The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936, September 07, 1894, Image 2

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    WORLD'S MARKETS
OLO DEMOCRATIC ARGUMENT
COMPLETELY EXPOSED.
Tl*« American Market Worth Over Pour
llilllon Dollars a Year More Than AH
Of bora Combined—Let Us Keep Our
Own and Not Destroy It.
The renewal of the free trade
party’s destructive free raw material
war cry against American industries
nattlrally calls to mind their old theory
of the markets of the world, and how
great a gain it will be if we can only
secure them. Let us look into it
The total manufactures of the
United States in 1890, according to
the last census returns, amounted in
value to $9, 054,435, o37, of which we
exported to the value of 9151,102,376,
leaving 93,903,332,901 worth of Ameri
can manufactured goods consumed at
home, as follows:
AMERICAN MANUFACTURES.
Total United States manufactures.
1890:.j9,054.435,357
Total exported, 1890. 151,102,37#
Total home consumption, 1896..88 913,352,981
In the same way we must deal with
our farm products, the total value of
which during 1889, consumed in 1890,
was 92,460,107,454. We exported to
the extent of $532,141,490, leaving
American farm products worth $1,927,
9C5,9t>4 consumed by Americans Thus:
AMERICAN FARM PRODUCTS.
Total farm products. 1S89.82,'C1.107.4>4
Total exported, 1839. 5"2.111,49 )
Total home consumption, 189). .81.927.985,964
Wo see that the American people I
consumed American manufactured
goods and farm products in 1890 to the
extent of 9)0,831,258,925. To this we
must add the value of the foreign
goods entered for consumption through
our customs department, which
amounted to$773,674,S12 in 1890, there
by getting the following aggregate
value of the entire
AMERICAN CONSUMPTION IN 1890.
American manufactures.?3,9>3 :;:12,9M
.American farm products. 1,927 931,964
Foreign goods. 773, 74 81:
Total American consumption.Ill 601,973,737
Against the aggregate consumption
of goods in the United StP.tes, worth
$11,004,973,737 in the year 1S30, or
$17:1.52 for every man, woman and
child of a population of 65,000,000 per
sons, what are the great markets of
the world that we may expect to se
cure?
The markets of the world comprise
only such goods as are imported by
tbc different countries of the world,
bacause we can not claim to supply
them with what they already manu
facture or grow in their own coun
tries, unless they propose free trade,
as the democratic party would have
us do. They are not so foolish, how
ever Other countries prefer to re
tain what they already possess rather
If.an throw- away the substance for
the shadow. We find from the Amer
ican Almanac of 1$SS that the total
imports of all other countries in the
world at the latest date for which
complete returns are available, were
as follows:
TOTAL FOKKICX IMPORTS
Europe, Asia, Africa, North and
South America, Australia and
tlic Islands of the Sea. #7,553,100.03]
This is less by over four billions of
dollars than the total consumption of
good* in the United States. Thus:
Total United States consumption
1891.$11,604,973,737
Total imports, all other countries,
1888 . 7,5-9,003,000
L'nitedStates market excess.. #4.035,973,737
Will It Be a Total Eclipse?
FARMERS, ATTENTION!
See How the Democratic Promise? of
1893 Have Been Kept in 1894.
In October, 1892, that great demo
cratic authority, the Chicago Herald,
exhorted its readers to vote for “a
■change,’' and in order to catch the
votes of the farmers it used the fol
lowing bait:
WHE*f
.4U3"
__A.
"Vote for Cleveland and 81.25 for
wheat.”—Chicago Herald, 18s*2.
In less than two years we have seen
many “changes” that have become
only too painfully familiar to the
people of the United States. It is un
necessary to dwell upon these beyond
drawing the attention of the farmer
to the manner in which the Chicago
Herald’s promise of 81.35 for wheat
has beea fulfilled. This we do by
quoting from the Chicago Herald of
July 0 1804, a telegram which it pub
lished as follows, grammar and all:
Vandai.ia, 111., July 5.—Wheal
threshing is in full blapt in Fayette
county. Six hundred bushels of the
new crop was brought to market to
day and sold at 40 cents per bushel.
The berry is exceptionally fine, and
weighs over sixty pounds to the bushel
measure.—Chicago Herald, 1S94.
Demnrratic Kespect for Labor.
. M_II_111 i
AHERKAI
mmik
m
POPULISTS ARE TO BLAME.
They Vote With the Free Wool Tarty
and Against the Wool Growers.
In the event of a tariff bill becoming
law with free wool, it is but right that
the sheep farmers of this country
should know exactly who is to blame
for the cheapening or destruction of
this branch of their interests. Some
western wool men have accused the
eastern manufacturers of desiring free
wooL This is an entirely mistaken
idea.
The records of the senate showed a
solid republican vote in favor of put
ting a duty on wool, and a solid demo
cratic vote in favor of putting wool on
the free list. While the populist sena
tors voted for a duty on wool, they
are really to blame for wool being put
on the free list, because they tied
themselves up with the democratic
senators in order to act on the income
tax. Had the populists stuck by the
republican senators there would have
been no free wool, no tariff bill passed,
and no income tax.
The policy of the free trade party is
to throw our American market—worth
811.604.973.737 in 1890—open to the
competition of the farmers and manu
facturers of all other nations, while
we strive to secure their markets, all
of which put together are worth
84.035.973.737 less than our own home
market
Is it not best to retain the good home
market that we already possess, also
striving to cease buying the 8773,674,
313 worth of foreign goods that we
consume and to produce these goods
for ourselves, if we can. rather than to
throwaway what we are sure of and
take chances in securing a portion of
the smaller markets of the rest of the
world in open competition with the
cheap labor of Europe, of Asia, of
Africa, of Canada, of Central and South
America, and of the savage labor of
the Islands of the Sea?
Such is the policy of protection.
But the free trade policy is to give our
markets to the clu ap labor countries
and to compete with the cheap labor
in their smaller markets. We already
consume over four billion dollars’
worth of goods more than they can
buy from us. Let us keep our own
trade first. Always vote for protec
tion.
The western wool growers should
understand clearly that the only party
to blame for free wool is the populist
party of the house and senate, and the
populists represent the wool-growing
sections of the country. Perhaps the
populists think they will acquit them
selves from any blame in their actions
by voting against free wool, but if the
farmers can see a hole through a five
foot door they will readily see that
the Populists tied themselves up to
the democrats, and it would have
been utterly and absolutely impossi
ble for the democrats to pass a tariff
bill without their vote. Tnat would
have left wool with 11 cents per
pound duty as it had been heretofore.
That the democratic platform went
all to splinters we know full well.
They have acted very viciously to
ward the wool men, especially when
they put a duty of 15 per cent on old
rags and shoddy, and placed scoured
wool on the free list. Out of ninety
nine woolen manufacturers in the
state of Rhode Island there are only
thrle that can be counted as free wool
men, and there is not one in Massa
chusetts. It is not the eastern manu
facturer who is to blame for free wool,
but the populist senators.
At Coney Island.
Adams—It is astonishing.
Brown—What is astonishing?
"That there should be so much
water.”
‘‘Yes, and just think, you only see
the water that is floating on topi”
! THE DACOITS.
| Kept at Bay l>y tlie Bravo lTlfe of a
Missionary.
Among tho arrivals at tho Occi
dental the other day was Mrs. J. E.
Case, a missionary of the American
Baptist board in Upper Burmah, who
was accompanied by her t ’"o children
and Miss Ma Mo li'.vin, a Burmese
girl of about 18 years.
Mrs. Case has been in Upper Bur
mah many years, and has had many
remarkable, as well as very danger
ous, experiences, says the .^an Fran
cisco Examiner. She related some
of them, while the native girl, ar
rayed in tho queer costumo of the
country whence they came, sat near
by and gravely accentuated the story
by sundry bows. The children mean
while climbed on her lap and talked
in the strange language which they
had learned in Upper Burmah.
“At tho time I had my most dan
gerous experience.” said Mrs. Case,
“we were living in tho outskirts of
Myingan, a town of US.OJi) people,
seventy miles below Mandeiy, the
capital city of King Theebaw. Nu
merous bands of Dacoits were travel
ing about and committing crimes,
robberies and murdering the people.
The Dacoits are really marauders;
that is the meaning of the word da
eoit. The natives are composed of
many different peop e, as, for in
stance, the Karens, tho Chins, the
Kochins, the Shans and the Burmese.
They are all, however, of Mongolian
origin.
■the people inclined to rob would
get a bo, or general, and set out,
then they moved about in many
bands, especially in the district
in which wo were situated,
and they robbed and killed
people right and left. My husband
was away, and for several nights I
walked a porch we had in front of
our house with a revolver in my
hand, not knowing what moment the
dacoits might come. I had no one
with me but the servant girl and a
native man.
All this time the different b inds
were going about killing, maiming
and robbing. If the victim resisted
he was attacked, and maybe he would
be anyway. If they got very angry
at those who resisted they would
cut their arms off at a blow, or cut
them off by pieces with their hatch
ets. Some times a man’s aim was
cut off in half a dozen or more pieces.
There were many instances of great
cruelty. Luckily for us we were not
attacked, though we hardly knew
how we escaped.
“King Theebaw, as has been
learned, was cognizant of the work
of the dacoits, and even encouraged
them, while he received a good share
of the profits. But the British gov
ernment has taken him in hand. He
has been deposed and sent to India,
along with his retinues, where he is
now receiving several thousand dol
lars a year. Things are, therefore,
changed in Upper Burmah. It is
peaceable and free from anything of
that kind.
Recovered His Long; Lest Memory.
Authentic instances of old people
who have recovered lost sight, hear
ing or speech, or who have grown a
third set of teeth or a supplemen
tary crop of hair, are not uncom
mon. But cases in which perfect
memory has been regained after be
ing impaired almost to the verge of
extinction by paralytic shocks are
rare. This, however, has happened
to William McEntee, an old man of
81, residing on North Twenty-eighth
street. During the recent storm he
insisted upon taking his daily walk,
and in consequence was laid up with
a severe cold. While sitting in his
arm chair after his recovery, a day
or two since, he found himself hum
ming an air which he had not heard
since he was a boy in the Emerald
Isle. Then he began to tell a story
which the old soug recalled, and. to
the amazement of his family, ho
went on to recite incidents and
events not only of long ago. but of
more recent dates, ot which before
his brief illness he had no recollec
tion.—Philadelphia Record.
Not so Low as That.
“I’m sick,” whined the tramp at
the kitchen door, ‘and will you
please give me just a piece of bread
and butter?’ ’“Nothing mean about
you is there.” responded the chari
tably-inclined cook. “No ma’am
there ain’t.” “Perhaps you
would like to have some sugar
on yourbread?” said the
cook with sarcasm. The tramp
drew back digniiiedly. “Excuse
me,” he said. “I may have my weak
nesses, but I hardly think there is
anything in my manner to warrant
you in thinking I am a United States
senator.” And the cook apologized
on the spot.—Detroit Free Press.
He Should Be More Careful.
A young girl, tall, curly-headed
and bright-eyed, sat near the fruit
stand of which her father is the
owner, in Brooklyn. Charles F.
Erwin tried to kiss her and may
have succeeded. She screamed. He
was arrested, but, protesting to Jus
tice Goetting that his arrest was an
outrage, for the girl had put her lips
in a kissing position, he was dis
charged with a mild caution to be
more careful.
The Higr'iiest Tower.
The public building of Philadel
phia. when finished, will have tbe
highest tower on any building in the
world. It will be 537 feet high.
The building covers four acres, and
will be finished next year at a cost
of $10,003,000.
—
We Never Speak as We Pass By.
Once every fifteen years the planet
Mars comes within 35,030,003 miles
of the ea th. At all other times b
distance of oomething like 141,030,-j
033 miles separates the Marsiaoa
from the people of our sphere.
OUR BOYS AND GIRLS.
THE TRUE STORY OF BRAVE
ELIZABETH ZANE.
By a Courageous* Act She Saved the
Fort and Her Friends—Troubled—Coy
ote Not Afraid to Ba Near a Man
Whom He Kuotvs Is Unarmed.
A Heroic <ilrl.
In the year 1777, when the British
troops in the Middle states were '
marching on to Philadelphia, and
Washington, at the head of the col
onial army, was doing all he could to
keep them from entering the city,
General Burgoyne led his forces from
the north by way of Lake Champlain
and landed near Crown point. Hero
he met a large body of Indians, who
went with his army to Crown Point
and Ticonderoga.
These Indians, cruel, cunning and
savage in their nature, were the most
terrible enemies the American sol
diers and country people had to fear.
They were worse than the Hessians,
the Tories and the British regulars all
put together.
A body of troops under Colonel
Shepherd held Fort Henry against the
British and the Indians, but the gar
rison was gradually diminished to a
few hundred men. They were daily
looking for reinforcements, and the
majority of the men, going one day to
meet them and bring them through
the enemy’s lines, were cut off by a
band of the Indians, who prowled
about in every direction.
Within the stockade surrounding
the fort the farmers, who were also
soldiers, had driven their horses and
cattle spared by the invaders; and
their wives and children, with their
household goods, were safe inside the
fort. At the approach of the Indians
the little garrison of twelve brave
men, under the command of Colonel
Shepherd, determined to sell their
lives as dearly as possible, and not
knowing how far off or how near the
reinforcements might be, they hoped
iur me uehi.
But their powder was nearlv ex- I
hausted and there was no chance of \
keeping the savages at bay by any
other means. Some one then remem
bered that in a small building just
outside the stockade there was a keg
of powder that had been forgotten
when the other effects were carried
inside the fortified place. But who
would go for it, or who could be
spared from the small garrison'?
Every man was needed at such a
time. Their leader was a brave and
generous man; but he knew that his
place was there; his duty was to
protect the fort and save the helpless
women and children from the savage
cruelty of the enemy. Several of his
best men offered to go, but he could
not make up his mind to lose one of
them, so great seemed to him tne risk
of venturing within the range of the
Indian's tomahawk.
“I cannot command any man to go
for the powder,” he said. “If there
be any one willing to take the risk he
must assume all responsibility of the
venture.”
What was to be done? The powder
they must have. Soon it would be
too late, for the savages were coming
nearer all the time. Three of the
men were discussing which of them
could best do the hardy deed, when a
brave girl, whom history knows as
Elizabeth Zane, approached Colonel
Shepherd as he stood listening to the
arguments of the men.
“Let me go,” said she. “I can
bring the powder as well as any one
else, and if I do not come back with
it—why, you will be no worse off
than you are now. It would not be
like losing a man. ”
After much hesitation they let her
go, thinking the Indians would be
less likely to attack her than a man.
Very carefully they watched her—
those inside the fort—as she crossed
the open space before it, until she
reached the house in which the
powder was.
No doubt, if the savages had rushed
upon her, the gates of the stockade
would have been opened and the men
would have defended with their last
breath the brave girl that had so
nobly risked her life.
But she reached her destination be
fore the savages had fairly seen what |
was the object of her expedition out- i
side the gate of the stockade. Re- j
turning she again had to cross the '
ujjcu space.
Perhaps the weight of the keg of i
powder made her footsteps slower. ;
PerhaDS the Indians had a suspicion of
what it was that Elizabeth carried in
her homespun apron, for with a wild
whoop they let fly a shower of arrows
round her head—not one of which,
however, harmed her—and two or
three of the nearest savages rushed
towards her as the gate of the outer
barricade opened and shut quickly be
hind her.
The powder that Elizabeth brought
held out well, and the Indians, judg
ing from the incessant firing the gar
rison kept up that reinforcements had
arrived withdrew and left them un
disturbed until the main body of the
troops came to their relief. —Philadel
phia Times.
Cunning: of tl*e Coyote.
The barking habit of the coyote is
very doglike, and his old name of
barking wolf is very appropriate.
When collecting mammals in Wyo
ming, says a writer in St. Nicholas, it
was a very common thing for us to
hear the coyotes around our camp set
up a great barkiDg in chorus at the
first sign of daybreak, just when the
roasters begin to crow on the farm.
It was a wild and uncultivated kind
of bark, ending in a falsetto howl,
and resembles the cry of the jackal, of
India more nearly than any sound I
ever heard. But Sir Coyote is cute.
He knows exactly the distance that
constitutes fair rifle range, and he
knows just as well whether the
stranger is armed as does the stranger
himself. When hunting in the Sho
shone mountains in 1883, I wanted to
kill a coyote for a special purpose, but
never once succeeded in getting a fair
shot, even at 200 yards. For ten days
we banged away industriously at
every one we saw, but never touched
a hair. Finally, at Corbett's ranch I
left the expedition and started north
by stage, leaving behind me rille, re
volver, knife and even scissors. Just
two hours after I had said good-by to
my shooting irons and tak-n the
buckboard “stage,” we saw a coyote
ahead of us, close to the trail. Seeing
us coming he selected a soft spot, sat
down within thirty yards of the trail
and waited for us. We drove up,
stopped as we got opposite him, and
still lie did not run. That villain sat
there coolly without moving a muscle,
but with a leer that plainlv said:
“Now, don’t you wish you had your
old gun?” When we got through
making faces at him and wishing for
a gun or a revolver or even a common
stone to fire at him, w.i drove on, and
then he got up and went hunting for
jack rabbit. To this day I have been
puzzling over the question: “IIow
did that crazy rascal find out so quick
ly that both the driver and I were to
tally unarmed'?” That he did know
it perfectly well I have no doubt
whatever, for no coyote over waited
like that for a man with a gun.
A l»oy I’olice man
“Lieutenant,when do I get ray pay?
I think it is about time, ’cause I want
to get a tin whistle and lots of things,”
said a cute little shaver of (i, as he
strutted into Central p dice station
and walked up to the lieutenant's
desk, says the Cincinnati Enquirer.
Lieutenant Hill peered over tiie
desk and recognized his little protege,
Horace W. Carle, all dressed in a com
plete lieutenant’s uniform, with a sil
ver badge, stripes on his shoulders,
with a revolver iu one hand and a club
in the other.
“Well, how much pay do you think
you ought to have?” asked Lieutenant
Hill.
“Well, you might give me about
830, I guess. That's a big pile of
money, but I 'spec it's about what a
lieutenant ought to get, and you
know, I am a lieutenant now,” and
the little shaver strutted about and
then asked Lieutenant Hill if he
thought a burglar could get away
from him.
“Lieutenant” Horace Carlo, though
only a very little boy, is a born police
man. Ever since he was a baby he
has been wild over policemen. When
he had on short dresses he strutted
around with a club and would run to
the window and call to every police
man that passed. He got acquainted
with Lieutenant Hiil when the latter
was a sergeant. Little Horace had
his aunt fix his suit up as a sergeant's
uniform, and when Lieutenant Hill
was promoted he had his uniform
changed, too, and Lieutenant Hill got
him a silver star and a club.
When he does not mind his father
tells him it he is not good that he
will not let him be a policeman, and
that brings little Horace to time at
once. His great ambition is to catch
a real live burglar, and who knows
but what he may some day?
Troubled.
If it were not for fairies, this world would be
drear.
Cl in sure they are true — heigh-ho:)
The grass would not tangle.
The bluebe is would jingle,
And things would bo stupid and queer, you
know,
And everything dull if the fairies should go.
(I’m sure they are true, -heigh-ho.’)
I love to believe in the • odmother's mice,
And Hop o’-my Thumb, heigh ho!
And it’s cruel in Willy
To call me a silly
If brothers would only be nice, you know.
Not tease and make fun. all my troubles
would HO.—
rj believe in the fairies forever,—heigh-ho!
—Mrs. Mary Mapss Dod re in St Nicholas
Her Way of Tellin? It.
We have seen in print this little
story about a niece of Bishop Brooks.
The child was three years old.
Her mother was preparing her for
bed when she had a call down stairs:
as she was about to leave the room
she said:
“Dear, say your prayers while mam
ma is gone.”
When she returned she asked the
child if she had said her prayers. The
little one replied:
“I did and I didn't.”
“Why, what do yon mean, dear?”
asked the mother.
“I told the Lord I was very tired
and couldn't say my prayers, and lie
said ‘Don't mention it. Miss Brooks!’ ”
Having: a Splendid Time.
Sammy came home from an after
noon at the natural history museum.
“Where have yon been?” said his
grandpa, who saw that he was in un
commonly good spirits.
“Oh, we've had a splendid time.
We’ve been to a dead circus.”—Sun
day Mercury.
Sadie at the Oentist’s.
Sadie was giving an account of her
experience at the dentist's.
“My tooth ached dreadfully,” she
said, “till the dentist took the cavity
out”—and she was indignant when
her listeners laughed, instead of
showing the sympathy that the case
demamded.
Poll- Parrots.
“Oh, mamma, Maudie had the love
liest funeral: the poll-parrots were all
in white and wore wreaths of flowers.”
“Poll-parrots, Ethel!”
“Yes. indeed, mamma, that is what
they called the little girls that car
ried her.”
Something: She Hid Xot Like to Meet.
Four-year-old Minette was much
opposed to going on board the ship
“What are you afraid of, sweet
heart?” said her uncle, the captain.
“I'se ’fraid, ’cause Bobby says it has
a spanker'.”
SLEEPLESS HiSHTS
Itako you weak end weary, unfit for work. In
disposed to enertion. They show that yonr
nervo strength is pono and that yonr nervous
Hood's Sarsam
| parllla
system needs tmildint /*? g rj «/\ er
up. The surest remedy M
Is Hood's Sarsaparilla.
It purifies tilo blood,
strengthens the nerves, creates an appetite and
c'ves sound, refreshing sleep. Get Hood’s and
only Hood's Sarsaparilla.
HoocJ’3 Pills cure all liver ills. SO*'
W. L. Douglas
#>«» ^Ej0*$lBT 13 THE BEST.
Jxg 2a'W'&noequeakinq.
55. CORDOVAN,
FRENCH&ENAMELLED CALF.
34.f3.5.° fine calf&kangarosl
I 5 5.5P POLICE,3 Soles.
49s.o.J2.W0RKlNGMENff
^ EXTRA FINE.
i2.*l7^ BOYSSCHOCLSHQE*.
•LADIES'
i3^-B|s|DONG0l^
SEND FOR CATALOGUE
pf VV'L'DOUGLAS,
^ BROCKTON, MASS
V/. L. Dougins $3.00 Shoo.
Reranse, r;o cro the largest manufacturers of
this grade of shoes la tho world, and guarantee their
value by stamping the name and price on the
bottom, which protec t you against high prices and
the middleman's profits. Our shoes equal custom
work in style, easy Airing and wearing qualities.
Wo have them sold everywhere at lower prlcesfor
the value given than any other make. Take no sub
stitute. If your dealer cannot supply you, we can.
FRE
i xil IC i/iiirr I Fine Steel. Keen as a razor.
18180 IS. flirt! flood, strong handle.
| Mailed free in exchange for 25 Large Lion Hoads cut
I from Lion Coffee Wrappers, and a 2-cent stamp to
; pav postage. Write for list of onr other fine Pro*
, mlurns. WOOLSON SPICE CO.
450 Huron 8t. Toledo O
s CREAM BALM cures
T
IJflUUIJL
PRISE SO CENTS, ALL DRUGGISTS
Davis’ Cream Separator Churn, power
hot water and feed cooker combined.
Agents wanted. Send for circular. All
eizes Hand Cream Separators.
Davis & Rankin 13. & M. Co. Chicago
WALTER BAKER & CO.
ine largest manuiacturers oi
PURE, HIGH GRADE
COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES
On this Continent, have received
SPECIAL AND HIGHEST
AWARDS
on all their Goods at the
CALIFORNIA
'A MIDWINTER EXPOSITION.
,! jW BREAKFAST COCOA,
I | Which, unlike the Dutch Process,
? iainiuio without the use of Aik dies
uj-ggl or other Chemicals or Dyes, is aba.>
lea* than one cent a cup.
SOLD BY GROCERS EVERYWHERE.
WALTER BAKER & GG.I0RCHESTER. MASS.
| CANNOT HEAR
E Gt or the Comm ■•--ioner.wiil \vnT**inNATH AN
RJCKFORO, Pension «& Patent Att\y, '.H I- I- sr..f
W nsliingrou, I).C., they Will receive a prompt reply.
jlE PAPER
Stiift Sli«l 2 L. r rare )»«.«>k-> nutrl’.ii—, «-lC ,
free. OUNMfcL'SMOfiTHLY, Toledo, Oh.o.
TMAHl^SSliT
n I "7 0 Q O Sharpened. Mai! your razor tozeth
nAiLUiiu erwi li f.Qc toSiax.fie^d At Co.. Cutlers,
Ba ber Supplies Onnha and t .< j
trill return it hot.ow ground and tharp. W<.r»anted.
g | ■ TWf d Repaired. II you ir vt* a<gOOd
I H JJ H hat and don't want to invest in a
ft M ft Q kjf new one, send it to us and. have it.
| put in tiisi-class ^bape. We n anufac ure wboie
j sa c and r lad all kind - < f hats a d caps. N. t» —
AH p«»K*ai;e and » xpr-“S cnar o»r must b* prepaid.
MILLARD HOTEL i> AT sTOH£. Oniaua.
01 OTMIIIO for MEX and BOYS* If you.
Ill IS I H 111 II wish to save from 52 to f 10.0:) on.
; Vfc,w,,,,,,wa suit write for our. new Fall.
Catalogue cortalning samples «»f cloth.
NEBRASKA CLOTHING CO.,.
Lor. J4tn and Douglas fcts., Dot aha.
| EDUCATIONAL^ ’
CUD DTI! A W FT18 tcu5?ht bY expert ofB tnl court
onun I NnllU reporte s at tlie «'-maha College
j of Shorthand and Tvpewrulng Omaha. Neb- c*xaJ
for catalogue. 5oL Boyd s Theater.
Brownell
UI U If MUIX null ^ DOHtt'KlY S.T.D.vaaba
HMAHA m NESS COLLEGE
U III rt 11 ft Cutalugue free. F. R l.O'J-sE, Fi e*.Omaha.
TslBSfaoh Gol,e?e Fbee circulars'1 S> a dent*.
I Ulu^lU^IH ran work foij-buard. Win. J. B Sher
wood, Prluoii-ai. Rair.g*, Qik. Oinahju
UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME.
THE FIFTY-FIRST YEAR WILL OPEN
TUESDAY, SEPT. 41H.
Fvil courses in Classic!, Letter!, Science, Iav
<$ivii and Mechanical engineering Thorc-opa
Preparatory and Commercial Courses. St. Edward *
Hail for boy 3 under 131* unique in the completeness of
I Its equipment. Catalogues sent liee on application to
Uev. A5PJUBw Moeeisset. C. &. C.. Notre Dame lad.
ftGftDEMY Of THE, bHGKEL) tltrtKi
The course of instruction In tills Academy, conducted
by the Religious of the Sacred He&it, emWa.e* trsa
! wboio range t»f subject* necessary to constitute a solid
: and refined education. Propriety of deportment, per
I Bonal neaf;ess end the principles of morality a:ijc-b
! iect3 of unceaudug attention. Extensive grounds af
i ford tfc- pupil* every facility for useful bodi y exer
cise; tneir health is an object of constant solicitude,
and in sickness they are attended with maternal care.
Fall term open* Tuesday, Sept. 4th. For further par
ticular*, address THU SUPERIOR,
Academy Sacred Heart, fit, JoiepU, Met