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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27, 188).~-SIXTEEN PAGES. ANENTIRE FURNITURE DISTRICT PURCHASED | @~ Michigan Furniture Manufacturers “Squeezed” by Eastern Money Lenders. ‘ Rumors began flying thick and fast about four weeks ago in the Chicago money market that certain Michigan Furniture Manufacturers were financialy embars assed, 1t was an open secret that they had to raise thousands of dollars in a few days or goto the wall, large buyers were immediately wired for, and our eastern buver arrived the following morning. Without going into further details, we wish to state that before sundown we had purchased $40,000 worth of goods for less than half their value, and the cool cash had been passed over the counters of the Citizens’ State Bank. The consienment made 13 car loads which has been arriving all of last week, and every dollars worth will be on sale, begining to-morrow, Monday, Oct. 28th: for postively one week only, at such orices as would astound any buyer. Be sure and attend this sale, as you may never have such an opportunity again. No dealers supplied during this great sale. We wish to add that vrices on every dollars worth ot stock has been macde uniform with goods purchased. These Prices are Lower m Jobber’'s Figures 480 Chamber Suits ... $12.50, worth $25 ‘ 17 Folding Beds $24£ . worth $40,.00 1 * 181 Plush Rockers. .....88.75, worth $16 672 Chamber Suits $17, worth §30 3 31 Folding Beds $32.50 Laworth $50,00 : 90 Plush Rockers ...$12, worth $22.50 179 Chamber Suits 820, worth 35 3 25 Folding Beds $45 .. ... . worth $35.00 : 400 Plush Parlor Chairs...$3.75, worth $7.50 88 Chamber Suits .$24, worth $40 ) 100 Bookcases $5 . . . . . aworth $10,00 9 Hall Racks..............................$6.50, worth $15 61 Sideboards.. ......812, worth §24 ; 50 Boolcases §7.50 RS avorth $15,00 : 12 Hall Racks. ... $10, worth $20 980 Bedsteads. ... $1.45, worth $4 : 88 WVardrobes $9.75 L avorth $18,60 4 7 Ladies’ Writing Desks ... ...... $10, worth $20 110 Bureaus. $7, worth $14 7 25 Lounges §5 . o worth $10.00 Y 105 Pictures PR e ......82, worth $5 367 Center Tables. ; 90c¢, worth $2.50 : 82 Lounges $7.50 cworth $15.00 400 Heating Stoves................ Bl $5, worth $10 1750 Chairs. ... _.25¢, worth 65¢ 82 Lounges $§90. . v eecaverth $20.00 ;i 350 Heating Stoves.. .89, worth $16 880 Kitchen Safes. ...83, worth §7 f 26 Pavlor Swits $24.50. ... ..... .. worth $40 .60 b 226 Heating Stoves......$12.50, worth $22.50 21 Dining Tables $2.75, worth §5 i 20 Parlor Swits $32.50............vorth $50.00 : 100 Heating Stoves. ... 815, worth $30 1025 Rockers .$1.45, worth $§3 25 Pavlor Swits $45 . ... ............worth $65,00 ¢ 461 Cook Stoves.. ¢ ...$9.50, worth $16 18 Rolls Ingrain Carpet...... 25¢, worth 45¢ 300 P dlows 35¢. ciiiieie . wOrth$ i 00 i 169 Cook £toves. . ... 12.50, worth $22.50 25 Rolls Brussels............ ... .68¢, worth $1.25 ; 730 Comforts T5¢ SR avorth $1.50 4000 Joints Stove Pipe. .10¢, worth 20c¢ 7 Rolls Stair Carpet........ e 16¢, worth 40c Fy 360 Blankets $2 Fehad __avorth $4.00 g 2000 Elbows ...6¢c, worth 25¢ 1000 Window Shades.................. 35¢, worth 75¢ y £GO Springs $ 140 e avorth $3.00 i .....75¢c, worth $1.50 People’s + Mammoth » Installment ~ House, BI3-615 Horth (6th Streef, Between Galifornia and Webster. OPEN AT NIGHT. TELEPHONE 727. : B. ROSENTHAL & CO., FROPRIETORS. N | ward. The shame, and the danger to | who asked the witty Bughsh Givine | whatis vight! Even in his early D I\ [ | simply, for the reason that the quantity | neither to right hand nor to the left, THE MAKING OF THE CITIZEN our government, are manifest. “how she could s sure that her | days, every futare citizen should lear THE NORTH WIND DOTH BLOW | girpiy. for the vewson ¢ greate with heads howed and hands erossed.. But the great majority of our citizeus | boy should ono da, me a bishop.” { to feel the'solemn responsibility which House 1 lower than it was last | shuflle alone in their sa Jovity A 0 3 | o in their sabots, till they come o u3 not from the immig eplied, “First, get him born rigl rests on every citizen of o free state to vear. Cottages, which formerly brougnt | reach the door of the rcfectory. Whe i i 1 very P z of the refectory. When Tt Oan't Be Accomplished by the | SteAmships but from the public schools! | This goes to the root of the n e, | govern himseif, thoughtfully, velun- | Does It Presage a Long Oold or | #20 per month, now rent for $17 and | the last has passed in, the door closes What are our schools doing, to provide | And ~the next step, that we arily and strie Mild Wint other dwellings are in priportion. upon them, shutting ont even t em- ¥ vLofgu 4 b, AECY G n ; i A or? S ) 8l out even the tem Machine Method. the United Staces with citizens intelli- | have as many boys as possible If with such a g 08 The completion of the suburban lines | porary darkened glance of the living Rl gent enough upon maiters political, and | e trained in’ tk >s and the | citizenship a teacher combi ] of street railway wrought a decided | world they have just enjoyed. patriotic enough, to secure the perma- | spirit of good citizens : that | the pupils, of the offices, the forms NATURAL PROGNOSTICATIONS, | change in this direction, as the labor- | These are the nuns known as the nent success of our form of government | mothers, sis i sof young | the proceedings of our own govern- ing classes began an exodus to the out- | Bernardines, a religious sisterhood the people, for the peopie?”’ children a inteliigently awake to the | ment, local, state and national (begin- i £ { skirts of town where cheaper vents | founded nearly sixty years agoby ’Abba Nitilikon Naed Enllor Instraction §n he obligation of the state to main- | Tesponsibility of residence among a | ning with the local), an interest is” al- | What 1t Requires in the Way of | could be obtained. ~This prompted | Cestac, writes Honsy W. Lucy in the het Prinoinlas lofAGhyrnmeont tain the school, we hear often enough . T'he girls and | most 11, ably awak vhich the Money to Shelter Mortals From property owners in the center of town Inglis Illustrated Magazine. The e 4 o " emphasized. s the obligati the women of ou ountry | teacher lneed to direct and keep the Rigors of the Wintry to lewer th rents in order to hold rculiarity of their vow is, that they in the Ethics and Econo- school to support the state by usi P (as we belie many of th e within bounds rather than to stimuia ) Gy 5. But [ re not a | voluntari resign the pri ge of mics of Social Life. right means to train good citiz ligent patriots, with cl 1 Later in the course, more detail ASERT NSO MANY, must ha pt when they join in a frankly. recognized 1 | zun'll:im!u(l on l«'lilmh' 1pon matters of | stud; i forms nlf gover . i , a8 wood is altogether too ex- | chant or murmur their prayers, they TInlour school public interest in the state. | vill fi v pl with histol The Needs of Winter. pensive in this locality, the price of | never open their lips to speak, and True Citizenship, enough place e : f A The elements of poli eeonomy W : coal must be considered. hrough 3 aar (they hol - : 4 ; he state—socicty organized with HEI0HDe ! 3 approaches, the question | ©0 L) o through the long year they hoid no /Jnacounu"\’lll\vly:vr::‘|’.‘)u§x Slal which promote intelligent patriotism. oy Nsiaa 2 ; | come ull tater. Highe, ingtit 1tions of 4728 to iwhiatlioviion mot sbavillibern | ajitipres m 1 is worth $) and | converse with humin being, At thei 'y whe > voluntary obedience to law, and publie- f tlons and e ; | learning must givo constantly increns- | BYI0s 18 Jo wWheluox or BOLIL WIE be & | 810 per while the best grades of | beginning, the founder of this stranget *ern, it is Loo obvious to need argument | spirited interest in public affairs? rivileges—is founded upon relati ttention to s‘l\:\ll which prepare [‘m?: :ml, T“:“\“ ornu.. A q“-x _u‘n.ul:‘,'x ‘f‘_ soft, cou 1 may be purchased for $6 and $7 1 proposed to the nuns that at 56 Fhat all the peovle should know some- | Ty Germany, it became a fundamental | Justice. Ivery man is born into tho ! pRpTaRsR o liaen, M MC0G oL Rrer Ls] savone [ TthioheRpor randes atipblcas rangling woele they should accept relie Shing about government, Either there | maxim of state policy a century ago, | 8tate, and no man can by any possibilit AMONEIYOLOLE S enough for the poorer classes, but, in | all the way from $.50 upwards. .| from their vow and celebrate Sunday by lare cortain principles of government in. | **What you would have come out in the | get out of the stato, for”he must ulws "““f”“}'-"”-’j"“i some cuses, the amount of suffering is | The supply or hand at sent is | indulging in conversation. Bub e : h life of the nation, you must put into the | bo in relations of right and wrong w ] < by our state and |01l iessened by the mildness of | C1unlly uslarge as at any provious sons- | enamored of their new luxury, they ‘which wise men and practical men are | Iie 0f the natfon, you must put fnto the | 24 B T8 S0y o e s founded on” ional 1 tures, of the deli % GL § ou and unless something extraordinary | declined the suggested amelioration ofs mgreed, and such principles can be [ o0 A0 A e al 1ife of ality. Ln the moral convictions, in | 8djusted yet orfulfor iehY|itheiweather. (o | 'should happen, theve will probubly be [ theirlot, and remained silent al¥ learned and should be taught, or gov- | Germany in these lnst decades, is di- o i of its individual citi- | Which our present system (?} of t: Last winter was an exceptionally | no scarcity, A severe and cold season | through the year. sroment is & matter of chance to be | rectly traceablo to her observance of | Zeus, lies the strength or the weakn ) a left mild one, and, for the greater partof | would doubtless, however, raise the | The founditions of the buildings con= ‘managed at hap-hazard. Does any one | this law of self-preservation applied by | of every ~government. — The moral e b\\" ““l“:"l‘ffl"""zl . ({I:Y?Q:')il\‘lfilfl L‘;“ the time, the days were warm and l“(‘“lgihin . Soaults hes s lihorat thass nected with the order were literally built Mbelieve that affairs of government are | the state to Germany’s educational sys- “Im";,"‘i of its Joung o tizens is lhl\w 10 it that in the ;:’ru system -of public | Plensant. Hence the prevailing ovin- |, Vo aaA l‘-«{li:;;”:lnll‘ Ty T '1’\':."2'13'?’..73"'{},0'i?flf“" th:} NII]"L"“ o 900 A 3 tem, in which patriotisi is steadilyaud | seen tobe vital” to the state. In the pithe § H S oming s i ol alling : zlot ¢ @ there lie plains of Aho only occupation in which ravional | (0 TH WHEH PRIEIRERE 8 SEOCE VAR | earliest school traming, principles of | S¢hools which isso closely conuected | 1on ?“f‘:l“‘fl Sominelaermon ;“‘ "‘; | grades. A very good comfortable suit | sand, with here and there a pinc troe men engage where study and the ox- | ting of young men for the proper dis- | social morality, of regard for the rights “""v“l Qurd llnle:_umlpe m]n- yingjiyeryioold.ons. | (avmors ey vt that the | can b purchased ut any leading cloth- | braving the blasts from the Buy of perience of others ure of no value to | charge of public duties has #n import- | Of others, of public-spirited interest in troduced, pursued and strongly | shucks on the corn are thicker than | ing house for from $12 {o 818, while one | Biscay. ¢ fearners? ant part. the welfare of others will mark the enu‘yllm;n nL‘ such sllmlni,“up wt"dl uli usual, which is regarded as an cun,,mrx-lnm.eqchm't\pur grades nt’m'an ; Hl\ll"u century ago there dwelt here, = y et Rl chool that is training good citizens. rectly to make mor mtelligent, loyal | o ible sigi Vo as low as #8. n overcout of good housed in a straw hut, an old man whoe Sinco any male citizen of suitable age | In America we have been slow to APhoelithat 1a iralpin gigood elilaong > wnd and love not '{‘]“‘“j"'\ signiol Siarens senson: | s able quality can be bought for$12 | earned u pitiful living by growing a few may becomo o logislator or an office- | Make room, in tho curriculum of our | In his school-lifo, the conditions are iv vights, but also their duties | Along the river banks the® musk- | e onTwitkont nity rihollans ot ieanecapiastin i Rl KON ST holder, while every citizen has an a sohiools and collogas, for the studies | so cssentiully differantfrom thoso of his | g ofti of the United States. Our | rats have buit their homes much - is very cheap, suits ranging | pute his tervitory, and little by little he \ y ¢ P~ | that emphasize the demands which pop- | home life that the boy virtually g e i 4 XL i 0y eap, 8 ! s 'y e by e he preciable influence upon the political | ular self-goyernment makes upon the | his sociul lifo whon he sl 1) t depend upon this. So | larger than usual, which fact | from 75 cents per suit and upwards. seraped together a few perches of¢ life of his neighborhood, it is evident | citizen, ws well as the blossings it con= | At home. in the family. love.soif-denial, | CP1Y;Can gevernment by thoe people be | s considered ns w mever-failing [ In the line of bedding und clothos | garden ground. L’Abbe Costae Jei g 1 £ 464 teniul, | carried on with safety to the peovle. | o that the intelligent little animals | pricesare away down at preseat. Com- | found him heve one day dying in that every citizen of the United States | fers. was the 1 In, the school, as in the | ynd itisan unquestionabie maxim of | *'# ¥ R ? mon prints ¢an be bought at 3} conts per | the solitude of his hut. He removed ought to have some intelligent compre- of n'\‘xlr hu{l‘u rlw[ government, ml of nl':lll!r, g:un.\nl‘c_l'xl‘llunw' of justice, of equi- | yoyepnment, as deserving of attention i g 5 v:ulu-l along yard whilo fair quality of cotton flan- | him to o place of sholter, and, in order hension not only of the essential feat- | £ {‘.u{"fi\‘;l’_‘{i‘f“"\,‘: ALpren N . "," "‘ll-|‘f’() ‘"f!“flll‘:lt 1 ook i -.htlnl-lnl SU1in divecting the poaceful policy of cold g he hunters | )%y idveptised at the same figure. | to satisfy the yearnings of the dying ures of our own government, national, “_u-‘im'hh“v‘u 0 A ‘"“\HLV:‘IR K }’"V T R Ee A apa Y e ilh.‘t.x national education ns at moments of o chase game over the hills in this | Tyenty yards of bleached muslin can | man, he underfook to look after his car< stato and local o municipal, but also of | of the undarlying principles of govern. | qucstion the'sohool-boy is practically tn sos and manife to the state, | vicinity claim that the few squirrels | be bought fora siugle dollar, Other | d turnips, ( 0 i io b B AP ANEAN 0 o b PRy A ipar \us populi 1 ) he wel- | o to be seen in this locality are | household nocessitios of like character | started a refuge for the fundomental prineiples of political | ment will stimulate a just pride in our | ¢ y by day, whether or not he | fape of the peoplo i hest law. a ! Fera il voportion. Shoos are ohe it oceurred to him to en, them upon thics, volitical ec 1 political | own form of government, and will fur- | puts it into words, " The way 1 which - working very bard to ‘store up proyi- | 8Y6 5 DrOROFLON. = S1008 8re OLOAD g | e ] ethics, volitical economy and political £ H A . , ¢ a pair g Houg. 3 v ot the old hed garden g 1 i i . Tah d vonty-thre g . : i and a pair good enough for anyone can | the old mun’s pinched garden ground. nish a rational basis and a sure support | he capries himself among his school- A8 Lwenty-three. sions for the coming season, while some R FT 0, while the children Accordingly, half dozen of the wonen for that loyal spirit of true patriotism | mates, the standard of honor and of be- Sun Franciseo Call, stockmen claim that oven the cattle are | oun b sumpiied for $1.5 upwards, | were d od to the sand dunes, and: science. We get our supply of citizens from ich i ren g 1 a iol c0e! o A ! 88 time kas wrought, . g which is the strength of a nation. ha rich he accepts and helps to fin o P vutting on an extra coat of haiv for the | with foot cover > infant tod- [ the 1 solitude, with the sea on one two sources—immigration, and tho T A . DSAPA ) y ! : '8 o Here we seo the value of that great | form, will go with him through life. | 3Gl ek oler trials fought purpose of protecting themselves against much lower rvate. hand and the distunt village on the growing up of American children. 'We | tiae of consciousness of national life | Tho school, by its tone and spirit as | “pyey goem un age away, e bt # 54 s : other, they begun the work which are keenly alive to the dangers that | which swept across the continent with [ Well us by its studies, detexmines in wo | And thoush the world is just as fair, : R iy pid TR T to-day has reclaimed many acres of threaten our government when igno- | the recent colebration of the centen- | #light degree the nature of those relu- | It doas ot scom to me 3ub. allthoso signs or indications arp | FOINORS 8O 8 s por bushels | valuable land. Where the monatonous ; nyp Sdlo tions with his fellows—relations just”| That I enjoy it a& fraz from care of the old-fashioned kind,and, while re- | While good first-ciass flour can be bought 4 rant and immoral foreigners are mado | nial of our constitution. As we recall | tohs with his follows Trelutions just™) That ¥ eajoy L atfees from 0.0 1 und, for 45,021 per 100 pounds. — Othor eat. | 5and houps stood thera now lics oute citizens by hundreds and thousands. Z"“.“‘“,‘:;"::‘l‘-'&l:hL‘"i"_'l:“;“‘él’;’:“il:r‘l‘;‘.: WP A | ant—which ave to muke or mar his iife Whene'er I wodka oyhood friend fi’l‘l“‘n;')‘”:::’n‘"']‘“"‘lt‘l"""“““_:'l" ::'" “l‘l“"; ablos ave in proportion. Fresh and | stretched a smiling gurden, ¥ 3 3 feit i 't e o "Pis true we talk-and laugh, , do notagree with the signal-| salted meats are ver A Our United States laws are explicit in | Uiionni government. We love our | 28 & man and eitizen. Sometimes u jolly:@vening spond TRy N TR T o Aliad K1l aro yary Low, S Helr to a Malilior requiring evidence of fitness for citi- f oounpey “more intelligently and | Teachers, with whom rests the ve- | In old-tme songand chofr, partment, which maintains, | To those who can afford to doso.it | Cyrus P. Berry, an_empioye in the zonship, before naturalization papers < it Y ibility o uti{tiaomal T as a rule, that two extremes in weather | may not be out of place to say that, as | waye, Ay W JoD! . P e b more truly, as our thought | sponsibility of fixing these standards in | But it somehow luoks that hearty zest ) plac y thi water power machine shops, for are granted. “It shall be made toap- | {59°° 5 (G0 88 ) QUE 0 BROUET | EPRUCT iraY Will mot train their papils | Aud mersy, souléar gleo, do not necessarily follow one another, | regards coal and provisions, now is the | yeply a clerk in the Portiand custom ar to the satisfaction of the court ad- | 1ho value of our national life; and it | intelligently for the duties and respon- | When life secined but a round of jest and that this winter is as likely to be u | time tolay in the w k. Should aye a Biddeford, Me., dispatch mitting such alion—(n) That he has re- | yysyps woll for our country that the | sibilities of citizenship unless they have [ AuG1was twenty-theee = mild one ns last, while there is yet u | UNe Weather chunge and the to the New York Times, received in- sided in the United States at least five | { f i 0 /At i ) come very cold these figures are ) -d 1 ¢ imperative demand arises from the | themselves given time nnd atfention Seirg G : iy e i 1A Dot At very gure | formution to-duy of the death of an eurs, * * % (c) and that during o!m.; 1o 80 many?ot our iustitutions of | and loving thought to the principlos of | Whsey taraisodhen ooy says "'|"‘"‘" probubility of its being u cold | 1o rapidly advance and the cost of living | uncle in california, by which he will gl(‘;::\“.':&:.'luq'x'::u;‘:‘:1‘(5‘{0‘3“’:n'&&"{f,"n?.: funrning: - Give us fuller instruction | sound . government, and to the | | Thatyouth hisipisscd away, R s B AR Y Inore come into possession of 81,000,000, 'rm; ! PRALGIRr, ) in the duties that fit men for citizen- | demands which popular govern- | "Iis then I roalisethat time The alg sl muske e deceased uncle was Silas Emerson, o wrinciples of the constitution of the s;‘ip_h,uw principles of government; | ment if N e PR nust | | Hus dealt thewsme with me, rathouse does not count with the sig- WHITE AND SILENT NUNS, Mout L Cal., who went to that United States (¢) and well disposed to | §¢ha othics, the motive powers and | constantly make upon the citizen, | Aud fuster downthill now I climb nal service officer who relieson his el state from Harrison, Me., at the time of tho peace and good order of the same.” | ¢, oconomics of social life—in the [~ The study of the history of our coun- | y Ll U at twenty-three. record of rainfall, temperature.and the | o Religious S1storhood Which is Vol- | the gold discovery. Ho leaves prope his is the law. How safe we should b A . 0 i A My dreams are of Seenes of long ago, state of the barometer, When all . 8 Ay TR , Phis e the I oounsnto we should be | dutios of American oitizenship. try, with omphasis upon shining ox- | Myylienms e of Hetas of gf the haromeler. ‘When il untarily Specohloss. erty Gstimated 1o b worth 810,000,000, ce and vicious anarehism which now All colleges which deserve the nume | 8MmPples of putriotism and disinterested | Bright as a plain of untarnished suow, 1na by asserting that it is next to As noon strikes from the clock-tower They Offer a Variet :::ubls LTIOAD ARATGUNE Wik s.oc:’d now. forniab (ol fnstruotion in such | 89edness: .m‘. ml sange 1n the n}wul With woudrous thiugs in store, 1m.;m.,d$.1.fu} redict weather four or | Of the little Notre Dame do Re ru;.,“m, B Raahaalant ke "They v Pl 4 “ - | room; patriotic selections for reading | Audaso I dream of the past and gone, L ol " Anglet, a sand-bound village near Ba- 0RO L "ome, citizens had attended av our courts | thomes. But impariant s ¥ tho fnflu- | BOOT B on: those lielp o form the | . Not of what It is to bo, five days shoad, Yomne, overy day, there files forth from | the happy, = curcless, — wiggling of naturalization and had forced home | ence of liberally-educated men upon | ¥/ i d i o Like the castles I built, which lay beyond, But,” applying the rule of chance, [ ¥°! Y e e cension. " Tt is | prophets. ~ We knew. they would be true spirit and tone in the school. But 1 the po u unotable pr upon the consciousuess of all officers of [ the life of America, it is but a small | 0BG UER G h When I was twenty-three, K which has governed woather mutters | ol 4 that it in composed of | here with their cradked “goosebones, the law who have power to grant nat- [ percentage of our voters whoin their ] There is one face, though, that will fair re- 1 for so long a time, the anbumhlh»s ara | FeAeLs Ih’u( ey o s b hbentital | their muskrat nets, wet summer, jumps uralization papers the will of the peo- | school studies reach the collegecourse, | There should be in ull our schools | , waia, =" xrunlliy in favor of a cola winter. And | FOFERR (U O e kind is cave- | 10 chipmunks and sun spots. “They ‘,1(, that this wise law bo oboyed | But | oreven tho high school. It ismost | (and in a “grade” not so far advunced AThab0 e a0 aelar seowald, the thoughts of the chilling 1 o e J predict a long, cold winter, an open n practice these provisions of the law | important that all future oitizens, girls | that most children leave school before | A% AL oRe o ot of rola. sweeping down from the north le Eaoh figure is olotl.ed 1n coaree whites | ¥inters ..“:vi.;llu:'...u\-:},l,} snowy winter, a . " e r o comfortable flaunel skirt with a cape, carrying at s 'THE SCHOOL AND THE STATE, are a dead letter, as any one kuows who | and boys alike, in all our schools, | they reach it,) simple, clear, convineing though others way rinkles | one to shiver and think of how they W hus sat for a fow hours 1n any one of our | should have elementary instruction in | teaching of the elementary principles | *°% Gaopt Y sec wy wrinkles | o) he met ; faanel skist with 8 capo. ol b | solf-contained these weather large cities and hus seen ‘the purely | the principles of good citizenship. 1t | of government, of the purpose and de- [ I kuow that she sces in me As compared with last winter, the | the back alarge black cross. I If you want to ind them mechanical method of making Ameri- | 18 the mothers of our boys, and the | sign of law and government, of the ul- | The lover sho gave her heart to keop expense attendunt upon the securing ) b6 W pnveloned that | inauire for *'f Told You So,” can citizens out of forei, nors,‘( norant, | early school-life of our boys that large- | timate foundation of all government When I was twenty-three. of bodily comfort will doubless be | hood ol lu] nullln.s'lu 51“1 matorial that : 2L reckless, too often mnnflanlly fmmm’nl ly determine the life-bias toward good | upon justice, equity, righteousness, October, 1859, much heavier - this season. This pre- ‘f‘““‘\""}“j g “'f ¢ ‘fl"‘:}_ he l;‘f“\‘ ""‘Ij - i -‘-J' Absolute Cure. ' nnd besotted, The process is ‘‘mechani- | citizenship or bad citizenship, for the | upon the moral law, and of the supreme ey sumption 18 based, of coursg, upon | Out ‘“)["“'-] uonel-like, 60 thut, unless | | The ORIGINALABIEIIN OINIMEN cal” bocause it is usually conducted in | great mass of our voters, authority of that law over majorities as | - To allay pains, subdue inflammation, | the - subposition that the mercury | one meets the weaver dlveetly o, Outy | 5E5LHBNLUR L (NTHS b othee, Lo boxeh the interest of one or the other of the Au intelligont, public-spirited moth- | well as minorities, however “free” the | heal foul sores and ulcers the most | will be lower than during the l.-"“r’ s “‘"r nlul"\ che regard the face | Wounds, chapped hands, and all skin e party “‘machines.” By its agents the | er is almost by necessity the mother of | form of government may be. Every | prompt and anl-hmoyf' esults are ob- | win of 1885-6). Not that | het ket 0y B8 ) oK | tions, Wil positively cure all kinds of piles- machine brings these undeserviug can- | patriotic sons and daughters. Given | young citizen should early be taught | tained by using that old inble re there is any noticeable advance in the | of herkind. ¢ 7 Ask for the ORIGINAL ABIETING OINT- fidates to court wnd pays their way | good mothers, in this respoct,and good | that a majority has a right to do what [ edy,” Dr. J. H. McLean’s Volcanic Oil | cost of the necessaries of life, fovin this | € hantiog in low, 3.1.31...meunl nfi s, g,:;r.ur, Sold by Gioodmau Drug coupany ak Wbrough, that it may *‘vote thew” after- | sons follow. To the ambitious mother | it pleases, only when it pleases to do [ Liniment. respect matiers are nearly equal; but, | the molancholy procession, looking cents per box—by wail 30 cents, face are completely euveloped in a