The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, April 25, 1895, Image 7

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    Can Not Be Cere*
.lions, «k they con not ranch
I portion of tl.e eor. Thera s
I' V to cure Deafness and that is
TV' ii.,,,,,1 remedies. Deafness is
fc, in intlamed condition of the
fvj,"UB of the Eustachian Tube.
V uU-trctK inflamed you have a
f ',„„i or imperfect hearing, and
« ,„tirdv closed Deafness is the
ft, . mljtws the inflammation can be
It niiii this tube restored to its nor
l . i n hearing will be destroyed
f ‘ iue rates out of ten are caused
■rt, which is nothing but an in
1,‘m litiou of the mucous surfaces.
Ill give Oue Huudred Dollars for
T f Deafness (caused by catarrh)
. m,t he cured by Hall’s Catarrh
t, nd for circulars, free.
/ j CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
|,i i,v Druggists, T5e.
| Kitinilv Pills, ■A~v._
’! lie Travels of Ilerellcts.
|\ew York Tribune: The dis
, inch derelicts traverse is much
Ilian is generally supposed. A
record of observations has re
I in the preparation of a chart
Isliows that the hulk of a schoon
t innnie K. Wolston, has drifted,
r the last iive years, more than
■'miles. This calculation is bused
V- .six reports of its having been
Lj. Another derelict, which be
lls wanderings in 1801, drifted
I;; -oo miles up to the time it was
Jen. when it had been afloat C15
The W. L. White, another float
^,-or of the sea, roamed over the
Ulantie for 310 days, covering
time about 0,000 miles.
Next Time Yon Go West
| tin- Darlington Route’s “Black Hills,
nu mid Puget Sound Express.’’
vs Omaha at 4:35 p. m. daily,
st mid best train to the Black Hills,
■n Wyoming, the Yellowstone Na
ark, Helena, Butte, Spokane, Sent
, 'I at uiua.
rates, time table, etc., apply to the
[icket agent or write
J. Francis,
G. 1’. & T. A., Burlington Route,
Omaha, Neb.
■ April Review of Reviews on the
tv of the winter just passed,
■' southern latitude of our own
ry and in the British Isles. The
on of a snow statuo of Washing
i New Orleans late in February
he freezing over of the Thames
r London Bridge in the same
h are two events which fully jtis
tlie Review in pronouncing the
•r of 1895 a most unusul one for
t years, and a rebuff to the ‘ V>In
habitant’’ with his tales of ‘‘old
Dned’’ cold weather.
i have been washed, but none thooe
veil cured of their love for mud.
KNOWLEDGE
rings comfort and improvement and
Is to personal ‘enjoyment 'when
it!y used. The many, who1 live bet
4um others.and .enjoy life more,' with
expenditure, by more promptly
pting the world's best products to
needs of physical’being, will attest
value to health-of the .pure liquid
itive principles 'embraced in the
ledy, Syrup of Figs,
is excellence is due to its'presenting
he form most ‘acceptable and pleas
tothe taste, the refreshing and truly
cficial properties ‘Of a perfect lax
e; effectually cleansing the system,
wiling colds, headaches and fevers
permanently curing constipation.
ms ff'ven satisfaction .to millions and
I with the approval.of the medical
fession, because it acts on: the Kid
's, Liver and Bowels without weak
"? them and it is perfectly free from
py objectionable -substance.
■rrnp of Fig* jg -for gale by all dni ~
l«in50e and-gl bottles,bufcit isman
tttured % the 'CaliforniaTig Syrup
■ o®ly, whese name imprinted on every
ftage, also the name, "Syrup of iFigs,
“ ®einS well informed, you i will: not
*pt any substitute if .offered.
Many man
°* many miwriy
say that 1
iCU
Sft "H -»uch
ma<kIfelWlngtobacco
UrJ2if?,,apd’«
utee, by Imposing tbs following additional
duties upon county commissioners when ap
praising educational lands: “And tliey shall
forward to the commissioner of public lands
and buildings evidence of such appraisal,and
all appraisements shall be reviewed by the
board of educational lands and funds, and if
such appraisement be found by them to be
out of proportion to the true value thereof,
the sa.d board shall reject the same and
shall appoint three aisiutereted free
holders of the county in which such
land is situated to reappraise the
same, and upon approval of the said
board of educational lands und funds the re
appraisement shall be deemed the true value
of said lands.” . .
House roll No. 101, by Chapman—An act
to amend section 8821, chapter 45, consoli
dated statutes of lbUl and to repeal said
section. The act changes the law in relation
to the payment for land sold by the state so
that if a purchaser desires to make full
final payment and has interest paid in
advance be may hare credit on his final
payment for such advance interest paid.
Chapter 4(1—Public Finances.
House roll 83, by Beo—An act to authoriso
the investment of sinking funds in the hands
of any county treasurer In registered coun
ty, city, town, township or school district
registered warrants. The investments are
to be authorized by county boards. The city
councils of any city in the state under the
law may also make similar provisions for
the taking up of city warrants by the sink
ing fund m the hands of any city treasurer,
the warrants so taken to be of the city in
which they are taken up or of the school dis
trict of said city. Where a school board is
custodian of its own sinking fund it may
make like provisions for taking up its own
warrants through use of the said sinking
fund.
House roll No. 117, by Lamborn—An act
amending sections 1 and 3 of chapter 93,
compiled statutes, relating to warrants. The
now law acquires treasurers of school dis
tricts, as well as state, county, city and vil
lage treasurers, to pay warrants in order of
their presentation and to keep a warrant
register in which shall be entered each war
rant, fund drawn upon, time drawn and
name and address of persons in whose favor
drawn.
House roll No. 500, by Crow—An act to
provide for a uniform system of vouchers ‘
tor use for all disbursements of state funds,
to require an oath to each claim by each
chaimant and providing a penalty for the
same. The law places in the hands of the
auditor the preparation of forms of vouch
. ers. Orignal vouchers shall be printed on
white paper, duplicates on blue and tripli
cates on red paper. No warrat t shall be
Issued except upon the original voucher on
white paper. All claims shall be itemized
1b full, and a blank form of oath is pre
scribed which shall accompany each claim.
Anyone making false oath to a claim shall
beheld for perjury. The law becomes oper
ative on and after May 15, 1893.
(House roll No. 590, by Shickadant*—An
wet authorizing the state treasurer to trans
fer $10,681.70 from the saline to the pep*
unanent school fund. Emergency clausa.
Special Acta.
House roll No. 002, by Harris of Keith—
An ait defining a legal newspaper for the
publication of legal and official aotioes.
The law requires that to be a legal (news
paper for such purposes that it mustihave-a
bona flde circulation of at least 200 ‘copies
weekly, and it shall have been published
within the county for fifty-two successive
weeks prior to publication of leg al notices
and must be printed in whole or part in an
office maintained at place of publication.
Exemption is made for counties having no
newspaper published therein or but one pub
lished therein. The affla.iavit of publica
tion of any legal notice shall state that the
publication has been made in a legal i news
paper.
Senate file No. 170. by Cross—An'act le
galizing dedication and ‘conveyance of lots
and parcels of land in tiie«city of Fairbury.
House roll No. 27. by Brady—An act
punishing by a fine nottoexceed $20 and im
prisonment in the county jail not to ex teed
thirty days, anyone who unlawfully obtains
or wears the flremaai’a national button. It
is unlawful for any not an active fireman
or exempt through having served os a fire
man according to the laws of the state, to
obtain or wear the button.
House roll No. 881 by Munger—An act to
vest the title to lot No. 'll in block No. 123
in the city of Lincoln in the German
Evangelical Lutheru congregation.
House roll N<*. 09, by Burns—An act Test
ing the title to lots Nos. 11 and 12 in block
189 city of Lincoln in the Congregation
Buai-Jeshuram. Emergency clause.
Code ot (tvll Procedure.
3enate file No. 8, toy' Watson—An act to
amend section 311 of the code of civil pro
cedure. Exceptions .must be reduced to
writing within fifteen days, not exceeding
forty days front adjournment “sine die of
the term of coart at which judgment is ren
dered or at which the motion for a new
trial is ruled on.’’ * * * “Provided,
that any person officer, or the presiding
officer of any boa»J or tribunal before
whom any proceeding may be had, shall, on
request of any party thereto, settle, sign
and allow a bill of exceptions of all the evi
dence offered sr given on the hearing of
such proceeding. Provided, further, this
act shall apply to all cases. now peuding or
hereafter brought.”
Criminal « ode.
House roll No. 87, by Dempsey—An cet to
punish cattle stealing, those buying stolen
cattle or harboring them or concealing
cattle thieves and providing that those
found guilty shall be punished by imprison
ment in the penitentiary.not more than ton
nor less than one year.
House roll No. 348, toy Benedict—An act
to amend the criminail <c nle ‘by raising the
age of consent of a female, child from fifteen
to eighteen years, except such child be over
fifteen and is known to be .unchaste, every
person so offending shall be deemed guilty
of rape with punishment dm the penitentiary
not less than three or more than twenty
years.
House roll No. 00, by -Jenkins—An act
prohibiting the manufacture, -sale, keeping
for sale, or giving aaay jin the state of
Nebraska, cigarettes, cigarette paper or
materials for cigarettes and fixing the .pen
alty for violation as a misdemeanor. The
minimum fine is $10 and the .maximum, line
$50. In each case one-half film fine goas to
the informant.
Senate file No. 38, by Hafan—An act to
protect Mongolian pheasants, .prohibiting
their killing or injury or the offering for
•ale when killed, providing a penalty of .not
less than $50 or more than <100 dor viola
tion of the law, one-half of fines to go to the
.informer. Justice courtsgiven jurisdiction.
Senate file No. 40, by Smith—An .act to
•amend section 53, chapter 8, criminal .code
fin the compiled statutes, so as to malKdlay
Jight burglary a felony punishable by .im
prisonment in the penitentiary not more
.than fire years nor less than one year, «r iby
fine not exceeding $500 and imprisonment |
in the county jail not exceeding six months ■
at the discretion of the court. 1
Senate file No. 139, by Rathbun—An met .
for the destruction of Russian thistles, eol>!
lection of expenses and to fix penalties.
Any person or company owning or eon- j
trolling land wfco shall permit an Russian
thistle to grow thereon one week after pub
lication of a notion by the road overseer the
first week in July shall, on conviction, be
fined not less than #10 or more than $100 and
costs, and if thistles are not destroyed by
Augast 15 the road overseer shall do the
work and t he cost shall bo charged to the
party in possession of said land. If
t**® party is not the owner he
shall pay 25 cents an acre, the
bulauce to be taxed against the land. If the
lessee fails to pay, his share shall be taxed
against the land, and the owner may collect
from the renter the same as any other debt.
The road overseer shall destroy thistles in
*7*L, *nd receive $2 a. day and help
at 31.50 a day. If he fails to do bis duty he
may be fined $50 or not more than $100.
City Authorities aboil destroy thistles grow
ing on public ground, and tax up tbe cost of
destroying those growing on lots. Railroad
viKut of way comet under tho provisions of
thbaet. Anyone wbq knowingly vends seed
containing thistle seed may be'flned HB and
may be liable tor damage*. Tbia act takei
Sect from and after its passage.
Senate file No. 78, by Sloan—An act de
fining Imitation bntter and cheese^ prohibit
ing tneir being colored in semblance of but
ter and cheese, regulating manufacture and
•ale and protecting coiuutuers at the table.
Every substance other than that produced
from pure milk or cream tnude in semb ance
of butter or cheese is declared to be imita
tion butter and cheese, but the use of salt,
rennet and other harmless coloring matter
for coloriug product of pure milk or cream
shall not render such product an imi
tation. Any jierson making or keeping for
sale any imitation buttor or clieoso
shall be fined not less than $10 nor more
than $30, but the manufacture of substitute
butter not colored shall not bo prohibited.
Each package shall be stamped ‘’imitation
butter.” Failure to keep a sign in the place
where imitation butter ir us t at the table,
bearing the words “imitation butter," is
puuisbable by a fine of not less than $35 nor
over I5U, or imprisonment in the county jail
not more than thirty days, she sale of
imitation butter to anyoue who asks for
butter is punishable by a flue of not less
than $25 and not more that $50 for each
offense.
House roll No. 642—An act amending tho
law relating to imitation butter and cheese,
by providing that no provision in the act
•hall be construed to prevent the manufact
ure of imitation butter and cheese within
the state under the restrictions of United
Btates law for shipment to points outsids
the state.
Beet Sugar Bounty.
House roll No. 67, by Burns of Dodgo—
An act to provide for the encouragement
of the manufacture of sugar aud chicory
and to provide a compensation therefor.
The law provides for the paymont to any
person, firm or corporation engaged in the
manufacture of sugar ia this state from
beets, sorghum or other sugar vielding canes
or plants grown in Nebraska the sum of %
of 1 cent per pound upon every pound or
sugar manufactured under the conditions
and restrictions of the law. To those who
after the enactment of this law establish
and operate additional factories for the
manufacture of sugar an additional bounty
of % of 1 cent par pound shall ba paid
them. Iu order to receive the bounty sugar
shall contain at least 05 per cent of crysta
lized sugar. The beets used must have been
paid for to the grower at least $5.00 per ton.
Hu gar made from beets grown by a manu
facturer cannot command tho bounty.
The secretary of state has charge of all
inspections, and is authorized to appoint
inspectors, a resident inspector in each placo
where sugar is manufact ured; fees of inspect
ors are limited not to exceed $5.00 per day.
A weighman is provided to be appointed by
the secretary of state who shall weigh al
beets received and keep record of the same.
Compensation of weighman uot to exceed
$5.00 .per day, to be paid by the manufact
urer.
In tho manufacture of chicory, a bounty
■df %*of 1 'cent per pound is paid to factories
unready established and to new ones estab
lished an odditonal % of 1 cent per pound
w ill be paid. No bounty shall be paid upon
chicory not manufactured from chicory
beets for which at least $10.60 per ton has
•been paid, and the quality must be 09 per
•cent pure. -The same duties, regulations
•and appointive powers are vested in the
• secretary of state in relation to chicory
•manufacture as in sugar maufseture.
All claims must be verified and approved
by the secretary of state whereupon the
auditor shall issue a warrant upon the treas
urer for the amount.
The law applies and is in force for a period
of three years.
Constitutional Amendments,
Senate file No. 274—Adding a new section
to article 12, relative to m -rging the gov
ernment of cities of the metropolitan class
and the government of the counties wherein
such cities are located.
Senate file No. 280—To amend section 2,
article 14, relative to donation to works of
internal improvement and manufactories.
Senate file No. 288—All votes shall be by
ballot, or such other method (voting
machine) as may be prescribed by law, the
secrecy of voting to be retained.
Senate file No. 270—Fixing the number of
supremo judges at five and their terms of
office at five years.
Senate file No. 271 —Providing for the in
vestment of the perminent school fund in
registered school district bonds.
Senat* file No. 275—Authorizing the leg
islature to provide that in civil actions five
sixths of the jury may render a verdict.
Senate file No. 273—Authorizing three
fifths of both houses to change salaries of
state officers.
Senate file No. 281—Adding three railroad
commissioners to the cat of state officers.
Senate file No. 28(1—Authorizing the leg
islature to increase the number of supreme
and district judges. >
Senate file No. 283—Authorizing the leg
islature to establish compensation of su
preme and district judges.
Senate file No. 284—Limiting the number
of state officers, except by concurrence of
three-fourths of each house.
Senate file No. 276—Authorizing the leg
islature to create an appellate court.
Joint Resolutions.
Senate file No. 130, by Hahn—Asking con
gress to pass a bill now rending for ceding
to the state of all government lands within
the state.
Senate file No. 393—Authorizing the gov
ernor to receive and receipt ia full for (19,
000 due the state from the government
account of repayment of the direct lax.
Senate file No. 270, by Sloan—That Ne
braska shall hereafter in a popular sense he
known and referred to as tka Tree Planters’
state.
Senate file No. 174. by Smith—Asking
congress to grant Ft. Omaha to the state on
coudition that the fort be converted into
encampment grounds for the Nebraska Na
tional guards and maintained as such toy the
state.
Senate file No. 411—Authorizing the gov
ernor to appoint three commissioners to act
in conjunction with a like commission of the
state of south Dnkjta in ascertaining the
true and correct boundary line be. ween the
state of Nebraska and South Dakota as lor
as the same mn y- be the boundary between
ttie counties of Clay in South Dakota aad
Dixon in Nebraska.
Senate file No. 120, by Pope—A joint res
olution asking congress to pass a bill provid
ing for the payment to all uniou soldiers
who were confined in rebel prisons during
the war a pension of (2 per day during the
time so confined and (12 per mouth for the
remainder of their lives.
House roil No. 306, by Judd—A concurrent
resolution as follows:
VVhere as—The adoption of a state floral
emblem by the authority of the legislature
would foster a feeling of pride in our state,
and stimulate an interest in the history and
traditious of the . commonwealth, therefore
be it,
Kesolved—That the legislature of Nebras
ka hereby declares the flower commonly
known as-“golden rod’’ (Salulugo Sorotina)
to.be the .floral emblem of the state. *
Soldiers’ Home.
(House roll No. 284, by 'Merrick—An act to
establish and maintain a branch soldiers’
heme at Milferd. The law requires a lease
to he made to (the the state for two years,
with the privilege of eight additional years,
for the sum of (803 per annum, of the
property and buildings known as tbe sanita
rium ami park at Milferd, Neb.
A commandant is to be appointed by the
board of public tends and buildings, wbo
shall receive a compensation of (9i.O per
annum. The home shall bn governed and
regulated under the tew governing the sol
diers' homo at Grand Island, and to carry
the tew into effect RUi'JO. or so much as
necessary, ft appropriated. Emergency
clause.
Shakspeare s plays have been trans
lated into the Armenian language, and
the translation will soon ts published
in Kussia.
• - , yy.
fHS PRICK OP CHAMPAQNB.
The Sparkling Uln Is Higher la Prla*
Than I* Jua till able.
It la reported from France that the
price of champagne will be, If ahy
thlng, higher this year than It has been
previously. This Is somewhat surpris
ing, for, although a great deal of money
Is spent on the manufacture and bot
tling of the wine, nevertheless Its cost
of production appears to be wholly out
of proportion to the charge at which it
Is retailed, not only In America, but
also in French restaurants. In Paris
you must pRy 12 francs, or $2.40, for a
not strictly first-class bottle of cham
pagne, and the same wine will cost at
least $3 in New York. Turning to the
bill of fare given In a little guide book
to Paris published in 1803, the most
expensive champagne Is quoted at $1.20
a bottle. To be sure, Chambertln, Vol
nay, Pommard and Nuits were only
$1 per bottle then. A beefsteak with
potatoes was 20 cents; and “boullli"
garnished with vegetables only 3 cents;
but mutton cutlets were dear, being
cited at 20 cents apiece; and a fried
sole cost 40 cents, if the book Is to be
believed. Be this as It may, the value
of the champagne produced In Franco
is dally Increasing. In the department
de la Marne alone It has increased from
$1,327,000 In 1844 to $6,000,000 in 1891.
The strangest circumstances connected
with champagne 1b that the Froncli
themselves have little liking for the
vintage of Espernay. In fact, the av
erage Gaul rarely touches “fla" save on
the occasions of marriages, birthdays
and grand balls; at the carnival, and
sometimes at race meetings. At Btnart
dinner parties the vintage Is nevor
served, being deemed vulgar. There
Is an Immense amount of champagne
drunk at first-class Paris restaurants,
but the consumers are for the most
part foreigners—English, Russians,
Germans, and especially Americans,
who for some unaccountable reason
dote on this wine and consider no feast
complete without it.
ELECTRICAL HEATING.
tt Ib Now Applied to Warm the Inter
ior of • London Theater.
The Vaudeville theater, London,
England, has recently been heated en
tirely by electricity. At first It was
contemplated to use a system of hot
water heating, but, after carefully con
sidering the matter, the management
decided that electrical heaters afford
ed a more advantageous system. Twen
ty-two "box" or wall radiators and
four large portable radiators, all of the
“Crompton-Dowslng" type, are em
ployed, and they answer the purpose
admirably. The temperature of the
theater is maintained at 60 degrees,
while the corridors may he as low as
40 degrees. The heating arrangements
are under absolute control, and any
portion may be turned oft or on at will.
The electricity used is taken from a
public street 'circuit from a central sta
tion. With electrical radiators there
is no danger of a fire, as there is no
combustion, and the temperature is
about the same as that of hot water
pipes. 'Some difficulty was at first
experienced with regard to the fire of
fice and London county council, hut
all authorities appear now to be con
vinced that electrical heating, when
properly Installed, Is very safe, and
perfectly suitable for public bull dings.
It is stated that electric radiators ore
often used in an auxiliary sense where
sufficient heat Is not obtainable in
buildings heated by hot water. They
are also useful for chilly evenings,
and at times when it U net cold enough
to work the whole system of heating,
hut a little warmth is required In any
particular room or portion of a room.
A Prlneaaa and Bar Violin.
Grand Duchess Olga, the 13-year-old
sister of the empress of Russia, is just
now a source of great anxiety to her
relatives, and especially to her mother.
Some celebrated German and French
specialists have been recently In St.
Petersburg, with the abject of diagnos
ing her case, and she Is to accompany
her mother to the south of France,
where she will undergo medical treat
ment. She has never recovered from
the shock of the terrible railroad acci
dent at Borki, which in some way ap
pears to have affected the development
of her physique, though not of her
mind, for she is a remarkably Intelli
gent girl, and has Inherited In particu
lar her mother’s talent for music. She
Is especially proficient on the violin,
of which she is passionately fond, and
Which she has been playing for the
past five years. Many people and not
a few doctors have expressed the opin
ion that her playing several hours
every day on the violin may be partly
responsible for her stunted and slight
ly 'deformed physique. There is cer
tain;^ no musical instrument more cal
culated to affect injuriously the figure
of a young and growing girl than the
vloHn, owing to the position in which
the body is held while playing. It is
probable that the doctors will now def
initely insist on what they have al
ready recommended, namely, that the
princess shall put her violin aside for
a time, at any rate, pending the treat
ment which she is about to undergo.
What Dora Be Mean?
What does the German minister of
war mean, when he says, as he did the
other day in the relchstag, that the
new army rifles had been fully tested
and were “certainly not Inhumane
weapons?" Considering that the end
and object of their manufacture is the
destruction of human life, “humane"
Is a somewhat strange word to apply 1
to them, and we may expoct to hear !
soon of the benovolence of gatling guns !
or the merciful propensities of torpe
does. ,
B*"" IOYAL BAKING POWDER
is the purest and strongest
__ baking powder made. It has
received the highest award at the U. S.
Gov’t official investigation, and at all
the Great International Expositions and
World’s Fairs wherever exhibited in.
competition with others.
It makes the finest, lightest, sweetest,
most wholesome bread, cake and pastry.
More economical than any other leaven
ing agent.
ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO., 106 WALL 8T., NEW-YORK.
Flying Under Wat nr.
When the penguin in the London
zoological garden ia ted, the fish are
thrown into the water, and the bird,
which cannot fly in air or swim on the
surface of the water, at once plunges
in, and is transformed into a swift and
beautiful creature, beaded with glob
ules of quicksilver, where the air clings
to the close feathers, and flying
through the clear and waveless depths
with arrowy speed and powers of turn
ing far greater thnn in any known form
of aerial flight The rapid and steady
strokes of the wings are exactly simi
lar to those of the air birds, while the
feet float straight out, level wltii its
body, unused for propulsion, or even as
.rudders, and as little needed in its
progress as those of the wild duck
when on the wing. The twists and
■ turns necessary to follqw the active
little fish are made wholly by the
strokes of one wing and the cessation
of movement in the other.; and the fish
are chased, caught and swallowed
without the slightest relaxation of
speed, in a submarine flight which is
quite as rapid as that of most birds
which take their prey in midair.
Like a Machine,
Which kept In order runs smoothly and regu
lurly, so tue bowels keep up their uutlou if
measures are taken to keep mein in good
working order. This Infers, of course, that
tney are out of order. Tne surest recourse
then la to Hostetler's Stomach Hitters, a luxu
live mild but effective, which 1» also a remedy
for dyspepsia, mulurla, rheumatism, uervoug
uess and kiduey trouble.
He always does his Lest who always does
all he can. _
The less blood there is in a sermon the
more compliments the preacher will get.
“Sanson's If agio Corn ■alva.”
Warranted to cure or money refunded. Atk your
druggist for It. Price It cents.
It is well to have a noble purpose, but oh!
perform the doing of it.
"Short Journeys on a Long Road”
Is the characteristic title of a profusely
illustrated (mod containing over one hun
dred pages of charmingly written descrip
tions of summer resorts iu the < ouutry
north and west of Chicago. The reading
matter is new, the illustrations are new,
aud the information therein wilt be new to
almost everyone.
A copy of "Short Journeys on a Long
Hood'’ will be sent free to anyone who wid
enclose ten cents (to pay postage) to Geo.
H. Heaflord, General Passenger Agent
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway,
I Chicago. III.
Lions At« th« Boar*
London Dally News: From Lemberg
otir Vienna correspondent learns that a
terrible battle lias been fought at the
railway station at Rawaruska. A men
agerie was being conveyed by rail and
when the train stopped at the station
a great noise was heard. The guards
went to the wagons containing the
wild beasts and found the wooden par
titions which separated three lionesses
from three bears and these again from
‘.hree hyenas broken down and the an
imals engaged in battle. One bear was
missing, the lions had eaten him, skin
and all. They had bitten another bear s
paw off and a hyena lay dead on the
floor. Two lions in a neighboring com
partment remained calm. No one dared
to interfere between the fighting beasts
.ntil the owner arrived in a sledge and
separated them—not before he had
been bitten by a bear, however. He
claims damages from the railway ad
ministration because the partitions
gave way.
A Word Ahnut White ( Inver.
Professor Ilonry of the Wisconsin
station Is credited with the following!
it is not advisable to sow white clover
alone on land for hog pasture, but a
mixture of several grasses, such as two
bushels of blue grass, one bushel of
orchard grass, one peck of timothy and
four pounds of white clover seed. Sow
this on three acres of ground, with a ;|5
very light seeding of oats and barley,
or, better still, without any grain at
all. itia suggested that the laud be
not pastured until the sod is well
formed, and if the grass runs up tall ^
that it may be cut for hay. No stock
should he turned in on tho field until
the second season, unless a few week* v,
in the fall while the ground is dry.
Thick seeding is urged.
Maks Your Own Bitters!
On receipt of HU cents in V. 8. stamps, I
will send to any address one parkaxo Ht**
ketee's Dry Hitters. One package makes
one gallon tie:X tonic known. Cures stora- -h
arh. kiduey disease*, and is a great appe
titer and bfooil purifier. Just the medicine
needed for spring and summer, if&e. at
your drug store. Address Uao. 0. Hto
'kctee, Grand Hapids. Mich.
If a woman has a nice looking pocket
book to tarry, she doesn't care whether she
has any money or not.
Notice.
Drs. II. II. Oreen & Sons of Atlanta,
Ga., are the greatest dropsy spectullate
In the world. Cure more patients than
the entire army of physicians scattered
over thlB beautiful land of ours. A val
uable discovery outside any medical
book or published opinion. A purely
j vegetable preparation. Removes all
! dropsical symptoms rapidly. Ten days’
; treatment mailed to every sufferer. Sea
1 advertisement In other column.
! Only a l rave man is a'rnid of a ghost of
1 s murdered opportunity. ,
i - -..—-\1
If the Baby It Cutting Iceih. 1
Ro sure and line that old and v eil tried remedy. MiA
WiNhi.ow'H BooTHwa Bvnt'P for Children Teething
Bright things are not always good things.
What an ordinary man eats
and the way he eats it w onld
be enough to give dyspepsia
to an ostrich—unless die os
trich were wise enough to as
sist ins digestion
from time to time
, with an efficient
K combination of
|/ vegetable <*»
tracts. Such a
^preparation is
wDt. Pierce’*
Pleasant Pellet*.
They are the pill*
.par excellence
^for those who
sometimes cat
me wrong tnings ana too much. Tney
stimulate action in all of the digestive
organs. They stop sour stomach, windy
belchings, heartburn, flatulence and cure
constipation, biliousness, dyspepsia, in
digestion, sick headache ana kindred
derangements. *
Once used they are always in favor.
FOR ALL THE ILLS THAT PAIN CAN BRING.
ST. JACOBS OIL
fiS CURB IS KING} /Mike Witt) ACHES fa) Everything.
A GREAT COUGH REMEDY.
Perhaps you may think that Scott’s Emulsion is
onlv useful to fatten babies, to round up the angles and
make comely and attractive, lean and angular women,
and fill out the hollow cheeks and stop the wasting of
the consumptive, and enrich and vitalize the blood of
the scrofulous and anaemic persons. It will do all this
—but it will do more. It will cure a
Hard, Stubborn Cough
when the ordinary cough syrups and specifics entirely
fail. The cough that lingers after the Grip and Pneu
monia will be softened and cured by the balsamic heal
ing and strengthening influences of this beneficent
food-medicine, namely, Scott’s Emulsion of Cod-liver
Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda.
Refuse substitutes. They are never as good. ' '
Scott A Bowne, New York. All Druggists. 50c. and 31.