Plymouth Republican, Volume 45, Number 34, Plymouth, Marshall County, 11 July 1901 — Page 6
BULLS FOUGHT IN OMAHA
Many Women Fainted and Officers of the Humane Society Occupied Front Seatj. Omaha, Neb.. July 5. The first of two dozen bull fights arranged by the South Omaha Festival committee was witnessed yesterday by 10,000 persons. In every detail the spectacle was about what the average person expected who had read details of the Spanish fights, with the exception that no horses were gored and the ferocious bulls, which the agile toreadors provoked to a frenzy, were not killed. The hairbreadth escapes, the snort of pain, and wild dash On the part of the bulls to destroy their tormentors, were in evidence, and several times the matador dashed in and laid his sword over the neck of the frantic animal, just to show how he would . dispatch the wild, plunging brute were it not for the presence of the sedate-looking humane society officials, who occupied a prominent position in boxes. The understanding of the public was that the officials would attend the first fight, and if it was not too revolting or too cruel, the exhibitions could continue through the week. The tacit understanding is that from now on tho bulls will be killed outright in the ring and dragged from the slaughter pen by horses attached to thier tails in true Spanish style. Today the toreadors, picadors, and matadors contented themselves with tormenting the bulls, piercing their hides with long darts and iacing around the ring, dodging the lunges of..-the animals. . There were situations , that were sufficient! v exciting to cause the crowd c? spectators to scream in fright and many women to faint- This was true when Senor Minquil Sorosis Sierol, chief of the toreadors, slipped and -fell beneath the feet of one of the mad bulls. The animal ran over the prostrate man and turned to pierce him with his lc keen horns. The toreadors an for ward flaunting their red olankets in the face of the enraged beast, and succeeded in distracting the animal's attention until the injured man could 'be dragged to a place of safety. The Spanish managers of the concern say the man was overcome by the ex treme heat and fainted. .With tjiis and other narrow escapes the . sport was sufficiently animated to satisfy even the most ferocious exponent of the art of Spanish" bull fighting. The great crowd gathered .early in the afternoon and fought for seats. The big amphitheater constructed by the committee has a seating capacity of 8,000. The building is of circular form, and a ring ninety feet in. diameter is in the center, with raised seats around the sides. At four o'clock J "'I 1 -1 M. 1 1 iour gauy aressea xoreaaors ana two matadors entered the ring. The picadors the ones who handle the bulls from horseback were excluded from the exhibition for fear some of the horses might be disemboweled and the sport stopped. " The matadors carried huge swords, but it is said that the weapons were dummies covered with tin foil, and first inspected by the Humane society officials, to be certain the bull could not be actually killed. Still, this is a mooted question, as the swords were not required :o shed blood, and the management insists they were of real steel. The toreadors were greeted with howls and whoops by the excited crowd, and they bowed and kissed their hands like circus clowns, There wrs a number of women present, and to these especially the bull fighters kissed their Jiandsr and were greeted with , waving handkerchiefs. Forced a Wall at Midday. Peru. Ind., July 5. Four men escaped from the new counts 4n hp.re at noon vasterdav. igr jm- - They dug through the two and nVin.lf font wall, receiving asV JL w - - w - - sistance from outside. '-Although In rdain view of the street no one those helriinsr from the HVy WAWä ' ' J outside, The implement used . was a crow oar,
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Angus
- 2 A Story of Early Indian Life and Adventure in the Territory v .J Northwest of the Ohio River. - ' $ BY A WRITER OF MARSHALL COUNTY. J
9 Chapter hi. INTO THE WILDERNESS. (Continuation)' home again and if that could not be, then he would on no account separate from the first and only friend he had found since he .'eft that home. The reader may as wel' be informed now that the fond Scotch mother mourned and grieved for her boy aiid that as hope gradually left her so did her strength and at the very time of the journey now related she passed beyond the dark river to meet him or 'await his coming, she knew not i which. The father had already exhausted his means in an una- j vailing search for his son and had : been reduced to the extremity of taking employment as a shepherd on the moors. He received the letter Angus wrote from Philadelphia and answered it, writing tenderly of the mother's death, but the answer never reached the son nor did the father ever again hear from the wanderer, for within two years he succumbed to the exposure incident to his unaccustomed occupation aud died one stormy night all alone in his little bothie. When Angus learned these facts years later he abandoned forever his longcherished design to return to Scotland, but so soon as he was able to do so he engaged the pastor of the village church to erect a fitting stone at the graves of his parents, where it may yet be seen, kept in order by the care of their descendants in tho distant state of Indiana. -This may also be a fitting place to mention that , Jessie Floyd languished and died while still quite young aud that her 'insolent brother, in his early manhood, was detected in a forgery of his father's name and escaping from arrest was killed in a drunken brawl. Mr. Floyd's miserly habits grew upon him so that his business fell away and in an effort to retrieve his waning fortune he entered upon, a series of unsuccessful speculations and finally died in poverty. The young slave visited the scene of his cruel apprenticeship in after years, when on a business trip to the city; but was unable to learn the fate of the family that contributed so much to the desolation of his boyhood life. The old warehouse, even, had been destroyed by fire and new buildings stood in its place where now still newer structures rear their loft'y walls not far from the water front Chapter iv. LIFE AT THE POST. Our two friends pushed leisurely but steadily onward, stopping for rest and refreshments at farm houses along the road, and the affection and admiration of each for the other grew as the days passed. Sammy John's narrations of his experiences, humorous or serious as the case might be, his bits of shrewd philosophy and his descriptions oV the country to which' they were bound were irresistabiy attractive to his young protege. The farms became less numerous and the road showed less indications of travel as the Delaware was left farther behind and one day, during a warm misty rain, a turn in the path around the jutting foot of a hill suddenly revealed a little stockaded fort in the middle of a clearing surrounded by dense forest. Here a warm welcome was waiting Sammy John and a kind reception was given Angus. The fort was held by an English captain and fourteen soldiers, whose red coats, stubbornly adhered to against the advice of the more experienced provincial officers, made them conspicuous marks in the contests with the Indians. The two way farers settled down for a good rest while waiting for the little pack train to come up, and Angus saw and heard much that was in teresting and instructive. He - was soon a great favorite with all the inhabitants, of the fort. The trader busied himself in gathering the latest information concerning the movements of the different tribes in the locality and in making . preparations for the next stage of the journey. In due season the merchandise arrived and the expedition, consisting of the merchant's party augmented by three or four woodmen, six soldiers and two friendly Indians; moved forward. The road now was not so clear and the log cabins of the few settlers were far apart. The party had to camp out at night and they depended-very largely upon hunting for their food. ' Reaching the beautiful Susquehanna river their
Corbly s Captivity
path lay up its. east bank through a very rugged and heavily wooded country until they came to the little settlement ofPaxton. which but a few years later was the scene of a horrid massacre by a ravaging band of Indians. Not far distant, at Harris's Ferry, now Harrisburg, the river was crossed and the next stage of the journey brought the travelers to the village of Carlisle, a little settlement of log cabins nestling al tne feet of the beautiful Blue mountains and centered upon a blockhouse or log fort, the refuge for all the little clearings around in ctse of alarm. Carlisle was Sam my John's trading station, established by him years before, and with the boy he rode directly to his log cabin, which was the largest structure in the town save the fort, dismissing the guard of soldiers and Indians to the block house with a message that he would visit there later. The first duty was to unload the packs and prepare sup per, the distance from the ferry having been traversed since that morning, and to this task the trader addressed himself, reject ing the boy's offer of assistance and casting his eye shrewdly about to discover if all things were as he left them. Angus busied himself with an inspection of his new home but had not proceeded far when the citizens of the village began dropping in to get from Sammy John the latest news from the great outer world and to impart such information as they had concerning the exciting movements of the English, French and Indians in Northern Pennsylvania. At that period the two European nations were engaged in a tremendous contest for empire in America and the stake was the magnificent valley of the Mississippi, the possibilities of which as a seat of future civilization were far more glorious than was ever dreamed of then. The trenty of Aix-la-Chapelle at the close of the war between England and France in 1744-9,did not settle the controversy as to the boundaries of the western possessions of the two nations . England claimed the right of extending her dominion indefinitely westward from the Atlantic colonies, whileFrance claimed the whole of the Mississippi valley, eastward to the Alleghanies. France had quietly and persistently established and strongly garrisoned fort after fort until every water approach to the great basin was guarded and the system comprised mission houses' and armed trading posts as well as forts. Frowning bastions at Frontenac, Niagara. Detroit, Michillimackinac and Sault St. Marie commanded the narrow passes of the great lakes and prohibited any but friendly naviga tion. Forts Presqu'Isle, Le Boeuf and Venango held the ap proach to the Ohio river by way of the Alleghany; Fort Sandusky held that by way of the Sciota, while the Wabash river route was barred by Fort Miami, Ouiateuon and v incennes and the route to the Mississippi through the Kankakee and Illinois tributaries lay past Fort St. Joseph. The south ern and western routes were like wise effectively protected against the English, "whose only open door to the coveted land -wasthrough the forbidding Alleghanies westward from the Susquehanna settlements. There they maintained three or four insuf ficiently maned block houses for the protection of settlers against the Indians and without any reference to the French. This route necessarily led past Fort Du Quesnt and thus that point, at the confluence of the Alleghany and Monongahela rivers, where Pittsburg's chimneys now smoke in peace, became the objective of the two contending nations and it was inevitable that a collision should there occur. The French were always much more adroit than the British (or the later Americans) in winning and holding the good will of the savasre tribes,, realizing what powerful allies the implacable reds would be mthe struggle that was to come. The British, always selfopinionated and overconfident, blindly and stubbornly allowed all thesepreparations o France to go forward before they could be aroused to the fact that they were locked out of the great northwest and that the Indians and French held the key. Then England awoke to her danger and sent George "Washington, then but 21 years of age, up the Monongahela and. Alleghany to Venango to ask the 'rencn omcer in command what he meant by maintaining an armed French force in English territory, to which the proper response was that he was ordered to be there
and could not question his orders, with -which answer Washington had to return to Virginia. The French retaliated by ordering the English traders to go bacK to the eastern side of the Alleghanies and to keep out of the dominion belonging toFrance Slightly more than a year after Washington's return from his mission to Fort Venango smould ering embers flamed into open warfare and the destiny of America hung upon its issue. The war was not confined to the forests of America, but its first gun was fired on the banks of Newfoundland and its ravaging
storm swept Europe and Asia before the latal battle ot woite and Montcalm on the heights of Abraham forced peace. Sammy John's cabin was not in the disputed territory, for he was a hundred miles east of the backbone of the Alleghanies, but the country round about him was infested by hordes oilndians who, if not friendly to the French, were angered at the aggressions of the English. The important and exciting news that he learned on the evening of his arrival at Carlisle with Angus was that Captain Trent, leading a detachment of Virginia rangers, had been unsuccessful in an attempt to establish a fort at the junction of the Alleghany and Monongahela, having been driven away by hosts of French and Indians who had descended the river from Venango; that Washington, with a similar small body of backwoods troops, had been halted' in an effort to support Trent and had, on adark and stormy night.brilliantly surprised a French reconnoitering party lurking in a rocky glen and captured them," but was compelled to retire to Great Meadows, just over the mountain ridge; that here he had been attacked in his entrenchments by a force of nine hundred French and Indians and had defended himself through a whole day and into the night, but was forced by lack of supplies to surrender and was permitted to return to Virginia; and that the Indians all along the frontiers were very much excited by these events and their attitude toward the English seemed quite unfriendly everywhere. A wave of uueasiness was passing eastward from the border and its disturbance reached almost toPhiladelphia before it subsided. Sammy John went over to tne fort that evening and had a long consultation with the lieutenant in command, returning with that self satisfied young ofiicer's assurance that Carlisle was entirely safe in his hands, but with a re served opinion that more troops and a stronger building would be more reassuring than the officer seem ed willing to admit. Nevertheless, with the morrow he and Angus began their preparations tor the season's business operations and they were very happy together. There was very much for a bright and wide-eyed boy to see and learn in an exposed frontier town in those daysand Ansrus stored his memory with tales of exciting adventure that his children and his children's children heard eagerly long aft er. - Of course Angus was faith fnl tn his new master and he grew and expanded under the genial influences about him and readily drew to himself the warm affections of the rougn bacKwoodsmen and their families as well as the reckless soldiers at the fort. There was much to do, for Sammv John drove a thriv ing trade with the settlers, the roving fur traders and the Indi ans themselves, and there was much merchandise to be measured out and many packs of skins to be counted in. With all his work and his new and strange experiences the boy never ceas ed to long for the coming of the letter from Lome that he never doubted would reach him. in the fall or winter. As the long summer passed the Indians about Carlisle and throughout the- Susquehanna valley increased in restlessness and hostility to the "whites. These Indians were Delawares, whose long-established friendliness for the French was intensified by-the belief that their ancient oppressors, the Iroquois, were inclined to an English alli ance and by the further fact that the English settlers and traders as a rule treated- them with fierce and contemptuous cruelty and when remonstrated with for encroaching upon the Indian hunting grounds replied with curses, threats, and murder. Sammy John was one of the very few Englishmen m all that region whose kind and sympathetic treatment had won the respect and affection of. the persecuted red men and he frequently said that the wrongs and abuses heaped upon those children of the forest would some day bring a fearful retribution. The situation was more hopelessly complicated that same summer by the Hi-timed news that a large part of the lands of the Delawares had been sold to the rapacious Pennsylvania colony by their oppressors, the Iroquois, without consent or even consultation with the rightful owners; and then came the disturbing rumors that the Iroquois themselves were listening to the
"evil birds" sent by the French and were lukewarm in their attachment to the English, in spite of a weak treaty of alliance that had been consummated at a coun
cil held at Albafiy. Several times the little settlement atf Carlisle was thrown into wild alarm by the sudden rush of ter-ror-strickenfarmersand their fam ilies seeking the protection of the stockaded fort against ravening bands of Indians, and once a swirling column of smoke told that the savage torch had been applied to an out-lying cabin and shortly L after the scalped and bleeding corpse of the pioner was brought in by a detachment of soldiers sent to investigate. hen the corn was ripe and ready for the harvest a little settlement of Germans and Irish on the banks of the Juniata north of Carlisle was utterly destroyed by an Indian raid and the inhabitants were slaughtered in their cabins as they slept. Even the ""rigors of a severe Pennsylvania winter did not deter the desperate and relentless savages from committing oc casional hostile acts and skulking about in small bands for the pur pose of devastation. Late one cold and blustering night of that December the oc cupants of a farmhouse on the road from Carlisle to the Susque hanna river were aroused by the awful war-whoop and after a vain resistance were overcome by a party of twelve young braves and ruthlessly scalped and tomahawk ed in the light of the burning cabin, but were not permitted to die without having first been tortured with fiendish ingenuity. The miserable victims were stripped and bound, the farmer, his wife, one son and a guest lodging there for the night, and coals of fire and flaming sticks were thrust into their faces and against their bodies and if one cried out in anguish some laughing savage applied glowing coals, saying "Your eyes are wet; see, I will dry them fur you." The guest who perished there in agony that mght bore the letter that Angus was impatient to re ceive and the letter was destroyed ! in the burning cabin. Chapter v. BRADDOCIvS DEFEAT. When the long blustering win ter at last broke away and the warmth of spring began to steal over the land the mind of Sam my John was disturbed with a plan that he knew not how to effect. The certainty that war was about to come between Eng land and France weighed upon him heavilv. for he felt that his services were due his king and he was conscientious in his patriotism as in everything else, but he knew hot how to dispose of his young ward. He knew that he could sell his business and he was willing for his coun trys sake to postpone his purpose of returning permanently to the coast colonies, but be could see no way to leave the boy safely in the west and it was impossible to send him to strangers in the east. It was clearly impracticable to take the youngster into the military campaigns that he proposed for himself. Besides, he could not contemplate with calmness the prospect of a separation from his young friend, especially in view of the uncertainties that war involved. While he ye- brooded over his perplexing problem came the news from over the mountains on the south that General Braddock had taken command of all the British forces in America aud was preparing for a descent upon Du Quesne, where the French were fortified at the union of the two rivers forming the Ohio. Then it became known that the Indians were, gathering to support the French in maintaining the line of forts from Du Quesne-to Presquer Isle and that the French were re-enforcing the threatened posts. Quickly came the further intelligence that Braddock was in need of a body of provincial troops,, in addition to the regulars he had brought from England, and that Major Washington, an unknown young Virginian, was to command them. These forces were already gathered at Will's- Creek, on the upp. r Potomac, where the raw beißt woodsmen were to be bent and twisted into ;some sort of discipline resembling that of the solid regulars. At Carlisle the talk was of nothing out the war and Braddoek's expedition. . Many of the younger men started at once to join it or declared their intention of doing so md it was expected that the garrison at the fort would be ordered into the field, leaving the inhabitants to protect themselves while the hostile Indians were with the French. (TO BE CONTINUED.) "I wish to truthfully state to you and the readers of these few line that your Kodol Djipepeia Cure ia without question, the best and only cure for dyspepsia that I baye ever coma in contact with and I have used many other preparations. John tJeam, West Middlesex, Pa. No preparations equals Kodol Dyspepsia Cure as it contains all the natural digestanter It will digest all kinds ot food and can't help but do y-u ffo)i. J W. Hsss, "
You can hardly straighten up, the back feels so sore. There's a chance that it is kidney "trouble," and that is something which it is dangerous to negiert. The best medicine for disease of the kidneys is Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. The use of this medicine has resulted in some remarkable cures. It increases the activity of the blood-making glands, purifies the blood and relieves the kidneys from clogging impurities. I feel it my duty to let you know that I have recently advised a young gentleman who was suffering badly with kidney and bladder disease to try vour 'Golden Medical Discovery, writes Frank Startz, M. D., of Flatonia, Fayette Co., Texas. "He bought four bottles from our druggist here, and after he had used the first bottle he began to improve. Sometimes he was unable to walk ten steps; now he can ride any horse without any pain in his back and he looks as well and sound as a young boy. His age is only 38. He has suffered for nearly three years, and several other doctors called the case incurable, but I had confidence in Dr. R. V. Fierce's Golden Medical Discovery. I have been offered one hundred dollars several times already for my kind advice, but I would not accept it because I want everybody to know what Dr. Pierce's famous medfeine can do. "This testimony is absolutely true, and the reason I haven't mentioned the young gentleman's came is because he don't want to have his name published.'' Accept no substitute for "Golden Medical Discovery." The sole motive for substitution is to enable the dealer to make the little more profit paid on the sale of less meritorious preparations. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets stimulate the action of the sluggish liver. They should always be used with w Discovery n when there is need of a laxative. A. Curious Tree. There Is a curious combination tree In West Stockbridge, Mass. It is primarily a maple which measures, a foot from the ground. 12 feet 3 inches in circumference. Fifteen feet from the ground there are one or two birch limbs growing, and higher up are currant and raspberry bushes which bear fruit each year. It is not stated whether the sugar made from its sap has a raspberry flavor, or the birch bark a currant color and taste, or the berries a spicy tang of birch. It is very old and bids fair to stand for many years longer. 'I am usice a box of Chamberlaio'e Stomach Sc Liver tablets aod find tbem the heet tbicg f r my stomach I ever used." save V. W. R )biceon. Justice of the pence, Loomie, Mich. These tablets not only correct disordera of the etomacb but regulate the liver aod bowels. They are easy to take and pleasant in e fleet Price 25 cents per box. For sale by J. W. He6s. The Unman Jaw. The huma jaw is very loosely socketed in the skull, so that it is often dislocated by the mere act of yawning. Not being Intended for biting purposes, offensive or defensive, no attention seems to have been paid by nature to making It fest. It ie eaeier to keep well than get cured. DeWitt'a Little Early Risers taken now acd then, will always keep your bowels in perfect order. They never eripe but promote an eaey gentle action. J. W. Hess. There's Etiquette In All Trades. A lady who imprudently explained to a fishmonger the other day that her purchase was intended for the cat's dinner was little hurt at receiving It wrapped up in a newspaper. I understood, as it wasn't for yourself, mum. replied the fishmonger loftily, "we never wraps up in brown when it's for cats!" London Chronicle. Cut this out and take it to Hess'e drug store aod get a box of Chamberlain's etomach'and liver tablets. The best pbyetc. They also correct disorders of ihe stomach. Price 23 cents. Queer Land Tenures. Some of the tenures In England are very curious. A farm near Broadhouse, in Yorkshire, pays annually to the landlord a snowball in midsummer and a red rose at Christmas. The manor of Foston Is held by a rental cf two arrows and a loaf of bread. An estate In the north of England Is held by the exhibition before a court every seven years of a certain rase owneTl by the family, another in Suffolk by an annual rental of two white doves. , The Same Old Story. J. A. Kelly relates an experience Eimi lar tn that which has haDnened in al most every neighborhood in the United States and has been tola ana re told oy thousands of others. He save: "Last summer I had an attack of ayeentery and purchased a bottle or UDamoeriain s uoiic. Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy, which I used according to directions and with entirely satisfactory result?. The trouble was controlled much quicker than frtrmr nttar-ks when I used other remedifts.' Mr. Kelly is a well known citizen of Henderson, N. C. For sale by J. w , tiees. A Pot "Walloper. The parliamentary register for 1S96 showed that there was then only onepot walloper ia all England. One seeing the term, for the first time might easily imagine that a pot walloper was a species of ichthyosaurus or some other reptile of a past age. " It will be disccveied upon inquiry, however, that the tern- pot walloper" Is literally one who boils a pot and was applied to Toters in certain boroughs of England where before the passage of the reform bill of 1S32, the qualifications for suffrage was to hare boiled (walloped) his own pot in the parish for six months. 3 O c If you Knew how SCOTT'S EMULSION would build ycu up, increase your weight, strengthen your wes!; thro-t cr.d lungs and put you in condition for next winter, yea would begin to take it now. Send for free sample, and try it CCOTT-A DOW NC, Chemists, - 409.415 rean street, Kew York. O 50c. andi.oo; all druggists. oi 3Ü
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PROFESSIONAL, CARDS A. C. HOLTZ EN DORFF C. F. HO LTZEN DORFF, Physicians and Surgeons, Oomer Michigan scd Jefferson Street Night calls answered. DR. I. BOWEIR, Physician and Surgeon 315 N. Michigan St., PLYMOUTH, IND.
Br. F. M. BTJRKET, DENTIST Office over Plymouth State Baak, Michigan St Plyrrjouth, Indiarja. MONEY AT FIVE TODAY. It costs nothing to Call or Write. 5i, 53c JOHN G. GftPRON, Packard Bik J0UX W. TAUKS, having completed the course of Bachelor of Laws" at ona of the best law schools In the United States and having had 24 years experiesce in the active practice of law, is a guarantee of fitness as a lawyer. Deeds, mortgages, wills and other legal instruments carefully drawn, estates and guardianships settled, practice in all courts. Office First Moor Park's La Building, Plymouth, Ind. ITonderUnd 1901. The annual publication of the North Pacific Railway will be found a distinct advance, in some reepecta, upon even its immediate predecessor Wonderland 19C0. Its cover designs and eight chapter headings are by Alfred Lenz, of New York, from plaetique models and are splendid exam plea of art. There is within the covers of the book historical matter some of it new, as well as purely defecrictire narrative. The three principal chapters relate to th. history of the unique Northern Pacific Trademark, the Custer Battlefield in Montana, and Yellowstone Park. Each is profusely illustrated, the Trademark chapter in colors. This trademark is of Chinese origin and is 5,000 years old. Its story is a EtraDge one. It is safe to say that Wonderland 1001 will be in greater demand than any preceding volume of the Wonderland family, and, as heretofore it will be sent by Chas. S. Fee. St, Paul, Minn., to any ad. dress upon receipt of the postage, six cents. Brick and Tile Mill with 30 horse power engine, only six years old. Cost $2,600, includes kilms. Will take 8500 cash. J. A. MOLTER, Plymouth, Indiana. EXCURSIONS. ON AND AFTER FEBRUARY 1st uie rjuill run land excursions, at special rates, on the 1st and 3rd Tuesdays of each month, to the finest farming country in Arkansas. Don't delay as these lands are fast being taken up. For particulars call or write, EDWIN H. C0RB1N, General Agent, Corbin Block. Plymouth, Ind., mm tu, :;;f Natw temperance leverage nnnrsi WIM Make it at hone. Sold eTerj"bre in 26c. packape, which make Lrt gallon each. CIIABLF E. HIRES C ttalvcr,l'a. THE GREAT PflN-flMtRIGflN EXPOSITION BUFFALO, N. Y. MAY TO NOVüMBER, 1901. Make arrangemeucs now for your summer vacation, and join one of the special low rate personally conducted excursions...... VIA THE Late Erie & Western The Pioneer Niagara Falls Excursion Route. Both shows this year for one admission. For full particulars, call on apents Lake Erie & Western It. R or address O. F. DALV . General Passenger Agent, INDIANAPOLIS INDIANA (Jmm and bsaat ..it th haiz. tVoaaot a luxuriant gmrth. Zlvrer falls 9 Bectore Gray Jl&ir t Its 1 r-et&fal CcIt. PjttiU Dentavf and hair a:ii.-.f Sfto. i e U-4 at Itt.. 1-.
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