The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, May 16, 1895, Image 7

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    Maillot ■ * j
lanv people know how to moll
n a letter? Nine people out
i.-U it so carefully down that
je„t always loses his temper,
iallv the stamp, in the effort
it ' It is really more exas
than when the sender forgets
ier the stamp he should have
for then, at least, it is not
liven the most extravagant
jom have souls above saving
for it is, strangely, far dearer
’;,n the 2 cents it represents,
u'h person sends it loose, which
enough, provided it docs not
unseen and vanish, as these
depraved small things have a
doing. The proper way is a
lone. Cut with a sharp pen knife
dlel slits at the top of your let
. ,iip in your stamps, which will
avel as safely as if in a special
use. Perhaps you have been in
i ry village where money orders
st a I notes are unknown, and for
reason it becomes necessary to
lange in a letter. Cut a piece of
-•a i d board the size of the envel
nd from this cut circular pieces
e of your coins. Insert the coins
iste a slip of paper across one or
ides. — Demorest’s Magazine.
nest the Judge Could Do,
nv Times Union: A story is told
dge who lately had the hypnotie
ised before him by a burglar,
l isnner claimed that he did not
that he wus "burgling:” that he
a 11 tomatically and unconsciously
the direction of a hypnotist,
dge said he would give him the
uefit of the law. and also of fais
tie misfortune. He thereforesen
the man to ten years in the
prison, but told him he could, if
se. send for the hypnotist and
himself made unconscious for the
of his imprisonment.
nme power.” said the judge,
eli enabled you to commit the bur
, and not know it, ought also to
|e you to suffer imprisonment with
labor and not be aware of it. At
ate that is the best I can do for
lloiil the Fort
m a tiliouo .uiauv uy lumug to your aid
ku.'sui*i ux.y, iiusiciu-r y alumacu ±>il
iHe iuc win lutii ot i>r*ven luck uitcny
i u. is> spcp&ia, aicK muuuucue, muxuiaai,
(. nervous ana x'ueuxixulxc uuuuiu uuU
l»auoa iiuitl lo luc uelxuxx Ui Lma must
vt i.i ox ixuifUtes. 'iithv xL legUiui'xj xaxii
H..9UUU UApUrXCllCC XXb gOOU Ciltclia.
Snake Make* a Charge,
the month of July, some four or
Fears ago, 1 was out shooting llori
ivitli a friend of mine in Guzerat.
uid fairly good luck, and as we
• making our way to the railway
on to catch the early train back to
dabad I noticed my friend, who
shooting in line on my left sud
y point his gun at something on
ground and fire, and on asking
it was he said it was a black
a. and that he had shot it in two
?s. the head portion disappearing
n a hole. As we were in a
v to catch the train we went
but very soon heard one of the
ers calling out, and looking back
him running toward us with the
1 portion of the shake following
with the hood expanded. It ap
eil that he had remained behind
ng 10 dig out the cobra, and the re
was that it came out of the hole
went for him. Of course the snake
ii not get much pace on and was
’ ly killed.
L. THOMPSON & CO., Druggists, Cou
pon, Pa. say Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is the
ami only sure cure for catarrh they evei
Druggists sell It, 75c.
The Prince Walked In.
few years ago a well known physi
n of this city, while visiting Paris
.ended an amateur circus—a fashion
le society event to which there wa:
mission only by invitation. He pre
tied himself at the door with a tick
made out in the name of his friend
nice Or]off of the Russian embassy
l»ut this ticket is not yours; it ii
inc*e Orloff's, and it is not transfera
said the doorkeeper, as he barrec
e way.
‘Well, am I not Prince Orloff?” askec
e doctor.
. No. sir: we know very well tha
ince Orloff has only one eye. Th<
her is glass.”
'5ell. stupid, how about this?” sale
uoctor. as he took his own glasi
out and held it in his hand for in'
■tion.
i'J'k I>, beF>'or highness’ pardon,’
the doorkeeper. -Walk right in.’
had by a singular chance
upon the only respect in which t)i(
al]d the doctor resembled each
dilimivr *nc*dent, wasn't it
41 * tln(f Express.
(. -- ^»» ur*ion»1
'm,,n h«-iff!.Ssv!tn<1 J“fe nlth-IS95’ the
liss(mrj a; '; te‘n "11* so!1 tickets irom
k. Z Nei raJ,0‘U ? and ■tations in Kan.
*'■'in Xelra” » nnrt trf 01nt8 south and
rai,, «... 1 . u ?n“ Kansas, also to ( o1
u-t-r aiM 'ltn.‘h aIul Idaho, east of
"no first !fB 'lver,1 anon. at rate
mud trin mV,,- stantiard taro lor the
‘x1- Minimum rate ST.oo.
MUSt tlo,l,e ,l,e Naked.
re'." saMathIeCOri1? **? with the naked
^"rt iustiee •• li er *Ve to the Police
ln,: tl,e living picture*' was
ln’ir,'iy nude.'
tila '*>*> nthed e1°°e“t,th® f®fendant
ertainly*'e' asf'cd his honor.
“■oeom.fan.V^tnissed,” continued
That lcmp in *
”’,a.n. s stomach
iVifv.! tnakes him
imuble and misera
Weand unfit for bus
,0r,Pleasllre «
“«sed by indiges
hkp t, ln,liges‘i°n,
1 a ,n„fr,an,ty’ °°vers
Tk?, U,de of sins.
inh «r°llble Jnay be
1“ stomach, liver
is ' " berever it
’ ’ U 18 caused bv the
OUS^ref °f P°isoc
«W,1, *-Se Ulatter
«lnUi Nature has
unable to rid
1 ^rse]f of, unaided
^Peon^ 1 CaSes’ wise
Wc*"d dow« a
!“tIe health officer
55"^ by one
ant d £lerce 8 Pleas
out th e^*’ to search
V
MwnmymMT.
INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR
OUR RURAL READERS.
How Successful Farmers Operate This
Department of the Homestead-Hluts
as to the Care of Lire Stock and
Poultry.
Poultry Industry In Chinn.
The breeding and rearing of fowls Is
an important industry In China, as
they form a very considerable portion
of the dally food of the better class of
the people. The United States consul
at Chin-kiang says that the varieties of
fowls are few in number. The prin
cipal are the Yangehow fowl, a large
bird of good flavor, which weighs from
four to six pounds. This variety is a
good layer and sitter, the eggs being of
brownish tinge and good size. It lays,
during eight or nine months of the
year, about 200 eggs, ceasing only in
the hot summer nights. This descrip
tion is kept more for the table than
for laying purposes, as its flesh is par
ticularly good. The Langshan fowl is
a distinct and fairly pure breed from
the Yanktze river region, Just below
Chin-kiang. It is a large, heavy, hand
some bird, weighing from seven to
eight pounds. The eggs are of darkish
brown, and of good size. The Black
Bone or Typhoon chicken is a distinct
fancy breed. In color it is white and its
skin, legs, bones, flesh and comb are
very dark. The flesh of this fowl is
much dsteemed, and, boiled down into
soup, it is prescribed by physicians for
certain diseases. The Chow is another
variety. This breed is small, weigh
ing generally from two to three
pounds. A pure white cock of this
breed is always carried on the coflln
at a native funeral cortege, and is sac
tlrely tor foreign markets, that Is, for
the foreigners at tho treaty ports. The
peacock Is reared In many parts of
China, and has long been known to the
people, though it Is not n native of the
country. Its tall feathers are used by
the Mandarins In their caps to desig
nate official rank.
The Gold and Silver Pheasants of
China may be called domesticated
birds, as they are now so extensively
reared that it is doubtful if they are
found wild. There is a bird in China—
the Cormorant—which is domesticat
ed, trained to wonderful intelligence,
and employed in catching flsli. These
birds are reared and trained with groat
care. A pair costs from five to six dol
lars. They are taken out on the lake
and rivers in a small boat —one man to
every ten or twelve Cormorants. The
birds stand perched on the side of the
boat, and, at a word from the man,
they scatter on the water and begin
to look for fish. They dive for the fish
and then rise to the surface with the
fish in their bills, when they are called
back to the boat by the fisherman. As
docile as dogs, they swim to their mas
ter and are taken into the boat, when
they lay down their prey and again
resume their labor.
Breeding for Milk.
When It is so easy to combine in
moderate degree the milking and the
breeding qualities of one animal, why,
it may be asked, should breeders have
gone to such extremes on the one side
or the other? We believe that the
whole thing is due to physiological
laws, says London Live Stock Journal.
The perfect beef animal and the per
fect milk animal are two totally differ
ent productions, and In their highest
excellence the two characteristics can
not exist in the same frame. Common
stock, possessing fair milking and fair
grazing properties,are easily produced,
but the abnormal beef beast and the
THE CARRIER PIGEON.
The illustration given above is repro
duced for the Farmers’ Review from
the French of Ad. Benlon. It shows a
carrier pigeon en route with a mes
sage. The letter in this case appears
to be fastened to his legs.
The carrier pigeon is a bird larger
generally than the common pigeon,
measuring about 15 inches in length
and weighing about one and one-fourth
pounds. The neck is long and the pec
toral muscle very large. An appendage
of naked skin hangs across its bill, and
contiues down on either side of the
lower mandible. The great develop
ment of this muscle is what gives the
bird the power of long continued flight
The quality that renders these birds
so valuable as messengers is their hove
lor home, which seems abnormally de
veloped. The art of training them is
carried to perfection in Turkey, where
the procedure is about as follows: A
number of very young birds are taken
to a distance of one-half mile from
their home and freed. The most intel
ligent will quickly find their way to
their homes. Those that get lost are re
garded as stupid, and are rejected. The
ones that return home are then taken
to greater distances, first only two 01
three miles from the domicile, but
afterward to hundreds and even a
thousand miles. Thus taught, they be
come expert in returning to their own
ers, and do this from all parts of the
country.
As to their rapidity of flight there is
much dispute. The more conservative
say that the usual speed is about 30
miles per hour. Some, however, be
rlficed at the grave. Also on native
boats a cock bird is killed on the Chi
nese New Year’s day, and the blood
sprinkled on the bow to propitiate evil
spirits, and to insure good luck during
the year. Ducks are reared in great
quantities, and are largely used for
food, both fresh and salted. They are
all artificially hatched, as the duck is
an uncertain sitter. The common duck
is a good-sized bird, weighing, when
dressed for the table, three or four
pounds, and is much esteemed for the
excellence of its flavor. After fledging,
the birds are driven about in vast
flocks through canals, and from pond
to pond, where they find their food.
They are brought under strict discip
line, and obey their keeper’s call with
extraordinary intelligence. The Man
darin duck is smaller than the common
uv^uumui uni
WUU UL"
versified and brilliant plumage. It is
reared chiefly for its beauty, In the
grounds of the wealthy there is always
an artificial lake, where the Mandarin
duck is kept. They are considered as
emblems flf conjugal fidelity, and a
pair of them usually form a part of
wedding processions. Preserved ducks’
eggs are considered a delicacy, and al
ways form an important part of a Man
darin dinner. The process of preserv
ing them is as follows: A lye of bean
stalk and lime is made by burning
these to powder. This is put in water,
black tea leaves and salt in certain
proportions being added. The boiling
is continued until all the water has
evaporated, and the residue becomes
caked and hard. This is powdered fine,
and the fresh eggs are placed therein
one by one, with a little rice husk.
1 hey remain in this preparation one
hundred days when they are ready for
use. The preserved eggs will keep for
several years.. When ready for use they
have the appearance of hard-boiled
eggs. The shell is taken off, and they
are put on the table, cut into small
slices and eaten as hors d’oeuvres. The
goose is generally of pure white plum
age, very striking In appearance, of
great size and majestic carriage, much
resembling the swan. The turkey has
Jong been introduced Into China, and
P j^Catiwi &&£ Xiaa-Iala m-,
llevo It possible for these birds to fly
from 60 to 90 miles per hour in rare
instances. It takes about 12 hours for
a carrier pige< n to digest a crop full
of grain. Passenger pigeons have been
shot in New York with their crops full
of rice, which they could not have ob
tained nearer than the Carolina rice
fields. They must have traveled 300 or
400 miles in six hours, or over 50 miles
per hour.
In England pigeons have been re
peatedly used in wagers, bets being
made on the full speed of the birds. In
such cases a greater speed than 36
miles per hour has rarely been made.
In 1833 a great trial of pigeons was
made at Ghent. On June 24, of that
year, 24 birds that had been entered
for the prize were thrown up at Rouen,
about 150 miles from Ghent. The first
pigeon arrived in Ghent in one and
nno-hnlf hnnr*a< 1R noma * u t _ t
and one-half hours, and three In the
course of the day; four were lost. The
first pigeon must have traveled at a
rate of nearly 100 miles per hour, which
seems incredible. Yet it is possible,
seeing that sixteen others also obtain
ed a speed of over 60 miles per hour.
It is hard to believe that carrier
pigeons are not governed by instinct,
yet men that handle them say that it is
merely a matter of education. If the
bird cannot recognize some landmark
he gets lost. Also birds thrown up dur
ing a fog or haze, seldom reach their
destination. There are, however, 3ome
rare instances extant that seem to prove
that the birds can succeed Irrespective
of the educational principle.
abnormal milk or butter cow must
have a carcase specially suited for ex
cellence in one direction or the other.
British cattle breeders are so captivat
ed by symmetry of form that they
have done comparatively little in de
veloping special milk and butter
breeds. There Is, indeed, only one—the
Ayrshire—and in it the wedge shape,
so suitable for milk, offends ideas of
beauty. For the rest we have to go to
Jersey and Guernsey for our special
breeds, which have been developed as
the result of at least a hundred years’
systematic breeding for this particular
i quality. Our best milking shorthorns
; aioo leuu 10 me weuge snape.
Governor Hoard, of Wisconsin, who
has made a special study of this sub
ject of breeding for milk or for beef,
says: “I believe that the English ideal
of the form of a dairy cow has been on
the whole, a hindrance to the develop
ment of dairy cattle. It is essentially
based on the outline of the shorthorn,
and hence is more or less a beef form.
To my mind, the true science of breed
ing for dairy qualities is based on the
same law of distinctiveness that gov
erns in breeding horses for speed. I
do not think that the English ideas of
dairy breeding, based largely as they
are on the ‘general purpose’ notion of
beef and milk both, are conducive to
the best development of dairy quality
and potency.”
We consider that Governor Hoard’s
views are quite right, and that though
moderate capacity for beef and milk
can be combined, yef superiority in
both cannot be attained in the name
animal. Therefore, we hold that Brit
ish breeders who have striven for the
perfection of beef cattle, and Channel
island and Ayrshire breeders who
have aimed at superiority of butter and
milk, have been acting in strict con
formity with physiological laws, which
will prevent combined excellence in
milk and beef, though, as we have said,
moderate achievements are within the
reach of everybody.
The vindication of what our breed
ers have accomplished Is consequently
to be found in their observance of laws
of nature, which cannot be set at
naught, and it the attempt -s-n'j m
bo made It will be touna to be lucou
patible with prlnclploa that are fixed
and unalterable.
, Fat Hem.
So much has been said about laying
hens getting too fat, that more thun a
few people have concluded that the beat
way to keep hens in good condition tor
laying Is to half starve them. This Is
a mistake. If layers aro fed the proper
kind of food, and given a chance to ex
ercise properly, they will not get too
fat to do their best as layers. Ap or
dinary flock of farm fowls are not apl
to get too fat, for they run at large and
are constantly taking exercise enough
to keep them In good condition.
We know that when hens are kept In
pens most of the time, they can easily
be fattened beyond the point of profit,
as far as laying 1b concerned, but our
readers are nearly all farmers who al
low their fowls perfect liberty r i to
such we want to give the warning that
they are Just aB liable to underfeed
them. Those who have fed their fowls
liberally during the past severe winter
will be rewarded with plenty of eggs
as soon ns the weather moderates this
spring, while those who have been fear
ful of overfeeding will probably be com
pelled to wait till the price of eggs has
fallen very low before their hens will
be producing at their highest capacity.
Too many are careless about properly
feeding their hens during the season
when they do not lay many eggs, for
getting that it Is necessary to keep them
at the highest point of health and vigor
if best results are to be expected.—
Farm News.
S»lt In the Dnlry.
1. Salt, like acidity and charity, cov
ers a multitude of sins.
2. To the majority ot consumers a
small amount of salt will Increase fine
flavors (n butter, while a large amount
of salt may partially hide poor flavor.
3. Salt is thus partly a flavoring and
partly a preservative.
4. No amount of salt will preserve
poor butter, but good salt will help to
preserve good butter.
5. Salt should be applied with a rea
sonable addition of brains.
6. If working only once, use an eas
ily dissolved salt, or else partially dis
solve it before using. The latter is
not a good plan, as it is difficult to dis
tribute such a pasty mess.
7. The amount of moisture left In the
butter when the salt is added should
he regulated according to tho dissolu
bility of the salt.
8. When salt is applied to drained
butter and left to dissolve at the
proper temperature (about 60 degrees)
it will absorb moisture from the but
ter globules in dissolving, and this is
quite an important matter.
9. Heavy brine, when applied only
once in brine salting, will be diluted in
proportion to the water left from wash
ing, and hence be apt to leave the but
ter too light salted for the average con
sumer.
10. It is more difficult to salt evenly
with brine than with dry salt.
11. First and last and all things get a
good dairy salt which has not been ex
posed to bad odors.
12. Do not believe that you can fol
low any fixed rules, but consider the
dissolubility of your salt, the amount
of moisture and the temperature in
your butter, and use Judgment in salt
ing as in all other work.—National
Dairyman.
Cheap Rations.—With butter selling
at 18 cents on the Elgin board of
trade, feeding for profit is not so easy
as it used to be. The writer finds
nothing cheaper this winter than a
grain ration of bran equal in quantity
to the milk the cow gives and a forage
ration of cornstalks. Cornstalks cost
nothing but saving them—we have to
grow them to get corn—and exchang
ing a pail of milk for a pail of bran is
a good trade, especially if it is Jersey
milk. With this ration it requires
qjiout four and one-half pounds of bran
to make a pound of butter. We have
made it with less bran, but the in
creased feed makes a paying increase
in butter yield per cow with good cows
A cow giving thirty pounds of milk per
day has about seven and one-half
pounds of bran, and a smaller yielder
is matched with a correspondingly
smaller mess of bran. Bran for milk
in equal bulk—measure for measure—
is so safe a rule that the veriest novice
need make no mistake. The expert
with good cows can profitably feed
richer and more concentrated food._
Advantages of a Separator.—The
gain of butter by the use of a separator
over that of the best deep setting meth
ods is slight, if any. Tests have varied
considerably in this respect. The
principal advantage of the separator
is the economy in time and space in
the dairy, no setting pan or pail being
required. The cream is separated soon
after the milking, and the cream only
has to be taken care of. The skimmed
milk too is sweet, and therefore better
for feeding, as the souring' is at the
expense of the nutriment in the milk,
some of the sugar of it being changed
into acid. The quantity of milk for
a pound of butter depends on the pro
portion of fat in it. If there is 4 per
cent, there will be a pound of butter
for each 25 pounds, or about 12 quarts.
And there should be this proportion
in the kind of cows mentioned, if they
are well fed*—-Country Gentleman.
Keep Down Expenses—We hear from
men on every side that farming does
not pay as well as it did twenty years
ago, and that the country is goi ig to
the dogs. Their fathers or grandfath
ers made money on the farm; why
can’t they? The trouble is Just here:
They live beyond their income. They
spend more than they earn. Getting
“on tick” has ruined many farmers,
not only In Kansas, but all over the
country. Farmers twenty and forty
jours ago bought and sold for cash.
Their wants were not so numerous as
the wants of the average farmer today.
They bought what they needed, and
could pay for. There was none of this
modern splash and empty style about
things that we see now.—Ex.
Whey Butter.—The agricultural de
partment at Cornell claims to have
found that butter fat can be extracted
from whey by running it through a 1
separator. The department now has
in press a bulletin explaining the
process. It is estimated that general
adoption of the process would save the
agriculturist interest of New York i
state nearly $1,000,000 a year, or, to I
put it in another way, that the entire :
expense of making cheese would be I
paid by the saving of what has hereto- *
tore torn e weatm Modact j
highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov’t Report
Absolutely pure
The British Speaker.
The position of speaker of the house
of commons is one of great difficulty.
He draws a salary of VS,000 a year, en
joys the use of a palace, gets a liberal
allowance for entertaining, and a peer
age on his resignation from office. It
is one of the unwritten privileges of
members of the houso of commons to
dine with the speaker. The speaker's
dinners are held on Wednesdays and
generally compose a total of about
thirty members, so that taking the en
tire parliamentary session, all the mem
bers get their turn, starting with the
cabinet, then the leaders of the opposi
tion, and then the rank and file. Until
1880 it was the custom to wear court
dress at these dinners; that is, knee
breeches, velvet cutaway coats and
cocked hats, but in 1880 that rule was
swept away.—Washington Post.
You Don't Have to bwear Off,
Says the St. Louis Journal of Agriculture In nn
editorial about No-To-Bac, the famous tobacco
habit cure. "Wo know of many cases cured t y
No-To-Boo: one. a prominent, St. Louis archi
tect, smoked and chewed fortw.-uty venrsi two
boxes cured him so that even the smell of to
bacco mukes him sick." No-To-B.ic sold and
guaranteed bv Druggists everywhere. No cure
no pay. Hook free. Address Sterling Remedy
Co., New York or Cblca/o
Country Without a Paper.
A country without a newspaper is in
these days a curiosity indeed. Andorra
is believed to be the only civilized state
in the world in which not a single
newspaper is published. Andorra is a
little republic—about thirty-six miles
long by thirty broad—situated on the
south side of tho Pyrenees, next the
Spanish Province of Lerida and the
French department of Ariege.
It is nominally under the protection
of France, but its H,000 inhabitants
speak the Spanish language.
Here, then, is an opportunity far an
enterprising journalist.
He need not bo afraid of duels, for,
though firearms are plentiful enough,
it is said there is not n single inhabit
ant who could hit a cow at 100 yurds.
Coe’s Cough Balsam
Is the oldest, and best. It will break up a Cold quick,
•r than anything alee. It It always reliable. Try It,
It will always shorten our prayers won
derfully to first do what (Jod experts.
I am entirely cured of hemorrhage of the
lungs by Piso's Cure for Consumption.—
Louisa Linuaman, lietlmny,Mo.,.)au. 8, ’04.
Faith rests and waits. Unliellef refuses
to be quiet l ocalise it has no feeling.
It the Ilaby Is Cutting Teelh.
Be sure and use that old and well-tried remedy, Mas.
Wlxscow’s Southin'! Svncr fur Children Teething.
Bin cannot be hidden, Lecause Uod never
shuts his eyes. (
What the Chicken Picked Up.
Colonel W. I). Bettis, of Orange, Tox.,
has a vahiablo opal about the size of a
grain of peaberry coffee, that lie wears
in a scnrfpin. Yesterday he called up
a pet chicken and took it In one hand
while ho allowed it to pick some grains
of corn from his other hand. The chick
en Bwallowed the half dozen grains
that were held out to it, and looking
about for more spied the opal and
struck it, but did not quite dislodgo it
from the setting. As quick as a flash
the bird made another and more suc
cessful grab at the stone, tearing it out
and swallowing it. The chicken was a
great pet in the family, but opals cost
more than chickens. A council of war
was called, and it was decided that the
opal must be found even at the cost of
a life, so about two hours later the
chicken was executed, and the opal was
discovered lodged in its gizzard. —Gal
veston News.
A new dining car service between Chica
go and Buffalo via the Nickel Plate Hoad
has recently been placed at the disposal of
the traveling public, which will enable
patrons of this favorite low rate line to
obtain all meals on trains when traveling
on through trains between Chicago, New
York and Boston. For reservations of
sleeping car space and further information
see your local ticket agent or address J. Y.
Calahan, General Agent, Chicago.
Monopoly keeps prices up and wages
down. _-_
No man can speak for God except he to
whom God has spoken.
Billiard Table, second-hand. For sale
cheap Apply to or address, H. C. Axis,
511 B. l'-’th Bt.. Omaha, Neb.
Eternity is the inflnito expansion of time
A Slander.
The new woman is marching bravely
on. Two smoking parlors for her ex*- ■*
elusive use have been established in>
New York, and there is promise of sev—
eral more. From the smoking parlor’
to the drinking room is only a step sndl
frequently is not such a long step at.
that. Beyond that, if the reformers
are to be believed, are the card and
faro dens, the roulette wheels, even
! the loaded dice and goodness known- -
what not. Oh, yes, the new woman in- 'c s
inarching ahead very bravely indeed,
l.etas hope that she is enjoying her
progress.—Philadelphia Inquirer.
Make Your Own Milters!
On receipt of DO cants in U. 8. stamps, t , .
will send to any address one package Hte*
ketee’s Dry Hitters. One package makes
one gallon lea tonic known. Cures atom*
noh, kidney diseases, and is a great appe
tiser and blood purifier. Just the medicine
needed for spring and summer. 25c. at
your drug store. Address Oso. Q. 8tb*
ketu, Grand Kanids. Uich.
Not I.Ike Ills Name.
One of the managers of a home for
destitute colored children tells a funny
story about the way Christmas was cel
ebrated at the institution. She went,
out there in the afternoon to see how
things were getting on, and found ft ,
youngster as black as the inside of a. *
coal mine tied to a bedpost, with hi*
hands behind him. - ;
“What !b the bov tied up there for?”1
she demanded of the attendant.
“For lying, ma’am; he is the worst* .5)
cst, lying nigger 1 ever seen.” * V *
“What’s his name?”
“George Washington, ma'am,” waft
tho paralyzing reply. —Chicago Record.
World's Columbian Exposition
Will be of value to the world by illus
trating the improvements in the me- ■■'A
chanlcal arts, and eminent physicians
will tell you that the progress in medic
inal agents has been of equal lmpor- ' |
lance, and as a strengthening laxative
Syrup of Figs is far in advance of alt
others.
Boston Courier: Wo cannot see why *■
dog should he so much more loud of th»
Brut of a maii's trousers than any other*
port of his wardroLe.
Health nnrr Impnlrril Is not enslljr rftslnedr
jvt Burkur'i, Ulna r Tuulo Imnuttalncd thus* rtiuito ■
In rnauy casui. Uuud turuvery wauknussanJd struso
The coal liarous threaten a war of rates.
Their winter victims will have the satisfac
tion of seeing them sweat without laying,
for it.
Tt Is more thou wonderful
how pntlo’itiy peoplu Mirror with corns, dot pssee*
uml comfort by rouiovlns tuem with liinduruorna.
Those who borrow trouble uever get ah
chance to pay it back.
"Xanstm’e Hafflo Corn Valve.”
Warranted to cure or money refunded. Ask yeas *
drusslet for It. 1’rli'e is cents.
(Jalveston News: Man made justice blind:
so that I '
; his escapes would l.e easy.
ASK YOUR DRUaOIST FOR
★ The BEST *„
FOR
Dyspeptic,Delicate,Infirm and
AGED PERSONS
* JOHN CARLB * SONS, New York. *
My son teas afflicted
with catarrh. 1 induced
him to try Ely's Cream
Halm and the disagree
able catarrhal smell all
left him. lie appears as
well as any one.—J.
Olmsted, Areola, III.
CATARRH
■iLV*S cm AM BALM opens and cleanse* tb*»
Nasal Passages, AIIx.vn Pam ami Inflammation. Heal*
the Sores, protects the Membrane from Colas, lie
stores the Senses of Taste and Smell. The Halm to
quickly absorbed and gives relief at once. , «
A particle Is applied Into each nostril and is agree*
able. Price 30 cents at lmigglsts or by mall.
ELY BROTHERS, 68 Warren St., Hew York
Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica, Backache.
ST. JACOBS OIL a
'9
is made from the best leaf,
in the best way, and by
* the best skill—that’s why
IT’S MUCH THE BEST. '
Sold everywhere. Made only by the Oldest Tobacco j
Mfr’s in America, and the largest in the world—the j
P. LORILLARD CO. !
■AV FOR PLEA8ANT WORK easily secured throngk
W 1 an early application tor Local Agency to sell the
DAVIS CREAM SEPARATORS
to Farmers and Dairymen. One style was shown in
last number Of this Journal. Another will soon be
pictured out. Meanwhile, write ror Handsome Illus
trated Book Fraa. davis a rankin bldg, and
MFQ. CO., Sole Manufacturers,UO W. Lake St,Chicago.
W. N. IJ.. OraaHa—aO, INS3.
When answering advertisements kindly
mention this paper. i
Patents. Trade-Marks.
Examination and Advice as to Patentability oC'
Invention. Send for ** Inventora’ Guide, or nl>wr to Gek
• Patent*’ FATSZCZ OTASEILL. Wlita&TttJ, D. X
h,