JONES CAN .DICTATE. 1 T^£ NEVADA SENATOR HOLDS THE BALANCE. i Oh Position t Poworrol Ooe la tha Mat ter of Tariff Change*—Republican* 1 Cannot Carry Oat rholr ITIiho* IVIthoat the Westerner's Support. : X Tha Tariff Confer**ce. Wasihsotoic, July 9.—The thrift conference committee is an unusually large one, and for the first time is composed of an even number. Politi cally the Senate committee is com posed of four Republicans, three Dem ocrats and one silver Republican, Jones of Nevada. While Mr. Jones of Nevada will not be able to hold tha balance aa between tips two great parties, the Republicans will not be able to carry a single mat .ter that may be in contention without his support, so that it may be said that he practically controls not only the ; Senate conferees, but the entire con ference committee. • The- conference . committee of the , two houses is a Joint body, but each will act independently of the other, and every question in dispute must re ceive the vote of a majority of each of the two oommltteas,acting separately, fp and at no time and upon no question is there a vote of the- combined commit The first meeting pf the conferees began at 3:40 o'clock in the room of the Senate committee on finance and was attended by bo,h Republicans and the Democrats constituting the committee from each of the Houses. The clerks of the Senate committee on ’ finance and the nouse committee on ways and means were also present The meeting was a formal one. WjtsHiNflTox, July 8.—When the House met to-day the eommltteo on rules presented a speoial order send ing the tariff bill to conference as soon as it was received from the - Sen ate. The Democrats tried to secure an agreement for time to debate the conference report, but none was made. The Republicans offered a day and the Democrats asked for three or fonr. The special order was adopted —143 to 107—and Mr. Tllngloy's motion io non-concur in the Senate's amend ments and agree to a conference wot agreed fay , The speaker appointed the following conferees upon the tariff bill: Ding ley, Payne, Dal toll, Hopkins and Oro*> venor, Repnblicana, and Bailey, Mo Millin and Wheeiock, Democrats. IOWA GOLD DEMOCRATS. " ■. —1— Vail Stats Ticket nominated by a Cos ■ vsatlon Of 0«1 Delegates. Das Mounts, Iowa, July 9. —The gold standard Democrats surpriqed both' their friends and enemies by bringing S41 delegates to tho city for their state convention. The meeting was one of harmony along the lines of the gold standard for finances and tariff for revenue, together with de nunciation of state liquor laws enaeted by the Republican party, an issue whieh the silver Democrats at their recent convention omitted. Grover Cleveland's name was cheered every time It was mentioned. The ex-presi dent favored the gathering with a let ter of congratulation and encourage ment. A fnll stato ticket was no mi anted headed by Judge Joha Cltggett. of Mason City. W. I. Babb, who, *7®, «W® was the can did ate of the united Demoeratle party for governor, was unified for judge of the supreme court, adding to the ticket tho prestige of his campaign two years ago. * The nomloation of candidates was made by acclamation, their being no contests for the offices .NQ, BAIL FOR BARTLEY, i Xabnukm'i Defaulting ex-Treasurer De serted by His Termer Friends. lidfcoui, Neb., July 9. —Several week a have passed since ex-Stato Treasurer Joseph Barkley was eon Tinted ot looting the state treasury of 3500.000k He has appealed to tl.n su preme court, but remains in jail, un able ts provide a bond that will give him his liberty pending a hearing. He has a sentence of twenty year* and a fye of double the amount stolen facing him, to say nothing of ten more indictments to answer. It is consid ered that tbs chances of his returning to serve a life sentence if the verdict be affirmed are very-few, and this is why his ooe-time friends will do noth ing for him. He hss hinted, from the recesses of bis cell, at auieide, other 1, wise he appears to take his medieine like a philosopher. He has few visit ors and the man who was once a prime favorite in ijvery precinot In the sthte to-day has no person to speak 4 word to his behalf , _i , * K ■•••V foe the1 Militia > > f WaanmoTox, July it —The secretary of war has Issued an order alottlng to k the various states their proportion of the appropriation of $400,000 made by the last Congress for the equipment ot the national guard. Of this amount the national guard of New York conies to for the largest share, securing $31, OOtt Missouri gets $14,000 add Kansas •lS.Oud. ■ • M * h . ■. i Mm Lease Deserts Silver. OahTRAon, Mo., Jnly 9.—Mrs. Mary E. Lease, who is here ns a lecturer at ; t)>e Chautauqua at&embly. said in an i S Interview to-day: "The silver quo** tloq^is an issue of the past and will * Mhver again serve as the leading issue V for tbe reform olements in politics. If * Mr, Bryan is to make tbe silver ques . > tion the dominant isstte in the nest * campaign here is one woman who is :S? against him. Socialism is the hope ol i the country, and in the next campaign t thp fight mast be made for the indns i- trial emancipation of the people." .£-7- , ... NO MESSAGE YET. ■; < i Th« Mind of President McKinley Coder |oti dinner. Washisgtox. July 9.—The proposed message of the President to Congress, recommending the appointing of a commission to consider the question of a revision of the currency and na tional banking laws, will not be trans mitted to-day, nor for several days, if I at all, which is a matter of doubt. [ Senators Allison and Quay, Repre sentative Dingley and other party leaders called at the White house this morning and had a long conference with the presidept They urged him to reconsider his determination to send a special currency message to Congress, and gave as a reason that the sentiment in Congress was sncli that it would be likely to aronse feel ing and cause friction that would de lay speedy final action on the tariff bill After the conference Secretary Por ter announced to the newspaper men that it had been decided that it would not be expedient to send In the mes sage to-day, and that it would not go in for several days at least and might be deferred altogether during the spe cial session of Congress. TARIFF BILL VOTE. Two SllTar Republicans sad On* Dimo' era! Toted for lb Washington, July S.—By the deals* ire rote of 38 to 28 the tariff bill was passed In the Senate shortly before 3 o’clock yesterday. Yeas —Allison, Baker, Burrows, Carter, Clark, Cullotn, Davis, Deboe, Elkins, Fairbanks, Foraker, Gallinger, Hale, Hanna, Hawley, Jones of Ne vada, Lodge, McBride, McEnery, Me MiUin, Mantle, Mason, Morrill, Nel son, Penrose, Perkins, Platt of Con necticut, Piatt of New York, Pritch ard, Proctor, Quay, Sewell, Shoup, Spooner, Warren, Wellington, Wet more and Wijson—38. Nays—Bacon, Bate, Berry, Caffery, Cannon, Chilton, Clay, Cockrell, Faulk ner. Oray, Harris of Kansas, Jones of Arkansas, Kennedy, Lindsay, Mallory, Martin, Mills, Mitchell, Morgan, Pas co, Pettus, Rawlins, Roach. Turner, Turple, Vest, Walthall and White—28. An analysis of the final vote shows that the affirmative was cast by 35 Republicans. 3 Silver Republicans, Jones of Nevada anil Mantle, and 1 Democrat, MoEnory. Total, 38. The negative vote was cast by 25 Democrats. 3 Populists, Harris of Kan sas and Turner, and l Silver Repub lican, Cannon. Total, 38. Eight Republicans were paired for the bill and eight Democrats against it. The senators present and not vot ing were: Populists, h, via: Allen, But ler, Heltfeld, Kyle and Stewart; Sil ver Republicans, 9, viz; Teller and Pettigrew. Following the passage of the bill a resolution was agreed to asking the House for a oonferenee, and Senators Allison, Aldrich, Platt af Connecticut, Burrows, Jcnes of Nevada, Vest,Jonea of Arkansas and White were named as conferees on the part of the Senate. MANY OPPOSE PARDON. Minnesota Does Mel Take madly to Yonnaer Boys’ Blltsis St. Paui., Minn., July B.—At a meet ing of the city council a committee was appointed to appear before the Board of Pardons and protest against the threatened release of the Younger brothers. This action op the part of the council was unanimous. At the State house a large portion of the mall received la on tike subject of the pardon of the Younger boys. Protests from every section of the state come daily, and petitions in be half of the Northfield bandits are hardly loss numerous and bulky. The agitation of the proposed pardon has made the enemies of the two convicts even more aotiye than their friends, and at this time release appears to be very doubtful PRESIDENTIAL VACATION, KflKinlay Will Taka Two Heath*—May Go to 1 allow* too*. Washington, July 0.—The presi dent ha* decided to take a two months' vaoation, beginning August 1, but he has not decided where he will go for recreation. He has concluded to at tend the encampment of the Grand Army of the Republic at Buffalo and the reunion of his own regiment. Each of these affairs will take place in Au gust. It is the intention of Mr. Mc Kinley to go to Yellowstone park dur ing hie vacation if he can arrange it, but this detail has not been definitely Settled. SULTAN IS DEFIANT. Oemaads Peace on HU owe Term* or Ho* at All. . London, July 0.—Graoco-Turkish af fairs appear to be re-entering an in teresting stage. . To-day the porte dis patched a circular to its representa tives abroad containing a skillful de fense of the Turkish case and declin ing to consider any frontier line in Thessaly north of the river Penlos, which it regards as its natural bound ary. It appears that the sultan has convinced himself that the powers will not resort to coercion, and has decided to test the alleged concert of Europe to the utmost Hlonmota Cyclone Proves Move Fatal Thau nr** Reported. Dui.uth, Minn.. July 9.—Fourteen people are known to have been killed in the cyclone and cloudbursts in this section of Minnesota Tuesday. The storm was general and it is impossible to estimate the amount of damage with any degree of certainty. The cyclone, which was created near Glenwood, was the worst that ever struck the state. The telegraph lines are down for seventy-five miles each side of there and particulars are hard to get. DAISY AND POULTRY. INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. Bow Sneceufat Formers Operate This Department of the Farm—A Few Hints as to the Care of Lire Stock and Poultry. HE importance of making better cheese is becoming more and more ev ident every year, as it is now apparent that we must prac tically consume full 90 per cent of the cheese made, says John Gould in Prac tical Parmer. New aic uciug uiuugui. --« which Is the action ot ferments upon the curing and quality of the cheese. At the cheese makers' convention, In Wisconsin, Prof. Russell had some thing to say in opposition to the French views upon bacterial action. He prefaced his remarks by saying that usually the trouble lay in the carelessness of the patrons in caring for the milk, a carelessness which in some cases became criminal. Yet the makers could not all lay blame on the patrons,' they should be posted, so as to instruct these in the care of the milk, and give a good example by neatness in the factory. He believed the whcy-vat was responsible for more trouble than anything else, and con demned the dirty ones in strong terms. Bacteria were the best allies which the maker had, and it was only the obnox ious ones which should be fought. He showed a chart which illustrated the number of bacteria in cheese when live days old as being about four to five millions in grain, increasing rapidly in the next eight days to eighty or ninety millions, and then increasing in the next twenty-three days to eighteen millions, and then gradually diminish ing until 197 days old, when only a few hundred thousand are left. Another chart showed where milk had four million lactlc-acld-produclng bacteria, 700,000 digesting or peptonizing bac teria, and about 350,000 which produce gas. Also how a 13-days-old cheese had 67,500,000 lactlc-acll bacteria, while the gas-producing ones remained as original and the digesting ones were reduced. When the cheese was twen ty-four days old the lactic-acid bac teria were 60,270,000, While the gas and digesting were reduced. When the' cheese was thirty-six days old the lac tic-acid bacteria were reduced to 16, 900,000, and the gas and digesting ones were still more reduced. At fifty-two days the lactic-acid bacteria were on ly 11,473,000, and the others nearly dis appeared, and at seventy-four days on ly 6,682,000 lactic-acid bacteria remain ed. Hence the lactic-acid bacteria is the true ally of the maker. Standard Varieties of Chickens. The fullness and oblong shape is typi cal of the Brahma and Is characteris tic of prolific birds. The **trves of HACKLE FEATHER OF LIGHT BRAHMA COCK. neck and back are facalmllle in abape of the outlines of an egg. In plumage the male is pure white, excepting hackle, tall, and flights, which are black, and white striped with black. Any other color but white and black is against the standard-bred bird. The hackle is white with a black stripe extending down the center of each feather and tapering to a point near the extremi ty (see fig. 10). The tall feathers are black, and sickles are glossy greenish black. The shanks are well feath ered, with the feathering extending down the middle toe; the toe feather ing may be white or white sprinkled With black, pure white preferred. A small pea comb, broad crown, projects over the eyes; bright-red face, wattles and earlobes are essential to a good head. The shanks and toes are bright yellow. The Brahma female is much like the male In head qualities, having sroad comb, projecting well over the eyes, and small pea comb. The head of female should be masculine in ap pearance, Indicating great control and will power. The head is white; hackle, white striped with black, as in male; tape, white and black, but is com pletely covered by hackle when the bird stands erect; tall, black, excepting the two highest main tail feathers, which may be edged with while; tall - coverts, one or more rows, distinctly covering * part of both aide* of the main tall, two being preferable, are black edged with white. The Light Brahma is a valuable bird for the farm. They have always been made to pay for their keep and have seldom been set aside by any who have bred them. They are the largest of domes tic poultry and do as well In confine ment In small runs as on free range. As layers they will average from twelve to thirteen dozen of eggs a year, and lay exceptionally well in winter. Their eggs are large, about 7 to a pound, of a rich brown color and excellent flavor. For table pur poses they are good; they do not ma ture as early as do the varieties of the American class, yet they are hardy, and can be raised with as much ease as any of the earlier-maturing varieties. As sitters and mothers they are fair. The Dark Brahma is not so popular as the Light—the difficulty being in breeding them true to feather. Their delicately marked plumage is ex tremely pretty when bred to standard requirements, but if not so bred it be comes most disagreeable and unsatis factory to the breeder. The head and neck of a Dark Brahma male are sim ilar to those of the Light, the head being white and the hackle rather more striped. The back is nearly white, a little black appearing here and there. The black should predom inate between the shoulders, but is nearly hidden by the hackle flowing over it. The saddle feathers are, like the hackle, silvery white, striped with black, which should be distinct As the feathers approach the tall the PAIR OP WHITE WYANDOTTES. stripes become broader till they merge Into the tall coverts, which are rich, glossy green black, with a margin or lacing of white. The tail Is pure black, with green gloss. The wing coverts are black, forming a distinct black bar across the middle of the wings, while the ends of the second aries have a large black spot on the end, making the top edges of the wing appear almost black. The remainder of the secondaries are white on the lower half and black on the upper. The flights are all olack, except a nar row fringe of white on the lower edge. The breast is black; the thighs and fluff either black, or black very slight ly mottled with white. The Foreign Hone Market- ’ Mr. Alexander Galbraithof Wiscon sin, who Is giving large attention. to the foreign shipment of horses, in a contribution to an agricultural paper gives it as his opinion that the for eign market will take from five to six million dollars worth of horses In the year to come. He states that it is gradually enlarging, until now not on ly the United Kingdom, but FYance, Germany and Belgium are buyers of any of our horses that are good enough to buy. The great trouble with us is that there are few that are good enough. If the horses that we have today were such as Europe wants, there would not be enough shipping available to carry across the Atlantic the numbers that would be eagerly bought. This point should not be lost sight of by those of little faith in the future of the horse department of the farm. It is now three or four years since we began to urge farmers to breed horses for* 1900. We were told then that we were mistaken, that the horse business was done for, that we were entering upon the horseless age, etc. We do think that the breeding of horses that the world does hot want Is as unprofitable business as any in which the farmer can engage, but that the breeding of either draft horses, heavy or light coachers, road sters and saddle horses will bo in the years to come as profitable a business as can be conducted on the farm. In another year farmers will see the ut ter folly of allowing the good, or mod erately good, draft colts to go at pub lic sales at from $10 to $12 for year lings and at from $15 to $20 for com ing two-year-olds. The home demand will have absorbed the supply of these youngsters as fast as they come to market, and there will be a foreign de mand for the best, limited only by the supply, : 1 Blow sad Fail Milking. The effect of slow and fa3t milking was once made the subject of experi ment at the Wisconsin station. In his report of the test. Prof. Babcock says: “The effect upon the yield of milk was not marked, this being about the same whether the cows were milked fast or slow, the variations being no more than might be expected if the cows had been milked in the same way for the whole time. * • * The effect upon the quality of milk was more marked, there being in every case rich er milk produced when tbo cows were milked fast than when milked slow. The effect was most marked with the cows giving the most milk. The cows which were least susceptible to these changes were cows far advanced in the period of lactation that were giving but little milk when the trial was made. Calculated upon the fat yield the gain of fast milking averaged for the whole lot of cows 11.7S per cent" • The hard winter froze out the field mice in the neighborhood of Green wood, Me., according to the farmers spring observations. , KANSAS CITYMUEDEB A PROMINENT PHYSICIAN SHOT DEAD ON THE STREET. !*• Whole Community Ink Uttered Uf Orer the Traced?—Prleatfa of the Dead Physician Befoeo to Credit the lllmijr story of Urn. HchlelgeL The Killing of Dr. Krifen Kansas Citt, Ma, July 10.—No crime in Kansas City in recent years has caused as much discussion and as universal an expression of either jus tification or condemnation as the kill ing' yesterday of Dr. L. A. Berger, secretary and former dean of the Uni versity medical college, by John Schlegel. the grocer and butcher of 321 East Eighteenth street. People stand on the street corners and con done or condemn Schlegel’s deed Families all over town talked about it last night and this morning. Lawyers, doctors, business men, laborers, all are interested, and perhaps the taking of sides on a similar event was never so general Schlesrel declares that because the latter outraged Mrs. Schlegel when she was in the doctor’s office for professional treatment. He prepared to kill his family physician with care and deliberation; hi laid in wait for his victim, and when h> found him he promptly put him out of exist ence. It was not, evidently, the act of either an insane person or if one suddenly exeited to anger by great provocation. It was the deliberate and long-planned avenging' of what he felt was the greatest wrong one man can do another. And, consequently, there are thousands to-day in Kmiht City who, believing the story of Dr. Berger's assault on Mrs. Schlegel, de clare that her husband was right in hilling her assailant. * On the contrary, there are perhaps just as many who declare that the murder was simply the frenzied act of S man thirsting for vengeance for .wrongs wholly imaginary — that Schlegel was insanely jealons; that he suspected things which he could not prove; that lie killed the man who he fancied had wronged him without the slightest foundation for his actions. Dr. Berger’s friends Stand by him. His fellow physicians unite in decry ing the stories of his alleged misdeeds. They resent the insinuation that one who held high place in his profession would violate its principles in that way. Dr. Berger's friends, outside of his profession, are equally firm in their denials of the - accusations against him. They point to his suc cess as a doctor; they speak of his own happy family relations; his chil dren, one of whom was grad uated in the last High school class -with honor, and all of whom are favor ites among their associates. Why, they ask, should a man of his stand ing and associations violate the homo of a poor German grocer by assaulting his wife in his office, where she had come for professional treatment? Mrs. Schlegel, they say, is not a particu larly attractive woman, tor whom a man would risk everything. The al leged assault took place in November —why should a man, after eight months had passed, suddenly feel his outraged honor so keenly that he must needs shoot his enemy on sight? It is difficult to choose between these two points of view. It is known that Dr. Berger's reputation was not such as to make the assault on Mrs. Schlegel utterly improbable. He had not been entirely free from whispered insinuations. While Dr. Berger was widely kncfwn as a physician, he never reached the front rank of his profes sion, and there are those who say that his conduct with women was to blame for this. Others doubt the story of the outrage, because of the lapse of time between the date set as the time of its commission and the avenging of it. They hold that while a man is justified in avenging such an outrage by death, he Is not warranted in wait ing months or even weeks, brooding over it, and then shooting the man who commits it in the back. The coroner's jury impaned to in quire into the death of Dr. L A. Ber ger returned a verdict at noon to-day stating that the evidence showed that Dr. Berger had been feloniously shot in the back twice by John Schlegel, and it recommended that Schlegel be hold for trinl. .Mo Cau*a for Apprehension. Washisgtos, July 10.—Minister Hoshi, of Japan, has received late ad vices from Japun and Hawaii which show that negotiations on the differ ences between the two governments on the immigration question are going forward peaceably, and that there is nothing in the progress of the nations to justify sensational reports that there is a probability of serious trou ble between the two governments. Mrs. Julie JUOl Dead. St. Louis. Mo., July 10.—Mrs. Jnlie Maffit, the oldest woman born here and the richest woman in the city, died last night at her home, aged 81. Her grandfather, Pierre Chouteau, ar., was one of the original members of the American Fur company, and from 178!) to IKOi p..ssed his time in the western woods trading with the In diana Irwin Saabar Out ou Ball. L8SINOTON. Mo., July 9.—Irwin Ses ber, who killed David Elling in Hig ginsvllle last March, and upon whose case the jury failed to agree, was ad mitted to hail in the sum of $10,000 bv Judge Byland this morning. He will be taken to a hospital for treatment, as his health is failing. Blue tiotham Children Us Nkw York. July 10. —Nine children died suddenly to-day and their deaths were due indirectly ta the heat. Seven persons were prostrated in the gtrueta ■I* Golden Opportunity. “What's the matter, Gerald?" ex claimed his horrified wife. “The matter?” shouted the young doctor, turning a handspring on the parlor carpet, danoing a jig, throwing his hat violently against the ceiling, and stamping on it as it came down. “The matter?” he repeated, catching her round the waist and whirling her in a mad waltz about the room. “Oh, nothing—only my bottle of anti toxins has just got here, I’m the only doctor in fifty miles that has any, and I have a lovely case of diphtheria over in the nevt block!” Try Graln-O. Ask your grocer today to show yon a package of GRAIN-O, the new food drink that takes the place of coffee. The children may drink it without Injury as well as the adult All who try It like it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but it is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. % the price of coffee. 15 cents and 25 cents per package. Sold by all grocers. Tastes like cof fee. Looks like coffee. Washington'* Great IMfflenlty. Mrs. Kings-Dorter, impressing one of her protoges—Be brave and earnest and you will succeed. Do you remember my telling you of the great difficulty George Washington bad to contend with? Willy Baggs —Yes, mum; ho couldn’t tell a lie.— Pnclr. Hall's Catarrh Cora b a constitutional cure. Price, 75c. The Only Way. Watts—It is the easiest thing in the world for a man to convince hie wife that she has the wrong side of M argument. Potts—What? Watts—Fact, I can make my wife take back everything she has said by giving her $10. Te Cure Constipation Forever. Hike discards Candy Cathartic. lOo or Ha If C. C- C. fall to cure, druggists refund money. The down dog is sometimes badly spoiled. Nervous Weak Tired. Thousands are in this condition. They are despondent and gloomy, cannot sleep, have no appetite, no energy, no ambition. Hood’s Sarsaparilla soon brings help to such people. It gives them pure, rich blood, cures nervousness, creates an appetite, tones and strengthens the stomach and imparts new life and in creased vigor to oil the organs of the body. Hood’s b the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. $L Hood’s Pills cure all liver Ills, es cents. Sarsa parilla SI00 To Any Man. WILL PAY dlOO FOR ANY CASE Of Weakness la Men They Treat and Fall to Cure. * An Omaha Company places for tho first time before the public a Magical Treat ment for the cure of Lost Vitality, Nervous and Sexual Weakness, and Restoration of Life Force in old and young men. No worn-out French remedy: contains no Phosphorous or other harmful drugs. It is a Wonderful Treatment—magical in its effects—positive in its cure. AU readers, who are suffering from a weakness that blights their life, causing that mental and physical suffering peculiar to Lost Man hood, should write to the STATE MEDICAL COMPANY, Omaha, Neb., and they will. send you absolutely FREE, a valuable paper on these diseases, and positive proofs of their truly Magical Treatment. Thous ands of men, who have lost all hope of • care, are being restored by them to a per fect condition. This Magical Treatment may be taken at home under their directions, or they will pay railroad fare and hotel bills to all who prefer to go there for treatment, if they * fail to cure. They are perfectly reliable; have no Free Prescriptions, Free Cure, Free Sample, or C. O. D. fake. They have 1260,000 capital, and guarantee to curs every case they treat or refund every dollar; or their charges may bo deposited in a bank to be paid to them when a core b affected. Write thorn today. Thro* Yellowstone Park on a Bicycle. Among the geysers, water falls, lakes and terraces ol Yellowstone Park Is where every true wheelman should spend his ’07 holiday. Most delightful outing Imagin able. Less expensive than a week at a fashionable summer resort. Good roads —built by the government. Elegant hotels. Fine fish ing. Splendid air. Write for booklet contain ing a map of the Park as well as full information about the cost of the trip, what to take, what the roads are like etc. 1. Fas 1VCI*. Gen'l Pnss’r Agent, Burlington Koute. Om»bM IT’S To buy MCAI.CH. guaranteed **A» OUOUAtt** MIKNAKKH'. for leas money; they can't bo Dade Don't bav. unle.se you get the best. A cheap Meale (a iho most expensive Investment can make; It is unreliable, and means that ieonec or Inter you must buy attain. Huy onljr • fennlne. latest Improved PAIKUAXKH nPblcfi will last you a lifetime, and prove tbo ebraprst Ip she end. No one can then dispute your weights BKU AKKOF IXITATlOXIil FAIRBANKS, MORSE A CO.v 1102 Farnam st.. Omaha, Neb. tOJd ekalrs Repaired.> CURE YOURSELF! Use Big Cl for unnatural discharges, iutlammotions, irritations or ulcs’-ationa of mucous membranes, rainless, and not astria* gent or poisonous. Sold by Dranrlits, or sent in plain wrapper, by express, prepaid, for SI .00, or 3 1 Kittles, $2.76. Circular sent ou request. W F15CTS' CUR llMbi WHtHt AiL LINE iAILS. Ooutrb Syrup. Tahtos <»otnL Uso | ?n time. Sold hr tiruirsrl^ts. C GW^&iilArRjXiQN: