Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 17, 1894, Page 5

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) HE OMAHA DAILY BEE: MONDAY, e e \ the ground, with all the contents, exeept the | Among other beautiful designs of shades ”TL K FO ‘T N [STER | mine, the trees in s orchard, threw the | are supposcd o have acqy red the peculiar PFR[\‘"FD w T" " \ organ and & few minor articles. for floor and table lamps are the represen- " LI\ | Dranches inte the river. 1a the fall he | flavor which the Belgian water gives them, AN N I\ X The school house In W. H. White's district, | tations of various kinds of flowers made sepa- was much surprised to find the brush cov- | and they are put on the market eight miles northeast of town, was burned a | rately and grouped together on skeleton i ered with oysters, Others began to ex H lding through natural adventages the ! Wew nights ago. Supposed to have been set | frames. The result is an entire departure g periment wili brush, plinting it xln ’“,“ P ~l:|l-n “{h ch w-‘ ‘v‘nlw‘:mi |':‘ the u_\"xl'»r R Rarid rep i i i ile | on fire from the hackneyed style of siik and Jace | Cultivation the ‘Dusoious Bivalve et | and Juke, ntd with such success that this | werld, it is nct at all likely that we will be | Formor Residont o hraske, MGt " Louls Martin of R_lvartou Kifled: While The town board will sell the water bonds | shades now fn vogue. The general constrac- Ation _of ty = method of raising oysters is still followed | obliged to adopt foreign methods of culti ble Pate § PPt 8 Terri Standivg Beside His Brother, September 28, and begin work on the water | tion of the shades is protected by a patent, Home ¢nd, A broad to a limited extent in the neighb:rhood. Its | vating cysters within the experience of o Fate in California. works as soan as arrangements can be made. | and every design.is registered. It {s a_note- | limitation by the lccal authorities is in the | this or the mext generation But it it R B Mrs. W. White, one of the first settlers | worthy fact that the designer of mearly all L | interest of health, for the wreat accumula- | heuld be necessary it has besn demonc " ounty ed he - | the pat s a yo oman, who de- - | tion of brush at cne time made the waters| strated dhat these methods can be applied 0 LATTER DD NOT FEEL THE SHOCK | of this county, waa buried here last Thurs- | the patterns is a voung woman, who de- | UNITED STATES' §UPPLIZS THE WORLD | llon of bru Very easily atong our coasts and that we can | C10 NOT TAKE WATER ENOUGH WITH HIM P Banker Everett and family have gone to - ———— E frw— | The great natural uu;w\ of hxfl n \llnr‘rh \r-:'“l‘\l lew[ m"n\n u‘:u::m\uh t the oyster California to spend the winter. can waters in certuin localities has made armets of other countries ‘; John Moreall of Butte City, Neb., Fatally s 4k DESERTING THE STRIP. Measures Adopted tyBupply the Growing | unnecossary (hus far to protect the spawning i | Dr. George K, Kimball of y DI J " I Extingtion Urobab oyster. epar ng the sea bottom by dredg rnlng Sand Injured While Iunting on Snuke RULINGS ON SC L QU Boowiers Who Musbed 1 Kee Now auly Dy 'm !' x »:‘ p All'n :-1:- Unless i isd Bl g Mg Bitton WILD HOGS OF ARIZONA. Siodii B0 wenmu.:. e Kk any— dina ' Out Ay ossne hecked —1u- nd scatlering - grave bl Nob: River Friday—Espired in Declsions Made by the State Soperintendent STOUIIRE SOt SRS TRESHV "P Rt Izealitien I8 snough to insure & Satistestory | . ¢ T swi A e on the Pacific onst, Few Hours. of Public Tnstruction, The results of the opening of the Cherokee elrae bivhyo i T e o | Eaitens b WO - 3O J 8 Q; Septe " . 03, " v, 8101 - LA to protect the young oyster in merica ex gerous to " PR LINCOLN, Sept. 16.—(Special.)—Following | 8trip, September 16, 1503, are already history. s L L TRA] TR G T b ol N g g o i O RIVERTON, Neb., Sept. 16.—(Special Tele- | &F¢ some declslons made by State Superin. | There were ten men for every clalm, and | (cypypignien, 1901, by 8. 8. McClure, Limited.) | When it has attained a certain growth. This | y1d holow Yuma.. on the Colorado river. —(Special Corres )—Louis Martin, & respected citisen of | tendent Goudy on points recently submitted: | more than n third of the land was entirely | 7y threaoned extinction of the American | /8 In some measure a protection from the | (I Below SHEd. o0 A iyibg ak. Ouatle Georms & l’lrilnmvlzlnl):lyl was Killed m" lightning this | A school distrlet cannct legally botraw | worthless for any form of agricalturdl pur- | oyqien_gn tdle (hreat It would, seem ‘In the | ginf fah, nd in a great Gegres s sateguard | o\ 0\ "o tow days since, says the | Kimball, who was until & year age & residen . : . ' 08 o ot car has been « ot contes| : b r ! agalnst storms hen the oysters are 2 | Deme lanc ow days since, says the afternoon. He was leaning on a wire fence, | MONeY for building purposes, excepl by the | poses. The year has been one of contests | y oo o t1ie fact that the production today is | years cid they are seed oysiers, and much | San Francisco Chronicle, a fine band of b, dled a week ago near elbow to elbow with his brother, and the lat- | [#8uance of district bonds. over clalms, writes a correspondent of the | groqior than it has been before in the history | of the busimess of Connecticut oystermen | tnom on the opposite shore, came down to | OSIIbY, In the desert region of southern Call- ter 414 not feel the shock. The deceased Aclegal yoter Who s & taxpdver I8 Migible | New York Tribume. Many of thess have | ,pins fiiepieststiun fead the United “Htates | 18, I (B faising:or sesd . to. aell 16 LODK | 14y river 1 fesd on the banks, where the = il . o} . 0 membership o be of educ: " ed by force. Suffe s have beel by i Island planters. n four years the oyster b L ) . iy 4 leaves & wife and four young children. to membership on the board of education n | been seltled by force. Bufferings have been | g,y oommission to make many exporiments | [ai4nd Dlanters. In four years the oyster | o\ "0uy ‘weeds were groen, ‘and to get a | home in Nebraska and bought a ranch’ neak e aliatre by ondured beyond the power of pen to de- 1, "o Ciio or artificial propagation, and to Ll Kb S B drink ot water, They paid no attention to | LONg Deach, where he has since restded Schuyler Affairs, Saloon license moneys paid under the au- | geribe, Claimholders dared mot invest any- | tully th g THE OYSTER IN ENGLAND (O B T KB b UG THUTKRE R WoME.. KHteP SCHUYLER, Neb., Sept. 16—(Special)— | thority of village board or city council should | ¢ oo™ S 0 5 ; g who would | EXamine carefully the system of oyster cul- | pooiindg” 1o next in importance to the | the boat, nor to the Ind at w . e " >, ok telegraph | be equally divided among ali the school dis- | thIN8 In thelr claima, not knowing who would | |/ o%yiyio et abrond with o view 10 its adop- | yaited" Seates 1n the roduntion ‘of oyeters, | loufing arcund for awhile an old boar came o fuspect this that he made his Frank June of Whitman, Neb, a telegrap tricts Iying wholly of in part within the [ be awarded the land by the government. | o "ottt nany e United States. | but this Is due largely to the conditions | out of the brush, and, o spying us, gavo being familiar operator, s here among relatives Jand | corporate limits of said village or city. (See | Women and children who had been used to | [0 1 some Foan ® Gub I e PRI S8 o | WHICHNGRHE 1o bentice hee, Ratiba Bunote: |w Mawishy’. G AW iEhay i1 Wast. . HAdy toak” oo LEIUIM friends. 29, Nebraska, 288, and 28 Nebraska, 264) | the sheiter of a rcof and the comforts of | W8 (WOl BRORIE DOURRRE T YOS RHO | noshaustible. The Roman writers spoke | a day passes that the Indians and cattle. otherwise une Stephen and Emil Dworak visited thelr } The endorsement of a teacher's county | pope were forced to spend the winter [ | that their supply Rt ek bty of the abundance cf oysters on the English | men do not run upon them. These bands Baclor ‘was (i PobHRE Fatliar at Verdigriu (hls week. certificate merely transfers It to the county | yopporary shacks, cld tents, or in a wagon | ble, but they have had to resort to the most | coast in their tim., and while the supply has | seem to be more timid than ugly B8 iy oV AR expert. NGBS The Bohemian publication at Schuyler, | bY Whose superintendent it is endorsed. box set on the ground covered by an old | remarkable artificial means to restore thelr | been lessened by {oo indiscriminate fishi When the late Thomas Blythe was trying 1ge of the latt LThy Bohen B s i'| , Children residing in ‘unorganized terrl: | nyaq ghoet. Every mouthful of supplles | nsheries. The abundance with which nature | thers is still a largs business In oysters | to settle a colony at lerdo, farty-five miles e Tt m:a’.‘ .lmx ":‘Wr" ,.;“unulm':\lw‘.m.I"' ln.ul‘ wll:h tory” cannot be legally enumerated In any | ¢’ i and beast had to come from the i ke n.‘ s g may not | taken from the public reefs. The decrease | below Yuma, on the Colorado. he sent down | since his condnuot shows. he knew publishers, K. Ringsmuth and Jose school district states. The long delays in opening the land | Na® blessed the Chesapeake waters may ROt | i, " yatural production, however, is well | a large number of fine, fuli-blooded Berk- | about the % bE LNy BeaaH Priborsky, have decided to dlscontinue it | “The powers of the county board are lmited | J(S1*% \THe 1n% qelavs [ opeaing TRE (RS | onqure through the next halt contury, e illustrated by the fact that seed oysters | shire and Poland-Ching pics, and turned | fpovt, i, Character it Al and .".w-‘ to Cedar “"l“m" ‘:u v:lu;,w \rlhr to the fixing of the per diem of the county | ;ine toithe of the boomers, so that when | cially if no attempt is made to protect the | which wers worth about $1.50 a tub of | them loose on the banks of the river near visiting the mine, four miles from Oxliby M ol DL AL S @bt superintendent's pay (or to the annual salary | (hay entored the strip they bad not as many | oyster beds by legislation twenty gallons In 1859 and $2 a tub in 1885 | Lerdo, where they lived on the roots, grass, | {he Southern ; Ringsmuth that has had to subside since | iy case of a county w.th salary); this board 4 ] y N & toanY quOLed At $10 ) 1 S hrys 2 GANTte HaNAES b " E X lars as children. StotEare Wil 4 b Bk | L2 1 at §10 a bushel. In view | weeds, tules and ‘mesquite beans; bred, mul- | jnto a narrow gorge called Box Can 1889, the firat bolug the Nova Doba and the | cannot determine the number of days nec- | "oy % by os"cauged by so many contests pre. | It 18 likely that there will always be pub- | 5" (hig heavy price for native seed, the | tipiied, kept fat and filicd the low’ tule ¢ 0 Tntense Lhat the dootin e R . e itron, | cssary for the proper performance of the | yopieq any general effort at breaking ground | llc oyster grounds in the United States as | chief aim of the English culturists has al- | lands with a large numbor of fine porkers, | o Qitickly' ovorcoms: And- Sayk oHEIEE nhlp,mld .:‘,:, lw;«;fl:njn::‘"l»ul lack of patron- | guties <.r”ur..;‘:<;-:1\:ley{ Isup lrml \mlr"“r(rnn 1‘;"' and planting crops. But those who could buy | there are in England. Oyster culture in the \: been the development of the oyster | Never secing a human being, except now His companicn gave him (B last age has pulled him dow county superintende! y recover from the | squatters and clear their claims of | older ca s 8 yorta dustry, embryo in reservoirs, The possible profits [ and then a lone Indian, they soon became | gron oy id 1 After some weeks of dusty streets be- his claim for services rendered, at :.fi v'»:::;n- & have :.y,(‘ v'i:\:rlvl al:;lyuml.;g.“ g SLE SCBLE AR ek rn'm ”:‘VH ”':x' hn: of the successful sxecution of this under. wild, and wilder still, and tlored until | oreorg piee they had, lald himdowh SHE oy ACLEL DAL T ol CHEL L per diem fixed by the county board, for | pring rains gave promise of abundant har- | te attempt to interfere with the right of | yaying are almost beyond computation. But | the fow lands and woods were full of them, | g cued, back | Herdationa sprinkling, rellef was begun last week by | as many days as in his judgment the con 43 4 c Rt fishermen on the oyster banks has always | up to the present time the English experi- J5Ewithe hat the coyotes slaugh- | & periaps delirium, the doctor got on' his i 16.90 A vest, but the drouth and hot winds which I present time the English exper Notwithstanding that the coyotes slaugh ruggled on’ until he foll prostrate, J. H. Fulmer, wiio secured the job at $16.80 | aitions in his county demand 3 no | ave prevailed all over the west have been | met with a strenuous and partly successtul | ments, though carried on at great expense | tered the little ones in great numbers, they | yuid s friond. on returning nd him some ber week, which Is 53.10 leas per month than } ‘A county superintendent has no legal HEht | doubiy severe in this sectio, and the entire | opposition, Limitations have been placed on | and With every scientific care, have been | have increased vntil it Iy estimated that at | oo s fhlend, on ret ned et hiGT IR el b e e o T fontion & €Olle8® | sirip s almost as general in its desolation | \ye™o i fheries fo the extent of prohibit- | UVSUccesstul. The only successtul experi- | the prescnt time there are more than 10,000 | o *\WACh £10™, witere he hud feft him, | A large number of dressed stone atreet | diploma as evidence of quatification. today as when the boomers had driven out | !M¢ PUPIC s ment in raising a crop in a closed pond | of them roaming up and down the Colorado A wis Geruhis crossings are being substituted for the old Yati Wyclk Lives In & Chutoh the cattlemen. The cleimholders, who bo: ing the marketing of deep-sea oysters be- from spawning oysters is that of Mme. | and Hardle rive from their mouths up as with results as o plank ones. £ Washington Special to the Chicago Trib- | ToWed a little money from their friends back | tween June and August 4, and there are | Veuve de Saint-Sauveur at Breneguy, in | high as the tide runs, or from sixty-five to the instance of H1s son. CHATISEER Some of the eiectric lights at strect in- jington Special to the Chicag in the states, have spent it and have no har- | rogulations which have been in force since the | France, and the conditions there are peculiar, | soventy miles this side of the Gult of Chicago, taken to PANCASHA; WAL tersections are being placed upon poles forty | une: Ix-Senator Van Wyck of Nebraska has | vost. When harvest time arrived the yellow- seventeenth century prohibiting the taking | The chief obstacies to success in England They go wherever they please: nothing { e v instead of twenty feet in helght. given the society people here something to | tinted wheat was the evidence of the | °o*° ) . Dot the Britien | MV been the collection of sediment in the | stops them in their course. When the Colo- and two daughtors o inbura RIEL I Miss May Elden of Des Moines, 1a.. WhO | ¢y oyt by taking up bis residence in the | presence of death instead of the golden | OF small oysters altogether. But the pritish | ponds, the excess of salt in the water and | rado is at its flood they will cross it from i 4 has been teaching music o Schuyler durng | oy rosque litdle church cn Massachusetts | Grain. The fields of sod corn have never [ fshcrman still dredges for oystors on Uhe | the malacration of the water. The fish | shore to shore, even near the Hardle, where | pororts ob gr i ot 1o California to re- the past two years, has been offered o latge | oyo, e just opposite the residence of Chief | shot the silken shoots which give the prom- [ public banks and ke probably will continue | commission at Washington has gone a st-p | it is four milts wide when at its highest | qor 5 OB ER WG hax Eakcen & peaiti e I B, e e e mve 3 | Justice Fuller. It is In the sweilest portion [ ise of the ears of corn. The flelds have fired | {0 exercite that privilege for all Ume. The | beyond the Englishmen in its experiments | gauge. Thelr range gives them the finest | \ith (%o Union sock ymede pheiiah besition week. Monday e e as | of the city, and for the last few days Mr. | until the crops cannot be securcd for forage, | same spirit of independence will preserve | with artificial eultivation. 1t has proved | of feed—wild sweet potatoes, tules, stray | yoih the Ution stoek vards they can dikgied recital at the home of Mr. and Mrs, Thomas = T = F as the corn blades crumble and blow uway [ to the American fishermen the right to the | that it is possible to remove the eggs from | fish, clams, dead turties and scaweed along et ek i v and Mrs. K and their daughtel ha Bryant, which was very hightly spoken of | ;0o their home in the edifice fo y do- | like chall.” A more dreary scene of desolation | public fsheries, though corlain concessions | the female oysters, fertilize chim and raise | the'siver bank at low tide. ' They are unmo by those present voted to divine service, Mrs. Van Wyck | cannot be imagined, and further westward | are made even now to those who wish to en- | the spawn. But while this process is in- | lested, except now and by a_hunter by cousin of Gene ow Wi The Bourd of Education appointed Prof. | yoied 1o property. it haviug been bought by | the damage is more complote, if possible ter on the industry of teresting from a scfentific view point it is | who finds his way down the river. Most of | , A r"‘_,.“,i?i\,“l,,.f' o ”[:,“"'I:‘] ",‘“‘l‘,“;"‘:"f- s Van Eaton, the newly elected prinei- it L er as i The first effe of this deplorable condi- | Already all of the Atlantic coast states have | as yet of no value commercially the hunters give the wild swine a wide L v 901 LS IS g her hushand and presented to her as an after p ¢ n val, B. Lamhoter and J. A, Grimison an ex- | giv 05 G0 o ey were leaving Wash- | tion of affairs was upon the numerous cities. | enacted laws setting aside sca bottom for pre The chief business of tho oyster farmers | berth except now and then as they hapien TBBNInE ovar with '€ Vieween amining board to examine the city teachers g Ve “the conclus ¢ e | Thousands of the disappointed land hunters mption or lease by those who wish to enter England is very like that of the oyster | to spy a nice little roaster on the bank and d & d ington for Nebraska at the conclusion of thy I L r s : SHtabANIE & elected for this year . latter's senatorlal career. It has been the | flocked to the town sites in the desperate | on the cultivation of oysters; and most of of Connecticut. Seed oysters are | within easy rifie shot I8 DbNen It L at Wednesday Mrs, H. W. Nieman and ehil- | 005050 %oy Bpiscopal and Sweden- | hope of securing a town lot which would at [ the northern oysters come from private beds ed In the spring, chicfly in France. | A few years ago a man and family likely make arrangements o remain in dren, Sara and Chauncey, left for New borgian serviees, but lately has been idle. | least partly recompen them for their time | ¢ js estimated by Mr. Ste on of the fish amount of seed comes from America. were living a few miles below the colony N a 3 & York. Sara will enter school in Philadelphia | \wyop My, and Mrs. Van Wyek came here to | and expense, These towns were largely pro- | commission that the available sea bottom on ich oyster after two or three years | on the banks of the Colorado. He had a 4, hfopiletor of the Erieskt MGHR and Chauncey in C nwl\r"l ) ,‘11, % attend to repairs then in progress upon their | moted by a syndicate of sharks, who did all | {pe coust of the United States will always in I1nglish waters takes on the | pair of very fine large stag hounds, which 4 4 o The Zaphyr Wheel club will have a five- ir for the mile race at the coming county hock. x ig company for $10,000 a year. The limits of oA : ; 2 4| they will remain pe Mr. Kowitt and family have removed to [ to a proper dwelllng, and have had plans | fals. Every oy beings long lines of the') cujture would not pay in the United States: | each park are marked by roes stretohed ber | Lo ot oWh i irY oi0 et hia rifle, | hoen residents of National City, Ohthai drawn for that_purp have spent a year or more in the vain | that only the limited industry which hes | (weon cormer posts. Other ropes are ar. | bask o ire rome” Ducitrand, 41d drove him | “afrs ‘May Abbott and Marion' Abbott, her Mrs. George Burtch and daughter, Ollie, are Peculinr Grant County Deal. Py Ml g L S B R on | been established ,"“"“m"fi ‘\"’“:l o ranged weblike across the space. The posts | |efe. lx)aylliegh:flzumv“::::; RaAIone '1\..’ The | 200, of Greenwood, Spanfiag visiting relatives in Springfield HYANNIS, Neb., Sept. 16.—(Special Tele- | which to bulld a home for themselves ana | 02t could be made profitable as ye low | are made of three sticks of green pine bound | men had hardly reached the river and got | Lfon With their i Mra RIBHHES Prof. William Crothers, who takes Prof. SRR G et Taition T (his atmy Okiabome prored | the oyster beds of the Chesapeaks oW | oz inor” near ihe top. Looss. bundles. of | b niid phardly reached th river and eot | Norahii, G, Mitoheli's: place st the collage as' instructor | Eram)—ihe democrats of Qrant county met | [IVES. 0. Lole &7 DEIAbCR strongeh, | 8igns of exhaustion, ‘there may be a profit | ;01’0 gorge boughs are hung In the water. | after them in va i pursuit, K Tocurueh T of Oreek and Latin, arrived on Thursday. | at Hyannis Saturday. A few domocrats, led | (%0 % 0% ere unortunate In their sojeo: | 1B DFInEINg up ovsters by hand; unul hal | ey atiraet the spat. Spawning takes place RSl T YislUng sherShiothe Prot. Mitcholl has réturned to Princeton to | by T. B. Lynch, nominated ex-County Juge | o of Jand, and who. from ofher and ‘var. | Ume it will never be a very important | 1y, R (I8 AENE, TRATRINE akes place Eonir - i ; g resume his studies. Crandall for county attorney, passed free | oue ynforseen conditions have failed, have | American Industry. We produce today nearly | 'y, "y o \hon the oysters are firmly at- erkingion Japaussa Ko pliah; Peters of Yutan, Neby Mrs, William Hamilton and family re- | silver resolutions, endorsed Bryan and || o alled, have | 'y times as many oysters as all the rest of | 8 B 2 A y The Japanese want to learn English. The where their 4 left their elaims, but the majcrity who have ! T Oy 00.000 barrels of bysters | tached these bundles of boughs (called fas- 3 Tatal hesed turned from Decatur Friday. elected T. R. Lynch, an administration Alned in Oklaho: t i the world. ‘We ship 100,000 barrels of oysters | G708 FLas€ FICES B hoUEAs (2 & i | dream of every Japanese servant in Japan, | féther bas lately purchased a farm. Mr. Henry Whetstone was struck by B. & | a rat, as a delegate to the state con- | gee v i e able to wioeenifE | annually to England. *We have oysters to | bincs y ved from e water and A5 ey plrstl " | will remain at Perris and take charge of the R o e g Mt g ol || cemoote five years ago will be able to winter in | SnAuANY 10 BOREE U8 BOKG or coun- | broken up into twigs. The twigs are spliced | Where servants work for 5 cents a day and gentleman is very deaf and did not hear the - . - comfort They were more fortunate in even approximate. into long ropes which are then hung in the | their rice, is to come to America their first few years and have now a very Ll G T water. The oysters swinging from these SErA VAR e : & train, PROVIDENCE IN THE WEST, good start and are giUWwing some corn cn A THREE-FOLD INDU STH\». TN aeap b e TEan ot A IohL (o Lettar oxxiv.-) nn ‘ln' o 'm V,"e ?I\vrr!hid in a TR i3 G niley Notes of News. 3 , % their old breaking, where a sod crop would There are three distinct branches of the | oig an oyster crop at the bottom of the | J2PAfeS€ newspaper for four servants. T!\nu- a VALLEY, Neb, Sept. 16.—(Special)— | The Judge Got Into m Ditch, bt it Wasn't | not survive the drouth, oyster industry; the collection of the “spat” | wytar ana the crop matures very rapldly. | 5ands answered the advertisement. When Miss ENa Lowell of St. Paul, Minn., arrived His Last One. pictr e Rl or spawn; the protection of the young oyster o as a" nnl en last evening and will spend two weeks with her sister, Mrs. D. R. Brownson. Mr. Willlam Hart, a prominent liveryman of this place, was married Wednesday even- ing at Fremont to Miss Alice Whitehorn, also of Valley. B. Esway has twelve acres of the finest onlons in Nebraska. He has already shipped two carloads to Denver. The Valley band arrived home from the v om Yokohoma the last day, 1 L8 < : _five | 000. There are smaller oyster farms at | C3Me away from , ““Well, it didn’t amount to much as an ad- | Writes to the Philadelphia Record from | It has been estimated that twenty-five T b remember how proud our jinrikisha man was o) cide n AERLNLaIF this morniog. venture, I'm afraid, though I'm free to say | Conashaugh, Pike county, under the date of | oysters, under perfect conditions, could pro- [ Fusaro and the Lucrine lake. Naples has | (50T e B R Co i 0r a plindle. of No other accident com Hon. John M. Thurston will address the ) ! 4 N young to supply the whole Gon- | some few parks like those at Tarente, but ; : 3 { - Do 3 adjolni I was never more frightened for ten min- | July 22, saying: duce enough youhg b er is not of the t fans and sald with his face all beaming with pany has such a reputation citisens of western Douglas and adjoining | | ot® [y ' Seal" s “ealled " the Gran. | Lar-dlseying: = B hoctiout coast. A female oyster will produce | the water Is not of the purest. B llok T IR e nea Y ABORDE troms Hus [ Bs AEN . ; counties upon political questions at the Val- | ™ pypoy and Bad Water creek, in arlety and novelty rewarded our efforts | 000,000 eggs at a time, and one authority THE PRIZED GREEN OYSTER. 1,” nor how triumphantly he looked down as a claim-payer. ley opera house Tuesday evening, The Val- | o0 \wyoming, is a fine cattle range. | 1ast Week. On last Thursday we drove | says that a particularly large American | mhe best French oysters are those which upon the other “riksha” who did not under- A ident R athal i a4 5 bosn enaaied (100 (Le ]y out “with a small party last summer | from our hotel at Cragsmoor to the little inn | oyster may produce 60,000,000 eggs at one | pyve been fattened and ‘“greened.” The | stand him. Fuji San was prouder of that $10,000 acciden Ty Haiall, Olimaiesd. & Johieen prospecting for certain, ||!\llnirlala and had | at the foot of the mountain, opposite Ellen- | time. The European oyster is less fecund, | groon oysters come from Marennes, where | speech than Cicero was of his speech against policy at $24 per year, 0 cross this valley at abo editors and publishers, made its appearance 3 X ) There were four of us on horseback, With | joo cay s - : But from the conditions surrounding (he | green moss, peculiar to the lccality, grows. [ —The Japanese have a mania for putting up o Vet his morning. Valley Row Ba% | our outnt packed on the three lead mules, | O CAVe In the top. We mado the ascont | oggy, the spat and the young oyster, it ls | SIen osh PECRIAE 16 U8 ICERULY, ETORR Hogieh Liana and they. flood your reom ac | ~¥he United States Mutual TN ANy Bapers, ¢ town, | and at about 2 successfully, but took the wrong path, walked nosseurs. After “‘greening” or fattening the [ the hotels with English cards. And such : ln_‘;“:{:flf;‘.j,“[‘;z:’;‘; doving north of tOWR, | gighieq something to make the hair lift our | Past the ice cave and wandered over the | but two full grown oysters will result Muct | oyster is often placed in a basin filled with | English! The Japanese have no imperative Accident Association, Mr. and Mrs. lsrael Hessig of Phelps | B4i8 right off our heads.” mountaln topsaaly hesa tisrnoon four ssarohil e latalutal Lhniyotng joyater,nand may clear water, where he is allowed to remain [ mood and they generally. express an idea 320, 822 & 124 BROADWAY, KEW YORK. ) . oy “Indlans or grizzly bears? querled the | belbg fruitless. Late in the day we re- | the oyster full grown. The crab, the star A e & 4 | S e ML county are visiting the family of Pete Miller. | (% turned to the town to stay over night. that | fish, the oyster bird, are all destructive in- | Until his system Is freed from the sand or | negatively that we express p y. Cuanies B. Prer, Lightning's Work at West Poln % Ligud u P e : morning. ore than a minuto percentage of the fer- | {00d. Theso are the cholcest oysters shipped. | “Kishi, the rolls are cold." i H. A. WAGNER, State Ageat, WEST POINT, Sept. 18.—(Speclal)—During | Kritzly oo randh »:‘:;N-?gnl:";f ;lfi e Laned " th wois very necessary pur- | {iMsed esgs. And the possibilities of fertili- | Some oysters are “educated” for long dis- Yes,” he said, “a good deal of not cool 08 Blrss Nationad neatmalialie] & heavy rain yesterday the house of John | 3%y 0y or about 4,000 cattle coming our way, | chasing and repairing of shoes, procured pro- | zation are considerably lessened by the fact | tance journeys. They are taken from "'f, ing the cakes I8 gocd” D inocel sk Dienslake was struck by lightning. A hole | and they were coming as if every critter | Disions for the trip mext day,'and on Friday | that the male and female oysters empty their [ Water every day for a cerfain time unt A consplouous natice at a Kioto liots! resde; L 4 b was torn through the roof and Mrs. Diens- | was carrying a hundred pounds of stoum, [ Morning we started, soon after § o'clock, to | generative products directly into the water, | they become accustomed lo Keeping their | oOn the dining time nobody shall be enter lake was knocked down by the shock, but [ Two or three herdz had got mixed, and fn | 8ain ascend in search of the cave, this time | leaving largely to chance the fertilization of | shells closed and retaining their Jjuices. | to the a Dot otherwise injured. other property the former sug camp cut in their empty church. ed that'they Mr. Van make a good many alterations to transform it ‘“Yes, we have an adventure now and then out in our country,” said Judge Thompson of Wyoming. “If you'll come out and see us I'll refer you to five or six men whose halr- breadth escapes would fill a book. As for me, | haven't had but one close call worth relating." “That's the very one I'm after,” said the Detroit Free Press interviewer. the center. o'clock in the afternoon we “Pish! The Indians were all right, and trying to separate them the boys had started in their power to attract a grea boomers, knowing that number of the large surplus prairie schconer and jaded, half-starved ani- STUDENTS IN AN ICE CAVE. A Natu 1 Curiosity In Mountains, The traveling class in geology, under the direction of Prof. Heilprin, have made their latest observations in the northeastern part of Pennsylvania, and a member of the party he Shawangunk ville, from which we were to climb to the we might start bright and early the next taking a guide. We reached the cave about be able to over-supply the local demand for oysters. would oyster always been that the foreign s has stem of try can through natural growth, and the fattening of the oysters of marketable size. In some countries all three of these branches of the industry are carrled on in the same place and by the same people. But there is a large trade In oyster seed (the developed spat), which is monopolized by France and Hol- land; and Belgium devotes her attention ex- clusively to the fattening of oysters which are grown in other countries. and produces only 1,000,000 to 2,000,000 eggs. possible that from these millions of eggs fluences which prevent the development of the ‘female’s eggs by the male fluid. An SEPTEMB aracteristics of the native oyst be detected as a transplanted and can ster only by ment rents out the entire bay bottem to n It takes two years and a half to produce an oyster of the first grade. A rope fourteen feet long will hold 2,000 oysters. The rope method economizes space and it enables the oysten farmers to overhaul their crop and to clear away any parasites which might injure the oysters. In addition to these ropes there are light baskets hung in the park in which loose oysters, taken from the Lo‘tom, are kept. The annual yield at Tarente is about 20,000, they are kept in claires or basins in which a mud which may have entered the regular ‘When they have been educated in this they uld run down and kil the owner claimed a that region. One he wild hog in | N n 8 ors v alr Lo & - v i a xpert, The planting is done on private T k dogs and rifle d went for fcs it with a carload club champlo! W ‘e his long illness, has a horror of | ¢laim hunters wculd give thelr town a & other countries the supply of availabic | 20 exper b took dogs and rifle and wen & n t | of Holsteln cows, for the purpose Lucy P. Dodge of Peoria, Ill, ts visiting | wrl, LGRS (UF (AT "I Could be a | den importance and assist them in unloading | oo OPGE COMMURS, paratively thai | Srounds, leased from the government. ~Some | tle one, just right for the oven, He had not | of Holsteln cows, for the purpose of starting M and Mra B, H. Phelps, e g A their best lots at big prices. Nor were they o avmsare. estabiished undor condi- | Of the leases run sixty years. The Whitstable | gone far before he found a large band of | ® ¢ d Christiane Jacobsen has opened a_ kinder- 5 they moved to the churen and divided | WFong' in " their prognostications, — Towns | (YT IS G (X' Felartiod by the Ameri- | COn.Dany. a en-operaiive coricern which pro- | fogs, and turned his dogs loose on them Pl e s i garten school at her home In West Schuyler. | oy ¢ye guditorium by imaginary lines into | Were built in a night which would rival in | (" ovgterman as -almost prohibitory—cer- [ (UCes §1,000,000 worth of oysters in a singl o0 sooner had they started when out of the Santa Monles, Cal., giving 1ssons i She has a class of fifteen. parlor, bedrooms, dining room, and picture | Population and push many of the old county | it WWEETURE, S rh w6y In Italy, | Year, has been in existence for a century. | tules near by jumped an enormous boar, a 4 g g B JL Miss Harriett Hood of Omaha is In charge | wojjory Pictures they had in plenty, and a | $€4ts of the east which have more thin a [ oo example, the available sea bottom is le The privats grounds are prepared by dredg- | monster, who, with mouth wide open, paying from - OMGIE of a class in physical culture during her va- | gonning expedition quickly provided the nec- | century’s growth in parks only ffteen feet square (the Mary ing and by scattering shells; and the seed | no attention to the dogs, made for the hunter w . cation., There are twenty in the class. essary furniture, The vesiry was turned into | = But with the faflure of all vegetation these | {7 BTk Only AR FCot ARARE (GE BT i strown thickly In about a fathom of water. | The latter drew up his riflo and fired, but on The doctor has come to California f 2 a Kitohs ud the shining pipes of the organ | lot speculators, who had been holding on, | ;"g 25 SOl Ui ciintion hinders culti- | The product is gathered with dredges. Both | came the boar, the dogs nipping at him at vctor :has--come: fo, 8 RIS L UG ML and the decorations of the chanc:l helped out | hoping that good crops would help them [ % A¥S 4tes G0 RERCEPEI, I FEED | in England and in America dredges are used | every jump. Dickey of the Westsrn Union (X6l BELLEVUE, Neb., Sept. 16.—(Spectal)— | {ho art gallery. Itugs, lumps, small tables, | Ot ave quletly abandoned the towns. The | {0 on the Swiss mountain plan--ver- | 23 the public, as well as on private grounds, | *“The “hunter fired a second shot, but on company at ias boen viaits The public schools opened Monday with & | easy chairs, and sofas dot the space all | Oty of Ferry, which ten months ago had a | (ically. In France. muddy botioms, which | i Connectieut there le a law prohibiting | came the beast. The hunter turned and ran | Fthf, [HRRORT S O Nelson, also of Sl s around, and papers and books give evidence | POPulation of 15,000, has not today more than | iieAlY: te, FOACE MGH DOCRTR (MU | the use of steam dredges on the public | for a mesquite tree a few vards distant, the | 0§ Albuaicra A ks & . o E skl g rocke - | 800 souls. Other smaller towns have been Yo e hds lustry | Danks hog close at his heels. He dropped his gun [ O'yptd 18 alsc in Albuquerqu Miss Helen Longsdorf left Monday to take | of their enjoyment. A big rocker under th American coast, are ddpted to the industry | P Py mothariand i LOnge st g 8 almost deserted. Arkansas City has . s. Now | OYSTER CULTURE ON THE CONTINENT. | and jumped for his life, grasping a limb of ke (s sotiodl, trees which shade the porch made a resting and are made to produte large crops. Noi charge of the Falrview schoal, place for the ex-senator as he sat read. | been fllled for three weeks with | & it jdering the possibility [ The continental methods of eyster cult the tree just as the hog grabbed his pants Prof. G. D. Crothers, formerly of the [P : het el o 5 France 1 calmly considering the poss ; a s vster culture make their v y he vil- | Ing or chatting. Nobody could have more | the = floelng = boomers, = hurrying - away | of gojling sced oysters to our oystermen. difter usually from the methods adopted in [ and tore one-half of them from him, but he | j oo ot et iS00 ity faculty of Bellevue collegs, was in the ¥il- | (/% ;7. the tact that within easy reach hung | [rom the land of 'promise to some | Of telling seec oystexs fo DO GYEICHCR | England. and. Amerion ra oo the .oldest | Was safe, just out of reach. The dogs all | “yry *5 “H' Blair of Omaha s spendiog & i equntatancos, O e Week 109K | o ‘bell rope, a pull on which would have { Iocality which promises ‘them at least an | yehHE 18 00 GUT Rt TAMIC LD 0 | oyator farms. The businets 15 carsied oy | this while ran grabbing the hog by the hind S0 PSS Strs, 3. D, Kerr met with a_serlous ac- | caused a familiar sound n that locality, | eXistence. ~Trains have been loaded with | A0l ican conditions.—Bat the proposition to | extensively only at Tarente, The system ls | 1°8% 1o Which the beast paid no attention Mrs. L. H. Knisely and Mrs. Leran Clark ot A Vednesd While driving down | With plenty of servants and every comfort | those = who —could secure the price | i roquce the Frenchi system in this country | entirely different from the French system—. | . The mad boar seized the bark of the tree | yayrois oot 10 remain a i":-lfigéemnsllu“amsll‘rp:mfr‘nkp and the norge, be- | Possible the little household spent the last b oy ek e MAT 04 claim- | jaa always met with'a commerclal obstacle. | in fact It has o parallel In the world, The o ol ei e 16 lte alteanc, ) p hoat 4 few days very pleasantly in their novel quar- Hdellby) GRYVe Uil Lot L FOM | ywrith th enormous matural supply to meet | yta|i @ divided th vater 1 ¢ . nally he turned upon the dogs, Instantly f Frankl coming frightened, overturned the buggy, h é the wife's folks, and h it o W the allans have divided the water into parks | gt fodl tlia of Franklin, ors liked it o well that it is quite o' folks, and have sent the women | . demani Laihisthe somparatively | na Dhes 2" ed one and wounded the other so that it | 51" throwing her and her son, Ralph, to the | ters. and and childre; the \road: hile they | 8lmost any demand 2 teen feet square which are rented by the | gioq e aETA CUNOh b i ately been in ¢ s probable the church will become their winter en oon the rallroads, while they | .y¢ravagant cost of labor In_this country, | emall holders at 50 cents aplece, Th vern- | (iod koon after. He then turned his atten- | “gimer smith and Chad Arnold started a gl ""‘:‘l‘l‘”"gn'f’m"":;"‘,‘r‘.‘"&’"fi:‘u sprafned | Jome. They intend (o put up partitions and | Proceeded overland ~ with the _dilapidated e Gay Y rheanawer 8 plece. The govern- | tion to the tree where the hunter sat. He guarded him until it was dark. Twice did my wife asked them what wages they said, bowing to the ground ‘We come if you speak English.' “But your wages?" ©'0, you give us ri that's all.” When they came they were so anxious to learn English that the Jinrikisha (carriage drawer) and Amale (mald) repeated after us every English word they heard, When we they wanted ce and speak English— Cataline. day 1 said to the waiter: the guests allow. The Ouming county falr will begin tomor- | a general stampede. In the old days tho [ 9 o'clock, and, looking over the side of the | authorily has estimated that each oyster | are packed and shipped to market, Many | One of the articles {n the municipal law fow. Prospects are good for a large ex: | buffaloes used to be some on the mad rush, | chasm that leads to it, We feit the ice-cold | born has 1-1145000 of a chance of reaching | of the oyster farmers ship direct to con | of Kloto readsi =~ = o hibit, as more Interest s being manifested | but let me tell you that the wild cattle of | air rushing out. Prudence dictated that we | adult age. sumers. An order given in Paris Friday ny dealer sh y by A by farmers than for many previous years The large barn of Charles Mack was de- stroyed by fire last evening. The fire was evidently of Incendiary origin Work will be commenced Monday on the new creamery building. The plans are ac- cepted for a large brick. The latest im- proved machinery for butter making will be v . : of the Generative Orgn v e “And there was no convenient grove or [ “The depth is about seventy feet, and we | §3"provide for its safe deposit, With a few | Dut it is coontrolled by the government and | maie for your purpose. rezertion: Youth o] Hrimre o e s purchased, and the capacity of the plant very | rock to shelter you?" found the temperature in the coldest place | resirictions, It is every man for himself in | 18 only allowed for very brict periods The printed label on the claret bottle at Opitim or Lquor, Which soon. lead. fa wuch enlarged 4 “Not a tree nor a rock for five miles | 34 degrees, while out in the sunshine the | (he American fisherfés, and it is no man's | The Dutch abolished publlc dredging In | nykko read: B b S jongd tion, Insanity and Desth. By stk A very largly attendod double wedding | sround, but just whero we pulled up was thermometer ran up to 126. This ice cave | huginess to protoct the" young oyster, where JALL SuB-ENE EoveeningnE “;'"‘ Jossession of | Weak man who is mot so hard of his | Fefund monoys WM CONAY SERUD. A ot oecurred Vednesday, *County Attorney | a natural ditch about fitty feet long, e s one of the many In the Shawangunk o of evel the oyster beds. Now they are let to ¢ | stomach takes notice of his health ever | cure for Conghs, Cokis, Asthma, Bronohitis Moatia a0 2int Xai4 Baedlager and, Brot: | at buime Jlich Abos g8, cut it should be the busingss of every man. It is " nchitls, Oroup, H. L. Wells and Miss Lizzie Readinger were ayste t des b To show how an educated Chinaman, who inuied; o100, phao, how 50,3 old united in matrimony. The brides are tho | only ope. We alipped o our horsce, gave | SUTES 1o the rock caused by the slipping of | SPawnINE ovters, sa he amount of spalde: | 1% ‘wome favored localities 1t is enough 1o | givis" Mselt far above pigeon. Enlish, ¥FS nbd only by :::"lrcomp"ahml daughters of Judge Read- m a slap and piled In‘o that ditch faces :ll'xlt-‘ \;;;pltnl; v ";'I"x"l:"m‘?‘:flr on :l'l'l "fll'v calities. The same: eofdition of affairs oc- | shell ln,lx- grlr:u:x;‘i:rx:lJ«'{ull‘_:u‘r _"l‘lvuk;vu‘lfi‘:fl“ lmnmx-xl our lnufuugln' 1 ml‘\” note \;m.-kh 1 Goodman Drug Co., Owaba. " derlyl extes great depth | currec P t b e necessary | cumulate; in o . French tils 4. | received from Eu Don, a Chin anker, = . Ora Personal Mentlon And the herd passed over yo in many cases, and the snow forms & mass | ypire lmlrnnt.f‘:.'.‘:f‘rua::gxnl 10 sel asids spawn. | During the process the tile 18 | whom I invited to dine with Consul General ORD, Neb., Sept. 16.—(Special)—Mrs. Vin- [ “Exactly. I hadn't drawn three long [ laT8e ¢nough to last through.the —entire | jny grounds. This necessity is not likely to | handled twenty-one times. Yet the cost | Leonard at the Astor house, Shanghal cent Kokes loft 8 for W. breaths when the front of the herd was at [ S¢ason. The melling and refreezing of the | aife n the United Slates for an indefinite | of each oyster delivered cn board the raiiroad SHANGH 1st Augusi.—Mr. Landon n okes left Saturday for Wahoo on a [ pPCRIRT AR just tell you that I was mever | SUOW cause quite beautiful stalactitic for- | r.riod. but Mr. Stevemson, in one of his ad- | cars is only 3 cents. ~The Duteh oysters | Dear Sir—I to_[nform you that Or the Liguor § ‘ositively Cared visit to relatives there, #0 scared In all my born days. Tvery critter | Mations, resembling the calcite ones found | hiiofv Tt b (EEVERERE 0 PMne authorl. | have a large sale in Germany. The seed | as s me To Take dine To by admintsiering 9 Mr. H. C. Spaulding was on Omaha visitor | wus bellowing, ho i e b L A in caves in limestone regions. n il e esalte ot mrananty is sold in many places. Hoiland produces | da my Engagment Have non Goltden Bpe s werlc up the soll, and &% sach e Jumped 1ng | (o A% e had abstained from food 1o a cer- | (1% o MDA CHOECTIRLY SFAURYIE | about 70,000 bushels of oysters each year— | tmé to meetingyou Huch pretty dinner, | o Jemn beslren itk ofeotie S Rev, C. C. Wilton and family, who have | ilich o caved the dirt in on sse, 1 feit ity | (410 extent tho previous day. we had prepared | the, “fhie” poantis (8 tHE oL o *Pity pa | & Ntite more than Ttaiy and much-obllge. © Yours falthfiyy on, | Barmiss. sad il Sso: 4 éruma been visiting In Pennsylvania, returned home | gifterent hoofs scuft my back. and evers in. | 10F this trip quite an elaborate lunch, the collccted b\ large mwrllun of the Chesa- | . The public oyster beds of Spain have been - - - lio wreck. " 1t har boon givs It Friday ovening. stant_expected to be stepped on. 1t took | CTONNIDE feature of which was o be the | pegia spat 1s undoubtedly lost in the mud of | dredged out, and the price of oysters has s S R St ImAtAL O & BOF{o0t Gur has fols m':':'. {-.;};fl:\ Yhams is visiting the state | the herd only about ten munutes to pass, yailieios S, n’i‘r’}f«u:: f:.'ffi“"?".'. MK | the sea bottom—one:df the spat's worst ene- mh:m:‘;'n RNy ohte fom. 3 "S.'.‘fi'.'u.:fi In Librarian Riatoliers Mktle" book about ooific. 1t beoo menin. | but the time seemed hours to me. When o of the fce | ! . y blio libraries in America, says Lhe Boston Miss Hattle Winslow is visiting with rela: . 4 cave. The concoction was made carefu T iy e y rmers s imported from France, and . the | public lib n America, says th 0 Y o Otmeinn tives in Lincoln. b LR LU oi |8 tin pail, ‘8 whole bottle of " SR '\',f.,:: COLLECTION,OF, THE OVSTER. French method of case culture is followed. | Globe, Massachusetts is credited with 213 B4 wook of paredc Ve fron. o o Had be Mra. Bdith A, Miller of Onawa, Ta, a | aue out" " Tleo 0f the pacey wore steppeg | U%€d in It The pall, with a lid, was burieq | Spawning havingdwen protected, the next | The Portuguese industry s very like that | free public libraries, with a total of 2,760,000 | '9F Sale by Kubn & Co., Druggists. Corve former resident of Ord, Is visiting with Mrs by 3. W. Perry. Fatally Shot While Hun tlug. VALENTINE, Neb., Sept. 16. (Special.)— John Barrall, aged 19, who resides with his Pparents near Butte City, Neb., was fatally shot while hunting on Snake river Friday, s to seatter about 2 ese companles o es than the sIx states rank- eo, nnd destroy mi- He attempted to place his gun in » wagon | “geamed lke the hand of Providence, | 33 clentific students we had expected un: | Soothn IO OZMer farmers fo Reatter abow ot \}‘n‘rl;lhl‘ln:;’rllxhol:;:mmu el 40, 1“:?.; next u:“;ur:rfl;;:llluxl-lher N e s cla which feod on with the muzzle reversed. He dicd in a | gign't ft?* Usual pleasure from lce cream frogen in na- | ground under cultivation. The use of shslia | Germany has but one district for oyster | Hampahire, Illinois, Michigan, Rhode Island, o Pow hours. "Of course. That's what we look for and | (4T OWh [reezer. The afterncon was speot | ig ymprove the oyster beds has had a lim- | culture—a sheltered corner of the North | New York aud Indiana. This is gratifying Tl oL arvciane snd A Rilght Fross at Mhiford depend upon out In our country. Come out | b VINLRE BURCC FIfle 1 the vicinity, n one | jted popularity of late years in Virginia. | sea. The banks were rented out at one | to the pride of Massachusetts people, more MILFORD, Neb, Bept, 16.—(Special some time, and see how the old thing works | | (% OM “l . ““Kh @ & graceful man- | Byt [n the south, where so little private | tima for $17,000 a year. Between 1551 and | especially as it represents the - J q P 6.—(Speclal)— | when we are going to have an avalanche Frr Qg :‘ 8 decper chasm a beam of sun- | planting is done, there sre not the same | 1891 they were closed by the German gov- | work of the people themselves for popular CATIONAL. There was a slight frost on the bottom | three miles long by a few thousand feet ‘ul 3 nv:rc ng the darkness from a chink In | {nducements to method that there are here | ernment because they were being depopu- | education, not the benefaction of gener- = lands last night. It will prompt the farmers | wide." What oky walls, made a beautiful effect. | jn Connectiout; for example, where thero | lated, They are now held under a leass | ous-handed millionaires. Ind:ed, in the list to complete the cutting of their corn. Many —_—— hat Is known as the ‘great rift' is a tre- | are more than 70,000 acres of private ground, | which does not permit more than a certsin | of individual gifts of $1,000,000 and over for farmers in (his vicinity are preparing ensilage Novel Lamp Shades. f'h'n"u“l split in the rocks, extending about | one-half under cultivaticn, and only abouf | number of oysters to be taken and which public library purposes, Massachusetts does for thelr ook this winter An English electrical firm Is Introductng | ® Mile in length and in its greatest width | 13.000 of public ground. the government u percentage of the | not appear. This is Mr. Flotcher's list BOARDING AND DAY 8¢ . some striking novelties In electrio lamp | 202Ut 100 feet. This riven and torn moun- | “On the Pequonock river in Connectiout Obtcans “John Crerar, 5,000,000 W. N " Lyons Residence Burned. e S e O d.x:;m:::’n o weet ::xulu:. fallen m]-nu there is still another method of collecting Belglan oyster Industry s devoted | Newbury, $2,000,000; New York, the Astors, YOUNG LADIRSG LYONS, Neb., e, ~ i o' V. N onderful lesson in geology. Sept. 16.—(Special.)—Mrs. Neary's house, one mile west of town, caught fire last night and was burned to the west can run a third faster, and when thay once get started they will charge a flaming mountain. The front of the herd wasn't over a mile away when we sighted it, and it was no use to run before it, turn back or ride ahead. Our horses were scrub stock and had no speed.” wasn't over two feet wide by twenty inches deop, but it was our on and badly hurt,” “And your horses and mules? “Picked up on the horas of the caltle and tossed about and stepped on till they were reduced to a pulp. Just cleaned us out as slick s a whistle. 1f we'd been in our saddles nobody could have recognized us as having once been human beings. clally selected description of natural feath- ers, dyed in cholce tints, and arranged in artistic shapes and combinations of color. wait and ool off a little before going down into 0 cold a place. After a rest, and eat- ing ice and snow, we climbed down Into this big rift, and down the slide of Ice and rock to the tongue-shaped mass of snow, which accumulates during the winter and remains throughout the year. mountains, and they are very interesting as well as attractive features. The large fis- snugly (n the snow at the bottom of the cave. There it remained to freeze for two or three hours, according to most approved Greenland methods; but, alas! when lunch time came, and we excavated the luxury, it was found in its original liquid state, and that ‘vanilla soup” became the substitute for ice crea “This was a grievous disappolntmen for, There must have been some quaking in that reglon when those rocks were broken and tossed in 80 wild a manner." THE MAIN DIFFICULTY IN THE IN- DUSTRY. The influences affecting the permanency of the oyster supply in the United States are not so much the enormous consumption of full grown oysters as the destruction of th young and the failure to protect the spat or nobody's business ta maintain the supply of step in oyster cuMufe”)s the selection of the spat. In Amériéa but few preparations are made for this. Along the Connecticut coast it has been the custom for some time o spread gravel at the rate of 100 cr 200 tons to the acre on muddy ground, and on the same coast, as well as in Long Island sound along the New York shore, it is the the spat, which might at first be considered an adaption from the Itsllan, but which was really a local discovery made in 1868, In that year a farmer near Groton, trim- night will bo filled in time for Sunday din- ner. The green oysters of the best grades cost the consumer from 1 to 4 cents each and the Portuguese oysters about half as much. There s a little dredging on the public grounds on the French side of the channel; highest bidder on short leases and they bring to the public treasury about $500.000 a year. in America. ‘The spat sccumuiates on the shell bottom naurally and it is collected as seed and sold to fishermen. An English company fcr a leng time controlled the ex- port business and made a great deal of money sending Portuguese oysters to the Thames, where they were fattened for the English market. The business is now in entirely to fattening. The oysters are re- celved from England, France and Holland at Ostend, and are pliced in cases in con- oreted compartments, In & month they to Of “ourse the sold one shall prepar make up the safe package. A Tokio dentist's circular reads: Our tooth is a very important organ for human life and countenance as you know; therefore when it is attack by disease or in- jury artificial tooth is also very am_ engaged in the Dentistry al must use this wine usually. volumes, or 1,233 volumes for each 1,000 of the population, Wwhile the nearest rival is New Hampshire, with forty-two librari containing 175,000, or 464 books to each 1,000 of the population. TIllinois, which ranks third, has forty-two libraries, but this gives only 130 per 1,000. In brief, Massachusetts $2,000,000; Baltimore, George Peabody, §! 400,000; Enoch Pratt, § 5,000, Philadelphia, Dr. James Rush, $1,5600000; Pittsburg, A drew Carnegle, $1,100,000, county, Neb., writes to M., that he will days ego for policy with The United States Mutual Association, has a clean, contract with a solid, reliable corporation, Wy, Bro. S, Becretary. LIFE Dr. E. C. Wesl's Mervo and Brain Troatment 13 s0ld under positive writte ized agents ouly, to curo Weak Memory; Loss of Tower; Lost Menhoo Night Losses; Evil Dreams; Lack of Nervousness; T.assitud gunrantee, by authors Brain and Nery Laoss of Power Plonsant 10 take: 16th and Douglas streets, Omaha LUXURIANT HALK 1o produced by the Cuticuna REXEDIES when - ull others fail scalp of irritating Fall term begme \Vednesdny, September 19th, For catalogue &ms particulars apply o the reos w. DOHERTY, 8. T. D, OMAHA, NED

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