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of tig jl get i'r\ W 01,D COUNTBt. wotr*of trie t-re 301 s: S ('01 .ts. I! (H lfs eub. s in •lit ii| itviIU if* rare. E L(M $ Stcj Pca,% ,e IIH'H. olWcIstlE' almost, t'eal not vet beyond the pale of i:ati0D8. After all tlx ^e e\i~ i foreign country imagine our u- we came around a corner to Mri and stripes of Old Glory vera hotel. With one accord \n off our machines and hiilut ,nner with a glmut that caused iy" English swells around ire at us with monoch e\e«, :d to go along, "th aie .« been pushing slowly along :i coast, a stretch of sea shore 'or 160 miles or so from Lon n the north, to Belfast on the ds have been almost uni and we are told that they er We came on one bad place. mtuin chain had to be cross went along up. the country :i re desolate, the road fuller and the hills heavier. At miles of peat bogs, with I turf stacked up all around, turn cutters and carters go tiieir work. But what shall e ride down the hither side? »-v.-a miles, and we made it iu 23 without accident, which we ^'"d time, considering that our i Falcons curried in addition to height, at least St pounds of nd of this ride we came to hunt', i lively and "sporty" town pinny wheelmen and a good track. cyclists were astounded at the weight of our mounts. They had 'i if evening beginning at o'clock, time in this mouth and Au have three clear hours of dey- I" us, fresh lrotu the American laieu ruces at Asbury Park, New }'. these contests were amusing. was but one wood rimed bicycle ground the others weighed from '5 pounds. Eight brawny fellows Mlor a five mile race. Toward ''"se, when the excitement ot the drew near, two poor devils came ilfcr nf ionel and went down with their whpfla on top of them. Hot two ired yards farther, the remaining six frsgot tangled up, and every moth ls,)D of them went in a heap. Most iietn were too bad iy used up to re- ,nti but oae limped on a shaky wheel, slowly to the end, and won the A most commendable feature of mces was the fact the charge for nssiou was but three pence. tet wotsderfull car price of niture— Giants Causeway—you can read futiti any guide book, or in any enoy |^dia. We clambered over its rocks 'loolc as much pleasure in abusing ofiicious guides as in viewing the ^'tic columns. In brow-beating and "s'nn these parasites who hang nbout I'otulers, one feels a righteous satis r^n. Never yield to them. They are ^be trouble ot a good "cus- ®°ticable thing along this coast is a bridge over a deep, deep chasm i"'nS the rocky island of Canick a- 5 lo the shore. A handrail of rope p®cts the venturesome traveler, but in strong wind we w&wl k Ireland. July 28,1895. ,bape impossible to commt.ni ?',enwhoare in the bosoms Unilies, and intent on iheir ,tioQS, the sensations winch bm to tourists in a for- "renJote from all friends ex I as a shilling buys, and with '..s written on th« faces ot the their dress and manner, in I 4nce of all thafc man hascon aa, even in the as sure herself. For instance |.,reled into Port Kueh, a fash waterside resort on the j, coast, ii ai we saw and examined I. with Stocl their numerous players ]jttie balls on the irround, in )::e ininKless way we saw hotels i, amea, and coats of arniH for saloons with no button ivsol the familiar tiu beer osteftd a legend which in that some citizen was •jeell spirits and malt liquors on or off the premises ^oods stores called drapers' llorney signs, but those of in plenty absolutely no res •ut bake shops and occasioual ,ise, for the Irish are preut on ,ke it excellently well. But pole seems to be the same, aed length stuck across the was to us an encouraginir sign iUNYAN ON SILVER. l, 5 rj^ y W i Now, at the ftirther side of that plain was a little hill called Lticre, in that hill a silver mine, which some of them that had formerly gone that way, because of the rarity of it, had turned aside to see but, going too near the brink of the pit, the ground being deceitful under them broke, and they were slain. Some, also, had been maimed there and could not to their dying day be thoir own men again. Then I saw in my dream that a littla off the read, over against the silver mine, stood Demos, gentlemanlike, to call to passengers to come and see, who said to Christian and his follow, "Ho turn asido hithor, and I will show you a thing.'' Christian—What things so deserving as to turn us ont of the way? DCIIKUS—Here is a silver mine and some digging in it for treasure. If you will come, with a little pains you may provide richly for yourselves. ing and jumping ropes to »he earth. Above the bridge is a peasant's hut, and being economical, we t»ok our lunch there of bread, milk and cheese. Pre sumable this cabin is typical. Its walls were stone and a fnot thick. It stood away down under the hiil tr protection, lis occupants were man and wife and three children. On» small room seemed to serve all purposes. On the wolls were rude shelves with blue and white dishes in one corner a bed curtained off, In an other a bunk, a heavy table and clumsy chairs a Are ot p^at burning merrily i» large fireplace ceiling to thatch, smokeu black whitewashed walls, ornamentJd with chromo daub-* of the roval family small prisonlike windows, a dirty stone floor littered with bags of dulee (a sea weed that is used for food,) old clothing and potatoes chickens and dogs scramb ling under our chairs for crumbs—these are some of the features that a rapid glance or two revealed of the home of the Irish peasant. Fairly comfortable, we should call it, if not either clean or luxurious. Then Christian calk-d to Dermis, saying: "Is not this place dangerous? Hath it not hindered many in their pilgrimage?" Demas—Not very dangerous except to those that are careless. But withal he blushed as he spoke. Christian—What is thy name? Is it not it by the which I have called thee Demas—Yes, my name is Demas. I am the son of Abraham. Christian—I know you. Gehuzi was your great-grandfather and .Judas yonr father, and you have, trod their steps. Spenking ot bread and milk, we had a lunch of it that we will not soon for get. We had a long morning, covering many Irish miles, and there was no town in sight, Upon inquiry, we were directed to a heme were we could get "a drop of milk." It proved to be the house of the talent of the land on which stands Dunluce castle. A grinning girl brought US rich milk, fiesli l.ulie- and seme of those delicious, flaky, crusty bakings cal led scones. After filling up on this fare we introduced our,elves to the ron.anuc side of sight seeing by rambling over the castle ruins. We went into ecstatic deli" lit. There were chff tops a half acre square, with side sheer down a hundred feet to the rocks ever beaten )j the angry waves a narrow bn ge nected this crag with the land, lhe walls remain almost intact, u timbers and roof have perished centuries ago, for the castle was built before Amer ICA W«B DISCOVERED In the presence of 0 gray preferred to he down ever, and were exceedingly *bfta we were back over the away- stones, swept by the winds, the rem"an|s ol rooms lhat baveechited to llio tramp of iierco "M l,„v,. many scene Wo we "few pensive. To add lo the mter eJ.ndagre».cavern,Hrec,ly2 der the cnsllf, a l)"ce c»v« in winch waves break on black rocks, and the sea weed ere,v long and rank. A most grue some hole, and lor deeds ol darkness. Till* cavern served the old knight a» ou,let to these.. Uo letter pl.ee for medieval castle could be imagined, and no better preserved ruins exist in I»- aod, ban tbo*» of old Dunluce. UA W,.Q ft C, tr?i i* i« kg I 44 A bright, sweet navy plug chewing necessary HAND SEWED PROCESS. $5.oo For Men 1 tobacco, con taining finest quality of Bur ley Leaf. Has a fine, rich flavor and excellent chewing qualities,combining all TAKE AVER'S MlNt- and It's a Prize Winner Read what the Worid'3 Fair Judges said when grant ing the Highest Award to points to rate this Everybody MAX PLUG For sale everywhere. 1,000,000 People Wear IW.iJoiKiasSliacs L. «n*BEST 13N THE WORLD, $3.00 rvi i**w» w noaelai «hoc» and »a»e from «\l OO Palr. All Sl.vle* and rdvance In leather hat Incri-uM-d Hie **. „V?,'.h/r makes, but the qimlitv and prices of nnee °f "thcr nUK the »»ue. -ELLIOT'S.- Dr. Miles' Pftln Fills stop Headache. [col *FA!R° P*CSiffc the Only Sarsaparilla AT THE V/ORLD'S FAIR. IT LEADS ALL OTHER BLOOD Purifiers. f'ir-r !*vi11. An h. .\uu. -•. 'ST. NOTICE OF TIME APPOINTED FOR PROV ING WILL, ETC.- State of Smith Dakota, County of Grant,SB: In Coumy t'ourt. Iu ttu- matter of the estate of Samuel Dtm- ru'll, Deceased The State of South Dakota Sends Greeting to llanir Diitiuell, Ktliel Staples, Helen 1). Kurbt-r, Mnuce DiinrxMI and I'var! Dimneli and Kmily A. Unrueil, heirs next of kiu of Samuel Duuiiell de ceased. Purf'.imit to an order of said court, made on the tfth day of A"fruHt. A. I. lSifi, notice is hereby niven, that Saturday, the 24th day of Aucuet, A. I). IWi®!. !it.'! o'clock^ p. ill., of *iiid day. at the Court Room of said court, at Milbnnk, in the County of Grant, have heen niipointed as the time and place for proving the Will of faid Samuel Dunne!!, deceased, and for heariuc the application of Hannah Dunnell executrix, the «Hti nnce to her of Lftters Testamentary, when and where any person interested may appear and corneal the pame. \Vitnec8 the Hon.. IOIIN II. OWES..Judge t© 1 N of the Countv Court, and the seal of said Court, tills »ith day of Aueun. A 1). 1S!»5, at his office in the City of MiJbauk, County of Grunt, State of South Dakota. W. I'KKVBY, Clerk. MORTON BURNS A HOTEL. fbe Secretary of Acrlcnlturo Gives 16 Object Lesson« Secretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Morton not only lias oloar ideas about moiiry, but bn is over ready with some striking illustration or pat parable to make his thoughts clear to others. On July 23 he wroto the following lotter DEAK Siu-liHturning from a small furlough, we. I known to me to be the T« i i tf. T„ it vrm ""Monov in and made of motuls a fiction of the law. Tho commodity value of the material out of which money is coined or creatf A Is of no consequence in a currency." tcu. In W yoming, Otoe county, Neb., there lives a good citizen who oil the field and in the United States sonato has been a conspicuous figure. He bus in his time advocated nearly all kinds of money, including of course the "poor man's money," meaning silver at lfi to J. And now ho advertises for sale for cash in hand to the highest- bidder a half mile square of his large domains. Many thrifty citizens of Otoe county arrive at the Hotel Wyoming the night before the sale to be on hand when the bidding begins at 8 o'clock next morning. During the night the hotel is burned to tho ground, (sixteen of tho would bo purchasers, each having 1,000 silver dollars melted in the conflagration so that tho Goddess of Liberty and "In Ood we trust" are erased and swal lowed up in ragged chunks of bullion, awako to find that the commodity value of money is of consequence. For, placing their bullion of silver on the- market, they find it worth only 00 cents, whereas they bought it at a mint value,with ls.bor and labor's products, at #1.29 an ounce. Sixteen thousand dollars of silver coin accidentally melted into bullion brings its owners lens than ?(S,000. But there was also one would bo purchaser who had melted in that same fire $1,XK) of gold coin, so that the goddess and "In God we trust" were lost to view in a lump of yellow bullion without a single sign of governmental Btami thereupon. And this one who held gold finds that the commodity value of his bullion is nearly if not quite equal to that, stamped upon it as coin ty the United States mint, lie has learn ed at least that the bullion valuo and the mint value of gold are very much the same, and then therefore gold is by far the best metallic money. It is safe to wager 18 to 1 that the gold coin owner feels 10 times t\s much consolation when selling iu bullion hw gold thousand dollars as does any one of the other selling his thousand dollars of «ilver reduced to bullion. And tho poor man's best money is that which loses least in valuo when by lire or otherwise it loses the tamp of tho government. And if at that fin- sumo fiat money advocate lost a product of the highest order oi' excellence in its class. who tries Ctl- says it's the best. few thousand paper promises to pay dol lars he also wi?l rise up and dispute tho pop ular fallacy that "money is a mere fiction of the law" and vehemently denounce tho vagary that "a commodity valuo in money is unnec essary and useless," Gold and silver were money before any law made them so—before any government coined them or any mint stamped them. And then each was valued by the demand for each, and now also the relation of the supply of gold to tho dem-md for gold regulates its value. And the relation of the supply of silver to the de mand for silver regulates its value. But you further say that the government, not taking silver for coinage at 10 to 1, has de stroyed the /lemand for silver. In a government like ours, which aa an en tity is simply "all of us," there can be no de mand created either for silver or anything elso except tho integral parts of the oomposito evolve that demand. Only tho people of tho United States by their generally expressed de sire for a thing can create a demand for it. Yours faithfully, BTEHLINO MOKTON. No* onft compliant has ever been made by thoee usini? Ayere RareapHrilU wc cording to directions. Furthermore, we h-ive yet to learn of a ningle CHBG First pub. July vlr, 'V5. Lr#' ib. Sept '9P Mortgage Sale. Whereas, default has been made in tl o condi tione of a tnorti.'ai e coritaiuiiiir a power of sale, yiveil by Guftav hrockmun and Anna Brockman, hif wife, luortjiayors. to H. K Morrill, uiorhranee, dated October :50th, 1N!H, and tiied for record in the office of the register of deeiiri of Grant county. South Dakota, on the 30th day of October, 1--HI. at 4:4So'c!ock p. m.. and duly recwrdetl in boi I. SO of mortfia^ee on ]ate W!t, mortuaunii the foliowiiifj descrilnd lauds and preniiio rt annate, lyu aiad l»ei»j: in liie count.) of lirai.t and State ot iJ-outfl Dakota, to-wit: The North-enM quarter of Section Thirty iu Township One Huudrcd and Eighteen (11^), north of ran^e Fifty '5c), VV 5th I*. ..containing acres according lo the government survey thereof, and vVhereas. by reason of in which it hns failed to afford benefit f* Bays hundreds of diugirists all over the country, llus cured others, will cure you. Advertised let»«r 1.1st. Letters remaining uncHlled for in tlie Milbank Post Oflice Aug. 21, 1885. Crawford W. A Bohn Herman Grieesen Geo. L. Htgland Adu Johnson Chas. K. Lliidstrom John In calling for any of the above plense say "advertised" and give dale of advet tisement. It not c»lle«1 for in Hlieen days will be aent dead letter office, GEO. C. MIDI P. M. LIHPOOK, ench default the power offaleiu eaid mort^ftire has become operative, and iio action at law oi nuit in eijuity t.aa been instituted to renew the indebtedness secured by en id niortgace, or any part tin reof, and there is claimed to be due on tniid mort^a^ti the sum of llfteen and lO loO Uoliai s, and W'hen-as, since the execution i s.nd morttrnjo the said II. E. Morrill, said moricranee. has died, leaving her surviving Frankie t,od mid Anna Morrill, who were all her In )rs at law and to tvhum her estate was distributed arui who were the owners and holders of said mor'pige and ul the indebtedness served thereby, ami: Whereas, since the death of said II. E, Mor rill, the saic Aunt} Morrill to whom was distri buted one half of the estate of said II. E. Jtor ri 11, lias died, and Whereas, G. 1, Wood has been duly appointed administrator of the estate of said Anna Morrill, defeased, by the eounty court of suul countv of Grant, and is duly qualified and act inn as such, and as such administrator with Fnakse Wood aforesaid, holds and owns said nmrmat'e, and Whereas, said Frankie Wood and said adminis trator are both desirous of foreclosing, eaul mortuaL'e, Notice is hereby uiven tlint saul mortL'a^e will bv foreclosed bv a sp.le of said |M miscs at nb!ic auction by the "sheriff of said rant comity on the Ttb day of September, 1M.", at o'clock p. m. at the front door of the court house in the Gity of Milbank, Coumy of irnnt and State of South Dakota, to pay said indebtedness, Interest, at torney's fees of twei ty live dollars, besides costs, and disbursements allowed by law. Dated, July sMth, 1 M5. FITAMUE VVoOD.heir, niidG. 1.. C. P. Aiimiii IsWator, holder# of eaid Mortiraue. who I find your letter. In it you state. Money, acknowledged to me that they executed whether or paper, la merely THOMAH PorcK, Attorney for holders of said inoitua_'e. Firtt Tub. July S®, I.at I'ub Am "1)6. Known all met! by these presents, That th? firm of Wood Brothers, is a p«rtn'n-lnp composed of Georjje A, Wood and John Wood, who are all the peisonn interested as partners in the busi ness transact ed by such partnership- The prin cipal place of busiuess ot Maid tirni is situated at the Citv ot Milbank in the Connty of Grant and State of South Dakota, and the place of .resi dence of each of said partners is at, said City of Milbnnk. i s certificate is made in compliance with taff provisions of section 1443 of the Civil code of iho State of South Dakota, the same beiug Beclion 4(ifi of the compiled laws of 1W, Dated July :ird, 1S!»5. GEOIUIE A. W OOD, JOHN C. WOOD HtaieofSouth Dakota, Connty of.rant. ss: Pe it reiuembf leil that on this :Srd day of Jnly, IWfi, before me Thomas L. Hoiiek, a notiry publio within and for said county and stale, personally appeared Georjie A. Wood and John W ooii, executed the foriuoiu^ lnstrumtnt "ll(V In witness whereof I have hereunto set my hand and seal the day aid year ilrst above wnt- (SEAL] THOMAS L. Hot'CK, Notary 1'ubllc, Grant Couuty, South Dakota. First 1'ub. Aug. ,9i. Last Pub. Aug. :«», '15. (Notice. U. S T,atid Office, Watcrtown, -i. Ifk. July 2!', Complaint having been entered at this Otlice by Hans P. Olson H'.'auiSf 1'erdiimnd S ™!T abandoning his Homestead Kntry No. llOil, dated July 2^, 1^", upon the K i, Section to. Township laiN, Uango 50VV, in Grant county, S .I), wiin a view to the cancellation of said en try, the said parties an' hereby summoned to appear at this oliice on the 4th lav of .Septeiu_ber, is(,t,r. at o'clock a. m, to resp' Hid and furnish testimony concerning said nilegert abandonment. M. \V. S'.IKAK, Register. Notice. Notice is hereby given that Grant countv new holds $1,230 of the permanent, school fund bo loaned on farm merit-ages and bonds or school corporations at the rate ot 7 percent interest, pav able semi-annually. Persons applying for loans, cull at the county auditor's oflice. N onslil:liJ, Auditor of Grunt County, S. D. 7 Chronic Nervousness Could Not Sleep, Nervous Headaches. I Gentlemen:—I have been taking I your Restorative Nervine for the past i three months and I cannot say enough in its praise. It has I Saved Hy Life, 1 lor I had almost piven up hope of ever being well again. I was a chronic suiierer from nervousness and could not. sleep. 1 was also troubled with nervous headache, and had tried doctors in vain, until I used your Nervine, Mlis. M. WOOD, Ringwood, ill. Dr. Miles' Nervine Dr. Miles' Nervine is sold on a positive iruarantee that the first bottle will benefit. All dru^pists -ell it at |1. 6 bottles for 15, or It will be sent, prepaid, on receipt by the Dr. Miieu' Medical Co., Elkhart,priceInd.of Pais All drujrjrlsts puarantee Dr. Miles' VUjIM to btoo lleaduclMt. "Oae cent a dose.'