Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, March 2, 1891, Page 6

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, MARCIH 2, 1801 1 ook w [ lish beyond o ¢ s FUR, WOOL, HIDES, LLOW, bk ishes beyand, 4 gt OMAHA 00L, HIDES, TALLOW, s > vention ger ceredited to Fulton, Goo, Oberno & 0o, | J. 8. Buith & o, | b S o Who i 2" | AR for ol vrops.” Ty Wi | o il b Bearly. gratefot t che kind | 1 ne hich ok whilon jist before ths DIRECTORY. 8AD HOME INFLUEN ) 1 tnco | witl ! d " BILLIARDS BICYCLES "“"}l’,\;\\" il PRt Victime Are Able o Take Care ithent t ‘ ! . Q ois, and 4 o | TheBrunsvick.Balko | A, H, Porrigo & Oo m All Makes of Themselyves They Sthouid Not i i : i i i " ¥ i " e ; i, ! —— Acwo Tron and Wiro| Wilson & Drake, | N bkl ) H . S b ¢ | Luvention, nnd ment ¢ | BOOK BINDERS & STATIONERS, Works, S W . AN o strools oy of Tl Inex L RE | Lo HGlK o uitniey's iden, A4 L 10th LITHOGRAPHING dry fora ol sec Hw\‘ ¥, Hel l\\“‘ Eirduh wnn Bros, & Heintao, Printing Co. | Ka corn, 7l r wage and | It is that in muny localitios of the | CO-OPERATIVE HOUSEKEEPING , b electrotypers, blank tioRPAR AL T | 00 bushels soed I i west have been destroyed by cold ey fiank nocee | el by the ly fro me | hent and drouth, and that those | 1618 a Fatlure use it Makes 1die : I'he yield o ot | which pas ) the ordeal, have Women of douscewives was s follow Knttir corn, | been shy be 81 but the eyeles of frait | The sixty h ind o half tons: ite milo maize, | bear may soon ocear, and farmers | BOOT! AND SHOBS. LIQUORS. who essayed arative hou Oharles A, Ooe & Oo., | Kirkendall, Jone TR 0o 1 Willinn ! .“\““wv‘. \\H I ind o ‘"hv',‘ .\‘\Wd v‘s‘ udtive o th "f‘," | Seasitidiakd odl tiialw onle Manutacturers and Jobe | Wholesilo Manuf Meroh W 1 ety that ripened much seed Joch I be growin at night st trog E Nealtios w ' i o 1 o v A9 1 1418 ne iy ahs ay abot whilo you sleep. Iiven if the farmer | cause the unreg rate part of socic lias fruit tr which bloom abundantly, | toindulge in j he main ding maize will usually they may not he loaded at harvest tini wtod by 1yield peracre, ns | unloss the hees have carried the ferti THol almost sure to bo hur wacer from flower to Dower. Crops Frank Dellone & Co,, one i dead , and in and grass, such s corn, wheat Al ellhe Al another pre y lder ve, barley, timothy andbluegrass, cipnted, 'Then ther | .. BOXES BUTCHERS. | L Kirscht & Oo., d much m it e 1 e the: seliiy Bl Blosm ol Slovers, el fie) I G bt lH sy 5 f“' }“" z “‘l]”‘i it ‘If‘”‘ “,' butin seasons of drouth, | and of many vege s dependent | them, ‘The billof fare, too, is uniform T Dongtvy | iy S led by chinch bugs, [ have | upon insects, chiofl o perforn | yot indivi Phere ave roast heel | o od ¢ s | ¢ amon rule at th ) cen the co on miltet and Hungarian | this work for them Spring he-best | qay when the whole v families 10 torehe 5 Bl il #oiio good Might " ! when the later-ripening | time to purchase bees, and the coming | st ent roast beel, Roast ehicken nd em | sult he u. But theold | Gertian mi tally: destroyeds | one they can undoubledly be houglt woll il R nal is porwitted to [ and 1 think, 1 o, the best crops | cheaply., 18 little loss has oveurred, ox- | poist ehickor G tyouth. | throngha series of ye 4 ' ptby starvation, becuuse the sonson | |'~‘1l_~;,,‘,“,'“ NUTORKBE L LI Yo varse Oolumbus Bugey (. s A Whatever of n Qepravity * the by sow ing the common Hungs has been so mild, The colonies to bo | girange that the nttompt should fail it d may be in the young vietimmay be th We have tried cow soja bea chosen should have the hives boiling | 1o it el on co-operative housekec { wickedness that | lupins, vete trl millet | over with bees, and contain ugh i culprit back to | and Japan maiz wnone of these | stores to lust until flowers bloom, v fimo to | have wiven o paying o The only in propor- 5 Bve no evil be done dur- [ other for plant the onld recom= . The stalhon. W duys, when, nolens volens, all must eat failure is of no moment A Oharles R, Loe, ke the attempt was notin the line of S ARDET A Haniwooil umbor, w co-operative hoisekeening at all. [t Rkl ASICA R carpets raue me, and that discipline cannot | ing the term of confinement, inthe way [ mend for teial is zeosinte. Thi it | Tnselecting n stallion says an L # 1 Omaba Carpet Co, lmoro & Rubl, | _ eth and o trictor severe, At the samic tetion in erime, there are serious | resem 1 the stalks o change, first look at his| if they BV U A SRS RS Rl FaiTe Carpets fact to- | Q ; SH Lelldves to G veiv likgei| b ties contingent upon th und very loaly, From twelve (o fity | notup to the standard don't look any | My cftios vuits fugd, and Tttt o e | Zungs, urtatngoodae ; ’ ady & Gray extont, the convict can bo so dealt with | ciation anda DL SHe nelsone | Stalks grow from cush saed, The pinnte | fatthier 5 that hotsa, for v horsa witiis | SOUTHOT Inoorsaiohue, Bl of garoiny it Hin FB Pt D R R e Bbliead AL | ‘avays AdSTIRibag g won [ do ot reach maturity in our seasons, | out legs is no hor The legsshould | {1, S HTIAR U8 bhre PLE bR D the sentence is long enough to furnish | suspicion, may becom ininted with | butcontinue to grow until hurvested or | be lurze, llut, bany, freo from Hosh ahd | puteh, Another veason of failure is ap CIGARS. time for it With him reform and labor | de e criminals while confined in [ killed by frost. It stands drouth well. | puffsof any kind, not too straight at the conl e expectatio W the b v ) RRY TIONS, O T T e U | Sl e it whiioh shudl vindle | W eut tho stilics whon the pastures bo- | pasterns nor yot sel toofar buck—a fauly | rrentcla e expecuuion thut Lhe b |~ Weat & Eritsoh UAADHEIREASING Losiy) (IR fumily, the sehookor good society should | eate him, A few months after his liber- [ gin to fail in the fall and feed green. | with somo draft horses. A good flat f 150007 kivate family mue betow the | Manutacturces ane cie 0. A. Stonchill, | I, Oberfelder & Oo. have done for him must be supplicd by [ ation, in want and privition, he may be | The cattle eat the entive plant,stallc and | toot, with the ability to Nift itup and | G yfird of the millionaive's has its | JoWbersofleatiobaccos. | ATy bR Impor W1 Jouvers fa the cfforts made for his reform in | tempted by these acquaintances to the | leaves, without waste. The weight of | ple aight forward the proper dis- | LB G R eken davs: and th 1011 Farnam stroot. | Cloaks, Be | o, Ml prison. Warden Brush has not weitten | commission of crime, Even without | the green evop per acre was scventeen | tance GBI SRR G It e i (B A ) exhaustively on this subject, but he is [ such possibilities it is an injustice to | tonsin 1888, thirty-one and three-fourths ) ll~h«-\w: be, lei straight | g W duys, That an experiment of JOAL, COKE, ETO. e R O working on the right linc at [ any innocent man or woman, who | tonsin 188, twenty-three tons in jand y coupled. Next, the head. WG ARSI Rl eHa RARIRTE . T " R Sine Sing, and in aceord [ may be committed to jail through | 1800, or 4 e of twonty-four tons | Requisit vad hetween the eyos Al i H e ea At aha and | Ooutant & Squires, | MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS, ETO with Superintendent Brockway of | error, to be known by the other | per ac ¢ yewr. Cut and shocked | ¢ , mild eye, not showir ; sat natural, However, inte e (o, Unrdand eoft coal ship ’ e Wit n . thoy mothods . (of|| inintes e FROIT i veur vu yield of four and [ white; jaw thin. ‘10 the horse be full ;‘_I““ AL e S L rih ; it S Mox Meyer & Bro, Go. | A, Hospe, Jr, reformatory treatment. Both men be- | this country, and yet only seven hundredths tons of dry fodder per | between the eyes, head sloping back ward 3 Vs Uil S L Ougsh | S b M Cg Jowelors e in | plan ! lieve that the supply of conviets comes | portionof the erfminal o acl ced from such immature |and rrow poll, that horse has no in- | wasical Inatruments 4 n positively bad home life, | fined. Crime is ! ly | material, of course, is not equal, pound | tell ce, and will breed that way. t0o late to undo aerime | than population. T I he | forpound, to thatfrom the more mature rs should be larg G o e t bnsis | presentsystem. Then why n o a | com or sorghums but the whole crop is | back: wnp: long Bips, ot pinelied after one has become a coaviet, The be 7" 1t may cost someihi , | eaten,w with botheorn and sovghum | up in ke fist doubled o yotel, or the apartment ho o i 10th and Douglas sts 5 o) prison wardens of the day ave beliovers [ b cheaper to pay the isalways wiste. What the rela- | Wide i | Ll N nEntmarLoy A i A. Booth Packing Co., I tias aOttRe e anat e nin o el e ihan nEthS Convil tive value of the three is has not been |latch, Neklong and enlar L e R e L % Howell & Co a G, ters, sl and cunnod forts, and the pre flort for the offec f1 ninal. determined, but I believe that zeosinte | point »itis st on th TAGEENE e i S G bR I BT (v U BEa N o bl tual restoration of discharged eviminals is worthy of a trial onu small seale, If the horse posseses the necessir) must do thair sharo of tho ‘work in ke 3 118, Uth strooh it ens 10 socicly s in keeping with the rveform The > of Rip Van Wink \ Hits e dividual merit, his breeding may IR UmEHeIToma S CIsATN ; s —_— fort within tho prison. walls, and, in | a¥akening from i imber could not f heep Brceding looked up. But though the horse had a [ (& th VA AOTE ey ; ? sroot. [ JAPER IR, : o reater than the consumptive:'s The sheep breeder has reached a | podigreea mile long, don’t oreed to hi R bitod o fact, s its necessury compleme Theve B TR0l e By R s e Gona DR g M fumilies can not be united and sys is l}H‘t point, howover, u\n .\{...}n too I g ”' T bl e R he has ivdividual merit. tized s0 s to secure n very ad Carpenter Paper Co., much bas not vet been said. and that is, A pretty pietun sunny-haired child Itk Ll il ) = Anco over the present slite o 2158, 13th o 4 Gariv i BRI 10 UOLVTHB CifFIRt i Uiilon; ShAUSTO || lrin i Newroliaals At Toot with Sal 8 d . ot ‘Au’»’{lu \\‘”‘;‘H‘ l]]" y.“‘,“‘,f", el .‘“’YMHI\““EA,.,,' ATAveL i '_l_ 10 ] : e lanavey Aligldsie ikt man, whatever his offe ought over | vation Oil \[Z6s thithe has tha: ideal llk: ina s, croup, asthma, deafness and rheun rimentsof such chars writing papen, card pa PARM MATTERS, that hisaimin the futire will be to pre- | s tive to the t Mount & Griffin, . B. Havens & Co., yor Louis Bradford, ( } L 1511 Donglas ste ingr to organize ind divide the domestic labor of several families is another o+ & Bl 3 T thing. w the families in which house ,,,n,",n\ t & Blum, P, H. Mehoney & Co. wives can ufford 1o be o v 1 Ha -Coal ft in o purely omamental pe croanod nut aithraclts, omces 813 N, tith and cor OYSTERS. 1o be discharged from restraint escept upon reasonable evidence thathe ismor Iy, intellectually and physically eapa- Crops. of carning an_ honest” livelihood serve that ideal, he has before him some FOR THR SPRINGS reason shows in favor of such 28 1ehstrasy | 32 Farnam street, o o thres | SetiOUS estion’ for consideration. Up In neaelyevers depetment of i : e 'orn planted in rows, three o "eo ot time his breeding s bee or Of Arkansas and ALl Points South, rts the anization and divis 3 i) Ll Hero the grent lotkago in socioty i | und o hilf feot aput, with tho Jormals | temavement nore it il bato mitos | Talca the Wabnsh.the best and quick- k has been successfully cavrs | . Ribbel & found. ‘Wo_ are continually restoring | dropped eight o twelve inches apart in | tain o given standard, Not a fo | estroute, Only 88 hours tothe Hot | With the results of far greater o CEMENT AND LIME. | pentersin men o socioty whose only fitness 10 { tho row, will fuiish u large amount of | had to face these questions, for in Springs, 40 to New Orleans, 52 to Jack- | thanotherwise possible. = One fuo enter it is the fact. that they"have faith: | chgice fecd, says the Kunsas Farmer. | flocks the ideal sheep doos not possess & | sonville, 63 to Tampa, with correspond- | build houses, another sell ¢ i fully served outa eriminal sentenc o advantages of this closor planting | yery great arvayof fine polnte Tt time 1o Wi Sotnta. south: PR | other sell Hardware, anothier pave tho . : whoso habits and purposes of lifo are many. A much larger yield ean be | 7l Sheep breeding thereis but one way | clining chairand Pullman buffe sleep- | Strects and so on, but the division dgos | €1 ¥irnan sr O Rossoice Oou SN BB BantiRe Cor precisely what they were bofore the producod ‘than when planited 1o tho 0rdis | of keegin the Ldoal shoop, and. Lt by | Lng onrson all teriner P~ | not stop there. In building a house, for N Forelgn, California 1 frotte of al rost and conviction. The reform ¢ nary way. On the college farm in 1889 lng toimprove it, Round trip tickets now on sale at | example, one set of men will do the dig- | m——eeeeeeeee——r el fiibransi JiL lie mrlionaee Mou plocneiy corit planted in the ordinary way gave o .0 oithor improving or thoy | grestly reduted rites. For tickots nd | £ing, another lay tho foundutions, CORNIC B RO o et Johnson Bros, HTHORAR D these persons, and yet we have not pro- | yield of fifty-seven bushels’ of corn and | are deteriorating. And theret full information eall at the Wabash [ hird lay the = brickwerk, a fourth Robort P nent retivement from society, But ev TS AL b TS R 1 - ixth the Manufactur | Egenlay ireD 1 ionk b yield of nen ce and @ are notas heavyas we wish, ! write : N, Agent plastoring, aelxth the aling;iind 80 ) . f s if the reform treatment should v while thickiy-planted corn, of the [ other ways of increasing its weight f22 gen on. ults are w known to b IRt oA wen | nay A Lroat ciety as decent men, and the in- w & § vided any legal means for their pern wd s half tons of fodder per aeres | mate ways of doing this. 1f ticket office, 1502 Far do the carpenter Kk, a fifth the | EagleCornice Works F. Ruempin orter Bros, 0o, i ized Iron i S J largze proportion of our conviets (0 £0- | sume variety, guve seventy-thre> bushels | than by~ the addition of dirt and Hestaurant Dialect. better ot only heenuse ono man may | b e SOV i . An- 1 of corn andand three tons of fodder per | groase, Let the weight be incereased The chief hash-slinger ina Salt Lake vturally be bette ¢ tering and ge9¢ corrigiblo criminals should be logullyll aere, a totall yield “of five. and Byndding o the longth of the swple. | short-order house fairly knocked out a | 8Rother at stone wor cause il DRY GOODS. kept in permanent yestraint, the evimi | half’ tons per” acre. These figures | This not only adds to the weight, but [ patron, saysthe Trivuie. A young dry abilities are eq s man who | e 8 xus and D nuloine e ilopbocxtenmiaiod, SL 2 st g inerease from the thick | qlso inereases the intrinsic value of the | oods clork sut down opposité him und [ Rives all his attention to enpenteving | M. B Smith & Oo., | Kilpatrick-Koch Dry olementary conditions ‘of criminal 1ife | pranting, and the inevense in quality | wool. When our sheep as | ordered a chicken pate and . glass of 1en to do hetter work thun if he | pry gooas, furnishing Goods 0o, £3181 In modasn pociely 18 sl DLovEEY | from the planting was much - | we would wish, we should pay attention Nury singer left,” suid the its his ctforts up among hatf a dozen gouds, notion effort to climinate them, and the only | rthan the gain in yiell. The leaves | tothe rotundity, comy or. **Muko it bacon thon dthe es. Itis likely that the failure to | cor. 11t and Howara sts resultof our best_lubovs will be to con- f und cars form the valuable part of corn | and - early maturity, When we reach | clerkc, “Hollercost rooster and drive the | 4Pl this sune” division of lubor to e fine eriminal conduct within closer lim- | fojder. Close plantivg reduces the size | our ideals, we oftén find them imper- | c lled the 1o the cook. | household aff s ann inheritance from ELECTRICAL SUPPLIES. its. Theunion of punishment and re- o atalk Che increasing the pro- | foet h S SRR e Jtion when ~ form in handling the criminal is the ou stion of leaves and ears found in the The best principles of breeding must | green-looking lad who had just s made o Wolf Electrical Oo. growth of an intellige dy of the | fodder. Our feeding experimentsshow | boarranged for ench loeality accoraing | down. “I want ad Fradt ope 2 but for the com- | tilustaten catalogue prison problem, and it & tho | that from 40 to 00 per cont of the corn | 1o the anvironments and thoobject of | onions.” wis the r Rl muni e pe ive in clow Omaha Rubber 05 treatment of prisoners so thatthey shall | fodder made in the wual way is uncaten, | tho bieeder, whether he is breeding for | tosellin’ and fr 57 “Comin® | tapos the parit the ¢ SR A s o fan facts , g0 out of prison s true men thit we aro | while only from s to23 per cont is o mutton, wool ora stud flock. Thesolec- | up? yvelled the cook. “What doyou | cates that the co-onerative p= SHINBE 570 Uathgbut 5’1;‘”" glf"-” ‘v“ ‘l\h ';'N \m[m- "\',A1~» L for ‘r«‘- d Inpl e TR T TPV RS C rn Titons e L G et il Tt | T ,‘,.,,mw_” A ____FARM MACHINERY, BTC - o bapads B IR0 O SN GLIArEAT Y Vhien good 1 nbe had for [ Side man. “Corn beef hash and a cup | grat anenhancement s I Qorf & T, G. Northv statosmen,? suld ho, “ttuke he leafy, slender “stalked variety cuse for breedir ‘hoo . Tho | smashup and killan Arab,” he roared, | e family living in houses costing [the prison manag« t]in earne ne time select a late maturing sort, man who, in the selection of avam, con- | and taking an ovder for rand eggs | aplece. p of ten housewive 8 duo sense of the vast dungers thub con ] overy week’s growth incroases the siders no) jon but of the fivst cost, [ he howled out, “Set a guinea on a pin | itisvertin theiv capncities for different fron s from tig ationgihSond moeniol it eun be secured, will never make much of a mark as a | cushion” Thena man ordered enkes | iinds of housework will vary as one sta FLOUR combination of eriminalc the prob- drouth better than the early kinds. | shoop 5 and a glass of hot water, and the youth | differeth from another, Some will b = = lems that now perplex and vex us will | A varieiy called Mosby's Prolifie has | "Ny farmers think they should not | shouted for “a Turkisn bath and a’stack | betier — cooks — than seamstres Broken Bow Roller R. T. Davis Mill Co, be nearer their solution been found espe v valu ¢ 1 e o Al : ¢ purchise agood ram unless the of whites.” The Heard on the Sideman [ others will — have SAS RS DS, BT kol iR gd oo olloecitsm SElR Rt RS hichy i, ' it for, | Hhen it wagost i o oar bim | i1, ok o ‘ : o ROOIR BINRS B0, 2 jod b gav yiela o U bushels pe as hus been pointed ouf there is howl, “Slide t with son whae b some il )! { ¥ ! % iahrc & () 1 from arduous toil, but of incorporating | smallcars, In 1800, thickly pl R e R e et o [Tl e e ey 2 L N‘; A, Disrow & Co., | Bo withisuoh goyornmont mane system | fodder, g gave three and & half tons of | Bred rams on common ewes than on high | stuff on the sidc style. The division can be pursued 3 Oskamp, doors e wnd | caleulated to wor rinals at least | corn and fodder per rideowes A koodramwill nddmore s . further; but the illustration indic: ik . eady 1o rales Idings Bra !](.unvltl gree u(ll a0 A common varietics planted in the us: 0 the offspring of ewes shearing four Ih-[\\’m\!.vvvlw avly Risers: oestlittle | one of the gains from intelli faptatoal i ot andtlsaniats voy Press. Such in effeet ave the in- | way did not yield onehalf as much | jounds than he Q0 to the lumbs | Pills fordyspepsia, sour stomach. bad breath. | organization and division of the labor | cB Bk, - Mamgor | 120712158 20t siroot cEr e tentions of the Fussett law enacted in | To’make the best fodder corn must bo | b l';’.,",‘.h.f"flvh' \l:w,:‘.m(\lf A - of, sny. ton households. It is cloar, too, - SYRUPS, 1889 by the orke. It | eut when green, Probably the greatest iano 5 i A o No Frills in \1":" 4 that such a combination should dev FURNITURE AND CARPETS, T ostprisonlegls: | amount of feed can bo secured by cutting LR NG DRacmiby LR b This story is_being told in theGerman | other mavked intages, A la poree * . arrell & Comy ion that 1 st | Al e | | s L RO L o b Il BOUE Gubs of New York: When Buron von | part of its supplies could b bought nt & tons Fur-| Ohas. Shiverick & 0o | ¢\ 110aai0 man to the roformation of impr ed erim- | Repeated experiments haveshown us | thoro is danger of doing more harm than | Stidletr-Leipe, Brewer Ehret's som-in- | wholesule, When ntative experi- it ? i 1 Byrup inals, The law assumes that the nature | that v in this ¥ o e Tt LN T o in a | law, amivedat the Hoboken pier of the | ments had demonsteated the practicabil- | Furntorean« conviet differs from that of a di wraln of from 2510 83 | fretances where twoor more rams aro | Novth Germn Lloyd steamship com- | of the plan, agreat economy could be | 1181 Faruam s 1201210 Farnam St nest citizen not only in degree, but in | per cont: Even when the stalks are e ther WiTL Do 1o beowt, | pany recently he was met by Captuin | seeured by wholishing the kitchen part W and quality Wer former | until the husks and leaves ave drying | even when none of them could be called | Hamelman, formerly of the steamer | of cach dwelling house, and grouping furnished with the same moral equip | up, thereis a loss of from 10to 127 pe indifferent. An uneven flock of good Wer 1d now in charge of the com- | the individual home about a central ment as the latter, he might have often 1t in yield of corn over that leftstand- | gieepis worth more than an even flock | PARY S PRers: g kitchon, staroroom, collar and ‘laundry. | tcbneider & Loomis, |J. T. Bobinson Notion | “Gongolidated G a8 well remained ut liberly: but ho is in- [ fe. O the other hand the longer corn [ of por ones, And by dlways brocaing | , What is your nume?”? asked the cap- | Of courso the difficulty would e, firstin | rovers and tmoriers of | e gyt Compa: tellectually deficient, and henee his o f re cutting the greater the 10ss | e host et 10 the hest owes, in i very | tiin of the noble stranger, prepuring to | overcoming the prejudices in favor of | notis and furuishing OSa Tk ool | 1414 and 1416 11 deserves attention along that tine, "The | of fodder in handling and feeding. This | fow years we will have enough good | enter the reply in his record 3 present state of allwirs; and, soc- Flinekakin” o' o ute \’mn‘ s ulso to J\H‘!l»\\ili;{ prison- m the lute cutting s dc or | lumbs to take the plice of the poor ones Tne l).u]‘un lniu..:\ to enumerato ])n- ininducing women to adapt them 8,50 far s o le, with the Lor Wt of the early-cut o tho orig Toet "Phen wo will haye | yarious titles and Christian names, but ves to the work of wized house- JATER SUP PLIE stimulants to exertion thatobtain out- { ) aking Toddor in i | o o o o Myaprosad | I only got hall through when the cap- | hold labor. Both ofthes difieultics | GTass PAINT, OIL AND DRUGS. | SriaM AND WATEI SUP PLIES - S A n interrupted him with are liliely tohe so g 1 ey b6} : : A side the prison walls, thus doing away 4 we-fou »third doom ull with the mentai enevvation that must | of his corn fo ST e oh, hang it, you left all those in Ger- | early attempts to fi S \ Ken k g . () 3 ensuo upon excessive toil for which no | quality of fodder, that is known F. Do How to Mate Poultry. many. You're in Americanow. What's | tagos must e u 5 h'ul-‘ml (lass 1| 7, A Fuller & Co,, 1 Oo., acknowledgement of thanks or of mu- | 40 to (0 per cent in . Theinfer- There are all sorts of theovies ad- | your last nam step by before th Y Paint Co, A neration is to be expected. 'To develop [ enceis plain. 1f we 1 for fod- | vanced on this subject. Many of them I'he baron, who was exceedingly taken | society can understand how to 1408:1114:31a7107 4ifpok in a person unused to any continuous oc- | dex pay best to plat solely for | are ridieulous ones, The old English | aback, gave the desied information and [ gother en do. Whether na habit of steady industry, and | that purpose. clect ¢ iety es- | rule—and England has much to boast of stily passed on to meet his friends, ganization will ever y him to some extent for ¢ e » the production of | in her poultry—is to puta stout, youn - - we can rest assured that - all attempts at mi o many o St | « , 80 as to produce a | and lively male with twenty-four ) Van Houten's Cocou—FPure, soluble, eco- | co-operative hou “keeping which try to | 317 anae1s south ot St ceure his perseverance when he | | yield: cut it while green, set in | if the ave merely intended for table | uomical make idle ladics of housewives will o 1 ~ ¥ d beserat liberty, Atanyrate he snocks and teed without huski use. Butif we wish to obtain strong ant's Estinate of Meade. g rily be economic failuves, magnificent foed and thriving chickens m.-.-,{m.»um ot d phofollowing utict from a letter b GROCERIF ks with a lavge proportion of | be more than six hens toeach male. 1f | e 16 OE I e e Mg irer by | x 2 him no excuse committ ¢ “ich in grain. Corn handled | the object is to improve a wornout and | Jritten 6 Shiladelph AULEhE by paxton & Gallagher, | Meyer & Raapke, crime upon leaving prison to gain | in this way on good soil, in an avers anbrato Broed (ines arabeat Buy | e lale AdnivalForlor lusa partisulae Many Clergymen, ‘” I Lo 14031405 Hiarnoy a means of subsistence, Other sec- n, will produce more feed, und of o Il casos the malo must be in portect | INtersst at the prasent time: . I 8 G RIBN tions of this enactment were in- | better quality and cheapor than any | he -, 0 > Gormantown | (ATIANTA CIITY JWS S Glty Toint, | Ayers Cherry Pectoral. It iy the fay N SR8k e tended to provide for the secur- | other fodder erop. ° 1 Te by, we u periment | DI RRGRIERL Rk S, SN remedy for hoarseness und all affections of | Steole & C % f y T of the hislosies and formas nsbonine | Eon tha oaal dhtoo yoats wo have teit- | whidh. proves that the Englisniides s | Jist btorathe sucronder of Tiehmond, | tho vocal orgats throt, sud lungh, As ai D. M. Steele & 0o, | Sloan, Johnson & Oo. tions and surroundings of prisoners, thit | ed corn on stubble ground as soon us tho | correct. Wo mated u pair of light | ¥hi o1 ’,\‘j‘h“" A denerl Cunay 1n 2 and expectorant, the liects of 12011205 Jonos wirest, | Wb and Lenvonworts LIVE SI0CK COMMI their mental treatment may be intelli- | grain could be removed. For two sea | Brahmas—five hens and a cock—and the | 001, fasied him Bt B8 EEHTEC N ISURAIIUON DI0 DIDMAMY fralitt, Cmstn A >malin, N gently directed. It makes mental, | fonsa profitable fodder crop has been | chickens hatched were hurdy and gave |y Ly and e i — | A.D. Boyer & Co moral and industrial education compul® | Faiseds wnd in one (1500)the planting wis | excollont results. Lator on” we - added | b arawetedy tostoou B, BRI SEE -GS0 of o' thront and lunes, and 1 have Allou Bros, {o0ord, Brady & Oo,, i sory. The prisoner is constantly [ total failure, Early varietios were | seven more hens to the pen, and whilo | SEORS O R L ure in tes iyl (o its merits."— e serutinized with view of wking advan- | planted, with the kernels dropped six | there was a_remarkable fertility of the | S5 FIRREC 08 TCRN G0 CUrAE™ dne N. Nichols, No. Tishury, Mass. By tage of any opportunities which his | to twelveinches apart in rows, and | eggs, the chicks produced were very | Shdy e Hode, @ W o on of what s In my profession of an auet wy daily life m ose of improving and | the fodder from this late planting was | wewk, and the changeable weather we | POF £005 bis itcie Brechiyarn b ¥ o affection of the voice or throat is o scerious mup to the measure of hon= | very good have had has killed almost all of them. on & liolg o) 2 0 i Carpots 1 " GENTS FURNISHING GOODS. | TEA, COFFEE, SPICHS, CIGARS. el as well, 102 Douging Straot, Omialie, Nob such or bo possible or 1ot | William Cumuings, | Biske, Bruce & O, 08 Leavenworth st Singers, actors, and publie speakers 9 Exchange Bulld eavenworih, Bk A matter, but, at each attack, 1 have been re Ihe Fassett law has | Next in value to corn for a fodder crop | This year we will follow the English flis ':lfg;'.‘j‘:\‘ e lieved by o few doses of Ayer's Cherry rald of the | T would place sorghum, It will stand | rule much more elosely, and believe our q AWIRTON UNOR YRRV AR [\ | BgHILC TUER i ody, eIkl R Aty aare: ay when the criminal shall realize in | drouth better than corn, and yield more | success will be better., ) f N MR N AT A the rod of justice notonty the inflicted | on poor land, although not nearly equ - e . S0 used it in my family, with very ex r i Dain, but shall also’ appreciate and tuke | 1o dorn under favorable eircamstances. A Horse's Laxuries. o 8o used It 1.ty fanilly, with very exstls ) WANFED ] Winslow's soothing syrup for chil lent results, i coughs, colds, &e."—Win, 1, Total 1eues of CITIES, advantage of tho substan proof of | It is ne =5 t0 write of sorghum sown Do not stint your horse in the use of ) teething gives quiet helpful rest. 25 Quartly, Minlaton, Al COUNTIES, SCHOOL kindness with which it is accompanic broadeast and cut and cured as hay. All [ salt, is the Sporting Worid's advice to | centsa bottle. i Aygr's Cherry Pectoral RiR-omanTey,d L4 ) COMPANIES, ST.R.R.COMPANIES, . 30me dical cha should be de | are line IO o o iis feed ho! [ 'S, Orses 18 ¢ le do nof 5 - 5 n % « i Some radical chung ild be mude | are familine with the value of this feed. | horse owners, Hor L not f o e ; v . » : ; 7 Go Lee-Olark - Andraosen | in the private and reformatory institu- | In this seetion of the statea good erop | get half enough salt, It isa great thing ’ « HARALY - Reotor & Wilkielmy Go 1 [ W, tions of this country, says the Pittsburg | from Early Amber seed ean us for the promotion of hewlth. Ho Colonel Alexandor R, oteler o | pg 5 6 AwER d €O., Lowoll, Masss | or jous st sscsson sy | Bardware O waz.M'3,“!&,&?EMPAE\Y..'EEEESS' Dispoteh. Our so-called reformatory in- | obtained it sown as a sccoud erop after | crave salt, but thousands never get iton Shepardstown has in manuscript, unle Bold by all Druggieas Frice §1; 815 bortlos, b \ . tro 16 Wall Stroet, NEW ) RKe stithtions, with some fow exceptions,are | wheat, and Ishould slways raise it in | sccount of their masters’ ignorance or | he hus published it within u year, Uuatis Ot B RORTON, tralia HARDWARE,

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