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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (March 7, 1878)
ADAMS, JACKSON, ASH CLAY. Sv.v.rvturjr Hii.Hpon PcrNiinnl IC-:oll4MlioiiM aiml Aii--!ofr" Hi proposi-i to npcalc of tJ-re'' lenI .stntcMiH-n, with whom he ' ben jmt MHKiIly 'ii-ipiaintril, ami 'ho. public life In; h:ul wittif.""-''- They were sc Iecteil beo.ui.se they repru.senlcrt three distinct t pes of character and each of whom wen; ruat in thi'ir particular sphere. Whatever their contempora ries, in the heat and bitternes of par ty conilirt, had .said about them, now that we can view their character and deeds through this unbiased medium of history, tln-ir claim to the Jirt rank amonj; American statesmen will not lie disputed. Adams, .Jackson, and Clay, names which roused thu lierce.il passions and exoked the bitterest invect ives from minds inflamed by the ran cor of political contests. There is a point of dillerence, as well as resemb lance, with these three men, arising from their diimihir family and social relations. Adams de-feuded from an old and wealthy family: in early life came under the influence of education and the associations of a well-regulated and law-abiding community. Jack mhi ami Clay, born in poverty, without early advantage-, were compelled in a wild, unsettled community, where the -ceue-j shifted aceordinjr to the pas.siii" pasion, to seek that fortune which was not theirs- by inheritance. Thev were all men of marked ability. Adams, of a caution-", deliberate nature, with al most the appearance of timidity. I'ut it was only in appearance - that he was eombatativc his opponents had good reason to know. Outwardly cold, his passions were violent, smoldering with in like the pent-up lire of a volcano. Iackon and Clay were men made in the same mould, men conscious that they were horn to rule, and men who were inspired with such a sublimity of patriotism that they were n-tily to sac riJice their lives upon the altar of their country. I served with Adams in the Houe dining the Twenty-seenth and Twenty-eighth Congress. I saw him die at his dck like a mediaeval knight with his armor on. One scene in his life brings out fully the man's character. It was in that celebrated trial for trea son in IS 12. Adams was a linn sup porter of the right of petition, and when he was asked to present a petition looking to the dissolution of the 1'iiioii, he did so, because he held that all pe titioners had at least the right to be heard. For this he was charged with treason and arraigned fortuial. Against him were arrayed Marshall. ('iliiiurc. and Wise, men of pre-eminent and.ac knowledged ability as orators and de baters. In the long and excited debate which followed, Adams, with the ma ture ability of a giant, laid his oppo nents in ihe dust, and achieved the proudest triumph of his life. The lirst time I saw Jackson was at the celebration of the battle of New Orleans, at Nashville, Tennessee. lie then impressed me, as I saw him on hor.schack, as one whom nature had stamped as a nobleman. He was a great man with a kind heart, the truest of friends, unswerving in duty. If he committed errors it was not from a dis inclination to do what was right. The number of persons now living who were per-onally acquainted with Clay is growing less eery year, and his fame now rests- with the historian. From a perusal of his speeches, it may be ditlicult to understand the power which he wielded. l'vcn we, whose hearts were touched and played upon by his burning chxpiencc. can not de scribe his power to others. Clay never studied oratoiy : his eloquence was the blaze of an internal lire. Hence, his set speeches do not gic a fair idea of hi-- power. He needed the .stimulant of a great occasion in order to ri-e to the full height of his power: The lec turer dosed with an eloquent flight on the power of the orator, i'rum a ,(- fart Thorn psttn. IJAYAKiriAYLOIt. !ii43!t l" l!ic ev Sinister f : Vni:iu . Mr. Uaard Taylor, the well-known author and traveler, has been nomin ated by the President as Minister to i'eriuaiiy, and will doubtless be con- firmed by the Senate. Tin-Philadelphia 7Wrv., in a complimentary notice of Mr. Taylor, says he was born in Chester county. Pa., in l.Si'o. and when a lad was apprenticed to the printing business. He traveled in I"u rope, most ly on foot, in 1SH-It. and on his return published an account of his travels. He then became editor of a paper at Pho-nixville for one year, and after ward a contributor to the l.itcrnru M'nrhl and the New York Trifmnr. sub sequently becoming a member of the editorial stall' of the latter, and also a stockholder in the association. On the breaking out of the gold fever he visit - ed California, returning in ISoO by way of Mexico: ami a year later left the rnited Stales on a third tour, from which he returned in 1S.":5, having trav eled over fifty thousand miles in Asia. Africa and Kurope. In duly, SoG, he set out upon a fourth tour through northern and eastern Kurope. return ing in 1S."S. In isf,-j he became Secre tary of Legation at St. Petersburg, and in ISO:? Charge d' Affairs there. He had fc previously married a daughter of Fro fesssor Hansen, the distinguished (!er man astronomer. Upon his return froui Russia, in 1S61. Mr. Taylor devot ed himself to writing and lecturing. He revisited California, and made a somewhat protracted stay in Colorado and the region once known as the Great ' American Desert, in 1SG(-(17. In 1871. with a part v of friends ' - iei-sed A. the route of "'m Pacific Kail, w-iv - -"'" :in t'Xfrsion into uani ioba. He had occasionally mingled volumes of poetry among his descrip tive works, but until 18G:5 had never attempted anything in the way of fic tion, in which year his first volume ap peared, and has been succeeded by oth j, ers.all of which have been favorably re- ceived. His principal works of travel have been translated into several lan niares, and have been widely read. Mr Taylor has given y articular atten tion to German literature, for which class of studies he had a natural bias. He will be at home in Germany, and no X American who could be named would be more heartily welcomed at Berlin It mav be sstid, moreover, flint wnile this will be called a Pennsylvania ap The appointment is one which does credit to the Administration, and is in the line of genuinely honest govern ment. The jrarpingen Miracles. The German Parliament has been dis-jussin"- the Marpingen miracles. Three little girls in Prusssan Rhineland said that they had seen the Virgin, with the pointment, ami wnnciur. ww cwums his home to be in Chester county, he i practical" V a New Yorker, thong!, he Iii-iv oceasionallv vote in this State infant.!-' ttnZ "njhe ground in a i)f.r,l',,,rilln wood. I he day follow Jiig, after another walk in the forrcst. the lh.ee little girls awrW'd that they had been again isited by the eclc-tial appparition. On this occasion. oje of the lit tile girls, about -e.cn years old, venturing to ak who the lady was, the latter irraciouslv replied. I am .she who ha.s been conheived without -i,i. and you .should pray and pray forever."" Subsequently the children were accom panied oy a large number of the pea an i ry of all sexes and ages. The crowd reverently -stood at a distance from the hallowed spot, the apparition being vis ible and audible to the three little girls onlv. The rir!s were eoiistanllv kept in the grounds to place the hand of in valids on the invisible Virgin's feet, and numerous cures were wrought by the I'eningnant I'eing. After a few day-, to extend the benefits of the mir acle to tho.-e who could not put in a pcr-onal appearance, the little girl- pro nounced tin water of a neighboring spring specially appointed by thdr la dy saim to restore absent invalids. This announcement confidently en hanced the gratilving nature of the mirade, and there was much praying in the wood and no little revelling in the adjacent villages. 'J he I'urgomust er of Marpiiu-eu ordered the multitude to leave the wood, and, bcinir set at de fiance, had the grounds cleared by the militarv. '1 his whole subject wa- ilis- eussed in the I'rus-iau Parliament three wPeks ago. A motion wa- made by an L'ltramoritainc member to censure the actions of the authorities. Her I.ipkc, a Liberal, -aid that the three little girls of Marpiugeii, when lirM examined by the magistrate, contended that they had not only seen the Virgin, but tin: devil too. On being asked how the devil looked, they said he was "black and white"" (the I'ms-ian national colors.) The motion was rejected after a heated debate, none but Ultraiiioiitaines and Poles votinir for it. Austria. Our readers cannot have failed to no tice that all the advices from Vienna indicate a curious diversity of opinion in rc"-ard to the position that Austria should assume in the great r.iiropean quarrel now pending. This i- partly Inc. we think, to what might be called the mixed make-up of the nationality. Austria has two political divisions: The German monarchy, or Cisleithan Aus tria, with an area of .r.-Jli..) square miles, and a population of "Jl.ooo.iMiO: the Hungarian kingdom, or Tran-lcith-au Austria, with an area of .V(-H square miles, and a population of 1i, Hi,(iiifi. At the last census the Germans constituted thirty-eight per cent, of the inhabitants of tlie Cisleithan part of the empire, and eighteen per cent, in the Traiislcithau part. The Slavonian race formed forty-nine percent, of the pop ulation in the Cisleithan. and sixteen percent, in the Transleithan division. The M.il'v r race constituted thirty -eight per ei-nt of the population of Hungary, and one and one-tenth per cent, of the Cisleithan part of the empire Although these three races have lived under one grveniincnt lor centuries, dwelt side by side in peace and fought side by side in war. they never have been, and probably never will be thor oughly united in feeling. The Germans hae small sympathy with Slavonians or Magyrs. the Slavonians quite as lit tle witii the Germans and Magrs. and the Magyrs stand aloof from both the others. The Magyrs and we may say all the people of Hungary hate Uu-sia with an ineMinguishahle hatred for the share she took in the suppression of the Hungarian insurrection of 1S1.S: while the people of the G rinaii monarchy -proper- arc rather friendly than other wise to Russia. The hold of the Aus trian government upon its Hungarian subjects has always been slight since ISIS, and a seere shock from within or without would break it entirely. Since the establishment of the German empire under the leadership of Prussia the Germanic produces have not been quite as certain in their allegiance to the House of llapsburg as they once were: and it is among the not very re mote possibilities that they will, sooner or later, transfer this allegiance to the House of Hohenollern. It will be readily seen, therefore, that Austria must moever carefully in the present crisis. She cannot join Kugland airainst Russia: nor can she aflbrd to let Russia appropriate Kuropean Turkey, because her own territ r might sillier next. Austria is between the Russian and German mill-stones, and if she blunders, is liable to be ground as fine as poor Poland was. Her location, and the peculiar character of her popula tion are sufficient excuse for her hesi tating policy. Rut should Austria step into the ring of battle she will be a for midable antagonist. Her army numbers SOO.UiH) men. and is in first-class condi tion in every respect. Stock Gambling in in California. Tuttle's Senate bill to suppress stock gambling causes quite a flutter in the circle it hits: but in proportion as it vexes them it raises a hope among their victims of such a radical reform in the stock business as will place it more nearly than it ever has bu-en. on a par with honest and square vocations. The only complaints so far heard come from the worst class of dealers and those pa pers which have lived oil of the illicit transactions. The bill may doubtless be improved by amendment. As to that feature of it the most obnoxious to the gambling fraternitv. the tax on sales, it should not be struck out; but the rate of "one-half of one per cent, on all sales and puv.'iases," is too high, " mirl reduced to not e.w- "g ,nt-' eighlh of -- i"1 cent, with advantage to"tlie public. Xo good reason can be given why this business, when honest ly and fairly conducted, should not be taxed. Every broker who sets up an of fice to deal in stocks enjoys a property in his right to buy and sell, and the law is invoked to protect him in its enjoy ment. We tax the merchant for his privilege to sell goods: the saloon-keeper for his privilege to sell drinks: the cigar and tobacco vender for selling his wares. If an itinerant vender of goods comes along he is charged a license in every county. Here is a business that aggregates into the hundreds of millions a year, protected by the'law like any vfihcr, ami out or liieh ihe ilealers re alize large fortunes every year at the expense of the public. Why should not they help equally with others to sup port the State which gives them pro tection? As stock transactions have been con ducted hitherto, in this coramuuiu. me business has hardly been distinguisha ble from any other species of gambling. It has ruined twenty times ac many people as the -tiger" and "draw-poker"' combined. And the worst phase of it is that the victims were generally of the I better classes, whose Ixinkrnptcy is a 1 public calamity, and agreat drawback to the general prosperity- The revenues ' of the city and Stale suffer from it; and the State'is in duty bound to lake meas ures to reform and abate such an evil. The bill in question, with such an amendment as i- above suggested, ami other- that may appear nccesary. will yield a revenueof -omcthingmore than a quarter of a million a year, and dive-, t the -lock bu-ine-sof those fraudu lent and purely gambling characteris tics which have brought it into disgrace and driven -o many houe-t, prudent people out of the market. The screams of the profes-ional s-vindler- and the new-nanors which thrive upon unlimit ed gambling, ought not to have the weight of a feather with the legislature, --.san Frunnsro IJullitin. How n Springfield .Man Hancid viilh Hi WiTc. TIim nice little incident of the Mur phy campaign get-, into print through the connivance of a Springfirhl corres pondent of the Pittsfield Eaiflt. "We had a ma-ked ball the other night, giv en b one of Springfield's well-known clubs, and thereby hangs a tale.' A busiiie-s man told his pretty young wife, on the night of the abo-c mentioned ball, that he was obliged to go out of town to one of the temperance meetings, and might not return till the following noon. The wife resolved, after he had left, to hae a good lime in a different wav, o accordingly she procured a sim ple" black iiiiiio." '""I "i !ohily to the masked ball. She had neve- do-'e such a rash thing before, but her hus band had been away very often of late, and she would mope at home no longer. She danced once, twice, three times, and nobody seemed to know her, yet she fully determined to see it over and unmask with the ret at 1-' o'clock. Now a dashing young cavalier asks for her hand 'or the coming waltz, ami sue accepts. Thev whirl away, and she says, -Do ou dance often?' blushing behind her mask at her boldness. -Very often. replied the cavalier, and added, 'not often in Springfield." 'Vou do not live here, then, said the little domino, mustering up courage to .say. 4I would live here, or at the ends of the earth, to be near a little black domino that I could mention.' said the cavalier. This was too much for the lady, but she was in for it, and would fight it out now come what would. They danced a wait together, and when the circle formed, just before 1 -J o'clock, they unmasked, when, to the horror of Mr. he found that he had been dancing with his own wife. The scene that followed can be imagined, and we will drop the curtain on the lecture which followed, but will sav that it was not on temperance. An Kloqucnt Peroration. "Leaving Solon, the great Athenian law-ghcr, and ascending the stream of the centuries a little farther, we reach a name which has come down to us thro' all the intervening ages, encircled with a halo of glory uiidimmed by time. I know that your hid conceptions have outstripped my tardy utterance, and that you have already pictured in your in'uiifs Moses, descending from Mount Sinai, bearing in his hands the table of the law -the perfect law of liberty.while his face is gleaming with the radiance of heaven. Rut if I had the genius of a Raplud, I would paint Mill another scene in the life of Moses. I would throw him upon the canvass and fasten him there in undying colors, as he stands before the judges of Israel, charg ing them in loving words, saying: 'Hear th.i curses between your brethren, ami judge righteously between every man and his brother and the stranger that is with him. Ye shall not respect persons in judgment: but ye shall hcarthesinall as well as the great; e shall not be afraid of the face of man, for Hie judg ment is God's; and the cause that is too hard for you, bring it unto me and 1 will hear it.' No one in any age or country has ecr drawn a liner portrait ure of 'judicial integrity, wisdom, pa fence and firmness. If I had Milton's fervid fancy I would follow Moses as he goes up from the plains of Moab unto the mountain of Nebo to the top of 1'isgah: and I would crystali.e him in immortal song, stand ing upon the top of Pisgah. with his eyes undiinmed and his natural forces unabated, looking across the turbid Jordan, upon the sweet fields and flow ery plains and fertile alleys, and ver dant groves and vine clad hills and hoary mountains of the beautiful land of Canaan, until his far reaching vision takes in, in the dim distance, the blue waves of the utmost sea, as they roll in, and dash and break up the rocky shore. The deep sea and its tumultuous billows fittingly portray his grand ami stormy life. The transporting, rapturous scene, spread out before him, is a type of his everlasting home. I would not wreathe his brow with a fading chaplet, for he wears a starry crown. I would not sound his praise with the music of cym bal or organ, for he strikes his golden harp in concert with the songs of the angels. From a Lecture by lion. G.W. Dunn, of Richmond, Mo. Cleopatra's Needle. Cleopatra's needle is at li safe on the bosom of Father Thames. In this age of incessant novelty, the old niono IiTh docs not create the sensation that its history and antiquity would seem to warrant, except of course among the well educated. Tb- -ivor rjiU tion evidently regan' it with smu-JS akin to coiite-npt. think it. and Us cylindrical case, ugly things to, .,n'Ke so much fuss about. The- would have hmtrhetl to scorn tl-- lotion that could ie"inoiiumef nave spoken it would have told of a time when even the re markable Briton was no better than an American Indian, if so good. An amusing enecdote was told in one of our society papers hist week, of the replv nuufe by a flunkey, when told to stump a letter for Egypt for his employ er, which throws a light upon the cool reception of Thormes' pillar. "Egypt!" exclaims James, "why, that's the place where Joseph lived," as if any one in his mortal senses could believe in such a place now!" There is a? much difficulty in arranging about a site for the -"needle as though we had Cleopatra herself to house. It and Temple Bar are the subjects of much searching of mind just now in this re spect. London Letter. The 1,-iltoratorv of It Sysf citm. The stomach is the laboratory of the sy"' in which certain mysterious oro?-; ',."::, stantlv going on. These l; itP.T tif" tion of'that wond wyfi"S .Ht the blood. which " 5l,l" L "lallu umivs laucii -nli t- :-uents of vitalitv to the remotest parts of the svstem. But when the stomach is semi-paralyzed by dyspepsia, blood manufac ture is carried on iinperfectly, the circulation grows thin and sluggish, and the system suffers Fn eousequence. Moreover, indigestion reacts upon the liver and bowels, rendering the first sluggish and the latter constipated. The brain also 'suffers by sympathy, and sick-headaches sleeplessness and' nervous symptoms are engen dered, ilostetter's Stomach Bitters reforms this state of things, gives permanent tone and regularity to the stomach and its associate or- pan, th? Nrcl and lfrer. intl esnrw com plete nourlf hment nl incTw' vlor of tb ftrm It J- the popular rll a the tf.t cfflcicnl a nil -dyspeptic and tonic la America. THE MARKETS. NEW YOUK. twf rtti . ., . . lltC -Uv ... Sh"-p- IJie I1 I t S 1 s H Ti t 1 "IS a t .-s 1 w t: c!2 23 KKar " io CTrtc . . . Wfcr:- V 3 iW Com-W'r .irrn salted . . . .. . 0l Wr.tern. ViC Itottrr lrfc Srv llr , I.nJ . CHICAGO. IlwTi1 CJwlee llust . . .. .. ...... Sherp -iU" thte i:ttT -Cinder to Vetfow... Ktv Ktour Wliil r sp'lBjr Kttr "Vhrn-sprtSiC No. 2 ("'iro So 2 !: So. 2 I!' So 2 Prk -!. Sew lUrlrr No. 2 ST. LOUIS. i:--.'Cttte Klr to Obolec 1 !; Hoar-Kill XX Wtirt-No 5 I""J l'rn- No. 2 ot l.y o. X . . .... .......a. ......... .... It ICC 4 s te i n 3 a k i ) 3 X Ct i'.x 31 A' i 1 i UJ is V 1 U-S.J 1 '- l CH 3 ii : is im u i ) I j i (.:? t ss ' ( it I ! 4I( ! tt 2 10 si V-0 3 s n I li H I 22 3 H S I'orfe-Mv Lrl CINCINNATI. Flour Wl.rat-11 Com ii'i Itarlry .) Porl: L.iru- . Flour Whrat-No. 2..... Corn Oat. Hurley No. 2 lip. KT Flour- WlioI-.a!' Whrst Ni '.,... I urn 0: Harl.-y I- V Ituo.r H..i: Cuttli- Ti 32 Vs ft) & M.J1 (II u 7 r M I LW. UK EK. (til 9 d t.1'4 w IS PESMOINKS. 1 ') 7 2 ". .Ji ZS i.r If 17 1- t 2sjA 11 3 ID C 3 2S ft m Itllloiianraa, Ilritclurhr and purr lllol each of ttifiii done away with, tf you w JII take yulrk'i. Irirh Tea. Price ' cent, ix-r pac'a-acr No Mork of drill's U romnleti which ilo.-e not incluilc KHiTt'h Kxtrart of Tar and il! Cherry. It I- the hi-st remedy known for roiu"h, coMs and all thront and Iuri disca.-i-f. Then- N no earthly boon more pm-lon- than irood health, and It'lii'lionvi-s it x-eM.r to endeavor to retain it. If vou are availed with Mich provoking ills as Mck headachi-, torpid liver, Miiir stomach and a general feeling of weariness and dhgu-t, don't go and com mit suicide hut take Kilcrt'p Daylight Liver Pillfi and he cured. Mothers ".vill find Dr. WfnchHIV Teething Svrnp jut the medicino to have in the house for the children, it will cure eoldr, coughs. Hire throat, and regulate the iowel. try it. iii.i.tiiioi,i- itrc'iir. Ilclmltold's Itucliu has long Ihth known as one of the most valuable medicines attainable in certain claw, of disease, such as dv-pe" sia, chronic rheumatiMii, dropsv. ciitaneoii af feetiiins, and especially affections of the uri nary organs Asa diuretic, it i superior toal most any other medicine in use, and the great care with which it is prepared, the absolute purity of the preparation, and the diligence used 'in the selection of the crude material, have made it known far and uid as a reliable and effective preparation, and one that Crin al wav.s be used with safety and benefit. The great success of HcImboId'h'Btiehu has led to the production of many spurious preparation, which are made cheaply and placed upon the market to be sold on the reputation acquired by Helmbold's original preparation. Parties u ho desire a real I v gixwl medicine should be careful ami u-c Helmbold's onlv. None genuine unless in steel-engraved whin wrappers and my proprietary stamp atlVxed. Sold lv all druggists. Price $1 per bottle or sifor. Medienl diMil 104 South 10th St rhilailelphia, l'a. KheuiHiiti-m, neundgia, sprains and bruises will be relieved by 1'ncIeSam's Nerve and Hone Liniment, sold by all druggists. IIiii ll'Hlitiilioii. This is becoming alarmingly serious in our midst. It is depicted on the countenance of hundreds of ladies who are struggling through life. It is -ecu in the dull flash of the eye. the languid laugh, the hcavingsigh, the nale cheek the feeble walk, the dull intellect, the palpiu ting heart. Yes, he is detitute of health, and the family is almost destitute of a home. Sci ence and Chemistry have combined a reined v. quick, (Mm erf ill and never failing, whicSwill regulate her whole system, ami cure her uli and pains, will build up and restore her health, strength and huouuicv. The article is !hwii a ""ngJish Female Hit ters. and sells at one dollar. L. II. Hush, at Dcs Moines, can give all information. Du. Wisiiakt's 1'in'k Tiu:k Tut Cokiuai. po-dtivdv i'i nr.s consumption. Taken in time it will prevent it. All affections of the lung are cured by this sovereign Kemedy, which al so eradicates dviepia, and kindred diseases. Sold bv druggist. DejMit, lipi Filbert street, Philadelphia. Twin Biiothcks YntST always makes gixd bread. Tin: Bkt in tiii: Woim.ii. This assertion jiistlv applies to the celebrated Fanning Mill manufactured by A. P. Dickey, at Marine, Wis. Kverv farmer who is so fortunate as to possess one of them, we doubt not, will give his en dorsement as to its superiority over all others. At the Centennial Exposition 'in ISTli. its merits were so conspicuous to the !est judges, both in this and foreign countries, that Mr Dickey has since sold from 000 to 701) fanning mills in England and Australia, and the dcmniid for them is coiitantlv increasing. At the Centen nial it received the highest award. It cleans the grain so thoroughly, separating the differ cut kinds .itul grades of grain and seeds completely, that it will pay any fanner to lim it, owing to the better price that grain cleaned by the A. P. Dickey mill will command. The superiority of the A. P. Dickey Fanning Mill docs not consit alone in the perfect manner in which it performs its work, but also in the i' of operating it, and the beauty and eyf'"'! , of it.s construction. It i made'of t- ' - ii material, and is therefore dur--,e" , -J.1; ,; ' Dickev will ship to ' iHir.ia-er a im i . r est riilnvul de- or any of their anthor ized ag, nt.v.t the manufacturer's price, free of freii-'"- charges. ifuff Ixadrr. I.oiin'ake. Willi Fruit. Two large cups of powdered sugar, one and a half cups of butter, stir to a cream, live cups of Hour, with three teaspoonfuls of Dooi.kv -Yc.vsT Povdkk, one cup of sweet huH", nan pound of raisins, two ounces of citnm cut in small pieces, one jrrated nutmeg, one wine glass of wine, one of brandy, eight eggs. lil the Hour with the milk, sugar and butter, tlie beaten volks of the eggs, and then the whites well beaten, then tic wine, -"ie" anil frui it: make this into o lo.-.-; t'ake slowly one hour. - A lVixc I-ncH. "Deacon Wil.K.r, I w.,r .win tn tll m bowr vou kept vourself and family so well the past season, when all the rest of "us have been sick so much, and have had the docters running to us so long!'' Bro. Tavlor, the answer is very easy. I used Hop Bitters iu time, and kept niv family well and saved large doctor bills. Three dollars' worth of it kept ns all well and able to work all the time, and I will warrant it has cortyouaiid most of the neighbors one to two hundred dol lars apiece to keep siek the same time. I guess yon'Il take my medicine hereafter." See other column. - AT THIS SEASON of the year Coughs. Colds, Hoarseness, and other affections of the Throat and Lungs prevail. Madame Zadoc Porter's Curat ive"Balsam is a valuable remedy. No familv should be without a bottle fa the house. It is onlv "25 cents, and will be found worth as manv'dollars for the cure of the alxwe complaints. It is for sale by all Drug gists. Rheumatism Quickly Cured. "Durang's Rheumatic Remedy," the great Internal Medicine, will positively cure any ease of rheumatism on the face of the earth. Price $1 a bottle, six bottles. $5. Sold oy all dni""ist. Send for circular Helphenstine it Beiitlv Tvggists, Wellington. D. C. Sold wjiou ife in Burlington and Pes Moines. It Ii Maid That the "coming child" will use Lacock's "Worm Killer. It is no doubt true, because mothers have stopped giving any other medi cine for worms, now that they know that Lay cock's Worm Killer excels them all in safety and efficiency. Pleasant to take. Twenty-five cents a bottle. Sold by all druggists. Pinkerton, the great American detective, has a world-wide fame in arresting thieves and rob !ers. but the extraordinary iiTiwer and eth'cacv of Dav's Ague Tonic overall forme of chdls is far more widespread. It it-rapidlv Liking the place of quinine and all iher chill remedies, because it does not contain quinine or other H)ison. produces no unpleasant syaiptoms,sct6 finely on the liver and bowels, and never fails to e'ffect a" entire cure. Il H. Busi, Des Moincansupplv all demands. J yim Milter Rrinrdy Known rn) to ( artcr Fx'r-r. imin M Vr "-V Inr op cnkl ifulri-t'rH rwoi t-i. t brc 'tdf harV. '?- .if t-- -" a ' j to-, UJI of tir y -u4. no;s ".'. j nrck, rtc "A tWog "f tsti'T i a " fuffrf'" snl I yea dlre 1-ot aJ Utttv cmihtnml U gTfatfr rTtMtJ than r !. rrTBH hrt-r ynu f Cml tt la U 'i' (.MkltuC tOTC. IU.ttf.T-, (VittChv CiW, Terf & of Um dl" htrt H . tUr. Shn ! H-r ! P'ollrT ari- rt Wt tr mM .rrir ttf anl ruri kwr Btttil wirMMa ditin P-It .wntiriliitttr"oli44ilrtJ' -.1.1 by A;: .Irucgl"-- Carter' I.iti !.lf Pi'l '" s Homrfn'Mc :-il'-t i-l - t" t- tligar . . rt'.1 'if t' ii IO I H " ' ' " f''l. !0 r i voin:.v '. . t f e Pa .hi on i Mr- -J. . ' V- w- 3-is: -, i.i:oi.tn:rtiAiiM yeuf fll .tigrr n.v -.ji'- ,roliTriilun ni ' 1. . l "i t - T . ... .iif r '.r . 4jm utM Tie CompeoDtl Orps Treatmrs! yntiirr ' J , 6 r ?'; lt,r ' 7 lr i ku "fom&f.Mf t-!. T s . s I.'wKt 1 - t- i 111--f.. -, -. JIT T-- llr. hTlltl'KVAIMI.KV ."a-.1: I" !. Oi-Tii .-J i - of "! I M T). : i '". f?..rsl Y Slilril(Trll. t drt.tK It. WfUUtWOlt'I'll . s. ; . i AWMINGS, TEMTS, Wiilrisi,,ri r. Sl-jwa. !!! Hhui1r Ar vr U-V.J .V- llv K Vtl IINIWIHIK .u.t."7"fc si.,T7ft-iir. s " fi... CHARLES rvlUNZ, ALL EDS OF BRUSHES, M.lrlilir- (r'( I tijrl , ,. . i a: ' P ". fci ' " i Hni a - t t tn r-. I " ! 2162 Couler Ave., Dubuque, Iowa. : - e llKr.n' l.Krw r s 1 FA Extra Laree G I'alil ' tfr' -r ' um.'i; on !' r ' "" I t .ii. h .' 1 r It 7nU N ,.-.. T ..v I - m irn Hnrlitl mill t nii'iml .iniii.l.ii. fo c l, -4- . " ln iHl' ll.ia. li. ' . s ' t r - i . I i ! . . ' AMI'ltll IMM II ..! I.-. . ! ( r,i , ., JjIm k-;M 1 Mi.f i. vnmpiiitxiM' .ttt ' i -r. Th I i .. nti . n ij t i CHEWING TOBACCO CIIE"Vi" gtM ATC H LESS ! riMvr im t ; Tint i - II ' " lll.'l II. Ul, i.,, rraj mil I K i. Ml II III lit. 3T "t l I V , : A ' ' J?TV I I Vmi.thi.. . V: 4ACo ' - !-. iii ni.-... LirruAiiRicHTiVest Pocket GaiHng Gun. tlrfls Q V Kl- I'i- s.fn'1. . . M I' r 5i ,)V. Vf ' I" . k I r.. '.. I s ,rV$tJyt'V ) '.N t s ,,! . .. I , r TRAC HIKH i-Es- r f . t i.i. icii.iii riui est SEEDS kv pu II I lie i c-li-r "ill relui.d Wariaiili-d in e A. lie-h V ciit I'xiirc-o iailorl mail. i'inl tor r.eaiitifiit free IlluMra- t'ii .ecil Catalogue and (tanlcn (.uidoA admire undrcd ut tin e ui:ra mir. Addri-sA. It. II. Slll'MWAV ItOLKKOltD, II l.I.NOIH. J YSffjifffil th'r Klilnrya. ItliiiMIi-r a .1 I rlmtry Or- .. . tir ir.Dit ,ii I'll mm ! a '! hum " - a SUiia. Iliuili ncniriyninjrtjivno.', i ir.j'rm riiirrMi) I run ,ar .. -a --. ii i -urnl tIMMia i i ri i - a at i-.i -r ju . , I. C.arkr inilf r I. I I ' u aMi- j -t ', rour ilns-z t :ni'fitrit ' ! ! I t j u. MillStone and MIIIFurnishing Factory GRIST MILLS r r l km II BURR STONE. I tt:iii J i r rs M'U for" XI IHIO ur P -'. M ' f r1 f-' i r. s.l ! ' ' .W ' rr, Irt' f r,.i JS!. r'.'i M hi lit ' 'a. '! . r ' i, i" ", " k ' I 'f " "- - . - jrolnlvo a ""l KORIIVKK.1- ''theWORLD ,u Hilit Ananl at Conti-nnlal. IM"" l!tV TUB A. V.DICKEY FANNING MILL No koo1 Farmer can afford to mir- c-- ra n rar'i.r'r-af " i'irr Trr rw -u? I?- t;rt ff.l in dirt a co.i-'--'- r Ta. Adilrvhb. A. ". DICKEY. Uacin, WU Important TO FARMERS t a. i u-)l ' ? - r - - a - ' '. i:-hrlIll B, Ii ' ' . i " "' " "" can c f i'-. 1. ".V "Wii'i lit - a-i W : "!' isrvlr- frt-i-i. "' -' -""a ninn l'un .i"v ii!'. "r . . .at ' '-n! ip h "' r ' of " r ,ja -; ' -anyotl. r ; rirc h af W fJ" ' VI" t ni a f. ; r.ui n -"-' 'i . r ' -char.i"i ruf -I' rrrc It-il fn-mrann i:i:"m whfji I rl-! i-sij an i- - rti if pr!r.lf alfSS I T v ".rlKh M tic-.ir. !- p r mt-' . Knm.l M WiMIani.Mnr.K. Ini T! -two buhp!. of i:ui.in Wh-at I lKn?l'f f v.iti .it jpnnsr . "r,' B i ncrr. inw whlctll hnrv sji-.i ' n. I 'ilt' o'l: r v.nrVM,... !aJ I ThlnV h- .u-.an vliM.d 1 mWf that ut .W wb" 1.T 'fsnu I: l:a!trac:f-. awrw " riwii 1 b-i. of ! ri 1hi. (:!' r arirt' vl ! : A t ri'tn W o 3' lwh-H r crr " KTn IIrinl VTrm. "r,irarT'T' M'-.n. Tli " huh-l f Whlt- Uii.'ai wf. st I puTh3-d la" -prln ."' -I cm "' am of Mml. aad I harit il ii bwL i'"- of r(wJ hpt .srnd stamp lornrrBH'.wrn iim pi'r j"ar and x-rc-.3l' amp'-of tfctr i 'itcaro. i r. f-w fca s" . TEXAS ommissions in .' '.) . : " - .. - ,- . I fZi . Vsi, ytZiyt I TV u.i 4Bs & Jam.j4 .rtk -ilKP-?!fc-.-V)nV4 rjvrsi2rs..,r-D r. IfNtf1'-? ' '-' 7f' -- 'r.v w i . yCrr-iti ts.V M I I III! J SI7s t. "sC.;V .V.Cr- '-JS i WDf 9flIWk& WErnER .n ojmmKwi rn i ''i.' "li " 'i i i r ii;i i' . ' 'ill - s. l.ll'l ' t r . l-ill, s f ,- l '. i i. leu, i i . e-rTSi?s. VrVI) Va W fccirmyr-. -sl SSA3' .sKfi &? e2m. -?PAAmmmmWn sii-1 , -fjCvMrN yyzrai t';)ii h r..aml I fi" "' " J "r KniTi" "' "" AMi-t.HnaMi.CTv.( o. v-.V. ' Mv Whit.- i:nMan "VTwa: rlrMci AV. " HTITT. Z UXf -s K5r -tj --'f v. 9 rfic " t fit' Trtt " l--Ms rfBBt'Q I I YBf -?0 I I iMmmmmmx''J" I BaaLaV I aH Km - Q II aaaaaaV " B H II iMmXmmmW- ' 0 (I mKB ? K T- ' -'j - tir Hj" - miti.iiintr i i rr r -t - ,': 'I f t -1 nr .aiwrllwr. 'K:.. - t mt " s ai fto. a&4 . I- ;, ya,r- -4 J - it i.st i im. n sKiiirr. --. " a, tll V- m - a. t- m M- ".....-. ii i j -. - . & i .Mr, tk FiLEPSfaffi t r . t r .ii 4 .- mmtmik j.k im:t- Tt-iiiKIIg AiU s P;. ?.-V.s? TIIL L: LAT FAMILY LINIMENT. Soft- T ifoi!. La-e Uj:V S. ra.it B-e. t ' B.i'n li ter j-d Ftier Src Thi-rv I M MilII It a III NOT III l, NO I- UN It mi!! Nlll ! IIIII I , i 'lit; imperial Egg Food! ,-&. mr' . uii.i. m 1. 1: n ic iii:nj i. v. $aF j. '! a mm. -i T- -sLaaaffiMia zsrjMnn W " F f ""SaT P f 1" mmm-E Wmt Jt ii. f i t J r "3 ia 4 " Lk 4afaaWaLa3 rii -:'. rrk7eA. w m ma 3&i'-1ZZi'Z" i'i iTi mmgmmm . ib r i.t i i li-v s.- -m-mmw jr,-, :-vjkA.aaac- i- -J-tZ J - tW a r r . - , II ' ' k 1 ' I i a' v a J ,.," i - k.'-i M ..1 . I - i . ' ' t ' I. ' ,l.,i.'l .; f . - - j I... . ..M It. -LOCAL A (HINTS WANTKO- ' II1N A Hi '! Haifi-nt. fvtin U liiilrmli- ki-iiIi I- I M AlN. Ik. a " I liSi)A i il Kn k J' t ' c r ' l-.irk-' f r i i 'r;C t ;.'! ) I. . l Ma 'n Inf. I') t.w iKi:in:i.n.i ro.. II s- I r.. ruic h i.i: it v a i.i. iiki uiiiHTi. BHUHGTilN HAWKEYE ! AMD BAWKETE HAP FOR $2.00. Till HWII l .lt..r. ... ..' l!.r nri. 1,'lf.rl JJ ' ' " -r -! .VMiS Wry' I'ViiTHrr" ' Ain ii l iljii f vl 'ii ! .rl ali'l ..f . i :ii I. i' .1- Js, . in- . rr " .1 . f. . r n-l lani'.l)'.! ( i i . 'i.. r i ' .' ' at I'lrriiliUliiii - . i ' jfc . I ary r.liiii...iif '-larTi'. " i '- I.I i it'. . i. rtii.iii ffir. upon l !e!i . f it, . . w . ..ii ..IT. r in. .iiiiiiilin BnrliEiElon Bawteye - M TliK I'll alKli: I'lIMII'll - - Mi 11IK. ii t i4i:i i: m ti - - - All liirVJ.IIII j..,..nl.I. M litis. Bnrliogton HawKcye - - S2.QP IB tltl,i:s:i U.-. klxorMunUily - o0 ii 14 i.i: b: ii i ... All lor t.(IO ..i.tiil.l. Bnrlnton htil'vu,-r . S,, " -i-i!Vi: fi " rt.ir . pinlil. Hav.;keyn ? Co. Burlington. Iowa. ENTIRELY NEW ! .it st it'n:vri:i. THE FURST & BRADLEY IKON FKA.MKsn.KV PLOW 'J-s-1 With Stiililile Plo-Tor 1'rcakrr Attached. A maj- b- 4jc'?T'J It rrnVxllr-a SEVERAL WK FEATUEES NO OTHERMY HADE. dtM-Hf -r cf Far 4. Knu!r SULTulS-? 9ft'SPLOWS, BREAKERS, "''RAKES. HARR'dWf; e.T I i;1',," " 'tr ft."f. ii.vS:.u IC . ' Kl-KJT.V IJ1CA IILRV Mro. CO.. OSier, CJ Nvina Ir.a'3a s m CiilCMg-x. Il-.'oola. mmsmn us eiiDDEN pateib . r-. -.. mm nil J E3L . Being owners of AJHf-lBBaa.Hrk . i.oo I nB "3rSi- C &'i "? ' Lf22&5f&?&U jj t r ga "T T m JL m WaafHair''aVlaVIIia.aVlaVlaVM ST iv.'ss rA 4&?&A , , w"r'rT',ir" ' rlh'" I'EKFECT -o-r"rr of s fcrp If? ' ..ito crft.Ti:t t-qt HtTt l';''- l :f- f ' rr Iray'-.Z. to Jt lor ur !xr i'-nr p?rs-'' t -ntfr-. .-it.iniw, i --- -.- aMa. w J KSLar C"lr"tT' ...; uitnirirsi faients customers are in no Danr of Suits for ry rLmy. ., ... K . . . " dlcadtestanl.arr dealer, te tte yone. Tor EXAMINE! SS?. As they are WARRANTED To do Quicker I Better Bam.mq, To use Cne Third Less Fuel To Last Longer and Haye Double the Conyeniexces I of any other l.no of Sor in Arrt. mil unit . iti O l.cr. I..wt Agents Wanted! t i nri in i i 1 .1 It l IM. II V It II till M I I. I ti o : --.- .. V.-.. ... L. s4 v e in Nilf f.k.. I III I II s. HOPfBITTERS, tlrUl.l.r H.l . Ilfl.U hops, iii ii! . yt in: iiki: i) vii.: io . Vr, " ' I . . n s; -t I- THEY CURE !- ' -v i W m ' s . ! 'lt K' . N mm mi I .- lllMMtiriir. hi. ooo i a ;!. t ' I" t . .. -.. . . .a r -1 .. t t, ' a. '.,- ' I rn ".! Cheap:;. Zzrtz'. azi ::t. tr i j. BARRtTrq t-m ry SOAP! Illntl.nlrU 'r l Ml 'I i imsi i ni i.irr I - Ih Ih. ho r i n i ii i w nit i ii lll.t- II I.M. tc. I !.. 1 1 r .1 m, a . I i r 7 .'. . a. - .. II 'I II llltl I r H i 'a jr"l -f3 c RICHMOND CITY MILL WORKS, Itll II VIOMI. I Ml. xtttir: '"Mi - t. I'llMr s 0" r r ha- Wir.. Mm . -.... MH. t l.ilUv'. Gi: r.n.a . m il ,f ... r. A fral . a K 'f MfM "' . I u I H ' A Slii .. rv.t . a4 tr 1 - A FIX Itll II MON II """Vaa PAer Gun. PARKER BROS., i Graefenbcrg- Vegetable PILLS Have been acknowledged for ove Thirty Yearn to be a certain euro for HEADACHE. LIVEH COM PLAINTS, DISEASES Or DI GESTION, BILIOUSNESS. AND FEVERS Or ALL KINDS. Tbeo TILLS act with prcat tmldne. and will restore health to tboc mntrcrinrf from GENERAL DEBILITY and NEHVOUSNESS- Trice 25c. per Doc Send for Almanac. r (irat-fi-nlHTCo.rjri It.'aiU-St. N. Bl jr . - l iT-r- -. T'a4r !;- lira M ' ra .. imi I... -.r m,r r I l Ha ' '"! IJ .'. ..!' ln'ii Dr. A.(llllir Jr-wtwil ..f tri xid Aavrk ! -ft ." far tm . wa- '.7"-' ! !" K ""- ' tra.K''-.-. i ,jf4'l I - 'rni..f- a ' - tinn J?'Jf ircyi af lLt'rm- ''ale- a v ' '- li ru a- I'.r-t. '"' ."""7 "' iH.'awtK IIla-tratJ i!arne fiil. W ?. eh tad pili Lirlins. M ccta ; aaM n rwtjr coTcr., 2. r ;. Malol. M crU ; VTonmm' hooJ. 10 c-nta , Vna h-t, 2 c-W iKrcMnlr aexla!. by ma.L ."srivl r- r -i?a itampa.DK- .-Tni:K.tbj-TiiflxItos. .... & . .9 .JIU U TTT Ml C17 St. CHarJe at-!. .U !. H-. MARRIAGE SECRETS ra -t T ili(.H( ' IOWA lKI." WV' 41 ' JO IJ riW3milrm'Fm aaaaVtW" iaaaaaL 1 MkaV aaKF aaaaaaLaU 1 tataLfl ikfi ltM $2.oo Tr; u,i Tli- llr.l i.l M..l l.Ml.r tiun l ... Use Lnyties5 HsmiEcpat&ic Csnu Sjrtp. ;;:c';--;" -' " . t--i r r - . - , -. - -t- - r p r.. ME Vitl Al3 " asp 1 at. .,, K. am aiwi a lril s . a s r l 't V 's i ' - -. aura r ? a T ? - " TIJ . ! wm mm mv iZ 17. ''-. "1 II II .i.. - ' VftJ cr If 3 " - - - - a. xiii uxj ii inn iruiiiitia. -i " -'. the! First Patents,? ti ?!'" Infringement. " " w" u " jr w "J,M'il cwci t.i r au lul'rtiai fc IkS &, " JK.. Md ."" tr r 7tf i9HZ n