The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, August 13, 1896, Image 6

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    SUFFER BY SILVER.
is
&
IS
I
DEPRECIATION IN METAL tN.
jures British business.
•Lo_
fir Thonu 6a(h«rland,a Expirlsoea Re
lated to Block-holder*—-A "Moat Serl
and Onerous Lota** to England—
Steamship Company’s Affairs.
w r
Sir Ttadmaa Sutherland, president ot
thfe Peninsular and Oriental Steamship
Company, in a recent report to Lis
Stockholders, has contributed some au
thoritative information as to the ex
istence of British steamship subsidies,
Which the free-trade papers in this
Country persist in claiming have no
existence in fact. We quote Sir
Thomas:
"There Is, I know, a section of the pub
lic who profess to believe that a subsi
dy Is paid to a mail company as a sort
of generous gift on the part of the gov
ernment toward the proprietors of that
fompany; that it is paid without any
Commensurate service being rendered;
*nd that the company Is able to live
•nil thrive merely on the'strength of
oeing a mall carrier and receiving a
tnail subsidy. There can be no greater
delusion, if, indeed, that idea is really
Seriously entertained In any quarter.
We have been paid during the last ten
steainshipping business are pointed out
by Sir Thomas Sutherland as follows:
“Who could possibly have imagined
that within these last ten years the
rates of freight would have fallen to
the miserable point at which we And
them to-day? Who could possibly have
imagined that silver would to-day be
worth little more than half what it was
worth ten years ago, thus involving
the operations of this country in a
most serious and onerous charge for
loss in exchange? And who is able to
say what may take place within the
next ten years?”
We believe that the foreign mall
steamship companies honestly earn
every penny that is paid to them for
carrying mails. We also believe that
American companies earn far more
than Is paid them, and we want to see
these compensations equalized, or if
there is to be any advantage let it be
on the American side. The difficulties
of low freight rates and the deprecia
tion in the value of silver that con
front the P. and O. company are equal
ly pertinent as applied to the Pacific
Mall, Oceanic, Occidental and Oriental
lines that ply between the Pacific coast
and Australia, China and Japan. We
have the fact settled that subsidies are
paid co British steamships for mail
transportation, so now let us get the
fact equally established that the rates
paid to American steamships for trans
porting American mails shall be on as
liberal a scale.
A Prlns (.1st for Farmers,
The following prices, taken from
Clapp’s Weekly Circular, July 2, 1896,
represents the difference between a
democratic administration, with confi
dence unsettled as in 1896, as against
those when confidence was established
in 1892, under protection:
1896. 1892.
Price Price
Articles. June 30. June 30.
Butter, creamery, lb... .9 .15 $ .20
Beans, N. Y„ bu...... 1.06 1.96
(hmucl Product of TIN PLATE in the United States
From Foreign Black Plata
J60 jnrfliqn. rounds
_!5Q ^[||wn_Pounds, ■
mo'rtillion Pounds. -
jliUlijlion .Rounds.;
Ttjo]ml]ipn .Pounds
lOp.njilli.OTi Pounds :
SO.miItiorL Pound?. ;
■ ’ • ■ ;
80 ^TliJliori_ftujld8_ ;
S
JO M Won. Pounds, j
.flJWfelftfflft..:
.SP-M'lion. Pounds..
i^{pn .Pounds i
. AqJtjUUso. Pounds. J
20 Miy23.PouTji.8L.;
■f
jg.MlliS3 Pounds.
'k *
fjjkr ending Jkm 30:
Jr
Sria" 0. Mem United Slates Industry ■ J
•ppeara a. very considerable sum of
||pioney, but in carrying out the service
f Involved, which has been paid for at a
Z,.far lower rate than that given by for
eign governments for similar services
•; tender thteir flags, the actual carrying
* teut of the contracts has Involved an ex
jVA»endlture by this company in ten years
l V 8%ething Ilka *18.000,000 or *20,
|^O0Q.Q06 more than has been received
■■ -throughout the ten years from the
tetitte." '
Wo are glad to know, authbrltatlve
. >y, that there is at least one British
fcteamsliip company In actual receipt of
Jf."* «»hsidy" from the Erltlsh goveni
• Btenr. "**e hope this point will no long
, 'ter be denied by the free-traders. But
•>e never for a moment supposed, nor
«© wo know of anybody else who sup
^ posed, that the British government, or
;; liny other government, was paying sub
fdieB for nothing. Of course, there Is
Measure of return, and that consists
l»S'ln the transportation of the malls.
But what we do claim, and always
■ have claimed. Is that the subsidies paid
y|tey the British and other foreign gov
S><
ernmentB to their respective steamship
V, \ companies carrying mall matter, have
’ been far larger than the miserable pit
tances doled out to American steam
ships jjprQrming similar services for
-. the American government.
- t The foreign mall steamers start on
their,vo/ages with a larger amount of
' the'expenses of each trip guaranteed,
through the mall subsidy, than the
Jtmertcan steamships can secure. Our
i tinea are handicapped In their expense
Account to the extent of the difference
between the subsidies paid by foreign
And American governments. Our line*
Are still further handicapped by the
higher wages that are paid to American
•ffleera end crews. Therefore the for
eign mall steamers can afford to carry
i fj i
f -., ‘ ■ ■
T>
freight at lower rates than America!
•teamen, thus securing the business
Tfr. tf the freight rate be the same b;
p" ' tell line*,' the foreigners can make i
profit on the voyage where America:
I Ateamshlp companies would have t
•karge op a loss. The risks of th
"l|f/ - ’ ,•
SJ'V'r >''•&*' ' " “J mV '
n
Barley, No. 3, Chicago.,, .26 .54
Buckwheat. Chicago ... .85 1.45
Corn, No. 2, Chicago... .26% .61
Cotton, mid., N. Y.07% .07%
Cotton cloth, 64a,F.Rlv. .02 7-16 .03%
Cattle, Chicago .. 3.00 8.70
Coal, per ton, N.Y.,net 3.86 4.00
Copper, lb., N. Y., cts.. 11.70 11.75
Cheese, N. Y.06% .08%
Coffee, N. Y. ’Ex.11% .11%
Eggs. N. Y. .11 .16
Flour, N.lT. 2.25 4.20
Hogs, live, Chicago.... 3.15 5.60
Horses, U. S., Jan. 1...,33.00 65.00
Hops, N. Y., lbs.07 .24
Hay, Chicago, ton.8.00 10.00
Iron, Bess, pig, Pitts.. .12.25 14.09
Lard, Chicago, 100 lbs.. 3.90 6.90
Lead, lb., cts. 3.05 4.12
Oats, No. 2, Chicago.. .15 .33%
Pork, mess, Chicago.. 6.95 11.35
Potatoes, Chicago.10 .67
Peas, dried, N. Y...... .72 1.62
Rye, No. 2, Chicago.81 .76
Rico '.04% .05
Silver, N. Y.• .69% .88%
Steel rails ..28.00 30.00
Steel billets, Pittsburg. 19.50 22.97
Flax, Chicago ..79 1.06
| Sugar, granulated, N.Y. .04% .04%
Stearine, lard, N. Y.... 4.75 7.75
Sheep, Chicago . 3.00 4.50
Short' ribs, Chicago .. 3.65 7.30
Tobacco leal.085 .09
Tallow, N. Y.03% .03%
Wool, average ........ .13 .22
Wheat, red, No. 2, N.Y. .61 , .89
Wheat, No. 2 spg., Chi. .55 .79
t -- *
Ki|l>Bd'> I'm Trad* Stock.
English tree-trade sentiment has re
ceived a fresh shock from the latest
discovery of Germany’s Industrial in
vasion. The minister of agriculture it
holding an Inquiry regarding dogs, and
a member engaged found that he had
to sit on Austrian chairs and write
with Bavarian pencils. When the wit
nesses rcommended the use Of Germai
. muzzles for English dogs, British pride
was stung to the quick. Truly Eng
land's Industrial supremacy Is ridinj
' iK.i, ,
'■’/l
for a fall if she persists In her fre<
trade policy under the rapidly changing
economic development of all other na*
tions. The markets of the world no
longer furnish harmonious music foi
the step of her commercial progress.
Chain It U|t
W« Want I«r, HoKInlej.
Air: “I Want You Ma Honey.”
When der election’s a cornin’,
And politics Is hummln’
• Den we want yer, McKinley, yes we
do!
We’re a thlnkln’ of you ever,
And your Tariff bill so clever, t
And our hearts are forever true to
you!
We’re a thlnkln’ of you gladly,
Cause the country needs you sadly,
And It don’t know what to do!
So uplift Protection’s banner,
In the good ole fashioned manner,
'Cos we want yer, McKinley, yea we
do!
, Chorus,
We want yer, McKinley!
Yes, we want yer mighty badly,
We’re a thlnkln’ of yer gladly,
’Cause the country needs you sadly;
So come back to please us.
Old Grovei' can’t deceive us,
’Cos we want yer, McKinley,
Yes, we want yer, want yer, want yer;
’Cos we want yer, McKinley, yes we do!
Now the bosses say "tarnation;”
Where were we In the “creation”
Of that boom so vast and true,
Our scheme has failed completely,
Though we fashioned It so neatly,
’Cause the people were devoted to
you.
We won’t yet linger longer
While the tide is growing stronger,
But Jump on the wagon with you.
Free silver ain’t in It,
Not for a single minute:
The people they all want you.
Chorus.
■
When the bonds am a poppin’
And the mills am a stoppin*
Then we want yer, McKinley, yes we
do.
For you are the one to strike It,
As you know we do not like it.
And our country is forever safe with
you.
We’ll have money for to-morrow,
And no further need to borrow
From London or TImbuctoo,
So, come back, our hero,
While the Treasury’s at zero,
’Cos we want yer, McKinley, yes we
do.
Chorus.
When the corn am a growin’
And the meetings a goin’
The sun will be shinin’ on you,
And their voices raised In glory,
Shall chant aloud the story
Of your record so grand and trus.
Prosperity will follow,
Not weal, nor woe, nor sorrow.
And ’twill all be owin’ to you.
So hail to Protection:
That’s the need of every section,
We want yer, McKinley, yes we do.
Chorus.
When the country am in danger
From the foreigner and stranger
Our honor will be safe with you.
The starry flag will cover
Our land entirely over,
And Britain will cringe and sue;
A policy so glorious,
On land and sea victorious.
Will bury old Democracy from vlsw.
So, hurrah! for the soldier
Whose heart will ne’er grow colder
In Its love tor the Flag and you.
. . Chorus.
Th« American Brand.
With the restoration of protection
the demand for American goods should
increase. Begin, at once, to ask for all
American brands.
Human nature is always trying t<
add a cubit to its stature.
DAIRY AND POULTRY.
INTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR
OUR RURAL READERS.
•lot Saecmfal Farmer* Operate This
Department of the Farm—A Few
Hint* a* to the Care of Live Stock
and Poultry.
late circular from
the department of
agriculture gives
the following on
filled cheese:
“It may be well
to state in passing
that filled cheese
differs from the
genuine, old fash
ioned article in
but one essential
particular, eo far as its composition
is concerned. Instead of the natural
fat of milk, or cream, which is extrac
ted for butter making, there as neutral
lard, made from the leaf fat of the hog.
This article, claimed to be exception
ally pure and good of its kind, is
used at the rate of two or three pounds
lo every 100 pounds of skim milk. The
cheese resulting carries about 30 per
cent of (lard) fat, which is rather less
than the average of (butter) fat in good
whole milk cheese. The casein and
other components of the two are prac
tically the same in kind and propor
tions. From this statement of com
position one can Judge for himself
whether this filled or lard cheese is a
legitimate article of food, whether it
is wholesome, and whether he desires
to use it in the diet of himself and
family. It is made of comparatively
cheap materials, costing from one-half
to two-thirds as much a3 good, full
cream, factory cheese, and its market
price, wholesale or retail, should cor
respond. At its best, this is cheap, in
ferior cheese;- it is almost devoid of
flavor, oily or greasy when warm, and
never attains the dry, crumbly consis
tency of a well cured cheese. It is sold
when only a month or two from the
press in imitation of mild, immature
:heese. It is claimed that it does not
*eep well, especially if subjected to
temperature above 60 degrees. No one
icquainted with first class full cream
cheese would ever accept the filled pro
iuct as a substitute, but it may be suc
cessfully passed as a genuine article
>f second grade. There is plenty of
{ocd cheese still made in the United
■States, and it can be secured if buyers
will but make a little effort to find it.
The states of New York and Wisconsin
together produce two-thlrde of all the
cheese made in the country, and the
reputation of the factories of these
states for high quality, full cream
cheese has been long established. The
product of these factories of the stand
ard or Cheddar form of large cheese
stands second to none in the markets
of Great Britain as well as in America.
The two states named, as well as oth
ers, absolutely prohibit the manufac
ture and sale of filled cheese within
their borders and the marking of skim
cheese to Imitate full cream goods.
These laws are well enforced.”
ContlnuouA Income from Poultry,
F. A. Homann, of Effingham county,
111., read the following paper before a
farmers’ institute in that county:
Eggs are all the year round crop,
differing greatly in this respect from
hay, corn and vegetables, which are all
harvest time crops; and if not marketed
at once, expensive buildings have to be
prepared to store them in,and not a few
crops such as potatoes, cabbage and
fruit, shrink in value by decaying
while stored. Not so with our poultry
product, which has an all the year
ready market, and with eggs as the
basis of a poultry business a steady all
the year round income can be com
manded. It is the winter eggs that pay
the greater profit and bring up the
average price for the year. If the
greater part of the eggs are received for
spring and summer, when prices are
brought down by a large supply, the
average will be lower, but if fowls lay
in uecemDer, January ana r euruary
when eggs are 20 to 30 cents a dozen
the average price for the whole year
will be satisfactory. The whole story of
getting eggs in winter can be resolved
Into three simple rules. First, hatch
the chicken early; second, keep them
growing so the pullet will come to lay
ing maturity in October or by Novem
ber; third, keep them laying by good
food and care. When I say hatch the
chickens early I do not mean t6o early,
because if hatched too early and go to
laying in August and September they
will usually moult in December just as
the weather is becoming very cold, and
good-by eggs from then till spring.
For the heavier varieties, such as
Brahma and Cochins,(the middle of
March is none too early. Plymouth
rock and Wyandottes we would hatch
the first halt of April if possible. If not,
April will do. The Spanish, Minorcas,
Leghorns and Hamburgs should be
hatched in May for best results. Set
three or more hens at a time and once
i week dust them well with insect pow
ler, and when the chicks hatch give
them to two or more mothers. I gave
as eur first rule for getting a good profit
from poultry to hatch your chickens
early. Equally important is the sec
ond, keep them growing so they will
come to laying maturity by November
first. The food and care has much to
do with the chicken growing.
, Now for the first 24 hours do not feed
the chicks, for they need no food dur
ing this time, nature has provided for
that by absorbtion of egg-yolk into
their little abdomens, and it is neces
sary this absorbed egg-yolk be digested.
Much damage is done and many chicks'
lives are lost by disregarding this rule;
some people in their haste to get the
| chicks growing htirry food into their
1 crops before the system has toned up tc
' i take care of it, and the consequence is
1 the bowels are congested and the chicls
goes over to the majority. Feed often
but little at a time, every 2 hours say
five times a day, until the chicks are
five weeks old, and see that no food Is
left standing in the sun to sour after
they have eaten. Remove it all, noth
ing causes more bowel looseness, and
dysentery, 'than sour food. The best
food for the first five weeks is composed
of one-third oat meal, one third corn
meal and one-third wheat bran; add a
pinch of salt, moisten with sweet milk
or water, warm it in cold weather and
twice a week add some bone meal.
Keep coarse sand by the coop at all
times, don’t think the chick can find
this themselves, that Is one of the
commonest mistakes in rearing chick
ens; after they are five weeks old you
can leave out the oat meal and feed
three or four times a day. When ten
weeks old, at noon scatter wheat and
cracked corn In litter such as leaves
and cut straw, so they will have to
work for it, but not too much corn as it
makes them too fat. Green food must
be supplied. If the chicks are cooped
up on fresh grass this problem is solved
and they will help themselves to what
they need. If, however, they are con
fined in a small yard, finely cut grass,
lettuce, or onion tops will make a good
substitute. Fresh cool water must be
kept accessible so a drink can be taken
when wanted. Sell the Cockerells
when they weigh two or two and a half
pounds each, and don’t forget to dust
the pullets well with insect powder, for
you do not want to raise chicken lice,
but if you are not careful you will.
Now with this food and proper care
they will begin to lay along in Septem
ber and October. Then sell off your old
fowls, clean the houses and whitewash
them and the pullets moved in, and
then on feed for eggs as follows; For
four days in the week feed early in the
morning a warm mash composed of one
part shorts, one part bran, one part
corn meal, and add cooked potatoes or
turnips and apple parings. Feed on
boards or in troughs, only enough to
supply part of their hunger; give water
all round, then scatter wheat or oats
in the litter and let the aim be to keep
the hens busy every moment from
morning until night scratching for
wheat and oats, which should be buried
in the litter. Let the noon ration be
green rye or a cabbage hung in the
pens just high enough to compel the
hens to jump to peck it. About 3 p. m.
feed the whole grain, full feed, oats or
wheat, and in the very coldest weather
a little corn. Keep grit or granulated
bones so they can get at it all the win
ter, and charcoal, don’t forget to give
them some. Clean pen, fresh water,
pure air and a system of feeding such
as is, here outlined will bring money
to the farmer every month in the year,
try it.
Southdown Wool.
The wool of the English breeds Is
thus referred to by the Journal of the
Royal Agricultural Society of England.
"Lastly, there Is the pure Down, a
wool which Is still unequaled for
hosiery purposes, and which will al
ways find a market of Its own, some
times quite independent of the general
course of prices. Of this wool I should
like to say—keep to the old-fashioned
style; keep it as short and as fine as
possible; let no suspicion of a long
wool strain get into it; and if I am not
mistaken, pure Down wool will take a
respectable place in the future as re
gards comparative prices. With such
ends in view, breeders of Southdowns
may well abstain from trying to imi
tate in length of staple and
superfluous covering of the face with
coarse wool any other breeds of sheep,
and be content to let the Southdown re
main what its best friends have always
tried to make it—i. e., a producer of
quality before quantity.
Sheep Less Numerous.—The east
ern farmers seem to be going out of
the sheep business. They are, as a
rule, very small holders, and when
their, small herds seem to be a losing
proposition they do not hesitate long
before letting them go. It is the sum
of these small holdings that make up
the great aggregate, and when the
farmers begin selling their small flocks
the number of sheep in the country
speedily decreases. There is no branch
of the live stock business that can be
so readily adapted to changed condi
tions as the sheep business. Since
1893 the number of sheep in the United
States has been constantly decreasing
until now the total number is less than
at any time during the past twenty
years. Meanwhile the range of prices
has been very low. It will not be long
before there will be a change and sheep
will be in demand again at goqd prices.
—Ex.
Butter.—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 the least possible ex
pense. The dairyman can condense
tons of fodder and crops grown on the
farm into dairy products and send
them to market in compact and port
able form.—Ex.
Incomo from Dairying.—Dairying
brings in a constant income. The man
who sells crops of any kind has to
wait until he can market his product
once a year. There is little satisfaction
in this. It is unbusiness-like to go
without cash fifty-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 fn the
year.—Ex.
{darks made by hot dishes set on ta
bles may be removed by the use of
kerosene oil well rubbed in, and then
polished with a fresh cloth.
It is hard to believe that a sin will
bite if it has gold in its teeth.
United State* Patent Office Report.
TKANS-.MISSIISSIPrr 1SVKNT0RS.
351 patents were issued to United
States inventors the past week, of
which number Nebraska inventors re
ceived 2 patents, while 10 Iowa invent
ors were rewarded. James Gilbert of
Omaha. Nebraska, receivin'? a patent
for a thurst bearin'? for marine engines
while W. H. Fairchild, Diller. Nebras-.
ka, received a patent fora corn planter.
Amongst the notable inventions are
found a railway track layer; a sand pa
pering1 machine; a fence .comprisng a
split tubular rail having a projecting
serrated tongue; a vegetable cutter,
grader and dish strainer, a pad attach
ing attachment for sewing machines; a
machine for forging ear wheels; a pock
et for prize fruit; a hair curler compris
ing a pliable web provided with longi
tudinal rolls; a self-feeding mucilage
brush; a new tubing for bicycle frames,
comprising two half sections provided
with projecting flanges, between which
half sections and H inges is |heid a web
plate; an electric igniter for gas en
gines; an improved carpet sweeper; a
golf club; a support for musical per
formances; a tire shrinker attachment
for anvils; a bicycle slioe provided with
an outer sole comprising a layer of
fibrous material; a field anchor for
check row corn planters; a step cover
for 6tairs; an improved bicycle pump; a
folding brush; a collapsible chair; an
inflated bicycle tire comprising a plu
rality of tubes arranged tp form tami
inations with intervening air spaces; a
fire proof floor or roof; a combined
cbid's wagon and velocipede; a combi
nation bloomer and divided skirt;and a
a lap board in the form of a cylinder.
Parties desiring free information rel
ative to the law and practice of patents
may obtain the same in addressing
Sues & Co., United States- Patent So
licitors, Bee Building, Omaha, Nebr.
It takes just one month to send mail
from Buluwayo to London.
It costs 27 shillings a week to maintain
an English lifeboat.
Personal
ANY ONE who has been benefited
by the use of Ur. Williams’ Pink Pills,
will receive information of much value
and interest by writing to “Pink
Pills,” P. 0. Box 1592, Philadelphia, Pa.
The river Rhine flows at three times the
rate of the Thames.
Cures
Talk In favor of Hood's Sarsaparilla as for no
other medicine. It has the greatest record of
cures of any medicine In the world. In fact,
Is the One
True Blood
Purifier. g\.
Sarsaparilla
Hood’s PUIa cure sick headache, todlgcstioa.
Featherbone
Edge
&
,^V BIAS
VELVETEEN
SKIRT BINDING
has a strip of Featherbone stitched
in one edge. It b.oth flares and
binds the skirt and holds it away
from the feet; the newest of the S.
H. & M. bindings.
If your dealer will not ■
supply you we will.
Samples showing labels end materials mailed free*
“ Home Dressmaking Made Easy,” a new 72 page
book by Miss Emma M. Hooper, of the Ladies' Home
Journal-.tells in plain words how lo make dresses at
nome without previous training ; mailed for 25c.
5. H. & M. Co., P. O. Box 699. N. Y. City.
v»
EDUCATIONAL.
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE SAME.
Notre Dame, Indiana.
Fall Cnrtn In Ciaulcs, Letters, Bains*, Law, C1*H, He
•buln) and Kleetrleel E»|)aeerlny. Vkiraifh f»p|ir«lor/
and limn.rtlil Cenraea. !«*■■ Free to all Students who
have oumplefei the studies required for admilaaion into
the Junior or Senior Year, of any of t|he Collegiate
Comufd. A limited number of Candidates for the
ecclesiastical state will bo received at special rates.
St. Kiwarri’a Ran, or hoys under 13 years. Is unique la
completeness ef its equipments. The 103th Term will
Open September 8th, 1SB8. Cstalagars sent Pree on appU
ration tu T»RY RXV. 1. ■ORR1SSKY, C. S. €., President*
MOT HP DAME, ISO.
ACADEMY OF THE SACRED HEART
mV. JOSEPH. HO.
■The course of instruction In this academy, conducted
by the Religious of the Sacred Heart, embraces the
whole range of subjects necessary to constitute a solid
and refined education. Propriety of deportment, per
sonal neatness and the principles of morality are ob
jects of unceasing attention. Extensive grounds af
ford the pupils every facility for useful bodily exer
cise; their health Is an object of constant solicitude,
and in sickness they are attended with maternal care.
Fall term opens Tuesday, Sept. I. Terms for session
of 5 .months, payable in advance, 8115, this includes
tuition, board, washing, courses in French, German
or Lntin, use of library and physician’s fee. For fur
ther particular* address. THE MU FKRIOH.
Academy Sacred Heart. St Joseph, Mo*
oOUTri
WEST
MISSOURI.
The best iruit section in the West. No
drouths A failure of crops never known.
Mild climate. Productive soil. Abundance ol
good pure water.
For Maps and Circulars giving full descrip
tion of the Rich Mineral. Fruit and Agticullu
ral Lands in South West Missouri, write to
JOHN M. PURDY. Manager of the Missouri
Land and Live Stock Company, Neosho, New
ton Co., Missouri. *
STEADY
WORK
WE PAY CASH WEEKLY and
want men everywhere to SELL
CTADV TDCCC millions te t
OlAHK I ntCOcd. proven
“absolutely best."Superb outfits,
new system. STARK BROTHERS,
Louisiana, Ho., IIockport, 111.
P
ENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS.
JOHN W. MORRIS,WASHINGTON.D.a
Late Principal Examiner V. 8. Peaaien Bure an.
Hjn, in last war, li adjudicating claim*, a tty. since.
HMbit Cured Est. in 1871. Thousands
cured. Cheapest and best cure. Frke Trial.
State cane. Dr. Marsu, Quincy, Mich.
OPIUM
SCHOOL SUPPLIES.
Omaha School Supply Co.
Write for catalogue.
Save freight charges.
LINDSEY* OMAHA* RUBBERS!
W. N. U., OMAHA—33—1890
Wbeni writing to advertisers, kindly
_mention this paper.
, CURES WSInTsE FAILS. „ ,
[ Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use |
in time. Bold by druggists.
CON S UMPTION