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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 9, 1889)
AT STANDING ROCK. Kail For Sicnmtorrs Opened Gcacnl Cruot Winu the Obdurate. Staxdutg Roce Agescy, Dak, Aug. 2. At the council Wednesday the Indiana were informed that no mare meeting for tne explanation of the treaty would be fceld. John Grass repeated bis objection! to the treaty, chief among which is the price oftrd for the lands. Major Vamer replied to Gras. He met eTery obj ction and explained the provi sions of tn- trea-y cf 1SC1 which the Gov ernment is charged with violating. But the spech of the conference and one that will never Le forgotten by the In dians was made by General Crook, who said. among other taines: "I have al ready intimated that, unless you except the treaty, thi3 land may be taken f rota you any wav. Hy reasons for thinking so are as fol.ows- Dakota, Montana and Washington Territory have only one representative each in Congress, and do not have a vote. Thus, in the past, the cries of Dakotans for the op-ning of this r"servatioc have had little weight, rut after October next they will be States with an appropriate repre sentation, and then when they ask that thtse reservations be or-ened, the red man's voice will be email and he will be crowded to one side. I assure you that you are retting the best terms that will ever be offered you, and unless you accpt you will not pet more than you w-re offered a year ac The Great Father does not want to deal with the chiefs alone; he wants every Indian on the reservation to express hi desires that they may be grat.fiwd. Ton are the equals of the whites mentally and physically, and men- is no reason wnv vcu snouta not tie placed on an equal footing if yon contin ue to progress, ion must do more in the future. Yen love your families and yon want to know what will become of tfa-m when you are dead. If yen accept this treaty and take your land like the wsites it can never be taken from you and will be your children's when you die. "You will see that the Government is your friend." The roll for signatures wa3 opened yes terday. JOHNSTOWN RELIEF. A. Hnje Balance of Money Lett Hamls of the Committee. la the JOHxSTOwy. Pa.. Aug. 2. The relief ccaai's.on a 'he close of yesterday's s-ion made public a report on the finan cial part of fs work. It is in substance e f'lows: Received lv the Governor, ;M!,414 40; rec-iv-d fr-m Mayor Grant. S100.0U0; received from the .New York committer. i-l 30.000: recivd from the Phi.adelphia committee. STcM) COO; rec.v-d from the Pittsburgh cotnmitt. $400,000; grand total receipt , $2,394,414 46. The committee ex'fndd in Johnstown, in cluding thei.OOOJ distributed. jO-3.170 30. and in other Tiart-s of th- S--t -17 "(. 57. This amount, taken from the total re-c-ipts. leaves S1.C54.077.6C. Tnere was appn p'lated in ottiT parts of the State End yet unpaid. iJ3T2C Si The contracts and hi 1- i i hand for Johnstown amount to SCO IsS 22. The commission's estimate for 2 0 houses ord- r-d is iC2,W)0. mak-ng a total of Sill.-1G.04 necessary for outstanding items. Tot- wou.d leave a ba ance on hand of SL3!2,S0i 52, but the commission figures on gett.ng $133,000 frim the Phi de rh'a committee, and SIS"1 00") from ti- Pittsburgh committee. mating in all jl t4i-0i 52. DIRTY TEA. n,.r , T,-rm- v-..f.-.- r k- x? ....: T.. r. ,".- r if ukwfk ukiuu b aiiis .u.a w k aAE:&aua fea. rASHESGTOX. Au;. 2. The Secretary of : Treasury has received a letter from Secretary of State mc'osins a copy of iFdi- lispatcn received from the United S'a'es Consul at Amor cal :n attention to tne inferior q laiity of much of the Amoy Oolonjr tea extorted to th United Suites, and Assistant secretary Tichenor has issued a circular letter to customs of ficers on the subject in which he says: The statement of tne Consul and the doc uments mcl sed in his communication in dica'e tha? it is a well recognized fact amon dealers in China that Amoy Oo lon are generally dirty, adulterated, carelessly picked or poorly cured, and that thtrr reputation is so vile that all marke's save those of the United States are now c!oed to them. A circular letter iued by Messrs. P.usseTi 3j Co-, of Amoy, speaks of these teas n-. the decayed veg etable matter of Chi a. and states that it is difficult tn understand how. tinder the -rii-Tr,,- ;rwrww;rT, r-ni.irmn& thev vm ' be d-alt n." Tbe Consul strongly recoa- pressed great gratitude to Mrs. Harrison mends that no invoices of Amor Oolongs ! and declares that her sympathy has snould be aam.tted to entrv .n the United made a man of him. His name is with Srre m-hnnt trt beintr ricidlv in- beld as he has the promise of a good speCied. 1 ROOSEVELT'S WRATH. The Civil-ierrice Commissioner Sharply Kevlieit tit Adverse Criticism. Washlngtos. Aug. 2. Mr. Roosevelt in rply to an editorial in the Poat said: Any statement that I used any cut legit imate and honorable means in the mavor alty contest in 2ew York or that I was a party to any deal of the kind or that any uch da! was made witu my knowledge or connivance is a falsehood. Any state ment that the Civ 1-Service law has ben rep-atedlv violated with the knowledge and consent of ihe Commisionrs is a falsehood. Any statement that I have received any money from the Government, except from my -a.ary and for my legiti mate traveling expenses while engaged on Government business, is a falsehood. To be exact I should use a still stronger and shorter word than falsehood. I will aSge in no controversy with any writer who talsiCes the truth. Hereafter I shall make no response whatever to any state ment or accusation in the Post. Taking into account the relative quality of harm done by spo.Is hunters and by prize fight ers and their associates. I am by no means certain that the ed.tor of the Washington Post should have his feelings so lacerated by my coupling his journal with thePo lice Gazette." m Hronek Attempt Snicide. Jolitt UL. Aug 2. John Hronefc on of the Chic&zo Anaechists confined here, severed toe arteries in his arm with a saddle knife. He is serving a twelve years' sentence for making dynamite bombs for Anarchists. Records Broken. Clxvixaxd, O., Aug. 2. At the Grand circuit races yesterday two records were broken. Axtell, the wonderful three-year-old, went a mile for 2,KX) to beat his own record of :1.' made at Minneapolis. He trotted the mile with a running mate ? without a sfcp in 2:14, the time by quarters being: SIS l:i7, 1:41. 2J4'. Gay went an exhibition mile for a cap to beat his own record of 2:12. There was " great d.fficultv in getting him started, bat once he was off he moved like clockwork, covering the last quarter within one- quarter of a second as fast a the Brst. The time bv quarters was: :32i, l:0t, 1:38, 2-AOX. "iHs. TRUST CRAZE. Am American Consul Thinks Germany Is Seriously Troubled With the Incorpora tion Fever- VTasuisgtos. Aug. 2 Jacob MuIIer. Consul-General of the United States at Frankfort on the Main, under date of May 27 sends to the State Department a report on the formation of stock companies or trust in Germany which he calls the 'in corporatlon fever." He says that he has always locked distrust'ully on existing attain there. The present events, the gigantic strikes by which Germany is vU ' seem to him to prove that the social conditions are fraught with danger. The strikes are not revolutionary but are the outgrowth of unbearable conditions. In Rheinish Westphalia, on a territory of not more than twenty square miles, 90,000 t-ople revolted at starvation prices. When the mining companies were realiz ing better prices for coals than for many years past the miners were receiving S12" to S1S.1 per year. Just now Mr. Muller says Germany is showing ivmptoms of a business fever m lar in many respects to that which terminated in the crash of 1S73. It is tak ing the form of the creation of industrial enterprises or the changing of private un dertakings into stock companies. In 184 a law was enacted for th regulation of stock companies. It required a more definite statement of affairs in the or ganization of the stock company, but it made the stockholders mucn less resnon I aibla than tha members of a nrivate firm. The "winnings," as he calls the earnings of these companies will, he says, be larger and spread out among a greater number of rersona. bnt the neoole of lim- ued means can not participate as the law has hxed the minimum price of a share at L000 marts. Mr. Mullar believes that the separation of employer and employed which mu-t result from these changes in business conditions will result in the union of workinemen and a permanent , war between them and their emnlovers. AN OPEN SWITCH. Wreck With Serioun Consequences Near Albany, X. V. Albant. "). Y.. Aug. 3. A south-bound Delaware & Hud-on through train in chartre of Condneinr Artir rn.n thrnntrh . ' an open switch at the Kenwood Junction n-ar here, about 4:20 yesterday afternoon, and into the north-bound West Saore train, due here at 4:3'). The drawing room car "Arcyle," and two passen ger coaches of the Delaware & Hudson train were thrown from the track. Thomas Conn iff. a paseng-r on the West Shore train, residing in Albany, was killed, and several others were more or less seriously injuied. There were about thirty pas sen ders on the Delaware & Hndson train and their escape from death was marvelous, as ' two cars turned comp.etely over on their i sides and the inmates had to be taken cut tcrcurh the windows. The names of the seriously injured are: James E. Pittman, of Troy, injured about the back and head; Mrs. Henderson, of TVe-t Troy, cut on the head and injured internally not serious. Joseph Perkins, of Bingiiaraton, engineer of the Delaware & Hudson train. le in jured by jumping; Mrs. Bart, of Coey mans Junction. bad!y bauised; William Mould, Saarrerties. back hurt; H. T. Finch and wile, Brooklyn, internal injuries; Mrs. Kate Powers Catskill. arm injured; C J. Wright. Pe-kskilL arm s-raine.i: R. J. Kepple, Utica, arm sprained; W. T. j Burnside, Xew York, arm lacerated: G. C i Morris. 130 South Fourth street, Phila- ' delphia. badlv shaken up J. P. Foster. bad'y hurt; Engineer Perkin arm was broken: Matthew Turner, fireman of the Delaware 6t Hudson train, slightly in jured about the arms by jumping; he re sides on Quaker street. The tracks were blocked until a late hour. How a Convict fu Pardoned. Sa Feancisco, Auz. 3 A convict la San Qaentm prison serving seven years was pardoned this week by Governor Waterman. He had been convicted of forgery committed while intoxicated. Soon after President Harrison's nomina tion he wrote a poem entitled "The Old Soldiers," which was published in an evening paper. The poem, which de scribed General Harrison's bravery at the battle of Resaca, was copied widely on this coast, and soon after Harrison's election one of the prisoner's friends sent it to Mrs. Harrison, with a brief account of tha convict-author's good life in prison. She took an interest in him and he has been pardoned. The released convict ex- piace. Crawford Big Fee. LrmjE Rock, Ark,. Aug a The Ga zette's Muskogee, L T.. correspondent wires as follows: "The evidence taken in tha investigation of the misappropriation of money by the Creek delegates was filed yesterday by Agent Gardner. The taking of testimony abruptly closed Thurs day after the delegates testified that they paid ex-Governor Crawford the S2S.000 alleged to be unaccounted for. Agent Gardnsr expresses the opinion that ex-Governor Crawford will be indicted by the grand jury. The delegates are only responsible to their constituency, many of whom bcldly assert that the enormous fee claimed to have been paid the at orney is a. ruse to shift the burden on Governor Crawf ord. who in some way will exonerate himself The Pilgrim .Memorial. Pltxocth. Mass., Aug. 2. This old town vesterday was gay with decorations and filled with visitors to the dedication of the national memorial to commemorate the landing of the Pilgrims. All historic spots are marked by inscriptions and decora tions. Tae celebration has included the ringing of bells, the firing of salutes and the dedication of the monument with im posing ceremonies, after which there was a parade to the dinner tent, where an ora tion was delivered by William C P. Breckinridge, of Kentucky, and a poem was read by John Boyle O'Beilly fol lowed by speeches from other distin guished guests. Concerts were given in the afternoon and the celebration closed at night with fire-works and a ball. i Collisions Caased By Fog. jfrw Toebt. Aug. 3 There were sev eral collisions in the bay and river dar ing the fog yesterday. The Clyde line steamer Ye masse from Charleston had in tow the fishing schooner Melinda Wood, of Xyack. The schooner's foremast was cat away, the aiast was broken and a large hole cot in her starboard bow. When the collision occurred the steamer wasrnaningat half speed on account of the fog. The schooner J. P. Pharo, of , ProTideace. was towed up the bay by the tag Robert Robinson and beached oa the Jersey fiats. It was roa iato by the brig Calaaa daring the fog last aigat- Tha schooaer was alatcHt a total wreck. Three persoss ware rescued by the pilot boat. MARRIAGE CEREMONIES. The Forms ObtaiMd in England. Scotland and the Cnlted States. The early marriage ceremony among the Anjjlo-Saxons was of a very prim itive character. It consisted merely of hand fastening, or taking each other by the hand, and pledging- each other love asd affection in the presence of friends and relatives. The bridegroom paid the father a sum of money, called a foster-lean, or payment for nourish ing. At a later period the early cus tom o: espousals was reduced to a reg ular system, and the lover was re quired to give a wed. or security, for the performance of his contract: hence our word wedding. In England, until the time of Crom well, which extended from the year 16V0 to his death in 16oS, marriage was a religious institution, "having been so held since the earliest times of Christianity. Under the Roman em pire it was simply a civil contract: hence we read of men "putting away" their wives, as if they were pieces of furniture whose old fashion or bad fashion did not exactly please the fancy. When the English Republic fell to pieces and the Stuarts were re stored in 1660 marriage agaiu was le gally regarded as a religious ordi nance. Fifty years ago it was enacted that, at the will of the participant parties, it might be a civil contract or a religious rite. The Roman Cath olics, considering it as a sacrament. do not recognize its merely civil char acter. In the United States "the union of hand and the union of hearts may be legally celebrated by a clergyman or a magistrate in most cases the clergy man's good offices are preferred. Ac cording to the laws of Scotland, if a lady should call herself "Mrs. Charles Burns' in the presence of Mr. Bums, without his challenging the in ference, the local laws consider them husband and wife. Of course, if the male party addresses or introduces the lady as Mrs. Charles Burns, she is as much his wife as if they had been mar ried with full choral service in West minster Abbey, by the Archbishop of Canterbury, with the assistance of half a dozen of the inferior clergy. In a word, if a man in Scotland allows it to be understood oy word or deed that such a lady, young or old. is his wife, she that by the strong law of the land. An old adage thus lays down the proper days for wedlock: "On Mon day for wealth, Tuesday for health, Wednesday the best day of all; Thurs day for crosses. Friday for losses, Sat urday no luck at ail.' A polite cham pion of the fair sex accounted for their superiority by saying that Adam was created outside of Paradise, while Eve was created within its sacred limits; no wonder, therefore, if a man retains something of the earth from which he came, while woman still exhibits the more refined elements among which sLe first drew the breath of life. Poets have fancifully designated her "the precious porcelain of human clay.' Philadelphia Record. Little Bits cf Philosophy. Riches are never out of style; pov erty is never in. One man's charity for another's faults is sometimes a cloak for his own. All men have peculiarities, but they are worse in some men than in others. Heaven is a place where a man gets credit for the good he intended to do. As a man gets older he knous more. but he does not get any more attractive in learning it. In ending one man who can be de pended upon, you will become ac quainted with a thousand that - not be. Some men pay their debts only with the intention of deceiving their cred itors into trusting them for larger ones. Detroit Free Press. There is nobody living to-day. with possibly a few exceptions, who will see another year in which the figure "9" does not appear. Arkan saw Traveler. THE GENERAL MARKETS. KANSAS CTTY. Aug. i CATTLE Shlppinj-steers....! 3 4) & 4 10 Butcher steers 3 00 3 SO Native cows. 2 00 S SO HOGS Good to choice heavy. 4 00 4 30 WHEAT Ko.S red 3 Q, C6 Ko-2sot 66 67 C02X Xo.-J 27 S74 OATS No.2 21 S3 EYE No. 2 35 3C FLOUE Patents, per sack... 2 tt) 2 10 HAY Baled S 00 6 50 BCTTEB-Choice creamery.. 10 14 SHEESE Fall cream 6 7 BGG5 Choice 6 a 84 BACON Hams -.... 30 10'i Shoulders 5 64 Sides 7 8 LARD 6!iG 6J. POTATOES 23 40 ST. LOUIS. CATTLE Shipping steers. 4 00 4 S Batchers steers... 3 73 4 no HOGS Packing 4 00 4 25 SHEEP Fair vo choice 3 63 4 9) FLOLK Choice 3 91 4 33 WHEAT No. 2 red 73 734 CORK Xo.2 SI 34 OATS No.2 T. 214 21J, RYE No. 2 39 A 40 BUTTER Creamery 14 13 PORK. 1130 1125 CHICAGO. CATTLE Shipping steers. . 3 75 4 S3 HOGS Packing and shipping. 4 00 4 60 SHEEP Fair to choice 4 03 4 95 FLOUH Water wheat 4 40 4 SO WHEAT No. a red 734 76 X CORN No.2 3649 3S OATS sto.2 SlJi 21X RYE No. 2 43 w 44 BUTTER Creamery 15 16 PORK. 10SS 10 73 3JEW YORK. CATTLE Cossmoa to prune.. 4 00 4 75 HOGS Good to choice 4 00 5 SO FLOUR Good to choice 4 40 J 5 SO WHEAT No-ared 86 87 CORN No.2. 434 44 OATS Western saixed as 2 BUTTER Crca-Bery ..... 13 17 FORK. -, 12 00 S SO THE ROCK ISLAND'S POSITION. Geaeral Saaager St. John's Reply to Statement of Alton Of rials. i From the Chlcazo Times." ' General Manager St. John, of the Chicago, Rask Inland k Pacihc road, authorizes the foUowteg statement in reply to assertions recsntly made by Vice-President J. C. HcXallmof the Chicago Alton in a pub lished interview; "Mr. McMullin, in a recentpublished inter view, has clearly defined the present posi tion and policy of the Alton road. It la to Insist on through rates being made on a basis that will give to It a fair share of the traffic which goes to and comes from . points west of Ranges City. He illus trates his meaning by citing a shipment of live stock from lopeka on the Rock Island road through Kansas City to Chicago. Upon such a shipment the tariffs of all the hues as heretoiore adjusted provided for a through rate somewhat less than the sum of two locals. This practice was ' tn accordance with well recognized prin ciples of rate-making as universally prac ticed by carriers, and has been approved by the interstate commerce commission, which ma recent ca-e used the following language :As throughrates are made by the American system of roads, agreed percent ages of the total rate, considerably less la amount than the local rates of reads receiv ing such percentages, are usually a leading feature, and it is eminently proper as a general rule that this ahould'be so. i ominerce and trade require it and compe tition compels it. Such rates, when rea sonably and fairly adjusted to local busi ness, are greatly 'favored in the law, be cause they furnish cheapened rates and greater tacilraes to the public, while at the same time they give increased employ ment and earnings to a larger number of carriers. "In the rates as adjusted heretofore upon live-stock traffic from points in Kan sas. Indian Territory, Texas, etc., through Kansas City to Chicago, the difference be tween the sums of the locals and the through rates was an entirely reasonable difference, and the tariffs in ouestioa were ' precisely upon the line of the resolution which JCr. JJcilnllin quotes approvingly. Notwlthstandimr this, he says tnat he pro- poes to get wnat ne cans a Tair snare or the taruf by redncin? the local rate from Kansas City to Chicago to the amount of the proportionate rate between them TMiinfs b f-r.rf H Ti T?rttr TalfiT,? ,.s r. through shipment. 'This statement Is certainly candid. His line has no extension west of Kansas City. The Rock Island has. He pro roses to make the Iattor divide with him traffic which originates upon the extension that it has furnished means to construct and this he will do by reducimr the established ate from Kanpat. City to Chicago. This declara tion tollo'-vs his announcement at the com- mencement of the same interview that the ' Alton does not cut any rates; it only reduces when necessary to meet cut rates of other roads.' Yet the Alton has just forced a large reduction in all rates on live stock and products from Kansas City to Chicago in ac cordance v.-;th the policy above stated. "Naturally and inevitably when the Alton reduces its rate trom Kansas City to the division of the through rate charged upon the lines where the live-stock phijitnents originate those lines must meet the reduc tion in the local and at the name time re duce their through rate correspondingly. This is neeceary for their preservation: they will not think that they can reasona b'y'be asked to cut their lines m two for the benefit of the Alton, nor can the latter justiv expect them to surrender traffic which they have constructed long lines of road to secure. This step will apparently involve a new reduction dv tne Alton to the level ol the new proportionate rates:' and the process will be repeated until ail the lines are doing business as a lobs and somebody surrenders. , '"The a-sociation has no desire to punish the Alton for its withdrawal nor for any i thinir else Action necesarv for the pro- ' te'-tion of its liaes asainst the Alton's raid will probably be taken, however." The Prince of Wales has purchased a new uniform, his eightieth. Each new costume of milirsrr character that he burs costs him ' about J4jJ. Ee therefore owns about $36, OUO worth of uniforms. Those destructive enemies of the 'Western farmer, the chinch burrs, are subject this rear to a disease resemblinjr cholera, rrhich in some localities is destrorins' them rapidly. TIIEHE Is a man in our town And he is ver wie. i-. When e er "e doesn't feel Jest nsht One remedy he tnes. ir. It's Jnt the thini: to take In spring The Blood to punfy. Ee t-lls his friends, and no thins else Is lie Induced to try because, having taken Dr. Pierce's Goloer Medical Discovery to cleanse his system, tone it up. and enfich the blood, and finding that it always produces the desired result he considers that he would be foolish to ex periment with anything else. His motto is. "Prove all things and hold fast to thai which is rood " That's why he pins his faith to the ''Golden JledicafDiscovery." m "Walking advertisements for Dr. Sasre's Catarrh Remedy are the thousands it has cured. The Sultan of Zanzibar has a German wife, and by a singular coincidence Ger manv obtains valuable concessions from his Majesty's Government denied to other powers. m The great fire at Seattle, W. T., is said to have been started by the upsetting ot m ' Livi: Oak, Ala., Dec. 13th, ISSd. Messrs. A. T. Siialle-nbergeb & Co. Rochester, P. Genu. Last spring I re ceived by mail a bottle of your Antidote for Malaria for my brother, who had chills for more than six months. He frequently broke them with Quinine, but thev would soon re turn. I save him the Antidote and he has not bad a chill since. It has made a perma nent cure. Yours truly. W. W. Pebdce. The introduction of the electric lirht has caused a marked diminution of crime in Pittsburch, Pa. m Are you busy! Are you making money? ' If so. stick to it, you are fortunate Lt you t are nnt. inea our auvice is tnat vou write at once to B. F. Johnson & Co.,"l009 Main St.. liichniond. Va. They can show you how to enter quickly upon a profitable work. Miss Arnold, sister of Mrs. Humphrey "Ward, is the onguial of Bose in "PJobert Elsmere." All who use Dobbins' Electric Soap praise it as the mest economical family soap made; but if you will try it once it will teil a still stroneer tale of" its merits Uif. Pleate try it. "i our grocer will supply you. The fuel supply of the Sierras is ex hausted alcup the line of the Central Pacific railroad. Pane from indigestion, dyspepsia and toe hearty eating', is relieved at once by taking one of Carter's Little Liver Pills "immedi ately after dinner. Don't forget this. These has not been an execution of a white man in South Carolina for twenty ave years. a Bed, angry eruptions yield to the action of Glenn's Sulphur Soap. Hill's Hair and Whisker Dye, 30 cents. Apache Colati, in Arizoaa, a larjrertham the State of Massachusetts, yet it has act a single doctor within its borders. Old smokers nrefer Tonsill's Puaca 5a Cigar to xtoat 10 centers. Oraanr Cni.i Vat haa k4 truit crop for sixteen coesacnthre yean. a "Wovzs and children are bow aet allowed t work otct tec hours a day ia CaliteWaV Areas to Aetiom A dormant liver, or you will suffer all. the tortures incident to a prolonged bilious at tack. Constipation, headaches, dyspepsia, furred tongue, sour breath, pain in the right side, will admonish you of neglect. Disci pline the recalcitrant organ at once with Hostetter's Stomach Bitters and expect prompt relief. Malaria, rheumatism, kiuney comprint, nervousness and debility are thoroughly relieved by the Sitters. m BEOoxrrx can boast of having the largest bread baiiery in the world. It tums'out 7U,GU) loaves of bread a day on an average. BirtocssEss, dbziness, nausea, headache, arc relieved by small doses of Carter's Lit tle Liver Pills. Tns Prince of "Wales has 17 brothers-in- iaw. 16 uncles, 57 cousins, oS nephews and aieces. lr aSUcted with Sore Eyes we Dr. Isaac ThomDon's Eye Water. Iruggisti sell ir 25c There's a grave-diggers' assembly of the ETnights of Labor. Suiasier Weakness Is quickly overcome by the tonmc. revtvtrc. sad blood pnnfytr.g qualities of Hood's Sarsaponila. This popular medicine drives off that tire-t feeling and cures sick headache. dypepsla. crorala. nd ait humors. Thousands testlij that Hood's Sara pariila "caiesthe weak strong." "Sly health was poor, as I had frccruent sick headaches. could not leepwel!.dui not hare much appetite, and hid no ambition to work. 1 have taien less than a bottle of Bood'a arsapartlla a-d feel like a new person." Mas. W. A. TCUSKU. West Hanover, 3laj. If. B. if you d-cide to take Hood's Sarsapartna, do not be induced to buy any other. Hood's Sarsaparilla Bold by all drucslnta. Si: si f or 15. Prepared only by C I. HOOD & CO.. Apothecaries. Lowell. Uaat. IPO Poses One Dollar Ms Pills iTssepUe, the debilitate!, whetlf er fnaa excess of worst of aalaa er Tftodr, drink or ezpeMtre 1st Malarial Regions, will tad Tnr Pills tae asest ees- releratte ever oaTered tbe easTerlms iBTStlld. Try Them Fairly. A Timorous body, pare blood. strciS. merres and a cbeerfal mind ulli resalb SOLD EVERYWHERE. nCIITC MfStlTCTl tos?l!tneBlvlT.infu-- MI3UI I 1 If MM I Ul Popular. iUuJtru.vd and J0HNST8WM fLOOD HISTOKT, OP THE By W. FLETcnrRJotrssov. Faxteataelllaaboox e-ver lsud. Moeeeaa of As-nta is rr.uluI. SOO.OOO copies already sold- lUartlitul auto lyhle picture of the tnat disaster. AdpIt to Headquarter. Low price. tTBIKTIEUVS. Fmeht pnul. Sind 33 cent at once lor ouiQt to HUBBAKD BaoS SO "rth 3d Street. St. Louis. sniAXXisis rxrzzmwjswrx OPIUM CURE DC J. C m'FFMAX JrSe-Mtt. - n l.rnla ag-sax this rapra ..jtaijM"- Ot SI EC BEST: Imr. pond for price lit. OVPI-&0 Weeks'scaleWorluicraloJ.-.r. ar-SAXE TUU PA7IZ mmj caajw ffia. EDUCATIONAL. A BUSETESS EHUCVTIOK AT HOSE. For circulars address CLIEK'S COLLEGE, Ekie, Tjl. JACKSONVILLE "& Pirpajatory and colleztate eotirxo. IittfriSrre, lans-u-sb jsoscart. E.F.BiXtAES.PrBuncal.JacksoaTiIle, 11L LAWRENCE BUSINESS COLLEGE. The Leadinz ScIuhjI of But29 Sciences. A 7i pae llUis-rated CitJlofPH'. fineat pul.Iuhed. at tree. E. L. Alcllravy, xre.. Lawrence. Kaa. lT5IoycOLLEfiEofLAW.rhic:um.FallTT!r.l). L. .tiiis i epl3. t orcircularadil.FT.Bouth. Chicago. vnilBjeacpsiLeam Tek-zrapny an2 Bailroad I UyHB lataSl Agent's Business here, and ecuns . oot situations. V. rite J. D. BitOWN". Sed.itia. Ma. J&S- JOSEPH H. HUNTER .Sssssssssssssssssassss3 asssssssssssssssssaaflsssaTlssssuKjfla ai watsmXBE mjl,SUSWlK0mBn. BsssssssssssssssssssssssssJsMfcwsPt wlggjl1RgSjfcfc,Bgg I BslsBSSSSslBBSSSSSsSCBBsKjLsiasBBBB I BBBWsf-IPaHsMBSSaBffiaaBr TO WJKE SS 9aB --aBSSSSSSSBSSaBSSSSSSSSBT 'Q,'a "OCOJ at f V H , ---f V asscunxiT rum. -daataaamElf!---? "- -aBsasslSJJMaSggsy "laK5Bsswwj?Si5f.: - ' aBsaBaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaaaBaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaVaBaaBVaaaaaaaVaaaaaaaaBBBBBai aassaaaaaavssSSaaaaaaa4aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaassaaaVaaawaavSBBBBBBBBBS ILLUSTRATE! JEfGSSni 'BBBBBBal Far KferUsiag; aw Fasten, CaNa, Bin-Head, Beass, ar aa EsUelliaaBKBt For Any Pnrposs ! Order of at. or write for Prices and Specimen Books. We caa ao4 tail oa any order.asTisg aa iMl-MWe Tariety iIS! MISCELLANEOUS CUTS! Humorous Cuts! Ie Haie Hnfafe cf Coins tf Tbise, Haarof taem Ja OoauMeta 'iinim nnw If EiifcfT Efetntniaf tr Umrtjm, Addretwanortfafsfor CaicSpeeteeasorteTaMLar letters cf laoatrr aa to asttawtas est mott. erasa The A. N. Kellogg 368 It 370 DEARBORN sa a a ti an wsuarr ax. ar. loom. t STSaTT, CLEVCL Mtlll TH ST.. KAMCAS CtTT. I W THAOE HemU DYfPj rwiT ITCOHQUERS Kencrcs eno ceres 2ZHUZ2ATIS2C, KECSALGIA, CclAtIca,Losikat. HEADACHE. Tocthadja, gprziss BECT3T9, Bern asd Scald At Xrsgrats mad Dealers. rm CHAILES A, V0CSLEI CO, Baasft. I GOLD MSDAL, PA2I3, I7S. W. BAKER & CCS ast Cocoa obmolntel'j pure it is tolublt. No CJieniicals are used in it prctrst:c t La wturr aux Un d lit mwtflM of Cccs nu3rl vita Sus. ArTovrncf or frti-ar, and i therefore Itx nut craDonucal, cutua? (rit tfcm w or p. It is dclici uj. aoortsh mngthcsiag. Easilt Dliizsrra. and admirably adapted for am'aj ai wH aa fiirprrtau in hn'rv Sold by Grocer everywhere. W.BAXEE 4b TO, Dorchester, Kass. Wnei Wire Fencinf Wife Rope Selvac SOo TO 52 PER KOD AV dJaaalM SVsdaa,M t tnthtolmrof m- VsnBMTran. Informaano fnat. IHK aVMiu?X wsvn WtllFjrXCFra, SULUiaracomateB souidtcsot I MISS aawawaaaa JONES 1TB laro Ixaci a't reaai Ika. Icr cz-cr tETerysiw Scale. Fcxfrw price ja J tne-aath- rapr aid address inAlP-t ns RINGHAVTC9I'- BX3GHA21TOX, S. Y-: raas tins pipza ? aa. jca n If Mil 1 SSSllJ NW.ssat.rrN. I 9 sTMl 3 SSSSaV His.r Tt-. iLezz ivniu. K- ian. BEST wrTFIT TCJ. FRUSTS. ESSSOSRI RDRSE?.r CO., LOCtSiiHi, IB. vaAJta iua Aaa.eT.ssnto. CUIMS1 PES1X. A3 kiB'tiof C n pro-iruml Z4 vnsck l47TsjDn& Ktlcd Oi.iiit a nssnaltr 32 T-a- es-rMaciw lUraiTiUiuan. X. E. . PKTUlblU. Kiiha.jTO.V. D- C UTE ClllEy at llsrw CUiat? Pit PENSIONS tJD? ALL SOLDIERS-. I it Mdisabledtpaj t-.: D rtertrelivt"vl.LawsfTeu. a.w Stcoaana a toi-. n.riau.0.. a wuisf.a.c ruu xuia Parsa St-f a uojrm aso boarb mib. ilfI orhighc-tconr.mk'sion and K DATS '"' CE Eli IT to Agentson ourXevr B ! P."W.ZIEfiLEK&CO.mM (rSet.fct-LoiiJt r aaxE xata earza mot bo jm ku. Orator Cmlthat Plso'9 Cra for Cccsntnpuni sos 01U7 PKEVLSTd, bes oIm tc'iuu H.S Leak AGENTS wasted. TOi5S!w Bis proflia. Eirf F"niianis. Eis sales. SOaday Wriia tnt terms, or na U.1 eent. fcT OCTFIT and SAVC TIME. ATIQS.VL PCBLISIHSG CQST.LutM, PATENTS PwlSVEMOBS. poot FaitSL IT. T FUlz-tnM. A'MM-if aU2Tat3 PiPISii7CMiMnt& A. N. K. D 1251 wmzn vrtarmQ t Aviarn'5EKs pleast atate tkat joa aaw tke AAncrtiacacal la aascr- arp-ain. VuMacaav D. C. VHi CKTTOl. -Jacobs o; iGMPaCAJK .BBBBBmBBSallBSBBBBSSSSSSSSBBBB JVIIM bssbbbBt rsstsvill Pfln.1 Blfi.J fcZST fjk ICtLvf vaiMt- amm sasaBBB9 .MVBSSSSBBSSSBSSMBBBjamm(aBi.Bt at aHssssa5tit3j3Z3B5 m FJsasssKsXJwijl'fT"8s ggMpjs3S$r IF YOU REQUIRE THE MOST RELIABLE, . . BEST FINISHES aB' BlBaBSSSSalrali' BsUBSSSSalBSaF Srto.tb other Ulattra. btr oatoatea Newspaper Co. STREET, CHICAGO. ILL. ITT a IT tUi ST, sa t e satr sin sx, ar. & y I