Newspaper Page Text
Jos. G. Chandler, Lite Beceiver United State* Land Office, *!. Xankton, Dakota. Attorney at Law. Beal Estate, loans aid insnranoe. Land office business a specialty, Pennmt ton's blook, opposite Poitofficn, YANKTON... .DAKOTA J. H. 3 JSLUEK, Attorney at Law, Office in Postofliee block YAWKTON .................... DAKOTA. JOHN L. PENNINGTON ATTOBNB* AT UV K«al Entate and Loan Broker, Life and Fire Insurance. Hoom *»nkUis, Dakota* HUGH J. CAMPBELL 0, FoitoffiM bloef, E. VAN Attorney at LAW. JAMES O. KsYAX Presii S a 3 ^NTWERP. Civil Engineer and 0'Quty Surveyor* Campbell & VanAutwerp I4&W, REAL ESTATE, AND O A N O I E ATTtCND oases in the district, pr»baie and supreme courts. tonvey auoing and'extuniuation of t'tler*. We rave a complete and the only abstract of tit eft in Yaifct«n county* 0» Unctions mado promptly Money to loan on realest te. Office in Dudleys block, corner of Tb-rd and loujlv# avenu*. BANKS. Yankton Bank. Edmunds, Hudson & €o. Hanker*, auk ots We do a general fluking, CoUect'on tnt Lean fcuilneis, the tame a* National Banks, JSos and sell exebaage on the principal citie. of the United (States and Europe. ftpooittl attention paid to collections, and mltted for invariably on day of payment. Will loan money, pay taxes and sell res •itate tor non-residents, on favorableterms. Ajenti for RELIABLE INSURANCE COM PANIES, and insure property oa torm avorable. EDMUN&S. HUDSON CO iVAT.Oashler. First National Bank -OJ~ YANKTON, |AK(^A. ilNITEB STATES BEP05(T0BY, -•.•Svyv.C SSE^ V'/\• .J.-"' CAPITAL 980,090Oft 8UBPLC8 •aa.OOO 0* ..Oerreepojudentsi Chemical National Sank, Mew York. Commercial National Bank, Chi cago, Illinois. Wnjell Bxohange on ali'le-principal oiti« Buxopa. Hr*OoUeotiosa receive prompt attention. McKinney & 8cougalv Yankton, Dakota. OT"bO A »«STEBAL BANKING BUSINESS Foar per oent. interest-allowed on deposits Collections promptly attended rU. Domestle and Foteign Exehang* biS^nt and BOXflle Mossy to loan en Karm Property. LOOK riine Ton per cant. Interest. an Ni m-A(«w.«ik, Hnololpai Secnrities, School Bonds, a» UOBIIT Wamuito ^onpht on Kiuonablf wbui HOTBLS. Germania House Lougtaa Avenue, near Third etr«e4r" 1 Tankton, Dakota* ,t .r. 'I Walibavm & JMker, PBOPMJETOB8. This b^nse is tke headQnarters 2or travelers ad immigrants. Qood stabling la ooaneetioa with the hotel. Raymond House -,vr: '.i,. •..•••.i .: faS^ktom, Dakota. ®. 3. RAYMOND, PBQPBnnoB .... ihitouS:1 'bus'to Swilt's Specific IB natures own remedy, made from roots gath ered from the forests of Georgia. The method by which it is made was obtained by a half breed from the Oreok Indians who inhabited a certain portion of Georgia, which was conmt^ oated to one of tho early settlers, and thus the formula has been handed down to the present day. The above cut represents the method of manufacture twenty years ago, by Ur. 0. T. Swift, one of tho present proprietors. The de mand has been gradually increasing until a $100,000 laboratory is now necessary to supply the trade. A foreign demand has been created, and onlarsed facilities will be necessary to meet it. This great Vegetable *Blood Purifier O03E8 Cancer, Cataarh, Scrofula, Eczema, &wi Ulcers, Rheumatism, Blood Taint, JS00Hb For sale by ail druggists. TBK BWIF*SPECIFIC CO., Ga„ N. 3t„ 187 W. 23d St. lib*- MJ Hereditary or hjr ii5, w.V'L uio of Potash. on "Contagious Blood Poison" aud on 'Blood and fjkin Diseases" mavled true. ,Drawer 3, Atlanta, ADVERTISERS can learn the exact cost of any proposed line of advertising in American papers by addressing Geo. P. Rowell & Co., Newspaper Advertising Bureau, lO Spruoe St., New York.. Send lOots. for lOO-Page Pamphlet. Session Laws '85 Authorized Edition. WHS CONTRACT for printing the Pension Laws of Dakota for^lwS was awarded to BOWKS & EIWOSBURR of the P/eaa arid Dako t«B» and beow tho edition pubiisbed by then- is the only AUTHOHIZED EDITION. We now have in eteokjover mt OJTE THOUSAND VOLUMES I of the book and have boon supplying tbem to v. all parts of the country, Argds, strikes ns ^as a triile"precuntore if not wholly untruthful: To School Officers. Sohool Township Books, end Blank Sohool District Books and Blanks, compiled arid arranged under the Sohool Law o, 1883, FOR SCHOOL OFFilt S&3W0T/ FublifibfO aud for sale by BOWEN & KINGSBURY, Tankton Dakota JQAKOrA LEGAL BLANKS. PRESS AND DAKQTAliN LIST: FOR LAWYEK8, C-c JUSTICES OF THE PEACE PROBATE JUiXiES CLERKS OF CODRT In view ol is fact the following advertise. i.Thenlwasks to meet R. H. at supper, ment which appears regularly in the Fargo 1 Session J.aua K. °. .The regular edition 'of tbe Session Lnws of 8B, publJ«hed under authority of the territorial legislature, re now out of print, but tho Aran# has a few oopie«of the Heseion Laws of '7H, '81 and -U rndafull iiipply of the Seasimi Law* of prepared[ by tbe West Publishing (Jo. of St. Paul, whioh will be sold at lowest prioj-s. Remember that the Session Laws of 79, 81 and '88 are of the regular stoek. but the *ettBion Laws of '86 are from the West Publish ing Co. Address THE AllGUS, Fargo. CVAU orders for Session Laws promptly tilled by BOWED & K1NGSBUBT, QFeb. 4,1886. Yankton Dakota. 1. COMMI88IONEl«» MINERS SHERIFFS A1BERT EDWARB'SILIFE. HOW THE ENGLISH HEIR APPARENT SEEMS TO ENJOY HIMSELF. His IJtUo Sunday Evening J-'ntertnin monts—Tko People Who lixcrt Them-. selves to Amuse Ills ltoyal Highness— The Prince a Capital Speaker. The restless activity of the life of II. R. H. is simply amazing. 1A peep at Ills monthly diary of. engagements would ap pal most men. What with levees, draw ing-rooms, public dinners, balls, presiding at music exhibitions and Masonic meet ings, laying corner-stones, visiting hos pitals Bhooting off into remote shires to open docks, tunnels and bridges, assisting at the erection o£ statues to statesmen, warriors and poets—what with these Amo tions, to say nothing of looking in at horse, cattle and flower shows, steaming down to Windsor or Osborne to confer with his queen mother, and turning up promptly at most of the premieres at the dozen, or so London theatres ho invariably attends, one would reasonably infer that the prince of Wales is not only as busy as the pro verbial bee, but. never has a minute to himself. INCESSANT HIGH-PRESSURE MOVEMENT. And yet II. R. H, never seems in a hurry, but always appears at the ap pointed moment radiant and resolute. When he finds time to make his careful toilet, read the papers, breakfast and dine and enjoy tho dalliance of domestic life is a mystery to the general rublic. And this incessant high-pressure movement does not break him up. Ho shows no traces of strain or fatigue. In 100 ap pointments I doubt if he fails in more than one or two, and then the fault is not his own. Doubtless the partial retire ment of tli© queen throws a great deal of social routine work upon him, but he is equal to the demand. I have known him to leave a. ball at 3 a. m. and be in the train equipped for a shooting expedition a 100 miles away from town the next morn ing at 0-30. Sharp work that, but as the Americans say, he is "on deck," looking as serene and robust as though he had gone to bed at sunset instead of sunrise. But there is one evening of the wcok that tho prince reserves to himself, and no amount of influence or intriguing will in duce him to engage himself to any formal function, no matter how important it may be, on Sunday night. That is the "night off" of II. It. II., and on that occasion it is quite understood among his "set," as his little knot of intimates' is termed, that he is to enjoy himself sans facon. Like a good Christian, and the' "first gentleman in England." he attends divine worship in the morning, dines early with his family, and then the night is his own—and he usu ally drives in a hansom after the shades of evening have descended to the earl of Fife's, in Cavendish square Lady Moles worth's, Mr. Alfred de Rothcliild's, Lord Charles Beresford's, Lady Lonsdale's, the duke of Beaufort's, Hamilton Aide's, or to the hospitable mansion of Lord Carrington who is a great favorite with tho prince, but who is just now abroad. Formerly Mr. Henry Labouchere provided jolly Sunday nights, delicately' tinged with Bohemianism, for H. R. H., but of late the M. P. for Northampton has gone over, body and boots, to Radicalism, and is so abusive of blue-blooded people in tho caus tic columes of Truth that royalty knows him no longer. A SUCCESSFUL SUNDAY NIGHT HOST. Alfred Rothschild is facile princeps the prince's most successful Sunday night host. He is generous, cultivated and genial, possesses great wealth, and his fine house is a museum of the loveliest and costliest art treasures. The wits, tho musicians, the vocalist, the raconteurs, the dramatists, the travelers, are all on his list. Ho knows most of the pretty actresses and the reigning beautiea of society, and all in good time he is made aware of the coining, of his royal guest. Carney Grain, who is a genius at the piano- George Grossmith, who sings the drollest of funny songs Marie Roze, Toole, the Comedian, who'possesses an inexhausti ble fund of good jplrits, and anecdotes Miss Adelaide Detchon, a bright little American lady who tells stories of forests and birds and imitates the "feathered denizens of the grove" with surprising fidelity. All of these and many other amusing people are bidden to the feast, and after supper they sing and play, chat and chaff and revel in the follies of niaoseriesof the moment with admirable abandon. The prince is ubiquitous, flitting from point to point, the incarnation of frank condescension, turning a graceful compli ment, graciously applauding the artists or whispering the latest mot in the ear of the prettiest lady in the salon. A la bonne heure! Is it not the prince's "night off?" And supper, how simple and gay it is, without restraint or formality. There ai no speeches nor prosings, no "few re marks" nor healths to be drunk, but if anybody remembers a good apropos story that does not "play more than three min utes," he is welcome to rise and fire and fire it off. lie is sure of an appreciative and laughing audience. Jests and puns, riddles and calembours fly about like mad, the newest scandal that is public property is lightly discussed and then sent to the limbo of forgotten offenses. The ladies are all in their finest attire, and you may be sure they wear their jewels bravely. The diamonds flash, lips are wreathed in smiles, flowers are everywhere. All have come to please and be pleased, and it lifts the heart of the high-spirited and generous host to know that his friends ore having a right royal time. The men are all clever, the women all pretty. Is this not a felicit ous combination? I may remark, in conclusion, that.the prince is a capital speaker. He never says very much when he gets oh his legs, but what' he utters is well to the point and always in excellent taste,—Howard Paul 5. .ns in New York World. (i NOT ABIES PUBLIC CONVEYANCERS ABSTRACTORS U. S. Land Office Blanks MA.OtaIogae furnished or/ application. Addreok BOWEN KINGSBURY, 'fankton, Dakota, The Last Kussian Serf Set Free,-/. The Russian papers announce the eman cipation of the last Russian serfs. It ap pears that the peasants on the estates of the foreign convents in Transcaucasia were nntil quite recently the serfs of the dioceses of Jerusalem and Corstantinople.. This abnormal situation has attracted the at tention of the authorities, and since last summer the'eufranchisement of' these sarfs has been in progress in tho governments of Tiflia and uUis. The Brotherhood of the Holy Sepulchre possesses more than 6,000 serfs, and the patriarch of Constantinople, as representing the convent of Iversky, on Mount Athos, has about 500 more.—Lon don Times. The Military Portje of Europeli|f|| If the military force of all Europe were drawn up in line, the distance from right to left would be 6,000 miles, as the force would consist of 9,000,000 of soldiers. The reviewing officer would require an express train for several days to go from one end of the line to the other.—Exchange. Try It Yourself. The proof of the pudding is hot in chew ing the string, bat in having an opporta nity to try the article itself. Purely & Breclil, tbe druggists, have a free bottle of Dr. BMankoV cough and lung syrup for aach one who is afflicted with coughs, eolde, consumption or any lung affection. J. P. MorriB, cashier of the (Jirard hocse, Philadelphia, Pa., writes, Novem ber 27,1884: "For tbe pa»t twelve years I have been a sufferer with what is known to the medical profession as lum bago, Having been recommended, about five years ago, to try AUookV Po«tik Plasters, I did so, and was more than' astonished at tbe result. I found almost immediate relief on their spplioation. I I wear one constantly now, and would not be without them. 1 oonsider them invulnable/' Up gallop is just after breakfast. But an ex- perienced explainer is requisite for a com-1 plete understanding of the assemblages.' avenue belle or asocial outcast, for all that a stranger can know from appearances the solid-looking man is possibly the bank president that he looks, or just as likely the banker of a faro game and the inten sified dandy gives no conclusive evidence whether he is a scion of wealth, to whom the expenditure of time and money is of no consequence, or a chap who nervously watches the lapse of the hour, like a child cautiously licking instead of biting an unu sual stick of candy, in order to enjoy it to the utmost before reaching the end. No sport has more various devotees. The indiscriminate character of these road gatherings and the casual throwing together of good and bad people in the res taurants where equestrians habitually stop for rest of legs and refreshment of palate are not infrequently turned to ac count by thieves. Only a few days ago a spruce fellow rode up to the front of a house in which twenty or thirty persons were eating and drinking. Perhaps half were equestrians, like himself, in costumes that had nothing to throw oil while in doors, but the rest included women who had laid aside their wraps. Selecting a $500 fur garment that lay on a chair be hind the owner, and close to a door, he boldly throw it over his arm, sauntered out on the rear veranda, and tossed it down to r, pal who was waiting. These scoundrels or others had practiced the same trick before, however, and the wait ers had been told to watch for a repetition of the feat and so the very presentable horseman, known to the police as "Jim Jerk," was arrested on the spot. He had for months been an habitual rider in Cen tral park, a cash customer of a neighboring stable, and a liberal boarder at a first-rate hotel, all on the proceeds of robberies like tho one at which he was caught. His domicile is now the Tombs.—New York Cor. Chicago Tribune. Clara Morris' Studies In Realism '.'Have I ever studied much from real life. Oh, yes on two memorable occa sions in particular both were at hospitals one was the hacking cough of the con sumptive. There is the bark and the hack. I studied the hack. I coughed for days in my room jmtil I got the hack per fect." Here the actress began to cough a hacking cough that would have caused al most any physician who might have heard her to say that she was a consumptive and coxildn't live long. "Of course," continued the actress, "coughing racks the voice, but an actress' voice has a great deal to stand. Talking makes it stronger. There are draughts on cold stages to be encountered in low-neck dresses, and many other little annoyances to contend with, but I have always preferred a bare throat, winter and summer, to wrapping up. I think there is less danger. "Another study I made was the actions of a person troubled with heart disease. A specialist secured me a subjeot from a hospital in the shape of a middle-aged woman, a charity patient. When she came into the room where I was, she came quickly. She had ran up stairs. Just as she got to the door a pain shot through her heart. That was the action I wanted to catch. Hardly an actor or actress on the stage to-day but what in placing their hand over their heart does it awkwardly, and many don't know the exact location of their heart. I didn't know where mine was exactly situated until I had in quired of my physician."—Dramatic Re view. Six Bottles of Best Ohampngne, At Dussaux'.s restaurnt, in the Grand Morskoi at St. Petersburg, six officers of the imperial horse guards sat drinking champagne. Not far from them sat an insignificant little man with a shabby coat and an unkempt beard, and a glass of liquor in front of him. It was not long be fore he became aware that he was being ridiculed by the officers aforesaid. By and by, as they became more and more offen sive in their remarks on his personal ap pearance, etc., he called for the waiter, and said: "Bring me six bottles of your best champagne." The waiter hesitated. "Did you not hear what I said?" asked the little man. The waiter brought the wine and six glasses, "Take these glasses away and fetch a basin—one as large as you can find." The waiter again hesitated, but obeyed in stantly at the peremptory repetition of the order. "A piece of soap," was the next or der. It was brought. "A towel." The waiter handed him one. "Now open the bottles." The waiter did so. The little man now filled the basin with the contents of the six bottles, rolled up his sleeves, washed himself in the costly fluid, wiped his hands, laid a 100-rouble note on the table, and, casting a look of withering con tempt on the officers, strutted out of the room.—San Francisco Argonaut. Xh® Darkey and His Cranium. It is fun to see the darkies when a sum mer rain comes- up. They will plow on until the shower comes and' then mount and lope home and get wet all over, and by that time the rain is over and they have to go back again. The darkey takes more care of his head than his feet. He don't want his head to get wet or cold. He sleeps with his head to the fire and covers It up good and lets his feet stick out any way. He will warm his hands before he will his toes. There is one thing that a c,?n do bette' tha?8 wbite man. maWng fires on a cold, wintry- morning. Sometimes when the .wood was wet and the kindling poor I have despaired of inaking it burn, but a darkey never fails. The fire seems to recognize him and I have thought that maybe it drew some colored caloric from his carcass.—Bill Arp in Atlanta Consti tution. Use of Electricity in Surgery "Any thing new in the medical world, doctor?" "Well, yes :pr. Roberts, of New York, has lately made a remarkably discovery. It is a method of investigating the dis eases of a bone by the Introduction of a stem of electrio light." "The object?" "Well, in this case the party had been injured, and the physician suspected that there was an abscess or pus in the thigh bone. He bored a hole in the hone, and by tho aid of the incandescent light dis covered thatfhis diagnosis was correct."— Cincinnati Enquirer Interview. Tho Machinery of Great Britain. The statement is made thatall the varied machinery of Great Britain now operated by steam power Is capable of performing more work, and hence of creating more products than could be produced by the labor of 400,000,000 able-bodied men, a greater number than all the able-bodied men on earth.—Exchange. 'I Bucklen's Anna Salve. -HsP VJ The best Salve iu the world for Outs, Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rhenm, Fever Sores, Tetter, Chapped Hands, Chilblains Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, and pos itively cures Piles, or no pay required. It is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction, or aioner refunded. Price 25 cents per box. For Sale by the Excelsior Drag Store of Purdy &Brecht. '!. THE TURTLES AND THE BEARS. Bow the Plcture-Writlngs of the North American Indiana Are Produced. Let us see how an Indian of North .• .. __ America goes to work to write. Suppose Where Society Is Badly Mirnd Up a The show of horsemen and horsewomen whose members call themselves the Tnr at tho Casino, a restaurant maintained by jjeg makes a raid on a village of huts and the park commissioners, is worth going to wigwams owned by enemies belonging to see on a pleasant morning or afternoon, ^he widespread flan called the Beair clan, the former time being the more favorable, Suppose it has taken the Turtles three because the fashionably correct hour for a -yyjjd Indian belonging to the great clan 0f the The sightliest girl may be either a Fifth ingTT1n.-,afl| hard travel through forests and and0ver the hills to reach the Bears. By moang 0f their crafty spies they find that brave men of the Bears are away lmnt- nnri that most of the squaws and pappooses are either in the fields of maize or ia tho woods, where the berries are ripe, and only a few old men and women are left behind to keep watch over some ponies and oxen. Then the Turtles, each clutching his bow, creep on the vil lage under cover of the woods, and with a terrific yell rush at the wigwams. The old people run into the bushes, frightened almost to death, as you can well Imagine. Then the Turtles gather up all the ponies and oxen, drive them off, burn all the wigwams they can, and hurry home with the cattle Now these savages think they have done quite a fine thing In robbing their neigh bors of their cattle and plundering aM burning their homes, as does one great na tion in Europe when, like our Turtle chief tain, badly counseled by wicked and am bitious men, it robs another of a great province and forces the wretched people who dwell there to obey tho laws of a na tion they dislike. And they wish to let other Indians know what clever robbers they have been. So the Turtle chief chooses apiece of smooth, cream-colored birch-bark, chews up a little tobacco to serve as ink, plucks a twig of soft wood for a pen, and with the tobacco juice draws the following pictures: First comes a turtle, and it is a very big turtle, because he thinks that he and his clan are very great personages, indeed. Then he draws as many waving lines, to represent bows, as there are Indians in his party, and perhaps tho same number of Indians with topknots his lines bend for ward to show in what direction the trail went. Following these a rising sun stands for daybreak, and three lines un der it means that three days went by fn going to the Bears. Next he puts down as many little pyramids as there were Bear wigwams, and draws them upside down to show that they were destroyed. After that he draws as well as he can, a wee, wee bear, very small, in order to show his contempt for the bears. Finally he draws with the greatest care as many oxen and ponies as he has captured, because he is chiefly proud of this part of his exploit, and wishes all the world of the woods to know what a great and successful robber he is. He does not tell that the Bear braves were away when he surprised the camp, and probably does not care to tell that part of the story. We may under stand it-from the absence of any sign for scalps. Had there been resistance and men slain on either side, the exact num ber of dead would have been noted by drawing just as many human figures without their heads.—St. Nicholas. Cost of a Millionaire's Slnlng-Koom. "How much does it cost to furnish a din ing-room for the mansion of a millionaire?" was asked of a fashionable furniture dealer the other day. "Well, that depends entirely on what he is willing to pay. Chairs, for instance, range in price from $15 to $60 apiece—that is, tho chairs for the side of the table. The arm-chairs that are placed at either end cost from $50 each up to $100. Tables run from $50 each io $850, according to the wood that is used. All tables are, of course, of the extension pattern. We do not sell any that can not be extended to eighteen or twenty feet in length." "What would a carved oak dining set cost?" "Here is a sample of a chair with carvetl oak feet and back. It is covered with em bossed leather, decorated by hand. Such a chair will last 100 years. It is worth $60. The arm-chairs to- match are worth $90 each. Put six or eight chairs on aside and add a table, and the set would cost in round figures $1,200. That does not in clude a sideboard and- a side-table. Of course there are cheaper sets," remarked the dealer with a beautiful smile. "Food, doubtless, does one as mnch good when set before one on a rough pine board," he soliloquized, "but people who can afford to prefer not to take it that way, and there fore we exist."—Philadelphia Press. The Cowmen Pushing into Mexico. It will be a surprise to most people to learn that American capital invested in the cattle industry has already pushed its way across the Rio Grande, and is seeking Investment in. the northern states of Mex ico. The advantages of this region over even the southern portion of Texas are ob vious, in the superior winter pasturage and milder climate, and great ranches have been recently purchased }y New Yorkers, who count with reasonable assur ance upon securing large returns. The Mexican Financier considers the move ment so important that it regards the cat tle interest as destined soon to equal If not surpass in importance the mining interest in the northern states of the republic, and it demands a repeal of the old law which prohibits the holding of real estate by for eigners within twenty leagues of the fron tier, together with other encoi^ ragements to the coming of outside capital.—New York Post. The Jaguar Pulls Through Safely. Fanny, the jaguar at the Philadelphia "Zoo," has just come through a serious crisis in her existence. She is 2 years old, and lately began cutting her second set of molar teeth. This is always a particu larly dangerous period with animals in captivity, few passing through it safely, as death is caused by inflammation SC^TTS Ei'uii OF iri&£ 'GOB And Hypaphssphites of Lims & Soda Almost as PalatableasMUlc. The only preparation of COI) LITER OIL that can be taken readily aud tolerated for along time bf delicate nLoiuorJis* AXP AS A Ki:srny COYSUMMO!^ scuorii .')i.s AI•yEffi'w.Ns, New Advertisements. trpr ,i P. O. Co., mil" t: gDPfi a g, *•5 38?&?E? A BIG OFFER GIVE AWAY 1,000 self-operating Wanting Maohines. If you want one send tnvtlope_mallert Betting in. Fanny was carefully watched and tended by the keepers, and put on a diet of Squabs, mutton and milk. She pulled through safely, but now another trouble has arisen. Her luxurious diet has made her fastidious, and she turns up her nose in scorn at her former food of horse meat, and howls for chicken.—Chicago Times. Cheap Dinners for London Children. Princess Christian, in view of the extent of the distress in Windsor, is very anxious to organize some cheap dinners for chil dren, and has invited several women to assist in the carrying out of this benevolent object. The mayor, besides allowing the use of the Guildhall, has consented to act as treasurer to the fund, to which the Prince and Princess Christian, Princesses Victoria and Louise of Schleswig-Holstein, and several women arid men have already contributed. The Rev. Mr. Tahourdln of St. George's chapel is the secretary.—Chi cago Tribune. The sidewalks and fences of Washing ton are almost covered with chalked re quests to tho public not "to shop after 6 p. m."f»a *W,. PS. Josiah Davis' Trouble, Josiaih Davis, North Middletown, Ky writes: "I am now using a box of yonr HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE npon an nicer* whioh, for the past ten days has Riven me great pain. This salve is the only remedy I have found that has given me any esse. My nloer was oansed by varioose veins, and was pro nonuced inenrable by my medioal doc tors. I find, however that HENRY'S CARBOLIC SALVE is affecting a onre." Beware of imitations. Catarrh cured, health and sweet breath secured by Remedy. Price Shile&'s Catarrh 60 oents. Nasal free. Sold by Pardy Breoht. injector UA your name, and ezpresR office at once. TH*.NATIONAL 21 Boy street. Mew York. $ 1 0 in re y1 vrilUdtJl #100 in 10 to 20 days. For proof of this address J. NMITH, Box 83, ROCK HILLwith0.stamp. S. I Cure Fits! When I gay cure I do not mean merely to stop them for A time and then have them return 1 mean a radical cure hay the oigeane of Dr. H. O. KOOT, 188 tt'F'G Co., P, O. Box 1916, nttiUl A marie FITS, EPILEPSEY,Ior FALLING OIGK*E88 a life-long study. I warrant my rem* dy cure the worst canes. Because others have failed is no reason for not now receiying enre. 8end at once for a treatise and a Free Bottle or my infallible remedy. Give Express *Fpstoffice. It cortts'you nothing for atrial, and wul cure you. Address. Pearl St., New York A30IK8 TfANIEO—To w«rk for us at th lr own homes. 8? to ®10 per week can local W SALESMEN everywhere, lu and traveling, to sell our goods. Will pay good salary and all expenses. Write for terms wanted. STANDARD SILvliiK WARE COMP Y. Bostoa. Mass. pusmpTiu I P*UiY» V!mcsly !ul'lue above fc'y it* Qi» (iiotUMdf ofMsua of th« w^rtt kind and of t.»n? slertliR bar* b«B eurcd. In.lc-e.t. m-. fr.iih '.r, J!?*15"1 'DVo PHKK.' to&e *-r with VM, JABIJC TRK.vriStt OD this G»?e Ex "TBMtinrtP Ii. r.fidr... TO, A. M.T :v NERVOU& DEBILITATED MEN. free^ by addressing I V0LTA10 BELT CO., MarskaU, Mich. DOCTOR WHITTIER EH, ST. CHARLES STREET ST- LiOVIS, MO- A Beralar Graduate of three medical col leees, has been longer engaged in the treatment of Chronic, Nervous, Sfaln and Blood pfneaaes than any other physician in Amer ponsu'tati°n atoffice or by mail, free, and Medicines sent by mail or express everywhere •ecurefy packed tree from observation'. Nervous Prostration, Debility, Mental o/irf Physical Weakness, arising from Indiscretion, Excess, Exposure or In. dalgence, producing some of the followinp I- .vo"5""S, Bebility, Dimness ol Sight, Defective Memory, Pimples cn the Face, Aversion to Society of 1- emales, Want ot Pleas ure in Life, Unfitness to Marry, Melancholy, Dyspepsia, Stunted Development,I^oss of Power, n'V j" Back, etc., are treated with unpar alleled success. Safely, privately A Positive Written Guarantee •VveT5T CAS* where DOUBT ex ists it is frankly stated. Completesymptom blank enabling you to properly state your case, sent free. 38 page boot either sex. one stamp. Blood Impurities and Blood Poisoning, mercurial and other Affections of Throat, Skw and Bones, Blotches, Eruptions, Old Sores and Ulcers, Painful Swellings, from whatever cause, positively and forever driren from the system, by means of SARK TIMR TESTED REMEDIES. STIFF and SWOIXEK JOINTS and RHEUMATISM, the result of blood poison, positively :ured. No poisonous drugs used. Catarrh, Throat, Hose, Lung Diseases, Constitutional and Acquired Wenlc A 1 A jo and experience are Important th* proved good, remedies of all agesand countries are used, and knowing what to give, no experi ments are made. Orfaccount of thigre'??um. ber of cases applying the charges arc kept-low often lower than is demanded by others MARRIAGE GUIDE 280 Pagea, Flno rln.^f !n^n?»v' Cl°lh,i""3 tr"tbindinir. Scaled forSOc In money or posture stamps. Over fiftv wonder not?whvP Pure8' may mC.rt, ^h hi Uiinkin I** man* "a nd wo mlrf. Paper cover, 2ftc. Address V.'Sf St! O Tlle RU VRItV GUIDE fe M.ttrch and Sept., em:* reftr. -J-.*50 pages, lnclir^,ul[hover 3.GOO llh.-GU-atlonB-.a whole Picture Gnllerr. GIVI2S WboSenate Prices #reet to contain on all f-oocla for personal or fomlljr-.iiM., I'elH liotv to •rder, and gives erail cost of every tfclag you use, cat, u, wear, or have fun with, Thwe IM'ALtlABLK BOOKS contain InformnUon gleaned from tho raarleels cf the world. We will mall a copy Fnin any -ad" Areas npon re«i ij4 i»f defray expense olT L. tto hear from you. MONTGOP/SESY^ARO & CO. •8T 9°'* ^l OCH& SON'S -mP"''«d States. Complete eth Avr, fc & g?,5: RAILROADS. Sioux.By &4S! liver oil ^8® AN At:,w I A, l.itu, '.r.iai.nv, CII G«S ANO TKHOAT AFV t'KCTlO.Mj, and all WASTIXO DLSOItUOtS OF CHlliDRKX It is mamllnns In its ri'tnlts. Prescribed and endorsed by tho best Physicians In the countries of tho world. FOR SALE ay ALU DRUGGISTS. -V Pacif KAli.ROi.D 'r 1 IS CONDUCTION WIN, T„K., Chicago & Northwestern l&putar PWw um:,t, Thessliars art the most modem and mafimfloent Dining Cort in txiin™P!?J ar«i managed and run entirely in the inte'r iu of the traveling pnblio, and without recuH it expense in maintaimug the table TKii. tarnished will include all the delicacies V! season, and equal to those to be had at PEOPLES' FAVORITE fioui!s '1 sioux cit* 'airoamcACH/'*sj "^Two Daily Trau.^. ice onlv ii„.... S'lfl PULLMAN PALACE andb^iNGtJarsbet^^r City ana Ohieaeo through with ont change. Tfleirar.r linin? Oars arc also iuii on Trains between Chicago and Council JBlug8t FROM SIOUX cm To Chicago AND ALL Milwaukee POINTH EAST iD Des Moines ^fa'Btt4na.8,Htisra St. Louis AN ALL Points Huuth Time. Sure Connection*. So DilayB. All Trains are fully equippeu wi ti-.e Mil LKB SAFHTY Pi^.TFOitM a._. WK8# i. BOOfffi AUTOMATIC All. BUAKJS8. Trains leave Sionx olty dally at 2:25 n. and4:40 a. rn. Paseengers taking this line make direct 0011 sections in Ohioa^o with all fast train* for all principal points east, and at U. P. Ti msfer Uounoil Bluffs, with all ti- ins for po.ub sonth ^ud west. Baggage cheoke.- through to (t« p-iaoipal points. O. M. J. K. BUOHAKAH, General Paaeenger ivrv.. LAWLXB, Gen'l. Bnp't., Missouri Taliey.lnca J. W. BUDDX. Agent. Sioux City. •X'HB QHICAGO, jyj IIJWAIJKEE, and 01. At 1, RAILWAY COMPAJN and operates £ye thonsand miles of thoroughly equipp«a rood in Illinois, Wif sonsiii, £uwa, Minncsotiw and Dakota. ZIT IS THE SHORT LIME AX1) VEST ROUTE BETWEEN ALL PUIS 01 PAL POINTS IN THEN 0MTE WEST AND FAR WEST. ••-r to any "Wsjlroad Agent anywhere in tlie United BtateB or Caaada. A. V. H. OABFKNEKK. Gen. Pass* and Ticket Ageut. & KULLEB. Qenoral ManR^er GEO. H. HKA-bFOBI^. Ass't.Geii'l. Passespor T0OK8Bia AsaTt Gen*l Manager. MlIiWAUKKE, WlSOOKBXW. H^*For Botioes in referenoe to Speoial fix arnonst changes of time« aud other itexos of interest in oonnecti(»n with the Chicago. Mil waukee & Bt, Paul Railway, please refer to the »aa! columns of this paper rilE PEOPLE'S EIISE Fargo & Southern »,*y jttvi RAILWAY,^between FARGO & ORTONVILB la prepared to handle both FREICHT & PASSENCER TRAFFIC With promptness and safety. Connectinp .. ®t Ortonville with the Chicago, Mil ,, waukee 4 Bt. Paul system the Fargo & Southern thus makenanother Great Trunk Line eiSp&StSl^pe^Sl nants, elegant ooaehes, Pullman sleepers, on •ll,s»st trains and its rates are always as low and tuts aa qtuok aa other lines. When you (JO EA8T or,OOMK WIBT try th Bargo and Southern. J «3rf X.I&4S SCK Trains lsave Fargo for Minneapolis, St. Paul and intermediate stations, at 7:60p. m.aiid7.:S0 a. m. Arrive at Fargo from Bt. Paul and Min neapolis r.t 8 a. m. and p.m. moketafor sale at the prinoipal stations Bt. Paul, Minneapolis, Chicago and all eastern ana southern states. For further information address A. Y. H. OABPEHTBB, Gen. Freight and Pass. Agent, Milwaukee