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About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (May 21, 1896)
'v THE SIOII COUNTY JOURNAL. L J. SIMMONe. HARRISON', NEBRASKA. An English variety actress has had a diamond set In a tooth. ' Her bright mile haumi me stilL" On of the first reform Introduce in Formosa by the Japanese is a system of free schools. The Japs have studied modern civilization to sonie purpoee. Dr rhan the at1eodar-e of a azi uieuMiivtiie aud glorious IM'Aht day at the World Fair. It 1 true. tttat the Htiwns of Atlanta 1d utak'ng up the llar e of their exj-eniu- and re ceipt Bud that the ex!o:tiou ha cost them etout f-ti.(H. Hut The benefita JILTED THE SPINSTER. " Vorigti the ttogu lb ireon'i toottr- Cupid ia playing strange pranks with an aged trio in an ocwure little village in Androscoggin Couuty. up in Maine. Mrs. Rallington Booth, of the new American Salvation army, has devised a more attractive bonnet for her as sistants, a stroke of subtlety that may well cause dismay at the English headquarters. Mr. Ab Hamid of Constantinople kindly explains that "the Armenians are by nature a restlct-s people." But It will be admitted that Ab. himself has been working overtime in an earn est endeavor to make them "restful." Gladstone says that Che solution of the Arm en-la 11 problem "rests with the Afandg-h-ty." but It may lie douUed if Great Britain can thus shift the reion slfafUty for a situation that exists by her permission and practical appropal. Brazil does not want to arbitrate the dispute about Trinidad. There Is nothing In this to be wondered at. When a citizen is held up by a footpad he would resent a proposition to arbi trate. To make arbitration successful there must be at least the shadow of Justice on each side of the question. anrniing to the city in other ways are. white-haired bridegroom is not to be measured in terms of money. P"ing an uncomfortable boncytuoon. In one way the exposition fully acb!v- haunted by a vindictive splutter. He ed its pun.t. It drew put.lic artea-l ' OD tue wealthiest citizen of tfon from ail parts of the North to the ,ue ,,,w "n- auJ be old tw'd had act her poHtabtlities of adranrageous cotmner-;'aP for ljlin la earnest, and It was not cial relations with the Sourh and with! willow effect, either, if the neighU.ra the Soutliern metropolis. It was the j nH,y he believed, for ft is said that he miiM of awakening a frieti.llier tr-l-'Bxe her m a little en-ouragetiient. The bicycle manufacturers are ex pecting to sell about 80,0u0 of those vehicular contrivances this year, the aggregate cost of which to the purchas er! will be not lews than J50,(Ki,(KiO. The rapidity with which the wheel has gained popularity Is one of the striking facta of current history, and It has manifestly come to stay. While 102 American vessels were con structed lu 1SU5 for the ocean coast trade, sixty-five vessels were construct ed for the hike trade. The smaller number of lake vessels, however, is offset by the greater average tonnage. Not a single sea-going vessel was built of the size and capacity of a dozen large ing and an appreciation of the fact that the interests involved air mutual. In advertising alone the exposition ha re paid its com am! Its benefits to Atlanta and the Soiith are likely to lie felt in the commercial development of Che country for a numtT of years. The people of Atlanta will please accept weil-deserv ed congratulations from the Northern city which has leen foremost in an swering her Invitation and giving ma terial aid to her enterprise. An English Jury has Inflicted a nun- ishment of $tjo,o00 upon Dr. Playfair tor a betrayal of professional confi dence to his own family and. through them practically, to as large a portion of society as might be interested In a scundal apirarently of his own creation. To its credit, the London press gener ally approves the finding. To its shame, the medical profession of Loudon fur nished approvers of Dr. riayfair's per fldy. Ioubtles manv of the i.hvsi. clans called by the practitioner In his dcfeiise feared that, if they were not abettor after the fact, Dr. I'layfalr. But when the.wedding finally did take place she was not the bride. He mar ried another woman. Hence this ule of haunting spinster. Let not t.';e aie senee of rhe names for a uiouieut cast a question upon the veracity of th tory, for rt W the talk of the town. No sooner wa the marriage over thau the deserted spitister began her eternal vigiL She wart eil in by standing acrost the street from the borne of the newly married pair aud staring fixedly at the (windows at all hours of the da v. Her dally promenades akto were confined in variably to that locality. Whenever the liUMtuid aud wife tooS a strotl she Immediately espied them from her watch tower, put on her old fashioned bonnet and became their ver itable shadow, dodging their footwtcps wherever rhey went. The village so.ni woke up to the strange srate of affairs, ana we jutiicrou ppx-ewiiou was seen dally by a choice selection of town guwslp who stood on the street vomers aud gazel at ttie mournful trio. The haunting sjrinster kcjrt up an un broken silence, but this was far more expressive aud tantalizing to'the pur- !1 UJYz. 1- Irovided he won at the lr. would 1 able to cripple or destroy their profes-1 tl,an uu.v amount of abuse could sional pnwpecta. A more disgraceful Incident has ncrt been found lu prof sional life In recent years than the con currence of a number of these delin queutsin ethics, who declared that Day fair ws Justified in denouncing a i tient as Immoral on presumptive evt dence procured In his private relation- ship as consulting specialist. Another Instance of recent occurrence present! a case less Infamous, but not without perfidy, that of ex-Editor Oust, who, after his dismissal by Mr. Astor, parad ed In the Ixindon Times shamelessly over his own signature matters of which he acquired knowledge only in his confidential relationship to an em ployer. The London Times, which ap proves the finding in the I'layfalr case, was unconscious that In the case of Inko rtiiimj a rWi .......... ., 9 .i lakes and rivers i no- i,..i.i- .. I Cugt so far as circumstance,, the coastwise commerce on the Atlan tic. Mr. Rnd. Kip. the other day refused the New York World's offer of $1,000 ftor 1,000 words on the subject, "V(hr the United States Could Not Conquer Great Britain." Hl reason was that he could nit write such an article with out disclosing Important faoss pertain ing to Great Britain's military and nTl atrengti), and on that topic no Brittafa subject had any Information for aale. Mr. Bud. Kip. may be a trifle iy on modesty, but Ills pu-triotlwni Sa above reproach. '- - - L Touching what are called "the ameni ties of war," Archibald Forbes remarks In hla recent book that much that is aid upon the subject is mere humbug. The object of military operations, he points out, Is to deal as bard blows against the opposing army as possible, and then to cause so much suffering to the Inhabitants of a country that they will long for peace. "War Is bell," Sherman once declared; and Sheridan id: "Nothing should be left to the people but eyes to lament" Our case against Turkey Is an excel lent one, and the demand for the in demnity for damage to American mis sion should be pressed with terror. Nothing In the way of money due can be got In Turkey nowaday without pressing the suit in a manner which would be thought extraordinary in ev ery other country. The money is not of so much consequence a It 1 to snow the wicked Bui tan, who ought to be ashamed of himself for allowing the Armenian to be even maltreated when be has a strain of Armenian blood in his own reins, that he can be reached and made to pay up. It may be con tMered certain that America will achieve her desire without resorting to th use of big ship and guns, a the English do when they wish to collect. permitted, an disgracefully an abettor of professional turpitude as the time serving doctors who unsuccessfully sought to shield Tlayfair in a position of unparalleled baseness It is prob able that if Astor had brought an ac tion against Cust a Jury would have found for him, aa another has found against Dr. I'layfalr. It has been fie queutly shown that the standard of honor of the common people is a higher one than that prevalent among what are conventionally called the higher, but what In truth are the lower, "classes." If Playfair le hereafter le reft of patients, having sworn that he was in no way.bound to respect t!ie sanctity of professional communica tions except by the measure of his own caprice, the new employers of Ed'tor Cust ought to be cautious how f:ir they trust him with suggestions they will not be willing to have posted in the col umns of their most conspicuous and least esteemed contemporaries. The lockout of garment maker In New York City ha failed. The boaaea, who are the sweaters, hare backed down and have acceded again to the terms of the union. Last summer the worker In this line waged a bitter and successful fight against sweat-shop conditions. At she close of that strike the garment worker were guaranteed the abolition of the obnoxioua sweating ystem and the establishment of a week-work system, with a ten-hour day ind a minimum scale. So little faith bad the workers In their bosses that the latter were required to give bonds for the carrying out of the agreement Notwithstanding all this, however, when the dull season came In Decem ber the contractor reopened the fight locked oat the men and declared they would not hire member of the union. Public sentiment and the press of New Vork was quite generally with the union. The victory of the workers is gratifying, because It to another teil Ing blow agalnat the sweating aysteas, and because it was a fight by labor to compel the faithful carrying out of th tens of a contract. , fwpst 9t AOanta do right to stiai CM stair esyasMsa, wttcb came b s!aoailMjBa4ay-:iW(l, has t .!. U terra that the gate t hftre aaaotmtsd to (ess than ? aad Cat th tots paid attend ' J&JX, or not many 9 m mmv tiiJei Omitted Two Stanzaa. Gray, the poet, actually omrnnd two four-line stanzas from the "Elegy." According to Mason, the stanzas were omrtted by the poet (Jut before the Bprtaph), because "he thought it wo too long a parent heats." Of the first stanza James Kuaeell Lowell affirmed that Gray might run bis pen through this, but he could not obliterate It from rhe memory of men. Surely Wads worth hlmnelf," continued the Ameri can critic, "never achieved a simpHcity of language so pathetic In suggestion, so musical In movement, aa this." The two verses are as follows: There wsttered aft, the earliest of a year By hands unseen are showers of tiolets found; The redbreast love to buiW and wirbl there; And little footsteps lightly print the g round. Ilhn nave we seen the greenwood sid along While o'er (he beat we Wed, our labor done, Oft the wood I ark piped her farewell song, With wistful eyes pursue the setting sun. Boand to Help. Cardinal Bonaparte, who died recent ly, wu a grandson of Lucien Bona parte. He wa a very charitable man. During one of hi lllnesaes a servant came to him and said that a poor per son at the door begged for aim. "Give him what money you will find In my parse," said the cardinal. "There I no money, eminence." "Well, then, give blm a stiver spoon." "The silver spoons are all given away. , We bar nothing left bat pewtf spoon." "Well, bring blm In asst fve Mm a good meaL" '- Ike Is Disappointed. The iMortntt o the life of the new Duchess of Hafi&rough for her hus band' benefit baa bad to be abandoned, Name of "Cripple Creek." A magazine writer say that Cripple Creek got It name from a trio of pros. Hectors who hsnoened in itnn nn tK. I . i. . tukkHjA.! JIM lJ 1 . v ' ' ' ' ' ' " Z ' " uiuivuraeB in ian fMokn of tne treatn because their mule way. bit uyce isocaworin, wno went, to Rome on behalf of the syndicate of nave lteeu. So HiU wiu!i'r-Kiok of genuine flenli and bld sooti had the whole vllluge lu an uproar. The h:i;i pi u etc of the honeymoon was tram formed in Hhort order to misery. Sunday, however, was her particu larly busy day. Then it was that she played her nniter trump, rig-ht lu the face of the entire chun-hgug public, too, and rlat whs what seemed to please her the most. She always cts out very early, so as to be sure to catch rhe victims before they n-tich tin church gate. When they make tlieii appearance she drojw into place Ju; behind them and follows thetn directly into the meeting house. As soon us they rake a seat she takes her position In the very next pew In front of them. No sooner does she take her seat than she draws from the recesses of her clothing a photograph a likeness ( tne unhappy man who sits behind het with his bride. Then the shows begins, i Neither the spinxter, the ssar actor In the little melodrama nor any others In Che congregation jmy any attention to the sermon. The little comedy in tht runic i-ruier pew is tne sole attraction. All eyes are turned In that direction. and she idays to an appreciative au aience while the weary couple in th next pew back writhe and squirm 1e delicious agony She holds up the photograph so that the bride can see rt, too, as well as the groom. Lifting it to her lips every now and then, she kJse H fervently before the gaze of the entire congregauiou while a tear rolls down the cheek of th bride, and tiie groom turns his head ir, disgust at this token of affection. Whenever the haunted meets bit shadow in the treet face to face she al ways greets him with: "tlello, Benny dear! How are yot; this morning, love?" Retaliation came recently. The haunt lng spiwiter awoke one morning no) long ago to find that the front of bet bouse bad bee n completeiy daubed wltl red paint during the nlgbt. The brU liaot fluid had evidently been applied with a squlrtgun. The house wa b perfect sight. But even in this dlletu ma, the persistent spinster turned tin tables on them all. She wouldn't remove the unslghtlt decoration. Day after day It reuialnej an eyesore to the residents of the street They begged her to repaint the bouse but from ridgeftole to cellar the stair remained, while In one window glare 3 a pair of blood-red lace curtain, gnaaniy relic or the oW maid' punish ment Sbe positively refused to toucl the red paint. "I want folk to know what fine nelgl bora I have," sbe replied. Not until she had thoroughly shame whoever perpetrated rhe Joke did slit finally consent do have the houst painted. . L - . . . .. oui me uniorxunflTe om couple art still haunted by the persistent white- haired spinster, and It is getting to b an old story In the town now, although the ouUtide world has not heard of thf old-maid spook and her revenge. New lork Press. 1 Illinois Farmers for i'tuit i.'oadn. A KM EltS of Illi nois have been quick to resent the insinuation that they are not pule 1 lie-spirited citizens , lu the matter of good roads. When ' ever a fanners' in stitute or conven tion Is held the question of roads is Introduced aud the old. old story of poor highways aud bad roads In Il linois Is told again. The bicycle riders and good-roads advocates in large towns and cities declare that the farm er! are not enterprising and are afraid to spend money for public improve ments, forgetting that road -building In and around large centers of population aud road-building In agricultural dis tricts are propositions of w idely varied Character. The farmers say that they want good. solid, hard-surfaced roads; they declare that with Improved menus of intercom munication their material Interests w ill be licttered In every way. but that the expense to the Individual taxpayer will lie entirely out of proportion to the l-n-eflts derived. For this reason they Hike the pnsi lon that the State at large ghould build the main thoroughfares mid that the feeders and connecting n.ads should be built by townships and counties. The I'nlted States department of agri culture has taken up the nmtters of "farmers' roads," arid Itov Stone, au engineer of the depart mei:t. believes that farmers can build good roads without Impoverishing themselves. On this subject Engineer Stone said: "In the first place, the road that will lest suit the needs of the fanner mit not lie too costly; In the second place, it must be of the very licst kind, for the farmer should lie able to do bin heavy hauling over It when his fields are too wet to work and his tennis are free. The road that would seem to fill the farmer's needs, all things consid ered, Is a solid, well-ledded stone road, so narrow as to 1 only a single track, but having an earth track alongside. "A fine, dry smooth dirt track Is the perfection of roads; it Is easy on the and the other fias a shoulder ot earth A AAAASSi AAss uZVi:;,- Hebraska Notes section of farmer's combination road, HP V V V W WW suitable for wet soils or springy tilaccs, ' e- ; . jr7.- having an underdraiti beneath ihe stone road. The space above the drain tile Is filled with any cheap, coarse material to within six Inches of the surfa-e- The! tile is covered with straw to keep the earth from washing into the Joints. I Field stone, common gravel, sand orj burnt clay will serve as filling. Th's should I well rolled and the road fin ished with a laver of tie st broken stone or gravel obtainable, also well; rolled, or better still, with two l.tyewl of three Inches each rolled separately. The next three sections show simple i methods of constructing combination roads where the underlying will Is naturally twirous. ;1896 MAY. 1896 I. M. I. w. t. r. S. I 2 3456789 IO II 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 jru 25 26 27 28 29 30 The Republican river ii running bank full and the channel est are going up tr-am. The ground under! ( hailev Watkini of Venango jumped the macadam should lie well rolled ami out 0( B wagon, diehs-aling his ankle "impacted and all soft plan-s excav.it- j wnen , jt. ed and filled with ckh1 material, rwoi tracks will require a roadted alKUit twenty-one feet wide aud three tracks one alxiut twenty-seven feet wide. The two bottom cross-sections in the Illustration are those of the farm roads built on the farm of the late Judge Ca toii, of Chicago. Mr. Stone said that while the "Caton" road was man" lor farm use It will serve equally well for the lesser public roads of the uclghlsir-hood. The roadlied is made by plowing two furrows sixteen Inches wide nnd hIkmiI twelve Inches deep under w lint fire to le the wheel tracks, turning the ear.h Inward, and two more for ditches, slso turned Inward, which results in a slUIit raising of the lied; the inner furrows are then filled with field stones or coarse gravel and a light coating of fine gravel is spread over the whole. This plan gives a very solid l-d of material under the wheels and a sun clemy elsewhere, and. If occasional side outlets are provided, the furrows are quite sufficient as blind drains. For public roads, occasional passing places need to Ik- provided for the mcei Ing of loaded wagons; elsewhere n width of eleven feet between the ditch es would tie sufficient for ordinary light travel. Such a road uses the minimum of ma terial with the maximum of efficiency, and. having a great depth of Hone Just where it Is needed, should bear the heaviest loads without Injury and in quire only an occasional resnrfaci'i to last indefinitely. The a mount of material required Is less than Ski cubic yards per mile. Charles E. A shburner Jr., a civil en gineer who has had w ide experience In building and maintaining public roads, gives the following advice; 'The old saying, 'A stitch In time saves nine,' never applied more appro priately to anything than It does to ile maintenance of a macadam road. In spect your roads constantly and -t,re-; fully; never allow the smallest hole 10 remain, but use the pick to loosen the surface as one forms and then carefi Ma Sfcf-iv t A ME KLKXHl.ia; COl'NTY 1 NOHTH CAROLINA) KOAD. Much Id Little. It does not take many volumes to hold -the really great thing! 'that hav been written In all ages, and a New York firm Is planning to put the best part of It Into a aeries of twenty-fire volumes, with the title, "A Library ot the World s Best literature." Charlen Dudley Warner will be editor, and will be assisted by Henry Thsnston Peck. Hamilton W. MiUe, W. D. Howeils. Prof. Charles Eliot Norton, sod otbert of high ability, so the work promise to be of value. London offices concerned In the insur ance to make an examination of the candidate, made a satisfactory report, and as It was practically a case of In suring the Ductless' Ife against that of her father, no dlfflcnhtes arose on that score. The difficult! e were those of onMsMom and red tape. A boy has) the best dog la town, a man the best watch. had gone lame. They discovered signs of gold and decided to stay a while. While putting up a shanty one of the men fell from the roof and struck on the dog which they had with them, breaking III own arm and the leg of the ranlne. This made three cripples in camp hence the name. Minnie "Chollle Ardup writes to me that tils love I more than he can ex press." Mamie "Why doesn't lie send it collect" Indianapolis Journal horses' feet and legs, easy on vehicles and free from noise and Jar. It hold snow better than gravel or stone aud requires less snow to make sleighing. and where such a roed has a stone road alongside to take the travel in wet weather It will suffer hardly any appre ciable wear. "The atone road, on the other hand, wear by the grinding of the wheats and the chipping of the horse' calk dry weather more than In wet. If It can be saved this wear for an average of six month In each year, so much win be clear gain. The question raised regardlns this method of construction are: Can the Junctions of the earth and stone sec tions of the road be kept even so a not to nave a jog in passing from one to the other, snd can the meeting and '3alBjBj ooMBiaATioa dirt Attn sto roads. psssing of loaded teams be provided for?" Mr. Stone cited the condition of tlw Canandaigua (S. Y.) road a evidence Ibat there I no sign of division between the earth and stone, and added that those who use these roads say that no difficulty Is found in the passing r.f teams, since practically no two teams ever turn out st exactly the same spot, and do rutting of the earth road occurs. In the Illustration showing cross sec tion of combination stone and earth roads, the two upper section Indies is the method of msktng a Canandaigua road; one has a dirt track on each 1dn, ly fill with chips one-half Inch In dm 111 eter, or even smaller, of the same ma tenai or which the road Is built, nn l roll. In filling, he careful not to change a hole Into a hillock, which would even tually cause two holes, one on each side. Equal attention should le paid uiDiuiBiuiuii iiiorougn araiuage, m that the water will run off without sat urating the edges of the road. When the road surface at last becomes worn out, pick It thoroughly (picking by the steam roller is by far the most eco nomical), then apply stone, and pro ceed as in the original construction. "Koads now In my charge, built four year ago of Virginia gray granite de jecting such as contained much n:leu) were only seven Inches thick. They have been constantly under heavy traffic of the worst kind, namely, country teams which drive one behind the other In the center of the road, yet not 1 cent ha been spent In repair, and they are as tree rrom boles as the day they were constructed. They are worn, however, a the fine granite dust taken from the gutters w ill prove, but the wear has been denudation simply, owing to the fact that they were constructs uiton a roadbed of uniform hard smoothness, and all material used was uniformly tough." In Mecklenburg County. North Caro- Una, the systematic Improvement ,.r roads ha been In progress for nenrly fifteen years. The general plin adoi.t- ed wa to start at the city limits of the county seat and to grade and macadam all public roads from this point out toward the township aud the coumy limns, inese roads have a width of rorty feet for the first two mile from the city limit and beyond this jxiiut a width of thirty-six feet. , The average cost of these rem da In. eluding the macadamizing nnd grad ug. Is about 12.000 a mile. rii efli- clency of the road I shown by the Illustration, copied from a Photoarnnh. The wagon loaded with twelv talcs of cotton weigh 6,000 pounda, and each of the other three wagon Is loaded with a cord of wood. Love and a cat have nine Hv A Modern Wooodman camp hat been organized at Ames, with nineteen char ter members, A local Nebraska club baa leen or ganized at Sidney. It has a flourishing membership. jick of rain lust year destroyed more than half the shade trees at the Sidney military poot. Thomas Rogers of Hodge county had a hemorrh? ge of the stomach that near ly proved fatal. Six men have ha. I the courage to re monstrate atrainst issuing a eaioon li cense at K.Ik Creek. One tboucand four hundred names are on the pay roll at Cudahay'i pack ing house this month. Red Cloud will have to tough it through for the next twelve months with only two saloons. It ia intimated that the North Platte valley people are poon to hear tome cheering railroad newB. The Ainswortli Star-Journal has changed bands. J. K. B. Good retires in favor of J. 0. Berkley. E'wood, the capital seat of Gosper county, has lour hundred inhabitant. and nary a meat market. The Hardy council has placed liquor license so high that no one can engage in Ihe business without losing money. It is "hurrying" the tcho d trustees of Harvard to carve clown expense to the level of the income derived from taxation. W. I). Frymire of Fustia will answer in district court to the very serious charge of selling pale beer without first procuring a license. The South Omaha Tribune offers to bet ten to one that the pig city will have its new postoflice be'ore Omaha is b!esed w ith a union depot. Ileshler, the metropolis of vies'crn Thayer county, feel! pretty well, thank you. She is out of debt and has two hundred dollars in the treasury. People attempting to leave Ileuel county without paying their taxes are followed by the eherilT with a dietresa warrant and "everything goes." The cost for witnesses in the William Henry murder case foots up a ehade aliove $1,225, and the murderer gets off with a sentence of only ten year. William Rons -landed in Fremont a month ago from South Dakota, in a ick and destitute condition. He was lent to the poor farm, where he died last week. The Free Methodist have pitched ten at Grand Island and are waging a tigorou warfare against all manner of secret societies, which they claim sre the works of the devil. All paat due subscriptions to the Chappel RegiBter not fixed up by July 1, win ve collected by an attorney at law, who has been instructed to go Into court for relief if necessary. A small child of W, H. Menkin of Arlington found accesa to an open can ol concentrated lye. Ha mouth, lips and finger were badly corroded, but not enouifh was swallowed to causa serious result. Joseph Van Vanlin of Nelson, while trying to break a coll, waa thrown to the ground with considerable force, landing on the back ol hi head. He wa unconseiou lor several hours, but the doctor say he will recover. The thirst for beer at Elm wood can not be legitimately Managed unless a few church members can be induced to sign the petition lor a taloon. At present the are standing, out, and the bootlegger are preparing for business. I wo fellow residing in North fiend wl quite a scran the other evening One uied a club and the other a pitch fork, and the reaull ia, one i wearing u m a anng irom bavins the tines of the pitchfork run through his arm. No arrests 1. ivf tiwn ma, la A Banner county fiend noiaonml cow belonging to one of Lis neighbors oy leeuing ner salt seasoned with itrychniae. If his identity can be es tablished beyond a doubt, he will be hanged to prevent further mischief. By the breaking of the hand la of . handcar at Farnatn Pat O'Brien, a section man, wa thrown on the track t of the car and then ilruH under it with its load of eight or tea men. The cog wheel smashed of the man' rib and bruised him considerably, One of the greatest hindrance, tay the North Piatt Record, to luccessful lawn cultivation in this city ia dande lion. They spring up in the for peri of the season where none bad grown the year before, and spread with eiaper ting rapidity. Anyone who will de vis a good scheme to get rid of them. iMily can sell hi knowledge at a good round cub price. A Bearer City man who baa lived ia Furnas eosnty seventeen yean visited Arapahoe for the first time hut weak.