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fyt £lottd |f oni-ipl ST. CLOTJD, MINNESOTA W. B. MITCHELL, EDITOR. Thursday Oct. 14,1875. REPUBLICAN TICKET. STATK TICKET. For Chief Justice of the Supreme Court JAMES GILFILLAN. For Governor, J. S. PILLSBURY. For Lieutenant Governor, J. B. WAKEFIELD. For Secretary of State, JOHN 8. IRGENS. For State Treasurer, WM. PFiENDEB. For State Auditor, O. P. WHITCOMB. For Attorney General, GEO. P. WILSON. For Clerk of the Supreme Court, S. H. NICHOLS. For Railroad Commissioner, W. R. MARSHALL. 8TKABN3 COUNTY TICKET. For Treasurer, MATH1AS GANS. For Register of Deeds, JOHN ZAPP. For Sheriff, J. H. DENNIS. For County Attorney, L. W. COLLINS. For Judge of Probate, D. B.SEARLE. For County Surreyor, M. P. NOEL. For Coroner, H. P. BENNETT. For Representatives, W. & 8TINCHFIELD, 3d Dist. efc» AT Gbllingwood, Ont, snow fell Tuesday to the depth of six inches. AH election at Newark, N. J.,their Tuesday resulted in an immense Re publican majority. ass THK evangelists, Moody and Sank ey, will begin their labors in Brook* lyn on October 31st. THESE is a strong probability that *he fast mail trains will be abolished. vay are considered too dangerous. A NUMBER of failures in New York were announcedMonday. They included dealers in grain,flour,cot ton and woolens* THE Indianola, Texas, relief com mittee have given notice that the cit zens of that place are now able to provide for themselves. GEN. BABTLETT has declined the nomination for Lieut. Governor of Massachusetts on the Democratic ticket. Bats always desert a sinking •hip. THINK of it. Minnesota'spopulation has increased thirty-three per cent since 1870. —St. Louis Globe-Democrat. And in the next five years it will increase another thirty-three per cent. Think of that, too. ONI hundred and ten woodchucks have been shot during the Summer in New- Ber lin, N. Y., this Summer by Louis Graves, aged years. Time is called on the Hon. David Taylor, of Houston county. JEFF, was unfortunate enough to have a "previous engagement" when the managers of a colored agricultur al society in Tennessee invited him to address them last week. PKESIPENT GRANT stated Tuesday that he had as yet made no appoint ment of a Secretary of the Interior, 1 but would make one immediately up on his return to Washington. THE annual conference of the Con gregational churches of Minnesota will be held at the new Plymouth church, Minneapolis, beginning this evening and continuing through the week. PLYMOUTH church, at Minneapolis, was dedicated last Sunday. It cost 165,000, or with the lots on which it stands, $70,000. To pay a debt of $20,000, remaining on the da^ of ^dedicstiofe t£ft£40 was subscribed. DOESN'T rten Buell wish now that he hadn't mounted that Owatonna plat form and taken the Ohio little rag ba bytohis boasom But they will not be parted long. His epitaph is writ- and he will soon crawl under it. It is: "GOM too Blllallen and she Ohio Sag Baby." •j ass CARDINAL MCCLOSKEY 1 left Rome Tuesday. He goes first to Paris. He will afterward visit Cardinal Manning, at London, and Cardinal Cullen, in Ireland. He has ordered in Borne a splendid marble altar for the Roman Catholic Cathedral of New York, costing $40,000. THE people of Duluth and St.ple Louis county, or some of them, have been contesting their enormous tax levy. Judge Stearns has decided thatabout one-fifth of the taxes, or be tween $20,000 and $25,000, is illegal. As neither party is satisfied with the 'decision, the Judge has certified the case to the Supreme Court. FOUR million baskets of peaches were shipped from Delaware this sea ion. For these the consumers paid .11,250,000. Of this amount $1,000, )00 went for freight to the various transportation companies, leaving $250,000 for the men who raised and shipped the fruit It looks to some )f these Delaware producers as though the railroads had the best of the bargain. JUDGE PAGE, of Austin, a politi cian of the small-potato variety, un dertook, with his satellites, to crowd town and crush out Judge Harwood, Ihe editor oP the Transcript. But at he last county convention Page was •outed, horse, foot and dragoons, and Fudge Harwood's friends had full tontrol. The Transcript is and has wen a good, staunch Republican pa Mr, only a little too independent and uisppsrantosuit some of the would *|SJMager» ofthe party at Austin. AN OUTRAOKOUS TKRDIQT. In the State Newa department of the St. Paul Pioneer-Press of June 19th appeared the following item: "The Pine City telegraph operator is a bad one. lie is now under arrest for at tempting to ravish a Swede woman and se riously injuring a watchman that came to the woman's rescue." Lcarniug that it was the operator at Hinkley who stood charged with the offense, the Pioneer-Press the fol lowing day published a full retrac tion, and again the day afterwards a further explanation and retraction. Not satisfied with this, the Pine City operator, George Hewitt by name, brought suit against the publishers of the Pioneer-Press, claiming $2,000 damages, and Friday thejury return ed a verdict of $500 against the de fendants. A stay of proceedings was granted and a notice for anew trial will be heard. The publishers who have been thus mulcted assert their determination to fight this outrageous verdict to the bitter end, and they should. If pub lishers are to be rendered liable to a fine' of $100 per line for every item of news they may print which may prove to be incorrect and which some •individual—refusing to accept any explanation or apology—deems prej udicial to his character, newspaper publishing will become, either a very precarious or a very tame business. With the greatest care, it is impossi ble to verify every item of news which comes to a publisher. He must do the besthe can. and when he discovers that he has made a mis take rectify it It is absurd to claim that an individual is injured in his good name or his business by a state ment which, if untrue, is promptly and fully corrected. We have no ticed that almost invariably those persons who are so sensitive as to reputation are those who have the most need to be—that their repu tation is of so curious a complexion as to be tarnished by the faintest un friendly breath. They are usually less solicitous about their conduct than they are that that conduct should be carefully screened from public view and comment. A man of sturdy good character, who is con scious of the rectitude of his con duct, may be annoyed by the error of a newspaper paragraph and may in sist upon its correction, but he will noffeel that his good name can only be established at the end of a libel suit. Against the individual who does consider this a necessity. it is pretty safe to shut the doors to one's household. He is one whom it is better to have outside than inside. This verdict against the publishers of the Pioneer-Prem is an outrage and a robbery in whatever way it may be looked at. It embodies a principle dangerous to the liberty and the usefulness of the press, if not to its very existence except as a tame and spiritless gatherer of news which can interest or affect no one. If a verdict for the plaintiff under the circumstances is in any way justi fied by law, it should be a verdict merely for a nominal sum, and a stat ute which would thus legalize and render possible robbery should be at once repealed. If it is not jus tified by law, anew jury on a new trial, should find for the defendant. WOMA N SUFKKAGE. The United States Supreme Court has decided, in a case appealed from the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, that the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution does not confer upon woman the right to vote. Women have always been considered citizens under the Constitution and entith 1 to the privileges of citizenship. Wt the Court holds that suffrage ign0 one of the privileges or immunities of citi zenship. It illustrates that under the Fourteenth Amendment it was not intend*), by the framers of that anie'adment, to confer the right of suffrage upon the negroes who were thereby made citizens. This right the Fourteenth Amendment secured to them. The Court says: The Fourteenth Amendment had already provided that no State should make: or en force any law which should abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States. If suffrage was one of these privileges or immunities why amend, the Constitution to prevent its being denied on account of race, etc.? Nothing la more ev ident than that the greater most include the lem, and if all were already protected.why go through with the form of amending the Constitution to protect apart The decision was unanimous and must effectually settle the matter, so far as the claims of womanto.the right of suffrage under the Constitu tion are concerned. The Court state that they do not undertaketosay.the what ought to be, but what is, and that for nearly ninety years the peo have acted upon the idea that the Constitution, when it conferred citizen ship, did not necessarily confer the right of suffrage. REPRESENTATIVE NOMINATION. The Republican Legislative Con vention which met at Cold Spring Tuesday unanimously placed in nom ination for Representative from the Third District, Mr. W.6. Btincfafield, Mr. 8. is an intelligent farmer, of Maine Prairie, who has long enjoyed the confidenceand respect of his neigh bors and fellow-citizens. He is well qualified to representhis district inthe Legislature and to look after its wants.? THE Indianapolis Journal says "A ten-dollar note issued on the Can adian side of the .Detroit River is wort $1.60 more than a'SlOgree issued on this side/' Advocates of more money can explain this if they choose. AT the county fair held at Manka to, the most successful fair in the Slate this year, the selling of pools, and of malt or spirituous liquors, was absolutely prohibited. THE Forepaugh block,. St. Paul, was sold TuesdaytoP?,F. McQuillan &r*75,000. ,'* GOES REPUBLICAN! The Democratic Rag Baby StrangledI Iowa's BBplcmi Majority ONLY 35,000! NEBRASKA GOES 10,000! Wheeling Into Line to Start a Republican President. TO-DAY'S GEN. news from Ohio gives that State to the Republicans beyond all question. The Democrats concede Governor Hayes's election by a ma jority of 2,500. TheRepublicansclaim that this majority will be over 8,000. The victory, though hardly won and narrowly won, is a grand triumph of honesty in business andhonesty in public faith. The inflation scheme is pretty effectually killed. Pennsyl vaniawill add. her voice to the de^ mand for-hard money and no more greenbacks. Both branches of the Legislature in Ohio are Republican. Iowa rolls up a magnificent Re publican majority—36,000. This is a large increase over last year. The Republican majority in joint ballot in the Legislature will be 30. Nebraska gives the Republican ticket 10,000 majority. The new constitution is adopted by a large ma jority. The Republican party has taken the work well in hand for the next Presidential contest. Ohio redeemed the Republican majority in Iowa largely increased Nebraska heavily Republican. •,. ..-.{•.: ..„ 1, Minnesota will respond in No vember with one of her heaviest Re publican majorities.' IN the court of quarter sessions at Philadelphia, Saturday,JudgeFJevek sentenced Westervelt, charged with being implicated in the abduction of Charlie Ross, to seven years in thehave Eastern penitentiary at solitary con finement, and fined him $1 and the cost of the prosecution. The prison er listened with apparently close in terest to the words of the Judge. When the severe sentence was an nounced, and the words "seven years at hard labor" pronounced, he bent his head forward and shook like a leaf. As the tipstaff removed him to the large dock it was seen that he was crying like a child, and when he took his seat he bowed his head in his hands and continued weeping. C. W. MEAD, General Man- ager of the Northern Pacific Railway, has entered suit for libel, with dam ages laid at $100,000, against Wm. Kountz, of Pittsburgh, for having published a letter in the St, Louis Timet last July charging Mead with having,-while General Superintend ent of the Northern railway, in Mis souri, embezzled funds of tile compa ny, aided' defaulting Agentstoescape made contracts to his personal advan tage and allowed fraudulent" claims against the company. "*'*':':"'u**^ BISHOP WHTPPI^S is in Montreal, by special invitation, this week. He is to supply the pulpit.of Grace' church, New York, for several weeks. He will attend the meeting of the board of missions, in New York, Oct. 24 that of the house of bishops on 28th of October. He will also be present at the church congress in Philadelphia, in the early part of No vember. i.t THE Bank of Duluth, B. 8. Rus sell, manager, has suspended. C. P. Bailey and R.\H. Morford are. the assignees. Liabilities not known. The bank had $4,621.40 of the coun ty's funds, but the county is well se cured. ''*i THE Attorney .General is in daily receipt of advices from Mississippi. Gov. Ames is averse to arming citi zens of the State for their own protec tion, for the reason that it would duce great excitement.. Everythi is slow reported quietrtil 2LU a:,'HU fJ^^lJr»m^%^mWM0 ed that Germany will demand this tssment. year the addition of ^6,000,1 told by a telegram from Marquette, where three staunch Chicago propel iere were,Tuesday detained by the prevalence of a driving snow-storm. THE New Era is tiie name of a new paper started at Hastings. It is small inrise,but to be enlarged at once. •!"i^ FOBT GABBY had a snow atom boa•\vw5alvl TORSION GRAIN MARKETS. The Mark Lane Express of Mon day, in its weekly review of the prod uce market, has the following: "The weather has been much broken, hav ing been hail in some-places, but the interruption to field labor*,- was only partial. The dampness has interfer ed with threshing, and the condition of the samples is generally bad. The upward tendency in prices is contin ued, though business is restricted. The averages as compared with 1874 are two pence lower, while in France they are slightly higher. There is less doing at Odessa, but rates are maintained. Dantsec is rather dear er. The receipts of wheat front In dia are unprecedented. The quality is low, however, hut if shipments pay it places a,vast acreage at the service Of England." UKiraOTA!f£Wg I —A. M. Barnum is suing the Du luth blast furnace company for $40, 000 on his contract for putting up their buildings. I James Setney, #f Herman, was, by the running away of his horses, thrown from his wagon, which ran oyer him and broke one leg. I -^GOT. Davis has appointed E. A. Gove Judge of Probate forHennepin county,tofillthe vacancy caused by the resignation of Judge Beebe. •—A now National Bank,, in place of the old established bank of Chad bourn.Brothers, of Rochester, will go into,operation in a few weeks. •—Clinton Lewis was killed at lano, Friday by his horses running •way and. throwing him front a loaded wagon, one wheel of which passedover his body. ., —Charles Bailey, of Wabasha, while out hunting carelessly, trailed his gun, when it caught and the con tents were discharged into Lis body. His recovery is doubtful. —The new post office building at Rochester has been completed. It isby a two-story brick, 48J by 90 feet, and was built by the Odd Fellows, who have a hall on the second floor. !—The Republicans of the 28th Senatorial District, in convention at North Branch, nominated W. H. C. Folsom for Senator and M. A. Braw ley for .Representative. .. —Ed. Ingraham, arrested for lar ceny,todJim O'Conner, arrested for the same, offense, and sentencedtosix ty days, broke jail at Rochester on Monday morning and escaped, and not as yet been re-captured. f-rA fire Sunday night, at Austin, Minn., destroyed the grocery house of Henry Watchlin, together with his en tire stock of goods, the whole valued at $4,200. Insurance, $2,600. Sup posed to be the work of an incen diary. —Mrs. Christana Lepke, of St. Paul, was killed in that city on Mon day morning by an engine on the Lake Superior road. She had been to see her husband, employed in the shops, and was retaining, when she was overtaken on a bridge by an en gine which was, backing. —The Democrats of the Blue Earth District have nominated by acclamation, Hon. Morton S.Wilkin son for State Senator* *nd for Repre sentatives, Samuel M. Walker, Steph en Lamm, Robert Hughes, E. F.has Champlin and H. M. Greeley. f-D. F. Rater, of Manannah, in forms.theLitchfield Newt-Ledger that hehadthirty-twoacres ofbreaking that went 33 bushelstothe acre and. his old ground 28 .bushels to the acre of wheat. He also, hadfiveacresof oats. Which yielded 84 bushels per acre. .., f-Henry Harley, of Lake Gty, isplaintiff another victim of carelessness. He was pulling his gun out of a boat, with themuzzle of the weapon pointed toward his .own body, when the gun20th, was discharged, the full charge of shot entering his right side. It is possible that he may live. —E. E. BoutweU, of Kasota, was kicked in the face by a coltSaturday, and had his jaw badlyfracturedand"the his chin broken in. The surgeon called was compelled to extract a number of pieces of bone. The suf ferer had been raving in delirum un til Monday morning. .. ,,-,.,' "'. ''m ii —",.4ff A DISPATCH frdm Shanghai China, Oct. 11th says: An edict has ap peared in the Gazette at Pekin en joining the proper treatment of for eigners. The important points that the English Minister demands, how ever, including the punishment of the hfargary murderers, are still in abeyance. The prospects now are |ots^mvximbl^^ran ultimate set- Ctrl 1 Aged GOD bless Boston," says the New speaking in behalf of the exas. Which moves the Tribune to say that Chicago also has reason to know that these solid men have ten der nearte. A Boston man's first feelingforsufferers is in his pocket and it is the best kind of a feeling, tt6o.i!!f\'^ --tSLL— •".'"••".'"."'the I3f a suit brosjght by three credit* ors of Duncaav Sherman A Co charges of fraud wera made. Tha membWs of tja» flynv were arrested ajM gave Mil. .- -.».IP»-Jad3: «/3R ,ir,/-'»? :i esT? LATK NE^TAnrftiis. —Mexico will be represented at the Centennial* —Three negroes were ku-kluxed at New Orleans Tuesday night —John Sergio, London, merchant, has failed. Liabilities $750,000. —The new constitution for Ne braska' is carried by a large majority. —Wm. Pembertou, a hone thief, was lynched Saturday at Forest City, T|| —The name of the Marshall JVtri rit Schooner has been changedtothetee Jfeeeenffer. —The law prohibits the killing of prairie chickens or quail after the 31st of October. —During the past week the flour shipped from Minneapolis to Eastern markets amounted to 19,300 barrels. —A black bear yesterday had the meritytovisit the business portion of Fargo, and lost his life from his carelessness. —The Rev. John B. Colter, of Winona, has been elected Vice-presi. dent of the Catholic Total Abstinence Union of America. —Italy will be represented at the American Centennial by a royal com missioner. .!,' ai-^ —Brazil has applied for 34,000 square feet, of space at the Centennial exhibition. -^A new indictment las-been found against Tweed, and $1,000,000 added to his bail. —The Marsh investigating commit will send their reporttothe Pres ident to-day. —The failure of .W.. B. Hunter, tea merchant, New York, is announc ed. Liabilities unknown. —Strauses, Lausman & Co., New York drygoods dealers, have suspend ed. Liabilities half a million. —It is reported in England that" all Her Majesty's ships in Japanese ports have been ordered to China. —Two Ontario propellers,' the Standley and Bristol, valued at $40, 000 each,,were burned Friday. —An Indiana baby 'coughed up a key the other day, which for some time had been locked up in its little chest. —Madame Fortlyer,aconvictinthe Missouri penitentiary, squeezed her self through the transom of her cell and escaped. —The reported resignation of In dian Commissioner Smith is without foundation. He has- no intention of resigning at present. —Montreal wholesale houseshave notified their customers that they in tend to reduce their prices instead of sending out travelers. —Pemberton, who murdered Mrs. at Boston, and. Brown, the negro murderer of. Pfarr, near St. Louis, were hanged Friday. De-Bingham, —^The Kaiserof Hotel, of Berlin was totally burned Monday. It was the finest of the kind in Germany. Loss estimated at $1,000,000. —The Prince of Wales left Lon don on his visit to India Monday. He was accompanied as far as Calais the Princess. Alexandria. —The Supreme Court ofNew York has confirmed the decision of Judge Barlett, refusing to Vacate the order of arrest in the case of Win. M. Tweed —John Ryan died Saturday at Boston from the effects of a prize fight the day beforewith Carney. The latter fled, but was afterwards arrest ed. y, .-'....."..... ,'ii$y-^'-:\}: —The Empress Eugenie Recently asked Marshal MaeMahon for per mission to pass twenty-four hours in Paris in the strictest incognito] but was refused. —^The costly residence oi xienry Allers Hankeyf of Westminster, Eng land, was burned Tnursday., The loss on the building and contents was $2,500,000. —Brown, Stevens & Williamson? sugar refiners of Glasgow, Scotland, have failed. Liabilities heavy. It is stated that several Greenock houses are involved also. —Thbs Divine, night watchman at the Palmer vein colliery, near New Philadelphia, Pa., was shot and prob ably mortally wounded Monday, while on his way to work. The as? sassin escaped. —It is representedtobe very dull in Paris,, and the price of everything gone up. The hotels charge ex orbitant rates, and American travel ers don't stop half as long in the gay city as they used to. For the ALPACAS, MOHAIRS, POPLINS, BRILLIANTINES, SERGES, a -—In the case of Edwards vs. The Ottawa River Navigation Company, for the destruction of the mills at Rockland, last summer, by sparks from a steamer, the jury gave the a verdict for $220,000. —The body of Winnie Cobb, a lead beater, aged 10, who disappeared from home on the afternoon of .September was found floating in the river near Detroit,. Mich., Sunday. It is supposed she committed suicide. .. —An Illinois paper states that in fifteen of its exchanges in one day it found a statement to the effect that delay in issuing'bur paper this week is owing to all bands being down with the: fever and ague." :'-... —The excise returns of Great Bri tain show that six hundred millions of dollars (£120,000,0013) are annu ally spent in alcoholic drinks. Of this immense sum more than one-half is spent by the laboring classes. —The Detroit Po* wants to know when the editor of the Chicago Time* committed suicide. It has seen the story that a Chicago organist recently found an exquisite lyre suspended above, the keyboard of his instru ment. ..s/lt ,yiti'£ph btiii •,iii:2r^.. —The English steamer Biscay, be longingtoNew Castle stranded off Jutland, while on her voyage from CronstadttoBtemmefdaves. Eleven persons were drowned. 11w Biscay was an tton steamer, built in 1872, and was owned in London. .. —Massachusetts is putting in claims for both orator and poet at Centennial Exhibition. The Springfield Republican has reason to believe that the choice for orator will fall upon Charles Francis Adams, and thatfor.poet on, Mr. Longfellow or Mr. Lowell. J':] ••,'[••: KI^ St. Cloud, Sept. 30th, 1875. THE The Soles an attached to the Uppers with rows waxe (USteadoC •two row asoifnfi**cord other shoe*,)d anthread, aro iflS£M 'X^H 1 Kerar toripfrom the uppers^ These Shoes can be had only of W. HENDERSON, Dealer in and Manufacturer of BOOTS AND SHOES. 2 RUBBjatS. ,t[v". LEATHER AND FINDINGS. Carton Work done in the Best Style. Repairing Neatly and Promptly Done. Washington Avenue, STvCLOUD, MINN Tl7n38 REAL ESTATE AGENCY OP Cooper & Hinchilwood, ST. CLOUD, MINN. O S A I E No. 53.' Corner lot, with lJ-Htory bouse. Good well in kitchen, good, barn, and good picket fence, with fruit trees, Ac., in yard. Good location. Will be sold cheap for cash, or ex changed for good land. No. 54. Lots 4, 5 and 6, in block 40, St. Cloud City. Good well and small barn on premises. Good location. Will be sold very cheap, and on terms to suit purchaser. No. 55. A dwelling house in lower town,, opposite the Normal School. Oooid barn, well, etc. Witt be -:.iJ sold very cheap and on easy term*. No. 57. Two-story house, containing 1$ rooms. 2$ lots, on which are fine fruit and shade tree*, «ood thill, cistern and barn. Very dafiirable neighborhood. Must be soil No. 58, 160 acres land in Benton 6t*utHy good timber 20 acres meadow on v-'ai a nice little stream running through the place 40 acres in !-':«rop{ good log house and stable a good well and within half mile of school house, store and saw mill will be sold rery cheap, and on easy terms. A. P. ROBERTSON, Watchmaker and JeW*Hir, fit. Gfinntih Street, St. Cloud, MiniL Particular attention given to Repairing O S & W A E S that have failed to give satisfaction after being repeatedly workedon by incompeten workmen, oct22tf radford's! coming Season we bave the Largest, Most Varied and Attractive Stock of Ever before offered by us, consisting of a full line of DRESS GOODS, BLACK CASHMERES, DRAP D'ETE, MERINOS, EMPRESS CLOTHS, PONGIES, TRIMMINGS, SILKS & SATINS, FANCY GOODS, GENTS' FURNISHING GOODS, NOTIONS, A I E S N E W E A CLOVES, HOSIERY, LADIES' FURS, Shawls, Beave Olpakings, LADIES' CLOTH, REPELLANTS, ^LQTHS AND CASSIMERES. Assortment of [Flannels, GEEMANTOWN YARNS, OOTOm IABHS, O O S J^JNX) iiil- 3S UJ=JIAS. S A fVr E E S Patent Partly-made Dress Shirts, OlSnLTT S1-50. CAL AND EXAMINE OU STOCK. All Goods Warranted to Be as Represented, AND N O TROUBLE O SHO SERVICE! Buy toe Styiiah, Good,FittJs« JMU+Snui FINM SHOES! Vot LADIES' sad MISSES* wear, with this Trade Mark in every shoe. W GOODS YOUNG & BRADFORD. __. LAND SALE. STATE OF MIKNESOTA.Y L&XD OFFICE, ST. PAUL, Aug. 24th, 1875.) NOTICEState is hereby given that the Commissioner of the Land Office, will offer at public sale all the School Lands that have been appraised and remain unsold in the County of Stearns, at St. Cloud, on Thursday, October 28th, 1875, at ten o'clock A. X. ^.county tion of the public. Lands upon which the interest is delinquent for two yearsor more will be declared forfeited and re offered. Fifteen percent, of the purchase money and in terest at the rate of seven per cent, on the balance from the day of sale to the first of June, 187«, will berequlredonthedayofsale. On timber lands an amount equal to the value of the timber will be re quired in addition to the fifteen per cent. After the first paymentthe balance of the pur chase money in full or in installments is payable at the option of the purchaser until twenty yearsfrom the date Ofsale, provided the annual interest at the rateof even per cent, is paid in advanceon the first of Junse each year. Upon a failure to pay the in terest whendue the lands revert to the State with out further notice or process, and will again be sold at public sale, unless double the amout of interest due is previously paid. O, P. WHITCOMB, sept2-6w Commissioner CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE AND ST. PAUL S'T. THK QKXAT TOBOUOH I1 BETWEEN CinOAGO, NEW ENGLAND.. NEW YOBK, THE CANADA8, All Eastern aad Sontltern Points, AND THE GREAT NORTHWEST. Connecting in Chicago with all Eastern and Southern Lines. CHICAOO DzpoT.-Corner Canal and West Madi eensts. Horse Cars and Stage Lines for all parts of the City constantly passing CHICAGO OITT 0»ncsa.-«l and 88 Clark St. -XiLWAVKaaOiroT^-Corner Reed and South Water Streets. Horse Cars and Omnibus Lines running regularly therefrom to the principal parts of the City. ciTTTianrr Oman—400 East Water Street, corner Wisconsin St. THE ONLY THROUGH LINE BETWEEN CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE, 8T. PAUL '•'i-.S AN MTJOTEAPOLIS. It traverses a finer country, withgranderscenery, and passes through more business centres aad Pleasure Wayrts, than any ether Northwestern Line. And the only Railway Una TnAVSnfiDTS THK TUU 01" THE UPPER MISSISSIPPI BIVEB, am ALOHO THB anon or LABS rxpht. Also via Madison, Prairie du Chien, McGregor, Austin and Owatonna. Through Palace Coaches and Sleeping Cars OFTHE BEST ANDTRACKPERFECT 43* Connecting at St. Paul and Minneapolis, with the several lines centering at those points. ST. PAUL DEPOT.—Cor. Jackson and Levee. CITY Oma.-11 8 East Jackson St., corner of Third Street. -, A. Y. H. CARPENTER, Gen. Pass, and Ticket Agent, Milwaukee. MADAM E C. HEARS, Assisted by MLLE L. SEE. ENGLISH, FRENCH AND GERMAN Boarilii and Day M%T Toong Ladles and Children, 428 Madison Avenue, New York. WitXREC*EN*sfeEMll»li^^ gsar^Circulars sent on application. S E E O ^fr Mahufacturersof Parlor, Chamber and Office FtJRNITtllEJ The Woven Wire, Hair, Moss, and other Mattresses, and Feathers. O-EITEBAL FURNISHING UNDERTAKERS. Sole Agents for Fisk's Patent Metallic Burial Cases and Caskets. Corner Third and Minnesota Streets, •17n42-ly PAUL. SHUN DRUG POISONS' MEDICINE RENDERED USEXES8. Yolta's Electro Belts and Buds ta% endorsed by the moat eminent physici»ns in the world for.the cure of rheniwH.ni. nenralsU, liver complaint, dyspepeU, kidney dateae? acfita, peins, nerrooi disorders, fits, female complaints, nerrous and general debility, and other chronic atetate. of the cheat, head, lirej, atomach, idney. and blood. Book with foil particulars sent free by Volta Belt Co., Cincinnati, O. $3 SAMPLE rBEE5*JS.a female everywhere Newark, W.J, CO., Terms of Advertising are offered for News papers in the State of MINNESOTA/! Send for listof papers and schedule of rates. Address Geo. FHEVowellACo., Advertising Agts. NO. 41 PARK BOW, NEW YOBK. REFER TO EDITOR OF THIS PAPER. =1^,1 PRONDZINSKI'S Is the place to buy CLOTHING! Gent's Furnishing Goods, Hats, Gaps, &c. The Larget: Stock oi Most Desirable Goods always on hand. ST. CLOUD MINN. Atien'e Suite, YwtiCs Suite, Borf 's Suits, Fall Overcoat*, •4?rt.wru*iU ritti^oijiil ici-n .*••*• Winter Overcoats, Rubber Coats, Undershirts, Overshirts, Address THE UNION FOB. A a day at home. $ terms free. into wanted. Outfit and TRUE & CO., Augusta, Maine- a month to energetic men and women _. everrwhere. Butinc** honorable. EX CEl^lOB M'PG CO., 151 Michigan ave., Chicago. A —The choicest in the world—Im- Hi A ij» porters' prices—Largest Company in America—staple article—pleases everybody— Trade best Inducements—donrt waste time—send for circular to ROBMT WKULS, 43 Vesey St., N. Y., P, O. Box 1287. A WEEK guaranteed to male and female Agents, in their locality. Costa NOTHING to try it. Particulars free. P. O. YICK- EBY ft CO., Augusta,Me. "STiwfnrr UFAW% wanted to leam telegrapb O 6 ing and take offices on new line which we are famishing with operators, ary fromltOto tlOO a atonth aid steady" tion. Particulars suited free. Addra TauoKAfH iMaTlTjUTaygaynearme, Wis. $510,000 Plain and Fancy Shirts, Drawers, Lumbermen^ Shirts, Lumbermen's Drawers, Buck Gloves and Mitts, Buck Gauntlets, YANA LOTTERY every fifteen days. prise. •50,000 1 prize §100,000 11 prD S prizes •Sff.00 0 each OO.OOO Sfi4prlaes, amounttaa to 310,000 Whole tickets, $28 quarters, $5: twentieths, $1. Circulars of Information free. Prises cashed. A. DONAU CO., Bankers, Postjoffice box 2089. 21 Park Bow, New York. Royal Saxon and- Brunswick Government Lot teries constantly on hand. dlC A,— dJOA per day at home. Samples worth UD W tp^aU $1 free. STINSON A CO., Portland MOSTEITRAORDINARY ?f[o"SA 5 I W A N S O ,13 JH IN S E A s^jsccLwmB: roo5 Address I I a in Post Office Box 2384, New York City HOTEL FOR SALE. I offerforsale, at a great bargain, the SATJK VA1VLEY HOUSE, with hirniture, etc. This is one of the most favorably located hotels in the city and is in good condition for the accommodation of farmers and travelers. Inquire on the premises of H. KAMMERMALER, St. etwrdirfub^fli, 187R 3a. Shaker and Scotch Home-Knit Woolen Socks, British Half-hose, Collars and Cuffs—every style, Hats and Caps, Gloves, I Sckrfs, Neck-ties, XJhbreUas, Studs, Sleeve-buttons, I &c, &c, ace. BUFFALO ROBES, a specialty. •.* ESTABLISHED IN 185«. OITT DRUG STORE. S. MARLATT, Dealer in .'j*.) Drugs, Medicines, Chemicals, FANCY AND TOILET ABTI CLE S. SPONGES, Brashes, Perfumery fee, Kerosene or Goal OIL AND LAMPS. Physicians' prescriptions carefully com pounded, and orders answered with care and dispatch. Farmers and Physicians from the country will find our stock of Medicines complete, warranted genuine, and of ihe best quality. S. MARLATT. Washington Avenne. St. Cloud KINCSFORO'S AND Silver Gloss Starch. a MANCFACTURED BT T. KINGSFOBD & SON. The Best SUrch in the World. GIVES A BEADTIFOL F1N1BH TOTHELIN. en and the difference in cost between it and com mon starch is scarcely half a cent for ordinary washing. Ask your grocerforit. OSWEG O COR N STARCH l-or Puddings, Blane Maags), let) Creatam, -f--. -s-,, «o. IS the original—Established in 1S4S. And pre aerres its reputation as rcana. sraoHona aad aoan DBUCATa than any other article of the kind offered, either of the same name or with other titles. iVi ETBTKireOK BtACADAat,iPh. D.Ac., the highest cheadcal authority of Europe, carefully analysed thiaCem 8tatch, and saystt isasaostexeeUenlar tide of diet and its chemical aad feeding properties are fuUy equal to the best arrow root. Directions formaking Podding*, Costards, Ac, ac company each package. BARNARD & COPE, Manufisctoren of all kinds of FURNITURE. 1 i. !t. :.J 1 .• SjpeciaJ attention given to. E S O "'iV'OIfcll. CHURCH LOME ft HALL furniture made to order, on short notice. •Price marts* ,, «JCwVis.kJ t*.,. 5i'-j'-'r LVI to the trade sent on application. All goods delivared at the depou or within the city limits FREE OF CHARGE. As we manufacture all our goods we Guarantee Satisfaction. tQrHighest market price paidforDry BARNARD A COPB. Factory 4th street, East «de. arerooma 6 Centre Block. TIT ml Mannb?iipr (k fr*m, I A O S O E No. 7 East Sd Street, St- Panl Mfaw. large* Stock, J**e1* kSritL^ P. J. GIESEN, O O "&*l3<tTXEZ S ,:'•.',.* A .... Blank BIMHC Hamifacturer. All kinds of Cotroty Rooks and Blanks. O W TlkU»« S ST. PAUL. *. -*tirr i- -r MINN. A