The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 26, 1894, Image 6

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    HOME DEPARTMENT.
% OEMS OP KNOWLEDGE FOR THE
HOUSEWIFE.
^ C»f«l Information A boat Managing the
tioaseliold—Recipes and Inetractlnas
for Om In tha Kltohan—Tlia Family
| Circle.
They That How.
OWa fool, tbalr gold and It aval tbalr
i powar.
Lot fortuna's bubble* rlta and fall;
, Who «owa a field or train i a do war,
Or plant* a tree. It more than all.
. For ha who blesses most It blent;
And God and man aball own hie worth,
WhotoiU to leave an Ufa beqneit
Atk added beauty to the earth.
/And eoon or late to all that .ow,
fi; '^e of harvott .ball be glean;
s The flower thall bloom, the fruit ehall
» kt°w>
■ B not on earth, at latt In beaeen!
i-.-V’.s;. ■ -Whittier.
r ^ Uncle Pater't Xernaon,
44 Wha’a yo reoo d, tremblin’ elnnaht
Who's da tithe* yo' brlngln’ int
Doyo’ ’speot t’ be a winnah
f;-, lb’ y o’Chris tyun wuk begin?
r Hn.ee! op! Seruah yo’ lodgin’,
;t Wha’ de golden lante’nt glow
tit Fob dee won’ be any dodgin’
* Wen de ho’n begin• t’ blow.
4’Tend tar wu’h an’ be a taeln’;
Yo’ no Lljah—brah my song?—
s£. Be* • waitin’ twell a raven
Cums a totin grub along!
To’ may hab a peaceful lodgin’
Wha’ de streams of marcy flow—
But dey won’ be any dodgin'
’ ' W'en de bo’n begins t’ blow.
“Put away de idle drenmln'—
Ijtt’ Emanyul’s bannah high!
Don’ yo' see de lamps a gleamin',
On de buzsatn o’ de sky?
Ah, ye can’t deadbeat your lodgin'
Wha’ de hebenly roses blow—
An' dey won’t be any dodgin'
W'en old Gabe begins t’ blow."
—Cleveland Plaindealer.
Bow KumIoq reinnti Lira.
Under the Fame roof which shelters
the family, the cattle and other deni
aena of the barnyard are also boused,
a continuous roof of tliatoh usually
extending over both house and yard,
aays a writer in Demorest'a. The re
lation ■ between the stockyard and
bouse are so Intimate that at times,
When the weather la particularly so
- Vere or a suekllng calf may be ailing,
it is brought into the house to share
the only apartment with the family.
The rear part of the house is partially
oocupied by a large stove, in whloh a
fire burns continuously for eight
... months of the year. The stove is ar
ranged somewhat like a baker’s oven.
The fire ip lit in the morning, and,
after two or three hours, when the
Wood is reduced to coala the flue
plate, of damper, is shut; the brick
walls being very thick, the oven re
kmains warm until the next day, when
^he Are is lit again.
This stove serves every purpose of
the household, even supplying com
fortable sleeping quarters on top for
the old people, who can not stand the
eold so well as the younger'folka The
rest of the family pack themselves
away at bed time in a gallery which
runs serosa the rear of the apartment,
above the stove, the children occupy
ing one end, the seniors the other. In
aome seotlone an Innovation has been
made by inserting board partitions in
the baloony, thus giving more privacy
to the sleeping quarters of the differ
ent members of the family. On Satur
day all the members of the family
. crawl into the -oven in turn and have a
good wash, using a little home made
> wooden tub and a bundle of birch
twigs. An abundant supply of the
latter is gathered in the spring while
the leaves of the birch are green and
fragrant. The furniture of the house
in Usually very meager, consisting of
Hbme-made benches and tables and a
variety of articles which have found
their way there from the homes of
their wealthy neighbors
P
Biros.—Those who possess a su
perfluity of rugs oan make a charming
offset by hanging them against the
wall in the corner of a room, one at
the head and two or three on the sides.
Another rug is suspended lengthwise
to form a top. A narrow divan seat
wdth four or five large cushions is ar
ranged at one end, and the rest of the
spaoe is filled with a small eastern oc
tagon table (on which are laid cigars
and cigarettes, matches and a silver
taper) and a couple of oddly-shaped
ohaira A Turkish lamp, with a red
glam shade, gives just the amount of
light desirable, and a few eastern
surma arranged in the background of
rugs will aid greatly to the effect
| - Rhubarb Pib.—Pour boiling wafer
over two teacupfuls ot chopped rhu
; ' barb, drain off the water after four or
! v five minutes and mix with the rhubarb
a teaonpful of sugar, the yelk of an
egg, a piece of butter and a table*
■ spoonful of flour, moistening the
whole with three tablespoonfuls of
water. Bake with the lower crust
only and make a meringue of the
| white of the egg with three table
spoonfuls of sugar; spread over the
top of the pie and return it to the
eras to brown.
Ijemob Pa—Two tablespoonfuls of
flour, two-thirds of a teacup of water,
one teaoup of Bugar, yellca of three
egg and one grated lemon. Bake in i
hot oven. While in the oven beat the
whites of three eggs to a froth and
mix in three teaspoonfuls of 6ugar
turn it over the pie and return to thi
oven until nic ly browned.
STBawbkbky Pis—Into a rich dee;
undercrust that has been baked, pa
strawberries sufficient to fill and cove:
with sugar. Make a meringue of thi
whites of two < ggs and a tablespoon
ful of powder, u sugar; cover the pi<
with it and brown.
Milk an Kraal lion.
It hulmn found by experiment that
various animal and vegetable oil* can
be mixed with water and broken up
into minute globules of fat, quite
evenly distributed through the water,
forming true emulsions, says an 'insti
tute speaker. Thus liquids ean be
made closely resembling milk and
which act like milk. For a time, and
while greatly moved, the emulsion Is
preserved. If left at rest, gravity acts
to bring the fats into a mass at the
top like cream. And by churning, the
fate can be gathered into a kind of
butter. In these and other ways, such
artificial milks or emulsions act so
very like true milk that, reasoning
by analogy, there is a strong argu
ment that cow’s milk Is simply an
emulsion. If this is true, there is one
important clue obtained to churning
aright If there are no sacs to rupture
or break, there is no need of the
violent beating which was given milk
and cream, in former days to compel
the butter to‘'come.” Milk being a
simple emulsion, and acting like other
emulsions made by experimenters, all
it needs is gentle agitation, under fav
orable conditions, to cause the fats to
collect and form butter.
Leaves for Feed.
Thk recent experiments in Germany
showing a high nutritive value in
leaves of trees is being further em
phasized by investigations by the
French department of agriculture
which is seeking to transform twigs
and loaves into food for stock. There
Is nothing new, however, in all of this
except the method of approach, as the
Romans S,000 years ago fed their work
oxen on leaves and twigs. The ques
tion is one of economy. Shall we find
a crap of leaves as economical as a crop
of grass? There is but one answer to
the question, where grass can be ob
tained. The experiments mentioned
have been undertaken in Europe be
cause it was a question largely of kill
ing the cattle or feeding them on
leaves and twigs, on account of the
widespread failure of the grasp crop.
A Cargo of Onions—People who had
occasion to go down to the Delaware
river front last, evening in the neigh
borhood of Dock street, encountered,
as they approached the wharf, the
pungent odor of onions to a marked
degree. It was as though a ten-acre
lot with onions laid only an inch apart
was making itself heard from. In
vestigation showed that the smell
came from the schooner Eva May,
which has on board a whole cargo of
onions—about 300 tons of them—
which she brought from Bermuda.
The captain never carried that kind
of freight before, and said it was
rather hard on his olfactory nerves
just at first. However, he and his
crew are used to the odor, and don’t
mind it One advantage they have,
which is that no one on board suffers
from insomnia. The officers and
sailors sleep like tops when off duty,
and have to be kept moving to make
them Btay awake when on watch. This
is due to the soporific effect of the
onion smell, and any one who can't
sleep and would like to, can gratify
his desire by taking a stroll down to
Dock street 'wharf.—Philadelphia
Record.
LevklincpOld Battlements. —With
very few exceptions the old cities of
Belgium and Holland have leveled the
walls which have played such grand
parts in the national histories, and they
are converted into promenades after
the manner of Chester and York. The
walls of Antwerp and Malines have
been replaced by boulevards The old
bastions of Amsterdam still remain,
but the citizens of Arnheim and
Utrecht and Hoorn and Zwolle and
Haarlem and Leyden disport them
selves on fine evenings upon the line
of fortifications famous in the most
stirring pages of what is perhaps the
most stirring of European histories
Cheap Kid Gloves.—The cheapest
kid gloves in trade are made from the
skins of kids and lambs that are born
dead. The reason they wear out so
quickly and tear so easily is because
they have no elasticity. These dead
skins are called schmachen. kid and
the gloves retail at $1“ or less. To a
judge of gloves the difference between
a schmachen and a kid is as plain
as the difference between a gingham
and a linen shirt. Some of the heavy
gloves sold for kid are made pf colt
skin. _
Use and Abuse of Gloves.—Whan
putting gloves on begin by buttoning
the Becond button; then, when but
toned to the top, you can easily fasten
the first button without tearing the
kid. Never remove the gloves by
puUing the fingers, but by drawing
the part covering the wrist over the
hand and leave them thus wrong side
out for some time before turning them
to their proper shape. Always lay
gloves lengthwise—never roll them.
—Ex.
Ami Sump.—Cut apples as for
pies and fill a rich undererust of a
good thickness; corer with a thick top
crust and hake in a slow oren for
about an hour; when baked remove
the top crust, add sweetening, season
ing, and butter half the size of an egg;
then remove part of the apple. Place
the top crust in sn inverted position
upon what remains, and the apple that
has been taken out on top of that.
Should be eaten hot.
Date Pie—Scak the dates over night
and stew until they can be strained;
mix with a quart of milk, three eggs
and add a little salt and nutmeg. Bake
with an undercrust only. One pound
of dates will be sufficient for three
pies, and the other ingredients are
given in proportion for that, quantity
of dates.
Cherry, Blackberry and Peach Pie.
Make both upper and lower crust
1 fill with the fruit well sweetened.
I
' 1
REPUBLICAN DOCTRINE
Revenue Dutlaa—La* Bales Do Not Pro
duce Raven ue.
Mr. Voorheca challenged the atten
tion of the senate to the seeming para
dox that the reduction of taxation by
the Wilson bill would produce an in
crease in the revenues. There is but
one way in which this seeming paradox
can be resolved, and that is that the
proportion of importations must in
crease beyond the proportion of'reduced
duties. Thus, if un average of customs
duties of 35 per cent produces a reve
nue of 8300,000.1)00 on an importation
of 8800,000, then if the tax is reduced to
an average of 30 per cent the importa
tion must be increased to 81.000.000,000.
llut as, under the Wilson bill, more
than half our importations are on the
free list, this increase of importations
to increase revenue cannot be on such
artieles as are not raised id the United
States, nor such as are called “raw ma
terial,” for these are free of duties.
The 8300,000,000 increase of importa
tions must be of manufactured goods,
and if wo import 8300,000.000 more of
foreign manufactures we shall dimin
ish. our own productions in a like
amount. This will close our own fac
tories and discharge our own laborers
now producing these goods at home.
This paradox is not difficult to under
stand, nor is it new in our financial his
tory. The war of 1813 cut us off from
foreign importations, and greatly stim
ulated our own importations; but with
peace and the removal of discriminat
ing duties our importations rose from
830,000,000 in 1814 to 8150,000,000. The
result was that American workmen had
the benefit of cheap markets, and in
return were turned out of employment.
England could sell us hardware, cloth
ing and other goods cheaper than we
could make them, and we had to quit.
She did not buy our hay, potatoes, but
ler, or eggs, and but very little of our
grain and meat; nor did she hire our
workmen, or run our mines, factories,
or workshops. Instead of our work
men buying the produce of our farm
ers they had to till the soil themselves,
thus increasing the amount of farm
products, while diminishing the market
for them. In consequence came a sea
son of hard times that it required years
to overcome, and which was not over
come until there was a re-charter of
the national bank and the re-enactment
of a protective tariff. It was of this
deplorable result of Mr. Voorhees’ par
adox that Andrew Jackson wrote to
Doctor Coleman:
*» nere nas the American farmer a
market for his surplus products. Ex
cept for cotton he has neither a foreign
nor a home market. Does this not
clearly prove, where there is no market
at home or abroad, that there is too
much labor employed in agriculture,
and that the channels of labor should
be multiplied? Common sense points
out the remedy. Draw from agricul
ture the superabundant labor. Employ
it in mechanism and manufactures,
thereby creating a home market for
your breadstuffs and distributing labor
to the most profitable account, and
benefits will ensue to the country. *
* * In short, we have been too long
subject to the policy of British mer
chants. It is true that we become a
little more American, and, instead of
feeding the paupers and laborers of
Europe, feed our own; or else in a short
time, by continuing our present policy,
we shall be paupers ourselves.”
How like a modern protectionist re
publican Old Hickory did talk.
A Tariff for the New State*.
The tariff reformer claims that
we ■ have reached the acme of in
dustrial development, whereby wo are
able to compete with the world. Is
this true? More than two-thirds of our
public domain has not been occupied by
absolute settlers to exceed forty years;
fourteen great states, stretching from
the Dakotas and Washington on the
north and west to Wyoming on the
south, and from the Pacific to the
shores of the Mississippi on the east,
covering an empire greater than all
Europe—a large portion of this terri
tory is not ten years old in statehood.
It took a hundred years lor Connecti
cut and Pennsylvania to reach their
present perfected system of diversified
industry, and yet the most sanguine
friends of tariff reform are willing to
concede a duty on coal and iron for
Pennsylvania and a reasonably high
duty on woolens for Connecticut. If a
just reason, therefore, exists for these
thjDgs, then let us point you to that
new domain just entered by the pio
neer, where for a thousand miles a fac
tory is unknown and a shop has not
been erected—a vast wilderness to be
conquered by the agriculturist, where
busy industry yet must find a way to
establish itself. How then, we ask,
have we reached the acme of industrial
enterprise when more than half of our
great national domain is but in the in
fancy of statehood. We cannot for
bear saying to the gentlemen who have
stood for a hundred years for the doc
trine of state sovereignty and state
rights, as we hold before you in the
great family of states these new mem
bers of our great national union, how
can you deny to them the advantages
so long enjoyed by the older states?
Levying Blackmail.
Tammany, for the purpose of carry
ing out its measures, levies blackmail
on the illegitimate business of 2iew
York City and grows rich thereby, the
money whereof is used to perpetuate
itself in power. The democratic party
in power in both branches of the gov
ernment levies blackmail on the busi
ness of the country and grows rich by
exempting trusts for its special favor
ites—the whisky trust with a gift of
864,000,000. the sugar trust with a gift
of an indefinite amount, perhaps more
than 860,000,000, while a hundred thous
and villages and cities are wrapped in
mourning because of the idleness of
their shops and their mills
Truly Tammany and democracy are
great examples to be studied in the
school of polical economy.
From the best estimates possible at
this time, according to the sugar sched
ule as it now stands in the senate
amendments to the Wilson bill, a ton
of sugar will produce $27.44 of duty, or
the total amount exported about $42,
000,000 annually. This is made up of
the 40 per cent ad valorem duty, of the
one-eighth and the one-tenth which are
added under certain conditions. If the
i senate schedule should be adopted and
I become a law we may expect in the
! coming year to pay $42,000,000 more
| for our sugar than was paid in the past
year. Until other figures are made
these will answer the purpose of gip
I tag a forecast of what is to come.
Th« Plomiclal Showing of the Present Ad*
ministration l>oe« Not Compare
Favorably with Prior Years.
Since the close of the war of the rc*
hellion the republican party was able
to make steady progress with the re
duction of the national debt, and main
tain the credit of the government
through all the years of its history.
When the democrats came into power
in 1893 they were confronted with
about the same problem with which
the republicans had had to contend for
years, but it is a lamentable fact that
for the first time since 180.’) there is a
deficit or a deficiency in the public rev
enues. The excess of revenue over ex
penditures from 1874 to 1894, twenty
years, varied largely, showing in 1874
82.325.000, the lowest point ever reached
until the fiscal year closed. The high
est point ever reached in the surplus or
excess was in 1882. when it was $145,
500.000. The four years of Harrison's
administration show excesses as fol
lows:
Fiscal year closing June 30,18S9.$87,500,000
. 1890. 8.5,1 iUO.OOJ
“ “ " “ “ 1891. 26,000,000
" “ “ •• “ 18v2. U.OOUXK)
These averages are above some of the
former years,
1874.$ 2,5000,000
187.5. 13,r,00,000
1876 . X9,0 0,000
1877 . 30,0 ;0,0u0
Mr. Cleveland starts, however, with
a deficit of $71,500,000 for his first year.
No one is able to tell what the second
year may produce. The indications
however, point to disaster.
The customs receipts, are continually
decreasing, as also are the internal rev
enue receipts, and until some increase
in these sources of revenue is found a
deficit is sure to continue in the Treas
urer’s account. It is proper to state
that the expenditures for the fiscal year
just closed were $10,800,000 less than
the expenditures for the fiscal year end
ing June 30, 1803, which if added to the
deficit would raise the deficit, when
truly considered, to more than $88,000,
000.
Cleveland VI. Harrison—Who Served the
People Best ?
The work of destroying industries and
protecting trusts has been transferred
to the conference committeee of the
two Houses of congress. Tho public
await their action with great concern.
If a more equitable settlement cannot
be reached, than that reached by the
senate, we are destined to a period of
great depression.
The total debt on July 1, 1894, was
8899.313,381, against 8838,069,470 on
July 1, 1893, being an increase during
the year of more than 860,000,000. How
does this compare with Sir. Harrison's
administration for the first year of his
administration? Comparsons enable
people better to understand public
affairs than assertions. In justifica
tion of the truth, Mr. Cleveland admin
istered the same laws that Mr. Harri
son administered. An opportunity for
the collection' of the same amount of
revenue was provided. Avenues were
open for the transaction of an equal
amount of business, and whatever
failure Mr. Cleveland's administration
is charged with, it cannot be attributed
to the laws on the statute books, for
under these same laws Mr. Harrison
gave the country a satisfactory and
prosperous administration.
When Mary Bans for Congress.
Topeka, Ivan.. June 11.—It is an
nounced here that Mrs. Mary Lease
will be nominated by the pojiulists for
congressman at large from Kansas and
that the prohibitionists will endorse the
nomination.
When Mary runs for congress,’y Jinks but
won't we laugh
To sec t he pops, electin' Mister Lease's other
half;
The prohibs., too, they say the Jubilee '11
surely como
With Mary kllen in the house an' nary drop
'o rum
When Mary gits to congress she will kill the
railroads dead.
An' we'll ride upon the Pullman keers
’ithout a single red;
She’ll give us silver, plenty, so’s we’ll be
glad she went, „ .
An’ we’ll borry money on our farms at less’n
two per cent.
I’d like ter know what Thomas Reed, if he
Is in the chair.
Will do when Mary takes the floor an*
shrieks and paws the air;
I guess you folks ’at's got the bonds will
kinder feel afraid
When Mary Kllen stomps her foot an’ says
they shan't be paid.
The osage orange hedges are a-shakin' in
the breeze
That will shortly be a cyclone a-rippln' up
the trees;
You fellers In the east hcv got to knucklo to
the prairie;
An' you might ns well make up yor minds
to start us in with Mary.
—\V. O. i- uiler, Jr., In boston Journal
Next Winter
Read the old proverb, “The ants are
a people not strong, yet they prepare
their meat in the summer season.”
Would it not be wise for some of the
men who have families dependent upon
them for food and raiment, to look well
to the present opportunity for next
winter’s supply? Can the men who
now refuse to work in the summer sea
son justly claim charity next winter if
pinching times should come? The
broad mantle of charity is always
thrown around the unfortunate in times
of great suffering, but is it right that
those who will not labor when work is
offered, should be fed from the public
treasury, supported by private funds
in a day of greater disaster? The unem
ployed who have voluntarily left their
places to become idlers in the great
multitude who must depend upon char
ity, had better read this old proverb
carefully.
Comparisons.
Fruits of Democracy.—Idleness, pov
erty, closed mills, lost wages, strikes,
riots and widespread lawlessness
Fruits of Republicanism.—Employ
ment. thrift, prosperity, good wages
few strikes no riots no lawlessness,
buzziug mills highways crowded with
commerce and prosperity everywhere.
Let the American voter read the
above and take his choice. Times are
usually what people make them.
-—
Bl-Motallsm.
Since the republican party has mani
festly gone on record through the state
platforms and utterances of public me*
that the party will ever stand by bi
metalism as a principle, and attempt to
maintain a parity between gold and sil
silver as money, the democrats are at a
loss to know just what to do and what
to say. It is even hinted that Grover
Cleveland is now attempting to show
from his public utterances that he has
always been a bi-metalist notwithstand.
ing his monwinetal gold message seat
to congress list August,
MIMD READING.
When the Wife Will# the Hatband »*'
conwloailj Obey*.
Ono Saturday evening: the gentle
man whom the story names pondered
as to just how he could best "fool”
his wife, and decided that It would
astonish her greatly if he carried
homo a box of candy, for as he was
not personally fond of confectionery
ho had probably never made her a
present in the sugar lino before, bis
gifts generally being of more
valuable character. Providing him
self with a box of bonbons he started
home, says the Boston Journal, and
arrived there in company with the
candy and a chuckle in aivance at
the expense of his wife and the
state of surprise she wo-ald be in on
opeuing the package.
••Here is something for you,” he
remarkod, handing over the bundle.
•‘Yes,"she replied without oven look
ing at the box, the character ot
which was concealed in brown paper.
"It was very nice of you to bring mo
this confectionery from S.rs, I was'
wishing all the afternoon that- yon
would do so. ”
Mere 13 anotner account or mtna
acting upon mind. A young1 lady
was extremely anxious to obtain a.
pair of mousquctaire gloves to match’
a certain new lavender gown, but
could not find her size—5(—in. the
desired shade. After visiting sev
eral shops, she went home to fret
because the “lovely new suit!’
would not be ready for wearing
until the new gloves could be sent
from the distant city and the dance
came off the very noxt evening! In'
the meanwhile a certain young man’
had been racking his brains for a
suitable gift for ••her” approaching
birthday. They had not been ent
gaged very long, and many of her
tastes he was only able to guess at.
Strolling aimlessly into a shop on
tho very afternoon that she was
fruitlessly searching for gloves in
the rival establishment of the vil
lage, a bright idea from nowhere
in particular darted through his
mind, and he remembered that it
was allowable to give gloves even to
girls with whom one made trifling
bets. It was only when the pert
eleik inquired, “What size?” that he
began to bo bewildered. And then
his state of “phase” did not last
long.
Picking up a pair of suedes from a*
box open on the counter he reckless
ly ordered them wrapped up, and
that very evening the gift, in a vel
vet-lined box, and accompanied by a
big bunch of violets, was In the
hands of the young lady.
“Oh,” she exclaimed delightedly,
the next time he called, “the gloves
were exactly what I wanted! But
however did you find out that I wore
5:, and that I wa3 having a pale vio
let frock made for the assembly?
Did your sister tell you?
Fans Wort'i From 88 to 81,890.
The handsomest feather fan on re
cord is that owned by the countess
of Lonsdale, which consists of five'
wide white feathers, the longest,
twenty iuches, with a handle of amt
ber, having her monogram of dia
monds and costing $1,500. Pearl,
shell and amber mountings and.
shorter feathers in the lyre-shaped:
fans cost from $25 to $10fX Even,
for twenty dollars a dainty one,
though simple may be had. In the
closing fans a really choice specimen!
costs from $15 to $25. From $8 to
$16 come very stylish ones, bat
under that price they have a cheap
look, though many are carried in.
black, light colors, and the natural
mixed gray. The sticks or mount
ings 'nave much to do with the price.
A feather fan is supposed to last a
lifetime and should always be kept:
in a box. It is a favorite bridal
preseht and is never oat of style,
but a handsome design of this kind,
is only suitable for full dress.—
Ladies’ Home Journal.
ITobson’s C hoice.
The gentleman from the far- Wes %
sauntered into Delmonico’s hashery,
which is situated ia the city of New
York, and having been seated*, he
was approached by a garcon.
“Got any bacon and cabbage ?” he
inquired.
The garcon shook his head. -
“Got any corn pone and side meat-?”
Another shake.
“Got any pickled pork and. saler
atus biscuit?”
Another shake.
“Got any turnip greens andibulk.
shoulder?”
The garcon responded in the nega
tive again, and the gentlemani front,
the West, with a weary sigh,,
stretched his legs under the table.
••Well.” he said resignedly, “bring;
me some champagne and terrapin,
with the usual trimmin’s."
A Stage K tun.
Alvin R. Berry, a real estate dealer-,
is suing his wife for divorce in the
chancery court at Newark, Berry
testified that his wife had: gone, rid
ing with David E Carpenter, at liv
ery stable keeper. A servant girl,
who hadi bee* employed by Mrs.
Berry said she had seen, her greet
Carpenter with a kiss ae he entered
the house. Asked if it was at hearty
kiss the-witness replied: “It sounded
like a cow taking her hoof owtof tJb*
mud.”
WMhlnrtaa’i lack of Colored School!.
It seems that ia the cltgr of Wash
ington there are 4.000 oolored chil
dren of suitable age for whom there
are no school accommodations.
There are thousands more who are
not old enou
schools.
Time
All plants hive periods of aotivity
and rest Some are ac.ive in the
daytime and sleep at night; others
repose during the daylight hours
I atd are awake at night
Sh to attend the pubiio
It
Best (or Plants.
Mighty la th# Tnthl
And It will prevail. Altai nit tttderhagd
competition and spurlooa Imitation, the
genuine efficacy of the great national tonic,
i. listener's btomach BUtera, always iaes-and
always will prevail. The public recognise
tt everywhere as tba chief preventive* of
malaria, anti a reliable specific tor dyspep
sia, constipation, nervousness, rheumatism,
kidney trouble, biliousness and loan of ap
petite. Efforts made by Irresponsible deal
ers to-compete with lc by indirect means
have and will' continue to fall upon tbe
heads-, and It may be added, the pockets of
those making them Tbrou.'h the length
mid breadth of the American continent It la
the acknowledged household remedy, relia
ble and prompt. ft relies upon facts, upon
public experience, and upon tbe emphatlo
commendation of tbe medical fraternity.
Crowding the Hard Times.
-Mrs. David Roseaberger, the wife ol
a farmer wear Kittanning'r Pa., has just
given birth to five babies, three boys
and two girls, all of whom are alive
and well. .“I thought,” say* the sur
prised father, “that we were coming to
a time of astonishing pluralities- when
they began to- count up the vote lor
Grow a few weeks ago. But. eh* nayt
I didn’t look for anything like this—
hard times and five-babies-at once'”—
New York Tribune
Opali fbr ntrd Ballast.
E. E. Van Dyke informs us that ha
has killed a number of blue grouse front
time to time in the region- of Cnandie
creek and that in the crop of the birds
he has found opaisi It is thought-by
Mrv Van Dyke that the birds piok up
these opals in the-Bad Lands-in the-vi
oinity of Eed Lodge and usfe the precious
stones for ballast. The opals-found in
the crop of the mountain grouse are of
line character and of- variegated colors.
—Red Lodge (N. D.) New Idea.
Use weak lye,- or saloratus water;, for
cleaning paint;
A Good Appetite
Is essential to good health, and when the rat
oral desire for. food is gone strength will souq
fail. For loss of appetite, indigestion, dck-head
l-fOOd’S Saraa~
1 !%%%«%« partlla
ache, and other troubles
of a dyspeptic nature,
Hood's Sarsaparilla is
the remedy which most
certainly cures, 'it quickly tones the stomach
and makes one “Teal hungry." Be sure-to get
Hood’s and only Hood’s Sarsaparilla.
Cures
Hood’S Pills are purely vegetable.. iBc.
Y¥„ L. Douclas
13 THE BEST.
U(| N083UCAKIN0.
p5. CORDOVAN,.
FRENCH&ENAMELLED CALF.
FlNECAlf&kAHSAMl
4 3.50 F0LICE.3 SOLES.
e«5S"rffi*N»
*2.^175 BoysSchodlSSoesl
• LADIES ••
*3.w-BestDOngo^
.SEND FOR CATALOGUE *
WL'DOUQLAS,
BROCKTON, MASS.
at on can gave money oy wearing tno
W. L. DoBfflas 63.00 Shoe.
Because, vra are the largest manufacturers of
this gradeof shoes in the world, anil guarantee their
value by stamping the name and price on the
bottom, which protect you against high prices and
the middleman’s profits. Our shoes equal custom
work In style, easy fitting and wearing qualities.
Wo have them sold everywhere at lower prices for
the value given than any other make. Take no sub
stitute. If your dealer cannot supply you, we can.
COOK BOOK
320*PftG BS-ILLUSTRftTBO.
One of the Largest and Best Cook
Books published. Mailsd la sxohaiifs <
for 30 Largs Lion heads cut from Lion
Coffee wrappers, and a 2-cent stamp.
Write for list of our other fine Pro
mlums. Wool,or- B.icr Co.
4S0 Huron Bt roLEIKL-OHIO.
Davis Inter
national Cream
Separator,
Hand or Power.
Every farmer
that has cows
should have
one. It saves
half the labor,
makes one
third more but
ter.. Separator
Butter brings I
one-third more
money. Send j
for- circulars.'
Davis & Rankin Bldg. & Mfo. Co.
Agents Wantjt Chicago, 111.
FREElnTppm*. FACE BLEACH
Afpirt mimn me lu unai inousanaa or lame* .
of the U. S. have ootuaed my Fere Bleach, oa
account of price, which Inf g p*r bottle,and .
In order that all may (ti»« It a fair trial, I:
will send a Sample Bottle,yafely packed, all I
chanrea prepaid, oa receipt of 15c. FACE:
BLEACH removes and cures alwolatelv all i
freckles, pimples, sooth, blackheads, m»ow.
ness, acne, eczema, wrinkles, or roaghneaa of
akis.ard beautifies the ccmplexioa. AddrsM*
IflmO,A«KUPriST,6 E. l4tn»t.,N.T.UJTy
TOURIST TRAVEL
T® COLORADO RESORTS
Wm M4tiD eaalp this yesr, and the Ore^t ROOH.
Island) BsulS hu already ample and perfect ar
Mni«uu>ni Wuenaport tbo many vto wllL Uk* 1».
tbaiaralji mt at Colorado's
HIGH ALTITUDES*.
TbalbML Ift perfect, and double over important*
Divisions.. XruaEquipment the very beet, end a so.tdi
VrettbuJed Train oelle*l the ilQ pi VC leaver Chicago,
daily atwpi.ee.and arrives second mornicer at Denvec
or Colorado teian for breakfast
Any Coupes Ticket Airent can five yon rates, aedi
fst-thev tsvleessatteu «111 be cheerfully and quickly re*
spondee t* to addressing- JNO‘ SEBASTIAN.
Genera* P«" e'er ▲feat, Chicsf*
EDUCATIONAL.
CoIlM*. Mth nnlao tw
(In, Oct 1 (or Catalotru*
Mod to YCO. Brtdgvi Scc(
OMAHA **uffSS^.
King Paper Co
Hotel Doilone
WkaPPINO T*r»
PKH, TW1NFL
KtS. 1406-Mi*
Howard Street.
Omaha. ee*
and Capitol
H blk fro® bo*J
Council Bluff* *
Omaha ear llnes
houee In the state. Wre
Ui*>
and
Beat WB.OO a day house In the sta
mppp Jk CAIET, Proprietors.
SilksandDressGoo,,s^
W 11 It V fashionable Uks.Urcsetloods and
Laces In Ameilca at lowest pr>®<*
ever known. Sumplee five. It pays to keep post**
Write to UAYDJUV BttOft., Qaafea