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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 12, 1891)
8 THE OMAHA DAEDY MONDAY , JANUABY 12 , 1891. OF INTEREST TO THE FARMER Bomo Suggestions on the Wlntor Manage ment of Farm Poultry , SELECTING SWINE FOR BREEDERS. An Ideal Parker Must Ha Kept In View How to Out Op a Hug * Iluukwhcnt Ilran lor Cows. The usefulness of hens next year de pends to a great extent upon the wny they are wintered , writes Miss II. C. Duoloy in the American Agriculturist. If properly cnrod for they will begin to lay cnrl.v in the spring , a greater pro portion of their eggs will prove fertile , nnd the chicks hatched will inherit strong , healthy constitutions , grow rnpiply , and escape nitxny of tlio diseases common to their Idnd. A right system of management will cnublo tlio hens to' produce a sufficient quantity of eggs dur ing wlntor to repay liberally for the 'extra food and attention given them. The first thinp to do Is to reduce the slzo of the flock. Do not try to winter inoro than your lion house will shelter comfortably ; crowding together invites disease. Experienced poultry keepers find that from fifty to ono hundred hens nro as many us can bo profitably kept in ono yard ; when the number is increased the proportion of eggs Is lessened. So cull your Hock judiciously , leaving these only thatyou feel sure will do good work. Ho hard hearted for once and gather up those long cherished favorites that nro too old nnd too fat for future useful ness : it is a kindness to cut them olt now before life has become a burden from old ngo and infirmity. Then select a man lier of your nicest hens to kcop , thoseIn their second and third year will ho most profitable , and in addition to these cliOoso about the name number of your prettiest pullets , which , if curly hatched , will begin to lay In the fall and continue at intervals throughout the winter. The eggs of the older hens , however , are best for hatching , and the hens them selves will make more reliable1 mothers. Next , got rid of till your roosters ex cept half a dozen of the finest or , letter - tor still , market every ono of them nnd buy a lot of thoroughbreds. An infusion of new blood will work wonders. If your object is to raise early broilers , procure fcomo Plymouth Kock or Wytin- clotto cockerels. You will find that the chicks of inivod blood will bo heathy , hardy and attain a peslrablo size. But should you wish to improve the laying qunlities'of ' your ilock , buy a thorough bred Leghorn cock. The pullets result ing from this cross will bo much larger than the pure Leghorns , will prove excellent Invers nnd bo less inclined to eit then their mothers. By n succession of judicious crostos you can , in a few years , grade up a Hock of common hens until they assume a uniform color and markings. Such a ilock about thohouso nnd lawn is really ornamental , and will ph'o pleasure to all who see it : and be sides , ono is less apt to consider tfoublo- eomo the work of caring for tiiat which Is both hnndbomo and profitable , "VVo instinctively feel that it will not do to neglect line stock , and , if wo take a pride and a pleasure in the contemplation of our pots , wo are likely to go about them oftcncr , to study their dispositions , and try to discover what method of treatment will ontiblo them to do their best work. After the flocks is reduced in number wo can afford to feed it bettor , nnd wo will probably find the number of eggs 1 Increased , for it is the surplus food that makes eggs. Barely sufficient nutriment to sustain life leaves nothing over for egg production. The next thing to do is to take a look nt tlio hcnhoube ; the walls are probably not at all tight , numerous cracks all about , or a hoard of ! hero and there. These openings were very useful last Bummer , ndmitting plenty of fresh air on sultry nights , hut in winter there Is no need for so much vontilaUon. Cold" purifies the nir everywhere , and.tin al most Imperceptible aperture will cause quito a draft ; therefore , nail on tlio boards and make the house ns tight ns possible , for even the hardiest breeds of fowls will produce few eggs in winter unless they "havo a comfortable roosting placo. A good tight roof is indis pensable ; cold rains and snow will caube oup and other diseases. If tlio ' eldos of the lioiibO are thin and 'open , they may bo made almost imper vious to the cold by placing tall corn stalks against the outer walls. This is both inexpensive nnd easily done , nnd the stalk fodder can bo easily removed next spring. There is no real necessity for building costly , elaborate houses for poultry ; simple , inoxponbivo structures will answer every purpose , -provided they tire comfortable and convenient. Before winter sots in clean the house thoroughly and give it a good coat of whitewash , sprinkling kerosene upon walls , porches and lloors ; then make a number of now nobts , of soft grass , leaves or straw , and last of all dust the floor liberally with dry earth or line coal iibhcs. If your hens hnvo not been accustomed to laying in the henhouse confine them there for Bovoral consecutive days until 2 or 8 o'clock in the afternoon , nnd they will 6oon become attached to the house , especially if food and water are supplied them. It is also a good plan to place their dusl baths in doors. During cold weather eggs should bo collected twice dally , if they freeze nnd crack open in tlio nest the hens will dls cover their contents , and acquire the vice of egg-entlng. Freezing nlso destroys the vltnlity of an egg , nnd , as BOOH as the weather turns warm , decompositson will take placo. For this reason and for the sake of greater clean liness it is bettor to kcop artificial nest eggs. A poultry yard should bo placed upon eandy soil which drains itself naturally , but if this is not feasible , throw several loads of sand -md gravel around the houso. Last fall I had the hard coal nshes emptied in my yard ; it not only formed a firm and dry walk , but the cinders furnished tlio fowls with grind ing material for their crops. Charcoal sifted from wood ashes should also he supplied them , and broken oyster shells , ground bono , or sotno other shell-form- ing materials. A long shed closed tow- nru the north nnd west is a bettor place for feeding fowls in the winter than the house in which they roost , as greater cleanliness can thus bo obtained , and the fowls are Induced to take more oxorciso. Even in the very coldest weather they should not bo allowed to remain all day upon their porches. Swine for IJreotlrrs. In no part of the farm economy is it so easy to have thoroughly good stock for breeders as in the swine department , and in no other branch of farming are more mistakes made in selecting breeders , enys the Western Stockman nnd Cultt Viitor. There are whole sections of the country where the swine range accord ing to their own sweet wills and improve themselves by tlio "survival of the littost" Scarcely better than this absence senceof method in breeding is tha lii vogue where ono neighbor "borrows1 a boar pip from another neighbor for service , or bogs the use of any boar ho : nn find in his neighborhood. It is most surprising to think that this sort of work 's going on In neighborhoods all over country , and it is as deplorable as it 3 needless. In breeding hogs wo must hnvonn deal porker in mind or else wo had bother her quit the business. Wo must have tvell-deflned ideas of the "length , breadth and thickness" of a good hog , nnd , with duo regard for the shape of the ear and curl of the tall , tcop working toward the ideal. This ivo cannot do if wo depend upon picking up a boar pig at a ba'galn ' just when wo want , or in sponging the use of onb from a neighbor. Mueh of course depends on the sow in breeding , but with a boar of the right stamp and a wise selection of the best sow pigs for breeders a very few generations of hops will develop a stock with all the good qualities of the thoroughbred. Hew to Cut Up n With a sharp ax and a butcher's knife at hand , lay the hog on the ohop- ilng bench , side down. With the knlto _ nako a cut near the ear clear across ? the neck and down to the bone. With u dexterous stroke of the ax sever the head from the body. Lay the carcass on the back , a boy holding it upright and keeping the forelegs well apart , writes 13.V. . Jones In the American Agriculturist. With the ax proceed to take out the chine or backbone. If It Is desired to put as much of the hog into neat meat as possible , trim to the chlno very close , taking out none of the skin or outside fat with it. Otherwise the cutter need not bo particu lar how much meat comes away with the bono. What does not go with the neat meat will bo in the olTal or sausage , and nothing will bo lost. Lay the chlno aside , and with the knife finish separating the two divisions of the hog. Next strip off with the hands the leaves or flukes of fat from the mid dles to the hams. Sclr.o the hock of the ham with the loft hand , and with the knlfo in the other proceed to round out the ham , giving it a neat oval shape. I5o very particular in shaping the ham. If it is SDoilcd in the first cutting no sub sequent trimming will put It into a form to suit exactly the fastidious public eye ? Trim ojT the surplus leaa and fat and projecting pieces of bono. Cut on" the foot just above the hock joint. The piece , when finished , should have nearly the form of a regular oval , with its pro jecting handle or hock. With the ax cut the shoulder from the middling , making the cut straight across near the elbow joint. Take oil the end ribs or "sparo bono" from the shoulder , trim the piece , and cut oil .the foot. For homo use , trim the shoulder , as well as the other pieces , very closely , taking oil' all of both lean nnd fat that can bo snared. If care was ta'ken to cut away the head near the oar , the shoulder will bo at first about as wide as long , having a good deal of the neck attached. If the moat is intended for sale , and the largest quantity of bacon is the primary object , let the niece remain so. But if it Is preferred to have plenty of lard and sausage , cut a smart strip from off the neck side of the shoulder , nnd make the picco assume the form of a parallelogram , with the hock attached to ono end. Trim a slice ol fat from the back of the middling , take oil' the "bhort ribs , " and , if pre ferred , remove the long ribs from tlio- whole piece. The latter , however , is not often done by the farmer. Put the middling in nice shape by trimming it wherever needed , which , when finished , will bo very much like a square in form , perhaps a little longer than broad , with a small circular piece cut out 'from the end next the ham. The six pieces of neat meat are now ready for the saltcr. The head is next cut open longitudinally from side to side , separating the jowl from the top or "head , " so-called. The jawbone of the jowl is cut at the anglo or tip , and the "swallow , " which is the larynx or upper part of the windpipe , is taken out. The head 'piecb is next cut open vertically and the lobs of the brain is taken out and the oars and nose are removed. The bono of the chlno is cut at several places for the convenience of the cook and the task of the cutter is finished. Besides the six pieces of neat meat there are the chlno , souoo , jowl , head , ' fat , sausage , two spare and two short ribs , and' various other small bits derived from each hog. A good cutter , with an assistant to carry away the pieces nnd help otherwise , can cut out from fifty to sixty hogs in a day. "Sweat" on Fruit. It is well known by all botanists that watery vapor exists in the cavities of plants in larger or smaller proportion and is inhaled in abundance from the stomata ( breathing pores ) . In the living plant this vapor is never quiescent , but is thrown off the lifo of the plants , writes S. B. Green in the Western Stock man and Cultivator. The storaata- are most abundant in the newer parts of plants above ground , and yet there are mpro or loss of them on all exterior'Hying tissues of highly organized plants , oven on their roots. It must bo borne in mind , too , that when apples are picked or pota toes , onions , etc. , taken from the soil , they are still alive and tnoir cells and cell contents are active and continue so Indefinitely. This activity is greatest in a warm atmosphere , while in a cold medium it may become nearly or en tirely quiescent. Again , this activity is increased after changes from a cold to a warm temperature , for by such changes the air in the cells expands and a sap or watery vapor may bo forced out through the skin. Such being the case , a pile of beets or other roots tightly covered with earth in a close collar , or apples at once nicked and barreled up , may bo coino covered with moisture because the watery vapor which is thrown oil soon saturates the enclosed air and the excess is condensed on the fruit or root This would bo most apparent If the roots were gathered in quite cold weather , and wore then put in close pits wl'lch would bo warmer than the roots , In such a case the air enclosed would ex pand ; cell action would bo very rapid and would engender more boat which would not bo reduced by evaporation , as it would bo if the roots were exposed to C * dln Ullllcni ot Ilomeo AO Soari the Standard. Sto HOW plairj bnjy mind areltfie scenes of , nv cHWIjood , , i/ls / my recollection receJtefaiov/ew / -kefilehunQfoaJlippolesof , _ kTfe5mokean ] BuHbosedays anguish , since departedTwe ; pray andweJjopGj ioojidsil eyolfered us MY * * N.K.FAIRBANK&CO. , CHICAGO , , ho open air or wore ventilated. The rdinary treatment of allowing this ivtitor to pass elf is the proper one , I. o. , ho fruit and vegetables should bo kept n a circulation of air until they have .ost a portion of their superabundance ) r moisture , and should not bo at once itorod in close collars or pits or the like , and when stored should bo koiit cool. Art Exhibition Closed. But/ pictures will bo sold at private lalo during this week. For Halo. A clear stock of hardware nnd stoves , nvoleing1 about Jli.SOU. iu the host town in the central part ol the state. Will take part cash and the balance In good paper. Address , O. ,1. SMITH , Grand Island , Neb. Httclcwticnt Ilrnn for Cows. This food is the cheapest ttio market ifforcls , and very soon it will bo nbun- ilant at tlio country mills where the buckwheat is ground with Hour -for early winter use. Following figures how the value of this brim : AlbuminCnrfoo - olds. hydrates. Fat. Whoat-urnn , nor cent 12.0 ftVl : i.r > "iVhoat mlUllIiiKS.per eciit.lt.4 Cil 8 2. ! ) iluokwliout-lininper cent. ! .1 4G,4 4.0 Thus it coYitains nearW oO nor cent nero nitrogenous matter amt.'ili per cent of fat , both of wjiioh are worth " } ; onts per pound , while the dofic- oncy of carbo-hydrates is only 111 per cent , and these , says Henry Stewart in Practical Farmer are worth only f of a cent per pound. The clilYcrenco in vnluo is therefore quito considerably in favor of the buckwheat bran. The farmer who misses the bene fit of a crop of buckwheat because of the foolish prejudice against it , due to the ouso and cheapness of its growth , misses a go6il thing and the next best ho can do is to buy a ton of it for winter uso. It is not a good food for making buttorastho color is light ana the texture is soft ; but 'or making good rich milk , heavy intol- , , ds , Ills equal tu any. When it is steeped in hot water , the mixture on cooling becomes a still jolly , showing the largo quanity of albumen in it , and this is the best way in which the bran can bo given to cows , calves or pigs. Pork is made faster on this than on skimmed milk , and the moat is more juicy and tender. Milk and buckwheat-bran , with a little corn meal , pigs can bo fattennd quickly and cheaply , and the moat will bo unsurpassed in quality. Buckwheat and corn closely ground together make an excellent food for horses , and espec ially for young1 colts ; and when the coat is shedding oil' in the spring , a few feeds of the bran with out hay moistened will bo as useful as linseed meal , and only one-third of the price of the latter. Economy of tlio Silo. A great many farmers cannot boar to think that the silo is the most nerfoct method yet discovered for the keeping of winter roughage for cattle , says Hoard's Dairyman. It takes a great deal of time , and will take a great many more years of loss to convince. Tlio town of Lake Mills , Wis. , contains about fifty silos , largo and small. Many of these have been in operation for years , and have been highly profitable to their owners. Yet for all that , many farmers in the neighborhood are yet skeptical as to the economy and profit of thp silo. They scorn to think somehow that the sown corn fodder is much more profitable ble- when cut and fed in the good old way. Mr. T. B. Wakoman ol Connecti cut answered ono of these objections the other day In the following convincing manner : , 1'Tho ' natural food of all cattle is croon herbage , and they have a hard time to get through our winters on dry fodder. They have no stomachs fit for it oven when steamed. Therefore , to give them their own fresh food in winter , in a warm enclosure , is to make it sum mer for them nil the year. The result is that they are bright , slock and healthy , and give 'Juno milk and butter in Feb ruary. ' But if the corn could be ripened and 'BO dried , no amount of steam could make it green , milky herbage again. Steam cannot ressurcct the dead. When the the cellulose albumen , protoplasm starch , gums , sugars , etc. , have turned to woou , fiber , or dry skins , or hard granules , half their value is gone and can never bo restored. Lot the cattle have the choice and they will bottle the question in favor of the ensilage every time.Vliy don't the skeptical follows take the testimony of the cows , as Mr. Wakoman says ? Good dairymen cannot afford to lot ton years go by in teaching them what they ought to learn in two years. Irrigating Lands. A Florida correspondent writes to the Orange Judd Farmer : I wish to Irrigate land from a small lake adjacent thereto. This lake Is about six foot lower than the land to bo Irrigated. Is thoro. any practicable way by which a hydraulic ram can be constructed so to carry water onto this land through ti six-inch pipoV A plpo of that size would glvo water Buflicient for ton acres , the amount to bo Irrigated. Will it ilo to lay the pipe which carries water to the ram far enough in the lake to secure a good flow to ram , and to make the fall sutllclont to do this at n suitable distance from lake , dig down into the ground ton to four teen feet , and place the ram therein , forcing the water from there out into a lateral through n six-Inch pipe. Please give address of firm in Chicago or Now York who make hydraulic rams. The above was referred to Messrs. W. and B. Douglas , 107 Lake street. Chicago. They are the oldest and most extensive manufacturers of hydraulic rums , pumps , garden engines and hy draulic machines in the United States , nnd in answer to the question say : The plan Is not practicable. The largest size ram wo have will deliver only a two-Inch stream of water , which re quires a four-inch plpo to supply the ram. There would bo about four-fifths of the water wasted in working the ram ; this would soon fill up the { nt and stop the nun. Wo think a largo force pump worked by windmill or by steam force power would do the required work. DPS , Belts & Belts Pj/slm.Sarjjans / . and Specialists , 14OO DOUGLAS STRH1U1T OMAHA , NEll. Tno most wlcli'lvsmil fnvomlily Ifnownspec ialists In tlio Unftpi . _ .Their long cx- Dcrlonco , rcmarKalilu skill nnd uimcisal suc cess In tlio treatment and euro or Nervous , Chronlo and Surgical Blse.'ices. entitle thcsn omini'iit physicians to the full confidence of tlio uflMctrd nvurywhpi'o. Tliev Kiiarant"c : A omtTAIN AND I'OSITlVR CUKE for tlio nwlul rlTects of early vlco und the numer ous iM-lls that follow In Us train. I'lUVATK. 1U.OOU AND SKIN IHSEASK3 sjippdllv , coniplololv nnd nprtnanoiitly curi'd. NKUVOUS UKHlIjITY ANII SEXUAL DIS- OUUKItS yield : oudlly to their skillful tieat- niont. I'lhES , TISTUnA .AND RECTAL TJI.OKUS euurnntccd cured without pain or detention from business. HVDHOOlILn AND VAUICOrRLE perma nently and successfully cured In oxcry IMSO. SYl'HILl ? , ( JOXOUHIIKA , OL1CET. Spei- nuUorrhea , Seminal Weakness Lost Manhood , NlKht Emissions Decayed Faculties , Kcnialo Weakness and ull dollciito disorder * , peculiar to cither snx positively cuiecl , as well as all functional disorders that result from youthful foil lot or the excess of mature ycnrs. TlvMPTf Ill < Guaranteed pormuno ntly O I 1\1O 1 U IVlj cured , removal complete. without ciittlni ; , caustic or dilatation. Cures effected nt homo by patient without a mo ment's pain or annoyance. TO YOUNG 'AND MIDDLE-AGED MEN. ' riTKT Tll ° awfnl elects of , UU1\L cary ] vlcu which brines organic weakness , dc.stioylnir both mind nnd body , with ull Us dreaded Ills , permanently cured. HP ; RFTT Address those who have Im- L > I\J. UL/l IO paired themselves by Im proper Indulgence and solitary habits , which ruin both mind and body , unllttlng them for business , studv ornmrrlaKo. MAltltlED MEN or these entering on that happy life , aware of physical debility , quickly assisted. OUR SUCCESS Is based uiion facts. Plrst 1'ractlcal o.xrorl- unco. Second Every eiisc is specially studied , thus starting right. Third medicines are luopaicd In our laboratory cxnclly to hull each case , thus effecting curcswltliout Injury. Drs. Betts & Betts , 1409 DOUGLAS STREET , OMAHA , NEB. Have you a Pittsburgh , Rochester , Duplex , or a Stu dent Lamp ? Do they work satisfactorily ? Do your Lamp Chimneys break ? You get the wrong sort ! The RIGHT ones are the " PEARL GLASS , " made by Geo. A. Macbeth & 'Co. , Pitts burgh , makers of the cele brated " " chimney Pearl-top lamp ney , which have given univer sal satisfaction. e To cum Biliousness. Sick Headache. Constipation. Wlilarln. J.Ivor Complalnta , t.ikn tlio eufo nuil certain remedy , SMITH'S UeotheBMAI.t.BIZEK'iO llttlo brjnns to thobot- tlo 1. They arc tlio most convenient : suit ull ages. 1'rlcoof titter elto , 25 cent * per buttle. Ef IQCtBEVir * " ' ? 17. 70 : Photo erovuro. tfe-IOCIIIMIQia jianol BUo or Ihls iilctuio lor ! ccnU ( coppers or clumps ) . J. F. SJIITH A CO , linkers of "Jlllu Ileann , " gu loula. Mo. AMUSEMblNTS , BOYB'S. . - 3 NIC WE , Jan. 12 THE CLARA MORRIS Under the Management of Kdwln 11 , Trice. MONDAY SArenou's QIDEXTTR TUESDAY Bale of iont begins ti turil.iy morning nt U o'clock EDEN Will Jvtiwlor , Mannser. Cor. llth nnd 1'arnam WIJIJK Of JANUARY I2TH. Last week ot the Missouri U hint ess , Klla living. TnoNcliraska Fat Girl , weighing 410 pounds ; but 10 years old. Howard's Imperial Minstrels , nnd u host of special nttmutlons. A bright , buuzy enter tainment. DR. BAIL BY GRADUATE DENTIST A Full Sot of ToatU on Kubber , fur . _ - . Fivu Uou < uia. Anorfoct fit cimrantcod. Tooth oxtraotoa * Ithout pain OP dauKor. and wltLout unucs- thetlcs. Gold and silver Jill nifi nt lu e t rates. Ilrldgo nnd Crown Worlc. TcotliuttU- ontnlatp * . All worlf warranted. . . . . . . OFFICE PAXTON BLOCK , 16TII AND FARHAM Entrance , Ifitli street elovutor Open cvoiv ga until 8 o'clook \ THE BEST HI ] r IN THE WORLD. ARE MADE BY THE WoonsookBtRhode Island Rubber Go wcstorn "R0"13 and " 1 ways carryularj > > : flmern [ land Sewed Slioe Bo 1204 and 1206 Harncy Street. C.S.RAYMOND'S ' Sacrifice and Kemoval Sale We mean Just what we sjy. Our nrloos ivlll tell. Our entlro stock ( except Patek Philippe & Go's Fine Watches ) , Is on sale at such sacrifice prices , that It should Insure the silo of every article. CUB AIlT DEPARTMENT wo are simply selling without rorard to cost. Oun discount on watcbei , DiamonilsSoHd Silver , Fine Jcwolr/ and all Roods , makes the prices lower than our people have ever been able to purchase this class of goo'Jls. This sale will n last Ions. C. S. RAYMOND. Donclis and 16th St. IZZRRD ICE CREEPER. Adjustable Ice Creepers tit any shoo. Anyone cin put them on or off ; they aro'alwaysin order , and you are ready for any change -weather. . Agents Wanted. C3y Send outl no of fore and hind bhoe. t27 0nly tlio "Points"vear out : anyone can put in a new set , "IndlBpaiisabie. " Full set (1) ( ) $3. Points. 8 sot , $1 , to oje address. Points' 1 tet , (10) ( ) 20c. by mail. S. W. Kent , Sole Ffr. , Meridan , Conn. DR. MCG-REW , THH Is unsurpassed In the treatment of all forms of PRIVATE DISEASES Stricture , Syphilis , Lost M.inhood , Skin Dis eases and 1'eiiKilo Diseases. JJr. MeOrow's success In tlio treatment of the above Disease * lias nurer been equaled. A euro Is guaranteed without tlio loss of nn hours time. Write for circulars. LAUIKS , from 2 to 4 only. Olllcc , Cor , Htli and Farnaiu Bis. , Omaha. Neb. Entrance on either street. FOR SALE Mr Painting and PaperhnnglnK business. Kitab- llslicil IS.MI. ll a n neil Kolcctf J block of Wall 1'upcr , Wall MouMlnus , I'alnts , llrushe * , eta. P. WINDHEIM , 610 S. 10th Street , Omaha. UV V V U MiU 1 rj I on call Out Well FirminenllT. I > u A'oiMng , find you'll Hie or lie KtmenleillVcllaillinlly - ' ro AIMY < > nhnrMrianilIMicnm rjlriit KiclQitv.Mithodi la Jfome 7'rrafmrrifd < icrlbi4ln lOUR HEW BOOK ilPme.KniKitfMtVAb i , , . nuduiu JK. v. UJirtateU leillaoalali. Ertrrtblni confldcntlil. DOM'TS ! _ C5JVE UP For chafed okin apply Pond'a Extract. I | 1 OMAHA , NEB. During hli several months location and practice In Ouinhii , Dr. Dlllliuo hiH cntncil an cm Inblo roputa- tlon among the hundreds of cltlrcns uho applied to him nlmcxt n n last ro-oil , nnd lounl In his skillful ministrations lliolull realization ol liupu lonR'ito- forrut. Ilol permanently located and Imi the best np- polutcd imil most conveniently luc.ttcd physician's onke and reception rooms In Omaha. The sick \\I11 find In Dr. DIlllnKs a true physician and n sympathetic friend and adviser , IVr the treatment of the following named dlncacej Dr. IHllliiKH tiaa proven himself puajesscd of most unusual skill. r CATAUKII Alldlsen esof tliront nnd noso. C * tnrrli Impoverishes tlio blood nnd nerves , pruduolntf debility , dccny anil decline. nVSt'NPSlA-And nil tlio phnse of Indigestion , llvor trouble , Imperfect asslnilltillon nnd nutrllldn. KIDNIIV DISIARIS : : Are most deceiving nnd ln Mluoui. Sytnptomnunrd torecoxnlzo by thopalloui often lend to fntnl brlRlita Ulseiiso or dlabetos. 'MSKASK3 0V Till' ' ! IU.OO1) Illood polnonlnn scrofula , cryilpolas , anil diseases mentioned bora' nflor. ALT. SKIN illSKA8r.3-rc emn , nail rheum , Vnr\T \ oln , nlcorn , t iberclo' , acrofuln , luinis , muddy color of the pkln , pimple , nnd tllsenscs of the bcalp artf cuicil by Dr. IHIIIncJ , NRIl\OHS DlSKA8is-Io : of vlBor , lost mnn , lioftil , debility , piojlriitlon , despiiiiduni-r , c-iuptlonl onlhorneu. lost of memory , ilroul u ( future , ut& Anuw IrontinonttliolNKVUIl VAll. ' * . UIIKUMATI9M AND NHUHAI/JIA-Aro cur 4 by lr. DlllliiK whonnllotliorB liuvo fnlleil. FUMAI.i : WlIAKNlWSlM-Thu Imrsli , Irrntlonal nnd iinniiturnl motlioils uiunlly employed nro ro iipuiislbla fur fully Ihroo-fuurlhn of tin ) BultcrlnJ now endured by noinen , liivotltnlu tlio now , liomo troitmcrit of Dr. DIlllnKS. rnisAMI : utscTAi , 'iitoiiiii.ns-ribs , in tnln , iib cos-"C < , ntrlcltic , nnit nil dl ca ei of rcctutn ( tiioit without tlio knlfo , uiUtury or nn hour's doloj from work or business. ALL HIIADACllES nro quickly cured , VIlNlMtlCAl. PISKASKS-Ileccnt or Ion * BtniWlnif jplillh , KoiiorrlKva , Btrltturo nnd nil roiiililne af ; fecllonsnro cured pernmnuntly niidforour without nuy mercury or iiilnernl Irentmont. SIOUl'IIl.VK IIA111T Quickly , positively and pillulescured. ! . TAl'inVOHM Taken with hcnd complete In oni hour with ono teaspounful o& plo.i : ml medicine. Nd fasting , OTHER IISIASisSuchni : old norei , mnllnnBnir \ ulcers , tumom , cnricers , hrnrt troubles , nclhtnV vv epilepsy , St. VltUH ilnncu , milk let chronic constlpa lion nnd chronic diarrhoea pro ciiml , THK COMI'MIXIO.V The 1110 t unsightly nnf muddy complexion quickly freMicnuil nnd bcnutltlodi BOH OKL'IINSIVIJ I1III5ATH A permanent cur * IX\V ) KKKSI FllKB CONSUI.TATIONI HOUUSi OilOn. m. to 5 p. m. Ktonlngs , 7 to 8:04. : Sundaya,2 to 4p in. Patients Treated By Medicine Sent Everywhere. 322 South Fifteenth GUOTJND FLOOK. KO STAIRS. " Dr. Dllllnss prepares and dispenses hl own medicines , -which are largely seleotod from nature's healing plants , barks , rootn ( urns , shrubs , etc. No mineral drugs gireii The First Special Rfto Stock Taking. MEN'S ' PINE TROUSERS Strictly All Wool , : .50 , $3.50 3.75 and $5.00 NO OURKr NO FAY. 1316 Douglas Street , Omaha , Neb. Seventeen years experlonco. A rcculnr graduate * In medlclno , as dlplom.\i show , Ii allll tro.itln . , wtUi tlio BrcBteit success , nil Nervous . Chronlo nnd 1'ilvato Dhonoi. Apcrmnnont euro guaranteed for Catarrh , Spcrmatorrlicrn , Lost Manhood , ScnilnnlVoaknojf , jNluht Iwisoi , linpotenoy , Syphilis , .Stricture , and < l nil dli- cascsof tliulllond , Skin ami Urinary Oriiuis. : N. II. lidinrnntoo JVIO fner euia 1 undertake and fall to cure. Consultation froo. Book ( Mysteries o L\lu \ ) ont fruo. OlllcuuouM 9a ut. tot ! p , m. Sunduyi 19 n. m. to 12m. M. D. Practice limited to Diseases of the LUNGS AND Nervous System IncludtnK Neuralgia , 1'nralyidi , Upllejuy , Cntali'psT , llyatero Epilepsy , Con vu 1 flom , Hulnal Irilta tlon , Uheumntlsm Chronlo Aleohollim , Nurvous lleidarhc , Korvoun I'roitrutlon cciniumpttonnnd nil diseases of the luncs llooms 310 to SiO , BEE BUILDING , OMAHA. KEHVE AND BRAIN TREATMENT , for Hysteria , Dl > slnes , I > " > ir > lsr ( . lulimu.U nU I l ; pres lon , heft nlnipf the IJialn re * tutting tn Inianlty nail l a'llnir to inliery duuv ar l doth , Premature Old Age , llai r nn < .u. l.utr tit I'nvro ? Inoltbor n , Involuntary Lot > t > jauil iiermi > tnrrl. < c.i c&uit i | jy oTbiMJxeitloa of tno tiraln , relf bu a or crcr-mdulgfnco. > .ach lint contalai on i montI 'i Ire t- ment. tlnbax , or ll Iff 81. l nt liy rnrilrrt | < uld. With each order lor rlz b zi-i , will lend purchn-r duranto to refund nc.icr If tno crcMmrnt folia to euro , uuar Jitcc4 lnuod anil m nuina mill unit Lr GOODMAN DHUG CO. , lOlOl-'unuca itreoU - - Uiaab Neb , N. W , Cor. 13th and Farnam Sti Omaha , Neb. Makcsn specialty of Ohronlc , Nervoni < ini I'rlvntoolbuusos. 1'ortuunetitly cures .SyuUR HH , Onnoithua , Gleet , Kporiiintorrhi-ii , iomluul Weakness , Nlalit Loisus uinl Jnipotunoy. Dr. JMcCoy ciirpH'Alth icmiirknlilocortnlntr Ohronla Itliuumatlsm , I'llcn nnd other Jlauucel iif II D Hectiini , anil ticmtswitli'rent ( suocotl nil Diseased nf thu Kidneys nnd Dropsy , I'atlents can rely cut roeoivln honorahl * nnd canald opinion as to whntcau 'jo ' ucooro- pldihoil In thulr c'nse. I'atlents ut n tllatanco can uddrcsi DR. MCCOY , 13th and Farnam Streets , OMAIIA NHB. _ _ _ , oarknowiolgefl IvadlliK remedy for all ih A , unnatuial dlntharKea and" * * * ' Prlvatudlieax'sndncn. A certain cure for tin- debili tating veukiu- peculiar towdirun. I prenrribo U nnd feel iafa In recommending It to nil BUlTerprs. - J.8TONlRMDDfCATUiiui , Hold l.r I rii-ii ( i ' . t'X'.icis tti.uo. > Ovir..lr. ) l mc'i l-nrltnllcal rillt lliet'riMicli roniwly , nctnn tha inuiiilrual ijntumand euro 0uppr n lon from whatever canio , i'roiaotc / inuiiitruntlun. Thuio pllli ibauld nut ba takaa durf i Kpiovuancy. Am , I'lllCo. , iioynlty 1'ropi. , Hpo . ; cvi.CU/ . , la. ( JviiulLO bf Shermjn Ic McConntlL PoJjo tt , nu.ir I1 , u. , O uah i U. A. Mulclier , Houl * UuiiUitt M. I * . Kiln , Cuuocll UluOJ. ; , ot it for ti ,