The frontier. (O'Neill City, Holt County, Neb.) 1880-1965, September 03, 1896, Image 6

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    BY M.T.CALDOR.
international press associations
CHAFTER V.—fCoxTi!to«n.i
^Afi,” said she, fixing her eyes stead
fastly 6n the dim line where sky and
enaii blended Into one, "when I ait
here I igow so impatient, Walter; I
hoax to skim like the albatross yonder
wrtth -daring wing, along, above the
heaving waves. The world—the world
—go beautiful—so grand—I would see
ft. Mgr spirit tires of this sameness; It
^antdjUke an imprisoned thing longing
for one taste of the pure air of free
dom." . ;
“Silly girl! What is freer and purer
-than this sea breese, playing so daln
"tily with your' curls? What more
toundlesa* vast and grand than this
-wver-changing ocean at your feet? Why
•hould you sigh for anything fairer?”
“Because, fair as it is, it is our prison.
We can go no farther; her we myst stay,
-eonlined to the narrow breadth of this
little Island, when the wide illimitable
World is before us. Ah, Walter, I
fathom your kind wish to cheat me into
oontcntedness. Can I not read your
Wympnthy with my own yearnings? Do
I not Wee your .eyes flash as they turn
toward the point, where, far away, our
Borne and mother-land waits for us?
lAm I so dull that I cannot perceive the
noble ambition imprisoned in your
woul? What a glorious name might
mot the talents and germs of genius,
-dormant and passive here, carve out
for you in the great arena of the world.
When I think of it I grow restless—
suigrylalinost.”
m
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it
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V
sue,; started up venemenuy ana
otretcped out her imploring hands to
the ocean. y,' "‘
“Cope; come!” she cried, as passion
ately jhf. though the onleaplng waves
woukf tear her words to friendly ears.
■“Oh, pcean, mighty ocean—that spared
vs from thy yawning graves for a liv
ing tdmfc, he merciful. Send hither a
hark 'to-hear thy . foster children back
to theembrace of mother earth—a mes
eetigen of hope and mercy. Mighty
MeptUl*, where are thy spells now?"
Thd glrl stood, frozen by the rpell of
%cr own emotion into a statue of such
wild and matchless, loveliness that, the
gazera almost hushed their breath in
and den fear that the myth ehe had ln
wokeJf mlgbt rise from his foamy couch
to eefse and bear her away for his bride.
Tim’’ only reply came in the hoarse
Seating of the surf that seemed to moan
wildly, "Not yot—not yet.’
HCr/ outstretched arms drooped de
Jectedfy, the glow died from oft her
facet hod with a deep, deep sigh she
wank'slowly back to her seat again.
Hey. sigh waa echoed- dismally, yet
Valfy answered soothingly:
"Nay, nay, dear Elite, do not look so
Mopelesa. I eon teas you have spoken
the truth. I, too, have these longings—
these-wild, Intense cravings for action
—thill.dismal lamenting for talents bur
ied iu obscurity—and yet often and
«ften ,comes a strong conviction that
wenrour wildcat hopes gratified, and
We safely restored to all the pleasures,
vxcitement and honors of the world, we
woubj, look back with a sigh of regret
to th# peaceful Innocence of our life
Bha shook her beautiful head doubt
togly. ' ' ' ;
“I ten scarcely agreo With ybu—bet
ter sorrow and sore trouble than au
plnepCM and inaction.”
Walter was looking fondly in her
fhooiC;
“Itjjls not strange that you fret and
glneivute dear. A brilliant lot amidst
the nhblest and beat of our happy land
teo^jtejesif awalts you, hut for me it
wvuftebtlone continued struggle; and
UMtegn I would welcome it gladly, yet
tt tfmforta me to thinks that in its ab
neape I enjoy a blessing which freedom
tpwn the island would take forever
train me.** .*<.< -
8fce looked down at him question
.tagHr.. ■ 1 ' a: :?
"Do yoh not guess, dearest, that once
Ih your own circle humble Walter
Would scarcely presume to intimacy
with the .noble heiress."
i .tt,
CHAPTER Vf r
LEANOR ' reached
down her little
hand to hie shoul
der, -and .her bluo
eyes shone. Indig
nantly.
“Had It been any
one but you, Wal
ter, to make that
heartless speech—"
• And breaking into
sobs, she added
tremulously:
■“Oh. what does not the helpless,
friendless child owe to you and your
father, but tor whose untiring lore and
I mJghi jno.w, he an,jg»orant, uu
meuth and awkward creature, of whom,
' f ever rescued, my relatlres would be
■shamed? No, no, Walter; come what
the best and
your place."
with Us Ups the
toward him In
mare might
prevented by the
Mr. Vernon.
to our father," cried Eleanor,
down from the rock and run
fondly on hla arm. "Ah,
pen. we hare had such a delight
excttrston at the brook up In the
and we Were industrious, too,
that even Tom praised' oar fine
offish."
hie hand caress
“And yet my canary la weary o- her
pretty cage, her aeeda and sweetmeats,
and beats her wings against the bars
and pines for freedom!”
Eleanor colored,
"Ah, you overheard our Billy talk. I
never meant you should know it, but,
oh, papa, is it not very hard for us as
well as you?”
“My child,” answered he, solemnly,
It will be of little use for me to tell you
what a bitter cruel enemy I have found
this same world for which you sigh.
I may bid you prize this calm peace,
this freedom from sin and sorrow, but
you will be deaf to my words, because
of the siren song the radiant-faced
Hope sings ever to the ears of youth.
No, my children, I long no more for
the busy haunts of men. I am ready
to pray that this peaceful Eden may
prove my grave.”
The young creatures, dimly guessing
through what waves of grief and pain
he had reached the peaceful shore of
content, looked up wistfully Into his
pensive face and kept respectful si
lence.
“Now, then,” said he, rousing from
his reverie, ”1 shall send you, Elite, to
the houap. You will find the French
lesson I prepared on your table, and
you may translate it as neatly as you
can. Tom has plenty of freshly-made
paper in the drawer.”
Eleanor obeyed at once, glancing at
Walter as if expecting him to follow;
but his father laid a restraining hand
on bis arm, and Walter remained at his
side. •
—„ —'“i uu. » ci uuu gruveiy—
so graevely that Walter felt the toars
rising to his eyes—“you are pining for
action; you long for the excitement and
effort required in the battle of life. See,
here In this deserted island is a grand
opportunity for heroism that you have
quite overlooked. Do not.be startled,
Walter, when I tell you that I have
made a painful discovery'today—that
you love Eleanor with an affection more
fervent than a brother’s or a friend’s.
I put it to your owIT conscience and
manliness—is it honorable to take ad
vantage of the isolation of her life here,
and win her love before she has op
portunity to see others, and Judge for
herself? There is no doubt, judging
from the Jewels in the trunk, the coat
of-arms on her clothing, and Tom’s ac
count of the servant's idea of the fam
ily’s Importance, that Eleanor Is the
child of noble and aristocratic parents.
You know the exclusive pride of such,
for 1 have often told you of it. Now,
then, have you a right to profit by the
accidental circumstance of the ship
wreck, and take advantage of her guile
less, unsophisticated nature? Here is ’
your task, grander and nobler than any
struggle for worldly fame and prosper
ity—conquer yourself, Walter; be a
man thus early in your boyhood.”
There was a yearning, pitying ten
derness in the tone that belied , the
calm, reasoning words. Walter knew
that his father grieved for him, and
looking up proudly, although his lip
quivered, he said:
“I know what you mean, father, and
I will be worthy of your goodness. El*
lie shall never hear a word or hint from
the to suggest there is anything else in
the world besides a brother’s friend
ship.” -
His father bent down suddenly and
left such a kiss on his forehead as in his
dreams Walter had received from an ,
unknown angel mother, and was gone.
Walter continued on to the little
wood beyond the cliff; and only him
self, and the pale-leaved blossoms that
were wet with briny dew knew of the
passionate flood of boyish tears that
were shed there.
' Thenceforward there wae a quiet dig
nity of manliness about Walter’s de
meanor that puzzled Tom and Eleanor
as much as It pleased his father. He
did not take so many strolls alone with
Elite, but always managed to And pre- ’
text for Tom’s company. He no longer
used the slightest freedom In word or
act, but treated her with as much hon
orable delicacy as he might have Used
toward his queen. Her probable rank
and superior station were more fre
quently alluded to, until, pouting with
pretty vexation, Eleanor declared that
she would throw into the sea. the spark
ling chain of diamonds whose unknown
crest had raised such a formality be
tween them. Tom in his droll was co- '
inclded with her. ,
', "I know.” said he. ’Tve alters been
brought up to think nature made a
great difference In folks when she
brought 'em Into the world. Why, our
folk I# bounty thought we were
hardly lit for my Lady Somerset to
speak to; but the older,1 grow the mere
Xcomq ia reason that our souls pre
pretty much equal hi the1 Lord’s sight,
If so be we all do right.’ Shiver m>*
timbers if I didn’t use to get Into a cor-,
ner when one of my shipmates that
^ent down off here In the ’Petrel’ ar
gued with me about It. Te see, he came
from Amerleky, where, It they behave,
*11 the folks are lords and ladles, and,
''cording to his account, they live amaz
ingly happy. Well, well: the Lord
knows all about It—where’s the use
of puzzling over what don’t concern
us?—though sartln, here in this ’ere
forrln place, we don’t get any special
sign that little Elite's any better'n the
rest of us, only for having the angel na
tur’ of all womanhood.”
"There,” said Eleanor, laughing
gayly, “see what a philosopher our Tom
has become! Look that you take a lea
<.&.*** »a v - t
boh from him, Sir Walter. I am becora
ing much aggrieved, you are so forms
and polite. You don’t frolic with m«
you don't pet me. I declare, Waltei
you haven’t kissed me for these thrr
weeks!”
As she spoke she held up her beautl
ful face, the crlmsop lips poutin
archly.
Poor Walter colored crimson, stam
mered incoherently, an<J then dartei
away.
Ellie burst into tears; Tom whistled
and Mr. Vernon, closing his book, fol
lowed after his son.
CHAPTER VII.
RECKON I’ll fine
Walter and fix th<
flag as we agreed,’
said Tom, looldn;
ruefully at thi
weeping girl. Hi
had hardly disap
peared when Mr
Vernon returned
and began quietly
wiping away the
tears from the gii l'f
An earnest, serious
conversation ensued, from which they
were interrupted by Walter, who came
rushing in with a face so ghastly they
both sprang up in alarm.
"Quick, father, quick! Come up tc
Tom. He is hurt; he is dying, I am
afraid.”
Mr. Vernon seized & flask Of brandy,
preserved carefully for such exigencies,
and darted after his son, who had flung
afn arm around Eleanor, and almost
carried her in his rapid flight back to
Tom.
At the foot of the tall tree to which
the flag staff was nailed they found
poor Tom. He was lying Just as Wal
ter had left him, with a face wearing
the awful, unmistakable signet of
death. Mr. Vernon shuddered, and
flinging himself frantically beside him,
groaned:
“Oh, Tom, Tom, what terrible thing
has come upon us? What has hap
pened to you?’,’,-,,** r * # |AM
xne glaring eyes turned lovingly to
the distracted group. , , jj
“My hour has come this tjme,,! The
'Petrel’s' ribs wasn’t cleaned stove up
than mine are now, Tom’s last voyage
is nigh on it, ended.” . <• > Hj(
“It can’t be, it shan’t be,” shouted
Walter fiercely, and passing hIS'' arm
under the .drooping head he poured a
little, brandy in his hand ana we't4^o
clammy, parted lips, and turning Impa
tiently to his father, said almost an
“Why dO^eu fdbi'ffo hopelessT 6elp
me take him up,; help me to do what
will make him well again.”
“No, no, lad, don’t move me; i*’a no
use. Tom, tells ye sp himselfr—he's
sighted the promised land already.";
Oood children, dear children, ye’re sor-j
ry to lose poor Tom; he thanks you
kindly. Mr. Vernon, sir—” V < \
“Tom, my best friend, my preserver
iad savior, say on, I hear you,” sobbed
the strong man, hiding his quivering
’ace.
“I'm going fast, and I must say quick
while I can tall* all I want you to do.
I’ve wrote down where my sister lives
long ago; you’ll see it, and if you aver
set away from here I know, you'll see
tier. Tell her I was willing to die,
:hat I alters tried to do the best I could,
ind I know the Lord is merciful.”
Mr. Vernon could only take the cold
land in his and press it tenderly for a
response.
"I know ye’ll miss me, but the use of
:he change will soon come. V I I’m soiVy
io much hard, work will fall to you
wlthoht Tom’s' Stout" arm to do It, but
:he Lord’s will be done, He knows
what’s best, and can take care of you.”
He paused -again to rest, and seemed
linking Into a stupor, until Walter
rled to move him to a more comforta
»le position, when he smiled feebly in
;hanks, opened his eyes, a,nd said with
:onsiderable energy.
(TO Bl COXTIXITBD.I
(WOMEN STARING AT WOMEN.
: .Jrtj'R'i... ^i........ 1.-..; 4 ,,,\ -f
l Man'* Comment* on Thl* WnkstH
■ of the Fair Kexi H
Two women pass each other on the
street 61, a provincial town; they are
lot acquainted, yet it is long odds that"
one ol them turns around to look after
the other—very short odds against
both doing so, says the Nineteenth
Century. It is not the gait or the
figure or the hair of fhe stranger that
has attracted, atehtion; itjs tl\p difesaj’
not the person within it. The gentle
anarchists who are busy organizing
the ’debrutalization of iuan will, of
course, ■attribute;this little failing to,
the vanity of the feminine mind by
reason of man’s tyranny in excluding
wom4»r|fom boards jqf directors and
other Intellect uni arenas. ,'It 'may he
conceded that psychology end better
ment are more recondite Helds than
millinery, bat this would be but a dull
world and far uglier than it is if every
woman had a soul above chlfTous. Odds
grenadine,and tarlatan! That were a
consummation' by no means desirable.
No, let all men who have eyes to see
withal or hearts to lose set great store
by the pains bestowed on pretty dress
ing, but if onehniy speak and live the
art should be studied with subtler tact
than is sometimes seen. It should be
better concealed; It is distressing to see
a young woman’s eyes, wandering over
the dress of h$r with whom she is talk
ing, for if the mind be engaged in tak
ing note of external detail conversation
ceases to be intercourse and becomes
the crackling of thorns under the pot.
t t • > V » ? : j ; ' ■
A loyal Irishman.
A loyal Irishman, who recently died
in Wisconsin, set apart $10,000 in hla
will for the purpose- ni transporting
his own body and those of his broth
era buried In this country to Ireland,
where they will be interred on the old
family estate, In the shadow of a grand
monument.
:» -JL
i DAIRY AND POULTRY
; INTERESTING CHAPTERS FQ
' I OUR RURAL READERS.
. | -
’ , Hair Saecoraful Farmari Operate n
Department of tha Farm—A Fe
Hint* aa to tbe Cara of Uta Btoc
and Poultry.
E HAVE RECE1\
ed from one of th
patrons of a ct
operative creamer:
a comparatlv
statement of th
prices paid for mil
at the co-operatlv
creamery and at th
creameries operat
ed by a private com
pany. In the lat
ter filled cheese teas made, and It i
claimed by parties who have been in
terested in the manufacture of flllei
cheese, that the farmers are recelvlni
a large benefit from the use of skim
milk In the manufacture of fillet
cheese. We give below the two tablet
for the year beginning June 1st, '95
and ending May 31st. ’96: f>.’
i, CO-OPERATIVE.
Month. ~ Price
une ....
uly .. 6i
iugust .. 8(
September .-..... 8(
Ictober ..8<
November
December ...i.v.•;• •H-Of
January............. .80
February . .78
darch .............. •.. .80
kpril.i.....^.............. .60
lay ■.... ■
average price ... 781-0
PRIVATE CREAMERY.
Month. , • Price.
June... .60
July .......'..65
August .. 75
September . .86
October . .85
November .. 98
December.81.06
January ... 88
February ... 92
March. 85
April . 64
May .. .64
Average price ..'. 80 4-6
- The party from whom we received
’ these figures makes this notation:
“Farmers, please, examine the above
carefully, and see how much you have
lost or gained who have Sold to the
aboVe creameries.”
Taking the whole year through, it
will be seen that, the average paid by
the co-operative creamery is only 2%c
less than that paid by the creamery
utilizing skim milk for- filled cheese.
Any farmer that will sell his skim
milk for the purpose of making filled
cheese at an average of 2%c per hun
dred, is certainly lacking either in
good judgment or sound business
sense; and has never understood the
value of skim milk, even for fertiliz
ing purposes. He would make more
money by dumping the milk on the
ground or any place where h9 raises
either fruit or vegetables, than to sell
it at the rate of 2%c per hundred.
This shows how the makers of filled
cheese have been humbugging the
farmers, telling them that they were
receiving so large an amount per hun
dred for their skim milk over and
above what they could get were they
selling their milk to creameries where
filled cheese was not made. Ever
since the passage of the filled cheese
bill we have heard the cry that the
farmers were going to lose a large
amount of money by its passage, be
cause the factory men who trade filled
cheese could afford to pay so much
more for their milk. We have no
doubt but what they could afford to pay
much more for the milk when they
manufacture filled cheese and sell it as’
it has been Sold for the last five years.
But that they did pay this advanced
price for the milk where they manu
facture filled cheese is not a fact; and
they have been humbugging the farm
ers at their expense, and making a
great deal of profit out of the manu
facture of the fraudulent article.—El
gin Dairy Report.
■ - .ytr t-0 >* , ; . .. jr'i « ?-■' ■ .<• ■- y |<• V
Goat*.
The goat has not had a fair show In
modern times. Among the ancients
he was highly esteemed, and figured
extensively in serious literature. Now
he is only the butt of funny parai
graphers whose acquaintance with him
Is confined to a tradition that he eats
tomato cans on the Harlem rocks. The
children of Israel and the heroes of
Homer, knew him better. The Old
Testament shows the goat as an essen
tial part of the Hebrew’s flocks. It
gate him milk and meat for food, hair
and skins for clothing and was his
most common Sacrifice for sin. En
camped before the’ walls of Troy,
Ulysses and his comrades regaled
themselves with the fat goat’s roahted
quarters, and thought themselves spe
cially blessed of the gods. But we of
the Western world have Come to des
pise the goat as “the poor man’s cow,”
a useful enough animal for the moun
taineers of the Alps or the squatter
sovereigns of unsavory suburbs, but
an inferior creature not worth the no
tice of the free-handed owner of broad
American acres, possessed of Jerseys,
Merinos and blooded trotters, and
above the utilization of a brush lot or
a stony pasture. Some American
farmers, however, are coming to real
ise that the goat may be made one of
their valuable domestic animals, not
merely a poverty-stricken substitute
for a cow, but an addition to the farm
community, filling a place of its own
and giving a return peculiar to itself.
A Missouri farmer writes to an agri
cultural paper that he finds goats
profitable for rough land filled with
weeds and bushes. He has had them
four years, and they have destroyed
the bushes, sumac and small persim
mon trees. His hogs have been free
from disease, while his neighbors who
did not keep goats lost most of their
s kogs by cholera. .He ate the moat of
young goats and liked it better than
mutton. His experience coincides
with that of farmers in countries where
is the goat ie extensively raised and
w prized. England is not among them,
k owing partly to there being compara
tively little waste land, but, also, ac
cording to S. 'H. Pegler, an authority on
the subject, because there “the advan
B t**os of goat-keeping are but lmper
. fectly known.” and the American
lack of appreciation for goats
j may be inherited. In Ireland,
8 on the contrary, the number
c 8oats has increased in recent
i years. Of course the goat cannot com
s pete with the cow as the single milk
. aninjal for those able to keep the cow,
. but It has advantages In places where
. cow cannot be-kept, and as an ad
i dUlon to the profits of the farm. In
. *ke first place, it is a, great Instrument
1 *°r catending pasture lands. It will
eat , by preference and thrive upon
' forest leaves, shrubs and weeds that
no other domestic animal will touch,
! and get a rough and overgrown field
Into good condition for homes and
cattle. It Is hardy, and will live on
rough or Bmooth ground. There ie a
prejudice against the milk, but one
entirely groundless. It to richer than
cow’s milk, heavier in butter and much
heavier In cheese, but all experts de
clare that it has absolutely no differ
ent flavor or taste from that of the
cow. The average dally yield of a well
. kept goat is said to be three pints; not
a large quantity, but not an item to
be despised, in view of Its richness, the
size of the animal and the slight cost
i of keeping it. Herds of goats in this
country would not only utilize much of
the herbage which now goes to waste,
but might also develop some profitable
industries which have not yet been ac
climated here. The manufacturer of
fancy cheese in imitation of expensive
foreign varieties in some cases has
been so successful that the domestic
product sells on its own name and
merits. In other cases, such as Roque
fort, the results have not been satis
factory. Methods of curing account in
part for the failure, but different ma
terials may have something to do with
it. Many of the finest European
cheeBes are made from goat’s milk,
while the American attempts to rival
them have been made with cow’s milk.
There is nothing else available in the
market. If there were, doubtless
creameries making fancy cheese would
arrange to consume all that could be
had, and the goats would prove a
source of wealth both to farmer and
manufacturer. Nor is the goat to be
despised for food by an over-fastidious
race. In the restaurants of Rome the
kid holds an honored place. The el
derly members of the tribe are inferior
to mutton, but the kid, properly pre
pared, is a meal which will bear com
parison with any other. It would be
an agreeable variation of our regimen.
The man who makes a goat grow
where none grew before should have
credit with him who makes two blades
of grass stand where formerly one
stood alone. By all means, let us
learn of the ancients and grow rich
from flocks of goats.—Ex.
Some Fienrea on Cheese.
In a recent report Major H. E. Al
vord, of the United States Dally Di
vision, says:
Nine-tenths of the cheese produced
In this country is made in the states of
New York, Wisconsin, Ohio, Illinois^
Vermont, Iowa, Pennsylvania and
Michigan, ranking in the order named.
The New York product alone is almost
one-half the total, and this state and
Wisconsin together make over two
thirds of all made.
It requires the milk of about one mil
lion cows to make the cheese annually
pressed in the United States.
The value of the annual cheese prod
uct of this country varies from $20,
000,000 to* $25,000,000.
▲bout 9,000,000 pounds of cheese are
imported annually into the United
States.
The rate of consumption of cheese in
America is about three pounds per
capita per annum.
Consumption of cheese is applrently
somewhat decreasing.
Good cheese is approximately com
posed of one-third water, one-third
milk fat, and one-third casein, with
some sugar and ash,
' Mildew on Pen*.
Late peas, especially when grown
in damp ground, are often eo badly
mildewed that it is not worth while
growing them. The pea mildew is one
of the powdery mildews, Erysiphe
communis, belonging to the same
family as the powdery mildew of the
grape. It grows entirely on the sur
face of the host plant, covering it with
a white coating of delicate interwov
: en. fungous threads. At certain points
protuberances appear on threads
which serve as suckers, drawing from
the cells the nourishment required for
the growth of the fungous. The spores
are produced in delicate sacs which
in turn are enclosed in dark colored
spore cases. ' The latter appear as
black specks just visible to the naked
eye among the fungous threads. The
disease attacks leaves, leaf-stalk, pod
and stem so that the pea plant is thor
oughly infested with it, much to. the
detriment of its growth. Frequent
cultivation or irrigation will do much
to hold the disease in check, but the
use of some fungicide will be desira
ble upon late varieties in hot, dry sea
sons. Among the best for the purpose
is & solution of one pound of copper
sulphate in 500 gallons of water.
* Bad water will make bad milk, no
matter what the other food may be;
and bad milk will make bad butter, no
matter how it is handled.
The Rhode Island Station says that
milk fever in cows is a brain disease, I
and is inherited by many cows. j
>-• I ' ' •' ! it- ’ *
=======»
Best for Children.
It Is far better not to allow a child
to be ont of doors at nil in the middle
of the day, when the sun is hottest,
and always to insist that it lii* down
for an hour after dinner. Whether .
the child sleeps or not does not matter; V
it is resting and that is what is re- |
quired; and nnless this is a rule rigidly y.
enforced, it will not bo carried out, '/'
most children, after the days-of their
infancy have passed away, being very
disinclined to be compelled to lie down,
except at such times as when they wish
to sleep •
Dishonored Draft*,
When the stomach dishonors the drafts '
made upon It by the rest of the system, it is
necessarily because Its fund of strength Is
very low. Toned with Hostetter’s Stomach
Bitters, It soon begins to pay out vigor In
,the shape of pure, rich blood,containing the
elements of muscle, bone and brain. As a
sequence -of the new vigor afforded the
stomach, thebowelsperform thel> functions
fegularly, and the fiver works like clock- >
wo k. Malaria has no effect upon a system
thus reinforced.
They Study Greet Speeches 'J.'.
A feature of the work arranged for s
clast of women who are studying Amer
ican history will be a study of the
speeches of American orators who rep*
resented different schools of thought
and different sections of the country.
Another class of women interested in
the same subject is studying the liis- -1
tory of the forts of their state.
Fiso's Cure for Consumption has been a
God-send to me. Wm. B. McClellan. Ches
ter, Florida, Sept. 17, 1895.
A Real Mrs. Partington.
An English paper tells of a real Mrs
Partington. She walked into the of
fice of the Judge of probate and asked,
“Are you the judge of probates?” »*I J
am the judge of probate,” was the re
ply. “Well, that’s it, I expect You
see, my husband died detested and left
me several, little infidels, and I want
to be appointed their executioner.”
-FIT* stopped free and permanently cured. No
Bts arur flrst day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve
Sealorer. Free $2 trial bottle ami treatise.
Send to Da. Kuna, m Arch 8b. Philadelphia, Pa.,
Mrs. Walter Q. Gresham has become a
Christian scientist.
_ We stand in our own sunshine oftener
than others do.
Good
Blood is what gives strong nerves, vigor, vitality.
Good blood and good health eqme by taking
Hood’s
Sarsaparilla
Be sure to get Hood’s and only HOOD'8.
Mood's Pills are tbe favorite family cathartic.
BEWARE OF FEVERS.
' If yon are all ran down with a
poor appetite you are iu danger of
‘ *e’er. At this time of year it is
: positively'dangerous to delay.
You can prevent it “very time if
• you will take Dr. Kay’s Renova
tor in season, as soon as you first
1 discover that your appetite is poor
and you feel “fagged out” It
cannot do you any harm but taken
in time it will save thousand*
of dollars and hundreds of
lives. It increases the appetite,
promotes digestion, cures toe very
worst cases of constipation and
dyspppsla and all derangements of
the stomach, bowels, liver and
kidneys, debility,and nervousness.
Dr, Kay’s Renovator
prevents fevers by renovating.and in
vigorating the entire system', enrloh
.tag the blood and giving new life and
t restoring vigor to the whole body.
It strikes to the root ol the matter
and is a positive preventative. Why
not seed SScts. by return mail ant we
l will send you a trial box of 35 doses
and our booklet and question blank.
It will save many dollars and perbsps
life Itself by having It in time It it
the greatest Nerve Tonic and Alterative
ever Mund. Sold by druggists at SScts.
and Si. or sent b* mall bv Dr. B. J.
Kay Medical Co., Omaha. Neb. Send
for fres sample and booklet.
jMktdlUfc BOLD by adfc.jlSS.OA
WIWWDSPQOI8TB
S32DXJ OATION AL.
i College, Fall Term Sept. 1.
Board lor threo boar's work.
'Catalogue aud specimens free
SHORT HAND
hand. 51SIT.Y.Life Bldg, Omaha.
3nly one In Omaha taught by practical stenographer
THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE, PANE.
Notre Banc, Indiana.
Fall Cnrin In Classics, Letters, ScLaw, 0*11,
•Saaleal and HirtHnl K»f lsceris«- Thoresgh Preparatory
and Ccuemini Cmnm. IUcn Irw to all students who
have completed the studies required for admission into
the Junior or Senior Year, of any of tha Collegiate
Courses. A limited number of Candidates for tha
Ecclesiastical state will be received at special rates.
Kdwird’s Hall, :or boys uider IS years. Is unique In
mmpieteneee cf its equipments. The lOftt Tsra will
Dpcn ItpUskfr Rtk, 1804. Cstalsfaes sent Frse on spplil
EOTBE D.Iif UU."‘ *■ ”OM“SISI
. -1
W-f MISSOURI.
The best fruit section in the West. No
Irouths A failure of crops never known.
Mild climate. Productive soil. Abundance of
food pure water.
For Maps and Circulars giving full descrip
tion of the Rich Mineral, Fruit and Acricultn
^est irite u.
IOBN M. WJRDT. Manager of the Missouri
Land and Live Stock Company, Neosho. New
on Co., Missouri.
STEADY
WE PAY CASH WEEKLY and
want men everywhere to SELL
CT1DV TDCCC millions te.*
■ a v/\r> i# vlAnK InCCOed. proven
lA/l 11/ 11 “absolutelybefit.’'Superboutfits,
V V I\ new system. STARK BROTHERS,
Louisiana, Mo., Kockfort, III
PATENTS, TRADE MARKS
JodAdTice os ti r.teliUbtllty of In.
rentioiu Send for ‘‘lnvontors’ Guide. ..r How to Got n
O FAR&ELL & SOS. Washington. P.tb
PATENTS ?? }KV?' vsperlenoe; Rond sketch for ad.
j » /1.5 vire. (L. Lean**, InIh pnn. examiner TT «
> aLOHlce} Deane A Weaver, McGill Jildtf., W*sh.lACl
LINDSEY* OMAHA«RUBBERS!
UPIUMr.‘.!,HJ«.Kr;'. — -
[f afflicted with
sore eyes, uaa
. WQOIXKT, ATLANTA, flA.
iThonptos’sEys Wstsr.
W. N. U., OMAHA—30—189e
When writing to advertisers, kifcdly
mention this paper.
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