The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 15, 1894, Image 6

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    THE FARM AND HOME,
EXPERIMENTING with irriga
tion AND DRAINAGE.
*»>•• Bwd for Uotli Pnrposo. with Ac
tonlihlns ftncce««~startlnar a Dairy
te. — Management or Sltoep—Farm Notea
and Home Uinta.
pf€-:v:_
Dr.tlnxcr and lrrlRntinn Combined.
Another investigation undertaken
tho past year is an attempt to com
bine drainage with sub-irrigation in
the out door gardon. In other words,
it is an effort to dovclop a plan for
the effective and economical control
of soil moisturo.
Tho greatest obstaclo to lho suc
cess of intensive garden culture Is
the irregularity of moisturo in tho
soil. There is too much at ono time
aud too little at another. In early
spring and not unfroquontly at other
times during tho year, tho soil is too
wot: during summer und autumn it
is usually too dry. llow to remove
■ superfluous moisture ut ono-time and
supply the luck at another, in a prac
tical way, Is tho problem wo are now
trying to solvo.
Tho following is a brief outline of
tho work already done, writes W. K.
lia.ienby in Colman’s Hural World.
A fairly level spot was selected in tho
vegotabio gardon and divided into
five plots each twonly-flvo by forty
feet. In plot No. 2, linos of three
inch tllo.were laid eight inches deep
and two and ono-half foot apart, tho
rows extending longthwiso of the
plot.
The tile was laid upon an exact
level and the ends embedded in
cement. At one end of each row* or
lino, an upright tile was placed, Into
which water could bo turnod. Tho
opposite ends woro all connected
with a lino of tile which continued
beyond tho plots and acted as an outlet
when the tiles wore use! as a drain.
A valve was placod at the beginning
of this outlet so that when desired,
water could bo held in the tiles.
That is, when the soil was too wot
tho valve was openod and tho tiles
acted as a drain; when it became too
dry and water was turnod Into the
tiles, the valvo was closed, and tho
tiles uctod as a roservoir from which
the water passed into thejsoil.
1’lot No. 2 was tested In tho sumo
way except that only one half the
number of tiles woro used. Instead
of ten rows two and one-hulf feet
apart, there wore five rows live feet
apart. In every othor respect tho
treatment was the same. Tho plots
wero closely watched in early spring
to note the effects of the tiles as to
drainage, or the removal of surplus
water. While no definite statement
can now be made, it can bo said in
general that the soil of the tiled
plots was dry and in a fit condition
to work several days before that of
adjacent, untiled (dots.
The following crops woro planted,
each extending across tho five plots;
early beets, onions, potatoes und
string beans. Tho early beets ma
tured and woro markotod early and
but little difference in yield was
noted between tho tiled and untilod
plots.. Up to tho period of harvest
ing this crop, there was an abun
dance, although not an excess of
moisture. For the onious and string
beans water was turnod into tho tiles
at live different times, and tho oltoct
was marked. Tho former crop
yleldod an Increase of over fifty por
cent and tho latter was considerably
more than doubled in weight Be
sides this increase in weight tho
season was greatly lengthened and
tho quality of tho crop greatly im
proved. At the above rate of gain,
for intensive cultivation, this system
of control Ling soil moisturo is a
grpnd success. It has all the ad
vantages of under-surface watering
in the greenhouse, and combines
drainage, when an a^coss of moisture
renders this necessary.
Staritii'^ a Oali v.
Thofie is no “dairy belt" in this
country. ‘ Just as good buttor and
cheese can be made in ono state as
another. Some of the finest dairies
in the country are to be found in
Tennessee, Mississippi and Texas,
while the West is famous for taking
first prizes at interstate fairs. What
is needed is plenty of good water for
cows and washing utensils. It is a
real calamity to run short of water
in the dairy, and no one should start
without a never-failing supply. Then
again it must be conveniently located,
Waste no time of man or boast in
going after water, make the water
come to you. Lead it through pipes
in barn and dairy house. Do as little
pumping as possible either by hand
or power. It is a back-breaking and
weary business and in hot days, in
summer. Cows drink a fearful amount
of water. Lead the water from a
point on the farm high enough to do
liver it up to the knees of the cows
as they stand in the stable.
In starting a dairy the first thing to
learn is the value of a good stable. It
not only does not pay, but is foolish
to make milk only in summers. That
is the hardest time to make good
butter, while the market is crowded
and down to the lowest notch in
price. Build you a good, tight,com
fortable cow stable large enough to
hold as many cows as you need and
give them plenty of room. Put win
dows in it for light and have no
cracks for the cold wind to get in.and
if the cows are properly bedded and
kept clean, as they must bo. there
will be no need for ventilation. Cows
can stand six months in the stable
■with perfect comfort and make more
milk than they will if turned out to
“exercise.' , •>
* Wfyat kind of a ohurn to use. It
makes little or no difference so you
get the right amount of agitation.
The modern barrel churn that turns
end for end works easier than most
et them and does as good work. The
v‘ i* ‘‘■■'in iik»w. . . .
main point in to have a good-stzai
manhole so that the churn can. be
easily gotten into and freoly aired.
This last is of vital iipportanco.
Nothing takes tho lifo out of cream
and makes old tasting and worthless
butter as a stalo churn. Use the
nose freely on tho churn and do not
Bparo it—Homo and Farm.
Munagemfint of slirop.
A good authority on shoop manage
ment says: It is advisnblo to give
sheep aceoss to salt continually. It
can bo kept in covered troughs from
wasto by rains. As a partial pro
tection from ravages by dogs, it is
well to boll about ono-twontioth of
tho shoep. • Thera is usually a
‘•loader” in every Hock. This one
should always be bellod, if any are.
It is thought by many that sheep ar*
moro npt to bo worried by dogs when
pastured in tho woods than when in
tho open Holds. Tho reverse is tho
ease, .sheep-killing dogs, liko hu
man thieves, are great cowards.
They must see an apparently froo
field for escape before they will be
gin to doprodato. Thera is safoty
in tho woods, but more or loss
danger in tho opon fields. Sheep
aro summered continually in a
wooded tract of thousands of acres
near me, and by diligent inquiry I
cannot learn of a case whore they
have been molested by dogs,although
tho latter are plentiful around tho
tract. Shoop are subject to intornal
purasltes much more than formerly,
and fiocks are often docimatcd by
them. Salt, sulphur and spirits of
turpentine aro the best romedy. To
administer it, take salt., four parts;
sulphur, one part; turpentine, enough
to very slightly moisten; mix them,
and place in a trough when tho ani
mals aro hungry for salt If this
should bo done once in two months,
it is boliovod those vermin would
Dover trouble.
Fsrin Note*.
Plant tho orchards and small fruits
on uplands.
Stock need an increased ration dur
in.tr extremely cold weathor.
Don't allow tho harness to crack
and break for want of occasional oil
ing
Don’t fail to cut up a big lot of
green wood-to season for next sum
mer's use,
It pays best to raise the kind of
stock one likes host, for ho will give
thorn better attention.
The surplus of horses in tho coun
try soems to be of a class horso buy.
era don’t want to invest in.
If you keep sheep at all put enough
good blood in them to get the best
returns from their products.
Tho big, thrifty lambs will sell
roadily und handsomely. It is a
wonder more don’t go into it.
Stock aro matured early mainly by
propor feeding and care; although it
can bo aided by proper breeding.
If the owes aro kept too fat before
lambing they will socroto too much
milk; and this will cause caked bag.
A poultry raiser advises adding hot
water to tho cold in the drinking ves
sols. It acts like a tonic to the fowls.
No farm is complete without a
good lantern; but great care must be
taxon to not sot hay or straw afire
in tho barn with it.
I ho appoarance of eggs has a great
deal to do with the salo. Even if
an egg is fresh it will sell much bet
tor it' white and clean.
It is claimed by those who have
made analysis that the corn fodder
from one acre yields as much digesti
ble matter as two tons of timothy
A Iihodo Island poulterer says that
if onionskins are placed in tne nest
boxes and thon covered with straw
or hay, they will bo death to lice, as
the vermin cannot live whore the
skins are.
Homo IIInt».
A large, soft sponge, cither dry or
slightly dampenod, makes a good
duster.
Jiever rub your oyes, nor allow
your children to do so from their
cradles.
A restaurant keeper says celery
wants to lie in cold water an hour
boforo it is chewed.
A tart in groat favor is an iced
case of puff paste, with the filling of
marmalude and whipped cream.
Sweet oil and putty powder, fol
lowed by soap atjd water, makes one
of the best medicines for brighten
ing brass or copper.
Silver, brilliantly polished and ar
ranged on the finest of showy
damask, is the chief ornament of the
smart dinner tablo of the moment.
A good remedy for chapped lips is
made by mixing togothor two spoon
fuls of clarified honoy with a few
drops of Invendor water. Anoint the
lips with the mixture frequently.
Jt is very vexing and annoying to
have one's lips break out with cold
sores, but it is better to have them
out than in. A drop of warm mut
ton suet applied to the sores at night,
just before retiring, will soon cause
them to disappear.
The correct way to use doylies on
the table is to placo them under
finger bowls and other simple dishes
for which they arc made, if no ta
blecloth is naed, and tho surface of
the shining mahogany table ia ex
i posed, the doylies uro placed under
the plates in order that the table
may not be scratched.
In a charmingly-furnished apart
ment, whore the space is very much
limited, tho substitute for the cum
bersome buffet is a spot of beauty in
the .little dining room. Two skele
ton shelves have been made of wal
nut, and placed in one corner against
a piece of dark red matting tacked
upon tho wall. On these shelves
rich blue china is arranged with a
most delightful effoct
REPUBLICAN MATTERS.
(INTER) NATIONAL HYMN.
My country: 'tis of thee,
Sweet land of liberty,
.Of thee 1 Ring;
Lnnd where the wheels are tied.
Land where Industries died,
And to the Knslish side
Took rapid wing. •
My native country! thee.
Land to which paupers flee,
Thy name I love
I love thy Cleveland frills.
Thy no-trade tariff bills,
Thy Greihdms. Smith.* and
Born from above
Let munic swell the breeze,
Democrats to your knees,
And swell the song!
Let those who brought this fate
Their medicine take straight,
And three years longer wait
To ri ht the wrong
*MS}
Mills,
Our father. Grover C..
Mogul of miservi
To thee we sing:
Bear with us, if you can,
But, if not, like a man,
Say you don't cure a d—
For anything
—Cincinnati Commercial-Gazette.
SOUND FACTS.
The Brneflrcnce of Protection to the
"United Staten.
After the war of 1812 had any
American statesman opposed protec
tive tariff he would have been re
garded as a foe to his country. Mr.
(.'alhoun. in 1816, an a friend of
American protection, hardly lagged
behind Henry Clay; and General
•Jackson, in 1824, was not less its
champion than John Quincy Adams.
There was then but little more than
one party, and that was for “a tariff
that would protect” Both houses of
congress wore Democratic in 1828,
and among the eminent senators who
voted for t te ultra-protective tariff
of 1828, and who subsequently be
came Democratic presidents, will be
found the names of Martin Van Buren
and James Buchanan. Such dis
tinguished supporters of protection,
1 fear, would now be drummed out of
the Democratic camp by some self
elected drum-majors. In I860 the
votes of Virginia and Tennessee were
given to Bell and- Everett, both of
whom favored tariff protection. The
tariff of 1861, undeniably blessed
with the virtues of protection, was
approved by a Democratic president,
a veteran long in the services of his
party.
Any claim of superior stamina on
the part of Americans, or of doing
more work in a day than any other
people, is a vainglorious assertion.
The British are of the same stock,
and bred in an equally healthy clim
ate. A Briton, so long as he is able j
to get full pay, without doubt is j
about as athletic and physically as j
good as an American, and probably
no better. ' j
In Great Britain no wage-earner j
aver rises to be an employer of wago
aarners. In the United States it is a
common occurrence and almost the ■
rule, that the head or business man- j
ager of any industrial company has j
risen from tho ranks of practical j
manual labor. The biographies of i
our captains of industry shine forth
as abundantly as the stars of the i
milky way.
It has beon long roundly, perhaps
ignorantly, claimed that the differ
ence in wages here compared with
the lower British wages is compen
sated by tho lower cost of living; but
this has no basis of truth, except
that the lower scale of wages practi
cally and brutally imposes upon Brit
ish wago earners a lower and far in
ferior scale of living. If tnoir pro
visions and comforts of life were to
be made equal to those of wage earn
ers in America, the British cost
would be found excessive and insup
portable. Tho foundation of Eng
land's large wealth was laid by a
century of stringent tariff protec
tion.
British wage earners, as we all
know, obtain on the average, under
free trade, but little more than one
half as much reward for labor as
Americans obtain under protection.
The advantages of a protective tar
iff are not claimed on account of its
production and diffusion of wealth
ulone, but on account of its benefi
cence, its educational and civilizing
influence, its distribution of the com
forts of life among the men who
work, and as the strongest arm of
national independence_From Sena
tor Morrill’s speech in the senate.
Needed a Lesson.
The World believes in Cleveland
rather than Hill. It will fight Hill
whenever he is wrong, as a machine
boss, as it fought him before and
supported Cleveland. It is still in
general sympathy with President
Cleveland but it supported Senator
Hill in this case because he is right.
The lesson may prove a whole
some one for Mr. Cleveland. He
needs to be reminded that ours is a
constitutional government, with co
ordinate branches strictly limited
and based upon the people's will.
Judging by Olney, Van Alen and
Hornblower, the Hawaiian blunder
and the insulting “noise and clamor"
letter, he is lacking both in respect
for the law and public opinion.
This drift towards autocracy, con
tempt of limitations, and disregard
of congress needs checking. It is to
be hoped that no severer lesson will
bo required.—N. Y. World, Dem.
Blount, the Scapegoat.
Humors trickle out from the inner
circle cf the administration at
Washington that in recent confer
ences of Cleveland, Gresham and
Blount the president has emitted bluo
language anything but agreeable to
the quondam paramount commis
sioner. One report has it that
Cleveland bluntly told the Georgia
statesman that bis alleged investiga
tion and one-sided account of the
revolution had “plunged the admin
istration into trouble.1’ The diffi
culty seems to be that Blount
proved too faithful to the letter of
his instructions in presenting such •
■ • - ... . .
report as was desired by the presi
dent; but it now occurs to Cleveland
that Blount ought to have ascer
tained and reported all the tacts,
whether agreeable or not to his ex
cellency. The administration will
seek in vain for a scapegoat in this
wretched business. As the public
looks at it, if there hud been any
purpose on the part of the president
to conduct an investigation with the
idea of getting an accurate account
of the situation in Hawaii he should
not have appointed one man to do
the work, nor would he have acted
at all in the matter without first con
sulting the senate.—Times-Star.
&& NO LOVE FOR IT.
Grover Cleveland's Kelatlons With the
Old Flag.
Thus far there have been four dis
tinct flag: episodes in the official life
of Grover Cleveland as president of
the United States, and all of them
have been shameful. Two occurrod
during his first term, and two have
disgraced him since his second in
auguration last March. Nobody has
forgotten how the stars and stripes
were lowered to half mast on the in
terior department building during
Cleveland’s first administration as a
mark of sorrow at the death of
I Jacob Thompson, the ex-rebel who
j had tried to introduce small-pox into
[ Northern cities during the rebellion.
That incident created a storm of in
dignation in the North, but a greater
tempest of wrath was aroused soon
afterward by the order of Adjutant
General Drum, which Cleveland ap
proved, returning the rebel flags
captured on the battle fields of
the rebellion to the Southern
states. The opening of the second
Cleveland administration was signal
ized by the hauling down of the
United States flag in Honolulu, by
Grover’s personal representative, Mr.
Blount. The next news from
Washington is that “Old Glory” no
longer floats over the capitol build
ing, because the Democrats cannot
afford to buy new flags when the old
ones are worn out If anything
were neoded to complete the humilia
tion which every loyal son of the re
public must feel at being compelled
to live under a Democratic adminis
tration, dominated in every depart
ment by ex-rebels of the South, says
the Cleveland Leader, this latest ex
hibition of hatred for the stars
and stripes is enough. What a
spectacle we must present in
the eyes of the world! A
nation of nearly 70,003,000 of people
too poor to float the flag of our coun
try over the national capitol! Of
course, poverty is simply an absurd
and silly excuse for doing something
which every ex-rebel will applaud,
an:l which every patriotic citizen in
the North and West should condemn.
Gresham Is Lonely.
Secretary Gresham represents the
most pitiable sight of any man about
Washington. Ho presents the ap
pearance of one who has lost several
nights’ sleep. His face, plainly
telb the story of his mentai suffer
ing. He fully realizes that he has
sacrificed himself in the Hawaiian
affair and that the Democratic lead
ers are glad of it. There is not a
man in the cabinet who at heart is
not glad of Gresham’s dilemma, and
the secretary of state is well aware
of the fact. lie has no one to lean
on in his hour of political trial. He
can’t look to Republicans for they
resent his desertion of them. Yester
day he was comforted by pouring his
tale of woo into the sympathetic
ears of Bob Ingersoll. Now Gresham
is assiduously cultivating ex-Senator
Edmunds. The Vermont statesman
being out of active politics, Gresham
feels that he can arouse sympathy
there and find advice from Edmunds.
—Daily American. Idem.
Can Not Swallow the Medicine.
Of all the revolutions in political
opinion that have occurred in the
United States the most remarkable is
the change wrought by the common
experience since November, 1892.
The young voters v:ho were familiar
only with prosperous conditions and
thought they would chance free
trade have rushed over to the Re
publican party, accompanied by a
good many older heads who iind that
they went after false gods once too
often. Moreover, Wilson radicalism,
(iresham mugwumpism and Cleve
land egotism havo driven not a few
steady-going Democrats out of the
lines, to seek more congenial com
pany behind the Republican band
wagon. The procession of the (1. O.
P. on the road to victory is a
brobdingnagian affair.
At Morton Again.
The national Farmers’ Alliance in
session at Chicago landed again on
that soi'o spot where all the state al
liances and granges have been tap
ping Secretary Morton for the last
month or two. Mr. Morton may not
| know very much about farming, but
it begins to look as though he will
j know quite a bit about farmers be
! fore he gets through with his pres
I ent joh.
A I.ittle Republican Leaven Nedtled.
I The Kansas City Journal thinks
I Missouri will never take her proper
place in the union until she wipes
! out her Democrat majority and ex
j terminates her train robbers, and it
is difficult to say which should bo
done first, though a Republican ad
ministration might be a powerful
discourager of train robbing.
Democracy*. Only Chance.
If the country stands the storm
now raging over it and striking
everything that protrudes above the
surface, the future is all right, for
nothing worse than this Democratic
“change" is likely to be experienced
in the next fifty years—in other
words, till the Democracy again gets
control
PROFIT IN GUINEA P1QS,
Baward of Thraa XSfara* Labor Id Pro
ducing a Citadated Variety.
"I spent last fall in the country, ’
said the young: man with the fall
style derby, "and I succeeded in
making: a large and juicy-fool of my
self almost eve^y day while I was
there. I stayed with an uncle oi
mine who has a farm sixteen or sev
enteen miles from nowhere, and the
Reubens got the laugh on me bo
many times that I can't remember
the number.
"The queerest experience that 1
bad, though, was at one of their
country fairs. They held the fair
early last year, for some reason or
other, and I was on hand to take it
in. I went out to the grounds with
a party of women who were visiting
in the neighborhood, and, undis
mayed by the failure of my former
efforts to string the rustics, I started
out to have some fun with them as
soon as we struck the grounds. We
walked around for a couple of hours,
and I was poking all manner of fun
at the people we met Finally we
came to the shed where the poultry
was on exhibition, and as we went
along looking at the variously bred
chickens, I got particularly funny.
At the end of one of the rows of
coops was a box with five or six
guinea pigs in it There were quite
a number of countrymen standing
around looking at the queer little
animals.
“We walked over and looked at the
pigs. Then I said loudly: ‘Do you
know that if you pick up a guinea
pig by the tail its eyes will drop
out?’ The countrymen stared. ‘Fact,’
1 continued. ‘Pick one of them up
by the tail and its eyes will drop
right out Most queerly constructed
anatomically of any animal known
to naturalists. If these pigs were
mine I would soon show you.’
“A big, strapping fellow who stood
beside the box said: ‘Stranger, I
don’t believe you’. I insisted that 1
was right, but he stood and doggedly
shook his head, and the rest of the
countrymen sided with him. Now,
a guinea pig has no tail, and there is
where the joke comes in. I argued
for some little time, and then made a
grand bluff. I pulled out a little roll
of bills and offered to bet the Reuben
$25 that just that thing would hap
pen. Imagine my surprise when the
Reuben hauled a greasy old pocket
book out of his jeans and covered the
money. I was sure I had him, for
the bet was a catch one anyhow, and
as the young women who were with
me were egging me on, I couldn’t
think of flunking.
“‘Understand,’ I said, *1 claim
that if you pick up that guinea pig
by its tail its eyes will drop out.’
“•I understand,' said the country
man, as he opened a little door in the
side of the box and pulled out a
guinea pig. ‘Now, pick this one up
and let’s see its eyes drop out ’
“Then I began to laugh. ‘Ha, my
friends,’ I said, ‘I have played a lit
tle trick on you, that’s all. As a
guinea pig has no tail you can’t pick
one up by it If you could I do not
doubt that its eyes would drop out’
“I reached out for my half of the
bet, when the big countryman said:
‘Hoi’ on there, mister. You jes look
and see if this here guinea pig ain’t
got a tail. ’ I examined it and I may
be switched if it didn't have a tail
an inch long. The countryman picked
it up by the little caudal appendage,
and. of course, its eyes didn’t drop
out Then he reached over, grabbed
the wad of money and put it in his
pocket, remarking the while: *1 did
not think when I developed that
breed of guineas that they would
ever make that much for me. ’
“I’ll be blamed if he hadn’t been
working three years to produce
guinea pigs with tails! He had suc
ceeded. and I was chump enough to
go against the only cage of that kind
of animals in the world with my
chestnut about their eyes dropping
out ”
A Fresh Translation.
.The small boy had been irritating
his father with many vexations ques
tions about a psalm he was studying
for Sunday school next day.
“Father, what does *Selah’mean ?”
was the latest.
“Shut up!” said paterfamilias.
The boy said nothing, but in Sun
day school the psalm was under dis
cussion.
“Who knows what the word ‘Selah’
means?” asked the young superin
tendent
The small boy’s hands went up,
and he was half way out of his seat.
No one else raised a hand.
“WellP” said the superintendent
•■Shut up!" said the small boy.
And seeing the look on the teacher’s
face added, “it is! I asked papa, and
he said ‘shut up!”’—Toledo Blade.
Inherited*
The small boy who applied to the
Chicago physician to be vaccinated
was so bright-faced the doctor asked
him who he was.
“I’m Johnnie Smith,", he said,
“and my pop’s a detective.
“Oh,” exclaimed the doctor,
“run along little boy, there’s no need
to vaccinate you; you’ll never catoh
anything. ”
Tho Decision Dl<l Her uo Good.
Miss Catherine Bitner of Franklin
county, Pennsylvania was so over
joyed a day or two ago at a decision
in her favor in a suit whioh she had
instituted in Hagerstown, Md., to set
aside a deed for a farm, that she was
overcome by the excitement and died
an hour after.
Willing to Loso Them.
Mrs. Hylyfe—Why do you think
Mrs. Skekkles doesn’t tell the truth
about the price of her diamonds?
Mrs. Hotong—She wears them to
receptions where they haven’t en
gaged detectives. —Chicago Record.
Hev» ©• A Bower
Symptoms of Cancer
Appeared on my Up. Disagreeable eruption,
came on my neck. After taking 4 bottles of
Hood s Sarsaparilla, all the traces of disease
hare disappeared and the medicine has given
me renewed vigor and strength. I am now a!
most 73 years of age, and work like a tin..
And I know that Hood's Sarsaparilla has had
much to do with my vigor and strength i
recommended it to my wife, who has suffer,
ed so much with rheumatic troubles as
also with female weakness. In two years
Hood’s Cures
she has used about 8 bottles of nood's Sarsa
parllla, and to-day, and for the last « months,
she seems like a new being.’’ ret. o. H. Pow!
SB, 2*24 Hanover Street, Chicago, Illinois.
Hood’s Pills cure all liver ills, biliousness, j1M.
dice. Indigestion, sick headache. 25 cents.
WALTER BAKER & GO.
COCOA awl
CHOCOLATE
9b Highest Awards
^ (Medill and Diplomu)
World’s Columbian
Exposition.
niSely!* foUowln« MUdtt,
BREAKFAST COCOA.
iPREMIUl So. 1 CHOCOLATE,
0ER1AS SWEET CHOCOLATE.
VARILLA CHOCOLATE,
COCOA BUTTER,
For "parity of material."
“excellent n»vor.M and “uai
xomt even composition."
•OLD BY CROCERE EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER t CO., DORCHESTER, MASS
Ely’s Cream Balm
QUICKLY CURES
Cold in Head
Apply Balm Into each nostril.
ELY BROS., 36 Warren St., N.Y.
PISO'S TJUR E FOR
Consumptives and people
who have weak lungs or Asth
ma, should use Piso’s Cure for
Consumption. It has cured
thousands, it has not injur
ed one. Ills rot bad to take.
It is the best cough Byrup.
Bold everrwhere. 2.1c.
CONSUMPTION.
WELL MACHINERY
Illustrated catalogue showing WELL
augers, bock drills.hydraulic ‘
AND JETTING MACHINERY, etc.
Suit Fkeb. Have bean tested and
all warranted,
THE PECH i“IFG. CO.
Sioux Cits'. Iowa
19 S. Canal St., Chicago.
mm
SMOKE YOUR MEAT WITH
KiWUSERS LIQUID EXTRAMfO^
~ircu LAR.LKKAilSERJt aRO.MlUQN.HL
|EM8ION"H!,-w***KTO
rltllOIVU WaahiHi.rl«iit D.C.'
“Successfully Prosecutes Claims.
Late Principal Examiner U.8. Pension Bureau.
3yrslu lost war, 13 adjudicating claims, atty since.
At* Price
Watches, Goa*, Rvggim, H*rww»
Stwlac Haeiilmii.Orgun«,Bif:rK
Pim TmiIv, Safe*, He, Uat IMIt.
CHICAGO SULK CO., Chicago, W.
OMAHA BUSINESS HOUSES.
FOR SALE,
TRADE or LEASE, BRICK an<l
TILE PLANT, Dawson, Iowa.
C. D. WOODWORTH, Omaba Xei)
GRAIN
Bought and sold on margins. Write for
Circular. Hewkeye Commlaal®»
Co., No. 8 New York Life. O.uaha.
POULTRY
Butter. Eggs and Wild Game. *h!p
to Robt. Purvis. Commission Mer
chant. 1216 Harney Street. Omaha.
Omaha, cor. 1«1»
and Capitol Ava.
blk from both
Council Bluffs A
Omaha car line*.
Best 92.00 a day house in the state. Ww P1^07
REKD *fe CASEY, Proprietors.
Hotel Del lone
twin qye WORKS " '1"'
CITY
& 1521 Fa roam bt.
Omaha, Neb.__
DR. BAILEY,
| LEADING DENTIST
_ _ u _ _ Honest work it WJ"
Paxton Block Sixteenth and karnam^ •
TEETH
Paxton Block Six
)0D BROS.
KO. JOHN D. DAD1SMAN
Live Stock too*
mission M rchants
r WLT i/n w. South Omaha and
[O. JOHN D. DAD1PMAN. WALTER *•
). Managers. Market reports by 11 •
tapcrfulljr furnished upon application. »oui
_a Telephone 1157.___—
Wall Paper 4c Ron
Only Sl.no required to l>aPerc''n1!| too
room 15x13, Including border. ..end
postage and get EKEE, 100 beautiful •
pies, and guide bow to paper. Agunts
sample hook Sl.OO; f’KEE with a
order. Write quick.
HENRY LEHMANN,
1620-1624 Douglas St., - OMAHA,
FOR LADIES ONLY
DB rHETALIEK’S FEMALE
solute safeguard against any form but
If you suffer from monthly tortures d
send 81.00 to our agents, shkhman * voa
1513 Dodge street, Omaha, Neb .who w»[i w nnj«h
one box of the genuine Dr. robbb‘1 W
Female 1111s Don't be deceived nud r . QU
high-priced pills and liquids. Get our pil
will he happy. No danger In using.
McCREW
JSTUEONLY
SPECIALIST
WHO THEATH All
PRIVATE DISEASES,
Weakr>ess and^crei
Disorders ot
MEN ONLY.
Fvorv cure jjuarantec^
(Essr&«?^