THE DAILY I1EIULD, 1'LATTSMOUTII, JEBllAJSJvA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBBIl l'J, 1667. $l)e tplattsmontlj, Datln Cjcrato KNOTTS BBOS., Publishers & Proprietors. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. For Supreme .Judtjo, SAMUEL MAXWELL. Tor University Iti-gciits, Dll.'tIi. 1$. DAVIS. DH. GEO KG 12 KOI'.KKTS. For Juil'p" of Mim-oiiiI Julirliil DiHtrlet, HON. SAM UK L M. CHAPMAN. HON. ALLEN W. FIELD. REPUBLICAN COUNTY TICKET. KorTn-iisurer J). A. CAMTJIELL. ForCh ik UIUD CIUTCIIFIELD For Keconler WM. II. POOL. For .1 u.lt; CALVIN JiUSSELL. ForSuperiuton.ler.t of l'ulille Instrucll on MAYNAIU) SPINK. ICr SlicrilT .1. C. EIKENIJAltY. BjrCU-rk of District Court II. J. STUEIUIIT, For County Coiiiiiii.xsioner CEOKUE YOUNG. For Surveyor A. MADOLE. For Coroner 1IENHY 1S(ECK. Tho Republican Stato Platform. Tliu republican i ;n I v of Nebraska, while erer ea'ciul f property rights, ami holding no sympathy with tliose. who would witli tlie com muinu UiTHli', or V. H 1) t lie iinurchirits destroy reasserts Its (leleriiuiiaMoii that the great rail wav corporations of t his statu which hold re I at ions of eloecst interest to tli! people shall ba tho (airly paid servants ot tin: stu'e and not its masters. Tin work of legislative control in tlitt stat: n'ld n itioii shall eontinue until a cau-o of cuiiiplaiiit of exorbitant, rates and unjuit licriinination in favor of individuals localities hIwII re:is tu exist. Assuiiiir-u the ivspousibiluy whieli fairly belongs to it Iiuvin' originated all legislation lo.ikin railroad eatitrol and the creation of thost tri Ixiuals oi.ooiuiiiirt-'i"iii which have been en abl'd to maiii'lu witu corporate power, the re publican party will see to it that by a'l needed eniarirenients of power these commission, ua tional uud state, Khali by arniet'. for battle and or viatory- While favorinir such can-re tha const initio:: of tilis htate as will permit the ra until a commissioners lo be elected by the nsopla. It hereby voices its confidence in the existing board of transportation, and commend its fforts to obtain for Nebraska the same tariff of rates for frel-'ht and carriage of pas enters as is accorded to ueiliboriM; states iiintarly circumstanced. It is cros-y unjust aud a grevioim wroriK that Nebraska should jvty mor for the transportation of her products and tn "carriage 01 no-r supplies than her neiirh ixirs, Iowa, Minnesota and Dakota, with its WW miles or easily constructed and cheaply maintained lines ot railroad and the republi cans f thit state will not cease th-.ir eilons until ad wrongs lie righted. W rvufliriu our aaherauce to the American vtem of tariff, under which, with its broad protection of American labor, our country lias prospured beyond any other. As the business ul the country now demands revision, the re publican, alive to thedemands of eery mate rial interost. win sec to it that such revision hall be made at tho earliest practical day We condemn the action of the democratic ma jonty in conerfs in that after repeated ulpdiios of taritf reform, it Ins utterly failed. while h'iin!f a larco majority in the house of repr!"Bta'.ivM. where t irilt bills must origi nate, to bring about such reform, which inus coins from the party that lias erer been tho friend or tho American laborer and producer. The grateful tha. iks of the American people are due tu those who defended the union in t lie lute war anl we are in favor of providin itablo pensions for soldiers and Pallors who wera disabled In its service or who hare since viihout thair fault or vice, become objects of yuunc r private cuaiuy aim to me wilows and orphans of those who fell in its defence. We heartily sympathize with the ambition and effort of the patriots of Ireland in their endeavors to obtain for their country the blowings of free institutions and local self torerumont. We recognize In i-harles Stew art -arne!l and the Kt. lion. Willia u E. Clad tone worthy champions of the fundamental Sriacipais or the Declaration of ludepen nco. We eoademn the action of the president in Is attempt to return the trophies won by fcrarery on the field of battle. We condemn the narrow, intolerant and par tisan acuou on ue ueinoc-auc party lu exeiud i2 from the prlrileues of state citizenship the kaif mihica peopla of Dakota. solsl von the un niaulv and Indefensible ground of a difference ia paimcat views, not content with their ef forts to exclude the nero from the elective franchise, they now seen to proscribe an intel ligent, presnerous and patriotic people because 4f their political opinions. We view with alarm, the abuse of the veto pevver py tho president of the United States, a powrr uum me use 01 wnich linglanl sov reikis have abstained for two centuries; ; power used but ix times during the first forty years ot or national gorerninent, a power by the people intrusted to the president for the purpose of preventing hasty legislation, has by mn piaiciii lucumueni 01 mat nice been used i tu ware ins wen ascertained will er the peo- viv nun io m-i-i iwrir repeated uemsnas. lie Las. In one-littlf of a sinjle term of ofllce, used the power more tiiuos than all the predecessors coiuuiiicu. iieus sought by all the prece- aeniee. use ot extraoniiuaryjpower. to consti tute nimeit a co-ordinate branch of the na tional legislature, lie has frequently oxer eised tni "one man power ' by the cowardly Method of th- "pocket veto" bv which import ant measuro have been defeated without any wou uciuji given tor wunnoiuing its itp proval. rw ' ' i . -m liiisisuieat -vcatner ana everyone should put the finishing touches on their work. TnE celebrated Cleveland weather has played out in the south, the president having found it raining very hard on several occasions. Ocn brother over the way is endeavor ing to make the people believe that he lias, for some time, been a Van Wyck re publican, instead of a moss-back demo crat, judging from the amount of hog wash he has been dealing out to the ex senator. Brotiieu Sherman seems disposed to grumble because his democratic brethren do not put up more liberally. The man at our elbow suggests, that probably the democrtic campaign funds are being used to better advantage, (ie) by buying up mugwump (?) papers. A TniRD term for W. C. Showalter, who held the office of district, clerk for eight years, is a 4rcry proper thing; but a third term for J. C. Eikenbary, who has held the office of sheriff for four years, is a very, very bad thing. Sample page oSJierman's conshtenry. Rrotuer Sherman says the country wants free lumber, but it does not want free whiskey. It looks like some folks who try to run democratic newspapers did not know a democratic doctrine when they saw it. The demand for free whiskey has always been a democratic war try, find to-day the bulk of thckm- ocratic party are insisting upon it. Just so ceitain as the democratic party adopts a tariff-for-revenue-only platform, just so certain will the party go down to defeat. Agusta (Ua.) Chronical Dem. This sort of talk docs the country good to hear. Lut it would be more im pressive than it is now if the talkers would, ho to speak, occasionally crystal lize some of their talk into acts. A year ago the Georgia democrats nominated ten "revenue-only" candidates for the lower branch of congress, and if the pro tectionist newspapers of that party made any serious attempts to send it "down to defeat" on that account, tho country lias not heard of the circumstance. (Jlvle Democrat. We have noticed of late, in several democratic newspapers a great deal of complaint about hard times, which has been charged up against a protective tariff. Although we have a democratic president and have had a democratic con gress for eight years; yet, it seems we :ire having hard times, a thing that was not expected, if any creature had been given to the promises of the democratic orators, four years ago. We opine, however, that by the time the four years trial trip of the democracy has closed, the people will be only too ready and will ing to change back to republicanism and prosperity, which have always went hand in hand. Pan Elixtuic Garland, President Cleveland's choice in all the democratic ranks for attorney general, and a man that, had he been a republican and been guilty of the same offenses that he has been guilty of as a democrat, would have been kicked out of office long ago, is now having . a little row with secretary of state, Bayard. It is to be hoped that the speculative mind ofjMr. Garland may be turned in other directions. While Jlr. Cleveland may need him very badly, it is very clear to us, that the people are in safer hands with some other scion on the con fed racy in charge general's office. of the attorney The republicans of Cass county owe it to themselves, as rcpublcan?, and as good citizens, to support the republican ticket from top to bottom. The idea of scratching off u republican and electing a democrat only strengthens the demo cratic party. The successful democrat in office becomes apart of the d3nioeratic machine that is used to defeat your best candidates at yournext election. Every time you elect a democratic officer you place a club in the hands of an enemy that is likely, at any time, to be used against you. Let us take a lesson from the past and for once elect a straight ticket in a county that is republican by four hundred majority. New Motive Power. Yankton Press and Dokotian: Wher ever the artesian system can be utalized for mechanical purpose as successfully as it lias been at lankton, it is superior to the natural gas system of any country. The force is nature's free gift. There is no destruction of appliances required to bring this force under subjection, as is inevitable in the combustion of natural gas, which can only be utilized as fuel for steam-producing purposes. There is no danger to individuals, communities or property in the use of artesan power' while in the employment of natural gas. life and property is held in continual jeopardy. An artesian well and an iron turbine wheel will outlive the generations of earth, while a plant for the production of steam-power from burning gas yields rapidly to the intense heat evolved, and must be replaced many times during one generation. For economy, utility and simplicity there is no motive force equal to that of the artesian well, which flows on forever, unaffected by drouth and flood or any natural or artificial causes. It is always there, and a turn of the valve puts the wheels of manufacture in motion or causes them to halt. The longer we contemplate this simple force in nature and its application to mechanical pur poses the more firmly fixed is the convic tion that it is destined to become an im portant factor in the future of this section or the west. Yankton gave to Dakota its first artesian well an experment and a success, which has proved a boon to scores of thriving communities, lank ton gives to Dakota the first experiment in the utilization of artesian power for manufacturing jmrposes and it also is a success. Procrastination. Time once gone can never be re called." is the remark only too often said by those who neglect themselves. Dr. Warner's new SpecilicCough Cure Comes to the world's rescue And denies death of its rightful due. Please report your experience lo your druggist and neighbor, that tho world may have proof no cure, no pay re quired Price 50c and $1. For sale by WillJ. Warrick. Warrick has a very nice line of birth ay cards. d 4t FORTUNES IN FICTION. VHAT POPULAR STORY WRITERS EARN BY THEIR PEN. Grinding Out a. Library ot Five Ceut Literature lit the Kate of SIO Worth JJncli Jiay Salaries of Noted Writers auil j;ditors. To have pointcl out to you "tbo most popu lar American author," und then not to recog nize him either in tho flesh or by nny jicr traits you have seen, is n trifle surprising if you bud previously thought 'ou knew tho faces ami figures of all the American author you ever hcunl of. Tho man who ivm jKjint- cl out stood on a corner near tbo city hall of of Brooklyn, apparently waiting for that carriage which tiiy poorest of us keeps a horso car. He v. as a short man of medium build, dres::ed in a suit of bluo sergo, wearing a fashionable whit straw hat, tilted a little over tho ear, and carrying a enno. Ho looked rather like 11 shre wd commission merchant or grain broker than like an inspired ward of literature. "Whyro Ho wells never was heard of," said mv friend, "whore tho fame of Longfellow has not 3-ct re:i'.i:ed and where Robert Louis Stevenson is us if unborn, that famous author is admired, if not reverenced, llo makes ?1.",000 a year by Lis writings." Vexed at m3r ignorance and with my cu riositv keenly whetted, I inquired his numo only to learn that it was Ilarlund I. llalsey, a name I never had heard in my life. The wholo truth was grudgingly delivered by my informant, who at length freed his mind in this wise: llalsey is the writer who signs tho nom de plume "Old Sleuth" in one of the popular weeklies. Fifteen years ago he wrote a serial story called "Old Sleuth, the Detective," mid it achieved a sucee-s bo great thut afterward h adooted the name of tho hero for his own lien nanio, and ever since he has boon reeling out stories, alwaj's about "Uld Sleuth," until lie has now written something like 200 vol-imiei-Jof this literature. Wide as is his circle of fumo he desires to widen it by tho production of more ambitious literature, and to that end, or as an approach to it, has just finished u temperance tale. How strange tins all is! o have never read of llalsey in tiio magazino articles upon "the literary movement in New York," have not soon his portrait in similar articles upon the spirit J of the .Authors club. let he is tho leading writer for a paper that boasts of ijOjOOO circulation and four times that num ber of readers 1.230,000 a week. It seems piite likely that, as my informant suid, "his books arc to be found in the cabs of the loco motives, ia tiie garrets of the sowing girls, in the kitchen 3 of t'.io land, and the factory hands of the average New England mill town would rather see. Liui than Bismarck or Ten nyson." And $15,000 a year! That is almost $300 a veok. Why, I may bo unloosing a secret, but it is none tho loss a fact that the prince of our novelist, William D. Howells, is paid orly $10,000 a year by Harper & Bros., and L"j is considered fortunate to get that sum, though in ordor to do so ho had to surrender all chance o" earning extra money by means of a contract in which he agrees to give all Lis gifted creations to that llrm. And Rev. Ed ward P. Roe, polled favorite of the middle kus of novel consumers, the man who is fupposed to press one of his metaphorical heels on the neck of tho reading community, does not earn a penny moro than 10,000 a year and did not more than begin to mako that much until his publishers triad the ex pariment of printing "Barriers Burned Away" in twenty cent form in a limited edition of 100,000 volumes. I say "limited" because they destroyed the plates when that number was printed, to foivo tho public to buy 1 ho higher priced edition of old (at $1 a book, I believe) in case is wanted moro after the twenty cent bocks were sold. This was fol lowed by the same experiments with "Ho Fell in Love With His Wife." Both succeeded perfectly, and now Dominie Roe makes 10, 000 a j-ear. AVho else does as well as that with his pen ? Editor Stoue of the old Journal of Connnerco of this city draws exactly that sum for his .alary, but then ho controls the paper and pays himself, and he is nofra novelist. What novelist makes it? Mr. Mayo W. Hazeltine, Amos J. Cuiumiiigs, Col. Cockerill and George Alfred Townsend are credited with jariihig 10,0vjJ a year, which is also the salary of more than one of the metropolitan ?dilors-in-chief. Tbjs is money made with the pen or with the management of tho pens of others, but it is not by novel writing, and it is not 613,000. Brander Matthews and Henry C. Bunncr, the editor of Buck and author of several entertaining books, are credited with $7,000 or $7,500. Both could make more if they were not too conscientious and better satisfied to live easily and ploas antly. The newest claimant for popular favor among novel readers, Mr. Ilenrj Har Iand, the young lawyer and ex-attache of the surrogate's court, who writes under the name of "Sidney Luska," has not yet pushed his income up to the 5,000 mark, but he is very young yet not more than SO and he is only making his first bows and stooping for tho first bouquets shot from the thick of his ap plauders. I have not mastered the socret of Mr. Hal sey's story telling, unless it bo that there is an adveuture in every 1,000 words, an arrest, a shooting scrape, a surprise or a ruso. But the st-le is easy to analyze. It is that of the repeating rifle, bang, biuig, bang, as fast as you can pull tho trigger, with pauses for re loading at tha end of each short chapter. It might bo called the Gatling gun mode of writing. It is a sign of the times and a good omen for the country that in this author's works there is no word or suggestion, plot or thtmc, that could stir an unholy appetite or bring a bliioh to a pare woman's face. It is not so much a sign of the times that this author is no Bohemian, but a solid, practical man of affairs, of family end of high repute. Syl vnnus Cobb, Jr., lately departed, was oil of this, and he was the king of popular writers, just as Mr. llalsey is now. Cobb never earned more than $100 a week, but he lived in tho country, where such a sum goes a great way. His home w; a pleasant cottage, and ho drove a horse that Mr. Bonner gave him. Ho lived well, though modestly, and neither in his life nor works offered a wrong example. New York Star. Bordette Homesick at Hryn Blawr. How people who move away from Iowa get homesick once iu a while is exemplified in tho close of a letter on another subject by our Uawkeyo humorist to Dr. Magoun the other day: 4-I expect to spend the rest of my traveling days' in my Bryn Mawr home. It Is very beautiful here. But oneo in a whilo I get a little tired and homesick, and I want to look over a long, wide, billowy stretch &f prairie, shut in only by the circling sky and hear the wind whisjer and siDg through the wild grasses, and feel as though tbo world was 1,000 miles wide and reached from Albia to Ackley. And see! jus thinking of tho prairies inspired me to write you, a busy man, a 1-jtter as long as a wire fence! 'Finally, brethren.' " Des Moines Register. A Yankee has patented a fork to hold hot porn with impunity. HUNTING JACK RABBITS. ONE OF THE MOST EXHILARATING SPORTS KNOWN OUT WEST. llaclng Grcylionnds :md u Light l ull of bnow Aro eccsu vv '1 hf .J .irk KhI111 uu Expert at IJodiiis' ieseriptlou of a Hunt. Ono of tho most cxl; il:ii :itiu; sports known in tho west is jack raM.it cour.-ing on the- plains. A bracks of ra greyhound bold with a leash, followed I y a scoro or more of lovers ( f the sport on 1 ebael:, i-tart out on a bracing winter moriiin;.', when tlieie i ;u light covering of mio '.: t he ground, fur the places where tho jael. rabbits aro wi.t to congregate. Tho jac!. rabbit is unknown in the eastern part of ti.i-i ot untry. 11 -j istho counterpart of the El .: i.ii hare. J lo i ; J.n ; T than tho common rabb.L .r '"cotton tail." iio has long logs, and i'i n rac i-; a ruum r worthy the uttention ot t ! fleetest f grey hounds. The coursers .:-.v h in tin; :-ii w far a fresh jack rabbit track 1 fallow it up. V.'h :i tho rabbit is spied tho i. uu I are let l ..c and rush after hini. The whole crowd of hoi.-.;-men follow after, wl.o; pi';i.; and yoliiiig nr. 1 urging on their hor.-es t tl.o top of their tjieed. The hounds do not nltompt at tirst to catch tho rabbit. They are ten wary lor that. They simply try to run him down. The jack rab bit is mi expert at do.tgbig, and tlio hounds try to bend him oil w in. never he attempts to make a sharp turn. At in-!, by s-uperior strength anil tho ad . mtage of t wo to on", they succeed in tirin;; l.'im out, ai.d be fall i an easy victim. Every timo a bound heads u rabbis oil" it is a p -.al in his favor. Two points are placed to tie; civ.it of the U"g which catches tho rabbi:. A reft r o, iii.ir:lo l on a swift, suro horse, !-.-a;is the follow cr.- of the docs and marks th i 'oi.et la II. is v av it is decided which la from $5 to $100 aro u e. ir..:. Sialics of .'aiiv iH.,n these rac;-s. AN F.XCI i ' . : Mr. Alonzo Yt'iiiiaa.-. years in Colorado and i . of the sport, tells the ! last coursing exporienc "Wo were riding r.i a ; arroya, and were jus; of rocks when we hea . Bill. There, not two. was a big jack rabbit . i littio cavo or nichu in : .: and was off like ti v. l-.l rooks. Iu un instant from the straining, dash they were oil, a . i crowd were after th .. horses at the top of th ir : "Tho country was ;c there. Ono minute-wo r . a sharp bluff and dov.n u a high hill would slur, (a moment tho dodging ra' Up tho hill we won! I ; v ho .-pi -lit ver.il i ( i.t'au-i.istic lover .vhig s.twry of ln"s i i i .; plains: li.-y l.-d of an ; ;md a ma-s ai-; 'l.Ut !" from t nla a-'i of ii-. ia'. :r; up hi fr.asit of a n.'vs. II, saw us ,f si real: ov r t!i j il slipped the lea b :g Io,'--i. With a t!io whole yeliing t-purrins o:i their )L("l. -.tally hilly right aid 1 io da'-'!ii;!g over mo-'P bill. A.'-:m ! rom s :--lit I or ;i : :.'' and tho dogs, ;.;-!! poll .1 nr.. would get a bell or vi; w spirited chase. That .a . membered. The old rr largo one, an 1 was a; , qrreat toughness of n. ' . lung. He led the hounds n i fully five minutes bef him at all, although .: every nerve. Flora w::.s snow with long leaps, i i almost to the ground, along, with head erect a its greatest tension. Ti from tii.) lop of the a. ran lo-rig to bi 1" w as mi ur.usu. .iVril!'. l!0-rO:-.s."(l of and strength of Jo chase. It v. ..y caught up to were .sr.-r.ii.iti uni'mg ovor the It OUt ttil llstcio V. il :i v. as da-bi! o very mv.sclo at oM rabbit was bounding along on its bind 1 looking like nothing but a streak snow. 'Finally they cr.ug!.: the fun began. He ct: doubled on his trail tin began to think they nev light brown on the up with liiiti. Then and (bx!grd and atid again until e r would raf.-h him. Now they are right on to I.'tn. The old raij bitViakes a sudden dn i t the l"fr. Flora is too quick for him. w lneis an l drives him back to bis fori:;-!" course, 'lliori'vl score ono point for Flor out. Nobody pnys any but the riders keep up rl and yelling, probably a eitemoiit of tho nionit t rabbit trying all mam-": off bis pursuers. Now dodge. Iio wheels qui" between the two dogs t XEAKIXG 'i "With a few strides and sends him back abet : !" Lverybedy cries it .tent ion to the cry, e constant shouting ! a vetjlforthe ;: !. 0:i they go, tbo of dodges to sha'ce 1 trios tiio doubling rrul Marts b-o k " nrd the hor-.enioii. .!- i:::!. iio is i:ii.-r.d of him : i is bu: iut-ss. The ; to show signs -f rt'i uiitg mi l moro t;t'paro;:t;y as iie.L: rabbit is now bogimi," fatigue. He does les : dodging. Tho dogs aro as ever and can run all tiixm him off wherever lie st;.r;s t 1 him and Lea-i tro. But they can't catch him V"ct. is too r.rtfid iitai slippery for them. But. i:e woift last long. His struggles to get free are becoming weaker and weaker. He and tao hounds are running, turning and twisting in every direction. Ac cording to tho referee'.-; count Flora has now- scored six points and B 'ie jive. "Suddenly the world v caaod lo turn around and I found myself lyio ;- on my back with what seemed to be abottt forty hoofs wavi-ag over my head. The sad had turned around on to the little bronco' off about twenty yard:; wildly at the saddle, w: amrioh. Ho ran id began to kick l had now fail-, ti A mom. nt later g into the nir and down on to his hind lo be had sent the saddle i ; was off over tho plains at a lr adloag run. "I heard a shout from tli ; jik ji c: the foes of the hill. I jumped up and, forgetting my bruises and vanishing potty, saw lite ia: -h of tho prettiest race it v.-. s :..-. my grvvl for tune to witness. The r..'. Li", bad i..adi; fi. r.r dodges and each dog had ! cored two Tieim. , making the score S t 7 in favor of Ficra. Just as I looked up ttA..- had made a char-m on tha rabbit, thrust her l-erj ii'.-.e u:;der his left fore leg and thrown ! ii' i.it'ioair. Tic two dogs pounced upon Liri as bj fl Crid ia an instant the race; was a.r. jJoilo had v.,n by a score of 9 to 8." i i.i':'- cU-Lia. Times. Indians Increasing Violcr CI :I:i::(S to::. At tho meeting of t't-; Frivitds of th: I:i- dians tho other day it v. r.s .-aid that the 4,Oy Indians who sti.l live ca r :orva' ior.s iti tui state are increasing iti uumber. The populatr impression that our lnd.:..:.s are dying out is, iu fact, incorrect so far a--, it relates to In dians who have abandoned migratory l;f? and beootna partly or wdiiaiy civt"ii;:ed. Th.y Cherokees of tho India: frrit cry have nearly doubled in number sir.eo i-.d'-, ar:d too reiii nant of the Six. Katior.s. l.ew .st-ttkd on faritas in Canada, numbers S,f .' ' souls, and has be-:, steadily growing since ;"..' trioes aliand-mid their wild habits and'tc k v ar.viau!it::v. 'l'. quit the war path and b- a "good Ind:a'i': nowadays is conducive tj longevity ;;i'i t the perpetuity of the r.d race. New Yc? Sun. A Lavatory for Yachts. One of the most ccnvr-.t 'nt pieces cf yacht furniture yet devised is tho folding lavatory seen in several of tho i;-,onr!ed cutters. The outfit includes a tank for water, a v,ahbaan and a second tank below for waste wa5.-r, ail in one frame, the dimeitior.s of the largest sire being S feet 8 inches, high, 1 foot G inches wide and 8 inches extreme depth. The ba.-iu folds up when not in u.--, emptyiug tho water as it does so. When cprn tiie water faucet and dishes for soap and bin dies are seen in side. New Ycrk Mail nud Express. w W $m For t lie next, few wt-t-ks oliou-i; of lots in S'tJiitli I'm nlJ0 b'j had l')V ) I'uiv.liiisfi- may :i)- nil in tsli; " 0111; half cash, the other half in one year; or, one third cash, bal ance in one and two years; or cash, rcnutinder in month ly installments of .?10; or, any one areein; to construct a residence worth $2,f()!) and upwards will bo yiveii a lot with out further consideration. to select your residence lot-, even though you should not' contcni)late building at once. ("ne visit to South i'ark will convince the most skeptical that it is t he most desirable residence locality in the city, and we will add, thai the most substantial class of buildings of which I'lal tsinmit h can boast for the year 18S7, are now bein; constructed in this handsome addition. Beautiful Shade Tres OF JIOST -jrZ3"7ai rKrj d: 7N-r-,rp'j' f"") v'Pr-j "( c7" aroiuul ami Ihrouh the entire tract. Any one desiring to construct lirnt-: vowiib'iiu.M n .'.,n't. 1J.,..1- , 'i-iha tit i j 1. 1 i . i 1 1 i. , Lini v. ii ill 1 1 h: U i 1 1 ; j j attKciiuii : of plans of the latest st y!e of rt si!t:uees by calling at our oflice. Anyone desiring to examint jiropert y v. ith n viewf to purchasin;;-, v." ill be driven to the park at our expense. Sulltll Ps I rK- is; less: tli-.n ,.,. 1'.. .!.. ,..tl.. 4' 4l.,,. (. ... ...... .,1.,,, u.jv.- x'-i .ii.- "i b 1 1 1 1 1-. ; 1 1 tj in uu; ji.i, iiwuri.. It can be rcttclitd conveniently y eitlar Chicitu er J.inculu Avenues, or south on 7th street. . GALL ON !. n. Wmooaro or TT uaciiBiittB 38d a bJe h 5 a 1J iS VZ? fT"" FMtQUIi, FEE 3 & JPMVVK'mm v.-i-; hake Aj.if::'J,iLTi ;; s-sxk ? c. 1:1:v l ft,' jTr, Ilave a-iychin you want from a r a o T T. r 7 zr jm..v SHORT are PwW.iys kopt raxly. Ca'w or and everything Or funeral k t iM J fay ,f SSJ'li'iiJi L - All 4 9 - T'.'-X .ID li'fc. a cot tae or a more j);-eten- . .. I l,.,.t,,. Ti Si :i .-IT . vf , . Vs. j p -zn;--r.r:: , , nr't vjN: T-is ' L- lutein ki i i ?.JJ. - - .;-'' -iMC.'.w.'.wp jrrasa V-j..!,'f ?.;r?' -'I i - - . .it two v.l.co' A t B j; ; i iiv - . .- tijrlit carriarres mi! 1 on diort", oV- v ? -i- v J?Jil A 1 0 41 v