THE I i A St oy of the Inner Visicn of the W1hlandersrCommonly Called i the Second Sight. t By GEORGE MACDONALD , t cI-IAPLLR IL-Con ( tlluled , ) 4 I had not noticed till now , that the storm had risen to a very ecstasy or fury. fury.They They say , likewlse. that the ladys hnle bs still glowing , for , every time they see her , it is longer than before ; an(1 that now such is its length an(1 the dealing speed of the houlee , that It floats and streams out behlll(1 like one of those curved clouds , like a corn- et's tall , far up in the sky ; only the thud is white , and the hair dark a ; night. And they say it will go o.l . growing till the Last Day , when the hots ( ' will falter and her hair will gather in ; and the horse will fall , and the hair will twist , and ovine , and wreathe itself like a mist of threals ahOut him , an(1 biud ] tins to everything but her. Then the body will rise all witlihh it , face to face with him , nu- inltlted by a fiend who , twining h1 arms around him , will drag hills down to the bottomless pit. "Ile need not think to take me in , wizard as he is , with his disguise. I taut see through them all. Duncan. my dear , whew. you suspect anything do not be too increlulous. 't'his human demon is , of course , a wizard still , anti knows how to make himself , as well as : uhything he touches , take quite a dillerent appearance from the real on ; only every appearance must bear some resemblance , however , distant , to the the natural form. What lie is after , now , of course. I cannot tell ; but you must keep a bold heart , and a tirnm and wary foot , as you go home to-night. " I showed some surprise. I do not doubt ; and , perhaIs , some fear as well ; but I only said : "How do you know this , Margaret ? " "I can hardly tell you. " she replied : "but I do know him. I think he hates me. Often , of a wild night , when there is moonlight enough by fits , I see him I tearing around this little valley , just on the top edge-all round ; the lady's hair and the horse's mane and tail (1rit- iug far behind , and mingling , vaporous , with the snowy clouds. About lie goes , hi wild careering gallop , now lost : : s the moon goes in , then visible far round when she loops out amour-ua . airy , pale-gray specter , which few eye ; but mine could see ; for , as far as I am aware , no one of the family but nmyself has ever possessed time double gift of seeing and hearing both. In this case I hear no sound , except now and then a clank from the broken ' shoe. But I did not mean to tell you that I had ever seen him. I am not a bit afraid of him. He cannot do more than he may. His power is limited ; else ill enough would he work , the nibs- creant" "But , " said I , "what has all this , tcr- riblo as it is , to do with the fright you took at my telling you that I had heard the sound of the broken shoe ? Surely you are not afraid of only a storm ? ' "No , my boy ; I fear no storm. But the fact is , that the sound is seldom heard , and never , as far as I know , by any of the blood of that wicked mllaih , without betokening sonic ill to one of the family , and most probably to the , one who hears it-but I am not quite sure about that. Only sonic evil it does 1portend , although a bon" tauti ' lnay elapse before it shows itself ; anti I ' have a hope it may mean sonic one el& , than you. " "Do not wish that , " I replied , 'I 1 iiow no one better able to bear it than I am ; and I hope , whatever it tuay he , that I only shall have to meet it. It must surely be something serious to be so foretold ; it can hardly be con nectei with my ( lisapPOiutnent in b1 ' ing compelled to he a pedagogue instead - stead of a soldier. " "Do not trouble yourself about that , , Duncan , replied she. A soldier you must be. The same day you told mime of time clamik of the broken horseshoe. I saw you return wounled from battle. and fall fainting from your horse in the street of a great city-only fainting - ing , thank God ! But I have particular reasons for being uneasy at your hearing - ing that boding sound. Can you tell me the day and hoar of your birth ? " "No"I replied. "It seems very odd when I think of it , but I really do not tknow even the day. " "Nor anyone else , which is stranger still ? " she answered. "How does that happen , nurse ? " "We were in terrible anxiety about your mother at the time. So ill was she , after you were just born , in a strange , unaccountable way , that } ou lay almost neglected for more than an hour. In the very act of giving birth to you , she seemed to the rest around her to be out of her mind. So , wildly did she talk ; but I knew better. I knew that she was fighting some evil power ; and what power it was. I knew , full well ; for twice during her pains. I heard the click of time horseshoe. But -no one could help her. After her de livery , she lay as if in a trance , neither dead nor at rest , but as if frozen to ice , and conscious of it all file while. Once .more I heard the terrible sound of iron ; I and , at the moment your mother start- e(1 from her trance. screaming , 'My child ! my child ! ' We suddenly became ) : tware that no one had attended to the , - 'child , and rushed to time place where Ire lay wrapped in a blanket. Uneov- ering him , we found ] lint black in the face , and spotted with ( lark spots upon v the throat. I thought lie was dead ; I but. , with great and almost hopeless . ; pains , we succeeded iii making hint t breathe , and he gradually recovered. But his mother continued dreadfully exhausted. It seemed as if she had spent her life for her child's defense and birth. That was you , Duncan , my dear. "I was in constant attendance 111)011 1 Use : . About a week after your birth , as t near as 1 can guess , just in the gloaming - ing , I heard yet araill time awful thumb : 1 -only once. Nothing followed till about midnight. Your ntothe steer , : and you lay asleep beside her. I sat . by the bedside. A horror fell upon r sue suddenly ; though I neither sa w 111)1' heard anything. Your mother r tarte'l ( from her sleep with a cry wlitli sound1 1 , ed as if it came from far away , out of : t dream , and did not belong to th s world. My blood curdled with fear. ; , She sat Ui ) fn bed , with wide. starbim : t : ' A eyes , and half-open , rigid lips , and , feeble as she was , thrust her hands straight out before her with great force , her hands open and lifted up , with the palms outward. The whole action was of one violently repelling another. She began to talk wildly as she hind done before , you were born , but , though I seemed to hear and understand - derstand it all the time , I could not rib- call a word of It afterward. It was as if I had listened to it when half asleep. I attempted to soothe her , put- tin ; rmiy arms around her , butsheseem- ed quite unconscious of my presence , :111(1 111,1 arms seemed powerless Upon the fixed muscles of hers. Not that I tried to constrain her , for I knew that a battle was going on of some kind or other , and my Interference might do awful mischief. I only tried to comfort and encourage her. All the time I was in a state of indescribable cold and suffering - fering , whether more bodily or mental I could not tell. But at length I heard yet again the clink of the shoe. A sudden - den peace seemed to fall upon my minder -or was it a warm , odorous wind that filicd the room ? Your mother dropped her arms , and turned feebly toward her baby. She saw that he slept a blessed sleep. She smiled like a glorified spirit - it , and fell back exhausted on the pbl- low. I went to the other side of the 1 00111 to get a cordial. When I returned - turned to the bedside I saw at once that she was dead. Her face smiled still , with an expression of the uttermost - most bliSS. " Nurse erased. trembling as overcome by the recollection ; and I was too much moved and awed to speak. At length : . resuming the conversation she sail : "You see it is no wonder , Duncan , lily ( lear , if after all this I 5110111(1 find , when I wanted to fix the date of your birth , that I could not determine time day or the hour [ then it took place. All vas confusion ill my poor brain. But it wis strange that no one else could , any 11101 0 hhall I. Olle carried y011 across the room to lay you down , for I assisted - sisted at your birth , I hlppened ; to look up to the window. Then I saw what I did not forget , although I did riot think of it again till many days after-a bright star was shining on the very tip of the thin crescent moon. "Oh , then. " said I , "it is possible to determine the day and the very hour when my birth took place. " "See the good of book-learning ! " r ' plied she. " 1Yilen yon work it out , just let mile kno , miry dear , that I may re- nlelnber it. " "That I will , " Absorbed in the story I had heard , 1 took my way , as I thought , honlevvard. r1'hc whole country was well known to rile. I should have said , before that night , that I could have gone home blindfold. Whether the lightning be. wildered me and made inc take a false turn. I cannot tell ; for the hardest tiling to understand , in intellect as well as moral nhistakes , is-how we came to go wrong. But after wandering for sonic time plunged in meditation , and with no warning whatever of time presence - ence of inimical powers , a brillia it lightning-flash showed me that at least I was not near home. The light was prolonged for a second or two by a slight electric pulsation , and by that I distinguished a wide space of bJick- ness. on the ground in front of nle.1 Once more wrapped in the folds of a thick darkness. I dared not hove. Stid- denly it occurred to me what the blac ; ; ness w as , and whither I had waudered. It was a huge quarry of great depth. bug disused , and half filled with wa- ter. I knew the place perfectly. A few' more steps would have carried me over the brink. I stood still , waiting fir the next flash , that I might be quite sure of the way I was about to take before I velltnre(1 to move.Vliile I stood I fail ied I heard a single ho- ! low plunge in the black water far be low. 1Vlieti the lightning came , I mined. mind took my path in another di- rection. After for walking for some time ' across the heeath. I fell. The fall became - came a roll , anal down a steep declivity I went. over and over , arriving at the bottom nuinjjuretl. Anot11cr flash show ei me where 1 was-him the hollow valley , within a 1 couple of hundred yards from nurse's i cottage. I lna'l ee my way towards it. There was no light in it , except the ; feeblest glow from the embers of her peat fire. "She is in bed , " I said to t myself ; "and I will not disturb her : " Yet something' drew mile toward time Ut- tle w im ioty. I looked in. At first i I COuid sec nothing. At length as I kett gazitlg. I sm v something indistinct in r the darkness , like an outstretched hillt nail forum. B } this lime the storm had lulled. . The had been . time moon up.for some , 1 but hla(1 been quite conceale(1 by tern- pestuous clouds. Now , however , these had begtlll to break up ; and , while I stood looking into the cottage. they scattered away from the face of tue moan , amid a faint , vapory gleans of her light , entering the cottage through a window opposite that at which I stood , i fell directly on the face of my old nurse , as she lay on her back , outstretched - f stretched upon chairs , pale as death q and with her eyes closed. The light e fell nowhere but on her face. A stran- c1 to her habits would have thouglit i She was dead ; liut she had so nmuch of I the a1)pearince sure had had1 on a former - mer occasion , that I concluded at once rhat she was in one of her trances. But e h often heard that aving persons to i mcbl a condition ought not to be dis- e turned , : rid feeling quite sure she v new best how to manage herself , I c ttlrnel , though reluctantly , and left t the lone cottage behind me in the right , with the deathlike woman lying ti motionless iii the midst of it. n I found 111y way home without any v farther difficulty , and went to bed , 1 1 where I fell , soon asleep thoroughly 1 yenned more by the mental excitement n had been experiencing than by the tv tmnount of bodily exercise I had gone f hrough , t CHAPTER III. s HILTON HALL. II As my father accompanied me to the ti door , where the gig which was to carry ne over the first stage of my , journ.'y rims in waiting a large t rget of lmh1 , veil studded with brass nails , which a lad hung in the hall for time unknown t -to lime. at least , fell on the floor with t t (11111 bang. t1y fatiier started , but Si 11h1 nothing ; and , as it seemed to lime , ii ather pressed my departure than t othertvise I would have replaced the t old piece of armor before I went , but g IC would not allow mile to touch it , n say ilig , with a grim smile : s " 'Take that far an omen , my boy , that our armor lutist be worn over the b conscience , and not over the 'body. Be \ s . - a man , iiuncan , my boy. Fear nothing and do your duty. " A grasp of the hand was all time good bye I could make , and I was goon rat- thug away to meet the coach for Edinburgh - inburgh and London. I reached London in safety , and slept at the house of an old friend of my father , who treated me with great kindness and seemed altogether to take a liking to me. Before I left he held out a hope of being able , some day or other , to procure for me what I s ) flinch desired-a commission in the army. After spending a day or two with lam and seeing something of London. I climbed once more on the roof of the coach ; and , late in the afternoon , was sot down at the great gate of Hilton Hall. I walked up the broad avenu : , through the final arch of which , as though a huge Gothic window , I saw the hall in tune distance. Everything , about me looked strange , rich and love- ly. Accustomed to the scanty flowers and diminutive wood of my own country - try , what I now saw gave me a feeling of majestic plenty , which I can recall at will , but which I have never experienced - rienced again. Behind the trees which formed the avenue I saw a shrubbery ; composed entirely of flowering plants , almost all unknown to me. Issuing from the avenue , I found myself amid open , wide , lawny spaces , In which the flowerbeds lay like islands of color. A statue on a pedestal , the only white thing in the surrounding green , caught my eye. I had scarcely seen any sculp lure , and this , attracting my attention by afavorite , contrast of color , retained by its own beauty. It was a Dryad. or sonic nymph of the woods , who had just glided from the solitude of t11e trees behind , and had sprung upon tha pedestal to look wonderingly around her. her.At At the same moment , from the base of the pedestal rose a figure ill white. graceful as the Dryad above , anti neither ramming , nor appearing to walk quickly , yet fleet as a , ghost , glided past me at a few paces distance , and , keeping in a staiglmt line for the main entrance of the hall , entered by it and vanished. I followed in the direction of the mansion , which was large , and of sev- erai styles and ages. One wing ap geared especially ancient. It was neg lecte(1 and out of repair , and had in consequence - sequence a desolate , almost sepulchral look ; an expression lmeightened by the number of large cypresses which grev along its line. I went up to the central door and knocked. It was opened by a grave , elderly butler , I passed under it , fiat arch , as if into the midst of the waiting events of my story. For , as I glanced around the hall , my consciousness - ness was suddenly saturated , if I nmy be allowed the expression with the strange feeling known to everyo'le , and yet so strange-that I had seen it before ; that , in fact , I knew it per- fectly. But what was yet more strange and far more uncommon , was that , although - though the feeling with regard to the hall faded and vanished instantly , and although I could not in the least surmise - mise the appearance of any of the regions - gions into whichh I w as about to bs ushered , I yet followed the butler with a hind of hitleflnahle ereetatiori ref 3eeina soillething which I had seen before - fore ; and every room or passage in that hnausion affected me , on entering it for the first time , with the same son- cation of previous acquaintance which i had experienced with regard to the hall. I was received by the housekeeper , a little , prim , benevolent old lady , with colorless fmicc and antique lmeaddre ; . who led mime to the room prepared for 1110. To my surprise I found a large vr0od fire burning on the hearth ; bur the feeling of time place revealed at one the necessity for it ; and I scareel ' needed to be informed that time roan. which was upon the ground floor , unit looked out upon a little , solitary , grass. grow ii and ivy-lllantled court. had not been siidef or years , and therefore required - quired to be thus prepared for aim in- mate. My bedroom was a few paces tlowml a passage to the right. Left alone I proceeded to make a nore critical survey of the room. its ook of ancient mystery was to inc in- comnparably more attractive , than any Doty of elegance or comfort could have been. It was large and low , paneled hrougliout in oak , black with age , and wornm eaten in many parts-otherwise entire. Both of the windows looker' nto the court or yard before mention- e(1. All the heavier furniture of 1110 0om was likewise of black oak , brit he chairs amid couches were covered w itbi faded tapestry and tarnished gilding , apparently the supelamnuateu nenbers of the general imouselmold of Seats. ( TO BE CONTINUED. ) Catching a Glance. Mr. Smalley , in the Fortnightly Review view , gives an interesting explanation of lime expression on Bismarek's face n the last portrait of him , painted by Lenbach , the great artist. This look is till of power and purpose , afiame with nger 1111(1 resolve , "iightnbng in the ye amid time mouth hard as iron. " So might he have looked thunder- rig at : um obstinate majority in the leichstag or trying to bend a hostile nation to his purpose. But this is not the explanation of his xpression. Price Bismarck loves sing u rig birds and hates time crows , their nemies. One day he was walking with Herr Lenbach in the woods , and aught sight of a member of this de- estable tribe. His sudden glance of anger arrested e attention of the artist , who , as soon s he got home , transferred it to cau- as. Thus it was not the affairs of atioits which were responsible for the ook ; not the obstinacy of his countrymen - men nor the antagonism of time French 'hick will send the great chancellor's eatures down to posterity clothed in ragely. It was simply the fact that he caught fight of an insignificant bird who has 0 reverence for the sweet singers of e feathered wbrld. Seeing by Night. Nocturnal creatures assume night t ctirity for some other reason timan hat they cannot see by day , or tlmat hey see better by night. The bat 2s admirably in time brightest sun- ght , as any one knows who has ever eased one by poking a stick at it. It 1 rill open its nmouth and make an an- ry grab at the stick when it is not ear it by several inches. Prof. Belles ay s it is the same with the owl. They see perfectly in bright sunlight and otter at night than most creatures.- Icehan's Monthly. , } - - GRAND DPARTY. THAT PREPOSTEROUS NICARAGUA - GUA SCHEME. Nothing Can Excuse a , : nn Who Votes for It In the Present Condition of Affalr3-This Is Not a Bauher'a Gov- ernment-Car11slo "Sot In It. " The Nicaragua Job. Really , the Nicaragua canal jobbers at Washington are losing some of their fine artistic qualities inthe management - agement of a boom. They should not have sent out one day a report that the British age'ressivo pollny at Blue- fields was with a view to obtaining future control of the canal territory , and permitted it to be followed next morning by an announcement that the Nicaragua canal bills would be pushed earnestly this win- ter. The juxtaposition of these two accounts was too evident a disclosure of their relation to the same fashion- inghand. A few months ago we had a dispatch telling us that agents had embarked for England to dispose of the priceless Nicaragua concession , and that America was about to lose it forever ; followed by a gentle hint that action at the comilmg session might yet save to us this boon. Then we had a cable message to the effect that English capitalists were hungry for the investment , with another suggestion - tion that we could still head thom off. And now'the Bluefields difficulty has been "worked" by the same skilled hands of the third house at Washington - ton , which has the interest of the Nicaragua - aragua scheme so close at heart. Is it possible that any representatives - tives of the people can be so unfaithful - ful to their trust as to dare commit this government to this wild and extravagant - travagant scheme ? The St. Paul Pioneer Press sees cause for alarm in the fact that the iicaragua job has obtained so large a hold upon the press of different parts of the country , attacking it through alleged local interest - terest and through the weakness of the American imagination for big projects We have been obliged to borrow $100,000,000 during the last year to pay ordinary expenses. There is no immediate prospect that we will be on a paying basis for some time to come. Foe are now trying vainly to adjust our affairs with the Pacific railroads that trere subsidized for private profit. Yet in this condition - dition of the treasury , and with this warning example before us , we are asked to put fromn $7OOJO,000 upwards in a similar scheme. And this preposterous - posterous project , which is agitated principally by a band of "promoters , " who expect to sneak $7,000,000 or $10,000,000 out of the boodle through a purchase of the worthless posses- IQIi of tie bpkrupt canal company , atualiy has its warm advocates and defenders in both houses. Nothing can excuse a man who votes for the Nicaragua job in the present condition of affairs. If this country concludes thatit needs a canal 1 across the isthmus bad enough to build and pay for it , we have not a word to say. We do not believe that it doss ; but if such a straight business proposition - sition were offered and adopted , we shoulu think it proper even if we believed - lieved it to be an unwise expenditure. But to go again , under any conditions that may be framed , into the business of giving the government's guarantee to the bonds of a private corporation is simply unpar- donable. It ought to be an offense against the lairs to srg est such a thing. To play into the hands of the speculators , who have managed the Nicaragua company's affairs into bankruptcy - ruptcy , and are now planning to get some juicy picking from the remains , and to do all this when the treasury is short of receipts and without resources - sources , is little short of a crime. Time Nicaragua business ought to get its final black eye this , winter. Feelln s L'eep'y ' Stirred. Mr. Cleveland comes to the defense of his pet pension bureau with perhaps - haps the most ponderous sentence in the message. lie says : 'lime accusation - tion that an effort to detect pension frauds is evidence of unfriendliness toward our worthy veterans and a denial - nial of their claims to the generosity of the government , suggests an unfortunate - m fortunate indifference to the commission - sion of any offense which has for its motive the securing of a pension amid indicates a willingness to be blind to the existence of mean and treacherous crimes which play 111)011 demagogic fears and make sport of the patriotic impulses of a grateful people. " If ' the length of the period is any meas- C re of the depths to which Mr. Cleveland - land is stirred , it is to be presumed l that some of the current criticisms of his pension course have struck home. -Detroit Tribune. t Arid Lands to the State. t The Transmississippi congress did a t good thing when it adopted a resolution - tion in favor of a grant "of the arid lands to the several states in which they age situated. It is along that line that the true solution of the irrigation - gation problem lies. To each state iLould be left the regulation of the 1 distribution of water , , but that would not be done if the reclamation of the land should be intrusted to the national - tional government. Congress would v Insist upon enacting laws governing the distribution of water if it incurred the expense of building reservoir ; and digging ditches. Congress would c be incapable of legislating intelligently - i ly concerning irrigation , for a great i majority of its members never would lave the requisite information concerning - cerning irrigation methods and difTi- mlties.-Denver Republican. A Saving on SSeodr. Secretary of Agriculture Morton promises to save about $160,001 a l ear to the government by discontinu- : : . - trig the ( listribution of seeds to farmers. The Republicans will save much more than that by distributing to their' respective homes a lot of Democratic "seeds" who draw salaries - aries in the several departments without - out rendering any compensating services - vices therefor-Cincinnati Times- Star. Not a Banker's Govornment. Mr. Cleveland has.used his facilitie3 for studying the temper of the American - can people to little advantage if he believes - lieves they will consent that the banking - ing interests shall be put in charge of the country's welfare. The Baltimore plan is a dangerous proposition from whatever standpoint it is considered. Frith the sole power to create and destroy - stroy money time banks would . very soon virtually be time government. The banks are institutions organized for private gain. In their place they are not only a great convenience but they are a necessity. This does not argue , however , that the interests of the general public and the very government itself should be delegated to them. Should they be given authority to expand and contract - tract the currency of the country at will time only interest they would naturally look to would be that of the earning power of money in the money market. The people's interest lies in the earning power of commodities which are taken in exchange for money. 1 The tendency of recent events has been to centralize power in the money dealers , but time time is not yet ripe for the delivery of our freedom to any set of money makers , and through them to Wall street and still beyond that to the gold monopolists ot Eng- land. 't'hat is what the adoption of time Baltimore plan would amount to. Mr. Cleveland would not only give the banks time power contemplated by the national bankers' convention , but he would take away the responsibility of the general government altogether. In short , lie would put the money world against all other interests and lot each side take care of itself , with the weapons all on 0110 side. lie would make the banks mutually protective - tective , so far as the currency of each was concerned , but in reality his plan would leave the depositor as the only real guarantor of the bank's solvency. Time depositor is compelled to take enough chances now. lie will not go into this new partnership if he can help himself. In truth , there is no feature of the plan that will commend it to the favorable - vorable consideration of any other class than those engaged in money dealing.-Kansas City Journal. Amo lea in Chlna. England takes care of her subjects , no matter how humble , no matter where they may be. And the man who seeks the protection of the Eng lish flag , whether citizen or alien , finds security tinder its folds so long as lie shows himself worthy of such succor. With1 a blush of shame we must confess that the United States has never exercised her power to defend - fend the rights of her citizens in other lands , and as for time hcople of other countries who have sought protection under the American thug , they haveas a rule , relied upon a weak if not a broken reed. We are very plucky at home , but abroad we lack spirit. Dlr. Julian Ralph , writing to liar- per's Weekly from Shanghai , repeats the story of two Japanese students who , hounded down by the Chinese , were deluded into seeking protection under the flag of an American consul- general , Mr. Jernigan , at Shanghai. To the credit of our consul let it be said , he tried to sate these poor youths. 1-Ie telegraphed our minister at Pekin , and would have appealed to Mr. Gresham had diplomatic etiquette permitted it. But Washington heard of it , and Greshamn telegraphed the consul-general to surrender at once the young men who had sought the protection of our flag. The Japanese students were surrendered - rendered and subjected for three ( lays to time most horrible tortures , till death put an end to their sufferings. England would have sent her whole fleet to Chinese waters rather than surrender these men to the savage and worse than brutal enemy. Once the American was a power in time Orient. Now he is being despised. sir. Cleveland has much to answer for , but not time least grime of his cowardly administration is his be- coning a party to the murder of these two young men.-New York Adver- 1 tiser' . Doubly I mpossible. A Boston paper characterizes as 'foolish" the charge that Secretary arlisle is using the patronage of his department with a view to advancing xis presidential chances. The Boston paper is right. Mr. Carlisle is well e aware that no Democrat can be elected o the presidency nett time , and if such a thing were possible he knows hat his failure as the head of the reasury department would put him out of the race. Ctits and Democrats. Scientists are trying to ascertain b1 1 practical experiments and by photographs - graphs how it is that a cat invariably ights on its felt. The Democratic f party is anxiously awaiting the result of the investigation so that it may profit by it. 'l'ime last time it fell it vas with a dull ; sickening th-d. Drover's I acne. It looks now as though Grover Cleveland would rumble down time enturies as the only man that ever nsisted upon being president and sec- etary of the treasury at the same , time. The effort does not amount to f greatness , but is regarded as a fairly good imitation of it. r mjo mikes it. Mr , Andrew Carnegie thinks the 1 country'm currency system is all right. + It appears to hove worked very well n the case of Mr. Andrew Carnegie , m ( d V n Scrofula in Neck . . , Is dangerousdisagTeeableandtenacious , but Hood's Sarsaparilla , as a thoroub t t blood purifier , cures this and all other forms of scrofula. "I had a bunch on , the side of myneck ' ' i as large as a hen's I I I ego. I was advised - vised to have it cut out , but would not : consent. Afriend r suggested that I tl take Hood's Sarsaparilla - i 1 parilla , which I + am ] ad to say that did , and , ? soon the bunch i - r Entirely Disap- . peared . . ' I can truly praise P r t , 4'j Hood's Sarsaparil- a ' , tar for I know it is lira. Ella Billings an excellent med- icine. I have recommended Hood's t Sarsaparilla highly in the past , and shall continue to do so : ' 111Its , ELLd BILLINGS , Red Cloud , Neb. $ arsa 8 lloodsCures I l Hood's Pills are the best after dinner Pills ; assist digestion , prevent constipation. 1H..H. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . * WORLD'S-FAIR * ] IIGJ ST AWA.IW : . ; . . .H. . . . . . . . . . . " , - "SUPERIOR NUTRITIOG- LIFE : ' * PERI AL ' " I , ; . S' . I THE 1 I Z NAi . F ; : t e , Has justly acquired the reputation of being I The Salvator for 1 . ; a The-Aged. ) AN INCOMPARABLE AL1IIEAT for the GROWTH and PROTECTION of INFANTS and I i-ig DR .ICI k- ( A superior nutritive in continued Fevers , And a reliable remedial agent in all gastric and enteric diseases ; often in instances of consultation over i rI I patients whose digestive organs were reduced - duced to such a low and sensitive condition r that the IMPER1AL GRANUM was the only nourishment the stomach I i would tolerate when LiFI seemed depending on its retention ; - And as a FOOD it would be difficult to conceive of anything more palatable. , Sold by DRUGGISTS. Shipping Depot , JOHN CARLE & SONS , New York. m I sltt fend terribly from fly's roarini ) m n ,1 head clotoqp BALM . 1 cfR re iSec t iniJ an attack o f ca ( ( lid became very deaf ; r .2 ' " } used Ely's Cream Balm and in three weeks could l meI r ( IS well as erCmA. . l.XewntauGrapliuglicir.N l E atdt'x _ ELY'S CREAM DALFA opens and cleanses the Tasal t'assagesAllays ) 'atn and Inflammation , He da the Sores , protects the Membrane from Colds , IIe- ' storesth'Sensetot Taste and Smell. The m13 quickly absorbed and gives relict at once. Apartlrlels applied into cachnostritandlsagree- able. PrieP l ) cents atDrnggitsorbymall. ELY BIOTEERS , 50 Warren St. , New York WALTER BAKER & CO The Largest Manufacturers of err ; PURE , HECH CRADE COCAAS A. COL A T ES . On this Continent have recdvs I t FR HIGHEST AWARDS from the great 1. . , . . C II S Id C y'G x EXPOSITIONS 14 r s , ' ' t i ; ti ' d ' tinliketheDnlchl'roecs..no'.ika- lies or other Chemicals or Dyea are used in any of their preparation. . Their delicloua B1tIIAKFAS'r COCOA , a absolntdy , pure and eoluble , and costs less than on cent a cttp. SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYtVHERE. WALTER BAKER & CO. RORCHERTER , MASS. TAKt i LYTERIIAUY a i'JiQ the Dr. Cured in lBTO. , ° ' t has cured thous. USED ands since and will R Cure . you. Send + I(1CDll ( " - y for free book , and 1 symptom blank. r , o wits Pkge by mall , ' ' e > ZS.oo. Insulator. r I 0l. SYKES' SURE CURE CO. , IT. fAX Etc. CHICy3 : / : old b : all Urngl ts 1 F { ELEGANT 4e.-ACSE. , FRUIT TRACTS . In ilontrore county , Cob. , with perpet _ M ual wnterfor irrl ritlmr ' at i15' itch. 1 cash. Ialmroad , fare free to purchasers. 1 v GL't1 .EY 1lxv. Co , . $2 ; Cooper Bldg. , , . Denver. Advise us immediately. 1 WE WILL TAKE YOU i t u 1 Cheaply , Quickly and Cornfortably oa the Phillips-Rock Island Tourist Excursions. ' , CEEAP , because the rate in Sleeping Car is but m.OQ QUICK , hecause you travel on the astest trains that run. COMPORT , because ' you have a through Sleeper. 4 Fourteen years' record. Over 100,000 already i carried. and all like the service. Car leaves Des Moines and Omaha every Friday via the , t amour Scenic Eonte. A special manager ' goes each trip to care for the many wants or patrons en route. We can't tell you half the benefits in this ad. , but for your Canfornia trip - , Sou should post yourself. ) Address , JO. SEBASTIAN , G. P. A , C. , B. I. & P. R'y , Chicago. - ' i - k h O MAHA Business r ' ' Y Houses. 4 + DON'T r.IIrN , , 'I YOUR STAY ' Write at once for i Omaha Store Repair Works , 1209 Douglas St Omaha " ( i i' W ANTED An agentto handle our EAFFTY : : 1 1 t LAMP HOLDER. Lveryhonsoan ! i . 1 t home ehonld have them.o money I < equired If sathfactory refer. races are given t ' tsIAaA SPECIALTY CO. . 5S Pierce ht. , Omaha. . r j. for YEN and . t BOYS. LOTHINn If 70. want to save from $2 to il0 00 on t a snit write for our new 1 t Catalogue , Containing I samples of cloth. r t NEBRASKA CLOTHINC CO. ' ) Car. loth and DouQ1a18ta. , Omaha , , , t I ii1 - 1 . = t l . ' ' - i V ( t t - , '