The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, June 27, 1900, Image 4

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i Saltaa's OM Maslctaa Di
Gaatelll Pasha, for over half a cen
tal? director of military music tc the
Sublime Port, died recently, at Con-
. stantinople at the age of 5 years. He
was a native of Parma. His predeces-
aor in office was Giuseppe Donizetti,
' . the brother of the great composer.
Batterfield Getting Well.
' General Daniel Butterfleld, who has
been invalided for more than a year,
' . Is recovering his health slowly and
'expects to be able to attena the Grand
- .Army encampment in September.
The
Turn
of Life
-' This Is m critical
Im the life of every
help for
massing through thlm
Be
LydU E. HmUum's Vegetable
this
fleaf to by am army of
grateful womem who have
helped my It.
Mrs Plmkham, who has
the greatest ami meet
mmooeesful experience Im
.the worU to qualify her,
wUI amvtse yom free of
Lynn, Mass. Wrkotohor
For starching fine linen use Magnetic
.'. Starch.
The girl who doesn't wish to see
.callers must expect to be found out.
Haifa Catarrh Care
Is a constitutional cure. Price, 75c.
Eve may have had her troubles, but
Adam never brought his friends home
to dinner unexpectedly.
Magnetic Starch is the very best
laundry starch in the world.
If afflicted
? ThMjMTs Eft Water.
anuieres.
: DEIICinilCfietYNrPHsiH
rcnoiu no double quick
Write CAPT.O'FARRELL. Pension Agent.
.. M5 New York Aveaoc. WASHINGTON. D. &
'"ZmmwTRVmmm
,-.fllV
I.I
...c ue!W
aw""
.. 6,n" .AClS
" 6 ""a.
LsM
H
!
jgpC For yoor family eosatett
nau Toor DTIL
HIRES Rooibeer
ST Will rvtnfrlKrttA . ..
S tons of Ice and a gross or &
Oa K. (VallAna - - - -
BSfe -...r?r,v'""L .
"iiw tow iii oi prrmiunu oflbffM
-0 awr iiwii,
, CHARLES E.niKESC.
- -a
(
Starch
Tie Wafer
if tit Mi
It Stiffens the Goods
:. It Whitens the Goods
It polishes the Goods
es all ffarmtnU fresh aaa
ant bought nnr.
Try m Sample Package
Tou'U Ilka It If you try It
You'll buy it if you try H.
Teu'll im It If you try It.
Tnr K.
Sold by all
QXYDONOR No. 2.
TawcHMa
;OJian 1 by Pa, H. toosA
WAMINO NOTICE.
Beware of fraudulent imitations of
Oaydoaor. Jjawsaits are needing against
Imitators. Anyone buying, selling or
star sack iafnagesBe&ts will be prose
eated. Te geaaiae Oxydoaor Is stamped as la
above lllaatraUon, Dr. Saacae's Patent.
BUY NO OTHER. Write for circulars
of Jafenaataoa sad cures to
DR. H. SANCHE it CO.,
7 Saa OU. CHICAGO, ILL.
sMaariLMaa. aaYarfc. ateatml. Caa.
JfeatJoa this-paper to advertisers.
mwxxvi&mji- Hm"
winniniiiiim
kTillll'lMB'Tr in
aiiaiTii"'
. V1"
Mm
ewOmsSitnM mmr
'aBBBa HHP Jv.
, W.N.U.-4NHAHA. N.5-ioo
M llllaaa freaa Hatfelas;.
It is said of the maker of the latest
bequest of nearly three-quarters of a
million of dollars in the Cathedral of
St John the Divine, in New York, that
he came to that city some years ago
as an errand boy, and without a penny
in his pocket
Barrto la Politic.
James M. Barrie, the novelist, in
consenting to stand for parliament,
sTinws a HpHiImI rhaneo of ODiniOB in
such matters, since onry Ave years ago
he said that he would rather be flogged
than have to go into politics.
The Rabber Steatach Maa.
F. M. Spawn, 19 years old, a school
teacher of Alto Pass, 111., has ex
ploded all physiological theories re
garding the capacity of the human
stomach by eating and drinking in
one evening, in addition to his regu
lar supper, one can of tomatoes, one
can of peas, one can of sardines,
seven glasses of soda water and two
quart bottles of temperance drinks.
This is only one of many like achieve
ments by which he has astonished his
acquaintances.
A Strike Effect ia Aaastordaaa.
. The printers strike at Amsterdam
has had a peculiar result in the jour
nalistic world. From April 28 to
April 30 no Amsterdam newspaper ap
peared, but from date the managers of
nine newspapers agreed to print a sin
ble sheet, calling it the Extraordinary
Journal.
The President' Favorite.
President McKinley's liking for the
red carnation seems to be unfailing.
He has a dozen sent from the White
House greenhouse every day and
narly always wears one when out for
his daily drive.
Tba Place of Flak PearU.
One of the most important indus
tries of the Bahama islands is the
gathering of pink pearls. It is the
only place in the world where these
pearls are found. They are not taken
from the oyster shell, but from a shell
resembling a large snail shell, called
a "conch." These pearls, when per
fect, bring very high prices, it is said,
ranging from $50 to $5,000.
Heeded Daty's CalL
A Chicago girl writes to a friend
about her hero, who is a soldier in
the Philippines. She says: "I got a
letter from . He is getting along
splendid. He has been assigned to
the guardhouse for Ave days. Says it
is a pretty hot place; but then, you
know, he never shrinks from his duty.
Ma and I are naturally proud to hear
of his promotion."
Gold Medal Prlae Treatise, M Cta.
The Science of Life, or Self-Preservation,
865 pages, with engravings, 25 cta., paper
cover; cloth, foil gilt, tl, by mail. A book
for every man, young, middle-aged or old.
A million copies sold. Address The Pea
body Medical Institute, No. 4 Bnlfinch 8t,
Boston, Mass., the oldest and best institute
in America. Prospectus Vade Mecom free.
Six cts. for postage. Write to-day for
these books. They are the keys to health,
igor, success ana nappini
The Burly Boti Playa Golf.
In England Richard Croker is at
tracting attention as an expert golf
player. When last In this country he
used to spend many of his mornings
learning the game on the Lakewood,
N. J., links.
If you have not tried Magnetic Starch
try it now. You will then use no other.
We are made great or small by our
own acts.
I do not believe Piso's Care for Consumption
has an equal for coughs and colds. John F
Botsb. Trinity Snrinn. IntL. Feb. IS. WOO.
Don't fail to add a drop or two of
vanilla flavoring to a pot of chocolate.
It is a great improvement
A Book ef Choice Beetaee
Seat free by Walter Baker Co. Iao.. DorcbaKar,
Kais. Mention tbU paper.
If you heat your knife slightly you
can cut hot bread or cakes smoothly.
Age tends to IcM the hair and torn It gray. Farces'
Hair IIalsax renews color and life.
Hisuaacoaxs, the best cure for corns. IScts.
For a Rnskln Moaaaieat.
Admirers of the late John Ruskin
are moving for the erection of a me
morial to the great critic The spot
most in favor 1s Friar's Craig, Dtr
wentwater, England, the view from
which Ruskin used to regard as one of
the finest in Europe. The memorial
will probably take the form of a suit
ably inscribed early British cross of
native stone.
Saccesafal Havana Paper.
Senor Coronado, owner of the Cuban
newspaper El Oiscusion, published in
Havana, and the most influential jour
nal there, is in New York buying
presses for an enlarged circulation.
He sells now between 24,000 and 25,000
papers a day at 5 cents a copy.
A Maaaachasetta Medal Wlaaer.
The first medal of the Paris salon
of 1900 has been awarded to M. D
Oespradelles, professor of architecture
and design in the Massachusetts insti
tute of Technology, who had for his
design "The Beacon of Progress."
Not AU Prise Fighters.
While the Queensberry family is
generally associated in the public
mind with prize fighting and personal
eccentricities there are members of it
who have achieved distinction in
other and more conventional direc
tions. One is the Hon. John Douglas,
C. M. G., who has recently published
in Brisbane a very interesting his
tory of Thursday island, the sentinel
guarding the northern approach to
Australia, where he has been govern
ment resident for the last fifteen
years.
After Thlrtv-Nlae Tears.
General Wheeler is in the United
States regular army again, after an
absence of about thirty-nine years,
caused by his resignation to enter the
military service of the southern con
federacy. A graduate at West Point
in 1S59, he was not long on the ac
tive list before, and he will be on it
even a shorter period this time. Gen
eral Wheeler was born September 10,
1836, and Is nearing his 64th birthday,
the retiring age in the regular army.
Beaaarkable Beeerd as a MPlaater.n
Wexford, Ireland, has lost one of
the most remarkable of its citizens in
the death of Fred Hyland, an under
taker, at the age at 85. For sixty
years he was an undertaker in Wex
ford and it is calculated that during
that time he buried over 5,000 people.
Thackeray Prices.
A complete set of "The Snob" and
"The Gownsman," with all of Thack
eray's contributions, was sold for
$660 in London lately. "The Orphan
of Pimlico" brought $77. "The Cor
sair" (New York) $82, and "Tnitv
Fair," 1848, $61.
Geaereas Jessie.
Jessie Bartlett Davis will sing for
a week at the Masonic temple in Chi
cago for a salary of $1,000 and this
she will contribute to the fund for
the Actors' home, to be built in New
York.
Date Palate fer
Walter J. Swingle, agricultural ex
plorer for the United States depart
ment of agriculture, is in Algeria bay
ing 200 date palms, which are te be
shipped to Arizona.
CAMPFIEE SKETCHES.
SOME SHORT STORIES
THE VETERANS.
FOR
at the Freat The
Battett If Aaaerleaas Were
the Beers Moaned aa Dead,
Age.
Dear little girl. I hardly remember you
What did you look like, you?
Was It you had eyes like your Grandaunt
Cells,
And hair like Grandmother Prue?
Dark hair, curling hair, that would have
made you.
Brown eyes rather than blue.
Odd what a dim little ghost you've grown
to.
And yet I used to be you!
Dear little boy. bow well I remember
you!
It's you had the eyes of blue.
And the fair little, dear little waves of
yellow
Over the head of you:
And, oh, such a dear, dear heart to love
with.
Shone from the eyes of blue
And spent and lavished its boyhood on.
you.
You dim little ghost-girl, you!
Fannie Kemble Johnson.
Canadian He:
Lieut E. W. B. Morrison of D Bat
tery, now in South Africa, with Car
narvon field force, writes as follows to
an Ottawa (Ont) friend: "Just
now a load of oats and straw
was brought into camp and when
the drivers were called up to
draw the ration they came on the
run, as if it was something good to eat
for themselves, and fairly fought over
It, each man his 'moke.' It Is peculi
arly unfortunate that the horses can
not be fed up. because the Canadian
gun horses and troopers have stood
the arduous service splendidly. Their
feet and backs and shoulders are in
fine shape, and their general health is
excellent; but they are being played
out for lack of food. Even the horses
that have been foundered by the
wheat get well after a few days'
marching and the care their drivers
give them. A horse will be found in
the morning so stiffened up that it can
hardly move ten feet apparently. It
is put on the center gun or wagon
team, and the other five horses practi
cally pull It along all day. Every halt
it lies down in the harness and often
the driver has to put the whip on it
to prevent it falling down on the
march. It is kind cruelty, however,
because if the horse goes down It will
have to be shot whereas by lugging it
along for a day or two it usually re
covers. The vitality of the Canadian
horse Is wonderful. The Australian
and English do not stand the service
nearly so well. Yesterday six dead
horses marked the line of march from
Blaau Spruit to this place. Only one
horse in D battery dropped, and it was
the most awful looking skeleton you
ever saw in draught It was left for
dead some distance back, but half an
hour after the old chap, walked back
into camp, and the boys gave him a
cheer. It is pitiful to see the old
troopers play out on the line of march.
We, of the artillery, will be trudging
on through the sand, when we will
come upon a horse of the advance
guard standing by the roadside, sway
ing groggily on its legs, Its neck
stretched out and its eyes glazing in
death. When it hears the clank of the
guns and the tramping of the horses
In the column, it will reel forward in
a game effort to Join the ranks, and
tumble in a heap. The battery passes
on, and a minute later the sharp crack
of a pistol announces that some more
horse flesh is fertilizing "the wild and
waste karroo.'' A gunner of D battery
had an unpleasant experience yester
day. On the previous day he was de
tailed to lead a sick horse. At the noon
halt he was detailed on some fatigue
work until the battery was moving off,
when he made a rush for the column
and clambered on a gun carriage,
thinking Bomebody else would have
looked after the horse. But this s
not the way things are done on this
sort of a Job. On arrival at the night
halt the horse was reported missing,
the rear guard had not brought it on,
nor any other unit The gunner was
given some hard tack and a tin of
bully beef and ordered to go back for
the horse In the morning and overtake
the column here. To his credit be it
said, that he acquiesced cheerfully, and
admitted that the punishment fitted
the crime. He left on, his lonely Jour
ney at daybreak and found the horse
in the possession of a Dutch farmer,
who at first refused to give him up,
but the gunner had a pursuader with
him. The Dutchman pretended to have
lost the halter, but the gunner drove
the horse before him on the road for
ten miles, until he met a man who
gave him a strap to lead It with, and
at 6 o'clock last night he marched into
camp, having covered thirty miles in
twelve hours.
If Aaaerleaas Were Parsners.
Some idea of the way in which an
American column would pursue the
retreating Boers will be illustrated by
the First Brigade, M. V. M., General
Thomas R. Mathews, when it goes into
camp at South Framingham next
month, says the Boston Journal. The
proposition is the advance
a pursuing force upon a
treating enemy, with advance
attack, rear guard and defense.
of
re-
and
The
covering force of the retreat will com
prise cavalry, artillery and a portion
of a regiment of infantry. The rest
of the brigade will make up the at
tacking column. It is the intention
of General Mathews to divide his ar
tillery battalion and his cavalry be
tween the attack and defense. He has
made requisition for shelters, rubber
blankets and campaign outfit which
will be issued to the troops in season
for camp. Buzzacots will also be
taken along, and rations cooked on
the march, and the attacking column
going into night bivouac before the in
vestment of Perkins Hill, upon which
the enemy is retreating, and where h
will make a stand. From Perkins Hill
the maneuvers will be continued to
"Nobscot Hill," the entire terrain em
bracing about five square miles of di
versified country. A request has gone
in for 50 rounds of ammunition per
man, which It is hoped to obtain. The
idea is to make as excellent a presen
tation of grand tactics as it is possible
to obtain, while at the same time hav
ing due regard for 'the safety of the
soldier and his health. For this rea
son South Framlngton is chosen as
the base, it affording all the benefit
of the home camp in event of bad and
stormy weather. It is anticipated that
the forward movement to Perkins
Hill will occupy two days, wilh real
istic resistance and battle formations.
flajiV movements, etc., and that two
days more will be passed in the man
euvers to "Nobscot Hill." getting the
men back to camp in season for the
review and closing ceremonials. Cap
tain George M. Thompson, brigade en
gineer, is at work upon a topographic
al survey and plan of the entire region
to be fought over, bine prints of which
will be ready for camp. With sack
veteran commanders as Colonel Clark
of El Caney, Colonel Darling of Gnan
Ica and Porto Rico, and Major Du
chesney, who saw four years of active
field operations in '61 to '65, there
ought to be a very Interesting exe
cution of the brigade commander's
plans.
The Enaerjreaey Batipa
In the account given' by Capt Hal
dane and Lieut Le Mesurier of their
escape from Pretoria, some readers
may have noticed that for two days
they lived on an "emergency ration,"
which they happened to have with
them. It was the only thing that was
not spoiled by water, and they found
it "most excellent and nourishing
stuff." This ration is a very ingeni
ous and fascinating multum in parvo.
It consists of four ounces of "cocoa
paste" and four ounces of "pemml
can." The paste Is a mixture of cocoa-honey
and Iceland moss; the pem
mican Is dried beef and fat ground in
to a fine powder. It is made in Aus
tralia, and comes over in tin-lined
casks. Both of these articles are high
ly palatable, whether eaten dry or
warmed up and mixed with water. The
quantum of each that goes to make a
ration is packed In a small oval tin
open at one end; the two open ends
are put together strip of tin is wound
round them at the joint and soldered
down, thus binding them together and
forming one hermetically sealed case,
in shape like a short fat pocket flask
and containing half a pound of con
centrated nourishment far more pala
table than anything else of the kind
yet invented. It is opened in a mo
ment by tearing off the band of tin,
which has a handle at the end. Ev
ery ration bears the date of filling
stamped on the metal, and the follow
ing printed instructions: Emergency
ration (field service). This ration is
not to be opened except by order of an
officer or in extremity. It is to be
produced at inspections. The ration
is calculated to maintain strength for
36 hours, if eaten in small quantities
at a time. Further instructions for
use arc contained inside. Perhaps the
possession of this little case explains
how the detachment captured at Red
dersburg was able to hold out so
pluckily "without food" until their
ammunition was exhausted. Its value
in similar situations is obvious. Lon
don Times.
Big Birds Cham With Soldiers.
The English soldiers have mistaken
troops of ostriches for bands of Boers
and bands of Boers for ostriches. In
some cases the ostriches have made
friends with the soldiers. A correspon
dent who was with Gen. Methuen at
the Modder river says: "While I rang
ed the valley or plain with my glasses
something slipped and tumbled heavily
and tumbled over the loose stones be
hind me. I turned, thinking to dodge
or help a stumbling man, and found
myself staring into the great brown
eyes of an ostrich six feet tall, and
with legs as thick as and longer than
my own. 'He came up here some days
ago,' said the soldier, 'and he always
stays here now. We feed him and fool
with him and he seems very happy.'
The ostrich stalked past me and took a
position between the major and the
captain, where, after appearing to ob
serve that they were very busy scan
ning the landscape, he, too, stared at
the plain and remained erect and
watchful, the highest type of a sentry
in appearance. He marred this fine
effect for Just a moment "by seizing
and swallowing a box of safety
matches. After that he continued his
sentry duty with satisfaction In his
eyes. The ostrich is a valuable sub
stitute for a watch dog, and he eats
with relish things that would poison
the strongest goat that ever lived.
The Persian Brigade of Cossacks.
The Neue Freie Presse of Vienna
gives, on the authority of what it de
scribes as Russian official data, some
particulars concerning the Persian bri
gade of Cossacks. It recalls the cir
cumstance that in 1896, after the mur
der of the late Shah, order wasmaln-
tained at Teheran by the intervention
of the Cossack brigade, which also
prevented all resistance to the succes
sion of his son Muzaffer-ed-Din. At
that time the brigade consisted only
of a cavalry division mustering 500
men, commanded by a Russian colonel,
and of a mounted battery presented
by the Czar Alexander III. In the
year, 1899, the strength of the brigade
was trebled. At present it numbers
200 officers and 1,500 men, infantry, be
sides cavalry and mounted artillery.
Its organization is completely inde
pendent and is under the control of
Russian instructing officers, who are
at the orders of the Russian Legation
at Teheran. Their chief is a colonel
of the Russian general staff, holding
the rank of a Persian field marshal.
The annual cost of the brigade is 500,
000 rubles. It receives with great reg
ularity its monthly pay, which is the
more worthy of note as that of the
other Persian troops is always In ar
rear. New York Post
Mourned aa Dead, Beraras.
There is a surprised and happy
mother in Washington this week, says
a correspondent:
Harry Neal, son of Mrs. Minnie
Judson, fought in the Philippines as a
sailor In the Asiatic squadron -when
Dewey took Manila bay. No letter had
come for more than a year, and the
mother mourned him as dead. One of
the unidentified dead brought from
Manila and burled in Arlington, nearly
a year ago, she recognized from the
description as her son. A few days
ago Neal returned to this city. He is
hale and hearty. He will not remain
here long, as he intends to enBst for
another three years' term.
Death of One of the Faatoaa See.
General Silas M. Bailey, one of the fa
mous old guard of 306 which stood by
General Grant in the convention of
1880, died at Uniontown, Pa., recently,
aged 64 years, of brain trouble, which
resulted from a bullet wound received
during the war. After the war Pres
ident Johnson brevetted him major
general' of volunteers for gallant ser
vice. He was elected state treasurer
by the Republicans of Pennsylvania
in 1881.
Would Lack Sease C
"I'm deuced glad " Thus cau
tiously observed an English oflcer as
he withdrew his men under cover of
night from an untenable kopje, "that
these confounded Boers haven't got
a territory that the sun never sets
on."
Horses for Seep.
Doting the siege of Ladysmlta 4,000
horses of 'the cavalry brigade were
converted into soup er sausages In a
single-month.
te Market
The cost per pound of growing ani
fattening a hog for market increases
with the size and age of the animal.
It costs much leas to raise two hogs
weighing 300 pounds each than to
grow one weighing 600 pounds, and
even 500 pounds is too heavy to be
profitable under ordinary circum
stances. A hog must consume a cer
tain amount of food to maintain his
present weight, and for that food the
owner receives no returns. Whatever
the hog can be induced to eat in ex
cess of the amount required for main
tenance goes to the production of
growth, and it is from this excess that
all gains and profits are made.
These facts make it to the interest
of the feeder to induce his hogs to eat
all they can digest and to secure gains
as rapidly as possible. A pig which
Is made to weigh 200 pounds at six
months or 300 pounds at a year old
is always profitable, while if it takc3
two years to make 300 pounds the last
100 pounds will usually be made at a
loss. As the rate of growth, both in
proportion to the size of the animal
and to the amount of food given, de
creases as the hog becomes larger,
there must come a time when a pound
of incred.se will cost more than it will
bring on the market, and it is a nice
point with the feeder to decide when
that time will come and to market his
hogs before it is reached. Ordinarily,
his time will come when the hog
weishs from 250 to 300 pounds, but
may be reached either above or below
those weights.
A hog one year old and weighing
300 pounds in November may still
make a profitable gain if he has the
gleaning of a recently harvested corn
field with an abundance of cowpeas,
the leavings of a sweet potato neht.
or any similar food which would other
wise be wasted, but if none of these
feeds are available, and all the food
consumed must be purchased, it will
be more profitable to sell at once,
even if the weight is not more than
200 pounds.
Animal Food In Poultry Feeding.
Report of the New York Agriculturil
Station at Geneva: It was found in a
number of feeding experiments with
chicks, ducklings and laying hens that
rations containing animal food gave
almost invariably better results than
did those consisting entirely or very
largely of vegetable food. For conven
ience "animal meal" was made the
principal animal food. Many gram
foods were used; but when rations
were so arranged that the proportion
of protein was alike for two rations
the one with the animal food contained
generally more fat and always a much
larger percentage of mineral matter.
The first series of experiments did
not definitely indicate the cause for
the superiority of the one ration. It
appeared that the more favorable re
sults when animal food was fed might
be due either to the more efficient
forms of the nitrogen compounds or
with the rapidly growing young birds
and the laying hens to the much larger
proportion of ash consisting largely of
phosphates.
Subsequent experiments have shown
that while ducklings require a certain
amount of animal food, hens and
chicks are able to do well on wholly
vegetable food, supplemented by ash
rich in phosphates. In these experi
ments, rations of vegetable food, to
which bone ash was added to make up
the assumed deficiency of ash, in grow
ing chicks gave identical results with
those from rations containing animal
food. With laying hens the rations
were equally efficient for most of the
time, but good results were not sus
tained quite so long by the vegetable
food ration. The addition of bone ash
did not, however, enable ducklings to
make as good use of a ration wholly of
vegetable foods; such a ration being
decidedly less efficient than one con
taining animal food.
Daager la Second Growth KaBr Cora.
Bulletin 93, Kansas Agricultural Col
lege: If Kafir corn is cut early a sec
ond growth starts up. Usually stock
can eat this second growth with safety,
but deaths are frequent Most of these
deaths can be explained by the cattle
bloating, but sometimes deaths occur
:vhere it seems that the green Kafir
orn acts as an acute poison. Cases are
aported where animals have broken
ato a field of Kafir corn while being
driven along an adjoining road and se
curing only a mouthful or two of the
green second growth, have been im
mediately attacked with symptoms of
acute poisoning, and have died in an
hour or two. Cattle have been herded
in a large field In which was a small
patch of second-growth Kafir corn; an
imals have strayed on the Kafir-corn
while being driven by the herdsman
and secured only a bite or two and
have been attacked and died within an
hour. Neither veterinarians, chemists
nor feeders have been able to explain
the cause of such deaths. They are
rare, but occur often enough to make it
unsafe to allow cattle to pasture
green second-growth Kafir corn. Af
ter this second growth has been cured
or killed by frost the danger seems to
be over. We have never heard of a
case where second-growth Kafir corn
fodder has Injured stock.
Lectures on Forestry. A plan has
been arranged by which the section of
tree planting of the division of for
estry will combine lecturing with its
practical field work for the purpose of
When an official of .this section of the
division is called to any portion of the
United States where planting is espe
cially desirable, he will arrange for a
series of meetings of land owners, to
interesting the public in the subject
whom he will explain the 'objects of
the division and the free assistance of
fered to those desirous of making a
trial of planting.
Reports the country over seem to
indicate that we are to have an excep
tionally large peach crop. There have
been killing frosts in some locations,
and in those localities the peaches
have been damaged, but the area so
devastated Is not comparatively large.
From the eastern part of the country
come reports that the peach growers
axe seeking to form a combination to
prevent the peach market being de
moralized .by a too abundant crop.
Maryland is said to be the center of
this agitation.
Recognition of Women. The west
ern stairway of the Capitol at Albany
has been recently decorated with a
bas-relief of the heads of five of our
most illustrious American women.
Those selected for this honor are vet
erans in the world of fame, namely,
Mrs. Harriet Beecher Stowe, Miss
Frances E. Willard, Miss Clara Bar
ton, Miss Susan B Anthony, and Cap
tain MoUie Pitcher, of Revolutionary
.fame.
They do Satan's business who
simply Idle.
are
ear
Lieutenant Hobson, the aero of the
Merrimac, has dropped ont of sight
to a considerable extent since he has
been on the Hong Kong station. A
reminder of him came to New York
the other day when the American bark
Adolph Obrig reached that port from
Hong Kong. On board were a num
ber of relics of Admiral Dewey's vic
tory in Manila bay, in the shape of
cases of guns, shot and war curios.
With them was a mast from the Span
ish man-of-war Don Juan ae Austria.
All these things were sent by Lieuten
ant Hobson. The mast will De set up
in Hobson's native town in Alabama.
REDUCED RATES
Colorado te the Eaat aad to Utah
aad Colorado Petata.
The Denver & Rio Grande Railroad
company announces low rates to a
number of conventions, association
meetings, eta, among which are the
following, at about one-half the usual
fares:
National Democratic convention at
Kansas City, July 4, 1900.
National Education association,
Charleston, S. C, July 7.
Baptist Young People's Union of
America, at Cincinnati, July 12 to 15.
Biennial convention National Re
publican League at St. Paul, Minn.,
July 17 to 19.
Annual meeting Supreme Lodge, A.
O. U. W., Sioux Falls, June 9 to 20.
Overland Park Racing association,
at Denver, June 9 to 23.
Annual convention Music Teachers'
National association, Des Moines, la.,
June 19 to 22.
Meeting of the Young People's Chris
tian Union, at Denver, July 25 to 30.
A special rate of $25 for the round
trip from Denver, Manitou, Canon and
Intermediate points to Salt Lake City
and Ogden, Utah, from July 1 to Sept
30. Limit thirty days.
Full information on application to
S. K. Hooper, G. P. and T. A., Denver,
Colo., or any official or agent of the
D. & R. G. R. R. Co.
Egypt where some sort of plague
is almost constantly in existence, was
at one time free from the evil for
two centuries.
Try Qraln-et Try Orata-et
Ask your grocer 'today to show you a
package of GRAIN-O, the new food
drink that takes the place of caffee.
The children may drink it without in
jury as well as the adult All who try
It, like it GRAIN-0 has that rich seal
brown of Mocha or Java, but It Is made
from pure grains, and the most delicate
stomach receives it without distress.
One-fourth the price of coffee. 15c
and 25c. per package. Sold by an
grocers.
Eleven millions of men are said to
belong to the great Chinese Society of
Boxers.
Use Magnetic Starch ithasnoequal
Seventeen Irish regiments are at the
front in South Africa.
Try Magnetic Starch it will last
longer than any other.
He who is not true to himself is a
traitor to heaven.
Are Taa Cuing Allea Foet-KaaeT
It Is the only cure for Swollen,
Smarting, Burning, Sweating Feet,
Corns and Bunions. Ask for Allen's
Foot-Ease, a powder to be shaken into
the shoes. At all Druggists and Shoe
Stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad
dress Allen S. Olmsted. LeRoy, N. Y.
If the girls who chew gum in the
street car only knew how ugly It
makes them look, they wouldn't do it
Laaadry Work Made Easy
by using "Faultless Starch." All grocers
sell it large package 10c.
The women who are born to com
mand always get married.
Diseases of the Scalp
should not be neglected. Coke Dandruff Cure
will clean the head and cure the disease.
Many a man dresses more expensive
ly than the men to whom he owes
money.
SPECIAL EXCURSION TRAIN
to
DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVEN
TION Held in Kansas City, July 4th.
The Omaha & St. Louis R. It. will run
a special train, leaving Omaha Union
Station July 3rd, S p. m.. Council Bluffs,
S-15 v. m., arrive Kansas City July 4th,
7 a. m. Trains consist of sleeper,
coaches and chair cars. Round trio rate
from Omaha. fo.SO. Round trip includ
ing railroad fare, 4 days sleeping far
accommodations while in Kansas City.
18.00. Black silk hat and badge. $3.00. All
those joining this excursion will have no
trouble in gaining admission to the Con
vention Hall. Sleeping car berths should
be engaged at once. Ask your nearest
Ticket Agent or write Jno. E. Reagan,
Secy. Douglas County Democracy Club,
No. 509 Brown Block. Omaha, or write
Harry E. Moorcs. C. P. & T. A.. 1115
Farnam St., (Paxton Hotel Block), Oma
ha. Neb.
BABY'S BAWLS
.b&W BHHnnHjVI n n 1
benefit. Try it! Send for a
fuarantee, all irregularities of the
3C 9UC
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Sterlio Rtwdy Company,
Wests to SeH Mlaaaelf Agala.
Walter Wentworth, 75 years old, aad
for many years a professional contor
tionist, is In New York looking for
somebody to buy his body. He has
long been a wonder to medical men
on account of the wonderful pliability
of his frame, which he has already
sold twice once to Dr. Cowes of De
troit, and later to Dr. Wilder of New
York, receiving in each case $100. Both
these medical men are dead, and now
Wentworth is looking for a third speculator.
Everyone thinks he works for a man
who is mighty unappreciative.
THE NATIONAL CONVENTIONS.
Prohibition, at Chicago. June 27. 28.
1900. Tickets on sale June 26. 27.
Democratic, at Kansas City, July 4,
1900. Tickets on sale July 2, 4.
The road to take to attend these
conventions is the Chicago Great
Western railway, the popular "Maple
Leaf Route,"with its vcstibuled trains,
free chair cars, satisfactory dining car
service, and its unsurpassed sleeping
car accommodations.
Only one fare for the round trip.
For further particulars apply to any
agent of the Chicago Great Western,
or address F. H. Lord, G. P. & T. A..
113 Adams street, Chicago.
No matter how homely a man is you
can always say he has a striking face.
Ladles Caa Wear
One size smal ler after usingAllen's Foot
En se, a powder. It makes tight or new
shoes easy. Cures swollen, hot, sweating,
aching feet, ingrowing- nails, corns and
bunions. All di n rgsts and shoe stores,
25c Trial package FREE bv mail. Ad
dress Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N.Y.
You can't judge accurately of a boy's
behavior by the way he looks at fam
ily prayers.
Mrs. Wlnslow'n Soot bins; Byrne.
?or ctitMrea leethinc. noften the Rum, reduces Itr
namniatlon, allays pain.curcs wind colic 23c a bottle.
There is something wrong with the
small boy who can wait patiently for
his -dinner.
The stomach has to work hard, grinding the
food we crowd into it. Make its work easy by
chewing BeemanS Pepsin Gum.
The Brooklyn management has
placed itself on record as being net
opposed to the protective association
of ball players.
S30.30.
N. E. A. Convention at Charleston,
S. C, In July. Tickets good going via
Chattanooga, Knoxville, Ashevllle and
Spartansburg, and returning via Nor
folk, Old Point Comfort, Richmond
and White Sulphur Springs, Va. For
maps, time cards, etc., address J. C.
Tucker, 234 Clark street, Chicago.
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nessandlfestCofttains neither
Opitim.Morplune norlfioeral.
MOT NARC OTIC .
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Aperfecl Remedy forCoustipa
Tion. Sour Slotnpch.Diarrhoea
and Loss of Sleep.
Facsimile Signature of
NEW YOHK.
exact copy or wrapper.
.Hh
MAM-M-MA!!
DON'T YOU HEAR BABY CRY?
Do you forget that summer's coming with
all its dangers to the little ones all troubles
bred in the bowels.
The summer's heat kills babies and little
children because their little insides are not in
good, clean, strong condition.
Winter has filled the system with Me.
Belching, vomiting up of sour food, rash,
flushed skin, colic, restlessness, diarrhoea or
constipation, all testify that the bowels are out
of order.
If you want the little ones to face the coming dangers with
out anxious fear for their lives, see that the baby's bowels are
gently, soothingly, but positively cleaned oat in the spring time,
said made strong and healthy before hot tveather sets in.
The only safe laxative for children, pleasant to take (they
ask for more) is CASCARETS. Nursing mothers make their
milk mildly purgative for the baby by eating a CASCARET
now and then. Mama eats a Ciiooucnj, caoy geis ine
10c box of CASCARETS to-day and you will find that, as we
little and big childrens insides are
nsl IlLWawP" ' DKUCKjJSTS
boobies and tM poor to buy CASCARETS we will cnd a box fee
Chicago or New York, meiitiooineaJvertisoiieBtanisapeT.
The Blahe Tested the Fare.
The formal opening of the Squirrel
Ian, the cheap New York restaurant
In the Bowery under the auspices of
the Church Temperance Society, took
place the other day. 3ishop Potter
and other distinguished clergymen
made addresses, and many of them
tested the viands that will be served
at low prices, and pronunced them ex
cellent A good luncheon is to be
served for a dime and an elaborate
breakfast, dinner or supper for IStcents.
Few women ever feel really comfort
able In a new gown.
sTOUMIDT EQUALS PERUHA,
80 THE WOMEN ALL SAT.
Miss Susan Wymar.
Miss Susan Wymar. teacher In the
Richmond school, Chicago, 111., writes
the following letter to Dr. Hartman re
garding Pe-ru-na. She says: "Only
those who have suffered as I have, can
know what a blessing it is to be able
to And relief In Fe-ru-na. This has
been my experience. A friend in need
is a friend indeed, and every bottle
of Pe-ru-na I ever bought proved a
good friend to me." Susan Wymar.
Mrs. Margaretha Dauben. 1214 North
Superior St.. Racine City, Wis., writes:
"I feel so well and good and happy
now that pen cannot describe it. Pe-ru-na
is everything to inc. I have
taken several bottles of Pe-ru-na for
female complaint. I am in the change
of life and It does me good." Pe-ru-na
has no equal in all of the irregulari
ties and emergenices peculiar to wom
en caused by pelvic catarrh.
Address Dr. Hartman, Columbus, O.,
for a free book for women only.
'ffilH
it
&S5W
Your clothes will not crack if you
use Magnetic Starch.
CASTORH
For Infants and Children.
The Kind You Have
Always Bought
Bears the
Signature
of
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
CflSTORIft
TMI CCHTauM COMPANY. NCW YOHK CITY.
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