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Show f removed by band so as not to draw tin femlizer oi immuit fiom the plant-lb- wwJt well overcome, apph Coaraxv. BT Ta Timm frat-tamaIt it Ian to natter it luuhhing MATTERS OF INTtKb ST TO and let the M. lKTTTrkdlU aud Muacr. plant- - grow up through i' ACRICU1TURIS1 i. Tl: UTAH. then foim above the mfilrh COALVILLE, v il ean Iine tieedb aiol he f) jai f HinM 4mt ( uIIim- - (tin lands an anej are best. But an nlh?l0!8 til k (Tljlill in eatt r si i a a or ba lion uf the kotl ftR( Implied sruabUTTiouth ttce than ever thi ym. fcf hm1 lint to blow off will aiibwer. ortkrullur, "i, YVUiUm Trout of Mavl!le. Ky, p!i oi v manuie no mulch l needed l.ved for fifty one day on butt' i mi. 'I a be ihe ad lie of an old grovur Ke p jour fields ( le.n a tfiloitt" of stl a w bci mriitl). LCFTera-v- . of manure (hem wll and, unteijs you: to a largo iu The bond-biliar gives fair prom-l-itt, jvLutKiti, ad j vr.ijiej, jut wot tltltHh. you Will of stuff site n.l fsn a.r jpK '.wiN's lift uI your reward. O. W. Bwrknab PoA1 1X1011 the H. picv ion. in Fai m i - H v ic i a hot a no a pi name of FoM rta, Pr. Martin Hell 4M l Not THE TIMES 1 FA It M A XI) J A ' l, In aa jury She famous umity U-- r ud;t-nl- ro Frenrh cr! bob up about leg wlurly as do rumor that Mi Gladstone or Herr k I about to public life. ( witnessed a Mexican The pugilist droll fight, and were disgusted. In fart. They afiy Tt wa a barbarous IfiHig, all blood and no bluff. The French crisis would be a good deal more Interesting If themon-expereader were able to tell whether thia la the same crlsla or a new one. rt It la aafo to predict that the new captain- of th Spanish army in Cuba will prove highly successful aa a recruiting officer for the Insuigent. -general Judge Morrow of the Vnited State district court In San Francisco ha a Chinese born In this country la a citizen of the tnltcd State.- A aeetlon of a moving train was stolen In Chicago the other day. The police, however, see an encouraging feature In thia affair Inasmuch aa the track were left Intact. The persistency with which account of Spanish victories com to u by wy of Madrid, while tale of Insurgent auc-esreach u by way of Florida, la most extraordinary. se If any Vanderbilt ever desire to become a dramatist or a librettist, be w 111 find material for a first-clasociety drama or a comic opera in the recent history of the family. ss Wood ofTTIT Congressman tola announces that he has beard every aiieech delivered in the bouse this session, but, he leave us In the dark a to what tearful ulme he Is thus expiating. Henson V gather from the Washington dispatches that the courtesies so often extended to congressmen and senators by railroad companies will never be offered to Senator Morgan by Colli P. Huntington. bill has been Introduced In the New York legislature to compel railroads to carry bicycle aa baggage. The railroad people say If they let In blcjcles It will not be long until the baggage ears will be filled with buggies. A Amelia Kives-Chanle- who got r, a di- vorce a few month ago, wa recently married to Russian prince named Troubetakot. He Is a painter and ha wrltten-a- n opera that didn't go. Mr. Troubetakol'a pen will keep her warm as hot aa It was up In Rtmsla If It when she wrote The Quick or the Itead. She made It too w arm for Chan- t 1 ter. Thomaa Baugh aleepa In the postofiUa wt Chlllleotbe, Mo., and at 3 30 the other morning hla slumber were disturbed by somebody who had evidently not called for bis mail. The stranger had called for the money aud stamps In jthe safe, but Mr. Baugh gave him sue a good fight that he wa forced to leave so hastily that he did not leave his address. And nobody has yet been able to discover It. The people of Corea are tip In arms because the king has ordered everybody to get their hair cut. Many are leaving the country rather than sacrifice their locks, and the wildest counter nation la said to prevail among alt c lassea except the barbers, who are working knee deep In hair and pralring the wonderful wisdom of the great ruler. Our barbers will be glad to know of one place where business I t hin prat!!! I ifO In base roI make tUlf, g razed ohc! will run out all otlur rrasKC slth which It may be growing It is propagated In two ways by It seed and by It creeping ui dci ground root stalks. It la among the best. '1 not the first, grass to start lu spring and if the fall be moist wl.l guw until from the 1st to the Fth of Oitober If not too dry, the climate ran hardly be too cold foR to loutish, a It cau perpetuate Itself by means of it i coping root atalk where the summer is too frosty to ripen It seeds, and is known to do well near the Arctic Circle In Bi America. It cannot endure gieat and long continued heal and It southern limit may be roughly defined as tbe latitude of Cairo, 111., though It grows well In the elevated limestone lands of middle Tennessee Blue grass la rather difficult to get started and a good set is hard to get in less than four jeara from the seen sown, but under constant grazing it Improve for year. Many of the best pastures In Illinois and Kentucky are on land never aa jet insulted by the plowshare. It la very difficult to get a stand from Imported seed as Its germinating qualities are quickly ruined by mold after R la cut. In Illinois the safest way to sow It, U to cut it stalk and all, scatter It over the ground to lx seeded. It ran be sown at any time not later than August during the growing season. Blue grass In Wisconsin will do well on either day or sandy lands, but of course will thrive best In limestone diTo 'get the greatest benefit, strict. pasture It rather closely. If It grows up tall and falls down. It la apt to become weedy. Thl grasals without question In Ita green state the most nutritious grass known. Illinois farmer clover to be washy and Infinitely prefer blue grass to It for both milk and beef. D. R. McGinnis. It I J I Iona b tou-ald- Manure la Whiter. A good deal will be gained tt the winter-mad- e memtra la piled in heaps anti subjected to partial fermentation, so as lo maka Ita fertility soluble. It la fact that cannot be too frequently remembered that fresh enlmsl excrement la never Immediately beneficial to the plants to which tt la applied. We see this In tbe killing of herbage In pastures where animate have voided tbelr excrement while posturing The following year surrounding (hla excrement will be found a rank growth of grass, which will generellybe left uneaten, because smelling and tasting matoo much of the nure. But let this same excrement be composted to a fine powder, end It will enrich aeverel aquare feet, and the grass will be of better quality for ih The composted manure baa all tbe ammonia that the fresh excrement had, and la available form for use. This la especially true If either gypsum or German potaah salt are put on the heap to absorb the ammonia. Most stable manure la deficient In potash. The German potaah salts, known to the trade as kainttn I the beat thing to apply to the compost hpap. It le not caustic, like wood ashes, and therefore will not hasten decomposition. Neither will the kalnlt delay It, The ammonia of the fermenting manure and thejqt,-aswill unite, forming nitrate of ammonia or saltpetre, which 1 one of t power tub fert lUzcr know n--R le very soluble, end all compost heaps should be kept from exposure to rains, which will speedily leach out their most valuable properties. Am. Cultivator. writer In Popular Science News The mistletoe grows most commonly In the apple tree. Thia is quite correct, but the English (?) mistletoe that cornea to this country in such quantities for, Christmas comes from Normandy and other sections of northern France, and grow almost exclusively on the black poplar, the principal roadside tree on the military roads of Franoe. These trees yield a large revenue to the commune; about of the limbs are cut close to the trunk, once In six years, tied In small bunches, say four Inches in diameter, and sold aa fagots, and U tbe From wood mostly used 'by bakers. these limbs the mistletoe Is taken about the 2dth of November and shipped in crates to England, and from thence to this country as English mistletoe of pgr tic history. A ea.va: partly-decompos- two-thir- The Bunch Sweet Potato Few plants could be more Interesting than this. Here at the North we have not succeeded fn getting a good crop of tuber from IU At the South it seemta very valna blc thing. "Per b spg no other which has been invegetable-novel- ty troduced In the South In recent years, h rrcparUg Strawlterrj HU. Fins berries end large crops depend so much upon th treatment the plants receive the spring of fruiting that no one can afford to neglect them then. Where the soil la free from weed seed the matter Is vastly aim pi Hied. But such soil Is'not always to be had; and the richer the sell the more apt H to be Infested with weed. Subdue the weed by running shallow rooming. cultivator down middle ns early In spflng aa practicable. Scrape around A Topeka rasq is' said to have a and between plants-wit- h raaLL-el-i-cheese fe--r making city pavement from- - sharpened weeding hoes, wrhlcb will re straw. He may succeed In jnaking move all weeds aud not some guileless city man bellcve the enough to Injure roots. Then apply over rows, plants and all. plan feasible but It will be a hard thins to overcome tbe suspicion of anyone about 300 pounds an acre of highly solwho has ever had occasion to tread the uble commercial fertiliser rich In pot-asstraw pavements of farm yards at that - Stable - manure and unleached delightful season when. In tbe words of wood ashes, tt to be had In sufficient Ten good tbe poet, winter la beginning to slide quantHlea, are excellent. off the lap offspring epd the trot la load of manure and 50 bushels of ashes an acre will do. scattered over and about aO out of the ground." around the plants; the aahes on top. Frances E. Millard. -. M. N. as they hasten the action -of tbe ma---ens. Katharine I .cute Slovenian, Hart nure. Hoffman. Frances E. Beauchamp and Remember that almost anything can Hele.x M. Barker, the officers of tbe be safely scattered over and on straw-berr- y W. C. T. l have sent to members of plant while in a dormant state congress a protest against the passage hlle not grow Ing. Should the appliof any measure which aims to provide cation be unavoidably delayed till military Instruction In the public j growth begins. It should be applied Just schools. Iudouhtedly the puprLi of the ; before a rain, wbkh will wash It off publis a hoots already'xbave enough the leaves Into the groundt-e- c ft e&n be studies. Military instructions In add.- - scattered around and between the tion would soon become irksome, H plants. Where the toll is not o baa not Richelieu HdJ the world tested with weed as to need much that ctatef iray be saved without thVscratchlng, the ntsiiure nnd .ashes are ' beat arpHed Izto th? rrevioua fall. weeds appear after the (er timer t . J . is .pj'Iied, they- - nfut be dug out, or 1 b, I- -- -- s. frri? Nrucn. great many of the negroes In the South, who, thirty odd yeura ago. were slaves, have prospered since they became free men. Probably their greatest success has been In farming, to which most of them were accustomed In tbelr day s of slavery. There are &4h,642 farms owned or occupied by negroes, and of the i,329,5t4 who work at fanning. 010,619 are independent farmers and employer of others R I not likely that tbe Southern negroes will ever became largely engaged or commerce, transportation though there la a better field for them In the South and leas prejudice In a bustuaM way than thar is at the North. The Southern white mas object only to association with the negro socially, but In business matter he treats the colored man Just as he would any otbet. Ex. A I i ' says a bulletin recently published by tbe Texas Experiment Station, haa caused more comment than the vineless sweet potato. The experimental stage has been passed, and the value, of this variety, like that of the bunch lima lie .:t, has befit established beyond question. With nearly a level culture, we have grown over three nundred bushels per acre of this varfetyrand all the lops could have been easily cut with a mower. The high value of the tops for feed has been proven; but ids best to feed them green, they do not cure well. Frequently tt Is a good practice to mow off the heavy tops and leave the gritty runneis on lha ground." Examine Stock Salt. lt not always best to buy a cheap quality of salt, or having bought what is supposed to be a good quality and finding it not up to expectation, to feed It to stock. Several week ago we mentioned an unaccountable case Of death or a number of bead of cattle. Vpon questioning the gentleman who lost the cattle, this week, we learn that by comparing note with others who had sustained similar the cause. A sack losses, he of salt which had been fed to tho cattle consisted of the faring of the evaporating vat, and contained so much gyp and other harmful subHance that ihe cattle died of scours as though they were afflicted with an acrid poison. Amarllla Champion. 1 Three Litter a Year. Three litter a year keeps th sow pretty busy, but the American Cultivator think t Is better for on that has attain -- her growth and Is two or three year old. It checks the tendency to firncq gych polls the breeding faulty 10 woi. sows after they have toppd rowing Ex. well-beate- la-ti- -- -- . Y I Scrofula , ?refe Another point of illffeience bctw.en lonH and nut tiecb Is this In the uv of the nut tiers auoidlng as you g,.th er the fruit jou lemave from the soil Just mull ' lenient v as are contained in nd It ho happen in the the fiuit wmioiiiy of fiatuie that the tree will store up more of the mineral demean-wl.l- i h artjlnillated In the fruit than it dos in any other of Ita parts. And in removing the fruit jou really deterior ate vour taill Hence you mutt put voiii nut tries upon strong soli, and if ton want t ne best nuts you must follow the line of ore hat ding. In the care of a forest, you plant your forest upon the pooiest soil soil whhh you canuot use for agricultural aud you depend upon the forest itself to enrhh that soli. Here again Is a very great contrast between the two classes of trees. You depend upon the foiest to enrich the soil. Why Because the mineral elements and tbe carbon and oxygen which the forest tree takes are secured from the atfflos-- ! phere, and it transforma those elements. assimilates them, and puts them Into an organic 'ondition. With each recur-- ( ring autumn the forest diops Its leaves and these lie on the ground beneath the tree. In time (hey decay and make a rich inanui- e- humus, we call it, So your forest really enriches the soil. whlU your nut tree it This, thou, is the second cent last bet we. n those two clasec o' trees, (has A. Keffner. ilia onlv j. I -- I It I- The kalaer doea not think a parliament would govern any betier than h doea, piesumably being a little shoitcm divine right." Bdf , , d 1 Ka.1., ha upon a C fu 1 sat -- es-ai- toat 1 tkt for Child's Blrtb'isy The fof'.ew irj receipt wjl 'el.hcw to make a nice buthday caa fer a COOD SHORT STORtES FOR OUR ' ream together one cn o' it SOLDIER READERS. , u r aim U.ree tups of sugar', t. e waI l ammunition left, an.1 n't v w tl four egp thorougo v ne to ntake t he- ii'i' '1 inmt . nc c. p of sw eel milk, then ad non j etl Ihe lCelH-4pniun of .eu, duhu to si ape fiom Hem M hot-- - Auflo .r three I,,: cups (1a ofhnely-sifteli laordun iBiuout iee It l ( liUgo nt at l exhaii-te- d baking powde- - a .ft e I'.i.i it fit ,ii ,iiu He hdttil (hat It Might lie tlrdid lu 'he wounds of 'hi an,.- - hit p.ee, a i upful of seeded rains nr pul f fo,.r whites ( iindti.1 Soon. the , puts to Inn uigtig Mm m In- - m t in t eggs. l'nt into a rather shai itT cake and iejhd t hi hcik o' i.ed, i mand base in not too hot an ever, H' we though' Hill nvr on th hi1 opp it dust lefire putting in the oven drop .n W lluit Will that on w hi h th' pu- -' wa.-- situa'i ti e r.ng thimble and the sixpence . lighting in a just eointtleret v worn n i with tnd fa'rgua and no!v cause. . and n ho -- e I'topped ' d Ill'll we i iiliu d In lx hue I r ,'!,1I i 'h -- id 'ti .mil bland fo. t la li w ad. d ' iie i i n 1. ml ' o ins to make ou an ha ' t n 1 d (ORXEIi. ,hTlof a large 1 0r 111 vft. bnff!o hirh 1 think il t he w olv es from tul o' ion pot Still some of tl em i lowing me aftfr me tin'll I got wnlrn fiven.les of the po-- t, w hen 1 had onlv foul t o.i'id-o- f VETERANS It I K. JJiL.' km s pau-- c , As j mi ame dow n in our I Its I -, -- i mill! light ji apje . in v '111 I ' j made ery soon J scale. v i It . ISC's. -- er t nn-- i s si d at'..-ware-., Bore he- - o me 1 sere -- c-f el m Foot d j ill tl P and iu walk cp to (avor it I six. ned rny ankle. Tue becane wcft I could not put my' t ,t on ant! I thought I should have to g.ce up at ev ery f !cj I c r aid not get mi v re, t f h. I read of t are c f snd had to ttc p sxun.larcs-- e i j Hood - Sarsipar !'a srd concluded tot-- y l. Before 1 ha 1 taken all of two bctllta the nore hsd h" and the sivc.l.rg had gone down. M 1 Northmen tell us that at night time, w hen they could not see the grav, They could tell where we were fighting from the sound like hounds at bay.; And have heard It when we charged them 'hove the noise of shot and shell, For it followed with our bullets, that pointing out trophies was un.iisg and boyish. While lunching with him "rebel yell' the natural way in which he brought But the voices that did utter those himself clown to the level of mv youth and small expei!ene of lift' without a' most awful screeches then Have for many yeats been silent, thae at noying to the young, was charming " spake as other men. But should England ever treat hs in a Meeting him some years aftir, and failrecognize him. Mis de Navarro way we liked not well. 0 er her holders would he si leeching tecords that after his speaking to her and announcing himsell as General that historic "rebel yell Grant, before she recalled him he said So, my comrades of the southland, that jokingly In response to her confused utterance that hr had 'so (hanged".) were fighting 'gainst the blue, 'Yes, 1 have grow n t linn r and paler , Get your vocal chords in order, as they I am no longer president von see, and may have need of you, " For "Old Glory that floats o'er us we I am consequently lc.s banqueted ' It was about this time that j our very lives would sell. my friendship with General Sherman But before we had departed also began," writes Mrs. ile Navarro would hear the "rebel yell.' 'He was one of the few eminent men have met whose interest in every sub- )'urtted by 4olut. Ject of conversation was so great that Captain Baldwin gave me an account his particular metier could not have of an accident that happened to him in been He knew mu h about guessed. May, 1.8G6, say b General Miles In the stage. Shakespeare and the drama North American Review. generally, and was a passionate lover I was stationed," said he, "at Fort of the arts, thinking them all worthy of Marker, Kan., in command of a com- equal regard. As a ciitic he was good, pany of the Thirty-sevent- h infantry. though, perhaps, too enthusiastic over Fort Marker was located on the over- any excellence, however small, if genland stage route from Fort Riley to uine enthusiasm can be called a fault Denver, and after leaving Fort Marker His manner was brisk and hearty. His it was unsafe for any one to travel in personality gave the impiession of a daylight except with a good escort of rugged strength, so much ho that h.s troops. entrance Into a room warlike a breath On one of my journeys of inspection j 0f fresh. Invigorating air. He scorned I stopped within thirty miles from the j fear and discouiagement of every k.ud, fort to have a buffalo hunt and hunted anj refused to allow any one to give all day, but at night I was obliged to wav to either. atari back for the post. 1 left the station about 4 oclock In the afternoon in An Xriny Hard to t.et Fnto. a light snowstorm, with a tolerably is but one army in the world There fresh horse that was both strong and to enter, and that Is the Is hard that spirited, I was alone and armed only little of the Fnited Slates. Most army with a small pistol, dependarmies are hard to keep out ing almost entirely upon my horse to European most of Continental Eu-- 1 over since of, escape any danger from Indians, not man must do d every ropf anticipating danger from any other British The service. army is military source. enlistmaintained still voluntary by "I had ridden about ten miles when British recruiting the ment, though It began to grow dark. My horse taksergeant has winning ways of his own ing an easy trot, I was rather enjoying that exercise a compulsion upon his the ride. I had noticed previous to victims different In kind from that of thia time the howling of wolves, but the press gang, but almost equal in de- - j had paid very little attention to it. As The recruiting sergeqnt in the gree. I rode along I noticed that this howlFnited States army is not required to closer, and at length exercise anv such influence ing began to. get . upon men blood-freezm- -- i - .... A pte-ente- il t I at nS ; Inpir a u ' ) I v ! i , .n h ,d i. - I i As we fought like verv demons both on mountain, hill and dell, And whereer our lines extended one could heat the "rebel yell." I lo I of hum'll: i' it fu in- -, but to I K."l s ap.u n' i ..nu v tali, s the b i the - Inft-i- c.rut.l In all lo i l.tii-i- and wilting M o Ar.leiajn de Navaiici- - ioinlcos- - lm he friends of hei , I ,c da s town In ih .nl ii- - Itume I. iii,.I km.iIK bo nil cn no i who h.i i pasbd awav iiotaoiv l.ooin Managi Maiaulev John T Find and .Mis ie cords her me ting with un,d estimate of General Giant It was during mv ih lightful southein tom till fiistl thu, f)r Giiffin me to General then piendent Giant wnoin he had known in old soldiejmf das when tin general had captured- - and impti-onhim It was pleaaant to see these etn titles in war so frlendlv in times o' peae. Kindliness and sriiplu it wie( niaiked traits of the president, while a and certain ruggedness of manner spec h that w as suggt slue of his eai ier life gave an additional Intel est to all he said and did In showing the White House his pleasure lu oiinlrv to give battle for tht right mu. h mistaken, you i g ' -- j 1 iul. and I have been grea'iy n othern.se. I have increa-e- u weight and am in better health. I cam t i gave cough in jxa,e of Hoods riila.' Mr. H Blvkf, So. Berwick, Me. This and other unrilar cures prove that Is notv , j uhle-boille- - oods Sarsaparilla Itil.fOi' True I oini IN.rifler it 11 v It lltHit I MlllS rWHHJ ft AiUlrinit (o. lmtJ lut Unr'y Uie $1. i u)urt lc and liter stimuitui. The Greatest fledical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDYS j er k- MEDICAL DISCOVERY. V KENNEDY. OF ROXBURY, I DONALD MASS., Has dixco ered 11 one of our common reels a remedy that cures everv J rtsturt Humor, from the woott vrofu.a a common Pimple. He has tried it m over eleven hundred cases, and never failed except in tvo cave (both- thunder humor) lie has now m his possession over two hundred tertifnatev of its value, ail within twenty miles cf B ision Send postal card for book A benefit is always experienced from the first bottleand a perfect cure as warranted when tlu- right quantity is axen. When the lungs aie affected it causes like needles passing shoot mg pari through then, the same with the Liver or Bowels Ino is caused by the du.ts being stopped and always disappears m a week aier uhi g it Read the label. If the stn,.t.h is loul or bilious it will cause squeamish (eelmgs at first down to t: - Eat No change oi diet ever necessary. the best vou ca.i get. and enough of l in water at Dose, one Sold by all Druggists. it bed-tun- e. ' ro. ... wm. or three wolves bark and howl very close to me. Looking back, I saw two coyotes and one big prairie or Lobo wolf following close behind me and howling their utmost. This rather ' --- o i CUT-SLA- ; SH t SMOKING TOBACCO. 2 oz. for 5 Cents. f ; cruiting station In this country there are many more applicanlsThan are A recruiting officer needed. in the army of the Fnited States may be as nice as he w ill in choosing his recruits. startled the TTfiere Is no great rushTScnter the ser- it did me. I Increased my speed, hut vice, but there are many more still they gained on me and it wasn't men offering than njways are needed. The long before their numbers grew to a physical test for applicants is extremely dozen or more and the distance between severe, so that only the soundest men them and my horse was very much can stand it, while the applicant must lessened. have a Jail' edm ation and proper certif"I began to appreciate the danger and icates of haracter fiom at least two I realized for the first time that had a reputable persons. It is stilt true that weapon with which it was doubtful less than a majority of those seeking whether 1 could defend myself against to ,,nter tj,p service are native Amerl-auc- h ravenous beasts as these. 1 re-- j rans buj jt s required that every man called the fact that just before leaving phail at least have declared enigng ' I had counted the number of rounds of hiR lt)tentlon ot becoming a citizen of ammunition I had, which was Just forty-Ui- e if Vnitea Sttg and thP h11' to obtain natives. Thestripe possible I had left the stage route. Intending t 0f n)en apply ine Is remarkably good to go to the post by a trail which would i Germans now more than save me something more than A'! others. Danes and Swedesfrequent also present miles In distance, and aa It was dark ! - vhefnepives, and make good soldier. had hopes of gaining one of the stations The Germans usually have the advanalong the route, but was obliged to keep tage of having seen military service at the trail, trusting to my mount to take home. Reenlistments are frequent, and me out of what had now become a real as about half a score of danger. The wolves kept gaining on offliers receive commissions ms until they had got within a very every year, the man that holds by the short distance before I fired the first service baa a chance to do well. There shot at them, which fortunately dis- Is a strong prejudice in the English abled one of their number to the extent army against as these rankers, that blood ran from him and they be- men that rise from . tbe ranks gan to howl, whereupon the whole pack to commissions are called, but turned npon him and tore him to pieces. there Is said to be no such This gave me a little start ot 100 or 200 prejudice In our own army. It is said yards before they commenced' follow- that favoritism Is unknown In the mating again. I tired every shot with the ter of promotions from the ranks In tha greatest care, and It was seldom that I Fnited States army. missed disabling or killing one of them. , rU Head la Thairh.-Georg- e -horse at the "Afraid of tiring-m- y Bretherton, a wealthy ranch-t- r, Mart, I rode very carefully. The numfell dead. In a Butte, Montana, ber of tbe wolves Increased intil there church, recently. The body was rewere not less thanfrom fifty Jo seventy-fiv- e moved from tbe church and the sermoh of them, and they followed me tor proceeded without further interruption! at least twenty urilescuTOng my horse Experiments are still being tried In In the rear and Banka, often getting almost in his frost, enabling me Jo shoot Daglacii Jn preserving freUi- - fruit in from right to hft, firing when the at borax, it has been found perfectly auc-enroot four left distant from j ccsfal with cherries, snd is now beiag ms. Fortona'ely I ran through a, large tried with vegetables. i CUT" SLASH i 9 9 t HOI Y CO. TUth tO Oirlia 1 WORKS, f f C. i i ou Catr Set Your YVatrh -- tribe Bur inxton v 'HeiiTtr a so regular 1 envc Omaha, &v 4 tk) f CD, EAACILY. Lipmed," it j w t9 3 for 5 Cents CHEROOTS Give a t.ond. .Mellow, Hca;thT Pleasant Nmoke. Try Them. Arrive Eenver, T )0 Ri. CXACiLY. Fastest and most eom'orta-t,i- e train from Omaha to in Colorado T e Cpcf alf "T rTwr-:Ask tbs local tulet cu.l via Ihe t'nr incK n Ind i BE NCP.E YOl GLl - t --a- 1 HEM J. Fxvxcia, Gen lass r Agt, Omaha. Net. 1 LEGGINS !(.fr rif Arm iteavy 9rfMpt of pi HAYDEN with LC wih t4s fttvfcn., ! pw4)Wiv mitrp f Nrod of bo and HU.MINCTOM A 30S, Uu !. BR0Stot,'!it!l"i-iUrw.fl" n4bff HM for nine nbvnptMiM t Ik r "ON UMKilOk " tK MfiikltH faahtoa ttldiiioiitA nhtrripfHMi FRFK. F rit for catcfYd iMTowfi of Pm. ftyriai Patents. KMfiitMDfi ttnriKh. - Trade-Mark- s. a4 of m to lowitnro Grid, or Hnw fi (M vi&xrzx. k a. Adrkr fe uma rjjstu o Sul t REFO UtlS. iu loojrh fejrupy Tmim (kwd. v4d v? ht ttm. ONSUMRTIO -- Y. I i4 X. LU 101SG. advertisers, kn! y OMAHA When writing fo o.tct ion this paper. f t t J |