The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 23, 1894, Image 6

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    HOME DEPARTMENT.
OEMS OP KNOWLBDQB FORTH!
HOU8KWIPB.
OMtal tahrmlla About Muooglu* thu
BuiMbold—Kuslpoa ond luitruotloufl
l» Dm Id thu Kltchau—Who r»dU|
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■am* of Cholank
IlfDiA, the ancient home of cholera,
whence the peatilence usually npreada
to Bussla and onward to western
Europe, U now the scene of experl
menta of great interest and importance,
which are being conducted by Dr.
Simpson, the health offloer for Cal
cutta, and M. Haffkine, one of M.
Paatour's asslatanta The point which
they are seeking to establish is the
effioacy against attacks of cholera of
a protective vaccine which M. Half
kine has introduced, liy way of a
test, 110 out of the 200 Inhabitants of
a group of native huts were inoculated.
When cholera broke out shortly after
ward, ten persons were attacked, of
whom seven died; all the oases, how
over, were among the minority who
had not been fortified by the vaccine.
This result may have been merely a
coincidence, but it Is remarkable
enough to justify the continuance of
the experiments for a time
long enough to give the rem
edy a fair trial. The discov
ery of a prophylactic against
cholera would be one of the most re
markable medical achievements of the
oentury. In India, where the coward
ice of the Hindoo renders him an easy
prey to the disease, and where the
sanitary conditions of native life are
still far below the European standard,
many valuable lives might be saved
by a cheap and simple precaution. To
Europe the consequences would be
still more desirable. The disease,
checked in its place of origin, would
discontinue Us almost annual visits;
for,though the state of Home European
ports is calculated to develop cholera
when it is once brought to them, thero
are probably few recent cases of its
breaking out spontaneously in Eu
rope.
How to K*op ltrasd
Don't shut bread in airtight boxes
to keep it moist. Suoh barbarous
treatment of bread may be etficacious
in keeping it moist, but bread from
which fresh air is excluded always has
a disagreeable, clayey flavor and is un
palatable to people of cultured tastes,
who appreciate the nutty sweetness
that la a prominent characteristic of
all good bread.
The foolish notion of keeping bread
moist has its origin in bad cookery.
Most of the stuff made by bakers has
to be eaten fresh and moist or not
eaten at all. It is so light and woolly
that if exposed to the air a few hours
It grows dry and husky and is almost
as unsavory and innutritions as chips.
A large proportion of homemade
bread is similar in character and is
affected in a similar manner by expos
ure to the sir. Hut properly made
bread—snch bread as ought to be in
every Intelligent home and on every
Christian table three times a day—
grows sweeter by exposure to the air
and is not at Its best until two or
three days old. Bread should be kept
In a - well covered box or jar, but it
should not be wrapped In cloths, and
the box or jar in which it is kept
should have small holes in the top or
sides, through which the fresh sir can
have access As soon as loaves of
bread are taken from the oven they
should be exposed freely to pure air,and
at no time after it should they bo ex
eluded from it. Make good bread, put
It In a well ventilated box after it is
perfectly cool, and it will keep suf
ficiently moist at least a week.
Sweat and Soar Cream.
From a bulletin of the lows experi
ment station we take this summary of
results in butter making, under vary
ing conditions, between Jan. 18 and
April 8:
Each batch of cream was divided
Into equal portions. One-half was
ripened? and churned at 88 to 60 de
grees; the other half was churned
sweet at a temperature of 50 to 54 de
grees • If the latter temperature had
been even lower, it might have been
better.
The-yield at butter from sour cream
was usually larger than from sweet
In nine triads it averaged 3 per oent
larger.
Sour cream usually churned quicker
than sweet The butter from sour
cream usually contained less fat and
more water than did that from sweet
cream. In four trials the average
difference in fat was nearly 3 per cent
The butter from sour cream usually
contained a trifle more casein than did
that from sweet This was the case in
eight of the nine trials made. The
average difference was two-tenths of
I per eent
The losses of fat in churning, wash
ing and working were less with sour
cream than with sweet cream. In nine
tciala the average difference was
■early one-half pound of fat per 100
pounds of butter made.
M
v*.
i *
Japirna Morainic Ulorlsa
The morning' glory is one ot the
eight plants whose flowers the Japan
di chiefly value, the others being the
apricot (mume), the cherry, the wis
teiie, the peony, the iris, the lotas
.end the chrysanthemum, ssys Garden
end Forest. The species most general
ly eultWated is Ipomoea trileba, a
notion of China, which blooms in l'oklo
In midsummer. The plants are grown
in small pots and neatly trained around
ham bob stakes about three feet long;
three or four only being produced on
a plant at one tune. In all the little
sweaty gardens in the snbnrbs of
ToktO and of the other Urge cities,
collections of tho plants are grown
isr
:;v.:';vV V,,
and offered for sale, thousands
being disposed of every year in Tokio
alone. Amateurs, too, devote a good
deal of attention to the cultivation of
these plants and pay large prices for
certain fashionable forma with pecu
liarly marked or abnormally formed
flowers, in which the Japanese de
light, although to less carefully edu
cated eyes they may appear simple
abominations. The city of Osaka is
said to contain the best private col
lections. We have seen a Japanese
book in which hundreds of named
varieties are described and illustrated
by colored drawings. At Irlya, in
Nhitaya, a suburb of Tokio, every
summer the gardeners make a display
of morning glories, which they use as
they do chrysanthemums in the au
tumn in decorating with growing
planta life size human figures placed
on revolving stages. Every morning
thousands of persons visit this exhibi
tion, which la perhaps the most curi
ous midsummer spectacle that can be
seen in the capital.
Coxer Arm lex.
Pressure of an unforeseen and unde*
sired sort Is being' brought to bear
upon membors of congress by the
various Industrial armies encamped
about Washington, says a report from
Washington. The novelty of the pres
ence of these unique organizations has
departed and consequently local dona
tions of provisions have fallen off un
til the men arc in a pitiable plight for
want of food. Every day the lobbies
are besieged by deserters from Gen
erals and Admirals Coxey, Fitzgerald,
Galvin and Fry, who are wearied of
husks and anxious to return home.
Naturally they came to the congress
men from their states for assistance.
In some cases members have yielded
to their charitable impulses and fur
nished funds for the purpose.
—. ..
Five or 10 minutes spent every morn
ing during winter in rubbing the bony
briskly with a flesh brush or piece of
flannel over the hand will do much to
keep the skin active aud prevent
colds.
Labor Is Life. —The late Sir Andrew
Clark, Mr. Gladstone’s physician, made
use of the three following aphorisms
during a conversation with Miss
Franoes Willard: "Labor is the life of
life.” "Ease is the way to disease.”
"The highest life of an organ lies in
the fullest discharge of its functions.”
There is a feast of food for reflection
in these three sentences.
Chocot.atk Pudding.—After a pint
of milk has come to a boll add one
large tablespoonful of corn starch, two
of chocolate grated and .a half a tea
cup of sugar. Boll until it thickens
and turn into molds; set on ice. Serve
with cream and sugar flavored to taste,
Stanish Puddinc.—Put two ounces
of butter and a little salt in a pint of
water, and when It comes to a boll
add as much flour as will make it to
the consistency of hasty pudding.
Keep It stirred. After it has been
taken from the fire and has become
cold, beat it up with three eggs and a
little grated lemon peel and nutmeg.
Drop the batter with a spoon into the
frying pan with boiling lard and fry
quickly. Sprinkle with sugar before
sending to table.
Milk in tiik Cellar. —When it Is de
sired to use a cellar or basement
room for the keeping of milk it should
be thoroughly cleansed of all other
farm products, the floor disinfected
| with lime or land plaster, the walls
and ceilings thoroughly covered with
strong whitewash, ample ventilation
provided, and then a suitable room
should be built above ground and the
cellar devoted to strong fruits and
vegetablea We never saw an under
ground room which was fit for a hu
man being, a horse or a cow to live in,
and so not fit to keep milk in.—Ex.
Care of India Rubbers.—In these
days, when India rubber shoes are so
often made of shoddy material, it is
especially necessary to take good care
of them. It is a great mistake to wash
an india rubber to free it from mud.
Soap always injures them, and even
clear water applications are of no
special advantage. The best way is
to allow the overshoes to become thor
oughly dry. Then brush them free
from all dust and mud, and rub them
thoroughly with vaseline. This not
only cleans them, but leaves an oil
surface, which makes the overshoe
more impervious to water. There is
an india rubber cement which is at
times quite effective in mend ing small
rents in overshoes, though it does not
last a great while. In buying over
shoes it is always beat to buy of the
freshest stock you can secure, and to
buy them of a trustworthy dealer who
will not deal in interior goods.—Ex
change.
Rabpbbbrt Bliqut.—There is a dis
ease now a dieting the Black Cap va
riety of raspberries, which, unless
energetically fought, will exterminate
the useful plant, writes the Glenbeu
lah correspondent of the Sheboygan
County Newa It is called blight and
may first be discerned in small dark
specks upon the bark, it spreads until
portions flake off, the leaves darken,
wither and droop and the bush looks
as though it had been blasted by fire.
Spray with the Bordeaux mixture
The mixture is one pound blue vitriol
and one pound unslacked lime,powder
and dissolve the vitriol and also slacken
the lime separately, mix with enough
water to make twenty gallons; get a
good sprayer, one may be had of any
hardware dealer at *4.50. The canes
should be sprayed before leafing in
the spring; again after full foliage,
the new canes when 6 inches
high and again when fully
grown, again when the old canes
are cut out, which should be
done at once after the crop Is har
vested. Follow this course until the
trouble is mastered. With bushes
troubled with yellows, dig up by the
roots and burn.
-:.W!
■y&r"
AN ACT OP HEROISM.
Exalting Incident nt a Itreent Clrona
Performance at the Hub.
At the circus In lloston the regu
lar evening performance hud drawn
to a clone. The great crowd had
b.’gun to file out slbwlv, and the
lesser throng, but still a very largo
ono, which wus to remain to see the
••concert,” had lilted tlio reserved
seats. Suddenly the latter multi
tune noticed tout in the center of
one of tho ere at rings the end of a
rope, which was dangling too high
to bo reached, had taken Arc. Tho
flames mounted rapidly toward tho
canvas. Amid breathless silence
someone jerked the other end of the
rope, which ran over a pulley at the
very ridgepole, with the evident in
tention of drawing it over so quickly
that tho fire could not be communi
cated. But when the blaze went
through the pully sparks woro scat
tered In evory direction, and pres
ently the wutchful crowd saw that a
spark had ignited a little spot in the
canvas at the top of everything.
Then restlessness became manifest
in the crowd, and a quick whisper,
••Shall wo run?” ran ovor it. The
Transcript says of the event:
••Things lookod very serious; for a
panic ainpng those movable chairs,
with tho groat throng still blocking
tho doors, must have meant death
for some. ”
Tho burning spot above was grow
ing rapidly. The manager of the
show curao forward and commanded
tho people to sit still. At the same
momont a man began to climb the
groat center pole by means of a
swinging rope. “Hand ovor hand,
up he went—not hurrying at all, for
if he had hurried ho could not have
accomplished his groat task. Up, up
ho wont, deliberately, surely. Tho
burning spot grew and grew, and the
flamo flashed up. Before ho reached
tho top the tent would be all ablaze!
Tho crowd was ready to break; but
now tho man was at the top; ho cropt
up through tho canvass, whore it
was gatherod at tho polo, and disap
peared; then the quick depressions
in tho cloth showed that tho man
was croeping on all fours toward the
bursting flame, and thon hl« two
hands came through the hole in the
cloth, and were gripping the flaming
edges nil around, and in an instant
tho lire was all out.” Then the au
dience broko into a loud choer. Fi
nally ho came down through tho
hole and began to descend the rope.
Ihore were more cheers, and when
the hero reached tho ground tho
cheers woro so loud and so enthu
siastio that ho had to bow and sorapo
before the multitude. “And he did
it as if he wore afraid—as he un
doubtedly was. He had done an
heroio and brilliant act, and—so
queer a thing is a brave man—he
acted as if he wore ashamed of it ”
CALLED DOWN.
The Woman Tried to Have Her Daugh
ter'* KiiB»«temeut Ring Appraised.
A salesman in a Philadelphia jew
elry store was approached by a
woman of tho fashionable world and
her duughter, a few days ago. Tho
latter looked somewhat embarrassed.
“I desire to get a ring for my daugh
ter,” said tho woman. The salesman
looked at the young lady. “Not
this ono—another daughter. It is
to bo a surprise.” She was showu
case after caso of diamond rings,
but none seemed to suit her. Finally
she said to her daughter: “Show
him yours, dear.” Blushingly tho
girl took off her .glove and
slipped a sparkling ring from her
engagement finger. “I want to get
one exactly like that. How much
will it cost?” Tho salesman looked
at tho ring, and tho girl watched
him as bravely as sho could. Ho
recognized it as one he had sold to
Mr. Blank a few days bofore. So he
handed tho ring baok to tho daugh
ter and said: “Tho cost of this ring,
madam, was a confidential matter
between Mr. Blank and myself. Wo
haven’t another like it in tho house.
I understood from his remarks that
ho thought the ring would not be
valued at its intrinsio worth. How
ever, if you wish to know its value,
take it to some pawn shop, and
multiply what they will offer you by
threo and you will get pretty nsarly
tho correct price.” The mother
flounced out of the store in great
wrath. Her daughter followed, al
most in tears.
Our Brother’s Answer.
The sachem waited in stern si
lence. Presently a stir at the door
of the wigwam announced the com
ing of the expected courier.
“And does onr brother beyond
the mountains," the king demanded,
“consent to join in our ghost dance?"
i he messenger prostrated himself
and answered:
“He said certainly, and wanted to
know if you took him for a wall
flower. ”—Truth.
Nothing Stingy About Iler.
“Mrs. Robinson has the reputation
of being very stingy."
“I should say report belies her,
then. ”
“You think so?”
“Think so! Why. she presented
her husband with twins the other
day.”
When Needed.
Husband, preparing to go to the
club—You Kick at everything I da
You used to say I was the light of
your life.
Wife—So you are yet. That’s the
reason I can’t want you to go out at
night—Puok.
A Stand Off.
The Father—You’re not exactly
the kind of man 1 would like
for a son-in-law.
The Suitor—Well, you're not my
1 ideal of a father-in-law, but wo
needn't be chummy unless you wish,’'
! —Judge,
l
“PURELY SELFISH.!* .
ENGLAND'S REASONS FOR HER
ATTITUDE ON SILVER.
A London Financial Papar 8coraa tho
Brltlah Gold Boca—America Can
Coerce John 'Bull to Adopt p Silver
Poller.
[The London Financial Ncws.l
There have not been wanting of late
indications of growing irritation with
England for its dog in the manger sil
ver policy. Gold monometallsm is
convulsing twocontinents and gravely
compromising the future of the poorer
states in Europe. This feeling has
been voiced in America by Senator
Lodge, whose proposal virtually to
shut out British goods from the
United States until we should assent
to a bimetallic convention, though
extreme and absurd, indicates the
trend of sentimenton the otherside of
the Atlantic.
Senator Lodge is not a silver man in
the usual sense, being opposed out and
out to free coinage in the United
States under existing conditions, and
therefore his views, though tinged
with strong feeling, may attract more
attention here than those of the pro
nounced silverites, Mr. Lodge is very
bitter about the failure of the Brus
sels conference of last year, where the
attitude of the British official dele
gates was “scarcely less than dis
courteous” to the U nited States, and
he believes that nine-tenths of the
American people regard it in that
light
A feeling of this kind is not to
be lightly ignored. We have fre
quent diplomatic differences with
the United States, but as a rule
there is seldom associated with
these any sense of animus between the
people of the two countries But now
we are encouraging the growth of a
feeling that on a question which af
fects the prosperity of millions of in
dividual Americans England is in
clined to entertain views unfriendly
to the United States. We know, of
course, that the unfriendliness is acci
dental, and that our monetary policy
is controlled by purely selfish notions
that we do not mind seeing India
suffering from our actios much more
than America does. The Americans
PLEDGED TO FBEE TRADE.
Are sufficiently old fashioned to be
lieve that it is the part of a friend to
show himself friendly, and when this
country turns a deaf ear to the plaint
of half the world, including1 all the
New World, they not unnaturally take
it unkindly.
It is not for us to say whether the
feeling of irration is wholly justified
or not; it exists, and that is the main
point Moreover, it is taking a shape
that may entail very awkward conse
quences on us. The recent proposal
to coin Mexican dollars in San Fran
cisco was a bid toward giving us an
object lesson by ousting us from our
commanding position in eastern trade.
There is a plain moral in the remarK
that if the United States would ven
ture to cut herself adrift from Europe
and take outright to silver she would
have all America and Asia at her
back, and would command the mar
kets of both continents. “The bar
rier of gold would be more fatal than
any barrier of a custom house. The
bond of silver would be stronger than
any bond of free trade.”
There can be no doubt about it that
if the United States were to adopt a
silver basis to-morrow British trade
would be ruined before the year was
out. Every American industry would
be protected, not only at home, but in
every other market Of course the
states would suffer to a certain extent
through having to pay her obligations
abroad in gold; but the loss on ex
change under this head would be a
mere drop in the bucket compared
with the profits to be reaped from the
markets of South America and Asia
to say nothing of Europe*. .
The marvel is that the United States
has not long ago seized the opDortu
nity, and but for the belief that the
way of England is necessarily the way
to commercial success and prosperity
undoubtedly it would have been none
long ago Now Americans are awak
ening to the fact that ‘ so long as they
narrow their ambition to becoming a
larger England” they cen not beat us
It has been a piece of luck for us that
it has never before occurred to the
Americans to scoop us out of the
world s markets by going on a silver
kerve us pi&ht if,
UTiiAted by the contemptuous apathy
of our government to the gravity of
gf.”1™ Pr°hlem, the American*re
». .. -s,
i
roralgn Wafti.
The weavers of Manchester, Eng
land, earn on an average 88.03 a week
of fifty-six hours. The spinners aver
age 88 53. Girls from 18 to 20 years of
age receive from 84.30 to 84. 50. Piecers
earn on an average 84.48 a week; bob
bin boys from 81.7C to 81.95.
In France, the daily wage for forty
one hoars’ work in Cambresia and the
Department de l'Aisne is from 13% to
19% cents, for weavers.
The representatives of a large Ger
man factory employing 1,500 hands
and running 90,000 spindles reported
in 1894 the average earnings of girls
and women at 81.45 for a week ot six
ty-six hours
Japan is taking away from both
Manchester and Bombay and is mo
nopolizing the Chinese trade. Last
year 360,000 spindlers were in opera
tion in Japan and by the end of the
present year the number will have
been increased to 750, <>00 The .Japan
ese factories are at Osaka. They have
the advantage of cheap coal as well as
cheap labor. The average wages at
Osaka are 16 1-5 cents a day for male
operatives and 8 cents a day for fe
males.
The question of securing foreign
markets for American cotton goods
and also of retaining the American
market for American manufacturers,
under the W ilson bill, rests on the
ability of American workers to accept
foreign wages,—Seattle Post-Intelli
gencer. _
Tariff Kafaraa,
Ill VrV I f
‘■E-woov f f
Sugar at Hair Price.
The sugar planters of Louisiana,
must indeed feel proud of the attitude
of their representative in the United
States senate. These men were re
cently elected to congress with spe
cific instructions to care for the best
interests of the state which they rep
resent. Neither Senator Blanchard
nor Senator Caffery has done so.
Louisiana can and will only be thor
oughly protected by the republican
party which represents protection.
The two southern senators thought
otherwise They made a trade; they
bartered away the certain prosperity
of their state for a vague and and in
definite nothingness. They have as
the matter stands now, deliberately
voted to rob every sugar planter in
the state of Louisiana of exactly one
half of the amount of protection
which was given to them under the
McKinley tariff.
But cane sugar is not the only sugar,
and on the broad lines of national
progress- and prosperity something
further must be said regarding protec
tion to the American sugar producing
industry. Those gentlemen of Louis
iana, who have their every interest
invested, in the sugar business, if not
content with the action of Senator
Blanchard and of Senator Caffery,
should by this-time have decided, that
the voice of the Louisiana sugar
planter be heard in plain and. vigor
ous terms. If the Louisiana sugar in
dustry must be subject to democratic
barter,, let it not be disposed of at
half prica
Democratic 8vmpathj for- Labor.
/ s
Basalt*. off Protection
, . any great American inventors
htfve earned world-wide fames Fitch
and* Fulton for steamboats, Whitney
for the aottcm gin, Evans for milling
machinery, Whittemore and Jemks. for
looms, Hoe, Adams and Gordon foir
printing- presses, Stuart for- sugar re
fining, Baldwin and Winans. for loco
motives, Pullman for sleeping cars,.
Collins and Soot for ax making, Anes
for-shovels, Wood wortn for woodi na
ehinory, B’airbanks and Howe for
scales, Howe and Crosby for fin mak
ing, Knott and Mott for stoves, Terry,
lyes and Jerome for docks Wood for
plows, Lorillard for tobacco, making
^wards l°r leather making, Blanca
wra for lathes for turning irregular
form^ Snencer for geometrical lathes,
McCormack and ICetchuoa for miners,
idt, Spender. Sharp, Smith and \Ves
wn^rfirewms, Phillips for matches,
Hells for hats, Goodyear for india
rubber, Ericsson for naval construc
tion and hot air engines Howe, Wil
son. Singe,-, Gibbs, Grover and Baker
lor sewing machines, Morse for the
telegraph. Tatham for lead pipe,
Whipple for screws, Checkering and
Steinway for pianos Burden for horse
shoes ’kale for locks Uoebling for
yure cables Corliss for steam engines
Disston for saws Stephenson for
horse ears and Gatling forquyiTfiring
guns—Baltimore Journal cf (t0R5
merce, May 98, 1894. ora
k-%.
< Big Fees.
ErsUne, the leader of the English be
in hia time, andoneof the moat hrilliui
lawyers Great Britain ever product
never received a greater yearly ineom*
than $60,000 and more than £5,000 a
any one case. Sir James Scarlet, a
wards Lord Abinger, a very anoceasigi
lawyer, had an income certainly not to
exceed Erskine's. The same is true of
Garrows, another great English lawvw
Ballantyne received from the British
Government a very large fee for goiu»
to Calmtta to try a murder case, but|
large part of it was consumed in ej.
peases.
America takes the lead in big lawyer
fees, and it is only a dozen years or ao
that our lawyers have been ao lucky.
Pinckney, Webster, Choate or any of
onr great lawyers in times past nevet
dreamed'of such extravagant bills. Th,
first great fee ever known in this con»
try was received by Clarkson N. Potts,
in. the foreclosure of the Oanandiagu
railroad, not many years ago. It u
stated that he received $100,000 in that
case. It is reported that Charles O’Coi i
or received $75,000 in the Jumel will
ease and$100,000 in the Parrish will cue, 1
—Troy Frets.
A Snperb Display.
Talk about energy! Has any om
more than the woman who works the
beefsteak pounder that wakes you up
in the morning?—Atchison Globe.
There are over 500,0)0 telephones in ser
vice in the United States.
In Hot Weather
Something to needed to keep np the appetite,
assist dfgestton and give good, healthful sleep.
For these purposes Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is pecs
JJood’
g Sarsa
parilla
Cures
Harly adapted. As a
blood purifier ft has no
equal, and It Is chiefly by ^ _
Its power to make pure
blood tli at it has won such famo as a cure fa;
scrofula, salt rheum and other similar diseases.
Hood’S- P LI is euro headache and Indigestion.
W. L. Douclas
$3 SHOE
13 THE BEST.
KOSOUGAKIN&
45. CORDOVAN.
rKtNLn&LNAMtuxU UALr.
„ fine calf&kansarou
4 3.5PP0LICE.3 Soles.
«#££%£**
*2JU3 BUYSSCHOOlSHOEl
-LADIES*
kSEND FOR CATALOGUE
W-L-DOUGLAS.
BROCKTON, MASS.
Ton cniL save money* ftywearlag the
W. L. Doofflas 03.00 Shoe.
Because, vre are the-largest manufacturers of
this grad© of shoes la the world, and guarantee their
value by stamping the name and price on tha
bottom, which protect you against high prices and
the middleman's profits. Our- shoes equal custom
work In style, easy fitting and wearing qualities.
We 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, \ve can.
COOK BOOK
%FREE 1^
320 P/UihS—ILLUSTRATED.
One of the Largest and Best Cook
Books publ ished. Mailed in exchsngs
fbr 20 Large Lion heads ent from Lion
GOffee wrappers* and a 2-cent Rtamp.
Write for list of our other fine Pre
mluni!A Woolson Spice Co.
450 Huron St Toledo. Ohio.
[ELY’S CREAM BALM CURES MifcfffiS
CATARRH
IPBICE SO CENTS. ALL DRUGGISTS
Davis' Inter
national Cream
Separator,.
Hand or Power.
Every farmer
that has cows
should have
one. It saves
half the labor,
make-3' one
third more but- 4
ter. Separator A
Butter; brings
one-third; more Ei
money.. Send MS
for circulars. Ms
Davis & Rankin Bldg. & mfg. Co.
Agents Wanted. Chicago, 111.
Patents. Trade-Marks.
Examination and Advice an to Patentability of
Invention. Send for “ luventors’Guide, or How to Get
a l atent.” PaTKSS O’PAEBSLL, WASHINGTON, D. 5.
CLAIMANTS WHO PiAlftinT UCJtD
from thei r Attorneys If A Will I IIL fl H
r ab a ^mm^sioner.wHl write to n A T H AN
^e/?8ion A Patent Att’y, wi4 F m.,
Washington, I>.C., they will receive a prompt reply.
IF
__ educational,
^Uf)DTUANn offldnl court
OnUn I IlnllU repones at tlio Omaha College
<1 Shorthand and Typewmilng. Omaha, Neb. Bend
for caUalague, &01 Boyd *Tln*i ter.
Ceiteare, 14th eesMon be
gins Oct. 1. For Tata oiU9
tmod to W.O Bridges Sec/
UIIVERSITY OF VOTOE DAME.
“ FITUKSDj»y 8EPT. 4! hV °PEH
USIm*"?.!" ***** aclence, t»w.
Civtl and Mechaakal Engineering Thorough
Freparatory and Osamrrttl Courses. Bt. EdwanlM
Bali for boys under LSI* unique In the completeness of
its equipment. Catalogues sent free on application to.
Mas. A>drkw lloBBtfan, C. 8. C., Notre Dame, ln<E
AGftDEMy or tftfi SACKED HEART
jJJe course of tnetraction In this Academy, conduct
^rthe Religious at the Sacred Heart, embraces tii«
whole range of sehjeCUnecessary to constitute ajtfhd
•ml renned edusattan. Propriety of deportment, per
sonal neatness ami the principles of morality are ob*
Sects of unceasing attention. Extensive grounds af*
*L6 »pUw!i for useful bodily/exer*^
ri^e; their health Uan object of constant acJIcltude,.
and In sicluiees they are attended with maternal cate.
Fall term opens Tuesday, Sept. «h. For further par
ticulars, mldr*— —--- —
Aoadeaj j
... . j , '"“Ji no. ior iuraner pa*
ticul.ra, ariUrcM THIS StJPBHIOB.
.Sacred Heart, Bt. JaiphTllA
OMAHA Bu8h'SS2I,.
D jtTflDO ®fe*n>pn®d. Mail your-raaor tegeth*
IlHLUnO er*l hSOc thSrarflel<#Aco.. Cut'or*
win aB.a ber 8uW'llea. Omiha end tin*
win return it nohow ground and tigu-p Wi-vnated.
U I VC ®«P“lr«d. Uron h tw a good
n A I ^ hat aQd don,t * ■»n* w tarn* *
■■ri ■ kJ new one, send it to t e and bate it
put la fl* si -class shape. We n anafac urj whole”
**Y« r ta.l all kinds cf hats a, d eap8 n.p
^1 p.»siage and express must b * prepaid.
MILLARD HOTEL hat HTOBFi Qmaha»
for St EX and BOYS. If 7oa
wish to save from 93 to HO.Ot) on
_ . . a i nit write for oar now Fall
Catalogue tor^alnlnt **®p!es of cloth.
NEBRASKA CLOTHING C0.»
Cue, i4t& and ii jugiiw git, OoaAt
CLOTHING