Decatur Democrat, Volume 46, Number 22, Decatur, Adams County, 7 August 1902 — Page 6
Weak Men Made Vigorous | tiff fKMpL "pffl \3iA. -*£>■ •*<&*' rra/ry 9*»jw treaav' What PEFFER’S NERVIGOR Did' It acts powerfully and quickly. Cures when al oibera fail. Young men regain lost manhood; ol men recover youthful vigor. Absolutely Guar anteed to Cure Nervousness. Lost vitality. Im potency, Nightly Emissions, Lost Power either sei, Failing Memory, Wasting: Diseases, and all effect* of self-abute or excastt am indiscretion. Wards on insanity and consumption Don’t let druggist impose a worthless substitute on you because it yields a greater profit. Insist on hav lug PEFFER'S NKRVIGOIL or send for it Cai. be carried in vest pocket. Prepaid, plain wrapper. $1 per box. or 6 for $5, with A Written Guar an tee to Cure or Refund Money. Pamphlet ire’ PEFFER MEDICAL ASS N. Chicago. ID Small size 50 cents. Sold by Blackburn & Christen, Decatur. TO RESOLVE ITSELF The Vatican Said to Be Reconciled to Friars Question. Rome, Aug. 2.—According to statements obtained from reliable sources, it is the intention of the Vatican that the friars of the Augustinian, Dominican, Franciscan and Recolletto orders now in Manila, who number about 450 men, should leave there in small numbers at different times, so mat when the moment to resume negotiations between Governor Taft and the apostolic delegation arrives all the friars will have left the archipelago in such away that the friar question will have resloved itself without the necessity of further discussion. The foregoing plan is interpreted as a-late but significant recognition by the Vatican that Secretary of War Root’s first propositions made to the Vatican through Governor Taft were the most liberal that could be devised for the settlement of the question. The great influence of the religicufe orders in Rome must be reckoned with, however, should they think it to their interests to resist these measures. From present indica-icns this would seem to be so. as the general of the Augustinians will soon leave for the United States to choose American Augustinians to replace the Spanish members of that order now at Manila. PAID BRUTALITY Shocking Disclosure Made to Chicago Grand Jury. Chicago, Aug. 2.—Charged with paying rewards for assaults on non-union workmen, the scale varying according to the degree of injury inflicted, eleven union brass molders were indicted by the grand jury yesterday. This is said to be the first action of the kind ever taken against laboring men in the West. All of the accused are members of Brass Molders Local union No. 83. some of them having been officers of the organization. Several witnesses told the grand jury that the officers of the union through the buslnes agent offered from $5 to $25 for assaults on a non-union man. If the victim was permanently disabled they said the man who did the work received $23. and in rare cases S3O was added. Prices were graded, it was testified, according to the time the man assaulted was unable to work. Men who did this work for the union, the grand jury was told, were known as the “wrecking gang.” ; , . v_-- Australian Mine Disaster. Sydney, N. S. W., Aug. 1. —An explosion resulting in heavy loss of life has occurred at the Mount Kimbla colliery at Wollongong, a port forty miles from here. Twenty-seven bodies have been recovered. The buildings at the mouth of the pit were wrecked. One hundred and forty-nine miners were rescued, but a hundred are still entombed. It is feared their release is hopeless. A portion of the colliery is on fire. I Met Instant Punishment. Clinton, la.. Aug. 5. —Arb McDonald dropped a stick of dynamite from a boat into the Maquoketa river yesterday for the purpose of killing fish. The dynamite exploded directly under the boat and McDonald was blown to atoms. John Ralston an J Peter McCabe. who were in the boat with McDonald, had narrow escapes. They will have to stand trial for violating the game laws.
'f I > Desperate Sian's Deed. El Reno, O. T„ Aug. 4.—At their home here Sunday Joseph Podawoskl stabbed his wife four times in the back, the blade entering the right lung: stabbed his 12-year-old daughter twice and then shot himself and cut his throat. Podawoskl died a few hours later. His wife and daughter will probably die. The man was de spondent because of long illness. Killed His Father. McArthur, 0., Aug. I.—David Morris, a farmer aged 48, was killed by his son Davis Morris, aged 22. Saturday night near Prattsville. The son was living with his father and demanded the use of a horse. When the father refused the son struck him with a club. The father died within an hour. Young Morris is held without bail. He Was Exonerated. Hopkinsville, Ky., Aug. s.—ln a quarrel about a woman near Trenton yesterday Mose Tyler, a farmhand, advanced with a drawn pistol on Thad Coleman. Coleman burled two stones at Tyler. The first stunned him and the second struck him on the head and killed him Instantly. The coroner's S-rdict exonerated Coleman. This signature fa on every box of lhe genuine Laxative Bromo-Quinine Tabled the remedy that cures i» cokl In one duy . —ii
WORK NOT RESUMED Rumors of Proposed Activity On Part of Anthracite Collieries Not Verified. STRIKERS REMAINING FIRM The Operators Say That When They Are Ready to Resume Work They Will Do So —Strikers Apprehensive of a Surprise. Wilkesbarre, Pa.. Aug. 5. —Yesterday having passed without a resumption of mining in the strike region caused rejoicing at President Mitchell’s headquarters. There was some fear that work might be started at the Woodward colliery of the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western company, near Plymouth. and many strikers and their sympathizers were stationed in the vicinity, but when it became known for a certainty that the mine would not resume, the strikers returned to their homes. At the offices of the coal companies the only information that would be given out was that when the operators got ready to resume work they would do so, but how soon that would be they would not say. Those in charge at strike headquarters are apprehensive that some of the coal companies will spring a surprise some morning, and will have a colliery in operation before the strikers know it. To prevent such a surprise the strikers are watching the collieries very closely, and also the movements of all men who go in and out of the works. Rumors of a resumption of work in this territory are still in circulation, but there is nothing to Indicate that these reports have any foundation whatever. There are in the Shenandoah district nineteen collieries operated by the Philadelphia & Reading company, which formerly employed 12.000 men. and six collieries owned by the Lehigh Valley Coal and Iron company, which employed 3.000 miners. Besides these there are several individual collieries. The mine inspector for this district says that ■where a coal company desires to place a mine in operation it is compelled by law to notify the mine inspector of the district in which the mine is located, so that he can make an inspection to see whether it is safe to permit men to enter it. Up to this time, he said, he had not received the slightest intimation that the companies are about to resume work.
Relief Disbursement. Shamokin. Pa.. Aug. s.—The headquarters of the Ninth district. United Mine Workers, were visited yesterday by hundreds of men asking for aid. They were accompanied by wives and children. Orders on stores for provisions were Issued only to strikers in good standing in the union. A number of applicants who have worked in the mines for years tried to obtain aid but were refused, whereupon they threatened to go to work as non-union men. —T’ BURIED IN SAND Missing Woman's Body Found and Husband Missing. Chippewa Falls, Wis., Aug. 4. —The body of Mrs. George Wolf, who has been missing since June 27, was found Sunday buried in the sand four miles south of this city. The last seen of Mrs. W’olf she was driving on the night of June 27 with her husband, who has since left and wjjese whereabouts are unknown. Suspicion was aroused by the disappearance of the woman, and the authorities have been conducting a search for several weeks. Yesterday George Bollinger, while prodding the earth with a wire, discovered tae body. The face shows marks that indicate that death was inflicted with a heavy piece of iron or stone.
The Hope Broke Richmond, Va.. Aug. 2. —At Wise Court House yesterday in the presence of a thousand people George Robinson, colored, was hanged for the murder of another negro. On the first drop the rope broke. Robinson was brought up the steps on the outsid? of the scaffold to be hanged the second time and had to wait until the sheriff went to a store to secure another rope. He was conscious throughout the whole of this remarkable ordeal and did not show the faintest sign of collapse.
A Bandit's Fatal Leap. Manila, Aug. 4. —Pablo Mauras, a j bandit who had terrorized the Island of Romblon for the past ten years, i was captured by the natftve constab I ulary on the neighboring island of SI buyan. With his arms bound he was ’ placed in a boat to .be conveyed to Romblon, but sprang overboard in a : dash for liberty and was drowned. Government Debt. Washington, Aug. 2. —The monthly statement of the national debt shows that at the close ot business July 31. 1902, the debt, less cash in the treasury, amounted to J 973.910.267, which is an increase as compared with July 1, of $4,453,126. This increase In ac counted for by the reduction in the amount of cash on hand. Executed At isiiut Hing. New York, Aug. 4. —After two stays of judgment since Juno 24. 1900. when he was sentenced to die six weeks later in the electric chair. Aaron Haile, the murderer of his sweetheart, Miss Mery Rrannlgan, was executed today at Sing Sing.
HARDY SUWAROFF. Peculiarities of One of Bosnia 1 # Great Military Commanders. Suwaroff, Russia’s great military commander, was a little man, insignificant in everything but that intangible power of mind and character with which physical strength is never to be compared! He had been sicjtly in his youth, but became hardy under the stimulus of cold bathing and the benefits of a plain diet. Buckets of cold water were thrown over him in the morning, and his table was served with fare which guests would fain have refused, but dared not lest he should think them effeminate. He despised dress and delighted in drilling his men in shirt sleeves, sometimes with his stockings literally "down at the heel.” But Ids hardihood of life and action had its effect on the men he commanded. He was often up and about by midnight and would salute the first soldier whom he saw moving with a piercing cockcrow in commendation of his early rising. During the first Polish war he had given orders for an attack at cockcrow, and a spy in the camp carried the news to the enemy. The attack, however, really took place at 9 o’clock in the evening, when the arrangement had been made, for Suwaroff. suspecting treachery, had then turned out his troops by bis well known crowing. The enemy, expecting the event in the morning, were entirely unprepared and fell easy victims to his forethought. “Tomorrow morning." said he to his troops on the evening before the storming of Ismail, “an hour before daybreak I mean to get up. I shall wash and dress myself, say my prayers, give one good cockcrow and then capture Ismail.”
CnrlouM Translation Errors. Some amusing errors are made by translators. An Italian paper turned Kipling’s "Absentminded Beggar” into a “Distracted Mendicant." Another Italian editor who translated a passage from an English paper about a man who had killed his wife with a poker added an ingenious footnote to say, “We do not know with certainty whether this thing ‘pokero’ be a domestic or surgical instrument.” The desperate expedient of the French translator of Cooper’s "Spy.” who had to explain how a borse could be hitched “to a locust.” is worth recalling. He had never beard of locust trees and rendered the word by “sauterelle,” or grasshopper. Feeling that this needed some explanation, he appended a footnote explaining that grasshoppers grew to a gigantic size in the United States and that it was the custom to place a stuffed specimen at the door of every mansion for the convenience of visitors, who hitched their horses to it. The Binejay. One may pet or patronize, according to one’s nature, a chipping sparrow, bluebird or pheebe. but he is indeed well coated with self esteem who does not feel a sense of inferiority In the presence of a jay. He is such a shrewd. Independent and aggressive creature that one is inevitably led to the belief that he is more of a success as a bird than most men are as men. Conspicuous by voice and action during the fall and winter, when other birds are quietest, he becomes silent when other birds are most vocal. If be has a love song. It is reserved for the ear of his mate. At this season he even controls his fondness for owl baiting and with it his vituperative gifts. The robin, the catbird and the thrasher seem eager to betray the location of their nests to every passerby, but the bluejay gives no evidence of the site of his habitation by being seen in its vicinity.—Frank M. Chapman in Century. The true test of civilization is not the census or the size of cities or the crops—no. but the kind of men the country turns out.
These Medicir.es are the Result of Forty Years Practice and Experimenting. They Have Stood the Test! DR. E. L. WELBOURN’S CELEBRATED VEGETABLE MEDICINES DR. E. L. WELBOURN’S Rheumatic Aegis Cures Rheumatism, Consumption, Scrofula, Cancer, Liver and Kidney Diseases. PRICE, SI.OO PER BOTTLE. Rheumatic Aegis will cure the worst cases cf Rheumatism and all disease* resulting from ar. impure condition of the blood. We have hundreds of testimonials from patients who have been cured by this wonderful rein*'Rheumatic Aegis when taken as directed will quickly cure all diseases peculiar to FEMAI To. They pr<>*nptlv remove any obstrurtiors or irregularity of the system, and quickly restore Females to complete health, A few doses will work wonders ou the whole system; bringing back the long-lost complexion, appetite, and arousing the whole energy of the human frame. Our new Family Receipt Book containini numerous tested cooking receipts and a list o these wonderful Remedies free by mail or of druggists. Dr. Welbourn Medicine Co. UNION CITY. INDIANA. V - For rale by Blackburn & Christen.
Special excursion fares to Delphos, Ohio, account of annual pow wow of Red Men. Aug. 14th and Loth, 1902. One fare round trip via Clover Leal route. Get information of a^ e e t 8» Clover Leaf route. -- w - Low Rates to California. August Ist to 10th the Erie railroad will sell round trip tickets to San Francisco and Los Angele at very low rates, on account of the Biennial meeting of the Knights of Pythias. Tickets good returning until Sept. 30. See Erie agent. 20-‘> Sunday excursion to Toledo, Ohio, and Lake Erie resorts via Clover Leaf route, Sunday, Aug. 10, 1902. Low round trip fares. Direct connections for Put in Bav, Detroit and Monroe niers. splendid attractions at Lake Erie Park. Casino. Farm Theatre and Summer Garden and Bellevue Park. See Clover Leaf agents for particulars. One night out to Colorado. The Erie railroad and Chicago & Erie railroad will sell round trip tickets at half rates to Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo, Aug. Ist to 14th Aug, 23rd and 24, Aug. 30th to Sept. 10th. Tickets good returning until Oct. 31st. Low rate round trip tickets in sale daily up to Sept. Ist at all Erie coupon stations to Colorado Utah. Minnesota and Wisconsin. See Erie agent. 20'8 SI (>.OO St. Paul and Minneapolis and return. Chicago A North-Western Railway, every day, from Chicago, July 9’to Sept. l(i Four splendid trains daily, connecting with all lines from the east, with dining compartment, buffet, library observation and free reclining chair cars through without change. Write for illustrated booklets or apply for information to your nearest ticket agent. A. H. Waggener, 22 Fifth avenue. Chicago, 111. 20-7
Double track to the Missouri River. The Chicago A North-Western R’y is the only double track line between Chicago" and the Missouri River. Four trains a day Chicago to Omaha, three daily trains to the Pacific coast and two trains per day Chicago to Denver, with through Pullman service to points in lowa, Nebraska, Dakotas and to the Black Hills. Send stamp for booklet. “Only Double Track Road Chicago to Missouri River” to A. H. Waggener, 22 Fifth avenue, Chicago, 111. 20-5 Special low rates to Colorado and Utah points, Deadwood, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth and the superiors and return via the Erie R. R. Tickets on sale daily in June, July, August and up to September 10th, 1902. Tickets sold at half rates June 22nd to 25th; July Ist to 13th; August Ist to 14th: August 30th to September 10th, 1902, to Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo. All tickets good for return passage until October 31st, 1902. For full information call on Erie ticket agents or write, W. S. Morrison. T. P. A., Marion, Ohio. 14-12 Your vacation. Are you going to take a vacation this summer? A cheap and delightful way to spend your vacation is to gather a few congenial friends and camp out in the Rocky mountains. Very low round trip rates to Colorado and Utah points via the Missouri Pacific railway will be on sale after June Ist. You can learn where to go, what to wear, what to take as camp comforts, supplies and utensils, what they will cost and where to get them, by addressing G. A. A. Deane, Jr., T. P. A. Mo. Pac. Ry., 200 Sentinel bldg., Indianapolis, Indiana, 7tf, $25.00 round trip to Denver, Colorado Springs and Pueblo. $35.00 to Glenwood Springs and return; $40.00 to Salt Lake and Ogden and return from Chicago; via Chicago A NorthWestern Railway. Selling on certain dates during July, August and September, good until October 31 to return. Two trains a day to Denver, three times daily to Ogden and Salt Lake. The best of everything. Write for booklet, “Colorado Illustrated.” For rates and reservation apply to vour nearest ticket agent or address A. H. Waggener, 22 Fifth avenue, Chicago, 111.
“Michigan in summer." The Grand Rapids & Indiana Railway, the “fishing line,” has published a 48-page book about the resorts on its line, and will send it to any address on receipt of a two-cent stamp for postage. Contains 280 pictures, rates of all hotels and boarding houses, and infirmation about Petoskey, Bay View, Harbor Point, Weouetonsing. Oden. Walloon Lake, Mackinac Island, Traverse City, Omena, Neahtawanta, Northport, etc. “Where to go fishing.” two cents, will interest fisherman. Summer schedule with through sleeping car service goes into effect j June 22. New time folders sent on : application. C. L. Lockwood, G. P. 1 A T. A.. 16 Island street, Grand Rapids, Mich.
New carriage and cab service in I New York City. Acting for the Erie, i the New York Transfer company will effective July 15th, 1902, provide a service of entirely new vehicles and ■ equipment, wilh diiteio iu new livery, for transfering passengers by carriage or cab from Jersey City to all points lin New York and Brooklyn. This service operates from Jersey’City passenger station, taking passengers directly from trains to any jioint in Greater New York, with positively no 'inconvenience, and assuring complete i immunity from outside and irresponsible hack men. The rates, too, have been reduced, so that a low uniform rate prevails from Jersey City to any point on Manhattan Island south of Forty-second street, inclusive, with I reasonable charges for a greater dis | tance and for shopping by the hour.
A Lesson in Health t fBSTIHATEVER the apparent > |W Wj cause of your ill health, are laHM r I'l’l you absolute!* - certain that the . r, i a1 ’ cause L • 11 lsn t disorder in your kidMHHEm L 1 ncys ’ Nine chances in ten it’s y OW F kidneys that need attention, the real L? root ot your poor bcalth is to be K 4 reached. Treating your stomach, lu N , your liver, your blood, your heart or p your nerves, is to treat symptoms oniv. L Treating your kidneys is to reach and W S remove the cause of disease. L If you neglect disorder in the kidnevs vou’ll ITI ha»e dial. Lie.-. Br.shl's di Dr ' WKgHtSßgiffiKj! S*,Other serious and usually fatal jSjyMSRwSWW’a’goSMBjI IT Foley's Kidney Cure is abs [.it. ly g . jar . M Wr-2 As anteed for all kidney disorder. You run no kJ HQffifwWvWwliWmtwjMMl. W risk. Try it to-day. MtLjg. SORE ? BANNER SALVE will heal it. Sold by Holthouse. Callow * Co., druggists, Decatur.
<®> RAILROAD In effect June 18, 1902. WEST. No. 7. express, dally except Sun-I day for Chicago f 2 :18a. m No 3 New York ana Boston t Limited I 12:88 pm No 13 Wells Fargo Express.... ( 5:12 pm No 21 Marlon Huntington I _ Accommodation I P m EAST No. 8, vestibule limited, dally for I New York I 2.3 b a m No 22 Cleveland and Colombus f 15:58 a. m No. 4 New York and Boston t Limited ' P m No. It Chautauqua and Buffalo t Express I P“ Through coaches and sleeping cars to New York and Boston Trains 13 and 14 will not carry baggage. No. 13 daily except Monday. No. 14 daily except Sunday. Nos. 3 and 3 carries through coach. Columbus to Chicago. Grand Rapids & Indiana. In effect June 22. UM. TRAINS NORTH. STATIONS. +No. 5. | •N 0.3. I *No7 Rich mono 9:10 p m i12:50 p m 5:40 atn FountalnClty : 1:08pm s:sßam Johnson -1 6:06 am Lynn ! I:2lpm 6:llam Snow Hill 6:16 am Winchester.... 9:48 ptn I 1:3» p m 6:27 am Ridgeville 10:02 pm ; 1:57 ptn 6:43 a m Portland 10:20 ptn | 2:17 p m 7:08 am Briant 2:31 pm 7:18 atn Geneva 2:40 pm 7:28 am Berne 12:50 pm 7:37 am Monroe | 3:04 ptn 7:49 a m DECATUR 11:03 pm 1 3:17 p m 8:00 am Williams 3:30 pm 8:11am Hoagland 3:36 pm 8-15atn Fort Wayne.... 11:50 pm 4: nip m 8:40 am Kendallville. . 12:48 am 5:11 pm 9:M a m Sturgis 1:36 am 6:50 pm 10:53 am Kalamazoo 2:40 am 8:05 pm 12:00 m Grand Rapids .. 4:ojam 9:40 pm 2:00 pm Howard City 12:00 nt 3:00 pm Reed City 6:00 am 1:08 am 3:55 pin Cadillac 6:55 am 2:10 am 4:50 pm Petoskey 9:35 am 5:35 am 7:40 pm Mackinaw City ll:'A)atn 6:55a tn •Daily, except Sunday. CDally. TRAINS SOUTH STATION’S, , ♦No.2. ~2N0?4 3N0.1T Mackinaw City. 9:15 pm 1:50 pm Petoskey I10:3opm 3:35 pm Cadillac [2:osam 6:35pm 7:56am Reed City 3:19 am 7:20 pm 8:53 am Howard City... 4:28 a m ...pm 10:03a in Grand Rapids [ 6:00a tn 9:35 ptn 11:20 a m Kalamazoo I 8:50 am 11:00 pm 8:30 pm Sturgis ... .... 10:<i9am 12:i0pm 4:44pm Kendallville... 11:07 am 12:48 am 546 pm Fort Wayne... 12:10 pm 2:05 a m 6:35 am Hoagland 12:57 pm 7:00 am Williams 1:03 pm 7:(Mam DECATUR .. I:l9pm 2:42am 7:l7am Monroe 1:32 pm 7:27 a in Berne 1:44 pm 7:B7am Geneva 1:52 pm 7:60 am Briant 2.00 pm .... 7:59 am Portland 2:17 pm 3:26 am 8:15 am Ridgeville 2:34 pm 3:47 am 8:38 ain Winchester.... 2:49 pm 4:02 am 8:66 am Snow Hill 9:08 a tn Lynn 3:04 p tn 9:13 am Johnson 9:18 a m FountalnClty. 3:l7pm 9:24 a m Richmond 3:35 pm 4:45a m 9:42 am ♦Dally. JDally ex. Sunday. ‘Dally except Saturday from Mackinac Citv. Jury Brysow Agent O.L Lockwood. Gen. Pas Agent.
WHITE STAR LINE NEW STEEL STEAHER GREYHOUND Leaves Toledo 9:15 A. M. Daily Arrive Detroit 1:15 P. M. Daily RETURNING Leaves Detroit 4:30 P. M. Arrives Toledo 8:30 P. M. CAPACITY 3000 PERSONS. The largest and most magnificent day steamer on the Lakes. Detroit, Star Island, The Flats, Port Huron and Way Ports. Steamers CITY OF TOLEDO AND TASHMOO Detroit to up River Points and Port Huron. Meals ala carte, Parlors one way $2.00. Round trip $3.00. Perfect service and attention. c. F. Hiki.man. .1. w.cokrad Traff. Mgr. Gen’i Agt.. Detroit, Mich. Toledo. Ohio
Clover Leal Excursions. International Christian Endeavor Union, August Bto 10, 1902, Minneapolis, Minn. Bienial Meeting. Knights of Pythias, August 11 to 22,1902, Salt Lake Cilv, Utah. Grand Lodge of Elks, August 12 to 14, 1902, Put-in-Bay, Ohio. Tourists, Fares, July 1 to Sept. 15, 1902, Tacoma, Wash. Asheville, N. C. Society of American Florists. Ang, 18th to 22nd, 1902. Bethany Park. Ind., Bethanv As sembly, July 25th, to Aug. 18th’, 1902. Boston, Mass., Brotherhood of St. Andrew, Oct. 9th, to 12th, 1902. Chattanooga, Tenn., Sherman Brigade Review, Sept. 19th and 20th, 1902. DesMoi’ies. lowa, Sovereign Grand Lodge, I. O. O. F. Sept 12th, to 15th, 1902.
EAST. No. 6. TheComm'l Traveler daily 5-25» m No. 2. Mail, daily, except Sunday .10 1No. 4. Day express, daily. 7 I'n m N 0.22. Local freight l-loE® WEST. No. 3. Day express, daily 5-25*™ No. 1. Mail, daily except Sunday 11-Aii,'m No. 5. The Oomm'l Traveler, daily ■ ■, m No. 23. Local freight .ll:i|.'° A Picture Book ENTITLED "Michigan in Summer” ABOUT THE SUMMER RESORTS ON THE Grand Rapids & Indiana R«llwav-‘‘The Fishing Line ' will be sent to anyone on receipt of postagetwo cents. It Is a handsome booklet oftor-ty-eight pages, containing 2W pictures of the ! famous Michigan Summer Resorts PETOSKEY MACKINAC ISI.ANn.BAY VIEW OMENA TUA VERSE CITY < U.UII.EVOIX HARBER POINT WALLOON LAKE ODEN NORTHPORT WBqVETOSSIXi; KOARINO BROOK NE AH-TA-WaS-TA ! LES CHENEaVX ISLANDS Gives list of hotels and boarding houses, rate by day and week, railroad fares, t .aps. and G. R. & I. train service Fisherman will want "Where to go Fish- 1 Ing.—Postage two cents. C. L. LOCKWOOD. U P. A . 16 Island Street. Grand Rapids Mich. THE Beautiful Sapphire Country in the heart of the North Carolina Mountains Reached only via the Southern Railway. Low Summer Tourist rates to BREVARD and TOXAWAY N. C. A Paradise for the PLEASURE SEEKER HEALTH SEEKER and the FISHERMAN. Excellent trout fishing. Remember Asheville, N.C., the great health resort; low rates the year round. Send 3c for a copy of the “Land of the Sky." Ask your nearest ticket agent for rates and tickets, or write, J.S. M' CLLLOUGH, N. W. P. A.. 225 Dearborn Street, Chicago, Illinois. We have had plenty of rain.
IZlwo /rfaIRACKi 3j|o , <C|eXA$ » HEW FIST T»l!! Between Bt. Louis and Kansas City J OKLAHOMA CITY, WICHITA, DENISON, SHERMAN, DALLAS, fORTW' Lnd principal points In Tex’" J“ h , . ,n<lJ* vest. This train is new througi roT i<l«J nade up ot th® flneat *9° I’. 01 n>od* ,| 5 “thelectric lights and all '«ft, our .raveling conveniences. Il rnns tompleted _ , Red River Divisionn the tuult.i-up ot thia sertn-v. Case Observation Car* tnder the management of df t« cull information as to ra tea “ i trio via thia new rot ite * ill by any ntnished, upon application. J tentative oi the A D. Murray, OeneralAße“^ oC|rl tl Union Trust Bldg. Wul "" ' I
