The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 31, 1893, Image 7

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    99
[erraan
lyrup
Ur Albert Hartley of Hudson,
r was taken with Pneumonia.
,'h’rotber had just died from it.
In he found his doctor could not
fh£!,e,o<>ko.*botti.ofG«.
l cvrup and came out sound and
“ S. B. Gardiner, Cleric
nru^eist J. E. Barr, Aurora,
s prevented a bad attack of
umoniaby taking German Syrup
time He was in the business
knew the danger. He used the
it remedy—Boschee’s German
for lung diseases. <D
iinosipsioDsa
ii SLATE & R00FIN6 CO.* ™av£2
i*G Slate Roofing, Slate Blackboard., Eta
u
Second Hand, SO Hone.
Will be sold at a great Bar
, gain. Write
H. C. AKIN.
Ml So. 12th St., Omaha, Neb.
DR.
McCREW
TMR
SPECIALIST,
s. CUBES ALL
c PRIVATE DISEASES
f Weakntu and of
• MEN ONLY.
Ht hat no cqutk
1ft years experience,
to 7 yean in Omaha.
■ Nerroupness. Low Splr
W its or loss of Vlvor or
" Ambition, Varicocele.
•natural discharges anti evil enects or early
disease of iho Hood, Kidneys and Bladder,
cutest known remedies. Instant relief. Pe>
tut cures. Write for book. The doctor Is
M.it tiv the people in the strongest terms,
auil Ka’rnam streets, Omaha, Nebraska.
A A .75 Fully War
.7. j i./ru_
ranted for 5Years
py Send- for catalog of the
KIMBALL ORGANS
tVApents Wanted.
A. HOSPE, Jr., °nk£a*
UPTURE
PERMANENTLY
CURED PAY
Ho PAY UNTIL CURED
WE REFER YOU TO 4,000 PATIENTS.
NO OPERATION.
NO DETENTION
h KUIY1 DUDINboB,
r-iN.it. Bank of I'ommtrct, ln_,k,
s.i Carman Savinas Bank. f Omaha.
ito or mil for Circular.
THE 0. E. MILLER CO.,
-50* X. Y. I.lft Bids, OMAHA, MSB.
EDUCATIONAL.
WNELL HALL"™ “go
irroat school Is now In Its twentieth year under
ame Hector and Lady Principal. Fall term
n Sept. 20. ISPS. For catalogue and particulars,
Rublrt eou ehty, S.T.D., Hector,Omaha,Neb
LLEGE SACRED th1art,
Mo. Conducted by Jesuit Fathers, Fre
f lsMlcjil and -tclentifl- studies. Lodging,
union, washing aud mending of linen. M71I
' - Catalogue sent on application.
ORTHAND AND TYPK-WRXTING.
It and Best Business College In the West. No
iso. Thousands of graduates and old students
fit* paying gosUlons. Write for catalogue.^
F. F. MOOSE, Osaka, Neb,
■ilranred independent normal -^
' Itertsle: Expert, need Instructors; Fifteen Ws
■"». men la months in the year; terms begin
I Jailer, t and Junes; tuition. $1 iter week;
„ ,ent. apparatus and equipment.
T nl™1.0 L n«i]n every 21 m'nutee. For
rST“ou»ddra.. J. F. Savior. President, or
Vine Free ,y-nt. formal. Neh.
l'ree Hide to Denver, Colo.
eUtI R™i’J?eanJusi u'hat we “>y- The
•MTiuvn u. nESS CoEEECE Old Collegia
f, and for „Vh ' owlnK to the prevalent hard
a from , feasons, give free transpor
>’ a Busine. to atudents who come
Tins i« th.^oh °J shprthand course of stu
tila and nn.lir'If and bTst lius>'iess College
fo«!w hospices of the Uniters,
kta Oeomctrv di U?n the above courses,
''retanehwLVGerm»n end theSci
aive discarded olfVAdentS w5° want them
Iron, the stda?t. A‘0Ty' and teach Actua>
iitll partictilnrs call on or address,
titft Ittd Ar^ V. - hCSINESS COLLEGE,
k M Arapahoe Sts. Denver cilo.
•Clara’s Academy.
''““oniiM™ *1 UO,i,NIOAN SI8TBH&
'»rr'«><»i« In thin Uwtltu.
? Vacation »®tttag° which c»n contribute to
?1’»nuS'f,™<T*Jle<1 " » health mart.
? IN. Potf„„h Dul*nqun, 1».. fan miles from
Wien " Pnrt'caUrsnddiMs
SIRBss- «■ Clara'. Ceiwrnt, i
—r.wlna»°. Grant Goupty. Win.
SSlpNWffiiSiSSSffS
Hf WEATHER
iV -ytem U re
I fooT „ua- Ur‘ve
' ol the ^uptlon
“OW
'ckapoo
lr»dian
.®agwa,,
FARM AND HOUSEHOLD.
THU PREVENTION OP DECAY
IN THE APPLE.
Car* Watt Begin With tlw Blottom—
Tha Object or Root.—In thn Spring—
Mnedt of Potatoes — Poultry Picking,
and Hontchold Help*.
Decay of tha Apple.
No one likes to eat decayed apples,
but in the present state of sin In
man and in nature apples are sure
to rot, and it has seemed as if there
was no way to save them from speedy
destruction, says a Boston exchange.
The ordinary way of treating fruit, if
its decay is to be prevented, is to
pick it carefully, without bruises,
and to place the barrels in a dry,
cool room, where the natural ten
dencies to decay may be resisted
as long as possible. This sub
ject has been studied scien
tifically by a professor m Rutger’s
Colleger Dr. Byron D. Halstead, and
his paper in the Popular Science
Monthly is the first one we have seen
in which light is 'thrown upon the
treatment of apples. Ordinarily no
attention is paid to them until they
are grown, but this writer takes us
back to the time of the apple blos
soms, and ehows that if good fruit is
to be secured in a healthy condition
it must be protected from the begin
ning. The small specks that dot the
surface of an apple that is just
springing from > blossom are one of
the low forms of plant life belonging
to the molds callod spores. These
spores are produced in great abun
dance, and being carried by the air,
alight upon the fruit, and these ger
minate into specks which feed upon
the substance obtained from the skin
of the apple. Whenever these specks
are observed it is certain the apple
will decay.
Another defect in apples is known
to fruit dealers as the “scah.” This
is due to a mold which is as different
in its real structure from the specks
as the two are unlike in general ap
pearance. It is as much a distinct
kind of plant as the apple tree upon
Which it thrives. The apples are
first attacked by the scab fungus,
while the tree is in blossom or short
ly after, and this fact is what makes
it necessary that the fruit should
be treated as soon as the apple tree
is in blossom. The germs which
gather in the form of a scab are the
germs of bacteria, and as soon as the
skin of the apple becomes broken in
any place, the coarser decay germs
enter, and quickly overrun it with a
motley vegetation of various
molds. All these products rot,
and the question of saving the
apples is transferred to the matter of
doing something for the fruit while
it is yet untouched by bacteria that
are floating in the air. What Dr.
Halstead suggested is that this de
cay of the fruit shall be anticipated.
Nature tries to- protect the apple in
all the processes of its growth, but
the bacteria are sure to appear wher- J
ever they can find their way through
the tough skin. The only way in
which the apple can be saved is by
protecting their skins by the use of
fungicides in the orchard while the
fruit is growing,, then by picking
the fruit carefully and by placing it
in a cold, dry room, where it is free
from fungus germs, and where it
will keep indefinitely until chemical
change ruins it as an article of
food.
There is no absolute protection for
the ripened fruit, or for the keeping
off the specks and blotches where
’hflofnt'in. lrwlnro pparltf nrAV tirmn
the fruit at its first opportunity.
Each of these spores feeds upon the
ruptured pimples in the skin of
the apple, and the only way to keep
the harvested fruit effectively is to
spray it with fungicide, and even
this will not do it excepting under
the most favorable circumstances.
The only sure way to keep fruit is to
cook it until the germs within it
have been killed, and then to can ft
to prevent the entrance of those
without. If the fungicides are used
freely in the orchard, while the fruit
is growing, the result will be fairer
fruit and the prevention of it from
decay to a large extent. Use this
prevention, pick the apples so as to
avoid bruises, place them in a dry
storage room, and you will have fruit
that will last as long as the chem
ical substance will allow. This is in
substance the only treatment that
will prevent the apple from decay.
, Feeding Dairy Com.
It now seems to be a generally ac
cepted fact that the per cent of but
ter fat in milk is always a matter of
breeding and of individual peculiar
ities, says a writer, and that it can
not be controlled in any considerable
degree bj the feeding or treatment
of the cow.
Professor Farrington,of the Illinois
station, has made some experiments
recently to test this point, and the
results are interesting. He finds
that the butter fat was the most
changeable constituent of the milk.
The per cents of solids not fat was
qjiite uniform. Both were higher in
the last part of the period of lacta
tion than in the first, when the cows
were fresh and the maximum quan
tity of milk was produced. This was
especially true of the fat. As the
activity of the milk glands gradually
decline until the llow of milk ceases,
the formation of the fat seems to hold
out better than the other constitu.
ents of mil*.
A gradual increase of the grain
feed from twelve to twenty-four
pounds per day per head, and the
change from stable to pasture feed
each increased the yield of milk, but
‘had very little effect on its quality.
In some respects the results obtained
-by Professor Farrington are contrary
- to the generally accepted belief in
ragftrd to tho production of butter
fat, nnd will serve to reopen a cues
tlon which has never been definitely
settled.—Journal of Agriculture. _
Xtequlraiaiata of Potato* n.
The man who plants a field with
potatoes has already in labor and
seed involved himself in considerable
expense. Ho has to this extent, at
| least, placed himself under obliga
tions to give the crop tbe best cafe
and promptly. With the potato crop
promptness is more important
than it is with any other.
A single day's neglect may involve
the loss of several dollars per acre.
We understand now that both the
size and quality of the potato depends
on the foliage. It is through tho
leaves that the crop gets the carbon
which in the juices of the potato
turns it to starch. Beetles and their
larva may be killed to-morrow or
next week, but after the foliage has
been half eaten, the crop cannot
amount to much. Some loss is in
evitable where entire reliance is bad
on poisoning the larva. They must
eat some of the leaf to get sufficient
poison to kill them.—American
Cultivator.
Poultry ricking*.
Fresh eggs are heavier than old
ones.
Buttermilk may be fed to hens
with profit.
Sorghum seed is liked by poultry
and is good for it
Disease results from crowding
fowls in large flocks. . --
Millet seed is a good grain feed
for young chickens.
Crude petroleum will destroy scaly
leg. It is a good liniment for sores
on fowls.
Chopped steamed hay, mixed with
bran, is relished by hens and is a
good egg producer.
Ducks will relish and do well on
corn meal and wheat bran made into
mnsh with sweet milk.
Fowls should he marketed in decent
condition. Many people will not buy
fowls from filthy coops.
When ducks are fed with chickens
and turkeys they will not get their
share of food. They are too clumsy.
When hens are confined they should
not have more than an ounce each of
chopped meat two or three times a
day.
A red comb and an active, restless
disposition is said to be an indica
tion that the fowl is in perfect
health.
Bees are a benefit to fruit trees.
In extracting the nectar of flowers
they collect the pollen and carry to
other plants and fertilize them.
Useless roosters are like hens that
lay no eggs. They eat but pay noth
ing for what they eat Keep no
more roosters than are necessary.
If poultry are given the run of the
orchard they will destroy a great
many insects that will injure the
trees, and the fowls enrich the land.
A poultry writer says that if you
suspect rats near where you have
young chicks, keep a liberal supply
of whole corn near by. A well-fed
rat is not so apt to bother the chicks.
The Poultry Yard says that there
is just as much difference between
eggs of fowls allowed to roam and
forage .for themselves, and those
which are fed regularly on good, nu
tritious food, as there is between a
leg of Southdown mutton and that of
a common, half-starved sheep.
Household
Iron closet hooks that are annually
given a coat of enamel paint will
never injure damp clothing with rust
When lemons are plentiful and
cheap save the peels and make your
own supply of extract and candied
peel.
ii wiuuuw irauies wijjcu uu
with a clean, dry cloth when dusting
a room their appearance will be
greatly improved.
A towel rack, made with several
arms fastened to a half-circular cen
tre, which in turn fastens to the
wall, is a convenient place for drying
dish towels.
To relieve pain from bruises and
prevent discoloration and subsequent
stiffness, nothing is more efficacious/
than fomentations of water as hot as
can be borne.
Fancy china toast racks are cer
tainly less serviceable than silver
ones, but they are quaint and dainty
additions to the breakfast table, and
are fast gaining in iavor.
Flatirons should be kept as far re
moved from the steam of cooking as
possible, as this is what causes them
to rust. When purchasing new ones
be sure and get those with movable
handles.
The stains and discolorations &ade
in marble basins from the dripping
of the faucets can be removed with
pulverized chalk. Dip an old nail or
tooth brush in water, then in the
chalk, and an instant’s rubbing will
do the work.
Strong carbolic acid is sure death
to bed bugs. It is also one of. the
very best disinfectants. A bottle
should be kept on hand out of the
reach of the children, and a few
drops occasionally put down the sink
drain and in slop jars.
Grass stains on white goods can
usually be removed in the following
way: Wet the fabric, rub in some
soft soap and as much baking soda
aswill adhere; let stand half an hour;
wash out in the usual manner and
the stain wi 11 generally be gone.
A convenient article for the sick
room is a long, low shelf, supported
at either end by broad stanchions.
It spans the invalid’s lap without
touching her, and enables her to eat,
when propped up in bed. with the
same convenience as though she were
not deprived of dining room com
forts.
■: x':, . .-r/-.
,1 ' f. ' '.:N • r .
How Many Btam In thoTlag.
It It remarked as sing tier, and possi
bly an indication of lack of patriotism,
that the average American, always ex
cepting school children, cannot tell off
hand how many stars there now are in
the country's flag. If any reader of
this desires to try the question on ten
of his friends he will probably And that
only three or four can give the correct
number even after a minute of hard
thought The ordinary reply will range
from forty to forty-two stars instead of
the correct forty-four. The admission
within four years of North Dakota,
South Dakota. Montana, Washington,
Idaho and Wyoming has brought the
list up to the last mentioned number.
The shape of the union has been
changed from a square to a rectangle,
and the stars are arranged in six
straight lines, the upper and lower ones
containing eight stars and the remain
ing four having seven stars.
A Cunning Crag.
A scientific journal tells this story of
A frog's cunning: A brood of chickens
was fed with moistened meal in sauc
ers, and when the dough soured a lit
tle of it attracted largo numbers of
flies. An observant toad had'evidently
noticed this, and every day toward eve
ning he would make his appearance in
the yard, hop to a saucer, climb in and
roll over ana over until he was covered
with meal, having done whiclrhe await
ed developements. The flies, enticed
by the smell, soon swarmed around the
scheming batraehian and whenever one
passed within two Inches or so of his
nose his tongue darted out and the fly
disappeared. The plan worked so well
thqt the toad made a regular business
of it
Tte Autocrat's Jest.
Edward Everett Hale tolls this: "A
few years ago, in a fit of economy, our
famous Massachusetts historical society
screwed up its library and other offices
by some fifteen feet, built in the space
underneath, and rented it to the city of
Boston! This was very well for the
treasurer, but for those of us who had
passed sixty years, and had to climb up
some twenty more iron stairs whenever
uuluu w iwiv aw ant uiu jiaiupuiov
in the library, it was not quite ro much
a benefaction. When Holmes went for
the first time to see the new quarters
of the society, he left his card with the
words. “O, W. Holmes, High-story
call society.’”
I Care Dripcpala end Constipation.
Dr. Pboop’s Heitorntlve Norve I’ll Is sent freewltlk
Medical Book to prove merit, for Do •temp. Drug
gists, 26c. Du. Buoor, Bos W., Bmelne, Wle
Choked by a Blacksunlto.
• George Fraleigh, while working at
haying for William Odell in lirookfield,
Conn., one morning recently, lifted a
fork full of hay to place it on the load,
when he fell to the ground with the
bay on top of him. When picked up
Fraleigh had hold of a blacksnake
which was coiled about his neck. The
serpent did not bite him, but it left a
black mark. Fraleigh was disabled
from work for the day. The next
morning, and every morning since, at
the same hour that the snake wound
itself around the man's neck, he has
been taken with choking spasms and
fits of strangulation, and is growing
weaker every day. The case is being
watched by local physicians, whose
efforts to allay his sufferings have thus
far proved futile.
■lOO Reward SIOO.
The renders of this paper will be pleased to
learn that there is at least one dreaded disease
that science has been able to cure In all Its
stages, and that Is Catarrh. Hull’s Catarrh
Cure Is the only positive cure known to the
medical fraternity. Catarrh being a con
stitutional disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken In
ternally, acting directly upon the blood and
mucous surfaces of the system, thereby de
stroying the foundation of the disease, and
giving the patient strength by building up the
constitution and assisting nature In doing Its
work. The proprietors have so much faith
In Its curative powera, that they offer One
Hundred Dollars for any eaae that It falls to
cure. Bend for list of testimonials.
Address. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo* 0.
t3f~8old by Druggists, 75c.
Kdsm Cheese.
One of the most delightful of the
solid cheeses, and one which has grown
in favor because of its merits within
the nast t wen tv vpnni. in t.he email.
round Dutch, known as the Edam
cheese. It is called alter a small flour*
ishing town of that name near Amster
dam, in Holland. In size and shape
these cheeso resemble cannon balls,
and when dry they are nearly as hard.
They have perhaps been made more
widely known by the story that during
the siege of a Holland city the sup
ply of cannon bails gave out and Edam
cheeses were used as a substitute.
Scribner's Magazine for September
contains sixteen titles in prose and
verse, seven of them illustrated. The
artists represented include Alfred Par
sons, A. E. Sterner, W. L. Taylor, 0.
H. Bacher, J U. Twachtman and C. S.
Kinehart. With such notable artists
the number is remarkably rich and at
tractive in pictures. Four of the arti
cles, widely varied in character, deal,
from different points of view, with lit
erary personages whose books have
become classics. The three hundredth
anniversary of the birth of Izaak Wal
ton is noticed by an entertaining arti
cle on his life in London and at Dove
dale, with illustrations from recent
sketches by Alfred Parsons, who is so
skilful in depicting English landscapes.
The author, Alexnder Cargill, has
collected a great deal of interesting in
formation about Walton which is not
easily accessible.
A hungry man never calls for cake. What
he wants is bread.
ri‘ \
FIT#-All fits stopped free br ML IUlt*S MliT
nBTK ■K8TOBJCR. No til after Artt day’» wee. Mar*
▼eloua cures. Treatise aad 92 00 trial bottle free to Hit
oaeee. Bead to Dr. KMoe.fl* Arc* St.. Philadelphia. fa.
The man who does bad work robs himself
whifc he is doing it.
"Hanson's Magic Corn Naive."
warranted tj curr, or money refunded. Aik your
druggiit turlt. Price 2ft cento.
Two important articles on “The Fi
nancial Situation” will appear in the
August number of the North American
Keview. The first is by the Comptroll
er of the Currency, Hon. James 11. Eck
els, who is to write on “The Present
Crsis,” and the second, by Governor
Pennoyer, of Oregon, will be entitled
“After the Four Hundred Years—
What?”
The Assistant Secretary of the Navy,
Hon. William McAdoo, has written an
artiele on “The Lesson of the ‘Victoria’
Tlisaster" for the August number of
the North American Heview.
At the root of tho Palisades.
Perhaps the quaintest end queerest
little settlements within a hundred
miles of New York are those built at
the foot of the Palisaides. The fisher
men who live there appear to be os far
from the madding crowd as though
they were alone on the prairie. The
tall cliffs and jagged rooks about them
cut them off from tho rest of the world
and they have few visitors. There is
not a horse or wagon among them and
no road to drive on. Springs of good
water are found within a rod or two of
the salt Hudson, but beer and groceries
are a long way off, unless one takes a
boat and crosses the river to the Me
tropolis that swirls and roars on the
other bank.
Peculiarities of Speech,
It is a peculiar fact that persona born
deaf are usually mute, not from any
congenital defect in the organs of
speech, but from the faat that, never
having heard others speak, they can
not imitate articulate utterance. It is
probably true, too, that the source of
some current errors among those who
are not esteemed deaf lien in a defect
of hearing. Many persons who habit
ually tack on the "r” sound to words
ending in “w" say that they are un
able to distinguish between “law” and
"lor.” _ r
A good way to get help is to be a helper.
Scientist* May Differ
A* to tha causes at rehunmtlsm. bat there I*
no difference of opinion among thorn as to
the dnnger which attends It, the symptoms
by which It manifests Itself,and the difficulty
of dislodging It in Its chronic mtugo. HeterUI
mineral ami vegetable poisons are prwscrlb
ed for It, but none of those hat boon .shown
by experience to possess the name efficacy
an Hosteller's Htotnnch Bitter*, THU benign
apeclflc depuratea the blood by promoting,
vtgorou* action of the kidney*, which strain '
from the blood a* It pu**e* through them tbo
rhoumutlc vlru* when It exists In the system.
Physicians of eminence testify to the vain*
of the Bitters In rheumatism, and the pro
fessional opinions regarding it arc home uni
and corroborated by ample popular evi
dence. The Hitters remedy chills and fever.,
liver complaint, dyspepsia and ciuistlpattotb ,
:'-'v
■a
Barnacles an rish.
Speaking of barnacles it Is said that
besides fastening themselves to Shipp
and piling, they have been Unown te
fasten themselves to a species of fish
found In these waters and whioh art!
known as bull heads. Specimens of
this fish have been found completely
encrusted by this little animal, tout*
limes to such an extent as to cauae
death. “Sticking like a barnaelo’V
would seem to be an appropriate phrase.
Beeciiam's Pi MX cure sick headache, dis
ordered liver, and act like magio on ths vi
tal organs. For sale by all druggists.
I.ittle duties well performed will make
great ones easy to accomplish.
For Summer Cookery
Royal Baking Powder will be found the
greatest of helps. With least labor and
trouble it makes bread, biscuit and cake
of finest flavor, light, sweet, appetizing
and assuredly digestible and wholesome.
► ,/.$
:r$!
tg
.■m.
•:W
M
HU Host's Cl|iri.
The prince of Wales not long afro
was one of a large house party, his
host being a very woll-known peer.
After dinner, the royal guest, .the host,
and the other male visitors repaired to
the billiard room. On a table at the
side were two or three boxes of cigars,
and the prince was helping himself to
one, when an ambitious millionaire ap>
proached him, and talcing from his
pocket a cigar case, held it out to the
prince, saying: “I think, sir, you will
find these better.” “Mr.-,” re
plied the prince, “if a man's dinner is
good enough for me, his cigars are good
enough for me.” The millionaire was
unexpectedly called nway to town next
morning on business.
• THE MODERN BEAUTY
Thrives on good food and sunshine,
with plenty of exerciso in the open air.
Her form glows with health and her
face blooms with its beauty. If her
system needs the cleansing action of a
laxative remedy, she uses the gentle
and pleasant liquid laxative Syrup of
Figs. _
A fool ran ask questions, but only the
wise can answer them.
A Bln Thine.
"It Is the biggest thing I have ever struck." Whet?
Why the holiness advertised In another column by
B. F. Johnson A Co., of Richmond, Vo. If you are
open to au engagement write them. They can show
you a good thing.
Folks who are thankful don’t have much
trouble about being cheerful.
Female Weakness Positively Oared.
To rat KmTOB:—Please Inform yourrendersthat
1 have a positive remedy for the thousand end one
Ills which arise from deranged female organs. Not
a prescription to ho Blled, hut I will tend two bottlej
of my remedy Free of nil cost, for the medicine,
reedy for use. to sny lady If they will tend their ex
press and P.0, address. 1 bold corcospoadene strtetly
confidential and forward my replies aad remedy la
plain wrapper, Dr. J, Marchlsl, Utica, N. Y.
People who give in earnest soon find out
that It is a blessed thing to do.
liegeman’s Camphor lee with Glycerine,
Cures Chapped Heads and Face, Tender or Sore Feet,
Chilblains, Piles, Ac. C. a, Clark Co., New Raven, CU
It is easier to be brave than it is to be pa
tient.
aiwuuuu in iniicu iu a rretJ ntUO IU
Denver,” appearing elsewhere in this paper.
Read and take advantage of the liberal
offer that is made.
The heart, not the head, is the real mas
ter of the man.
If the Hahy l« Catling Teeth*
Be sore end use that old and well-tried remedy, Mae.
Winslow's So online Rracr for Children Teething.
Growlers are never wanted anywhere.
Slxtv-flve Bushels Per Acre.
This remarkable yield was reported
to the John A. Salzer heed company,
LaCrosse, Wis., by Frank Floss of
Iowa, on a field of Salzer'a World's
Fair Winter Wheat. Speaking of
wheats, this new variety takes the
cake. Several farmers tvho tried it
during 18*3 believe they can raise 100
bushels per acre. His northern grown
wheat sorts, as also his grass mixtures,
can be sown with success as late as
Nov. 10. Salzer will send free a pack
ace of World's Fair Winter Wheat and
his fall catalogue if you will cut this
out and send use to John A. Salzer
Seed company, La Crosse, Wis.
Polishing a rascal's head never makes his
heart any whiter.
The Calf Coast of Tessa
Has the best and cheapest land in the Uni
ted States and more even climate than Cal
ifornia. Rain enough to raise four crops a
year. Plenty timber and prairie. Lumber
] 10 to (7 per thousand. For further informa
j tion, write to Gulf Coast Land and Improve*
; ment Co., 1334 Farnam, 8t., Omaha, Keb.
H
I
Tie Best
Waterproof
Coat
In tho
WORLD!
SLICKER
Tlie FISH BRAND SUCKER to mirutel «Utr.
proof, end will keep you dry la the harden norm. The
new POMMEL RLU KCli to • perfect riding cOeL and
carvers the entire eaddle. Eaware of ImltaUuaa. Don't
buy e coat If the “
ted Catalonia tn-e.
Fleh Brand" la not on It. ninttre
TOWER, Bealoa, Meee,
INSUM la Ike hmm ead lermaa* lanareaee
' of Uneola. Capital ead »«rptna a m trn.
<*e. l tee loanee paid tTlitoato senate atacelSt
i fluaptM’* Eft Water*
*-WORLD'S-»
BotanUan Exposition
s
'"'ON. K
E!£!£!iL SOUVENIR—1893
In beantifnl itnd bright color*. r
and tho Designs hundhomolf
richfil on *ilk, taken from Oil
Paint I rugs end the oilubriht,
•d, world-renowned modelf
now on exhibition at the
World's Pair. On the top
)> the fatnoae portrait, nflct
Moro, of Christopher
Columbus, in the neater la
an exact reproduction of tbs ^
Santa Marla in fnll will,
eh owing tho brave orew the!
Heeirted In dfecovoring AMERb
CA, on tho bottom in a detdctit
allowing two Globes—tho Old
And tho new worlds—on oneeldA
la Christopher Columtnnt, non
rounded bv hia crew, represent
ing tho first landing on ottft
Unlike tie Butcb Process
■mwiiw.uiIm uu UIUUWIUI IlliUlll’
ut^iwum tin * Dleto bird’s ejr« view of tl» -
IfURLD 8 FAIn* Ie prononneed on® of the hnnel,
lomuatnna most attractive numientoss yot IwtueJ
Is n Souvenir of the grant Kxponition. Can he
aso<l as a Madge, book-Mark, or m an ornament
tor t he parlor. \
Adopted by Societies, Clubs, Churchen, anti th4
R&&in.fK2££ifJ< 1Sr> each, or t wo for Wc*
IQ ENTS WANTED Everywhere. Pri^o pf r Dox,, ItJ
Special terms for largo lots. Mailed and doiiverca *
treo to any part of the U.S. or Canada. f ?;fix
4. MCLEAN ft CO., 157 8. CLARK ST.. CHICAllOt 0
hm.
No Alkalies * ^
— OR—
Other Chemicals ?
ft aro need la tbe
MF preparation of ‘
W. BAKER & CO.’S
IreamstCocoa
!-•
tehteh <i absolutely
pure and soluble. ■
ltbaamaretAantArMtlnM*
the strength at Cocoa mixed <
iwlth Btarcb, Arrowroot or
p fltur&r. and la far mnrn ma.
nomical, eottiny lata than ana cent a aun, '
It la delicious, nourishing, and basil* -
ZMGSSTED. _
Sold hj Crocers trtrywliw, rfpS
W. BAKER A 00., Doroheater, Mom.
MEND YOUR OWN HARNESS C
WITH
THOMSON’S
SLOTTED
CLINCH RIVETS
Ho tool* required. Only a hummer needed
to drive and clinch them easily uud quickly:
twin* the clinch absolutely twootli. Requiring
no hole to be made In the leather nor burr lor flu
“»«»»• They are STRONG, TOUCH ami OURS OLE.
Million, now In um. All length., unlfbnn or
amorted, pnt np In boxen
A.k yanr alonlrr for them, or *ond 4k
to etnmpe tor n box of 100; amorted Area.
. _ MAIIUf ACTUR.D XT
HUDSON L. THOMSON MFO.CO..
Waltbaai, Unes.
LEWIS’ 98% LYE
rowssm iss rarnoD
(PATENTED)
The strongest and purest Lyl
_la. Unlike other l.ye, It being
1 a floe powder end peeked In • can
I with removable lid, tUe content*
are always ready tor one. WUI
make the best perlhmed Herd Sean
In 30 minutes without boiling. It in
ihf host for cleansing waste pipes.
disinfecting sinks, elottts, washing
-■?_. .... [ tUs
(jeh:"Aytiri*h?laT.
s*
bottles, paints, trees, etc.
FEWNA. HALT
PISO'S CUf- f. row
IOmiumpUtm and people
wbobav« weak Inna* or A»th- ^B
u, should om Piao’* Cure for ^B
Consumption. It ha* eart4H
Uw—4*. It ha* not injur* ^B
ed one. It I* not bad to take. ^B
It I* the beet ooufh syrup. ■
Bold everrwhere. BAe. ^B
CON(; U V*'T i 0 N
■IB MOBEY WZISSATiSSi
■ ex. M Vidor
Chopper” r
on “
Oorbln * Co.,Ow«fo,TVof*Co., II. T.
VWm Horr*B«f«l wImb all r«««4t«o fell. blifgM
k)f.Muc»i^U rw*y,«.T. WrlUtorfco»kgfprw»f Ktt
$75.00 to $250.00 —
B. r. joBMaoM a oo.. ■icitgoiifr ta.’
0 (/ Omaha. 35 1893