A Cow Acts as a Mother to a rig. Portland Oregonian : The recent paragraph in the Oregonian about freakish relations among animals causes - es to be brought to light a very singular - circumstance on the farm of R J Moore , at Malalla Corners. A l6 months old heifer lost her calf and two or three days afterward it gas noticed that she did not require milking. Investigation - vestigation led to the discovery of the fact that the heifer had adopted a 4 months old pig , which she would "call and suckle as affectionately as if it had been her own calf. This relation has evident dent satisfaction of both parties , and theshoat is sleeker and weighs several pounds more than Its companions of the same age. Ready to Do Ills Part. "And nowwill somebodyin the audi ence accommodate me with a cavalry sword ? " asked the professor of magic , stepping to th front of the stage and rubbing his hands in pleasant antici Patton. There was no response. The professor repeated his request. Same result. " 1 am sorry , " he said at last , niter waiting several minutes , "that I shall be unable to perform my advertised feat of swallowing a sword , but you will see , ladies and gentlemen , that'it is not my fault. I will now proceed frith the wonderful performance of the manic egg bag , " etc.-Chicago Tribune. Chaining a Beauty. Jinks-Everybody predicted that Iiardhead would have trouble after he married that vain beauty , but she never leaves her home unless he is with her. How does he manage ? ' Wincs-Ho filled the house with mirrors-Nevv York Weekly. Cure for Curiosity. Inquisitive Yankee visitors to the Amtnen ram while lying at Bath have been unable to refrain from meddling with the machinery of the guns and other interesting pieces of mechanism found about the ship , despite the big placards desiring them to keep their "hands oft , " which the officers plentifully - fully strewed about the vessel. So in order to discourage such investigators several of the machines with seemed most to attract the inquisitive were connected to a powerful electric bat. terv , the "hands off" sign being , of course , retained also. Since the idea was put into effect the ship's company has had lots of fun , and the visitors have begun to have respect for a rea conable request. The University of Omaha. Nebraska has many creditable institutions - tutions of learning-colleges that have wrought a grand work and given the state name and fame extending far be. yond its own confines-and conspicuous among them will be found that embodied - ied in the heading of this article. It a w , A h : 1 .4 4'i1F . x. , , \ M.i 4 [ f = ± - r x- z s t f ' " r 1 comprises three departments , namely : Ilellevne College , Omaha Medical College - lege and Omaha Dental College , the latter just organized. Each department - ment is conducted on the plan of doing the best possible work. Bellevue College , as is well known , was the pioneer in Nebraska for high grade work , being in some particulars in advance of even i the state university. All of the high schools of Nebraska which prepare fully for the state university , have the additional studies necessary for entrance - trance to Bellevue College. The institution - tution maintainsan academy or prepar- I atory department , and for those who desire to teach or become proficient in music it offers superior advantages , the talent employed being the best to be obtained. The college is ten miles from Omaha , the metropolis of the si + state , and is a delightful and attractive - tive location. It is far enough away to be out of sight and sound of the I bustling city , and yet near enough to i be in touch with advantages that the d metropolis brings. Many desirable features in connection with the college I might be dwelt upon , but from what j has been said the reader can draw his I or her conclusions , corresponding with the faculty for details not here set torth. t A Wonder of Antiquity. of One of the greatest wonders of an cent Egypt , says the St. Louis Repub ; lie , was the famous artificial bo ty of ic water called Lake Moeris , According . to Herodotus , - the measure of its circumference - cumference was 3,300 furlongs , which L is equal to the entire length of Egypt t nlbng the seacost. " The excavation , which was made in the time of King Moeris ( the memnon cf the Greeks and a ; _ . ' F omanswas of a varying depth and its of center was occupied by two pyramids , the apexes of which were 300 feet higher - ' er than the surface of the water. The water for this gigantic artificial reservoir - . voir was obtained from the Nile i through a canal , which six months of the year had an overflow , corresponding - ( ing to high and low water in the river. on , The canal gradually filled with sand } - and the lake has longsince evaporated , a but the bottom is still one of the most fertile tracts in Egypt Homeseekers. We desire to direct your attention to the , . - Gulf Coast of Alabama. Our motto : "If - you antieil'ate a change in location or for investment , wh not et the best ? 11 a have : , „ and 1n rder to serif our statement icw e are ma6ing extremely low rates to ' ' . ; - homeseelaers and investors that they may : make a personal investigation. For par- . /-y . ticu\ and low railroad rates address The , . _ . : ' Union Land Co. , Mobile , Ala. , or Major T. I - S. C arkson , Northwestern Agent , Omaha , , _ Nebr. pi ; \ ! 1- F - Human nntnreon the throne is no better f tbau human nature in the slums. , Billiard table , second-hand , for sale r , 1 cheap. Apply to or address , H. C. Asti , of , ' : : : ,11 S. ith St. , Omaha , Nei , 1 , l AG SERMON A PLAIN TALK ABOUT THE PLAIN PEOPLE. They Who Provide the Food of the World , Physical as Well as Moral , Also Decide the Health of the World --Trials of Consplcuoas People. i EW YORK , July 21 , 1895.-Rev. Dr. Tal- mage , who Is still absent on his annual - nual mtd-summer tour , preaching and lecturing , has prepared - pared for to-day a sermon on "Plain People , " a topic which will appeal tea a very large major- - uy or reaaers any- where. The text selected was : Romans 16:14.151 "Salute Asyncritus , Phlegon , Herman , Patrobas , Hermes , Philologus and Julia , " . . Matthew Henry , Albert Barnes , Adam Clark , Thomas Scott and all the commentators - mentators pass by these verses without any especial remark. The other twenty people mentioned In the chapter were distinguished for something , and were therefore discussed by the illustrious expositors positors but nothing is said about Asyn- critus , Phlegon , Hermas , Patrobas , Hermes - mes , Phflologus and Julia. Where were they born ? No one knows. Where did they die ? There is no record of their de- cease. For what were they Olstingulsh- ed ? Absolutely for nothing or the trait of character would have been brought out by the apostle. If they had been very intrepid or opulent , or hirsute , or musical - al of cadence , or crass of style , or In anywise anomalGus , that feature would have been caught by the apostolic cam- era. But they were good people , because - cause Paul sent to them his high Christian - tian regards. They were ordinary people - ple , moving 1n ordinary sphere , attendIng - Ing to ordinary duty , and meeting ordinary - nary responsibilities. What the world wants is a religion for ordinary people. If there be in the United States 65,000,000 people , there are certainly not more than 1,000,000 extraordinary - ordinary ; and then there are 64,000,000 ordinary , and we do well to turn our backs for a little while upon th- distinguished - guished and conspicuous people of the Bible and consider in our text the seven ordinary. We spend too much of our time in twisting garlands for remark- abler , and buildiig thrones for magnates - nates , and sculpturing warriors , and apotheosizing philanthropists. The rank and file of the Lord's soldiery need es- pedal help. The vast majority of people to whom this sermon comes will never lead an army , will never write a State constitution - tution , will never electrify a Senate , will never make an important invention , will never introduce a new philosophy , will never decide the fate of a nation. You do not expect to ; you do not want to. You will not be a Moses to lead a nation out of bondage. You will not be a Joshua to prolong the daylight until you can shut five kings in a cavern. You will not be a St. John to unroll an Apolcalypse. You will not be a Paul to preside over an apostolic college. You will not be a Mary to mother a Christ. You will more probably be Asyncritus , or Phlegon , or Hermas , or Patrobas , or Hermes , or Philologus , or Julia. Many of you are women at the head of households. This morning you launched the family for Sabbath observ- s ance. Your brain decided the apparel , your judgment was final on all questions - tions of personal attire. Every morning you plan for the day. The culinary department - partment of your household is in your dominion. You decide all questions of diet. All the sanitary regulations of your house are under your supervision. To regulate the food , and the apparel , and the habits , and decide the thousand questions of home life is a tax upon biota and nerve and general health absolutely solutely appalling , if there be no divine a lleviation. It does not help you much to be told that Elizabeth Fry did wonderful things k among the criminals of Newgate. It does not help you much to be told that Mrs. Judson was very brave among the Bornestan cannibals. It does not help you much to be told that Florence Nightingale was very kind to the of wounded in the Crimea. It would be better for me to tell you that the divine Friend of Mary and Martha is your Friend , and that he sees all the annoyances - ances and disappointments and abra- ons and exasperations .of an ordinary housekeeper from morn till night , and from the first day of the year to the Iast day of tits year , and at your call he is ready with help and reinforcement. They who provide the food of the world decide the health of the world. One of the greatest battles of this century - tury was lost because the commander that morning had a fit of indigestion. You have only to go on some errantd amid the taverns and the hotels of the United States and Great Britain to appreciate - of preciate the fact that a vast multitude the human race are slaughtered by of incompetent cookery. Though a young o woman may have taken lessons in mus- of , and may have taken lessons in painting - ing , and lessons in astronomy , she is not well educated unless she has taper , les- to son's in dough ! They who decide the apparel of the world and the food of the world decide the endurance of the world. An unthinking man may consider it matter of little importance-the care the household and the economies of domestic life-but I tell you the earth is strewn with the martyrs of kitchen and . The health-shattered nursery. womanhood - hood of America cries out for a Gad who can help ordinary women in the ordinary - nary duties of housekeeping. The wearing - ing , grinding unappreciated work goes , but the same Christ who stood on the bank of Galilee in the early morning the nd kindled the fire and had the fish already cleaned and broiling when the sportsmen stepped ashore chilled and the hungry , will help every woman to prepare - pare tt eakfast , whether by her own the hand or b * the hand of her hired help. The God who 'made indestructible eulogy - boy logy of Hannah , who made a coat for Samuel , her son , and carried it to the temple every year , will help every woman - will man in preparing the family wardrobe. will The God who opens the Bible with the of story -Abraham's entertainment of the farce angels on the plains , of Mature will help every woman to provide hos- tality , however rare and erribariass- ing. It is high time that some of the attention we have been giving to the remarkable women of the Bible- re-markable for their virtue or their want er's it , or remarkable for their deeds-De- borah and Jezebel , and Herodlas and Atliaitah , and Dorcas and the Marys , excellent or abandoned-It is high tint : some of the attention we have been giving - ing to these conspicuous women of the Bible be given to Julia of the text , an ordinary woman amid ordinary circumstances - stances , attending to ordinary duties and meeting ordinary responsibilities. Then there are all the prdinary bust- ness men. They need divine and Christian - tian help , When we begin to talk about business life we shoot right off and talk about men who did business on a large scale , and who sold millions of dollars of goods a year ; but the vast majority of business men do not sell a million dollars - lars of goods , nor half a million , nor a quarter of a million , nor the eighth part of a million. Put all the business men of our cities , towns , villages and neigh. borhoods side by side , and you will find that they sell less than fifty thousand dollars' worth of goods. All these men In ordinary business life want' divine help. You see how the wrinkles are printing on the countenance the story of worriment and care. You cannot tell how old a business man is by looking at him. Gray hairs at thirty. A man at forty-five with the stoop of a nonogena- rian. No time to attend to improved dentistry , the grinders cease because they are few. Actually dying of old age at forty or fifty , when they ought to be at the meridian. Many of these business - ness men have bodies like a neglected clock to which you come and you wind it up , and it begins to buzz and roar , and then the hands start around very rapidly , and then the clock strikes five , or ten , or forty , and strikes without any sense , and then suddenly stops. 9o is the body of that worn-out business man. Now , what is wanted is grace-divine grace for ordinary business men , men who are harnessed from morn till night and all the days of their life-harnessed in business. Not grace to lose a hun- d red thousand , but grace to lose ten dollars. Not grace to supervise two hundred and fifty employes in a factory , but grace to supervise the book-keeper , and two salesmen and the small boy that sweeps the store. Grace to invest not the eighty thousand dollars of net profit , but the twenty-flue hundred of clear gain. Grace not to endure the loss of a whale shipload of spices from the Indies , but grace to endure the loss of a paper of collars from the leakage of a displaced shingle on a poor roof. Grace not to endure the tardiness of the American Congress in passing a necessary law , but grace to endure the tardiness of an errapd boy , . stopping to play marbles when he ought to deliver the goods. Such a grace as thousands of business men have to-day-keeping them tranquil whether goods sell or do not sell , whether customers pay or do not pay , whether tariff its up or tariff is down , whether the crops are luxuriant or are a dead failure-calm 1n all cir- c umstances and amid all vicissitudes. That ! s the kind of grace we want. Millions - lions of men want it , and they may have It for the asking. Some hero or heroine comes to town , and as the procession passes through the street , the business men come out and stand upon tiptoe on their store steps and look at some one who in Arctic clime , or in ocean storm , o r in day of battle , or in hospital agonies - nies , did tits brave things not realizing that they , the enhttsiastic spectators , have gone through trials in business life that are just as great before God. There are menwho have gone through freezing - ing Arctics , and burning torrids , and awful Dfarengoes of experiences without - out moving five miles from their door. N ow , what ordinary business men need is to realize that they have the friend- hip of that Christ who looked after the religious interests of Matthew , the customhouse - tom-house clerk , and helped Lydia , of Thyatlra , to sell the dry goods , and who opened : t bakery and fish-market in the wilderness of Asia Minor to feed the seven thousand who had come grit on a religtouspicnicandwho counts the hairs of your head with as much particularity an though they were the plumes of a coronation , and who took the trouble to stoop down with his finger writing on the ground , although the first shuffle c.f feet obliterated the divine caligraphg , and who knows just how many locusts there were in the Egyptian plague , and new just how many ravens were necessary - essary to supply Elijah's pantry by the brook Chertth , and who , as floral commander - mander , leads forth all the regiments of primroses , foxgloves , daffodils , hyacinths - p cinths , and fillies which pitch their tents of beauty and kindle their camp-fires color all around the hemisphere-that that Christ and that God knows the most minute affairs of your business life and however inconsiderable , understanding - standing all the affairs of that woman who keep athread-and-needle store as well as all the affairs of a Rothschild and a Stewart. Then there are all the ordinary farm- ers. We talk about agricultural life , and we immediately shoot off to talk about Ctncinnatus , the patrician , who went from the plough to a high position - tion , and after he got through the dictatorship - tatorship fu twenty- one days went back again to tits plough. What encouragement - couragement is that to ordinary farmers - ers ? The vast majority of them-none them will be patricians. Perhaps none of them will be Senators. If any them have dictatorships it w311 be ver forty , or fifty , or a hundred acres the old homestead. What those men want is graze to keep their patience while ploughing with balky oxen , and t keep cheerful ztnid the drought that destroys the corn crop , and that enables - in ables them to restore the garden the day after the neighbor's otitis have broken In and trampled out , the strawberry - berry bed , and gone through the Lima- as bean patch , and eaten up the sweet " corn [ n such large quantities that they must be kept from the water lest they swell up and die. Grace in catching " weather that enables them , without imprecation - precation , to spread out the hay the " third time , although again and again and again it has been almost ready for mow. A grace to doctor the caw with a hollow horn , and the sheep with the foot-rot , and the horse with " distemper , and to compel the un- of willing acres to yield a livelihood for family , and schooling for the children - dren , and little extras to help the older in business , and something for the you daughter's wedding outfit , and a little surplus for the time when the ankles get stiff with age , and the breath we be a little short , and the swinging the cradle through the hot harvest a field will bring on the old man's vertigo. Better close up about Cincinnatus. I know five hundred farmers just as 1t noble as he was. hills What they want is to know that they have the friendship of that Christ who often drew his similes from the farm- ' life , as when he said : "A sewer went forth to sow ; " as when he built they his best parable out of the scene of a farmer's boy coming back from his wanderings , and the old farmhouse shook that night with rural jubilee ; and who compared himself to a lamb in thl pasture field , and who said the eternal God is a farmer , declaring : "My Fattier is the husbandman. " Those stone masons do not want to know about christopher Wren , the architect - chitect , who built St. Paul's Cathedral. It would be better to tell them how to carry the hod of brick up the ladder without slipping , and how on a cold morning with the trowel to smooth off the mortar and keep cheerful , and how to be thankful to God for the plain food taken from the pail by the roadside , Carpenters standing amid the adze , and the bit , and the plane , and the broad axe need to be told that Christ was a carpenter , with his own hand wielding saw and hammer. Oh , this is a tired world , and it is an overworked world , , and it Is an underfed world , and it Is a wrung-out world , and men and women need to know that there is rest and recuperation In God and in that religion - ligion which was not so much intended for extraordinary people as for ordinary - nary people because there are more of them. The healing profession has had Its Abererombies , and Its Abernethys , and its Valentine Motts and Its Willard Parkers ; but the ordinary physicians - cians do the most of the world's medicining , and they need to understand - stand that while taking diagnosis or prognc' is , or writing prescription , or compounding medicament , or holding the delicate pulse of a dying child they may have the presence and the dictation o f the Almighty Doctor who took tlrt case of the madman , and , after he had tarn off his garments 1n foaming de mentia , clothed him again , body and mind , and who lifted up the woman who for eighteen years had been bent almost double with the rheumatism , into graceful stature , and who turned the scabs of leprosy into rubicund corn plexion , and who rubbed the numbness out of paralysis , and who swung wide open the closed windows of hereditary or accidental blindness , until the morn- l ug light came streaming through the fleshly casements , and tyke knows all the diseases , and all tits remedies , and all the herbs , and all the catholicons , and is monarch of pharmacy and therapeutics - peutics , and who has sent out ten thou- s and doctors of whom tits world makes no record ; but to prove that they are angels of mercy , I invoke the thousands of men whose ailments have been assuaged - suaged and the thousands of women to whom in crisis of pain they have been next to God in benefaction. Come ; now , let us have a religion for ordinary people in professions , in occu- p ations , in agriculture , in the household , In merchandise , in everything. I salute . across the centuries Asyncritus , Phle- gen , Herman , Patrobas , Hermes , Phil- ologus and Julia. First of all , if ou feel that you are ordinary , thank God that you are not extraordinary. I am tired and sick , ] and bored almost to death with extra- ordinary people. They take all their time to tell us ( row very extraordinary they really are. You know as well as I " do , my brother and sister , that the most of the useful wort : of the tiorhi is done by unpretentious people who toil right on-by people who do not get much approval proval and no one seems to say , "that h is well done. " Phenomena are of but little use. Things that are exceptional cannot be depended on. Better trust the smallest planet that swings on its orbit than ten comets shooting this way and that , imperiling the longevity of worlds attending to their own business. For steady illumination better is a lamp than a rocket. Then , If you feel that you are ordinary , remember that your position invites the less attack. Conspicuous people - how they have to take it ! How they are misrepre- s ented , and abused , and shot at ! The higher the horns of a roebuck the easier to track him down. What a delicious tltin5 it must be to be a candidate for President of the United States ! It must be so soothing to the nerves ! It must pour into the soul of a candidate : ' such a sense of serenity when he read the blessed newspapers ! his I came into the possession of the abusive cartoons in the time of Na- oleon f. , printed while he was yet alive. The retreat of the army from Moscow , that army buried in the snows of Russia - sia , one of the most arful tragedies of ; the centuries , represented under the fig. ore of a monster called General Frost shaving the French Emperor with a razor of icicle. As Satyr and Beelzebub he is represented , page after page , page after page. England cursing him , Spain but cursing him , Germany cursing him , Russia cursing him. Europe cursing de him , North and South America cursing t him. The most remarkable man of his day , and the most abused. All those men in history who now have a halo around their name , on earth wore a crown of thorns. Talcs the few extraordinary - ordinary railroad men of our time , and see what abuse comes upon them , while thousands of stockholders escape. All the world took after Thomas Scott , President of the Pennsylvania Railroad , abused him until he got under the ground. Thousands of stockholders in that company. All the blame on one ® man ! The Central Pacific Railroad- wo or three men get all the blame if anything goes w ° ing. There are 10,000 that company. , At an anniversary of a deaf and dumb asylum one of the children wrote upon the blackboard words as sublime the Iliad , the Odyssey , and the "Divira Commedfa" all compressed in - one paragraph. The examiner , in the and signs of the mute language , asked her , "Who made the world ? " The deaf and the dumb girl wrote upon the blackboard , "In the beginning Gcd created the heaven and the earth. " The examiner you asked her , "For what purpose did Christ t came into the world to save sinners. " dumb girl wrote upon the blackboard , "This is a faithful saying , and worthy and all acceptation , that Christ Jesus and came intot the world to save sinners. " The examiner said to her , "Why- were barn deaf and dumb , while I hear W and speak ? " She wrote upon fife blackboard , "Even no , Father ; for so It seemeth good in thy sight. " Oh , that Ah might be baptized with s contented StttiT spirit ! The spider draws poison out of all flower , the bee gets honey out of a thistle ; but happiness is a heavenly elixir , and tits contented spirit extracts T RE not from the rhododendron of the , but from the lily of the valley. f' The Mohammedans have ninety-one names for God , but among ahem all ' have not "Our Father.-Anon. 1 7 I rY t Highest of all in Leavening Power--Latest U. S. Gov't Report , j t r t t L JTE ICY PRE - She Had Bitten Hersolf. About a quarter of a century ago Be- ranger's "Grisette" was performed at one of the theaters , 'lire part of Lit- ettc was allotted to Virginia Dejazes. This popular actress , then anvanced in years , had lost all her teeth. and , to do justice to her new role. she had ordered n fresh set. As the teeth felt uncomfortable - fortable , she took them out when the p lay was over and put them in her pocket : When in the greenroom , she incautiously satdotvn , and immediately jumped up , with a scream. "What is the" inquired our jolly old friend , Adolphe Denncry. "Nothing , " said Mlle. Dejazet. "I have only bitten myself.-Berne Theatrale. Tobacco Tattered and Torn , Every day we meet the man with shabby clothes , sallow skin , and shambling footsteps , I holding out a tobucco palrfed hand for the charity - ity quarter. Tobacco destroys manhood and t the happiness of perfect vitalty. No To liae is guantntced to cure just such cases , and its charity to make them try. Sold under 6caran tee to cure by Druggists everywhere. Book free. Address Sterling Hcmedy Co. , New York City or Chicago. In After Years. ' . " Darting"- He gazed at her with a tender , ap- p ealing glance. They were preparing to start out for the evening , and he was anxious , for her sake , to loop his best. 1 -"my hat on straight ? " Being assured that it was , the husband - band of the coining woman , after giving ing explicit directions to the nurse regarding - I garding the baby , trustingly took tits arm of her who had sworn to cherish and protect him-and so they went their way.-New York World. Open the Safety Valve 1Vhen there ! s too big a head of steam on , or ( yon will be in dancer. Similarly , vv1ien that i mportant safety valve of the system the bowels. retests , obstructed , open itprompt- ] y with fiostetter's tonrt"h hitter ; , and guard against the consequences of its clos- . It3lliourness , dyspepsia , maluril. rheu- matic sail kidney compluhit , nurvousnc s anti neuralgia are all subjuRatcd by this pleasant but potent conqueror of disease. Too Much Curiosity. The Judge-have you any reason to oiler wily sentence should not be passed upon , you ? i The Prisoner-I ain't got much to say , but it's right to the point. When I shot the feller I was only loin' it fer fun. an' here you fellers are tvantin' to tang me in cold blooded malice , so you a ir.-Indianapolis , Journal. ALBERT BURCH , West Toledo , 0 , , says : "Hall's Catarrh Cure saver ] my life. " Write kiwi for particulars. Sold by Druggists , 75e. He Was a Prudent ) tan. Chicago Tribune : "James , what ave you been doingin the garret ? " It was his wife who spoke. "You won't betray me , Elizabeth ? " exclaimed the prominent politician , pale and excited. "Betray you ? Certainly not. What have you been doing in that garret : ' " ; . "Elizabeth , " he replied in a hoarse whisper , "I have been looking to see if anybody has discovered my views on the silver question. That's where I keep them ! " IlrGeman'sCamphor leewith Glycerine. Thcuriginalandarl } tenuite , Cures ClL tuwdnauds sudFace , ColdSures&c. C. G.Clar6Co.,1.Hat cuC + - e A lie is always an enemy , no matter how well meanin , it may lee : ; . FITS-All Fitsstopped freebyDr.Bllne's Crept crceltestorer , tioFi.alter ti + lrntday's u. ( . Jlarcelouscures. Treatise and $ trulbotth ( rv'rt , , : bend to llr.Iiliue,9itdrehSt.YLDa.Ya. He is the greatest man who does most for fellers men. I have found Piso's Cure for Consumption - tion an unfailing medi : iue.-P. R. LfIT % , 130i ; Scott St. , Covington , Kr. , Oct. 1 , lii'J4. Every reform that comes to stay , has to tegin iu the heart. di "Eanson's Ti agic Corn Salve. " It Warranted to cure or money refunded. Ask your druggist tor it. Price 15 cents There are people who vvaat to do good , they are stow to commence. It the Baby 1s Cutting Teeth. enrr and use that old and 'well-tried remedy , 3lrs. rissto 's SooTTtnc STncr for Chtldrea Teething- Nebraska has fourteen women superintendents - tendents o : public instruction. p The man who never praises his wife sometimes talks very nice in church. ¶ lh iL I Is r t ar i . , cure LEAVES ITS PIARIC -every one of the painful irregularities weaknesses that prey upon women. They fade the face , waste the figure , ruin temper , wither you up , make you old before your time. Get well : That's the way to look well. Cure the disorders and ailments that beset , with Ur. Pierce's Favorite Prescrig ion. It regulates and promotes all the womanly functions , improves digestion , enriches the blood , dispels aches and pains , melancholy nervousness , brings refreshing sleep , restores health and strength. ELL MACHINERY Jfl J Illustrated catalogue showing AIIQEBS , ROCILDP.ILLS HYDRAULIC D JSTTLtiO 3fACHIhERI , etc. Fhrz Havebeon tested and L warranted. i SiouxCity Engine & Iron Works , SucccssorstoPechif . Co. rtloazCity Inra. . RewrLL , t : CdSn : Il.CISF.nY Co. , ii It Wet Eleventh Street 1Csr-sas C'tv , 3ta * ( . PARKER'S f'd HAIR BALSAM e , and beg 0e , the halt. = _ Promote , a luxuriant grow' . - Never Pails to Eestore Gray -Sir Hair to its Youthful Color. Cure , eatp dheare , k hair ralhng. „ 6tk.ndtiWst Druz Bard Luck. First Man at the Beach ( to second arrival-may ) , it's hind of mesa of you to come down here. I was hcc first , and consequently I have a prior claim ' on the young ladies at this beach. second Arrival-A thousand pardons for rntrudittg , but I really had no idea + there would be n man here ahead of ' me. 1'11 get out right away and try another beach , and it isn't likely 1r11 run against such hard luck again. G'day.-1oxbury Gazette. Make Your 'Own Blttorsi " On receipt of 30 cents in U. S. stamps , l will send to any address one package Ste- ; ketee's Dry Bitters. One package makes rene one gallon bed tonic known. Cures stem- , ach , kidney diseases , and is a great appetizer - tizer and blood purifier. Just the medicine , needed for spring and summer. 25c. at . , , your drag stare. Address Glo. G. 8Ta , KETEH , Grand Rapids. Mich. t I ills Choice. Bobby was trying to make it pleas. not for his father's guest till that individual - vidual arrived Ire pointed to two boles of cigars on the piano. ' "The one at ther right is them wet paw gives t' his friends. De udders he smokes himself. " 1 ' "All right , my boy , " said the visitor , helping himself to the private box , "I'll tape one of these , for at present + I'm not one of your father's friends.- ' Syracuse Post. K THE FARMER IS narl'Y ! The farmer reporting 60 bushels Winter - ter Rye per acre ; G ton of stay and 6 : bushels of Winter Wheat has reason to ; be happy and praise Salzer's seeds ! Now you try it for 1596 and sow now of grasses , wheat and rye. Catalogue and samples free , if you write to the John A. Salzer Seed Co. , La Crosse , Wis. , and send this slip along. ( W.N.U. ) t Notbing is so cheap and so very valuable as Iolitenessaud courtesy. Parker's Gln terTontc it popular f or it + > ; otd work , snaering , tired , sleeptoe , nen cue women and ncthing so soothing and reclving. 'Ibo heart is larger than the world , ho- cause the vvbolo world cannot till it. Chat a , ene of relief It II to know that you have nu more corns. Iimlercons mmnwes them , and very comforting it Is. 16c at drurglsU. This country , with its institutions , ho- longs to the people who inhabit it. i a . a iL1' ' dM - - I KNOWLEDGE Brings comfort and improvement and I tends to personal enjoyment when ri , litly used. The many , tyke live bet- than others and enjoy life more , with l less expenditure , by more promptly adapting the world's best products to the Weer s of physical being , will attest G , tlc value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced m the remedy , Syrup of Iles. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pless- ant to the taste , the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect la : - ative ; effectually cleansing the system , spelling colds , headaches and fevers an permanently caring constipation. has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical procession , because it acts on the Kitl- nevs , Liver and Bowels without weak- en ing them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs - is for sale by all dru ; gists m 50c and-Si bottles , but it is manufactured - ufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only , whose name is printed on every ackage , also the name , Syrup of Figs , and being well informed , you will not accept any substitute if offered. R , WING L r' EETHIN3 * SYRF the best medicine for all diseases incident tr , children. It revL ttesthe bowcl ; assists dcnti- ion ; cures diarrhea and dysentervin tlett orst ms ; cures sinker sore throat isa certain isre- ventit eofdipbtberia ; < 1trictsantisoothes ailpain n4igorties tits stomach and tow eh ; corrects all acidity-will cure griping in the botrcls and v.ind coiic. ho not fatigue yourself and child Wiilt sleep.ess nhhts when it is within your reach to your child and save your otsu strength. Dr. octane's Gcrlucat lI'oran ( lakes destroptsorms 3tmmnve them front the system Prepared by Emmert Proprizttry Co. , Chicago , ( IL SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. DR . Mcc E Is TflE aNi.Y , SPECIALIST - , / ' 1-no TItuATr AL ! . PRIVATE DISEASES Weaknss and t cret Ulwrders of MEN ONLY Every cure guarante d. : o years' experience. 8 icon ! n tm + b . ; , , lsr x F'reo 14th .t : Farnam St , . OMAHA , NEIL EN BN.j aelrltt'.tort [ iL'itIOIERI4 , Successfully Prosecutes Glai ate ? rlnclpal Ex'mner U.S. Pension Bureau , 3yra alastwar , l5adjudltaaagcLmsscncc. i4' . 1. IIi. , Ontalia--3. It1df ) ; , liken answering advertisements kindly mention this paper. - . BURLS WHEN All E , U1S. Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. IIso , intine. Soldbydruggists. , I i i ,