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Show J ... wy' ' -- i " I: .- .- "4 41 I TIMES 'THE Tn FARM PcsLUBina Coupasy. i t. . Pi.Mi .o, s dltor 4 UTAH. COALVILLE, Br Tim GARDEN. AND TO OF INTEREST MATTERS AGRICULTURISTS. ' The decision of - feme Up to IHUe IllaU A Soot CnlUr-IIof tbo Soil and Ytolda .Xboroof and Hertirmltare, tUWultar Baltimore judge u not larceny ' doubtless intiuencod by the probability that the cat would come back. I It la aaid 1 m one-ha- Ffori-caltar- o. lf , itatee-tnen- - yn - ' - i wake inquiries are reader of painful' to learn that the Fait that answer I through view, at ,.r$ta to, which ha been estimated d WoflHtmell,m 1 10.000,0X), 1 lpsmgkeJIie, aIIyhIy after mode planting practical is What to 15,000,000. becomdfif f tn berry novice the that work so plain ;he poor Fair family f growing will know of a certainty how finish, and all The Bock Island man who killed to ppoceed from start to How answered. be fully may Inquiries do himself rather than (jury service, to rows the We should plant can be spared. The country can get plant snd set the along without men unwilling to dls. seven feet apart, in the rows. plants Plant feet three spurt of duties citizenship. charge simple rows north and south wher practicaeast and A scu a Baku, the novelist, claims ble, but would rsther plant down hill. nnd weat to than up pleut wothat the men are to blame for before taken men's extravagance In dress. If this Well grown plnnU root a circle up of bo 0, it is one of those eases Is which occupy with their in diameter. I therefoot one about man has to pay dearly for his fault. fore dig holes for plants at least one deeper AacnxtoLOOisTS have exhumed a foot across snd several inches set. -want to bp than the plants boiler and bath tub at Pompeii with The setter draws some of the good pipe for supplying hot and cold water. Next thing they will light upon a top noil bsck Into the bole,, leaving it In the middle, and having It Pompeiian Joe Miller, with Joke higher about the plumber scattered through deep enough to allow the sprout of It. plant to be about two inches below the surface, and let the long, small A BustoX girl ha refused to marry roots slope downwards around the an English suitor because he' said be center nnd fill fine soil on the roots haltar." snd press it down firm, but leave soil would lead her to tbo Shrewd American girl put the halter mellow and rake after rains to prevent crust from forming. Cultivate and around the neck of the other contractknow and never hoe often, but the steel rake is more he it, ing party, ' safe to use until plants are well up. slther. When plant have grown to be about Tin conduct of the Japanese troops one foot high pinch from tips of leadat Port Arthur show that a few ing shoot about one and one hal year of civilization "are not sufficient inches to make them grow more stocky to prevent a heathen nation from re- and they will form better hills and hot lapsing, with the aid of enterprising grow so low and sprawling. After New Fork correspondent, Into barpinching a1 tip back once, do noJrWich barism, it again that season, but let it grow tie to stakes. will. Never at The bakors of Cincinnati have re- If the soil is good, and good cultivaduced the price of bread to three tion given, and plants xyere good to .cents a loaf. And there is no reason tart with, you will be' surprised at why the cut should not be universal. their great growth. It matters not The present cost of flour means that what form vine may tske, do not the broad industry at present flgu res touch them your until the next spring, and la a thriving one. . especially If y or have planted the wlli take care of themOlder, Arthur Brisbane philosophically selves, asthey a winter's winds and far observes that great men are rarely eold are as they need no concerned, interesting when they talk to one protection, ter or summer, to stand yin a and another. Bret Ilarte, Froude our climate, north or south. The next third celebrated writer talked once spring shorten in the canes to make a for two hours. The most Intellectual oompecVldUi perhaps no larger than a them subject of discussion selected by bushel basket As soon as half was the American cocktalL pruning is done each spring, keep ground well cultivated, the more often A omsawrwiaewtsrwse total lea tee of licking the mucilage side of the the "better, until berries are nearly stamps the tongue should be applied ripe. Mulching put In at that time will to the portrait of (ieorge Washington, hold moisture aud keep fruit clean. who never was licked in his life. The The last of May or fore part of June, difficulty of making the stamp stick one year from planting, the yonng Inspires the public with a desire' to eanea will spring up from the hills, and when they' sre from ick the mucilage contractor. ifl to ?4 Inches high, according- The threat to remove the Sacred to their strength and uprightness, out or pinch from their tops about one and Codfish from the capltol of Massachusetts is stirring the old common- one half inchea Qo over the patch about every two days (as the canes wealth from center to dreumferenoe. All that the Lares and lenstes were grow np very quickly) and pinch off all . to the Homans, the Sacred Codfish la canes m they get the right height We to the people of thqbay state, with usually wsteh the" patch for shoots a few additional sacrosanct! tics of Its about tea daya after we commence to pinch back. V say again, never pinch vwn. a cane but once, and we would about Turks comehigh at Erizinghlan, as soon dig up the whole patch and where for the "murder" of one of throw it into the brush pile as to negthem twenty-fou- r Armenians were lect to pinch the canes at the right lately sentenced to death, while time. After the pinching back is all nineteen inore received sentences of done they want no more pruning until imprisonment, from six years up to the next spring, except cutting out old life. It should be added thai among canes after fruiting. As soon as the the condemnod several proved that crop of fruit la picked, remove all old they were in Constantinople at the canes that fruited, cutting them off e of the killing. near the ground, and carry out at once and burn them. As soon as old canes PiTTSBiRa reports that during the are out cultivate at once, to be out of year 1894 in that county 101 persons the way of young canes, and clean out were killed by steam cars and thirty-thre- e with hoe all weeds and grass the hills. by cable and electric car. That that may be among la a total of 191 preventable deaths, In after years do as already advised, averageof nearly four deaths but pinch baekaues somewhat higher, evory week the year through. The but leave them not over two and a half companies should flud means to reduce feet high, to get the greatest crop, and this needless sacrifice of life, and if stand. winds , without supports. Aa they do not,' legislation will be in- hills get older, perhaps they may throw voked to help them to do so. up too many canes In a hilL In that case, after removing old canes, cut out The customary announcement, some all surplus ones, leaving the best and What belated, .that the duo d'Orleans strongest I often leave as many as la about to Issue a manifesto and head eight or ten, if even in size. The more a demonstration in France is accom- left the closer one has to prune. Four panied this year with a reference to strong canes with many laterals are his possible arrest, for which he has better than more. Shorten In canes apparently small concern. It would every spring to make a good hill and do him BO harm if in the event of his row, and sot leave the canes too long. disturbing . the peace the pretender You will be more inclined to leave too should be treated with something much wood rsther than not enough. uore than Fkkwiclkau bareness. . . There Is no rule to lay down to prune by , bulto use our best judgment. After There are few advertisers who a season or two of careful watching hsvq not been looking forward to this we will learn what they need. Diffeyear with hopes "of better vcsultr rent varieties need somewhat different aa some . grow more from their expenditure than they ever treatment, -ventured, to expect from last years sprawling than others. The - Older outlay. A year- - ago the business de- will take on a ' better form of pression had yet to reach its lowest row, of itself, than any other Blackpoint No one could guess just how cap that I have can be pruned to make. far it would go. TUI year, however, The Older la the ideal bush, and no business is on the grade, and other grows la so fine a form, neither - nobody knows the upward extent to which it can they be pruned ' to grow like it, will have improved by the time the and they give me more pleasure, satisTear is c!J, faction and profit, than any other that I aver planted. Pruning Last spring Now tht the source of the Missis- - to guard against wind storms. I pruned alppl has been discovered, there comes shorter than ever before, so the hills also the -- knowledge that the Mis- - looked rsther stumpy until the leaves okrl Is really the larger and longer . were out. The canes are very short liver, and its sdurce L the one that pointed and the fruit stems earns out ought to give name to the giant stream in multitude, from five to ten inches In ' that divld. country Into East and length.. At picking time the rows West, but unites the North and South. ' were even and in good form, being The Mississippi above St. Louis about three and s half feet high and shorter than has been thought, while about four feet wide or through, and the Missouri is longer. These two a mat of berries spread over the whole rivers, with the Ohio and Arkansas surface like a blanket 'No river farther south, drain an empire eould pick over one row, sixteen'picker rods . desi-- e e richer than any liko ex - , long.in ten hours; and last season was - It 1 r . - theFx-kE- nt . - 7 -- oni - i,-- r . , toot vi Lrr ' on thU f' plneL - I ' - . the worldl that ' Cctlaro of Jtaxpbeeitr. quinine product til consumed Ta tat? I am often asked by letter how I manUnited States, That may explain the s age Blackcaps in planting, cultivating buzzing la to many f our and pruning. To answer each Inquiry It bonnet. take much time, and as many .that . T-LAST, l-- ...'3 that stealing eat peer one on account of late frosts, KINO EIIEUMATISII. high winds snd burning drouth. Pickers could not cross over from one row to another, as they were unbroken HIS REIGN like a hedge; they usually give us pick- -' e ing from twelve to fourteen days. My Medical Science Drive Him ee HI oldest rows, some of them IS years A Discovered Medicine Throe old, produced the most fruit. My Uni BheamalUm Cea Ho Be patch is always pruned and cared for elel A Booa for Sufferer. to the above I and according always succeed In having a heavy crop of fruit Mo., Chronlclo. jFrom the St luxe no wire or other supports, give Tbe effoct of nein Dr. Williams Fink no winter protection, although eold Pills for rheumatism was brought to light reaehe thirty-fiv- e interdecrees below zero, lately by S Chmnii'te reporter who Bread-wsI think any novice in fruit growing, by viewed John Ferguson of 70S9 South had been sufferer who a Louis, St. following - these instructions and with this Incapacitating discam. practices, with good brain snd a willThose pills, h said, "have proved of to me but to mv .wife. ing mind, maydo well, tbe above is wrest benefit ZKitORl? to ssy we bottrsuffer! from Vre practical and not' all theory. L. Kl btrtBge same ailment, although my wife's condiBallard in Farmers' Review. tion wss much worse than mine. Neither Of B oould sleep st night; we had sharp, ftABHHB J'Manurel 7 shooting pains ia onrsiura, Hides aud Bsrbej-sns continual soreness all over the Drawing out manure In the spring we suffered from wss nothing mure when the work is pushing and At times my ire than rheumatism. or ia the ground soft and muddy is wife had to crawl up stairs on her hands always a bother and a bugbear and knees, and as for ms, 1 would at idgkt mv utmost efforts to the new hired man who comes twitch and Jerk despite to oontrol myself. We suffered the torture about that time. . All this work eould ofthsdsmntxL be saved, and much more of the fer"Butin throe weeks the pain began to case not being as severe as tilizing value of the manure, by draw- leave us. . IMy wife's soon got well, but it took nearly ing it out and apreadlng it as fast as it my Mrs. Ferguson could before three months is msde. Then, too, work is not so say the was entirely free from rheumatic pushing and a man has plenty of time pains Of course I recommend Dr. Willall my friends. to draw out a load every day, oy two iams Pink Pills towords are indorsed by T. Ferguson's or three times a week. Practical A.Mr.Campbell, an iron worker living on ; Chouteau avenue. lie too had been afliirled Dairyman rheumatism contracted from working On this National Dairyman com- with s damp foundry He said : "One day i ment aa follows: All very plausible, In was seized with chills and my and indeed very practical on dead level me to remain in bed for at least several land, but what about hilly land, where days. I began to lose my previously good a depression of spirits, lack of amthe most valuable part of the manure sppetite, bition, tired feeling and even loss of memwill be washed way by the heavy ory followed. 1 couldn't keep my fct warm rains or as thesnow melts? There sud my usual ruddy complexion had given are two sides to every question, and way to t sallow hue. to With my family support I cauldu't while hauling a load everyday may be afford to be idle. I struge.e.1 against my economical in one way it means hitch- feelings as beat I could, but the best 1 could ing np to every load Instead of for do, even with the doctor s help, was very half a days work. But that ia the little. "Hearing of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills I smallest consideration, . The mala determined to try them. The effects were short of marvelous. They made thing is the horrible waste by spread- nothing I take them as a ing the green manure and exposing it me well, andThey're preventive the best medieine I regularly. to alternate sun And rain. We con- know of, and as such uiy friends hear me fess to an old fashioned liking for a speak of them." l)r. Williams Pink Pills for Iac People manure .heap under cover and well all the elements neceasary to give cared for by pumping the liquid contain new life and richness to the blood and remanure over it nowand then, increas- store shattered nerves. They are an unfailing Its size by leaves, sweepings, etc., ing specific for such diseas s as locomotor dance, and it was with satisfaction that we ataxia, partial paralysis, St Vitus nervous sciatica, rheumatism, neuralgia, read In Hoard's Dairyman the followla headache, the after effects of gripix, ing by Mr. J. D. Smith of Delaware palpitation of the heart, pale and sallow of and forms ail weakness, complexious county, New York: in male or female. They may be "Some nine years ago we built our either had of all druggists, or direct from the Dr. house and found it necessary to tear Williams Medicine company, Schenectady, down our pig pen. The following sea- N. Y,, for 50 cents per box, or six boxes for son we concluded to build a carriage tl.50. Every drunkard wile knows by bitter house and horse barn. This is 30x40; wine is s mocker. our old house was 2?x3b This we experience that ' It takes s braver man to forgive an a foundation at the end of placed upon the horse barn on a line with the enemy than to make one. Covetousness is a mors deadly-dixea- ss lower aide, making the length of the two 74 feet I removed all flooring and than cholera. floor joists, and made a zement floor DISCOVERED BY A WOMAN. about two feet below the sills. I never expect to live long enough to see Vhe A Mine that le Said- to lie One of the Richest In tho Black Hills. sills rot out The cement floor is laid , . From the St. Paul Pioneer Press. on an incline of eight inchea In twenty-seve- n 8. D., Deer 16. One Crauiieri.aix, feet. (Ifbuijdi again would day during the latter part of last June, have as much aatwalvemches incline.) William Franklin and bis daughter, At the lowest, or back tide, I made a Mrs Frank Stone, happened to stroll sort of trough or depression to conduct np a gulch in Pennington county, and the liquids toward tha center. In the and stopping to rest, Mrs. Stone idly wall at this point I left an opening or broke in two a small piece of rock, which in the break, upon examination doorway large enough for a good sized showed some particles of gold. A little hog to go through. Through this open- flififilhg exposed more of the rock; a ing AlliheliquidipasaJnto vat.the whkihf upon bein- g- panned, proved' bottom of which la about four feet be- very rich. Everybody in the vicinity, low the bottom of the main pen. This having nothing to do, visited the spot, vat is what I term my manure fac- and for pastimo were allowed to dig of the rock and pan out the tory.' It is 13 feet wide, 48 feet long out some and about 10 feet high, a wall laid in gold. As every man in that vicinity cement with water tight cement bot- was in bad condition financially, and meant for raising the tom. - In the-cenof the wall I left withoutforother the proper celebration money a wide doorway which is high enough approaching Fonrth of July, quite an to bsck a wagon under the sill to clean opening was made and the proceeds deout tha manure. The manure from voted to that purpose. From this little incident dates the the horse stable goes Into this vat every day and Is worked np by the discovery of gold in the lloly Terror from day to day causes pigs, absorbing the liquids. We have mine, which mining circles. never yet worked it to its full capacity, greater excitement in owner With five stamps the recently but have taken ont 150 good wagon out 83,500 in gold in ten hours. loads as the year's make. I find it pounded Much of the ore runs 8500 to the ton. more valuable for the' production of Persistent prospecting revealed no corn, grass or any farm crops than any other place where the vein eame to the cow manure I can get. The liquids surface save this one spot, which has from pigs are very rich in potash, and been walked over every day for years took in T. C. Blair as I find no difficulty in growing fine Mr, Franklin partner, and a shaft was begun, tho crops of clover on land manured with ore taken out being treated in tbe Keythat taken from this vat." stone mill, and returned value much above the expense of sinking the "Dark Ass of Agriculture. shaft When the shaft reached a The "dark age of agriculture" la depth of forty feet developing a well England is said to have been during defined vein, which steadily improved the civil strlfeknown as the Wars of with width and value ss depth was the Rosea This Idea is corroborated by gained, the owners made an arrangeMr. Corbett In his recently published ment with J. J. Fayel and Albert by which they agreed to erect a work on the history of England. He mill on the property in considremarks that during the whole of the stamp eration of a half interest is the mine. year between the revolt of the peas- A, five stamp mill with an engine caants under Wat Tyler and their re- pacity of ten stamps or more was quickvolt in 1549 under Ket hardly a single ly built at a cost of about 85,000, and The put in operation three weeks ago. Improvement was introduced. While the mill was being built men uses of clover, turnips and were to run drifts north and grasses still remained unknown, plow- south employed from the shaft lit depth of ing continued to be little more than a forty feet, while sinking was pushed in of the and scratching surface, draining the shaft. Most of the ore milled has manuring were neglected; and even been taken from these drifts The marling went somewhat out of fash vein consists of marvelously rich ore, M body.-VYh- at i ter of-th- e -- Am-bur- al wall, with about two feet of low grade ore filling the remainder, of the veim The richness of this ore strike most be seen to be believed. Xnggets of solid gold from one to two pennyweights to five ounces in weight are found snugly bucked away waiting to bo brought to light, while large pieces of quartz are so bound with gold thut the parts hang together when broken with a hammer. was made in the The first clean-unew mill after a run of thirty-sihours. The resultwas a retort weighing a little over 166 ounces, from thirty tons of ore taken from the miua. The second hours gave a retort run of twenty-fou- r weighing 179 ounces and the third run hours gave 203 ounces of twenty-si- x These three retort sre worth SU'.DJO, p and were all produced by s mill Inside of one week from the stack a depth of The shaft has sixty feet, and shows a larger and HovrRNMEst Roar Rni.ntxo. The richer body of or than ever. Parties government of the United States took who have recently visited the mine rethat it is probably the richest ever a, baud in road building for the first port in the Black Hills forty years of its existence. The discovered MOW TO BEACH THE HOLT TERROR." Cumberland pike, crossing the states Take tbe LINE, of Maryland, Virginia,: Pennsylvania, F E. St M. V. R. R. to llermosa,- South Ohio, Indiana, and extending to Illinois, costing over $6,000,000, was the Dakota, thence stage to the mines" Stage fare work of the were still "hardly ever used, oxen being preferred, because ' they cost lest to keep tn winter, wanted no shoes, and when dead were man's meat, whereas horses were carrion. And yet the common pastures were In many cases as bsre snd unsheltered, and the grass so poor, that we are assured it was almost impossible to keep working oxen In condition upon them." The cultivation of "such herbes, frnites, and roots as grow yearly out of the ground of seed," which had been plen- tiful on the land in the days of the Edwards, "in process of time grew also to be neglected," so that from Henry IV. till the beginning of the reign of Henry VIIL there was little or no use - ofAhem in England. p x five-stam- now-reache- d NORTH-WESTER- 81-5- general government - J. i - R. BUCHANAN, V. R. a P. A. F.. E. A M. V -- J 1L Otnhs VTv FIENDS. Travel ft Ick the Trale, BAGCACE Oa VllUla the Other Kernel at the Depot. There are two of them, the one who flits from station to station and trunk poor dumb dumps your with force enough to drive piles in a government and around loiters who the ' one the depot watching for his chance to shatter your baggage, says Texas - break-wate- r, biftings. The depot baggageman is the most culpable of the two species. In bhiiAng aq4 darkcarocr of smashing trunks he has knocked the hoops off his conscience, and there is no remorse brave, foolhardy and reckless chough bo tackle hi heart strings and play on them. The cowboy ropes the Texas steer for fun, but the rnitn rones vnur trunk for a quarterjif a dollar. No matter though your t?gn!T be shod with half-inc- h strap iron and armed with solid steel corsets on the corners, snd double locked with a combination the station burglar-proo- f baggageman wants to rope it, all the same, and usually he terrifies all the passengers into letting him have his own way. He approaches you w'ith a with twenty-fiv- e smile, goes-aw- ay cents and ties your bruised and battered Ulster with a tow string. Tho d chest of the drumstrong, mer, and tho aristocratic though fragile frame of the Saratoga, meet on a common level, and when they do meet tho splinters fly, and while the owner of the Saratoga is wringing her lily white hands and tucking stray bits of lac.;, ruffling and bird's-ey- e linen into the fractured corners, tho drummer is using tho most vigorous and spiritual language he can command, and a great deal of it warming up with tho eloquent brilliancy of his discourse. As the prayers of tho wicked avail naught, so neither do tho tears of tho lx die nor the curses of the commercial gentloman. Tho time table of tho railroad is not changed in tho least and the sympathetic passengers are obliged to go aboard. Tho wounded trunks are thrown into tho ambulance baggage car and whirled away to tho next slaughter-hous- e farther up tho road. And the dear, sweet dude, and tho starchy old deacon, and the grand and impressive member of the legislature are all alike powerless in the hands of tho fiend of the check ring. Tyre and SiJon have passed away, and so will our trunks. The Goths and tho Vandals swarmed down upon Rome and it fell. Verily so do the Geths. and Vandals of tho modern railroal.-prc- y on our baggage and it is all broken up. iron-boun- H(enaruivkM lee wttk OIvwHm, ; Will It Wil. The Empress Catharine had a warm heart for the ladies of her court relates In tbe new volume of his history that Catharine, noticing that the beautiful Mile. Potocka, who had lately come to the court, had no a fancy pearls, immediately commanded dress ball, to which the girl was bidden to come as a milkmaid. Then, while Mile. Potocka was dancing', the emof press slipped a superb necklace pearl into the pail she carried, and at her exclamation of wonder said, "it Evenly the milk which hsaeurdled." Scrofulous Taints Lurk tn the blood of almost every one. In many esses they sre Inherited, Scrof- pimples snd cxncerou growths. Scrofula can be cured by purifying the blood with Hood J. 5aro- - x parilla Hood s Sarsaparilla. ThU great remedy fex had wonderful in curlug this disease. success It thoroughly eradicates the humor from1 the blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla cures the sores aud eruptions by removing their cause impurities In the Mood. "HoodS Pllja cure all lirer l. Se. - THE MAN IN THE MOON." One of the Most Ancient of tho Super- tltlons of tho World. - "The- - Man ia the HoonV ia tho name popularly given to the dark pots and lines upoti the surface of the moon which are visible to the naked eye, and which when examined with a powerful telescope are discovered to be the shadow of mountains in that luminary. The best existing man of the moon, says the Year Hound, shows 32,856 crater-shape- d projections, according to Wilhelm Meyer, and astronomers tell us that 100,000 It is not scope of medium power. craters probable that these have all been eruptive volcanoes, for the size of some of them is opposed to this assumption no less than their great number. . The crater Copernicus, perhaps the most beautiful of all, is a circular wall miles in diameter, risabout fifty-foing in one place almost perpendicularly to 18,000 feet - Its origin has not been satisfactorily explained. On the other hand, the system of radiations about the crater Tycho, covering half tho moon's surface, may well be regarded as the effect of the cooling and contraction of the moon from a molten state. It is one of tho most popular and perhaps one of the most ancient superstitions in the world that the spots and lines on tho moon are the figure of a man leaning on a fork on which he carries a bimdle oTthorns or brushwood, for stealing which on Sunday he was confined to the moon. The biblical Account given in the fifteenth to chapter of Numbers, thirty-secon- d thirty-sevent- h verses, of a man who was stoned to death for gathering sticks upon the Sabbath day is undoubtedly the origin pf the belief. Wants tho Doctors to Advertise. The editor of a paper in the eastern part of tho state has made an announcement that henceforth he wil 1 never preface tho name of a physician Thus, inby his professional title. stead of saying "Dr. Sawbones was he will say among thoso present, A. B. Sawbones was present. . lie ethics discountenance advertising, and holds that the prefix "Dr. Is an advertisement o( a calling. "There Is no more reason, he argues, "why I should speak of Dr. Sawbones in the news reports than of Grocer Jones, or Lawyer Smith, or Hotelkeeper Brown. If any practitioner wishes to see him- self set down in this newspaper as a doctor, our advertising columns are ft his disposal. Buffalo Courier. Eye Shut The king of Dahomey evinced cided displeasure. de- -- "Why." he thundered, "dont the Amazons quit shooting? Cant they "COLCHESTER". SPADIHG BOOT. eE8T IN MARKET, nrsiT rv fit. BESV IN WKAKEKJ i QUALITY. ;sl The enter or tap olo ex-- , tends tbe m hole length 5 to tlie'hecl, qdown teolin the boot tn Vl them JS snd don't he pat off food wiUt-laferl- COLCHESTER RUBBER CO. W. L. Douclas S3 SHOE NT f t. iLV ' - ft jtv FOR AKH40. cordovan; X FRENCH AUOUICUiDCAir. FineCalf iKangmocl . 3.5P POLICE, 3 SOLES, JrHw I $23? wlx21 :rJr 2- - W0RKNGH&6 BoyschdolShoex lauies iwwtS?S8i5S3E. Orr Om Mmioo PeopU ww th W. L. Douas $3 & $4 Shoes-Ail our shoes are equally satisfactory They give the bet vain for the money. They equal custom shoes la style and fit. . Their wearing qualities are uesurpeesed. The prices are uniform an Freis f to t 3 saved ever ether make.eel. U your dealer cannot supply you we can. OMAHA. DUHouies. . Health dree BiiSKSiS Bld. amahs.1 V1AVI CO., MS Bee UC CYPUJlWfiC Farms for Merchandise TIL LAUnAllUL and Merchandise for Farms. List your property for sale or trade. A Schlits FRENCH Bldg. Omaha. Neb. CO., MERCHANDISE & FARMS for nirt8. or for Rral KMatft from t ,(U0 to-9100 (ML five full deecrlpi Ion, 1 wW ret dealt or t v went to bn or exchinge f mue, Oil; prop j o altruo fte., wrte rty, Stock, - k. fr r, RIIOfiK, Omaka, Xek. OMAHA. Farmers Supply Store will fill this space with a new line of Bargains every week. It will contain valuable information to every former these hard time Ilayden Bros, furnish Catalogue and , Order" Blanks free. Send your name on. postal card. You can make no mistake in order Ing Goods from Hayden Bros. Satisfaction is fully guaranteed in every particular. Many Peocannot believe that tills Is ple i the Largest Store, of the kind in America, and all goods are sold on a basis of wholesale cost Grander. Write for Catalogue. 3 HAYDEN BROS.; ; - 'OMAHA, NES, - see tbo flag of truce? The chief of the staff shook his head. - "No, your majesty," ho replied. The flag of truce was raised afto-- the order to fire was given them. Detroit Tribune. Btlrred Him "What made him propose so denly? i aig. is rinrand la other hard tocr dealer ask FOR , -- pro-t- r sud- "Jealousy, replied the demure glrL "I took off fny hat at the theater and he overheard the young man t. just behind me call me a WE WILL TAKE YOU ' TO CALIFORNIA; the and Comfortahlv os Island Tourist Excurninna lh rats in Sleeping Car to CBXAr, but qXTTCK, lietaiiw von travel on the r that rnn. COkUTOBT, because Jon huie s through Sleeper. Fourteen record. Over W0.OT0 already earr.ee. andjears all like tha aerrice. Car leave peg Moine and Omaha erery Friday via the Qulfkly Cbreply, Phl.npe-Kocl- i bn-- v tamous Bceaie Boat. A special manager goes each tnp to care for the many wants of en route. We can't tell yon bait the patron bene? t In thl ad., hut for your California trip-yosh.Lld poet yourself A daroas, J.IOSEUASTIAN, Q, P. A., L A F. B y, Chicsgss L ' |