>Lji iiPSilfijh ijjij* a Pledged tout to Truth, to Liberty mod Lewi No Favors Win ue end no rear Shall Awe." *#•> M'HENRY, ILLIN018, WEDNESDAY, MAKCH 28, 1894. . 38. PubushedEvkby Wednesday bt V A N I L T S S r BDITOBAND PBOPBIKTOB. OfTlCt IN THE NICHOLS BLOCK. V Door* North of ferry A Ovm'iIMm, ' TCRM8 or subscription: Oaeyesr(lasdvaaee) • • ... it *> MB,•• »••• 9 w» thiM or Hi . 6) It Mc4 f <Od within Three J nuthi la fM aV0£ ' RATES or advertising: them eeiSSTytiSlihey win be readily na- dsrstood. XMyaroaa follows: 800 gfi ss llnehoaeyoar t Inobosoaeyear - 8 Inches one year- - K Column one yeir • H Oolumn one yea*- - Ooloiu on* year - One lnoh m««u the OMrarwaat of hi lnoh down the ooldmn, single oolumn width. fearty advert leers, at the above rates, have the niTilm of ohanfing ae often as they e boose, without extra eharge. Regular advertisers/meaning those hartog stand lag cards) will be entitled to insertion •f localnoticesat the rate of Scents pot line •aeh week. All otters will be eharged 10 eents per Hue the tost week, and ft cents per line far ipMh aabst^vmt week. Transient advertisements will be ohargsd at the rate of 1ft eents pe^ llae. (nonpareil type, mm as this Is set in) the first Issue-and Soeats per llao for subsequent lssaea. .Thus, an laoh advertisement will cost t LOO for one week, $1.60 tor two weeks, ft00 for three weeks, aad so on. The PLAUTDBAUn will be llberal la giving editorial notloea, but,aaa business rale, it will require a suitable fM froja everybody seeking the use of its oohimas for poOualary gain. e.F.aoi.EY, Prenrfetor of ItHenry Breien, McHSXBT, ILL. on Band with tit* Best Beer, ' BUSINESS CAJRDS. a& rsaBBB. x. d. »HTSI01AN AHD SUBaBOX, MeHeary Ilia. Ofloe at Betldenoe. O. J. HOWARD, M. D. SIOIAH AND SURG BOB. OMce at _ __ie ersta MeHeary, 111 JP"the"erTldenoe of &. A. Howard, West DR. A. R AURlNttJCB^, TUkTSIOlAK AND9URUBON. Offlceia Dr. JrtJbH4*l«l»dii»g, West McHenry, III. Resideaae,bouse formerly occupied by Dr. Oitara^^l professional sails promptly at tended to. ^ V. O.OOLBY, D. O. A. Woodstock, III. JfceolaJ »«•»- 17 tion paM tflrteguUting ohiWren's teetb Parties eomiag from a dlstanoe would do wel to give timely notice by mall. Offlce, Kendal , Wooh, coraer Mwi street Dad Publlc4q.uare 0. *. BARNK8, A TTORNBT, Solicitor, andl iV Oolleotlonsia specialty. WOOMTOOK, lunon. JOSJLTH * OMMt; nt ATTORNBTS AT LAW,Woodst«>Ok«. A All business wUl roooive prompt attea KNIGHT * BROW*; t BY8 AT LAW. U. S. Bxpross Oo-'S Building, 87 and 88 Wasting ton St. CHICAGO, ILL. •, S. LUMLEY. A tTOBXIY AT LAW, aad MMMt ll 1 °taW!»b0WT0(W. ILI# OBm In Park House, first loot* •.V.BHSrABD. ». L, SHBTABD •HKMRB * SMIPARO, . TTOBBBTb AT LAW. Suite 512, North- ' era 0»ce Building, M LaSaUe StrMt . H. C. MEAD, Jfmttce of the Peace and General In- mrance Agent jncluding Accident w, .. and Life Insurance. - einroos with b. gilbkbt, hba* DOM, :.,|T WBOT MOUIIBT, III. : We P. ST. CLAIR. JfyOceof the Paato and Notart/Q$&. Jteal JEatateand lmuranc* HUN PA, HI. I M. CHURCH, lalcer and Jowd®' ladredTwenty-Five State StOhi- L Apodal atteation given to re- pairiagf &ie WMOlies and Ohroaomsters.^ irAftil^liwimtat of Good* ta hip line -- FILCHKRe Surgeon. • - Wei MeHemrthltt- w ****** Crown, „ge Work artistically k.prlces. special atten tfOhildrea's Teeth, frbb. JOHN P. SMITH, Ss, 3 ewolor •oMKRIY, ILLINOIS. \*4 riVB stock of Clocks, Watches »ad JFeW- A elry alwaysom hand. Special attention liven to repairing too watches. Give as rsj. JOHN P. SMITH. Westerman & Son, ' HOUSE, SION AND CARKIACK FAINT CltSt M o B v m r , . . . . . l u u n o u . Wo Mo prepared to do all work fit oar llao oa short notice and guarantee satlsfaetioa PAPBR HANGING A SPBCIALTF. Prioes reasoaable and work promptly done. W&STBRMAX Si SON. McHevry, J unary SO, 18M. 10c. IOc. Does smoke from your cigar arise Like incense in the air ? < Or does iti only cause a smudge i And make your neighbor sweart' Why win yon stick to cabbage leaves And drive your friends afar, When you can purchase for a dime "Our Monogram" cigar? IOC* IOC. ikos. MAKERS OF| Choice Cigars. We can sell you. one or a thousand.--retail or wholesale. .V.ir Horsemen. Look Here. , I have a fine stock oi MJH, »hksb •M •« fM(|f Oreen MouMife «arn#» nor- till Ohartos." and otheiy. awns before making anangemeau etao- where. jr. 8. COLBY. * MoHenry.Ill., May H. *L We MeHenry House, > « mSENBT. ILL, * J'"6"' <TO& BMlMStL T»opritHr, 4 ' situated on the banks of the fox the VilHge of MeHeary, speeUiat i»rr7rs?E3is ftMNBttr. ij^mme^lhi. Unite! Statin VarClaii iieicy --OP-- WM. H. COWLIN» WoodMock - - llllnoto. Proeecutee all olasssi and kinds of olalms against the United States for ex-Soldiers, their Widows, Dependent Relatives or Heirs. A spoOialty is made in prosecuting old aad refected claims. All communications promptly answered If Postage Stamps are enclosed for reply. WM, H. COWLIU Oftoe at Reside aee, Madison it. Woodstock DO YOU KNOW -WHO 8ELLS-- Boys cape Overcoats .....fl 60 Men's chin Overcoats............. 4 50 Men's wool Suits 4 50 Boy's Suits $1 25 and 2 50 Men's wool Shirts and Drawers 50 P1.5o Buck gloves only 1.00 Beavy lined gloves and mitts......... 55 8 pairs handsome socks 25 Best beaver can 75 Hundreds of goods at these prices. E. LAWLUS. Opposite Riverside Honse. BEST IN THE WORLD'. GOAL & FEED to Good Supply, ; - -- - For Spot Cash Only. ?y?<- PriitRWiicM ikcdtrAagiy. V ' , : ^ "* t * will payyoiito inv«Btiga " 1W. A. CRISTY, • • a' : WEST UcBENBY\ ILL. VITALIS "ssrar f\sdc s Weil of SHOCLD OBTAIH POB tOV Tie Best Goods ii the Market That to what we fire sat- toiled to make, •» Th • Best, n and tliinlc: we can no dononatr ate to you ' • . ?.'v -V-"-. ' a V if you will gire nw the opportunity. 0*lll#»»<i b«« the oonvlnoad. CARLSON. ,111., 1804. A. IHn gai n 's SALOON AND RESTAURANT MoHRNRY, ILLINOIS* Pine Kentucky Llqpf, French Bitten. ̂ v MeHenry Laeer.Beer, - 'y • * , *»AKD-- J. Scklitz Hilrantee In any quantity from * Snits 0lus to 1C0 barrels. At Wholesaloor Ratal I Beer in bottles, kegs or casa, as cheap as the cheapest. I buy none but the best and sell at reasonable prices. Call and see me and I will us use you well. ANTONY ENGELN. MeHenry, 111, 1894. * JSXAB THE DBPO$f^ VTBST MoHENBY, ILL Keeps open for the ssosatwdsttMi of the Public a rirst-Olass ^ Saloon and Restaurant, Where he will at all times keep the best brands of Wines, Liquors and Cigars to be found In the market. PABSTnS HhmkM lagw Bsm At Wholeule and Retail. Beer In Large or Small Kegs or Bottles al- trays oa haad, cheaper thaa aay other, quali ty considered. Orders by mall promptly attended to. GOOD BTABLlMrjOM HOBBTB. WOallaad see as. Robert Sohltnli. f VICK'S nuus THMOSXAT Botk FRENCH REMEDY soar**? Predcess the Ahere Bsealls In SO Bars. 1' acts powerfully aad quickly. Cures when all others falL Young men will regain their lost manhood, aad (Admen will recover their youthful vigor by using VITALIS. It quickly and surely re- stotea Nervousness, Y-oetVitality, •Impoteney,, Nightly Bmlssloas, Lost Power, Failing Mem ory, wasting Plseascs. and all effects of ae| or ezeeea aad lodisoretloa Wards off Ity aad oonsumptioa. Insist on having -- no other. Can be carried In vest pocket. By matl. Sl.ee per package, or six for laHaikSfi: for saieat Story's 1804. th* Mtt.er Catalocm* oI Tip- teblea and Flevera. Contains 112 pages 8 x 101-2 In., with descriptions that describe, mislead; illustrations that instruct, not exaggerate. The cover is charming In har monious blending of waler col or print's In giwn and white, with a gold background, -- a dream of beauty. 32 pages of III Novelties printed in 8 different )| colors, Alltlie leading novel ties and the best of the old va rieties. These hard times yon ii/,- « cannot afford to run any risk. hi HBay HONEST GOODS where you wiiireceivn l,-( l*L HI F! UKE. It is not necessary to ad- yerl Ise that Vlck's seeds prow, this is known t!ie world over, and also that the harvest pays. A very lit tle spent far proper seed will save procer's and doctor's bills. Many concede Vkk's Floral Guide the handsomest cutalopne for ISM. If you love a Bne garden send ad dress now, with 1! cents, which uiftv be deducted from flnt order. 9360 Cub » for Potatoes. JAMES USCK'S SONS. Agents. $75 • weak. KxolaaiTe territory. TW KuMMAWmW. VuhcaallLba dishes for a ia«M ShM. Wuhei, Hum aaS Mm ikoa without w«ttla( Ik* haaSt. T«« piiafa th* battM, thtaMcMasSssS lb* rnt. Bricht, poiUM at*M, u< sfewrfhl wi*M. K» mm* P M T E N 1 S i . for .pr.oTccrioii, not for or^ssebt. frits DUBOIS k DUBOIS, Patcet Attorney*. In^ontivo Ago Building;* WASH1MOTOM, D. C. r. BsefcMoe - flswlea tbte wtm •W.;-vV '• 1 . T< " ' SOLBMS' DBPlfiTMENT. BT AM OLD SOLDIER. C. A R. MoHeary Post M». <tt holds rogular Meet ings the first and third Thursdays of each month at the City Hall. H. a MaADt Commander, •LBCKT Snow, Adjutant. *n3f Billy Nevans, the well known drummer boy of Post U. S. Grant, Chicago, Is very low and not expected to live. Rev. Barton Cartwright, of Osegon, the veteran preacher who was chaplain of the 92d 111. In'fy, Is sick Mid failing rapidly. He is 31 years of age. There is a pathetic story told Of the W. R. C. Home, in Michigan. A hneband was in the Soldier's Home, the blind wife was in the poor house. After the W. R. C. Home was opened the old eouple were reunited there. An Aurora applicant for a pension has been notified by the pension bureau that his application has been refused because he is dead. The applicant not ever hav ing heard before of his death and being thoroughly satisfied that, he is alive will hardly take much stock in anything the present Democratic administration may say. All suspension of pensions in cases where payment has not already been re sumed, or where the pensioner's name has not been stricken from the rolls, will be removed by an order signed last week by Commissioner Lochren. This action affects the -cases of between 3,000 and 4,000 pensioners. The pension agents will be instructed to pay theee pensioners their former rates until otherwise order ed by the bureau. Hereafter all notices of redaction of pension will be sent to pensioners by reg istered letters. This plan has been adopt ed by Commissioner Lochren and neces sary arrangements have been made with the poetoffice department. It was stated at the bureau that a margin of nine or ten days it addition to the required thirty days from time of receipt of notice in which additional evidence could be filed would undoubtedly be allowed. Further time will be given if asked by the pensioner. Arrangements are complete lor a grand reunion of the old soldiers on the Shilob battlefield, April 6 and 7. The steam boat lines from Evansville, Ind., St. Louis Mo. and Cincinnati, O. have all made a very cheap rate, and the railroads will also give a reduced rate for the grand meeting, which will be the largest ever held on 'this battlefield. Many of the prominent soldiers who took-part in that battle will be present. Anniversary exer cises will be held and the positions of the various commands marked. E. T. Lee, secretary of the Battlefield Association Montioello, will give all desired infor mation. Representative Martin, of Indiana, the chairman of the pension committee, says it is difficult to say just now what Con gress will do in the way of pension legis lation. He is personally greatly interest ed in the service-pension bill, and it was he who offered a bill of this nature as an amendment to the Morrill bill,but it was voted down. Mr. Martin believes that if a service bill was passed it would be a final solution to the pension problem. He is thoroughly investigating facts and figures which show that the enormous expense to the government of such a bill is mostly imaginary. He intends, if this matter comes up on the floor, to bfi^iell prepared to support his beliefs. TAinrasns visit to TrtdtOOL The Latter Lives in Torment Iter the Sake of Those He Loves. All the neighbors about No. 827 Union street, Brooklyn, cried when Corporal James Tanner and Color Sergeant David Pitcher met on Monday afternoon and were too weak with their old war wounds and the eight of each other's crippled bodies to speak to each other. In fact when one man went to his home in the flvt next to Sergeant Pitchers at 7 o'clock that night he found his wife cry ing still. It is a strange comradeship of misery that Sergeant Pitcher and Corporal Tan ner are bound in. It is a not altogether miserable comradship, for their commun ity of pain bas made them fonder of each other than are perhaps any other two men who have outlived the war. Of course everybody knows the basis for Corporal Tanner's part in the comrad ship. Both his feet were shot off at the sec ond Bull Ron, and ever since then he has been made an inch or two shorter every few years through operations rendered necessary by the improper first healing of his wounds. The latest of theee oper ations was endured a few weeks ago at the Seney Hospital, Brooklyn. He was on his way from there to the St. George Hotel when '^i^.rMOsd^^li Sergeant Pitcher. 1 f Hundreds of people, but not the public generally, know the contribution of Ser geant Pitcher to the community of pain. His case is a harder one than Corporal Tanner's, for, though he has had just as many operations, they have not given him the intermittent aotivitv that Cor-: poral Tanner's have. While the Corporal has been out in the world fighting the battles of the privates and thenon-ooms, and stirring up soldier haters generally, the sergeant has been sitting in his win dow. He gets a iittie mors view «< the world than the street immediately in front of him by means of a "Peeping Tom" mirror, and is always looking for ward to the periodical parade days of Grant Post. He is a member of it, as is Corporal Tanner, both being Brooklyn volunteers, and whenever the post turns out it marches up Union street to No. 837, lines up in front of it, and gives three cheers for Sergeant Pitcher, who smiles and salutes in return. Fate has been whimsically agonising with Sergeant Pitcher, playing with him in tat and mouse fashion. Shot through the hip at Fredericksburg, he was taken to Libby, and when he was afterward ex changed it seemed a fraud on Uncle Sam. The man he got in return for some well nourished graduate of Elmira was a great deal more dead than alive. Buthe had been a big man, with a big constitu tion, and he came slowly back from the grave. The shot hole healed. He mar ried, had children, and seemed for awhile as good as new. Seven years ago he thought he was quits strong enough to go into the milk business. He started in on a Tuesday. On the following Sunday he set out with his wife for the Hanson Place Methodist Church, of which he is a member. They had nearly reached there when the sergeant stopped and said: "My hip has been hurting me so that I will have to go home." They turned back. It was the last walk that Sergeant Pitcher was to take in the open air. The wount} reopened. There was an opera tion. The wound healed. Again it re opened. This went on for five times. Now a daily antiseptic process of dress ing is necessary. That is a modern scien tific term for it, but it is expressed more briefly and comprehensively, perhaps, in St. Paul's words, "I die daily." That is as to the pain of it. Sergeant Pitcher is a Christian: otherwise he would hope to die. He is a father; otherwise he would have an amputation and stand a chance of death. But if his sufferings ceased bis pension of $72 a month would be cut to $12. So he prays to stay alive in tor ment. When his children are old enough to be self supporting he will then if alive, have the operation performed and seek relief, either through life or death. This voluntary martydom Is undoubtedly a fraud upon the Treasury under the Hoke Smith dispensation. The nimble-minded Lochren would undoubtedly rule that it is a pensioner's legal duty to die and beggar his family, if he may thereby save $60 per month to this impoverished government. Such is the comradeship of pain be tween Sergeant Pitcher and Corporal Tanner, There is a mystic tie about it that stretched from No. 827 Union St. to Seney Hospital, where the corporal was having two and one-half more inches of his legs cut off. With one of the gifts of flowers wh-ch the corporals wife took to the sergeant was this message: "I am buoyed up by the thought of the patience which enables you to endure an affiicteon worse than mine." The doctors didn't want the corporal to leave the hospital on Monday, but he insisted and they gave in. Perhaps they wouldn't have done so had they known that he contemplated a visit to his friend the sergeant. But he made his friend Major Wright order the carriage driven to No. 827 Union street and looked anxiously up to the second-story window when the carriage stopped there. The sergeant was there. He smiled and sa luted from the window. The corporal smiled and saluted from the carriage. The sergeant threw up the window. He tried to speak but his voice broke as he saw what the knives had left of the cor poral. The corporal tried to speak cheerily, too, but the knives had not left enough voice in him to rise to a second- story window. "Major," he whispered, "go up please, and shake hands with Sergeant Pitcher and say, 'Good day and God bless you,' for me to him." The major went up and delivered the message with a quavering voice. The sergeant braced up and said to his wife: "My dear, please go down and shake hands with Corporal Tanner for me, and thank him for his call and wish him a speedy recovery." The sergeant's wife went down and when she had done as bid, Major Wright got into the carriage and told the driver to start. Then Sergeant Pitcher in the window kissed his hand to Corporal Tanner in the carriage. The corporal kissed his hand back and the carriage rolled away for the St. George. And this is why all the neighbors about No. 827 Union street were crying Monday afternoon, and why the man in the next flat found his wife still crying when he came home hours afterwards.-- New York Press. < A TRUE SAYING. It has been said that habitual consti pation is the cause of fully one-half the diseases that flesh is heir to. Keep your bowels regulated by Caldwell's Syrup PepBin and your system will be in proper condition to beep off diseases of all kinds Get a sample bottle (10 doses 10 cents) of J. A. $$<raAnd you will day you did. f j ' ' •' •'> ITw4 j ; ' , f r e s h . ' Best XXX Butter Crackers 20 pound for $1.00. Best XXX Soda Crackers 30 pounds for $1.00. Best XXX Ginger Snaps 8c per pound. Choice Rice 20 pounds for $1.00. Choice new prunes 20 lbs for $1.00. Six dosen clothes pins 5 cents. Pkbby & Owsx. Received 75 new all wool suite, all sizee prices from $7.00 to $21.00. Odd pants Pithy, Pointed and Pertinent. The U. S. Senate having refused to or der an investigation of the sugar stock jobbing charges against certain Senators the whiskey stock jobbecs appear to have grown bolder, ) Boss McKane's lieutenant isn't theflrft New York Democrat who has preferred the climate of Canada to that of Sing Sing. There ta one point In common bSiwssn the King of Belgium and Mr. Cleveland; that both neglect their official business to go on private pleasure trips. Col. Breckenridge will discover, IS are not mistaken, that men of his age, education and social standing are not excusable when they deliberately commit crimes against morality. The verdict of the court matters little in such a case; it is the verdict of respectable society that counts and that was passed against* Breckenridge when he confessed his rela tions with Miss Pollard lor a period of nine years. The house cuckoos have been again sweetly calling for that evasive bird known as the Democratic quorum. The - American Institute of Architects has discovered that Secretary Carlisle knows nothing of architecture. The American people would like somebody to discover something, aside from a Ken tucky product, that Mr. Carlisle is thor oughly informed about. It is a cruel and uncalled for libel upon Mrs. Waite to attempt to make her re sponsible for all the damphoolistns oI Gov. Walts. Brother John Wanamaker is evidently not a victim of the hard times. He has lately invested $600,000 in Philadelphia business property. Mrs. Stanford seems to hare some of the late Senator's business shrewdness if one may judge from the manner in which she is playing the Southern Pacific railroad people. Congressman Breckenridge, of Ken tucky, has certainly lost the right to lec ture on the proper conduct of a married man toward an unprotected gitl. If the liquor question were permanent ly out of Iowa politics some folks would find themselves without an occupation. Perhaps that may account lor reoent legislative happenings. Editor Stead seems to be what the late Roscoe Conkling once called a writer of filth--a literary sewer rat. The Democratic free trade editors blackguard the Democratic protectionists in the Senate, but it is noticeable that the aforesaid Democratic protectionists are bossing their party so for as Congress is concerned. Fred Douglass has declared in favor of the Cleveland Hawaiian policy, queen and all. It's a question whether Fred is growing doty or wants an office.) There is one point upon which Henry Watterson and Mr. Cleveland are in per fect accord--they both favor free trade. The editor of the Chicago German pa per, owned by the new Democratic post master of that place, is said to have bean "fired" for writing the following, but anyway he has the satisfaction of know ing that he is a victim of truth: "The president makes one blunder after another. His minster of Finance is in efficient. His secretary of Foreign Affairs is no better. No president has made greater blunders In his appointments. Two years ago Democracy, sanguine of victory and joyous with hope, went about with strutting gait and haughty mein, to-day she totters in rags and de jection." Certain New York Democrats have late ly concluded that 'tis better to go traveling than to wear a striped suit. Men may come and men may go, but the mind of Grover Cleveland never--well '• ;• hbn& ' ",V- It is a question in the minds of many reflecting people whether the man who first discovered hens did a good thing for the human race or not. The economy of our kitchen circles in a large degree around the hen and her products, and probably the deities of that part of the house would declare that they could not evolve many of their most popular dishes, if cut off from the hen's nests and roosts. Still if they had not been educat ed into this notion they would doubtless have found substitutes on which they could rely just as satisfactorily. Other meats can be cooked and flavored into as wholesome and toothsome forms as even spring chickens; and a more gener al cultivation of the egg plant would probably eupply an adequate basis from which to satisfy the demand for omelet and custards. The fact is the race has permitted itself to drift into a sort of slavery to the hen--it has bound itself hand and foot to the delusion that it cannot get along without her. Accord ingly she has come to feel her oats, and to exercise her petty tyranny to the in jury, annoyance and frequent demorali sation of her subjects. The people of the United States pay over $100,000,000 a ytar for hens'eggs; the entire gold and silver product of the country would not bny a third of the crop; and the hen acts as if she knew it. We spend millions to send missionaries to Africa, aad yet the hens of America are adding more to the total ot human wickedness and depravity in this country than the missionaries oan naggihlv cftniml All mt nnntiMat ha»naH the Atlantic. A man who sees his neigh bor's hens leave pie and pudding corn to scratch the straw off his bushes on an early spring day, exposing them to sure destruction if not recovered cannot but be conscious of a drop in the mercury of his religious condition. And the one who sees one of his own hens, six inches in diameter, crawl out through a three inch hole and then refuse to beelub- bed back, though he lays a whole section of fence down before her, cannot be an good a christain as before. In the inter ests of general morality, and consequent ly of general prosperity, we insist that the hen question offers a better basis on which to found a political party than half the isms which set up standards and rally voters by the million. fiegitfsr. - . , i,er Seal Estate Traaatea, Recorded up to and including Mar. 9, Mftts W BT Gardner and w et al to PjMdoa- strong Ita», 1Q, 11, 13, blk $ To ion.. »KOOuS J 0 ana Tm O'Brien to C Crowley seM swX sec 84 Dunham .. .. ?M 00 O Orowley aad w to Emira Gay same.. 90S 00 W L Glass to S Peacock 90a in nX see 18 Hebron M0 M H E Hogaa and w to H Wagner e sou wJf sex sec 31 MeHeary tfoa aa B Heatoa to J J Schmtdt S,3Sa in vK sec SI Greenwood Mary Lorden to J J Murphy wX seX end aeX swjf see 10 nartland Emma Lambert ot al to same allots* eXaeMseo21 oof hy aad w)f sw * seejfetex (a) Hartlaad .. VMS * Maria Blake and hus et al to W A Nor throp, Its 1 and 2 blk 3 Blaekmaa'a sdn Harvard MIS t> G McDonnell and w to M Fobte pt ItaS and 7 Boeder's adn Richmond . ... 11CS Ml P J Hallisv to Bridget Kinney self aw X seo21 Dunham .... 40SSS Aurora Thompson and hus to J stew- oat IMSa in e* a »3C sec SS Algonq'a SS « A K Alexander and w to to H Reborst Its 23. M, * and SI OotUng Ss Pordy's adn Biehmnnd... Ml ft h F B Fay and w to J Oantpbell swK ss K (exe 16a) sec % Biley M A Hubbel' rod w to A McOotmb wjf seo 84 Dqahatn G P Banner and w to F Luhrtng Its S aad 4 blk 18 Tnion .. V.-v ' V . ICS OS ltt PEACEABLE SNAKE INDIANS. Chief Del I vera an Bloquent AddtSlS Beplete With lUwre For the Whites. 5 A delegation of Snake Indians visited the red men of the Umatilla reservation recently. When they started for home, Young Chief delivered the following eloquent farewell address to his visitors: "We part tonight. Not as before, lor once bate was between us. Now there is love. Once war; now peace. Once we swung the tomahawk and aimed the deadly rifle at each other's hearts. Now the pipe of peace we smoke to show that the past is passed and buried. In other ways it is different. There was a time when some of ns lay in ambush against the whites. But we have all put aside the implements of war and cultivate the arts of peace. Our fathers swore eter nal vengeance on the palefaces. This was because of tbe tradition handed w by them of an invasion of trappers and traders who valued not the Indian's life. They went to the sea and found their friends at Astoria by the great water and left some to mourn their Indian dead. But we live side by side with him now, and from the rising to the setting sun we know no foe for whom we wonld put on the warpaint and ride forth to return with scalps hang- ing at our belts. Our ponies no more carry us to bloody attack. We own the great father at Washington aB our great chief. Him ws obey. The past Is for gotten. Major Jim, go to your people and say Yonng Chief sends them peace and good will."--Portland Qregoniaa- "STRONG ARMED RED" CONVERTED ̂ •Tearing Ihs Bfnsle la Abandoned m Murderous Bmnd. The Florence mission Is just now in the possession of an interesting and promising convert who will likely trou ble the minds of these philanthropists who make the reclamation of criminals their especial hobby. It. was just afterS o'clock on Friday night, and the large meeting room of the mission house was filled with a crowd of worshipers, when the door slowly opened, and there entered a heavily built, slouching individual whose square jaw and lowering forehead somehow suggested a sandbag. The organ was playing "Where Is My Boj, Tonight?" and as the stranger, aftet a moment's pause, walked up the oentet aisle to the platform all eyes were turned toward him. He looked steadily for S moment at Mr. Hyatt, the exhorter, who had charge of the service, and then wheeled around and silently content plated the audience. The chorus ot voices had died away to a quiver, and there was an unbroken silence as fits man's hand groped toward his hip pocket. Then in a casual way he drew out a bag, self acting revolver. The audience needed no seoQSMl bid ding to run out into the street, bat in a minute they had returned, reassured by the voice of the stringer. Then tbej saw that the man had placed ttke re volver on the desk in front of Paine, an ex-actor. Cries ot "Crank! Hefe a sounded through the rooms. Bat the man standing on the platform, raking his hand for silence, said: "Do not 1* frightened. My name is Bo&littsoa. ] have been saved from crime tonight." Then he prooeeded to inform fee andl* ence how out west he had been knownas "Strong Armed Bed," how his real name was Abraham Robinson and how he had just been discharged from Joiiet prison, His., after serving a five years' term far burglary. He had intend ed.hesaid.te get money that night, even if he had to commit murder to accomplish his pnr* pose, and was on his way to Broadhsray to do a little stroke of business whs* he entered the Florence mission and WM saved. The mission people are trying toob» tain employment for York Tribune. This lump salt business shooM be in vestigated by all. Anybody, kseptag a horse or cow should try it. It SMBW times as far aa tte oonnoi swi Yoa .talumpinthomaagecaadttesl** W Itar sale «*Fm40i j * I'C-eJi hi - • v* - ' r i * 4. - J- % Iff-