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Show U'cillimull i.j Newspaper, vi.u-- 1 fs.q- t to t'ac general interest of of "' ji Pete and surround- - eoantier.. - "t.iiMcrlptlon: - i h - - iVa- vnuh, i.tve .0111.. - oKlHia-- . .iaiMon Application. -- X- imiuninications to the 1. Company, 37, Manti. U. T. Jas. T. Jakeman, Manager. Iir I;nv!i; i P. O. .io - i .U- $2.00 I o WK!'NK1-- JAN. Y V 1889. .".0, mo Card. s jeave Neplii d.iih , i - : illosvs : a. m. A 2 .23 y . IV'i'no, North, to connect Av. and the U. it N i. it 4.10 p. nr. am I. ke City at 11. U . Jo ' in. leave Xephi and for i 8 :i3 a ui. . in. niCori', Cell 1 ' ike-- . , i . it P. Sup:. Main ft. tin-- A.t. . ne mg to buv an organ or can make a good barWe in.t this otlice. . iei..n4 in. ' gain lv c. sure ciic.i.ie B'lV'ndy . uJ e!. better terms that mil please rememlier On' triend warn wood, hay, wheat, potatoes, ham. ca nnge, store orders and' 'ia-.l- i at this oihee. Dial we To the Bis lops jveieo.r.mend . to la n' at this ulhce. n i tor 75 ci- is, 15 - of San Pete Blank House of the Price: 50 for 50 cents foi $i and $2.50 per the 5o and the scaf the law, tiiv tuu. fold are close at hand to mete out justice ar-punshmer A Model Woman Suffragist. Mrs. H. H. Rchmson, who, for a long time the woman sufhas been connected frage movement in Massachusetts, is brought up as a proof that strong minded women are not necessarily neglectful of their household duties. Her kitcocn is said to be a model of all that a kitchen should be, and to appeal in its arrangements alike to the prae.ic al ard eye. It is built of sheathed hard pmo, with rafters overhead, A big closet at one end holds earthen and stone vessels, and among tliera' stand two stone idols, which she calls her Lares and Penates. On the walls of the kitchen the decooking utensils are hung in signs, and within easy reach of ll.c cook. Mrs. Robinson is said to have her servants so well trained that she is seldom called upon to visit this qi arler of her house, but order. when she does she puts it in apple-pis Th Debtors Assets. Two officers called upon a young man in M line in order to destrim Franklin him Ue received them poute.y'at the door and offered to conduct them to hi, gallery of paintings,' as he Called ,1, i.i.h the that ho possessed noili.ngi' e .hut nut could be seized for debt, 'i hi ;. the gallery consisted oi over hi uunmug letters, twenty summons to 001 r; . , u . rod hundred ngaid bills, rang, g bi i a ten and 1,C7J mar us. all of which weie pasted on tho wall. The officers bade him A speedy good morning. e 1 h; single-handed- .. JUDGE JOHN LYNCH. Zj 7 1 i WhP I fifty Curb I do not mean merely fitop tnem for a time, nuu men nave meiu tarn aain. I mean A KADlCAXa CLiiL. 1 the disease of M study. I warrant my remedy tt others hut Core the worst cases.not Because now receiving a cart failed is no reason for a a and for treatise once rer bend at liomt ot my Infallible Remedy. Give Lxprest and Post Office. It costs you nothing for trial, and it will cure you. Address H. C. ROOT, M.C., 83 Pearl St.. NewYssi A v the Sen lies Which Ho Rendered the Proud Dominion of Virginia Aro Appreciated by the Present Hen Generation Says ttie Lynchburg (Va.) correspondent of the lni:r (lean. While chatting with an old hntiquu.ian in his cool Lbrary this afternoon, I casually inquired how this r town cacie by its suggestive Di 1 ta or gmal judge of dreadful name. . faun c c !" here! I asked. Yes. t; 3 c.d. repued the old genleman. nq eyes that reveaicl il light Wdi n. ia t Juugj Lynch might fairly ! o founder ot the city, and it be v . .gry to see all these newspaper nv lX only locating him in oiher t un . c ml m .mg his mode of pro-- l and brutal. 0. Is in the summary VV ui hclu-vnt . tit mg with sinful men: .1 i! '. vcuek lady, not so fast, . i ' . A' EIPC Pro. tn?' 1 - pf THE WORLD Are manufactured and sold for the least by I- morn -t n D. cS "S u a 5 UI OF THIS PAPER. id Wg hrve made arrangements with the publishers ituourt. rice regular of Til a! IHCaGO LKDGEKtonfleftheirpapei the subscription ait.NO-tiiiiaa- if! Family a well known r ' r. r. now m its eeventcM r th year, and .n agrat l.. u.L rvveruiH found It i- - the only in the rirbt-u- a story pAper pn thu price of Last-ertot. West, and in boui fatoiT pupero, li'cii are no better iu character. It LEDGER is t i..i r ! Well, 1 will tell you what ho actually did. Eo applied to the Governor of Virginia for a commission to act as a justice of the peace. Ins reputation for honesty and good judgment was beyond a doubt, and his commission granted. He was qualified and became a judge. The first use he made of his power was to appoint some special constables and engage a few sharp detectives. They at once began work with such sucoess I that gang after gang was captured. Did they have no trial! Yes. Tncy were brought before Judge Lynch, and ho never acted until he was positive of their guilt, and h:s knowledge of the men and the country was. an immense advantage to him If he found them guilty he would, according to the. law, require a good bond, which,' of course, in those days a thief could nver get, and when that form was complied with would start them off. well guarded, to some jail. The constables knew what tho order of march meant, and as soon as they found themselves in a thick wood chose a stout tree, and with a good rope which they carried created a temporary scaffold, from woieu the horse tuieves quic.vy dangled. Ranging was the legal puni h.n .11 . , horse .ea: ngm those days, but tho p.o: p ac ,a and dispatch with which out justice at their Judge l.ji.u s of the very slwu- .c, n .cod tho country, and uc.weeu those h; hung and those ho fled, m two years there was not a horse tl.nf 1.1 Virg.ma. u And v. ha. became oi Judge Lynch! Eo con., uued to live near the ferry, Tound which a large village grew up under the nan 0 of Lynchs ferry, and sot until long at T h.s death did it 'become Lynch!)! eg X). ring his life lynch law was and peek, but smee then at has t oi lema! character and . . . u 1 1 iidar, it, it is the iu...riaud impose of a rough v. w moo no. uie.t wa.t.ng for the law at hand i i,.oe nuocence or giaU decide on it anoio ng to tjoir own iuc. lotion, and tauo a lno peiuaps more unblemished than far-awa- y t co ui d r- AND tKtlsessiioIy Hkistrafeil. contain3 fpom 8 to 16 pages, end eac5 lcidlumii" it prinud on pure mu fhrantly l l itiorui it ope. Arsrig itb many -ttoi its and hkt :j s may bo lo ibutois ot oi U21U 'Uiid the tolJowMig wtVi known autla i aud writers: Mu. Alice 1M airitou, Kldoa J ( oo. Leon Ld K i Hin Abbiy C. M Kt t ver, tapt ward8, iai.ny ihornton. Ib tt Wiuwood, Burke May hicnttuid, drt. E Burke tomiib, ArH. ianny Duncan, James Franklin Fitts, MJohn K Mustek, D, toitune L. Mary I. Mwluitt, Alex Koberthon, Mone, Nathan D. Urner, Kev. L W.'lhomaa, Prof. David Swing. 1 HE GO LEDGER can be appreciated oniv when itiH eee and read Sample pies will be sent to every man, woman, bo, or girl who will send his or her name and addrif'S upon a postal card to the office of publication , 27 1 f ranklia otreet, Chicago, IU. The pneo of HE CHICAGO LEDGER ia SI.. 50 per year, ca&h in advance, but we wiU furOO nish it for SI per year torvery old subscriber who renews his cr her subscription to ()UR PAPER for another year, this month, and will extend the samoiotior to new subscribers for OUR PAPER wbo smd in their names at ence. Now ts your time to Rave something by subscribing for OUR oihee, or end in your name PAPER. Call at befoT it is too late WASHINGTON. WARREN CO. N.J,j UENTION THTg FAFKSe ore HAI SL i without guns on I' or Sa I or as a stamlurd of excellence ntra-he- driits of a no superior. It contains every improvement thatinvont, rQtuus, skill and money cunproduco. f T1' 7 J', . 7rT'"w ini,?. : . j HI t s 'T. - irwows-j v. c in-le- - ) life-lon- g s The Man Who First Popularized Swift Retribution. V: . FITS, EPILEPSY or FALLING SICKNESS, . u 'J eq have made SC Ui SKSSliEERS TO stock-dealer- a What could hedo 11 1 s Street. v I.-t- Ay in ,e 10 a.m. A b 04 p.i.i. T.,i!'e City at 7:20 a.m. and 4 p. in. Ti lins leave Salt Laki Arrive Sail 1. '.ives S.i. Vi.lt . 8:18 ,;r. I said the-- tine old Virginian, smiling, I will tell you the story just as I had it from my grand tat her, who was proud of his acquaintance with that ashrewd ferryman w no wiped the crime of horso stealing, for which the State wa growing famous, right out. Why, V.rgraians were notorious tor the love of othei men s horses, and 1 en taught the trace of acquiring them j the Cherokces and Chiekasaws, much to the disgust and shame of the better class of cituens. When was this! queried your correspondent. Not long before the revolutionary war, and at that time there were quite a number Of that splendid race1, the Scot, h Irish, settled hero. Shrewd and brave, can ious, yet daiuig. dajhingj but prudent, henest and cnergei e, every tnan of them proved a great b.io lugtothar settlement, and not a few became tnmous, such as General Andrew Jaikson, James K. Polk, John Calhoun, Sam Houston, David C rocke.t, Robert Kultop, Patrick Bronte, and later, Robert Bonner, A. T. Stewart and Uoiace Greeley. Theso names come mo. t readily to mind, but is ilill another generation of them, .nrlud.Dg airthur and James G Bkane. 1 ventured. And the Lynches! W ere from the same stalwart stock and settled in 1r.nco William County. There wero four bojsin the family, and one of them, John Lynch, was a bright, quick young fellow and remarkably courageous. One du, in rambling about the head of the James Liver, he lound a gap in the mountains on either siuo of the water, which, it struck him, would make a capital crossing and for.hwith he drove point i u- f his proprietory stake, and shortly after, with a f w logs and a scow, established a primitive ferry. The horse tlieies were among tho first to take ad antago of the new convenience, and young Lynch, himself scrupulously honest, was disgusted and humiliated at having to take them across. At this time tho country was sparsely settled, courts vere few and jails far apart. The evil continued to increase; finally the ferry beeamo the favorite means of escape for and John Lynch, thorthe oughly aroused, proposed to put au end to it. i ? "t .V v AkWs55 tL evil-doer- rl 1 their own. concluded tho old gentleman, No, Johu Lvnch did this State a service m ridding it of a lot of miscreants, wnom, hut for h r,. mo out of the reach of the law; no living no one would be quicker but than he 'a resect thi3 barbarous mob fash-ioof puttiuga man to sudden death 'hen e h GF PURE COD LIVER GIL BES HYFOPHOSPHITES Almost as Palatable as RSHIc. taken, disguised that it can be by the most digested, and assimilated the oil sensitive stomach, when plain cannot be tolerated; and by the com. blnation of the oil with the hypophos-phite- s So is much more efficacious. Remarkable as a flesh producer. Persons gain rapidly while taking It. SCOTTS EMULSION is acknowledged bj Physicians to he the Finest and Best preparation in the world for the relief and cure oi CONSU?.S?T!QM, fiCROFULA, GENERAL CE.TiUTY, WASTING DISEASES, EMACIATION, COLDS and CHRONIC COUCHS. The yrrol remedy Watting in Children. and Consumption, SAd by aU Druggists, for EXCEL. for voting Tnese Orrans are ectrb-ato- d , nrtisnn il quality of tone, quick ir.i, m finish, pert-uirautythe ioi them most ite.iiuble orgi.-ichurches lodges, teciet.os, etc. ESTABLISHED IffEPETATIOX. JNElvWkI,ED FACIIITniS. resi-on-e- SKILLED MOEHJIES, BEST NATEAIU COMBINED, MAKE THIS THE POFULAS OEQa Instruction Book) and Piano Stools- Catalogues and Price Lists, on application-rCHICAGO CGTTACE ORGAN dor. Randolph and fnn Sts.. 4 ! i CO, CHICAGO. i non iej |