Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 20 September 1895 — Page 4
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Ill HAYAM'S HARBOR
Spanish "Gunboat and Merchant S'nio Collide."
FORTY-SIX PEOPLE DROWNED.
the Merchant Ship .Sinks Immediately. Amon^ Mm Drowned Was li*• ur Admiral Senor I'art-ju, Ccmii:niIcr of tlie Spanish Fleet in Cuban Waters—Details of
the Disaster.
TAMPA, Flu., Sept. 20.—Official news received in this city state* that- at the entrance of the harbor of Havana Wednesday night at midnight the Spanish gunboat Sanchez Barcastegui collided with the Spanish merchant steamship Mortora. TUJ urter was almost immediately sr.uk. 'i ha damage to the gunboat wa- serious, but she was not sunk.
Rear Admiral Senor Delgado Pare jo, the capram »»t che vessel, four of his officei.- iiMii 41 seamen, were drowned. Adnurai Kin jo was commander of the Spamsli n.iv.u forces in Cuba. He arrived on tho island ou June 17 from Spain.
The Barcastogui is a third class cruiser, carrying live heavy and two rapid-linng guns. She was of 1,000 tons displacement. She was built in 1870. '1 lie cruiser left tor Fort Barcastegui a: m.uniqht and on reaching the mouth oi iiie harbor close to iioroforfc the Ba:vasifv.rui came collision with the Mortem, a steamer engaged in the coastwise trade. The Jnorcora struck the cruiser on the starboard and so badly injured her that she sank at once.
The Mortem, though badly damaged, stood oft" to give assistance to those on board the Barcastequi and with her boats saved the greater part of licr crew.
General Pare'jo's body has been recovered. Captain Ybanez's body was also recovered, but in a badly mutilated condition, indicating that he had been crushed in the collision. The cruiser Barcastequi had been employed in going on government business between different, parts of the island of Cuba.
The cause of the extinguishment of the lights on board the cruiser, which was described by Captain Venal of the Mortera, ami which undoubtedly was the cause of the collision, was occasioned by the stopping of the engines to to save the life of a sailor whose arm iad been caught in the dynamo.
FLED WITH THOUSANDS.
Paris, Kentucky, in the Throe* of a Genuine Sensation.
PARIS, Ky., Sept. 20.—A big sensation was sprung here yesterday when it became known that John I. Moore, one of the best known farmers of this county, had skipped to parts unknown with a large amount of money. He left home last Monday week with cattle for Cincinnati, and has not since been heard from.
His creditors became suspicious and an examination proved that he had mortgaged his home, 121 acres of land, to the following parties: Northwestern Mutual insurance company, $11,000 Citizens' Building association of Paris, ifl-l.iJOu William R. Tayson, .$3, 200. Yestemay morning eight attachment suits were tiled by parties who hold his notes. They amount to $10,500, and others amounting to several thousand will be iiied.
Moore sold 50 head of cattle a few days ago lor about $10,000, and he lias that money with him. it is supposed-, "besides many thousands more. About two years ato he made $80,000 dealing in Chicago pork, bat lost it afterward. He is a v. mower with throe children, and has always stood high in the community.
NEW JERSEY RLPUBt
I
John \V. Grijiss Heads the Ticket .For Governor. TRKNTOX, Sept. 20.—The Republican state convention met here yesterday, and nominated John W. Griggs of Union connty, ex-state senator and a prominent lawyer, for governor on the third ballot. His chief competitor was ex-Congressman John Kean, Jr., who was the candidate against Governor Werts three years ago, The others in
the race were Elias D. Ward, president of the Prudential Insurance company of Newark State Senator Foster M. Voorhees of Union State Senator Maurice M. B,ogers of Camden, and Congressman John A. Gardner of Atlantic, all of them having almost equal strength •with the exception of Gardner, who polled only 23 votes on the first ballot.
Upon questions of national import the platform says: "We reaffirm our devotion to the national policy of our party our opposition to any attempt to impose upon this country a debased or depreciated currency, and our firm belief in the wisdom and benefits of a tax upon imports which will afford protection to American industry and adequate revenue."
TRAIN HELD UP.
An Uiiiiiit'ccssfiil EA'ort Made to tilow Oien fcs-} the Safe. "WAUPACA, Wis., Sept. 20.—Passen
ger train No. 2 on the Wisconsin Central road, Conductor Whitney and Engineer Blaine, was held up by armed men at 0:15 last night in a swamp, three miles west of the city. The engine and baurxagecar were, ditched by pulling spines and piling ties on tiie tracks.
The passengers were not molested by the robbers, only terrified by bullets which were fired through the coaches. Twelve .sucks of dynamite were exploded on tl:e .'-ai2 without avail and the robbers fled"without getting any booty. Coudacmr Whitney .says there were 10 or 12 men in tne gang.
3.' Vn) I-aHiiitf Wails. Sept. 20.—A portion of the walls of the old Colonnade build
ing.'corner of Cherry and Deaderick streets, wluch is being torn down, fell yesterdjyr. Six workmen were buried under the debris and all were more or less injured, but nono are thought to be fatally hurt. The injured men are John Westley, Andrew Jennings, Ed Blair, Ed Hopkins, George Yaughan and Austin Wilson.
Thursday's Treasury Statement.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 20.—Yesterday's statement of the condition of the treasury showed: Available cash balance, $181,523,530 gold reserve, $95,948,875.
CODERS' TROUBLES.
Oifr.TMif. TI-{i »rts I-'rom Different T^ocall-
TICS
in the Coiiuellsville Region.
I PITTSBUKM,
Sept. 20.—The reports
from the Conncllsville coke region indicute that the men have made heavy gains in the last 24 hours. The cokers claim the men at Oliphant, Kyle and Yvymi vorks of the Frick company came out cu strike yesterday, and that ether plants are crippled,
A conference with the Frick managers was fruitless. The Italians at Oliver will be evicted from the company's 1 louses.
.Looks I/ike a Failure.
UXIONTOWX, Pa., Sept. 20.—The men at the Kyle. Oliphant, Wynn, Memont, I Morrcll. Wheeler and Oliver coke works in ri:e sou! hern end of the Connellsville reg.m: are oat for the advance, but all
1
t.'.iw '.lis.- iiorcliern district .ire still .: 'i'he situation is not oucoury. aj'i :. tJ. iabo-' leaders an 1 :.ioss ti.. i.an g't the men nil ier '.'o.-.rroi ira-uMr-.y and t:.n\:e a saspeii-iou '.-I' work me strike movement v. Uie n.is in a nay or two. At this time looks Liiiie a failure.
CAL!v1 Af fcR HE
TO: ,M.
Second I)uv at tiie Cotton State* ami Interi.utional Kxposit ion. I ATLANTA.
Sept. 20.—Yesterday was
tin.' calm after the storm at the cotton stales and international exposition. The machinery which President Cleveland's touen set in motion Wednesday was moving with busy whir a«d there v.-as a general air of bustle and pteparation among tiie exhibitors who were anxious to put the finishing touches on their uisn ays. It was Georgia editors' day ami tna members of the state pres association were on the grounds one hundred strong. They viewed the exhibits, took in the midway, shot down the chutes and had a good time generally.
There is general gratification over the success of the opening exercises and the people of Atlanta are inclined to shake hands with themselves in their delight. The big show is now fairly under way with a fair field an no favor.
Crossing Fatality.
AI.UAXCK, O., Sept. 20. Frank Coldsnow, aged. 19 years, a young farmer residing near Bayard, when re.turning home from calling on his girl at 1 o'ciock yesterday morning, was struck by a fast freight on the Cleveland and Pittsburg railroad at a crossing near his home. His horse was catto pieces, the buggy smashed to splinters and Coldsnow thrown 50 feet. His ribs and collarbone were broken and his hip crushed. Keeovery is doubtful.
IYIIMOII Money Drawn.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 20.—The J^cretary of the interior has drawn o* the secretary of the treasury for the following amounts to pay pensions falling due Oct. 4: Buffalo, $1,750,000 Chicago, $2,700,000 Concord, N. H., $725,000 Des Moines, §2,150,000 Wilwaukee, $1,800,000 Pittsburg, $1,675,000. ,,
l-'atally Stabbed.
PORTLAND, Ind., Sept. 20.—Andrew Scheul, a jeweler at Montpelier, was stabbed in the abdomen by his father-in-law. Samuel Lee. Mrs. Scheul had gone to her mother's and her husband followed her. He was ordered from the premises, but refused to obey and was stabbed.
Walked Oft'a Train.
ARCANUM, O., Sept. 20.—George Moor, O2, who lives at Jamestown, Dak., walked off a moving train at Gordon. A wedding party was showered with rice, which partially awoke the passenger and caused the arrair. Moor's left leg was broken below the thign.
Will Not Stop :ti Honolulu.
SAN F'nANcisco, Sept. 20. The Oceanic steamer Monowai sailed yesterday for Australia via Honolulu, but she refused to take freight or passeilgers for Honolulu on account of the cholera. The United States mails, however, were taken.
No Ksliinate of Losses.
ALDKR, Minn., Sept. 20.—Fire here has destroyed 14 stores, a church, a newspaper office and several other buildings. No estimate of losses yet.
I miieations.
Generally fair and continued warm weather southerly winds Friday, followed by cooler weather Friday night or Saturday, increasing sout herly winds.
Bast llull.
^AT I'll 11. A DK'LI'II IA— it E Philadelphia 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 3— 9 10 1 Washington 0 0002510—8 7 1
Batteries—White and Buckley Molesworth, Boyd and McGuire. Umpire—Murray.
AT CLEVELAND— RIIE Cleveland 0 22 0 0 0 2 2 x— 63 Pittsburg 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0—3 73
Batteries—Ouppy and Zimmer Moran and Merrict. Umpire—Jevne. AT BOSTON— RIG N E Boston 3 001 4230 x—13 10 0 Xew York 0 1 0 1 0 0 1 0 2— 5 8 1
Batteries—Siivetts and Ganzci: Douehy and Wilson. Umpire—llursb AT BROOKLYN— E Brooklyn 0 0 1 0 2 0 2 o— 10
2
Baltimore 3 0 0 1 0 0 0 0—14 17
2
Batteries—Kennedy, Daub and Bailey Holier aiul Clarke. Umpire—Keefe.
THE MARKETS.
Kevicvv ol' tilts Grain and Livestock Markets or Sept. Ji).
S'itrsbui's
Cattle—Prime. §5 &)(&.> 50 gt,»od, $4 10($ 4 40 good butchers', *4 l(J(jU 40 bulls, stags and cows, $1 50(^3 oO rough fat, 7o(g!3 75: fresh cows and springers, $15 @40. Hogs—Prime light ami medium weights, $4 b0 85 common to lair §4 l)0(3s4 70 roughs, $3 75(^4 25. Sheep— Export, S3 5(W,.:j SO exi ra sheep, ¥3 0i)@ 3 40 good, £2 (iUW2 'jo l'air, #1 70(§2 &> common. 5oeu££l 00 sprin.- iambs, $*} OUco 4 50 veal calves, s-0 5ou/i7 00.
mciiiiiaty.
Wheat—853t".5 !*Jc. Corn—32^@:J8c. Cattle—Selected Initcliers, §1 8 J@4 85 l'air to medium, $3 5:X54 25 common, fo!
L'5ait
3 00. Hogs—Selected and prime butchers, $4 45(^4 50 packing, 5'4 35(«(4 45 common to rough, 3 05@4 10. Sheep—41 ™'5(^.j 85. Lambs—$2 75@i 35.
Chicago.
Hogs—Selected butchers, $3 85@4 60 packers, $3 85@4 55. Cattle Poor to choice steers, $3 50@5 75 others, $4 3045 5 60 cows and bulls, $1 25@3 60. Sheep— fl 50(^3 40 lambs, £2 50@4 50.
New York.
Cattle—$1 25@5 50. Sheep—$1 75@1 00 lambs, $3 00(^5
2o.
WOMAN'S WOKLDv
"THE AMERICAN GIRL" IN THE CATTLE COMMISSION BUSINESS.
Woman's Advancement—A ConTentlon In Baltimore—Women Physicians For the Insane—Dora Wheeler Koith—Girls* Colleges—Ciiivalry For Women.
The first woman to go into the live stock commission business in America has received her first consignment and sold it at the "top" market price. Outside the door of her office in the Live Stock Exchange at the stockyards hangs her sign. It is this:
JENNIE M. GOODWIN,
LIVE STOCK COMMISSION AUCUCHAKT.
Miss Goodwin is an exceedingly pretty girl. She is 2-1 ypars old and was born in White county, Tenn. She has the low*, well modulated voice of southern women and lias dark, expressive eyes and an abundance of black, naturally wavy hair. But Miss Goodwin is much prouder of being the first feminine "commission man" than she is of her good looks. But she knows the value of those same good looks, and to prove it has a. half tone engraved portrait of herself on her letter heads.
Six years ago she weut with the American Live Stock company as stenographer and grew to be bookkeeper as well. At that time the American coni-
JENNIE M. GOODWIN.
pany was doing an enormous business, as every shipper was made a stockholder. But one day the company was driven out of business, both in Chicago and Kansas City. It was while with this company that Miss Goodwin was given the sobriquet of the American Grirl," which clings to her to this day and which she fills to the dot.
After the American company went out of business she obtained employment with the Campbell Commission company and handled its correspondence and books until last month, when it went practically out of business. Then Miss Goodwin had at least 40 offers of emploj'nient with other commission houses and no one knows how many offers of marriage. But after considering these offers she declined all and made up her mind to go into the live stock commission business for her own profit: Sho got up a circular letter which she sent to all the customers of her former employers, in which sho said: "I find that it is not a complicated or difficult matter tom'anage a commission house. I have a competent force of hog and cattle salesmen and am now ready for business. On myself alone rests the entire responsibility, and I hope to receive your co-operation in a liberal patronage, with the assurance on my partthat the stock will be well handled and sold for the best price the market will afford and proceeds remitted as you direct. Would like you to come in with the first shipment. Consign your stock to Jennie M. Goodwin, and you will receive every courtesy any commission house can Oi tend."
Cunning little commission merchant that she is. she wants the burly shippers to come in personally with their first shipment and meet her. A cattle shipper is only a man, after all, and not proof against the good looks of his agent. She promises all the courtesies a commission house can offer. As a usual thing this means much liquid refreshment, but probably her -salesmen are hired to look after that part of it.
Her stenographer is a man, "for," says "the American girl," "I can get much more work out of a man than I could out of three women. It takes a man to manage a woman, and vice versa.''
Miss Goodwin's office is furnished as tastefully as the parlor of the little fiat in which she lives with her parents. But she has a comfortable outside olilee in which her cowhide booted cattle punching customed may lounge and expectorate and smoke their stockyard cigars without damage to either lier furniture or her feelings.—Kansas City Cor. Chicago Tribune.
Woman's Advancement.
Dr. Nellie V. Mark, the noted lecturer, in ciie of her talks said that when in 1848 the first woman's right convention was called at Seneca Falls, which was the cradle of the advanced condition of the women of today, the nation was convulsed with laughter from Maine to Louisiana when they read the declaration made by these women, though their demands for suffrage, rights to property, work and wages were the same that wise people accept today.
In nothing has advancement been so great as in the education of women. Colleges and universities are open to women so that they can by profound scholarship become specialists if they wish. The scientific women coming to the front are too numerous to mention, and they are found doing good work in astronomy, microscopy, chemistry, botany, biology, dentistry, anthropology, medicine and mathematics. Useful papers by them are also found in the various scientific and medical magazines. The only thing needful for a woman's success is efficacy.
There is nothing in the earth nor under nor above the earth that the women «f today do not investigate, and this
state of things has been greatly helped along by the clubs and arr^Sciations that women have formed in almost every village, town and city for study and improvement.
Tbo tirr.o has come, the ^valru:: said, To talk of many tilings— Of ships and shoe? and scaling wax,
Of cabbages and kin^s. Dr. Mark agreed with the immortal walrus tnat there is nothing too great or too small to escape the attention of the women of today. This clubbable instinct has been the means of bringing to the front a new woman. The old maid is dead, but from her ashes, phenixlike, has sprung the bachelor girl. Even as Pallas Athene sprang from the dead^of Zeus, so the bachelor girl rose, full armed, from the brain of the ever mastering modern idea.
Buoyant with youth and health, with eyes that look forward with hope and courage into the coming day, strength for adversity or success, she is a hiw unto herself, or should sho marry sho will adapt herself to her husband like perfect music unto noble words, and all humanity will profit by her existence.— Exchange.
A Convention In Ualtiunore. In October there will be a woman's convention in Baltimore which will devote one or two days to the discussion of social purity and the best means of attacking vicious and immoral tendencies both in the Jiome and the school, in books and pictures, in music and the arts, how to elevate the moral standard of society and how to aid those who have made a misstep and are desirous of retrieving the past. There is match greater interest taken in this field of thought than is generally known. The National Woman's Christian Temperance anion has a department devoted to it, as has also the National Council of Women. The Society of Christian Endeavor and the Epworth league mate it a special object of their organizations. The Roman Catholic organizations, more especially the newer and larger ones, also give it great attention and study, no less a personage than Mgr. Satolli having recommended it as one of the most important subjects^ modern Christianity. In addition to these great organizations, the King's Daughters and King's Sons, the White Cross league, the Society For the Promotion of Social Purity and other organizations are equally interested. In the convention there will be a strong move made toward having all of these organizations represented, so as to obtain an accurate consensus of opinion from every point of view.
Writing on the general subject a Ifew York editor suggests: "There is one field where it woald seem improvement is needed. The law on the subject, as well as the judgment of society, should be enlarged so as to cover other languages besides English. There are today in the libraries and book stores many novels in French, Spanish, Portuguese and Italian, in German, Swedish, and even in Latin, which are so abominable that were they translated into English the translator, editor, publisher and bookseller would bo put in jail 24 hours after the book appeared. As the modern languages are now'taught universally it. is obvious that the evil is on the increase and should be met with a strong hand before it grows to any greater dimensions."
Women S'hysiciaas I'or the Insane. Women physicians in hospitals, sanitariums and lunatic asylums are now an established feature in number .of states, but in the south the idea seems "to gain ground but slowly. A southern woman recently made an eloquent,.plea for women physicians in the lunatic asylums, saying "Any one who is accustomed to visiting asylums which are exclusively under the management of male physicians know how eager these poor, unfortunate women are to have ail occasional
A
ford of sympathy from ono
of their own sex. Many of them have days and weeks of rational thought and feeling, and it is a great grief to them to bo separated from their family and friends. They need the companionship of some woman who can direct their thoughts into healthy channels. An intelligent female physician, who has made insanity a study, knows that she can control a large proportion of her patients by kind and gentle treatment. She also knows that restraint does not always restrain, and that some forms of mechanical restraint increase the nervous excitement. "There is nothing more humiliating to a woman than to have an inferior placed over her, and unfortunately the attendants in the female wards of insane asylums are not selected for their superior education and refinement or for their knowledge of the best methods-to obtain the best results in the treatment of the insane, but for their superior muse'e and ability to overpower a ref'ractozy patient. If we had some of the noble v. -men who have devoted their lives to t'»! profession of medicino and have made insanity a specialty in charge of our sister.-v whose minds have lost the light of reason, we should soon have a better class ov attendants in our asylums, and if v-.v had two or more intelligent women on he boards of trustees of each asylum in the stato wo would soon get the women physicians. "—New York Mail and Express.
Dora Wlmeler Keith.
Dora Wheeler Keith is as versatile an artist as ever handled brush, palette and maul stick, says the article on somo American women painters in Tho New Peterson Magazine. Her first successes were mado in illustrations and designs. In the prize competitions instituted by Mr. Prang for the production of Christmas cards her imaginative qualities came into play, and her success in these competitions served to make those qualities renown to the public.
In the last competition Miss Wheeler carried .off both the artist and the popular prizos of $1,000 each, and this iinushal success in competition with many well known artists emphasizes Miss Wheeler's ability. She brings" to the ex
ecution of the fancies of a very suggestive bram hands and eyes which have received a thorough training. Her worb. whether it be a ceiling, a picture for a church window, the portrait of a grave man of letters or of a woman of society, or perchance a deliciously soft pastel of a child, is always good, in a refined and yet strong maimer.
Somo time ago Mrs. Keith painted a notable series of American men of letters, choosing such subjects as James Russell Lowell and others. In all of these portraits the
artist
has demonstrat
ed the rare talent of bringing out what is best in her subject, her own strong, sweet nature empowering her to divine and portray only the highest characteristics of her sitter. The exquisite needle woven tapestries for wlijcli the Associated Artists are so widely known are from cartoons designed by Mrs. Keith. Indeed much of the decorative work produced by the Asrociaied Artists— ceilings, mural painting.? and Other decorations—are tu rn designs by this artist. Mrs. Keith's ceiling of the library of the Woman's braiding in Chicago is perhaps tho bo it known of her mural works.
C:ir]s*
'oi'.
A delect, in the college life of American girls that mr:st be noted is this: The arrangements are too much after the fashion of a boarding school, and do not allow sufficient scope for ^e development, of individual character. The girls aro expected to retire to bed at a fixed hour and to take a definite amount of exercise each day, and—a more serious defect—they do not each have a separate study. Where the students board out, which is the ease in most of tho women's colleges, they share tho life of the family they join, but where, as at Vassar. halls of residence are provided, two or three bedrooms to one study are the usual rule.
At Oxford or Cambridge every woman student has at least one room to herself arranged with much ingenuity as a bedroom study. Here she works, ^meditates or idles as she likes, receives her friends, and mistress of her time enjoys the independence and solitude which are too often entirely absent from the everyday life of the average middle class girl. Under these influences she quickly develops sobriety and self command, which are the best correctives of giddiness or of what a past generation entitled comprehensively "vapors," while the social life of the college, with its clubs, entertainments and debates, suffices to check any tendency that may exist to turn the student into a hermit.—National Ob-
Chivalry For Women.
Those who see boys and girls "jollying," as they now call it, treating each other with perfect frankness and scant regard to courtesy on either side—parents who deplore the growing rudeness —will be delighted to hear that an English educator of reputation proposes to introduce into tho education of young women and girls the principles of chivalry toward the inalo sex. He maintains that this has been entirely neglected in the teaching of girls, and while boys have been taught to pay due deference to women, the girls have not been taught that they owed any consideration to any one—either of their own or the opposite sex. Tho result has been selfish and inconsiderate women, who accept all chivalrous attentions from men as a right, without a thought that they owe even tho courtesy of a thank you in return.
It is a good time to begin such teaching when women aro entering upon a wider sphere of work with a greater recognition of rights the same as those, of me-n. It would be a loss rather than a gain of these new rights should be as sumed in such a way as to knock down tho old ideas of chivalry among men, and the best way to maintain these will be to teach tho new woman the same chivalry toward men as used to bo taught boys toward women. Philadelphia Ledger. •.
Tie Undivided Half.
Mrs. Julia B. Nelson says: "Woman does not want the earth, but neither will she be satisfied with tho use of a third of it. She wants 'the undivided half.' Gentlemen may cry, 'Peace, peace!' but there will bo no peace until she has a clear title to that which her heavenly Father bequeathed to lier. His last will and testament has been set aside through many dark ages, but she now has the will in her possession, is able to read it and bases her claim to joint title in the ownership of the earth on that section of the will found in tho first chapter of Genesis, verses 26-28 inclusive.
Miss Laura Clay.
Miss Laura Clay, daughter cf Cassius M. Clay, the famous Kentuokian, who has for several years been a leading exponent of woman's right to the franchise, had tho satisfaction of presiding over a mass meeting of women at Lexington recently called to nominate four women candidates for the board of education. The women of Kentucky will vote for the first time in tho selection of school officers this year. Miss Clay has her famous father's blood and spirit.
Mrs. Potter Palmer, Mrs. Russell Sago and Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton aro interesting themselves in a movement to eject a monument at Seneca .Falls, N. Y., to Mrs. Bloomer, tho lady who first had the courage to don tho garment that now bears her name.
Tho eightieth birthday of Mrs. Elizabeth Cady Stanton, which occurs Nov. 12, will be appropriately celebrated by '.he national council of women at the Metropolitan Opera House, New. York.
The University of Vermont has bought the old Governor Van Ness mansion at Burlington. It will be utilized as a dormitory for womci^ stu«fents.
Cheap .Excursions to the West. Bountiful harvests are reported frem all sections of the west and north-west, and an exceptionally favorable opportunity for home-seekers and those desiring a change of location is offered by the beiies of low-rate excursions which have been arranged by the North-Western. Line. Tickets for these excursions, with favorable time limits, will be sold on August 29th, September 10th and 24th to points in Northern Wisconsin and Michigan North-western Iowa, Western Minnesota, South Dakota, Nebraska, Cclorado, Wyoming, Utah and a large number of, other points. For full'information applya to agents of connecting line?, or addrets. A. H. Waggoner, T. P. A.. 7 Jackson Place, Indianapolis, Ind.
l'lte Koclty Mocitains.
Alonci+ho Hue of tho Northern Pacific 1 ii ibound in iur^e game. *foose,i dti r, iK«r, elk, montsiu lious etc can*: yti |H. found there. Tne true sj-ortsmans wilii eg to go tiie re for them. A little*
11"-i.»K
ca'le". "Natural Game Preserves," publifcae-i !y the Northern Pacific Railti,ad, will be sent upon receipt of fours c-'Uts in stamps by Charles S. Fee. Gen']* Pas.-. Agent, St-. Paul, Minn. lotf
Indianapolis Division.
ypfennsyivania
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1217
I !l 54
5 30 5«6 75 7'.I'M
1L-12 31 44 1 25 3151150
5 9 uf
10 00
I A I'M I I'M
7 4011 30:
I'M I I'M 1
Flag Step.
•.. ••..d ti connect at Columbus 'y 1 !ii 'asi, and at Kiclnnoi. 1 jViji,-,1,
and Sprhigliekl, and J10. 1
!•:'.vn CauibridKO City at, i7 20 a
:i. gg p. m. fls' Rushville, Shelby\ilU',1 ••'h'is "and int^i'mfdiate stations. v'.-. n'a-idge City f12 30 and 16.35 1- m. JOSEPH WOOD A FORD,
Goneral Mauage Ge.ival Passenger Aged
PITTSBURGH. PEX-'A.
For time cards, rates of fare, through ticket# .a .,•«»••» checks and further information ie'M iiin, t,»iA rnnninff of trains apply to anj.s ox i'9aiiBylv*aua ioue8._
«!i IM
Ml#
P,
0lot?rfS VVAT£«E So
UilBf
fcTniaSf-:
$500.00 cv:.'5\RENTES.
ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS. Will not injure hand': rrf N-ic. No Washboard ntecier). Can use hard watef same as soft. Full Directions on every package. At
8-oz. package for 5 cts. or for cts,
S^ld by retail {.IYCTS everywhere.
When the Ho' hmid Points to Nine, Have Your Washing an the Line."
1
ELECTRIC POWER.
I DATE.!
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"A. MAGAZINE OF POPULAR ELECTRICAL
SCIENCE.
SUBSCRIPTION, $F2.00 PER YEAR.
TRIAL
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