Crlt for (lmwU rli We bare noticed that growing fowH I oae more grit thn the fully developed ' Wrdi. Something the half grown vhkkt .ill leave there food to set at it a bak-' et of grit, while the older fowl will pay ' . . - . : 1 . . 1 A HO attention ui iu iv u iroquenuy beeo the cane that the little chicks of a Jew neeka old would et more grit than several time the like ntimtr of old Lena. It show that nature ia pushing her work rapidly and rhould be accom modated. Don't Tob.icco tplt and Biooke Toor Life A war. f yon ant to quit t'bci iming easily u forever, regain lost niaiihKl, l nmie well, utroiig. inn : tu-I i-, full of new life hihI vig.ir. take Xo-IVHao. the wonder-worker that make weak men strong. Many etiin ten pound in ten ilny. Over 4HI.IHKI etireil. Jluy So To Hic from your own ilnrJiiiM. 'h' will Kniirmitce a rnre Hooklet anil "Hiuple free. A'hlrcim Ster ling Hetnedy Co.. Chir-azu or New York. At a Chinese funeral in Visalia, Cal , three inongoliam Uxl at the gate ol t!ie femetary, and to each person' who passed out tin y gave, a new dime wrapped in paper. Poum cute hoys quickly tumbled to the racket, and re turned through a hole in the fence tev erai times, to emerge publicly on each occasion w ith u Irenh dim ;. Whi'ii hilioim or contive eat a Caitcnret, andy cathartic, cure guaranteed; hi. Water hyacinth which caue ko much trouble by choking navigablo fctreamg in Florida, afford good imeleriHuce (or cat tle, it ha Wen ascertained Jackannvill for the firat time in its experience, ha a .ahxiti in which a reg ular meal in wved as free lunch from 11 oclock until 1 daily. f a'dines bring ao little to the packer now that the lactone around Kaittport Maine, are not expected to run up to Ihretnher, aa is iipual. Uogx belonging to J. If. I'rice of Six Mile creek near Jacksonville, Fla., cared up a polecat and tore off a collar it wore. Apparently the animal had vjeen doni' Hticated, and the neighbor! concluded that it had been the property of a former resident w ho ten years ago made a iel of one of the apeeies. The feats in t ne of the city park of Memphis, Term, are npholsterd and the v.uIkhii1 of ti e city find them tomforiMlile lo'ini'ifitf places. Look Sharply to the condition of your blood. At this Ki-iiK.it! pei iiliar peril" axxnil the ynteiii. Therein- amlileii change in tem perature; f.i;r and ibiiiiiiii', chilly niglila, lowering hold, drenching rains. These Kiidihu change tiriim ou colds, fevers, pneumonia, brun.-liiii anil other ailment. Keep the hlood pire. rir h ami full of vitality and ynti u ill he well. Klood's Sarsaparilla I tlm H-M In fwt. the Hue True Hlo il I'urltier. Hrvwl'c Pill '' ,'"t fter-.llnii"r The Cyclist' Xecetwity. la th REPAIR KIT for oil ACCIDENTS. Uncqnalcd for Quickly Hf-aling Lameness and Soreness of flusdes, Wounds, Bruises, Stiffness, Rheumatism. Rub thoroughly with , POND'S EXTIIACT after each ride to keep muscles supple, pliant, strong. Try Pond's Extract Ointment for Piles. knid Subttitutet-Wnk, Watery, Worthltu. Pom Extiact Co., t Fifth Avenue. New York. Th fit. Jom-ph and Grand Island B, B IK THE SHORTEST and QUICKEST LINE to iu roiT NORTH WEST I"! EAST SOUTH '"toJOTiE Pclfio 6y,tm la 111 FAVOKlia R"I'TB To California, OrrKOU and all etera ToinU Kor Inlortiiailon rerdin raliw. etc , call on or addreM any airetit or B- Aomt, il. p. RfiaiMWiK, Ja., lien. Alt'- Uen'l Manaxer. t. Jowpb, Uo. Tlmiu(iMlll(N(MklIf CASCARETS, CalDY CATHalTIO, th Ideal laaotlv esnd guaroqttad consti pation cur, aant FREE on receipt of flvt 2-cent I'ompi. Addr vrakMN ! roariar. CMml Inal. OPIUIJ Habit -aral. ttM. IB 1ST, "jaf11 curwl 1)i e en. ' il. tuuew. U Miua. ulor. alirK M. M. V. Mo. 40-l. York, - eli vwaiatM alTINn TO AOVBRTIftlM f aTliart mf foa mw tk a4 naro i EHTRfiCT IU f BCAUiaTt, POP'S DECLARATION. STARTLING TRUTHS TOLD BY AN OHIO PAPER MUST CET OFF. Member of the Lung W liUbrml l"rty to Whtrh UIju Ik-long will Go Back a ltrn If I'roiul..-. Are Not I- uililled I'rrdirt Awful lixter Mini Trrribl Yeugeaure. Mr. I'.ryan iM-inif a I'opnlit 1 would lie prexiiined that he in imoh- of the "aame kind of iniid' ux the other of that crowd, tihicb from the tone of the followiiii; are evidently alter ttolliethillK other than the einniii ipaliou of the "muHiM-K." They ere promised noine thiiij and evidently intend to have it or Mr. r.ryan'a little wulplock. The letter of one of the inniiixtny of Ohio 1'opuliKlii, whose initiul, I. J. K., were Kilned to the dociiuieiit, appeared in the Ohio l'opnlist of reeent duti-. The letter in full follows: "Io you want to win thix fight? Well, you c:in do it if you don't insist on u tinn the hot;. "Vou can't win, and you know it. with out Populist help. Vou can't win iiiiIcmi you can carry K:in.a". Noliruskii, Colo railo, t Ireuou anil Washinirlou. In eiK-h of tin-He atnte the 1'i puliht Vote largely outiiiiinlierx the 1 lenex -rutie vote. You cnniiot carry u single one of these ntntcn UltlcKM yoll p-t I he i'o illliMt Vote. Vou i:i!iiiot carry Ciiliforniii. Iowa, Indiana ir Illinois to snve your kohIh unlesH )-oii liet the l'opnlist vote in thoc kI.iU-k. tinil all if it nt that. Now. iinother Ihint'. I 'on t you he too dead certain that yon are troiiijs to carry the Ktnte of North Carolina, (ieoruia. Kentucky and Texas unless you firsl satisfy the l'opulists iu those states. "The facts are that without Populist help you are "not in it:' not a little hit. "Now don't you for a moment hug yoti -"elves over the idea. '(Ill, well, the Populists are Koine to vole the I'ein ocrntic ticket iinj how." Vou never made a greater mistake in your live. They may. and attain they may not. It de pends entirely on how you hehuve your selves. "Now, listen! Populists are willinir to I mil off their couts and help you elect tryan. ltut they ate not pnnii to help you elect Sewa.ll. And tiny are not ko iiiK to help yon on any douhlc-dculiui;, thiitihli-ritiKiui; arranuenienl that means cither the eh-ctioll of Sewnll or Iloliurt. "The lissurame was made hy Allen, Weaver. Waslihuru and other nt St. Iiuis that if the l'opulists would nomi nate Hryan. Si nail would he withdrawn. Chiiirmuu Jones of the luitioiiiil 1 emo crulic committee was there and was in close mid fnipient consultation with Al len, Weaver and olhers. It is presumed they spoke with authority. 1'nder these statement hundreds of delegates voted for Hryan. I'leiulisls are still williuc to stand hy that agreement. Hut ihey will stand no cheatinit or f:ile pretenses, Vou must curry out that iiKrecnieul, and iu Hood faith. If you don't, you are cu ing to get one of the worst skinning you have niched in twenty yenr. and don't you forget it. "Why do you want to keep SewnU on that ticket? lo you expect to carry Maine? Do you expect him to carry a single Kiisiern slate for you? Vou know you don't. I'o you expect him to add a single vote for you anywhere? If so, where ami how? ltut you know, or ought to know that he will lose Hryan n million votes. I'o you expect Sew all's 'iinr'l' to assist in the cnmpnignV Vou won't get enough of thut 'ImrT to ljy half as many vote as he will lose you in Ohio alone. "If you want to win this light, you want to l' doing something. The reac tion is setting in: Populists ure leaving you every day, and w ill continue to leave yon. (Jet Sew all off. and that p. d. ip "If you want l'opnlist help, you can have it. They are ready to help you hind your man. I'ut you must treat with them honnrn hly. Vou must show your gisid fuitli and sincerity. "If you persists iu acting the political fakir and ixditicul hog. you are going to get your political necks broken, and then your hemis pulled clear out of their sock ets. And l'opnlist w ill help to do it, too. I'o your hear us?" l'tti-iner Not l-'ool. The farmers of this nation are smart euoiign to know mat n monetary sys tem that would he good for then' nloui would not he good for all the people, Therefore, when the I leiuocrn tie speak ers toll them that oil-cent dollars will raise the price of their wheat, the fanner is intelligent enough to know that the slctcment is intended to de ceive, tor n currency that will raise the price of one thing will also raise the price of another. I'm while I lie fanner and mcrch.int would lie marking nil their stocks, the laborer will plod iiioiig nt the old unties. Kxpericnce teaches these statement In he fails. Then sit ipose they mark up their prod ucts and their ware. Who iw il thai support the merchant and the farm er? 1 it n privileged class, who li ti dily to spend money the earning of someone else? No; not in this coun try, fur laboring masse support the great stores and the limner, and when they are nt work ut wages that Amer ican ought to receive, the monhnul and the farmer enjoy good times. Ol what heiielit would a raise in prices of good nml product be then to the farmer and merchant unless a full ra tio riisc would come to the laboring iTi m ii ; The Courier might answer this hy any ig. Let the laboring man strike for hi rights and get them. Hut can the Couri er vouchsafe to Ihe laboring mini iu gen eral any mure wucies lhaii it achieved in his strike for hi rights against the Courier? Would it not result iu each instance in n year of idleness, mid n complete shut out so far II securing work under old employer i concerned ? Laboring men generally think so. wheth er the Courier d'- or not. They are thinking for themselves. They are com paring the time they enjoyed during lS'.rj with the present Wilson bill time, and will vote accordingly. Kvaiisville Journal. Chinese lor I tryan. The Ventura tCitl.) cnrrcs'iondetit of tho I.o Atigelo Time furnishes the fol lowing: Will lira contain within its border one smart almond-eyed Mongolian, who i far-eoklng beyond ihe, average of his bv no mean weak-minded brethren. In conversation with the Times correspond ent yesterday he Intimated that Hr.vuii' election would he in the nut tire of n Mossing to Chinese merchant, who keep n weather eye open lor the main chance. In support of Ihi theory (which, coining from a Chinaman, eenicil siiangcl. the lieitlheii outlined the following scheme which to him looks like ready money: "Vou see, Mexican dollar are for sale In Ventura bank for ol cent. Sup pose I Imi v $2INKI worth, hold them un til Iirynii I elected, melt them down and cnd ilieni to the mint In Sail Francisco I mnke IfiNai clear. If Hrynn I defeat ed I can use them for China trade with no Iom. If Mexican ilver don't go up in price after ltryan'a election I can put tnr hKHI hack Into Mexican dollar ami double my money again. Hryan' (deetinn mean money to ine on Ihe first ileal in nnv event, and hi defeat can only result' in Ihe loan of a frttction of a cent or ao, a .Mexican dollar Huctuata in uluc. We Cbiueac merchant htiy l!im for f'lnnn .Tade a they com chents-r than Ihe American trade doll:,'. Il is a big scheme, and if Ihe chance n-eni g.sid for ISryau' election I will put a cou.ile of thousand dollar into it." 'i he foregoing i no fancy sketch, hut a w ell-iniisidcreil itcliemc evolveil from Ihe fertile brain of a Chinese trailer. ho is always open for a chance to turn mi honest js-nny. It may furnish food for thought for winie of the advocate of uiilimiied coinage, and i given for what it is worth; FACTS FOR WORKING MEN. How J'rotectiou anil Free Trade Affect Toller. P. H. Laird, tue labor leader, give convincing reason why the workiiii;.iieu should vote for McKinley and Hobart. lie say the pauper record under free wade and protection tell the story. Of tin; protection period, ending 1S.'!1. he any: Many new factories were built and all were running full time; our working men were all employed. Knglisu fac tories were running half time. At the close of this period there wa hut one pati-r to l.'U peron iii New York, while England had one pauper to thirty-1 nine person. I'tider the Democratic party, from 1K.TJ to 1N-h'i. we again had a free trade tariff. At the close of this period. Amer ican factories were practically all elo.-iod. Ill New Vork there wil one pauper to every thirty inhabitant. The Kuglish factories were running full time and Kngland hud hut one pauper to li-V person. Again, from 1R4.T to 1M.7T. we were under Whig rule and a protective tar iff. Tien many new factories were built, ::ll running on full time. At the close of this period there was hut one panic r iu New York to 1ST person. In Iliigland there were bread riots, fac tories were running les than half time and one pauper to every forty-three per son. Andrew Jackson said of this period that we had the greatest pros perity this or any other country had ever seen. I'rom 1 HIT until IMil we again had free trade and I leiiusratic rule. AM he close of this period factories were idle. American labor unemployed, American credit at n great discount, the govern ment in debt and paying Vi per cent, for money to defray the running expense of the government. President Huclianau, in hi message of December, 1 Si it I, prac tically admit t tint the government was bankrupt, that our factories and labor ing men were idle and demanded a pro tective tariff. President Hiichanan signed the Morrill protective bill In Fch-rua-v. IHtil. Di.ring this period, from 1M-17 to Kngland saw her greatest prosperity, laboring men were much better off there than in America, her factories were all running, and she had full control of oni markets. At the close of thi period Ktighiud had but one pauper to every .''111 inhabitants. New Vork had one pauper to every l.''.1-. inhabitant. I'rom l.Nl!1 to IS!"'!! the country was under Hciiubliciin rule, with a protective tariff. From the signing of the Morrill tariff bill, faclorio spi nog up as l v magic all over ti e I n tel Stales. The woil ii -ti. 'en's pny wi.s more than doubled. l:'o;-'i:g men iu huge number from all (In r-ee trailf countries came here to gel li e beuellts of our protccti-e tariff and Ao.eilcae wages. During this period we loul become the largest manufacturers of uiiy nation on earth. 1'nder reciproc ity nnd a protective tariff we were fast taking the markets of the world, ami no nation on earth ever experienced such prosperity. Our greatest prosperity was under the McKinlev bill, from 1 S!l until the elec tion of drover Cleveland in 18112. Sta tistic show that under President Harri son we had in New York but one pauper to rir inhabitant. The Kuglish records of lS'.ll! show one pauper to .'!0 inhab itant. My authority for these astound ing pauper record is the "Pocket Kn cyi lopedia ou Protection." page 4H. 4!l. 'During President Cleveland's first term the Mill hill the worst tariff hill ever framed passed the Democratic House, and was killed in the Republican Semite. As the tariff law wa not changed, pros perity continued in spite of the fact thai n Democratic President was in the w hin house. In IS! I'J the Democrat came into full power, controlling both houses of Con gress, and that free trade apostle, drover Cleveland, was President. Within ten davs after his i ignratioii orders for more than Jl.tHHl.iKHi for factory iiiachin ery was coniuerniandcd. Factories be gan to close. Wages were cut down, until now there are from 2.hMI.I"NI to ;t.iMNi,)MMl Americans who cannot gel work at any price, ami timl only knows how great the pauper record is. 1 tut Knit'iind is in a prosperous stale. Iter factories arc running full time, and II her workiiigiiicu are fully emplo.wd. The largest pp. cssimi of uorkingiucn Ihaf ever paraded in Shelli-hl. I'ngl.ind. n:is on Weduesd iv night iifier Ihe elec tion of drover Cleveland. They seemed to understand what that election meant better 'han we, the American working- ,n lid. for we elected Cleveland, and loi'a-' they have ;ot work and arc lunch bettor off than w.- are. Kleven hundred factories were Miilt during the Harrison ailminisiraliou. How many under Cleve land? None! A vole for M Kinlcy and llobnrl. with Republican congressmen and legislators to elect n senator instead of free Trade I ill, means the repassage of the McKin lev bill, with the additional dulie re ip'iireil to keep out Ihe paupcr-madc goods, of which we .ire now importing about tvjoe a much a under the Mc Kinlev hill. . It also mean the passage of the im migration restriction bill that wa passed bv iiliout 2il majority in the House nnd killed bv the Democratic Senate, with David IS. Mill n it leader. . A Ile publican vole means opening our lac tones, with steady work at American wage, payable iu liKI-cetit dollars. A vote for Hryan menus the worst bankruptcy and pauperi-m for American w age-eiii'iicr that we or any other peo ple ever saw. Hrynn is the strongest free (ruder ever nominated by the Demo crat, and four years more of their rule would practically make ns all paupers. Let us not forget the promise made to ti by (i rover Cleveland and the Demo cratic pre a promise of steady work, increased wage and the markets of the world. Instead of thi the world ha got our markets, mid every dollar' worth of goods imported take a dollar's worth of work from ns. Vote to protect our wage and home. Keep out paupor-made goods nnd the nai'-icrs that make them! New York i Commercial Advertiser. The Kenl Issno. Mr. Hryan' latest device to get away from the tariff issue, which his audi lor persist in thrusting upon him, 1 to belittle it. The oilier day the hoy orator told n crowd that, when compared witli the currency question, the mutter of high or low duties was "insignificant." The tariff was II subject to be waved aside, lo be shelved, or to he thrown upon Ihe rubbish heap of time-worn nnd immate rial politic. Mr. Bryan did not care which, ltut a nil issue in till ciiiivunh, faugh! The Idea was revolting to every honest icutiinctit of the masse, and par ticularly to the candidate with the record of having predicted a rise in the price of wheat to 1.25 per bushel iiiion the pas sage of the f lorman-Wilson hill. Yet, "inlgnilicant" as thi question may seem to men who have made a record upon which they want to hnvc forgotten, tln voting masses have aoine how been misled into thinking that m tat ' . lln present mini is running ; roir into debt at the rate of 1.I Ol) L day il i a good thing to have re lilw'. 'i'hey do not Isdieve that the iicatiiietit of a vast ami growing deficit i outside the realm of practical and intissary jsditics. Mr. Hryan apparent ly does. In the idle o-rative who want itothirg more than to have the mill or factory which once employed him open it doors again go that he may supiort hi family a he did iu McKinley time, the assurance that the tariff Ueslioii i puerile come with very little torce. To him it i the poliiical (inestion of all question. It concern bis bread and but ter. P.y the taxpayer who hud that the government ha put n lien on him for Iweuty year for the payment of interest ou a quarter of a billion dollar, which would have been collected through the custom houses of the iinHrter of foreign goods if the McKinley law had lieen kept iiistiict. the Hryan sneer at the impor tance of the issue is poorly appreciated. Likewise the retailer, the tradesman, the professional man and the laborer all thee, after four year of reduced busi ness and incomes mid uncertain work be cause of the hard times, know of no more important issue than that of Mtarting the wheel of industry and business once more iu motion. It is useless to tell the thoughtful and discerning voter that the desired effis-t could Is- had from a mere change in the Htnndard of the currency, having the general economic conditions as they were. No form of money produces pros perity unaided. As for free silver, noth ing would so well lubricate Ihe machin ery of business after the machinery had liegtlli to work hut no one pretends that free silver would start the engine. It could not open a factory which had been closed by fni- trade competition. Pro tection would late to be used for that. There must first be some means found of putting mere money into circulation before imi extra volume of either gold, silver or paper can reach the masses, and if there is any better way to do this than by making it possible for American industries to put their old pay rolls into fope ii(.'ain, experience doe not suggi-Kt it. In a word, to have n return to pros perity we must first repeal the tariff law which drove il away and the re store the law which produced it. There is no other recourse, and, in spite of all that Hryan may say about the "insig nificance" of Ihe tariff question, it looms up before every discerning eye a the issue of real moment in this canvass, San Francisco Chronicle. THK KMI'TY Itl.NNKH TAIL. A ! alt here Idly ilieninlng of the happy lime tluit's gone, Not a dollar In my pocket. And the winter coming on; The tiling Dint breaks nie up the most, Ami makes me feel so small. Is the sight of Hint old dinner pull Hanging on the wail. I've carried that old dinner pall Kor Hfleen year or more. And it never saw uie out of work Or liestitnte before. Kor with shop and factories i-uniilrijf. And the best of vnges paid. A prosperous lot of fellows tvere Tlie dinner pull brigade. lint yon see we wasn't satisfied. Though It seemed most mighty strange. And tve snhl we thought the country Would lie better for a change; Am! tve railed about the tariff. And tte lilnwed about free trmte, Ami tve voted llctnncriitlc. Ilid the dinner pail brigade. Well, a change whs what tve wanted, And we got II too. you iiet: For tiie simps and factories all shin down, And left us In Ihe wet: The banks suspended pnviuent. And I lost my little nil. Aait the dinner pall Is empty nutv, That's hanging on the wall. fin dependent now on charily Knr the roof above my head: And I've seen my wife and little one lio hungry to their bed; lint I've plentv of time for thinking, And I see it, isn't it triiugcV for I voted I icuioera I ic. Just to hate a little change. Ye, we Voted Ileui'iclMtie. And you see tile clctige has made A lot of hHiigry beggars of the dinner pail brigade: The tt orkltiginen are Idle but the tt irmwooil and the g.-ill Is to see the i-inpty dinner pall Hanging on Ihe wall Troy (Kansas! Chief. Where Is Hie l'ciniinil ? Mr. Hryan. after week of cogitation, has at last a nstv-eroil ihe question. "Why will ait net of Congress make oO cents' worth of silver bullion worth a dollar?" If' says uproariously that the enormous demand for silver will make it dearer: but he fails to show any demand. The holder of silver bull. on can lake his Money to Washington, but the govern en'iii will not buy it. Th" mint will stamp a dollar, hut the moment the gov ernment ceases to redei in its obligations iu gold ou demand that moment Ihe sil ver dollar will buy hut oil cents' worth of .toducis, No! cdy who has gold will cure to exchange it for silver, dollar for dollar. Wli.'ic. then, will any demand come in? Now here y.e;cept on the pari of a ninii who minis lo pay a dollar of debt wi'h IVI cents' worth of silver bul lion. Is il upon that demand Mr. Hryan relies for the success of Ihe free silver movement? If so. his campaign in one for repudiation. There can be no oth er lciiinnd, so cither Mr. Hryan's cnni 1 aigti is founded upon re.imliation or de lusion. In cither case, does he think il worthy of the support of the American pi ople? Huston Advertiser. Wliut Hoc Itcyan Care? "Speaking of myself, it is immaterial in my judgment whether the sheep grow er receive any benefit from the tariff or iiol." W. .1. Hryan. ISryuii Tor Frr-e Trade. "It is as easy to jusjify n bounty ns n protective tariff, nml it i impossible to justify either."-W. .1. I'.ryan. Itcyan tho Mind's' I'liend (!) "The duty ou coal is indefensible." W. .1. Itryan , And I'r"e Silver. "I believe in free iron ore." W. J. Hryan. CAMPAIGN NOTES. The Bedford Tinu-s-Itepuhlican offers to accept subscriptions lit $1 per year payable if McKinley is elected ami free if he is not elected. Nothing risky in that except for reluctant subscriber. Hryan says there is such a thing ns n dollar being too good. A dollar nnd n wife, says the Council Bluffs Nonpareil, "are two things that can't be too good, and they lire bi hard to get to he read ily traded off for a cheap dollar or cheap wife, just because those are easier to get. It is not necessary that anybody should follow up Hryan to answer and confute what lie say. He does that himself. Bryan tells gaping crowd that iifier taking one bottle of his Free Silver Tonic tiny inn n can lift himself over the fence by hi bootMtrnps. And some men be lieve him. It Is the universal report nil through Western cw York that if you want to moot those Itcpiihlicaii fanners who are going to vote for Bryan you must go to "Ihe next town." The nomination of a Southern man by tho sound money pcmocrticy will effecto ally euclier the effort mnile hy Brynn, Altgeld, Tillman and company to make the uational canvass a sectional one. Tb irt.t Hr. Dante baa been called "the CLrinflUn Homer." While hia work baa imhv blemishes, it nevertheless is the leailin poem portraying the "elig'ous life of the middle ages. Mozart was the greatest writer of opera and the father of the modem school. He was in most respects the greatest musical genius who ever lived. At the age of 5 he wrote compositions of much beauty and died at 6, leaving over 800 finished compositions. THAT JOYFUL FEELING With the exhilarating sense of renewed health and strength and internal clean ti jiess, which follows the use of f-yrup of Figs, is unknown to the few who have not progressed beyond the old-time medicine txnd the cheap substitute sometimes off ered hut never accepted hy the well-informed. Florida's barrooms number 21G, mt re than half of them being iu three coun ties The state's revenue from them is $108,000. Cumfoit to Cat fornt. Yes, and economy, too, if you take the Burlington route's personally conducted once-a-week excursions which leaves Uniaha and Lincoln every Thursday morning. Touritst sleepers clean, bright, coiti fortable through to tan Francisco and Los Angeles Second class tickets nc pepted. Only $5 for a double berth, wide enough and big enough for two. ' Write for folder giving full inhuma tion, or call at the depot and see the local ticket agent. J. Fkaximh, lien'l. Pass'r. Agent, Burlinit'.on Koute, Omaha, Neb. Cascareta atiinulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe. At Persion funerals the mourners are supplied with wads of cotton, which they usri to wipe away their tears. The cotton is afterward collected and squeezed and the tears are bottled and preserved. They are supposed to possess restorative qualities in fainting fits. "Use the Means and Heaven Will Give You the Blessing." Never Neglect , A Useful Article Like SAPOL8Q " Everybody likes 44 Battle Ax" because of its . exceedingly fine quality. Because of the economy there, is in buying it. Because of its low price. It's the kind the rich men chew because of its high grade, Jtnd the kind the poor men can afford to chew because of its great size. ' . , A Scent piece of " Battle Ax' is almost twice the size of the JO-cent piece of other high grade brands. yuMtaffanHnwTnMfwvwuwviiiwiiTa 'C- 7 that will suffer by it. , - - t' Cut if you want the easiest, quickest, most ecdncrictl rrzT f washing and' cleaning then you'll have to use licica iiuuiuiw ciac. aiiiuiiv ...... i t r itn, tnat can De compared to Jew Itl tba Newspaper. t A foreign Jeni.-li newspaper com plains of the Jewish di-regurd for he journals of Judaim. It ssvb: "The ...... ,.r t. ...... ......a. ra.A i r L iiiaj iiaj Ul . w o uc.i -J m jWifh paper, and there are very many educat d Jews who do not know of the Jewish press." These re marks do not apply to the Jews of the United Stat?, who (oipport a large niiniher of Jewish journals, many of wlrch circulate by thousands and ap pear to be prosfs-rous A Household Necessity. Casearet. Candy Cathartic, the most wonderful medical discovery of the age, pleasant and refreshing to the taste, acta gently and positively on kidneys, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispels colds, cures headache, fever, ha bitual constipation and biliousness l'lease buy and try a box of C. C C. to-day; 10, ''t, T.t cents. Sold aiil guaranteed to cure hy all druggists. (ieorge Wilsjn, a colored pTteior T. Tiasun & Co , of Hartford, Conn. caught a rat in a wire trap. W hile debating as to the mxle to adopt in putting it to death, he fed it for a few davs and then let it go. It returned to the trap the next niuht, and every night since to be fed l'iso's Cure for Consumption has saved me large doctor billa.--0.L-. Baker, 4228 Kegent Sq., Philadelphia, Fa., Dec. 8, '95. Five gallons of spitits, four of whisky and one of brandy, were forced down the thoat of a horse belonging to Frank Cor of New Augustine Fla. Th animal had been bitten on the nostril by a rattle snake, and its head bad swelled alarm iucly. The horse recovered, but wag staggering drunk all the next day. Jllr. Vlnlow'e Soothing SYbiip for child ren teething, noltein the gums, reJuct's nitlma nistloii, alluynpHin. cures wind colic, ijt uollle. Near Belt Mont, a rancher who was driving a load of poles t" h'S ranch was stuck by lightning and killed. His wagon and three horses were burned up. "every uuc to her taste en she kissed the cow." If' you d rather do your wasmirj 1 . . and cleaning in a slow, labori ous way, spending your time and strength in uscUx. J tiresome, ruinous rubbing, its nobodyV business but yours. You are the oris. uiiujea f wviu.wi ,u i - . - ' it iOi v.