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Show GoI Cal rrao la Boston Journal: A new system of fraud has made it appearance upon th larger denominations of our gold New and unworn piece are secom lected, that they may circulate with lest suspicion, and the circumfrence and weight slightly reduced, to the MVi of Ti ccoti to ft doJar, by milling on the'edge turning down the and reuniting lL In the absence of detailed scales this fraud can oniy-b- e one is by companion with a piece that sure has not been tampered with, of such coins have been stopped at sub treasury. They vveie chiefly t.O gold piece ilaiuilH'U of I ha Crape Sterile. ' TIDIES THE onto. Tun PlLJh!C. f Hilar lad Muai, T B , m'. COALVILLE, l,1 -- l TAIL f Ti kbit hat excluded all American from that country, but not materially affoct the circulation of the American newspaper newspaper that, will artloning the man who reoffed Atigir, the kateer it certainly going his IttuteiaiL cousinUu-- at chw. jjLymoujy -- least o j1 at his tony to - tr - notes me court of Massaebdretts Tut hat- - d Added tliat marriage t a bunt su-pr- ties. and the girls a III be more thaa ever Impressed that young men ought 1o get down to busme-- . Thcbk ta a clash on In New York between the living picture the footlights and those in the opera box, and it isnt expected that Gotham win know what peace is any more this winter. d Ir hat been said that a Scot eh mam at home as when he that as it may, it is ery certain that there is no land In is never so much is abroad; but be which he baa been more welcome or in which he has made himself more entirely at home than America. Zolv, the French n national writer, to America to lecture and to gather materials for a book. FolWw-in- g the example of English Editor is tend, the distinguished Frenchman Biay give ua something very ninth in his native vein under the title If Xo'a fame to Chicago is coming x James JIkid was hanged for niurdei England the other day. There was some doubt of his guilt, but unhappily Robert ltuchanan, the playwright, wrote a letter im hie defense. Itneban-a- n is a notorious wniider and gYurabler, and it is the fashion in England as bewhore to dissent from his opinions, so Mr, Iteid was duly hanged. In Spain has decreed the abolition, ot public executions, the ostensible reason being that anarchists- - and ether alxiut to bo executed abused the oeca-sio- p by making Incendiary speeches or The eoOntry posing as martyrs. which ono led the civilisation of Eu Top has Jagged behind In this jtartic uiur. that possible danger Juries in everything. Rutter, for infwlFNCEVshows stance, may contain putlmgeiiio genus, and every one knows Juyw bad they are. So, also, it Is show n IhJhe Lou-do- n Lancet, that broad contains many kinds of living bacteria. And the cob, elusion Is roathod UiafTuany disease may be eventually traced to the agency of breadkx le xsrssxssssrsssrpss JVisrm racing isbecoming very popular In the kiytifli, Soma of the fastest steppers that move over the tracks in ityef North in the summer and fall wrs transferred to the South In thew ipter. The iteuthern people are great admirers of Sort, and the racing so far this season has been Unusually well attended and some very fast time is being recorded, Jboth in -- betting and pacing.-- " Itaw ha some of the Uncut battle ships and cruisers In the world, and probably wants to test them against a weak power like Rraxil before taking idee In the new European political shuffle, Mia may, however, well bear In mind her last naval experience, when at Liana, the Austrian Admiral Tegethoff with wooden ships rammed and sauk the Italian iron cladsTgain- -- ing mat. Important victory for his - country, h'her the bet- Keeping Sweet Pels toe. j growth, and ficronltng to "TrofTtV. F.Miawy of the North . the observations made heat seemel to Carolina experiment station, gives the be more beneficial than rain 1 he following method of keeping sweet MATTERS OF INTEREST most rapid growth' in height was made potatoes It was written for the cliAGRICULTURALISTS. 2 mate and facilities of i between 3 and feet tall. . llgrx-that state. In feet per week for two week in ucc Ohio and neighboring states some other m (p to Date Hints AbMt Cultlta-ll- l skin the last of June. 1 8V). Ike exmaterial, straw or leaves, vvonld have of ths Soil and Vkrldt Urvl-Hortlrultu- rv, cessive rata of April, May and June, to be substituted for pine straw," and f the, earth covering would need to be Vltteulturs sad Horl-su- ISltt, prevented the same grbwth a corn in the during previous deeper. Prof Massey says- year x ura. these months, but about 3 inches ip The follow mg no thod 1 have found height per day was made in the last to keep sweet potatoes in perfect order j week in July, lUJ. The table show j until June. Tore re a good sjipply of CaanwnM Hess Growls. A Michigan eorresjioudeut of the that In the first three year the corn j pine straw from the woods in a dry Jts naxinyya height, tight, I tune and keep it under wtfr ready for Auicrigan AgrieuitnriskJUJWS. the lowing interest teg information abreil'W'eeknafterte was t fmjfWghr potatoes a soon as the Ah baulneM of cuiiiinrn ing. The draught on the planter and ten weeks from this time. No uniform to dig at once, cut the frosted vines off harvester is very light. The cost of relation between growth of plant uriid at, once or they will harbor fungus meteorological conditiona can be ex- grbw th that vv ill damage the potatoes harvesting by machinery doe not 50 cents per acre, while by hand actly traced from these figures, which Dig on a warm, sunny day lay the it was about 81.50. The puller leaves cover a period of four year of potatoes along the row as dug, and do not allow them to be bruised the ground ret up loose, and saves one into piles. Handle by throwing harrowing for wheat or rye. If the Ulwiol Cold &terf beans when hauled to the barn are at all time a gently a eggs. Allow With the introduction of the tele- them to lie in the sun during the day ripe and dry, they may be put io mows the same as wheat. 1 have had three phone, electric appliances of all sort and in the evening haul to a conventhat ient place. Place good layer a foot days hard anil steady ram on a crop and the score of improvement lying on the ground without material j every year brings us, facilities for cold thick of pine straw on the ground, and injury; la fact, I have seldom raised a j storage vv ill come in time, and no verv on this pile the potatoes in strep heaps, of It get-- long" lime at Thut, says New Yoik not over twenty-fiv- e bushel in a pile. crop without at least a Cover the piles thickly all over with wet ft was after pulled. In plant- Eedger. It will be among the ca-ting log large quantities-o- f beans, it is well possibilities to have a series Of pipes o the drv straw now build a rough to giant at interval of a few days. arranged that air at a very low tem board shed over tie piles, and let them Then with tha machinery they can be perature will be supplied to households remain until the weather grows handled without any hurrying, After in the same way as we now get watt r or until they have gone through a the beans are off the ground it is gen- and gas. When that day comes,houe- - sweat and dried off. Then cover the . erally fitted lor w heaL Vi here it i keeping will have lost at least one of heap with earth six or eight inches intended to plant the ground to crop it terror. The possibility of pur thick and beat smooth. The importthe next spring, rye is generally sow n. chasing supplies in reasonable quantity ant points are the sweating under the This will afford a large amount of Jute and feeling assured that they will not previous cover of the pine straw before fall pasture, when other pastures are spoil on account of the ice running out covering with earth, very careful handshort, and It hi the first to afTord a will be a comfort that every house ling, and the board cover overhead. Half of the Dry t arth keeps out more cold than w et green bite in the spring if allowed holder will appreciate. to get a start, it becomes almost Im- cost of living in some families comes earth If for family use, put in smaller possible to keep it fed down. Many from waste because of no facility for piles and take up an retire heap at farmers plow under the fall sown keeping article Stale on e for use, keeping them in a dry, purchased. again, food is objected to on the score of warm place while using. rye for eorn, or bean and find it an excellent fertil- health as well at taste, and ought Mummy VVliest W ill Not G row. izer. The bean are rtady to be t r to he used under any circ-uIt has been published repeatedly asa threshed at any time after pulling stance. The atmosphere of all dense fact that wheat taken from deposits Thtebt dofidby" steam power in much ly populated district is too full made with Egyptian mummies will the name manner as wheat, although of disease germs to make it safe - grow when planted, though it be 3,000 the separator must be one made especially for bean threshing The large wholesale houses send out their buyers, and the greater part of the crop is bought in tiic barns and delivered by the farmer, the price ranging from 81 23 to 12.50 per bushel, aeuordiug to the condition of the market and the quality 'dTtli'e crop The hand picking is done by the wholesale houses. These houses employ a large number of women to aid lo the work. The bean are first run through large fanning mills run by steam, w hiuli taken out ail The the dirt and damaged beans are then can led by an endlcwt belt, on each side of which the women are arranged, who pick out the discolored beans.- - The refuse bean are sold for sheep feed at 25 rents a bushel. It i the practice of many sred house toJurniah the seed and contract to take a drop at a certain price, but In many cases those houses have furnished the gardenvarietles, and the white field bean nas, aide by side, yielded four time tbequantity and brought more per busheb The vines and pods are led to sheep and Cattle, and a ton of them will go further than a-- ton of hay. Many farmers are of opinion that the vines and pods from a good crop pay all the rest of producing it, PA TA W a A KTl ft ii Ti T)FT T I , j -- it 1 , te d rrt 1 nt-v- Valuable Wood the finest woods In existMany of ence are yet nuknow n, or only slightly known, to the manufacturer of wood in the civilized vv orld. The wood of Central and South America are, per. haps, the most remarkable as well as the least known, in the yet untouched forests of this continent are many woods far finer than any of those now These woods range from pure in use white to jet black in color, and many of them are most beautifully niu-kand veined Some of them are to bard that they turn the edges of axes, chis s sad,, other tool, while the band cut them ouly slow ly In the f attrm Thuu' "e x pdsttii Jirtlrere were tnany- - rite--' plays of little known woods, and the finest of them were those from Argen tine Republic, Brazil and other South Some of these American countries southern woods yielded to the teeth of the band saw, not the ordinary sawdust, but fine powder, fine as the the finest flour so hard were Some of them burnt but woods. slowly. Others possess qualities that .Noinu of keep them free from insect them seemed to be practically inde i! along strudLjJbte by airand water the eastet n slopes-o- f the Andes, up to the snow line on those great elevations, throughout all the gi cat river valleys, and in some of the wide area of level country in Sou t h Amenta, are great forests of fine woods that are es penally fil for the finest cabinet and furniture vvoik, and also for shipbuilding, carpentry and otlit r lndu-- ti ia) arte In which wood is the "raw-- material " These great forests aie now an un known quantity in the commercial world, but they w ill come rapidly into the knowledge of men and into industrial use when once the railroad haBefore many year-- , it rt ached them is safe to predict, the South A met lean and Central American republic- - w ill be threaded by railroads, and then tho--c wonderful woods will be diawn upon to supply the demand for new and fine wood in all the civ ilied counti ies Lumber World. ed ex-tin- t, hev-er- 3 t.. nsyrtlegrnai hardyJChregh tWre.p lulled to the ground, it will push up and flower like a herbaceous plant attraction to Possibly it would give gardens in this herbaclous wav, much farther north than Philadelphia. Several correspondents write that it is not always killed down even so far north One at Chestnut Hill, as Philadelphia. a part of Philadelphia, instances a specwinch must fir-tmr-tlt Wwis-io-A PhiiaTtevpni " imen five to six feet high, have passed several winters unharmed. Meehan My s Monthly. Wifes Hcrves net Are weak and she suffers terribly buih vousuess, luudache aud loss of sleep The poor, li the testimony of many a bums, tired woman is suffering from kup're and blood Htr food does cot impovert-he- d bhe is living on her nerves, because digest her strength te gone Her nerve and mustlt Heed Strengthening the use of Hoods Sarsapar.llu, which makes puie, rich blood, creates au appetite, and gives tone to all the organs of the body. This is not what we say, St l3 what Hoods My wife began taking 8aiaparilla docs Hoods Sarsaparilla about three mouths ago She has been in poor health to. 15 years Hei appetite is Hood s is doing her good. better, she looks bttter and tlier has been improvement iu ev erv ivay." J V Horn rson, By Greenfield, Tmn. Mood Be sure to get 'IIOOD'S- - HoodS rills. Sarsa afist Cures PHIS are the best after dinner prevmt dige-tio- n, BAKERUO. WALTER The Largest Manufacturer of - PURE, HICH CRADE CHOCOLATES COCOAS AND rccrd On this Continent, jijp. a HIGHEST AWARDS from the grett Industrial and Fond EXPOSITIONS In Europe and America. fotikt th Dutch Pkwm fie A tfca I litre or other Chemicals or lrc are usrtl in ary of thelf prcrar turns. Their delicious BKLAKE AST CCK OA la absoinUtly puro asd soluble, and costs Urn tkan m cost a cup. SOLO BY GROCERS WALTER BAKER EVERYWHERE. A C0DCRCHESTER. MASS. DROPSY . he trkated frf.e with Vegetable Remedies Positively Cured Here cured tboUMBds of aues. Cure ceae pronounced bopeleu br beet phr.lcisn. trom Aral tliee ijmpU.m. disappear. In ten day. et lea. I Itu-Uili- Ears Help, The help problem is one of the greatest difficulties which stare farmers in the face. It Is, moreover, a problem which refuses to remain still, but Is ever rising up and surrounding them with some new phase of character The great difficulty besides that of getting help at all Is to obtain reliable help, faithful employes as well as capable, an those who will adhere to A New England farman agreement. er, w ho has had a long and varied experience In hiring farm help, has concluded that there Is no time so auspicious for obtaining good hands and making agreement a in the autumn. Now, as most farmers knovF w ho have tried it, there Is one serious difficulty at this season of the year. It is that the average workman having enjoyed Voir cannot down the enterprising space writer. A reporter for a morning paper was writing up a wedding at a hotel lately and remarked to an obliging etei k, who was giving him Information-- . Youngest bride ever In this hotel, aint she?" Oh, no, re not- by severate xnoce- plied the clerk,years. The space w rlter w rote; Mie Ing the winter, will desert his employer la- - the spring, because the wages for was almost the youngest bride by sevthe following six months are out of eral year w ho nal ever boon married Yon this hotel. proportion to the pay received by those who hfre for the summer. The farmer quoted tells In the Farm Journal how Some New York grocers are com to obviate this difficulty, lie says: The plaining in the bun that the enterprisway to surmount this difficulty exten-sioiproper bouse tf in their ing dry goods and grocery annexe are en- is' to pay a graduated table of croaching on-t- he grocers business. wages for the months throughout the But the dry good merchant do this year, something as follows: The comInstead of pensation to be made proportionate to by judicious advertising. emulating the example of the dry the labor season and the' amount of goods merchant, and advertising ex work to be done. Beginning, we will tenaBtelyras-thcragrthnrere to rsafewRh Oetoberr th;man. agrces io take fJ40 and bis board, an average of 20 per month. This contract In this region would call for 820 per month throughout October and November, f 15 One of the lourees of safety fot for December, 810 through the three bank is a perpetual rotation in office. months beginning Jam 1, 815 for April, Let the rereiving and paying teller 820 for May, 830 for Jnne, 35 for Jnly exchange place, the bookkeepers ex830 for August, $25 for September. change book, the vice president and Here is s graduated system of wages president scan one another personal which will giv the faithful worker account, the cashier now and then enough for all needs during the months pat on the messenger's cap. If some- ot comparative leisure and first class thing like this had taken place in the pay when the day are long and the Wipe and Leather bank the thieving labor rigorous. A satisfactory system .firm of Neley Of Baker would not of payment of 8330, t Including rent, have gotten away with 3ii,000 or board and a quart of milk daily, with 854,000 cents. garden, HthU graduated seriea, with rent Worth 8 0, fuel 830 and milk and One of the interesting subjects garden 830. These things, if properly of future legislation grow out of shown to the hired man, will convince comjeUUon between steam and elec him they are worth so much, for which trio ruoeTn --arryiny express and he would have to lay out cash other-mail matter. It is to be doubted that tee. the electric railway com panic! will wish to extend thrir JmssinossTiey ifod 1 Growth f Cera-, 4 the single privilege of the passenger Illinois the At experiment station ob--service, and it i e jually certain that servations have been made, for several the steam railway and cxproa com year, of the relation of grow rti of corn panics will make a formidable oppod- - to weather rendition, and the amount tion to such oncroa 'hment upon their Of growth at different times. As a rebuin-s- . The result ought to sult of those obseravathm the followgoverned ly considerations of public ing condition Jiave been found i to .interest and ccmcn'cncc -- -. j til aymptoiua removed Send for free book teat unf- day. treatment it. I. of mlreeulone curea.trialTenacrid Wo in epempe free by mall If you order woxa Atlanta Ga. H H Da Greks pontage Opay to m advertlwmant iu order trial return thl. to cat anything that has long been exposed to the air at the ordinary While extreme cold muy temperature. not kill existing germs, it prevents their accumulation. Given an article in fresh and healthy condition and it may be kept for a very long time in cold storage without the brightest deterioration. Vegetable, fresh frutts and very many of the delicacies of life need only extreme cold to keep them in usual rendition, provided the is steadily maintained, but this must not rary to. any appreciable extent. Metal, earthen or stone receptacles with suitable air chambers vv ill be arranged for every household, and the supply will come, perhaps meter or other easily arranged rates When the happy day dawns vve may have fruit juices, the most delicate dishes and the most practical productions with very little cost above the original amount paid for them The health of families will be improved, and with it the tempera, and tniff w 11 b but one of the beneficent of cold storage, u-- e- Numxo Wheat West. At the gen- eral freight office of the Northwestern railroad it was stated yesterday that shipments of.ylu:ak.iui:JeedIiigpuL. poses Into the drouth area west of the Mississippi average about fifty by that road, the bulk of it com ing from Kansas, which is w etl supplied with low grade wheat. At the Burlington freight office it was stated that shipments of wheat for feeding purposes sometime amount to loo cars in a single day. From the fore going it would Irek ak if all of the western roads were shipping, possibly, 500 oars in the territory west of the Mississippi river for feed alone, equivalent to about 300,000 bushels per day Chicago Herald. car-dai- ly Artificial Leather. - A new material Is proposed as a substitute for leather. It is Called flesusfibraand is derived from flax, suitbly prepared And oitedi It has the same appearance as leather, J particularly supple and takes a pol- ish equally well with the best kinds of calf. The material is said to posses great tenacity, while affording great ca-- e and comfort to the foot when made into shoe Flexus fibre, being nf vegetable origin, la calculated also to fao.litate free ventilation and there-b-y to obviate tha discomfort ari-in- g Iron a hat is called drawing the feet. or more j ears old. There is no truth in these stories. IIow they originated is told by a recent Egyptian traveler Every visitor to Egypt is called on to purchase what the seller impudently declares to be mammy wheat, but which ia really wrhet of the present or last seasons crop. Sometimes a man hr found credulous enough to buy some of. this so called mummy wheat, and, of course, it grows when planted. Some of them have even show n grains of Indian corn as the grain they have found in Egyptian tombs, though this is an exclusively American cereal, not known in the old world until after Columbus discovered America. This very Worms in Horses n iis.-- Ve Cun a the never liked Th only sure cure for pia worms In horses the practice Of letting the weeds grow known is hteketee Hog Cholera Cure Never until their seeds were ripened, w hich fails to destroy worms in horses ho sheep, is often defended by the plea that thej dog or cats, an excellent remedy formcW fowls, head sixty touts in United Mate post age and I can then be gathered together and will send by mail Cut this out, take it to unig-ga- t and pay him fifty cent Three packages burned. A great many weed seeds are for II 50 express paid- - G G STl.KEl Kb shelled in cutting or pulling the w eed Grand Rapid Mu h Mention name of paper and getting it to the heap. Then un less some dry wood is used to make an OMAHA extremely hot fire, it is by no means certain that all the weed seeds w ill be destroyed. The heat of fire bursts the seed pods, and they fall to the earth. If the fire burns slowly w ithout much beat, the carbonic acid gas w hich is thus developed does not rise and be dissipated into the air, but remains at the bottom to burn. Th weed seed-ar- e A few npeclully good thing fn Clothing thus protected, and will often ind Cloak, t rder them Your money back brought home some wheat that he y u want It. found in a newly opened tomb It was spring up, especially around the edges IfSOO Newmarkets, color black, dark blue, not but a w of the fire where a heap of weeds a brown, duly planted, single grain drab; sizes 3: to 38, at St. 73 each. germinated, though placed under the burned the previous year. Ex. These are worth $S 00 to 815 00, most favorable conditions for grow ing Misses Long t loaks, sizes 8 To 12 years. In Land bn abas j Al srnxi i a There navy cardinal and deep red at one-ha-lf Ex. are In South Australia about 2,036,00(1 price. Ladies' Cloaks, 42 inches long, black, blue, acres of the 12,000.000 acres purchased British Am f Crop. A correspondout of the total area brown and tan at a 10.00 and SIS 50. The- ent of the London Garden says the un- of the government garments and are Sold everyof the colony Of 578,361.600 acres, which are elegant where at 1 100 to 20 00. usually poor apple crop in England in held farm are ore dates A full line exceeding puzzles many, in view of the fine dis- 5.000 acres eaehT The oftur Cap t.33 The leader a returns show-tha- t beautiful black Conly bur, inches long at play of bloom last May. He accounts fifty-fou- r estates range fruap 5.000 9.05, for it by wet and cold weather at the to lv000 each, nineteen from 10,000 to CLOTHING. blooming period, which the pears, 15.000, nine from 15,000 to 20,000, flowering earlier, escaped. Another A strictly all wool Cheviot FtilV. and--ta 23dia0,te n- rbiu dark cause w hlcb played enormous- - havt" thirteen iram20,t-VJGray fassimere Fult, (hate rela.ted was the apple blossom weevil. This 25.000 to 30,000, eight from 30,000 to three day ago for 812.S0 how 8 50. three from 40,000 to 50,000, four Our Leader Is a suit made a stylish scourge appeared In thousands of 40.000, a any tailor-mad- e garment can Herefordshire orchards and often sev- from 50.000 to 60,000, two from .80, (hH) indwell one from 90.000 to 100,-35- 8 be. They are cut from the best material, eral weevils would be found inside a to 00.000, and acre , bo it Will be seen that and sell everywhere at from IIS Ul to 12 '50. Our price Is now at i 50. single flower bud. Then, again, the about one fourth of the public land A genuine Columbian Melton. Kerrey or new wood last year, instead of being oLthe is in the Beaver government Overcoat In blue, black, brown or well ripened, was roasted and the buds bought hands of the so called landed pro- Cxford, made wl h an eyeto solid wears prematurely checked in growth, and prietors, who can and do gobble up well as style, and retailed everywhere at when they started into growth this the small owners almost whenever it Il2 00. OUT price, 5.75 a sodn manner. did weakly year they afcetr 4 to 14, In Boya Cap Overcoat suits their pleasure. . , ' here the soil was kept moist and cool Che v lots and Cassliuefe, at SI 75. Ax Foot. Can't Krm, The funner, Boya Overcoat size 14 to 19 years, mad by mulching, there w ere heavy crops of apples, hut where no mulching was in whatever branch of agriculture ho of Brown Melton, at at 95, . done the fruit was absent may be engaged, who neglects to study carefully the commercial aspects of his Y.T1j rough-o- occupation, will fall far short of realSuire A Watfr St ret OMAHA, NEB. a very wide range of country, farm- izing the best profit that is possible RCIV er have suffered seriously from from it. He must watch the market, PONT the , past season. know when and whereand howto sell, YOUR at8 one for STOVE REPAIRS- drouth during rite Drouths have Become of such Omaha ttovs Repair Wrkt208 Douglas St OauhS u here to bnv, the value of cash recurrence that where it can be and all the detail that goes to Ta a m. crx- done with any reasonable outlay, the making of a successful innrket. SAIL ML, tiff, -sb Jobhen of Brush, there Is no farm improvement which All of which goes to disprove the Ot Ail kind, hpeetai ttentloa pi4 I order & iftUi than vorka return itt lo a better a dk, uouUm. will pay good saying that any fool can farm. h , sufficient for Ex. water supply a supply bflndto emr MFFTY An WANTED I.AMI HOlih&lL Krrrj f at least the , irrigation of part of the ' The Ahmikt br tbem bo mooey cranberry crop is only one-hafarm. H n fef ctrea iwi Kqn'f! of the average and prices ares likely to t ma ba fcl'imm lo. Is one ton of corn stalks there are be firm. If yarn from S3 taliftOPoa seventeen pounds nitrogen, eighteen isnt too early to single out the CLOTHING -It for oar Mw fat pounds potash and forty pounds phos roaster that Is to grace the table the CiUilocM cnnuttalnf tattpkM ef rtotb. NEBRASKAmA CLOTHING CO. cx&ls g Thank-gorin- g. phone acid, worth as a manure 84. 76 n'SSIIs. - - - 0 -f HAYDEN BROS., ut requent pnr-chase- BRUSHES ll - 5- "'S? i.ft a Ixnrmm 6ml,v6u , |