The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, January 01, 1886, Image 7

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    ""riKWrn"': ' '-" '-
feffis&lkE'' . ;.:.":'-"ww -7Wr i?!aPW'
?ti?-'
sas.. -
'j 36S
, St '
as - .:ar
' ,- - r - M I, t . i r iranry . i " bj fir i i n M I I '" I "'" rii an 1 M 1 ! m
mMMWM
gcr)'g';r",j.,ii.''
., 1 1 miinf i4fjtii!.'w . af
ft
J
n I. i I iMh
m - i mi wwpw j ww ii m iwiwfwwhi
vBSrtv l3&' 3c&aB 35nPrfc3EBSBBBSraSflB?zSfca,TF ar - vsksa 9
. f .1 i JaBa"a""3KsBfeli? ImimS'&JZ.'&emM'm: mm L-3HBBlBBBBrnW -'
. -1 a. " -iav ." viwijp ,Bnn.g.-;v-v"
v&vsai"wK ASf-.. s? rts-t--rs " a.kvaaBBiM ;-. -T aar k.. iaHKaBHHBi - i
. - - , - 2" -- v
MjlW& wtiyp; 's:C viss " r"5. .vuBTKafBMBkBr bHbbk9KbbbbbbbbbbT m
itflfTTininJBnr . SE -- 'r. F BBBBBBBBBBBBBBBmBBBBW.. fllBE9i2a9HiiiH M.
-LwmTimTi " I - " - cHiHik nn IbW?IbbbbEI'Vbbbbb) M
im t t p. M -p - i'BJg''tBr,BBBBB .TMBra J-BbbF.bbbBbbbbbbbbbbM S,
bbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbbby fBrrliMMMWr ilim
m.
4
3
TEMPERANCE.
"
THE LAST ITEM.
A 84 Accident" to Oaa Who "Wu
Vnlreraally Uked, HalaK jj0 Trntrnj
Bat Himself".
It was early evening. The lamps
were beginning to shine out here and
there and men and women who had
finished their days work were hurrying
home to supper. The door of a ncal
litUe home stood partly open. A man
was near it, evidently just starting out
to begin his work.
"I am sorry you have to go back to
night work," his wife was saying. She
looked pale and troubled.
"So am I," he answered, "but never
mind, dear, perhaps it won't be long."
He kissed her as he spoke and went
out through the door. She looked after
him with her eyes full of tear;. "If
he should begin again," bhe said; "oh,
if he should!"
"Mamma," called a tall, slender girl
from the room, "come and tell me
what pattern to choose for father's
.slippers; I want to commence em
broidering them to-night. His birth
day Isn't very far ofl". you know."
"Hertha and I are going to club to
gether and get him that new book he
wanted," .said another girl, evidently
her .sister; "we heard him .speak of it
ami we have money enough."
The woman turned and went into the
house and shut the door.
The man went on down the street
and was .oon busily engaged at his
ease, away u in the highest story of a
tall building.
His lingers went back and forth,
baek and forth, picking up the bits of
black metal, setting up line after line
of what in the morning would appear
in the great daily. Out overthecity he
could see the lights beginning to shine,
and gradually the hum in the streets
below him grew less and less.
All about him were men working
away steadily at the bits of metal. He
could hear the presses click, click, as
they went on with their part of the
work.
The gas flared. Now and then one
of the men spoke hrielly, generally
something about the work
Some of them went to their coats
occasionally where they hung on the
wall and drank from" bottles in the
pockets. One offered hi- to the silent
worker boide him, but he shook his
head.
What." called a gay young fellow
across the room, ".V'U given up the
bottle. IV! enroll ; what will happen
next?"
The men laughed.
The light, iu the hour's died out after
awiule, the noises on the street grew
: and flfe The men went to their
bottle oflw' and naa-cd them back
"and forth fpm hand to hand. Menson
was growing tired. lie was not as
young as he had been when ho began
to workat the tvpe,A.nd the smell of
the liquor came to
jbbw
m
as he worked
and grew more and more wearv.
He longed for one taste, just one, "to
help him out." "to rest him." Yet,
when a lad near him took the bottle
and began to taste the liquor he touch
ed his arm and said: "Don't, I began at
your ago; I wanted to be smart; don't
begin."
lJut the boy laughed and drank.
The hours went by anil the presses
clicked louder and the noises on the
street grew less and less.
"Here. Menson," said a man. com
ing across the room, "here is some of
the best Trench brandy. Just taste it;
1 know you arc sick to-night; it'll do
you good."
" I don't foci exactly well." he said,
seizing the bottle eagerly, "I'll taste
it. only taste it."
The fumes of the liquor had been
half-maddening him. his old thirst had
been ening out to be satisfied. He
drank as eagerly a; he had seized it.
"That is good brandy," he said, giv
ing baek the bottle.
The man winked slyly at the others
as he went baek to his ease.
IVIenson worked on. He felt better,
hi- said to himelf. the brandy had done
him good: and after awhile he asked
for another drink.
The man gave it and he drank as
eagerly as before. He had drank a
good many times by the time; the last
line was set up and the men were mak
ing ready to leave, it was early morn
ing now'and the noises of that early
time in the city were beginning to be
heard.
Menson went to get his coat, but he
could not find it. '1 hen he looked for
his hat. but he could not remember
yhere he had put u.
He stood holding ;n to the back of a
i.Vvie. v.-priieiv. wonderinir wnat ne
shold doabout it, when the man who
had iriven him the brandy eame up.
elK Menson. he called out.
voii-took :i though you were getting
up a leVder. loo late now lor that,
come out" Menson endeavored to let
him know his dilemma.
"WheVo's vour coal?" he said: he
was loutlv:m'd noiv; "Where's your
coat? ltk'Vt it i Know.
-Oh, here it i; let
me help 'ou on
with it
There vou are. come
on now.
the bows- have all irone and left us.
iy
Thev went over to the elevator. It
was "ul coming up the haft. Away
down below them they could hear the
engine and at one .side the presses
stamp, stamp, as the great daily
dropped away fresh and damp from
their "aws. ' .,
"Come on then, now my boy.
called his companion, as Menson hesi
tated. lie drew him on. one bewildered and
confused, the other hilarious and loud.
The elevator began to move down the
shaft. Menson looked up and saw a
door.
-Here's place," he said stepping out
toward it.
His companion caught his coat. It
came off in his hand, and as he stood
wildlv looking at it, he heard, down
below him, something fall heavily.
The sjreat daily had a little item, a
few lines crowded into its eolums that
morning.
Vc regret to relate a sad accident
at the building of the Morning Chron
icle," it sa'uC "which resulted in the
death of one of our oldest and most
popular employes.
"At 8:30 this morning when the
printers were leaving, G. W. Menson,
being at the time in a rather confused
state, owing to having taken a little
brandy for a slight indisposition,
stepped off the elevator shaft at the
fourth story, falling to the basement
and being instantly killed. His terri
fied companion attempted to save him
but was horrified to find his empty
coat left in his hand.
"Menson was universally liked, hav
ing no enemy but himself.
"He leaves a wife and three daugh
ters who were dependent upon him for
support." Emma Harriman, in Union
Signal.
-
California has over eight thousand
licensed liquor saloons
WHAT SOBERED HIM.
An Iasalt Ut Ifte wife Amm
rd'fl Latest Maaheod.
A woman came out of an ill-ventilated
room in a tenement house in
Center street yesterdaj walked
down, the front steps and at
on Jlhc last step. She was about
twenty-five years old, remarka
bly good looking, and held a little child
in her arras. She sat for some time
with her head bent, listening to the
roar of the traffic which swept by. She
raised her head a few times and re
garded with an absent air the crowds
of foot-passengers who hurried to and
fro without stopping, and going mauy
of them knew not' whither. One of
those gorgeous red sunsets which
scientific men can not uilertand was
disappearing behind twj post-olticc
building and sending its ravs slanting
ly down along the street. Xot a brenth
of wind could be felt, and the liquor
stores in the vicinity were wide open
as they would be in the height of the
summer season. Far up on the other
side was the somber-looking portico of
the Tombs, which looked dismal and
forbidding even in such a pleasant at
mosphere. Some of the law-ers who
frequent the place, as much opposed
to as in favor of law and order, pasaed
down the .steps and hurried on.
Around the immense pillars men and
women clustered in groups, all speak
ing at the same time and hanging on
to the place as though it were a haven
of rot for the wearied.
" Git out!"
They separated at once and ran
down the steps'.
A poor wretch, physically well
formed, intelligent looking, but the
picture of dissipation, ran no, stag
gered down the steps and the gruJI
policeman, swinging his club airily,
turned and began talking to a poli
tician. No one noticed the incident
but the politician.
" Did he register?" the politician
a&ked.
" No," said the policeman; "I think
he ain't got a vote."
" If he had, would he vote straight?"
" No; crooked every time. Look at
'im now."
The drunken man was tracing a zig
zag line up the street.
" Whew!" .said the politician; "theo
it re the men who vote straight. I would
have had one more majority had I
known that man;" and he tickled tht
stalwart gendarme, under the ribs.
The man conMl'iued to stagger up the
street, and the woman on the stoop,
looking accidentally across, saw him.
Then, as if to compensate in some
manner for her desolate condition, she
squeezed the little baby over and ovi.i
again and ki-sed it. The innocent l.t
tle being stroked the mother's chei.k
once or twice vith its tiny hand, ami
then, with a sudden light of memory in
its eyes, said, pointing to a liquor store
on the opposite side:
" Ma, I think I saw papa go in
there."
The tears flowed faster adown
mother's cheeks, and this time
sobbed as well as cried.
Presently the man cam: out of
V lie
she
the
saloon. Kvening shadows had com
menced to darken the street, and in
trying to make his way across he stum
bled across two men. He was unable
to excuse himself, and the two men
abused him because he had made their
boots di. He made a strong effort
to clear InS mental vision, and regard
ing the two strigers for a moment,
muttered to hii"lf:
" 'Tis very strange."
"What's strange, you old fool?"
"To see two dudes in these parts of
the town."
"A sail, a sail!" shouted one of the
dudes, in brutal vulgarit. at the same
time pointing to the poor woman on
the stoop, who was still weeping.
They crossed over and sought to en
gage her in conversation. It was near
ly dark.
The drunken man erossed the street
in half a dozen steps, and felled one
after another of the insullers.
He tenderly lifted his wife and went
up stairs. He was quite sober now.
"I'll never drink again." said he,
pressing his wife's hands and kissing
lier. The wife cried tears of joy this
time; so did the little child.
"Kddieation and good brecdin' tells,"
remarked the policeman, as he went by
swinging his club. X. V. Telegraph.
TEMPERANCE ITEMS.
During the past year seventy-five
now W. C. T. Unions have been organ
ized in Illinois.
In one year -1 1,000, 000 were spent
for liquors in Liverpool, or an average
of $120 per week for each saloon.
A Roman Catholic Hisliop recently
said: "It is not the English laws, the.
land laws or the landlords' laws: it is
the drink Ira flic that is the curse of Ire
land. Sunday closing of saloons is now agi
tating the people of several cities Ea-t
and South. ith open -aloons Sunday
has become in all cities the star dny for
crime. Chicago Inter Ocean..
Elk Presbytery. Tennessee, took a
firm position in regard to Temperar.ee.
declaring that church members ahould
not u-e"liquors as a beverage in any
form, neither sell their fruit or grain to
the distilleries.
Tut: sale of brandy, cither wholesale
or retail, is forbidden in Norway on
Sundays and other festivals, or on the
evenings previous. It can not be sold
on any day before eight a. m., or to
children or apprentices.
Tun Autocrat of all the Russians has
just promulgated a degree that no liq
uor shall be sold at retail in his do
minions, except in hotels and eating
houses. This will close ninety thou
sand saloons the first of January. Des
potic power is u good thing sometimes.
L'nion Signal.
The Knights of Temperance is the
name of a new organization just started
in New York to Ao battle against King
Alcohol. The ritual and insignia are
modeled after thoe of the Knights
Templar. The badges and standards
are inscribed with tlie motto: "Sobri
etas, Reerentia, Puritasque."
A contkmpokaky, referring to the
recent Temperance uprising in Geor
gia, complacently remarks: "It is a
good thing the negro and whisky do
not get along well together." Rut why
say "the negro and whisky?" When
did whisky ind white men get along
well together? Inter Ocean. "
Wuen an anatomist wishes to pre
serve a human brain for any length of
time, he effects his object by keeping
that organ in a vessel of alcohol. From
the soft, pulpy substance, it becomes
comparatively hard: but the inebriate,
anticipating the anatomist, begins the
indurating process before death; be
gins it while the brain remains the
consecrated temple of the soul, while
its delicate and gossamer tissues throb
with the pulaes of Heaven-born life.
Boston Medical Journal.
" POLITIKLE CONTOflSHUNIST.
Mr. Xaaby Reviews tba PrcaMcat'a Mac
aga, Gm aa ta Coatldar What a Meg
wojaa b aad Attempts ta Ki plain lllaa.
f From the Toledo D!a4c.)
Ijr a llAPTtrr
(For t&kin poMeiinn ar the I'ost-oOifJ I
CosrrnKrtiTX Koad.
nvjcUUIn thetate uv Kcntucfcr.)
December 15. 1J5. J
Ther ain't no sich thing ez a Dime-
kratic party no more, on.y in name. Jt
is troo that we elected a .posed Dimo-
it? I hev red the message uv Grovcr
Cleveland, a man wich 'twere base
flattery-to call ingrate. Iwuzneverso
thunderstruck in my life cz when I
peroosetl that dockyment, so much o
that when the Corners cum, en masse,
to the front uv my cell to hev it red to
'em, I reely hedn't the power to do it.
Here wuz a Dinvcratic President actil-
lv advokatin a high pcrtective tarilf, or
deprecatm any movement onto the
present t a rill', wich is the same thing;
and beer wuz a Dtmocratie rre-ideiit
actilly insistin on that most feendiah uv
all traps wich the Dimocratie party
ever fell into Civil-servis reform.
lint that aint the wu-t uv it. Here
wuz a Dimocratie 1're-ident wich actil
ly and without reserve, insi-tid that the (
olli&es shel not be given out . rewanls
fur politikle servis, but suthin wich he
calls "litnia" ahel be taken into ac- ,
count!
f am prepared now to hcor the horn
uv dabrel any minit.
tikeler. now, how soon
I am not per-
Azrael waves
his dark wings over me. I hev my
baggage cheeked fur the ousartin here
after. When a Dimekrat enun-hates
sieh doctriu, it is high time fur a old
i mo baek like me, to git reddy tt go.
Life ham t got notliin more into it fur
me, and my re-tin place sliood inline-
jitly be the .-ilent loom.
i lier am t no more Uimocrisy. e
hev bin swnllered up by the Mug
wumps. They are runninthe glorious
old organiza.hun, and they hev even
me under controlc.
I apose 1 ahel hev to become a Mug
wump, myself, or die in prizn. I spose
when I walk out uv this cell into the
free air uv the hevins I shel hev to set
up in ISaseom's cz a Mugwump. I
beer myself now trvin to cggsplane to
the good Deekin 1'ograni how it is that
lie and I shood elect Cleveland, and
Pollock still be Collector and Lubbock
still in the post-oflis. 1 heer myself
egg-planin to him wat a Mugwump
reely is: that a Mugwump is a man
ivieh is to pollytix wat a wild-eyed Noo
Knglander is to philosophy. That ez
the Noo Englander .-oars after the on
attaiuabh: and lives after the on
fathomable, so a Mugwump is a polit
ikle phiioMiphcr wich wants to drag
the kentry from the i-n't to the is, ami
then take it baek again. I shel hev to
instruct him that to be a Mugwump,
wun wich is a Dimocrat mu-t vote the
Hepublikin tikkit, still swarin that he
i a Dimocrat but oppo.-m all that lie Muldrow in a con-piracy -bleeves
in fur the -ake uv lteform, and info which he entered
ef he is a Kepuhlikni he must vote the
Dimocratie tikkit fur the sake uv He-
form, swarin all the time that he is vh,
t Kepublikin. I shel hev to make the
poor old man wich never volid any
thing but a Dimocratie tikkit in his
life, and never put one in the box till
he lied sum one wich cood reed look it
over to see that there wuz nary a
skralch onto it. I shel hev to beet it
into this innosent old seed that, bein a
Dimocrat, he must vote the Republikin
tikkit this year, and the Dimocratie
tikkit the next, and so on. becoz when
a man votes the same tikkit twiet in
consekootivenis he becomes corrupt
and can't be a Mugwump at all.
The Mugwump uv to-day is the In
dependent uv veers gone by, wich alluz
bleevcd one way and jist ez alluz votid
the t other.
However, to do this is th only way
to offis jist now, and I don't know ez I
keer. It wili be ruther renchin on the
Deekin, but I kin stand it. I hev in
dulged in a good many moral gymnaa
tix. and I ain't agoin to allow any lit
tle thing like this to cheek me in my
career. Ef Mugwuuipism is the way
to posl-ollis, then I .-hell be a Mug
wump, even if I hev to go to Noo York
to find out wat a Mugwump reely is.
Ef the President kin ask an thing uv
me that I can't perform, ez the price
u v the place, I shood like to see him
try it. Any fate is better than the life
1 iicv bin lecdin, and I don't know uv
anything that I can't stand for the few
ycers I hev to live.
Pktkolkum V. Nashy,
(Politikle Contorshuni.-t.)
a m
REPUBLICAN ITEMS.
fCeneral Logan's luck never fails
him
XowllttTM.'add that seldom doei
d seiaiiSfiiChim. Vlica Frets.
his good
I!To-C(Mrre5s: There is no use in
lllll.peas IIOI.I SUIlg-IlOls ai Hie MOT-
nions. Cut the cancer outl-.V. r. in lmvn th:lt ,C was unable to p:u the
( ivil-eriee examination is a Special
Iyi he Democratic Civil-service rcc- F.xaniincr in the Pension Bureau at
ord appears to be averaging up pretty , one thousand four hundred dollars a
well. Out of eighty-four collectors of year.
internal revenue seventy-eight have " X man with the picturesque name of
been displaced and their places lillcd Emuh Saint was put through a similar
by Democrats. 7t Iroit Tribune. i .examination". He wa- Senator Voor-
i-There is just one difficulty with ! bees' friend. General I Hack was about
this whole business of foreign com- ; to appoint him, when news reached the
mcrce, ocean-earning trade and ship-' department that Mr. Saint had belied
building, and that is" the interference his name and had been convicted two
of the Government with the natural . weeks ago to live years in the penlten
tendency and development of things. ' tiary for fraud committed on the very
and what is needed is not more but Bureau of which he hoped to become a
less of this. X. Y. Times. shining ornament.
fcarSecretary Whitney's report is a ; 'N"" greatest farce, however, upon
disappointment. From his own eriti-1 Civil-service reform as practiced
eisins upon the contracts that his pred-j by General Black is the ap
eeessor had entered into with Mr. pointment of Chester R. Faulkner as
Roach, his disparagement of the vei- j Chief of the Record Division in the Pen
sels which Mr. Roach is building and ! $ion Bureau. Faulkner is ignorance
the defiant protestations of the Demo- and incompetency itself. Kven Voor
eratic organs that under the new dis- hecs was compelled to exclaim once:
rensation we were to have laid the I "Ye ffod. you ought to sec Faulkner's
louniiation ot a real navy, we had a
jr .a . -
r'ght to expect the clever" ex-Corpora-
nu
tions to the blush of inferiority. But
he refuses to do anything of the sort.
I'hiladelphia Frcst.
Want Big Appropriations.
Mr. Colman, the Commissioner of
Agriculture, now joins in the cry of
the other Democratic heads of National
Departments and Bureaus so far a
heard from, in favor of big appropria
tions. His report abounds in sugges
tions for the extension of the work of
his department, for all of which more
money wouiu ce necessary lsouuuess
as the agricultural interests of the
country grow, the expenses of this De
partment will gradually increase, and
nobody will begrudge the needed ap
propriations; but it is none the less
amusing to note how widely the en of
the Democrats iu office differs from
ineir cry wnen iney were out. xnen j
., . . .. -. .. n. 1
it was always ana mvanauiy ior ccono- j
my ana a reuuction oi expenses; now j
it wases tne ecnoes irom tne Aiiegnan- j
les to tne kockv Aiountams m i.ivor oi
big appropriations. H. JT. Tribune.
aon uouniet of ew York to shine as e pivsumaoiy in oruer io ureK iu
tc inesumptive architcclof a tleet that ! force of his implied criticism. Be that
would nut all the other maritime na-' as it may. C icral Black retains Faulk-
EVADING THE LAW.
Th4 Democratic AdmlaUtratloa Cfcarff'd
with Vlolatlaa tb CUil-Sarvtea KuU
The 9o-Cal!d "Private" giawtlaatloaa.
The Administration of Mr. Cleveland
i pledged to Civil-service reform on
I .,,
'
; sji
ancr. in reaniv u vioiaies doio me
an opportunity
witdout tear oi uiicoverj. u wx- oniy
a few daysago that the President ten,-
I
j service rules in order to make the ap-
i pointment of ex-Alderman Sterling
possible. Now it is Secretary Lamar
drow. who are trying to sec what their
. personal influence will do in securing
appointments for people who can not
be certified in the regular wav by the
! Civil-service Commission. Here i a
flagrant example of the way in which
t,e j:iw ;H violated by them:
j,, Augu-t. 1-S-Sl. there occurred in
tjK. cafe'of the Kiggs House a shooting
, affair, whieh for lays afterward fur-
ui.-hed the town with food for go--ip.
The persons concerned in it were Mrs.
K. L. Uarnes, a clerk in the Second
Comptroller's office; a Mr. Dougherty,
employed in the Treasury Departmenaj
ami a woman whoe name wa- not as
certained at the time. Mr. Dougherty
was dining with the young woman,
when Mrs. Harnes entered the room
and discharged the contents of a pistol
at Mr. DoiiL'heitv. There wa the uual
nniount of hysterics, but beyond this
' no damage was done. Jealousy wns
said to ue tne eause oi me irouuie. -
' paragraph in the local papers r cord
ing the occurrence ended with the
i .l . ..V .,-t"
... .. ii. &
, '',js. seemed to end the matter. Not
41jUlU. i .MU.'IO
, i0jr after this however, Mrs. Jhirne
. resig"d her place in the Trea-ury and
wciit to New York, where she se'eured
a subordinate position in Daly's The- I
ater. She failed there and returned to
.i - i .i i.i- n. . ..
suit her, ami for cvcral months .she
hung about Washington trying to get
something better. Finally she uc-
ceedeo. rsiie was appomieo a nine
i hundred-dollar clerk
in
the Sixth
Auditor's Office and
was detailed
for work in the Second Auditor.- room.
How all thi- was dime remains a mys
tery. She never got the appointment
through the Civil-service Commission,
for she had never been certified by the
commi toners, and even if she had
pas-cd an examination could not be
appointed under the lav and regulation-
on account of there being four
members of her family in the t'overu
ment service in this city already. Mr.
Iliggins acts very inv-teriou-Jv about
this ease. It look- very much as if hu
had engaged with Messrs. Lamar and
miliar to that
with Fir
t
Auditor Cheuowith
I Republican certified
I service Commi ion
to keep a
by the Civil
out of an ap-
J pointment, simply because she wa-a
Republican.
That ''i re arc ca-cs sin.i-
lar to
this occvi rjr constantly in the
departments admits of no doubt. They
...... ....!...!:, I .I......-1. .,.. !."
;u: i;iici ii-e'ei eti. iiuiun. iui nit;
reason principally that those most in
terested in seeing the law admini-tered
strictly and impartially, viz., the men
holding positions in the departments,
are afraid to talk about them because
doing o would lead to their immediate
CJeneral Black, if not violating the
law itself, certainly acts contrary tV its
spirit every time he gets an oppor-
tunity. He not long ago made .James
I-ritz. of liosport. I ml.. Special hxain-
inerin the Pension P.ureau. The ap-
pointment was made at the request of
Congrc man Matson. Fritz was given
a letter to the Ciil-service Cunmis-
moii. with instruction to deliver it to
Judge Thomau. and to no one else.
ili..riit viri
The letter secured a "private exa mi-
nation
Tlii was of course noihiu
but a farce. There iva-s no competition,
no chance iriven to others. Kven the
would be asked to an-wcr. Fritz was
informed of this, ami o pawed the ex
amination without trouble.
Another ease is that of Archie Mc
f'inni.s. He too is a protege of the Na
tion. "I can't pa5 an examination, '
he told (lcncral Hlack when the Com
missioner informed him that his ap
pointment would have to be made
through the Civil-servica Commis
sioners. "It's all right," answered the
C'eneral, "I'll give you a letter to Judge
Thoman." The letter secured a "pri
vate examination, " and to-dav the man
...i,ft .1..,.l.vwl tr. i.mr. tlmn nnn ii.M-m,
m !! -....- 1 r a
spelling: mil men. ue i
as tme as
?tu-d
The hitler proposition he ad-
ner in otiice ernaps inai. nu may jroe
useful some day. At present this Dem-
ocratie ofliciar cot: tents himself with
-...;.,rr ,- ,ii;miit ?f tinvinrr
. ",. , ,.
I w.w...,, .... ..e...- ... "
j "possel of women abdut him, who.
I he fears, will not "kiver all the point
when writing letter- on the husiuess of
the office. Inter Ocean.
www
JfirA faint wail it can hardly yet
he called a howl comes up from the
solid South for a nlace on the ticket of '
1883. A man named Lee w.,nts it-Sad-
dle-of-his-Lncle-Lee and the solid
South thinks he would noil a large
, ., u ii
vote down mere. So he would: so i
i vcrte
wonld anybody, including his Satanic j
Majesty, if his" name appeared on the 1
Democratic ticket. And that is justthc
reason whv the man named Lee will t
get on the ticket. FhiladeljJiia Call.
-" !
The Sunreme Court of the State :
jj oin jjeen
muj am mjj
jtic-i vJUainy
s adji to the
vile record of the
Democratic party of Ohio. CUreland
Leader.
9pirit and letter of the law whenever I action of heat, or any solvent action of j made it a principle to into: all enagr
an opportunity " offered for o doing water or acid. Cement often fails in j men:-. More than once I harr -Vinpcd
nils riLV, wiieiv. inruuii iiiu iiiiniunn; . ,w c , . . , . ,
of Sec.Vf.ry Lamar ami Assistant See- ' 'l'" ,d .f s,: ! I,arls "J lfhw :1'
' rotary Muldrow. ,he got a place in the , lntch' .A Pl! c." ". for a"'1
Covernment Printing Office. Not liking I .:i" V , f T W' f'1 " lu"
the place. he was given another in the l!"n J11 lhvatv ,of ,!a- A. 8-' 1' ;
. i . i.i -i . i ii.P. 'im.:. it. i .. . 9i-t damp can be prepared with boiled
Illllll m. 1 llll.m-ii'"'i. ' !-, i''. win iiiii
que-tions asked are said to have been ' for French horse. I would advise the I lanty n jwiraijo. Jtn nenrcfudy wntirji
simply those printed by eo,nmi,-ioner.- j farmer and breeder, win, are breetiing gjffilHitSntlK
in their annual report of the preceding j hor.-es to sell on the ew ork market, I Qf 10 ceuts iu i.stago tamnn. AMns
year as oxamides of what candidates to breed from French hor.-es in prefer- ! t. St. JOHN.
, i. ... i i . .
drajrsed down into the Vrl-ZV?1
to aid the rankest of pol- I VHE.vr-;o.2rs
, and one more hlack spot 1 5??5;;0 r- .-...
ABOUT CEMENTS.
Caaapocltlea of Ohrrlnf MrdJaaM for Ta.
rlooa rriKMSi
The value of a cmenv. first, that
. it should become a tronly cohering
j medium between the substances joined;
anu. .ccouu, it aoum wunsiami ;nc
I i i
rep io wie wi conMuerauon. for
, water-proof ii. several mixtures are
be mentioned: One i to mix white
f lead, red lead and boiled oil. together
8" -'. l- cuhm-wucv ox
ounce, di-v-olved in ten ounce of a moment of forgrtfulm I had prom
strong ammonia; gelatine, five part; i"ed to take togirl- to the theater
olution of acid chromatc of hnie. one
part. Exposing the article to sunlight
is u.-eful for -ome purpo-e-. A water
proof paate cement is said to he nude
by adding to hot March pa.-te half its
weight of turpentine and a ?mall piece
of alum. A- a cement lining for cis
terns, powdered brick two ounce-",
quicklime two. ood ahes two. made
into a paste with boiled oil. is recom
mended. The following are cement.
for steam and water joints- (1 round
litharge, ten pound-; planter of Paris,
four pounds; yellow ochre, one-half
pound, red lead, two pound-, hemp
cut into one-half inch lengths, one
half ounce, mixed with tailed lin.-eed
oil to the conai-tenc of putty. White
lead, ten parts; black oxide of innnga-ne-e,
three; litharge, one. Mixed with
boiled linseed oil. A cement for joint.
to iv-i-t great heat i- made thu- As
bestos powder, made into a thick pate
with liquid -ilicate of soda. For coat
ing acid trough-, a mixture
of one part pitch, one pnrt
resin, and one part pla-tcr of
Paris, is melted and nsaid to be a good
cement coating. Corre-pondent.- fre
quently ask for a good cement for fixing
, ., .
notliin
iron nars into stone m neti oi lead, ami
linseed oil ami ordinary glue, or b
melting one pound of glue in two quart.
of skimmed milk: .-hellae, four ounce-;
borax, one ounce; boiled in a little
"iuc jwiu uiicciiu;ucu oy ih-;il io :i
........... i . i i... t . . .
ii-ie. -v eeiiii'iii io n;.-i-i mimic neai
may be UM'fulh mentioned here: Pul
verized clay, four part-; plumbago,
two; iron filing?, free from oxide, two;
peroxide of manga:ie-e. one; borax,
one-half, sea .-alt one-half. Mix with
water to thick pa.-te, use immediately,
and heat gradually to a nearly whin
heat. Many of the cements iiied
whieh are e.xpo.-ed to great heat, fail
from the expansion of one or more in
gredient's in them, and an unu-ual
stress is produced, or the two .-ub-stances
united have unequal rates of
expansibility or contraetibility. The
chemical or galvanic action is import
ant. The whole subject of cements
has not received the attention it de
serves from practical men. Only Port
land cement has received an thing like
scientific notice; ami a fewexperiment.
upon waterproof, heat-re-i-ting and
other cements would -how which
cements arc the be-t to use under cer
tain circumstances. Farm, Field and
Stochnan.
PERCHERON HORSES.
40 Vcar Kxjiprlrncr.
To a Tribune reporter, Mr. A. S.
Chamberlain, who for 10 years has been
' the proprietor of the " Old Hull's Head
Stables," New York City, said: "I
j:cel) exchange and sale stables for
horses thou;:imlj. of which !inmianv
i , , . , , ,, ,
come to my stables from all parts of
the country. I don t deal on my own
' account to any extent. The French
horses have god "eet and stand the
pavements better than the. Clydesdale",
' and bring a better price on the market.
i The Clydesdales are sl.ort-rihhed, slim
waited and lack action. Com tiara
tivclv few of them are now brought to
this market. The demand h largely
'
ence to all others." Chiraqo Tribune.
Pcrcheron stallions of the finest quality
and with choicest pedigrees, registered
in the rercheron Stud Book of r ranee,
are annually imported in immense,
numbers. Within the past two years
1. 000 have been imported and collected
by one tirm alone.
m
! A man in Salem. Mass., ha-- in
;cntrd a method of ventilating railway
ars by means of fans revolving under
leath'the car through pipes having
)cll-shapcd movable openings above
ach seat; but this air is freed from
lust by passing through water. It is
m trial by the Boston & Lowell Kail
oad. Je't'Vi I'o?.
m
'rarytanil, Ij- Maryland.
Maryland legislators, who are n!srr.y
ab'vp to tho public interests, have ndorel
Ihe new discovery, Il'l Star Cou;h Curs,
ieau-e it contains neither inorjibia nor
Dpiuui. and alTsrays cure. The price is only
15 cent.
THE CNERAL MARKETS.
K.N?AS CITY. December V.
CATTLE Shlpp.nr tccr?...
Native co. ... .
liutcheri steers...
HOGS Good to choice near
J.'yhl . . ,.
WHEAT No. 2 red
No. 3 rel
No. 2of:
CORN No 2
OAT No. 2
KVE No. 2 . .. ........
FLOCK Kancr. per ac5f
H A V Largo baled
ItCTTEK Choice creamer..
CHEESE Full cream
EGOS Cho ce
BACON Hani
f3 8 l
2 i ki
2 10 it
3Ti ii
2 W i
5pri
3 79
4lft
in
3 31
70rI
2S;
Ti
S2
I a',
8 01
2S
II
17
10
5k
e
16
W
fi25
1 f-r,
5i
0)
25
Hi
1
'J
s
6
n
it
5
rhoulder?
Sides
mARX .. .... ..... ......
POTATOES Ne
57. LOCIS.
CATTLE Shtpptng -teorj. ..
, Buicber steera..
.rilI Ultll UUHillUVi
50) n
3 2TiC
2Ut it
5 2T,
3 at
HOGS PacXlng
sheep Fair to cnoice
FIX)CK Choice
201 fe srr.
4 to ft. 4 to
vi ft K
31 H z-i
OATS No. 2
RYE No. 2
titivrTtn j-N -
pohk.
COTTON Maidhny
. cv CHICAGO.
SSSMKl
SHEEP Far xo choice
S5r55r
WHEAT No. 2 red
vn 2
2T. ii
9 0)
3
. No.; sprnr. .'.
oATSNa r
rye No. :".'.....,'..'.'.'.'.'.'.'.
g-JTEK-Crcan:crT
TOKK VEtrftr"
CATTLE Eioort.'
HOG-tr00 ciio..
IlCTrEl'.-Crwuirrr
rouK
i'tt.;tjLr:u3: Gh i
il Vfc. t- IXiHMI II liltltl i Vl'lli"
tr lW?tt J I'llitlMl tliftti .k f.a.t
r. . v.- t. iiniemni ij
- ..lW MbbbV
A HUSTLER.
Maw a Cfctraffa Vtrnmrnmr Tmrtarm a
I'nparalUld rat.
I had a little experience the other
night." -aid a drummer, "that tooV all
ray nerve and pdl to bear up under.
Ever ince I've ten oa the road I've
three or four town in which I wa, -ure
. :r ,,. "-. .' ., : .; , .
J J" - ?n"roer to cnlT oil . omr
J certain place at a given minute, vou
: can bet our Ia-t dollar I'll b. there
i ., .e o.. ir ua, i ..-u,uo. . o..
that night. I he giri- were not ac
quainted, eithrr. I hate ti bar anJ a
.-neak, and the girl- brother- were
customers of mine, and o. after think-
itii fl, rvl,ikl. fl,lw v,r- tnaili, ihi
r- .... ""- --""f- "'- - -' "I
my nnnu l o live up :o n) contract,
So I bought my -rat- at two thrAUr..
iiiael ir.v rirnic xiitl nrtmril for
iue eamiiaiii. i -em wurti i v- iiri
.V . ! I It 1 1 I
one that 1 d call for her rather erl.
ami to the other that 1 might ! a U-w
minutes late. I wLiriyd No. 1 otf,
-ealed mx, xcuvd my-t'lfTtir a. mm- i
ute lfore the rising of th nrUu:i. !
-lipped out. and in twn -eend 'be
hor-e- were on a run for No - I got
her in her enl the minute- afwr the
curtain ro.-e. Stal the net owt, ex-cu-ed
my -elf, went back to the other.
apologized, and everything was all
right. I spent the evening ibttine
from one to the other, and got m
mon'- worth out of the hackmjui. n
I made htm hump. I made inquiries nt
to the Imur the play- would If ocr.
and found I had twcnt-fhv minutes
leeway. Then 1 made inch gMwl u-e
of tho-e twent -five minute? that 1 got
No. 1 home and was Imck after No '2
jn.-t as the curtain went down. To do
this cost me twelve dollars ami the
next day 1 had to skip out ot town be-cau-e
the haekman wit- after me with n
lill for one of hi- hor-e--. whieh had
died from overdriving, but not till after
I had sold big bills of goods to tht
prW brother-. Resides. 1 had the -at-lsfaction
of keeping my engagements
and of performing an unparalleled feat
in the theater-going bu-ine--. That
the kind of a huitler I am." hutiy
Herald.
m
Some per-on inutilatetl an enndhd
hill amenuing the Lqttor law wh i h
had lxen pa ed at the late -e ion of
the Oregon Legi-lature by drawing a
pen through the word "be it enm ttil "
Hut Coventor Moody decided that the
mutilation wa not material, and-gml
the bill. Chtciifn Matl.
If! "
"Stand baclr, Kent!rmnn! CIv.r the
trnek e' houtl Ui jxHee, nnit n the
quickly-pnttieniiK crowd BUrRiMl tmclr,
ter.ia-r No c.uu up tlie rtrvet, the iu.ik
niiiccnt black horcs Ktrtkln tire from the
pavement
Hut hold! A whel comes off' the stenm
er ivertunul, and tl lrnvi tlremcn nro
j)iel:ed up blet'dutK ami teu-ele.'
An iuetlf;ntioii revenletltln fnet that hi
oHin the steamer that moraine the te.vttnl
had neglected to jiiit in thn Illicit niu. A
littlo lU'Klceton hi. part had caued n loin
of n half million dollar. The tiu-y martK
of trade are full ot men who nm ninkim;
the b.itne fat.il mistake. Thev neglect thi'ir
kldnoys, thinking thev nref no nttent.on.
whereas if they maile oorashmal umj of
"Warnt'r'K nfe cure thy would nerrr rny
that they don't feel tpuU' well; that n. tin!
feeling botheri them, that they nru placued
with indigestion; that their timin refue
to rKi)Otnl at call ; that their nerves nro nil
unstrung. Ftrr Juurn it.
A i'KovKKtt ay Hunjrer Utho bt cook.
That may beo, but htmyr hncn't jot anj
tliitif; to cook Trxa .Sifuie.
"ottag:t" m Klcrirlcttr.
Th pnKener Department qf tho Chlcn
po. Kock lsla:d ,c I'ufjtlc Itnilwnv an
iioiuice tho publication of a new and villa
nblo work v.lMsoMMpo and inUut l bet
fxprcs,eJ ri tti Ml" j apt, whieh retdn nn
follow: "Volfaal. Umusof Elerfrirtty
or Ned Hcmmi k AdvetittircH and Tall: With
onoof tboUemi, by "A Mas" of the Itock
I'-lnnd IU)Ut rosjiect fully dedicated to the
Bovk and (irk of Ani"nea, by ti.e ( JenTnl
Ticket and TawnpiT Aeotn'f the Chi( no.
Hock I.slaa! it J'ai-iiieKndwnv. It is an ajv
propnato b ''!! to Watt K jiiions n steam
unit it.i u"o!, Tvcicii nttolneti rjcu n wja-
Gen. Ticket and Tassengc;
V. P.j-., Chicago, 111.
Afct. C , !C L &
Cci:ior IntfKntor bar lIC0Tcrd
that the Sinnite twin were well connect
ed. A . Mrald
PiKr.'sTooTiiACiir Dimrs cureln I minute. Se
tVtnn t-SulfJiur :ihe.-lnd hcnutifle. Zc
oCRM.tNCoit.vKcMOvrukllUCorn&nunioca.
Witr U a flre-enKine called 'ho" I M
catue khe it mori at home when trarkios:
St. Paul Jftrnld.
Ir flKJIctr-l with Foro Erc. v.f" Vr. Iwnc
Ihom &on's Eye A ater. DrzieUu rll It. Z
"A MIM i R rooil n a rntlc," and a
rrnt!cnl hottr
Vou can't kit a rnl!.
rr,n'Jtlptti cut.
Xo Oftium in riin Cure for Oiwaaj
tion. Cures hrv otlar rpnilie fail. w.
Tut anil irrtno a place in erjody
Zontl-TxM, i.ot forstttirij;yoar rich unci
Trvu Ttinn
Tub boTo! n:ay I rcjrslsto'J. uii tho
ttomach itreagthnetj, -sritb Aver Till
Tim fiaijcrmen ho rot a Ml from :!
mouth of a riTr ha !! hcarfl frro.
Ztt.t.t on ! pcTfcrftlr :Aa'I "to area
Bed Star
...W uaaw
L. jflf ""'
r:
Fre from. OteUa, JL'mme mud. Voiacn.
SAFE.
SURE.
PROMPT.
w
wtr-r. T1VTY
111 AT StttoCtTT !
r - j- &tv w jrs'w
moawK-'"1 -rrJr.t. ti w
twx. ll.W"i.wik. is-
LS"-kBBBBl
is3nrvrrriftTw--- uitVM
iouGHfyRE fgmm&r I
JF l.ZaT0lmm l mM V.Bk '' JBBBBBBHfT-OBl
9,R 4-&sn?m . ; .
W1 9 m rtTmWmr BTBbITbT ITrL'
L I jfMUJJ IIPAfi:r
BB1 BBI BH .TB BB B- Uf BBBBT BW BBt BB BBI BBB iVBBBBI
.Ba. ... mJV xafm
5 , TBBT i 'BBBk. y" ,ylr All A 1 UO L.,.-,rf. La c. rniffr f
, , ,,. w SJOKsrl UKbAlWiSsss p
3 to -, 3 or. bb"Tc!bbbp
9B9bV9b7bb1pII1
" S 2J. BBjfc WMmlm l"i? tTZT
;ji B ti kB . BTI II at ccir 55T ww" , - - '
f r. tfV .BB BBBv
"i 5 'JOLsSSsKassflssssHs sltkS!
J t l""--.Je-sKrrt7a &aBBB J bSSbBK
SwiSefblSmri:
UfeltrbaW
Taat K1 Wfar.
T a u r w - Koqm0
KJ&.H&iaS
IkP a i!Mjn J rs
t I
o .i-. s i tvj r TV C. W. W. a CO.
trxctAL rcmi oc loor ; r .rrr
Xk rta 3 tf w vn Ut-"
m!.rtu.nJUilktIMr ).,--.
ta ti
m. m r. rive ." at.i
...
V.X
o
tft. 9m.m.1 a.?T wt
tka il
I IU.W Mr
..rruCATARHH
bnCAM DALm
ia r-TJrU iJ Sr
i m-.m. mutt !-&
st ;-,u ?
! lttr4f :rr
i -.
I 'f WrHNI
! -' - r-
Ur
' ! fc' tm 4 r t
il rc a-r !.: tf
T 1 1)82:9 a SIUfF
HAY-FEVER
r , :
f -
r - t fr"'4
f " T ft
KLV IIKOiIUu'
PArrEKNs or any size.
UNPARALLELED OFFER I
D
EMOREdT'6 -l-
: BESI
Of nil tho MaRazinot.
Illftrlr.l inli ilrT.W .fr rHjNN
''jt, r,ojr.irMr !..! U t'trtrt.
EV ttt t If ST J SSwi-" "-
t U) I J'ft O-' .'-J f I ' - .,! I J
UtltntM. I I . tu .'-4
cmt"'r r' !-. ui4 i4 'i? -7 '.
ftt tic UkuiK ti f l- tr4t
ONLY TWO DOLLARS
t r Hi, n, of tla
4"t'l '
W Jrr-l0-'O IV
f
r'tr-
' f ?4oc. h-YV.'
llicr!.a tf C I '.rp'l l r
nle rnitiJ rr irv ?3l-? Vr rr f
lf .try r ri -r.- " I f It ( y txt"
t co altrlflij -w!,c,Jr l?i
? iUft ut jfjkrj n I o - f t?f"
lll'l imT i.1 til" i"rc'lTP Tfr 't r .rx.S4
It VrrailtitulciJ linden. r jc iaMluu.
LEPAGES
CLUES
l"nl tr ww ttmn":tctKfT
m-A tne I 9M Iti llso i
I'utlnsn !!' r K;;!
A ll- tn rrtn A 1 n iig
AC J f I li, -At
ti K tl.-fcf-9l
tl 40 JtlaU tsvl 'i It -dcrnf
a Utirc (triii of cr
1600 Pounds
to i kouaui: new.
TW0Q0LDMEDAL8.
lf .f Jllff .lKtl-tl
t!xt h ipflv ' 'uf(T'i
KLSXU CKHK.NT CO., 01ctt:r. RaM.
Tkcto Dines
rLrcrcctj
tho
3p03lt0
8.'8 Cf
B. H. DOUGLASS A. SOKS'
Caiiirniii 4iit;!i Drop
for Cotijch. Ci!t3 nn-' Kirn Tlsroats, n
Allcviur or Con j f.i i, axil of pr?.t
benent 1 1 in ,i vwc o iytMJyst.
timt.it cr i:iiatj3x5
Tfcy r tj ri'l Ot tr Trlr r irr1
n mM94arl.li!; 'XlCOn Hl.iSK3tX&.
i'iUHtLrnr i.i, ut:ii.r.n.
FREE'
I rttlr.t IllurMo
KIJ-CATAMMii;K.
ftr-trr 11 '1 'inajtrs
IA !"t hkkih vrin.
t,r.Ttl-ivrt tra-J n ?Pf
ti ': J"i kt' niu iw.
V - -., M c ' tf . l.
I'mlnf r V 1. pnld.
n .'pi rrl"'t..
K. II. SIM tt IV. lUUf.irU 111.
j,i t 1
r - r 1 t
if jrnir r :rr
'Cf n.T Oh rr rr.
rwttU.J CHZAP ttAILHOAD
LANDIiI!MUtl a. M j'Mu
rsxr. Ati, CMA3. B. LAM3CSH,
Iaoil CmmlMUnrf, !. Atlu.
PIANOS-ORGAWS
T"Jw t t-f I ntfJ M lOV 11,1 M
1.1.1 riA'li r Ml-rtl' j4m1
V,m' i-'f'Th f l -j
ft "" aHf-r " r " z . J 'fc
itt - t r - t f r .
yo m tst OKa,(t i o rr
yam & haiiuii qrsak m fuho csir jt,
140 Voboh Ave, Chlc.iKO, IH.
lis Rcpe to Cst Ot! Horses Masea.
Cr-'lt J "K4 a.rf." H.i.r-
Mt aoA IIRI1II.; (n.Vo'l,
eaviwVtTi rtr- Px-it
lMr7. Hr6rtv J54 IU
Tr4 r- fl f'.T Tf I J
J C l-:caTBiCill6f r- "" T
ft S B.hJW "-
WI MU 3A
7;r!xx - s-JT-
1- r im Wfw rr7
'Jl.JrtfB
yt at --' vZ9T'inr C. "
I5ir322
awiV. tV vrf a
rmi' v v uuli
EttmTi
ir& ho "v 1
Z YA il'ValM
:' " rsirr
f'm W'rL
c- h VrrT
1JM
iftfiWT
Ur tw-ml
Abw bT' W
J J U
ASTHMA CUREr FjS
h v. - www-vv. ..i ,. i. r m . .m
frPII r "-Bjr W .BBM S v
11 Tmrf' tiAr tjm. m j
lUUIl bTckwST oj:
.rriTLT ITO -??-
STWis: z iu.
Ujw'-fiS?1
li m. 1T)MXAS.V
w.a.'""
" . w -
A.Z'
TO
imaz. -AJST
AMXBTT1KDBB. jF
"
,f.:
fcJ
k:
al
f r.
K
m
I
F
U'
f
Jt
'a.
'fJ-rl
T-, J.
I -i
A-l, 2 .
f c 11
?i
-a
m
JST
f
, .
f?t
-s
'
t ?
Br,
32fiitifr
r:'7iL. rtsr
-;as..
& . .-2&'
bbbbbb;- m
7 lJ bbbI
BB .aBBBBBBBBBVIBllBlBBBHBBBBBBnBK"VlBBBBBBBBBBBB9