Nebraska herald. (Plattsmouth, N.T. [Neb.]) 1865-1882, September 05, 1878, Image 4
AK3 RADICAL CURE For CATARRH FBTAJTTLY r15rret and rfwmanantly cora Ufa loathaomo dlnai la ul lu varying ataa-ea. 16 plant, hcrts aud bark la their vaaeotfal firm. frro era uio luowicf iqu a;iU7 proptrueff Oi from try norons contamination, nua in this ro pct dLTTnra frou rv.-ry o'.ur known remedy. Ii 00 har i. yr it nM found Its way from tlx Atlantis o tba 1 Mctfdconst, and wberever knows baa Da eon U)9 at&ndrl remedy lr the treatment of Cv tan b. (he proprietors hara beea waited upon by entleMi of national renotudon vbo beea t -red by tbu remedy, and who rrvn.at conalJer abla espM aud praonal tronbla, apraad th cood Be tttrortrboat the rlrrlea In wblcn thry Sioa When jror hear a wcelUiv gentleman of lo tolllreara anI rrflr,cnin aay, I on my Ufa to EatiXurd'a Radical Care," you may faal aaar4 Ctiat St la an artiola cf arrest valoa. and worfliy to bartwe4aaKig tbaalaadard luaulcaiapectflcs cf ue dor. fVBE benefit X dertTO from Ita daily as U to mo JL tnvrrluuhu. iLiXBY WELLS, or Wrixa. Txnoo Co. IT baa enrei tna afiar twelTa year of nalntar mptd aoTer'ir. , OSO. W. UwL'GHTOM. WaX-THa. lUaS. IyCtT-CXED trs dirarUona to tba letter and un bappy tn aa t hiiT bad a permaoant care. i. W. M. D.. 11 taenia. Iowa. SHAYK i e"".u manned It to qnlta a d amber ef my frl.iid. ell of wbom hava expreaaed to ma fir Mpti aailmat of li Yalaa aad good affecc arUatbtui- WM. HOTTgy. 'iX Vnrz 6r BT. Loin a. ' A HI1'! tulnir Two bottiva I fin J mvlf perma- j jl r- mTy curra. t liata (loca reeonnaamlrd POD4 fciUfclrrd bottlea "ritu I bo r . . iVjd. AiMisTnoyu. ' - U4 Haciiui Ail. createal suo- 1S9 Bj.SISO ATK-, EoiTOJf. iara anid PixroD'i TUmcai. Cm for near'.v una ir Bad ran aar raodldlT that 9 oare? ao'.d alioilaJ preparation that faTatasa culTerul eat laXacUoo. VTa cava jot Uiltam of tas Ant cejpplair.t. e. 1. i AID AVIS & CO., TVAJnrOTojr, It3. fVliK ewe everted to ray caae T y P a rroBi'a ft r 1. CaL CrF.a to rjmc-'itaxe Ttrat it 9eeiad (otboao ario bad an7t.-red wltbojt relief from any of toe vasal rmsi 'ttint It could not ba trae. 1 tbarefura mie a3da.lt to It beiore Batii J. 1 Aomaa, Faq, Jnn'irn of the Pea'a. Boaton. GZLHQaY. bU.SHOrjL. Bsoaoirr, BoaTCy. Pcb rrk; re cf B. Irene's Kapica t. Ctrei con fctloa Dr. 8ACforls improved IauHi:afrlnbe, and full tLiertiors f- r It uae la all eaaea. FTlca. $1 0). Toraaieby all wboleaola and retail dmrsiata and tfealera tbronbont laa United Statea and Canadaa. VTt.EKS ( OTTER, Ceueral Asabta and Wnola ala iru;git. ot jo, ataaa. VOLTAIC PLASTER An E2cctro-CXTSiiTe Eattrw ormVbLoetJ wltb a hlghir Medimtl gtrraartbraing flaater, foiTalno; the beat PlJtaterfor pain, aad scIacb in tbe World of Madiolne. A wrmrmTOTTTTTTgn. GrUirmrn, I aer.t fsr oa of COLLIT9 VOI lAJC KLASTFTiS, and It baa b;n of great beneOt lu r Jic:cz a olliniir In ror l-ft a!4n tlat two rhy alciaua pronnnre-l 3'rnrpemer.t of tho Bpleaa, tad ooe prono-'aeodlt at Uvarlen Tntnc. L. A.BI3TZ3. THEY AEETEB BEST. &nv:?mm, Enclosed you will find fS.23. and I Wlnb you oulJ a'u& i.t enotlier doaaa of your COLLIN 6 VOLTAIC X'LASTEHd. By the aboTO r'oo will aee t!rut I cra doaomc'hlnntoln-lpothrrs a aoma a 17 cfco U 1 am not ebls to ba np and aroond. Tbero are a nomber who have tried yonr filaatera wUobadTen octthat nil plaaMra were) goodfariiothinfr.anj now Join with roe thnt they ara tba brt th-y bare ercr tried. I hT arot alonff tala wluter better than I bo before In taree fear. VYUunl I conifi hare beard uf roar plaaters tciure. Vuora, ic, e . LOHETTA M. CU033. Ir1 oc, r." Ccnta. Beearfbl topnllforCOLtTTS'VCLTAIC PLA3 TH le.t you pel aomo wortiilcsa Imitation. Sold by all Wholesale and B .tall IrnirithT ihroQjt.ioat t-e CntteU btatea ao.l Canada, and by Vi Er!i.a O. fOTTtin. ri-ur:lora. Boaton. Maaa. YUT1 11 EalLa For TEN YEARS XCTT1 PILLS liave bsn the recognized lUindard S'auPAll 9Iedlcin in all the Atlantic fct tea From main to llexlco, scarcely a family can be found that doe not use them. It is now pro posed to make their virtues know u in- the WEST, with the certainty that as soon as tested they will be come as popular there as they are at the ITorth and 8oath TUTT'S PILLS!! DO THEY CURE EVERYTHING? NO. They are intended for dis eases that result from malari al Poison and a Deranged Uvsr. nil. TCTT bits dYotM twentyars yrsra to tbe ataejy of the I.lTer ssd the result fan detnonat rated tbnt It rxrrts CTeslff Lnflnrnee over the eystem than an? oih"T ortin of tbe body ; Migration and Attain Ilution of the food on which, a1pBu tlie vitality of the body, is rar fled n tlirvuch it the regular action of the boweltt ilrprndon it, and nhri three fanr'.iono are deranncd, the Heart, the tSraia, th4 Kidnrys, the Skin( iu fact the entire ti sauiiini is affected. SYMPTOMS OF A DISORDERED LIVER, Pull Pain in the Side and Shoulder, loaa of Appetite; Coated Tongne; Coetire Bowels; Sick-headache ; Drowsinetia ; Weight tn the Stomach after eating, with Acidity and Pelchisg up of Wind ; Low Spirits ; Xioaa of Energy ; Unsociability ; and forebodings of Eva. If THESE WARNINGS ARE NEGLECTED, SOON FOLLOWS DYSPEPSIA, BILIOUS FEVER, CHILLS. JAUN DICE, COLIC, NERVOUSNESS. PALPITATION OFTHE HEART, NEURALGIA. KIDNEY DISEASE, CHRONIC DIARRHdA, AND A GENERAL BREAKING DOWN OF THE5YSTEM. HEED TUB WARXUrai TUTT'S PILLS. The first dose produces an cf iW"t which often astonishes tho euftercr. frying a cheerfulness ot mind, and bouyancy of body, to which he was beiore a Strang a: They create an Appetite, Oood JUigrestion, and SOLID FLESH AND HARD MUSCLE. A LOUISANA PLANTER SAYS t "Jdv plantation if In a malarial diatrict. For several years I could cot make half a crop on account of sirknw. I employ one hnndred and fitty hand?, often half of them were sick. I ria swlydiacoora-'ed when 1 began the nee of X ITT'S PlLJLSa 1 used them aa a pre eatrtiou as well aa a enre. Tbe rceolt was marrcliocs ; my laborers became hearty, robust, and banpr, and I have had no farther trouble. With ihw Mils I would not fear to live in tlie Okofonokee swamp. " K. 1UVAL, Batod Sara, La, "BEST PILL IN EXISTENCE." I have need yonr Pills for Dyspepsia, Weak Stomach and Nerroufne;, and un Bay I never had anv thirty to do me eo ranch good in the way of' medicine. They are as trood as yon rep-r-wrtt them. I recommend them aa the Best tit existence, and do ail I can to acquaint Others with their good meritl.', J. W. TltJBKTTS, Dacota. MutK. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS, 25 CENTS. Office, 35 Murray St., New York- LAND.LAND! BEST FARMING LANDS m NEBRASKA FOK SALE BY S. EffiO-.S8L. R.. Great Advantages to Buyers IN 1S77. Ten Tears Credit at 6 per cent Interest. Six rears Credit at 6 per eent Interest, end 0 per cent Viacount. fttrr Liberal Discsauts Far Cash, H!tfii"tt.- en Fare and Freights, auic. Ptculnna tor Improve. FrmpMets J.tnd jrepa. eontalntne foil pnrtle-ntaUi-.via be mailed free to u; pxt ot th aauldor appltcar-ca to UlUtW, XV1B1AH THE HERALD. The Bell ranch in Tolitics. North Carolina proposes to introduce the bell-punch for registering votes at elections. Then the popular song will be: When he receives a vote tbe inspectare Will punch in the presence of the electare, A Pern, check slip for a white votare, A Kep. check slip for a black niKgare, And Ind, check slip fora hold be 1 tare, AH in the presence of the electare. The above is from the Xew York Worl J. To which we beg leave to add the following: And if the head of the electare Should be covered witn wool instead of hair, And votes Republican fair and square, Tbe inspectare shall at once prepare To punch the head of the electare That is covered with wool instead of hair. Philadelphia Bulletin. We have received a copy of An irews Slate Drawing Book, intended for the use of Common Schools. Commencing with the rudimentary lines illustrated in a number of different ways with the definitions of them, and thence proceeding on to the more difficult animal, flower, vase, and finally, heads, and the various features, it seems to take the pupil along iusenBibly, and by defining the various figures and the lines of which they are composed teaches him the foundation of what he i? working with, and in short begins at the begining in a practioal manner. There is scarcely anything which children enjoy the study of so much as drawing, and these books seem to us a most practical way of giving them a few short instructions every day, as a sort of rest to more arduous studies and at the same time acquaint them with at least the rudiments of an accomplishment which is useful in al most every business in after life. They are published by A. II. Andrews & Co. Chicago. The Uses of an Enemy. The Rev. Dr. Deems, in the Sunday Magazine, gives the following ad vice, with the subjoined reasons: Always keep an enemy in hand, a brisk, hearty, active enemy. Remark the uses of an enemy: 1. The having one is proof that you are somebod'. Men who never move, never run against anything; and when a man is thoroughly dead and utterly buried, nothing ever runs against him. 2. An enemy is, to say the least, not partial to you. He will not flatter, lie will not exaggerate your -virtues. Of course, if you have a fault you de sire to know it; when you become aware that you have a fault you desire to correct it. 3. In addition, your enemy keeps oti wide awake. He does not let you bleep at your post. Your hater watch es that you may not sleep. He keeps your faculties on the alrt. He stirs you up when you are napping. Even when he does nothing he will have put you in such a state of mind that you cannot tell what he will do next, and this mental qui rice must be worth something. He is a detect i vo among your friends You need to know who your friends are, and who arc not, and who are your enemies. The last of these three will discriminate the other two. When your ineiny goes to one who is neither friend nor enemy, and as sails you, the indifferent ot:e will have nothing to say or chime in, not becau- e he is your enemy, but because it is so much easier to assent than to oppose, iind especially, than to repute. But yoi r frifiitl will take up cudgels for you on the instant. The next best thing to having a hundred real friends is to have one open cn my. But let i s pray to bede livered from secret foes. Advocate. All Sorts. The London fast young man says !io greatest bass-relief" is clearly .ia.ss' pale ale. Train, a journal of neurology, i3 to He published quarterly by McMillan & Co., of Loudon. The Bagot will case in Dublin is said to have cost 30,000. Notice of appeal has been given. If two omnibuses are racing, never hail the first, unless you want to be run over by the second. The trustees of a Maine village re solved that "the walls of this room be whitewashed green." Never keep your cattle short; few farmers can afford it. If you starve Lhein they will starve you. Dr. Kenealy, in a recent ppeecli in the House of Commons, declared that 'the penny press was the devil's right hand." The hair of a New Or!eaus belle will e bright purple until it recovers from l.er attempt to bleach it from black to yellow. Lawyer Hart was so affected by the icquital of ins client on the charge of .uirder, in Colusa, Cl., that he wept r joy and fainted. A salmon was caught in Scotland with eighty yards of tapeworm, three sixteenths of ;m inch in breadth, in the pyloric portion of the gut. A salmon has been caught in Scot land, the happy possessor of two roes. This freak cf nature will be the means of consigning it to a museum. Khediv, not Khedive, is the correct way of spelling Ismail Pasha's title. Authority Capt. Burton, the traveler, who is intimate with his Highness. The heautiful Pauline Markham'a wardrobe, excepting a blond wig and he tights that she wa3 wearing, were seia d for debt hi a it. Louis theatre. In the Island of Guernsey, one of the t hannt-1 L-lauds, is & Wee camellias So feet broad by 11 feet high. It is said to be the L-rgest in Great Biita n, pos sibly in the world. The leek waa adopted as a Welsh em blem in consequence of a command given by Dewi, who. after a great vic tory uren by Kin? Arthur, ordered tLa In the olden time the Cape of Good Hope was called the Cape of Tempests, And was also known as the Lion of tlie Sea and the Head of Afr.ca. A burglar broke into a store in South Framingbam, Mass., and instantly found himself face to face with a clerk. Both had revolvers, but the clerk was quickest in using his, and the burglar feLL A magnificent loan exhibition or pic ture and works of art is on view at Manchester, England, which for years past has been the great absorber of objeia (Vart offered for sale in that coun try. Two of Bismarck's nieces, witli whom he had quarreled for some reason re ported as futile, were lately applicants at a London agency for situations as governesses. They required the fami lies to be titled, and doubtless demand ed a handsome compensation. According to the tables in the arith metics, four roods make one acre, but we "have known one acher to make one rude. The acher was on his foot, and his friend trampled on it. It was an acher of corn, as it were, and there after the friend was cornered. The following advertisement is taken, word for word, from the North British Advertiser: "Wanted, a place of solitary retirement by a peisou 30 years of age, who wishes to exclude himself from all society and live as a hermit, for any period not exceeding seven years, on suitable terms." Up to the seventeenth century lace dresses were in France restriced by a sumptuary law to royalty. In 1491 a lace dress wa3 presented to Anne de Hretagne, on hermarriasre with Charles VIII., which was valued at a sum equal to-day to $2-j0.000. It was en tirely of point de Venise. There i3 great dancer in wearing damp clothes, because when a liquid passes ino tlie state of vapor there is a great absorption of heat. In tlie ani mal economy, heat is generated in the system and given out by the body. If tlie clothes are damp this heat is ab stracted faster than a new supply is formed by th process of respiration, and the result is what is termnd a cold. It seems from a recently published blue book on drunkennrs3 in Scotland that the permission granted some years hack to grocers to sell liquors has been attended with very bad effects, so far as women are concerned. Whisky is frequently put down in the bill which their husbands pay under other heads. In 1SO0 12U women were arrested in Kilmarnock for drunkenness; in 1876 no fewer than 270. Some years ago a man in the North of England proposed for a small wager "that he would, at four distinct inter vals, deprive a bull dog of one of his feet by amputiiion, and that, after every individual deprivation, he should ttack a bull with his previous feroci y; and lastly, that he should continue to do so upon his stumps." The ex periment was made, and the result de monstrated the truth of the prediction. The forts round Rome are being pushed on vigorously, although there seems no immediate prospect of need for them. Several contractors having declared that, on account of the un healthiness of the summer, they would be unable to complete the fortifica tions at the period appointe I, con. siderable sums have been offered tliem as premiums if the works are finished befote the end of the year. A patient in the hospital of Beaufort, in France, rushed, during a moment cf insanity, upon a sister of chairty who was bringing him his food. He cut her hand, but wa- prevented from slab bing her by a man named Ilamard, wliom he slabbed in the eye. He then entered the female ward and k lled three women. The rest fled. One among them had been paralyzed for several months, l.ut under the influence of terror was able to jump from her bed and run. The man was secured. Western Pennsylvania dairymen who are propi ietors of cheese factories, have inaugurated a very commendable fea ture of instruction in connection with their factory system. Some twenty factories have secured the services of Prof. Arnold to instruct the factory men, showing them his methods, while in the evenings he is to lecture to both patrons and factory-men. One day is to be devoted to each factory. AVould it not be well for d dry men of other sections to take the hint and act ac cordingly? All meal-producing animals should be killed when they are in the coolest st;ite, or when respiration is the least ictive. Their tie h will then keep m cli longer fpsh, and be mnre l.eau tiiul, fwt-et aid healthful. When kill 1 in a heated condition, or iuim di elyaftera hard drive, the flesh will take longer to cool through, spoil soon er, while the flesh and fat will have a dark, feverish look, caused by being lull of hood, and fence will not be so inviting in appearauce or so healthy as food. Adam was a farmer In Paradise; Job the honest, upright and obedient, was a farmer: St. Luke was a farmer, and is popularly believed to have been the liist who suhjecled the ox to the. use of man; Socrates was a farmer, and so was Cincinnatus; Bui 113 was a farmer, and the m use found him at the plow; Washington, Adams, Jefferson, Ran dolph, Lincoln, besides a vast number of other great and represeuiative men, were farmers. -Truly,-the profession has been amply dignified by its vo taries. The hopeless light of tho Rev. L. II. Boyle against his appetite for alcohol ended with his suicide in Indianapolis, lie was the son of an eminent Metho dist clergyman of Kentucky, and was carefully leared and educated. He practised law a few years, aud then was editor of tlie St. Paul Pioneer. Through drunkenness he lost influence and position; but after a seemingly thorough reformation, he entered the Methodist ministry and was made pas tor of a wealthy church In Hutchison Ky. His remarkable talents led to great popularity. He was twice tried on charges of intoxicatiou, but his fault was in each instance forgiven. One day he was found lying drunk at the roadside, and the matter was so public that he was compelled to retire from the ministry. He declared that he was "ia,sV', V. Jwt alcokciic A curious phenomenon has. says a French scientific journal, been ob served at Vernon, in France. Five or six years ago lightning struck n garden planted with gooseberry bushes and cherry trees, making a deep hole, the orifice of which was not above a yard in diameter. Subsequently everything died round about. The death circle enlarged year after year, until it is now about eight yards in diameter, and has just reached a cherry tree planted twelve years ago, which lias died like the rest. The gooseberry bushes which were replanted on the spot died in two years. -The cause of the evil was evidently the lightning, but it is difficult to exp!ain why its morbid ac tion continues, ami sterility gains ground. The lightning possibly gene rated in the soil chemical compounds injurious to vegetation, or burned the humus. The Mangold Wurtzel. Besides arguments which are of weight for cultivation of all kinds of Toots, there are special ones for the raising of man golds. The vast bulk of yields exceeds that of any annual crop, as high as eighty tons of roots having been raised to tho acre on the sewerage farms of England, and when to this is added the weight of leaves that such a crop would carry, it will be safe to say that a hundred tons have been given to the acre. Taken as a whole the mangold has less enemies and is less apt to fall than any other root. Compared with the turnip family, it has several marked advantages being more reliable in dry seasons and less liable to disease; and in flesh-forming, heat giving, and fat-producing elements it sur passes it. While the turnip family cannot be raised repeatedly on the same land, in deed on most soil can be raised only at in tervals of three or four years, mangolds can be raised many years In succession, as Mr. Mechl, the distinguished English agricul turist, has proved by raising sixty tons per annum or the same tract of land of six acres area, for six successive years. They will keep longer in good;conditlon than any other root, under favnrabl circumstances even as late as July. Experiments In feed ing steers made with care, proved that while a ton of mangolds Increased their weight sixty-five pounds, a ton of swede, iucreased their weight but forty-eight pounds, equal quantities of hay having been frd in each experiment. Other experiments have es tablished about the same proportionate val ue between these two roots, though the general result was not as favorable. Man golds, like fruit, undergo a ripening change after they are gathered, and until this Is ef fected they are not In the best condition for feeding. The ripenlrg process for the most part consists in a change of starch in to sugar, and makes the mangolds both more healtMul and more nutritious food. Before this change Is tffected they are apt to ecour stock If fed to any degree liberally. The time when this chemical change takes place will depend on the degree ot ripeness of the crop when stored ; and this, as has been clearly shown Is affected by both the soil on which they grew and the manure with which they were fed; other conditions equal, those grown on upland ripen earlier than those on lowland, while rank manures tend to prolong the period of growth and crops so gTOwn, come into con dition for feeding later In the season. In England a common practice Is to begin feeding tbe mangolds at Cfnstmas, while In this country the niiddJj of January is considered early enough. Experiment carefully made have proved that when fed to fattening animals they should follow and not precede turnip. It 13 a good rule In feeding this as with other roots or tubers to begin with a small quantity and gradu ally increase, the amount up to the limit which the appetite ot the cow, ner general health and the tale of the milk pail ludi rates. Domestic Recipes. Rice Pudding To each quart of milk one tablespoonful of rice, sugar to the taste; bake three hours Frequent stirring makes the pudding creamy. Com Starch Cake-Whites of five eggs, half a cup butter, one cup sugar, one cup flour, half a t-up corn starch, half cup sweet milk, two teaspoonsful cream tartar, one spoonful soda. Indian Pudding One flat cup yellow Indian meal, one quart boiling milk poured upon it; allow it to cool; add two eggs well beaten, and one teaspoon baking powder; a meringue top if liked; bake twenty minutes. Eggs in Cream Pour into a flat tin dish cr.am to the de,th of a quarter of an inch; bring to a quick boil and then drop in the eggs and cook until the whites are hard; season to taste and serve in the same flat tin dish. Ramequin Pudding Three-quarters 3f a pound of suet, one pound of mo lasses, three-quarters of a pound bread crumbs, quarter pound flour, two eggs, juice and grated rind of a lemon, half a nutmeg, a little mace, two cloves, fine. Boil three hours. Baked lthubard Cut the pieces about an inch in length; weigh; allow as much moist sugar as rhubarb, and bake in an earthenware dish; put into the dish in layers; add a little water; cover closely and bake. CatskillMilk Potatoes Take good, sound potatoes, cut them in slices, (raw) and put the milk, accordiug to the quantity you wish to make, in a pud ding dish, then, after you have put the potatoes in the milk, put it in tho oven for about 20 minutes, then take out aud put the potatoes with the same milk into a saucepan to boil until done; sea son before you put them to boil. Curing Felon3 Prof. Huter, of Ber lin, cures bone felon or whitlow by first probing tho swelling of the finger, making a small incision where the pain appears greatest. The pain of the ope ration may be lessened by the local ap plication of ether or inhalation of chlo roform. The after-treatment is equal ly simple. The small wound is to be covered with lint and carbolic acid, and b, i thed morning and evening. In a few days it is perfectly healed. Scrambled Eggs Have your spider hot and buttered as soon as you are ready, with six eggs broken into a dish, to which you add a little salt, a "shake" of iepper, a bit of butter the size of a nutmeg, and half a cup of rich, sweet milk, if you have it; it will do without. Beat up a' little, just enough to break up the egg, then pour into the buttered spider. Scrape your spoon back and forth to prevent their adhering to the bottom of the spider. Do not cook too dry, a few minutes will cook them; then pour out onto slices of nicely browned and buttered toast. This is nice for breakfast or a lunch Orange Salad: Peel one dozen or anges, and cut in slices; put in layers in a glass dish, sprinkling each layer plentifully with sugar. Squeeze over this the juice of six orang.es, and pour Feeding Mangolds. Were It cot tor the euwuions ouic that an acre will produce in roots when compar ed with its yield in hay or grain, there would be a serious argument against the growing of mangolds to any extent beyond what might be needed for medicinal pur poses, In the fact that the manure made from them Is of so low a value; and the practical weight of this argument would grow la proportion as farmers acquire a knowledge ef the most important depart ment of farming. To most farmers a cor.l or load of manure of cow or horse is a cord or load of equal value; now this is far, very far from being the fact, as will be seen by the following table which is taken from the Scientific Farmer, compiled by the cel ebrated Mr. Lewis, who, by his careful ex periments has laid the agricultural world under lasting obligations, in this table a ton of English hay Is taken as the standard and were all tbe manure saved, both solid and liquid, from a ton of each of these "va rietles of food, the ingredients at the mark et vahieof the Ammonia, Potash and Phos phoric Acid would be worth as follows: ITay $10.00 Clover Hay . 'J2 Oat Straw . oo Wheat Straw .... 4.10 Btrley ttrar 3.53 Decorticated Cotton Seed Cake 43.38 Linseed Cake 30 83 Malt Dust..........-...... 38. 'MS Malt - 10.50 Oats . 11.50 Wheat - 11.60 Indian Corn -- 10.GO Barley 3.8a Potatoes .... 2.33 Manjroids.... ..-. "- l.fi,J Swedes -.. . ........... ...... ...... 1.41 Tunips (oommon)...... .....- 1.3 Carrots - L33 This table is very suggestive In many ways: by it we see that there are varieties of food, the mauure from which is worth more than the cost of the food itself. In its application to the feeding of mangolds, it at a glance suggests the wisdom ot feeding a' the same time a portion of something rich er and more concentrated. By so doing the ouallty of tbe manure is vastly improved and the crops will not be slow to discover lu There is still another reason for feeding these rich foods while using roots; it ena bles the farmer to feed with profit his straw or inferior varieties of hay. Says Prof. :Stockhardt,The full benefit to anlmils de rivable from feeding roots Is secured only when the proper proiortlon of substances rich In nitrogen are fed with them; accord ingly, about two pounds of oil-cake should be fed with each hundred pounds of beet root, or other foods may be substituted in be same proportion as they are rich in nitrogen." It would seem, remarks the Ameri can Dairyman, that the abundance and low price of cheese ought to turn the attention of our dairymen to the devel opment of our home markets. The consumption of cheese in America de creases instead of increasing, and we are dependent wholly on the foreign market for the establishment of prices. With cheese low, it is the cheapest food that the people can eat. If g ven a tine article they would soon learn to eat it. Can not our dairymen manage to reach the consumer with a tempting article? H. A. WATERMAN & SON Wholesale and Uetail Dealers in PINE LUMBER. LATH. SHINGLES. SASH, DOORS, DLINDS, ETC.. ETC, ETC. Jlain strei t. Corner of Fifth, 1 L ATTSMOUT II, NER. Still Better Rates for Lumber. 4 T ' -a?v v.tayvSStJJ'- a! & 5 -ac-s James Pettee DKALKK INT Musical Instruments, Sole Appouttiny A'jent for The i'litl vailed Mason & Hamlin CABINET ORGANS. Also, the Stcck, Henry F. Miller, and Hullet . Cmnston riMuns for Cass and Sarpy counties Neb. C ill ami sec SAMPLE INSTRUMENTS ... at office. Sixth, one door south of Main St. l'LATTSMOl'TH, NEB. Tnnina; and repairing Pianos and Organs specialty, under the skillful hands if Mr. S. M. Brown, a tuner of thirty-three years ex perince. o ky o v v has come And he has brought aVfcat Hi;.- - I fe ... .S TOT rrn Dress Goods, Staple Goods, -Taney Goods and Notionsvou ever saw. rjV say motMsig; f gieeeeira ie by tlBeae&'e9fet anil laoes till yon caii9t vest laats and cap til! you EMtit huj. Spring and Summer Goods eyer and ever so cheap JVcio tiyour char.ca bound to stll iTHE OLT) RELIABLE CONTINUOUS ALL-RAIL ROUTE I NO CHANGE OF CARS! ONE ROAD, ONE MANAGEMENT I From mezi to Pittslmrgli, Harrislui Baltimore, WasMnston, PMlaclelpuia & New Yori. fr?at Short Line To BOSTOH! VIA NEW YORK CITY. Reaches all Points in Pennsylvania and Neio Jersey. Pullman Palace Cars ON ALL EXPRESS TRAINS I MAGNIFICENT CARS F.QCIPrED WITH THE CELEBRATED WESTINGHOUSE AIR BRAKES -AND Janney's New Patent Safety Platform and Coupler. Elegant Eating Houses WITH AMPLE TIME FOR MEALS. THREE EXPRESS TRAINS LEAVE CniCAOO AS FOLLOWS H.OO A. M. SPECIAL FAST EXFRESS EX CEPT SUNDAY. lVf7i the popular Vestibule Sleeping Car Hearhes Pittsburgh, 2 :30 a. ni. : Ilarrlnburg, it -4S :l. iii. ; Philadelphia. 4 :00 n.'in. : New York ri :io p. ni. ; Kosloii, 6 :15 a. m. ; Baltimore U :30 p. ni. ; asiiiiigiuij, y :uu i. ui., ut uuj . 5:15 2'. M. Atlantic Exp. (Dully) Wit7i Drawing-Room ami Hotel Car. Kent-lies Pittsburgh, 12 :15 p. ni. ; Harrisbure, 10:55 p. m. , Philadelphia. 3 :35 a. ni. ; New York . AC, a. m. : Soeeial Philadelphia keeping Car on this Train, which remains in depot until 7 :Ja a. in., aflordiug Pli'ladeipnia passengers a mil night's rest. :10 P. M. Night Exp. Except Saturd'y. With Drawing-Room Sleeping Car. Iteaches Pittsburgh 7 :.Ti p. ni. : Ilarristmrg, .1 :50 a. in. ; Haltimore, 7 :45 a. m.; Washington J :(5 it. in. ; Philadelphia. :00 a. m. ; New York, 10 :3T, a. ni. ; Boston. :4o p. in. Through Balti- noi r and Vv ashiugton Sleeping Car on this 1 nun. FARE ALWAYS AS LOW AS ANY OTHKII LINK. J"-rThrough Tickets for Sale at ;:1I Pl iiu ipal Points in the We-t. Ask for t hem via the FOKT WAYNE & PENNSYLVANIA LINK. F. K. MYF.KS. tly Gen. ras. & Tk ket Agt., Cuic.vr.o. A. G. HATT, JUST OPENED AGAIN, New, Clean, First Class 2Ieat Shop, on Main Street in Fred KroeliTerV old stand Everybody on hand for fresh, tender meat. 28V1.06 O. F. JOHNSON, DEALER IN Drugs- Medicines- AND :"r,'t".:'i.'.rjrl All Paper Trimmea mee of Charge. ALSO DEALER IN :BQei&a3. Stationery, Magazines, AND Latest Publications. Prescriptions Carefully Compounded by an Kxperienrcd Orussiat. REMEMBER THE TLACE. COR. FIFTH & MAIN SI RE FT S PLATTSMOUTH. NEB. t i i j Jala il l home, the finest li'ie of and undersell anytioay. uurrh i 3 .rN 63 WALT, PAPER, yvv i mm GZ'ZEEL'ZFS IB7JJPE1RJE SITdPmjE! has once more " come back" to FRANK GUTHMAN who is, on and after this date sole proprietor. NEW .GOODS, ELEGANT STYLES. Mr. Week bach having gone into the Lumber business I propose to run th old EMPIRE awhile myself. IBIEcGrIIISrS I We are in almost daily receipt of DRY AND FANCY GOODS, aud lffiOPOEllIES, which we offer our Irieads and the public at Wflaoleale mul ESetaiL at prices iAmss' tmm goods, Cashmeres, Alpacas, Delaines, Ac. Calicos, from 12 to 16 Yards for $1.00. Muslins, from 6 cts. a yard upward. BEDSPREADS 1 The flnest stock o White Bedspreads ever brouitlit to the Citv. Buell's Cassimeres, Tweeds, Jeans, and Cottonades in full Slock. BBof aired tIiee? Mats aend Daps5 asad FMrBias!BfiBagds. Di0oceHe aud PA'ovisions OK ALL KINDS. Country Produce taken in exchange for Goods. I desire to see all my old patrons back and want to hold as many of tli j preenst ones as 1 can FRANK (ll'TII MAN. REMEMBER THE PLACE, ONE DOOR WEST OF P. O., 201y PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA BOOT -atd SHOE !i Si S piWj s ii H 2 tim?ti$dm0 2 ?s s O k X'te&ttt&hW ft) ll I II ISM f iplf 5 II 3 so O J -'fffr II- P g JO J IhkmhH MANUFACTORY. a. ai an anai and more, by buying a machine that will last you a life time, on J Uij.1 h...i u!l thl UUit improTements. 1CT0R BEWINQ ilACIITNE CO., tUbaral Tarmi to Ajects. 6ni for Ctrcalac. to suit the tunes. - l'Jt) axd 201 Wabash Avf., Cor. AJ".iaa St., C'ii)i.sj.. IK, P. MERGES. Aceut. over all a glass ot wis or br&ndy. i 1 U J- j ius. ' " - - i