The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, June 06, 1888, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    (fflkmlra
0EmaL
VOL. X1X.-NO. 7
COLUMBUS, NEB., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 6, 18S8.
WHOLE NO. 94;
O
.
j
r
COLUMBUS
STATE BANK.
COLUMBUS, XKB.
Cash Capital
$75,000.
inmvious
LENli'.ll (IKKI.AItli, I'i-i'i
.11.1,1 I'M a ui.i.i.
it ii. mi:m:.
.1 l' I :IM l, I'-iiln'T
Collection lrou.Hl "1
hII PoIuIn.
Fa, lalereNi n Tlnie t4-
-r.
It.
Ol
COLUMBUS. NEB.
CAPITA!. STOCK. : $flMOU.
Ol 1 K 1.1.
-. ii..sui:i.i)N'. rr.-.i.
V MfM.l.lSlTi:. tic I'r.--.
Uiili! Kl UIII.U:. Cashier,
hnii:i,schi:m. wt '--
DlltlM-IOKS
.1 ! Ill Chill. I! I'- II or.Hl."M"ll.
JONAS UII.CU, CUM. Kl lh'.
11 M UlNSl.ovv
i
'Hurt llimk trariMiri-. i regular HiuhiiiK liu-i
.h, uill hIIow interes on time l iit", m-l-
..ill.n-tt.mx. lu or -.-II ''.'- "" L'nil.-l
Htntennnd I im.H.iuut " ""' r " '" "' 'l'1''
sw untie.
.1
Whill twilei-l t rer-cite tour hu-ies-.
We solicit our pstrowu-e We t-iiii-MUl.- satin
fnction in hII l.iront-i intrusted in our car. .
dertH-h.
i-oit 'I'itf:
( Kl I. ON
A.&M.TURNER
Or . W. Illtl.l.lt,
'l'rii-litK liiiiin.
S-Sr-lliw ore-iii are lir-i-ela-mii eter .ir
ti.'iilitr, uii.t " mi irint.-ed
SCHIFFROTH & PLATH,
lit (IH.MN
CHALLENGE
WIND MILLS,
AND PUMPS,
Buckeye Mower, combined, Self
Binder, wire or twine.
Pumps Repaired on short notice
S-Oneil.or we-t of ileiiiU - linn; Store. 11th
rect. I olumhu-. Neb Kuov-o-tf
t-trrrt
HENRY G-ASS.
XJISTDEKTAJKER !
COFFIN'S AND METALLIC CASES
AN1 WEAI.KR IN
Furniture, Chairs, Bedsteads, Bu
reaus, Tables, Safes. Lounges,
Sco., Picture Frames and
Mouldings.
tSJtejMiriHU of oil kimh of Uphol
stery Gtxw
U-tf COLUMBUS. NKBKASKA.
PATENTS
Caveats and Trail Markr obtains!. an tall IV
entbutoneHM conducted for MOHFKVI 1' r hl
OUR OFFICh IS OlTOSflF I'.S l'ArKNT
OFFICK. We lime m t-i.l-Jin'iw, nil b'iin
direct ht-nce we ran trnn-M. t t.atnt hiisinm. in
lwc time and t LF.SS Ol th.tn tli- iviiK.t.
from Wa.-hinirton.
Send model, dram ins, 01 j.lir.to. with .le-Ti
tion, W adviwj if patentable or not, fn-e of
charge. Our fe not due till patent is cnie.1.
A book, "How to Obtain Patent, with rpftr
nee to actual clients in jour state, countj or
towu..entfree. gSJfOW & CO.
Opposite Patent Office, v ashington, D. C.
COMMERCIAL
m
fiBf
WESTERN
COTTAGE ORGAN
RAGS AiNTD RAG PICKERS.
WHERE WORN RUBBERS, OLD TINS,
RACS AND WHAT NOT GO.
Vli.lt to h Warehouse. Heaped with l'ick
Inji iit All Kind-. Sorters acid Their
Ileftnes. A rile r Old Itu! her and
A relict.
Twas hi tny golden ago of childhood
tbat there lived, if. indeed, she does not
j et. a bent and withered woman, wrinkled
as China crepe and merry as a lark's song
Melhinks 'tis as. far back as the third time
the pussy willows purred far me when
first 1 heard her shrill, cheery call. "Raks,
raks'" From then till I was "quite a bik
geil. uii&sey." old Mary was a welcome
ai rival upon the domestic scene 1 was
reminded of old Mary the other day by
seeing a woman walking briskly under a
heavv sack of rags It was sunny. I wa3
strolling insensibly and followed her. Sho
euteivd a vtaielioiiso heaped with pickings
of all kinds after hesitating a moment 1
did the sumo Things seemed novel, so
tt hen the proprietor looked at mo in rather
a surprised manner, i explained I'd like to
add to my slim stock of information ro
garding rags and rag pickers Whereat
the clei It inquired inteiestedly. "Are you
the Komim who writes?" and a rag peddler
who had justdrope-d in leaned up against
the wall and gazed at me fixedly, and with
much tho biimo expression as ho would
wear in viewing a freak in the dime
museum
"Oh. it's a great business." he remarked
I mean the proprietor as he glanced
over bonie letters before conducting me
over the establishment, "if it weren't for
rags thei e would bo no paper, you would
liuvouo lhblo, no romance, no love let
ters," ho added in quite a courtly manner.
Of all the queer places, that warehouse!
I clambeied over the foot hills of rags,
separated by vallevs rich with old iron,
7inc sheets," lead piping, brass wire, and
my eye rested upon Arctic mountains in
the backgiound, perhaps 1 should say
mountains of arctics It seemed I touched
iiidely upon professional pride when I
u.skuf if that immense bulk and tho many
b.i!es lor shipping were brought in by nig
pickers I was informed that rag pickers
are those that go about the btieetsand
alh-vs or beg rags, which they usually sell
to small merchants Then there are rag
peddlers w ho own wagons and go about
among houses buying what they wish,
merchants bin ing from both these classes,
and himself, bujmg mostly fiom them.
1 asked tho proprietor what under the
canopy ho does with all this truck, and
w as told ho had contracts with largo fac
tones all over the country Old metals
are returned to foundries; paper and nigs
to paper mills, and alo ropes, which are
used for mauilla paper; vinegar and oil
barrels to be relilled. bits of leather and
old boots to soap factories, where tho
gioaso is extracted for soap for my elegant
ladies' w hite hands; old bones to sugar
refineries, where, calcined, they purify
sugar and sj i up, or bones may bo shipped
foi ferti!iiiig Old bottles aro leturned
to brewers etc., new cloth ra;,s fiom
tailors b.u-k to cloth factories. and lubber.
gums" as tho Angioma niaes term them,
to tho factory in Massachusetts
That pile of nibbers and arctics reach
ing to the ceiling did look odd There
were tin baby arctics and largo scows
stranded side by side: those exasperating
run down at-tho-heel rubbers which peo
plo had lost in tho street and plenty which
had bpriing a leak and been abandoned
You've walked from many directions,
through man' paths, upon feet shod in
righteousness and those taking hold on
hell, haven't you? They present a good
Illustration of l eincarnation doctrines,
they will bo rid of the useless parts and
tho impurity and their best parts sent to
the factory, whence they will shortly is
sue again, shining aud new.
1 alwas used to depiecato throwing
arctics, etc. into the allevs, but now 1
shall do all in my power to assist theso
rag pickers to a plentiful spring crop.
They u-ceive four cents abound for them;
besides, quite a number of boys and girls
get employment in cutting off tho rubber.
It's queer, baling them. Hundreds of
them aio thing into a huge box lined with
but lap Then a man on each side pumps
on a windlass this may not be clear
enough.but that's v. hat it looks like. When
tho box was opened, I saw tho rubbers
hal been pressed out of all semblance.
The proprietor took me to another ware
house w hero tho rags wero being sorted
A long room was boidered with deep
boves. in shape and si?o liko tables, with
bottoms of sieves for tho dirt to sift
through On either Bide stood women
rapidly sorting them, and unerringly
dinging tho rags into various barrels
round about. They wore calico gowns
reaching to their feet, and kerchiefs on
their heads, to protect themselves from
tho dust. They didn't seem to be paying
any attention to whether rags were linen,
woolen. miKed. what not. I asked one of
them how sho tells. "By the feeling.
We scarcely ever stop to tear it. "Wo get
to that we can tell anything by touching
it, even with our eyes shut."
"Easy learnt? Well, for thoso as has
the knack Somo girls pick it up in a
couple of weeks, some never can learn it.
Oh. it isn't dis.igree.iblo work when you're
used to it Most rags is pretty clean.
Some," she pointed to a bin. It gave new
meaning to men's righteousness being
liko "filthy rags." "A. E. P." in Pioneer
Press.
BILL OF PARTICULARS WANTED.
A Statement Which Hon. IV. II. Knglikh
IVuuld Find it Bard to Verify.
lion. W IL English, of Indiana. Is cred
ited with this statement: "President
Cleveland came into power under circum
stances peculiarly difficult and embarrass
ing " In the platform adopted at the
state convention it is stated that "coming
into power under circumstances peculiarly
(iillicult and embarrassing, after a long
period of Republican rule."
The Indianapolis Journal pertinently
comments upon it as follows:
Mr English seems to be deeply im-press-ed
by the peculiarly difficult and em
barrassing circumstances under which Mr.
Cleveland came into power. What were
I they? The repetition of the statement
' justifies us in asking for a bill of particu
lars. Wo know somo peculiarly difficult
j and embarrassing circumstances that did
not exist when Mr Cleveland came into
power Tho Republican states had not
passed ordinances of secession, and wero
not preparing to break up tho Union.
as most or tno JJemocratie states
were when Abraham Lincoln was inaugur
ated Tho navy of the United States bad
not been scattered to the four quarters of
the globe and army officers ere not re
signing their commissions every day to
join their states in the treasonable move
ment to destroy the Union. United States
senators were not resigning their seats
for tho same purpose. The departments
at Washington were not honeycombed
with treason. The treasury was not
empty, nor tho national credit bankrupt.
The government was not obliged to bor-
j row money at 1 per cent, a month to
rneeL currenr, expenses i ne government
arsenals had not been depleted of muskets
to arm its enemies Hostile cannon wero
not trained on any of its forts The press
and people of one entire section of the
country were not clamoring for war be
cause of the election of a Democratic
president. None of these "peculiarly diffi
cult and embarrassing circumstances" ex
isted when Mr Cleveland came Into
power On the contrary, all the states
and all the Deonle acouiesced in his elec-
Uoa and. when hn agsnmed the -duties of
the ollice be iound every department 01
the government in perfect running order,
no treason, no trouble, no friction, an
overflowing treasury, the books balanced
to a cent, the national flag full high ad
vanced. the national authority respected
at home and abroad, and all the conditions
of a prosperous people and a tower fill
government Vhat. then, were the pecu
Hat ly difficult and embarrassing circum
stances under which Mr Cleveland came
into power? Nothing in the world, absu
lutely nothing, but his own ignorance of
public affairs, tho lack of trained states
men in his party, and its natural iucapau
ity to administer the government We
might safely challenge Mr English or Mr
Cleveland himself to name any other dif
ticult and embarrassing circumstances at
tending his advent to power.
Villi Keniova to Germany.
A dispatch says.
Fearing that the Mills taruT bill will become a
law, the Boot Knit Goods Manufacturing com
pony, of Cohoes. has sent an agent to Uermuuy
with a view to purchasing a bite for a mill in tbat
country and removing their busmens there, as It
woulJ be Impracticable to continue in business
here. Tnw company employs COO persons, with a
montlily pay roll of ?18.000
The company has two mills, connected,
which in external appearance and internal
arrangement aud equipment have no
superiors in the world, and had plans pre
pared some time ago for the erection of a
third The head of the concern, the well
known Commodoro A. J Root, has a repu
tation throughout New York state of
being the most considerate employer, and
ouo of tho best posted men on
the ins and outs and ups and
downs of the knitted goods industry
in tho country The better class
of working girls in these mills earn from
2 to $3 a day. and machinists and other
high class workmen earn from $1,000 to
$3,000 a year. The lower grades of work
ers are paid in proportion. In Germany
the same labor would not cost half so
much as it does in Cohoes. Deuce the far
sighted commodore looks ahead and sees
that he can turn out the same quantity
and quality of goods in Germany and sell
them, through his New York jobbing
house without a tariiT. cheaper than he
does now Here is an object lesson for
knitted goods and all other mill operators
to ponder over.
English Farmers and Free T-ade.
Tho agricultural distress in England is
illustrated by a letter from a Bedfordshire
clergyman to The London Times, who
says that the few men whom the farmers
aro able to hire receive on an average
nine shillings, or $2.25 a week, subject to
deduction For days wheu work is inter
rupted by stormy weather. He says that
ho has assisted two .strong men to emi
grate, who had been earning from four
shillings and suspense to five shillings
per week, with deductious for all time
lost on account of bad weather This is
in free trado Cngland. which robs labor of
its living to pile up capital in the coffers
of the rich merchants and manufactuiers.
Hartford Courant.
Cousin Iten Tulkliie Too Much.
Cousin Ben Folsoni. the genial and effi
cient American consul at Sheffield, "-ho Is
now in this country on a visit. ' ankly
states that the English manufacturers
earnestly hope for the passage of the Mills
bill on account of the improvement it will
effect in their business Cousin Ben is en
tirely right m assuming that it is the pol
icy of this administration to "tell the
tiuth." but be should betaken aside and
quietly informed that there are times
w hen even telling the truth may upset the
most precious schemes of statesmen
Clearly Cousin Ben's diplomacy is wearing
rough on the edires. Philadelphia Press
PITH AND POINT OF POLITICS
Some Sharp SKIrtulsli Shooting Iteforo
the Opening of tho liilttle.
Since Germany has ubandoned free trado
its commerce has increased 07 per cent ,
its maritime tonnage 120 per cent , utid
Its bank discounts, showing the activity
of domestic trade, 240 per cent Theso
are liard facts for free traders to face, es
pecially as Germany's prosperity has been
accompanied by a corresponding depres
sion in many English industries. Boston
Journal
What has become of the old Democratic
cry of four years ago. "Open the books!"
"'Show the rascals upl" "Tnrn the ras
cals out!" They have got tho offices and
opened the books, bsit where is the "ras
culity" that was going to be epofd7
Chicago Inter Ocean.
William II Barnum's refusal to servo
again as chairman of the Democratic na
tional committee is not construed as indi
cating that ho w ill work any harder to
carry Connecticut for Cleveland this jear
than he did in 18S4. New York Tribune.
The Republican party is mdre nearly a
unit today than it has been at any time
in the List fifteen jears. On national
issues it is practically solid. Saratoga
Saratogian.
Tho Republican national convention
will be a thorouglily representative body
and not one that can be readily stain
peded. Fort Wayne Gazette.
One thing Is certain. If tho Republican
party can have its war. the tariff will
never be tinkered in sucfi a manner as to
lower laboring men's wages and cause
general injury of his interests. This is one
of the most important facts to be kept in
mind during the coming campaign. Troy
Times.
"Let it be Cleveland and Thurman,"
says The Central New Jersey Herald
That is a ticket that would suggest a buL
pup scooting along with a rare old Roman
vase tied to its tail. New York Press
When President Cleveland in his mes
sage remarked that the question of free
trado was "absolutely irrelevant" he little
dreamed that within four months there
after Roger Q Mills would show the
country that he didn't know what he was
talking abouL Yet it must be admitted
that Mr Mills has done that very thing
Philadelphia Press
Mr Wattersou is urging tho south to
stand by tho Mills bill, on the ground
that a reduction of duty on iron and iron
manufactures will close many northern
furnaces and give better opportunities to
the southern. This is an argument which
is designed exclusively for southern cou
sumption Boston Journal.
Nearly 8.000 emigrants arrived at Now
York on one day lately It is odd that
these people should fly from the lands
where free trade prevails to come to a
country where protective tariffs exist.
The free traders should explain all this.
Philadelphia Press
The administration has made no expo
sure of Republican rascality, simply be
cause there was none of the article to bo
found. Troy Times!
The multiplicity of presidential r.ndi
datcs in the Republican party is a mighty
good sign. Cleveland Leader.
Tho Democratic free trade policy is to
buy labor in the cheapest market. In
some foreign markets labor can be had for
less than ten cents a day The free
traders ought to live there. Detroit
Tribune.
A league of Democratic clubs Is now
proposed. Imitation is sincere flattery.
Tho Democrats follow the footsteps of the
Republicans as rapidly as they can, hut
they are always behind. Hartford Post.
The civil service reform mugwumps,
learning that Cleveland is no longer a
civil service reformer, declare that "tariff
reform" is the only issue. The mugwump
surpasses all other creatures in forgetting
to remember what he most believed in last
rn&i Crdrarrn JanxsaL
TALES OF THE TEETII.
TRADITIONS, OMENS AND ADAGES
mMONG THE UNEDUCATED.
All Sorts of Superstition Conrerulog the
Teeth Cliurtns and Other Remedies for
Toothache KnglUh aud Irish Keel pes.
The Praer Cure.
The teeth and the aches to which they
give rise have been subjects of many
strange ideas among uneducated people
Teeth havo even been worshiped, and are
still venerated as lelics in borne Catholic
shrines Buddha's tooth is preserved in n
temple in India, and Ceyloneso worshiped
the'toothof a monkey, while au elephant's
tooth and shark's tooth served a similar
purpose among the Malabar Islanders aud
the Tonga Islanders respectively. Siam
ese valued a monkey's tooth so highly
that they are reported to have offered tho
Portuguese 700.000 crowns for it.
There was a tradition that, from the
time Chosroes, the Persian, carried off a
piece of the true cross from Constantino
ple, the number of teeth in tho mouths of
men were reduced from thirty-two to
twenty -three It is needless to say that
we still have thirty-two Teeth have
often been worn as amulets. Shaiks"
teeth berve this purpose in Samoa It
was formerly thought that a wolf's tooth,
worn in a bag about tho neck, would
chase fear away froiu the possessor. The
back tooth of a horse, found by chance,
will, say tho Irish, keep you supplied with
money
OMENS AXO ADAGES.
There aro many omens connected with
infants' teeth, as well as those of adults
If a child teethe early, it is thought in
England to predict more children "Soon
teeth, soon toes," is the adage, both in
that country and in Sweden If a tooth
comes first in tho upper jaw it is, on the
contrary, an omen of early death, as tho
child cannot survive so potent a disaster.
An old work, published in 103)1, tells us
that to loose a tooth or an eeisalso to
lose somo friend or kinsman, or is. at
least, attended by some ill luck. IIo who
has his teeth wid'o apart is there said to
be attended by good luck. Breton mothers
will not touch infants' gums, lest tho
teeth grow crooked. To dream of teeth
was a warning of somo disaster, unless
j ou dreamed they fell out.
The period of teething being an anxious
ono in childhood, it is extremely impor
tant to have it oer with. In Susbex.
England, a necklace of beads made from
peony root was placed on the child's neck
to assist this operation, and one of amber
beads was also thought powerful. It was
ulso said that first teeth must not be
thrown away when they fall out, for if
am animal got such a trophy the next
tooth would be like that of the unimal
finding the old one. In Nova Scotia, and
in somo parts of tho United States, rhil
dren ate told that the new- tooth will be a
gold one if the tongue is kept out of the
jld cavity
Folk lore is full of odd notions about
the toothache, and many queer remedies
aio current for it. It was once thought to
be caused by a woim.
Ono of the most potent remedies was
thought to bo a charm of somo kind oi
other. In England this charm is a rhyme
or pmyer written on a piece of paper.
Verses for this purpose uro current in Ger
many to this day. St. ApjollIniis was
especially invoked for this malady in tho
Thirteenth century.
A woik publishel In l."5J." prescribes the
following remedy: The patient was to in
hale the smoke from a essel in which
dried herbs were mixed with live coals
IIo must then breariie over a cup holding
water mixed with wax and serum, whn
it was said that a woim, the cause of tho
trouble, would appear in tho cup.
AN01HI.U si i:xgi: jiEMi.nv.
Nearly a i-entuiy later wo find another
strange remedy: "With an iron nail raise
aud cut the gum from about the teeth
until it bleed, and that some of the blood
spill upon the nail. Thti drive it into a
wooden beam up to the head. After this
is done you never shall have the tooth
ache in all jour life."
Another old writer of tho same period,
Aubrey, gives popular remedies tor the
toothache. A splinter of wood from a
gibbet was thought efficacious in the
north of England, while in Devonshire it
w as thought best to bite a tooth from a
skull in a grave yard, and carry it in the
jKK-ket as a charm. In another pait of
England, an equally ghastly amulet was a
tooth drawn from tho mouth of a corpse,
carried in the pocket Tho paw of a live
mole or a double nut were also preset ibod
as preventive charms To dress the left
foot and leg before the right is equally
effective.
Somo of tho Irish cures for the tooth
ache wero fully as ghastly as those cit-d
above. One of theso empirical recipes
bids ou go to a grave, kneel upon it, say
three paters and three aves for tho soul of
the dead, then chew a handful of glass
taken from tho grave, spitting it out.
Tho toothache will never after trouble
you
Another remedy is to vow never to comb
your hair on Friday, invoking the Creator,
tho Virgin and the new moon. You may
afterwards neglect the two first, but must
kneel and say five prayers on first behold
ing the new moon. Tho two jaw bones
of a haddock have been powerful in al
laying tho toothache ever since tho mir
acle of the loaves and fishes. If you wish
to avoid tho toothache, say tho sons of
Erin, never shavo on Sunday. Globe
Democrat. Tapar Manufacture and Its Methods.
The Chinese are supposed to have been
tho Inventors of paper. They used rice
straw or rags of cotton or linen for making
their paper stock. Modern nations fol
lowed their example, but mado few im
provements on tho ancient process until
within the last forty years. Since then
every decade has witnessed great advances
in this industry. New methods, processes,
and machinery have been devised, new
materials brought into use, and new and
multifarious forms of the manufactured
product now enter into tho economies of
modern life. Rags are gathered in all
parts of tho world and brought by ship
loads to tho United States, but they aro
no longer the chief raw materiaL Paper
fibers are obtained from old rop, juto
butts, straw of tho various grains, from
many grasses and reeds, and from the
wood of cypress, pine, poplar, spruce,
hemlock, basswood. sycamore and other
trees Now great mills prepare tho fiber
stock for paper manufacturers, who buy
it by tho ton, in bulk, and then work it
into whatever shapes their business re
quires As it costs far less to carry
chemicals to the forests than it would to
transport the logs, wood pulp establish
ments are generally located near sources
of supply
The chief chemicals aro lime, potash.
coda ash, and caustic soda. These alkalies,
dissolved in water to make the cooking
liquids, have been employed in huge
wooden tanks, in which, because tho tem
perature could not be carried above boil
ing heat, it was necessary to continue the
cooking from two to three days. The
progress of invention has recently mado it
possible to greatly reduce the time re
quired for this purpose. The demand for
paper in all forms for old and new uses is
I unlimited, and is daily Increasing. In
no part or the globe is there a greater
variety of vegetable fibers than in the
south, whose cane brakes, swamps, for
ests and cotton fields can furnish inex
haustible quantities for all time. The
cotton plantations alone could probably
supply every pulp mill in American with
a materlaLcneaolT gathered and .bnndJixL
nna containing a long, siruug. oeamirm
fiber. Baltimore Journal of Commerce
A Great Opportunity Lost. t
Mr Littlo has strong opinions not fa
vorable to the current idea of tho wealth,
strength and prowess of China and her
value as au ally, and considers that theso ,
are only remotely potential He thinks
tho Chinese possess "a much less highly
developed orgauization than do the Cati- '
casian races;" finds their religion consists
in "propitiating evil spirits," and that they
"can hardly appreciato tho Christiap
ideal." On tho other hand, they havo
"many vlttues." and, although tho social
system is uudermined throughout by pec
ulation and' "deceit, "from tho armies
which only exist in tho commander-in-chief's
wardrobe and the public granaries
containing only chaff, down to tho pres
ents not intended for acceptance and the
proclamations never meant to be ob
served," so that the empire is a sham,
et still ho is forced to admit, ou rellec
tion and in fairness, that such is tho per
sistent industry of tho Chinese "that with
highly gifted rulers to guide and rule
them, they may yet be a great people."
As illustrations of their readiness to
obey ho points to tho edict of Ivublai
Khan, which directed that tho cemeteries
should bo plowed up. an edict obeyed and
only revoked two centuries ago, and to
the Mauchu orders which abolished tho
flowing robes aud imposed tho pigtail
The first emperor of tho present dynast
ordered the tribes of Yunan, "on pain of
death, to learn Pekingese," and was
obeyed Mr Little thinks ttiat had we.
w hen masters of Peking, "had the coin
age to usurp tho dragon throne, and hud
wo issued an edict prohibiting thence
forth the mutilation of children's feet,
tho command would havo been oleyel,
sullenly, perhaps, at first, but afterward
thankfully." That, undoubtedly, would
hae been an immense social reform, lib
erating from torture and physical do
formity the women of China. London
Spectator.
rhysiologloUI Kflects or .lias-age.
Iii a discussiou of this subject by Brit
ish physicians of eminence. Dr. Symons
Eccles "declared, as tho results of his own
experiments on healthy persons, from a
combination of the vai ious massage man
ipulations, that tho texture of tho skin
was improved, the senso of locality in
creased, tho general body temperature
was raised and tho fieo surfaco tempera
ture of a part under massago becanio
higher than that of tho rest of tho body,
while abdominal massago decreased tho
surfaco temperature of tho extremities,
a courso of massago of one month's dura
tion increased tho body weight, the appe
tite, muscular strength and ability to
sleep and wot k w elL
Dr Play fair expressed it as his opinion
that massage is only one agent, along with
overfeeding and freedom from previous
surroundings, in tho treatment of pro
found cases of nervous debility or malnu
trition, tho exact character of which is
not as yet thoroughly understood; some of
tho casc3 which wet e commonly accounted
as incurablo and wero a curso to their
families could, ho thought, bo cured by
theo means. New York Tribtuie.
Stonewall J act son and tho I'riest.
Dr. J. William Jones, tho gallant Con
federate veteran, was standing with some
friends on Broad street bridge waiting tor
tho procession on Decoiation day. "1
wonder," some ono asked, "if any body of
Vuops ever moved exactly on time';"
"Noter," replied t lie doctor quietly, "I
imagine, since Stonewall Jackson died."
This Fcemel to set tho ieministent.il
mood and the doctor continued.
"By the way, did you ever hear tho
close of the prayer made by Father Dubert,
the bravo Catholic priPst who was chap
lain of Hay's brigade? It was in New Oi
lcans, on a big Confederate day, and Father
Dubert was praing. He had eulogied
the Confederate soldier in Gen. Stonewcll
Jackson in particular when ho closed
with the-e words- "And now. Almighty
(iod our Father, thou know est that when
thou madest up thy mind that tho Con
federacy should bo defeat isl in war thou
found ii necessary to remove thy servant,
Stonewall Jackson, befoio thou couldst
accomplish thy purpose!" Atlanta Con
stitutiou.
Diphtherlit from 1'oultrt.
In Skiatos. ouo of tho Grecian isles,
there has been no caso of diphtheiia for
over thiity years until tho summer of
1SSI. when a child died of the disease,
and in tho courso of live months thero
were over 100 cases, with thirty si
deaths, in a community of about 4.0U0
Careful investigations of tho origin of tho
epidemic resulted in tracing it to a Hock
of infected turkeys received from Salon
ie.t. and wliich on examination showed
unmistakable evidence of tho diphtheria
process Dr. Pauliiiis, tho reporter (Bnl
letin Medical), coitfluded from this ex
perienco that the diphtheria of tho ord
inary barn yard fowls was similar in its
course and symptoms to the disease oc
curring in man. and that it could bo car
ried from tho ono to tho other, sometimes
through the medium of the air. Chicago
News.
Eating u Meal in Silent e.
"Thero are." says Sir John Lubbock,
"perhaps few more objectionable sceiu s
in this life than a man or a woman eating
a heavy meal in perfect silence It is at
meal timo w hen tho spiritual element in
man should bo most apparent. It is easv
enough to have great ideas and to express
them in tho lecture room, tho library or
tho drawing room. The animal nature is
practically dormant with such association
but at dinner, for instance, the veiy con
trary is the case, and it is of all situations
tho severest test of a man's chum to be
master of his animal nature "I Iio man
who can discuss home rule, the conseiva (
tion of energy or tho authenticity of the ,
fourth Gospel over a dinner consisting of i
soup, game, joint and tho usual sweets. I
may fairly bo considered to come within I
flm tnt' Incpfintinn rf mrni rts n f .tf lit '
looking before and after Tho two car
dinal sins in conversation are talkative
lies and silence; the rest are wl...i nncht
be called venial offei-sei " Hume li.ni:il
Afraid of the f'uiorito Sou.
The Indiana Democrats are afraid of tho
Harrison boom, the Ohio Democrats aio
afraid of the Sherman boom, tho Michi
gan Democrats aro afraid of tho Rusk
boom, tho Now York Democrats are afraid
of tho Depew boom, and the Connecticut
Democrats are afraid of the Haw ley boom.
The favorite tons of sovereign states uro
causes of E'emocratic terror everywhere.
The favorite sons of Democracy ho ex
cite Republican terror where are tbov?
Ask of the winds but even the winds
can't tell Philadelphia Piess
A Warm l'rn ectllu?.
Brown What's tiio matter. Duniley?
You look hot about something.
Dumley (angiily) Hot' I should say .
I was around at tho Eagle just hot;, and
that fool Featherly dropped a hunk f
lev down mv back Enough to malv uu
tnun hot' S'e.v York Sun
Syi up of Ki'k"
Is Nature's own true laxative. It is fir
mest easily taken, and the most effective
remedy known to Cleanse the System
when Bilious or Costive; to dispel Head
aches, Colds and Fevers; to cure Habit
ual Constipation, Indigestion, Piles, et..
Manufactured only by tho California Fig
Syrup Company, San Francisco, Cal. For
sale only by Dowty & Becher. 27-y
FARM, FIELD AND GARDEN.
TIMELY INSTRUCTION IN VARIOUS
FARM DEPARTMENTS.
Nerevil).- for reeding Crop W lien Voiiiir
Imperfect Sec-da 111 Adapted for I'oor
SoiU tluture Seeds Ilct for All KiniN
ol Laud.
Tho fact that every plant has to form
roots, leaves and stems before tho fruit
cau appear i e.. organs which collect and
s-toto up the materials from which the
fruit is formed it follows that in caso a
plant has not been able to collect a suf
ficient quantity of these fruit producing
constituents by the time of flavoring it
cannot by any possibility Uar abundant
fruit, hence tho importance of supplying
to seed crops fiom tho moment of their
growth proper quantities of all kinds of
food that aro necessary to form grain as
well as leaves.
With forago crops the case is somewhat
different. There would be no special
harm in forcing theso to bear luxuriant
leaves by means of uitrogenied manures,
provided always that the growth is not so
rauk that the plants wiH lodge It would
bo folly, however, to attempt to force a
grain crop in this way unless tho joung
plants had access to an abundance of
phosphoric acid, and all the other ash in
grcdieuts necessary for tho formation of
grain
Tho same reasoning that teaches tho
necessity of tho early harvesting of for
ago crops applies, of course, to green
ciops that are to bo turned under as man
uro These should bo plowed under
when in flower or even just buforo flower
ing, for at that time they aie richest in
easily decomposable organic matters, and
contain nearly all the ash ingredients
they are capable of taking It is usually
important, moreover, in green manuring,
to save as much time as possible in order
to get in another crop, and to avoid tho
formation of sceds, whether thoso of tho
crop itself or of tho seeds that grow
with it.
It ought to bo borne in mind that im
perfect teeds aro specially ill adapted for
poor land, and that, as a rule, dead ripe
seeds aro best for sowuig in all soils The
results gained by scientists and prcgres
sivo fanners of trials with seeds at dif
ferent stages of ripeness, sown in the ope i
field, make it appear that the less ripe tho
seeds the fewer gennlnato and the weaker
aro the voting plants Ou sandy soil theso
differences persisted throughout tho en
tiro life of tho plant, but in wit garden
soil tho weak plants soon grow strong
after a time In a word, the huitful in
tluenco of light seeds may be overcome m
a fertile soil, when till tho conditions aie
favorable, while on poor ot dry lan.i the
crop may nov er i ec-over w hen thus ci ippied
at tho start
VINES AND CLIMBERS.
Varieties Th.it Am Decidedly lie. omtUi
niid KnIly C'ultiv tied.
Vi.ies growing about tho house, climb
ing on bare walls and covering old fences,
or hiding under clustering leaves somo
unsightly old building add greatly to tho
apiKarunc of a place Theso festoons of
green not only conceal defects, but de
stroy tho primness and formality of a
dwelling honso as it comes from the hands
of the builder Just why one does not
see more of these graceful climbing plants
is hard to understand, for tliero are many
kinds that are easily giov. n and which re
quire but littlo care
There ate lew plants of more value to
the gardncr than tho hardy or perennial
climbers, which, onco planted, remuiuaud
grow huger and better every season 'I he
general cultivation of tho Viigima reeper
a native ot our woods h:i dmio much to
beautify rural homes The ivv and v.ootl
bine are two other populai climbers The
clematis is yet anothes tavoiite chmU-r.
and for covering trelli-es. rock woik or
screening n hit tic-o it cannot bo excelled.
The large flow ei ing varieties are paitic-u
larly desirable for these purposes
Clematis jackmanui, an English hybrid
that bears intense viol, t pin pie Mowers,
and tho queen, with delicate lave.id-r
flowers, are two choice varieties umoi-g
tho large flowering clemetis
Tho so called moon (lower plant, which
the past two seasons has had such a lai.t
pationage. is useful for verandas i.nd
makes a good green houso chmbei fi tie
v.dl known cy pi ens vine, with its bright
beautiful (lowers, is another deservedly
popular cliniLr. and, by tho by. thiivcs
best in sandy loam The few plants abo-.o
enumerated are but the beginning of an
almost inexhaustible libt of ornamental
vines that one may havo growing about
their homo w ith the expenditure of a lit
tlo labor and almost no money
Tho i:.-.t Small I'ruits.
Early in tho season Tho Rural New
Yorker sent out inquiries as to tho best
three kinds of cariy. medium and Lite
fruits Tho replies came from authorities
over a wide range of country fiom Can
ada to Texas Following aro in brief the
results of the inquiry
Strawberries, IM votes, as follows: Cres
cent Seedling. 10. Downing, 10. Sharp
less. 10; Cumberland. S. Wilson. 4; Bid
well. 4; Jersey Queen. :J; Jewell, 3; Miner.
3. Btibach, 3, tho others 1 and 2 each.
Itaspberries, 21 were voted on with this
result: Cuthbert, 14; Souhegau, 5, Marl
borough. 4; Gregg, 4; Uan&ell, 3; Shaffer.
3; the others 1 and 2 each.
Blackberries, 18 were voted on with this
result. Kittating. 9; Taylor, C; Wilson. 3
Snyder. 3; Ancient Britton, 3, Erie, 3
the others 1 and 2 each.
Gooseberries, 0 wero voted for as fol
lows. Downing, 13; Houghton. 9; Industry.
7; Smiths, G; Triumph, 2; Dougal. 1.
Currants. 8 wero voted on with this re
sult White Grape, 11; Fays, 10; Versail
laise, 4; Cherry. 4; Victoria, 0; White
Dutch. 2; Leo's Prolific, 2; Red Dutch. 1
Of white grapes, 19 vveio voted for as
follows Niagara, 12; Lady, 10. Empire
State. 5, Pocklington, o; Duchess; 4; Mar
tin, 4. Hayes. 3; the others 1 and 2 each
Of red grapes, 20 were voted for as fol
lows Brighton, 11; Delaware, 12. I'Sti r
o. Lindley, 3, Salem. 3; Vergennes. 3. the
others 1 and 2 each
Of black or blue grapes, 1 1 were voted
for as follows Worden. 12; Concord, 10
Wilder, 8, .Moore's Early. 7; Herbert, 4.
the others I and 2 each
A ISree.ler T IN How to Kali" C'-.
A bre dcr in fine horses tells in Turf
Field aud Farm his plan far raisuig fine
colts
Tho brood mare, after foaling, is fed
liberally on grain. When tho rlies are
bad she is sheltered during the heat of
tho day and is given tno range of sm-ci
lent pastures at night When the an K
chilly she is housed at night and i turned
out during tho day Each mare is put in
a box at feeding time so that sho may en
ioy her oats in jeace. If the gram is put
into troughs out hi the pasture thero will
be serious scrimmages for it In every
band there are two or three mares who
want to rule, and at feeding time they
rush from trough to trough and keep
everything in a ferment The grain is
hastily swallowed and there is danger of
tho colts getting injured by kicks
The foal will begin eating grain when
two weeks old. and if the mother is fed
inn quiet place the baby will havo more
inclination as well as time to nose m the
trough itself At five months old the
foal is weaned and it goes for the winter
into a sunny and sheltered yard used ex
clusively for weanlings At night two
colts occupy one box, and during tho day
the whole band enjoys tho bright and
bracixm weather. Each i&Jejl ua.ta ina
sepanitc "box ana is given pranty ot goca
hay. and gathering in a band for exercise
promotes cheerfulness and aids digestion.
All this requires thought and attention,
but it pays in tho long run.
Polled Aberdeen Angn Cattle.
Nono of the so called "beef breeds" of
cattle have attained a moro rapid or well
deserved popularity in this 'country than
the Aberdeen angus, say3 American Agri
culturist Their ireedom from horns is an
obv.otis advantage in feeding and trans
porting by rail They aro prolific, mature
early and fatten easily Well bred "dod
dies" wliich "rustle" tho first two years,
and arc finished off with grain, weigh
from l.oOO to 1.000 pounds each, and when
brought to the final test of tho butcher's
block, yield as high as sixty pounds or
moro of finely marbled dressed beef for
every hundred pounds of livo weight.
For the purpose of securing purity of
blood, the leading breeders of theso cattle
several y ears ago organized tho American
Aberdeen Angus Breeder's association, and
two volumes of its herd books havo been
published and the third is in courso of
preparation Tho association has a mem
bership of nearly MO. embracing many of
tiio foremost live stock breeders of the
country
Cal la Lillet.
New York florists who grow calla lilies
for market keep the plants in pots all tho
voir round In a v.oid. t hoy keep the
callas in active growth until May or June,
then they dry them off and put them
away to rest until about August, when
the plants aro repotted into tho same
sized pots (bix or eight inch) in which
they were previously growu. After ro
jMtting they are watered and exposed to
aii and sun. when active growth soon bo
gins again Tho plants, under this treat
ineut. begin to bloom in October and con
tintio to (lower during the winter and on
until after Easter.
Some growers vary tho above plan Im
planting their callas iu tho open ground
during tho summer and lifting and pot
ting them in tho autumn. This latter
practice is productive of luxuriant foliage
anil very largo lilies Tho first plan men
tioned resting the plants in bummer
will, however, give the greatest number
of blossoms
Ciit Liinu :ih Mil Intecticl.Ie.
Prof. A. J Cook, in a lecture delivered
on gas limo as au insecticide, makes tho
follow mg statement:
"To use gas lime for leaf eating injects
it may be seat tered on as ,i powder or it
ni'iy bo mied with water and sprinkled
on tho plants. 1 hav e reason to believe
that if a littlo of it is incorporated in tho
soil in lods where radishes aud cabbageu
at o being grow u that tho destructive mag
gots will not put in an npe.irai:co. We
tried it on plants already attacked, and
found that all the m.iggots actually
t ouehed by the pow derw ere speedily killed.
Li!;., the kerosene emulsion, togive perfect
satisfaction, it must ho applied as eaily as
the (leas come to deposit tho eggs ft is
very possible that by scattering tiiis gas
lime on our s.jn.i.,li vines in Juno we
might stay th ravages of that dreaded
pest, the squash borer.
Tiio V il-.m Straw herrj iiii.l Cone. ir.1 Grape.
Thrr.-are unquestionably better varie
ties of tho strawberry than tho Wilson,
but there is none that gives better returns
under inexperienced management. Just
so the Concord grape, though not the best,
it is the grape that will stand .the neglect
and want of favorable conditions of the
general grower better than any other sort.
How to l'.irlt rgs--
It pays when packing eggs for market
to put them in egg cases Theso cases
are s.-lt counting, being uniform in bi7e.
and will cat ry their fragile freight much
-ifcr than rny otlur way It is best to
riake two grades, those absolutely clean
.- i.l fresh nd thoso not up to tho staud
aid lit color, cleanliness and freshness
Thine Told !y Others.
The professors and others aro telling us
in the farm press that if slices of pota
toes are soaked in Paris green water and
scattered over the field before the potatoes
are up tho potato beetles will bo killed
This is not Rural New Yorker's ex peri
ence In tho first place, the beetles don't
appear in largo quantities before the jo
tatoes aro up Afterward they will not
eat a Paris greened slico if they can gt t
tho leaf.
Skimmed milk is good for young chicks
Indiana Farmer says that the Shropshire
sheep have grown moro rapidly in favor
than almost any other breed, especially in
the central western states.
An authority on poultry claims that
close breeding and breeding for feather
reduces tho size and especially tho number
of eggs.
American Cultivator expresses the opin
ion that barley is somevv hat better than
oats to sow- eaily for soiling purposes. It
grows up to cutting sio i lore quickly,
and just before heading out is specially
rich and succulent lor cows giving milk.
A southern farmer very truly says
Pigpens ought not to bo in tho same
locality every season. By having them
movable much valuable manure can be
secured from the saturated earth around
the old sites, while the change to fresh
places will greatly promote cleanliness
and health.
For the first me-d tc littlo chicks a
prominent poultryman recommends boiled
eggs chopped line, shelta and all. with
baked corncako crumbled into scalded
milk.
A Scotch shepherd says that she ep keep
much better when they have to get their
feed with somo difficulty A feed box.
in which they c-.-in get only their heads,
with a troughlike arrangement on top. a
narrow slit at bottom, ot three or foul
inches saves about all waste, and muss
ing and soiling of tho hay
Want of Sleep
Ii si iubng tllOlls Hills 1III1SI l'!. To tho
iit-a:u- aslimi , ,'n.l tl.i I t. - s tins
trouble is alarmingly on tl. .ir.i.-.
Tin- Usual it in. iis. winli th. in iv
give ti mjM.rary r 1.. f, art- IiU.lv to l
more harm than gim.l. What is m .!. .1
is au Alterative and i'.Kn.il-t.m i!'n r
Ajer's S.irs.ipariU.i is mm miMr.it.lv
the best. It orri ts those listiirb.ll. . s
ill the in illation wlu h i .msc sit i-pl. s-,-tifss,
gives iiureai.il vitality, and re
stores tin- nervals syslc-ui ton healthful
condition.
Rev. T.G. A. Cot.'', agent of the M i-s.
Home Missionary So. lety, writes that
hw stomal h was out of order, his sli i-p
very- often disturb. .1. anil some- impurity-
of the blood manifi st : but that
:t perfect cure was obtained by the use
of Aver's Sarsaparilla.
Frederick W. Pratt. 121 Washington
street, Boston, writes: " My daughter
v. as prostrated with nervous debilitv.
Aver'n Sarsaparilla i-stond her to
h.-ilth."
William F. Uovvker. Erie, P.i . was
cured of nervousness and sleeplessness
bx taking Ay it's Sarsaparilla for about
two months, during whn-h time his
weight im-rca-ii-il over twenty pounds
Ayer's Sarsaparilla,
rncr.vnKn r.v
Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass.
Sold by all Drui!it. Price 3 1 , u tottlcs, S3.
National Bank!
OF
COLUMBUS. NEB.
-HAS AN
Authorized Capital of $250,000,
A Surplus Fund of - $20,000,
And the lar.-st Paid in Cuh Capital of
nil li.uik in thin Hit of the St'ile.
-Cl I'otutt. receive.! ami interest imiiljoa
tiiiid'io"itH.
JST-flnifts on the princ inl e-ititM in tliiecouu
try timl lairote ltii:ht ntul Mild.
Wt'oHectioiin and nil oilier htiaiuesn Kites
Iromit mitt CHreful attention.
NToehiioi nuts.
. AMtCKSON. IWt.
.i ii.i;ai.i.i:, ;.-.. iwi.
o. r KlU:N.Ca-.liier.
Ii. WIM'ltSON. ! ANDKKSO.N,
,iMitiii;i:tM:N. iiimi kaiiaiV.,
JOHN. I. SI I, LIN .. "A. . .MeVI.USTKK.
Apr-JS-'sltf
business ;ird?;.
(jn.MVAi .v ui:i:iti:ic,
-1 '"'( AV; YS AT LAW,
OlH.-e oter I irst Niitumal Hank, Colnmljti-.
Nebraska. .MMf
c
'1 . i:VAi.i, ,-ri. .,
i ii i .s 1 i v .sr.v.-Ko.v.
'""I1"'" m"' r"o'f4. ("hick Imihliiic. 11th
tr.st. T leIioiie-oiiiiiiiiiuiatioii. l-r
T SB. .11,tiFAKlt.
.iuoi:r ,r ori;r n nur.
tr"0:l ter I'm-! Nnlioiuil Ijimk, Coliiui.
buw, N. hraxkn.
J
oii.a 3:1 .sii:.
in i st i:i rvoi:.
it" Vat tin I.Tiriii.' Mirtejini; iloiio can ii.l
.Ir. s in,, at oIumhiiH. ,. I,.. r .all at mj othi-o
ml oiirt lb. iir.. rinnjNl.y
( . sri" r ft ;.( ,s 7UO..S-.
I willi.. in in ..Hi... in lie Court :ioiiM. th,.
tl ir.l Kitnr.li! of ..i. Ii in. .ml. f,,r th.. examina
tion f ;ip;.! intM .,r (.aiders . ertiti.-ntes. ami
for the tr tns.n in. n ,if ,,ti. r .., , Ihjhiiuh.
1-j m-s
W
ijua) ami :a'::.s'.s'.i;a'.
(.iht ami h.-it haul in". ;,-. hnnII.it uali
r.ir. . I!f-iil.imrl-r at .1. I. iUs k. r.V I '.' olhie
.-l.-lhone. u ami .11. auniarsT
JY K. TURNER & CO..
I'ropri. tors.in.l I'liMi-h. rs of th,.
lt..l(i tt-ihiiil t i -.Mr.sH. f..r .'.(Hl a j,..,r
Mm tit in . ..It inie. 1-flirt .loiuwt i ini
ttar. '
V. . AI. U.I.IS-I I . M. ( OIJMIIJUS.
UcII.3.!S9I:K.V t!tMMIS
A'lTdlLXrVs AT LAW.
I "oliiiiil.us, M,..
( tu. e ii, stairs ,.t, r CniMl A S. i.tt.inV toi.. on
l.i. v. nth Mie. t. Ii;iiunjr.s
Die. .9.4 ii A.-. mi.i.i,
'. nt.i.,- Arzl.)
rilYSIClA ,i,l scnavox,
t'oblllliill-. Nel,.
1 h s s-s I S-..7 M.rw
. , l!' riiii.hi.il..
l.Iet..iu. sti.-i. i :!,.,. , ;,,.t ,....r,7.
lTJiimrs7
JlHIM..IIK.i.lS. t. J.I.AKI.OW.
HIGGINS & GARLOW,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
hn.ilt m.i.l. of I oll.itn.imb C. .1. (on-low
.:i-m '
K. C. BOYD,
ii i t t ri iii-it oi-
Tin and Sheet-Iron Ware,!
Job-Work, Hoofing; and Gutter
ing a Specialty.
; ".Shop on I 'i, sir, . hr..is.. !ro V ..1.1
"Minion 1 1 irt.. nth -tr. . i jif
GRASS SEEDS !
Clover, Timothy,
Red Top, Millet,
Hungarian and
Blue Grass Seed,
u
HERM&NQEHLRIGH&BRO'S.
fell.
-till
nrrnSEA wonders x,,t ...
I j L L Uu.o"-iikU ot I. ."ii-. hut are Mir-
II i I fc1"'' ''j l'ni..rvelHof int.-nln.n.
!! Tl.o- who . re i,i H.-.I of .rotitiMi,
work th .r inn U !.ri U,t!, living at home
"hoiiM at ..in. s. nil their uililn-r. to IIhII. it A
.... I'orthiml, Main, .ami i.M.n,. free, full in
form it ion l it either wx,(,f all ..ci -, kii .-am
from $1 I., j. i- r ilitan.l iiitt.irils Iiw.h.t
th lite Yon are M.irt.-il fr. ( npital n..l re
oiiir.il. home hat. mail.. .t. r V) in a inul..
la .it tl .s work All sin C...-.I. sTil.cij
$500 Reward !
We will tf( thealx.te ren.inl for an case of
liter ..mpl.iint, .Ijr-t- .nm. mi k lit.nl u he.in.lt-Kei-tion,
"-.instillation or nwiinii.f. w. cannot
cure with .t' fctuMe Liter I'lll-, when the
lir.i tiotis ,.r. i-lru tK coiiiiiIi.-.! with. Ilie aie
j.ur. ! o talile. ami i: ver fai' to Kite Mitisfm -tion.
I-iri;e I,....- coiit.uiiim; .JO finr ir oatnl
j. ills, -in . I,,r sal- l all lrnn."t.. l!c wait of
t ounti rf. its ami in n n.iinm.-. The k inline
ni-iiiiif.K-tiireit oi.l l JOHN ( . Wh-sr A ( (..
- W. Ma.li-on St . ( tm- ait III ilc 7 sTt
INVENTION
h.w r. tolntii.tiieil
tl.i ttorhliliirmictlie
I u-t hilf centiirj.
Not hast anionic the
wor'lets of mt. ntue i roi;r."-s is i inetho.1 ami
.j-stem of work that can ix- rfornic.1 alloter
t he ronnt r without seiinmtini; the workers from
their liiiini -. In tihenil. aii one cm do the
work, . itht r 'ex. toiini; or old. no npi-cial ahilitt
required. ajntnl not muli-d. jrm are start, d
free. ( ut this out and return to us and we will
fend you free, souip thine of nat value and im
portance to oti, that will Mart joit in hnsine-.,
wliich will lirint: jou in more mon.-j riuht aw.ij.
than antthins t le- in the world. ,.iu,t mtit
frrr. Aililn-. True A Co.. Atiiruta, Jle. (Uc"J3
WPWS P2L P JT? A hook of Ko piKC3
fl li, jWrr;r& n. st l,o!c loran
ITvm.--mn.j.,,. niKf-tiM r to cou-
fJV AJ I a " J?J . IK, .1 or otherwise.
Itf-ont i n li-t-ot ii-Niie!-:nnl stn:iat(M
ottl. e-o-roi.KUtrtisiiitr.lhc n lv rti-erttho
t..u.ts to siieini one ilollr.r lon' hi it the in
iiriuuti mlie re.juircj. thIe!thim tthott ill
invest one- hundred tboiis-ui t dollars in ud
vur'itiit'. :i sclie-mo is indicnt.d vtliich will
meet Ills every reiiulremeiit, or enn I matte
to tlo so ly sliiht cltttngestasily arrirettttt lycor
rtiontrnre. WJ edition-) have been issued.
:eiit. post-paid, to any address for lOe-ents.
Arlto tc I5KO. 1. KOA'EI.L. & CO.
NKWaPAPEIt AUVEKTJrfl.N'U HUKEAU.
aodoruwst.1 riaUns House Sq ), New YorS.