The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, July 23, 1896, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    DAIRY FARMIXO.
Itt Advantugn Ovrr OflKf Kind* ttl
Hulumlr)-.
A Vermont gentleman of large ex
perience anil observation, Mr. J. W.
Newton, draws the following com
parisons between dairy farming and
other farm pursuits:
The tirst advantage of dairying is
that jt takes less fertility from the
soil than oilier branches of farming,
sugar making alone excepted.
A ton of wheat Hikes $7 out of the
farm and sells for less than $10. A
ton of butter takes 30 cents worth of
plant food from the farm and sells
for from $400 to $000. Comment is
needless.
Second—Butter is a condensed pro
duct. Nothing can be made or grown
on the farm which brings as much
per pound. Farms remote from the
market, and communities far from
railroads can send butter from the
farm or creamery with tire least pos
sible expense. The dairyman can con
. dense tons of foild»r and crops grown
on tire farm into dairy products and
aend them to uurket in compact and
portable form.
Third—Butter is a finished product.
It is 'made ready for the consumer
clthei'aln the private dairy or local
factory or creamery. The only excep
tion is w'lierc cream is sent long dis
tances to n central station from skim
ming stations scattered over a largo
section of country. But this exception
only proves the rule.
Fourth—Dallying brings in a con
stnut income. The nan who sells
crops of any kind lias to wait until j
he can market his product once a !
year. There is little satisfaction in
this. It is unbu«lncss-like tc. go with- I
out cash firty-one weeks and then
have a lot of money come in at one
time. The dairyman has an Income
nearly or quite fifty-two weeks in the
year.
Fifth—Dairying gives constant, re
munerative employment. The grain
or potato grower must spend a large
part of the year in enforced and de
moralizing Idleness, but the dairyman
finds profitable work through the year,
and bis work Is most profitable during
the winter time.
SixtIk-On the dairy farm the work
Is better divided. The grain harvest
comes so close to linylng that It often
gets mixed up with It to the detriment
of both; but when com is grown und
put iuto soil lor dairy feed, and not
*o much or no grain raised, the har
vests are several weeks apart.
Seventh—Skill and brain work get
better pay In dairying than in any
other branch of fanning. To produce
flue dairy products requires something
besides bard work. The dairyman
must have knowledge and skill and
exercise great care.
Eighth—'There is more room at. the
top, greater opportunity to improve
than in any other farm wtrk. Cows
Product from 130 to 500 pounds of but
ter per y-nr. nnd butter sells from 10
cents to $1 per pound No other branch
of agriculture shows anything like
°r #ives ■«<* a chance to rise.
Mnth*Tnke the country through,
there is no kind of farm work so suit
ed to women as dairying.
Tenth—Dairying lends to thought
fulness for the comfort of animals
and thus tends to morality. To do
her liest. the .mw must be made as
comfortable as possible In every way.
8he will tolerate no neglect or cruelty,
ahe Is a teacher of gentleness and
Kindness,
Eleventh—Dairying Is the most pro
gressive branch of farming.
Twelfth—Dairying pays better than i
any lAhcr branch of farming, both
aotualW and prospectively. Dook at
farm Products. Take
wheat br sheep and w-ool, or horses,
^ow P‘*iccs have dropped.
Ji will! Production.
Little savings here and there are
whlat accomplish great things. ’ We
wmiot make profit out of the average
She la of no use to any one. I
dV‘ot believe one can get along suc
ccmfully by having to purchase his !
own cowa. No cow Is profitable that
produces less than 2,000 pounds of'
mitt. Nor is there anything more pit
iable than a 400-pound butter cow in
thW hands of a 150-pound man.
I^do not say you ought to produce
mtfce milk to flood the markets with:
be* 1 do say you ought to produce the
same quantity of milk for less money;
ttttt Is, you ought to produce the same
®*JPP'lnt of milk with fewer cows and
an’less expense, and so make more
mofcey.
. Those who buy tows seldom get the
hart; they buy the “good lookers," but
arp, often deceived. And when they
get these purchased cows home they
overfeed them, and as a consequence
these cows, unused to such high foods,
soop break down and lh two or three
years are used up. Better breed up
frmn your owta stock, and by watching
ciftfully, you know what sort of an
ai|mnl you have.
Bed and water are two important
pents. You cannot build up an anl
i by starch and sugar foeeds. These
1 starve her to death, being an fin
anced ration. To be profitable a
kneed ration must be fed.
_i»e individuality of the cow must be
studied. One cow Is Inclined to milk
production, 6,000 to 8,000 pounds of
milk. Another produces 400 pounds of
batter: another is a producer of beef.
To be successful we must know whai
tpiflency the cow .has, and act accord
ingly. Those who want to make but
te! , should keep only the butter cow;
those who sell milk should not keep
butter or beef cows, etc.
Don’t feed too ranch corn for milk.
WJusat bran or middlings are the safest
at|| the best foods for the -cows. I
would make either of them a principal
food for cows up to six years at least.
ThAre are no better fodds. Pea meal
la*excellent. Every ton of milk sold
takes of about $3 worth of fertility
from the farm. The butter maker sells
but Tittle fertility. One or two pounds
of linseed meal a day Is a good ration.
Oood biewers* grains are excellent
food. But ensilage is better than all.
The timothy hay of commerce la a
mighty poor food, especially when late
cut It Is a poor milk producer. Clo
ver la much better and one of the best
balanced of foods. Kor “clover sick”
soils apply wood ashes or muriate of
potash and ground bone.—H. P. Cooke.
a. Milk Hoau.
A subscriber wants information
about a good milk house. We know
of no better plan than to build double
walls, as you suggest, but we would
not fill In air space In the walls with
any sort of material, sawdust or other
wise, preferring to put resin paper
onto each side of the studding. It pos
sible, do not have any windows or
doors on south or west sides, prefera
bly on north side only. Line up on the
Inside with matched flooring. Proba
bly the best way to ventilate would
be to have a box shaft at one end
coming down to the floor, and with a
side opening like a small fire-place,
only having a door or slide to it, so
that It can be closed, If necessary, in
whole or in part. Sometimes in muggy
I weather the draft may be hastened
i by hanging a lighted lantern in the
) 8haft. If you have eight or ten cows
and need to buy a creamer it will pay
you best to purchase some of the $75
separators, and then you c&ud do good
work the year round. To make granu
lated butter, churn slightly acid cream
at 58 degrees If possible, and as soon
as It begins to “break” dash Into the
churn a quart or more of weak, cold
brine; then as soon as the buttermilk
shows clearly, but before the butter
has begun to mass in lumps, put two
gallons of water at 55 degrees into the
churn and agitate slowly, then allow
the butter to rise on top of the mass,
and draw out the diluted buttermilk
from under the butter, and you have
granulated butter which you can now
put into any form or package you may
choose.
Effects of Food on Milk.
A paper In the Transactions of the
Highland and Agricultural Society, by
Mr. John Speir of Glasgow, Scotland,
considers the question of the effect of
food on milk and butter quite exliaust
lvely, and the following is a summary
of the results of the experiments made
by the writer, which experiments are
to be continued during the present
year:
1. That at least two foods—young,
fresh grass and grnins—have the pow
er of lowering the percentage of rat in
the milk, and other two—vetches and
decollated cotton seed cake—have a
tendency to Increase it.
а. That most changes of food seem
to be followed by an increase of fat In
the milk, but that there is a strong ten
dency for the milk to return to what
may be called Its normal condition.
5. That the solids other than fats in
the milk seem to rise or fall in much
tlie same manner as the fats, although
to a less degree.
4. That an Increase of oil In the food
does not seem to give any increase of
fat in the milk.
5. That the effect of food is more
marked in the quality of the butter
produced than in the quantity.
б. That some foods seem to produce
milk from which a much greater per
centage of the fat can be recovered by
churning than others.
7. That the greatest difference in the
effect of the food was seen in the qual
ity of the butter.
8. That some foods produce butters
which retain much more water than
others, and butters which have a large
percentage of water in them seem
usually to be of second or third class
quality.
Areordlnff to Merit
There are too many poor milch cows
on the farms of this county—cows that
do not pay for their “board and keep.”
The North Carolina experiment station
proposes a plan that It Is believed will
result in eventually raising the stand
ard of the milch cows of the whole
country, for, If adopted, it will result
in the turning over to the butcher of
all poor cows In the country. The
plan proposed is to buy and sell milch
cows absolutely on their merits, the
quantity and quality of their milk be
ing determined by tests. The rule is
to pay for the cow at the rate of $12
per gallon of milk given per day that
Is high enough to show 3V4 per cent of
fat. To this price add or subtract $1
for every one-fourth of 1 per cent of
fat, which is above or below the 3V4
per cent. Under this rule it will not
pay to sell a poor cow as a milker, and
she will be dried up and fattened. Un
doubtedly the plan is feasible and the
end it seeks greatly to be desired.
CUceae-Mnltin* in Swltisrlnn.l.
In Switzerland,, the making ol
cheese Is not left to hazard and to
the whim or ignorance of the peas
ant. Not only is iU consumption very
large, but the exportation of cheese
from the little republic last year
amounted to $11,000,000. For these
reasons, the government takes a pn
ternal interest In this induitry, and
to tills end has established cantonal
schools, the pupils ot which are taught
! tho theory and practice of cbecse
| making, by eminent professors. Tho
! course of twelve months, and the cur
riculum includes hygiene, physics,
s chemistry. pasturage, manufacture
■ and accounts. Not content with this,
the federal government sends young
men abroad to study, and at present
forty students nr* in Italy investigat
ing the methods of the production of
the famous l'nuase.ti, and Modena
cheese of that country.
Dalrjr Notes.
' The Kliode Island Station says thnt
milk fever in eows is a brain disease,
itfrd is inherited by many cows.
An Knglisli professor, writing on the
chemistry of milk, says that the yield
of milk depends on the milk glands, j
and the particular surroundings of j
the cow as regards treatment, etc., and
only secondly on the kind of food and
the condition of the blood.
A dairy writer says that while it Is
'! true that some thin cows and some
■ very fat cows are long and persistent
milkers, yet the rule is. thnt the cow
for steady work in milk-giving, car
rles a good quantity of fat on her
bones, and always looks to bo in good
comfortable condition. That is the
kind of cow the old dairyman picks
j out. But it mujt not be understood
i by this t'rnt more than a small quaa
(tlty of tat Is needed.
1
: A DEMOCRATIC DODGE.
I -
SQUIRMING AWAY FROM THE
TARIFF ISSUE.
Apologists of the Administration Back
log Their Brains for Excuses — The
Country's Tremendous Pressure for
Protect ion.
One of the moat noticeable things in
connection with the present political
situation is the unmistakable desire on
the part of the members of the demo
cratic party to get away from the tariff
issue in the coming political contest
and to fight out the battle on the finan
cial question. That some importance
must be attached to the financial and
money question generally no one will
doubt But republicans everywhere
will do well to note that the import
ance of that question has been very
largely augmented by the action of the
members of the free trade party in
their frantic desire to get away from
the consequences which have naturally
resulted from their violent assault
upon the industries of the United
States. -
It will be remembered that the pres
ent free trade and prosperity ruining
administration was scarcely inaugur
ated before Its friends and apologlzers
began to complain that the disaster and
devastation which promptly spread
over the country was not the result of
the threat of free trade, but was due to
the unstable condition of the national
Bnances and the uncertainty respecting
I This has been the Invariable policy in
| tlyj past when the enactment of a tarifl
! that would afford protection to the
! American, not to the Australian, wool
producing Industry was' fully assured.
Nobody will begrudge the sheep farm
ers all the advance in the market that
they can secure because the democratic
policy of “free raw material” selected
them as a special object for ruin and
destruction.
Th« McKinley Idea.
The free trade which England teaches
and cajoles us to follow she fails to
practice at home, and looks forward
with fond expectancy to the time when
that same freedom of intercourse, that
close commercial union, shall exist in
all the British empire as Is rigorously
maintained by the citizens of the
United States. Here we have unre
stricted trade among ourselves, no im
post duties, no discriminating tax be
tween the states. The markets of Cali
fornia are open to the manufactures of
Maine. Ohio sends her manufacturing
and other products freely and without
restraint to every state of the Union.
The products of one state are as free
to the citizens of another state as those
of his own. We Impose duties only on
the products of foreign labor and cap
ital.
Hon. Wm. McKinley.
Senator Thnr«ton*i Argument.
We feel that It is no longer neces
sary to make an argument for protec
tion in the United States. That argu
ment is being made by the silent water
wheel, by the still spindles, by the
smokeless chimneys; that story is in
every American home, graven on every
American mind, and now, the Ameri
can people are ready to act, they are
eager to act, they are burning to act,
and they are going to act at the St
Louis convention and at the polls in
next November.—Hon. J. M. Thurston,
U. S. Senator, of Nebraska.
’ Will Do Oar Onn Work.
The demand for a return to reci
procity is as universal and vigorous as
is the demand for a restoration of oth
HOW M’KINLEY FEELS TOWARD THE AMERICAN PEOPLE.
"The glory of his country and the
welfare of its people are the touchstone
of his principles and his conduct."
the money of the land. Every effort
has been made by the friends of the ad
ministration to foster that Idea among
the people, and the penalty has been
paid for that folly by the unrest which
has prevailed among many of our peo
ple concerning the financial question.
The disease went beyond the control of
the quack doctors of the administra
tion, and they are now being repudi
ated In the house of their friends.
But those who have held strictly to
the fact that the principal trouble with
our country at the present time, and
the trouble that has upset industrial
prosperity in the country, is the throw
ing down of the tariff barriers, which
have stood during republican adminis
trations between the goods made by
foreign labor and those made by the
labor of this country, find no difficulty
in explaining the causes of the present
conditions. The hundreds of millions
of dollars worth of foreign manufac
tured and unmanufactured goods which
have entered our markets during the
past two years have contributed much
to reduce the productive ability of the
American workingmen, and also, by re
ducing their wages, lessened their
power to consume either domestic or
foreign products.
The tremendous pressure that is be
ing felt all over the country at this
time in favor of a return to protection
—adequate protection that shall pre
serve our own markets for our own
people, affords abundant evidence that
a vast majority of these people of our
own country understand what the real
difficulty with American industrial con
ditions is, and also that they are pre
paring to vote to change these condi
tions. While it is important that our
currency shall be of a sound and stable
character, it is of the greatest import
ance that those who toil shall have
opportunities to do so and earn good
wages in our currency. The only way
to obtain these opportunities, and to
restore the wage conditions which the
workingmen of the country enjoyed be
fore the blight of free trade settled ■
upon the industries of the land, is to
turn out the whole free trade crowd
and restore the policy of protection.
The Wool Market.
Wool is more stagnant than ever,
prices being but a fraction higher than
the lowest ever touched. This condi
tion is not to be wondered at, consider
ing that half the woolen machinery of
the country is idle. Our best advices
are that the farmers throughout the
country, instead of selling, are
holding their wool in anticipa
tion of the higher prices which
will certainly prevail after the
•lection of a republican president.
er features of ttie McKinley tariff.
This combination will form the basis
for the construction of a protective
tariff that will, we trust, be enacted
by a special session of congress in less
than a year from now, and without any
suggestions from Bermuda potato
growers, Australian sheep farmers,
French chambers of commerce, Aus
trian manufacturers of British bull
dozers.
Hlor* Free Trade Trusts*
The manufacturers of bolts and nuts,
following the example of the nail mak
ers and manufacturers of shovels and
the combined producers in several
other branches of the highly protected
iron and steel industry, have formed a
combination, the first effect of the
movement being an increase of prices
by 50 per cent.—New York Times, Dem.
Senator Hilt Not In It.
There will be no tariff legislation in
this congress, nor in an extra session,
if one should be held, nor in the two
years daring which the next congress
will be in session.—Hon. David B.
Hill, U. S. Senator, of New York.
How does Senator HHI know? He
won't be a member of congress after
next March, to obstruct its business.
Mary aad Bar Lamb.
(With apologies to the San Francisco
Call.)
AND EVERYWHERE THAT MARY
WENT THE LAMB WAS SURE TO
GO.
Will «j»» Thm
It will be noticed that nobody Is
promising a “campaign of education”
this year. Experience has given the
people all the education they need to
enable them to vote Intelligently. All
they want now is the ticket and the
opportunityJournal, Kansas City,
| MO. ' . - •
Improved Elastic Stocking,
j The ordinary elastic stocking' which
I is used as a preventive in the frequent
; cases of varicose veins, has been won
i derfully improved upon by a recent in
vention termed the "Lattice” elastic
stocking and legging, where an open
work, lattice-like arrangement is fol
lowed with the best possible results,
not only where the immediate comfort
is concerned, but in the su bsequent ac
tion upon the vein, At the same time
all the necessary protection and sup
port is given, and it may also be men
tioned that the red rubber used is a
special preparation which has been
proved to be the softest and most com
fortable obtainable.
Tnni-Mlialiilppl Inventors.
Amongst the Trans-Mississippi in
ventors who received patents during
past week were Joseph J. Burke, Wil
bur, Nebraska, lawn-mower knife
sharpener; Emil R. Draver, Alliance,
Nebraska, sifting apparatus; -Richard
Evans, Mitchell, South Dakota, cutter
bar for harvesting machinery; James
D. Wiltfong, Glen wood, Iowa, bedstead
brace and mattress support; Frederick
G. Weeks, Lyons, Iowa, railway time
and station indicator; William H. Scott,
What Cheer, Iowa, pick; and Joseph A.
Rekenthaler, Cushing, Iowa, shield for
corn cultivators.
Amongst the noticeable inventions
are found a combination fuse block and
lightning arrester;a perpetual calender
for watches; a safety pin; a beefsteak
tenderer; a toy balloon; a gear combi
nation to propel bicycles; an apparatus
to produce moon effects upon stages; a
walking toy; a pueumatic cushion for
crutches; a racing sulky; a tack ham
mer provided with a magazine feeding
the tacks to the hammer head; a sim
ple milk can cleaner; a tool for packing
piston rods; a sounding post for music
al instruments; and a campaign hand
kerchief.
Inventors desiring free information
relative to patents can obtain the same
in addressing Sues & Co., United States
Patent Solicitors, Bee Building, Omaha,
Nebraska.
How to Keep Pies.
When pies are to be kept over until
the second day after baking, it is a
wise plan to brush the under crust
with a beaten egg. then to put the tin
or dish on the ice for half an hour.
After that put in the filling of the pie
and bake quickly. This will keep the
crust from getting soaked.
Travel With a Friend ' '
Who will protect you from tho^e enemies—
nausea. Indigestion, malaria and the sick
ness produced by rockinir on the waves, and
sometimes by inland traveling over the
rough teds of ill laid railroads. Such a
friend is H os tetters stomach Hitters.
Ocean mariners, yachtsmen, commercial
and theatrical agents ami tourists testify
to the protective potency of this effective
safeguard, which contj uers also rheumatism,
nervousness and bjlliousness.
Keep Him at Home.
Mrs. Yeast; “I wish I coaid think of
something to keep my husband home
at nights.'’ Mrs! Crimsonbeak: “Get
him a bicycle.” Mrs. Yeast: "That
would take him out more than ever.”
Mrs Crimsonbeak: “Oh, no, it
wouldn’t My husband got one day
before yesterday and the doctor says
he won’t be out for a month. Yon
; kers (statesman.
A Child Xtafoya
1 The pleasant flavor, gentle action, and
■ soothing effect of Syrup of Figs, when
tn need of a laxative, and if the father
or mother be costive or bilious, the most
; gratifying results follow its use; so that
It is the best family remedy known and
! every family should have a bottle.
No Trouble to Explain.
“Little boy," said the meditative old
gentleman who had just bought a pa
per, “why is it you always say, ’Horri
ble murder on the North Side,’ or ‘on
the South Side,’or 'on the West Side,’
but when somebody kills himself you
never say what *side’ it happened on?”
“’Cause everybody knows its sui
cide,” answered the dirty-fiiced news
boy. “Morninin’ paper! All ’bout the
hor'ble murder on the North Side!”
My doctor said I would die, but Fiso's
Cure for Consumption cured me.—Amos
Keener, Cherry Vabey, Ills., Nov. 23, ’93.
One mt His Worst attacks.
“When a man becomes a parent for
the first time,” said Asbury Peppers,
without the slightest exeuse, “as I
said, when a man becomes u parent the
fact at once becomes apparent by his
undignified actions, which I may ven
ture to say do not become a parent.
Pass the butter, please.”—Cincinnati
Enquirer.
Hall's Catarrh Care
Is taken internally. Price, 75c.
It Moves Them Oil.
A teacher giving lessons on physical
force, when he had finished, asked,
‘■‘Now, boys, can any of you tell me
what force it is tnat moves people
along? the streets?” He was greatly
surprised, and the class highly amused,
at receiving from one of the boys the
unexpected answer. “Please, sir, the
police force.” <.
How to Grow 40c Wheat.
Salzer’s Fall Seed Catalogue tells
you. It’s worth thousands to the
wideawake farmer. Send 4-cent stamp
for catalogue and free samples of
grains and grasses for fall sowing.
John A. Salzer Seed Co., LaCrosse,
Wis.
The patent leather slipper never loses its
bold on feminine fancy.
FITS stopped free nnd perrmnent'v e-p d. No
fir. after ilr^t day** no of Dr. Kl file's O' eat Nerve
Restorer. KreeStira1 bottleand tteatie Marv.
elouscures- Db.Euns.931 AreUSt. Phl.a-e.phfa,fa
Don't expect a lamp to act right if it is
not properly cleaned.
It the Baby Is Catting leetn.
Benin and ns that old and well-tried remedy, Hu.
Winslow's Soothing stbut tor Children Teething.
It is very easy for an un'ueky man to
drift into neglect to pay his bills.
A Story of Colorado Gold.
The most unique and instructive
book yet published about the cold end
other features of Cripple Creek District
has just been issued by O. W. Craw
ford, publisher, Masonic Temple, Chic
ago. 111. Every page is illustrated
with original pictures in three colors,
made for this work by Mr. E. M Rice,
the sketch genius of the Rockiea It
is a complete exposition of Cripple
Creek Gold, telling where it is found,
how it is found, where it is milled,
how it is treated, how it is paid for; all
about mines; titles, camping in the
mountains and Cripple Park’s wonder
ful Appolinaris Springs, which the
Indians called Quleeka and of which
they said, “If you drink the waters
always, you will live always. ” In
printing and illustration it is a work of
high art. We are not surprised to
learn that the second edition is in
press, for it ie a book from which the
oldest miner may get information and
entertainment as well. Price, 50c., but
if you will send five names and ad
dresses of friends and 25e., stamps or
silver, to the publisher, it will be sent
postage paid.
Appendictis is Retting eld fashioned. The
farmers are getting it..
Results prove Hood’s Sarsaparilla the- host
blood purifier, appetizer and nerve tonlo.
Sarsaparilla
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. Jl.
Hood’s Pill- euro all L'ver Ills. 25 cents.
Drink HIRES Rootbeer
when you're hot; when
y oil re thirsty ; when callers
come. At any and all times
drink HIRES Rootbeer.
Hade only by The Charles E. Hire* Co., Philadelphia.
▲ 23c. package makes 5 gallons. Sold everywhere.
The Greatest fledical Discovery
of the Age.
KENNEDY’S
MEDICAL DISCOVERY,
DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS.,
Has discovered in one of our common
asture weeds a remedy that cures every
ind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula
down to a common Pimple.
He lias tried it in over eleven hundred
cases, and never failed except in two cases
(both thunder humor). He has now in his
possession over two hundred certificates
of its value, all within twenty miles of
Boston. Send postal card for book.
A benefit is always experienced from
the first bottle, and a perfect cure is war
ranted when the right quantity is taken.
When the lungs are affected it causes
shooting pains, like needles passing
through them; the same with the Liver
or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts
being stopped, and always disappears in a
week after taking it. Read the label.
If the stomach is foul or bilious it will
cause squeamish feelings at first.
No change of diet ever necessary. Eat
the best you ca.i get, and enough of it
Dose, one tablespoonful in water at bed
time. Sold by all Druggists.
EDUCATIONAL.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME.
Xotre Dame, Indiana.
Fall tonne* in €:»**!**, better*, Science, Law, Civil, Mo
ebanleal an t Piorlriral Knglnarrlng Thorough Preparatory
and CtHumerelul Court**. Kooum Free to all students who
have completed the studies i equired for admission into
the Junior or Senior Year, of any of the
Courses. A limited number of Candidates for the
Ecclesiastical stale wilt be received at special rxtes.
Si. Kd*v«r<r» Hal.', or hoys ui der 13 years, is unique in
romp •I teness r ts equipments. Tile 105th Term will
open September Sth. t'ltalerur* sent Free on uppll
»atidn to Vi BY UKY, A. MOHUISSAY, C. S. t., Presldeat,
NOT IIX D.OlK, 1X0.
ACADEMY OF THE SACRED HEART
81. JOSEPH, HO.
The course of instruction in this academy, conducted
by the Kellginus of the Sacred Heart, embraces the
whole range of subjects necessary to constitute a solid
md relined rdu^atiou. Propriety of deportment, per
jor.al neatness and the principles of morality are ob
jects of unceasing attention. Extensive grounds af
ford the pupils every facility for useful bodily exer
•ise; their health is an object of constant solicitude,
M»d in sickness they are attended with malernal cai-e.
Fall teim opens Tuesday. Sept. 1. Terms for session
ot 5 .months, payable in advance, $115, this include*
union, board, washing, courses in French. German
t>r Latin, use of library and physician’s f«-e. For fur
ther particulars address. THE bVPKRloK.
Academy Sacred Heart St Joseph, Mo.
"i
PATENTS, TRADE MARKS
Examination nnd.Advlee ns t > Patentability of In
dention. Send for ‘‘Inventors* Guido,« r How to Get*
Patent.” O’FARRELL & SON, Washington, D. C.
STEADY
WORK
WE PAY CASH WEEKLY ant*
went men everywhere to SELL.
CTADtf TDCCC millions te t
Ol/lllIV InCLOed. provea
“absolutely best.,,Superb outfits,
new system. STARK BROTHERS,
Louisiana, Mo., Rockpobt, 111.
PITCITTC 20years' cxperlencev Send sketch foracN
iHItn I u> vice (L. In-iine, Into pnn. examiner U.S
PaLOlUce) Deanes Weavter. jjcQiU jJhifc^Vaah.V.Q,
} Thompson’s Eye Water.
fIDIIIM ,*d WHISKY »>'«. cird. n.ok ...t
UrlUin HIKE. Ur. U. M. ttOOLLKt, ATLANTA, OA.
LINDSEY* OMAHA * RUBBERS!
W. N. U., OMAHA—30—1806
When writing .to advertisers, kindly
mention this paper.
j*
Tills Apj
rCUT PRICES ON PUMPST
Everything the farmer sells is low. Who
sells low to him ? We have repeatedly refused ,
to join, and, therefore, defeated windmill combi
nations, and have, since ’89, reduced the cost of
*1 wind power to one-sixth what it was. 1
f We believe in low prices, high grades
and large sales. No one knows the 1
best pump or prices until he knows
1 ours, wh make short hand and long
1 power stroke pumps, with best seam
less brass tube cylinder, lower than
iron ones—a 2% x 16 inch at *2.12. Tell
yoor dealer. Buy none other. Aermotor prices and
goods are always best. Through gratitude, and
because we are price makers, and are safest to
deal with, the world has given us more than half
its windmill business. We have 20 branch houses—
^one near you. Writ* tar beautifully Illustrated circulars.
1