Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 6, 1884, Page 2

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THE DAILY BEE-~OMAHA, THURSDAY, MARCH 6, 1884, — y when | vines are full of se of fruit, They| THETORPEDO BOAT ALARM, there are lambs around. Thes tle fel- farc also ely to rot off. It is quite - lows have n great way of running their | troublosome to fasten the vines to the |omo Interesting Facts Abont Admis e’ q i heads into holes and other improper |stakes in such a manner that the clusters 1 Porter's G Invontion, tangled up in brash and killed. T use |as to insure ripening. The roots of the |« THE PURSUIT OF HAPPINESS, g or sy prrpose s York Hersld. FOR THE CURE OF ALL DISE ; q hne high, nailed to 1x4 inch picces, and 1|set. Trellisses made of slats of wood are e FRAR Tomen. ——— sivo of the end. Hence, when I leave a | most economical grape trellis is made of "'“““"'i""h‘j"“r';mlfv"l“:""‘ R~ "']"“"‘L ‘"1' e the Rapid Growth of Gosper County | 10t of ewes and lambs in a lamb pen made [ suwn cedar postsand telegraph wire. She [ 01 1160 tho torpedo bort Alarm, designed s Mo " , of such panels, I never fear that coyotes | posta should be sct about a rod apart, | ¥ AW berioe Aen . others aniing stock, | Typfoal of all Others—Varlows | yijj <oy in thoir work” on them during which will allow two vines to grow be- | efiPuon B tie 2arm, which has recent. hephreys Veterinary Manaal, (50 ppl Ttems of Interest to Tillers the night. I make my pens triangular in | tween them. The end posts should be ‘2('“”‘;“‘:‘J";f]':“r“"’:}""‘,I‘,‘lz’l‘“"(']:n‘l‘:"‘;!;i,““:‘('lv Ll S KRS A A of the Sofl, shapo, using throe panels from 14 to 15 |set deeply and ho braced on the inside so | ¥/ b® OF tnletest, | The Aatm - HUMPHREY § HOMEOPATHIC MED.CO: feet long. a4 to withstand the strain of the wires in | D81AC A0 ‘I ' t]- lod "”‘ i " 109 Fulton Street, New York, ST In addition to theso lambing pens, for | stretching them and the weight of the |8 & hOW gun, anc Intendec for service Gospor Oounty. uso on the rango, two or more such pens | vines when they are loaded with grapes. | 2% S KB it L bl NERvnus n should bo cut off from the main pen, | Large staples should be employed for [Al00g the seh conati in fast, for use uo. it Weakness ant pros. | Me. R Dunu, a well-known stock man | where tho shoep are held at night in or- | securing the wires to the posts, Two [4°F AR of the condi At HUMP“RE{)% Fadon,from overwork ot | of Gosper county, was in town last Mon- | dor that the ewes that drop lamba during | wires, one placed three and_tho other | 2% anc nsions and form were Indlscretion, E x@g l peculiarly od by the designer for o adiently : £ A ; , induscretion, | 88..!‘1‘4 S |aay, urging upon the B. & M. company | the night wmay be_separated from the | five foot from tho ground, will generally {ERUINEY wweiyict DY the designer for the necessity of providing better facili. | ain flock and with their lambs held | be found sufficient for supporting the |y .\ yad bortion below the water sur- Jotrameay nen, Pl atyte vial ort i back in camp, after the main flock goes |vines. Bome, however, use threo wires, i - ; : L ®, | faco forma specics of tubo for tho sup- ares vial of powter for #5 sent post treeontd | ties for handling and loading stock at | gyt placed respectively two, four, and six AL R iR 08 Fhitea sea N: ¥% | Homeraville, the new county seat. He gl feet from the ground. Grapes ripen {:33?,':;:.1“-"‘“?:1\ i."5:.;::.[1,1‘3":.«";:';':y'i':yrg reports cattle on the ranges have passed “The Little Busy Bee.” batter when quite near the surface of |0 o'yiitalning the reactions of a torpedo " N M the soil. Supports made of good posts : 3 r s H tho winter so far in comparatively good | [n Lis “Talk on Beos," beforo the Con- | and large wirle)lmt takiny ycnrn“and }muw of such size that its discharge in proxim- condition and very few losses aro report- | necticut farmers, Mr. H. L. Jeffrey, of |litle trouble. ity to the hull of the largest vessel could od in the county or the immediate neigh- | Washington, gave much preference to the il e not fail to prove instanteously destruc- e ey ix fooditm 400 bhoa v | Talians, bocauto thay Are stronger and | A Polatcr for Eastorn Farmers, | t¥e: Tho spar is oporated in the hold of more prolific. Bees will gather honey by e ; the vessel by proper mechanism., cattle, Thoy aro woll sheltored and of | wmoonlight in ploasant weather, especially m;\;"fl 'l;;';";::tfi::":&‘;;m:g"gggg iflm Above the water surface the forward course have notsufferedfrom the severity | when tho bass-wood trees aro in bloom. | g T0 purtion of the hull ia recessed, and the X g i will By ; gard o one of our Johnson | prineipal gun is placed closo to what ap- of the winter. Ho has alresly used up | Uho Italiaus will fly turther in soarch of | ounty men. In 1879, Theodore Smith | Peary to b the stom, ovor. which it firee 20,000 bushels of corn, paying from 20 to | O1EF £, 18 FHEEIE ot O el | oo to this place from Henry, Illinois, |1y the] straight-'ine direction. The bow 28 conta por bushel, the latter being the | uy five of the latter, The Italians also | 0. Purchased 160 acres of land a few |of the' hull above the water surface is itk e ol e oy Hillsay troi | éctiibeis, T fellwWing | Srotastad by AEmibE pIKta OiE KB joRe: i g o liomey from 1o clover Tt was his | PTG Mr. Smith took posacssion of his | halt inchos thick, which is an effisient The corn crop last yoar was fi.rnt class ‘"‘",‘.‘"““Y R ';N‘i""“': WA 18 | 1and and commenced business by invest- defonse, as the vessel has the power un- 1 every rospoct, the yield ranging from | belict that honey production might bo ) : A g ! ing $41,75 in hogs, Since that ~time he i i forty 1o mictyfivo bushels por- acre, | ireased fivo o six fold without oxhaust- 1l o from thia investmont, §1,080 der all feircumstances of eitheg advance Wheat was largely grown and yielded | fer.ilization of t! ing the honey auEplyc:iNm counl:ry.'Thl worth of hogs and still has 140 hoad, (v)v'mr:tsrfififho;Kflffi"‘éfinz‘:\:efifiyfi’bfi Ig:I A 0 garden rasphberries 18 | yhich he is feeding. The average price from twenty to thirty-four bushels per [ duo almost wholly to the work of the | 1oy realized for hogs has been .11} acro. There is a large quantity of both | bees- Individual bees are short-lived. | por hundred. Mr. Smith now owns 320 flected under a very acute anglo. The gun has no carriagein the ordinary ! T atimmes they seldom ke mors than : d 1 o Ay 4 A1 | acres of good land, 80 acres of which he wheat and corn still held by the farmers, | forty-five days, while in winter the life it seoding down with tame grass for pas- meaning of the term, the hull itself act- ing as the carringe, the gun being mov- md} will not be nent to r.nn_rknt before | period may extend to six months, Hives |40 AT other matter might also be spring. Mr. Dunn thinks it is the great- | are much to be proferred to the old style, | nantioned that will show that men need P AV E —WITH— 00K FALLS b ANITE. And your work is done for all time to time to come, WE CHALLENGE to produce a more durable material ) for street pavement than the Sioux Falls Granite. [FORJANY AMOUNT{OF able in only the fore-and-ait direction on est folly for farmers to sond away for |88 they yield consilerable more honey. |4 ho practical farmers or stock raisers lor, Owingto this mode of supporting piiosh € LoEe cealsrs, whie suy amodnt | kives cellar niay be the bast place, pro: | ianafacturing, and had not. the least |11k vesael ia’ thua mob only & torpedo- it oty 1iah BoLU16 tp vaty Faplaly)| 1B, iros 1 Ithe cestl 18, omehlnes | idmentand! giving his peronial attons | s on the minimum, hulland hiaving/a soarcely any governmont land left fit for | in wintor quartors, but kept as quiet, a8 | apisipated. And now wo would say | not obtamable by another method, §7 por acre. The farmers are all pros- | the small hen house and the red spider [Sohnson County Journal. and length on water line 172 fect; ex- perous and contented, and expect during | of the groon house. The insccts live =7 treme breadth, 25 feot; height from bot- the ccming summer to surpass last year's | upon the bodies of the bees to the num- General Notes, tom of keel plate to top of wooden deck, record in corn, wheat and hogs, ber of twenty or more on_a singlo bee, 147-10 feet; displacement, 750 tons; Soed Corn ried from one hive to another by contact | tains condensed reports from fifty-throo | °% 10 tons. The hullis of iron and teat he mado of his soed corn. Ho so- | known as to tho best method of fighting |susceoded_tho best in those different lo- |1 from the deck to alittle below the confident that with a littlo pains ho can | tho old bees seem to have no means or |sic. Chili in two, and conquerer and late | the. bottom of the hull is carried for- 0 ; ; A ; 3 th | This beak carries th le t ovorything considorod, ia probably as | tury ago, aud is spreading to an alarm- | joarl, poorloss, oarly Vermont, white | THSPERK Selen he Spar, of, PO 1o ty, and who lives ton miles northwest of | honey from one hive to another. Itisa |duce fiber of first quality should be |inoreases the draught from 10 fect fo Ll slides, and depending for training on the steerihg screw, which is also the propel- i On the question of how to winter bees [y b successful. Mr, Smith was en Sk I e . Mr. § gaged [ \nd th the Al be new soed cor, or in fact to pay fancy | thero is a diversity of opinion. With 160 | fiom boyhood in tho business of carriage S S 1:;;@“:“; can be had in Gosper county at market | vided the temperature can be kept be- | jctical knowledge of the business he is i i 5 ¥ ine boat, but a gunboat, solving the import. price and every kernel warranted to grow, | tWeen 42 and 48 degrees. Bury- |,y engagedin but by exercising good | ant Yprublent c‘nrrying e m”i,‘:mm a good way, but whatever the method [4i,,"¢o the care of his stock and crop he T : during the b twe , Th i i i direct fore-and-aft fice, with a capabilit; ating Cho pasb two yom. There 1| the baes should not be disturbed whils his suooseded far better than he had over | of prompt and acourate aiming in aximuth ivatl i ossible. Two difliculties are rendering | ¥, ; : ) cultivation, and land claims, with very | [Tl oniny duite hazardous at tho pres: | ocomis, T Joung men; como to Johnson | The length of tho vessel on deck is 141 few acres broken, command from $5 to o, time, a little insect resembling both Y g8, feet; her extreme length is 17 32-10 feet, A copy of the Jate proceedings of the | 147 nent, and suck their lifo away, They aro car. | Naw York State Agrioultural sosioty con- | "eiht of hull, 305 tons; woight of arm- Henry Collamuro exhibited in our of- | ofbees with each other while gathering | caunties of that state, givivg the names | 2rmored on the upper portion of th bows fico Wednesday, a very fine sample of | honey from flowers. Not much is yet |of such varietics of 'thgo mbmwu Ve with iron plates 14 inches thick, extend- lootod 135 grains from us many oars takon | th parasites. Foul brood is a name | cdlities, Tho Burbank was at tho head | ¥ater line. Thereis no wooden sheath: OBDEBS promiscuously from the oriband obtained | given o the other bee pest. In affected | of tho list in thirty-four counties, beauty | %, CCRPered, o spars, no Zideranc | 124 healthy sprouts, Mr. Collamore is | hives the young dio beforo hatching, and | of Hobron in nine counties, early rose in (10 keol, "ho lower portion of the bow select 80 or 130 bushels that will grow. | disposition to clean the .comb. It is an |reso in one each. Among those which |Fard into a beaker snout fiftecn fectbe- This corn is not the largest kind, but | old disease that was known nearly a cen- | sxood high, but not firat, vgvru mammoth | fore the forward end of the water line. profitableto raise as any.—[Utica Record. | ing extent in some of the western states. | star, snowflake, white elephant, early |’ : : Michigan sufforod a lots of 5,000 hives | Ohio, James Vick, and queen of the val, |12 Fun, out and_in horizontally from the Good Husking. in one season. It is a disgusting disease, | ley. vessel's hold without the exposure of the Last Tuesday evening Carlos Clark,one | s tho dead larvic omit a strong stench. q men working it. The hull has a double g of the most extensivo farmers in the coun- [ Foul brood is spread by bees carrying | 10 the northern states, sheep to pro- |bottom which, when filled with water, the city, informed us that on Monday his | fungus, and great care should be exer.|louted during winter; not closely con-|feet 1 inch. There are two horizontal —OR— son Lise, only nineteen yoars old husked | cised in prov%ul.ing ita spread upon new'|fined, but have a comfortable, dry place, | compound engines of the tandem type, i d d ten hi and be allowed to go in and out at pleas- | which gave the vessel a developed speed e e ooy | teertorys ure. They should not be allowed to[of 9 knots an houron a rocent trial M Ac A D AM ' to the acre. Mr. Thomas Harmon, a The Best Grapes. range over the fields, as that_in fatiguing | trip. @ | young man in his employ also husked and to the annimals, and the little picking of ——— eribbed an equal amount in the sametime we(l)l.,h'h is very good when it ripens | yrags operates against their eating up the A Fine Hit. filled promptly. Samples sent and | while another young man by the name of But it i‘] rather lateo, and to bring | food given. They should have 8ccess t0| \hen the proprictors of Burdock Blood estimates given upon application. |Myers, huakodynndguribbed’;ma hundred °““umlg Id*:i“ ““d‘h‘»l“n-%’ arm fi“"“ water every day, Sheep well lfittm:ut this ronowned medicias on the bushels, A young boy only sixteen years | 2208 In addition to_this, if there|housed and fed plenty of good hay and | market they hit it exactly. They hit dyspop- WM. MoBAIN & CO.. of ago i the same tirae husked and orib. | Toud boa wet time in summer, the | fodder need littlo grain. Tho latter [sin, indigeation, and liver and kidnoy com- Sioux Falls. Dakota. [}.q S (Gh by AR e TS da tHo aat leaves mildew and drop off, and as a con- | should be given sparingly at first, but | Plaints a hard ‘blow, from which they will e ] n sequence the fruit, instead of ripening re- | regularly, and slightly inoreased as the | 2eVer recover DR. WHITT [ |vor bon oo she e (Haniog | noe bard and sour, Goneord o e | witer progresan so thak U theep bo| 1 penmare suten 4 Domocrat. only of moderate quality, though it suits P lrpds oot isjontey quality end of the wool is weaker than that near| A \Vuhinéton special to The Pittsburg Pruning Season. a great many until their taste becomes | th skin, and should the sheep become|Commercial-Gazette says: The woman 5 ; : A more cultivated. Its worst fault, how-|yery thin in flesh it splits and becomes |suffragists will meet here in convention Now is the time to train grape vines, | ever, is its habit of rotting in late years. | quilo rotten, consequently is of little |next week. Congressmen are preparing and fix up trellises to hold t.h? luscious | The same is true of Isabella. Salem is|yalye, to leave town. The ladies will have fruit. Go, cut off all last year's growth, [ large and good, and ripens tolerably The trade in frozen meat from the|everything to themselves, Miss Susan, fovited. When it e Inconye leaving three buda nearest the wood of | early; but the leaves mildew as badly as Australian colonies of Enmgland has ad. | B: Anthony has arrived as a part of the trsabent, medicines oan be a the year’s growth before, except- those | Catawba, and tho vine is generally hurt | B9 8! 2 |advance guard. She was at the capitol verywhore. Curablo cases guaranteed; wheredou | | that h to trail and | by 1d wi “"Thi a vaneed within three years to a most im- 3 exiats it is trankly stated. ~Call or write, ong vines that you wish to trail and | by a very: cold winter, s and the |0t condition. In 1880 only 400|to-day and viewed the statesmen from ‘Nervous Prostration, Dobility, Mental and Physica | 8pread over your trellis or side of your Wnldar.lmvo been called the best of Mr. e e im’porml while in 1883 | the galleries. **We are going to have a Waalnon, Morourial and other affoctions of Throat | houso or othor place. Spread those long | Rogers' hybreds; but his No. 9, now [FEReed Hore JEHOTE® FETe W 8| voryenthusinstic moeting,” she said in ing, Skl Affootions, Old Soros_and Uloors, Tmpedi | Vines out as a fan and tie them to nails, | named Lindley, is superior. Delaware England—62.793 from. Australia, and | conversation on the subject. onts $o marriage, Wisumatiem, Pilos._Bpooial b | hooks, or straps of leather or strong|is most excellent in quality, but it g it ice O USRI B wwhat do you expoct to accomplish by ailon 8 cawe from overworkod bratn. URGICAL | trings. Thoy should bo at least three | has two serious faults; small size | 125742 from Sew Zealand, “wentyiono |y .. oo vontiony” GASIY Toosive wpedal wiiautlon. ~ Discases arlaing | feot apart, and most every bud will send | and Jack of vigor in tho vine, A larger | CAM0es arrived in a perfectly satisfactory 0 s Sl ? ; ion: £ qoit 4| “Agitation. Education. Nothing can from Tmprdonce, Fxoomes, Indulgenoes. | out oross shoot and with leaves snd | grape and ono of raro quality, fully up to | 24ition, soven wero not avite 80 800d, |y Jo0n liukiod until the people are odur 200 pagos;thewhole | grapes cover that space, if the vines| Delaware, is Toua, introduced about|? i ted to that deg f liberality which: MARRIAGE vttt i | SO0 a1 aid beat well. The other | twanty years age; bat its consetution | i greater demand than colonial beef. | oated to that degroo of liborality which G 617 St. Charles $t., St, Louis, Mo. REGULAR GRADUATE of two medical colleges recolpts; who muy will enable them to see that women are w i daucucieied :r“t‘;l‘: the \aine .h\;ulbdl be a:&do fl'l)t 80 | lifs would be almost a blank but for one [ known “:h “old A““‘l"i"‘?""' ‘ht” boen |, cotings soon lose their prejudice, for hat the wind cannot blow them off or | thing; it becamoe one of the parents of | Brown in the same garden for sixty years 8T, LOUIS PAPER WAREHOUSE. b 5. its in . fall faixly on the arbor, color and all its excellence in quality, | been known to be affected by disease, aad | 4 "\ iomborg in the house who voted: Weed, not dig around the roots, and | together with the size, productiveness, [ that the crop has invariably been a good | ,oinst iving us s committee have no 217 and 210 North Main 8., 8t. Louls. or old compost, You may plant straw- | other parent. The keeping propertios cf | the experience of most farmers who have | byo have given the matter proper atton- WHOLESALE DEALERS IN borrios under tho vines but do not out | the Jefferson life as remarkablo as its fine | attempted to grow the potato upon the |70 M08 BEUA.C AP L NERIOREL 5 doad branches, and market grapo is second to that of no | diminished yield of tubers of & much | ™y, \yhag direction d look f SUTROOETROARD- POARD AND There are too many reasons for all this | cther variet; B poorer quality. uismn‘c:'"y‘ ST Ton R CFLIDE. many,whomaynol | sprouts on tho main vines will stick up, [ so very feeble that there is not the slight-| Mr. Taylor, of Fancote, England, is | 5 soltivent aud a T bos, Goneequense asd mm'?f:gog;u 56 |orthey may be tied to tho trellis as tho | est al:zourngemont 0 plant it, ~1s siiort | authority for tho statement that a potato |32 i e ml"u:;l: “who attend. our no f the they see the movement is among the re- tanglo thom, Lot the raysof the sun|Jefferson, which has inherited its fine [ Without change of seed, and has never|g,cq anq intelligent women. Uncalf Gr&ha-m P&per co” fortilize with ashes, soapsuds, sawdust, | vizor and hardiness of the Concord, the [one. This isin striking contrast with |iqo, ¢ Thoand what we are. Thoso 1BOOK, warmiva | the roots. As soon as the sop begins o | quality; so that in addition to its great [same plat of ground for only two Or| y friends, But we will educate thon %, [PAPERS, {Viliiko | run_ stop trimming exoopt to cut away | value for home use, ita valuoas a shipping | three years, tho rosult usually heing 018 ToRCh | PRI 5 H to tell you why it is so. The grape is too| The Hnng)'rd Prolific, which has been| A writer ina scientific journal rili-| ¢you mean to which party!’ said Miss PB-INTER s STocx good fruit to be neglected, and every- | endured so long becauso of its earli- | cules the idea that apples sweat, and that| Anthony. *“To neithur i? particular, ‘box No. 1 will cure any case n four days or less No. 2 will oure the most ol ate case no matter of how & Cash oald for Rags of all body should try to cultivate them. ness, is passing out of notice, 1ts place | they must undergo a sweating process | but both, We shall identity ourselwos —_———— ——— is taken by Karly Victor and Early | before they are put in barrels in order to | with neither as ‘they now are, but which- A’ Posmv {jre wikbons med- The Lambing Season, Dawn, varicties which are finer in every | keep well. He states that unl{ injury | evor party inserts a woman's suffeage tober 16, '76. One | Kansas Farmer, wn'):]. Sy comes from Jeaving apples in piles in an | plank in its platform we shall work for. he w! Tho time is over when 1,000,000 of lambs, more or less, will be dropped in Kansas, That means $1,000,000—for Wo are neither free-traders nor protec- tections, nor hard nor soft moneyises. grug«u (which are generally | orchard, and that the moisture found on some shade of whitish green, or greenish | them comes from the atmosphere. He yeollow) have reached a good degree of [ recommends placing them in barrels as| Wo aro for sufirage wherever we find it, overy saved lamb is worth §l1—not to popularity, and deservedly, True, the |soon as they are picked. and we shall help those who help us, We sell “but to keep. The importance of [ firat introductions, Cuyahoga, Martha, | The Cochin fowls are big eaters, and | shull meet on the 4th of March at Lin- #1.60 | saving the lambs, then must be apparent | Lndy and some others, were not very not as good layers as the Leghorns. A |colmihall, and hold our sessions :every to every person, Old and experiencod | desirable; but their sucoessors are rapidly | British writer says that while his €ochin | day fov threo or four days. We are re- stockmen need little warning or informa- | coming into favor. Their beauty com- | Loy was laying bwo eggs a Leghorn laid | ceiving numerous letters from prominent tion, but beginners, young men need to | mends them, and a number of them have | four; and that in the production of the | people in this country and in Burope, de- e t8 SO0 Baeal, Now YOk, k and instructed, ‘_l“"lltz‘m sustain it. Lady Washington | o Cochin oggs twice as much food was | clazing their interest in our. causs and T ing season is most important | is probably the finest. It is delicious, | gonsumed as in obtaining the four. He [ giving us the support of their influence. lq in handling sheep, because in case of [ and both berry and cluster are largo. | says that three of the Cochin hens ate as | Among theso aro lotters from Heury IMPROVED overy lamb another life besides its own | Many persons like Pocklington, whicn is | ;much in day a8 a 4-mouths-old pig [Fawcett, the blind member of the Brit- is involved. Goed care of lambs involves | & seedling of Concord, and full as large | yould, ish parliament; John Thompsen, also an SOFT goods care of mothers, and that means a | and as good;but Prentiss is better, though e ——— M. P, Francis P, Cobb, Mies Ili% 0. ELASTIC SECTION |good deal wore than running loose on | not so largo; and sois Duchess. Others| ARE YOU GOING TO EUROPE? | editor of a woman suffragist paper in the open prairie shifting for themselves. N"i‘lfl?lfllll“s" s P 1n anothew coumu will be found the au~ gland; Miss Becker, editor of an English ne in ourlsf . 01 ozk,, | George urtis, an h 4 Sacs Tloak s ?:meon'ng thous- | (Mv. ). H, Ricketts) also produced the [relative to'the Very complete arravgements Shere i one thiok _y(::l x:;.y look for,” i \(,”“Nfi o "“fi‘,.’“ ".3'11“::'8’:13' ands, or whether it is & hundred or two, | Lady Washington. ~ He has raised |they have wade for tours in rurois th*|oontinued Miss Anthony. ‘“There will JonOhass iy olbee Cote: \ long : Allan’s Soluble Medicated Bougies ds 1 subol oll of san- 33 magrsdoon 1 Sobs smpik 28 L o Jith i it suy clier Corw, | Tn tho former case, among the firet thing | soveral others besides, among which are :E:f:if.g‘:-*%&'nhfimg iy m‘."fi‘éfih‘mr be some who will§serve Solicitor Ranyor Secretary, Quassaic and Waverly, bla il b di ipt of 10 | up in capital style for his action in the grapes, which are very fine and promis. ;:‘:Iu.» AN I8 A0y AJAIOM 48 TN oru of h};u MiYer,"” o' | to be doue by way of preparation is to separate the ewes into small flocks, A prominent Texas sheopman says: *‘I have | iv, o y g e e———— “What will you do at your convention gl iy : ho hesitancy in saying that ordinarily it| 1t is not necessary to have a vineyard Sumdrivg for Pood. bosides agitato aud cducater”, b will pay to run small flocks during the | in order to have a supply of grapes for| Wil you kindly giveme a few pen-| *‘We shall decide upon our plan ef lambing season. The er percentage | home use. A dozen vines properly eared | nies!” said a tramp as he entered an edi- | operation,” replied Miss Anthony *‘and of lambs that will be saved will, in my | for (and there ia little mystery about this) | toral room in Ohicago. “‘Tam slowly|will try to du a little something with opinion, many times pay for the addi- | will give un abundance of this most desir- | starving to death.” congress. ‘¥ne senate committee on suf- tional labor required."” able fruit for an ordinary family. Oune of | I am very wr&," woplied the editor, | trage is about to make a report fayorable athy The lambing ground should have a | the very best ways is to plant the vines | with much sym; o his voice, “but|to us. Owr further plan of work will southern exposure and bo as much as | by a building—house, barn, woodshed or |1 haven't any pennies.” probably be to axtend our local cgaiza- possible protected from north and west -moke-lmun——gm'i train them on the| “Well, wi{l you lot me have a wouth- | tion.” In the next place, says the au- . The building is @ protection in | ful or two of paste; I see you have nearly | Solicitor Raynor has made preparation above quoted,the lambing ground | various waya, and no one can show that | a pailful of it there,” to take to the woods. be .upfiiud with lamb pens, as we | the vines do tha house lnihuu . “'No I cannot spare any paste. 1 have That is to say, pens that 4 . J. BLAGK, | just hegun my editorial work for tomor- will hold from twenty-five to fifty ewes| Bruue, Fairfield Co., O. ssue, and I shall need it all.” and lambs, to be distributed about over A hen you can't help mo any this| ZLet the facts bo known. Let us under- the range o as to accommodate such ewes Supports for Grape Vincs. morning.” stand thata boil, or an ulcer, or & carbuncle, with their lambs, or drop their lambs on Let Truth Prevail. Blood Bitters »re_employed. This wonderful PO8: | and the reasons for 1ta use are thevefors obs vious, the range dur‘.nfoflu day, and can not be \rouhlo’d about finding suitable aupports | going to write some letters ftornoon 40 Woar away aud disappoar when Burdoch These lo:::vinu. QCommon stakes auswer a | about b o'cloek, and if you vulh-fi;;enm inodicine scts directy upon u::uml.nuniTHE .lEAn Nfl GARR'AGE FAGTURY safely driven inf be made of brush, or anythivg else that r purpose, They arve liable to blow |at that ti will hold sheep, but 1 abominate bruah Bver whou there are bigh winds, and tho | tago mml; e Lwill lot you lick tl - B e e —aiet et fias the Lawo:st Steolz in Omaha and Malkes the Lowest Prices. Furniture! DRAPERIES ANIC MIRRORE, CEANMBER SERTS ! Just recoived an assortment far surpassing anydhing in this matket, comprising the latest and most tasty designs manufactured for this spring's trade and covering a range of prices from the Cheapest to the most Expensive. Parlor Goods Draperies. Now ready for the inspection of cus-} Complete stock of all the latest tomers, the newest rovelti- s in stylesin Tarcoman, Madras and Suits and 0dd Pieces, Lace Cartains, Ete., Ete. rassewozs srzvaror |[HAS, SHVERICK To All Floors. T OMATINGN IR e The Executrix é OF THE ESTATE OF JNO.B.DETWILER Carpets ! Garpets ! * IS SELLING Il CLOTH, - LINDLEOMS, THESE GOODS Mats and Mattings, AT PRICES TO MAKE THEM ©C URITA ILIN S GO UPHOLSTERY GOODS! TO CLOSE UP THE BUSiINESS: WINDOW SEEADES 1313 FARNAM STREET. 1313 WM. SIN Y DHIR, MANUFACTURER OF OF STRIOTLY FIRST-CLASS Carrianes, Buooies Road Wagoms AND TWO WHEEL CARTS. 1319 and 1820 Harnay Stroet and €05 8, 184h Btreet, Hiustrated Catalozue furulshod free apon appiication. } IMAHA, NEB. FAD CLAIRE LUMBER YARD. 1024 Nosth Eighteenth Street, Omaha, on Streeti Car Line. . W. DIZX . OIN, WHBOLESALE AND RETAIL Lumbgr, Lime, Lath, Doors, Windows, Etc. Grades.and prices as good and low s any ™ dhe city. P'21se try me. Henley, Haynes & Van Arsdel, NOTTONS, H[]SIERi, GE&@TS’ FURNISHING Fancy Goods, 1106 Farnam Street, -~ - - = - - OMAHA, NEB farmers who raise erapes are! ‘I guess mot this morning; but I am for suy exuption or blemish of the skin is sure BS. T PolSTaeIs [IAUS 14 Dodge St. { “WiaiSys | OMAHA, NEB

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