S UPER VISOR SESSIONS Official : Publication : of : Proceeding (Continued from last week.) On motion the following amounts were transferred to’the general fund of 1904: County judgment fund.$1426 85 County bond fund. 3557 99 Advertising fund. 1723 48 Interests on deposits. 1822 68 County school fund. 157 08 Total.$8688 06 On motion $2500 of the above amount was transferred from the gen eral found of 1904 to the bridge fund of 1904. On motion the following claims were allowed upon the bridge fund of 1904: Wm Krotter & Co, apply on tax,$25 16 and. 48 73 Wm Krotter & Co, apply on tax, 41 10 and. 23 04 Wm Krotter & Co, apply on tax $10.32,. 14 80 John McManus, apply on tax S45.I5, . TO iU M L Erb, apply on tax,. 47 00 Geo Bowden, apply on tax. 10 00 James Binkard, apply on tax,... 27 00 E Carroll, apply on tax $2, . 4 15 W G Ousley, apply on tax $3.95,. 6 95 Patrick Barrett, apply on tax,.. 5 00 Fred C Turner,apply on tax $8.30 11 25 M P Sullivan, apply on tax $5.25, 15 00 A L Shannon, apply on tax..,... 24 50 Thos Malloy. 10 50 O O Snyder & Co. 76 58 Edwards Bradford & Co . 17 03 Wm Krotter & Co, $4.62, $3.84, 29 92 Wm Krotter & Co, $18.23, $32.76, 18 35 Wm Krotter & Co, $24, $28.58, 4 25 Wm Krotter & Co. 29 70 E Boy Townsend, $17.70, $35, 40 00 E Bov Townsend, $29.50, $30, 7 50 E Boy Townsend, $31.50, $49, 41 66 E Itoy Townsend, $42, $39.59, 39 00 E Boy Townsend, $31, $58, 45 55 E Boy Townsend.$17.70, 33 40 GB Hodges. 2 00 A W Burbank. $0, 6 00 Will Goree. 23 00 JoeTimmannas. 7 50 M W Beebe. 12 40 G W Pond.. 10 00 Canton Bridge Co. 18 00 John Staples. 4 00 F A Hatch. 10 00 L L Cosner. 9 75 H Hibbard.19 50 W B Mayer. 6 00 Laurence Barratt. 53 00 W L Tunender. 12 00 Loren Simonson.10 00 Henry Martfeldt . 5 00 John Smith. 3 58 Hiram Stearns. 2 00 C H Bigler. 5 25 Nelson Ames.11 00 Galena Lumber Co., Atkinson.. 65 07 Joe Benash. 1 50 John Kramer. 13 00 C O Tenberg, apply on tax,. 2 80 Han Lynch, apply on tax,. 6 00 Golden & Hodgkin, apply on tax 26 40 WJH Stearns. 6 00 Ole Pearson. 3 00 BP Smith... 4 00 Ed Jacobs. 5 00 iDpmnsiBf son Impoverished soil, like impov erished blood, needs a proper fertilizer. A chemist by analvz ing the soil can tell you what fertilizer to use for different products. If your blood is impoverished your doctor will tell you what you need to fertilize it and give it the rich, red corpuscles that are lacking in it. It may be you need a tonic, but more likely you need a concentrated fat food, and fat is the element lacking in your system. There is no fat food that is so easily digested and assimi lated as Scott’s Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil It will nourish and strengthen the body when milk and cream fail to do it. Scott’s Emulsion is always the same; always palatable and always beneficial where the body is wasting from any cause, either in children or adults. We will send you a sample free. Be sure that this pic ture in the form of a label is on the wrapper of every bottle of Emul sion you buy. SCOTT i BOWNE CHEMISTS 409 Pearl St., Hew YorK 50e. and $1.00. All Druggists. Ayer’s We know what all good doc tors think of Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral. Ask your own doc tor and find out. He will tell Cherry Pectoral you how it quiets the tickling throat, heals the inflamed lungs, and controls the hardest of coughs. _ 1* Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral Is well known In our family. We think it is the best medicine in the world for coughs and colds.” Katie Peterson, Petaluma, Cal. 25C., 50C.. gll.00. jJ. 0. AYER CO., fOl" ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■ Hard Coughs One of Ayer’s Pills at bedtime will hasten recovery. Cently laxative. I S Grager. 9 00 Ivay Bros. 27 40 J os Shober. . 3 00 GL Butler. 4 00 J J Schwetger. 15 85 Atkinson Ildw Co. 4 20 Louis Steabner.$38, $18, 54 00 Joe Timmermans. 12 50 Brook Ildw Co... 7 50 Pat Barrett, .ir. 24 00 K L Tunender. 1 50 Lee Woods. 5 25 CT Simonson. 3 00 Dan Sullivan. 9 00 Edward Murray. 3 00 N Carson. 6 00 J II Moler.... 15 37 John Davis. 9 50 Dennis Murphy. 19 50 Thomas Malloy. 21 00 Claud Goodsell. 3 00 DC McKay. 2 25 Dexter Bros. 1 60 J II Moler. 6 00 F E Richardson. 43 00 Frank Hughes. 7 50 Anthony Murray. 2 00 J D Seiah . 5 25 Chris Timmermans. 17 00 D J Harrington. 6 50 I D McClow.$7.65, l5 20 Louis Steabner. 76 00 O O Snyder & Co.$57.72, 16 26 Edwards & Bradford. 51 03 A B Vanzandt. 30 35 Thomas Malloy. 12 00 On motion a refund warrant was granted to J. L. Roll for $37.70, for taxes excessively paid on lot 24, block 6, Ewing Village, for the years 1888 and 1889. On motion the county attorney was allowed a stenographer from this date, as long as the board deems it neces sary at a salary of $40 per month. On motion the county treasurer was instructed to employ what extra help he deemed sufficient in preparing the delinquent tax list, under instructions of the resolution passed by this board undsr date of Jan. 17th, 1905. xiic wuui) aascasui auuuiitucu tile following appointments as deputy assessors with their postoflice address. Donat Seger, Atkinson; J. B. Den' nis, Dustin; J. D. Grimes, Cham hers; John Fundas, Dustin; Mike Ratherham, Ewing; L. P. Pucket, Emmet; A. B. Donaldson, Ewing; Isaac Millspaugh, Inez; M. L. Wintermote, Chambers; Anton Prusa, Atkinson; John Linden, Bliss; Martin Stanton, O’Neill: Horace Bradley, Inman; George Lambert, Martha; Wm Lell, Martha; W. D. Bradstreet, Paddock: John Alfs, Atkinson; W. H. Snell, Page; S. M. Aldridge, Celia; J. J. Naclit man, Anncar; J. E. Wiley, Dorsey; R. J. Jennings, O’Neill; John O’Connell, Atkinson; W. A. Hiscox, Stuart; P. Kennedy,Amelia;U. Hoyer, Black Bird; J. C. Knudson, Page; Harry Stanton, O’Neill; H. S. White, Amelia; E. I'. Porter, Chambers; J. J. McCatferty, O’Neill. On motion the above appointments were confirmed. On motion the board adjourned until 9 o’clock tomorrow morning. F. W. Phillips, Chairman, E. 9. Gilmour, Clerk. Healthy Mothers. Mothers should always keep in good bodily health. They owe it to their children. Yet it is no unusual sight to see a mother, with babe in arms, coughing violently and exhibiting all the symptoms of a consumptive ten dency. And why should this danger ous condition exist, dangerous alike to mother and child, when Dr. Bochee’s German Syrup would put a stop to it onceV No mother should be without this old and tried remedy in the house —for its timely use will promptly cure any lung, throat or bronchial trouble in herself or her children. The worst cough or cold can be speedily cured by German Syrup; so can hoarseness and congestion of the bronchial tubes. It makes expectoration easy, and gives instant relief and re-freshing rest to the cough-racked consumptive. New trial bottles, 25c; large size, 75c. At all druggists. To PATENT Good Ideas may be secured by our aid. Address, THE PATENT RECORD, Baltimore. Mo. Subscriptions to Tbe Patent Record SI.00 per annum AAAAAJVAAAAAAAAAAA^AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAe goto, J)i^eoVer®ep Vvwwwwwvwwwwvwwvwvwwvwv When the lecturer assigned to me the task of speaking to the memory of DeSoto, his plans and purposes, his explorations and exploits, 1 little thought of the moment and magni tude of this vast undertaking; as 1 thought it was a dry subject and one bereft of all interesting features to the present times and people here. 1 had read that he was a soldier of fortune and did not amount to much— that his life was a selfish and sordid one. Some authors painted him as a combination of the restless, roving ex plorer, the freebooter on land and a pirate on the high seas. So you may imagine my pleasing surprise when, after a thorough investigation, J found, instead, that he was one of the world’s benefactors, whose noble deeds has made mankind his debtor. 1 could not find a life of him nor even a decent, well written biography of this great man in town, and so I did the best 1 could. And if the little data 1 have here, gleaned from the purusal of two cyclopedias and the writings of Hawthorne, Bancroft, Irving and Prescott will only interest you sutli ciently to enthuse one single mind to the point of doing justice to this great Spaniard I will be amply re warded for the time spent. 4.UV1V ” Vi V (jlVUU VI » lllt-VU nations on this American continent when the Spaniards came over—the Astics in tiie north (Mexico) and tiie Incas in the south (Peru and Chili). History knows comparitively little of those two ancient and highly civilized peoples, as tiie white man burned and destroyed all records and traces of their past life and times, their origin and development, hence we know nothing of them before tiie conquest and so tiie field of the antiquarian is almost a total blank. Tusco was the chief city of the Incas, and the Inca name of Peru was Tavanhuxuya, signifying four quarters of tiie world, and the king dom or empire was divided into four equal parts, eacli distinguished by a separate and appropriate name or title of its own, and to each of which ran a great, well kept public highway of solid masonry, diverging from the capital city. It is said that the roaa between Cuzco and Quito and running thence to Chili was the very best in the world’s history, not even except ing the famed Appean way of Rome. Rut we know the military policies and government of the two peoples were vastly different. In dealing with other people the Astics were ferocous and cruel and carried on a war of extermination, signalizing their triumphs by the sacrifice of haticombs of human captives; while the Incas, perhaps as fond of coquest, preferred a milder policy, substituting intrigue and negotiation for violence, and dealt with conquered foes so that their future resourses should not be crippled and that they should come into the great empire not as foes but as friends. The Mexican vassels were ground down by the worst forms of oppression, only limited by the power of human endurance. There was no regard paid to their welfare. The Inca on the other hand admitted their new and conquored subjects at once to all the rights enjoyed by the rest of tiie community, and so solidified the empire’s motely population by a bond of personal, provincial and national in interests. Now a word for the terri tory in which the Incas lived. If you take a map and look at Ecuador, Peru, Bolivia and Chili, I think it covers the ground sufficiently well which at that time contained the western hemesphere’s three most noted objects—the richest mines, the most polished and forward civilization and the greatest ruler of men, viz, the Copper mountains, the Incas and the Emperor Autohalpa. This was the country and now the time—1532—for Francisco Pizarro, the world’s most natural soldier and leader of m6n, to appear on the scence and in company with Hernando He Soto, the subject of this sketch, to undertake the con quest of that vast empire, which they successfully did with an army of 180 in fantry and 27 horse, and they raised the standard of Spain on the walls of the Inca cities and called the new possessions by the present name Peru. You may object to my calling Pizarro the world’s most natural soldier and leader of men, but you will no longer do so if you read W. II. Prescott’s “Peru” and keep in mind the fact that he (Pizarro) could neither read nor write. He was the neglected and dis owned natural son of a colonel of infantry in the Spanish service. Both Pizarro and He Soto served under Cortez in his brilliant conquest of Mexico. It is needless to follow these two historic persons, or landmarks of that time, through the Inca wars to the storming of Cuzco and the sacking of the holy city; sutticit to say it was He Soto himself who captured the illustrous Incan emperor and it-was he, too, who had the courage of his convictions and the Stirling humanity to rebuke Pizarro, his chief, for the murder of the Emperor Autohalpa in his (He Soto’s) absence. “You have acted rashly,” said He Soto, “Auto halpa has been basely slandered; there was no enemy at Huamachuco, no rising among the natives. I’ve met with nothing but good will and all was quiet. If it was necessary to bring the Inca to trial lie should have been taken to Castile and judged by his peer, the emperor. 1 would have pledged my life to see him safe on board the vessel.” Tiiis speech provoked the ire of l'izarro and so began a fued between the two chiefs which grew apace and only ended after the battle of Vilca coopa, where De Soto gained a decis ive victory over the Incas, after which he tendered Ids resignation of his commission to Pizarro. He did so for another reason that he might be able to go in quest of, find and conquor another Mexico or Peru. You may ask, Who was DeSoto, anyway? And this is just what I am striving to tell, so I’ll now give you the answer of the International Cyclopedia: “Hernando De Soto—born 149(1 and died 1542—was one of the early explorers of North America, and distinguished himself, when young, in literary studies and athletic exercises. In 1519 lie accompanied Pendracious Davilla, ’his patron, to tile Ismus of Darian and was a most daring and independent opponent of the tyranical rule of that otllcer who was afterwards the governor of Darian. Leaving Davilla’s service in 1528 he explored the coast of Guatemala and Yucatan seeking for a supposed water commun ication or channel between the Atlantic ana i/acinc oceans. in i->.>_ he was in Pizarro’s expedition for the coquest of Peru and used all his in fluence to prevent the Spanish butch er from murdering the Peruvian king. ” Having amassed a fortune, De Soto returned to Spain and married Da villa’s beautiful daughter. In 1536 he was moved by the reports of the new found Eldorado and undertook the conquest of Florada. lie sailed in April, 1538, with 20 officers, 24 priests and 600 men. May, 1539, lie landed at Tampa bay and followed the tracks of Navarez, a former Spanish invader. In July his ships were sent back to Havana, and the next year, 1540, he worked slowly northward, having many conflicts with the Indians. His second winter was spent in the Chickasaw country. These Indians, in the spring, burned his camp and their own villages be cause he attempted to force them to carry his baggage, and 40 of his men were burnt to death. After several day’s marching, mainly through swamps, he reached the queenly Miss issippi in June, 1541, and was the first European or white man who ever looked upon that mighty river’s turbed waters. He constructed barges and crossed over, marching to the head watersof the White river, the western limit of his explorations, turning south and passing the hot springs of Arkansas, he passed his third winter on the Washita river and, in spring, moved down stream to the Mississippi and was marching along that majestic river towards the ocean when he was striken with fever and died, in either May or June. To keep the knowledge of his death from the natives, his body was sunk during the night in the middle of the river. IIis wife died at Havana on the third day after hearing the news of his sad fate and end. ./Vli flic bliuc X./C OUUU U11UCX IUUIV bills conquest of Florida lie was governor of Cuba, where lie left his wife in Havana to govern till his return, thinking only of future success and that all would go well to that end. His purposes and plans were of a three fold nature, viz., discovery, conquest and colonization; but unfortunately his followers were chiefly cavaliers and adventurers, and, therefore, poorly litted and equipped for the methodic, plodding life of successful colonists. Before the deatli of this great man the whole expedition was reduced to the extreme point of want and starve tion. Their clothing was matts of bulrushes held together by the bark and lint of trees, but the proud spirit of I)e Soto buoyed them on and pre vented their return home till they could do so under the auspices of suc cess. Few people are aware that this intrepid, brave and daring explorer penetrated as far nortli as the present states of Missouri and Illinois, and it will be news to others that he planned settlements in Florida, Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi and Georgia, and in fact laid the foundation of a colony at Ociius, now Pensacola. Some writers call him a tyrant and say his disposition was cruel and harsh, but such is not the fact of truth. Towns and communities are not called after tyrants, and we know they are called after and named in honor of the good He Soto, who died in poverty and rags but without a a stain on his great and glorious career. He Soto did many grand and noble things in the 40 years of his life, but his greatest achievement was the discovery of the Mississippi river, which is now and always must remain his glory, his grave and his monu ment. John J. McCalferty. ■ - m If troubled witli weak digestion, belching or sour stomach, use Cham berlain's Stomach and Liver Tablets and yon will get quick relief. For sale by P. C. Corrigan. ^msmss^mmmmnsssBi * _9 jjiiZjLijljB f£f^»E$5Si ^ i AVfegetable Preparation for As similating the Food and Regula ting the Stomachs andBowels of Promotes Digeslion.Cheerfirf ness and Rest.Contains neither Opium,Morpliine nor Mineral. Not Narcotic. liKtpe of Old Jt'SAMUXLtttCHUl , ftmyjtm Seal" , ALxSmna * 1 I , RochdUSJd- I Aimr .ftvrf <■ 1 te&a** l JiftnpSetd'- 1 ] Ctarifitd SiMf * 1 hvtbryrmn, rknwz / \ A perfect Remedy forConslipa (ion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea II ; Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- 1 ness and LOSS OF SLEEP. Fac Sunitc Signature of NEW'YORK. EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER. 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Our system of selling direct to customers is saving thousands of dollars to carriage buyers lu every corner of the country. We quote the same rates to you that wo would give the largest wholesale jobber, and we offer you an assortment to choose from such us no other dealer can show. With every purchase we give the broadest guarantee. I f it is not in every way satisfactory, you can return the vehicle to us aud wo will pay freight charges both ways. We cau also I Save two Profits for you on harness and other horse equipments. f Write for our free illustrated catalogue in which we describe the buggies, surreys, phwtons, etc., that have d made our factory famous for their high grade. Don’t j wait until your need is more pressing; write to-day and have the catalogue by you for future use. ! I THE COLUMBUS CARRIAGE & HARNESS CO., j j ... Columbus, 0., P.0. Box 772. i ISM™ 155? St. Louis. Mo., P. 0. Box 64. strap tent from Columbus. 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