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ANNUAL GIFT | | ‘Elgin OW TO THE FRONT. | As we promised to give to our Customers a present, we are now tell you what it is and how we propose to give it. sold we will give an opportunity to obtain the watch. REMEMBER | You take no chances but get the worth of your money in buying your goods and we only give the present with a view of the appreciation of your patronage, not being able to give each and every one a present we have resorted to this plan and | hope all will realize the motive. OUR LINE OF GOODS, Is complete and yet unbroken notwithstanding the immense trade we have alrea- but avoid the rush during Holiday week. |dy had. Donot delay, | be repaid for your trou ENGLISH ANARCHISTS. A Difficult Operation. Their Organ Urges the Assassination of All Concerned in the Chicago Hanging. London, Dec. 16.—The English government will be asked to take ac- tion against the publishers of an an- archist and revolutionary periodical iseued here. The November number contains articles inciting and urging the assassination of the authorities who are responsible for the conyic- tion and punishment of the Chicago anarchists. Of Mr. Bonfield it says: “Bonfield, the bloody conspirator, , Shall yet be hounded down and hanged. The lovers of liberty and justice swear in the name of the mur- dered men that in you they will avenge their death.” Elsewhere it is Oglesby who comes in for denunciation: “He is guilty, the governor of Illinois who now like a cowardly murderer that he is, _ skulks in the seclusion of Springfield, € hedged in by an army of detectives, shivering with terror for fear of the wild justice of revenge which is cer- tain to overtake him before long for his bloody work.” In another place is a letter from Henry Seymour saying: Every editor will be hanged when the anarchists Last Friday the little four-year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hayes swallowed a piece of comb, which causeaher great trouble and no little pain. It was with the greatest dfficulty that she could get her breath, and could at no time lie down. Tuesday she was brought to Nevada and after a consultation among the physicians it was deter- mined to perform the difficult operation of tracheotomy, as the only means of removing the obstruc- tion. The child was taken to Dr. Buchanan’s office, and Drs. Buchan- an, Callaway, Wilson, Dulin and Smith began their work, while the anxious mother awaited, in burning anguish, on the outside, the result of the knife upon her loved one. The piece of comb was removed from the laryanx, and was about a half-inch in length, the teeth of the comb having been broken off before it was swallowed. The chances for the child’s recovery are doubtful. —Nevada Mail. Lung Troubles and Wasting Diseases can be cured it properly treat- ed iu time, as shown by the tollowing statement trom F. L. Johnson, M. D. Greenwood, La.: ‘‘I had a severe case ot Pneumonia, both Lungs invohed; ao appetite, sick stomach, general weak- ness, and complete exhaustion. I wigt her Scott’s Emulsion Cod Liver Oil have Hypophosphites ot lime and soda, ac- cording to direction, and she has im- proved ever since.” I-1m. get the upper hand.” There are twelve pages of this kind of language and on each and every one of them there is sufficient matter to justify a criminal prosecu- tion. A Million for Missouri. Washington, Dec. 15.—The bill to | refund to the states and territories the direct taxes collected from them under the act of August 5, 1861, has been reported back by Senator Mor- rill from the finance committee with A Sound Legal Op'nion. E, Bainbridge Muneay Esp. Co. Attv., Clay Co. Ky. says: **Haye | used Electric bitters with most happy that committee’s unanimous rec- ommendation that it be passed. This was the first committee report of the Fiftieth congress. The bill results. My brother was very low with Malarial fever and Jaunnice but was cured by the timely use of this medicine. Am satisfied it sav- ed his hfe.” | but solid growth of the South. ' THE NEW SOUTH. { The Good Opinion That Northern Capitalists have of its Present and Future. Baltimore, Md., Dec. 15.—The manufacturers’ Record of this week will say: A few weeks ago two parties of Northern and Western capitalists and iron manufacturers, representing in the aggregate over $200, 000,000 and including George M. Pullman, August Belmont, Jr., Hon. Robert T. Lincoln, members of the banking houses of Kuhn, Leob & Co., Hallgartner & Co. and Powers & Co. of New York, and others, went South for the purpose of making a personal inves- tigation as to the industrial and railroad progress of that section and the prospects for the future. From a number of these gentlemen the Record has secured letters giving | their views upon this subject, as well as a letter by Hon. A. Schoon- maker of the interstate railroad com- mission. Judge Shoonmaker’s letter is based on his study of the South during the visit of the interstate commission there last spring. He says that the South will soon rival if not surpass the North and West in the quantity and value of its pro- ducts and in the enterprise and re- sources of its people. advantages are inexhaustible resour- ces and cheap production. The additional circumstances of a more homogenous country, a better appreciation of our national Union | with the blessings which it secures | to every portion of the country, greatly improved sanitary conditions, better schools, more pronounced individuality and increased home comforts, fill out the picture of the new South. The others speak in an equally favorable strain of the rapid is almost certain to become a law, in | which event Missouri will come in for $1,600,000. Mr. D. TU Wilcoxson, of Horse Cave Ind., says, He positively be- lieves he wouid have died had it not been for Electric Bitters. This great remedy will ward off * as well ascure all Malarial Diseases and tor all liver and kidney disorder it stands unequaled. Price Soc. and $1 at all drug stores. Ballaré’s Snow Liniment. There 1s no pain it will not relieve no swelling it will not subdue, no wound it will not heal. It will cure frost bite, chilblains and corns. Ruhematism Cured. W. K. Powers, 2933 Thomas Street. St. Louis, Mo., states: Ballard’s Snow Linmment cured Itisa GOLD (not goldine Movement WATCH, warrarted, and with each Dollars afi of pro ble call and tock if d b “se eer f e call and see our stock if you do not buy. Claus will be here again, bring the little friends to see him. aa GHO. W. WEAVER. Respectfully, prepared to Women Need Repose. Reading For a Life Time. New York Herald. Womankind will never get repose until she is willing to be apparently ignorant of many things. She ought never to know as much as the man with whom she is talking, and she really ought to know just enough to make him wish to educate her a little more. Voltaire said, some place or other, about a very wise woman, that she told him there were three follies of men which always amused her: “The first was climbing trees to shake the fruit down. when ifthey waited long enough, the fruit would fall itself; the second was going to war to kill one another, when, if they only waited, they would all die naturally; the third was that they should run after women, when, if they refrained from doing so, the women would be sure to run after them.” But some of them get tired of waiting. They forget another very good French proverb about all things coming to her who knoweth how to wait. Naturally, we havenot achieved the knowledge of the value of not hastening. Our women will always lack something until this is gained—that something which is the perfume to the rose, the sparkle to the diamond and the song of the bird. From the Chicago Tribane. I happened in a Dakota settler’s house one day while we were wait- ing for something and noticed the first volume of Johnson's Cyclopedia on a shelf, each volume of which work being about the size of one of the unabridged dictionaries and very closely printed. I casually suggest- ed that it was a good thing to have in the house, or words to that effect. “Yes,” he replied, “I only got the first book.” “How does it happen you haven't the others?” “W’y, you see I got it of an agent when I was livin’g down in Iowa, an’ ‘bout six months after round he come agin an’ knocked at the door an’ I opened it an’ sayshe: ‘Mister, here’s the secon’ book of your cyc- lopedia.’ ‘Git out!’ says I, ‘I ain't got the first one red yet!’ and I made him go, too. W’y jes’ think of it, that was nigh onto ten years, an’ I ain’t more'n two-thirds through this now, an’ my wife is only jes’ nicely started on the ‘B’s’! It took a pile o’ brains to make it, but for all that I don’t mind sayin’ that I think it’s got its dry streaks jes’ like other books.” themselves may obtain an excellent idea of a thriving corner of the new § uth by reading a description of the city of Savannah, Ga, published in Harper's Magazine The improvements in the place since the war, as well as the traces of for mer days, are sketched not only in words. but but by pencil in the illus- trations of the monuments, public buildings, and natural ecenery there abouts. What a thriving town Sa eros es le. I. W. A i orthern le. I. W. Avery is the ie ae drawings are b "yon, Graham, Hawley, Shell and Hogan, done into wood-cuts by Johnson, Fa- ber, Wood, Clement, Stewart, Morse, Heard, and Bodenstab. Its great} Wants Nothing to Do With Public Expenses. Washington, Dec. 15.—Represent. atiye Holman has requested that he be not reappointed to the appro- | priation committee, but that he be | given a place on some committee | | having no control whatever over the 1 | expenditure of public money. He | | expressed a preference for the public | lands committee, and it is probable | that the chairmanship of that com- | ‘ mittee will be given him. | | The Walton & Tucker Investment | Company | Have made special arrangements to | | accommodate farmers with money to | ifeed stock. They have a large amount of money on hand to be | me ot Rheumatism of 4 years stand- ing. I bless the day when I was in- duced to try it. loaned on real estate, on time any- where from 6 months to 5 years, at low rates of interest. If you want | ‘to borrow call and see them. 33-t£ BADGLEY BROTHERS lis head-quarters for low prices in every hing usually kept in a First-Class Grocery. In connection we have a full line of —GLASS AND QUEENSWARE— | LIBRARY AND STAND LAMPS We also have amusic box to be given away with the |AMERICAN BAKING POWDER A beautiful present for Christmas. Those who cannot travel to see for for January. will be news to most What Am I to Det The sym toms of billivusness are un- happily but too well known. They diff- er in different individuals to some extent. A billious man is seldom a breakfast eat- er. Too frequently, alas, he has an ex- cellent appetite tor liquors but none fos solids of a morning His tongue will hardly bear inspection at any time; if it 1s not white and furred, it is rough, at all events. The digressive system is wholly out of order and diarrhea or Constipation may bea sym tomor the two ma alternate. There are otten Hemorrhoids or cven loss of blood. There may be giddinces and often headache and acidity or flatu- lence and tenderness in the pit of the stomach. To correct all thisif not e+ tect acnre try Green’ August Flower, it cost but a trifle and thousands attest its efficacy. 4l-lyr. € OW-