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Tim "i luSjir 4'lDOD'i iMlina 4IS«lil'.y i^filM. Jvl fc h, pub)libe «rer)r thnrnday at 'o^rSfiWttBg, Fourth BtrMt, Wahpeton. ^:C4k0t*-''MlQ the gnbacriptlon price Ults.00 ner *S tS.'M at: Pac: delibirati me, and that has since I Iom with my Ward shou I fet%the remotes! will takes SkS aanu .s jl/Bafling-rDemocrats during "pic hn/i .visit to-the soflhern porti terrtjtbrj^ iJiatlyarn was ittxt* ri\ 4 -/j ItW*. I*--,— 2, QXAVicWSaif hi aa 3££&m. %'^V.rv TWW I '.if knas O A., & y~" iht #*»r., 3 §f Mr. Geo. P. Oarred ?.-! !T '^JUL ®J§. Dear Sir:—Your 'Wi :S indebtedness for The •J tr TUT span. line STTT toeo 400 &{&?)**»'•-f lieta. P%.\V:.. J-f Swk lm jlMk.. 8m 8m fO 75 8S0 Uot., ?fl'\ S'OO •400 400 900 7 00 1000 •450 woo f, «r»~i '1(1 l. Viifir, .. „-i i"t 1 Wf. .$%, :.P»ul (nit k' a 1 *bm-. kov 3i 50 00 6 80 8 00 000 -trr -.M** Jontpallat defend .the doctrine ot the yMch 1» approves, lit: him criticise and the party which he does not approve, re K*hr»T»nt» rtghtitor jpjrtaiid his on. inceenanrehlg frieiuisvtoBthe, truth may P4™*! and he will be independent enough for a ilj)r'f. ^r^ec.ountry.^-[Onrfield. u-, .$ I a .... .' r—tt1 *'Kj •., ... iwwnranmoi tic timci areoi aiietfssjon tf qWlufrfiSf ••"••sTto' the peopW 6f RIchla^d «ouirty^ but of A 4fc"" Ible for feb, :&:m sQ:lftb|e {.T-^ipe^cjpi iat: Rafteringduring tbq\4$t»r bfcfcard, t«8ft to* W&MlMtbf the i^Dftkotaand: Minnesota !. '.Dakota, can! teed mw.V $£f$N9%ii9. a d^e» ff»t# tii* »$fc!?ii^^ry. Nobpdyisaiiihor tzed toask^cbarity fprt her., ni ii^' kpta, "for nowhere, in the terrifcoiy ^.fLrs str,, aring my administr PoHtical cod mea7? SO90f»,'b^Qteehight editor being PlUttaldywas tjempprpriiy ""siened to ijere lie was i*P kt .rtfft1- lyr flflO 'iso 85Q 18 Sits 9300 895 500 7 00 000 10 00 18 00 83 00 88 00 56 00 1 75 4 50 •4 75 9800 585 6 00 850 14 40 16 00 84 00 85 00 56 00 60 00 95 00 8 40 peton jher- Frorrieigbt uiitli teii o^lobk kon- 4»yihOtning aEaiT&geof wonderful JW*W fcl1 ^B'derits ot I oin 'M^.ci'ty t$e villages of Warner and ff ", Mell^tt^ tn tbe south, and Groton ', Bath and Brlttou in the east. The vanous.bSQlBjUtfglol thfelattertown, wWob isat least forty miles distant, weire especially prominent.—[Aber deenPioneer. irga$: Hs| Afi ^||bali|j |well kftpwb, i'n ^ifgb and tiakotai was «»Ued to St. Paul last week, and at a consultation' witb Cql, liewis ''3 proffered ftn editorial tii «"2.K po&itWh ob tbe^ Dako^ tliB^aft|nent tlte-maMeri- under advisement,[ and wijl prolbabiy accept, which takes from, Fargo bne of the briglitest and Most copious wiitere ip the tefritd^'' „,Mr. Easton who has ..b^n witfcj the .1 ^iai^benia^i^OTil^^ —^,y, The *—--r- a vKfbt •Hi t.i: Baiiit f.O'j s.: .tit ,«jf. bbttU I ki'ePerisnowtiedi«and a" 4tn* .-S-w. eswuiai/Bu mat one-nait tne en His of Bum i» actoll, SSEZ&SSk** "NNa *•«*«. maiiafactuc Sl^wMf ||»mirthern ^^^^out due ^J^jEjtovjpijlhout' due af gt w«th av„. in with recent 'of th€| 1 Jjutljpf whole cloth ... searcely/w^th||Mfenial.'' a^aiParb®r® raniifac (1 is (.ElKU HxlU The Far8« ..v»M J]7a«» *uu fll& 1 Argii-rrfi Mr* 'Ptutfiioy, who was $!j(v York, and *t,lt Ao. young man kftwe^oecaajOQojto fde} ,pfroud iocc^ionally that along b«aq- W S Sew? 3^1^ ^Mommended by Daitlfttg-. W(i|n he pre^fefitW thought—Ohr lulditlie major Hfite 1 feUow^e%i2 pounds. sickly, unprepared for times. He, ^Jveaa joboflopking up out Piimley made a wfP for 3Sie Argus, and came back a report that 'evidenced faith fWne»8, iMacH and deflniteriess. 'wils- fc disliked to give yyywWIMWWv uioiircu vUKtVV •J1'-*tha.tduty,' iio-ivas »i(.a w. v'-H^^aioe^faitliful, untiring worker if t' j. '^8M»4itBii! until now he |lms -grown ji——in favor of the Argus, never asking f.oti forpromotion^n^vet'' s&kinj for art ~ftdvance"!n salary—gwig abmjt asi' :i —other's failing or neglecting—Mr. Wli«nttml^attfenalii^t6 fthi'MHViftjW heiaWskuajgiAg'editbr 9ttM Ai'gufti Wpositftift fie worthily AIM—h| i^ also vice president of The Argiis I w. i«q|jQ«ltir!raaaa%OThis mmjm rtntamt Hi,,'? We'll Let Up. Shbmwrk*Kouk Corxeks, N. V., indebtedness for Feb 1 notice of my he Times re ceived in due time and I cheerfully remit, but Mrs. Purdy says there is too much tree trade in The Wah- Times for her, so you can 14 40 send The Times to my address. I 88 00 aa oo 60 00 80 00 06 00 10 00 18 00 1500 .7 00 1300 1800 «8tt go send you five dollars, credit me with the same and continue The Times to me, and send me the notice again when you think it time if I don't remit before or come there and see you myself. I hope my old friend, you will let up on free trade. Yours respectfully, James T. Purdy. The many friends of Mr. Purdy at Wabpeton will be pleased to hear from him, even in this indirect way be glad to learn that he is still among the living and interested in learning the weekly news from Wahpeton. But say, Mr. Purdy, do you not think that your noble spouse is un duly impatient in throwing The imes into a dark corner unopened and despised on account of its ideas of reform. Should she not tend to meet these arguments and refute them if need be. The truth is it is not a matter of free trade, but a matter of revenue reform. Just think of the fact that in round num bers 4ty000,000 of people are unduly taxed to support unjustly the re maining seven millions, this undue and unnecessary tax amounting to from 40 to 100 per cent on the necessaries of life. And worst of all, this extra tax does not contrib ute to the,,needy workman, but in the end makes him poor indeed Look at the,great trusts and combi nations ma0ej life, wholly turer—the] pense of scarcely a a piece of the necessaries of inrich the manufac jolist—at the ex tlie ^ofisumer. There is thiVg.manufactured from .. twine tV, railway steel that is not protected (?J\j rates varying from 40 to more than 100 per cent all for the*m*um||^tjlirer, who is now fast laying nis plans and insti tuning the ,,.^st. g^ntic line of monopolies ever, known or even ven in creasing the already burdensome ico?tS j(to,th«) be Te ciwiilate^ f^gardiag lations between A^jwmp the gtins^ferj ^based on a system which has for its founda ii6$ $bis: Ameri can industry* whereas in fact it is i-j-.-: u." tl*Q step- ping stone to an American-oligarchy. ^tore- and foot to keeper^ is now^ tied hand and foot _'j i. biought about a good deal of cnti ... St. Louis Republican claims that [°£. ^leaving Ithe mort^eVo®ly.^sibleian^ us our necessariM' 'ji&vlife/'lnclud n& fwMfe! i^ holdinjj pjir •no»ei» ia t^^grtndest ne unfair and s^n •'$j0j[ttkn ed m. atized we are all so Broiid-jof Is yttLftJess t«an huge work^oi^PVeAeJltSof the nabob and ^anittjjst mtjyenjto* increase of weaUh wrought W d^veio^ment—aU cSftO^tini to to the mbney power,—and do iyou ^gely?a f^tlae power, -at X^jTffi^iend Purdy, we belieV^tliat an equjil, |oc\ting., the American manufacturer for the most part and American,vim can stump the world to produce lari eqi^al. She can to-day enter the markets of the earth and: do a greater business than she does to-day and very soon lead the Wj5rl4, in all that is desii^ble in this life among the 'common people The great..le^yen is coniing, and Hskj spee^ tlie day, ..: ,i We' want revenue for ait e'eon q4 •mical management oSf'the jlnanci^ ^.^..•HUURgvuiBUb VI UIO linUIlCKVI the extent of from $50,000,000 to $100,000,000 annually,paying tribute to the bankers who really have no right to this money—further than through this agency, only, is a monetary crisis avoided, growing out of the* present war system of national taxation. We do not see how a rational man can call these monstrous deformities right and even undertake to combat men who are demanding revision, adjustment and reform. To Boom Dakota. Huron, Dak., Feb. 4: The proprie tors of the Daily Iluronite closed a contract this afternoon with the chicago Si Northwestern railway for a mammoth edition of their pa per, describing this part of Dakota. The paper will be called the Dako tan and will be twelve pages, six columns each. Two hundred thous and copies will be issued. Aid for the East. affairs of the government,/ leariflir, ^^Fi'iv|fHtf8inan 'Blaine to give .whisky jind hni9iin of life, an untaxed cigarette FLoud laughter and ap plausej UJqfc that one of these toy^cMpH^ in a reasonable degree blit ^,^ay,^,Jth"thTs"iuonstrous Pimkatwof^nopolies^d trtidtsj to thfe relief tit an' classes of ^r.^ring classes v!!i'1^1 |ffilbdW-s(i$mercial SIMi thereisdthe "p#'c a fitge is litttIn ti||r^ury at ali, bttfc is li^^^tpatf: banks, »ous in Evening Journal: The Winona board of trade, keenly alive to the terrible sufferings in the blockaded towns of the east, took immediato and prompt action. The northwest is noted for its generosity. Pierre, Dak., has been sending food and clothing to the Kansas sufferers. But Winona is the banner town of the northwest for the extensive and wholesale manner in which it leads in sweet charity, as witness this special WINONA, Minn., Feb. 2: At meeting of the board of trade last evening a resolution was unani mously adopted appropriating $10, 000 for the relief of snow-bound communities of New York and the New England states, the same to be forwarded April 1st or sooner if the communities raise the blockade. Resolutions of sympathy were also adopted and copies of the same for warded to the governors of New York and the New England states The Whisper in St. Paul. Globe: Appropos of Gov. Church 1 was talking with him shortly after his return from his last Washing ton trip. He told me that inciden tally the matter of the attacks which 1'eirce and several other disgrun tied individuals were constantly making on him was mentioned "What's the mutter with these peo pie, Church asked the president "What ground have they for their statements?" "I told him," said the governor, "that the matter was very simple. I had simply gone ahead and done what was right When I had a good man in office kept him there despite whatever his enemies might say, and when I had decided upon a line of action which appeared to me, after due delibera tion', to be the right one, I stuck to it, whatever howling the opposition might do. Of course that naturally Itbe cour«e Cism. Ohio, Illinois, Miiinlesota, but if so they have been while Michigan and Indiana are mortgaged have been seeking for the right mattec everything •.^^jhe^tiong.l tgjj. inrtnatr.-y Btntefiftnifchtr Then the president said he could V"»pathi«» with me. He had met «pv S^teii^i^iditor ., ucl1„*rith a good deal of similar criticism ito*e&i&Slanofc ®n^..J,the.frui|ii of himself, but he believed the man her industrious pepple growing jout who always endeavored to do right i.no change in Tne land poncv or i7-»zTi." "•.* «•'i __ *otber that has^nriffaegjirated "he pose recognized in the end. He "told ins my administrate^.* As for ife back to us ^ahd saiB|..ia ^t p^es^ 1 ent absorbed like a great spo lge 'hat natarallj I may have made mistakes not to mind the adverse criti so long as it had no better indation and I don't think I have," concluded Dakota's compan ionable executive. Dakota people generally will agree with him and the president, too. J". Blaine's -'Free Chaw." forge M. Stearns to the Boston Tariff Reformers: Fuel and warmth and food and clothing, and comfort an&Jhfealth are the real necessaries and things with which we should minister to the people's benefit TaUCrOf tobacco being a necessity of fife? 'took at that boy up there in thtf atfcfc this cold night shivering ^iii'Titei&gs and wishing that blan )c«t8:iwere not such of a luxury, but contending himself with the thought that .^iS father is chewing an un taxed cu(|lown there in the kitchen! Ithe^t laughter and applause.! Thin'^^Uiat wife, with her little thin dre!Mt longing for a shawl to wrap around her to protect her freezing form, compelled to console herself with the that her husband is leaking an untaxed cigar in the SaHSonl/1 See that boy coming down Washington street, his legs the size of#uf3t,hiuiib, carrying a cane big geY tkinHiis body |great laughter] pimpled, worn, lighting Ji's'eiffaret.te.at every street corner, -aiia^ylanlHbg God that we have i!jh u1 eyerwh to saj4 #fl] {money tpr Y~V:^v*'Vr*i| .V A lar and see in the streets of New/York tftmn-freely partaking of ,4'M bf|Ke. [Loud laugnter. W^JS®?6' tban YARDS IN DAKOTA, MINNESOTA, IOWA, l'ot- NEBRASKA AN| KANSAS. 14 is IrtSe^Mnflffijive mean to make Riis^oMortgnity—this sur l»ctflF tlflmgs. We mean weep away use Jta^cation Irom cmI and salt, mm the m^n^ho cud the sal tariffed pipe bar-Vf^m wool and •-IfWtflMHOT^Itf'^hffdjP^essaries of Ap!51ause?r. mean a re fe relief, not to his untaxed ing his un around a relief that c^bin and verykitch tablejind &} mbfSMMW Groceries MONEY ON REAL ESTATE. The Peoples Savings Bank Have Perfected Arrangements with one of the tub Largest Leei ComoralioDs in 1 United States By which they are now able to offer unusual inducements to Borrowers on Real Estate, You Have Your Choice of THE STRAIGHT PAYMENT FULL TEitM PLAN. THE "ON OR BEFORE" PAYMENT PLAN. THE INSTALLMENT PLAN, SAYE YOTJB MONEY. Investigate tbe LAST NAMED LOAN SYSTEM and begin to practioe economy. PEOPLES SAYINGS BANK, WAHPETON, DAKOTA, W. H. HARKER, •AGENT AT Lidgerwood & Wyndmere •For the Adjustable Light Steel-Frame Esterly Binder WITH FOLDING PLATFORM, The Best Harvester in the Market. He also sells the NEW ESTERLY and MEADOW KING Mowers and Hay-Rakes. Eirgesupplyof the best binding twine constantly on hand, ee nim. EHs & HcGulIocli Lute Goipy, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN ALL KINDS OF Lumber, Lath, Shingles, S^sh, Doors. Blinds, Building Paper, Paints, Oils and Var nishes, Coal, Brick,Etc, Etc Wahpeton, Dakota. J. G. DAVIS, Resident Partner. J. N. JURGENSEN, Dialer in Boots and Shoes -K»TTBBEB Q-OOIDS, HARNESS, FLY NETS, SADDLES, WHIPS, CURRY COMBS BIIUSHKS, &c., and sells at Bed Rock Prices. Wahpeton, Dakota. R. J. HUGHES, —DKAI.KR IK— WALTER A. WOOD'S HARVESTERS, BINDERS AND MOWERS, AND MASSELON THRESHERS & ENGIN ES. WINDOW .GLASS, HARD AND SOFT COAL, WAGONS ANnlLotS *'-,U OILS, WINDOW .GLASS, HARD AND SOFT COAL, WAGONS AND BUGGIES.JFARM IMPLEMENTS, THRESHER SUPPLIES, &C. WAHPETON, Has Just Received a Large Stock of JFJLTjJLJ AJSTID "WllTTBE/ DRY GOODS & NOTIONS. His Stock of is ALL AT *S Call 7 DAKOTA. S Fresh and Large. BOTTOM PRICKS. Li^. ^•5mw&sm-** itif fce donated INK & CARTER. Persons wishing to loan money on Real Estate will do well to cal' upon Ink & Carter. They will write their own Mortgages and Notes, making the same payable at their office in Wabpeton, Dakota, saving parties tbe trouble of sending to foreign banks or parties. They pass upon their loans themselves, and charge low rates of interest. Office Rooms in the Globe Block. Ink & Carter, Wahpeton, Dakota. THE NEW RAILROAD Running into Southern Richland County TOTOHES LIIDQ-IEIR/W OOD "V:- yvlJv WHERE SMYTH & DORSEY Handle the most extensive and best selected stock of In the county, comprising Osborne Steel and Empire Binders, Osborne Empire and Bradlej Mowers, Bradley Rakes, Bradley, Norwegian and Deere Plows, Wagons, Buggies, Etc. Also agents for the Minnesota Chief Thresher,'Giant and Stillwater Engines and Binding Twine, all at reasonable prices. Thresher repairs a specialty full line of repairs for all kinds of threshers constantly on hand. Fair dealing and satisfaction guaranteed. Call and see us. THE LIGHTNING JETTING- ARTESIAN WELL MACHINE Is tbe best thing in the business, and the only one in the county is owned by EIS^TST TOWN LOTS AT Prices Are Soaring Heavenward! Fail-mount is destined to be tbe Juncion Cily of the Southern Red River Valley. Three railroads and the,surveyors of the Duluth, Fergus Falls A Black Hiil Railroad are now here. The Manitoba, the C. U.& St. P. Ry and the great new line, the Minneapolis & Pacific givens untold advance ages. Grand openings here for Merchants, Mechanics, andlCapitalists of all kinds. One sale of #5,000 started the boom and opened the eves of many to the facts above noted, that the town is not overdone, but has" room for all that the wants of the surrounding country may be supplied. Thro? elevator^are'kept3bSymosr^The year organizing creamery and cheese factery being pushed, make money. For particulars see *, r^mE=rr/\ -i And is acknowledged'to'be the best machine made for soil such as is found in the Red River Valley. It will sink a two inch pipe 312 feet in ten hours. As men who are willing to testifv to the above facts I would respectfully refer tbe public to M. R. HANKINSON, The DOLUTH ELEVATOR COMPANY at Warner Station, AUGUST HOEFS, HERMAN STRUBEL and FRED NEWMAN. HEILEMAN'S LACROSSE BEER, Deherci4 nt Wabpeton unil Vicinity in Jiottle and Keg Lots. Pira Mrykk Agent, and can be found at his Sample Room Dakota ave., opp. A. Miksche's, or the Refrigerator, Fourth Street. FAIRMOONT Are Selling like Hot Cakes, and for a first class hotel. Flouring will company now POMEROY & CO, l"e. H?. company Room for all to 710 LUMBER EXCHANGE, MINNEAPOLIS JOS. C. HENVIS, FA1RMOUNT. RICHLAND CO., DAKOTA^ ^-W"' S3 iv fllf f^ •^'4 •ti t»~ri $ 1 '(t vif