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"iJ -5T-v "- -. $! fi&ictata gailg gaglc: edfaesffatt pfomitHj, tpTiI4, 1894. H MR THE CAMPAIGN She Politicians Are Already Pro pared for the Year's Elections. BTolres the Elections of Owr Twenty United States Senators A Jfcw Con gress The State Elections Begin This Month. ICOFTniOHT, 18U4.1 The politicians of the country are pa. the saddle. This is no unmeaning' hrase this year, for 1804 promises to eclipse in interest even a presidential selection. In fact it promises to fore shadow accurately tho campaign of JS96. For this reason all the talent pf the various parties is already being brought to the front, prepared to Jump into the breach which partisan tetrife will engender, and primed with b, mass of campaign material growing" put of the silver, the tariff, and the Hawaiian controversies of the past rrear. Local issues will be merged in those sweated by the leaders of tho nation, and as over twenty senators are to be chosen by the legisla tures which are to be elected "this year, and an en tirely new house of r e p r esenta tives is to be voted for, a change in tho f.&-0 -"U".V com plexion of j thn ennnt.n' I he legislative branch of the country lies in the balance. In the following" Eummary no detailed mention is made of tho congressional elections, but these take place in all of the states on November 0. The senators whose terms expire March 4, 1695, are John T. Morgan, of Alabama; James H. Berry, of Arkansas; Edward O. Wolcott, of Colorado; Anthony Higgins, of Dela ware; Alfred H. Colquitt, of Georgia; George H. Shoup, of Idaho; Shelby M. Cullom, of Illinois: James F. Wilson, of Iowa; John Martin, of Kansas; Wil liam Lindsay, of Kentucky; Donelson Caftery.of Louis iana; William P. Frye, of Maine; George F. noar, of M a s s a chu fcetts; James Mc Millan, of Mich igan; James Mc- f fJJl r j ; v i-ftXK-J'rt.'- eiesippi; Thomas '!W S . tVjjj&lft tana; Charles F. StJ&olp?' Manderson. of Nebraska; William E. Chandler, of New Hampshire: John R. McPherson, of New Jersey; M. W. Itan Bom. of North Carolina; Joseph .N. Dolph, of Oregon; Nathan F. Dixon, of Jthode Island; Matthew C. Butler, of pouth Carolina; Richard F. Pettigrew, of South Dakota; Isham G. Harris, of Tennessee: Richard Colte, of Toxa3; 3Gppa Hunton, of Virginia; J. N. Cam den, of West Tirgina; Joseph M. Carey, of Wyoming. In addition to ,these, vacancies for the terms ending in 1899 arc to be filled by the legisla tures of Wyoming, Montana and Washington- Iowa has already elected Con gressman Greer to succeed Senator "Wilson. Virginia has eleoted Col. Mar tin to fill the place of Eppa Hunton. Kentucky has chosen Senator Lindsay to succeed himself. The legislature of Louisiana will also have the naming of the successor to Judge White. Sen ator Walthall will rcs-ume the senator- ship in 1895. So, on the whole, tho stato lecislative i t 1$ contests will JU4 41U.pa WO ISA most impor tance. The fight in Rhode Island will have its be ginning when the republican UCOate-1-" convention meets late this month. It will moreover bo the first election un der tho new "plurality" amendment to the state constitution, a change which will prevent the absurdities that jiavo cropped up year after year in that i.tato and in Connecticut under tho con stitutional provisions requiring a ma j :rity of votes to elect. Oregon will end its state campaign with the casting of the ballots on Juno 4. All state, county and pre cinct officers are to be voted for and the real bat tle will com mence with tho 'April conven tions. The pop ulists under the command of Messrs. Waldrop, Fitch will have a ??'rrS.4 '"ie b.V ..-'l '" " Kl (," Marksberry and full ticket in the field. At present its governor, Sylves ter Ponnoyer, its attorney general and its adjutant general are democrats, while the remaining officers arc repub lican. The legislature to be chosen will have the successor to Senator Joseph N. Dolph to elect. The populist nomination for govern or will probably go to Nathan Pierce, and it is not un likely that the party will sup port Gov. Pen noyer for Sena- torDolph's place. A Alabama will be thenextstato to vote, its elec tion takingplace August G. The populist and re publi c n n con- rentions have already been hold and May will find tho bitter contest for the democratic gubernatorial nomination at an end. Alabama elects a governor, secretary of state, auditor, treasurer, attorney general, superintendent of education, commissioner of agricul ture and a legislature which will SEXUAL decline may be arrested before decay: ftrenrUl mar be mtored; povrem -rhea Impoverished by youUi'g recUess orerdraf u ruaj be relavls orated by our borne treatment. CONFIDENCE aer has iu citadel la tbebrast of thceTrho hae weak, shrunken, undeveloped ordbeased organs 1 ha evil that men do through igno rance In boyhood and errors ot early unlxood leares wasting effects. RESTORED tovlgoronsTltality you might be RirccRSfnl In business, fervent In spirit- Our cnxatl e rm-th-odk arc unfaUIn?. Write for our booL, rEjl FECT 21XNUOOD," sunt free, sealed. ls5B5SBS5Ssrl EB1E MEDICAL CO,, SWFFAUO, N. Y. v&" ' r rTw"' -). iL St A&&& 8r n 1 Aw he3al)y was-rfck, i7ttsrzcbBr'C&stos. Yhea she was.a.Chlia;.shff crfedXorCtstuda. When sha became His, she clung ttrCsstarta. Sen she hail Children, she gavbthem at.reia choose the successor to Senator John T. Morgan. Arlcanbas has its state election on SenlemberS, and will vote for all state, judicial courts, township officers, one snee ana raiiroau commissioners, naif the state senate and the entire lower house. No senatorial election is on the tapis to clog legislation this year. Kansas promises the nation a four cornered fiifht with iitrs. Lease either in trie populist or republican ranks. If Gov. Llewellyn is nominated it is doubtful if she will support her one-time enthu siastic friend and her now arch enemy. The fusion dcino crats have agreed to join with the populists. The., stalwart democrats have decided to put a state ticket into the field and the republicans will name some such man as Ady, Humphreys. Fitaston or Case Bi odcrick. The f usion&ts may unite on Congressman Harris, a democrat, or on Gov. Llewellyn, Thomas J. Hud- :rTi .Tnn-r SimnQnn rxr "Will? si m "Rn.lrPT". As the successor to Senator Martin, v. ho now fills out the tcirm of the late Senator Plumb, is to be chosen by the legislature, ex-Senator Ingalls will undoubtedly take an active part in the campaign looking to an election as senator next winter. Nebraska elects a legislature which will have Senator Manderson's suc cessor to choose. In addition the state votes for governor, lieutenant gov ernor, treasurer, auditor, secretary of state, attorney general, commissioner of public landp and buildings, and superintendent of public instruction. South Dakota, elects all its state and county officers and a legislature to choose a s u c cessor to Sen ator Richard P. Pettigrew. North Dakota elects all state officers, a judge of the supreme court and all county officers. There will be no senatorial va cancy ues.t year. r.' Virginia has only its congressional elections, tho senatorial contest hav ing been settled this year by the elec- tion of Messrs. Ilunter and Ma.rtin to fill tho short and long terms respec-, tivclj. Maryland has only its congressional elections. New Jersey elects six senators and "ixty assemblymen who will have a voice in the elec tion of Senator McP h c r son's successor. West Virginia votes for a legis lature which will choose Senator j ''IbsSiSKK? Camden's succes- . sor. jr Ken tncky urn0- elects judges of its court of appeals and county officers. Its legislature has already named Sen ator William Lindsay, whose term ex pires in 1895, to succeed himself. Massachusetts elects its state officers and a legislature to choose a successor to Senator Hoar. As he has no oppo nents in the field the campaign prom- j i&es to be rather quiet. Onio votes onlv for secretary of stato, minor state officers, and for con gressmen. Its ilrst congress ional election this year will be that on May 1 in the third dis trict to choose a successor to the late Congress man Honk. -y.i ways votes twice in the fall. Its town elections take place in October and its state elections in November. All the state officers are to bo chosen. Wyoming; elects its state officers and state senators for four years. Its asheinbrymen and county officers hold office two year's. This year all these officeb will be filled and the legislature will elect a successor to Senator fZ& Joseph M. Caney and fill the vacancy in the short term which expires in 1S99, the gov ernor's appoin teo not having been recog nized. Tho legislative dead lock which made this condition possible may oc cur, as the candidates are as numerous as they were two years ago. Idaho has its state, district and county officers to elect and a legisla ture which will choose the successor of Senator Shoup. Senator Wolcott, of Colorado, will succeed himself in March. 1S03. His state, however, has a bitter contest on hand for 1S94. Gov. Waite. who was chosen by the fusion of the silver dem ocrats and the populists, expects to run again, and the republicans will make a warm effort to defeat him. Colorado elects all its state officers in November. Michigan has a successor to Sena tor McMillan to elect and a state ticket to take of fice January 1, 1S95. The reve lations of tha amendment re turn frauds will undoubtedly se cure Gov. Rich the republican rcnomi nation. It-is not unlikely that Don M. Dickin son will be his democratic opponent. Texas elects all its state, county and precinct officers this year and a legisla ture which will choose a successor to Senator Coke. North Carolina elects judges, solici tors and a iceislature which will name A n j r e- .! N ""venj nj 5sS? ii?i ... 4v.Sc Jo"'rI,, In the remaining- states only cosgrcs aional elections will be held- associate justice of the supreme court, and a legislative election which will choose the successor to Senator Berry. The political sentiment in the state has not yet crystallized into movement except to develop the certainty of an entire populist state ticket. Florida has its slate election Ooto- ber 4. In addition to state officers it will choose a justice of the supreme court and a legislature. No senatorial vacancy in its delegation will occur until 1897. The battle royal is, however, being1 fought out in Georgia, which docs not vote until Octo ber 3, but as a senator is to bo chosen in place of Senator Col quitt, the con i test is already j rather warm and , the conventions .will be held early. Georgia elcct3 all its state ofS- J cers and a legislature. New Hampshire is one of the J era states in which the fight for i senatorial and gubernatorial honors has already begun, and it will at- I tract national attention. Ex-Senator Ulair will enter the Cold for the seat now occupied by Senator William E. ChMaier ana Charles H. Burns is j close third for the same honor. Both Chandler and Blair are well known to the public. New Hampshire votes on Novem ber G, as do all the rest of the states that have elec tions. Missouri's fall elections will be of little impor tance. The dem ocratic conven tion will meet in Kansas City on May 15, and will nominate candi dates for judge "IX If nvw frEFwJ of the supreme court, for state super intendent of schools and state railroad commissioner. New York has its state election this year, and both parties are preparing for an aggressive ccitest. The stato 'tickets will be named shortly after the constitutional convention, probably early in July, as it is more than likely that Gov. Flower will secure a rcnom- ination, somo one else taking the place of Lieut. Gov. Sheehan. The anti-Hill faction is already organiz ing throughout tho state with a view to controlling the conven tion. Should they succeed, which ,is exceedingly problematical, Gov. 'Flower would probably be defeated for the nomination, and a warm friend of the ad iministra tion named. The re publicans are al iready looking for gubernatori ial timber, and a m o n a thnnn talked o f a r e ' Elihu Root, Cornelius Bliss. Mayor iSchieren of Brooklyn, Judge Gaynor and possibly ex-Vice President Levi P. Morton. It is understood that he has consented to run if he is needed to "cement" the party factions. Tennessee democrats expect to have things their own way. They have ar ranged for two conventions, one to bo held on April 18, to name candidates for the supreme bench, and the other for state officers to be held later under caU to be issued on April 17. Tennes see elects a governor and a legislature upon which will devolve the selection of a successor to Isham H. Harris. There is a strong populist organization in the state and it may make a bitter fight for the assembly. In Indiana the republicans hold their convention on April 25, and the candi dates for office in that party are said to be more numerous than in any campaign for the past twenty years. The offices to bo filled are those of secretary of state, auditor, treasurer, attor clSf ney general, judge, clerk of the su preme court, superintendent of pub lic instruction, state geologist and state statistician. No senatorial va cancy will exist and so the legislative fight is not of national interest. Illinois has a senatorial fight already 4n progress and in all likelihood the conventions, which meet in April and May, will announce the party candi dates for the scat now occupied by Senator Shelby M. Cullom. Ex-Congressman Cable, Gov. Altgcld, ex-Congressman William Morrison, Congress man William M. Springer, Congress men Black and Hunter have all been mentioned as possible democratic nom inees, while republican success will probably mean the reelection of Sen ator Cullom. Pennsylvania's republican conven tion will be held in May, when tho contest for tho g u b e rnatorial nomination will come to an end. P h i ladelphia's delegates have already an nounced them selves in favor of the nomination of Gen. Hast ings, and as ev ery other section of the state has a candi j date, it promises to be a rather warm I contest. The state elects one-half its i state senate, its entire lower house, a povarnor lieutenant-governor, secreta ry of internal affairs and an auditor general. The Roster trial will have an impor- J tant bearing on the state election in Wisconsin, and the echoes of the Ben nett law agitation will perhaps still be found reverberating when the cam paign fairly opens up in that state. Wisconsin votes for governor, secreta ry of state, state treasurer, state su perintendent, commissioner of insnr- Disappointed, t Widow Yes. you are very much like sjy dear dead husband. He (pleased) In what resnect? Widow You have aH his bad habite. j xiaxio. Distributed In Small Share. "Toodles says that talent for art is n inheritance from his parents." "Humph! There must have been a I bis family of. heirs." Chicago "C&cxd. 'J U&d, -v. m V U3lV5fc. M "& TWO FAMOUS HORSES. Messenger nd Daniel Lambert la the Hie tory of Aaierican Trotters. The American trotting horse is fa mous the world over. His development is one of our national triumohs. In the history of this development two of , the greatest n mes are Messenger and J Daniel Lambert. j Messenger was, so to speak, one of j the seven fathers of the American I trotter. He was a thoroughbred, that is to say.his ancestors were recorded in the English Stud Book for running horses and was imported to the United States in 1TSS. Though bred as a running horse, he was a natural trotter. As showing his remarkable sound ness and vigor, a man who saw him taken off tho ship used to relate that three other horses, who had made the voj-age with him, were ''&o reduced that they had to be helped and sup ported down the" gangplank: but when Messenger's turn came, he, with a loud neigh, rushed down, with a negro on each side holding him back, and dashed up the street at a stiff trot, carrying east-' the grooms along in spite of all their , j ' f iP"'mns - tasteful ar both efforts to bring him to a standstill." "ngements becomes vastly interest- Though not remarkably fast himself, he became the progenitor of some of the greatest trotters. Hiram Woodruff once said: "When Messenger charged down the gangplank the value of not less han I one hundred million dollars struck our SOU." Messenger died at Oyster Bay, L. I., in 1803, being twenty-eight years old. As Mr. H. C. Mervin says, he had "at tained such a height of equine reputa tion that he was buried with military honors, and a charge of musketry was fired over his grave." Daniel Lambert was a horse of later date, a Morgan, son of Ethan Allen, and great-grandson of Justin Morgan. His son was a granddaughter of Mes senger. Of him Mr. Merwin says: "Perhaps it would be no exaggera tion to say that the finest gentlemen's roadsters in this country have been of Lambert stock. Daniel Lambert him self was a horse of commanding- style and of magnificent carriage. "For many years he was kept in the vicinity of Boston, but late in life he was brought back to Middlebury. Vt, where he had been raised. On this oc casion all the inhabitants turned out with a brass band to welcome him home, and there was a procession through the village streets. 'The old horse,' relates an eye-witness of the scene, 'kept time to the music, and was the proudest creature that ever walked the earth.' " Youth's Companion. STARTED TOO SOON. A. Kansas Vltj Swell and HU Best Girl Come to Grief. She was a shapely chestnut mare from Kentucky, and the patrician blood of a long line of Blue Grass an cestors gurgled through her swelling veins. When she paused before the ladies' entrance of the Coates house the other afternoon she was hooked to a new fcugffy. that had just been turned out of the shop. In that buggy was a pink cheeked, youngish-looking man, with a yellow flower ia his buttonhole. He got out of the vehicle and fastened one end of the stout hitching' strap to an iron post. The other end of the trap engirdled the arching neck of the proud Kentucky mare. The pinic-cheeked man went into the hotel. There was a lonely iaterval of ten minutes and then the pink-cheeked man reappeared on the pavement. With him was a maiden in a tailor made gown, with a huge cluster of roses at her belt. The pink-cheeked man helped the pretty woman into the carriage. The Kentucky mare never as much as turned her head. "Is this love of a horse really tame and safe?" queried the dainty maid, as she settled in her seat. "As safe as you are charming'. Just watch her step off," replied the pink- cheeked man, as he jumped into the huggy and gathered up the lines. The maiden smiled and her escort touched the mare's flank with his whip. And then the mare gave a jump and the maiden a genuine scream. The man was thrown halfway over the dashboard. It took four men and ten minutes' time to bring order out of the chaos, but only five lonely seconds for the maiden to jump out of the buggy and the pink-cheeked man to intone a remark that is too strong1 for publica tion. If you ask MickieFinnegan, who wit nessed the performance, what caused all the trouble, he will say: "Hully Gee, der guy wid de boka pinned to his ulster forget ter untie der nag. an' him an' his 'mash'came bloomin' near flyin over der dashboard. See?" Kensaj City Times. The Old Man's Oatinjr. Robby Ma. did pa spend a good deal of time at the dentist's when he was in Chicago? Mother I didn't know that he was at the dentist's at all, Robby. Why. "I heard him tell Mr. Smith that it cost him over a hundred dollars to get his eye-teeth cut," replied Robby. Alex. E. Sweet, in Texas Siftings. Decree of Crime. Manager All our theaters suffer from petty larcenies. Why, last week, a fellow broke into the box office and took the entire receipts! Reporter I should call that grand larceny. Manager No; the receipts were too small. Hallo. Moderate. Miss Primlips When you eayyout prayers at night do you pray for all men? Miss Leftover No, indeed! Just one would be enough. Life. Master examiniag- pupils in geog raphy) "What is the came of this town?' Pupil "Birmingham. Mas ter "What is it noted for?" Pupil "Firearms." Master "What are fire arms?" Pupil "Poker, thovel and tones." Tit-Blta. A Juvenile Miarapoo. Lrttle Sister I heard Mrs. De Neat say that tar-soap was good for clean ing the hair. I vrish I had Mme. Little Brother Don't 'think we've got any; bnt I'll go to the street-pavers and get you some tar, and yon can put soap on afterward. Good News. Children Cry for ditcher's Castoria. FLORAL DECORATIONS. There Is aa Art in Arranging; Xlewen Properly and Katnrally. The preference for growing plants for decorative purposes is becoming so universal that we seldom notice tho subject of bouquets and bouquet-making1 given deserving1 prominence. While it is certainly a mo-t sensible idea to purchase beautiful specimen plants (which maybe enjoyed for many weeks or even years after the celebration for which they are intended) for decorat ing our parlors or dining tables on spe cLil occasions, or to present to friends, it is often desirable to select instead, a handsome bouquet tof tastefully-arranged blossoms. Where the purse will allow one tc order repeatedly, the exquisite bou quets on which the experienced florist is eager to display his rare skill and perfect taste, this' subject may seem 'of little importance, but there are many who delight in using for decora tive purposes or for floral offerings, bouquets from their own private green houses. In this case the subject of ap propriate selections and tasteful ar- mg. The art of arranging- flowers grace fully and naturally, is a rare accom plishment, and one that Is worth care ful study. Remember that graceful 'ness and naturalness should bo oui aim, and not artistic arrangement. Ii the word artistic is used to indicate ' that perfect degree of art in which nc i art is visible, but everything looks sc j simple and natural that it could hard ly be imagined other than what it' is, we could not emnlov a mnr snitnbl term. But the bouquet usually sup- j posed to be artistically arranged is in I almost every case decidedly stiff, and I unlike any collection of blossoms in art or nature. It is claimed that the Russian and German 'women far surpass the En glish in their many modes of weaving flowers into household decorations, and that flowers are too of ten regarded by us as mere accessories. In France and Germany the wreaths and bou quets are especially charming, and there is not a toilet without its appro priate flower parure no family fete is Germany without its graceful door wreaths, its garlanded picture frame: and its coronals of flowers, all arranged with the most perfect harmony in re gard to their surroundings. With us, on the yother hand, there often seems to be but slight connection between the flowers and their sur roundings, and it is certain that manj who are fond of flowers, and have studied their characteristics, oftei make the common mistake of choosing such as are either in form or color quite unsuited to the articles which they are intended to decorate; in arranging oui vases, decorating our tables or select intr our corsage bouquets we should always have in mind a regard for the general harmony. This is of first im portance in decorating with out flow ers, and after making a judicious choice of flowers that will harmonize with their immediate environments, we should next consider the best method of cutting and arranging them, and then how to keep them from fading prematurely. Ideas will suggest them selves as we work among the plants, and we soon find ourselves ambitious to -produce some especially attractive decoration tnat will illustrate our pel theories. Philadelphia Press. HE WAS A PHILOSOPHER. Aad tha Destruction af Bit New Wladan Didn't "Worry Him. "Talk about dead philosopher said the man at the bar. "There's a live one down near the Freneh market who puts history to sleep." "Go long!" "Sure thing. Why, say, he gives the sages eards and spades. That man had been saving up money patiently foi years to buy a new show window. One day he got the require amount to gether and he came upk 5wn and or dered a plate glass a half-inch thick, and finally it was in position. The man would stand inside and look out, then he would stand outside and look in. You never saw such a perfect pic ture of contentment" "Don't see any philosophy in that," "Well, hold on. One day the man'i big Newfoundland dog lay asleep in the store. Along came a dime museum wagon with two bears in a cage and a keeper sitting beside them trying tc look scared, but really looking foolish, the bears were so small and harmless. There was a gong on the wagon, and it created a rush to the street. The dog looked up, his eye caught the bears, and he made a dash right straight through that plate-glass window. There was a crash, then the crowd gathered, and men, women and children talked excitedly, for the window and its cost andts history were well known. The calmest person in the crowd was the man himself- He stood there a minute looking at the irregular hole. Then he smiled. " 'No great loss without some small gain," he said. 'I've got the measure of that dog, anyhow. "And he walked in and spat on the stove-hearth." St. Louis Post-Dia- natch. Physical lroof. Paterfamilias What on earth did that young man mean by paying you such an unconscionable Ionjr call last night? Mary Oh, papa, it was purely an ac cident, you see! The clock stopped at half-past twelve. Puck. Still Room for ImproTrmul American Youth Well, Parkin a. t you think I will look presentable nt the recept'on this evening? Imported Valet Everything- hfe hall right now. sir, hexcept your ghastly Hamerican haccent- Good News. Carrie "George is evidently vary much in love with me. He tells me there is hardly a moment in tht iay that I am not in his mind. Aunt Mary "Don't yon believea word of it, Carrie- There's nothing in it." Boa ion Transcript. lilted the Decii?tl3B- She I'll nercrmarry a man whose fortune hasn't at least five ciphers in it. ne (excitingly) Oh, darling, mine's all ciphers. Truth. Quite MarprUiae- Tte Wifc Charles acted so queerlj last night. Her Mother Drnnk, I suppoe. The 'Wife Oh nol Perfectly sober. -TrstlL M? f Y L s ik SM' ifcjKrN rrff- the greatest economy in every direction saves the most money, time, clothes and health. If your grocer sends you an imitation, be honest send it back, ass james pyle, n y. ALL HALLOWS ACADEMY. If i PEnHF l ll JBI H 1 E9U SaaBBBBBBmeXDaBLLH SlaBBBiBiBiaBaar FOE 1893-94 WICHITA, KANSAS. Thfs Academy, established in 1SS7. possesses orery advantage that parents can desire far the general improvement of their children. 'I ho situ is attractive, and, aa experience has proved, most atlvantas-ous for the protaetlea of kox1 health. 1 ho grounds are neat and spacious, atfonlin: means for the eojoymeal oC inTicoratinc exercise. '1 lie Sisters of Charity of the B. V. M., bcinj; especially devoted to tho iastructioa of yeattk pare no pains to win the heart to virtue, and thoy impart to their pupils a soldi aad reaaea scholarship. With a isilnnt and immediate saperliitendance, they provide for the want aad comforts ot the children intrusted to their care. Studies w ill be resumed the arst Monday iu September. For further particulars apply to the SISTER SUPERIOR, All Hallows Academy. Wichita, huniaa. THE DAYS OF GOLD. CalUorala Has Freialsa at a Revival af thf Mooatala Jalnlng Camp of '49. The suggestion made by the Argo naut several months ago that the bat talions of the unemployed who wera clamoring for charity in this city might make a living in the abandoned dig gings has produced quite a literature. The newspapers of tha regions where the pioneers dug and washed have dis cussed the matter and information has accumulated. The Argonaut made on ly one mistake and that was in suppos that tho sort of men who haunt soup houses and flock to cities "looking for work" have the stuff in them to be min ers. In the dollar-a-day army out at the park there are doubtless many hon est, harmless creatures, but none with ' the vim necessary to try to be independ ent of an employer. It remains true, however, that any man without a fam ily and what right have men to bring Into the world families-if they cannot feed them? can, if he possesses good muscle, a willing heart, and a little in telligence, wrestle out a livelihood in the placer sections. Doubtless much mineral land has been covered by agricultural patents, yet the holders of these patents are often willing enough to sell to the miner the privi lege of working. The Chinese buy this privilege frequently. The Tele graph, of Folsom, relates how the en terprising Mongol has caused a rancher on the American river, near Salmon Falls, El Dorado county, to think meanly of the Caucasian brain. The river bed at his place had never been mined. Some Chinese offered him on hundred dollars to let them try theii luck on it. He stood out for one hun dred and fifty dollars, half to be paid ia advance and the remainder at the end of the year. He exulted when the coolies, after long haggling, accepted his exorbitant terms. As soon as the lease was signed the Chinese went at Wot TiiehlnoaU. Mean Man Say I run for a doctor! A neighbor of mine had win of your sausage last night, and he is very sick. Butcher Mein cracious! It cannot be he has trichinosis? Mean Man N-o; I think it's more likely hydrophobia. N. Y. Weekly. Very Nasty of Her. Gwendolen You told me he dreamed of me all night. How pale he looked, poor fellow! Ethel Yes. I met him on the st?txt I He said he was jufTering from the ef I fects of a nightmare. Truth. pe REMINGTON Typewriter '''SyjQy' unquestioned pre-eminence as the Standard Writing-machine. Simple, Practical, Durable, Easy to Leam and Operate. "' ' J ,4trrrf t IA WrW Wmir, Onr dUflmy U tr MUkiUiUm. aw, SEND FOe CATALOGUE. WYCKOFF, SEAMANS & BENEDICT, 327 BROADWAY. NEW YORK. 125 Wret Kinlh SU Kaasas Citr Wendell McLaughlin, Local Dealer, Wichita. Don't be 'the Axe! -Just keep in mind that the grocer .of tne peddler has " an axe to grind A when -he tells you that he has some y , thlnsf " as good as " or r' the same as " Pearline. There can be but one reason more; profit to him by your use of tne substitutes. But how is it with you ? What reason can you have for wandnsf to take the risk ? Certainly not econ omy Pearline leads to HOTEL CAREY. $2 TO $3 PERDA.Y JNO. B. CAUEY Prop. C. W. QJIEY, Jfer B. L. Eatov. Proprietor. .1 RortnA. A sit. Manager HOTEL METKOPOLE Kates $2.00 Per Day Piuwensi-r Elevator, Slrm li-mi, JRectrle LlRht, UitUiH. Bat sample roots la city WICHITA, KANSAS. The Earn F la CaJOaf Uua Don't currba a Caltforala ticket be fore 70a leura what the Saot Fears do- j?K' . Uali at J.Vs JScrtb Main str-et or aa BTeours station. dX tf makes no pretensions that are not supported by its record; advances no claims that the actual performance of each and every machine manufact ured vill not justify; varies not from one uniform standard of excellence in construction ; and therefore maintains, by means of timely and thorough. ly tested improvements, its sSsBBHaBaraStt JNauiRiil BFeinBfBflRnBssssssssssV HataflBBBBiBssssssssW "" , I -