The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 13, 1894, Image 7
Can of the Eyes. e most serious trouble with rest ed writers is, as might be predicted their peculiar work, weak eyes. Ind that engravers, watch-makers ill others who use their eyes con ly in their work take extra core to rve them by getting the best pos light by day and using the best or 1 light at night. The great army dors and writers are careless, and if them, sooner or later, pay the by being forced to give up night _tiroly—some to give up reading, at short intervals, under the best jis. mid now and then one loses light, entirely after it is too late arcing. Greek, German, shprt any other characters differing 0 plain Roman type, make a anger. The custom is to langh •arnings till pain or weakness .ttcntion imperative, and then it too late to avert the mischief, prehend the vast nnmber we ;ly call a million, but it takes a letters to make up a fair-sized of 500 pages, forty lines to the fty letters to the line. A reader an easy day of reading this, but s must go over a thousand tliou ietters ! We can do no better ser readers and writers than to call on to this great danger of failing the best of care, which is none ;ood, for the eyes. Every tyro that he should have the best lor reading, should shun carefully lawn or twilight, should always it the first signs of pain or weaii etc. Most know that the glare plain, white surface is very try id that the eye is relieved by a Recent experiments in Germany lorted to indicate some yellowish easiest for the oyes. Dork pa iks that show little color on first faint lead-pencil marks that can 1 only by straining the eyes, are sources of mischief. So is bad . The bad paper, ink and pen ast of our readers will have too ense to use. The intelligent pub ould so clearly show its disgust at ne type, solid matter, poor paper loor printing which some pnblish nd most periodicals, except the are guilty of offering, that no pub 1 would dare attempt the experi a second time. The modern news r. which so many read in the cars by gaslight, is one of the most ill causes of poor eyesight. We can jntrol this at once, but owe it as y to protest stontly against such sd matter, and, if possible, tc re io buy or tolerate it in any form than absolutely necessary. Print tter ought to be leaded. A size ir type with this extra Bpace be the lines is easier to read than the rger set without it. As the leaded tr size will contain fully as much r to a given space, there is no rea by publishers should not adopt it, so it is quite as cheap.—Literary pal. iiard Table, second-hand. For sale Apply to or address, H. C. Ails, 511 8. 12th St., Omaha, Neb. nmark’e dikes are over seven centuries MAHA Business Houses. ITUIIIP t0T MF.Sf ami BOVS. If you I I Illlll] want to save from S3 to 110 00on r ■ a suit write for our new Fall ue, containing samples of cloth. IRASKA CLOTHING CO.. Cor. 14th and Douglas Sts., Omaha. !? DYE WORKSHS^fc fS STOVE REPAIRS {Stove Repair Works, 1208 Douglas St. Omaha I DO Sharpened. Mull your razor togeth | IIA er with 60c to Stanfield & Co.. Cutlers, Barber Supplies. Omaha, and they am it hollow ground and sharp. Warranted. The S. M. GTTX SArt CO.. Mfrs. - --rndjobters of Broshes kinds. Special nttention paid to order jO-iU to 10B5 So. 18th Si., Omaha. 50 ‘ ‘PHOTORET, ** 1W^ Watch size, loaded _ for 36 views. Catalog free, l’hoto Supply Co., Exclusive Agents, 1215 hru St.. Omaha. Everything in Photo Supplies Tufessionals and Amateurs. Repaired. If you hsve a good i I hat and don't want to invest in a i I kj new one, send it to us and have it |i.i tiisi-class *bape. We manufacture, whole fauu r.tati all kind* of hats a;.d caps. N. H.— and expraf s cuar-es must b* prepaid. [.LARD HOTEL LAT STORE. Omaha. IUSHES imerasS2 IIAHA BUSINESS COLLEGE S“ IInKin Catalogue free. F. F. hOJSE, Pi EDUCATIONAL. OMAHA Youo in begin any time •d for 3 hours work. Send for Illnstrated Cata »!. Address Rohudougii Luos.. Omaha, >isb. owaell Hall Seminary for Younar Ladles. For cat iloiue. address Rev. it. DOQ FttTY.S.T.JJ.oinaha Shorthand & Typewriting. ' ‘eo .Omaha legraph Pftllflfro Situations guaranteed UUMCgC Free circular*. Students ran work for board. Win. J. B Sher wood, 1’riiioipal, Ramge Blk, Omaha fcADEMY or TiiE, SACKED HEART o course of instruction in this Academy, conducted o Kcligious of tho Sacred Heart, embraces tlio o range of subjects necessary to constitute a solid oil tied education. Propriety of deportment, per nI neatness and the principles of morality are ob s of unceasing attention. Extensive grounds af 1 the pupils every facility for useful bodily exer thelr health is an object of constant solicitude, in sickness they are attended with maternal care, term opens Tuesday, Sept. 4th. For further par ars, address T HE SUPERIOR, tiiomy Sacred Heart, St. Joseph,. Mot HARVEST XCURSIONS PT.IIth, SEPT. 25th, 0CT.9th these dates Rohnd-Trip Tickets will be sold ui Chicago, Peoria, St. Louis, and other sta H* on the C. B. & Q. R. R., to the principal .it*s and farming regions of the orthwest. West and Southwest LOW RATE8 railway* will also sell Harvest ’im-sron Tickets, on same terms, over this 5 “uderslgned or anv agent of the SiS2t2?ii °ute- and most ticket agents of con « T*yf. ot the Mississippi ■ River, L n*.P5. ,<J*nu with Harvest Excursion lers gtylng full particulars. p* *• CUSTIt, tal IMs’r sit BsMigaa - CtUCAQO. U. | CLEVELAND ON WOOL. ; TRYING TO HEDGK PROM HIS attack on farmers. I ' - - I Oh! How Different It Would Do If I Then Wu > Wool Trait— HU Third | Mena** Paralleled with the WUion i Letter. ■ — President Cleveland’s record on the question of free wool shows that he advocated it in his third annual message t& congress, Dec. C, 1387, be cause “a large proportion of the sheeD owned by the farmers throughout the country were found in small flocks numbering from twenty-Eve to fifty." The inference to be drawn there from is that free wool would never havo been thought of by President Cleveland or his party if the flocks of the United States had been large ones concentrated among a few owners, or, in fact, if there had been a sheep trust, a wool trust, or both. Such a trust could have dictated its own terms, but the unfortunate 810,900 separate farmers who owned sheep were selected as victims to free trade. President Cleveland lias evidently seen the necessity for correcting these views, and he tried to do so in his ad The Tariff Burglars. 3 • ’rrgfifi* dress to congress, sent from behind the back of Congressman Wilson. We quote, side by side, these remarks that he made last month together with those made in his message of 188?. President Cleveland’s Third Annual Mes sage to Congress, Dec. 6, 1887. I think It may be fairly assumed that a large proportion <fl the sheep owned by the farmers through out the country are found in small flocks numbering f r 6 m twenty-live to fifty. . . . When the number of farmers engaged in wool rais ing is compared with all the farmers in the country and the small proportion they bear to our population is considered; when it is made apparent that, in the case of a large part of those who own sheep, the benefit of the present tariff on wool is illusory, etc. PresldentClereland’s letter to Hon. Will iam L. Wilton, July 8, 1894. It may well excite our wonder that dem ocrih are willing to depart from thii(Free raw material), the most democratic of all tapiff principles,, and tbai the incon sistent absurdity of such a proposed de parture should be emphasized by the suggestion that the wool o( the farmers be put on the free list, and the protec tion of tariS taxa tion be placed around the iron ore and coal of corporations and capitalists. in tne course of the same message of 1887 Mr. Cleveland argued that a tariff upon wool “becomes a burden upon those with moderate means and the poor, the employed and unem ployed, the sick and well, the young and old.” In his later message of last month, while trying to hedge on the ground of his opposition to a tariff upon wool because it protected the interests of a large number of farmers, and while endeavoring to show that he is opposed to a tariff upon the “iron ore and coal of corporations and capitalists,” he plunges boldly to the protection of the sugar trust, advocat ing a tariff upon sugar, of which it may indeed be truly said that it “becomes a burden upon those with moderate means and the poor, the employed and the unemployed, the sick and well, and the young and old,” while at the same time he continues to ad vocate the destruction of the sheep farming industry upon which the farmers depend. May not “the incon sistent absurdity of such a proposed departure” be calculated to “well ex cite our wonder?” The only conclusion that may be drawn from President Cleveland’s “I'mriff Reform. ” THE HONEST AMERICAN REDUCED TO BEGGARY. contrary courses is bis desire to strengthen the belief that he has com pletely sold himself to the interests of the sugar trusts and to the coal'barons who propose to develop foreign pro perties in Canada. Effect of Free Wool. If wool be put on the free list, the American wool grower will have to submit to the disadvantages of raising wool in this climate on even terms with his foreign rivals, who do not have such difficulties to contend with, and so without adequate protection t mast necessarily he driven out of the j basinet* Our leTenth largest agri* cultural industry, producing annually 806,000,000 worth of wool and repre* senting an investment of 8100,000,000 in sheep, will be destroyed by free trade. Sheep will be fattened and will then be sent to market as food, and flocks will disappear forever. Our food supply will in time thus be da* creased and our manufacturers event* ually will be driven to buy their wool stronger Flanks Needed Here. in London or in Australia. Gold will thus be sent out of the country again, increasing the harmful influences that must follow with the balance of trade permanently against us. The wool growers would be forced into some other industry. They would probably plow up their present sheep pastures when the land is suitable and raise wheat, of which we already have an overproduction and a surplus It is to the interest of American farmers to diversify their industries and to pro duce such articles as will find a mar ket at home instead of abroad. The present administration favors a glut of a few products with their conse quent cheapness to the producers Presidential Prevarication. President Cleve land’s Message to Congress, Dec ember 4, 1M)3. A measure has been prepared by the appropriate congressional com mittee embodying tariff reform on the lines herein suggested. It is the result of much patriotic and un selfish work. The committee have wisely em braced in their plans a few addi tion a 1 internal revenue taxes, in cluding a small tax upon incomes derived from cer tain corporate in vestments. President Cleve land’s letter to Hon. William L. Wilson, July 3, 1804. You know how much I deprecated the incorporation in the proposed bill of the income tax feature ii aeprecalea tne mcorpr Uion" in the Wilson bill "of the income tax feature,” why was it necessary to say that the ways and means committee “wisely embraced” it? If the income tax were "wisely em WALK CP AND PAY YOUR TAX TO THE TRUSTS. braced” by the ways and means com* mittee “on the lines herein suggested” —in “my message”—on what grounds can it be claimed ‘ 'how much I depre cated it? Which is “the result of much patri otic and unselfish work?” 'Democratic Principle and Poller. ** Letter to Mr. Wil son, July 3, 1894. While no tender ness should be en tertained for trusts, and while I am decidedly op posed to granting them, under the guise of tariff tax ation, any oppor tunity to further their peculiar methods. I suggest that we ought not to be driven away from the democrat ic principle and policy which lead to the taxation of sugar. Statement in the World, July S8, 1894. Mr. Cleveland stated to members of the house that if a cop cession to the refining inter ests were found to be unavoidable in order to pass a tariff bill this con cession should be put in such form as to make it abso lutely certain what it means. Sugar Economically Studied. Continuing- the economic stpdy of the sugar question, on the basis of a 40 per cent ad valorem rate of duty, a 45 per cent rate and a 40 per cent rate on raw, plus K cent differential rate on refined sugar, we attain the follow ing results: Average value of sugar. 2% cents per pound. Duty in cents. At 40 per cent ad valorem. i.io At 45 per oent ad valorem. 1.2375 At 40 per cent ad valorem and V Nfcent differential. 1,235, Benefit to refiners at 40 per cent and h cent above 45 per cent rate_ 0.0125 Total benefit to refiners on 4,420, 000,000 pounds sugar at 0.0125 ..$552,500 Itiabut a trifle of half a million dollam, but every kittle help* THE AVENOER'S TRACK. They TTero TVnltlni for Their Tletlm ■ad Would Cot 111m or Ole. “The only time over I was really scart,” said tho colonel, “was In tho edge of a littlo town in Ohto. ” “Ha, ha! Let’s have it, colonel,” came a chorus of yells. “Well, I wus cornin’ alone about midnight—mind ye, boys, I’ve seen life in tho plains an’ in the arm'—” “Oh, yes—go on!" “Well, it was nigh onto midnight, an’ as I passed through a dump o’ treos—this wus a college town, and—" , ••Yes, yes, what happenedP" “Somethin’ seemed to crawl all over mo an’ push my ha’r right up j through tho scalp. I could see nothin’.but 1 knew somethin’s wrong. So I blundered through the half da’kncss and fust thing I knowod I run plump into about fo’ dozen a’med men—" “Impossible!’’ “I wish It had boon. They wuz young, active, ligbtln' men, too, an’ ev’y one of ’om hod a rovolvah an’ big club. ‘Well,’ scs I. ‘gents, ef you’ll take mo to tho boss robbah, I’ll give ye my watch— “ ‘Get out, yo old fool!, Was the ansuh." "ina you git.-" "No. sah! Somethin’ ’bout that crowd seemed to hold me, an’ 1 staid. Well putty soon thoy begin to edge up in a suhkle.gettln’ out an’ cookin’ tlieh revolvahs. They wus, as I said, ’bout fifty. Some of ’em ploked up mo’ clubs an' some rocks. They wus muddah in theh eyos an’ death in the ah—” "Yes, yes, what happenedP” "I wus fusclnated, spellbound, aw fully sea’d, and wusn’t made a bit easiah when I hud the ledab whis pah; “Boys, don’t let ’im escape!” But, sah, when the suhkle gotclosah an’ I cuddont stand it no longah, I tuhned to the nighest man an’ Bald: *• ‘In heaven’s name, sah, what's the meanlu’ o’ this?' “ ‘How’s yo jaw lookP’ he asked. “ ‘Tight, sah, I kin keep a soe’et with any of ’em.’ “ ‘Woll,’ said he, ‘ye see we ah ahmed fo’ dospit deeds, an’ will die a lightin’—’ “ ‘I see!’ said I, tremblin' all ovah. “ ‘Ye soe that house among the bushes ?’ •“Yes, I did!’ “ ‘Well, tlidh’s a blamed, insignif icant littlo cuss of a sophomore hid in that ‘house an* wo ah goin’ t’ have 'im er die!’ •‘Then, Boys, I quietly went about my business. I’m an educated man myself an' nevoh meddlo with the cause.” THERE ARE A FEW. 1'oor Relations ITIio nave Survived Jay Gould. Gould’s poor relations! What an attractive sound that sentence hath! llow many men there are who would rojoice to be included hi tho category! Even the reflection of wealth, the very shadow thereof, is onticing to the uvorage eye. Jay Gould provided for some of his relatives modestly, but to none of them did he leave fortunes except the direct heirs. His brother, Abraham Gould—Abe, as his friends cull him — isn’t wealthy, but he onjoys what is bet ter than great riches, the reputation of being a thoroughly good fellow. ‘•Abe’’ is a great, hearty, whole souled fellow, a giant in everything but stature, who cares not a whit for money and possesses that peace of mind that comes only of a good di gestion. lie can eat anything with relish, and doesn’t give two straws how ho may, die, provided ho liver, long enough to enjoy the fullness of life, lie has tho shoulders of an ox and the strength of a Titan, though ho is only of medium height. Jay Gould’s three sisters aro also in modest circumstances. All of them were remembered in tho magnate's will. Thoy are all most estimable women. One of them Is Mrs. Anna S. Hough, tho wifo of a well-known clergy man of Los Angeles, Cal. Mr. and Mrs. Hough are not poor, as or dinary folks go. hut thoy are by no rneuns well off. Jay Gould left to Mrs. Hough $20,000 and a life annu ity of $2,000. Mrs. Sarah B. Northrup is another of George Gould's aunts on the pa rental side. She is a widow with four children, all of whom live with her at Camden, N. J. Mrs. Nbrth rup teaches school for a living. When her brother died he left her $25,000 and a life annuity of *2,000. tegether with a life estato in real property valued at $15,000. Mrs. Elizabeth Pnlen, the third sister, lives at Tuckgunk, Po. She. too, is a widow, and has several child: en. Her brother's will be queathed to her $25,000 and a $2,000 annuity for life. Like her sisters she is much better off than ag.eat many persons of equal family rank, yet she is certainly, comparatively speaking, a poor relation. •I«pan’.i Lamentation. I Japan laments the decrease of for eign visitors, who formerly spent so much money in the country. Since the agitation about the treaties has aroused a regular anti-foreign feeling people are afraid to go to that coun try lost they be molested in travel ing. Their absence makes a consid erable difference in the profits of the curio-sellers and dealers in embroid eries and all kinds of art objects. l!o* to Detect Cotton In Cloth. Cloth manufacturers have learned to mix cotton and wool so thorough ly that more feeling will not detect the presence of cotton. The only sure method in such cases is to boil a piece of the goods in a solution of : caustic potash, which will eat up the I wool and leave the vegetable fiber intact. I Take no Substitute for Royal Baking Powder.1 It is Absolutely Pure. All others contain alum or ammorila. ' Well Earned, A well known business man in upend Ing the cummer In a country boarding house in Montgomery county, and his interesting family of a wife and three tiny misses are with him. The other night, when Mra VV. Was saying good night to the angels, the eldest asked for something to eat. ‘‘I'm sorry, darling,” said tho devo ted parent, ‘‘but there is not a thing to eat here, and everything is locked up down stairs.” "Ain't there a cracker here?” inquir ed the little one wistfully. ‘‘No, precious, not a thing." Tho little one sighed wearily. Then she brightened up with hope as a bright idea struck her. “Then, mam ma,” she queried plaintively, "won’t you please give me a pill?” That baby got a generous slice of buttered bread, despite all obstacles, after that remark.—Washington Star. Another Mammoth Statue, The sculptor Nikolaus Gelgor is put ting: the luBt touches to his statue of llarbarossu, which is to symbolize the ancient kingdom in the Kyffhauser monument, to be unveiled in 1890. The Darbarossa appears at the end of a ves tibule in the Btyle of an undent castle, on the steps of the throne upon which he is siting like the sleeping figures of the courtiers, with fabulous animals of the old mythic world. .Ittvrburos&u is represented at the moment of waking from his long sleep. In his right hand is his sword; his left hand strokes his long waving beard. Contrary to nil other figures of the old hero, he is here represented as an actual emperor, with the features of a noble man. The whole monument, hewed from the rock, will be about eighty feet high. The figure of tho seated monarch is about thirty feet high.—London Sun. Vine Pictures Free, Here’s good news for any of our readers who are pinched by hard times. The Woolson Spice company of Toledo, Ohio, aro giving away many fine pictures to drinkers of Lioncoifia in exchange for large lion heads cut from Lion coffee wrappers. Besides pictures they also mail valuable book', a knife, game, etc. It surely pays to drink Lion coffee, which is by far the finest sold for the price, and has a beautiful picture and card in every one-pound package. If you haven't Bn Illustrated Premium List, ask your grocer for a copy, or send your name and address to the firm above named. Ammunition In Africa. -‘All of the native Uganda soldiers I notice, had well filled cartridge belts round their waists. In my innocence, as I thought of all the thunders of the general act of the Brussels conference and all the ordinances, enactments and regulations which had been published thereafter by different powere having possessions on the African coast, I won dered how, in the very center of Africa these people were enabled to keep their belts so well replenished with cart ridges of different and of the most modern patterns. “I had not been a month in the country before I learned that, for those who had the wherewithal to trade, guns, powder, lead and all the instru ments of destruction thereunto apper taining could be as easily purchased in Uganda as Pall Mall.”—The British Mission in Uganda, 1893. Hull's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally. Price 75a The Fly and His Feet, “Don’t you think it is rather coward ly,” said the baldheaded professor to the fly, “for a six footer like you to jump on me in this manner?”—Wash ington Star. 9 It the Baby Is Cutting Teeth. Is sure «Ji(l use that old and well-tried remedy, Xus. tvUislow’s SooTirura Syhup for Children Teething. Cordials are warming medicines, as aro matic confections._ Three Home Seekers' Recursions To ail parts of the West and Northwest via the Chicago, MiUwankee & St Paul Rail wsy at practically half rates. Round trip tickets, good for return passage within twenty days from date of sale will be sold on September 11 and 26 and October 9, 1894. For further information apply to the nearest coupon ticket agent or address U. H. Heaford, General Passenger and Ticket Agent, Chicago, 111: Disenchanted* Softsodder (on the cars)—See that young lady across the aisle? Just note the intellectuality of her face. Sourby (proutily)—Yarp! Softsodder—As fair as the daughter of the gods, as intellectual as Minerva! Oh, to her voice, to Miss Lyddy Greenup (the subject un der discussion)—Please excuse me. Mister, but kin you tell me where we ire at?—National Tribune. Savina His Capital* “You’re a goose!” angrily exclaimed a New York man to his wife, who con tinually chided him about his excessive extravagance. “You do nothing but cackle, cackle, cackle, all the time.” "Yes. dear,” she sweetly replied; “but you must not forget that the cackling of geese once saved the capi tal of Home, and if cackling can save your capital, I’m going to keep it up," and she did.—Texas Siftings. 8 Homeiceken Excursions South vis the Wabash Railroad. On Sept 11th, 35th and Oct. 9th the Wabash will sell tickets at half fare plus S3 toad points in Tennessee, (except Memphis) Mississippi. Alabama and Louisana, (except New Orleans) Arkansas and Texas. For rates, tickets or a houieseekers' guide giv ing full description of lands, climate, etc., or for steamship tickets to or from all parts of Europe, call at Wabash office, 1503 Farnam street, or write G. N. Clattox, N. W. P. Agt, Omaha, Neb. Love is a game In which the jack pot is not to bo overlooked. Edible bird’s nest is the nest of the sea-swallow of the Malay archipelago, a bird of the size of a common martin. It builds its nest of a glutinous sub stance, which it is said to derive from a sea-weed. This weed is swallowed and partly digested, and then disgorged and fashioned into a nost as large as a ooffee cup. When fresh, these nests are of a waxy-white color, and are said to bo worth twioo their weight in silver in the market.) of China, where alone they are sold, the general cost being tfi or more a pound, according to the age of the nests. The taste of dlahee pre pared from those nests is said to be in sipid, but the Chinese prize them, not, perhaps, so much for their taste, as for their supposed tonio and aphrodjsiao powers Make Your Own Bltlarst Stokitm Dry Ulttsrs. One paclcago of Stokotoo's Dry Bittern will make one Gallon of the best bitters known; will cure Indigestion, pains in the stomach, fever and ague. Acts upon the Kidneys and Bladder; the best tonio known. Sold by druggists or sent by mall, prepaid. Price :»0 ct*. fur ■Inurle, or two pu BO cfcg. U. N. *tampa taken In payment OKO. O. STKKETKK, Urailil Kspldl. Uloh. Solicitude. The elephant struggled madly. “Fly, clearest!” he exclaimed, "I am caught in a snare.” Hut his faithful wife lingered yet a moment “Promise me," she urged, with trem* bling voice, “that when you walk in ; the street parade before performances - you will keep a sharp lookout for bi cycles. " “Yes. Farewell!” “Farewell!” With a great sob she plunged into the jungle.—Detroit Tribune. _ Ksrl’s Clover Root Ten, Tli* flT*at Blood purWH.'r.jjiven rresuiuntnmmlrlMnuiaft u> iU«Cumplviiuu tiuti curtm CotmlipaUutu Z3u.«Mo.£U Tlte Wronjf Prescription. When Edward Terry was convulsing , a midland town with laughter, a pa- : tient waited an a physician in that place to obtain some remedy for exces sive melancholy, which was rapidly consuming his life. The physieian en deavored to cheer his spirits and ad vised him to go to the theater and seo Terry. The patient replied, “I am Terry. ”—Life's Calendar. . » Tbs Modern Beauty Thrives on good food and sunshine, with plenty of exercise in the open air. Her form glows with health and her face blooms with its beauty, if her system needs the cleansing action pf a laxative remedy, she uses the gentle and pleasant liquid laxative Syrup of Figs. _ Thirty Mllss In tbs Earth. Rev. Osmond Fisher, in a very reli able work .entitled “Physics of the Earth's Crust,” says that “the rate of increase in temperature as the distance beneath the surface is augmented is, on the whole, and equable one and may be taken to average about a degree for each 31 feet” Figuring on this state ment as the most reliable, we find that at a depth of thirty miles below the . surface all known metals and rocks are in a state of white hot fusion. Il-ssmsn’i Csmphar Ice will! Oljresrl ns. Cu pen C hamnni H audit and Face. Tendrr or Bora Peats Chilblalu», File*. Ac. c.O. Clark Co., Now Raven, CW How to Make Lemooade. / The Journal of Hygiene says lemon ade is the most perfect of drinks; that it ought to be substituted for tea. cof fee and alcoholic drinks. This is the direction given for making it: “For • quart, take the juice of three lemona, using the rind of one of them. Care fully peal the rind very thin, getting just the yellow outside. This cut into pieces and put with the juice and pow dered sugar, of which use two ounces to the quart, in a jug or jar with a cover. When the water is at boiling point pour it over the lemon and sugar; cover at once and let get cold." 44 Hannon** Magte Corn *a Warranted to euro or money refunded. Auk rotf tfTUtfgibt for it. Price 15 cent*. Four thousand Sioux Indians are regular church attendants. A pall of cold water will purify the air of a room. _, A Russian is not legally of age until he ie thirty-six years o!d. PIERCE0^ CURB oh mowev is amiaita The woman who is tired, and has heavy, : dragging-down sensations, pain in the bads, und headache, should take warning in time. _ l>r. Pierce's Favorite Prescription Is the best tonic and nervine at this time. It’s a posi tive remedy for all irregularities, weak IM-TXW8 OUU Ut'I tui^o* nieuts of the female system. I The “ Prescription ", cures Ulceration and* Falling of the Womb,' Leucorrhea and Uter ine debility. Miss Maggie Crow ley, of Jamestown, JIT. I’., says: “I feel as if I had a new lease of life since taking the ‘ Prescription.’ 1 trust that others will find the. same benefit from your1 wonderful medicine as I have." Miss Ckovlit. THE PLAN OP BELLING MEDICINES PISO'S CURE FOR CoMDnptlTM and people who bare weak lungs or Asth ma, should use Piso's Cure for Consumption. It has c^red thousands, it has not lnjur od one. It is not bad lotah* It Is the best cough srnipL Sold ererrwhere. tie. CONSUMPTION. WNU, Omaha—ST, ISM toiMw Aiuwtriur AiiwrUHMi awitCui tub t*a|»«r.