Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 19 November 1895 — Page 4

PERJURY- SDBORNED.

Holmes'Senior Counsel Guilty of a Grave Offense.

THE EVIDENCE OVERWHELMING.

Sensational Story Comes From Chicago That Pietzel Is Still Alive—Said to Have Seen Seen by Three Responsible Persons

Who Give No Reasons For Their Former Silence -Slinuie Williams Also Lives.

PHILADELPHIA, NOV. 19.—

The evil

spirit that presides over the destinies of H. H. Holmes, king of murderers, and eventually destroys all who ally themselves with him, found another victim yesterday. The first swift turn this extraordinary case took was on the first day of the recent trial, when the archcriminal dismissed his lawyers, and the "prisoner at the bar" became counsel for the defense. Yesterday the tables were turned, and senior counsel for the defense became a prisoner at the bar.

William A. Shoemaker, the young attorney whose first association with the case is obscured in the mystery which envelops its every detail, passed through an ordeal yesterday as severe as any his client has been called to face, and the crisis came when he was held under $1,600 bail to answer a charge of subornation of perjury. This means that he manufactured evidence tending to prove that Benjamin F. Pietzel, for whose murder Holmes was convicted two weeks ago, committed suicide, and that he, Shoemaker, paid a woman $20 to iSign and swear to this. But the comv. monwealth had supplied the woman, al\fchough Shoemaker was ignorant of this, find after he had produced this important "after-discovered evidence," and read it, with great emnresseinent to the court, he asked that the argument on the motion for a new trial, which had leen fix^d for yesterday, be postponed to give him an (i his associate counsel,

Samuel Rotan, time to ran out this and other clews recently obtained. Then it was that District Attorney Graham

Arose unci Exposed tlie Plot. His declaration came like a thunderbolt. T1 je court stared in wide-eyed amazement: the spectators turned in their chairs :-nd gasped the accused lawyer sank back in his s^at. livid and tremulous, while his innocent associate glared at himvi th unveiled horror, but the prisoner in the dock rested his cold Hue eyes on the shrinking figure of his legal representative and smiled with scorn.

Briefly told, the details of the chai-ge are the.^e: The trial for the Pietzel murder was not two days old when Shoemaker approached a private detective named John Schwechler and asked him to procure a woman who lived around Twelfth or Thirteenth and Callowliill or Vine streets, who would swear to certain facts in connection with the finding of Pietzel's body at 1316 Callowliill street. Schwechler assented, but instead of straightway getting the woman, he told his story to Detective (lever, who. for the commonwealth. brought to light the evidences of Holmes' murder of the children. Geyer submitted it to District Attorney Graham, and a most skillful trap was prepared, a -:n which has birmght about the ruin of the opposing attorney. Under instvnetions Geyer went to Mrs. Margaret Reah, a iron in the Fourth •District police station, and she. under the name of Blanche. A. Hannigan, was taken to Shoemaker by Schwechler. Meanwhile Shoemaker had prepared an affidavit statingjtfhat the deponent had known Pietzel and that to her he had expressed his intention of committing suicide. Mrs. Hannigan readily signed and swore to this and Shoemaker gave her two £10 bills for so doing. On each bill she marked the initials "B. A. H.." and yesterday she exhibited them in court.

Shoemaker walked into the trap blindfold. When he read the affidavit to the court, lie declared that its contents had been dictated to him by the womaij. A moment afterward, irrefutable testimony was introduced, showing that he had himself made uy the affidavit and dictated it to a stenographer before he had even asked Schwechler to procure a woman to sign it. and that he had not so much as read or explained its purport to Mrs. Ilannigan.

Judge Arnold, who was upon the bench during th\ trial, has called Judges Thayer and Willson to hear and decide with him on the merits of the arguments for a new trial. As the Btrange revelations came, the three judges did not hesitate, by their bearing and words, to manifest their sense of the gravity of the accused lawyer's situation. .7 ndye Arnold afterward privately stated that disbarment proceedings would be considered after the disposition of the pending charge against Shoemaker.

Shoemaker had nothing to say. He was Stunned and Shocked. beyond measure, but said this was not the time for him to talk. Rotan, his associate. expressed his confidence in his colleague's final exoneration, but lie admitted that the ovideii"c of his guilt was overwhelming. Rotau himself was tmsmirched. Th witnesses, the district attoTiw and :h' court vve careful to make that and 1 he young barrister v, .o Ian i'org'.:t practically single-handed a ba tl against tremendous odds with some skill and much fortitude, was visibly afire ted.

A strange story is whispered about Shoemaker's initial appearance in this case. A little over a year ago, it is said, he first came to Philadelphia. Whence he came no one seemed to know, but a tale is told that ho had been for some time in a little town in Indiana. Upon his arrival here he is said to have spoken of the receipt of a letter from Boston signed "H." It stated that the writer desired to retain him as counsel in a case which would soon afterwards come up in Philadelphia, and enclosed a $100 note as a retaining fee. A few days afterwards Holmes was arrested in Boston, and the story of his manifold crimes came out. Now, it is said that the little Indiana town in which Shoemaker lived was but a short distance from 11other town where Holmes had lived and fostered his multifarious schemes.

It ifl even said that in Shoemaker's office has been found a map of the county In which these two towns lie, and that a line is drawn ill red ink between the jdaces, .but so drawn as to avoid railroads and settlements, cutting through the bare country. This curious story is jnot given out officially, but with those

who know of it there is an unanimity as to its details. The Holme3 case was the first Shoemaker tried in Philadelphia. It is probably also the last.

DOES PIETZEL LIVE?

Remarkable Story, Well Authenticated, Comes Chicago.

CHICAGO, NOV.From—The 19.

Daily News

last evening published the following story: James McNeary, conductor on car 776 of the Sixty-third street electric line, has sprung a new sensation in the Holmes case by stating that Benjamin F. Pietzel is alive, and that he recently talked with him on his car.

Mr. McNeary claims there could be no mistake, as he worked nine months for Pietzel and knows the peculiarities of his voice.

According to McNeary Pietzel boarded his car a few days previous to Holmes' trial. Pietzel's beard had grown around the greater part of his face, so that he wa-s completely disguised. When addressed, however, he admitted his identity. and asked as a friend that McNeary keep silent, as he was on his way to Philadelphia, but McNeary called in Motorman Letterman and he, iy), claims that he had a conversation witii Pietzel, who took a transfer to the Cottage Grove cable line.

Mr. Robert Corbett, who has been following the case for months in behalf of the Farmers and Mechanics' National bank, Fort Worth, Tex., claims that he also has seen Pietzel. "I never believed that Pietzel was dead," he declared to a Daily News reporter, "for the following resons: First, when I was searching the castle months ago. the man who resembles the man seen by the conductor and motorman, and who I then thought was Pietzel, found me iu the building looking over some papers. He asked me if I had seen a tool chest. I told him there was one in the front room. He said that one was not his that he had left it in the room where I was engaged. I asked him who he was. He said Mrs. Pietzel sent him there for the tool chest, and when I asked him his name he said, after thinking a momcit, 'Andrews,' and left. "Saturday I learned that Mrs. Pietzel was stopping at 6233 May street with Mr. Hayward, and sent over to ask her if she ever sent for the tool chest. Both she and her daughter Dessa declared they had not, and I also discovered that Mrs. Pietzel is wavering in her belief in the identification of Pietzel, and begins to hope that the children are living, but for her husband she does not care whether he is living or dead. I believe that if Holmes is not granted anew trial Pietzel will declare himself to the governor of Pennsylvania when all other means are exhausted, and Isaac R. Hitt, Jr., and myself both have his address in Philadelphia. innie Williams is stopping at the same place under the name of Mrs. E. M. Gardener, while Pietzel is kuown as G. D. Hall." "IRISH TRAITORS."

What the Alliance Men Tliiuk of Dillon's Crowd.

NEW YOKK,

Nov.

19.—At

a meeting

of the committee of arrangements for the demonstration to be made by the Irish National Alliance in this city next Sunday, there were denunciations of John Dillon's call for a convention of all Irishmen iu Dublin.

J. B. Sutton, the secretary of the alliance, said: "This movement of the parliamentary schemers has been made to counteiact our determination to use all means iu our power' or the complete freedom of Ireland. Their last move iu the game really failed when the Gladstonians went out of power and they are now trying to get a crowd of West -British Whigs to assist them in putting a few dollars into the empty treasury. I move that the committee on resolutions be requested to deal with this last attempt by the Loyal English Legion in Ireland."

John F. Kearney, editor of The Irish Nationalist, said mat tiie parliamentary convention announced was the last resort of a pack of Irish traitors ami renegades who desire to rivet forever England's hoid on Ireland.

The matter was referred to the committee on resolutions. RESERVATION OPENED.

Tlie Scenes of Oklahoma and Cherokee Strip Xot Kepeated.

SPOKANE,

Wash., Nov. J9.—The Nez

Perces Indian reservation, Idaho, was opened at noon yesterday. There was no filing of guns or any other signals given. No excitement of a serious character has been reported. Probably not over 3,000 locations will be made this fall. There was no lining up for a grand rush, bur the people, at noon, were all over the reservation, each on his chosen quarter section. At noon work was commenced by establishing corners and laying foundations. A large number of people were at tlift land office in the morning but they were informed that they must locate before they could file claims. Filing did not really begin before this morning.

A I.iunher Trust.

SEATTLE,

Wash., Nov. I!).—Lumber

pric.es seem certain to go up with a bound with the opening of the new year, for on Jan. 1 the largest combine ever made will begin to control the trade of the Pacific co.wt. It is the Central Lumber company of San Francisco, the successor of the old Pacific Pine Lumber company and represents a capital of at least $45,000,000. It includes every mill of importance in the region west of the Cascade mountains from San Francisco on the south to Vancouver, B. C., on the north.

JJra/.il Spunks Up.

NEW YOKK, NOV. 19.—The

Brazilian

government, The Herald's correspondent in Rio Janeiro telegraphs, has definitely concluded that no arbitration is admissive with respect to the ownership of ji'isamd of Trinidad, as proposed by r!i -British government. The government also refuses to consider such suggestions as may arise through discussion in the British parliament of the question.

Schooner a Total Loss.

OWEN SOUND,

Ont., Nov. 19.—The

schooner, J. G. Worts, which went ashore at Tobermoray on the 5th inst., has been broken up by the waves and is a total loss. She was owned by Sylvester Broth ors of Toronto and valued at $6,000. Her cargo of wheat was uninsured.

DISASTROUS" FLOODS

Inundate Islands in the River Neva.

LOSS OP LIFE AND PROPERTY.

Guns Fired From Fortresses to Alarm the People in tlie Endangered Districts. Boats Used in tlie Streets of Villages on the Outskirts of St. Petersburg—Extent of the Damage Not Known,

BERLIN, NOV. 19.—Advices

just re­

ceived here from St. Petersburg give details of the severe storm which swept over that part of Russia on Wednesday last, Nov.

13.

Owing to the violence of

the gale the river Neva rose 8 1-2 inches and the islands in it were flooded. In addition, the wooden buildings along the banks of the Neva, piers, etc., were washed away, and the low lying quarters of the city were inundated.

So threatening did matters become that guns were fired from the fortress to alarm the inhabitants of the endangered parts of the town, and they were able to seek refuge in the upper stories of their habitations. Boats were used in some of the streets to carry people to places of safety and strong detachments of troops and police were sent to the assistance of those who were in danger.

The peasants inhabiting many of the villages on the outskirts of St. Petersburg lost everything through the floods, their homes, cattle and all belongings being swept away. The amount of damage done is said to be very great, indeed, and many lives were lost. The exact extent of the disaster, however, was not ascertained when these advices left St. Petersburg, although the bodies of several drowned people had been recovered.

COUNTERFEITING STATISTICS.

Immensity of the Crime Shown in Chief Iliizen's Anmial Rejiort.

WASHINGTON, NOV.

19.—Chief Hazen,

chief of the secret service, treasury department, in his annual report shows that during the year 803 arrests were made, with few exceptions for violations of the statutes against counterfeiting. One hundred and eighty-one persons were convicted, 119 others pleaded guilty, 74 were indicted and are awaiting trials 51 awaiting examination 1G were nolle prosequied, 53 were discharged by United States commissioners, and 84 were acquitted. Altered and counterfeit notes, counterfeit coins, &c. (representative value), were captured during the year of an aggregate face value of almost $5,000,000.

There were also captured 935 copper, steel and glass plates for United States notes, state warrants, postage stamps, world's fair diplomas, etc., also 47 dies for counterfeit coins and 217 molds for coins, besides a large quantity of crucibles, photographic outfits, machinery, etc.

The number o.' arrests made of persons engaged in manufacturing, and handling counterfeit coins shows a great increase in this branch of counterfeiting. 'BABY BUNTING' DYING.

IRONTON, O., NOV.

Against

It Was Sh«' Who Won the Suit Millioimii-e [Arbticklo.

19.—Miss Clara

Campbell of this city who some few years ago secured a

140,000

against. Arbuekle, the millionaire coffee dealer, in a breach of promise suit, is dying at Dr. C. G. Gray's sanitarium, three miles below this city. Friday last, Miss Campbell was subjected to a delicate operation for tumor, Dr. Gray and Dr. Taylor of Cincinnati being the attending physicians, audit is from the shock attending this operation that she is sinking.

The Campbell-Arbuekle suit in which Miss Campbell -was plaintiff was one which created national furor, and the appelations of "Bunny" and ••Baby Bunting," by which the principals were known, were for months household words tliroughout the central and eastern states. Although extremely eccentric, Miss Campbell is of a philanthropic disposition, and many of fronton's destitute families will hold her memory in reverence.

Vast Oil Tank Explodes.

WHITING,

Ind., Nov. 19.—A tank con­

taining 500,000 gallons of naphtha, owned by the Standard Oil company, exploded shortly after 11 o'clock last night. A furious fire is now burning around the wrecked tank, and it is impossible for anybody to get near it. It is not thought that any lives have been lost. The lire is spreading and there is great danger that more of the oil tanks may catch fire.

Coit Trial Again Postponed.

COLUMBUS,

O., Nov. 19.—Judge Wal­

ters, who is presiding in the Coit case at Circleville, yesterday ordered anew jury impaneled on the testimony of physicians that one of the jurors who lias been sick would be unable to serve again. The case has cost Fayette county .$12,000 already, and only one-tenth of the witnesses have been examined. The trial will be started anew.

THE MARKETS.

Review of tlio Grain and JLivcstoclt Markets i'or November 19.

Pittsburg,

Cattle—Prime, $4 30^4 50 good, $4 80@ 4 00 good butchers', $3 8U(oz4 00 bulls, stags and cows, $1 60@3 00 rough fat, fl 00@2 50 fresh cows and springers, $15 @40, Hogs Philadelpliias, $3 7U(f£3 80 best Yorkers, $3 75@3 85 common to fair Yorkers, $3 (55@3 75 roughs, $3 00(c§3 50. Sheep—Extra, $2 90@3 15 good, $2

Companion Calendar for 1896. Tbb publishers of The Youth's Companion are now sending to their subscribers frte, an art calendar which will be highly appreciated. Four elegant water-color paintings are reproduced in all the beauty of color and design of the originals, and of tuch size, 7x10 inches, that they may be framed with fine effect.

The first two pictures offer a striking contrast, a blustering March day in a sugar orchard, and a peaceful scene in midsummer. Then follows the noonday rest in the harvest field, a charming bit of colsr with a foreground of goldenrod and brilliant autumn foliage. The winter walk to church over the snow covered fields is the last of the series.

To all new subscribers to th« paper who send their name and address and $1.75 at once, the publishers offer to send free this hai dsome calender ithogriphed in.nine colors, the retail price of which is[flfty cents, Tbe Companion free every week until. January 1,1896, including Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Year's double numbers, and The .Youth's Companion fifty-two- weeks, a full year to January 1, 1897. Address,

THE YOUTH'S COMPANION,

195 Columbus Avenue, Boston.

In This Country.

Everybody is more or lets affected with catarrhal troubles, and all these victims of our atmospheric changes are on the lookout for effective it nit dies. Century Catarrh Cure has proved itself the best remedy on the market, for cold in tbe head, bayjfever and all other forms of this insidious disease, it has proved a reliable remeoy, cleansing the nesal passages, and allaying pain and iiflamation and lestoring the semes of taste and smell. tFor sale at Crescent Pharmacy.

The publi&beis of «the Youth's Companion are sendiog free to the subscribers to the paper, a liandsomejj four-page calendar, 7x10 inches lithographed in nine colors. j-It is made, up of four cbarming pictures, each pleasing in design, undtr^each of which aie the monthly calendar for the year 1896. The letail price of this calendar is 50 cents.

New subscribers to the Companion will receive this beautiful calendar frte and besides the Companion free every week until Jannirj 1, IK'O. .Aiso tie Thanks giving, Christmas jtnd New Year's double .numbers fiee, fand the Companion fifty-two weeks, a lull-year [to January 1, 1897. Address,

THE YOUTH'S COMPANION,

195 Columbus Avenue, Boston.

Indianapolis Division.

l/ennsulvania Lines.!

Schedule of Passenger Trains-Central Tim»

21 AM

Westward. All

45 AM

Madison..

.VIICYS \\:*v Paris... iU'.hmor.tl... j\l vnlreviile... inianiown" •'•lalvri.re City... •i:'!ih ,i .'.'isviiiu .... !'"ir,reiih ... Aiiiu'liisloxvn" a-'riulkville level-irul i.-.-niinld ... 'iiiiilierbuul rv inijton intiianapolis ...ar.

Eastward. 'ndianapolis—lv. Irvington 'mnberlfind I'niiadelphia iireenfield ... Heveland •'hirlottsville Knisht.stown Dimreith Lnwisvillo ... stiMwns Dublin ilambrita Oity .. ierniantown" (,'cntrevillo .. Richmond... ]v NVv* Paris... Wilcys X.Madison... Weavers in'en villo ... kttysbnry .. ra'ilord .If -.'1T1 Lfton ...

Mna

20®

2 50 fair, $1 7U@3 35 common, 50c@$l spring lambs, $ 3 45®3 45 veal calves, $13 00$6 75.

Cincinnati.

Wheat—G3j£e. Corn—29@31%c. Cattle—Selected butchers, $4 35(j4 40 fair to medium, $3 25@3 95 common, $3 25@ 3 00. Hogs—Selected and prime butchers, $3 70 packing, $3 45@3 55 common to rough, $3 00@3 40. Sheep—$1 00@3 50. Lambs—$2 50$4 10.

Chicago.

Hogs—Selected butchers, $3 40@3 75 mixed, $3 40@3 60. Cattle Poor to choice steers, $3 75@4 60 others, $3 75@ 4 50 cows and bulls, $1 25@3 40. Sheep— $1 40@3 50 lambs, $2 75@4 75.

fsste New York. Sheep—11 75@3 o0( Cattle—fl

lambs, |3 25m S3.

"t

I

oMinibus lv.,*2 47*7 15 Urb: na '•'i'l'ii -. Yjvmgton... "r vU'i'fl

judgment

Ii'i t.vshtirg .. rivenville ... VvViivers

6 58,

7 09

1

c-:

6 07| 10 35!t2! 5:" ."5 7 6 35 *lK0i 1TC, 4 58 7 4U!'6^i

3-1

1

itfi

1!5 1 53! 5 00, 2 03! 2 17j 2 28

•7 0. 7 111

...,'848 3 53

735! 7 46 8 03 8 11 8 25 8 37 8 55 AW

'2 31 2 43: i'2 50 3 04 1 315.

9 25

8 00 AM

12 30 PM

1

330 8 501015 P3VI PM I PM

-us a 1 go I AM! I'M PM I

AM

*4 30 *5 4518 00*7 051*245*5 10 i'4 43

814 8 25

:f8 38 1 8 46 f9 02 a9 06' 9 17 9 30 9 401 9 47 9 56 fe1

5 45

5 3C 5 43

6 09 6 20

1'5 51 IB 05 6 10 f6 16 6 35 6 50 6 55 17

7 0610 or g10106 10 20 7 SO 10 35: 840 7351038 843 ,10 51

6 47

4 25-1715 4 30( 7 35 if7 4b| (7 55 »'8 02

07

17 18 725 (7 35 7 47 '3 01 8 15 8 25!

Imoi 1103

.... 1H17. 8151128, ... 1140: 83512 08 1217

f8

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21

18 33 8 45'5IV 8 54 S Sfj 9 l!5i 5 -.•i 10 no! f) 25

8 38 8 5512 51: 9 34 9 44 1

95

11 10:11 20 3 1511 50 I AM AM Pj.r I'M I

7 4011 39j 74?i PM I PM I'M

Flag Stop.

c,o, 9 and 2C« connoft. at OolumiM's for PlitshiirK siinl the Kast, and at. 1!iclimoad lor Ossy- 1 .".ia and (Springfield,and Xo.SOi'or L'I-icirnial 1.

Trains !o v" Oimbril«o City at. 17 05 a. r,:. 11 (l 12 00 1»- '"i' Iviisiiville, Sb lnyville, himbus and ":i''rmediaio stations. Arrive Cunibridtjo City ,12.30 and 16-35

Jn.

JOSEPH WOOD, E. A. FORD, General Manner, General Passenger Agsr.t 10-20-95-R riTT-.MTNM,

PENN'A.

For time cards, rates of fare, through tickets, baggage checks and further information regarding the running of trains apply to any Agent

of

the Pennsylvania Lines.

EXCURSIONS SOUTH.

Lower Kates to Atlanta via I'eiiDfjlvaijia JLInes.

Three forms of excursion tickets to Atlanta account the Cotton States Exposition are for sale via Pennsylvania Lines. One ticket is good returning twenty days from date of sale, another is good for return trip until Jan. 7, 1896. and a third good! returning ten days. Twenty* day tickets^ and those good to return until Jan. 7 may be obtained any time during the exposition. The ten day tickets will be sold only on Oct. 26, Nov. 5, 15, and 25, and Dec. 5 and 16, at special low rates. The fare is exceptionally cheap. For details apply to nearest ticket agent of Pennsylvania Lines. d&wtf

1895 November. 1895

Su. Mo. Tu. We. Th. Fr. Sa.

ART,

7 i_ai I'M AM

I'M!

1-8 45*1 15*3 00*7 15 10 25 2 55 4 45 8 33 11 20i 334 5 43 9 21! 11 35 CO 9 C-:! 48i 3 58 8 '»3 11155! U' 9,5 A11 V? rn

4 03j via 4 46' Daj_

f5 23 1 .v.:

1 2

3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 26 21 22 23 24 25 28 27 28 29 30

ThePhiladelphia

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Daily Circulation

OVER

160,000 COPIES.

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"The Record" spares no expense to collect the very latest news of the World for its readers, and has special departments edited by experts on

HEALTH and HYGEINE, FARM and HOUSEHOLD, FASHIONS, SCIENCE,

LITERATURE, SPORTS, THE TURK, etc.

SUBSCRIPTION RATES.

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Daily^ Edition, Daily[and Sunday, Daily Edition, Daily and Sunday,

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4.00

The Record Publishing Co. 917-919 Chestnut St.

Phihulc-lphia.

BIG FOUR

66

59

ROUTE TO

ATLANTA. Cotton States and International Exposition.

Travelers to the South during the fall and the early part of the winter reason will have an unusual opportunity of see ing the South at its best advantage. The Atlanta Exposition is the largest e^po&i tion of its kind in this country, with the exception of the world's fair at Chicago.

HOW TO KEACII ATLANTA.

From Chicago, Peoria, Indianapolis, Terre Haute, LaFayette, Benton Harbor and intermediate points, tiie North and Northwest, the "Big Four" route oilers the choice of the two great gaitvvays to the South—Cincinnati and Louisville. Solid trains with parlor cars, magnificent sleeping cars and dining cars run daily from Chicago and Indianapolis to Cincinnati and Louisville.

From New York, Boston Buffalo, Cleveland, Coiumbus, Springfield, Sandusky, Dayton and intermediate points, niaguili cent through trains run daily into Cincinnati. All trains cf the "Big Four" arrive at Ceutral Union Station, Cincinnat i, making direct connections with through trains of the Que* & Crescent routa to Atlanta. Through sleeping cars via the Q. & C. route ruu directly to Chattanooga, thence via Southern railway to Atlanta. Many points of historical interest as well as beautiful scenery may be enjoyed enroute. Of these Chickamanga National Park and. Lookout Mountain at Chsttanooga are foremost, and should be visited by everyone on the way ta Atlanta.

For full information as to rates, routes, time ©f trains, etc., call on or address any agent Big Four Route.

D. B. MARTIN,

Gen'l Pass. & Ticket Agt.

E. O. M'CORMICK, Pass. Traffic Mgr. 41t3

A Yellowstone Park Trip

Will do more to over come that feeling of laEsitude or laziness which ever you prefer to call it than all the medicine in the apothecary's shop. Get out of the harness for a while take a lay off and {go to the park and become renewed in body and mind. See the geysers play, hear the paint pots pop, the cataracts roar, climb about the canyon walls, catch trout in the Yellowstone lake, take on a new life. Send Chas. S. Fee, General Passenger Agent, Northern Pacific railroad, six cents for the new and Illustrated Tenrist book. 34t6&d.

Cheap Bxeumtons to the West. Bountiful harvests are reported fr®m 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 tka series 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, Colorado, Wyoming, Utah and a large number »f other points. For full'information apply to ageate of connecting lines, or address A. H. Waggoner, .T. P. A. 7 Jackson Place, Indianapolis, Ind.

The Rocky Mountains.

Along the line of the Northern Paoiflo Railroad abound in large game. Moose, deor.JJ'jear, elk, montaiu lioi H. etc., can yet be found there. The true sportsman is willing to go there for tl em. A little h"ok. called "Natural Gan.e i-'?eserves-^^-— published by the Northern l'»ciflc 'Hailroad, will be pent upon receipt-' of four c^nts in stamps by Charles Fee. Gen'l Pass. Agent, St. Paul, Minn 15m

COTTON STATUS EXI'OSH ION.

Atlanta, Ga. ^ejt.l8,iec 31, 1885

The schedule printed below is a comprehensive guide to the shortest and quickes-t route to Atlanta from the North and Northwest, Chicago, Indianapolis, Terre Haute and Evansville,

Palace Day Coaches and Pullman Sleeping Cars are attached to all trains shown in this schedule.

Extremely low inUs hf.ve been made to Atlanta and. return, vm tie Nashvill^ Chattanooga and St- uis Bnilway. An trains run solid between Nashville and Atlanta. The train in last columij, which leaves Cincinnati at 4:30 P. M., runs solid to Atlanta. This is the route of the famous "Dixie Flyer" through "all tbe year round" sleeping car line between Nashville, Tenn., and Jacksonville, F)a.

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per year

ADDRESS

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35c per month $3.00

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I 5

'-*5 2

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Sisil

St: "~A1^

Fc.r fu!tber information n(kh'e.-s Briard F. Hill. Northern Passenger Agent, 328 Marquette Building, Chicago, III.: R. C. Coward in, Western Passenger Agent, 405 Ry. Exchange Building, St. Louis, iVio. or D. J. Mnllaney, Eastern Pa?pengt-r Agtut, .-39 W. Fourth St., Cincinnati, O.

W. L. DANLEY.

C-r. P. «Sr T. A. Nashville, Tenn:

0-(" 01 ikVw-ti

A N

I

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%,

Ho^nnKs0,LY

$500.00 GUARANTEE:. ABSOLUTELY HARMLESS. Will not injure limits or fabric.

No Washb'nu-J nnocied, can use hard watel same as soft, i-viii Directions on

I

every

8-oz. pack.iRe for 5 c!s. 01 ,or ts,"

ELECTRIC POWER. ^1'•"l•TOajesaarsy

package. Al

Sold by retail grocers everywhere.

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