Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 5 April 1893 — Page 9
Wht
I SECOND PART. I
J PAGES 9 TO 12. v.1 43 M M 1 ' ESTABLISHED 182L INDIANAPOLIS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, APRIL 5. 1893 TWELVE PAGES. ONE DOLLAR PER YEAR.
ED BY EH George Doyle's Heroic Struggle for Life In a Mad Man's Grasp Sixteen Stories High. STRATEGY SAVES A LIFE. Albert Gedney Tries to Hurl His Friend Down to Death, But Grants Him a Few Short Moments for Prayer, And Vonnjc Doyle Seeing Hin Only Opportunity lor lAte Leaps Through a hcuttle and Faints Just as Assistance Is at Hand The Victim's story ot the Terrible Ordeal Through "Which He Passed. Chicago, March 31. Alone on the top of a sixtee u-itory build. ng the Great Northern bote), save for the conn a y of a mad man, who fiercely s-rove to huil h.m over tae edge, was l ie ei enence of George I'oyle of Chicago to3ay, and to hi quick wit, rather than to bis strength lie owes Iiis li e. One we k ngo ye!ter'iay Albert Godney and his aon llootrt, a youo wan, registered from I'hiludrl; a a. Thür Jay tie elder Godney went to Omiha on business, ieavin? hit son in Chicago, Besiding at the hotel is one George Doyle, a former Philadelphian, who had known young Gedney ia his youth. Naturally they were much together, and yes'eruay, (iedney, forgetting, or not realizing, tbut the hotel was odo of the vantage view point of the city, proposed that they go to the Masouio Temple to look ont oTer ths city. linaliy they went to the roof of the new hotel. The line's Laugh. They stood for tome time looking over the lity, when suddenly Gedney gave a strange .au','h and grabbing Doyle by the hand, he began pul.ing hi in across the small square aud beck 21.D, as if the cool breeze had exhilarated hiui to playtu'.aesa. Thea he said: "liold my hand; I want to look down." Doyle did so. and he Razed over the side at the people who lookeJ like pigmies below. Theo with a Lalefui light in his eyes aud with a strange earnestnestnes in his vo ce, in contrast with his recent piayfulners, be said: "You've got to jump oil of the building or I'll throw you oil." For the first time it came back to Doyle's memory that Gedney had several years ago beeu treated for a mild form of insanity ia au as; urn at Lome. Iiis first impure, as the sickening realization of the (ituatioii came over Lim, was to call fur h p. but (iedney ia larger aud stronger than I.e. aud euch a policy might have meant almoft instant destruction. He iritJ to toiuporize and treat the matter as a joke. "Will pou jump?'' said Gedney, and without waitirg tor a reply he seized Doyle and began to drag him toward the e.Ige. Doyle ioui(ht with the desperation of de tar, and the men, c osely locked together, staggered to and fro over the roof, Geiiu-y steaai.y lurcing his man toward thee-ige. 'Iwicj Doyle tripped him and they fell together anl twioe Gedney broke awuy, only toreuew the ntiempt to burl Doyle to the pavement lar below. An Uys tVunr. Robert Ilaslan, a wine acect, who hai an of. fee in the upper story of the Monadock building just aoroda the street, saw the nieu t rustling and watched them for a few minutes, thinking that they were only in sport. lie ioou saw, however, that the desperate struggle was one of lite and death to the men who were lighting so furiously, and, rushing across to he hotel, he informed Mr. I.den, the proprietor, se i accompanied by a porter t!ie men started lor the roof. When they readied the et airs eading to the roof Doyle, barencaded, came lashing down. lie was weak and excited, and almost fainting leil egainst the poitr. With his ciothea torn troiu l.ibxck and Lie Manet e l face aud trembling limbs bore witness to the fearful ordeal he had uudergoue. Gedney waa walking calmly around the roof when Mr. Eden put his head out of the scuttle and pi a-antly invited that gentleman to come out and nee the city, but Mr. Eden de -lined and finally succeeded ia getting Gedney to come down for trie purpose o. taking a drink. Mr. Eden and Mr. llvlitn fina ly got him into a room and asked him why he had attempted to throw Doyle o:t the roof. Ue seemed surprite i at first, hutlanglied aud said that it was only a joke. Nevertiie.ens he whs locked iu security and hie father telegraphed for. Poj'lr'i Story. When Doyle was able to tilk he gave a traphic account of his tearful fight for life, and when iu'oraied thut Ciedney claimed that it was aoly a joks, he said, pacing his hand nervously over hia face to which the natural 0)lr Lad not returned, although it was several hours a'ter the occurrence, "Joke, was it? Well, I would give up my hopes of heaven rather than go through such a ptraiautry for the second lime. It was no joke to u:e, whatever it tniy have been to hin. I fought as I never fought betöre as I had no idea that 1 or any other man could tigiit. I teil ycu my life grew sweet to me when I thought of being toftsed s xt en aMii? down to a granite pavement. Once we were wtihin four feet of the edge and I thought he had nie. I grppe 1 one L.t:id ia his l.a.r and cid the other on his throat aod I swore that if I went over the edge of that roof to ciy death be would never live to tell anything about i'. I would have dragged hi mi down with me." A I'levrr Strategy. Doyle's escape was by a clever strategy. Feeling that his strength wm almost gune and being at some dis;ar oi from the edge, he suddenly called to Gedney to stop; that he would jump o.J. When he was loosened he stipulated that be mu4t have a few moments for prayer. He stepped back and knelt down. Gedney. standing in his i lnce reverentaity. Lent his h-ad. Doyle watched him througn Li Lal.'-elosed eyes, aud as suddenly aud as k L 11. SIMMONS LIYEK ÜEGULATOh. EFFECTUAL SPECIFIC for Constipation. Iyipapla. IIea!arh, IMzxloe. ft.)nr tflomach. ba-t tati3 th luoath, bilious attack, a id dpn'lencr, all cf which are the oCspriof of a dlieaatd Liver. Save Time! Save Health! Save Money! NOTHIXO TO EQUAL IT. . "I bare sold Simmons Liver B(rulatnr for years. My eu.tAfflir. ,rinouae- it ibe er aed. One eust iuer who health was la a wretched eoo lition, fiora a very hat sad stubborn caa of lyiprpsia, Bd the i&rgalator aa t tw niiralr earmi. I au asiii it . if for Torpid Livr. eau"4 by eloe aoafiovoa-Dt I find Bottdna' o equal it aa1 highly reeommeod IU ue." C Y. Uiaar, rujglet, i-dia-by. Ya.
Unlike liie Dutch Proces
No Alkalies OR Other Chcmical3 are used in the preparation of W. BAKER & COS BreakfastCocoa trhich ia absolutely t imr and soluble. I thymorthnnthrtetimca I lAe utrenyth of Cocoa mixei I with Starch, Arrowroot or Sugar, and is far more eco nomical, costing less than one cent a cup. It is delicious, nourishing, and easily DIGESTED. Sold by Crorers everywhere. 7. BAKES & CO.. Dorchester, Haag, quickly a a cat he darted through the scuttle aud went through it like a fiaih and into the arms of the men who were coming to save him. "1 knew it was my only chance," he said, "and I made a leap for life. I saw the ecuttle in a k nd of hole, and I dou't actually believe that 1 touched the roof between that hole and the spot where I stood when Gedney loosened his bold. I simply jumped forthat hole, and I owe my life this tniuut to the fact that 1 hit it. If I bad ruirsed it Go iney wou.d have hauled me hack and ths whole thing would have ended s xteen stories lower thai: it did. I felt then as if 1 had fought him a'l afternoon, though I do not suppore that the whole thing was over ten minutes, probably less than that. My strength was ail gone and I could not have foughi any longer. 1 would have been game for hi i if he had got me in hi hands acrtia, but then,'" continued Doyle, I would have died game, and I would not have died alone." TIRED OF THE CHIMES. James F. Motisell, Invalid. Commits Suicide iu a New York Hotel. New York, Mtirch 31. The little wensened and crippi.-d old Jaiues V. Mom-ll, tired of a life of pain and illness, tired of righting against the ringing of the Grace church chimes, celebrated his sixty-seventh birthday by killing himself in the St.ltn hotel early this moruing. Morsel! had been a guett at the t. Denis at the corner of Uroadway and Eleventt.-st. for five years and an invalid in the fullest sense of the word for the last two years. He came f oai Ohio, originally, and was fairiy well educated. Some money had been :eft him when young. It was not much but enough to keep him in a life of leisure. He invested soma of it in a com pany that at the time manufactured a native champagne in the West. That investment paid pretty well and l.a soon increased his ainail fortune. He spent considerable of his timj wandering about Europe, lis was a bachelor and ha i no tiei to keep him here, lie has relatives in Ohio. His ailments genersted cocentrioities. One was a fur ous hatred of the chimes ia Grace church steeple directly opposite the hotel on Broadway. The method of playing the chimei t a J been altered, a keyboard with choir eil uut.ectior.1 having been substituted fr rthe old me. hod. A new player, a young woman, hai also been secured to unn:pulte the chimes. (She liked practicing on the new keyboard and the sound of the chime so wt-h that she practiced moat of the time. The old man bad hia windows open on account of the warm weather and the continuous sounding of the chimes dnring tne day drove him well nigh distracted. BOYS GIVEN FORTY YEARS. Severe Punishment for the 3Iurder of Another Youth. Chicago, March 31. Two boys, one fourteen-and the other fifteen jeara of nge, were today niven, practicl'iy, life sentences in the penitentiary for murder, both beiDg sentenced for lotty years. The younger ct the two con viets is Wi liana Blunck, the other being John T. Luveiue. The trial has lasted three days, and while it wascertaiu that the verdict would be "guilty," it was hardly expected that the punishment would be so revere. The crime of which the boya were convicted was the murder of Albert Eckroth on the night of May 15, 1S!2. One of them pushed a revolver int Eckroth'a face wnile the other attempted to grab his watch. E kroth resisted and wa shot dead. Young lilunok was captured while running from the sceu of the mur ler and by his own confession implicated I.uveine, who was aireated the next day. When the verdict was read in the court room thU atternoo.i I.uveine was overcome, but lilunck took it calmly. When his( brother apDronched and in a choking voice said. "Forty years is pretty hard, Willie," the young euviot replied: "Well, what's it to you; go of and don't bodder me." The jury on the first ballot declared the boys t'Uiity a:i 1 two vol. a were cast for hanging a id, as one j;imr raid, "fh only thing ttiat sved their lives was the tact of their youth. We all agreed that the murder was a deliberate and cold blooded a'ir aud we brought in a verdict o fit the eniui." DÜBBS FACTION OUSTED. Decision ol the Illinois Supremo Court in the Iivait;elical Church AVar. Ottawa, 111., March 31. The Illinois aupreme court to1ay in a lengthy opinion per curiam absclitcly settled the evangtlioal church war by ouating the Dubbs factiou bodily and holding that the In Jieuapolia general couference was the only laiul body aud that ita adjudication and finding regarding the d vision in the church was final ard bicding. Tue opinion has been looked forward to with great interest not only ia the state of Illinois, but Ol io, IVnnnylvao a, Orecou and Iowa, where splits have beeu organized in the church. The trouble grew out of a charge of itnmomlity being preferred a?'iin-t Euhop iuibe, who forihwiih sece led fruui the chtiro'u proptr and established what he claitued was the real church. While poung as the heul and founder of the rivnt ecclesiastical tody he named the llev. Mr. Ilu-er to preside over the woraiiioeaat t. Jo in's evangelical chureli iu Chicago. It is ent'm ite I that about UO.UOO oi the church itim!iers iu all "'cuon or the country professed faun to the Dibbs dioce. ANOTHER VESSEL OVERD U E. The Italian Freighter Stura May Bo Wrecked. New Orleans, March 31. Anxiety for the missing Italian steamer Stura. now thirteen days overdue, Inj increased since the arrival of the Urit ah ateamer Wickharn, from l'aiermo, which reports having had fine weather the entire voyage and eume over the route which the fclura i auppotad to hava twkn. The Mur sailed from .Messina on Feb. 13, Palermo, Feb. 18, with 2Lt5.0 boxes ot lemons and 2.800 boxes of oranges, called at (fibrillar for coal, sailing from there on Feh, 23, amce which nothing has been heard of her. he ia an iron venae i. registers 1.410 tana net, carriea a crew of forty-six men and is owned by the Italian navigation compaoy of 1'aleruio. The impression ia that she has either been lost or brikodown and drifted out of the ordinary track of vesstla. Persons suffering from sick headache, dizziness, nausea, constipation, pain in the aide, are asked to try one vial of Carter's Little Liver Pill.
THE FARMERS BUSY SEASON
BUT THEY MUST TAKE TIME TO ANSWER INQUIRIES. "Sentinel's" Offer to Make the Inge a Mt-dimu for the Interchange of Thought Pushing One's Business Suggestions to Feeders Dralt Horses Preferred A Letter from "Norman" Canning Factories Corn, Peas Egg-Eating Fowls What Cas sius 31. Clay Says Sentinel" Pointers Ileclpes. The Sentinel recocnizea the fact that this ia the farmers' busy season, and that they Lave little time to do more than read their favorite papers while they are plowing and planting. But notwithstanding the rush of work, we confidently expect them to take half an hour in the evening or on wet daya to answer the inquiries of any brother farmer, or to make a suggestion that will help others. This pape we offer as a medium for the enterchange of thought among our farmer readers. We want to be helpful, and to this end are willingly devoting this pace. We want thodeoartmeut thoroughly practical. None but working; farmers write for the department, and it tries to present those facts that wi l aid in trcttinz better crops and better prices. As wo have eatJ, you are now busy. Winter brings the greatest leisure and time for comment and discussion. E-ut while we look forward to the winter season we trust many will continue to give us the benefit ot their counsel as eouio have already done. Join with us in our effort to point the way to better methods of Drodi;cin and marketing o'ir crops. Add to th sociability of farm iiie by joining our family of farmers and their wives, eons and daughters, who o'fer comments and fcug'estious. If you do this iu fair degree this summer wo hope to oiler you a feast of good things Lext winter. Pushing One's I!uiness. We livo in a very busy age. The leaders in the world's business are very energetic men, pushing their interests and full of expedients. The less enterprising are pushed to the wall, or else follow in tha rear, keeping company with a preat crowd who n.nke no money and spend none, and thus manage to make their accounts balance. Good judgment, ordinary industry and a practice of industry aod economy are not the eole factors of assured success in any Iir.e of work, as they formerly were, however important a place they may hold. America has become a synonym of push and shrewd management. The successful man gets out of the rut, does hin own thinking, driven his work and believes in himself and in it. These things are eminently irue in the business world, but thev are little less bo in the farming; worid. 1 ho thrifty men on th farm aro they who know the capabilities of their Foil, who know what crops pay be.t, wbo have confidence in their figures regardless of common practice in their community, and who have tho pluck to cut loose from crops that do not pay, let others do as they. There are few if anv farms that cannot bo male to grow some crop or eorr.e kind of stock at a flight profit, to nay the least. Tiiv: Sentinel farmer kuows from experience, obscrvaiion and a etudy of ngricuitural htatiatics that the buidm-es of farming is hampered by the existence of some evils that legislation enn remedy, fie is ever ready to work for tha correction of theee evils. This view is often presented in this department. Hut the other tide, our own failure and shortcomings ced juat rs patient consideration and correction. More money can be made by the majority if tho business is pushed with the energy and study that uuctessful business men giv8 to their work. Indiana produces only 13.1 bueheli of wheat per aero on an avercge. Some farms arc growing twenty to thirty bushels per acre. Xecesari y soma land is producing lews than the nvernge. Is there a neighborhood in which The Sentinei. is read where fields are not sown in the fall that any reader would Fay does not give promi-e of ;he etate average? Ohio's average is only one bushel greater. Wo illustrate with the figures for wheat, but those for corn or other grains tell a aimiiar etory. It is not fair to assume that the most of this unre r unerative land is not handled with that foresight and Bhrewdtiess that is characteristic of the Euccessful business man of the world7 It lias greater capabilities, doubtleos. If it do' S not pay cof-t of tillage and wheat fields producing lens than the state average do not then should they either have other tillage, or el lie in grass and gain in fertility. It is true that much poor land id Fown in wheut to prepare for grass, but this iu no wire accounts for half the chortage in wheat yields. The average yields of all crops bear evidence that many of us are not pushing our business. It is not oaly in wie choice oi crops that euccessful farmers drivo their business. This is like the choice of the merchant in such lines of good -4 as he feeis capable of handüng. Tho merchant or manufacturer that ntays at the front inubt be quick to avail himself of all improvements in his line, and especially mufct he stop all leaks aud wastes. It is this latter thought that strikes us with force as we begin the season's work. Unless we can plan to do all our work at the right time, much of it will not pay, and the leak begin. The most of us try to till too many acres. Teams and implements ar int-nlirint for the work. ome land is plowed u littio wet, and tillage is waited among the c'odi half tho summer. Fields are not we'd prepared lor the seed, and tho younz plants have to light for a bare oxintenctf. I'oor tools, men and W wssavawasjWAasasT Makes an evcry-day convenience of an old-time luxury. Pure and wholesome. Prepared with scrupulous care. Highest award at all Pure Food Expositions. Each package makes two large pies. Avoid imitations and Insist on having the NONE SICH brand. TERRELL & SOLLE. Syracuse N. Y.
Such
vmmm iw
:a t . SWIFTS SFKCIFIC I totally rniiK? anv LvJ other blood medicine. It cures tiiscasosoi and at tho same time puppliea pood hlooil to tre wasted nans. Don t bo Imposed on by 6utstliute, which are enid to bo just as good, tt u it true. No medicine k5J fUH HjARI FJ has reformed as nany IH SlSS- CVUt.llataJ wonderful cures, or relieved so much BiilTerinsMy Mood ivas badly poisoned last rear, which pot mv whole eys'-oai out of onicr ;L-caM:d and a constant source of fufTcrirg, r.o r.) pcfio and no . enjoyment of life. Two bot t!e3 of f'ir S ought UiO ri :ht out. There is no :H?iin tier remedy dor Wood oiseaws. u-aa.J brought Detter : "Jhn Gavin, Da )-ton, Ohio." Trcatiao ort Wood an a skin diseases mailed frei SWIFT SrZOFlC CO Atlanta, C teams waste valuable time. Ho great a failure to push one's business. Have we any right to expect bucccps? Not all are failing in this way. More of tis are improving in our methods, doing more thinking and studying and living up to our convictions than formerly did so. But there is always room for better work. The farmer of today needs to be not only economical and industrious, but studious, energetic, full of expedients for cheapening cost of production, and ready to te?t in a conservative way a'l new methods for increasing incomes that give promiee of purees?, whether they consist of crops new to the farm or ony methods of culture. Pushing cue's business on the farm may not mean harder manual lahor, but it means the shrewd management bo necessary in all other iines of work. Sijggcatlons to Feeders. From a southern state report the following suggestions are valuable. Two thiugs are essential in fattening animals: 1. To keep tho animal comfortable and quiet. 2 To induce him to eat tho largest amount of nutritious food possible. One is of litt e va.ue without the other. To keep the cattle comfortable, Bhelter is indispensable. t attle must be handled quietly. Thn point we wish to emphasize, for it is entirely overlooked by too many cattlemen. A barking doc and noiy, loudmouthed maa are two things that should never be permitted to enter the cattlefeedii'g pen. It should be remembered th:it when a naturally wild steer is etruck with a whip, or disturbed in any way, that he stor s gaining in weight for a time, and the food consumed is a los. This i not a sentiment, but a business matter of working the animal machine to its full capacity. Cattle should bo fed twice a day at a regular time, if confined in a building, by the same persons, and strangers excluded for at least a month a'ter the cattle are shut op. Feed vrhat tho cattle will eat and clean out the mangers and troughs once every day. Cattle dis. ike feed that has been picked over and breathe 1 upon. Vary the rations occasionally to stimulate the appetite; have salt always betöre them, or better, if the feeder is careful and skillful, BDrickle a little salt on the feeder, but care must be exercised not to give too much. If feeding to ship in the spring after grass starts keep the cattle off the grass unless it is proposed to finish on grass, otherwise the cattle will ioso their relish for silago and dry feed, stop gaining and be in eolt condition to ship. liralt llorsea Preferred. A Letter fruiu Norman. "J The Sentinel asks whether a good reason can be give i for the advice to farmers that they breed their mares to draft horses. I think 1 cuu give several uood reasons. One reason is that most farmers have r.o time to train and develop road cults. If they have draft colts they can tench them to work on the farm and read, and when five or six years old the horses can be put upon the market. Then, a draft horse sells for what he is. and a farmer can get about all he is worth. His ai p.-urance he ps to sell h.m. While if one raises road colls, all depends upon speed, and unless one has a track and trains his horse?, a buyer cannot teil whether the horse ia worth having or not. There are oertain sections that have a reputation for raising road h rses, and when auch horses are wanted buyers go to those places. Reputation helps to sell them. It a farmer 1 a a pair of good draft hcrses he can always hud a market for them. He can ship them to a eity market if there are no local buyers, end the size aa i form of the horses command a good price. Then, too, most country mares are better fitted to produce draft colli than road colts. Unless the dam has fast biood iu her no sirs cau give the colt any great speed. I think it is alwavs safest to raise draft horses. Noioi an. Our correspondent presents his 6ide of this question with some force. However, ho eays nothing of coach horses and all that class that commands a good price for pleasure carriages because they have good form and action, even when spaed is lacking. Iet us hear from the other side. Are some of our readers doing well with road stock? We trust so, and want them to speak for their favorite breed. Canning Factories. To the Aor.icn.Ti EAL Editor S : Will some of my brother farmers tell us whether raising vegetables for a canning factory is a profitable nusinessf What are trie usual prices paid to farmers by the factories? Header. Will some one who has had experience please answer. Give the scale of prices paid, the average yields of the various veg etables and any other facts that will help "Keader." Cow Pe. To the AoaicrLTcitAL Editor S'r: Can souther cow peas be grown in Indiana? When should tbey he sown, and where otu seed be obtained? How much seed is required for an acre, the crop to be plowed nnder for manure? . j-armek. 1. lei. theie Daai cart be grown in the latitude of our state. They should not be sown until the ground is thoroughly warm, as they are a native of a warm CÜ mate. I ehalt sow several acres thn year about June 1. If you have no spring cro p on the land you will do well to sow about May 15, although they wiil make a fair growth if not sown until the 1st of July 2. baedsmen should advertise in our columns. I sent to the Houth for my seed for this summer's planting, having alreadv ordered as the price goes up later ia the season. V rite D. M. Ferry, De troit, Mich., who advertises with us, aud if he does not handle them I will give the name of a southern firm. 3. bow one and a haft bushel per acre broadcast, using disc barrow to cover them. Egsr-Kntinsr Fowl. To titk Ag men. tubal Editor Sir: What will atop hens from eating eut? Give them plenty of lime mortar, bono meal and ashes. Keep nests in a dark place. It toe eating continues, use n hatchet. Who knows a better way? A Letter from J, tj. M. TO THB AGßiCCI.TUBAL EDITOR Sir: t want to say that 1 agree with everything said in that article on maintaining the fertility oC our soil. Farmers are too mach ineiined te turn to commercial fertilizers when their fields do not yield aa good crops as they should. Clover, rye, oats and ether kinds of grasses furnish fertility to our fields when plowed aa der, and it is moot better to grow clover than to depend wholly upon commercial fertilizers. When one turns under a big erop of tops and roots of olovtr he has a mach plant food la II !
as he gets in half or three-quarters of a ton cf fertilizer. I am not objecting to the use of these fertilizers wheu needed, but one should not depend upon them ao long aa he can grow good clover. Uut I am espeeially interested in that idea about the manurial value of the food. If a mart ean get $10 or $12 worth of fertilizers out of a ton of wheat bran by feeding it and saving all the manure, he should buy such a tu It instead of fertilizers. The trouble ia that we don't save the manure right. 1 see manure lying under the eaves of barns, leaching all the strength away. If we would bed our stock well and haul the manure direct to toe fields we would get nearly all of it. Will you pleae tell us what ia the mauurial value of oorn-fodder and of timo
thy hay? Alaocats? J.Q. M. Prof. Armsby estimates the manurial i value of a ton of corn fodder to be l.Si); ! timothy hay, Sö.W. and oats, $7.4.'S. J. Q. M. understands that when we feed these stalls to stock that there is some loss, although when fed to grown stock, except to milch cows, the loss need not be very much. If nil the manure, both solid and liquid, bo saved, it is eafe to estimato its value at 80 per cent, of the manurial value of the feed. We can thus see that many farmers ofen sell plant fcod off the farm for a less price than they pav for it in lertilizere, bt.-Mides losing all the feeding valut The onlv gaiu in it rests in tho availability of the fertilizers, as they act on plauts quicker than coarse yard ma nure. tVhat Cnsslus M. Clay S-.ys. We have no better authority upon tho care of sheep thaa the Hon. Cassiua M. Clay. Ho gives the followinj advico to shepherds: 1. Select dry and high lands and lay them at once in the best native grasses, adding others as they prove suitable from abroad. 2. Buy the beat yearlings (and upward; ewes of the "scrubs" or mongrels. 3. buy the best purely bred bucks, say one to thirty ewes. The ewes and rams should be over one vear old when bred. Put the pairs together so as to have the lambs (five months in tearing) in tho fall to take the early spring grans before the gxiily checks their growth by driving them from pastures to cover. 4. Sever breed any but purely blooded rams ; then your whole liock will improve. l'y breeding mixed blooded rams the liocks wiil retrograde all the t'.me. 5. Divide your lan is eo that you can have suitable) lots for a change of all of the sheep liocks. This allows the grass to grow and sweeten and interrupts, by frequent changes, the attacks of the gad-tir, as the new comer will not take the old s'amping ground of the last occupants. 0. Have cheap, rude sheds boarded up on the north sides, with the east and south aides open, Here store hay and keep the racks full, and let the sheep enter at will. Clover here is the beet hay. Hay should never be left to ripca the eeed. lij all means use the modern wood pulp bay capa. 7. The beat troughs for salt are the old dugouts of trees. If plank is used oak is best. I keep salt, lino and lump (rock salt), all the year round. For sheep thay must not be water proof, aa they get into them and soil it. For other stock they should be water tight and too high for sheep. 8. Cattle 6hould always run iu the sheep pastures to eat the long grees which the eheep refuse, preferring short, richer etuiF. Tha cattlo should precede and tho sheep follow after tho others are moved on, and the cattle on the place are a great terror to dogs. These troughs should be near the water and shallow as possible. 9. Mutton lambs by Southdown rams are now very profitable in the demand in all cities, wlii.-h is better than wool anywhere. My wool has rua down from f0 cents in three years to '2.1 cents. Tariff don't save us; it keeps out foreign wool of linn g.ades and reduces the same wooli hero to the price of "shoddy" from abroad. Let us have no more protection. Let it go now and forever, 6tock, lock and gun barrel. 10. I put bells on my eheep, one to about three or live, against dogs, with success for twenty years. 'Sentinel" Pointers. Red-top does well on flat land. Sow a litllo timothy with the clover. Is Mr. Clay, right about protection to wool ? Now is the time to est out a strawberry bed for next year. Corn on a late plowed eod usually escapes the cut worm. Nothing much better than the early Otiio potato for the early patch. Graft a few limbs of vour favorite apple tree upon a less desirable variety. It will pay j oa to spray your orchard with the diluted Bordeaux mixture. I am setting some Concord grape vines. Do you know a better variety among the score of new varieties? The old May Duke cherry is a grand one. Set one tree for the birds or they will take thoso you want for yourself. Feed some ha)' or straw to stock during first ten days of pasture. The grass is washy, and the stock will relish a little dry feed. Fried P.ecipea. Steamed Brown Bread One cop Indian meal, one cup rye meal, one-half cup white flour, one-half teaspoonful salt, onehalf teaspoonful Boda, one-fourth cup molsisses, H cups sweet milk. Mix in order given and steam it two and one-ba f hours. Lemon Ice One gallon of water and four pounds of sugar, well boiled and skimmed ; when cold, add the juice of a Advice to tho Aged. ArebrinssInfirmitles.,suca i mc ptah hoHclt.ncsk Kidneys and bindUtr and torpid liver. tinvc n specific effect ou tlicaeorjran, nltirtulatiu? f be bunrtlt. plvlntf uatur. 1 diftchai-K? nitltout straining or griping, und II'IPAIiHNG- VIGOR to tho lttdnry. Madder and Hvcr. Tlicy are adapted to old or young. SOLD nVJEUYWIlEKi:. Positivcl cure Sick-headache, OonstV patlon, Bilioujuess, Liver Complain Coleb and General debility. 40 to the bottle. Sugar coaled. Easy to take. Do not gripe nor sicken tho stomach. 8old by druggist. Price 25c. Keliable And economical. Sample dose free. F. Smtih & Co.. 253 Vrtenwkh St, W.
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An Indian Outbreak is a dreadful thing undoubtedly caused by the irritating effects of dirt. Outbreaks, and crime generally, are never possible among people who are addicted to the use of
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The great soother of angry passions the promoter of health and goodceeling. Cleans everything injures nothing don't be afraid to use KIRK'S Soap on the most delicate fabrics. JAS. S. KIHIC &: CO., Chicago. Dusky Brand Tar Soap A SBfbM;.T.pIt dozen lemons and the BÜced rind of eight, and let iafus'j an hour; strain into the freezer without pressing, an! Pt'r in hgiuly tho welJ-beate:i whites of twelve egg-One-Egg (Jems Beat on? egg without separating, add to it half a pint r-I milk, ona tablespoonful of melted butter, hall" a tablespoonful of salt, an l then put in ons cup of bread flour; add a teaspoonful of baking powder, beat thoroughly und bako in a moderately quiet oven twenty to thirty minutes. Ground Bice Two tablespoon fuls of rice, one pint of mi.k. Boil the miik and stir iu tho rice, which .-üUüt have been previously mixed with cold milk. Let :t boil sk'wly twenty minutes if it ahouid be thicker than a thin butter, add a litt e more miik. Sweeten it to the tüste. Four it into teacups and servu it with cream. Ginger Found Cake ifix egg", one-half pound of butter, one pound ot hour, one email pint of moiasses, one-hail pound brown sugar, one teacup of ground ginger, one glaaa of wine or brandy, a teaspoonful of soda dissolved in a littla vinegar or water. Cream, butter and sugar together, then add eggs, beaten separately, and other ingredients, soda last. Potato Cups Peel eight large potatoes, cut them in two. Take out the centers ernoothly with a tin scoop. Take any co d meat you may have, although beet and veal are preferred; chop this line and seabou well. Fiil the holes with this and cut the potatoes on a tin in a hot oven ; bake until done, aud terve wi;h brown gravy left over when tho meat was first cooked. Gem Eggs Place the gem pans upon the top of the stove and when hot grease them with good sweet butter and break the eggs into tha pans, one for each, and bake about livo minutes. Have a warm platter aud remove each egg with a knife and serve. This makes a pretty dish for the breakfast or dinner table, and can be trimmed with lettuce or other groeu vegetab es. Chocolate Sauce Put a half tint of water into a saucepan, add a half cup of granulated sugar, bring to a boil, then pour gradually over two tablepoontula of moistened cocoa, 6tir until perfectly smooth, return to the fire. Moisten a teaspoonful of arrowroot in a little cold water, add to the cocoa mixture, boil for a moment, struin, add teaspoonful oi vanilla and it ia ready for ut-e. White Pudding t'atice Moisten one tablespoonful of corn etcrrh with a little cold water, pour over it a half pint of boiling water; have ready the well-beateu whites of two eggs; add to the cornstarch one-half cup of powdered suar. Pour this gradually over tho whites, beating all the time; when cold add the vanida, or if you use wine, four tablesDoonfuts of sherry. This makes a light and very palatable sauce. Corn Starch Pndding Oae quart of milk, three tab!espooniu!s of corn starch, four eggo; beat the yo'.ks, add a few spoonfuls oi the milk and starch, put the miik on in a double kettlo over the fire; wheu hottftirin tho eggs and starch, sweeten to the taste, stir weil and cook three minutes, pour out in a deep dish; when partly cool flavor with vanilla, spread currant jelly over the top; heat the whites to a etiff froth, sweeten with fine sugar and pour over the whole. Eggnog for Invalids Separate two eggs, beat the yolks with two tablespoonsful of granulated sugar until light, then add one pint of new milk, mix thoroughly, pour into a pitcher and pour this backwards and forwards from one pitcher to another until thoroughly mixed. Add four tablespoonsful of brandy. Beat the whites of the eggs to a stiff froth, stir them into the other mixture, pour again backwards and forwards from one pitcher to the other three or four times. Strain this into a glass, dust on top with grated nutmeg and seive. Israel Cake Take half a pound of butter, half a pound of sugar, a good hat fonnce of cornstarch, three-quarters of an ounce of wheat flour (good weight), and three eggs. Beat the butter to a cream, a id the eggs and sugar, and the Hour at the last. Stir half an hour. The butter ought to be rather thick. Butter a shallow sheet-iron pan, fill it with the butter about a quarter of an inch high, smooth it with the blade of a knife, then dust 6Ugar over it, and, if you wish, some almonds cut into fine shreds. Bake in a cool oven, light yellow. Cut into 6mall pieces of any shape you wibh while still warm. Chocolate Wafers Boat one-quarter of a cud of butter to a cream ; add gradually one cup of granulnteil sugar; beat until while aod light, then add two tablespoonfuls of cocoa, teaspoonful of vanilia and one cup of flour. Thin batter must be exceedingly still. If you us a pastry flour this will be quite 6Uthcient; if bread flour, you may have to use a little less. Grease the bottom of a Bood-aized baking pan, spread the mixture at the bottom cf the pan as thin as paper. Bako in a moderately quick oven, and while hot cut iuto squares and roll on the pan. Now this h the part that practice only can make perfect. They must be handled instantly or they will crack in rolling. If you wish to use them in small squares you wi 1 find it much easier. Simply cut them on the pan, and with a limber knife loosen and put aside to cool. Sour ( ream wafers are delicious if made in this way: One full half-cup of butter is beaten to a cream, and into it ia stirred one small cup of sugar and a little nutmeg or mace. Into one-half pint of aonrcrcam put one-half tablespoonful of soda; add this to the other mixture, with half a cupful of chopped raisins or almondi aad enough flour to roll ont thin. Best Way to Clean Brass Brass, to be kept in proper order, ahouid be cleaned at
least once a week, while it is the custom in households with well-trained domestic1 to have brass andiron?, fenders and other lire-plactj furniture given a lijrht rubbing every day. In cleaning brass it must first be relieved of all canker and other spots to which the metal is subject from contact with acids, exposure to water or other causes. An application of alcohol, spirits of turpentine, benzino or kerosene will gjntra.ly remoNe all ordinary spots on bra?s, unle3 very old spot, the metal in some cases seeming f.o per fectly to absorb foreign substances that tho removing of theui amounts to almost aa impossibility. Spots removed, there is no more certa n cleansing aad polishing application for brass then rotten stone and oi'. Hotten etone usually comes in lumps. Before using for polishing brass it must be reduced to u powder, and in this state it qcickly dissolves to a smooth consistency wfim u?el with o'ivo oil. A thia pasta of the preparation should be rubbed lightly ort tha ineta!, a:id when perfectly dry It should !)b rubbe l olf vigorously with a liatsnel c oth, the üoisuing t-o ish being given vitli the powder ilrv, ar.d subsequent rubbing wi:h clein llannel cloth or chamois skin.
THE IMPEACHMENT CASES. i Nebraska.' LrUlatpro Adopts tht Resolution by a I;ar;je Vote. Lincoln. Neb., March "l. The joint convention of the legislature ti.:s afternoon, by a vote of 127 to -1, adapted tha reol:::ior. t: lvipe.ichmor.t ag iinst Attorney-General Hasting. Secretary of S'tA's A'len. Couirrsiz-sioucr Huir.plirc? nnd ex-Tre urer Hill. Hi fore ths tu'.optioii ol t!ie resobi'.ion Senator P"po!!tie " ac uiiniunication ironi tiie iaipe-ir!. aides as'ting t!ie adoption of tl.e impeachment reLoiution in ordei tunt they niic'it h allowed a chance to be lierr J in t!i-. ir on o defense, it was rece-ved nr. l Ciadt; i. p trt of t:.e record by a unanimous vote. Th ' c.i-rk s e tiled uoon to read the re.M'l itio;i of icipcolnneu t. ( Ihm of loulr.ta called r.tientiou t tiie fi:ct ht the resolution charged n a'f-h.-ance, end Moved that it be stricken tin the vsor l mi'dcMtanor substituted, whica w.-.s carried, aud theu sl.e adoption of the reso'.it on followed. A committee wan appointed t' draft nrficle- of impeacliment and proecile t.:ai:i before the supreme eaurt, "SQUIRE ABINGDON" BURIED. Charley Mitchell' Trcsence Distaste ful to the Friends of the Deceased. Glasgow, Arril 1. George Abinpdon Eaird, better known as "?qaire Abiogdon," who died in New Orleans on March IS, was buried today ia the family vault in the churchyard at Stich ell. Scotland. The pall-bearers vera seven conaini of ths deceased, including Mr. John George Alexander Baird, conservative M. P. for central Glasgow, and son of the ereat iron uaster, William Baird. Charles Mitchell, tha pugilist, who went to America with ;b ""quire." and returned after the unexpected death of the latter, waa present at the inter meet, but his presence was evidently distasteful to the relatives of ti e deceased. Mitchell was not t Lowed to join iu the funeral procession. He sent a wreath, however, as evidence of his devotion and gratitude to Ids departed patrou and entered the churchyard and stood by the side of the grave while the remains were bein,; lowered into the vault. SUES FOR SLANDER. 3Ire. Fomeroy Places the Value ol the Damages at $50,000. Chicago, March 3L Lillian B. Tomeroy today instituted suit in the circuit court against Mrs. Kate W. King, John W. Bahcock end A. C. Loomis for f 50,100 for slander. John W. Babcoek is at present o jngreuman from the third diktri jt of Wis-'outln, und A. C. Locmls is connected with the Juneau back at M&nston, Wis. Mrs. Kate King waa, before she w&t divorced, the wifo of Ldurard King, who is said to be a millionaire, and rei le at present at Mlnni aKl.a. It is held by the plaintilT that the deiendants. through tli I'lnkerton detective agency, attempted to blight her character. Mra. I'omtroy is the divoraed wife of Frederick A. Pomeroy, a wealthy resident of Chicago, LEAPED FROM HER COFFIN And Admonished the Giddy People at Her Wake. Di'HAXGO, Mex., March SI The lower classea of this city are greatly stirred up over a remarkable oocarrence which took place last night. MissJcana Juarez died after a brief illoer. She was placed iu a rude hex in liea of a cofTiO, and her Borrowing relatives proceeded to have a lively wske over the apparently lifeless Body. In the midst of the ceremony Juan opened ber eyes, and seeing the caodla around her, jumped from her cofiia and asked the meaning of it all. The attendants fled in fright, thinking ths resuscitation was the work ot trie devil. A priest was speedily summoned and succeeded in allaying the fear - of tha relatives. hlrery Man Should Ilend This. If any young, old or middle-aged maa enilering from nervous debility, weakness, lack of vigor from orrors or exceneea will iucloso stamp to me I will send him the prescription of a genuine, certain cure, free of cost. No humbug. No deception. Address Charles Gaus, box Marshall, Mich. An Open Leiter io Women. Laurel Ave, San Francisco, May iS, 1S92. " Dear friend of women : " When my baby was born, five years ago, I got up in six days. Far too soon. Result: falling of the womb. Ever since I've been miserable. " I tried everything: doctors, medicines, apparatus; but grew worse. "I could hardly stand; and walking without support was impossible. " At last I saw an advertisement of Lydia E. Pinkkam's Vegetable Compound, and decided to try it. The effect was astonishing. Since I took the first bottle my womb has not troubled me, and, thanks only to you, I am now well. Every suffering woman should know how reliable your compound is. It is a sure cure." Mrs. A. r . DetwiUr. Alt druggists sell it. . I. - 1 Lydia K. Iinkham Mio. t.vtT I Co., Lynn, Mass. ' - q cV- SS I J vr Pill. 25 cents, p-- k
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