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7J$?:PK K $• 3^ r%f,- j*' K: h' A.*f, 1m» A*v, 1 T- .••• 35^ dUto^ «*.»« rr t..'- W-l*'"- th»* i In rf# Wkk wftdi* wvety m*l «f n»«* b-8 3V' a»\ fThrt UU»t*t.' «f #«. ft 1 WrttHir* W11*" i,W "Pi«•«».*', WM b*i t» wb*n "t" htM "loontow «1-rr. »... -.v .rhs- lite onJ h* Iwl tMC W maMM i, . ^whs* «**«*.* '4m c«i ii-«! -.i ,rf! ic n-mpersts d»y« dkfcefrsgeee From tb« rt'iUncHn ml.» *b I |«i'H (MM: ij« juwr» lo "Tuhy *t 71 As b* muf" ««1 Uf "TuU$ .at -from iu iirs.4 InfMt struxgfcM. to cmiit MM Be AM wsicWKl WW# iwt I'Jlwpri** pal Ms hrr* ww h«r to In tv Y«t-wi»r« aui th« fW ciwfc po* J' mrh «»v«»jfc t»*-11,uf Wt htm a W^wBt A *3ujEiir#t h© mijcbi -.• **ti, |kit ukt ti«nrt «u*d w«arv (14 t»m-i«t Ans M» :nml f'r th« years thAt^**« J-vmy tilliM h« in the h«yUy of li/# Hm (M*ews w !t|»er*«i «nd bc« ueath h«%ri"W »..• pf' meiiiiay's ^ure-J tiil ThM rtifi ^mtf iftir r*-^ r*~* rt* a.- s.rkt hm a. A»d n ?v«*rt (».fte wtTt •elk toAMQT. 'lift Mid. 5«*r tiv y«»r tb« *md of fiUJ luanr *lt **|»y OOMMI prontiM of tuiuiwrv h*1 ch««r 'TWre's a iw^l Itttie chwab" th*i Kwri poor olrt J«ck Jo A turixii" wtner* mvmm ctmm to bkmt i drops for U»« iMt IUm tlw pH| Itl nek W'licr* eiatiwaMflM got —1TWonvM frail in N«* ark BeitU. Mn, I*i*tt'a Cormpoiidmi. Mre. Thoixuw C. Piatt receive* many Snare tetters ttata the »*x-senator. Most 4f them come Irrxn mifortunate and im ihf'riineiit jvoplo, wlm want everything mortal ran want. Money tin cen tra! dexnanl. Otter wi^lwantu want iMiatonc* in g«lting employment, pro motion or tr»n*portatii»ii botne waat #ntjrraplifc others politely a*k for let i«r« of Jntrcxlnctjon to ttoe families of ':||h« oaWiwt. officern. presidentor senators #thers beg for fiiffirient inflnpm:© to get 4 precocious son or aopmug iaiigbtar gdnntted to an educational dramatic or flnwui-aJi organisation. Among the reqnestu for material aid ji|r« rails for books, old clothing, wotwid %anl furniture, wa*h Ixmrds^tulm, type •riti?rs Mid toy*. Blw is aiumd to sign ^saaeo. lray afcock, advance rnjntal, take flubci'riptioii lx*)ks, pnrchaM? jmmjiiib, pioturt»8 audi aonvemm, and Cai»«etiM ghaliosgx go Brcunty for rents, househoii supplitw, %iitiort «nd dry foode. Th« coratnoni Hation* from institutions aad rharitable Wt»» lUiirwMti Lm* MoMf. For tibe personal damages to psswi iifffc «|i the We*t Jersey railroad at May's liandiag' the coai{any |iaid out $81,000, •ad got off very luckily, as then? were •Ineteen deaths and twice as many in juries- Such ternUJe accidents as that •t, New Hamburg, on the New York Cen tral, or at Ashtabula, on the Lake Bhors H^d. cost n company a fortune nnd se ^k'ialy impair dividends, (ienerally the «pmpauc^ are giad to settle in such uti! are able to secure fa arable %rim mi eoadititm of prompt payment, pens ally u. om& where cla.imants are aad desirous of avoiding protracted litigation. But where claimants insist Ms ctionnotiK claims the litigation is both awt}y and protracted, and is seldom «it Maetary to either party ^•wTork^m. (Morse Moor^, the English disciple of jHola, otic« had a play at the Odeon, in yaiis, and at the nine time an adapta tion of "Othello" was l» mg rehearssed at Hie theatr He called one morning flnd aaked to see the manager. "What Hame Khali I give, monsieur?" demanded fx: r. .ucierjre. "Tell Porell tluit the |lngiuh author whostj play he has ao teptei dtatirea to see him." The con «ierge went toward the manager's room. #rgani*ationH aaking for contril/uticwaa »^lwte stamlard of womanly beauty ifrf !y x:ceede! by the demantls of Hie franks Nine ont of every ten Ict Ifm read, "Although a stnagarto JM," tie.—New York World. There is a gentleman in the hall who i«ii« me he n the English author whose •lay lias just been accepted,*" he said to jhe official "t^tute right." answered |he latter, "semi him in. Monstieur Ihaktspesre. nodaobt," Ban Pranciaoo Waves a're *eff- To t)of 4|t them in a storm ouo would think the llvater travelcnl The water »tays iu the Maine place, bnt the motion goes on. fiouifctimes in storms thtaie waves are forty teet high and travel fifty miles an fiour more than twice as fast as the ,#wiftest steamship. The distance from *«dley to valley is generally fifteen time» the height, hence a wave five feet high mAwul %»v«ur «i»vea^-6v« foefc «l*| vat«r,~OoeaB. A for Ail. Mr* Gabb Are you goin? to jronr darter take mmiv kMoiidl Mrs. Gadd—No-o, i kkiB't no ear fer mtnic hare Mr*. Gabb—Well, I Wouldift be 4'oiirsged at that Mebbe she learn to play claamc anj now York Weeklj. (TL»- flfeen ftgh -uyteli wt ronnt fish in the New Ybrk market ITIms 5,0«* hotels, restaurants and oyster JyiifVing in the city use Ml.000 baskets of osters every day from Sept to May 1-. and half as maajr wore are uaed, My the dealers, by Individual con sumer*. Such newspapers have to be cat or torn are worth half a cent a pound for \wmmi* paper, and if there are any so ?i*-aied or unfit to keep that 1uev must b« "jjjt'urned jwk theui into a pa^r tube,. 'with turt^ntiue and rwin, and mm Sijpectiom tor kiudliiig i&rk mji«« are sotuetimea .. Corit fcuie*. are tKHBuetmies in demand, x" .Joscre tsyerially when tl«-re i« a tiability dmtoipu*-M atvs ny those who ob.'.ct to Jw#«nrg rafttm* o*k Nrfng iinperrious jsbleas a n»-conductor I M*m ou» A 4«|MkMM Tftffiit Btid. INlMd bow to tek« a long night rife, and «t Irttgtli wo rn«hrd out iato *li« ii"soo«U^I:*t, our fonr1»*»ui mnners appear iUttf and «iiha,p|h-aring as we camo in mu{ out of the «h«k«ir» i& ttw loog poo bion of oivr train We whirled jvi«t the houses of tt« m~u.ill town, indisrm'tly clowj to the jvqwr li^litini from within, agatiuit wiuch w«m profiled the shf*k\r* of fiicet, toiiietiineA with ]i)e« or cuj* Uft Itl to tht'ir li{wor th« outliucctof roiffuw* p.led up on th* head- i ll pn*tm e« unm Japaneee than tbi'ir very on«nbult: then between roir.»ded hills on which stood trauBMsaof maj le tm«: then near to empty spar« of vrater then «aak itilo «litrk hollowi, at the bottom of which rt*er ran hs fa-st the other way. -I watched and kxke«l long as fatigue allowed, hut fell asleep in the uncom fortable knrutna, waJ^d every now and then by some snddeu Jdtto mfWtMKled arm and head. Occasionally 1 had dreamy glances at what I remember as a vast blue plain, with lofty colorless' mountains at one side, and jH-rhaps saw glitnpaea of the M*. Tlie night air was cold in the hoi low* after the sweltering day, and I found my nrm and face damp with the dew A Japanese po would have said that it waa bat the aprav from off the oars of aoroe heavenly boat which sailed that night acrosu the (tarry stream of the milky way, lu the dawn we atw the white walla of the castle of tho city of Osaka, u«d ran acromi ita many bridifee. all silent in Mm liw nimt —John La Farge»€•f.| wtMr* i» hi»*r Where in that "divine perfection of a wonn,'' entitled "the loveliest of her hex," to 1» found? "There!" "There!" "There!" nhoat no end of enamoured bachelors, each pointing at hi* heart'us kloL The hu.«'(»andK are le«s ent husias tic, for it is a lamentable fact in ffsthetica tfnat matrimonial familiarity modifies very materially theante-nuptud "pinion« of the j)art a implicated with re«|wv«t to each other. But almost every unmarried man with a malleable heart knows or has known some woman whoa* he re tr:tr«l* or has reg^ded as "tte tardiest of her sex Yet tho uj»t rlative is ridic ulous, for the simple reason that there exists no The sculptor who shaped the Mcdician Venus thought he had combined all the rarest physical charms of thy sex in that romarkahie work of art, and et we have heard it criticised Hit too short, too tall, tow pi amp. too thin, etc, etc.: and a six foot-four Vermonter who went to Rome to perfect hi* taste iu vertu recorded in a "visitor*' legistri" thire the unsenti mental dictum that "the figure is pretty good, what there to of it, but there isn't more'n half cnotmfc.*" Mo^ that even the sUtue which wear© told, 2iant»the world" is not ever)*body's paragOB.— Jitw York ledger. |tirtl#«l to a Bti Cfctl'^ndifo if arm had ble voice. It was th«* voice of a man of too puysiqu\ and ita owner used it as skillfully as a trained elocutionist Judge Noyes" voice was of remarkable timbre, and it was wont to be his boast that "give roe an audience of 10.000 peo- Interview Jiie in the o?»eti air, nnd ill make every I tone of them hear." Whan Oen. Noye« minister to France his great voice, found and musical as uoU» f«il» a bronze bell, was tlw narrel at Hm i ib prostraH' u rmt qmte as ^aafefctoafele as it wm year »r two ago. fcrhich i? r'cv JS I J, I'*- Li: cheerfiiS tigts aad that to the fact that we nm teaming tsk* better care at min»lr«t fiiji i French peojile. I^ew Rosen, the playwright, wa* in Paris when Gen. Noyes came to repre sent he great republic at the French capital, and wa* engaged as French tutor for the American minister's family. Gen. Noyes had difficulty in learning French, and freely confessed it. One day Mr. Rosen called upon Henri Mar tin, the famous French historian, and in the course of the conversation he mentioned Gen. Noyes' difficulty in ac quiring French. "Ah,' naid the gr*»t writer, ''(hm. Noyes doe« not need t« learn to »peak zo French language he *raile* ze French language."—t hnciwuiti Oosnmercial Gazette. A«1Y HlRL1S££ id Few people probably realize how rare, optically speaking, i* a really perfect or uormal eye among human being*. Out of L*00,00) persons exauiinod by German wuli&ts only on© was found who had normal vu»k#«, and he, strange to say, saw nothing, as the ^eneraiity of man kind see things A etar, for instance, to him was a perfectly circular figure, with no radiating jwiints, ami he seemed to le inc.] ]iab!e of recognizing lines and projectionH (MHential to many geometri cal toucepUons. May not the myope and astigmatic comfort himself, therefore, with the re fl#«-tio?i tli it his vision, if iu the sirict s«mse defective, has ccjfnipen^tionii not to be lightly disregarded? Is it not lx-t »tnr to see things in a picturesque way. with harsh outlines softened and with Sfvr variation* in curves, and anglei* in har mony with one'# senae of beauty, than to \h- held rigidly to the letter of nature and so find the external vrorid an affair of blank inonotouy? —Boston Beacon. nMc«cu Im Life. JBfc lokm Aluntcr, theeuuueBt wwiimm, adopted a rate which may be mom mended to aU When a friend aaked Uiin how he had beeti able to aconjpli»h so mu in the way of study and discov ery in his busy life he answered: My rule ia deliberately to consider t»efore 1 commence whether the work is practi cable. If ii Ui not prftcttcflbie 1 do not attempt it. If it be practntiliie 1 can accomplish it if 1 give »ufficihit pains to it, and ha. ng tjegun I never stop until the thing in done. this rule 1 owe all my suecea* in life." Xi£± rp «rv«t t!re f^ataiUl tmfanlitfts Tt^ hide* Kn Gts* y«. is la"i year* old. He lias been a re*»d«-nt -f that I.x^lity wer fifty year*.. and now ocruj4^ a c»*tui by the r«a«I-iie He know- bo living rela t: over weuty /ears klud n^igh bor* have supplied hk fuel, clotbiag aad yrovutona, af ifiir'iiii i 1 s rf TERY Ql'ERR INDIANS. *|iCMARKAti£ mmm «unftouNC$ mf A MAYiHMMW W*m 1 •nm UUrMiiag Fast* Atmst ti«» Km*m tmpmi* Thmj Uw In a lump* OaajFM ki M#w W^Kiee «|p II—n Sr IfMti Tk«r Am took a trip up the canyon mad located the tribe in the narrow, valley like in closure between the mighty walls of the Supai canyon. Hupai i.* a name which Mr. Supai gave the caany xi him self after having made a trip to the re i gion On reaching the canyon IM found the Indians tn the midst of a marveloualy S fertih valley, diminutive as it i.-, where all sorts of grains and fruit® j^row in rank profusion, where there are splendid climatic influences nearly the twelve month through, and where all th it tends to build up physical i-'wers is at liami He made invtsstigatinim, too, into their language their rite# and ceremonies, their legends, and into all the pitase* of their present and patst history x^»ible. and he is confirmed in the belief that they are in noway alHed to the Az'ece. Ho says, on the contrary, that «k far as can be ascertained tifcey am allied to fte Wallapai as tuot.ATKr rnrttt The tribe ia a mostfringotaronf-. Their •alley home has on ••I'her ml i great ledges of rocks mailing «p In benches thousands of feet In the valley are groves of Cottonwood tree*, and 1 luxu riant vegetation la mn on ail Kidea. There are a ho tit 243 or £36 in the trite of the Bupai They live aiiaoiuteh alone. Tbev do not intermarry witi other tribes, neither do they mix with tt»«* scat tering white people of the refiofH round abont. When they «ein need of forage or food outside of that which they can get in their own rich valley they sally out, make their trades or parch..«e« and return home They are monogamists, ©very man bavteg one wife and n•• more They do not live in a cotnmun il form either, but preserve the family if its in t^grity The men are a little at••jvu the average height, they are strosig and active, and they are noted for th* ir skill in climbing the mountains and in bring ing down the came they need. 'I tiev are very shy and su.*iiciom of India from other tribes, and it is only by th* most careful and adroit meam that u while man tan approach tbttm and gidn .in*, information to their li#». The wi.mei are smaller in stature very i nd of adornment and given to fianlMtsc deoe rations of their faces. The flupai Indians appear fee fee flat above n^any other trilw^ in (gioral« They look with worn upon any ot*c wi»o asks them questions as to their mamed relations, holding that this is «t» one's •iu&ine«M but their own. and the fijr* that the woman of the tribe who g«« wron? is fmhjecte1 to the most prod^naced neglect, and generally is put out of the way. is pretty good proof that they aie ^•a^ased of a sort of himplt. w tue nntvcAi. cmftAOTntsTiaK Mr. Wit lick fount! eleven of the men totally blind Hi believe® this to le due the splitting of the arrow# when the bows were stretched too taut. Borne of the women who would be seea sitting barefooted in front of their thJtcl i roof houses have the most i*x*uls«r ttw* that ever were seen on a huauum s« ing The toes were not so very large, but they were of abnormal width at the en da. In some cases the big toe would tie an inch and a half broad at the epd and very flat and thin When Mr Wittick and his party entered the canyon they found the Bupai very genUe and hospitable in their aboriginal way. but very reticent at the same time. •Procoading ikoKfe thfc x.an\ujx tiin^ngh the fertile valley, along which was a slender stream of. never failing water, the purest arid sweetest in tii laad, tb*y reached a magnificent waterfall, where th« silver stream plunges over a preci pice 357 feet-i» height, an4 tailing in a stream of the ran^t lieauty dow» to the pool below O-ttonwood tree* were feliod. lashed togethsr and -ladder made in sections, the whole sev«uty~»' I feet long, and down this ih»j ajplatwr* chndied in their exit from a«: huffiMT oi h-*e .-trangely intereotiug w»ii«#avag» folk. Use beautiful stream h*» beta utilised by the Indians in irrigating t"iOf» portions of the valley that were sterile, and it appears that i centuries they have known of this nu h.xl njd s n a u e 'v -TV! CHlltuM. Ben Wittick. a well know pTu tog raplier of Albuquerque. N. M., }:as l*«ii visiting friend* in )f umeapoh- and to hiaa The Mmuenjxli* JourvaJI i- indebt ed f^r m*t interesting and accurate account of the Nava-frUip&fa of the Snj«n canjron Kiuie time ag» he went to New Mexico, settling at A1 '('ntjuert|e IVing a man of adventurous turn of mind he A' W»itM4 lnnllrt^ 9m Wf* Uli'fl A mnn step-ped up to the •1.-hv«ry win dow at the postoflicQ baturday night and in a savage voice sail "S#o here, you fellows, I want my ni.ne} imck. You can't fooi inn this wav the trouble?" inquired the clerk "Wal, hi ml one of your goeb durued boxes mo*it two weeks ago and hav» r.o| got a letter since 1 had it, but 1 most '«.4T the other fellow# that i..i- ixuies geH nomethirr in thdn. Give me hack my money, 1 say!" It was usci- u argwi with iiiiii tie- clerk t«»l i iii® there imd be*»n i-ionnf tuistakv, and he caMenl i snmnd later he would find »o:uetlrf«$ the bos. He went oil satisfied^ while the dork Hied th# box witti ]nte*t med' i K3^e**w*ii*r»."-iiel£ast A»p. (H4 O•«»»» i*|.|fc, Ji the di*j)tb of about n*l wavea are not felt The temperature i» th# stone, varying only a tnjk U iu \h& n* of the i«»le to the burning of th« •«,aator A mile down the water has a -r» *rare of over a ton to he nijuare inch. box fix feet wide were nil#.! with, sea w^er and allowed to va|«rate pi der tlu* suti tiMire would i«. two tncfeea of sail l«ft on the bottow.—Ocean. I n j?. Is 3&* "," «£. v Ditetnl iu Mm Choir. Drtltiag a volunteer choir is tiba «Ml 0«MCHMttfng work ever undertairf® by a iMMMin Wing. In the first place it ts mora&y certain that at least, half a do»s«i mem Iters think they know more thatt the leader, and two or three art al ways letter informed than the man wli wrote the mtwi. so they offer with cheerful alacrity, the most idiotic sag gestionsi t« the manner in which It should be performe«l. and feel xmn-h ag grie v»-d if theu idea* are not atted ou. Then the women are always either so devoted to each other that they keep up a constant chatter when they should be singing or listening to the leader di rection, or arc quarreling axul "put each other out** They an aot napooaibie to 41 trouble, but when they do quarrel th®y generally manage tc enlist the men in the service of both sides, and the lliwt thu the leader knows one half hk choir has quit and the other half is about to do so beoause they are not numerous enough to make a creditable chorus A choir leader say* "I have gone into church on Sunday morning and found six or eight memtierB sitting in the con gregation. instead of in thair places, and th,* rest glaring at them from the organ Ktand It ts fnu for them and for the people. )mt it's death to tte —St. Louis Globe-Democrat. Nnd X»rwwst*ig. Bfteaking of congress g&iten and drowning recalls a tashnsiat lo middle aged physician who thort^pghis Wlieve* in this fatality. He gave it u.e. jy* in this wise: While consulting a man In «lell mte health aln»ut his c«re for hiiw«»}f in the winter tune tlio doctor sawl: "Whnt kind of shot s have von got mt?** They provel to Ik the fatal comfrmH gaitera, and the doctor objected, IH»1 you ever see an account of a drowned nmn found in the l*ay that didn't say he bad on con gr«'HH gaitens*' Yon laugh ami lav that doesn't make any diffeeeuce. and there i4 no c*n»ecti«». of c^use and effect. "How do you know there isn't? Yon can't trace it. hint I'm not certain that congress gaiters do not tend to such moral and jihvsv al degenuracy that a man is liable to fall off a ferry boat, or in a fit-of deafjondency to jump into the liver. At any rat# I don't wear them. I told a woman the same thing once and she laughed. 1 went on, and when I iosk hrd home found a letter from her, say mg she hail picked up a paper after 1 went away, end tin- first thiiig fgund several confirmations of what 1 said, and she wanted to adiait that she was cen- York Tnbnaa. Ku Um CImOi Profe«*or oiler, of (.^arlsruiie, hae made some interesting observations on cloud* The highest clouds, cirrus and eirrontratiis., ri«* »n an average .to a height of nearly 80.000 feet. Th© mid dle cloud* kwp at from JU.OOO feet to 18,000 feet in height, while the lower ofcnsdi* reach to betwwni H.000 feet find t,«0 feet. The cumulus dotMla float with ti»eir lower aurface at a height of from 4,000 to 5,000 feet, ffamtnitH rise to above £^?i r^?r-v^ •7^- „v4" while their ifl.OOO feet The toj« of the Alp» are often hidden by clouds of tb# third chum, but th# bottoms at tb* chmds of the second class, and esj* tally of the thunder clouds, often enfold them. The vertical dimension of a ckmd ob served by Professor Moller on the Netle berg was over 1,300 feet He stepj»ed out of it at a height of about n,7(» feet, and high the mountain floated clouds of the middle clam, while veils of mist lay in the ravines and clefts. The upper cloud* were growing thicker, white the lower ones wero dnstolving, and soon it Ixegan to rain aad snow Public pinioa. A Hnwrt Detceilt*. Moeer on one oeoa«d4M myr a widter a cafe at Hoho receive and place in his jock«t a letter which the de tective believed to be from a criminal a knowledge of whose whermlxrats he was anxiou« to obtain. He therefore dn»p ped his ring on the floor and asked the man to look for it. Alphtmise, expecting a reward, immediately went on his hand* and kuee*% and while thus en Bergen ui nlfflta^ted thc Ici ter from his jmk ket and thn« obtained the means of bringing a forger to jus tk e. Who can doubt that this was a perfectly justifiable act? But it. instead. Bergeant Moeer had suborned another person to steal for reward, Mid without telling him the object in view, he would most «.-*?• uredl v havo acted very wrongly —ftpe tator. rn xrtiwt silk XUl ia A portion of the old mill built by John Lombe at Derby in 1718—the first silk mill ever erected in England has col lajmtsl. uid it is expected that the whole building will haw t»come d»wn. Lomtie wortewl as a silk weaver in Italy, and at the risk of bis life made drawings of the machinery. Ho then retnnml to En it land, bringing some Italian workmen, and built the factory on an island in the Derwent, having first patented the ua chinerv. He diet! soon afterward, and it is said he waa poisoned by a fenuu* emissary of the Italian manufacturers. The mill was worked for many years, but long bc*?n in disuse. It wan iwt uti Bjtoi as a stea4u laundr) and was condemtied tKitue yeax'» since'as y' sa&. —G«dtgna ui Meseengm TUtU'i «iu»w Taor CotlilP TtutToK. Il is desirable th. a cravat or four-tn shotxld tie held firmly up agataet the tabe of a collar. The collar button never should he m*«i. With a cravat this may be accimipJWted by drawing the fir»t knot firm Wilis a four m-htmd it may accomplisht^! l,»v first tying a firm iiiuple knot before maldiag the fotav in-hand mov^aent. -CSothier and F«o Blafect- »UfimmmmiMh, A ^»cinRi!ti polketoan wlro tilted. withcwit spjirfh-ut good reason«i exjiai»H to a r*f#orter t.hat the cost *t Citizens l) Ktrr# 3*. caltil tsd Surplus, $61,000, A 0&NK11AL 1!ANK1N9 BUSi- VKE88 TBAN8AC1ID. «ma HP* A co«^it*Di roiiMtof t? *U*ihI to coUei-tiou# Kj on it W. BMTTH, P^ida* W. DALY, Vto^lWde«t| 3. A THt»Wt Oaablar sr Cspital MADISON 'S: -ideMSr at-:, .Alttfti -•I" ^Vl 4 »«,0«0. Surplus A Genera! Banking Business 1 raiisamed k gjj.t WIS remit money to*any part of the Old World, and m*U tickets to and principal European porta on any of the leading linee of at^amboata. aad Municipal Boats bought and sold. &v r.\ *,•„ \jj V •AMKISU,(^LLf«4TI9SS, •r^-S-"!t'k MM* DAKOTA Oollecti«s M«da asd pranptly OOBRBSPONDENT^: Firat Kalloaal Bank, Chicago. Chaaa Katiaaal Bank, N««rCovl MaHfllWll 11*"*** CHAE B. ICKfmEDY, Pirn Ww. P. KENNEDY, 8ec A Tvaaa. Northwestern Loan and Banking Co. Madison. South Dakota. A tiENJCHAL BANKING BUSINESS TMAN8ACTED. IWwa specialty of first i»ortgag» ami raai wt&te loana. Buj mviiictfMl, iNtty and ach^l boiwls and othw saeitxita^ (JORRfiSPONDKNTB. Co., PltHndelphia, Bwwfc, rJational Bank of Illinois, Chicago, III., Sioux Full* National Batik. Sioux Faiig, S. D. "v- AlOWAn. n8»T*«!t WIkT iw*H* 5!S5 *ONNECT10^ tlMARft. Ittsu HALL! JOHN HUSS. Proprietor. 1STKK RAMK1SU, laLtRCTiaXM, A. MA s*v, VI i'rmwal. u* em ploysi fiCStltt)!, ^aeaUi. *sl asHts tar mm* B«pk. Y*r* Hr»t Ne t«»• k atik, »*«a* f«H# N ttewi howltj t»kti« 1 ntunitiit the d#|*artm«nt was in«rreaaa^ rapidly that, c'jtm*i*»fttiotud^ obliged to exhibit an incr«Mie©f iA' Tbe citiwti hapimml to ne' -M«wy, 1 "energy "—Detroit Free Pwr Wf m*: -r. w soanrti Aih NN«I J3S5-' GOTO McCormick & Hou'lett's VOB THi a&a rm f»fiiyvf«ya»p a .S9blffPf k,'- a i w fecai •.& i i i 11 ft 7 RH. CLAfT.iflm Vm, W*$+ Aset Sec'y A Treat,. v 4^^-• -J*/**"' V. ••J The Largest. The Best Most Complete V* I K -.a Hardware Eundert &> Fitzgerald's. WITH klLUAta HAI L.<p></p>BLTLIMI A too, Wholesale tmi Retail & DALY, Bete, Fruiterers and Confectioners. tHikciH Of the i ietmiiM €RLAM MMJkM* i(,E CHE AM nerved day or rveuin^. STAHBAKERY •AMKNY, M*F»C* T10WIC*\ Kte D. H. KILROY, Proprietor. It KfeCMS, FIKMT NATIONAL BANK. Qgar StOT^l F. E. MATLOCK, City Shoeing Shop. MAIM and Trotting disease! feet curml. •AliKJIV. CaifM^lOIIKIK, MS. PI i*' faulty Horaaa a speciafty. •W Lundi Oounter, loi I rtukin l'srl'sr, ('4)iife('ti»ner' rm IT1 IIBAT MAKST BOCHE ^Roa, City Me.dt Market IP P. O. BUIL01NC. jpeeeosHnify its*1!!!'1"'1 tersest .B Ma 0n«d Kwt, K»h, row atil Game ill s«*aaon. JSS LilKKl Ward & Vreelaai City Livery, At Hi-HBgLL liliO 'H BABN- IOEE •i T'- V. •*.. £4,' Jit'livt'red to asy psrt v i.C. MITt MELI