3w THE RED CLOUD CHIEF, FRIDAY, APRIL 24, 1896. tf i ! orncc BLACKWKLL'S DURHAM OURHAM, To AIL Who Retail soap, each Merchants TOBACCO to-day. Yours very truly BLACKWELL'S DURHAM TOBACCO, COMPANY. c. ........ VA ftaaau llff soap, cut out this your order to your ROSS I'ROPBIRTOBB OF ftlP A 6740 Watch Kxnminer for li. & M. U. It. THE CHIEF IMitilMii'il Weekly. tHitiaurlplloii, in I Vnr Annum Iiiviii lull) III ,.l viinc.i II not paid 111 iiiiMiini', utter tills ititio Ii r- tx, lc'f.', tlu prU'i. will im i '.'.'.. KntiTfO m iiir rum niiici In l.'t-ii t'loiul, NkIi n 111.1II niiiitrrot Hit km mill vliii' SWOnN CIRCULATION 1,300. u.rFi ok itiVfintsiNd I'rnl. ciiiiIh, I tin li or lens pur year fii in nix 1111111111H ..HHij Tlirfa niontliH -j oil HTAMUMI AIIVltl'.rtHKMRNrH. I'm liu'li iiiuifiir VI nu 1'er Incli six iiiuntlm :uiii Fur men iliri'o month -t 111 MpoclHl iiIIci t per lino or linn spare, llrnl plllillCHlUlll rn'cntB, Transient nimtIhIk, pn)iili liiviirUtily 111 ml. vatice, it lino to ci-iils, All rlilllnr lliltli.ik III III.. 1 1. 1, iitm .if uilvMrll... Dientrt nr pulls, f, criiU iiit line. I lin millers ul iil'iiI iiiIk, vlr: for H iHHrt- ilru Hum of Noinuro I nr lt's,l llrst pulillcntlor 1.00; for ciicli uliseiiii'iit piililicjitliin, m i iquuro, M rent. No "pn-fmi-d hiIIiih" contrail iiihiIp. All in Hit it to iniiiui imlillcittlnii mutt b. 1 Oelrril at thli oftlce tint Inter (linn Vrilnol " AdverlUrineiits cannot tie oriloii'il o1 fiM thi rurrrnt wvvV, lutt-r llnui Thurmlmr. U. A .11. It. It. Time '1 abl (!HIN(1 1USI , IaohI Kri'tKlit. I.v 0 a in. 16, Pan.iwmer, " to:nr, Arin;niiR. m. M.Kastl'reliilit. " ism p. in. Loop. in. (lOINtl NOUTII l, Mixed Train, l.v Hat n. in. Ar 11:13 p. in tHHNO WK8T 03, Fast Frcluht, l.v ll:lla. in. Ar 10:30a. tn UL Mixed Triitn, 12.obp.111. ll:0Sn. m 18, laeiii.'er. ' 8iWn. in. ' 1:30 p. in Markut Itoporl. Corrected weokly by Ited Cloud rrodiico Co. Wheat &0fj 55 Corn new 20 Oats now is Ry 25 Barley 35 Flax 75 Hoga ft3 10 Butchor'B stock 2 0002 50 Butter 10 ErB 8 Potatoes 40 Unringchickona peril) (J Old hona por lb fi Turkeys 8 Hay per ton 3 003 Kalit'o lw tliu IMbllv. I am now in full posBCRaion of tha city liTory, nalo, aad faed atiible, and in Tlte my friemln to call whon in nood et good taamt anil hugnies. II , ruKjfis I'oit kulDi.nci: Team, to hay 15 cants, Slngla horaa, to hay 10 canta. 11-COd J. 11, Davis. ii in . ii 1 I'roiuluina. The Nobraska and Kaunas Farmer is giving Oscar Glomon'a horta book, valued at 13, with one year's ubaoription for 50o , The Ghtuago Iutor-Ooein and The Fanner, for one year. ... 60o The Now York Tribune and The Farmer &0a Tbe Dream City and Farmer for ooe year ftOi Tbe Ceimopolitaa magaaiae and Farmer for one year tl 00 The SiWor Knight and The Farmer, BOo The Sstni-Woekly State Journal and Fanner, one vo&r 90o Omnha World-IIcru'ld and Tho Farmer 80a Sent to any address on rccoipt of ' amount. Neuuaska and Kan.sah Faumeu, Hod Cloud, Nob. BkBaHaB.aflBHiHiVflSFvSamflBlBNBBV or TOBACCO COMPANY. N. 0. Dear Sir: You are entitled to racatv FREE 'rom your wholesale dealer, f IHITE STAR SOAP with all Blackwell's Genuine Durham Smoking TobaCCO you buy. One bar of soap Free with each pound, whether 16 oz., 8 or., 4 ox., or a oz., packages. We have notified every whole sate dealer In the United States that we will supply them with soap to give you FREE. Order a good supply of OBNUlNiB DURHAM at occe, and Insist on getting your one oar 01 2oap FREE witn oound vou buy. ioai offered for a limited time, so order faaf t Im MaMla hahb a.yaaa..a notice aad sand It with wboUsala daakr. & RIFE, m This J as. Boss Watch Case With a 17 jewaled Dubtr work In it luv few tqanl and 110 aapnriors for botiit; durability aad time knapiui;. Any ni 'litl!itf k raally lit" wtti or n'elnok wt do wall tocail aa I'amnnti mill gat li print Imfor galug el'ewhf rn If yon naad Sptatnelos I run lit y oarraatly and will kutmk lilt, tunkit off nay prlca In tlit city. Ilm?n Hun In of tham. Laatliar halt-, O0I1I m id Silver Utl -Ijuag Gala" tad A Wrr Wutoli CiimIiih an Opal ItiMB-a nr ta ltat in nnr lino fi lailia. Call ia ami e tliam. "If your wattli linn liaan run oror li a wak'nu, klakr-il Iit n malt- ir ruiiiail i inotiupattat workman lirlatf it to lat, will tarn it on umxl aa ntw. nlno jim o'.eek and jawalry rrptirwark. (Jsidi paiil far old Kild aad ullrar. THOS. PENMAN. ITCHING PILES SWAYNFt& OINTMENT ' AHOt.TTTT:T BTMrTOBW-MsUti til ll U.BBMrMlMl.HM. lUldh. iaHm- auUtoc Miu.rian4u ua.iiwiu4aa.rijjfZ A. P. T. L. The American Protective Tariff League is a national oiganization advocating "Protection to American Labor and Industry" as explained by its constitu tion, as follows : " Tli otijnct of thin Liu hall ba to prsUet Amtn;an Itlirr hy tariff n import,, which shall dqunLly iNiiri Anienctn induitntl product! a(tinit th eompttition of fortign Ubor. Thcru are no personal or private profits in connection with tho organiza tion and it is sustained by memberships, contributions and the distribution of its publications. FIRST: Corrttpondanca la tollcittd ratrding " Mambtrthip " and ' Official Corraipondantt.' QESOND: Wanaadand waleomacontributiona, whathar imall or larga, to our cauta. THIRD: Wa publiah a larga lint of dooumanta tovarine all phaaaa of tha Tariff quaition. Com platt aat will to mailod to any addraaa for DO etnta. FOURTH: 6anr poital card raquait forfrta aampla copy of thn " Amarican Economist." Addraii Wilbur F. WaKaman. Qanaral6ecratanh t3S Wait S3d 8traat. Now York. TH.GQ!lQQ0l1,OOllQSlSlIlSf1nll. im yosi, work is Peiieciion. itie Densiore, me iiotii Running Densmore. 1(319 Furnam St, Omaha, Nab. A.C. Uoiratr, At.. Ked Cltud, Neb. RDMEDO commission UnUlCllO COMPANY, Kansas City, Mo., Stock Yards. fa VMbhSEt FecdersFumhhca I W. T. GRAY, Office. Market IUporU Fna. PILES mi talia ltaktaa aaJ EzKW r.lWAYWaTWoTNTliRNTlliKKZa I S S1D1 TYPEWRITERS ! .atSBBBaaBafli ' flPWHaaHBHaLB''' iltdlpriSSitt We 1-o.a My Fraud. In 1880 tho United States exported cheese to the valuo of $12,170,000. In 1894 the Unlcd States exported cheese to the value of $7,180,000 a decrease In exports In fourteen years of 40 per cent In 1880 Canada exported cheese to the valuo of $3,000,000. In 1894 Canada exported cheese to the value of $15,500, 000 an Increase In fourteen years of nearly 400 per cent. In Canada the mnnufacturo of filled and skimmed cIiccho is prohibited by law, eked tip by strong public senti ment, 'rom tho humblest cheesemaker to tho Rhest government officials tho entrglcs of the people havo been bent toward honest, wholcsomo cheese and world-wldo markets. In this country, In marked contrast with Canada, many people havo been working to prodttco cheaper cheese and not better cheese. Within our own stato trado has been greatly Injured In pnat yeara by skimmed chceso and more recently by filled cheese. This has now been stopped by law. Illinois manu factures enormous quantities of filled cheese each winter, branding much of It as Wisconsin goods, thus stealing what should be a good namo and break ing down our markets with a fraud product New York and Wisconsin are the great cheese-exporting states. Wiscon sin la by naturo tho greatest cheese state in the Union, made so by the nat ural adaptation of tho soil to nutritious grasses, the puro waters and tho cool nights In summer time. Our commonwealth has lost millions of dollars becnuso of tho laxness of our own people In tho matter of high qual ity and honest goods, and now that re formation has como all otir good acta will count for little, so long aa other stntea make fraud cheeso and brand them Wisconsin made. Wo need a United States law which shall place filled cheese In the same category with oleomargarine, licensing the manufacturers producing It, plac ing n small lax on each pound manu factured, and holding up its Identity until It reaches tho consumer. W. A. Henry, University of Wisconsin. Our Vnatcr Mother. At a dairy meeting In New York, re ported by the Country Gentleman, J. S. Woodward said: I have traveled over a largo part of this stato and have been in many sta bles. I address the brightest and most intelligent body of dairymen In tho state; and aa I saw how tho cows had been treated, I made a vow to say some good words for our real foster mother. Many barns and stables are not over 7 feet high, often not over 6' feet. There are stables so dork that If the door is shut It Is necessary to have a lantern to sco by In midday. Some nro very cold; Bomo aro damp and dripping. A stnble 20 by 45, by 6 feet had 20 cowa In It, weighing over 1,000 pounds each, and Aero were no ventilators. Not 100 tulles from Syracuse I saw n stable 45 by 24 by 7 feet, In which there wero 32 grade Jersey cows, weighing over 700 pounds e-nch. Thin means only 2G8 cubic feet of air spaco for each cow, and la equiva lent to putting a man of average alzc into a box measuring G feet by 34 Inches width and 35 Inches height, with no ventilation. In 90 per cont of the sta bles, also, the cowa are kept in tho old fashioned rigid stanchions. God pity tho heart of him who confines his cows in this way for 24 hours of the day, und makes them sleep, or try to sleep, In the itanchlouB also! Many farmers feed all dry food through the winter, with no succulence whatever. Oat Btruw unit corn intui arc all fat; they contain no bone or muscle, and yet farmers think they arc feeding well when they give their cows this ra tion. Many cattle get drink only once in 24 hours during the wluter, when they are turned out into the stable yard, and tho water is cold enough to chill them all through. From such con ditions as I have described, cowa often becomo distorted and deformed, with thouldcrs out of Bliapo and bunches on ho kneos, the result of rigid aUnchions. rheso aro not fancy sketches; I have icon them many a time. The farmer should study his cowa, raise tho height of Btables, learn more )f cow-ology. The cow 1b 90 per cent trtlflclal. Wisconsin Dairy Statistics. A phe nomenal incrcaso In tho dairy industry m Wisconsin during tho past ten years is shown by the stato censua returns for 1895, now being compiled. The census returns show there aro now in the state 1,325 cheese factories, valued at $959,531, Mid 729 creameries, valued at $1,550,707. Tho greater number of these hnvo been trcctcd during the post ton years. Tho entire number of cattle and calves on aand, Including cows In 1895, was 1,543,899, valued at $26,062,508.16. This year tho uumber of milch cows 2 years Did aud over lu tho state Is 842,039, rallied at $17,442,144, and the cattlo aud ;alvca, Including milch cows, aumber 1,352,827, valued at $38,900,766, In 1885 ,ho number of pounda of cheese report id was 33,478,900, valued at $2,984,813.92, while this year tho number of pounds ;cported was 52,480,816, and the valuo 3,984,103. In 1885 the number of pounda of butter reported waa 36,240, 131, valued at $5,850,402.50. This yoar ;ho number of pounds reported was 74,. 153,730, and tho value $12,310,373. H. B. Gurler thinks the first raove r a dairy farmer wa baa not tasted lis cowa, should, be to have them tested, ind become acquainted with them U41 ridually. Weed out all tha unsroaUab4e tsea. Then select a bull from aerae lalry breed. rASE & MoNITT, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Moon Block, - KED CLOUD, NEB. Collections promntly nttended to, and correepondenco Bolioited. How Onn Fanner hucucdrnl. "Well, Wallace, you seem to be pretty nicely fixed here on a farm which, when I left the country ten yeara ngo, was not considered worth much. You don't mean to say that this nice house and nil there Is In It, nnd those two extra barns, and nil tho numerous other Improve ments grew out of an old run-down farm, do you?" "Can't eny that they exactly 'grew' out of it, Uncle John, but they wero dug out of it by hard work, coupled with good management and thrift. As you Bay, tho old placo was all run down, and many of my friends Bald I was a fool settle down on a western Now York farm In such shnpo as this when I could go nto tho far west and get hold of a prnirlo farm which woud be so much easier worked. Uut Martha did not like to go very fnr away from her old father nnd mother, nnd besides, I thought that I saw post.1 bllltleti hero of success, and so I re solved to try It. The fnrm wap encumbered with a mortgage for one-third Its price. I took possesion tho last of February, and nftcr looking it over pretty thoroughly, I Btaked off four acres, lying on a sunny slope, nnd prepared to devoto this pint to market gardening. I went to the city and cn gnged a gardener, and with his aid put the ground In tip-top shape with fertil izers, as soon as It could be done, and started plants In cold frames and hot beds that I might be on hand with tho enrllest of the early vegetables. You should have heard some of the doleful predictions of my friends nnd neigh bors. My extravagance nt hiring a gardener and paying him considerably more than an ordinary farm hand could be got for was only to bo matched by my folly in supposing that I could dis pose of such an acreage of green truck if I succeeded in raising it. You boo mnrket gardening was not carried on then as much ns It is now, and eight miles from market was considered a uerlous obstacle. "To cut the Btory short, the flrBt peaaon my garden paid my help and my household expenses, put n new founda tion under my barn, and did somo tile draining. This left my hay, corn, po tato and Bitch crops to be sold toward reducing the mortgage. But oh, how I worked that summer and tho three or four following! Every other morning in the week I had to get up at 3 o'clock und start off to the city with a load of green stuff anJ It would bo noon before I could dispose of it and get bnck. Then, after a good dinner nnd an hour's rest, I'd plunge into hard work ngaln and keep at it as long ns I could see. But I was young nnd strong ns well aa ambitious. My wife was my best as sistant, for no matter how hard a man works outdoors, if the household mat ters aro not managed with thrift and economy, ho can't get abend much. Sho had a strong Gorman girl to help her, but Mnrtha was at the helm, early and late, to seo that things were going rlgtit with no waste. She was never lacking In expedients nnd tact." "I Bee," said Undo John, admiringly, "you struck a scientific track getting out of tho ruts that our fathers and grandfathers jogged along In." "You're right. Though I was brought up on n farm, I didn't think myself so wise that books and papers could not teach me anything. In addition to two good rural papers, I procured every other help I could, and ns you remarked at tho outset, have something to show for 'book farming,' combined with hard work. Now we're In circumstances to take It easy and see Eomethlng of the world." The wrlter'B only excuse In prepar ing this sketch is that It Is written from life, and tho farmer described Is not yet 40 years old. Helen L. Manning in Farmers' Review. Vie of Tuberculin. Wo havo Just heard of the following facts In connection wiui the uso of tu berculin, says the Rural New Yorker. Three cows were tested several yeara ago and gave the usual reaction. They wero taken out of the regular stablea and put in sunny box stalls and given the best sanitary conditions. The fol lowing year they were tested again, and ngaln reacted. The next year they were again tested, but failed to react. After they were slaughtered, an examination of the lungs showed that the disease had been stopped tho scare or marks show ing bow far It had gone. This suggesta two things: Sunshlno nnd a perfect san itary condition is the best "consump tion cure." Many herds nro undoubt edly weakened and mndo moro liable to the disease by bolng kept In dark, filthy and poorly ventilated Btables. Another thought Is that while tuberculin muy prove an nccurato test for tho prcsonco of the dlFcase, It docs not follow that every cow that shows tho reaction should bo killed at once. A covv may havo tho gerni3 of tho disease In her system nnd yet bo bo well cared for that she will entirely recover. Blood Tells. Recently 308 American beeves wero sold in Ixmdon at 7 centa per pound, an average price of $97,58, tbe herd bringing the snug sum of $30, 054.64. The Polled Angus In this ship ment brought full $100 each; tho Here ford a came next, and next the Short horns. The average weight waa 1,3(0 pounda. These beeves, It to aald, reached their destination without loss and ao tually la better condition than wheft placed on shlpbeard. This shows that the cattle were carefully managed tap to the day ef sate, aad that the breet !?Kt.aJi,.?JXS5 T.If.EI0?! ft Cfclakaatea'a KutU UtMadHmad. NNYR0YAL PILLS unflaai only Urn Dine. a.a,t !'; (raiaua. urn i till kr CAfrfr umJ ilrand n Htdt&i be it aralaxl with blua rib nnatkora HtfU4t datwroui 1 fiotaj and atUalMAi. A I I)f atari all. oranli la itampd) for jift(cuUrt, leitliao&UU tJ "UelUf for follfVMnltfr.bjrrtara niuii ivivvu iBwuiuvuiajtB nam ruprr, OklahMtfChowlciUCUutlJaNKqiuire, (lUU t,Diaaj all .faVY (jM BitaJilaJr boo. TLW 4m awL L ntaaitu . N RHEUMATISM Results from Liver and can be Cured by Using Dr. j. h. : LIVER AND KIDNEY BALM : A Certain Remedy for Diseases of the Liver, I Kidneys and- Urinary Organs I AT DRUQQISTS. PRICK, tt.00 PER BOTTLE I THE Dr. J. H. McLEAN MEDICINE CO., St. Louis, Mo. (SJlMaMaM Profitable Sheep. In these days of low prices nnd general depression only systematic sheep husbandry can bo made profitable. In tho better times when any lamb would (sell for 5 cents per pound, and wool would bring a luartcr, any slouch could make money ut of sheep. Ex. Happiness Is not found In getting the t11. but In giving It up Itching, ; Burning, : Eczema I the external indication of a cm lition of the blond which produce, a icry irritation almost unbearable. I ia 1 mistake to think that this local irtta tion is the disease itself it is sinipl-nn :vidcuccof a disoriluicd condition ofthe Wood. The scat of the disease is iutlic blood, and this is why the various saves md ointments ustinll'y applied hat: no (feet whatever. They cannot posibly reach the origin of the trouble; oily a blood remedy can do that. S. S.S. is without an equal for blood disease and promptly and permanently cures Kyema 'itnl removes nil taint. Much torture could be avoided f the firt.t itchini: symptoms were hccdtl aud a course of S.&.S. taken promptly, is ap parently insignificant H.in iirittions u-u'tlly" develop into the worst form of ICccma unless properly treated It nutters not what other ticaiiicnt has liecti tried in vain, S. S. S. Quays L'i'ts nt the seat of the disease and forces it out. Mr. William Armstrong, an oldresi dent unit highly respected citi.ti of iiu I'ere.Wis., writes 011 April ls.t,'.8j6. MR. WIMJAM ARMSTO& "I have been a sufferer for eigl years with that horrible disease, Kcaua, at times nil over my body, nnd ucpt-rson can describe the burning nnd ihiug I had to endure. ' "The extent of my sufferingican be appreciated when I state thnt.y con dition was such that I could )t take my bed, and for three month never laid down, but was compelled ;f sit in my chair when not moving ariinl. I was treated by the best of plsicians with no success, aud tried nil tl patent medicines recommended forj.ceum, without any good results. I tin went to the Indiana Mud baths, withies.ime results, nnd then to Mt. Clcnnts, the celebrate 1 medical resort, wire the treatment partially helped nitbut the disease- shortly returuel. J vent to lHoridn, thinking that 11 char. of cli mate aud water nnd the elm fruit miuht cure me, but found 110 ce. "I then tried S.S.S.amlniterirccilays the burning and itching Miblcil, nud I continued to improve stead until I was well entirely cured. Iter com mencing S. S. S. I never pntn exter nal application to my hmbi any part of my body. You nmy refer) me any person suffering from Hcct. I will always keep the S. S. S. iny house, fur I consider it the best htooMicdiciiie of the present age. 1 am sevty years of age nnd nm now in perfet health." l'or real blood diseases roll can only be obatiucd by using n real lod reme dy. So many people who a sufferers from an obstinate or dcep-sted lilood disease make the mistake of Aing rem idles which at best are onlymics nud cannot possibly reach their table. It is in just such cases which ott so-called blood remedies caunot reachut S.S.S. baa made aomi of the niMlonderful cure. S. S. 8. carea perm anew Cancer, Catarrh, Rheumatism, Heap, Tetter, Contagious Blood PoUon, Itfula, and all other diseases having th origin in the blood. It is a gj A Real Blood &iedy, and gets at the seat of diseaiuid forces it out promptly even after etr so-called blood remedies have failed.S. S. S. is guaranteed purely vegetal Hooks on blood and skis, cases will lie mailcu Jree to any atUbt by Swift Speoifc Co,, AtU4CJr ' M (l '? 'W ft a Bad mcleans :: Nailtqh ptpw nuc iU& mas SIM ttri oaaqdb j n n rATh'BttioSOf OR LE AT rl 0 If you Intend purvluialng Tan Shoes or Oxfords Come and see this line it will pay yon. G. A; Ducker & Co.. BEST LINE TO DENVER AND CALIFORNIA QH.J.S. EMIflH. -t) Dentin!, KiDCLODD, - NkDBA8K Over Taylor'a Furniture Wore. Extracts teeth without pain. Crown anil liriiltio work h spcclnlti porcelain Inlay, mm nil kinds of gold nillom. Makes told ami rubber plates and cumbinatlea plates. l work iniHraiitead to ha flrst-oUss. Notice to 'ii'ut'iicm. Notice is hereby given that 1 will examine all persons who may desire to offer theuiKolvcH as candidates for teachers nfthu public aolioola of this oouuty, nt lied Cloud on tho thirtJ Saturday of each mouth. Special examination will li,i held on tho Friday proceeding the Hd at urday of eaoli month. The standing desired fr 'Jd and 3d crado oi-rlitinntos is tint -.nine no grado bolow7( per iint., avengr 80 por coin; lor lirst grade nertiuoatc no grado below 80 por oi'iit., ivtrrago 90 per cont. in all biaiiohtm required by law. P. M. TTiTNTr.it Cmiiirv yurn. No Air, No Life. Pneumonia suffocates, because the s w o 1 1 e n tubes get solid, and keep air from the IlltlOfQ. Dr. Acker's English Remedy reduces the inflammation, so the patient breathes freely, and is soon well. MiRsR.Rnyl35W.33dSt.,N.Y.l says: "When threatened with pneumonia, I took one bottloof Dr.; Acker k KmrlMi u..,.,.i.. .,.i i. - ....k...(. .tvinvilV, Hill. ...w pain and cough disappeared." 3is, 25c.s50c.jSl. AUDrorslsU. ; AcaRjkuiCI(,O..I-UCliBliiL'riSt..N.T. ' : (ci(l&t l?Wrafl IHJ ?s ..ru".ri,. 1 - w"i oocKer s Gash Dry GoodsHouse faaaaaaaaaaaaaiaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa ""IMIHMlinilHmw tMnnmVl.llllllHI . w - .,, - . .3SmJaakx-t. "-- www.. ... .., stts$sm$zrm tr" zx ""V r 11 jajj i -w- fVfmfitaaanimeiKfgg, fJAymmt. ti. ' K4