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THE _OMAHA DAILY BEE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1805. SETTING APRIGEOY PUB. DOCS 25548, = = TINTS 0N AUTUNN'S BARNERS| 7, 040 0 o 1 hoaded, insignificant little Scotchman,” but dry there he has been maligned. He is tall and tire day parading about the Union depot, to = — Uncle Sam’s publications have been a maze Ripans Tabules: Sold by drugglsts, or by man It the price (30 cents a box) is sent to The Ri- pans Chemlcal Company, No. 10 Spruce The Land of Promise Big Profits No Hot Winds 4 # No Fierce Blizzards e —— article fn the May Forum, says that Uncle J— TREES CAST OFF DEAD LEAVES, stalwart, with flaxen hair and an attractive 5 : A Why don't you begin the Books, wages of about $3,900,000 annually. In 1594 of the Fall, tion of & littie thin layer of vegetable (lseus | BIf bare knees and the abrupt little skirt e C nd A or the tree this tissve PASSING OF AW LE DICK, : pounds of paper, The reports of the secrs- make starch and sugar for the tree this tissue PASSING OF KAWKE Pearline “cats the Stated Sum—The Monthly Cat ernment was the report of the Wilkes expe- ble for the Tints=Shedding but an automat'e-serering of the member, n) He arrived In the city, says the year or two, and test it in naturalists. The publication was limited to ing the Lenves. tirely healed over. The falling of fruit when d do any harm. But it won't eat your dishes, that's sure. I For the first time in history Uncle 8am's | oxpanses of the expedition. Kighteen vol-| From now on begins nature's grand shed its leaves artificially. By making tho| He was a man below the medium height, and any y ' t P P congress refused to give any more money for y y . | the plant may be made to cut off leaves in a kY o " ¢ y vho wants them can buy them. | fRETess ! trees which relieve the otherwise gray land 3 criminate use of bad whisky can bring to the Y < anybody who wan ees W | th soap—that won't be there if only some of the states of the union have s.ts. | gating colors as the solar spectrum. How | Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers will tell you ** this is as good as® gather the autumn leaves understand how | the same falling Will oc ur. Those who wish s L T s groc W good as' 3 \J and if your grocer sends you something in place of Pearline, be by the new bureau, says a Washington corre- | these, the annual catalogue will be & per- | ghop which s now open to all? but an easy task ect the branch of a t handled such weapons said they were—and it Back 4 F v . 3 tion of a library which will contain eventu- | gerving as a key to the oficial history of | this problem, which has alway tree finally matures it will be filled with the | shaven, 'cept for a long, savage looking y y s beginning. For this purpose space was | \¢ be made more attractive, a Wl ";v"“ % | visited the 1aboratory of Albert F. Woods | as coleus, have been produced in this mann r | shaggy black 8 Kinds, each of which may b kept for many | world dndsd, - The doll Wil a two- | that they might be distingulshed readily. | the results of his studies in this' line. Mr. | XInds, eich L 5 ¥ rl expanded o collectio a two 1 consult with whatever has been | {n each editign. T atalogues will be | €28€8 of plant life, and consequently he has | therefore can give some valuable suggestions | He know they were the children. He tried and consult with e lateve een | in each editic 1ese cathlogues be the ten- | Indigestion spoils more lives call for paper or cloth covers; for leather | autumn leaves are diseased, or rather that Soon after they are gathered, he says, they | ders of the various stands in the depot to without a clew son, except for public libraries. The docu- | modern experiments in botany, reaching up|and held down by heavy books. All of the | hand would go to the hilt of a bowie knif: withou e TR R joanier ity peodely thiey, will|prodch fama, tesmbll - worse. The trouble is all in the lic documents conts volumes that would cost $3.50 in | ,;000my of the leaf. Here it Is in a few | retain their color for years, provided they them, and to do this requires that they shall | Undoubtedly it will often happen that |y, 0" Bl ofeq out you will have a first.| It is a remarkable fact that almost th But “Kawkee Dick” lost his terrori colossal faflure, mainly because it was chron- [y i% (O A0 0 fh such & cass has not | 4ermis, or outer skin, of the leaf. The po- | of fresh meadow grass there is often as much | points. An elderly gentleman alighted from thCln. Ol](. gives rch(‘f and th(.”- DSSA e, A bk e hat w he done in suc! case D 1 ; f t be presse s e same moment Kaw the lea h cally combining water, | pounds of water. All of this must be pressed | man saw him. At th an moment what been published on any particular | by ipe executlve departments. The State de- | Of the leat by Lkl o are absorbed by the protoplasms, or living | by botanists is what is known as *“leaf pho- | the run, The elderly gentleman ook after The ehiet of the Bureau of Documents is | Immigration from the Bureau of Statistics. belng unhampered by demands for the places | the pott-route maps. The Navy department(of sunlight certain chemical changes take |and the starch grains will become blue. After | ken Dick unbuckled the belt around his waist markable transformation of Rawkee Dick's larly trained for it, receiving diplomas as in | office and patent office, the maps of the land | hecomes diffused throughout the stem. | by the suniight Brains and nervous systems often give way | Wonders upon wonders—it was a wig! \With yes-and a complexion of peaches and cream. | quite a nimber of other publications, includ- | flling its functions of making starch will tify the system when exhausted against such | trembling yonth of about 18 years The public printer has orders to send to mbstone. produced in plant life except in the pres- | '!fy the sy rembling e i printer has orders d the library a copy of cverything it pub. . ” hrash you until your hide raises,” and th D h f 3 o) ed by the leaf cells, [ Lorne at a celebrated German spa. He was | ! No Drouths ments. These accumulations are enormous. | Secundra is like a city In itself, placed at the | ©OFM, in the sap contained by the leaf cell orn, RN ok way he had to'stand aside for no one, nor e the capitol will remain where they are for | ings, for these monarchs had the plea:ant | cell. Brown is the normal color of the walls library of congress and from books furnishe1 ¢ » IGFER IR LA dne bal & 3 3 & glon of the world. The place where one-half the encrgy and per e little ¥ u P e head. | bination of al. thrse colors in the one ball, S T IR A i o A e S L Rl 4 verance necessary in this western country to make a bare living, will bed disappears the al effect : g 3 e A » bank. ere s S P 0 raise thing almos car stable full of its own books. Thanks to | $(40ds there, with the empty socket on the | Just described disappears the general effect SN ot Npecaan 2oy Il S in the bank. Here is a soil that will ralse anything almost that o o case \f yol ad a lot of gre beads AT cessible than formerly. impressive than Futtipoor Sik 1, and the sp'en. | D2 the case \f you had a g ¢ covtrary you have the markets | aieE I ade: utumn_leaf turns red, for 2 e Cortaln libraries are legally designated as | dwarfing every structure within the walls, 1 | Shades: 1f an a y S o epresentative has the right to name | Eyery bullding which has in any measure | CroY o5ent (BEMERt 2 tett AT . Giptiithe In the twelve if you wish to do so. You are the architeet of your own fortune In this garden spot of the world. Now is the time to go south. It has been estimated that more people can be accommo- dated comfortably in the south and lay the foundation for prosper- ity than now live in the United States. 20 TO 40 ACRES. In that marvelous region with its perfect climate and rich soll if properly worked will make you more money and make it faster and easier than the best 160 acre farm in the west. Garden products are an immense yield and bring big prices all the year round. Straw- F hing Dish or washing Dishes, there's nothing like Pearline, Sam's printing and_publishing costs $4,000, Al Fal It Is interesting.to Know how tress Anally | fce, while hia ppearance at thie par:i-ular Uncle Bom Enters the Field as a Dealer in [ 000 per annum.' The governmoent priitink |The Ohemistry of the Beautiful Foli cast off their leaves In the late fall. The fall- | time was rendered engagingly quain i ! : office employs mors than 8,000 persons, at v - ing of a leaf is rotight about by thy form:- | Kiits he wore, and woresso well that even use of it in that way, if were printed 40,888,698 coples of pubile doo- *the paint whers the lent sreen o he | C0UId ot "altogether detract from his dig- you're one of the timid uments. A single repott of the secretary et a W - jo 1€ | nity of bearing sisters wl ill think tha ‘ 00,000 branch of the tres After a leaf coases to o sisters who still think that LIMITED TO NATIONAL PRODUCTIONS | Of aricujiure required mors than 1 RESULTS OF SCIENTIFIC INVESTIGATIONS videly o beg'ns to grow, and actualiy cuts the leaf off . tary of agriculture are the most widely clr . . - The Sudden Hamil of & Would- S culated documents in the world. The most 1t is therefore not a_mere breaking away, ‘01 | The Su g L clothes?” Then you can Public Documents {0 Ne Had for & | costly publication ever issued by this gov- | Jaek Frost Not Altomether Respomsls | account of the wind's banding the dried siéme. . i R soak things in it for a - itlen 1o, the NOUTh sexs. And-arodnd (he 5" BlesFadrintive longer useful. Af'er a leaf has fallen the | Kansas City Journal, spent the en- Ul bd 1 I:‘l'l“'".'l o world, which was accompanied by famous e e R scar left in the end of each twig becomes en men entlor . . s ) the intense amusement of the older people ‘ery wav, . s N Anced tha pram i an edition of 100 copies, which was never ripe Is dependent mpen the same process., Wi |“-‘< P '. ot i Hf_",f,. every way, until you become convinced that Pearline can't finished. It costs $242,460, exclusive of the Botanists have learned how (o muke & tree | A1d to the Indefinable terror of the children ublications are on the market. They are |umes quarto and eleven follo, WIth atlases| soason, Every American who has penetrated | surrounding alr very dry, &0 that the evapora. | very slender. His features were prominent | WON't clog up the sink pipes, ecither, as soap does. And » re finished to 1861, w om the 1 ‘ | 4 - b . advertised for sale st specified prices, and |and maps, were finished up to 186 fout of doors in autumn has admired those | thon of moisture tiom the loives Is tco gr:at | under the crimson blush which only the indis- | that cloudy effect that you've probably noticed on cut glass ‘The new Bureau of Doouments will lssue o | 2, WOk TIres In pristing offots destroyed | (Cb, "™ i foliage, as tioh fn varle. On theother hand. i the soil ‘be mate 1y | checks—and nose. He wore genteel clothes, | il china when it's washed w catalogue every month, giving a list of what- molst, and the roos become smothered o | and there were no diamonds in sight, but in | you wash it with Pearline. 3 ever has been printed by the governmen BUREAU PUBLICATIONS y of those who not only admire but | growned so that they cannot absorb moisture, | a belt that was strapped around his small S during the previous thirty days There are 120 offices and bureaus of tha body, were several long bowle knives—at CI1A o ' ihe ‘same as Pearline.” 108 FALSE Pouine b oo peddled, The most important work now being done | government that publish documents Of | they are shaded and tinted in nature’s work- | to bresd highly cc 1 autumn leaves have ) least, that's what men who have seen and he 1 g hich ains the most beautitul 1 hies b | he steel of which honest=send it bask, ee JAREE FYLS, NSRS manent_record, preserved in all the impor. | s bt i o is solving | Which contains the most beaut aver. | two or three big revolvers, the steel of whic spondent of the Globe-Democrat, I8 the crea- | v e ™)y rgrjay n‘[ the United States, and | The Department of Agri ““url:uvfl: : x\r:.“: | Cut the branch off and plant it. When the | glittered like diamond Hin face was clean ally & copy of evary obtainable book or other | the country.” I has been suggested that the | mystery to botanists, up to very recent years. | sama varlaty of leaves cach autumn. Most | menstache wnich adrney he ks |ooKIng document published by the government since | bindings of tho matlonal publications ought | A Washington Star writer a few days #go [ of our highly variegated folinge PIAIts, $uCh | hend wan adormed by nmeta) ey o Ml ol ol o oL At hair, which hung below his o 1) s 1 = [‘j " Al | Prevailing at present. It ““l”“\‘l ¢ the | Of the division of vegetable physiology and | through many gencrations, stooped shoulders, and from under the broad | DF J U[ Il ( |D[ \L |L.L_1 E set aside originally for 10,000 volumes - |idea to bind the reports and bulleting of the Foods prescrves leaves AP0 | wonibsre two Tittle eyes: pesped o ! set a riginally for 10,04 umel idea to bind the reports ’"I_f” colors, o | pathology, and learned a greater part of | Mr. Woods r leaves of var'ous [ sombrero two little eyes peeped out upon th ready it Is crowded, and it will have to be | various departments in difterent colors, ¥ years as an object lesson il'ustrating som This individual evidently knew some of the The Bureau of Documents issues, as directed | Woods' spectalty is the study of all the dis- | Dartioular symp om of plant oo ’ elers e depot steered clear of h um fold purpore. It will enable any one to find | J€, Buteau of Bacuments tasues, as Girected 0 y is the y particular symy ¢ plant diszas>, He | travelers at the depot steered clear of him. Orse all % . devoted considerable of his attention to | to those who have the fad of collecti: g au several times to frighten the grown people issued from the national presses on any sub- | furnished to anybody who applies for them, ‘, & . :" hF: 58 TheT tumn leaves. but they would not be scared. He was gruft ; . Untl w, of course, | but the number will certainly prove insuffi- | leay which are the lungs, or breathing f P~ TAVRE n his conversation, d he ordered the ten ject at any time 11 now, clent. The prices set down in the catalogues | organs, of plants. It Is now believed that TO DRY THE LEAVES W 2o ot M 1 wait of t bravado that was amus » ’ ink v av & literary labyrinth through which & Person | there is an extra charge. Only one copy of | they are abnormalities. This is all new | should be dried by pressure between two it on him with'a bravad e than rum. But you think vou have bent ‘on researh was obliged to grope his way [ any document may be sold to any one per- ['science. It is the revelation of the most | sheets of blotting paper lald flat on a table t ng. B 3 T Vs iy 7 g The ¢l 11 be furnished by this library. | ments are offered at the cost of paper and | to date. molsture should be taken out In from three | and he would glare savagely at the little s malaria” or grip, or SOlHLthll]“ e e W D I vegucd, will setys | Brinting, typeselting being not _ included, HOW A LEAF IS CONSTRUCTED. to four hours after are first sublected to | No wonder the child would run at his “N'u “f“"‘- e ant ‘aceumulations of pub- | Thus people will be able to-obtain for 90 First, we must definitely understand the | this treatment. After this process they will [ proach and tremblingly snugg v as a key to the vast accumulations : + ¢ . cobil <awkee Dick,” said the individual . . . T ¥ g shop. The bureau is not authorized to dis- . Aeactibed By catis. vou | are not subjected to the direct rays of the am Kawkee Dick," said 1 » . A b i To make the catalogue 18 In itselt & great | iy ooy documents gratuitously, save only Mgl g T et i oh I Gun TP ledves re fiot thofoughiy deld | to thoss who dsked nig and they sy dioestive tract. I{lp,}ns 1 abules labor, inasmuch as most of the publications ny do " aue a large bag and with p 2 O : over. | I'm the terror of the Kaw Valley. 5 : have no titles. Tities have to be made for | 0 the designated libraries until they lie four or five deep, when the | however, they will soon turn brown all over o t of Ml ? il have no titles, es have to b 2 3 3 0) =) | fi , talogue [ MOre coples of an attractive governmently,i, iodel of a leaf on a colossal scale, | whole weight of leaves is due to the water | identity immediately after the § ring a sort c Hiennium with be read. Ben l'““l;)]’ "("l"““”“"’il‘;'( "I‘i“:;’:”; publication will be demanded than are fur- [ 708 ACEL OF & € bag represents the epi | which they hold.. For instance, in 100 pounds | Fe train came in from of government publications, nished for sale to the Bureau of Documents v arq ol ter. e dred | the train, and there was anxiety upon his e The lis 1 tatoes represent the cells, within which the | as eighty pounds of water One hun on hil i ological and not alphabetical. ~ The MWSt| ey gacided, for the law makes no provision. | 2 v od. This food consists en- | pounds of lettuce or cabbage leaves have been | face as he glanced hurriedly about. Kawkee A A 1Qe LZe B ath AL A B OT EEEA L G S b s e T e ST G i G e T L B O D NG I T B3 A habitual use keeps the whole sys W hat been written by any individual, | jniy rupning order. Many documents are sold i 3 . iy wbsorbed up through the roots of the tree, | out if the color of the leaves is to be pre- | kee Dick saw the elderly gentieman, The | tem 1n tone. subject, and where any document may Be | partment sells the statute laws; the Treasury | ara’ catbonto aetd gan, breathed in by the | served cognition was mutual. Kawkes Dick found The libr asillive uk‘l‘v“:'fl:‘rh) i eells the catalogue }let'lrx))‘rluhlfl and ”"; leaves themselves, Both the water and gas An intere ng experiment lat discovered | turned about and started out of the depot on THE BUREAU OF DOCUMENTS. monthly statements of finance, commerce anc vt Tebelioy | Aubstancos, In”the. cells, as well ‘as the | toraphy.” Take a leat aud soak It in alco- | him and caught him Just outside. ra e has had the unusual op- | The War department sells the Rebellion | minute grains of pigment which furnish | hol until all of its green color dlsappears. | You rascal,” sald the elderly gentleman o o He o sistants, | Record and the Postoffice department sells | tho color of the leaves. Under the Influence | Afterward soak in a water solution of fodine | “take that off,” and with his own hands Kaw portunity of selecting his own e — & by congressmen. Four of these, only one of | sells the Naval War Record and the publl- | place in the carbonic acid gas and water, | this dry the leaf, and it will appear translu- | and meekly handed it over to the elderiy gen JLJ H DLJ __lu JD __)f-}L lml ’ P craduates of the | cations of the Nautical Almanac office and |and their elements again coming together | cent. By holding over sensitive paper it may | {laman them being a man, gradiatos & Albany Library school. Library work is a |the Hydrographic office. The Interior de- | form sugar. The sugar is transferred from | be used as a negative and will print beautiful Then followed a lightning and most re profession nowadays, and studsnts regi- | partment sells the publicaticns of the census | one cell to another in the leaf, gradually | photographs of the original leaf when held appearance. ; t57onlet an ce, and reports and s of the geo- [ reaches the branches, bs ik and - — Vith one tug at_the long hair the elderly ¢ or medicine, Mr. Crandali’s chief assist- | office, and reports and bulletins of the geo- | reaches the branches. Iimbs, trunk. an With one tug at_the long A C Ty s aRI ORIy oL o tyniesL i Ibraria | | JoRIoA1 X RiiTvey: " (PHs {QBVeramEnt Metneing | Dty tHe e ot e In This Work-a-Day World. gentleman relived Kawkee Dick’s head of it belng & young woman with beautiful blue | office sells the Congressional Record, and | — Any force which provents a leat from ful ety under the pressure of anxieties of business. | another jerk the old gentleman got possession Her name s Adelaide R. Hasse, and she | Ing the reports of the fish commission. cause it to change color. These differences | paregis, wasting of the nervous tissues, 4 | of Kawkec's savagelooking muctacne. 1 mes from Los Angeles, Cal. Hitherto the are caused by changes In the grains of | . g4en’and unforeward collapse of the mental | was false, also {HAs310% SC/aOvEr amIent Tiblications:link ean n. color pigment. ~Green, which is character- | 41 physical faculties are daily occurrences This trimming left standing before the . oot Meakiitsa oiarits. who Istlo of the greater part of vegetable Mfe, 18 | og e columns of the daily press show. For- | elderly gentleman—not Kawkes Dick. but (TR0 S DL . r -1-noor Wnws Set In n | very complex in its composition. It is not ) made a botch o : toward events with Hostetter's Stomach This is ¥y son, said the elderly gentl: this library one copy of ev document | The Mogul emperors were wise enough to | ence of N'"’"'*';‘-”"“‘):‘h'):‘“‘:‘h“,““”‘;"\“"":"" E1ttor; “that BAE Slptdl madicine ot the i o the Awused spestkioe FHs tan y U o ination of colors, ch, el N, & k. 0! C nd r Jse it | W J home and ha st located N ba i Rt e 1 LiLewiah ovary e | rediiiaytHat it theydaiabtabulia Attieipkown) || SLINHOROL U0 vk EENER T BiXEd aEy weak, worn out ‘and infirm. Ute it In rh aay trom lome and 1 have just loeated bin. | § The Land of Plenty Soutlve department I8 require furnish 10| mausoleums they stood but little chancs of | btherwise than green is not natural LB UG U DL LR R 10 the Be%r IR ls. th ChIvA MR ol AT, lishes. The accumulations of government | being buried with fitting magnificence, and A NATURAL PAINT BOX. OIS played this trick on m: You come w Sure Crops publications now held by the departments | took a serlous pleasure in rearing these state'y | Red is one of the color el ot layes. | e a¥il11e niBLEhS £o6s nulh 1o fiekANAIIE YO U Atsran ey, dore praske il are to be turned over to the Rureau of Docu- | sepulchers, says Harper's Magazine. Todt at | Reddish colors are generally in a liquid & L S humiliated terror of the Kaw Valley disap- Sl b b 500,001 Yellow (s another principal color element, | traveling withont his royal wife, and what | hUmiliated terror of the Kaw Walley disap Tolnmen, and of thest Mr. Crandali s o, | end of a vast pariciike garden, and there ts [ Fhie combimed with green, is the natural |y good time he was having! For once in a | fnan @ 4 NO Cold Winters ready taken 200,000. The accumulations at | nothing funereal fn its character or surround- | shade of the grains of pigment within each ¢ e whic A ? | had he to attend to any punctilious ceremony The Modern Bennty | the present. There millions of volumes have | o HAARIGBYBLICOKINE (chusctully fatwaral| oo heReelIRiTLATosll Awhio N Rt e R eI Tob Lot g e Thrives on good food and sunshine, with | e K TAlRa b eastern fa: stance we likened to a potato, for closer de e i 1 7% and g slenty of exerc in the open air. Her forn D N LI Rb Y N0k S5 ¢ MRevil bl {aBa TRt s uss (oL HaiE] | pomcs Thpc xensd lola potitotforioloner dac ed In the common dining room and were | pl A Ll : worms, gnawed by rats, and a prey to an odd i i el compared with a small rub- | gay affairs, where he jestcd and laughed | glows with health and her face blooms wi S0 mgu Olakis toSwhich hGoke aye| MeuNdlstin S mblle they Jlved; Ak pleadchiine - tomeRred Comiin R ML Hob attending friends, and was not | its peauty. If her system needs the cleans subject, houses, and the surrounding gardens as appro- "fl d:}:‘ . M‘”“_'h) AiksTEea s hna. fotlors tha 8 g the pretty girls at the neigh- | ing action of a laxative remedy, she uses 4 Many of these volumes, being rare, arc | priate plac:s for all fresco entertainments. It Wrola soiution. Also add Paris green. whose | boring tables, nor'trylng the effect of sweet | gentle and pleasant liquid laxative, Syrup of Tonin from $10 to 326 each. The accumula- |y, o postic tnspiration on the part of Akbar | mimste grains will mot distolve, . Fellow grajng | siniles and glances.upon them. The marquis | Figs L] {jons are largely frim the overflow of the | Yo have placed his tomb out in the sunshine | ot horse powdered substance, likewise insolu- } and in the middle of the wide marble court, [ ble, should be mingled with the green one : s RS s LT toloommitiens and dlsponsediwithy Improve- ) Giek-oily" the Blus vAUlL of heaver over If. | Tho tubbor RellALSoIt: In Bfown correspond. situated in the most fertile and rich vegetable and fruit growing re- ot th s docimente. "Samide, i e sLOra&: | i the Ko-i-noor flashing ke a star from the | ing to the color of the cell walls. The com- se documents. Many of them are belng : : on 6 e light, is the green tint of Fergusson do»s not mention the Koh-i-noor, | when seen In the light, is t senate annex. The senate also has hired a 3 8 fe. ] ‘ v | 5 3 ed car s 0, v 25 % nor the little column four feet high, said to | plant life. e taroaolots *, In that glorious climate make you a good living, a home and money I.IN\T i o \:‘lnl‘l‘l‘" o ’f\'.:'";:’,’," ‘I:’,:“(”I:" have been covered with gold, but it still | When any one of these elementary colors g these clianges, the government publications | (o, and It was. at all events, & unique and | Of the remaining colors clustered In bt PNz INGE NI LS Y grows and no such thing is known as a failure. You ave uot limited At the capitol are much more readily ac. | Pleasing idea. Few deserted cities are more B, S fn the demand for what you raise by any local markets. On the fipred i Which towers t | mixed with brown ones, yellow ‘ones and 5 r Cop did gateway ol 3 que ch towers to | Log o o A took away any one of these LIBRARY COPI the height of 15) feet above tho ground, | Fod ones, and too ¥ : . (deale il ak Colons tnwdne fo¥ i hal A REU iR depositories for pubic documents, Each sen- | o jandmark for all the nelghboring country :y‘r‘;l““;: red pigment is left. If yellow, all L) Com s aibrary. The libraries {hus selected || cacaped. the ravages of time is of tho rame | oiue eellon eratnt, it 1 pAEs e bFO Tonireyy e, publications of the government | rod sandstone, and the only excption Is ths | that a the sl that the leaf 1o dosd. ATl Tegularly, The latter are sent also to every | white marble tomb of Sellm Chisti, which living color has disappeared, leaving only the She of ihe state and territorial libraries, to [ stands in the court yard of the mosqus. Such | brans wails ot the. cotls. The brown ' leat 8 Mbrmrlox ntgths oy Gttve. depariments, | miracles of delicate tracery and such fan‘as- | therefore, may be compared to aruined et Poiny miltary and naval academies at | tically twisted brackets wera surely never b:- | casigle, deserted of all interior life, and whoss et ar lkeland paving tha hest price it. There Is no West Point and Annapolls, But hitherto the | fore wrought in unylelding marbie. and.ss the | wolior: walls still stand O, the’brown le % allivouicnnian lfaiand DY i0ggchom ELERtibuic: r“r‘ 5 i b system adopted in furnishing the books to the sculptured c2ils in the tempies of Mcunt Abut | may, be said to be emblematic of | human f y A % end to the scason or crops. You ean have a erop to market every month LIREaHTBSEhAK bosn At poorione ATl ak nHb)Ic | reprasent Ltho! highast aliais it ctLEiisass |k tiaton: (intwhioh simile may well be s : 1Al { ) D henr adtended to that part of his busine:s | art in this direction, so the tomb of Selim | the uppfl'l‘r“"““‘"‘:"'"f)';; oaasa e men. hen he happened to have tme. At @ result | Chistl may stand as an example of what in ton mankind s “green today, Ceral gocs Sommonly got the documents | genjous Mussulmen architects may aceomp'ish | Sea B 3 . Yoo foars late, and sometimes they did | Within the range of purely geometris d-tign | JACK FROST NOT ALL TO BLAME. Ty eocelve them at all. Some cf the volumes | circumscribed as they are by the limitation Mr. Woods says that many pesple other- ssucd during the Fifty-first congress and 1u- | of their creed, wise well informed make the mistake of \ended for the libraries have not been bound | * The most unique of all the little strucures | :upposing that the frost mlone is the ca yet. The bindery of ihe NOYeEomL Printing | standiag In the nelghborhood, or on the near | of the yarlation o the color ot autumn | —s — —_—— work, | ears behind with a good deal of its | margin of the tank in tha vast court inclosed | leav:s. The leaves in this season reilly tezin Mokl by the palace walls, is the one commonly |to turn befors the frost appears. Frost “A BRIGHT HOME MAKES A MERRY e libraries complain that they have beon | called the su'tana’s giosk, and lovingly d - | however, hastens the destructive actlon al- obiiged to go without books which private per- | signed as the boudo' of the Impsria favarits | ready begluning to ke place. Any condi HEART.” JOY TRAVELS ALONG WITH Whe, Ohialned through thelr congressmen. [ We know little today' of the jewel which it | tions of climate which cause the fradual When the documents were recelved finally | neltered, but we may at least hope thet it | death of leaves produce a high var.oly of = they were apt to be stale and no longer of | was worthy of such & carket. The red sion | colors. Hence in & long drawn out autumn, 4 contemporary interest. People applied to the Beo v dee color, | when the days gradually cool from summer 7 PP 0 the | js peculiarly deep and rich in quality of color, librarians for the books and could not gat . b fteq | heat to winter snow, are to ba found the @ anl as every inch of it Is carved and freited t ; them. The system was worse than atsurd. ||\ rescmbles licquer most beautiful autumn leave:, whereas in Henceforth, however, it will b qaite differe:t, | ' 1 : erbul' hierlt those autumns in_ which the frost eomes The new law, which will not have. full affect I8 onie o Baerhuls Daughbert and sl | ooie. DR atiar ia IeraRblar Twer o v, whic 10t have full effec or's o 0 8 ike, she 4 a bl e ! s, peac 's, early apples, figs, sos— until after the beginning of the next congress, th “,'i;"".;'":ff,r":,"‘l'f,"0'}“,::,',“:‘."""I‘:, "":,"I‘,,"\ to be found. 'An early frost will cause all berries, apricots, plums, peaches, pears, early apples, figs, oranges o el by oy comles of every new pub iea- | of'theso fortunate sultants had reason to b | 188Ye8 (0 turn fo @ dead brown, — b i all small fruits—are an early and very profitable cr :',f'l;]l.‘,,,"‘.“:,,:’y.,”.H.fn‘,xrm.’.'."("r( Bioumesty fog | lealous of a rival's installation, since all were | CHimeon and rearlet utwmn leavesihe MANHG“D HEST“HED"?UP"‘JENE- Timber of the highest quality Is abundant. FI 18 abundant i nt to the Bureiu of ents £0r | equally well lo¢ Nothing Puttipoor o Oro. ™ H ia great V. . distribution to the lMbraries. The printing and | oo 1y won lodged. Nothing at Futtipoor | (3 ooior portions of this country than in Vitlrhe s and costs you nothing. Cattle run out all the y They are easily binding of these coples will have precedence, | LT 18 more impressive than the view of the i TOEE BRCIME O, A CAREE, L0 T tion of a famous Fre:ichy phyaician, wiil quickly cure you of all 3 8 3 s From the beginning of the year 1896 ine | M2 and 10 sianys ntinkeiat the EUUC- | who have coveted the luxury of our au'umn Jota or digcaie of the girivé bl mbd'sy Lo raised and fattened. Grazing 1s good all the Native grasses A y car 1896 the | tyres’ towering above them, whem one leaves e tian iy el BRI, nsomuia, Falns In the Bick, Bembal Eunissions, Nervous D 5 ernment publivhilans. - Hicoles Of all £0V- | stand two'great elophants’ tusks. Hers he may | SUCh Lrees [n thelr_ native caunt A nysmof discharge, wilch it not ehecked Tobd to ormatorshosa gressional sets” of documents nave been sent | 100K back to the deserted capiial, or forward [ Mottt (FEEY L Ve they patriotio e BEFSRE ano AFTER jthie ormors ol tmpotency. €Y TENL ol LI U - 3y i b oave been sent | ¢o the western glow, beyond the crumbling refuse to make beautiful the laadscipe of CUPTDENE atrengthens and restores small weak 0 gans. 14 Gocomente riew: | hese embraced execu(ive | rujny of the last and outermoat wall, whers ther nations. Botanists al:o find that trees The rcacon sufferers nro by Doclors Is beciuse ninety per cent aro troubled wity Chments, miscellaneous documents, reports | the grest vultures and adjutant storks batance || the eastern portions of this country are ‘asitin, CUPIDENE | known remedy t0 curo without an operation. L testimont of the senata and house and reports of the i) S ¥ 1A sritten guarantee given an y returned If six boxes does not elloct # permanent cury executive departments. They did not fncluie | (NeMS8IVes on the broken batilements. much more productive of beauliful autumn abor, six for 45,00, by matl, Bend for ¥REL cireular and teatmon aly deparimental bulletins and other such publi a- e loaves than those of the west, The reason FOR o AES DAVOL UEDICINE CO., ¥, 0. Lox 57, 8an Fraciwo. Cal. o Sale by bk Is the finest in the known world. The summers are even fn tempera- . A . A 3 ALE BY GOUUSAS G st : o tlons. Henceforth the libraries will rocelve = — RISE MOUUNAN DRUQ 00, A Taream it ature and rendered delightful by land and sea breezes, The nights practically everything, though not perhaps the aho ey O i s T feports of the Smithsonian institution. That| ren"of moderate means. with famnive | Beecham'’s pilis are for bilious. are always cool. The winters are mild and short in duration, Ther rather anomalous establishment, though| . = ecure, are o3ted i 3 oX 1o o S Is fa a The o4 helped by congress, pays for its publications r:;l\y;-lml‘]llfn‘ l;;n:-)r{;:ux;w|¢\;‘rn;l|xtni ||<u“r;‘;|rl.| :u ness, bilious headache, dy5pep- are mo extremes of heat or cold in this favored reglon. The mean OgEetieonatuage [y the one way to satisty yourself as to the | sia, heartburn, torpid liver,diz- temperature is 42 to 66 degrees. The averag is 06 inches. AN EXCHANGE SYSTEM. credibility of the statements made as to th * H ’ There is au abundance of rain for all crops. v.l;:lxlurl;:x;n::l{, the zew lu,w ':s . mm favorel regon. ziness, sick headache,bad taste gue, and S not certain whether the 5 copies of everything provided for the libraries aro to be printed as extra copies or to be subtracted from the quotas of the depart- ments. Probably there will be a squabble over that question; for the departments would object to such a subtraction, and, on the other hand, to make 500 extra coples would be a large expense. Another matter not pro vided for by the law is a system of library exchange, which Mr. Crandall has adopted This system makes the Bureau of Documents a sort of clearing house for all of the Il braries designed as depositories for govern. ment publications. The libraries have many duplicates of documents. These they send to the bureau, which furnishes sacks and malling franks, and in return they receive copies of such documents as they lack, 1f Mr Crandall has them. Up to date the libraries have thus returned more than - 100,000 duplicates. One library 18 supplied with what it lacks out of what the bureau recelves from another library. Thus before long every one of the important libraries of the country will have a complete set of the public documents. Incidentally tho set of the Bureau of Documents s being made complete. The bureau occupies the wholo of the top floor of the brick building which temporarily houses the Washington postofiice. Nearly all of the floor space is utilized for storage purposes, with upright tiers of what look like exaggerated ~book shelves. These are called “bins,” and in them the books and documents are being stacked. The library of the bureau will be 4 key to the bins, which will contain the dupli- cates. At the close of each sesslon of con- gress the burean will lssue a catalogue of the publications of the government during the previous year. The first catalogue of this kind will be for two years, covering the 1f the land suits you buy twenty or more aces of it. The cost of the trip to you fs nothing. Such an arrangement as this shows the confidence we have in Orchard Homes as the best section offered in which the intelli- gent, hard working citizen cannot only maks 4 good living, and make it easily, but will with'n two or three years, have a comfortable bank account as an evidence of his energy and the generous aid a fruitful soll and ex- quisite climatc give him. The climate of Orchard Homes is warm, but temperate; it is subject to no extreme of heat or cold. The summers are long, usually including May and September, but it Is rare that the temperature reaches 5 degrees even in the hottest weather. Sunsirokes are prac- tically unknown, and the nigits by reason of the gulf breeze are delightfully cool. The winters are mild; blizzards and severe freezos are unknown. You are never ice-imprisoned or snowbound. The health sceker always finds here an atmosphere of unquestioned physical purity. The average rainfall is 5¢ inches, which is sufficient for all crops. Gov- ernment statistics show that Mississippl Is one of the most healthy states tn the union. Cases of pneumonia, consumption and diphtheria are rare because of the absence of sudden changes in temperature. This, in fact, is true of all diseases of the throat and lungs. Malaria is no more common in this section than in any of the western or middle states. Rallroad facilities are the best and giye ready means of. reaching the markets of the entire country. Three railroad com- missioners are elected. by the people who control frelght and passenger charges. The cost of building is very much less than in the west. For all further information see or sddress Geo. W, Ames, general ageat, 1617 Faroam St., Omaba, Neb. in the mouth, coated tongue, loss of appetite,sallow skin,etc,, when caused by constipation; and constipation is the most frequent cause of all of them. Go by the book. Pills 1oc and 25¢c a box. Book free at your druggist's orwrite B. F, Allen Co, 365 Canal St., New York. Annual sales more than 6.000.000 boxes. acee g ntage of the GRE TERMS offered by the South Omaha Land Company PROPERTY. This beautifully situ- perty lies between the Stock Yards and the Metropolis, and % Omaha or South Omaha. Fin ailroad tracks, SMALL INVEST y HANDSOME PROFITS, because the prop- t the growth.of the two cities toward ea:h other BOTH v ated p. AND ACREAC ible to all the railroads location for manufacturing plants on MENTS cannot help but P erty is so located th cannot help but rapidly increase value OMAHA OFF1CE— Rooms 208 and 209 First Nat. Bauk Bldg TITLE PERFECT. If you want to make money, buy a lot in the Magic City of South Omaha. ATLY REDUCED PRICES and LIBERAL SOUTH OMAHA OFFICE— 506 North 24th St A Few Advantages Offered by the Chicago, Milwaukee clean train made up and started fro P aul Railway, the short line to Chicage Bagga, teous emp! every berth, in other word, pot dally at 6:00 p Finest dining car service in t he 5, order what you wa = ZCEDAR RAPIDS il Biy gD ES MOINES © checked from residence to des lination. Elegant train service and cour- Entire train lighted by ele ctricity, with electric reading lamps in west, with meals served a la cart t and pay for what you get. Flyer leaves union de m., arriving at Chicako a t 9 a or, m ligent mun 18 assured. \Central Mississippi offers to the int finest opportunity for bettering his offered. The health of this region Is excelled by no section of this country, equalled ‘and never excelled for all good qualities. Karly and sure The soil found he an rarely «be The best railroad facilities in the coun- try briug the entive country to you as & market. One-half the work you now do to get along will render you a successtul money maker on any of this Orchard Home lands. Work intelligently and success I'his is your opportunity. The people arve friendly; schools efficient; newspapers progressive; churches liberal, The enter- prising man who wants to better the condition of himself and his Investigate this matter and he will be convinced. Care tully selected fruit growing and garden lands In tracts of 10 to 20 acres we now offer on liberal terms and reasonable prices. Corres GEO. W. AMES, Gen. Agent, 1617 Farnam St., Omaha, Nebraska, City Ticket Office, 1504 Farnam Street. C. 8. CARRIER, City Ticket Agent.