asij? q V -ic . - s- ESC I 5 it A II !?.: , -' Jr: .". I - . l- From Hli Standpoint. One day Dr. Heller, of the lfrencW r.cadcmy of medicine, met the gifted German writer and satirist, Heine In Paris. "Ah, dear poet," said tht doe tor, "you are all smiles this inorni' "It is for good reason, d6cW I hare 'iibt been calling- my uncle from Hamburg, whg,'l8'S&iting- Paris," rc . piied llcin "Your uncle, the rich fcankcrr'- "Exactly." "Ah, then I wndcrstaadyour cheerful air." "Oh, it . 3s hot on account of the thousand-franc . tote that that dear uncle slipped into ' my hand. It is because of a remark he made to me, the true opinion of a bank er, a Hebrewand a German. After he -h:itl embrace me, he said: 'Well, my dear nephew, you arc as usual doing - -nothing- in Paris?' 'Pardon, dear uncle,' e:iUl I; -I write books.' 'So I was say-""iig-.'said my uncle, 'you are always Vioing- nothing-, " and Ileino burst into 'shouts of 'auffhter. .'1 Deafnws Cannot He Cared . Hy local applications as they cannot reach the vifoe:ise2 ponion of the ear. There is only ,,he way to cure deafness, and that is by con- tticutioncl remedies. Deafness is caused by an inflamed condition of the mucous lining - -of tfie Eustachian Tube. When this tube is 'inflamed you have a rumbling Ecuml or im perfect hearing, and when it is entirely closed, "Deafness is the result, and unless the inflam . nation can be taken out and this tube re- "fctorcd to its normal condition, hearing will he destroyed forever; nine cases out of ten sire caused by catarrh, which is nothing but mi Infilled condition of the mucous sur faces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any esse of Deafness fcauFcil !jv ratmrli that cuinot Ik? cured by llaij's Catarrh Cure. Scn 1r M!i!!nrq? frt " F. JVC!IESET & CO,, Toledo, O. IsTSold hj Druggist, T5c ,r J? Was Innocent. Mr- .Tnstice Maul once addressed a phenomenon of innocence as follows: I ""J-'ri'oner at the 'bar, your counsel thinks you innocent the counsel for the prosecution thinks you innocent; I .hink- you innocent. J'ut a jury of jyour own countrymen, i the exercise -of such common sense as they possess, "which does not, seem to bo much, have fouiui you "guilty,' and it remains that t should pa-s upon you the sentence of l.iv, That sentence is, that you be J.opt in imprisonment for one day; and ls that was yesterday, you may now go about vour bubiness. Argonaut. Ivive never works bv the clock. opyji -a. lajl Jast a bad cold, and a hacking We all suffer that -way some- CCUgil tr.ues. How to get rid of them is the study. Listen I am a Ranch wan and Stock Raiser. My life is rough and exposed. I meet all weathers in the Colorado mountains. I sometimes take colds. Often thej' .re severe. I have used German Syrup live years for these. A few doses will cure them at any stage. The last one I had was stopped in 24 hours. It is infallible. ' James A. Lee, Jefferson. Col. ting Esthers ! W Glfa Tou a Itemed f krAlcTi Insures Safety M Zifo o3Iother 4 CKiliU 03 BOTHER'S FRIEND Xtbs Confinement efitM 2aln, Horror undBUJc Afterndngonebottlacf "Bf otkra f-rlfent I t2ffred but llttla pain, and did not carerlenoo that vealcn.MU nf urirtrd tuual in ewsa cases.-lira. ien Djrei ArrLAKTA CA. Eou) by all snuaorsix OPSY Yafo ivrly Cur.it with Vegetable BC.edles ' 1 1 ...c cured Uionantis otcas. Care eaten rro oiMintt'd hojelcby bejtplirs'.tians.hrom first le i vu;;lom3 n'.fappoar In tL-n dT3ut least twu-thlrds ' '1 vmptom reniorea. Send fur fre book teatlmn- I -lalfc or mlraralouK cores. Ten dars' treatment 'r J ma!l. If you order trlnl seed 10c In ctamps , sny p.wta(;o Dk H.H.GitrKX A SoN-.Atlanta.Ga. TREATCIl VHRR "wuracr trial return tliia adrerttempnt to ua. M8GRN NIGHT AND DAY. lIoWs the wont nip. ttre with cas unJer all clreumstanrcs. lVrml Adjustment. Comfort and Cure XowI'Atentcd ImproTemnta. Illus trated ratalojma and rules for celf-cicarur ment cent aecurelT scilsu. O. V. iiocsfc tlFO. CO 744 Broad yaj. kew York Citj. EDUCATIONAL. SHORTHAND AM) TTPE-WRITIXQ. Olili'it and licit nusincss Collogo In the West. No raott'vi. Thoiiiandi of graduates and old students .ccupj ing paying positions. Write forcRtnlopiie. . F. ICOONE, Umatha, Xeb, JLAYCOZJY 's- r s?J2Ms7a wmMfo r vff f WVfs vniy noranrrd mtimpmicnt nr-ni.: chool in Hie rtalr: Ettktu need Instructors: Flftrcn Pi" tmrt Cuims; open 12 mouths in the -raw; terns Ikwb b.viLs?:room roat. TSc; apnarHm and cql.ptneati ! cnmtl-Mc:clfnricc3rtiInclnc-eryai in'Dut". K 1 furtlrinfrrntion svMrws. J. F. SaOor. IToiidmt, or .. r. rami-. ire iTr jit. voncai. Nvti. ' COLLEGE sacrYdTeart, Denver. Colo. Conducted by Jesuit father, r. juratory. Clascal and dentin; studied LodelnT Urt. 'uiaoa. wahtu5 and mndinSof liie ?S vt ar. Calaloffuo sent on application. St. CSara's Academy. C?hV.L,CT?D.BIIOSIIN1CANSIST,5KS- " Thp p.n of Instruction carried out In this lnstltu- uonumipscveiy aarantago vnich can contribute to pood education. Unejullcd as a health resort. Snuatrt fire miles from IJubuaue. la., ten miles from Galena. III. Forfurther partirulars address MOTHER PKIORESS. St. Clara's Cornf, Slnsinawa. Grant Couqty. Wis. OMASA BUSINESS HODSES. FARRKIX ft CO.. Maple Snar and Syrnpm, JelHea, yreserres.Jaais.AppleBnttcr.Etc. l'rops.Omsha Csn Mmm'Uc'bm Co., Cam mad uecoraled Tlawai OMAHA SLATE & ROOFING CO., yI,X KOOFUs'O. Elate KooEng. Mate Blackboards, Ktc Tents, Awnings, Flags WOLF BROS. CO.. 703-5 8. ICth. Tel. COL 4 Q. 75 Fully War 4 ?f ranted for 5Years 3fcad for catalog of the KIMBALL 0R6ANS 3r"Agetits Wanted. A.H0SPE,Jr., OMAHA, NEB. HIGHLY ENDORSED. The Frof essor of Phvstolojrical Cbem- , Istry at Yale College says: "I find Kick. apoo Indian Safftca to te an extract of t T Hoots, Marls and Merits of Valuable Rtm. 0 glial Adton, ictlkcxt am mineral or other harmful admixture. A Klckauoo Indian Jl Ssfa Is the grand cst IJvcr, Stouncli. A Blood and Nerve X Itemtdy Known. Cleanses, i'urifles. jj and Eenovates eTery Frt I the bunvui " ff--ystcia. All a K1SIS. 1 a coi oBoUUffortt. an 99 yrup JRAIffXI,S2sgoiJI.ATOiK CO., D R WSHlM lOf-oW'j0M f f flaBWWfiPPalsSIHfitMsl aW'JslliiMKiilSSflll?5l"BH BWBiJ'fI iWjL''HWIJf 'yic i HUlMS&n rAmmmmMmmimm imSsWusW aVaaaaaaassiisMwBaBaaaaasss..sssk. tmm " fsrsr- 2 rWYTf" A urug' " Al- "w W UB . T-rlmj " A .- 99 BOOTH. kail sun farewell! Sleep, now, in grand repose Well earned. One tlmple, deathless rose Of nM j?n tive. one simple wreath ot tame, J, r 'ace upon thy bier. Nor loud acclaim, ..'or fanfare wild could aptly tell our itrief, Of stricken hearts, the trust :nd strong belief In thy majestic life can. at the tomb, In slmplc&t tokens fond most sweetly bloom. Hail and farewell! Sleep, now, O nobte dufe Of finer clay, that calm in peaceful trust Of life eternal, born of lire imbued With deatnless fire, the final Ltr.tra i viewed. Ah, vain to eck In Jlc ord- or son; Our cricf to 3ho. Thou master mind,Wholdnj A20 in sorrows mysteries didst gxc'eX Sleep, now, in jjrand repose hail ahd faicwell! --iihiile PickhanlL THE LOST IDEAL; Miranda was n, cnarming little girl of feretllcen; she was also a bundle or contradictions cultured and crude, clever and foolish, sentimen tal and very much alive to the ridiculous. She was also extremely pretty, in the Irish way, which is perhaps the prettiest way In the world. Her father, tbc rector, was Irish, and he rtnd all his family were genial, cheery folk, who laughed end grew fat. Miranda was rather ashamed of hr own keen sense of fun, which belonged, she supposed, to her "lower nature." She liked to pose to herself as ernest, with lofty ideals of life, love and the dignity of womanhood. One fcopfombor lny Mi'c beaming rector wlio&v beams had never been obscured except when his only child's mother died, ten years before, called to Miranda from his study window. Chick!" cried he. lie often called her Chick," and she did lot mind much, although tho dignity of woman hood might be a little hurt Miranda, who was walking in the garden with a rough-edged parchment-bound poet, stopped and looked up. "Chick, would you like to come to London with me for a wcok?" Yes. papa," sho said in a little languid voice, and with a dreamy gaze beyond him into infinity. She had very nearly jumped for joy, but recollected the dignity of womanhood in time, and waited until the got into her own room. Then kuc did. 'JTicy went to the houso of her father's sister in Loudon. She Was n rich and lively old maid, theft gatW caring a Iwckaclio tit some (ierman baths, and spending most of her time with much cheerfulness up t3 her Vhin in thcinj One morning the rectoi- had to go Into the city on business, and left I Miranda all alone. She meant to re j clino in an easy-chair and read Browning; but she got rather I strained over "Sordello," which ' many who can run cannot read. Now Miranda, reclining in her I easy-chair, found it so much easier than Browning that she fell asleep. Sho was shacked at herself when she awoke and found the poet prone I at her feet However, she got up, . stretched her arms, and thought sho ! would explore, hc Ihrco drawing rooms n Search of new toys and ) cu'riosit'es. of which her aunt was a front. frllrrtnr. Shc carao to tho smallest room at the endj ? 1 tJvch as .-he crossed tho Unvshbid, her eyes fell on a face! She stopped bhort, then went forward with clapped hands und stood to gaze. It was only tho photograph of a very handsome young man, stuck into tho last Jcaf of a photograph screen Standing on a little table; but in that moment Miranda thought she fore tested the rapture of a realized ideal. In those dark eyes she seemed to read genius and sweetness; in that counterfeit presentment she seemed to recognize the Ferdinand of her dreams. Almost shyly she slipped the fate ful carte out of the little screen. ithonl even a glance at its com- ttauiuus inure j ue iinaju nau no ..:n ii. mi. - : , , superscript:on: the upper and lower edges of the mount had been pared away to admit of its insertion in tho screen. This only added the fitting touch of mystery. Miranda could not bring herself to replace and resign what seemed al most sacredly her own. almost heaven sent Sho put the heaven-sent Ferdi nand into her po.'Kct; and when tho rector and his daughter went home to tho rectory, Ferdinand went too. Thereafter Miranda spent much time in contemplation of that snn picturcd face. In point of fact it was a badly executed photograph, for there was a haziness in some of the outlines, a want of finish in some of the details. This, however, en hanced its significance in Miranda's ' eyes and appeal ed to her to imply a 1 peculiar value in tho portrait as a portrait, independent of its merits as a work of art ' Miranda passed the winter in ! trembling expectation, half hoping. half dreading that her aunt would in some of her letters, allude to the missing treasure, and at the same timo tear the veil from its mystery; hiit, no such nli-litontnpnt ramn nnrl XX, """" Lnll0UItnmcnl Came, and In 31 ay 3Iiranda was to go and stay in London with her father's sister. Meanwhile, only two things hap pencl to her at the rectorv. One was her eighteenth birthday, the other an offer of marriage from her ! father's curate, which it need scarce ly be said that sho refused, affianced as she felt herself to her ideal. The curate was a good young man handsome, too, with good brains, good heart, and jjood expectations. He was devoted to Miranda, and hi6 sober fancv had never pictured any- t thing so fair and sweet as this reality. Sho lilied him very much indeed, annreeiatcd his nlcasant talk, his pleasant ways; but it was quite im- v ... ., ,. , . x liussiuu: iu iuuuii.u mm. Tim unnr vnnnrr oiplr;inti J11C l,0r i OUn" CLClCbia&ll ic was very unhappy when she refused him. , lie never smiled again for at least a 1 week. j In May Miranda (and Ferdinand) went to London, where the pretty J country girl was a good deal admired an enjoyel hciself very much. In deed, she was pronounced bewitching; there was no monotony about her, and thcro was a touch of innocent ' coquetry. Truth to ay, Ferdinand faded a little from her thoughts at this time, as photographs are apt to fade. Still, no gilded youth had pushed him from his place. Soon after she reached her aunt's house, Miranda had gone into that third room; but every thing there was differently arranged, and the photo graph screen had disappeared. She dared ask no questions about it. One day at breakfast her aunt read " a letter that seemed to give her con siderable pleasure. i "My dear," said she, "Charlie's cominjr."' j "Who is Charlie?" asked Miranda. 1 who had never heard of him before. Mc dear," replied her aunt rather solemnly, "Luariie is the son ol my lirst and onry love; the man I should probably have married if he hadn't preferred some one else." "Oh, poor auntie;' said Miranda, with ready sympathy. Not at all, me dear! J Bhould have ! j been poor if I'd married him, for he 1 rtVV"14 Ho CMVUH SM WC UVUEJi Q - ' . - 1 -" ,.'J bW!N j married a richer woman, and spent ail Hers. " And is he alive now?" "JNo, me dear both dead lonjr ago. Ho got himself killed by a tlgdr out in India, and it killed her tdd Not the tiger, but the loss of her husband. Indeed then, she was far fonder ot him than I ever was. Some Well-Off uncle looked after theif boy, and got him into the- F: a Hd's beri iii Canada itlesd three years, add now he writes me word he's coming home, and will be iii London next week: So sit ye down,. Miranda", child, arid. send him a card lor me dance riext Tnurri day." Miranda did as she was bidden in a little flutter of agitation. An exquisite possibility had occurred to her. Could this he the original? Could Charlie be Ferdinand? "ts-is be nice, auntto?'' she asked tremulous!?. "WelU me dear, you'll s9 lor" yourself.. Oli, yes! Charlie's nice" ! enough, but not So nice, or handsome as ii is pour iamer, me nrsc ana oniy love. Howpver, that's ancient Uislory now; and there's no doubt I should have been a tried woman. Goodness knows I never grudged him to his wife, and maybe if I'd married Jiini I nUtrlUri't lad grudged him td ihe tiger quite as much as she did." Thursday came; the guests came more than could ever get upstairs. Charlie arrived early and did get up stairs. His hostess, glorious in green velvet and diamonds, pounced on him, .took both his bunds. and. kissed him before the assembled multitude. Prosnnt.l" Miranda made her "- pearancc, and being effusively intro duced to each other, they went off to the ballroom together. Miranda's heart beat a little faster when they met; but for one moment shd had scorned to i'ecogtiizd the beautiful dark eyeB Of Ferdinand. Bnfc ah; rid; no! , That rounn foolish fade inclined to LhJ Chubby, that nose inclined to be snubby, that wide mouth forever widened by a schoolboy grin! Hyper ion to a satyr! And as for those eyes, there was no speculation in them, and it would havo been difficult in deed to find genius and Hreatriees id their shadows,. Inoug'hL Miranda, as Chal'lle prattled insanely at her side. Miranda went to bed that night vaguely disappointed and unhappy, and had a painful dream of a dis torted Ferdinand photouraphol on a spoon. Charlie came to luncheon next day. Miranda was tired and a little cross: sho found him horribly unin teresting. Nice? How could auntie say ho was nice? Ho had not two ideas; he chattered like an apo and was quite as ugly; his eyes woro not tho loast like Ferdinand's. Ho was an impostor; he bored her; sho wished ho would go. He and her aunt had all the talc to themselves; Miranda sat by silent and gliim, arid said she had a headache. She was only half con scious that Charlie was babbling and bragging of his exploits on the ice in Canada; sho only half heard what he said when bo asked her aunt if she had over got the photos he sent her the year before. "Nino of our skating club and the what do you call it? you know " "Oh, yes," sad her aunt; "I got them, and put them all into a photo graph screen. It used to stand on a table in the third room upstairs. I dare say it's somewhoro up there. Let us go and look for it " "Photograph screen!" The words woko up Miranda like a pistol-shot. At last at last! And what was go ing to happen? Was her sin to find her out? No, she would never con fess; but she felt very guilty, and shook in her shoes. However, she managed to walk upstairs in them behind her aunt, with Charlie at her heels." In the third room her aunt pulled the drawer of a cabinet "Here it is?" said she. "folded up as flat as a pancake'' and she gave it to Charlie, who unfolded it "Yes," cried he, with his wide laugn, "nere we an arc: uut, 1 say, Where's the the combination composite what d'you call it? Nino of us blended into one, you know the new dodge. What's become of it? Awfully handsome fellow wo made, too. Bit of Brown, bit of Jones, bit of me. By Jove! What's the matter? Are you ill? Here, sit down. Where's the eau-de-cologne?" Miranda sat down. She did feel a little faint for an instant while she realized tho truth, and Ferdinand melted into space; but then the sup pressed fun in her "lower nature" jumped up like a Jack-in-the-box on the phantom heels of the vanishing Ferdinand, and she went off into peals on peals of inextinguishable laughter. They were rather fright ened; her aunt slapped her hands, Charlie emptied the bottle of eau-dc-CDlogne over her, and I am afraid she slapped him. Me poor child," said her aunt, "she's hysterical!" "I'm nothing of the sort," gasped Miranda, trying to stop laughing, going off again, and speaking in spasms. "Oh. oh, oh! it's too, too, too funny! Oh. oh, oh! that I should fall in love with nine men at once! No. no. no! with nine bits of men! Oh. oh, oh! a thing of shroJs and patches! Oh, oh, oh, oh! shall I ever, ever, ever stop laughing?" Miranda went home in July, a merrier and a wiser girl. In October she married her faithful curate, whose only rival had been Ferdinand. Maklna; fcUnors. Though no complexities arc in volved in tho making of scissors, yet the process is very interesting. They are forged from good bar steel heated to redness, each blade being cut off with sufficient metal to form the shank, or that destined to become the cutting part and bow, or that which later on is fashioned into the holding portion. For the bow a small hole is punched, and this is afterward expanded to the proper size by hammering it on a conical anvil, after which both shank and bow are filed into a more perfect shape and the hole bored in the mid dle for the rivet. The blades are next ground and the handles filed smooth and burnished with oil and emery, after which the pairs are fitted together and tested as to their easy working. They are not finished, however. They have to undergo hardening and tempering, and be again adjusted, after which they are finally put together again and pol ished for the third time. In com paring the edges of knives and scis sors it will be noticed, of course, that the latter are not in any way so sharply ground as the former, and in cutting scissors crush and bruise more than knives. Newspaper In India. The newspapers in India are pub lished in many languishes, and it is said that those in the native tongue are more widely circulated and read. in proportion to the number of copies printed, then is the case anywhere. I Vi3w fU IMP ITVUUl I - - - EARTH. Sabtemfieaa Coarolsloaa Amoar the Moaatalas of PenosylTanU. The curious phenomenon formerly exciting the wonder of people living in the vicinity of Thick Head and Sand mountains, souh of Tusseyvilie, Center county Pa., which has not been noticed for ffvb years, fcas mau!d its presence known again. For twelve years, at iri'eguiar intervals the dwellers in that part 01 'Center cotiniy had been disturbed by loud and mys terious" noises which came from the ground boiwcerl tho two mountain named. Iii the spring of 188 those" noises were heard dally, with increas ing volume, for a week. The noises were sometimes like the rumblo of. distant thunder and then like the deadened crash of thunder heard in the air close by. On the seventh day of this protracted disturbance be neath these two mountains a f csident cf Ttisseyrille was climbing Thick Hend mountain, when the rumblirig began in the mountain o'ppbsito. At first it was deep and low, and it in creased in violence until it became as the tumult of a mass of rock roll ing down a mountain side. Tho person who heard the sounds said that thoy convinced him that they were caused by a suotcrraricatl avalanche, as it began at the very top' of tlfo mountain, increasing in violence arid speed as it went down, and ter minating 9m a terrible crash at the bottom. After that day the Trick Head noises c'Sasc'd, arid were n.ot heard again until a week aro, when ttic.t' besn just as thoy had nvo ycI- aZ and this time they terminated in a simi lar subterranean land or rock slido, except that this time the hidden avalanche Occurred somewhoro in the deblh df Thick Heal mountain, instead of 4iii dtrijd mountrtiii.. In Potter county, Pa., between Houlcttc and Burtville, is a hill in which rum blings of the same nature arc heard at irregular intervals. This ele vation is called Thunder Hill, and it rises from the south bank of tho Alleghany river1. The floises that oc cui; iri this Hill soniciiihcs iriakd the earth tremble for a long distance around, and they have been heard for a mile away. The theory of local savants is that a strong vc'n of natural gas underlies the hill, and that when the great retort is disturb ed by somo undcrgroud convulsion it rises in its might and tumbles rocks and things around in the confines of the hill until everything hums. Still no one has confidence enough in this theory to hand out the money that is being asked for to send a drill down into the alleged gas cauldron, let out its treasure and make everybody in that bailiwick rich. A LOUD-SMELLING DELICACY. More l'uiigonl Tliail S-suvrUrant, It As tonished ttie Court. Sauerkraut has heretofore been considcrcd.suysa London correspond ent of the Boston Herald, the most odoriferous compound imported from Germany, because, as an old song says, it is Cabbage which has lain in a ucry damp cel lar. Till it smells sn hi;h it can smell no smeller. But a very formidable rival has now been found to the national dish iu a peculiar kind of herring, duly labeled, in accordance with the act, "made in Germany," which formed the sub ject for a law case before the assist ant judge of the Westminster county court Tho mysterious herring arc sold in tins, their technical name be ing "Deutsche Delicatessen," in other words, "German tasty-bits." A firm in the fatherland sent over some of these delicacies to Mr. Lin gen, a restaurant keeper in the city, and when the gentleman failed to sell them, owing to their twenty-horso power odor, it sued him for the price, 5 lis. 6d. The restaurant keeper's defense was simple. "Dey smell do schoppe out, and I would get dreo mouths if I sell them. I never smell any ting dat vas so high." His shop man's opinion was: "Mein Herr, if you no get rid of dem smellerenest fish as I ever smelled ve will die of de cholera." Stronger testimony still was produced in tho shape of a tin of the "Delicatessen," which was opened for the judge's edification. The court held its noso until tho box was carried out of the building, and then gave a verdict for the defend ant Mr. Leigen said he only sold one tin, and the customer who pur chased it brought it back and do clarcd that it was more powerful than all tho thirty-four odors of cologne combined. A Terrllic 11 u nee. A man who had undertaken to climb a certain steep cliff on tho Shetland islands to gather wild-fowls' eggs, was neither very experienced nor very bravo, although he boasted of being both. Ho pushed upward, however, briskly, without looking be hind, till he had got about a hundred end fifty feet, when ho stopped to orcathc. Tho pause was fatal to his self-possession, and he called out in tones of terror: "Men! men! I am going I am going 1" His comrade;, having been thus warne 1, moved the boat out of tho way, so that tho poor ' fellow came sheer down into tho deep water. Mighty was the plunge, but at length he ro c to the surface, when he was instantly caught hold of and dragged into tho boat After many gasps and much spluttering of sea-water from his mouthr, his only remark wa: "Eh, men! this is a sad story I havo lost my snuff-box"' Argonaut WItere nasselm" Wan Written. Another landmark of old London is about to suffer destruction. This is the house in Stapcl inn in which Dr. Johnson wrote "Uasselas," and in which somo of his earlier years in' London were passed. Ihe house is situated on the south side of tho Garden court, and, from an inscrip tion on tho face of the building, it appears to have been built in l(i9i. The architecture of this period is not remarkable for grace, and the build ing is as ugly as most of the contem porary structures. Novortholsss, the magic personality of the sturdy old doctor has invested it wih a certain degree of interest, and, although the site is to -be used for the extension of the patent office, the idea of the de struction of the old houso pang of sentimental regret gives a Puzzling. On a certain Western railroad, for convenience, the locomotive is made to push the train down to the terminus, instead of, as on the return trip, pulling the train after it This circurastauco occasioned great bewilderment of mind to a freshly-made citizen of tho place, who was of Milesian origin. "I kin aisy understhand," ho observed after watching this phenom- j enon one day, "how the injme pulls f thira cars oop, but I'm bothered intoire'.y to understhand howiver thorn cars pulls the iujine down! ti AVALANCHES UNDER FARM AND HOUSEHOLD THE GOSPEL OF CLEANLINESS IN THE DAIRY. Dairying I TlckllU Business Deep Cultivation Qaeons Getting Lost Ab sorption In Drained Sella Stock Notes and Household Help;,. Cleanliness. Dairying is a very ticklish busi ness, Dairy products absorb odors so readily that io keep them pure re qdie3 the" greatest of card. Tho country storekeeper gots soma hard raps for his "dctcstiblo" jUmblo of different grades of butter, good, bad and indifferent; and I am frco to con fess that ho deserves pretty nearly all the censure he gets. But ho is not the author of all tho bad butter in the world. His offense is ciuetly that ho f polls some good butter by mixing it v.'ilh grenso. The greaso is not mado by him. It is sold to him fur butter. My dciro is to im press ihe' butter maker with tho fact thai often through a little carelessness on' his or her part butter is ruined. Sometime.; it is injured without any fauit of the butter maker. It may be injured "vhilo in tlm udder. Galen Wilson recently ga"'o an illustration of this, in writing of tho experience which another had", who said: "I once got up ray cows lato at milking time, be tween sunset and dai k. 1 cat down to milk, and at the first stream wa& aimOst choked with the effluvia of a ftktink Ihe hired man cried out that tho 3fail was to pay with tho cow, and we foiinti every cow so tainted that the milk was worthie-. That is all I know about; ;t. but I (Suppose tho cows had encountered a skunk.'' Now, if a cow's m Ik while in her by ho in her udder can bo SO contaminated jv ho fnec rf smell says Wilaon, it is perspicoitsly CAplSirien how tho milk gets into the dairy Cocoailii Milk, when warm especially, absorbs odors equally well whether in tne udder or not Jn a search for tho causes nf so much poor butter it is found ihn. the farmer is many more times in fault than" li'a 'vife, who docs the mechanical part of makin;? . At first the cow may havo sour or musty feed to cat, stagnant and bacteria-laden water to drink or manure odors to inhale. And when the milk is drawn it encounters stable an 1 barnyard scents; and when being con veyed to tho dairy-room it possibly passf?s the pig pen, with its odorif erous cxhailutiOh-, the swill barrel privy, a dead cat or lien 1ing on the ground, tho sink-drain, bad slnb'lHn spots on the ground where slops havo been thrown and rotten chips in the woodshed. These are all faults of tho man. Woman's derelictions arc that when milk enters tho dairy in mav encounter scents of cooking vegeta tablcs. boiling clothing, steam from washtub, floor mopping, musty cellar scents, stale victuals and filth in the corners and seams of milk utensils All of these .'cents pierce the milk as surely as the sharp sticks do the white man, with this difference, that the sticks arc withdrawn and the scent remains to corrupt tho mass. To make first-clas butter every visi ble and invisible Indian must bo sup pressed, say a a Farmer's Voice writer I have found all this true iu my forty years' exj crience, and anyone who observes it will also find it true. Depp rulti.ilio:i. I read an article in your paper by D. J Bissell, on "Corn Culture,'" which interested me, and as he wants to hear from fanners and I be ing a jaek-at-all-trades will give my experience, and that will differ from Mr. Dispell as regards shallow culti vation. Now. it all depend on how you bicak the ground; i' you break your ground shallow and plant your corn it will come up and grow right away from corn planted in same fie d when ground is brcko deep. v ow. ' the reason for that is this, the sub- i soil is haul and as the planter packs the ground Unlit around the seed, ) the moisture from the ground starts the seed quicker than when the soil i is deep plowed and necessarily looser i around the kernel. In that case I 1 think shallow cultivation would bo I the only way propcr.sineo the ground is too hard for the roots to go down for moisture, they must hie to 1 spread out and if you cultivate deep i and cut those little feeders off, you injure your corn. J If the season is right and soil good. Mr. Bissell can raise corn, but let i him plant his corn that way, and tend I it shallow. 1 will proceed as follows I a4 I have done for ears with beat result and if wo have a drouth or if we do not I will beat him ( n corn. I j will plow nvy ground deep ad put on 1 bull tongues and cultivate deep as I j plow and close to the corn: keep my i ground lovcl, next time I will not j plow quite so clo?e but close enough , to get the ground all covered with fresh dirt. The third cultivation should not bo quite so close to the hill I but with large shovels; tho fourth j time, which will likely be the last j turn your shovels so as to put a little more dirt toward corn and put the bull tongue or small shovel on bc- hmU to keep the ground evel, but nlowas deep as ever. If vou have tended your corn right it will now be just ready to commcr.ee taseling and after that time prosecute any man you catch cultivating your corn. Your ground is loose and the feeders have gone deep and corn is green and will btand drouth while neighbor Bisscll's is all fired: Coleman's Kural World. A l-iro Crc.imcrj-. An English exchange taya: The largest crcamory is near St. Albans, Vermont, in the I nitcd Mates. Twelve thousand cows, owned by 7 ) fai mors, supply it with cream, and the average daily produce is 1 V ') pounds, or five ons, of butter. All cream received is tested in order to obtain a thorough knowledge of the amount of butter fat in the average product of each farm er's dairy, and he is paid daily for the butter value ho brings in. There are fifty-four stations for receiving the milk, and at these sta tions tho cream is separated, and only the latter is sent to tho factory. They run a score of churns, each of which will turn olT 5 JO pounds of butter in one batch. Tne butter working machines are four in num ber, and in a very few moments eighty pounds can be properly worked and salted. They use a cartload of salt every two months, and the fac tory employs sixty hands, besides the forty on the station's employ force, to prepare the product. Valne of a Good Cow. Take tho common cattle of the country as a basis, if you pay $30 for a country cow that runs you 10 in debt by the end of the year, and that gives you a calf no better than she is herself, it is a poor speculation, Ihit if, on the other hand, you pay 5) tor a cow that shows you ?3J profit j at the year's end, as such a cow should do, that is a pleasure to look at and a satisfaction to own and that gives you a calf still better than herself.- you havo mado tho host and safest investment in a farmer's power. lis putting monoy at interest, you would' think yourself very lucky to get $5 a year on 20. From ono cow you should got "?30aycar on $50, and not only havo tho cow herself in good ordor, but a valuable call beside' And as you spend no moro time in milking and feeding tho good cow than tho poor one, it is easy to see en which side your bread is buttered- Mrs. M. P. Jones, in tho Journal of Agriculture. Querns Getting Lost. Mrs. Jennie Atchloy tells tho Can adian Bcc Journal: I havo discovered that queens do not often get lost on tbo mating trip; but, upon their re turn am apt to enter the wrong hive and get killed. A; we keep several huntiicd nuclei together or in adjac ent yar"s, wo haVO had scores of queens return to the wrong hives, in which, being quecnles3 most of the time, thoy were accepted. .Bat she always destroys tho cell that is in the nucleus. I noticed that where the o arc only one or two hives apart by themselves the queens do not got lost Even the drones in the drone hive will scatter all over the yard, atul act pretty nearly tho same way. Who ever found a quecnless oee trce? I do not believe that ono queen in a hundred gets lost of is captured by birds: they simply rctunf to thf) wrong hive and got killed. Aniorjitlolf ti Drahiod FoSN. The power of land to absorb water and hold it without injury is greatly increased by drainage. It is ft?" this reason that tho drain whon Grot laid OiivD runs off more water than it over doo thereafter, while not drain ing so wide a s.ice us it doos after several years usa Taking O.I tho nftrplus water in winter allows frost to poriotrnte tho sou deeper, anc mn !,. .i..'i1ir..r Itc iinrtiidfis enables" it to hold moro watov. Hover has also a like ciiect. wiwi ino auuiiuiiai ou- vantage when it has made full growth that its decaying roots in the subaoil i lmKc natural water coiirses -" d'eepfning cf soil by these means is greatly inerOasi'd by tho uso of tho subsoil plow. With a field clovcrcd, drained and subsoiled there .'reed bo little fear of drought, as tho soil wJU hold water enough to tide over tho" dryebt seasons. American Cultiva tor. : Inrk Notes. profitable to keep It is enough hor&es !o do the work of the farm promptly Keep no horso's show. Make every on the fi oncf c:rn irm for its liv- ing, or bell it. When a hog is ready for the mar- Tvnoniil kct it should "o to market fat hogs for better prices sciuom pays- Dehorned cattle can be kc .in a common stable without partita."0' thout parmiv"3" . tie, too. all stocK other. J With dehorned cattl can be pabt tired loge GicabC and carbolic acid make at good composition for lice on stock. ' A pint of grease and one and one-half tablespoon ful of carbolic acid. ' When the calf is once stunted it never gets over it, mind that The only way to get a good cow, bull or steer is to keep the calf jjrowmg all the time. Never buy a calf without learning"; what its ancestry was. Even if the call is not thorougnured, ami us an-j ccitrv was good, there is a fair . chance of its being good. ... I j no man who &ciis a noio win; false pcoigt-cc can be an J o:igit io ue i-ent to t'-e penitentiary. It is said . ,. -i .. tr.at one of this sort is now wearing stripes in one of our prisons. Kvory good herd and flock has within it the possibility of improve ment, and if improvement is not made it is tne breeder's fault. He does not make good selections. lloii.cliiilil M"!;-. A woman is just as much entitled to the hot washing machine and wringer, or a gool churn, etc., as her husban ; is to labor saving machin ery. if John likes gool cool milk, firm butter, etc, he will get hi-wife a re frigerator or ice chest if she will bring the matter forcibly to his at tention omen need to exercise prudence on wasli day. uomg out irom a not, room bareheaded, oi with bare arms ' is surely im. .s, is bin cry nn to hang out clothe prudent. .Most hou-ckccpcrs need to bo fre quently warned not to hurry or fret, .omctimcs it seems actually neces sary to hurry, but the habit should be guarded against. Tho intelligent mother is very par ticular about who attends to baby. Impressions aro made on children very early and very easily and noth ing but good ones should be made. We know women wit'i small fami lies who hire cooking and washing done, when their health is buffering for that kind f exercise. People ave bettor contented and therefore much happier whon thoy have a I reasonable amount of work to do. Madras curtain-, seem to go best I with straw mattings in the summer j home. New patterns show pa'.c gold grounds with deep yellow borders. I An ivory white curtain is sprinkled with clusters of pinks. These cur tains are usually finished with ball fringe. There i" no nicer "position" for anv woman than that of houMjkccper for the man of her choice. Tho girl who is neglecting to learn how to cook and keep house iii fir.-t class style, will certainly rue it in the future. The fal.-c notion that house keeping is not - honoiablc as a clerkship, or s-onie other positions is at a discount with sensible people. Will stock bo injured if it cats grass in an orchard where tho trees have been sprayed with Paris green? asks a correspondent, it is possible, but not probable Wo never knew nf a case, though others say that they have known a few cases. The Ohio experiment station pastured cattle, horses and s-heep v. bile the spraying was going on, and they were not in jvrcu. l!lr:hpl:ice or St. Patrick. The most recent investigators hold that St. Patrick was born in Scotland at what is now Kilpatrick. in Kirkcudbrightshire. The story of his capture by pirates goes better with the history of Western Scotland in the sixth century than with that of 1'oulogne, in France, at the same time. (uttiti;; Iven. Strawbsr I proposed to Miss Rap porly and she called me an idiot. Singerly What did you say in reply? Stravbcr -l toi lj$r guessed I vs tht oply of. Sb Was Reasrared. There was a woman of 'dignified bearing and apparent Intelligence standing at the post-box the,other day, says the New York World. S5be drop ped in several letters and gazeVJ hesitat ing at a small package which sfc held. She glanced about for assistanOein her problem, and her eye lit upon a Jjolicc- man. "i beg your paraon, sne saia, swcetlv. holding the package for hfisin spection, "but do you think that tnere are enough stamps on this to carry at?" And such is the chivAhrous attitude1, ofn man toward pcrplcxca woman inai ine policeman said, praiaptly with put making even an atteraptXto weigh he package in his hand: ' "Oi'm share there s enough, ma am. Her douots banished by this statement, the la py dropped her bundle and Wfnt on brb There was a large boUcr of scalding way rejoicing. Th Greek Church. 7he orthodox ecclesiastics hav. re mt'. in Moscow to discuss the method of.' checking the wandering of the GrceJ : church. The increase of sects is a o rapid as to constitute a danger, n it oniy to the church, but the state, tit was supposed" that all sectarians shou d be forbidden to leavo heir own pil lages and to try all offenders agaifiht the faith not by an ordinary jury, J,ut by a special judge, and fUrtheroyre that the orthodox missionaries should be increased in numbers who should .strtve in all love and chari'cy to. bring back the lost sheep." Chic ago Time. i Grcst Britain received 10,037f,600 letters from America last year. &$ I !f X At Chicago I Royal i JJ . y V "I. ." .- V. . I u NX?! Ac-rrif rrC11 -vf w -1.0 wv- 'Ult x-m v. v rkStv'Atl RAfc'iMrs Ofwrcr : i. ii ,j- v C1 1 KW.rKlf l-rrvH"V I - - i the offers in every M i i. -- - 1 I S"I 4a M i a W ,ej Si & Consulting Chemist, S x iree iro11 " auuiiuduuu aim unwiiuie- some imp urity, and in baking- it gives off a greater volume of leavening gas than any other po vTcier. 77 is therefore not only the purest, but also the strongest powder with which I aiiS acquainted. WALTER - HAINES, A D., ' Prof, of Chemistry, "si Medical College, All other baking powders are sl)y by analysis to contain alum, lime or ammonia. ir4 9 '.Cl! I .I?, . fc7Si3 '' .- Z. 2 . " " .& ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., How a Whale Fights. . '-rr a whale at all times is nnproaciii.. - ,.... ,...:i,,i;rr lCJli.. - , Ai. ..:!. like Boh intb TZ: 1 i ni; abandon oi tv. , no fear that the rlgh. . i- whale will swal- do so even if loir vou. He could n". .IT -.1 n his gullet is lie were u uispiKcu, ..- , only large enough HA.Ki WJlWt w -- - lri-rh j-if-iirrl ff S$tlm7 O j sized herring. Thf sperm wf; . i swallow a man if he drsired l;ffC? could to- K - so. i, t,A ; innllnn.7 toswai.Vw a ra.in pii-ticnlarlv with his clothe. Gn than yoi: would be to sivam h small bird with its feathers. Hut he will crush you in his ponderous jaws, if he is a fighting bull, and eject you in dct-iil. Ho will also chew ui and . -.-.- -- . spit out piece of the demolished boat, i,rc:;ic Up the wooden utensils floating p the wooden luensus uoauu upon the water, and every piece oi matter. W. S. Mtnu. ?- "" wood, until more than scveh baskets of I qi Reform Press ssocljtln. fcn'ments mav be taKen up. anu nav- . .. , . : ais . I.si ! ir.g tired nimseu out m uu w .i , -1 will lav off. ansrrilv slapping tho water ' with liis fins, and challenge some other boats, or, perhaps, in rare cases, at i tack the vessel. Waverly Magazine. ' I Care Iypepl Contlpatlo. I J)r. 'hoops Kcfiorat.ve Nerve FilU -ent Tee with ! Medical Bcok xo prove merit. or 2c stiop. Drug glsts.aic. DB. Shoop. Bo W., Kcln, WU- ' A wi-e man never has to advertise in the uew.Hjnj ers that ho is one. j A niau with a short memory needs long ! les. Artificial ivory skim milk. is made from condensed Iron steannhns wero first built in Great Britain in 1S43. j I'-;.-;., ; isu:i ' . Tho devil keens close to the man who gets , mad quick. Is tocb blood poor! Take BwshnnTs Pills. Is your liver out of order? hse Bcechaiu.s AiIIss. 2T cents a box. The tramp who will work has no profes- -ioual pride: Ifthe Baby i Cuttlnr Teeia. Be ftiro an.l use that oM and ircll-trird remdy, Mas. Wihslow's Soomuu SrKrr for Children Ttething. Nearly :X),000 pounds of aluminum were produced iu this country last year. FITS-AII nu staapod frer by BB. kJ"" 6W5 S&IkkINTOUR. So Ot after Dnt d? :tf: velou cures TreatUc .l B CO tril bottla ,' cm. Sena tol)r. Kltae.Kl Arcm..FBtladehou,rm- Silver dollars oro shipped direct to Cm.na from Mexico by Chinese merchants. ILiikou's r.Iacln Corn Salve." Wirranteil to rurc. or money refunded. Ask yoor tlrutrjl" turlt. PriteaScenb. Mulliall estimates that the civilized na tion, annually pay gi:i,700,000,000 for food. "Wear tho Knickerlwckcr shoulder brace nnH sn.rtidir combined, sold evcrvwhero or s-ent iost paid on receipt of $1 per pair I p'nin, or il.SO silk-facel. Send chest nicas- lire. flimicM, inn.u vf... . w w., Easton, Pa. It takes a blockhead out what ails him. a long while to find Ilia Money. Just think of It: IU0.0.! made In one week by an Rcent reprc.cntlniz n. K. Johnson A Co . Richmond, Va., and they have had many more parties travel line for them who did equally as well, some a good deal better. If you need employment It would be a good thing to sit down and write them a lino at once. There is no rnscal. greater roguo than a pious SEDENTARY OCCUPATION, plenty of sittiiiff down and not much exerciue, ought to have Dr. I pierces .rieasanr. Pellets to go with it. They absolutely 'and permanently cure Constipation. One tiny, smrar- v3tifT l-pllt i. n corrective, a regulator, a gentle laxative. I They're the smallest, the easiest to taUe, and the most natural remedy no reac-i lion afterward, oleic Headache, liillous Headache, Indigestion, Bilious Attacks, and all stomach and bowel derangements are prevented, relieved and cured. A "COLD IS THE 1TEAD" 1S quicklv cured by Dr. Sago's Ca tarrh Itemed-. So is Catarrhal Headache, and every troubla caused by Catarrh. So Is Ca tarrh itself. Tho proprietors offer 500 for any case which they cannot euro. RUPTURE A It m Invrstleate our method. Written t-uennu xo absolutely cure all kinds of KVPTfRE of both Kfies. without tb use of knlfo or svrlce. no matter of how locrfstaodlPr. EXAMIXATIOX FREE. Hcnil f-r-Clrc-ilar. Addresa . THE O. E. MILLER COMPANY, Jlttl-SM Xfltr for Xif MJUU.?, OXAHA. KS A Tremendom Shaking Uw ; This is what every system afflicted with. chills and fever, bilious remittent, o any 'other form of malarial disease, undergo Irjeriodlcallv. Xot nnlv fo mnl.irln. terrlhla In (itself It is the breeder of an Infinity ot uoouny ailments, bpeciiics used foritspro vention and removal prove. In the vast Ppurpose than to mitigate the disease and .stave olT Its attacks. Thov are sure, with ' f the average treatment, to return after a- ..... a tic sunorur uiaj tuaugc ui.f iiAia- tion to a healthier one. lut the com pin I lit, which Is in his blood. Is nut thus lltrhtlv sot ) rid of, and returns after the wonted Inter val. Organic affections of the nerves, heart trouhle, general debility of the system aro tho ,onspriiijr of malaria. Cure tho oflzln atlrqr cause and avert future physical Injury wlt Hostettor's Stomach Hitters. cMcacloua alsA in liver complaint, inactivity ot tho kly.neys, rheumatism and indigestion. ' ...... -3 boiona inenacnj. 1 water over a fire in the yard and sev eral black imps playing near it Sud-. denly a shrill voice was heard from in side the shanty. "You, George Washington, keep away from dat ar bilcr.' D'rcctly you is gwine ter upset 'de biler and scald yerscif to def , an w'en " you is you'll be de fust one to yay: '"Twasn me, mammy." Texas Sif tings. - TO CLEANSE THE SYSTEM Effectually yet gentry, when costive or bilious, or when thfe blood is impuro or sluggish, to permanently cure habitual constipation, to awaken the kidneys and liver to a healthy activity, without irritating or weakening them, to dispel headaches, colds or fevers use Syrup of Fijrs. Leads All. rvitr 4-oc-f- T GA 4-l, "Jf U-OLO, x ilUU LUC V1?lLiK ISLIUCIIUI Ltl A - x respect It is entirely - k - k 4. - ... . I - l Chiefs Board of Hk alth. "v. . vn 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. ,1W. - " " - - Vs Jo Populist Press and Peopled I take pleasure In announclngr that I have made arrangements on behalf of the National Reform Presa Association, whereby plates and ready-prints containing: Populist, matter officially approved and rec ommended by the National Reform Press Association and Chairman Taubenock, In any quantity desired. W-i db lurmsneu oy Uaelnm - Umu The Astern Newspaper Union. Write to the Western Newspaper Ilnlnnfnf S&. "- " Mnooa. No .. . "rnishes authorized oxnor nousa ., m Address WESTERN NEWSPAPER UfiM f OMAHA. NEBRASKA. MEND YG tWN HARNESS, mcrct I THOMSON'S SLOTTED CLINCH RIVETS. No tools required. Only a hammer needed to drive and clinch them eaxily and quickly; tearing the clinch abioluteljr imooth. Requiring no hole to be made in the leather nor burr for the KWeU. They are STRONG. TOUGH and OURASL Millions now in use. All length., uniform DURABLE. millions now in use. ah lenzw. uaiiorm or nssnrtfd. nnt nn In boxea. a1c your dealer for them, or send -Mc In stamps for a box of 100; aworted aiiw. JUDSON L.THOMSON MFG. CO., .aamr t m mi & i mi Wsklthsm. Ma as. L EWISJ 98 LYE PCTH223 ACT jzxrnaa (rATX-HTSD) Thn tlTfmmrtt and VUTttt L.T6 made. Unlike other Lye, it bein a Hue powder and tacked in a can with removable, lid. the contents are alwars ready for n. ill make the bttt prftimc! Hard Poap in W minutes without boiling. Ids ti b forcUansing waste pea, dltinfeetlnK links, closets, waabtng bottles, paints, trees, etc. PEW!. SALT k'FG CO. Geo. Ails. Phlla., Pa. laiiPKa CaaaaiUvs and people v-Wohavo weak langaQr AStk- 5?! -nptioa. It has carasl ro""m' ,t- Irhainntlnlm. TZ z.Zzr. is noi oaa to lace. Wab . -.T - V. "r" It is me Be. -'m' "" .v nrtucn mmrt. n.t. ah.kv. . .v. COiu ciuit WttWWWWT Vwm !--.-. ' i deubti t."ii.t w cAn cn " "V trtm ft,mt . w -rz "r . ILMO POISON .. -m-- V PIU110 Kmrnw sa --,. days. let him ,r '.'' pitlctilar aad fK w"" gate our rellaVIMy. V, Onanclal bacHngr aioo.000. Wbea mercuryv It V IO vj - A SPECIALTY. lo-tlde potassium, sartapirllla or HotSprinff-f fall. - gn'rantee a cure nd our Halle Cypntlrne 1 on y thiax that will cure permanently. Pcittlve procf o'm Id, free. Coor Remzdt Co.. Chicago. III. R upture: Has been Car L C'ao he Cured V nrt la Rein Cared meierr day by mod- -, w..h..i.i llaana. Our book tell von how. I D CaaUuP. Pa 3": l"?.-- I.B.S!tiei&Co.'iK - tnrnmiiistt am am rUjCt month. Ilann- 9f ' ,nitr.tai.al(y fttc JSf VC ryLTw smraui. iixfin mrfi If" ' trtlai.al ty prie- fU UebTTBdma).JieiUiS O. W. P. SXTDF.n. .M. I Mall - TtaM4, cnri. ,nu fc n txxnm ,11 erJ- r; McVIcIr riintr, C'hicis in. AIO m-r mi JOHN W.JIOHKIv NalUn Waihlnclon, XD.C. Successfully Prosecutes Claims. lt Principal Mxamlner D8. Psnaton Bureau. Iu last war, 13 aty uolcatnn; cuius, ally since. KALOS-y.in.'a!!;t.'?y..gw.BA nsed br it lntr- -d i America. inj. ot druwist or sen nd taint - Ie I.a Cuata, 70 Mate t.. Chlcajt". Al -4- Price Vlltrhe. Can. Birrtts Hlfew, SIX X.rklaM.OrgaM.'ttr;.! farm TK St.rtr, !! rkRF. IMlriGO SMIK CO., fUrSf", 111. $75.00 to $250.00 "a StilZ! a. f. jonxso.N" a co- RicrofoxD, rx IHSURK lath raneva and Merehaata Iruuranea Company of Lincoln. Capital nd Surpl owMJ. OSS. I.B1S loea pall to Safcraaka people inc !&. iyiThompton's Eyt Walir. W N U Omaha. 31 1893 PERMANENTLY CUREO or NO PAY We refer you to 2JVJ0 patients. Financial reference; NATIONAL BANK OF COtfTIERCE, Omaha. c -j