Bloomington Progress, Volume 19, Number 26, Bloomington, Monroe County, 26 August 1885 — Page 4

o

HIO ft MISS.SSIPPT

B AIL W A. Y . JL

Solid Daily Trains (each wav) between CINCINNATI AND ST. LOUTS. ' Solid Daily Trains (each way) between CINCINNATI AND LOUISVILLE. Solid Daily Trains (each way) between ST. LOUIS AND LOUISVILLE.

WO

Chain or Cam for AST

Class mf Passeagera. First Class, Second Class and Emigrant Passengers, all carried on Fast Express Trains, consisting of Palace Sleeping Cart, elegant Parlor Coaches and comfortable Day Coaches, all running THROUGH WITHOUT CHANGE. Only 10 Honrs Time Between Cincinnati and St Louis, or St Louis and Louisville. But Four Hours tsWBetmeen Cincinnati and Louisville. The Ohio Mlnlsit Stray is the only Line between ISt. Louis and Oincinuatl Under one management, running all its trains through "SOLID," and in consequence is the only recognized first class iroute betwean those cities, its Easy Grades, Its Splendid Motive Power, Steel Baih, Straight Track, and Solid Road Bed Xnable (he O. & M. to make faster average time than any other Western Road. 10-Ask for Tickets via O. & M. R'y.-QB. For sale bv Agents of connecting lines Kast, "West, North and South. W. yf. PEABODY, President and Sen. M'gt W. B. SHATTUC, Gen. Pass. Agt . CINCINNATI, OHIO:

BLOOMIHGTOff BAB. BVSKIRK A DUNCAN, Attorneys, Office Jo New Corner Building stairs. Will practice in all courts of the State. Special attention given to Probate business, and to collection and prompt remittance of all claims. LOUDEN $ MIERS, Attorneys. Office over First National Bank. All business of a legal nature given careful attention in all courts. Beat estate Titles carefully examined by aid of Louden's Abstract, A specialty made of the collection and remittance of claim? of all kinds. MULKYk PITMAN. Attorneys, will practice in the various courts. Especial attention given to collections, and to probate business. Office, Pea's corner, opposite the Progress Office. E OVERS HENLEY, Attorneys and Collectors. Office In Mayor's Office building. Special attention given to settling decedents' estates, and to all kinds of probate business. Also, abstracting. EAST & EAST, Attorneys, at law, Bloomington, Ind. Office, in Waldron's Block, north side square. Probate business and collections given prompt altenion. Will practice in courts of all ixMnimng counties. Business solicited. JAMES ft MORGAN, Attorney, Office, West Side Block, uo-staira. To tae probate and collection business he will give special and particular attention. Business attended to in courts of surrounding counties. WILLIAMS MILLEN Attorneys, Office five doors south of Hunter's corner, up-stairs. Do a general collection and probate business. Will practice is courts of adjoining counties. CR. WORRALL, Attorney.- Office . in New Block, up-stairs, over McCalla & Co.'s. Will practice in all the courts. Special attention given to Pension Claims and probate business. KA. FULK, Attorney. Office in AU . len ,j McNarsf new block, up-stairs over corner room. Special attention will be given to probate business, and to the prompt collection of claims. JOHN GRAHAM, attorney, real estate and insurance agent, abstracter of title, snd claim collector. Office upMairs, over corner room in the Alien UcNary J 1 lock. Business solicited.

ABE TOU dOIKCt WEST? To those who contemplate a trip to the Vest or Northwest this coming spring, we desire to suggest the advisability of making some inquiry as to the route they should take. Ia this connection we wish to call the attention of those interested to the real inducements offered by the Direct Yaxalia Lixb in the way of quick time, prompt Manectionsandunequaled facilities for the safe and comfortable transportation of passengers of all classes. By this route you are carried over the safest and best Railroad in the West Too are landed in Union Depots and escape atl annoying Omnibus transfers. You can purchase tickets and have jour baggage checked through to destination, avoiding till vexations while en ronte. H you are going to travel it is to your advantage to secure the best, and if you are ticketed via the Vasdaija Short Like you are sure to (jet it Residents of Bloomingtoa and vicinity desiring to visit Indianapolis will find the Vakdaua Route na Greencastle Junction the f. if est, the quickest, and the beat. Application for rates of fare, time tables, etc, should be made to the nearest Ticket Agent or to H. B. DEBOfO, Assistant General Passenger Agent, Ikdiasapoxjb, Ihd.

THE NEWS. jtelligioe by Wirefrom All the World. FQREI&l. It W alleged by Henry Bochefort that Olivier Pain, the Frenchman supposed to be an advlrn of the Mahdi, was executed at the instance of -British officials in Egypt. Tbe number of British and Indian troops on the Afghan frontier is to be permanently Increased to 10,000, and a telegraph line Is to be constructed to Csbul, the Ameer's capital. Henry M. Stanley has been interviewed in London concerning; certain damaging- reports recently printed in this country in regard to the Congo Free State. While Mr. Stanley is not inclined to picture tbe country in question as tbe best place on earth, be is sanguine that when it bas railroad facilities a fine field of commercial enterprise will be

opened, by which be expects the United States to greatly profit. The average American would live Just as lona and thrive just as welt there as In Louisiana. Osman Digna bas abandoned his followers and fled to Kordofan. The agitation in favor of church disestablishment has been renewed with great vigor in England and Scotland. Russian agents are intriguing in Macedonia to bring about a revolt against Turkish rule. Lord Chief Justice Coleride, of England, was married in London to Amy Augusta Jackson Lawford. Lord Coleridge is indignant at the published reports of his recent marriage, and has written a letter of protest to the London newspapers. His bride is 38 years old, and the daughter of a former Judge in Bengal X. Olivier Pain, whose supposed murder in the Soudan M. Bochefort demands shall be revenged upon Lord Lyons, British Ambassador at Paris, if the English Government refuses satisfaction, is now reported to be under arrest at Bombay, India, on suspicion of being a Russian spy. The restrictions upon tbe Importation of boa products from Austria-Hungary into Germany have been removed, The bodies of persons dying in the Paris hospitals are to be cremated as a measure of economy and to relieve the overcrowded cemeteries. Mr. Gladstone, who is enjoying a cruise in Sir Thomas Brassey's yacht Sunbeam, has reached Bergen, Norway, In improved health.

PEBSQIAIk John Thorpe was elected President of the Society of American Florists, in session at Cincinnati. Waldo P. Johnson, a prominent lawyer of Missouri, died at Osceola, in that Star. He represented Missouri in the United States Senate at the outbreak of tbe war, and was expelled for disloyalty. He was afterward a member of the Confederate Senate. Ann Hogan, a colored woman reported to be 120 years old, died near Vicksburg, Miss., hurt week. Six sons of the late Francis Jordan, of Philadelphia, served as pall-bearers at bis funeral the other day. Frank Moyle, IT years old, committed suicide between the graves of two brothers in the cemetery at Torkville, Wis. The Duke of Marlborough and Lady Aylesford are reported to be making a pleasure trip of the United States together, traveling under assumed names. Deputy New York State Treasurer Edgar K. Apgar died at his residence in Albany of embolism of the brain. Mrs. Mary Paid, of Lawrence, Mass., who began to fast a month ago because of

her tins, was burled last week. Notable deaths reported from abroad are I those of William John Thorns, the English antiquarian, and Henri Campon, godson of

the Count do Chambord. Ex-Gov. Julius Converse, of Vermont, is dead, at the age Of 88. Sir Francis Hincks, at one time Dominion Minister of Finance, died at Montreal of smalt pox. Mr. B. W. Hanna, the United States Minister to tae Argentine Republic, sailed from How York for Buenos Ayres last week. John McCuUough, the tragedian, now un Inmate of an insane asylum, Is gradually passing Into a condition of stupor, and no longer alludes to his stage days. The physicians think ha will not live more than a

ORCHARD HOUSE!

The youngest son of Gen. Fitz Hugh Lee, the Democratic candidate for Governor of Virginia, died last week at Evergreen, Fairfax County, Vs. William Carleton, an actor and playwright, committed suicide at New York by asphyxiation. Tbe Bev. Dr. Farrar, Archdeacon of Westminster, bas promised to deliver tfarae lectures in Hew York City, the time to be

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LOUISVILLE to CHICAGO and CHICAGO to LOUISVILLE, ConnectinK closely with tbe night and day trams out ot Chicago on the Great Through Trunk Lines IV eso and Northwest, and with the mornipg and evening thrvoith trains out of Louisville ou the Grea- S mthern and Southwestern Lines. This Popular Ronte now nun tbe most comfortable conches on day ind PaUee Sleepers on night trains, and bas only one change ot cars to all the principal towns and cities In the North, South, East, or West. Sell Through Tickets over all the various crossing and connecting railroad Ones, and check basuage through to passengers' destination, avoiding the disagreeable annoyance of re-

checking, the danger ot missing direct

tlon, and the expense and worry of tiresome lay-ovr on the Journey. Low-rate, Land Explorers', and round-trip Winter and Summer Toorirts Excursion Tickets on sale in their respective seasons. Will cheerfnlly give travelers fall information in regard to the nest connections, the fewest and easiest changes, and the meat comfortable and pleasant route; and will furnish Railroad Maps Time-Tables and F older, containing much useful lnformu.eu to travelers, ou application 'o WSf. a BALDWIN, CASTER PEKING, Gen. Pas, ag.at. Station Pass. A pent, Chicago, 91- Bloomington, Ind.

Resident Dentist.

Dr. J. W.

CRm.I1.

Office in the New Block, up-stairs, over Cole's Book Store. All work warranted.

PDLAJKIIAL ASD DLDUBTBIAL. The issue of standard silver dollars from the mints during tbe week ended Aug. 15 was $888,441. Tbe issue during the corresponding period of last year was (293,988. Too anthracite coal output for September will be restricted 800,000 tons. The corn crop of Indiana will reach boot 100,000,000 bushels an average of forty bushels to the acre. Pittsburgh dispatches state that the outlook in the iron trade is more favorable than for a number of years, and that many mitlB are running on double time. There is a brisk movement In silver dollars throughout the country, and the Issue is slightly In excess of the regular monthly coinage of $2,000,000. According to the figures of the New York Produce Exobange, the visible supply of wheat Is 40,888,106 bushels, and of -com M18,U8 bushels. Tbe total exports of produce from New York during the week were valued at 87,-KH.973.

! The Executive Board of the Knights of

Labor on the 18tn instant ordered a strike of all members of the organization employed by the Gould railway lines west of tbe Mississippi River. The strike was of small dimensions, comparatively few members of the Knights of Labor remaining in tbe serv-

i lee of that company. Tbe Executive Board

of the order resolved to employ counsel to defend imprisoned members of tbe organization, prosecute the Wabash Company for conspiracy, and impeach Judges Treut,

Bremer, and KrekeL of the Federal courts.

Tbe drivers employed by the Memphis Street

Railway Company struck against a reduction In wages, and ears were only moved

under police protection and at Irregular in

tervals during the day. Several of the new

drivers were assaulted and a number of

strikers were arrested. Employes of the Michigan nut and bolt works, at Detroit,

went on a strike against a ten per cent, re

duction In wages. At Yonkers, New York,

a number of striking weavers attacked

four men working in tbe carpet-mill of

Smith's Sons, when one of the latter drew his revolver, and a riot was only prevented by a plucky Catholic priest, who, gun in

band, dispersed the crowd and marched one of the men to tbe police Btation. Thu situation at tbe Marion coal mines in Alabama is threatening. Twenty-three of ths Italian laborers have been arrested at tbe Instance Of the strikers for earrylngjconcealed weapons, and serious trouble is feared. Between six and seven hundred men and boys employed in a colliery at Shenandoah, Fa., struck against a 10 per cent, reduction Hi wages, and assaulted the Hungarians and Fates working about the mine, who repulsed them after an hour's battle, teu or twelve men being badly hurt. The cloak and clothing manufacturers ot New York find themselves seriously embarrassed by the pending strike of Journeymen tailors in that ctty for higher wages. Complications have arisen

between the glass manufacturers of tbe country and their employes, and a general strike of tbe latter Is apprehended.

covering tbe whole South from

Virginia to Texas show that the prospect for the crops and the outlook for business in that section are remarkably good. A conference in New York of tho sroclrail makers resulted in n decided increase in the demand and an easy advance of $1,50 to $2 vton. Tbe transfer of gold coin from the San Franolsco Mint to Washington through tho mails has boon resumed, tho amount already shipped in this manner being about $11,000,000. Secretary Bayard rienleB having Intimated to the Austrian liovornmcnt that tbe withdrawal of its Minister from Washington would not be construed into an offense. Tho Iowa Democratic State Convonilon, which met at Cedar Haplds on the 1Mb of August, declared in favor of tbe repeal ot tbe prohibitory liquor law and against the adulteration of intoxicants. A license fee, to range from $350 to $1,000, was recommended. President Cleveland's administration and the Democratic joliey in

general wore indorsed. Charles E.

Whiting, of Monona Count)', was noinluated for Governor; E. H. Gillette, of Des Moines (Grconbncker), for Lieutenant Governor; W. F. Itrannon, of Muscatine

County, for Justice of tbe Supremo Court; and F. W. Moore, of Davis County (Greonbacker), for Superintendent of Public Instruction. Robert Lowry, the present Governor of Mississippi, was renominated by the Democratic State Convention, which met

at Jackson.

BHERff

An effort is being made to prolong the

existence of the Alabama claims commis

sion, which expires this year. Tho Secretary of War bas instructed

Gen. Miles to hold troops in readiness to en

force the President's order lor tho removal

of cattlemen from the Indian Territory.

Work is soon to be resumed in all tho

navy-yards. ,

Winnipeg (Manitoba) telegram: "Eleveu-

of tbe half-breed rebel prisoners at Regina bare teen sentenced to seven 3 ears' im

prisonment, three hove been sentenced for

three years, four for one year, and six have been discharged, to appear for sentence

when called."

The cattle disease in Kentucky is con

fined to Harrison County, where it has

gamed a strong foothold.

Surgeon General Hamilton, of tho Na

tional Marine Hospital, says that there is as yet nothing to alarm tho people of the United States in the reports coming by cable

of the spread of Cholera. He is of the

opinion that the danger to tbts country is

mainly from cholera in England or in Cuba.

Fort Bowie (Arl.) dispatch: "So iut Leslie bas just come in and reports tbat tho

command of Major Davis mot a party of In

dians, killed Chief Nana and seven others, and captured eighteen squaws and Cbiof Geronimo and one buck. Geronimo is badly wounded," Fort Reno (Ind. Tor.) dispatch:

'News bas been received of a desperate

fight between a number of cowboys oc

curring at the ranch of Frank Mur

ray, thirty-five mil s southwest, in the thiokasaw Nation. A party of twenty-live cowboys rode up to tbe ranch and HroJ about 100 shots at the boys inside tbe ranch cabin.

with whom they had-a quarrel overstock. The boys inside, being well a rmea, returned

the Are with deadly effect, killing Dick Covarc and seriously wounding Dick Jones and Bob Woods, of tho attacking parly. This makes four who have been killed over the trouble at this ranch since April."

-The train bearing the first installment of

tea shipped over the Northern Pacific Kali-

road covered the distnnoc from Taconia to New York 3,376 mile in eight days and

four hours.

-The Oklahoma boomers have broken up

their camp and are returning to their homes, tbe recent action of tbe President having convinced tbem that tbe administration Intends to deal fairly both with the cattle men and would-be settlers.

Peruvian insurgents surprised the Gov

ernment forces at camp, defeating them in a

battle wbich lasted Ave hours. Lieut. Col. Bustamente, of the regulars, committed

suicide durin-f tbe engagement. Tbe losses on both sides were heavy.

Investigation bas established the fact

that the recent explosion on the steamer

Felton at Philadelphia was the work of dynamiters.

Henry Byners, a sailor on the schooner

John Gibson, which arrived at Now York

from Cien f uegos, Cuba, was picked up on tbe Battery suffering from yellow fever and was sent to the quarantine hospital.

The American Bar Association held its

eighth annual convention at Saratoga last week. .

P

o

r

n

life

w

rtially released himself, buf lost part of

hand. Twenty tramps have been ar-

fcitod. U-Thrcc tramps who entered a farmhouse

nr Crawfordsville, Ind., were overcome by

owner, Noah Lockablll, who, with his

s asBistftuco, bound them with ropes.

then gave them the alternative of ao-

ctmting a thrashing or being turned over to

officers, t boosing the former, each ro

od one hundred lashes, well laid on, and

then stiD'ored to depart

Joel High, a broker of Kcndjng, Pa., has

ha sentenced to nine months' iinprlson-

rabnt lor taking a foe of $000 which ho bo-

cijred under false pretenses.

A shocking double tragody is reported at

rmtida, where u pilot named Pitcher, in

fliJmcd by jealousy, murdered his sweetheart.

then leuped into the sea with a hundred-'

ptlund weight fastened to bis body. I

At Herrold, Dakota, Charles Cooper was 1

and killed by William Todd, bis brother- '

law, the bomicido growing out ot family

ubles of long standing. Todd is in jail at !

tlfc

clv

W8

b

shbt

in

tr.

Pifcrro.

David

th

out

shbt

W

8bbt

McMulleu, a ranolunan. living

rty miles from Pueblo, Col., who has 30,-

acrvsof Government laud inclosed, was

by n United States Marshal wh le re-

siihing arrest lor contempt of court in not

removing the fences.

In a quarrel about a trivial matter In

taster County, Kentucky, liojio Daker

and seriously wounded J. 11. Curtee.

lug pursued by tho friends of the lator.

emptied his revolver, jumped Into the

ter, and was drowned.

An old man named Willis Roach, who

attacked by lour robbers near Frank-: Ky., was rescued by his young son, who and killed two of tho desperadoes and j

ally wounded a third.

Five employes of a wholesale shoe house !

Pittsburgh are under arrest, charged with i

Wins $15,000 worth of goods from the firm

lng the past three years.

fort,

eh fa

OASUALUEa The bouse of Simon Ashley at Graham,

Ga., was burned, and the bodies of his four children wero found in the ruins.

Court Ahlers, Charles and Mark lllch.

and Jacob Meiler wero drowned near Pittsburgh by tbe capsizing of a skiff.

John Carney, Benjamin Norton, and

Mary Granger while returning from a picnic, were run down by a train on a bridge on tbe Housatonic Railroad, near Plttstleld,

Mass., and killed.

The Roman Catholic Church in Unlon-

vlllo. Conn., was burned, involving a loss of $230,000.

Fire at Waterville, Kan., destroyed Mc-

Fadden's livery, the A ams House, and Rommel's store and residence. Loss, $uu,-

000.

-As tbe steamerS. M. Felton i eft her dock

at Philadelphia the otner mormng en route

to Wilmington, Del., an explosion occurred, which subsequent investigation proved was

caused by dynamite, by wbich sixteen per

sons were severely injured. A fire at Cobden, 111., destroyed several stores and residences, oauslug a loss of $50,000. Three cbildren of Emlle Lirett, ot Little Calllon, Torre Bonne Parish, Louisiana, were instantly killed, .tho mother fatally burned, and the father and two otner children seriously injured by the accidental explosion of gunpowder. Three men were killed and one seriously Injured by a stroke of lightning, while Ashing In tbe Illinois River near Peoria. A lire in a dwelling at Tekonsha, Mich., shockingly burned the inmates, J. C. Full tag, wife, and two children. One of the latter is dead, and tbe parents are not expected to survive. Three adult sons of an aged widow living at Martin's Valley, l'a met with violent deaths within a period of less than twelve hours one by drowning, ono by suffocation in a grain-bin. and one by falling into a cnt-tle-guard and breaking his neck. The shock will, it is feared, prove fatal to the mother. The 0IB00 of the Frutt Journal at Cobden, 111., was entirely destroyed by fire Aug. 17. On the Inclined railroad at the Cabin Creek coal mines, near Wheollnr, W. Vo., some loaded cars broke loose and collided

I with a passenger oar. Layton Oakford,

President of tbe road, and three other per

sons were killed.

Fire at Sherman, Tex., destroyed the

grain warehouse of O. T. Wells, also tbe

residences of Edward Dwyer and K. A. Aidrieh. Total loss, $00,000; Insurance, $40,030.

Tho Northwestern Furniture Faotory, at

Minneapolis, was partially destroyed by II 10,

at a loss of $30,000.

Near Acton, 111., tbe train on tho Big Four Koad struck a wagon, In which were

Samuel and Joel Adair, father and son.

throwing tbem out and Inflicting fatal in

juries. GRIMES ASD 0RIMBTAL8,

Thomas Crepps, while walking on a rail

road track near Huntingdon, Pa., wus at

tacked by two tramps, who, after robbing and gagging bim, tied him to the rails, that he might be killed by tbe next train. He

HERE ANDTKERE.

vhb Ohio Democratic State Convention

nominated the following ticket: For Gov

ernor, George Hoadly, of Hamilton Coun

ty; Lieutenant Governor, John G. Warmikk, of Massilon; Supreme Jndp-e, Charles

D. Martin, of Fairfield: Supreme Jndee to

fill! vacancy caused bv the death of Judge

Ofkcv, Gibson Athertou: Treasurer. Peter

Brkdy; Attorney General, James Lawrence;

iber of tbe Board of Public Works.

Hepry Weible,

strange malady has broken out

anjoug cattle, particularly milch cows, iu

th. stock yards at Chicago. It appearc iu all cases to be fatal, and is thought to be Tt cos fever.

the expulsion of Russians from Eastern

Gib-many continues.

cablegram from Madrid, Spain.

sa; s: The only wealthy persous who have be u attacked by the cholera scourge are thi public officials who are compelled to vit it tho hotbeds of infection. Many peopli aro returning to the city, which they

coasider safer man tbe provinces, a doc-

toil who saved fourteen out of fifteen patients in the second stage of infection by

administering an enema of ether, bus been j nnlherizeil to apply the remedy iu the hos- 1

piikls.

fHE Adjutant General is informed that

thil cattlemen arc losing no time iu getting oul of the Territory. It is thought that at

thil expiration of the forty days all the iutnjders will be found moving out as rapidly

troops were after tbem.

Nonstable Thomas D. Smith, of La

fayette, Indiana, has. been suspended from duly. Under cover of his authority as cou-

stijble, it is charged that Smith has been

isEtung warrants ot arrest on young girls

in he city, and then taking them to bis ro m and comjielliug them to remain over nij bt. In the morning he would releaso thi girls after emoting from them a promise to sav nothing about the matter, and

thibugh fear of additional imprisonment,

thily have for the most part kept silent.

Snfith makes no attempt to deny these ullo-

hons.

he Ohio Republican State Central

Committee has selected Judge William T.

Spbors, of Warren, as a candidate for tho vniancv on the supienie bench.

ctiso Secretary FairchitjD has tel

egraphed Mr. Brooks, the recently ap

pointed Assistant Treasurer at San Fraa-

cisho, to take possession of the suu-treas-1117 there at once.

OMMissiOKEB Black hits appointed

Jaihes G. Dontwain, of West Virginia, and

Ha Tey Hovey, of Michigan, to bo special pei sion examiners, at 1,400 per annum; Jo n W. Lawrence, of Illinois, to bo round' ntial clerk to the Commissioner of Pensio is, at a salary of $1,800 per annum; Dr,

William Uoodiove, of umo, to be quaiinect

stubeon, at $2,000 per annum, to sueeeeii

Dr .Baxter, reduced to an si.'HHi MerKsmp; Aa on S. Coleman, of New York, is pro mt :ed to be chief of special examination di sion, vice E. C. Grabon, resigned. I t is 1 nderstood that Commissioner Black lm-i suit id for the resignation of Examining

Sntgeons Johnson, Ballneh, Bonde, Cald

well, Clemen, and rotter, ana tnattiiey.wiii be transferred to fourth-class clerkships an socti as their successors are appointed.

special from Son Francisco says :

Thi British ship Hoddingdonshire, from

Aslprin, for Liverpool, with a cargo of flour

salmon, is ashore on; Point Keycs,

for y miles north of this point. It is also sai' that eighteen lives were lost. Iieft Asl iria July 6th; got down as far as the, eqt utor, when she struck a heavy gale, wh Bh so disabled her as to oblige the cap-

to put back to nan Fraiicisoo lor re-

In that gale she lost tour seamon,

tail pai

ancl

her chronometer. When off this port

encountered a dense fog, and while

grohping about she lan on me rocks nea:: Point Keyes. The vessel a id cargo is a tot4l wreck. All aboard, except one sa;lo:r

the cabin boy, wero diowned. Thu o consisted of i'2,tKMl ban-els of flout,

Tallied at $50,000 and 17,700 eases of sol-

., valued at $54,000. The Haddington a new iron vessel, launched at Glasgow,

October, 1884, and owned by J . A. Shepard,

ttlasgow.

she

and

car:

mo

w

f

THE MARKETS.

NKW VORK.

VBS

IS...

Wi (eat-

No. 1 White

No. a lied

N No 2

fs White

ik Mess

CHICAGO.

eves Choice to Prime Steers.

(iood BhipjMng Common

is.

1K -Fancy Bed Winter Ex..

Prime to Choice snrinii.

Wheat No. a Spring

Cokx No. 2.

OaI-k-No. 2. RyE -No. S in bun -No. 4

DtlTTKR Choice Urcamery

Irlne Dairy

Cheesi: Full Cream, new.

Lleht Skimmed

E( lis Fresh Vof atoks New, per brl Pork Mess

MILWAUKEE.

WlfEAT No. 3 Co IN No. 2

OiB-s NO. 2

me no. 1 a..

l'OKK Mess

TOL1SDO.

W 4eat Na 2 Bed Cobs No. 2

OABS No. 2

ST. LOUIS.

Wl BAT No. 2 Red Co IK Mixed Oi rs -Mixed I"o ik Hies

ClMJi;.NATl.

Wheat No. 2 Red, Now O0SN--N0. i

OAtH-Mixed

Ryfc No. 2 Fall

1'oliK Wess

DHT1UMT.

Fi ben W:4eat Ne. 1 White CofcjJ Xo. 2

OAlrs-Xo. 2 White

Pork Mess

BiEPCA-nLE ...

lMJIANAPOljIB.

Wheat--No. 2 lied. Cchs- Mixed

OB-s No. i.

CaItu.e Host

lair 1 ommon

t.25 .97 .98 .51 .37 11.09 5.75 5.00 4 00 4 00 5.00 a 75 .85 .45 .25 .67 .49 .18 .13 .09 .03 .10 I. 25 I'.OO .85 .45 .25 .57 II. 00

Skeei'

ptle. . us...

BE!'...

BUFFALO.

.91 .40 .20

.95 .43 .25 9.50 .mi .46 .20 .58 9.50 5.50 .93 .47 .34 10.60 4.00 .91 .41 .24 6.50 5.00 4.00 4.50 4.25 4.00 4.50 5.00

0.75 m 5.00 & .9 W .99 tli .63 & .42 ' 011.60 0 6 O0 & 6.50 & 4.50 m 0.00 01 6.25 & 4.25 & .851 ii .40 & .20 C$ .58 (fll .51 & .! & .15 (Si .09 t .04 & .11 a 1.40 3 9.50 & .80 & .40 .26 & .59 & 9.50 m .93 13 .48 a .27

0 .96 H9 .44 & .26 S10. 00 C .94 .48 .27 .00 SlO.OO & 0.00 i .95 .48 $ .36 (4U.00 5.00 & .93 & .46 & .2 & 6.50 5.50 0 4.5C if 6.00 & 6.0C m 0.011 ('. s.00 & 6.00

A Dally Defalcation, The Hon. John Kelly, the head and front ot" fammany Hall, u man of strict integrity, an Indefatigable worker, early at bis ollice, late to leave, so burdened with business tlat regular meals were seldom known by him, with mind in constant tension and energies steadily trained, finally broke downl The wonder is that he did not Sooner give way. An honest man iu ail things else, be acted unfairly with his physical resources. Ho was over drawing upon this bank without ever depositing a collateral. The account overdrawn, the bank suspends and both are now in tbe hands of medical receivers. It is not work that tills men. It is Irregularity of habits and mental worry. No man In good health frets at his work, llye and bye when the bank of vigor suspend), these men will wonder how it all happened, and they will keep wondering until their dying day unless, perchance, some candid physician or interested friend will point out to them how by irregularity, by excessive mental effort, by constant worry and fret, by plunging in deeper than they had a rigb t to go, they have produced tbat loss of nervous energ)' which almost invariably expresses itself in a deranged condition of the kidneys and liver, for it Is a well-known fact that tbe poison which tbe kidneys and liver should remove from the blood. If leit therein, soon knocks the life out of the strongest and most vigorous man or woman. Daily building np of these vital organs by so wonderful and blgbly reputed a specific as Warner's safe cure. Is tho only guarantee that our business men can have that their strength will be equal to the labors dally put upon them. Mr. Kelly bas nervous dyspepsia, we learn, indicating, as wo have said, a break-down of nerve force. His case should be a warning to others who, pursuing a like course, will certainly reach a like result. Sunday Herald. The Cynic What is my opinion of a oynic? It is poorer than a defeated candidate. Cynics strike me as persona of such infinite conceit that they feel hurt because the Creator didn't consult them when he made the world and all that ia therein. I have lived' for several dozen years, more or less, and I hare had my nps and downs like the lest of humanity, and at times have felt sour and ugly, but one to-day of reflection added to a yesterday of disappointment has always resulted in a to-morrow of comfort, and I have much to be thankful for yet. I have looked the world over about as much as the ordinary person does, and find a very general distribution of flowers, and sunshine, and songs of birds, and happy hearts and smiling faces, and when I hear a man, because his liver is out of order, or his own wishes have not been -gratified iu some particular, going about saying the flowers only bloom because they can't help themselves, and the sun shines only when the clouds don't obscure it, and the birds sing because it is in accordance with a law of their being, and happy hearts and smiling faces are the results of designing and mercenary motives, I want to take him out somewhere and hire a car

pet beater to hang him on the fence

and lambaste the weather-boarding on him from turret to foundation stone. There aro people who are designing

and mean, and there are various rea

sons for various things, but one baa does not make a thousand bacl, or, as the poet puts it, "The good are na good as the bad are bad." and while there is

so much good, I don't see why that

should not be broutrnt torwara ana

shown in its beauty, rather thnn that the bad should- 1m displayed, and all its hideous deformity flaunted in our faces, as the true condition of mankind. I

don't know iust how to accept it cynic.

Those I know, I am sure, nicke the

world only a reflex of their own dis

ordered minds, and many I do not

know make it ugly and forbidding for some cause not tint as boldly forth as

their opinions. Take them as they come, I think they should be boxed up and shipped to some -.seaport not dowu on any map. Mrs. Brown, in Mer chant Traveler. The Lyre and Its Goose. The Lyre, of Dry Wash, A. T., ought to change the spelling of its name if it perpetrates many stories like the following: "Billy Mascott, of the lower divide, has an old gander that beats the Dutch. Every Thursday morning he, the gander, goes out to the front gate, and, picking up the Lyre, which he finds lying there, carries it into the house. He houks loudly till! some one appears and takes it from him. The same gander also goes to the vil

lage, two miles distant, on errands, and I can carry home light articles hung around his neck better than a boy. He was sent to Jim Bludsoe's for a paper of needles the other day, with 11 dollar bill under his wing. To tease him Jim gave him no change, but Mr. Gander knew it wasn't a straight game, and chased him around the store till he gave him the change. Then he houked a paean of victory and went home." A Story of a Printer. I'll tell you a funny story about a fat printer I knew onoe. He had a linen duster on that was a mile too big for him, and he was "full." What I mean by that is he was drunk, and awfully drunk, too. Two of his oompaniona were trying to get him along, when they met a third party, who invited them in to drink. The fat fellow wasn't able to stand alone, they didn't want to let him fall, and be wouldn't sit down on the curbstone until they came out, so they deliberately pulled him over to a lamp-post and buttoned him around it by his duster while they went in the saloon. It was tbe funniest sight I ever saw. It was moonlight. The fat fellow had lost his cap, and thi) moon glistened and shone on his bald head like dew on a flower. When his friends came out the tavern they found him all (. K., as erect as the lamp-post to which they had fixed him. The Home of Mr. Blwllme. Washington, D. O. The son of Sena

tor Frye, of Maine, who has been fluttering from a severe cold, which setled on his chest, was cured by a few doses of Bed Star Cough Cure, He publicly indorses it as prompt, pleasant, and safe. Dr. Cox calls it the best remedy. It contains uo opiates or poiBons Hesjiiug of Coup.

N 1 17 1. a . 1.1 n, Tf

a x'reucu wvxu iucnuiu$ wiib. a. is a term variously used to express the sense of something forcible and efficacious. Thus: Voup-de-graee, the finishing blow or mas tor-stroke; coup-de-main, a sudden, unpremeditated attack, generally resulting in success; coup-de-veil, the first gltince of the eye, with which it surveys any object; coup-de-eta t, a sudden and violent measure of political action generally understood in a dishonorable sense; vonp-de-soliel, a sunstroke, a disorder produced by the action of the hot sun; coujt-de-thealer, a sudden and aurprisiug substitution or transposition in the action of an event or ciroumslanoe, St. Louis (rlobe-Democrat. Education No Drawback,

Dr. McOoeh, of Princeton,, being asked if it was not true tbat a large number of persons were unable to obtain employment because their education and sensibilities were above the

wants of thi) society in which they

lived, replied that he did not know of any case where education hsl hurt

anybody. H a man Mas m gooa neattn, and industrious, a good education would qualify him for a dozen different things, where an ignorant inaa could only do one. Education properly used would enable a person to rise in any sphere of labor. Important,

When ypa visit or leave New York (llty, gavo Dngtuigo Exi.roaf ago and Carriage Hire, and stop at the Grand Onion Hotel, opposite Grand Centra! Depot ; 600 elegant rooia.8 flttod op at a cost oi ono million dolluru, reduced to 81 and upwards per day. Europuan plan, Blovator, Restaurant supplied with tho beat. Horso oaba, e-ago, and elevated railroads to all depots. FaniUies can

live hotter for lees monoy at tho Grand Union thou at any first-closs hotel in tbe city. It-thoro bad been auotbur wemun and a lawyer b tbu garden of Eden, Kva would buvo probably itot a divorce and maicrled the devil.

Longreilows Birthday Book Is a beautiful present; to glvo any lady, nut there is a llltlo book published In pamphlet torm, with no pretensions to literary merit, that would be as appropr ate, and mi; lit be tho means ot saving a life. It is called Dr. It. V. Pierce's treatlso on diseases of women, for whose peculiar troubles the "Favorite Pres rlptlon" is oSocially deined. It IS proftis-ly Illustrated with wood-cuts and colorel plates, and will bo sent to any address for ton eents in 6(111 ins, by the World's Dispensary Medical Association, Buffalo, N. r. A Careful Conductor. On the international train that left

the other day for San Antonio, there was a darkey who kept sticking his head out of the car window.

"Keep your head inside," said the

conductor, angrily.

"Wliatlor, for fear HI damage some ob de iron work ob de bridge?" asked tho darkey. "No," roared the conductor, "but you've got your ticket in your hat, and if you bust out what little brains you've got, the ticket will go with them, and then the company will take it out of my salary. Keep your head inside, I say." Texas Sifting s. Ir you are bilious, take Dr. Florco's "Pleasant Purgative Pellets." the original "Little Liver Pills." Of all druggists. The striped stick candy must go. There Is enough poison in 0110 hundred and sixty-live pouuds of it to kill a boy. Just think of it. Gen. Grant's Book. The American Publishing Co., of Hartford, Conn., make the claim that the publishers of Gen. Grant's book exhibit bad taste in assuming as orginal for that work some of the features advertised as new therein. The Hartford people say that several of the important features were original with a biography of Grant published by them before the General thought of writing his book, and that tho title, "A Personal History of TJ. S. Grant," was used on the biography published by them on their first edition, and has always remained the same, but has been almost identically appropriated for the General's book. Among the features found in the latter, but claimed as original in their book, are the famous "Fort Donelson Surrender" letter, the portrait of Cirant when a Lieutenant, at 21 years of age, and the celebrated horse-buying story. When aro sportsmen like fashionable tailors? when they make good "bags."

Fob dyspepsia, indigestion, depression of spirits and general debility in their various forms, also a preservative against fevor and amie and other intermittent fevora, tlie"PerroPnosphoratod Elixir of Calisaya,'1 made by Caswell, Hazzard & Co., New York, and sold by all druggists, is the best tonic, - And for patients

recovering trom ouicr sickness it uas no equal. The young ladles' best ft-leud- -their look-lng-lass. Because It always gives them "aids to reflection. '

"The proof of the pudding is in tho eating," so says the old adage, and so tl,e proof of the value of a medicine is tbe opinion of thoso who have used it Thoa. Bass, Sr., of Hteelville, says. "I have used Prickly Ash Bitters in my family fortwo years, forailmentsof tbekidnevs.

liver., and bowels, and find there is no remedy

equai 10 it "What have you to remark about my singing?" asked an irate vocalist. ' Nothing," replied a spectator; " it Is not reinurkoblo."

One greasing withFruzerAxlcOrcaiie will last

two weeks.au others two or three days. Try it.

DO NOT FORGET

Perry Davis' Pain Killer

bbbB A 1 It SS is aaHS Ida 3. 2

Price. US ol., SO cts. and 81.00 per H )tUo.

SOU) BI URtJGOISTS.

A S H 1 n 1rti"ffrk1 I

1PT m

s 1

0.

CURES

audisfasesof

IaIYKH j

KIDNEYS

5T0MA5H AND

BOWELS.

ALL DRUGGISTS

MICCl DOLLAR.

73 to

Dyspepsia,

la

General Debllltyi

lauadioe. Habitual Conatlpa

tlon, Uvev Complaint, Hlok HaaAaono, Dlseasod Kidneys, Etc., Etc It contains only the Purest Drugs, among whtoh may be enumerated PWOXIT XBH BAH AXB IIUIII, KAHOBAZl, BUC3U, EH A, IU, It elaaases the system thoroughly, and as a PURIFIER OF THE BLOOD la Unequal)!. It Is not an Intoxicating berange, nor eai It be used as auoh, by teasoa oflni Cathartic Properties. PIOUT ASK BITTSM CO. Beta Proprietor!!, T. LOUIS AND KANSAS CITY.

An Inventor's Advice. George Stevenson, when advising young

men how to get on, would finish by saying

uo as I havj dine persevere, for nuee-u

years ho plodded and worked boforo giving the finishing touches to his locomotive. In as many Uayn those persevering in the use of

or. I'lerco's "ijoiden Medical Discovery.

have experienced groat reller and found themselves oil the high road to health, Liver

ompiaints, impure mood, chronic tuns Qis-

ease? and many others yield to its healing lo

ll nencea never 1.0 return. All druggists.

Titv.v are culled plumbers because they set

all the plums.

The House Wi: Live m In other words, our

bodies aro held on repairing leases. We must prop and sustain them when they exhibit signs of weakness and decay, or they will inevitably break down. In Da Wauieb's California VtMBCiAB BlTTBlls, the debilitated, the bilious, tho rlieti initio, tbu consumptive, will fiud tlio most ?er ial tonic and restorative ever offered to tho Hollering invalid. It coulalnsjio alcohol, and thersfore leaves no sting behind.

Wrsk were tliero only two vowels? In tae

days of No-a, before 11 and I wero born.

ViNEGAR BiTTEBS Is the Great Iltootl Purliiei snd, Ute sivinc Principle; a okuUo PurBtivo and Tonic; a perfect Ktnovntor nJ uvigontor of the iytem. Never Ueloro in tho history it the world h a medicine been cmravo unlet tioesi raiiig th,' power ot Viseoau Bti rEBs in hrallnif tho Hick ot every dineme iun U heir to. Una bottle will prove it.

ros

Man and Beast. Mustang Liniment is older than most men, and used more and more every year.

FOIl FAIN

OUR EB Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sciatica,

Lumbago. Backache, Headache, Toothache,

ore Tbroat.S wr1Unai.prilu,Braiaea, Burn, Mcnlda, Front Bltra, ItID ALU Oil! '. BOim.Y FAlliS ARO Acnm. Bold 1,7 Dru;,L t , I !l-l.-r ,v"rTvti r. FIOyOvaUAlMttl. Dr-tlmuilol! lAiirwini. T1IE OIIA KI.ES A. VOUELEBCO.

i,uA.vouiU&feC04 BaUlaan,S&,i:.S.A.

MALT BITTERS, If you wish to be relieved of those terrible Slek Headacnee and that miserable Sour Stomach. It wit, when taken according to directions, cure an- cause of Sick Headache or Sour Stomach. It cleans tbe lining of stomach aid bowels, promotes healthy action and sweet secretions. It makes pure blood and Klvei it free flow, thus sending nutriment to every part. It is the ant'eat, speediest and surest Vegetable Remedy ever invented for all diseases oi the stomarJi and liver. J. M. Mooro, of Farmlngton. Mich., says: Ky unTcrtna; from Sick Headache and Sour Stomach was n-rriule. OiKouoltlo ot Hops and Malt Bitters cured me. Do not get Hops and IHalt Bitters confounded with inferior preparations of similar name. For sule by all druggists. HOPS & MALT BITTERS CO, Detbot, ia.

COUNTERFEITERS BEWARE. A Michigan Concern Enjolnod. IFrotn tho naebttner Morning Herald. Tha following in junction ha peon obtained by tho Hop Bitten Company, oi Eochoster, N. Y., against Collatinua D. Warner, of Heading, Michigan, prohft King him from manufacturing or selling "German Hop Bitters." The President of the United States of A.merleo to CotlatitmiD. Warner, of Reading, MUh.. his servants, workmen, salesmen, and agents, and each and every one of them: Whereas It has been represented unto t!it Jiutlcu of our Circuit Court, the Hon. Stanley Matthews, and the Hon. Heniy It. Brown, at Detroit, within and for said Dljtrlct, sitting as a Court of Chancery, tbat you, Ciillatinus D. Warner, aro nuitmfactoriiig and selling a modieine named Gorman Hop Blttera, in friudnlent imitation of the Hon SUtm made arid sold by complainant; your said meuietae being devised, ealculated and intended to L tetd tho public into purchasing such counterfeit goods as themauofacturo of tbe con-plainant. Vfv therefore, in consideration of the premise, do strictly enjoin you, the said Collatimn D. Warnor, and all and every the persons before owned, from using Ihe moras "Hap Bitters' on iiy fluids contained in bottles so ae to indue the belief that such fluids iuw made by the complainant; and, further, fnhamainrtacturliig, suing or offering for nalo any bitters or other fluids in the bottles and with the labels, and in the accural form iu which you wmra manufacturing sua m Uing tho bittere called by you German Hop Biv ter,:, on the filing of tho bill : or in any ottus bottles, or with any other labels contrived tr dom,nicd to represent or induce the belief that tba bitters or fluids sold by you are the goods cf tt .ifinplaluant, until the farther order oi tha Court. Witness, . Tub Honorable MORRISO B. WATTE, Chief Justice of the United statta. At Detroit, this fifteen th day of Julv J? t. . Walter & Baraba, Clerk. Prosecute tho Swindler. If whon you cell for Hop Bitters the Dragglst hands out anything but "Hop Bitters" With & green cluster of Hops on white label, shun that Druggist as yon -sould a vijier ; and if he has token your money or bogus staff, indict hbn for tils fraud and sue bim for damages for the swlndla arid we will reward you liberally for the soar viction. See U. S. Count injunction against C D. Wsiv cor, Reading, Mi?h., and all his salesmen, agents druggists anil ot: ter imitators, Wa Want BvOOOffJora B00K Ajrsntsto !

The Personal History or

U. S. GRANT.

Aseiits Wanted tor Lire and Deeds of

'L flRANT

ByCOLONMLA R A. BRBB,

Tf mnlfltiifl full hiatnrv of his noble snd eventfnl

life. Introduction irritWa by Grant's Pastor, Bev. Dr. Newmsu. ColJinrr'i; work is indorsed by Grant's most intimate trienU. Sundforextra terms to wonts. Address National l ublisliins; Co., CHICAGO, m.

GrEN

R. U. AWARE THAT Lorillard's Climax Plug

'oeailng: a tvd tin. toy; that Lorillard's Kotie I.eaf fine cut ; that Lorillard's

SH

.TTJa. Si- Ut a. fi 'Mi tutmrng

AMBSUtJAH rUBUBUIRUl aViatan, Chlco, Ci ad snath mr

aL

Maumshettmi

PENSION aainui

PROSECUTED I

WITHOUT FEE - ITaless nceMsfBl. ifilO B. otfiTBQS & fX

AftM

Detroit, IHen. Caleag,IU.

Kavy Clippings, and that Lorillard's SunOS, are

tue uesi ana caMpest, a.uauiy consiaerea r

$165

li-OJ SO DAYS OITIjY! Wil 1 buy a New Uprtaht or Square 3PI jIsrp ! Hiiwl and oh o&ra. Stool and cover

1

5 TON WAGON SCALES,

TMSUmtmt a iSSfc

J0NPIT.a6jlt-C Vric u susdM ss sHlil

Blagl

Igwg ay BBjsasBnsa. ubanstsa, Kl.

- Tha Oldest Medicine In the WstM

,J prakaMr r. Isaac Thorn;

Uelebrated Eye

ITsrMa f

II Basil K. 8. A. P. I.ACKV,

ratent Atvrs. wasnragtoa, u, v.

This article i a oretully prtunred plijiili sssH JS

npUon, snd has been in constant ass tor assay a

ntuiT. snd notwithstanding um mug (it. . r,.t h.v- hwn fntrndtiMrf Intn fl

e i tlda article Is constantly Im wsgllsT. U

fictions are followed it will never tail, we I l .wlv indlAlh. rt," .kfcrataiama SB SH 1

Johu L. TIwissrswss. tat Otm Tror. Bt X.

era re now to raise wheat

now to rrevent winter Killing. Write forftwpinuihlet. Address THE SB0 DRUX !

sasg-i t-tno Jt Dli V Learn hereaiid earn I Bt-at.fsslK.Hll'n I EooUpsr. Situations

furnished, nrritcvaienunoi

Urus.JsnosriHe.Wia.

npnv Aiinr for nvsnnnKln. llAndAche. and

Dtdl bUnC Nervousness. Sent for SI. Sure,

Safe. DR. W. ltAKOB. BQXT. Uli ANll ISLAM II. KBB. VnilsIC UCU if Von want urbecome feleirraph I UUnD MCn Operators, and be guaranteed snploynMnt, addnss P. W. REAM. Ada. Ohio.

LSflsV

i

MORolAHA'S GIRCASSIAH

sTsrUsTsCsLrV 0 T VsTlsfBlt7

Freck lea, Moth-lWbesjcte. Sl.U) per b-rttlo. Seat fl. O. prby fx--aril -V 4V Onls BJ ufv

.Iirew. iMV-AJlAsgyroaHMsisAaajt UH 4t 1S6 btato Stxc, Chicago, 10.

m 1 unrn Treated anl tnred wtthotn tbalnsHa, C ANGER LIFE OF 6RANT. A. B. DAVIS CO., IBS Wasetngton 8L, CMnsge

WHO IS UNACQUAINTED WITH THE CSOCRAPHY OF TH18 OOUHTRV, si V avassisilsin T'UIR ataa. THAT THI

' MU"6mS t, i Jo i Bp:

AHiliACO. ROCK ISLAND & PACIFIC RAILWAY

Bv renaon of its central position and close relation to nil principal linos East end West, at initial and terminal points, constitutes tup most important mid-coi itinental link: la that system or trough transportation, wlilch jnvgtes and fhilfr sates travel ind trafno between cltfea of the Atlantic and gtojoCowMsTn is also ttie l avorito and best route to and from points East, Northeast and

isoutaoast,anacorrasponcunff pomis w eon, mir t mu ouuuiwnt,

in6 itocis isiaua byacera moiuuea iu uuuu wictuiu

Jollot, Ottawa, La Salle, Peoria, Oeneseo, MpUne and Rock Island, m ljimow: Davenport, liSuscaUne, Washington, Fuirfleld, Ottumwa, Osfcsjoj Woa XJberty, Iowa City, Des Moinos, Induuiola, Wintoreet, Atlantic, KnoxvUto,

Trenton, Cameron end Kansas City, to Missouri ; Leavenworth and Atchteoo, In Kansas; Albert Lea, Minneapolis and St. Paul, in Minnesota; Watortown m Dakota, and Uundreda of intermediate cl'Ses, towns, villages and stations. THE GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE Guarantees its patrons that sense of personal security afforded by a, soM, thoroucfbly ballasted road-bed; smooth tracks of continuous steel rail; hub utantlaurnallt culverts and bridsres; tolling' stock as near perleottop iag human siiU can make It; tho safety appUonces ot patent buffers, plottornM and alr-tirates: and that exacting- dlsclpllno which governs too praotwal

operation 01 ail its trams, otner specializes m mis route are inasms sw

an ooniKio.r.incf nomta in union usdocs. ana

luxuries of Its Pisisennr Equipment.

the unsurpaeeed comforts smt

Tha Fist Express T. . tins between Chicago and the Mtfsouri River 8M com3Bd of well ventilated, flnolv uDholstered Day Coaches, Matrniflcont Pullman

alace Bloopers of the latest design, ani sumptuous Dining- Cars, In whlcto

euin wniwim Kansae City

THE FAMOUS ALBERT LEA ROUTE :fahA rilrvwii: nnH favm-lt-A lino Vot.wovn ChicA70 and Minnaarmlls and St. IHsnl.

where ccinnectlona are made in Union Depots for all points in tho Terrttorleo and British Provinces. Ovr this route, Fast Express Trains are run to thai

watering- place lngfgTounas of

watering places, minimer resorts, picturesque localities, and hunting and Ittbx

(it ot lowa una muinesoak il is mso tue iiiuks. aeKiraoio rouro CP wa it fields and nostoml lands of interior Dakota.

Still another DIRECT HNS, via Seneca and. Kankakee, has been

between Nownort News. Richmond. Cincinnati. Indiananolia. and

Council IUu 1's. Kansas City, Minneapolis end St Paul and Intermediate points.

For detailed mtormation see Maps find Folders, obtainable, aa well Tickets, at all principal Ticket Offices in the United States and Canada;

R. R. CABLE, President and General Manager. Chicago.

E. ST. JOHN, (lentral Ticket and Fassesger Agent,

HAGAieS

Magnolia Balm is a secret aid to beauty. Many a lady owes her freshness to it, who would rather not tell,, and you cant tell.

SEND 20o tat so stamps or moasy ocltt STRACTJSK BOLT COMPANY, Syracuse. Hew fork,

ai.it (tot b return mn, prepa-0, the neatest VISalB evii mmlf. Opeiui 1M im lien. Every MlvCHAKuS t VOID COfNTKat-RITSt " ' ' " J ,,D" m JJo, '",ts 1,11,1 w will -"onil vou t- return

! iV'k"'."'"' usci hj- the twoi'lvfttsl V t. UatbrtUM ,-rttiater,iwaieyhi-ve' I . H.IiMlNvi BIWS.. I'lttshvitl -a.

No. a -s.-,.

'. v., V. w..

When Writing to AdvertlsersTpi

la tlt

jv saw the Advartlsameat I

ti4

im 1