-MS".. ?zt-!SW, -1 -.J. : , .'.'Br v i e, 5 tA t FOu t .-- .... . P33C .- "" WAeJT. -VS .-j&Jfe-" . j e 55 ' "SMFjij. ft . " - j5r - -3. i.-T-"--' r . tip- : i fe i rngl Lefson - dMNMNHHM 1 Oarbtr.) DEALERS IK- Dry Gl Hate, Capo, Hta, Mho, CUtltiaa; e. At LOWEST Prices. Our large stock of new Goods will be marked down low. COXS AV2 SEE US AOT QET 3A1SAXHS. EALEY & LETSCW, KEl) CLOUD, - NEBRASKA. SPECIAL BARGAINS! at the Store of F.NEWHOUSE, KED CLOUD, - NEBRASKA. )o( A lnrge nlork of ftcminntown Wool, Zcjrhyn aiid Stocking Yarn, always on hand. SUMMER DRESS GOODS, LAWNS AND TERCALES IN GREAT VARIETY. TOYS for t'nc Children and Every thing clue you need, at NEWHOUSES Store. BIiACKSMTHIBr. (o) JOJTjYjYOYES Wishes to inform the public that he U prepared to do all work in hi line promptly and in a Workman-like manner. Horse-Shoeing AND PLOW WORK A SPECIALTY. Shop north of Mitchell & Morhart's o... KKnCr.onri.iNnR Samuel West, DKALKR IX Tobacco, Cigars, CONFECTIONERY. CANNED FKUITS, FRESH FRUITS, CRACKERS, CHEESE, ORANGES, LEMONS, AWD A. FUIX LIKE OF FAXCY ALSO A FIRST CLASS Ice Greim Parlor, Where you can always get a nice dUli of Ice Cream during thu Season. A share of Iho puhic patronage is respectfully solicited. First door south of Mitchell & Morlmrt's. Red Cloui, - - Nebraska. IDE. SHEBEB, Proprietor of the City Drug Store. a tuin m Drugs, Paints. Oils and Varnishes, A fair supply of LAMTSv LAMF SHADES, WICKS, COMBS BRUSHES &C PktroniK tliek d thukfallr rMciTti. "PrecriptIoM esrefaliy oyB4dt One door south of Garber's store; RED CLOUD, NEB. JR. L. TINKER. (SBceMter to O. A. Bwa-) DEALER IN Parlor, Bedrosm .AND KITCnKN FURNITURE, Brackets, Chromos, Picture Frames, Mattresses, Etc C ftu ftlwars m ImbA awl tnaavi mi aht n.tie. IVim at lew a ay ia tka VHr. Rcpairiac of all kiaAt ateaa acuaady aaa Burial Robes furnished rates. at reasonable . NEB. RED CLOUD,, Harness Shop, Y J. L. MILLER. taTaca cvatteau? aa aaa a MUm af HARNESS, J COLLARS, SADDLES.. '; HORSE-BLANKETS, WHIPS, COMBS, BRUSHES. DlVVNa SYTT An4 everything usually kept a int . class shop. TW 900BS NORTH OF THE BANK. a " 'wy?i " "faaBMEaV 'TWJ"Ji5BJ, r ,. - THE CHIEF. LOCAL MATTERS. THURSDAY. JUNE 8, 1882. Anita! Mi Ufrtmn t Tntm tat USa.a. 1&.m. fnwirt Aeim. Uvim. arriT , ..... , . A-J0 9. m. EAJTEKX DIVM105. lMtrAP Imtm. rrivf ,T MTif .MO.i Trstet DaOr iet fluUr. 4 , ,t A. Caupbilu Aw'l Sap't. Go to Mrs. McBride's for Corsets. Lots of Boots & Shoes at J. G. Potter'h. Sweet potato plants for sale, at Rout's. Cultivators down to bed rock, at SrAKooLK & Funk's. Largest assortment of millinery, at Mrs. McBriukV. Clothing and Hats cheap at J. G. Potter'h. Lane mitts in black and colors, at Mr. McBmde'ij. Brown fc Canton spring cultivator at SrAXoaij: & Fukk'h. Headquarters for stylish millinery, at Mus. McBKiDK'tf. Boots & Shoes will be sold cheap for cash at, J. G. Potter's. The new Quees Sewing Machine for sale, at Mr. McBride'h. Improved farms and raw land for sale by Simpson & Sweezey of Blue Hill Neb. Remember clean corn ground in sures a good crop, our cultivators docs the work. Span'ogle & Funk. Call and see the stock and prices of Boots and Shoes before purchasing elsewhere, at J. G. Potter's. Fox Sale: A few stands of Italian bees. Enquire at Marsh's store, Red Cloud, Neb. W. H. Baixard. The best is the cheapest buy the Norwogian cultivator and be convin ced. Sold only by SrANOGLE k Funk. The Rev. Geo. O. Yeiser will preach next Sabbath (D. V.) at the Congrega tional church morning and evening. subscribe Tor the chief ana get a cony of Kendall's "Treatise on tho Horse" free of charge. Sorry that "Rustic's" letter arrived too late for insertion this week, but we may use a part of it next week. Farm loans made by Simpson A Sweezey of Blue Hill Neb., easv terms and money in three days from appli cation. Mr. II. W. Ross savs that eum camphor pulverized and mixed with the feed is a sure preventative and a cure for chicken cholera. And still they go ! Must get rid of our cultivators to make room for our large stock of Harvester goods. Spanoguc & Funk. Loot: On Monday, June 5th, some where in Red Cloud, a pension certifi cate given to Samuel Bright. Tho finder will please leave the same at the Chief office and obligo the owner. Smith Brothers announce still an other important reduction in rate of interest on time loans. Straight nine, percent annual interest. Call at the Bank and leave your application. 8-40tf. Died. At his residence in thiscountv, May 22d, 1S82, Mr. August Reiher, who was born in Reith, Gcrmanv June 14th, 1882 and came to Amer ica in 1871. A widow and four children are left to mourn his loss. NOTICE. To the Board and Managers of the Webster county Agricultural Society. There will be a business meeting of the Board and Stockholders in Red Cloud on Saturday June the ICth, 1882 at 1 o'clock. All stock holders and those interested in a county fair are requested to be present By order of tho President. Married. On the evening of Juno 1st, 1882, at the residence of J. W. Sherwood Esq. (the bride's father) in the city of Red Cloud, by the Rev. Geo. O. Yeiser, Mr. Wm. H. Smith and Miss Bertha Sherwood, all of Red Cloud, Neb. The Chief was remembered in the distribution of the wedding cake, and extends its heartiest congratulations to the happy couple while wishing I them a long, prosperous and a happy life. Call on Simpson &. Sweezey of Blue Hill, Neb., and get terms and prices beiore buying land or making a loan on your farm. The B. & M. R. R., known as the "Burlington Route" offer special ad vantages to travelers. See thier advertisement in this paper. TAKE NOTICE. I have purchased the fractional J sec of land laying between Peter McNitt's and the river. And the public is hereby notiEed not to cut any timber oa the sane. M. B. McNrrr. ' A Stlifatfkl Kmltr. Ladies prefer Floreeton Cologne be cause they .find this lasting combina tion of exquisite Derfumes a dpliVhtfnl novelty. Now that good times are again upon ue, it is worth remembering that no one can enjoy the pleasanteat sur rourtdingaifimbadheakh. There are hundreds efatawahle people going het to-day with davardered ttoaaach. liter or Iridneya. whea a bottle of Parker's Ginger Tonic wokM do them More good than all the medicine thev hate ever tried. StAtedmroDaaabwfflte received bv the school board of district Ko. J7, ltAfclMforfculdinarainaB J noaeeuieaM tnetrict. Satf to he 30x28 feet 1 feet nana aad cpenfkatioaa caa he bycaumgMthe echo! hoard. The hoard reserve the right to reject any or all bids. 41-41 C. Maxzene, Director. : Jjr -. J"-J ol.?St,' L -- r v-1- l - '' saw MFT" -J MHHHHHHHHHal '?-.' - IEflEflNNH v- rEflNNNNJ will do next Friday. Read tbe advertieeaient of J. K. Attlts, ia another column. Charley Potter u up and about again, after a painful illness. The editor of this paper attended church last Sabbath evening. A large supply of printer's goods always on hand at the Chief office. Will E. Hahn. representing the State Journal Company, spent last Monday in town. Save up j-our nickles, boys, so that you can buy fire-crackers and make an unmitigated nuisance of yourself on the 4th. Blue Hill is preparing to celebrate the Glorious Fourth, with the antici pation of having a general good lime. We hope they will. How about celebrating the 4th of July at Red Cloud this year. Talk the matter up and let us have a celebra tion that will be a credit to the town. Hon. S. W. Switzcr, of Bloomington, was in town last Monday, presumably looking after his political fences in this vicinity. Wo understand that Mr. Switzcr will lc a candidate for congress from this district. There will be children's day services at the M. E. church next Sabbath, services at 1 1 a. m. At 3 p. m. a ser vice by the children and at 7.30 p. m an educational concert. The church will le decorated with flowers, birds &c. If that fellow near Inavale who an noys his neighbors by persistently borrowing their Chief will call at this office with a dollar and a half he can have a paper of his own to read every week for twelve months, and thms be able to give his neighbors a rest We are pained to announce the death of Mr. Robert Mitchell, who died of Bright's disease at 5 o'clock last Tuesday morning, after a protract ed illness. Mr. Mitchell has resided in Red Cloud for the last eight years, and has made a host of friends who regret his untimely death. He has been successful in business and leaves his family well provided for. An effort is being made to revive the Agricultural Society of this county which has been indulging in a Rip Van Winkle sleep for several years. This is a matter that the farmers should all be interested in, and which, with a little effort on their part can be made a success, and we hope to see them Lako hold of the matter and push it forward to euocess by having one of the best county fairs this fall that has ever been held in the state. It can be done, and the farmom are tho ones to do it. Will you take hold? Waather Oaaarvatlana Mentha May, l far tha No. of clear days 10. No. of cloudy days 11. No. of stormy days 10. Rainfall 6.44 inches. Highest temper ature at noon 84 Lowest tempera ture at noon, 4i Mean temperature 63. Prevailing winds, north-east and south-east. Light frost on the nights of the 12th and 13th. The rainfall for the months of April and May amounted to 13.20 inches. G. W. Knight, Obs. We notice that a few papers in this congressional district, notably the Qaxdte-Journal of Hastings, has com menced to make a fight on James Laird, presuming that he will be a candidate for congress this fall. Mr. Laird is a man of unquestioned ability, and as such is entitled to a fair con sideration should he be a candidate for congress, and whilo we have had occasion to censure him for a part wo supposed he played in the local politics of this county, we recognize in Mr. Laird a man well qualified to fill the office of congressman, and unless a better man for the position is brought forward the Chief may be depended upon as one of his most ardent supporters. Decoration Day was olserved bv Garfield Post No. 80 Department of Neb., G. A. R. In accordance with rules and regulations of the Depart ment Headquarters, G. A. R., assisted by the public schools and citizens of the town and vicinitv. The column was formed at 1 o'clock p. m., headed by the Post, next Union soldiers. public schools in charge of their teach ers, citizens on foot, carriages in rear of column, marched to the cemetery at 1:30 p. m. Decoration services by the Post. The craves were then deco rated by the Post, schools and citizens. The Post marched to the M. E. church and Rev. J. M. Pryse of Blue Springs, Neb., delivered an able address, after which the boys sang the old favorite "Rally Round the Flag Boys," then marched to the armory and dosed. Worthy of special notice among the floral contributions was a Garfield family group in black and tint, in a superb walaat, gilt edged frame, 18 by 24 inchs, each portrait encircled with a beautiful wreath of Forget-me-not's and in the margin at the top was in scribed in aeat manuscript "A Senti ment, Artistic and Floral contribution, to decorate the grave aad commemo rate the virtues of the Appointed aad Disappointed Comal to Chemnitz the late lamented Hon. H. 8. Ealey, of Red Cloud, If eb. Prmiatad at the first Decoration Services beM ia Red Cloud Cemetery Stay 30th, 1882." In ceater of left margin was in scribed -A devoted huehaad, an iadal ges.bther;asid friend; a mhhJal cowaceUor." Asm m ceater of right margin "A tree Patriot; ajarave aal dier; estssmed ia fife; ia death lamsaleaV Aadia'ccatar ef taMern margin "T Lis hareaTad feauly this anawe m eaecooaately dsaJcaUd bequeathed by friendly rtsA. ' - il Tfc Red Ooo4 A, ry 1st. J. X. Tryst, af triiIaIsdeaasd,aUy)h---St- J. "Man," said the graft old Hobbes. "is a fighting animal." He might as well said that he m any other kiad of animal, a worshipping animal lor in atance.for man is a manyaided ani mal. .But it u ducred it or disgrace to him, 'under the condition of hu growth to be called a fighting animal, when we bear in mind that Moaea in his song of victory declart that "Jeho va" the almighty maker of man, "is a man of war." If in its origin and causes and occa sions or conditions, war is evil, it is not all evil, lu character w deter mined by the purpose for which it is waged. It ia good or bad lawful or wrongful according to the motive that impeU to it, and the object sought to le gained by it. If thct motive be brutish pugnacity or the mere love of IHjwer, or a false senio of kingly or national honor if the object be the establishment and spread of power or dominion, the acqui.-ition or extension of territory for the gratification of ambition, greed of paasetttiou or the Hvengcmeut of fancied grievance, affronts or indignities to a monarch or a nation. Whether the motive be a savage thirst lor blood, love of glory or comment or greed of gain, the motive and the end are bad, and the war itself wrongful and evil. But waged in self-defense, for the preser vation of life and liberty and lawful possessions, or in a word, waged in vindication of eternal right it is need ful and lawful and right. The right of a nation to wage war in self-defense or self-protection is predicted on the right of each and every individual in it to employ physi cal force and material weapons for self-preservation, involving the Bafety and preservation of all those who are naturally as endeared thereto as his own life. If one of these be lawful and right the other must be likewise so. For a nation consists of individ uals and if it be lawful for each to act in tome given manner individually it cannot be unlawful for any number great or small (a family or a nation) to act in the same manner conjointly. And the right to self-defense, I might say the duty of self-defense is based upon the right to life and liberty. The right to protect life and liberty or self-possession is neceuarHy implied in the right to have them. If a man has a right to the life and tho liberty wherewith his Maker luis naturally endowed then he has a righLJn order to the protection and the preservation of the same to resist every aggrewtion upon tho samo by every means within his reach, at any and every risk of consequence to the aggressor. This is plainer than reason or common sense it is sound animal sense. There arc evils in this world greater than war or than tho forcible taking, or self-surrender of human life. Be cause the value of that life is not in trinsic but conditional. Wrong ever uppermost in the world, right trampled under tho feet of tyrants tho niayes of the people subject to perpetual oppicors, bereft of their liberty, in peril of their lives and doomed by their oppression, the Cains and Nimrods, to hopeless toil in extrcmest penury and want for sujh port and gratification of the few would on every view a worse condi tion a greater evil than war for the purpose of human emancipation. War is due to aggression and the disposition among men to aggress on human rights, and the aggressor is to be held to account for it, and be made to run all the risks and bear all the consequences thereof. But for ag gression on the natural rights of man kind, i. e. oppression and tyrany, such a thing as war would never have been known in the world. Talk of religious wars, of Christianity, audits, creeds, causing ware and filling the earth with carnage and bloodshed, it is all drivelling nonsense. It is a foul ma licious libel on that institution which has done more to mitigate horrors of war and to do away with it than all other causes put together. The men who brought wars about never thought enough of their religions and creeds to fight or to expose their lives to peril for them. No, it was something olse that kings and popes fought for something to them far more substan- .a a . - - uai ana desirable even for prestige and power and possession which they arrogated pretensively in the service of religion and the support of her creeds, and zeal lor the creeds was only the cloak the pretext under which they disguised their seifiah aims. Little cared they for the creeds apart from the worldly advantages which they made the popular rage for the creeds the means of securing. The Protestants and the-Puritants en gaged in war it is true, but not the creeds. The charge is a slander upon them. It was for the right of men to believe whatever they pleased or oeneve notnwg whatsoever if they pleased that thev fought. It wan their prerogative to ight for it Who would not fight for such an object? Religious liberty k liberty ia mat ters of religion, liberty ia regard to them whether creeds or cetamonies (liberty to iadividnels to act as they please in regard to them) aat'k is obvious at a glance that it implies involves civil liberty and every other kind of liberty. Liberty is liberty, an matter what it may relate to. For my religion aad creed I.woakl aever afht. There is ao need of it. Bat for my aberty-for my right to hold a reaipea era creed or not ta hold them-jast as Iseeit,IwoaId fight, preacher as I am. veaaearty,"esadftriaEf sa ass celahratad speech, caoai-oays are aa waat to '"Give sac liberty or give av I weald never have made such a silly exclamation if I had been in hit ttrad. bat rather Give me liberty or III giTe yon death. While therefore a proneneas wilt exist among men to en croach upon the rights of one another, there will be war. While man ia prone to aggrrssiou upon hi fellow man, to rob him of the frail of his industry and of his right to labor for the benefit of himself and family of hk labor, and in certain cases, of his fife, there will be, there should be, ought to tie rwmtance unto blood. War will be lawful and ncceaaary. Such is the nature of mau and such the condition of his development tli at but for lawful war, rolitanrc to tyrany and oppression, such a benefit as liberty could, as far x we can sec have never been attained. uch thing as freedom in thinking, believ ing and acting would not be now enjoyed. The atato of society would be at present what it was wout to be ages ago, tyrany and oppression ) consiating of two classes, master and slaves, oppressors and oppressed, the one altout as mean and bac and con tetnptablc as the other. The lamen ted old sage, Horace Grccly was com pelled to acknowledge after a tour through Europo and a ricw of the etatc of society there that there was tome tue after all for powder and lead and steel. Hence, though war has it primal origin in unrighteousness and wrong, war is not all unrighteous and wrong it is not so on all aide. It hat an other side or aspect there can be such a thing as religious war. War may have tcen, and may bo a condi tion of good a benefit and a great beneGt to mankind. And it ever war was such, the wars of our own country, the firt and last war which was waged thereby were clearly aitd indubitably of this type or character, the first for liberty and independence to our country and nation, and the last for the life of tho nation and for liberty to a large class of its popula tion. And the one was necessary to was the complement of the other. Of little value or avail would have hcn the first without the last. Thu last was necessary to the vindication of tho last or for our justification in pro claiming and in waging it. Because if our government had not resitted to the bitter end the attempt which po litical demagogues and traitors in the south had made to rend this I'nion in sunder and establish their own inde pendence in eternal perpetuation of human bondage or slavery, or had we through remissness or cowardice al lowed them to succeed wc would have stood before the world convicted of unworthiuess to be Tree and indepen dent ourselves, our war with the mother country would have been con demned as unrighteous and hypocriti cal as a gigantic crime against human nature. Nothing of which the nation could have done would have expeated that crime, or indemified the world for the blood which had been shed and tho lives sacrificed in tho conflict with Britain. No degree of national pros perity or aggrandizement to which we could have attaancd, no amount of cotton, rice and tobacco which we could have raised would have made that war pay. Our national life and history such ft in that case, our would have lccn. ttriild have made it there arc who challangc the position I have taken in this address, not Britons or Southrons nor abettors of the same, but northern Americans Republicans and even good christians who deny the right of men, cither as indiviluals and nations to self-defence or to employ physical force and mater ial instruments for the purpose, who hold the doctrine of nonresistancc to evil in all its integrity, who insist wc should succumb to every imposition and suffer every ill treatment rather than take up arms, carnal weapons in defence of themselves and their fami lies. In charging error of judgement we by no means question their sincer ity and purity of motive. We simply dissent from the construction they put upon our Savior's language touching resistance to evil and tho position which they deduce as a general con clusion therefrom. Wc think the construction fallacious, the result of ovestraining the meaning, and the position untenable, because flatly con tradictory to his utterance on the same subject on another occasion. It cannot be that He meant to enjoin on us a love for our enemies greater than that which we have for ourselves, that we should appreciate the life of a blood-thirsty villianmore highly then wo do our own, even when he is making a deliberately premeditated attempt on that life. Certainly the life of the innocent is as valuble to the universe as the life of the guilty and the tanner has as good a right to hi. life as a murderer in heart or deed has to his, and if so the farmer has a right to defend his life against the assaults of the latter, even at the cost of his life if necessary lecause incurring the risk or the forfeiture voluntarily and unnessesarily he alone is responei- xor it. ATue, our Saviour loved Hk enemies so as to give His life for theirs, so as to die for them by their own hands. Bat in that sublime self sacrifce He is alone the only one ia our world capable of it. And then He had the power which wc hse not, of taking again the life He had thai kid down. And we kaow that He stresmoasly adrooatedthe execution ef the crimi-aalcodeofMcaaoaaVran4oaV-ders ; aad that by His spirit ia the Apustle Ha declared that the execo tivwofthelawisammisierafGod fer that he is a terror fa evildoers haasareththa fasframaat of the sward, aotia vain. Aad if aftaakwisa ieiHir af Gal why is as ami other tarraat af tha kw, tag ailssar, whether amcar private, a mtmSJrr of Gcl in diRDg auWtantUUy the im? worVr. itb iarxliRg unrighleou acx?VMtoo upon human lives aod theme Can you designate the atuuiow of humn nzht now enjoyed by individual or nation which wm not wretcl by nuun (phys ical) force from the Iron jrxj of tj rany and npprctaaUMi, from the grip of tha Nimroda aad Pharaolu of ancient, and the Cliraleaea. and George ihc third of modem time or that not had to be purciuuod and paid for tu blood. Blood, the blood of either or both of the parties in tho contest ha alwar leen the pnee of human right, of human liberty. Every inch of prog roM in ciuhzation atd improvement ha been made in the force of UuUit opposition which had to be overcome by war. But for effective resutancc to tyrany and unrtghtcoat atnl irrational power, the world would now be in lle condition in which it totl immolt ately after the firat murder. What would have become of the world, wliat would the atate of ociety, of the hu man race now be if the freedom rol lers the Pharaohs of tho world, the marauding Amalckitc. and the bold aggressive Cananitcs had had their own way, and their nefarious scheme and plou, their dcpcratu attempts to reduce free people their guest to galling londage, to wrench from their hand the product of their toil and kill, and to iuvado their territories and usurp their dominion in violation and utter defiance of the mot oIeut:i and sacred compact made between the nations of the earth, hud met w th no sturdv and successful resistance "Hut" it may le objected, "could not more rational menu, such a the power of speech and persuasion, which ere now found so etlectivr have accomplished the purpoe witlu-it the shedding of human blood?" Tho power of free-apcech indeed How could it accomplish anything when there wai no chance to ue it, and what chance would there eer have occurcd, if something a great deal more pcruaivo and udectivu with tho priuintive tyrant of tho race in its barbarous or precivihzed condi tion had not been used with HFcct to make a wav for the exercise of speech T An was not speech in the most pcrauanivo manner tried to the utmost upon tho Chnrlcc and George's torien, and the JeiT-j of mod ern times, with what died wc know full well. As well miglit it have leen tried on a herd of wild bullalo in full flight with the view of arresting their onward course The objection to which no arc re plying reverses the order of human dcvelopcmeut, which took phiee in a slow gradual proccv from intiuct and intuition to reason and rationality ami human speech or the voice of reaon. Ere renpou and pcrsuaMion could exert an influence on mutt they had to be dcvelopod into n degree of strength equal if not superior to that of certain passion, which the iuttiurt of n'lf hood or natural pxsion for freedom, together with the intuition of human right had to resist and hold in due check by main force, physical force, in order there might be chance nnd cojc for the excrci-e of rntion.nl thought .mil speech, condition essentially roijuisito to their elocution. Became tho f tower of thought nnd speech are in the present state of human devel opment and civilization adequate to the maintenance of the entire of hu man liberty, if such Ik: really the ra-r, it by no means follow that thoy would hare been so at the inception of, or at a former stage in the proccs. To hold that the power of thougit when evolved could, prior to that, have created the conditions rcqnWic to its evolution is to argue in a circle, or to put the vehicle before tho draft force. There arc still condition in the world, i. c in other land than otir own, in which the only way in which thought and speech can be serviceable to the cause of liberty i a way pre paratory to the employment of phyti- cal force and material weapons, by arousing the oppressed people to a just sense of their natural tights and ahjo of their grievances, so they shall be induced to put forth eflbrta, the moat itrrnuou efforts, reaort to force of arms for breaking the yoke of their tyrants, bunting the bond of their thraldom and setting themselves ami others free. The voice of the people may suffice for securing to the people their jat right in countries like thu and England where that toice ha become mightier than that of mon archs and rulers, because the condi tions afford full rcc vent for it. And even then it is mighty as an evidence of the corporate atrength of the people in case of an ulterior resort. Bat for the ftrestige and backing which phy. cal power lends to speech leas cmjH be said about its might. And while we hope we are on the eve of tho bleseed times when, in the word of Holy writ "Nation shall not lift up swerd against nation, neither shaii they learn war any more," yet it caa not be denied thai war, especially th wars of our own country, hare playej an important part proved aa esea tial factor in preparing the way sir the advent of thoe times. Oar wan were not clannish brawla not wan with men as sch not wtfb Batata, not with the South, bat with srstl principles, with wrong in power. Soldiers of the Grand Army of the American SeaubHc who foaght m the kte Civil war, Commander of the Post, osacers aad privates, H is my pleasing province ia addressiatf; yo oa this aaapiooas occasion, to assara yow that y oar coadact ia the kte eas lict is fcJlyjattuled,that the logic af tsai skMaarat4e tark4SHhsaa UutlW of the Saatb tajr te approve it, that aba yoa have rendered iw is eVuy appreciate by all m. ail j thrswgbeat tae wand. IBesley & Divunt i. HARDWARE, STOVES. TINWARE, BARB WIRE, ETC. Rd01oad. ltbrmk. PUMPS AND WINDMILLS A SPECIALTY, All -wV wtmse4 t jjlvr JW t. HKSI.KY A rtlKICI.W, KKD CtOCD. SM Chicago Lumber Yard: Had Cloud. Nab: YARD SOUTH Of HAMrrON" Keep comtantlv on hand an awtrurnt of t.ntstar, Uth. Sblojle, lorat Window. 1.MUC. Hair, Cement 11ler, lluildiftg ltr Ktc. Ki Ku S-Mtf PLATT JON12S & MACJE13, DEALERS IX I.UMHKR. IMlTI!,SmNULI, 8A.SU, DOOM, !!!.(!!, 4& RED CLOUD - - NEBRASKA. DItY LUMBER A SPECIALTY. TIIK IH&T IN THK MARKET AND SOLD AT TUC LOWEST l'KICK. A f JONES & MAGEE. Go To W. Staple Fancy Groceries, -TIIK TOBACC IN town. ALso Choice Hut. Fruits & Confev asf-rramn rruiia ami cgeiauu rmui Davis Sewing Machine S0LDJ1V- MITCHELIa a MORHART, Reel Cloud, - - 3STobru.sk a. THK 1IBST .M ACII1.VK IN I'liK, AND DON'T YOU FORGE? IT. Meat Market Jo,, a a ttiiKt:, rnp AM. KIN1H lr Hut:, Suugt: k A r w a vc. nv U a vr u .. , - u., . UHW r CASH PAID TOR FATCATTLK. Moshcr's old Stand 388 SPANOGLE k FUNK. II E. IDQ U ART KRS FOR ' " AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS, Two Doors South of Rank, EEI) OLOXID. NEBBASKAJ REMOVAL FROM- CHICAGO TO -AN- Immense Stock MAilSH has Them, f COME! COME! COME! Uaa Lawranca ft MUAMJEIOU! lcxo KTX. t a Qart laaaasaaamamamaasamaamaamaasaa OOslOiaV OOHSJ WOm. Tliarwr wmummm isataa i asa. wm. i aaa a aaaaiaaaavaai mtammmmm aaavaaT. aaaaaaaia aiaaaa aaaaiwgaaaaaaaiiwwpii. j Mtta aaaai aaaaaavaa wmmt m wbibm MMmsUSfiSafmS rxitaaiaaaaaa tor asvaaasSsa, Saawawa mmm aaansasw sa ym awaaBaavaamatlVaESaVllBmmmm TtoTIUMaCMaflfC Febkins, aaaaaaawia km. HLACKMITH S!!01CX It.U KT. & FREES, Proprietors. H- B. ROBY'S FOR- 11KST- A CmAMS on loiiimiMion wfM REP CLOW, Nfcrf- f .imammttiZr IIOflK, FOt'LTRY, WUKHAC' - Red CAmtA MrK.. - --r 1882. 5 BaBaaaaa ' TTammmmmmmmfl & - J Jam? ammmmmmmmmmmmmP'amW'lsir tiamKMaaiBaMmmaaYJsM', -I J9.asammmmmmmmaisaammmmma9ammmmmmmmm n mm Basbt"" ammamavftaBitammaBmV - i mb aaraw" "aammmanaw" RED CLOUD of Dry Goods, 1 Martin'a Km atom Ww -mm m iwj4waMi MSSScmrrWi jdmibta, as.M sawaaaa af mm MMttf iMTi irrar tt i art try a0aY f ' V v s -, m aaaal tmmmm9 LVSCJUrt'ACtJ.TT an Sat Than at! JiwaaS SKm