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The Grange advance. [volume] (Red Wing, Minn.) 1873-1877, September 13, 1876, Image 4

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POLITICAL
Tilden and Hayes Concise!
trasted.
on-
Scattering Tilden's
S
E in^Erhier*" «***&*
'.+#&**
Tlic Candidates Contrasted.
Hon. John Sherman, in ft speech in
^Mansfield^ Ohio, said ^Andnow. fel
*low citizehs, there is but one political
topic to which I.wishtb call your at
tention, and that is ^'contrast "between
the candidates of the two great parties.
I know them both very well, and have
but we may draw from their personal
traits and tendencies many things that
may tend to determine your choice.
Mr. Tilden is a New York lawyer, rais
ed in the school of Van Buren, always
active in politics, and especially famil
liar with the acts and agencies:..'fojrj,
which the city of New York, the greaf
Lazar House of American politics
governed. Governor Haves is the ou
growth of Ohio, born and--educate
here, and governed by the purer in-f
fluence of Ohio politics. He was edu
cated in our common schools, gradua
ted in an Ohio college, and his whole
life has been under your eye and view.
Mr. Tilden in I860 Avas a SecessiQnist,
or so near to it that it is hard to draw
the dividing line. His letter to Wm.
Kent dated Oct. 26, I860, is full of the
very dogmas which encouraged the
South to rebel, for it recognized in
every State an organized rebellion, and
he did not dream of the power of the
Union to put it down.
Hayes has always been for the Union
—first, last and all the time. He nev
er dreamed of its overthrow by seces
sion, and never uttered a word incon
sistent with his supreme allegiance to
the United States. Tilden was a' lag
gard growler during the war. 1 have
read all that his pamphlets have said
of him, and what Mr. Hewitt and Mar
ble have said, and what does it amonnt
to Considering his wealth, his influ
ence and his power, it is a sorry record
for the time when his country was in
danger. Hayes promptly enlisted in
the military service and fought
through the war. He was several
times wounded, and was always brave,
gallant and successful. Tilden in 1864
was a member of the Chicago Conven
tion. He was a member of the com
mittee, which framed the infamous
peace resolutions, the darkest act of
infamy during the war. It was re
ported unanimously without a word of
objection from him, and the assertion
now made that he advised General
McClellan to repudiate the worst
phrase of that platform, subjects him
to the suspicion of duplicity. Hayes
at that time was with his division in
the presence of the enemy. He per
formed his full part in the great
achievements under Sheridan in the
Shenandoah Valley, and when nomi
nated for Congress, at home, he nobly
refused to leave his comrades to pro
mote his election.
Tilden was the Chairman of the
Democratic State Committee of New
York in 1868, and under his name, and
with at least his passive silence, the
great crime was organized by such
men as Tweed and Hall, by which the
great State was cheated out of its vote
in the Presidential election^ Hayes
was the patriotic Governor of Ohio,
winning golden opinions from all sorts
of men carrying out reforms in your
benevolent institutions, and especially
seeing to it that our election should be
fair and free, without fraud or the
suspicion of it. Tilden is rich from
the plunder of railroads, not stolen
plunder, but that kind of plunder
which, even with the sanction of
Courtis, has given to railroad attorneys
such exorbitant fees as amounted to
extortion and plunder.
To the disgrace of Courts, railroad
wrecking has been accompanied by
such extortion under the name of fees
as to arouse public attention. Hayes,
though practicing his profession, has
been free from such reproach. I
never have heard his name mentioned
with unreasonable charges, or harsh
practices. Mr. Tilden is a bachelor,
and our experience with Mr. Buchanan
makes that a bad omen. Hayes in the
White House will have with him the
charm of home with wife and child
ren around him.
But, after all, the great thing is that
Tilden is a Democrat, wedded to
the series of opposition measures
that have distinguished
ty for twenty years,
affrmative principles and
of reform. Hayes is a
not one word of unkindness for either. ts to submit with reference to
Both are men of ability andcharaeter,\-SSSSte1-
Is there a Bloody Shirt, or is it Mythical?
A leading Democratic organ ig
quoted as saying that "killing negroes
down south is a wretched and infam
ous, business," which the "Southern
can stop if they will.'?
the particularsof the recent
amburg massacre, froiiifthe Charles
rion^Stewd and Courier, the New l^ork
Herald aflds: "W€rhopftv our readers
will bear jn mind that these extracts
are nofcfrom a speech of Senator Mor
ton, intended to inflame the North,
but from one of the ablest journals in
the South, and leading in the cam
paign in South Carolina for Tilden and
Hendricks." With such authorities
for a shield, the writer has a few
utra
£?.
ocrScy:
Since the ^sacreiigious eulogy of
Lamar upon Sumner it has
been unpopular to assert the
truth of a "bloody shirt" and of "out
rages" upon Republicans in the
feSunny South," by her "noble sons,"
pjgifih assertions are denounced in the
8§utli as "slanders" upon the brave
generous chivalry of that fair
and their authors have been
^ped wit.i the epithets of thieves,
iars, cowards, scaundrels, jail-birds,
escaped convicts, etc.
Under such circumstances, traduced,
denounced, and ostracised in one di
rection, ridiculed in another, and ques
tioned and doubted in a third, South
ern Republicans had almost ceased to
make any assertions in the matter,
but chose rather to leave the North
and the old Radical papers, like those
named above, to their folly, of which
they repent at their leisure.
But a change is at hand. With such
authorities as those quoted at the head
of this article the word of a southern
Republican is not now involved.
These authorities will not be question
ed. And besides the above, there are
volumes of testimonies taken by com
mittees of Congress. In these volumes
are thousands of outrages, and evi
dence of brutalities, and persecution,
and intolerance, and ostracism, and
murders that would disgrace the Sioux.
The secret and sworn societies for the
commission of these crimes and for
thwarting the reconstruction policy of
Congress are fully developed and ex
posed. Of these sworn facts the North
is ignorant. They have been ignored
by the press of that section, and the
statements of individuals have been
treated as fabrications. The truth
however is coming out at last, and
Southern Republicans are likely to be
soon vindicated.
In addition to the authorities and
evidence above referred to, the testi
mony taken by the Senatorial investi
gating committee, of which Mr. Bout
well is chairman, in Mississippi, the
present summer, will be given to the
world in a few days. This will shock
every impartial, candid man in the
country. The truth has never been
half told. The madness and folly of
the North in ridiculing and suppress
ing truth, involving not merely the vi
tality of republican government in the
States, but the very life of the Nation
al Government, are inexplicable to
those living in the midst of these fatal
scenes. Thank God, however, a South
ern Republican can, at last, hold up
his head, and keeping before him as a
shield leading Democratic organs, can,
without shame, declare the truth of
Southern outrages for political pur
poses. No "bloody shirt!," GreatGod!
there is, and has been all this time, a
fearfully bloody shirt, saturated and
dripping in every thread with the
blood of Republicans, martyrs to South
ern hostility, to the Union, the flag,
reconstruction, and to the great senti
ment of independence—equalitv before
the law!
The above volumes of testimony and
reports upon Southern outrages can be
had of the members of Congress by
the mere asking. In God's name, will
not the people call for them and learn
the truth
Jlr. Tilden's "'Defense."'
From the Chicago Tribune.
After ignoring for several days the
serious charge made against Mr. Til
den by a comparison of two sworn
statements contradicting each other,
the Democratic newspapers agreed up
on a line of defense. The case against
him is clearly set forth as follows
On December 2G,1S63, Mr.
Tilden swore to a return
under oath, in winch he
said:
"I hereby certify that the
following is a true and faith
ful statement of the pains,
protits, or income of Sam
uel J, Tllderi, of the City of
New Tort, and the County
of New York, State of N.Y.
whether derived from any
kikd of property, rents in
terests, dividends, salary.
or from any profession,em
ployment, trade, or voca
tion or any other source
whatever, 'from 1st day of
January to 81st day of De
cember, 1862. both days in.
elusive, and subject to an
income tax under the ex
cise laws of the United
States. Income from all
sources $7,118 00
that par
with no
no hope
Republi-
can, ardently attached to the princi
ples and policy of that party, and
ready to lend its advance to new meas
ures of progress and reform. And I
may say, in conclusion, that whatever
faults may then and there have been
committed by Republicans in offiee,
the Republican party have always led
the way in every reform. It has
frankly taken its position on every
question and has never receded, and
has never in the end been defeated.
It is the party of progress. It naturally
wins to it the young and enthusiastic
lover of liberty and Union. Every
step of its progress in foreign and do
mestic policy has tended to secure
equal rights to all, rich and poor, white
and black, native and naturalized.
Its very composition compels it to ad
vance. It has made no ^promise to be
broken, and when performance was
delayed by opposition, it has renewed
the contest and won. With such a
party every citizen of the United States
who loves his country may proudly
take up his ma rch.
In his answer to the cbm
plaint in the Circuit Court
of the United States, in a
suit of the St. Louis, Alton
and Terre Haute Railroad
Company against himself
and others, which answer
was filed recently, Mr. Til
den swore under oath as
follows:
"That for snch services
the defend't, Tilden, made
a charge of $10,000 against
said second mortgage bond
rfccharge
holders.and the said
was paid on the 17th
of October, 1862. also
made a charge of a like
sum of $10,00u on account
of professional services,
rendered—. which sum
was paid—. under date
of Nov. 7, 1862, re
ceipted for by said Tilden,
"on account of profession
al services performed."
The conclusion forced upon any im
partial reader is that Mr. Tilden swore
falsely in one case or the other. The
only answer that we can conceive of
as effective would be to show that one
or the other of the two statements was
never made and sworn to by him.
This, it seems, it is not possible for
Mr. Tilden to do, and a defense is at
tempted whichwa suggested by Mr.
Tilden's private secretary, and has
been taken up by the Democratic news
papers with something like the despe
ration which prompts a drowning man
to clutch at a straw. Mr. Tilden's sec
retary says that "a lawyer might work
for a long time before he got his fee,
and a conscientious man would, of
course, consider the work he had done
from year to year as a case progressed,
*—•fJTBjgmrtiTifo~^r='"'n^»a^fVtiisiif
and that the fee, though received in
one year* was not his income for that
year it had been, in fact, earned each
year during the progress of the case.
Th$t #a elb there? was about the
matter.f' £f thisi is that is to be
said in explanation of Tilden's contra
dictory statements, it had better not
have been said at all.
The law required him to return his
actual income within Jthe year,—that
is, the money received from all sourc
es,—and it had been decided by the
Courts over and over again that the
law required just this., Mr. Tilden,
a lawyer himself, could riot have been
ignorant of it. Besides, if he had been
earning this fee of $20,000 in previous
years, did lie "return any part of it as
his income before he received it He
could scarcely haye done this, as it was
not an income until it came into his
hands, but, it not, then there was a
part of his income on which he paid
no tax. That is exactly the point. He
swindled the Government and swore
to a false return in order to do so.
Mr. Tilden's "defense" seems also to
be based on assumption that in the
year 1862, when he swore his income
was ou $7,118, he had received nothing
but this single fee of $20,000. This
will scarcely do. Did Mr, Tilden get
no other fees for a whole year, not
withstanding his large practice as a
corporation lawyer Had he no other
resources, notwithstanding he had al
ready amassed a large fortune It is
more probable that his income for the
year 1862 was $100,000, the $20,000
having been but a single item but he
swore that it was only $7,118.
The theory of Mr. Tilden's "de
fense" woiild enable any man so dis
posed to whittle his inceme down to
insignificance. The professional man
might with equal propriety mantain
that he began to earn his income of
this year when he was a school-hoy, as
he there began the education which
subsequently secured him his income.
This is the reductio ad absurdum.
The simple fact is that a sworn state
ment has been found in which Tilden
admits that in the year 1862 he re
ceived $20,000 for services to one cli
ent alone, and another sworn statement
in which he claimed that his entire
income for that year was only $7,118.
And, to make the matter worse, one
of these swoin statements was made
for the purpose of swindling the Gov
ernment out of its tax at a time when
its necessity was greatest. Yet the
Democratic party still desires the peo
ple of this country to elect this man
the Chief magistrate of this nation.
A Hint to Tilden.
Governor Underwood, of Vermont,
says of the Democratic candidate for
the Presidency:
I have known Tilden for twenty years I
know he holds the opinion that the war was
unconstitutional I heard him declare, in
conversation with myself near the close of
the war, that every man of the United States
army that marched across Southern soil was
a trespasser, and liable to a suit for damages.
It is a littie strange that Governor
Tilden has not added to his railway
wrecking practice this class of profes
sionel business. According to Tilden,
every plantation owner at the South
over whose soil the Union armies
marched has an action for damages
against each "boy in blue." What
more natural, in the event of his elec
tion, than that Tilden should propose
to lump these suits for damages in one
grand claim for the benefit of the States
of the late Confederacy?
*.*« ,—
An Adroit Swindle.
From a Paris Paper.
Last week a ragged man, having the
appearance of an itinerant musician
and carrying a fiddle under his arm,
entered the shop of a pork-buther and
called for a sausage. When he came
to pay for it, however, he discov
ered that he had no money-with him,
and leaving his fiddle as a pledge hur
ried away to obtain some. Hardly had
he left than a well-to-do stranger en
tered the shop to make some inquiries
as to his way. He preceives the fiddle
on the counter, looks at it, takes it up
and cries excitedly:
"Why, it is a genuine Stradivarius
I will give you 500 francs for it!
"I can't sell it," replied the pork
butcher it does not belong to me, but
has been left here for a few moments
by the owner."
"I'll give you 1,000,
Same reply. The stranger slowly and
reluctantly lays down the precious in
strument, gives the pork-butcher his
card, and saying that he will be found
at the Grand hotel and give 1,000
francs for the fiddle if it is brought
there, retires.
The proprietor of the Stradivarius
returns, pays for his sausage, and is
about to depart when the pork-butcher
offers to buy the fiddle, offers him 50
francs--100—150. This last tempting
offer proves too much for the poor
devil, and he accepts it. The butcher
pays the money, seizes the fiddle which
the mendicant surrenders with tears,
and hastens to the Grand hotel, where
he learns that no such person as the
ameteur who gave him that card is
known.
A Rag Millionaire.
One of the wealthiest of English vel
vet manufacturers, Mr. Listar, worked
his way to success by years of patient
labor in search of a way to utilize silk
rags. He began by buying up all such
waste at less than one cent a pound,
and up to the year of 1864 he had ex
pended the immense sum of over
$1,300,000 in fruitless efforts to find a
process. Nothing daunted, however,
he continued his experiments, and
within the past ten years had discov
ered a method of converting sueh re
fuse into velvet of the finest quality.
He carries on this industry in Eng-
land, employing some 4,000 workmen,
and hundreds of travelers are also em
ployed whose sole business is to buy
up silk waste in all parts of the globe.
-+•+-.
There are handkerchiefs at the Cen
tennial worth $1,500, and one can't
look at them five minutes without feel
ing like wiping his nose on his coat
tail.
Pimples on the face, rough skin,
chapped hands, saltrheum, and all cutaneous
affections cured, the skin made soft and
smooth, by the use of Juniper Tar Soap.
That made by Caswell, Hazard & Co., New
York, is the only kind that can be relied on,
as there are manyimitations, made fromcoin
mon tar, which are worthless.
I he most astonishing cure of chron
ic diarrhoea we ever heard ot is that of Wm.
Clark, Frankfort Mills. Waldo Co,, Maine
The facts are attested by Ezra Treat, Upton
Treat and M. A. Merrill, either of whom
might be addressed for particulars. Mr.
Clark was cured by Johnson's Anodyne Lin
iment.
Hon. Joseph Farewell, Ma)'or of
Rockland, Me., Isaac M. Bragg, Esq., Bangor,
and Messrs. Pope Bros., Machias, Me., lum
ber merchants, fully endorsed the Sheridan
Cavalry Condition Powders, and have given
the proprietors liberty to use their names in
recommending them.
Fair deal and low prices have won
for the Boston One Price Clothing Store, Min
neapolis, the largest trade in the State.
STOP THAT COUGH!
From the sale ot 50,000 bottles of a
Cough Cordial, sold in the northwest with
in the past year, on a guarantee to refund the
money in case of a fai'ure to cure, there were
less than fifty bottles returned, being less than
one failure in a thousand. The fact speaks
volumes in favor of this wonderful remedy for
Colds, Coughs, Sore Throats, Bronchitis,
Asthma, &c. Physicians everywhere ac
knowledge their surprise at the wonderful
results from the use of this medicine. We
authorise every druggist to warrant a cure or
return the money in case ot a failure after
using one-half the bottle. It is very pleasant
to the taste, making it a very desirable rem
edy for children.
No. 2 BARLEY
W A W I
l0
onl Buro
820
$12
$10
6
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remedy. package
a aA free. L, SMITHNIGHT,Trial
Cleveland, O
a HOW TO MAKE IT. Something new
and salable. COF. YOXG&CO.. St. Louis, Mo.
a day at home. Agents ^wanted. Outfit and
terms free. TRUE & Co., Augusta, Maine.
ftp* O ffc*n
a a
home. Samples worth *1
T«J *P£ Vfree. smsox & Co., Portland. Maine.
fef
O I E Best chance~ylt. Write
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S){\ a week salary guaranteed to male & female. Sen.
Ad\J stamp for circulars, E. M. Bodine, Indiauap's, lud
it a a a work hundreds now em
ployed hundreds more wanted. M. X. Lovel!, Erie, Pa
a month. Outfit won li$l free to agents- Ex
I celsior M'fg Co.. 151 Mica. Av., Chicago, j'l
Picture of next N
1
KKSDALL & Co.
sent free. XXlXiOIL/XilN 1 isostou, Mass.
$55 to $77 p.o!'—••-••—,!tAugusta,
tu,npl"
FKKK
V1CKEKY Maine.
a Day. Employment forall. Chromo & Noveltv
Catalogue free. Felton &Co.,l 19 Nassau st.N.Y
VEKY desirable NEW ARTICLES for Agents,
Mfr"d by G. J. Capewell & Co., Cheshire, Conii.
W 3 3 3 I I veuW In tha
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ft "TA^ffiFi-l 'sPEcsu.7 WMnhingioa ht ,Bo ton.
J*1 *yt\ IN GOLD given away to every
S W agent. Circulars free. Samples 25 cents.
Empire Novelty Co., 307 Broadway, New York.
50
FINE Bristol Visiting Cards, white or tinted,
with name. I S cts. 4 0 small size, 9 tints, lOcts.
STARPRINTING COMPANY, Northford, Conn.
$350
A Montli.—Ageots wanted. 30 best sell
ing articles in the world. One sample free.
Addaess A BKOXSON. Detroit, Mich
CAMPAIGN n,"r?orT,LPEN HAYES,SK!X
I W an inches.. S:iinp!e copy, mail, O rents
11. BUKFOKD'bSySONS.IiBOSTON.
A A 5IOSTJI to Agents. Centennial Sash
W 4 Fastener. Sample and terms 1© cents.
Address S O II. MTRO\G, Summcrville, Fa.
$3WATCHESs
A Great Sensation. Sample
Watch and Outfit free to Agents. Better than
Gold. Addres A. COULTER & CO., Chicago.
I 1 Instant Relief and SURE self
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THculture.
Sl'ORTSMAS. Turf, Field Sports, Agri
3 per year. Specimen copy free.
C.f. FOSTER & CO., Pubs., Murray St., New York
I in APD£C Selected Wheat Land
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GEO. B.WRIGHT, Minneapolis, Minn.
B" 0 %JT mulBitroDg Btshfulncss cared
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Book: lOe. Seut¥ne. Addrest. H. I,. BYRN, Box 4669,N.Y.
MONEY
O A tflOO.OOO
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I fine'Chromos,Crayon?,and beautiful Picture
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ffsTT^STAiTdrcTj.Visitinj,,Re»:iM,Motto,Comic,and Trans
parent Cards. ISfi samples,worth iftii, sent postpaid forelft cents.
J. II. BUFFOBD'SSONS. BOSTON. MASS. Established 1«30.
I»f yon -want to do your
own printing,
lo«»,DTnal «in«nrT, ... foi Circular. If Touwantl
N*1- n"i Uouli ol'Tyv*. Str. wad thrm rc.U. V. »r. ttu
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«'lien»e«t a le«l hiind iiml)
Keir-lnkInK printing
..11 rnvn l'..r TWO DOLLARS. «nd a uini.tur.
printing office lor HV E DOLLARS. Adrfr.*
TOTOG AUEBICA PSE33 CO., 63 Murray St., Mew York,
PARENTS &
GUARDIANS.The
The School and College Directory for 1 S 7 0 «1
pages.
EVERYTHING ABOUT Scnoot-s:
MAP AND ILLUSTRATION'S OF SCHOOLS:
PUPIL'S RAILKOAD EXPENSE PAID BY THIS BUREAU.
FKEK by tnail for postage cts). T. COTESWORTH
PINCKNEY, Domestic Building, New York.
J.D. Kaestner,
Leather* Findings,
204 Washington av. North. Minneapolis1
P.R.LHAROENBERG.
Leather&Findings,
78 East Third Street, St. Paul, Minn
Umitwui&tm'iiimmMmm nntmm*aaamaSB&
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•MUM to J. BRU)K CO., tan Broadway,N. T.
ftQfiO
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CO. St. Mo
MARRIED LADIES
tial circular, of great valne.
thT:frfi,r7£r*
Address WORTH &
under 43 years of age
send stamp for conflden-
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E N I N E E S
A
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a£M f.^fSLLEN^STn.
EARN
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a11
under-
I1,U8trated
C,rcul"
.„, yvV"** r» a Reopens September is
rhorough Instruction in Civil'and Mininbg Engineering
the Classics, and English Branches. For Circular!'
apply to COL.THEO. HYATT, Pres., P. \l, A.
O I "ABIT CURED AT HOME
MWI go publicity. Time short
Terms moderate. lOOOtestlmo
nlals. Describe case. Dr. F. E. Marsh. Qulncy, Mich
TELEGRAPHY.
The best oner ever made to young
ladies and gentlemen. Address, with
stamp. S A N O
Oberlin, Ohio.
made easy by Agents selling our
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L. E. BBOWK & CO., Cincin.nati,0
E O E £Y,,e.Giant' »Sn°t, Self Acting
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Sporting Goods. Novetttef Sre UoSfc rtS^SSS Goods
for agents. BALDWIN & CO., Ill Nassau St., N. Y.
Revolver S!naifr
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tnanJKholesale
t„V ,r! 7, ^uy
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TERMS $2.00 PER DAY. JOHX BAUGH, PROP.
This Hotel is most centrally located, being but one
block from Post Ofllce, Opera House, Rice Park. United
States and District Courts, First-class in every respect.
a in I he City.
STEES BROS. W S
Feathers Wholesale Agents iVr Metalic Burial Cases
Caskets Wood Coffins, Undertakers 'Primings &c. St
Paul, Minnesota.
TOBACCO USERS
should
0 1
a
bushels No. two
AXlJLf• (2) Barley, for which the high-
est market price will be paid. 1». O A S A
CO., 7* Robert Street, St. Paul. Minnesota.
Xew Centennial Game 10c. Adr's box 493, Norwich.Ct
ASTHMA SPKfllFIO Ben in tto World. Trui
ASTHMA °*nvi*I,/» T. POPHAM co., »s. oast.7Mkig.&N..
Phiia..p»
Agent.s
wanted, on salary or commission. New busi
ness Address J. 13, MASSKY & Co., St. Louis, Mo,
A S Tne
Saint Paul Minnesota,
GEO. CULVER, MANAGER.
Complete in all its appointments. First-class in even
department. Fare $3.00 per day
The Enemy of Disease, the Foe of
Pain to Man and Beast,
Is the Grand Old
LINIMENT
WHICH" HA S STOOD E E S O 4 0
V'EAHS. I I E E IS NO SOSti I W I
NOT E A S O tAMEF'JlSS IT WIJLK
NOT CUKE, NO ACHE W A I N A I
AFFLICTS E A N O
E K4ilY OP A O S E O O E
t»nf ESTIC ANIMAL A HOES NOT
rX BW IT,Sr MAttIC TOUCH. A bottla
?£*'.'lle
2TO
3
5
or 91.0*9, has often saved
the life of a human being, and restored to
Ufe and usefulness many a valuable horse
N. F. BURNHAM'S
1S74 Turbine
Water Wheel
Has is a hundreds of othei
Turbines, but hast It
is a Pamhhlet free.
N. F. BUKSHAM. York, Pa.
SA^SWWMV-CO ."g.-\ 5-K»\
saMsassaasssassBsai
THE MINNESOTA CHIEF.
Commercial Hotel.
M. T. C. FLOWER PROP'R.
NOB. 95 and 91, Seventh st., between Robert and Jack
son, (Barney's Block,) St. Paul, Minnesota.
Great reduction In price. Transient board $1.50 per
day. Day board $4 00 per week. This house Is new, well
and neatly furnished, and table first-class.
Patton's American people.
The press calls it "the best,*' Sells where fllmscy "Cen
tennlal Histories" have no chance 1030 pages, illus
trations, Autographs. Maps, Charts, etc. Priee low. A
SS Steel Engraving (now at Memorial Art Hall, Cen
tennlal Exposition) given to subscribers.
CANVASSERS wanted on Liberal terms.
R. O A CO., Ve l'o.k mid Chicago.
ABQOKfortheMILLION.
MEDICA AOVIC
S
iffflaBsessraas
Catarrh, Hupmrr. Opium Habit. &c., SENT FREE en receipt
•it (tamp. Address,
Dr Butt*'Dispensary Ko 12 N. Sthst., St.Louis, Ma
I A Telegraph, or Capir*
J. I1C 9 Magnetic Chord. Thenxxt
wonderful and and amusing Instrument erer Invented. Secret
conversation can be carried en trom different rooms, across the)
street. Ac, without detection. A child can use it. {TJrAcessta
Wanted to take orders for it. Sells like hot cakes. Sample pair
sent for lOe. Address, Fletcher Co., WUliamsburgh, N. T.
SHEETMUSJC
Send me SOcents and a 3-cent stamp, and I will send
£0Vv,
h*vreturn
prices, dto
FIRST-CLASS for $«
nickel plate, self-revalviug. seven shooter, including box
of cartredges. The Petrel orBuffalo Bill revolver for
SC25. Addr essAMERICAN CO., Chicago 111
GREENMAN HOUSE.
NIC-1N-N0C
with theirTOBACCO. Prevents Vertigo. Dizziness,
Faintness, IServousness, without impairing its Soot li
lng. Comforting and TranquUizlnir powers.
Trial packages by mail 25 cents. V. HTKUtNS
Druggist, Detroit, Michigan —.«•« a.
S
1
From 5 to *GUO, ana sold
I I f-ir A N monthly or quarterly
^•^.r-V" payments, or rented until
the rent pajs tor them. Burdctte Organs, Ste.nwayand
n^»
wHOWARD.t
0
A\i^ "71 .^:
a
-streetn.
a
easy terms
DYE & 3 Eas Thir St. Paul
1 0 0 0 0 A E S Wanted.-**.© to *1«© a
xv.VA/U week, or 1500 forfeited. New novelties
chronics, stationery packages, watches, jewelry, etc.
spocial terms given to agents: valuable samples, with
catalogue, sent free a 16-karat solid gold watch given
as premium. R. L. FLETCHER, Dey street, NewYork
Metropolitan Hotel,
Cor. 3d and Washington Sts.,
mail, four copyright songs hy Barry
Collins, beautifully printed, regular sheet music size
"NEW PLANTATION TIMES." "TIIE HEABT KXOWH
WHEUE IS HOME" very sweet). I E O' BARLEY
(Scotch art! very pretty). "FAITII'S BRIQIIT WINGS'*
(Devotional). J. M. STEWART, Franklin, Mass.
A HOUSEHOLD
BLESSING,
THE
Peerless Wringer.
PIANOS AWAY DOWN.
$175.
For now seven octaves, rosewood, full iron frame,
overstrung serpentine base, carved legs and lyre. &c,
boxed and shipped, same as I have in past years sold for
¥-150. Times are dull and money scarce, materials and
labor cheapened, and piano buyers can take advantage
of this state of affairs and buy of us at a price below
what it formerly cost us to get up a piano. s«-nl for cir
culars, references and pric
1 4 4 S
|$250,D.LYAS.OX,Or!.U.Kot,snyli3tlknoo
PIANOS
We have just purchased 1,000 first-class Pianos and Or
gans for the **prf ns a and will sell th?m at the
largest discount from factory prices ever offered. Terms
of payment $25 to $100 cash, remainder Quarterly, or $10
to ?50 monthly. Catalogues with full explanation sent
free. E E S O A I S I 32 Van
Biiren Street, Chicago, 111.
USf"Cnt this out and enclose it in your letter. [St. P.
THE LIKEWAS NEVER KNOWN BEFORE-we
send the in in a W Slur a tine eisht
page,forty-eight column paper, independent in poli
tics, and brim full of good reading matter, lor 81 OO
a It is the htrijrst paper in the United
States for the money. Each subscriber will receive a
copy of the beautiful engraving—**THE O O
E O O M'lX' S I E N !ize, 24x34
inches a picture that would grace any drawing room in
the land. We also send to each mbfcriber a copy of
the S a I a A a a 2 3 Cta. extra
must be sent for packing and mailing premiums.
B9f"Special inducements to agents. To any person
desiring to get up aclub, we will send a saniplecopy
of tho picture and a canvassers outfit, on receipt of
25 cts. Specimen ropy of the paper/r^e. S or
re aubnerlblntr for an
E S A 23 0 Walnut St., Cincinnati, O.
SELTZER
I a has sent thousands to prema
ture graves. A cold stops up the avenues of the system
and disease must result. Neglected, most violent rem
edies must be used to remove the obstruction- taken
timely, a few doses of
a a S A
will carry on' naturally the cause of the sufiering, and
save days, months, or even years"of sufl'eriug.
SOLD BT ALL DRUGGISTS.
JOE.. jQH, A Ni\.fuN'S
Marriage Guide i::u.-trated
with numerous engraving*
irom lite, teaches a.! tne in
quisitive skDiiid know on
Courtship. MamngCi the
Physio logical Mysteries and
KeVelations of the Sexual
system, how to cure al.
CRETS,
kind of Diseases, with hundreds of valuable receipts, whv
should marry, the impediments to marriage, their uatura
and cure. Treats on ail Diseases, fully explaining their cau
ses, symptoms and means to cure it is the only really
scientific workoi the kind everpubhshed, and is complete
in every respect. Sent securely sealed oa receipt of 50 cts.
Address, lir. C. A. lioUANNAN, 619 Nona Filth street^
St. Louis, Ko. Established iu 1)J87.
ST, P, N. U. No 1376
EUTWlicsa writing to Advertiser*
Please nay you saw the advertisement
in this paper.
THE THRESHER O THE HAY.
Crowning Success ot a Century's Experience!
NEITHER VIBRATOR OR APRON MACHINE, BUT COMBINES ALL THE
GOOD FEATURES OF BOTH, WITH THE OBJECTIONABLE
ONES DISPENSED WITH, AS SHOWN BY THE
MOST PERFECT THRESHING—BEST
GRAIN CLEANING-GREAT-
EST GRAIN SAV-
ING,
LIGHTEST RUNNING—MOST DURABLE, ECONOMICAL AND LEAST EX-
PENSIVE MACHINE IN THE MARKET.
For Price Lists and Circulars Address
SEYMOUR, SABIAJi, & CO., Manuf%
STILLWATER, MINN.

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