Kngllftb Wild CsUtle. ' "The only herds remaining in Great ."Britain are thoso of Hamilton park, -Chillinshara iwtrk r.ntl Cliartleypurk. It .is-iliflicult Jto determine to what extent they are pure. Storer whs of opinion iiat '-no -wiM, liertl, if imprisoned in a park, ami interbred forseveral hundred .years without re cross, could be iu exist ence now." ,TJiero is a tradition tliat a "whole herd rin PrumLinris "was sold find driven off. to ChiMingliam" alwmjk a linn died years a;of and tlntt fresh blood "Vag occasionally introduced from other Tsonrces.', On 'the other hand, there are evidences of iubreeu'inr in the fct that the anunal increase is only one in five. It is welt authenticated that the Hamil-. -ton eattle'were formerly hornless, and the horns -which tliey now possess are snid to lo tho result of the invsiMoii of iihe park hy ; a Went Highland bull. Black, black ami white and brown calves are occasionally born in each of the three wild herd, which is another ynip tom of crosses iu the past. These col ored calves are alwa.rs destroyed, and were it not 'or this it is by no means cer tain that white would now be the pre vailing color. At Hnniinerford Park, in Cheshire, Kir W. ShakerJey has a herd of domesticated hornless cattle which strongly resemble the Chartley breed. Their 'milking powers are extraordinary. Individual cows have sometimes iven fourteen quarts at a milking and seven gallons a day. The ordinary cows most like the existing breeds of wild cattle are tho Ayrshires, which have much in common with them in form, color and horn. -The Saturday Keview. Imlttlna of Old Bronze. An excellent imitation of old bronze has been introduced in some of the art products of that diameter. It is well known that the repeated applications to copper or brass of alternate washes of dilute acetic acid and exposure to tho fumes of ammonia result in a very an tique frreen bronze; but a more rapid . method of producing this beautiful ap- iearance lias Joiiir been a desideratum, t is now found that this ma' be siccom plished by immersing the articles in a solution of one-psirt perchloride of iron in two part of water, the tone acquir ing darkness with length of immersion, or the materials may be boiled in a rong solution of nitrate of copper. It vAalso found practicable to insure the desired eneet by immersing the articles in a solution of two ounces of nitrate of iron and the same quantity of hyposul phite of soda in half a pint of waiVr, drying aw burnishing completing the process. yew York Telegram. Tli l(Mnlaiir.a f 111 Fait. .After a long interval, a long period of neglect, the yea 1829 saw a revival in the taste for fans. It chanced that a grand ball was preparing at tho Tuiler ies, at which several "eostume quad rilles" were to be dnnced. Mme. la Duches.se de Berri had undertaken to get up a Louis XV quadrille, and was seeking everywhere had sought every where in vain for fans of that period. Suddenly some one remembered having cen some old fans in the hop window of a perfumer named Yanier, who lived iu the line Caumartin. Vanier had col lected old fans for some time as an ama teur. His. fans wero taken to the pal ace; in the quadril'e they created a furor and were all purchased. The Duchesso de Berri's ball began the ren aissance of the fun. Louisa Parr in Harper's, Magazine. ITIetliotl of Km balm in?. There are vartons methods for em balming bodies, but the ."Brunei li pro cess" is held to be the best. Iii perform ing that- tl3 circulatory system . is cleansed by nshing with old w ater till it issues quite clear from the body. This may occuny from two to five hours. Alcohol is injected so as to take out aa - much water as , possible. This oecnpies about a quarter of an hour. Ether is -then injected to abstract the fatty matter- Tin's occupies from two to ten hours. . A stronir solution of tannin is then injected. This occupies for inibi bation from two to ten hours. The body is then dried in a current of warm air passed over heated chloride of calcium. This may occupy from two to five hours. Tho body is then perfectly preserved and resists decay. Boston Herald. , Open All the Year Hound. As Senator "Don" CAmeron stood talking in a corridor of the Fifth Ave nue hotel a night or two ago a thing lie very rarely does, as ho abhors pub licity nnd detests being pointed out or looked at somebody told him an im portant telegram from General Lloyd Brice hud been sent to him to "Wash ington. It seemed to a casual listener strange that congressmen should have important communications addressed to them iu midsummer at the national cap ital, the one plnce it c-uld be assumed they would not be. But the fact is, ns a member ayIio stood by explained, that the senate is supposed always to be in session, and both senate and house of representatives are open all tho year round for the transaction of certain bnsiness. The congressional postmas ters are always on hand to receive mem bers' mail and forward it to any address in the country or Europe, the serjeants-at-arms are on hand also and commit tees work off and on in their rooms all through 'the dog days." New York World. The.judVe of probate of Ca-ndor, D. T.. iias disappeared with a large amount ol the people's cash. , Queen Victoria has been appointed to the command of the Fiist Dragoon Guards of Berlin. A record is always improved by bein broken. " Send two cent in stamps to E. L. Lo max, General Passenger Agent Union Pa cific railway, Omaha, Neb., and secure a handsomely bound copy of Outdoot Sports and Pastimes, containing complete rules for Lawn Tennis. Croquet and Base Bait, free. Just issued. How to remove weeds marry the widow. liny n Ilftiue In Kill, Kanana. . This town is one of the most promising .n Kansas, located on the Union Pacific Hallway. It is a division station o that road and has division shops, round house and leatin? station. Mills and factories are springing up and it is becoming a thrivin" place, in the midst of a prosperous farmin" region. It is a healthy place and the soil and climate are excellent, Albert Wood cock, General Land Commissioner U. P. Ry Omaha. Neb., or T,eroy S. Winters Laud and Emig. Agt. U, F. Ry.. Ellis, Kan. A vessel has been built at Belfast, Ire land, 582 feet long. Gttlnr ItZoney nnd Matnn lijr Fraud. An old gentleman with bent form and watery eyes wandered about in the vi cinity of the postofIiee with nu envel ope in his hand addressed to 'Marie Maroniski, Philadelphia, Pa." At in tervals he would stop pedestrians and ask for two cents to buy a stamp so that, ; as he said, he could send his letter to his daughter in Philadelphia, at the tame time showing the envelope. He got either moDey or a stamp very fre quently, but both money and stamps vent into a pocket. One man asked to see the envelope, and on getting it held it up to the sun. There was no paper m it. When the old man got his en velope back from this man he shuffled . around to the Broadway side of the building. Kew York Snu. f Eev. H. P. Carson. SLOtland,Dak.. savs- Two bottles of Hall's Catarrh Cure com pletely cured mj litt'e 2irL" Sold bT firuggists, 75c. J IOU A3D I. Some dav, lovo, one of ns will stand And gaze npoatho other's happy la; Who's lonnd a haven i a brighter land And left behind a dreary, vacant place. "We tan not know which one of ua will stay Or when the day. If yon, dear heart, should look upon rae there In all your acrony of;rrie and wop, Bearinjr a burden that I may not share Feeling a torture that I cannot know Yon will forget the crnel words, now past, Remembering but the lore I gave at last. Ton will forget my waywaid. cruel ways; Forgive roe alt the pain I made you bear. Ton will forget the dark and gloomy days, And think of those alone that were so fair. Ton wiil forget the doubt that 'tween ns lay, Remembering that I kissed the pain away. But, darling, should I see you silent lie, And listen for tho tender tones and true. The tears, unbidden, might bedim my eye. And 1 might eink in bitter grief for you. I do not know I only know that I Should pray to die. .'..- N. Y. World AN ALIBI. The man4who sits down to deliber ately plan a crime works every point and detail to one common center an alibi. The law has common sense enough in this one particular to pre sume that a man who is in Boston, for instance, when a murder is com mitted in Cincinnati could not have fired the shot or struck the blow. Therefore, let one accused of crime prove to the jury that he was at some other point at a certain critical hour, and he must be declared inno cent. This knowledge makes the alibi a favorite defense. If not clear ly proved, it always raises doubts and affords opportunity for argu ment. On the other hand, however, when an alibi is fairly beaten by the prosecution, then circumstantial evi dence becomes the death trap ol the accused, and he has no show. One of the best laid alibis I ever ran up against in my career as a de tective, and one of the easiest to work out after I got the end of the thread in hand, was put forward in a case in Iowa about twenty years ago. The situation was this: In a small village in the western part ot the State lived a Miss Clarinda Moore, a spinster about forty five years of age. She was worth fifty thousand dollars, and she had adojpted a boy named Byron Fergus. At the date ol which I am writing this boy wag no longer a boy, but a young man of twenty-three. He was employed as a clerk in a dry-goods house, and boarded and lodged at home. He was adopted at the age of twelve, and on the day he reached his ma jority Miss Moore made a will leav ing him everything. This fact was known to all in the village. Fergus was a model young man. No one could point out a single bad habit. He was trusted and respected by all, and had he been accused of the slight est dishonesty no one would have believed the charge. In a smaller village six miles away Fergus had an aunt; who was a widow and lived alono, with the ex ception of having the company of a servant girl. He was in the habit of going over thore about once in two months and remaining over Sunday. On these trips he drove a horse and buggy belonging .to the village cooper. The horsa had a peculiar habit which will be described hater on. One Saturday evening of a July day Fergus drove away on one of these trips. There were' two or three women at the gate in com pany with Miss Moore whenhedrove away. Tne only thing out of the usual run was the remark that Byron looked rather pale and seemed a bit nervous, but probably this would never have been thought of but for what came to pass. At eleven o'clock that nigh.t there was a thunder-storm, and an insur ance agent who was on the road be tween the two villages, with horse and buggy, drove into a fence corner and sheltered himself as well as possi ble with the waterproofs. In the midst of the storm a horse and bug gy came along. The driyer was so enveloped by waterproofs that the agc:t ccidd not tell whether he was old or young, large or small, black or white. At that spot the road had been graded up and was very soft. The stranger was urging the , horse to trot, but the beast found the mud too deep, and could only proceed at a walk. As the strange horse came opposite there was a long, vivid flash of lightning, and the agent saw that the animal had his head turned to the right and his tongue out. this was, the peculiar habit of the cooper's horse when on a walk. When trotting he held up his head and kept his tongue back. The agent identified the horse to his perfect sat isfaction, and called out to the driv er, asking who he was. Instead of nalting or replying the man struck the horse sharply with the whip and was out of sight in a moment. "That's old Shepperd (the cooper), and he's afraid lam a highwayman.5" laughed the agent, and, the rain now beginning to cease, he made ready to resume hisjourney. Miss Moore was an early riser, and moreover never missed church ser vices. A3 the day was fine and she was not seen at church, two or three of her friends called at the house on their way to ascertain her excuse. They found the curtains down and the doors locked. As they knew of young Fergus going to his aunt's the evening previous they reasoned it out that he must have returned dur ing the night for Miss 'Moore, she perhaps being wanted for an emer gency. This theory satisfied them until lour in the afternoon, when one of them returned to gather a bou quet of flowers. She then noticed bloody finger-marks on the back door, and, trying the door, found it unlocked. She dared not enter the house, but two cr three men were summoned to make an investigation, j and m a few moments it was discov ered that a murder had been commit ted. The dead body of Miss Moore was found ia the sitting-room at the door of her bed-room. She had been struck three terrible blows with a club qr other blunt weapon, each one' breaking the skull. I was visiting the sheriff at this time, and we were driving through the village when the first alarm was sounded. I was, therefore, at the house among the first, and being placed in charge by the sheriff I kept the people out until I could make an investigation. The murderer had not obtained forcible entry to the house. Not a single article of value had been removed, nor had any ransacking been done. The woman had been struck down where the body lay, but her bands were clenched asif she had grasped the weapon of death and it had been pulled away fron her. The palm of one hand was torn and bleed ing. , I did not know either the dead woman or Fergus, but I wanted au thority to arrest the latter. When this fact became known I was regard ed as an idiot or a lunatic. A gener al cry went up that Fergus could no more be suspected than an angel in Heaven, but while the sheriff was left ta secure the necessary papers I drove out to interview the young man and break the news to him. If Fergus was guilty his defense would be an alibi, and he carefully arranged the details. He would be expecting the news, and he would be braced up to play a part. I found him making ready to hitch up to drive back. He had never seen me before, and he did not know my frofession. As I entered the barn he ooked startled and turned pale, but recovered himself after a minute, and asked the nature of any business. "You know, of course, that Miss Moore is dead?" I carelessly replied. "How-how should I know it!" he exclaimed, turning very white. "Well she is dead, poor thing." "And do they charge me with it?" "With what?" "Her murder?" "I hadn't said she was murdered. I told you simply that she was dead. How did you know she had been murdered?" He saw the trap he had fallen into, and he gasped and stammered and did his best to smooth it over I pre tended - not.to lay it up as a point against him, and speedily arranged that he should return in my vehicle and leave the cooper's rig where it was. After the first shock he braced up wonderfully, and his demeanor on the way home was entirely that of an innocent man. He expressed great willingness to give us all possi ble information, but at the same time advanced and clung to the theory that no one but a tramp could have been guilty of the crime. Upon reaching home he displayed considerable grief and emotion. In fact, he rather overdid it. It was more like acting out a part. The people were indignant that he should be suspected, and he was not put under restraint. Indeed, no warrant had been issued for him. Earlv the next morning, satisfied in my "own mind that Fergus was the murderer, I drove out to his aunt's. I found that he arrived there at seven o'clock Saturday night. Half an hour later he com plained of headache and went to bed. saying he would .be down again by nine o'clock. As he did not keep his Erbmise, the hired girl knocked on is door at that hour, but receiving no reply, was told not to disturb him. He was not seen by the in mates of the house until seven o'clock Sunday morning. The girl was up at five, and as she crossed the yard she saw that his window was up, and some of his clothing was hang ing in the sun. At the bani I found the cooper's buggy washed clean. Fergus had done this Sunday, fore noon. He had not made a good job on the horse, however, and I found plenty of mud on his fetlocks. As it was dusty Saturday night when he was driven over, this mud must have been picked up after the storm. I bund the harness stiff and damp from being wet, and the cloth cushion of the buggy was still damp. Hunt ing further, I found the fresh tracks of horse and buggy turning into the barn-yard after the rain. The win dow of the room occupied by Fergus opened on the roof of the shed. At the lower edge of the roof stood a leach, On the edge of this leach and pn the roof I found mud. On the car pet in Fergus' room I found more of it. He had scraped and cleaned his boots and flungthe dirt into a stove, whence I got half a pound. All thisl got without the aunt sus pecting that I was alter proofs. I then returned to the scene of the mur der, and after an hour's search dis covered the place where a horse had been hitched for some time. It was in the rear of the house, on an open space and under a tree, and tho horse had pawed up the ground and gnawed the bark of the tree. The footprints of a man could be faintly traced across the garden, and I had no doubt that Fergus came and went this way. On the' fourth day after the funeral I learned from the in surance man what he had seen dur ing the storm, and then a warrant was issued and Ferjinis was taken in to custody. By this tiraethe towns people had begun to think it a queer case. Fergus had gone over the house and declared that noticing had been taken. No suspicious characters had been noticed in.the neighbor hood. Jewelery and money had been left lying on the bureau, show ing thai; the object could not have been plunder. Bid the woman have an enemy? No, not one, as far as we could learn. Who could profit by her death? No one but Fergus, and yet this was one of the strong points he brought forward. It was known to a score of people that she had made her will in his favor. Would not everything be his at her death? To clinch our case and make cir cumstantial evidence good we must show a motive. This seemed hope less, but I went at the task; hoping evidence misht aid m-a if Fergus was guilty. I examined his personal ef fects over and over again in search of a hintbut for two weeks after he had been sent to jail I discovered nothing.' Then I got the clue where I ought to have secured it Jfore. In n. drawer in his desk I found several udvurtisements plainly in the inter-: est cf swindlers. One of them read:: "A steady yonne man with f 10,000 cash : capital can doable it in one year in a lejriti- mate enterprise. Fof particulars address Box 891," etc Another read: If you have nerve and f 5,000 In cash we will make yon a millionaire in one year. We permit the fullest investigation before in vestment. Write for particular." A third just hit the case: "Are you a yong and ambitious man, feeling that you could get ahead if properly backed and encouraged? Have you any money? Can you get from $1,000 to $3,000? If bo we will positively gmarantee you $100 in ret a rn for every dollar, and inside of a year." I felt sure he had written some of these parties,- but as I could not find any letters from them I set ont to hunt them up in person. They were bold-faced swindlers, and they both ered me some, but in the end I got five letters written by Fergus. In one of them he stated that he would soon have money to invest, and ex pressed his satisfaction at the parti culars of the speculation as far as given him. The greed of gain, then, was his incentive. The woman who had been mother and sister to him came of a long-lived race, and was in good health, and a month before her death was told by a doctor in the. hearing of Fergus that she was likely to live to be ninety or one hun dred years old. Until her death the young man could hope for little or nothing, as she was obliged to make the interstate of her capital support her. Murderer or not, the boy was the legal heir; and he employed the best legal talent in the west to defend him. The lawyers might take every dollar if they could but clear him. It was a veritable fight for life with all the money and most of the talent on one side, but that web of circumstantial evidence kept drawing closer and closer, and it could neither be broken nor explained away. Had Fergus been innocent a frank reply to each question would have explained it. Being guilty, his evasions only made matters worse. The jury were out fourteen hours before finding a ver diet of guilty, but within an hour he had made a full confession. He told me that he had been planning, for two months, and that he believed he had arranged details until his case could withstand the most min ute investigation of the highest de tective talent. N. Y. Sun. A Grave-digger Passes a Bad "Sight, A few nights ago, says a Philadel phia paper, while a party of young men and women were walking under the shade trees skirting the Lafayette cemetery, they were startled by a number of wild cries issuing from the center of that burying ground. The hour was about 9, and although there were twenty persons about, none ot them at first could muster enough courage to go in. Then some of them, guided by the sound, made their way between the graves to a vault near the center of the cemete ry. The vault top rises only a few inches above the ground, and there are a number of holes piercing the sides, and the investigators threw themselves prone before this. For a time they could see nothing. Then one of the watchers discovered the outlines of a moving form, and another piercing cry rent the air. Satisfied now that the thing within was a ghost, the men sprang to their feet and ran like mad for the streets. The mystery was not explained un til officer Smith passed that way. Just as he reached the vault in ques tion he noticsd the white face of a man who was lying on the floor in side. He promptly broke in the door and found James Clarke, one of the grave diggers, in a half uncon scious condition, leaning against the side of the vault. It was some min utes before he could talk. Then he said: "I came into the vault yesterday afternoon to. do some work. There are seventeen bodies here. As I en tered the door .closed with a bang, and I saw that I was caught. The lock is a spring lock, and opens only from the outside. At grst I laughed, but as no one came to my relief I soon quit that. When night came I was thoroughly frightened. There was no fun in the prospect of passing a whole night in a narrow vault with seventeen corpses. Then I shrieked for help, but no one -came. I must have fainted, for when I awoke the sun was shining. I knew no more until you came. I'm going into some other business now. Legal lerbiasre. The world has outrun the courts and legal technicalities have out lived their usefulness. The progress of the people has been toward common-sense methods in all tilings, and the lawyers "whereases," "afore saids," and "parties of the first part" must be relegated to oblivion. There is a demand springing up for plain, direct English. There is really no sound reason why, to a man of or dinary intelligence, legal documents should be unintelligible. The techni cal verbiage emp!oed is a relic of the age when that which was mys terious and could not be understood was esteemed to be beyond the com prehension of the common herd. The use of uncommon English in purely business circles would not be endured. Why, then, should the transfer of a piece of property be a process so labyrinthine and so mysterious that a man of sound sense cannot fathom it? . It has been estimated that the droppings of the letter u in such words as honour, labour, and the like has added to the world each year what is equivalent to the pro ductive capacity of 500 able-bodied men. What would we not gain if from every legal paper and from ev ery legal suit there should - be re moved that vast mass of superfluity, that antique verbiage, that bulk of repetition and solemn senselessness that now enwraps them as its shell enwraps the cla in? New Orleans Times-De m ocru t . The Foreign Way of tTaltslns. The French and Anstin raou of war which -visited Newport this Hummer added not a little to the gaiety of the early season. Entertainments wero Riven in their lionor on uoara smp ana elsewhere, au'd the officers, it is said, with the snsceptibilitr characteristic of their profession, admired oar pretty young girls very mnch. Thir method of daucing was not, however, calculated to recommend them to the American feminine heart, c Whatever may be the defects of our new world civilization, we have made vast improvements iu the art of dancing. Our yonng ladies, ac customed to the graceful American methods, were quite overpowered at the manner in which these foreigu officers pranced up and down the decks, never reversing, and stopping the dauce with such suddenness that their partners, dizzy with the rapid motions, were obliged to grasp at gun carriages, rail ings or any near object in order to r.void falling. One yonug girl told the writer that she did not recover from the fatigue oi dancing with these foreign partners for two or three days, although she was a buxom and hearty looking maiden. Newport Letttr to tne Epoch. Hrl?mils Around ItoK... Letters from Rome represent that brigands aro numerous in the environs of the city, committing frequent rob beries, aud that travelers by rail, even, are not safe from robbery. Ihe Epoca is quoted as saying that no less than one hundred robberies, many of them ac companied by violence, have occurred iu the section of railroad between Genoa and"Veutimiglia. A few weeks ago the eldest sou of the Swiss consul at Men tone was murdered and robbed on this road. Exchange. If not above being taught by a man, take this good advice. Try Dobbin's Electric Soan next Monday. It won't cost much. and you will then know for yourself jueb how good it is. lie sure to get no imita tion. There are lots of them. The chrysalis is like a hired man; they both make the butter fly. Lurseat In tlie Vet. To any ot our readers who have any thing that needs cleaning or coloring we would call their attention to the Lincoln Steam Dye Works. Office 1105 O St.. Lin coin. Neb. They clean and color all kinds of lad iea' and gents' clothing and guarantee ti rat-class work, send to them for price ns c. uooas sent oy express or man. ' The old bachelor who would alter his ways should begin at tho altar. WITH A GREAT FLOURISH of trumpets it is announced by Eastern papers that an "Elixir of Life" has at lant been discovered by Dr..Brown-Sequard,a French physician, and wonders are claimed to have been achieved by its use. Be that as it may, Titos. Kennedy, more than twenty years ago distilled from certain Roots and Herbs, after a recipe inherited from Capt. Kennedy of the East India Co.'s service; a Temc, ever since known as Ken nedy's East India Bitters, which have done more good to suffering humanity than pro bably the new French discovery ever will They are made from the finest spirits and guaranteed absolutely pure by Messrs. Her & Co., who are now sole manufacturers o those Bitters. i Atlantic City saloons are called "cabin ets becauae of the spirits therein. A box wind matcbeJ free toimokeri of -TantuTs FuncU" 5c. Cigars. The original "nickle in-the-slot machine' was the bob-tail car. "The days of miracles are past." That may be, and yet eomu of the raont wonder ful things ever witnessed by the human family have occurred within toe last de cade. Not the least of these wonders is the success which the agents of B. F. John son & Co., Richmond, Va., are meeting. Write them for particulars. They will show you how to work wonders. The elixir of life did not live much longer than "The Q-iick orte Dsad." The Best Yet. In addition to the unequaled Dining Car Service between Council Bluffs and Denver, the Union Pacific, "The Overland Ronte," will on Sunday, August 18th, and daily thereafter, run Dining Cars between Coun cil Bluff and Portland. Ore., on "The Overland Flyer," leaving Council Bluffs at 7:55 p. m., Omaha 8:15 p. m. These cars are model of excellence, and the best meals the' market affords will be furnished at 75 cents. Time ia money. Some car conductors beat time. Furniture. Hardy & Pitcher of Lincoln. Neb., have one o! the largest stocks of Furniture in the state. They are shipping goods all over the state constantly, so can secure good freight rates. Anyone wanting furni ture will find it to their d vantage to call on or write to Hardy & Pitcher. The balloon is never arrested, yet it is without visible means of support. JThen Baoy was sick, we gave her Castoria, When cho was a Child, cue cried for Castoria, "When sho bocamo Hiss, suo clung to Castoria, When she had Children, she gave them Castoria, For two two-cent stamp we will send yo.it one of the hiiudsotuet nlmanucfl in the country. "Homestead," Omaha, Neb. Speaking of detectives, isn't the sua a great shadower? One of the signs of autumn: ''Take Home a Fry in a Box." CURES PERMANENTLY BTBPRALGIA. Intense Pain in Face. Little Rnpids, Wis., March 2, 18S9. My wife euflered with each intense neural gic pains in the face ; sho thought she would die. She bathed her face and head with St. Jacobs Oil. and it cured her in four hours. CARL SCHE1BE. At Drtggists and Dealers. THE CHARLES A. V0GELER CO.. Baltimore. M4L 1 - wear and - . a 1 SuHE,,,JP CUBE. M i I Mt II i f ' I SJ i t BP .B1- i -fc -i J--v . . necessary to-Keep tnem ciean witn ordinary soap, tour own interests should lead you to use it, if you do your own work and value your fine linens and flannels ; the latter reason should surely convince any bright .woman that it is to her interest to see that her servants use it. F-bARLINE makes a saving Beware Peddlers and some unscrunnlous srrocers are offering imitations which rearlins " IT'S FALSE Ttm Cwr ! Fay. v It ! a Dretty severe test ot any doctor's skill when the payment ot his fee is made conditional upon bis curing his patient. Yet after having, for many years, observed the thousands of marvelous cure effected in liver, blood and lung disease, by Dr. Pierce' Golden Medical Discovery, its manufacturers feel warranted in selling it, as thev are now doing, through all drug gists, the.world over, under a certificate of positive cuarantee that It will either bene fit or cure in every ease of disease for which they . recommend it, it taken in time and given a fair trial, or money paid for it will be promptly refunded. Torpid liver, or "biliousness." impure blood, skin erup tions, scrofulous sores and swellings, con sumption (which is scrof dla of Ihe lungs), all yield to this wonderlul medicine, it is both tonic or strength-restoring, and alter ative or blood-cleansing. Chronic Nasal Catarrh positively cured by Dr. Sage's Remedy. 50 cents, by drug gists New Jerrey's annual crop of oysters is valued at $2,000,000. Buy Union Soap and make a guess. 'Ask your grocer about it to-day. A colored man at Albany, Oa., has served no less than twenty-one terms ia Jail for fighting. 1 The cucumber does its best fighting after it is down. rosltlvelyeured by inese uuie nils. Thev also relieve Jiu tress from Drupe ptia.Is rtlgaation and TooHeaxt j Eating. A perfect remH ear tor Dizziness.Nauaea Drowsiness, Bad Tastq in the Mouth,' Coated Tongua.Pain in the Side. TOKPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels Purely Vegetable. Price 2& Cents; CA&TEB lffinCIlTE CO., NEW YO&Z. Small Pill; Small Dose. Small Price. JBRWIELD'S ppmn ATM? MENSTRUATION On MONTHLY SICKNESS fir TsS.t DURtHB CHfcNSt Of VC fiRLKT.VjKHBW SUf FER1H WU.BE MQIQE& f J500K TO"WOMAN'-cfl7A'iy BRA DEI ELD REGULATOR CO. ATLANTA 6A. . aiuBMVAUutmm, Mi. PIO DCMCIIV WIU cure Blood Poison where MAUIw nCMCUI mercury falls. Owned and tor sale cniy, by Cook Iiemeiiy Co., Omaha, Keb. Write. U a nl ET STUDY. Book-keepinp, Penmanship, I V Iwl Km Arithmetic. Shorthand, etc.. thor ouehly taught hy mull. Iow rates. Clrculsrs free. BK Y AiX'd COLX.KUK.4ol Main St.. Buffalo, N. V. Lincoln N. U. 7938 Ths FISH BSAHD tha bsrSast storm. covers ths eatlrs Brmnd" trade-mark, CARTER'S i wr- n I Vult J bf- C53h FEMALE VV- rOR SALE BV yVLL. PRUQOiaTa, I f (IV -2--. S X Bright eyes and dull; nearsighted; far sighted; anybody cept tnose wno won t, and they are worse than blind) can see at a glance the advantages" gained everyone win lasts longer. does away with most 1 i1 tear that clothes are subjected xr .. all around. , they are not. living at a distance from a physician should at all times be prepared to treat such common but by no means simple complaints as Diarrhoea, Cholera. Mor bus and Cramps. Tho lost Elomcdv for such disorders is Terry Davi;' Pain-Killer, which never falls to afford relief. A single dose will do more to drive away paiu and promote the natural action of the stomach than any remedy you ever tried. The virtues of PAINKILLER are not confined to the human race it is used with equal success either ex ternally or internally for HORSES 0 CATTLE. It cures Lameness. Sores, and Cuts, while for Colic it is the best remedy in the market. Sold by all Drujrjrlsts at 05c. 50c and $1.00 a DOTTLE Qlf MONEY FOR AGENTS! IE? I 3 HIM FRANCM WILmSD latest and beat book. "Glimr-aes of VI Mr Ter " being her autobiography and blutorr of tha W. O T. U. UrMat Ur ! M Mlra." Kb author la tha most remarkable and ba k n.wn v.mtn of the TrRnt e.eoo solo ritaur- tiirkc wotitm. ONI AOINT BKPOHTaM ITRST PAV, AXOTHIR ? riBST week. Ar woman ran make 110 rtn dav. No experience neceaaarr. No small publisher or Eeneral agent can get this book. For KXCLCSITS crrltory and liberal terms write AT oxes to II. J. SMITUACU.. Ut Dearborn tUCklemr. SAMcsmiw by the oldest, largest and best known Nur series in tha Wwk Experience not nwMMrr. Per manent position. Good pay. Write atooew. Uet to work WOW. while It Is enr n sell and territory Snworked. BEST HARDY burls for the iOBTU si BitlMir. STARK BRO'S NURSERY CO.. Louisiana, Missouri. ON AHA BUS tfl Egg Tlia Largest and nest Eqntnpsd School Is tha Wat. Thorough, Practical Department Send for College Journal. GARMENT SUASANTCCD TO flF PCnrtCT WITHOUT TSTINOOSJ. Jiy'JHLEIS by return mall foil rtesrrlntlvs cirrularsot MOODY'S MEW TAIL- OK SYSTEM Or SKEIS CUTTIKO. Any lady of ordinary intent. f :ence can easily and qulrkly earn to cut and make any ir- ment, in any style to any meas ure tor lady or blld. Addresa MOODY ACQ. CINCINNATI, O. MUSiC IrJTHE AIR kiuu ui goous warned. Otn tltM. Nrl. Piso'a Remedy tor Catarrh Is the Best, Easiest U Use, and Cheapest Pi IT Sold by druggists or sent by mail. 80c. E. T. Hazelttne, Warren, Pa, nACE ten I I CHADWICK'S MANUAL SwS-BSbbi IIlumliiHtetl (inter. ei'w 1 T rupr on application enclosing on SlNT rilbC (20.) stamp. b add reiiuSw THEO. HOLLAND, P. 0. .Bex IgO, fiijli.tall MOXTD and mors is esrnsi toy graduates who spent 6 mantlis Or Jess at the College, gendsaddress of ft) friends and get circular and beantt. ful apeotmens of venmanshlo IREK. Both sexes attend. Shorthand taught by mail. SUIJH.'j COLLEUK, Jtrllnsr, 111. CO HKTY MANAGERS 'STS.Si'Ssr Book. None like it. Bapi t seilor.KxcluslTe terrt tory to state and county manager. Sularr or eotitf mlasion. Write at once aud secure sgency. Xsbbaska PcBLiSHtxa Co., Lincoln, Neurssk. IfiPTll? WdlltPrt 10 rtt 173 10 txo PrmeatU flltulllO IT Gil lull on salary or commission. Our Books. Bibles snd Albums la demand. Bend utama for catalogue and circulars. Nubsabea Publish ixo Co., Lincoln, Nebraska. OPIUM Tlablt. Tba only ssrf avis and easy cure. Lr, J, L btepbsns, Labaaoa, Oaiew S5 !! day. Samples worth 3s. 1.1 e Utl Lines not under hnrses' leeu Writs lii-uvr. star Safety Rein Holder Co-Holl. ilic.i. Tne Best Waterproof Coat. SLTCKES is warranted wstvrnrMf. s4 wttl To dry U The atwPOHlfCL BLICXJIBis a asrlerl rtrtln- txt, ! saddl. Bawar r ImlUtloas. Mass Itsntn without Ui Tu nioatrated CataJaftts ti-M, A. J. T war, Baetaa, If ut, Delicious Biscuit ASK VOUB SftOCtR SOS COW BRAND SODAMSALERATUS. ABSOVUTILV PURE. a-svas u 'As I- j HAHTED l. urn 7 'tot r?UA Headquarters for Csnd Instruments. Drum Corpi Outrtm. Accnrdeons. Violins. Banjos. Mondoilns, (initsrs. Zithers, Harmonicas. fir rluj for ererr Instrument made. Full stock of Sheet Music. Ma Hooks, Hand and Orchestra MuMc, Bund Folios, Instruction Hooks for all Instruments. Any one send inic in an order will receive a copy of Mu'lo rets Write to us for prices snd cataloEues, stating wiiat V i .. .1 . a ) - - .t G Ik .ly As ji tf ,'T TO MAKE oy using rni.KLiin. We uo not expect ii . i . 1 - . see it, out minions ao, and the number increases every day. Delicate women and strong, vonder at the amount of work thev can do with the aid of PEARLINE the time saved ; the satisfactory results, and when thev have used it for years they realize that every thing that is washed or cleaned with Pearline This is very simple-'-Pearline of the rubbing the greatest .V . 1 11. to is the repeated ru .. . bbines thev claim to be Tearline. cr thr? um . , JAMES PVU3.ftswYL