The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, October 07, 1875, Image 4
.,Tr 2- !.. frAr,S --j--" .. - JR - rft-S-r-f ysrk?. 'M. X.T3i,.IT ' s.-t.-i,ii. "??-ii"aSL, "5v fj-- A fttrntrter. I Itft he tbronr whose laughter nidi That wide eld woodland erbo dear, Wlille forth they spread. Id breezy shade. Tack plethoric aaaperfnla of cbee r.' Along a dark. mowla ted plank My way 1b dreany Bond I took, Atd croeaed, firoa balmy bank to bank. The iBpetaoea aiiTcr of the brook. And waaderiog on, at laat I found A shadowy, tranquil, glade-like place. Full of SMllffaoaa leafy aoand. While Bldmoat of iia graasy apace, A lsapof rugged granite gleaned, A tawHj-Mcfceaeo ledge of gray, Aad ap among the boagha the re bciaicd Oae blae, deildoaa glimpse of day! la fitful ialntBcr a oa n y car The plcnie'a lightsome laughter fell, Asd aoftly, aa I lingered here. Sweet fancy boand me with a spcl la some bland clime across the seas Tboac Berry tonea I eecau-d to mark. While daBca and gallanta loaBcd at case The pathways of aomeatatcly park. Aad la that glinpse of amethyst air I act-Bed to watch, with musing eye, The rich bine fragment, frcah and fair. Of i obc dead tummcr'r. morning sky ! Aad that rough mats of inanltc, too. From graceless utllnca gently wancu. And took the sculptured ahapc and hue Of dull old marble, deeply stained. And then (moat bcaulcoua chancre of nil!) Strewn o'er 1U mottled slab lay low A gloTe. a lute, a allken ahawl, A vellum-bound Boccaccio! Edgar Faxcatt,ln OdoUr Atlantic REDEEMED. The fact .IP, wc were both too young to marry. She was eighteen, I was barely in my majority; but she was a poor, desolate little orphan, s cutout Into lhc cold world to do the bett the could for herself as a governess; I was madly in love with her, and I was my own master; we had no wiser heads to ad vise us and no more experienced hands to guide us so we took our own way, as was but natural, and married on my clerkship of three hundred a year. I need scarcely say we were happy. For the first two years indeed it teemed to me as if I had really never lived until - now. Our pretty little home at Kilburn was bright and chcciful. Edith was alwass affectionate, always good tem pered, and like Annabel Lee, seemed to live "with no other thought than to love and be loved by me." My work sat on me easily, and being youn people of moderate tastcswwe had money enough for all we wanted. There was not a flaw anywhere, and lhc days were scarcely long enorgh for the joys that filled them with ainshinc from beginning to end. All this continued for two years, and then my wife became a mother. This was the first break in our man ner of life, the first shadow cast over the brightness of our happy love. It changed the whole order of things, and the changes told heavily against me. Edith was no longer my companion as she had been. The baby was delicate, aadher health also gave way. pLc was obliged to go to Ucr own room quite - cariyJn thfe evening, sometimes at seven o'clock or so, and even when she was well, she was up in the morning with the child, and the evenings hung on me heavily and long. I was no student in those days. I wss social, and if not in ordinately yet undoubtedly fond of amusement; hence, sitting alone for all tliese hours after my solitary dinner for Edith dined early by the doctor's orders was dreary work for me, and I grew daily more fretted, by the dulness of my once sunshiny home. I tell the story just as it was; not to excuse myself, but to explain. Also, too, the desire for more experi ence natural to my age began to make itself felt, and more than once I found myseir confessing uWe married too young." Yet I did not wish for dissi pation; I was not conscious of a reserve of wild oats that I was longing to sow, but I did want a little change from the dead monotony of my spoiled home. I was yearning for the society of men of my own age and standing, and naturally the boy, though I loved him well enough for all that I thought him the ugliest and oddest little imp I had ever seen was not to me what he was to his mother. To her indeed he was everything. The mother had superseded the wife, and the husband was nowhere in comparison with the child. Edith was angry, too, that I did not. as she phrased it, "take to him more,1' and I was angry that she took to him so much. Hay be that I was jealous. On looking back I should say that I was. Just when Bertie was three months old a fellow in our office introduced me Jr Jack Langhorne. Handsome, well mannered, rich, gay, good" tempera; generous Jack was just the man to fascinate a comparatively raw lad, as I still was. He knew everything, being - one of the kind who start at seventeen as Men, and "see life" systematically from that time. There' was not an ac complishment in which lie was not a proficient; not a game he could not play, givinc long odds and winning. He was lavish of his money, and a gambler by inbred instinct. He was always staking his fate on chance, and hitherto chance had been his friend. He used often to an? that he had been too lucky, and that he should have to pay for it before he had dose. Nevertheless, the day of pay ment had no sign of dawning, and Jack went on staking and landing, backing the right color and the. winning horse, as if he had a private Nostrodamus at his elbow, and could read the future as other meal conld read the past. I dare amy many f my readers will lasgh at me lor the confeaaioa,btlhai . sever seen n raee atil Jack LaBghorne leek me dow te'the Derby on his drag. .ItweMrm both of great enjoyment smwit to me, for nndar mil seait Ifty pounds, and I I ww wild with toe. the cham- :in saw nil- mumi v- m '. ." mK!'! aoamiasjSHima arity, as I took home to Edith a sixth of my yearly income, made in fewer hours than it took me to earn my paltry diurnal guinea. Visions of foitane, goldea and bright, paused before my eyes, aad already I saw Edith qaeening it in the park with her high stepping bays and faultless turnout. She should have everything money could command. Whatever else my visions showed me she wss always foremost in my thoughts and highest in my hopes. But when I gave her the money she turned away from me coldly, and a min ute after had buried her face in the pil low of the sofa where she was lying and wai xobbing. I was a good deal sur prised, a little shocked, and greatly hurt I hd tetter use the harsher word and May vexed at this outburst. I did not understand it Beside, it chills a man so painfully to be received with coldness and tears after such a day as I had spent! It makes the contrast be ween life inside and outside the home too sharp, and only sends him further off instead of drawing him nearer. How ever, tears were too scarce yet for me to disregard or withstand them, so I kissed my wife and did my best to soothe her, and by degrees brought her round so far that she left off crying and began to kiss the baby, as if it was something quite new, and she had never kissed it before. Though I was sorry to see her cry, this vexed me again. She had not seen me all the day, and the had the boy. I thought she might have paid a little attention to the one who had been absent, to put it on no other ground. But when I remonstrated she only answered, "I know, George, you do not care for baby. You never-have cared for him, and if it were not for me ho might die of neglect." I began to laugh at this. It struck me as too comical for a woman to re proach her husband for not taking care of the baby; for surely if there is such a thing as "woman's work" in the world, and they are not meant by nature and the eternal fitness of things to be soldiers and sailors and lawyers and doctors and the Lord knows what beside, that work is to be found in the nursery. But she Avas angry when I laughed; and raising herself on her elbow, drew a picture of the Infamy, ruin, degredation that was to follow on my taking to bad courses, founded on my not caiing for baby and my having won fifty pound3 at the Derby, that I seemed to be talking to a maniac, not the Edith I had left in the morning and had loved for so long. Perhaps I was too impatient, and ought to have remembered that if I found my life dull, hers was not too gay; I ought to have made allowance for the morbid nervous ness and brooding fancies of a woman left alone for the whole day; but I was younger then than I am now, and the thing jended by our having our first grave quarrel, wherein we were both silly, both unjust, and neither of us would give way. Theliad blodd'made between us to night grew worse as time wore on ; and the circle we were in was a vicious one. I kept away more and more from home, because my wife made it too miserable for me by her coldness, her tears, her complaints, her ill humor, and the more I stayed away the more I resent ed it. She took an almost insane hatred and suspicion of my friends and my actions, and did not scruple to accuse me and them ot vices and crimes because I was often late, from no worse cause than playing pool and billiards. Her reproaches first wearied and then hard ened me; and by degrees a kind of fierce feeling took possession of me a kind ot revengeful determination that I would be what she imagined me to be, and give her cause to denounce me as she did. Harmless amusements became amuse ments not so harmless; petty little stakes of half a crown and a shilling grew to gold ; the glas3 of beer became the glass of brandy and more than one; and the facilis descensus had one more self-directed victim on its slippery way. Work was intolerable to me. What I did I did badly, and I shirked ali I could. I was often late, I as often left- too early; and my employers were really good and lenient. As it was, however, I wearied out their patience, and they remonstrated with me firmly but kindly. This sobered me for a moment; but I had gone too far to retreat; until I came out at the other side I must go on. The fortune which had so long be friended Jack Langhorne deserted him now, and with his fortune his nerve. 'Where he had staked with judgment he now backed wildly, recklessly, and the more he lost the more recklessly he staked. His fortune seemed to influence mine. Hitherto I had been immensely successful; now the luck ran dead against me, and I lost more than I could afford, and soon more than I could pay, and so came face to face with ruin. Daring all this time the estrangement between Edith and myself grew daily wider. She took the wrong method with me, and being a woman she kept to it. She thought to dragoon me' back to the quiet of my former life, and made my private actions personal to herself; seeking to force me into rendering an account of all my doings, and of every item of expenditure, then taking it as an affront when I refused to answer ques tions. But now there m bo hope for it. I mut perforce oafcat. With that writ out against me it was Bseless to at tempt concealment; and if marriage k set feminine sepenority, yet it k part nership. - Yen may be snre it was a bitter mo-, ment for me when I had to tell my wife that all her wont nntieiBntiojM were re alized; that ah had been Tight throngs oat, and I wroeg; ad tnt tie deetrnc- tton she had nrophenied kni na. In her temper of no many now, it was doubly hard. But it sterna that I knew rs little of woman as of man, and had miscalculated the depth of her goodness underneath "all her wrong headednefts, joat as he bad mis calculated my power of will and truth of lave when fairly pulled up. She beard me out to the end without making a sign. -There was no interrup tion, no angry expression, no scornful look. I saw the hand with which she held the child tighten round bis body; the one playing with his curls tremble. But that was all. When I bad finished she looked up and said quietly: "It is better to know the worst, (ieorge; for then we can meet it Now that I know the worst I know what to do." "And you do notrcprntch me, Edith?" I asked. She ro-c from her Mrat and cumc over to me. Her eyes were full of tears, her Him were quivering; and yet ttierc was more love, more softnesi in her face through its sorrow than there had been for all these long, bad, dicary month?, passing now into years. She slid the boy from her arms and pressed them round my neck. "Why should I reproach you?" she said. "Is not your burden heavy enough without that?" While I thought I could help to keep you straight, I tried; if clumsily and to no good, yet loyally. Now I know that all is over; I have only to try and help you, both by my work and my love." Something seemed to choke me while she spokt. I cnulii have lcen hard enough if she had been angry, but this sudden return to the old love this un expected magnanimity was too much for me. Still, I am thankful to say I did not break down. I was man enough for that! "Will you trust me Edith?" said I, in a tone so rough and husky I scarcely recognized it as my own. "Love me as you used, be to me what you were, and I swear you shall never have cause to reproach me aain. I am young, I can work, I can be resolute. I have bought my experience of life, and I find the taste too bitter in my mouth. A man may be a man, and yet not be ashamed to think of his wife as well as of his pleasures, and I will think of you now." She sighed and then she smiled. "You come back to what you left," she said in a tender, caicssmg kind of way that scfincd as if it buiied now forever all that had gone wrong between us. Of course the struggle was a tremen dous one. I lost my clerkship and every sixpense I possessed, both in goods and money. My wife had to give lessons, and I had to accept anything that would keep us from starvation ; but we pulled through in time, and the sufferings we had encountered were, perhaps, a good thing in the end. ' It taught us to value each other in a deeper and truer manner than ever before; and it gave us a friend. For dear, old Jack's luck turned with his uncle's death, and he used his influ ence to get mc a situation that began at five hundred a year, and has steps up ward in the future. Things have gone well with me since then. Edith's health has come back, and my boy is at the head of his class. I have traveled a good deal and lately I have taken up chemis try as a study. Edith declares I will blow the house up some day, but I have not done so yet, and I think I am on the track ot a discovery that will do a great deal of good make mc a name, and bring me in a lot of money. I find that as one grows older work is a more satis fying thing than pleasure, and knowl edge goes further than excitement; and Edith finds that a wife's influence is greatest when least visibly exerted, and that when a woman abandons the per suasion of love for authoritative com mand, and tenderness for ill temper, she loses her power and only deepens the unhappincss she aims at preventing. The Iowa Corn Crop. Iowa is a growing State scarce thirty years old. Among other products she will this year add to the sum total, will be 140,000,000 bushels of corn. Now let us see what this means when put in a comprehensive form. It will require an army of 150,000 Grangers twenty days to pluck and crib the ears. If shipped, it would require 4,660 ships of 1,000 tons each to carry the crop. If transported upon cars, it will require 470,000 cars, and would make a train 2,750 miles in length, or space nearly across the continent If loaded upon wagon?, with carrying capacity of thirty bushels each, the train would form a line 27,000 miles long, or 2,000 mile3 more than the circuit of the globe. If emptied down upon the city of New York, it would overwhelm that city as were Herculaueum and Pompeii. If made into whisky, it would float the United States navy, or make everj man, weman and child upon the face oi the earth drunk. It means fat horses, fat beef, fat hogf, fat poultry, and fat pock- etbeoks. It means that it will open bank v salts and start the wheels of Com merce. Here in young lowa ant mines richer than California, or Ophir or Peru. Fifty thousand square miles of snriace dignin's and all "play dirt." Then why not come to Iowa? Council Blvfs JWs pareil. Lyman Bnrkhardt, who without provoj cation shot hw uncle a few weeks since at Ann Arbor, Michigan, has been con victed of muder in the list degree, on his on n confession. He was sentenced to' solitary eoninement for life in the State Prison. He k but IS years of age. Ha on going to jail, "The old Jndge may gel to hell. Til be pardoned ont in atnrnnn." Tattatennntteauef Scott cennty have - -rt-7 ' na nVjpBvB- MCjKflPnMCSeSffXVBnV SnacUlac nf Internet tn Farmers. WIJ Mill aw Lair-MlM Maekl Tbn rapid growth of our country and the constantly increasing demand for practical aad d arable farm machinery has brought the wind mill into almost crneral uae. Their practical value ia no longer doubted; no well regulated farm can afford to be without them. By usinfc and applyiag the free wind which our Creator has given us, (which soma day not far distant will be utilized to a surprising extent) we can obtain aatrone and cheap power which can be adapted to almost any extent and to every variety of work. Dry pastures can be watered, swampy lands drained, gardens irrigated, water aupplicd for hoiae and barn, wood sawed, corn shelled, feed cut; meal, Graham and buckwheat flour made at home for your own use and that of jour neighbors". In short, nit the work that ia done on a large farm, and which at some seasons of the year ncccattitates the em ployment (jf two or three extra hands. Farmers who are improving their prop erty and miking investments will fluu wind mills not only a pleasure but a machine of profit. There are so uiaty new ana cheap mills in the market that we feel it our duty tc caution our farm ers that they look at the mill and not at the price, examine the record and know that the mill U one that has been thoroughly tried at least three years by some one. Wind is an unruly element, and unless a wind mill is built upon true mechanical principles and from strong and durable material, they are liable at any time Ao be jdestrojed. It costs jutt as much i erect a poor mill as a good one, and ifwill not pay to run the chance of losing your labor, time and mill for a few dollars more at the start. When at Beloit, Wis , a few weeks since, being interested in this rapidlv developing business, we spent. an after noon examining and looking over the extensive works of the Eclipse Wind Mill Co., and were surprised to find so large an establishment. We were in formed that the business of this company extended into every State and Territory Their factory is one of the finest in the West built of stone and iron, 100x40 feet three stories above the basement, with a foundry and blacksmith shop ad j riniag. The main building is heated throughout by steam, and furnished with the mostimproved machinery, all espe cially designed for wind mill and pump work. They employ about 35 men, mostly skilled mechanics, on wind mills of all sizes, from the 10 foot farm pump ing mill to the large railway and grind ing mills. The capacity of the works is about 1200 mills a year, besides pumps and cylinders, which they also, make quite largely. This company are the owners of the celebrated Wheeler pat ents, under which a dozen wind mill companies arc licensed, and are the original inventors of the solid wheel mill. We strongly recommend this company and their mills, for they have had eight years experience and have the name ot making good all their contracts. The Eclipse mill is the one that uses the side vane regulator, which is called the safest and sursst regulation vet proauccd. We were told by an old railroad engineer on one of our western roads that the Eclipse mill was about 20 per cent, stronger than any other mill, and was the nearest constructed on mechanical, principles of anything in the line of' wind mills; and from the numbers of these mills seen on several of our rail roads, it would seem others entertained a high opinion of them. Wc believe the Eclipse mill only costs some $10 more for 10-foct farm mills than others, and we do not think this difference should be considered in buying a good reliable mill for a permanent investment The company are able and willing to guaj antee their work, and farmers who are contemplating buying a wind mill this fall will consult their interests by send ing for illustrated circulars to the secre tary of the company, C. B. Salmon, Btloit, Wis; The Latest Oat We wjuld call especial attention of our readers to the following interest ing facts: The Moberly Gilt Concert Association and its management, which is endorsed by many of the leading citi zens of Missouri, was postponed from July Slat to Oct. 8th, 1875, at which time it will take place, or the money re funded. The McQiid Hotel, which is the capital prize, is a new building just completed; covers one whole block; di mension, one hundred and twenty feet by ninety ; three stories, with a ftlansard roof, and contains over one million brick, with sandstone cornice, window caps and sills. It has sixty-five fine large rooms on second and third stories; base ment has four elegantly furnished store rooms, 20x80; a barber shop and bath and wash room, 20x40; hotel office, 20 x40, and an immense dining room sixtg feet square. In addition to this fine building, the following prizes will be distributed : 1 Grand Gift.McQuaid Hotel $25,000 4 $5,000 Gifts 20,000 1 Grand Cash Gift 5.000 1 $2,500 Cash Gift 2,503 1 1,000 1,000 1 500 500 1 400 " 400 1 100 " 100 5 50 250 10 25 u 250 50 10 500 100 5 . " 500 10U 250 M '250 7226 100 7,226 The drawing will be conducted by six gentlemen whcfwill oe unknown to each other until selected by the ticket holders, after the concert performances are over. There will be 7,831 gifts, 75,000 tick ets to be sold at $1.00 each. For tickets and other information, address A. T. Bissell, General Manager, Mcberly, Ho. P. 8. Money should bo seat by P. O. Money Order or Registered Letter. Make Your Fortukk. In another column we publish the prises and date of drawing of the Louisiana State Lot tery. This is a scheme chartered by the State of Louisiana and endorsed by the first citizens of New Orleans. A prize is fixed for every six tickets, and the drawing will positively take place. So fair and equitable k the plan of this grind golden drawing that tickets are being acM very rapidly, and he or she who invests now in a whole or half ticket may bay the foundation of n fortune. We call attention to the advertisement Soeeaal U called to the card oftae asd lak. which does away Dealer CeoylBi wiii piaaa. BananoaM ad wafc-r. Every oaatarta SaacrUr la Ue eld aotaed. ra oSarm to awvita. avert Gnat Mr. X. P. Boa, Jaathr caioBtatod aa aatfcari grower, adveruaea ata ats aatMa yaaar. Mm grows oaly saoerior aorta, nkai wai inea. oosaii to a reliable power. JUKt JnMnWBnrnar fta yn cm, pw. jr. w. Mitcwii cer Cimi yg Wot f m nntra ft tryiag Wlinn OkT9s9tWmM9ty MMW tVMI easlnWC nranWnnStnl na4 VftnoVBrVMBB ynJoMn naSH waanisMVInns' TlnOT grVoKjn Ban gonaaaiao a Mk ovary caoa, and aok no neataclraafd. AnnatSa. AtaaaHloaw-Ttare ta aotktse tor ra&M aala or aeaT Bakta naal to tb CsrI alar Copyist 6ok a&d lak adrvrtlMrd la aaotcer colaas. Try tt. St. Jam aOa ftcmtatafy.-S adrcr?1it of this Intiitatlos ta aeoUier col a ran. Tfcc Id unction la tala Kbool U of thai t&orv&crt tht' etrrfor which the fitter are aotcd. A dljU ma aatl gold BrJal an? coafrrard oa gradaaic. V-rtIa. Tbe jrcai bc of the rsHiEe a aclramcr and pariBcrof tfec blood 1 howa brjoad a doobt fcjr the crest nomlr who hate taken it, and received Ironed, ale ttltt, with nach remarkable cnr. Dr. McArrKE-A rrjaur craanmt or Unna asd American taatitntra. 'Ju jrr pracilctns pfejralciaa. Treat all Ditrxtf of the K (Inert, urer. Lane. Heart. Tfcnat, 11 rid nd Nrrroa arates. JErrur of Youth and Aba ot Had hood acccfarnllr trealtd and ctcn alter other have failed. $VJU forfeit for any ex" ot ea!n! Weakarra or prlTaUt dia-ae i( any kind or chr actrr he undertake nd fail to care. Lidt will And jrujKT treitment for dlrf iH-cuIr totbrirx-x. Alt leiirto con til n 1 1. tamp for reply promptly answered. VotM-UatMmfrt. Send for eirenlar. Addrr Ixk itoxU). r call at ofEce, 31" IVrry ftrcct. U-inr low pire tUhle.DfCk aad Map IK M'KKD-S Era- now 4rlreo. ill. TUK brat andclirapriit liiuue folk' t'amrr In the United Mt.. K!rcnt cUivtno ruac. XatlOccnt prcntiama for dob, Simple Ire- Only sAcmiaa yrr. THY IT. WC11WAN A CO.. Pain. Z rgle. Iowa ftANTlCD Yoang men lo Iearniclrrpnins il Tuition to b paid out of nalarr alter l'n lion U ured. QUEKS CITY TKLKUltAI'll INSTITUTE. Sedalla, Ho., and St Loai. Ma., and Kana City. M". US flTO f l'KU DAY can be nid r .rh-V-a-' Inir oor Dubinin;: Copjinj: IJ-k asd lak. Neither pre, wmter or bruh tAijnlnrd Send H for ont fit and secure territory, call or addreta DEXTtCH JtANUFACTUHINU CO.. 317 Ollre St.. St Lout. tt? 9XnaXM7XjJE! rasiTimv eatti at mi, ...- ! knl, Liftlufn or CWf n4 PAI.V, Ce lUtia-B Frew. Crffta4jtj IhlUud. MS. J.W. WTCMiul.es.. i uU r suu M., Chu. nypjrai2.so With 100 Cart rkteaa. SitO :WU)nJd -. wr "rrn. tod . tUfctlm raarmntfo-d. nitirtttut Cuttlvj . WfcsTKKX Ul! WOHKN, Chicago. III., OV Doarboni-st., (McCormickllkKa). Strawberry Plants FOH SALE by E. I. HOE. author of "Play and Profit In My Usnlen," "Opcnlre a Cbextnnt lnrr,"eic. Plant act out cow will ber well next June. Send for Clictlar. Address at Corn-wall-ou-tho-lludaon. Orange Co.. N. Y. Wanted Immediately 1 flCs YOUNG MKN TO 1W' LKAKN TKI.KGKAPIIY. Salary paid while practicing. AdiirrM. with atainp, C. A.SHEAHMAN, Hnprt U. T.U.. Obcrlln. Ohio St. .loMJiiir Seminary, Kankuken City, III. mills t-titahlUhntcnt. within a few uitnuten X walk of the Kankakee railroad xUulon. I conductcu by the Sieters oi the Congregation of Notre Dame. Hoard, bed, bedding, tuition In the Knglith, French and German lauguaea, per term ot live month, 875. Mm-Ic etc. extra. Addren SI-TKK Sl'PKIMOH. UNIVERSITY of DES MOINES. rpHK Fall Term of this Institution will open X Sept. 1. This reboot oiler excellent advan tages to rtudent. Situa'ed at the Capital, with competent teacher, a college course, and ample fact II tie in all departments of Mudy. For catalogue or circular, apply to Dca Molne-, 187.5. F. MtrTT, Trea'U WOOD S HOTEL 34 and 36 I. WASHINGTON ST. Chicago. Opposite IWd.tlUT CWa Retail I)tj Oood Store.and adJolnlnK U B. Flak Wholesale Milllnerr bturu. QEU 8. PALMEU. (late of Cttj Hotel). Clerk. O. HAIDN, Proprietor, OPIUM 'MorpfiiDeHal Speedllv cured bv DIt. HKCK'S only known nnd sure Kemedy. Sn VUAHUK (or trvuttneut until cured. Call on or addreaa JDr.jJ. C. BESS. 112 John St. Cincinnati, 0. MEN OR WOMEN Wanting employment CAS MAKE $4 TO $S J'KJt 9A T, In tbclr own neighborhood, cllinj a household article, light, profitable, and auux tc aelL Great aucceaa East. Circulars sent free. AddrcM, " UISSEE lllttEC" Mr I CI., 17S Went YfasfciBKtOB Street, Olrago. SJaaafactured ami '"r - '- ItAIIL Randolph St.. Cklrn. liarna" Foot-iowr Scroll Saw4 ami Latht. An entire revolution in me construction or foot-power ma chine 1 The old style thrown aside when these are known I Thonsand now in uc! $I..V) to$.UU0pcr year made ulng them. One person out of every three who send lor catalogues o these machines buy one. Ssy what t'apcryoa read this in, and audrers W. F. JOHN I1AUNES. Box. Oil. Hockfbrd. Wlruie'iago Co.. Illinois. iVLOJN UY To Ixaa In Iowa, Kaatora Ncliraaka and Northwestern Missouri, Upon improved farms, in rums of SOO and up wards, for a term of S to 5 years; Interest at 10 percent., parablo semi-annually. Funds supplied on short K otic a and at at Ducao rats of commission. Apply to buknuam, Mckinley at co.. Conncl! Bluff. low Truth is Mighty and will Prevail. VEGETINE Purifies the Blood and Restores the Health. seyknty-onk years.of age. East MaxaunaLO, Aug. ti. 1S70. Mr. II. R. SUrentDtu Sir: I aa t erenty-onc year of age; have suffered many years with kid ney complaint, weakness In my back and stom ach. I was induced by friends to try our Vao KT1NE. and I think it the best medicine for weak ness of the kidneys I ever used. I have tried many remedies for this complaint, and never foand so much relief aa from the Veoetixz. It atrengthens aad invigorates the whole system. Many of my acqaai ta&ces have taken It. ana I believe tt to be good for all the complaints for which it is recommended. Your truly, JOSIAI1 U. SUElCJI AN. EXPERIENCE OF YEARS. Chjuuxsiowx. Mass-, March 19. ISC. Mr. U. Jt. SUteiuDeu Mir: This is to certify that I have used yoar -Blood Preparation" (Vao-k.-ixe) In my family for several ycarr, and think that for scrofula aad caakerosf Lnaaors, or rheu matic affections, it raaux be excelled; and as a blood parlSer and spring medicine It is the best thing 1 ever used, aod I have aaed almost every thing. I caa cheerfaily recoxmesd it to any oue la need of such a aedidae. Yo:ra respectrally, MRS A. A. D1SSMOKE, VJ Boaaell at. WHAT IS NEEDED. norro. Feb. W. 1STU Mr. II. R. 8lernDT Sir: Aboat one year tjpt 1 foand myself la a feeble coadltoa frvB gen eral debility. Vtsmw was atroejcly rrcom aeaded to me by a Ulead who kad been beaedtcd bvitsBse. IpocaredtheartiaIe.aadareraiBg aereral bottle, waa restored to health, aad dla coatlaaed it use. 1 feel qaite cosSdeat that there la so ssediciac aaperlor to it tx those eoaa plalata for which It la etvedally prepared, aad woald cheerfalty recoaames4 It to those who feel that i hey need aosaetalax to restore them to per fcet acta. -KSHB0Itu Fira:ofS.M.PetteasillCo. Stale 3tB.sU?B. Yzorrm exteada ita ladaeace into every part of the hamsa orxaalsaa. coBBesdaa; with Ita foaadalloa, correctlac dlaaaaed action aad re tanac vital powsra. craaiag healthy eanaatieo aad parlacauom of tha aioed. dnvtxs; oat disease, ad feanis aazaiw to mtJotb Ita ailotud taak. YMrnyiaaoldByatdrarf1ota tkorthkatfe,amii aad aa ooea aieor nwi byoxaroso'Oftffw B krlorMt. oao daUar. daacrlaClvai r .snavasaaw asaaa a. l jn . Jib -4W L. an TaC-anTVnnf - - as sao -'-- -- ana sanncta nsv ,- nnnBj b 1 bbb b . a a s ' - 'r'jji- ' " !-! j , wm fffr-"r ' iXaWdaAri, unaa ata Baaiac saa aaoy am- BeaBoaaesaoawyaoaosw. M mZJZrnwlm' m laiiatuLVaJ- naadSSeoatasararioK ta wajwi s . . !. wsbh Baa. PAaOC dt asalillWI , aaa 59. X-nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnl fegaBHiKnfSlMHI -nnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnoB. janW m'anrnaV mi1 C,-Wn atJsaw nnnBlsannnnnnnnnnnnnnnnVnCM "My Iw ftnn ssrnSw- nnnnnnnnKr'aiiiHH oMoBJll' nnnBlSBl.annHBnn9P -' " -J,nfcSKV1niF" lannnoBB ' 'anBwaWaBaBiA-, wahp awsZaaMaWaVBBBBWaWaWaW m MbobbbbM A J -. .i.aaiHBBnjMPnBWsBBaaT ' ' -sssssssssssssl HaV(riaJtfyjk"MnjgiBn - '- e nnnnnnnW' ' 1$r3SKM&m&mr-- -J -r aiHy -nnnnnBti"i BBaaBaBB"iS?HLEia..awv '"" HaTSTannnnnnnnnna) l-msssmWif iMssnaShBrlnsOjnaauaBBWaovaovawan I .- Z was asawfrv-v'T-i '""3- " 7' 1 m i MnnnnnMI anil ' M t-'VOnnM" "-'BBVAoBwVaBWnkSHBHBHBHBHBHBMaBWa yjBaj - -'' si ;V; . -iTBB. -.t. Z2MMMEZr?SFissssssW&ifW' sU- -4sMad ssssssssssssi7''r-5BsF ' 7' 'aavVaal SsssTnE jaoYaoYspaaTiXr tLswt.-)MMsssssssssiS--iMM'- - -J'r?j-;awHsiwMiwoBWB t &?mfl&iWKsssss$v-4imW ' -J' - tnnyHBKS UtJ&im1ssWKssssKXlmv 'nWnnnannnP "nnnnnnnnnnnunnnnnnnnnnB SanBDJonsVaasam-" annnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnnna tWTt jm nnnnnnnnnvknnnnVBnnB - & nnnnoBftaJessu'aW'rHK,. a BBBSVDaTaf9pHlH.H & as!SsaBsnnBwa r,v BWSBBsaaWBOBssssssM nnBssnoSs'nBsrss''' - --- -rss "ZT.iTw',9nnnaaBa ' aaMBBOWnanttnBBBOBEBBBBokXAV. VvcTT'y- " , Ta aaMkaaaBOBBBOBBsaira 9nnaoMaaBsssssssBBBBBS '" BBSBJSaBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBM sBBannonnBTnnnnwjnaaioaalny?rM' " ' Tbl I a c'lndcr h:ier. aad combtses U thl?ct Improvement lo thl slv'cof mh'T IT SHELLS-IT SKPAKATES-IT CLKAXS -IT SACKS, and doe It work perfeitly. It Is the oaly shelter that wU h-U torn w.tk the .v , Bond for Oirovilar iac1 Price Lit. KIXGSLANJ, TEHGUSOX & CO., latiuriicturf r;, St. LouU, 3!o. ryqsjesxjjjsaw nHnjanMwnaMaaaoBaBaBi'vy s.iJ!nMBL--K-aBBaBnaoaaonBBBBnononaWB jooojMwjswjswawwnwwwwj- ' IJ -- -----"ajfTssnaO-aaaasSjoMnnjd snnnnrTtjRjnUHBjBSBjt" nnnnnnnnnmnr f V bJ SLBsslaosSswaaEnnnnlannnn MMaBBh r ' "iriiMas?MsrCTsTnBffini iVi'r"i- ir"aT-TT;i tMnaBBOB MBOBoSnnaBnBOBOJSBBBBSBBBTSssBoS aBBBBBBO1tJBBBKjBBBdBw3 snaanna fftwSkl?5ml!SSimBl-" 'tgiSnnrMf, I'Sk'BSBSBSSrSBSBSST Kfgaov . &. asBsssBB vjaaaB BsasomasaaT .-- - jfi ass wssrv 9 . aaaMsav asasaaar lH&vBn -.'3-rji.; - "j mm in nNcS- . Iff nw lnMssBssBssnnl "ifere OSEg) nann W fflr H VssHsssssssssssI T"w i t!tru'i&HP&mi H seconi-iiaxi waxos.ijs.S" rutr.:- that wc will ell lorea!t f'JU each; fcen Lve; n Kilcais, w r t f . S.. if Ureater-t bargain veri ItVred In Chlesgo. ICKKIl TKMI'I.K OK Ml'MIO. U3 Vnti Itiiren Mrr-el. I tirK... in. nM'laiillR vsnnosnnnnnw 1 tl snPtsassnr FssnnnnnnnnT onnnnnnnnnf S w VslsnnnosrV LsnnnnBarS fTSjErBTall "CMmrJ aunT SAFE AND RELIABLE, Hiivo Yon Weak Lungs? llavo You a Cough or Coll ? ITavoYou laln In Your Breawt ? annBaBaaMaasaaaoisoBBaaawsBwaBBBannB Ifnvo You any Throat Dlwcawo? Have You Conmimptlon? USE Da. L. 0. C. WISHARfS PINE TREE TAR CORDIAL, Arc Yon Weak nnrt DcMlltatcil '.' jawaaan a aa as awasaasOMaaawawsaBBasaaasnaaaaaBaBaoBawaBB ?)o You Suffer from Indigestion? Do You reoulreaTotiir? Inv You No Appetite? Do You need Building Up? Oo You w tab iobStroiipT and Healthy? USB Ph. L. 0. C. WISHARrS PINE TBEE TAR C0RDI1L Sold by all Druggist.. Principal Depots No. 232 North Second St.. Phil. DEATH IN MIDAIR' STAHTI.INO facts, acknowledged by doctors and others, prove that the deadly inon lb Is season, known as malaria, which ctu.es all forma or chilis, or atfiio aad fever. Is or a morn danger ous character than uual. Neglect the flrt au. and the second or third one may become con tlvc and rau.e death. This belnjj thi cae. It becomes thjdi'ty of every man to keep In his family an arilrlu that wilt serve as ancrr-ciuil and never-failing antidote; and as Ulnine la ob jectionsble on account of Us rlou enVets upon tile n;rve, the hearing and the brain, all de-Ire something mild la ttaeneciandeinaUy:is etnea clous. Such a remedy Is Day's Ague Tonic, which does not affect the hearing or eyesight, does not contain any arsenic, siryrbnlne or other poison; doi not alfsct the bead, and does not re quire the Use of pills, aw it also acts finely upon the Kver and bowels, and can be used by the most delicate female or tender Infant. ONE BOTTLE TREE will be Riven to every one who will use aa di rected and falls to be cured. Pries, half pint bottles, f 1 : three botU;s. $2V). or f 7.00 per dor t druggists. ArMret J P. DKOMUOOLlS Jt CO.. Louisville, Ky., wto have laUly become sole proprietors ot this never-fallinz qalalne substitute or U I), Hash. Dee Moiie. Iowa, .OtUJ.MJWa.lf Swsa8Ua4r caaorrdaaajaa; Atbsaallarifvsl x W.H.BtAJSatn ? S 1 is j t wlwci ssa, HAofaCanlSt, THE WEEKS TAX 8V0TEM IS XOT A5 KXPCKlMKXr. It ha aaem coa taadly aed ia PoHc coaaty fer tva years, aad la arrant other coaaUaa tor fear years, aad la rrerycaselaasacesaa. Ha daaMa aaaawasoata no QBlatloaa ao ttoaMo wiin trrefaiar -aenotiew. It srdtecta hot toa rroaaa aad tae tax-oarer at less exaeaaa lo ekaer: aaeoasu ara aaoreeoatly kvsyt aad aaere oaotry aaasruoad. Jkaviadaarictaaa td ayrtoa tor WXwSil bSbsssssbo aoninnnnf tnt nnsBsCfnatSnBwU AosfnnT nVT tosPff- saiaoioa to Polk Coaaoy oasawa. JirtX Q. wnnXS. box 3d. Dew JKetatw. iowa. or oalaTXCnXniO jrro oom wV jaHntnnnnoasnnnnnnnnnnu i Em V ajsanasaTisasr a n Hi saBa sToT TbT'"TTi' siisinili swami i iBoBBssaESS2asasaBC-w JasaBsintV-T " -, J,- YiTirrrVf 'JIBssnT oMnofomT y. t.t-;iv sSiPBnr ssssaBB SB nj?ns JjarWnai BBsBaBsVa. 1 aari nnnnnnnoBslnTi' , , r -n.- -- , ",m pj , ,,, AsnnnnnW"" LnBoiar J'vi-SItSfflA nnnnnnnnnB sssssssTX anBssssssssPo'sssssssssssM nnnnnnnHsKr wsnnBnX'VJ$VnnnnnnnnnnnnT dnnnnnnnnoUVVS nnnnmvVa V T nVsnnnnnnnaf 'osnnnniK" ,pgamtsrX 5aaTssnni'i--'3Bafaf snWnfclHIIElB'!L AJUf RD Sc SONS ORGANS. TVTlW and iniunant iitiprtvniiii', Mmi-Mci A'tyot c'ntrcctlon. therefore Irast UhA- to Kelout of oriler. hweetetrjuallty -f tmin- Ktt est action for quck mnlc. Ncwl style of ca-. Kvcry rnn warrHtiird, bold n m nithtj irurterlv Ksvmerts. lieular sent fie. 1 ItEl.'I) TkMI'l.i: OK 51 1 '.NIC, Ul Vsn I ureu Htreet.OillCAtlu, U.U S, II..Cnt this out and encio.e In )otr Jeiirr rc Make YoMForlniie ! GRAND GOLDEN DRAWING oir nut LOUISIANA STATE LOTTERY Takes place Kuturdny, l)rr.3,lri?.1,pelUvt !y. CAPITAL PRIZE. $100,000. IViHO Prizes amounting to Jjt502, All In iJul.l. One Prlae to every sis lfrk!. -ONI.V- iI0,(MH) 1 itkrtM a! $.(,M) U. S. Carrrnry1. Ten'hs and twentieth In proportion. Order tickets and wrlta f rclrcnlars to Ititilfintia MaUi liOtferj Co., ,l.iek IJI ni2, I'rM, Onire, .V.w Orleqn. Competent and reliable agsnt wan'tvlihrirtzn ont the country. rnecptlonai jrarabteM re nal ed. t.iw,trtA AvtvKvav 1: "ssS 5ls5 I Tfct Do9 Cxcekior Hty Prm,' BaH atoa a Maw Pisufrla, ANtrjn. VfryStrMf, " W "Bav jasasj sswsw sjb1 awnw OpboW CMHt?nlTSr.sksattMKW, swiii w.M.mjuncB 00. . ' assaJarrr. BU. ssJ star. SUiilw. 94 at 39 ooaassh Cmmml nirasd. CMltLtam. Pro a awn a oat ax j 11 u - - - -- . a . , aUtiy t Bade with tfc ifnsu ur aaeaa it aad s-9 yrttrwA itdsa It aftit tt9kmA t Ammm m9 ,W t-m Oar A s;rrrs ue operaud ctlrlr by horse pwi7 aisd will hot mi tk turn ,4 1 b... -v.-. bare freaa a to V feel in dlaseter, aad aay 4vtN rMsired. Theyhjrtia ail kladof arih.K.f: aasd aad !iutae. bl:aasl&oss ua e aS, stale asd hard ou. uj m si.it t . r .m. i aaie-kaa&lJ. iiM& mtim 49. i. . State and coaty la UM Laitd nutea thai ta aJt vappbed ad tor oar itl&stralis tt'aJoj', hmi.rnea.nt, provltC ut adTertlseawat 4jU. Ad4re THtt UKXAT WC5TCK5 nrXLLAUfJEaCO. BVjn 3e-'d Datl- Citv (wa. A aKKNC FOR TM mtLUuttl GUIDE. nnnltawmislnl! Itoarii " " s: v f a sssan mm a .nsnV Tlal In I it fw man a ana SM 4sSBwoJajaB Bsarnf nasaa a sif r t ""-- - - - -- - -- - isisw tT?JyM'awViw3ra7SsaI JarlrasnniTlliB rewmto XSSmmy, KoidWlaasaualoa la UKoU forth edt- yaaa hdiaa. Preparatory ad Cotkaatatoogaaaasi . iJ. mZtT. tar naateaod Pasattaav &YtU - T.mn,i.uA.mu, rrmctyn. - ! rri m ncr.y 44MSv Camw.asAa e :?. 2 1 rn a .it ' iiae - k. yjmi i3 "n Mai5 iuai JL k in latHBB e-cts n fJErfJ . jnCTnWk nanw twm -. . lanf3asn njngyjii A IMfJnCn ttmSm tmtf rTT.mmrtwmfm mMiMium nox4 IIMnnna nJlisfffwai lliiisa,onj or ! n 1 si bjBw -mm M 3atstwWB, iS5ter o k x ky r 1 1 f I- ; A 3 WBssssssssssI 4Smr ' fF-Jtr A fi xf&-&?: -i!i"Bt; &, r?, Sw?rSB is. .. "Via. " ( -2K5A--'r?..-7&a- ''-- edSS e .vMf.w?;' r7r;-Mj' . m-. - a d 9& ; -'?LZ-Z3S&ZZG rf- , 'i . - - i m.": J----ik-eTt -... i. -f-3r. &: - 1 f 1 Aiass s- v S-'-5 r? . Je ?--?' . n. ' fT ' ,. - Jr M ? i.v .. s --z yj JW'ajV&ffi r.''x -s " i - i ' "SS" 1 , -&X3 v. r-".- -JCJ s-e-te .KfeJti-sS ; &rl ... ME- . J .' !".-" - -- '"L- 1TS5J. Tl.f utfj.- B2&g:4 f2j St J -, t:- r'"' o,. -mt ' '3- "T , t . .-J7e-?-Tpii-'.esJ,"