Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 20, 1892, Page 17

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mwz] 1THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE s a_ [1 TWENTY-SECOND YEAR. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 20, 'I:\\'l-'..\"l'\' PAGES. NUMBIER 14{3. 0 Minutes Walk ~ > . To Business Center. AV NBALE FARE;- et b S On Both Sides. L x. : Nold Avondale Park. to, 17, THE LATEST, 18, 19, THE FINEST, Block 1 THE BEST. Lo's 0, 7, ¢ ® [LLots Already Sold.. v 161026 g Avondale Park i':n:}lils?;;)siilrtlzultil'ul]y situated addition within the It was platted August 26, 1892, houses are now being built on it, and nearly half the lots sold. AR 1 ; ELECTRIC 7 (4 $1,300 $4—,OO or $500 CASH, $1,400 " FOR LOTS BALANCE 5 YEARY IF DESIRED. "FOR LOTS ON on Burt Street. Discount for All Cash. WEBSTER OR CALIFORNIA STREETS. Jera— (N Property Beyond Sells for Twice as Much. e Lots 4, 20, 22 Webster Stredt Now Being Macadamized and Parked. ~ . . 7 For further particulars either call on or address ISIJ;.I 5 OCk 1..OTS ancans GBI TrUSE Company, e 17,19, T wsinbusio e 6 . PAYNE, Prosiden; H, . HARDER, Secretary; S. P, BOSTWICK, Cashiar, Bl (702 FARNAM STREET, OMAHA S : : . : . 0CKS Go and see the Most Beautiful Residence Park in Omaha—AVUN DAL\E : 2 E’:(iz%’c:‘" Money to Loan at Lowest Rates. k ! : G BLOCKS . 1 i \i TR NN the vesult is that our corn has oeen snown to | doing what he can here to push the mattes | decide as to the use of the corn by the ] “How much corn do we ship to Europ “ 1! 4 be far superior tothat raisea in south Rus- | wi*h the German government, He receive- | army (" now?’ AR U4 0 V1 | ) D ound again, She didn’t appear to be i as much scared this time s she went ear from the Agriculs | “Ldon’t know,” was the reply, *‘but Iex- | +Ouly about 4 per cent of ohir cntire crop. In tho room were two othey aud this, with £1,000 for | pect to hear from them daily, lo addition { The people of Kuro bodios, but she only wanted to see the sul- bis secretary, is ail that the goveruinent is | 1o their exporiments on the brend thes aro | ing of tho advautages of Indian corn. 1 havo | oIABTA R ATy Erll Bl s RV ST e spending ou this enterprise, oxperimenting on a buscuit for the been trying to introduce it in a dozen ditfer- [ @400 Paso'nation of a Young Girl Who | *Well, for about six yenrs that same girg How the King of Cereals is Tuvading the o0 insties AnI0ppoAltion. The truth of tho matter is that there ch will be composed partly of maize, | ent countries ana in Scotiand 1 bad a corn 80 2 ; &) s around overy. t1me we had/asuloldelos < S have no vast standing avmy in Amor- | should be a dozen men here instead of one, | Tbe army Las its own mills for. the grinding | pulace where I showed over 3,000,000 visitors Frequently Visited ths Morzue. the body of any one who hud baen murderod. Bakeries of Germany { you cannot understand at a glance | and that the very best and most practical | of much” of its meal and, as it is now, thé | the worth of corn as buman food. 1eave | et Then sho scemed to sort of disappear. One whiat un wportant thing the fecding of such | business men of the United States should bo | duty on Imnorted . mesiis 80 much greater | thousands of clildren from the different | Ay tialbod 7i0 19t omen s HicHINR AR EREY a vast body of meu as the German army 1s. | sclected. They snould be scut here with a | 1han that on raw corn tnat the most of the | charitable orgauizations free meals and somo | ¢ SITY THA N EASE | found in the river, was brought i and—'? i | Mo food has to ‘b of & ceortain charncter, | 000 Supply of money and tho corn used for | corn hore would huve to be grownd by Ger. | of those institntions are now using Indian | CURIOSITY THAT AMOUNTED TO DISEASE | fouaidio uho river, wis bronat . wisitorm ESTABLISHED INTERESTS IN OPPOSITION | 1 a food which will keep for weeks | experimenting should be selected corn from | man miilers, corn. 1 got the peovle of Glasgow to using - {0, but she came in to seo tho body be- without spoiling, and it must be | the bestsoitand the bost seed. The bread T'io miliers arc watehing the oxperiments [ it and in Ireland | know they are now cating | L fore it was buried. 1 asked hor whore she = capable of being trausported long dis- | should be introduced through the bostso- | carefully and they are teady Lo ouy machins | a great deal of indian corn, wlich they use | Ieople Who Want to See Viethms of Setf= § pai'yo0n a0 sne said she nad peen married Ty e Taadine the Gonamn exine | tA0CES without injury. Corn bread will | ciety, much as William Walter Phelps in- the ‘moment uny decided movement has | in the form of mush, which tuey call sty Slaughter—One (el Who Never Missed abont four vears before. She's got quite a ButUnole Jerry is Leading the Conquering | 15t°4o" this, but “avhon mixed with | trodtced It ot the dinner which he gave to | been made. As 1y is. npiw, Germany ymports | bout.: ™ SO o famlv now. 1seo her on the sireot ocem- Maroh of the Maiz: rvo in certain proportions its character is | Bismarck and others, where the only bread | about one-third of its food supply, and I hop *“There is a big field for A i 4 3 i sionally. Once in a great while she comas in R R nstheidd changed and it keeps very weli, ‘These | on the table was corn bread, so made that it [ to see this third made up largelv of Indian | >orn in Furope and the governiment ought to t for the Cofila, now, but her husvand, she told ma, doesn’t provortions ave now being determined by tho | was as lizht and white as wheat bread, and | corn. lo the event of @ war with Russia the { bo snowing our corn and its uses at the dif- like tho fdea. Her children are all bright government chemists and bikers, and I am | it should not be brought forth as a starva- | foreign supply of rye which Germany now | ferent exhibitions here. 1f a retail ur‘l“{'l.\' 2 2 RMERS | told that breaa made of one-third of corn | tionfood or a cheap food. gets fron: there would bocut off aud tne Ger- | estaviishment could be sel iffor- Memories ot the morgue the mworbid 3 Became w Regular Visitor, WHAT IT MEANS TO AMERICAN FARMERS and two-thirds of rye is a success. Such a I chatted with Colonel Murphy last night | mans would be materialiy crippled from the | ent cities and towns which for a faw merories that deal with ghastly forms lying i's"” reminiscent mood recalled several : bread tastes no aiflerent from rye broad, and | nbout his work and the prospects. Ssid he: | lack of it. By the way, young man, do you | weeks a goou baker could wrepave iuaian | GtoES BRSSO WS EIERS T S CR ot iooplel who mad st mopia tho soldiers of ono of tha warrisons here | “Weare now making a bread of rye flour | know anything about Iian corn ¢ cora for the people and give it away, I be- | *!F b s (3hes | curiosity for gazing o4 the facos of the dead More Than One Hundred Millions of Dol- | Were fed for cight dayson such bread and { and corn weal. ‘Tho proporiions are one “I bave plauted it, hoed and busked it.” | lieven a short time the people of the ya- [ though double-windowed inclost or the | ) only one othor of & woman who wanted X . s 2 tney did not know it. After they were told | third corn and two-thirds rve, and the bread | saia 1, “aud 1 oughtf to know something | rious countries would get to using it g the de and the city'sunclaimed dead, butliv- | (o7 o 0@ 7)o corpses of those wno meb lars for the Corn Raisers, what they had becn eating they found fauit | is fully as nutritious as toe rye bread. It is | absutit.” ok outlay would be yuickly repsid in our ivg and breathing memorios induced “Urcie | joah at their own bauds. The case with it, but not before. The bread is being | more aigestible and at least 25 per cent “Well, what do you[know nbout it!” creasea exports, e U7 to talk of queer people who Visiv tWe | wydihatof a woman, rather olderly, who testea in the prisons and in overs wav possi- | cheaper. Tue clement of eheapness makes o | Aq 1 s iy . | Thore secnis to be a differenco of opinion | the place. bocame for ab AR ) s 1 stopped to think, Colonel Murphy = bocame for about two years a CORSLANL A ble to find just how well it agrees with the | greal difference with the Germaus,and in | v, R 1o, ¥ | among tho bakers here as to the use of this cle ELY was in a communicative mood | (RGRE (O e § went ons * 08 T and ot C mood | yisitor, but of whom nothing hus been seen CORNMEAL MURPHY'S GREAT EVANGEL | mcn, how iong it will keep and the exacu | this country ovory cont counts. This tread | Suistal vou ronover Sou kuow, § cau prob | n)uephy bread. Quite a number of the sbops | —but first, of course, you doa't know I | 55\’ i0 "somo time. 1 reckon a6 oame amount of its strengil-producing power in | has the same taste as the ryo brend and the | a'on s the bigeost gialn crop of the world, | DaVe tried it, butowing to the uso of the | and wouder who und what be . Well. | hows moro outof a desiro to bo accounted —_— compurison with rve. “Tho eriin’ used is | rye completely conconls the tasio ol the €ora. | Gnilwa thrn oyt xomdihing 11ke 3,000,000,000 | WronE recipés or carelessness of mixing it | [iius Gish,or o3 holias boeu known to the 15t | o3a"thag nnything elso, but sho grew fired, T eround 5 governi il ¢ o orn Bread ¢n German Hothe: R S0 vy N B 2 rye the L) I best re- | quarter of a generation of newspaper report- - e men vl 4 f Our Corn Product Worth Much More Than | KFoutd ut the goverument mills und the Corn Broad dn German Hoines, I of corn every pear, ana we bave ‘six | Wib the e thoy havenot hud the best xo | quayter of a wonerailon of newspaper repopt- | suppos, Have any men visitorsi Plenty, bread 15 made under the eyes of the govern "I have no doubt but that it will bo | states which produce pver 1,000,000,000 bush- | *Uits. Thie numberof bukers in Berlin using | ers in Omaba us just platn Shill, b bas for | by T guess thay come around ~vecuuse they All the Vrocions Metals Mined—som ment ofticials, x adopted by thoarmy, and 1£ 1t is it will b6 Have you auy idea what that meanss | it A% bresent is uot luvko. I'm:x.w\.:l\ (u}ulg: nearly Lurenty Ill\u soars 2-::( rmed th \‘.: U [ haven'vanyibing olse 0 do. Some people pontuo mountimo all sorty of faulls are | used by the best aliciplined figting forc n | Iorty bushels of sbolled corn is a good loaa | tho brond sollevs in Ao big central markst | xites of the \wing toifho dokd AL tAe | liko to havo it to say to their frionds und ac- olug found withTpdian cornas anarmy food = the world, Thu German eovernment would | fora team of hovses,fand if you coutd lond | thismorping and I did not flud asinglo stand | wnorgue In this city. (His hate 18 sualutances that they have soen the body Correspondent, by 1o rye snd potato ruiscrs of Gormany, | suveover,000a yeav by usingitand its adop- | that crop unon wazond, puttini the noses of | 00 which Murphy broad was for sale, and } turning u whitistygray, but his exo is just 08 | of someone who bias beeu killed or shufiled it ovo charge, which bus boen latoly pre’ | Hon would fmean a demand for his purposs | tho horses! hends: (o tho taifboards of the | O old marlet woman conflded to me that it | bright us on tho flvst niglt, years ago, when | gp®) = ferved, is that it gives the soldiers a disease. | aloe of many million bushels of our Indig iy | NPRLCS was not good, and another knew nothing o the police reporter his tirst *“tin’’ on Had n Mania To al Tho . alo any ion bushels of our Indian | wagons in front of thdm, the line of wagons 5 d 0 4 ng o 10 ) s firet Miip! o A n Mana for v By Ilic etiomies of Indian corn charzed that te | corn overy yoar. 101015 usedin th ur T Yot i i e o ros tona | abouc it. "One’ of tho cooling schools bero | a big auicide or on w “fioater’ that had been | Giiyng fu the Ntts crowd, listening to B, Nov, b~ |Special Corresvoudence | Italtan soldiers were afilicted with this dis- | il soon oo introduced &l geor Ty 8 D O e 20k | which tried it did not suceaed very well withi | found in ke river Vs tales, was @ woll known undertaker U 3 cuse dt ho soldiers o oxico got 2 " ' ha r 'e O Pty ;4 LI i ( ad is having 108 T'o the mem\ cwsana r frater g X " ) of Titi Bry. |~ Experiments are beiug mado | Cise wd that tho soldiers of Mexico got o | i3vors family in Germany hus ono'or more of | oceans, 1t would go six times around tho [ i 804 1 flud that the bedad is having almost | to the membess of the nowspaner frator | jocated in tho north part of the city, * impdtauge to tho future prosnority of the | the same way and that such food had caused | Lociiods food would in this way reach to | yot to spare (AL ORI FeRIS crop of e avo mado their decision Upon i, and upon | morgue. The old man, for ho is noar his | 47t0F the old man had dusncd @l wasn's Uuited Statos, The govornment of Germany | tho sume trouble in tho army of France LI B fo0ti e g | G4 corn would make w road of waguns [OrLY- | i "yooigion tho immediate success of Amer- | throe-scoreof years,bas occupied acomforta- | fhos DIALL0AN0 R1F) MM 8 tho sume i 1o tho ar of Fra o is wetling 4 footing among the people abreast from Now York to San i Ll 4 . c 4 tho suiciaes, it sho hat @ nania just as pe- 48 carafully tostice the useaof our Indiun | Wheso comnlainta wore braught to the atten- | ut targe, Thero sre more than thirty milis | cisco, and If tais amount were loadea in 509 | 1o81 vorn in Glormany and smong whe Gorinan | ble bed 1n the morgue for many seusons, 1 | auligr, ~ ho was s gooi-looking girl and corn, and Is considering tho sdoption of it us | Lion of Consul General Kdwayds, who. bytho | in Germany which aro grinding Indian cormn lgta dn irelkhiicara tho uealp wonid)| RESPIRIYILREARGRE Tl B T oRdeE kiba.on hiabd i epgeiofia; nex. | dressed quito stylishly. 1 noticed her first @ food for the Germanavmy. Tois avmy now | {lear oieors of one. dinlomtie. sorvioet wed | o7 Rumen food, phaimaLy-QL sho bakers are | yencis from tho west Lo New York, ucross the BANR L ANRERT Ho hos seon Lo hushand woen over tho dend | ong'day e 1 was borowi i on "“'\hd ul’lmo 3 . Dy, i omitic service, using from 33 10 40 per cont of maiz8 with | Atlnatic ocean, cross Europe and nearly to dy.of 6 Wilo,houm 1Ening &S00 plaes i the coffin cover. uneral sorvices consists of 457,000 soldiors, wud on & war [ ho nipped thom in the bud by writiig to | 1) #4010, 3 T AT s ft AT i footing 1ts total rums up to more tha \nl' 3 ‘\'.m.‘m”\\“‘,fq,'..'i UL DYAIAIE 0 thoiruve, lxum‘m.t a number o. bakers | the Pacitic shores of Asia before the (ast car ',L’“",“m‘,‘”,” 8 dupghier nobl e pRaikelihgd just c otuded .nk.x u\‘u)\m;y who de > ts total rums up ore than various authori of the differen ve in Berlin who are selliug it, and the | was on tho track. These cars wouid form : SOI0. (RELMEIRIL C ONY ShO tenta, | iroa had 0 a fast look at Lho fave of the 500,000 countries on the subject. e received tho | corn is making ita way very fast TEAL PR SR f Hartford Post: A roverend geutleman ( long sinco realized that tears and lamenta- | gorod B0 HAAGRT JREL 0K & CR6 AR other day a lotter from the Prenc Y Fa 8 Ak S| 0 ontinuoL reight trains from New 5 ket o oy §:81000 JORIZ96 NG 1amel deceased, be girl came along and laid & ‘Tuo famine fn Russin has taught Gormany | 040 4a¥ lotter from tho Prench winister | ™13 "the cornmonl the snmo s ours!” I | York to San Prauciscs, and they would biook | 1018 13 story of a littlo boy: 'no boy was | tions will no restoro life. Ho has becomo | suail bunioh of roses on thecofin, 1 thought that $he cannot rely upon the Rranarios of tho | feneh. soldion never hud soet oot tho | asked up all the trunk liues of the country. | tired out from a hard duy's play, and when | something of a philosophier. ner u friend or relative, Sbe went along o o o e e R e e hor sor. | Vweuch soldiers nevor-lind such adiseaso, | No," replied Colosel Murplly, “The | And the most of this corn' coinea from | Be retired be was too slccpy 0 suy his good But withal tue old man bas a kind, tender | {in & VNG OF SUNUNE 0T NENE, SODK ot €280 10 SUpPlY ¥yo enough to feed hur sol- | and even \f they had bad Ity M could nob have | breaa used in Ciormany must keep much’| only wix states, though corn can be | RikBUprayor. His mother tried in vain to | beart and many lttle tokens of respect for | ygany "oy over snd 1 thought nothing dicrs, and the danger of @ war with Russia [ come from the use of corn #s food, for tho | jonger than in America, “The ayorage | raised 1n noarly evesy state in the union. | bave him say i, and finally sent the othor’s griof have provon bim human 88 | 506 “of g, I had auothery. fue hus lod ner to carofully examine the otier | BTNV 1A never used €10 uny. ertent. The | German Uaking takes place only fonco i | Out of overy thouskad acros of arable landin | futhes iv. Lio fotud the boy yustsinking | woll us stoleal, Dicture u man whout (0, | UGl % ohareo n fow “duve lator £00d resnurcos of tho world, Sho knows | MM mirister of war ropliad tnat corn had | woek, and. there is oo miuch oll in tho the country only forty.one are devoted to | iMto @ tred sleep and demandea thac ne | small in atature, but rathor heavy, gray Wit | yyG'sie camo again. Sho went through the heen found a very good food for soidicrs in | forit'to keep 80 long if 1t is iy 116 the grice s raised by this furc. | #bould pet up and say his praye Tho lit- | and mustacho, treadiag about with u voise- | gor IR R0 4 ecompanied the bod that it is out of tho question for her to hopo | that country aud the ouly trouble from it | oraivarily ground in the United States. | wens omand e e i vaised by tbis Karo- | 1l foliow arose weaily, sank down upon his | less step, sayine but Iiitie as u rule, ana | 1670 Perioniiin oo GRERAGIBERIEE LS SomN, 10 raiso cuough f00d for berself, aud il sho | was when it was used 1o an unrine s1ato. | Tho most of this ol is in tho littlo gorm AL | fions of acres of naw cors, felds, Kuppose wa | k0ees by the bedsids and began: “O dear | there you'havo k. The playhouse has | yigsed a funoral, Sometimes sho would must be depeudent upon other nations for ‘lll-f‘ a'hfllf‘": authoriies had 1 ever board v: the end of the grain of corn, and we get rid | increase our arcasonly one-tenth, this willadd | 1«0rd! please make papa say uis prayers | for him no eharms ‘”“‘Q”“ ovly diversion is | pujnievoses, and again only n few geraniums Lex supply sho would profer to bave it come | (it IAFRRTPAAD LECCT 1 FORIEUS FERI | of this by eutting it cut by 'a degerminating | &),000,000 to our coi recolpt, 8dd the money | 91 tme when bo's as tired ns 1. | Wis Heutovie tasio for beer which oxtends 1o | o suchlie. Crazy ¢ Nota bit ofiv. Hbe is from other parts of 1be world than urope. 8.4 SALER, .0 91 ARIA-A0I0KM mac Itis then almost as freo from oil | received from corn bow Dy us is enormous, | AWes: X bout two iroe glasses daily, and now | jiving in Dabuque, la., now and shows no P p | tion was laid Lefore the Giercaan government | gq yve, and it makes a finer four than many . you can seo L1 more symptoms of insanity than the casket At present tho staple food of the soldiers | and i- effectually seitied that guestion peoplc in Ameriea can realize. It will make Corn More to Us Than Gold or Silver. A contentious charch member iu & western ot @ Disense. over there. % 8 1ye, but the experimen (o et @ read, and selng > ROL I S vn recontly attempted to have bis pastor { 18 150, but tho_ experimcnts which are now e = the flnest of white proad, and it is Lelug We get more out of our corn fields ov :l‘;j“_'i‘l"'“‘:’(;‘}; ‘\:f:"":}"‘h: 1o hare Bik pater Tuat there is no accounting for tastos is an ROk on_wciude mixtures of ryoand pota- | ; used for cako vakiug Liero with splendid ro- | vear than wo do out of our gold, silver and | disciplined for using the slang phrase 'not axtom perpotuuted by the irish woman who toes, of ryeand peanuts, and, in fact, ail ais movement for the introduction of In- | sults lead mines. Our corn receipts ave greater | 10 0 Lho puipit, HU aam ¥ kissed tke cow and the idivsyncracies of tne LI AR e BeN i 4 diau corn into Europe is being pushed by | _“Vienna pastey flour costs “kere | tnan ull tho dividends of our railroad stocks, | OUt of bis charge wnen tho clergyman pro T T BT S Fr v iy e o1 ¥ © combinations. Tho agri A 0 : 2 ; ; g Bnds .08, posdlile nation 8rh | Seoretary RRusk for all it 1s woith, and the per 200 pounds, and the same | and thoy are mors tuaa all the dividenas of | duced 8 manuscript of bis sermon and read of the seushore, Lo the believer in the hore oul v dormauy view the situation | goye its of Europo have learned more ount of fine aize flour can | cur uational banks, As itis now if we can | WIS ”“."""“'"..','“m i: lff u_word, my after death holds the key Lo the wystery of with great elarw, and both they and the ! about our Agricultural department during | be had for about %0, anda maoy of | getan locrease of 5 cents @ bushel on- corn | CBristian hearers, the ark was a minuture the great future, Muuy people visit the wmillers, Who know that new machinery will tho present mdministration than they | tho bakers are using it without the knowl | we will add §100,000,000 to our receipts this | World: there was no form of life that was bouses of the dead aud gase long Bave to bo bought for 100 grinding of waize, | OYCF | KU ('1."“‘;'- JDeeretury” Rusic :.l!?u).x‘l:|l:l*{x' customers, Visuppose they | year, and if vou could divide this increas ot in It and ewrnestly futo the stilled featurés aro opposing wy radical chango. - Tue gove | i, UOUKUL tho department o o tho | aro eatiug caes mado from Vienua tlour, as if to wring from them tho Seckels i Y I i " | frout 1 Furope that the Russian gove ound a baker in Kngland who was using our held thereio, This seems to be the most erment, Lowever, is testing the mattor | weut Lias just decided 1o adopt our system of | corn meal 1u this way. One day 1y . reneral cause of the morbid tendency of the scientifically apd practically, and our Amer- | crop reports, and whilo I was in St. P sing a grocery store I was attracted by a | 000, and I expectit ta run into the billions | lamp before oue of the altars. “we had the body 'of a suicide here whoghad, | fivine 1o seo the doad. 1o lize @ loved dcan corn 18 belug subwitled 1o wore experi- | Lure the agricultural off of the czar re- | audy sign advertising a wheat preparation | when these people here are ealing corn an—What did the priest say ¢ gone by thu morphine route. The dead man's | opo lying still in dew'h, who but & sbort wonts berd thln iy which 1t bas unaorgope | (91564 directions from Secretary Kusk as to | Which was guarauteed to be cxcelient " b {0 th 1d 1 bad a st ant for | bread 4 Witt—""Holy amoke ! relatives lived aiway down eust and Uioy | timo beforo was in good Leallh and spirits, > . Dy Y 10w to o this. puddiogs. | had a strong suspicion that this T'he most of new to me," said 1. wantea the vody forwarded. We had placed | is to attemp ha LH0g wera poss 4 the United States, 10it should be adopied | oy 1n Gevinany his efforts fn the pushing | Was some farm of fudisy corn, and I bought | “What miore do yst\“;n::“ e e i 18,8 shunoh sholn, tis athar day. nososding | thit caresa il & coakie ana” 1t Ruar o rianne 1 s aus A..y'\‘lfu’q“n: T i x‘l?:f} 0 our American pors have been supple a one-pound box of it for 10 cents uud took it ‘Well,” contiuued Colonel Murphy wit to the Chicago i'rtbur the little soprano | that evening, About 3 o'clock in the after- | uud lewrn that waich cannot bs solved corif Wil iwapialy surpass in valuo tbose of | meuted by the work of bis agent for Ameri- | home fa try it tor Sunduy dinper. Wo | laugh, “I kuow that worn itself is quite 4s | shook her fist the teacher's whiskered | noon a girl, who, I judge, wasn't over 18 or | yhis side of L6 sbore wheat, and the price of Indian corn will rise | ¢80 corn. This ageut fs Colonel Charles J. | cooked it und we found it was notbiug more | inieresting as the corn erop. Here is a pic- | face. *“Your voice is tenor,”’ she fiorcoly ), camne in and asked 1o see the remains, To the general public there is a peeculiar ull over the world, An iucrease of oven | hh llq)‘n\i K nln .‘“«;n;‘m‘ .nl\:x.w” :u‘»“ \I ‘|n’ I;r"n-;_\ :u\.«\ ‘\.lv‘..l\ Ar .\ hioued American mush | ture Iu! 6 grain of eomn gwreatly maur muui hissed, ety sir, 18 Dase.’ ,\m-;“ l:.um'-r l"mm and n’h.n ”‘,w fascination attached 1o a sulcide, Ths maR cous z cu* product wo | mea phy, 8ud who has been tryiug to | tlavored with vanilla ich will show yeu wiore about it than she followod me 1o the place whera the cas- | o wowman, belicver or unbeliever, who couts v.m.;he! ou ou [r::tl.u' would add to i intr, o Aweriean maize 110 the markets ‘Hero in Germany this corn meal tellyou. Itisa I[ubl‘nulflt!‘ 1L corn cut A Freoch electro-metallurgical company, | ket lay The lid was removed and us she |..u“ :‘.l.‘..zl N-n‘m:,.u. x‘J:'n’:ax; 1:“.{:.'-“. onr weiltl more than 100,000,000 a y of urone for some years. He bas had cora | is belog used in large quantitios by | perpendicularly through the miadle. There | Which employsthe Herault-Kilian atuminium e 0 e RV o S P wid the rpisiug of Indiae corn will @t cuee | extib ttuo leading agricultural aond | the restaurants as a thie entog - for | ure w number of variebiss of Iudien corn and | Process, asserts that it will be able to sell the * *He took poison, didn't het act the future and life is a thing of eur: becoms rforg profitable than the rais ) 1 Austrial cxhibitogs ot Kur during tho | soubs and gravios. It is driviog out the | this is oneof the best. You see tuat cach | Bluminiua at a price equivalent to less than I told ber fosity, whethers cariosity be & morbid adioat nast eig years and be 3 beeu going | Chiuese vice, which does not ive as good | kernel of corn is made up of bundreds of | 15 cents a pound, provided it is in a position | about bis looking lovely aud turned to £0. | one ur uot. Men bave buen Kuown to pay | g \ho bakers af Scotland, Fugland ard | results and costs wore. The Germans ‘like | littie stareh boxes, cagii of which is pacied | 10 dispose of @ yearly output of 3,000 tons of | *Relatived Iaskey, but she said no. | 0t | gieady visits to gravevaris at witebin| Tho Jiossian fawine has shown Eavopo | perts of the coutinent aud sbowing thew bow | thick souns, and the Germuu housewife is | full of nutriment, and there are 21,000 of | tbe metal | of wondered . hours; others perforin equally queer fopts Ut oir coru is the bast corg in the world, | 10 ook this jneal. . ie wentto Russia and | Waking up o the advantages of Iudian | theso kernels in bushel of corn aud i our - “1t was some time bofore gnother suicide | cases are innumerable of friends of the dea It hes brought the diferchit couniries to | 8BOWed the peoplehere Low 1o mix the In- | cora cases aro inuumorable of friends of the dbad g e . Sow. 1e } == £ . Orh product of one year we bhave enough l‘n.n'nr.-u railroads bave their trunk lines | was brought iu and the body had not boen | H diau corn with rye to muke tbe bread which Some Flgurlng on Carn, ins 10 giv - in Omaba and furnish emplo 5 placed iu @ cofin yet, but put in the lit - T comparing (he aifforeut Kiads of maice, 8ud | was u 1ed by m: 10 ake 150 0 WA . £Tains 10 give 77,000 kernels to every ) ) aha and furnish employmeot to 5,500 | placed in @ coffin yet, but putin the little | ::::‘-: 0 loarn Lhal which only death cam ‘When do you think the government wilk | Woman aud child on the face of the globs.' | men iu this city alone. | voom downstairs, = whew thai young girl 1 , To HIGH SCHOQW sia, in Spain and in [taly, and if maize is o | a salary of §2,500 a vo used us an avmy food it will be the Amer- | tural department, thatis chosen, Figures That Surprised Gur | and an was taging o rest after some ork and as he sank into & char be b IU's queer isn't it the odd desires of people to gaze on the dead! Some, of courss, call it morbid curiosity, butip many cuses of the kind of which 1 speak ) tLink itgets to Lo a diseass. Something gets wrong with their ¢ matter—they gor i what you boys va call ‘wheels ug the families of tne United States it s And 110 stopped to thiuk aud his memory would give more than $6 a family. Our corn | Tom De Witt-—When Jack Ford was iv an | went back to years passed. when pas- | crop in 1550 was worth more than §700,000, Italian cathedral he lit his pipe at @ sacred *About t ve years ago,” she medran s an arwy food our exports of Awerican | of yes and she smd something i | looked down on the mau's face she asked | ‘ e

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