Means of Motors 01 - the Banks. Americans have good grounds to thinking that they have evolved in th system which has been adopted for th Erie canal the best method of propel ling boats electrically yet known, say the Pittsburg Dispatch. In this f.ieth °d. it will be remembered, the moto travels on a cable running along thi tow-path, and it is under the contro of a man seated upon it. While in spee< attained and general efficiency this mode of canal propulsion i3 far aheat of the beat European developments some experiments In this direction which are reported as having taker Place on the Bourgogne canal in Franci are not Without interest. Two meth ft?3 ^!fere tried, one of which was callcc the "rudder.,motor.” The motor war contained, in a light detachable meta' hox, forming part of the boat’s helm and working a screw attached to tht shaft, running at about 300 revolutions a minute. The entire outfit—mounted complete—weighed about 1,800 pounds In the second method there was em ployed a three-wheeled electric motor oar running on the bank ol the canal on a fixed track and towing the boats along in the usual way by means of a rope. A motor-man was car .ried on the car, which weighed about two tons. Current in both cases was conveyed to the motors from an over head wire. Both systems gave a speed of about two and one-half miles an hour in towing single barges, and the motor car £owed three barges in a string weighing 418 tons, at a speed of one and one-fourth miles an hour. In re porting on these results a government commission expressed itself as pleased with the ready way in which the barges equipped with the rudder mo tors answered their helms, and also stated that the towing car ran. perfect ly well on the bank without excessive strain. On the whole, the preference wae given to the latter method, al though the fact that it required the services of- an attendant who would be of no use On the barge was regard ed as a decided disadvantage. No trou ble was experienced with the canal banks from any wash of the rudder motor, and its use leaves the bank free for animal traction or other purposes, but- still the tow car, it was concluded, gave the best results all around. .PAPER OF THE OXFORD BIBLES Only Three Persons Who Know the Secret of Its Malting. The papermaking for Oxford Bibles is a specially important and interest ing part of the work. At Wolvercote, a mile or two out of Oxford, the univer sity has a large mill for the supply of its own requirements, says Chambers' Journal. A good deal of the paper they turn out there is made out of old ships’ sails, the material of which, after bat tling with storms in all quarters of the world, come here for the purpose of being made into paper, printed in al most every language under heaven and bound up into Volumes to be again scattered far and wide into all the ut termost ends of the earth. This Wol vercote paper mill has much to do with the great reputation that Oxford has acquired in the production of Bibles and other devotional books. Twenty years ago and more the management hefre hit on a valuable Invention in papermaking, and ever since their “In dia paper” has been the envy and the puule of manufacturers all over the kingdom. There are said to be only three persons living who know the se cret; of its make, and, though the pro cess has'never been legally protected, and all the world is free to imitate the extremely thin but thoroughly opaque and wonderfully strong and durable paper of the best Oxford Bibles If they only knew how, all the world has, hith erto ouite failed to do an' Tt to thu tissqp, but perfectly opaque, and so strong that a strip of it three inches wide has proved to- be capable of sus taining,^ quarter of a hundredweight. Oyer 160 works and editions are now .printed op. this paper. This special advantage has very largely helped Ox ford to retain the leading position which it originally gained by being nearly the first if not quite the first printer of books in the kingdom, and by the prestige of its name.' . Overcoats Not Needed. ' A medical paper says: “If, instead of wearing overcoats people would wear coats of different thicknesses, accord ing to the weather and conditions gen erally, they would avoid the danger of cooling by evaporation; the garments saturated with molkture would be re moved and dry off the body, instead of on It. We believe that no consid erable proportion of the ‘colds,’ at tacks of lumbago, and'even more for midable resultB of what are popularly . called ‘chills’ may be‘ traced to the practice of wearing overcoats.” Toothing at 88 Henry Garrett of Punxsutawny, Pa., who will he 88 years of age next May, has lust recovered from an attack of the grip. Mr. Gatrett Is getting a new set of teeth. He lost his second set of teeth some twelve years ago, Re cently his gums became Bore and swol len and he consulted a dentist about it. The dentist examined his gums and in formed him that he was getting a new set of teeth. . PI* 112 bays Voder Snow. Charles Davis of Cummings, N. D„ who lost several pigs during the-snow storm last Thanksgiving and found one of them about two months ago. now tells s stranger story still. To his own amazement he found another of his pigs which was alive- and still lives after being buried 112 days. It was , found only by the thawing of the snow | a few days ago. An Alluring Bole. 'Here's an odd story. And you must believe it, for facts cannot be' denied;1 Here is a little list: Lillian Barr, Eleanor Beebe, Harriet Avery, Carrie Boleyn, Rita Selby. These, young la dies were all successive Tonys in “A Trip to Chinatown.” They’ve all made runaway marriages. Now, what allurement has Tony for the marriage able young men about town? Don't Tokaeeo Spit and Smoke Yoor Life Away. To quit tobacco easily and forever, be mag-' netlc, full of life, nerve and vigor, take No-To Bac, the wonder-worker, that makes weak men strong. All druggists, 50c or. |1. Cure guaranteed. Booklet and sample free. 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After taking • a few bottles of Hood's Sarsaparilla she was cured.” Mas. Emma Franklin, Honeoye, New York. -Get only Hood’s becausa HOOd’S Spar»l"a Is the Best—in fact the One True Blood Purilter. HnnJi. r>]||_ are the best afterdinner nooa S rlllS pills, aid digestion. 25c. ’ Who opened that * bottle of HIRES Rootbeer? I The popping of a , cork from a bottle of \ Hires is a signal of good health and plea-' sure. A sound the old folks like to hear —the children can’t resist it. HIRES ^ Rootbeer la composed of the very Ingredients the Kstem requires. Aiding e digestion, soothing the nerves, purifying the blood. A temper ance drink for temper ance people. I — ***d« only by Tba Chtrtoa E. Hl/ee Co.. PhUm. Antektn MtkM&itUMia. Sold r a tTorywhort. $100 To Any Man. AVIL'L PAY *100 FOR ANY CASE Ot'.WwkBUi In Man They Treat amt An Omaha Company places for the first time before the public a Magicai. 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Circular sent on request. w •insvuiv, ibu eoniaiioa. r WU A TP A 48 page handsomely Ulus* 9 * trated brochure, with de- J ■ mriptsop of the Tennessee • I I J| Onte»ial and International w ■ a ■ Exposition, to be held a* 9 I' Nashifllle. Tern.,May 1st »o V Oct. 30th. the National £ Event of *1897. Can be obtained by "" sending eight cents rostage to C. L Stone, (Jen ei al Passenger and Ticket Agint, C. «fc E. I. K. It., 355 l)eai born 8t.: Chicago. 111. ma . . UURfcS WHfcRE All ELSE FAILS, _ [ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good, Use 1 in time. Sold by druggists. CONSUMPTION C