The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, February 27, 1896, Image 7
Two Views of Twins. “I never was so mortified in all my life!'* she exclaimed. “What was the matter?” asked her dearest friend. “My maid told me that' my fiance was in the reception room.” "Yea" , “And 1 threw my arms around him and kissed him twice before I discover ed that it was his twin brother. Take my advice and never become engaged to a twin.” “On the contrary, I think I shall look for one. It just doubles the fun.” —Chicago Evening 1’oSt. GROW RICH, EVERT FARMER. The editor thinks It to be the wish of everybody to grow rich, not for the sake of the money, but for the good that can be done with the money. . Now, there are three new cereals recently created that will make money for the farmer. One is Silver King' Barley, the most wonderful creation of the age, yielding '90, 100 to 116 bu. per acre in 1896, and there are thousands of farmers who be- ^ lleve they can grow 150 bu. per acre therefrom in 1896. Then there is Silver Mine Oats, yield ing in 1895 209 bu. per acre. Every farmer who tested it, believes 250 bu. possible. Then there is Golden Triumph Corn, which produced over 200 bu. per acre, and 250 bu. is surely possible. And potatoes, there is Salzer’s Ear liest, which was fit for table in 28 days in 1895, yielding tremendously, while the Champion of the World, tested in a thousand different places In 1895, yield- I ed from 8 to 1,600 bu. per acre. I Now, in Salzer's new catalogue there j is a wonderful errayal of new varieties of wheat, oats, barley, rye, potatoes, grasses, clovers and forage plants, and the editor believes that it would pay every farmer a thousand-fold tefget this catalogue before buying seeds. If you w II out this Oa, and send it with 10 cents postage to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., you will receive, free, 10 grain and grass samples, including above and their mammoth catalogue. Catalogue alone, 5 cents postage. w.n. The rule sti 1 holds good that the bizger the s eeve the more modish the garment. Much doing is not so important as well doing. If the Baby Is Cutting Tcetn. fee euro and nee that old and well.triad remedy, Hu Wixslow’s Soothino Syrup for Children Teething* Some of the Japanese soldiers wear paper clothing. Billiard table, second-hand, for sale cheap Apply to or address, H. C. Asrx, 511 8. 15th St., Omaha, Neb The value of the diamond is not what it does, but what it is. Gladness Comes With a better understanding- of the transient nature of the many phys ical ills, which vanish before proper ef forts—gentle efforts—pleasant efforts— rightly directed. There is comfort in the knowledge, that so many forms of sickness are not due to any actual dis ease, but simply to a constipated condi- , tion of the system, which the pleasant family laxative. Syrup of Figs, prompt ly removes. That is why it is the only remedy with millions of families, and is everywhere esteemed so highly bv all who value good health. Its beneficial effects are due to the fact, that it is the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness without debilitating the. organs on which it acts. It is therefore all important, in order to get its bene ficial effects, to note when you pur chase, that you have the genuine arti cle, which is manufactured by the Cali fornia Fig Syrup Co. only and sold by all reputable druggists. If in the enjoyment of good health, and the system is regular, laxatives or other remedies ore then not needed. If afflicted with any actual disease, one may be commended to the most skillful physicians, but if in need of a laxative, one should have the best, and with the well-informed everywhere. Syrup of Figs stands highest and is most largely used and gives most general satisfaction. WE HAVE NO agents. ww 9 " " * w but sell direct to the con sumer at wholesale prices, ship anywhere for exam In al ion before sale. Every thin'* warranted. 100 styles . of farriafni 80 styles of Nllsrasu, 41 styles Bldlag 8*4 Idlrs. Write for catalogue. f ELKHART CARRIAGE A HAR * HESS IUU CO., KLKUART, W. D. Pratt, Secy. 1XD. gSi-JS To Kansas City and tbe Soutb. Burlington! Route | From Omaha and also from Council Blurt*, tbe Burlington Route runs two trains daily to 8t, Joseph and Kansas City, making close connections in the Kansas City Union Depot with all lines for the South. The Bur.ineton Route is the shortest, quickest and in everyway the lest line to Kansas City, and trace ers who take any other do so without a proper under standing of the tacts in the case. The local ticket agent will gladly ticket you via the Bur.ington if .you w ill ask him to do so. /. Francis, Gen'l Fass'r Ag^ Omaha, Neb. A«WW» 9 for But HAYDEN BROS.,1 liniVbil Wl,vv,l terii-k'a Putt© iw,offer to anyone tenri'ntr W*0 for nine xubecrlpi ion* to tha *Delincatcr ’* the standard fashion magazine. one ad ditional zueScriptUm KRS.E. Write tor catalogue of ■prlBi Fa hlons Free. LEaaiNS i Ffno Army Duck with Md<f sp In , £11.CO. Good Heavy D ek. with Buckle*. Afie. rent frepaid on ffwlpt of price. Send size of vjjoo and me..*nr<* of «alf of eg. U C. HUNTINGTON k SON, Du-aha. A SUGAR BEET BOOM. NEBRASKA WELCOMES THE SACCHARINE VEGETABLE. And Will Do Wliat It Can to Encourage Growth of the Sam—Mach Enlighten ment on the Subject by Men Who Haro Made Sugar Beet Culture a Study— Beet Sugar Factories, the Bounty Ques tion. Etc., Etc. Nebraska** Coming Indastrj Thero was deep and absorbing; inter est in all the proceeding's of the Beet Sugar convention held at Fremont. On the second day of the meeting the first matter taken up was selection of place for holding the next convention. Several points were considered, Grand Island finally being chosen. The date was left to the executive committee, with a recommendation that it be fixed at a time when the Grand Island fac tory is in operation. ... Harry O’Neill, who represents the new method known as the Masse-Cuite process, intended for small factories for reducing the crop to raw sugar for the refinery was introduced. The clar ified juice, he said, after being treated with lime and all the impurities, taken out, is put through a copper cylinder, through which a current o: hot air passes. An experiment was made at Grand Island on juice 8.6 per cent su gar and 91.4 per cent water. After passing twice through the cylinder the result was 8.5 per cent water and 91.5 per cent sugar. With the assurance of a continuation of the bounty law the process will be rapidly developed. If the bounty law remains unchanged after the next leg islature the company will be ready for operations. In the discussion following Mr. O’Neill’s talk it was brought out that a,plant with the capacity of 100 tons a day would cost about 830,000. The coippany will encourage co-operation and will not sell the machines. Chairman Furnas of the committee on resolutions reported. The resolu tions favor a state and national bounty for the encouragement of the sugar in dustry; recommended the formation of county associations; indorse the trans Mississippi exposition at Omaha; in dorse the Nebraska club, the state irri gation association and the irrigation fair at North Platte. Thanks were ex tended the state board of agriculture for its work. Improved methods of soil culture is favored The beet sugar enterprise was recommended and thanks extended to the citizens of Fre mont for their hospitality. A resolu tion by Peter Jansen was submitted and adopted, thanking ex-Governor Furnas for his long and arduous labor in helping to build up Nebraska. Superintendent Granger of the Utah sugar factory was present and address ed the convention from the factory standpoint The first crop was raised in Utah in 1891, when 9,960 tons were produced and made up, and in 1895 38,000 tons were made up. The aver age of sugar per ton of beets was 190 pounds. The factory cost 8750,000. Bast year a dividend of 10 per cent was declared. The factory lost money at first, but the business has grown steadily. This is one of the factories that is wholly American. The factory pays 84.25 for beets with 11.80 stan dard. A farmer is selected in every community to do business between the farmers and factory. No beets less than the standard are taken at any price. Hon. C. J. Green gave an eloquent and stirring address on the importance of the sugar question, of its vast con sumption and small production in this country. His address was the most elo quent one. of the convention. He re viewed at length the tariff legislation of the country, with an appeal for its application to the sugar and other manufacturing interests of the day. “The Possibilities of Nebraska” was ably treated by R. M. Allen, president of the association. The experience of Nebraska as a sugar-producing state was compared with other states and countries, showing that they did not always meet with success. The crop in Europe was very rich. Their beets are firmer and contain more sugar than is possible in this country, which may be due to climatic conditions and to seed. . Germany can produce four and a half more tons of beets to the acre, with 3 per cent more in raw sugar than is possible here. In Russia the indus try is under control of the government and possesses all the elements that go to make sugar culture profitable— fertile soil, cheap fuel and low priced labor. Beets have been tested with as high as 35 per cent of sugar. To com pete with these countries it is apparent mat we neeu protection. vve wane a duty on sugar that is lair; not an ex acting one. Mr. Allen gave his hearers an insight of all sugar-producing coun tries the world over and also as to the yield. Here in Nebraska we have a good field, the right altitude, ricu soil, and with skilled labor and a study of this subject we . may be able to save much which is now lost, and make dis coveries of vast benefit to beet culture. J. S. Hoagland addressed the associa tion on state legislation. If the bounty law only tended to the enrichment of the manufacturer it should be voted down, but if it was a source of revenue and made the state prosperous it should be sustained. He referred to Bchool taxes and the wolf scalp bounty and proved that the law was beneficial. When the industry is established it will enhance the value of land and prop erty, make a demand for labor and in crease the population. He was in favor of amending the corporation laws so that large stockholders coujd not crowd out the small. lie would make it so there was only one rote for the man, not a vote for share of stock. Under this basis he would organize dis trict factories and county associations. Hon. W. ti. VVhitemoreof Valley read a paper on the subject “What Now?” He regarded this convention as the most important of any that has con vened in this state since that which prepared our constitution. We may well congratulate ourselves and return to our homes with this sentiment, “Ne braska is the place and sugar beets the stuff.” Men differ because the facts which form the basis of their judgment are not understood by them alike. He failed to see how those people who had signed a contract with theOxnards to raise beets of a certain standard of purity and saccharine contents could kick because the company refused to take beets which did not reach that standard, lie did not believe that the Oxnards would pursue a course which 1 must inevitably lead to failure, and [ the kicking of certain parties he as cribed to the old tendency which began in the Harden of Kden. The other fel low did it. The discussion which had arisen here, he felt sure, would recon cile the differences existing between the producer and manufacturer. He ascribed the failure of the Valley beet syndicate to the fact that their beets did not ripen, and that the land was not in the best | condition for their growth and develop ment of their sugar qualities. The convention was unanimous on ' one question. That was that Nebraska is naturally and peremptorily adapted to the beet sugar industry. We want i further supervision of the factories by i having the analysis made by state chemists. Who'are in nowise interested in the factories. When this is ac complished, and the farmer lias " the same degree of confidence when lio sends a load of beets to the factory that he will receive the fair treat ment he would receive Were he to take a loud of corn to an elevator then the industry would advance;.. < E. M. Norton, state weighmastcr of the Norfolk factory, read a, paper on the production of the Norfolk factory. Since the factory has been in qperation it has paid for beets the sum of 949?, 427. It has paid to employes 974,GOO, and the estimated amount it has re ceived for the sugar it has ’manufac tured is $886,623, which, after payiug for coal, coke and lime and other sup plies, does not leave a very large mar gin of profit, thougli it shows that the factory is a success. | M. A. Lunn of the Beet Sugar indus try addressed the convention on how to | secure factories His talk was relative to his experience in endeavoring to se cure eastern capital to erect them with no subsidy other than the land on which the factory was built. They would do nothing without a guarantee of acre age. Mr. Lunn reviewed the ground covered by other speakers and told his experience from actual experience. K W. Reynolds of Freinont read a most interesting paper on practical raising. He raised forty acres of beets this season and cleared $5 an acre after allowing 94 rental per acre. The treat-, inent received from the factory was so satisfactory that he. will plant 100 acres to beets this season. Congressman Meikeljohn made a short address on the merits and pur poses of the Nebraska clubi Its object is to advertise the state and encourage immigration. It belongs to all and is not a political organization. Every cit izen should help to advance the associ ation, which is for the state. The past two years had blighted its good name and it would require much labor to get it upon its old footing. NEWSY MORSELS. Emigration from Ireland is said now to have sunk to its lowest ebb since the year 1851. "Grab all in sight and rustle for more.” is the picturesque motto of the Kalama, Wash., Bulletin. In the early days of gold mining In California waiters in the hotels were paid 85 a day for their labor. A team of fox hounds hitched to a wagonette with pneumatic wheels will be a feature of the Fourth of July pa rade in Sanilac Center, Mich. The Ink used in printing the Bank of England notes was formerly made from grape stone charcoal, but now it Is man ufactured from naphtha smoke. On May 15 a pure white crow was picked up near Sherburn Colliery sta tion, England. The bird, which is a young one, has the bill, feet, and legs white. A committee ha* been appointed to raise an endowment of $250,000 for St. Paul's school. Concord, N. H„ which became so famottf under the late Rev. Dr. Colt. On an almost Inaccessible knob near Towesville, Ky., stands a gloomy old house with stone walls of castlelike thickness, only reached by a winding path about the cliff. King James I. bought of a Mr. Mark ham the first Arabian horse ever owned In England. The price was $2,500. He was disgraced by being beaten by every horse that ran against him. Every able-bodied maie In Norway has to serve In; the army. The first year he serves fifty-four days, the sec ond twenty-four, and the third year twenty-four. He gets only his board. Two thousand nine hundred and nine ty-two pennies have been taken up in the Canton, O., schools as a collection for the Francis Key monument which is being erected at Frederick, Md. The Klnzua viaduct, near Alton, Pa., was designed and finished in eight and one-half months without the use of scaf folding or even a single ladder. It is 2,100 feet long and 300 feet high. Canada's debt Is now $316,029,502. That means about $65 for every man, woman and child In the country, and It costs about $12,000,000 a year to pay the Interest and charges at the low rates now prevailing. It is worth remembering that Mount Logan, near the boundary between Utah and Wyoming, is the highest peak In North America. Professor Mendenhall, formerly chief of the coast and geodetic survey in Washington, made this statement. The largest raft ever floated down the Mississippi river Is now on the way to St. Louis. It consists, with its load, of over 7,000,000 feet of lumber, mostly white pine. If carried by rail this lumber would make nearly 600 car I loads. Allowing forty feet to the car | the train would be over four and a half I miles long. ■ CURIOUS FACTS. While we write from the l#ft to the ! right, the Japanese write from the right to left. I There are two hundred thousand fac i tory girls in London, one twenty-second i of the whole population. A curious present for a deaf person has been introduced in Germany—a fan deftly concealing a tiny trumpet in its stick. Berlin is the most cosmopolitan of large European cities. Only thirty seven percent of its Inhabitants are Ger man by birth. There are something like forty thou sand public schools in Japan. The buildings are comfortable and education is compulsory. In many European countries the practice has been adopted of planting nut and fruit trees in place of merely ■hade trees along the highways. THE WOODEN HEN.” W( have heard of wooden homes and wooden ducks, but a wooden hen Is something new under the sun—and Its purposes are different from those of either of the other wooden animals mentioned. It Is a not a toy, thouith It will please a boy. It la a hen, at least It will batch chickens from hens' eggs. or twenty-eight eggs. It Is an incu bator and costs only 18.00. This wooden hen is made by George H. Stahl, Quincy, III. If you want to And out more about It before you buy one write to Mr. Stnhl for catalogue "W.” which gives a full description, and mention this paper. A Man of Honor. The saloon door flew open, and the ragged gentleman struck the sidewalk with suddenness and all his person front his heels to his hat "Well, what are you going to do about it?” asked the facetious passerby, "Do? Da sir? Nothing. Do you think 1 would imbrue my hands in the blood of a common whisky seller’s hire ling? If he were only a gentleman”— And the ragged gentleman looked bat tle, murder and sudden death.—Indi anapolis Journal. Sifted from the Blood By the kidneys, Impurities pass off harm lessly. 'I ne inactivity of the ononis ■mint'd not only cuu«u these impurities to remain and poison the syslom, but also lend to the degeneration and destruc ion of the organs themselves. Prevent Bright's di-vane, dia betes. dropsy, gravel and other ailments which affect the kidneys and bladder w ith llostetter’s Stomach Bitters, wliielt likewise overcomes niaiarht, dyspepsia, hlllluus, ner vous and rheumatic complaints. ■ Vanity. Dumas the elder had a good deal of the African in his appearance, and he had to no small degree the love of show common to that race. Deferring to the latter trait, Alexandre Dumas tils made the remark, "My father is so vain and so fond of display that he would ride behind his own coach to make people believu that he keeps a colored foot man. ”—Argonaut Deafness Can Not Be Cored By local applications, as they cannot reach the diseased portion of the ear. There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deafness Is caused by an Inflamed con dition of the mucouB lining of the lius tachlan Tube. When the tube Is in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imperfect hearing, and when it Is en tirely closed Deafness Is the result, and unless the Inflammation can be taken out and this tube restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed for ever; nine eases out of ten are caused j by Catarrh, which Is nothing but an In- i flamed condition of the mucous sur- i faces. We will give One Hundred Dollars for any case of Deafness (caused by Ca tarrh) that cannat be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Bend for circulars, free, i F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, O. Sold by druggists; 7Gc. Hall’s Family Pills. 55c. Knmity cannot live long when it can find no enmity to leed upon. WHERE DIM YOU GET THIS COFFEE? Had the Ladies’ Aid Society of our Church out for tea, forty of them, and all pronounced the German Coffeeberry equal to Rio! Salzer’s catalogue tells you all about it! 35 packages Earliest vegetable seeds $1.00 post paid. If you will cut this nut and send with 15c. stamps to John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis., you will get free a package of above great coffee seed and our 148 page catalogue! Catalogue alone 5c. _ w.n. It is not the clock that strikes the loudest which keeps the best time. Itegeman’a Camphor Ice with Glycerine, The original anil only genuine. Cum Chopped Hands •Od t aco. Cold sores, Hu. c. O. Clark Co.Ja.Muvvii.ct A good printer ran always tell how the case stands. I know that my life was saved by Fiso's Cure for Consumption.—-John A. Miller, Au Sable, Michigan, April Id, 1805. Selfishness Is self-robbery, no matter whether it dwells in a hut or in a palace. -FITS—All Fltsstopped free by Pr, Kline’s Orest Kerve Kestorer. Ko Fits after the Ursula vs umi. Marvelous curt's. TreatlReanil #2trial bottle freet* WdUM. bend to hr. KliueJKl Aichbl.,Phils., la. The fan 1b now an inseparable adjunct of all dainty evening toilettes. . Irritation or the Throat and Hoarse ness are immediately re ieved by “Brown’s Bronchial Troches.” Have them always ready. Don’t be a saint in ihurch and a heathen on the street car. Many lofltaeneea combine an red "rr benllh to itii Hunger limit T e rovlvini i rnp *r lea o1 Parker's Giu.or Toulc best uveicame Ibese Ills. Matrimonial triumphs of gentlewomen in trade cause more to go into it. Everyone knows bow It le to suffer wliu corns, a-d they are n l t-onilnelTe to ■.Tuneful wulki Remove ili.m with l.l .dereorn*. Modern woman sometimes stoop exceed ingly low to conquer. | Marrs •* f Heritage I is Pain!« PWMN'SI PANTID0TE4 i»i Prow ■*" ST. JACOBS! ###$ OIL.! ABIIIU Mornhln* B»Ut Cured In 10 UPIUII IftftRUagft *R1**OTWP. CO. flaee half the Min ' ylndmlll bnameae, twcMiaa It has reduced Uw cast at wliid power to l u what It was. a it baa mans branch - houM*. umtunpjjiiBc lucnndaaoo rapalra »et joardoor. It can and tloas furalafe a , better article (or less moo*; tbaa others. It makes Puoipma anti .Qeared, SteeL Gaivaniced-antr* r .. rfOWiptetlon Windmills, Tilth* - w« Fixed Steel Towers, steel Buss Saw Frames, steel reed Cutters amt Feed Grinders. On a pp! leutlon It will nmne atm m. —. yl these articles that It will furnim until January 1st at 1/3 the usual price. It also maltee pota aad Pumps of ail kinds, Send tor catalueneL MayiUtl. deck well and FUlmers Streets, CMcna WEIL MkCHINEBY ~ Itlaatrated catalogue thawing WUXj AT7QEK8, BOCK DRILLS, IiyDEirrUO / AND jCTTJNO MACHINERY, ate Hmr fna Sara been teatad and all warranted. hiuux City Knglne and Iron Work*. Btiooeaaoni to Peck tUg. Co. _ _ Maai City. lewd. Tua Itovctt A ( 'h ask Ma CM in any A/o, —-— III* Went Ple'-enth atyeot. K a nr a A CiTv TTie comino Artist who knows ennui*1* The largest piece of tobacco ever sold Ibr _ . .and Ine 5 cent piece is nea large as you get of high grades for 10 ce SALZLRS SELDS 35 Package* Earliest Vegetable Seed*, postpaid, •1.00, J2HM5AL2ER SEED® LACROSSE.WIS STEEL WEB PICKET FENCE. CABLED FIELD AND HOB FENCE. AI*o (ANLkU FULLTKY. OAttUKSi Aftl» HA B BIT KANIN CAB* We manufacture a complete tine of Smooth Wire Fencing aiul gum ran tee ever/ article to be aa reiiie vented. If you consider iiuaitty we ran save you money. t'aUlegne free. De Kalb Fence Co.,121 High !‘eTa KALB, ILL. A Simile in Smoke. There's all sorts of grades of tobacco plant. The' best comes from Havana. There’s all sorts of grades of sarsa parilla plant. The best comes from Honduras. If you want cheap tobacco, all right—provided you get value for your money. Cheap tobacco’s not as good to smoke—but it don’t cost as much. If you want cheap sarsaparilla .. . But you don’t want it. Of course you don’t. You are paying for the best. To pay for the best and get anything but Honduras sar saparilla is like paying for Havana cigars and getting Pittsburg “ Stogies.” There’s only one sarsaparilla made exclusively from the imported Honduras plant That’s Ayer’s, just keep it in mind that you are paying for Honduras sarsaparilla when you are paying for the best; but you don’t get what' you pay for unless you get Ayer’s« Sarsaparilla. Any doubt about it? Send for the “ Curebook.* It kills doubts but cures doubters. Address: J. C. Ayer Co., Lowell, Mass. CUT-SLASH SMOKING TOBACCO, 2 oz. for 5 Cents. '• CUT-SLASH CHEB00T8—3 for 5 Cents. Give a Good, Mellow, Healthy, Pleasant Smoke. Try,Xhem, LTOM t CO. TOMCCO iOUS, Mia, L C. ^ I JOHN W.BIOHHH, 1 Washington, D,C. When writing to advertisers, kindly mention this paper. PISO’S CURE FOR , WitS WHERE ALl USE .FAILS* _ . I Best Cough 8yrua. Tadtea Good. USD | in time. Sold by dwarlstfi CO N S U M P.TION