Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 17, 1884, Page 5

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0. 1", Thaye Blair, Is quattored at the wrdson at t s of is stopping at J. D, wart, of Polger, is in the city registored at the Metropolitar Waltor A, Rhue, of Philadelphia, is at the Metr an, L. E. Waterman, of Chippewa, Wis,, is registard at the Metropolitan. L, W. Webb, of Washington, Kas,, is at the Matropolitan, Edward Matchell, of Harrishurg, Pa, is at the Motropolitan < TISE wnd Wife, of Fullarton, are regis- tored at the Motropolitan. Mrs. J. N. Phillips has roturned from Lockport, N. Y., where wlsit to relatives, she bas been on a S, P. Morse, has returned from the east whete he has been buying goods. Mre. Major Alfred Morton, sister of Mrs, Clara Grossman arrived yesterday with her two sons from Fort Bridger, A, McInnis, of the firm of McTnnis & Bus. left for Long Pine yesterday to 1 after some lands in which the firm are inte esto M+ Dr. Tdington, accompanied by her Paul, and her mother, Mrs, Porter, left yesterday for a two month's visit to friends in Cinclnns swhere in the cast, ~George Clar) J. W. Paddock, Fort Robinson; H. W, Newman, Schuyler, and Thouas C. Patterson and wifs, North “on wnd ¢ bner; Platte, registered at the Paxton yester Hacon Turner, the irrepressible agent of the Tneyelopedia Brittanica, is again in the city. Mr. Turaer has been spending a few months among his sheep and cattls on his ranch in Pierca county, this etate, and is now on his ¢ to the south to spe winter in the servic J. W, Love, wife, Lincoln; 1 David City; A, Lucas, Central City; Hon, of his employer, Fromont; A, I, Bolten and Leonard, wife and child, Wisnor; C. Hart, Dakota a, and C. 1 illard yester Graham, Atler Baraes, Por ra, were at the —— pis. tt yeaterday afterncon ilty ofthe larceny and was centenced to the coun- Ed Paiton wasfound g of a ca ty jail for 20 days on bread and water. Jam, sault Swartz found guilty of » ,wag fined $5 and costs, and batte st constable George C. Burr was also called up and tried. It appcared that Burr armed with a writof replevin for a horse, In hisattempt to serve the writ he was resisted by the possessors of the animal and atruck one of them, itis elleged. The defendant claims he was justified in the assault while the complainant con- tends that an officer has no right to take property by replevin from those having possession of it, and could bo legally re- sisted by then. The court took the visement. The case of the state ag was matter under ad. e —— Must Pay for the Improvements, The somowhat noted and quite famous Dawson will case involving the title to a considerable amount of Lincoln real es- ate, was yosterday decided by U. S, dis- trict Judge Dundy and the decree filed. The decree of the court is that the cupying claimants shall be compensated for all improvements made upon 'the property after deducting the rents. received since the beginning of the suits. The amount to be paid each claimant be- fore he is dispossessed is fixed in the de- cree, which is a document of considera- Dble length. The attorneys for the plaintZfl were L. C. Burr of Lincoln and Hon. J, M. Worl- worth of this citv, for the detendant Wal- ter J. Lamb and Harwood & Ames of Lincoln, oc- — o ——— A Matrimonial Knot, L. M. Appel, of Denver, Colorado, was last night married to Rachel Goldsmith, the daughterof Meyer Goldsmith, the well-known clothing merchant of this city. The marriage ceremony was per- formed by Rabbie Harfield, of Cincinnati, in tho new Jewish sy ner of dand Haroey, in the presence of numerous ivited guests and friends. Aftor the ceremony had taken pl: the bridal party repaired to Fale hall where a reception was held supper served. z ———— Yiexican President’s Message. September 16, lent Gonzales read his message to con- which opened tonight, The me atulates the nation upon the almost ous election of General Diaz to the lency and upon the satisfactory relations s at howe, Tho goguo on the cor- Tywenty- and via Galveston, unani ¥ with foreiga ions and pea president expeets o quick consummation of the reciprocity treaty with the United S He will recommend to eongress an extension of the the time of the treaty permitting the crossing of the bonndary by traops pursuing kavagos, The prelimivary bas iplomatic relations with England will immediately be submitted to congress, The executive considers them equitable, A commission will also soon sail for i Japan to develop Mexlcan com mereial iuterests, Subventions to steamship lines are recommended to be amplified, and the cout act with the Alexandria Steamship company extended two years, o —— A New York Fire, New Youk, September 16.—Late to-night, & fire broke out in the drying room of the A. 8, and W, D, Nichols & Co, factory 157 and 159 East 125th stre tover § G, A r 1 . O 1 i 5 lown, — Cholera in Spain M bor 16,—A e by cholera a lays, At Bayas for the past th b Cherta, 1d ——— ugland, A death by cholera is Wercester, to-day, et Tho Black Hills Tin Mines, LDenver Nows, Having made an examination duris LoNDON, Sept. 16, reported in Stourbridge the months of July and August, of the district in Dakota where tin ore has been found, 1 am prepared to say to your read- ora that there can be no doubt now of the existence of tinore in that country, The firat discovery of it was made at the Etta mine, in the Harney District, a fow miles from Custer City, in the Lower Black t1ills, and was made in thoe shaft on that claim at a denth of seventy fect. The mine itself wasopened and worked as amica mine, and large quantivies of mica wero taken from the mine and ship- ped to markets in tho eastern citios, but at that dopth the mica becamo exhausted and tho kidneys in abundatce bogan te make their appearance in the shaft, and men who were at work there, who had formerly worked in the mines in Corn- wall, asserted at once that tin ore in pre- dictions proved correct; samples of the oro were sent to the United States assay office. The return from there was 15 per cent puro tin. Samples were sent to Prof. Bailey, of Cheyente. Ho pronounced it tin, and he also made a visit to the district to examine it for himself, and he is now engaged in colleeting a samplo of the ore to bo placed on exhibition at the Bxposi- tion here in Denver, which ought to con- vinco any one of the fact that the tin thero in abundance. Prof. Riotte, of Now York, eat of the ore and his vordiet is Prof. Phelps, of London, in England, mado an analysis of it, aud pronounced it tin of the finest quality. Prof. Hulst, of Milwaukce, made a test of it, and pronounced it tin, and to et nosrer home with my authorities, Mr. Von Schuliz, of Denver, tested it, and ha pronounced it tiv, and the sam- ple ho had ran very high in that metal, and best cf all, tho samples of tin can be seen hero in Denver that camo from the ore found there. The ore is found in a hard white apar, and in true fissure veins or lodes lyin between wall rocks of a mica slate forma tion. The pressure of the oro is first de- termined on when the tin kidneys first made thelr appearance in the spar, and then the stufl callod mica schist begins to appear, and what is called tin wood also come in. Wherever these indications ap- pear the books on mineralogy tell us we may look for tin ore in quantity and in afew of these veins I speak of, these in- dications are very prominent. Thore aro not only hundreds but thousands of fissure veins of sparin the district that carry mica, and there has been an enormous quantity of mica ship- ped from these mines to markets in the cast and London, In England one mine that I know of has shipped 47,000 pounds of mica withiu three years p brought an average price of §4 pound. but 1ot more than one vein in forty milos shows any indication of tin, and where the prospects for mica are good for noth- ing. 1 differ with a former writer, who stated that this district where the ore is found is sixty miles in length. 1 claim it is not more than thirty miles in length by fifteen in width, and is in Cus- ter and Pennington counties, Dakota, in made a tin, the lower edge of the Black Hills. C —— THESIRANGESTOF FOSSIL A Man Who Thinks He has Found the Petvified H iry A correspondent writing from Chero- kee City, Ark., tothe New York Sun, eays: An extraordinary fossil—tf fossil it is—was picked up by me on the banks of the Spavinaw creek, in Indion terri- tory, about twenty miles from the west lino of Benton county, Arkansas, The through which the Spavinaw s very rough. In many places rocky blufld rise 10 a considerablo height on either side, and sometimes on both sides. Rugged hills that can be seen for miles on either side flank tho stream from its source to its mouth, The rocky nation seems to be of flint and lime The bed of the creek is composed of solid rock in some places and very coarse gravel in others. The water 18 clear aud limpid, always cool and ple ant in the hottest summer weather, The supposed fossil is about the of a walnut, The features of th facc—eyes, nose, mouth, forehe and chin— Bize o human checke, may all be discerned, of course not readily and distinctly by cveryone, but still they are there, somewhat dis torted, it 13 true, for the chin is not in line with the nose, which makes one eye appear lower thap the other, But this may bo accounted for by the fact that the body, before and at the time petrifi- cation begun, was lying on ono side with something under the head, thus raising i above the planc on which the body rest- ed. Thelower jaw is fallen, as is usual- ly the case after death, Water tlowing over it and other action of the clements have defaced it to some extent, but, 1f it does not prove itself to be a genuine fossil of a human head, it is certainly a surprising imitation, and I can not be- lieve that it is a mere freak of nature, The sutures or seams in the skull, with so maiy other points of resemblancs, seom to preciude all idea of its being only a ROBERT RONNEI'S STABLES, Mobt me | The Rich Pablisn Whoss | Is Valuable Horsellesn—S, Animals, Mr. Bonner 18 a very exteaordinary ' says a writer in the Philadelphia Press, 1 have known him aince 1 was a boy. 1 have never scen him ont of tem per, although he has developed immenso amounts of onergy at ditferent periods of our acquaintance, He is notable in soy eral lines of life, partly as the owner of I'he Ledger, partly as the proprictor of the largest and most expensive, and most important scables in the world, and partly as a liboral donor to worthy ~ theo- logical and literary institutions; but in this letter 1 am treating of the ties of Now York editors, more espec a8 they take hold of their physical recre ations and pleasures, Mr. Bonner tolls mo that when ho first began to push the Ledger about 1857 ho was {n very bad health, That was the time, when ho startled the country by {aking pago of the New York Herald for the advertisement of his Ledger, and when twitted as being a sensational ad- vertiser he hired another page in the samo journal on which were printed the advertisements of Harper's Weekly alone. That shrowd dodgoe put the lLed- gor and the Weekly on the ssme plane in the minds of all who thought about it at all, and carried Mr. Bonuner's He was troubled thirty years @ constant headache and ver! troubles of various sorts and kinds, and his physicians directed him to try riding, He did so but the exercise was too vio- lont and ho was induced to purchaso a epan of horses, The very firstday ho went up tho road, then known as Ifarlem lane, he overtook Commodore Vanderbilt, and Col. Harper, who were the only two men in town who owned notably fast horses. They casily passed Bonner whenever they cared to, and he, finding health and rest in the exercise, deter- mined from that time on to own horses that no one covld pass, and the cons quence is that, going on from ono pur- chase to another, beginning with Lantern and Mato, way back in 1859, until t day, when he is the owner absolute Miud and the prospectsve owne of Jay Lye-See, ho has expended, all told, not less than £500,000. In his stables, in addition to are Dexter and threo full and daughter of "lora Temple, the three famous mares, Peerless, Lady Palmer, and Flatbush Maid, and Pocahontas. record, you know, is a term applied only to the rate of specd shown by a horse in a public race for money. As DBonner wever trots his horses for moncy, no horses owned by him or raised by him, no matter how fast they trot nor in the presence of how many people trot, ever , while owned by him,a technical d. Forinstance, if Maud S., within Maud sters, a son reo tho ensuing six weeks, lowers her record a second, 80 far as the record is concerned she will continue to be rated at 2:00f Mr. Bonner expects to have her make a mile in 2:05, and will be disappointed if in time she doesn’t do even botter than that, I asked Mr. Bonner give me an idea of wh stables, in such lan intorcst to the general r laughingly assented, and wi istic modcsty bogan. He said: *In the first place we have Doxter, with what is techically called a record of 2:17}, made on Buffalo park when it was twenty -seven feot eight inches over a mile. [t has sinco been reduced to an exact mile, 8o some of its managers informed me, and s now at least three seconds faster than t was then, Five thousand people saw Lim trot on another slow track (Fashion) in 2:16, without a break or a skip. Then follow Grafton, who was timed at Cleve- land by a lerge number of well known gentlemen in 2:154; Joe Elliott, now trotted a public trial in Mystic park, Boston, in 515 Startle, who four days efore ho was five years old, with Com- modore Dodge, Robert Fletcher, and Simoon Hoggland in the judges’ stand, trotted a previously advertised trial in 2:18}; he afterward repeatedly trotted in 2:19'n Fleetwood park: Pocahontas, the only horse besides Startlo that ever troved on Fleetwood in 2:19; she has since then trotted in 2:17{ on the three- quarters oxercise track on my farn Wellesley Boy, who arecord as al year-old of 2:26}, and who when 7 years old trotted on my track in 2:10}; Peer- less, who carried the great traner and honest driver, the late Hiram Woodrufl, in 2:24} to wagon, the fastest he over drove any horse in public or privatc Molscy, with a record of 2:21} and trial in 2:18]; Music with a record of 2:21} in a fourth mile anda trial in 2:20} on a thireo quarter tra which is not adapt- d to her long stride; John Taylor, with a record on Fleetwood of 2:25; Walton the 4-year-old, by Burger, that trotted if he wouldn't he had in his 0 as would be of ader, He ith character- S a trial last August, several months before 1 bought him at Poughkeepsie, in 2:27); Eric, who has the fastest 3 old re- cord, ) In addition to the above are the following, who have trotted in 2:30 or better: Astoria, full sister to Dexter; Mamie B., by Kdward Kverett, Lady Hughes, by Jupiter; Ada Duroc,by Messenger Duroe; Uncle Sim, old Lady Moscow's grandson; Malice, by Wood ford Mambrino, dam by Alexander’s Abdailah; Billy Button, by Edward Yye- rett, dam, the dam of Lottery; Bruno,by Hamblotonian, and Prince Imperial, Flora Temple's colt, {OUNG MEN, IisAD THIS e Vourate Benr Conpany, of Marshall, Michigan, off d tl ated Lpo O VOLTAIC © and othor ELECTiio Ap- PLIANCES on trinl for thirty to men (young or old) afflicted with aervous debility, lows ot vitality and manhooa, sud all kindrod troubles, Also for rheumatism, neuralgin, Lysis, and many other diseascs, Complete ion to health, vigor and manhood guar ed, No risk incurrad, as thity days is allowed, Write thein atoncs for illis trated pamphlet, f ——— How Aswr Became Rich, A recent writer, spesking of the lato John Jacob Astor, thus speaks of the street. BBy the time y twelve thousand dolla will be worth eighty th nd Which proved te be t course of timo the isla over with Astor landas to such an extont that the whole income from his estate forfifty years could be investod in new hous, ithont buying any land. R Horstord's Acid Phosphate IN SEASICKNESS, S. 8, Pavker, Wellington, “While crossing Lake Erio 1 tome passengers who were seas; gave immediate reliof. e What to Do Remember that other people have chil dren as well as yourself, Bolieve in a child’s statements until you are sure they re incorrect; mistrust breeds estrangement. Retlect that a pert child is an avom- nation; train your children to be respe ful and to hold their tongues in the pres- ence of their superiors. 1f & baby cries warm its feot beforo you dose it. Sing to tho little ones ; tho memory « a nursery song will eting to them through lifo. Attend to them youraself; a go-botween | betwixt mother andchild is liko a middle man in business, who gots the largest share of the profits, Drosa the children sensibly; cover up ther limbs in winter, and study health first and pppearance second., Show the children that you love them; do not expect them to take it on trust, As thoy grow oldor, win their confi- dence; if you do not, somebody else will, Maintain a respectful tone to their father before them; if he is not all you wiah, still mako them respect him; ho is always their father, and disrespect to him is a reflection upon yourself, As tho boys grow up, mako ions of them; then they will companionship elsewhero, Lot tho children make a noiso some- times; their happiness is as important as your nerves. Itospect their little secrets; if they have concealments, worrying them will never make them tell, and patience will probably do thoir worlk. Allow them, as they grown older, to have opintons of their own; make them individuals and not mere echoc Remomber that without physical health mental attainment is worthless; lot them lead f oo, happy lives, whichwill strer en both mind and body. 0., says ave it t k, and compan- not seek Bear in mind that you are largely re- sponsiblo for your children’s inhorited charactor, and have patiencs with faults and failings. Palk hopefully to your children of life and its poesibilities; you have no right to depress thom becauss you have suftored. Teach boys and girls the actual facts of lite as soon as they are old onough to un- derstand them, and give them a senso of responsibility without saddening them. ¥ind out what their special tastes are, and develop them, instead of spendin time, moncy and patienco in forcing them into studies that are repugnant to them, Aslong as it is possible, kiss good night after they are i bed; they do like it 80, and it keeps them very ciose If you have a lost child, remembor that for the one that is zone there is no more to do, for those remaining, every- thing; hide your grief for their sukes. Malko your boys and gizls study phy siology; when they are ill, try and mal them understand why, how the com- plaint arose, and the remedy as far as you know i Tmpress upon them from early infancy that actions have results, and that they cannot escape consequences even by being sorry when they have acted wrongly. As your daughters grow up,teach them at leant the true morits of housckeeping and. cookery; they will thank you for it in later life a great deal moro than for accomplishments, Try and sympathizs with girlish flights of funcy, even if they scom abaurd to you; by 8o doing you will retein your in- fluence over your daughters and not teach them to seek sympathy elsewhcre. Remember that, although they are all your children, each ono has an individu- al character, and that tastes and qual- ities vary indefinitely, Keep up a hieh standard of principle your children will bo your keenest judges i the future. Do be honest with them in small things as well as in great. 1f you cannot tell them what they wish to know, say so rather than deceivo thom. Reprove your children for tale-bear- ing; a child taught to carry reports from the kitchen to the parlor is detestablo. Send the youngsters to bed carly cide upon the proper time and ad to it. Remember that children as m they is oftener than not an infliction, Cultivate them the visitors praiss ch to pleaso you as beo use scparatoly, and not agif you were turning them out by machinery. Ilacourage them to take good king exercise. Young ladies in this country are rarely good walkera, Thoy can dance all night, but are tired out if they walk a mil Girls ought to be able to walk an casily as bo Half the nervous diseases which afilict young ladies would disappear if tho habit of regular excreise was encouraged. A CARD.~To all who are suffering from errors and indiserctlons of youth, nervous w. docay, loss of manhood, <40, 1 wil) ipe that will cure you, FIt) OF CHARGE, This great omody wia discororod by a mislonery 1 South rica, Send selt-addressed envelope to kry, Jo NuAN, Station I Now Yoil, . EDITORIAL TRIBULATIONS, The Volanteer Contributor in of His Various Phases, Some One of the tribulations that often con- front the editor of a paper, wore espec- | tho “‘hateful deserve it, and that their presence | from the I it i3 ha rl graduate whe and ril decla parents, sistors, brothe frionds, aweothe epl Tho aw i ors her oosay v the ed: ud is piqued to sco that 0 t ex dingly oager to got it loca her soul, when she, dressod all in ecy white, read to good | natured audience her loarned esany “The Past— Whero In 1t/ and was applauded o the echo and butied in bon juets and praised and potted and flatter | ed till she was *“actually ra [ never dreamed for a moment that a croes | eyed, sandy-haired editor would bo so 108t to deconcy a8 not to seo at i glance what a literary troasure he might have to print. It would only tak y, from one to three or four columns of epace, [ and would probably not be read by half & dozen people outside of her own family, and the majority of subscribers would wonder what the editor moeant by print ing such rot, “Rot!” Ah, yes, dear girl, it sounds cruel, but when “you are older you will say the same and thank 1d erank” for not printing the stufl, ow bear in mind, it is agreod that the essay is good, tip-top—as an sssay; but wero you to see it in print you would bo so ashamed of yoursolf that the sight of a paper would throw you into convulsions, S— The finest mayonaise dressing for all kinds of salads, cold meats, raw toma- toes, picklod snlmon, cabbage, ete,, is Durkee's Salad Dressing. 1t is bosides, more economical than homo.made. Seven Millions in ot man's Cofters Now York Morniug Jonrual, From a country doctor with an annual L Congres Hin Gencrosity, incomo of $1,000 chiefly in bad dobts, John H, Starin has become the high admiral of the Now York rivers and canals, He oven onco had a post-master- ahip at 820 a year, and thought himself more than fortunate. The sum of £20 paid for his years' clothing, and lott him suflicient wherewith to “‘spark” tho young girls of Sammonaville, in Fulton county, N. Y. How difforont aro his surroundings now Now at his beautiful mansion at Weat Thirty-vighth stroet,furnished with its costly ebony furnituro and its thou sand and ono evidences of the vast wealth 03 its ownor, and then compare it with the humble cottage in which he first s tho light of day sixty yeats ago. That M Starin often recalla his early poverty has been cloarly demonstrated 1n tho lust fow years. Thero are thoso who sny of Mr. Starin, and of all such mien, that their liberality is a lly caleulated adver- tisement; that the freo excursions given to tho newsboys, the police and the vet- erane of the rebellion, serve to advertiso the excursions for which the public pay; that tho frequency with which the pa- pors are called upon to mention Mr. Starin’s name attracts tho public to Glen Island, and that this generosity, like virtue, isits own roward and pays an am- ple intercst upon tho original vestment, If this were all trueit would not be a fault in Mr. Starin. On the contrary, tho world would be very much brighter and better and happier 1 many other men would choose the same mode of advertieing themselves and their bueiness. The advertisement which gives a day’s pleasure to the poor, ragged nows boys, to the much pestered police, and to the veterans who are forgotten and neg- locted by the country they so faithfully served, is an excellent thing to imitate, It it eafo to say however, that Admiral Starin has no such ulterior views in his benevolence. In business he can drive as shrewd a bargain as any or his critics, but out of business he is a sort of all-the- year-round Santa Claus, delighted in giv- ing btcause it ia his nature, and happiest when ho has succeeded in making others tarin was born at the littlo vil- lage of Sammonsville, in Fulton county August 27, 1825, Ho received a classi- cal education, dus to the sovere pinching and sacrifico on the part of his parents. Young Starin determined to become a doctor, and in 1812 ho commenced the study of medicine, but he soon found that his talents wore more practical than professional. Three years later he opened a drug store in Fultonville, and continued it for over thirwenyears, In tho meantime he had, of courso, taken an interest in local politics, and from 1848 to 1862 he was the postmaster at Fultonville, His drug store was the center of the politics and gossip of the county, and when tho ropublican party organized Mr. Starin hecamo one of earlicat and most enthusastic suppor- ters of the new platform. The defeat of Gen. Scott cost him his postmastorship It was in 1806 that Mr, Starin turned his attention to tho freightago business on the Iivfe canal, At firat he hired canal-boats; then bought thom; then built them. 1"rom the canal-boats he took to tho casy step to steamers, and irio canul sailed out into New York harbor and Long l«dand sound. Your by year his fleot of vessels increas- ed in size and importance, At first he carried freight only; then he began to de- velop the passenger traflic, and now he ! has two brauches of transportation under his control. Although Mr, Starin has left Fulton- ville these many years he is by no means forgotten there, nor has he perted with his waterial interest in the county. Twice his fellow-countrymen have eloctod him to congross, and three years ago his name was presented to the republican conven- tion as a candidate for goyernor, With his usunl generosity he gave way for Sec- rotary Folger, and ~ Mr. Starin scomed to be mighty well pleased that ho did, His son-in-law, Mr. Howard Carroll, the well known journalist. with less prescience, ac- cepted the nomination for congressman- ot-large against Gen, Slocum, He was defeated, and did not ask, *‘Is Gen, Slo- cum here!” the day after the electton,? Mr. Starin’s double life as a metropol- itan and a ruralist is evident in _his ocou pation. He isa director of the North e 1 d the buil g 5 enti eak, o ' 4 34 i t spread apidig o dho Duilding was cutively | freak, and yot naturo is full of frcaka. 1| inodo by which ho acquived hin great | ially s country papors s sasoraomng cobecy | Kiver bauk horo and of tho Mohawk mAutuctory, and althongh they had b know thav it is a very common thing for | wealth.” It was neither furs nor teas | by thoso pooplo who are anxions %o holp | Kiver bank also. To pen u portrait of A Ys aud althoug i people in rough countries like thia to pick | that gave him fwenty 1mill 2 U Mr, Starin ono has only to take the stock on hind, the logs buildiug and | PP 000 ERURIIIES at g oty llion ~dollars, | him out by finding something that will | M. Starin ono has only to take Tnchinery 0 S100.000, Tho adjvoumn st | Jus speoimens in tho forms cf| When he arrived in Now York it con-|%do to fill up his poper,” says the Hoo. | 12481 picture of Brother Jouathan, yrz mg, 100 .;Iwflp,?l,, t, accupied by Calvert l\n;mu« sorts of stone, but | ]',Av\'u never | tained but twenty-five thousand inhabi- sier. These people ull Ynnufi well. but |#e the blonde hair and chin tuft and e e isnufuctory, wis als | before secn anything in the shape of a tante: In 1809, whon ho had begun to | they Iabor under a wisconception of the | Wake the body a trifle shurtor, and thore wamied, | The ulling wally enisho the il bew it any rosomblance to s human | havo monoy to invest, tho city had bo- |editor's nods, ad. aro e offonded | 18 & capital portraitof the ex-congreesman, ) Tho rouf of A i i e SRR TR gun to double in population and hud ad- | when they find that the elipping they ~— d, but tho theatro o, | Puried in theloose dirt on the bank | vanced rearly a milo up the island. As. | tock out o ; L RRING ey L the 5 of the creek, and onlya fow feet fr o ! took out of a patent-medicine uwlmans Harvestng Potatoes, 2 B g g o o e d. AGR A88E (FOR [ KarceAw S0 (‘f'“’f‘ growth,and bought | or some other * publication, and kindly| Farmors dislike harvosting potatoos as ki ho ve oy whien it attractod my |all th lands and lots just beyond tho carriod o th voite local paper for | the oporation calls for herd work, A Plouro-Fneumonia in Hogs, showing tho outlines of a human face, | littls aneodote will show th. icdon e | oA boppear, Tbis hard to|stooping posture i pequired for pulling 5 Sol r 16,~The slthough it lay somo distanco feom e, | this proceeding. Ho nld 8 ot i the | o rice ackle that the editor is alwayn | tho vines romoving tho aarth from th wi 1 eve nt N persons ent s % REGURAGIRR. < 508 A # 1ot in tho fubly to wield the shears, oven when |tubers, and for picking them up, It is AR 1 s o | 9oRe. Nuk "'”‘“”"W“.’,“”(,‘-Y (Jiaorant | vioaity of wall atroet, 00, for cight | his pen f PR A Rt e mn.,m\.u'.;, R el e O o itk ¢ of th icce that 16t bo's por| D omewiiat under its valug, Tho pur- | matter should be printed in his_shoets. | putting them into the collar, - Almost all ( ¢ |sil buman head, I shall not be sstistiod | cemecd to oo ) re signed, | as well ag more competent to decide the work connected with harvesting other f i- | hos been investigated by scientifioh. ¢ Why. M A it hargain, |the freshuess of the article and whether | field crops 18 now done by the ad of i i I have writton more than once £ will b worth said ho “*‘this lot it has ever appoared in the columns of | horses snd machinery, On this account in: (HY B ® (i mer NI i ek and dollare,” | the journal over which ho presides, | farmers dislike to hurvest potatoea worss 3 U Jecived no auswer, and ‘now hopo ,‘f,:‘. { {1 ool M. Astor, *hut, Thosd thinws aro provoking, yot they aro | than they did when wost other crops H ¢ ? ope that now you shall e will do withimore easily dieposed of th > the | were gathered by hand, A ! 3 hog cholurn, but something { through the medium ¢ S ey et 3 & W y | than are the | were gathered by hand, A number of g coflug Ll buy cighty lots above Canallcome in,” A budding poet may be kindly ) potatoes, some of which place the tubers (8 or baak 0ts. Several of the them y aoellent p K in eoil that isfren from atones and hard W'mps of earth, Where on- | those oviat they are likely to be eollected with the potatoes. 1f farmers raised potatoes on as extondcd o scalo as they do wheat aad other gra ‘'ns, machines for thes wight be 88 common as i solf binders, Few farme raise moro than a few acres potatoes, and whero this is the ca is n nowical 1o purcitete & ma chwe for digging them. A good potato. [digger oporated by hovses might bo used | for cuttin by tho owner on a large namber of farma, |t a prico could be agreed wpon for doing tho work. It s very likely, howsver, that a difliculty would arise in regard to this matter, A uniform price is charged ¢ and binding grain, and for thrashing it out. It is cut at a certain price per acro, and a charge of a certain number of cents per bushel is made for for thrashing. It costs much more to dig the potatoes in 010 field than another, owing to the kind of potatoes raised, the mothod of planting ana _cultivating, the charactor of the soil, and the amount of Vital Questions 1! Of any school, what 18 tho best 71 in the world for quieting and allaying all irritation of the nerves, and curing all forms of norvous complaints, giving nate ural, childlike refreshing sleep always! oy will tell you unhesitatingly Hopy CHAPTFR 1, _ Askany or all of the most eminent phy siciana: “‘What is the best and only remedy that can bo rolisd on to cure all diseases of the kidneys and urinary organs; such as Bright’s disease, diabstes retention,or inability to retain urine, and all the dis- onse and silments peculiar to Women”— “‘And they will tell you explicitly and ompNatically “*BucAn 770 Ask the same physicians *‘What is the most relialde and aarest curo for all liver diseases or dyspepsin; constipation, indigestion, billiousness, malatia, fever, ague, Ao.,"and they wilf teil you: Wendenke! or Dandelion 111" Hence, when these remedios are others cually valuable And o dod combined with Hop Rittors, such a wone woeds and graes that will intorfere with digging, For these reasons it will be difficult to establish a uniform price per acro for harvesting a crop of potato Tho same difliculty willarise in fixing a prico for digging thom by the bushel. The jpotato-digger could, however, be operated for a cortain sum por day. Farmers who allow woeds and grass to grow among their potato-vines will find tho digging of the tubers to be hard work. 1f the ground is quite clear of weods and grass, however, the work will bo comparatively easy. Potatoes should bo harvested whon the ground is quite dry. If it is not it will bo heayy to move, and it will bo likely to stick to tho im ploment employed in digging, 1t will also adhere to the potatoes, give thom o bid appearance, and cause them to rot after they aro harvested. 1f potatoes on out of soil that is quite damp it will bo necessary to allow them to re- main on the eurfaco of tho ground for sovoral hours to becomo tolerably dry. This oxposuro to tho sun greatly injures the eating qualities of the potatoes. lix- it for aoveral days complotely ruing them for tho table, ~ If tho soil isdry ana comparativo light, the hand hoo is a8 good an instrumont as any for digging potatoes. It should be free from rust and tolerably sharp. 1t is botter to com menco d; 2 at theside of the ill and to work under the tubers than to apply the hoo at tho top. The work will be quite as easy, and fewer potatoes will be cut. The pronged hoe is better than the common hoo for digging potatoes that grow in ground vhat containsconsiderablo turf. A cloan, smooth shovel can bo usod a limited time in digging potatoes to ex- collent advantage. It is hard work, how ever, to use it long at a time. In digging potatocs with a shovel, the dirt and tubers should be thrown to u considerablo distanco on one side, when the latter will lie on tho surface of tho ground quite freo from dirt. 1f potatoes are planted in drills, most of thom will bo thrown out whero they can be seen by tho use of a light plow It is best to sort potatoes at the time when they are picked up, All the very small cnes well as those that aro seabby, partially rotten, or cut,should boe fed to stock, and the solectod ones placed in tho cellar, Potatoes are desira- ble for feeding to stock before corn be- comes ripo enough to gather. To derive the most benefit from them, they should be cooked and fed in connection with bran or meal. 1t is not desirable to dig late varioties of potatoes till the vines exhibit the appearance of ripencss and the weather is quito cool. They keop better in the ground than in the cellar, e jon Universello do I'art Cul dertul ar orious curative powder o doveloped, which i1 #0 variod in fta_oporations that o disoase ot il Helth can possiblo exist or resist its powor, and yet it is Harn i or smale the most tiail woman, weakest invae child to use CHAPTRR 11, “Pationta - Almost dead or nearly dying” or years, and given up by physicians, of Bright's and other kidney discases, liver complair sovere coughs, called consumption, have been cured. From ageny of neuralgia, nervousness, wakefulness, and various diseases pecu- liar to women, Pooplodrawn ot of shape from exerveiatine pangs of rheumatism, inflamatory and chrouie, of sufforing Erysipelas and, in fact, ost all diseas heen cured by P irall” psia, Indigestion op Bitters, preot of which whborhood in the known can | Vorld None gentiine without a_ buneh of green Hopa on' tue whits Inbel Doisonous sttt With Hop” or “ops” | DR, HURHE:SE!.EQ'{‘R!G BEL 1en 1t ieothivity v Dody, A ean bo Tockiariged 1 a i ¥ tho paiont. Winter is coming, the geason of tho year for aches and pafos. o view of this fa y buy one of . Horne's Fleotrio Felts By so colng yeu will avold Rheumatism, Kidney Trcubles and other ills that flosh i heieto, Do not delay, but eall office and examiue telts, No. 1423 Douglas 0. F ¢ ', 1110 Farzam St., Owal dors 1) B, Amelia - Burmoughs 1617 Dodga ®t, - Omaha. DOCTOR WHITTIER 617 8t. Charles 81, §t, Lounis, Mo. o, Neavous, B I St Louis, 1C. 0. D. biiity. Montal and nd other Affece Wity Ao o) Nervous Prostration. Physical Weakness , Mt c ost honors to An gos the most ef! s stim appotite and to keop tho d od order, Ak for the ger wifactured only by Dr. J. G, ons, and boware of imitations, S— Alliunde Joe. 1, Siegert Tustiee 10 court, ing sting Srowe, Veryos bradloy, of the Uni wnys of the newspaper dispatch announ his intention to resign: It Qs inte nows, and the first 1 have heard of it.” TEST YOUR BAKING POWDER T0-DAY. optember 16, d States Suy sadvortived as absolutely puro ALN ADMMONIA. THE TEST: Placa n ean top down o 4 Lot stose until heated, then FomOve Ui covir an mell. A eho st whl Bob be 1 LU0 L0 oLt T prosenco of iimonia, PERKECT MADE. THE MO5T DOES NOT CONTAIN AMMONIA I8 HEALTUFULNESS 108 NEVER BEEN QUESTI In A million homes for n quarter of o century it bas stoud the consumors’ reliablo t THE TEST OF Ti{E OVEN. PRICE BAKING POWDER CO., HAKERS OF Dr., Price's Special Flavoring Extracts, Dr. Price’s Lupulin Yeast Gems Yor Light, Healthy Tiread, The Tust Dry Hop Youst | World, FOR SALE BY GRUCERS. CHICACO. - 1, Louls. rong eat, most delielous and uaturs | luror knows, aud DreRRERER Aud Undisputsd in e BROAD CLAIM of beingtne VERY BEST OPERATING, QUICKEST SELLING AND MOST PERFRCT COOKTNG S1072 Ever oflered to the publicy tions of Throat, Skin or B old Sores and Ul rallelod Discases Arising frum (ndiscretion, Excess, Exposure or Indulgonce, vhich produce soro of th Toltbwing. vcety ‘of alght ive b ysical decay, Ton to the i oy Soning, suitation ot of questions. 1ren Guarantee Mo i v to or by wnll {r A Positive Wri a dn all curablo o mphlots, glish or ribing above discascs, in MARRIAGE CUIDE! £t bindlng Thi3 bool tro want ta Health, Be o prozoied by Its advic, | Wik, o MaL1"e® BAKER'S Braakfast Cocoa. Warianted absolutely pur? “ocoa, from which the cxcess o s boen removed. 1t has thyas A miged owroot or Bugar, © cconombs rishing, d, and alids a0 Ith. 2imes the stren ably adapted f well as for persons in Sold ny Girocers ovorywhers, . BAKER & C0.. Dorchester, fass Health is Wealth ' ryoun ¢ or' tobhacco, Mental deprossion, Softeuing of the brain, resulting n_insen'ty and e 0 misery, th, Premature Old sge, Earonoss, loss avoluntary Losses and Sper oxertiontaf the brain, self- abuse oF over indulgenco. \ box, containg one wmonth's teatwent. §1.00» box,or six hottles for 80,00, scnt | 1 repaid on receipt of price. WE GUARANTEE SIX BOXES To curo suy With each_order received by ug {or six Dottics, sccomplit had with 85 00, wo will tho purchiw Four writlen guarauteo to refuud the mcncy If the treatmentdoea nog effec anteed issued only JOHN C: W 2 " £62 Madinon Kt. nsed by the Drawn at Havana, to 14 D, TICKETS, €2.00, + o Soct't 1o manipnlation, Lot e Ly th partivsin intorest. 1t I tho fairest thing i th wature of chance in exlstence, Forluformation and particulars apply ¢ 8! iuo ,Gon. Agents, 1212 Broaaway, N Y. it E. KAUB & CO., 4172Waluut sircet, St. Louls', Mow or Frauk Lobraio, L D, 20 Wyaad:tte, Kau. W 2mso & wi

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