Zt WftMg gntlqmulcnt BY H.HUCKINS. LINCOLN. NIBBA8KA. The I'tira Press thinks tr'; interna docal yachting races "are calculated to promote patriotism." So they are 1 you via. China ham a bfK lot of money to raise, anil cannot very, well economize on her methods of living. She la on "a diet of rice" now. "Wfcnt's In a name?" Only this: An. Ohio woman reoently presented her Jiusband with his sixteenth child, and ler name Is Moore. It must be admitted that the cattle crop is also pretty good when we read that 200,000 head In Texas will Boon b ready tor shipment. . Mrs. Noe was arrested in Little Rock lor Wtcrlns bloomers. Judge Wilson rtinmiFsert the. case, and handed down a cieclslon that "bloomers are lust the thl-ag." Miss) Marie Millard, a Boston actress, renounces her engagement to Count Riioiil Do llrabant of franco. Miss Mil' lard has scored in the game of love, She won a count. In places east mischievous persons have purposely placed glass, tacks, and nnlls on the highways used by the bi cyclers for the purpose of wrecking tho tires of the wheels. At Chlcopee, Mass., n ordinance has been passed making auch an offense finable, the penalty being from $2 to $20 for every mch effeni o. Such an, act ia mean enough to richly deserve a much heavier punish' ment. Two gentlemen of Newport, Ky., while engaged In painting that town a vivid scarlet, gave offense to a sensi tive cow, which chased them into a convenient church. Tho Louisville Courier-Journal says that a crowd speedily came to the scene and rescued the gititlemen "from their perilous position." The phrase shows the pe culiar pfilefiin In which the church 1 told In Kentucky. Dr. Heine Marks of St. Louis says bicycle riders form a great suicide club that threatens to depopulate the world. AH the functional and constitutional disorders, to which the race is subject are ascribed by tho doctor to bicycle riding On some fateful day in the course of bit: lifetime Dr. Marks prob ably thought he could ride a wheel, and found that he could not. That would explain his extreme hostility. Jo much grave robbing has beon folng on in the small cemeteries around Indianapolis recently that owners of the f emeteries have adopted the plan of placing nitroglycerin In graves. An old man was burled at Greenwood the other day and three sticks of nitro glycerin were placed on the coffin. Borne day a carelessly dropped clod will produce a premature resurrection that will not only raise the dead but the living. The "new woman" has broken out in another way in Georgia. This time she comes to the front as a distiller. A woman in Jasper county and another la Cherokee have been granted the neces sary government license to enable them t& establish registered distilleries from which to make peach brandy. These ere the first cases of women distillers who appear on the books of the revenue department. There have been Isolated cases of omCn who were alleged to Swn illicit distil lories, but those have been Spartan women who took the blamo on themselves In the hope that the courts would be lenient with them. Now let women acquire tho habit of drinking tw stuff and going home with Jbrs like men and bealinx their hus bands next and their truinoh will b complete. The abandoned telegraph lino which the WVaUrn Vnlon Telegraph rornpairy set aliout establishing through Alaska bout thirty years ago is to be revived, h company deciding that there is tuflU-l-nt buhincft to warrunt Its con struction. The line will be built to Forty U Creek on the Yukon. n4 iruche will run to Sitka and Juneau, thus ptititns Alaska in touch with the worUI. The plan thirty )fare ago was to tnM u t, a linn through Alaska by way of I '.brlii it straits to Siberia, and tbeitc t- 3t. ivtersburg. Hvfore the line h td Im-u flnUhed lo Alaska, the iutim i'f the Atlantic t ulle umd the ran-til rlart lin unnMarjr. On A0i prlnt'ipal diravultloe the tele fi.!t litcaunteri . from Irttt. hlh tiHik th tr kg rap j iUt for bt trt nn4 the humming uf the wtir I tm oi.n4 of ditsirU'l Iwi. Tury i-h le it tt my puke la their at lW r. It for th bum r iUiH4 la tn i'uiulei In tb'tsi. t Jt ! still iuturrai It. that rrgl'iA. end th eu-pt i e( crr i g Hi Ut rlh i!ul tjir ,rfcut may b auul tM Utrtw uli U atviM' j,!uU ib l " than lit, TM rt,U rti Nt if m trluainf ai!km fur tn thy tu. K'i -lkii4 t the '' tii ! ta'f m!I dating i tt diie ( ike , tf fy H !) 'ria ft am (4-thitg en the aata. in full f . n t mtti Nil t ir, m i b .kf y r . k U ! iif..V.I rj ( H I m4 tfcat IJ Hu U Ike fUht ,h flJ xv "tt the t'l : t iii.fni lli r(e kt lt - SNAKE FARM IN EAST. ITS UNCOMMON LIVE STOCK, BREEDING METHODS. The roMlliUlMa of tiie gnukenkin In doitry gagsette) to Mr. Ilunklri hy the Bolts and Pocketbooki of turn mcr ItoaTIcrs In Conpcrgtowb. (Special Correspondence.) P In the Ovoego Hills In New York State many strange Industries "re car ried on,, but .'.'' -o 13 none stranger than that of Hiram Hasklns and none that returns a bet ter proflt. Mr. Has- profitable has his business become tbat he has undertaken to domesticate the reptiles and breed them. While travel ing through Otsego with wheel and camera a few weeks ago tho writer hoard at Cooperstown of this strange man who had gono to raising rattlers and pilots for the market. Ills place was found up in the hills near Schuyler Lake. He lives In a comfortablo frame dwelling, where the writer was Invited to partake of a meal of fresh milk aud boiled urackcd corn. "Kent up to look fer snakes, did yeou, neow?" said tho old man as his bright, gray eyes twinkled, and ho chuckled; "Waal, I guess I kin Khow yeow a pow erful plght of them." "What Induced you to go into tho jnake trapping and breeding business'." "Waal, about five years ago Mrs. Has tens an' me was down to Coop.'rstown, HOME OF TUB SNAKE FARM, an' we seed so many ladles at the hotel with snakeskln belts an' pocketbooks that we wondered if they was common rattler skins, One day some weeks later I was cradlln' late oats an' I killed a spotted adder with the blade of the cradle. I took him home and skinned him jlst like I would an ce!, that Is, tripped his hide off whole without eplittln' it. Then I cleaned it and cured It with white oak liquor, and when it was dry and cured it was soft and shiny like. Mandy, that is, Mrs. Haskins, says, says she, 'Hiram, I'd send that pelt down to New York to some pocketbook maker and see if it's worth anything.' Waal, I sent it to a feller on Mercer street that deals in fancy leather an' In a few days I got a letter with a check for $3.50. He said If I had any more spotted si ako pelts to send them along. I didn't bev any, but Mandy says, says she, 'II! -am, you kin git some more, can't you?' 'I dun- no,' says I, 'but I guess I k!n when buckwheat mowin' begins, as her'll sure to be some snakes In the ten-acre buckwheat lot or I'm mistaken.' Then I begin to think an' to rumluale around In my mind bow I cud git a lot of snake pelts. A few days later I got a regular windfall. I run Into a den and killed live full-grown spotted adders, a rattler, and a purty brown mottled sarpint that I didn't know tho name of. I cured these skins an' sent 'em to New York an my returns was $25. The man that bought the pelts said he'd take all I cud ketch. "'Mandy, says I. "do you think I could trap snakes In a trap? I'm going to try anyhow.' 'I don't see why not, Hiram,' says Mandy; an' then 1 made up my mind to to try an' ketch snakes In traps. A few days later I vent lo Cherry Valley an bought one of them big wire French rat traps. It's like an eel pot; the snakes eutild slip easy like Into the trap but t udn't get out, as the wi-es stuck Into them. They cud git Into the trap, but cud n't reach the bait. Then I kctchpd a couple of theni Kng llxh sparrers in a snare an' baited j trap an' put It out In the long Kmc in the east niedder, where I had heard an adder hiss a few days befure. "The next morn In' I went down to the trap, and, blew me. If thfr wunn't an Tint s m: i ti m sir j 4-ki full U fvt l-. an' uu my I iil koJ". tin in itw r-iu a: A . ..H'f, Willi! thtiiti tUui U'uhl !h b4t i4 t(.t hint iti tliv liu u t - it I In ea t t Ufv I 4 lt h4 Mtl(vtl fcr .i.i full ( j hl fl'vlt lr. Out U, tbry kt a t id h Ml wn tn t k t I km-4 blm an' aritt n tia kruki iniv all oi r ll t trm hniit It 4t lim I r Vm ta U tUMf k.u h. r hm t't J tint, ( trH lUixra- . rtilM, aa.t rt ' r . .!.! !' f ikIii tlat tai t y .v. tattikt. ii. t I t4 In Ut of pelts, I'd go to New York with 'era myself. I fixed up and went down, and when I kem back I hed a clean $:!00 in my wallet. While I wuz down thero the feller who bought my pelts says to me: 'If you keep on this way yqu won't hev no snakes left in the counties of Otsego or Chenango. You hev brought more pelts to me than any perfesslonal trapper on my list, an' I've got lots of men ketchin' snakes. Why don t you build a snake house an' raise em?' Waal, I laughed at that, but the idee struck me that I'd try anyhow, bo I asked if he could reccoraend any one to me as had a snake house, an' he told me to go up to Central Park an' see how they kep' snakes there. I went up there an' seed the glass place where they kep' the snakes, an' the keeper says to me, says he: 'The varmints 'ud breed here, if we wud let 'em, but we don't want any young snakes. There wuz all kinds of snakes there, an' the Idee struck me to build a glass breedin' house. I seed a power ful sight of other kinds of varmints up at Central Park, but I s'pose you hev, seed them, too. How3omever, wereoa snakes now. I reckon we'd better etlcl to snakes. "When I kem home I went to work to build a snake house. I trade a purty good one, as you'll see. Thero wuz no more snakes to ketch that fall, so I rested until spring, when they kem outen their holes. I bed good luck an' kotched a lot of young ones an soon hed my snake house stocked. I bed all klnda, but didn't know much about,' the nature of puttln the wrong kinds of snakes together. I ketched one of them big ringed neck racers black snakes, you know an' he wuz a fighter. No sooner did I let him into the cago than he tackled a rattler I hed there an' in a switch of a lamb's tail he hed gibbed that rattler in the back of the neck, jumped into tho air with him, an colled around him, squeezin' the life outen him. That glv mo a lesson, an' I didn't put rattlers an' racers In the sane cago agin. "Waal," said the old man, as he looked up at the sky, "I think mebbe we'll hev rain; let's go au' see the snakes." lie led the way to a frame shanty with double walls like an lee house. In side was a row of wire-netting cages, covered with glass. In the cagca were as choice an assortment of snakes as one would care to sec. In one compart ment were spotted adders by the score, little and big, all colled and twinted in a squirming, wriggling mass. In an other compartment were twelve or more copperheads the old man called them pilots. In still another compart ment were all kinds of snakes of the garter and whiplash species, green scaled, brown and white mottled, and of nearly all shades of drab and gray. Another compartment contained fully twenty rattlers, all lying still, as If dead. In the fall, the old man said, just before the snakes were ready to hiber nate, he culled out all the big ones, and, after killing them, stripped off th HASKINS AND ASSISTANT, hides and salted them dry. He did not tan-cure them now, as the purchas es preferred to dress them, as they could dye them in many colors at the same time. He got Just ns good price for salted skins as for cured ones. The remark that .iierc were no blacksnakes in his menagerie caused llaskins to ex plain: "I kill all them fellers. They scales, an' only the snakes a hev purty skins bring big prices. When I kptch a komi-sizej racer in my traps I send him down to York for breeders, but I JlneniUy kill ihe no-good thin." Illr.ltcil Willi I.Ik In I! n ,. One of the nirmt unumial ami tioHest pM-apea from dea'h from liebfning ever recorded nlmenwd at dray Kjiile, .M lun. During a heavy eleetiioal storm. hit Otto 1 1 1 1 IT 1 1 1 a n atood mi bin porch, a boll of lightning struck the tp of hlt head, icirihs hU hat to u- 'e mid teir itig eff a !m k of li.iir on th back of hli head, nejr the Ikise of the brain. Aft thin ait the eli itrinl p.m.l round to Ii'" lire.tnt. Mitei ing it, and j on ilun hi tiiiht leg t the tuot, ii'TD U lent itff the pIum", bud paused Into th t)i gruiinil llnffRUH : m . U un iHiliii iun-i but I fe itx j itijf Mi. !.nh tjn t r 4 m uim df lour ! .'Fil ilprr lt HU III. tli Biff ti . vt a grtling iliiwi. M i . UilnlSe VVtli, h lint! Tby in y iH in)') i ar uf uuik t 4 lit. I ! 114 III IIm, I Milt . Jl 1 ''l 1 it - 1 H4IV fctt I fe . tr. ihmk, VUm l'0lJi. . In i m 4 Mla ' I I vi I It A 1 1 4 r. I t'".t l ? IHi(al liwlm U I tl a litt.wl 4ii-in lui N ul I .t un I '.! 4.k,?( in ( I w 1 I t ) . H.-1a; t-ul t- t.t r, vip 4 It ' The Last Chance. MRS JOHNSON HAD ONLY ONE CHANCE TO SAVE HER LIFE. Now Uoi- the Work of Threa Areraga Women. From the Ledger, ? .'exlco, JIo. Mr. Lucinda Johnson lives in Mexico, Mo. The Ledger liai ja fct succeeded in ob taining an interview with her. This is the in tmtauce of her story ; In the winter of 'V2 and '68 Mrs. Johnson wan, like many of her friends, attacked with la grippe. Yes. we're most of us had it and know its wrecking powers, wbeu ii getH in its work on a good constitution. Well, Mrs. Johnson, along; about Christmas, wan prostrated. All the medical aid here In the city only "brought her around," as an '-herts and roota" female sym pathizer expressed it, and she was left in a debilitated and exhausted condi tion, and experienced a constant pain in hrr left tide. Hlie was wholly unfit for her domentie duties and was un able to do any work about the house, even after the la grippe fever and its character istic gicknens Lad left her. Hhe is a con sistent member of the church, and one Sun day, between the Sunday school and church m-rvioes, being barely able to tie conveyed there, she heard of a miracle that Dr. WilliamM' Pink Pill for pHle People bud ferfortned, and she revived to try them, t was like the drowning man grabbing at the last btrnw. It ai Iter lant and only chance to save her life. She procured one box of these pills from the Bouth side drug gistH, French & Garrett, in this city, aud by the time she bad used half tho box she nnd her watchful friends noticed a mitrked improvement in her condition. Taking the rest of the tox of pills and one more box she recovered remarkably in nu exceedingly bbort time. Before she had used the first box she resumed her household duties, and hnn been steadily at work for the last eighteen months. It took only a few boxes, iei lwiis live or six, to entirely cure her. Since then she was attacked by rlieuma tinui. caused from cnreloss exposure, but by hi one taking the Fink fills for Pale Peo ple she drove that painful aim dreadful uialudy away, (She told the reporter that whenever she felt that she wan going to be 111, she took one or two of the pills, and she never got tick. Mrs. Johnson is perfectly healthy now and promises to live to a ripe old age. Her friends have never ceased to talk about her almost miraculous recovery and are loud in their praise of the Pink Pills for Pale People, and all who have tried them say they would not be without them under any conditions. ur. w imams rink mis are not looked upon on a patent medicine. An analysis of their properties stows that they contain, in condensed form, nil the elements noce.s ary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for surh diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vi tus' dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous headache, the after effects of la trrlmie. palpitation of the heart, pule and nallow complexions, and the tired feeling resulting from nervous prostration, all dis eases resulting from vitiated humors in the blood, such as scrofula, chronic erysipelas, etc. They build up tbe blood and restore the (tlow of health to pale ana sallow cheeks. 1 bev are tor sale by nil druirsisls, or may be had by mail from Ur. Williams' Med. Co., Schentetady, N. Y.'., for bOi ptr box, or six loxe for fi.0O, The Kangaroo at Mir. When pursued, the kangaroo, If possible, directs his flight toward the river. If ho reaches it ho enters, and, thanks to his great height, is able to go on foot to a depth where tho dogs aro obliged to swim. There he plants himself on bit two hind legs and his tail, and up to his shoulders in the water he awaits the attack of the do. With his forepaws he seizes by the head tho llnst doj that approaches him, and as ho is more solidly balance. 1 than his assailant he holds the doga noso under tho water as long as he. can. Unless a second dog speedily comes to the fescue the first one is sure to be drowned. If a companion arrives and by his attacks on the kangaro j manages to set the captive freo the half-drowned brute is glad to regain the shore as quickly as possible. In this way a , strong and courageous male kangaroo will'hold its own against twenty or thirty dogs. drowning some and frightening others. and tho hunter is obliged to intervene with a bullet. St. Louis Globo-Deiu- ocrat. How Tlilut We offer Cine Hundred Hollars reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall's I'atarrh Cure. F. J. CM KSV.X St CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J. Cheney for the last 15 yearn, and be lieve him perntly honorable In all business transactions, and financially tbie to carry out aa obligations made Ihelr ll.m. WALDINC. RINNAN & MAUVIN. Whole.al IruKRlts, To-lo, Olili. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internal ly, acting directly upon the blood and mumiiM aurfaces of the sti.-ni. Tctt monials sent frev. Price, T.le per buttle. HoM by all driiceiRt. IUil s Family t'llH, :5c. 'Ilia Matae (irattAr? at HamUii. The wonderful Kait Indian status a:id tciniiW cut from tho folid liowl- lei's and stratified ruck are duplicated if not OXCelicHl, by tho Afghan. I'ro-fo-dor .1. A. liay, in iip of hi. recent leetmvt o:i the far Kn-t, ..U ( a tone statue of a ijod which d,, ,iJWr at rxiiiiiiin, near the l!itiu!t frontier. I bi particular nUtuo m r,im of a co;v, but u ttin giant '.' ilm lut, lill ll.'l fevl ill height ail. I l.ic-rrt in j.r'Mmi tun). It win iimM ,ii M sioi'ii-lioii-e tin- ii. Mil at tlnil tun i run t j'le'd uior i'.iMD Ii iu-V AM0N0 THE 0ZARKS" Hie I nut tiilliii Itnl .i1tti, I !.,! and iiiiliiij I i, lttti'iiety j.ln.lr 11 ii Ii id H,.i ,.,.of tt !!. H.' II.IH I ll4 I'l.lll'H II J-H fill I Urtii if V'KI sett 1. 1 lli ! i.'i.nl. It i4in in (till I ' hi I fill llU'i , l illif tn.1,'1, lti i.i'.ini :.tn i f l U. itl. ii J it .Mtw (.1 grt ; ., n, j k 1 1 I l If ll.B-fi, i ll I 11 ll.l i4 li Vi, -4 lei Ui.u s4 i h" . !'' I Irf t J, 1" . , k4 1 t), M .1 It te a n ii tmt em in . com ll.Kl4 I I (H'K tt -l 11. ijl. Ill' H mii iin4i ji,i. . i cv Mi . I i'ie i. tli" h n'iicr I ra! .( tun n.l . i. tL Ater lima n-.i. I ; 4. 4 U-t hH'ii i' m' the fui f nan ai.d auiitli, U hi i'ii ih.Ii Ira iiiI, ll.e l. aurl anuiiT l lti w4U'rr "fbi tvtntrea TRAMP IN MAYOR'S CHAIR. tV;ii)!il I'ants and Heard flit Uuoof Wai Dispensing Them.i A tramp, the most miserable-looking tramp that could be picked out in a day's travel, played Mayor of New York the other morning, says the New York sun. His clothing was in tatters and wis in danger of falling off. His vet was old, and he was three years 1 n ay from a bath. Janitor Larkin went into the mayor's office at 6 o'clock In the morning and just missed having a fit wlien he spied the specimen sitting In the mayor's big chair. 4s the Jani tor came in the tramp stood up and leaned against the desk. "What!" exclaimed Larkin. : "Sir?" aid the tramp. . "What the blazes are you doing here?" demanded Larkin. "I only want a pair of pants," said tbe tramp with a tremulous voice. "Think this is Baxter street?" de manded Larkin. "Think we run a pants factory? Think this Is the head quarters of the Hebrew Pants Makers' Amalgamated Reform Union? Well, It ain't, and how In blazes did you get here?" "I came in through the window," said tho tramp softly. .."The door was locked." Ho looked at Larkin and Larkin looked at him. Tor a moment neither spoke. Then the tramp said: "I un derstand the mayor distributes pants every morning, and that a great crowd gathers to receive them. I merely wanted to be on hand In time, and so I climbed up and came throul. the window." "Well you'll come out of the door," said Larkin. "Certainly," said the tramp. Larkin held him in the hall until a policeman came and took him to the Oak street station, where he said he was Andrew Bradley and had a home in Brooklyn. Later he was arraigned in the Tombs court and was sent to tbe workhouse. Nothing in the mayor's of fice had been disturbed, IT MAKES SOME MEN TIRED. lint .lennln'i Brand New Husband De 'iled That He Was at All tmlguei. They were from some locality up north and on their wedding tour. Ia taking In the sights of Detroit they boarded a Woodward avenue car fotf a ride to the terminus and back. As ttey sat beside each other, her hand in his hand and his straw hat fanning them both, a grumpy old codger on the next seat sneerlngly observed: " 'Nother case of love's young dream, I fee!" The newly wedded looked around at him, but made no reply, and pretty soon he said: "There ought to be a law against this spooning business! It Juttt makes ine tired!" "Oh, It does!" retorted the young man as his cheeks began lo redden. "Meb be you never spooned when you was a young man?" . "If I did It was not in such a public place!" "What's the place to do with It? Can't everybody tell right off the handle that me'n Jennie are Just married?" "I should say they could." "And that we are on our bridle tower?" "Yes." "And that we are Just honey and peaches?" "That's what thes me." "It does, eh? Well, it don't tire us. She dotes on me and I'd die for her, and we are going to kiss and hug and squeeze hands and eat gum-drops as long as our $17 holds out, and you and all the rest of the old mossbacks in this town can lick your chops and go to grass!" And he sat down and put one arm around his turtle dove and hugged her till the grumpy old man cams to his corner and dropped off with a grunt of (iiHgllSt. NEWSY MORSELS. Kngland has decided to Increase the ay of the native Indian tsoldlera by G4 cents a month. Basrelief memorial medallions of Oliver Wendell Holmes are being worn by Boston people. Saoo, Me., Is bragging of a 2.005 pound cow that It declares Is tbe largest one In tbe world. The Japanese grow dwarf oak and pine trees that are only eighteen Inches high w lien jno years old. A scholarship has been founded la memory of Jay Could tit the college of the I'nlverslly of New York. T!..i maximum axe assigned to the pine Is 700 je irs; to the red lieach, 21S; ti the o.ik, 110, and to the inn, Hi years. car containing .,oo0 ehh keni, U led ui tl.l'Ni, ma shipped fmrn Clay Center, Mc, billed to H.n FrmeUoo. ,tt eek. It lit .ii4 that mure vMtm to Miunl I ii,p n cemetery, near Cambridge, I laity nt the tu iiti of Min conth titan at iu uther I'd i'l ci li'lira'a th one hiin In-lih iaiitw.if) nt It founding cneiiHi.r I an 4 II elHitrv a-! ta pl i. e '4I oil' .1 I'l t' lf I Mil. V ll ii ' (old le o ufa (m r h J'jV nnd a fimr pt L ather belt H fri !'!; 'Ill Is III he I )e tho ail' set n r u 4 mntc eii I ii lHinl.ii.inu la l 1 lll'r-4 lati Ireia 4 l JSIIJ f 'M m am nu Irf M, lii I'taa. t tU'ra 4i eV ; aa- a U Die I iM It I 'Je I 1 1 ll 4 ail tmi mil ii') I if f an I niil Ukra ttl niTi'iriii ur ta. Inn M 44 la apb.r t) tiaato i lli map. Ill I. k lU I K44 f ,1'l fM-al p. Ill I I' ill kit (itta !, tt a vf la 'in. Iin4 Ml h4 rMIJn a In itiiiiury ili ill rti m ini. i(il . i. T i a tli l,4N44 it I'hM4iUi aa.i i,i ie K iui 4 n ii'mu'i tn ti utiJ al jf-;lta. i Fa I edicine Is fully as important and as beneficial as Spring Mcdk-lue, for ut this seasoi; there is great danger to LeaUh lu tli varyiug temperature, told storms, ma larial germs, prevalence of fevers and other diseases. All these may be avoided if the blood is kept pure, tho digestion good, and bodily health vigorous by tuklng Hood's Sarsaparilla The One True Elood Purifier. Hood's Pills aM" Go to California in a Tourist Sleeper. It is the RIGHT way. ray more and you are ex travagant, ray less and you are uncomfortable. The newest, brightest, cleanest and easiest rid ing Tourist Sleepers are tt used for our ffSSiSI Personally Conducted! Ii i iM' (1 2 praMrnH excursions to i UjiiaMj California, which leave Omaha efory Thursday morning reach ing Sac Francisco Sunday evening, and Los Angeles Monday noon. You can join them at any intermediate point. Ask nearest ticket agent for full information, or write lo J. l RANCis, G. P. A., Omaha, Neb. tl H I iVleta IflfUal for your Wagons Aar fly toii nt, 80 lo' M In.'l t h I v h. Tir 1 lo Hi In cbfli Ui luibi ntnT Havel lott many timciln a r to . hi f low kMll to fit jonr wtcoH for b anil nc ft ralD,foliJr, mu- nr. finr, c. So. mtllln tf Ur CU'rM. 4'Urrn I'. O. Box fi, (JU1DC7 111. Walter Baiter & Go. Limiisl Tka LtvraTMt IfaatifkctuMra mt PURE, HIGH CRADE ( Cocoas and Chocolates Oa IhU Coalinral, kr nelT4 HIGHE8T AWARDS from th pnl Industrial and Food EXPOSITIONS i IH EUROPE MO AMERICA. Cant inn' 'a lw of Ik pftfc UbrUand rpprt on our iwoi, couiumtrt tlioum friBkv mi hmi our KiUr f mimifme'iir. minil. DorrhMlrr. Ma.. it pruilotl oa cll )ig. SOLO BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. " j WALTIR BAKER a CO. LTD. DORCHESTER, NASI west MISSOURI. Th tMi.t fruit M" ll. ii In Hi Wot No dio itl. a fallur of erupa nrvir Imown. Hilil rllmalo. fimluotlr toll, Abuiulftiiu of tfnthi pur tr. lor Map aud Cln-bUra tfitinf full doiwrlptloft or tli l;kh Mliiaml, Krult and Avilrullmal Indf la louih v.aitMl a.uil.vriirlo JOII M. FI Hll, Mana.rnf it Mlnoiirl tauil auj Ui Siovk l ip- a j, Nco.hci, t n To. , Mi..'U 1. EWIS' 98 LYE roxiisio ahs rtimts (PAlaVTtUJ Th afrmiorit and tunrt l.ra. mail. I'mik nlbiw I.?, It brnt a ln poaiilrr anil 'kml In ,ilta riu..tliio hit, I ho ouiiiom aim aiwara r" i"r .'wv. s loak Hi of ihi fuii'ol Hard h? ; Hi aMiiiiiuloa bllkiul .lii9. Ill l Iko krl l..r rlauvMii aa.i pipra, I d.aiiilv'iliK ali k. I'luwta, tiliif PFMMA. SALT M'F'G C(l . Ota. AMit' I'b'lav. I'a. FREE! FREE! FREE! In ti-l tlm iir' ii'ltn t'm l 'lili Iii.iiiA ai-r III I'm il t'n N'ol.rnkliia Mai I .ill -- HI I l n i hi i. Ii lan t tt I n Hal oi leer fur il.iilnr, 'lln" l"u' in. In.. li). iiii. tlr laM, tlrli ll n -lur ill, 1. 1 ' I ail I lily. I' 111" ii ' tin , lilt, ami tli.i ill-i li' Sviiil 11 1. In iii n' Aililt, I l Ui 1'ul li-h ii; I ii , I in flu. HAIHRBALAM 4k a4 I. !. ki i r .Ik a. or ii, i i.i n. lir t 'kl I t.. imi i. Omaha STOVE REPAIR Works lt r.i lar tM l.ral l a raa.. I ti. at, , UTTHTt " ''' ' " 1 '. Tit. U. It. 40, 18957 1 if Tl K1 II ll k n ii a H (if ) m I Ii c 1 I I 1 VM 17 iliwTl in a mm n w ram I II mi m m s wVt41 Mna ttin ftm .kaa Vi Witt Iv Ai U'M i.