Majok McKlNLEY prefers the foreign product for taxation and the home product for consumption. MeKinley Ikih a way of stating a groat truth in a very few words. A WK.STlvRN county looms up with ne Venice 1 1 candidates for sheriff thin early in the si-ason. Jf there is not a cessation of new booms in this county shortly, Cass will be able to show a still stronger crop. 'I'm; Ohio Democratic convention meets at Cleveland this week. The latest reports are to the effect that Governor Campbell has triumphed over the Kiujuirer and Cincinnati crowd, and will be re-nominated with but little opposition. San Fka.ncisco wants the -Na tional Democratic convention next vear. bet her have it. It would do the Democrats irood to cross the continent and discover that this i a billion-dollar country tliat can not be run on the parsimony plan. Till; democrats held a big con vention at I't. Worth, Texas, Satur day to head off the third part 3- alii mice move that had trot started in that state. The delegates were all alliance men. but they were bour bon democrats first, and don't propose to see any side-tracking of the old part- if the- can Mop it. Tin: editor fencer, the )f the Dallas Intelli leading democratic organ in Texas, .-ays that Grover Cleveland will be left, entirel3' in that state, lie siiys Texas will be for Gorman, of Maryland, or Morri son, of Illinois. Personally lie is for Gorman and looks upon him as the next democratic nominee for the presidency. Democratic organs just now are fearful that alliance men in the South have shown their hands too soon. The intention was to keep up appearances for effect in Kansas, Iowa, and Ohio, but even that has been done. Southern politicians, as a rule, have one merit, they are out spoken, and know just where the3r stand. Kx. Govjcknor Tillman, of South Carolina, wanted to discuss the sub treasury scheme with the national lecturer of the alliance. Mr. Terrell. The arrangements . were all made and now at the last moment the order goes forth that the discussion must take place in secret convention before members of the organization onl3'. A very neat way to back down from an indefensible posi tion. TllK latest European cablegrams give further details of the failure of crops in Russia, which, instead of exporting millions of bushels of wheat to Kngland, France and Germniiy in direct competition witli the American product, we are as sured will be a purchaser this year, a customer of Uncle Sam. This ought to make wheat sell for a dollar per bushel in Nebraska, while it would be worth much more at all points on the coast. The French government is just now engaged in an apparent earnest enquiry as to the advisability of re moving the embargo from Ameri can pork. At the meeting of the council of ministers held yesterday in Paris this was practically agreed to, though the order for its removal will not be made until the Council of Hygiene (their national board of health) has passed upon the question as to whether our pork is seriously affected with trichina. We know that it isn't, hence an honest enquiry will only hasten the opening of the French markets. Ex-State Tkeasukek XoLAX.of Missouri, has been convicted of stealing the people's money, but a Democratic judge fixed his sentence at only two years in the peniten tiary. The difference between justice as administered in a Re publican community and in a Demo cratic community is shown by the difference in the sentences of Bardsley in Philadeldia and Nolan inMissouri. Bardsley received the maximum sentence of fifteen years for his crime and Nolen the mini mum sentence for his. The crimes were alike, with the benefit of the doubt in favor of IJardsley In ter Ocean. WE ALL WEAR TITLES. The platsmouth Herald says: "Col. McMurphy is making a spicy paper of the Omaha Times, &c." snnnosein the slang of the day Colonel Polk wrote that or perhaps Admiral Knotts. We take the lib- erty to designate these gentlemen this way to show our good will, and 1 because it is the fashion and good i authority says: "Better be out of the ' world than out of the fashion." But .11. : lousiness in W m. A M w a r.r,oVrtpd into the 1 r 1 1 1 1 n wwx. --' - - hemisphere a great ways. We shall soon have more Colonels in Nclr;iwk;i lh:n Kentucky and all the south combined. " "Majah might do, even Captain (witness Captain Palmer who lias nevt lii iMi :i Ciiliini'll is respectable, and "Corporal", beats them all. Admiral, now, is a new title; the niivy lias not been run in the !--round, in fact it can't be run on land like the army, and it is par ticularly appropriate to tin- propri etor of Till! llKK'ALP. who sails that sheet at the rate of many knots week. Ill fact it is a steam 'yacht now, and has got over the wind crs of the schooner age. nel . its all riiilit auywav, we on!v want to Dolce you up a little Omaha Times. Till-; K'K is no doubt. tViat the pre varicntors who irave so much atten tion to tile tin industry a short timi ago are now beating a rapid n treat. Congressman Niedringhau in particular is alter them. He ha some new facts to shoot into their ranks every day or two, and their confession is increasing percepti- bly. His latest contribution to the literature of the subnet appears 111 a recent issue of the St. Louis Globe Democrat. He promises that the price of American made plate will be as low on an a vera ire in the next twelve 3 ears as the imported article has been in the last twelve, and that the laborers who turn out th product will be paid at least double the British schedule of waires. He anticipates a period of fierce com petition with the foreign manufac turers that would have been avoid ed had it not been for the demo cratic victories of last November Before that time it was planned to move many of the works from Wales to the United States at once. The apparent Ieaningof the country toward free trade eucourged the manafacturers to believe that a majority of the voters of America would still favor keepimr them on the other side of the water, and they will continue their light againsl the American industry- until they are satisfied that the republican party is to remain in power. Then they will come over if the field i not fully occupied by manufac turers of our own development. State Journal. ONE day Blaine is going to die of I rights disease. The next day we are informed that he never felt better in his life, and that he has nosymp toms of that dread malady. And so it goes from day- to day. Some body is evidently lying and what satisfaction he can get out of it, is more than we can discover, at this altitude and distance from the roll ing tides of the Atlantic. SCOTT RAY. the exhuberant edi tor of the Shelbyville (Ind.) Demo crat, has made a pretty mess of it by interviewing Governor Hill of New York in the interest of Gov ernor Gray of Indiana for vice president, and then giving the whole snap away to a New York reporter. Hill is said to be in a rage about it, while Gray seems to have deserted the race entirely and talks as though he wanted first place. We have met Mr. Scott Ray several times, and while he is a very frothy democrat of the W. J. Bryan orde'r we always supposed he" had more sense than his recent interview would indicate. Some have claimed that Ray was not a friend of Gray's at all. The follow ing talk with Gray by a Globe Democrat reporter ought to settle that fact: "Ex-Governor Gray was shown this afternoon a New York dispatch which represented Scott Ray, ot the Shelbyville .(Ind.) Democrat, as being east on a mission, the pur pose of which is to procure the nomination of Hill and Gray as the democratic standard-bearers of 1892. In this dispatch Mr. Ray is rep resented as quoting Governor Hill to the effect that he is a candidate for the presidency; also as telling Ray to tell Governor Gray to see that the Indiana delegation is in structed for him, and that he will do the rest. Being asked the mean ing of this, Mr. Ray is further quoted as saying that it meant the nomination of Hill and Gray in 1892. Kx-Governor Gray was sur prised and incredulous when in formed of the import of the dis patch. "'Mr. Ray did not go to New York at my solicitation, nor is he my representative or agent,' ex-Governor Gray said. 'I have no agents. Mr. Ray has been friendly to me, and has often spoken very kindly of me in his paper. I think he has also been very friendly to Governor Hill. Formerly he frequently spoke most favorably of Governor Hill.' "'Has he not lately done the same?' was asked. '"Well, I haven't noticed it lately, Mr. Ray, as I say, has always been my friend. I do not think he has been correctly reported. Iam nat - in combination with auv candidate for president, and will not be.' Kx Governor Gray continued: 'I am not candidate for second place on the ticked, will?-any man, for I am not a candidate for vice-president at all. I am reluctant to believe that Governor Hill said what the dispatch attributes to him. Don't you think that would be assuming a good deal to put himself at the head of the ticket and take it for granted that I would be willing to take second place? No. sir; I am not a candidate for the vice presi dency.' "There was a perceptible accent 011 ihe first syllable as Mr. Gray uttered and repeated the word "vice president." This, with the well known fact that the ex-governor has in active operation a full Hedged newspaper bureau of his ow n, leaves no doubt that he is in the field for the president ial nomi nal inn," li K X -Co N J K ESS M A N PEk'KINS of Kansas is certainly correct in say ing that capitalists have lost confi dence "in his state. But when and why did they lose confidence in this, one of the best farming states in the Union? Kansas was all right until the political farmers began their work in the alliance movcificui and advertised the state falsely over the east as being plas tered all over with mortgages and that the farmers could not much longer pay the interest on their in debtedness, making the paying of the principal entirely out of the question. When the farmers them selves began to cast discredit on their own firesides, that political prestige might be gained there from, it is little wonder that the eastern capitalist listened to their tale of woe and was fright ened at the gloomy outlook. But that was not all: the farmers' alli ance did not stop at misrepresent ing the agricultural resources of their state.-., but they actually be gun a Imter personal wariare on capital, some of their declarations being as extreme and dangerous to the general public as Ilerr Most would have uttered in his palmiest days. The capitalist knows that the agricultural class form a large majority of the population in the Western states, hence he feels that his property, if he had ati3' in their reach, would be seriously endan- ered; not only does he think so from their threats and assertions but from their actions in the legis lature as well. Let us take courage and hope that the day of the extremist and calam- ty shriekers is past, and that a more intelligent class ol tanners will crowd the chronic fault-finders to the rear, who are to-day the greatest enemies of the farming class, and that they will learn to build up rather than tear down. We believe the injury that has been done the country by this alli ance agitation has taught ttie farmers a valuable lesson from which nought but good result s will follow. The democratic party down in Missouri allowed their state treasu rer to be convicted of stealing $33,0X) from the state, and then a democratic court was compelled by the harsh verdict of the jury to sentence him to two years in the penitentiary. Truth compels us to say, however, for the benefit of the judge, that two years was the low est limit. Had it been two days instead, the prisoner would have certainly received 01113- a two days' sentence. Missouri Majors and Colonels are all torn up over the outrage ot sending one ot their number to the penitentiary and in timate that the jury wasn't looked ifter to the extent of keeping the republicans off. Verily, some dem ocrats have hard sledding even in Missouri. Silver coinage was free, asthesil- verites say, tolS73, but the fact that only about $8,000,0)0 in dollar pieces wascoined from the begin ningof the government to that time shows that the people didn't value this privilege much, even in the latter -ears, when the production of the white metal began to be heavy. In act. there was no "kick" against the "discrediting" of silver until several years after it was demone tized Ex. Tllli polygamous mormons of Utah removed some time ago to one of the northern states of Mexi co where they have built up quite a settlement and improved the coun try by irrigation until it looks very different from the surrounding farms owned and occupied by the Spanish Indian class of people that goes to make up the bulk of Mexi co's population. If they can't give up polygam3'we are glad to get rid of them and it seems, the having of twoormore wives is a triflingaffairiii Mexico that 110 one cares to inter fere with. Cropt, whooping cough, and bronchitis immedialtly releieved by by Schilok.s cure. F. G. Fricke Sc Co W-41I FIFTY YEARS AGO. Tia fifty-year fiifo. dear John, fast fifty year Seems Like tws only yeetenl&y I heard you tell me bo; Po I rciiiviulvr 8ik tn' yen? Well, John, we're Krttiti' old Ami trimly now, u-ud I unit Bare my uieru'ry In m Ijold; And yet, I 'piee I must a bbj1 u thing or two irijilay, For you were rather sa.-iy, John, a Koiii' home thut duy. Ju.st think! 'tin fifty years, dear John, jnstlifty years uxo, hence you ami me blood up afore old Paraoa tiandcrblow Anil Siiid we'd have each other, aliore! for bet ter or for wuss. I)id ever 1 not eick of it? Now, John, doriT mako a Dish 'Bout nothiii', for I 'low thur'a times a had tnvle turns to K'xxi, When men's wi vim nu.-.s t heir patience ha Chris tian peoplo should. In all Uiee ui and downs, dear JoiiD, Hence fifty years ao Wo joiiuil our hearts, aud hands, tho Ixrd alone can fully know What you have lxxn to me, John, or I have been to you; For lie sees, though oft we've stumbled, that our poor old hearts are true. And that I will he thmkini; of you, John, as you will bo thinking nf me When our fifty years below have Ions boon lo-st in etcrnit y. Browne ivrriman in Yankee Itlarfu. Oueer SupcrHttltoiis About Stones. The most wonderful properties were ascribed to the chimerical stones which many creatures were supposed to carry in their )o;u.Ls. Most readers have no doubt heard of the precious jewel which the toad carries in his br:iin box, and so called toad s-iojjes, which were in reality the teeth f fossil were formerly worn in tinker rings as a protection against poi.-. ris, at the presence of which they were supposed to change color. It was thought that the xt stones were those voluntarily ejected by the living toads, but as the latter were not addict ed to freely giving up their treasures in that way, it was necessary to procure the coveted articles by other nd the recognized method was to decapitate the hapless batrachian at the instant h 3 swallowed his breath. Tho feat naturally demanded consid erable celerity, such as could only have beeu acquired by constant practice; and it is not unreasonable, therefore, to as sume that although the endeavors to gain possession of the jewels were per haps numerous, they must invariably have been unsatisfactory, especially to toads. The eagle stone was considered an excellent thing to wear during preg nancy, and the swallow carried in its st omach stones of great medicinal value. Chambers' Journal. The Editor's Hope. We hope this is true. We should like it to be true; to put it on record among the wonderful doings of Northampton citizens, litis is the story: W. II. Pratt was fishing in the old bed in about three feet of water when he noticed a fine pound and a half pickerel chewing his hook. Slowly, carefully he began to haul him in, when around the captured fish the waters rolled in wild commo tion and a huge fish about three feet long was seen making frantic efforts to swallow the pickerel. Mr. Pratt waded out to catch a closer glimpse of the mon ster, who, with a wicked roll of the eye, turned tail and made off, leaving a track as large as the wake of a steamer. Hampshire Gazette. Set a Womao to Catch a Woman. The chief of Paris detectives says: Men, as a rule, are not as close observers and do not give what I call detective de scriptions of people. I remember trying to catch a woman counterfeiter once who hail been described to me by several men. I found half a dozen women who would answer to her description. Finally a woman who had seen her gave me a description of her with one strong de tective point the way she did up her hair and on that description I very soon arrested the j ht woman. Boston Herald. Definition of a Itore. "You call So-and-so a 'bore.' What is a 'bore? " asks Bishop Selwyn. "It is a man who will persist in talking about himself when you want to talk about yourself or, we may add, in telling stories when you want to be telling theux Coleridge says he used to be much amused with Tobin and Godwin. "Tobin would pester me with stories of Godwin's dullness, and upon his depar ture Godwin would drop in just to say that Tobin was more dxdl than ever. " Exchange. The law connecting temperature and uiaxiinuzn amount of water vapor is such that a hot and a cold body of air, neither of which is saturated, or con tains all the water it is capable of hold ing in a state of vapor, may, when mixed, become more than saturated, so that some of the vapor is condensed and rain falls. General Wolseley, who is in command of the British forces in Ireland, is fifty eight years old and probably the beet soldier in England. He is a native Irishman and the son of a soldier. He entered the service at eighteen as an en sign. Buddha is worshiped in Paris in vari ous private temples, where the devotees meet regularly to pay homage to the "Light of Asia." Most of the Bnddbists are Japanese, but among them are many Frenchmen and a few Englishmen. For severe hemorrhage from the nose try holding the arms of the patient up over the head for five minutes at a time. A email piece of ice wrapped in muslin and laid directly over the top of the nose will usually give relief. A rule allowing tenants 5 per cent, discount on rents paid the day they fall due is followed by more than one rich Philadelphian and not a few agents. It ia 6aid to give great satisfaction all around. Congress passed the bill authorizing the construction of the Brooklyn bridge in 18C9, after the secretary of war had decided that it would not impede com merce and navigation. Irt Sacli I-nekf Ridicule it as we may, there is some thing in luck, tend if there isn't you can not break the faith of some people. Tho other day a young English friend cf mine icked up a two and a half cent Columbian silver coin probably the smallest silver pince in the world. "That's luck." said the young man, who has an English Kyndicale deal on his hands. lie felt more confidence in the coin as the day advanced, for he showed it to seeral friends, all of whom curiously examined tho piece and Pinihil with its jiosm-ssor. He filially went joy fully home late for dinner, and found Ids wife fretting and with red eyi. Ho b gan to cheer her up by pleasantly t'gi li ning the topic of his afternoon and ex hibiting his rind. "Luck! lickl Don't you talk to mo atout luykl sUu fairly shrieked, plnng ing into fh sofa cushions and hysterics. In the course of half an hour's hard work she Jwd recovered sufficiently to inform him that she had ler jmcket piektl while out shopping and loci a dia mond ring shy had been afraid to wear and all the. money given her that morn ing for her summer clothes. Finally sh braced up all at once- and said impera tively: "Gimme that coin!" As she piuhid it out of the window she uttered tho usual feminine oath, "Drat the thing, there P aud both she and her husband felt 'better. New York Herald. T-eMtioeiit of Iiorcs. The redoubtable Samuel Parr proved as great a bem to De Qnincey as the dip lomatist d-S'l to Coleridge. The opium eater, sensitive lit tbj spirit that ho was, did not often put himself in the way of being lored. He w.-.s completely taken by surprise, on his first meeting with the scholar of prodigious fame, to find him no better ttian a slander mongering "old babbler." Bv-ron's method of dealing with the gentry was even more ingenious than Scott's, who himself assumed the ardu ous task of boring his bore. Byron used to set MVmk Lewis (whom he found as great a bore as Scott did) on to some "vivacious person," who p"cnliarly ab horred fho tribe as, for example, he saj-s, Mme. de Striel or Hobhouse and leave the pair to fight it out together, while be- quietly rnjoj-ed his revenge. But even this was more humane than the conduct of those who, like Douglas Jerrold, leave their bore in tho lurch. "Well, what's going on today?" asked the lore, full primed for a siege. "1 arn," returned the wit, hunying remorse lessly past. "Do not dnll people bore 3'ou?" one of his companions at the breakfast table asked of the autocrat. "Madame," was Dr. Holmes' suggestive rep 3', "all men are bores except when we want them." Exchange. A Talk with a liii-tl Faueirr. Mocking birds come from Texjis chief ly. Albany in that state is the head quarters for them. One trapper there sends me from 50 to 100 mocking birds every week in crates. I forward nearly all of them to New York, exchanging them for other stock. The system of ex change is carried on to a great extent in the fancier's business. Most of the stock that we get from boj-s is negotiated on that plan; so many rabbits make a squir rel, and so on. I do a considerable trade in peacocks, which customers who have country phices buy for ornamental purposes. Farmers raise them in Mankind and Virginia. Goldfish are propagated by regular breeders in Maryland, Virginia and Pennsylvania, who send them to me in cans, but the fancy goldfish, with double tails, are imported from Japan to San Francisco and reshipped from that city. Those stuffed birds are jcts. Their owners bring them here for the purj)ose; four legged teasts, too, of all sorts. A squirrel is one of the most difficult ani mals to stuff successfully. Food is an item in caring for such a menagerie as this; it costs me nearly f l.uuu a year.-In-terview in Washington Star. Taking Girl's Arm. The young man who lifts his girl along by her elbow is to be seen every few yards on Broadway. Nor is this style of locomotion confined to any par ticular class. It is one of those fashions that occasionally starts up in the crude society of the country village, and, re versing the usual rule of social con tagion, spreads to the metropolis. Being 6imply a recorder and not an arbiter in such matters, I am not prepared to say that it is strictly fashionable in New York, much less proper or in good form. If the girl likes it I withdraw my nat ural objections. Where the sex is con cerned it is pretty safe to follow the rule that obtains in euchre "When in doubt take the trick." New York Her ald. Force of Ublt. A lady who wished to weigh her baby, two months old, but who had no scales at hand suitable for the purpose, took the child to a neighboring butcher shop. The butcher put the baby in his spring scales, looked at the dial, and remarked: "With the bones and all, mum, it's fourteen pounds and a half. Shall I?" "How dare you make such a sugges tion," screamed the woman, as she snatched her baby and rushed out of the shop. Youth's Companion. Two Iloy. A neatly dressed boy fell into the Harlem river just below the bridge j-ea-terday morning about breakfast time. He was pulled out and went home cry ing. In the afternoon a smaller boy fell into the river from a boat house float. He got out without assistance and went out in the sun to dry. "I don't want the 'old man' to get on to me," he said. New York Advertiser. Harvard university has 363,000 bound vorumes in the library, Yale has 200,000, Cornell 150,000, Columbia 90,000, Syra cuse 75,000, Dartmouth C8,500, Lehigh 67,000, Brown 66,000, Princeton 65,000, Bowdoin 84,000, University of Virginia 40,000. Drs.BETTS&BETTS PHYSICIANS, SURGEONS and SPECIALISTS, 1409 DOUGLAS ST., OMAHA, NEBRASKA. . 7 ''' v,i Otlico hours from i a. 111. J. m. Holiday from 10 a. m. to 1 i. 111. KiciiiliHta in Chronic, NorvoiiH.Skin aud Hlcxxl liiMCllHt'H. f-Con.nl tt ion at !)ir or by mail frj. Mislieint Hint ly mail or oxiiwh. Hi'ftirfly imrkrwl, frco from oliwrval ion. inuninti-H to euro (jnirkly, nafrly and poi inani.ul ly. Thomof t widely nnd favorably known upecial its in Mm Unite.) Kiat. Tln ir loii exferiencti. remarkable nkill nnd nnivernal wirr-efH in tho treatment and cure of NervoiiH, Chronic and hur-fc-iral Dirteanen. entil lo theno eminent phjuician to the full confidence of tho alhicUxi everywhere. They guarantee: A CERTAIN AND POSITIVE CDHE for tho awful elliiclH of early vice and the numerous evil that follow in it trnin. PRIVATE, BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES Plieedily, completely ui'd permanently cured. NERV0DS DE.EILITY AND SEXUAL DIS ORDERS Jield reudily to their ekillful treat ment. PILES, FISTULA AND RIXTAL ULCERS (.'uarauteed cured without jiaiu or letutiou from business. HYDROCELE AND VARICOCELE perma nently and MiccesHfully cured ill every caso. SYPHILIS. (iONOUUIKKA, (il.KKT, Hrma torrlma, Heminal Veaknesn, Jjost Manhood, Nitfht KmiHsions, Decayed Kacult.ies, 1'emalo WeaknosH and all delicate diHordcru peculiar to either sex positively cured, iw well as all func tional disorders that result f rom youthful follion or tho excess of maturo yearn. QlrFpTllfO f'uaranteoil permanently cured, OlIIOlulC removal complete, without, cut ting, caustic or ililatat ion. Cure effected at homo by patient without a momenta pain or annoyance. TO YOUNG AND MIDDLE-AGED MEN AQlt'Ti P'!Jf The awful effect of early Oul j jS U vice which brim,'n organic weakness, destroying both mind and body, with all it,B dreaded ills, permanently cured. nc pflftp Address those who have impar Ul O . C wll-J ,., f he nisi Ivck by improper in dulgence and sobti ry l.abitn. which ruin txilh mind and body, unfit tii.n them for buHineHu, st udy or mai riaee. MAi:iILJ SI ICS, or those entering on that happy life, aware of physical debility, quickly assisted. is """" Scr.d li c.-nts postage for celebrated works on Chronic, otou and Delicate iJiseaMeH. Thousands cured. 1"" A friendly letter or call may save you future Huflerin and phame, and add Kolden years to life. ;r"-No letter annwerel unlesH accompanied by 4 cents in htampH. Address, cr call on DRS. BETTS & BETTS, 1409 Douglas St., OMAHA, - - NEBRASKA. I V the immigration coming throutrh Ihc port of New York in the fiscal year lS'.ll the Italians al most eijualfd the CJeriiians, and ex ceeded the Irish, Kno lish and Scotch combined. . The a rr i va 1 s of Italians, too. are rapidly itiereasinr, while those of the other races named are decreasing. The United States would he I.k! to see K i 11 g I lumhert keep his subjects at home. Scotland arrows about as rapidly in population as Ireland shrinks, yet in natural resources the fertile jrreeii isle is far better than the sterile barren fields of Scotland. The question naturally arises, why then should Scotland increase in population and wealth while its near neighbor decreases? There can be but one answer and that is, the shameful liiisoovernment of Ireland by Kuglmul. A reduction in population from 9,000,000 to o,0fX), 000 in a few decades shows a start ling condition for a country to be in, and casts serious reflections on the government. No other country 011 the face of the civilized earth can show such alarming statistics threatening its depopulation. Knjrlaiid should change her methods of ioverniiiof Ireland in the interest of humanity if not in her own interest. Where! What! When! Why riofht here, rio;ht now and all the time, is going on a strule with desease for health and Ilaller's Sar saparill & Burdock is tho most su ccessfuf opponent that science has thus far discovered. For sale by all druggist. To keep thp beard from turning jrray. and thus preventing the ap piaranoe of age, use Uuckin ghanis dye for whiskers, the Lest dye made. The American people are always interested in anything that pertains to the White House. We are relia ble informed that the stables con tain a full assortment of different drugs and they alsotso the head groom says) keep a bottle of Ilal ler's Barb Wire I.inement, which is the most successful liniment they hae ever used. T-'or sale by all druggists. Shilok's Velizer is woat you need for consumption of appetite, dizzi ness, and all syuptons of dyspapsie Price 10 and 75 cents per bottle. K. G. Frick A: Co. w-4tf "A God-send is Kly's Cream Balm. I had catarrh for three years. Two or three times a week my nose would bleed. I thought the sores would never heal. Your Balm has cured me." Mrs. M. A. Jackson, Portsmouth, X. II. I have had nasal catarrh for ten years so bad that there were great sores in my nose, and one place wan eaten through I got Kly's Cream Balm. Two bottles did the work My nose and head are well I focd like another man.-C. S. McMillen, Sibley, Jackson Co., Mo. newspapers .