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The Stock Farm Home Weekly from Wyandotte, Kansas • 8

The Stock Farm Home Weekly from Wyandotte, Kansas • 8

Location:
Wyandotte, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE STOCK FAUM AND HOME WEEKLY. OPINIONS OF THE PRESS. Slkcetinn. It Is a verv crMtaMe journal and deserves euooeks. Hiawatha Sun, It will h- ilitiouto our exchange (CHICAGO OFFICE, 777 SOUTH CANAL ST.) is acmmki ralluy Tmut ViH neuiy priuted.

wil MM, eight page, six column Pint LOOAL PENCILINGS, Stock of all kinds is now demanding fair prices. Iiis novoted tberupiujv urnwtne wont, and general home miscellany. It uaml liecora, Ins a ei column vurv ueat COMMISSION MERCHANTS DOINQ BUSINESS AT THE KANSAS CITY STOCK YARDS. lioomu 1 and 2, IB WIN, ALLEN is CO. Kaoia 3.

J. BHOOQ I CO. Boom- 4 id 5 ROGERS ROGERS. Its raO, J.R BTOLLER CO. Rooms 7 and WHtl'E HOLMES.

Room 11 THOMPfcON, PAY ME CO, Room 11, JNO ti, MAJOR. Ilwo IS, A J. GIL' ESFIE Roomti 18 ind 19 FLV1T Bocmn 20 and 21, QUISLAN, MONTGOMERY Room 22 REGORY tc BTE PHEN8. Rooms 23 and 24, iRSE vIDEU. un, and 1 just what its name Implies PiiWj Litenl Gii II A.

P. Clark, of Lawrence, Kansas, was i'reas, Texas. Tj intu la filled with valuable reading us, hliis Mr fr un extensive patronage. Ulue llanida Times. iJBpur i oertnlnty well gotten up and will Office, 1st and 2d Floor, 15 W.

Missouri Ave, Kansas City, Missour bo ben nt to all no way oaieluiiy lua'i Review, It i very large eiwht page pHper.haudsoma Iv into'l nti'1 oraui full Of Bolul knowledge. Gurnott Jtmnuil. at the Exohange on Tuesday, Several cits of hue porkers were received at the yards on Monday afternoon. J. D.

Duckworth, the Short-horn breeder of Cass county, was at the yards on Wednesday. Ilnvl.lunn klnsrdom of Clav. Was J. B. SHOUQH.

L. H4RSH. It ia a Urge fcigtatpafie paper nrimfu'lof sood tnings anil we tigit itwmgaiu a jurue ouuuia' Times. There eeita lily is ro menoujYi In ths end J. BaSHOUGH'fcCO, LITE STOCK MAltlilT.

ivb Stock Exchange, 1 Kansas City, i anbab. 1-June 2D 18S0 1 be market for the pai week baa ruled quiet, TUE FAHMEUW LIFE, The farmer's life is an anolent HI For Adam onoe tilled the land When turned out of Eden, and sent to toll, He gathered tls bread from (he fruitful soil, By labor ol bis own hand. The farmer's life is a toilsome lit a It asses in work away; He brushes the dew from the early (mss, And never onoe heeds how the hours may pass, Till he finds tha close oi the day. The farmer' life 1b a noble life, He is lord ot all the land He reigns a kiao on his rural throne Aud the bills and the valei he ealls hi own, Wh re be issuea his oemmand. The farmer's life is a happy lite, He inbalos the wholesome air, From the morning dew an I the evening breeze, And a madlotne finds for all dloeise An antidote sure is there.

The farmer's life is an easy life, He lives on the lertile sell; When he easts a ey o'or hia wide-spread field, He knowa very well it will always yield Returns for hla constant toil. The farmer's life a merry life Ho merrier life than ha With the lark he rise at irly awn, And goes to bis work in the fresh cool morn, As merry as man oan be. The farmer's life la a rleaeait life, Bur winded by fruits and flowers in with two cars of cattle tor Thompson, Kinsas fnr simn a wisu it suedes "-Wyandotte Gazette. after perusing it uulumas we oan safely reooniiueud ir as Bourne valuable inlotuia-tinn to fa mers. Piitetiiile Pilot.

His a handsome ooluiun quarto paper, filled Valley Democrat, Great Send Kama) It la an tx ieilent paper for tock raisers, con-tainiDg much practical ii form ion iu lin.f tho biiiiness -Girard Prew. LIVE 5 TOCK thoiucreasod supplies of Texa.s oattlo oauairg a considerably weaker fueliag la ull classed of I'ayne do. A train of twenty-nine cars of hogs and ten of cattle was switched into tho yards on Wednesday morning. We noticed three oars of mules leaving the yards Mjnday over the Onloao Alton road for the eastern market. It well gotten up, to e'i oually and me- COMMISSION MERCHANTS, ROOM 3 EXCHANGE BUILDING.

KINSli CITSf ST0C YARDS Tuesday seemed to bathe "Held" day A ndy George, A Besos, cnanioallVi ior a iioerai pa-tronag Plaindealer. It is a bttnciscniily rp six oolumn quano, and devoted to the iaterett Jl 1 name and general news -Kinsley Graphio. It ia a frrty tight column ehect, andl woithy of front rank xiuo'-st' ej mrnalstf its olaa8 Itocky Mountain Husbandman. It is admirably piiuted, Iota filled with fx-oailnt reading mattHr, and io in every sense really meritoriiiuii. Plattsburg Lever It ia filled with a deliuutful vaity of reading gpeoially to the hnmx or the fa mer, ai.d print, ed with new tvpu --Chamte Timet.

I. is hamlnom- and meaty, and Its managers will Dleap acvptiou- bat wisnea fnr Its 8U0 for the stock men. Qitte a number of cars of cattle and hogs being reoelved at the yards. GEORGE, BEGGS LIVE STOCK BROKERS J. Henry Stevens, ol Texas, one of the In rloh blooming meadows and fields all pay, He pas'es In labor tils time away old timers and one of the equarest men Or re its in his oool Rreen bowers that ever struck the trail was at the yards -ASD- The farmer's life is a useful life, Manhattan, Kansas.

It is a very read nolo sheet ami should find, as itmTits, a weleomiin the hums of every farmer in the land. -St. Clair County, Courier during the week. As pleasure to all It gives The showers ot yesterday and day be By him we are clothed, and by him we're fod, It staowa eritorlal abili ami we welcome it And to him we look our daily bread to i ur table and hope that it oarepr may be a long and prutpnruus one. -Western Homestead.

It is weit wirh patromzl ana wi.l be found sound on the tempe' kuo qiw-ti'iTt. We For the publio good he lives. OOMMISSION MERCHANTS, KANSAS CITY, MISSOURI. Special attention given to Fllilna; Orders fur Stock and Feeding Cattle fore were God sends, and have so cooled the heated atmosphere that there Is now some pleasure In living. The farmer's life is a fav'rlte lifo, wioh it financial auceena uolaen Gate.

It is an eicht Dase paper, well primed, and It is free lrom noise aud strife And plenty aud pleasure supply hia cot, Bob Cooper and J. E. Smith were in with brim full ofintereMiugagriiMil uml nd miscellaneous readlDR matt r. Fllimvood Express. There's nothing he wlahea ha has not, four cars of hogs, and A.

G. Carpenter, The Stock. Fahm and noun weekly, in l'e Then give me The Farmer's Lite. rrake-ui) aud uet-np. Blows 'be band ct a Lenexa, was In with one car of hogs trained workman and no Farmer.

A fireman's toast was recently siren as for White and Holmes. Iccontalna an immense amount fit oboice J. E. LIVE STOLLER It CO. ST follows: "Our Are engines; may they be like our old maids, ever ready but never Monday was the longest day of the reading and is fcxccllntly printirt We gladly plae it on our ttxchurgti Holt County Sen? tinel.

butcher stuli, but espeoially the lower grudos. There have been but few oholue ootLf td steers on the mar et, yet the market for shippers baB not been strong, espeoially when we take iuto consideration the ot that the foreign demand and shl merits are aotlve The first part ol the week advio from east) points lndioated heavy receipts and a dull and weaker market. We see no leason why prime native shippers should not advanoe aud bring strong prices. Wo look for a further decline on ordinary common grades of butoher stuff owing to the increased supply of grata oattle, aud the falling off in the western demand. Prine buHier sceers we think will ho up present prices well for some time yet.

AU kinds of rough stuff is exceedingly low, aacsnners refuse to take bold except at ruinously low fl ures. CATTLE. Extra prima steers, av. 1500Srvr 4 159 4 25 Pnm na'i steer, av 1400 U500 3 90 4 4 10 Good, av. 1300 to 1400 3 75 9 3 91 Fair to hOou, av.

1150 to 1300 3 404 8 85 Native feeders, av. 1000 to 1300 3 25 3 3 65 Native Btockers, av. 300 to 1000, 1 85 3 15 Native cows, ra 3 00 3 35 Native cowa, Jr to good 2 25 2 25 scalawag 1 75 2 00 Native cxen 2 759 3 40 fair to good 2 50 2 70 Native lis 1 75 2 40 i alvea, eaca 8 00 10 00 Mlloh cows 20 00 35 00 Oornfea x. steers, good to ohoioe 2 75 3 50 do do Btockers Dd feeders 2 60 3 00 Native Col. steer good 2 75 3 50 do d- stockers and 2 4U.

2 76 Grass Texan 2 20 2 65 Grass Texas cows 1 85 -2 50 Colorado Texas 2 309 2 75 New Mexican steers 3 403 2 65 HOGS. The market for ihs st week has been lively, and notwitbstandiu the heavy receipts the market has held remarkably firm, owing trinclpally to the Advance in provision On Wedne-day the run amounted to 8345, the largest day in the annals of thai arcs, we be-litve Tui run oaused a decline ol from 10 to 153 per 100 Iba, but we consider it a small failing off in view ol the enormous receipts here and at ea tern points. Packers will buy read! ly even at advanced prices, as long as their ice holds out and provisions maintain thoir present activity Ohoioeheavy 3 75? 3 80 Mixed paoki 3 65 8 70 Light fchippiDg 3 70 3 80 Blockers 3 15 3 30 SHEEP. The market has been inactive, s'mDly owing to the fact of the supply being very limited. Good mutton sheep in demand but at rather weaker prices.

Natives fat, av. 100 115. 3 25 to 3 60 do co do 80s 85 2 (5 to 3 00 Stotkers, pe. head 2 25 2 60 wanted." year, the sun having reached its extreme limit to the north and begun its course It is full of sucr, matter aa will both interest Said the Arkansas man: "I respest re ligion, but can you fairly expect me to at- and instruct the general reader. It ia a hin''-anm -ly printed six column quarto.

Coffeyville Journal again to the "Sunny South." tend crunch when there is a circus In JEVum the eam'le belore us it is amy edited, town demanding support?" Col. S. N. Hill, ot Berlin, was at and th editors apt or to uuder tand tneir bu- nine. 8ucoe.es to you gentlemen.

National It was a nice little fellow that had to the yards on Wednesday. Says he comes Headlight. from the country of good grass. He will live and leain, that asked his mother if bees had splinters In their tails when hit bare feet came down upon a yellow want some cattle to put on It. Ic la a new oanaiaaie ior iavor among western farmers, and Judging from the number we received, it, will achieve tucceBa.Stewartsville Independent.

Ii oouioiuc the best summary of mtteis of general interest to the furme'S of env aeriml-tural paper we know of -lirechenridge Bulletin- Q. Nine cars of cattle were shipped from COMMISSION MERCHANTS, BOOM NO. 6 EXCHANGE BUILDING, NTOCK Deebb Moline, I'l. A. Mansck St, I.ruia, Mo.

U. 8, VI heeleb, Kansas City Mo DEERE, MANSUR the yards Monday over the old reliable it is in an respectB an xceaent juuru aua Chicago Alton road to the Chicago will Drov valuable to farmers and stockmen, markets. The cattle were all in the best 1 -iim whnra it merits a hearty suppt xt.Miami Republican. Th farmer turns the furrow With a careless unconcern The aimers work the handle Of the big, old fashioned hurn. Their son sort out the 'taters For plantin', in (ha orllar; Their daughter on the ck porch la talking to her feller.

To the high spirited but poverty stricken man, there comes nothing that can thrill of order for shipping. Ice name explains its mission, it is a large eight page cbeet, elegant printed and rnwdei) fnil of Interebliug reading Morning Journal. According to the report of the census Ic is a large and handsome lorty-eigm oolumn paeer, fill witn reaaaDie matter, we i "iitea enumerators, Kansas City, the "metropolis of the west," has a population of anairint-o, xc aeBeives to suooeH- Commercial. him like the he feels when he discovers that his coat talis are long enough to It ia UBautifullv printed with new type, on 605. What other city west oi the Mississippi river of her age can "show up'' witt her? so' paper an1 1b fully what it name indicates and recommend i hoortily to our leaders Wabaunsee County News.

IuiB luii ol valuable luiormiuon ior tne lar- mor and stock raiser, and we thin it will soon ake the lead of all papera of the kind now cover a patcu mat is on nis pants. "I wish I was worth a million of dol said a gentleman, "What good would It do you, for you don't spend your present inquired a friend. Oa," I could be economical on a larger Some people are born to ill luck. An i suf in tne Journal. FRENTEESS BARBED FENCE WIRE.

It is a mo lei ol exceiieuoe nu beauty, and if he present Is a prophesy of tne future, it wib COKN SHELL RS, FEUD MILLS, WAGONS, become paper of the Wocdson County Post. We thins nctuias in the promotion old lady who has pasted nearly five thousand medical receipts in a book during that the ctock. Faemand E' me Weekly wi 1 snnn 'nke i-a" a 1 westerh competitors. UUCrlilKS, AND CAKlil.GL-, And it full Hue or FARM A 0 I Y- Santa Fe from 10th to 11th, WES KANSAS CITY. the past forty years has never been ill a day in her life, aud she is growing dis Otanute Democrat I.

is a haijdxoiiiB and promising publication, Our old friend, 3. H. Graham, of Lone Jack, Missouri, was visible at the yards Tuesday. He reported wheat In a fine condition hi his neighborhood, and that oorn was looking better than It had for years at this season of the year. As a lazy tramp came down the street Wit free an easy gail, This welcome sic his ey did eet: ''Free chops to those who wait." "Now here," he said "I'll get sonm food, Without tho slightest tax." They led him to a pile of wood, And handed bm an ax," couraged.

Ita matte show itt be in ab bands, ana, A Noel, formerly of Lone Jack, but who recently pot Mi naturalization papers as a citizen of Kinsas City, was at the yards during the week. witri the immeuse field surrounding it. nothing hinders it success I os Animas Leader It has foriv-oiebtoolum ot must excellent and prxoticai reading mattor for faron rs and (toctrao i. It is just suoh a pnir as Mis'onri andlv-msaa faruifrB nne'i North Missonrian. THE AMERICAN PAST, PRESENT AND ORGAN FUTURE.

Tho BTOCK, ABM ND HOMul WEEKLY a new publication ccmiriR to our table iri Kin-, sas Uitv, Kansas. lidPSTVPR tne aucceas we a aurt- ic will recei Gazette. A wealthy Frenchman offers $20 000 to any doctor or surgeon who will make a hunchback of him, as he pities the class and wants to be one of them. Suitable arrangements can be made with a mule for less money. Beneath many a sun-bonnet la the berry pasture, there is a blight eye and rot-y tanned cheek that causes the farmer's boy to drop his ox whip and scale for the fence.

Just to "help fill up the basket," that's all." You never see a woman button anything that she can pin, and you never see It ia devi tl to the inter -nt of ftiuers and 8 took raiders, and a gotten up in splendid tyne, is full or imereaans matter on all mattera intereatii'g to armera Ptiot Point Post. It is edited with marked a jilicy and its well Icebergs, ii unusual numbers and of immense mass have been reported for some weeks as lvlng across the path of vessels going to Europe from this country, and cow the news begins to come In of collisions of these very dangerous obstructions. What adds to the perilous character of an iceberg, especially when it has gone south of the latitude of Newfoundland, is the fact that the difference in tern perature between the Iceberg and the ocean atmosphere surrounding it is almost sure to generate fogs, so that it is impossible to see the fluatlug mass, and the only way of detectiug its presence is the chill which it gives the air within a fil ed cluinns give evidenoe of the culture end literarv tasteH oi its editors it will he a wW- orm visitor to 6Vsry fireside PRICE LIST, a Ic is a large e'eht pace, sx oolumn. reatlv a man pin anything that he can tie with string. You would have trouble making some men oeueve inai uiey cuutdn tie button-hole into a wristband with a string, Groat and many preparations are now being made by our citizens to receive General Grant on his arrival to tho city.

The General will arrive on the morning of the 2iof July, and will Immediately proceed to Marrlam Park on the Fort Scott and Gulf road, where a pto nlc is to be given that day, and where the hearts of the old as well as those ot the young will be filled to overflowing with jay at seeing the ex-president. J. P. Alexander, a prominent member aud past master of Independence Grange, No. 9G, and a breeder of Short-horns, was at the yards on Wednesday wlthadiive in of 77 cattle to White and Holmes.

Mr. Alexander reports the yield of wheat fully A gentleman, recently about to pay his few miles of it. The fact of this exten sive movement of berga thus early in the i inter! pipr, flllod ith chO'Ce origin 1 and (elect) and fills a want long -tit. Success to it -Democrat, Arkansas City, Kansas. It is a largo rty- Ir.nt ojiumn papt ihivt is bothpleasa end profitable to read.

I's matter is ch ice in every respect, and just such reainp as should find place in every house hold. Kansas Herald Ic begins its career wilh a very pr mising outlook, and if it sustains Its present standard of excellence, we have good reason" to believe it will be eminently Banner. I' is A si column eight page paper, filled wiU with a large variety of reading matter, such as its name would indicate. It is a neat lno i doctor Din, saici, "wen doctor, as my little boy gave the measles to all my season is commonly takt'n to imply un neignoor cnuaren, ana as tney were at. usually open water in Btfll is bay, Davis's tended by you, I think you can afford at Nos.

10 -115 14 160 220 235 SOO 3(7 Chapel 340 -345 410 -40 the very least to deduot ten per cent from the amount of my bill for the Increase of straits and on the west coast of Green land. If this should be the case the pros ent season, it would seem to offer an un usual opportunity for the Eowgate espe dition to push far north. business we gave you." and well edited County, Kansas i ouug man, aon i swear, mere la no necessity for swearing outside of a news Kot Her Motto. paper office, where it is ueful in proof Uoitmnt. It i a weekly paper published in intereBtB of te farmers, and is tbe best if the kind iu the United States.

Much practical inf mat ion can be gathered by the farmers fiemi'S columns. It snould have a lnre circulation in up to the average, and the acreage about teaaing ana maispensaoiy necessary in gettiug forms to press. It has been known "90 rfrrM 1 pi A Woodward avenue policeman was the other day halted near the Hall by a two hundred pound woman with a parcel also, to materially assist the editor look Is county. Lafayette sentinel ing over paper after it is printed. But It is one of the hanileome-t papers that oomes to our table, and we doubt not but that it will in ner nana, and sue requested to be shown to the 6tore where they be a success in tne department it represents sold mottoes.

He asked what paaticular It is ably eoitea, containing tne lateal ana ao curat market reports and news of importance. store sue wanted, she explained: "Well, I can't tell. My old man came to Hutcnmson interior 10 per cent greater than last year. Ground pratty dry, but not enough to hurt anything as yet. Corn looking splendidly.

When the courting at midnight is ended And he stands th his hat in his fist, While she lovingly lingers beside him To bid htm "ta ta and ba kissed, How busy the thoughts of the future Ton bet yon his thoughts he don't speak 1 He is wondering how they ean manag To live on six dollars a week. town yesterday and I wanted him to buy otherwise It Is a very foolish habit. Knock, knock, knock, Knock till you're black and blue I'm not going wn to-night To pen the door for you. You would go drink at tne oleb Till your boot were full of anaea, And now you can roost on the mat Till the lttht of the morning breaks. These organs are given as premiums to churches, benevolent societies and agents for subscriptions.

For 100 subscribers and $150, we will srive an organ valued at $150 free. This unparelleded offer is made by the company in view of our fxtenslvely the motto of "God Bless Our Home," he It la a mndel borne and fireside journal rnd we cordially commend it to the reader of the Herald. Th paper is ry earetully edited rnd arranged wi'h meohanieal neatness and an eye to the ba ifnts. It is a promising got in somewbere, where they tola him mat styusn no longer used that and the old idiot went and brought home this BUCOe8B. unca zitsruia one.

It is a oredit to the young community whence advertising for uiern. She unrolled the parcel and held up a card on which was painted "Don't ask for credit Our terms are it eminates, ana it wouia rennet oredit on oities of greater antiouity We wiah It every success, as we are sure it will have, for Kansas is not only a raring oommunicy, but also a reading and intHllipr't people, and t.hey will patmnlza They had their evening quarrel as they sat by the hearth. On one side lay quietly a blinking dog, and on the other a purring cat, and the old womm pleaded with her growling husband, "Yust look at dot cat und dog; dey nefer gwarrels nor vits cash." tbe beat. Dutcliessrarmer, roughkeepsia N.Y. "You needn't grin, she said as she The Stock.

Farm and Home Weekly, rolled up the card again. "I'm heavy on foot and walking is bad, but I am going to The age, standing, experience and resources of the Smith American Oroan new agricultural journal repiete with Interesting matters to farmers. The artioles oompriae like us." said the old growler, "I knows dot, but yust tie dem togeder one Eveu before It Is out they all want It; the children cry for it; the father and mother anxiously wait for it, for it is so valuable for the household and fireside. It is indispensable, readable and instructive to both old and young on all subjects, hence the anxiety. What Is it that is all this? Why, it is the Stock, Farm and Home Weekly, one of the best family walk the town till I find the man who got Compakt afford a strong guaranty of the excellence of ita work, and of the just and liberal principles on which its business is conducted.

a greater variety nna are oi more praotical na dime, und den you see wol ture ban much of the reading matter in ch teis mingon on josian, lor 'God liless journals, we commend it to mi wno desire an Our Home. Free Press. The Company has been established twenty-six years, and is the oldest Keed Some one put a wooden Indian under agricultural paper. urapnw, jsureica, Kansas Organ Company in New England. i be bed of an old maid, and of course she Itia ndatly printed and filled with interesting artioles upon all tbe subjects pertaining ti tha Advice to Glils.

saw ii ana yeiiea, ana a pouceman came The instruments number over eighty-one thoumnd. The chief constructor was the first to make reed orauB on the rlan now farm and home. Its editorials show unmista in and craw.ed under the bed to bring the kable talent, ana avm tae ring oi good sound and stock Journals published west of the burglar out, and fought the Indian for generally followed. sense it is mac sucn a paper as everv mem. thirty minutes before he found out it was Mississippi without any exceptions, what.

ber rf the farmers family loves read. oweU wooden, and then he told the spinster KjOumy xievww. All the members of the Company are actively engaged iu the business, and are interested in the improvement of tie iuN'rumuiit, Its ample capital, and the large property of its members, five the Coamanv ever. All those wanting such a paper It ia with pleasure we 'otloe the constant tnaisne wasagone-ny old numb-head. should subscribe for It.

Improvements in tne btock, abh nd Homb and went out and pumped on his head for halt an hour to get the' dust out of his practically unlimited resources. Weekly, xnere is not a neawr printed pape. in tbe west. The editorial manasema ia Frank Beamer, the modest, diffident, veB. The reputation of the Company for honorable dealing has never been called ia question.

Its oldest patrons are today its firm eh frieud. cellent, its leaders always timely and sparkling with a more than ordinary brillianoy. The information for farmers and stockmen whioh the wenky contains, is invaluable Besides these quiet cashier of the yards once more sheds the beams of his beaming counte It has two large factories, fully supplied with nil modern machinery and facilities of every description. Its immense stock of lumber and other materials is purchased for cash on deliv rioultural news and literary matter. If thn nance upon bis contemporaries at his old paper ia not a succeas from the start, it will i ot the fault of th editors.

Mr. Oontant post Frank has just returned from a pleasant trip to Colorado and New Mexi ery, and comprises only the highest grades of every article required. The tone of the American Organs is dihtiuguUhed from that of all othi others ia a ready ana writer, woo nag bad a lonv and snooeaafnl exm-rinnoe in newspaper by its A woman's safeguard is te keep a man's hands ft her. If you need his assistance in walking take his arm instead of his tak ing yours. Just tell him in plain English to "hands (ff." He may not like it at first, he will respect you In the future tenfold more.

Men will be and do Just what women allow them to do. Men will not do to trust. Give a man your arm and you will find him very confidential, and he will take a great many privileges he wonld not take if he was not permitted to do so. Ho will give your arm many loving squeezes and sly twists that he could have no opportunity of doing, and tun opportunity li Just what he is after. A few words more of advice and I close.

Keep your girls off the street, except when they have business. Teach them it Is not necessary to go to the postoftice every time ihey go out. Your girls can walk home alone ust as well as your boys. Don't allow your gills, if they must have a beau, go with boys much older than themselves. If possible instil Into their very nature that they are eater In their own hands than in the hsid of any man preachers not excepted.

Olive Logan. superior sweetness, fullness, and voic like quality. Ktocr, Fahm and Homb Weekly. This la The cases are new and artistio Iiurniouizing with the best modern PROF. J.

FRED'K WETZEL, PR1CIIOAL SUKQIOAL CHIROPODIST CORNS extracted, Banions, Chilblains, in-grown toe-naua, aura and tender fret buccbmi-fully treated; soft, fettered, and throbbing corns a specialty, ftnmarfiato relief guaranteed In all cases wltboat pstln. Ladies and children treated at their real lenoe. Attention given to requests made by postal cards. Offloe Colorado House. Shaving and bathing purler tbe me of a new aerlouttural iuumal that furniture, and durable as well as benaurtu.

co, and looks as hearty as a buck. We cease to wonder at the troubles experienced In settling the irrigation problem when we observe Frank's chin, as it must have exhausted the system of Irrigation retcnsu8 romtnat enterpi ismg ci'y of the New at, Kansas City, Mirsouri. The copy The American Organ has received a great number of medals and other awards, and has never been judged inferior in any fir oum petition. before na oontains very large amount of ex cellent readin partifnlarlv fitted for the olaaa for wbioh tha paper is intended. Suoh a wrk to have grown the massive forest ot hair ought to succeed, and we trust it will Far- The sales have steadily increased until the full capacity of the factories has been reached.

The prioes are as low as those of any first-class iuotrnnierits. We aie not reoeiv ne pay ior this dub. and it mat nryr meet iha eye of the Etock. Farm and H' MB Wbkkly editor, but we do say tbat it ia by far the neatest and moat merit rious paper of ita kind that known to us in the thereon. Old boy, deal gently with them, as summer wanes and the frosts of winter come apace, or they may strike In and cause serious damage to your now robust constitution.

Til SMITH IMEIllliill ORGM COMPMi, BOSTOW west. It deserves live if itia ept np to its opposite Btoek Exohan Baaideoce 1500 Ball 8Teet Wet Kusas Citv, Mo We'xal's Russian Corn Erxiiontor sure core. Ben a 1 parta United States bjmail. Frioe, 60 ots BeodBta- pa. ront hlnh nlar'l ol eioaUenoe: Norton ounfy Eanias Advocate Branch House, Kansas City.

Mo i.

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About The Stock Farm Home Weekly Archive

Pages Available:
176
Years Available:
1880-1880