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About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (July 5, 1894)
Ilatk for Hot Wvathcr. Tut to a cup of sea salt, one-ba'.f ounce of campuor and one-half ouuce Of amuioDia In a quart bottle; (ill the bottle with hot water and let it eland twenty-four bourt; then, when pre pared to bathe with a sponge, pat a teaapoonful of this mixture, well shak en, into your basin. A surprising qui ility of dirt will come from the cle eat skin. The ammonia clemes-i, am .he camphor and the sea gait ini par a beneficial eflect which cannot be exaggerated. Wben Traveling Whether on pleasure bent, or bnainesi, lakeon every trip a bottle oi riyrnp oi Kits, as it acta most pleasantly and eHectually on tlie kidney, liver ana bowels, prevent ing levers, headache and other forirut of skkiia-s, For lale in !Jc. and $1 bottles by all leading drnpgutts. Manufactured by the California Fig fyrup Co. only. a.tr4rl!iiary ttialltr. Tbe persiatance of- life in frogs is ery long. bpallaDzaui preserved some frogs in a mass of snow for two years. They became dry, stiff ana almost frlgidable, but a gradual heat brought them back to life. Vulpian observed a return of life in frogs and salaman ders that had been poisoned with citrate and nicotine, In both cases the an imals In q a stion bad been for several days In the condition of cadavers. Toads have been shut up in blocks of plaster, and then, bavin; been deprived of all air except what may penetrate through the material, and of all sources of food, resusciated severnl years after ward. '1 he question presents one of the most curious problems that biolog ical science has been called on to ex plain. The longevity and vital react ance of of toads are surprising. Be sides tb experiments we have cited, nature sometimes presents some already made, and vastly more astonishing. Toads are said to have been found in rocks, buch cases are rnre, but It would be m unreasonable to doubt them as to believe In some of the miraculous ex planations that have been made of the matter. The phenomenon Is marvel ous, It fa true, but it is supported by evidence that we are not able to con test; and skeptism, which Is incompat ible with science, will have to disap pear if rigorous observation shall con firm it. HELP IS OFFERED very bxttous, exhausted, woman ufTerinr from " female complaint " or weiakneas. All pain, bearing-loro aeiiBatira, and inflam mation are relieved anil cured by Dr. Pierce's Kavorite Preacription. HavtUntmrn, Pa. Woai.n s DispKKSAav Medical Association, Uuflalo. N. Y.i (Imtumtn we cannot sufficiently thank you tor tlii' great aiuou.it oi i-n-f-flt my wife motived from I the un of your medlelnt'. iar wiifl naa a oaa w oi Ik-ucorrho, and ae uwd ' Dr. Pierce Kavorite r"re- erirlptlqn for It. I cannot nraiH It above Ita value. I have a daughter who has been poorly over a year; the I taking the " Kavonte rrrauripoou, and I already feclttif bet ter, alter laMlna 7o oot- Um. Youra, OEO. W. BWr.S.lM. PIERCE CURE OI MONET KTIBNED. a S U Mm. BweckeT. jPwlCE SO CENTS ALL DBU00I9TS LMbJ 'waaT.a v. 12.M2I.7, Twlnfct Mat j-Ttira. In June, IH.ri, Mrs. llarr son Bfted- love, of Carson t it y, N'ev., presented her husband with a bouncing pair of twins. This tact of iUelf is not "out of the ordnu y," but when It is known tliat the bidy was sixty-three years of ae at thattime,aud the husnand over eveniyit becomes an item worthy of recoro in all annul devoted tooaities re- pectinghuman being". The Breedlovtis are said to be t ie oldest counle in the world that were ever so favored. W. L. Douclas 03 SHOE"" qJ t"wi 5. CORDUVAn, FMNCHAENAMEUEDCALF. V3.wFlNECALF&r4H8AIWl $ 3.4P POLICE, 3 Soles. rfSslZ.WQRKINGMfj,. EXTRA FINE. X 2.L7r? BojpSTH'iCLSHOES. -LADIES' W2 l ' 'BesTDNS0. , SEN6 fOU CATALOG UE WL-DOUCLAS, BROCKTON, MASS. Tea ave money r wearlos tbe V. I.. Doaclna 03.00 Hhoe. Beeaace, w are tbe larnrat manufacturer of tzila f r-lof ibiri In t!ie world, an 1 jrunrunU'e their value by iomiJiii m nam ira v-" w,Mnm whi.-h uruln't tou a!iit hie h pnrea ail the mlddlxmio profUa. Our ah eiul otom work In tyl, ey rutin nd wer1nf qualltlra. Wabaihrm old rywtier i lower prtcMfnr h r.lii lvrn thn anr olhr maka. Tnoul Utui. If your dealer canaol supply you, w can. FREE ! RMupdpa."-. FACE BLEACH Mme. A. A it TfUUf (" " of uh u. a. biHviiwdnr !. f prw, hkb to It r" WuU ,ni t at in tUI tu. rl It lr UMl, I III d S.tnpU B.lU.l.lr I'"-!. H Kuppert Dept. K.6 K Uili nt..N. 1 ny SADIES W VOU KNOW OR. FELIX LC BRUN'S STEEL BHD PEHKYROYflL PILLS arthonlDl and only FKF.NCH eafe.nd re. Itabie eare on the roark.t. Price I1.0U! ent by Uentune oia oniy ny saeiL C. J. NORM A CO., York, Nehraika. utm UdiA ULi Dar'i Trtol. WICC laMIT III HOW 01 00 Nils If alB PIT rallanl. f rTW aif trm 4 kr ) im flIMf 4ar UltU,ll-MUf 4I mtf at XHj't Trial. H rtl"4 la M'. bifoii I if i. bo. Ma wiuu a-., cnicabo.ilu Are You a Steam User? II so aJlrirens i'r1 to IRV1N PRIBBLE, York, Neb and he will give yo Inloiiiialion that wll avi you money. PATENTS. TRADE-HARKS Riaailnation and Ad'lrx a to fatoniatilllty of In -..iitA -i-.iri ririnftimr'itiiifiA.nr rioir imiet afaicat. raraica O'KAaasu, Waalilnti.B, t. O. I ulreralty Nt w. The State University is one of the nstitutions that grows steadily and even phenominally. in the fare of all obstacles and in spite of hard timos. The catalogue of the current year wl 1 show about thirteen hundred names (none repeated) while not less han live hundred more could not l accomodated. All departments are over crowded in spite ot the fact that work continu-s practically from eitrhf. o'clock in the morning until 10 o'clock at night. The number of instructors s nearly eight. For the coming year the authorities are planning even larger th ngs. 1 he courses are being carefully revised and strengthened, large additions will bo made to the shop work and the forge work in Manual Training. A new course in Architecture will he offered, a Conservatory of Music (one of tho irgest and best equipped in the country) will be opened in its new building, the Special Medical course will be strengthened, the Sugar School will be maintained, the College of Law will he moved to new and larger rooms and several new instructors will be, secured. In corps of Instructors, library and aboratcry facilities, and general equipment, it now stands fully abreast of the strongest Universities In the west. Plf ir Hi"? KV rTnTirK connection, Ucauws It Is especially liimijy O VIj71 IIXO. atlapUL)ie re.,r auction for wee witn tne cnange oi eizo BUT LITTLE CHANGE IN IS NOTICEABLE. STYLE Jla I rrtlculrly Fortunate for th Mother Vfho Meed to Practice Eeonomy Little Folk' Ureaae Are Be'n- Pat terned After Thoae Horn by Woaueo. mm Tit For l Kt At a Staten Island ball one evening a plain country gentleman had engaged pretty coquett for the next dance, but gallant yachting captain coining along persuaded the young lady to abandon her previous engagement In favor of .himself. The other over hearing all that had passed, moved to ward a card table and sat down to a game of whist. The captain a few min utes afterward stepped up to the young lady to excuse himself, as he was en gaged to another he had forgotten. The coquette, much chagrined, ap proached the whist table In hopes to secure her first partner and said, "I be lieve, sir, it is time to take our places." Ihe old fashioned suitor, in the act of div ding tbe pack for the next dealer. courteously replied: "No, madam, I mean to ? ny place. When ladies shufile, I cut ." Philadelphia l'ress. Top (or LlttU Tola. Sew York correapoodeace: UT little change Is noticeable In children' fash ions, for durinjf tho paet year little girlsr wear has partaken less ai d lex of the m irked cha ao tjritii:s of their elders' garb. This Is particularly fortunate for mothers who need to practice economy, and a lucky -iiing for children general ly, for the tot who is gotten up to show in minia ture all tho cur rent eccentrici ties and oddities of women's stylos is dre!-ed too fancifully, (jood taste al wavs admits ot bufrtrestini' in the chilli's garn ents the late developments In fushion' for mature wearers, ana so, too, do current pra tio js: but it is now seldom ovordono. wnh the i esult that children's ch thes are all the more suitable for children. As illustrating what is permissible, take the child's apron (hown in tho initial picture. Here, in tho yoke, there is direct pat terning af tor the shoulder eiiects wom en now deem so necosi-arv, but tho sleeves do not follow out this sugges tion in the l 'ast. It U woll that they do not, for if a pair of huge balloon puffs were placed on thoso tiny shoulders, tho child would decidedly rosomblo a cai ii ature. The garmont comes near ly to the hem of the littlo dross and is made of pink batiste. It is laid in three pleats In back and buttons be neath the centor one. It is cut away at the top and the opening filled in with a yoke of luce and butisto inser tions, round in buck and pointed in front, and finished in a full luce frill. folic s wear. should come chaiite of material, and white China siU .light well replace the white satin of which the sketched garment Is compo ed. But it ia de scribed as in ti e -grown-up" original, ao that it may furnish suggestion for either use. It is made with pleated fr( n and back and fitted sides, and la finished by a circular baaque cut sep a atoly and joined to the bodice, tbe stain being c vered with a twl-ted belt of woite silk. A deep lace frill is caught in the collar seam and the ends reavh to the waist as shown. The stand ng collar is made of folded silk with rosettes in back and front, to match the belt, but t" n 'oratcly wide balloon sleeves are y Babies' apparel follows no laws but those of mothers, and they reflect so many material crotchets as to b s beyond codification. Kven lashion's laws could n t convince a mother that she shouldn't dress hor owa babe as she pleases. Some mothers insist that there should bo a distinct dl ",ereni Ie the mode of dressing girl and boy babies, even at a month old. The e Shlloh'a Cnnaumptlon Cure ti aold on a guar antee, it rnrt'i incipient (viiumptton. It l Ihe beat OoiiKb Cur, iftoent. OOceiitaand II. W. Filrndahlp la Ihe Family. One of the most Important requisites of home life, and ene frequently over .ooked, is tbe Intimacy that should ex ist between the parent and the child. This is, indeed the foundation on which all good Influences may be most secure- y laid. The control which Is obtained through fear, or force, or bare authority has nothing abiding In it. As soon as the fear is outgrown, or the force re moved, its power will pass away. But ihe Influence which Is at work where real sympathy and friendship exist be tween parents and children will abide long after the relation itself is severed, and will enter as a powerful factor into ;he whole lif". fTTMSH MAID OP SIX Hall's Catarrh Cure Ia takaa internally, Trice 76 cent. C rn tr Pall equina. In regard to green corn f r fall feed ing says rii Indiana dairyman, our ex perience is that a large variety of sweet corn is tho best. It produces most, milk, is the most palatable to the cow and gives the milk a better tl ivor than any other food we have used; green clover and ensilage coming next m order for Ilavoriog milk. If green feed produces milk cheaper when we can get It, the closer we come to It when we can get It, the better we are off Theref re, early-cut hay and ensilege made from ordinary Held corn are the chief factors In producing milk cheap in winter. It is said that all the gold in the world, not counting that In virgin state would not make a block of more than 013 cubic yards. A cube of the above dimensions could be put in a room 21 feet each way. The things that go without saying must have escaped feminine attention. We put our business Into a pigeon hole and declare that procrastination Is the thief of time. It Is Not What We Say But what Hood's Sarsaparilla does thaf tells the story. The great volume of evi dence in the form of unpurchased, olun tary testimonials prove beyond doubt that Saraa-parilla J-Jood's Cures Sme to n Hoodfl Hood' Pill cure habitual noiiallpallon. N. N. V, No. SeO-t7. York, Neb. UMIKN WMTINO TO ADVKKT1MKKH I pica ay ro saw trie aaveruaeneut In this paper. The front breadths are laid in six pleats and tho tiny sleeves are par tially covered with frills of thread lace. The strings commence at the sides and tio in Iwck, and tho gathered skin part i-i icwoJ to tho top or bodice portion wuh two rows of gatnors at tho waist. Garments which fu n sh protection for the littlo one's dresses and which aie at tho same time drossy and becoming and scarce enough. This model seems to posse-s all these qualities, and. of course, it can be tranflno-ed info coarse stuff without i n g muen oi any o mem. In the next to U ustrutions bl used drosses are shown, ana this might at first tnought bo taken to moan that the current rao for 1 louse waists, which ou d luundut.! ouryounfr women did It not carry them h.gh on it-, crest to Increased daintiness, had reached th children. But tlie latter were ever much in blouses, so no charge of aping their elders will hold The first ex ample of these two is a timplo little gown in blue and whito-ttrlod rop. with a white benguline yoke, a:id is suitable for girls from four to six years. The yoke is finl hod with a frill of ecru laco, and 'he tiny skirt is gathered to tne bodice, which han js over Use a blou e, front and back. The dress buttons t ehlnd and has ribbon garniture and u ribbon bolt. The sec ond child's blouse c mes from pink surah and is made with a flttad lining hooking in 1 bck. Thj round ,oko is trade of lace and the lining is cut away. only a narrow band being loft at tho bott rn, ,U which tho straight, ull breadths of tho surah are gathered with a hoiul, as shown, six un-adtna being r quired. The bottom has a draw stri ig or an elastic, and is turned under like tho sailor blouses. The but plice sleeves are made entirely of lace WIOILT DlrrKRINO nt,Ol!T.S. :! ? WITH 0 THOt'OHT VET 0 STV LB. would have for the b iy no laco, frills, insertions, or furbelows. The little gowns are of the finest material and invariably white for both soxes, but here resemblance ceases, according t these philosophers. The little girl's gown is no longer than trie bov's. hang ing almost to the lloor when the child is in nurse's a ms. It may tie made short-sleevedand low-necked, a fashion which, in spite of the frantic appeals of physicians and reionab:e-minded folk, is coming back. It may be laoe trimracd. real lace always in the finest nyssibln mesh and narrowest width, un til tho little maid is sit months old or so, when the lace may be wider, but no leia fine. The lit tie dret-ses are daintily made in conformity, to a slight degree, to the prevailing fashion for marnmi. Fluliy frills extend frr.in tiny shouldor to shoulder acr sh front and back, each frill la e edged. The short sleeves are sometimes puffs nearly as big as tho 1. Hie maid s hea i, and now and t.ien the frock is cut off the shoul le -s in true 18 to style. Certainly the satin skin seems too pretty to cover up though the crusty old doctor will say: "Better cover it up with clothes tha i with the cold ground: But wuat taste have doctors! If her mother soelocti, her baby boy will be dres ed in much the same fa-hion; indeed, those who would dis tinguish tho sex of the child in arms in the mentioned ways are very much in the minority. By the time the child is in short dresses the face will be like y to tell the tale, and if it does not, then i-i tio e en ugh to consider the garb in this respect. i"o badge is necessary for the youngster of the fourth picture, for the coming man is apparent in the bright face. Ills dreis is made of fine white nainsook and trimmed with Swiss embroidery. The full sirt is perfectly pluin and at tached to the waist, and the litt'e and are finished by a twisted arrange . . t l L. - .. I. I nn I11UDL OI BUIBkU aUIOBB Ilia diiuiiuoi. while the standing collar consists of lace with narrow pink rlbbjns run through It, In the same picture there appears one of the prettiest of the blouse mod els which this summer has brought forth in ptofusion, and its detailed de scription It not out of place In this 1Mb) DAKIN6 POWDER Admitted to be the finest prep aration of the kind in the mar ket. Makes the best and most wholesome bread, cake, and fciscuit. A $ hundred thousand unsolicited testimo- nials to this effect are received annually by its manufacturers. Its sale is greater g than that of all other baking powders X combined. ABSOLUTELY PURE. 9 ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO.. 106 WALL ST., NEW-YORK. ery Showy. Two women were buying a hat. Said one of them in despair, "I do wish I could get something to wear on my head that would be showy and yet not cost a fortune." "(Jet a few gray hairs," suggested tbe other woman. "They are the most showy things I know of. They stand farther out and can be seen a greater distance off than anything you can purchase by way of ornament. Just ask anybody who has a few and tries to Hide them. Philadelphia Times. Till ' Saiil to Ke Good. Shell twenty-four walnuts; divide thern into halves. Take one pound of prunes, soak over night, and remove the stones. Save the water in which they have been soaked, to which add one cup of sugar. Boil for a moment and skim. Then and the walnuts and prunes. Cover and stand on the back part of the stove for at least thirty minutes, until the syrup is thick and dark, the prunes tender, and the wal nuts soft. Serve cold as you would any other preserve. Great Grief anil llrad Hrutvin;. Among the ancients shaving the head was a very common mode of ex pressing great grici ui buiiuw. oww- j times it was aone Dy tne priest or some other religious functionary form ally cutting off the hair, sometimes by violently plucking it out by the roots. In extreme cases among men the beard as well as the hair was either cut off or plucked out. The idea seems to have been that mourners should divest them selves of that which under ordinary circumstances was considered most beautiful, ornamental and becomiug. Lucian (and he Is not the only one of the ancient writers oy any means who irives Doints on this queer mourning custom) says that the Egyptians ex-1 chart, eacn wonia pieaa ior me otner prt ed their intense sorrow by cutting j to feel for No. lo or No. 3 or Xo. 4. off tie hair upon the death of their god j The spendthrift was gratified to learn An and that the Svrians acted in the j that he was posessed of a well develop. same manner at the death of Adonis. I ed bump of acquisitiveness and secret-j Olvmniodorus remaiks concerning iveness, with a tendency to hoardiajfj Job 1. 20. that the ancients, among ! . nother, bold as a whom long hair was regarded as an or- The Wonders or Ph rmolog-y. There is a peculiar fascination about the science of pbranology which it is hard to withstand, as whs evinced by an exhibition which three hard headed young newspaper men made of them selves on Eighth street Saturday while gazing at a chart displayed by a local phrenologist. After gazing for a few seconds at the many bumps, which are duly lettered and numbered, three hats went off three heads and three hands simultaneously touched the spot on each head where the most desired qual ity should be found. The result was disappointing; the young men had no faith in their ability to discover their own powers, for with an eye on the IK VBITI LAVS ANO 11 A M HCHO. bodice Is beitod in at the waist with a band of embroidery, tho yoke lieing of tho same. Full nulled sleeves reach to the elbow and are finished off with a ban 1 of embroidery and a small frill of laco. Wtiite socks and black slippers with vylvet lO-iettos complete his dair.ty rig. Baby's dross No. 2, which the last picture show , is in white lawn, and a pretty finish for it, and one which w uld lend a torn h of femininity, would lie little bows of blue ribbon to fasten the straps where they join the waist bwk and front, and rosottos of the same at shoulders and wrists. Its waist is laid in lino p;oats back and front and line lawn straps edpod with narrow Hamburg pa s over tho shoul ders. Tho skirt is entirely of white Hamburg and is gathured on to tho waist. Narrow Hamburg edges the full sleeves. A now and much improved way to prove that you really belong to an old family is to dress your baby in the identka1 clothes that his g rout-great-grandmothor or father wore when suid grand-paront was a mere child. Such littlo gowns are eura to be marvels of hand needlework and exquisite weave and of a de icale old white. It is whl.perel that layettes of this style can l)e purchased at a c st so enormous that their coming from some really old familv Is thereby assured. It seens Incredible that any one would sell the littlo drosses woi ri by some way back relative; even a spinster would, one would suppose, retain such things. These outfits may be genuine, but rumors of New England manufacturers of antiques of allsorts are sometimes heard, and 'tis but natural to suspect in these days. Oopyriaht, lis. nament, cut it off in times of mourn ing, but that those who commonly wore it short suffered it upon such occasions to grow long. St. Louis Republic. "I hear Bilker has lost his job. Won der f he's struck anything since?" "Er yes: all of his friends and two-thirds of his cquaintance8." Buffalo Courier. lion, found that while he was wanting in courage his) faculty of caution was developed to thai ex-reme, while the third, who could! well be described as "foxy" in the pur suit of his profession, learned by his cranial bumps that he was ingenuous to a fault, "childlike and bland" being the only way to express It. Philadel phia I iquirer. Invalids- no matter what their ailment are benefitted by the pure air and healing waters of Hot Springs, S. D. Rheumatism, neuralgia, dropsy, dyspepsia, eczema, liver, blood and kidney complaints are only a few of the diseases that are there successfully treated. Beautifully illustrated folder free on request. Ask the Local Ticket Agent for a copy, or write to J. FRANCIS, Gen'I Pass'r and Ticket Agent, Burlvigton Route, Omaha, Neb. Nebraska Legislative Hand Boor and Manual lOOQ . 1X717 have a limited number of these books in our possession, an " " them at th extremely Low Price of $1.48 postpaid. iruiC work contains information peculiarly valuable to anyone wishing to Slid become acquainted with in attars concerning the state and state gorj ernments. It also contains the Declaration of Independence, th Constitution of the United Btaies, tbe Constitution of the State of Nebriwka, Statutory Provisions, Manual of Parliamentary Practice; eic, etc address in the United States on receipt of the NEBRASKA HEW8PAPEE UNION, Tork, Hebraika SENT pr?psii,i any ' price, $1.40. '. " " "'" '.' ' " ' """"'"-- " - mm.j, , i ,., ..nil,, ,u ,, .. wmm ,. .j, K, - . i ii iumwj'i.