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Show VrTPD VC LtUIVilliH. rnp VLR IdlXilVAftO the times - fr Taa Tub Ppnusaino t F. H. FINKM. dim ud - Coumf. The man who forgets that he has le half cured. all-de- nt The Battle ( Traatea M Tarae Da a h tar ef the BarolaUejH' lah gad Old Tatrlet Lire e Die." The woman who doee not like to bo admired Is to be feared. A -- erSariei, night Is cold, the sparkling By the way, who Is following up the Schomburgk line nowadays? , anow ' Ifas shrouded all the earth below-bang the lamp on of heaven ittosf be pretty rocky this year, even In the middle of the road. -- Those who amuse can maka money where those who Instruct would starve. ' The depths of blue dye the sky Grow deeper at the 3 zeniths belt. And where the earthbeglns to melt Unto the distance, and the sky. The fainting blue, begins to die And vanish, like a broken prayer. Across the hazy mist of air. And where the' river wtndeth slow, The rock of ice and drifts of snow. Impede the motion ot a boat. As if some madman at her throat In vain did try to drag her down. But perseverance was the crown That made the noble ship the queen Of all the aeas that she bad seen. And all the islands, sun caressed, ThU lay upon the water's breast Gas in St Louts hotels bed quite blowout during the populist conven- tion.' , For the first time In eeveral months Generals Gomes and Maceo are dead at the same time. The life that is spent in preparing for emergencies may be a ueaful one, but It does not embrace much comfort. Nile, Mich., has gone erasy over politics. He Is now in fit condition - to become a convention rooter. A mau In If the hours In the middle of the day could be made a little longer than the A soldier standing on ber prow Others this would be a great world for With eyes down bent and knitted brow, business. , w h; A Bapgad Mid patriot. In 1776 Lord Howe reached America with authority to make oiertures to the colonies for peace. Shortly after he landed In New York harbor he beard the booming of the cannon which cele- la wrapt In meditation deep. His thoughts are those that will not reap A goodly harvest in his heart. For lo! he sees the waters start And tremble, and, as If long pent. An earthquake through the waters eent A shock, to ravage there and rave. Clear mirrored on a loosened wave. He sees a maiden, wondrous fair, -Who knots a piece of golden hair And ties It round a floweret blue. Fresh plucked from out its shade ot People who think they are perfect week or two and should lay off for see some younger person improve on their work. brated the adoption of the declaration Independence, but be persisted in his The federal authorities complain that mission and waa met by a committee to $10 bills ere $2 some people raising from congress consisting of Benjamin bin. Most people woutd be satisfied Franklin, John Adams, and Edward to raise the original $2. Rutledge. A hitherto unprinted account of this meeting by Henry Stra-checonThe number of horse killed for Lord Howe's secretary, appears dew. sumption as food in Paris last year in the June number of the Atlantic, and of fortywas 23,180, this being exclusive "Take this, ahe cries to him who very Interesting reading It makes. three mules and 383 donkeys. The English commissioner opened stands the discussion In a skillful and diploon Beside sands. the "sounding A New York girl saved her aunt matic manlier, and what he said must from drowning, and the papers began "This flower, an emblem of the peace when feud re- have been listened to with great recalling her a heroine' before they That here shall reign spect, for be was a good friend to lease learned the aunt was poor. America afad was strongly opposed to Their claims upon the lives of men. the houttle'pollcy of the king. But with a summer's This token when. lock, a In Two female doctors got fight all hi friendliness and with all hla In Chicago, la which on of them was Beneath the beating ot the stars, -persuasive eloquence It was Impossible of the the bars. Beyond Is sobbing shot The physician for him to help emphasizing the fact Our were told. love and first pledges certainly a iuccesa at drumming up that he could not debate the question and to when red But leaves the gold trade. Were changed by autumn's brilliant of Independency, and he impressed It upon the members of the compelled to brush. Ladles with husbands who have the treat them simply as Influential g habit should Imitate Mrs. O'er woods and dales there came a cltlzeca-an-with d not in their official capahush." Rosa Zentner, a Gotham woman,, wlfo city. ' on There the shore a rang bugle huabaVl an inch within thrashed her , During Lord Howes That echoed back the name of warf speech there of his life for knocking her down. were eeveral courteous Interruptions, The Soldier started, glanced around. and at the close each of the Americana My hoy, If all right enough for The ship Its destined place had found, mad raplv d4uawTbre was BO atm. 4 "To land I To land t" th ooldUra cry, W Sot n plv.'knt flwuu 4 ot weakening on the part 'of either of overlook tba s4 tnta ot VVlUlum lAtUe "To tight the fight, or fighting diet" them, but It la curious to .note how ot McKeesport. Little 'William had a The Hessian revels had not stilled wonderful weakness for pies, and the The night, when camp and tents were eloeely the reply of Adams .comports with the eloquent though imaginary filled other night he Invested t3 In them and With sounds of distant marching feet. words that are put into hla mouth by sat down for a feast, which was Webster in advocacy of the declaration. "topped oft' with a chunk ot water- Hurrying down the torch lit street, Tht Is the way it ia reported by the melon. Two hours later Willi was They beard the drunken leaders call, "To arms, to arms, ya warriors alU" ecretary: dead. Ia mockery tho trumpets blew, Mr. Adams said that he had no obThe Parisian newapapert are divid- As down tho ranks he hastened through jection to Lord Howei considering ed In the view la which they take ef Each group of soldiers standing there, him, on the present Occasion, merely Emperor WllhHma dispatch to Presi- Stunned by the torches' blaze and glare. as a private Gentleman, or in any Character except that of a British Subject dent Paure congratulating him from The battle raged, the cannon roared. his escape from oaawisi nation. that the Resolution of the Congress Bom praise the emperor highly, while others Bright flashed the saber and the aword. to declare the Independency was not exhort the public not to allow a mere The smoke in columns upward taken upon their own Authority that wreathed. "bluff of courtesy to blind them to they had been Instructed to do so by the enmity of Germany. A a matter Bearing the prayers tho soldier all the colonlee and that It was not in breathed. their power to treat otherwise than inof fact, the enmity Is all on the French aide, a is customary with the nation A hundred hands upheld In fight. dependent States he mentioned warmThat perished ere the dawning light which gets whipped In a struggle. ly his own Determination not to depart Had streaked the heaven's vault with from the idea of Independency, and . gray. . Our duchess, aa the Duchess ot Marlspoke In the common way of the Power And darksome night had changed to of the Crown, which was comprehended borough ia now called In newspaper flay. In the Ideal Power of Lord and Comparlance, although there are several Among the alala a youth did lie. mons, other American duchesses in England, One hla flag and banner, by hat paralysed London society by a dis- The hand "Sink or swim, live or die, aurvive or other clasped a flower fair. perish," he had given fall heart and hts play of Jewel at the great ball at Tied to a tress of golden hair. hand to that measure, and he was Just Devonshire House such aa not even Margaret Ridgley Schott as plain spoken in the presence ef his London haa ever witnessed before, A lordship as he had been in Independbelt ot diamonds was the en detail A bssikiw f the Kavolatlaa. ence hall. If he were living which capped the eUmgx. She aimply he There itvea la Phoenixville, Chester might be a gold man or he might be a biased with atones, according to the county. Pa., a remarkable womaa la silver man, but It Is dead certain that cable accounts. tha person of Hannah Philips Eaches, he would not be a straddler. Some comment haa been created In who possesses the unique distinction of Hla "Shaar.a Washington by the refusal ot the being the only living daughter of a The distinction of being the richest Christian Endeavorera to fly the flag Revolutionary soldier .In the county. at the Cuban republic among the other She was born April (, 1803. In 1820 she and the meanest man In the town In bunting displayed upon their tents married Jacob Still, a farmer of which he lived belonged to old Andy had four Ttragga No one during their -- convention. They exquestioned hie right plained that they flew the Spanish flag children, two of whom are still living to this honor when old Andy's wife a West Abram of Still, Chester, died and he went to four son, because Spain was a nation and Cuba different unwas not one, at least as yet They took Pa., and a daughter, Margaret R. dertakers trying to get them toijnake ot ot Thomas widow Sigman, no part in politics, they said, and merehim a coffin for $5 out of soma worm-eate- n ly followed customary precedents. Nev- Phoenixville. Mrs. Stilla husband died old black walnut boards he had ertheless the Cuban sympathizers are in October, 1831, and, In December, 1833, )upt In hts barn for twenty yearn for married Eber she she whom by Eches, very angry over the occurrence. had five children. Three eons ot this that very purpose. as ht admitted. The 3,000 guests at the great fete second marriage remain to her Wil- , When he was worth over I50,000 s given in Paris by the Countess de Cas- liam, ot Philadelphia; Joslah, who bas committee went to him to solicit sometellans were waited on by 115 servants been paying teller of the national thing for a widow with tlx little children who had been burned out ef bouse and everything else was in due pro- bank at Phoenixville for twenty-fiv- e end home, and who had aot a penny in and makes whom with ahe her portion. Even the blase Parisians say years, that such erlgtnality and prodigality home, and Owen, pastor of Hlghstown, the world nor a change otelothlng for children or in the art of entertainment hit never New Jersey, Baptist Church, a pastor-a- t her ' Tm dreadful herself, he has held for twenty-seve- n years. been seen in the Lutetian capital. The sorry for her," said old fete proper wse preceded by a dinner of Joslah Philips, her father, waa th son Andy, "dreadful sorry, an' I agree with -- 138 covers.- It seems that the hard-earn- ot Joslah and Mary Philips, who came $ou that Its right for her friends and Gould money ia spinning right to this country from Wales in 1755, fielghbors to help her out IH do my when Joslah was 4 years of age. He Sheer, gentlemen. I'll do my sheer." merrily along the boulevards of the waa one ot tour He was making his usual brothers, all ot whom five or six gayest city la the world. were afterwards officers Revoluin the tons of maple sugar at tb - time. and. New York haa an amazing lawsuit tionary war, Joeiah holding the rank fitter a few momenta reflection, he of lieutenant. was Joslah twice ftl Philips A very pretty girl is suing a young man for 600, and produces a written married; six sons were the result ot ! THl tell ye what I'll js; rl ,ed hts first union; by hla second wife, her over two agreement in w hich he says that If ahe quarts o mspig syrup if Sarah ho had nine Thomas, children, she'll will lend him money to flnlah his eduto send back the Jar HI cation he will marry her as soon as six sons and three daughters, Mrs have to put It in. I think be be la able to support a wife. It seems Eaches being the youngest child. Mrs. Vut my sheer, gintlemln." that'U Eaches had two a and brother sisters be bas now secured a position In a law "" . office with a good salary, but refuses who lived to be almost 80. Her father f Fur to rim. to carry out hla contract, wherefore and mother were both members of the The King of Arragon acc ztd: the girl is trying at leaet to recover Vincent Baptist Church, In the adjathe money even if she loses the hus- cent burying ground of which they now There are four things B ,he WOrld worth living for old win to drink, band. Incidentally the agreement stip- lie. They were characterised by the ulate e forfeit of 50,000 if either per- strictest piety,. rearing their children old wood to burn, old boo& to read In the faith of their forefathers, and and old friends to converse son breaks the contract. -- with." The king waa satisfied with teaching them "to love God and speak any old ,'the truth." Mrs. Eachea waa 15 year thing. Washington Tlmei. of y. new-wom- wife-beatin- yn - i to-d- ay Bwchlan-townshlpsTh- ey Sig-ma- n, ed - DAIRY AND POULTRY. NTERESTING CHAPTERS FOR OUR RURAL READERS. , ' rib died-Mar- cVL hav-COO- U SHORT STORIES FOR OLD SOLDIERS. - UTAII. COALVILLE. wheB her father igi7. In bis 6th ,Mr. Her nxAher lived to be 17, Mrs. Each recalls ,n heard her mother eay that during the Revolution the womepbad to do almost the entire farm work, even to the plowing, the men all being engaged In warfare. Deapltd'the fact of Mr. Each having paised her 91th birthday the 6th of Afcril last. hel but lit- -. . tie bent witfa age, and remarkably bright' In intellect, recalling the dates and episodes in her life with exception-H- E al aecuyAey. Kindly blue eyes light up pleasant face, full ot character and womanliness and crowed-w-tt- h snowy 1 hair She fa the oldest member of the 'Chester County Chapter o?the Daug"h-Loters of the American Revolution, for shlth distinction she one year ago reived a spoon of gold from the Nation- si Chapter of the D. A. R , of Washing-tha- t ton, D. C., an honor which was con- f erred upon three other women In Pennsylvania, they being the only living daughters of revolutionary soldiers In the state. There are. I think, thirteen in the United States. The golden spoon was handsomely engraved, and bore in bas relief upon Its handles a representation of a woman sitting at a spinning-whee- l. She also showed me a gold badge, with Its pendant of blue and white ribbon, conferred upon her by the Cheater County Chapter, and the blue and white button as an insignia of her membership In that organization She doubtless felt a great degree of pride In the ownership of these golden emblems, significant of a past generation. ot A 1,1 be-su- re la 'Saecnsral Farro.r. Operate This OapartaMat or tba Farm A Fi Hlats as to tha Cara at Llva Stark, sad Fault ry. late circular from the department of agriculture give follow log 4b filled cfae&se: It may be well jAf to state in passing that filled cheese differs from the genuine, old fashioned article In but one essential particular, so far as its composition s concerned. Instead of the natural rat of milk, or cream, which la extracted for butter making, there as neutral 'nrd, made from the leaf fat of the hog. This article, claimed to be exception-ill- y pure and good of its kind, is used at the rate of two or three pounds o every 100 pounds of skim milk. The tees resulting carries about 30 per of (lard) fat, which ia rather less .han the average of (butter) fat In good whole milk cheese. The casein and jlher components of the two are practically the same In kind and proportions. From this statement of composition one can judge for himsclt whether this filled or lard cheese Is a legitimate article of food, whether It Is wholeeotne, and whether he desires to use it In the diet of himself and tamlly. It is made of comparatively cheap materials, costing from one-hato as much as good, full cream, factory cheese, and its market price, wholesale or retail, should correspond. At Its best, this Is cheap, Inferior cheese; it Is almost devoid of flavor, oily or greasy when warm, and neter attains the dry, crumbly consistency of a well cured cheese. It Is sold when only a month or two from .he press In imitation of mild, Immature heese. It la claimed that it does pot ceep well, especially if subjected to temperature above 60 degrees. No one acquainted with first class full cream cheeee would ever accept the filled protect as a substitute, but it may be successfully passed as a genuine article if second grade. There Is plenty of joed cheese still made In the United lutes, and It can be secured if buyers will but make a little effort to find it. The states of New York and Wisconsin of all the together produce two-thlrcheese made in the country, and the reputation ot the factories of these states for high quality, full cream heese has been long .established. The product ot these factories of the standard or Cheddar form of large cheese stands second to none In the markets of Great Britain as yell a iu Amenta. The two Btatea named, aa well at others, absolutely prohibit the manufacture and sale of filled cheese within their borders and the marking of skim cheese to Imitate full cream goods These laws are well enforced. - lf two-thir- ds da Contlnaoaa ) Rtont from Poultry, F. A. Homann, of Effingham county, III., read the following paper before a farmers Institute to that county: Eggs are all the year round crop, differing greatly In this respect from hay, corn and vegetables, which are all harvest time crops; and if not marketed at once, expensive buildings have to be prepared to store them ln,and not a few crops such aa potatoes, cabbage and fruit, shrink In value by decaying while stored. Not so with our poultry product, which haa an all the year ready market, and with eggs as the basis of a poultry business a steady ail the year round Income can be commanded. It ia the winter eggs that pay the greater profit and bring up the If the average price for the year. greater part of the eggs are received for spring and summer, when prices are brought down by a large supply, th average will be lower, but If fowls lay In December, January and February when eggs are 20 to 30 cents a dozen the average price for the whole year will be satisfactory. The whole story of getting eggs In winter can be resolved into three simple rules. First, hatch th chicken early; second, keep them growing to the pullet will come to lay' Ing maturity in October or by Novem ber; third, keep them laying by good food and care. When I say hatch the chickens early 1 do not mean too early, because If hatched too early and go to laying in August and September they will usually moult In December Just as the weather Is becoming very cold, and good-b- y eggs from then till Bpring. For the heavier varieties, such as Brahma and Cochins, the middle ot Plymouth-roc- k March Is none too early. and Wyandottes we would hatch the first half of April if possible. If not, April will do. The Spanish, Mlnorcas, Leghorns and Hamburgs should be Set hatched in May for best results. three or more hens at a time and once l week dust them well with insect powder, and when th chicks hatch give them to two or more mothers. I gave as our first rule tor getting i good profit from poultry to hatch your chickens jarly. ' Equally Importantfils the second. keep them growing so they will come to laying maturity by November first. The food and care haa much to lo with the chicken growing. Now for the first 24 hours do not feed be chicks, for they need no food during this time, nature has provided for k .into hat by absorbtlon of their little abdomens,tand It is necesbe digested. sary this absorbed egg-yol- k Much damage is done and many chicks Uvea are lost by disregarding this rule; come people ia their haste to get the chick growing hurry food into thetr crops before the system has toned up to take care of It, and the conseqtrence ia the bowels are congested and the chick egg-yol- the majority. Feed often but little at a time, every 2 hours say five times a day, until the chicks are five weeks old. and see that no food is left standing In the sun to sour after they have eaten. Remove It all, nothing causes more bowel looseness, and dysentery, than sour food. The best food for the first five weeks Is composed of d oat meal, one third corn d wheat bran; add a meal and pinch of salt, moisten with sweet milk or water, warm it in cold weather and twice a week add some bone meal. Keep coarse sand by the coop at all times, don't think the chick can find this - themselves, - that' Is on of the commonest mistakes in Tearing thickens; after they are five weeks old you can leave out the oat meal and feed three or four times a day. When ten weeks old, at noon scatter wheat and cracked corn In litter such as leaves and cut straw, so they will have to work for It, but not too much corn as It makes them too fat. Green food must be supplied. If the chicks are cooped up on fresh grass this problem is solved and they will help themselves to what d they need. If, however, they are in a small yard, finely cut grss, lettuce, or onion tops will make a good substitute. Fresh cool water must be kept accessible so a drink can be taken when wanted. Sell the cockerells when they weigh two or two and a half pounds each, and dont forget to dust the pullets well with insect powder, for you do not want to raise chicken lice, but if you are not careful you will. Now -- with this food and proper care they will begin to lay along in September and October. Then sell off your old fowls, clean the houses and whitewash them and the pullets moved In, and then on feed for eggs as follows: For four days in the week feed early In the morning a warm mash composed of one part shorts, one part bran, one part corn meal, and add cooked potatoes or Feed on turnips and apple parings. boards or in troughs, only enough to supply part of their hunger; give water all round, then scatter wheat or oats In the litter and let the aim be to keep the hens busy every moment from morning until night scratching for wheat and oats, which should be burled In the litter. Let the noon ration be green rye or a cabbage hung In the pens just high enough to c6mpel the hens to jump to peck it. About 3 p. m. feed the whole grain, full feed, oats or wheat, and in the very coldest weather a little corn. Keep grit or granulated bones so they can get at it all the winter, and charcoal, dtn't forget to give them some. Clean pen, fresh water, pure air and a system of feeding such aa ia here outlined will bring money to the farmer every month in the year, try it. goes ever to one-thir- one-thir- fon-flne- Soatbdown Trying to Salt Him. Josisr," said the young m ah' father, do y remember what he said the other day 'bout not being able to do whut I asked yer to round the farm sene y got educated, cause ye wanted su'tbin' deep ter accypy jerten-tion- T "Yes. father. "Wal, I've got the very thing fur ye. Ol man Tunkins isdiggina subcel-la-r. Washington btar. That Terrible Saoarge. Malarial disease is Invariably by disturbance of tba liver o toe the bowels, the ttomacb and th nerve removal ol both tba cause and Its effect, is Bitter btomaeh fully llosietiers vfcti no . raoeMly the bill it toes, performing ita work tborou.blyanditt ingredient are pure andbuild up a admirably erve to broken by ill beaitb and shorn of atrengtb. t onhtlputlon, liver and kidney complaint and nervounea are conquorod by it. 1 ade-luxt- o. ut-lu- m Leek of Baalism. What ridiculous, Mr. Wlckwlre im- possible things these fashion plates are. I know they used Mrs. Wickwire to be, but most of them are engraved from photographs nowadays This one cant be. Mr. Wickwire Here are two women going in opposite directions, both with brand new gowns on, and neither looking back at th other. Indianapolis Journal Bair Catarrh Car Is taken Internally. Price, 75c. Somehow, w always distrust th bib ot fare at a boarding nous that calls its boarders guests. Javentlons. Omaha, Nebraska, July 31, 1S9& Amongst th inventors who received Witpatents last week were William & feedten, Sonth Omaha, Nebraska, holding bin; Gaylord G Wooster, Rulo, Nebraska, scale beam; Jehiel F. Wyukoop, Muscatine Iowa, rubber cap. for axle nuta; George P. Kistner, Low Moor, Iowa, disk cultivator; Edward A. Ilinrichs, Davenport. Iowa, doll Amongst the curious inventions were found an interchsngsble toy and box; a combination bloomer and bicycle shirt; a pneumatic tire provided with a steel shield; a bicycle adapted to be nsedon ice; a duplex bicycle tire comprising superposed flexible tires; a device for raising and lowering bicycle tops; and an attachment for bicycles comprising a folding rod that can be expanded and is provided with a mirror adapted to be used oa ladies bicycles so that they can arrange their bangs while in transit Free information relative to patents may be obtained in addressing Sues & Co., United States Patent Solicitors, Bee Building, Omaha, Nebr. Be a fool while you are young; it is better to cense grief to parents than pi If the Baby le Cutting Teem. ar ami um that eld nd ramedj, Kj Wnauw Soomine Bnur for ChUdraa Teethlnp t wU-tr1- You can't make an old man believe he can live on iora Wool. The wool of the English breeds is thus referred to by the Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England. 'Lastly, there is the pure Down, a toot which ""is1 still unequaled for hosiery purposes, and which will always find a market of Us own, sometimes quite Independent of the general course of prices. Of this wool I should tike to say keep to the style; keep it as short and as fine as possible; let no suspicion of a long wool strain get Into it; and if I am not mistaken, pure Down wool will take a respectable place in the future as regards comparative prices. With such ends in view, breeders of Southdowns may well abstain from trying to ImiIn tate ot staple and length superfluous covering of the face with coarse wool any other breeds of sheep, and be content to let the Southdown remain what its best friends have always tried to make it 1. e., a producer of quality before quantity. Sheep Less Numerous. The eastern farmers seem to be going out of the sheep business. They are, as a rule, very small holders, and when their small herds seem to be a losing proposition they do not hesitate long before letting them go. It ia the aum of these email holdinga that make up the great aggregate, and when the farmers begin selling their small flocks the number of sheep in the country speedily decreases. There is no branch of the live stock business that can be so readily adapted to changed conditions as the sheep business. Since 1893 the number of sheep in the United States has been constantly decreasing until now the total number ia lees than at any time during the pact twenty years. Meanwhile the range of prices bas been very low. It will not be long before there will be a change and sheep will be in demand again at good prices. Ex. History that what character has written. 1 trom Muscle, steady nerves, good appetite, refreshlug sleep come with blood made pure by Sarsaparilla The One True Blood Purifier. All druggists. L Hoods Pills are the best afterdinner pill. EDUCATIONAL. THE UNIVERSITY OF NOTRE DAME. Daa, Indian.U Wl CatHM U Gmb4m UHirfl, fikMkai Mid Uaetriral lafiestriif CNN, la Tliiwffi fripwitory fwinfl, Imu Ppm to oil $$ tu$ wbo eompletoA tk Mad i reqairtd for AdalMioi iito Ik J valor or leator Ymt. of onj of lk Colloftoto A UmitoJ Coorvo fionber ofa1ldo$o$ for tk Ecckvtuttrftl it to UI bo ot prriol roto C Maarfi Mitt, tor boyi dor 19 yoo r lo nt0 Ub eompotrnoao f 'to cq1pmntt. Tho lOltfc Tom till opt Id, Iom fiuhtwi tent Pro on opplt rotHti to V'Y IKT. A MOlUUbfcY C i U f BOTH tAlft, IBU. a4 f erelal ACADEMY OF THE SACRED HEART ir.jo.9iPH, no. tovroo of tnotroetfoB In thlff orademy. trondnetoA by tho Rollflooo of th Borred Heart. Mibrtm tho whole ron of onhjecto noconry to eonotltute o oolld ood reftord rdncatJoa. Propriety of deportment pe oonol BrotntM end tho principle of morality ore ol Jeeto of UMulBf attention Extmirt fronndo of ford the pupil every foetiity for ttOrful bodily exert eteef their bcoltk to o$ object of eonotoat lulidtiit, ond In oiekpMo they are attended with motomol com. Foil term open Toetey. Sept. 1 Termo for oemio off .monte. pooblo in advance, tilt, thio Inelodoo initlon board. aahln, coorm ia French. Germa f Latin, am of llbrar? and phrulrtano fwe For tun tbor partirolarv addreoa. T11E V riCItlolt. Academy Sacred Heart St Joteph, Me Jk SOUTH MISSOURI; WEST The best fruit section the West. lo No drouths A failure of crops aevtr known. Mildclimat Productive soil Abundance of good pur water. For Maps and Circulars giving full description of the Rich Mrni-raFruit and Agiiculltt-ra- l Lands In outh West Mtuscurl, write to JOHN M l'VKI.V, Mmnarer of the Missouri Land and Llv Company. Neosho, Newton Ca, Missouri. l. Butter. Butter is a condensed product Nothing can be made or grown on the farm which brings aa much per pound. Farms remote from the market and communities far from railroads, can tend butter from the farm or creamery with tba least possible ex pense. The dairyman can condense tons of fodder and crops grown on the farm into dairy products and send them to market in compact and portable form. E-xIncome from Daiplng. Dairying brings In a constant income. The man who sells crops of any kind haa to wait untll he can market his product once a year. There ia little satisfaction in this. It if unbusiness-lfk- e to go without cash fifty-on- e weeks and then have a lot ot money come in at obe time. The dairyman has an income weeks fa the nearly or quite fifty-tw- o year. Ex. . Marks made by hot dishes set on tables may be removed by the use of kerosene oil well rubbed in, and then polished with a fresh cloth. It la hard to believe that a aln bite if It haa gold in ita teeth. will -- wmiT ud want errry where to STEADY STARK TREES TZiZi. bem.Boperbowtet WB PAT CASH men WORK Mviptm. Locwam, Mabeo)otely SELL STARK BROTHERS Ma, Rocirott, Ila. PATENTS, TRADE MARKS InalMllM tn FitmtiHlItr ef taS.Advfea Nto' to t0t VORlloa. Send for InTeewra OeUe. u. Hew O AKUEIX .SON, Wtoktogeja. H. Q, t SCHOOL SUPPLIES, wm ,OT Jeve freight ebargOmaa to bool lurpiT Co, ' pertfMm.gei4nktrtfr P1TTIK I Me. Alinid Iteane,!! prta. eiamiaef rakumce) Peaae A WoaeorpMcChimklfteanh Mmi telL WOOLLlt. 4TUITA, npUIll VflWMPltl. WHISKY SA If nfltteted i$tth ontiw, m ITbotnpsent Ejt UNDSEY OMAHA Water. BUBBERSI W. N. U., OMAHA 32 When writing 1898 to advertisers, kindly mention this paper. fejTUph BrHd ttmo. br drwggia, SUMFVflO |