The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 06, 1894, Image 6

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    ('Wwli Hub* l» lorn Field'.
T;»e following letter from I'rof.
For ben gt Tea some additional light on
the very Important question of chinch
bugs in corn fluids:
After the chinch bug* have dispersed
themselves general!/ in the corn fields
little or nothing remains to be done
to defend the crop sgu ust their attack
that year; bat while they are on their
way from small grain or corn.or while
they are entering corn field* and be
fore they hare distributed themselves
widely. It is not diflicult to arrest them
en route and to kill them in great
numbers. For this purpose plow deep
and thoroughly pulverize with harrow,
brush or drag, a atrip of ground about
six to twelve feet wide between the
crop or part of the crop infested and
that which is to be protected. Heduce j
this strip as nearly as possible to the
condition of dust, aud then make a
deep furrow in it by dragging back
and forth a imall log six or eight
inches in diameter, or a triangular
loaded trough made by nailiDg two
boards together lengthwise and filling
with stones. Thisdragshouldbedrawn
hack and forth by horses with thedriv
«r standing on it, the object be
ing to make a deep furrow with steeo
dusty aides across the lino of move
ment of the chinch bugs. Next dig j
holes about a foot In depth with a
post-hole digger, in the bottom of
this furrow, at interrals of, say.
twenty feet. Chinch bugs making
their way Into the corn will march or
tumble into this furrow, and will be
unable to get out again on the op
posite side as long as that is kept
dusty. As a consequence, they will j
gradually accumulate in the post {
holes, where they may be very readily j
killed in large numbers by pouring in j
a little coal tar; or the tar may be ]
placed in the holes at first, so as to I
destroy them ss they fall in. If the I
sun is very hot. large numbers of
mem win uo killed m the furrow I
itself. It will be necessary for
some one to keep watch of
this barrier, so that as the chinch
bugs gradually work down the dust
in the> efforts to climb out. any part
of the furrow from which they arc
liable to escape may be trimmed by
hand. On leaving the Held at evening
everything should be looked over and
put in the bestcondition, so that there
may be no passage of the bugs in the
night; and some one ahonld also take
the Beld very early in the morning.
Sometimes, where they are very abnn*
dant, a second fnrrow parallel to the
first may bs necessary. This arrange
ment will serve the purpose complete
ly unless it rains, In which case the
farmer mast be prepared with e barrel
of coal tar, a slender line of which be
should then pour from e vessel with e
smell spout along the bottom of the
fnrrow ite whole length to serve as a
stop to chinch bugs after the dusty
sides of the furrow ere wet This elso
must be watched end renewed ss
necessary. When first put on the coal
tar will aink into the ground quite
readily, but as it dries out a crust will
form upon which fresh tar will lie for
some hours without sinking in Even
after it is well dried out chinch bugs
avoid It and will not cross It If they
can help themselves. Kindly give
these Instructions to any especially
Interested in the matter, as we have
thoroughly experimented with this
method and have found it, if careful
ly followed up, a most effective one
for the destruction of chinch bugs in
midsummer. The introduction of
eontsgious disease by means of in
fected specimens is an uncertain and
somewhat delicate operation, liable to
fail through oversight or mismanage
ment even when all the clroum stances
favor it, and practically certain to
fail absolutely in very dry weather.
Its utility has often been enormously
overstated, largely, I think, as a con
sequence of mistakes of observation,
to which those not thoroughly ac
quainted with the life history and
habits of che chinch bug are especial
ly liable. It will, of course, do no
barm to try this method, but I most
urgently advise that It be regarded at
most as an interesting experiment,
and that no practical dependence be
placed upon it at present.
S. A. Forbes,
Illinois State Entomologist.
l*fl«MW of road* an Hanaro.
A bulletin of the Mississippi station
nya:
Stable manure is undoubtedly the
beat fertilizer we hare for general
use, aa it eontaina all the elements
needed for plant growth in a condi
tion in which they soon become avail
able; and, in addition, its principle
bulk is composed of humus-making
material which is needed for all ex
cepting very fresh or alluvial soils.
Although stable manure is regarded
as a “complete” fertilizer, and ia a
standard with which others are com
pared, it is of very variable composi
tion, its value being determined by
the animals from which it comes, their
food; age and condition, the amount
of straw and bedding which has been
mixed with the droppings, whether it
has been sheltered or exposed to
leaehing rains, the length of time
since it was made and by many other
causes An increase in the amount
of eotton seed meal fed to the animals
is very quickly followed by a corre
sponding increase in the amount of
nitrogen in the manure, wheat bran
gives a marked increase in the phos
phoric add, while there are few feeds
which give a manure richer in potash
than does clover hay. In some recent
experiments made at the New York
(Cornell) station the value of the ma
nure from cows fed on different ra
tions varied from $1.76 to 32.47 per
ton, and from 3L09 with calves to
g(. 17 with sheep. These figures give
the results of work done where the
ration was rich in grain, and where
nearly dll the urine was saved by
using water-tight floors or a sufficient
•mount of bedding. Had the urine
v -■ ^' ; '. '
been allowed to waste the raise of the
manure would bare been much less,
as large proportions of both potash
- and nitrogen are excreted in the
urlna.
The fertilizing ralues of some of the
more common feeding staffs, as given
in the “Experiment Station Hand*
Hook" per ton are as follows:
Mixed bey_(1.00
Hedclover.... 2.20
Alfalfa. 1.08
Melilotui.. 1.83
Caw nee.1.47
Corn Milage... .37
Oat Straw.... 1.34
Oats.03
Corn Meal.8)
Corn and cob
™**1.47
Wheat bran.. 1.01
Rice bran ... .34
Cotton seed
meal. 1.79
Potash- Phosphor- Nltro- Total
ie Acid. gen.
Ml
.88
.51
.{0
.03
.11
.20
.82
.03
5*23
6 21
0.57
5.04
5.70
.84
1.80
0.13
4.74
.57
2.38
.29
4.23
8.01
2 13
(5.55
8 79
8.70
8.38
7.09
1.82
3.30
7.02
0.17
5.27
12.01
2.00
2.08 19.93 24 89
It should be borne in mind that the
figures giren abore represent the nom
inal fertilizing ralues of the different
feeds, and are far from showing their
aetnal ralnes when used in the field.
Under good barn management not
more than 80 per cent of the fertiliz
ing ralue of food giren to stock is re
eorered in the manure, and when the
urine it allowed to waste not more
than 50 or 00 per cent is recovered.
There is a still further loss from the
fact that fields seldom need the differ
ent fertilizing elements in the exaet
proportions in which they are found
in the manure, and so a portion of
such aa are in cxceas of the amounts
needed will not be consumed. To bal
ance this loss, however, there ia a pos
itire gain in the humus-making ma
terial which has not been counted in
the estimated value, and for clay
soils which have been in cnltivation
for a long time the humus is often of
greater value than the combined pot
ash, phosphoric acid and nitrogen.
Tiie actual value of stable manure
will vary with every variation of tie
field to which it is applied.
Frtmlnc Raspberries.
A Cornell bulletin says: Growers
are in general pretty well agreed as to
the method o( pruning blaclc-caps.
One point, however, needs to be em
phasized, that the young shoots should
be nipped back low, and when they
reach the dosired height, not allowing
them to get considerably higher and
then cutting back to the height re
quired. If pinched low, the plant will
all at once throw out strong and vig
orous branches near the ground, mak
ing a well-balanced self-supporting
bush. On the other hand, if it is al
lowed to grow higher and is then cut
back, only woak buds are left, and the
result is that they do not develop so
rapidly and only three or four of the
upper ones start at all, producing a
top-heavy and unsatisfactory plant.
Sheep shears are very convenient for
this summer pruning, or it may ba
quickly done by merely pinching
out the tip with the thumb and
finger. To determine whether
the manner of doing this would make
any difference, two sections of row
were marked and in one case the canes
were all cut with shears, taking care
that the cut should be in a slanting
direction so that water wonld run off
readily. In the other case the canes
were snapped off by bending them
quickly with the thumb and finger,
leaving an irregular, ragged end. The
canes had grown too high, so that
rather more was removed in both
cases than ought to have been m the
best practice. An examination the
following spring showed no percepti
ble difference in the condition in which
the two lots came through the winter..
The cane nearly always died back to
the first bud in either case, so that
while theoretically a smooth, slanting
cut would seem to be best, practically
it does not matter.
Element* In Fertilization.
Pit in commonly said that a “com
plete’* fertilizer need contain only the
three mineral elements which are
usually deficient in the soil, viz.:
potash, phosphoric acid and nitrogen.
Practically, however, we find that
though a soil may be rich in each of
the elements which go to make np the
plant, it is impossible to secure good,
or even fair crops, unless it contains,
in addition to these, a liberal supply
of humus, which is formed whenever
vegetable matter decays in the soil,
and it is in the formation of this ma
terial that the practice of plowing
under green crop3 has its greatest
value. It is plentiful in all fresh
soils, but becomes exhausted by con
tinued cultivation in hoed crops,
especially in the hill lands, and the
supply must be renewed before chem
ical fertilizers can be used to advant
age. It is the necessary foundation
of all fertility, and without it the use
o' any commercial fertilizer is sure to
be disappointing. If the fertilizers
used do not contain humus-making
material it must, sooner or later, be
supplied by the plowing under of
green crops, or by turning the land
out to rest.—Farmers’ Review.
Fresh Blood.—An expert In the
poultry business advises that in order
to have plenty of fresh eggs fresh
blood should be Introduced into the
flocks every year. Get as good blood
as possible to introduce, but even a
mongrel bird will help the high-bred
birds better than none at all. In fact,
sometimes the mongrel bird will bring
points of hardiness and endurance
into the flocks that can not be ob
tained from those that have been so
carefully reared for generations past.
The rooster should be obtained from
good stock, and very often of a differ
ent breed from the hens, and if a new
one is obtained each season enough
fresh blood will be brought into the
flock to make the standard of the
birds high. There is little chance of
deterioration, and more eggs will be
obtained from them than from a flock
that has been closely inbred for years.
; MOUSE AND LION IN ONE CAGE.
They Peered Kerb Other la Tara 1'ntU
the Little Animal Feeapei.
Ono day a keeper wishing to test
the affection popularly supposed to
exist between a mouse and a lion put
a moose in the cage of a full-grown
Nubian lion, says McClure's Maga
zine. The lion saw the mouse be
fore he was fairly through the bars.
| and was after him instantly. Away
went the little fellow, scurrying
across the floor and squeaking ir.
frighl, When he had gone about
ton feet the lion sprang, lighting a
little in front of him. The mouse
turned, and the lion sprang again.
This was repeated several times, the
mouse traversing a shorto -distance
after eacli spring of tho lion. It was
demonstrated that the lion is too
quick for the mouse, at least in a
large cage. Finally the mouse stood
still, squealing and trembling. The
lion stood over, itudying him with
interest Presently ho shot out his
big paw and brought it down directly
on the mouse, but so gently that the
mouso was not injured in the least,
though held fast between the claws,
‘lhen the lion played with him in
tho most extraordinary way. now
lifting lus paw and letting the mouse
run a few inches, then stopping him
again as before. Suddenly tho mouse
changed his tactics and, instead of
running when tho lion lifted his paw.
sprang into tho air straight at the
lion's head. The lion, terrified,
gave a great leap tuck, striking the
bars with all his weight and shaking
the whole floor. Then ho opened
his great jaws and roared and roared
again, while the little mouse, still
squealing, made his escape. Ol the
two tho mouse was the more fright
ened. It is a fact well known in all
manageries that a mouse will fright
en an elephant, moro than a locomo
tive. Let ono appear in an elephant's
stall and the elephant, his mountain
of flesh quivering, his trunk lashing
tho air. will trumpet in abject ter
or; and he will not recover for an
hour afterward. Tho trainers say
that what tho elephant fears is that
the mouse will run up his trunk.
There is a tradition that a mou-o
really did this in one instance while
the elephant was sleeping and caused
the elephant such intense pain that
he had to be killed.
COTTONSEED OIL.
The Many Cm to Which ThU Valuable
I roUoct I» Now Pat.
••It is astonishing to what a mul
titude of uses cottonseed oil is now
put. and how enormously the de
mand for it has grown, and that
makes it surprising that the merits of
the oil were not discovered sooner,-”
said C'- J. Johnson, of Atlanta, to the
Globe-Democrat man. “For cen
turies this important part of the
cotton crop (the seed), except what
was used for planting, was either
thrown away as waste, used for en
riching the soil or fed to cattle.
Only of late years was the mercantile
valuo of the oil discovered. It de
veloped very rapidly. In two or
three years mills for crushing the
seed and rendering the oil sprang up
all over the South, and the new in
dustry increased, until now I believe
the cotton seed oil trust is second
only to the .Standard oil trust in cap
ital and magnitude of its operations.
At first the product was modestly
used for cooking purposes in place
of lard, but its sphere was very soon
enlarged. Its value as a lubricating
oil was soon discovered, and it would
be hard to tell in how many ways it
is used now. There is a largo market
for the seed after the oil is extracted,
too. It is sold in tho shape of cot
ton seed oil cake and meal for cat
tle food. The oil has become an
article of great commercial import
ance^ and it is shipped to Europe in
largo quantities. A movement is on
foot to export it in bulk like pe
troleum. Tho first vessel has recent
ly been launched, built for the pur
pose. It has a capacity for 500,03)
gallons of oil, besides other cargo.
It is built of steel. It is almost
superfluous to add that it is in the
servico of the American cotton seed
oil company.”
I ong ami Narrow Maine Farms.
Maine probab'y has many oddly
shaped farms, but we doubt if one
cud be found more peculiar in form
than that in the oast part of Dexter.
This was eight rods wide and half a
mile long, with the highway cutting
it at right angles into unequal por
tions. The inconvenience of so nar
row a farm, with the pasturage and
woodland at one end. is obvious to
anyone, but in its A>rm it has con
tinued since the days of the fore
fathers to the present time, in use
as a farm all the time. A farm only
twenty rods wide and about half a
mile long was in use a great many
years near Farmington Fa'Is. and
may be so used yet. but the Dexter
farm beats it by nearly two-thirds for
narrowness and general oddity.
Farms of this shape are numerous
ip Canada.—Lewiston Journal
■Indicia Sarcasm.
The sarcastic Justice Maule did '■
not spare his judicial brethren. “I
do not believe,” he said to the coun
sel once, “that any such absurd law
has ever been laid down, although it
is true that I have not yet seen the
last number of the ‘Queen’s Bench
Reports.’ ” When a witness was
telling an impossible story, and de
clared that he could not tell a lie,
for he had been wedded to truth
from bis infancy. Justice Maule ob
served: "Yes. but the question is.
how long have you been u widower?”
The counsel who objected to a bill of
costs in a case before Justice Maule
and a juiy, declared that the aecount j
was a “diabolical bill." The judge ;
toll the jury, however, that even°if j
the statement of counsel were true. I
it was still their duty to “give the
tevil his due."—Argonaut.
WORLDS MARKETS
OLD DEMOCRATIC ARGUMENT
COMPLETELY EXPOSED.
The Ancricin Market Worth Oror >o»r
Rtllloa Dollar* a V*ar More Than All
Other* Combined—Let l'* Keep Oar
Own and hot Destroy It.
i
, The renewal of the free trade
party's destrnctire free raw material
war cry against American industries
naturally calls to nund their old theory
of the markets of the world, and how
great a gain it will be if we can only
secure them. Let ns look into it
The total manufactures of the
; I'nited States in 1890, according to
| the last census returns, amounted in
value to 89, OH,435.037, of which we
exported to the value of 8151,103,376,
leaving 89,90.1,312,901 worth of Ameri
can manufactured goods consumed at
home, as follows:
AMERICAS MANUFACTURES.
Total United states manufactures.
0190..19,051.435.337
Total exported. 1890. I5I,1U2,3;»
Total home consumption. 1930 .JS9J3.332.961
In the same waj- we must deal with
our farm products, the total value of
which during 19S9, consumed in 1S90,
was 83,400,1CV. 454. He exported to
the extent of 8533,111,490, leaving
American farm products worth 81,937,
965,9o4 consumed by Americans. Thus:
AMERICAS FARM PRODUCTS.
Total farm p-oJuc'.s 1889.J2,46).197.4>l
Total exported, 1889. 5.12 141.491
Total home consumption. 189). .91.927,965,964
We see that the American people
consumed American manufactured
goods and farm products in 1690 to the
extent of SJu,631,296,925. To this we
must add the value of the foreign |
goods entered for consumption through
our customs department, which
amounted to8773.674. S12 in 1990, there
by getting the following aggregate
value of the entire
AMERICAN CONSUMPTION IN 189ft
American manufactures.59,913 332,99
American farm products... _ 1,927 935,981
Foreign goods. 773.-.74 81;
Total American consumption til 001,973,737
Against the aggregate consumption
of goods in the United States, worth
$11.<504,973,737 in the year 1890, or
$178.32 for every man, woman and
child of a population of 63,000,000 per
sons, what are the great markets of
the world that we may expect to se
cure9
The markets of the world comprise
only such goods as are imported by
the different countries of the world,
because we can not claim to supply
them with what they already manu- ]
facture or grow in their own coun
tries, unless they propose free trade,
as the democratic party would have
us do. They are not so foolish, how
ever. Other countries prefer to re
tain what they already possess rather
.f.*n throw away the substance for
the shadow. We find from the Amer
ican Almanac of 1288 that the total
imports of all other countries in the
world at the latest date for which
complete returns are available, were
as follows:
TOTAL rOItEIGX IMPORTS.
Europe, Asia, Africa, North and
South America, Australia and
the Islands of the Sea.*7,5*9,703.030
This is less by over four billions of
iollars than the total consumption of
goods in the United States. Thus:
Total United States consumption
1897.*11,601,873,737
Total imports, another countries,
1888 . 7.5!9,000,000
United States market excess.. 14,035,973,737
Will It Be a Total Eclipse?
FARMERS. ATTENTION!
Bow the Democratic Promlees of
1803 Bare Been Kept la 1894.
In October. 1S9;, that great demo
cratic authority, the Chicago Herald,
exhorted its readers to vote for "a
change," and in order to catch the
votes of the farmers it used the fol
lowing bait:
“PRIME
wheat1
.$ua"
“Vote for Cleveland and Si. 25 for
wheat’’—Chicago Herald, 18>*2.
In less than two years we have seen
many “changes" that have become
only too painfully familiar to the
people of the United States It is un
necessary to dwell upon these beyond
drawing the attention of the farmer
to the manner in which the Chicago
Herala’s promise of 91.34 for wheat
has beei fulfilled. This we do by
quoting from the Chicago Herald of
July 6 ISO*, a telegram which it pub
lished as follows, -grammar and alU
Vasdai.ia, III., July •'>•—Wheal
threshing' is in full blast in Fayette
countv. Six hundred bushels of the
new crop was brought to market to
day and sold at 4*1 cents per bushel.
The berry is exceptionally fine, and
weighs over sixty pounds to the bushel
measure.—Chicago Herald, 1*04.
Democratic Respect for Labor.
POPULISTS ARE TO BLAME.
They Vote With the Free Wool Party <
and Against the Wool Growers.
In the event of a tariff bill becoming
law with free wool, it is but right that
the sheep farmers of this country
should know exactly who is to blame
for the cheapening or destruction of
this branch of their interests. Some
western wool men have accused the
eastern manufacturers of desiring free
wool. This is an entirely mistaken
idea.
The records of the senate showed a
solid republican vote in favor of put
ting a duty on wool, and a solid demo
cratic vote in favor of putting wool on
the free list While the populist sena
tors voted for a duty on wool, they
are really to blame for wool being put
on the free list because they tied
themselves up with the democratic
senators in order to act on the income
tax. Had the populists stuck by the
republican senators there would have
been no free wool, no tariff bill passed,
and no income tax.
The policy of the free trade party is
to throw our American market—worth
$11,604,973,737 in 1890—open to the
competition of the farmers and manu
facturers of all other nations, while
we strive to secure their markets, all
of which put together are worth
84,035,973.737 less than our own home
market
Is it not best to retain the good home
market that we already possess, also
striving to cease buying the 8773,(174,
813 worth of foreign goods that we
consume and to produce these goods
for ourselves, if we can. ratiier than to
throw away what we are sure of and
take chances in securing a portion of
the smaller markets of the rest of the
world in open competition with the
cheap labor of Europe, of Asia, of
Africa, of Canada, of Central and South
America, and of the savage labor of
the Islands of the Sea?
Such is the policy of protection.
But the free trade policy is to give our
markets to the cheap labor countries
and to compete with the cheap labor
in their smaller markets. We already
consume over four billion dollars’
worth of goods more than they can
buy from us i-et us keep our own
trade first. Always vote for protec
tion.
The western wool growers should
understand clearly that the only party
to blame for free wool is the populist
party of the house and senate, and the
populists represent the wool-growing
sections of the country. Perhaps the
populists think they will acquit them
selves from any blame in their actions
by voting against free wool, but if the
farmers can see a hole through a five
foot door they will readily see that
the Populists tied themselves up to
the democrats, and it would have
been utterly and absolutely impossi
ble for the democrats to pass a tariff
bill without their vote. Xnat would
have left wool with 11 cents per
pound duty as it had been heretofore.
That the democratic platform went
all to splinters we know full well.
They have acted very viciously to
ward the wool men, especially when
they put a duty of 15 per cent on old
rags and shoddy, and placed scoured
wool on the free list. Out of ninety
nine woolen manufacturers in the
state of Rhode Island there are only
three that can be counted as free wool
men, and there is not one in Massa
chusetts It is not the eastern manu
facturer who is to blame for free wool,
but the populist senators
At Coney Island.
Adams—It is astonishing’.
Brown—What is astonishing?
"That there should be so much
water. ”
and just think, you only see
ths water that is floating on topi”
SLEEPLESS
Hake yoa weak arid weary, tmSt for .
disposed to ezcrilon. They show th^
nerve strc2"t!» b ;roae and that
Mood
1
roar ,
1 system ncod3 bonding
v.p. The rarest remedy
!s Hood’s Sarsapariila.
It purifies tl:o blood,
strengthens tlio nerves, creates an appe>
gives sous,I, refreshing sleep. Get noaj*
only Hood's Sarsaparilla,
*S ^twso.
- Pan
Qur(
Hood’S Pills cure alt User ills.
W. L. Douclai
$3 SHOEdsaysa
_ ftm ^saw.l
$3.59 FQLICE.aSa
^^>2.W0RKli|j
EXTRA FIN “
$2.*lSB()Y5SCH!)9j
•ladies.
**■*■.»“
BeSTDON^
, SEND FOR CATALNk
W*L*DOUG!jm
Too ©nn kto money by wenriaji
W• Ij« Douglas (3*00 Shop,
Because, wo era the largest manufnet®
this grade of shoes lathoworld,amlf;uari}nt(,
vaiue by stamping the name and price
bottom, which protect you against hlghprfc
the middleman's profits. Our'shoes enuaif
work in style, easy fitting and wearing qo,
We hare them sold everywhere at lower p*
the value given than any other make. Tak»0
•titute. If your dealer cannot auppiy y0Ui „
T11IC VUICC I FineSteel. Kle01.,J
(Mid IVrllrC • Good stronglia,
Killed free Id ncbup for U Urn Llei I
from Lion Coffee Wrappers, end a iorct •:
pay postage. Write for list of our othrr t
mlorna. WOOLSON SPIC E CO
160 Huron St. Ton
CREAM BALM CUREsI
"Ilf n3f
Davis' Cream Separator Churn, pon
hot water and feed cooker comn sfq
Agents wanted. Send for circular
sizes Hand Cream Separators.
Davis & Kankln B. & M. Co. Ctur.,
WALTER BAKER&l
xne largest ^lanuiacture:
PURE, HIGH GRAD
COCOAS AND (Ml
i On this Continent, harereo
1 SPECIAL ANO HUM
AWARDS
on all their Goods at
CALIFORNIA
MIDWimiR EXPOSiTli
■ BREAKFAST CCK
I r: ■. I 'l l Which, unlike the Pntnl1'
h i £i* made without the yi-jot A
| or other Chemicals or Ihti .•«
_ iutely pore and soluble, at M
leas than one cent a cup.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE. I
WALTER BAKER & CO. DORCHESTEM
111
■ p CLAIMANTS WHO p»UMflTl
I B* from their Attorneys U AI 111 v IJL
■ ■ or the Commissioner, will writ*’ i-'NAl
BICKfORD, Pension & Patent Att>.
Washington, D.C.. they will receive a |“
MARRIAGE F*M» SSLVr.: .
free. CUNNfcL’S MOWTHLY, Tclecnf
OMAHA Bu«
DA7HD0 Sharpened. Mall your m*oj
nil /IInA erwiibcOc toStarfle «l\<-° 1
Baiber Supplies. Om ,liau. j
will return it hohew ground and sharp
U I TC Repaired. If you bi *|
A I bat ant* 44011,1 want to
lin I ij new one, send it to »rdJ
put iu lira.-class -bape. We ttanufac «r P
sale au«l r tad all kinds rf bats a d J
All pm’aue and express Cuiir ps niU"l..r 1
1MILLARU UUTEL a. AT BTOUM
GL0THIN6 M”■*
.. a >ult write for our «
Catalojrue containing samples of cloth- _
NEBRA8KA CLOTHlNCl
Lor. j«tu and Douglas 8ta., Oai»*i»§
_. EDUCATIONAL.
SHORTHAND SS&K&S
f t Shorthand and Typewriting. Om*^8*
for catalogue, 5tl Boyd a Theater.
OMAHA
Telegraph
Seminary lor 'f-vw
For cat’lo-ok1 a*"1'
Ai. DOntK'l^ 31 .
BUS BESSCOLLEffE?
Catalogue tree, F. F. 1
College rSSSnV
can work frrboanl- 'v"
weed, Fill.oil ai.
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE
THE FIFTY-FIRST TEAR WILL*
TUESDAY, SEPT. 4iH
rutl roumcteciaaslca, letter*. Ml***
Civil and SwlMDlnl Bn*|nceTtJJt
Preparatory and Commercial Courses. Si
Hall for Usavauuder IS Is unique In tho^P
lta equipment Catalogues sent free on apF‘
Hav. Axdexw Mobjiissky, C. & C-.
AGADEJfty Oh Ttt& tftGKtil *
The course of Instruction Inf la Aca-letf'*
hy the Heligioua of the Sacted Hea.t. ‘JJ,
whoio range of ueceasary to
andlelincdeducation. propriety of tlV"*
•onal neatness and the principle* «»f
jecu of unceasing attention. Fxtes»‘‘v*£
ford the pupils every facility for »»“«* “ ,
else; their health Is an uhir't of co’> i*n*
ami In slckne** they are attended wii ‘
Fall tern, o|j»n»Tu««Uy, tor*. Uh. ClVn*
tleulara, Mln-n IJIiS SLl'^M
Academy B acred BmA BL J01