, J A-J . .LD pt Sunday outli. Krbr.. i iraft of Vine and 4 DAILY. . Jrauee, by mall.... SO iy ranter,.... fio , Ay carrier 11 . ro WIIKIY. A In advance $1 fl .atba. In advance 78 AL REPUBLICAN TICKET. Vim pkjuident. fBENJAMIX HARRISON. KOI! jviCK PUESIDKNT, LEVI P. MORTON, of New York. REPUBLICAN STATE TICKET. FOR GOVERNOR, JOHN M. TIIAYEH. FOR LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR, GEORGE D. MEIKLEJOIIN. FOR SECRETARY OK STATE, GILBERT L. LAWS. FOR TREASURER, J. 11 HILL. FOR AUDITOR OK PUBLIC ACCOUNTS, THOMAS II. BENTON. FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL, "WILLIAM LEESE. FOR COMMISSIONER OK PUBLIC LANDS AND BUILDINGS, JOHN STEEN. FOR PUPERINTENDFNT OF TUBLIC IN STRUCTION, GEORGE B. LANE. CONCRESTIONAL TICKET. FOR CONGRESS, (First Congressional Distiict.) W. J. CONNELL. " Every foreigner who desires to vote at the November election in Nebraska must take out his declaration papers be fore October C. This is the law of the state. The constitution requires a resi dence of six months in the state, and a ..declaration to become a citizen of the the United States at least thirty days be fore election. The Mills bill reduces the duty on salt 100 percent and that on sugar only about 20 per cent. The cost of the sugar used by the average family in a week is as great as that of all the salt which it con sumcs ia a vear. The burden of the present salt duty is so light that no one feels it. while the sugar duty l)earsheavi Iv on ev-erv ocrson in the country. Salt production, however, is a northern in dustry, while sugar is a southern product, so far as it is produced at all in the Unit cd States. The discrimination against the northern industry and in favor of the southern is what the economists of the Mills-Breckinridge-Clevcland stripe call statesmanship. GLASS-WORKERS FOR' IIARRI SON. The list of labor organizations and rep resentative labor men who are crying out for Harrison and Protection is being daily enlarged. The old leaders of the inde pendent labor movement are almost unanimous for Harrison, The various labor organizations in the trades which are immediately affected by the Mills bill have protested in most emphatic terms agiinst the free-trade policy of Cleveland and his mugwump and south ern allies. . Th3 Stone and Granite-cutters' union has protested. The Machinery Constructors' organiza tion has protested. The Amalgamated Association of Iron an! Steel-workers has protested. The Brass-workers have protested. The Glass-workers have protested. All these naticnal organizations are but illustrations of the sentiment prevad ing the entire body of ' organized labor. When Charles Litchman resigned from his position as general secretary of the Knights of Labor in order , to publicly defend the protective policy, his action was fiercely criticised by those who were in league with the Cleveland regime. But he is being followed by so many other representative labor men as toehow conclusively that the determ'natian of the working people is to oppose the Cleveland policy at all hazards. Mr. Robinson, the national master-workman of the Brass workers, is making a vigor ous campaigu for Harrison without af fecting his standing in the organization. . The WinJcw-glass Workers'. organiza tion lias determined to put three of their officers ia the field against Cleveland and bis Mills bill. Their names are P. Clary, A. M. Hamniett and James Campbell, the president of the oiginization and a mem ber of the national legislative committee of the Knights of labor, and one of the most trusted reprexctati res of the labor Movement in America. These facts are worth a Xlrjasaod theo- :rla'.S. a of red ...0n manufacturers to kcts. They iddicate the . itlming defeat of Cleveland and his free-trade conspirators. Ii ih World. 7$9.TIIETAIlIFF THE FIRST QUESTION, The tariff question was the very finst subject discussed by the first congress; and for more than one hundred years has been the one subject that has never been finally settled. Nullification, secession, banks, slavery, and reconstruction, have had their times of fierce discussion, and hare nil been forever settled, but the tariff was never a more vital question than it is today. The first act of the first congress regu lated the form of the oath to be taken by officials, and was merely formal, but the first act of that congress affecting the country was the act establishing a tariff, passed and signed by George Washing ton, July 4th, 17!. The discussion was long and earnest. It was participated in by such men as James Madison, H. II. Lee. Charles (Jar- roll, Rufus King, Oliver Ellsworth, Fish er Ames, Roger Sherman, J. Trumbull, and others; and a congress composed of such men passed a tariff act in the inter est of protection and not for "revenue only," for in the preamble to the net occur these words: "Whereas, it is ncc cessary for the support of government, for the discharge of the debt of the United States, and for the encouragement and protection of manufactures, that duties be laid on imported goods, etc.; therefore be it enacted," etc. It is thus seen that the doctrine of pro tection to home manufactures, to home products, was coeval with our national organization. It had its enemies even then; and then, as now, the most con spicuous were either Englishmen or men imbued with English ideas. Tariff League. Don't let that cold of yours run on. You think it is a light thing. But it may run into catarrh. Or into pneumonia. Or con sumption. Catarrh is disgusting. Pneumonia is dangerous. Consumption is death itself. The breathing apparatus must be kept healthy and clear of all obstructions and offensive matter. Otherwise there is trouble ahead. All the diseases of these parts, head, nose, throat, bronchial tubes and lungs, can bo delightfully and entirely cured by the ue of Boschee's German Syrup. If you don't know this already, thousands and thousands of people can tell you They have been cured by it and know how it is, themselves. Bottle only 7-3 cents. Ask any druggist. The standard remedy for liver com plaint is West's Liver Pills they never disappoint you. 30 pills 2oc. At War rick's drug store. $500 Reward. We will pay the above reward for any c ise of liver complaint, dyspepsia, sick headache, indigestion, constipation or costivencss we cannot cure with West's Vegetable Li yer Pills, when the directions are strictly complied with. They are purely vegetable, and never fail to give satisfaction. Large boxes joutaiuing 30 sugar coated pills, 25c. For 8 lie by all druggists. Beware of counterfeits and imitations. The gen uine manufactured only by John O. We & Co.. 802 W. Madison St. Chicago,nnd Sold by W. J. Warrick. ' runifcliinsr t1 God China. A funny story illustrative of Celestial sim plicity (or superstition!) comes from Foo chew, in China. There is a joss bouse, or temple, in that city to which persons of a re vengeful disposition are wont to resort whea desirous of obtaining satisfaction for an in jury, the deitigs there being credited with a rower to cause instant death to those against whom their aid is invoked. After the death of the late Tartar general the cause of which appears to have been rather mysterious the supposition that ho had fallen a victim to theso particular josses was started by some of tho gentry, and the viceroy thereupon gave instructions for an inquiry to be held into the matter. The taotai was commis sioned to see the order carried out, and he went t- the temple 'and arrested fifteen of the j 03303. Theso idols are of wood, about lire feet in height. Before being taken into the presence of the taotai their eyes were put out ia order that they might not see who was ( their j-.'.dgo, bo that they might not bo able to identify him in the realms above or below wberever they go! After an investigation a report of tho case was sent to the viceroy, who at once gave orders that the josses shou'd be decapitated .aud then cast into a pond I Vet withal China claims to bo a civ ilized country! London Figaro. Utah's Sipafam of TVatcr. It has been discovered tfcit g, large portion of Utah is underlaid with a stratum of water, which may be reached by boring wells from 100 to 00 fcset. Thewcll3 flow so liberally that one of them wilj water five to six acres thoroughly. The desert is litorally "made to bloasoEi as the rose." Boston Budget. A Poetic mttle One. A little one happened fo see a morning irlory open late in the afternoon, when all its ! fellows had gone to sleep. After loosing nt j it thoughtfully for some time she said: "1 fir.1- ninn it. rrmsfc rn drpflmln? ." Youth's Comr".rii'ofi. It is the purpose of the Free church of Scotland, before the year 1SS3, the fiftieth anniversary of tho disruption, to pay the en tire indebtedness on its churches. Four roars ego the indebtedness was ? 1.245,000. k f this more than $750,000 has been paid. The means of completion of the fund are in j;gh.t. . " -' " : : INDIFFERENCE AT HOME IS WRONG FOR THE CHILDREN. Parent' NcgWtt or Lock of Interest Too Much I Expected of Teacher Some jugrjcstlons of Value Parrnt as Visitors In tho Schools. Tho otio thing in a teacher's lifo that would be amusing if it were not too often a source of despair, is the remarkable statements per petrated by scholars. For instance, one young person talks in all seriousness of "an illustrated soro throat," and thinks an inter mittent fever is- "something catching." Another classes tho "larynx" among the ani mals of Maine, and declares the "hypothe is use to bo a huge animal peculiar to Africa. Another ii firm in the belief that the weather bureau is uu articlo of furniture, and cites as an example of vegetable dyes her countenance illumined with the inspira tion that has just come to her "Diamond Dyes." Still another jumps at the transla tion of the French word "corne" ("horn"), and announces in a certain festival "the cor ners of the cow were gilded." Fancy the astonishment of a worthy friend on learning that "tho sect of Quakers was founded by Guy Fawkcs." The difference letween a col lege and a university has boon illustrated ns follows: "Young men go to Harvard college, and young women go to Welles! ey college, but both go to Boston university." These mistakes were all made by high school scholars, varying in age from 14 to 17 years, and in ability from the brightest to the dullest. Tho stories are all very amusing, and can be matched ami distanced by teach ers and by parents who remember stories brought home from school by thir children. But do tho parents who laugh over their anecdotes aud over "English as Sho Is Taught" ever think that the fault of such blunders is not duo entirely to the child, nor entirely to tho teacher? Do they ever think that many a bull like tho abovo might be prevented by a little care taking at home? A liard working, faithful scholar of good ability asks "if it wasn't Alfred the Great who invented tho cotton gin." She would never have asked that question if her father and mother had taken the trouble to make their general conversation in the house of some interest and instruction. Would the weather bureau ever have been mistaken for a chest of drawers if curiosity about "Old Frob" and his coworkers had been stimulated and then satisfied? The cry is an old one, lack of interest nt homo, but it is none the less a cry that demands attention. Too many jiarents select schools for thoir children, see that they are properly clothed to go to them, and consider their duty thereby done. Tho teacher must do tho rest. Now, in tho first place, this is much too hard on the teacher. The time she can de vote to each scholar is limited, and she is but human in capacity. Your son may be a boy of but averago ability; he needs to have tho preparation of his lessons superintended as well as their recitation. Or ho may bo clever but careless, and that fault must be attacked in every act of his life and at every hour of tho day. "Tho five hours a day in school won't cure him, and until the circus comes again ho will call a lynx u larnyx and a hip popotamus a hypothenuse. Or, ho may be quick to learn, but lazy and unwilling to set himself about his tasks. Ho cannot bo cured of that fault by his teacher working unaided. Parents ought not to ask teachers to do what they cannot accomplish themselves, or expect tho few opportunities of the school room to surpass thoso of the home. Then, again, this indifference at homo is wrong for tho children. They do not take tho stand in their classes that they should; their powers of thought aro not developed; they cannot apply themselves to their work and concentrate their attention; they aro not stimulated to road out of school. Take, for instance, the habit of thinking. The teacher laj-s before her scholars certain facts with which they ore all familiar, aud which illiistnito BOino point. Bbe asks them to ciako a similar general statement drawn from their knowledjo of thoso particular facts. You may Lo very sure that tho an swers will como chiefly, if not entirely, from those who have parents who talk to them on tho questions of the day, and tho great ques tions of all time, and who thus encourage thought in their children. Again, tako the matter of reading. A teacher may recommend a book, may give an account of its author, and by describing its connection with cud interest for the work in hand, try to induce tho pupil to read it. But sho cannot go to the library and get the book and put it into the pupil's hands. Thcro is where tho work of tho parent should sup plement that of tho teacher. Let him seo that the book is brought into tho houso and let him excite intereefc in the reading by having it read aloud or by reading it with his son. Visitors are not always desirable in a school; they are sometimes a hindrance to the conducting of a recitation. But there is certainly no excuse for a parent's not visit ing the school where his children aro taught at least once during tho year, and there is no teacher who would not feel pleased rather than annoyed at such a manifestation of in terest. A high school teacher carding on twenty-five recitations a week states that during the last school year not a single call was :nado upon her room by a parent, This is not an unusual statement, and it merely illustrates the lack of interest of tho average parents whoso average children fill our aver age schools, -Mabel S, Clarke in Boston Globe. , The Cabman ia London, Getting away from the theatre, particu larly if there are ladies in the party, is al most ns bad as forcing an entrance. The stranger, who has already been impressed with the idea that London consists almost en tirely of cabs, trusts implicitly in the belief that ho will bo able to get one as soon as the theatre is over. Not so. The cabs are kept at a distance of two blocks from the entrance of the theatreand only private carriages and those that have been specially retained by numbered checks are a'lowed to come to tho door. The only thing that the hapless Amer ican can do is to tramp two blocks through the rain it always rains 'in London jump Jnto a hansom, and fight his way to the door of tho tiicatre. This, owing to tho crush of vehicles and the geueral confusion, is tedious. The chances are about seven to three that a policeman will order a hansom away even when it has arrived. But if he does not, the American jurpps out, loads the hansom with as many of tho party us possible, and returns to tho slush and rain to repeat the pperatipn. The toffs have a way .of their own, however. They go to tho porter pf a theatre, bribe him, and he gives you a number. Then he scurries down to the mud himself and get; you a hansom that will answer to the number you hold, and in that way a good deal of trouble is avoided. But it is a trick that is not gen erally known. Blakely Hall's Letter. Medical Student (totramp) What hap pened to you? You seem to be suffering trom'ehock. Tramp Yessir; I iell 6 gainst a wire fence that wasn't ioulated. Judge. ' " Xa Excitement NeearC Jarloes U Health? Curious Evldeuoc Whoever may have studied man's earthly tenoro and the muses which tend to lengthen or curtail it, will have scarcely failed to no tice how contradictory is the evidence of those we naturally look to to explain them, and that their evidence, even when they agree, does not always accord with what would seem to be the facts, as they appear around us. Ono authority says general phy sical development is ,ueeessary to prolong life, while another insists this is not re quired if the day's employment does not call for physical exertion. Dr. itichardsou, an eminent English au thority, whose remarks before the Sanitary institute of Great Britain on the storage of lifo have been largely quoted, declares, among many obvious though scarcely novel propositions, that everything that quickens the action of the heart, any kind of excite ment, taxes and reduces the storage of life. If this were said of thoso naturally feeble, or inheriting disease, or even of those lead ing sedentary lives, and living from day to day without tho invigorating benefits of fresh hir and exercise, it would seem reason able, for one does not have to be a skillful physiologist to know that excitement affects tho nerves as well as the heart. But is the tatement strictly true when referring, as here, to the entire human family? Surely sol diers engaged in actual warfare and sailors in peace as well as war livo among excitements, besides being notoriously addicted to indul gences as to drinking and smoking, yet aro they long lived. Statistics show-it, and ob servation corroborates them. Tho pension list of tho British army, giving tho ages of the beneficiaries, men who have served in all climates for from twenty to forty years, and excluding thoso pensioned sooner because of "wounds received while in the performance of duty," shows that soldiers do not die as other men do; so it is with the naval peti tioners of tho Greenwich hospital, now scattered over Great Britain, because of its abolishment. In the merchant service today it is no un common thing to find a man 70 years old in charge of a vessel a post requiring activity of body as well as of mind. Here in New York we have the proof near us, for at Sailors' Snug Harbor, on State n Island, are 600 aged but for the most part hearty sailors. Most of these aro between 70 and SO; active old fellows they are, with clear minds and good appetites. They will tell you they aro not by any means tho sole survivors of our ono time merchant fleet; that many, if not most, of their mates are yet living but distributed over tho country living with their grand children, perhaps wherrying for a living or engaged in other employments along a water front. From this it would appear that a sound human body can withstand hunger and exposure, and even frequent excitement, if only there is plenty of fresh air and exer cise of a vigorous kind thrown in. Scientific American. The Tipping Evil In Paris. Tipping in Paris is occasionally carried to such lengths that even tho natives object, and wheu a Frenchman objects to anything ho is as persistent, if not as noisy, as an Eng lishman. I think tipping reached its highest point nt tho production of "La Fillo de Mma Angot" at the Eden theatre. It was a great performance, and tho crush to get in was projiortionately strong. Judic and Grauier, the rival queens of opera bouffe, had at last been brought together in ono cast, and tho production included mounted horses on tho stage and five or six hundred supernumeraries. Enormous sums were paid iu salaries, and very considerable prices were charged for the seats. It was on this account, perhaps, that the ushers and serving women thought they wero justified in raising their own ban ners. At all events, they made an onslaught upon t ho people which raised the ire of the most polished Frenchmen in tho house. My own experience is a fair example. I arrived late, paid tho cabman, and tipped tho ixrtpr, so as to get by him into the thea tre, I do not believe that I could have en tered the houso otherwise. Then I bought my ticket, and was taken in hand by a woman who lugged mo off to the eont room, gave me a check, and then sent mo iflto tho auditorium, after collecting a few sous for her own poeket. Another woman came for ward, placed mo in my seat, and held out her hand. Then a programme man sold mo r. highly colored satin card, which I discoTera i later on was minus tho cast. Hence I had to buy another programme from him. Another woman who said she was a door woman camo along and crowded past twelve or fifteen Frenchmen and said sho wished to collect a few sous for some mysterious purpose or other. I have not yet found out what it was. I paid, and so did the others more or less grumbliiigly when wo were all dis turbed by the appearance of still another old woman with a similar plea. This was too much, and there was a general and shrill chorus of protestations. Still the woman held her ground with tho most Impudent and brazen manner, until the Frenchmen actually caught hold of her and hustled her out of the place. It was tho most Insolent and impudent strike that I had ever seen. It is common euough over there, but the evil is so deep rooted in general that there is no chance of eradicating it. People grumble neverthe less. Blakely Hall's Letter. The Storage of Life. When the hereditary faculty for the stor age of life is implanted in an individual body for a few generations, it becomes, so to speak, an established principle, and the representatives of it, having onco arrived past the period of lifo in which accidental deaths of various kmds are causes of mor tality continue to live, often in opposition to the most adverse influences to the continu ance of lifo beyond tho average term of life. The person gifted with this faculty of stor age may be of fragile and delicate build of body, may even be deformed of body, may bo of dull or of bright intellect, may be of cleanly or uncleanly habit, may bo placed in what would seem the most unfavorable posi tion in life, or may bo literally in want, and will yet continue to live on so es to see the whole of U'S or her piore fortunate neighbors fall; nay, may even be so tired of the con tinuance of the monotony of the everlasting by recurring phenomena of life, as to be enviou3 of the fate of the dead who have found their rest. The storage of life in those who possess it in the most marked degree is, and belongs to, continuance of the process of .life, not to the power of resisting interruptions to it in and during periods of strength and youthf ul nes3. Dr.-Benjamin Ward Richardson. Tlio English Method. English Reporter (to Lord Salisbury's pri vate secretary) Would you kindly intimate to his lordship that it has come to the knowl edge of the management of The Telegraph that he desires to express an opinion puiv licly on th6 probable outcome of the F.irnell suits, und that 1 await his pleasure in thai regard? Private Secretary I will tell his lordship. (Returns in half an hour with a roil of paper neatly tied with red tap?.) Pitti-burg Chromcio. . . LA L. n ATTpRfinh ! V 8 H i .1 fas; - Pit stnssnn, THE WOULD KAMOl'S w a i ti FROM Berlin, Germany. RESTORERS 7A' You can consult him lit ITour lilyes, and how to take cure of them. More light for the unfortunate !- -t;-t-I- wear ers, and the doom of blindness prevented by the use of his Alaska IJriiihmts and Australian Crystals. A now cli inical combination of And patent self-adjusting Spring :Eiy3;Ias3Ccr The first time intraduced into this coun try; manufactured to order alter careful examination by modern instruments. PROF. VTV ASbMAN has arrived in Plattsmouth, r-iid has au ofiice at the Kiddle House, lie is do ing an immense business throughout the United States, giving the hwt of satisfac tion and delight to hundred:; with de fective sight. His knowledge of the human eye and his skill in e.djusJing the glasses is marvelous beyond i in igi nation. Endorsed by all the great men of this country and Europe. In an instant, as if by magic he is en abled to tell you any ailment of your failing vision, point out the cause and danger, and adapt brilliant glasses, pe culiarly ground to suit every defect of the eye. which will aid in strengthening the eyesight of the old and young. Sci entists invited to examine the new sys rem for the preservation of the human eye. Teachers should watch the early mani festations of their scholars" tyrsjld and report in time to ther respect i v parents to have their eyesight examined 1y Prof. Strassman, the wxpert optician of nation al fnmc. Artificial Eyes Feplaced. Persons deprived of an eye c;m have this deformity removed by 1! insertion of nn artificial one, which moves nnd looks like a natural organ. OFFICE HOUR S, 9 to 12 a. m.,'l to 4 p., and 7 to 8 in the eyening REFERENCES: KEBUASKA CITV. George Bnrgett, Rev. A. Clark, Mr. Duff, Mrs Dr Latsh, D P Polfe, Mrs Streeter, Dr Crinker, R M Rolfc, Roden- brock, C Anderson, J W Vv'I.lMnith, "H" A Cotton, S II Calhoun, .Jmiy M u rx, David llrown. Dr lb i.iiev. W :i liver, T S Jones, E M T.iggart. E R i'.er. "V. II Murphy, Frank MeC.irtney. .T;imes Fitchie, Rev. Emanuel HurHir. Mrs. A. E Rudd, V D Merriam, Miss V.-mM. ter, Dr S L Gant. A Home, Paul .S-hmiriko, Xat Adams. Geo A Wilcox, Mr Shi Id on, Mr. Gunsell. Rev R Pearson. Shorn? rne, L Levey, S M Kirkpttiirk, Drycoll, Donald McCuaig, William Willielinr. Rev Rivers, Lotran Knvart. X Tied field, J F Welch. Rey.'j B Green. John Good let t, C B Bickel, Dan Grerr?. C W Seh. r fy. E S Ilawley, A R Nowroud.. Win Nelson. Mrs N Davis. Wm Fulton. A am Eloos, Mrs Ed Plainer. M T Jehrson. Mrs Carnont, Mrs. Sterling Mor ton. Mrs. Watson. Miss Morton. Mr Geo W Ilawke. Mrs W T Sloan. 31rs L V Llovd. Mrs S J Stephenson, Dr. Bishop, Mr Johnson Brown. Mrs Aird. iv n 1 n a c E z LH 1 I OS i i i EIDDLE" HOUSE Prfllg SlT8Sku. Wsjf ?iv-f sJ... ;VVii.- no? p .Never lie-fore lias an Ojdic.iitii re ceived .-jiicli testimonials from . the pr()!e. Cilice of Iowa Soldicr'h Ifcii.c. Maif-hulltown, lit., Feb. 17, 'H. PitoK. Stiiaman, l iar S: 'I he glasses you furnihlud myself m! wife when in Clinton, have piovin in vry way satisfactory, mid we 1kc phinne in recommending jour woik mid gjus s to all who nifty be in need of safely nnd and comfort fur your eyesight. Very Respectively, Col. Milo Smith, Ci mnit.ndaiit. Mayor's Otlice, Marshallti it, November 3rd, 1S87. Prof. Stiiifcsnian bus been in our city some six weeks or more, nnd ns nn opti cian hns given the bent of satihfnctioa botli ns to prices and quality of woik, having treated some of the most diflicult enses of the eyes with success and nin sat isfied you will find hiiu a skillful opti cian nnd a gentleman. - Very Respectfully, Nllkon Ames, Mayor. Dkseuves It. No transcient oceulitt has ever visited this city before who hns given to the public such excellent pro fessional service, or has won such testi monials from the people, as Prof. Strass man, now in our city. Wc aro not in the habit of volintarily testisyin in theso matters, but in Prof. Strussman's case wc do it cheerfullj, and entirely in an unso cited way simply because he descrvtcs it. Oskaloosa Herald. Prof. Strassman, a distinguished op tician, now stopping in our city, comes before us with the highest testimonials of 6kill and experience in his art, nnd I take pleasure in recommending hiir. to my friends nnd the public aIh may bo in need of his servicf, ns n;e rnlilbd to his confnb nee. J. Williamson, M. D. Oitiiniw.i, Iotvn. Alter a stay of seviud wciks, 1'iof. Strassman, the optician, is uhntit to done his labors in our city. Persons w hi .:iyc not yet made use f his skill m.d sci' nee would do well to call at once snid there by d' tin inselyes a iastirg b l!( lit. has shown himself to b- :i man skilb-d in his profession, fair and liberal in his d idings, and w ithal, a g nth mi n in every risp'Ct. Tin- many c minendatory notie-s givin him by th" press are well d'-siivid n;d we shall past willi lrm with regie!. Red O ik Express. M.:r h !2."rd REFERENCES. Hill OAK. Dr E B Young, C F CI ink, O K Powers, I) B Miller, J B R ev s, Mis J S.ank,Mis T II Dearborn. G W Holt, A C Blose, W A Cb Mrs. Applcbee, Mr Stockslager, J S Wrulh, Rev McClurc, Mrs Heslier; Mrs. Farrier, Manker, Rev McCulleiy, Mis Staid, y. R Wadwoi tli, Mr Mareiiholtz. Mr J. Hires, Rev Jagg, W Stafford. C Schneider, llarvcy Spry, C E Richnrds David Harris, Mr. Dold, C II Lune, C M Mills. T II Lee. Wm Koehler, C J Lilli-j.-berk, T M Lee, Geo L Piatt, Mis L Ilolvser, Win Dubby, O Runnels, Mis B S Porter, I II Il izarenus, Mr Brondbv, F A Carter, Airs Fbhcr, Mr Stoddard, E O Shepherd. A MeCor.nell, E A Brown, Mr Gibson, Mr Pikes, Rev J W Hamil ton, S P Miller, Mrs F C Clark, B E A i Simons, J V SautJ in, Mr Van Abtinc, L F Ross, Mrs Decmer, Mrs. Junkin,' Thos Griffith, I Sanborn, Geo Binus, Mr. Meyers, P. P. Johnson, nnd many others f rim tlm QTlrrnnndi n rf nnnnlm OTTUMWA. Dr O'Neill, C F W Backmon, Rev F C War, Mrs W F Ros, Dr. Lewis. Capt. C. P Brown, Mrs. Slaughter, Dr. J William son, D T J Douglas, Dr II W Roberts, S B Evans, A C Leighton, J Ilansman, Kc A C Stillson. Dr B F Hyatt, Mrs. O Phellis, Mrs Dr Taj lor. C'LAIUXDA. Col W P Hepburn, ex-congress' lion T E Clark, senator; Rev Knock Cokenowcr, Dr Lewellen. F W I J S Mclntvr. A S Bail v. J D JonC Foster, II C Beck with," John GP A Kimball, Mrs. Morsmnn, V C Seny. Dr Vnn Sant, J D t MonzingM. Dr M.illen, II V Stone. J II Stct, Hon Wm Hurdle, A T Clement. J T Newton, Mrs Bhaul, Ilon Loranz, Dr. Power, Rev Lorinz, A P Skeed, J Batrett. Mrs Ells. CRESTOX President of First Nat. President of Cieston " J II Palt, Mn Dordin, Derr, Rev Van Wagnc Miss C Webster, Mr V M'-Grath. Ed Lewis. 1 Larrabfe. Col Swn!' W V MrCmaid. J Dr Groves. Mr II ? W F Patt. Rev I" van. Mrs Laramoi Dnanc. MN C v Lparr. Dr. Ib-yn Mi- Mattie Mr N II BlancW i-v, Mr il-tr ' Meyer, Dr T Senat' r Jor W Pt M r