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MINNESOTA 

HISTORICAL 

SOCIETY.        I 


DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD 


ror'KTKFXTH     VKAK. 


MONhAV.    >FAlirii    ir,.    isj>7. 


THE  WEATHER. 
Fair      tonight      and 
Tuesday;      warmer; 
t'-morroto    Southioest 
winds 


SATISFYING  SUITS. 

There's  positive  merit  in  our 
$9.45  Suits  —  it  shows  itself 
upon  hasty  examination. 

They're  not  back  numbers, 
polished  up  to  catch  the  j^ulli- 
ble,  but  good,  honest,  service- 
able, up-to-date  Suits.  We 
have  them  in  Cheviots,  Tweeds 
Cassimeres,  Homespuns  and 
Worsteds  in  all  fashionable 
patterns  and  prevailing  colors. 
The  styles  of  them  are  correct. 
They  have  a  finished  appear- 
ance, and  one  t  els  comf  rtable 
in  them.  We  sold  tht  m  freely 
in  early  winter  at  $12,  $13,  $14 
and  $15.  Ev«ry£?  purchaser  was 
satisfied  that  ^  i  got  full  value 
for  his  mone;?  if  he  was  or  is 
not,  his  mc^;y  will  be  paid 
back.     Now  f  ou  can  buy  the 

Suit  that  he  was  satisfied  to  pa  1 515  for,  at  $9.45, 

and  on  the  same  terms. 


FIVE    O'CLOCK     EDITION. 


President   McKlnley's   First 

Address    to   Coni^ress 

Was  Very  brief. 


Decreasing   Revenues    ond 

Increasing  Debt  Strongly 

Pointed  Out. 


Extra  Session  oF  the  Fifty- 
Fifth  Congress  Assem- 
bled at  Noon. 


Wore  Revenue  a  Necessity 

—A     Tariff    Law     Most 

Urgently  Demanded. 


■en's 
and  Boys' 
Ootfitters. 


Williamson  &  Mendenhall. 


125-127 

West  Supsrior 
Street. 


L.  MENDENHALL 


ESTABLISHED  1869. 


T.  W.  HOOPES. 


Mendenhall  &  Hoopes 

FlRaT  N4T10NAL  BANK  BUILDING. 

$12,500.00  to  Loan  on  Improved  Property. 


Commercial  Light  &  Power  Co. 

(SuccMsort  to  Hartman  General  Electric  Co.) 

FURNISH 
ELECTRIC  CURRENT 

FOR  LIGHT  AND  POWER. 

OFFICES— Rooms  4.  5  and  6.  216  West  Superior  street,     -     -     -    Oulutli,  Minn. 


MISSISSIPPI     FLOODS'.  |  second  Ooors.    Rains  and  continued  ria 


Raining  at   Memphis  and  the 
Situation  is  Worse. 

Memphis.  Tenn..  Mart  h  IG.— The  day 
dawned  dark  and  Klooniy  for  the  home- 
less inhabitants  of  the  flood  stricken 
districts  in  the  territory  near  this 
point.  Rain  began  falling  shortly  after 
7  o'clock  and  at  this  hour  is  coming 
down  in  torrents,  adding  to  the  misery 
and  suffering  already  caused  by  the 
overflowing  of  the  streams. 

The  work  of  rescuing  people  and 
stock  continues,  and  is  being  conducted 
systematically.  A  citizen's  relief  com- 
mittee has  been  organized,  boats  char- 
tered and  funds  raised.  By  these 
means  hundreds  of  head  of  stock  and 
almost  as  many  men,  women  and  chil- 
dren have  been  rescued  from  house 
and  tr€'e  tops  in  the  overflowed  district 
and  brought  to  this  city  by  harbor  tow 
boat.s,  with  barges  attached.  The 
gauge  here  is  26.3,  a  rise  of  one  foot 
in  twenty-four  hours  and  all  indica- 
tions point  towards  a  further  rise. 

News  comes  today  of  the  partial 
breaking  of  the  St.  Francis  levee,  .^^ixty 
miles  above  Memphis,  at  a  point  near 
the  south  end  of  the  levee.    Just  what 


in-g  are  reported  from  up  river  pointi;, 
and  the  water  will  certainly  reach 
forty-five  and  possibly  forty-seven  feet 
tomorrow  or  next  day.  This  will  be  one 
of  the  highest  records  made  since  tlu 
weather  bureau  was  established. 


OX  THE  TENNESSEE. 
Chattanooga,  Tenn..  March  l.i.— The 
Tennessee  river  at  this  noint  at  nooii 
registred  37.6  feet  and  is  falling  at  the 
rate  of  .05  per  hour.  It  will  probablv 
become  stationary  tonight,  but.  owii.^ 
to  heavy  rains,  will  probably  reach 
forty  feet  by  Wednesday  mornig. 

CROOKSTON  LAND  OFFICE. 

Candidates   For  Register  and 
Receiver  Are  Numerous. 

Washington,  March  15.— (Special  to  i 
The  Herald.)— There  are  a  number  of' 
candidates  for  register  and  receiver  of 
the  Crookston  land  office  who  have 
filed  papers  at  the  interior  department. 
-Among  them  are  Jud'ge  Montague, 
Messrs.  Walsh,  Palmer.  A.  F.  Oeorgv.- 
and  H.  George,  of  Crookston.  and  Syl- 
vester Peterson,  of  Ada.  The  term  of 
Receiver  Anglim  will  expire  in  June, 
and  by  reason  of  the  failure  of  the  con- 


but    local    steamer  captains   say   great 
additional  suffering  and  loss  will  result. 


damage  will   result  cannot  be  foretold.  '  nrmation  of  Joseph  Smith  there  is  now 
" ""'    '  a  vacancy  in  the  office  of  register. 

Representative  Eddy,  at  an  interview 
with  Secretary  Bliss  today,  recommend- 
ed the  appointment  of  Sylvester  Peter- 
son as  register  at  Crookston  to  succeed 
Smith.  Plis  endorsement  will  probably 
prevail,  and  Peterson  will  shortly  hv 
nominated.  Eddy  will  endorse  A.  F. 
George  for  receiver  when  the  present 
incumbent's  term  expires. 

BAD  TRAIN  WRECK. 

Several  Killed  and  Six  Others 
Injured. 

St.  Louis,  March  15.— At  the  head- 
quarters of  the  Missouri  Pacific  railway 
in  this  city  the  wreck  of  passenger  train 
No.  1.  which  left  Kansas  City,  Mo.,  at 
9:1»  o'ckKk  last  night,  is  reported  to 
have  occurred  a  mile  and  a  half  cast  01 


SITUATION  AT  ST.  LOUIS. 
St.  Louis,  March  15.— The  weather 
here  is  cool,  hazy  and  threatening.  Re- 
ports made  by  the  weather  bureau  in- 
dicate that  the  Mississippi  and  Mis- 
souri rivers  above  herf>  are  at  present 
either  stationary  or  falling  slightly. 
Here  the  Mississippi  river  will  con- 
tinue to  decline  only  for  the  next  thir- 
ty-six hours,  while  the  Missouri  will 
commence  to  rise  west  of  Hermann. 


PASSED  THE  DANGER  LIMIT. 
Nashville,  Tenn..  March  15.— Although 
there  is'  no  rain  the  Cumberland  river 
has  been  steadily  rising  and  will  con- 
tinue to  rise.  Last  night  forty-one  feet 
was  reached,  the  danger  limit  being 
forty  feet,  and  mefchants  along  por- 
tions of  the  river  front  are  removing 
g<x»ds.  Cellars  in  portions  of  the  city 
have  been  flooded  and  many  citizens 
have  been  forced  to  abandon  their 
homes. 


LIVES  MAY  BE  LOST. 
Nodena,  Ark..  March  15.— The  break 
of  the  St.  Francis  is  more  serious  than 
at  first  reported.  The  water  has  a  tall 
of  twenty-five  feet  and  rushetl  upon 
the  people  of  the  low  lands  behind  the 
Uvee  in  almost  a  solid  wall.  It  is  ex- 
pected that  many  lives  will  be  lost.  The 
city  of  Osceola  saved  many  people  who 
had  been  washed  out  of  their  homes  by 


Washington,  March  15.— The  presi- 
dent's message  was  sent  to  congress 
late  this  afternoon,  contrary  to  expec- 
tations. It  was  devoted  to  the  necessity 
of  securing  more  revenue  for  the  con- 
duct of  the  business  of  the  government. 
P'ollowing  is  the  text  of  the  message: 

To  the  congre.ss  of  the  I'nited  States: 
Regretting  the  necessity  which  has  re- 
quired  me  to  call   you   together.   J    foci 
that  your  assembling  in  extraordinary 
session  is  indispensable  because  of  the 
(•onditi(»n  in  which  we  find  the  revenues 
of  the  •government.     It  is  conceded  that 
its   current  t-xpenditures     are     greater 
than  its  receipts,  and  that  such  a  condi- 
tion   has    existed    for    now    more    than 
three  years.     With  unlimited  means  at 
our    command,  we  are     presenting  the 
remarkable  spectacle  of  increasing  our 
public     debt    by    borrov.ing     mcmey    to 
meet     the     ordinary     outlays     incident 
upon  even  an  economical  and   prudent 
administration  of  the  government.     An 
examination    of     the    subjt-ct    discloses 
this   tact  in  every  detail   and   leads  in- 
evitai)ly  to  the  condusicm  that  the  con- 
j  dition  of  the  revenue  which  allows  it  is 
I  unjLisiiiiablc  and  should  be  corrected. 
'      We  find   by   the  reports  of  the  secre- 
\  tary  of  the  treasury  that  the  revenues 
I  for  the  fiscal  year  ending  June  30.  189_'. 
from    all    sourc-es,    were    $425,868,260.22. 
and   th(^  expenditures  for  all   purposes 
were    $415,»53,S06.56,    leaving    an    excess 
of    receipts    over    expenditures    of    $9,- 
914.453.66.     During  that  fiscal  year,  $40,- 
570,467.98    were    paid    upon    the    public 
debt,    which   has   been     reduced     since 
March   1.  1889.  $259,076,890,   and   the  an- 
nual   interest    charge    decreased    $11,- 
684.576.60. 

The  receipts  f)f  the  government  from 
all  sources  during  the  fi.scal  year  end-  | 
mg  June  30.  1S93.  amounted  to  $461,716.-  j 
.561.94.  and  its  expenditures  to  $4,59,374-  i 
887.65  showing  an  excess  of  receipts  i 
over  expenditures  of  $2,341,674.29.  Since  i 
that  time  the  receipts  of  no  fiscal  year.  | 
and  Willi  but  few  exceptions  of  no 
month  of  any  fiscal  year,  have  exceed- 
ed the  expenditures.  The  receipts  of  | 
the  government  from  all  sources  during  | 
the  fiscal  year  ending  June  30,  1894  1 
were  $372,892,498.29.  and  its  expenditures  | 
$442.605.7.58.87.  leaving  a  deficit  the  first  ' 
since  the  resumption  of  specie  pay- 
ments of  $69,803.260..58. 

Notwithstanding  there  was  a  decrease 
of  $16,769,123.78  in  the  ordinary  expenses 
of  the  government  as  comnared  with 
the  previous  fiscal  year,  its  income  wa.« 
still  not  sufficient  to  provide  for  its 
daily  necessities,  and  the  gold  reserve 
I  in  the  treasury  for  the  redemption  of 
greenbacks  was  drawn  uoon  to  meet 
them.  But  this  did  not  suffice,  and  the 
I  government  then  resorted  to  loans  to 
replenish  the  reserve.  In  February. 
1894.  $.50,000,000  in  bonds  were  issued 
and  in  November  following  a  second 
issue  of  $50,OtXt,000  was  deemed  nect^b- 
.«ary. 

The  sum  of  $117,171,795  was  realized  I 
by  the  sale  of  these  bond.s.  but  the  re-  i 
serve  was  steadily  decreased  until  Feb-  | 
ruary  8.  1895,  a  third  sale  of  $62,315,400 
in  bonds,  for  $65,116,244  was  announced  ! 
to  congress.  The  receipts  of  the  gov- 
ernment   for   the    fiscal    year   June    30,  > 

1895,  were  $390,373,203.30  and  the  expen-  I 
ditures  $4:53.178,426.48.  showing  a  deficit  ■ 
of  $42,805,223.18.  A  further  loan  of  $100,-  i 
000,000  was  negotiated  by  the  govern-  I 
ment  in  February.  1896.  the  sale  net-  | 
ting  $111,166,246  and  swelling  the  aggre-  1 
gate  of  bonds  issued  within  three  years  ! 
to  $262,315,400.  For  the  fiscal  year,  end-  , 
ing  June  30.  1896,  the  revenues  of  the  j 
government  from  all  sources,  amounted  I 
to  $409, 47.5. 40S. 78.  while  its  expenditures  ' 
were  $434,678,654.48,  or  an  excess  of  ex- 
penditures over  receipts  of  $25,203,245.-  j 
70.  I 

In  other  words  the  total  receipts  for  ! 
the   three   fiscal    year   ending   June   30.  | 

1896,  were  insufficient  by  $137,811,729.46. 
to  meet  the  total     expenditures.      Nor 
has  the  condition  since  improved.     For  ! 
the  first  half  of  the  present  fiscal  year.  ' 
the  receipts  of  the  government,  exclu-  ' 
sive  of  postal  revenues,  were  $1.57,507,-  , 
603.76.  and  Its  expenditures  exclu.sive  of 
postal  .service,  $195,410,000.22.  or  an  ex- 
cessof  expendituresover  receipts  of  %'i~,-  ; 
902,396.46.     In  January  of  this  year  the 
receipts,   exclusive   of   postal   revenues, 
were  $24,316,994.05  and  the  expenditures,  j 
exclusive  of  postal  service.  $30,269,389.29, 
a  deficit  of  $5,952,396.24  for  the  month. 

In   February   of   this  year,    the   receipts, 
exclusive    of    postal    revenues,    were    $21.-  ' 
4tX).397.o8.    and    expenditures,    exclusive    of  ; 
j  postal    revenues.    $28. 796. tX^. 66  '    "   •' 


minins  jind  building:  'Hiil  to  romlor  to  la- 
bor ill  every  Mi>l.i  of  useful  occupatl«in 
the  hhor.il  wages  ami  adtHpi.-Ue  n'Wiinls 
to  wl.lich  skill  and  industry  are  iiistlv 
tnt'tleil. 

The  necessity  of  the  passage  of  a  tar- 
iff law  which  shall  provide  ampip  reve- 
nue ne<d  not  be  further  urjueil.  The  im- 
perative demand  of  the  hour  Is  the 
prompt  enaetment  of  such  a  measur. 
and  to  this  object  I  earnestly  recommend 
that  congress  shall  make  every  en- 
deavor. Before  other  business  is  trans- 
y.Vul  't;*  "*"  provide  sufficient  revenue  to 
fa.thfully  administer  the  government 
\\ithout  the  contracting  «>f  further  debt 
or  the  continued  disturbance  of  ou' 
finances. 

WILLI.AM    McKINLEV. 
IiiXecutive  Mansion,   Abirch  1.").  1897, 

POSTMASTERSMTERMS. 

Department  Will  Stick  to  the  Vice  President  Hobart  Called 
Four  Year  Plan.  j      the    Senate  to    Order 

Washington,    March    14.-Postmaster  PrOmDtIV  at  NoOn 

General    Gaiy    made    the    definite    an-  i^UUII. 

n«»uncement  today  that  the  adminis- 
tration after  deliberation  has  decided 
to  adhere  to  the  four  year  tenure  of 
office  policy  for  all  postmasters.  He 
stated,  that  except  in  a  few  cases, 
where  removel  for  cause  was  refjuired 
on  account  of  deli<iueney,  incompe- 
tency or  other  instances  of  un.satis- 
factory  conduct  or  administration  of 
the  office,  all  postma.sters.  fourth  class 
as  well  as  those  of  presidential  ap- 
pointment, would  be  allowed  to  .serve 
a  term  of  four  years. 

This  official  statement  of  policy,  one 
of  the  most  important  so  far  determ- 
ined upon  by  the  administration,  has 
been  awaited  with  great  interest  by 
the  entire  corps  of  postmasters  and 
by  the  patrons  of  the  70,675  post  offices 
throughout  the  country. 


TWO  CEXTS. 


TO  HANG  TOGETHER. 

Walling    and  Jackson  to   Die 
Next  Saturday. 

Cincinnati,  Ohio,  March  15.— The 
Times-Star's  special  from  Frankfori. 
Ky..  says:  Alonzo  Walling  will  hang 
with  Scott  Jack.son  on  March  20,  all 
the  Dublished  storie.^  to  the  contrary 
notwithstanding.  The  governor  fin- 
ished his  long  study  of  the  case  today 
at  noon  and  announced  that  he  wouiii 
officially  pass  on  the  matter  tonight  at 
7  o'clock.  He  will  write  "refused" 
across  the  l»ack  of  tht-  oetition,  and 
tnM)ps  are  already  under  marching 
orders  to  Campbell  county,  March  1!) 
the  day  before  the  double  hanging. 

A  GREAT  Fi.Y  CAST. 
San  Francisco.  March  15.— Walter 
Mansfield  has  broken  the  world's  record 
at  the  San  Francisto  fly-casting  clul) 
tournament.  He  droi)|ied  his  fly  in  the 
waters  of  Stow  lake  IdS^^  feet  from  the 
wharf,  where  he  stood.  His  rod  weighed 
nine  ounces  and  was  ten  feet  lon^. 
When  the  marker  announced  thai 
Mansfield  had  passed  the  108  foot  mark, 
the  world's  record  until  then  having 
been  102Vj,  feet,  there  was  a  wild  yeJ! 
and  a  rush  for  the  champion.  He  was 
seized,  thrown  upon  the  shoulders  of  as 
many  as  could  -get  hold  of  him,  anc' 
amid  cheers  and  congratulations  was 
carried  up  and  down  the  bank  of  the 
lake  for  several  minutes. 


Major  McDowell  Rapped  the 

House  to  Silence-  -Reed 

Chosen  Speaker. 


ST.\TE  OF  THE  RIVERS. 
Washington.  March  15.— The  following 
changes  in  the  rivers  (in  feet  and 
tenths)  have  occurred:  Risen:  Nash- 
ville. 2.1;  Memphis,  0.3;  Vicksburg,  OG- 
Augusta.  1.3.  They  are  above  the  dan- 
ger line  and  rising  at  Cacion,  9.0;  Nash- 
ville, 1.6;  Memphis,  3.3.  They  are  abovc 
the  danger  line  and  falling  at  Louis- 
ville. 0.9:  Chattanooga.  4.9.  The  river  at 
Vicksburg  is  0.5  below  the  danger  line 
and  rising;  at  Memphis  it  is  0.7  abovt 
the  highest  record  for  any  previous 
lear. 


Washington,  March  15.— There  was 
an  abundance  of  flowers  on  the  desks  of 
senators  today  when  promptly  at  12 
o'clock  Mr.  Hobart  called  the  senate  to 
order.  There  was  an  exceptionally  full 
attendance  of  senators.  The  public 
galleries  were  packed,  and  the  reserved 
galleries  well  filled.  The  chaplains 
opening  prayer  invoked  divine  grace 
and  blessing  on  the  senators  and  mem- 
bers now  about  to  take  up  the  work  of 
the  extraordinary  session,  and  on  the 
president  and  vice  president.  The  roll 
call  disclosed  the  presence  of  sixty, 
eight  senator.s.  ^ 

The  new  senator  from  Kansas.  W.  A 
Harris,  took  the  oath  of  office.     Mr   Mc" 

Hni  '.-''L^''^^""'  P'-^sented  the  creden. 
tials  of  Henry  W.  Corbett.  appointed  by 
the  governor  of  Oregon  to  fill  the  'a- 
cancy  caused  by  the  failure  to  elect  a 
successor  to  Mi.  Mitchell,  of  Oregon 
lu^  ^xl^l^''^,"/^  certificate  was  read,  and 
Ml.  McBride  requested  that  the  new 
senator  be  sworn  in  if  there  be  no  ob. 
jection,  but  Mr.  Gray  said  some  un- 
usual circumstances  attended  the  ap- 
pointment, and  that  the  credentials 
should  be  scrutinized.  He  moved  the 
credentials  be  referred  to  the  commit- 
tee  on  privileges  and  elections,  and  it 
prevailed  by  unanimous  vote 

Mr.  Hoar  and  Mr.  Cockrell  were 
named  as  a  committee  to  wait  on  the 
president  and  inform  him  that  congress 
was  in  session  and  ready  to  receive  any 
communication  from  him.  The  senate 
then,  at  12:20,  took  a  recess  until  2 
o  clock. 

HOUSE  ASSEMBLES. 

Many    Changes  Noted  in  the 
Roll  Call. 


It's  the  easiest  thing  in  the  world 
To  sell  flerchandise 

When  you  have  the  ^oods  to  sell,  and  the  kind  of  Me r- 
chandise  that  people  want  to  buy,  and  at  prices  where  the 
retail  will  averag^e  less  than  some  merchants  pay  for  them 
at  wholesale.     Conditions  of  this  kind  confront 

The  Big 

Glass  Block  Store 

Consequentlv  it  must  benefit  the  masses.  We  well  know 
this  small  profit,  quick  selling  s>stem  of  ours  may  hurt 
some,  but  for  one  it  hurts  it  benefits  fifty.  To  find  out  for 
V  oursflves  whether  this  is  correct  or  not,  visit  the  Big 
Store  at  any  hour  of  the  day  in  the  week,  then  visit  some 
of  the  high  priced,  small  business  houses  and  count  noses* 
the  test  will  demonstrate  to  you  this  is  the  store  of  the 
people  and  for  the  people.  This  is  what  we  will  do  for  you 

Tuesday  and  Wednesday. 

TORCHON  LACES, 


Linen  Dept. 


CHINAS  NEW  POST.\L  SERVICE. 
Washington.  March  lo.-Offlcial  an- 
nouncement has  reached  here  that  the 
new  postal  system  of  China,  which  re- 
placed the  crude  i)riv;ite  courier  .service 
went  into  operation  on  Feb.  20.  The  now' 
service  is  ba.sed  on  the  lines  of  the  Brit- 
ish postal  .service  and  is  now  under  the 
direction  of  a  British  offlcial  located  at 
London,  who  has  been  desiRnated  com- 
missioner of  the  imperial  Chinese  cus- 
toms. The  postofflce  established  bv  the 
I  nited  States  and  a  number  of  foreign 
countries  in  several  cties  of  the  empire 
for  the  benefit  of  their  respective  colo- 
nie.«.  will  remain  in  operation  until  the 
new  service  is  in  good  working  order. 

THE  OREGON  SKNATORSHIP. 
Portland.  Ore.,  March  l.-,._The  OreKo- 
nian  .sviy...-:  The  a.s.sertion  that  comes 
from  Wa.shington  that  Senator  Mitchells 
iriends  offered  to  compromise  the  .-^ena- 
\?'V,\\^  content  by  the  election  of  George 
}} "  V'lV''-  S"'-  HIrsch.  Binger  Herman,  J. 
.•  ^;!"<'J"ton.  M.  C.  George.  Stephen  A. 
J.oyell.  Robert  La  kit  or  any  other  Re- 
publican in  good  standing,  is  without 
foundation.  The  Mitchell  party  insist  on 
iMitchell  and  no  one  else.  The  opposition 
to  him  offered  to  allow  his  supporters  to 
name  the  candidate  only  stipulating  th.it 
be  be  a  sound  Republican  and  a  gold 
standard  man.  Twenty  Republicans 
signed  an  agreement  to  this  effect  and 
submitted  the  same  to  a  circle  of  Mit- 
chells supporters  but  it  was  rejected, 
they  insisting  on  getting  Senator  Mitchell 
or  no  senator. 


IRELAND  AT  WASHINGTON. 
Washington,  March  1.').— (Special  10 
The  Herald.)— Archbishop  Ireland,  of 
St.  Paul,  arrived  in  Washington  todav. 
It  is  said  that  he  is  here  to  take  a  hand 
in  the  Minnesota  Republican  patronagt. 
Just  who  he  will  support,  however, 
could  not  be  learned  up  to  a  late  hour 
today.  He  left  his  hotel  soon  after  he 
registered. 


Washington.  March  isi— The  main  in- 
trest  in  the  assembling  of  the  Fifty- 
fifth  congress  extra  session  today, 
under  President  McKinley's  call,  con- 

Ivlrf  .K*  ^^^  ^'''"^'^  ^""^  '^f  the  capitol 
were  the  organization  of  the  new  house 
and  the  seat  lottery  were  the  drawing 
cards.  Great  crowds  were  attracted  to 
the  galleries  hours  Ijefore  noon  But 
the  general  public  had  small  opportu. 
nity  to  view  the  proceedings.  The  sec- 
tion  opposite  the  speaker's  rostrum 
commonly  known  as  the  "Black  belt  '■ 
Which  ha.s  a  seating  capacity  of  ab.,ut 
300.  was  given  to  the  public.  The  other 
ga  leries  were  strictly  reserved  for 
ticket  holders. 

The  most  striking  feature  of  the 
scene  on  the  floor  was  the  number  of 
new  faces.  Old  familiar  figures  con- 
spicuous in  the  shock  of  many  a  par- 
liamentary battle  had  disappeared  and 
in  the  new  lists  were  new  and  untried 
knights.  The  change  in  the  personnel 
was  very  great.  By  11  o'clock  the  re- 
served galleries,  with  the  exception  of 
those  for  the  diplomatic  corps  and  the 
executive,  were  walled  in  tier  on  tier 
The  bright  costumes  of  the  ladies  gave 
lighter  color  to  the  animated  scene. 

As  the  hands  of  the  clock  pointed  to 
12,  Maj.  McDowell,  the  cierk  of  the 
house,  rapped  the  house  to  order.  Rev 
Couden.  the  blind  chaplin  of  the  house 
then  delivered  the  invocation,  appealing 
to  the  throne  for  God's  blessing  on  the 
work  of  the  new  congress  and  thc»  new 
administration.  The  clerk  of  the  house 
then  read  the  president's  proclamation 
convening  congress,  after  which  the 
roll  was  called. 

Thomas  B.    Reed,   of  Maine,   was   re- 
elected    speaker,     the     vote    standing 
Reed.    189;    Bailey    (Dem.,    Texas),    114- 
I  Bell  (Pop..  Colorado).  21.  and  Newlands 
'  (Silverite.  Nevada).  1. 

After  Speaker  Reed's  election  the 
members  were  sworn  in  and  organiza- 
tion completed  by  election  of  the  Re- 
publican slate  as  follows: 

Clerk  of  the  house,  Alex  McDowell  of 
Pennsylvania;  sergeant-at-arms,  Ben- 
jamin F.  Russell,  of  Missouri;  door- 
keeper. William  J.  Glenn,  of  New  York- 
postmaster.  J.  C.  McElroy,  of  Ohio,  and 
chaplain,  Henry  M.  Couden. 


Tuesday  and  Wednesday 

We  will  display  on  a  table  in  front  of 
our  Lace  Department  100  pieces  of 
machine  made  Torchon  Lace  from  2 
to  6  inches  wide.  Take  all  you  want 
while  the  lot  lasts  at  the  ridiculous 
price  of 

5c  per  yard 

The  New  Silks. 

A  few  of  the  extreme  novelties 
sh  )wn  at  this  department  are  the  new 
Moirr'  Velours,  Velour  Eccossais,  Ve- 
lour  Fantaisie.  Silk  Grenadines,  Silic 
FJaidb  and  Fancy  Brocades,  in  the 
most  beautiful  styles  ever  shown  by 

Ub. 

Changeable  Silks. 

j    A  choice  assoitment  in  Changeable 
I   Taff.ita  Suks,  in  all  the  new       |t A^ 
^   coior  combinations,  at-  per  yd  UifC 
I   At  25c— 50  pieces  New  Wash  Silks, 
•    in  C-ibie  Cords,  Km  Kais,  ORa 

Scripts  and  Checks,  at— yard. .  aOv 
27  inch  Black  Moire  Velour. 
p  -pular  fabric  for  separate  skirts, 
luil  27  inches  wide,  at—        tfi  •    AA 
per  yard ipiiUU 

New  Spring  fabrics. 

More  beautiful  and  more  varied 
tban  ever.  Latest  styles  and  weaves 
la  open  work  and  sheer  mitciials; 
al-o  rich  and  exclusive  des  gns  in 
H^ht  weijfht  fabrics,  comprising 
G.'iiiadinc,  Ja^pe,  Denteile  E  amine. 
Canvas  Poiiu,  Tissue  Ltno,  Silk  and 
VVojl  Crcpous,  Tissue  Scmtillante, 
etc.,  etc. 


75c 

h    half 

98c 


8ic 


Hiawatha.  Kan.  The  "  wrecF  occuVred  i  ?."^U'r.-o'oc*'""*^'-^'  «-'8.79«.tX^.GB.  a  deilcit  of 
at  12:35  this  morning  and'^  was 'cavKsed  '  ^^'^^^f  ^ll';  tu^T'  ^!^.'rl'  ''UI'V^u 
by  the  train  running  into  a  team.    The  :  months   ending   March  ^.  TsST.    Not   onlv 


en-gine  was  derailed  and  Engineer  Nyt 
and  L.  O.  Connor,  fireman,  were  in- 
stantly killed. 

John  Myers,  conductor;  J.  W.  Apple- 
ton,  baggage  master;  H.  Kemp,  express 
messenger,  and  four  passengers  whose 
names  are  not  learned,  were  injured 
more  or  less  seriously.  It  is  not  knov.  n 
whether  the  occupants  of  the  carriage 
were   killed   or  not.    hut   as   the   horses 


the  water  which  went  through  the  ere-  |  were  killed  and  the  rig  wrecked,   thty 


vasse. 


NEGROES  DRIVEN  FROM  HOME 
Memphis.  Tenn..  March 
steamer  Harbin  this  morning 
to  this  city  150  negroes  and  a  lot  .:)f 
stock  from  President  island,  situated 
about  four  miles  above  this  point,  who 
had  been  driven  from  their  homes  by 
the  high  water.  The  officers  of  the 
steamer  report  numbers  of  houses  on 
the  island  submerged  and  stock  of  all 
kinds  seeking  the  higher  points. 

THE  SWOLLEN  CUMBERLAND. 
Nashville.  Tenn..  March  15.— Lov. 
lands  about  the  city  are  submerged  and 
many  cellars  of  business  houses  ai" 
filled  with  water.  Families  in  tne 
threatened  districts  are  moving  out  and 
merchants  are  taking  their  goods  to  the 


were  undoubtedly  injured.     It  was  not 
learned  who  they  are. 
The    passengers    managed    to    escape 


.....(-,       ...««•,«  1    ti       a,       Ai.M/1.       i'^iji.       yjniw 

arc  we  without  a  surplus  In  the  treasury, 
but  with  an  increase  In  the  public  debt 
there  has  been  a  corresponding  increa.-- ' 
in  the  annual  interest  charge  from  $22  - 
S93.883.20  in  1892.  the  lowest  of  any  vea'r 
since  1862.  to  $.34..'y(-.297.60.  in  1896.  or  an 
increase   of   $11,493,414.40. 

It  may  be  urged   that  even  if  the  reve- 
nues  of   the    government    had    been    sutli- 
<ient    to    meet    all    its  ordinary    expensed 
during  the  past   three  years,   the  gold   re-  ' 
.serve    would    still    have    been    insufficient  1 
to    meet    the   demands    upon    it    and    that  ' 
bonds    woultl    neces.sarily    have    been    Is- 
sued  for  its  repletion.   Be  this  as  it   may  ' 
it    is    clearly    manifest,    without    denying  1 


GOT  A  GOOD  SEAT. 
Washington.  March  14.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Page  Morris  was  the 
sixth  name  called  in  the  selection  of 
seats  in  the  house  today.  He  chose  a 
seat  in  front  of  the  speaker,  second 
row  back. 


i.wiiii...  .1..C    i-cvoo^iifttri »    luttiiageu    lo    escape     u    •»    cieariy    manifest,    without    denying 

15.— The  with  comparative  ease,  but  it  was  some  ;  '"*    iiffirming    the    correctness    of   such    a 

brought  time  before  aid  from  Hiawatha  was  re-    <"''nf'>J«i"n.       th.it    the   debt    would    have 

1   lot    .~>t  ceived  for  the  injured.  A  train  liPaHno-    l'^*""  ^f'f'"!'"-''*'*'  '"  "^  least  the  amount  of 


ceived  for  the  injured.  A  train  bearing 
physicians,  left  here  for  the  scene  this 
morning,  and  will  bring  the  dead  and 
injured  to  this  city.  Engineer  Nye  was 
one  of  the  oldest  engineers  in  the  ser- 
vice, having  been  on  the  road  for  four- 
teen  years. 


ALL  ON  HAND. 
Washington,  March  15.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Representative  Monis 
and  all  the  other  members  of  the  Min- 
nesota delegation  were  in  attendant  e 
when  the  house  was  called  to  order  at 
noon  today.  Senators  Davis  and  Nelson 
were  also  In  the  senate. 


the  deficiency  and  business  confidence 
immeasurably  strengthene<l  throughout 
the  country. 
John  Romano  was  arrested  a  tWcit 
Congress  should  promptly  correct  the 
existing  conditions.  Ample  revenues  must 
be  supplied  not  only  for  the  ordimMv 
expenses  of  the  government  but  for  the 
prompt  payment  of  liberal  pensions  and 
the  Ii<|uldation  of  the  principal  and  in- 
tenerst  of  the  public  debt.  In  rai.^ing  rev- 
enue, duties  should  be  so  levied  upon 
foreign  products  as  to  preserve  the  home 
market  .so  far  as  possible  to  our  own 
producers;  to  revive  and  increase  manu- 
factures; to  relieve  and  encourage  agri- 
culture; to  increa.se  our  domestic  and 
foreign    commerce;    to    aid    and    develdp 


TREE  SAP. 
Sap  is  a  watery  fluid  found  in  the  in- 
terior of  the  cells  of  plants  and  trees, 
and  contains  dissolved  or  suspended  in 
It  the  materials  required  for  the  life 
and  growth  of  the  cell,  says  the  Cin- 
cinnati Enquirer.  The  idea  that  in 
winter  the  sap  goes  down  into  the  roots 
and  in  the  spring  rises  again  is  quite 
erroneous.  Trees  and  plants  are  full 
of  watery  sap  all  the  winter.  The  phe- 
nomena of  freezing  in  the  case  of  trees 
and  plants  are  but  little  understood. 
The  sap  in  leaves  and  in  smaller 
l)ranches  is  often  frozen.  This  is  .seen 
♦"specially  in  the  twigs  of  hickorv, 
which  in  very  cold  weather  are  as 
brittle  as  glass,  though  the  same  twigs 
at  a  higher  temperature  cannot  by  any 
possibility  be  broken  with  the  hands, 
tor  various  causes  the  water  contained 
in  the  cells  only  begins  to  crystallize  at 
some  degrees  below  the  ordinary  freez- 
ing point.  This  is  partly  due  to  the 
chemical  composition  of  the  sap,  which 
contains  various  salts,  starch,  etc.,  in 
solution.  Besides  this  the  bark  of  trees 
is  a  bad  conductor  of  heat,  and  the  in- 
terior temperature  of  trees  and  plants 
s  generally  higher  in  winter  and  lower 
n  summer  than  that  of  the  surround- 
ing atmosphere. 


ONLY  ONE  BID. 

Globe    Iron    Works    to    Build  [| 
Revenue  Cutters. 

Washington,  March      15.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Bids  for  revenue  cutters  : 
Nos.  4  and  5  for  sei-vice  on  the  great  ' 
lakes  were  opened  at  the  treasury  de- 
partment today.     The     single     bid     re-  ' 
ceived  was  from  the  Globe  Iron  works 
of  Cleveland,  at  $198,000     each.      They 
will  probably  get  the  contract. 

GOOD  WEATHER  AT  CARSON. 
Carson.  March  14.— The  weather  to- 
day is  a  decided  improvement  over 
that  of  yesterday,  and  the  promoters 
of  the  fight  are  hoping  it  will  continue 
as  now  until  after  the  17th.  Early  in 
the  morning  it  is  freezing  cold,  but 
along  towards  noon,  after  the  sun  is 
well  up,  it  is  so  warm  as  to  make  over- 
coats superfluous.  Carson  prophets 
declare  that  "'once  the  weather  gets 
settled  it  stays  settled,"  and  they 
guarantee  pleasdnt  weather  for  the 
rest  of  the  week. 


BANK  PRESIDENT'S  FORGERY. 

Louisville,  Ky.,  March  14.— A  special 
:sXbs  -Xx  •qBonpBtj  uioaj  ^soj  oqj  01 
M.  G.  Cope,  president  of  the  First  Na- 
tional bank  of  Paducah,  is  missing, 
and  has  forged  $13,000  of  negotial)le 
paper.  He  made  a  confession,  re- 
signed and  left  town.  His  bond  is 
good. 


Tuesday's  **Flyer." 

All- Wool  Serge  in  plain,  staple  colors, 
..nd  Au-Wool  Fancy  Suitings, 
in  uew  "-prirg  colors,  |  A-. 

weJi  worth  50c,  at— per  yard  .   1  ^C 
Aii-Wool  Suitings— Think  of  it ! 
Ati-Wool  rnd  S.k  and  Mixed  and 
»<aficy  .Suiting;,  and  a  lint  ol     OQa 
Fancy  CnetKs,  at     per  yard. .  .OtlC 

A  Great  50c  Sale. 

Tutsday's  ".sensation." 
100  pie-es,  representing  lo  different 
and  distinct  lines,  4oinch,  46  inch  and 
50  inch  wide,  in  a  beautiful  assort- 
ment of  colors;  aho  cheap,  for  -separ- 
ate skirts;  every  piece  worth  C  A^ 
double  our  opening  price,  yard  W UC 

New  Black  Goods. 

O^er  i.x)  pieres,  comprising  Silk  and 
Wool  Novelties,  Cheviots,  Storm 
Serges.  French  Twills,  Surah  Serge*, 
New  Pebble  Cloths,  etc.,  CA^ 

choice ; oyc 

Mohair  Brillianlincs. 

40-inch  50  .  quality,  aq 

45  inch  85c  quality,  ftRn 

45-inch  69c  quality,  V\(\t\ 

45-inch  i^i.oo  quality,  QRa 

Mohair  Grenadines. 

45  in-'hes  wide  in  scroll  designs, 
(others  ask  more  for  25  inches  wide); 
for  45  inches  wide;  dl  <    Ar' 

we  say— per  yard iplifiiv 


100  doz.  Pillow  Cases,  fancy  hem,  soft 
heavy  cotton,  worth  loc;  171^ 

special  each /2C 

100  aozen  I4  bleached  Daraisk  Nap- 
kins; special,  per  AO^ 
yard 5180 

15    pieces    72  inch    Silver    Bleached 
German  Damask;  special, 
per  yard 

%  pieces  extra  heavy  72-inch  half 
bleachtd  German  Damabk; 

special,  per  yard 

15  pieces  extra  fine  and  htavy  full 
bleached  Scotch  Damask,  worth  j5i.25 
anywhere;  special.  A  •    |i/| 

peryard ip  1  .UU 

500  dozen  27x5oinch  Heavy  Damask 
and  Huck  Towels,  knotted  frinee  or 
plain  hemmed,  pure  linen;         OCa 

special,  each aOfJ 

1500  yards  plain   white   India   Linon, 
worth  i2Xc;  special, 
per  yard  

Housefurnish- 
ings  Specials 

In  Bargain  Basement. 

You'd  never  imaj^ine  from  reading 
our  (juotations  on  ihe  following  that 
the  qualities  are  so  good. 

Fancy  Etobossed  Shelf  Paper,  Q '  a 
piece  O2C 

One  Quart  Retinned 
Dippers 

Washing  Machines— we 
handle  the  best  only 

Wood  Handled  Graters, 
large 

Wash  Boards,  fancy 

c-'mp 

Large  size  Scrub 

brushes  

Fancy  Chip  Baskets  for 
soiled  clothes 

Window  Brushes,  complete, 
with  pole 

Wash  Boilf-rs,  copper  bot- 
toms. No.  8 

Individual  Butter 

Moulds 

Lot  fancy  Two  Brush  Broom 
Holders 

Hard  Wood  Knife,  Fork  and 
Spoon  Boxes 

Our  stocks  of  Tinw.~,ri-,  Wojden- 
ware,  Graniteware,  Bru>hes,  Trunks, 
SatchelF,ai  d  everything  in  the  house- 
furnishing  line  are  complete  and 
marked  at  prices  that  will  assure  us 
of  your  trade. 

Crockery 
Specials 

In  Bargain  Basement. 
Bought  as  we  buy  and 
marked  as  we  mark. 

4  fancy  Glasa  Sauce 
Dishes 

4  piece  Table  Sets  in  fancy 
pre.ssed  glass,  per  set 

Lot  fancy  Jardiners  in  dark, 
rich  colorings 

Earthen  Milk  or  Rice  Q.. 

Boilers..     Q?J 

Thin  blown  Table  O-^ 

Tumblers  ijQ 

Imitation  Cat  Glass  c  ... 

Vases OC 

White  Egg  Shell  China  Cups  nnd 
Saucers,  pretty  shape  HOn 

Nest  Eggc,  g^ 

each ^Q 

New  Goods  being  opened  daily  in 
Crockery,  Glassware  and  China  de- 
partments. 

Shoe  Dept. 

Our  New  Goods  are  coming  in  r.^pid- 
Iv  and  we  mus'  make  room  for  them 
THIS  IS  HOW  WE  DO  IT- 
Men's  Calf  Genuine  Cork  ff  A  OC 
hole  Lace  Shoes,  only  . . .  jp^.aa 
Youth  and  Little  Gents'  Satin  Calf 
Shoes,  sold  everywhere  at  AOa 

$1.25;  our  price «fOC 

Youths'  and  Misses'  Grain  Button 
Sole  Leather  Tip  Shoes,  never  sold 
for  less  than  98c,  now  on  the      HCg^ 

bargain  counter  at l3C 

One  lot  Men's  Rubbers,  to  OC/k 
close  them  out;  per  p.iir aO*t 


3c 
$3.47 
..  3c 
.  10c 
...  3c 
49c 
33c 
59c 
4c 
5c 
15c 


2c 
21c 
39c 


It  pays  to  read  our  ad  vs.  -It  potts  you  where  to  buy-It  saves  you  money 
on  what  you  buy.  when  you  buy  it  at 

PANTON  &  WHITE'S. 


m  .  ■'■■maim 


as 


O^ 


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I    I     1 1 


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i 


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>■-  »«.-»— g—O—  ^ 


j 

1 

p^ 

f 

zi: 

il 


System   Under    Which  High 

School  Pupils  Govern 

Themselves. 


Council  oF  Students  Which 

Disciplines  the  Scholars 

When  Necessary. 


THE    ptTLtJTH     EVEytNG     HERALD     MONDAY.    MARCH    lo.    1897. 


Not  One   Case   Reported 
the  Principal  Since  Its 
Adoption. 


to 


Women  nowadayii 
are  learning  that  it  paya 
to    be    healthy,    that    it 
pays  to  be  strong.    Weak 
women  make  bad  wives 
and  worse  mothers.     A 
woman  need  not  neces- 
sarily become  an  athlete 
in  order  to  fit  herself  for 
the  duties  of  wifehood 
and  motherhood.   If  she 
will  obey  common  sense 
rules  of  health,  and  be 
sure  that  the  organs  that 
constitute    her    woman- 
hood are  always  healthy  and  strong,  she  will 
be  a  capable  and  healthy  wife  and  mother. 
The    best    medicine    for  the   treatment  of 
weakness  and  disease  of  the  organs  dis- 
tinctly feminine    is   Dr.   Pierce's    Favorite 
Prescription. 

It  is  the  discovery  of  a  regularly  gradu- 
ated physician  — an  eminent  and  skillful 
specialist.  Dr.  R.  V.  Pierce,  chief  consult- 
ing physician  to  the  Invalids'  Hotel  and 
Surgical  Institute,  at  Buffalo,  N.  Y.  There 
are  on  file  at  that  institution  letters  of  over 
90,000  women  testifying  to  the  mar^-elous 
merits  of  the  "Favorite  Prescription."  It 
acts  directly  on  the  organs  that  make  wife- 
hood and  motherhood  possible.  It  makes 
them  strong  and  healthy.  It  cures  all 
weakness  and  disease.  It  smoothes  the  way 
to  almost  pangless  maternity.  It  insures 
healthy  children.  All  good  druggists  sell  it. 
Mrs.  H.  F.  Reynolds,  of  North  Fenton,  Brcwme 
Co..  N.  Y..  writes  :  '•  I  thought  I  would  write  you 
a  few  lines  as  I  have  been  taking  vour  medicine 
and  using  it  in  my  family.  I  have  just  taken  an- 
other bottle  of  your  '  Favorite  Prescription  '  and 
it  has  done  me  lots  of  good.  I  thiuk  it  ia  a 
gr.Tnd  medicine.'' 

The  newly-wedded  wife,  above  all  other 
women,  needs  a  good  medical  book.  Dr. 
Pierce's  Common  Sense  Medical  .\dviser 
fills  this  want.  It  contains  over  looo  pages 
and  300  illustrations.  Several  chapters  are 
devoted  to  the  physiology  of  the  organs  dis- 
tinctly feminine.  Send  21  one-cent  stamps, 
to  cover  cost  of  mailing  oniy,  to  the  World's 
Di<»pensary  Medical  Association,  Buffalo, 
N.  Y.,  for  a  />r^  copy,  paper-covered.  If 
a  cloth  binding  is  wanted,  send  10  «enta 
extra  (31  cents  in  all). 


and  chain  from  Hon.  L.  H.  Davis,  Can- 
adian minister  cf  marine  and  flaheries, 
in  appreciation  of  his  efforts  in  rescu- 
ing the  crew  of  the  schooner  Ashton 
J.  Wright,  of  Digby,  N.  S..  which  was 
wrecked  off  here  iti  December  last.  B. 
E.  Dobbins,  his  nssitant,  received  a 
silver  watch. 


There  is  in  operation  in  the  Duluth 
high  school  a  new  departure  in  disci- 
pline. It  is  new  in  common  schools, 
and  but  little  tried  in  colleges,  yet  it 
may  eventually  become  the  prevalent 
method  of  discipline.     It  has  for  its  ob- 

jett  the  ennobling  and  uplifting  of  the 

iharacters  of  the  pupils.  It  makes  them 

not  only  self-reliant,  but  it  puts  them 

upon  their  honor,  a  method  which  the 

e.xperienci^  of  many   pedagogues  of  all 

degrees  show     tends     toward     making 

better  men  and  women. 
The  system  provides   for   local     self- 

.sovernment    among    the    pupils    as    re« 

.sfards  matters  of  discipline.     In  the  old 

days,    when   almost   every    teacher   had 

a  birch  rod  or  a  rope's  end  in  a  promi-  ■ 

nent  |)ositlon  on  his  desk,  the  teachers  I 

attended  to  matters  of  discipline.  How  ! 

well    they   did   .<«o   many   a    memory   of 

tingling  blows  will  bear  witness.    That 

day  has  passod  away,  or  at  least  it  is  I 

liassing  away.     The  birch  rod  no  longer  | 

has  a  place  in  the  average  pupil's  cur- 
riculum.    The  stern-visaged  pedagogue 

whose  Mows  made  him  the  object  of  | 
juvenile  hatred  has  no  longer  a  plare^  j 
except  in  literature.     The  pupils,  in  the  , 

hieh  school  at  least  will  govern  them-  ' 
selves,  proud  of  the  confidence  reposed 
in  them,  and  i>ecause     of     that     pride, 
firmly  resolved  that  the  confidence  shall 
not  be  abused. 

Xot  the  least  prominent  nature  of  the 
old  barbaric  birch  rod  days  was  the 
tale-bearer,  the  gossip,  hated  and  de- 
spised by  teachers  and  pupils  alike.  On 
the  other  hand,  not  the  least  admirable 
feature  of  the  new  system  is  that  it 
does  away  with  the  gossip.  The  pupil 
who  comes  to  the  principal  with  a  tale 
of  woe  about  another  pupil's  illdoings 
would  be  received  with  scant  courtesy, 
and  would  not  be  encouraged  to  repeat 
the  feat.  For  one  of  the  main  laws  of 
the  new  system  is  that  oral  complaints 
must  not  be  made  under  any  circum- 
stances.  Those  who  remember  the  de- 
spised  gossip,  who  probal)ly  existed  in 
every  school  in  the  country,  may  con- 
sider  themselves  revenged  upon  the 
whole  tribe,  for  their  fangs  have  been 
pulled. 

DETAILS  OF  THE  SYSTEM. 

The  system   in   vogue   in    the   Duluth      1,         j    i.-  ,    ,  - 

high  school  is.  in  brief,  something  like  ^!- '"  "^*^  ^^^-  and  I  am  afraid  I  gave 
the  following:  Each  class  president  ■  ^'"l  "*"'■"*'  ^"^""^  ^"''^'*'^-  ^his  duty 
has  chosen  five  suitable  meiribers  of  i  Pf '^'*^^^-  I  ^^'^"t  »>ack  to  my  work, 
the  class  to  form  a  sub-council  The  \  ^'''^^  '"*'  Pi'aft'fP  at  *  o'clock  every 
four  sub-councils  of  six  members  each  :  a?'*^'""^^"  ^o  go  for  the  mail.  That 
from  the  students'  council,  of  which 
the  president  of  the  senior  class  is  ex- 


AN  ENGLISH  VIEW. 

London  Times  Smalley  Writes 
of  President  McKlnley. 

London,  March  15.— The  correspon- 
dent of  the  London  Times  in  the  United 
States.  Oeorge  W.  Smalley,  gives  his 
Impre.tslons  today  as  gathered  from  a 
conversation  with  President  McKlnley. 
With  reference  to  the  arbitration 
treaty,  the  president  Is  quoted  as  say- 
ing: "There  Is  no  subject  on  which  I 
feel  more  strongly.  I  abide  by  every 
word  of  my  address."  . 

Mr.  Smalley  adds:  "The  president, 
is  for  the  treaty  as  originally  presented 
to  the  senate,  or,  at  least,  without  any 
amendment  affecting  its  efllciency.  He 
showed  real  interest  and  knowledge  of 
foreign  affairs  and  does  not  intend  to 
take  any  new  departure  in  regard  to 
Cuba.  "He  is  still  a  con\inced  protec- 
tionist, but  he  recognizes  that  circum- 
stances have  altered  and  that  there 
will  be  no  return  to  the  tariff  of  1890. 
"He  has  very  earnest  and  strong  views 
as  to  his  duty  regarding  bimetallism, 
will  do  his  utmost  to  promote  it  and 
will  exhaust  all  means  to  secure  an  In- 
ternational agreement,  believing  that 
prosperity  depends  upon  It.  This,  how- 
ever, does  not  Imply  that  he  is  any  the 
less  firm  in  his  resolve  to  maintain  the 
gold  standard.  The  Impression  which 
the  conversation  gave  was  one  of  con- 
fidence." 


Corbett    and     FItzsImmons 

Have    Finished     Training 

For  Wednesday's  Fight. 


tl6.  They  base  their  concjuaiou  on  the 
fact  that  3000  tickets  have  already  been 
sold   her*. 


QREEN  AND  RYAN  MATCHED. 
Carson,  Nev..  March  l.'i.— A  represen- 
tative of  the  Empire  Athletic  club  of 
Syracuse,  N.  Y..  has  matched  George 
Oreen  (Young  Corbett)  and  Tommy 
Ryan,  the  welterweight  champion,  for 
a  20-round  contest  on  April  17.  Should 
Green  lose  his  fight  with  Smith,  he  Avill 
still  go  against  Ryan,  and  the  club  will 
arrange  a  meeting  between  Smith  and 
the  winner  of  the  battle. 


Only   Light    Exercise    Will 

Now  Be  Taken  to  Keep 

Up  Condition. 


Both   Men    Are    Physically 

Perfect  and  Have  Great 

Confidence. 


FREE  COINAGE. 

Getting  the  Party  Into  Condi- 
tion For  1900. 


One  day  the  principal  was  away  and  a 
female  teacher  and  myself  were  left  in 
charge.  We  were  all  in  a  large  recita- 
tion room,  at  one  side  of  which  I  was 
hearing  a  geography  class,  and  at  th^ 
!  other  the  lady  was  hearing  arithmetic. 
In  her  cla.ss  was  one  of  tlv^  Lively 
Four,  and  as  the  principal  was  away, 
he  took  it  into  his  head  to  have  some 
sport.  He  began  to  raise  a  disturbance, 
and  the  teacher  sent  him  to  his  seat. 

"When  he  arrived  there  he  raised  the 
top  of  his  desk,  threw  in  his  arithmetic 
with  a  bang,  dropped  the  lid  with  a 
slam,  and  made  himself  audible  in 
every  possible  way.  He  made  so  much 
noise  that  I  could  not  hear  my  geo- 
graphy class,  so  I  said: 
••  'Will  you  kindly  be  still?' 
■•  "What  have  you  got  to  do  with 
this?'  was  his  gruff  response,  accom- 
panied by  more  noise. 

"I  walked  over  to  him  and  repeated 
my  request.  I  was  met  with  another 
defiance,  so  I  laid  him  over  the  desk  and 
cuffed  him.  He  leaped  up  and  ran 
down  one  aisle  and  up  the  next  to  the 
desk  of  another  member  of  the  Four. 
He  picked  up  a  tin  flute  and  shied  it  at 
my  head,  which  it  narrowly  missed.  A 
slate  went  further  astray,  and  a  pair  of 
scissors  which  followed  hurled  through 
the  air  and  barely  mised  the  female 
teacher  at  the  other  side  of  the  room. 
That  settled  it. 


Denver,  Col..  March  15.— Some  na- 
tional and  state  leaders  of  the  free  C(»in- 
age  movement  will  meet  in  conference 
at  the  Hrown  Palace  hotel  this  evening 
for  the  purpose  of  discussing  measures 
to  coalesce  and  strengthen  the  .silver 
forces  against  the  campai-gn  of  1900. 
-\mong  those  expected  to  attend  are 
Senator  James  K.  Jones  of  Arkan.sa^. 
chairman  of  the  national  Democrati<' 
committee;  Daniel  Campau,  of  Michi- 
gan,   chairman   of   the   Democratic   na- 


me 
th< 


Carson,  March  15.— Corbett  did  his 
last  training  before  the  big  fight  this 
afternoon,  and  when  it  was  finished  he 
and  his  trainers  expressed  the  greatest 
satisfaction  with  the  result  of  the  hard 
work  of  the  last  four  weeks.  "I  never 
felt  so  well  before  and  know  I  could 
possibly  not  be  in  better  condition  for 
fighting,"  said  the  champion,  as  the 
trainers  rubbed  him  down  after  the 
final  boxing  bout.  "I  am  in  perfect 
shape  for  the  battle  and  I  am  going  to 
win  it.  There  ha.s  been  some  talk  about 
my   over-confidence,    but   they   will   see 

Wednesday    that    I    know    what    I    am        ,,    =.  ,    ,    ,, 

talking  about    when    I   say   that   1   wt.!    Horn"  vrS^m  of  U.^'''    '''""'''"    ^'"" 


NEEDHAM  MAY  MEET  RYAN 
Oakland,  Cal.,  March  15.— Danny 
Needham.  the  well-known  welter- 
weight, has  received  a  letter  from  the 
Empire  Athletic  club,  of  Syracuse,  N. 
Y.,  offering  him  a  match  w'ith  Tommy 
Ryan,  of  Chicago,  for  a  $2500  purse.  The 
condition  stated  was  that  Needham 
should  be  in  shape  by  the  last  of  April. 
A  reply  has  been  sent  out  to  the  effect 
that  no  condition  could  be  arranged 
on  that  date,  but  that  any  time  in  May 
would  be  satisfactory.  Needham  says 
he  cannot  possibly  get  into  trim  for 
the  fight  until  May,  even  if  he  started 
to  train  now.  Needham  is  anxious  to 
meet  Ryan.  He  defeated  him  once  in 
St.  Paul,  after  a  76-round  go.  and  later 
had  a  fight  forfeited  to  him  by  Ryan 
in  New  Orleans  on  account  of  illness. 

CONDENSED  DISPATCHES. 

The  little  town  of  Elkin.s.  W.  Va  was 
seriously  scorched  by  fire  yesterday  The 
I0S.S   exceeded  $100,000. 

There  Is  no  anxiety  in  the  navy  depart- 

lent    about    the    cruiser    Columbia    and 

le  monitor  Puritan.  The  latter  ves,i?el 
is  as  big  as  the  cruiser  and  will  tow  but 
very  slowly.  They  are  expected  in  New 
York   harbor   today. 

Sylvester  Scovel.  the  war  corresoon- 
dent  i^cently  relea.sed  from  prison  at 
Sanctl  Splritus.  Cuba,  arrived  at  Havana 
last  evening. 

Germany  has  recently  landed  lirge 
shipments  of  munitions  of  war  at  Wal- 
flsch.bay,  near  Cape  Town,  South  Afri- 
ca, a  rircum.stance  which  cau.ses  suspi- 
cion. The  Transvaiil  is  al.so  armlni? 
steadily,  the  shii)ments  of  ammunition, 
guns  and  military  supplies  from  France 
amounting    to    SIM    tons    monthly 

It     is    reported 


YOU  CANT  DENY  IT 

ifysu  have  ever  had  the  good  luck  to  try  it:  if  your  palate  tmdyoor 
stomach  have  ever  been  in  happy  communion  with  It. 


BLATZ 


Is  The  Best, 


was  the  best  and  will  remain  the  best  beer  made.    Call  for  Blatz. 
the  STAR  Milwaukee  Beer.    See  that  "Blatz' '  is  on  the  cork. 

VAL  BLATZ  BREWINfi  CO..  Duluth  Branch.    Telephone  62. 


<Es, 


IC^^'J, 


'^'^mt 


sjs^ 


^. 


5WH^ 


whip  Fitz.  I  have  been  waiting  a  lonj:. 
time  to  get  a  crack  at  that  fellow,  and 
it  is  a  sure  thin-g  that  I  will  lose  no 
means  to  stop  his  talk." 

"Our  man  is  in  perfect  condition  for 
this  or  other  battles."  said  Charlie 
White,  'and  there  is  not  the  faintest 
doubt  that  he  will  win.  He  could  not 
possibly  be  in  better  condition.  All  tlu 
experienced  men  who  have  seen  him 
work  admit  that  his  condition  is  per- 
fect. I  am  entirely  .satisfied,  and  so  are 
all  his  friends." 


tional  executive  committee;  Senator  H.  \     7.^'^  '^^*-'"  ^^'^'l^  ^^'^s  begun  at  9  o'clock 
Teller,  Representative  John  F.  Shaf      " 


M 

roth.  Charles  A.  Towne.  Governor 
Adams.  D.  H.  Moffat,  Dennis  Shcedy 
and  others  of  Colorado. 

It  is  understood  that  the  main  end 
the  promoters  have  in  view  is  the  estab- 
lishment at  Washington  of  a  national 
bureau  to  carry  on  an  educational  free 
coinage  campaign  during  the  Interim 
before  the  next  presidential  election. 


SOLOMON  ISLAND. 

A  Trader  Murdered  and  His 
Vessel  Destroyed. 


officio  president,  the  president  of  each 
class  being  president  of  each  sub-coun- 
cil. The  students'  council  meets  at 
stated  intervals,  and  this  bodv  has  in 
Its  hands  the  discipline  of  the  high 
school.  It  has  no  power  to  punish  any 
pupil,  for  it  works  by  gentler  but  more 
subtle  and  effective  means.  When  the 
sub-council  ..sees  a  member  of  its  class 
engaged  in  wrong-doing  of  any  nature 
he  IS  immediately  .set  upon,  not  with 
elubs.  either  actually  or  figuratively 
But  h?  IS  reasoned  with  and  convinced 
that  he  had  better  not  do  what  he  has 
been  doing  any  more.  No  threats  are 
held  out.  no  force  employed,  except 
moral  force,  but  the  pupil  who  is  so  re- 
fractory as  to  disregard  the  entreaties 
of  the  students'  council  will  find  that 
he  IS  opposing  a  powerful  force,  that  of 
public  opinion. 

For  that  is  what  the  students'  council 
has   done   in   the   high   school.    It    has 
created  and  directed     a     lively     public 
opinion   m   that  little  community,   and  1 
those  who  have  attempted   to  stem   a' 
t  de  of  public  opinion  in  any  municipal- 
it>    know  why   the   pupil    who   opposes 
this   usually   lays   down    his   arms   and 
becomes  a  peaceable  citizen  of  the  high 
school  community.      Tn  extreme  cases 
AX  here  these  forces  are  of  no  avail  th» 
students    council     may     report     to  the 
principal.      Here    is    where    the    tale! 
bearer  .sees  his  occupation     gone       No 
repf>rts  may  be     made     orally.    '  Th -v 

hk"ve  th.'"'-*''^  !"  ^vritlng.     and     must 
naAe  the  signatures  of   at     least 
members  of  the  council 


San    Francisco,    March    15.— News   of 
another   murder   of   a    trader   on    Solo- 
mon island,   has  just  been  received  In 
the  Oceanica  advices.     Capt.  Glbblngs. 
I  walked  over  to  him.  and  as  he  fled    ^  well-known  trader,  purchased  a  car- 
pursued   him  into  a  corner.    Then   I  !  go  of  copper,  and  while  he  was  making 

his  payments  for  the  copper,  two  na- 
tives attacked  him  from  behind  and 
held  him  while  a  third  cannibal  behead- 
ed him.  After  the  murder  the  natives, 
who  belonged  to  the  island  of  Rendova, 
looted  the  vessel  brought  by  Glbblngs, 
and  then   fired  the  craft. 


SIX 


I  afternoon  as  I  was  in  my  room  one  of 
the  boys  came  in. 

'  'You  know.  Mr.  Loman.'  said  he. 
that  I  am  not  given  to  tale-bearing, 
l)ut  I  am  honestly  alarmed.  That  boy,' 
naming  the  member  of  the  Four  I  had 
trounced  in  the  morning,  means  to  do 
you  mischief.  The  four  ar;>  waiting  for 
you  where  you  will  pass  on  the  way  to 
the  postoffici-.  and  they  are  loaded  with 
rocks.' 

"On  my  way  to  the  postoffice  I  had 
to  pass  a  corner  where  it  was  very  easy 
for  anyone  to  lie  concealed. 

"  'You  go  to  him,'  said  I,  'and  tell  him 
that  I  am  aware  of  what  he  Intends  to 
do.  Tell  him  that  I  .shall  pa-ss  at  the 
usual  time,  in  my  usual  way,  and  look 
neither  behind,  or  to  the  right  or  left.  ' 
But  tell  him  to  take  good  aim.  Let  him 
be  careful  to  finish  me  at  the  first  blow, 
for  if  he  does  not  I  shall  come  back  and 
I  shall  whip  him  within  an  inch  of  his 
life.' 

"My  friend  went  to  the  boy  and  told 
him.  I  kept  my  promise,  and  as  I  went 
past  the  corner  I  could  see  that  the  boys 
were  there.  I  walked  on.  expecting  to 
be  struck  momentarily,  but  no  rocks 
came.  I  went  to  the  postoffice  and  re- 
turned, but  the  Four  were  gone.  Next 
nrioming  that  boy  came  to  me.  and  It 
did  not  need  the  tears  streaming  down 
his  cheeks  and  his  abject  apologies  and 
promises  of  reform  to  tell  me  that  he 
was  heartily  sorry  for  what  he  had 
done.  I  never  had  any  trouble  with 
him  after  that. 

"This  boy  was  not  the  ringleader  of 
the  four.  I  got  at  him  in  another  wav. 
I  went  to  him  and  asked  him  to  becorn? 


A  FAR  NORTH  POSTOFFIOE. 
Washington.  March  15.— By  far  the 
northernmost  postolTice  in  theworld  ha.« 
just  been  ordered  established  by  the 
Norwegian  government  on  Spitzbergen 
island 


ith  a  short  tramp  over  the  muddy 
country  road.  The  wrist  machine  ex- 
ercise and  bag  punching  were  dispensed 
with,  and  but  two  games  of  hand  bail 
were  played.  Three  slow  rounds  wtre 
sparred  with  McVey.  Jeffries  and 
Woods  taking  turns  with  the  big  fighter, 
and  the  rubdow  n  ended  today.  The  re- 
maining days  will  be  spent  very  quietly 
and  the  only  exercise  Corbett  will  take 
will  be  a  couple  of  half-mile  walks. 

FItzsImmons  was  up  early  this  morn- 
ing and  took  a  jaunt  around  the  ranch 
yard  before  breakfast.  Afterwards  lie 
walked  at  a  good  gait  over  his  usual 
morning  route  and  jogged  back,  cover- 
ing the  distame  in  half  the  time  he 
occupied  in  going  out.  He  loafed  around 
the  grounds  until  after  dinner  and  did 
no  more  until  the  arrival  of  Al  Smith, 
the  stakeholder,  who  came  out  by  in- 
vitation to  see  some  of  his  Avork  and  in- 
form himself  of  Fltz's  physical  condi- 
tion. He  worked  at  the  bag  and  boxed 
with  Hickey  and  Roober,  but  did  not 
devote  as  much  time  as  has  been  cus- 
tomary to  his  exercises.  He  simply  did 
enough  to  show  Smith  his  methods  of 
work  and  its  character.  When  told  by 
Stenzler  not  to  do  any  more,  he  \vent 
to  his  dressing  rooms  and  was  rubbed 
down.  Smith  being  present  so  as  to  see 
in  what  shape  his  muscles  were. 

Roeber,  Hickey  and  Stenzler  are  en- 
thusiastic about  the  condition  of  their 
man  and  have  no  doubt  of  his  winning 
the  fight.  Fitz  will  probably  fight  at 
not    far     from     160     pounds,    and     the 


SOUTH  DAKOTA. 
Not    for   years    have   the   settlers    alonp 
the    Missouri    and    James    river    bottom^ 

bad   .so   much    cause    for   alarm    over   th«^ 

chances  are  that  he  will  enter  the  riue     prospect  oi  an  inundation  as  at  the  pres- 


...         ,-  ,     ..         <'anadian   Pacific 

lailroad  and  Mr.  Angus,  president  of 
the  Bank  Of  Montreal,  have  become  as- 
sociated with  Gen.  R.  A.  Alger  of  De- 
troit, secretary  of  war.  in  oi)erating  the 
I.aurentide  Pulp  company,  of  Grand 
Mere.   Que. 

»-.T>^rL  S"*'*'*''",  Ro^-ernment  has  granted 
?uO(i.(tO<J  toward  the  erection  of  a  bridge 
across  the  St.  I.,awrence  river  opjiosite 
Quebec.  The  bridge  is  to  cost  $0,000,000. 
T  he  Dominion  government  is  expected  to 
grant  at  least  |1.0<)0.(MK>  towards  the 
structure 

Plans  are  being  made  at  the  Brooklyn 
navy  yard  for  naval  maneuvers  next 
summer  on  a  much  larger  .scale  than 
those  recently  held  on  the  coast  of  South 
^'V;obna.  It  is  said  that  the  maneuvers 
will  take  place  somewhere  off  the  New 
England    coast. 

Mrs  Nellie  Hare,  living  near  the  depot 
at  Oshawa,  Ont..  was  found  dead  in  her 
home  Saturday  niRhl.  her  head  and  lace 
smashed  to  a  pulp.  There  is  no  clue.  An 
inquest    is   being   held. 

A  whirlwind  visited  the  town  of  Minso 
Junction,  Ohio.  Saturday  night.  The  wind 
blew  off  an  iron  roof  of  the  Junction  Iron 
and  Steel  company  and  the  brick  walls 
fell  in.  Frank  Hobson  and  Larry  Fahev 
were  caught.  Fa  hey  was  taken  out  deid" 
A  widow  and  .seven  children  survive  him 
Frank  Hobson.  aged  29  years,  was  so  se- 
riou.sly  crushed  that  he  died  three  hours 
later.  John  Weikas.  a  Hungarian,  was 
badly  crushed  and  will  die. 


BEST  with  a  big  B.    Blackwell's  Gcnulno  Bull 
Durham  is  in  a  class  by  itself.    You  wU!  find  one 
coupon  inside  each  two  ounce  bag,  aud  two  cou- 
pons inside  each  four  ounce  bag  of 

Blackwell's 

Genuine  Durham 

Smoking  Tobacco 

Buyabafrof  this  cclelirn  ted  tobacco  and  read  the  coupon— 
Which  gives  a  lis  tof  valuable  pieseuls  and  how  \u  get  them. 


IN  THE  DAKOTAS. 


,,      ^  NORTH  DAKOTA. 

Much  apprehension  is  felt  at  Mandan 
and  Bismarck  over  the  nrobabilitv  of 
heavy  floods  when  the  Mi.ssouri  gets  it-; 
regular  spring  freshet  on. 

Judge  Pollock  sentenced  eight  Traill 
county  prisoners,  convicted  of  vioIatuiK 
the  prohibition  law.  to  ninety  days  eacn 
in  jail,   together  with  fines. 

Chester  Col.«on.  of  Ypsilanti.  who  was 
reported  lost  in  the  storm  Friday.  Marcli 
5.  turned  up  at  a  neighbors  "  several 
miles    distant. 


Assessment  Notice. 


Sprinkling  Season  1896. 


I 


Office  of  City  Comptroller, 
Duluth,   Minn.,   Feb.   22,   1897. 
Notice  is  hereby  given  to  all  parties 
Interested    that      an      assessment     has 
been    made    by    the    board    of      public 
works,    of   the   city   of   Duluth,    Minne- 
sota, and  confirmed  by  the  Hon.  J.  D. 
Ensign,   judge  of   the   district  court   of 
ihe    Eleventh   judicial    district,    to   de- 
fray  in   full   the   expense  of  sprinkling ' 
Third    avenue    west    from    First    street  I 
to    Second   street;    Second    street   from' 
Sixth    avenue    west   to    Sixth     avenue 
east;    Sixth    avenue   east   from    Second 
street    to    Third    street,      and       Third 
street   from   Second   avenue     east       to 
Sixth       avenue       ea.st,       during       the 
season  of  1896,  in  said 

city,  and  that  a  duplicate  as- 
sessment roll  has  been  delivered  to 
the    city      treasurer,      and      that      the 


have  their  assessments  divided  into 
not  more  than  five  (.'i)  installments  of 
not  less  than  ten  (10)  dollars  each,  by 
making  application  to  the  city  comp- 
troller within  45  days  after  date  of 
this  notice.  Said  installments  to  be- 
come due  and  payable  annually,  com- 
mencing October  1st.  1898,  with  inter- 
est at  7  per  cent  payable  annually. 

Blanks  for  this  purpo.se  may  be  ob- 
tained by  application  at  mv  office 
W.   G.   TP^N   I! ROOK. 
City  Comptroller. 
Duluth  Evening  Herald,   Feb-22-March 

1-8-1,'). 


AssessmeDt  Notice. 


Improvement  Seventii  Alley. 


at   rather  over  than  under  that  figure. 
He  some  time  a.go  abandoned  the  idea  of 


to  the  north  of  Norway.  An  i  going  down  tothe  middleweight  limit 
annoncement  to  the  po.stoffice  depart-  :  or  at  least  so  his  trainer^  say.  Tnd 
ment  from  the  universal  postal  union  |  thought  that  it  would  hardiv  do  i> 
says,  the  office  will  be  established  next  |  allow    Corbett    as    much    advantaet      ^ 

summer.      It    will    be    mainly    for    the    -^  -     .  •-  /tmagi 

benefit  of  the  excursionists  who  find 
their  way  there  at  rare  intervals.  It 
will  give  them  an  opportunity  to  mail 
Spitzbergen  souvenirs  from  that  place. 


MONTANA  STOCK  SUFFERING. 
Helena.  Mont.,  March  15.— Secretary 
G.  Proutt.  of  the  board  of  stock  com- 
missioners, said  today:  "The  stock  on 
the  ranges  has  had  a  remarkably  hard 
time  the  whole  winter.  In  the  extreme 
northern  part  of  the  state  it  has  not 
been  above  zero  for  weeks,  and  stock 
was  in  poor  condition  when  the  storm 
began.  The  stock  that  has  weathered 
the  winter  Is  In  poor  condition.  Unless 
relief  comes  at  once  the  loss  will  be  the 
heaviest  in  years." 


A  significant  indication  of  the  effeet    ""^  roommate.     I  shall  never  forget  the 


Wn  T.  r*^"",  '^  •^'^-  Although  it  has 
been  in  force  for  several  months,  during 
the  greater  part  of  the  school  year    in 

th^S."''^  ^'"^.  ':*"P'''"*  ^a"  ''^^n  made  to 
the  princinal  by  the  council.  On  the 
oth-r  hand,  the  teachers  frequently  re- 
port cases  to  the  council,  and  the  re. 
be Wishe'r^'"  ^^  «*"«'a^tory  as  could 
An  instance  of  how  the  pupils  regard 
the  system  occurred  recently.  On»  of 
the  boys  had  been  doing  .something  en- 
tirely apart  from  his  les.sons.  w  hich 
had  taken  the  form  of  an  attack  on  the 

He  was  .sent  to  Principal  Loman.  and 
if^"^  u^,  recounted  his  misdeeds. 
After  he  had  concluded,  he  said- 

"Mr.  Loman.  you  may  do  anythine 
you  want  to  With  me.  but  do  not  .seSS 
me  before  the  students'  council  " 
^.JaiT,-^"'^  ^'^^  ""*  *^y  any  means  a 
s"irnffic"a^nt.^"'^  '""^  '"^'^^^^  --  ver? 
EVTIRKLY  SATISFACTORY 

The  system  has  been  in  use  '  now 
nearly  long  enough  to  determine  its 
effect,  and  so  far  it  is  entirely  satis, 
factory.  The  pupils  are  proud  of  the 
fact  that  they  are  left  to  govern  them- 
selves, and  there  is  iust  as  much  dif- 
ference between  pupils  so  governed  as 
there  is  between  an  upright  citizen  of 

a  king-rldden  monarchy.  There  has 
b^'en  a  peaceful  revolution.  The  abso^ 
lute  monarchy  of  the  birch  rod  davs 
has  given  away  to  the  republic  of  the 
students'  council. 

"My  theory  of  the  plausibility  of  th«» 
system  arose  from  an  experience  of 
mine  in  a  boarding  school,  near  Phila- 
delohia.    where    I    was    first    a    student 


expression  on  his  face  when  I  asked 
him.  but  he  came.  Then  I  gave  him  to 
understand,  not  in  so  many  words  but 
by  a  process  which  I  shall  not  repeat, 
that  I  depended  upon  his  aid  in  keep- 
ing order.  I  won  him.  and  the  Lively 
Four  was  broken  up  forever." 


A  BUSINESS  FAILURE. 
Huntington,  W.  Va..  March  15.— Judge 
Goflf  has  appointed  Z.  T.  Vinson  re- 
ceiver for  U.  S.  Busmirk,  merchant  and 
tlmberman.  of  Logan.  Assets  $125,000: 
liabilities  unknown.  This  is  the  result 
of  the  recent  failure  of  the  Sliger  Lum- 
ber and  Manufacturing  company. 


THE  GREAT  SARCOPHAGUS. 
New  York,  March  15.— The  sarcopha- 
gus in  which  the  late  Gen.  Ulys.ses 
Grant's  remains  will  be  placed,  in  his 
tomb  on  Riverside  drive,  arrived  from 
Wisconsin  via  the  Pennsylvania  rail- 
road at  Jersey  City  today.  It  is  in 
three  pieces,  and  was  taken  to  the  foot 
of  West  One  Hundred  and  Twelfth 
street,  from  whence  it  will  be  taken  to 
the  tomb. 


Stop  drugging  yourself  with  drug 
nostrums  or  "cures."  Get  a  well- 
known  pharmaceutical  remedy  that 
will  do  the  work.  Catarrh  and  cold  in 
the  head  will  not  cause  suffering  If 
Ely's  Cream  Balm  Is  used.  Druggist 
will  supply  10-cent  trial  size  or  50- 
cent  full  size.    We  mall  it. 

ELY  BROS.. 
56  Warren  street.  N.  Y.  City. 

Rev.  John  Reld.  Jr..  of  Great  Falls, 
Mont.,  recommended  Ely's  Cream  Balm 
to  me.  I  can  emphasize  his  statement. 
"It  Is  a  positive  cure  for  catarrh  If 
used  as  directed."— Rev.  Francis  W. 
Poole.  Pastor  Central  Presbyterian 
church.    Helena.    Mont. 


WILL  RUN  FULL  TIME. 
Newton.  Mass..  March  15.— W.  S.  and 
F.  S.  Cordongly.  manufacturers  of  wool 
and  marino  goods,  at  Newton,  lower 
falls,  this  week.  Ijegan  to  run  their  fac- 
tory night  and  day  to  Keep  up  with  a 
large  number  of  orders,  which  have 
been  received.  The  factory  has  been 
running  on  short  time  for  two  years 
and  up  to  the  present  time,  has  been  in 
operation  only  three  or  four  days. 

MR.  GARY'S  POSTAL  AIMS 
Washington.  March  15.— Superinten- 
dent of  Foreign  Mails  Brooks  has  sent 
a  formal  announcement  of  Postmaster 
General  Gary's  assumption  of  office  to 
the  interna-tlonal  postal  bureau  at 
Berne.  Switzerland.  In  this  he  says- 
"1  am  directed  to  add  that  it  will  be 
Mr.  Gary's  aim  to  promote  to  the  extent 
of  his  ability  the  continuance  of  the 
cordial   relations  between   this  depart 


,    ,  „.    in 

weight  as  he  would  possess  if  Fitz  en- 
I  tered  the  ring  weighing  under  160 
pound.s.  The  champion  will  weigh  be- 
I  tween  180  and  185  pounds,  and  Fitz 
I  thought  twenty-five  pounds  was  a  trifle 
too  much  to  give  away  in  a  champion- 
I  ship  fight.  He  has  been  most  careful  in 
concealing  his  weight,  but  his  trainers 
have  given  out  the  idea  that  he  will  not 
fight  at  a  middleweight  limit. 

"There's  nothing  the  matter  with  my 
condition,"  said  FItzsImmons  this  morn- 
ing, "and  all  my  friends  may  rest  as- 
sured that  I  will  give  a  better  account 
of  myself  after  I  am  in  the  ring  than 
Corbett  will.  I  know  that  they  are  play- 
ing him  for  favorite  In  the  betting,  and 
It  has  been  said  that  I  am  not  as  con- 
fident of  winning  this  fight  as  I  might 
be.  If  I  were  not  confident  of  winning 
it  I  would  not  ever  have  entered  into 
the  aiTan'gement  to  fight  Corbett.  He  is 
a  bigger  man  than  I  am  and  they  say 
that  he  is  better  at  long-range  fighting 
than  I  am.  Now.  I  have  not  the  least 
donbt  in  the  world  of  my  ability  to  keep 
out  of  his  way,  and  I  say  now,  as  I  have 
said  before,  that  when  I  go  after  him  he 
will  not  be  able  to  beat  me  in  a  half 
day.  and  he  will  not  beat  me  if  1  do  go 
for  him." 

Hickey.  Tenzler  and  Martin  Julian 
were  of  the  same  opinion  regarding  the 
chances  of  their  man.  There  was  but 
one  opinion  among  them  all,  and  that 
was  that  Corbett  would  be  punched 
into  just  as  about  nothing,  and  that  he 
would  be  punched  Into  It  In  very  short 
order.  Fitz  yesterday  swung  ...o  colors 
to  the  breeze  by  putting  them  out  on 
the  clothes  line.  He  will  wear  around 
his  waist  a  belt  of  red,  white  and  blue 
silk,  having  in  the  center  an  eagle 
which  looks  very  much  like  the  eagle  on 
a  silver  dollar.  Fitz  has  worn  the  belt 
in  several  of  his  fights,  and  he  Is  of  the 
opinion  that  he  will  not  lie  beaten  as 
lon-^  as  he  wears  it.  He  first  wore  the 
colors  of  the  United  States  In  his  fight 
with  Hall  at  New  Orleans  when  he  de- 


.\merlcan  citizen,  and  ever  since  that 
day  he  says  he  has  fought  with  the  na- 
tional colors  around  his  waist. 


All 


OFF  FOR  CARSON. 

Kinds    of   Sporting    Men 
Leave  'Frisco. 


San  Francisco,  March  15.— A  delega- 
tion of   enthusiasts  left   this   city   last 


and  afterwards  a  subordinate  teacher."    "^ent    and    the    postal    administration 


said  Principal  John  Loman,  the  author 
of  the  system  in  Duluth.  to  The  Herald 

r*>centlv'       ••TVi.i-.^     ... ;_     ^^     .  . 


Of  the  other  countries  embraced  in  the 
universal  postal  union  which  have  been 


recently.       There   were  in    that   school    so  happily  maintained   during  the  ad- 
four   boys   who   called   themselves   the    ministrations  of  his  predecessors  " 

Lively      Four,     and     well-named     they 

were.    They  were  the  source  of  most  of  I         A  GRATEFUL  RECOGNITION 

West    Joneaport.    Me.,    March     15  — 
Capt.  J.  Lobbins.  lighthouse  keeper  at 


the  mlrehlef  of  the  school,   and   their 

school  Jives  were  apparently  spent  In    »,  -^ «^^^^.   «v 

an  endeavor  to  live  up  to  their  title.    Moose  Beach,  has  received  a  gold  watch. 


There  are  thousands  of 
sickly  school-girls  all  over 
this  broad  land  that  are 
dragging  their  way  through 
school-life  who  might  enjoy 
that  abundant  life  which  be- 
longs to  youth  by  simple  at- 
tention to  hygienic  laws  and 
a  proper  course  of  treatment 

tvitfi  Q<-r»«>#-'o  T7.v^.,1^:  T-'L*     I  **venlng  for  Carson  and  today  will  pro- 

Wltn  bCOtt  S  Emulsion.    This  I  ceed  to  the  scene  of  the  great  battle. 

Last  evening's  train  carried  out  Harry 
Corbett.  Brady,  Al  Coney,  the  horse- 
man; Peter  L.  Murphy,  Philadelphia's 
crack  pigeon  shot,  who  is  better  known 
as  "one  barrel  Murphy."  Needham. 
J  .    ,         -  i  Dan  Lynch,  the  manager  of  Tom  Shar- 

and  quicken  the  aOOetite    bv  1  ^^^'-    ^^"*    Wemer.    Steve   OBrlen.    of 
*        \l       .  .    'if'pCLUC    oy  j  Victoria.  B.  C;  and  other  lesser  lights 

Strengthening  the  disrestion     ""^J^^  sporting  world. 

i-k        T        .        °..  "ig^-onwii.        To^  Sharlcey,  who  will  give  his  ver- 

sion of  the  great  fight  for  a  local  paper, 
boarded  the  train  at  Port  Costa,  From 
the  statements  of  Dan  Stuart's  repre- 
aentatlves  in  this  city,  nearly  3000  peo- 
ple will  journey  from  this  city  to  Car- 
son to  witness  the  championship  bat" 


ent  time.  More  snow  has  fallen  than 
during  any  winter  ever  known,  and  It 
is  no  wild  inediction  to  say  that  th< 
Jame.s  river  will  overflow  its  banks  to  a 
depih  of  rive  or  six  feet  before  the  watf^r 
subsides.  The  ice.  which  usually  melts 
and  pa.sses  out  liefore  this  time."  is  now 
nerfectcly  solid,  and  three  feet  thicl-- 
forming  a  gorge  that  the  torrent  of  meli- 
ed  snow  cannot  ilislodge.  The  result  wil! 
be  an  overflow  that  will  come  upon  tiie 
settlers  suddenly.  In  anticipation  of  thi- 
the  farmers  along  both  these  rivers  are 
moving  back   to   high   ground. 

The  snow  is  beginning  to  disappear  at 
Hurley  and  robins  and  meadow  larh-: 
have  put  in  an  appearance.  They  wcr- 
preceded  by  rain,  thunder  and  vivid  light- 
ning. Farmers  are  getting  ready  to  pick 
the  balance  of  their  corn,  which  was 
snowed  in  early  in  the  fall,  and  are  dig 
ging  out  the  unthreshed  stacks  to  finish 
threshing  preparatory  to  seeding.  Jusl 
north,  in  McOook  county,  is  four  feet  of 
snow  on  the  level,  and  floods  are  ex- 
pected this  spring  equal  or  greater  thai, 
those   of  1881. 

The  snow  blockade  still  continues  ef- 
fectual on  all  lines  centering  at  Aber- 
deen. The  Milwaukee  has  three  train 
crews  in  drifts  on  the  Mitchell-Aberdeen 
line,  and  nothing  whatever  is  being  don'> 
for  their  release.  The  government  thei- 
mometer  recorded  20  degrees  below  last 
night,  and  winter  conditions  are  as  pro- 
nounced as  ever.  The  newly  appointed 
state  commissioner  of  insurance.  J.  H 
Kipp.  of  Campbell  county,  is  in  the  citv 
today,  and  gives  notice  that  he  haV 
chosen  W.  A.  McLaren.  a  druggist  ot 
Aberdeen,  as  his  deputy.  The  place  is 
worth  $1000  a  year. 

T.  Howell  Richards,  pastor  of  the  Epis- 
copal church  at  Dell  Rapids,  was  arrest- 
ed Friday  night  on  a  charge  of  commit- 
ting the  crime  which  sent  Oscar  Wilde 
to  prison.  He  was  put  under  $400  bonds 
and  his  hearing  will  take  place  Monday. 
Richards'  operations  have  been  going  on 
three  years.  It  Is  alleged,  among  other 
things,  that  Richards  organized  a  society 
of  King's  Daughters  of  girls  from  10  to  il 
years  of  age  and  had  them  go  through 
their  exercises  entirely  nude.  A  dozen 
boys  from  16  to  18  years  of  age  gave  the 
most  damaging  enidence  against  Rich- 
ards. 


vey.   plans,   specifications  and  .superin- 
tendence. 


W. 

Duluth    Evening 
March-1-8-15. 


G.   TEN  BROOK. 
City  Comptroller. 
Herald,      Feb.        2; 


Ofllce  of  City  Comptroller. 
Duluth.   Minn.,    Feb.   22,   1897. 

^^ .  ,  .     .  ^    .  Notice  is  hereby  given  to  all  parties 

amount  assessed  against  each  lot  or  interested  that  an  assessment  has  been 
parcel  of  land  can  be  ascertained  at  made  by  the  board  of  public  works  of 
fhe  office  of  the  city  treasurer,  and  the  city  of  Duluth.  Minnesota,  and  con- 
that  the  assessment  is  due  and  pay- !  firmed  by  the  Hon.  J.  D.  Ensign  judge 
able,  and  if  i>aid  within  thirty  (30)  \  of  the  district  court  of  the  Eleventh 
days,  there  will  be  allowed  a  deduc-  judicial  district,  to  defray  in  full  the 
tion  of  ten  (10)  per  cent  charged  to  the  expense  of  grading  and  otherwise  Im- 
amount  of  the  the  assessment  for  sur-  (  proving  •  the    alley    between    Sixth    and 

Seventh  streets  from  Fifth  avenue  east 
to  Sixth  avenue  east  in  said  city,  and 
that  a  duplicate  assessment  roll  has 
been  delivered  to  the  city  treasurer, 
and  that  the  amount  assessed  to  each 
lot  or  parcel  of  land  can  be  ascer-, 
tained  at  the  office  of  the  city  treasur- 
er, and  that  the  assessment  Is  due  and 
payable,  and  If  paid  within  thirty  (30) 
days  there  will  be  allowed  a  deduction 
of  ten  (10)  per  cent,  charged  to  the 
amount  of  the  assessment  for  survey, 
plans,  specifications  and  superinten- 
dence. All  persons  so  desiring  can 
have  their  assessments  divided  into 
not  more  than  five  (.5)  Installments  of 
not  less  than  ten  (10)  dollars  each,  by 
making  application  to  the  city  comp- 
troller within  45  days  after  date  of  this 
notice.  Said  Installments  to  become 
due  and  payable  annually,  commencing 
October  1st.  1898,  with  interest  at  7  per 
cent  payable  annually. 

Blanks   for  this   purpose  can  be  ob- 
tained by  application  at  my  office. 
W.  G.  TEN  BROOK, 


Assessment  Notice. 


Sprinkllnft  Season  1896. 


Office  of  City  Comptroller, 
Duluth,  Minn.,  Feb.  22,  1897. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  to  all  parties 
interested  that  an  assessment  has  been 
made  by  the  board  of  public  works  of 
the  city  of  Duluth,  Minnesota,  and  con- 
firmed by  the  Hon.  J.  D.  Ensign,  judge 


City  Comptroller. 


t,:^.  ^r^^  .?.°."rL°;.  ,l*^l,.?ll^.^""^  :  Oumth  Evemng  nerald.  Feb-"22-Mr«.h 


judicial  district. to  defray  in  full  the  ex 
pehse  of  sprinkling  Lake  avenue  from  ' 
Superior  street  to  ship  canal;  Michigan  j 
street  from  Second  avenue  east  to  Sixth 
avenue  west,  and  Fifth  avenue  west.  I 
Fourth  avenue  west.  Third  avenue  ' 
ivest,  Second  avenue  west.  First  avenue  I 
west.  First  avenue  east  and  Second 
avenue  east  from  Michigan  street  | 
to  Superior  street  during  the  i 
season  of  1896,  in  said  city,  and  that  a  j 
iuplicate  assessment  roll  has  been  de- 
livered to  the  city  treasurer,  and  that 
the  amount  assessed  against  each  lot  or 
parcel  of  land  can  be  ascertained     at 


l-S-15. 


issesient  Notice. 

Fifth  Alley  Sewer. 


WILL  BE  ELECTROCUTED. 

Auburn.  N.  Y..  March  15.— Frank     N. 

Schellon    was    this    morning    adjudged 

guilty  of  murder  in  the  first  degree  for 

the  killing  of  his  wife  on  April  30.  1895, 

-  „,„,  TT  ,,     TT  ..V.    J,         , --      i"   the  town  of     Brutus,   this     county. 

f^^*^^^"^"-.H*^°"thf^ay  of  that  fight    Judge    Dunwell    sentenced    Schellon    to 
had  made  his  application  to  become  a.i  I  be  electrocuted  In  Auburn  prison  during 


Office  of  City  Comptroller. 
Duluth,  Minn.,  Feb.  22.  1897. 
Notice  is  hereby  given  to  all  parties 
he  office  of  the  city  treasurer."and  that    interested  that  an  assessment  has  been 
he  assessment  is  due  and  payable,  and    made  by  the  board  of  public  works  of 


if  paid  within  thirty  (30)  days  ther 
will  be  allowed  a  deduction  of  ten  (10) 
per  cent  charged  to  the  amount  of  the 
issessment  for  surveys,  plans,  specifi- 
cations and  superintendence. 

W.  G.  TEN  BROOK. 

City  Comptroller. 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  Feb.  22,  March 

1-8-15. 


Assessment  Notice. 


the  week  commencing  April  25. 


would  make  the  blood  rich, 
the  heart-beat  strong;  check 
that  tendency  to  exhaustion 


Our  book  tells  more  about 
it.     Sent  free. 

«COTT  &  BOWNE.  ChemlM.  N«w  Yortfc 


THE  GURSE 


Of  mankind — contagious  blood 
poison — claimed  as  its  victim  Mr. 
Frank  B.  Martin,  926  Pennsylvania 
Avenue,  Washington,  D.  C.,  and 
the  usual  physician's  treatment 
did  him  not  the  slightest  good.  His 
condition  reached  that  deplorable 
stage  wbich  only  this  terrible  dis- 
ease can  produce. 


THE  CURE 


After  all  else  failed,  was  at  last 
found  in  S.  S.  S. — the  greatest  of 
all  bl<x)d  remedies.  Eighteen  bot- 
tles removed  the  disease  perman- 
ently, and  left  his  skin  without  a 
blemish. 

8. 8.  S.  is  guaranteed 

parely  vegetable;  and 

18  the  only  known  cure 

for  this  most  terrible 

disease.   Books  free;        _        ,_^     ^ 

address.  Swift  Specific  Company,  Atlanta,  < 


Improvement  Helm  Avenue 


Office  of  City  Comptroller, 
Duluth,  Minn.,  Feb.  22,  1897. 
Notice  is  hereby  given  to  all  parties 
interested  that  an  assessment  has  been 
made  by  the  board  of  public  works,  of 
the  city  of  Duluth.  Minnesota,  and 
confirmed  by  the  Hon.  J.  D.  Ensign, 
judge  of  the  district  court  of  the 
Eleventh  Judicial  district,  to  defray  In 
full  the  expense  of  grading  and  other- 
wise improving  Helm  avenue  from 
Twenty-eighth  avenue  west  to  Thir- 
tieth avenue  west,  in  said  city,  and 
that  a  duplicate  assessment  roil  has 
been  delivered  to  the  city  treasurer, 
and  that  the  amount  assessed  to  each 
lot  or  parcel  of  land  can  be  ascertained 
at  the  office  of  the  city  treasurer,  and 
that  the  assessment  is  due  and  pay- 
able, and  if  paid  within  thirty  (30) 
days  there  will  be  allowed  a  deduction 
of  ten  (10)  per  cent,  charged  to  the 
amount  of  the  assessment  for  survey, 
plans,  specifications  and  superinten- 
dence.    All   persons   so   desiring     can 


the  city  of  Duluth.  Minnesota,  and  con- 
firmed by  the  Hon.  J.  D.  Ensign,  judge 
of  the  district  court  of  the  Eleventh 
Judicial  district,  to  defray  In  full  the 
expenses  of  constructing  a  sanitary 
sewer  in  the  alley  between  Fourth  and 
Fifth  streets  in  said  city,  from  Tmenty- 
sixth  avenue  west  to  Twenty-seventh 
avenue  west,  with  an  outlet  in  Twenty- 
seventh  avenue  west  to  the  alley  be- 
tween Third  and  Fourth  streets,  and 
that  a  duplicate  assessment  roll  has 
been  delivered  to  the  city  treasurer, 
and  that  the  amount  assessed  against 
each  lot  or  parcel  of  land  can  be 
ascertained  at  the  office  of  the  city 
treasurer,  and  that  the  assessment  is 
due  and  payable,  and  if  paid  within 
thirty  (30)  days  there  will  be  allowed 
a  deduction  of  ten  (10)  per  cent  charged 
to  the  amount  of  the  assessment  for 
survey,  plans,  specifications,  and  su- 
perintendence. All  persons  so  desiring 
can  have  their  assessments  divided  into 
not  more  than  five  (5)  installments  of 
not  less  than  ten  (10)  dollars  each  by 
making  application  to  the  city  comp- 
troller within  45  days  after  date  of  this 
notice.  Said  Installments  to  become 
due  and  payable  annually,  commencing 
October  1st,  1898,  with  intrest  at  7  per 
cent  payable  annually. 

Blanks  for  this  purpose    may  be  ob- 
tained by  application  at  my  office. 
W.  G.  TEN  BROOK. 
City  Comptroller. 
Duluth  Evening  Herald.  Feb  22.  March 

1-8-15. 


POkiehiMtM'a  Eaitflah  IHrnnoad  BraaA 
ENNYROYAL  PILLS 


Orisinal  aud  Onljr  SeaBlae. 

•AFC,   alw:.yj   nlUblij.     ^aoics  uk 

Druggist  for  Chickutert  i^iqtitk  Di*-. 

mmil Brand  in  Kti  sod  OoU  nnwllk' 

iXO,  inJod  witl.  »1M  ribbon.    Tak* 


^ 


'tigiUttauHmUatioiu.  AtOraai«i,or 
in  rtimpf  for  partlenlan,   i  «■! liiMlili  tad 

Md  tar  ul  Unl  DrjgtiMU  muSS^B 


i 


■»  ■  ■ < 


r 


'"T 


■  ■* 


■"^ 


r 


THE     DULUTH    fiVENlNG 


THE  PRODUCE  MARkEt. 


'^^ 


■* 


Unfortunate  That  the   Iron- 
ton  Plant  Cannot  Roll 
Steel  Plates. 

The    Hufto   Contract   Would 
Have  Given  It  a  Hand- 
some Profit. 

Accident  to  a   Horse  Neces- 
sitates Shooting— St.  Pat- 
rick's Day  Social. 


It  is  most  unfortunate  for  the  people 
of  West  Duluth  that  there  is  no  roller 
mill  here  that  is  fitted  for  turning  out 
the  steel  plates  used  in  the  force  main 
contract  of  the  Hugo  iron  works.  When 
the  contract  for  the  pipes  was  lirst  let 


Commission  men  are  feeling  good  all 
along  the  Michigan  street  line  this  week 
The  season  s  conslgnmMits  are  coming  in 
early  and  spring  prices,  as  a  rule,  arc 
considerably  easier  than  last  year,  and 
sales  are  in  much  greater  volume. 
Changes  in  values  are  not  numerous  at 
present.  Eggs  tumbled  down  several 
notches  and  onions  are  strong  at  a  slight 
advance  Apples  are  sllghtij  higher  and 
cider  is  In  sympathy. 

DULUTH  QUOTATIONS. 
iNote— the  quotations  below  ore  for 
goods  which  change  hands  in  lots  on  ihe 
open  market:  in  tilling  orders,  in  order 
to  secure  best  goods  for  shipping  and  to 
cover  cost  incurred,  an  advance  over  Jol>- 
tJing  prices  has  to  be  charged.  The  fig- 
ures are  changed  dailv. 

BITTER, 
tream..    separators,     fancv       21    fj 
Dairies,  fancy,  special  make       ir.    4ii 

Packing   stock    8    (%i 

Dairy,    fair    12    w 

OHEESF* 
Turns,   flats,   full  crm,   new       ll>i© 
Full    crm.    Vuung    America       11    Mi 

Swiss  cheese.   No.  1 12    (3) 

Brick.    No.    1 10 

Limb.,    full    cream,    choice..         J»    © 

PrimosI     e 

EOOS. 

Candled,    strictly   fresh 13    ® 

Candled,    storage 9    8* 

HONEY. 

Fancy  white  clover 12HW     13 

Faney  white  clover,   in  jars 

strained,    per    lb 12^4 

Golden    rod    \x 

Dark    honey     n 

Buckwheat,  dark   n 

MAPLE  SUGAR. 

Vermont,    per    pound 11 

Ohio,    per   pound    10 

Maple  syrup,   per  gal   90 

POPCORN. 

Choice,    per    lb 

NUTS. 
Soft  shell  almonds,  per  lb.. 
Soft  shell   walnuts,  per  lb.. 
Hard   shell   w.ilnuts.    per  lb 

Brazils,    per    lb 

Pecans,  pt-r  lb 

,      ..        „  Filbert.s,    per   lb 

to   the    Hugo   company,    an    order     for  I  Peanuts,  roasted,  per  lb 

Raw    peanuts    

VEGETABLES. 
Sweet  potatoes,  per  bus 85    @     90 


22 

jJi 

9 
13 

12^ 

12 

12M, 

10 


14 

11 


12 

llVi 


BULLISH 


The  Wheat  Market  Firm  and 
Higher  Owing  to  Bull- 
ish News. 


HEBALD:     MOl!?DAY,    MARCH    15,    1?97 


Bad  Crop  Reports  Were  Re- 
ceived From  Illinois,  Kan- 
sas and  Indiana. 


1800  tons  of  plate  was  given  to  the  Iron» 
ton   works,    but    the   machinery   at    the 
plant    was   not   fitted   to  do   the   work, 
and  it  was  found  necessary  to  transfer 
the  order  to  a  Chicago  mill.     The  cost 
of  the  plates  used  in  this  contract  is  40 
per  cent  of  the  finished  pipe,  and  it  is 
estimated   that   they   could   be  made  in 
West   Duluth  for  IZ     per     cent,     which 
would    leave   the   handsome   margin   of 
17  per  cent  on  the  total  contract  price 
of  the  pipe,  or  TO  per  cent  on  the  price 
paid    for   the   plate   itself,     enough      to 
make  the  order  a   most   desirable  one. 
The  test  made  in  the  Ironton  plant  on 
this  work  is  said  to  have  demonstrated 
that    the    machinery    is    too    light,    and 
that  before  it  will  be  able  to  make  this 
kind  of  plate  heavier  rolls  will  have  tc 
be    substituted.     The    present    contract 
of    the      Hugo    company      will      keep 
the  plant  running  at  its  full   capacity 
until    next    September,    by    which    timt 
it  is  expected  the  city  will  be  ready  to 
let  other  large  contracts,  to  say  nothipg 
of  others  who  will  require  this  kind  of 
work,    so   th?  indications   are   that    the 
•works  will  be  kept  in  operation  indefi- 
nitely. 


@  1  OO 
2»4®       3 


12 
12 
11 

8 

9    @ 
11 

7 

4^® 


Large  Decrease  In  the  Vis- 
ible   and    Amount  on 
Ocean  Passage. 


larger  than  antifcipated.  But  th'b  amount 

Srtf^^lS.*^'*?*  *"'^»  ^w*  English  vwible 
both  decreased  a  miich  smailed  artiount 
than  looked  for.  The  worlds  shipments 
last  week  were  much  larger  and  indicat- 
ed more  activity  among  Rus.slan  ship- 
pers. Crop  reports  from  private  parties 
In  various  i.arts  of  Illinois  practlnallv 
confirm  the  state  report.  Bad  ones  also 
came  from  Missouri.  Ohio  and  Indiana. 
One  Indiana  farmer  near  the  Illinois  line 
writes  us  that  his  300  acres  of  whea"t  ar» 
a  total  loss.  There  was  100,000  bus  of 
cash  wheat  sold  here  today  to  millers 
but  the  export  trade  and  clearances  con- 
tinue light.  Cable  news  dull,  except  an 
advance  in  Paris  which  may  be  in  cvonfir- 
mation  of  the  reported  damage  there 
We  have  had  about  as  much  bull  sta- 
tistical news  as  is  possible,  and  now  that 
the  spring  approaches  the  outlook  is  for 
a  nervous  market  on  crop  reports  with 
probably  good  fluctuations  which  should 
be    taken   jidvantage   of. 

Corn  and  oats— Steady  moderate  trnd-» 
but*  higher  cables  on  corn  and  light  re- 
ceipts  give  strength    to   the   market. 

Provisions  continue  the  stronge.st  on 
the  floor  and  show  every  evidence  of  i 
further   advance,    parii<Milarly    in    nork 

Puts.   May   wheat.   T.?'*®":!^^,.^^^. 

Calls.    May  wheat.   74^f  asked  )f?74»^^. 

Curb.    May    wheat.     74c. 


One  Cent  a  Word. 


TXAISXD    NVBaX. 


IP  YOU   WANT  A  TRAINBS)   NURBB 
leave  your  order  at  Boyce's  Drug  ator* 


GOOD    GIRL    WANTED    AT    324    WEST 
small    family;    call    at 


Superior   street ; 
once. 


WANTED-A  GOOD  COOK  AT  432  WEST 
Second  street. 


WANTED-AN  EXPERIENCED  WAIT- 
ress  and  chambermaid.  Call  at  St. 
James   hotel. 


^ofo^X?^?-^IRL  fOR  SECOND  WORK. 
218  West  Third  street. 


11 


5«. 


U'/^ 


Sweet    potatoes,     Muscatine 
per  bbl  2  00 


HORSE'S  LEO  BROKEN. 
Olsen.  the  milkman,  lost  a  valuable 
horse  this  morning  by  a  very  peculiar 
accident.  The  animal  was  left  stand- 
ing in  front  of  a  residence  on  Third 
street  while  milk  was  being  delivered. 
It  was  fastened  to  a  heavy  weight.  In 
some  way  it  became  frightened,  and 
started  to  run.  the  strap  attached  to 
the  weight  becoming  entangled  in  the 
horses  hind  legs.  Dashing  into  the  high 
snow  bank  at  the  side  of  the  street,  the 
horse's  feet  sunk  through  the  curst  and. 
while  attempting  to  extricate  itself, 
broke  one  of  its  hind  legs.  Patrolman 
•  Jus  Schroeder  was  called,  and  ended 
the  poor  brute's  misery  with  a  shot 
from  his  revolver. 


3") 

40 

0)     bO 

®  1  7i 

(5)  50 

®  1  00 

(6)  27 
90      30 

(p>  60 
£i  2  23 
({i?  7 
©  2  25 
3  M  «?  3  73 
8.-. 

6.">  0    7r. 
r>o 

2X, 
90 
15 

2  25 

3  50 
90 
40 

5  50 


f?      40 
Sj   1  00 


(?r  1  00 


90 
73 
63 


@     90 


ST.  PATRICK'S  DAY. 
The  Ladies'  Aid  society  of  the  M.  E. 
church  will  give  a  social  at  the  resi- 
dence of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  G.  D.  Jewell,  No. 
608  Fifty-ninth  avenue  west,  on  "Wed- 
nesday evening.  The  following  musical 
and  literary  program  will  be  given: 

Chorus.   "Greeting  Olea"    

Recitation    Miss  Lucy  Le  Due 

Vocal  solo   Bert  Abbott 

Duet Mrs.  Hopkins  and  Mrs.  Haven 

Recitation    Miss   Bernice   Phelps 

Solo Mrs.  Jennie  Adam;- 

Instrumental  solo.. Miss  Mabel  De  Vore 

Reading Mrs.  Modelle  Bronson 

Vocal  solo  Miss  Sadie  P>rescott 

Instrumental  solo  ..Miss  Florence  Felt 

Vtxal  solo    Mr.   Jewell 

Recitation    Miss  Janet   Stewart 

Vocal  .solo  Mrs.  Olund 

Song   Smith  Quartet 

A  FAREWELL  PARTY. 
A  farewell  party  was  given  to  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  J.  Q.  Hancock  Saturday  night,  at 
the  residence  of  Dr.  I.  T.  Burnside.  by 
friends  and  neighbors.  Mrs.  Hancock 
was  presented  with  a  handsome  silver 
I>on  bon  dish.  The  evening  was  passed 
in  progressive  cinch,  Mrs.  Hancock 
winning  the  head,  and  .Miss  Free- 
man the  booby  prize.  Mi.  and  Mrs. 
Hancock  will  leave  this  week  for  Min- 
neapolis, where  they  expect  to  make 
their  home  in  future. 


Celery,  per  dox  25 

Carrots,  per  bus 35 

Beets,    per    bus 4o 

Onions,   per  bus 165 

Turnips,    per    bus 40 

Holland  seed  cabbage.  100  lb    2  50 
Minn  cabbage,  per  100  lbs...       70 

Potatoes,    pvr    bus 25 

Mint,    per    doz 25 

Parsley,   per  doz 25 

Parsnips,    per    bus 55 

Cauliflowers,    per  doz 1  ,50 

Horse   radish,    per   lb 6 

Hubbard   squash,    per   doz..     1  50 
California    cabbage,    crates. 

California  celery,   doz 

Florida  tomatoes,  basket 

Oyster  plant,  doz  bunches.. 
Green  onions,   doz   bunches. 

Spinach,    per  bus 

New  beets,  doz 

Spanish  onions,   per  crate.. 
Bermuda    onions,    per   crate 

Lettuce,   per  box 

Lettuce,    per    doz 

Horse  radish  roots,   per  bbl 

PE.A.S  AND  BEANS. 

Fancy  navy,   per  bus l  15 

Medium,    hand   picked,    bus.       90 
Brown    beans,    fancy,    bus. 

Green  and  yellow  peas 

Green   peas,    bus 

FRUITS. 
California    navel    oranges.. 

Seedling   oranges    

California    pears,    per   case 

Bananas,    bunches    

Lemons,  per  box 2  75    @  3  50 

Cocoanuts.   pt-r  doz TO 

Cranberries,    per   bbl 5  50    ®  6  00 

Cranberries,    bus 1  75    @  2  00 

Malaga   grapes,    per   keg....    6  75    @  7  50 

Figs,    per    lb 12    ra:     15 

Pineapple,  per  doz 4M 

APPLES  AND  CIDER. 

-Apples,    per   bbL 173    ®  2  50 

Mich,  sweet  cide'r.  per  keg...    2  50    ®  2  75 
DRESSED  MEATS. 

%'eal.  fancy  7    0 

Veal,   heavy,   coarse,   thin...         5 

Mutton,    fancy    dressed 6    @ 

LIVE  POILTRY. 

Live   turkeys    10 

Sprlnk  chickens,  per  lb 6    0       7 

DRESSED  POULTRY. 

Turkeys.   p*r  lb 10 

Chickens,   per  lb , 6    ®       7 

Geese,    per    lb 10    <&     11 

BRAN  AND  SHORTS.   CAR   LOTS. 
Bran.  200  lbs.  sacks  included    8  00 
Shorts.    100    lbs.    .sacks   Inc..    9  00 
Shorts.    200    lbs.    sacks    inc..    8  50 

Red  dog 12  tX) 

Ground  feed  No.  l 10  0(>    010  50 

Ground  feed.   No.  2 10  00    ©10  50 

HAY.    CAR    LOTS. 


Wheat  opened  firm  this  morning,  influ- 
ence*! by  bad  crop  reports,  which  were 
especially  bad  from  Illinois  points,  pri- 
vate messages  fully  confirming  the  state 
board  report  of  Saturday.  Kansas  and 
Indiana  also  sent  their  quota  of  damage 
reports.  Liverpool  cables  were  higher, 
and  the  worlds  shipments,  though  largfr    Leather 


NEW  YORK  STOCKS. _ 

Name  of  Stock.        Open  Hleh  Low  Close 

whiSky ; 

Atchison 

Sugar  Trust 

Canada  Southern. 

C,  B  &  Q 

St.   Paul 

Chicago   Gas 

Del..  Lack.  &  W.. 
General  Electric. 

Erie 

Reading 

Louis.  &  Nash.... 

Manhattan 

Missouri  Pacific. 

Tobacco 

Chicago  &  N.  W. 
N.  P.   preferred... 

Rock    Island 

Union    Pacific 

Western   Union 


Lake   Shore. 


13\ 

1!!H 

116^ 

"11% 

78 
7S 

ir)5H 
35 

"ax 

49X 
t&\ 

78  It 

108X 

38 

69 

7 

84^^ 
59 


n% 

117 

"78M 
784 

n% 

IMH 
85 

50^ 

86 

ia\ 

78% 
110 
83 
694 

J^ 
85  Ji 

594 


li\ 

n\ 

n\ 

12 

ms 

1154 

"77H 

"7"74 

77  X 

784 

77H 

784 

1554 

1554 

35 

»S 

"25H 

"254 

49  V, 

49  K 

My, 

ViS, 

18 

18)i 

7'<H 

184 

lti8K 

1004 

37  )( 

37* 

68K 

684 

7 

74 

84X 

85 

59 

594 

WANT  ED-GIRL     FOR     GENERAL 

ren^w°r^^'  9"l  ^ho  can  cook.  No  chlld- 
ren,  307  West  Second  street. 

°Kp^r^  9P^J^    WANTED    IMMEDIATE 
i>.    Call    Monday    morning.       1721    Ea.s 


One  Cent  a  IVord. 


All  advertisements  of  "situ- 
ations" wanted  inserted  FREE. 
We  Invite  as  many  repetitions 
as  are  necessary  to  secure 
wiiat  you  advertise  for.  Tiie 
Herald's  50,000  daily  readers 
will  be  sure  to  fill  your  wants. 


fggiy/»^^a  WAT  am, 

WANTED-PLACE  BY  GOOD  COOK  IN 
private    family,    or    to    general    house- 

m'^VJ-      .P  ^'^'*'  ^""^'^  ''''y  references.   L 
88.   Herald. 


tm  \\\ 


RArLTOAD  TIME  TABLES. 
St.  Paul  &  Duluth  R.  R. 


Lost* 
Dnlath. 


*1 :55 1 


«.  m 

p.m. 

•ll:15p  m 


•Daily.  tBzeopt  S(uida> 


ST.  PAUL, 
MINNEAPOLIS. 


Arrirs 
Dnlath. 


*6  JOa.  m. 
*1 :30  p.m. 
n  :4«  p.  m. 


iorw'Hj?^®''  °**»''    CITY  TICKEr  O J^FICB. 


EUSTERN  RAILWAY 

OF  ■IMIIEOGTA. 

CITY  TICKET  OFWCE  432  W.  8DPBBI0B  ST. 


First 


WANTED-AT  ONC.'S.  A  SIRL  FOR 
general  housework:  ."mall  fftniilv:  none 
but  competent  need  apply;  "  liberal 
wages  Apply  by  letter  \o  R 
Herald. 


tcmus.   care 


^tB\^^  S^^  ALWAYS  FIND  GOOD 
glrla  and  eight  girls  can  find  good 
places;  also  the  best  and  cheapest  hair 
goods,  switches  and  chains  at  Mrs.  M. 
C.  Siebold  s,  225  East  Superior  street.  - 

WANTED-A  LADY  AND  GENTLE- 
man  to  solicit  orders  for  household 
goods;  sold  on  easy  payments.  No  ex- 
Ul^^?'^®*  required.  John  Gately  &  Co.. 
706  West  Superior  street. 


A  RELIABLE.  MIDDLE  AGED  M\N 
?^"**l  work  of  any  kind.  Must  have  if. 
1'  S(,   Herald. 


I'os  tion  as  stenographer.  Has  had  ex- 
perience in  general  office  work.  Can 
uperate    any    machine.      Address    K    % 


A  \OT'NG  LADY  WOULD  LIKE  A  Po- 
sition at  g.-neral  hou.sework.  A  good 
and  reliable  German  girl.  Call  at  282 
Third  avenue  east. 


A     \OUNG    MAN.    22    YEARS    OF    AGE 
wants  work  of  any  kind.   Must  have  it 
Address  916  East  Seventh   street 


SALESMEN  Fo"r  CIGARS.  b"iG~PAY 
Experience  unnecessary.  Monopolc  Ci- 
gar company.  Galesville.  Wis. 


SIX  CENT  VERDICT. 

Jury    Allowed    Martin    Miller 
That  Amount. 

Late  Saturday  afternoon  the  jury  in 
the  ca.se  of  Martin  Miller  against  Jasper 
Wald.  after  having  been  out  since  early 
morning,  came  into  court  with  a  ver- 
dict awarding  Miller  6  cents  dama'ges 
for  his  Injured  reputation.  Miller 
sued  for  $3000  because  as  he  allegeii, 
Wald  had  accu.sed  him  of  burning  the 
school    house   at    Rice    Lake.      The   de- 


Ing, 


3  25  0  3  75 

2  00  (a  2  50 

200  (fj:  250 

1  25  (i?  1  .50 


than  for  the  previous  week,  were  still 
far  below  what  are  regarded  as  the  week- 
ly requirements.  Northwest  receipts  wer.^ 
302  cars  against  254  last  week  and  546  on 
the  corresponding  day  of  the  year  before. 
Not  much  attention,  however,  was  paid 
to  anything  but  the  crop  damage  reports. 
St.  Louis  was  a  heavy  buyer  in  the  Chi- 
cago market  and  many  of  the  longci 
there,  who  had  let  go  on  the  break  last 
week   took   hold   again. 

The  only  thing  that  prevented  thosf 
crop  damage  ropDrts  from  more  .seriously 
Influencing  the  minds  of  the  entire  body 
of  speculators  was  that  only  a  week  ago 
telegrams  from  similar  sources  said 
wheat  previously  thought  to  be  winter 
killed  was  growing  finely  under  the  in- 
fluence of  two  or  three  days  of  mi'd 
weather.     Too  much  attention,  as  a  rule 

anon.vmo"i..*^l^o'uVces.^bmX?rrde  introduced     some     testimony    to 

ting  more  skeptical  and  inclined  to  await  i  ^""^^'    ^'^^^    Miller   really   did    burn    the- 

some    more    authentic    Information    than     school    house,    but   the  jury    vindicated 

that  coming  from  country  correspondent.^  1  h'm    from      the    charge,    although      the  ,  ,, 

of  commission  houses  at  Chicago  who  are  ;  amount  of  his  damages  is  not  excessive  '     wo'i.i.^f    ■n'^r*'    *" 

presumably    interested    In    ral.sing   or    de-     as   fixed  lay  the   iiirV        '  t;j..ctaM.e       Racine,   Wis. 

pres.sing  prices.  rpy,.^    r»r.r„i„.,   %*,:/    „i„„., ,     


^.^i^P^'^i^OO^  ^IRE  INSURANCE 
solicitor.   Address   P  21,   Herald. 


^  ANTED-AGBNTS  TO  SOLICIT  SICK 
and  accident  Insurance  for  the  Union 
Men  s  Miitual  Insurance  company  of 
r"'"y?-..^'^^"^'  terms  to  the  rlghtpar- 
ties.  Call  or  address  307  PnUoHir.  h..ii,i- 


,^  1   RT  address  307  Palladio  bulld- 
Duluth,    Minn. 


4  PER  CENT  IS  GOOD  INTEREST  GET 
a  coijpon  book  free  at  10  East  Superior 
street  and  save  $4. 


■W  .\N TED-SITUATION  BY  YOUNG 
girl  in  small  family  to  do  general  house- 
work.  Address  L  16,   Herald. 


LeaTe  Unlath 

tl2:40p,  m. 
*11 :15  p.  m. 


Arrive  Ouintb 


YOUNG  MAN.  20  YEARS  OLD.  STRONG 
and  willing  to  work,  would  like  place  in 
commission   house   or  as  delivery   man 
I-amiluir  with   care  of   horses.   Address 
A.  G..   Herald. 


\\  ANTED-YOUTH  WOULD  LIKE  SIT- 
uatlon  of  any  kind.  Clerking  or  office 
work  preferred;  am  energetic  and  re- 
o  "'^o-„^^'.\  ^'^^  references.  Address  L., 
Box  279.  West  Duluth,  Minn. 

WANTED-TO      DO      WASHING      AND 

7^','"i"^*"o  ''*'"?*'  cleaning  by   the  day. 
7.31  East   Second  street. 


♦Daily.    tBxo«pt  Sandaj. 

Buffet  Parlor  Cars  on  Day  Tiains. 
New  Sleeping  Cars  oa  Night  Traiae. 

^^Dlroct  eonneetiona  with  Great  Northern  trains 

P*'»GO,  GRAND  FORKS 

WINNIPEG,  HELENA. 

BUTfE,  SPOKANE, 

PORTUNO,  SEATTLE 

AND  JAPAN. 
At  St.  Paul  conneotiona  are  made  for  all  point* 
East,  Weat  and  Booth.    Through  tickete  and 
bangage  checked  to  destiDatiou. 


Duluth,  South  Shore  &  Atlantic  Ry. 

^^——    Trains  for  all  points  East  leave 

K'.-.^'.-  4:10  P.  M. 

— , ^    SLLEPINii  CAK  for  Sault  8te 

Mane,  aaa  limlng  Car,  eervin*  supper. 

SUNDA??*"*  ^■'^  ""'^^  "  ^  ■•  "»•  EXCEPT 


ROUTE 


WANTED-ONE  ENGLISH  SPEAKING 
one  Scandinavian,  one  German  and  one 
French  salesman.  Salary  and  commis- 
sion; no  experience  needed;  good  hustlers 
make  big  money;  work  here  in  the  city; 
staple  goods.  The  Singer  Manufacturing 
company.    G14   West    Superior   street. 


WASHING.  IRONING.  HOItsE  CLEAN- 
ing  or  scrubbing  by  the  day;  work  guar- 
anteed. Call  or  address  112  First  ave- 
nue  west,    up   stairs. 


HOUSE         CLEANING.         SCRUBBING 

Bnn''%VT"'*u°™*'^''  *°  <^'^an-  Mrs.  Jack- 
son, 390  Lake  avenue  south. 


AGENTS-WE  HAVE  INVENTED  A 
new  device  for  printing  signs  on 
fences,  bridges,  rocks— any  rough  sur- 
face. Six  colors  at  once,  any  size.  You 
can    sell    one    in    every    store.    Arc    Co 


The  damage  to  winter  wheat  was  not  u"^^'^  morning  the  slander  case  of 
the  only  bullish  feature  of  the  dav-s  ^V?""!  .^'■"''■"  ^^ainst  C.  M.  Hill  was 
news.  The  quantitv  on  ocean  passage  t'a'ied,  but  the  defense  was  not  ready, 
decreased  I.6OO.11OO  bus  last  week,  and  the  ■  It  was  stated  that  one  of  the  principul 
domestic  visible  supply  decreased  1.318.0WI  witnesses  for  the  defense,  wh#was  in 
bus,   compared  with  a   decrease  of  3:3.oo.»  \  the  city  Friday,  had  unexpecteaiy  gone 


Choice  south.    Minn 

Northern    Minn    

Medium   

Tame.    ton.   choice  timothy. 


6  50  <!rt  7  ro 

4  00  (jl  G  50 

4  (W  (??  6  ."lO 

8  (JO  (&  »  W 


IN  CHICAGO. 
Chicago.  March    15.— Butter,  firm  cream- 
eries.   lO<U18c:    dairies.    9fM6<-.    Eggs,    f.isv. 
fresh.   SMti^lOc. 


AN  UNKIND  ATTACK. 
An  anonymous  correspondent  in  the 
News  Tribune  Saturday  morning  con- 
tained an  attack  on  Lieut.  Briggs  and 
Street  Commissioner  Stevens,  which 
has  created  much  unfavorable  comment 
among  business  men  and  others  in  the 
West  End.  It  was  considered  particu- 
larly unkind  to  Lieut.  Briggs.  who  has 
just  suffered  3  severe  loss  by  fire,  losing 
all  of  his  household  furniture.  Both 
Lient.  Briggs  and  Street  Commissioner 
Stevens  are  claimed  by  the  business 
men  to  be  unusually  popular,  and  are 
commended  by  all  classes  for  their  effl- 
ciency  and  willingness  to  assist  and 
accommodate  the  public. 


IN  NEW  YORK. 
New    York.    March    1."..— Butter,    steady. 
Eggs,   quiet. 


duced  to  41,4.">0.000  bus.  compared  Willi 
62.123.000  bus  a  year  ago.  The  worlds 
shipments  of  wheat  and  flour  to  Europe 
last  week  were  only  3.688.0<J<J  bus  against 
6.001.000  bus  the  corresponding  week  of 
last  year.  The  English  visible  is  esti- 
mated to  have  decreased  469.000  bus 
against  an  increase  of  34.000  bus  last  year. 
Chicago  receipts  were  17  cars;  the  "year 
before   they   were  27  cars. 

There  was  fair  trading  on  the  Duluth 
board.  May  wheat  opened  %v  higher  at 
74>ic  and  sold  up  to  74%c.  It  eased  off  to 
(4c  before  noon,  but  later  sold  up  again 
to  7414c  and  closed  firm  with  buyers  at 
that  figure,  an  advance  of  %c  for  the  dav. 
The  mills  bought  6000  bus  of  cash  stuff 
at  >4c  under  May.  antl  the  elevators  took 
2fiOO  bus  at  *ic  under  Mav.  Following  were 
the    closing   prlct-s: 

Wheat— No.  1  hard.  cash.  75'^c;  Mav. 
76V,c.  No.  1  northern,  cash.  73>Ac;  May 
74Hc  asked:  July.  74?4c;  September.  70",*'' 
hid.  No.  2  northern.  71c.  No.  3,  ST^'Ufdu.v 
Rejected,  50«.i««5>.4c.  To  arrive— No.  1  hani 
7r>»<ic:  No.  1  northern.  73Hc.  Rve.  *4c.  No. 
2  oat.s.  17>4c;  No.  3  oats.  16^c.  Fla.\. 
:6\c:  May.  8D»4c. 

Car  Inspection— Wheat.  32:  com.  1.  Re- 
ceipts—Wheat, 16.334  bus;  barley.  15-U 
bus;   flax.    iaIH  bus.   Shipments— None. 


NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 

Trading  at  the  Opening  Was 
Only  IModerate. 

New  York.  March  15.— Trading  on  the 
stock  exchange  was  in  moderate  vol- 
ume at  the  outset  and  higher  prices  pre 
vailed  generally  which  were  most  pro- 
nounced in  the  industrials.  Consoli- 
dated Gas  improved  34c.  Sugar  %c  and 
Lead  »^c.  Rubber  exceptionally  de- 
clined 1  cent  on  further  liquidation. 
Railways  was  quiet  and  without  essen- 
tial change  from  Saturday.  Aside  from 
New  York  Central  and  St.  Louis  sec- 
ond, preferred,  wiiich  improved  l^c. 

The  advance  was  soon  Impeded  by  a 
bear  attack  on  the  specialties  which 
created  a  selling  movement  in  the  gen- 
eral list.  The  Rubber  shares  lacked  in- 
side support  and  scored  extreme  lines 
of  2%  and  2%  per  cent  for  the  common 
and  stock  rumors  of  dissensions  in  the 
management  which  were  denied  and 
the  less  favorable  trade  conditions  in- 
fluenced the  break.  The  losses  in  the 
rest  of  the  list  were  mainly  fractional 
with  the  market  at  11  o'clock  display- 


WEEKLY   STATEMENT 
Of  grain  in  store  at  Duluth  for  the  week 
ended  Saturday.  March  i;{.  1S97: 
Wheat. 

No.    1    hard    

No.    1   northern   

No.    2    northern    

No.   3   

No      grade    

Rejected    108!849 

Siiec'al     bin     250,2S.'» 

Afloat    402.30*1 


Bl]s. 

942,232 

2..305.731 

884.98S 

419.96.^ 

92.92S 


be  served  upon  him.  and  the  defense 
wanted  the  case  continued  until  the 
missing  witness  cnuld  be  recovered. 
The  case  wa.s  left  open  to  allow  C.  O. 
Baldwin,  who  appears  for  Hill,  to  make 
an  affidavit  setting  forth  his  grounds 
for  contiiauance. 

Judge  Ensign  then  took  up  the  ca^e 
of  the  Upper  Peninsula  Brewing  com- 
pany against  the  bondsmen  of  Fredin 
&  Wilson,  who  built  the  foundation  for 
plaintilY's  brewery  in  the  West  End. 
The  plaintiff  alleges  that  owing  to  the 
failure  of  Fredin  &  Wilson  to  carry  out 
their  contract  it  was  compelled  to  pay 
a  number  of  mechanics'  and  material 
liens  incurred  by  the  firm.  The  suit  is 
to  recover  the  amount  paid  out  in  this 
manner. 

The  case  of  John  Lemieu  a-gainst  Emii 
L.  Gross  was  dismissed  by  the  plain- 
tiff. This  left  only  the  following  jury 
lases  remaining  to  be  tried:  Lottie  E. 
Doyle  against  the  city  of  Duluth  and 
Melvin  J.  Clark  against  the  B.  B.  Rich- 
ards Lumber  company.  The  latter  is  a 
court  case  with  soecial  Issues  for  the 
jury. 


FOR  RENT-NICELY  FURNISHED 
room,  convenient  for  young  men.  Room 
18   Norris   block. 


NICELY  FURNISHED  ROOM.  LOWELL 
block. 


FOR    RENT-THREE    ROOMS.   220   SEV 
enth   avenue  west. 


FOR  RENT-BASEMENT  OP  1020  EAST 
Fourth  street;  very  warm;  $3  per  month; 
water   free. 


$200  CASH.    BALANCE   IN   BOARD  AND 
room;     will     buy     furniture     of     25-room 
boarding   house;       central       location     A 
snap.     P  91.   Herald.  ' 


FOR  SALE-A  FIRST-CLASS  OR(:;aN. 
?.|0:  easy  payment.s.  Address  P  96  Her- 
ald. 

~ ■ »<M 

FOR  SALE-STOCK  AND  FIXTURES 
of  white  front  store,  stationery  and  con- 
fectionery opposite  High  school.  Best 
stand  in  city.  Inquire  as  above. 

SEVENTY-FIVE  DOLLARS  AND  BAL- 
ance  monthly  buys  a  fourteen  room 
house  within  seven  blocks  of  the  Spald- 
ing hotel.  Chas.  W.  Hoyt.  405  Chamber 
of  Commerce. 


Dolttli,  Soperior  &  ffestera  Ry. 


WEST, 
P.  M. 


•Daily  except  Snnday. 


•3:06 
4:05 
6:13 
7:40 
7:02 
8:00 


0 
23 

76 

94 
109 


Lv Duluth  .... 

Ar Cloquet  .... 

Ar —  Swan  River 

Ar Hibbing  ... 

Ar..  Grand  Rapids 
Ar....  Deer  River  . 


BAST. 
A.  M 


....Ar 
....Lv 
....Lv 
....Lv 
....Lv 
....Lv 


•11:40 
10:41 
8:40 
7:15 
7:50 
6:55 


Duluth,  Missabe 

&  Northern 
RailwayCompany 


sntAirciAij. 


TO   HMXT—HOCSEIS. 

FOR   RENT-MODERN~8-Ro6m~'hOUSE 
well    furnished;    good    location,    for   ono 
yea*-;  also  8-room  furnished  house.  East 
End    for   three   or   six    months.    W.      H 
Carpenter.    112    We.st    Michigan    street. 

FOR  RENT-SEVEN  ROOM  HOUSE  ON 
Nineteenth  avenue  east,  near  Lond<m 
road,  at  $10.  water  free.  Carpets  to  sell 
cheap,   all   laid.     Address   P  81,    Herald 


FOR  RENT  -  HOUSE  315  WEST 
Fourth  street;  all  modern  improve- 
ments; will  be  renovated  to  suit  ten- 
ant. A.  C.  Volk  &  Co..  Palladio  build- 
ing. 


,      Total    5.407.2C-> 

Increase  during  week   236  41:: 

Stock  a  year  ago  12.60fi.418 

Corn    in    store    46.460 

Oats    in    store    1.948.812 

Rye    in    store    S04.81."» 

Barley    in   store    1.133.420 

F'lax  in  store   1.826.271 


WEST  DULUTH  BRIEFS. 
The  funeral  of  Mrs.  D.  G.  Bagley  took  I  '"K.an  improved  tone 


place  from  the  family  residence  at  2719 
Helm  street  this  morning.  The  de- 
ceased leaves  a  husband  and  four  chil- 
dren. 

The  entertainment  given  by  the  ladies 
of  the  Eastern  Star  Saturday  night,  in 
Masonic     hall,     was  a   most  enjoyable  , 
affair.'  and   was  well  attended.  ! 

The  Proctorknott  hand,  composed  of  j 
fifteen  pieces,  has  kindly  volunteered 
its  services  to  the  St.  Patrick's  eve  en- 
tertainment, to  ije  given  Tuesday  eve- 
ing.  at  Great  Eastern  hall  for  the  bene- 
fit of  St.  James'  parish,  and  will  dis- 
course a  number  of  patriotic  national 
airs  to  suit  the  occasion. 

Epworth  league  of  the  Asbury  M.  E. 
church  will  give  an  April  fool's  social 
April  1. 

There  will  be  high  mass  at  St.  James' 
church  St.  Patricks  day  at  9  o'clock. 


Liberal  purchasing  orders  were  ex- 
ecuted in  various  parts  of  the  list,  an- 
thracite coalers  being  especially  strong. 
The  rubber  shares  recovered  the  early 
losses  and  noteworthy  improvements 
were  shown  in  other  stocks,  notably  the 
Vanderbilts.  The  industrials  lagged 
somewhat  In  the  rally.  The  bond  mar- 
ket was  uninteresting  but  firm,  .sales 
of  stocks  to  noon  95,000  shares. 


CATTLE  AND  HOGS. 

Chicago.  March  15.— Receipts.  26,000;  left 
over.  800.  Market  active  and  shade  lower 
than  opening.  Light,  $3.85(^^4.05:  mixed. 
S3.85iJ^(4.o3;  heavy.  $3.64)^4.05;  rough.  $3.6iJ(?i 
3.65.  Cattle.  receipts.  16.000.  Stf»adv. 
I.3.(i0(fi5..35;  cows  and  heifers.  $2.00^425; 
Texas  steers.  $3.20(^4.25;  stocker.s^  and 
feeders.    $3.25^i4.2.").    Sheep,    receipts.    22.00(». 

Weak  to  10c   lower. 

Hogs,  official  receipts  Saturdav.  93<M: 
shipments.  761.  Cattle,  official  ftx-eipt-i 
Saturday.  440;  shipments.  210.  Sheep,  of- 
Hcial    receipts    Saturday.    1924;   shipments. 


DEAFNESS  CANNOT  BE  CURED 
By  local  applications,  as  they  cannot 
reach  the  disea.sed  portion  of  the  ear. 
There  Is  only  one  way  to  cure  deafness, 
and  that  is  by  constitutional  remedies. 
Deafness  is  caused  by  an  inflamed  condi- 
tion of  the  mucous  lining  of  the  Eusta 
chian    Tube.      When 


Do  not  be  hoodwinked.  Use  no  "Just 
as  good."  Salvation  Oil  is  what  you 
want  when  in  need  of  a  good  liniment. 


KENTUCKY'S  SENATORSHIP. 
Frankfort.  Ky..  March  14.— Th«re 
were  large  crowds  in  the  senate  chatn- 
ber  and  the  hall  of  the  house  today  in 
anticipation  of  a  ballot  for  United 
States  senator  to  succeed  Senator 
Blackburn,  but  in  respect  to  the  late 
Senator  Sawyer,  both  branches  ad- 
journed about  noon  without  a  joint 
session.  At  the  executive  depart- 
ment and  at  Bradley  headquarters  in 
the  hotel,  it  is  denied  that  there  is 
any  coalition  with  the  Democrats  to 
elect    Mr.    Bradley    senator   over    Con- 


THE  CHICAGO  MARKET. 
Chicago,  March  15.— Close.  wheat. 
March.  73c:  May.  74c:  Julv.  72%(ga4c;  Sep- 
tember. 70lic.  Corn.  March.  23%c;  May. 
24%c;  July.  25V4c;  September.  26^c.  Oats. 
March.  ]6%c;  May.  17»i,c:  Julv.  I8%c 
I'ork.  March.  $8.72>/i;  May.  $8.82>'i;  July. 
$8.95.  Lard.  March.  $4.20;  Mav.  $4.27'->rt- 
4.30:  July,  $4.37^^;  September.  $4.47^^.  Ribs, 
March.  $4.70:  May,  $4.72i^(&4.75 ;  July,  $4.75. 
Whisky  on  the  basis  of  $1.17  for  flnlshed 
goods.  Cash,  Wheat,  No.  2  red,  84irS»>-- 
No.  3  red.  78@83c;  No.  2  spring.  74c;  No.  3 
spring,  70^73c;  No.  2  hard  winter,  78<fr82c: 
No.  3  hard  winter.  72®76c;  No.  1  north- 
ern spring,  76c.  Cash,  corn.  No.  2,  '£i^- 
No.  3,  20'/2@21c.  Cash,  oats,  16^c;  No.'  ."" 
16(gl7c.  Rye.  cash,  32Vvc;  May,  33%c;  July 
35V4C.  Barley,  cash.  No.  3.  22>^?i32c.  Flax 
cash.  Northwestern.  80(&'80>;^c;  May,  78'v 
(ft^ic;  July,  SOc;  September,  Sl^ic.  Timo- 
thy,   cash,    $2.65;    March,    $2.65. 


BOYS  ON  TRIAL. 

Cases  Against  Car  Breakers 
Being  Heard  Today. 

Judge  Cant's  court  this  morning  was 
engaged  upon  the  trial  of  Walter 
Konezah,  a  boy  of  12,  for  bufglary  in 
the  third  degree.  He.  with  John  Sternal, 
a  Ijoy  of  11.  is  accused  of  having  broken 
into  a  St.  Paul  &  Duluth  box  car  in  the 
yards  and  taken  out  a  couple  of  sacks 
of  flour.  Detective  Murphy  of  the  St 
Paul  &  Duluth  testified  that  the  pris- 
oner told  him  that  Sternal  lifted  him 
up  so  that  he  could  break  the  seal  of 
the  car.  A  boy  who  was  present  at  the 
interview  testified  that  Konezah  couid 
not  speak  English,  and  when  he  was 
put  on  the  stand  that  became  very  evi- 
dent. After  his  attorney.  N.  H.  Wilson, 
was  through  with  him.  County  Attorney 
Arhury  abruptly  asked  him  a  question 
in  English,  and  the  boy  began  to  cry. 
He  testified  that  he  and  Sternal  found 
the  car  door  open;  that  they  pulled  a 
couple  of  sacks  of  flour  out  and  laid 
them  on  their  sleds,  and  that  just  then 
they  saw  some  men  coming,  and  thev 
ran.  The  testimony  was  very  brief,  and 
at  noon  the  attorneys  were  closing  to 
the  jury. 

It  has  not  yet  been  determined  when 
the  trial  of  the  investigation  cases  v.ill 
be  begun,  except  the  Holmes  case, 
which  will  probably  be  tried  March  20. 
Witnesses  in  the  case  have  been  sub- 
poenaed for  that  date,  at  any  rate.  It 
has  not  been  decided  whether  the  regu- 
lar county  legal  authorities  will  finish 
all  the  ordinary  criminal  business  first, 
leaving  the  investigation  cases  for  the 
last,  or  whether  the  latter  cases  will  be 
sandwiched  in. 


_^_ TOjaJBirT—F'ZATS. 

FOR  RENT-A  FIVE  ROOM  MODERN 
flat,  London  road  and  Eighteenth  ave- 
nue east.  Apply  to  Commercial  Invest- 
ment  company,    Torrey   building. 


LOANS  ON  DIAMONDS,    FURNITURE 

f,,  •r,,^"™'"®'''^^^*    paper   bought.    Room 
717  Torrey  building. 

MONEY    TO     LOAN,      ANY     AMOUNT 
Cooley  &  Underhlll.   104  Palladio. 


WANTRD-TO  BUY.  A  HORSE  WEIGH- 
mg  1200  to  1300.  2020  West  Fourth  street. 


WANTED-TO  BT'Y.  LIGHT  DELIV^ 
ery  wagon  or  strong  open  buggy,  suit- 
able for  delivery  rig.  Call  at  730  East 
Third    street. 


WANTED-TH REE COMPLETELY  FUR- 
nished  rooms,  in  good  locality,  for  light 
housekeeping.    Address,       stating    priro 
and    when    apartments       can    be    hal 
'Seeker,"   Herald. 


7 :45  a.  m. 
10:45  a.  m. 
10 :44  a.  m. 
11  56  a.  m. 
11  K>i  a.  m 
11:25  a.m. 

9KM».  m. 

1 :25  p  in. 

ll::«a  m. 


V^ -Daluth Ar     3::»  p.  m. 

f"  Virginia  ....Lv    12.«p.  ni. 

^r Evelpth    ...Lv    10  .W  a.  m. 

Af Biwabik  ....Lv    12:2S  p.  m. 

Ar Mt.  Iron  . — Lv  '  U:M  p.  m. 

^f »<>>»>»  g      -Lv    1M3  p.  m 


I^v Virginia Ar 

Ar Wolf     .  ..Lv 

Ar  Hibbing  ...Lv 


1  M  p.  ni. 
10:33  a.m. 
12:13  D.  m. 


Dai.y,  except  Sunday.      J.  B.  Hansom,  G.  P,  a. 


DULUTH  &  IRON  RANGE  R.R 


7 .15  p.  m.      Ar Virgmia Lv      »  KW  a. 


7:40p.m.    lAr. Evoleth Lv  |    7:3.1 


7:50  p.m.    |  Ar 


Dally,  Sunday  ezoeptedT 


-Hly Lvl 


m. 
m. 
7 :3o  a.  ra. 


NORTH-WESTERN    LINE. 

C,  St.  p.,  M.  &,  O.  Ey. 
Office :  405  West  Superior  St.         •  Phone  No.  20. 
Leave       |  *Uaily  |    tExcepi  Sunday    I  Arnvn 


tlO  45  am 

*ll00pm 

*5  10pm 


St.  Paul,  Mlu'pls  aud  West 
S;..  Paul,  Min'pla  and  West 
..C'hicitgu  Limitpd  .. 


t5  m  pni 
*7  to  Hiu 
*10  30  am 


ACCOUNTANT  AND  AUDITOR. 


CHAS.  EVANS  HOLT.  507  CHAMBER 
of  Commerce.  If  you  want  anything  in 
my  line- accounting.  auditing.  000k- 
keeping— temporarily   or  regularly,   call 


Fire  Insurance^ 
Life  Insurance, 
Investments. 

I  have  for  sale  a  few 
choice  commercial  loans —  i: 
$500  up. 

A.  R.  Macfarlane 

^  18  EXCHANGE  BUILDING.        jr 

-:''H"I"I"1-M"I..I..I..I..I..I..I..H. 


WANTED— TO    RENT.    ABOI^T    MAY    1 
sinall  five  or  six   room  cottage  or  flat! 
with  modern  conveniences;  centrally  lo- 
cated or  handy  to  street  car  and  reas- 
onable   rent.    Good    responsible    tenant 
Address  Tenant.   Herald. 


WANTED-TO  BUY,  AN  EXTENSION 
ladder.  C.  P.  Brarg.  No.  ;;i7  Thir,l  ave- 
nue east. 


WANTED-THE  BE:ST  SEVEN  OR 
eight  room  hou.se  that  $2500,  cash,  wll 
buy.  Must  have  modern  Improvements 
and  central  location.  Address  Elmo, 
care  Herald. 


'M  4  r*rfciu»T';  v." 


flamed  you  have  a  rumbling  sound  or  Im-  '  srressman  Hunter,  the  Republican  cau- 
perfect  hearing,   and   when   it   Is  entirely  I  cus  nominee, 
closed  deafness  is  the  result,   and  unless 
the   inflammation  can   be   taken   out   and 


this  tube  restored  to  its  normal  condition 
hearing   will    be   destroyed    forever;    nine 
cases  out  of  ten  are  caused   by  catarrh 


NEW    YORK    FAILURE. 
New  York,   March  14. — Crook  &  Per- 
ham.   wholesale  coal  dealers,  have  as- 


which  is  nothing  but  an  inflamed  condi-  feigned  to  Elibu  E.  Frost  without  pref  • 
tion  of  the  mucous  surfaces.  erences.       The  amount  involved  is  re- 

We  will  give  one  hundred  dollars  for  |  ported  to  be  over  $100,000.  The  firm 
ffi%"^^n''o'ttfc"u^eV^b7=^S.lS^c\'fa7r'ti  has  been  in  business  for  twenty-tw^; 
cure.  Send  for  circulars,  free  years. 

F.   J.   CHENEY  A  CO..   Toledo.   Ohio. 

Sold   by  druggists,   75c. 

Hall's  Family   Pills  are  the  bast. 


Tou  may  never  know  it  happened  If,  »..  w.,r  «.bv..vi»  rev 
you  faU  to  read  The  Evening  Herald;  j  Socialist  candidates 


FRENCH  ELECTIONS. 
Paris,   March  15.— In   four  legislative 
elections   which    took   place   yesterd&y 
all  the  districts  returned  the  Radlcal- 


THE   LIVERPOOL   MARKET. 
Livt-rpooi.    March       15.— Close.       wheal 
spot  firm;  futures.  Arm;  March.  6s  »id;  "id 
lower;   April,   not  quoted;   Mav.   6s  2d-   <id 
lower;    June.    6s    2^d;    Id    lower.    Maize 
spot,    firm;    futures   firm:    March   2s   6>4d- 
;^id  higher;  April.  2s  7d;  V4d  higher;  May.' 
23  8<1;  Vsd  higher;  July.  '2n  9%d;  V4d  higher. 

NEW  YORK  MONEY. 
New    York.    March    l.*;.— Money    on    call 
nominally  V^'^\  per  cent.  Prime  mercan- 
tile paper  3/54  per  cent.  Sterling  exchange 
steady    with    actual    business    in    bankers' 
^'i'f,.*^  $4.87(64.87«4  for  demand  and  $4.85^! 
^4.te%4    for  sixty   days.    Posted   rates  $.486 
«t4.86>;^   and    $4.8Jira4.88"^.    Commercial    bill.-: 
M.MVi.  Sliver  certificates  64>4®%:  no  sale<« 
Bar  sliver  63.  Mexican  dollars  49%.     Gov- 
ernment   bonds    Arm.    New   4s    registered 
$1.22%;  coupon.  $1.23%;  ^  registered.  $1.14- 
coupon.    $1.14;   4s    registered..    $l.ll»4:   cou- 
pon. $1.13'^;  2s   registered.   95i,^;   Pacific  6s 


NEW  YORK  GRAIN. 
New    York.    March    15.— Close.       wheat 
March.     81%c;  May,  79c;  July,  78%c;  Sep- 
tember, 75%c.  Corn,  May.  SOc.  Oats,  Mav 
21%c. 


THE   MINNEAPOLIS   MARKET. 
Minneapolis.    March   15.— Wheat,   steady 
closed:    May.    72>ic;   July,    73@Vic;    Febru- 
ary,   68%c.    On    track-.Vo.    1    hard,    74T4c- 
No.  1  northern.  72V.     Receipts,   273  cars. 


BUSINESS    AND    ADVERTISING. 
A  man  can  be  a  man     without     his 
clothes,    but   society   reckons     a     man 
partly   by   his     outside     fixings,     says 
Hardware. 

A  business  may  be  a  business  with- 
out any  advertising  to  it.  but  the  im- 
mutable law  of  custom,  before  which 
men  and  nations  rise  or  fall,  has  writ- 
ten in  letters  of  unquenchable  Are  that 
men  must  advertise,  and  that  by  their 
advertisements  so  shall  they  be  Judged. 
Until  those  words  of  fire  can  be 
quenched,  no  man  has  a  right  to  prac- 
tice or  to  preach  an  individual  doctrine 
opposed  to  the  rule  of  custom. 

I  will  admit  that  the  advertisement 
never  brought  a  reply  or  ever  created 
curiosity,  and  yet  I  am  willing  to  stake 
my  reputation  upon  the  assertion  that, 
if  the  value  of  an  advertising  was  lim- 
ited to  the  appearance  of  advertising, 
advertising  would  be  necessary  to  prop- 
er conduct  of  successful  business. 

TI.e  man  who  advertises  stands  be- 
fore the  public  in  the  full,  legitimate 
and  dignified  prominence  of  one  who  Is 
proud  of  his  business,  has  a  right  to  be 
proud  of  it,  is  doing  a  lot  of  it  and 
wants  to  do  more  of  it.  and  he  is  tho 
kind  of  man  that  everj'body  wants  to 
do  business  with,  for  just  so  long  as 
the  moth  will  be  attracted  by  the  can- 
dle light,  so  long  will  trade  swarm 
around  the  advertising  light  of  busi- 
ness. 


Contract  Work. 


Office  of  Board  of  Public  Works, 

City  of  Duluth,  Minn.,  March  8.  1897. 

Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
board  of  public  works  in  and  for  the 
corporation  of  the  City  of  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota, at  their  office  in  said  city  until  10 
jij^m-.  on  the  22nd  day  of  March,  A.  D. 
1887,  for  the  construction  of  wooden  cross- 
walks in  .said  city  for  the  year  ending 
I-ebruary  28,  1898,  according  to  plans  and 
specifications  on  file  in  the  office  of  said 
board. 

A  certified  check  or  a  bond  with  at 
least  two  (2)  sureties  In  the  sum  of  fifty 
uollars   must  accompany  each   bid. 

The  said  board  reserves  the  right  to 
reject  any  and   all   bids. 

M.   J.   DAVIS, 
-„  ,  ,  President. 

Official: 

(Seal.) 
R.   MURCHISON, 

Clerk    Board    of    Public    Works. 
Duluth   Evening  Herald.   March  8  lOt. 


PALESTINE  LODGE  NO.  79.  A. 
F.  &  A.  M.— Regular  meetings 
first  and  third  Monday  even- 
ings of  every  month  at  7:30 
p.  m.  Next  meeting  March  15. 
1897.  Work,  Summons.  W.  A.  Mc- 
Gonagle,  W.  M.,  Edwin  Mooers,  secre- 
tary.  

IONIC  LODGE  NO.  186,  A.  F,  £ 
A.  M.— Regular  meetings  second 
and  fourth  Monday  evenings  of 
every  month  at  7:30  p.  m.  Next 
meeting    March    22.    1897.    Work. 

Third  degree.  P.  W.  Kugler,  W.  M.;  J.  D. 

Macfarlane,    secretary. 


-^ 


4{ 


Parlor  Cars  i-n  day  iraina;  Wagner's  Finest 
blfepers  on  night  trains. 


GOSSIP. 

Received  over  private  wire  of  B.  E.  Baker 

grain  and  stock  broker,  room  107  Cham-  ^^v.-,  ^™  iuia-kj^ 

ber  of  Commerce  and  307  Board  of  Trade  «     ,           °^^  ^^  MANY. 

Chicago.    March       15.— Crop    conditions  Puck:    "Is  that  an  argument  on  the 

were  the  factor  in  today's  whe^t  market  tariff  you're  reading?" 

The  'deorlasi***in^t*'h»*  vu?Kf  ^^^  ^'^'*^.^-  I      "^''-    ^  ""PPose    it  was    Intended  as 
The  decrease  In  the  visible  was  affain  i  an  arguuientj  but  it's  merely  a  speegh." 


All  the 
Successful 
rierchants  of 
Duluth 
Advertise 
Regularly  in 
The  Evening 
Herald* 


KEYSTONE  CHAPTER  NO.  30. 
R.  A.  M.— Stated  convocation 
second  and  fourth  Wednesday 
evenings  of  each  month  at  7:30 
p.  m.  Next  meeting  Tut'sdav 
March  23,  1897.  Work,  Royiil 
Arch  degree.  John  F.  McLaren.  F.  P  • 
George   E.   Long,   secretary.  ' 

DULUTH  COMMANDERY 
No.  18.  K.  T.— Stated  conclave 
first  Tuesday  of  each  month 
7:30  p.  m.  Next  conclave 
Tuesday,  March  16.  1897.  Work. 

/^      k,*    ^  T^'^J^f^^     ^-      E-     Denfeld.      E. 
C,  Alfred  LeRicheux,  recorder. 


Templar 


A.  p.  U.  W.-FIDELITY  LODGE  NO.  105. 
Meets  every  Thursday  In  the  Kalama- 
zoo block,  third  floor,  18  West  Superior 
street.  James  McDowell,  M.  W. ;  J.  H. 
Powers,   recorder. 


THERE'S  ONLY  ONE 
RAILROAD 

That   operates   Its   trains  on   the  famous 

block  system  between  the  Twin  Cities. 

Milwaukee  and  Chicago; 
That    lights     Its     trains     by     electricity 

throughout;  ' 

That   uses  the  celebrated  electric    berth 

re.iding   lamp;  "=««-" 

That  runs  four  splendidly  equipped  pas- 
"^"i^^'",.*'"***"^  *'^e'">'  t'ay  from  St.  Paul 
.  **  »5f.'""®^P°"'^  through  to  Chicago 
via  Milwaukee; 

And  that  road  Is  the 

CHICAGO,  MILWAUKEE  A 
ST.  PAUL. 

It  also  operates  steam-heated  vestibuled 
trains,  carrying  the  latest  private 
compartment  cars,  library  buffet 
smoking  cars,  and  palace  drawing- 
room  sleepers. 

Parlor  cars,  free  reclining  chair  cars  and 
the  very  best  dining  car  service. 

r-r}.?^'%^iJ^^^^  J°    ^"y    Po'nt    in    the 
U/iIted  States,  Canada  or  Mexico,  ap- 
ply to  ticket  agents,  or  address 
J.  T.  CONLEY, 
Ass't  Gen'l  Pass  Agt., 

K^t^-c^i         *,  St-  Pau'-   Minn. 

Note-Elegantly     equipped     trains  from 

dV„  •    "L'^'V'    Minneapolis  through    from 
Feoria,  St.  Louis  and  Kansas  City  dally 


_JBOO^S^^^'»^J?O^D   OFFERED. 

ROOM  AND  BOARD  CHEAP.  io2'FlilST 
avenue  east. 


FURNISHED  ROOMS,  BOARD  IF  DE- 
Blred.  The  Daootah.  U7  West  Second 
■treet 


HAIR  DRESSING 


TILLIE  JORGENSON  (FORMERLY 
with  Midtsund  sisters,  of  St.  Paul,)  has 
oi.ened  halrdressing  parlors  at  room  417 
Lonsdale    building. 


CARD  READING. 


QUESTIONS  ANSWERED  FOR  10 
cents;  pictures  of  your  future  husband 
or  wife  25  cents.  Address  Madame  De 
Zoe,    P.   O.    Box   30,    Duluth,    Minn, 

CARD  READING,  PAST,  PRESENT 
and  future.  1330  West  Superior  street. 


STATE   OF   MINNESOTA,    COUNTY   OF 
ST.    LOUIS-SS. 

District  Court,  Eleventh  Judicial  Dis- 
trict. 

In  the  matter  of  the  assignment  of  By- 
ron B.  Inman.  Insolvent: 
NOTICE  IS  HEREBY  GIVEN  that  tho 
Duluth  Trust  Company,  as  assignee  of 
Byron  B.  Inman.  insolvent,  will  sell  at 
public  auction  for  cash,  to  the  highest 
budder.  subject  only  to  the  approval 
of         said         court,  all         Its       right 

title  and  interest  in  and  to  cer- 
tain property  belonging  to  the  asslgn^-d 
estate  herein  consisting  generally  of  lum- 
ber, shop  sui)plies,  office  fixtures,  restau- 
rant outrtttings  and  carpenter  and  shop 
tools  subjict  to  all  liens  against  the 
.same  or  aHy  part  thereof,  a  list  of  which 
pn)perty  ie  open  for  inspection,  at  the 
office  of  said  assignee  In  the  Duluth  Trust 
Company  building,  in  the  city  of  Duluth. 
in  said  county. 

NOTICE  IS  FURTHER  GIVEN,  that 
said  sale  will  be  held  at  the  Northern  Pa- 
cific dock  at  the  foot  of  Seventh  avenue 
west,  in  said  city  of  Duluth,  on  Thurs- 
day, the  18th  day  of  March,  1897.  at  ten 
(10)  o'clock  in  the  forenoon  of  that  day 
and  that  application  for  confirmation  of 
said  sale  will  be  made  to  the  .said  eourt 
at  a  special  term  thereof  apjuiinted  to  be 
held  in  and  for  said  county  at  the  court 
house,  in  said  city  of  Duluth  on  Satur- 
day, the  20th  day  of  March.  1897.  at  nine- 
thirty  (9:30)  o'clock  in  the  forenoon  of 
that  day. 

DULUTH  TRUST  COMPANY. 
As  Assignee  of  Byron  B.   Inman.   Insolv- 
ent. 
Duluth   Evening  Herald.    March-15-16-17. 


PILES 


WllUama  Indian  Pile 
Ointment  is  a  sum  coro 
forPILEV.  It  absorba 
tumors  Stopo  itchin* 
QIVB.q  RKLIEF.  60e 
and  SI.    At   Onuncibta. 


utr>yxrijrv. 


EVENING   HERALD  "WANTS" 
Bring  custoniera 
Bring  husinesB. 
Bring  rMulta. 
Bring  work, 
"jry   theni." 


PRFVATB  HOSPITAL-MRS.  BANKS 
midwife.  330  St.  Croix  avenue.  Male  pa- 
tients cared   for  also. 


CopmoBTs.      rAvaATS.       TK/.Daiu»ai. ! 


PATENTS. 


I 


:        MASON.  FENWICK  It  U«REI«CE,  I 

i  JIMES  T  WATSON.  : 

:    Patent  lawyers,  Selicitors  and  Experts  I 

!         •t.*?.'''''      '^MhlngtoB,  D.  C        liWl.  ! 

:  ,,   407  PiUladio  Bnilding,  Ocdoth,  klnn.  ! 

;  (iDTMitort.  «aid«t  book  tree.)  j 


FOR 


Liquor  License. 

STATE  OF  MINNESOTA.   COI^NTY  OP 

ST.  LOUIS.  CITY  OP  DULUTH-8S. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  said  city  of  Duluth.  and  filed 
in  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell  in- 
toxicating liquors  for  the  term  commenc- 
ing on  March  12.  1897.  and  terminating  on 
March  12.  189S.  by  W.  P.  Wheaton  at  No. 
222  Lake  avenue  south. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  s.iid  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth,  at  the  council  chamber 
In  said  city  of  Duluth,  In  St.  Louis 
County.  Minnesota,  on  Monday,  the  "''d 
day  of  March,  1897,  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m 
of  that  day. 

Witness    my    hand    and    seal    of    said 

D^\m7  ^"'"^'*'  *****  ^  ^^^  °'  March,  A. 

C.  E.  RICHARDSON. 

<Corpor«tP    9enl.>  ^"^  ^l*'"'^ 

Duluth  Evening  Herald.  Marglr4  to  '9  mq 


I  ^w.vmi  ■-  iwii  i|ii|  I 


i 


I 


f! 


I. 

-i 

f"^ 


•«- .^*-W>*C^HV4^« 


-i- 


4—^ 


i 


THE  DULUTn  EVENING  HERaLD;  MONDAY,  MAHCH  15,  1S07. 


ONLY  EVKNINU  PAPtR  IN  UULlTTtl 

THE  [eiNG  HERALD 


AN  INDEPENDENT  NEWSPAPER. 

Published   at    Herald    building.    220    Weait 
Superior  street 


Oulutb  Publishing  &  Printing  Co. 


TKLEPUONK  CALLS: 
Coantiof  Boom    3:^4,  two  riii«;8. 
Editorial  Booms— 324,  throe  riii<B, 


TEN  CENTS  A  WEEK 

Every  fcvening.  Delivered  or  by  Mail. 


Sinirle  copy,  daily ....... 

One  munth 

Three  month* . 

Six  months 

Oseyear 


S  .08 

45 

'".'....    1.30 

2.60 

5.00 


effort  would  indu)>itably  fail  and  the 
promotiT  ot  the  '  strik*-"  be  reloRatotl 
ti)  the  ino.st  obscure  place  In  the  house 
of  representatives  whieh  the  Ingenuity 
of  the  speaker  could  discover  for  him. 
Every  man  competent  to  lead  a  n^volt 
against  Thomas  Braekett  fieed  has  a 
keen  realization  of  these  facts  nn<l  the}' 
naturally  have  sornewhnt  of  a  deter- 
rent effect  upon  him. 

So  far  as  the  Fifty-fifth  congress  Is 
concerned  Mr.  Reed  is  now  safe.  He 
will  Ih'  lord  of  all  he  surveys  in  the 
semi-circle  at  the  south  end  of  the  capi- 
tol,  which  is  under  his  vision.  His  po- 
litical future  depends  largely  upon  his 
conduct  during  the  coming  twelve 
months.  If  he  pursues  the  same  tactics 
and  makes  enemies  as  rapidly  in  the 
future  as  he  has  in  the  immediati 
past,  he  will  not  wield  the  gavel  in  an- 
other congress.  Nobody  now  ever 
suggests  his  name  as  a  presidential 
possibility. 


Weekly  Herald,  $t.00  per  year;  50  cent*  for  six 
mouths ;  25  cents  for  three  months. 


Entered  at  the  Dnlath  postofiica  as  seooi.d 

elass  matter. 

LARGEST  CIRCUuTrON  IN  DULUTH 

Olficial  Paper  ol  the  City  ol  Duluth 
HERALD'S  CIRCULATION  HIGH-WATER  MARK 

17,148. 

THE  WEATHER. 


T'nited  States  Agricultural   Department. 
Wt-ather    Bureau.      Duluth.      Synopsis    of  ] 
wi-ather    conditions    for    the    twenty-four  | 
hours   ending   at    7  a.    m..    (Central    timet.  . 
March  15.— Accompanying  a  wave  of  high  ; 
prt-sj«ure.  which  i.«J  central  over  Manitoba.^  ; 
on«-   of   the   most    rigorous    cold    w.ivcs    of 
the    season    extends    from    that    province  ! 
southward  over  the  Drikotas  anil  Western 
Minnesota,  where  the  temperature  at  7  a.  i 
m.    today   was  36  below  zero  at    Bismarck  , 
and    Minnedosa.    ."Ji    below    at    Mo<.>rhead. 
and   22   below   at    Huron.    In   the    lake    re- 
gion,  the   Mississippi  and   Lower  Mis.^ouri 
valleys,     the     temperature    at     that     hour 
ranged  from   11   beli>w  zero  at   Duluth,   to  ' 

above  nt  St.  | 


A   CRISIS  AT  HAND. 

The    Philadelphia      Ledger      believes 
that,  while  Spain  has  stood  the    strain 
of  simultaneous  rebellions  in  Cuba  and 
the  Philippine  islands  better  than   was 
,  to   have   been   expe<ted,    before    long   a 
j  crisis  must  he  reached,  and  that  crisis 
will  probably  take  the  form  of  rebellion 
j  at    home.      The    government     has     not 
only  been  put  to  extraordinary  expense 
j  on  account  of  the  war  with  Cuba,  but 
I  h:is.    at    the   same   time,    been   deprived 
i  indirectly  of  <-onsiderable  revenue.     To 
j  maintain  the  war  fresh  levies  must   be 
j  made.  and.  because  of  impaired  credit, 
'  increased  taxes  must  be  collected.  Dis- 
satisfaction will  result   producing  con- 
ditions favorable  to  revolutionists,  and 
Spain  is  beset  by  two  classes  of  revo- 
lutionists   violently    opposed    to    each 
other,  the  Carlists  and  the  Republicans, 
the  latter  being  supported  by  Socialists 
and  anarchists.    It  is  argued  from  these 
circumstances   that    if   the   rebellion    in 
Cuba  should    be   prolonged    for  a    few 
months.  Spain  will  have  to  yeild  th?  is- 
land   to    the    in.surgents.    recalling    her 
tn>ops  for  service  at  home. 

This  may  be  the  result,  but  those 
who  have  counted  upon  it  have  made 
no  allowance  for  the  effect  of  patriotic 


I  the  panic  of  1837.     Every  extra  session 
I  since  that  time  has  been  called  to  con- 
sider  matters   relating   to  the   Internal 
condition  of  the  country. 

The  more  recent  sessions  called  by 
presidential  proclnmatUm.  together  with 
the  reason  for  the  calls,  will  be  found  in 
the  following  list  taken  from  the  Man- 
ual of  the  House  of  Representatives: 

May  ;{1.  1.S41,  Harrison,  londition  of 
finances  and  revenue. 

Aug.  21,  isr.6.  Pierce,  failure  of  ap- 
propriatitms  for  army. 

July  4.  1S61,  Lincoln,  insurrection  in 
certain  Southern  states. 

Oct.  5,  1877,  Hayes,  failure  of  appro- 
priation for  army. 

March  18,  187t>,  Hayes,  failure  of  ap- 
propriations for  legislative,  executive, 
judicial  and  army  expenses, 

Au'g.  7.  1S93.  Cleveland,  condition  of 
finances. 

There  have  been  nineteen  special  ses- 
sions of  congress,  provided  for  by  law. 
The  very  first  session  of  congress  was 
one  of  these,  being  convened  on  March 
4,  1789,  by  a  resolution  of  the  continental 
congress  adopted  in  the  preceding  Sep- 
tember. Altogether  the  extra  sessions 
of  congress  have  numbered  thirty-one. 
It  Is  probable  that  the  session  which 
opejied  today  will  not  be  of  long  dura- 
tion. An  effort  is  being  made  to  rush 
business  at  an  uni)recedented  rate  of 
speed.  The  tarifY  bill  is  practicallj 
ready  for  introduction.  It  will  be 
promptly  reported  by  the  ways  and 
means  committee.  The  speaker  and  the 
committee  on  rules  will  choke  off  any 
long  debate  and  a  vote  will  l)e  forced  at 
an  early  date.  Then  it  will  be  rushed  l"i 
the  senate.  How  long  that  body  wili 
take  to  discuss  it  is  problematical,  bu', 
it  is  expected  that  there  will  not  be  a 
prolonged  debate.  Its  passage  by  the 
senate  is  practically  certain. 


the  reason   that   so   few  Duluth   people 
cl.'an   their  sidewalks. 

A  man  in  New  York  has  been  fined 
$5  for  spitting  in  the  cars.  Health  offi- 
cer Murray  will  plea.se  take  note  of  this 
fa(  t.  Why  not  [.nt  a  stop  to  the  dis- 
gusting habit  ill  Duluth?  It  ran  be 
.stopped,  if  the  health  and  police  de- 
partments combine  to  sto)>  it. 

The  News  Tribune's  e.ssay  into  the 
humorous  field,  by  way  of  introducing 
Miss  Hirdie  McPhelion.  was  very  good 
for  a  beginn»'r  in  that  diUicult  style  of 
writing.  Perhaps  the  next  attempt 
may  be  devoid  of  the  crudities  of  the 
first. 


The  president  has  about  70,000  appli- 
cants for  government  positions,  when 
everyone  knows,  or  should  know,  that 
there  are  only  700  places  •  at  his  dis- 
posal, and  there  are  several  times  that 
number  of  Ohio  men  who  want  jobs. 

Ex-Senator  ln^;alls  recently  said  that 
opportunity  kno<  ks  at  a  man's  door  at 
least  once  in  a  lifetime.  When  he  ob- 
tained an  opjioriunity  to  report  the 
Car.son  City  tight  for  a  New  York 
paper,    he    promptly    accepted    it. 


A  rumor  Is  borne  on  breezes  from 
the  S(»uth  that  tlie  Keely  niotijr  is  go- 
ing to  mote  this  time.  A  small  lot  was 
recently  sold  on  the  New  York  stock 
exchange  at  U.M  a  chare. 


Ex-Private  Secretary  Thurber  has 
bought  the  office  chair  which  Mr. 
Cle\neland  occupied  during  his  second 
term.  It  was  always  a  stanch  support- 
er of  the  administration. 


22  above  zero  at  Ohi<ago.  3i 
Louis  and  3J»  at   Momi>his. 
Light   falls   of  snow   have  been  general     pride    in    protecting      the     government 

in    Michigan    and    Wisconsin,    and    snow  ,  revolts  at  home      The  people  ap- 

fUirries    continued    this    morninjj    at     Lu,  ,  from  revolts,  at  nome.      inepeopieai 

Crosse    and    Milwaukee;    fair    weather    1.-=  j  pear    to    be    disposed    to   strongly    sup- 
*^'l"r;^:.lt^ut;^'Sures    last    night:  ,  Port    the   government    in    its   efforts    t.. 

Swift  Current   ...— n  Medicine    Hat    ..    —;  quell   the   rebellion   in   Cuba,   and   some 

■■—34  '  of  those  who  might  at  some  other  time 

..— 2'i  i  be  disposed  to  join  the  ranks  of  Carlists 

■""":?.'  !  or  Republicans  v.ill  not  do  so  if  the  ef- 

..     2  ;  feet  of  their  action  should   be  the  hu 


Prince   Albert 
Minnedosa    . . 

l^algarv    

Williston    .. 
Pi>rt    Arthur   . 

L.andt'r    

Havre    , 

Duluth    

Marquette    , 

L.i    Crosse    

Hunm    

Davenport    . .    .  . 

Detroit    

Dodge    City     

North    Platte    

St.    Louis    

— Denotes   below 


3-'   HatiUford 
Winnipeg    . . 

— S'Qu'    Appelle    

— 32   Bismartk    

— lt>   Helena    

. ...      S  Rapid    Citv    

....—l'<  Miles    City    

— 12  Moorheail    

—2  Sault   Ste.   Marie 

—      2  Milwaukee 

....—22  St.    Paul    

.  .    12  Omaha    

eJlChicago    

...    22  Kansas    City    ... 
...     2ii   Denver 

:i2  Memphis    

zero. 


CHEAP  GAS. 

The  United  States  con.sul  at  Belfast. 
Ireland,  reports  that  a  profit  of  $3:it).S8."> 
was  realized  by  that  city  from  the  oper- 
ations of  its  gasworks  last  year,  and 
in  consequence  of  this  liberal  return 
from  the  Investment  in  th^  plant  tl;  • 
authorities  have  decided  to  reduce  thi. 
price  of  gas  to  consumers  from  66  cents 
per  1000  feet  to  60  cents.  That  may  re- 
.^:ult  in  a  decrea.se  In  the  profits  for  the 
next  year  or  an  increase  in  the  numbe; 
of  consumers  sufficient  to  make  up  tlic 
difference.  In  any  event,  however,  it 
will  be  of  great  advantage  to  the  people 
of  Belfast,  for  the  reason  that  if  thi 
sg-gregate  profits  are  not  <urtailed  ma- 
terially liy  this  »ul.  a  more  considerable 
leductiim  can  be  made  next  year,  antl 


Bailey,  of  Texas,  has  been  chosen 
Democratic  leader  on  the  floor  of  the 
house.  He  is  a  young  man,  but  the 
possessor  of   great    ability. 


The  Chicago  Journal  has  reached  the 
conclusion  that  unless  all  signs  fail, 
Corbett   will    have   Filz    in    the   ring. 

POLITICAL  DRIFT. 


HUMOROUS  NOTIONS. 


London  Answers:  Dot  <just  liack  from 
the  continent)- Well,  pa,  I'm  engaged  t.. 
seven  dukes,  a  marquis,  eleven  counts 
and   nine  grande(>s  of   the   first   class. 

Pa— What: 

Dot -Oh,  it's  all  one  fullow.  tb-s  a 
St>aniard.   you   know. 

Harper's  Bazar:  Papa— I'm  surprised 
Ih.n  you  are  at  the  foot  of  your  class. 
Tommy.  Why  aren't  you  ;it"  the  head 
sometimes,    like   little   Willie   Bigbee? 

Tommy— You  see.  papa.  Willies  got  ;oi 
awfully  smart  father,  and  1  guess  he 
takes  after  him. 

Detroit  News:  •!  hear  that  your  neigh- 
bor  Pinehpenijie   has    tuberculosis." 

"I  dunno  what  them  be,  but  III  bet 
he    hain't   got    two   ef   onell   do." 

London  Tit-Bits:  A  doctor  once  took  a 
tippling  Scotchman  to  task,  and  graph- 
ically described  for  his  benefit  the  effect.^ 
of    over-indulgence,    adding: 

"Think  of  what  physical  pain  a  man 
suffers  after  drinkins— the  aching  brow, 
the  parched  throat,  the  trembling  nerves." 

Whereuiion  Sandy  interrupted  him 
with: 

"Oies  yer  han',  doctor  man!  Ye  de- 
scribe the  sensations  sae  weel  that  I 
lliiiik  its  no'  the  first  time  ye've  been  fou 
yersel'." 

Cincinnati  lOnquirer:  "As  a  Lenten  pen- 
aiiee,"  said  the  spiritual  director,  "I  rec- 
ommend that  you  scrub  the  steps  of  the 
church    e<litice.  " 

"Mow  lovely!"  said  to  herself  the  friv- 
olous   lady   of    liiKJi    social   statiding. 

"At  the  same  time  it  is  essential  that 
not   a   newsi)ninr  shall    l>e   notified." 

The  light  of  high  resolve  faded  from 
the  beautiful  brow,  leaving  the  lady  in 
a  drear,   gray   mood. 

Indianapolis  Journal:  "Rapid  eating.  " 
exi)lained  the  traveling  physieian  at  his 
free  lecture,  "is  the  eurse  of  American 
civilization.  Two-thirds  of  the  sickness  is 
caused  by  our  national  habit  of  eating  a 
full   meal   in    fifteen    minutes.  " 

"I  s'pose.  "  interjected  Mr.  Dismal  Daw- 
son, "that  that  there  is  the  reason  liu  so 
healthy.  1  ain't  eat  a  full  meal  in  fiftcei: 
days." 

Yonkers  Statesman:  "It's  a  s'lamo." 
cried  the  young  wife;  "not  a  thing  in  th-^ 
house  fit  to  eat.  I'm  going  right  home  to 
l)ai)a:" 

"If  you  don't  mind,  dear,"  said  the  hus- 
band, reaching  for  his  hat.  "I'll  go  with 
you." 

Philadelphia  North  American:  Madge- 
Tell  us,  dear,  did  he  go  down  on  his 
knees  when   he   proposed? 

F'olly- No;  in  his  confusion  he  went, 
down  on  his  hat. 


RHEUMATISM. 


AMUSEMENTS. 


Torture  and  Agony  are  its  A:tci..:....is,  in 

Addition  to  this,  the  Fear  c: 

Sudden  Death. 


DAVIS'   OPPORTUNITY. 
Red    Wing   Journal:      Senator    Davis 
now    having    a    first-class    oi)poriunitv 
pay    Merriam    for   some    of   the    snulw 
has    suffered    at    his    hands. 


miliation   of   Spain    by    ttie   sacrifice   of  i  so  on  imtil  in  the  end  the  price  of  gat 


_  4  i  Cuba  as  a  colonial  possessiim.  The  Car- 
J"  lists  are  more  to  be  feared  than  the 
20  Republicans,  for  they  have  been  or- 
},*  ganized  for  years  and  have  adherents 
IS  i  in  the  armies  of  Spain;  hut  the  Carlists 
•^  I  cannot  command  the  support  of  the 
I  Republicans   proper. 

Of  course,  it  is  not  likely  Spain  will 
formally    al)andon    Cuba,    but    there    is 


Duluth  temperature  at  7  a.  m.  today.  11 
below  zero:  maximum  yesterday.  13;  min- 
imum  yesterdav.    zero. 

Local  forecast  for  Duluth  and  vi.-inltv:  '  no   doubt    Cuba   will   win    her   freedom 

5af  .!^:^;:rV?;::{;r'^;str';i:^u^h^:     through  the  exhaustion  of  spam.  Mad- 

JAMES   KENEALY.  rid    correspondents   say    that    the    gov- 

Local   Forecast  Official.     |  ernment  will  have  no  money  available 

Chicago.    March       15.— For    Wisconsin:  j  for  carrj'ing  on  the  war  in  Cuba  after 
Snow    flurries     tonight     with     warmer     in 


east  portion:  Tuesday,  partly  cloudy  with 
snow  in  east  jxirtion:  fresh  northerl.v 
winds.  For  Minnesota:  Partl.v  cloud.v 
and  warmer  tonight  with  snow  fliirrie-: 
in  ■=>xtreme  east  portion:  Tuesday  fair  and 
warmer:    variable    winds. 


REED  AGAIN  SPHAKEB. 
Thomas  B.  Reed  has  been  re-elected  ) 
speaker    of    the    Fifty-fifth      congress, 
which  met  in  special  session  at  Wash- 
ington today.    During  the  entire  period 
of   the   short    session   of   the    last    con-  j 
gress,    rumors    were    in    circulation    to  ' 
the  effect  that  Speaker  Reed  would  not  i 
be  re-elected,  but  the  friends  of  the  big 
man  from  Maine  simply  smiled  at  such  : 
suggestions.      Nobody    denies    the    fact 
thdt    Mr.    Reed    is    unpopular    in      the  I 
house.      The    opposition,    however,    has 
never  been  strong  enough  to  show  its  ' 


,  May.  If  that  should  be  true  the  Span- 
.  ish  troops,  already  suffering  for  want 
I  of  pay  except  in  depreciated  paper  cur- 
rency, will  soofl  be  in  a  bad  plight. 
The  Cuban  insurgents  relied  from  the 
first  upon  the  exhaustion  of  Spain 
rather  than  victories  won  on  the  bat- 
tlefield, and,  if  they  can  keep  up  the 
fight,  avoiding  pitched  battles,  they  are 
sure  to  win  without  any  help  from  for- 
eign governments  except  such  as  may 
result  from  recognition  after  they  shall 
hav«  established  a  civil  government 
with  a  fixed  seat  of  power.  It  seems 
impossible  that  Spain  can  subdue  the 
insurrection. 


THE   EXTRA  SESSION. 

Congress  met  in  extra  session  today. 
It  was  called  by  President  McKinit-y 
hand  and  he  has  been  able  by  sheer  for  the  express  purpose  of  dealing  with 
force  of  will  to  maintain  his  dominan-  ,  the  tariff  question  and  providing  more 
cy  of  the  Republican  members  of  that    revenue  for  the  conduct  of  the  gover.i- 


in  that  i  ity  will  be  reduced  li>  a  fi.uurc 
which  will  bring  it  within  the  reach  of 
almost  everybody. 

Commenting   upon    the   experience   of 
Belfast,   the     Kansas     City   Star  says: 
/But  the  significance  of  the  experience 
of   Belfast    in    relation    to    its   gasworks- 
is  the  obvious  advantage  in  municipa! 
ownership  of  such  monopolies.    There  is 
no  incentive  under  such  circumstances 
to     levy     upon     consumers     excessive 
charges  in  order  to  build  up  vast  pro- 
fits.    The  only  interest  is  to  supply  th- 
people   with    light    at    the    lowest    price 
possible  without  loss  to  the  corporation. 
.\n  incidental  lesson  is  to  the  effect  that 
the  cost  of  the  purchase  of  such  prop- 
erties is   not  a   burden   on   the   peopk-. 
Therefore,  such  constitutional  or  statu- 
te ry  restrictions  as  prevent  municipali- 
ties from  acquiring  gas  or  water  work.- 
on  account  of  Increasing  the  public  debt 
ought  to  be  removed.     In  this  town,  foi 
example,  the  purchase  of  the  gasworks 
.vould   not   involve   an   increase  of   tin 
municipal    burdens.      It    would    simply 
be  increasing  the  assets  of  the  city  and 
providing  assured     revenues   from    the 
profits  of  the  operation." 


The  Louisville  Times  quotes  prices 
for  aldermen  in  that  section  as  "sia- 
tionary  at  $2.50  each." 

Dr.  Grant,  of  Texas,  fairly  claims  the 
petition  record.  His  application  for  a 
cabinet  jol>  contained  100,000  names, 
yet    it    fell   short    by   several    lengths. 

A  North  Cari>liiia  state  senator  gave  i 
an    exhibition    oi    progressive    political  I 
muscle    that    has    some   claim    to    com-  |  Roar  from  the  surf  of  boreal  isles, 
mendmion.       When      a      lobbyist      ap-  i      rf«»i>''  from   the  hidden,   jagged   steeps 
I)roached   him   with  a  corrupt   proposi-  !  rp'^X'V,'''    "\'"   •}''^<.''o.ver   never   sleeps; 
tion  he  let  drive  liis  right  and  countered  |  ^""  """"^'^  '*"•  Hebergs'  Oothic  piles! 
with    his    boot    ,..!    the    dazed    briber.        I 

In  Clinton  county.  Illinois,  there  are  i 
two  neighboring  townships  known  ofii-  j 
cially    as    Irishtown    and    Gerniantown.  '■ 


IS 

to 
lie 


MARCH. 
Ho.  wind  of  March,  speed  over  sea. 
From    mountains    where    the    snows    lie 

(leei). 
And   cruel   glaciers   threatening  creep. 
And   witness   this,    my   jubilee! 


Illieumatisin,  us  is  well  known,  is  catised  bv 
acids  existing  in  the  blood,  diK!  tu  jKiisoiious 
secretions  from  some  of  the  gaai  lift-  centres 
yf  the  body ;  which,  if  not  conntpriictod  and 
carried  off  increases  from  dav  to  Ua\ ,  causm-- 
the  sufferer  endless  puiu,  until  the  disease 
finally  reaches  the  heart,  where,  by  a  BiidUcn 
contractiofi  the  end  is  buddeiily  readied.  "J  |,e 
cure  for  this  terrible  affliction  is  in  cverv 
instance  Kickapoo  Indian  Sagwa.  It  iui« 
directly  on  the  stomach  liver  and  kidiic-v.';! 
promoting  perfect  action  of  these  orirans.  "li. 
addition  it  purijj^.i  tlip  blood,  wliicJi  tln.s 
enriched,  disjiels  all  ]  oisonous  secieti -ns  and 
performs  its  natural  function  of  nourishing  the 
body.  One  of  many  instances  wliero  iflia- 
been  a  »>eiiefit  is  tlia  case  of  Mrs.  Jennie  Cimm- 
bers,  of  Kidgway,  California,  who  writes  :  "  ) 
was  a  great  sufferer  from  Ilhcumatism  n::d 
Dropsy.  1  liatl  been  afflicted  for  years,  and 
tried  all  our  local  doctors  and  manv  iiiedicities, 
but  could  get  no  relief.  My  liiiibs  were  sd 
badly  swollen  I  could  mt  stand,  1  commcncct! 
using  tiie  Kickajioo  Indian  Jicinedies,  and  in 
seven  days  the  jaiiis  were  all  gone.  The 
l)roi)sy  was  cured,  and  1  thank  the  good  I.(,id 
for  the  day  1  commenced  using  Kickajoc 
Indian  .Sa?\va.  You  may  use  niv  name  if  vou 
wish.       Everyone  in  tliis  countv  knows  nie." 

Siitfercrs  evciywhere  should"  follow  Mrs. 
Chamber's  example.  Use  Kickapoo  Indian 
Oil  for  external  api)licatii)n ;  it  rcliexes  tiie 
local  pain,  while  tlie  KickajKX)  Indian  »agwa 
is  removinsr  the  cause  of  the  trouble  from  the 
sysU'in.  'Ihe  Kickapoo  Indian  Remedies  are 
ah.-,olutety  harmless,  and  may  be  olitnined  at 
all  diiigi,nsts.  Kicka|>oo  Indian  Oil,  •>:>  cents 
a  bottle.  KickaiKK)  Indian  Sagwa,  $1,00  u 
bottle;  C  !ioJt!c3  for  J.'i.OO. 


LYCEUM  THEATER,  { 

L.  y.  SCOTT,  Manager 

TONIGHT  AND  IOMOHROW  NlQ  IT 

The  Brilliaut  Emetional  Accrese, 

Supported  by  i 

HORACE  VINTON 

Iq  David  Halasco's  Popidar  Play,  ] 

La  Belle  Russe 


iiie  Mroiiaur  tmetional  Accrese, 

EDAGLAYTON 


tu 


space    with    your    wild 


In  Irishtown  at  the  recent  election  Mr. 
McKinley  receiV' d  137  votes  and  Mr. 
Bryan  !*4.  In  Oennantown  Mr.  McKin- 
ley received  Iti  votes  and  Mr.  Bryan 
296.  This  was  the  strongest  Bryan 
township  in  the  state  of  Illinois. 

The  Ih-ooklyn  tax  levy  has  exactly 
doubled  in  amout:t  since  1870.  The  pop- 
ulation of  the  city  of  Brooklyn  at  that 
time  was  400,000:  it  is  now  at)out  1,200,- 
000,  or  three  times  as  much.     The  as- 


Voyage    through 
train. 
Harping  its  shrillest,   searching  tone, 
t>r  wailing  deep  its  ancient   moan. 

To  learn  how  imi>olent  .your  reign. 


Now.    hovring   by    this  garden    bed. 

With  all   your  wilful   power,   behold. 

Just    breaking   from   the  leafv    mould. 
My    little    [irimro.se    lift    its    head' 

— KLIZAL?RTH    STODDARD. 

TIIK    SOUTH    AFRICAN    PINCH. 
New    York    Herald:   The   depreciation    in 
South     African     mining    shares    is    some- 
thing  stupendous.    In    the   middle   of   Oc- 
toi)er    last     the 


GREECE  AND  THE  GREEKS. 

Greece  has  a  population  of  2.1.S7,208. 

No  part  r)f  Greece  is  forty  miles  from 
the  sea. 

Greece  is  a  little  larger  than  one-halt 
of  Pennsylvania. 

Hellas   is   the   name   by     which     the 
Greeks  call   their  country. 
•  The  royal  palace  at  Athens,  built  by 
King  Otto,  cost  $2.C0O,000. 

Greece  has  a  longer  coast  line  than 
that  of  Spain  and  Portugal  together. 

About  one-half  of  the  population  ot 
Greece  are  shepherds  and  agricultur- 
ists. 

The  present  king  of  Greece.  George 
I.  came  to  the  throne  in  186:J,  at  the  agft 
of  17. 

The  Greek  flag  is  a  white  cross  on  a 
blue  ground,  the  Bavarian  colors  and 
the  Gieek  cross. 

King  George  of  Greece  is  a  broth?r 
of  the  princess  of  Wales  and  of  the 
mother  of  the  czar  of  Russia. 

The  standing  army  of  Greece  consists 
of  16,2S0  infantry,  3120  cavalry,  :;S42  ar- 
tillery. lOSO  engineers  and  :!4(K)  (dficer?.. 

The  legislative  power  «)f  (Jr«>ece  is 
ested  in  a  single  body,  called  the  Bcmle. 
The  members  are  elected  by  the  people 
every  four  years. 

The  present  boundary  limits  of 
Greece  were  determined  by  an  arrange- 
ment  by  Great  Britain,  France,  Ru.ssia 
and  Turkey.  July  21,  18:52. 


London  Statist  made  .1 
sessed  personal  property-  in  Brooklyn  i  comidlation.  showing  a  decline  of  J3  per 
has    increased    during    this    time    froin    ""'"'    '"    "' "   ' '""   ' 


The  Chicago  Record  tells  this  story 
on  the  new  secretary  of  the  treasury: 
Mr.  Gage  has  not  opened  his  mouth 
since  he  took  a  seat  at  the  cabinet 
table.     He   is  sizing   up   the   situation. 


.?17.000,00<i  to  S27.00O,OO0,  but  the  in- 
crease in  asse.ssed  value  of  real  estate 
has  been  from  $185,000,000  to  $550,000,- 
000. 

These  are  the  states  which  in  the  new 
congress  have  a  solid  Republican  dele- 
gation in  the  house:  Iowa,  Minnesota, 
New  Hampshire.  New  Jersey,  Oregon. 
Rhode  Island,  ('onnecti(  ut.  Vermont. 
West  Virginia  and  Wisconsin.  These 
are  the  states  which  have  a  solid  Dem- 
ocratic delegation:  Alabama,  Arkan- 
sas, Florida.  (Georgia,  Louisiana.  Mis- 
si.ssippi,  South  Carolina  and  Wash- 
ington. 


cent  in  the  leading  issues,  a.s  compared 
with  the  prices  a  year  previous.  Making 
up  prices  of  Feb.  23  show  in  eightv-three 
proi)erties  a  decline  of  27  per  cent,  or 
|]2r).00<».0<Xi,  in  market  value.  In  view  of 
their  exi)ericnces  in  South  American. 
Australia  and  African  insecurities  it 
would  seem  that  British  investors  must 
after  all  turn  to  this  countrv  as  the  saf- 
est and  most  attractive  field  for  their 
operations. 


THE  SUGAR  SCHEDULE. 


Grading  Fifth  Alley. 


Office  of  City  Comptndler, 
Duluth,  Minn.,  Feb.  22,  1897, 

Notice  i.s  hereby  given  to  all  parties 
interested  that  an  assessment  has  been 
made  by  the  boanl  of  public  works  of 
the  city  of  Duluth,  Minnesota,  and  .  on- 
lirmed  by  the  Hon.  J.  D.  Knsign,  judge 
of  the  district  court  of  the  Eleventh 
Judicial  district,  to  defray  in  full  th.' 
expenses  of  grading  and  otherwise  im- 
proving  the  alley  between  Fourth  and 
iMfth  streets,  from  Second  avenue  west 
to  Me.saba  avenue,  in  said  city,  and 
that  a  duplicate  assessment  roll  has 
been  delivered  to  the  city  treasurer, 
and  that  the  amount  assessed  against 
each  loi  or  parcel  of  land  can  be 
a.scertained  at  the  ofllce  of  the  city 
treasurer,  and  that  the  as.sessment  is 
due  and  payable,  and  if  paid  within 
thirty  (30)  days  there  will  be  allowed 
a  deduction  of  ten  (10)  per  cent  charged 
to  the  amount  of  the  assessment  for 
survey,  plans,  specifications,  and  su- 
perintendence. All  persons  so  desiring 
can  have  their  assessments  divided  into 
not  more  than  five  (5)  installments  of 
not  less  than  ten  (10)  dollars  each  by 
making  application  to  the  city  comp- 
troller within  45  days  after  date  of  this 
notice.  Said  installments  to  become 
due  and  payable  annually,  commencing 
October  1st.  1898.  with  intrest  at  7  per 
cent  payable  annually. 

Blanks  for  this  purpose    mav  V>e  ob- 
tained by  application  at  mv  office. 
W.  G.  TEN  BROCK. 
City  Coinptr>;ler. 
Duluth  Evening  Herald,  Feb  22,  Harch 

1-8-15. 


TRAIN INt;  A  HOOSIER. 
Chicago  Record:  They  sav  that  one  of 
the  (onditions  of  the  appointment  of 
*•  armer  Oowdy  of  Indiana  as  consul  gen- 
eral t<.  Paris  is  that  he  shall  trim  his 
whiskers  and  wear  a  necktie. 


DEFERRED  INDEFINITELY. 
Minneapolis  Times:  President  McKinley 
has  not  appointed  Bill  Merriam  to  Italy 
Germany.  Austria,  or  any  other  foreign 
■nlsslon  yet.  If  the  president  is  waiting 
for  Bill  to  get  the  indorsement  of  the 
men  who  signed  his  accommodatlo-i 
notes,  he  will,  perhaps,  defer  Bill's 
;)ointment  Indefinitelv. 


ap- 


PROGRKSS   IN   GKORGIA. 
Atlanta    Eveninjr  Constitution:    Is   there 
a  village  in  Georsia  that  is  not  more  than 
holding  its  own".* 

And    how   about    the   farmers,    are   thev 

impoverished '.•   Is  the  sheriff  selling  them 

[  out?   Are    they    moving   ti>   Texas'.' 

I      If  you  think  so  you  are  mistaken.  Small 

They   do   say,    however,    that    when   an     '^'i'""'''  '"■''  '",  demand  and  the  small  towns 

•re    prospering,    and    some    of    them    are 


body.  There  is  little  doubt  that  Mr. 
Reed  would  have  been  defeated  for  re- 
election to  the  speakership  if  any  man 
of  ability  upon  the  Republican  side 
in  the  present  house  had   the  nerve  to 


office-seeker  came  into  the  treasury 
yesterday  morning  and  asked  Mr.  Gage 
if  he  should  file  his  papers  there  or  over 
at  the  White  House  the  secretary  told 
him  that  if  he  could  get  two  good  in- 
dorsers  and  furnish  a  satisfactory  col- 
lateral he  would  lay  the  matter  before 
the  board  of  directors  at  the  next  meet- 
ing.    He   has    referred    to   the   cabinet 


ment.    It  is  not  likely  that  there  will  \n 

much  other  business  transacted,  unless 

it  be  the  passage  of  the  three  Important 

ai>propriation   bills  which  failed  at   the 

last  session.  Mr.  Reed  had  been  figur- 
take  the  leadership  of  the  forces  '  ing  upon  appointing -but  three  cornmit- 
against  him,  but  no  one  of  prominence  |  tees,  those  upon  ways  and  means,  rules 
opposed  him  in  the  caucus  Saturday  and  mileage,  just  enough  to  carry  on 
night.  the  business  of  the  house  so  far  as  tariff  j  s^everal  times  as  the  board  of  directors. 

In  following  out  the  policy  whi  h  he    legislation  alone  is  concerned.    The  fail- i  '*"*  people  take  that  for  a  slip  of  the 
believed    to    be   for    the    best    interests    "re  of  the  sundry  civil.  Indian  and  gen-  '  'ongue. 
of  the  country.  Mr.  Reed  has  made  ene-    ^r^l    deficiency    bills   may    interfere    to 
mies  galore  in  his  own  party.    Economy  ;  some  extent  with  this  program, 
was  all  right  on  general  principles,  but        -^"  attempt  will  first  be  made  at  this 
is  was  all  wrong  when  it  interfered  with  '  <^-^tra  session  to  put  these  bills  through 
some   little    schemes   of   members    who  :  ^^^  house  in  their  present  shape  with- 
wished  to  take  care  of  their  own  dls-  |  '  "^   reference  to   committee.         Should 
tricts.    In  the  first  place.  Speaker  Reed     ^^'^  effort  fail,  however,  Mr.  Reed  wili 
put  his  foot  flat  down  upon  appropria-  |  *^*^  compelled  to  appoint  committees  ic 

take   charge    of    these    important    bills.  I 


putting   on   frills 

We  are  comin?,'  out  of  the  vallev  of  hard 
times  and  climbing  upward. 


tions   for   public   buildings.     He    would 
not  permit  any  new  bills  for  this  pur- 
pose to  go  throught   the     Fifty-fourth 
congress.      Shortly    after    the    election  j 
it   was  predicted  that  a  raid  would   be  I 
made  upon  the  treasury  to  provide  for 
the    new    public    buildings    authorized  ' 
by  the  congress  which  adjourned  a  few 
days  ago.     The  speaker,  however,  soon  ' 
informed    the    committee    upon    public  ' 
buildings   and   grounds   that   it    was   a  I 
waste  of  time  to  report  public  building 
bills  to  the  house,   and   the  apprehen- 
sions  of  the  economists  were   relieved.  | 
This    decided    stand    upon    the    part    of 
the  speaker  naturally  added  to  his  al-  ' 
ready  long  list  of  enemies.    The  column 
received  additional  accretions  from  the 
members  who  failed  to  get  recognized 
for  the  passage  of  the  pension  or  other 
claim  bills,  and  who  were  disappointed 
in    securing   appropriations    for   water- 
way improvements  in  their  several  dis- 
tricts. 

It  will  be  readily  understood  that 
there  was  considerable  opposition  to 
the  re-election  of  Mr.  Reed  as  speaker 
of  the  house  of  representatives,  but 
like  the  antagonism  to  him  which  de- 
veloped upon  at  least  one  previous  oc- 
casion, it  did  not  amount  to  anything 
Mr.  Reed's  domination  of  the  Republi- 
can members  of  the  house  is  so  thor- 
ough that  no  man  cares  to  take  the  in- 
itiative in  opposing  him.  Without  the 
guarantee  of  a  sufficient  following,  the 


Miss  Cora  Weed,  of  Iowa,  has  applied 
for  a  position  in  the  consular  service. 
It  is  Miss  Weed's  wish  to  obtain  a  Eu- 
ropean consulate.  She  has  held  several 
appointments  under  the  state  govern- 
ment of  Iowa  and  is  well  educated  and 
intelligent,  and  could  undoubtedly  pass 
the  examination  recjuired  of  applicants 


The  fiscal  year  ends  July  1,  and  unless  '  ^""^  P'»«>t.ons  with  a  salary  of  $1000  a 
the  appropriations  provided  for  in  those  i  J'^^"-'  "J^^^-^rds.  There  are  about  twen- 
measures  arc  made  available  by  thut  '  *\!^ir'"  '^^^"^"'^h'P^  ^^'^^''^  the  salary 
time  the  wheels  of  a  goodly  portion  of  i  'y^f^'  Many  of  the  present  occupants 
the  government  machinery  will  cease  to  i  ''^  ^^''^^  °"^'^^''  ^'"^  ignorant  in  the  ex- 
revolve.  Continuous  contract  work  upon  !  ^^^^^'  *"<*  the  consular  service  would 


rivers  and  harbors  is  provided  foi 
in  the  sundry  civil  bill,  and  this  makes 
the  measure  especially  important.  It 
is  not  likely  that  the  house  will  insist 
upon  reference  of  any  of  these  appro- 


be  improved  by  the  retirement  of  one 
of  them  to  make  room  for  an  educated 
woman. 


FORERUNNER  OF  BETTER  TIMES 
New  Vork  Mail  and  p^xpress:  It  is  dil- 
licult  to  overestimate  the  imi)ortance  of 
the  improving  conditions  in  the  steel  rail 
business.  It  is  an  extraordinary  move- 
ment and  its  colbiteral  benefits  to  indus- 
try and  trade  will  be  great  and  wide-  I 
spread.  The  total  output  of  steel  rails 
in  this  country  in  ISOG.  according  to  the 
records  of  the  American  Iron  and  Steel 
association,  amounted  to  1.102,892  tons 
And  .vet  since  Jan.  1  of  the  present  year 
the  mill  owners  have  received  orders  for 
.steel  rails  of  various  sizes  aggregating 
fully  b.MlO.OOO  tons,  of  nearly  400,000  ton- 
more  than  Were  made  during  the  whole 
twelve  months  preceding.  This  increase 
is  the  forerunner  of  a  period  of  enormou- 
activity.  The  oniers  have  not  all  been 
iWaced  yet.  Many  roads  will  have  to  buy 
more  rails  during  the  season,  and  it  is 
not  unlikely  that  the  year  will  close  with 
a  total  output  of  not  less  than  2,000,000 
tons. 


The  Chicago  Times-Herald  scored  a 
big   "sooop"    on    Saturday  by   publish- 


priation    bills    to   committees,    but    will  !  ing  the  full  text  of  the  new'  tariff  bill 
pass  them  without  question  in  the  shape  ;  prepared  by  the  ways  and  means  com- 
mittee.   The  bill  is  entitled,  "An  act  to 


in  which  they  were  put  throu-gh  the  last 
congress. 

This  is  the  twelfth  extra  session  of 
congress  which  has  been  convened  by 
presidential  proclamation.  The  first 
was  called  by  President  John  Adams 
and  met  May  15,  1797,  the  cause  being 
strained  relations  with  France.  The 
cession  of  Louisiana  by  Spain  to  a  ranee 
led  Jefferson  to  call  congress  together 
In  extra  session  in  October,  1803.  The 
condition  of  American  relations  with 
Great  Britain  caused  Jefferson  to  call 
another  extraordinary  session  of  con- 
gress in  October,  1807,  and  the  same 
trouble  occasioned  the  two  calls  issued 
by  Madison,  v.hich  brought  congress  to- 
gether in  November,  1811,  and  Septem- 
ber, 1S14.  The  first  instance  of  an  extra 
session  of  congress  to  deal  with  an  exi- 
gency in  domestic  affairs  was  furnished 
during  the  administration  of  President 
Van  Buren.  and  the  inciting  cause  w'as 


provide  revenue  for  the  government 
and  to  protect  the  industries  of  the 
United  States." 


An  English  paper  has  preached  quite 
a  sermon  on  the  disgrace  inflicted  on 
Kansas  by  having  a  governor  who  is 
a  "drunkard."  It  took  its  text  by  mis- 
reading the  statement  in  an  American 
paper  that  Governor  Leedy  is  a  Dun- 
kard.  But  there  is  quite  a  difference. 
A  Dunk^rd  is  never  a  drunkard. 

It  Is  said  that  Mr.  Bryan  has  been 
tendered  the  mission  to  Denmark.  The 
Mr.  Bryan  referred  to  is  Charles  Page 
Bryan,  of  Elinhurst,  111. 


A  Ql'EEK  ARGUMENT. 
Minneaiwlis  Times:  One  of  the  queer 
arguments  advanced  why  Bill  Merriam 
should  be  given  a  $20,000  salary  Is  that  he 
has  expended  upward  of  $100,000  in  poli- 
tics in  Minnesota.  It  is  just  because  he 
expend€-d  this  amount  and  much  more 
in  debauching  the  politics  of  the  state 
that  decent  men  do  not  want  to  see  him 
honored   with  an  office  of  any  kind. 

GATES   SWING   BOTH    WAYS, 
Chicago  Tribune:     All   the  entrances   to 
the  White  House  .ire  kept  wide  open,  but 
unfortunately    for    the    officeseekers,     the 
exits  are  in  the  same  condition. 


WHAT'S    IN   A    NAME? 
Minnea))olis   Tribune:     More    trouble    in 
Crete.      The    editor    of    the      "Crete.    Neb 
Democrat  "    was   knocked   down   bv   a   leg- 
islator shortly  after  high  noon  Monday. 

ADMIRABLY  EQUIPPED. 
Sauk  Center  Herald:  Hon.  C.  K  Davis 
by  the  retirement  of  Senator  Sherman 
to  accept  the  portfolio  of  state,  becomes 
chairman  of  the  committee  on  foreign 
relations— one  of  the  most  honorable  and 
responsible  positions  within  the  whole 
scope  of  governmental  affairs.  His  pro- 
found knowledge  of  international  law 
his  graceful  accomplishments  as  a  schol- 
ar, his  virile  p;itriotism  and  his  acute 
»»nse  of  equity  admirablv  lit  him  for  thN- 
position,  which  has  been  graced  by  the 
most  eminent  men  in  our  national  history. 

THE  SOONER  THE  BETTER. 
Freeborn  County  Times  (Rep.):  From 
the  present  outlook  it  would  seem  that 
ex-Governor  Merriam  and  Private  Sec- 
retay  Bixby  are  not  to  be  fed  at  the  na- 
tional st.ill  during  the  McKinley  reign, 
and  so  they  mu.st  of  necessity  take  an- 
other turn  at  the  old  machine  and  at- 
tempt next  year  to  secure  such  plums  as 
the  state  affords.  Let  the  battle  conv^ 
The  continued  rule  of  the  Republican 
party  in  this  state  is  in  danger  so  long 
as  these  unscrupulous  and  unrepresenta- 
tive politicians  dictate  its  platforms  and 
candidates.  and  the  .sooner  they  are 
turned  down  the  better  for  both  party 
and  state. 


The  Little  Falls  Transcript  says  that 
"Elder"  Stewart,  of  Minneapolis,  is  ad- 
ding to  his  reputation  this  year  by  re- 
fusing to  clean  his  sidewalk.    His  prin- 
ciples prevent  it.     This  must   also   be 


ECKELS  AND  BIMETALLISM. 
St.  Peter  Free  PYess  (Rep.):  In  his  opin- 
ion bimetallism  Is  a  phantastieal  dream 
of  a  few  impractical  cranks  and  must 
never  be  tolerated.  A  single  gold  stand- 
ard with  a  paper  currency  controlled  ex- 
clusively by  the  banks  is  advocated  bv 
him  as  the  Ideal  system  to  overcome  the 
pendexing  entanglements  of  the  bust 
four  years.  That  a  man  holding  such 
extreme,  one-sided  views  can  be  of  little 
benefit  on  a  non-partisan  commission  ex- 
pected to  do  justice  to  the  principles  of 
bimetallism  goes  without  saying.  What 
we  need  is  capable  men.  free  from  bias 
or  prejudice,  with  an  honest  desire  to 
solve  the  problem  of  safe  financiering 
in  the  interest  of  the  pe<jple  against  the 
speculators,  and  this  Mr.  Eckels  cannot 
be  expected  to  do. 


Chicago  Tribune:  The  increased 
duties  will  give  more  protection  to  the 
cane  and  beet  sugar  producers  of  the 
United  States.  So  they  ought  to  be 
happy.  They  are  liable  to  get  along 
with  the  duty  as  it  is.  They  ought  to 
make  quite  enough  money  when  the 
protection  is  raised  from  40  per  cent 
to  about  70.  The  beet  sugar  industry 
will  be  extended  in  Nebraska,  Califor- 
nia and  other  states. 

Chicago  Inter  Ocean:  The  new  sugar 
tariff,  as  outlined  in  the  dispatches 
fi"om  Washington,  almost  reaches  an 
ideal  standard  of  excellence.  It  res- 
tores the  polariscope  test,  which  alone 
is  a  safe  determiner  of  value;  it  does 
away  with  the  iniquitous  ad  valorem 
duties;  it  will  provide  a  revenue  of 
about  $44,000,000  a  year  from  sugar 
alone,  and  it  will  not  greatly  increase 
the  price  to  the  consumer,  while  it  is 
all  but  sure  to  add  immensely  to  the 
output  of  the  beet  and  cane  factories 
of  the  United  States. 

Kansas  City  Star:  The  new  tariff 
law  will  take  from  the  sugar  refineries 
nearly  all  the  protection  afforded  them 
by  the  present  law.  It  is  supposed  to 
tax  refined  sugars  only  one-eighth  of 
1  cent.  The  tax  on  all  sugars  is  to  be 
increased  so  that  it  will  yield  an  in- 
crease of  $27,000,000  a  year  in  revenue. 
Sugar  is  an  article  of  much  large  con- 
sumption and  so  much  of  it  is  import- 
ed that  an  import  duty  on  it  is  more 
of  a  revenue  tariff  than  a  protective 
tariff,  though,  incidentally,  protection 
is  afforded  to  the  sugar  raisers  of  Am- 
erica. 

Chicago  Record:  It  is  merely  fair  to 
the  members  of  the  ways  and  means 
committee  to  say  that  in  its  important 
work  on  the  tariff  that  body  has  de- 
\ised  a  means  at  once  of  increasing 
the  revenues  and  of  lessening  the  mon- 
opoly power  of  the  sugar  trust.  The 
sugar  schedule  which  the  committee 
has  proposed  fixes  an  increased  rate  of 
tariff  on  raw  sugars  and  a  decreased 
rate  on  refined  sugars.  The  result  of 
the  wl^ole  schedule  is  that  the  associa- 
tion of  sugarmakers  with  which  Mr. 
Havemeyer  is  connected  will  not  be 
able  to  coin  money  at  the  consumers' 
expense  quite  so  rapidly,  while  the  in- 
crease in  the  revenues  produced  by  the 
.schedule  will  amount  to  about  $27,000,- 
000  more  than  is  obtained  at  present 
fr(jm  the  same  source. 


^',^^19^.9?,  MORTGAGE    FORECLOS- 
1  RE   SALE.— 

Whereas  default  has  been  made  In  the 
conditions  ot  a  cert.iin  mortgage  madi- 
e.veeiited  and  deliver.Ml  l.v  Thad.leus  j'. 
Harrow  and  Nellie'  ,1.  Harrow,  his  wife, 
of  the  county  ot  St.  L.niis  .and  state  of 
■  ;'".'V.""^''"-  mortgagors,  to  Homestead 
l.uildinq  ,ind  Loan  Association  of  the 
same  place,  mortgagee,  dated  the  first 
(ist)  day  of  June,  one  thousand  eicht 
hundred  and  ninety-iive  (1895),  and  re- 
corded in  the  office  of  the  register  of 
deeds  for  the  county  of  St.  Louis  an.l 
state  of  Minnesota,  on  the  third  (3rd) 
day  of  July.  A.  D,  189.-).  at  the  hour  of 
twelve  (ij)  o'elock  and  lifteen  minutes  in 
the  afternoon  of  said  day.  in  Book  sixtv 
Om  of  mortgages  on  page  two  hundred 
and    seventy- three    (273). 

And  whereas  there  Is  claimed  to  be  duo 
and  IS  now  due  on  said  mortgage  at  th  > 
date  of  this  notice  the  sum  of  eight  hun- 
dred and  sixty-nine  dollars  and  eighiv- 
five  cents  («8f.9.85),  and  no  proceeding  or 
action  has  been  Instituted  at  law  or 
otherwise,  to  recover  the  debt  secured 
by  said  mortgage,  or  any  part  thereoi". . 
Jsow.  therefore,  notice  is  hereby  glvfii 
that  by  virtue  of  the  power  of  sale  con- 
tained in  .said  mortgage  and  of  the  stat- 
ute in  such  case  made  and  provided,  the 
said  mortgage  will  be  foreclosed  by  th" 
•''"i'«  of  the  premises  therein  described  at 
public  vendue  by  the  sheriff  of  the  coun- 
t.y  of  St.  Louis  and  state  of  Minnesota,  at 
the  front  door  of  the  district  court  house 
of  said  county,  in  the  city  of  Duluth.  St 
Louis  County.  Minnesota,  on  Wednes- 
da.v  the  twenty-first  (21st)  d.iv  of  April, 
A.  D.  1897.  at  ten  (10)  o'clock  in  the  fore- 
noon of  said  day,  to  satisfy  the  amount 
which  shall  then  be  due  on  said  mort- 
gage, with  Interest  thereon  and  thf> 
costs  and  disbursements  of  the  sale  and 
fifty  dollars  ($50.00)  attorney's  fees  sis 
.stipulated  in  said  mortgage  In  cnse  of 
foreclosure. 

The  premises  described  in  said  mort- 
gage and  so  to  be  sold  are  the  tracts 
and  parcels  of  land  lying  and  being  In 
the  city  of  Duluth.  St.  Louis  Countv.  and 
state  of  Minnesota,  known  and  describe*! 
as  follows,  to-wii:  Lots  numbered  t^n 
(10),  and  eleven  (11),  in  block  numbered 
twenty-.six  (2'!),  in  the  Fifth  Division, 
Duluth  Heights,  according  to  the  record- 
ed plat   thereof. 

Dated  Duluth,    Minn..  March  4th.  1897. 
HOMESTEAD    BUILDING    AND    LOAN 
ASSOCIATION. 

HENRY  S.  MAHON.  Mortgagee. 

Attorney   for   said    Mortgagee. 
Duluth     Evening    Herald,      March-8-13-22- 

29-Apri  1-5-12. 


POWDER 

Absolutely  Pure 

Celebrated  for  Its  great  leavening 
strength  and  health  fulness.  Assures  the 
food  against  alum  and  all  forms  of  adul- 
teration common  to  the  cheap  brands, 
ROYAL  BAKING  POWDER  CO..  NEW 
YORK.  ,  ^_ 


MERRIAM  WITHDRAWS. 
New    York    World:      Former    Governor 
Merriam  of  Minnesota  will  not  be  amba.^- 
sador  to   Germany   because   his  wife  and 
the  wife  of  Senator  Davis  are  at  dagger's 
points.       Former  Congressman       Bellamv 
Storer  of  Ohio  may  not   be  the  new  a.s*- 
slstant   secretary   of  state.    His   wife   and 
the    wife    of    Senator       Foraker    are    not 
friendly.  Ex-Governor  Merriam  has  with- 
drawn    his  name  from  the  list   of  candi- 
dates for  diplomatic  honors  and  has  gone 
back  to  St.  Paul  to  devote  himself  to  his 
private  affairs.     Mr.    McKinley  was   very 
anxious   to  appoint   him   ambas.sador      to 
Germany  and  had  fully  made  up  his  mini 
to   do   so.    An    unexpected   obstacle,    how- 
ever, arose  in  the  person  of  Senator  Da- 
vis,   chairman    of    the    senate    commltt'~ 
on    foreign    relations,    and    the    prt^sid^nt 
was  forced  to  choose  between  antagoniz- 
ing   the '  hitter's    influence    in    the    senate 
and   disaiipointing   Merriam.    He  candidly 
explained  the  situation  to  the  former  gov- 
ernor,   who    did    not    hesitate    to    relieve 
him    from    his    embarrassment.      The    en- 
mity between  Mrs.   Davis  and  Mrs.   Mer- 
riam is  said  to  have  been  caused  by  the 
refusal    of    Mrs.    Merriam    to    call    upon 
the  senator's  wife  at   her  St.   Paul  home 
or    to    acknowledge    her    by    the    smallest 
courtesy.      The    situation        naturally    in 
time    Involved    the    husbands,        notwith- 
standing   their    strong    previous    political 
friendship.      So    bitter    did    their    antag- 
onism   become    that    ii    is    said    ex-Gov- 
ernor  Merriam   stjent   $40(X)  In   an    ineffec 
tual  attempt  to  defeat  Senator  Davis  for 
re-election. 


THE  STATE  HONORED. 
Wadena  Journal:  The  citizens  of  Min- 
nesota, regardless  of  party,  will  rejoic-^ 
in  the  honor  that  has  been  paid  to  the 
state  by  the  selection  of  Hon.  C.  K.  Da- 
vis as  chairman  of  the  senate  committee 
on  foreign  affairs,  to  succeed  Senator 
Sherman.  Mr.  Davis  is  well  fitted  for  the 
position,  and  will  fill  it  with  dignitv  and 
ability.  His  service  on  the  committee  has 
b"(n  characterized  by  faithfulness  and 
elficiency,  and  as  its  chairman,  he  will 
only  the  better  prove  his  loyalty  and 
worth. 


A  GOLE^EN  OPPORTUNITY. 
When  an  opportunity  for  benefiting 
yourself  is  presented  to  you,  seize  it. 
This  is  good  philosophy.  Dr.  Greene, 
35  West  Fourteenth  street.  New  Y'ork 
city,  the  distinguished  specialist  ad- 
mitted to  be  the  most  eminent  authori- 
ty on  diseases,  can  be  consulted  per- 
sonally or  by  letter  free.     Dr.  Greene's 


NOTICE    OF    MORTGAGE    SALE.- 

Whereas  default  has  been  made  in  the 
conditions  of  a  certain  mortgage  duly  ex- 
ecuted   and   delivered    by   Antrew   A     Pe- 
ter.son    and    Clara     Peterson,        his    wife 
mortgagors,    to   William   E.   Lucas,   mort- 
gagee   bearing   date    May    first    (1st),    1893 
and  which  was  duly  recorded  in  the  reg- 
ister of  deeds'  office  for  St.  Louis  (boun- 
ty,  Minnesota,   on   May   thirteenth   (ISth) 
1893,    at   4:30   o'clock    p.    m.,    in    Book   one 
hundred  two  (102)  of  mortgages,  on  pages 
two    hundred   sixty-eight    (268),    two    hun- 
dred   sixty-nine    (269)    and    two    hundred 
seventy     (270)     thereof;     which     mortgaire, 
with  the  debt  thereby  secured,  was  there- 
after duly   as.sipned    by   said    William    E. 
Lucas   to  James   H.    Falconer,    bv   an   in- 
strument   of    assignment       bearing    date 
June    ninth    (9th),    1893,    and    which    was 
duly    recorded    in    the    register   of   deeds' 
office    for    St.    Louis    County.    Minnesota, 
on  June  ninth    (9th).    1893,    at   1:30  o"clock 
p.    m..    In    Book    eighty-three   (83)    of    as- 
signment   of    mortgages.       on    page    four 
hundred   fifty-six    (456)    thereof;    such    de- 
fault   consisting    In    the    non-payment    of 
the  principal   sum   thereby  secured,    with 
interest  thereon  at  the  rate  of  eight   per 
cent   per  annum   from  January   1st,   ifew, 
and  exchange. 

And  whereas  there  Is  therefore  claimed 
to  be  due,  and  there  is  actually  due, 
upon  said  mortgage  debt,  at  the  date  of 
this  notice,  the  sum  of  six  hundred  thir- 
ty-nine and  26-100  ($639.26)  dollars,  princi- 
pal,  interest  and  exchange. 

And  whereas  said  mortgage  contains  a, 
power  of  sale  In  due  form,  which  has  be- 
come operative  by  reason  of  the  defaults 
above  mentioned,  and  no  action  or  pro- 
ceeding, at  law  or  otherwise,  has  been 
instituted  to  recover  the  debt  secured 
by  said  mortgage,  or  any  part  thereof. 

Now.  therefore,  notice  is  hereby  given 
that  by  virtue  of  said  power  of  sale  con- 
tained in  said  mortgage,  and  pursuant  to 
the  statute  in  such  case  made,  .said  mort- 
I  gage  will  be  foreclosed  by  a  sale  of  th« 
oremlses  described  therein,  situate  in  St" 
Louis  County,  Minnesota,  described  as 
follows,    to-wlt:       All    of    lots    numbered 


wonderful  cures  have  made  his  name  _.    .    ^.^„ 

famous  throughout  the  world.  The  |  -^'Pht  (8)  and  nine  (9),  in  block  numbered 
weak  and  debilitated,  the  nervous  and  |  p^fiV  ^'Vhhu.^^  ♦^^  Macfarlane's  Grassy 
prostrated  from  overwork,  errors  and  I  [h"e'"Uc1frde'Xll?  Phe»  il'7^^'7e.L^. 
indiscretions  should  see  or  write  to  Dr.  ter  of  deeds'  office  for  I?  Louis  Count v 
Greene.  Treatment  by  letter  corres-  |  Minnesota;  which  premises  will  be  soiii 
pondence  a  specialty  and  offers  an  as-    by  the  sheriff  of  said  St.   Louis  Countv, 


surance  of  cure.  All  should  seize  this 
golden  opportunity  within  their  grasp 
without  delay  and  be  restored  tc 
health. 


WOLVES  KILLING  CATTLE. 
Cheyenne,  Wyo.,  March  15.— The  cold 
weather  of  the  past  few  days  has  been 
very  disastrous  to  range  stock.  Reports 
yesterday  and  today  give  news  of  many 
losses.  Sheep  are  thin  and  weak.  The 
snow  is  deep  and  crusted.  Cattle  and 
horses  are  suffering,  with  but  small 
losses.  On  the  Upper  Platte  ranges 
wolves  are  becoming  very  troublesome, 
and  in  some  cases  killing  full-grown* 
steers. 


at  the  front  door  of  the  court  house.  In 
the  city  of  Duluth,  In  said  county  and 
•state  on  the  twentieth  (20th)  dav  of  April. 
A.  p.  1897,  at  ten  (10)  o'clock  .i.  m..  at 
public  auction,  to  the  highest  bidder  for 
cash,  to  pay  said  debt  and  Interest,  and 
the  taxes.  If  any,  on  said  premises,  and 
fifty  dollars  attorney's  fees,  stipulated 
for  in  said  mortgage  in  case  of  foreclos- 
ure, and  the  disbursements  allowed  by 
law  subject  to  redemption  at  any  time 
within  one  year  from  the  day  of  sale  as 
provided  bv  law. 

Dated   March   6th,    1897. 

JAMES   H.    FALCONER, 
Assignee  of  Morlgaeee. 
P^RANCIS    W.    SULLIVAN  ' '«'**''^«- 

Attorney   for   Assignee. 
Duluth     Evening    Herald,     March-8-15-22- 

29-.^pril-5-12.  • 


H 


' 

, 

■iii^dK^^&d^aUid 


^1 


f 


11      «ii  >■   I 


I    >  ■■ 


><■■    ■ 


"!— t- 


i 


PEBISHED 


Robert   Cluff   Found    Badly 

Frozen    in   the    Itasca 

County  Woods. 


Was   Taken   to   Hospital  at 

Grand  Rapids  Where 

He  Died. 


James  Aibro  Held  For  Trial 

For  the  Swan  River 

Robbery. 


13.— 
fro- 
was 


ON  PROFAINTY. 

Dr.  Humason  Preaches  a  Ser- 
j       mon  on  That  Subject. 

Dr.  Humason.  at  the  First  Metho»llsi 
church    last   evening,    took    the      third 
commandment  a.s  his  text.     This  tom- 
mandment.    he   said,    forl^ids   not   only 
cursing,   but  all   forms  of  irreverenee. 
in    which    i.s    included    the    light,    care- 
less use  of  the  name  of  (lod.     The  Am- 
ericans are  a  nervous,   impatient   race, 
and    lack    the    refinement    and    <ulture 
of  the  older  nations.     Profanity  lowers 
the  user  in   the  esteem  of  his  fellows 
It  debases  the  tone  of  the  home     and 
many   a    mother   suffers    untold    agony 
because   of    the   suggestion    of    lack    >)f 
respect    for   her    which    its    use   in    her  i 
presence   indicates.      Perjurj    is   a   vio- 
lation of  this  commandment,     it  l)locks 
I  the  administration  of  justice  and   thus 
I  invites  anarchy  and  destruction.     It  is  ' 
a  question  whether  it  would  not  l>e  bet-  i 
[  ter  to  abolish  the  practice  of  swearing  i 
'  on  the  Hible  in  our  courts.     Certain   it 
j  is.    that    it    is   often   so   flippantly   done 
I  as  to  amount  to  irreverence.     A  person 
of  con.sclence  will  state  the  truth  with- 
out   an    oath,    and    one    without      con- 
science will   not   state   It    more   nearly 
under  oath.    Many  by-words  in  use  :ir,. 
oaths   in   essence  and   spirit,    and   thus 
a   violation    of   this   commandment,    as 
IS  the  ha)>it  of  meaningless  repetition  of 
Gods  name  in  prayer  in  public  worship 


THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD:  MONDAY,  MARCH 


LJ. 


1397, 


CLOSES  THISEYENIN6'|^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^<^^^^^^^^^^^ 


r. 


626  Boxes  of  Pills  Given  Away 
Up  to  Noon  Today. 


00OD'<  MEDICINE  C0«PANY'8  DlSIRL 
BUriOM  OF  KIDNEY  PILLS  PRO- 
CEEDS AT  THE  NEWS  TRIBUNE 
OFFICE  TODAY. 


APPLY  CHRISTIANITY. 

Its  Force  Should  Be  Injected 
Into  Money. 


Rev.  Dr.  Cleland.  at  the  First  Pres- 
byterian church  yesterday,  took  ft.r 
his  theme  "The  Christianizing  of 
Money.-  Mr.  Gladstone  had  made  the 
statement,  he  said,  that  the  christianiz-  |  r!^l^^ 
ing  of  money  should  be  the  livins  aim 


Orand    Rapids,    Minn.,     March 
(Special  to  The  Herald.)— A   badly 
zen    sufferer   named    Hol»ert   Cluff 
brought    here    on    Saturday    evening's 
train    fmm    Wallace    Siding,    forty-two 
miles    down    the    Duluth.    Superior    & 
Western  railway.     He  had   been   visit- 
ing at    William   Champion's  on   Prairie 
lake  Friday  night.  He  took  liquor  with 
him  and  they  had  what  Mr.  Champion 
called    a    real    good    time.      He    started 
back    Saturday    morning    before    day- 
light   intending    to    have    breakfast    at 
his  brothers  camp,  Cluff  &  DeLaittre's 

which  is  six  miles  from  Prairie  lake,  at     '"*^  ""^  money  snould  be  the  livin 
Wallace   Siding.  of  the  Christian  <hurch.       There 

William  Champion  started  for  the  tloubt  that  a  millenium  of  fraternitv 
camp  during  the  morning  and  found  ;  and  prosperity  would  follow  the  appli"- 
Cluff  alwut  11  o'clock  lying  by  the  trail  i  cation  of  gospel  principles  to  the  acqui- 
unconscious.  He  thought  the  man  was  siti.m  and  distribution  of  money.  Next 
dead  and  proceeded  t«»ur  miles  to  the  tt»  the  question  of  what  is  necessary  for 
camp  where  a  team  was  sent  out  al  salvation  is  that  of  the  right  use  of 
once  and  the  victim  was  found  to  still  money.  Laying  by  offerings  on  the 
have  signs  of  life,  although  his  feet  Lord's  day  identifies  our  wealth  with 
were  frozen  solid  and  other  parts  of  the  I  religion.  The  power  to  get  monev  as 
body  were  affected.  He  was  rubbed  I  <l"cs  every  other  gift,  came  frt>m  "liea- 
and  blanketed  »)n  the  way  in.  and  as  or-  |  ven  and  it  is  meant  that  we  should 
dinary         resti»ratives  were  un-  |  render  up  to  th&  Lord  part  of  our  sub- 

avaihng        he        was        .sent      here    to  !  stance.     By  so  doing,   we   properly   re- 
ihe    Rosser    hospital.      His    ag.my    was  |  cognize  God   in  our    earnings        As     a 
mtensf,  ami  notwithstanding  the  most  i  partner.     He   must   have   his   dividend 
earnest  efforts  of  the  physicians  he  died  i  Systematic    offering    regulates    our    in- 

hy   care  and   conscience.      It   en- 


It  was  great,   ^n.snt   it? 

This   morning  i^..    IX)I>I)'S   MKDTCIXK 

i  CO..    of   the   r.   .%    (lisp«>nse<l   at    the  offlc" 

I  of    the    .\ews    THbiine    over    six    hundred 

boxes    <if    DODDS    KIDNKV    r'ILLS-<kC, 

■  to  1h»  exact. 

i  Owing  to  the  nt<essary  jire.  autions 
[  taken  to  register  the  persons  applying 
i  for  boxi-s  of  pills,  that  nont-  might  re- 
I  ceive  mon-  than  his  share,  and  that  none 
j  who  have  no  neetl  for  pills  should  usurp 
the  pla.'es  .,f  those  who  ask  for  them  in 
I  Ko.id   faith,   the  long  line  of  seekers  affi- 

health  moved  slowly. 
I  The  distribution  will  close  tonight. 
-Ami  now  a  word  to  those  tWi'  person-: 
who  carried  away  boxes  of  pills  tills 
m..rnini;.  ft  is  our  hope  that  everv  pill 
will  do  xood.  These  pills  are  valiial)le. 
i  hey  are  not  Riven  awav  to  b« 
away.  They  are  Kiveti  only 
w-hom  we  are  satisiie.l  will  make  sensi- 
ble use  of  them.  They  will  do  you  good  if 
you   tak»'  them. 

We   al.so  advise   th<.se   patients   who   ar  • 
suffering  from  .severe  pains  in  their  back 
or   turbi.l    untie  or  other   urinarv   .lithcul- 
ties  not   to  be  diseourasecl  if  the  lirst   pill 
or    two    does    not    eonelude    a    cure. 

The  lirst  few  pills  will  have  the  effect 
of  (leansiMj;  the  kidneys,  ridding  them 
ot  poisonous  ae.umulations.  The  urine 
vklll  be  thick  and  <lark  with  acldwast- 
I  he  faeces  will  iilentiful  and  free  The 
panis  if  any  should  be  relieve<l  bv  the 
.secon<l  day.  and  should  entirely  disap- 
pear, except  in  most  extreme  and  extra- 
eases,  within  a  week.  The  di- 
,    ,,  ,    *>'•      'he     lio.x     should      l)e     eloselv 

followed      The    ..ills    will    do    ih.ir    w..rk 
is   no    f'^'*'"*'   ''"'     •^/""   "'   strength.    Kvery  one 
I  is  examined   before   it    is   boxed.   The  con- 
I  Im".''"'  ',*L""*'  *"'^  should   make  a    ptrcep- 
I  til.le   difference    in   anyone's    health,    com- 
I  plexion     and     feelitiKs.     Hut     we     strongly 
I  advise    that    the   whole   box    be    taken     \k- 
I  tore    JudKm-lU    be    passefl.     unless,     in.'leed 
the  remedy  w.rks  its  benefuial  inlluences 
before  then. 


thrown 

Co      tllOSi' 


On  Men's,  Boys'jidCJiiJdren's Suits! 

^  For  the  next  two  weeks  Z%'^''"'-^l},'""^^I  to/eJuce  our  immense  stock  of 

^ VTWWivo  Suits  quickly  and  make  room  for  our  spring  goods, 

^  : ^==^ -^^^  cut  the  already  low  prices  square  in  two  viz- 

I  Men's  Fine  Suits.         ICiiildren's  Suits. 

^  $24.00  Hen's  Suits  at  $i2.ooi<t        /-lmj      ,    ., 

5  $20.00  Hen's  Suits  at  $io.oo*^^'5^  Children's  Suits  at      $3.75  «^ 

$9.00?  ^^00  Cliildren's  Suits  at      $3.00  J 

j7.50|$5.oo  Children's  Suits  at      $2.50  ^ 
!^-^^f  $3.00  Children's  Suits  at 
$3.oo:p2.oo  Children's  Suits  at 
$3.oo|  $1.00  Children's  Suits  at 


^ 
^ 


^  $18.00  Hen's  Suits  at 
^  $15.00  Hen's  Suits  at 
^  $12.00  Hen's  Suits  at 
^  $10.00  Hen's  Suits  at 
$6.00  Hen's  Suits  at 
$4.00  Hen's  Suits  at 


$1.50 

$1.00 


-^N 

A 
^ 


"i"i'*h' 


i^'LJ.A 


last  night.  His  brother  will  take  the  re-  I  come 

ables  us  to  do  good  now.  while  we  live. 
The  divine  law  of  equality  is  expre.ssed 
in  the  apostolic  method  of  giving  "as 
the  Lord  has  prospered  you."  To  give 
less  than  we  ought  is  to  give  nothing. 
We    must   give  cheerfully,    to    make    it 


mains  to  Aitkin  f.>r  interment.  He  was 
-8  years  ojd.  unmarried,  and  made  his 
home  at  Aitkin.  His  brother.  B.  F. 
Cluff,  and  fJeorge  C.  Mlackwood  are  here 
from  Wallace  Siding,  where  Cluff  & 
IV  Laittre  are  logging  this  winter. 
Cluft  had  $;J,".  in  his  pocket  when  found 
in   the  Swan 


THE  CURLING  CONTEST. 

Beginners    Defeated   the    Old 
Players  on  Saturday. 

The 


50c    ^ 


I  All  Overcoats  Half  Price. 


4 


Kiver  highway  robtjery 
case  the  preliminary  examination  of 
James  Albro.  the  third  and  last  of  the 
men  arrested,  was  concluded  Saturd;-^. 
Judge  Stilson  held  him  to  the  grand 
jury  in  default  of  J.'.iK)  bail.  None  of  the 
trio  showed  either  disposition  or  ability 
to  furnish  their  bonds,  and  the  olTicers 
feel  that  the  community  is  much  safer 
with  them  i.ehind  the  bars  of  the  coun- 
ty jail.  Zeb  Forshet.  the  man  who  was 
thrown  down  and  robbed  on  the  rail- 
way track,  shows  a  determination  to 
push  the  eases  against  the  three  prison-  i 
ers.  I 

Trustee   W.    R.    Baumbach.    who   has 
conducted    the    business    of   the    Itasca 
Mercantile  company     so     satisfactorily  I 
during  the  past  year,  has  been  unani-  I 
mously  selected  to  manage  the  concern  ' 
during  the  coming  year.     Mrs.    Baum.  , 
bach  will  leave  their  home  at  Wadena  ' 
about  the  first  of  June  to  remain  here 
during  the  summer.  j 

The   Temple   Ladies'   quartet,   of  Du- 
luth. are  to  give  a  concert  here  in  about 
two   weeks.     Its    members   ar.-     Misses  ' 
Flora   Louden.    Anna    Farrell,     Justine 
Shannon  and  Dora  Swan.  j 

The  Ladies'  Catholic  society  have  de<  ' 
cided  upon  giving  a  concert  at  villag*^  i 
hall  on  March  17.  instead  of  having  a  I 
dramatic  entertainment. 

Teachers'   examinaticm    was   in   prog 
ress   Saturday     before     Superintendent 
Stilson.  who  had  twenty-one  candidates 
for  certificates. 

Mrs.  T.  J.  Feeley.  wife  of  the  sawmill 
man  at  Swan  River,  died  at  Asburv  hos- 
pital. Minneaptdis.  Saturday  of  brain 
trouble,  complicated  by  an  attack  of  ty- 
pnoid.  ^ 

Sheriff  M.  L.  Toolo  and  Countv  Com- 
missioner Henry  Logan  were  home  Sat- 
r.rday  from  Minneapolis,  where  they  have 
been  witnesses  in  a  court  case. 

The  Public  Scho<.l   Literary  society   will 
g-.ve   a   public   debate   on    Friday    evening 
next.      The    new    officers    are:    "Presiden* 
M;ibel   Day:    first   vice   president,    William 
ODonnel:   .second   vice   president.    Charles* 
King;    secretary.    Stephen    Leahv:    trea.s- 
urer.    James    Doran;        sergeant"-at-arms. 
Loretta     Doran;     critic.     Alwin     Kr>mer     , 
Rev.  Dr.   Forbes,  of  Duluth,  will  lecture  j 
at   the   M*thodlst   church    here   on    FrI.lay  i 
evening,    Manh       1<».    upon       the  subject 
"What    is    he    Worth?" 


pleasing  to  the  Lord, 
man. 


NO  FAITH  CORE 


ABOUT 


STUART'S       DYSj'EPSJA 
LETS. 


TAB- 


They  Cure  Stomach  Troubles  and  Indiges- 
tion Anywiy.  Whether  You  Have  Faith 
In  Them  or  Not. 


Mere  faith  will  not  digest  your  food 
for  you,  will  not  give  you  an  appetite, 
will  not  increase  your  flesh  and 
strengthen  your  nerves  and  heart,  but 
Stuarts  Dyspepsia  Tablets  will  do  these 
things,  because  they  are  compo.sed  of 
the  elements  of  digestion,  they  contain 
the  juices,  acids  and  peptones  necessary 
to  the  digestion  and  assimilation  of  all 
wholesome  food. 

Stuarts  Dyspepsia  Tablets  will  digest 
fo.jd  if  placed  in  a  jar  or  bottle  in  water 
.  !  heated  to  98  degrees,  and  they  will  do 
It  m.uch  more  effectively  when  taken 
into  the  stomach  after  meals,  whether 
you  have  faith  that  they  will  or  not. 

They  invigorate  the  stomach,  make 
pure  blood  and  strong  nerves,  in  the 
only  way  that  nature  can  do  it,  and 
that  is,  from  plenty  of  wholesome  food 
well  digested.  It  is  not  what  we  eat. 
but  what  we  digest  that  does  us  good. 

Stuart's  Dyspepsia     Tablets  are  sold 
by  nearly  all  druggists  at  50  cents  for 
full  sized  package,  or  by  mail  from  the  | 
Stuart  company,  Marshall.  Mich. 


Superior  Normals  Won. 

The  Superior  normal  school  basket 
ball  team  defeated  the  Duluth  Y.  M.  C. 
A.  team  Saturday  evening  by  a  score 
of  5  to  3.  It  was  a  pretty  contest  and 
was  hard  f(»ught  on  both  sides.  The 
game  is  the  first  of  a  series  of  three 
and  the  next  will  be  played  Saturday 
evening.  R.  P.  Shannon  was  Duluth 
umpire,  L.  Butler.  Superior  umpire, 
and  F.  K.  Driver,  referee. 


ACT  TOO  HASTILY. 

Too  Many  Alarms  For  Little 
Chimney  Blazes. 


contests  at   the  Duluth  Curling 
club's  rink  on  Saturday  resulted  In  fa- 
vor of  the  beginners  and  the  old  play- 
ers had  tf>  pay  for  the  supper  for  the 
crowd.     The  total  score  for  the  begin- 
ners  with    their   handi(ai.   of   ;j     points 
fiiving  ennobles    '"^'Uf'^*'!  were  l(i4.  and  for  the  old  play- 
ers !).-!.     The  showing  made  by  the  be- 
ginners  was  good   and    in   spite  of  the 
[  tact   that   the  old   players   were  beaten 
they   were  quite   well    pleased  over   the 
result  for  it  shows  that  the  club  is  be- 
coming stronger  and  that  the  new  ma- 
terial  of  this  year  is   bringing  forth   a 
number    of   fine    curiers.      It    will    spur 
the  new  men  on  to  greater  effort  also   i 
and  the  club  is  already  certain  to  have  \ 
a    much    greater    active    membershir.  ' 
next   year   than   ever    before.     The   in-  I 
crease  this  year  was  heavier  than  ever  I 
before  and  it  is  noticed,  too,  that  those 
who  have  kept  at  the  game  grow  more 
enthu.'-iastic  every  day. 

Four  games  were  played  in  the  after- 
noon and  the  beginners  won  in  but 
one.  C.  A.  Duncan's  rink  was  the  vic- 
torious one  and  he  had  the  honor  of 
defeating  R.  J.  MacLeod's  rink  by  a 
score  ot  14  to  S.  without  counting  the 
handicap.  Duncan's  rii.k  was  com- 
po.sed  of  J.  A.  Watlerworth,  F.  \\ .  Kva 
A.  v.".  Frick  and  C.  A.  Duncan,  skip.' 
In  the  evening  there  were  three  games 
and  the  beginners  won  two.  A  rink 
composed  of  G.  A.  Tomlinson,  W  La- 
vanway  and  L.  W.  Rolleston,  skip,  de- 
feated C.  H.  Thornton,  F.  W.  Boldric-k 
and  C.  W.  Culver.  Rolleston  pulled  the 
victory  out  by  a  pretty  shot  in  the  last 
end  which  gave  him  ;j  points.  D  W  i 
Stocking,  F.  A.  Currier,  F.  McLareri  I 
and  C.  F.  Macdonald.  skip,  defeated  | 
D.  R.  Black,  Thomas  Gibson,  A  H  - 
Smith  and  G.  F.  Mackenzie,  skip,  by  a 
score  of  16  to  7,  wiih(»ui  counting  the 
handicap. 

The  scores  in  all  the  games  with  the 
handicaps  added  were  as  follows-  W 
Lavanway,  12.  vs.  A.  H.  Smith.  IS;  W. 
\\.  Xewell,  10,  v.«.  D,  Morrison,  15;  J 
A.  Todd,  H.  vs.  D.  G.  Cutler.  16;  C.  A 
Duncan.  21,  v.s.  R.  j.  MacLeod.  6;  c 
F.  .Macdonald,  22,  vs.  G.  F.  Mackenzie. 
.:  W.  J.  West.  12.  v.s.  F.  A.  Day.  25-  L 
W.   Rolleston.  16.   vs.  C.   W.  Culver    11 


g  Heavy  Discount  on 


all  Odd  Pants. 


^  |<"*>>"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinmiiiiiii!iiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii|||||„|„||„m 
^  I  We  value  our  reputation  too  much  not  to   f 
I  live  up  to  what  we  advertise.  i 


1 1  First  Gome,  First  Served. 


^ 


^iiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiniiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 


M 


219  WEST  SUPERIOR  ST. 


for    the 
tonight 


AMUSEMENTS. 


"LA  BELLE  RUSSE." 
A  special  treat  is  in  store 
patrons  of  the  Lyceum  theater 
and  tomorrow  night,  w  lu-n  David  ilci- 
a!*_co's  great  play,  "La  Belle  Russe." 
will  be  presented,  with  Miss  Eda  (^lav- 
t..n  as  Beatrice.  Horace  Vinton  as  Cam. 
Dudley  Brand.  Hudson  Liston  as  Mo'i- 
roe  Quiltoji.  Thomas  Kmniet  as  Sir 
Philip  Calthorpe,  and  other  well-known 
actors.  Manager  John  (J.  Ritchie  gives 
assurance  that  the  i.ertornianee  will  b  ■ 
r.erfect  in  every  respect. 


A  social  will  be  held  at  Central  hall 
tonight  and  the  prizes  will  be  awarded. 
After  the  regular  event  there  was  a 
free-for-all  and  .several  members  of  tho 
East  End  Ski  club  made  trial  jumps. 
Dr.  Jones  cleared  4S  feet.  Ward  .Ames 
and  Muiray  Peyton  35  feet  each  and 
Martin  Watrous  30  feet. 


Assessioeit  Notice. 


Sewer  in  17th  Avenue  East. 


t  itice. 


K.*i«JM 


KNOCKED  OCT  QCICKLY. 
St.  Louis.  March  l.j.— Pat  OLearv.  r.f 
>iew  iork.  and  an  unknown  from"  Hot 
Springs,  who  gave  his  name  as  Georg*- 
Dyer.  fi>UKht  here  for  a  pur.se  of  Sk) 
The  "unknown"  was  put  out  in  less  than 
half  a  round  which  was  a  great  di.sap- 
pointment  to  the  sports  who  had  gath- 
ered to  see  the  fight.  It  was  one  of  the 
briefest    fights   ever  seen   in   St.   Louis 


Chief  Black  said  today  that  the  prac- 
tice of  turning  in  alarms  for  chimney 
fires  should  be  stopped  if  possible.  It 
costs  the  city  money  every  time  the  fire 
department  is  turned  out,  he  said,  and 
when  the  occasion  is  a  chimney  fire  it 
is  money  thrown  away.  Aside  from 
the  expense,  there  is  the  danger  of  acci- 
dents and  the  possibility  that,  during 
the  absence  of  th  •  apparatus  on  these 
wild  goose  chases  a  fire  may  break  out 
every  moment  of  delay  in  getting  to 
which  might  mean  additional  destruc- 
tion of  property.  If  no  other  way  could 
be  devised,  the  chief  thought  that  the 
council  might  remedy  matters  by  mak- 
ing it  a  misdemeanor  to  pull  a  box  for 
a  chimney  blaze. 


HOMESEEKERS'  EXCURSIONS 
South  and  West  via  the  Northwestern 
line,  on  the  first  and  third  Tuesday 
of  each  month.  The  next  one  comes  on 
March  16.  One  fare,  plus  $2.  round 
trip.  Full  information  405  West  Su- 
perior street. 


Georgia's  Fair  Authoress 


GEORGE  R.  WENDLING. 
The  lecture  which  George  R.  Wend- 
ling  will  deliver  Wcdnesdav  evening, 
March  24,  at  the  First  Methodist  church 
is  a  delineation  of  ancient  and  modern 
heroes  and  orators,  (ombined  with  an 
anal^ysis  of  the  life  and  sreater  speeches 
of  St.  Paul,  some  of  which  are  ren- 
dered with  powerful  effect.  The  genius 
the  eloquence  and  the  heroic  tiualitic'I 
ot  Paul  make  a  rare  theme,  and  in  I  he 
hands  of  an  orator  of  such  power  as  Mr. 
Wendling  a  fascinating  lecture  is  the 
result.  It  is  not  a  discu.ssion  of  anv  oi 
the  religious  teachings  of  Paul,  "^lut 
waiving  the  supernatural  element, 
treats  the  subject  from  a  critical  and 
historical  point  of  view,  and  is  there- 
fore deeply  interesting  to  all  classes. 
It  IS  today  one  of  the  great  lectures 
the  American  platform. 


Sprinkling  Season  1896. 


of 


TRAVEL  IS  HEAVY. 


Tells  Why  She  Uses  Dr.  Miles' 
Remedies. 


Restorative 


Office  of  Cily  Comptroller, 
Duluth,   Alinn.,   Feb.   22,   1897. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  to  all  parties 
interested  that  an  assessment  has 
been  made  by  the  board  of  public 
works,  of  the  city  of  Duluth.  Minne- 
sota, and  confirmed  by  the  Hon,  J.  D. 
Ensign,  judge  of  the  district  court  of 
the  Eleventh  judicial  district,  to  de- 1  days,  there 
fray  in  full  the  expense  of  sprinkling]  tion  of  ten 
Superior  street  from  Twenty-third 
avenue  west  to  Fourteenth  avenue 
west  and  Piedmont  aveuue  from 
Fourteenth  avenue  west  to  Eighth 
avenue  west  during  the  season  of  1896, 
in  .said  city,  and  that  a  duplicate  as- 
sessment roll  has  been  delivered  to 
the  city  treasurer,  and  that  the 
amount  assessed  against  each  lot  or 
parcel 


I 

1 
' 

I 


THE  WARSHIPS  ARE  SAFE. 
New  York.  March  1.5. -The  Cnited 
States  crui.ser  Columbia  was  sighted  off 
the  Highlands  at  an  early  hour  this 
morning,  with  the  monitor  Puritan  in 
tow.  At  8:15  the  Puritan  was  outside 
Sandy  Hook  bar.  coming  in  under  her 
own  steam  and  the  Columbia  was  stand- 
ing  off  shore. 

PIMPLY 

FACES 

Piniplea,  blotchei?,  blackheade,  red,  rough,  oily, 
motby  skin,  itching,  scaiy  »calp,  dry,  thin,  and 
fallin;;  hair,  aiid  baby  blemishes  prevented  by 
CcTiCfUA  Soap,  the  most  effective  ekin  purify- 
ing and  beautifying  soap  in  the  world,  as  well  as 
purest  and  sweetest  for  toilet,  bath,  and  nursery. 

Qticura 

l3  K>ld  throufhoat  the  world.    Potteb  D.  *xdC.  Coitp., 
Sole  I^p.. ,  BoMon . 


Ladies'  Athletic  Class. 

A  ladies'  class  in  physical  culture  will 
begin  work  at  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  gym- 
nasium Tuesday  evening,  under  the  di- 
rection of  F.  K.  Driver,  the  physical  in- 
structor. The  class  was  organized  at  a 
rneeting  held  some  time  since,  over 
thirty  ladies  having  signified  their  in- 
tention of  joining.  There  will  be  no  a|.- 
paratus  work,  the  course  being  con- 
fined to  exercise  with  Indian  clubs  and 
dumb-bells,  marching,  and  work  with 
wands.  The  class  will  have  its  sessions 
Tuesday  evenings  from  7:30  to  9  o'clock 


Lake  Road. 


A»..^u    T      It-       n  .,         ^  I  •;"*^^'   Of   Jand   can   be   ascertained   at 

inucn  Traffic  Over  the  Crane  ^^'^  °^^^  "^^  ^^^  ^'^y  treasurer,  and 

that  the  assessment  is  due  and  pay- 
able, and  if  paid  within  thirtv  (,30) 
days,  there  will  be  allowed  a  deduc- 
tion of  ten  (10)  per  cent  charged  to  the 
amount  of  the  assessment  for  sur- 
vey, plans,  specifications  and  superin- 
tendence. 


New  Variety  Theater. 


A 


BLOOD  HUMORS 


Mow  rr>  Beautify  the  SUii,''ft«e 

P«rm.n«nllT    Cured    by 
CUTICUUa'  Il£U£I>U». 


new  variety  theater  here  is  now 
among  the  probabilities.  J.  C.  Sodini 
proprietor  of  a  variety  in  Minneapolis! 
who  was  here  last  week  looking  over 
the  ground,  has  opened  negotiations  for 
a  location  between  Superior  and  First 
streets  in  the  down-town  district.  If 
not  successful  in  obtaining  this  prop- 
erty, he  will  cast  about  for  some  other, 
for,  it  is  .said,  he  has  determined  to  operi 
a  place  in  Duluth.  It  is  his  jdan  to  at 
once  organize  a  circuit,  including  the 
Twin  Cities,  Duluth  and  Ashland,  to  be 
enlarged  in  the  future  possibly.  Mr. 
Sodini  went  from  here  to  Ashland  to 
negotiate  for  a  location  there. 


The  importance  to  Duluth  of  the  in;  ■ 
provement  to  the  Crane  Lake  road  is 
evidenced  by  the  large  amount  of  sup- 
plies and  machinery,  to  say  nothing  of 
the  men  who  are  seeking  entrance  to 
the  Rainy  lake  and  Seine  river  gold 
fields  by  that  route  now.  before  the 
snow  disappears  and  leaves  it  practic- 
ally impassable.  There  is  now  travers- 
ing the  Crane  Lake  road  several  loads 
of  machinery  ordered  by  W.  A.  Preston 
for  use  in  the  Ontario  mine,  including  a 
sawmill,  stamp  mill  and  hoisting  ap- 
paratus. Besides  this,  large  quantities 
of  supplies,  provisions  and  tools  for  the 
Fi>ley,  Ferguson  and  Liftle  American 
mines  are  passing  through  Tower  dailv. 
Those  who  have  made  preparations  in 
advance  for  exploring  and  prospecting 
are  also  taking  in  supplies  by  this  rout* , 
but  it  is  not  expected  that  the  big  rush 
will  set  in  until  after  the  onening  of 
.  „  „  ,.  I  navigation,  when  the  road  will  present 

J.  1;..  Harwell,  (nee  I  many  obstacles  to  the  passage  of  even 
Julia  Emma  Flemming)  Is  a  familiar  j  light  loads,  and  heavy  toteing  will  t.e 
one  in   the  state  of    Georgia.     She  |  ""t  of  the  question,  unless  many  needed 

improvements  are  made. 


W. 

Duluth    Evening 
March-1-8-15. 


G.   TEN  BROOK, 
City   Comptroller. 
Herald,      Feb.       22- 


Office  of  City  Comptroller, 
Duluth,  Minn.,  Feb.  22,  1897. 
Notice  is  hereby  given  to  all  parties 
interested  that  an  assessment  has 
been  made  by  the  board  of  public 
works,  of  the  city  of  Duluth,  Minne- 
sota, and  confirmed  ))y  the  Hon.  .1.  J). 
Ensign,  judge  of  the  district  court  of 
the  Eleventh  judicial  district,  to  de- 
fray in  full  the  expense  of  construct- 
ing a  sanitary  sewer  in  Seventeenth 
avenue  west  in  said  city  from  Pied- 
mont avenue  west  to  Superior  street, 
and  that  a  duplicate  a.sse.ssment  roll 
has  been  delivered  to  the  city  treasur- 
er, and  that  the  amount  assessed 
against  each  lot  or  parcel  of  land  can 
be  ascertained  at  the  office  .)f 
the  city  treasurer  and  that 
the        assessment  is      due  and 

payable,  and  if  paid  within  thirty  (30) 
will  be  allowed  a  deduc- 
(10)  per  cent,  charged  to 
the  amount  of  the  assessment  for  sur- 
veys, plans,  specifications  and  super- 
intendence. All  persons  so  desiring 
can  have  their  assessments  divided  in- 
to not  more  than  five  (5)  installments 
of  not  less  than  ten  (10)  dollars  each, 
by  making  application  to  the  city 
comptroller  within  4',  days  after  date 
of  this  notice.  Said  installments  to  be- 
come due  and  payable  annuallv.  com- 
mencing Oct.  1st,  1898,  with  interest 
at  7  per  cent,  payable  annually.  ! 

Blanks  for  this  purpose  may  be  ob-  ' 
tained   by  applicalion   atm   v  office. 

W.   G.   TEN   BROOK,  i 

City  Comptroller. 
Duluth    Evening      Herald,      Feb.       22-  j 
March-1-8-15. 


'^miiiiiiiiimiiiimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiinu: 

I  FOR  SALE.  I 

j  5  Five-room  house,  near  to  sclioel,  electric  ~ 
1=  line,  ou  tfradrd  strent;  .ill  taxes  and  as-  = 
1  =  sBf.-jm.  nts  i.sid,  in  Went  Liuluth.  for  &i  = 
j  =  cash  aud  $10  a  luoutlj.  including  ti  per  S 
]  =  cent  intero§t.  or  $yja  cush.  = 

=      Otlior  property  on  similar  easy  terms.       5 

I  Union  and  Zenith  Building  and  I 
I       Loan  Associations.        | 

'  E  Office  No.  n  First  Avenue  West.  = 
|Slllliililillliillilllil.Mlill|i:iii|||i;||iiMiilllllli|lilii 


Assessieni  Notice. 


Sprinkling  Season  1896. 


Assessment  Notice. 


kHE  NAME  of  Mrs. 


Dr.  Bull's  Cough  Syi-up  has  always 
been  kept  up  to  the  standard.  It  is 
the  same  it  was  forty  years  ago,  the 
best  sold. 


Smoke  the  "Tom  Dinham' 
by  all  the  leading  dealers. 


cigar,  sol 


writes;     "  It  is  with  pleasure  that  I  express 
my  gratitude  for  the  wonderful  benefits  I 
have  received  from  Dr.  Miles'  Restorative 
Bemedles,  especially  the  Nervine,  the  Nerve 
and  Liver  Pills,  New  Heart  Cure  aud  Antl- 
Paln  Pills.     Actual  experience  has  taught 
me  their  great  worth. ,  No  family  should  be 
without  them.     They 
have    fully     restored 
mo  from  a  complica- 
tion of  disorders  chief- 
ly affecting  tMe  heart, 
nervous    system    and 
kidneys.  When  I  trav- 
el I  always  take  ono  of 
your   Anti-Pain   Pills 
before  entering  the  cars  and  thus  prevent 
swimming  of  the  head  and  nausea,  to  which 
I  have  been  subject  for  several  years." 

Dr.  Miles'  Bemedles  are  sold  by  all  drug- 
gists under  a  positive  guarantee,  first  bottle 
benefits  or  money  refunded.   Book  on  Heart 
and  Nerves  sent  free  to  all  applicants. 
DB.  MILES  MEDICAL  CO.,  Elkhart,  Ind. 


CASTORIA 


For  Infants  and  Children. 


Thsfae- 

iimils 

ilgutare 

Of 


-sZ. 


'  ices 
tntf 
vrappar. 


The  Ski  Running. 

A  large  crowd,  considering  the  dis- 
tance to  be  traveled,  saw  the  ski  run 
ning  at  Hunter's  Park  yesterday  after- 
noon and  the  sport  was  greatly  en- 
joyed. Eleven  contestants  entereu.  The 
best  jump  was  made  by  Ralph  Hansen, 
who  cleared  62  feet  10  inches.  This  was 
not  as  long  a  jump  as  it  was  expected 
would  be  made,  but  the  speed  attained 
was  considerably  less  than  that  desired. 


Sprinkling  Season  1896. 


Office  of  City  Comptroller, 
Duluth,  Minn.,  Feb.  22,  1897. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  to  all  parties 
interested  that  an  assessment  has  been 
made  by  the  board  of  public  works  of 
the  city  of  Duluth,  Minnesota,  and  con- 
firmed by  the  Hon.  J.  D.  Ensign,  judge 
of  the  district  court  of  the  Eleventh 
judicial  district, to  defray  In  full  the  ex- 
pense of  sprinkling  First  street  from 
.Seventh  avenue  west  to  Third  avenue 
east,  and  Second  avenue  east.  Lake 
avenue,  First  avenue  west.  Second  ave- 
nue west,  Third  avenue  west.  Fourth 
avenue  west  and  Fifth  avenue  west  from 
Superior  street  to  First  street  during  the 
season  of  1896,  in  said  city,  and  that  a 
duplicate  assessment  roll  has  been  de- 
livered to  the  city  treasurer,  and  that 
the  amount  assessed  against  each  lot  i)r 
parcel  of  land  can  be  ascertained  at 
the  office  of  the  city  treasurer,  and  that 
the  assessment  Is  due  and  payable,  and 
if  paid  within  thirty  (.30)  days  there 
will  be  allowed  a  deduction  of  ten  (10) 
per  cent  charged  to  the  amount  of  the 
assessment  for  surveys,  plans,  specifi- 
cations and  superintendence. 

W.  G.  TEN  BROOK, 

City  Comptroller. 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  Feb.  22,  Marcii 
1-8-15. 


Assessment  Notice. 


Sewer  in  Jefferson  Street. 


Office  of  City  Comptroller, 
Duluth,  Minn.,  Feb.  22.  1S,47 
Notice  is  herel)y  given   to  all   parli.s 
interested  that  an  as.sessment  has  been 
made  by  the  board  of  public  works  of 
the  city  of  Duluth.  Minne.sota,  and  con- 
firmed by  the  Hon.  J.  D.  Ensign,  jud;;- 
of    the    district    court   of   the    Eleventh 
judicial  district. to  defray  in  full  itn:  ex- 
pen.se   of   sprinkling  Third    street   from 
Second     avenue   east    to    F'ifth    avenu^ 
west.  Fourth  street  from  Fifth  avenu. 
west  to  Sixth  avenue  east,   during  the 
season  of  1896,  in  said  city,  and  that  a 
duplicate  assessment  roll  has  been  ilc- 
llvered  to  the  city  treasurer,  and   that 
the  amount  as.sessed  against  each  lot  or 
parcel  of  land   can    be  ascertained     at 
the  office  of  the  city  treasurer,  and  that 
the  assessment  is  due  and  payable,  and 
if     paid    within    thirty   (30)   days   ther;- 
will  be  allowed  a  deduction  of  ten  (lui 
per  cent  charged  to  the  amount  of  the 
assessment   for  surveys,   pians,   speci.l- 
catlons  and  superintendence. 

W.  G.  TEN  BROOK, 

City  Comptroller. 
Duluth  Evening  Herald,  Feb.  22.  March 
1-8-15. 


Office  of  City  Comptroller, 
Duluth,  Minn,,  Feb.  22,  1897. 
Notice  is  hereby  given  to  all  parties 
Interested  that  an  asstasment  has  been 
made  by  the  board  of  public  works  of 
the  city  of  Duluth,  Minnesota,  and  con- 
firmed by  the  Hon.  J.  D.  Ensign,  judge 
of  the  district  court  of  the  Eleventh 
Judicial  district,  to  defray  in  full  the  i 
expenses  of  constructing  a  sanltai  v  | 
sewer  in  Jefferson  street.  In  said  city,  i 
from  Fourteenth  avenue  east  to  a  point : 
250  feet  west  of  Fourteenth  ave-  i 
nue  east,  and  that  a  dupH-l 
cate  assessment  roll  has  been ! 
delivered  to  the  city  treasurer,  j 
and  that  the  amount  asses-sed  against  I  Notice  is  hereby  given  to  all  parties 
each  lot  or  parcel  of  land  can  be  i  '"terested  that  an  assessment  has  betn 
ascertained  at  the  office  of  the  cityj  made  by  the  board  ot  public  works  of 
treasurer,  and  that  the  assessment  Is'  ^'^^  city  of  Duluth.  Minnesota,  and  con- 
due  and  payable,  and  If     paid     within'  ^'med  by  the  Hon.  J.  D.  Ensign,  jud>;e 


Assessment  Notice. 


Sprinklinji  Season  1896. 


Office  of  City  Comptroller. 
Duluth,  Minn.,  Feb.  22,  1897. 


thirty  (30)   days  there  will   be  allowed 
a  deduction  of  ten  (10)  per  cent  charged 
to  the  amount  of  the     assessment     for 
survey,  plans,     specifications,     and  su- 
perintendence.    All  persons  so  de.slrlng 
can  have  their  assessments  divided  Into  [ 
not  more  than  five  (5)  installments  of 
I  not  less  than  ten  (10)  dollars  each     by 
making  application   to   the  city  comp- ! 
troller  within  45  days  after  date  of  this ' 
i  notice.    Said     Installments    to     become 
I  due  and  payable  annually,  commencing  i 
October  1st,  1898,  with  Intrest  at  7  per 
cent  payable  annually. 

Blanks  for  this  purpose    may  be  ob«  \ 
tained  by  application  at  my  office  j 

W.  G.  TEN  BROOK, 
^  .  City  Comptroller.     ' 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  Feb  22.  March 
1-8-15.  1 


of  the  district  court  of  the  Eleventh 
judicial  district, to  defray  in  full  the  ex- 
penses of  sprinkling  Superior  stiv.-t 
from  Eighth  avenue  west  t.. 
Ninth  avenue  east  during  tlu- 
season  of  1S96,  In  said  city,  and  that  a 
duplicate  assessment  roll  has- been  df- 
llvered  to  the  city  treasurer,  and  that 
the  amount  assessed  against  each  lot  or 
parcel  of  land  can  be  ascertained  at 
the  oflice  of  the  city  treasurer,  and  Hut 
the  assessment  Is  due  and  payable,  and 
If  paid  within  thirty  (30)  days  there 
will  be  allowed  a  deduction  of  ten  (po 
per  cent  charged  to  the  amount  of  th  • 
assessment  for  surveys,  plans,  speci.i- 
catlons  and  superintendence 

W.  G.  TBN  BROOK. 
^   ,     ^  „  City  Comptroller. 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  Feb.  22.  Man  Ii 
1-8-16. 


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6 


1  RAPID 


Maj.   Baldwin   Says    Leech 

Lake    Estimators    Are 

Doin^  Good  Work. 


Fraud. 


The  cztentive  counterfeltiHg  of 
tJM  cipwilc*  aod  labels  of  our 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     MONDAY.-  MARCH    15.    1S97. 


piltlltfllHHIIMllllllllinillHinilUIHIHIIIIHIIHHIHIIIHIIIHIIHillHIIWIHIHm  IIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||!£ 

j      The  Liberal  Store.  -•^^  POWER  &  SETTLE.  «i^^^  The  Pleasant  Store.     | 


Ife  Will  Insist  on    the  Print- 
ing of  Inspector  Wright's 
Report. 


Interior  Department  Seems 

to   Be    Disposed    to 

Suppress  It. 


"Canadian  Club"  | 
Whisky, 

while  very  flattering,  l«  extreoMly  un- 
plca^ajit  to  ua  aa  well  aa  to  those  who 
«|rlak  the  vile  substitutes. 

•    •    •    • 

THE  HIGH  STANDARD 

of  ••Canadian  Club"  Is  always  nalif 
taiaed.  Beware  of  Inferior  substitutes. 
When  you  suspect  fraud,  write  us  at 
«ace  and  we  will  protect  you. 


ANTICIPATE  MUCH! 


Expect  much  of  us,  you  will  not  be  disappointed.  I 


shipped  out  of  New  York  this  season. 


Mr.  Settle  writes  us  from  New  York  that  he  is  selectincr  one  of  the  handsomest  lines  of  Spring  Fabrics  that  will  be  = 

I.    Beautiful  effects  in  Silks,  Dress  Goods,  and  all  the  many  new  wash  fabrics  will  = 

peared,  _we  will  show  you  all  the  damty  novelties  of  fashion's  finest  assembling,  goods  fresh  from  the  manufacturer's  S 

looms,  the  newest  of  the  new,  the  latest  of  the  late  effects.  manuiaciurcr  s  ^ 


Don't  buy  until  you  have  inspected  our  spring  goods;  it  will  pay  you  to  wait,  g 


XIaj.  M.  R.  Baldwin,  chairman  of  the  \ 
t'hipi>e\\a   Indian  commission,  lame  In 
from    White    Earth    today.        He    has 
been  in  the  Leech  Lake  reservation  for 
a  few  days.      A  corps  of  estimators  is    *^""""?'  dentist,  Palladio.  Phone  No.  9. 


at  work  there  under  his  direction.  "He 
says  the  statement  that  estimators 
lannot  work  in  winter  up  there  is  l>f- 
in?  disproved.  They  are  doing  line 
worlv.  They  know  how  to  use  snow- 
.•*hoes.  says  Maj.  Baldwin,  while  the 
llolve  Smith  crowd  knew  nothing  of 
iheir  use  and  lay  around  all  winter 
doins  ntithins:. 

"The  work  on  the  Leerh   Lake  reser- 
vation will  bf  completed  about  March 
::.*.■■    -said    Maj.    Eialdwln.    "The    twelve 
estimators      will      then    have    been    at  ' 
■work    si.v    weeks.        Uniler    the    system 
tised  on  the  Red  Lake   reservation  and 
with    the    estimators       used       there    it 
would  have   taken   a  year  and  a   half  : 
ti>  do  the  Leech  Lake  work.      There  are 
twelve   men   and  a   chief  in   the   party 
and  they  are  the  best  estimators  that 
ever  went  into  the  woods  in   Minneso- 
ta.      I  am   responsible   for   their    work 
and  I  have  full  confidence  in  them."        i 
Maj.  Baldwin  regrets  that   the  inter-  1 
ior  department  either  failed,  neglecteil  I 
or  refused  to  send   Inspector   Wright's  j 
report  on  his  investigation  of  the   R>.h1 
Lake  pine  estimating  to  the   house   In 
r>»sponse     to     Representative     Townos 
ivquest.    when      it      would      have    been 
orinted  and  would  have  made  interest- 
ing  reading  for  the   people   of   Minne- 
.<ota.     "I  shall  insist  on  its  being  prim- 
ed." said  Maj.  Baldwin.      "Having  read 
it  myself.  I  cannot  wonder  that  the  in- 
terior department,  especially  the  com- 
missioner  of    the    general    land    offlce. 


CITY  BRIEFS. 


I 


Smoke  Endion  cigar.  W,  A.  Foote 
Wendling.  the  great  orator,  Mjirch  24 
Thomas  McXaught.  of  the  Marshall- 
Wells  Hardware  company,  received  a 
telegram  this  morning  announcing  tht 
death  of  Eldert  Lott,  formerly  of  this  j 
city,  in  Milford,  Conn.  i 

T.  J.  Barrow,  formerly  connected  with  j 
The  Herald,  is  now  advertising  solicitor  i 
for  the  Montgomery.  Ala.,  Journal. 

The  Central  W.  C.  T.  V.  will  hold  its  ! 
regular  meeting  tomorrow  at  3  p.  m.  in 
the  parlors  of  the  First  M.  E.  church.  i 
The  Unity  dub  will  meet  this  evening  , 
and  will  discuss  "ScH-ialism  and  Com-  ) 
munism."  The  leaders  will  be  I^.  J. 
Hopkins.  Miss  Welsh  and  H.  S.  Mahon.  I 

Fred    and    Gus    Anderson,     who    al- 
though of  the  same   name   are   t)f   kin 
only   as   they   are    brothers    in    misfor- 
tune,   appeai'ed     before     Judge    Edson  ' 
this  morning  on   the  charge  of  drunk-  j 
enness.      They  were  each  fined  $10  and  ' 
costs.      Gus  paid  and  Fred  went  on  the 
hill. 

The  death  of   Marie   E.   Taber.   aged  | 
2  years,   of  205   Restonnel  street,   of  la 
grippe,  has  been  reported  to  the  health  , 
department. 

The    municipal    court    calendar    was 
called  this  morning.      There  were  four  ,  S 
jury   and   ten    court    cases.       The   Jury 
will  report  for  duty  tomorrow. 

Attend  the  lecture  and  entertainment 
tomorrow  evenin-g  at  St.  Clement's  hall. 
Do  not  fail  to  attend  the  lecture  and 
entertainment  at  St.  Clement's  hall  to- 
morrow evening. 

Marriage  licenses  have  lieen  issued  to 
August    Johnson    and    Bessie   .Swansor. 


Oae  iot  of  Plain  Colored  Wool  Etamine 
Dress  Goods  in  tans  and  grays, 
bought  to  sell  for  65c  a  yard, 
will  sell  Tuesday  for 


48c 


handsome 
grotesque  patterns,  in  black  and  white, 
new  blues  and  other  colors, 
bought  to  sell  for  20c  a  yard,  Tuesday  at  . 


% 


Clieclc5. 

Bourette  and  plain  Checks,  both  sides 
finished,  good  cloth  for  serviceable  dress, 
would  be  cheap  at  70c  a  yard, 
Tuesdays'  Price  will  be 


4<)c 


Colored  Dimities. 

12  pieces  fancy  Colored  Dimities,  in  black  and 

white  and  the  new  spring  colorings, 

good  value  at  12c  a  yard, 

Tuesday's  price  is 


7c 


WaldOrt  Checks  in  green  and  in  brown's  only.  This 

is  the  nobbiest  of  all  new  checks,  it  is  50  inches 

wide,  both  sides  finished  and  just  the  right  cloth 

for  a  pretty  skirt,  would  be  reasonable  at  goc  a 

yard  yy/z  yards  enough  ior  skirt)  Tuesday's 

price  ....'. 


>  oniy.  xai9 

63c 


Etamine  Royal  Wasli  Fabric. 

Dark  colored  ground  with 

colored  flake  overshot  effect, 

well  worth  iqc  a  yard, 

Tuesday's  price  will  be... 


12c 


The  beautiful  spring  novelties  for  Dress  Embellishment 
are  on  view;  you  will  see  the  best  assortment  of 
new  braids  now  being  shown. 

Fancy  Hohair  Braid-- 

All  color  combinations,  curl  edge,  green  and  gold,  blue  and 
gold,  white  and  gold,  etcselling  from  _-.^  a.^  4t-   >C_ 
P"yard t IOC  tO$I,OS 

Nobby  Black  Braid— 

Five  different  widths  composing  the  set  in  a. 

Mohair.    Wools  and  silk  Irom,  per  yard %Q\O^OQ 

New  Tubular  Braids— 

In  Silk  and  Mohairs,  different  widths,  gi^  a. 

selling  from,  per  yard DC   tO   IOC 

Soutash  Braid— 

In  silk  and  wools,  all  color  combinations,  in      ^,^„  4.      /L 
plain,  also  with  tinsel,  selling  from,  per  yard..2C  tO  DC 

QimOS—^'e*'' 'lon-^atnishable  Gimps,  dainty   /L„  ^.^^ 
^        and  desirable,  from ". OC  Up 


•■■•• 
Mill 


POWER  &  SETTLE 


=  Just  Received- -New  Jaclcets, 

=  New  Sl<irts,  New  buit5,  and 

=  all  marked  to  sell  at  Small 

=  Margin  Prices. 

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniHiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiniiii^^ 


SPIES  ARE  NEEDED. 


was  opposed  to  Us  being  printed.'  |  and  to  Ole  Johanson  and  Anna  G.  John- 

As    to   the    pi»spect    for   his    remain-  )  gyn. 
ing    in    office    Maj.     Baldwin    said;       l 


don't  iinow  anything  about  it.  I  have 
!>een  informed  that  there  is  consider- 
al'le  feeiing  among  the  Indians  re- 
garding the  proposed  change  in  the 
commissionership.  and  that  they  are 
to  a  man  opposed  to  any  change  being 
made. 

"The    cases    of    destitution      on      the 
White  Earth  reservation  are  among  the 
old  and  helpless.       Both  the  agent  and 
myself    have      been      relieving      cases 
wherever    we    have     found      them.        L 
found  some  cases  at  Leech  Lake  wher^s. 
1   have  l>een  spending  a  week  and   of-  ; 
fered   such   relief   as  I    was  authorize*!  | 
to.       The    agent    has    sent    a    sufficiet.t 
supply    of    provisions     to    relieve    ar.y 
further  distress.  Through  it  all  the  Lu- 
dians  have  been  patient  and  more  con- 
sidt-rate   than    white   men   would   have  \ 
l>e*'n    under    the    same    circumstances. 
There  is  no  denying  the  fact  that   the  1 
Indians  have  not  been  fairly  treated  l>y 
the    government.        Senator    Nelson    is 
now     familiar     with     their     condition. 
and   is   taking   ?:reat    interest    in    their 
affairs.       I  shall  acquaint   Representa- 
tive Page  Morris  with  everything  per- 
taining  to   their  intere-st   and   have  no 
no  douljt  he  will  co-oj»erate  with  Sen- 
ator Nelson. 

"The  civilfzation  among  the  Indians 
is  progressing  fairly  and  satisfactor- 
ily. They  are  makinj;  progress.  I  do 
not  find  them  lazy  or  shiftless,  neither 
do  I  find  the'Ti  viciou.«.  but  on  the  con- 
trary patient  and  considerate,  disposed 
to  do  right  and  exceedingly  desirous  of 
advancement    in    civilization.  " 


The  sale  of  the  stock  and  fixtures  of 
the  W.  VV.  McMillan  company  to  J.  J. 
Burns  and  R.  H.  Cox  for  $235  has  been 
approved  by  the  court. 


PERSONALS. 


TILT  OVER^ALARIES. 

Prospect  For  One  at  Tonight's 
Council  Meeting, 

There  may  be  a  lively  tilt  over  sal.iricM 
in  the  council  this  evening.  It  requires 
a  two-thirds  vote  to  make  a  change  and 
there  seems  to  be  a  question  whether 
ihctse  in  favor  of  reductions  can  muster 
the  requisite  number  of  ballots.  One  al- 
derman said  today,  emphatically  that 
they  could   not. 

It  was  rumored  today  that  It  is  among 
the  pos.sibilities  that  Ald»-rjnun  Harker 
may  again  be  placed  on  the  waterworks 
committee  as  chairman. 

The  opinion  of  City  Attornev  Richards 
upholding  the  legality  of  the  councils 
action  In  appointing  the  committees  bv 
re.solution  will  be  .submitted.  It  is  said 
it  Is  possible  that  an  adwrse  opinion  Dv 
a  leading  attorney  will  also  be  presented. 
If  -so.  there  is  a  fair  pwisibility  of  some 
fun. 

It  is  rumored  that  the  membors  of  the 
"combine"  got  together  again  this  morn- 
ing and  finally  fixed  on  John  Rustgard 
ii.s   the   assistant   city   attorney. 

Louis  Na-sh.  representing  the  retail 
merchants  of  St.  Paul  and  Minnea|)oli'-. 
will  appear  before  the  council  this  after- 
noon and  endeavor  to  get  an  endorsement 
of  the  pending  bill  taxing;  deparimciit 
stores. 


Will  Adjourn  Tomorrow. 

The  March  term  gran«l  jury  will  make 
its  report  and  adjourn  tomorrow  morn- 
ing. This  morning  fcur  new  members 
were  sworn  in,  Herman  Hanson,  of  New 
Duluth:  P:dward  Paine,  of  Ironton,  and 
O.  C.  Reitan  and  George  J.  MalJory,  of 
Duluth.  and  the  jury  started  in  again. 
The  civil  war  on  Minnesota  Point  was 
(•fcfore  the  grand  jui^  this  mornjng,  and 
among  the  witnesses  was  William 
Pryor.  the  lighthouse  keeper,  who  com- 
plains of  an  assault  upon  him. 


Dr.  F.  T.  Rudy  has  returned  from  a 
liusiness  trip  to  Ely. 

B.  Silberstein  was  summoned  to 
Detroit.  Mich.,  this  afternoon  by  a 
telegram  saying  his  daughter.  Miss 
Florence,  had  broken  her  leg  by  fall- 
ing on   the  pavement. 

A.  H.  VIele  returned  today  from  a 
trip  to  Florida.  He  was  away  about 
two  weeks. 

W.  D.  Andrews,  of  Pittsburg,  Pa.. 
is  in  the  city,  a  guest  at  the  Spalding. 

A.  F.  Ferris,  of  Brainerd.  is  at  the 
Spalding. 

J.  O.  Ketchum  is  down  from  Tower 
today. 

F.  R.  Wedden  and  wife  returned  to- 
day from  an  extended  Eastern  trip. 

C.  S.  Cowles.  of  St.  Paul.  S.  E.  Spra- 
gur,  Minneapolis,  and  Joel  M.  Hubble, 
of  DesMoines,  la.,  insurance  adjust- 
ers, are  among  today's  arrivals  at  the 
Spalding. 

F.  M.  Osborne,  of  Cleveland,  arrived 
in  Duluth  to  look  rtfter  his  mining  in- 
terests on  the  Mesaba.  He  is  stop- 
ping at  the  Spaldin.g. 

Ed  Mitchell,  the  well  known  Mar- 
quette contractor.  I<»  in  the  city  today. 
He  is  registered  at  the  St.  Loui.s. 

R.  Gregg,  of  Sault  Ste.  Marie,  is  a 
late  arrival  at  the   St.  Louis. 

D.  Boynton,  proprietor  of  the  hotel 
at  Partridge,  Minn.,  is  at  the  St.  Louis. 

George  A.  Fuller*,  of  HIbbing,  is 
among,  today's  arrivals  at  the  St. 
Louis. 

Capt.  A.  J.  Carlin  is  down  from  Vir- 
ginia today,  a  guest  at  the  St.  Louis. 

F.  S.  Colvln.  of  Biwabik,  is  in  Du- 
luth today.      He  is  at  the  St.  Louis. 

C  M.  Wheaton,  a  lumber  buyer  from 
Chicago,  is  among  today's  arrivals  at: 
the  St.   Louis. 

John  G.  Brown  w^'nt  to  Ely  today. 

H.  S.  Tallman.  dtrputy  United  States 
marshal,  came  up  from  St.  Paul  this 
morning. 

J.  S.  Gratz.  of  Cblcago,  is  at  the  St, 
Louis. 

D.  McLean,  master  mechanic  of  the 
Duluth.  Superior  &:  Western  railroad, 
came  in  from  Swan   river  today. 

L.  W.  Wolcott,  of  Grand  Rapids, 
Mich.,  is  in  the  city  on  legal  business. 
He  is  registered  at  the  Spalding. 

Amended  Findings. 

Saturday  afteinoon  Judge  Ensign  by 
agreement  of  .yarties  made  amended 
findings  in  tt.e  case  of  the  Bishop 
Iron  company  against  Thomas  W. 
Hyde,  a  suit  over  the  title  to  a  part  of 
the  famous  "section  30"  in  63-11.  The 
findings  are  to  I  he  effect  that  the  plain- 
tiff owns  13-25  of  the  property  through 
mesne  conveya.nces  from  the  paten- 
tees; and  that  the  remaining  12-25  it 
leased  from  parties  who  obtained  title 
from  the  patentees.  He  finds  that 
Hyde  has  no  tatle  whatever  on  the 
land,  and  that  he  is  and  has  been  in 
wrongful  possession,  and  he  judges 
that  the  Bishop  Iron  company  be  given 
immediate  posi«ession. 

The  evening  paper  is  always  care- 
fully read,  espec  lally  in  the  home  circle, 
and  Is  therefor*  an  excellent  advertis- 
ing medium.  Acivertisers  in  The  Even- 
ing   Herald  alw  ays  get  full  value. 


All  the  European  Governments 
Employ  Them. 

The  military  spy  system  is  now  a  re- 
ciignized  institution  in  every  Eruopea.i 
state  and  a  necessary  and  inevital)le 
part  of  the  organization  of  every  arm> 
says  the  New  York  Sun.  With  all  the 
precautions  possible  that  may  be  taken 
to  prevent  the  secrets  of  the  construc- 
tion of  fortifications  becoming  known  to 
a  possible  enemy  there  is  probal)ly  no 
fortress  of  any  importance  whose  plans 
are  not  in  the  possession  of  more  than 
one  foreign  intelligence  department  or 
general  staff.  Where  works  are  con- 
structed by  contract  it  is  almost  a  cer- 


ways  in  which  its  a^airs  are  conduct- 
ed, and  it  is  perhaps  just  as  well.  It 
might  Ijecome  disa'greeable  for  those 
conducting  them. 


THE  GREEK  STADLA.. 
The  common  Greek  method  of  reck- 
oning distances,  both  by  sea  and  land, 
was  by  computation,  not  by  measure- 
ment, says  the  Boston  Transcript.  A 
journey  or  voyaf;e  took  a  certain  num- 
l)er  of  days,  anil  this  number  was  i*e- 


every  precaution  was  taken  to  prevent 
natives  or  strangers  form  even  ap- 
proaching the  works  or  viewing  them 
from  a  distance,  a  Brkitish  Indian  stalT 
officer  in  the  disguise  of  a  Persian  was 
working  for  a  long  time  on  them  as  a 
common  laborer.  At  the  same  time  two 
(Jerman  artillery  officers  in  the  disgui.-<e 
of  Russian  moujiks  looking  for  work 
were  leisurely  tramping  the  country  for 
the  purpose  of  correcting  and  complet- 
ing the  topographical  survey  of  the 
trans-Caucasus  for  the  German  head- 
quarters staff. 

The  English  government  is  particu- 
larly well  served  with  information  of 
everything  pertaining  to  the  coast  de- 
tenses,  movement  of  troops,  ships  of 
war  and   analogous 


INCREASED  BY  OIL. 

Speed  of  Ships  is  Thus  Greatly 
Accelerated. 

The  invention  of  a  simple  and  inex- 
pensive  device  for  accelerating  the 
speed  of  ships  and  preventing  l>arna- 
cles  and  corrosion  has  recently  been 
duced  to  stadia  by  allowing  a  certain  I  brought  to  the  attention  of  the  chief 
number  of  stadia  to  each  day's  jour- 
ney. The  numbi  r  of  stadia  so  allowed 
was  computed  on  the  supposition  that 
circumstances  were  favorable  to  the 
traveler's  proKi'ess,  and  therefore 
every  impediment,  such  as  winds,  tide, 
currents,  winding  of  the  coast,  a  heav- 
ily laden  or  liadly  sailing  ship,  or  any  ' 
deviation  from  the  shortest  track  at 
sea  and  the  corresponding  hindrances    ment,  says  the  New  York  Herald, 

The  invention  consists  of  a  mechan- 
number  of  days  which  the  journey  took  ism  which  envelopes  the  suljmergsd 
and  consequently  the  number  of  sta-  !  portion  of  a  ship  with  a  film  of  oil, 
dia  which  the  distance  was  computed  thus  reducing  friction  and  overcoming 
to  contain.  These  circumstances,  to-  [  to  a  large  degree  the  resistance  of  the 
I  gether  with  the  fact  that  the  Greek  I  water, 
writers  are  by  no  means  agreed  a.«?  to  I  A  series  of  iron  fianges  are  fastened 
;  the  number  of  stadia  contained  in  a  I  along  the  bottom  and  sides  of  the  ship 
day's  journey,  and  other  sources  of  ,  below  the  water  line,  in  which  are  in- 
inaccuracy  which  w-e  know  to  have  i  serted  sheets  of  woven  wire  netting, 
existed,  furnish  a  satisfactory  expla-  lathing  or  sheet  iron,  covered  with  an 
nation  of  the  discrepancies  which  we  absorbent  composition  saturated  with 
find   in    their   statements   of   distances,  \  oil.     The  flanges  have  a  semi-circular 

covering  on  top,  below  which  runs  a 
finely  perforated  pipe,  which  ejects  a 
fine  spray  of  oil  against  the  inside  of 
the  flange  and  on  the  sheets,  from 
which  its  spreads  downward. 

The  oil   is   not  carried   away  by   the 
water,  but  through  capillary  attraction 


of  construction  and  other  officials  of 
the  navy  department  in  Washington, 
with  the  result  that  Assistant  Secre- 
tary of  the  Navy  McAdoo  has  appoint- 
ed Chief  Engineer  George  Cowie,  Jr., 
United  States  navy,  stationed  at  the 
New  York  navy  yard,  a  commissioner 
to  witness  a  test  of  the  idea  on  a  large 
scale  and  report   on   it   to   the   depart- 


tainty  that  among  the  workmen  there  I  l)y  land  would  all  tend  to  increase  the 
will  be  foreign  agents  in  disguise  study- 
ing the  plan.s  while  they  work.  Such 
was  the  case  during  the  construction 
of  the  fortifications  on  the  French 
frontier,  when  men  of  various  nation- 
alities were  employed:  the  same  with 
regard  to  the  Belgian  fortifications  on 
the  Meusc,  and  of  the  permanent  forti- 
fications on  the  Austrian.  German  and 
Russian  frontiers. 

During  the  remodeling  and  extending 
of  the  works  of  the  most  important  of 
the  Russian  fortresses    in    Asia,    while  i  1,0th   when   compared   with   the   actual 


REPORT  OF  THE  CONDITION 

—OF  THE— 

First  National  Banii 

OF  DULUTH, 

At  Dolatb  Iq  the  Stale  of  Minnesota,  at  the 
Cloae  of  Basiness  March  9,  1897. 


fact,  without  there  being  any  occa- 
sion to  resort  to  the  supposition  of  a 
stade  different  from  the  Olympic. 
Col.  Leake  also  came  to  the  conclusion 
that  "the  stade,  as  a  linear  measure, 
had  but  one  standard,  namely,  the 
length  of-  the  foot  race,   and   which   is    is  spread,  thus  keeping  the  ship's  hull 


very   clearly   defined    as   having 
tained  600  Greek   feet. 


con- 


"Quality 
First 
and 
Always." 


DULUTH 

MPERIAL 

LOUR. 


The  Leader 
with  all 
First-class 
Dealers. 


the  numerous  consulates  scattered  all 
over  the  world,  and  the  skippers  of 
trading  vessels,  with  many  of  whom  it 
is  a  point  of  honor  to  act  as  spies  for 
the  l>enefit  of  their  government. 

All  the  intelligence  departments  of 
the  various  European  armies  have  very 
carefully  executed  topographical  sur- 
veys of  those  countries  in  which  their 
troops  may  be  called  on  to  carry  out 
warlike  oi)erations.  and  these  maps  arc- 
corrected  at  regular  intervals  by  exam- 
inations of  the  country  l>y  officers  sent 
for  the  purpose.  At  this  moment  there 
are  in  Berlin  most  minutely  prepared 
maps  of  the  North  and  East  of  Eng- 
land that  are  revised  at  intervals  of  two 
years  by  military  .tourists  with  note- 
book and  pencil  and  kodak.  The  hedges, 
fences,  gates,  stiles  and  paths  are  care- 
fully and  accurately  delineated,  and  a 
German  army  maneuvering  over  those 
parts  of  England  would  astonish  the  na- 
tives by  its  familiarity  with  the  natural 
features. 

The  South  of  England  has  had  special 
attention  paid  to  it  in  the  same  way 
by  the  French,  and  the  English  intelli- 
gence department  has  returned  the 
t-ompliment  by  making  the  same  kind 
of  studies  of  the  northern  and  western 
parts  of  France.  Cycle  tourists  and 
sightseers  now  enable  the  military  spies 
to  become  thoroughly  acquainted  with 
each  other's  countries,  without  attract- 
ing attention,  and  thus  have  become 
subsidiary  but  important  factors  in 
their  conquest  or  defense. 

The  political  spy  and  political  agent 
are  parts  of  the  same  system,  but  in  a 
different  category.  They  are  of  all 
kinds  and  descriptions,  from  the 
humble  watcher  of  the  movements  of  a 
monarch  or  a  mini.ster  in  some  menial 
capacity,  such  as  butler  or  valet,  up  to 
the  fashionably  dressed  and  sometimes 
titled  ladies  who  grace  the  receptions 
and  dinner  tables  of  embassies  and 
legations,  who  flit  from  one  diplomatic 
circle  to  another,  encouraging  the  at- 
tentions of  the  younger  diplomats  and 
making  scarcely  perceptible  but  well- 
understood  advances  to  the  older  and 
more  susceptible,  the  reward  for  infor- 
mation of  value  l>eing  in  diamonds  or 
in  golden  coin  to  pay  off  a  gambling  or 
other  debt  that  is  as  a  cankerworm  on 
the  rose  of  existence.  Many  a  treaty, 
convention  or  diplomatic  arrangement 
has  been  furthered  in  the  quietude  of 
an  embassy  smoking  room  or  helped  by 
a  tete-a-tete  conversation  amid  the 
noise  of  music  and  the  desultory  talk  of 
the  card  tables  that  might  never  have 
been  concluded  by  the  method  popularly 
understood  as  "negotiation."  The  world 
in  general  has  little- Hoowledge  o(  the 


HE    DIDN'T    WANT    MUCH. 
Atlanta  Constitution:   "Say,   kernel," 

he  said,  as  he  walked  into  the  editor's 
office  and  stamped  about  forty  pounds!  ing  arough  sea 
of  mud  off  his  boots  against  the  legs 
of  the  stove,  "I  .sorter  though  I'd  take 
matters,   throirgh  |  yer  paper  ef  you'd  do  the  square  thing." 


greased  without  any  waste  of  oil.  It 
Is  said  that  the  composition  is  a  per- 
fect carrier  of  oil  under  the  surface  of 
the  water,  a  feature  which  has  never 
before  been  achieved  and  which  will 
make  oil  perform  below  the  water  line 
the  same  service  that  it  does  in  quell- 


"Why,  of  course,  we  are  always  glad 
to   accommodate   our   subscribers." 

'Well,  here's  a  little  obituary  of 'Aunt 
Kalline — hit's  jes'  ten  pages  o'  foolscap 
an'  wont't  make  much  I  reckon." 

"We'll  print  it." 

"An"  you'll  send  forty  copies  of  the 
paper  to  this  list  o'  relatives,  won  t 
you?" 

"Yes." 

"An'  next  week  my  daughter.  Ser- 
illy  is  goin'  to  git  married.  I  reckin 
you'll   print   a   hull   lot  about   that?" 

"Of  course.   That's  news," 

"An'  say,  I've  got  one  o'  the  finest 
young  shotes  you  ever  saw.  I  want  you 
to  cum  out  some  day  an'  Avrite  up  hit." 

"I  shall  be  glad  to  do  so." 

"You  ain't  got  a  dozen  er  two  ole 
magazines  whut  you've  dun  read  a  lay- 
in'  eround  handy,  hev  you?" 

"Yes.  here's  three  or  four." 

"Thanky.  Jes'  put  me  down  fer  three 
months,  an'  I'll  hand  you  the  quarter 
'long  this  fall  some  time." 


FACTS  ABOUT  PRESIDENTS. 
Pittsburg  Dispatch:  Grover  Cleveland 
is  not  the  only  man  who  has  thrice  run 
for  the  presidential  office.  Jefferson 
ran  three  times;  Jackson  three  times, 
and  Martin  Van  Buren  four  times. 

The  name  of  Adams  reappears  on  a 
presidential  ticket  at  feast  twice  in  :i 
generation.  Nine  times  the  American 
people  have  been  called  upon  to  vote 
for  a  member  of  this  Massachusetts 
family,  either  for  president  or  vice 
president. 

Charles  Coatsworth  Pinckney  was  the 
most  persistent  and  unsuccessful  of 
presidential  candidates.  He  tried  three 
times  in  succession,  failing  each  time. 
Thomas  Pinckney  also  made  one  unsuc- 
cessful trial. 

One  president  of  the  United  States, 
John  Tyler,  has  afterward  been  in  re- 
bellion against  it.  One  vice  president, 
John  C.  Breckinridge,  has  led  an  armed 
force  against  it  in  the  field. 

Maj.  McKinley  is  the  twelfth  presi- 
dent out  of  twenty-five  who  had  pre- 
viously served  his  country  in  a  war. 
With  three  exceptions,  all  had  attained 
a  'general's  rank.  The  other  two  were 
Monroe,  who  was  a  captain  in  the  revo- 
lution, and  Lincoln,  who  was  a  caotain 
in  the  Black  Hawk  war." 

Virginia  has  given  six  presidents  to 
the  nation.  McKinley  is  Ohio's  fifth 
contribution. 


It  is  said  of  the  invention  that,  ap- 
plied to  any  vessel,  either  steam  or 
sailing,  it  will  increase  the  speed  by  at 
least  twenty-five  per  cent  without  aug- 
menting the  amount  of  machinery  or 
the  expenditure  of  fuel.  Another  and 
most  valuable  feature  claimed  is  that 
it  will  prevent  the  growth  of  barnacles. 
These  enemies  to  a  ship's  hulls  neces- 
sitate frequent  dry  docking  and  scrap- 
ing, .at  large  cost. 

The  inventor  also  declares  that  the 
fatty  composition  will  completely  pre- 
vent corrosion  of  hulls. 

The  oil  used  is  crude  petroleum,  and 
is  supplied  to  the  pipes  by  tanks  and 
valves  located  above  the  water  line. 
The  system  is  so  arranged  that  in  rough 
weather  a  large  quantity  of  oil  can  be 
discharged  along  the  sides  of  the  ship 
and  distributed  over  the  surface  of  the 
water,  thus  providing  a  more  effective 
method  of  greasing  and  smoothing  high 
seas  than  any  yet  devised. 

The  covering  composition  is  an  ole- 
aginous preparation  of  tallow.  •  cal- 
cined carbon  and  several  other  ingred- 
ients which  the  inventor  keeps  secret. 
It  is  said  that  it  hardens  in  the  water 
and  cannot  wash  off,  and  can  be  ap- 
plied to  submarine  war  projectiles, 
permitting  double  velocity. 

The  inventor  is  Rudolf  Altschul,  a 
civil  and  mechanical  engineer  of  New 
York  city.  Mr.  Altschul  said  that  he 
was  preparing  to  make  tests  for  the 
government  on  a  large  scale  in  March. 


RESOURCES. 

I.oiins  and   discounts   $1,509,096  82 

Overdrafts,    secured  and    unse 
cured   

U.  S.   bonds  to  secure  circula- 
tion   

U.  S.  bonds  to  secure  U.  S.  de- 
posits   

Premiums  on  U.  S.  bonds 

Stocks,    securities,    etc 

Banking  house,   furniture  and 
fixtures  200,000  00 

Due  from  national  banks  (not 
reserve    agents    

Due    from     state     banks    and 
bankers  ." 

Due     fr»m     approved     reserve 
agents    

Checks  and   other  cash   items.. 

Exchanges   for   clearing   house 

notes    of    other    national    banks 

Fractional      paper      currency, 
nickels    and    cents    

Lawful  money  reserve  In  bank, 
viz.— 

Specie   $206,761  85 

Legal    tender   notes..    39.105  00 


1,220  59 

50.000  00 

50.000  00 
10,000  00 
]3..'")15  4S 


19.369  20 

16.  .^ao  5-4 

373.106  7.^ 

r.24,s.-i 

13,810  37 
25.160  00 

2,-299  07 


Redemption  fund  with  U.  S. 
treasurer  (5  per  cent  of  cir- 
culaition)  


245.866  85 


Total    52..5.U700  47 

LIABILITIES. 

Capital  stock  paid  m $1,000.000  00 

Undivided      profits,      leas      ex- 
pen.ses   and    taxes   paid 64.188  39 

National  bank  notes  outstand- 
ing         45,000  00 

Due    to    other    na- 
tional   banks     %^1.Tm1\ 

Due   to  state  banks 
and    bankers    74.799  23 

Dividends  unpaid  12  00 

Individual    deposits 
subject    to    cheek    . . .  991,298  17 

Demand   certificates 
of    deposit     6,410  54 

Time  certificates  of 
deposit    247,875  62 

Certified    checks     16.792  26 

Cashier's        checks 
outstanding    4,568  55 

United     States     de- 
posits         44.534  86 

Deposits     of     U.    S. 
disbursing   officers    ..      .5,465  14 


Total 


State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis, 
— ss. 

I,  John  H.  Dight,  cashier  of  the  above 
named  bank,  do  solemnly  swear  that  the 
above  statement  is  true  to  the  best  of 
my  knowledge  and  belief. 

JOHN  H.  DIGHT, 
Cashier. 
Subscribed  and  sworn  to  before  me  this 


15th  day  of  March,  1897. 


(Notarial  Seal.) 
Correct  Attest: 
A.   L.   ORDEAN, 
A.  D.  THOMSON, 
THOS.  J.  DAVIS, 


E.  H.  BURGER, 
Notary  Public. 


Directors. 


Rooms  ere  quickly  rented  when  9A- 
vertlsed  in  The  Evening:  Herald.  II 
costs  but  1  cent  a  word. 


The  evening  paper  is  always  care- 
fully read,  especially  in  the  home 
circle,  and  is  there^pre  the  best  adver- 
tising medium. 


Indoor  Base  Bail. 

Considerable         interest         attaches 
to  the  game  of  indoor 

baseball  to  be  played  at  the 
Armory  tonight  between  teams  from 
Companies  A  and  G.  Company  A  won 
the  first  one  and  the  G  boys  are  de- 
termined to  win, tonight.  The  line-up 
will  be  as  follows: 

Company  A.  Company  G. 

Carey    pitcher    Wigdahl 

A.  Michaud  Catcher  Chapman 

Mulvey   first  base   ., .  .McCormick 

Magihis   second   base    Smith 

Barnard   third  base  Totman 

J.  Michaud  ...right  short  ...Mannheim 

Bryan    left  short   Sinclair 

Grocheau    fielder    McClure 

Hemiek    fielder    Reed 


BANK  ADVERTISEMENTS. 

FirsHMiaTBank 

OF  DULUTH. 

United  Btatee  GoTemment  Depoaitarjr 

CAPITAL,  ONE  MILLION  DOLURt. 


k.  L.  Obdsak, 
Praaidant. 


J.  H.  DiosT, 
Ouhler. 


■0B«y  SaBt  to  All  Parte  of  tha  WarM. 

4ooonnta  of  Merahanta,  Banki,  'Corpontioiw 
and  Indivldaala  Beceived. 


Subscribers  to  The  Evening  Herald 
who  do  not  get  their  paper  regularly 
will  please  promptly  report  the  matter 
at  once  to  this  offlce.  It  is  the  intention 
to  have  The  Herald  delivered  promptly 
and  regularly. 


lataraat  Allewa4  aa  TIaia  Oapaatta. 

H.  M.  PEYTON.  Preaident. 

JAB1KI4  C.  HUNTER,  Caahier. 

WILLIAM  Q.  HBGABDT,  Aaa't  Gaabr 

THE 

American  Exchange 


Dultfthy  Hlnnaaata. 

Capital,  $500,000.  Snrplas,  $100,000. 

DIREeTORSt 

HAMILTON  M.  PEYTON, 
MELVIN  J.  FOBBB8. 
JUDGE  J.  D.  RN8IGN, 
JOHN  H.  UPHAM, 

GEORGE  BPENGBB, 

ANGUS  B.  MACFABLANB. 

~  c.  iroSTEi 


NOTICE   OF   MORTGAGE   S.\LE.— 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  a  certain 
mortgage  was  executed  and  delivered  by 
.lo.sephlne  Hansen,  mortgagor,  to  M.  H. 
Crocker,  mortgagee,  covering  the  proper- 
ty hereinafter  described,  dated  May  20th, 
1895,  and  duly  recorded  in  the  offlce  of 
the  register  of  deeds  of  St.  Louis  Countv. 
Minnesota,  on  May  25th.  1895.  at  4:15  p. 
m.,  in  Book  9."?  of  mortgages  on  imgc  3.H1. 
That  said  mortgage  together  with  the 
debt  secured  thereby.  w;us  duly  assigned 
by  said  M.  H.  Crocker,  mortgagee.  to 
Conrad  Carlson,  by  a  written  assignment 
dated  November  2nd.  1S96,  and  recorded 
in  the  office  of  the  said  register  of  dee<ls 
on  November  27th,  1S9C.  In  Book  107  of 
mortgages  on  page  4W,  at  ]1:.")0  o'clo<k 
a.  m.  That  said  mortgage  together  with 
the  debt  secure<1  thereby  was  duly  as- 
signed by  said  Conrad  Carlson.  assign<'e, 
to  David  M.  White,  by  a  written  assign- 
ment, dated  January  9th,  1897,  and  re- 
corded in  the  office  of  said  register  of 
deeds  on  March  9th.  1897,  at  12  oV-lock  m.. 
In   Book   108  of  mortgages   on    page  484. 

And  whereas  default  has  been  made  in 
the  conditions  of  said  mortgage  by  the 
non-payment  of  the  sum  of  one  hundred 
dollars  and  interest  thereon  at  the  rale 
of  ten  per  cent  per  annum  from  the  20th 
day  of  May,  1895,  secured  thereby,  and 
the  amount  actually  due  thereon,  and 
claimed  to  be  due  thereon,  at  the  date  of 
this  notice  is  one  hundred  and  seventeen 
>50-](W  dollars,  and  no  part  th<  reof  having 
been  paid,  and  whereas  the  power  of  sale 
in  said  mortgage  has  become  operative 
and  no  action  or  itroceeding  having  been 
instituted  at  law  or  in  equity  to  recover 
the  debt  secured  by  .said  mortgage  or 
any  jiart   thereof. 

Now.  therefore,  by  virtue  of  the  power 
2  250  00    "f  *''*''^  contained   in   said   mortgage,    and 
'  the  statute   in   such   case   made   and   pro- 

vided, the  premises  described  in  said 
mortgage,  situate,  lying  and  being  in  St. 
Ijouis  County,  Minnesota,  viz:  The  east 
half  (Vi)  of  the  southeast  quarter  (H*  of 
section  No.  four  (4),  and  the  north  half 
('■s)  of  the  northeast  quarter  (V4)  of  sec- 
tion No.  eight  (8),  all  in  township  numl»er 
sixty-seven  (67)  north,  of  range  number 
twenty-one  (21)  west  4th  P.  M.  will  be 
sold  at  public  auction  to  the  highest 
bidder  for  cash,  at  the  front  door  of  the 
St.  Louis  County  court  house.  In  the  city 
of  Duluth.  St.  Louis  County,  Minnesota, 
on  April  27th.  A.  D.  1897.  at  10  o'clock  in 
the  forenoon,  by  the  sheriff  of  said  St. 
Louis  County,  to  satisfy  the  amount  then 
due  on  said  mortgage,  and  twenty-five 
dollars  attorney's  fees  provded  for  in  said 
mortgage,  and  the  disbursements  allowed 
by  law;  subject  to  redemption  within  the 
time  provided  by  law. 

Dated    March   15th,   1897. 

DAVID    M.    WHITE. 
Assignee  of  Mortgagee. 
M.    H.   CROCKER. 
1.434.512  08       Attorney    for    said    Assignee    David    M. 
White, 

410  Chamber  of  Commerce. 
Duluth.    Minn. 
Duluth    Evening    Herald,    M arch -15-22 -29- 
April-5-12-19. 

NOTICE   OF   MORTGAGE   SALE.— 

Notice   is    hereby   given    that   a  certain 
mortgage  was  executed  and  delivered  by 
John     W.     Irwin,    mortgagor,    to    J.imcs 
Whalen,    mortgagee,    covering    the    prop- 
erty   hereinafter    described,    dated    Octo- 
ber  21.st.    1895,    and    duly    recorded    in    the 
office     of    the     register   of   deeds    for   St. 
Louis    County,      Minnesota,      on    October 
31st,    1895,    at   2:35     p.    m.    in    Book    93     of 
mortgages  on   page  446;  and  default   has 
been    made    in    the    conditions    of       .-^aid 
mortgage    by    the    non-payment    of    the 
sum  of  eight   hundred  and  seventy-ihreo 
90-100  dollars  and   interest  thereon  at   the 
rate  of  six  per  cent  per  annum  from  Oc- 
tober 21st.   1895,  secured   thereby,   and   the 
amount   now    actually   due   thereon,     and 
claimed  to  l)e  due  thereon  at  the  date  of 
this  notice  is  nine  hundred  and   forty  u»>- 
100  dollars:  no  part  thereof  has  ever  been 
paid,    and    no    action    or    proceeding    has 
ever  been   instituted   at   law  or  in  equitv 
to  recover  said  debt  or  any  part  thereof. 
Now,   therefore,   by  virtue  of  the  power 
of  sale  contained   in  .said   mortgage,    and 
the  statute  in   such   case  made   and   pro- 
vided,    the     premises     described    in    said 
mortgage  situate.   lying  and  being  in  the 
county   of  St.    Louis.    Minnesota,     to-wit: 
An     undivided    one-half     interest   in   lots 
numbered   thirty-one   (31)   and   thirty-two 
(32),   in  block  numbered  nine  (9),   town  of 
Hibbing.    according   to   the   recorded    plat 
thereof    in    the    office    of    the    register    of 
deeds,     in   and     for  said   county   of      St. 
Louis,     excepting     and    reserving    thirty 
(30^    feet     of     the   north   end   of  said    lot 
thirty-two      (32).      extending     twenty-five 
I  feet    west     on    same    lot    exciting     and 
reserving  all    ores   and   minerals    beneatii 
the  surface  of  said   lots,    will   be  sold   at 
public  auction,   to  the   highest  bidder  for 
cash,   at  the  front  door  of  the  St.   Louir. 
County   court   house.    In   the   city   of   Du- 
luth.   St.    Louis    County.    Minnesota,    on 
Wednesday,    the    twenty-seventh    day    01 
April,      1897,    at    10     o'clock    in    the    fore- 
noon,   by    the    sheriff    of    said    St.    Loiii.s 
County,    to   satisfy   the  amount   then   due 
on    said    mortgage    and    twenty-five    dol- 
lars attorney's  fees  provided   for  in  said 
mortgage,  and  the  disbursements  allowed 
by  law;  subject  to  redemption  within  the 
time  provided  by  law. 
Dated  February  1st.  1897. 

JAMES   WHALEN, 
Mortgagee. 
M.   H.  CROCKER. 
Attorney  for  Mortgagee, 
410  Chamber  of  Commerce, 
Duluth,    Minn. 
Duluth    Evening  .  Herald,    Mareb>15*22>2d« 
April-5-12-19. 


. .  .$2.ii33.700  47 


W.  B.  B18HOF 
Aast.  Caaliier 


i       i 


I 


-i>a* 


"-f 


'^ 


•^ 


t 


>■  ■    ^' 


-ti^ 


-\- 


h 


-  »  ■  ■■  J  ■        ■  I  I    ■ 


• 


wmm. 


Matters  at  the  Capital  Which 

Are   of    Interest    to 

Minnesota. 


CHARCOT'S  FAME 

Gained  By  Curing  Ner- 
vous People. 


THE  DULUTH  EVENINa  HERALD:  MONDAY,  MARCH 


1897. 


Rumors   in   Regard    to    the 
Make-up  of  the  House 

Committees. 


ily«pt>I)sla. 
blooil,    neural- 


There's  No  Secret 


\WvM«  '^*^*^.*\  *•'  ^^  Charcots  Kola 
Nervine  Tablets  in  cases  of  nervous  .le 
tMllt>.  sleeplessness,  nervous 
melancholia,  impoverisi 
prm.  impaired  viaror.  rheumatism  and  all 
otner  conditions  arising  from  a  debilitat- 
ed nervous  system  is  no  longer  open  to 
Question. 

Dr  Chariots  Kola  Nervine  Tablet'< 
are  famous  for  two  reasons,  tli-st— as  the 
favorite  prestriptlon  of  tTi.-  Int.'   Pr    Jem 


Woric  of  the  Silver  Republi 

can  Organization  Promises 

to  Be  Heavy. 


■•:  -^i' 


Washingrton.  March  15.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Wash! nirton  is  still  fllled 
with  visitors  who  were  called  here  by 
the  inauguration.  It  is  to  be  presumed 
that  these  belated  visitors  are  not  all 
staying  on  just  to  see  the  city  and  to 
pay  their  respects  to  the  president. 
Most  of  them  want  offices,  and  very 
few  of  them  are  backward  in  saying  so. 


X"- 


L 


Everything 


DB.  IBAN  lIARTi:{  CHARCOT. 


Martin    Ciu 


areot.    of    Fari.s.    The    greatt.. 
The  candidates  here  are  for  all  sorts  of  \  ^J^:::\^'^:;^^^l^'^^^!-^\^^ry^^:< 
positions,    from   ambas.«5adors    down    to    «nd— for   its   cures    in   ca.ses   where   other 
local  offices.     It  is  expected  that  by  the    remedies    and    physicians    failed    ti> 
end  of  this  week  most  of  the  inuHirtani    ^''}\^^-  .^^         ..       „  , 

*  I>r.     Charcot  s     Kol.i     Mf.n-Jn«    Tablet 


St 


glVl- 


About  tl.e  secret  of  our  vast  Furniture  and  Carpet  Business.    We  sell  furniture 
best.    We  sell  nothing  but  Good    Furniture,  and  at  prices  as  small  as  you've 

ever  known.    Be  the  price  little  or  much,  it's  a  fair      

price,  likely  to  be  10  to  20  per  cent  below  that  asked 
by  any  other  concern  in  the  city.    Furthermore  we 
have  a  faculty  of  keeping  just  what  the  people  want. 
We  are  house  furnishers  in  every  sense  of  the  word. 

Here's  the  opportunity 
for  Bargains: 

184  pairs  of  genuine  Irish  Point  Lace  Curtains 
—we  have  in  stock  some  as  low  as  $3.85  per 
pair,  but  mostly  of  the  better  jjrades,  costing 
from  $\o  to  $25  a  pair;  the  richest  and  choicest 
of  our  select  stock— nothing  reserved; 

Monday,  Tuesday  and 

Wednesday    You  can  hae  your  choice  for- Hfllf    PfJCC  ! 

Husband ^^^^  ^^^^  ^^^  sighed  for  a  long  time  for  a 

■****•        pair  of  just  such  curtains. 

Wif  P You  have  been  saving  your  stray  dimes  for  a  year 

^        for  just  this  chance  for  a  beautiful,  durable  window  draping. 


In  oar  mammoth  Mtablish- 
meot  aold  on  our 

Equitable  Easy 
Payment  Plan.... 

Only  a  little  cash  down 
required  and  the  balance 
can  be  paid  in  small 
weekly  or  monthly 
payments. 


Contract^  Work. 

Offlce  of  Board  of  Public  Works. 
City  of  Duluth.  Minn.,  March  8.  l^ 
Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
board  of  public  works  in  and  for  the 
corporation  of  the  City  of  Duluth.  Min- 
nesota, at  their  offlce  In  .said  city  until  iO 
i»Jq7™V   '^'^.v}^^  22nd  day  of  March,   A.   D. 

\^K,  .^P^  construction  of  tile  or  gran- 
olithic sidewalk  corners  in  said  city  for 
^n^^,^^*"".  «""**ne  February  28.  1898.  ac- 
fl?f  <L"?u  *°  J*'*"^  and  specifications  on 
file  in  the  offlce  of  said  board. 
1  -A^  certified  check  or  a  bond  with  at 
l?.''^-,*?^^  <2)  sureties  in  the  sum  of  fifty 
^•^.-"''"a'*-''  """^t  accompany  each  bid. 

The    said    board    reserves    the    right    to 
reject  any  and   all   bids. 

M.   J.   DAVIS. 
Official:  President. 

(S^al.) 
R.    MI'RCIIISON. 

Olerk    Board    of    Public    Works 
Duliitli    Kvpuing    Ilnralil,    March   8   m. 


NOTICE. 


Notice  IS  hereby  ^ven  that  the  under- 
signed have  been  duly  appointed  by  the 
common  council  of  the  city  of  Duluth 
as  commissioners  in  condemnation  pro- 
ceedings for  the  purpose  of  viewing  thn 
x^if."\l^^^  *"**  assessing  the  damages 
^nich  may  be  occasioned  by  the  taking 
Of  pi;ivate  property  for  the  purpose  of 
of  "nlnm^h  /    right-of-way   by   the   city 

^rJ^rf'  ""i""  *^^  P^^'P  house  now  in 
toun«hi  "^f^r^"""  on  lot  1.  .section  V.. 
tounship  51  north,  range  ].•?  west,  to 
Lester  river.  The  juop^rtv  to  |,^ 
acquired  being  as  foll/.ws!  to-wii: 

(1)    A  atrip  of  lajid  6C  feet    In   width 

follow.s.    to-wit:    Oommencing     on     Ih, 


y 


1 1    Leather  Scat 
1    Bocker... 


I  Oriental  Rugs. 


missions  and  most  of  tht-  undersecre 
taryships  and  comniissioncrships  will 
bf  filled,  and  that  tht-  senate  will  r>e 
able  to  take  several  days'  recess  before 
the  beginning  of  the  e.\tra  session.  It 
is  hard  to  say  what  Minnesota  will  gt-t 
out  of  the  bag:  hut  that  she  will  <ct 
something  that  is  worth  having  goes 
without  saying. 

governor  Mei-riam  is  still  mentioned 
as  sfle<ted  for  the  Australian  or  Ger- 
man mission,  though  there  are  those 
who  l>elieve  that  Governor  Hubbard  ..-^ 
absolutely  certain   to  go  to   Italv.   and 


Charcots  Kola  Ner\-ine 
are  po.sitively  ireo  from  opiates,  n.ircot- 
i.s  or  any  other  drug  oi"  an  injurious  na- 
ture, rhi-y  art  as  a  nourishing  food  for 
the  nerves  und  l.jood  and  lun-  l.v  r.-pair- 
ing  the  wasted  tissues,  and  l)ui"ldinK  ui. 
the  nervous  .system  to  Its  norm.il  stn-ngt  i 
and   vigor.  '^ 

Two  sizes.  :*)  rents  and  SI.  at  druggists. 


.IS  good  a  cominitiee  place  as  Towne 
had;  nor  the  added  advantage  of  rep- 
resenting a  district,  which  has  such  in- 

„      -      -— .. .   ,  terests  that  it  cannot  well  be  ignored  in 

that  fact  would  shut  out  the  ex-'gover-  |  making  up  the  river  and   harbor 
nor.     Stanford    Xewell    is    believed      to  I  mittee.     He    is   likely     however 


have  an  excellent  chance  for  the  post  lie 
desire.s.     If  these  two  men  get  missions. 
it    will    be   good    luck    if    Minnesota    is 
Riven    anything   of    importance    in    the 
consular    field.      Soivn    Listoe    is    here 
pushing  his  candidacy  for  his  old  con- 
sulship, and  stands  an  excellent  chance 
<»f  going  back  to  fill  out  his  term.     He 
is  understood  to  have  Senator  Nelson  s 
backing.    I  believe  the  only  possible  ap- 
pointee for  a  bureau  chiefship  is  L.  P.  | 
Hunt      for     public      printer,      and     the 
chances  are  against  him.     It  is  not  that 
there  are  any  strong  candidates  far  in 
the  lead,  but  because  there  are  so  man', 
and    tht-    fight    will    be   so    big.    and    so  I 
many  prominent  men  will  take  part  in  ' 
1  ushing   favorites.     The    president    will , 
not  take  up   the  public  printership   for  ' 
several   weeks.     I  can  find   no  one  who  I 
believes  Tarns  Blxby  has  the  ghost  of  a  I 
show    for    the     land    commissionership 
Public  opinion  is  still  that  Hermann    of 
Oregon,  will  get  this  plum,  and  there  is 
no  doubt   that  his  appointment   will   !« 
the    most    popular    that    can    be    made 
among   members    of   congress.        He    is 
lecf.g'nized    as     an     authority    on    land  I 
matters,  from  his  service  on  the  public 
lands  committee  in  times  past  and  from  ' 
his  long  study  of  them.     He  will  f.,llo\\ 
the    most    efficient    and    most    popular 
land  commissioner  for  years  past. 

It    is    not    decided    yet     whether    the 
extra  session  will  result  in  an  entire  or- 
ganization   of    the    hou.se    or    not.      Th- 
present    program    seems    to    be    for    tht- 
naming  of  the  ways  and  means  commit- 
tee and  the  immetliate  intniduction  and 
consideration  of  the  tariff  measure,  and  I 
for  the  house  to  do  nothing  further  in  \ 
order  to  force  the  senate  to  hurry  with  ' 
that   measure.     This   is  a  very   shrewd 
program,  and  it  is  undoubtedly  the  re-  1 
suit  of  a  conference  of  the  house  leauers 
and  the  president  and  his  advisor.s.  but 
the    senate    has    a    way    of    not    being 
forced.     The  house  committee  has  now 
been  working  on  the  tariff  bill  for  three 
months,  and  it  will  take  another  month 
to  get  the  bill  through  the  house.     The 
senate    is    not    likely,    therefore,    to    Ix  i 
hurried  by  the  public  clamor  which  will  ' 
arise  to  rush  tha  bill   through   without 
amendment  or  without  a  thorough  dis- 
cussion, j 
There  is  a  little  gossip  in   regard   to  ! 
the  appointment  of  the  house  commit-  , 
tees,    and    Speaker    Reed    has    receivt  d 
many  applications  from  members  who  i 
desire  places  on  particular  committees. 
It   may  be  put  down  as  sure  that   the 
new    members    of    the    Fifty-fifth    con- 
grresa  will  not.  as  a  rule,  fare  so  well  as 
did   new   members  in   the  Fifty-fourth. 
It  is  easy  to  be  seen   why  this  will   be 
so.     Of  the  250  Repuldican  memoers  of 
the   Fifty-fourth,    about    160    were    new 
men.  leaving  only  about  90  old  members 
among    whom    to    distribute    the    more 
valuable  and  more  desiraitle  places,  and 
abfjut    half   of    the   old    members    were 
only  second  termers.     This  year,   how- 
ever,   the    Republican   membership    has 
been  reduced   by  about  fifty,  and   two- 
thirds  of  those  elected  are  old  members 
Of  course  Speaker  Reed  will  take  into 
consideration  this  service  in   fixing   his 
committee   places.     It   is   this,    for  one 
which  may  make  it  difficult  for  the  ntv. 
Minnesota  members  to -get  as  good  com- 
mittee  assigmments  as  their   predeces- 
sors had.    Judge  Morris  desires  to   '»  on 
the  river  and  harbor  committee.    There 
will  be  five  Republican  vacancies  to  fill 
on  that  committee,  one  from  Pennsyl-  i 
vania.  one  from   the  Pacific   coast,  one 
from  Minnesota,  one  from  Missouri  and  i 
one   from    Michigan.        In    filling    the*.e  I 
vacancies  the  speaker  will  first  considL-r 
the  service  in  the  house  of  the  appli-  I 
cants   for  a   place   on      the   committee.  I 
then  the  locality,  then  the  man's  prom- 
inence in  public  life  before  his  entry  to 
congress,    and    after    that    the    various  I 
pulls   which   may  be  exerted  in  his  be-  I 
half.         While    doing    this    he    will,    of  ' 
course,  consider  the  proper  distribution 


■ane  Seat,  h  igh-baok  7  r  « 

Dining  Chaira /OC 

Wood  Seat  0P« 

Chairs J5C 

(ilasB  Hand  Lamos  tc^ 

Cream  Pitchers iOC 

China  Su«rar«  nn. 

and  Creams ZUC 

Cordnroy  for  recoveriug       7C» 
faroitnto f  QC 

Cnrtain  Poles,  7^ 

per  foot I  (J 


Just  received— direct  from  the  importer 
—and  selected  by  our  buyer  in  person 
from  the  original  bales  shipped  from 
Constantinople.  Select  rugs  are  first 
choice  (everybody  of  taste  wants  a  good 
rug  or  none  at  all.)  Reject  rugs  are 
poor  quality  and  subject  to  imperfec- 
tections. 

We  ofiFer  one  very 
choice  lot  of  good 

size  pieces  at 

Some  of  them  worth  double  the  money. 


^t 


m 


$10.50 


Other  selections  at  from 
$12.50  to  $50  per  piece. 


p?C?i 


FOR 


Liquor  License. 

STATE  OF  MINNESOTA,  COUNTY  OF 
ST.  LOUIS.  CITY  OP  DULUTH-SS 
Notice  is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  said  city  of  Duluth,  and  filed 
in  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  .sell 
intoxicating  liquors  for  the  term  com- 
mencing on  March  21,  1897,  and  terminat- 

^^  ^  ^/''■^'^a^^'  ^^^-  ^y  <5"st  Levin,  at 
'  No.  227  West  Superior  street. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  the 
cUy  of  Duluth.  at  the  council  chamber 
i"  '^?i?  ^'*y  of  Duluth.  in  St.  Louis  Coun- 
ty. Minnesota,  on  Monday,  the  loth  dav 
of  March,  1897,  at  T:30  o'clock  p.  m.  of 
that  day. 

Witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  said  city 
i*!-^"'"*"^'   ^^'^^  ^»t  «'ay  of  March,   A.   D. 

C.   E.  RICHARDSON. 

in.  L     c     ,.  C'ify  Clerk. 

•Corporate  Seal.) 

Duluth  Evening  Herald.   March  2  to  17. 


NOTICE. 


com- 
•  to  get 
.something  pretty  good,  beeau.se  i>f  hir 
well  known  ability,  and  what  Is  more  i> 
pretty  sur^  to  prove  one  of  Minnesota^ 
most  efficient  members. 

The  failure  of  the  sundry  civil  and 
Indian  appropriation  bills  caused  the 
failure  of  some  of  the  projects  for  which 
Mr.  Towne  had  worked  the  hardest 
this  season,  and  in  the  fight,  for  which 
he  won  two  or  three  hard  contests,  vic- 
tories which  marked  him  as  a  legisla. 
tor  of  unusual  ability.  All  these  mat- 
ters ought  easily  to  be  secured  in  the 
first  sundry  <ivl!  bill  which  passe;* 
save  that  of  allowing  the  cutting  l)y 
Indians  of  dead  and  down  timber  on 
Indian  reservations,  and  that  can  be 
secured  either  by  special  bill  or  in  the  |  Washington,  March  l.^i -<Miemists  hiv.. 
next  Indian  bill,  by  good  work.  Of  r.-.ntly  and  in  public  m^d 
course   this   last   cannot    be   secured   in  1  «  j"'-    m.iut 


We  sell  everything  needed  in  a  home—Furniture,  Carpets, 
Draperies,  Chinaware,  Stoves,  Pictures,  Clocks. 


Smith,  Farwell  &  Steele  Co.  ""'"'iS 


Minn. 


MAKES  DIAMONDS. 

A  Swiss  Savant  Who  Produces 
Large  Ones. 


time    to    allow    work    this   year.     Many 
members  allow  work  to  lag.  when  they 
know   they  are  to  leave  congress,   anil 
take  things  easy  the  last  session.   Thi» 
was  not  the  way  with   Mr.   Towne.   lie 
worked  just  as  hard  as  during  the  first 
session,  and  under  the  added  difficulty 
of   having   the   speaker     against     him. 
His  work  told,  however,  and  his  second 
-session  ended  just  as  brilliantly  as  hi." 
tirst.     An  old  member  talking  to  me  the 
day    after   the    session    ended,    said    he 
hated  awfully  to  see  Towne  leave  con- 
gress:    that    he    was    one    of    very    few 
men  peculiarly  fitted  to  be  a  good  and 
great  legislator,  and  that  he  never  knew  ! 
a  member  to  accomplish   so  much    be- 
f«)re,    in    his   first   term,   as    Mr.    Town" 
has. 

The  work  of  the  silver  Republican 
organization  promises  to  be  a  heavy 
one.  The  address  issued  by  the  silver 
Republican  senators  and  memberi« 
seems  to  have  touched  a  popular  chord. 
From  every  state  in  the  country,  al- 
most, letters  have  bt-en  pouring  in  to 
Mr.  Towne  in  regard  to  the  work  of  or- 
ganizing for  coming  campaigns.  He 
will  probably  open  an  offlce  here,  and 


mimds. 


ictual  dla- 
compa  ruble  In  every  respect. 
save  one.  that  of  size,  with  nature's  most 
valued  produd.  «ut  the  crystals  so 
}nanufa<tuied  have,  while  true  dlumond.s 
iMcn  so  miiro.scopic  in  proportions  as 
i-  ."o/'^tnmercial  value.  Now.  however 
I  lilted  Stalt-s  Con.sul  G.-rmain  at  Zurich, 
riports  to  th.-  state  department  that 
Movat  claims  to  have  discovered 
cess    by    " 


K. 


which   diamonds   of  .1    larger  di-  I  *>'•   Minnesota,   on   Juiio   idnth 


NOTICE    OF    MORTOAGE    SALE - 

Whereas  default  h.is  been  made  In  the 
conditions  of  a  certain  mortgage  duly  ex- 
e-utert  and  delivere(l  by  Charles  C. 
bchmidt  and  Annie  M.  Schmidt,  his  wife,  , 
mortgagors,  to  William  E.  Lucas,  mort- ' 
Kasee  bearing  date  May  tlrst  (1st),  1893, 
and  which  was  duly  r.corde«l  in  the  reg- 
ister of  deeds'  offlce  for  St.  Louis     Coun- 

;ii;,  *''""'''''^^"'*-  *'"  ^^''>  thirty-lirst  (31st). 
1S>J.  at  4:40  o'clock  p.  m..  in  Book  one' 
hundred  two  (102)  of  mortgages,  on  pages 
three  hundred  one  C'JiI).  three  hundred 
two  (.■JOJ).  three  hundn.l  three  (303),  there- 
of which  mortgage,  with  the  debt  there- 
by .secnriHl.  was  thereafter  duly  assigned 
by  said  William  K.  Lucas  to  James  II. 
halconer,  by  an  instrument  of  a.ssi'^n- 
ment  bearing  date  June  ninth  (9th), 
and  which  was  duly  i. corded  in  the 
Isier  of  deeds'   offlce   lor  St.   T^ouls 

(9th),    1893. 


If  you  wish  to  drink  a 
Choice  glass  of  Lager 
call  for 
FITQER'S  BEER. 


Office  of  City  Clerk, 

Duluth,  Minn.,  March  6,  1897. 
Notice  is  hereby  given  that  an  assess- 
ment of  damages  made  by  the  commis. 
sioners  in     condemnation     proceedings 
for  obtaining  a  right-of-way  for  public 
thoroughfares  as  shown  by  the  plat  of 
the  same  on  file  in  the  offlce  of  the  city 
I  clerk,  has  been  returned,  and  the  same 
I  will  be  confirmed  by  the  common  coun- 
cil  of  said   city  at  a  meeting   of  said 
common  council,   to   be     held     at     the 
council    chamber,    on    Monday,    March 
22nd,  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m.,  unless  objec- 
tions are  made  in  writing  by  persons  in- 
terested in  any    lands    required    to  be 
: taken. 

[  Following  is  a  list  of  the  property  pro- 
j  posed  to  be  so  taken,  with  the  names 
I  of  the  supposed  owners  and  the  amount 
I  of  damage  awarded  for  the  taking  of 
same: 

Charles  A.  Homer,  James  A.  Gary, 
Julian  J  Chisholm.  For  the  taking  of 
1.34.5  acres  in  the  ne%  of  the  se'^  of  the 
I  nwi4  and  the  neVi  of  nvv%  of  section 
j  13-50-14,  being  a  strip  of  land  66  feet  in 
width  extending  from  First  street,  in 
I  Gordon  &  Whiting's  addition  to  First 


it  1:30  o  dock  p.  m..  in  Book  eightv- 
three  of  a.ssignnionts  of  mortgages,  on 
page  four  hundred  lifty-live  (455)  thereof; 
such  default  consisting  in  the  non-pav- 
ment  of  the  semi-annual  installment  of 
interest  upon  the  debt  secured  by  said 
mortgage    which    became    due    on    Janu 


mension    may    be    pr.«liiced.    In    the    main 

Ins    proce.ss    is    similar       lo    one    alre.idv 

used.   That    is   to  crystalize  carbon   out   of 

iron    and    steel    by    means    of    a    pressure 

and    high    t.'mperaturc.      Vet    there    is    an 

improvement   In    the    technical    operation 
J  ulverized    coal,    iron    diii.s    and    ii<iuid  — .     ,-.    

carbonic    acid    ,ire    enclosed    in    a    strong!  "'"-^'  ^"''  ^^-  amounting  to  the  sum  of  $56.  , 

steel  tube  hermetically  sealed  and  subject     .""    P'**"^    '"^    which    has    ever    been    paid; 

to  an   elwtri<-  arc  between   two   terminals  I  "J"   resuson    whereof  .said   u.ssignee   of  said  ' 

n   the  ends  of  the  tube.     The   iron   liqui-  '  '""J'tsage.  after  said  default   had   contln-  i 

fl.es.   is  saturated   by  part   of  the  piilver- (  "^"^    for    more   than     ten      davs,      elected  ! 

ize.I  coal,  and  at  the  .same  time  the  liroiid     ['*  exercise  the  option  to  him  given  by  the  1 

carbonic    acid    evaporates,    thereby    <au-^-  '  '*^'''"=t.   **'^,   ^"'''    mortgagi-.     bv    declaring.  ! 

and    he   does    hereby     declare,      that     tht-  I 
whole    principal    sum    secrared     by    said  . 
note  and   mortgage,    with   aJl   accrued   in- 
terest  thereon  and  exihange,    to   be   now 
due   and   payable. 
And  whereas  there  is  therefore  claimed 


DETECTIVES 

'•  ^^^-  !  ^nyonereqairinKtheservicea  of  experienced  ;  street, 'in^EaVr  Duluth'' and' p'irst  addU 
e  reg-  officers  In  civil  and  criminal  caees.  can  secaro  tinn  to  ti'aat  t^.o.V.v,  t7  ^>rsi  aaai- 
Coun-     same  by  calling  on  or  addressing  |  "°"  ^°  ^^^^  Duluth.     Damages,   $1. 

Benson's  Detective  Agency 


ZT^e^  ^r?'"  the  northwesterly  cor- 
norfhLi"^'*^  ^'■^f^  proceeding  thence 
w^^l  T'^\""  *  ''"*'  parallel  with  the 
westerly  boundary  line  of  said  tract 
deeded  for  a  pumping  station,  a  dis- 
tance of  566  feet  to  a  point.        ' 

thP    \  ^^I'P  °'  '^"<*  6«  <'e*'t  in  width.' 

fonow«*^^""^?^  '^'*'^''^  •"  described  as 
follows.       to-wit:      Commencing    at     a 

erlv 'line  ffi  "•'rtherly  from  the  north 

t^YJ  f^  }^^  ''■^^t  heretofore  deeded 

tion  it^  lot  1,  section  35-51-13,  measured 
«".»f  "ne  parallel  with  the  prolonged 
westerly  hne  of  said  tract,  and  -4'"^ 
feet  distant  easterly  thereof;  thence 
proceeding  along  said  line  parallel  with 
the  westerly  line  of  said  tract.  150  feet 
Trnn  R  '•'^'it-^f-way  of  the  Duluth  & 
Iron  Range  Railroad  company. 

the  center  line  of  which  is  des<ribed  n^ 
follows  to-wit.  Beginning  at  a  point 
'I.,  feet  northerly  from  the  northerly 
boundary  line  of  the  tract  heretof..,v 
referred  to  as  having  been  deeded  to  th.. 
fity  of  Duluth  for  a  pumping  station 
and  measured  on  a  line  parallel  with 
the  prolonged  westerly  boundary  line 
of  said  tract,  and  24.23  feet  distant 
easterly  thereof;  thence  proceeding  in 
the  same  direction  and  parallel  with 
the  westerly  boundary  line  of  .said  be. 
fore-mentioned  tract,  a  distance  of  lOfl 
feet  to  a  point. 

(4)  A  strip  of  land  16  feet  in  width 
the  center  line  of  which  is  described  as 
follows,  to-wit:  Commencing  at  a 
point  on  the  northerly  boundary  line  of 
the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range  railroad  right, 
of-way  on  a  line  parallel  with  the  pro- 
longed westerly  l^oundary  line  of  a 
tract  heretofore  deeded  to  the  city  or 
Duluth  as  a  site  for  the  pumping  sta- 
tion and  24.23  feet  easterly  of  said  west- 
erly boundary  line;  thence  proceeding 
in  the  same  direction  and  parallel  with 
the  westerly  boundary  line  of  said 
^•act.  a  distance  of  I20..'i4  feet  to  a  point 
Thence  by  a  curve  to  the  left  with  » 
radius  of  7.3.3  feet  to  its  point  of  inter- 
section  with  the  westerly  boundary 
line  of  lot  1.  section 
north,  range  13  west. 


35,    township   .51 


Excbaoge  Bailding,  Dnlutb. 


evaporates 
m.:?  enormous  pressure  on  tht 
and   coal.     Thi.- 


<■au.'^- 
litpiid  iron 
I|ressure  considerably  in- 
liMV.icrirln*'  ''''"««'""""  "'  'he  coal  In  the 
While 


the  mixture  is  cooling  the  car- 
l)on  crystallizes,  partly  in  the  form  of 
real  diamonds,  and  partly  in  the  form  of 
.similar  stones.  These  crystals  are  re- 
ea.sed    from    the    Ingot    by    di.s.solving    the 

.'v"»hr«*'.!^^^K  ?"••"'";■  "^'i"-     The  mixture 
c<.\    this  methofi  remains  under  high  pres- 


CARLTON  SMALL  FRUIT 
AND  PLANT  NURSERY. 

Catalogue  mailed  free  to  any  addrese. 
I  will  set  out  any  variety  of  Strawberries 
myself,  nnar  the  city  of  Dnlnth,  (guaran- 
tee all  to  live)  for  $1.50  per  100,  if  ordered 
before  April  15th. 

E.  G.  BOVEE, 
Carlton,  Minn. 


me 

to  speak,  and  then  to  Duluth  for  a 
week  or  so,  and  after  that  back  to 
Washington.  It  may  be  that  he  will  de- 
cide to  make  Duluth  the  headquarters 
for  a  time  of  the  organization,  though 
it  Is  desirable  that  the  offlce  be  here, 
where  the  political  center  is. 


after    a    brief    visit    to    Duluth    remain    ,  .,^    ,     ,        ,^ 6..  ,..^.-. 

here  until  some  time  during  the  sum-     furrent                   operation  of  the  electrl- 
r.     He  goes  this  w(ek  to  New   York  '^     ' 

BURNED  TO   DEATH. 

Three  Negroes    Perish    In    a 
Burning  Jail. 

Nashville,  Tenn..  March  15.— At  Do- 
ver, capital  of  Stewart  county,  the  jail 
was  destroyed  by  fire  early  this  morn- 
ing. Four  prisoners,  one  white  man 
and  three  negroes,  were  the  only  occu- 
pants of  the  building  at  the  time.  The 
General  Manager  Warren  of  the  street  }  white  man  escaped,   but  the  three  ne- 

poes  were  so  badly  burned  that  there 
is  no  trace  of  their  bodies  this  morning. 
The  dead,  who  are  negroes,  are:  Will- 
iam Black.  —  Nebley,  old  negro  wo- 
man. 


DAMAGE  IS  FEARED. 

Melting     Snow    May     Injure 
Street  Railway  Tracks. 


railway  company  is  having  a  number  of 
photographs  taken  on  the  different  lines 
today  showing  the  heavy  banks  of  snow 
that  it  has  l>een  necessary  to  move  to 
keep  the  cars  moving.  At  one  plat  e  on 
the  Duluth  Heights  line  the  banks  on 
either  side  of  the  track  are  higher  than 
the  cars  themselves,  and  an  hour's  biow 
of  a  strong  wind  even  now  will  fii;  up  , 
the  cut  so  deeply  that  it  will  require  u,\ 
expenditure  of  $75  to  remove  the  snow. 
On  the  West  Third  street  line  there  are  I 
a  number  of  places  almost  as  bad.  j 

Mr.  Warren  says  that  the  snow  is  \ 
worse  now  than  ever  before  in  the  his- 
tory of  the  street  railway  company,  and  ; 
he  does  not  think  tlf^  end  has  come  yet.  I 
He  looks  for  heavy  damage  from  floods  ' 
V.  hen  the  thaw  sets  in  in  earnest,  and  j 
can  conceive  of  no  happy  chance  by 
which  it  can  be  averted. 


MANY  RAILROADS  INVOLVED. 

New   York.   March   15.— An   important 

meeting   of     the    interstate     commerce 

-  ,  commission   was  held   here   today  upon 

of  the  total  membership,  and  that  total  j  the  complaint  of  the  New  York  produce 

membership     in     connection     with     the  ,  exchange    against    forty-four    railroads 


TAX  DECISION. 

One  Which  Will  Interest  Fran- 
chise  Holders. 

Washington,  March  15.— The  attention 
of  the  United  States  supreme  court  was 
Kiven  largely  today  to  the  power  of 
states  to  tax  the  franchises  of  corpora- 
tions, such  as  express,  telegraph  and 
railroad  companies.  Two  cases  involv- 
ing the  constitutionality  of  the  state 
law  of  1892,  one  affecting  the  Henderson 
I. ridge  and  the  other  the  Adams  Ex- 
press company,  were  both  decided 
lavorably   to  the   state. 


to  bo  due,  and  there  is  actually  due,  upon  ' 

said   mortgage   debt,    at   the  date   of   this 

'  notice,     the    sum    of    one    thou.sand    four 

huiidred  seventy-eight  and  53-100  ($1478.53) 

,  aollars.    principal.    Interest   and   exchange. 

And  whereas  said  mortgage  contains  a 
I  power  of  sale  in  due  form,  which  has  be-  I 
come  operati%e  by  reason  of  tiie  defaults 
above  mentioned,  and  no  action  or  pro- 
ceeding, at  law  or  otherwise,  has  been 
instituted  to  recover  the  debt  s«'cured  by 
-said    mortgage,    or  any    part   thereof. 

Aow.  therefore,  notice  is  hereby  given, 
that  by  virtue  of  .said  power  of  sale  con- 
tained in  said  mortgage,  and  pursuant  to 
the  statute  in  such  case  made,  said  mort- 
gage will  be  foreclosed  by  a  sale  of  the 
preml.ses  described  therein,  situate  In  St. 
Louis  County.  Mlnne;jota,  described  as 
toilows,  to-wlt:  All  of  lot  numbered 
twelve  (12).  In  block  numbered  sixty-four 
(W).  London  Addition  to  Duluth,  accord- 
ing to  the  recorded  plat  thereof,  in  the 
register  of  deeds'  office  for  St.  Louis* 
County,  Minnesota;  which  premi.ses  will 
be  sold  by  the  sheriff  of  said  St.  Louis 
County,  at  the  froat  door  of  the  court 
hou.se.  in  the  city  of  Duluth.  in  said 
county  and  state,  on  the  twentieth  (20th) 
day  of  April.  A.  D.  1897.  at  ten  (10)  o'clock 
a.  m..  at  public  auction,  to  the  highest 
bidder  for  cash,  to  pay  said  debt  and  in- 
terest, and  the  taxes.  If  any.  on  said 
premises,  and  .s«->venty-tive  dollars  at- 
torneys fees,  stipulated  for  in  sjtid  mort- 
gage in  case  of  foreclosure,  and  the  dis- 
bursements allowed  by  law;  subject  to 
redemption  at  any  time  within  one  year 
from    the    day    of    sale,    as    provided    by 


Assessment  Notice. 


Grading  Palm  Street. 


Office  of  City  Comptroller, 
Duluth,  Minn..  Feb.  22,  1897. 
Notice  is  hereby  given  to  all  parties 
interested  that  an  assessment  has  been 
made  by  the  board  of  public  works  of 
the  city  of  Duluth,  Minnesota,  and 
confirmed  by  Hon.  J.  D.  Ensign,  judge 
of  district  court  of  the  Eleventh  judi- 
cial district,  to  defray  in  full  the  ex- 
pense of  grading  and  otherwise  im- 
proving Palm  street  from  Arlington 
avenue   to   the   west   line     of     Duluth 

Heights,  5th  Division  In  said  city,  .and  . 

that   a   duplicate   assessment   roll    has  |  the  plat  of  First  addition  to  East  bu 


Same.     For   the    taking   of   2.02   acres 

in  the  neJ4  of  the  nwV4  of  section  13-50- 

j  14,  being  a  strip  of  land  66  feet  in  width, 

I  the   center   line   of   which    is    described 

as  follows,   to-wit:      Beginning     at     a 

;  point  on  the  northerly  line  of  section 

:  13-50-14.  at  the  distance    of    289.8     feet 

■  westerly  from  the  north  quarter  corner 

,  of  said    section    13.     thence    extending 

southwesterly  on    a    line    making    an 

angle  of  47  degrees,  57  minutes,  39  sec- 

onds,  to  the  left  of  the  aforesaid  north- 

erly  line  of  section    13,    a    distance    ot 

!  1412.09   feet   to  a  point,    the  above  de. 

;  scribed  center  line  being  at  right  angles 

with  the  line  of  Thirty-fourth  avenue 

east,  as  platted,  (formerly  St.  Clair  ave. 

nue)  in  First  addition  to  East  Duluth 

Damages,  $1.50. 

William  Howell's  estate.  For  the 
taking  of  0.2  acres  from  the  sw%  of  sec- 
tion 12-50-14,  being  a  strip  of  land  the 
center  line  of  which  is  described  as  fol- 
lows, to-wit:  Beginning  at  a  point  on 
the  southerly  line  of  section  12  afore- 
said, at  the  distance  of  289.8  feet  west- 
erly from  the  south  quarter  corner  of 
said  section  12,  thence  extending  north- 
easterly on  a  line  making  an  angle  ot 
132  degrees,  02  minutes,  21  seconds,  to 
the  right  of  the  aforesaid  southerly  line 
of  section  12—135.81  feet  to  a  point,  the 
above  described  center  line  being  at 
right  angles  with  the  line  of  Thirty- 
fourth  avenue  east  (formerly  St.  Clair 
avenue)  as  platted  in  First  addition  to 
East  Duluth.    Damages,  $0.50. 

East  Duluth  Land  company.  For  the 
taking  of  lots  2.  3,  4  and  5.  block  4.  in 


Dated   March   6th,    1897. 

JAMES    H.    FALCONER. 
CD  A  x-,-.,-^    .„,     Assipi^e  of  Mortgagee. 
FRANCIS    W.    SULLIVAN 

Attorney   for  Assignee. 

^"**^  M^-^,^„"*"S     Herald.     March-8-15-22- 
29-April-o-12. 


NOTICE. 


make-up   of  other   important   commit- 
tees. 

Hermann's  successor  on  the  commit- 
tee will  undoubtedly  be  a  Pacific  coast 
man,  and  the  successors  of  Towne  and 
Stephenson  will  come  from  .states  of 
the  Mississippi  valley  and  the  great 
lake  region.  Illinois.  Wisconsin.  Ohio 
and  New  York  will  be  represented  on 
the  committee  by  old  members,  .so 
Michigan.  Indiana.  Minnesota.  Iowa 
and  perhaps  Kansas  and  Nebraska  will 
l>e  the  states  to  furnish  new  men, 
though  the  Atlantic  coast  membership 
may  be  made  three  instead  of  two,  as 
now.  Pennsylvania  will  undoubtedly 
be  given  another  representation  on  the 
committee,  as  that  state  has  greater 
marine  interests,  in  on?  way.  almost 
than  any  other  state,  having  a  lake  har- 
bor, coast  harbors  and  the  Ohio,  Alle- 
gheny and  Monongehala  rivers  to  look 
after. 

•Mr.  Stevens,  the  new  member  from 
the  St.  Paul  district,  has  so  far 
pressed  no  choice  of  a  committeeship 
As  one  of  the  new  members  he,  like 
Judge  Morris,  will  be  at  a  disadvantage, 
and.  unlike  Judge  Morris,  he  will  not 
hav?  the  Republican  machinery  pulling 
to  give  the  man  who  beat  Towne  just 


forming    the    Joint    Traffic    association  i 
and   outside    roads.     The   charges    for-  | 
mulated  by  the  produce  exchange  com-  I 
mittee    is    practically    an    attack    upon 
frei-ght   differentials   from    the   West   tfs  ; 
the   seaboard.     It    is   claimed    that    the 
freight  differentials  at  present  uiscrim- 
inate    against    New    York    and    are    in 
favor   of     Boston.    Philadelphia.    Balti- 
more.    Norfolk     and      Newport     News. 
Commissioner  Knap  presided.  Commis- 
sioner MoiTison  being  absent. 


we 


CUBANS  FORFEIT  BAIL. 
New  York,  March  15.— In  the  criminal 
branch  of  the  United  States  circuit 
court,  presided  over  by  Judge  Benedict, 
Gen.  Carlos  Roloff.  secretary  of  war  of 
the  Cuban  republic,  and  Dr.  J.  Castilio 


today  failed  to  respond  to  answeTThe  I  Ge«4''^Be^'"^ira    ISer''    ^"''"""^ 
indictments  charging  them  with  viola- 1    Dal^e^'  Zerfaus     We^ne? 


NEW  YORK'S  BASEBALL  TEAM        I 

New  York.  March  15.— The  New  York  \ 
Baseball  club  team  went  to  Lakewood, 
N.  J.,  today.     Capt.  Joyce,  before  leav-  : 
mg,  said  he  was  hopeful  that  the  team    i 
which  was  in  excellent  condition,  would 
make  a  splendid  showing  this  season, 
and   added    that    he   was   sanguine    the 
Giants  would  vanquish   the  Yale   team 
on  the  Polo  grounds  on  April  10,  next 
•The  men,"  said  Capt.   Joyce,   "are  inlTx       1 

n^l?.K^  f-ondition  and  will  be  in  bar-  i  Hardware    Companv,    which 

ness  this  evening.     It  will  be  easy  work  ^yj^^fanjy      w1111.11 

with   them   this  week,  and   the  outlook  I       Ml  •               1         -r^ 

is  decidedly  hopeful.    I  have  the  utmost  '  '''^"*  COntHlUft  the    Retail     busi- 

confidence   in    the   staying   qualities   of  1 

the  men   who  are  all  experts  at   base-  I  «otc.  ««■  *l.                        1 

ball."     The    team    is    made   up   as    fot  '  "^^^  ^*  the  SamC  plaCC. 

lows:     Bill  Clark.   Mike  Sullivan,   Miles 


We  desire  to  announce  that 
have     sold    the    Re- 
tail Department  of  our  busi- 
ness at  409  and  411   Superior 
street  west,  to   the   Northern 


tion  of  the  neutrality  laws  in  connection 
with  filibustering  expeditions  to  Cuba. 
Their  bail  bonds  were  declared  forfeit- 
ed.  Dr.  Joseph  J.  Luis  and  Editor  Htn- 
5^x-  I  riques  Trujillo.  indicted  on  similar 
charges,  pleaded  not  guilty.  Dr.  Louis 
bail    was   increased   $1000. 


Catchers: 
Wilson    and 


AH  accounts  due  us,  should 


Shea.      Fielders:      George    balls!    Kid    be  paid  tO  US  at  OUr  offirp  innt 
Gleason.   William  Clark.  Jim  Stafford        ,  ^  Omce,  lOOl 

and"  iRuir"'    ^'^^   Tiernan.    Buckle.v  |  of  Fifth  aveflUe  West. 


OCEAN  STEAMSHIPS. 
New  York— -Arrived ;     La  Normandie, 
Havre. 


RUSIES  CASE  PO.=?TPONED. 
I      Trenton.  N.  J.,  March  15.— The  case  of 
Amog  Rusle  against  the  New  York  Ex- 
I  hlbition   company,   which   was  to  have 
I  come    up    today,    has    been 
j  until  March  22. 


■ 

I 


MARSHALL-WELLS 
HARDWARE  CO., 
postponed  Wholesale  Hardware  and 
[Mill  Supplies. 


been  delivered  to  the  city  treasurer 
and  tha't  the  amount  assessed  against 
each  lot  or  parcel  of  land  can  be  as- 
certained at  the  offlce  of  the  city  treas- 
urer, and  that  the  assessment  is  due 
and  payable,  and  if  paid  within  thirty 
(30)  days  there  will  be  allowed  a  re- 
duction of  ten  (10)  per  cent,  charged 
to  the  amount  of  the  assessment  for  sur- 
vey, plans,  specifications  and  superin- 
tendence. All  persons  so  desiring  can 
have  their  assessments  divided  into 
not  more  than  five  (5)  installments  of 
not  less  than  ten  (10)  dollars  each,  by 
making  application  to  the  city  comp- 
troller within  45  days  after  date  of  this 
notice.  Said  installments  to  become 
due  and  payable  annually,  commencing 
October  1st,  1898,  with  interest  at  7  per 
cent,  payable  annually. 

Blanks  for  this  purpose  may  be  ob- 
tained by  application  at  my  office. 
W.  G.  TEN  BROOK, 
City  Comptroller. 
Duluth  Evening  Herald,  Feb-22-March 

1-8-15, 


Notice  of  AilicatiOQ 

FOR 

Liquor  License. 


luth,  according    to    the    recorded    plat 
thereof.    Damages,    $0.50. 

Charles  A.  Homer,  James  A.  Gary. 
Juilan  J.  Chisholm.  For  the  taking  of 
1.23  acres  from  the  ne%  of  the  nw^  of, 


(a)  A  strip  of  land  80  feet  in  width 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  the 
right-of-way  of  the  Duluth  &  iron 
Kange  Railroad  company,  the  cenlet 
line  of  which  strip  is  240  feet  northerly 
fn>m  and  parallel  witlj  the  center  linV 
of  said  railroad  right-of-way;  said  strii. 
extending  from  the  northerly  to  th." 
westerly  lines  of  lots  3  and  4.  and  the 
nwVi  of  the  sw%  of  section  34-51-1.3. 

(6)  A  strip  of  land  SO  feet  wide 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  the 
center  line  of  the  right-of-way  of  the 
Uululh  &  Iron  Range  Railway  com- 
pany.  the  center  line  of  whi(  h  strip  i.* 
240  feet  northerly  from  and  parallel  with 
the  center  line  of  said  railroad  right-of- 
way,  said  strip  extending  from  the  east- 
erly lo  the  southerly  lines  of  the  seU  of 
the  seU  of  section  33,  township  51  north 
range  13  west. 

(V)  A  strip  of  land  80  feet  in  width 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  the 
center  of  the  right-of-way  of  the  Du^ 
luth  &  Iron  Range  Railway  company 
the  center  line  of  which  is  240  feet 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  the 
center  of  line  of  said  railroad  right-of- 
way,  said  strip  extending  from  the 
northerly  line  of  section  4,  township  50 
north,  range  13  west,  to  the  easterly 
boundary  line  of  Lester  Park,  Fourth 
division,  according  to  the  recorded  plat 
thereof  on  file  in  the  "bffice  of  the  regis- 
ter of  deeds  in  and  for  the  county  of  St 
Louis,  state  of  Minnesota. 

That  the  undersigned  have  duly  qual-* 
ified  as  such  commissioners,  and  have 
entered  upon  the  discharge  of  their 
duties  as  such;  that  the  undersigned  as 
such  commissioners  have  caused  a  sur- 
vey and  plat  of  the  property  proposed 
to  be  acquired  for  said  purpose  of 
rights-of-way,  or  which  may  be  di- 
rectly or  indirectly  affected  thereby,  to 
be  made  by  the  city  engineer  of  the  city 
of  Duluth,  showing  the  lands  or  parcels 
of  property  required  to  be  taken  for 
said  purposes  as  aforesaid,  or  which 
may  be  damaged  thereby,  and  have 
caused  .said  plat  to  be  filed  with  the 
clerk  of  said  city  of  Duluth;  and  that 
the  undersigned  as  such  commissioners 
will  meet  at  the  office  of  the  city  clerk 
in  the  city  hall,  in  said  city  of  Duluth. 
on  the  24th  day  of  March,  at  10  o'clock 


STATE  OF  MINNESOTA.  COUNTY  OF 
ST.  LOUIS,  CITY  OF  DULUTH.— SS. 
Notice  Is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  said  city  of  Duluth,  and  rtied 
In  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell 
intoxicating  liquors  for  the  term  com- 
mencing on  March  10.  1897.  and  terminat- 
ing on  March  10.  1898.  by  H.  Brown,  at  No. 
333  West  Superior  street. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth.  at  the  council  chamber  in 
said  city  of  Duluth,  in  St.  X,ouis  Coun- 
ty, Minnesota,  on  Monday,  thtt  22d  day  of 
March,  1897,  at  7:30  o'clock  p..  m.  of  that 
day. 

witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  said  city 
of  Duluth,  this  9th  day  of  M;arch,  A.  D. 
1897. 

C.  E.  RICHARDSON, 
.     „  <5ty  Clerk. 

(Corporate  SeaU 
Oulutb  Evening  HiM'ald^  March  -9  to  22  inc 


which  is  described  as  follows,  to-wit 
Beginning  at  a  point  on  the  easterly 
line  of  the  ne%  of  the  nwi4  of  section 
13-50-14,  where  it  is  intersected  by  the 
dividing  line  between  lots  2  and  3,  block 
4,  First  addition  to  East  Duluth,  thence 
extending  northwesterly  on  the  pro- 
longation of  the  dividing  line  between 
lots  2  and  3  aforesaid  814.68  feet  to 
a  point,  being  a  prolongation 
of  the  center  line  of  Thirty- 
third  avenue  east  (formerly  Mackinac 
avenue)  in  the  plat  of  East  Duluth. 
Damages,  $1.00. 

Same.  For  the  taking  of  0.65  acres 
from  the  ne%  of  nw%  of  section  13-50- 
14,  being  an  extension  from  the  westerly 
line  of  First  additon  to  East  Duluth  to 
the  northerly  line  of  said  section  13,  of 
Thirty-fourth  avenue  east  (formerly 
St.  Clair  avenue)  as  platted  in  the  plat 
of  East  Duluth.    Damages,  $1.00. 

William  Howell's  estate.  For  the 
taking  of  4.215  acres  from  the  sw%  of 
sw^  of  section  12-50-14,  being  a  strip 
of  land  66  feet  In  width,  the  center  line 
of  which  is  described  as  follows,  to- 
wit:  Beginning  at  a  point  on  the 
southerly  line  of  section  12  aforesaid,  at 
the  distance  of  360.19  feet  westerly 
from  the  south  quarter  comer  of  sec- 
tion 12;  thence  extending  northwest- 
erly on  a  line  making  an  angle  of  42 
degrees,  02  minutes.  21  seconds,  to  the 
right  of  the  aforesaid  south  line  of  sec- 
tion  12—1964.75  feet  to  a  point,  being  the 
point  of  intersection  of  the  prolonga 
tion  of  the  center  line  of  Thirty-fourth 
avenue  east  (formerly  St.  Clair  avenue) 
as  platted  in  First  addition  to  East  Du 


hear  any  evidence  or  proof  by  the  par. 
ties  interested,  and  when  their  view 
and  hearing  shall  be  concluded,  to  de» 
termine  and  ansess  the  amount  of  dam- 
ages to  be  paid  to  the  owner  or  owners 
of  each  parcel  of  property  proposed  to 
be  taken  for  the  purposes  aforesaid,  op 
which  may  be  affected  thereby. 

FRANK  P.  TIMS. 

LOUIS    K.    DAUGHERTY, 

D.  W.  SCOTT, 

Commissioners. 

Duluth,  Minn.,  March  10,  1897. 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  11 


lot. 


Contract  Work. 


r-u9.'')f/r?'i?2^';'l.°f  P"b"c  Works. 
City  of  Duluth,  Minn.,  March  8.  1897! 


Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
board  of  public  works  In  and  for  the 
corporation  of  the  City  of  Duluth.  Mln- 
ne.sota,  at  their  offlce  In  said  citv  until  10 
f897'"V«^"  ^l?"  22nd  day  of  March  AD 
1897,  for  furnishing  and  laving  In 
eaTuf^««?.?  the  line  of  Grand  "avenue 
f.^  »K<  .,^^'^  ^'*y  ''■<^'"  *^he  center  of  Six- 
ty-third avenue  east  to  Cambridge 
street  and  thence  along  Cambridge  strel^ 
to    the    center    line    of    Fortieth    avenu.' 

east,    about    11,600    lineal    feet    of    lo-inr , 

luth,  with  the  prolongation  easterly  of    cast  iron  water  pipe  and  appurtenances 
the  center  line   of   Victoria  street,   aa   afcoMlng  to  plans  and  ppeclflcations  oii 
platted  in  the  plat  of  Glen  Avon,  First      '!  '"  i^.A  °J^'^t  °t  ^^^^  board, 
division;  thence  extending  westerly  on    least  two  m  sor»HoJ"".«^»J'°"''    ^"'^    ««: 
the  prolongation  Of  the  fenter  li/e  of ,  llln^'^d^'^  S)  VnarsVusl"  acco^'l 
Victoria  street  aforesaid,     817.29     feet, !  Pany  each  bid.  accom- 

more  or  less,  to  the  westerly  line  of  sec- ;     T^®   ^^'**   board   reserves   the   right   to 
tion  12  aforesaid.    Damages,  $3.00.  i  ^^^^^  ^^^  *"<^  »"  bids. 

C.  E.  RICHARDSON,  M.  J.  DAVIS. 

City  Clerk.       Official:  President. 

(Corporate  Seal.)  I     (Sea^ 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  f  to  I  ^i,  MUBCHISON. 
19  inclusive.  /     •  ts9*rl5  S°^^?   of   Public   Works. 

*       _>- '    iiia^     ^"^"^^  Evening  Herald.  March  8  lot. 


— f 


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TOE     r>M.^^Tn     KVENINQ.    nERALD     Mo:;j>AV,    \uyh 


Kx.'lti-tvfly  ilcviito.l 


.'«;i|>;iri'!, 


i  SPRING 
illATS 


••••••••••• 

3f 


f 
f 
f 
f 
f 

f 

f 


Tlic  followiag' 
Exclusive  Styles 

ol  proprietary  Ilals, 
reprosenlinif  the  best 
Ilats  in  vogue  in  Xew 
York  Citv.  Boston. 
l*hila(.1elphia  ami  IJalti- 
inore  may  be  fouml  at 
the  Burrows  Corner — 


-k 
-k 
■k 


Stetson 
Hats 


'4 
I 
« 

4 


Spring  Styles 

The  proper  hats 
for  America's  un- 
crowned kiniis.  ("live  just 
the  proper  finish  to  the  attire 
an  J  wear  like  true  friendship. 
Stiff  and  soft  hats  deserve 
et^iual  praise. 


*      A 

*   A 


NOT  TO  BE 


A.  L.  Ordean  Does  Not  Ex- 
pect to  Be  Comptroller 
of  the  Currency. 


SUSTAINSJHE  COUNCIL 

Opinion  of  City  Attorney  as  to 
the  Committees. 


Oily  Attorney  Kichards  holds  that  th( 
action  of  iht'  i-ouncil   in  i  hunsinj; 
personnel    of     the   committees 
pointed  by  President  Cochrane 
Mr.  Hichard.s  tiled  his  opinion 
urday   afternoon,   after     having 


days 


tlu- 

a.s   ap- 

i.s  lesal. 

late  «at- 

Spent  ' 


Go  where  your 
liatlies  waiting 

^«Gofaon 


re.solution 


J  The  You  mans, 
I  The  Stetson 

Y  Special, 

V  The  Gordon, 
9  The  Broadway, 
t  The  Dickerson 

7 

^         &  Brown, 
f  The  Burrows 

^  Re.::istered. 


* 

I 

A 
« 

4 
4 
4 
4 
4 
4 
4 
4 

{ 


Neither  Does  He  Want  to  Be 

Comptroller    oF    the 

Treasury. 


He    Has    Filed    No  Applica- 
tion-Finds    Improve- 
ment In  Business. 


w  'J^x^^  '"  ''Xitininins  into  the  iiiie 

tion.    The  opinion  states  as  follows- 

"It  is  evident  that  tht 
adopted  by  the  eonncil  on  March  <<  189T 
was  adopted  by  a  two-thirds  vote  of 
the  common  c.uncil.  .sixteen  aldermen 
beiriK  present,  elev.-n  voting  in  favor  .,f 
said  resolution  ajul  five  against.  Then- 
can  be  no  question  that  had  said  reso- 
ution  been  accompanied  by  a  motion 
to  suspend  the  rules  and  then  i)a.ssed 
after  a  two-thirds  vote  ha<l  suspendi'd 
the  rules,  as  to  the  K-^alitv  and  entire 
\aliduy  of  the  resolution  pas.sed  undor 
such  circmnstaiK  ,-s.  It  does  not  ai^pear 
that,  a  motion  to  suspend  the  rules  wa-: 
made  ami  carried,  neither  does  it  ap- 
lu-ar  that  a  inoiidi  to  susp(>nd  thi 
was  not  made  ami  carried.  Tht 
IS  silent  on  that  subject,  l^nd 
circumslan<-es  it  Is  a  settled 
of  law  in  this  slate  that 
not  be  i>resum.  ,|.  but  the 
maxim    of    law 


The  True   Story   as  to  the 

Closing  of  the  Biwablk 

Mine. 


Rockefeller   Willing   to   Re- 
duce the  Royalty  But  Will- 
iams Would  Not. 


>■•■■•■•*••• 


i  Manhattan  Shirts  i 


Made  up  in  g-enteel  patterns 
that  please  Dressy  Men — 
Stitches  that  sta\— Button 
holes  that  hold     Strain  points 
reinforced.     Matv.rial  and 
finish  do  their  own  talking-. 
Feel  and  see  the  fit  of  these 
popular  Shirts  yourself. 
Money  back  if  not  right. 
All  ready  to  put  right  on  and 
wear.     Guarantee  same  satis- 
faction as  if  you  had  them 
made  specially  to  order. 


f 

4 
4 

1 
f 

4 
4 

i 
t 

4 
4 


I  A.  L.  Ordean.  president  of  the  First 
.Vatii)nal  bank,  returned  from  the  East 
j  this  morning:.  Since  the  statement  sent 
out  a  few  days  asro  from  Washington 
to  the  effect  that  an  application  from 
him  for  the  office  <)f  comptroller  of  the 
tivasuiy  had  been  tiled  it  had  beconv» 
the  general  opinion  in  Duluth  that  Mr. 
Ordean  would  get  the  place.  It  will  be 
a  matter  of  some  suri)rise.  therefore,  to 
learn  that  Mr.  Ordean  seems  to  have 
no  intention  of  entering  official  life 
under  President  MeKinley.  Naturally, 
about  the  tirst  (|Uestion  The  Herald  man 
asked  Mr.  oniean  was: 

How  about  the  coniptrollership?" 
■■t'iunptrollershii>,  nonsen.se!  If  the 
iwsition  were  offered  me  T  could  noi 
ajcejjt  it.  Why.  it  has  be^n  kiumn  bv 
.  verylxidy  lor  the  oast  two  or  threV 
m.mths  that  Hon.  Cliarles  O.  Dawes,  cf 
Illinois,  is  to  be  the  next  coniMtrolUr 
of  the  currency.  Howe\er.  it  will  lie  ;i 
year  or  more  before  he  will  come  int  » 
the  office,  as  the  present  comptrollers 
office  d()es  not  run  out  liefon-  that  time, 
the  law  the  comi)troller's  term 
is  live  years,  doubtless  made  ru 
the  office  as  far  as  possible 
hang:e  with  a  change 
it  ! 


Laws  Suggested  That  Would 

Be   in    the    Public's 

Interest. 


rules 
'  rectiid 
<'r  such 
piinc  ijil(> 
illegality   will 
e  <'<intrary.    Th. 
,  .  '"    such    cases    is     all 

thins.s  are  presumed  to  have  been  pru.j- 
erly  done."  ' 

In  support  of  this  the  opinion  of  the 
supreme   court    in    .-^tale    vs.    .Smith      -^        Biwabik.    Minn..    March   13.— (Speciil 

•.re''Jked'*''Th  •^';'^'""^u''''^*'*''"^*'*^'^"    *"  '^*'^  Herald.)-Information  concern 

;^i;'in  *MinIi!!::;,;;r";i;e^:^:;i^[;^'Sei  *"^ "-  ^'-'•'•^  -*-  ^''tained  duvct 

that,   in  the  alisence  of  a  showing-  tiuu  '  '^'''•"^   ^^^  "f  the  officials  of  the   Hiwa- 
any   motion    to  suspend    the   rules    was  !  l>ik    Ues.semei 
made,  when  it  does  appear  affl 


TREASURERS  REPORT. 

Statement  of  Finances  Cover- 
ing the  Past  Year. 

Treasurer  Voss  today  completed  his 
annual  report,  which  he  will  transmit 
to  the  council  this  evening-.  The  follow- 
ing is  the  showing  in  brief: 

.       GEXKRAL  FUND. 

Receipts: 
Balance  Feb.  17.  1896 
Sale  of  $2.".0,000  '41/0 

bonds  _" 

Taxes  from 
Municipal 
Licenses  . 
t)ther  sources 


nvm\  HIS 


Agents  for  BuHerlek  Pattern*. 

Mail  Orders  Promptly  Attended  to. 

Whatever  ia  New  and  Novel,  (^hic  and  Cheap, 
Yoa'U  Always  Find  It  Here. 


per    cent 


county  for  1895.. 
court  lines  and  fees 


.$129,042  87 


231,894  .'■>6 
136.r,:!4  86 

1:5.66*48 
l(t9,607  84 

54,790  98 


Total    

Disbursements - 
Geni'ral  fund  6  per  cent 

paid   

General  fund  orders 
Municipal 


..$69.-|,r,:54  .'-,9 


bonds 

$2r.0.i>00  00 

paid   ....  348.739  64 

court  orders  9.870  7tt 

Temporary    loan    to    interest 
fun«l  

Miscellaneous 
Balance  Feb.  15, 


Special  Features  of  our 

Marvelous 
March 
Merchandising 
for  Tuesday. 

Colored  Dress  Goods. 


1897 


was      lesailj 


hat' 
com- 
coun- 


$1.50,  $2.  i 
I M.  S.  BURROWS.  I 


INDICTMENTS   NO  GOOD. 

Bills  Against  Willett  and  Others 
Would  Not  Hold. 

-;    ...lay    afterno<)n    Stanley    Krontz, 

•  o-uswl   of     selling     liquor     without   j». 

Jit fnse;  Richard  Harper,  accused  of  for- 

i^ery  in  the  second  decree,  and  KdwanJ 

iliiard.  accused  of  re<ei\  ing^  stolen  prup- 

i!y.    pleaded    not    guilty,    and    Kronti; 

as  released  under  $:.'♦>•)  bail. 

!>"eniurrers   were  entered  in   the  <  ases 

..sainst   Frank  Willett.   Hush  Camenii. 

..'i.l      Martin      C.      Miller,      accused 

bribery.  ..n  the  ground  that  the 


ot 
indict- 


ments were  m.L  properly  drawn  i.p. 
.\ttorney  t'rocker.  who  represented  tl.i- 
defendants,  save  County  Attorney  \r- 
I'ury  a  little  hint  by  stating  that  if  the 
■  -••unty  attorney  had  used  the  preseni- 
ment  ot  the  case  in  The  Herald  he 
would  have  had  a  proper  indictment. 

The  demurrers  were  argued  and  sub- 
mitted Saturday  afternrM)n.  and  tb.is 
afternoon  Judge  Cant  sustained  the 
demurrers.  The  cases  were  remanded 
10  the  present  grand  jurv  and  the 
prisoners  returned  to  the  sheriff's  cus- 
tody until  new  indictments  can  be 
trund. 


Pure  Spring  Water. 

Delivered  daily.       Telephone  orders 
Stewart's  livery,   telephone  No.  334. 


to 


rndei 
of  offi»-e 

'  to   remove 

'  from  liability 
in   administration,      in   other   woids. 

,  was  clearly  the  intention  of  the  framer>^ 

1  of  the  law  that  the  office  should  not  b. 
used  as  political  reward.  Personall>. 
I  w..uld  be  very  much  pleased  to  se,' 
the  present  comptroller  reappointed  if 
he  would  serve,  as  Mr.  Eckles  ha" 
proven  himself  to  be  the  right  man  in 
the  r.ght  place,  (.^'rtainly  no  ( omji- 
troller  since  the  creation  of  the  offi.  (> 
has  had  such  a  burden  thi-own  upon 
him  as  the  present  one.  and  the  master- 

!  ful    manner    in    which    Mr.    Eckles 
handled    the  affairs  ..f   the   offict 
mands    the    admiration    of     the 
try." 

I  It  was  evident  from  this  that  M- 
Ordean  was  under  the  impression  thai 
the  cominrollership  of  the  currency 
was  referred  m.  When  t(.ld  that  the 
coniptrollership  of  the  treasurv  wa.- 
the  office  meant  he  said  that  lie  had 
filed  no  application  and  that  he  could 
not  give  up  his  present  place  to  take 
it.  The  Herald's  Washington  corres- 
pondent, however,  found  an  applica- 
tion for  the  place  for  Mr.  (Ordean  on 
file,  and  it  must  be  that  some  of  Mr 
Ordean's  Washington  friends  were  re- 
sponsible for  it.  It  is  evident  that  he 
has  no  thought  of  taking  the  office. 
In  regard  to  the  business  situat 
'  Mr.  Ordean  said: 

"The  industrial  situation  in  the  Kast 
IS  improving  every  day.  More  men 
are  being  employed  and  retail  trade 
shows  increased  volume.  It  is  to  be 
hoped  congress  will  be  prompt  in  pass- 
:  ing  a  new  revenue  bill  which  will  have 
the  happy  effect  of  covering  the  ex- 
penditures of  the  government  and 
cidentally  protect  our  home  industr 
If  the  duty  on  lumber  is  restored 
doubtless  will  be,  Duluth  will  be 
ly  benefited. 

"The  financial  sky  is  as  serene  as  a 
summer  day.  The  banks  are  full  of 
money,  but  with  the  return  of  busi- 
ness activity  no  doubt  thev  will  be 
able  to  find  profital>le  employment  for 
their  surplus   funds. 

"The  West  has  been  unfortunate  in 
Its  trading  in  real  estate  and  it  will 
take  some  time  for  the  East  to  regain 
full  confidence  in  the  West  again.  The 
West  has  great  recuperative  powers. 
I>ut  wemustnot  misdirect  our  energies 
Trading  in  town  lots  may  do  for  a  time 
l>ut  not  for  all  time.  We  have  had 
an  object  lesson  here  in  Duluth  that 
should  l»e  of  value  to  the 
eration. 

■People     generally      throughout    the 
East  have  great  confidence  in  Duluth 
and   we  can   count  on   the   help  of  the 
East  beyond  any  other  Western  city." 


,.     ,    .,  . niativelj 

that   the   refiuiied    two-thirds   vote    was 
cast  for  the  adoption  of  the  resolution 
It   will   be   presumed   that   the  rule  was 
regularly  suspendetl,  and  it   would  fo  " 
low    that   the   resolution 
■  adopted. 

I      Authorities  are  (  ited  holding  that  it  is 
I  immaterial    that   the  council   violates  t- 
mere     parliainemary    law.    and,    it      is 
.stale<l.  it  should  be  l)orne  in  mind  that 
the  standing  rules  of  the  council   were 
adopted    by   a   simple   resolution    un.ier 
section  S4  of  the  -ity  charter.    There  h; 
no  provision,  it  is  stated,  in  that  section 
declaring  that  any  action  taken  bv  the 
council  in  violation  of  ruk-s  to  be  adopt- 
ed l>y  it  should   be  illegal  or  void,  and 
111   this  case   theie  is  no  claim   of  anv 
violation  of  an  express  provision  of 
charter  or  general  law  of  the  state 
formalities,  it    is  stated,  shi.uld 
regarded  wher.'  the  substantial 
ments  of  the  law  are  met.     It  being   .-,- 
parent  that  the  number  of  votes  neceV- 
.^ary  to  suspend  itie  rules  and  pass  tlie 
re.solution        were        cast        in 
"*"  the  resolution.  and 

view  of  the  fa<  t  that  the  council 
be  presumed  to   i<now   the   rules 
which  it  is  actinj:  and  the  effect 
pas.sage    of    the    resolution    by    a 
thirds  vote,   it  must   be  held  "that 
action   was  ec|uivalent   to  a 
of  the  rules,  and  that  such 


$69.-|,.->.^4 

IMPROVEMEXT. 


,59 


Total   

PKltMANENT 
Receipts: 
A.sse.ssments     for    street     im- 
provements,     sewers,        side- 
walks  and     sprinkling    col- 

,      lected  jiioviA  on 

year  unless  some  ;  Assessments  from  county 135  674  19 

made    in    the    cost    of  ;  Sale  improvement  certificates    41^73  45 

1897   297,'08O  33 


mine. 


the 
lu- 
be dis- 
reciuire- 


favor 

in 

1.-^   to 

under 

of  the 

Iwo- 

theiv 

suspensioT! 

was  the  In- 


tention of  tho.se  w  ho  vott^d  (or  the-  re^o-  i 
lution.     In  suitpoit  of  this  position   ih, 
cases  of  State  vs.  Armstrong.  r>4  Jiinn.  ! 
4;.9.   and    Benn.-tt    vs.    the   Citv  of  NVw  ' 
Bradford.  llO  Ma.-s.  -i::3,  are  cited. 


I 


Masonsc  Notice! 


All  members  of  Ionic  lodge.  No  18d 
aud  all  8oji>arni,i«  Master  alasoas  are 
reqnosteJ  to  mt-t  at  Masonic  Hall, 
Tuesday,  Marcli  l6tb,  at  S  p.  m..  for  the 
purpose  of  atteDdiuR  the  funeral  of  onr 
late  brother,  J.  }{.Ieham.  iiy  order  o' 
W.  M.    J.  D.  McFARLANE,  8eov. 


)n 


in- 
ie.s. 
as  it 
great- 


J  H.  Isham  Dead. 

J.  Henry  Isham.  who  had  been  ill  t.ir 
about  a  week,  died  yesterdav  morninr 
shortly  after  midnight.  He  was  aboul 
'4  years  of  age.  His  son  is  to  arriv, 
Iiom  Bradford.  Pa.,  todav.  anrl  u  ill 
probably  lake  the  body  there  for  burial 
Mr.  Isham  had  lived  here  about  ten 
years  and  was  a  watchmaker.  —  wa-i 
very  popular  with  all  who  knew  him 
and  has  been  a  familiar  figure  in  Du- 
luth. 

The  funeral  services  over  the  remains 
of  J.  H.  Isham  will  be  held  at  the  Ma- 
sonic- Temple  tomorrow  afternoon  at  :, 
o  clock,  deceased  having   been  a  mem- 
ber of   Ionic   lodge,    Xo.    1%,   and   Key- 
stone chaptei.  Xo.  20,  A.  F.  and    A     M 
An  address  will  be  delivered  by  Profes- 
sor Denfeld.     All  master     Masons    and 
Iriends  of  the  d.?ceased  are  invited.  The  , 
retnains   will    be   shipped    to   Titusville 
Pa.,  for  interment.  " 


SELL    REAL   ESTATE 
f^y.nieans  of  an  Evening  Herald 


'want 


present  gen- 


Massdga  of  the  Face  and  Neck 

/■ ')/  fhe  removal  of  irn'iikles 

Would  jfou  preserve  your  hair? 

Then  call  and  see  ns.  as  we  treat  all  hair  and 
scalp  diBeaaes.  Artistic  hair  dressing  and 
manicuriog.  latest  styles. 

KNAUF  S'STERS.  101  W.  Superior  St. 
Oyer  Smith  <fe  Smith's  Drag  Store. 


company,    is   somewhat 
I  different  from  that  contained  in  the  dis- 
1  patch    published    in    The    Herald    las^i 
!  Saturday.     It   appears   that   the   Biwa- 
bik   Bessemer   company,    realizing    the 
fact  that  it  would   be  unable  to 
except  at  a  loss,  this 
reduction    were 

production,  applied  to  Mr.  Rockefeller 
for  a  reduction  in  royalty  or  freight 
rates.  He  agreed  to  reduce  his  share 
of  the  royalty  if  J.  M.  Williams,  the 
fee-owner,  would  make  a  proportion- 
ate cut.  The  latter  was  appealed  to 
but  he  positively  refused  to  make  any 
reduction.  The  Mr.  Rockefeller  pro- 
po.sed  another  plan  to  the  Biwal)ik 
Jtessemer  c-ompany.  He  gave  tlu-m 
the  privilege  of  maintaining  their 
lease  by  mining  their  allotment  from 
either  the  Adams  or  MeKinley  mine 
and  to  let  the  Biwabik  lie  idle  until 
Mr.  Williams  should  come  to  terms  or 
a  ri.se  in  the  price  of  ore  would  per- 
mit of  its  operation  without  a  loss. 

The  lease  of  the  Biwabik  Bessemer 
company  calls  for  a  royalty  of  5o 
cents  per  ton  on  300,000  tons  per  an- 
num, but  Mr.  Rockefeller's  lease  from 
Mr.  Williams  calls  for  only  $10,000  pe- 
year.  The  lea.se  has  now  run  fo-ir 
years,  and  expires  in  sixteen  years. 
Mr.  Williams  has  already  been  largely 
overpaid    and    conseiiuently    the    mine 

I  can    lay    idle    for   some    time    before    it 

j  will   be  necessary  to  pay  Mr.  Williams 

I  any   more  royalty. 

J.  D.  Shilling,  superintendent  of  the 
riiwabik  Bessemer  company.  was 
asked  what  he  would  consider  a  fair 
royalty  for  Biwabik  ore.  and  he  re- 
plied:  "Twenty-five  cents." 

•It  is  not  true."  asked  The  Herald  cor-  ' 
respondent,    "that    Mr.    Carnegie    pays  : 
2.-.  cents  for  Mountain  Iron  oie.  and  is  , 
not  Biwabik    ore     much     better     than 
Mountain  Iron?" 
•  Xo.   it  is  not,"  replied  Mr.   Shilling. 
Either  the  Mciuntain  Iron  or  the  Oliver 
contains  just  as  much  good  ore  as  there 
is  in  the  Biwabik.     The  only  diffc-rence 
IS  that  both  the  Oliver  and  the  Moun- 
tain Iron  contain  more  ore  of  a  lower 

grade."  I 

P.   L.   Kimberly  once     said     that     he  I 
would  rather  have  the  Biwabik  at     ,=;0  • 
cents  per  ton  royalty  than  the  Moun- 
tain Inm  for  nothing,  because  he  con- 
sidered   the    Biwabik    ore   worth    more  ' 
than  that  much  difference. 

The  (luestion  of  operation  of  the  Bi- 
wabik this  year  now  hinges  upon  a  pos- 
sible   change    in    the   determination    of 
J.  M.  Williams.     But  this  change  is  not 
probai)le.    Mr.   Williams  is  a   very  old 
man  already,  with  one  foot  in  the  grave 
and  in  poor  health.     His  demi.se  is  ex- 
pected  at  almost   any   moment.     He   is 
reported   to  be   very  close-fisted  and  f- 
;  great  lover  of  money.     Those  who  know 
him  best  do  not  expect  him  to  budge  ar. 
inch  or  yield  a  farthing  of  his  royalty 
The   tendency   of   the  day   is    toward' 
lower  royalties,  and  when  Biwabik  ore 
must  be  sold,  if  at  all,  at  $2.65  or  less 
per  ton,   it   would  certainly  seem   that 
Mr.  William's  portion,  30  cents  per  ton, 
is   altogether   too   much.    The   ore  con- 
tained in  the  Biwabik  was  obtained  by 
him  as  a  free  gift  from  the  people  of 
the  United  States.       Practically  it  cost 
him   nothing.     He   bought   the  land   for 


22,000  00 

2,5S9  .-,8 

62,334  61 


Sale  improvement 
Overdraft  Feb.  15, 


Fol.i  after  foM  of  th»  newee t  weaves  anci  tol- 
oriupB  await  y«,n  Tuesday.  We  wfX  to  °  ay  as 
little  as  may  Iw  about  the  price?,  for  In  th« 
Dreparat.oa  of  tl.o  showing  we>e%'ad  iu  ni  ud 
a  pleasant  surpriee  for  yon. 


60c 

Press 


.$616,638  8ti 
$112,514  69 


130,706  99 
28,446  48 


Total   

Disbursements: 
Overdraft  Feb.  17,  1896 
Permanent  improvement  fund 

orders  paid: 

Duluth    

Village  of  West  Dulutli 

PtJldic-  imj>rovement  bonds  paid- 

Duluth      ijog.jo 

Lakeside   '^-^ 

Village  of  West  DuVuth 

Interest  on  Improvement 

?"'"^h 16.023  24 

Lakeside    g  g.,g  g.. 

Village  of  West  Duluth   .*. ..  2"  s'm  60 

Miscellaneous   .'1 105  6" 

Total    

FIRE  DE P.\ RTM EXT 

Receipts: 
Taxes  from  county  for  1895. 
Other  sources 
Overdraft   Feb  15.  1897 . . . . ." ." 


54,729 

150,729 

bonds: 

....     16.023 


Total    

Disbursements: 
Balance  Feb.  17,  1896 
Orders  paid   


..$616.6.38  86 
FUXD 

..$  94,626  02 
. .  1.820  96 
. .     74,815  40 

..$171,262  38 


mixtures,  none  worth  less  than  7,5c. 
sell  Tuesday  at-a  yard ,_ 

R«lf,'i^r «-**''.  .''"<l8«7;''  Spring   NoTolty 

aiif    6;ic  kind ;  for  Tuesday  at—       >i|5  -» 

15  pieces  of  Dress  Materials,  inclntog  tilk  and 

^^ m'^U.V"*'V*^^"'°"."  '^^  checked  NoveCs 
Nis  (inalitioe;  for  Tuesday -a  C  «»     ' 

ywd /. OoC 

w"na*'ij,J  *°^"^  Suiting^,  colors  brown,  black- 

:  olne  and  grsfD,  and  worth  f  1.25 :  O  C  ^ 

sell  Tuesday  at-a  yard O  O  C 

™*L^  ^}\^  '""^-  '^''>"'  Novelties,'h«„,|8oinf.st, 
Th^JM-  I^®*".""^*'"*  Bummer  season  ;  SI  25 
should  uo  the  price ;  1  ueeday  tboy  "7  cM 
sellat-ayard /  OC 

Wash  Fabrics.  * 

A  neat  stock  at  very  small  prices. 

wo'i!h'?l-',f*"-*'*  Challies  and  Lawns,  none 
worth  lers  than  ic  a  yard ;  go  on  sale  j§  ^ 

Tuesday  at-a  yard ..;. _         4C 

20  pieces  of  Dress  (iioghams,  all  good  styles  aud 
colors,  regular  10c  an<l  12Hc  <iu«li.       4»i/  _ 
ties;  sell  Tncsday-a  yard  ............ O/^C 

Another  case  of  short  leaglbs  OntiViV  Flannels, 
light  and  dark  coIopf.  well  worth  10c  ''"'g^^'^ 
a  yard ;  sell  Tueed8>  -a  yard OC 

50  pieces  of  Imported  Silk 
Str  ped  Orgdndi«»s,  c'jcocasI 
of  coloriag  and  stjle,  50c 
value  ;  sail  Monday  -  a  yard 


32o 


..$  12..344 
..   158,917 


-\XD  LIGHT 


i>  s. 


...$171,262 
FUXD. 


38 


Total   

WATER 

Receipts: 
Sale  of  $600,000  bonds. 

Disbursements: 

Orders  paid   106,519  47 

Interest  on  bonds   lo.ooo  00 

Balance  Feb.  15,  1897   491.650  53 


.$608,170  00 


Total    

PARK     Flixb. 
Receipts: 
Balance  Fel>.  17  18»5 
Taxes  from  county  for 
Other  sources  


.$608,170  00 


Honitan  Lace  Gauz-^  Wash  Fabrics,  newest 
spring  colonnge,  well  worth  lioc ;  #>/>.. 

Bell  fnesday-a  yard dSUC 

fi.^\Vl?  °{  ^'»«°'-5<l  pimities  anci  Organdies,  all 

the  late  coUira  and  styles ;  tome  tell 

yon  they  are  worth  2rM5  a  yard ;  I  O I  /  -^ 

they  sell  here  at-a  yard I  fc/^  C 

Ask  to  fee  our  impirtel  Dlmitiea ;         O  C  -.. 
ttiey  sell  at-a  yard. 46  O  C 

Lining,    special  tor  Tuesday. 

15c  Silesia  Silks  at— a  yard 

20c  Linen  Canvas  sells  at— a  yard 

50c  Gre,  French  Hair  Cloth  sells  at-a  yd 

30c  Fancy  Sateen  sells  at- a  yard 

15c  Taffeta  Lining  sella  at— a  yard 

25c  Figured  Taffeta  Lining  sells  at— a  yd.. 
Buy  Your  Linings  Here. 


10c 
ISc 
32c 
18c 
80 
17o 


189.» 


239  25 

31,541  02 

6.417  37 


Cloak  Room. 


64 


T9tal   5  38,197 

Disbursements: 

Orders  and  intere«5t   37,8.55  49 

Balance  Feb.  15,  1897  34''  15 


Total   

IXTERES-f  FUXD. 

Receipts: 

Balance  Feb.  15,  1896  

Taxes  from  county  for  1895..! 
Temporary  loun  from  general 

fund  

Other  sources  

Total   .7i 

Disbursements: 

Interest  on  Londs  paid 

Balance  Fe'.j.  15.  1897  


$  38,197  64 


Ladiee  Walking  Cobtume  of  fine  qualitv  Stoim 
Herse.  yneviot  and  fancy  wc>ava  cloth,  the 
jacket  richly  lined  with  taffeta  Hlk.  the  skirts 
out  and  gored  accor.ling  to  the  latett  Pan-ian 
style  aud  workmaDship,  only     ttIO     >l  O 

very  best;  tomorrow  only 9I^.40 

Ladies'  Black  Walking  Dress  Skirt,  made  frt>m 
«K>d  heavy  hgur^d  gros  g<ain,  taffeta  or  sstin 
finish,  eilk  lined  throughout  with  percaliue, 
velvet  bound,  the  latest  cut  and 
every  one  tailor  made ;  tomor-  ft  7  Ck  CS 
row  only 9#  .90 

New  Silk  Shirt  Waists  from  extra  good  quality 
Japanese  Silk  and  printed  Fonlnrds,  in  all  the 
latest  colorings,  lined  throughout :  a  rtres*- 
malfpr  made  garment  in  style       ^  O    >l  O 

and  tinisfa;  Tucsda,  only wOa'vO 

New  Derby  Shirt  Waists,  made  in  lawn,  pw- 

cal-«  anci  batiste,  the  new  HiehoD  sleeve,  full 

n/.  «^rT,     pleated  backs  every  one,  detachable     g%0 ^ 

96,27a  6(3  ;  collai-8  aud  cuffs;  Tuesday  only «f  oC 

I  Great  variety  of  Dark  Washable  Print  Wrap- 
pers, made  full  in  s^kirt  and  perfect  ^  i     i|> 


597  87 
61,197  73 

22.000  00 
12.480  00 


95,465  00 
810  60 


Total  $  96,: 

T.IBRARY     FUXD. 

Disbursements: 

Balance  F'eb.  1,".,  1896  $ 

Taxes  from  county  for 
General  fund 


60 


189.- 


8.375  55 

7,341  3a 

765  00 


llPff-pi  #1  ^^    SPECIAL  SALE  OF 

UFFEL&^g; 


ALL  THE  NEW  AM3  LATEST  STYLES. 
COMPARE  WITH  OTHERS. 


LADIES'  HOUSE  WRAPPERS 


For  Tuesday,  Wednesday  and  Thursday 


(CONTINUED) 


This  Beautiful  Wrapper  for  three  days 
or  until  si.ld— 


79c. 


The  Perfect  Fitting  Wrapper,  as  thowi 
above— only 


98c. 


he  Appledore  Cook  Book 


fam^  Honi.  w'^  "^  *'  "•  Tbe  above  hand- 
?orThferdi;;[h%^r,Ieeir''  "'^  '"^  ''''' 

SI. 19 


the  standiuK  pine.  Accidently  he  still 
held  the  property  when  some  other 
man  discovered  ore  thereon.  But,  ac- 
cording to  law,  it  is  his  and  he  is  not 
to  be  Ijlamed  for  getting:  all  he  can  out 
I  of  it.  He  has  some  grounds  for  argu- 
ing that  he  should  not  reduce  his  roy- 
i  alty  so  long  as  there  is  another  con- 
siderable royalty  on  top  of  his,  and 
while  freight  rates  remain  just  as  high 
as  they  were  when  ore  brought  more 
money. 

When  the  Biwabik  mine  was  leased 
from  the  Merritts  by  the  Biwabik  Ore 
corrtpany    the    royalty    was    only    one- 
eighth  of  the  selling  price  of  the  ore. 
while  the  freight  rate  was  almost  one- 
third.       In   the   competition    for   lower 
costs,  the  mine  operator  is  now  com- 
pelled   to    labor   without    profit,    wages 
in    the    mines    are   cut    to    a   miserable 
pittance,  the  vessel  owner  is  forced  to 
accept  lower  freights,  but  the  railroad 
and    the   fee-owner,    by    reason    of    the 
fact  that  they  hold  natural  monopoli.-s, 
hold  out  for  the  last  penny  the  tra.fic 
will  bear. 

A  law  compelling  railroads  to  accept 
a  fair  proportion  of  the  value  of  the 
ore  in  payment  of  carrying  charges 
and  another  law  subjecting  small  roy- 
alties to  small  taxation  and  big  roy- 
alties to  high  taxation  would  solve  the 
problem  in  the  interests  of  the  public 
and  distribute  .some  of  the  benefits  of 
producing  iron  ore,  where  now  all  the 
profits  are  taken  by  the  railroad  and  1 
the  land  owner  while  all  the  losses  are 
sustained  by  the  operator  and  the  lab- 
orer. 


Total   $16.48194 

Disbui-sements: 

Orders  paid    

Balance  Feb.  15,  1897  


14,.380  58 
2,101  36 


Total    

SIXKIXG  FUXD.' 
Recefpts: 

Balanc:e  Feb.  17.  1896  

Taxes  from  county  for  1895  . 


.$  16,481  94 


43,419 
15,771 


Tot  al    $  59  190  85 

Bala  nee  Feb.  15,  1897  .'..'.'.'.'.'.'.     59^190  85 
SUMMARY. 

General   fund  balance   $  62.3.34  61 

Water  and  light  fund  balance. 491,650  53 

Library  fund  balance   2,101.36 

Park  fund  balance   342  15 

Interest  fund  balance  810  60 

Sinking  fund  balance   59,190  85 

Permanent  improvement  fund 

overdraft  297,080  33 

Fire    department    fund    over 

diaft    74.815  40 

Total  cash    on     hand    in     all 

fun-«3s   244,534  37 


ia  workmanship;  Tuesday  only. 

Dress  Silks. 

Hundreds  of  Spring  Silks  sparkle  with  price 
interest  for  Tuesday.    For  instance,  these : 
Printed  Foulards,  i  he  wide  kind,  28  inches  wide, 
blue  and  white,  helio  ami  black,  black  and 
wbite,  Rell  at  $1  00  a  yard ;  others  at      O  A.^ 

5Dc,  and-  a  yard W  vC 

Figiirod  Taffeta  Silks,  all  new  eoloringf<.  new 
debigns,  namely,  $1,19,  98c  and--  T  C  -». 

ayard       #  OC 

20  pieces  of  Changeable  Taffeta 

Silks  sell  at-a  yard 

$1.2.'>  cinaiity  Black  Peau  de  Soie 
Bells  at— a  yard 

$1  00  cjuality  Black  Faille  sells 
at— a  yard „ 

$1.00  quality  Satin  Dushess  sells 
at— a  yard _ 

$l.:r.  and  $l.-/h  (luality  Black  Taf-  i%0^ 

feta  Brocades  eell  at— a  yard w  OC 


Black  Goods. 


Total    :\ $616,430 

DEPOSITED. 
First  Xational  bank  $151,694 


Bell  &  Eyster  estate   

American    Loan    and      Trust 

estate  

Marine  Xational  bank  estate. 

Security  bank  estate   

Xational   Bank  of  America... 
Cash  checks  in  safe  


10 

83 
37,132  .50 

27,834  68 
20,249  92 
4,599  81  : 
2,792  77  I 
229  86  ; 


Tuesday  our  Black  Goods  Department   will 
present  more  fashionable  Spring  Novelties  and 
more  Oennino  Bargains  than  ever  before. 
48-in  Black  All-Wool  "Merges,  the  kind    that  will 
wear;  6.50  hhouid  bethe  urice;  Ott.** 

special  Tusday— a  yard 499C 

10  pieces  of  Figured  Granites.  Jacqnard  Fan- 
cies and  Wsllle  Suitiuns,  g<x)d  value     ^^  — 

at  »5c ;  seU  Tuesday-a  yard OOC 

7  pieces  of  Priestley's  Black  All-Wool  Figures, 
S1.25  and  $1.00  (inalities;  for  "7  K  :^ 

Tnesday-a  yard #  OC 

48-in.  Black  Mohair  Figured  Novelties  and 
Fancy  (jranite  Suitings ;  beet  $1.50^  i    A ^ 
cloth  ever  sold ;  sell  1  ueeday— yd.  w  I  .  W  w 
Figurel  Suliels  sell  at  a  yard—       ^  f     O  CS 
SI. 76,  $1.60  and  91. ^O 

Creat  Sale  in 

MUSLIN  UNDERWEAR  TUESDAY ! 


Total    $244,.534  37 


Jj  48,  worth  $2  00  and  $2.25.  The  above 
;f,?"°' ■*>'»  o'  Honse  Wrappers,  worth 
5^.00  and  K.25,  for  three  days,  price— 


$1.48 


Uiide 


garment 
purchase  or  not 

Every  advantage  in  the  wayof  low  cash  prrces^nd  ext 
OUR  CUSTOMERS  RECEIVE  THE    BENEFIT 


given  away  free  with  every  purchase  of  qo  cents 

ufacturcd   by  a  "i. 
It  will  pay  you  to  e 


Accused  of  Stealing  Butter. 

John  Romano  was  arrc»sted  at  We-<t 
Ouluth  this  morning  charged  with  th-- 
theft  of  n  tub  of  butter  from  the  stoiv 
V^'^  "^  VJo  Weir-Mear-s  Commission 
company.  118  West  Michigan  street,  on 
baturday.  He  was  apprehended  bv  De- 
tective Donovan,  who  found  a  tub  of  but-  1 
ter  answering  the  description  of  the  stol-  1 
en  property  in  the  .store  of  Antonio  Piro, 
at  West  Duluth.  where  Romano  Is  eio - 
ployed.  Romano  was  to  be  arraigped 
this  afternoon. 


rwear  at  prices  from  10  cents  up  to  «^;o     Our   Mnsiin    tt„^ 


!>,/-'      .    . '  — ''^'^  ™ade  and  perfect  fiitiDy 

Dry  Goods  IS  now  complete.     It  fS^  ""'og 


,.  .'s  one  of  the  largest 

ra  discounts  has  been  taken 
WE  WANT  YOUR  TRADE. 


or  upwards.  Be  sure  and  ask  for  it.  Special 
you  seen  the  new   spring  stales  of  Muslin 

is  home  made     Eveiy 

in  the  riiv^.,,^  K  ''t'"'"e  our  stock  during  this  sale,  whether  you 

in  tne  city  and  has  been  bought  for  ■ 


D-»»  rash 


SUFFEL  &  00. 


DUST  A  MILLION   YEARS  OLD. 
A  curious    theory    has   recfintlvr    l)een  I 
advanced   by     the     eminent     scientist 
Gustave  Blattner,  of  Vienua.       He    be- ' 
lieves   in    the   existence   of   a.   cosmical 
powder  or  dust  which,  he.  claims,  is  con- 
tinually falling  from  space,   and  which  i 
is  the  dust  or  remains  of  worlds  which] 
have    been    destroyed.     Some    of    these 
worlds,  he  says,  may  have  been  so  far 

away  that  the  dust  or  reniains  of  them  Mr^cT     ocDCcr-T     iAAPkC 

which   IS   now   raining     do'.vn     on     the  MOST     PERFECT     MADE. 

world  in  the  shape  of  fine  powder  has    a  nure  Hrane  Cream  of  Tartar  Powder      Free 
been  a  million  years  in  traversing  the    r  ^    f       '^^     ai  »anar  t-owoer.     rree , 

space  between  us  and   what   was  once'^^^'"  ^'"'"°"'^' ^'""^  °^  ^"^  *^^'^^^ 

that  destroyed  world's  oriiit.  j  40  Ycars  Ac  Standard, 


Awarded 
Highest  Honors— World's  Fair. 

^  CREAM 

i{4iaN6 


\  Linens. 

Not  often  such  values,  for  honest  effort  is  not 
always  coupled  withgcod  foitone. 

Table  Linens — 

7  pieces  Pure  Linen  Bleach  Damrslc,  new  pat- 
tern 8,  cheap  at  75c  a  yard ;  Taee-  gS  ^  ^^ 

day's  price , O9C 

I  10  pieces  72-in.  Satin  Rieach  Damask,  O  C%  ^ 
worth  fl.25;  Tuesday's  price— a  yd....  09C 
100  dozen  Heavy  Linen  Fall  Bleach  9i  Napkins 
regular  SI. .^0  (luality;  Tuesday's  ^  i  i  -» 
price, adozen 91.1  # 

New  Stamped  Linens  en  sale. 


Sheetings. 

2  cases  4-4  Bleached  Unshn,  equal  to  Fmit 

or  Lonsdale ;  Tuesday,  only—  ^  ^ 

per  yard OC 

1  case  9-4  Bleached  Sheeting,  heavy  qualuv, 
soft  tinibh ;  ihe  22o  qnality ;  i  ^  1/  .-. 

Tuesday  only-per  yard  lO/^C 

25  pieces  IS-inch  Bleach  and  Brown  Linen  (rath 
rowehog,  sold  by  other  stores  for  12Wc      *>  ^ 

ayard;  onr  price  Tuesday «f  C 

100  drzan  Hemmed  Buck  Towels, 

sizes  18x33,  worth  1 5e ;  *  g\ 

Tuesday  only— each IwC 


T\^lW\itWS 


I  «■■  « ■  ■     ■ 


Houses,    Bcoms   and 
Fhrta      Ar>'    IJuicUy 
Heuffd  Throuijh  Eve 
ning    Ueruhl     Want 


ror'KTEEXTH     VKVK 


DIJLUTH  EVENUNTG  HERALD 


MINNESOTA 

HISTORICAL 

SOCIETY. 


TCKSDAV,     .MAI{(^H     HI.     l.s;>7. 


THE  WEATHER. 

Fair  and  warmer 
tonight  and  Wed- 
nesday; Easterly 
Wi)ids 


■ 


■4npi 


■PHai'iQiiM 


J. 

I 


>«"»Vi 


i 

••  -^ 

•  ^^ 

. 

f 

1 

■ 

' 

' 

•    ; 

, 

k"  ■ 

EASY  HOUSEKEEPING 

F|¥\¥/^  j^^i    Those  are  the  kind  of  prices  that  are 
M l#  1 1      p  V  f    placed  on  goods  here.     It  makes 
*    l\lwl-^Wt    housekeepings  and  economical  living  easy 

because  it  don't  take  a  small  fortune  to 
buy  all  the  things  to  do  it  with.     Fifty  dollars  will  go 
as  far  liero  as  seventy-five  dollars  in  most  stores. 
If  you  doubt  it  try  it.     We  carry  complete  lines  of  every 
necessity  and  luxury  which  go  to  make  up  a  modern  home. 

The  Best  Sewing  Machines 
on  Earth. 

$20.00 
$27.50 


Administration  Bestows  Two 

of  Its  Most    Important 

Foreign  Gifts. 


Medium  Arm, 

full  attachments 

High  Arm, 

full  nickel  head. 


Col.  John  Hay  Selected  For 

the  Court  of  St  James 

at  London. 


HOST  LIBERAL  TERMS  OF  PAYMENT. 


French  &  Ba? sett 

First  St.  and  Third  Avenue  =  est. 


Gen.  Horace  Porter  Chosen 

For  the  French  Mission 

at  Paris. 


£JiiiiiiiiiriFiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiv:iiinMiiiiiniiii 11111112 

iPIANOS!f«"s:,     ■-     " 

:=  ■■•^#\#  I   Pianos  and  Organs  for  rent     Ex'       tuning  &  repairing.    = 

i  .u  E. JEK"^"*""  "usic  CO.  E.  G.  €«.  P«A».  «.„.,.,.  i 

_    SALhs!iUOM>     t'han.x  HuK:k--odtl,K.r:  Fourth  Av«»naeWpgp^d  Snporior  Street  = 

aiiiiiiiiiMiniiii>iiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiinii»iiiiiinnii„|||||,|in,|,|,|,,,,,,„,,,,,,,,;,,,,,,,,„,,,„,,,,,,,,,,„,,^^^^^ 


•fiiiiiiiillllll  y.  Illlllllllilllllllillllllll 

$i:l5.oo 


±    


^«H"I"I"I"K«4- 


Office  Supplies! 

THE  OSLY  COMPLETE  LINE  IN  THE 
CITY  IS  AT _. 


Chamberlain  &  Taylor's 

DOOKStOre.  323  We»t  superior  Street.  Duluth. 


f.H~H~i~H"i":":"i"i"i-i"i..;»i..i..:..i..i..:.ii..:..i,.|..i,.T,,t.,j..j..|. 


! 

VVashinirton.   March     16.— The     presi- 
(Unt  today  sent  to  ihn  s.-nate  the  fol- 
,  luwingr  noniiaaticms:     State— To  he  am- 
bassador extraordinary     and     plenipo- 
tentiar>-  of  the     I'nited     States,     John 
iHay.  ^of    the    District    of  Columbia,    to 
!  (Jreat   Britain:   Horace  Porter,  of  New 
Vorlt,    to    Frane?;      Henry      White,      of 
Rhode  Island,  to  be  secretary     of     the 
vmUui^sy  of  the  United  States  to  Great 
liritain. 

John  Hay  is  a  native  of  India,  .".9  years 
<'f  age.  He  graduated  at  Brown  uni- 
versity in  1S.-„S.  and  began  the  practice 
of  law  m  Illinois  in  1S61.  President 
i^mcciin  appointed  iiim  a.ssistani  secre- 
tary, and  kept  him  in  that  capacity 
throughout  his  administration.  He  also 
acted  as  Lincoln's  adjutant  and  aide- 
cle-cainp,  and  was  l>reveted  lieutenant 
colonel  and  colonel.  Kntering  the  dip- 
lomatic  service  in  the  'eo's.  he  was  at 
various  times  in  charge  at  Vienna,  .s.c- 
retary  at  Paris,  and  secretary  of  lega- 
tion, at  Madrid.  In  1S70  Mr.  Hay  con- 
nected  himself  with  the  pre.ss,  and  for 
nearly  six  years  devoted  him.s.Mf  to  edi- 
torial  work  on  the  New   York  Tribune 

In  1S7..  he  entered  politics,  taking  at- 
a(  tlve  part  in  the  presidential  cam. 
l)aigns  of  1S76-1XS0  and  KSS4.  being  then 
a  resident  of  Cbneland.  Ohio.  President  1 
Hayes  appointed  him  as  a.ssistant  sec- 
retary of  state,  which  post  he  filled  fot 
nearly  three  years.  Since  liis  retire- 
ment from  office.  Col.  Hav  has  resided 
chiefly   in    this  city,   where   he  occupies 


2000  HOMELESS. 

Flood  Stricken  People  Cared 
For  In  Memphis. 

Memphis,  Tenn.,     March    16.— Nearly 
2(M)0  homeless  and  half-starved  persons 
rescued   from   the  over-flowed  districts 
of  Eastern   Arkansas   are   being   cared 
ffjr  in  this  city  today.    The  refugees  are 
niostly  negroes  of  the  lower  classes,  who 
show  scant  appreciation  of  the  charity 
extended.     The  citizens'   relief  commis- 
sion IS  practically  backed  |,y  unlimited 
<apital,  merchants,  bankers    and     cor- 
porations having  subscribed  great  sums 
of  money  to  prosecute  the  work  of  res- 
forty    miles    north    and    an    equal    dis- 
tance south  of  Memphis, 
cuing  the  inhabitants  of  the  territory 
The  entire  government  fleet  stationed 
here,   through  Capt.   Kit.h,  engine.M-  in 
charge,    has   been   pressed   into   service 
.Manned   by  crews     familiar     with     the 
lather  of  water.s.  the  fleet  gives  great 
assistance  to  other  steamers.    The  situ- 
ation today  is  critical.      News     is    ex- 
pected  hourly  of   breaks  in  the   levees 
in  r-ither  direction,  and  when  this  hap. 
pens,  as  it  surely  will,  the  loss  to  prop- 
erty and  stock  will  reach  into  the  thou- 
sands. 

The  first  loss  of  life  has  been  reported, 
a  whole  family  of  live  neKroes  having 
been  drowned  at  Marlon.  S.-nsational 
stories  (»f  ivholesale  drowning  at  No- 
dena.  Ark.,  are  denied  by  steamer  hands 
fresh  from  the  scene. 

The  gaujre  today  registers  3G.4  feet,  a 
rise  in  the  past  twenty-four  hours. 
Railway  trains  to  and  from  the  West 
arrive  and  depart  without  reference  to 
schedules.  All  tracks,  except  the  Iron 
Mountain,  ar*  submerged,  and  the 
Kansas  City  &  Little  Rock  roads  use 
the  Iron  Mountain's  roadway.  It  is  ex- 
pected by  night  that  the  rescued  steam- 
ers will  land  thousands  of  refugees  on 
the  Chickasaw   bluff.^. 

The    relief   committee    today   decided 

that  no  appeal   will   l)e  made  to  other 

cltieJ?   for  aid.        Resi)onses   from    local 

sources  have  been  so  liberal  as  to  make 

outside       contributions       unnecessary. 

;  Churches,    white    ami    < olored,    will    \h- 

I  thrown  open  to  shelter  white  and  l>lack 

refugees,  while  thousands  of  dollars  in 

cash  and  an  immense  amount  of  clothe.s 

I  and  provisions  will  do  the  work  of  car- 

i  ing  physically  for  the  sufferers. 


FIVE    O'CLOCK     EDITION. 


TWO  CENTS. 


House    Adopts    Laybourn's 

Car  Bill  as  Reported  By 

the  Committee. 


..,'iwLi''^*^  ''<^^"  <onstru.ted.  More  than 
-(MI.OOO  acres  of  land  had  been  patented 
to  It  and  much  of  it  .sold  to  third 
parties.  Three  governors,  two  attorneys 
general  and  the  supreme  court  had 
pas.sed  upon  the  question,  and  it  should 
be  allowed  to  rest.  Legislation  of  the 
kind  proposed  could  only  result  in  long- 
continued  liti-gation,  and  in  the  end  the 
road  would  surely  prevail. 


Lively  Debate  Over  the  Road 

and  Bridge  Fund  County 

Division. 


Day's     Labors    of     the 
State  Law-Makers  at 
St.  Paul. 


GREEKS  DESPONOENT. 

Because    France    Will    Stay 
With  the  Powers. 


L.  MKXDENHALL 


ESrABLI.SRED  lJ-69. 


Mendenhall  &  Hoopes 

FIE8T  NATIONAL  BANK  BUILDING. 

$12,500.00  to  Loan  on  Improved  Property. 


Commercial  Light  &  Power  Co, 

(Successors  to  Hartman  General  Electric  Co.) 

FURNISH 
ELECTRIC  CURRENT 

FOR  LIGHT  AND  POWER. 

0FFICE»-Room$4.  5  and  6.  216  West  Superior  street.    ...    Ouluth.  Minn. 


OEN.   HORACE  PORTER. 


NAVAL  RETIREMENTS,      j       FATAL  CHICAGO  FIRE. 

Which  Will  Change   Many   Im-  One  Woman  Burned  to  Death, 
portant  Officers.  Another  Fatally  Injured. 


V/ashington.  March  1«.— A  number  of 
important  changes  in  the  navy  will 
•xcur  within  the  n.xt  few  months  ii^ 
consequence  ot  the  compulsory  retire- 
ment, on  account  of  age.  of  the  three 
rankmg  ofTicers.  viz:  Rear  AOmiral 
<-x.  Krown.  commandant  at  the  Nor- 
folk  navy   yard,    who  retires   in   June- 

/^K  -^^T'':""  •^-  ^-  '^'alker,  chairman 
of  the  lighthouse  board,  who  retires  on 
the  :JOth  instant,  and  Rear  Admiral  F 
M.  Ramsay,  chief  of  the  bureau  of  navi- 
gation.  who  retires  early  next  month 
The  names  are  given  in  their  rank  ot 
seniority. 

It  is  expected  that  Capt.  W.  S. 
Schley,  in  command  of  the  New  York 
who  has  been  ordered  to  this  city  for 
duty  as  a  member  of  the  lighthouse 
board,  in  place  of  Rear  Admiral 
Walker,  relieved,  will  succeed  to  the 
chairmanship  of  the  board  vacated  by 
that  officer,  notwithstanding  he  is 
junior  in  rank  to  Gen.  J.  M.  Wilson, 
corps  of  engineers.  United  States  army, 
who  is  also  a  m-mber  of  the  board. 
While  the  latter  might  be  entitled  to  the 
chairmanship  on  account  of  his  su- 
perior rank,  it  is  not  likely  that  he  will 
be  a  candidate  for  the  office,  for  the 
reason  that  his  onerous  duties  at  the 
head  of  the  engineer  department  of  the 
army  would  not  permit  him  to  give  it 
the  attention  demanded  of  the  incum- 
b3i;t.  Although  there  are  three  armv 
and  three  naval  officers  on  the  board. 
the  chairmanship  has  always  been  re- 
?:arded  as  properly  belonging  to  the 
navy. 

There  is  considerably  more  uncer- 
tainty concsrning  the  prospective  as- 
signments  to  the  vacancies  at  the  head 
of  the  Norfolk  navy  yard,  and  the 
bureau  of  navigation,  but  it  is  expect- 
ed that  the  last  named  detail  v>ill  be 
announced  in  a  few  days.  The  place  is 
held  by  Rear  Admiral  Ramsay,  and  it 
IS  regarded  as  one  of  the  most  import- 
ant in  the  naval  service,  and  Secre. 
tary  I.,ong  will  take  all  the  time  at  his 
disposal  in  the  selection  of  his  succes- 
sor. Capt.  Evans  was  an  applicant 
under  the  last  administration,  but  it 
is  understood  he  is  no  longer  in  the 
field.  It  is  not  improbable  that  Com- 
modore Miler  will  be  chosen  for  the 
duty.  He  will  be  Rear  Admiral  before 
the  vacancy  occurs. 


Chictigo.  March  ItJ.— One  young  wo- 
man was  l)umed  to  death,  and  another 
'  probably  fatally  hurt  last  night,  in  a 
I  fire  which  destroyed  the  residence  of 
William  Spier,  No.  364P.  Vernon  avenue, 
air.  Spier,  who  is  an  invalid,  was  res- 
cued by  neighbors,  and  his  wife  and 
three  children  barely  had  time  to  escape 
from  the  building  l)efore  the  roof  fell 
Newman  Barl»ara.  18  years  old,  a  niece 
of  Mrs.  Spier,  was  imprisoned  on  the 
top  floor  of  the  building  Ijy  flames,  and 
her  body  burned  to  a  crisp.  The  re- 
mains were  recovered  by  the  firemen. 

Rose  Mayfleld.  16  years  old.  niece  of 
Mr.  Spier,  jumped  from  the  second 
story  window,  and  was  burned  about 
the  hands  and  face,  and  internaly  in- 
jured,  but  may  recover.  William  Spier. 
40  years  old.  an  invalid,  was  overcome 
by  smoke.  Mrs.  William  Spier,  38  years 
old.  was  burned  about  the  hands  and 
face.  The  Spier  home  is  in  a  fashion- 
able district,  and  the  fire  created  in. 
tense  excitement  among  the  residents 
in  the  vicinity.  The  nieces  were  on  a 
visit  to  the  family.  The  excitement  at- 
tending the  rescue  of  Mr.  Spier  greatly 
affected  him,  and  it  is  feared  the  result 
may  prove  serious. 


A   PRINTING    FAILURE. 
New  York.  March  16.— The  De  Leeuw 
and   Oppenheimer     Printing     company 
today    assigned      to     Rudolph     M.     De.  | 
L.eeuw.    The  company  was  incorporated  ' 
In  1896.  with  a  capital  stock  of  $100,000. 


VANDERBILT  RUMOR. 

Traffic   Interchange    With  the 
Great  Northern  Road 

Chicago,  March  16.— It  is  reported  on 
apparently  reliable  authority  that  the 
Vanderbilt  interests  have  entered  into 
an  agreement  with  J.  J.  Hill,  president 
of  the  Great  Northern  road,  for  a  close 
interchange  of  traffic  between  the  Great 
Northern  and  Chicago  &  Northwestern 
at  St.  Paul,  similar  in  effect  to  that  now 
in  existence  between  the  Union  Pacific 
and  the  Northwestern  at  Omaha.  The 
effect  of  such  an  agreement  would  be 
to  give  the  Vanderbilts  two  trans-con. 
tinental  routes,  and  would  give  thein 
a  practical  monopoly  of  the  trans-con- 
tinental traffic. 

The  boa'rd  of  managers  of  the  Joint 
Traffic  association  has  authorized  a 
one-fare  rate  for  the  round  trip  for  the 
convention  x)f  the  Epworth  league,  to 
be  held  at  Toronto,  Ont..  next  July.  The 
board  has  authorized  the  same  rate  for 
the  international  convention  of  the  Y 
M.  C.  A.,  to  be  held  at  Mobile,  Ala. 
April  21-25. 


a  palatial  home  in  Lafayette  park,  and 
has  devoted  himself  to  literature  with 
the  greatest  success,  some  of  his  besl 
known  works  being  "Pike  County  Bal- 
lads." "Castilion  Days."  and  a  history 
of  Lincoln,  written  in  co-laboration 
with  John  Nicolay.  John  Hay  has  also 
been  a  frequent  contributor  to  th" 
highest  class  of  periodicals,  and  to  him 
has  been  ascribed  the  authorship  of  the 
anonymous  nov.^1.  "The  Bread  Win- 
ners," which  caused  such  agitation  in 
labor  circles. 

Gen.  Horace  Porter  comes  of  revolu- 
tionary stock,  his  granfather.  Andrew 
Porter.  being  one  of  Washington'.^ 
most  valued  oflicer.^.  Gen.  Porter's 
father  was  David  Ptittenhous?  Porter 
at  erne  time  governor  of  Virginia  and  a 
prosperous  manufacturer.  Horace  Por- 
ter was  born  just  sixty  years  ago  in 
Huntington.  Pa.  He  was  well  educat- 
ed in  his  own  state,  at  Harvard,  and 
finally  at  West  Point.  Son  after  his 
graduation  from  the  military  academy 
he  was  a.ssigned  to  duty  in  th-  South, 
then  in  secession.  He  was  an  ordi- 
nance expert,  so  most  of  his  service  waa 
in  the  artillery  branch,  on  the  staffs  ot 
McClellan,  Rosencrans  and  Grant, 
where  he  earned  a  reputation  as  a  gal- 
lant and  fearless  fighter,  as  shown  by 
his  brevets. 

Gen.  Grant  was  greatly  attached  to 
Gen.  Horace  Porter,  and  made  him  as- 
I  sistant  secretary  of  war,  while  he  him- 
I  self  followed  the  secretaryship.  Gen. 
Porter  surrendered  his  army  commis- 
sion in  1873,  and  plunged  at  once  into 
active  business,  lieing  first  president  of 
the  West  Shore  railorad.  vice  president 
of  the  Pullman  Car  company,  and  as- 
sociating himself  with  other  great  cor- 
porations in  a  directive  capacity.  He 
is  well  known  in  the  field  of  literature, 
being  an  author  of  repute  and  a  much 
sought  after  public  speaker. 

The  appointment  of  H.  White  to  the 
secretary  of  the  American  embassy  in 
Great  Britain  is  practically  a  reap- 
pointment, as  Mr.  White  had  held  this 
office  for  eight  years  previous  to  th?  be- 
ginning of  Mr.  Cleveland's  last  admin- 
istration. He  has  been  in  London  most 
of  the  time  since  his  displacement,  and 
the  fact  was  brought  out,  after  his 
nomination  was  sent  to  the  senate  to- 
day that  he  had  rendered  Mr.  Olney 
important  service  in  the  recent  Vene- 
zuelan negotiations.  The  present  sec- 
retary.  Mr.  Roosevelt,  resigned  some 
time  ago. 


i      London,    March    16.— The    decision    of 
the    French    chamber   of    deputies    ap- 
1  proving  of  the  policy  of  France  in  ad- 
I  hering  to   the   conceit   of   the   powers, 
!  has  had  a  good  effe(  t  upon   the  stock 
I  exchange  here.     Con.^ols  went   up  5-16. 
Foreign  securities  were  firm.     Accord- 
ing to  a  Times  dispatch  from  Athens, 
a  tendency  towards  despondence  is  be- 
ginning  to    show    it-'-'-lf    at    the    Greek 
capital,  the  "last  hope  of  a  rupture  of 
the    concert    of    p:ur(.F)e    having      been 
shattered  by  the  decision  of  France  to 
join  in  the  coercion.' 

The  dispatch  adds:  "There  is  much 
speculation  as  to  whether  the  forces 
of  the  powers  will  proceed  to  active 
measures  against  Col.  Vasso's  troops. 
While  it  is  formally  announced  that 
orders  have  l)een  given  to  both  the 
Greek  troops  and  ships  in  Crete  to  op- 
po.se  force  by  force,  it  may  be  doubted 
whether  the  orders  have  really  been 
given.  Brave  words,  however,  are  in- 
dispensable in  the  prevailing  popular 
mood.  The  king  and  the  government 
have  no  choice  but  to  swim  with  the 
tide." 

The  Daily  llail  says:  "The  vagaries 
of  a  cei^ain  ccmtinental  sovereign  ar^ 
causing  profound  anxiety  to  his  family 
and  especially  to  the  diplomats  who 
recognize  that  the  concert  of  Europe 
may  at  any  moment  be  disturijed.  Pin- 
ching guests  and  trying  to  trip  them 
with  his  sword  are  among  the  antics 
attributed   to   the   insane  sovereign." 

The  paragraph  unmistakably  hints 
at  Emperor  William,  of  Germany. 
NO  BLOCKADE  ANNOUNCED. 
Canea.  Island  of  Crete,  March  10, 
noon.— At  this  hour  the  admirals  of  the 
foreign  fleets  have  not  yet  i)roclaimed 
the  bk)ckade  of  the  Island  of  Crete,  as 
decided  on  by  the  powers. 

The  Greek  squadron,  with  the  excep- 
tion of  two  vessels,  has  left  Cretan 
waters,  and  the  two  vessels  referred  to 
ar^  pieparing  to  lea\'e. 


St.  Paul.  March  16.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.)— In  the  house  this  morning 
the  railroad  committee  presented  its 
report  on  the  Laybourn  railroad  car 
bill,  stated  in  these  dispatches  today, 
and  the  report  was  adopted. 

The  resolution  dividing  the  road  and 
l>ridge  fund  among  countiee  not  having 
state  institutions  was  called  up.  Mr. 
Grondahl  wanted  to  amend  by  also  ex- 
cepting all  counties  that  have  sent  in- 
mates to  any  state  institution.  An  ac- 
tive discussion  ensued,  the  second  dis- 
trict members  especially  complaining 
that  they  were  not  being  given  their 
fair  share  of  this  internal  improvement 
fund,  and  being  backed  up  by  the  Sixth 
and  Seventh  districts. 

Mr.  Hartshorn,  of  the  roads  and 
bridges  committee,  argued  in  opposition 
to  the  resolution  and  in  defense  of  his 
committee.  Mr.  Staoles  moved  to  in- 
definitely postpone  the  resolution  and 
Rive  the  matter  to  the  committee 
Finally,  after  forty-five  minutes'  warm 
discussion,  Mr.  Jacobson  suggested  that 
the  matter  had  been  sufficientlv  called 
to  the  attention  of  the  committee,  and 
Mr.  Lar.son  then  withdrew  his  resolu- 1 
lion. 

The  Reeves  bill,  to  tax  mineral  lands 
and  providing  for  a  tonnage  tax  of  S 
cents  upon  the  output  of  iron  mines, 
has  been  made  a  soecial  order  in  the 
hou.se  for  2:30  Thursday  afternoon. 

DOINGS  Of"tHE  senate. 

Can  Erection  of  Another  Hos- 
pital Be  Obviated? 

St.  Paul,  March  16.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.)— The  senate's  session  today 
was  rather  dull.  Senator  Miller's  reso- 
lution to  examine  into  the  condition  of 
the  state  insane  hospitals,  and  see  if 
by  pa.ssage  of  the  bills  to  reduce  the 
population  of  the  hospitals  now  before 
the  senate,  the  necessity  for  a  new 
hospital  for  the  present  could  not  be 
obviated,  was  discussed  at  some  length 
and  finally  adopted. 

.4mong  the  new  bills  was  one  by  Sen- 
ator Ozmun,  to  establish  a  probation 
system  for  juvenile  delinquents,  and 
one  by  Senator  Dunham,  repealing  th.^ 
law  requiring  corporations  to  pay  fees 
into  the  state  treasury  on  filing  articleii 
of  association. 


SOLICITOR  GENERAL 

Bob  Evans  of  Minneapolis  May 
Be  Selected. 

Washington,  March  16.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— John  Goodnow  and  T.  E. 
Byrnes,  of  Minneapolis,  are  the  latest 
politicians  to  arrive  in  Washington 
from  Minnesota.  Mr.  Byrnes  declares 
that  he  is  not  here  to  get  ap- 
poinefed  to  any  office,  nor  to  push  the 
claims  of  any  one  els-.  It  is  whispered 
h.jweyer  that  Byrnes  will  l.e  candi- 
date for  United  States  district  attorney 
lor  Minnesota,  when  the  term  of  the 
presMit  Democratic  incumbent  expires 
about  two  years  hence. 

Mr.  Goodnow  also  states  that  he  does 
not  want  any  oflice.  It  is  believed 
however,  that  he  has  come  to  Wash- 
ington to  end?avor  to  have  something 
to  say  al)out  the  distribution  of  Minne- 
sota patronage. 

Robert  G.  Evans,  of  Minneapolis  h^ 
.said  to  be  an  avowed  candidate  for  so- 
licitor general  of  the  United  States 
with  excellent  chances  of  being  ap- 
pointed. He  will  have  the  backing  of 
Senator  Davis  and  Senator  Fairbanks 
of  Indiana. 


Nebraska's   Metropolis    Ex- 
cited Over  Its  New  City 
Charter. 


Old  A.  P.  A.  Police  and  Fire 

Boards  Are  Legislated 

Out  of  Office. 


CAUCUS  NOT  FAVORED. 

Only  Two  Minnesota  Members 
Favor  the  Idea. 

Washington,  March  16.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— There  are  no  indications 
today  of  any  move  being  made  soon  for 
a  caucus  of  the  Minnesota  delegation 
to  fix  up  an  appointment  slate.  There 
are  two  or  three  in  the  delegation  who 
arc-  anxious  for  the  delegation  to  have 
such  a  meeting  and  try  and  get  to- 
gether on  appointment  matters.  They 
believe  that  if  the  delegation  could 
agree,  the  state  would  fare  much  bet- 
ter  than  will  l)e  the  case  if  there  is  no 
attempt  to  settle  the  vexatious  patron- 
age question  in  a  caucus. 

Morri.s  and  HeatwoI;>  favor  a  caucus, 
but  Fletcher  and  the  others  do  not  ap- 
pear at  all, anxious  to  have  one.  The 
senators,  it  seems,  much  prefer  to  get 
along  without  caucus  dictation. 

DEADLY   GASOLINE. 

Singular  and  Fatal  Accident 
to  an  Omaha  Family. 

Omaha,  Neb..  March  16.— Charles 
Rodatinsky.  with  his  wife,  started  from 
Omaha  this  morning  to  find  a  new- 
home.  The  family  was  in  a  covered 
wagon  with  a  gasoline  stove.  Just  bo- 
fore  starting  on  the  journey  a  fire  was 
lighted  in  the  stove.  Befpre  driving  a 
block  the  stove  exploded  and  the  team 
ran  away.  Before  help  could  reach 
them  the  occupants  of  the  wagon  were 
fatally  burned. 


Tliey   Will  Resist   the   New 

Board  Appointed  By  the 

Governor. 


Omaha,  March  16.— Two  minutes  be- 
fore midnight  last  night  a  bill  which 
had  been  passed  under  party  pressure, 
was  filed  with  the  secretary  of  state 
giving  Omaha  a  new  charter.  It  turns 
out  the  board  of  fire  and  police  com- 
missioners, concerning  the  appointment 
of  which  there  was  such  a  turmoil  two 
years  ago.  and  gives  John  HolcomI) 
the  right  to  name  the  new  board.  This 
right  was  promptly  exercised  this 
morning  when  Governor  Holcomb 
named  the  four  appointive  members 
of  the  lM>ard. 

These  with  Mayor  Broatch.  as  ex- 
officio  chairman,  constitute  the  new 
board.  The  old  board  which  was  or- 
ganized under  the  A.  P.  A.  law  of  two 
years  ago,  has  decided  to  resist,  and 
the  old  fight  seems  to  be  wide  open 
once  more. 

The  new  charter  also  legislates  out 
of  office  the  entire  city  government  and 
provides  for  a  new  election  to  be  held 
within  thirty  days.  It  opens  the  wav 
to  what  will  be  the  warmest  political 
campaign  ever  experienced  in  Omaha. 

The  bill  was  prepared  l)y  the  fusion 
leaders  of  the  state  and  was  put 
through  both  branches  of  the  house 
under  party  pressure,  the  object  being 
to  .secure  control  of  the  Omaha  muni- 
cipal government  now  in  the  hands  of 
the  Republicans. 


SNOW  MELTING. 

"Chinook  Winds  Will  Do  Good 
I  In  the  Dakotas. 

'  Minneapolis.  March  16.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Specials  to  the  Journal 
from  Bismarck  and  other  Western 
North  Dakota  points,  state  that  the 
snow  is  rapidly  melting  under  chinook 
winds.  Twenty-four  hours  ago  the 
mercury  at  Bismarck  was  36  below. 
This  noon  it  is  50  above.  This  will  prob- 
ably save  the  lives  of  many  thousapda 
of  cattle  that  were  dying  from  cold 
and  hunger. 


TWO  WILL  DIE. 

A  Train  Wreck  Near  Chicago 
Will  Result  Fatally. 

Chicago,  March  16.— Five  men  were 
injured,  two  of  them  fatally,  In  a  rail- 
road accident  at  La  range,  last  even- 
ing. A  m.oat  train,  bound  for  Ham- 
mond, Ind.,  jumped  the  tracks  on  the 
Belt  line  of  the  Chicago,  Hammond  & 
Western  railway.  The  engine  was 
"ditched,"  two  of  the  cars  were  tele- 
scoped, and  the  remainder  of  the  train 
thrown  from  the  track.  The  fatally  in- 
jured are: 

George  Maxwell,  fireman.  inhaled 
steam  and  severely  sialded. 

Charles  Merryweather,  brakeman, 
leg  broken  and  internally  injured. 

The  injuries  of  the  other  three  art 
severe,  but  they  will  recover.  The  ac- 
cident  is  attributed  to  the  engine, 
which  is  an  old-fashioned  pattern,  and 
has  no  small  truck  wheels  or  "rollers." 

HUNTER  WILL  BE  SENATOR. 
Cincinnati.  March  16.— A  Times  Star 
special  from  Frankfort,  Ky.,  says: 
Much  interest  was  aroused  over  the  ac- 
tion of  the  senate  upon  the  motion  to 
refer  the  credentials  of  four  new  Re- 
publicans and  one  new  Democratic 
senator  to  the  judiciary  committee. 
After  a  long  debate  in  which  one  gold 
Democrat  said  he  would  oppose  the 
motion,  a  vote  was  taken  and  the  mo- 
tion defeated,  yeas,  11;  nays.  19,  Six 
gold  Democrats  voted  with  the  Repub- 
licans. The  new  senators  were  then 
seated.  This  is  regarded  as  removing 
all  doubt  of  the  election  of  Hunter,  the 
Republican  caucus  nominee  for  United 
States  senator. 


TROOPS  FOR  THE  HANGING. 
Frankfort,  Ky., March  16.— The  Frank- 
fort company  (McCreary  guards)  are 
under  orders  to  leave  Frankfort  next 
Friday  for  Newport  to  help  preserve 
order  at  the  Jackson-Walling  hang- 
ing. 


NEW  RAILROAD  CORPORATION. 

Harrisburg,  Pa.,  March  16.— The  Erie 
Eastern  Railway  company,  capitalized 
at  $250,000,  was  chartered  today  by  the 
state  department  to  build  a  railroad 
from  the  Erie  harbor  to  connect  with 
the  Erie  railroad  at  MUlvillage,  Erie 
county,  via  Waterford.  A.  L.  Tilden, 
of  Laboef,  is  president  of  the  company. 


IRON  ORE  MATTERS. 

Laybourn's  Independent  Ship- 
per Relief  Bill  Favored. 

St.  Paul,  March  16.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.)— In  the  railroad  committee 
meeting  last  night  Mr.  Laybourn's  bill 
providing  that,  in  the  event  a  railroad 
is  unable  to  provide  cars  for  a  period  oi 
ninety  days  or  more,  the  shipper  may 
furnish  his  own  cars,  of  standard  size, 
and  the  railroad  must  haul  and  return 
them  for  a  reasonable  wheelage  charge, 
to  be  fixed  by  the  railroad  commission 
in  the  event  the  shipper  and  the  rail- 
road are  unable  to  agree,  was  recom- 
mended to  pass. 

Mr.  Laybourn  explained  that  the  bili 
was  designed  to  afford  relief  for  the  in- 
dependent iron  mines.  The  two  rail- 
roads into  the  iron  countrv  allow  the 
independent  miner  to  get  his  product  to 
market  by  furnishing  his  own  cars. 
There  was  no  opposition  to  the  bill 

The  Meyers  and  Feig  bills  fixing  the 
charge  for  hauling  iron  ore  at  5  and  7 
mills  per  ton  per  mile  respectively  wer" 
set  for  consideration  on  Wednesday 
evening.  There  was  some  discussion  in 
the  committee  to  consider  the  bills 
last  evening,  but  Mr.  Schmidt  urged 
that  an  opportunity  be  given  the  inter- 
ested parties  to  appear.  Speaker  Jones, 
who  was  present,  took  occasion  to  urge 
the  committee  not  to  undulv  delay 
action.  He  said  that  as  speaker  he  felt 
sensitive  about  criticisms  he  had  heard 
made  against  the  railroad  committee. 

DULUTH  A  IRON  RANGE. 

Its  Land  Grant  Forfeiture  Dis- 
cussed at  St.  Paul. 

St.  Paul.  March  16.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.)— The  house  committee  on  pub- 
lic lands  took  up  the  bill  forfeiting  the 
Duluth  &  Iron  Range  grant  last  evening 
for  the  purpose  of  hearing  Attorney  J. 
H.  Chandler,  of  Chicago,  representing 
the  road,  in  opposition  to  the  bill.  Mr 
Chandler  said  that  he  did  not  oppose 
the  bill  so  much  as  a  matter  of  law  as 
a  matter  of  policy.  He  contended  that 
it  would  entail  endless  litigation,  not 
only  by  the  company,  but  on  the  pan 
of  those  who  had  in  good  faith  pur- 
chased lands  from  the  road.  He  went 
over  the  history  of.  the  legislation  in- 
volved in  the  grant  in  detail. 

Mr.  Chandler  then  took  up  the  liti- 
gation between  the  Minneapolis  &  St 
Cloud  railroad  and  the  Duluth  &  Winni- 
peg, in  which  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range 
had  intervened.  The  same  tract  of  land 
was  given  to  all  three  roads  to  enable 
them  to  get  into  court.  The  state  was 
not  a  party  to  the  action,  but  Mr 
Chandler  contended  that  every  question 
which  the  state  could  possiblv  raise 
with  respect  to  this  grant  had  been 
raised  in  that  case,  and  all  had  been 
adjudicated  by  the  sunreme  court  o: 
the  state  in  favor  of  the  Duluth  &  Iron 
Range. 

In  short,  the  legislature  had  intended 
to  make  a  grant  and  had  done  so.  The 
road  had  accepted  it  in  good  faith.    Its 


ST.  LOUIS'  FIRE. 

Loss  Will  Exceed  $1,600,000 
—Insurance  $1,000,000. 

St.  Louis,  March  16.— Noting  re- 
mains of  the  big  block  covering 
Eighth  and  Charles  streets  and  Wash- 
ington avenue,  occupied  by  the  Ely. 
Walker  Dry  Goods  company,  but  a 
mass  of  ruins.  At  1  o'clock  today  the 
flames  had  not  entirely  been  subdued, 
and  jat  least  half  a  dozen  streams  were 
playing  on  the  smouldering  mass.  A 
conservative  estimate  places  the  total 
loss  at  ?1, 600,000. 

The  Ely-Walker  stock  of  goods,  val- 
ued at  about  $1,200,000,  is  a  total  loss. 
The  loss  on  the  building,  which  was 
owned  by  John  R.  Lionb;'rger,  is  esti- 
mated at  $300,000. 

The  adjoining  building  ow^ned  by 
Liggett  &  Meyers,  was  damaged  to  the 
coctent  of  about  $10,000.  The  Versteeg- 
Grant  Shoe  company  estimate  their 
loss  at  $25,000,  as  the  result  of  water. 
The  Gauss-Shelton  company,  estimate 
Uheir  loss  at  about  $25,000  from  the 
.same  cause,  and  the  Kelly-Goodfellow 
company  at  about  $.5000.  The  insurance 
aggregates  $1,000,000. 

A  defective  electric  light  wire  is  sup- 
posed to  have  caused  the  fire. 


A  MOTHER'S  PLEA. 

Sensational  Scene  in  the  Cov- 
ington, Kentucky,  Jail. 

Louisville,  March  16.— A  special  to 
the  Times  from  Covington.  Ky..  says: 
This  morning  at  the  Alexandria  jail. 
Mrs.  Walling  .suddenly  walked  over  to 
Scott  Jackson  and  cried:  "Save  my 
son;  you  can  do  it  by  telling  the  truth." 

Jackson  was  visibly  startled,  but 
denied  that  he  had  concealed  any- 
thing he  knew.  Mrs.  Walling  persist- 
ed that  he  had  not  told  the  truth  and 
he  was  dragging  her  son  to  the  scaf- 
fold. Guards  interfered  and  quieted 
her.  She  left  the  jail  weeping  bitter- 
ly. Jackson  was  much  agitated  even 
after  her  departure. 


PROSPEROUS  B.  &  O. 
Baltimore.  March  16.— The  earnings 
of  the  Baltimore  &  Ohio  Railroad  com- 
pany for  the  month  of  February,  1897, 
were  $1,725,235,  an  increase  of  $187,230 
over  the  month  of  February,  1896.  The 
increase  for  the  eight  months  of  the 
fiscal  year  was  $1,100,476. 


A  SHATTERED  IDOL 

Chicago-St.    Paul    Passenger 
Pool  Nearly  Collapsed. 

Chicago,     March      16.— The      Tribune 
says:    The  Chicago-St.  Paul  passenger 
pool  is  on  Its  last  legs.     It  was  organ- 
ized two  years  ago  for  the  purpose  of 
securing   an   equitable   division   of  the 
passenger  traffic  between  Chicago  and 
St.  Paul  and  Minneapolis,  but  no  divi. 
sion  of  business  has  been  made  since 
the  pool   was  organized,   and  competi- 
tion  has    reigned   as  active  as   before 
The  strong  lines  have  carried  the  bulk 
of  the  traflic  at  the  expense  of  the  weak 
lines     Threats   to    withdraw    from    the 
pool  by  the  lines  which  failed  to  carry 
the  percentage  allotted  to  them  caused 
a  meeting  of  passenger  officials  of  in- 
terested roads  to  be  held  at  Chairman 
Caldwell's  office  to  settle  existing  diffi- 
culties. 

The  strong  lines  expressed  a  willing, 
ness  to  turn  business  over  to  the  lines 
which  were  short,  but  the  Chicago- 
Great  Western  emphatically  refused  to 
give  up  business  it  had  already  con- 
tracted for  to  other  roads.  As  a  result. 
It  IS  understood,  several  of  the  weak 
lines  will  give  notice  of  withdrawal 
from  the  pool  in  a  few  days. 

SECRETARY  SHERMAN. 

Talks  Nicaraguan  Canal  to  the 
Senate's  Foreign  Committee. 

Washington,  March  16.— Secretai-y  of 
State  Sherman  today  met  the  senate 
committee  on  foreign  relations  by  his 
own  appointment  and  was  closeted 
with  them  for  some  time.  The  prin. 
cipal  subject  under  consideration  is 
understood  to  have  been  the  Nicaragua 
canal.  It  is  understood  that  an  at- 
tempt is  being  made  to  negotiate  an- 
other treaty  similar  to  that  made  by 
Secretary  Frelinghuysen,  which  was 
withdrawn  at  the  beginning  of  Mr. 
Cleveland's  first  administration. 

Secretary  Sherman,  when  discussing 
the  Rodriguez  letter  and  the  old  Nicar- 
aguan bill,  indicated  his  desire  to  ne- 
gotiate a  treaty  on  the  old  lines,  and 
supported  the  contention  made  In  th« 
letter.  The  probabilities  are  that  in 
case  a  new  treaty  is  made  in  regard  to 
the  canal,  it  will  be  upon  the  lines  of 
the  Frelinghuysen  agreement.  Secre- 
tary Sherman's  long  connection  with 
the  senate  led  him  to  consult  the 
senate  before  any  definite  terms  of 
agreement  were  made. 


THE  CHESS  CONTEST. 
New  York,  March  16.— The  eleventh 
game  of  the  match  between  Pillsbury 
and  Show-alter,  chess,  adjourned  late 
last  night  at  the  Hamilton  club,  Brook- 
lyn, was  resumed  at  an  early  hour  this 
morning,  and  was  finally  won  by  Pills- 
bury  after  66  moves.  Score:  Pillsbury 
5;  Showalter,  4;  drawn,  2.  The  twelfth 
game  will  be  played  on  Wednesday  at 
the  Hamilton  club. 


THE  CUMBERLAND  BOOMING 
Nashville.  Tenn..  March  16.— The 
Cumberland  river  registered  42»A  feet  at 
this  point  today  and  is  rising  steadily 
It  is  believed  the  river  will  reach  a 
stage  of  45  feet  here,  and  may  exceed 
this  figure. 


MITCHELL  AFTER  JOHN  L. 
London,  March  16.— Charley  Mitchell, 
the   pugilist,    deposited   $2500   today   to 
bind  a  match  with  John  L.  Sullivan. 


INDIA'S  FAMINE. 

Nearly  2,000,000  People  Are 
Receiving  Government  Aid. 

Lucknow,  India,  March  16.— The  spe- 
cial reporter  of  the  Associated  Press 
has  just  completed  an  exhaustive  tour 
of  the  Northwest.  In  an  area  of  400  by 
200  miles.  1,750,000  persons  are  receiving 
governmental  relief.  Owing  to  the 
government's  timely  grasp  of  the  situ- 
ation, the  correspondent  did  not  leant 
a  single  Instance  of  death  from  starva. 
tion  during  the  whole  tour. 

DR.  NANSEN  HONORED. 
Cambridge,  N.  J..  March  16.— The  hon- 
orary  degree  of  doctor  of  science  waa 
conferred  here  today  upon  Dr.  Nansen. 
the  Arctic  explorer,  who  was  accorded 
a  most  flattering  reception. 

CAPTAIN  ROBERTSON  DEAD 
Oswego.  N.  Y..  March  16.— Capt. 
Andrew  Robertson,  a  well  known  lake 
captain  and  father  of  Morgan  Robert- 
.son,  the  writer  of  nautical  stories,  died 
today  after  a  prolonged  illness.  He 
was  80  years  old. 


OCEA'N     STEAMSHIPS. 
Queenstown  —Arrived:         Catelonia, 
Boston,  for  Liverpool. 


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I— 


Central    American    Exposi- 
tion In  Full  Blast  In  Guat- 
emala City. 


Will  Continue  for  Six  Months 

and  Is  International 

In  Scope. 


^^     ""^^^^^.y^^^    ^^^^    ^HESB^Y,    MARCH    16,    1897. 


A  Great  Place  forS^htseers 

With  Interesting  Side 

Trips. 


Many  a  tmianess  man 
Irbo  is  envied  by  his  as- 
sociates   and     acquaint, 
•nces    as   a  "lucky  fel- 
low" stands  but  a  step 
firom  the  g^ve.     He  has 
purchased  success  at  the 
cost  of  health.    For  every 
step  forward  in  wealth  he  has  uken  two 
backward  in  health.      Now  that  he  has  al- 
most achieved  his  ambition  as  a  money-gfel 
ter,  he  is  standing  on  the  verge  of  his  grave. 
Just  one  more  big  business  strain— just  014 


celled  anywhere^ 

Pew  buildings  have-  escapect<  the  ter- 
rible  thrd«is  of     the     m6hst«i-s   which 
tow«^ie.eo»-or  more -fee^  »bove>-the  de- 
voted rtty.  first  in  1541,  and  then  every 
few  years  till   1773.   when  most  of  the 
Inhabitants  fled,   the  people  stctod   the 
tei*ror  of  earthquake  and  flood,   every 
time   losing   lives   and    property.      Still 
there  are  over  aK600^  inhabitants  now  on 
the    9lte    of    these    disasters.        Indian 
towns  atud  the  sides  of  the  volcanoes, 
each  tribe  having  its  own  peculiar  cus- 
toms and  dress.     All   these  people  arc 
industrious,    making    pottery,    baskets 
and  woodenware.  and  others  work  on 
the   nearby    coffee    and    sugar   planta- 
tions.    Once  in  Antigua,  an  ascent  of 
Volcan  de  Agua  (over  14,000  feet  above 
sea    level)    would    give    the   traveler   a 
good  view  of  the  country  from  the  Pa- 
cific to  the  Atlantic  oceans  on  a  clear 
day. 

Oautemala  city  is  by  no  mean^  as  far 
away  as  many  believe,  and  there  is 
more  than  one  way  of  reaching  it. 
Sailing  from  New  York  on  one  of  the 


Business  Beginning  to  Reign 

Smoothly  at  the  White 

House. 


solid  flesh,  and  stront;  nerves.  When  the 
arteries  are  filled  with  rich,  pure  blood,  a 
man  doesn't  easily  break  down  or  get  sick. 
He  can  stand  almost  any  amount  of  work  or 
strain.  The  "Golden  Medical  Discovery" 
corrects  the  all-embracing  disorders  that 
Uuatemala  City,  Guetamala.  March  cause  all  manner  of  disease.  It  corrects  dis- 
15.— (Copyright  1897.  by  the  Associated  "ders  of  the  digestion,  irregularities  of  the 
Pres8.)-The    Central    American    expo- i'^'"' *'"* '"P""  *''°*»**-  ^"^rists  sell  it. 

sition.    formalv  opened   today  and    will  i      " I. ''«s  nfflicted  with  pimples  and  boils,  and 
_  .  '       \^  -^  ninninpsoresonfaceand  neck,' writes  Roberts 

remain  open  for  the  next  four  months.     Wert,  of  No.  615  Galloway  Ave..  Columbus  Ohio' 

The  first  idea  was  to  have  an  exhibit     I^A'mI'I.'^.^-I.V.v""'' ^^''  .."?^''  Dr.  Pierce'i 
,  ,.         .  ^jvniuii      Golden  Medical  Discovery  and  Pleasant  PeUete" 

or  notnmsr  but  Central  American  pro-  1  before  I  had  taken  four  bottles  I  was  cured."  ' 
ducts.  It  was  soon  seen  that,  though  |  Every  family  should  have  Dr.  Pierce's  I 
these  five  republics  are  extremely  rich  |  Common  Sense  Medical  Adviser.  The 
In  raw  material  of  every  kind  they  ?,"°'^  ^^^  *'**?P.***'-^o—»t'' regular  price. 
.„u,d  n„,  expec,  .„  .„„c.  ,h,  „„.,<,  ,  %rA4."ToVS  'i^pl^o  JSj 
by  that  alone,  so  the  original  plan  was     the  cost  of  mailing  only,  will  procure  you 


more  step  backward  in  health— and  he  will    <^olon  steamers,  port  is  reached  within 

step  into  his  grave.     No  man  has  the  right    "    "">'•»' ■ —  "--   .-^ 

to  gain  money  at  the  expense  uf  health.  He 
owes  something  to  wife  and  children — some- 
thing to  himself  He  may  have  health  easily 
»Dr.  Pierce's  Golden  Medical  Discover}* 
makes  men  and  women  strong  and  well.  It 
wards  off  disease.     It   makes  pure  blood, 


Additional   Press   Facilities 

Accorded  Reporters  By 

Secretary  Porter. 


President     McKInley     Will 

Take  Time  to  Attend  to 

His  Health. 

Washington.  March  16.— Business  be- 


modifled  .««o  a.«»  to  include  a  general  ex 
position  of  foreign  goods  as  well.  This 
measure  encountered  opposition  from 
many  of  the  native  artisans  and  manu- 
facturers who  feared  f.irei^n  competi- 
tion in  their  respective  lines,  but.  as 
it  was  soon  pointed  out,  native  indus- 
tries are  In  a  very  rudimentary  stat." 
and  much  wa.s  to  be  learned  from  for- 


the  book  ia  strong  paper  covers,  post-paid. 
Or  you  can  have  the  book  in  elegant 
cloth  binding,  for  10  cents  extra;  31  cents  ia 
•11.  World's  Di!;pensary  Medical  Associa* 
tioQ,  Boffalo^  M.  Y. 


White  House.  The  malls  are  enor- 
mous and  the  clerical  force  is  heavily 
taxed  t»  keep  up  with  the  rush,  yet 
there  is  a  system  about  the  proceed- 
ings that  facilitates  the  transaction  of 
a  great  deal  of  business  in  a  short  time 
The  president  himself,  is  to  be  credit- 


as  running  expenses  up  to  closing  day 
the  30th  of  June  next. 
It  would  not  be  supposed  that  a  small 
eign  land.«t.  the  backers~of The  broader  !  T'""""*  ''*^^  ''^'^  would  be  hard  to  uet 
principle  prevailed.  .  I' "^  a  rich  country  like  Guatemala  with 

The  als.sembly  voted  over  $1  000  000  '  '^^  ^**  banks  having  a  combined  capl- 
for  the  huilding.s.  and  contracts!  were  i  **'  "'  a^'>ut  $20,000,000  and  paying 
-signed  with  a  French  firm  for  the  main  "^  '^  *°  ^"^  P^""  *^^"^  I'**'"  annum  in  dl- 

edifire.  which  arrived  several  months  i  \'*^^n^''':  nevertheless,  there  have  been 
ago  from  Bordeaux,  and  ivhich  la  now  I  *'^^^  during  the  last  couple  of  years 
in  fair  way  to  be  finished  hy  the  end  of  I  ""^n  busmes  men.  as  well  as  part  of 
the  week.  The  frames  of  most  of  the  !  *"^  Press,  thought  that  the  exposition 
buildings  are  of  iron  and  they  are  dis-    )\°"'<^  either  not  take  place  at  all.  or, 


tributed  over  a  surface  of  some  twen 
ty  odd  acres.  The  grounds,  including 
the  Reform  park,  cover  an  area  of  over 
800  acres. 

The  Guatemala  exhibit  contains  most 
of  the  native  products,  but  the  same 
building   contains    sections    for    Salva- 


if  it  did.  would  be  a  failure.  Then, 
the  uprising  in  Chiquimula  and  the 
subsequent  mobilization  of  troops  and 
the  trials  of  some  200  prisoners  all 
caused  expense  to  the  government  and 
a  stringency  in  the  money  market. 
The  atack  on  Concepclon  and     Esqui- 


dor.  Costa  Rica.  Honduras  and  Xlcar-  P"'*^  ^5'  »  small  band  of  Insurgents  last 
agua.  Special  buildings  are  occupied  January,  although  promptly  put  down, 
by  exhibitors  from  Germany  France  '  ^"**  ^**^  principal  ringleaders  dealt  with 
the  United  States.  Italy.  Belgium  and  i  ^^^'^''^•y-  has  again  helped  the  dissatis- 
England.  Numerous  kisoks  have  been  '  ^^^  '"  predicting  that  few  foreigners 
erected  for  refreshments,  music  stands  ^^**"'<^  ^'*slt  the  fair.  They  pointed, 
and  for  the  service  of  the  police  Many  ^'*"'  ^"  ^^^  presidential  campaign, 
thought  that  a  machinery  hall  and  ^^h'^*^  ^^s  already  begun  In  several  de- 
electrlcal  exhibit  would  be  superfluous  Payments,  and  that  no  less  than  four 
but    after   cnn«<HapaHi<^   >4i..^..„_i »t--'  '  candidates.     Morales,     Reyna,     Castillo 

and  Fuentes,  are  already  in   the  field. 

thus  bringing  about  complications  and 


a  week,  crossing  the  isthmus  by  rail, 
the  tourist  embarks  on  a  Pacific  Mall 
line  steamer  for  the  port  of  San  Jose, 
which  he  reaches  in  four  or  five  days. 
As  a  heavy  surf    beats    against     this 
coast,  vessels  do  not  go  up  to  the  piers, 
so  the  landing  has  to  be  made  In  large 
cargo    boats,    which    is    unpleasant    to 
many.    After  being  hauled  up  on  a  high 
Iron  pier  and  paying  the  dues,  baggage 
inspection  begins,  and  within  an  hour 
the  passenger  is  on  his  way,  over  the 
Central  railroad,  an     American    enter- 
prise, to  the  capital,  which  he  reaches 
in  the  course  of  some  six  hours.     Pas- 
sengers from  New  Orleans  can  also  con- 
nect  with   this  route  at  Colon.    Those 
who  sail   from     San     Francisco,     Cal 
reach  the  port  of  San  Jose,  on  the  Pa- 
cific, In  about  fourteen  davs. 

For  a  quick,  varied  trip."  any  of  the 
steamers  sailing  from  New  York,  New 
Orleans  or  Mobile,  could  be  taken,  and 
In  from  five  to  seven  days  they  could 
land  at  the  pretty  town  of  Puerto 
Barrios.  The  bay  there  is  almost  land- 
locked, and  the  largest  steamers  come 
up  to  the  pier,  which,  like  the  railroad 
(Ferro  Carril  al  Yorte)  was  built  by  and 
belongs  to  the  government.  Owing  to 
the  heat.  It  is  generally  well  for  the 
new  comer  to  tarry  but  a  short  time  at 
any  coast  town.  Nevertheless,  a  day 
or  two  can  be  profitably  spent  there, 
and  accommodations  at  the  railroad 
hotel,  lately  put  up  by  Americans,  are 
very  good. 

On  reaching  Zacapa.  where,  by  the 
way.  hotel  accommodations  might  be 
better,  mules  can  be  €ngagd  for  the  trip 
to  the  capital.  If  the  tourist  ha.^  time 
several  interesting  side-excursions  can 
be  made  from  there,  specially  to  the 
celebrated  shrine  of  Esqulpulas.  Thou- 
sands come  from  far  away  New  Mexico 
and  Colombia,  afoot,  to  visit  the  black 
Cristo,  whose  miraculous  cures  are  be- 
lieved In  by  more  than  half  of  the  pop^ 
ulatlon.  A  large  portion  of  this  church 
is  covered  with  silver  and  other  metal 
amulets,  representing  every  portion  of 
the  body.  This  and  other  rich  sections 
like  Chlqulmula.  Caban  and  Quezelten- 

ango.  It  would  be  well  to  visit  later,  as    ;:r" ,«u\r'"'    '"""le   Mouse   in    com- 

they  are  all   well   nopulated   and   little    ^  I  ^^'""  ^^""^  McKlnley  he  will  go  out 
known  to  our  merchants  and  capitalists    li  °°°'^  »"«  take  some  exercise,  walk- 


THE  DINGLEY  BILL. 

SumrtlAry  Showlngjof  How  It 
Wfll  Increase  Revenues. 

Washington,  Alarch  16.— Chairman 
Dingley  of  the  ways  and  means  com- 
mittee in  response  to  a  request  for  a 
synopsis  of  the  new  tarlfl:  bill  made  the 
following  statement: 

tn  TilL^'l'i-,!?*^*  "^T*"  P"''POses.  namely, 
to  raise  additional  revenue  and  to  en- 
courage  the   industries   of   the   United 

tin^o^%  ^Jl  *^^  ^"^^^  of  the  importa- 
tions for  the  last  fiscal  year,   the  bill 

l^^'^^^^ff^.^^^  revenue  about  $112.- 
000,000  divided  among  the  several 
schedules  roughly  as  follows:  A- 
Chemicals,  $3,500,000:  B— Crockery  and 
glassware,  $4,000,000;  C— Metals  S4  - 
000,000 ;  D-Wood,  $1  750,000;  K-SuJar 
$21,000,000;  F-Tobacco.  $7,000  000  ffll 
^^l^^^^Y^h  '^-SOO.OOO;  H-Liq'uors,  $1,- 


What  is 


Oo"*^'  ''^''^'*'  ^^^•^:  N-Sundrie.s7$6,S,^ 
The  bill  also  provides  for  a  $2  duty 
on  Canadian  pine  and  a  retalliatory 
duty  of  an  export  duty  Is  levied  in  the 
countries  from  which  the  loes  are 
shipped.  * 

Mr.    Dingley   continued:      "This     in- 
crease of  revenue  is  secured  by  trans- 
ferring   wool,    lumber,    crude    opium, 
c-inn    ♦«    «,^  "~  ""    I  argols,  paints  and  statuary  and  varioim 

gins    to    run    more    smoothly     at      the    articles  from  the  free  iFsYof  thrpres^ 

ent    law    to    the    dutiable    list;    by    in- 
creasing the  duty  on  woolens  to  com 


CastoHa  ,.s  Dr.  Samuel  Pitcher's  „re.soripti«n  for  Infants 
and  Chtldren.  It  contains  neither  Opium.  Morphine  nor 
othc^  Narcotic  sub.stance.  It  is  a  hannless  stibstitute 
for  Paregroric,  Drops.  Soothing,  Syrups  and  Ca«tor  Oil. 
It  ,s  Pieasa..t.  Its  guarantee  is  thirty  years*  use  by 
Millions  ot  Mothers.  Castoria  is  the  Children's  Pf 
-the  Mother's  Friend. 


'anacea 


pensate  the  manufacturers  for  the  duty 
paid  on  wools,  by  raising  the  duty  on 
sugar  at  three-fourths  of  a  cent  per 
pouiid  in  order  to  encourage  the  pro- 
duction of  sugar  in  this  country,  which 
It  IS  believed  can  be  done  and  thus  give 
our  farmers  a  nevi-  crop  which  we  im 


THE  FAC-SIMILE  SIGNATURE  OF 


ed  with  this,  for  his  wide  experience  I  PO't  mainly  from  abroad;  "by'lnVreas- 
in  departmental  and  congiessional  !  I'J^^*,*^^  f"^*;. •^I'_ ^'""'^"'tural  products 
methods  has  enabled  him  to  direct  the 


APPEARS  ON  EVERY  WRAPPER. 

THr  CeNT>un  COMPANY.   TT   MURRAY  »-,,„.    New  YORK  C.TY. 


sSeeTto'^Jhr-^P''''''    ''''^'',    accuracy    and 
speed  to  their  proper  places  and  to  re- 

non^^^K^P'"'^**'""  ■"  ^he  .same  man- 
ner to  the  proper  oflielal. 

Facilities  for  the  press,  heretofore  un- 
kno%yn  at  the  White  House,  have  been 
provided  by  Secretary  Porter.  A  com" 
modious  table  and  comfortable  seats 
have  been  placed  In  the  lobby  of  the 
secretary's  offi,.e  in  such  a  favorable 
position  that  the  reporters,  for  whom 
IZ  f  fu '"  '■•'•"Prved,  are  enabled  to 
see  for  themselves  all  the  president's 
visitors  and  to  talk  with  them  if  they 
desire  and  there  is  a  general  air  of  wel- 
come In  the  place. 

The  president  also.   Is  settling  down 

health  and  comfort.  In  office  hours  he 
w>,u  ^^  \vorker.  but  hereafter  the 
White  House  i.s  to  be  closed  to  official 
callers  at  4  o'clock  and  at  that  hour  the 
president  will  retire  from  his  office 
and  after  a  brief  rest  In  the  private 
portion    of   the  White   House 


KEEP  YOUR  HOUSE  CLEAN  WITH 

SAPOLIO 


A  PoaStlTe  WrittcB  I 


but  after  considerable  discussion  the 
government  decided  to  have  them  This 
was  greatly  due  to  the  enlightened 
first  president.  Senor  Don  Juan  F. 
Ponciano.  whose  knowledge  of  foreign 
languages,  extensive  reading  and  ster 
ling    • 


possibly  election  riots  during  the  expo- 
sition. 


specially. 

Should  the  traveler  not  like  a  long 
ride  from  Zacapa,  over  one-half  of  the 
distance  can  be  made  by  coach,  the 
rest  Is  mountain  climbing,  and  must 
be  done  on  mule-back.  The  country 
one  passes  through  Is  ever  changing 
and  ever  picturesque,  especially  as 
when  climbing  the  Andes.  By  the  third 
evening  the  City  of  Guatemala  Is 
reached.  For  adventurous  slght-seers, 
no  better  route  could  be  selected,  hav- 
ing for  Its  objective  point  the  Guate- 
mala exposition,  that  by  way  of  Liv- 


„ „^^..        >Jow.  although  there  are  many  diffl      ^ „,  ^^ 

reputation      in      the     commercial  |  '^"l"^*   ^°   ^^  encountered   in   carrying  I  Ingstone.     This 'is  a  port  on  the  Car- 
worid    made   him    a    valuable    acquisl-  1  ^^^  ^"  enterprise     of     this     kind  in  a    ribbean  sea,   ea.slly  reached  by  steam- 
country  where  even  the  buildings  havft    ers  from   our  principal  ports,  in   from 


Ing   or   riding,   according   to    the   state 

Wh!tlfM''^*^f-  ^"  ^^^  evenings  the 
White  House  loses  Its  official  character 
and  becomes  a  social  center.  The  pre- 
sident is  fond  of  company,  and  scarce- 
ly an  evening  passes  that  half  a  dozen 
friends  do  not  sit  down  at  the  presi- 
dent s  mahogany  for  dinner. 


tion  in  the  provinces.  It  was  Senor 
Poncinano  who  did  the  principal  work 
of  organization  and  who  also  wrote 
the  bylaws,  and  no  doubt  had  he  re- 
mained to  the  end  a  greater  scope 
■vonid  have  been  gl\-r>n  to  the  fair  and 
large  sums   would   have  been   saved. 

Among  other  important  points  con- 
tained in  the  regulations  of  the  expo- 
sition, approved  by  the  government 
are  the  .sums  set  aside  for  prizes.  The 
total  amount  is  $.^0,000.  which  is  to  be 
conveniently  divided  among  the  native 
and  foreign  sections. 

All  goods  coming  for    the  exposition 


to  be  brought  from  abroad,  that  what- 
ever turn  the  elections  may  take,  no 
foreigner  need  fear  being  molested.  In 
-fact,  tourists  who  know  iioiv  to  con- 
duct themselves  when  traveling  in  for- 
eign     lands    will    generally    lind     the 


three  to  six  days.  On  landing,  a  small 
river  boat  Is  taken  and  in  the  course 
of  a  few  hours,  during  which  the  tour- 
ist is  greeted  with  a  superb  view  , of 
the  verdure  covered  pallisades  of  the 
Golfete    and    the      thousand      emerald 


destination,  perhaps,  a  couple  of  hun 
dred  miles  away. 
-..^  .^j,^„.„„„        ^•^'"  ^^"^    accommodation    of    tourists 
have  the  advantage  of  special  reduced    '*>ere  are  over  twenty-five  hotels,  largb 


Gautenmlans  courteous  and  obliging.  I  isles  beyond,  the  boat  is  cleaving  The 
fcven  the  poor  Indians  on  the  countr>-  waves  of  the  Lake  of  Izabel  This  su- 
roads.  far  from  being  objects  of  fear.  ]  perb  sheet  of  water  Is  shut  in  on  every 
can  be  trusted  with  large  sums  of  side  by  towering  peaks,  several  moun- 
money  which  are  certain  to  reach  their    tain  torrents  and  two  large  rivers  em- 


rates  on  the  steamer  lines  on  both  the 
Atlantic  and  Pacific  coasts,  and  on  the 
railroad.s.  the  different  pier  companies 
whose  charges  are  usually  very  high' 
have  al.<;o  made  a  reduction.  Every- 
thmg  gaining  a  prize  comes  into  the 
rountrj-    free.    Certain    kinds   of   prov- 


and  *mall,  to  say  nothing  of  innumer 
able  boaring-houses  of  all  nationalities. 
Let  alone  the  exposition  proper,  the 
two  opera  companies,  one  Italian  and 
the  other  Spanish,  the  electrical  dis- 
play and  usual  public  amusements  will 


pty  their  waters  into  this  lake.  Trips 
up  these  streams  would  cnrrj'  one  into 
the  gold  plac?rs  and  the  Indian  coun- 
tiy. 

I.^ndlng  at  Izabal,  mules  are  procured 
and  the  mountain  climbing  and  swamp 
wading  begins  at  once.  Arriving  at 
Quirlgue,  a  mile  ride  down  a  steep, 
difficult  road,  rewards  the  tourist  with 
a    sight    of   gigantic    monoliths,    thou 


RUSH  FOR  OPIUM. 

Heavy  Withdrawals  From  Bond 
at  San  Francisco. 

San  Francisco.  March  16.— Duty  to 
the  amount  of  $240,000  was  paid  yester- 
day on  opium  withdrawn  from  bond. 
This  is  one  of  the  biggest  day's  re- 
ceipts from  this  source  in  the  history 
of  the  custom  house  at  this  port  The 
big  withdrawals  of  the  drug  were  due 
to  the  fact  that  the  big  seizure  of  Feb. 
.7.  left  the  market  practically  without 
.stock    on    hand.      Orders    from      retail 


affected  by  Canadian  competition  and 
on  fine  cotton  goods,  some  advanced 
manufacturers  of  iron  and  steel,  manu- 
facturers of  jute,    flax   and    hemp     in 

order  to  encourage  these  and  other  in-     44  a    tt  *  -k-rT^T-., 

dustries  here  and  especially  by  in- I  -^  "^.NDFUL  OF  DIRT  MAY  BE  A  TTOTTQFPTir  rkc^oTT*,,^  . 
creasing  duties  on  such  luxuries  as  Tf  P'T^ta  v/^ttt^  tV^C^^V^  HOUbEFUL  OF  SHAME." 
liquors,  tobacco,  silks  and  laces,  etc."  «  «  m  "    v#»ftt^   xx^,,«« 

EXPORTS  AND  imiPORTS. 

Former  Increasing  and  Latter 
Are  Decreasing. 

Washington.  March  16.— The  monthly 
statement  of  the  exports  and   imports 
of  merchandise,    gold   and   silver  from 
and  into  the  United  States  durin-g  Feb- 
ruary last,  issued  by  the  bureau  of  sta- 
tistics, shows  as  follows:     Merchandise 
exported,    $79,773,398;     merchandise   im- 
S^rT^'  '^^'1/3.868  (of  which  neariy  $33,- 
^"«^-'''^^  fr?  ""^  '^"ty);  gold  exported, 
$.J.j6.69<;    gold    imported,    $544,700;    silver 
f^?,"a'"/,^^'  »'*'^^^'3^2;     silver     imported, 
Tiai'     u     ^^  compared  with  February, 
1896,  this  statement  shows  an  Increase 
of  about  $2,070,000  in  the  value  of  mer- 
chandise  exported,   and   a   decrease   ot 
over  $3,250,000  in  the  amount  imported 
For   the   eight    months    ended    Feb     'K 
there  was  a  gain  of  over  $132,000,000  in 
the  amount  of   merchandise   exported  I 
and  a  decrease  of  nearly  $119,000,000  iii  i 
the   amount   imported.       The  gold   ex- 
ports  during    February    were    $1,847  000 
less  than  a  year  ago,  and  the  Imports 
about  Jll.000,000  less     than     February 

Konn'^*'^  ^'L^^""  ^P^Ports  were  about 
$700,000  less  than  February.  1896,  and 
the  imports  $700,000  less  than  February, 
1896. 


=  ^ 


or  disease,  but  »re  a  great  \FKTK  i«MliV^  '^°n?'/JJ?J*J'/ "«■'*'»*»»  M>e iwi 
back  the  pink  clow  to  ««!«.  „K     i     ^  'i'*'*^  ■"*  BU»OI»  BCILOKIt,  brtorinir 


^"^'%^^f'%^%^%^^  I      NOTICE    IS    HEREBY    GIVEN    THAT 
V  WW^m^  ^     sem  n.''^''i.^^^**'S   ^°-  3«3  and  3oi.  Tepre- 

^B    ^       ■       .a     .^  A     •^Piiting'     1000     shares     of    th»»    T -i    vm^o 

^    ni.l..iL   T— ^1   A^     #  1  {^«"«l'd«ted  Gold  Mining  companV  stock 

W  !  have  been  lost  and  that  I  am  the  owner 

dte^Jps'^of    "IS"  «^P'y  ^«  the  board  o? 
Hfl^ol^  "^  r*'*^  company  for  a  new  cer 
tiflcate   in   place    thereof   as   nrovidert    l» 


% 


DolutI)  Trust  Co 
Writes 


#  Fire  Insurance.  ^ 


law 


as   provided   by 


STRANGLED  TO  DEATH. 

Final    Ending  of  the    Vicious 
Elep*^ant  Tip.      . 

Bridgeport.  Conn..   March  16.— Tip,   a 
monster  elephant,  which  a-s  been  shown 


dealers  in  the  city  and  elsewhere,  had  1  ^^"^"&*i<»»t  the  country  for  many  years 
f".!  1 ".?!-  T.^*^  "'^^''  ^?'-  the  release  of  !  Past,   was  put  to  death  by  sUangula- 


LDOD  POISON 

A  specialtySS 

"»•▼  »^«OD  POISON  pSnenU? 
cured  In  16  to85  days.  You  can  be  treated  » 
home  for  same  price  under  same  goaran- 
tZ'J  JlSlJi'I^f,^'  to  come  here  we  will  con. 


attract   many    people,   and    the  capital  ;  sands  of  years  old.     Some  are  "broken. 


the  opium  was  received  from  the  treas 
ury  department  by  Collector  Wise 
w-hich  enabled  the  Importers  to  fill 
these  order.s. 

mJ^.^^i*  **  required  the  withdrawal  of 
100.000  boxe.s.  each  conialnn.g  forty-one 
pounds.  The  price  of  opium  which, 
immediately  after  the  seizure  rose  50 
per  cent,  has  fallen  back  to  its  nor- 
mal   figure,    about    $12   a    pound.     The 


ooehai 
cnry, 


isions   imported  during  the  months  of  !  '^^^"-    ^'th    the  nearby   views   of   An-     but   others  are  still   standing  and   the    •  - -•.- 

February  to  June  are  also  duty  free  '  t'Rum.  is  well  worthy  of  a  visit  from  '  hieroglyphics  graven  on  their  sides  I  '"^""^^s^  •"  the  price  was  not  as  much 
Iinduiled  in  this  list  are:  Canned  meats!  ,  ^o^f'sn^'s.  Built  in  the  old  Spanish  and  covering  them  from  top  to  bot-  *^  v^ould  ordinarily  have  been  expect- 
preserves.    milk   and   vegetables:   hams    ^^^^T'  *'''°"'  ^  distance  it  looks  like  an    tom.  are  as  clear  and  sharp  as  thoueh  "^  ^^^  withdrawal  of  so  large  a 


and    a    number""ot  '  ^"S^?"i'^'^.^.^'"'*t"  ^^'th  red -tiled  kiosks!    made  yesterday"    A  fewVhdudred  >"a"rds  '  ?"antity  from  the  market 


and  dried     meat.< 

articles  of  household  use     and     minor 

pieces  of  hardware. 

The  location  of  the  fair,  on  the  out- 
skirts of  Guatemala  city,  is  not  only 
ample  but  picturesque,  the  beautiful 
dnvesand  gardens  of  La  Reforna.  l>eing 
close  by.  The  Liano  here  is  fully  ten 
miles  square.  To  the  North  lies  the 
capital,  and  as  a  sublimely  beautiful 
background      on      the        South 


the 


nestling  at  the  base  of  the  mighty  vol-  1  away  you  can  hear  the  railroad  whistle 
^^^J^^**-       u.  u        .  i  *"'*  before  many  minutes  you  are  whiz- 

on  reaching  th-  city  a  stranger  !&  1  zing  towards  Zacapa  and  the  capital 
first  struck  with  the  uniform  construe  '  If  the  merchant,  traveler  or  capl- 
tion  of  the  houses,  with  their  heavily  \  talist  wishes  to  enjoy  a  most  unique 
grated  windows  and  massive  doors,  experience,  whilst  looking  for  oppor- 
often  made  of  mahogany  (.r  other  precl-  tunitles  in  a  business  way,  let  him 
ous  wood.  The  streets  are  of  moderate  make  the  tour  of  Guatemala!,  not  for- 
wldth  and,  as  a  rule,  badly  paved,  but     getting    that    the      exposition      proper 

,    ..  .^  ,  the  principal  streets  have     lately     had    gives  but  a  short  view  of  the  many  in- 

maje»tic  volcanoes  of  Agna.  Fuego  and  ^^^''^  ^""^^  sidewalks  laid  along  the  sec-  teresting  things  which  this  new-old 
Acatenango.  complete  the  picture..**'*"^  which  debouch  on  the  Plazz*de  country  contains,  all  of  which  can 
The  climate  of  Guatemala  during  these  ^'■"^^-  '^^^  cathedral.  La  Merced  and  easily  be  enjoyed  or  investigated  by 
months  is  pleasant  and  equable.  The  ^^"  Francisco  churches,  as  well  as  tht  a  few  days'  trip  through  the  interior 
neat  IS  never  intolerable  as  It  is  on  the  I  "*^^^'  t'^lacio.  artilery  barracks  and  sev-  reaching  as  far  South  as  the  Nicar- 
fvf^i,  regions,  the  principle  reason  for  I  ^^^^  **^  *"^  colleges  would  certainly  at-     augua  canal  route,  If  necessary 

this  being  the  elevation,  which  is  close  1  ^""^'^•^  attention  anywhere.     It     Is    estl-  : 

to  oOOO  feet.  It  is  therefore  super  I  mated  that  the  new  government  house  ! 
fluous  to  state  that  yellow  fever  has  \  ^^^  *^^'^'"  'LWO.OOO,  and  the  style  is  a  , 
never  attacked  the  capital.  mixture  of  the  Italian  and  French  Re- 

As   well   as     every       department     of  '  "a^ssance  and,   of  course,    marble   hat. 
Guatemala,  Salvador,  Costa  Rica    Hon-    ^^*"  "sed  in  profusion 
duras  and  Nicaragua  will     send     well        "~~"    '" 
selected    exhibits:    their     hundreds     of 


largi 
.  ,  .  The  opin- 

ion which  was  strongly  held  that  the 
treasury  would  release  the  seized  goods 
has  had  a  stn>ng  Influence  In  keepine 
down  the  price. 


tion  today.    While  the  brute's  feet  were  __ 

chained  to  stakes  firmly  driven  into  the     f*™P'f»v!t°?^P**"9«»«*'«<f  8potB,'ufceral)n 

T:^r.  rZe  tirabo!;rh'[srk"uiSi  BI^iilliB^'^^^^^ 

he  was  de^d.  The^ope^ratiin  wL^  ."uT  1  SSt^c\'?e".n:^JrcT«fi,rn%^re"'4M°r^f; 
pleted  in  thirteen  minutes.  Tip  had  de-  1  t*?gJ5'i5?»?.?f,*"ir«!  This  disease  boa  alwayi 
deiT  .v^'c^^n'^i^  tendencies,  and  his !  ^fa^:^*i|o'£'Mo"'^?»l^°Kt'.«ii"?.*"tpby8? 
death    was    determined    unon    in    order  ■   --^^  "'"w  e»r 

1.,^' ..*?*"  "I'eht  have  no  opportunity  to 
kill  his  keepers  or  people  visiting  the 
show.  Yesterday  he  was  given  poison. 
but   without  marked  effect 


■-'tracttopayrallroadfareandhotelbillgBnd       ./'"^       .  .       -      -         - - 

T?;H^"l''l**'£."*"yo"'>»'«takenmer.  h!"l"VJ*''lS  '""y    ^^    admitted    to    probate 
-  •*?"*«»«  potash,  and  etill  have  aches  Ina     •^"<'  ^   "  —  *  ~' ' 

fcT™«&?.°*^*'«^*?'°'°o«th.  Sore  Throat     "    "' 
Pimplea.  Copper  Colored  Soota.  PlciiSn^ 


CONDENSED   DISPATCHES. 


IN  THE  DAKOTAS. 


NORTH  DAKOTA, 
bunuay  broke  all  records  for  extremelv 

rw^rr^'"'"'"''   *?   i^**'''-'^   ^^t    Bismarck. 
It   was  36  degrees  below  zero  at  8  a    m 
the  coldest  in   ten   years,   and   onlv   three 
times  since  1874  has  the  temperature  de- 
scended    to   «ueh    a   degree.    It    has    never 
I  been  so  cold  during  the  monht  of  Marc.i 
I  Bismarck   al.so   enjoys   the   distinction    of 
'  «f''?L  ^^^    coldest     point    in    the    United 
I  States,   according  to  the  government  sig- 
nal service  records.  There  are  about  thr*e 
I  feet   of  snow   on   the   level,   and   there   is 


and     San     Voldro,     Salvador. 
Santa    Rosa.    Chlahatta    and    Motagua 
in  Guatemala:  San  Juanclto.  Yuscaran 
and   Patuca.   Honduras:     Segovia     and 
Pana.   Nicaragua,   and   the   Los  Andes 
districts   of   Costa     Rica.     It     is     very 
probable  that  the  exhibit  of  this     de- 
partment alone   will   astonish   most  of 
the  visitors  to  the  fair.     There  are  sec- 
tions which  will  in  time  rival  California 
and  South  Africa.     Pages  could  be  fil- 
led  with    the     mere     enumeration     of 
difrerent    yarltles     of     raw       material 
Which   will   be  presented:   it   may  suf- 
fice to  say      that      hundreds  of     new 
fibers,     dyeuood     and     medicinal     and 
other  plants  will  be  here  found  collect- 
ed together  for  the  first  time.    All  these 
countries  are  celebrated  for  their  well 
known  products  such  as  coffee,   cocoa 
or  chocolate  bean,  rubber,  balsam  and 
sarsaparilla.  and  it  need  not  be  added 
that  each  one  of  them  will  vie  in  making 
a  creditable  showing. 

The  scientific  and  literary  sections  are 
well  represented.  New  works  were 
sent  by  such  lights  as  Falla.  Batres 
Pujol.  Mendos  and  Facio.  The  scien- 
tific works  of  Dolfus.  Monserrat 
Maudsley  and  the  interesting  articles 
and  researches  of  Professor  Chandler 


every    prospect    of    serious    floods    wh<»n 
monitor    Puritan.  |  warm  weather  arrives.  There  ia  no  prob- 
ability   of    the    Missouri    river    breaking 
p  before  April  15.  •caiviuo 

.  "^.u®  present  Is  the  most  severe  winter 
L"  \^^  "^^^^'^  ^'^'^'"  ^'^"^y  for  fifteen  years 
past.  The  unprecedented  fail  of  snow 
adds  largely  to  the  burdens  our  farmers 
have  to  bear  through  the  winter.  The 
snow  throughout  this  valley  Is  more 
than  three  feet  deep  on  an  average,  and 
in  many  places  from  twenty  to  forty  feel 


j      The    I'nited    States       . „,. 

which    met   with   an   accident   to   her   en-     .,     —     ...>.    ^.* 

kind 'of '*^^"'"    '"";"•"    "^^    ^    novellfr"rTeefa'iThe"l.V^oT;irn"^n'a%"?^^^^^^^     up_  before  April  15 

.^o     ui     Jl'"^    °^    amusement      in      the    Plazade    tow  of  the  navy  yard  tugs  Nina  and  Nar- 

varietles   of   precious    woods   includlnc  i  ^^^^^-  "r  bull   ring,   to  say  nothing  o.    Jjeeta  at  2:30  o'clock  yesterday  afternoon 
ebony,  lignum   vltae,     mahogany     and  '  numerous  cock-pits  in  the  suburbs:  but    °^^  ^"^  "»ade  fast  to  the  dock  and  did 
logwood  from  the  coast  or  hot  districts  '  ^^  '^■*  the  larger  number   will    find   a    ,"*?,^  "<'**'"  ^^^J^^Y^  suffered  any  during  her 
along  the  coasts,  the  minerals   sneSv     '''^"^   ""    t*^«  P'aza,   when    the   magni-  ^"^[l' f.Lr^^i^^'nJ^' h^/''"- v.  ,       . 

gold  and  Silver  from  the  districtTof'san    r.^l"Lf*"»^*  ^^''^J.^'  '«  P'^^'"^'  ^  ^^-  i  te^fe^ITn^'^^he'^casl^^of  ^ATbert  Wallin'g  an"i 
Miguel     and     San     Voirtm      «o,..o^^_"  I  "f  *l,^'"'   ^ ^^  ^^  whilin-g  away  a  couple    he  will  hang  with  Jackson  on  UScfay 

1AA    ^'^^•o.  !^*''^   ^^^^   '«   composed   of  ^The  duties  on  imports  withdrawn  from 

100  and  odd  instruments,  well  versed  In  "'  '"     ~ 

the   German   and    Italian    schools,    and 

rendering     the     latest     operatic     pieces 

with  masterly  precision. 
The  principal  theater.  Teatro  colon.  Is 

quite  large  and  built  on  the  plan  of  the 

Madeleine  of  Paris.    The  Italian  Opera    versity    at    Moscow,    where  -he    has 

company  receives  something  like  $80,000    undergoing    medical    treatment. 

from   the  government.   I>esides   the   box    ■  *-  "»rley       Johnson.       of       Mlnneapoli 

receipts  "  u-„r^,.i,.,^  «...   t ^ ..    _ 

usually 

latest   opera 

mala  quite 

elegantly    dressed    audience 


bond  at  the  United  States  custom  housl 
iJi..^i*^,£?'-.  ^^^K  yesterday  amounted  to 
$2.667.979.ul.  or  $360,000  above  all  previous 
records. 

Dr.  William  Stelnltz,  the  chess  player, 
has  been  released  from  the  clinical  ward 
r.?!!.!"^*''??  PHtlents  attached  to  the  uni- 

been 


FAIR  WILL  CASE. 

Mrs.   Craven's    Pencil  Deeds 
Are  on  Exhibition. 

San  Francisco,  March  16.— The  attor- 
neys for  Mrs.  Craven,  who  claims  to  be 
the  contract  widow  of  ex-Senator  James 
O.  Fair,  has  filed  in  the  superior  court 
the    original    pencil    deeds    to    property 
valued  at  $2,000,000  conveyed  by  Fair  to 
Mrs.  Craven.  All  may  now  inspect  these 
famous  deeds,  and  as  the  attorneys  for  , 
Fair's  children   for  the  administrators 
have   pronounced   them   forgeries,    thev 
will  now  be  able  to  have  expert  examin- 
ations of  the  documents  to  prove  their 
charges.     The  two  parties  to  the  Fair 
litigation  are  now  arguing  the  question 
whether  the  cases  shall  be  decided  bj 
the  court  or  a  jury,  the  Fair  heirs  op- 
posing a  jury  trial. 


clans.     SS0O,0OO  capital  beh.nd  our  iincoaSl. 
Uonai  8ra*ranty.Ab»ofute  proofs  sent  aei^n- 
application.   Address  COOK   REMEDY  C( 
407  JOaconUs  Temple,  CHlGAO^  ILb 


FREE  TO  MEN. 


A   GUAItAlITleKjJ, 

t'lRE. 


Lost  Manhood  Restored,  Positive  Cure  for  Abuse. 
tiiilHsions,  Dohilily.  .Srxiial  Weakness,  Varicorrle 
ol,  I'^i'  '^''■'cture.  Parts  Knlarped.  Kidney,  Bladder 
r?i  >■  r'*."*,'"  «I«nd  Diseases  permanenilv  i-ur.d.  Ks 
Kf ' ,,^,''','. '**  TT-  '^■'"""I'le  '"><'k  (Keale.!)  wUH  luU 
M  A  .7«T  v"  iV^'V.'i'-Tlf.'irr  "''If  ^ree.  Address: 
MAHSTON  UF.MhD\  CO.,  ISO  Park  I'l.  New  Yorit 


riMitarninb«d 
from  Ure. 


POSTAL  CLERKS'  CONVENTION 
San  Francisco.  March  16.— The  East- 
ern delegates  to  the  railway  mail  clerks' 
convention    arrived    here    on    a   special 

Hb««    Whit    vc.    "   -.v.  -• ^  '"  ^""J^  '«ci  I  train  over  the  Oregon  Pacific.    The  dele- 

rh^'^^^,v  1^  J''"'  "^i"  '"''i"'^  ^he  fllling  of    gation  was  given  a  reception  in  the  As 
5.'??_'?'^"yJ»l^«'«  and  ponds  that  for  some    sembly    chamber 


.vears  past,  have  dried  up,  it  will  greatly 
retard  farming  operations  In  the  spring 
it,  indeed,  it  does  not  prevent  seedinc-  .-ii. 


together  on  low  land.s 


prevent  seeding  al- 


u      .    n,.  SOITTH  DAKOTA. 

Hoyt  Tidrick.  treasurer  of  Pukwana 
township,  has  been  arrested  at  Winter- 
set  Iowa  charged  with  embezzling  im.'A 
of  township  funds.  &»••>, 


ten    very    lively    rounds. 


Iphia,   boxp'l 
The    men    were 


beautiful  women  there  congregated  will  I  t^^'^^V   matched    and    at    the    end    of    ihi 

surely  not  be  the  least  part  of  the  plea-  i    "^l  opinion  was  divided. 

sure  for  many.     The  people  are    as  a  '■  w/rS  o^rfi^h     ^^^    murdered    John 

dress  on  the  streets  is  verv  similar  to  '  . 

I  what  one  finds  in  European     capitals,  j  -  ,  nn*i 
The  poorer  classes,  composed  of  mixtd        *•"«•*■- 
breeds  and  pure  Indians,  dress  very  pie  DUEAIE 

ture.squely.        Each    tribe    has   Its  own  I  *  CLIMATIC 
peculiar  garb:  greens,  reds,  yellows  and  i  AFFECTION. 


POWDER  WAR  TERMINATED. 
San  Francisco,  March  16.— The  powdc- 
war  is  over.  An  agreement  has  been  ef- 
fected between  the  Atlantic  and  Pacific 
eoa^t  powder  companies  and  the  latter 
Will  sign  their  agreement  todav  if  ihe 
program  be  carried  out.  There  is  a  dual 
'arrangement.  One  covers  the  neutral  belt 
and  is  between  the  manufacturers  of  pow- 

,  S,tr,„''J„lD.®»  ^"st  and  those  In  California. 

■  This  territory  covers   New  Mexico.   Colo- 

.         rado.    Montana.    Utah    and    Wyomlne     It 

#•  UfA  f^  rtf  I  I   '"  °H^"  *°  ''**th  parties,  who  have  agreed 

I  .11  ril  0  D  U  r"  advance  prices  from  1  cent  to  IM.  cent-? 

WftlMlinn    °"    both    black   powder   and    high    explo- 


.  Sacramento,  on  the 
arrival  of  the  train  in  that  city.  Gov- 
ernor Budd  and  Mayor  Hubbard  were 
present  and  welcomed  the  visitors  in 
the  name  of  the  people  of  the  state 
There  are  about  250  delegates,  who  will 
be  In  attendance  at  the  convention  or  on 
short  excursion  trips  to  neighboring 
towns  until  Sunday,  when  they  will 
leave  for  the  East  by  way  of  Los  An- 
geles. 


^tDay.  ,. 

ISthDay. 
THE  GREAT       30th  bay. 


REVIVO 

RESTORES  VITAUTY. 


Made  a 

Weil  Man 

of  Me. 


Bos  FY'  on 
Duluth    Evening    Herald,    March-2-9-lH-23 

''foISg!;°^'iZi^^^"^^^"^«^^;f-of 

^State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Ix)uls 

2n!l"  S?^*^  ^°"'"^'  SP^^'al  Term,  March 

^\f^^^  matter  of   the  estate  of  Addison 

M.  Farwell,  deceased: 

Whereas     certain     writings    purporting 
\^.f^%m^y   authenticated   copies    of    the 
labt    will    and    testament    of   Addison    M 
Farwell,    late   of  Jefferson    Countv     New- 
^ork     deceased,    and    the   probate   thereot 

L"red''t^o7h,«'''  ""9  =''^'*^'  ^'"'■''^  been  deliv- 
erea  to  this  court. 

Ami  whereas  Maria  P.  Steriing  and  Ella 
F  XVardwell  have  tiled  then-with  a  peti- 
tion, representing  among  other  things 
lli'^Lrf'^  Addison  M.  Farwell.  lately  d"ed 
in  said  county  of  Jefferson,  testate  pos- 
se.«sed  of  certain  real  estate,  situated  a 
and'th"""'.^  "^/1^-  ^""'-  Minnesota 
,^f  Lf^'^m''^  petitioners  are  exeeutrlces 
of  said  will,  and  praying  that  the  said  in- 
leiit  may  be  admitted  to  probate 
P  <5tL'?iL''"''''1  testamentary  be  to  Maria 
thefeon  ^-  Wardwell  issue<l 

It  i.s  ordered,  that  the  proof.s  of  said 
mstrument  and  the  .^aid  petition  be  heard 
before  this  court  at  the  probate  office 
iS  ''^'u  ^r^l^y  *^"  Friday,  the  26th  day  of 
March.  A.  D.  1897.  at  ten  o'clock  in  the 
forenoon,  when  all  persons  Interested 
may  appear  for  or  contest  the  probate  of 
said  instrument.  '  '^ 

And  it  is  further  ordered  that  notice  of 
l.5„J  *  ^  'l."*'  P'*^*^^*  "f  said  hearing  bo 
M  V.^  *?u'?"  P^i^ons  interested,  bv  pub- 
Ishlng  this  order  once  in  each  w»^ek  for 
three  succes.<.ive  weeks  prior  to  said  dav 
of  hearing  in  The  Duluth  Evening  Her- 
ald, a  daily  newspaper  printed  and  pub- 
lished at  Duluth.  in  .«aid  countv. 
A     D    ]^*  ^"'u«h.  the  2nd  day  of  March. 

By  the  Court. 

PHINEAS  AVER. 
(gpjj,  .  Judge  of  Probate. 

Duluth    Evening   Herald.    March-2-9-16. 


bright  blues  predominate,  and  a  wreath  1  Nothinir  but »  IocrI 
of  embroidery  of     most  quaint   design  ! '•m^dy  or  chaD»«»  of 
covers  the  skirts  and  vests  or  "hulpUcs"  '  o'**"***  will  cure  it. 
6f  the  women.    Shoes  are  generally  dls-    ^*>^'  *  '»'«>ll-known 

carded  by  the  Indians,  but  gally-colored    P'i'»''ra'»oeutical 

who  has  for  years  held  high  scientific    "''^  shawls  from  the  looms  of  Salvador    ™™^y> 
and  government  posts,  are    all    repre- ;  »t-®   "ever   wanting     on     holidays   and    Clii>»  Priiom  D«l.. 
sented.    It  was     at     first  thought  that  t*^'*"'"'^^  fiestas.  tly  51118911)  031111 

-^Most   visitors   to   the  exposition   will    It  i.  quickly  absorbed 
surely  not  grudge  a  short  ride  to  An-^**«8reli  fatonc«. 
tigua.  the  ruined  capital  of  the  Spanish    ^P^"  »"<1  clean-B« 
viceroys.        A   visit   to   the   thlrtv   odd      1   °"       **•■**••      ^0^1  ■% 
dent    Reyhaa   as-ked^for  Tnothe/  loin  j  churches  and  monasteries  alone  'would  .  nLtV^^HV^*}^??:    COLD  <^  H  FATI 
of  $800,000  to  Complete  th«  bUlldlnfsett     :i*"   '■*P*y  *»^«  tourist.     Hills   and  vol      mISibrane     Srii^ t^^^  '■'*^*' 

It  is  expected  thAt     the     last     nained    '^"fw**  «Urround  the  city  on  er^rjr  side,   ^^dl.  X  cSin;.  n^  ^^^"^Si/oS",':  r'^ 
amount  Will  be  .,umcl*nt  to  covT^^H    "  %u*h  ruardtng  this  earthl/para-r  dr««    ^U  .S'W  tM^ ^^^^ 
ouistandin*   debta,    contracts,   as  treit  f  fv     Z*^?!"     i"*L    'ntruslon   of     foreign    ^"^  •»''"^-     ^  *  otumu^. 

"^r  .^  -:r^f  the  fruits  of  the  «rth  camwt  be  ex-*      ^^^  ^»0*aBll3,  W Wme. St ,  N,w  totk. , 


$1,500,000  would  cover  the  expenses  of 
the  fair,  but  it  was  soon  evident  that 
double  that  sum  would  be  required,  and 
a  loan  was  called  for.    Lately.   Presi- 


on  both  black  powder  and  high 'explo- 
sives.   There    can    be    no    underselling   as 

f S^'tL.li"^  .1''*'  '■'5^V  through  auditotl.  to 
examine  the  others  books  and  examine 
the  accounts. 


A  PLEA  FOR  WHEATON. 
Denver,  Col.,  March  16.— A  special  to 
the  Republican  from  Santa  Fe,  N.  M 
says:  A  petition  urging  the  promotion 
of  Brig.  Gen.  Frank  Wheaton,  com- 
manding the  department  of  the  Colo- 
rado, to  be  major  general  of  the  army, 
has  been  sent  to  President  McKlnley. 
It  was  signed  by  Governor  Thornton 
and  all  the  leaders  of  the  territorial 
oniclals  here. 


Sbnna  ^i^  «°d  Quickly.  Cures  when  all  others  fail 
mi^l^f  "'*'"'■'-'**'"  t''*"-  lost  manhood,  and  old 

l^ftP^lrV^n^'  l^Potencr.  Nightly  Emiseions 
aU  ^fff^I!  J  "}?*u^'^°*°'"y'  Wasting  Diseases,  and 
»U  effects  of  self-abuse  or  excess  and  Indiscretion 

1«  «  ^^iL'"'""^^  ^'  ^**"*°^  "t  *»»«  «'"'»  ot  diseaM.  bu 
n^  h«  t  V,"''^^  *""'«'  »°'l  blood  builder.  brtn« 

?o.in^1h«  fi  ^^"K  ^^"^  *«  P*'«  cheek,  and  w 
«onn»  the  fire  of  youth.    It  wards  off  Jnsai  tj 

"he^Tl^ri^''-   ^°''l*  °°  ^»""«^  REVn^nJ 
■1  nn™^^  '^"■'*'*  '°  ^«*'  Pocke*-   By  mall 
•1.00  per  package,  or  six  for  «5.00,  with  a  mmI 
Uve  written   guarantee  to  curi  or  re^d 
the  money.   CirciUar  tree.   Addreaa  «*"»««» 

%L  MEDICDTE  CO..  271  WaDasUTe..  CHICAGO.  ILL 
Psr  Mto  In  Duluth  br  B.  W.  Bayos.  dram* 


THE  BALTIMORE  CHAMPIONS. 
Baltimore,  Md.,  March  19.— Manager 
Hanlon  will  take  the  champions  tonight 
to  their  training  grounds  in  Macon,  Ga. 
All  the  members  of  the  team  wu.  go  to- 
night except  Hoffer,  Quinn,  Stenzel, 
Jennings,  Kelley  and  Corbe«,  who  will 
join  the  team  at  Macon  as  soon  as  pos- 
sible. The  Orioles  will  stay  in  Macon 
two  weeks  and  then  come  North,  play- 
ing in  Baltimore  with  Norfolk  on  April 
12.  Hanlon  is  attempting  to  arrange  a 
schedule  with  Southern  clubs  foi"  the 
interim,  but  has  met  with,  indlfterent 
success,  and  nothing  definite  httA  been 


decided  ujion. 


CONTRACTORS  SUED. 
Washington,  March  16.— The  Vermont 
Marble  company,  of  Proctoi*,  Vt.,  has 
brought  suit  against  William  W.  Min- 
free  and  George  A.  Sheehan.  of  this 
city,  to  recover  $19,535,  alleged  to  be  due 
for  material  used  in  the  amusement 
hall  of  the  National  Soldiers'  home  here. 
An  accounting  and  the  appointment  of 
a  receiver  to  hold  funds  due  Winfree 
frOm  the  United  States  are  asked  for. 

HOMESEEKERS'    EXCURSIONS. 
Homeseekers'   excursion     tickets     at 
half  fare  to  all  points  in  the  South, 


Bi«  «  ia  a  non-poisoflon 
remedy  for  Gonorrhota 
Oleet,  Spormatorrhoea 
Whites,  onnatural  dis 
charges,  or  any  inflamma 
li>,..^i.  ;,.;;.^'  *i?°'  irjit^tion  or  ulcera 
IPnTtau  eoDiaclon.      tion   of    mucous    m«  m 

|THEEvAN8CheM]CHCP.  branes.    Non-astringtnt 

Sold  hy  DrocKlaU, 

'or  sent  in  plain  vrapper 

by   express,   prepaid,    foi 

•1.00,  or  3  botdes,  12.75. 

areolar  aent  on  nqvaf 


MAD£  ME  A  MAN 

AJAX  TABLETS  POSITIVELT  CUEE 
^LL  Ktifvout  JMssatoa— Failing  Mem- 
ory, Impotency.Sleeplomnaos,  etc.caaaed 
by  Al)U8eand  oihor  KiceaseH  and   India- 


They  tfuiekly  and   turely 

:  Vitality  in  old  or  }^oang,  and 

fit  a  man  forctiidy,  ouHineHS  or  marriage 


ere;  ions. 

restore  Lost  Vitality  in 


or  ^oang,  and 

.,  — B  or  marriage 

Prerent    Insanity  and    Consumption  il 


taken  in  time.  Their  u«e  fhovrs  immediate  ImDrovs. 
roent  nnd  effects  a  CT7RE  where  aU  othera  tall.  In 
BiBt  upon  having  the  genuine  Ajax  Tablets  Thei 
neve  cured  thouf>sndd  nnd  .vill  cujiB  you.  We  give  e 
positiva  written  guarantee  to  effect  a  curein  eacn  cas' 
or  refund  the  money.  I^rice  80  cents  per  packace  oi 
e^xpackases  (full  treutnientj  for  $2.60     By  mail'ii. 


Southeast  and  Southwest  via  the  Mln-    }^lir^'^^U.^r^^'^'^^^ 

neltpolls  &  St.  Louis  railroad.  Tlcjc«t«^  on  I  AJAX    REMEOV     CO..    »*2i?»*S^ 


Mie  Feb.  2  and  16.  March  2  and  it.  April  |  por  m1« 
i  <ihd  20.  &n6d  Majr  4  and  18,  food  {of  West  ?up 
tfr«&iy  M)ne  days. _ . ./  w-. .  ji  .i  W—i  Supi 


Ll^"i''-?ir??*-'  **^  mBTlf.  T 


In  Duluth  by  8.  F.  BOT< 
--   ,erlor  stre«t  


STATE   OP  MINNESOTA.   COUNTY   OF 
ST.  LOUIS-SS.  v.v^ci-»ii    wi. 

District   Court.    Eleventh   Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 

Martha    H.    Norton,    executrix 
and   George   W.    Norton,    exec- 
utor, of  George  W.  Norton,  de- 
ceased. 

Plaintiffs, 
against 
Jacob  R.  Myers.    Omar    H.  Sl- 
monds.      Roger     S.      Munger. 
Daniel  G.  Cash.  West  Duluth 
Land  Company.  Central  Trust 
Company,  of  New  York;  Met- 
ropolitan Life  Insurance  Com- 
pany,   Duluth    Manufacturing 
Company,   O.    H.   Simonds.    as 
receiver   of    Duluth    Manufac- 
turing Company,  Lesure  Lum- 
ber Company.  Duluth  Transfer 
Railway  Company,   Metropoli- 
tan     Trust      Company,      The 
Farmei-s'   Trust  Company,    lim- 
ited, John  Eliot  Bowles,  as  re- 
ceiver of  the  Duluth  Transfer 
Railway  Company,   William  F. 
Bailey,  Charles  W.  Nitterauer, 
and    George    N.    Bailey,    part- 
ners doing  business  as  Duluth 
Brass  Works,  D.  Ballard,  John 
C.  Perry  and  Robert  L.  Coch- 
rane,   partners       as    Perrv    & 
Cochrane.  Roswell  H.  Palmer, 
Mike  John.son,   C.    H.   Adams, 
Elbert  L.  Miller,  O.  T.  Strand, 
Peter  Gilinsson      and    Ole   A. 
Ritan, 

_,^  Defendants. 

The   state  of  Minnesota      to   the  abov« 

named  defendants: 

You  and  each  of  you  are  hereby  sum- 
moned and  required  to  answer  the  com- 
plaint of  the  plaintiffs  In  the  aboVe  enti- 
tled action  which  is  filed  in  the  office  of 
the  clerk  of  the  district  court.  In  and  for 
the  county  of  St.  Louis  and  state  of  Min- 
nesota, and  to  serve  n  copy  of  your  an- 
*!!'^7Li''  *t'^^^-'^  complaint  on  the  sub- 
scr  bers  at  their  office   In  the   Exchanire 

cm  mv-^'  J.?t»!.**^  ^^^y  °'  Duluth  in  safd 
county,  within  twenty  (20)  days  after 
the  service  of  this  suminons  uiSon  yo" 
ff  vm^f.n^  }^^  *^*y  °f  «"^h  service:  and 
iniH  )^.o^^ll«-***  ^"swer  the  complaint  of 
?hi^.?'i*?•U"^  '*'**^*"  the  time  aforesaid 
he  pl.-AntilTs  in  this  action  will  applv  to 

Pnmf.?o.'"^'°VJ^«  '•^"^f  demanded  in  said 
complaint.     This    action    Is    brought    for 

,  t,^°,^!?'°?^®  ''f  *  mortgage  dated  Jan- 
aar>  15th.  1887.  and  recorded  in  the  office 
Of  the  register  of  deeds  in  and  for  said 
^t.  Louis  County,  on  March  3rd,  1887.  In 
tJook  19  of  mortgages,  on  page  "3«:" 
ind  that  no  personal  claim  is  made 
igainst  any  of  the  defendants  except  the 
Ufendants  Jacob  R.  Myers.  Omar  H  81- 
monds  Roger  S.  Munger.  Daniel  G.  Cash 
md  West  Duluth  Land  Company. 

Dated  at   Duluth.   February  19th    1897 
AGATIN.    DAVIDSON   &   CAREY 

„  Attornev's  for  Plaintiffs. 
47.  48.  49  Exchange  Building, 


'  I  ■  ■  ■■— 1^»^» II 


». 


M- 


-r— " 


" 


T— r 


•*■■*»■ 


t 

■  ■A 

■ 

^T 

1 

i 



h- 


■^  •  •  -1 


i^ 


Number  of    Manufacturers' 

Bank    Depositors    Have 

Dividends  Due  Them. 


Receiver   Peasiee   Is    More 
Hopeful  as  to  tlie  Doubt- 
ful Assets. 


modern  top  hat  J»  only  th?  stjccwsor  of 
l^*J?*,i^.w  ^  *  slooping  body,  commonly 
worn  m  the  seventeenth  centurj-. 

THE  PRODUCE  MARKET. 

MlchiKan  street  Is  Ilvpning  up  greatly 
ThPv'l^/J'-.  ''"'  PJ:'*^^*'''  «'•*'  "ot  fluctuating 
Kfng".:  te;,  t7,r-'   ^•'^  usual  and 

v«»^?J^^^"^"  QUOTATIONS. 
D-,.i;i^  u?®^  quotations  below  ai-e  for 
goods  which  change  hands  in  lota  on  the 
open  market:  in  rtlling  orders.  In  order 
to  sceure  best  goods  for  shipping  and  to 
cover  cost  incurred,  an  advance  over  Job- 
omg  prices  has  to  be  charged.  The  ftjr- 
ures  are  changed  dailv. 

BUTTER, 
cream.,    separators,     fancy 
Dairies,  fancy,  .special  make 

Packing   stock    

Dairv,    fair    


TSE    DCLPtB    EVtMteQ  -HERALD:    WESDAr.ifABCB-ifi    1897: 


21 

® 

15 

& 

8 

«i) 

12 

(ii) 

n%& 

11 

fa> 

Confirmation  of  W.  H.  Smith 

Will    Be  of   Benefit  to 

West  Duluth. 


There  are  still  a  large  number  of  de- 
positors in  the  defunct  Manufacturers' 
bank  who  have  failed  to  call  on  Re- 
ceiver C.  R.  Peasiee  for  the  10  per  cent 
dividend  announced  over  two  weeks 
a«o.  Mr.  Peasiee  said  today  that  while 
he  could  not  say  that  there  was  any 
marked     ' 


improvement      in     collections 
noticeable,  he  believed  that  indications 

for   realizins   on   some  of   the   doubtful  ,  Sweet  potato^'^'^eV  hiw"^*"**-      sr 
assets  were  better  than  he  had  antici-    "-—  potaioee,  per  bus a, 


_  CHEESE. 

Turns,  flat.s,   full  cr'm,   new 
Full    crm.    Young    America 

Swiss  chee.se.    No.   1 i-»    ti. 

Brick,    No.    1 15    ^ 

Limb.,    full   cream,    choice..         9   & 

Primoat    « 

FGCS 
Candled,    strictly    fresh".  l'>«i(f? 

Candled,    storage 5   « 

HONEY. 

Fancy  white  clover 12»4ia> 

Fancy  white  clover.  In  Jars 

strained,    per    lb 

Golden    rod    \\ 

Dark    honey    

Buckwheat,  dark  '." 

MAPLE  SUGAR 

Vermont,    per    pound 

Ohio,    per   pound    .[ 

Maple  syrup,   per  gal    ..." 

„^   .                      POPCORN. 
Choice,    per    lb...... 

NUTS 
Soft  shell  almonds,  per  lb.. 
Soft  shell   walnuts,   per  lb.. 
Hard   shell   walnuts,   per  lb 

Brazils,     per    lb 

Pecans,  per  lb 

Filberts,    per   lb .'." 

Peanuts,  roasted,  per  lb '. 

Raw    iieanuts    

VEGETABLES 


16 
9 

:3 


12^ 
11^^ 
11    & 

n  i( 


124 

12 

12^i 

10 


13 

n 

13 


12 
IIV^ 


DECLINED 


Wheat  Was  W^eak  Today  and 
the  Price  Suffered  a 

4 

Decline. 


Failure  of  Liverpool  to  Re- 
spond to  Yesterday's 
Rise  the  Cause. 


taaxvxb  irtnax. 

IF  TOO   WANT  A  TRAINIS)  NURBft, 
le>v  your  ordtr  «t  60706*1  Dru*  ftoi* 


■s-mmauk  Hxzr. 


WANTED-AN    EXPERIENCED    WAIT- 
ress    and     chambermaid.     Call      at    S' 
James  hotel.  "^^    °* 


^-gPfPh.Tm^a^l  ^;^i?rfall\^t  o^ce^'^^^ 


^^yF\S^^^  .^^T^ATS    FIND    GOOD 
glrla    and    eight    girls    can    "    -""" - 


find 


11 
10 
90    ©100 

24®       3 


12 
12 
11 

8 

9    @ 
11 

7 

44® 


The  Crop  Reports  Were  Also 

of  a  More  Favorable 

Character. 


^o^-  s^ilfc",^^'^'^^?  and -chea-pest  1?afr 
goods,  switches  and  chains  at  Mrs.  M. 
C.  Slebold-s.  225  East  Superior  sti^t. 


11 


54 


pated.  He  has  not  yet  taken  any  steps 
to  dispose  of  any  of  the  bank's  real 
estate,  and  hopes  he  will  not  be  forced 
to  do  .so  until  there  is  an  improvement 
In  values.     On  a  conservative  estimate 


Sweet    potatoes,     Muscatine 

per  bbl  2  00 

Celery,  per  doz  25 

Carrots,  per  bus 35 

Beets,    per   bus ^ 

Onions,  per  bus .'.'  1  k 

posits                                          ""         *""           '             cabbage,  ner  lori  \hL  m, 


®     90 

®  2  25 

®  40 
®  SO 
@  1  75 
®      50 

Minn  cabbage,  per  100  lbs...  70  ©  1  00 

Potatoes,    per    bus 25  ©     27 

Mint     per   doz 25  ©     30 

Parsley,   per  doz 26 

Parsnips,    per    bus 55  ©     60 

Cauliflowers,    per  doz 1  ."-.o  ©225 

Horse   radish,    per    lb 6  ©       7 

y^**]^'*'"'^   squash,    per  doz. .  1  50  li!  2  25 

es 


WILL  OET  ITS  SHARE. 
The  oontirmatinn  of  W.  H.  Smith  as  u 
member  of  the   hoard  of  public   works 

will   insure    to    the    West    End    her   full, .._   .,^„..„.,     _^  „„_ 

share    of    positions    in    the    gift    of    the ,  California    cabba"ge     cra"e« 

board.    Mr.  Smith  owes  his  appointment  1  California  celerv,  doz 

and  confirmation  to  the  loval  suppoi t  ^'^rtda  tomatoes,  basket.... 
S-iven  him  by  his  friends  in  this  B«rt  of  Oyster  plant,  doz  bunches., 
the  city,  and  when  men  are  needed  on    «,^rniVi?"'^^- k*^***  bunches. 

public    work   he    will    not    forget    them.  ,  n'^w  b!^ts^  do^ 

This  is  the  first  time  that  the  West '  Spanish  onions,  'per  crate" 
Knd   Has  been   given   representation  on  !  Bermuda    onions,    per   crate    3  50 

the  board  since  It  became  a  part  of  the    Lettuce,  per  box 90    ©  1  00 

city  of  Duluth.     .\lderman  Sang,  in  an  '  ^-^^'"'^*-    P^^   doz 40 

interview  today,  said  that  it  was  prob-  I  "^rse  radish  root.s.   per  bbl    5  ,W 
able   that     all    future     administrations    pancy  naw^'^fr'^,^?  BEANS, 
would  concede  a  member  of  the  hoard  '  M^?^mhand%lcked' bus' 
of  public  works  to  the  West   End,   and     Brown    beans     fancy     bus 
tnat   Air.  smiths  appointment   was  the    Green  and  yellow  peas.... 
establishment  of  a  precedent  that  would  *  Green   peas.    bus.. 


3  50  e  3  75 

8  J 

65  ®   75 

50 

25  ©   40 

90  (if  1  00 

15 
2  25 


undoubtedly  be  followed  for  all  time  to 
come.  He  thinks  that  this  year  the 
Eighth  ward  is  getting  its  fair  share  of 
the  good  things,  and  should  congratu- 
late itself  on  securing  the  president  of 
the  council  and  member  of  the  board  of 
public  works,  to  say  nothing  of  a  num- 
ber of  less  important  places. 


per  bus l  15 

90 
90 
75 
63 


©     90 


ONE  SCARLET  FEVER  CASE 


FRT'ITS. 
Florida  strawberries,  per  qt 
Pie  plant,  per  doz  bunches. 
California    navel    oranges... 

Seedling   oranges    

California    pears,    per   case. 

Bananas,    bunches    

Lemon.s,  |>er  box 

Cocoanuts,   per  doz ..'. 

Cranberries,    per   bbl 

Cranberries,    bus 

Malaga  grapes,   per  keg.. 


10 


3  00 
9 


TK.!     c    ..„.._       ij  ..      »       I   "»««-«<»B<»    Biases,     per    KeK- . . .      0  ii> 

The   S-year-old    son    of    James    Scott.  '  Figs,    per   lb....  .  \% 

living  at   603   Fifty-ninth  avenue   west     "^^  

has  a  mild  attack  of  scarlet  fever. 
Health  Officer  Debow  savs  this  is  the 
first  case  of  scarlet  fever  retx>rted  in 
his  district  for  several  months,  and  is 
the  only  case  of  contagious  disease  o' 
any  kind  in  the  "West  End. 


35  ©  _ 

65  &  lo 

3  25  ©  3  75 

2  00  ©  2  50 

200  ©  250 

1  23  ©  1  EM 

2  75  ©  S  50 
70 

550 
1  75 
6  75 


Wheat  opened  weak  and  lower  today 
Influenced  by  disappointing  Liverpool  co- 
bles, which  failed  to  reflect  the  stronsih 
of  yesterdays  American  markets,  some 
reports  even  showing  a  slight  decline. 
Crop  reports,  especially  from  Kansa.s, 
were  of  a  favorable  character  and  milder 
weather  was  predicted  and  a  con.sequent 
Increase  in  the  receipts.  Commiss'lr.n 
houses  were  liberal  sellers  at  Chl-iago. 
and  as  support  was  small  and  .scattered, 
the  general  tendency  was  downward  liur- 
Ing  the  (Irst  hour.  Northwest  receipt;^ 
were  small,  Minneapolis  and  Duluth  re- 
porting but  250  cars  against  320  last  week, 
and  iW  on  the  corresponding  day  of  the 
year  before. 

The  volume  or  trading  on  the  Duluih 
board  was  only  fair.  May  wheat  opened 
H<-   lower  at  73*4C  and  sold   down   during 

i«5  ^TJk  ^''"^  '*'  "'*^-  ^'*<*'"  'n  the  mor>.- 
ing   It   Armed    up_to   74c.   and   after   noon 

iih 
le 

he 


•  WILI.  BVILD  TWO  DIKE8 

•  Some  very  intereatin?  particulftra 
are  pubU»hod  f#lative  to  thrscheme 
to  rwfaimHhe  2«yder  2^.  which  hSs 
now  reached  a  definite  stag'e  The  Com- 
mittee, appointed  by  the  Dutch  gov- 
ernment have  reported  recommending 
an  extensive  schemf>  which,  it  is  stated 
the  government  have  determined  to 
adopt.  The  reclamation  of  this  vast 
tract  of  country  is  to  be  carried  out 
by  constructing  dikes  running  east  and 
w*8t  from  the  island  of  Wieringen  at 
the  entrance  to  the  sea,  which  forms 
the  narrowest  part.  The  record  of  the 
loss  of  Ufa  caused  by  the  Inundations 
on  this  coast  is  a  most  appalling  one, 
about  600.000  persons  having  been 
drowned  at  different  periods.  The  first 
Rreat  disaster  was  In  1287.  when  80,000 

Ives  were  lost;  in  1421.  by  a  similar 
inundation.  100,000  people  were 
drowned:  in  1.^70  a  terrific  gale  again 
broke  down  the  dikes,  and  400.000  were 
lost.  There  have  bfen  other  inunda- 
tion.s,  the  last  of  which  occurred  in 
1717.  when  15,000  people  perished.  Dur- 
ing the  present  century,  the  danger 
has  been  reduced  t(;  a  minimum  by  a 
great  expenditure  on  the  dikes  and 
vast  tracts  of  land  have  been  re- 
claimed at  different  points  on  the 
Dutch  coast,  .so  that  there  is  every 
reason  to  believe  that  the  government 
will  be  equally  successful  in  the  pres- 
ent instance. 

Do  not  be  hoodwinked.  Use  no  "Just 
as  good."  Salvation  Oil  is  what  you 
want  when  in  need  of  a  good  liniment. 

•MONSIEUR    DE    PARIS." 

Tired  of  living  In  retirement.  Monsieur 
de  Paris,  alias  Del  bier,  has  resumed  his 
post,  or  rather  his  posts,  to  speak  more 
correctly.  Such,  at  least,  is  the  latest 
report,  says  the  New  York  Sun. 

It  has  often  been  remarked  that  the 
profession  of  an  executioner  has  an  ir- 
resistible attraction  for  its  members.  A 
retired  executioner  is  almost  a  phenom- 
enon. They  all  hold  on  to  their  occu- 
pation as  long  as  possible,  and  hate 
hard  times  and  little  work.     Formerly 

France  had  a  head-cutter  for  every  de-  — 

pertment.  but  when  it  was  found  that    ^^^       RENT-NICELY       FURNISHED 


One  Cent  a  iVord.Thmm:e»rd:WnrJ. 


^«^^??~A.  .f^^^..  AND  GENTLB- 
S.^,.*°-«?S"*^"  °''*^*"  '•"'  household 
![2S^1'«*°''*  °?  %^K  payments.  No  ex- 
perlwice  required.  John  Qately  A  Co., 
706  West  Superior  street.  ■ 

WANTED-ONE  SALESMAN.  SAI.AIiY 
and  commission.  $60  to  »ioo  per  month 
can    be    made.     No    experience    ne.-.|-.1 

n,rr„'l'"  ^^^  ''"*•  '^^^  Singer  Manufa- 
turlng  company.  614  West  Superior 
street.  "unrin.i 


SALESMEN  FOR  CIGARS.  BIG  PAY 
Js-xperlence  unnecessary.  Monopole  Ci- 
gar company,  Galesvllle,  Wis. 

^o^!?^^^A°®NTS  TO  SOLICIT  SICK 
aHI.**^^'/^^.^' .'"^"'•ance   for   the  Union 

nni^,?h  ^'}l"^M"^"''^"^e    company    of 

Duluth.  Liberal  terms  to  the  right  par- 

J^^^^address  307  Palladlo  build- 


Alj  advertisements  of  "situ- 
Wanted  inserted  FREE. 
W0  invite  as  many  repetitions 
as  are  necessary  to  secure 
wfrnt  you  advertise  for.  The 
Heraid*s  50,000  daily  readers 
wilf  be  sure  to  fill  your  wants* 

ggPjfgyojyg  wATtmK  ^  ^ 

WANTED-CARPET    LAYING    OR    ODD 
•s-treet.  Warner.     7    West     Fifth 

Vi^J.^^^^yASHING,     IRONING    AND 
(■r»(l.  41ii  East  Fourth  ."Street. 


ftARTOAjlTfME  TABLES. 
Sti  Paul  &  Duluth  R.  R. 


atta^ 


>l*Bp.i 


m. 
^  —  p.m, 
niJtp  m 


*D»Uy.  tBxe»pt  Bttnday 

ST.  PAUlT" 
miNNBAPOLIS. 


▲rriva 
Dnlatb. 


*t40a.  m. 
*1 :»  p.  m. 
t7  M  p.  m. 


From  Union  Depot    CITY  TIC  KErOtrFICE. 


EASTERN  UILWAY 

OP  ■INNESOTA. 

CITI  TICKET  OFFICE  432  W.  SDPEBIOR  8T. 


„      ??^??^-         INDIT.STRlOUa        MAN 
would    like   to   get    a   job   of   anv   kind 

^treeT"     '  ^^'-  '^""'°"'  ^  ^'*'''*  Superior 


^  ANTED-PLACE  BY  GOOD  COOK  IN 

l^^^rw'o/"""!'^'-  '"'J''  general  hous^ 
work.  Can  give  good  city  references.  L 
oS,   Herald. 


^7,!^n.»i?iJ'^-^'^^^  ^AR    BARN.    ONE 
furnished    room;       $3    per    month 
West  Second. 


270; 


A  RELIABLE.  MIDDLE  AGED   MAN 
P^^,  HTr°a''ld  "^   """^  *"""*•  **"•'''  ^^"-'^   "• 


WANTED-YOUNG  LADY  DESIRES 
pos  tion  as  stenographer.  Has  had  ex- 
perience In  general  office  work.  Can 
H       Id®    any    machine.     Address    K    95 


1jmt9  i>Qlath 


tl2:40p.ai.» 
ni:L5p.  m,  \ 


Arrire  Duiuth 


MIMNfAPOyt    i    *7:00» 


p.  ni. 
tu. 


A  YOUNG  LADY  WOULD  LIKE  A  PO- 
n„!i°"  w^vP"^""**'  housework.  A  good 
and  reliable  German  girl.  Call  at  282 
Third  avenue  east. 


THREE         OR         FOUR       FURNISHED 
FMrn^treet  *'°"«^*^^*'I''"&    »*    309    Wer.t 


MRS.  S.  L.  KELSOE  DEAD. 
Mrs.  S.  L.  Kelsoe.  wife  of  Patrolman 
Kelsoe,  died  at  her  home,  corner  of 
Forty-eighth  avenue  west  and  Oneota 
street,  yesterday  afternoon  after  an  ill- 
ness of  nearly  a  year.  She  leaves  one 
child.  Arrangements  for  the  funeral 
have  not  yet  been  comjileted,  but  it  is 
probable  that  it  will  take  place  Thurs- 
day. 


Pineapple,     per    doz. 

Dates,     per    lb 

,      ,  APPLES  AND  CIDER. 

Apples,    per   bbl 175    ®  2  50 

Mich,  sweet  cider,  per  keg...    2  50    ®  2  73 
,,      ,    ^         DRESSED   MEATS. 

veal,  fancy  7 

Veal,   heavy,   coarse,   thin...         5 

Mutton,    fancy   dress<^d 6 

LIVE  POULTRY. 

Live   turkeys    10 

Sprink  chickens,  per  lb 6    @       7 

_     .  DRESSED  POULTRY. 

Turkeys?,   per  lb 10 

Chickens,    per  lb 6    &       7 

Geese,    per    lb 10    e      n 

BRAN   AND   SHORTS.   CAR   L'OTS. 

Bran.  200  lbs,  sacks  included    8  00 

Shorts.    1(0   Ib.^,    sacks   inc..    9  00 

Shorts.    200   lbs.    sacks   Inc..    8  50 

Red  dog 1200 

^    WEST  DuE^H  BRIEFS.        ! g?S  S ^^°o. Y::::::::::  12^  gsS 

Fill   Burisa   has.   after  many  dlfficul-  I  HAY.   CAR  LOTS. 

ties,  finished  his  large  tie  contract  and  '  V"°'*"®  south.   Minn 6  50    ®  7  GO 

broken  camp.     He  is  well  satisfied  with    VV^*'^'""   **'""    4  00    «?  6  50 


sold  up  to  74^c.  The  close  was  easy  wit 
sellers  at  74c,  a  decline  or  y^c  for  t. 
•lay.  There  was  an  advance  of  lie  In  th.- 
premium  for  cash  stuff.  The  mlll^  bousfht 
WOO  bus  at  i^c  under  May.  and  the  ele- 
V  J  tors  took  4tJ<10  bus  at  ',ic  under  May 
Following  were  the  closing  prices:  ^" 
Wheat-No.  1  hard,  cash,  75»4c:  Mav, 
TRc.  No.  1  northern,  cash,  73Ujc;  Mav. 
l.!i  "'ll'ed;  Jul^^  74»/ic;  September.  7ta,c 
bid.      No     2    northern,    71c.    No.    3.    ^V^i 

v!l^  icF^r-  ^P-  1  northern.  73V4c.  Rye. 
^*i^-  •  ^J.^'lV*-  "''■  N"-  3  oats,  V'4.c. 
Flax.  79c  bid:  May,  >0c  bid 

n„^«'"J"''P*^",*i"T^^^«*-    135:      corn.      1; 


Bbls. 
20.7.S0 


7H 


the  result  of  the  winter's  operations, 
notwithstanding  the  extra  expense  en- 
tailed l.y  reason  of  the  deep  snow. 

Charles  Brown  and  his  .son  have  com- 
pleted their  contract  for  ties,  telegraph 
poles  and  paving  blocks  and  have  sus- 
pended operations  for  the  winter.  Last 
week  a  falling  tree  struck  one  of  their 
oxen,  killing  it  almost  instantly. 

The  ladies  of  Pearl  Hive  No.  4  L.  O. 
T.  M..  will  v?ive  a  basket  social  and  ball 
at  the  Phillips  hotel  tomorrow  night 
Out  of  respect  for  the  day  all  who  at- 
tend are  rerjuested  to  "wear^he  green." 
Charles  Ward,  who  has  been  em- 
ployed as  millwright  at  Mitchell  &  Mc- 
Clures  mill,  left  today  for  Texarkana 
Tex.,  where  he  has 
awaiting  him. 

Information  has  been  received  at 
Xew  Duluth  of  the  death  of  Mrs.  J.  P. 
Sanford  at  the  home  of  her  aunt  in 
Greenfield,  Ohio.  Her  husband.  Rev.  J. 
P.  Sanford.  late  pastor  of  the  Congre- 
gational church  at  New  Duluth,  and 
her  son  Roy  were  with  her  at  the  time 
of  her  death. 

The   Ladies"   Aid  society  of  the  Con- 
gregational church  will  meet  with  Mrs. 
Brearley    on    Wednesday    afternoon    at 
2:30   o'clock. 
Robert  Morrison  has  been  confined  to 


Medium 

Tame,    ton.   choice  timothy. 


4  CO    (R>  fi  50 
8  00    ®  9  00 


IN   CHICAGO. 
Chicago.  March  16.— Butter,  firm:  crtf.m- 
ery.     l(X(il8c;     dairy.     9<5;16c.     Eggs,     r^asv: 
fresh.  9Uc. 


n-  II  "^^^    FLOUR   STATEMENT. 

r^Miulh'*^^^  i"  *^^  l^"*"  statement  for 
Duluth  and  Superior  for  the  week  funded 
Saturday,    March    13.    1897: 

Production     

Stocks    In    store    inoin 

Kxports :::;. '^•,t| 

Receipts     by    rail "'Jai 

Total    shipments    .'."."."."!. '."22, ".40 

T  ,    '^^^\  LIVERPOOL  MARKET. 

Liverpool,  March  16.— Closing.  wheat 
spot  steady;  futures  quiet:  March.  6s  'id'. 
May,  6s  ia4d-  July.  6s  2d.  Maize,  spot  ttrin 

2.rSirJu^,^'-^2^-9ti^^P'-"'  '«  '^'  ^^y- 

XT  ^-^'EW  YORK  MONEY, 
^^^.t'^,  York  March  16.-Money  on  call 
easy  at  1M,@2  per  cent.  Prime  mercantile 
paper  3«ft4  per  cent.  Sterling  exchango 
easier  with  actual  business  In  bankers 
b«  »««t  W.87'S4.87'4  for  demand  and  "fss^ 
?i!.86^  for  sixty  days.  Posted  rates  11  S»; 
fh*ii^  «".r'  »-«-88®4  884.  Commerciai  biib» 
Vu^'lh  ®«'^''-  ^^•'•t'OS?''^''  fi3'««&?*-  Bar  sil- 
ver  62.    Mexican    dollars    48.    Government 

,'!J(n'^V^S'    ^'""^   *1   leglHtered   *nd    cuC- 
fi  ii'    ?^-^^-.  ^^    rf^lstered       and    coupon. 
J1.14:  4s  registered.  $].11»4;  coupon.   SI  131 
2s  registered,  95'^;  Pacific  G.s  of    ftS    ti  frtr„ 


too  many  of  them  held  sinecures,  it  wai. 
determined  to  appoint  one  executioner 
only  for  the  whole  country.  Deibler  got 
the  job.  and  a  mighty  busy  official  he 
was.  always  on  the  go  from  north  to 
south  and  from  east  to  west. 

It  will  be  said,  perhaps,  that  the  rea- 
son why  he  re.sumes  his  office  is  that  hi- 
likes  to  travel;  but  that  is  only  half  the 
reason,  because,  generally  speaking 
people  like  pleasure  trips  only,  and  it 
can  hardly  be  said  that  Delbler's  excur- 
sions can  be  placed  in  that  class.  As  a 
rule,  executioners  are  always  merry 
fellows;  but  one  of  them.  Helndrich,  a 
Paris  headsman,  was  somewhat  of  a 
sentimentalist.  He  was  in  the  habit  of 
dining  In,  a  little  nstaurant  in  the  Rue 
de  la  Roquette.  t)ne'  day  a  journalist 
dined  with  him  In  company  with  tiie 
brothers  Lionet,  whom  he  had  invited 
for  the  occasion,  .\fter  the  dinner  the 
executioner  asked  Anatole  Lionet  to 
sing  for  him  the  "Musette."  by  Murger, 
which  the  painter.  Horace  Vemet,  set 
to  music.  Anatole  sang,  and  when  he 
came  to  the  words: 

Et  Musette,  qui  n'est  plus  elle. 
Dlsait  que  je  a'etals  plus  mot! 

two  big  tears  rolled  down  the  cheeks  of 
Helndrich.  But  suddenly  he  jumped  up. 
looked  at  his  watch,  and  ran  out  of  the 
place.  His  official  duties  required  his 
presence  elsewhere. 

Deibler  has  never  exhibited  any  such 
weakness,  but  for  all  that  it  is  well 
known  that  he  is  passionately  fond  of 
fiowers.  Naturally  enough,  he  lives  In 
retired  quarters,  is  a  very  modest  man 
and  avoids  publicity.  He  used  to  dress 
like  a  dandy  and  was  always  fond  of  a 
joke,  although  he  has  nearly  400  heads 
to  his  credit.  His  assistants  always 
speak  of  him  as  one  of  the  best  of  men. 
He  hates  to  execute  women,  not  from 
any  reluctance  about  putting  a  woman 
to  death,  but  because,  as  he  says,  "they 
always  cry  and  make  a  great  fuss."  He 
has  sometimes  been  accused  of  slowness 
In    his    executions,    but 


Is'^NorHs" XT  '^^  ^'^""^  '"'^"-  «"«'" 


NICELY  FURNISHED  ROOM.  LOWELL 


FOR  RENT-BASEMENT  OF  1020  EVST 
water  free^''  '''^^'  ^^^"^''  ^  P^^  month; 


A    YOUNG    MAN.    22    YEARS    OF    AGE 
wants  work  of  any  kind.  Must  have  It. 
Address  916  East  Seventh  street. 

W  .A.NTED-SITUATION  BY  YOmJo 
fvnU"  a'^^"  family  to  do  general  house- 
work.  Address  L  16,  Herald. 


•Daily.    fEzcapt  Bonday. 

Buffet  Parlor  Cars  on  Oiy  Tialns. 
New  Sleeping  Cars  oa  Nfeht  Tralne. 

fo?il!f '  connections  with  Great  Northern  train* 

FAHQO,  GRAND  FORKS 

W'lWIIPEB,  HELENA. 

BUTfE,  SFOKtNE, 

PORTUNO,  lEATTLE 

AND  JAPAN. 
At  St.  Paul  connectioni  ar«  made  for  aU  poiota 
East,  West  and  Soath.    Through  ticket*  and 
ba«Kage  cb-^cked  to  deatinatiou. 


YOUNG  MAN,  20  YEARS  OLD,  STRONG 
?i?£  willing  to  work,  would  like  place  in 
eommssion  house  or  as  delivery  man. 
Familiar  with  care  of  horses.  Address 
A.  G.,   Herald. 


OuluMouth  Shore  &  Atlantic  Ry. 

■■  Tralna  for  all  polnta  East  leaTe 

Sett'at^'''°"4:IOP.  M. 

_    SLEEPING  CAR  for  SanJt  Ste 
arte,  aa.i  uiaiag  Car,  eerving  supper. 

8UND*Af?°** ''*''*  """"^^  "  ^' *•  "•  EXCEPT 


TO   KKKT-HOtTtKS. 

FOR  RENT-MODERN l-ROOM  HOUSE 
well    furnished;   good    location,    f or   ono 
year;  also  8-room  furnished  house.  East 
End   for   three   or  six    months.    W      H 
Ca''Pg"«Pr.    112   West    Michigan    street.  " 

^v^«.^^^I~^^^^'^N  ROOM  HOUSE  ON 
rJi^^*o%"«n  "v^'nue  east,  near  Lond.>n 
iZ^JL-  *^  f}^i  y^ater  free.  Carpets  to  sell 
cheap,   all   laid.     Address   P  81.   Herald.  ' 

^S^  RENT  -  HOUSE  315  WEST 
monTE^  ^M^l'  *"  modern  Improve- 
"'«""■  will  be  renovated  to  suit  ten- 
hTg  *  ^°  •  Palladlo  bulld- 


\\^ANTED-YOUTH  WOULD  LIKE  SIT- 
wnru"r.S  ^"*'., '""^-  Clerking  or  office 
^„K?1  ^^^^^^^^^-  am  energetic  and  re- 
U  '^<i^^*^r  ^'^■•'  references.  Address  L., 
Box  279,  West  Duluth,  Minn. 


WANTED-TO      DO    ^WASHING      AND 

;9?"4"^.°o  '^°"f^   cleaning   by  the  day, 
731  East  Second  street. 


WASHING.  IRONING.  HOUSE  CLEAN- 
Ing  or  scrubbing  by  the  day;  work  guar- 
anteed. Call  or  address  112  First  ave- 
nue  west,    up  stairs. 


Oolotli,  Soperior  &  Mm  Ry. 


WBHT. 
P.  M. 


*Daily  exoept  Sunday, 


•3:05 
4:06 
6:13 
7:40 
7:02 
8:00 


0 
23 

76 

94 
109 


Lv Duluth  .... 

Ar Cloquet  .... 

Ar....  Swan  River  . 
Ar...       Hlbblng  ... 
Ar..  Grand  Rapids 
Ar....  Deer  River  . 


EAST. 
A.  M 


..Ar 
..Lv 
..Lv 
,.Lv 
..Lv 
..Lv 


•  11:40 
10:41 
8:40 
7:15 
7:50 
6:65 


FOR   RENT-A   FIVE   ROOM   MODERN 
Hat.  London  road  and   Eighteenth  ave 
nue  east.   Apply   to  Commercial  Invest- 
ment  company.    Torrey    building. 


HOUSE         CLEANING.         SCRUBBING 

f«^'■^L.^"<*.  °'"^®'  *°  clean.  Mrs.  Jack- 
son. 390  Lake  avenue  south. 


COAT. 


ACCOUirTANT  AND  AUDITOH. 


CHAS.  EVANS  HOLT,  507  CHAMBER 
Of  Commerce.  If  you  want  anvthlng  In 
my  line— accounting,  auditing,  oook- 
keeping— temporarily  or  regularly    call 


LOST-ABOUT  3  P.  M.  THIS  AFTER- 
noon,  on  West  Superior  street  ucir 
corner  of  Second  avenue,  lady's  pocket- 
book,  containing  two  rings  and  some 
money.  Fmder  will  be  liberally  reward- 
ed  If  returnetl  to  St.  James _hjt«.| 

FOR  SALE— GOOD  DELIVERY  W4- 
goi^$30.   Apply  716  East  Third  street 


Duluth,  Missabe 

&  Northern 
Railway  Com  pany 


7 :45  a.  m. 
10:4Sa.  m. 
10:44  a.  m. 
ll:S6a.m. 
UAla.  m 
11:25  a.  m. 


Lv. 

Ar 

Ar. 

Ar. 

Ar. 

Ar 


CAJSD  READiyO. 


CARD     READING,      PAST,      PRESENT 
and  future.  1330  West  Sunerior  strm. 


IN  NEW  YORK. 
New    York.     March  16.— Butter     steady: 
Western    creamery.     IS^glSc;     Sigins,    19c; 
factory.    7WIIV2C.    Eggs,    quiet;    state    and 
Pennsylvania.    lO^c;    Western,   10<ffVic. 

BREATHING   MACHINES. 

Doubtle.ss   the   most   interesting   of   new 

inventions     are    several     instruments     for 

rewinding   the  delicate   machinery   of  life 

after  it  has  run  down.  or.   more"  literally 

a   similar   nos^ifior.  '  f.l^aklng.    for   bringing   the  dead   back   to 

a   similar   oositioi;     me.    Heretofore    such    mechanisms    have 

existed   only    in    fiction   or   in   the   visions 

of    those    who    have    craved    for    earthly 

life  eternal,  says  the  New  York  Sun. 

A  French  physician  has  patented  such 
a  device  In  this  country.  It  is  to  be  ap- 
plied for  the  purpose  of  breathing  re- 
newed life  into  bodies  which  are  life- 
less or  apparently  lifeless.  To  use  the 
words  of  the  Inventor,  it  Is  an  aero- 
theraDeutica!  apparatus.  A  vessel  Into 
which  water  is  poured  Is  surrounded  by 
an  air  chamber,  and  has  fixed  In  it  an 
upright  tube  surrounded  by  a  globe.  In 
the  center  of  the  tube  is  a  vacuum  guage. 
When    the  proper   valve   is   turned    water 


CATTLE  AND  HOGS, 
nn?.  if^.*'^'    ^^arch   16.-Hogs,    receipts,    17.- 
000;  left  oyer   2000.  Active  and  higher  than 
i-r^-^.7',rr  "  k'"*'^'  ^^^^-  »3.85^4.^;  mixed 
wi-^  Un^A-  'J!!*^'*'-       «■«''>'?/ 4. 07Vi.:       rough. 
K.&j'ti3.7a  Cattle,   receipts.   2500.   Steadv   to 

eP^''"&n,^''r,r^-''-  «.60«ff5-'«:  <'<'ws  and  heif? 
ers.  $2.0O(&4.25;  ^Texas  steers.  $3.204i4.2n- 
stockers  and  feeders.  $3.35''a4.25  Sheep  rc^ 
celpt.s.   12.000.   Steady.       *'"^-^^-  an''*'P-  ri- 


agalnst      this 
charge  he  always  defended  himself  by 

:^;  Pacific  6s  Jf '98,  Vl.oK."  fn^^H^  **?^^  ^^  '^^"^u  *"*  '^^  everything 
*  "  'n  perfect  order,  so  that  there  never  can 
be  any  blunder  in  his  work.  In  other 
words,  he  wants  to  be  sure  he's  right 
before  he  goes  ahead.  A  man  becomes 
accustomed  to  everything,  and  Deibler 
Is  no  exception  to  the  rule.  When  he 
first  began  to  practice  his  profession  he- 
was  nervous,  but  in  a  short  time  he  be- 
came quite  accustomed  to  the  thing, 
and  now  an  execution  has  no  effect 
upon  whatever. 


.^NEW  YORK  GRAIN. 
..^♦'W  York,  March  16. -Close  wheiit 
March,  8lHc;  May.  79Sc:  3»\y.  78VicT  sA  ^ 
^^b^^i,,^^-    Corn.    May.       29^?.    Oals, 


his^room    With- la  «HpprVorVhrpa^t  j  iTow^ll^aX'^d^u^Yng'^Tif^rn^a'^r^i-n'hara' 

tlons    and    exhalations    in    another    tube 


week. 

Mrs.    .Arthur    Bri-ggs 
Briggs,  Is  seriously  111 


wife  of     Lieut. 


West  Duluth  Covered  Rink. 

Music  tonight  by  City  band. 

■WELLINGTONS    REASONING. 

Harpers  Round  Table:  A  good  storv 
is  told  of  the  duke  of  Wellington  while 
out  fox-hunting.  It  seems  the  hounds 
had  reached  the  bank  of  a  small  river, 
and  the  master  galloped  up  saying: 

"The  dogs  can't  pick  up  the  scent. 
your  grace." 

"The  fox  has  crossed  to  the  other 
side."  cried   the  duke. 

"Not  very  likely,  my  lord.  A  fox  hates 
water." 

"Ay.  ay,  but  he's  crossed  over  some 
bridge." 

"I  don't  believe  there  is  a  bridge." 
answered  the  master. 

"Well,"  continued  the  duke,  "though 
I  was  never  here  before,  I  am  sure  you 
will  find  one  within  a  mile." 

Followed  by  the  hunt  they  pushed  on, 
and  less  than  a  mile  off  came  upon  a 
rudely-constructed  bridge.  The  dogs 
crossed  It,  again  took  up  the  scent  and 
killed  the  fox.  .Asked  for  his  reason  for 
asserting  that  there  was  a  bridge  near, 
the  duke  said:  "I  saw  three  or  four 
cottages  clustered  together  on  each  side 
of  the  river,  and  I  thought  the  people 
living  in  them  would  be  tempted  by 
their  social  feelings  to  contrive  a  means 
of  visiting  each  other.  That  same  in- 
ference of  mine  gained  me  one  of  my 
battles." 


I  leading  to  the  free  air.  By  suitable  mou»h 
I  or  nasal  pieces  the  latter  tube  Is  to  be 
attached  to  the  body  of  the  subject  The 
instrument  being  attached  and  put  Into 
operation,  the  lungs  will  be  filled  with  air 
and  emptied  at  alternate  Intervals,  cor- 
I  responding  in  regularity  with  the  natu- 
ral expansion  and  contraction  of  the 
chest  In  breathing.  Thus  the  blood  may 
be  supplied  with  the  necessary  oxygen 
and  unless  decomposition  has  set  in  life 
may  be  kindled  anew. 

Another  Invention  of  this  class  is  that 
of  a  Brooklyn  physician.  It  is  an  air- 
tight chamber,  suitable  in  size  for  the 
accommodation  of  a  man's  body.  It 
IS  connected  with  an  air  rarefler  and 
compres.sor.  the  controlling  mechanism 
i)f  which  is  worked  by  a  rotary  shaft 
and  crank.  It  is  claimed  that  the  subject 
inside  may  be  made  to  breathe  when  the 
interior  atmosphere  Is  alternately  rare- 
lied  and  compressed,  his  lungs,  as  well  as 
the  chamber  itself,  being  filled  and  then 
emptied   as    the   valves    are    working. 

Still  another  such  Invention,  that  of  a 
^.ufialo  man.  Is  a  l>ellows  and  tube,  the 
latter  to  be  connected  with  the  mouth 
and  n«>strils.  The  tube,  before  reaching 
the  subject,  pa.sses  through  a  small 
stove,  which  heats  the  air  to  a  proper 
temperature. 

An  odd  apparatus,  which  may  be  In- 
cluded in  this  category,  is  a  sort  of  cor- 
.''et  patented  by  a  California  man,  which, 
while  encircling  the  chest,  may  be  made 
automatically  to  compress  and  let  fre<» 
the  muscles  of  the  thorax  which  control 
respiration. 


THE  CHICAGO  MARKET. 
Chicago        March       16.-Close,       wheU 

^c^^^-  '=^'"-  ^"y-  "'^^:  J"'y-  72^*-:  Sep- 
tember iO\c.  Corn.  March,  23%c?  Muv 
24?<.c;  July.  25Hc;  September.  26%c.  OatV 
March.    ]6>4c:    May.       i6Tic;    Julv.    irlc 

jp.-io.    Lard.    March.    $4.22",.    Mav     *4  Si'i', 

May.    »4.ffi«6:    July.    $4,821^.    Cash,    wheat 
No     2   red.    84ft86c:    No.   3  red.    82c-   No     2 
spring,   73V,c;   No.   3  spring.   70©83c     No     ' 

?i.«''7.;.'^v'^*'^  '^^S-  N«-  3  hard  winter 
liltlbc  \o.  1  northern  spring.  76c.  Cash 
corn.   No.  2    23v^(g^c;  No!^3.  Ik&i^c.  Oats 

on  the  basis  of  $1.17  for  finished  good?. 
Rye  cash  32a4c:  May.  33%@34c.  Barley 
Ma?ch    »2.TO.  ^'^^^''-  Tlm^hTcash       "^ 


and 


FIRST  TALL  SILK  HAT 
Lloyds  Weekly:  The  first  high  hat 
it  is  said,  was  worn  by  John  Hethering- 
ton.  a  haberdasher,  who  wa.«  in  business 
on  the  Strand,  in  London.  He  conceived 
the  idea  that  a  tall  silk  hat  would 
prove  a  most  becoming  addition  to  a 
gentleman's  attire,  and.  acting  upon  the 
thought,  called  on  Winkle  &  Co..   who 

at   that   time   were  purveyors     to     the      „ 

royal  family,  and  from  the  plana  which  '  Itldney '  complaints. 


Hetherlngton  laid  down  the  firm  built 
a  hat  at  a  cost  of  £2.  It  is  to  be  re« 
membered.  however,  that  th«  b«av«r 
hat  preceded     the     silk     hat,  ana  the 


A  PIECE  OF  PARCHMENT. 
When  unwritten  on.  Is  not  more  colorless 
ti;an  the  cadaverous  countenances  of 
those  unfortunate  persons  whom  we  are 
accustomed  to  call  "confirmed  Invalids  " 
vvhat  a  misnomer!  Implying,  too  des- 
R?""'  .a,  giving  up  for  lost!  As  long  as 
the  vivifying  power  of  Hoetetter's  S'om- 
ach  Bitters  can  be  felt,  and  that  is  pos- 
sible so  long  as  there  is  no  absolute  col- 
lapse of  the  faculties,  freeh  vitality  can 
be  Infused  Into  wasted,  feeble  frame-*- 
color  and  flesh  can  be  brought  back  to 
w-asted,  pallid  cheeks  with  this  ijrand 
sheet  anchor  of  the  debilitated  and  the 
sickly.  It  is  a  tonic  of  the  greateet  po- 
tency  and  the  utmost  purity,  and  a  rem- 
edy for  and  preventive  of  dyspepsia  bil- 
ious, malarlouri.  rheumatic,  nervous  and 
Appetite   and    dleep 


MiIJ;^^   MINNEAPOLIS   MARKET. 

Mitineapolls.  March  16.— Whwat  wefik- 
er;  close:  May,  71%c;  July.  72%@%c;  Sep- 
tember. 68'4c.  On  track-No.  1  ha?d,  7'l'lc- 
No.  1  northern.  72V6c.  Receipts,  115  cars!   ' 

„       .     ^  GOSSIP. 

Received  over  private  wire  of  B.  E  Baker 
Sl!^'"*  o"*^  ^^°^^  broker,  room  107  Cham- 
ber of  Commerce  and  307  Board  of  Trid" 
h.^M  o^?*"'  ***.''v^  16. -Weaker  cables  and 
i!.'"^"'..  weather  opened  wheat  ea.sur 
and  a  decline  resulted  which  took  it 
under  put  prices.  Probably  the  most  Jm- 
?Kn"-"ir"f'"  of  bearish  news  is  the  fact 
that  offerings  of  Russian  wheat  are  In- 
creasing and  England  can  buy  it  muca 
cheaper  than  they  can  ours  at  present 
for  the  past  few  days  our  market  >5:i» 
Shown  more  disposition  to  be  governed 
by  domestic  conditions  mstead  of  tor- 
elgn  and  crop  news  is  becoming  an  im- 
portant feature.  Today  a  fresh  batch  of 
damage  news  came  from  Illinois  and  th" 
Southwest,  a  great  deal  of  It  being  nf 
apparently  authentic  and. well  conflrmod 
The  close  was  easleiT  on  realizing  by  the 
local  trade.  Cash  trade  and  c^arances 
again  light  but  St.  Louis  and  Toledo  ex- 
perienced active  Inquiry  and  much  high- 
er prices   for  cash  wheat. 

Corn    weakened       early    but    as    usual 
closed    firm.    Fluctuations 
pats    rather    weak    and 
lessening. 

Provisions    strong,    active    and    higher 
Even  on   the  present  advance  the  specu- 
lative conditions  favor  higher  prlcw  lind 
the  cash  demand  follows  it   up 
Puts,    May   wheat,   72%-73(ff72%c. 
Curb,    May   wheat,    74i4*i74^4c 
Curb,  May  wheat.  734-%c. 

_     NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 

Name^of  Stock.       Open  High  Low  Close 


A  QUORUM  OF  CONGRESS. 
The  concluding  article  of  "This  Coun- 
try  of     Ours"    series   by    ex-President 
Harrison,  appears  in  the  March  Ladies' 
Home  Journal.    It  completes  "The  Sen- 
ate and  House  of  Representatives"  ar- 
ticle.   In  it  Gen.  Harri.son  gives  this  in- 
teresting view  of  the  workings  of  con- 
gress: "A  majority  of  each  house,  under 
the  constitution,  constitutes  a  quorum 
for  the   transaction   of   business.     If  a 
quorum  Is  not  present,  and  that  fact  Is 
disclosed  by  a  yea  and  nay  vote,  busi- 
ness must  stop  until  a  quorum  Is  se- 
cured.    But   the   members   present   are 
empowered  by  the  constitution   to  ad- 
journ from  day  to  day  and  'to  compel 
the  attendance  of  absent  members,   in 
such  manner  and  under  such  penalties 
as  each  house  may  provide.'     A  great 
deal  of  business  is  done  in  both  the  sen- 
ate and  house  when  a  quorum  is  not 
present,  the  absence  of  a  quorum   not 
being  officially  disclosed  by  a  roll-call. 
The  sergeant-at-arms  is  not  an  infre- 
quent   attendant   at   social     receptions 
and  dinners,  but  always  an  unwelcome 
one  when  he  comes  to  demand  the  al- 
tendance  of  truant  senators  or  members 
upon  their  respective  houses.    One-fifth 
of  the  members  present  may  demand  a 
vote  by  yeas  and  nays,   and   the  vote 
must  be  recorded  In  the  journal  which 
each   house   Is  required   to  keep  of  Its 
proceedln-gs.    This  journal  does  not  in- 
clude the  debates,  which  are.  however, 
published  in  full  dally  in  the  Congres- 
sional Record. 

"The  senators  and  members  are  pri- 
vileged from  arrest,  except  for  treason, 
felony  or  breach  of  the  peace.  whlTfe  in 
attendance  upon  their  reppectlve  houses 
and  while  going  to  and  returning  from 
the  meetings  of  congress.  A  member 
may  be  punished  by  the  house  to  which 
he  belongs  for  disorderly  behavior,  and 
by  a  two-thirds  vote  of  the  house  may 
be  expelled." 


Contrad  Work. 

Office  of  Board  of  Public  Works 
City  of  Duluth,  Minn..  March  8.  1897! 
Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
board  of  public  works  In  and  for  the 
«^»K?''*"?1u"^  **>*  City  of  Duluth.  Min- 
nesota, at  their  office  in  said  city  until  10 
?M7*";'  °?x,^^^  ^"<*  ^ay  of  March.  A.  D. 
!^Vu  1  '"®  construction  of  wooden  cross- 
walks m  said  city  for  the  year  ending 
r.t'j.'ifl"!^'.  ^'  ^^'^^^oTding  to  plans  an! 
.specifications  on  file  In  the  ofllce  of  said 
Doard. 

i^.^f'^f^^fol  ^^^^^  ^^  a  bond  with  at 
least  two  (2)  sureties  In  the  sum  of  fifty 
"<wlars   must  accompany   each   bid. 

The    said    board    re8er\'es    the    right    to 
reject  any  and  aU  bids. 

M.  J.   DAVIS. 
Official:  President. 

(Seal.) 
R.   MURCHISON. 

Clerk    Board    of    Public    Works. 
Duluth   Evening  Herald.   March  8  lOt 


$200  CASH,   BALANCE   IN   BOARD   AND 

"'k'"'.,-^"^  ^"y     furniture    of     25-room 

boarding   house;      central      location    A 

snap.    P  91,  Herald.  '"^.ai.on.   a 


FOR  SALE-A  FIRST-CLASS  ORGAN, 
^;  easy  payments.  Address  P  96,  Her- 


^Sp^  sale-stock   and   fixtures 

of  white  front  store,  stationery  and  con- 
fectionery, opposite  High  school.  Best 
stand  In  city.  Inquire  as  above 

seventy-five  dollars  and  BAL- 

ance    monthly    buys    a    fourteen    room 

ili'^u  y'.^^'JH  ^®^®"  blocks  of  the  Spald- 

nf^r.«^®'-  ^^^-  ^-  "oy^'  ^  Chamber 
01  commerce. 


9:00  a.m. 

1 :25  p  m. 

lt:%a  m. 


-t)alc.th Ar  3:dip.  m. 

-Virginia  ....Lt  12 :45  p.  m. 
-Eroleth  ...Lv  10  56 a.m. 
-Biwabik  ...Lt  18:2<p.  m. 
-Mt.  Iron  ...Ly  1  1«:30  p.  m. 
-Hlbhi  e     .,Lr  Ij  :13  p.m. 

V' Vinri.iia;....Ar 

Ar Wolf     .  ..Lv 


Ar    ....Hibbing'.r.'Lv 


1 :45  p.  m. 
10^S3a.  m. 
12:13n.  m. 


Dal.y.  axcept  Sunday.      J.  B.  Hansow,  G.  p.  a. 


DULUTH  &  IRON  RANGE  R.R 

2;*2S-"-      fr Evejeth Lv  1    7.-:«a.m 

??^:     j'^'" gJy  Lvl   7:»ia.m. 

Daily,  Sunday  exoaptedl 


iryjuroiAit. 


^^V  A«vei 
^m  8*n«l 
JvflUOZl 


M  oBly  rallAM*  tamtam  rMndator 
«rwr^.  Soldbydruggistii.  SS.OO 

flUOZ  mSIOAI.  00. 228  t.  8th  8t.lktt»,rt. 


LOANSLON  diamonds.   FURNITURE. 

MONET   TO     LOAN.      ANT     AMOUNT 
Cooley  ft  Underbill.   104  Palladlo: 


VVANTED-TEAMS  TO  HAUL  WOOD 
to  \Vest  Superior.  F.  A.  Hamilton.  2:«)1 
West   Superior  street. 


\\ANTED-TO  BUY,  LIGHT  DELIV- 
ery  wagon  or  strong  open  buggy,  suit- 
able  for   delivery  rig.   Call  at  730  East 

.    1  nird    street. 


WANTED-TH REE  COMPLETELY  FUR- 
nlshed  rooms,  in  good  locality,  for  light 
housekeeping.  Address,  stating-  prloo 
and  when  apartments  can  be 
"Seeker,"   Herald. 


hai. 


very 
export 


limited, 
demand 


are  greatly  aided  by  ft;  It  counteracts 
the  effects  of  undue  fatigue,  or  excite- 
ment, and  nulllfles  the  often  perilous  con* 
^«ene«  of  exposure  in  lncl»rh.)ftt 
Weather  or  damp  clothing. 


Whisky A    i3ff 

Atchison I    11* 

Sugar  Trust 


Canada  Southern.. 

C,  B  &  Q 

St.   Paul 

Chicago  Gas 

Del..  Lack.  &  W... 
General  Electric... 

Erie 

Reading 

Louis.  &  Nash 

Manhattan 

Missouri  Pacific..., 

Tobacco 

Chicago  ft  N.  W...".' 
N.  P.  preferred 

ock    laland 

nion  PAciflc 

Mterri  Union 

«Aih«£.. 

^^  9h^*- ,- 


1   »-^ 

I   " 
112 


491K 

r,H 

78H 
'35' 
"28  J* 
*^ 

mi 

V»% 

'm" 


139( 

11< 

1I3H 

SOK 

18% 
78JS 

'85" 

■n% 

5U 

87H 
10 

!»% 

no 
•an 


H 

Ml 


i! 


18H 
11« 
lllK 
*9% 
7754 

riH 
77X 

■'35' 

'24]( 
49« 
86  IK 
15 

78ii 

10914 

87H 

6a 


1«H 

IIH 

lltM 

SOK 
77H 
78^ 
78 

16 

'25 
50 
X64t 
18K 

m 

8B!« 


BIRTH-MONTH  STONES. 
The  very  latest  craze  In  many  of  the 
fashionable  capitals  is  the  wearing  of 
plrth-month  stones,  and  strange  to  say 
it  emanated  in  remote  Poland.  Women 
there  according  to  an  old  legend,  are 
saved'  all  manner  of  ills  by  wearing  the 
guardian  charm  of  the  month  in  which 
they  were  born;  and  men.  too.  if  given 
such  gems  by  a  woman,  are  also  saved 
and  benefited.  Here  is  the  true  list. 
There  are  varieties,  but  the  one  given 
Is  direct  from  Poland: 

January— Garnet;  constancy. 

February— Amethyst;  sincerity. 

March— Bloodstone;  courage,  wisdom 

April— Sapphire  or  diamond;  free 
from  enchantment,  Innocence. 

May— Emerald;  success  in  love,  dis- 
covers false  friends. 

June— Agate;  health  and  prosperity. 

July— Ruby;  corrects  evils  of  mis- 
taken friendship,  discovers  poison. 

August— Sardonyx;  means  conjugal 
felicity. 

September— Chrysolite;  antidote  to 
madness,  frees  from  sadness  and  evil 
passions. 

October— Opal;  hoi>e. 

bad  dtSm^~'^°*'"'   '^'^^''^^^   pireV#ntfc 
t>ecembei^-Tufquoi9«;  pfo<perltf.' 


STATE^OF^MINNESOTA.   COUNTY   OF 

Dtetrlct    Court.'  Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 

In  the  matter  of  the  assignment  of  By- 
jon  B.   Inman,   Insolvent: 

n^ffl^^^^»^^^^"^'  GIVEN  that  the 
JJuluth  Trust  Company,  as  a-sslgnee  of 
Byron  B.  Inman,  Insolvent,  will  sell  at 
public  auction  for  cash,  to  the  highest 
bidder,     subject     only     to     the     approval 

?m  ^^'^  .  ^*'"'"'-  all  Its  right, 
title  and  Interest  In  and  to  cer- 
tain property  belonging  to  the  assigned 
estate  herein,  consisting  generally  of  lum- 
ber shop  supplies,  oflflce  fixtures,  restau- 
rant outflttings  and  carpenter  and  shop 
too^s  subject  to  all  liens  against  the 
Itl^.!'  -/  ^"y  part  thereof,  a  list  of  which 
property  Is  open  for  Inspection,  at  the 
office  of  said  assignee  in  the  Duluth  Trust 
Company  building,  in  the  city  of  Duluth 
In  said  county, 

c.^P"^',^^  ■J'.^  ^3'**THER  GIVEN,  that 
said  sale  will  be  held  at  the  Northern  Pa- 
cific dock  at  the  foot  of  Seventh  avenue 
west.  In  said  city  of  Duluth,  on  Thurs- 
MA?''  *^®  ^^^*}  <^ay  of  March,  1897,  at  ten 
(10)  o  clock  In  the  forenoon  of  that  dav 
and  that  application  for  confirmation  of 
said  sale  will  be  made  to  the  said  court 
at  a  special  term  thereof  appointed  to  be 
held  In  and  for  said  county  at  the  court 
house    In  said  city  of  Duluth   on  Satur- 

?^.^',  ^^%^i^  <^.ay  of  March,  1897,  at  nine- 
thirty  (9:30)  o'clock  In  the  forenoon  of 
that  day. 

DULUTH  TRUST  COMPANY, 
As  Assignee  of  Byron  B.   Inman,   Insolv- 
ent. 
Duluth   Evening  Herald,    March-15-16-17. 


'^'iA^kHiVfTltr: 


^ 


1897. 


Gonagle, 
tary. 


PALESTINE  LODGE  NO.  79,  A. 
P.  ft  A.  M.— Regular  meetings 
first  and  third  Monday  even- 
ings of  every  month  at  7:30 
p.  m.  Next  meeting  March  15, 
Work,  Summons.  W.  A.  Mc- 
W.   M..    Edwin   Mooers.   secre- 


NORTN-WEtTERN   LINE. 

C,  St.  p.,  M.  &  O.  Bv. 

Office :  406  West  Superior  St.         'Phone  No.  20. 

Leave       |  *Uaily  |    fExcept  Bnnday   I  Arrive  ~ 

t}?  "  •»«'  I  gt.  ^.ul,  Mjn'ph  and  Waai  I    fS  i^Ti^ 

i\  S**"    8c  Panl.  Mln'pli  and  West     •?  00  km 

*5  10pm  I Chicago  Umited  _       I  *iit  :<i  .m 

Parlor  Cart  on  dar  trains;  Wairner's  Fmest 
Sleapers  on  night  trains.  "renueBi; 

THERE'S  ONLY  ONC 
RAILROAD 

That  operates  its  trains  on  the  famous 

^  ardK^an^d^^S'Lio"?  ^•'^  ^'"-• 
^*'"hr!,'ffi"out-''  "^""  ''^  •lectriclty 
''''Vea^rg  'iS^p"?'"^'^*^  ^'^'^<^  b^rt" 
^'*ti/,i'"^/°}""  splendidly  equipped  pas- 
on"/'iJr!*'"^""'  ^y«''y  «^ay  fronT  St.  Paul 

vra'^M^f/raXe"'   "^'""^'^   *°   ^^^'^'^^ 
And  that  road  Is  the 

OHIOAOO,  MILWAUKEE  * 
»T.  PAUL. 

•'«<>  operates  steam-heated  vestlbuled 
trains,     carrying     the     latest    private 
-™^S\P'"'*'"^"*     ^ars.       library     buffet 
smoking    cars,    and     palace     drawing- 
room  sleepers.  urawing- 

Parlor  cars,  free  reclining  chair  cars  and 
the  very  best  dining  car  service. 
TTnff^^L'"?**^^*^    any    point    In    the 
H^"f^  States,  Canada  or  Mexico,  ap- 
ply to  ticket  agents,  or  address 


^ 


IONIC  LODGE  NO.  186.  A.  P.  ft 
A.  M.— Regrular  meetings  second 
and  fourth  Monday  evenings  of 
every  month  at  7:30  p.  m.  Next 

mu.  J,  J     meeting    March    22,    1897.    Work. 

Third  degree.  F.  W.  Kugler.  W.  M.;  J.  V. 

Macfarlane.   secretary. 

KEYSTONE  CHAPTER  NO.  », 
R.  A.  M.— Stated  convocation 
second  and  fourth  Wednesday 
evenings  of  each  month  at  7:30 
p.  ra.  Next  meeting  Tuosdav 
4.^1,-^  March  23,  1897.  Work,  Royal 
Arch  degree.  John  F.  McLaren.  H.  P  • 
ueorge   E.   Long,   secretary. 

D  U  L  U  T  H      CJDMMANDBRY 

^°\  ^5;  K-  T.— Stated  conclavf 
first  Tuesday  of  each  month 
7:80  p.  m.  Next  conclave 
Tuesday.  March  16.  1897.  Work, 
degree.      R.     e.    Den  f eld,      E. 


.     .    J-  T.  CONLEY, 
Ass  t  Gen'l  Pass  Agt.. 


8t^^°^t7?'"^-f"UT  equlpled'^tmlnffrom 
Ht.  Paul  and  MInneanolls  through  from 
Peoria.  St.  Louis  and  Kansas  City  dally. 


Templar     ^..      ^.    ^^„ 

C,  Alfred  LeRlcheux.  recorder. 


^\P-  P-  W.-FIDELITY  LODGE  NO.  105. 
Meets  every  Thursday  in  the  Kalama- 
l?S^}l°%^-  third  floor.  18  West  Superior 
street.  James  McDowell.   M.   W. ;  J    H 
Powers,   recorder. 


Nofice  of  Aplicatioi) 


FOR 


Liquor  License. 


STATE  OF  MINNESOTA.   COUNTY   OF 

ST.   LOUIS,   CITY   OF    DULUTH--SS. 

Notice  Is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of -said  city  of  Duluth,   and   filed 

n  m.y  office,  praying  for  llcen.se  to  sell 
tntoxlcating  liquors  for  the  term  com- 
mencing on  March  18,  1897,  and  terminat- 
ing on  March  18,  1898,  by  M.  J.  Dahlsten, 
aV.  ^?-   "  Second    avenue   west. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth,  at  the  council  chamber 
In  said  city  of  Duluth,  In  St.  Louis  Coun- 
ty, Minnesota,  on  Monday,  the  29th  dav 
that  Sr  ^^    ^'^  o'clock  p.  m.  of 

Witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  said  city 

S>    ?fSi  ^^   "**'   "'   March.    A 

C.  tt.  fttettAflDBOhr.     . 

^(Oot^orate  SeaL)  ^"^  ^'•^^• 

Duluth  Evehln*  Hefald  Match  16  to  29  ir.t 


ROOM  AND  BOARD  CHEAP.  102  FIRST 
avenue  east. 


"'^P^^^u^^J^^^MS,   BOARD  IP  DBS. 
'tl&  Dacotah.    117    Weat    Second 


BAIR  DRXtlSTyo 


wjk^  MM»i°^°^^,30N        (FORMERLY 
^r^iLS**^*?^"^  sisters,  of  St.  Paul,)  has 
??.t  t,*^  halt-dressing  parlors  at  room  417 
_  Lonsdale    building. 


Srilllama  Indian  Pila 
.  intment  u  a  bota  cnr* 
forPILKtf.  It  abM>rba 
tumors.  Stopx  itefaioa. 
GIVB8  BELftP.  Mlo 
and  tfl.    At  Dmaaists. 


BEST  LINE 

ST.  PAUL 

AND 

MINNEAPOLIS 


TO 


ST. 


LOUIS. 


»fir/ji»Tira. 


PRIVATE     HOSPITAL-MRS.     BANKS 


RteAL  ESTATE  TRANSFERS, 
John    Swenson    to    W.    H.    Smith 
lots   10   and   11.    block   4,    Ironton 

division t 

E.   J.    Duflfjes  to   D 
7  and   8.   block   40, 


A.    Reed,    lots 

Stryker'i    addition    .''!'" '^""'^^   *      \A 
H.   L.   Van  Horn  to.  Nancy     "van 
.^"xi;"'i°'  '2,  block  9,  Hlbblng.. 
^\^}*i    S**F'^    *o    Louis    Lepman, 

:Ǥf  ?^  .t.ssTjji.*':'.'';'.':- 

rnjtaj  ... 


1,100 
7.1S2 


FOR 

Liquor  License. 

^|4.^£o?^s,^<^?¥^^§?^^i:{:g^'/;flls«^ 

Notice  Is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  said  city  of  Duluth.  and  filed 
in  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell  In- 
toxicating liquors  for  the  term  commenc- 
irig  on  March  12,  1837,  and  terminating  on 
March  12,  1898,  by  W.  P.  Wheaton  at  No. 
2^i  Lake  avenue  south. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth,  at  the  council  chamber 
in  said  city  of  Duluth,  In  St.  S»ul8 
County,  Minnesota,  on  Monday  the  22d 
d«y  Of  March,  1897,  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m. 
or  tnat  day. 

Witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  said 
Ijtyj^.  OuJuth.  thl.  id  day  of  Marchr  Jc 

C.  fc.  ftlCHARDSON. 
^(Onrpofate    Seal.)  City  Clerk, 

culuth  fiveninf  Herald,  Mar«lj  4  tv  «  »« 


1 


"t 


"I  i'§  m 


f~ 


It 


■<r 


t- 


1 

>■  -1  — 

' 

} 

4 


'>  I  ■■ 


ttz 


Mmii 


—  I 


M  [eiNG  HERALD 


AN  INDEPENDENT  NEWSPAPER. 


TELEPHONE  CALLS: 
Counting  Boom— 324,  two  rinffs. 
Editorial  Boom»— 324,  three  rincs. 


TEN  GENTS  A  WEEK 

Every  Lvening,  Delivered  or  by  Mail. 


ONLY  EVENINQ  PAPER  IN  DULUTII  |  Sherman  and  Orant  suffloe  to  Illustrate 

thi«  power.  A  million  ii(fldi«>i'0  eame 
from  the  state's  that  the  ordinance, 
passed  by  Southern  votes,  hud  de- 
vott  il   to   freedom. 

In    the   developm-'ut.s   of    latei-   years. 

Professor  Turner  finds  an  analogy  be- 

Poblished    at    Herald    building,    230    West  |  tween    the   railiealism    of   the   Western 

Superior   streeL  populi.^tie    farmers   today   and    that    of 

the   "embattled    farmers"'    who   revolu- 
OUiUtll    Publishing    &    Printing    COi  '  »!""'*«'*'   ^h*-  ^vorld   UW  years  aso.    For 

'  he  says:  'If  we  follow  baek  the  line 
of  march  of  the  Puritan  farmer,  we 
shall  see  how  responsive  he  has  al- 
ways been  to  isms,  and  how  persist- 
ently he  has  resisted  encroachments 
on  his  ideals  of  individual  opportun- 
ity and  democracy.  He  is  the  prophet 
of  the  "hiffher  law'  in  'bleeding  Kan- 
sas' before  the  civil  war.  He  is  the 
Prohibitionist  of  Iowa  and  Wisconsin, 
crying  out  against  German  customs  as 

an    invasion    of   his   traditional    ideals. 

Bin«le  copy,  daily f  .08 1  He  is  the  granger  of  Wisconsin,   i>ass- 

One  month .46    ing    restrictive    railroad    legislation." 

Three  montha I.JO       j^    tondusion    he   adds:    'Today    th- 

8ix  month* ... . .. 2.80;-^,     .i,         »       .       ,.         .  . 

o„„_„_  .«,!  Northwest,   standing  ijetween   her  an- 

Weekly  Herald,  $1.00  yer  year;  50 cenU  for aia  [  «■*'*'< ral  connections  in  the  East  and  her 
montha;  25  eenta  for  three  montha.  children    in    the    West,    partly    like    the 

Kast.   partly  like  the  West,   finds   her- 
self  in   a   position    strangely   like    that 
in    the    days    of    the    slavery    struggle, 
when    her  origins   presenttnl    to   her   a 
■'divided    duty."    Hut    these    issues    are 
not    put    with    the     same       imperious 
"Which?"  as  were  the  issues  of  freedom 
or  slavery.    Looking  at   the   Northwest 
as  a  whole,  one  sees  that,  in  the  char- 
acter of  its  industries  and  in   the  ele- 
ments of  its  population,   it  is  identified 
.  on  the  east  with  the  z«>ne  of  states,  in- 
I  eluding    the    middle    region    and    New 
England.        Cotton    culture    and      the 
negro  make  a  clear  line  of  division  be- 
T'nlted  States  Agricultural  Department    '  tween    the    Old    Northwest    and        the 

^'lu^!:^  .^l^Sns'^l^r'l^ie  ^^^Jl^^.,::^  ^"^'^-  ^"'i  y-^  '"  important  historical 
hours  ending  at  7  a.  m..  (Central  timt),  ideals — in  the  movement  of  expansion, 
iliirih  m.— Fair  weather  has  prevailed  in     jn    the    persistence   of  agricultural    in- 

'  terests.    in    impulsiveness,    in   imperial- 


THE     DULUTH     EVENING     nERALU;   TFESDAT,    MARCH    IC.    1807. 


Entered  at  the  Dnlnth  poatoffics  as  »eeoad 

elaaa  matter, 

LAR6EST  CIRCULATION  IN  DULUTH 

OfficitI  Piper  of  the  City  of  Dulutk 
HERALD'S  CIRCULATION  HIGH-WATER  MARK 

17,148. 

THE  WEATHER. 


llcan  and   the  Democratic     candidates 
are  already  nominated  and  In  the  field. 
In  each  case  th  •     niai.hini'     politicians 
dictated  the  nominations,  and  the  can- 
didates  for   mayor  are   in«'n    %vho   will, 
above  all  othej    things,  consult   the  in- 
terests  of  the  machine  In  preference  to 
the  Interests  of  the  people.     There  arr 
two  independent    candidates,   who  also 
announce  their  intention   to  make  the 
race.     If   they   do,   one   of   the   machine 
candidates   will    be     elected,     and     the 
spoilsmen  will     again     be     in     <'(mtrol. 
There   is  a   movement   now  on    foot   to 
form    an   organization    of   the   citizens, 
who  are   in   favor  of   better  municipal 
government,  and  select  one  of  the  indo. 
pendent   candidates     for     mayor     and 
combine    all    the    independent    vote    in 
his  favor  and  elect  him.     Whether  this 
effort  will  be  successful  remains  to  be 
seen,  but  there  are  indications  that   it 
may  be  successful.    As  a  rule,  the  aver- 
age citizen  in  the  cities  is  remiss  in  per- 
forming his  duty  in  regard  to  the  selec- 
tion of  municipal  officials,  entertaining 
the   idea   that  the   partisan   politicians 
are  so  strongly  intrenched  that  it  is  im- 
possible   to   dislodge    them,     if   the   re- 
spectable   citizi'ns    who    want    a    good, 
business    administration,     would     take 
concerted  action,   they   would     be  sur- 
prised  to   find    how    weak    are    the   so- 
called  strongholds  of  the  machine  poli- 
ticians. 


RHEUMATISM 


PERTINENT  PERSIFLAGE. 

Washington    .Stur:    "This    l.iitt.r    s.-em.-; 
stroiiK.""  .said  th.-  yoiinfc  lai.sband.  at  th.-lr 

rir.-it    brealcfiist   at    home.  |      Munyon's    Rheumatism    Cur.-    is    guar- 

it.-s  .siu-  uiisw.Ted;  "l  talked  to  th.- '  ai'tt'ed  to  cure  acute  or  muscular  rheu- 
marK.'i  man  ahout  that,  and  la-  said  It  mutism  in  from  one  to  the  davs  Sharp 
„."^,.'V".".'"'-^'  '"  •'"■  «''"1  n<-vi-r  to  huv  ,  sliooting  piUns  In  .my  part  of'  the  bodv 
.1,.  .  „,.),i  .  •  ""  ""'*'  "'"*  '■^'••'1  iboti^h  i  •''V'l^l-"''^'  '».\A^  few  doses.  A  prompt,  com"- 
inis  niiRht  coMt  ;,  liiti,.  iiior.'  peopl..  c.inlil  '  l^'etn  and  permanent  cure  for  lameness 
p-i    alon«    with   ),.ss   of    II.    an.l    li    would  -,  -''oren.-s.s,  .stilt  baek  and  all  pains  in  hips 

and  loins,  chronic  rheumatism,  sciatica 
lumbaRo  or  pain  in  the  back  are  sp.^ed' 
il.v   eured.    It    seldom    fails    to   sivo    relic 


lavit  lon^fr." 


all  districts,  with  a  general  change 
w.irmer.  In  the  Xorthwt.-st.  including  the 
l>.ikotas.  Montana.  Western  Minnesota 
and  the  adjacent  Canadian  provin<'es. 
tht'  temperatur*-  is  J)  to  42  dejrreos  higher 
than  at  the  same  hour  yesterday.  It  w-i'-i 
coldest,  this  morning.  ;it  Sault  Ste.  Mari-- 
with  a  temperature  of  12  below  zero. 

An  area  of  low  pressure  which  Is  ad- 
vancing acr.iss  the  region  north  ot"  Mon- 
tana has.  as  yet.  been  unattended  by 
precipitation,  and  the  cloudiness  has  in- 
creased   but    sliiThtly    in    that    section. 

Lowest    temperatures    iast    night: 
Prince    Albert    ...—  S.Kansas    Oity    ...    32 

Davenport    2,  Battletord    — 

Swift   Current    ...— '.'Qu"    Appelle    •; 

Ciipary    tu  Medicine    Hat 

Port    Arthur    ....—12 'Helena    

Minneiiosa 

Havre    

Williston 
I>iiluth    ... 
Maniuette 
Lander    ... 


J.  H.  Hender.son,  the  newly  appoint- 
ed senat.u-  fr.>m  Florida,  was  born  in 
North  Georgia.  When  he  was  10  years 
old  his  family  settled  in  Hillsbor:* 
county,  Florida.  During  the  recon- 
struction period  he  represented  Hills- 
boro  county  in  the  state  senate,  be- 
coming the-  Democratic  leader  in  that 
body.  In  1877  Governor  Drew  appoint- 
ed him  state"s  attorney,  and  he  was  re- 
appointed to  the  same  office  in  1881.  He 


...I  Vl'"'*'  '"Muinr:  'I  w.m.l.r  who 
^^r*"*;.  f. hi  It  son;,'  about  •<l.>wn  in  a  e.)al 
nuiie?  iusked  the  reminl.scent  h.janler 
I  supi)ose  h.-  was  one  ot  th.jse  minor 
poets  we  hear  :so  much  or."  said  Asburv 
I  tppers. 

Detroit       Fi pn-ss:       "l    understand, 

i^'T'H-^-    *"••'  -^">i""  wife   was  shut  up  in 
a    foldiUK    bed." 

"Shut  up".'  Nothing  on  earth  can  shut 
that  woman  up.  She  yelled  till  the  police- 
man  on   the   ne.\t  l)eat   heard   her." 

Somerville  Journal:  Sht^And  vou  sav 
tUat  you  have  n<-ver  been  in  love"' 

He--Never.  I  i,j,ve  thought  1  was  sev- 
enty-hve  or  eighty  times,  but  I  always 
found    .)ut   afterw.irds   th.it    I   was'nt. 

Adams  Freem.m:  Scene:  Youiik  man  i.i 
•binly  huhted  i.ailor.  holding  enamore.l 
tair  one  In  his  lap.  Old  Kent  standing  ai 
head  ot    stairs. 


from  one  or  two  doses,  and  almost  in- 
variably cures  before  one  bottle  has  been 
used.     I'rice  25c. 

MUNYON'S 

Improved  Homoeopathic  Home  Rem- 
edy company  put  up  a  separate  cure  for 
each  disea.se.  At  all  druggists,  mostly  25 
cents.  Guide  to  Health  free. 

Per.sonal  letters  to  Professor  Munyon, 
lyiii)  Arch  street,  Philadelphia,  Pa.,  an- 
swered with  free  medical  advice  for  any 
disease.  ^ 


Father— DaURlii.r.    h 
g.im-  yet? 

l)aURrhter— No.    )..ipa. 

F-'ather— Is  he  making  any  luogress 
th.il    direction. 

Daughter— .\.,.,,  i„it  i,.'s  h<d«lin"- 
own. 


that    young    man 

in 
his 


Judge:  Merritt-If  I  don't  hiinv  up  it 
will   be  too  late  to  go  skating. 

Cora-Theres  pi.  iity  of  time.  I  int.  nd 
to  put  on  my  own  skat»-s   this  evening. 

TVV«»ONLY. 
Omaha    Worl.l-l  I,  raid:      The    Louisville 

. -J.V"'"V'.'''.""'"=''        -IX'^iks     ediforiallv     of 

The    Palmer   and    Hucknt-r    Men.""    Lefs 

see:    Palm»-r  an.l    Buckner   men.   Oh     ves 


miiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 
I    THE  LENTEN  | 

I  SEASON.    I 

^lllilllllllillllllllllllllllillliiiiillilllMllilllllllllfll^ 

This  solemn  sc.'is.m  ol"  the  ('hri>-liaii 
.venr  has  Its  name  from  an  ol.l  Saxon 
wor.1  m.  ailing  spring,  becau.se  the  occur- 
rence of  the  forty  days"  fast  is  during 
this  sea.«on.  Many  may  like  t.>  know 
what  this  fast  means,  and  why  we  keei) 
it,  so  I  will  try.  with  my  feeble  endeav- 
ors, to  t.ll  them.  l'.elor.>  Christ  was  cru- 
cilied  r.u-  our  sins  H.-  fasle.l  forty  davs 
and   forty   nights   in   the  wildern.-ss.     And 


r;.^Trsi,:;n-'m;^.^;:'!r;iV';!,jr;;v  in'^^:^^!^^  ^^^  '^^""  -  ~— i... 


serves  us  right  th-ir  names  were  Palmer 
and    Buckner.    respectively. 

WORLD  GROWINO   BETTER. 
Pittsburg       Dispatch:      Bishop    W  hite- 
liead     takes     an     optimistic     view     of     tlie 
troublesome    times    of    nations    when    he 
holds    that     th.ir    decline    and     fall 


We  fast  l)(-cause  Jesus  set 
us  the  exam|)le:  and  we  find  that  in  ili. 
olden  times  this  was  a  verv  common 
service.  ]>avid  in  the  Book  of  I'salms 
says:  "I  humbled  myself  with  fasting."" 
Daniel  says:  "1  set  my  face  unto  the 
Lord  God  to  seek  by  prayer  and  suppli- 
(atioiis  witli  fasting."'  St.  Paul  directs 
are  i  the  Christians  of  Corinth   "to  give   them 


istic  ways  of  kxjking  iit  the  American 
destiny,  in  hero  worship,  in  the  new- 
ness of  its  present  social  structure— 
the  Old  Northwest  has  much  in  com- 
mon w  ith  the  South  and  the  far  West. 
Behind  her  is  the  old  pioneer  past  o.- 
simple  democratic  conditions.  and 
freedom    of    oportunity    for    all    men. 

32  Before  her  is  a  superb  industrial  de- 
^     velopment,    the    brilliancy    of    success 

2s  }  as   evinced   In   a   vast    population,    ag- 


is  about  50  years  old.     For  some  years 
he  has  been  chief  counsel  of  the  Florida 


lit  the  preparation  for  a  new  and  better    .selves   to   fasting  and    prayer.""     There    is 


abundant    evidence    in    both    the    Old    an.l 
New   Testament    that    this    may    be   maiio 


_  .^  j  gregate  wealth   and   sectional   power." 
4  I 


Huron    

Dt-troit    

La    Cro.sse    ... 
Injdge    City 
North    Platte 
St.    Louis    — 


Winnipeg    . . . 
..    1(-  Bismarck    .. 

■      f ^"''w   £''^\.      ••    ,11  WHY    BE     HYPOCRITES? 

..—  »  h.iult    Ste.    Mane— 12         _,       ...  ,.     _  .,  „. 

..      0  Moorhead    —  ri        The  Minneapolis  Tribune  says;     "Th? 

..    10  St.    Paul    —  ♦    degradation   of  Nevada   ought   now    to 


—    Denotes    below    zero. 


«  Rapid    nty 
14  Milwaukee 

0  Chiiago    

%  'Omaha    

36  I  Denver   

3t;!Memt»his    .. 


24 


J,  be  considered  complete.  It  is  claimed 
22  that  the  governor  has  promised  to  fur- 
_..,  I  nish  a  New  York  newspaper  with  a 
2S  column  article  setting  f.jrth  his  impres- 
sions of  the  Corbett-Fitzsimmons  prize 


life.  But  the  go.id  churchman  has  th' 
law  of  nature  and  the  experience  which 
compo.ses  hi-story  on  his  side.  It  is  a   little     heli>fu]  t.i  tile  attainment   of  eternal   lif. 

c™„.a,  *  Pe„,„,„,a  KaHroa.  c„,„.  j^  rj.s,.'':;:^^!^,'^^  XS"";;;  i  ^';.„ro.^"::i.»s;;;.„.';;-;|.-  •ra,."r,„"ffi. 

pany,  and  he  is  now  president  of  that    r  k!.i  '''ri,'      '1   i>«"'ple  to   have  the  whole    giving    up   ..f   tliat   which    we   most    lik" 
road.     It   is  not  likely   that   the  senate    [h!^^ol;}:r^;!t 'a  ^llmJ^^^ti^'^^^J^l^LtS  i  alnli^iSsl'^anlrSvi^  ^ 

will  admit  him.  however,  treating  him    ',',L     *'.J     ,    w'"  .';''nP   "«  con.solation  to    ('specially    to   go<jd    thoughts   and    work-^ 
a.  It  Will     the     Oregon  and   Kentucky    l^y^^^:^^^J;^l^ur^^^^::n^X,l!::^^T^^^  ^^^^^^^^ 

"nxio,'fsK™':'n/V    ""•'•""tp^-v      Peering:  Ash     W.xine.sday.-     from   'the    cu.stom 
wm  d^-eb,sl    n.  ''*'',M.^'^'-  '."^''    *''**    ^"'"•■^^^'^r      '"•im'ti^*'        church      of     sprinkling 
To    "w..H.V  <""•  •'"•'7't'n       ,         .  ashes  on    that   day.   on   the   heads   of   no- 

b      .v,.p.       ,..!    .':"'^^  "*^    '•*■"•'''•    ''"^    't    i- !  t<.ri..iis   offenders.    The   great    use   of   spe- 
•t.  ■  •    '""'■  '■'■'^  •i»'^Hnce   ha.s    not    been     cial    .lays    like    this    is    to    till    our    hearts 

without    convulsions   and   r.-vdlsions.        All     an.l    min.ls   with   special   lh.nighls..r   tVel- 

■ng.   and   to  iix   it   firmly  in  the  memorv- - 


All  "women  wlic 
time  and  strengi 
I    .vho  "W'ant    snowy  clothes      ^ 

and  soft  hands  should  use  the  famous 

SANTA  GLAUS 


senators  appointed  by  the  governors. 


A  Methodist  minister  of  Lansing. 
Mich.,  is  preaching  a  series  of  sermons 
on  "The  Devil  in  I.,ansing."  in  which 
he  has  attacked  the  theater,  dancing 
and  various  other  amusements  in  the 
most  violent  and  .sensational  language. 
The  Springfield  Republican  asks  if  It 
Is  not  about  time  that  somebody  at- 
tacked this  manner  of  preaching"^  A 
sermon  on  "The  Devil  in  the  Pulpit" 
might  not  be  out  of  order. 


ij  "^^^  best  and  purest  soap.     Made  for  laundry,  pq 
il  and    general    house    use.       Sold    everywhere.  Ill 

Jf  Made  only  by  VM, 

Sr?l     ««— ._  —     — liy!f?J 


M    THE  N.  K.  FAIRBANK  COMPANY,  Chicago,     [p, 

Jnr  "'     Ill —Mil ,,. I  ft 'ill 


Duluth  temperature  at  7  a.  m.  today.  A;  fight  as  viewed  from  his  private  box." 
maximum  yesterday.  11:  minimum  yen  i  what  arrant  hvnor-Hav  i«  thi,:,'  Th^ 
terday.  11  below  zero:  minimum  last  ^^  "^^  ariant  n>potris>  is  this!  The 
night.  4  below  zero.  •  man   who   wrote   the  above   paragraph 

Local  forecast   for  Duluth  and  vicinity:     „.„,   eagerly  read   the   account     of     the 


Fair    and    warmer    tonight: 


increas>n>. 


cloudiness  and  warmer  Wednesday,  prol)-     fight  that   will  come  from   Carson   City 
ablv  with  light  snow  by  afternoon;  eu.st-     tnnir,vrr,,i       vi.,^    t  ^^t\,       «*  »w  , 

erlv  winds  becoming  fresh  to  brisk.  tomorrov\.     Nine-tenths    of  the    people 

will  do  likewise.     Many  of  them,  includ- 


J  A  M  ES    K  EX  E  AL  Y. 

Local    Forecast    Official. 


P- 


Chicago.    March   IG.— Forecast    until   8 
m.   tomorrow:     P'or  Wisconsin:   Generally  j  suit.     If  the  governor  of  Nevada  writes 
fair  and  warmer  tonight  and  Wednesday:     ...  »  m.eo 

fresh  ea.st  to  southeast  winds.   For  Min-     his  impressions  of  the  fight,  they  will  be 
:   Generally   fair   tonight   and   Wed-  ; 
.-:  warmer  tonight:  fresh  southerly  i 
winds. 


A  man  has  been  sentenced  at  White 
Plains,  N.  Y.,  Ka  twenty  years  in  prison 
'or  robbing  a  saloonkeeper  of  40  cents. 
Is  it  any  wonder  that  there  are  people 
who,  regarding  this  heavy  sentence,  as 
measured  by  the  magnitude  of  the 
crime,  and  watching  the  two  years' 
.sentence  of  a  man  who  stole  $,"»0,000  or 
more,  assert  that  there  is  no  justice 
in  the  land".* 


the  structure  th.u  man  has  built,  grand 
and  won.lerful  as  it  api)ears  to  mere  hu- 
man   eyes,    sinks    into    significance    when 


to   i)ress   and   stanij)   it   in   so    Hrmlv    th.it 
it    will    not    lie    .asily    nibbed    out    by    th. 


to  prevent  a  r.p.tition.  Will  {he  lime  All  the  davs  from  Ash  Wednesdav  to 
bv'theTvmH";;'  '7"';'""  ^"'  »>"  taught  Faster  are  fVist  days  .-x.e pt  Sundavs  VliJ 
b>    the   experience  of   the    p:..st    and    -ea.s.-     r,  .st    of    Lent,    except    the    last    w.-ek     ha-^ 

'^Z^^''' ii^T:^]'^^::l'''''''''t  ''''''']■  r. ''''''''''''  "''>"^"  ^'"»  ^^■''  have  continual  ; 
U,.  v-^rt'-h^.,    1     •,  "V"    V'\"   ,»^'">w-     It     before    us   the   suffering    and    temptation^ 

^.■!^  '»;  hoped;  I  may  be  w  shed.  Bui  the  '  of  our  Lor.l  in  the  wilderness  The  Ian 
sum   ..fhnman   knowledg.-   is   the  sum   of     week    of   L.-nl.    called    Passion    wet"<     hn 

n'M'lTVhi'^'VT";"''      ""''    *'"■'■'•    'H   """^''^«  I  =''^-^^>'^   l'^^"   considered   its    molt    solenn 
in  all  this  to  angur  an   apprf.ach   toward  !  season.      It    h.is    been    called    the  -gre  it 
,u;r(^ecti<m     except    the    law    that    Bishop  ;  week"    from    the    import^iT  trausa<??[o 
Whitehead   invokes:    By   the   fall    .m.l    de-     which     are    then    (■otnmem..ra  ed      Eve rv 


ing    not   a   few    who    talk   of   Nevada"s 
degradation,""  have  wagers  on  the  re- 

Commlssloner  Lamoreux  was  one  of 

the   must  popular  men   ever  appointed 

nesota:  Generally  fair  tonight   and  Wed-  ;  widely   read  and  discussed      If  Carsot^  i  ^"  *^®  \\^a.d  of  the  general  land  office 

nes.^y;   warmer  tonight;   fresh  souther.y     ^^^^   ^^.^^   ^^^^^^   Minneapolis,    and   ihe     "«  -n^-te.   t»..  «-..„  ..  ,..  ....... 

I  expense  of  seeing  the  fight  was  not  so 

THE  OLD  NORTHWEST.  j  great,   hundreds   from   that   citv   would 

An    interesting    series    of   papers    by  ;  be  among  the  spectators,  and  probably 

Frederick  J.   Turner,   professor  of   his-     ^^e  editor  of  the  Tribune,  who  penned 

tor>-    in    the    university    of    Wisconsin,     t^is    criticism,    would    not    be    far    dis- 


cav  of   the   leaf,    the   soil    is   prepared    for 
a    better  growth. 


He  conducted  the  work  of  the  depart 
ment  in  excellent  style,  and  won  much 
praise,  and  It  is  cause  for  deep  regret 
that  the  McKee  scrip  scandal  has 
clouded  the  last  days  of  his  occupancy 
of  the  office. 


will  be  begun  in  the  April   number  ot     ia^m 
the  Atlantic  Monthly.      For  both  his- 
torical and  local  reasons  they  will     oe 


Prize  fighting,  it  is  true,  is  not  an  en- 
„^  ,     nobling  sport,  but  it  is  not  worse  than 

read    with   interest   here.    The   general  ;  football,  so  far  as     brutality     is    eu- 
topic  is    the    origin,    development    and    ^^^ned.    It  is  less  dangerous  to  life  and 

limb.     It  is  as  scientific.     Why  not     be 


futuie  of  the  "Old  Northwest,"  the 
pivotal  group  of  states  of  which  Min- 
r.es.-.ta  is  one.  The  first  article,  which 
is  brilliant  and  forcible,  traces  the 
birth  and  growth  of  these  states;  their 
S(X-ial  and  political  life;  and  shows  how 
their     institutions     and       peculiarities 


honest  and  confess  thes?  things.  The 
barbaric  spirit  of  our  ancestors  still 
lingers  with  us,  and  there  is  in  alm.xst 
every  man  a  little  of  the  savage  spirit 
which  takes  pleasure  in  witnessing  and 
reading   of   such  event.s.     The   advance 


The  new  tariff  bill  gives  our  lumber- 
men all  that  they  asked  in  the  way  of 
protective  duties.  Minnesota  pine  is 
protected  by  a  $2  duty,  and  if  Canada 
puts  an  export  duty  on  logs  a  retalia- 
tory duty   will  be  added. 


were  derived   and   developed   down    to    „«  ,>i,-iu.»otw^«  i„  ^.  „,i:i  .,.. 

^      ,  ..  ot  ciMlization  is  steadily  repressing  this  i 

the   latest    manifestations   of   the    last    Hi«r>..«ifi,^„   k,,»  \t  ii.,„  -„  ,.  *         i  .v. 

,„,.     ,  ,  ,    aisposition,  but  it  lingers  yet,  and  those 

general  election.   The  latter  feature  of    ,,^^  ^.^^  j^  ^^^  ^^^^^  ^„^^^  Nevada's 
the   paper   will   probably    give   rise   to  ;  "degradation."   while   they   await   with 
some    criticism    of      the       deductions    g^me  eagerness  the  story  of  the  fight 
drawn  by  the  professor.  The  succeed-    are  but  arrant  hypocrites, 
ing  papers  will  be  the  "Colonies  of  the  ' 


When  the  London  school  board  was 
debating  whether  elementary  science 
should  be  taught  in  the  schools  it  was 
objected  that  the  pupils  would  get  only 
a  smattering.  Sir  John  Lubbock  re- 
plied:    "Who  has  more?" 


Northwest"         (the       trans-Mississippi  I  NON-PARTISAN  GOVERNMENT, 

states),    and    "Northwestern      Ideals'        The  abandonment  of  partisanship  in 
(the   future  of   a  grand   development-^    local  elections,  which  The  Herald  has 


The  Doge  Orsolo  is  credited  with 
the  introduction  of  the  fork  for  table 
use,  and  Venice  is  about  to  celebrate 
the  nine  hundredth  anniversary^of  the 
event.  _  Yet  there  are  people  who  still 
eat  with  their  knives. 


AT   THE  TICK    OF  THE   CLOCK. 
Every    minut-.    every    minute, 
Has   the  soui   of   living   in   it. 
Some   onts   cr.ving. 
Some  oiii-'s   b.irn. 
Some    (in.'s    dying. 

Old   and   worn. 
Some    one's    l;tughlng. 

Some  one's  fed. 
Some  one's   chaffing. 

Some  one's   .Iea<l. 
Some    one's    hearing 

Love    confessed. 
Some    one's   jeering. 

Some  one's  jest. 
Some    one's    sorry 

Some    one's    glad. 
Some  one's  worr.v 
Drives   him    mad. 
Every    minute,    every    minute. 
Has   the   s.)iil   of   living  in   it. 

-TOM   HALL  In  Truth. 

AN    I'N WORTHY    ATTACK. 
Boston  Heral.l  <lnd.»:     .\  writer  attacks 
Mr.    Bryan    for    appearing    on    the    scene 
of    inauguration    at     Washington,     ".is    .t  i 
newspaper  reporter  and   critc  of  the  pro-  i 
cei^dings.""    to    quote    his    language.    The  ' 
statement  Is  not  true  that  Mr.  Bryan  has  i 
been    there    in    that    capacity,    or    in    any  i 
other  capacity,   indeed,   while  the  inaugu-  I 
ration    was    in    progress.    But    suppose    he 


day  t»f  thi-  last  week  of  oiir  l.,oni  on  eartli 
and   His  sufferings,   are   i>artieularlv   deai 
to  every  Christian   heart.   Sundav  of  thai 
week  has  been  called  'Palm  Sundav,"   in 
reference    to    the    palm    branches    thrown 
before  our  Savior  on  His  way   to  Jerusi- 
lem.   five  days   before   His  crucifixion.   On 
Thui-sday    of    that     week    was    held     tii. 
first   commiini.in   ever   held   on   earth.    On 
the    following   day    we   commemorate    tlK 
sufferings    and    particularly    the   death     it 
our  Savior.  Christ.   And   from  the  mighty 
and    blessed    effects    of    these,    in    the    r<- 
demption  of  man.  the  day  is  appropriutelv 
called    Good     Friday.      As    this    dav    ha- 
been   kei)t    holy   by   the   church   from    the 
earliest   times,    so   has   it   also   been    mad' 
a  time  of  strictest  devotion  and  humill;-. 
tion.  .\nd  if  we  should  all  think  and  real 
'  ize    what    Jesus    did    for   us   on    that    da.\- 
I  we   could    not    tielp   but    feel    humble    and 
I  thankful    to    Him    for    it.    1    can    not    ex- 
plain, so  you  will  understand,   the  beautv 
and    solemnity    of    this    beautiful    Lentcii 
season;    but    if    you    carefully    read    th. 
New  Testament  you  will  see  how  solenri 
and   holy   It   is. 

The  last  day  of  Lent  is  the  glorious 
E:ister.  when  Christ  burst  the  fettei> 
that  bound  Him  in  (he  grave,  and  thu- 
comiuered  death  and  the  world  and  tooi 
from  the  grave  all  its  terror.  The  wor.l 
"Easter"  is  derived  from  an  old  Saxoii 
word  "oster'"  meaning  "to  rise.""  Thi.- 
sacred  festival  has  had  existence  fron. 
the     earliest     ages    of    the     church,     and 


COSTLY  SPACE. 

Chicago  Tribune:  The  construction 
of  skyscrapers  in  Chicago  have  devel- 
oped a  special  trade  feature  that  is  both 
unique  and  original.  That  feature  is 
the  little  hole  in  the  wall  provided  for 
the  building"s  cigar  and  news  stand. 

Some  of  these  reserves  are  barely 
larger  than  a  good  sized  box,  and  for 
the  space  they  occupy  they  pay  a  rent- 
al larger  in  proportion  than  any  other 
line  of  business  in  Chicago. 

Probably  the  highest  rent  paid  by  any 
of  these  little  stands  is  that  [.aid  bv 
the  owner  of  the  two  located  in  the 
Monadnock  building.  Exactly  $.1000  is 
what  he  is  taxed,  or  $2-500  each.  At 
the  rate  of  thirty  days  a  month,  this 
is  an  average  of  $7  a  day,  but  as  Sun- 
days are  dead  days  the  rental  must  be 
figured  on  a  basis  of  only  twenty-four 
days  in  a  month,  so  that  the  actual 
daily  outgo  to  the  landlord  alone  is 
nearer  $;t  than  $7  a  day.  How  many 
cigar,   chewing  gum   and   penny   paper 


AMUSEMENTS. 


LYCEUM  THEATER, 

L.  X.  aCuTT,  Manager  ' 

LAST  TIME  TONIfiHT. 

The  Brilliant  Emotional  Accrese., 

EDAGLAYTON 

Sui)p.  .rtod  by 

HORACE  VINTON 

In  David  Ilalasco'.s  Popular  Play, 

La  Belle  Russe' 


I'XCLE 


SETn    (jx    Tin 

NO\  EL. 
Them    novelists    who    write    today 
sales   must   lie   made  to   clear  a   profit  i  rp,     _"'<-y .  baint   got   the  trade 
enough   to  pay  such   rent   is  a  matter  '" 


MoDCB 


w  s- 


had.  Is  not  the"  occupation  of  a"  feporter  !  !^*^'^f  '^  'W-'*'  {^""'^^"f  '^^  apostolical  au- 
an  honorable  one?  And  have  not  some  of  '  V  '  l^ '  ^^  ^  t'ccorate  our  churches  with 
the    most    distinguished    literary    men    of    "."^vers    on    this    day    m    remembrance   ol 


the   resurrection.     Some  of   you   mav   like 


ine    country    engaged    in    it    upon      moor-  i  :       ,    '  .      "■     -'"■■■'^  "-^    .'""   "■".»    ""^' 

tant  occasions?    This  abusing  Mr.   Bivan  ,  *"    *^""*'    ^^^V    ««>    many    people    have    so 
in  season  and  out  of  season  is  verv  p.... r  !  ™=^"^\*'»''*''''  **"  *•''«  ''">'•     ^he  custom   ha,; 


The  action  of  the  European  powers  in 
T  »w  .  _^,  .  .  ^  -  .-  J  *  ,  1  preventing  the  liberty-loving  Cretans 
In  the  April  article.  Professor  Tur-  urged  for  years  and  with  considerable  {  from  throwing  off  the  hated  Turkish 
ner  calls  attention  to  these  striking  success  in  this  city,  is  now  being 
facts:  "The  Old  Northwest  is  a  name  strongly  advocated  in  New  York,  Chi- 
which  tells  of  the  vestiges  which  the  cago  and  other  large  cities.  Their  ex- 
march  of  settlement  across  the  Amer-  perience  with  municipal  governments, 
ican' continent  has  left  behind  it.  The  run   by   the  politicians,   has   been     de- 


yoke  is  unspeakably  cruel  and  utterly 
defenseless. 


New  Northwest  fronts  the  watery  '  cidedly  unfavorable,  and  the  abuses 
labyrinth  of  Puget  sound  and  awaits  ■  which  have  attended  this  system  of 
its  destiny  upon  the  Pacific.  The  Old  l  local  government  have  become  so  great 
Northwest,  the  historic  Northwest  ter-  i  and  so  oppressive  that  public  sentiment 
rilory.  is  now  the  new  middle  region  j  has  finally  been  aroused  and  the  better 
of  the  United  States.  A  century  ago  it  classes  of  citizens  have  become  alive  to 
was  a  wilderne.ss.  Today  it  is  the  key-  ,  the  necL-ssity  of  combining  to  put  an 
stone  of  the  American  commonwealth.  ,  end  to  the  rule  of  the  politicians. 
Since  1S60,  the  center  of  population  of  |  A  Citizens'  union  has  recently  been 
the  United  States  has  rested  within  it;,  formed  in  New  York  for  the  purpose  o* 
limits,  and  the  center  of  manufactur-  i  putting  able  and  independent  candi 
ing  in  the  nation  lies  eight  miles  from 
President  McKinley's  Ohio  home.  Of 
the  seven  men  who  have  been  elected 
to  the  presidency  of  the  United  States 

since  1860,  six  have  come  from  the  [  city  of  New  York  be  administered  Inde 
Old  Northwest,  and  the  seventh  came  i  pendently  of  national  and  state  politics 
from  the  kindred  region  of  Western  |  and  that  local  ofl^cers  be  chosan  solely 
New  York.  The  congressional  represen-  with  reference  to  their  qualifications 
tatives  from  these  five  states  of  the  |  We  will  nominate  no  candidate  unles:- 
Old  Northwest  already  outnumber  |  his  character  and  record  are  such  as  to 
those  from  the  old  Middle  states,  and  {  justify  public  confidence  in  hij 
are  three  times  as  numerous  as  those 


dates  in  the  field  for  election  to  muni- 
cipal office,   and   its  platform   contains 
the  following  statement  of  its  objects: 
'We  demand  that  the  affairs  of  the 


Tioga,  N.  Y.,  Senator  Piatt's  home, 
which  gave  McKlnley  a  majority  of  212, 
went  Democratic  at  the  town  election 
last  week.  Is  this  a  straw  that  indi- 
cates a  change? 


The  Herald  always  gives  all  the 
news,  and  therefore  it  will  present  a 
full  description  of  the  Corbett-Fitz- 
simmons fight   tomorrow  afternoon. 

The  Minneapolis  papers  say  it  looks 
like  a  late  spring  there.  They  should 
come  to  Duluth  and  enjoy  our  balmy 
spring  weather. 


business.  '  He  has  conducted  hiniseU' 
commondably.  so  far  as  we  have  ob- 
served, since  he  ceased  to  be  a  candidate 
for  the  presidency,  and  if  he  sees  fit  to 
engage  in  a  reputable  method  of  obtain- 
ing a  livelihood,  he  is  to  be  commended 
for  so  doing.  Mr.  Bryan  is  not  a  presi- 
iltnt  or  an  ex-president.  His  having  been 
a  candidate  for  the  presidency  should  not 
debar  him  from  a  useful  personal  calling, 
neither  should  it  subject  him  to  i)ersonil 
abuse  while  engaging  in  it.  He  asks  no 
more  than  the  courtesies  accorded  to 
Amer'cau  citizens  now.  and  it  I.-j  not 
rreditable  that  these  should  be  denied 
him  because  he  has  been  an  American 
candidate  for   the  presidency. 


i  been  in  vogue  a  great  many  y^ears— f 
do  not  know  how  many— but  it  has  a  very 
pretty  and  appropriate  signification.  An 
egg  contains  something  that  to  the  world 
is  dead,  yet  is  only  sleeping;  and  when 
the  proper  application  of  heat  is  applied 
it  bursts  its  shell  and  comes  out  a  beauti- 
ful bird.  So  we  in  our  graves  are  d.'ad 
to  the  world,  but  only  sleeping,  awaiting 
that  last  great  day  when  the  trumpet 
shall  sound  and  we  burst  our  shells,  an  1 
rise,  not  to  be  a  beautiful  bird,  but  to  hea- 
ven   and    eternity.  E.    A.    G. 


from  New  England." 

Professor  Turner  then  traces  the  ori- 
gin, settlement  and  growth  of  these 
states  from  Ohio,  the  eldest,  down  to 
the  youngest.  He  shows  whence  and 
when  and  why  their  settlers  came  to 
them;  the  meeting  and  commingling  of 
the  streams  that  poured  from  New  Eng- 
land, the  Middle  states  and  the  South; 
how  they  were  met  and  tempered,  and 
In  some  states  outnumbered  by  the  in- 
flux of  immigrants  from  Germany. 
Sweden,  Norway,  etc.;  the  effects  of 
the  slavery  struggle  on  all  these  con- 
tending elements;  and  how  the  great 
Northwest  finally  gave  the  casting  vote 
for  freedom.  In  the  c\vil  war.  Western 
New  Y'ork  and  the  Northwest  were 
powerful  in  the  forum  and  in  the  field. 
The  names  of  Lincoln,  Chase,  Senard, 


s  assur- 
ance that.  If  elected,  he  will  not  use  his 
office,  or  permit  it  to  be  used,  for  the 
benefit  of  any  political  organization,  but 
will  administer  it  in  all  respects  in  ac 
cordance  with  the  principles  of  this 
declaration.  •  •  •  Without  calling 
upon  any  citizen  to  surrender  in  any 
degree  his  allegiance  to  his  party,  we 
insist  upon  an  entire  separation  ot 
municipal  government  from  national 
and  state  politics,  and  we  appeal  to  all 
good  citizens,  of  whatever  party,  to 
unite  with  us  in  an  organized  effort  to 
accomplish  the  object  of  this  union." 

The  sentiment  which  has  resulted  in 
the  foundation  of  a  non-partisan  or- 
ganization in  New  York  with  the  above 
admirable  objects  in  view  bids  fair  to 
also  find  expression  in  Chicago  in  a 
similar  way.  The  municipal  election  In 
that  city  is  near  at  hand.    The  Repub- 


It  Is  said  that,  in  return  for  his  ser- 
vices during  the  campaign,  Terrence  V. 
Po\vderly  will  be  made  commissioner 
of  Immigration. 


The  Brooklyn  Eagle  makes  the  nice 
distinction  that  the  answer  of  Greece 
was  not  "her  ultimatum,  but  her  pen- 
ultimatum." 


MY    FIRST   LOVE. 
I  had  a  love  in  the  days  of  youth. 

Language  would  be  poor  to"  name  hor; 
Her   smile    as    the    face   of    trutlV 

And  all   that  she  did  became  her. 
Jler  love  for  me  was  so  sweet  a  thing! 

"Twas    the   smile   of   summer   beaKung 
On   the  flowers  of  the  early   spring. 

Of   never  a    winter   drearning. 

Ah  me'  I  fear  I  was  slow  to  feel 

Just  how  much   that  love  was  earning. 
So  little  1  gave  of  what  was  real 

To  fill   that   loving  heart"s  yearning. 
How  cruel   the   human   heart  "can   oe 

Such   wealth    of   true   love   to   borrow, 
/  nd  give  so   little,  so  grudgingly. 

As  if  it  were  pay  for  sorrow. 

"Tis  long  since  she  from  life  went  forth. 

After    all    sowing    comes    reaping. 
I  knew  not  then  what  her  love  was  worth; 

Now   I  see  it  through   my  weeping. 
I"ve  sought  to  replace  that  love  in  vain, 

But  I  find  not  such  another; 
Let  me  name  her  once  to  ea.se  my  pain— 

Her  hallowed   name  was  Mother' 
—WILLIAM    LYLE    in    New    York    Home 

Journal. 


A  duty  of  only  40  cents  a  ton  on  Iron 
ore  Is  provided  by  the  DIngley  tariff 
bill.     Maj.   Baldwin  will  feel  endorsed. 


Marcus  Alonzo  are  the  full  names  as 
they  appear  in  Mr.  Hanna's  commis- 
sion as  United  States  senator. 

When  the  new  tariff  law  goes  into 
^effect,  may  we  expect  the  arrival  of 
prosperity? 


Indianapolis  Journal:  "Is  that  rei^ort 
true  about  the  cashier  of  the  Confidence 
bank  committing  suicide?"  "It  Is  poor 
fellow.  He  was  caught  when  he  had 
embezzled  only  $1200.  The  disgrace  was 
more  than  he  could  bear." 


Tid-Bits:  Old  Quiverful-And  so  you 
want  to  take  our  daughter  from  us' 
You  want  to  take  her  from  us  suddenly 
without  a  word  of  warning.  Young  iiv- 
slow— Not  at  all,  sir.  If  there  is  any- 
thing about  her  you  want  to  warn  "me 
a-galnst.  I'm  willing  to  listen. 


HI^BBARD  WITHDRAWS. 

Washington  special  to  the  St.  Paul  Dis- 
patch: Notwithstanding  the  fact  that  ex- 
Governor  Hubbards  api>lication  and  in- 
dorsements were  filed  a  week  ago  for  the 
ambassadorship  to  Italy,  it  is  announced 
today,  that  he  is  no  longer  a  candidate 
for  the  position.  It  is  believed  that  he  will 
not  seek  any  other  foreign  appointment 
although  Senator  Davis  desires  to  secure 
a  good  iiosition  for  his  friend.  There  is 
some  talk  of  an  agreement  whereby  Hub- 
bard ma.v  be  given  the  coUectorship  ot 
internal  revenue,  but  it  is  more  than 
jtrobable  that  If  he  does  not  go  abroad, 
he  will  not  accept  anything  else  that  will 
interfere   with   his  business   at   home. 

It  is  learned  that  several  of  the  strong- 
est endorsements  that  Mr.  Hubbard  had 
were  withdrawn,  liut  the  two  senators 
and  six  of  the  seven  representatives  froni 
Minnesota  stood  faithfull.v  by  him.  Out- 
side of  the  delegation  his  strongest  sup- 
porters at  the  outset  were  C.  A.  Pills- 
bury  and  John  Ireland.  Ihe  two  latter  a 
few  d.iys  ago  withdrew  their  indorsement 
and  statel  their  reasons  for  so  doing. 
They  deemed  it  for  the  best  interest.^  of 
the  Republicans  in  Minnesota  not  to  liave 
so  important  a  position  given  to  a  Re- 
iniblican  national  committeeman  from 
the  state. 


e  aint  a  one  that  knows  jest  how  a 

story  should   b.-  nia.le; 
Not  one  who   understands   the   thing,    not 

one  who  does  the  job. 
An"  not  a  one  wh.»  sings  himself  like  ol' 

Sylvanus   Cobb. 
Ah.  ol'  Sylvanus  t'obb.   mv  bov,   w'en   Ik 

was   on   the  deck. 
We   had   a    story    teller  then   of  glunt    i:\- 

telleek. 

The  hero  of  a  story  now  he  don't  git  in 

no  row; 
No  Injuns,  an'  no  piruts,  an'  no  villains. 

nayh.jw. 
The    hero    of    today    is    tame;    hain't    got 

no  whiz  an'   whirl; 
Sets  still  an.l  lets  s.uue  other  chap  go  :n 

an"   cjurt   his   girl  I 
The   novelists   who    write   today   have   .ill 

mistook  their  job; 
Not  one   has  got   the  glorious  gift   of  ol" 

Sylvanus  Cobb. 

Svlvanus    took    his    hero    where    a    hero 

ought  to  go. 
In   scrapes   an"    awful    dangers   where    he 

Seemed  to  have  no  show; 
He  drowned  him.  shot   him.  scalped  him. 

but  every  reader  knew 
Sylvanus   knew   his   business   well  anil   he 

would    pull    him    through. 
He  bruised  him.  banged  him.  buried  hiin, 

an"   did  a   han"some  job. 
But  still  we  knew  th<-  chap  was  safe  with 

ol"   Slyvanus  Cobb. 


POWDER 

Absolutely  Pure 

Celebrated  for  Its  great  leavening 
strength  and  healthfulness.  Assures  the 
food  against  alum  and  all  forms  of  adul- 
teration coQimon  to  the  cheap  brands. 
ftOYAL  BAKING  POWDER  CO.,  NEW 
YOBK.      .  .      ^jJl 


WANTS  A  RE-ELECTION. 
Minneapolis  Journal:  Senator  C.  K. 
Davis  is  an  avowed  candidate  for  re- 
election to  the  .senate.  Within  the  past 
few  weeks  he  has  written  letters  to  .sev- 
eral influential  citizens  of  the  state,  tell 
ing  that  he  desires  to  do  business  at  the 
old  stand  for  another  terhi  or  six  years, 
beginning  March  4,  1899.  In  getting  to 
be  chairman  of  the  senate  committee  on 
foreign  relations,  Senator  Davis  has  taken 
a  new  lease  on  political  life.  The  recent 
political  shake-up  in  this  state  has  also 
worked  to  his  advantage.  Nothing  is 
clearer  than  that  no  man  in  the  stat. 
has  so  much  at  stake  in  that  cancella- 
tion as  he.  No  wonder  that  he  steadily 
opposes  In  WaslAigton  anything  lookin.g 
in  the  direction  of  an  office  for  his  old- 
time  enemy.  Davis  is  too  great  a  reader 
not  to  have  come  across  the  story  of  the 
man  who  warmed  an  adder  in  his  bosom. 
He  doesn't  propose  to  meet  a  similar 
fate  if  he  can  avoid  It. 

The  senatorial  contest  In  the  next  leg- 
islature will  show  a  large  field  of  candi- 
dates against  Davis.  Some  man  from 
Minneapolis,  possibly  C.  A.  Pillsbury, 
will  be  a  candidate,  and  then  there  will  'oe 
Tawney,  McCleary,  Clough  Heatwole. 
Comstock  and  goodness  knows  how  many 
more.  Such  a  fight,  it  is  evident,  cannot 
be  a  boodle  fl^ht.  and  for  this  the  state 
can  well  give  thanks. 


easily  imagined 

Of  the  many  holes  in  the  wall  whose 
high  rentals  seem  almost  Incredible  in 
view  of  the  exceedingly  small  amount 
of  space  occupied  at  least  one-half 
dozen  deserve  special  recognition.  All 
of  them  are  located  under  stairways 
and  in  some  instances  are  so  narrow 
that  one  can  barely  move  about  in 
them.  That  of  the  Chamber  of  Com- 
merce building  is  exactly  under  the 
stairway  at  the  rear  of  the  elevators. 
All  the  light  il  gets  is  artificial,  and  its 
trade  is  exclusively  to  tenants  or  pass- 
ers-by in  the  building  alone.  It  occu- 
pies a  space  about  4  by  12  feet  in  ex- 
tent, and  for  this  privilege  its  owners 
pay  the  heavy  rental  of  $1200  annually. 
The  cigar  stand  in  the  Counselman 
building  is  a  little  cooped  up  affair, 
not  nearly  as  large  as  an  ordinary 
piano  box.  The  rental  is  quoted  at  $;ido 
a  year.  The  same  is  true  of  the  stand 
in  the  Gaff  building  next  door;  but 
that  in  the  Continental  National  bank 
is  a  roomy,  well-located  sand,  in  full 
view  of  persons  who  have  to  do  busi- 
ness in  that  structure.  Its  rental  is 
said  to  be  $900  a  year.  Two  stands  do 
a  fairly  thriving  business  in  the  Board 
of  Trade  and  Rialto  buildings.  The  P**^''  ^'''^  ^'^'^  <^"'''''l'  '"  '^""Seons  deep,  with 
north  end  stand,  in  the  flr.st  of  these  i  to  tin  his*''"hr4v-' fllu'^r"  k  ♦  .,  v  u  .. 
two  buildings,   is  also  located  under  a    ^"     one.^gi^t  out  ^^"^  *'  *""  '^'"'"''' 

stairway;  the  other  is  in  the  main  cor-  '  Sylvanus   was    too   shrewd    for  th  it     an' 
ridor   and    pays   $2500    a     year,      it     is  |  alius  had  in  stock 

claimed,  for  the  yrivilege  of  doing  busi-  ;  -^  subterranus  passageway  through  which 
ness.     The  stands  of  the  Home  Insur-  i   .    .    Vu''  ''l-'IV '•'^»''''  wajk. 

ance,    the    Woman's    Temple,    and    the  !  ""    /,i^"^,     „;,,r  i.";^''''.  V-'    ^^'=»"i^''t"'-'"'l 

vr.x,.-    v,^^t.    T  !*      I     -I  3-  1        .       1  liim.    he    understood    his   j.»b: 

New    -Vork   L  fe  buildings  are   also   lo-    We  know.-d  that  we  could  trust  the  man 

cated  under  the  stairways.    Their  rent-  ;  with  ol"  Sylvanus  Cobb 

als    vary    from    $30    to    $125    a    month.  | 

Only  candy,  chewing  gum,  and  jtapers     ^^'^"•'   "*^''   ^^^'   hero's   funeral,    we'd   hear 

are   sold    in    the   Temple,    cigars    being    «•  -^         '"."■^'^"    '"■;•>' v 

prohibited  ^'K«i's    «  eing  ^^  ^.  ^j  „      ,      ,.„„,„  „,  ^^^  ^^^^^^   y„  ^^^ 

-rl'VJL-    ":  „  paeke<l   away, 

Wh<^    the    new    Stewart    building    is  i  But  that  didn'  worrv  us  a  bit.  Abov--    the 
opened  the  man  who  takes  the  six  feet  yawnin'  gravi- 

of  space  allotted  for  the  cigar  business  '  ^^''"  knowed  Sylvanus  still  was  there,  an' 
wil  have  to  pay  $2000  a  year.    So  posi-  i  ,,,„.  ,",*"  ha.l  power  to  save, 
five  are  the  agents  that  this  price  will  ,  Je^didiv'^in"  -1  pin'"'*''^  content,  an" 

be    paid    without    the    least    quibbling.     We   knowed   Sylvanus   knowed   the   trick 
they    have    already    declined    offers    of  i  to  git  him  out  ag'in. 

$1.''>0  a  month,  or  $1800  a  year  for  it.       i  • 

A  semi-circular  space  with  a  diame-  '  "  "''*^  Sylvanus  led  his  hero  we  were  not 
ter  of  approximately  six  feet  is  all  the  i  Tho.».h    L.   ^l]^' .,    i 

space  the  owners  of  the  cigar  stand  in  ;  ^''^^^  fl^ced^r^-r^on^fd'e";  ""  """^'  "'' 
the  Title  and  Trust  building  are  given  ;  Though  a  mine  should  cave  In  on  him. 
for  a  rental  of  $1800  a  year.     Its  loca-  ;  though  a  whirlpool  sucked  him  m. 

tion,  however,  is  of  the  best,  for  no  one  i  ^^'^  "•'  trusted  Sylvanus  to  produce  hlni 
who  visits  the  building  fails  to  notice'  ,„.    5,'^""^  agin 

it  in  the  rotunda.     The  cigar  .stand  in  i -^"    derstirod%he  job  ""        '   ''*'   """ 

the  new  Stock  Exchange  building  pay.s  u\-  knowed  that 'we  could  trust  the  man 
$150  a  month  for  six  feet  of  space,  and  ;  with  ol'  Sylvanus  Cobb, 

its  business  is  to  some  extent  cut  into 
by  a  buffet   standing  almost   opposite.  •  *^'^'^  "'*",  th^tn  good  ol'  days  of  guns,  of 

The  stand  in  the  Unity  building  pays  ;  nf   «wuv^''".j,*-"'..^^'"."'   ^^^•''" 

$100  a   month  *»   »    -^       Of    wolvw?    an     ragm'    catamounts,    with 

»iou  a  monin.        .      ,^      „     .  blood   upon    their   paws; 

A    cigar   store   in    the    Rookery    pays    Wen    six-foot    heroc.,  courted   girls    thet 
$4000  a  year,  and  one  in  the  Hartford  ,  _       ihey   had  snatchtd  awav 


$7000. 


A  GREAT  DISCOVERY. 

Superior  Citizen:  The  News  Tribune 
has  di.scovered  that  It  is  "an  original  Mc- 
Klnley newspaper.""  This  discovery  will 
probably  be  accompanied  by  an  applTcu- 
tion  for  office. 


IN   THE   OLD   BARN   LOFT. 
"Tis    thirt.v    years   or    thereabouts 

Since  I  used  to  roll  and  pl;» 
And   turn   all   kinds  of  somersaults 

On  the  fresh  and  fragrant  hay; 
A-luinping    and    a-tumbling 

On   the   hay  so   sweet   and   soft. 
At  my  home  away  b,tck  yonder. 

In   the  old  barn  loft. 

How  the  pigeons  used  to  flutter, 

.-Vnd   strut  about  and   coo! 
And  make  love  to  one  another. 

Like   sweethearts   used    to  do. 
While  I  walked  the  riskv  crossbeam. 

Or  clambered  high  aloft. 
\\ith   half  intent   of  lalling. 

In   the  old  barn  loft. 

How    I    used    to    frighten    sister. 

Who  was   looking   for  the  eggs. 
As   I   dangled  there,   bead  downward, 

Holding  by  my  little  legs; 
And,    giving   them   a   swing  or   two, 

I'd   strike   the   hay   .so   soft. 
At  my  home  away  back  yonder. 

In   the  old   barn  loft. 

The    twittering   of    the   swallow.s, 

While  making  homes  of  mud; 
The  gleeful  game  of  hide-and-seek. 

The   slip,    the   sudden   thud: 
The   pattering   of   the   raindrops 

Above   the   hay  so   soft, 
Are    memories    still    clinging 

Of   the   old    barn   loft. 
— S.   A.   HARRISON   in   the  Inter  Ocean. 

The  evening  paper  is  always  care- 
fully read,  efspeclally  In  the  home 
circle,  and  Is  therefore  the  best  adver- 
tising mediiuu. 


F'rom    out    a    bloody    bandits    clasp,    an' 
I  tramped  him  into  clay. 

1  wish  we  had  some  writers  now  who  un- 
I  dei-stood    the   job, 

I  Some  writers  who  could  sling  themselves 
'  like  ol"  Svlvanus  Cobb: 

SAM   WALTER   FOSS. 


There  Is 


No  Word  so  Fall 

of  meaning  and 
about  which  such 
tender  recollec- 
tions cluster  as 
that  of  "Mother," 
yet  there  are 
months  when  her 
life  is  fiDed  with 
pain,  dread  and 
suffering,  and  she 
looks  forward  to 
the  final  hour 
-^r-:^  with  gloomy 
forebodings,  fear  and  trembling. 

"Mother's  Friend" 

prepares  the  system  for  the  change 
taking  place,  assists  Nature  to  make 
child-birth  easy,  and  leaves  her  in  a 
condition  more  favorable  to  speedy  re- 
covery. It  greatly  diminishes  the 
danger  to  life  of  both  mother  and  child. 
Sent  by  Hail,  on  receipt  of  price,  $1.00.  Book 
to  "Expectant  Mothers"  free  upon  applieatioa. 
»•  BrwMsld  B«f«laUr  €•.,  Atluto.  «•. 
SOLO  BV  ALL  MIUOOIOTS. 


iMBM'^.aMa. 


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t! 


*  ^s— i^^peaa^* 


^•^■i  rf 


1 

' 

1 

1    ,  ,,^ 

The  Council  Is  Not  In  Favor 

of    St.     Paul's    Bell 

Charter. 


Appointment  of  W.  H.  Smith 
Confirmed,  Four   Alder- 
men Voting  Against. 


izmu  necessary  repairs  to  the  eity  hall 
to  1«-  made  was  passed  after  having 
.eer.  anieiided  so  as  f.  direct  the  pul..- 
li.  i.uildiuRs  .orniniltee  to  first  report 
a  list  of  the  repairs  needed  and  the 
cost  of  the  same. 

A  communication  from  the  city  attor- 
ney re<-oniendinK  the  appointment  of 
Juu^e  Davit's  as  assistant  city  attor- 
ney was  received  and  placed  on  file. 
WANTS  NO  CINCH. 
A  communication  from  V.  S.  Wilkin- 
son, the  applicant  for  the  position  of 
sealer  of  weights  and  measures,  was 
read,  in  which  he  stated  that  he  did 
not  want  a  life  job  and  waiving 
claim   to  one. 

The   Normanna    Mandskor  sent    in   a 
request  for  the  free  use  of  the  Armory 
for  its  concert  and  the  City 
patronage    for    its    coming 
.\t   the  conclusion  of  the 
dt-r  of  business.   Alderman 
newed    a    motion,    which 
vi»>usly  made  an«i  whi<h 


flOWAREMGETTINGON 


We  E.vpect  to  Hear  of  Cures 
From  the  Free  Distribu- 
tion of  Pills. 


any 


flared  out  of 
assistant  city 
dern>an  Tievi 
ilerman    Sang 


band  asked 

concert. 

regular  or- 

Stevens  re- 
he  had  pre- 
had    been  de- 


Resolution  In  Favor 

Department  Store 

Was  Passed. 


or  the 
Bill 


The  council  last  evening  pa.'^sed  reso- 
lutions against  the  adoption  of  the 
Bell  charter  and  in  favor  of  the  pend- 
ing bill  increasing  taxation  on  de- 
partment stores,  and  confirmed  the  ap- 
l»olntment  of  W.  H.  Smith  tu  the 
kH>ard  of  public-  works.  An  adjournment 
was  taken  without  proceeding  to  a 
ballot  for  assistant  city  attorney, 
aside  from  the  features  noted, 
business  was  of  routine  nature. 
On  the  motion  to  confirm  W. 
Smiths  appointment.  Aldermen 
villiun    and    Sang    had    a    passage 


order,    that    a    ballot    for 
attorney    In-    taken.    Al- 
llion    seconding    it.       Al- 
^.   .  moved   an   adjournment. 

\vhich    was    carrieil    by 
yeas   to  r,   nays. 

Thafs    just    what     I    wanted, 
i  rtsid.nt.  ■    remarked    Al.lerm 
vens.   as  his  motion   went 
"Weil,    it    isn't    often 


THE     OlSrRIBUTION     CLOSEO-PRESUM. 

ABLY    EVERY800Y     SUPPLIED— WILL 

THEY  DO  Aft   MUCH   GOOD   HERE 

AS   THEY   HAVE    DONE 

ELSEWHERE? 


a     vote    of    11 


Mr. 

in     Ste- 

limmering. 

you    get    what 


the 
on" 
was 
while 


Aldt-rman    Sang, 
the    laugh    that 

the  aldermen  out- 

f  ■  clalmetl  that  the 

a  ruse   to   make 


and, 
the 


H. 
Tre- 
at 


you  want."  retort»'d 
•Hoth  sides  claimed 
follmveil. 

After  the  meeting 
Hide  of  the    'combin 
niotion   to   ballot    was 

other  Sid,,  think  there  was  a  "hen 
and   force  an  adjournment,   which 
What    the   former   really     wante<l. 
the  others  asserted  that  they  de- 
sired to  postp^>ne  the  election  of  an  as- 
snstant   city   attorney    until   after     the 
matter  of  salaries   had   been    adjusted. 
The  resolution  agreed  on  at  the  cau- 
tu.s  m  the  afternoon,  referring  th« 
ter  of  salaries  to  a  committee 
with   mstructions  to 
and   report   at    the 
not  taken  up  and 

w«/o'''''^'"?-   »"•»*•» i^ally.  just  where  it 
w  as  a   week  ago. 


s    of 

aiiarm.v. 

Koixi    ill 

not    bci'il 

or 

the 

We 


thcin.s 

lll'V 


mat- 
of  five, 
agree  on  amounts 
next    meeting,    wan 
passed,  which  leaves 


IS 

not 

that 
up. 

up. 
•Mr. 

"l>ut 

they 


a   friend 


voting  in   the 


arms.  The  former  arose  and  remarked 
that  a  good  deal  ha<l  been  said  pro  anil 
con  about  Mr.  Smiths  ability  and  as 
to  the  legality  of  his  appointment  and 
intimated  his  desire  for  some  infor- 
mation on   the  latter   point. 

Alderman  Crassweller,  of  the  com- 
mittee on  public  officers,  said  that  he 
had  been  informed  that  Mr.  Smith 
a  freeholder,  but  that  he  had 
looked  up   the  title  records. 

Alderman  Trevillion  remarked 
the  records  should  be  looked 
whereurM>n  Alderman  Sang  fireil 
"This  is  only  a  subterfuge. 
President."  remarked  Mr.  Sang, 
they  can  p^o  to  the  court  house,  if 
want  to.  and  find  a  deed  in  favor  of 
Mr.  Smith  recorded,  all  right.  This 
cjuestion  has  never  been  raised  before 
and  it  won't  be  rai.sed  again,  certain- 
ly ni»i  if  my  friend  here  has 
V.  ho   wants   a  job." 

The  resolution  confirming  Mr.  Smith 
was  then  put  to  a  vote  ami  was  car- 
ried fiy  a  vote  of  V2  yeas  to  4  nays. 

The  auditing  and  finance  committee 
reported  the  resolution  on  the  Bell 
charter,  the  matter  having  Iieen  re- 
ferred to  the  committee  at  the  previous 
meeting.  The  resolution  recites  that 
the  charter  is  incompatible  with  the 
city's  interests  and  recommend  that  it 
be  not  pas.sed.  It  was  adopted  bv  a 
vote  of  14  yeas  to  2  nays.  Aldermen 
Jefferson  and  Trevillion 
negative. 

The  resolution  on  the  bill  Increasing 
the  ta.x  on  department  stores  was  re- 
ported by  Alderman  Dahl  and  was 
quite  lengthy.  It  sets  forth  that  modern 
c  ondiiions  refute  the  doctrine  of  equal 
rights  to  life,  liberty  and  the  pursuit 
of  happiness:  that  the  aim  and  end  of 
trusts  and  monopolies  is  to  usurp  the 
field  of  commerce  and  industry  to  the 
benefit  of  the  few  at  the  expense  of 
the  many,  and  that  among  the  agencies 
producing  this  result  are  the  depart- 
ment stores,  which  interfere  with 
trade  and  depreciate  values.  The  repre- 
sentatives of  this  district  in  the 
ate  and  house  are.  in  conclusion 
to  direct  their  efforts  to  the 
of  the  bill. 

Alderman  Shannon  said  that  he  had 
read  the  bill  since  the  caucus 
he   Would   vote  in   favor 
lion. 

"I  think  the  bill  is  dearlv  unconstitu- 
fKJnal.  •  said  he,     and  that  it  w  ill 
amount    to   three   whoops,    hut    it 
move  in  the  right  direction." 

The  vote  on  the  resolution  was  IT, 
yeas  t.>  1  nay.  Alderman  Crassweller 
voting  m  the  negative 

INyriRY   AS   TO    FEES. 
A    resolution,    introduced    bv    Alder- 
man   Sang,    was    passed    directing    the 
advise  the  council   as 
inquire    as       to       the 
received    by    the    city 
.    .  officer  and  to  require 

their   payment    into   the    treasury-. 

Alderman    Jefferson    gave    notiie    of 
his    intention     to    introduce    a 
tion  requiring  the  city  clerk  to 
record    of   all    fees    received    1 
A  resolution 


DEPARTMENT  STORES. 

Louis  Nash  Talks  to  the  Coun- 
cil at  Caucus. 

At  the  caucus  in  the  afternoon  Louis 
Xash.  representing  retail  merchants  of 
St.  Paul  and  Minneapolis,  addressed  the 
council  on  the  bill  now  pending  provid- 
ing   for    the     taxation    of     departmtiit 
stores.     He  said  that  the  retailers  of  the 
rvvin   Cities  had   suffered   greatly  from 
the  enc  roachments  of   these   establish- 
ments, and  read  a  list  compiled  bv  Hop 
<>.   o.  Cullen   and   presented    by   him   to 
the    state    senate     committee,    showing 
that  the  number  of  retail  dealers  in  St 
Paul  in  the  year  1S%  Is  less  bv  i:!l  than 
Huiing  this  time,   he  said,   the 
of    grocery    stores,    which    are, 
alfected    by  the  dei.artnient   stores   ' 
from  27.')  to  .m.    Mr.  Nash  le- 
the  department  store  of  Will- 
i   &   Co..   of   Minneapolis. 
5.!^^^'"  ^^^  P^^  >far  it  had  done 
th  of  business,  w  hile 


of 


sen- 
asked 
passage 


and  that 
the   resolu- 


not 
is   a 


c^ity  attorney  to 
to  its  power  to 
amount  of  fees 
clerk  and   health 


in   INW. 
number 
j  not 

I  increased 
!  ferred  to 
I  iam    Donalds, 
sayin'j 

nearly  ?::.OtH),iMX>  wo 

the  small  dealers  this  store  had  crowd- 
ed out  were  going  to  the  wail.  If  there 
was  no  other  way  to  remedy  the  evil. 
Mr.  Nash  said,  the  constitution  should 
be  revised,  which  could  be  brought 
about  by  a  general  demand  from  mun- 
icipalities. He  wanted  a  re.solutii.n 
from  the  council,  he  said,  inasmuch  .it. 
.-senator  Spencer  was  standing  neutrat 
on  the  ground  that  he  did  not  know- 
how  his  constituents  stand. 

.A.  resc)lution.  introduced  l)y  Alderman 
Dahl.  w  as  passed  after  some  discussion 
urging  that  the  bill  l)e  passed. 

Aldermen  Shannon  and  Crassweller 
opposed  action  at  this  time,  cm  th. 
ground  that  it  would  be  onlv  fair  to 
give  the  other  side  a  chance  to  be  heard 
the  latter  remarking  that  the  council 
sh(julil  not  commit  itself  to  a  bill  which 
I  none  of  the  members  had  read. 

Alderman  Sang  favored  the  measure 
The    department    stores      had      injure! 
West    Duluth  dealers,    and,    he   had    ii<. 
doubt,  every  merchant  in  the  citv  had 
been    affected.      He    believed    that    ilic  I 
council     should     show    where   it   stood 
"This  law    should    be  passed,      he  said 
"although  the  courts  may  find  a  way  t.i 
knock  it  out— they  generally  do." 

Alderman  Kowley  said  he  had  no 
doubt  that  were  it  not  for  the  depart- 
ment stores  every  store  room  in  town 
would   be   rented. 

The  aldermen  then  wrestled  with  the 
salary  question  a  while,  the  subject 
l»eing  taken  up  on  motion  of  Alderman 
Sang.  Alderman  Tievillion  moved  that, 
as  a  preliminary  movement,  the  alder- 
men donate  their  pay  for  twelve 
months. 

Alderman    Sang    rose    to   a    point    of 

order.     "That  motion  is  child's  play,  Mr. 

he  said.     "The  charter  fixes 

and   we  have 


If  there  lives  In  Duluth  a  man  or  woman 
affliitetl  with  Kidney  Disc-.ise  who  has 
not  provided  himself  «ir  herself  with  the 
means  of  cure.  It  is  not  the  fault  of  the 
DODDS   MKIUCINK  C'O..    of   the   V.    S. 

\V'-    hiive    distributed    eiionjrh    box 
Dc.DDS    KID.NKY    IMLLStocur. 
Ue    believe    we    h;ive    done    some 
the  c-oimniiiilty.  Certainly  it  hii.s 
for    l:iik  .of   .leeeptalic-es"  of   our   offei 
lor    link    of    kindly    asslst.iiic-e    from 
l.n.piietors    of    the    News    Tribune    if 
b.ivi-    lailicl. 

Appro.ximatc  ly  liNNi  box»\s  have  bet-n 
KlVeii  iiway  to  p«-oi)|e  who  represented 
Ives  as  beinu  sufferers  from  Kicl- 
Troiihle  in  some  form  or  other.  The 
experiment  thus  far  may  be  said  tii  be 
su.c-essfni.  .Vow  it  remains  to  b<>  so.-ii 
Wlli't    will    be    the  outc-ome. 

It   has   frequently   been  asked.    How  can 
W«-    affofd    to    do    this? 

..!n*'!h  1'  .'"  "j'"  ^■">-  ^^'^'  •■"■•'  niaking  a 
pill  that  is  of  inestimable  value.  (>nce 
Us  merits  become  known,  we  shall  receive 

Vol"  I  /*''!ll""''.'r' •  IJODDS  KIDNKY 
Hi-i..S  will  sell  on  their  merits  wherever 
tliey  are  known  and  .tppreciated.  Hut  we 
realize  that  there  is  a  common  prejudice 
asainst  proprietary  meclicines  which  has 
to  be  overcome. 

We  might  tell  you  of  the  marvelous 
ceres  that  DODD'S  KIDNEY  PILLS 
have  effected  In  other  states.  You  might 
not  believe  us.  if  we  did.  But  when  vou 
Know,  of  your  own  knowledge  that 
1  «;DD'S  K  I  D.VK  Y  PI  LLS  have^  cured  a 
father  ot  Rrisrht  s  Disease,  a  mother  of 
her  lame  back,  or  any  relative  or  ae- 
cpialntanc-e  of  Kidney  Trcmbl,.  vou  will 
readily  rec-ommend  them  to  some  other 
friend    of    yours    similarly    afflietc-d. 

In  short.  We  waul  some  cures  in  Du- 
luth. \ou  have  the  trouble.  We  have  the 
cure  for  it.  Now  .all  that  is  necessarv  is 
to  briiiK  remedy  and  ill  together,  and"  let 
I  i-m  light  It  out.  The  pills  will  win 
time.  We  are  sure  of  that.  At 
the  risk  is  ours. 

All  we  have  to  ask  of  the  good  peoide 
who  have  accepted  our  offer  of  free  heal- 
ing and  cure.  Is  that  thc-y  will  franklv 
report  to  us  whether  the  I'ills  are  as  len"- 
res<-nt.cl  or  not.  If  they  help  vou  doni 
I  be  1..0  mod.  St  to  t.il  us.  We  wfll  not  use 
.vour  nam.s  without  your  .onsent  If  on 
the  oth.r  hand,  the  Pills  do  not  help  you 
We  should   be  glad   to   learn   of  it 

i.^'".?"  ,^^''    '"■•■"    '•'"    '^'"t    «■'"'«    in.ide    bv 
I>r.    Dodd.   no  ca.se  of  Kidnev   Disea.se  has 

VV/.v.'AT.'  /'.\  ""'■  :Ht'''Uioii  thai  DODDS 
h".:^'''\.^'"'''^  ^""'<'  "<•'  relieve-.  Dr 
Dodd  sold  us  his  inescrii.tion.  and  th"  I 
mcclleilie  known  by  his  name  hius  be.-n 
in  general  use  now  for  ov.r  li.ilf  a  doz.  n 
years— and  in  limited  use  for  inu.li  lont;- 
.•r  pciiod.  .\K\KK  has  a  c-ase  been  re- 
ported ol  absolute  failure  on  the  p.irt  of 
the  Pill.s  If  there  is  one  in  Duluth.  it 
will   he  the-  (list   on   record. 

We   therefore  renew  oiir  request 
friends    h.    let    us    know,    as    thev 
their  family  doctor,   how    thev 
along. 

L.^w  c"'''A'.  ;"'''    ""^*     DODDS    KIDNKY 
t  ILI..S  Will   be   found   on   everj    druggist's 
shelves   In   this  city   from   now"  on     If 
need   more  they  can  be  had  at  50 
I'o.x:   .six    bo.\.'s    for   «L'..",e». 


THE  UNITY  CLUB. 


"Communism  and  Socialism" 
Discussed  Last  Evening. 

The  Unity  club  last  night  held  an 
interesting  discuss!.. n  on  "Socialism 
and  Communism,  "  or  as  the  leaders  by 
consent  divided  the  topic,  "Commun- 
ism and  Collectivism."  Miss  WeKsh 
save  the  opening  address,  dealing  with 
experiments  in  the  United  States  al.mg 
communistic  lines,  she  said  that 
communism  meant  the  abolishment  of 
ownership  of  property  and 
of  proi.erty  rights  in  the 
.    .  A  nation  may  be  divided 

into  separate  communities.  Commun- 
ism has  been  suggested  as  a  remedy 
against  the  oppression  of  labor,  aad  it 
the  di.ssatisfaction  at  the  condition 
society  at  the  present  time.  The 
subject  is  principally 
Republic,      and 


individual 
the   vesting 
communitv. 


IS 

of 

literature  cm  the 
drawn    from    Plato's 

Mores  Utopia,  the  i.Ieas  of  which  were 
outlined    interestingly    by    the    spc>aker 
The  experiments  in  the-  United  States 
Which  have  survived  are  light  in  num- 
ber.    Most  of  th.in   have  but  one  c-om- 
nninity.  though  the  Shakers  have  fifty- 
eight  and  one  or  two  others  have  .seve- 
ral each.     The  Shake-is  are  the  earliest 
socie-ly.    having    been    founded    in    1794 
m    the   East    and    in   iso.';   in    the    West 
The  estimated   i.o|.uiaticm  of  the  eight 
societies    is   r,(M)(».    an-l    they    own    150  000 
acres,  about  thirty-six  acres  per  head. 
Iheir  act-umulated    wealth  amounts   to 
about   $2000  each,    which    has    been   ac- 
cumulated by  hard   work,   honesty  and 
economy  without  regard  to  wealth-get- 
ting.    The   people  are  secured   against 
demoralization,    and    are    morally    bet- 
ter  than    their   ne  ighbors  of   the   same 
grades    of      society.       in      nationality 
their    i>eople      arv      mostly      Germans, 
though    the    Icarions    are    French    and 
the   Shakers  Americans.      The   bond   of 
union   between  th.m  is  either  religious 
or  Ideal.     One  soc  iety   abandons   relig- 
icin.  and  among  them  the  communistic 
theory   almost   amounts   to   a   religious 
belief.      In    the    Aun.ra     society     their 
icleal  is  that  the  .  .-ntral  idea  of  Chris- 
tianity   is    unselfishness.      The    family 
life,  which  Plato  abolishes,  is  preserved 
in   all    the   .societies   but    one.    the 
fectionists. 
All  are 


RAINY  LAKE  GOLD. 

Recent  Run  of  the  Big  Foley 
Mill. 

The  Rainy  Lake  Journal  of  March  11 
contains  the  following  late  news  of  the 
gold  mining-  region: 

It  is  currently  reported  at  Mine  Cen- 
ter that  the  output  of  gold  from  the  re. 
cent  run  of  the  big  Foley  mill  was  46 
pounds  of  pure  gold.  The  ore  bin  in 
the  mill  when  we  were  at  the  mine  be- 
fore the  run  was  made  contained  be- 
tween 200  and  2.50  tons  of  rock  If  the- 
repprt  is  true,  and  it  reached  us  prettv 
straight,  the  output  was  $14,720,  or 
about  $60  free-milling  gold  to  the  tern.' 
J.  D.  Stryker,  a  prominent  real  estate 
nian  of  Duluth.  has  been  making  a  tour 
of  the  Rainy  Lake  gold  fields,  the  past 
twc.  weeks.  He  was  in  town  Tuesday 
and  favored  the  Journal  with  a  call 
Mr.  Stryker.  having  seen  for  him.sc-lf  is 
now  satisfied  that  there  is  gold  in  pav- 
ing quantities  here,  and  he  will  accord- 
niK'ly  lay  his  i.U.iis  for  securing  his 
share. 

The  Journal  man  in  the  last  mail  re- 
ceived a  nice  little  bunch  of  the 
of  one  of  the  best  gold  minces  in 
new  g.dd  fields,  and  one  that  now 
mands  50  per  cent  premium  in  the 
ket.  together  with  a  hands.mie 
stating  that  the  company  felt  that  the 
donation  was  our  due.  inasmuch  as  they 
were  free  to  c:-onfess  that  our  unceasing 
labor  for  the  gold  fields  had  been  one 
of  the  chief  factors  that  had  enable.l 
capital  interested  in   their 


NATURE'S  BEST  REMEDY. 


Paine's 


Celery  Compound  Prevents 
Nervous  Breakdown. 


stock 
these 
com- 
■  mar- 
letter. 


first 

their 

The 


Per- 


eve-ry 
any   ratc^. 


are 


to   our 

would 

gelling 


you 
cents  a 


resolu- 
keep  a 
by    him. 
was  pa.ssed  directing  the 


comptroller  to  refer  the  matter  of  the 
iHK.ks  an.l  accounts  of  his  predecessor 
to  the  city  attorney  with  instructions 
to  call  on  Mr.  Ten  Bmoks  bondsmen 
to  act  with  the  city  in  bringing  the 
»K>oks   up    and    i)alancing    them. 

The  bills  giving  cities  of  ,50.000  power 
to  contract  for  the  removal  of  gar- 
bage and  providing  for  the  removal  of 
the  dead  from  unused  cemetene<!  and 
the  dedication  of  the  ground  to  public 
park  purposes  were  declared  by  reso- 
lutic.n  to  contain  no  provisions  disad- 
vantageous  to   the  city. 

Resolutions    were    passed    approving 
estimates    for    pipe,    machinerv      and 
work  on  the  tunnel  for  the  waterworks 
to  the  amount  of  $1.5.489.  and  directing 
the  ^K>ard  of  public  works  to  advertise 
for  bids  on  the  special  ct  stings,  blow- 
offs  and  pipes  for  use  in  and  about  the  i 
ie.«ervoir    at      Thirty-fourth 
east;   the  special  ca.'-tings  and  pipes  in  i 
and    around    blow-offs    1    to   7   and    at  i 
Thirty-fourth    avenue    reservoir.       and 
for  furnishing  and  laying  a  thirty-six- 
inch  steel  or  cast  iron  force  main  from 
Thirty-fourth    avenue    c?ast    to    Fourth 
street   and    Fifteenth  avenue  east. 

After   some    di.^cussion.    a    resolution 
introduced  )>y  Alderman   Burg,  author- 


ITCHING 

SKIN 
DISEASES 

SrwKD-r  CCRK  TRXAT3r«T»T  for  tortnrlDK,  dl«flff. 
nrliiK.  Itcliinif.  burning,  and  gculy  skin  and  scalp 
diseases  with  loss  of  tiajr.  —  Warm  batbs  withCu- 
TICITKa  Soaf,  jjeiitle;  applications  of  CtiTicrRA 
<olDtnienl),  and  full  r!o«<-8  of  Clticcra  Rksol- 
TX2iT,  greatest  of  blood  pariHers  and  liamor  cues 

(Siticura 

__^^^^  b  sold  tlify>arhoat  the  world.    Fdttbb 
J>BVa  Jk  Ch*m.  Cr.BP..  Sole  Pmn...  Rnston. 
W^  "  How  to  Curr  Itduaz  Bkio  DUtattt,"  fit: 


j  President, 
the  pay  of  the  aldermen 
nothir/g  to  do  with  that." 

The  point  was  sustained.  Alderman 
Trevilli.ms  moti.m  being  de<lared  out 
of  cjider,  which  put  an  end  to  what 
might  have  been  an  unpleasant  situa- 
tion. 

City  Clerk  Richardson's  salary  was 
then  taken  up.  Alderman  Jeffersoi. 
moved  that  the  salary  be  fixed  at  $600  a 
year  and  fees.  Several  amendment.s 
were  tacked  on  fixing  the  amount  at 
from  $8cX»  to  $1000,  all  of  which  were  lost. 
There  was  consuderable  debate  the 
while.  Aldermen  Jefferson  and  Simpson 
creating  something  of  a  sensation  bv 
arraigning  some  of  the  aldermen  who 
voted  to  fix  the  amount  at  more  than 
$800  for  not  keeping  their  promises 
made  in  caucus. 

The  original  motion  was  lost,  as  was 
a  motion  by  Alderman  Slmp.son  to 
make   it  $S50. 

Alderman  Shannon  moveu  that  the 
matter  l)e  left  to  a  committee  with  ii-- 
structions  to  agree  on  an  amount  and 
rep.jrt  at  the  next  meeting.  "I  would 
.suggest."  demurely  remarked  President 
avenue  i  <^'"t-hrane.  as  he  put  the  motion,   "that 

.= ,_  I  the  council  name  the  committee."     The 

motion  was  carrieil  and  the  chairman's 
suggestion  was  ad.jpted.  Aldermasi 
Shannon  submitted  the  names  of  Alder- 
men Jefferson,  Rowley,  Richardson. 
Cras.sw  eller  and  Dahl  as  the  committee-. 
Alderman  Crassweller  asked  that  his 
name  be  taken  oflf  and  that  of  some 
alderman  not  in  favor  of  reducing  sal- 
aries be  substituted,  which  was  done, 
AldeiTTian  Trevillion  being  appointed  in 
his  stead. 

Mrs.  W.  T.  Bailey  and  Mrs.  J.  H. 
Crowley  appeared  before  the  council 
and  requested  that  the  usual  annual 
donation  be  granted  to  the  Women  s 
home.    The  matter  was  referred. 

After  the  caucus  had  adjourned  Al- 
derman Simpson  again  took  Alderman 
Trevillion  to  task  for  not  xxiting  for  a 
reduction,  claiming  that  he  had  said 
that  he  would  do  so  in  caucus  during 
the  week. 

"You   seem    to   have     changed     your 
mind   all   of  a  sudden."   remarked    Mr 
Simpson,    finally,    Mr.    Trevillion   reply- 
ing tartly  that  "wise  men  change  their 
minds;  fools  never." 


THE  ME8ABA  SITUATION. 

Main  Contention  Between  the 
Big  Iron  Companies. 

A    main    contention     in      the     recent 
Cleveland    meetings    of    the    Be.ssemer 
Ore  association   has   involved  the  Lake 
Superior   Consolidated    Iron   mines  and 
the  Minnesota  Iron  company,  and  con- 
stitutes w  hat  may  be  called  the  Mobaba 
situation,  says  the  iron  Trade  Review. 
The  railrcjad  interests  of  the  two  com- 
I  panics  are  the  occasion  of  the  difference 
[  that    has   come    up.     The   Consolidated 
company,  having  leased  two  large  prop- 
erties to  a  large  consumer,  is  sure  of  a 
large   tonnage   for  its   road,    the   Oliver 
and  Mountain   Iron  properties  together 
insuring  1,200,000  to  1,500,000  tons  in  1897 
and  probably  more  in  later  years.    This 
t.mnage   is  outside   the   control   of   any 
association.  Since  the  producers  are  the 
sole  ccjnsumers  of  the  ore,  there  would 
be    no    point    in    association      member- 
ship. 

On  the  other  hand,  the  greater  part 
of  the  tonnage  of  the  Duluth  &  lr.,n 
Range  road,  which  is  owned  by  the 
Minnesota  Iron  company  interest  is 
under  pool  limitations,  onlv  a  siriall 
proportion  of  the  ore  hauled  being  non- 
Bessemer.  The  Carnegie  arrangement 
gives  the  Duluth.  .Missabe  &  Northern 
a  long  lead  in  the  matter  of  business, 
and  the  Minnesota  Iron  company  wants, 
as  a  condition  precedent  to  a  new  po(,i 
agreement,  some  arrangement  that  w  ill 
tend  to  a  better  equalization  of  the 
traffic.  The  Duluth,  Mis.sabe  &  Xorlh- 
ern.  from  carrying  less  than  half  a.s 
much  ore  as  its  rival  in  1893  and  three- 
fourths  as  much  in  1895.  took  the  lead 
last  year  and  w  ill  greatly  increase  it  in 
1897. 

The  distribution  of  ore  as  between 
the  two  roads  in  the  past  f.jur  years  is 
shown  in  a  statement  published  by  ti.e 
Review,  which  separates  the  product 
carried  by  each  road  for  its  owners  and 
that  carried  for  outside  mines. 

The  table  shows  that  the  great  gain 
the  Cons.dldated  interest  has  made  as 
a  carrier  of  ore.  in  the  past  three  years. 
has  been  contributed  by  properties  out- 
side nf  itself.  It  has  thus  gained  stead- 
ily in  income  from  transportation 
charges,  and  at  the  same  time  has  not 
increased  its  risk  from  the  fluctuations 
of  the  iron  ore  market.  Of  about  $1.- 
600.000  gross  revenue  from  its  ore  traihc 
last  year,  nearly  $1,250,000  came  from 
other  than  its  own  mines.  The  Minne- 
sota Iron  company,  on  the  other  hand, 
very  largely  provides  the  traffic  of  its 
own  road  and  its  profits  depend  to  a 
much  greater  extent  than  those  of  its 
rival  upon  the  maintenance  of  a  pro- 
fitable orice  for  ore.  In  case  the  two 
interests  should  fail  to  agree  on  a  basis 
of  ore  output  and  prices  for  1897.  the 
probability  is  that  the  resulting  strug- 
gle would  not  stop  on  ore.  but  would 
extend  to  freight  rates.  The  large  in- 
terest on  the  one  hand  in  the  mainten- 
ance of  the  80-cent  rate,  and  on  the 
other  hand  in  the  prevention  of  demor- 
alization in  ore.  furnishes  the  Incentive 
for  the  mutual  concessions  from 
Minnesota  giants,  that  now 
continuation  of  the  nool. 


the 
promise  a 


RED  ROUGH  HANDS 


Scrftcncd  and  Baautifled 
by  Cirrit'DBA  ittAr, 


TREASURY  PROMOTION  BOARD. 

Washington.  March  16.— Mr.  Vander- 
lip.  private  secretary  to  the  secretary 
of  the  treasury:  Mr.  Huntington,  chief 
of  the  bond  division,  and  Mr.  Nesbit, 
appointment  clerk,  have  been  appoint* 
ed  a  board  to  have  direction  of  exami- 
nations for  promotion  in  the  treasury 
department. 


Dr.  Bull's  Cough  Syrup  has  always 
been  kept  up  to  the  standard.  It  is 
the  same  it  was  forty  years  ago,  the 
best  sold. 


Aid.  Richardson  Explains. 

To  the  Editor  of  The  Herald: 

I  find  Alderman  Stevens  takes  some 
exceptions  to  what  was  said  bv  me  to 
a  Herald  reporter  in  regard'  to  the 
change  of  some  of  the  committees  bv 
the  council.  I  perhaps  owe  him  an 
apology  in  regard  to  the  matter  for  tru^ 
following  rea.scjns:  I  knew  nothing  of 
his  being  responsible  for  the  committees 
being  appointed  as  they  were,  only  by 
hearsay,  which  is  not  sufficient  evidence 
for  a  declaration,  and  had  I  considered 
the  matter  more,  would  have  been  more 
considerate  of  his  feelings  in  regard  to 
the  matter.     With  respect. 

I.  J.    RICHARDSON. 
Duluth,  March  15. 


very  strict  about   new  mem- 
liers.  and  these  are  admitted  only  after 
a    probationary   p.riod.     In   occupation 
the    Perfectionists    are    manufacturers 
agriculture   being  secondary,    while   all 
the   rest   are   mainly   agricultural.     All 
aim    to    produce    all    that    the    society 
consumes.     As  a  rule  the  reputation  of 
the   communities   is  good   among   their 
neighbors.     The  soc-ieties  are  all   dem- 
ocratic,   and    are    ruled    by    elders    who 
have    varying   powers    in    the   different 
communities.     So.  iaily  they  are  moral, 
industrious      and      temporate.        Their 
.schools    are    good.      The    lacking    ele- 
ments in  all  the  societies  are  the  intel- 
lectual   and    aesth.-tic-.     They    have   no 
pleasure  grounds  and  no  librarie.s. 

L.  J.  Hopkins,  after  prefacing  his  re- 
marks by  the  statement  that  he  had 
absolutely  no  sympathy  with  such 
ideas,  interestingly  went  into  the  prin- 
ciples of  collectivism,  which  he  said 
M-as  the  theory  of  equal  distribution  of 
the  products  of  labor.  Collectivism 
in  its  modern  form  is  far  more  impor- 
tant than  communism.  It  is  an  aggres- 
sive movement  which  will  in  twenty- 
five  years  unless  .hecked.  control  thp 
civilized  parts  of  the  world.  In  Ger- 
many the  progress  is  so  great  that  if 
it  cmtinues  at  the  jiresent  rate  Ger- 
many will  be  a  s..eialistjc  state  in  fif- 
teen years.  England  will  be  socialistic 
in  twenty  years,  and  France  and  the 
United  States  show  signs  of  the  same 
fate.  If  the  principle  is  right  it  is  a 
desirable  theory.  It  it  is  wrong  civili- 
zation  is   approaching  shipwreck. 

Collectivism    is    not    a    theory    to     be 
laiinched  out  of  existence.    On  one  side 
it  is  a  profound  economic  doctrine,  on 
the   other    it    is    the    claims   of   certain 
people    that    it    is    the    legitimate    pro- 
ducts  of  social   evolution.     The   theory 
<»f  collectivism   existed    vaguelv   before 
Marx    gathered    it    into    his    most    pro- 
found work.    It  undoubtedlv  arose  from 
the  injustice  then-  is  in  the  world.  The 
principle  is  that  labor  is  the  sole  source 
of  value.     If  that   is  true  it   is  difficult 
to  get  around  his  reasonings.     Capital 
came   in   when  the  first  skilled  artisan 
hired    an    assistant    and    appropriated 
the  surplusage  of  his  earnings   to   his 
own  use.     Capital  is  the  surplus  of  the 
product  of  labor  above  what   labor  re-  j 
quires   for   its   own   existence.     Capital 
now  absorbs  most  of  that.     According 
to    Marx    this    is    a    robberv.    and    the 
capitalist   takes   that    to   which   he   has 
no  right.     Marx  claims  that   that   sur- 
plus   belongs    to    labor.      Each    man    is 
now  suppo.sed  to  l)e  free,  but  according 
to  Marx  this  is  a  fiction,  because  free- 
dom of  contract  is  done  away  with.  The 
laborer  has  the  alternative     of     taking 
work  at  his  employer's  terms  or  becom- 
ing a  pauper.     This  disguises  a  slavery 
worse  than  that  of  old. 

The  speaker  believed  that  this  was 
the  weakest  argument  in  favor  of  col- 
lectivism and  that  evoluticm  is  the 
strongest.  Marx  had  a  clear  idea  of 
evolution,  and  his  theory  is  that  the 
present  capitalistic  tendency  must  fall 
or  civilization's  progress  cease.  The 
tendency  is  to  grind  the  workingman 
lower  and  lower.  The  original  artisan 
and  his  assistant  has  grown  to  trusts 
and  pools.  It  is  not  unreasonable'  to 
suppose  that  these  trusts  should  grow 
iiito  one  trust,  and  that  would  be  so- 
cialism, the  government  taking  the 
trust.  Mr.         Hopkins       said       that 

the  postal  system.  govern- 

ment coinage.  and  similar 

government    functions    were   steps    to- 
ward socialism. 

H.  S.  Mahon  abandoned  communism 
as  sporadic  and  harmless  and  took  up 
scK-ialism  or  collectivism  as  a  threat- 
ened evil.  He  did  not  believe  the  dan- 
ger was  imminent  in  this  country  at 
least,  for  if  the  national  government 
took  it  up  it  would  be  an  infringement 
of  state  rights.  The  Democratic  party, 
which  would  be  most  likely  to  take  it 
up.  has  always  favored  state  rights, 
so  it  is  not  likely  to  adopt  socialism, 
while  the  Republican  party  is  con- 
servative and  in  favor  of  nationaliijm. 
The  poor  condition  of  civil  service  in 
this  country  would  be  against  social- 
ism, while  the  constitutional  provision 
against  involuntary  servitude  would 
prohibit  it.  he  thought. 
An  interesting  discussion  followed. 


them  to  get 
gold  mine. 

At    the    Hawk    Bay    mine,    the 
shaft  is  down  58  feet,  as  far  as 
rope   would   allow   them    to   hoist 
vein  is  strong  and  shows  free  gold  oc- 
casionally and   assays   well.    On   No    t 
shaft,  which  is  400  feet  away  from  No. 
1.    the   shaft    is    down    twenty    feet,    at 
which  depth  the  vein  is  four  feet  wide 
and  .show  ing  g.jod  assay  results.  In  fact 
I  this  mine  at  the  pr>?sent  Icjoks  just  as 
;  well  as  Sawbill     did     when     the     same 
I  amount  of  work  had  been  done. 
I      It    is   stated   on    good   authority    that 
,  the  Mosher  mining  location  on  Manitou 
i  lake  has  been  sold  for  $25,000. 
I      Another  big  find,  equal  to  the  Ham- 
1  mond-Folger.  is  reported,  rather  indefi- 
I  nitely   located     as     being     forty     miles 
I  south  of  the  C.  P.   R..   but  proi>ably  in 
;  the  same  neighborhood. 
i      N.  J.   ITpham.     of     Duluth.     was  an 
I  agreeable  caller  on   the  Journal   Tues. 
day.     Mr.  U)*ham  is  one  of  the  promi- 
nent men  at  the  head  of  the  lakes,  and 
came    up    here    in    the.se    days    of   deep 
.'-now  and  z.^ro  weather  to  vic^v  the  gold 
fields  in  their  wcust  possilile  light,  but 
>  viMi   under  these  most   trying  circ-um- 
stances   he    was   very    much    impressed 
with  our  great  golden   tiva.sures,     and 
other  niimer.His  and  valuable  resources, 
and   will   make   it   a   point   to   make  in-^ 
vestments  in  this   region.     Mr.   Upham 
is  of  the     opinion       that   an   American 
railway     will   reach   this     section     this 
year. 

Notice  is  given  of  application  to  the 
Canadian  parliament  for  an  act  to  re- 
vive the  act  to  incorporate  the  Atiko- 
kan  Iron  Range  railway,  and  to  extend 
the  time  for  commencing  and  complet- 
ing the  work.  This  is  the  fourth  Can 
adian  railroad  now  seeking  to  enter  the 
rich  Seine  river  gold  fields. 


to    think 


AMUSEMENTS. 

"LA  BELLE  RUSSE." 
"La  Belle   Russe,"   a   play    by   David 
Belasco.   was  presented  at  the  Lyceum 
last  evening  before  a  very  small  audi- 
ence.   It  is  a  drama  of     the     style     In 
which   Clara   Morris   has  been    seen    in 
years  gont-   l>y.   and   which   happily     is 
out  of  date.     Some  people  still  have  a 
fondness  for  dramas  of  this  order,  but 
those   are    becoming   fewer   every    day 
The  story  and  plot  of  "La  Belle  Russe" 
are  similar   to   hundreds   of   others.     A 
beautiful    adventuress— all   adv?ntures. 
ses  are  beautiful  in   plays— ingeniouslv 
worms   her   way   into     an     aristocratic 
family,   persuading  them     that   she     is. 
the  long  lost  wife  of  a  son  of  the  family 
All   seems   to   be  going  well,    when    the 
usual  result  oi-curs.     A  big.  strong  man, 
a  victim  of  the  adventuress  in  the  early 
days  of  her  career,  turns  up  and  face:< 
her.     There  are  scenes  in  which  she  de. 
fies  him,  then  supplicates  and  entreats 
then  rages  and  grows  devilish,  and,  ii- 
fact,  runs  the  entire  gamut  of  human 
emotions.     All  of  this  gives  the  actress 
an  opportunity  to  display  her  emotional 
power,  and  the  audience  probably  ought 
to  be  able  to  endure  it  if  she  can. 

The  company  is  fairly  good.  Miss  Eda 
Clayton,  the  star,  is  an  actress  of  con 
sideral)le  power,  and  in  the  emotional 
scenes  was  seen  to  best  advantage.  In 
the  scenes  where  the  adventuress  is  in- 
gratiating herself  into  the  family  under 
false  pretensions  her  work  is  not  as 
subtle  as  it  ought  tci  be.  Horace  Vin- 
ton gives  good  support  to  Miss  Clay- 
ton i  nthe  role  of  Capt.  Brand,  who  folLi 
the  adventuress.  His  voice  is  not  par- 
ticularly pleasing,  but  his  manner 
throughout  was  good.  George  S.  Spen. 
cer  as  Sir  Philip  Calthorpe  was  satis- 
factory, and  Hudson  Liston  in  the 
character  part  of  a  fussy  old  lawyer 
was  very  good. 

"La  Belle  Russe"  will  be  repeated  thia 
evening. 


SiJiing  has  come. 

It    is    time    for    all    persons 
.seriously  of  their  health.  . 

But  that  doesn't  mean  taking  the  first 
spring  remedy  that  happens  to  be  of- 
fered. 

Persons  who  make  it  their  business  t.- 
get  the  most  effective  remedy  to  be  had 
are  sure  to  carry  home  Paine's  celeri 
compound.  No  ..ther  remedy  is  capabh- 
of  cleansing  tfie  blood,  nourishing  th. 
nerves  and  regulating  the  bowels  and 
digestive  organs  like  Paine's  celerv 
compound. 

If  you  are  troubled  at  all  bv  rheu- 
matism, neuralgia,  headaches  or  s-ieep- 
le.ssness,  even  if  the.se  attacks  ccmie 
only  now  and  then,  now  is  the  time  to 
purify  the  system  of  them.  Don't  pro- 
crastinate and  dally  till  frightened  into 
doing  something  when  y..u  find  the  task 
of  getting  well  has  a.s.sumed  desperate 
proportions. 

Paine's  celery  compound  will  cure 
kidney  trouble,  heart  palpitati.m  and 
disordered  liver  accurately,  intelligeniiy 
and  permanently  when  other  remedies 
only  raise  hopes  that  are  never  fulfilled 

Paine's  celery  compound,  which  owes 
Its  origin  to  the  most  distinguished  phj  - 
sician  and  investigator  this  count.v 
ever  produced.  Professor  Edward  E  ' 
Phelps,  M.D..  LL.D.,  of  Dartmcmth  col- 
lege, has  been  publicly  endorsed  anion" 
medical  experts  as  the  only  spring 
remedy  in  any  sense  entitled  to  th;  t 
name. 

It  can  be  .said  without  fear  of  con- 
tradiction that  no  other  remedy  ca;. 
truthfully  refer  to  men  and  women  .^.; 
responsible,  so  trustworthy,  so  convinc- 
ing. becau.se  of  their  straightf.irwaicl 
enthusiastic-    and    easily-verified    testi- 


biwn 


eolioi- 


d. 


^ 


monials  in  praise  of  Paine's  celerv  ex- 
pound. 

It    is    foolish    to    take      p.ior      he-iiiili 
"philos..phically"     fhe^se     s|)ring     da>  >.. 
There  is  no  reason  why  anyone  sh.iui-l 
'  sit  hands  in    lap,  and   submit   to  head- 
aches,    poor    appetite,     continual     tire.  I 
ft-eling   or  constipati.in.      If  every   di.s- 
I  heartened  invalid   will  go  right  at  g.t- 
I  ting  well   by  using  Paine's  celery  ccuii- 
j  pound,    that    person    will    be  astcmishe.i 
and    delighted    at    the    <|Ulekness    with 
which  this  wonderful  remedy  is  able  ... 
call  a  halt  t.)  wasting  .liseases.  disease.^ 
of    debility    and    a    "run-d. 
tion. 

Paine's  celery  compound 
ders  in  making  pe.ii)le  well. 

Here  is  what  a  w.iinan.  an  ambitious 
and  hard-working  member  of  th. 
profession    in    New    York   city, 
this  great   remedy: 

220  Fourth  avenue.  New  York 
While  a  student  in  the  New  Y..tk 
university  law  school  and  under  great 
pressure  from  w.uk  and  study,  1  was 
advised  to  take  Paine's  celery  c-oni- 
pcjuiid.  I  did  so.  and  its  beneficial  re- 
sults to  one  whose  nerves  are  under  th.- 
trial  of  severe  mental  effort.  I  am  onlv 
too  ready  to  assert.  After  taking  thie'> 
bottles  I  found  that  it  produce  d  .luiei- 
ness  of  nerves  anci  induced  sleep  vei  v 
beneficial  to  my  health.  For  those 
troubled  with  insomnia  I  can  hcariilv 
recommend  it  as  a  harmless  inducer  oV 
sleep  on  account  of  its  quieting  eflfect  .>ii 
the  nerves.     Yours  verv  trulv 

FLORENCE  H.  DANOERFIELD 
Attorney  and  Cmn.selor  at  La u 
Paine  s  celery  compound.  which 
makes  the  weak  strong,  has  rec-eivc-d 
testimonials  from  thousands  ..f  peooi.- 
who  had  almost  despaired  ..f  ever  agair 
I'eing  in  perfec  t  h.-alth  ' 


>es    Willi- 


legal 
says   of 


PRIZES  DISTRIBUTED. 

Ski    Runners    Receive    Their 
Well  Earned  Rewards. 


Will  Open  Headquarters. 


TO  HOT  SPRINGS.  ARK. 
The  Minneapolis  &  St.  Louis  railroad 
is  the  short  line,  and  only  line  with  din- 
ing  cars   and   compartment     sleepers. 
EzcursloQ  tickets  on  sale. 


The  Duluth  Elks  have  united  with  all 
other  Elk  lodges  in  the  state  outside  of 
St.  Paul  and  Minneapolis  to  maintain 
Minnesota  headquarters  in  Minneapolis 
durin-g  the  grand  lodge  session.  It  is 
the  intention  of  this  combination  of 
lodges  to  entertain  visiting  Elks  on  an 
elaborate  scale,  second  not  even  to  that 
essayed  by  Minneapolis.  Over  100  mem- 
bers of  the  Duluth  lodge  have  expressed 
the  intention  of  attending  the  grand 
lodge  meeting,  and  it  is  expected  that  a 
special  train  will  be  run  for  their  ac- 
commodation. The  City  band  will  prob- 
ably accompany  the  party  and  furnish 
lively  music  for  the  occasion.  A  meet- 
ing of  the  Minneapolis  club  will  be  held 
in  a  few  days  to  take  definite  action  in 
regard  to  some  important  details  in 
connection  with  the  trip. 


"BRIDES  OF  GARRYOWEN.  ' 
Tomorrow  night  is  St.  Patrick's  night 
and  what  will  prove  one  of  the  events 
of  Duluth  amateur  performances  will 
be  given  at  the  Lyceum  in  honor  of  the 
occasion.  The  entertainment  will  be 
given  under  the  direct  auspices  of  the 
cathedral,  and  this  in  itself  is  sufficient 
to  predict  its  success,  if  one  can  he 
guided  by  the  past.  Bishop  McGoIrick 
will  deliver  an  oration  at  8:15  sharp,  and 
it  is  requested  that  the  audience  be  in 
their  seats  by  that  time. 

Immediately  following  the  oration, 
some  twenty  or  more  Duluth  amateurs 
will  appear  in  one  of  the  most  famous 
plays,  depicting  life  in  Ireland  a  cen- 
tury ago.  Many  songs,  quartets,  etc., 
will  be  introduced  during  the  play. 
Arthur  Lahey.  Mrs.  James  McAuliflfe, 
Miss  Satie  McNeel  and  a  specially 
drilled  quartet,  will  render  the  musical 
numbers.  Much  interest  has  been 
aroused  in  the  production,  and  a  big 
house  is  already  assured. 


The  social  and  informal  dance  with 
which  the  Duluth  Ski  club  winds  up  the 
season  vvas  given  last  night  at  Central 
hall.  The  award  of  prizes  was  the  firtt 
thing  on  the  program.  Knute  Berven 
distributing  them,  accompanying  each 
with  appropriate  remarks.  He 
plained  to  the  guests  that  the 
would  have  been  longer  if  the 
for  the  jump  had  been  lower 
hill  side,  allowing  greater 
be  gathered.  The  distribution  of  prizes 
was  followed  by  short  addresses 
several  membei-s  of  the  club 
which  dancing  was  begun  and 
until  midnight. 

The  following  are  the  winners,  the 
records  as  officially  announced  and  the 
prizes:  Rolf  Hansen,  highest  average 
for  three  runs,  38  feet  11  inches,  a  pair 
of  opera  glasses;  S.  Deilv,  average,  2S 
feet  10  inches,  a  gold  watch  chain;  M. 
Olson,  average,  26  feet  3  inches,  an 
order  for  $3  on  C.  W.  Ericson;  A.  Rog- 
nan.  average.  26  feet  3  inches,  a  pair  of 
gold  cuff  buttons;  Christ  Storm,  aver- 
age, 25  feet  4  inches,  order  on  Manhat- 
tan Wine  house;  S.  Rognan.  longest 
jump.  60  feet  10  inches,  a  gold  watch 
chain. 


Missionary  Meeting. 

The  Missioii.iry  society  of  the  «:;iea 
Avon  Pre-sbyteriMn  church  will  meet  ii< 
<he    n^sidence   of    Mrs.    J.    D.    Stryker    io- 

foil. (Win};    i.s 


morrow   at   2:,'W 
the   pr.(gram: 
Song— ••  Abide 

Prayer 

'Til.-    K.mrd's   Nece.ssitv 


oel.jek.    Th. 
With    Me"... 


and   Historv  ' 

Miss   Gibs.i 

at    Home,    anc! 
.Mrs.   C.  C.   Salt. 


X- 

jumps 
places 
down  tli.^ 
headway   to 
i: 

'•y 

after 

kept  up 


"R.lation    to    Church 

Mission.iry   .Abroad' 
Song   

I'rayer    .........]..['. 

-noard's    Membershij)  "aii.i'organiza- 
-Thi""iu    ••••••••-•..Mrs.    W.   C.   Sherwood 

The    Magnitude    and    Variety    of    Us 
Operation- Mrs.   D.    E.    Holst-ai 

Missionary  Policy -...Mrs.  K.   R.   DonCeld 
S...n,,._-Spec^d   Away". Mrs.    H.    M.    Bae'tus 

How  the  Monc\v  IS  Raisc^d  and  Spent" 
..,, ■ Mrs.    J.    D.    Strvker 

Song— "I  m  the  Child  of  a   King" 
I'rayer    

"Facts  on  Alaska  "    ..  .'.'.'.Mrs' WilVon   Anil 
Alaska     from    a    Missionaries    Stand- 


point' 
'Alaska's 


Claim 


Address 
Song— ••(; 
I'rayer 

Mrs 


.Mrs. 
Upon    I's' 
Mrs. 


od 


W 

H.  "\v'.' 
...Miss 


be   With   Vou" 

J.    D.   Stryker.    leader. 


I'r.vor 

Coffia 

Jones 


ONE  OF  THE  BEST  FEATURES 


^  BUCKLEN'S  ARNICA  8ALVE. 

The  best  salve  in  the  world  for  Cuts. 
Bruises.  Sores,  Ulcers,  Salt  Rheum.  Fever 
Sores,  Tetter,  Chapped  Hands.  Chilblains, 
Corns  and  all  Skin  Eruptions,  and  posi- 
tively cures  Piles,  or  no  pay  required.  It 
Is  guaranteed  to  give  perfect  satisfaction 
or  money  refunded.  Price  36  cents  per  box. 
For  sale  by  Dulutb  Drue  compsnj. 


GEORGE  R.  WENDLING. 

George  R.  Wendling  will  lecture  at 
the  First  Methodist  church  Wednesday. 
March  24.  on  "Saul,  of  Tarsus."  It  is 
not  a  religious  lecture,  but  a  discussion 
of  orators  and  oratory.  The  Evans- 
ville,  Ind.,  Courier  said  of  it: 

"An  effort  of  great  power  and  force, 
and  held  his  hearers'  attention  riveted 
for  nearly  two  hours.  He  was  fre- 
quently applauded  in  the  most  enthu- 
siastic manner,  and  his  eloquent  peror- 
ation was  followed  by  an  almost  tumul- 
tuous demonstration  of  approval.  ' 

STANDS  AT  THE  HEAD. 
Aug.  J.  Bogal.  the  leading  druggist  of 
Shereveport.  La.,  says:  "Dr.  King's  New 
Discovery  is  the  only  thing  that  cures  mv 
cough,  and  it  is  the  best  seller  I  have."  J. 
P.  Campbell,  merchant  of  Safltord,  Ariz., 
writes:  "Dr.  King's  New  Discovery  is 
all  that  is  claimed  for  it;  it  never  fails, 
and  IS  a  sure  cure  for  Consumption, 
Coughs  and  Colds.  T  cannot  sav  enough 
for  its  merits."  Dr.  King's  New  Discovery 
for  Consumption,  Coughs  and  Colds  is 
not  an  experiment.  It  has  been  tried  for 
a  quarter  of  a  century,  and  today  stands 
at  the  head.  It  never  disappoints.  Free 
trial  bottles  at  Duluth  Drug  company's 
drug  store. 


a  par- 


Of  the  Pyrimid  Pile  Cure 

Is  the  fact  that  it  cures  every  form  of 
piles  without  one  particle  of  pain. 
This  desirable  point  is  not  obtained  by 
the  use  of  injurious  opiates  which 
simply  deaden  and  paralyze  the  nerves 
of  the  parts  and  make  matters  worse 
in  the  long  run.  But  it  is  done  solely 
by  Its  remarkable  healing  and  soothing 
elTects. 

And  while  it  thus  gives  immediate 
relief,  at  the  same  time  the  disease  is 
not  merely  checked,  but  a  radical  cure 
is  rapidly  accomplished. 

And  the  point  we  want  to  make  clear 
is  that  all  this  is  done  without 
tide  of  pain. 

This  fact  is  one  reason  for  the  great 
popularity  of  the  Pyramid  Cure  and 
constitutes  one  very  great  difference 
between  it  and  almost  any  other  kind 
of  treatment  for  piles. 

Every  kind  of  surgical  operation  for 
piles  is  excrutiatingly  painful,  besides 
endangering  the  life  of  the  patient  and 
in  most  cases  is  not  to  be  compared 
with  the  Pyramid  Cure,  neither  in  mak- 
ing successful  cures  without  pain  nor 
in  cheapness  and  safety. 

The  Pyramid  Pile  Cure  has  been  be- 
fore the  public  too  long  and  its  merits 
recognized  by  too  many  people  to  allow 
it  to  be  classed  with  the  many  salves, 
suppositories,  pills,  etc.,  and  you  run 
no  risk  in  trying  it,  as  is  often  the  case 
with  new  and  untried  preparations. 

If  you  are  ever  trou4>led  with  any 
form  of  piles  or  rectal  disease,  do  not 
forget  the  Pyramid  Pile  Cure.  Pre- 
pared by  the  Pyramid  Drug  company, 
of  Albion,  Mich.,  and  sold  by  druggists 
at  50  cents  per  package. 


The  Hawaiian  Ex-Queen. 

Ex-Mayor  Ray  T.  Lewis  has  rec.;ived 
a  letter  from  Capt.  Julius  A.  Palmer, 
who  is  acting  as  private  .secretarv  i,, 
ex-Queen  Lilioukalani.  Capt.  Paiinei' 
is  an  old  sea  captain  and  a  friend  .f 
Capt.  Lewis  of  many  years'  standii.g. 
Speaking  of  the  former  queen  of  Ha- 
waii. Capt.  Palmer  says  she  has  been 
much  misrepresented  and  that  she  is 
one  of  the  kindest,  gentlest  and  most 
amiable  Christian  women  he  ever  kneu . 
He  thinks  it  rather  unjust  that  40.oi!(> 
Hawaiians  are  not  allowed  to  cho.se 
their  own  ruler  because  .3000  Americ-ams 
say  they  shall  not. 


Company  A  Won.. 

A  game  of  indoor  baseball  was  play e- 1 
at  the  Armory  last  evening  between  nines 
from  Companies  A  and  G.  the  former 
winning  by  a  score  of  lo  to  C.  The  win- 
ners made  five  the  first  inning,  and  ivv.> 
each  on  the  second  and  fourth,  the  olh.-r-s 
stacking  up  but  three  the  while.  The  <l's 
then  picked  up  and  made  three  in  the 
following  innings  and  '  presented  their 
opponents  with  five  gcjose  eggs  in  succes- 
sion, the  latter  making  but  one  mor  ■ 
point  during  the  game.  A  large  crowd 
was  present  and  after  the  game  dan.-in:,- 
was  indulged  In  until  well  on  toward 
midnight. 

The  nines  were  as  follows:  Compin- 
A— J.  Michaud.  I.  s. :  Melbv.  p;  Gearhar; 
3b:  Cochrane,  r.  s. ;  Carey.  2b:  Lafans.  lb- 
Barnard,  r.  f.:  D.  Mlc-haud.  e.  Compaii.' 
G— Wigdahl,  e.;  McClure,  1.  f . :  Reid.  r  f  • 
Smith.  2b:  Sinclair,  r.  s. :  Totman.  3i>- 
Chapman,  j). :  McCormick.  lb;  Meining.  lb. 

WEAVERS'  STRIKE  ENDED. 
Philadelphia.  March  16.— The  cloth 
weavers  employed  in  John  and 
James  Dobson's  mill,  who  struck  about 
ten  days  ago  because  of  a  10  per  ce.i. 
reduction,  returned  to  work  today,  a 
satisfactory  agreement  having  been 
reached  with  Mr.  Dobson.  The  feeders, 
who  went  out  at  the  same  time  because- 
of  a  reduction  of  $1  a  week,  are  «till 
out.  They  were  offered  a  return  of 
one-half  the  reduction,  but  refused  t'» 
accept  it. 


■ 

' 

ij        ■ 


mmmmm   m 


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M'.c.»i 


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I. 


-•-••■■iili#li*l 


If 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     TUESDAY,    MARCH    16 


URIPf 


Ways  and  Means  Committee 
Consider  the  New  Ding- 
ley  Tariff  Bill. 

Democratic  Members  Want 

More  Time  Allowed  For 

Its  Examination. 

Dingley  Wants  to  Report  the 

Bill  to  the  House  on 

Thursday. 


1897. 


Washingtor*.  March  16. — The  Demo- 
rratio  niembtrs  of  the  ways  and  means 
romniittee  received  their  first  official 
information  on  the  new  tariff  bill  to- 
day when  the  bill  was  considered  at  a 
secret  session  of  the  full  committee. 
Chairman  Dinifley  announced  that  he 
d»'sired  to  reiH>rt  the  bill  to  the  house 
when  it  meets  at  nt>on  Thui-sday.  Mr. 
McMillan  complained  that  this  plan 
would  not  sjive  the  Democrats  sufficient 
tinif  to  analyze  the  meiisure  and  pre- 
pare a  rep«)rt. 

The  IVmot-rats  contended  that  they 
had  treated  the  Republican  members 
more  generously  in  the  matter  of  time 
when  the  Wilson  hill  was  framed.  Half 
an  hour  was  consumed  in  sparrinsr  over 
this  point,  and  no  definite  conclusion 
was  reached.  The  Republican  members 
of  the  committee,  who  had  been  most 
aitive  in  the  preparatiim  of  the  vari- 
ous schedules  explained  the  changes 
made  from  existing  rates  and  compared 

McKinley 


The  proposed  duties  with  th 
act. 

Chairman  Dingley  and  Mr.  Payne,  of 
New  York,  discussed  ih-^  chemical 
schedule:  Mr.  Dolliver.  of  Iowa,  the 
airricultural  sc>hedule;  Mr.  Tawney.  of 
Minnesota,  lumber;  Mr.  Payne,  susar, 
and  Mr.  Dalzell.  !?lass.  earthenware 
and  metals.  Mr.  Wheeler,  of  Alabama, 
and  Mr.  McMillan  took  the  leading  part 
in  the  discussion  for  the  r>emocrats. 

Concerning  the  sugar  schedule,  Mr. 
Payne,  asserted  that  it  was  practically 
a  return  To  the  law  of  1SS3.  He  repre- 
sented that  the  proposed  rates  were 
eiiuivalent  to  an  ad  valorem  duty  of  72 
per  cent  on  .'>  per  cent  of  all  the  sugar 
imported.  He  said  that  the  schedule 
contained  no  concealed  differential  be- 
tween raw  and  refined  sugar,  such  as 
the  Wilson  bill  had.  While  the  revenue 
which  sugar  would  yeild  had  not  been 
actually  calculated,  it  would  bring 
from  |16.00«).tXX)  to  J18.tW0.000  more  into 
the  treasury  than  imder  the  Wilson 
law.  Mr.  Robertson,  of  L^^uisiana,  ven- 
tured an  opinion  that  $50,000,000  could 
be  expected  from  this  sugar  schedule. 

In*  the  consideration   of   the  agricul- 
tural  schedule.   Mr.    Dollivar  explained 
that    the   countervailing   duty    on   fish, 
to  off -set  liounties  paid  by  foreign  gov- 
ernments, was  directed  against  France. 
The   Democrats   objected    to    the   impo- 
sition   of    a    duty    of   one-half   cent    on 
Tresh  water  fish,  which  are  now  on  the 
free  list.     They  also  contended  that  the 
proposed  rates  on  seeds  are  double  the 
McKinley  duties.     The  Southern  mem- 
bers took  an  interest   in  the   rye  para- 
graphs.    It   was  explained  that  the  in- 
creased  rate   on    broken    rye   had    been 
levied  to  discourage  the  growing  prac- 
tice of  breaking  rye,  which  is  brought 
in   for  the  use   of  l>reweries   before  its 
importation  composition,   to  secure  the 
advantage  of   the   cheaper   rates.     The 
duty  of  3  cents  a  pound  on  chicory  root 
which   is   now    on    the    free     list,     and 
which    is    used    as    an    adulteration    of 
coffee.   Mr.   Dolliver  explained,   was  for 
the  l>enefit  of  the  Middle  West,   where 
chicory    growing   is   a    new    industry. 

When  the  glass  schedule  was  reached. 
Ml.  Wheeler  criticized  the  increase  in 
•  iuties  on  cast  polished  plate  glass,  16  by 
IM.  from  6  cents  to  {•  cents,  and  21  by  30 
from  10  to  1."?  cents,  the  increase  being 
over  the  McKinley  rates.  Mr.  Dalzell 
said  that  it  had  been  demonstrated  that 
ii  the  McKinley  duties  on  plates  of 
thtse  sizes  were  not  protective,  but  to 
oflset  these  increases,  the  rates  on 
I>lates  of  higher  grades  had  been  re- 
duced. 

The  imposition  of  a  duty  on  cotton. 
ties,  now  on  the  free  list,  was  also  op- 
posed by  the  Demo<rats.  Mr.  Wheeler 
said  the  American  manufacturers  were 
able  not  only  to  supply  the  home  mar- 
ket, but  to  fill  large  orders  for  India 
without  any  protection  on  the  article. 
It  was  contended  by  the  Democrats  that 
the  additional  duty  of  ^  cent  on  all  ar- 
ticles of  steel  finished  cold,  would  prove 
very  far  reaching  in  its  scope.  The  aver- 
age rate  on  cutlery  was  stated  to  be 
about  46  per  cent. 

The  Democrats  oppose  also  the  pro- 
pc.ced  duty  of  $2  a  thousand  on  white 
pine,  which  is  double  the  McKinley  rate. 
They  also  criticized  the  paragraph 
placing  telegraph  and  telephone  poles 
and  railroad  ties  of  cedar  and  all  other 
woods  under  a  20  per  cent  duty.  The 
other  woods  are  not  now  dutiable  and 
the  opponents  of  the  new  bill  asserted 
that  they  constitute  the  most  extensive 
class.  The  Democratic  members  of  the 
committee  will  oflfer  amendments  to  the 
bill  in  the  committee  meeting  to  mor- 
row as  a  matter  of  form.  Their  amend- 
ments will,  of  course,  be  rejected  by  the 


FAMOUS  BELLS. 

Sounding    Tinklers    of   More 
Than  Local  Fame. 

In  this  country  bells  are  and  always 
have  been  ultimately  associated  with 
national  as  well  as  individual  joy  and 
sorrow,  says  the  London  Mail,  When  a 
great  victory  is  won  the  bells  crash 
forth  the  glad  tidings--  from  a  thousand 
steeples,  whilst  they  perform  a  like 
office,  though  of  course,  in  a  different 
key,  in  the  case  of  a  national  disaster. 
Hells  in  England,  however,  have  not 
become,  like  some  in  other  countries, 
hoary    with   ages  of  superstition. 

Hut   Spain  has  a  bell  that   is  its  pro- 
phet.   It    is    its   soothsayer,    oracle    and 
guide.    This    bell,    the    famous    Villela. 
has   hung   for  centuries  in   the   historic 
lastle.   keeping  watch  over  the  nation. 
It    is    the    most    celebrated    bell        in 
Europe.    Its    fame    rests    not    so    mu<-h 
upon  its  notes,  though  these  are  high- 
pitched,    soft    antl    clear;    nor    upi>ii    its 
size,   for  there  are  other  bells  in   Spain 
much  larger,   but   upt)n   its   personality. 
The  Villela  is  a  Sp.Tnish  bell  that  for 
.years  has  foretold  any  impending  trou- 
l>le  to  the  nation.    When  the  father  of 
little    Alfonso    died    the    Villela    bega.i 
tolling   in   the   night,    and    tolled     until 
morning  light.  In  the  ten  years'  Cuban 
war   the   Itells   struck    awful    tones   on 
the   nights  of  defeat.   And   when   great 
fires  have  touched  the  castle,  and  sick- 
ness   or    insurrection    threatened      the 
throne,    the    Villela    has    lifted    up    its 
voice. 

The  Villela  has  tolled  again,  and  only 
a  fortnight  ago.  It  was  one  short,  quick 
stroke.  Only  a  few  heard  it,  but  they 
ran  to  tell  the  direful  tidings.  Did  it 
mean  mor(>  disaster  In  Cuba?  Was  the 
war  to  drain  the  royal  vaults  beyond 
penury  to  debt?  The  Villela  would  not 
tell,  but  it  sent  tmt  its  warning  note. 

Russia  has  a  coronation  bell,  the 
largest  in  the  world  and  weighing  250,- 
000  pounds. 

It  hangs  in  the  Kremlin,  and  is  the 
emperor's  bell,  being  rung  only  in 
honor  of  him.  At  the  coronation  it 
pealed  forth  as  the  emperor  entered 
the  church,  and  its  voice  announced 
the  conclusion  of  the  ceremony  to  the 
whole  of  Russia.  The  coronation  bell  is 
rung  by  a  bellringer  blessed  by  the 
emperor  as  the  head  of  the  <-hur(h. 
The  bellringer  does  no  other  work 
is  always  on  duty  to  tell  of  important 
events  in   the   imperial   family. 

He  is  pensioned,  and  is  ever  polish- 
ing up  the  bell  in  case  of  need.  He 
rings  the  bell  when  his  majesty  goes 
to  church,  and  in  case  of  the  death 
of  a  Russian  monarch.  The  Kremlin 
bell  tolls  constantly  between  the  death 
and  the  time  of  the  funeral. 

As  is  well  known,  to  Russia  belongs 
th^  largest  unrung  bell  in  the  world. 
This  bell  now  occupies  a  building  in 
the  Kremlin.  It  was  cast  two  centuries 
ago,  but  was  found  too  heavy  to  re- 
move from  the  pit.  The  Russian  mon- 
archs,  one  after  another,  tried  to  have 
it  lifted,  and  dozens  of  lives  were  sac- 
rificed in  the  shifting  pit  of  sand.  Fin- 
ally fate  intervened.  A  raging  fire 
broke  out  and  heated  the  bell  in  its  pit. 
.\  quantity  of  cold  water  flowed  around 
it,  and  a  great  piece,  the  size  of  a  door, 
was  broken  out.  The  Russian  czar  im- 
mediately ordered  it  to  be  lifted  on  a 
pedestal  and  set  within  the  Kremlin, 
where  it  is  sometimes  used  as  a  tempi.'. 
Its  walls  are  two  feet  thick  and  it  is 
twenty-five    feet    high. 

The  bells  of  Notre  Dame  in  Paris  are 
the  largest  bells  of  sweetness  In  the 
world.  One  of  them  weighs  35.000 
pounds.  The  maker  who  cast  it  would 
never  disclose  the  secret  of  its  loud, 
sweet  tone. 

As  a  nation,   the  Japanese  have  the 
largest    bells,    but    the   crudest.    So    un- 
skill  are  they  that   many  of  them  will 
I  not    ring,    and    so   they   are   obliterated 
from   the  list  of  bells.       The  best   bells 
made,  even  if  cast  correctly,  have  two 
small  hammers.   Or  they  are   made  to 
sound    like    tin.   and   the  hammer   does 
not   strike   roundly.    One  of    these,    the 
"Little  Giant."  has  never  been  weighed. 
It  is  said  to  weigh  comparatively  little 
being    of    some    light    Japanese    metal, 
but  it  is  thirty  feet  across.    It  is  used 
to    announce    births    or    deaths    in    the 
royal    family.    Its    clapper   is    a    small, 
elongated    aftair    that    strikes    the    bell 
with   a   double   sound,    and    the    "Little 
Giant"  is  easily  recognized  when  heard. 
The  bell  of  Xotre  Dame,  in  Montreal, 
is  the  largest  bell  in  America,   but  not 
tht>  sweetest.  This  attribute  is  claimed 
by  the  biggest   bell  of  Trinity's   chime 
in    New   York,    which    is   surpassing   in 
delicacy   and   penetrating   in   its   pure- 
ness.  It  is  cast  in  E  flat. 

The  countries  of  Turkey,  Greece, 
Italy  and  Egypt  have  not  many  fam- 
ous bells.  Bells  are  not  in  good  repute 
there,  from  the  fact  that  criminals 
wear  them  around  the  neck  and  lepers 
are  strung  with  them.  In  the  temples 
the  high  priests  decorate  their  robes 
with  small  jangling  bells,  and  this  la 
another  rea.son  why  bells  cannot  be- 
come common.  In  Turkey  they  are 
conspicuously  unpopular;  indeed,  that 
country  is  the  only  one  that  positively 
forbids  the  ringing  in  of  the  new  year 
by  means  of  bells. 


CHMLS 


Some  Old  Time  Recollections 

of  Life  In  a  Slave 

State. 


Funny  and  Pathetic  Stories 

of  the  Black  Chattels 

Down  South. 


Negro     Songs     and     Negro 

Festivals-Why   Negroes 

Shout  In  Prayer. 


Lind 
ap- 
tho 
on 
Mv 
an 


Among    my    rocollectlons    of    life    In    a 
slave    state,    some    of    the    relations    that 
existed    between    myself   and    the   colored 
people    are    prominent,    and    their   recital 
may  perhaps  interest  readers  of  this  gen- 
eration, .sa.vs  J.  H.  Cloyea  in  the  Spring- 
field   Republiian.      1    was    always    on    th.i 
best    of    terms    with        the    masters 
slaves,     and    was    never,     so     far    as 
peared,    an    object    of    susprdon    to 
first,   or  of  confidence  to   the  second, 
account  of  my  free  stale  extraction, 
white  friends  culled  me  familiarly   "Y 
kee"     or     "Massat'husetts."    and    the     ne- 
groes   knew    that    1    came    from    that    in- 
definite   country    tliey    called     "ile    norf," 
which    many    hoped    to    reach    some    day 
by   the   "underground   railroad."    but   they 
never   asked    me   any    questions    about    ii 
and    I    was   equally    reticent    on    the   sub 
jec  t,    for   the   penalty   of   advising   or  as 
sisting  an  absconding  slave  was  very  se- 
and    ^'*"''c.      -My    place    as    clerk    in    a    general 
.store  brought  me  into  dost'  contact  with 
many    colored    customers     whose    money 
was    as    good     as    a    white        man's    an.l 
whose    patrongagt'    being    desirable,    gave 
them  a  right  to  the  ccurtesy  of  the  trade. 
Tliey    were    usually    as    free    with    their 
funds    as    children    and    bought    anything 
I)leasing  to  the  eye  or  taste  if  the  pocket 
could  compass  it. 

In  the  year  of  Polk's  efectlon  I  sold  n 
bright  brass  campaign  medal  to  "Sam." 
a  house  servant  of  my  employers.  He 
soon  returned  to  the  store,  saying  with 
much  elation.  "Golly,  Marse  Joe.  I  don" 
rooted  one  o'  dem  hotel  niggahs.  tol" 
him  dat  the  ting  was  surt'  nuff  gole.  an' 
made  a  dicker  for  dis  $2-bill.'  "Uncle 
S.im."  said  I  impressively:  ""you've  got 
your.self  into  a  mighty  bad  scrape;  1 
r.'ckon  you  won'"t  feel  so  peart  when 
Bob  Mitchell  (the  sheriff),  locks  you  up 
for  breaking  the  law;  better  return  the 
monev.  "  "Dasnt  go  nigh  dat  feller  agin", 
he  lam  me  sluiah."  said  Sam.  "I  'low  I 
got  to  lay  low  an'  watch  out  fer  him.  \y 
me  out  de  back  do'  an'  I'll  light  out  o" 
dis  kitiii.'  In  his  haste  he  dropped  the 
bill  whiih  I  secured,  and  waited  for  the 
""hotel  niggah"  who  presently  came  in. 
too  excited  for  ordinary  politeness. 
"Whar.  whar  dat  no  'count  niggah  Sam? 
\A"en  1  cotf'h  <le  or'narv  cuss  III  jus" 
frail  im  "till  his  hide  wont  hold  shucks." 
After  making  it  right  with  him.  we  con- 
spired with  the  sheriff  in  a  i>lot.  which 
made    Sam    uneasy    for   a    while. 

"'Albert.  "  ;i  boy  about  12.  was  a  tablt: 
waiter  at  the  house  who  "shoo'd"  the 
Hies  away  in  their  season  with  a  whi.-^k 
matle  of  peacock's  tall  feathers.  He 
"made  on"  fires  for  me  in  the  winter  be- 
fore which  we  sat.  myself  on  a  ch:iir. 
murdering   melody   with   a    fiddle,   and    he 


portico,  and  unpalnted.  Scattered  .ibout 
in  the  rear  were  several  .small  log  cabins 
occupied  by  slave  families  which  in  con- 
nection with  the  stable,  spring  hous.>  (all 
the  water  was  "totfed-  «t;  least  twenty 
rods  up  hi  ).  and  smoke  house,  (an  im- 
portant building  where  smoke  eur»d  hoii 
meat-hams,  shoulders  apd  middelings 
were    prominent    food),    made    up   an    Iso- 

ated  1  ttle  hamlet.  After  a  welcome  from 
Iw  ^"'omA  and  many  a  "Howdy  "  from 
the  darkeys,  l  „sed  to  take  my  gun  in  to 
the  low  grounds  and  bag  squirrels,  with 
an  occ.-isional  ml.ss  shot  at  a  wild  turkev 
The  colonel  had  .some  very  fine  old  peacii 
brandy  of  which  he  would  give  iw  a 
homeopathie  ,iri„k  at  supper.  Afterward. 
I  went,  with  a  supply  of  tobacco,  eandv 
iind    banjo    strinKS.    to    one    of    the    negro 

kitchens  where  I  was  the  onlv  white 
auditor  of  an  entertainment  composed  of 
singing,  banjo  Disking,  with  "pat  inba" 
accomiK'uiiments.  and  merry  dan.ini;  „f 
the  plckanninni.s.  When  the  moon  mse 
we  all  darkies,  dogs— nearly  evervoiie 
had  a  dog-and  myself,  started  with  pine 
knot.s-they  called  them  "'li^ht  wood"- 
on  a  possum  hunt.  I'ncle  Jim  blew  i  bla.st 
on  the  eowhoiii  he  earried.  whi<:i  set 
the  dogs  wild;  and  led  the  way  into  the 
torest_^  primeval,  the  murmuring  pines 
and  the  heml<)(  ks.  silent  except  for  ibe 
patter  of  the  doi^^s  nosing  around,  and  bit.s 
of  .song  like  this: 

(grasshopper  .sot   on   sweet   later  vine 
(.reat    big    rooster   come    up    liehinc 
\ankd    him   uiT  sweet    tater   vine. 
Rjucoon's  tail   is  ringed  all  'round- 
Possum's   tail   i.s   bar". 
'Po.ssum   diml)   ;p    "simmon   tree 
\Ne-uns  cotch  him  thar'. 


DECISION  SUPREME. 

Important  Judges'  Decision  tiiat  Dr.  Greene's  Nenrura  is 
the  Most  Wondeiful  Remedy  in  tlie  World  to  Cure. 

"^^'^ r,.t^y°  *^u^tu'''^^  ?^  *•!?  ^"*''"^  World.  The  All-Powerful 
pS^t'  "|alth-Giving  Properties  of  Dr.  Greene's  Nervura 
Established  Beyond  Doubt.  The  Greatest  Discovery  of  Modern 
Science.  The  Remedy  Which  Makes  Health  and  Strength 
Possible  to  All.    The  Great  Sorine  Medicine  fh=.f  th^  D<>/^ni<. 


Republicans. 


BADGER  .STATE  LEGISLATION. 
MadLson.    March    16.— Senator   Thayer 
this   morning     Introduced   a   resolution 
for  the  appointment  of  a  commission  of 
three  members  for  the  Investigation  of 
the  prison  labor  question.     Despite  the 
plea  of  Senator  Austin  that  to  exempt 
the    Lake   (^eneva   private    insane    asv- 
lum  was  an  unconstitutional  move    the 
senate  declined  to  acquiesce  in  the  as- 
sembly position,  and  at  the  instance  of 
Senator  Mills,  who  Is  a  supporter  of  the 
senate  amendment,  a  committee  of  con- 
ference,   consisting  of     Senators    Mills 
Thayer   and    Holliday.    was    appointed 
Senator    McGillvray's    bill    providing   a 
bounty  for  the  production  of  beet  sugar 
came  back   with   two   substitute     bills. 
The    committee    on    claims    bill,    whkh 
provided  for  the  exemptation  from  tax- 
ation   of     beet     sugar    manufacturers' 
plants  for  a  period  of  five  years  and  no 
iK)unty,   was   finally   oassed   to  a  third 
reading.     Senator  Mills'  caucus  reform 
bill    went   Into  a   third   reading.       The 
session  was  short  and  unimportant. 

Pittsburg  Chronicle-Telegraph:  "Hen- 
ry! "  "Yes.  your  excellency."  "One  of 
the  most  surprising  matters  of  the 
present  day  is  the  extent  of  the  ama- 
teur photography  fad  among  prominent 
statesmen.'  'I  did  not  know  that  feuch 
was  the  case,  sire."  "Oh,  yea,  it  is. 
Henry.  See  how  many  men  mentioned 
for  the  cabinet  have  developed  nega- 
tives." 4 


DRIVER  SLEEPS;  HORSES  WORK. 
Horsemen  and  others  interested  in  the 
problem  of  how  much  a  horse  Is  capable 
of  learning  and  how  acute  are  then- 
senses  were  greatly  surprised  yesterday 
by  an  act  of  the  two  large  Norman 
horses  which  are  driven  to  one  of  a 
transfer  company's  wagons  at  Ander- 
son's, Ind.,  says  the  Indianapolis  Jour- 
nal. Several  nights  ago  the  driver  went 
to  sleep  and  forgot  that  he  had  the  mall 
to  deliver  at  the  Panhandle  for  the 
Chicago-bound  train.  The  horses  be- 
came verw  uneasy  about  ten  minutes 
before  train  time,  and  after  waiting  un- 
til within  five  minutes  of  train  time, 
they  started  off  on  a  run  to  the  post- 
office,  drawing  up  next  to  the  door. 

The  night  clerk  did  not  notice  that 
there  was  no  driver,  and  pitched  In  the 
mail  pouches  hurriedly.  The  horses 
then  started  off  on  a  dead  run  for  the 
depot  and  arrived  Just  in  time  for  tha 
excited  bussman,  who  had  awak^ned. 
tc  throw  in  the  mail.  The  incident  was 
kept  quiet  at  the  time,  and  as  it  hap- 
pened at  night,  this  was  an  easy  mat- 
ter, but  yesterday  the  same  thing  hap- 
pened. The  driver  was  late,  and  await- 
ing until  they  saw  the  hands  of  the 
clock  on  the  court  house  were  getting 
too  near  the  train  time,  the  horses 
started  off,  made  not  only  their  pre- 
vious rounds,  but  this  time  made  the 
calls  at  all  of  the  hotels,  where  many 
pas.sen-gers  who  did  not  notice  that  the 
driver  was  missing  got  in  hurriedly. 
They  were  deposited  safely  at  the  depot 
just  In  time  for  their  train.  This  inci- 
dent attracted  a  great  deal  of  attention 
and  admiration. 

The  animals  are  beauties,  and  there 
are  but   few   Andersonians   who   would 
not  be  content  to  risk  their  lives  behind 
them  without  any  driver.    The  question 
which  arises  Is  as  to  whether  the  horses 
were  able  to  tell  time  by  the  clock,  or 
whether  it    was   their  keen    perceptive 
qualities  that  had   been   trained   down 
by   constant   sei^Mce.        At   all    events, 
horsemen  consider  the  performances  as 
being  remarkable.       The   horses   make 
about  twenty  trains  a  day  on  different 
roads,  and  their  performance  is  there- 
fore more  remarkable  than  If  they  only 
made  one  train,  and  only  at  one  "depot 
It  Is  quite  likely  that  they  will  be  given 
a  test  at  making  the  trains  voluntarily 
for  one  day,  and  if  successfully  done— 
and  but  few  doubt  that  they  will  do  it 
right— Anderson     may     have     quite     a 
novelty  for  traveling  men.  who  wish  to 
take  a  little  risk,  which,  after  all    will 
not  be  a  risk. 


on  the  floor  at  my  feet,  occasion.-illy 
holding  down  the  one  that  beat  liinie 
and  stopping  the  music,  which  was  a 
great  Joke  to  him.  His  mother.  Aunt 
Dorc:is.  was  the  cook,  who  when  ? 
roomed  at  the  store  ■  made,  me  a  bi:; 
sponge  cake,  to  whhh  I  added  :i  propor- 
tiimate  bowl  of  cider  egg-nog  and- invited 
in  my  friends.  We  all  got  full,  hut  not 
inebriated.  M.v  tirst  pro  tempore  valet- 
was  a  bright,  in  colqj-  and  mind,  mulat- 
to felliiw  named  Peter.  He  gave  my 
northern  freshness  same  sage  advice  in 
social  matters,  cautioning  me  against 
"  soclating  with  them  low  down  poor 
White  folks."  Dr.  M.'s  Jake  was  a  good 
blacksmith  and  practically  carried  on 
I  the  business  for  his  master  besides  oOll- 
ing  teeth  on  his  own  account,  also  was 
the  tifer  for  our  military  parades.  15ig 
Tom.  Mr.  T.s  coachman,  had  a  kiln  lor 
drying  lumber  and  was  allowed  time  to 
be  quite  a  business  man.  Abel  Wits  an 
able  tin  and  copper  worker,  belongin.g 
to  Governor  Morehead.  and  ran  a  sh  jp 
in  his  owner's  Interest.  I  had  only  a 
"Howdy"  acquaintance  with  the  "culled 
far  sect.  "  but  used  to  see  them  often 
getting  water  at  the  public  pump.  V'^'ru- 
dence"  and  "Charity"  and  others  with 
equally  misfit  names.  barefi>oted  ;ind 
bareheaded,  except  for  occasional  gaudy 
handktrthief  headgear  that  no  white 
woman  could  fashion,  would  meet  there 
and  after  much  gossiping  and  giggling, 
with  eyes  out  for  some  passing  "buck" 
and  a  possible  "mash"  (coquetry  is  in- 
dependent of  race  or  station),  they  would 
go  homeward  with  hands  on  hips  and 
"toting  '  full  buckets  on  their  heads. 
These  same  wenches  would  buy  femi- 
nine fixings  freely  and  appear  on  Sun- 
days in  loud  toggery,  from  muo'i  bo- 
Howered  bonnets  to  white  stockings  and 
pinching  gaiter  shoes.  The  white  people 
reijulred  waiting  on  at  camp  meetings 
as  well  as  elsewhere,  and  servants  wer? 
much  in  evidence  there.  They  were  al- 
lowed a  part  of  the  time  for  their  own 
special  services,  which  were  sometimes 
solemn,  but  never  silent.  There's  in  old 
stor>-  that  Illustrates.  One  of  those  dar- 
keys who  lifted  up  hi»  voice  like  a 
trumpet,  was  asked.  "Why  do  you  make 
.so  much  noise  when  you  pray?"  '"De 
Bible  says  I  must  holler,"  "Where"/"' 
•"In  de  Lawds  prar.  It  says.  *Our  Foder 
w'ich  are  In  heben,  holler'd  .  be  Thy 
name." 

In  singing  they  were  superior,  learnin? 
a  melody  quickly  nnd  applying  both 
heard  and  Improvised  words.  Some  speo- 
imens  of  the  current  secular  songs  may 
be    appropriately    quoted    here: 


^^e  came  to  a  small   inclosure.   witn   log 
walls  and  cover,   which  wa.s  expl  linej   to 
me:    "Dat   tucky   trap.    Dis   ver  ditch   go 
unner    bottom    log.    Hunter    scatter    cohn 
long  de  ditch  an"   in  de  pen.   Kool  tuck'vs 
come.  pick,  pick    long  de  ditch,  an'  unner 
de    log.    an'    inter   de    pen.    whar    they're 
obleeged  t'  stay,   all   time  flyin'   up  to  git 
out,  an'  nebber  drap  der  haids  to  be  come- 
in    hole.    Tuck'ys    got    no    sense."    But    I 
found   wrinkled,   frost-bitten   persimn-ons 
which   were  soft   and  sweet,   not  .so   good- 
looking  as  one  I  had  before  tasted.  whos«^ 
plump  deception   had  puckered  mv  mouth 
into   a^  ki.ssing    i.o.sition.    When    the   dogs 
"treed"  a  possum,  we  made  a  scene  for  a 
painter.  Overhead  the  tree  branches,  with 
ino«»nlight   sifting   tlirough;   below,   in   the 
glare  of  the  ton  h-s.   noisv  negroes  and  a 
chorus    of   dogs,    and    when    the    blows   ot 
the  choppers  brought  down  the  tree  tli-^re 
was  a   rush  of  dot;s  to  catch   the   possum 
and   darkeys  to  caieh   the  dogs.   The  pos-^ 
sum    saved    alive,    was    about    the    siz-    of 
an     average    cat.     but     with     short     legs 
peaked   no.se  with   little   hair  on   It.   t.nd   a 
long    tail    with    no   hair.      When    in    han<l 
not     a    motion    shewed     life;     but.     beln^ 
laid    down.     I    .saw    returning    animation 
which    .grew    as    I    watched,    showing    me 
what     ••i)laying    "pos.sum"     meant.     Then 
they    in.serted    his    flexible    tail    in    a    split 
stick,  and   "toted"  him  to  the  plant.iiion. 
where  next  morning  I  had  breakfast  with 
the   eolonel  and   roile   l>ack   to   business. 

I  must  extend  niv  storv  to  tell  an  im- 
portant episode  ill  Tncle  Jim's  life  whi.-h 
shows  a  relation  between  master  .ind 
slave  which  1  have  before  referred  to. 
Col.  M.  had  a  tannery  and  Jim  was  his 
waggoner.  1  think  he  had  been  raised  on 
the  plantation:  anyway,  he  was  n  loni< 
time  there  and  daily  contact  had  mad' 
a  quasi  regard  between  master  and  man. 
Jim  was  considered  entirely  trustworthy, 
and  was  sent  on  long  trips  with  four  tine 
horses  to  deliver  valuable  loads  of 
leather,  alway  returning  as  exnected. 
Knowing  the  mastir's  confidence  and  the 
slave's  faith fuliies.-^.  I  was  one  dav  much 
surprised  and  grieved  by  .seeing  Jim  p. it 
up  for  sale  at  auction.  His  physical 
points  of  value  wire  told  and  shown  bv 
the  auctioneer,  just  as  you  have  heard 
and  seen  at  a  horse  sale.  He  was  mdee 
to  strip  to  the  waist,  and  his  bar^k  ex- 
amined for  whip  marks,  which  if  tliere, 
would  evidence  foimer  and  probably  de- 
served punishment,  a  way  of  judging  a 
man"s  character  by  his  back.  His  muscle 
was  commented  upon  and  his  teeth  test- 
ed, while  all  the  time  I  wondered  at  tin- 
sale.  There  was  no  financial  rea.sons  tor 
it.  and  Jim  was  a  favorite  with  the 
colonel.  There  was  but  little  bidding,  and 
when  the  chattel  was  ostensibly  sold  r)r 
a  part  of  his  market  value  to  "the  white 
foreman  of  the  colonel's  tanner.v  I  begaii 
to  suspect  a  put-up  Job.  It  appeared  that 
Jim  in  the  absence  of  the  colonel  had  got 
to  that  precious  peach  brandy  and  re- 
duced the  stock.  It  was  a  w.as«eful 
crime  in  the  colenel's  eyes,  for  he  was 
very  choice  of  th.  liquor  and  seldom  used 
except  a  spoonful  for  "lacing  "  his  morn- 
ing <-offee.  No  punishment  was  so  mudi 
dreadetl  as  being  sold  away  from  home, 
friends  and  family,  with  a  prospect  of 
hard  life  on  a  cotton  or  sugar  plantation, 
and  a  threat  of  it  was  an  effectual  scare. 
In  that  <-ase  the  colonel's  wrath  nad 
brought  Jim  to  the  auction  block,  but 
the  sale  was  fictitious,  and  Jim  was  re- 
turned to  his  former  place  and  duties, 
with  a  probable  resolve  to  "nebber  again 
touch  oie  marser's  peach  brandv." 


Want  and  Insist  on  Using. 


Spring  Medicine  tliat  the  PeopJe 


Judsre  J.  H.  Hastings. 


The  decision  of  the  court  is  the  hi-gh- 
est  and  best  of  evidenc^e.     When  emin- 
I  <nt  judges  hand  down   a  decision  it   is 
I  only  after  the  most  thorough   research 
j  and  investigation.     Three  distin.guishcd 
judges  have  recently  brought  in  a  de- 
I  cision  which  affects  the  whole  people  of 
the  entire   country,    affects     everybody 
everywhere,    in   fact,   for  it  is  given   iii 
the  interests  of  the  health  of  the  com- 
munity. 

The  eminent  Judge  J.  H.  Hasting.s, 
Waitstield,  Vt..  says: 

"I  have  heard  Dr.  Greene's  Nervura 
blood  and  nerve  remedy  most  highlv 
recommended  by  my  friends  and  neigh- 
bors  who   have    used    it 


Judge  Edwin  C.  White. 


in  the  same." 

The  learned  Judge  Edwin  C.  White, 
Hyde  Park.  Vt.,  renders  decision  in  the 
following  enthusiastic  words  which  will 
give  renewed  hope  to  the  weak,  sick 
and  suffering: 

"1  have  used  Dr.  Greene's  Nervura 
blood  and  nerve  remedy  in  my  family 
and  am  pleased  to  .say  with  -good  re- 
sults. My  wife  had  been  troubled  with 
indigestion,  which  produced  nervous- 
ness which  might  have  been  serious 
and  at  times  troubled  her  greatly.  We 
had  tried  many  things  for  her  relief, 
but  without  success.  I  saw  the  wonder-^ 
ful  cures  claimed  for  Dr.  Greene's  Ner- 


,  J     .J    ,  and    know    of    vura  and  resolved  to  give  it  a  trial  and 

several  deeded  cures  where  people  have  \  it  gives  me  pleasure  to  say  I  am  glad 
been  in  a  very  feeble  state  of  health  I  did.  My  wife  now  sleeps  weU  and  i- 
and   had   failed    to   get   relief   from    the  !  greatly  benefited  from  inX.«tiL^"»,o ':! 


„^„„i  .    ,    ,         ,  greatly  benefited  from  indigestion,  hav- 

ff^il  H^^  V^^t"  ?.''"''t"  "^  *^^  wonder-  j  they  had   been   dally)  since  taking  the 
ful    good   which    Dr.    Greenes   Nervura  I  Nervura.      I      '  " 

blood  and   nerve  remedy  has  done  for 


her  mother,  who  was  cured  of  nervous 
prostration  by  its  u.se.  One  of  mv  near 
neighbors  who  used  the  Nervura  and 
derived  benefit  from  its  use  advised  me 
to  use  it  in  my  own  family.  They  are 
all  enthusiastic  in  its  praise,  and  I  join 


give    permission    to    print 
this  unqualified  testimonial." 

The  distinguished  judge,  J.  M.  Fisher, 
Cabot,  Vt.,  gives  in  his  decision  the 
highest  evidence  that  Dr.  Greene's  Ner- 
vura blood  and  nerve  remedy  is  the  liest 
medicine  a  person  can  use  to  restore 
health  and  strength.     He  says: 


Judge  J.  n.  Pieber. 

"Last  winter  my  wife  was  very  pick 
taken  down  with  the  grip  very  severely' 
We  employed  the  usual  methods  of 
physicians  and  she  improved  some  but 
was  left  very  feeble,  so  that  she  couid 
hardly  get  around  the  house.  She  con- 
tinued along  this  way,  until  a  friend 
advised  us  to  use  Dr.  Greene's  Nervura 
blood  and  nerve  remedy.  We  used  two 
bottles  of  this  medicine,  and  I  am  re- 
jolced  to  say  that  she  is  much  im- 
proved. I  think  it  is  the  best  remedy 
we  have  been  made  acquainted  with, 
and  have  no  hesitancy  in  recommend- 
ing it  to  others." 

Dr.  Greene's  Cathartic  Pills  are  the 
sure  cure  for  biliousne.ss,  sour  stomach 
and  constipation.  Small,  .«?ugar  coated, 
easy  to  take,  certain  and  ideasant  to 
act. 

Remember  that  Dr.  Greene,  35  West 
Fourteenth  street.  New  York  city,  who 
is  the  most  successful  physician  in  cur- 
ing diseases,  can  be  consulted  free,  per- 
sonally or  by  letter.  There  is  nothing 
to  pay  for  consultation,  examination  or 
advice,  and  this  fact,  together  with  the 
low  prices  of  his  wonderful  health-giv- 
ing medicines,  places  a  sure  cure  in 
reach  of  all. 


Statement  of  the  Condition 

--OF  THE" 


REPORT  OF  THE  CONDITION 

-OF  THE- 

Airicai  Eicbanp  M  Commercial   Banl( 


REPORT  OF  THE  CONDITION 


—OF  THE— 


OF  DULUTH,  MINN., 

At  the  Close  of  BasiDeBS  Tuesday   Evening, 
March  9th,   1897. 


CURIOUS  NOTATIONS. 


Dars    many    kinds   o'    cu'rous    things. 
From   difrent  sorts  of  Insec'   springs. 
Some  hatch   in  June,  and  some  July, 
But   Angus'    bring  de   bluetail   fiy. 

Ole   mars'er  he  ride  'round  de  fa'am, 
De  flies  so  numerus  did  swaam; 
One  bit  de  pony  on  de  thigh: 
De  debbll  take  dat  bluetail  fly. 

De  pony  rar'.   he  Jump,   he  pitch: 
He   tumble   mars'er  In   de   ditch; 
De   jury   wonder  why    he   die, 
De  verdic'   was  de  bluetail  fl>. 

De  squlr'el  Is  a  livelv  one. 

An'  totes  a  bushy  tall; 

He   steals   away   ole   inars'er's  cohn. 

An    eats  It  on  a  rail. 


ting. 


De    po.ssum     he's    a    cunnin' 
He  trabbels  in  de  dark; 
Ho  nebber  stops  to  kink  his   tail; 
W  en   he  hears  ole  Ranger  bark. 

O'   I'm  gwine    long  down  to  Lynchliurg 

town, 
I'm  gwlne  'long  down  to  town. 
O    I'm  gwine  down  lo  Lynchburg  town. 
To  tote  my  terbacker  down  dar. 

Corn  "shuckins"  were  popular  with  the 
slaves,  and  passes  given  for  the  3oeci:il 
occasion.    They    sung   on    the   way- 


We  re  gwlne  to  de  shuckln'  of  de  co'hn- 
W  e  II  stay    till  termorrer  sure's  yer  bo'hn 
vvork  at  the  big  heap  of  corn,  which  usu- 

w.s    nt"?.rV".?  °'  whisky   in   the  middle, 
was   lighted    by   story    and   song.    I   have 
on    a    clear  autumn    night    heard    from    a 
distant  plantation  this  solo  and  chonus: 
Wine  for  de  ladies!   High  O  high  O. 

wftrAK,  J^""  ^^  K^n'men:   High  O   high  O. 
Whisky  for  de  niggers:  High  O  high  O 

une  of  my  pleasantest  outing "  pl.ice.s 
was  the  plantation  of  old  Col.  M.  who 
lived  four  miles  from  the  court  house 
alone  except  for  his  small  gang  of  black 
ones.  Borrowing  a  saddle  horse— I  never 
hired  one-I  would  ride  down  to  his  place 
on  Buffalo  creek  after  dinner.  Imagine  a 
two-9tory  wood   hou?e  with   broad   front 


The  first  five  t)residents  had  no  middle 
name,  and  when  McKinley  Is  inaugur- 
ated he  will  be  the  seventeenth  presi- 
dent without  one. 

A  wealthy  gentleman  in  Vienna  stip- 
ulated In  his  will  that  an  electric  light 
must  be  constantly  burning  in  his  tomb 
and  another  inside  his  coffin  for  twelve 
months  after  his  death. 

A  new  employment  for  pretty  girls 
has  been  found  in  Paris,  and  the  fad 
will  not  be  long  in  reaching  this  coun- 
try. They  are  placed  in  shop  windows 
for  the  purpo.se  of  attracting  attention. 
The  Ohio  state  archaeological  and 
historical  society  has  purchased  lOS 
acres  in  Warren  county,  being  the  re- 
mainder of  Fort  Ancient,  the  best  speci- 
men of  the  work  of  the  mound  build- 
ers. 

In  Texas  at  the  last  election  the  con- 
stitutional amendment  requiring  six 
months'  residence  after  declaration  of 
citizenship  before  foreigners  can  be- 
come voters  was  adopted  by  a  vote  of 
268.262  to  51,648. 

The  fetes  commemorating  the  400th 
anniversary  of  the  discovery  of  the  sea 
route  to  India  by  Vasco  da  Gama  were 
to  have  been  held  in  Lisbon  next  year, 
but  have  now  been  postponed  until 
May,  1898.  It  was  in  the  month  of  May, 
400  years  ago,  counting  from  1898,  that 
the  great  navigator  arrived  at  Calicut. 
Although  In  Austria  women  have  but 
few  rights,  they  cannot  under  any  cir- 
cumstances be  imprisoned  or  con- 
demned to  death;  instead,  after  sen- 
tence has  been  pronounced  upon  a  wo- 
man, she  is  sent  to  a  convent  and  kept 
there  a  certain  number  of  years.  There 
is  no  prison  discipline,  only  that  of  the 
ordinary  conventual  life. 

The  largest  farm  in  the  world  is  in 
the  southwestern  part  of  Louisiana.  It 
extends  100  miles  north  and  south  and 
twenty-five  miles  east  and  west.  It  was 
bought  in  1883  by  a  syndicate  of  North- 
ern capitalists,  by  whom  It  is  still  oper- 
ated. The  fencing  is  said  to  have  cost 
fSO.OOO.  Rice,  sugar,  corn  and  cotton 
are  raised. 

It  is  claimed  that  the  tree  from  the 
bark  of  which  quinine  Is  obtained  fur- 
nishes no  quinine  except  in  malarial 
regions.  If  the  tree  is  planted  in  a  ma- 
larial district  it  will  produce  quinine;  if 
it  is  planted  In  a  non-malarial  district  j 
it  will  not  produce  quinine.  It  is,  there- 
fore, inferred  that  quinine  Is  a  malarial  | 
poison  drawn  from  the  soli  and  stored 
up  in  the  bark  of  this  tree. 

The  most  remarkable  gold  beetles  in 
the  world  are  found  in  Central  Ameri- 
ca. The  head  and  wing  cases  are  bril- 
liantly polished  with  a  luster  as  of  gold 
Itself.  To  sight  and  touch  they  have 
all  the  seeming  of  metal.  Oddly  enough, 
another  species  from  the  same  region 
has  the  appearance  of  being  wrought 
In  solid  silver,  freshly  burnished.  These 
gold  and  silver  beetles  have  a  market 
value.  They  are  worth  from  |25  to  $50 
each. 

The  corpse  plant  is  the  name  of  a  re- 
markable carnivorous  specimen  that 
grows  in  the  colony  of  Natal.  Its  prin- 
cipal feature  is  a  bell-shaped  throat, 
opening  into  a  hollow  stem.  It  Is  ai- 
mc  St  black  and  covered  with  a  thick, 
glutinous  secretion,  while  Its  odor  is 
very  offensive.  This  attracts  carrion- 
feeding:  birds  to  it,  and,  once  they 
alight  on  it.  they  are  lost.  Their  claws 
become  entangled  in  the  secretion,  the 
bell-shaped  mouth  folds  up.  and  they 
are  literally  swallowed. 


RESOrRCES. 

Loans  and  discounts   $ 

Overdrafts    secured    

Overdrafts    unsecured    

Real    estate 

Bonds   and    stocks    

Tax  and  assessment  certificates 

Call  loans  on  grain  col- 
lateral     $222.000  00 

Reserve: — 

Cash  on  hand  and  due 
from    banks    542,271  30 


725. 7?8  27 

444  63 

301  32 

].')5.241  Ifi 

32.'W  00 

3.018  90 


OF  DULUTH,  MINN., 

At  the  Close  of  Bosinus  March  9tta,  1897. 


764, '>71  30 


$1,681,065  ^ 
LIABILITIES. 

Capital   stock   paid    in $   500.000  00 

Surplus    and    undivided    profits 

less  expenses  and  taxes  i)aid.. 
Individual  deposits 

subject    to    check $615,600  81 

Demand   certificates    of 

deposit    15.237  31 

Time      certificates      of 

tleposit    335.877  82 

Certified  checks   3.176  68 

Cashier's    checks    5,334  53 

Deposits        of        other 

banks    77.703  66 


3,050  (K) 
2.332  75 


RESOURCBS. 

Loans    and    discounts $  54  l**' 89 

Overdrafts    .* '260  77 

Stocks  and  bonds   ..'. 

F'urniture    and    fixtures 

Call    loans    $10,000  00 

Reserve — 

Cash   on   hand    17.717  01 

Cash    in   other   banks 16.095  43 

Exchanges    for    clearing 

house  and  cash  items..    1.. 580  02 


45.392  46 


$105,228  87 
„     ,^  ,  LIABILITIES. 

C.npt.-il    stock    $25,000  00 

I  ndivided      profits     less    current 

I     expenses  and  taxes  paid 5''6 ''8 

128.134  77     Individual    deposits    sub- 

ject    to    check    $.->3.a-)0  01 

Certificates    .of    deposit..  23.(KH  84 

I  Cashier's    cheeks    19  (;7 

Certified    cheeks     226  76 

State,    county    and    other 
public   deposits    subject 

to    check     2,783  25 

Deposits  of  other  banks 


Rediscounts    . 
IJIils    payable 


1,052,?30  81 
None 
None 


„,    ^  $1,681,065  58 

State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis. 
— ss. 

I.    James    C.    Hunter,    cashier    of    the 
American    Exchange    bank,    do    solemnly 
swear  that  the  above  statement  is  true  to 
the  best  of  my  knowledge  and  belief. 
JAMES  C.  HUNTER, 
Cashier. 
Attest: 
M.  J.  FORBES, 
A.    R.    MACPARLANE, 

Directors. 
Sworn  and  subscribed  to  before  me  this 
13th   day  of  March.   1897. 

GEORGE    F.    MACKENZIE. 
Notary  Public,  St.  Louis  County,  Minn 
(t>eal). 


558  06 


79.702  59 


BANK  ADVERTISEMENTS. 


First  National  Bani( 

OF  DULUTH, 

United  States  Goremment  Depositary 
CAPITAL,  ONE  MILLION  DOLLARS. 


A,.  L.  Obobam, 
President. 


J.  H.  DiaHT, 
Caahier. 


W.  S.  BiBHor 
Aast.  Caehlai 


■•■•y  Ssnt  to  All  Parts  of  tlio  World. 

Aeeonnti  of  Merehante.  Banka,   Corporatioa- 
and  IndlTidaala  Beceived. 

■■torost  Allowod  eo  Time  Dopostto. 


T     T^     ,»     ,      .,  ,.  $105,228  87 

I,  D.  Maeleod,  cashier  of  the  Commer- 
*v  .  ^^"'^  °^  Duluth,  do  solemnly  swear 
that  the  above  statement  is  true  to  the 
best  of  my  knowledge  and  belief. 

D.  MACLEOD, 
Attest:  Cashier. 

CHARLES  F.  LELAND. 

J.  H.  GRAY, 

Directors. 

State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis. 
— ss. 

Sworn  to  and  subscribed  before  me  this 
13th  day  of  March,  1897. 
^.   ,       ■  G.    F.    MACKENZIE. 

Notary  Public,  St.  Louis  County,  Minn. 

(Seal.) 


There  is  no 
better  or  more 
profitable 
reading:  tlian 
tlie  advertise- 
ments in 
Tlie  Evening 
Herald. 


First  National  Bank 

OF  DULUTH, 

AtDolntb  in  the  State  of  Minnesota,  at  the 
Cloee  of  Busineea  March  9,  ls»7. 


RESOURCES. 

Loans  and  discounts   $1,509,996  82 

Overdrafts,    secured  and    unse- 
cured     1230  59 

U.  S.   bonds  to  secure  circula- 
tion    rn  nnn  nn 

.  S.  bonds  to  secure  U.  S.  de- 
posits            50,00000 

Premiums  on  U.  S.  bonds lO.mw  oo 

Stocks,    .securities,    etc 13  .515  4C 

Banking  house,   furniture  and 
fixtures 200.00000 

Due  from  national  banks  (not 
reserve    agents    19  ?,69  20 

Due    from    state    banks    and 
bankers  16.5«>0  54 

Due     from     approved     reserve 
agents    373.106  75 

Checks  and   other  cash   items..  524,85 

Exchanges    for   clearing   house        13.810  37 

notes    of   other    national    banks       2.5.160  00 

Fractional       paper      currency, 
nickels    and    cents    2,299  07 

Lawful  money  reserve  In  bank, 
viz.— 

Specie    $206.76185 

Legal    tender   notes..    39.105  00 


Redemption  fund  with  U.  S. 
treasurer  (5  per  cent  of  clr- 
culaitlon)  ; 


245,866  85 


2,250  00 


Total    

LIABILITIES. 

Capital  stock  paid  m 

Undivided     profits,      less     ex- 
penses and   taxes  paid 

National  bank  notes  outstand- 
ing  

Due    to    other    na- 
tional   banks     $32,755  71 

Due  to  state  iMinks 
and    bankers    74,799  25 

Dividends  unpaid  12  00 

Individual    deposits 
subject    to    check    ...991,298  17 

Demand   certificates 
of    deposit     6,410  54 

Time  certificates  of 
deposit    247,875  62 

Certified    checks     16,792  26 

Cashier's        checks 
outstanding    4,568  55 

United     States     de- 
posits         44.534  8G 

Deposits     of     U.    S. 
disbursing   officers    ..      5,465  14 


.$2,533,700  47 

H.OOO.OOO  00 

64.188  39 

45.000  00 


1.424.512  08 


Total 


. .  .$2..533.70O  47 


B.  M.  PEYTON,  Preeident. 

JAMBR  C.  HUNTER,  Caahier. 

WILLIAM  G.  HE(}ABDT,  Aaa't  Caahi 
THE 

American  Excliange 

BANK. 

Duluth,  Minnesota. 

Capital,  $500,000.  Sarplns,  $100,000. 

HAMILTON  M.  PEYTON?" 
MELYIN  J.  FORQES, 
JUDGE  J.  D.  KNSIGN, 
JOHN  H.  UPHAM, 
GBOBOB  8PBNGBB, 

ANGUS  B.  MACFARLANE, 
JAMS8  C.  HUMTEB 


State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis, 
— ss. 

I.  John  H.  Dlght.  cashier  of  the  above 
named  bank,  do  solemnly  swear  that  the 
above  statement  Is  true  to  the  best  of 
my  knowledge  and  belief. 

JOHN  IL  DIGHT, 
Cashier. 
Subscribed  and  sworn  to  before  me  this 
15th  day  of  March,   1897. 

E.  H.  BURGER. 
Notary   Public. 
(Notarial  Seal.) 
Correct  Attest: 
A.   L.    ORDEAN, 
A.   D.  THOMSON, 
THOS.  J.  DAVIS.     Directors. 


The  Evening 
Herald — 
Recognized 
By  everybody 
As  Duluth's 
Leading 

Newspaper. 


STATE  OP  MINNESOTA,  COUNTY  OF 
ST.   LOUIS.— 

District    Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 

In  the  matter  of  the  assignment  of  the 
Peoples  Savings  Bank  of  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota : 

Notice  Is  hereby  given  that  the  People's 
Savings  Bank  of  Duluth.  Minn.,  on  Feb- 
ruary 27th.  1897,  duly  made  and  filed  in 
tne  office  of  the  clerk  of  the  dl.strlct  court 
or  St.  Louis  County.  Minnesota,  a  deed 
of  assignment,  assigning  all  Its  property 
to  me,  the  undersigned,  under  the  gen- 
eral assignment  laws  of  this  state  for 
the  benefit  of  its  creditors,  and  that  I 
have  qualified  as  assignee  under  said 
deed.  All  persons  desiring  to  participate 
in  the  benefits  of  said  assignment  should 
forthwith  make  and  file  with  me  for  al- 
lowance their  verified  claims  as  provid- 
ed by  law. 
Duluth.  March  15th,  1897. 

ERNST    A.    SCHULZE, 

ALLEN.  BALDWIN  &  BALDWIN, 

Attorneys    for   Assignee, 
Duluth  Evening  Herald,   MaFch-lS-18-20. 


1 

1 

1 

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1 

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■  ■ » ^ 


"■'■*■■ ' 


BU  Fighters  Resting  For  the 

Decisive  Conflict  of 

Tomorrow. 


Suppressed    Excitement   Is 

Evident  at  the  Training 

Quarters  of  Each. 


Sports  and  Other  Spectators 

Flocking  Into  Carson 

Hourly. 


Carson  City,  Nev..  March  16.— Corbett 
spent  the  last  day  before  the  battle  very 
quietly.  He  arose  about  8  o'clock  and 
after  a  brief  promenade  on  the  rick- 
ety veranda  of  the  Spring's  hotel,  did 
ample  justice  to  his  breakfast.  For 
an  hour  he  lounged  about  the  mussy 
little  bar  room  and  parlor,  reading:  pa- 


in the  afternoon,  just  to  keep  his  wind 
in  good  condition,  but  he  took  no  vio- 
lent exercise  and  for  the  greater  part 
of  the  day  he  remained  in  his  quarters. 
Not  many  of  his  visitors  were  admitted 
to  .see  him,  and  the  throng  could  only 
get  a  glimpse  of  the  red-haired  nghtef 
as  he  strolled  around  the  yard.  His 
big  dog  Yarrum  was  of  service  in  keep- 
ing the  visitors  from  the  house,  for  al- 
though he  does  not  fly  at  everybody 
who  comes  near,  yet  Yarrum  has  a  gen- 
eral air  of  unsociability,  and  a  pair  of 
wicked  looking  yellow  eyes  that  form 
a  combination  not  calculated  to  in- 
duce familiarity. 

Julian  was  around  the  ranch  for  the 
greater  part  of  the  day  with  the  excep- 
tion of  a  short  time  when  he  drove  *n 
town.      He    said    that    there    was      no 
doubt    that   there   would    be  a   fight   on 
the  17th.  but  declined  to  say  anything 
about    the    trouble    he    had    with    Dan 
Stuart    the    night    before   over   the    re- 
ceipts from  the  exhibition  of  the  pho- 
tographs.    He  expressed  the  most   un- 
bounded  confidence  in   the   prowess  of 
his  auburn   topped   brother-in-law  and 
said:     "I   will  give  you  a  pointer,   and 
that  Is  If  you  are  going  to  put  up  any 
money  on  this  fight  just  put   It   up  on 
Fitzsimmons  for  he  is  a  sure  winner." 
When  asked  if  he  did  not  think  that 
the  superior  weight   of  Corbett    would 
be  a  .^serious  handicap  to  Fitzsimmons. 
Julian    said:      'I    think    that    FItz    can 
whip  any  man  in  the  world,  no  matter 
what  his  weight  may  be.     I  know  that 
Corbett    has    been    much    heavier   than 
Bob.  but  it  will  not  do  him  any  good. 
Fitz  will   win  the  fight  as  sure  as  the 
men   enter   the   ring." 

Fitz  will  enter  the  ring  at  very  close 
to  145  pounds  which  will  be  Just  about 
twenty  pounds  under  the  weight  of 
Corbett.  This  is  just  about  the  weight 
at  which  Charley  White,  the  trainer  of 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     TUESDAY,    MARCH    16,    1897. 


tervlew  the  ex-champion   said   Corbett 
was  a  sure  winner  of  the  coming  fight. 

DELAYED  SPECIAL  TRAINS. 
Ortrsim  City,  March  16.— A  number  of 
special  trains  were  expected   from   the 
East    this    morning,    but    all    of    them 
were  late  and  it  was  noon  before  the 
first   train,   a  special   from   San   Fran- 
cisco, came  in.  It  brought  a  large  num- 
ber of  people.     The  regular  train  from 
Reno,  which  came  In  at  the  same  time, 
brought  large  numbers  who  had  come 
from  the  East  and  had  been  compelled 
to  remain  over  night  in  Reno.     It  was 
expected  that  John  L.   Sullivan  would 
be  on  the  morning  special  which  came 
In  shortly  after  noon,  and  a  large  crowd 
was  at  the  depot  to  welcome  him.  Just 
before  the  train  arrived,  however,  word 
was  received   that   he  could  not  get   in 
before  midnight. 


Kind     of     Farming 

Which  There  Is  Much 

Money. 


In 


THE  FIGHTERS^  RECORDS. 

List  of  the    Fights  in  Which 
They  Figured. 


America  Can  Export  Frog's 
Legs   to   Many   Euro- 
pean Cities. 


regarding  his  antagonist  of  tomorrow. 
In  a  somewhat  unccmplimentary  vein 
were  his  opinions  of  the  aulmrn- 
haired  pugilist.  The  trainers.  White 
and  Delaney,  did  not  allow  their  man 
out  of  their  sight,  watching  him  with 
a  solicitude  that  was  comically  hen- 
Uke.  "We  have  got  him  to  just  the 
point    we   want    him,"    said      Delaney, 


Corbett    had    declared    to    be    the    best 

fighting  weight  of  Fitzsimmons  and  at 

:  which   he  said  that   Fitz  is  fit  to  fight 

pers    and    making-   occasional    remarks  I  ^'^^  ,^'^   ''^*'   ^^'^'^   ^^^  '^^^*   '"'*"    '"   ^^e 
7.        "|»-K'ng   occasional    remarks    vvorld.  no  matter  w horn  he  might  be. 

Fitz  would  not  express  an  opinion 
regarding  the  outcome  different  from 
that  which  he  has  uttered  .so  many 
times,  and  that  is  that  he  Is  a  sure  win- 
ner. He  did  not  boast  and  appear  any 
too  confident,  but  at  the  same  time 
there  was  not  the  slightest  lack  of  con- 
fidence in  his  ability  to  win.  He  did 
not  conceal  the  fact  that  he  knew  well 
that  he  is  about  to  go  against  a  hard 
proposition,  but  he  had  the  air  of  a 
man  who  did  not  fear  to  encounter  the 
danger  which  he  did  not  in  any  way 
imderrate.  He  said  he  rather  expect- 
ed that  Corbett  would  l>e  the  favorite 
and  that  it  was  natural  that  he  should 
be  so.  but  he  remarked  with  a  grin 
"that  favorites  have  been  beaten  before 
now  and  one  is  going  to  l>e  beaten 
again.  Betting  on  a  fight  does  not  win 
it." 

Mrs.  Fitzsimmons.  who  was  present, 
what  her  huslmnd  had  said.     She  has! 
wkhat  her  husband  had  said.    She  has. 
as  is  proper,  the  utmost  confidence  in 
her  husband  and  does  not  consider  it 
among  the  possibilities  for  him  to  lose. 
"I  have  not  a  doubt,"  she  said,  "that 
Bob    will    win.      He    cant      lose,      you 
know.    I  know  that  many  people  think 
Corbett    will    win    the    fight,    but    they 
are   all    mistaken.     Of   course    I    think 
that   my   husband    is   the   best   man   in 
the  world  in  the  ring  and  out  of  it.     I 
only  wish  now  that  I  had  taken  some 
of  the   bets   that   people   were   offering 
in   New    York  on   Corbett    when    I   left 
there.    I  am  going  to  remain  here  at  the 
ranch  while  the  fight  is  going  on,   but 
they  have  made  arrangements  to  send 
me  word  when  the  fight  is  over  and  I 
know  what  the  message  is  going  to  tell 
me.      Bob    is   going    to    win    that    fight 
and    ther   is   no    half-way    about     it." 
And    Fitzsimmons    grinneu    in    delight 
at  the  unbounded  confidence  which  his 
wife's  words  and  manner  confessed. 


skin 
four 


CORBtriT   PUNCHING  THE  BAG. 


In  response  to  numerous  requests, 
the  records  of  the  two  men  are  pub- 
lished here: 

James  John  Corbett  was  ijorn  in  San 
Franci.sco,  Sept.  !,  1866.  His  height  is 
six  feet  one  inch  and  his  fighting 
weight  is  in  the  neighborhood  of  180 
pounds. 

Won  from  Dave  F.isman,  Capt.  J.  H. 
Daly,  Mike  Brennan.  John  Donaldson, 
Martin  Costello.  William  Miller.  Frank 
Smith.  Draw  with  Duncan  McDonald. 
In  1886  was  defeated  in  a  boxing  con- 
test for  the  amateur  championship 
gold  medal  of  the  Ariel  club,  in  San 
Francisco,  by  Billy  Welch,  in  four 
rounds. 

A  few  months  later  he  scored  his  first 
knockout  by  putting  Billy  Welch  to 
sleep  in  one  round. 

1887— Defeated  Jack  Burke.  eight 
rounds. 

1888-8»— Defeated  Frank  Glover, 
three   rounds. 

Police  lnterfer€'d  in  a  four-round  bout 
with  Joe  Croynski,  on  May  SO. 

June    5 — Won    from    Choynski. 
gloves,    twenty-seven    rounds. 

July    10— Bested        Choynsk|, 
rounds. 

July  29— Draw  with  Dave  Campbell. 
Corbett  was  the  best,  but  agreed  not 
to   knock   out.   Ten   rounds. 

1890— Feb.    18— Won    from    Jake    Kil- 
raln   on   points.   Eight    rounds. 
March   20 — Sparred    Mike    Donovan. 
April    14 — Won    from    Dominick    Mc- 
Caffrey.  Four   short   rounds. 

1891— May  21— Draw  with  Peter  Jack- 
son. Sixty-one  rounds. 

June  30— Sparred  with  John  L.  Sul- 
livan. 

Aug.  5— Sparred  with  Jim  Hall.  Four 
rounds. 

1892— Oct.  8— Won  from  Ed  Ktnney. 
Four  ronds. 

March  15— Match  made  with  John  L. 
Sullivan. 

Sept.  7— Won  from  Sullivan.  Twen- 
ty-one rounds. 

1894 — Jan.  25— Knocked  out  Charley 
Mitchell.  Three  rounds. 

Sept.  7— Fought  six  rounds  with 
Peter  Courtney   for  the   kinetoscope. 

Jan.  o.  1896— Knocked  out  McVey  in 
a    three-round    exhiliition    bout. 

June  24,  1896— Could  not  put  out  Tom 
Sharkey  in  four  j-ounds. 

This  is  Coriiett's  complete  record     of 

fights.        While    traveling    around    this 

country  and  Europe  he  knocked  out  a 

great  many   "all-comers,"  but   no  rec- 

have    been    kept. 


Missouri  at   Present  Is  the 
Greatest    Frog    Pro- 
ducing State. 


ords 


BOUND  FOR  CARSON. 

Great  Crowds  En  Route  From 
the  Pacific  Coast. 

San  Francisco,  March  16.— Eight  car- 
loads   of    boxing   enthusiasts    left    here 
for  Carson  last  night  and  a  couple  of 
The  curious  crowds  which  thronged    hundred  more  will  start  today.    Twolv. 


"and  don't  intend  to  let  him  run  any 
risk  of  any  kind."  The  big  fighter  ac- 
cepted the  close  guardianship  good 
naturedly,  though  he  frequently  re- 
minded his  trainners  that  he  very  well 
realized  the  importance  of  being  care- 
ful 


special  cars  have  been  sold  for  the  4:30 
train  this  evening.  Besides  these,  a 
car  goes  from  Sacramento,  one  from 
Marysville,  and  another  from  Stockton. 
The    train    out    this    morning     carried 

re-  j  twelve  or  thirteen  day  coaches  for  the 

he    patrons  of  the  road. 

Members  of  the  Bohemian  club  have 
chartered  one  special  car  and  the  mem- 
bers of  the  Pacific  Union  club,  another 
for  the  fight.  These  cars  will  be  hitched 
on  the  regular  6  o'clock  train  tonight. 
At  a  rough  estimate  $.'>0,000  was  wa- 
gered on  the  fight  last  night  in  the  lo- 
in a 
to      bet 


the  vicinity  of  Shaw's  Springs  all  day 
were  rigorously   excluded     fmrn     Cor- 
betts    quarters.    White      having      an- 
nounced   that    his   man    must    l<e    kept 
quiet    and   away   from    all    excitement. 
The  champion's  father  arrived  on   the 
early    train    from    the   coast   and 
ceived   a  warm    welcome      when 
reached  the  camp.  Harry  and  Joe  Cor 
bett,    with   their   father,       spent       the 
greater  part  of  the  day  with  their  pu- 
gilistic relative,  all  of  them  being  con- 
fident  that   victory  awaits  Jim  tomor- 
row.   During   the   forenoon    and    after- 
noon. Corbett  took  several  short  walks. 

but   was   permitted   very   little  of  any    cal    pool    rooms.     One   man    sent 
other  sort   of  exercise.  |  commission    of    $675    on    Fitz      to      ..^, 

Among  the  sub-trainers  and  other  against  $1000  at  Corbetts  pool  room 
attaches  of  the  camp  there  wa»  an  ap-  ;  Betting  should  be  lively  today  and  to- 
parent  effort  to  conceal  the  inten.se  in-  ,  night,  as  the  Fitzsimmon  men  are  be- 
terest  and  excitement  resulting  from  |  ginning  to  loosen  up.  Betting  varied 
the  near  approach  of  the  event  of  the  a  little  last  night.  Fitzsimmons  being 
Celtic  samt  s  day.  Big  Jeffries  and  ,  8  to  10.  but  it  dropped  to  VA  to  10  after 
Mc\ey    nervously    paced      back       and    a  while. 

forth  through  the  quarters,  or  awk-  j  Smith  and  Green  are  selling  even  up 
wardly  joked  with  their  acquaintances,  j  Flaherty  is  a  10  to  6  favorite  over 
keeping  as  much  as  possible  out  of  the  i  Hawkins.  It  is  reported  that  Hawkins 
sight  of  their  chief.  Jolly  little  "Kid  "  |  is  not  in  good  fix  and  is  suffering  from 
Egan,  who.  through  the  month  of  hard  ;  a  cold,  which  doubtless  accounts  for  the 
work,  has  been  the  fun  maker  of  the  |  strong  favoritism  of  the  Eastern  man 
camp,  was  full  of  illy-suppressed  en-  i  The  favorite  combination  at  present  is 
uiusiasm,  his  long  association  with  '  Corbett.  Green  and  Flaherty 
Corbett  having  made  it  impossible  for 
him  to  see  any  possil>ility  of  defeat  for 
his  big  patron.  Delaney  and  White, 
both  veterans  of  the  training  quarter, 
were  more  self-contained,  and  they 
gave  but  little  evidence  of  nervousness. 
Throughout  the  camp  from  the  cook 
and  barkeeper  to  the  champion,  a  feel- 
ing of  confidence  prevailed.  "We  can't 
lose,"  was  the  unanimous  sentiment, 
and  the  sentiment  was  found  in  fre- 
quent and  vigorous  expressions. 

From  6  o'clock  in  the  morning  until 
late  at  night  the  camp  was  besieged 
by  visitors.  All  sorts  of  vehicles  from 
stage  coach  to  bicycles  crowded  the 
enclosure   about   the   hotel     and       the 


JULIAN  SQUELCHED. 

Stuart  Makes  Short  Work  of 
Him— The  Betting. 

Carson.  Nev.,  March  16.— The  trouble 
over  the  demand  made  by  Martin  Julian 
for  a  third  of  the  receipts  from  the  ex- 
hibition of  all  photographs  of  the  figiit 
has  been  adjusted  and  there  is  now  m, 
possible  obstacle  in  the  way  of  the  fight 

...-  ,  »>eing  pulled  off  tomorrow.    Stuart  maue 

murky  little  bar  room  did  a  business  i  short  work  of  Mr.  Julian  last  night, 
which  left  the  traditional  oldest  in-  '  and  it  is  announced  this  morning  there 
habitant  dumb  with  astonishment.  |  '^  no  prospect  of  any  more  trouble.  The 
The  members  of  the  constantly  shift-  '  morning  was  dark  and  gloomy.  There 
ing  crowd  were  almost  all  of  them  i  ^'^^  ^  heavy  snow  storm  up  in  th'- 
Corbett  admirers  and  the  man  who  bet  i  mountains  all  day  and  the  clouds  hung 
a  cheap  cigar  and  the  one  who  had  !  heavy  over  the  valley,  the  air  contain- 
wagered    his    bank    account   vied    with    '"^  *  lively  sug-gestion  of  snow  or  rain. 


one  another  in  singing  the  praises  of 
him  "who  had  licked  John  L.  and  who 
^■ouldnt  do  a  thing;  oh.  not  a  thing  to 
Fitz,  as  the  bar  keeper  put  it.  The 
enthusiasts  were  much  disappointed  at 
not  being  allowed  to  see  and  talk  to 
their  favorite,  but  White  firmly  re- 
fused    the    frequent    requests. 

-You  can  just  say  for  me,"  said  Cor- 

?^ll  ^^  *i\^^*  ^*  luncheon  with  his 
father  and  brothers,  "that  I  am  going 
to  win.  I  have  waited  a  long  time  to 
get  a  crack  at  Fitzsimmons  and  now  I 
intend  to  show  him  what  I  can  do  I 
don't  want  to  do  any  loud  talkine 
There  will  be  something  to  do  besides 
talk  and  then  I  will  show  the  public 
that  my  confidence  is  well  founded  " 
Corbett  will  enter  the  ring  weighing 
close  to  185  pounds,  rather  over  that 
figure  than  under  it.  His  exact  weight 
has  been  kept  a  secret  by  bis  trainers 
for  various  reasons. 

Things  are  very  quiet  at  Cook's  ranch 
today  and  but  for  the  great  number  of 
visitors  who  all  day  filed  through  go- 
ing in  the  direction  of  the  Fitzsim- 
mons' training  quarters,  there  would 
have  been  but  little  going  on.  Pitz  took 
a  short  run  in  the  morning  and  a  walk 


No  postponement  of  the  fight  will  be 
made,  however,  unless  the  weather 
should  be  unusually  severe  tomorrow, 
and  there  is  at  present  no  prospect  of 
such  weather  as  will  call  for  putting  off 
the  fight. 

The  l>etting,  which  was  carried  on 
until  long  after  midnight,  was  steadilj 
in  favor  of  Corbett,  the  order  being  6» . 
to  10.  Fitz  ijeing  on  the  'short  end.  By 
a  curious  freak  in  the  betting  in  the 
mutuals,  the  combination  of  Fitzsim- 
mons. Smith  and  Flaherty  Is  selling  at 
5  to  1,  and  the  combination  with  Cor- 
bett, Smith  and  Flaherty  at  6  to  1.  The 
three  California  men  continue  to  be  the 
favorites,  however,  the  combination  of 
Corbett.  Green  and  Hawkins  being  at 
2  to  1.  Even  money  on  Green  was 
offered  last  night,  but  there  were  no 
takers.  The  betting  has  not  been  heavy 
so  far,  and  all  of  the  wagers  laid  thi.s 
morning  were  for  small  amounts. 

SULLIVAN  PICKS  CORBETT. 
Salt  Lake.  Utah,  March  16.— The 
Parson-Davies  special  train  from  Chi- 
cago, with  John  L.  Sullivan  and  party, 
arrived  at  Ogden  over  the  Rio  Grand  A 
Western  railway  at  10:30  last  night,  and 
left  immediately  for  Carson.    la  an  in* 


Robert  Fitzsimmons  was  born  at  El- 
ston,  Cornwall,  England,  June  4,  1862. 
His  height  is  five  feet  eleven  and 
three-quarters  inches.  He  made  his 
first  appearance  at  Tlnaru.  New  Zea- 
land, in  Jem  Mace's  competition,  1880. 
in  which  he  defeated  four  men,  win- 
ning the  amateur  championship  ot 
New  Zealand. 

The  next  year,  same  competition,  he 
beat  five  men,  among  them  Herbert 
Slade  (the  Maori).  The  other  not  datenl 
.Australian  performances  are  as  follows*: 
Jem  Crawford,  three  rounds;  Bill  Sla- 
vln,  seven  rounds;  "Starlight,"  nine 
rounds;  Arthur  Cooper,  three  rounds; 
Jack  Murphy.  eight  rounds;  Jack 
Greentree,  three  rounds;  Dick  Sandall. 
four  rounds,  the  amateur  champion- 
ship of  New  Zealand:  Conway,  two 
rounds:  Professor  West,  one  round; 
Pablo  Frank,  two  rounds;  Jack  Riddle, 
four  rounds;  Eager,  two  rounds. 

On   Dec.   17,   1889,   he   won   from    Dick 
Ellis,    of    New    Zealand,    Sydney,      in 
three  rounds. 

On  Feb.  10,  1890.  Was  defeated  by  Jem 
Hall,  at  Sydney,   in   four  rounds. 
On  May  10— Arrived  in  San  Francisco. 
On  May  17— Tried  out  at  the  Califor- 
nia  Athletic    club,    with    Frank    Allen, 
and    »)roke    Allen's    wrist. 

On  May  29.— Won  from  Billy  Mc- 
Carthy, of  Australia,  for  a  purse  of 
%U->0  given  by  the  California  Atheletic 
club,   in  nine  rounds. 

On  June  28— Knocked  out  Arthur  O. 
Upham  in  a  154-pound  limit  for  a 
purse  of  $1000.  given  by  the  Audobot, 
Atheltic  lub,   of  New  Orleans. 

Jan.  14,  1S91— Knocked  out  Jack 
Dempsey,  purse  $11,000,  at  New  Orleans 
in    thirteen   rounds. 

April  28— Knocked  out  Abe  Cougie  at 
Chicago  In  two  rounds. 

May  1— Won  from  "Black  Pearl"  at 
Minneapolis  in  four  rounds. 

March  2,  1S92— Knocked  out  Peter 
Maher,  purse  $9000  and  $10,000  a  side, 
at  New  Orleans,  twelve  rounds. 

April  .-{O— Knocked  out  James  Far- 
rell  at   Newark  in  two  rounds. 

May  7— Knocked  out  Joe  Godfrey  at 
Philadelphia  in  one  round. 

May  11— Knocked  out  Jerry  Slattery 
at  New  York  in  two  rounds. 

Sept.  3— Knocked  out  Millard  Zender 
at  Anniston,  Ala.,  in  one  round. 

March  8,  1893— Knocked  out  Jem  Hall, 
purse  $40,000,  at  New  Orleans,  four 
rounds. 

March  25— Knocked  out  Phil  Mayo 
at  Chicago,  two  rounds. 

May  30— Knocked  out  Warner  at  Bal- 
timore in  one  round. 

Sept.  6— Won  from  Jack  Hlckey  at 
Newark  in  three  rounds. 

June  17,  1894— Defeated  Joe  Choyn- 
ski in  five  rounds. 

July  28— Knocked  out  Frank  Kellar 
at  Buffalo  in  two  rounds. 

Sept.  26— Knocked  out  Dan  Creedon, 
purse    $4000   and    side    bet    of   $1000     at 


The  United  States  fish      commission 
just  now   Is   investigating   the   subject 
of   frog   farming.     It   Is   believed   that 
there  ought  to  be  money  in  the  busi- 
ness, considering  the  large  demand  for 
the   hind   legs  at  high     prices.        The 
principal   market   for  them   is  in  New 
York  city,   where  they      are  gathered 
from  all   parts  of  the  country,   Fulton 
Market  alone  selling      from      75,000  to 
100,000  pounds  annually,  says  the  Phil- 
adelphia Times.    To  furnish  such  enor- 
mous  quantities   of  legs   must  require 
several    millions       of  frogs  having  an 
average  weight  of  half  a  pound.    Only 
a  small   outlay   of  cash       and       labor 
should   be   required   for  establishing  a 
frog  farm,  and  once  started,  the  enter- 
prise would  run  itself,  the  bactracians 
feeding  themselves      and  attending  to 
their  own  propagation.     But  nothwith- 
standing    frequent    stories    about   suc- 
cessful  frog     farms      printed     in     the 
newspapers,    the   lish   commission   has 
not  been  able  to  discover  the  existence 
of  a  single  such  plant  in  this  country, 
though    there    is   one    in    operation    at 
Beresford,    Ont..       owned     by    a   man 
named  Wedlock. 

So  here  is  a  promising  industry  as 
yet  unborn  in  the  United  States.  The 
frog  crop  at  present  is  wholly  wild, 
and  the  bulk  of  it  is  marketed  in  New 
York.  Missouri  is  the  greatest  frog- 
producing  state;  the  town  of  Kennett 
alone  ships  60,000  of  dressed  frog  legs 
annually,  and  New  Madrid  Is  second 
with  25,000  pounds.  These  figures  are 
taken  from  the  books  of  the  railroads. 
The  swamp  lands  of  Missouri  and  Ar- 
kansas are  the  finest  frog-growing 
areas  in  the  world,  the  frogs  found 
there  being  of  a  real  bull  species.  They 
are  caught  in  all  sorts  of  ways,  some 
with  a  hook  and  bit  of  red  flannel,  and 
others  by  speerinir  and  shooting.  The 
frog  season  begins  about  the  middle 
of  March  and  la.'stg  three  months.  At 
night  men  go  out  in  small  boats, 
which  are  provided  with  lamps  and 
big  reflectors.  The  light  so  blinds  the 
frogs  that  the  boat  can  be  paddled 
right  up  to  them  and  they  are  readily 
speared.         Exceptional  specimens 

weigh  as  much  a.s  two  pounds  apiece. 
The  experts  of  the    fish  commission 
say    that  the  plant  for  a  frog  farm  is 
exceedingly   simple  and   cheap.     Shal- 
low ponds  may  be  found  almost  any- 
where  and   they   need   no   preparation, 
unless  the  planting  of  bushes  around 
the   edges.     These   serve   as   a  protec- 
tion   against   enemies   to   some   extent 
and  have  the  further  advantage  of  at- 
tracting   insects.      Fi-ogs    feed    mainly 
on   insects;   the  reason   why  they   bite 
at   red  flannel  is   that   they  mistake  it 
for  a  gaudy  bug.     It  is  a  good  idea  to 
build    a   low    board    fence   around    the 
pond  in  order  to  keep  out  snakes  and 
small  mammals  that  are  fond  of  frogs. 
The  fence  should  be  close  to  the  water, 
so  that  birds  cannot  stand  on  the  In- 
side of  it  and  pick  up  the  pollywogs. 

Naturally  the  first  thing  to  do  is  to 
secure  some  frogs  for  breeding.  Any 
old  frog  will  not  do.  Some  people  im- 
agine that  a  frog  Is  a  frog,  and  that 
that  is  all  there  is  to  be  said.  But 
there  are,  in  fact,  a  good  many  species 
of  frogs  and  the  real  bullfrog  is  the 
kind  whose  large  and  muscular  hind 
legs  are  so  esteemed  as  a  dellcacj'. 
His  scientific  name  i»  Rana  Catesby- 
ana.  The  pond  once  stocked,  and  frogs 
will  take  care  of  themselves  and  mul- 
tiply rapidly  if  they  get  enough  to  eat. 
But  it  should  be  remembered  that  no 
insect  is  of  any  use  from  their  point  of 
view  unless  it  is  alive,  and  meat  of 
any  kind  has  no  attraction  for  them. 
They  want  live  bugs.  Another  point 
well  worth  mentioning  is  that  the  bot- 
tom of  the  pond  must  be  of  soft  mud, 
because  when  winter  comes  the  frogs 
go  to  sleep  until  spring.  They  burrow 
into  the  mud  and  there  remain  in  a 
torpid  state  as  long  as  cold  weather 
lasts. 

When  the  last  of  the  ice  has  gone 
the  frogs  come  out  of  the  mud  and 
again  take  an  active  interest  in  life. 
Spring  is  the  season  when  Mr.  Frog 
goes  a-wooing.  He  is  monogamous  in 
habit  and  ^he  employs  the  allurement 
of  song  to  excite  the  tender  emotions 
of  his  lady  love.  He  has  a  fine  bass 
voice,  by  means  of  which  he  entices 
the  coy  Miss  Frog.  A  lady  frog  does 
not  sing.  In  the  course  of  time  the  fe- 
male frog  deposits  in  the  water  a 
small  glutinous  mass  of  spawn;  it 
looks  like  so  much  jelly,  with  black 
spots  on  it.  The  spawn  may  be  hatched 
artificially  in  a  suitable  hatching  box, 
but  this  is  hardly  worth  while.  Inas- 
much as  it  will  hatch  itself  just  as 
well.  If  gathered  for  transfer  to  an- 
other pond,  care  must  be  taken  to 
break  it  as  little  as  possible.  It  will 
hatch  in  a  week  or  ten  days. 

Mr.  Lucas,  the  osteologist  of  the  Na- 
tional museum,  says  that  the  frog  is 
just  al)out  the  most  wonderful  animal 
in  the  world.  It  starts  in  life  as  a  veg3- 
table-eatlng  fish  with  gills  and  a  tall, 
and  later  on  turns  into  an  air-breathin}: 
land  animal,  developing  teeth  and  be 


animal  is  served  whole  quite  common- 
ly.   Anybody  who  has  eaten  frogs'  legs 
will    testify    to   their   delicious     flavor, 
which   is  somewhat   like  that   of   very 
tender  spring  chicken,  only  more  deli- 
cate.    The    legs,    after    bein*g   skinned, 
should   be  placed  In  fresh  cold  mter. 
Next  they  should  be  drained,  dried  and 
put  to  soak  for  a  while  In  the  white  of 
eggs,    well    beaten    up.      Finally    they 
must  be  powdered  over  with  flour  and 
fried  in  plenty  of  olive  oil  until  they  are 
crisp  and  brown.     Add  a  lemon,  some 
red  pepper  and  serve.    Frogs'  legs  fetch 
ordinarily  about  20  cents  a  pound    but 
extra  big  legs  are  worth  from  30  to  45 
cents  a  pound.       They  are  considered 
best  m  the  autum,  just  before  the  frogs 
go  Into  the  mud.  and  after  they  have 
spent  a  long  season  In  fattening  them- 
selves. 

It  has  been  alleged  that  large  quan- 
tities of  American  frogs  are  shipped  to 
Europe,    but    the    fish    commission    ex- 
perts have  learned  that  this  is  a  mis- 
take.   Dealers  at  the  Fulton  market,  in 
New    York,    told    them    that    they    had 
never  heard  of  such  a  thing.     If  frog 
farming  is  made  a  success,  however    it 
may  be  that  hind  legs  will  bo  exported 
on  a  considerable  scale  before  lon-g    In- 
asmuch as   they  are   highly  prized   by 
European  epicures.       Fears  are  enter- 
tained lest  the  wild  frogs  in  this  coun- 
try may  be  exterminated  by  the  whole- 
sale slaughter  that  now  goes  on.    Ruth- 
less  pot-hunters     have     invaded   their 
moist  haunts  with  spear,   shotgun  ami 
scoopnet,  and  thousands  of  acres  which 
once  afforded  them  a  home  are  now  a 
silent  waste,  not  the  echo  of  a  single 
nocturnal  croak  breaking  upon  the  still- 
ness  of     the     air     where     bactrachlan 
choruses  erstwhile  expressed  the  tune- 
ful mood  of  nature.    This  is  a  pity,  for 
the  bullfrogs  of  the  United  States  are 
the  biggest  of  their  kind  In  the  world. 
They  are  solitary  animals,  not  seeking 
each  other's  society  except  during  the 
breeding  season,  when  frequently  hun- 
dreds of  them  will  be  seen  together    At 
that   time   they   utter   the   hoarse   not-- 
from  which  they  take  their  name. 

A  notion  of  the  vast  quantity  of  frog.s 
consumed  In  Europe  may  be  got  from 
the  fact  that  they  are  fetcheu  continu 
ally  to  the  city  of  Vienna  from  the 
country  in  batches  of  30,000  lo  40  000 
There  they  are  sold  to  dealers,  wh  j 
have  conservatories  for  keeping  them 
These  conservatories  are  big  holes  lii 
the  -ground  about  four  or  five  feet  deep, 
the  mouth  of  each  covered  with  boards 
and  straw.  In  such  pits  the  frogs  never 
become  quite  torpid,  even  during  the 
hardest  frosts.  They  get  together  in 
heaps  and  thus  keep  themselves  wet  by 
preventing  evaporation,  no  water  being 
ever  put  with  them.  Recently  attempts 
have  been  made  to  can  frogs'  legs  for 
market.  It  has  been  discovered  that 
frogs'  skin  makes  a  beautiful  an  1 
most  delicate  leather,  suitable  espe- 
cially for  covering  books.  In  former 
times  many  salves  and  other  medicinal 
preparations  were  made  from  frogs. 
Frogs'  hearts  were  recommended  by 
physicians  to  be  swallowed  as  pills 
every  morning  for  certain  diseases. 

If  a  little  encouragement  were  afford- 
ed many  persons  doubtless  would  take 
up  the  business  of  frog  farming.  Only 
the  other  day  Congressman  Harry 
Skinner  received  a  letter  on  the  sub- 
ject from  Col.  R.  B.  Creecy,  of  Eliza- 
beth City,  N.  C.    The  colonel  wrote: 

"Some  of  your  constituents  are  dis- 
posed to  raise  bullfrogs  for  profit. 
Please  call  at  the  department  of  agri- 
culture and  send  me  such  literature  as 
it  can  furnish  relating  to  the  practical 
part  of  the  business." 

Frog  farming  having  not  obtained 
recognition  yet  as  an  agricultural  In- 
dustry, the  department  of  agriculture 
possessed  no  facts  with  relation  to  the 
matter,  and  the  letter  will  probably  be 
referred  to  the  fish  commission. 

The  frog  is  a  favorite  subject  for  vivi- 
section. Its  circulation  and  digestion 
are  similar  to  the  same  proces.ses  In 
human  beings.  The  usual  method  Is  to 
inject  under  the  skin  of  the  animal  j 
small  quantity  of  curari  poison,  which 
.some  tribes  of  South  American  Indians 
use  to  envenom  their  arrows.  It  puts 
Mr.  Frog  so  fast  asleep  that  he  cannot 
feel  anything.  While  in  a  helpless  con- 
dition his  foot  is  fastened  to  a  board. 
so  that  the  blood  coursing  through  the 
veins  may  be  observed  under  the 
microscope.  In  the  veins  the  reu  cor- 
jiuscles  can  lie  .seen  tumbling  along  in  a 
continuous  stream  like  stones  in  a  cur- 
rent. Many  other  experiments  arc  trie  J 
on  the  unfortunate  creature,  such  as  re- 
moving his  brain,  without  which  he  can 
live  comfortably  for  months,  though  he 
does  not  move  unless  In  a  reflex  way 
when  irritated,  havin-g  lost  the  power  of 
volition,  and  of  course  he  does  no  think- 
ing whatever,  being  reduced  to  the  con- 
dition of  an  automaton. 


Contrac|[  Work. 

Office  of  Board  of  Public  Works. 
City  of  Duluth,  Minn.,  March  8.  1897 
BeaJed    bids    will    be    received    by    the 
board    of    public    works    in    and    for    the 
corporation   of  the  City  of  Duluth,   Min- 
nesota, at  their  office  in  said  city  until  iO 
f^^'n-j   on  the  22nd  day  of  March.   A.   D. 
IitILi    "".y^®  construction  of  tile  or  gran- 
outhic  sidewalk  corners  in  said  city  for 
the    year    ending    February    28,    1898,    ac- 
cording   to    plans    and    specifications    on 
file  In  the  office  of  said  board. 
!«>„»''?'"*'"??    check    or    a    bond    with    at 
is?.  ^^S'*'  <->  sureties  in  the  sum  of  fifty 
t""^.  collars  must  accompany  each   bid. 

The    .said    iKiard    reserves    the    right    to 
reject  any  ami   all   bids. 

M.  J.   DAVIS, 

r\m  !   1  President. 

Omcia  I : 

(Seal.) 
R.    MHROHTSON. 

Clnrk    Hoard    of    Public    Works. 
Duluth    Evening    flenild.   March  8  int. 


NOTICE. 


to 
be 


FOR 


Liquor  License. 

STATE  OF  MINNESOTA.  COUNTY  OF 
ST.  LOUIS.  CITY  OP  DULUTH— 8*=? 
Notice  is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  .said  city  of  Duluth,  and  filed 
in  my  office,  prayin?  for  license  to  sell 
intoxicating  liquors  for  the  term  com- 
mencing on  March  21,  i?97,  and  ternilnat- 
\S^  ^i,  March  21.  1898,  by  Gust  Levin,  at 
No.  227  West  Superior  street. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth.  at  the  council  chamber 
in  said  city  of  Duluth.  In  St.  Louis  Coun 


Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  under- 
signed have  been  duly  appointed  by  the 
common  council  of  the  city  of  Duluth 
as  commissioners  in  condemnation  pro- 
ceedings for  the  purpose  of  viewing  the 
wS^^''  *"v**  assessing  the  damages 
Which  may  be  occasioned  by  the  taking 
Of  private  property  for  the  purpose  of 
acquiring  a  right-of-way  bv  the  city 
or  Duluth  for  a  force  main  for  water- 
works, from  the  pump  hou.se  now  In 
process  of  erection  on  lot  1.  section  ?,', 
township  .'-,1  north,  range  i:{  w.st 
lister  river.  The  pr«»perty  t.." 
acquired  being  as  follows,  lo-wit: 

thl'LnfJ'*';-''  ''^'an'^  «fi  f^'^t  i"  "Idth. 
follows    to-wit:    Commeniii.g     o„     the 

^  I?fTr  '^'^'^  ^"^  **''^  ^"y  '"■  T>Uliith  as 
»J:il  ''  '1  P"'"P'ns  station  for  water- 
works on  lot  ]. -section  3.V  township  :,l 
north,  range  13  west,  at  a  point  24  23  feet 
ner  nf'^'  ^IT.  ^^"^  northwesterly  cor- 
northLf***  *'''^>  proceeding  thence 
northerly  on  a  line  parallel  with  the 
L!fi^^'^,  boundary  line  of  said  tract 
deeded  for  a  pumping  station,  a  dis- 
tance  of   ^^fifi   f^i^*-    *^    « :_^ 


566  feet  to  a  point. 

(2)    A  strip  of  land  66  feet  in^vidth 

foHo*;v=^^^""^''^  "'^''^h  '«  described  as 
follows.       to-wit:      Commencing    at     i 

erlv  II?.'  ff^^^r^herly  from  thf  nonh 
fl*.,  f."^  ^^^  *'"*^'  heretofore  deeded 
to  the  city  of  Duluth  for  a  pumping  sta- 
tion m  lot  1.  section  35-51-13.  measured 
«^  f  line  parallel  with  the  prolonged 
westerly  line  of  said  tract,  and  2r'.1 
feet  distant     easterly     thereof;     them'e 

ty.  Minnesota,  on  Mondky."the"l5th  "dTv  I  iheTe^wi^n"^  ''%^'^  '1^^  parallel  with 
of  March,  1897.  at  7:30  o'dlock  p  m  of  to  th.  i  u^  "P^  °*^  ^"^'^  ^""a't,  150  f.-.-f 
that  day.  ^  l'^  the   right-of-way  of  t 

Witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  said  city 
?i.^^"'"^h,  this  1st  day  of  March,  A.  D. 

C.   E.   RICHARDSON. 

/o  .     «     .  V  City  Clerk. 

^Corporate  Seal.) 
Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  2  to  17. 


NOTICE. 


Office  of  City  Clerk, 

Duluth,  Minn.,  March  6,  1897. 
Notice  is  hereby  given  that  an  aseess- 
rnent  of  damages  made  by  the  commis- 
sloners  in  condemnation  proceedings 
for  obtaining  a  right-of-way  for  public 
thoroughfares  as  shown  by  the  plat  of 
the  same  on  file  in  the  ofllce  of  the  city 
clerk,  has  been  returned,  and  the  same 
w  11  be  conflrmed  by  the  common  coun- 
cil of  said  city  at  a  meeting  of  said 
common  council,  to  be  held  at  the 
council  chamber,  on  Monday.  March 
22nd,  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m.,  unless  objec- 
tions are  made  in  writing  by  persons  in-        -    ,      ....v      nn^'     or     ««u 

terested  in  any    lands    required    to  be    tract,  a  distance  of  120.34  feet  to  a  po^nt 


T         ^      -         -      -■ '    '■-   'he   Duluth     ift 
Iron  Range  Railroad  company. 

(3)  A  strip  of  land  16  feet  In  width 

f^^'i."^"*^:  ''"f  «f  ^^'"'"'1  i«  described  a^ 
foHows  to-wit.  Beginning  at  a  point 
71o  feet  northerly  from  the  north.rlv- 
boundary  line  of  the  tra<t  heivtofor.. 
leferred  to  as  having  been  deeded  to  th«. 
city  of  Duluth  for  a  pumping  station 
and  measured  on  a  line  parallel  with 
the  prolonged  westerly  boundary  line 
of  said  tract,  and  24.23  feet  distant 
easterly  thereof;  thence  proceeding  ir 
the  same  direction  and  parallel  with 
the  westerly  boundary  line  of  said  be. 
fore-mentioned  tract,  a  distance  of  100 
feet  to  a  point. 

(4)  A  strip  of  land  16  feet  in  width 
the  center  line  of  which  is  described  as 
follows,  to-wit:  Commencing  at  a 
Jjoint  on  the  northerly  boundary  line  of 
the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range  railroad  right- 
of-way  on  a  linfe  parallel  with  the  pro- 
longed westerly  boundary  line  of  a 
tract  heretofore  deeded  to  the  city  of 
Duluth  as  a  site  for  the  pumping  sta- 
tlcin  and  24.23  feet  easterly  of  said  west- 
erly boundary  line;  thence  proceeding 
in  the  same  direction  and  parallel  with 
the  westerly     boundary     line     of     said 


New  Orleans  In  two  rounds. 

April  16— Knock  out  Al  Allich  at  New  I  f'oming  a  carnivorous  quadruped.     The 
York,   three  rounds.  »  *«-j  .-  -  i-=-.- :— -.  .>---  ...- 

April  l^Knocked  out  M.  Connors  at 
New  York,   one  round. 

Feb.  26,  1896— Knocked  out  Peter 
Maher,  purse  $10,000,  at  Langtry  Texas 
one  round.  '  ' 

«  ^^*^^-~^«*  ""  '*'"'  ^o  Tom,  Sharkey. 
San   Francisco,  eight  rounds. 


Here's  where  you  can  compare    the 
two  men: 

??eet^VinPh      ^'•"/ns'l'ns      Fitzsimmon-.. 

29?/rn"cht.V.V.V.-.-  ^^a' lit  Pi"n?f '" 

42;|  inches  ....Chest,  normal  •.-.•.■%  1^' 
45^^    inches.. Chest,    expande<i47"v4^  inches 

16V,   inches    Neck X4\.   inches 

33  inches  Waist .^U  Inched 

II  "^^^ ^:Th|gh :^ iss 

\a  '"^n*^ Shoulders 20>A  Inches 

"   inches Calf 3  Inchll 

EVENING  HERALD  "W^NTS" 
Bring  cuatomerB. 
Brlng^  business. 

Bring:  re«ult».  " 

Brin^  work.  •      »    »  » 


toad  Is  a  higher  animal  than  the  frog, 
because  it  gives  birth  directly  to  lltt'.e 
ajr-breathlng  toads,  whereas  the  frog 
lays  eggs  that  produce  fish-like  tad- 
poles. Mr.  Frog  has  a  skull  of  enor- 
mous size,  with  a  very  small  brain  cav- 
ity. He  has  only  nine  vertebrae  in  his 
backbone — fewer  than  any  other  animal 
— and  possesses  no  ribs  at  all.  Thus  he 
is  obli'i3red  to  swailow  by  gulps  the  air 
he  breathes,  instead  of  projecting  hi:? 
chest  like  a  human  being  and  creating 
a  vacum  for  the  atmosphere  to  pour 
into.  He  has  a  joint  in  the  middle  of 
each  foot,  and  also  a  joint  in  the  middle 
of  his  back.  These  extra  hinges  help 
him  immensely  in  jumping.  If  a  man 
could  jump  as  well  as  a  frog  in  propor- 
tion to  his  size  he  would  be  able  to  leap 
at  least  300  yards  at  a  bound. 

Forty  species  of  frogs  are  known  In 
the  world.  The  largest  is  the  gigantic 
"bellower"  of  the  Louisiana  swamps, 
which  is  said  to  attain  a  weight  of  four 
pounds.  The  smallest  is  the  tree  frog. 
Ordinarily  only  the  hind  legs  of  the 
bullfrog  are  eaten,  but  in  New  Orleans 


A   WALTZING  REVIVAL. 

Waltzes  are  prohibited  at  the  court  of 
Berlin,  as  well  as  at  the  courts  of  most 
of  the  minor  rulers  of  Germany,  and  con- 
sequently a  great  sensation  has  been 
created  among  the  younger  generation 
of  the  Teutonic  empire  by  the  announce- 
ment that  henceforth  the  ban  against 
the  waltz  is  removed,  so  far  as  the  court 
of  Wurtemberg  is  concerned,  says  the 
Philadelphia  Press.  This  l.s  due  to  the 
influence  of  the  young  queen,  a  woman  of 
rare  beauty,  who  is  passionately  fond  ot 
dancing,  and  who  has  been  backed  up 
in  the  matter  by  young  Princess  Pauline 
daughter  of  the  king  by  his  first  wife, 
and  who.  barred  from  the  succesjsion  tci 
her  father's  throne  by  the  Salic  law,  is 
destined  one  of  these  days  to  ascend  that 
of  Denmark  in  consequence  of  her  mar- 
riage to  the  eldest  son  of  the  crown 
prince   of   that   kingdom. 

The  queen  and  princess  joined  In  the 
waltzes  at  the  last  court  ball  at  Stutt- 
gart with  manifest  enjoyment,  and  hopes 
are  entertained. at  Berlin  that  the  exam- 
ple thus  set  will  be  followed  at  the  court 
of  Emperor  William.  For  the  present 
the  polka  and  a  slow  sort  of  galop  are 
the  only  round  dances  tolerated  there 
the  waltz  having  been  forbidden  ever 
since  one  of  the  young  royal  princesses 
was  tripped  up  by  her  partner  and  fell 
at  the  very  feet  of  the  late  Empress  Au- 
gusta while  in  the  act  of  waltzing.  The 
Empress,  who  was  a  terrible  despot  on 
the  score  of  etiquette,  could  not  bear  the 
idea  of  a  dance  which  could  have  the 
effect  of  placing  a  princess  of  the  blood 
in  such  an  undignified  position,  and,  turn- 
ing a  deaf  ear  to  all  arguments  to  the 
effect  that  the  mishap  was  due  rather  to 
the  awkwardness  of  the  dancers  than  to 
the  dance  itself,  vetoed  the  appearance 
of  the  latter  henceforth  on  all  programs 
of  court  balls. 


taken 

Following  is  a  list  of  the  property  pro- 
posed to  be  so  taken,  with  the  names 
of  the  supposed  owners  and  the  amount 
of  damage  awarded  for  the  taking  of 
same: 

Charles  A.  Homer,  James  A.  Gary, 
Julian  J  Chlsholm.  For  the  taking  of 
1.345  acres  In  the  ne%  of  the  sei4  of  the 
nwi4  and  the  nei4  of  nw%  of  section 
13-50-14,  being  a  strip  of  land  66  feet  in 
width  extending  from  First  street,  in 
Gordon  &  Whiting's  addition  to  First 
street,  in  East  Duluth  and  First  addi- 
tion to  East  Duluth.    Damagc;s,  $1. 

Same.  For  the  taking  of  2.02  acres 
•n  the  ne»4  of  the  nw»4  of  section  13-50, 
14,  being  a  strip  of  land  66  feet  in  width, 
the  center  line  of  which  is  described 
as  follows,  to-wit:  BeginnLag  at  a 
point  on  the  northerly  line  of  section 
13-50-14,  at  the  distance  of  289.8  feet 
westerly  from  the  north  quarter  corner 
of  said  section  13.  thence  extending 
southwesterly  on  a  line  making  an 
angle  of  47  degrees,  57  minutes,  39  sec- 
onds, to  the  left  of  the  aforesaid  north- 
?rl^Ji"^  °^  section  13.  a  distance  ot 
1412.09  feet  to  a  point,  the  above  de> 
.scribed  center  line  being  at  right  angles 
with  the  line  of  Thirty-fourth  avenue 
east,  as  platted,  (formerly  St.  Clair  ave. 
nue)  in  First  addition  to  East  Duluth 
Damages,  $1.50. 


Subscribers  to  The  Evening  Herald 
ivho  do  not  get  their  paper  regularly 
will  please  promptly  report  the  matter 
dt  once  to  this  oflSce.  It  is  the  Intention 
to  have  The  Herald  delivered  promptly 
-ind  regularly. 


William  Howell's  estate.  For  the 
taking  of  0.2  acres  from  the  swVa,  of  sec- 
tion 12-50-14.  being  a  strip  of  land  the 
center  line  of  which  is  described  as  fol- 
lows, to-wit:  Beginning  at  a  point  on 
the  southerly  line  of  section  12  afore- 
said, at  the  distance  of  289.8  feet  west- 
erly from  the  south  quarter  corner  of 
said  section  12,  thence  extending  nortJi- 
easterly  on  a  line  making  an  angle  of 
132  degrees,  02  minutes,  21  seconds.  tt< 
the  right  of  the  aforesaid  southerly  line 
of  section  12—125.81  feet  to  a  point,  the 
above  described  center  line  being'  at 
right  angles  with  the  line  of  Thirty- 
fourth  avenue  east  (formerly  St.  Clair 
avenue)  as  platted  in  First  addition  to 
East  Duluth.    Damages,  $0.50. 

East  Duluth  Land  company.  For  the 
taking  of  lots  2,  3,  4  and  5,  block  4,  in 
the  plat  of  First  addition  to  East  Du- 
luth, according  to  the  recorded  plat 
thereof.    Damages,    $0.50. 

Charles  A.  Homer,  James  A.  Gary, 
Julian  J.  Chlsholm.    For  the  taking  of 


Thence  by  a  curve  to  the  left  with  a 
radius  of  73.3  feet  to  its  point  of  inter- 
section with  the  westerly  boundary 
line  of  lot  1.  section  :}5,  township  .51 
north,  range  13  west. 

(5)  A  strip  of  land  80  feet  in  width 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  the 
nght-of-way  of  the  Duluth  &  Iron 
Kange  Railroad  company,  the  center 
line  of  which  strip  is  240  feet  northerly 
from  and  parallel  with  the  cente.-  ||nV 
of  said  railroad  right-of-way;  said  strip 
extending  from  the  northerly  to  the 
westerly  lines  of  lots  3  and  4,  and  the 
nwi4  of  the  sw»4  of  section  34-51-13. 

(6)  A  strip  of  land  SO  feet  wido 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  the 
cj^nter  line  of  the  right-of-wav  of  th.» 
Duluth  &  Iron  Range  Railway  com. 
pany,  the  center  line  of  which  strip  i-* 
240  feet  northerly  from  and  parallel  with 
the  center  Jine  of  said  railn»ad  right-of- 
way,  said  strip  extending  from  the  east- 
erly to  the  southerly  lines  of  the  se'i  of 
the  sei4  of  section  33,  township  51  nc'.rth 
range  13  west; 

(7)  A  strip  of  land  80  feet  in  widlh 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  the 
center  of  the  right-of-way  of  the  Du- 
luth &  Iron  Range  Railway  company 
the  center  line  of  which  Is  240  fc'-t 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  th.- 
center  of  line  of  said  railroad  right-of- 
way,  said  strip  extending  from  th<' 
northerly  line  of  section  4,  township  .5n 
north,  range  13  west,  to  the  easterly 
boundary  line  of  Lester  Park,  Fourtii 
division,  according  to  the  recorded  plat 
thereof  on  file  in  the  office  of  the  regis- 
ter of  deeds  In  and  for  the  county  of  St 
Louis,  state  of  Minnesota, 

That  the  undersigned  have  duly  qual- 
ified as  such  commissioners,  and  have 
entered  upon  the  discharge  of  their 
duties  as  such;  that  the  undersigned  as 
such  commls.sloners  have  caused  a  sur. 
vey  and  plat  of  the  property  proposed 
to  be  acquired  for  said  purpose  of 
rights-of-way,  or  which  may  be  di- 
rectly or  indirectly  affected  thereby,  to- 
be  made  by  the  city  engineer  of  the  city 
of  Duluth,  showing  the  lands  or  parcels 
of  property  required  to  be  taken  for 
said  purposes  as  aforesaid,  or  which 
may  be  damaged  thereby,  and  have 
caused  said  plat  to  be  filed  with  the 
clerk  of  said  city  of  Duluth:  and  that 
th^  undersigned  as  such  commissioners 
will  meet  at  the  office  of  the  city  clerk" 
in  the  city  hall,  in  said  city  of  Duluth. 


io<!f.*"^%'™?.  *w^."l^-°^  ^^^  "^^  °'i  °"  ^^^  ^^^^  ^^y  "f  March,  at  10  o'clock 

"  '  '  ■  '  in  the  forenoon  of  said  day,  and  thence 
proceed  to  view  said  premises,  and  to 
hear  any  evidence  or  proof  by  the  par. 
ties  Interested!  and  when  their  view 
and  hearing  shall  be  concluded,  to  de. 
termine  and  assess  the  amount  of  dam- 
ages to  be  paid  to  the  owner  or  owners 
of  each  parcel  of  property  proposed  to 
be  taJcen  for  the  purposes  aforesaid,  op 
which  may  be  affected  thereby. 


Notice  of  Aplicatioii 


FOR 


Liquor  License. 


STATE  OF  MINNESOTA.   COUNTY   OP 

ST.  LOUIS,  CITY  OF  DULUTH.— SS. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  In  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  said  city  of  Duluth,  and  filed 
in  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell 
intoxicating  liquors  for  the  term  com- 
mencing on  March  10.  1897.  and  terminat- 
ing on  March  10.  1898,  by  H.  Brown,  at  No. 
333  West  Superior  street. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth,  at  the  council  chamber  in 
said  city  of  Duluth.  in  St.  Louis  Coun- 
ty, Minnesota,  on  Monday,  the  22d  day  of 
March,  1897,  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m.  of  that 
day. 

Wltnets  my  hand  and  seal  of  said  city  |  tion  12  aforesaid 


of  Duluth.  this  9th  day  of  March,  A.  D 
1897. 

C.  E.  RICHARDSON. 
/^  »     «     .  V  <^ity  Clerk. 

.     ,       .      _,  J   ^  v^         (Corporate  Seal.) 

and  also  in  France  ana  Germany  the  i  Duluth  Evenlog  Herald,  March  9  to  22  inc 


section  13-50-14,  being  a  strip  of  land 
66  feet  in  width,  the  center  line  of 
which  is  described  as  follows,  to-wit: 
Beginning  at  a  point  on  the  easterly 
line  of  the  ne%  of  the  nw^4  of  section 
13-50-14,  where  it  is  intersected  by  the 
dividing  line  between  lots  2  and  3,  block 
4,  First  addition  to  East  Duluth,  thence 
extending  northwesterly  on  the  pro- 
longation of  the  dividing  line  between 
lots  2  and  3  aforesaid  814.68  feet  to 
a  point,  being  a  prolongation 
of  the  center  line  of  Thirty- 
third  avenue  east  (formerly  Mackinac 
avenue)  in  the  plat  of  East  Duluth. 
Damages,  $1.00. 

Same.  For  the  taking  of  0.65  acres 
from  the  ne%  of  nwi^  of  section  13-50- 
14,  being  an  extension  from  the  westerly 
line  of  First  additon  to  East  Duluth  to 
the  northerly  line  of  said  section  13,  of 
Thirty-fourth  avenue  east  (formerly 
St.  Clair  avenue)  as  platted  in  the  plat 
of  East  Duluth.    Damages,  $1.00. 

William  Howell's  estate.  For  the 
taking  of  4.215  acres  from  the  sw^4  of 
SW14  of  section  12-50-14,  being  a  strip 
of  land  66  feet  in  width,  the  center  line 
of  which  is  described  as  follows,  to- 
wit:  Beginning  at  a  point  on  the 
southerly  line  of  section  12  aforesaid,  at 
the  distance  of  360.19  feet  westerly 
from  the  south  quarter  comer  of  sec- 
tion 12;  thence  extending  northwest- 
erly on  a  line  making  an  angle  of  42 
degrees.  02  minutes,  21  seconds,  to  the 
right  of  the  aforesaid  south  line  of  sec. 
tion  12—1964.75  feet  to  a  point,  being  the 
point  of  intersection  of  the  prolonga- 
tion of  the  center  line  of  Thirty-fourth 
avenue  east  (formerly  St.  Clair  avenue) 
as  platted  in  First  addition  to  East  Du- 
luth, with  the  prolongation  easterly  of 
the  center  line  of  Victoria  street,  as 
platted  in  the  plat  of  Glen  Avon,  First 
division;  thence  extending  westerly  on 
the  prolongation  of  the  center  line  of 
Victoria  street  aforesaid.  817.29  feet, 
more  or  less,  to  the  westerly  line  of  sec-^ 
Damages,  $3.00. 


FRANK  P.   TIMS. 

LOUIS    K.   DAUGHERTY, 

D.  W.  SCOTT, 

Commissioners. 

Duluth,  Minn.,  March  10,  1897. 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  11  lOt. 


Contract  Work. 


C.  E.  RICHARDSON, 
City  Clerk. 
(Corporate  Seal.) 

Duluth  Evening  Herald.  March  f  fl 
19  Inclusive. 


Office  of  Board  of  Public  Works. 
City  of  Duluth,  Minn.,  March  8.  1897. 

Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
board  of  public  works  in  and  for  the 
corporation  of  the  City  of  Duluth  Min- 
nesota, at  their  office  in  .said  citv  until  10 
iW""r  °"  ^•J*'  ^^njl  day  of  Marc^h,  A.  D 
1897,  for  furnishing  and  laving  iri 
trenches  on  the  line  of  Grand  "avenue 
east  n  said  city  from  the  center  of  Six- 
ty-third avenue  east  to  Cambridge 
street  and  thence  along  Cambridge  street 
to  the  center  line  of  Fortieth  avenue 
east,  about  11,600  lineal  feet  of  lO-lnch 
cast  iron  water  pipe  and  appurtenances 
according  to  plans  and  specifications  on 
file  m  the  office  of  said  board 

A  certified  check  or  a  bond  with  at 
least  two  (2)  sureties  In  the  sum  of  fif- 
teen hundred  (1500)  dollars  must  accom- 
pany each  bid. 

"The  said  board  reserves  the  right  to 
reject  any  and  all   bids. 

M. 


J.    DAVIS. 
Official:  President. 

(Seal.) 
jR.   MURCHISON. 
I    Clerk   Board   of   Public   Works. 
>u>ulutb  Evenio^  Herald,  March  8  lOt 


>  • 


^ 


I 


^ 


«*■ 


-»— , 


I1 


'«  ■  «- 


if 

4 


I 


it 


■il»i>illllllti«ll 


^''^■^~'^^"W»*pi^»» 


M      ■      »i 


-.lA^r^M,        M 


THE     ni/LiJTn     EVfiNINO     flEKALI)     Tl'K;jIUV,     MAnelj 


ONLY  A  FEW  DAYS  MORE  OF 

SEMI-ANNUAL 

AUCTION 
SALE 

Diamonds,  Watches,  Silverware 
Musical  Instruments,  etc., 
At  Public  Auction.... 

Without  reserve,  in  order  to  realize  our  money. 


SAID  BY  A  CATERER 


Our  entire  stock 

of  Unredeemed  Pledges 

Consisting  of 


Four  More  of  Mr.  Anbury's 

Indictments     Knocked 

Out  Today. 


Results     In     Keeping      the 

Grand  Jury  In  Session 

Another  Day. 


This  15  a  strictly  bona  ride  sale,  as  we  must  dispose  of  these  goods 
regardless  of  price.  We  jjuarantee  everything  sold  to  be  as  represented. 
Dont  miss  this  great  opportunity  to  buy  FIRST  CLASS  AND  BEST 
tiLALITV  GOODS  AT  VDUR  OWN  PRICE. 

Sale  commences  daily  at  2  and  7:30  p.  ra.  until  closed  out. 


The  Case  Against  Frederick 

Davis   Will   Be  Taken 

Up  on  Monday. 


To  Be  Injurious. 

xou    know    that    ti,„,    .,f   nui.v   «.„/•.  .V 
lannhar    t<.   t.v,.,y„ne    in    W.^stoin    N^nv 
^..ik   stalo.   Faxon.    Williams  c^   Kaxan. 
Then-   I.UHine.ss  niakos  them  experts  i" 
the  fTuod  thmRs  uf  the  table. 
The   hea.J   of   th.-  hou.se   will    tell   anv 
I  ""MUirer     that      when      Postun.     Cen  al 
.  offee   wa.s   put    into   his   own    house 
Plaee  of  herry  eofive.  it  permitted  then- 
l«>  fn.i<.y  a  deluious  eoffee  heveraee  antl 
a  sain    in    health    u  here   formerlv   th' v 
were  denied  eoff,.,-  I.eeause  „f  its  elfer; 

::^t^?;X''"^'" '■''''"■"' '"^'"'•'■- 

Postum.  I.einj?  made  of  pure  crains 
only.  ,.an  I...  tak.-n  by  the  weak!"? 
stoimuj,.  a.s  natun  has  wi.sely  pn.vidt.l 
that  the  grains  of  the  field  ean  l.e  di- 
Kested  easily.  an<!  as  Postum  looks  like 
the  hnest  Mo<ha  and  has  th.-  eoffec 
taste,  it  (Ills  tlie  uant  of  ihe  eofle" 
drinkt'r  very  niei-iy. 

fJeuare  of  the  fr.iudulent  imitation  of 
the  onwnal  Postum  Cereal  Crain  eoflVi 
Insist  on  I'ostuiii. 


Three  More  Indictments  Re- 
turned   By    It     This 
Morning. 


The  Standard 
Jewelry  &  Loan  Office, 

324  West  Superior  St.,  St.  Louis  Motel  Building. 

W.  D.  GOf<!>ON,  Auctioneer. 


CITY  BRIEFS. 


t  uilum.  dentist.  Palladio.  I>hone  Xo  9 
Smoke   Endion  ci^ar.   W.    A     Poote 
WeiidliniT,  thf  jrivat  orator.  Maj-eh  ::4. 
Vttend  the  !e.-tuiv  and  ^ntti  lainmciu 

:!;is  t-VMnms  at  St.  t^lemenfs  hall 
I'o  pot  fail  I.,  attend  the  terture  an<l 
•:•  rrainmerit   at     .»;i.     fleni.'  nt's     hail 
r-nins. 
.   >   :i   was  horn   to  Mr.   a.tid   Mi-s.    A. 

■I.    riantz.    of    lluniers    Pst'k     yester- 

<li.'y. 

The  adjournetl  annual  m'»etinjr  of  the 
.uiluih  li.iat  .  luh  will  ]^  held  this 
-  enins  at  the  Spaldin.er.  A  number  (.f 
niporiant  matters  are  tn  l>e  .ieeided 
•  ir-m  cn.t'rnintj  th^-  <-ou  -se  to  b.-  fol- 
l"wed  by  the  .  hib  this  s  amme-r.  Ther- 
.M    lu^   no  .lub   cymna.-^jum    this    uin- 

The    followinar   births    -nave    been    re- 
l-ned    to    the    health     department:      A 

l;>9  Ui.klow  s-treet:  a   jon  to  .;.  c.  and 
..     Kohas-n.   of  --    '^,t    pift,,   ^j^^. 
•a   daughter  to   Kvan    and   r.ertie  John- 
son, of  iv>v  \v,.^t  He'.ro  street;  a  dauph- 
t-r   to    Louis  and    F>h.>:-t,e   LaHarge.   of 
inirly-ninth   avenue   n>.sf    ^n,,   superi- 
'LryT'r^''    'laughter    t..    A.    R.    and  i 
Afao    n.    Porter,    u:"    ]..-,.    i^a.^t    Second  ' 
street:  a  .son  to  t>>orse  an«l  Belle  Cres- 
s.y.    of    1V.M    We.st    Miehi^.an    street;    a! 
son  to  otto  E.  anfl  Tena  Kuhitke.  of  423  ' 
a.- 1   Fourth  street. 

The  term   of   Pvesident    Davis,    of' the' 
board  of  publi.-  works.  w=:n  expire  Sat- 
'•nlay  and  W.  H.  Smith,  -.e  new  mem-  ' 
•      will    probably    .,uali  fy    then.      The 
■!•!    win    be   reorsaniz.  .'tl    the   first    of 
r>  xt    week,     rv    A.    Reed     will    probably  I 
"►■  the  president.  "   I 

r."^.^ ;»-"■'/*'  ,'"'    '"^^f"'"     ^-^Is".    '^f    West  '■ 

r-iilnth.   died  yest^-rday..    after  a  linger- 

■'.     Th«-  funeraf    will  take  plaee 

ly   afternoon. 

■     Hansen,    of    Park     Point,    has    re- 

.    ^, ./""inninifat"  on     from     Com- 

blander  \v  iJd.  ..f  th*  n  avy.  saying  that 

I    rv,        rf  ■"  «S»'"««  ^   ghthouse  Keeper 
.):.mes   Pryo,    will   he     inv.-stigated. 

,  ;^t  "?",  ^"^-^^n-  «•«  nt  up  on  the  hili 
i^«  T,K-''''^\^'*'.  '"•'■'  "'"S  for  drunkcn- 
n  ss.  John  nark,  vharged  ^vith  th. 
>aim  oflfen.se.  was  r  ilow  d  to  ro  with 
>'nt»'ntt  suspi-n<Ie  3. 
If  Kelly  el. ^ans    y^r  suit  its  elean. 

n.andsKor.  assist,  ^  ,>y  Flaatens  orches- 
i»a.  are  arranpi  ng  to  -give  a  popular 
■..ncerj  m  the  r. ear  . future.  This  cun.- 
'"int.on  of  taU.ni  assures  a  most  sur- 
■  *ss!ul    event. 

A  marriag.-  Ijc-^^s^  :has  been  issued  f. 
-ionore  H.dot    and  Eh>a  Demesy. 


PERSONALS. 


Four    more    riddled    indictments    fur- 
nished  more   work   for   the  grand  jury 
today.       making       .xeven     -indictments 
knocked  out   this  term  and  now   befor- 
the   grand    jury    for  a   second    hearing. 
The  grand  jury   now   has  before  it    iho 
I  ca.ses  against   the  four  parties  accu.^t  .J 
!  "f  suffering  gambling  on  their  preniists. 
!  and  al.so  the  cases  against  three  of  the 
I  men  who  were  witnesses  against   them 
I  before    the    previous   grand    jury.     The 
,  indlitments  were  drawn  by  the  county 
I  attorney  and  not   by  the  acting  county 
attorney.  Mr.   Paldwig. 

Yesterday  afternoon  C.  O.  Baldwir. 
objected  to  the  introdu»tion  of  any  evi- 
dence under  the  indi<tmeni  against  J 
I>.  Zein.  who  is  accused  of  sulTerin.t; 
gamblin-g  instruments  and  gambling  oii 
-   -  premises.     A  jury  ha.l  already  beei 


Sargent  and  thildren    h 
short    visit    to    friends 


ill 
re- 


.Mrs.  J.    W. 

today    for   a 
St.  Paul. 

Mi.fs  Charlotte  Iceland  is  visiting  Mrs 
Vittor  Siearns.  of  171.".  East  Superior 
street,  this  week. 

y.  J.  Marsh  is  ill  with  grippe  and  all 
the  members  of  his  familv.  including 
-Mrs.  Marsh.  Edward  and  his  babv.  are 
suftVring  fr4.m  this  prevalent  winter 
malady. 

Mrs.  M.  J.  Davis,  u  h<»  has  been 
with  la  .grippe  for  several  davs.  is 
i-overing. 

<^»rticer  Kassmer  is  confined  to  his 
house  by  illness. 

C.  .\.  Smith,  of  Hibbing.  is  at  the  St 
]  Louis. 

<".  J.  Jackson,  of  Erin.  Pa.,  is  anions 
today's  arrivals  at   the  St.  Louis. 

W.    \V.    Wright,    a    Swan    River   mer- 
chant. IS  in  the  « ity.  a  guest  at  the  St 
Louis. 
Peter  Phalen.  Indian  farmer,  is  d.)\\  11 
I  from  Clo  luet   today. 

<?'ai<t.    E.    Morcom    came    down    from 
Tower  today. 
I      J.  P.   Wells  and  wife,  of  Ashland,  are 
'  at  the  Spalding. 

CJeorge  W.  Savage  and  William  K. 
I  Ross,  of  Chicago,  are  late  arrivals  at 
1  the  Spalding. 

I.  K.  Howell  came  up  from  St.  Paul 
,  this  morning. 

C.  A.  Bennett  and  r.  M\  Plant,  of 
Minneapolis,  registered  at  the  Spalding 
today. 

R.  S.  Sutherland,  of  Grand  Rapids. 
-Mich.,   is  at   the  Spalding. 

John  Mulville.  of  Detroit,  is  among 
today's   arrivals  at    the   Spalding. 

CO.  Lawrence  and  J.  E.  McWilliams. 
of  St.   Paul,  are  at  the  Spalding. 

L.  C.  Xoble.  of  Pittsburg.  Pa  i';  re- 
gistered at   the  Spalding. 

ReiH)rts  from  St.  Paul  in.lieate  that 
-Miss  I.«abel  Fannings  condition  is  im- 
proving and  hope  for  her  ivcoverv  i^ 
much   brighter. 


argument  ovei 

was    excused 

■  matter  under 


th,- 
an.) 
ail- 


Tom''i  Snowshoe  Trip. 

rxputy  •.-nite.j  Stat  >:s  .Mai.shal  T.  J. 
Monahan  hKd  his  firsi  experience  on 
."^now  shoes  yesterday.  He  received  a 
vwirrant  fo.-  the  arrest  of  John  Peter- 
!•'"  J^'r,  '°  frf.ducing  liquor  on  to  th- 
^••nd  Du  La,.  r^servati4>n.  Peterson 
.ves  aboTit  five  miles  nlT  the  Northern 
la-ihc  read  back  of  Saw.-f  r.  and  wh-n 
i;-m  got.  out  there  it  was  n-cessarv  for 
mm  to  TOake  the  trii.  on  s>now  shoes 
H..  a'T.,niplished  it  all  right,  a  few 
i>ml>i».?  doing  nothing  more  than  to  illl 
bi**  ^ae*ves  with  snow.  \\-h»-n  h.-  got 
'■Hf  k  If,  Sawyer  there  was  n  j  train  that 
-ouw  lake  him  to  Duluth  and  he  was 
ort'ed  to  spend  th»-  nffeht  th^re  and  n- 
turn   to   Duluth    this   morning. 

Peterson  was  arraigned  l^ief>re  Judg.' 
<  ar^-v  t<Klay  and   his  examination   was  I 
continued   to  Thursday  I 


Value  of  a  Team. 

rif  «  cse  of  Olaf  Mikkil.-on  -.nd  M.ar- 
!.!i  J.-:?'  :t  against  th"  -^u-.,:  p.aiiwuv 
•  !ni>:ii  y.  in  which  th--  plaintiffs  c'aitii 
damages  for  injuri»-s  to  a  team  of 
burses  whiL-h  ii  is  allegel  v. a.-;  njn  in- 
to by  one  of  the  defendant;?  cars  on 
the  miming  ■<{  Jan.  o  last,  v  a.-?  on  t:ial 
in  th'  municipal  c.u.t  to.Jjiv.  Tt  is 
sT.Tied  that  the  horses  were  attar-hed 
to  a  snow  plow  which  was  stuck  in 
the  tracks  at  Superior  street  and 
Twenty-second  avenue  west,  when  the 
accident  hapj^ned.  Damages  for  th- 
l.«s  of  one  of  the  horses  and  injuries 
to   the   other  arc  claimed,   aggregating 


BONDSMEN  TAKE  IT. 

They  Will  Complete  the  Bridge 
Approach. 

The  bondsmen  of  Contractor  Meniere, 
who  are   W.    F.    Bailey.   J.   W.    Preston 
and  E.  J.  McLaughlin,  have  taken   the 
completion      of      the      Duluth-Superif.r 
bridge  approach  into  their  own   hands, 
the   contract    being  signed    this    morn- 
ing.   The  members  of  the  board  are  in- 
clined to  be  incensed   with  Mr.   Meniec- 
i  ,     ■  /"^J^'*"'"*'    *"    ^a^y    out    his   .on- 
i  J,^^^\J^.^y  'ay  »he  trouble  entirely  at 
^U:     Meniece's    door,    saying     that"    he 
00k  the  contract  at  too  low  a  figure  in 
the    hrst    place   and    that    his    methods 
were   lax.     As  an    instance   ..f   the   lat- 
er. President  Davis,  of  the  imard.  .said 
that   the  contractor  had  dumped   a   lot  i 
'  .   lU^  f^  '''"■  ^^*'  approach  on   the   ice  I 
,  a     the  foot  of  Garfield  avenue  and  had  ! 
1  allowed  it  to  remain   there  until   it   be-  ' 
I  caine    .so    firmly    imi>edded    in    the    ice  I 
and  snow  that  it  was  impossible  to  ^et  ' 
It   out    when  needed.  "       | 

J.  H.  Isham's  Funeral. 

Of'*'?*'  H""f k'  «^"«^-«'«  over  th.  remains 
H..Isham    were   hold    at   the   .Ma- 
s|.n,c    Temple,    under    the     auspices   of  ' 

whKh  deceased  was  a  member,  this 
af  ernoon.  The  funeral  address  x"a. 
delivered  by  Prr.fesso,  Denfeld.  After 
the  service,  the  body  u  as  taken  to  the 
•.o  clock  train  on  th;-  Omaha  road,  for 
sh.pmen,  to  Titusville.  Pa.,  for  inter- 
ment     A  large  number  of  the  friends  „: 

T  mpre^''^^^''      "■^'■^      P'"^^^"^     at      the 


his  premises.     A 
drawn,  but  after  the 
demurrer    the    jury 
Judge  ("ant   took  th« 
'  viseiuent. 

1  Mr.  Baldwins  grounds  of  olijection 
were  that  the  indiitment  did  not  slat, 
facts  sutHiient  to  constitute  a  pul>lie 
•  iffen.^e.  For  one  thing,  the  indictnuiit 
chaiged  Mr.  Zein  with  allowing  peopl- 
to  a.s,^emble  on  his  premises  for  the  pv.i- 
poste  of  gambling,  and  it  stopped  then  1 
It  seems  that  there  is  no  law  in  the 
statutes  pr.khibiting  people  fnmi  a.«sem-  I 
bling  lor  the  purpose  of  gambling  so! 
long  as  they  do  not  gamble.  The  in-' 
dictment  did  not  allege  that  tho.se  peo 
pie  after  as.sembling  .lid  anv  gambliii„ 
so  that  Mr.  Bal.lwin  th.>ught  that  an  ie- 
di«»tment  charging  a  pers..n  with  ;i 
<  rime  not  ,m  the  statute  bo..ks  did  lu.i 
amount   to  very  much. 

The  indictment  also  alleged   that   th» 
so-called     as.semblage     t..ok     plac.>     at 
.-Cems     i)la(e    .if    business    at    .'.ai    W^st 
Superior  street,  but  it  neglected  to  .state 
whether  :,:il    West    Superior  street    was  1 
in  Duluth  or  Kalamazo...  Mhh..  or  sun.e  , 
other  place,  so  Mr.  Baldwin  did  not  .see  : 
the  justice  of  applying  Minnesota  law^ 
to  an  impossible  crime,  when  it  was  an 
I  open  'lUHstion.  a«'...rding  to  the  Indict- 
ment,   whether    it    was    peruetrated    In 
i  Minne.sota  .>r  not. 

i  ,, The  court    this   morning  agreed    with 

I  Mr.    Baldwin    that    the    indictment    was 

not  a  .good  one.  .so  it   was  quashed  and 

the    .-ase    .)rdered    back    to    the    present 

I  gland  jury. 

As  the  .>ther  three  similar  indictmem-* 
were    couched    in    similar    terms,    thev 
were  subject  to  the  same  objections    ^o 
,this  afternoon  County  Attorney  Arburv 
,  moved   to  dismiss  them,   and   they  also 
I  were  returned  to  the  grand  jury  for  an- 
other try. 

,      This  left  the  criminal  calendar  up  i.. 

'  the  air.  Mr.  .\rbury  had  not  .-ounte.; 
upon  such  a  demoralizati.ui  .)f  his  plan-^ 
and  he  had  n.. thing  el.se  rea.lv  to  put  t". 
trial.  Mr.  flaldwin  had  not  looke.l  („v 
such  a  contingency  and  he  was  not 
ready   either. 

Edward    Huard.   who   was  accused  of  ■ 
receiving  $1;!  st..len  by  one  Levant  from 
Lenda.    Biella   &   Co.    was    brought    up 
and  he  changed  his  plea  from  not  guiKv  ' 
10   guilty.     Tomorrow    Mr.    Arburv   wii"l  1 
take  up  the  case  against  Riehard  Hai-  < 
per.    accused   of   forgery    in-  the   second  ' 
T*'^'*^^A      After   that    the   case  against 
■    r.u   ^^''v^-ntry.  accused  of  a   violati..n 
I  ot  the  game  laws,  will  come  up  and  wiM 
I  either  be  tried  or  continued.  1 

Fri.lay  C.  O.  Baldwin  will  take  up  the' 
investigation  cases  and  will  begin  pr..l)- 
ably.  with  one  of  those  against  Fred- 
erick Davis,  the  former  countv  sur- 
veyor, who  is  accused  of  putting  in 
padded  an.l  illegal  bills.  The  trial  of 
the  investigatb.n  cases  will  proeeed 
from  that   time  steadily. 

.\s  the  criminal  calendar  did  n..t 
materialize.  Judge  Cant,  in  ..rder  t.. 
keep  the  court  g.»ing  and  save  expense 
had  the  attorneys  sent  for  and  took  up 
the  case  of  Lottie  Doyle  against  the  c|i' 
of  Duluth.  This  is  the  case  in  whic  i\ 
the  plaintiff  sues  for  *.^(>00  f.jr  personal 
injuries  received  from  a  fall  on  a  siH... 
walk    on    Sixtieth    av(*nue    we.st.        She 


MAKING  PREPARATIONS. 

Authorities  Taking  Precautions 
to  Prevent  Flood  Damage. 

The    cold    weaih.r    has      lingered    so 
long  and  so  mu<h   snow  has  accumu- 
lated that  when  the  thaw  does  cme  ir 
is   expected    thai    ii    will    be   so   sudden 
that,     despite     ih.-     excellent      natural 
drainage,    ther.-   may    be    s..ine    tr.iuble 
with    water   unless   ample    preparations 
are  made,  and  v,  iliis  end  the  b.jard  k'( 
I  public    works  is   directing  every   effort 
nays  are  being  made  through'the  ae' 
i  cumulated   ice  aM.l  snow,   at   places  al- 
I  most  rock-like  in  liarriness.  for  the  tor- 
I  rents  of  water  i.,   take   their  wav.   an.l 
.  the    openings    of    ihe    draina-ge    sewers 
land  the  approaches  thereto,  as  well  f.-, 
j  the    gutter.^      at      .  rossings,    are    beii'g 
carefully    eleaie.l.      Some    tn.ubie     it    is 
I  expected,   may   be  caused   by  the  Hoot'- 
I  ing  ..f  cellars  ot  store  buildings  on  Su- 
perior street,    siieh    (juantities   of  sn.)v 
arid    K  (•    having    a.<-umulated      in      the 
alleys  that  it  is  IViiiv.l  is  will  be  imp..s- 
sible  to  obviate  the  danger  entirely. 

Th»>  health  d.partment  is  pr.'paring 
for  the  exigency  arising  from  the  un- 
covering ..f  the  huge  amount  .)f  „fia' 
that  has  accumulai.-d  in  the  snow  an,! 
will  be  expose.!  i,,  unl..ad  its  infeeiioii 
on  the  air  when  its  ...v.ring  di.'^appeai s 
under  the  rays  ,,1  the  sun.  Health 
Ottirer  Houth  says  that  he  ex|)e(ts  m.ire 
than  the  usual  amount  of  sickness 
when  winter  bieaks  camp,  unless  great 
•  are  is  taken. 


Parties  Are  Not  In  Custody 

and  the   Names  Are 

Withheld. 


The  daily  question  - 'Can 
Jjee^rtie  Gordon  Hatf 

ARE  SPECULATING. 

Delay  in  Selecting  Assistant! Opening    Warirregular   But 
Attorney  is  Causing  Talk. 


NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 


No  Indictment  Found  Against 

John  Mears— One  Juror 

Excused. 


The  grand  jury  this  morning  brought 
in     three     more     indictments     agaiii.st 
parlies  who  are  not  yet  in  custody,  and 
the  names  and  accusations  were  there- 
fore not  given  out.  Up  to  noon  no  bench 
warrants  had   been   issued.     .Xo  indiri- 
ments   have   yet    been   returned   in    th. 
•seven    cases    returned    to    the  jury    b.- 
^  cau.se  of  the  insufficiency  of  the  forme; 
j  indictments,  but  at  noon  the  three  wit- 
I  nesses  under  arrest  for  agreeing  to  re- 

i^u'^'^«.^     '"■'''*^'    '''■'^'^^     waiting    in    the 
i  sheriffs   office    to   be   called    bef.jie    the 

jury.  John  Donough.  the  fourth 
I  witness,  who  was  arrested  but  not  in- 
^  dieted,  was  also  present. 

The   grand   jury    reported    that    there 
;  was   no  evidence  on    which    to   base   i,n 
<  indictment    for    assault    against      John 
I  Meats    wh.)  was  aceu.sed  of  having  as- ' 
'faulted    William    Pryor.    the   lighthouse! 

Keener.  '■ 

The  grand  jury  will  not  adjourn  to-  i 
'lay.  now  that  s.)  much  new-  business  I 
has  been  thrust  upon  it.  George  ^sh  , 
was  excused  from  service  after  to.iaV  j 
so  It  i.s  evident  that  the  .session  is  g.jJr  ' 
tor  a  day  or  tw..  more  ai  anv  rate 


There  is  much  -speculation  as  to  what 
underlies  the  action  of  the  council  in 
adjourning  last  ni-ght  without  eleclin-' 
an  assistant  ejty  attorney.  It  Is  con- 
tended by  some,  on  the  authority  of  re- 

tnen  '.hn'T^'r^  '"'  ""'"^^  '"'  the"^  alder- 
men,   that    It    means    that    a    turn    un- 

I  tw"''    ''"  "\*^"*^"  liustgar.1.  who  at  01  e 
t'me  seemed  to  have  the  lead,  has  de- 

'         rilere   i.'''^^"'  '^''^'^  '■^"«"^'  "'is  change, 
•>  |here  is  any,  no  one  pl•of,^sses  to   bj 

:  able  to  say  for  certain 

I      It  IS  ontended  by  others,  who  claim 
to  ba.se  their  assertions  on  equally   'v.  v 
authority,  that  the  purpose  of  d.' feni    •' 

ci  t ;  47'%';'^"""'^'  '"  *'"^'"''  ^^^'^'>^^ 
srah-^hfel /*'^  /'"•■""""  "«■  salaries 
stiaightened  out  first.  The  rumoi'  that 
the  mov,^  nutans  that  Rustgaid's 
chances   have   gone   by    the   board    win 

'  stir "the^'lh^'    ""   «"«-'«-nt     however." 
I  stii    the  other  candidates     to     renewed 


ARE  USING  THE   STREETS. 

Complaint  Against  the  Squat- 
ters in  West  Duluth. 

It   is  claimed    by   many    West    Dulufi^ 

residents   that   there   is   in    that   end   ..f 

the  city  a  state  of  affairs  bordering  or 

,    "stiuatter  .sovereignty."     Several  vig..r- 

,  ous  objections  ha\.'  been  lodged  at   thi 

"ffiee    „f    the    b-a-d    of    public    works 

against    the    practice    of    allowing    the 

;  construction  of  shucks  by  s.,uauers  i  • 

,  the    streets    and    alL^vs.     The    objectors 

-say     hat  it  is  bad  enough  i.,  pav  taxes 

for  electric  lights  and  sidewalks 'for  th.^ 

sciuatters.    but    wh-n   it   comes   t.V  [he  , 

enc-roaeh.ng  on   the  th.iroughfares  with 

their    structures,    ihe    evil    bee.mies    s, 

great  as  to  call  f.,r  a  remonstrance.    " 

One  Uest  DMlutliman  made  a  reciue-. 

..n  ^»  n  •^^•■'"i'^'^'""  t"  ^^'ect  six  houses 
on  an  alley.  He  said  that  he  thought 
It  would  only  be  fair  to  giv.  taxpayf^- 
a  show  .m  publie  property.  The  same 
man  said  a  s.|uatter  had  begun  the 
erection  of  a  structure  that  began  t.. 
take  on  the  proportions  of  a  first  class 
summer  h.,tel.  so  far  as  size  was  ctn- 

and"th\;'l»l  \*^V*'''f  "«^ar  his  residence. 
Ana  that  he  had  to  interfere  to  prevent 
the  thoroughfar.  from  being  entirely 
blocketi  up.  Instances  like  this,  he 
said.,  had  ren.K-ied  forbearance  no 
onger  a  virtue,  and  it  was  about  time 


1 


WeuG!! 

I.RIC.IT  I.KCTCEE  I 


I.RIC.IT  I.KCTCEE 

^^Saul  of  Tarsus'' 

(Star  Lecture  Course.) 

I  Ftrsi  M.  E.  Church 
\    Wednesday  EteniDg,  Marcli  24. 


Tickete  .10c.  EeBerved  seat  ?ale  b««ins  Sat- ' 
nrday  mormng  at  Chambprlain  &.  TaylorV. 


His  Hearing  Set. 

Joseph  Romano,  who  is  accused  of 
abstracting  a  tub  of  butter  from  the 
store  room  of  the  Weir-M.-ars  Commis- 
sion company,  on  Michigan  street,  ap- 
peared before  Judge  Edson  yesterday 
afternoon  and  jileaded   not   guilty  to  a 

set  foi  t.miorrow  m..rning.  and  bail  wa- 
fixed  at  $25.  in  default  ..f  which  he  w a . 
committed  to  jail. 


NEWSPAPER  ECHOES. 

^Fair  Bpecimens  from  over  5000  JoDrnale  )    ■ 
Bnff«i«  /,i*"v\^,°'"'"*""'^'»r"Ma«aificent."  I 
'  ..^.^    '-X-^  Commtrcial-"GounJne  elo-f 

TM^- '*".{n\'^^^  l-:agle-"Ma8terly  analysis."  f 
P  .wer  •■     Tnbune-"Au  orator  of  great* 

CiDciunatl  (;«zotte-"Height  of  eicmence." 
e^lev.'laml  Leader-'-Rare  el„.,aenre  " 
Detroit  Free  Pre88-"Thrimng  elc.,aeDce."    1 
Havenpor  (la.  Gazette-Wonderfu  power." 

"'r"«^,r''^  Joaraal-" Front  rank  as  an 
K6oknk(Ia.)(iate  Vny-'-.\  wonderfnl  orator" 
1.0018V11I.,  t  ouner  Journal  'A  gr-'at  orator' 
i,i'"?'\?  **^I"iblican-"Mastcrly%frort'" 
1  In  a(ieJj,J,ia  Press  ->A  house  spell  bound.  ' 
Pmladelpbia  Iu.iuiror--'Master  of  tlie  ae-  i 

sembly, 

Pittsbu.K  (iazette---Coniolet.e  and  masterly.- 
y  aiucy  (111)  Herald-"Ne»er  cioaied  herb:" 
be.  l.()Hi8  «lobG-Dpmocrat--"A  born  orator." 
St.  LouiB  Ev«Dgelist-"Never  board  it 
e(4n<>l«d. 

Sptingfi^ld  (lU.)  Journal-  "A  brilliant  era- 
tor.  I 

Toledo   (O.)   Blado-"lrresiBtible-no  snpe- 
rior,  •^     1 1 

Utica  iN.V.)  Herald-"Best  of  the  course." 


NEW  YORK'S  PLAINT. 

Its    Discrimination    Story    Is 
Being  Probed  Into. 

New  Vork.  March  16.-The  inter-state 
commerce  commission  sat  again  todav 
I  or  the  purpose  of  investigating  the 
charges     preferred     against     forty-four 

sol'iau.m"  ^""Tii"^*^^  "^^'"^  '^''^^'-  as- 
Sallys     V.  »  H  legins         discrimination 

Philadelphia  and  IJaltimoiv.  The  firsi 
witne.ss  was  Lloyd  Blackmar  gra^n 
shipper  for  Power.  Son  &  Co  ami  he 
T'^r:^'  l^"  "'^"^  Jvsterday.  ile  es 
fled  that  the  arrangements  at  the  p.  ■ 
of  Hoslon  was  of  long  standing.  Thir, 
arrangement  gives  twenty  davs  fre^ 
storage.     -Did  you  testify 'that  Ihe  ele! 

thing  to  do  with  the  diversion  of  trade 

■     h     l,S9o.       asked     Lawyer     Howard. 

"Xo,  I  didn't." 

Witness  was  further  questioned  and 
maintained  that  the  cheaper  way  tot-x 
port  grain  from  Buftalo  to  th^  colst 
7^?  \'^  ^Philadelphia.  He  went  into  de! 
ails,  tending  to  show  that  the  railroadr. 
«  ere  put  to  extra  expense  at  New  York 
and  had  to  charge  extra  rates. 

Frank  Lewis.  r.^Jresenting  the  Xew 
York  Central,  asked  the  witness  c,ues- 
tions  concerning  the  terminal  charges 
at  New  ^ork.  the  purpose  being  to 
M^i!  V'  ,  admission  that  the  port  of 
New  \ork  was  treated  l)etter  by  the 
railroad  companies  than  the  other 
ports,    inasmuch    as     there     was     free 

■';^^''''or'\'"''  '''^'  ^'"ai"   to  the  ship. 

Mr.  Blackmar  said  that  formerly  thG 
railroad  company  allowed  the  vesseli^ 
to   b.^   loaded   at    the   wharves    through 

buf'in  fscif tT-  ^'^^«-^'"8:  y^c  a  bushel, 
but  in  1S92  they  impo.sod  an  additional 
charge  c^f   Ic  a  bushel   for  the  purpose  ; 
of  stopping  this  practice. 

John  \'aliant.  of  the  firm  of  Milmine 
Bodman  &  Co..  grain  receivers  testb' 
lu;d  that  the  New  York  Central,  the 
West  Shore,  the  Erie  and  the  Pennsyl. 
vania  railroads  had  elevators. 


Prices  Mainly  Higher. 

New  York.  March  16.— The  stock  mar- 
ket opened  irregular  but  mainly  higher. 
The  railways  generally  showed  sliglu 
improvements.  Sugar  was  pre.ssed  for 
sale  an.l  f.-u  „fr  t..  IIK^  ex  dividend  .-f 
u  pel  cent  being  a  decline  of  %  in  th. 
»  ir  .-  ,"  ^'«»''erbilt  shares  u.-i- 
ni..st  actively  tnidc-d  in.  Big  Fou.- 
showed  extreme  advances  of  t"'*^    *^"" 

ReneAved    purchases    of    the    Vander- 

l.»\»l..''''  ^'''7  ^''"  appearance  of  a 
supporting    order    in    Sugar     and      in 

""hichi ,^;"T'."""'"«">  the" sho  "; 
\\hich    carried    Sugar    up    to    n:}      The 

iinprovement.  however,  was  of  brief 
dura  ion.  r.,nsiderable  am..unts  ,»f 
the  stocks  were  ofTered  and  the  absence 
of  inside  support  exerted  a  dis.miet- 
ing  influence  on  the  Coul.l  shares  and 
Ibt"  market  generally,  declines  aver- 
aging ^c-  occured  in  the  luincii,.,! 
.shares,  .\rbitrage  houses  operated  f..r 
the  short  account,  their  oflfc-rings  in- 
c  uding  a  numl>er  of  the  l.jw  j.rire 
shares.  Wabash,  preferred,  in  panic  u- 
V  *"'  ^V^.^  unusually  active  and  decline.] 
^4f.  The  volume  of  trading  slackened 
considerably  on  the  decline  which  con- 
tinued unimpeded.  I^r-kawanna  rose 
1%  against  the  current  of  the  market, 
i^ailway  b.mds  were  .^uiet.  but  firm. 
Sales  t.i  n.ion  were  174,(ji>0  shares. 


A  RECEIVER  WANTED 
Chicago.  .March  16.— A  receiver  for 
the  Garden  State  National  Building  an.l 
."e'W'  association  was  aske.l  fo,-  ,,„lav 
b>  v\ .  K.  Hans,  one  of  its  stockh..id.>rs 
who  says  that  he  gave  notice  of  with- 
drawal four  months  ago.  l)ut  that  pav- 
ment  has  been  refused  him.  He  also 
says  that  the  state  auditor's  examina- 
tion  of  .Ian.  :i.-,  last,  revealed  that  ihr- 
association  was  insolvent.  Assets  aiv- 
Placed  at  $27.%4.  and  liabilities,  $M17 


THE  TREASIRY  CONDITION 
\Vashingion,       March        16.-Tod'ay's 
statement  of  the  condition  of  the  trea- 
s"t7Js°n-''-    ^y^"able    cash     balance. 
«-.ij.SM»,j><0.   gold   rc^serve.   $151. Ms. 162. 


Tlie  ev-enmg  paper  is  always  care- 
fully read,  especially  in  the  home  circle, 
and  IS  therefore  an  excellent  advertis- 
ing niedium.  Adveni.«ers  in  The  Even- 
mg     Herald  alwav«i  set  full   vnliie 


THE  LANPHER 


WATERS  RISING. 

Many  Missouri  and  Arkansas 
Towns  Flooded. 


THE  COUNTY  BOARD. 


St.  Louis.  March  16.— In  Southeastern 
Mis.souri.  Birds  Point  is  almost  entirely 
inundated  and  the  Cotton  Belt  and  Iron 
-Mountin  railways  will  probably  have  to 
abandon    their   trains  into   that   place. 
The  water  is  over  the     Cottcm       Belt 
track  nearly  one   foot    deep  at   several 
points  between  Birds  Point  and  Smith- 
ton,  the  first  station  south. 
I      Forty  thousand  acres  of  land  in  Mis- 
!  sissippi  county.  Missouri,  are  protected 
by   levees,    which    were    built    since   the 


Government  Work. 

Maj.  Sears  oi)ened  bids  yesterday  for 
the  exten.sion  to  the  pier  at  Grand 
Marais.  A.  &  p.  Sang,  of  Duluth  we  e 
jJcrQi'"'**-"'.-  ^"^,^1^'«-  their  price  being 
and  $8  per  cord  f.)r  stone  use.,  in  rifnf 

T7h  7^^^  ^''^^''^'  '^'^  «as  from  Li;' 
aire-..«%hn7'^h"'"'  ^V"^^^  ^^tsi-  She  I  l>ftt  &  Gregg,  of  Sault  Ste.  Marie,  their 
wa.*^  all.nfed  r.'?""  '"*''  defective  anci  \  fiffU'e  being  $85.50  per  foot  and  $13  75  per 
was    allowed    to    become    cc»vered    with    '^'"''l-  ".^  ij<^i 

snow  and  ice.  an.l  that  the  fall  cau.sed  u  ' 

mi.scarriage  and  ..ther  injuries.  Key.-v 
&  Lal.lwiu  appeared  for  the  plaintilf 
nfc'i  \.  ■  '*'•  hards,  as  city  attornev. 
eoont'i.  r  "'■''^  ap,.earance  in  district 
oun  in  his  new  capacity.  A  jurv  was 
being  drawn  at  noon. 

ivrr;'''*''r-^''^'   aftern.M.n    the   jurv    foun.l 
\\  alter  Konezak  not  guilty  of  burglari/. 
Ing  a  St.    I'aul  &   Duluth  car.   and   th 
case  again.st  John  Sternal,  in.licted  with 
nim.  was  dismis.secl. 
Judge 


O  I   ■■    iA  ,  ■*    "^^*^'-'*-    wnicn    were    built    since   the 

beveral  Matters  of  Importance  I^^*  ^""l^-  '^?*'^  ^"'  ^''"  holding  against 
to  Come  Up  Today.  ---  '""    '' """  """""'"  ™"- 


r-,     .  ,    Kf'ECTRlC  BITTERS. 

i..cctric  Bitters  is  a  medicine  suited  for 

Sed^  whZn  '^U'  P^''^^Pf  f'^"-^  ffeneraUv 
inT^^lJ^e^"  '*I.^  languid,  exhausted  fee- 
ing prevails,  when   the  liver  is  tornid  and 

flrf^ve  fs'^'f.',"?"  "I"^  °f  *  tonic'ind^aN 
nfl^^  •  '^  "^^'t-  A  prompt  u.se  of  this 
^n^'l'^^r^f  ,hfH',  often  averted  long  and  per- 
haps fatal  bilious  fevers.  No  medicine  will 
^ni.'^K'"^  ^"'■'^'y  '"  counteracting  and  f^e 
•  ng  the  system  from  malarial  poNon 
Koadache.  Indigestion.  Constipat  on.  dIz- 
zmess    yield    to    Electric    Bitters.    .tOo    and 


.       Ensign   this   moniing  was  still  *'"0  P^*-  bottle  at  Duluth  Dri ig  comMnv 

hearing  the  case  of  the  t'l.per  Peninsula  ^'""^  store.  "  "^"'^  companj 

Brewing     c..mpany   against     Fredin    .\i  

\\  ils.m  an.l  their  bondsmen. 


The   county   commissioners    are    holding 
a  special  meeting  this  afternoon  at  whicii 
several    matters    of    importance    were    to 
j  come    HI).      Bids    for    the    mortuary   vault 
I  at  the  poor  farm  were  to  be  opened,  and 
I  it    was    expected    that   some   .steps   towar-l 
building   the   poor   house   might    be    ta'cen. 
I  fie    committee    appointe.l    to    get    oft.Mv 
tor  county  orders  for  $50,000  to  IIOO.OO'I  for 
that  purpo.se  was  to  report.     The  bon.l  of 
-\.     1  .    Cook    as    superintendent    of    noo- 
was    to    come    up    for   approval.    It    is    in 
the  sum  of  $iihh»  with   M.   M.   Oasser  md 
t  .     W      Krieson    as    sureties.    The    super- 
inten.  .■lit   ..1    po.)r  has  n.tt   heretofore   luv- 
nisb.vl  a  bond,  but  one  was  demande.l  bv 
th..'    Dojir.i. 

.«\»unly  Treasurer  Whipple  was  ex- 
pected to  spe.ik  of  the  depleted  condi- 
tion .)t  some  .)f  the  c-ouniv  funds  again 
ancl  It  was  expected  thhrdlushrdlu  bior.iii 
and  It  was  regarded  as  possible  that  ih<> 
board  would  do  .something  toward  :;.t- 
tiiig  s.mieone  to  earry  county  orders  till 
the-   funds   tilled    up   again. 


TEACHERS  AND     STCDENTS 
SHOI-LD 

TAKK       HMRSFORD'S     ACID     PHOS- 
I'fSATE. 

a  supplies  just  the  material  that  is 
-:i..st  wa.^ted  by  brain  work  and  ner- 
vous e^.^rti.n— the   phosj.hates. 


CNIoN   RINK. 
Skating  every  afternocm  and  evening 
this  week.     Music  Wednesday,     Friday 
and  Saturday  evenings. 


Mr.  Whiteman's  Pamphlet. 

A  number  ..f  the  old  time  friends  and 

Sut;,"-r'   '''   '^-   '■    ^Vbileman    i 
Ljluth   ,ave  recened  a  ne.i'e.    printe  I 

in    Ahich    he   gives    his    vcrsioi    of    his 
many   trembles.     He  tells  a  sto^y   ,ha 
m.r''  ""^  Pfr-sonally  familiar  uith  l", 
numerous    escapades.      would      appejr 
Plausible  to  .say  the  least.     He  gills  a 
his  ory  of  his  experience  in   .^aUfornla 
am    endeavors  to  pr.,ve  that  ife  L"    ht 
^.^■t'."\'^f    a    dark    conspiracy,      s./rne 
ot  his  best  friends  are  given  the  Iti  .  - 
mary  characters  of  conspiratc  l^.  am.mK 
them    being   his  sister  and    br-.the,   in^ 
r  t,''^!"^"^    those    Who    have      read 
he    highly    interesting   story   are      ,„,- 
vinced    that    Whiteman      has      b.-e    ,: 
metitally  un.s.mnd  and   that  an  insan:^ 

f^^Z  IK^   '"  f   '""'■*^*  fitting'" -tee 
lor  nrm  than  a  prison. 


THE  BIG  FIGHT. 


FOE 


Duluth  Safety  Deposit  Vaults! 

S5  ?^'^  Proteption  of  the  kind  in  the 
rent-  s=;  nt?  ^''"''  valuables;  safes  for 
rent,  $0  per  year  and  upwards;  strictly 

Serlo%"lt?e;t^'"-^'-°°'-    ^^°-  '  ^^^'  ^^' 


Grip  and  Golds. 


EVENING  HERALD  "WANTS" 
Bring  custoniera  ^in  i-» 

Bring  business. 
Bring  results. 
Bring   work. 
"Try    them," 


Jay  Anderson  Has  a  Special 
j  Wire  From  Carson. 

I      Jay  Andersons  buffet  at  No.  1   East 
!  Superior  street   is  in  gala   attire   todav 
;  and   will    be   tomorrow.       His  windows 
j  are    tilled    with    portraits    of    the     ring 
champions    wh.i    will    battle    for       the 
I  worlds  trophy  at  (^ar.son.  Nev..  tomor- 
row,  and    the  grouping  of  flags       and 
inettj     '   "**''^r.hernalia    inside   is   r,uite 

During  the  entire  time  of  the  fight 
dispatches  will  be  received  ovei  ArVder 
sons  special   wire  by  the  ope.^tor  sta- 

hT''  "!  '^^  ''"'^'^*-  and  it  is  expected 
that  a  large  crowd  will,  assemble  to 
hear  the  results  by  rounds  or  ,Tortions 
"t   rounds_di.vct   from   the  ring  side 

Death  From  Exposure. 

F.    15.    Cliff   aiTived      here      yestei.l-^v 

was  taken  .suddenly  ill  .Sat    rHa,. 
,  ing  While  traveling' a'lotT^^'aX^'",';;;^' 
!  about  twelve  miles  from  Floe  d wood    ^Je 

«Vm   ^'^i""''  ""^Z"'^^-  ^^'^^  noon  and  w?Ls 
still   alive,   although    badly    frozen      it 
was  taken  to  Grand  Rapids  and  ev^Prv 
.  hing  possible  was  done  for  him    but  It 
was  of  no  avail.  '     "^  " 


I        Winter  Street  Scenes. 

I  The  Zenith  \'iew  company,  of  2i'u  West 
I  buperior  street,   who   have  been  taking 

views  for  Manager  Warren,  of  the 
'  street  railway  company,   have  secured 

some   very   fine   negatives     of      winter 

street  scenes  and  will  have  the  views  on 

sale  In  a  few  days. 


Awarded 
Highest  Honors— World's  Fair. 

^  CREAM 

BAKING 

vmm 

MOST    PERFECT    MADE. 

A  pure  Grape  Cream  of  Tartar  Powder,    Fret 
from  Ammonia,  Alum  or  any  other  adultenint 

40  Years  the  Standard. 


To  Join  the  Society. 

A  number  of  women  interested  in 
humane  work  met  at  the  Y.  M.  C.  A 
rooms  yesterday.  Mrs.  A.  M.  Marshall 
was  selected  to  preside  and  Mrs.  Wal- 
ter Turle  was  elected  secretary.  About 
twenty  were  present  and  it  was  about 
decided  that  all  should  apply  for  ad- 
mission to  the  Humane  society.  They 
were  also  in  favor  of  reducing  the 
membership  fee  from  $2  to  $L  They 
are  also  understood  to  be  somewhat 
dissatisfied  with  Special  Agent  Has- 
kins"   work. 


way  embankment,   which     forms       the 
southern  boundary  of  this  drainage  dis- 
trict. IS  not  raised  to  the  grade  of  the 
,  lovees    VA  ater  has  commenced  p.mring 

I  ten'itooV'"''^^  """"^  ''"'  ^"""^  ^"  ^^'^ 
I      At  Carruthersville.  Mo.,  work  on  the 

inT-  '^  ^^'"^  ^^^''  "P-  "'^^ht  and  day, 
I  and  in  Pemiscot  county,  the  levee  is 
:  I"  sood  ccmdition.  Twelve  miles  below 
I  Osceola    Ark.,    the   levee   broke   yester- 

Sp  ^."1"?^  "''"^  '^  *^°'"S"  J^'-'^at  dam- 
age in  that  section.     At  Tyler,  thirteen 
miles    below   Carruthersville.    there  are 
ten  families  on  a  sawdust  pile  for  pro- 
tection, having  lieen  driven  from  their  I 
homes     At  Cottonwood,  nine  miles  be-  | 
low    Carruthersville,    the    water    is    in  ' 
nearly  all  the  houses,  both  business  and  I 
dwelling.     At  Gayoso.   six  miles  above 
Carruthersville.    the    water   is   all    over  ' 
the  tcawn  and  from  three  inches  to  two 
feet  deep  in  the  houses. 


THE  LANPHER 

THJE  HAT 

IHAT  IS 

STYLISH  AND  DURABLE 

PALMS! 

A  NEW  LOT,  GOOD  ONES, 

From  One  Dollar  Up. 

These  are  the  Greateat  Bargains  ever  ollercd. 
Ferns  and  other  Pretty  Plants  „f  all  kinds. 

PUnt7-f'l'i''''*r-"   "L  *""•'   '^^'""''"   wortti   of 
riants  at  tlie  tireonhonses  may  select  to  Hia 

LINDSAY'S  GREENHOUSES, 

52nd  Ave.  Euf.  Lakeside  Car  Line. 


n,P?^^^^^^,.^^N^OT  BE  CURED 
^Lh  ?h« '*j'^"*''*'i°"^'  ^«  they  cannot 
Tifil^  }^^  diseased  ponion  of  the  ear. 
Jn.i  thff  r'^'K°"^  ^^y  *o  ^"""e  deafness. 
T-»^Jf.,**'^S'''  ^y  constitutional  remedies. 
f?«^^"r»J''  ''^"•''^^  ^y  a"  Inflamed  condi: 

u:  '*^J^,^  mucous  lining  of  the  Eusta- 
chian Tube  When  this-  tube  gets  n- 
n^rT'l  •'■,?"  ^V'®  '*  "•mbllng  sound  or  Im- 
Hol.^'a'"'?'"'"^  •'^"1  ^''^"  't  *«  entirely 
fi»  .^n*^*^'^*^"*"?^  '■''  *^'^  '■es"'f-  and  unless 
tne  inflammation  can  be  taken  out  and 
this  tube  restored  to  its  normal  condition, 
heanng  will  be  destroyed  forever;  nine 
i^^El  "<"^  "L*.^"  ^'■'^  caused  by  catarrh, 
which  is  nothing  but  an  Inflamed  condi- 
tion  or   the  nuicous  surfaces. 

We   will    give   one   hundred    dollars    for 
any  case  of  deafness  (caused  by  catarrh) 

^„ 'i    a*"'i"t  ^^  .*^"'*t^'   ^y  BaU'a  Catarrh 
cure.  Send  for  circulars,  free 

<\^^,S"F^^y.^  C-O.,   Toledo.   Ohio. 

Sold    by  druggists.   75c. 

Malls   Family   Pills  are   the  b3st 

UXIOX  RINK. 
Skating  every  afternoon  and  evening 
this  week.     Music  Wednesday.     Friday 
an.l  .Saturday  evenings. 


QUESTION  OF  RIGHT. 

Which    May  Keep  Henderson 
Out  of  the  Senate. 

Washington.    March    16.— The    senate 
today    discussed    at   some   length      the 
right  of  John  .\.  Henderson  to  a  seat  in 
the  senate  from  Florida  on  the  appoint-  I 
ment   of  Governor  Bloxham.       Senator 
Pasco  asked   that   Mr.    Henderson       be 
•sworn  in  as   Mr.    Call's  successor,   but  ' 
Messrs.  Chandler,  Lodge  and  Allen  all 
protested  at  once  that  the  case  should 
go   to   the  committee   on   elections   for 
investigation.        Senators    Hoar,    Pasco 
and  Vest  joined  in   the  discussion  and 
debated  the  rights  of  governors  to  fill 
senatorial    vacancies. 

After  lengthy  debate  the  credentials 
of  Senator  Henderson,  from  Florida 
were  referred    by  the   senate     to       the 

»°>?^'\^^l  *^"   y"^*'e&es  and   elections 
without   division. 


If  you  wish  to  drink  a 
Choice  glass  of  Lager 
call  for 
FITGER'S  BEER. 

DETECTiViS 

Anyotie  rc^ciniring  the  services  of  experienced 
oftcereln  civil  and  crinunal  cases,  cknl^S?e 
Mme  by  caUmg  on  or  addressing  "'^uie 

Benson's  Detective  Agency 

Exchange  BuUdinif.  Dolnth. 

CARLTON  SMALL  FRUIT 
AND  PLANT  NURSERY. 

CaUlogue  mailed  free  to  any  address. 
I  will  set  out  any  variety  of  Srrawberriee 
myself,  n«»ar  the  city  of  Dnlnrh,  (gunran- 
tee  all  to  live)  for  $1.50  per  100,  if  ordered 
before  April  15  th. 

E.  C.  BOVEE, 

Carlton.  Uiun. 


WHY  BE  HUMBUGGED? 

Aixiat  one  person  in  fifty  may  bave  a  slight 
;:alpciisea8e;  for  .Wc  we  goaraufe  a  cure 

ini;  h"ai"r%5S";e  i^a»V"-''"'  ■- 

MME.  BOYD  &  WILBUR, 

Gronnd  Floor,  Hunter  Bailding 


Pure  Spring  Water. 

Delivered  daily.      Telephone  orders 
Stewart's  livery,  telephone  No.  334. 


to 


^.    J^'^^    REACH  St^PERIOR. 

Madiscm,  Wis.,  March  16.-A  patent 
was  issued  today  to  the  Chicago  & 
L.ake  buperior  Railr-jad  company.  The 
inc.jrporators  are:  Abraham  H.  Had- 
fleld.  Mark  L.  Patek  and  Charles 
iM-icnd,  of  Milwaukee;  George  Dow  and 
.Vmos  J.  Allen,  of  Cambridge,  Wis  • 
George  Dow,  Jr.,  of  Madison,  and 
Robert  Dow.  Capital  stock.  $1,000,000 
Patent  to  run  from  state  line  (through 
Racine)  to  Lake  Superior  and  city  of 
Superior. 


Subscribers  to  The  Evening  Herald 
who  do  not  get  their  paper  regularly 
will  please  promptly  report  the  matter 
at  once  to  this  office.  It  is  the  intention 
to  have  The  Herald  delivered  promDtly 
land  regularly.  •"i'l.iy 


Ail  the 
Successful 
rierchants  of 
Duluth 
Advertise 
Regularly  in 
The  Evening 
Herald. 


*  '     »    I  ^fcp"^— -^l—— «w< 


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Ml  »    ■     m- 


mtmt 


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MINNESOTA 

HISTOfllCAL 

SOCIETY. 


JMl  DULFTH  EVENING  HERALD 


FOIKTEKNTH     VFAK. 


WEDNESDAV,     MAHril     17,     1807. 


THE  WEATHER. 
Rain  or  Snow  to- 
niglU:  Thursday 
Fair  and  Colder. 


-.a*. 


n 


mtm 


I 
■  ■■■'■'     ■  I  m» 


EXTRA ! 

FITZ  IS 

THE  WINNER 


He  Knocked  Out  Jim  ,,/Orbett  in  tlie 

Fourteenth  Roilhd  This 

Afternoon. 


body  an.l  left  on  chin.     Th.-  round  is  ii\ 

favi>r  of  Otubett. 
FITZ  FUJHTIN<}  LIKE  .V  DKMON. 
liound  fi— They  tJInrh  and  Fitz  tries 
to  wrestle  Corhett  down.  Loud  cries 
of  "Oh.  oh."  Corhett  lands  liKht  left 
Jab  on  the  face,  p-itz  counters  (»n  the 
jaw.  Cori)ett  uppercuts  Fitz  fiercely 
with  right  and  has  Fitz  Roing.  Fitz  is 
literally  covered  with  blood,  but  is 
fighting  like  a  demon.  Corbett  is 
showing  the  signs  of  the  work.  Fitz  is 
down  on  one  knee  and  takes  the  time 
limit.  He  is  full  of  fight  on  arising. 
Corbett  is  slaughtering  him  with  up- 
percuts.      Fitzsinimons    leads    are    wild 


FIVE    O'CLOCK    EDITION. 


lows  with  half  round  »,n  ))ody  He 
forces  Fitz  (o  ropes  and  smashes  hard 
on  sli.>rf  I  ibs.  Fitz  spits  out  wads  of 
blood.  Corbett  is  now  rushing  ami 
lands  one,  two  right  and  left  on  the 
<'ornishnian's  face.  Corbett  lands  left 
on  Fifs  face  again  and  follows  right 
on  body.  He  tries  a  knockout  ui»per- 
cut  with  right. 

Round  l."5— Fitz  lands  right  short  on 
Corbetfs  ribs  and  a  left  on  jaw.  Jim 
finds  Fitz  with  left.  Fitz  rushes  Jim 
over  to  his  corner,  hut  does  little  dam- 
age. Corbett  jabs  Fitz  lightly  on  the 
head  and  he  is  back  again  with  same 


BEFORE  THE 


TWO  t'EXTS. 


The  Blow    That  Did  the  Business 

Landed  Heavily  Over  Cor= 

bett's    Heart! 


STRUGGLE 


The  Weather  at  Carson  City  Clear 

and  Cool  and  Regarded  as 

Favorable. 


CORBKTT        MAKKS        LEFT        yiwn 
LANDS  OX  (MUX  '-•'-'^l.-        A.,U 


Corbett      Recovered      After      Being 

Counted  Out  and  Tried  to  Re= 

sume  Fighting. 


Carson  City.  March  17.— Bob  Fitzsini- 
mons is  now  the  champion  pugilist  of 
the  world,  beycmd  all  dispute.  Ho 
knocked  out  Jim  Cor)>ett  in  the  four- 
teenth round  of  one  of  the  most  ))eauti- 
ful  fights  ever  seen.  It  was  a  hot  mill 
from   start   to  finish. 

Fitzsinimons  came  from  his  dress- 
ing room  at  11:.57  in  a  l>iue  and  pink 
dressing  gown.  Julian  led  the  proces- 
sion and  the  t>ther  three  followed.  Cor- 
l»ett  came  a  minute  later  with  his 
seconds.  Both  men  were  duly  cheered. 
As  Fitz  passed  his  wife  he  shook  her 
by  the  hand  and  kissed  her.  Fitz 
climbed  into  the  ring  and  Corbett  was 


sumed  its  customary  fighting  grin.  And 
he  .settled  down  to  the  fight  of  his  life. 
Time  was  called  at  12:07  p.  m.  Fol- 
lowing is  a  description  of  the  fight  )>y 
r«  unds: 

CAUTIOl'S  AT  THK  START. 
Round  1 — Sparring  for  an  opening. 
Fitz  forcing  Corbett  to  his  corner  with 
a  left  swing,  which  Jum  ducks  cleverly. 
Jim  smiling.  Fitz  very  aggressive  aiul 
lands  a  light  on  Corbetfs  neck.  Jim 
feints  and  lands  left  hook  on  stomach. 
Follows  with  a  left  hook  on  Fitzs  jaw. 
They  clinch,  but  no  damage  done  in  the 
>)reak-away.  Corbett  lands  right  swing 
on  Fitz's  ribs.  Clinch.  No  damage.  i)n 
break-away  Fitz  lands  left  on  Jim's 
head.  Jim  lands  hard  on  Fitz's  short 
ribs.  Fitz  lands  heavy  right  on  Jim's 
head.  Jim  says  "Oh."  and  laughs.  Jim 
lands  right  on  Fitz's  ril>s  as  gong 
sounds.  Fitz  looks  light,  but  is  a  bunch 
of  muscle.  Corbett  looks  fifteen  pounus 
heavier. 

Round  2 — Corbett  advances  to  center 
and  faces  for  a  minute.  A  clinch  and 
no  damage  in  the  breakaway.  Fitz 
is  short  on  his  ribs  and  left  hand 
swings.  They  clinch.  Jim  is  very  cau- 
tious and  looking  for  an  opening,  lands  j 
two  stiff  left  hand  swings  on  Fitz's 
head.  Fitz  swings  left  and  right  and  I 
lands  lightly  on  Corbetfs  head.  The  ' 
fight  is  of  a  rapid  character  and  both 
men  are  very  lively  on  their  feet.  Jim 
landed  a  hard  left  hand  round-arm  jab 
in  Fitz's  stomach  and  follows  with  an- 
other in  the  same  place  .  He  is  jab- 
bing Fitz  hard  right  and  left  on  the 
body  when  the  bell  rings. 

Round  3— Corbett  starts  right  in  with 
that  hard  left  hook  on  the  body.  B'itz 
gets  savage  and  tries  his  left  and  right 
at  Corbetfs  head,  but  does  very  little 
damage.  Corbett  lands  a  left  jab  on  the 
body  and  follows  with  right  short  in  the 
ribs.  Jim  clinches.  Corbett  lands  right 
hard  over  heart.  Fitz  mixes  It  up  and 
puts  the  heel  of  his  glove  in  Corbetts 
face  in  the  clinch.  Jim  keeps  his  right 
working  like  a  piston  rod  on  Fitz's  body. 
They  clinch  and  Fitz  roughs  it  in  the 


and  he  misses  many  well  intended 
blows.  Time  called  with  Fitz  looking 
very  much  the  worse  for  wear  and 
Corbett   puffing. 

Round  7— Corbett  forces  the  fighting 
but  mi.sses  left  swing  at  head  and  Cor^ 
bett  upper-(  uts  Fitz  hard  on  face.  Fitz 
l.s  bleeding  again,  but  is  fighting  like  a 
lion.  They  are  both  b.oking  for  v 
knock-out  blow.  Jim  lands  a  light  left 
on  Fitz's  mouth.  Fitz  misses  right  and 
left  swings.  Fitz  tries  a  left  swing 
which  is  ducked  by  Corbett  and  count- 
ered with  heavy  right  over  heart.  Cor- 
bett is  very  tired.  Fitz  looks  like  a 
stuck  Ijullock,  but  is  as  strong  as  the 
other  man. 

Round    8— Fitz    is    forcing    the    fight-  i 
ing.     An  exchange  of  blows.     Xo  daiii- 
KrT",  Fiiz  misses  a   left   swing  and    is' 
lifted    off    his    feet    by    a    straight    jab 
from    Corbett    on    the    mouth.      Fitz    is 
doing    all    the    foning    in    this    round"   i 
Fitz  leads  a  right  hand  cross,  but  Cor-  ' 
bett  ducks.     Fitz  lands  his  left  on  Cor  ' 


on  body.  Corbett  is  sparring  beauti 
fully  and  is  ducking  out  of  .some  very 
dangerous  blows.  Fitz  lands  his  left 
straight  and  hard  <'n  Jim's  face.  Fitz 
lands  his  left  straight  and  that  hard 
right  swing,  but  does  no  good.  Jim's 
gloves  is  in  Fitz's  lace  when  Madden 
pushes  the  button.  Anybody's  fight 
yet. 

Round      14— Corbett     leads.'    but      is 
blocked.    Corbett    lands    that    left    jab 
again   on    Fitz's  head.     Fitz       counters 
with  that  terrible  right  swing  on  Cor- 
betfs  neck,   and  he  has  Corbett  going 
back  for  a  few  monient.s.     Fitz  lands  a 
terrible   left     hand     jab     on     Corbetfs 
stomach  and  Corbett  goes  to  his  knees 
with  a   frightful  look  of  agony  on  his 
face.     The    timekeepers    call    the    sec- 
onds.   One.   two,    three,   four,    five,   six, 
seven,   eight,    nine,    ten   before   Corbett 
comes  to   his   feet.     He  rushes   to   Fitz 
and  endeavors  to  strike  him  and  there 
is  a  terrible  upriwr.     The  decision  has 
not  yet  beon  given.    Siler  decides  that 
Fitzsinimons    wins.     The       blow       that 
(lid  the   business  landed  over  Corbetfs 
heart,  and  he  collapstnl.    The  last  round 
lasted  just  one  minute  and  thirty-five 
seconds. 


Both  Men  Confident  and   Fitzsini- 
mons Said  He  Would  Win  In 
Five  Rounds. 

Corbett  In  Splendid  Condition  and 

Felt  Sure  of  Doing  Up  His 

Opponent. 


er.s  and  when  the  arena  was  reached 
the  crowds  about  it  cheered  lustily  a.s 
the  party  left  the  vehicle  for  the  dress- 
ing room.  Xo  time  was  lost  In  strip- 
ping the  fighter  and  giving  him  a  vi- 
gor* lus  rub  down,  .^fter  a  short  rest 
he  again  donned  his  fighting  costume 
this  time  adding  the  belt  which  his 
wife  had  made  for  the  occasion.  it 
was  of  red,  white  and  blue  silk,  with 
a  green  buckle  at  one  side  hung  a  green 
silk   rosette  and   streamer. 

"Do  I  look  ready?"  asked  Corbett  as 
he  drew  himself  up  to  his  full  height 

"I  should  say  you  do,"  said  De- 
laney. 

"I  am  glad  its  Fitzsimmons  you  are 
after  instead   of  me." 

Corbet  drew  his  bath  robe  closely 
around  him  and  sat  down  to  wait  the 
call  to  the  ring,  exhibiting  not  the  lea.st 
nervousness. 

r,  "''^'^"..V^"  ^^^  ^°^'  he  feels,"  said 
Urady  He  is  sure  of  winning  this  fight 
and  that  is  half  of  the  battle.  He  is 
the    bett.T   man    and    he   is   bound   to 


FITZSIMMONS;^  JOURNEY. 

Lanky  Bob  Was  Up  Early  and 
Was  Confident. 


BOB  riIZSLMMO>'S. 


Close  behind.  Corbett  had  a  broad 
smile  on  his  face  and  shook  hands  with 
Siler.  He  tried  the  ropes,  while  Fitz 
walked  slowly  up  and  down,  glancing 
occasionally  at  Corbett. 

When  Governor  Sadler,  "the  fighting 
governor"  of  Nevada,  entered  his  box 
there  was  loud  applause. 

Billy  Madden  announced  that  after 
the  Corbett- Fitzsimmons  fight  the 
arnea  would  be  cleared.  At  3  o'clock 
the  douole  event  between  Green-Smith 
and  Hawkins-Flaherty  would  cxcur, 
the  prices  for  the  tickets  being  $5,  $10 
and  $15. 

Mrs.  Fitzsimmons,  escorted  by 
Houseman,  walked,  into  the  arena  and 
took  a  seat  in  a  box  behind  her  hus- 
band's corner.  She  received  a  round 
of  applause. 

"One-eyed"  Connelly  created  a  sen- 
.sation  by  climbing  into  the  ring  in  re- 
sponse to  calls  and  attempting  to  mak  ' 
a  speech.  Referee  Siler  pushed  him 
out. 

Billy  Madden  said  at  12:  "When  the 
contest  for  the  world's  championship  is 
taking  place,  please  keep  order,  as  there 
are  ladies  present." 

Siler  was  announced  as  referee.  The 
ofl^cial  timekeeper  was  Muldoon.  Sec- 
onds for  Fitz:  Roeber.  Hickey.  Julian 
and  Stelnzer.  Timekeeper,  Louis  House- 
man. For  Corbett— Seconds:  McVey, 
White,  Delaney.  Wyds  and  Donaldson. 
Timekeeper,  Colville. 

Fitz  was  introduced  and  Corbett 
next.  Corbett  got  the  loudest  applause. 
Fitz  then  stripped  and  put  on  his  gloves 
of  a  light  pea  green.  Corbetfs  were 
tan  colored.  Corbett  wore  a  red,  white 
and  blue  belt  with  a  green  buckle  and 
rosette.  His  trunks  were  green  and  he 
wore  white  socks  rolled  over  the  top 
of  his  shoes.  Fitzsimmons  wore  dark 
blue  trunks  with  small  American  flag.s. 
Siler  ordered  the  men  to  shake  hands. 
Julian  prevented  it  saying:  "No.  you 
refu.sed  it  once."  Then  they  walked  to 
their  corners.  The  gong  sounded  at 
12:07  p.   m. 

The  men  stepped  to  the  center  of  the 
ring.  Fitz's  face  was  almost  expres- 
sionless, but  Corl»ett  stood  like  a  pan- 
ther ready  for  the  spring,  darting  for- 
ward at  the  stroke  of  the  gong  with  a 
fearful  look  of  hatred  on  his  face.  Fo^ 
a  moment  the  men  danced  around  one 
another    and    then    Corbetfs    face   as- 


I'lTZSIMMCVS      STOPS      I>KFT      HAND 
l.KAI).     LA.VDS     RI.'J     ROASTKK. 

betfs  face  and   Corbett   counters  w  ith  : 
right  on  body.    Sparring  for  wind.  Fitz 
tries  his  right  at  Corbetfs  head,  but  is 
countered  heavily  on  the  jaw  with  Cor-  ' 
betfs  good  left.     Fitz  has  the  worst  of  j 
this  round  when  gong  sounds.  { 

Round    9— Long    range    sparring    at  • 
opening  with  both  very  active  on  their 
feet.     Fitz  lands  below  the  belt  and  is 
cautioned  by  Siler.     Corbett  lands  stiff 
left  on   Fitz's   wind.     Fitz   rushes  Cor- 
bett.   but  does  very  little  damagi-.  Jim 
is  jabbing  and     clinching     and     upper- 
cutting  with  right  on  breakaway.   Fitz 
lands    very    hard    left    hand    swing    on 
Jim's  jaw  and  tries  a  right  cros.s,   but 
Jim  is  inside.     Fitz  again     tries     right 
across,  but  he  Is  short.     He  is  landing 
more  often  than  Corbett  now. 
FITZ     AGGRESSIVK. 
Round  10— Fitz  spits  the  blood  out  of 
his  mouth  and  tries  a  ha.-d  left  s.m  ig 
at    Corbetfs    head.      Fitz    comes    back 
with  stiff  left  and  right  on  Jim's  head 
and  body.    He  is  very  much  cooler  and 
is  stronger  than  Corliett  at  this  stage. 
Corbett    stops    a    left    swing      with      a 
straight    left    on    the    mouth.      Fitz    is 
bleedinii     rapidly,    but    forces    Corbett 
back    apparently    and    is   the   stronger 


STREET  SCENES. 

Big  Crowds  and  Seat  Prices 
Are  Doubled  Up. 

Carson  City,  March  17.— Three  spe- 
cial trains  which  c.nie  in  this  morn- 
ing brought  the  la.^t  of  the  visitors. 
They  were  made  up  of  twenty- two 
sleepers  from  San  Francisco,  but  the 
last  section  had  four  day  coaches  in 
which  were  a  few  people  from  the  East, 
those  who  reached  Reno  last  night.  The 
large  delegation  of  miners  expected 
from  Virginia  City  did  not  come,  though 
the  mines  are  well  represented.  The 
arrivals  this  morning  were  about  500. 
making  the  total  number  of  strangers 
in  town  between  3000  and  4000. 

The  demand  for  tickets  to  the  fight 
was  very  good  this  morning,  Dan 
Stuart's  headquarters  where  they  were 
on  sale  being  crowded.  The  demand 
was  so  brisk,  indeed,  that  the  price  of 
the  cheapest  seats  was  doubled.  The 
last  few  rows  on  the  outer  edge  of  the 
arena  had  been  set  aside  for  people 
willing  to  pay  only  $5  for  admission. 
When  it  was  discovered  that  these 
seats  were  selling  well,  better  than  the 
$10  seats?,  just  in  front  of  them,   there 


breakaway.  .\s  the  gong  sounds  Fitz 
.seems  anxious  to  continue,  but  Corbett 
laughin-gly  slips  his  right  glove  in  Fitz's 
face  and   they  go  to   corners. 

A    BEAUTIFUL   CONTEST. 

Round   4— Corbett  rushing   lands   the 
left  again  on  body.     Fitz  is  short  with  , 
his    left.      Fitz   follows   it    with   a   stiff 
left  on  Jim's  stomach  and  they  clinch. 
They  are  fighting  at  a  terrific  rate  and  ' 
it  is  a   beautiful   contest.     Fitz  ru.shes 
and  Jim  meets  him  with  a  stiff  right  i 
hand  short  on  stomach.     Fitz  is  doing  ' 
the  rushing  and  hitting  and  roughing  ' 
it  in  the  breakaway.    Corbett  is  by  lonij 
odds  making  the  cleverer  fight.     He  is 
playing  systematically  with  right  and 
left  on  the  body.    An  exchange  of  lefts 
at  the  head  follows  as  time  is  called. 

Round  5 — Corbatt  lands  his  left  on 
Fitz's  jaw.  Again  that  left  goes  on  the 
jaw.  Fitz  blows  have  plenty  of  steam 
behind,  but  are  not  as  frequent  as  Cor- 
betfs. They  clinch,  and  exchange 
compliments  with  one  arm  loose.  Cor- 
bett lands  a  very  slow  left.  Corbett 
leads  left.  Fit:t  lands  left  on  Jim's 
neck.  Jim  throws  a  stiff  half  round  with 
left  on  Fitz's  nose,  drawing  first  fclood. 
They  mix  and  Corbett  has  the  better  of 
It.    Corbett  lands  another  right  on  the 


DAN  STUART. 


CORKETT  DODOKS  LEFT  HAND 
LEAD.  PINS  RIGHT.  AND  JABS  ON 
JAW 


man.  They  mix  it  up  and  honors  are 
alMJut  even.  Both  are  fighting  hard. 
Fitz  catches  Corbett  around  the  neck 
and  drags  him  to  the  ropes.  When  time 
is  called  Corbett  lands  light  on  Fitz's 
mouth.  Corbetfs  blows  lacking  in 
force,  but  he  is  fighting  very  cautious- 
ly. 

Round  11— A   clinch.       Corbett   lands  I 
his  right  on  the  ribs  and  is  countered  i 
with  a   left  jab   on  chin.       Fitz  is  re-  | 
ceiver  general   for  Corbetfs  left   jabs,  i 
but  he  is  like  a  bear  in  strength.  Cor-  I 
bett  mises  a  half  round  hook  in     the 
jaw.  Fitz  lands  a  hard  left  strlght  on 
Corbetfs    face.    They   clinch   and    Fitz 
cro.sses  with  his   right  in  the  stomach. 
They   mix    it   and    Fitz    has   decidedly 
the  better  of  this  roughing.  Fitz  fights 
Corbett    to    his    corner    and    has    him 
weak  as  the  gong  sounds. 

Round  12— Corbett  rushes  it,  misses 
and  is  countered  on  the  face.  Fitz  is 
bent  on  rushing  It  and  Corbett  is  keep- 
ing away.  Fitz  gets  the  worst  of  It  in 
the  rush.  More  clinching.  Corbett 
lands  left  on  Fitz's  sore  nose,  and  fol- 


being  no  difference  between  the  two 
In  desirability,  all  were  placed  at  $10 
each.  The  increase  did  not  interfere 
materially  with  the  .sale. 

The  impression  has  gotten  abroad 
among  the  townspeople  that  when 
Stuart  has  several  thousand  unsold 
seats  on  hand  (the  arena  w  ill  accommo- 
date over  15,000)  he  will  be  willing  to 
fill  at  least  some  of  the  further  rows 
of  seats  by  accepting  $1  or  $2  for  them. 
The  indications  are  now  that  there  will 
be  larger  numbers  than  Stuart  had 
been  hoping  for  since  last  Friday.  The 
main  street  is  full  of  people  waiting 
to  see  the  principals  drive  in  from  their 
quarters  on  their  way  to  the  arena. 

Fakirs  are  doing  a  good  business 
selling  souvenirs  in  the  shape  of  small 
boxing  gloves,  medals,  shamrocks  and 
flags.  At  one  corner  surrounded  by  a 
large  crowd  Is  a  wheel  of  fortune,  the 
proprietor  of  which  is  very  busy  tak- 
taking  in  bets  and  paying  out  win- 
nings. John  L.  Sullivan  was  up  early 
this  morning  and  attracted  a  good  deal 
of  attention.  He  seems  to  be  just  as 
big  a  man  in  the  estimation  of  the 
people  as  Corbett  and  Fitzsimmons. 

The  accessions  to  the  crowd,  due  to 
the  arrivals  this  morning.  Increased 
the  attendance  at  the  pool  rooms  which 
were  jammed.  The  betting  was  very 
lively  on  all  fights,  though  the  most 
cash  was  scheduled  on  the  main  bat- 
tle. The  odds  on  Corbett  are  the  same, 
most  of  the  wagers  ranging  between  7 
to  10  and  $65  to  $100.  The  aggregate 
put  was  large.  Green  Is  the  favorite 
at  7  to  10,  and  Flaherty  at  4  to  5.  The 
mutual  combination  at  9  o'clock  showed 
that  467  tickets  had  been  sold,  Corbett, 
Green  and  Hawkins  still  being  the  fa- 
vorites, with  ninety-five  takers,  \vhlle 
Corbett,  Smith  and  Flaherty  followed 
closely  up  with  eighty. 


Carson,   Ncv.,   March  17.— The  center 
of  activity  this  morning  was   the  Ar- 
lington hotel,   where  the  sporting  men 
have  been  in  the  habit  of  congregating 
ever  since  the  fight  has  been  under  way 
In  the  vicinity  of  Carson  City.     It  was 
a   wise    man    who   rose   from    his    bed 
early  and  did  a  little  leg-work  in  the 
direction  of  the  dining  room   early   in 
the  day  for  the  sake  of  getting  break- 
fast.     The    hotel    dining    room    is    not 
large   and    it   will     not     accommodate 
many  at  one  time.     The  first  ones  to 
arrive   were   sure   of   their   meals,    but 
along  toward  the  fag  end  of  the  morn- 
ing the  hungry  followers  of  the  noble 
art  of  pugilism  who  showed  up  clamor- 
ing for  their  breakfast  came  out  of  the 
argument  with  an  empty  stomach  and 
were    forced    to   rush    for   the    nearest 
restaurant,  and  the  restaurants  of  Car- 
son are  not  many,  nor  are  they  on  a 
par   with   those   of   larger  cities.     The 
late  arrivals  were  not  many  in   num- 
ber,   however,    for    the    large    majority 
of  the  men  who  have  come  here  to  wit- 
ness the  fight  were  up  early  and  after 
their   breakfast    in    short    order     after 
they  appeared  in  the  office  of  the  hotel.  I 
Most  of  them  realized  that  a  fight  at 
11  a.  m.  with  two  other  fights  to  follow 
meant  no  lunch  at  noon,  and  they  took 
no  chances  on  getting  a  good  meal  at 
the  opening  of  the  day. 

By  8  o'clock  this  morning  the  hotel 
office  was  crowded  to  suffocation  and 
for  several  blocks  down  the  street 
groups  of  men  stood,  all  in  earnest  con- 
versation, and  the  topic  with  nearly 
all  of  them  was  the  comparative  merits 
of  the  two  men.  Around  the  hotel  of- 
fice of  Stuart  the  scene  was  one  of 
lively  bustle.  The  big  blue  chart  of 
the  ring  was  lying  on  the  counter  and 
two  men  were  constantly  engaged  in 
selling  seats  and  making  final  arrange- 
ments for  caring  for  the  crowd  which 
was  to  see  the  fight.  In  front  of  the 
ofllce  stood  Dan  Stuart,  as  cool  in  the 
climax  of  his  work  as  he  has  been  in 
perfecting  the  work  to  conclusion. 

"This  is  my  one  chance  to  get  even," 
he  said  after  three  years  of  hard  wbrk 
that  I  have  been  through  with  all  these 
fighters.  It  marks  the  beginning  of 
the  end  with  me,  and  I  rather  think 
that  when  this  thing  is  over  that  I  will 
be  out  of  the  fighting  business  for  good. 
I  am  not  making  any  predictions  re- 
garding what  I  may  do  hereafter,  but 
I  do  not  think  I  will  undertake  any 
more  fights."  Stuart  expresses  himself 
as  being  somewhat  disappointed  at  the 
attendance,  which  is  smaller  than  he 
has  been  expecting,  but  he  viewed  the 
matter  in  the  stoical  manner  in  which 
he  takes  all  of  his  troubles.  "There 
are  not  more  than  3000  here,"  he  .said 
with  a  smile,"  but  it  is  the  best  we  can 
do.  There  is  no  use  of  making  aiiv 
fuss.  Carson  is  a  long  ways  from  lots 
of  the  boys,  and  the  hard  times  have 
made  it  impossible  for  many  men  to 
spend  $200  to  come  here  to  see  the  fight 
and  get  home  again." 

The  pool  room  of  Corbett  &  Coleman, 
across  the  street  from  the  Arlington 
hotel,  was  filled  with  men  this  morning 
who  were  anxious  to  put  their  money 
on  the  fight.  Outside  of  the  pool  room 
many  small  bets  were  made  with  Cor- 
bett the  favorite  at  odds  of  2  to  1.  The 
mass  of  the  sporting  men  are  with  Cor- 
bett, many  because  they  like  him  and 
many  because  they  dislike  Fitzsim- 
mons, and  would  be  pleased  to  see  his 
head  punched  into  mince  meat.  The 
magnificent  form  shown  by  Corbett  in 
his  training  and  the  somewhat  erratic 
manner  in  which  Fitzsimmons  has 
gone  through  his  work  of  preparation 
(but  which,  it  must  be  confessed  has 
left  him  in  fully  as  good  a  condition 
as  the  champion,)  has  also  tended  to 
keep  down  the  amount  of  money  which 
is  going  on  Fitzsimmons. 


CORBETT  EN  ROUTE. 

Says  He  Never  Felt  So  Good 
•Before. 


* 

\ 

/ 

( 

< 

t 


*■■ 


i±~  ».C.Ii..M.    .■^1.    ■!■  ■   l.ij^l.  !.■ 


Carson,  Nev.,  March  17.— Although 
many  of  the  members  of  the  camp  at 
Shaw's  Springs  were  up  at  daylight,  not 
a  sound  was  allowed  to  disturb  the 
morning  silence  until  about  7  o'clock, 
when  Corbett  awoke.  The  big  fighter 
hurried  through  his  bath  and  dressing 
and  soon  entered  the  parlor  of  the  hotel, 
where  his  trainers  and  relatives 
anxiously  awaited  him,  with  a  cheery 
"Morning,  everybody,"  showing  his 
temper  to  be  in  satisfactory  condition. 

"How  do  you  feel,  Jim?"  White 
anxiously  Inquired. 

"Fine  as  silk,  Charlie,  old  boy;  never 
better,"  and  the  champion  slapped  his 
groom  on  the  back  with  a  friendly  en- 
ergy which  almost  upset  the  stout  New 
Yorker  White  led  Corbett  to  a  window, 
where  he  carefully  looked  him  'over, 
paying  particular  attention  to  the  ap- 
•  pearance  of  his  eyes,  and  questioning 


-F      '       ^"-^ 

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him  as  to  how  his  lungs  and  throat  fell. 
"You  could  not  be  In  better  shape," 
was  the  trainer's  verdict  when  the  ex- 
amination was  over.  "Your  wind  is 
perfect,  your  eyes  clear  and  you  are  fit 
In  every  way  for  the  fight  of  your  life." 
Corbett  declared  he  had  had  a  splen- 
did sleep  and  was  greatly  rested  and  re- 
freshed. He  took  a  turn  or  two  on  the 
hotel  veranda  and  then  had  break- 
fast. 

Before  8  o'clock  Brady,  White,  De- 
laney and  Corbett  retired  to  the  latter's 
bedroom  for  a  final  conference.  White 
did  most  of  the  talking,  prefacing  his 
instructions  with  a  little  oration,  iu 
which  he  pointed  out  that  the  "eves  of 
the  world  are  on  Jim,"  and  the  "su- 
premacy of  America  in  the  prize  ring 
depended  on  today's  battle  between  an 
Englishman  born  and  an  American 
born." 

White's  final  instructions  consisted 
almost  entirely  of  admonitions  to  keip 
c{)ol.  He  time  and  time  again  warned 
his  man  that  angry  rushes  would  en- 
sure the  victory  to  Fitzsimmons.  "You 
must  keep  your  temper.  Jim,"  he  said, 
"and  not  be  in  too  big  a  hurry  to  put 
that  fellow  out.  Just  be  cool  and  care- 
ful   every   minute   you  are   in    front    of 

I  hiin.  He  is  expecting  you  to  get  at  him 
like  a  l)ull  at  a  red  blanket,   and   you 

j  must  f(\A  him."  Delanev  and  Bia^y 
followed  with  talk  on  similar  lines.  .Snd 
to  all  Corbett  promisee?  faithfully  to 
fi'ght  coolly  and  carefully.  He  was 
warned  particularly  to  look  out  foeS||ie 
work  at  close  quarters.  .^ 

CORBETT'S  RING  COSTUME. 
The  conference  closed  with  mutual 
expressions  of  confidence  In  the  result 
and  a  rather  solemn  hand-shaking  all 
around.  By  this  time  it  was  well  on 
towards  9  o'clock  and  Corbett  beg.^n  his 
dressing  for  the  ring.  His  ring  costume 
consisted  of  his  usual  white  trunks  and 
light  fitting  shoes,  he  having  decided  to 
fight  without  tights,  despite  the  cold 
climate.  For  his  trip  to  the  arena  he 
added  the  gray  checked  sack  suit  in 
which  he  had  done  his  training  and  his 
blue  sweater,  white  and  black  checked 
outing  cap  and  gray  mixed  bath  robe 
completed  his  carriage  costume  the 
robe  being  thrown  around  his  shoul- 
ders. 

"It's  too  late  to  talk  now,"  Corbett 
said  as  he  stopped  for  a  moment  before 
leaving  his  room.  "The  time  has  now 
come  when  Fitzsimmons  and  I  can 
finish  our  argument  without  talking.  I 
don't  know  how  he  feels  about  it,  but  1 
am  feeling  very  good  at  this  time.  1 
am  going  to  win  the  fight  and  I  am 
going  to  win  it  fairly,  I  have  trained 
faithfully  and  have  been  well  handled 
by  my  trainers.  My  condition  is  entire- 
ly satisfactory  to  myself  and  my 
friends.  Fitzsimmons  is  in  good  shape 
t(X),  I  am  told,  and  I  am  glad  he  is,  for 
I  wish  to  win  this  fight  strictly  on 
merits.  I  don't  want  to  do  any  lioast- 
Ing  now.  I  will  do  my  talking  after  the 
fight." 

"Everybody  knows  whether  the  man 
is  in  condition  or  not,"  said  Charley 
White,  the  head  trainer,  "and  you  can 
judge  from  that  whether  I  am  satis- 
fied with  my  work.  When  I  took  hold 
of  Jim  I  said  I  would  put  him  down 
at  the  ringside  In  as  good  shape  as 
any  man  ever  fought  in,  and  I  have 
kept  my  promise.  As  to  his  winning, 
of  course  I  believe  he  will  win.  Fitz- 
simmons is  a  grreat  fighter,  but  Cor- 
bett is  a  greater  one  and  today  he  will 
prove  that  we  have  not  over-estimated 
his  ability." 

"White  expresses  my  sentiments  ex- 
actly,"   said    Billy    Delaney.     "We    are 
proud    of    the    condition    in.  which    we 
have   put   our   man   and   we   expect   a 
few    hours   hence    to   be   proud   of   the 
condition  in  w  hich  he  has  put  out  Fitz- 
simmons, for  Jim  Is  going  to  win." 
RIDE    TO    THE    RING. 
The    lumbering   three-seated     coach, 
which    for   months   has    done   duty    in 
transporting   visitors  to   and   from   the 
training  quarters  had  been  drawn   up 
before    the    hotel    vei'anda,      the     four 
horses  eager  for  the  start.  "All  ready." 
said    White,    and    Corbett   ran    nimbly 
down    stairs    and    took    his    place     on 
the    back   seat  of   the  coach.       White, 
with    the    collar    of    his    red      sweater 
turned    up    to    his    ears,    followed    and 
Brady,    McVey,  Delaney  and  Joe  Cor- 
bett took  the  other  seats. 

It  was  but  a  little  after  9  o'clock 
when  the  long-bearded  native  who 
sat  in  the  box  yelled  out  to  his  horses 
and  the  drive  to  the  arena  began.  A 
carriage  containing  Jeffries,  Wood  and 
other  attaches  of  the  camp  had  al- 
ready started  and  a  procession  of  car- 
riages, carts  and  mounted  men  fol- 
lowed the  coach  on  the  two-mile  drive 
thcough  the  little  city  and  out  ti»'4he 
arena.  The  Corbett  party  was  ratlier 
quiet  during  the  ride.  Jim  leaned  com- 
fortably back  on  the  comer  of  his  seat, 
no  traces  of  excitement  or  uneasiness 
appearing  on  his  face.  "I  am  Kla^^it 
will  be  soon  all  over,"  he  said  oncFor 
twice  and  as  he  noticed  a  familiar 
landmark  he  added  with  a  confident 
smile,  "when  we  come  back  we  will 
have  the  undisputed  championship 
with  us." 

Joe  Corbet  and  McVey  were  the  live- 
liest members  of  the  party,  but  even 
they  were  more  quiet  than  usual.  As 
Corbett  was  recognized  when  •  the 
coach  entered  the  town,  he  was  en- 
couraged   by   shouts    from   his   admir- 


Carson,  Nev.,  March  17.— Fitzsim- 
mons and  his  trainers  were  up  at  7 
o'clock  this  morning  and  Bob  took  a 
short  walk  befor.-  breakfast,  "to  start 
the  blood  going."  He  did  no  work  after 
eating,  remaining  in  the  open  air  bare- 
headed, moving  around  quietly,  talking 
with  Julian  and  his  assistants,  and 
playing  generally  with  them.  The  con- 
ference with  his  trainers  and  helpers 
was  not  long  as  all  the  needed  advice 
as  to  fighting  Corbett  and  meeting  his 
known  or  iiossible  methods  of  attack 
had  been  given  during  the  progress  of 
Fitzsimmons'   work. 

"I  would  not  take  $14,900  for  the  purse 
this  morning,"  said  Fitzsimmons.  "I 
will  have  it  all  before  night.  I  do  not 
believe  the  fight  will  be  a  long  one 
Five  rounds  Is  my  limit.  I  think  I  can 
land  It  in  that  time  and  if  I  do  that  will 
be  the  end  of  the  gentleman  who  has 
no  manners,  and  his  pretentions.  He 
may  hit  me  as  many  times  as  he  can, 
I  believe  I  can  stand  all  the  i)unish- 
ment  he  is  able  to  give  me  and  be  able 
to  put  him  out  when  I  get  a  chance. 
Come  around  when  it  is  over  and  you 
will  see  what  shape  I  am  in." 

"Corbett  won't  be  in  It,"  said  Julian. 
"We  don't  like  Siler's  ruling  about  the 
clinches  and  breakaways,  but  we  al- 
ways got  the  worst  of  It,  and  we  will 
have  to  .stand  It  this  time  as  before. 
Fitzsimmons  is  fit  in  every  way.  He 
could  not  be  in  better  condition.  He  is 
not  as  heavy  as  Corbett  and  his  vic- 
tory will  be  all  the  more  creditable. 
He  will  be  the  greatest  fighter  in  the 
world— a  wonder— before  nightfall,  and 
everybody  will  acknowledge  it.  His 
muscles  are  In  the  shape  we  want  them. 
He  Is  not  too  finely  trained—just  right 
—and  he  can  just  stand  any  amount  of 
punishment  without  distress.  He  can 
strike  a  50  per  cent  heavier  blow  than 
Corbett  and  one  good  punch  from  him 
will  put  Corbett  down  and  out.  Fitz- 
simmons. is  a  fair,  square  fighter— one 
of  the  fairest  and  squarest  In  the  ring 
today,  and  though  we  got  the  worst  of 
it  by  consenting  to  tricks  which  he  is 
not  familiar  with  and  ha.s  not  practiced 
we  will  stand  by  our  agreement  to 
abide  by  Siler's  directions  as  we  are 
confident  Fitzsimmons  will  win  this 
fight  no  matter  what  Corbett  may  be 
able  to  do  In  the  clinches  or  when  he 
has  one  arm  free." 

FITZSIMMONS'  CONDITION. 
"If  you  know  anything  about  fight- 
ers," said  Stelzner,  "look  at  Fitzsim- 
mons and  tell  me  If  a  man  could  be  in 
better  condition.  He  Is  as  strong  as  an 
ox  and  can  tire  out  a  horse  on  the  road. 
If  you  have  seen  him  punch  the  bag 
and  break  the  rope  holding  It  you  can 
judge  of  his  cleverness  and  his  quick- 
ness of  eye  and  what  a  blow  he  can 
strike.  He  may  be  a  little  awkward 
and  ungainly,  as  his  enemies  say,  but 
he  has  the  endurance  to  stand  punish- 
ment and  strength  to  fight  whenever 
he  gets  a  chance  to  end  it.  You  will 
see  some  good  work  on  his  part  In  the 
ring.  He  is  a  few  pounds  lighter  than 
Corbett,  but  that  won't  make  any  dif- 
ference on  account  of  his  condition  and 
the  power  of  his  arms.  He  Is  heavy 
enough  to  win.  He  has  the  greatest 
confidence  In  himself  and  Is  a  sure  win- 
ner. I  have  heard  Corbett  is  in  fine 
shape,  but  he  cannot  be  in  any  better 
condition  than  Fitzsimmons.  You  will 
see  a'  great  fight— the  greatest  In  the 
world,  and  Fitzsimmons  will  be  up  at 
the  end." 

"Fitz  will  win,"  said  Hickey.  "I 
don't  see  how  he  can  lose.  No  man  was 
ever  In  better  condition.  Every  muscle 
in  his  body  is  right  and  his  wind  could 
not  be  better.  He  has  purposely  let 
me  hit  him  In  our  bouts  and  I  have  put 
in  some  good  ones,  but  he  did  not 
mind  them  at  all.  Corbett  may  punch 
him  a  dozen  times,  but  I  don't  think  he 
can  hit  hard  enough  to  make  much  of 
an  impression,  as  Fitzsinimons  can  be 
so  perfect  that  he  will  be  able  to  re- 
cover quickly.  Corbett  cannot  wear 
him  out.  All  Fitzsimmons  has  to  do 
is  to  land  one  stiff  jab,  long  and  short, 
and  Corbett  will  not  get  on  his  feet. 
The  blows  of  the  two  men  are  as  a 
feather  to  a  ton." 

"My  money  is  on  Fitzsimmons,"  said 
Roeber  "That  shows  what  I  think 
about  him.  He  is  all  right.  He  worked 
hard  and  faithfully  and  could  not  be 
in  better  shape.  He  strikes  like  a  mule 
kicks.  No  pvtnishment  Corbett  can  give 
him  can  knock  him  out.  If  Fitzsini- 
mons hits  Corbett  once,  and  he  is  clever 
enough  to  do  it  before  many  rounds 
have  been  fought,  you  will  see  Corbett 
drop  and  be  carried  to  his  quarters." 

The  party  began  preparing  a  little  . 
after  9  o'clock  for  the  start  for  the 
arena,  being  due  there  under  the  order 
issued  by  Stuart  at  10  sharp.  Not  much 
preparation  was  necessary.  Fitzsim- 
mons put  on  his  cap  and  was  ready. 
He  wore  over  his  fighting  costume  of 
green  tights  and  colors  a  suit  of  light 
checked  material,  a  blue  sweater  and 
ordinary  shoes.  His  trainers  did  net 
add  to  their  personal  adornment,  wear- 
ing their  customary  clothes— a  red 
sweater,  a  pair  of  old  trousers  and  sh'^og 
to  match. 

HIS  WIFE  CONFIDENT. 

Before  leaving  the  house  Bob  kissed 
the  baby  and  Mrs.  Fitzsimmons,  and 
the  latter  said  to  him:  "I'll  expect  to 
hear  good  news  from  you."  "You  will," 
replied  Fitz.  She  had  no  intention  of 
being  present  at  the  fight,  but  arrange- 
ments had  been  made  for  a  courier  ser- 
vice between  the  arena  and  Cook's 
ranch,  so  she  would  know  without  delay 
what  was  transpiring  In  the  ring.  The 
little  party  left  the  ranch  In  ample  lime 
to  make  the  journey  of  three  miles, 
driving  leisurely.  The  helpers  went 
ahead  to  get  things  in  readiness  at  the 
dressing  room.  Fitzsimmons  and 
Julian  rode  In  one  bu'ggy  and  Roeber, 
Stelzner  and  Hickey  In  another  close 
behind  and  within  talking  distance. 

The  road  from  the  ranch  to  Carson  is 
not  lined  with  objects  of  interest.  It 
winds  through  a  maze  of  sage  brush 


(Continued  oo  pa«e  6.) 


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SUICIDE 


Youn^  Woman  From  St 
Louis  Takes  Her  Life 
at  Chicago. 


Shipped    Her  Trunk    Home 

and  Shot  Herself  In 

the  Head. 


W  J.  Johnson,  a  Stock  Buyer, 

Took  a  Fatal  Dose  of 

Morphine. 


MakingrttaelMibf 
1>*PPT  i^  a  woman* 
ly  woman  'a  best 
pleasure.  It  in 
easy  to  make  a 
healthy  baby  hap- 
py. Such  a  baby 
IS  bom  happy. 
Smiles  and  dim- 
ples are  as  natural 
to  it  as  fretfulnes* 
is  to  a  puny,  sick- 
ly child.  It  rests  with  every  woman  wheth- 
er her  baby  shall  be  healthy  and  happy,  or 
puny  and  miserable.  If  during:  the  period 
preceding  maternity  a  woman  takes  proper 
I  care  of  the  organs  upon  which  the  perpetu- 
ation of  the  race  depends,  she  insures  the 
health  of  herself  and  child.  It  is  easy  to  do 
this.  The  proper  medicine  is  at  hand. 
Over  90,000  women  have  testified  in  writ* 
ingf  to  the  value  of  it. 

The  organs  that  make  wifehood  and  moth- 
erhood possible  are  directly  acttrd  upon  bf 
Dr.  Pierce's  Favorite  Prescription,  ft 
makes  them  strong  and  healthy.  It  cures 
all  weakness  and  disease.  It  prepares  for 
maternity.  It  does  away  with  the  discom- 
forts of  the  expectant  period.  It  insures 
baby's  health  and  makes  its  advent  easy 
and  almost  painless.  Druggists  sell  more 
of  the  ''  Favorite  Prescription  "  than  of  all 
other  similar  medicines  combined. 


THE  DULUTH  EVENINa  HERALD.  WEDNESDAY 


Board  of  public  works:  Approval  of 
the  bond  of  the  Union  Casualty  Surety 
company— Received  and  filed;  report 
recommending  street  sprinkling  for  the 
coming  season— Str«?ets,  alleys  and  side- 
walks; report  on  claim  of  Frank  PlUt- 
nlsky— Claims  and  accounts;  estimate 
to  Samuel  Menlce — Drains,  sewers  and 
park.s;  estimate  to  Emil  Ebert— Claims 
and  accounts;  estimate  to  N.  F.  Hugo. 
Ironton  Structural  Steel  company  and  I 
King  &  Steele— Waterworks. 


REPORTS  OF  OFFICERS. 
Annual  report  of  the  city  treasurer- 
Referred  to  auditing  and  finance  com- 
mittee. 


Chicago.  March  17.— After  carefully 
trying  to  conceal  her  identity,  the 
daughter  of  Gustave  Strassinger,  a 
wealthy  resident  of  Webster  Grove,  a 
suburb  of  St.  Louis,  committed  sui- 
cide by  shooting  herself  in  the  head  at 
her    boarding   house,    304   Chicago   ave- 


"  I  am  anxious  to  add  ray  testimonial  to  your 
'  Favorite  Prescription.'  •  writes  Mrs.  C.  O.  Bran- 
don, of  Fort  Grant,  Graham  Co.,  Aris.  "I  had 
been  u.viug  the  '  Prescription '  for  several  months 
previous  to  my  confinement,  and  I  am  sure  I 
have  been  t>enefited  greatly  from  the  time  I  com- 
menced to  use  it.  I  feel  fully  as  well  as  ever  I 
did  in  mv  life.  Up  to  the  very  day  when  the 
baby  was  bom  I  did  all  my  own  housework;  and 
during  coniinement  I  had  not  the  least  symptoms 
of  fever.  The  'ordeal'  was  nothing  to  what 
I  expected." 

The  woman  who  owns  a  copy  of  Dr. 
Pierce's  Common  Sense  Medical  Adviser 
probably  does  not  realize  at  once  all  that 
she  gave  in  exchange  for  it.  There  was  the 
price  of  $1.50.  That  paid  for  the  large  vol- 
,,       .        ,  ,...,.  "»"«  of  i«*  pages.    Then,  as  day  by  day 

nue.  Her  trunk  and  other  belongings  ,  she  looked  into  these  pages,  one  by  one  she 
had  been  shipped  to  St.  Louis  and  only  gave  away  her  anxieties  for  her  family's 
a  few  torn  scraps  of  wrapping  paper  health.  She  learned  how  to  make  her  chil- 
from    Missouri    business    houses      were  '  dren  well.     In  the  chapters  especially  treat- 


left   in   the  room. 

The  woman,  who  was  about  26 
years  of  age,  and  gave  her  name  as 
Strassinger,  applied  for  a  room  of  the 
landlady.  Mrs.  J.  Van  Xes.s.  about  ten 
days  ago.  She  said  she  was  in  search 
of  work  as  a  milliner  and  had  been 
direct«'d  to  her  lodging  house  by  Mrs. 
Evans,  forewoman  in  a  millinery  es- 
tablishment. During  her  stay,  how- 
ever, she  had  manifested  little 
anxiety  to  obtain  work,  spending  her 
time  in    her   room   or  attending  mati 


ing  of  her  own  weaknesses,  she  learned  the 
causes  and  the  cures.  680,000  copies  have 
been  sold  at  $1.50  each.  Now  an  edition 
in  strong  paper  covers,  will  be  distributed 
FREE.  Send  21  one-cent  stamps  to  World's 
Dispensary  Medical  Association,  Buffalo, 
N.  Y.,  to  cover  the  cost  of  mailing  only. 
Send  31  stamps  for  cloth  binding. 


REPORTS  OF  STANDING  COMMIT- 
TEES. 
To  the  President  and  Common  Council: 
Your  committee  on  auditing  and  fi- 
nance, to  whom  was  referred  the  com- 
munication of  C.  E.  Lovett,  city  comp- 
trollt'r,  with  reference  to  the  conditicn 
of  the  account  books  of  his  predecessor, 
having  considered  the  same,  recom- 
mend the  adoption  of  the  following  rcs- 
olutioti: 

I.  J.  RICHARDSON, 

H.   BURG, 

C.  E.  SHANNON. 

Committee. 
Resolved,  that  the  communication  of 
the  city  comptroller  with  reference  to  the 
condition  of  the  books  and  accounts  of 
his  predecessor  be  and  the  same  Is  re- 
ferred to  the  city  attorney  with  in- 
structions to  call  upon  the  bondsmen  of 
the  late  comptroller  to  act  with  the  city 
in  completing  said  books  and  correcting 
his  accounts  to  the  end  of  his  last  fiscal 
year. 

Alderman  Richardson  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution,  and  it  was 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas— Aldermen     Burg,     Crassweller, 
Dahl,    Duren,    Hanson,   Harker,   Jeffer- 
son,    Richardson,     Rowley,     Shannon. 
Simpson,   Sang,    Stevens.  Tischer,   Tre- 
villion,   Mr.   President— 16. 
Nays — None. 
Passed  March  15,  1897. 
Approved  March  16,  1897. 

HENRY  TRUELSEN. 

Mayor. 


qL^^^^I^*"*"  ^-  ^   S'mpson  and  C.  E. 

heiSS  \.**.^^*"''t"  °^  *^«  board  of 
neaitn,   would   most     restwctfullv     r#.- 

flSd  thaViif  ''^,^'^-^^  Ih^saml  and 
nnd  that  »ho  action  by  this  council  is 
necessary  in  the  premises. 

PRA^K     CRASSWELiLBR, 
GEORGE   TISCHER 
G,   E.    DUREN, 

The  report  was  received.^'"'"*"^' 


MARCH    17,    18br. 


To^^the  President  and  Common  Coun- 

o«I.°o'[,^°"?™'"®®  °"  P"b"c  offices,  offl- 
^2^J*"''.^'^^'<'"«'  *°  ^hom  was  ref^- 
M  ««f.?S*"^'"'^"*  ^y  *he  mayor  of  W. 
r/.'.Ki.  ^  *•''  ^  member  of  the  board  of 
public  works,  having  considered  the 
same,  recommend  the  adoption  of  the 
following  resolution: 

PRANK    CRASSWELLER, 
(}EORGE   TISCHER, 
<}.  E.  DUREN, 

■a       ,      ,  Committee. 

KesolvfHl,  that  the  appointment  by  the 
mayor  of  W.  h.  Smith  as  a  member  of 
tne  board  of  public  works  to  succeed 
M.  J.  Davis,  be  and  Is  hereby  con- 
Prmed. 

Alderman  Crassweller  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution,  and  it  v.-a.^ 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

T>  ^^^'1:7''^'*^*''''"*"  Burg,  Crassweller. 
Dahl,  Duren,  Harker,  Jefferson,  t'?ich- 
ardson,  Rowley,  Shannon,  Simpson, 
Sang.  Tischer— 12. 

Nays— Aldermen  Hanson,  Stevens, 
Trevlllion.   Mr.   President— 4. 

Passed  March  15,  .1897. 

Approved  March  16,    1897. 

HENRY  TRUELSEN, 
*  Mayor. 


about  five  miles  long,  on  which  turtle 
shells  are  taken,     belonging    to    Great 


nee  performances  at  the  Grand  Opera  ■  P'"'/^'"-  '^^heivas  the  Island  of  Pantel- 
and  the  other  theaters  Her  prepar-  i  -^  ^^  *"  ^'"''^  "^  fifty-eight  square 
ations  for  suicide  were  deliberate  One'  '"''^^'  ^  Population  of  about  7000,  pro. 
week  ago  .she  had  Mrs.  Van  Ness  as<?i.st  i  """^"'"s  ""**  fruits  and  has  a  convenient 
her  in  drawing  up  a  power  of  attor-  1  ^?^\-  Oppodilo.  at  its  northwest  point, 
ney.  and  sent  it.  with  her  bank  book  1  i"  =  ^^  ^^^  circumstances  the  Echo  De 
to    St.    Loul.s.    where    she    hinted      her  expresses  the  hope  that  the  pow- 

father  is  a   wealthy   contractor  I  ^3'*'  ^^'"  interfere  and  refuse  to  permit 

Gustave    Strassinger.    who     is     con-  transfer  of  the  islands  referred  to. 

nected  with  the  woodenware  store      of 


Samuel    C.    Cupples,     St.    Louis,    said 
last    night    that    his    daughters    trunk 
had  been  received  by  him  and  that  he 
had    supposed    she    was    on    her 
home.    He   could    give   no   reason 
she^  should    take    her    life. 

W.  J.  Johnson,  formerly  a  wealthy 
stock  buyer,  of  Indianapolis,  was 
found  deal  last  night  in  a  Clarke 
street  hotel.  The  body  was  wasted  al- 
most to  a  skeleton.  With  other  evidence 


DRAPER  AND  TOWER. 

Washington  special  to  Chicago  Record- 
way  I  The  pre.sldent  has  acquired  the  habit  of 
why  I  olfering  the  Havana  consulate  to  those 
who  come  for  t-mbassies.  He  has  done 
this  twice  that  we  know  of.  and  perhap.s 
in  several  other  cases  that  are  not  an- 
nounced. Both  Mr.  Draper  of  Massiichu- 
setts  and  Mr.  Tower  of  Pennsvlvania, 
who  are  candidates  for  the  German  em- 
bassy,  as  previously  stated 


and      thnt        fhSa    r-o", ""  •"  ■""'^y"=^"«.  "ui  neiiner  or  tnein 
ana     mat       this    has  given  up  the  hope  of  either  goln?  to 


found  in  the  room  it  led  the  police   to  '  t'5''<^hes,  have  had  the  opportunity  to  de- 
conclude    that   his   last   davs   had    been  •  ut  t**^.  honor   of   becoming   Gen.    Fltz- 
spent    in   dissipation,    and"   that       thi»    v"'?^~.V.t*l''..^"^?^^^or.  but  neither  of  the 
fact   had  induced  him    to  commit  sui- 
cide  by  swallowing  morphine 
NOT   HIS   DAUGHTER 
ft.    Louis.    March    17.-Gustav   Stras- 
singer   a  resident  of  Webster  Grove,  a 
.-suburb  of  this  city,  denies  that  the  girl 
who    killed    herself    in    Chicago    is    his 
daughter.  His  only  child  is  a  girl  3  years 


To  the  President  and  Common  Council: 
Your     committee  on   claims  and  ac- 
counts, to  whom  was  referred  pay  rolls 
for    waterworks      construction,    havin-^ 
con.sldered    the    same,    recommend    the 
adoption  of  the  following  resolution: 
E.  R.  JEFFERSON, 
DAVID   SANG, 
G.  E.  DUREN. 

Committee. 
Resolved,  that  the  pay  rolls  for 
waterworks  construction  to  March  1.'., 
1897,  amounting  to  $1813.07,  be  and  are 
hereby  ailowed,  and  the  city  clerk  is 
directed  to  draw  an  order  on  the  citv 
treasurer  to  pay  the  same. 

Alderman  Jefferson  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  resolution,  and  it  wa.-: 
declared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas— .\ldermen     Burg.     Crassweller, 
Dahl,    Duren,    Hanson,   Harker,   Jeffer- 
son,    Richardson,     Rowley,     Shannon. 
Simpson.   Sang,    Stevens,  Tischer,   Tre- 
vlllion,  Mr.  President— 16. 
Nays — None. 
Passed  March  15,  1897. 
Approved  March  16,  1897. 

HENRY  TRUELSEN, 

Mayor. 


To  the  President  and  Common  Coun- 
cil: 

Your  committee  on  waterworks,  to 
whom  was  referred  estimates  to  con- 
tractors, having  considered  the  same, 
recommend  the  adoption  of  the  follow- 
ing resolution: 

J.   W.   ROWLEY, 
C.   E.    SHANNON, 
DAVID  SANG, 

Committee. 
Resolved,  that  the  estimates  to  con- 
tractors on  the  construction  of  water- 
works, approved  by  the  board  of  public 
works  March  15,  1897,  be  and  are  here- 
by allowed,  and  the  city  clerk  Is  direct- 
ed to  draw  orders  on  the  city  treasurer 
to  pay  the  same,  as  follows: 
N,    F.    Hugo,    for    manufactur- 
ing 42-inch  force  main    $5,700  67 

Ironton  Structural     Steel     com 

pany,   for  steel   plate   5,718  23 

King   &   Steele,    for   laying   In- 
take   pipe     3.995  00 

Alderman  Rowley  moved  the  adop- 
tion of  the  resolution,  and  it  was  de- 
clared adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas — Aldermen    Burg,     Crassweller, 
Dahl,   Duren,  Hanson,   Harker,   Jeffer- 
son,   Rlchard.son,      Rowley,      Shannon. 
Simpson.   Sang.   Stevens.  Tischer,   Tre- 
vlllion, Mr.  President— 16. 
Nays— None. 
Passed  March  15,  1897. 
Approved  March  16.  1897. 

HENRY    TRUELSEN, 
Mayor. 


ond  street;  on  Second  street  from 
Twenty-first  avenue  east  to  Eighteenth 
trenueieast;  on  Eighteenth  avenue  east 
from  Second  street  to  Third  street;  on 
Third  street  from  Elgllteenth  avenue 
east,  to.  Sixteenth  avenue  east;  on  Six* 
teenth  avenue  east  to, Fourth  street 
and  on  Foorth  street  from  Sixteenth 
avenue  east  to  Fifteenth  avenue  east- 
and  that  said  board  cause  said  work 
to  be  let  by  contract,  as  provided  by 
law. 

Alderman   Rowley   moved   the  adop- 
tion of  the  resolution,  and  it  was  de- 
clared  adopted  upon  the  following  vote- 
Yeas  —  Burg.        Crassweller,      Dahl. 
Duren,     Hanson,      Harker.      Jefferson. 
Richardson,  Rowley,     Shannon,     Simp- 
son, Sang,  Tischer,  Trevlllion.  Mr.  Pres- 
ident— 15. 
Nays— Stevens— 1. 
Passed  March  15.  1897. 
Approved  March  16.  1897. 

HENRY  TRUELSEN. 
Mayor. 

UNFINISHED     BUSINESS. 
Upon   motion   of  Alderman   Richard- 
son   the  report  of    the    committee    oh 
auditing  and  finance    relative    to    the 
Bell  charter,  was  taken  from  the  table 
and  read  as  follows: 
To  the  President  and  Common  Council 
of  the  City  of  Duluth: 
Your   committee     on     auditing    and 
finance,   having  considered  the  matte^ 
of  the  Bell  charter  of  St.  Paul,  In  eon. 
nectlon   with   the  present  condition   of 
the  finances  of     the    city     of     Duluth 
woiild    most    respectfully    recommend 
that  the  provisions  of  said  charter    be 
not  adopted  as  a  general   charter  for 
the  cities  of  St.  Paul,  Minneapolis  and 
Duluth,   as  it  is  entirely  Incompatible 
with  our  needs,  and  therefore  not  prac- 
ticable  as  a  set  of  laws  for  the  guid- 
ance of  the  city  of  Duluth. 

I.  J.   RICHARDSON. 

C.  E.  SHANNON. 

H.  BURG, 

...  Committee. 

Alderman  Richardson  moved  the 
adoption  of  the  report,  and  it  was  de- 
clared  adopted  upon  the  following  vote- 

T^'^.f,^;^'^''*^'*'"^"  ^"i"^'  Crassweller,' 
Dahl,  Duren.  Hanson.  Harker.  Rich- 
ardson.  Shannon,  Simpson,  Sang.  Stev- 
ens. Tischer.  Trevlllion  Mr.  President— 
14. 

^Nays— Aldermen     Jefferson.     Rowley 


Contract  Work. 


Oitv"o'f^r?«i,^2*'S.o'  Public  Works, 

5  ^1.5^  Duluth,  Minn.,  March  8.  1897. 

Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
board  of  public  Works  in  and  fo^  the 
S^^a?%°J/*^l,  ^'^y  °"  DSluth°'Mln^ 
2  m^on  thf*'b9°f  *^l  *"  ^^^  city  until  10 
ftivT  *'  °"  the  22nd  day  of  March  A  D 
18?J. /or  the  construction  of  tile  or  efan- 
ollthlc  sidewalk  comers  In  said  cltf  fSr 
the  year  ending  February  ^  iSM^  inl 
cording  to  plans  and  speciflcatlink  on 
file  In  the  office  of  said  board. 

A    certified    check    or    a    bond    with    at 

Rn?*^J^J?aV2^  ^"r^"««  *"  the  sum  Of  flffy 
(5^  dollars  must  accompany  each  bid.  ^ 

"The    said    board    reserves    the    right   to 
reject  any  and  all  bids. 

M.  J.  DAVIS. 
Official:  President. 

(Seal.) 
R.   MIJRCIIISON. 

Clerk    Board    of    Public    Works. 
Duluth   Evening   Herald.   March  8  lOt 


NOTICE. 


FOR 

Liquor  License. 

Notice  Is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  said  city  of  Duluth.  and  filed 
l^fJ^Y  office,  pr.^iying  for  license  to  sell 
h^tox  eating  liquors  for  the  term  com- 
mencing on  March  21,  1£97,  and  terminat- 

nI  ^  wY«?^2^'  ^f  «•  \y  «"«'  Lev7n?  at 
NO.  al  West  Superior  street. 

t^t,  ^P?"^^**.?,"  ^'^  ^^  ^"^ard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth,  at  the  council  chamber 
In  said  city  of  Duluth.  in  St.  Louis  Coun- 
ty,  Minnesota    on  Monday,   the  15th  dav 

^L}^^"^"^'  ^^'  ^t  -30  o'clock  p.  m  of 
that  day.  ^ 

..T'^^^'^Vi  "ly.hand  and  seal  of  said  city 
1K»7  '  ^®'  ^^^  "'  March.   A.   D 

C.   E.  RICHARDSON, 

^rCorporate  Seal.)  ^"^  '''^'''^ 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  2  to  17. 


,,^?"<^^  '8  %efey  Slveh  fktit  the  under- 
signed have  been  duly  appointed  bv  the 

asTr^JJ^.rr""  °'  the  city  of  DJli?J 
cled?^«^KT»f"  "^  condemnation  pro- 

Which  mayYe  ^^SSd  ly%ht^"Sfn'J 
of  private  property  for  th/  Jtr.L  ^ 
ax^qujrlng  a  right-y.way  b?  thf  Mt'^i 
of  Duluth  for  a  force  mil n^f or ^^atlr'^ 
works,  from  the  pump  houS  now  in 
process  of  erection  on  lot  1  section  ^?  ' 
township  51  north,  range  13  west  ?o 
Lester  river.  The  property  to'  i« 
acquired  being  aa  follows:  to-wlt^ 

(1)  A  strip  of  land  66  feet  in  width'' 
the  center  line  of  which  is  described  as 
norJ^h"".  *t^'*"  Commencing  or.  the 
w^   *"'i^  boundary  line  of  a  tract  here 

I  sUe%of^^''  '°  V^  ^'^^  °f  Duluth 'I;, 
a  Site  for  a  pumping  station  for  water- 
works  on  lot  1.  section  35.  townshfp  5I 

2a2?rl^Trf  "  ^:t^'-  *'  »  »*°'"t  24.23  ?ee 
ITJ'r!^  'r?"^  tbe  northwesterly  cor- 
Tr!Jl^  ."^'•^  t*"^^*  proceeding  thence 
northerly  on  a  line  parallel  with  thi 
1!2\^^X  boundary  line  of  said  traSi 
deeded  for  a  pumping  station  a  d1^ 
tance  of  566  feet  to  a  point 


(2)    A  strip  of  land  66  feet  in  width 


fl^Jl^^f.  °^  ^^^  ^^'^^^  heretofore  deeded 
to  the  city  of  Duluth  for  a  pumping  stl^ 

on"  'l.i°'  l-t^^'}?^  ?f:51.?3.  iSealur^ed 


MOTIONS  AND  RESOLUTIONS 
Alderman  Burg  offered  a  resolution 
authorizing  the  committee  on  city 
property,  buildings  and  markets  to 
have  the  necessary  repairs  made  to  the 
city  hall. 

Upon  motion  of  Alderman  Jefferson 
the  resolution  was  amended  by  direct- 
ing the  committee  to  report  what  re- 
pairs are  necesary  and  the  probable 
cost. 


NOTICE. 


old 


A  DOUBTFUL  RUMOR. 

Tim    Byrnes    Talked    of   Fop 
Solicitor  General. 

Washington.  March  17.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Minnesotans  in  Wa««h- 
inston  today  are  circulating  a  rumor 
tha  President  McKinley  has  been  seri- 
ously considering  T.  E.  Byrnes,  of  Min- 
neapolis, as  a  good  man  for  United 
States  solicitor  general.  The  rumor 
however,  cannot  be  verified  from  any 
official  source.  This  is  the  place  that 
R.  G.  Evans  is  seeking,  and  many  have 
believed  in  the  past  that  he  might  suc- 
ceed. 


MANY  DEAD  CATTLE. 

One    Big    Rancher    Has   Lost 
About  250,000. 

Minneapolis,  March  17.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Specials  to  the  Journal 
from  Mandan  and  Dickinson.  N  D 
state  that  it  is  generallv  believed 
among  cpttle  men  that  7.=;  per  cent  of 
range  an  mals  have  already  succumbed 
to  the  w.nter,  the  chinook  of  yesterday 
coming  too  late  to  save'  them.  It  is  im- 
possible to  travel  over  the  range  and 
no  exact  figures  can  be  had. 

Bad  lands  ranges,  which  have  been 
operated  the  past  few  years  will  have 
but  few  cattle  this  season.  It  is  stated 
^5^..^**'"re  Wibaux,  the  big  cattleman 
of  Wibaux.  Mont.,  and  Dakota,  puts  his 
losses  at  $1,000,000.  Last  fall  he  put 
20O.OOO  young  Utah  cattle  on  the  ranges 
and  all  are  dead. 


CUBAN  EXPEDITIONS. 

Three  Steamers  Seen  Which 
Were  Heavily  Loaded. 

Key  West,  Fla..  March  17.— A  fishing 
schooner  that  came  in  late  last  night 
reports  seeing  three  large  steamers 
passing  Cape  Florida  island,  Friday 
noon,  going  South.  They  were  well  out 
and  seemed  to  be  under  full  speed.  One 
of  the  vessels  had  an  unusually  large 
number  of  men  on  deck,  while  one  of 
the  others  seemed  heavily  laden  No 
names  could  be  made  out,  seemingly 
being  covered  up. 

This  seemingly  corroborates  the  leav- 
ing of  the  expedition  from  Key  Palo 
Alto  Thursday.  It  indicates  that  they 
secured  the  immense  amount  of  ma- 
terial stored  on  the  keys,  and  that 
Capts.  Loomis  and  Colonels  Nunez  and 
Carl)o,  knew  their  business  when  there. 

Cubans  here  now  openly  state  that 
three  large  expeditions  have  left  the 
United  States  shores  within  the  last 
three  days. 


Berlin  or  to  Rome.  Mr.  Draper  is  a 
nillllonaire  manufacturer  of  cotton  ma- 
chinery, and  has  fitted  out  more  th  r.i 
half  the  mills  in  Xew  England.  He  hus 
a  good  war  record,  and  bears  wounds  >•« 
pr<x»f  of  his  gallantry.  Mrs.  Draper  was 
a  blue-grass  belle.  She  comes  from  the 
celebrate*!  Preston  family  of  Kentucky, 
and  Is  a  large  and  handsome  woman  with 
a  pink  and  white  complexion  and  an 
abundance   of  good    nature. 

Charlemagne  Tower,  who  has  been  prc- 
sente<l  by  the  Pennsylvania  delegation  a.>< 
ambassador    to    Berlin,    is    a    good    doil 
more  of  a  man  than  was  originally  siii)- 
posetl— a    student,    scholar,    traveler    and 
author.      While    his    manners       were    ac- 
quired  by   foreign   travel   and   would   not 
be    popular   in    a   mining   camp.- and    lii.s 
garments  are  well  made  of  the  finest  tex- 
ture, he  is  said  to  be  anything  but  a  dud-- 
He  IS  about  ^  years  of  age.   a  graduate 
of    Lehiffh     university,     and     a     practieaj 
engineer    and      chemist.      After     he      leit 
college    he   spent    several       years    on    the 
Northern    Pacific    railroad    -Huperintendini; 
the   work  of  construction.   Since   then    he 
has   followed   his  natural   inclinations   f.»i 
historical  research,  and  he  has  been  able 
to  afford  that  luxury,   for  his  father  am! 
mother,    who    were    of    the    bluest    Phil- 
adelphia blood,  left  him  a  fortune  of  ^V)  - 
eooooo.     During  the  last  ten  years  he  ha'-- 
spent  most  of  his  time  abroad,  not  as   a 
tourist,    but   as   a   student.    He  has   taken 
courses   in   history  in  several  unlversllU's 
upon  the  continent,   and  has  spent   PiU'  '1 
time  in  Spain  and  France.  He  speaks  all 
the   modern    languages   fluenUy.    and    has 
searched  the  principal  libraries  of  Eumpe 
for  historical  material.     He  Is  the  author 
of   several    historical    works,    including   a 
life   of  Lafayette,    which   Is   described   !i« 
a  classic. 

During  the  la.st  year  or  two  he  has 
lectured  before  the  naval  war  college  m 
Newport,  and  naval  officers  say  that  h's 
lectures  are  unsurpassed.  He  has  a  sum- 
mer home  at  Newport,  a  wife,  and  four 
or  nve  little  children,  and  although  he  Is 
a  tremendous  swell,  he  does  not  belong 
to  the  fast  set.  He  Is  more  a  student  than 
a  society  man.  and  has  never  sought  so- 
cial distinction.  Nor  has  he  ever  .sought 
an  office  or  taken  part  in  politics  except 
within  the  last  year  or  two.  when  he 
became  Interested  In  the  municipal  re- 
forms in  Philadelphia.  He  has,  howev.^r 
expressed  a  desire  to  enter  the  diplom.\tic 
service,  so  when  the  president  askei 
Senator  Quay  and  Senator  Penros.^  to 
name  a  man  for  the  German  embassy 
they  brought  him  out.  The  president  too'k 
the  matter  under  consideration,  and  at-- 
I  have  said,  offered  Mr.  Tower  the  Ha- 
vana consulate,  which  he  declined  to  ac- 
cept, because  he  does  not  think  the  cli- 
mate   suitable    for    his    little    children. 


OFFICIAL 


WAIL  FROM  FRANCE. 

Over  a  British  Acquisition  of 
New  Territory. 

Paris,  March  17.— The  Echo  De  Paris 
says  it  understands  that  Italy  is  on  the 
eve  of  ceding  to  Great  Britain  the 
Island  of  Pantellaria,  situated  sixty 
miles  southwest  of  the  Island  of  Sicily, 
and  about  half  way  between  the  coast 
of  Africa  and  the  Sicilian  coast,  in  ex- 
change for  the  Island  of  Perim.  off  the 
Arabian  coast,  in  the  strait  of  Babel 
Mandeb  and  at  the  entrance  of  the  Red 
sea. 

The  Island  ©f  Perim  is  a  bare  place. 


PROCEEDINGS. 


Council  Chamber. 
Duluth,  Minn.,  March  15,  1897. 

Regular  meeting. 

Roll  call. 

Present— Aldermen  Burg.  Crassweller. 
Dahl,  Duren,  Hanson,  Harker,  Jeffer- 
son. Richardson.  Rowley,  Shannon, 
bimpson,  San-g,  Stevens,  Tischer.  Tre- 
vlllion, Mr.  President— 16. 

Absent— None. 


To  the   President  and   Common  Coun- 
cil: 

Your  committee  on  claims  and  ac- 
counts, to  whom  was  referred  esti- 
mate to  Emil  Ebert,  having  considered 
the  same,  recommend  the  adoption  of 
the  following  resolution: 

E.    R.    JEFFERSON. 
G.    E.    DUREN. 
DAVID    SANG. 

Committee. 
Resolved  that  the  estimate  made 
March  9.  1897.  by  the  board  of  public 
works,  to  Emil  Ebert.  on  his  contract 
for  lighting  and  maintaining  lamps  on 
Park  Point,  amounting  to  $25,  be  and 
is  hereby  allowed,  and  the  city  clerk 
is  directed  to  draw  an  order  on  the 
city  treasurer  to   pay  the  same. 

Alderman  Jefferson  moved  the  adop- 
tion of  the  resolution,  and  It  wa.s  d"~ 
clared  adopted  upon  the  following 
vote: 

Yeas— Aldermen  Burg.  Crassweller 
Dahl.  Duren.  Hanson,  Harker,  Jeffer- 
son, Richardson,  Rowley,  Shannon. 
Simpson,  Sang,  Stevens,  Tischer 
Trevlllion,  Mr.  President— 16. 

Nays— None. 

Passed   March   15,    1897. 

Approved  March  16,  1897. 

HENRY  TRUELSEN. 
Mayor. 


To  the  President  and  Common   Coun- 
cil of  the  City  of  Duluth: 
Your  committee  on  ordinance  and  ju- 
diciary,   tow   hom   was  referred    H     F 
438  authorizing  cities  of  over  .'M).000  in- 
habitants to  contract  for  the  collection 
removal    and    disposition    of     garbage 
therein,  and  the  bill  for  an  act  to  em- 
power  towns,    cities   and    villages     to 
cause    bodies    to    be    disinterred    from 
abandoned    cemeteries,    etc.,      and      to 
dedicate    and    improve    such    cemeter- 
es  for  public  park.s.  etc.,  said  bills  hav- 
ing been  submitted  to  this  council  for 
approval    by    Representative      P       C 
Schmidt,    would    most   repectfully     re- 
port  having   considered   the  same,    we 
are  of  the  opinion  that  said  bills  con- 
tain   nothing   which    would    be    to    the 
disadvantage  of   the  city  of  Duluth 


To  the  President  and  Common   Coun- 
cil: 

Your  committee  on  ^vaterworks.  to 
whom  was  referred  the  communication 
from  the  board  of  public  works  dated 
March  6.  1897.  relative  to  specials  for 
force  main  and  other  water  pipes,  hav- 
ing considered  the  same,  recommend 
the  adoption  of  the  following  resolu- 
tion: 

J.  W.  ROWLEY. 
C.  E.   SHANNON, 
DAVID    SANG, 

Committee. 
It  is  hereby  ordered  by  the  common 
council  of  the  city  of  Duluth.  that  the 
board  of  public  works  cause  to  be  fur- 
nished   and    delivered    where    required 
at  the  trenches  all  the  special  castings 
required  for  the  42-inch  force  main  of 
the    proposed    municipal      waterworks 
system,  the  blow-offs  for  same  and  for 
the  pipes  in,  around  and  in  connection 
with  the  low  pressure  reservior  at  Thir- 
ty-third avenue  east  and  Fourth  street. 
and  that  said  board  cause  said  work  to 
be  let  by  contract  as  provided  by  law. 
Alderman   Rowley   moved   the   adop- 
ti<m  of  the  resolution,  and  it  was  de- 
clared adopted  upon  the  following  vote: 
Yeas — Aldermen    Burg,     "Crassweller, 
Dahl,   Duren.   Hanson.   Harker.   Jeffer- 
son.   Richardson.      Rowley.      Shannon, 
Simpson,    Sang,   Stevens  Tischer,   Tre- 
vlllion. Mr.  President— 16. 
Neys — None. 
Passed   March  15.  1897. 
Approved  March  16.  1S97. 

HENRY  TRUELSEN. 
Mayor. 


The 


C. 

E. 

SHANNON, 

c. 

M. 

SIMPSON. 

I. 

J. 

RICHARDSON. 

Committee. 

report 

was 

received. 

Upon   motion   of  Alderman    Shannon 


To  the  President  and  Common  Coun- 
cil of  the  City  of  Duluth: 
Your  committee  on  police  and  li- 
cense, to  whom  was  referred  applica- 
tions for  license,  having  considered  the 
same,  recommend  the  adoption  of  the 
following    resolution: 

THOS.   DAHL, 
ARTHUR  J.   HARKER, 
FRANK  CRASSWELL'ER, 
-^       ,  Committee. 

Resolved,  that  the  application  of 
Gust  Levin  for  liquor  license  at  No. 
227  West  Superior  street;  of  J.  Atkin- 
son for  liquor  license  at  No.  203  West 
Superior  street;  of  M.  J.  Arimond  for 
liquor  license  at  No.  415  East  Fourth 
street;  the  application  of  B.  H.  Relbel 
for  transfer  to  him  at  No.  213  West  Su- 
perior street  of  the  license  heretofore 
granted  to  John  Shea  at  No  28  Twen- 
tieth avenue  west,  and  the  application 


the  rninutes  of  the  meetings  of  March  8  I  °'  Kozlarek  &   Sadowski   for 
and  9  were  approved.  '  ~      *    "    ' 


fer 


a  trans- 


PRESENTATION       OF       PETITIONS 
AND    OTHER    COMMUNICATIONS 
From  City  Attorney  Richards,  recom- 
mendation of  John  E.  Davies  as  assist- 
ant city  attorney;  Duluth  City  band   re- 
quest     for      patronage;      Cigarmakers' 
union.        recommending        union-made 
Cigars— Received  and  filed;  V.   S    Wil- 
kinson,   disclaiming   any    rights   under 
the  old  soldier  act— Public  offices    offi- 
cers and   elections;   Swedish   Glee'  club 
and  Normanna  choir,  for  free  use  of  the 
armory— Referred  to  the  armory  board- 
E.   L.   PhiJlips.   for  permission  to  con- 
nect with  sewer  in  Fourth  avenue  east 
—Drains,  sewers  and  parks;  waterworks 
pay   roll— Claims  and   accounts;   M.   J 
pahlsten,    for  liquor  license  at   No    la 
Second  avenue  west;     Koziarek  A.  Sa- 
tT!^  «?'■  f^n'''^''  of  liquor  license  to 
No.  509  West  Superior  street;  H.  Brown 
for  liquor  license  at  No.  333  West  Su' 
perior  street— PoUoe  and  license 


i«n^  w  **I^  «."^."°'"  license  from  No. 
1605  West  Michigan  street  to  No.  519 
West  Superior  street,  be  and  are  here- 
by granted,  and  the  bonds  accompany- 
ing said  applications  are  hereby  ap- 
proved.  ^ 

Alderman  Dahl  moved  the  adoption  of 
the  resolution,  and  it  was  declared 
ac^pted  upon   the  following  vote- 

nJhTn^i''^'""^"    ""''«•     Crassweller, 
fon    'tjV.I'^^"^  Hanson,   Harker.   Jeffer 
son,    Richardson,     Rowley 
Simpson,       Sang.       Stevens. 
Trevlllion,  Mr.  President— 16 
Passed   March   15,    1897 
Approved  March  16,  1897 

HENRY  TRUELSEN, 
Mayor. 

'^cii**Jff  f>rf"^1f"^  f",?  Common  Coun- 
cil  of  the  City  of  Duluth: 

flel^^o^TT'*,*,**  °"  P"^"'^  offices,  of- 
Vf.*i?^^1**  elections,  to  whom  was  re- 


Shannon, 
Tischer, 


ferfed  the.  appointment  by  the 


To  the  President  and  Common  Coun- 
cil: 

Your  committee  on  waterworks,  to 
whom  was  referred  communication 
from  the  board  of  public  works,  dated 
March  6,  1897.  relative  to  castings  for 
use  in  connection  with  blow-offs,  and 
piping  in  connection  with  low  service 
reservoir,  having  considered  the  same, 
recommend  the  adoption  of  the  follow- 
ing resolution: 

J.  W.  ROWLEY, 
C.   E.    SHANNON, 
DAVID  SANG. 

Committee. 
It  is  hereby  ordered  by  the  common 
council  of  the  city  of  Duluth  that  the 
board  of  public  works  cause  to  be  fur- 
nished in  place  the  cast  Iron  pipe  and 
specials  required  at  the  several  blow- 
offs  numbered  from  one  to  seven  along 
the  line  of  the  force  main  of  the  pro- 
posed municipal  waterworks  system, 
and  around,  in,  and  in  connection  with 
the  low  service  reservoir  at  Fourth 
street,  between  Thirty-fourth  and 
Thirty-first  avenues  east,  and  that 
^aid  board  cause  said  work  to  be  let 
by  contract  as  provided  by  law. 

Alderman   Rowley   moved   the  adop- 
tion of  the  resolution,  and  it  was  de- 
clared adopted  upon  the  following  vote: 
Yeas— Aldermen    Burg,      Crassweller. 
Dahl.   Duren.   Hanson.   Harker.   Jeffer- 
son,     Richardson,    Rowley.      Shannon. 
Simpson,   Sang,   Stevens,  Tischer.   Tre- 
vlllion.  Mr.   President— 16. 
Nays — None. 
Passed  March  15,  1897. 
Approved  March  16,  1897. 

HENRY  TRUELSEN. 
Mayor. 

To  the  President  and  Common  Council: 
Your  committee  on  waterworks,  to 
whom  was  referred  the  report  of  the 
board  of  public  works,  dated  March  1, 
18517.  relative  to  the  manufacture  and 
laying  of  a  .se-lnch  distributing  main, 
having  considered  the  same,  recom- 
mend the  adoption  of  the  following  res- 
olution. 

J.  W.  ROWLEY, 
C.  E.  SHANNON, 
DAVID  SANG. 

Committee. 
It  is  hereby  ordered  by  the  common 
council  of  the  city  of  Duluth  that  the 
board  of  public  works  of  said  city 
cause  to  be  manufactured  a  36-Inch 
cast  iron  or  steel  water  pipe,  and  the 
same  to  be  laid  in  trenches  on  the  fol- 
lowing streets  and  avenues,  to-wlt. 
Thirty-third  avenue  east  from  the  pro. 
posed  reservoir  at  Fourth  street  to 
First  street;  on  First  street  from 
Thirty-third  avenue  east  to  Twenty- 
eighth  avenue  east;  on  Twenty-eighth 
avenue  east  from  First  street  to-  Su- 
perior street;  on  Superior  street  from 
Twenty-eighth  avenue  east  to  Twenty- 
first  avenue  east;  on  Twenty-first  ave- 


By  Alderman  Dahl: 

Whereas,  existing  conditions  in  the 
industrial  world  refute  the  constitu- 
tional proposition  which  guarantees  to 
every  citizen  the  right  to  life,  liberty 
and  the  pursuit  of  happiness,  by  per- 
mitting the  monopoly  and  control  of 
those  things  that  are  absolutely  neces- 
sary to  the  indulgence  of  said  rights; 

And  whereas,  the  tendency  of  the 
modern  department  store  "so-called," 
Is  to  monopolize  and  control  every 
branch  of  distribution  to  the  detriment 
of  the  thousands  of  jobbers,  whole- 
salers, retailers  and  their  employes  at 
present  engaged  in  those  occupations; 
and  whereas. 

The  future  welfare  of  this  common- 
wealth depends  upon  the  opportunities 
of  our  citizens  to  profitably  employ 
their  time  and  talents,  which  oppor- 
tunities are  being  gradually  but  surely 
lessened  owing  to  the  department  store 
system;  and  whereas. 

The  department  stores,  while  osten- 
sibly cheapening  the  requisites  of  life, 
are  at  the  same  time  closing  the  ave- 
nues by  which  the  wherewithal  to  se- 
cure said  requisites  can  be  secured;  and 
whereas. 

The  department  stores  destroy  tht 
taxable  value  of  other  properties,  with- 
out contributing  to  the  support  of  the 
municipality  in  a  ratio  commensurate 
with  the  profits  they  derive  therefrom; 
therefore  be  it  resolved, 

That  the  common  council  of  the  city 
of  Duluth,  Minn.,  in  the  interest  of  com- 
mon humanity  in  general  and  this  com- 
monwealth in  particular,  add  its  en- 
dorsement to  senate  file  No.  424.  at  pr-js- 
ent  pending  before  the  senate  of  thit- 
state,  for  the  purpose  of  regulating 
these  mercantile  monopolies;  therefor* 
resolved. 

That  we  solicit  the  co-operation  of 
Senator  Spencer  and  Representative?-: 
Schmidt  and  Laybourn.  of  this  district, 
to  use  their  vote  and  influence  toward 
securing  the  desired  legislation. 

Alderman  Dahl  moved  the  adoptioii 
of  the  resolution,  and  it  was  declared 
adopted  upon  the  following  vote: 

Yeas— Aldermen   Burg.    Dahl.    Duren, 
Hanson.  Harker,  Jefferson,  Richardson. 
Rowley.      Shannon,      Simpson,      Sang 
Stevens,  Tischer,  Trevlllion.  Mr.  Presi- 
dent—15. 
Nays— Alderman  Crassweller— 1. 
Passed  March  15.  1897. 
Approved   March   16.    1897. 

HENRY  TRUELSEN, 

Mayor. 


Ofllce  of  City  Clerk, 

• 

Duluth,  Minn.,  March  6,  1897. 
Notice  is  hereby  given  that  an  assess- 
ment of  damages  made  by  the  commis. 
sioners  in  condemnation  proceedings 
for  obtaining  a  right-of-way  for  public 
thoroughfares  as  shown  by  the  plat  of 
the  same  on  file  in  the  office  of  the  city 
clerk  has  been  returned,  and  the  same 
w  11  be  confirmed  by  the  common  coun- 
cil of  said  city  at  a  meeting  of  said 
common  council,  to  be  held  at  the 
council  chamber,  on  Monday,  March 
22nd,  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m..  unless  objec- 
tions are  made  in  writing  by  persons  In- 
terested in  any  lands  required  to  be 
taken. 

Following  is  a  list  of  the  property  pro- 
posed to  be  so  taken,  with  the  names 
of  the  supposed  owners  and  the  amount 
of  damage  awarded  for  the  taking  of 
same:  " 

Charles  A.  Homer,  James  A.  Gary 
Julian  J  Chlsholm.  For  the  taking  of 
1.345  acres  in  the  neV4  of  the  se%  of  the 
nw%  and  the  ne%  of  nw%  of  section 
13-50-14,  being  a  strip  of  land  66  feet  in 
width  extending  from  First  street,  in 
Gordon  &  Whiting's  addition  to  First 
street,  in  East  Duluth  and  First  addi- 
tion to  East  Duluth.    Damages,  $1. 

Same.  For  the  taking  of  2.02  acres 
m  the  neVi  of  the  nwi4  of  section  13-50- 
14,  being  a  strip  of  land  66  feet  in  width 
the  center  line  of  which  is  described 
as  follows,  to-wit:  Beginning  at  a 
point  on  the  northerly  line  of  section 
13-50-14.  at  the  distance  of  289.8  feet 
westerly  from  the  north  quarter  corner 
of  said  section  13.  thence  extending 
southwesterly  on  a  line  making  an 
^gle  of  47  degrees,  57  minutes,  39  sec- 
onds, to  the  left  of  the  aforesaid  north- 
erly line  of  section  13,  a  distance  of 
1412.09  feet  to  a  point,  the  above  de- 
scribed center  line  being  at  right  angle« 
with  the  line  of  Thirty-fourth  avenue 
east,  as  platted,  (formerly  St.  Clair  ave. 
nue)  in  First  addition  to  East  Duluth 
Damages,  $1.50. 


on  a  line  parallel  with  the  proFoneed 
westerly  line  of  said  tract  and  2!  4 
i^/td'j'tant  easteriy  th^reo?;  Chinee 
proceeding  along  said  line  parallel  wMth 
the  westeriy  line  of  said  tract  150  fee^ 
to  the  right-of-way  of  thrDuluth  & 
Iron  Range  Railroad  company  ^ 

(3)    A  strip  of  land  16  feet  in  width 
the  center  line  of  which  Is  described  ai 
follows    to-wit.    Beginning  at  a  pol^ 
715   feet   northeriy   from   the   northerir 
re'fe??edTo^i^'h  °'.  'K  ''"^^   he^reiSfo^r^ 

city  of  D^i^tt^r'"^  ^^^"  ^^^^^  to  th, 
city  or  Duluth  for  a  pumping  station 
and  measured  on  a  line  parallel  wl?S 
the  pr-olonged  vvesteriy   boundary   line 

eLferiv  *[heL^f"**.»,  ''-2^  ''^'  ^^^^^n? 
easterly  thereof;   thence  proceedine  in 

the   same   direction   and    paraUel    with 

the  westerly  boundary  line  of  said  be. 

fv,i*^    \  ^^I'.P  °'  '^"^  16  feet  In  width 
the  center  line  of  which  is  described  a^ 
follows,     to-wit:      Commencing      at    I 

fhe  Duhith  ir^'^ir'^  boundaA^  line  of 
the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range  railroad  right- 
of-way  on  a  line  parallel  with  the  pro- 
onged  westeriy  boundary  line  of  a 
tract  heretofore  deeded  to  the  city  o? 
Duluth  as  a  site  for  the  pumping  sta- 
tion and  24  23  feet  easterly  of  sa  3  west 
eriy  boundary  line;  thence  proceedinir 
in  the  same  direction  and  parallel  with 
the  westeriy  boundary  line  of  laid 
TheL^  H  "*^""^  °'  ^20.34  feet  to  a  point 
P/"^^-^^»^  S"'*.VP  to  the  left  with 


s^^tion^w/th'  \T  *^  "«  P°'"t  °'  «"tW 
section  with     the     westerly 

line    of   lot   1.    section 

north,  range  13  west. 


35, 


boundary 
township   51 


By  Alderman  Sang: 

Resolved,  that  the  city  attorney  bi 
and  is  hereby  requested  to  report  to  this 
council  what,  if  any.  power  this  counci 
has  to  require  the  fees  received  by  tlu 
city  clerk  and  health  oflflcer  to  be  turnec 
into  the  city  treasury. 

Alderman  Sang  moved  the  adoption 
of  the  resolution,  and  it  was  declared 
adopted  upon  the  followin-g  vote: 

Yeas — Aldermen  Burg.  Crassweller, 
Dahl.  Duren,  Hanson,  Harker,  Jefferson 
Richardson.  Rowley,  Shannon,  Simpson, 
Sang,  Stevens,  Tischer.  Trevlllion.  Mr 
President— 16. 

Nays — None. 

Passed  March  15.  1897. 

Approved  March  16.   1897. 

HENRY  TRUELSEN. 

Mayor. 


William  Howell's  estate.  For  the 
taking  of  0.2  acres  from  the  sw»4  of  sec- 
tion 12-50-14.  being  a  strip  of  land  the 
center  line  of  which  is  described  as  fol- 
lows, to-wit:  Beginning  at  a  point  on 
the  southerly  line  of  section  12  afore- 
said, at  the  distance  of  289.8  feet  west- 
erly from  the  south  quarter  corner  of 
said  section  12,  thence  extending  north- 
easterly on  a  line  making  an  angle  of 
132  degrees.  02  minutes.  21  seconds,  to 
the  right  of  the  aforesaid  southerly  line 
of  section  12—135.81  feet  to  a  point,  the 
above  described  center  line  being  at 
right  angles  with  the  line  of  Thirty- 
fourth  avenue  east  (formerly  St.  Clair 
avenue)  as  platted  in  First  addition  to 
East  Duluth.     Damages,  $0.50. 


Alderman  Stevens  moved  that  \\\ 
proceed  to  ballot  for  assistant  city  at- 
torney. 

Alderman    Sang    moved    to    adjourn 
and  the  motion  was  declared  carried. 
C.  E.  RICHARDSON, 
Clerk  of  the  Common  Council. 
(Corporate  seal.) 


Notice  of  Aiicatioi) 


FOR 


Liquor  License. 


mayor.  9ue  ea«t  from  Superior  itteet  to  Sec - 


STATE  OF  MINNESOTA,   COUNTY   OF 

ST.   LOUIS,   CITY  OF  DULUTH.— SS. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  appllcatioTi 
has  been  made  In  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  said  city  of  Duluth,  and  died 
In  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell 
intoxicating  liquors  for  the  term  com- 
mencing on  March  10,  1897,  and  terminat- 
ing on  March  10,  1898,  by  H.  Brown,  at  No. 
333  West  Superior  street. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth,  at  the  council  chamber  in 
said  city  of  Duluth,  In  St.  Louis  Coun- 
ty, Minnesota,  on  Monday,  the  22d  dav  of 
March.  1897,  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m.  of  that 
day. 

Witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  said  citv 

of  Duluth,  this  9th  day  of  March,  A.  D. 

1807. 

C.  E.  RICHARDSON, 

*     o     .  V  <^"y  Clerk. 

(Corporate  Seal.) 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  Mar«h  9  to  22  fnr 


East  Duluth  Land  company.  For  the 
taking  of  lots  2.  3.  4  and  5,  block  4.  in 
the  plat  of  First  addition  to  East  Du- 
luth, according  to  the  recorded  plai 
thereof.    Damages,    $0.50. 

Charles   A.   Homer,   James  A.   Gary. 
Juilan  J.  Chlsholm.    For  the  taking  of 
1.23  acres  from  the  ne%  of  the  nw^4  of 
section  13-50-14.   being  a  strip  of  land 
66  feet  In  width,  the     center     line     of 
which  is  described   as  follows,   to-wit: 
Beginning  at  a  point  on  the  easterly 
line  of  the  ne%  of  the  nw^  of  section 
13-50-14.  where  it  is  intersected  by  the 
dividing  line  between  lots  2  and  3.  block 
4,  First  addition  to  East  Duluth.  thence 
extending  northwesterly    on    the    pro- 
longation of  the  dividing  line  between 
lots    2   and    3    aforesaid    814.68    feet    to 
a       point,       being        a       prolongation 
of       the      center      line      of       Thirty- 
third  avenue  east  (formerly  Mackinac 
avenue)  in  the  plat    of    East    Duluth. 
Damages.  $1.00. 

Same.  For  the  taking  of  0.65  acres 
from  the  ne%  of  nw%  of  section  13-50- 
14,  being  an  extension  from  the  westerly 
line  of  First  additon  to  East  Duluth  to 
the  northerly  line  of  said  section  13,  of 
Thirty-fourth  avenue  east  (formerly 
St.  Clair  avenue)  as  platted  In  the  plat 
of  East  Duluth.    Damages,  $1.00. 

William    Howell's    estate.      For    the 
taking  of  4.215  acres  from  the  sw%  of 
SW14  of  section   12-50-14.   being  a  strip 
of  land  66  feet  in  width,  the  center  lino 
of  which   is  described   as   follows,    to- 
wit:    Beginning  at     a     point     on     the 
southerly  line  of  section  12  aforesaid,  at 
the  distance    of    360.19    feet     westerlj 
from  the  south  quarter  corner  of  sec- 
tion 12;  thence    extending     northwest- 
erly on  a  line  making  an  angle  of  42 
degrees.  02  minutes.  21  seconds,  to  the 
right  of  the  aforesaid  south  line  of  sec- 
tion 12—1964.75  feet  to  a  point,  being  the 
point  of  intersection  of  the  prolonga 
tion  of  the  center  line  of  Thirty-fourth 
avenue  east  (formerly  St.  Clair  avenue) 
as  platted  in  First  addition  to  East  Du- 
luth, with  the  prolongation  easterly  of 
the   center  line   of   Victoria   street,    as 
platted  in  the^plat  of  Glen  Avon,  First 
division;  thence  extending  westerly  on 
the  prolongation  of  the  center  line  of 
Victoria  street  aforesaid,     817.29     feet 
more  or  less,  to  the  westerly  line  of  sec- 
tion 12  aforesaid.    Damages,  $3.00. 
C.  E.  RICHARDSON, 

.    «    ,.  City  Clerk. 

(Corporate  Seal.) 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  t  t 
19  inclusive. 


nir)>,  .  ^*!i*P  °'  ^^""^  *"  ^^^t  in  width, 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  the 
Hght-of-way  of  the  Duluth  &  iJJn 
?nrff  ^t^}''^^  company,  the  cente? 
line  of  w-liich  strip  is  240  feet  noriheriy 
of''«,  fnd  parallel  with  the  center  line 
of  said  railroad  right-of-way;  said  strip 
extending  from  the  northerly  to  the 
westerly  lines  of  lots  3  and  4,  and  ihl 
nwi4  of  the  sw^  of  section  34-51-13. 

(6)    A   strip  of  land     80     feet     wide 
northerly  from  and  parallel    with    the 

Dulut''h"i!%"^  *^^  right-of-way  of  1E« 
Duluth  &  Iron  Range  Railway  com- 
J!.^"/'  }^^  ^^nter  line  of  which  strip  i.«i 
240  feet  northerly  from  and  parallel  with 
the  center  line  of  said  railroad  right-of- 
way,  said  strip  extending  from  the  east- 
erly to  the  southerly  lines  of  the  seU  of 
the  seH  of  section  33.  township  51  north, 
range  13  west. 

«/lV  \  ^^^j^  °^  '®^"<*  ^^  ^P^t  in  width 
northeriy  from  and  parallel  with  the 
center  of  the  right-of-way  of  the  Du- 
luth &  Iron  Range  Railway  company, 
the  center  line  of  which  is  240  feet 
northeriy  from  and  parallel  with  the 
center  of  line  of  said  railroad  right-of- 
way,  said  strip  extending  from  the  ' 
northeriy  line  of  section  4.  township  50 
north  range  13  west,  to  the  easterlv 
boundary  iine  of  Lester  Park,  Fourtii 
division,  according  to  the  recorded  plat 
thereof  on  file  In  the  office  of  the  regis- 
ter of  deeds  in  and  for  the  county  of  St 
Louis,  state  of  Minnesota. 


<fl  1*      ^^^  undersigned  have  duly  qual- 
ified as  such  commissioners,  and  have 
entered    upon    the    discharge    of    their 
duties  as  such;  that  the  undersigned  as 
such  commissioners  have  caused  a  sur- 
yey  and  plat  of  the  property  proposed 
to  be    acquired    for    said    purpose    of 
rights-of-way.  or  which     may     be     di- 
rectly or  indirectly  affected  thereby,  to 
f  V!}^^^  ^y  the  city  engineer  of  the  city 
of  Duluth.  showing  the  lands  or  parcels 
of   property   required   to   be   taken    for 
said   purposes   as  aforesaid,   or   which 
may  be  damaged   thereby,     and     have 
caused  said  plat  to  be  filed     with     the 
clerk  of  said  city  of  Duluth;  and  that 
the  undersigned  as  such  commissioners 
will  meet  at  the  office  of  the  city  clerk 
in  the  city  hall,  in  said  city  of  Duluth 
on  the  24th  day  of  March,  at  10  o'clock 
in  the  forenoon  of  said  day,  and  thence 
proceed  to  view  said  premises,  and  to 
hear  any  evidence  or  proof  by  the  par- 
ties   interested,    and   when    their   view 
and  hearing  shall  be  concluded,  to  de. 
termine  and  assess  the  amount  of  dam- 
ages to  be  paid  to  the  owner  or  owners 
of  each  parcel  of  property  proposed  to 
be  taken  for  the  purposes  aforesaid,  or 
which  may  be  affected  thereby, 

FRANK  P.  TIMS, 

LOUIS    K.   DAUGHERTY. 

D.  W.  SCOTT, 


Commissioners. 
Duluth,  Minn..  March  10.  1897. 
Duluth  Evening  Herald.  March  11  lot. 


Contract  Work. 


Office  of  Board  of  Public  Works 
City  of  Duluth.  Minn..  March  8.  iw! 

ho^n^r^'^f  *''**1..'^'"    ^    received    by    the 

TT'^:^  their 'office  ij;  s°/ld''city  u'nt^/ W 
f897  for"  *^^  22nd  day  of  March  AD. 
18W7.    for       furnishing       and       lavlne    in 

eas^in^ 'Ha?H"  .l?*^  r»"^  «'  Grand  *ivfni2 
tv  »h  III"*'**  '^•^y  ''■°™  the  center  of  Slx- 

sfrle/^nfl  ?r""®  .  ^*«*^  to  Cambridge 
street  and  thence  along  Cambridge  street 

eLt"'«ho?,';^7,  JiP*,.  ""^  Fortieth  a venuo 
^?f  ;•  .  ^'^out    11.600    lineal    feet    of    10-inch 

according  To '^^P'P^  ^."<*  appurtenances, 
flff  In  tif^  «P'^"2  ^".<*  specifications  oii 
file  in  the  office  of  said  board 

A  certified  check  or  a  bond  with  af 
\^1V-  i'^''^  <2)  sureties  in  the  sum  of  fiN 
X  'ercJ'"l1d<'^>  '^"'^^  -""^^  '^'-^^^^ 

M.  J.   DAVIS. 
Official:  President. 

(Seal.) 
R.  MURCHISON. 

Clerk   B^ard   of   Pablfo   Works 
Duluth  Evening  nU^uirS^i  lot. 


■    HI        I 


•^ 


'*-f 


t 

4 


*m» 


<  >■  »i  1 1«  ■  fc 


I  <"  ■  I  ■■     ■  ■ 


—       '        *n 


4 


«**»p 


I 
■4- 


m* 


; 


^0fB*tmm' 


•4w^ 


•     -    » 


tJ 


-  r        n 


St.  Patrick's  Entertainment 

Last  Evening  a  Success 

In  Every  Way. 


Fine    Address     By     Father 

IVIackey  In  the  Absence 

of  Bishop  McGoIrlck. 


j      THE  PRODUCE  MARKET. 

Michigan   street    Js    livening    up   greatlv 

hnv?n^  -  te*"  '{or^"'^''-   »han  usual  and 
bu>lng  .s  falrlv  brisk 

v^t^^vF^^'*"  QUOTATIONS. 
ffonliJ^i^^K  quotations  below  axe  for 
on^n^^il^^'^^.*"^?„^«"*i»  »n  'ots  on  the 
to  sn^ITr  "^K^^;  '"  *'.'""»  orders,  m  order 
rnv«r  oI'-\''.*'^^  ^°°^  '"'•  shipping  and  to 
co\er  cost  incurred,  an  advance  over  job- 
t^ing  prices  has  to  be  charged.  The  fig- 
ures are  changed  dailv. 
_  BUTTER, 

^ream.,    separators,     fancy       21    & 
Dairies,  fancy,  special  make       15    & 

Packing   stock    g    ® 

Dairy,    fair    , 12    a> 

CHRK3E. 
Turns,   fiats,   full  crm.   new 
Full    er'm.    Young    America 

Swi.ss  cheese.    No.   1 

Brick,    No.    1 

Limb.,    full   cream,    choice.. 
Primo.st    


THE     D0LUTH     EVENrnG     Ht;i»;a,D:    WEDNESDAY.   -MARCH    17,    1897.    ' r- 


CURED  BY  KOLA. 


^•-    -    '  -•      f 


Company    H  to   Have  Com 

petitive  Squad  Driils-So- 

cial  Event  Tonigh. 


The  St.   Patrick's  eve  entertainment, 
given  to  a  crowded  house  at  the  Great 
Eastern  hall,   Wtst  Duluth.  last  night, 
was  in  every  way  a  social  and  financial 
success.     Of   the  ladies  and  gentlemo.a 
who   took  part   in   the  recitations     and 
national  songs  it  is  enough  to  say  that 
they    did    their   work     in     that    highly 
pleasin-:^   manner  for   which   they   have 
been   usually   noted,    and   responded    to 
veil-merited  encores.    A  special  expres- 
sion of  praise  is  due  to  the  Proctorknott 
band   and     the     contingent    that    came 
with  them  for  the  enthusiastic  manner 
in    which    they    contributed    their    full 
measure  t»>  the  success  of  the  entertain- 
ment. 


EGGS. 

Candled,    strictly    fresh 

Candled,    storage 

HONEY. 

F:tncy  white  clover 

Karicy  white  clover.  In  Jar.s 

strained,    per    lb 

Golden    rot!    

I  Dark    honey     .'.".' 

Buckwheat,   dark    .'"* 

MAPLE  SUGAR. 

\  ermont.    per    pound 

Ohio,    per   pound    "" 

Maple   syrup,   per  gal    . 

„^   ,                      POPCORN." 
Choice,    per    lb 

NUTS. 

Soft  shell  almonds,  per  lb..  12 

Soft  shell   walnuts,   per  lb..  12 

Hard   shell   walnuts,   per  lb  11 

Brazils,    per    lb 8 

Pecans,  per  lb 9 

Filberts,    per   lb u 

Peanuts,  roa.«ited.  per  lb...!.  7 

Raw    peanuts    4: 

VEGETABLES. 

Sweet  potatoes,  per  bus 85 

'  Sweet    potatoes,     Muscatine 

I     per  bbl  2  00 

Celery,  per  doz  25 

jCarrots.  per  bus 35 

I  Beets,    per    bus 49 

Onion.t.   per  bus .'.'  i  @ 


11'/^ 

11  © 

12  w 
lU 

9    @ 
6 


22 

16 

9 

13 

12^4 

12 

12% 

10 


12*4®      13 

»  u    n 

12>4'??      13 


The     Wheat     Market    Was 

Stronit  Today  and  Prices 

Went  Up. 


As   Prtscrlbed   In  the  Pamout   Dr. 

Charcot's    Kola    Nervine 

Tablets. 


a^-g* 


@    11 


The  Main  Cause  of  the  Ad- 
vance Was  European 
War  News. 


Twtifflooy  ol   Oufutk    People 
Tetted     lh«    Femody 
6rMt  Results. 


Who 
With 


Have 


One  Cent  a  Word,  _    One  Cent  a  Ward. 


TRAIN BD    N  UR81B. 


VP  TOU   WANT  A  TRAINED   NURSBJ. 
leave  your  ord*r  at  Boyce's  Drug  etor* 


-MMAUK  BXIZF. 

^'^f^R   %^^h  WANTED    AT    324   WEST 
Fifth.  Small  family;  call  at  once. 


WANTED-A  COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework,  at  907  East  Flp.st 
street. 


Usual   Batch  or    Crop    Re- 
ports, Those  From  Indiana 
Showlnfi  Damage. 


Turnips,    per    bus 

Holland  seed  cabbage,  100  lb 

Minn  cabbage,  per  100  lbs... 

Potatoes,    per    bus 

Mint,    per   doz i 

Parsley,    per  doz 

Parsnips,    per    bus 

Cauliflowers,    per   doz '." 

Horse    radi.sh.    per    lb '.'. 

Hubbanl   squash,    per   doz.. 
i„  .»-  ,  ,    .  .        .  I  California    cabbage,    crates 

In  the  unavoidable  absence  of  Bishop  I  California  celerv.  doz 

McGi»lrick.  Father  Mackey  gave  an  ini-    Florida  tomatoes,  basket.  ..' 

promptu  address,  in  which  he  elo'juenl-  I  Oyster  plant,  doz  bunches.. 

ly  dwelt   upon   the  characteristic   lrait<»  I  ^'"'^'*^"  onions,   doz   bunches. 

of  the   Irish   race   at    home  and   abroad  .  ^P'^A^^-P^.-j^^us 

and  the  eminent  part   they  have  taken  ''  •  "°^ 

as  churchmen 


60 


40  & 

2  .-.0  ^ 
70  O  1  00 
25  ®  27 
25  ^1  30 
25 

.  55  ©   CO 

1  50  ((i  2  25 

6  ©>   7 

1  50  ®)  2  25 

3  50  @  375 
85 

65  @  75 

50 

25  (Q)   40 

90  (^  1  00 

15 


soldiers  and  statesmen 
not  only  in  the  civilizing  development 
of  Europe,  but  al.so  in  the  Australian 
colonies.  New  Zealand,  the  Canada^ 
and  htre  in  the  United  States,  and  ho 
concluded  thus; 

•The   glory  of  Ireland   is   not  simpl> 
national.       It       is       like      her      faith- 
catholic  and  worldwide.    It  is  written  in 
the  legends  and  traditions  of  the  past; 
it   is   inscribed  on   the  crumbling  ruins 
and  decaying  m-jnuments  of  her  former 
grandeur,  and   it  is  preserved   to  us  in 
her  ancient  language  and  literature.     It 
endures  in   the  fame  of  her  bards,   the 
prowess  of  her  chieftains,  the  devotion 
of  her  patriots  and  the  memory  of  her 
martyrs.     It   lives    in   the   eloquence  of 
her  orators,  the  exquisite  fancy  of  her 
poets  and   force  and    brilliancy   of   her 
writers.      Painters   and    sculptors    have 
made  it  enduring  on  the  canvas  and  in 
monumental    marble.      The   virtue    and 
constancy  of  her  daughters,  the  wit  anu 
valor  of   her   sons,    preserve   and    per- 
petuate  it   in    the    faith    that    has   con- 
secrated   her   past    and    the   patriotism 
that   illumines  and  guarantees  her   fu- 
ture." 

Thomas  and  Lottie  Robinson  deserve 
special  notice  for  their  very  entertain-  '■■ 
ing  e.xecution  of  the  bones  and  triangle 
of  the  national   airs,    which    had   to    b*- 
responded  to  by  hearty  encores.  j 

COMPETITIVE  SQUAD  DRILLS.        j 
Company  H   has  decided  on   a  serie."  I 
of  competitive  squad  drills,  the  first  to 
take  place  in  the  armory  April  22.    Th* 
corporals   will   command      the     squads, 
which  will  be  comr>osed  of  men  accord-  ! 
ing    to    stature.       The    winner    will    be 
awarded  a  silver  medal,  to  be  worn  by 
the    commanding    corporal,    and    to    be 
defended   against   all    challengers    until ; 
won  three  times  in  succession,  when  it , 
liecomes  the  squad's  property. 


25 


90 
75 
65 


1  00 


@  90 


40 
75 


35 

65 

3  25  ra  3  75 

2  00  ©  2  50 

2  00  (fi  2  50 

1  25  ®  1  .50 

2  75  @  3  50 
70 

5  50  (?  6  00 
1  75  @  2  00 

6  75  ©  7  50 
@   15 


fi 


Spunisii   onions,    per  crate 
iJermuda    onions,    per   crate    3  50 

Lettuce,  per  box 90 

Lettuce,    per   doz 40 

Horse  radish  roots,    per  bbl    5  'At 
PEAS  AND  BEANS. 

Fancy  navy,   per  bus l  15 

Medium,    hand   picked,    bus.       90 

Prown    beans,    fancy,    bus.. 

Green  and  yellow  peas 

Green   peas,    bus 

;  „,  FRUITS. 

I  Florida  strawberries,  per  qt 

Pie  plant,  per  doz  bunches. 
I  California  navel  oranges... 
;  Seedling   oranges    

California  pears,  per  case. 
'Bananas,    bunches    

Lemons,  per  box 

Cocoanuts.   per  doz 

Cranberries,    per  bbl 

Cranberries,    bus 

Malaga  grapes,    per   keg 

Figs,    per   lb 

Pineapple,     per    doz 

Dates,     per     lb 

APPLES  AND  CIDER. 

Apples,    per   bbl l  75 

Mich,  sweet  cider,  per  keg...    2  50 

_     ,  DRESSED   MEATS. 

\ea.   fancy   7    ^       71 J 

\  eal,   hea\->-.   coarse,   thin...         5 

Mutton,    fancy    dressed 6    ®       614 

LIVE  POULTRY. 

Live    turkeys    10 

Sprink  chickens,  per  lb 6    (S)       7 

_  DRESSED  POULTRY. 

Turkeys,   per  lb 10 

Chickens,    per  lb 6 

Geese,     per    lb 10 

BRAN   AND   SHORTS.    CAR   LOTS. 
Bran,  200  lbs.  sacks  included    8  00 
Shorts,    100  lbs.    sacks   Inc..    9  00 
Shorts.    200   lbs,    sacks   Inc..    8  50 

Red  dog 1200 

Ground  feed  No.  1 10  00   ®10  50 

Ground  feed.  No.  2 10  00    010  50 

HAY.    CAR   LOTS. 

Choice  south.    Minn 6  50    @  7  50 

Northern    Minn    4  00    ®  6  50 

Medium    4  m)    ^  6  50 

Tame.    ton.   choice  timothy.    SOW    ©9  00 


Wheat    opened  strong   and   higher   than 
yesterday's    closing   flgures.     The   sudden 
warlike    turn    to    the    news    from    Greece 
being  the  feature.   Consols   were  off    1-16, 
and  Liverpool,   although  showing  no  par- 
ticular opening  strength,  immediately  ad- 
vanced Id.     First  prices  were  above  calls 
and    the    selling    was    principally    against 
those    privileges.      There    was    the    usual 
batch    of    crop    reports,    those    from    In- 
diana   showing    damage,    but    from    Kan- 
sas and  Ohio  the  conditions   were  said  to 
be    generally    favorable.      Northwest     re- 
ceipts   were    about    as    usual.    Minneapolis 
and   Duluth  reporting  a   total  of  231    .ars. 
compared   with   300  last   week   and  413  on 
the  corresponding  day  of  the  year  befor- 
Opening    i>rices.    however,    did    not    hold. 
St.   LouLs.    which    had    been    credited    with 
buying    yesterday,    was    reported    as    sell- 
ing.    After  11   o'clock,    however,    the   mar- 
ket   became    firmer    and     prices     touched 
the   highest   point   of  the  day. 

There  was  a  fair  amount  of  trading  on 
the  Duluth  board.  May  wheat  opened  •  ,■• 
higher  at  74VjC.  but  suki  off  during  the 
hist  hour  to  Ay^c.  Then  it  ruled  dull  but 
at  ll:2ii  revived  and  touched  Tl%c.  Ne.ir 
the  close  it  declined  to  74'vc.  The  clove 
was  with  .sellers  at  74Vic.  being  an  a-1- 
vancf-  of  ViC  for  the  day.  The  mills 
bought  2i).000  bus  of  cash  stuff  at  '^c 
under  May.  and  the  elevators  took  -.n:>1 
bus  at  V  under  May.  The  mills  paid  the 
May  price  for  5000  bus  on  track.  Follow- 
ing  were   the  closing   prices: 

Wheat— No.  1  hard.  cash.  76c:  May,  7Cc. 
No.  1  northern,  cash,  74c:  Mav  74V^c 
asked:  July,  ;5c  bid;  SeptembeV.  Tf-.c'. 
No.  2  northern.  Tl^c.  No.  3,  68(&70c.  lie- 
Jected.  u0ai«/65(fic.  To  arrive— No.  1  haird 
northern.  74c.  Rye,  33'ic.  No. 
No.   3  oats,   16^c.    Flax,   79o; 


12 
3  fiO 
9 


10 


Any  assertions  the  compounders  of  Dr. 
Charcot's  Kola  Nervine  Tablets  make  as 
to  the  merits  of  the  remedy  might  be  set 
down  to  self-interest.  When  your  n.-ijili- 
bors  and  acquaintances  hear  testlmo'nv 
to  those  merits  you  have  a  right  to  as- 
sume that  what  the  remedy  has  don,>  for 
them  it  will  surely  do  for  you.  Comment 
upon  the  endorsements  herewith  ifiven 
is  unnecessary.  Read  and  heed  them 
T.    A.    Buckley.    12:{   Tenth    avenue   eaVf 

•Dr.  Charcot's  Kol.i  Nervine  Tabiets 
cured  a  bad  case  ot"  .■^ciHtio  rheumaiispi 
vvhen  other  remedies  lulled.  I  contra.i.d 
the  rheumatism  In  the  Rainy  Lake  re- 
gion. 1  have  great  faith  in  the  Tablets 
and    strongly    recommend    their   use." 

John  Armstrong.  Hazelwood  Park-  "I 
have  no  hesitation  in  liighly  recommend- 
mg  Kola  Nervine  Tablet.s.  I  have  used 
thm  for  myself  and  family,  for  rheuma- 
them  for  myself  and  famllv.  for  rheuma- 
sults.  ' 

G.  S.  Broughton.  'mVi  East  Fourth 
street:  "The  Tablets  have  been  of  gre  il 
benefit  to  me.  relieving  me  of  nervousne>s 
and  sleeplessness.  Thev  are  a  very  irooJ 
remedy." 

Mrs.  E.  Jackson.  320  Lake  avenue 
.south:  "I  was  troubled  with  pains  In  my 
chest  and  back  and  with  sleeplessnes.s  I 
have  been  taking  the  Tablets  but  a  shori 
time  and  have  already  found  great  relief 
I  sleep  better  and  the  jjalns  have  been 
much  less.  I  shall  keep  on  using  the 
Tablets." 

Walter  L.  Case.  300  Burrows'  block:  "I 
have  not  flnished  the  first  package  of 
Kola  Nervine  Tablets  but  notice  a  re- 
markable quieting  effect  upon  my  nerv- 
ous system.  I  feel  that  the  remedy  Is 
doing  me  good  all  round." 

James  Cole,  Sr..  in7  East  Fifth  strrel- 
"For  several  years  I  have  not  been^ible 
to  walk  up  stairs  unassisted.  My  son 
brought  home  a  b.ix  of  Dr.  Charcot's 
Kola  Nervine  Tablets  :ind  after  nsing 
them  a  few  days  there  was  such  an  im 
I>rovenient  in  my  idridition  that  I  walked 
up  two  flights  of  stairs  alone.  The  lem- 
etly  has  helped  my  brain  as  well  as  m;ik- 
ing  me  strong«'r." 

It  Is  not  out  of  plai-e  to  ask  those  suffi"-- 
Ing  from  Nervous  I'ellity  and  all  its  at- 
tending evil.s— sleeple-i.sne.ss.  rheumatism 
dyspepsia,  bloodlessne.s.s,  heart  failure  or 
lnn>aired  vigor  of  body  or  mind— whv 
they  d<)  not  try  this  great  remedy  It 
costs  3  cents  a  day. 

Fifty  cents  and  $i  per  box  (one  mouth's 
treatment).  See  Dr.  Charcot's  name  on 
box.  Kola  booklet  free.  All  druggist -1  or 
sent  direct.  Eureka  Chemical  &  M'g 
Co.,  La  Cros!?e,   Wl.s.   and  Boston,    Mass 


^-.?P^  S-^^  ALWAYS  FIND  GOOD 
ifiTLio*"?  eifht  glris  can  find  good 
places;  also  the  best  and  cheapest  hair 
goods,  switches  and  chains  at  Mrs.  M. 
C.  Slebolds.  225  East  Superior  street. 

WANTED-A  LADY  AND  GENTLE- 
man  to  solicit  orders  for  household 
goods;  sold  on  easy  payments.  No  exf- 
P^'^^^'ce  required.  John  Gately  &  Co., 
706  West  Superior  street. 


All  advertisements  of  "situ- 
ations'* wanted  inserted  FREE. 
We  invite  as  many  repetitions 
as  are  necessary  to  secure 
what  you  advertise  for.  The 
Herald's  50,000  dally  readers 
will  be  sure  to  fill  your  wants. 


^i^  MILLION   PEOPLE   VOTED       FOR 

irw"»^;.'^:.?'"y*"'  "'^  ^"'y  ^ool^-  "The 
i^i  ^>"i^'  .,*r^."°^  '■^'^'^y-  Agents  mak- 
ing $25  to  5150  per  week;  the  greatest 
seller  of  the  age;  send  for  outflt  quick 
Beware  of  fraudulent  books.  W  B  Con- 
key  compan.  .sole  publishers.  Chicago 


_: SITUATXOya  Jf^-*^^  ckik 

Wa'ntED-CARPET  LAYING"6R~ODb 
jobs  E.  W.  Warner,  7  West  Fifth 
street. 


RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES. 


St.  Paul  &  Duluth  R.  R. 


I/aav8 
Dtanth. 


t9a)a.iD. 

*1  ;56  p.  m. 

*11 :15  p  m 


'Daily.  fSzcept  Siuday 


5T.  PAUL. 
MINNEAPOLIS. 


Arrive 
Duluth. 


*8  JOa.  m. 
*1 :»  p.  m. 
t7 :45  p.  m. 


inrK™a^'"**P  Depot  CITY  TlCKEr  OfFICK. 
♦01  W  Superior  itreet,  oorner  Palladio  biUldiM. 
Telephone  218.  ^ 


EXPRRlBNCED    WAITRESS    DKSIKIOS 
rS''ri7."He?ald.  '"''  '""  ''"*''*''-"-   ^''^■ 


WOM.4_N  WANTS  WORK  t)P  ANY 
kind  by  the  day.  Call  n\  W27  West  Sec- 
ond street. 


WANTED-ONE  SALESMAN.  SALARY 
and  commission.  $60  to  $l«o  per  month 
can  be  made.  No  experience  needed 
Work  in  the  city.  The  Singer  Manufa'"- 
turing  company,  614  West  Superior 
street. 


SALESMEN  FOR  CIGARS.  BIG  PAY 
Experience  unneces.sary.  Monopole  Ci- 
gar company,  Galesvllle,  Wis. 


"WANTED-AGENTS  TO  SOLICIT  SICK 
and  accident  Insurance  for  the  Union 
Men  s  Mutual  Insurance  company  of 
Jr"'"U?-„^"'^'"^^  terms  to  the  right  par- 
ties. Call  or  address  307  Palladio  bulld- 
Ing.    Duluth.    Minn. 


W.\NTED-BY  YOUNG  LADY.  Posi- 
tion as  stenographic  and  typewriter 
(.ood  references  and  experience.  P  71 
Herald.  ' 


WANTED-SITUATION  BY  A  COMPK- 
tent  cook  in  private  famllv.  or  place 
as  housekeeper.   Address  L  85.   Herald. 


EASTERN  RAILWAY 

OF  HINIIESOTA. 

CITY  TICKET  OFFICE  432  W.  8UPEEI0B  ST. 


LeaTe  Dnloth 


Arrire  Duluth 

f-'::fJp.  m. 
•7  .-00  a.  on. 


V^  ANTED- WASH  ING.  IRONING  AND 
mending.  Work  called  for  and  deliv- 
ered. 416  East  Fourth  street. 


A         SOBER,  INDUSTRIOUS         MAN 

would    like   to  get   a   job   of   any   kind. 

Address  J.  W.  Fulton,  20  West  Superior 
street. 


FOR  RENT-NEAR  CAR  BARN.  ONE 
furnished  room;  $3  per  month.  2705 
W  est  Second. 


THREE  OR  FOUR  PURNISTIED 
rooms  for  housekeeping  at  309  West 
First  street. 


FOR  RENT-NICELY  FURNISHED 
room,  convenient  for  young  men.  Room 
18   Norris   block. 


A  RELIABLE,  MIDDLE  AGED   MAN 

i>^o?^\T^°'".H  °^  ^^y  *^'"<'-  Must  have  it. 
P  97,  Herald. 


WANTED-YOUNG  LADY  DESIRES 
position  as  stenographer.  Has  had  ex- 
perience in  general  office  work  Can 
operate  any  machine.  Address  K  95, 
Herald. 


tl2 :40  p.  m. »     «T.  PAUL  AMD    j 

ni.l.'tp.m.  y    ■HWWCAI'OLIS    \ 

♦Daily.    fExcept  Sauday] 

Buffet  Parlor  Cars  on  Day  Trains. 
New  Sleeping  Cars  on  Night  Trains. 

Direct  connections  with  (ireat  Northern  traioc 

fMQO,  GRAND  FORJCS 

WINNIPEB,  HELENA. 

BUTfF,  8P0KINE, 

PORTUND,  SEATTLE 

AND  JAPAN. 
At  St.  Paul  comiections  are  made  forall  pointe 
East,  West  and  South.    Through  tickets  and 
basgage  checked  to  dostinatioa. 


Duluth,  South  Shore  &  Atlantic  Ry. 


'■IJ/CC& 


ROUTE 


A  YOUNG  LADY  WOULD  LIKE  A  Po- 
sition at  general  housework.  A  good 
and  reliable  German  girl.  Call  at  2S2 
Third  avenue  east. 


Trains  for  all  points  Ea.st  leara 

'&t.^''T.  4:10  P.  M. 

Daily     EXCEPT    SATURDAY. 

with   \VA(J.\>,R  PALACE 

M.,i,  . .8LLEPINGCAH  for  Sault  Ste 

Mane,  an  i  uiuing  Car,  servinp  supper. 

SDlfDA?'^''  train  arrives  11 :20  a.  m.  E.XCEPI 
au^d  ulf  D~  ot'""  ^^"'''''*  ^«*«^  »"'''»*'^ 


NICELY  FURNISHED  ROOM.  LOWELL 
block. 


A    SATISFACTORY    PROOF 
In  County  Sligo,  among  the  hills,  there 
it   a  small   lake  renowned   in   that   region 
for     its     fabulous     depth,     savs     Har')ers 
Bazar.   The  professor  happened   to    •*■> 
th.it    i)art    of    Ireland    last    summer 
started    out    one    fine    day    for    a 
among    the    mountains, 
a    native    guide. 


FOR  RENT— BASEMENT  OF  1020  EAST 
Fourth  street;  very  warm;  $3  per  month; 
water   free. 


i  »  »••.  1  i  i  * 


A    YOUNG    MAN,    22    YEARS    OF    AGE 
wants  work  of  any  kind.  Must  have  it 
Address  916   East   Seventh   stnet 


WANTED-SITUATION  BY  YOUNG 
girl  in  small  family  to  do  general  house- 
work. Address  L  16,   Herald. 

YOUNG  MAN,  20  YEARS~bLD.  STRONG 
and  willing  to  work,  would  like  place  in 
commission  house  or  as  delivery  man. 
Familiar  with  care  of  horses.  Address 
A.  G.,   Herald. 


DBlBtli,  Sojerior  &  ffeslero  Ry. 


WEST, 
P.  M 


*Daily  except  Sunday. 


•3:05 
4:05 
6:13 
7:40 
7:03 
8:00 


01  Lv. 
23'Ar., 
Ar. 
Ar., 
Ar., 
Ar. 


94 

109 


....  Duluth  ... 

Cloquet  ... 

..  Swan  River 

....  nibbing  ... 

Grand  Ra]>ids 


Ar 

Lv 

Lv 

Lv 

Lv 


Deer  River  Lv 


EAST. 
A.  M 

•  U:40 
10:41 
8:40 
7:15 
7:50 
6:53 


(jo)  2  .50 
@  275 


7 
11 


176c:   No.    1 
I  2   oats.    17c 

May.   80c. 
L  Car     Inspection— Wheat.      81:      corn.      1- 

"'V**:   ''U.P'^-    ":   bariey.    9;    flax.    11.    Re- 
I  ceipts— W  heat.    74,797    bus;    corn,    695    bus 

oat.s.  .■M.593  bus;  rye.  11.029  bus;  barlev' 
;  la.  164  bus;  flax.  8035  bus.  Shipments— None 
I      ^,  NEW   YORK  MONEY. 

1  New  York.  March  17.— Money  on  call 
easy  at  W^^l  per  cent.  Prime  mercantile 
paper  Z'ii\  per  cent.  Sterling  exchans^e 
easy  with  actual  business  In  bankers" 
bills  at  f4.S7  for  demand  and  $4.85V4f«4.85ii 
for  sixty  days.  Pos»ed  rates  W.86r«  LSD-;, 
and  «-}.88.  Commercial  bills  *4.84V4  Sllv.-r 
certificates  63^4.  Bar  silver  62^c. 

THE  CHICAGO  MARKET. 
Chicago.    March       17.— Wheat.       Mai<h. 

Inb''^'  ^'*^''  Ji^'^l  •^"'>'-  73<-:  September, 
7«^c.  Oats,  March.  16'i,c;  May.  17Vi«"!,o- 
July.  18M.'&'4c.  Corn.  March,  mc;  Maj-.' 
2S=>4c:  July.  25%c:  September,  27c.  Po-k 
March.  $8.62;  May.  $8.72:  Julv.  $8.82.  Laid' 
March,  $4  15:  May.  $4.25:  July.  $4.32;  Seo- 
tember.  K47.  Ribs.  March.  $4.7(1;  Mav 
*^i!!:/«'>-  .»t-72.  Whisky  on  the  basis  of 
»1.1(  for  flnished  goods.     Cash,  wheat.  No.  i 

2  red.    W&86;    No.    3    red.    76^-8lc;    No      •>  

h"a^!rwi:;\'yr.%|jc?''5J:;!^-3'KrwS^er^  I  ^P«'^^'^«E   FORECLOSURE^IZZ 
(0^»75c;   No.   1   northern  spring    ' 


11 

and 

ramble 

accompani^i    bv 

„   1     1    L.    -   ,-    .       -^^    *bey    climbed,     Pat 

asked    him    if   he   would    like    to   se.-   thi.x 

lake,      for  it's   no   bottom  at  all,   sorr  '• 

"But  how  do  you  know  that,  Paf" 
asked   the  professoiL 

•'Well,  .sorr.  111  t<ll  ye  me  own  cousin 
was  showin'  the  pond  to  a  gentleman  one 
day.  .sorr,  and  he  looked  incredulous  like 
just  a.s  you  do.  an.l  me  cousin  couldn  t 
stand  it  for  him  to  doubt  his  worrd 
sorr,  and  so  he  said.  Gegorra,  111  prove 
the  truth  of  me  worrds,'  and  off  with  his 
clothes  and  in  he  jumped." 

The  professors  face  wore  an  amused 
and    quizzical    expif.sslon. 

"Ves,  sorr,  in  he  jumped,  and  didn't 
come  up  again  at  all,  at  all." 

"But."  said  the  profestsor,  "I 
see  that  your  cousin  proved  his 
by   recklessly   drowning   himself 

"Sure,  .sorr.  it  wasn't  drowned  at  all 
he  was;  the  next  day  comes  a  cable  from 
b'm    in    Australia,    a.skln"    to  send   on   his 


WanteHo  Rent 

From  May  1st,  eight  or 
nine-room,  strictly  modern 
house,  Ea&t  End.  Careful 
tenant  and  sure  pay. 

620  Board  of  Trade. 

At 

•i-I"I"I"I"H"I"I"I"I"H~I"I'M..I..I..I..I..I.I..I~H' 


HOUSE  CLEANING,  SCRUBBING 
stores  and  offices  to  clean.  Mrs.  Jack- 
son. 390  Lake  avenue  south. 


9   FOOT   RANGE.   lOii  EAST  SUPERIOR. 

FOR  SALE-FURNITURE  TaLMOST 
new)  of  five  room  house.  A  snap.  House 
^centrally  located)  can  be  rented  If  de- 
sired. Apply  W.  D.  Gordon.  17  First 
avenue    west. 


Duluth,  Missabe 

&  Northern 
RailwayCompany 


don't 
point 


Have  The  Herald  In  your  homes:     46 
OMttjr  a  month. 


i6c.    Cas!], 


.^OCI A L  ENTE RT AI N MEN TS. 
Many  entertairiments  of  divers  char- 
acters are  scheduled  for  West  Duluth 
tonight.  .Among  them  are  musical  and 
literary  exhibitions  by  the  Westmin- 
ster Presbyterian  Sunday  .school  at  the 
church  and  by  the  ladies  of  .\sbury  M. 
E.  church  at  the  home  of  Mr.  and  Mrs. 
G.  D.  Jewell.  608  Fifty-ninth  avenue 
we-st.  Pearl  Hive,  Ladies  of  the  Mac- 
cal>ees,  will  give  a  l)asket  social  to  be 
followed  by  a  ball  at  the  Phillips  hotel. 


IN  NEW  YORK. 
New    York,    March    17.— Butter,    stead v; 
Western    creamerv.     13ril9c:     Elglns,     l<k-. 
Eggs,    steady:    Western.    18>>c. 


PERSONALS. 

1   '3  '-iBQ  -Q  -jj  'uojjaiidoBK  'V  'O 
Hemenway    and    C.    S.    Cowles,    of    St. 
Paul  are  registered  at  the  Spalding. 

George  W.  G.  Calder.  of  Chicago,  is  a 
guest  at  the  Spalding. 

George  A.  Cheney,  of  Marion,  Ohio,  is 
a  late  arrival  at  the  Spalding. 

M.  W.  Bechtel,  of  Cleveland,  is  regis- 
tered at  the  Spalding. 

N.   N.   \Vright,  of  Saginaw,   Mich.,   is 


NEW   YORK   GRAIN. 
New  \ork.   March   17.-Wheat.       Marv;h. 
»%c:    May.    SOc:    July.    7S%c;    September. 
7S%c.  Corn,   May.  30V4c.  Oats.   May,  21 


•.'?»'. 


rate  the  grain  markets  were  strong  ail 
day  both  here  and  at  Liverpool  thou^rh 
consols  did  not  reflect  anv  serious  ap- 
prehension. Clearances  small,  new  export 


WEST  DULUTH  P.RIEFS. 

The   Women's  Christian   Temperance  1     ♦  »»,     c,*    t 
union   will   meet   in   the  Congregational    *  „.     i         L''^"'''- 

church     tomorrow     afternoon     at     "30        ^-  *'•  Cowling  is  down  from  Ely  to- 
o'clock.     "Social    Settlements"    will     be  i  ^^^'-  ^  SU^st  at  the  St.  Louis, 
the  subject  for  discussion  and  the  meet-  1      GtJorge    S.    Ring    came    up    from    St. 
ing   will    be   conducted    by   Mrs.    C.    R.  '  ^*"'  ^^^'^  morning  and  registered  at  the 
Keyes.  I  St.  Louis. 

A  dance  will  he  given  at  the  village      .^r.  Stuart  Bates  and  J.  B.  Bates,  of      _ „^, „.   ,„^.  .^ 

hall  tonight  by  the  Proctorknott  Cornet  {  Virginia,    are    among    today's    arrivals  '  news;   the  bears  would  sell 


Default  having  been  made  in  the  pay- 
'V^"rl  VL**^*'  *'""'  "f  thirteen  hundred  and 
six  56-100  (1306.56)  dollars,  which  is  claimed 
to  be  due  and  is  due  at  the  date  of  this 
notice  upon  a  certain  mortgage,  duly  ex- 
ecuted and  delivered  by  August  Banhol- 
dl  and  Anna  Bartholdi.  his  wife,  mojt- 
gagors.  to  Lewis  H.  Parker,  mortga^-ee 
bearing   date    the   Kith   day   of    February. 

i^^V..?.,"'!,  ^''".'  /'  ''"^■^'''  «'  sa'i'  therein 
contained,  duly  recorded  in  the  ot- 
llce  of  the  register  of  deeds  in  and  for 
the  county  of  St.  Louis  and  state  of  Min- 
nesota, on  the  24th  dav  of  February  1.S9I 
at  4:10  o'clock  p.  m..  in  Book  59  of  mort- 
gages on  page  149:  and  whereas  the  power 
of  sale  h.is  become  operative,  and  no 
action    or    proceeding   having    been    Insil- 

between   Greece  and  TuVke"y7  This"  irihe    delft    secur'^ed  *bv"^^.T7mnr/^n^^'^*'''^^  ''"^ 

opinion   of  the   well   po.sted    foreign   tr.-ide    p.Vrt   thereof     ^  mortgage,    or   any 

r^  i„^^r,f   r  "'■  "J^^  greater   powers    will  I     Now.   therefore,   notice  is  herebv  -iven 

be   Involved   remain.s   to  be  .seen.   At  any    that  by  virtue  of  the  power  of  sale"  .on: 

t.nined  in  said  mortgage,  and  pursuant  to 


GOSSIP. 

Received  over  private  wire  of  B.  E.  Baker 
grain  and  stock  broker,  room  lo7  Ch-am: 
ber  of  Commerce  and  307  Board  of  Trade 
Chicago.    March    17.— There   seems    Ptil- 

doubt  but  that  serious  trouble  will  ocui 


10  *^.^S:zSP^?S?x^ 

FOR  RENT-SEVEN  ROOM  HOUSE  ON 
Nineteenth  avenue  east,  near  London 
road,  at  $10.  water  free.  Carpets  to  sell 
cheap,   all   laid.     Address   P  81.    Herald. 

FOR  RENT  -  HOUSE  315  WEST 
Fourth  street;  all  modern  Improve- 
ments; will  be  renovated  to  suit  ten- 
ant. A.  C.  Volk  &  Co.,  Palladio  build- 
ing. 


^  TO  SJEyT—FI^TA 

FOR  RENT-COZY  FLAT.  $16.  ALL 
modern  conveniences,  five  rooms.  Wate- 
rent  paid.  $250  buys  a  good  resideni-e 
lot.   Cooley   &    Underbill. 


AT  721  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET  YOU 
can  buy  tools  and  hardware  at  less  than 
cost   price. 


FOR    SALE— GOOD        DELIVERY     W  \- 
gon,   $20.   Apply  716  East  Third  street. 


$200  CASH.   BALANCE  IN  BOARD  AND 
room;     will     buy     furniture     of     25-room 

boarding   house;       central       location.    A 

snap.    P  91,   Herald. 


7 :45  a.  m. 
10:45  a.m. 
10:44  a.  m, 
11  :S6  a.  m. 
11  :Oii  a.  m. 
n  r25  a.  m. 

?=^  »•«»»•  I  V^— ^-Vir«iuia Arl    1 :45  p.  m. 

11  :g  a.  m.  I  Ar Ribbing  ....Lv  I  12  :l.^  n.  m. 

Daiiy,  except  Sunday.      J,  B,  HANsotr.  G.  P.  A. 


V^ -Uulniu Ar  ,   a::{.>  p.  m. 

^ Virginia  ....Lv    12:45  p.  m. 

Ar Lyoleth  . Lv  |  10  ..16  a.  m. 

Ar Biwjbik  ....Lv  ,  12:2s  p.  m. 

^ ?JJr.l'"oa  — -Lv    12:30  p,  m. 

^ Ribbing   -.Lv  '  12:13  n.  m 


DULUTH  &  IRON  RANGE  R.R 


FOR  RENT-A  FIVE  ROOM  MODERN 
flat.  London  road  and  Eighteenth  ave- 
nue east.  Apply  to  Commercial  Invest- 
ment   company,    Torrey    building. 


SEVENTY-FIVE  DOLLARS  AND  BAL- 
ance  monthly  buys  a  fourteen  room 
house  within  seven  blocks  of  the  Spald- 
ing hotel.  Chas.  W.  Hoyt,  405  Chamber 
of  Commerce. 

■»  —• 

^  ^  J'l'>:Aj»cr^j/. 

LOANS  ON  DIAMONDS,   FURNITURE. 

£i*i''-,^°'"™®'"^*^*   paper   bought.   Room 
717  Torrey  building. 

MONEY  TO  T.,OAN.  ANY  AMOUNT. 
Cooley  &  Underhlll.  104  Palladio. 


YOUNG  M.\RRIEd'cOUPLe"'vVANT  TO 
rent  comfortable  furnished  hou.se  for 
year  from  May  1.  Apply  K  49,   Herald. 


ACfJOVNTAST  AM)  AVlilTOR. 


CHAS.  EVANS  HOLT,  507  CHAMBER 
of  Commerce.  If  you  want  anything  in 
my  line— accounting,  auditing.  000k- 
keeplng— temporarily   or  regularly,    call. 


is 


band.  at  the  St.  Louis 

A  meeting  of  the  Ladies'  Aid  societv  I      Jf>hn   McConnell,   of  Fort  William 
of  the  Congregational  ( hurch  was  held  I  among  the  guests  at  the  St.  Louis, 
this  afternoon  at  the  residence  of  Miv.  !      U.   M.   Boss  came  up   from   Bessemer 
J.    R.    Brearley.    415   Fifty-fir.st     avenue  ;  toda>,    on   his    way   to  Virginia. 


west. 


PREPARING  FOR  WAR. 

England    Preparing    to    Ship 
Military   Stores. 


London.  March  17.— Secret  and  rapid  I  weeks, 
preparations  are  being  made  at  Wool- 
wich and  the  other  military  establish- 
menu  of  Great  Britain.  The  chiefs  of 
the  various  garrisons  have  been  ordered 
to  prepare  details  from  the  regiments; 
available  for  foreign  ser\ice.  .A  number 
of  large  .steamers  have  been  chartered 
by  the  government  and  have  been  or- 
dered to  embark  stores  at  Woolwich  for 
Malta.  Two  thou.sand  tons  of  these 
stores  leave  \Vo<jlwich  tomorrow. 

Trouble  is  also  expected  at  the  Capo 
of  Good  Hope.  Stores  are  l>eing  rapidly 
forwarded  there  by  all  coast  line 
steamers,  which  have  been  fitted  with 
special  msi^^azines. 


M.  U.  Moore  and  wife,  of  Eveleth,  are 
at  the  St.  Louis. 

W.  R.  Baxter,  of  Minneapolis,  is  in 
the  city. 

M.  O.  Aubalee  came  up  from  Two 
Harbors  today. 

R.  A.  Costello,  of  Red  Wing,  is  in  the 
city. 

D.  J.  Stringer  left  yesterday  for  the 
South  and  expects  to  be  away  several 


business  limited  and  light  milling  demand 
here.  Crop  news  remains  unch.mKed 
and  continues  to  attract  attention  and 
keeps  operators  on  the  careful  sld.- 
though  probably  if  the  market  did  not 
have  the  support  of  the  foreign  politiital 
bears  would  sell  more  aggr-s- 
slvely  and  take  more  chances  on  the  crop 
outlook,  for  March  is  generally  a  moiitli 
of  decling  prices. 

Corn  and  oats  strong  and  higher  in 
sympathy  with  wheat  and  from  the  same 
cause. 

Provisions  weaker  on  realizing  8»ies  by 
packers  but  should  be  bought  on  all  de- 
clines. 

Puts,    May    wheat,    lZ%<aTi%-y»c. 

Calls,    May    wheat,    75^74%-75c. 

Curb,    May    wheat,    74^->4c. 

NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 

Name  of  Stock.        Open  High  Low  Close 


Do  not  be  hoodwinked.  Use  no  "just 
as  good."  Salvation  Oil  is  what  you 
want  when  in  need  of  a  good  liniment. 


_.  A  PIECE  OF  PARCHMENT. 
When  unwritten  on.  Is  not  more  colorlt-ss 
than  the  cadaverous  countenance-s  of 
those  unfortunate  persons  whom  we  arc 
^S^u-'^toraeil  to  call  "confirmed  invalids." 
v%  hat  a  misnomer:  implving.  too,  des- 
P-nr-  .a  giving  up  for  lost:  As  long  as 
the  VTVifylBg  power  of  Hostetter's  Stom- 
ach Bitters  can  be  felt,  and  that  is  pos- 
sible so  long  as  there  is  no  absolute  col- 
lapse of  the  faculties,  fresh  vitality  can 
be  infused  into  wasted,  feeble  frames; 
color  and  flesh  can  be  brought  back  to 
wasted,  pallid  cheeks  with  this  grand 
sheet  anchor  of  the  debilitated  an!  the 
Sickly.  It  i.s  a  tonic  of  the  greatest  po- 
tency and  the  utmost  purity,  and  a  rem- 
edy for  and  preventive  of  dyspepsia  bil- 
ious, malarious,  rheumatic,  nervous  and 
kidney  complaints.  Appetite  and  sleep 
are  greatly  aided  by  it;  it  counteracts 
the  effects  of  undue  fatigue,  or  excite- 
ment, and  nullifies  the  often  perilous  con- 
sequences of  exposure  in  incite  n-nt 
weather  or  damp  clothing. 


WASH  HHSING  RESIGNS. 
Chicagry,  March  17.— Postmaster 
Washington  Hesing  has  tendered  his 
resignation  to  the  president.  His  resig- 
nation was  accompanied  by  that  of 
Frederick  F.  Stoll.  superintendent  of 
the  city  delivery,  who  gave  as  his  rea- 
son his' intention  to  re-enter  business. 
It  is  said,  however,  that  he  will  take 
charge  of   the  mayorality   campaign. 


OCEAN   STEAMSHIPS. 
Queenstown— Arrived:    Majestic,      for 
Liverpool.    May  stop  on  account  of  se- 
vere  weather. 

Boston— Arrived:    Cephalonia,    Liver- 
pool. 


Whisky 

Atchison 

Sugar   Trust 

Canada  Southern. 

C,   B  &  Q 

St.   Paul 

Chicago  Gas 

Del.,  Lack.  &  W.. 
General  Electric. 

Erie 

Reading 

Louis.  &  Nash.... 

Manhattan 

Mi.ssouri  Pacific. 

Tobacco 

Chicago  &  N.  W. 
N.   P.  preferred... 

Roek    Island 

Union    Pacific 

Western  Union..., 

Leather 

Lake   Shore 


IIX 

\n% 

51)4 

11%. 
11% 
78 

'"%> 
14H 
24^ 

499( 

78"4 
109V4 
S7H 
fl«K 
7 
86 
89H 


114 

51% 

77  X 
78H 
78X 

"85" 
14X 

24  X 
49>4 
86H 
19^ 
78V4 
1103i 
87  X 
6S<K 
7 
86>i 


um 

51^ 
76« 
77H 
77  X 

■'34JK 
1494 
24H 
49 
85^ 
18V4 
76 

1094 
374 
6»^ 
6X 
86 
59  !i 


the  statute  in  such  ca.se  made  and  pro- 
vided the  said  mortgage  will  be  fore- 
closed by  a  sale  of  the  premises  described 
in  and  conveyed  by  said  mortgage,  viz- 
Lots  ten  (10)  and  eleven  (11).  in  blor-k 
twenty  (20).  in  Portland  Division  of  Du- 
luth. St.  Louis  County,  state  of  Minne- 
sota, according  to  the  official  plat  there- 
of on  file  and  of  record  in  the  offl.-e  of 
the  register  of  deeds  in  and  for  .v=aid 
bt  LouLs  County  and  state  of  Minnesota. 
With  the  hereditaments  and  ap- 
purtenances; M-hich  sale  will  be  made  hv 
the  sheriff  of  .said  St.  Louis  County,  at 
the  front  door  of  the  court  house.  In  the 
city  of  Duluth,  in  said  countv  and  state 
on   the   first   (1st)  day  of  May,    1897,    at   10 

0  clock  a.  m.,  of  that  day.  at  public  ven- 
due, to  the  highest  bidder  for  cash,  to 
ilP?'n„^"J*^..''®''^  '^^  thirteen- hundred  and  six 
36-100  dollars  and  interest,  and  the  tax.-.^. 

1  ?i"-^'  **"  "*''**  premi.ses.  and  seventy-fivi. 
dollars  attorney's  fees  as  stipulated  in 
and  by  said  mortgage  in  ca.se  of  foreclos- 
ure, and  the  disbursements  allowed  bv 
law;  subject  to  redemption  at  any  time 
with  n  one  year  from  the  day  of  sale,  as 

,"*  I  provided   by   law. 
Mu        ^^ted  March  16th.    A.   D.   1897 
ri%  I  LEWIS    H.    PARKER. 

11^     W.   G.   JOERNS,  Mortgagee. 

Attorne.v    for    Mortgagee. 

Duluth   Evening  Herald,   March-17-24-:u 

Az>ril-7-14-21-28. 


CARD  READING. 


QUESTIONS  ANSWERED  FOR  10 
cents;  pictures  of  your  future  husband 
or  wife  25  cents.  Address  Madame  De 
Zoe,    P.   O.    Box   30,    Duluth,    Minn. 


CARD      READING.      PAST.      PRESENT 
and  future.  1330  West  Superior  street. 


HIGHEST  PRICE  PAID  FOR  GENTLE- 
men's  cast  off  clothing.  Give  us  a  trial. 
Send  address  and  will  call.  Star  Cloth- 
ing  company.   .511   West   SuiK-rior  street. 

WANTED-TEAMS  TO  HAUL  WOOD 
to  West  Superior.  F.  A.  Hamilton.  2:«)1 
West  Superior  street. 


3:15  p.m. 
7:15  p.  m, 
7 :40  p.  m. 
7:50  p.m. 


V^ .Duluth Ar  I  12:00  m. 

*«■ !.>«'«:«»"« Lir  I   8:03  a.  m. 


Ar Evaleth Lv 

Ar Kly Lv 


Daily,  Sunday  excepted. 


:3)  a.  m, 
7:3)  a.m. 


NORTH-WESTERN   LINE. 

C,  St.  P.,  M.  &  O.  Hv. 
Offioe :  4(»  West  Superior  St.         '  Phone  No.  20. 
y?a»tyJ_tExcoptJJnDday    |  Arrive 


Leave 


tlO  45  am 

•11  00  pm 

*5  10  pm 


St.  Paul,  Mtu'pls  and  West  I 

8c.  Paul,  Min'plB  and  West  | 

Chicago  Limited. 


t5  lu  pm 
♦7  00  am 
*10 :«)  am 


Parlor  Cars  on  da»  traina;  Wagner's  Finest 
Sleepers  on  nlitht  traine. 


WANTEI>-THREE COMPLETELY  FUR- 
nlshed  rooms,  in  good  locality,  for  light 
housekeeping.    Address.       stating    price 
and    when    apartments        can    be    nad 
"Seek«r,"  Herald. 


^nATKHNTTtWH 


sinwiFs 


^^\y^!^^  ,  HOSPITAL-MRS.  BANKS, 
midwife,  330  St.  Croix  avenue.  Male  pa- 
tients cared  for  also. 


78X 


£5 
14X 

n\ 

49% 

«x 

185i 
'.7 

no>4 

»7H 
6»V4 
6% 
S6H 
59H 


Does  theGor 
don  Hat  be- 
come YOU? 


DEAFNESS  CANNOT  BE  CURED 
By  local  applications,  as  they  cannot 
reach  the  diseased  portion  of  the  ear. 
There  is  only  one  way  to  cure  deafness, 
and  that  is  by  constitutional  remedies. 
Deafness  is  caused  by  an  Inflamed  condi- 
^^SP  "'J'l®  mucous  lining  of  the  Eusta- 
chian Tube.  When  this  tube  gets  in- 
flamed you  have  a  rumbling  sound  or  im- 
perfect hearing,  and  when  it  is  entirely 
closed  deafness  la  the  result,  and  unless 
the  inflammation  can  be  taken  out  and 
this  tube  restored  to  its  normal  condition 
hearing  will  be  destroyed  forever-  nine 
cases  out  of  ten  are  caused  by  catarrh 
which  is  nothing  but  an  Inflamed  condN 
tion  of  the  mucous  surfaces. 

We  will  give  one  hundred  dollars  for 
any  case  of  deafness  (caused  by  catarrh) 

I  that  cannot   be  cured   by  Hall's  Catarrh 

I  cure.  Send  for  circulars,  free 

i      ^-^IS^I^^^y  *=  £0'  Toledo,   Ohio. 
Sold  by  druggists,  75c. 
Hall's  Family   Pills  are  the  best. 

Subscribers  to  The  Evening  Herald 
who  do  not  get  their  paper  regularly 
will  please  promptly  report  the  matter 
at  once  to  this  office.  It  Is  the  intention 
to  have  The  Herald  delivered  promptly 
and  regularly. 


UP-TO-DATE  CITIES. 
The  most  modern  cities  in  the  v/orld 
Falls.  Wash.,  .says  the  Toronto  Mall.  They 
Falls,  Washl  says  the  Toronto  Mail.  They 
are  entitled  to  the  distinction  becau.se 
within  their  limits  nearly  everything  is 
done  by  electricity.  Not  only  are  the 
street  railways  and  all  the  manufactur- 
ing establishments  operated  by  the  cur- 
rent, but  ^ven  the  houses  are  lighted  and 
the  cooking  done  with  the  same  agent 
Elevators,  sewing  machines,  dumb  wait- 
ers, church  organs,  pianos,  hou.se  he.it- 
ers.  burglar  alarms,  door  bells,  chartn" 
dishes,  water  heate-s.  hair  curlers  sad 
irons,       washing       machines.  printing 

nresses.  the  telegraph,  the  telephone  and 
in  fact,  every  piece  of  mechanism  that 
requires  external  force  to  propel  it  is  de- 
pendent on  electricity  for  motive  power 
All  this  looks  very  mUch  as  thoueh  the 
spirit  of  modern  progress  had  arbitra- 
rily taken  up  her  abode  In  Spokan.^  and 
Great  Falls,  but  this  is  not  strictly  the 
case.  The  modern  greatness  of  the  two 
cities  has  in  a  measure  been  thrust  upon 
them.  They  could  not  employ  anv  other 
motive  power  if  they  wanted  to.  They 
are  so  situated  that  all  other  sources 
are  unavailable.  Coal,  for  instance  is 
hardly  to  be  obtained  at  any  pri.'e  The 
waters  of  Spokane  Falls  and  Great  Ffdls 
have  been  pressed  Into  service,  and  made 
to  operate  turbines,  which  in  their  turn 
operate  electric  generators.  From  these 
sufficient  electricity  Is  obtained  tq  run 
every  piece  of  mechanism  and  light  every 
lamp'tn  the  two  cities.  . 


REAL  ESTATE  TRANSFERS. 

C.  C.  Salter  to  N.  V.  Walker,  trus- 
tee, lot  48,  block  53,  Duluth  proper 
Third    division     ........$ 

L.  Kahn  et  al  to  M.  Sobie.ske,  lands 
in    section    23-52-14 

A.  R.  Rogers  to  C.  A.  Smith,  lands 
in  sections  8,  9  and  17-62-12 


:.sos 

'JOfi 
512 


Total    $    3_rj2„ 


Hotjce  of  AjjlicatioQ 


FOR 


Liquor  License. 


S-TATE  OF  MINNESOTA,   COUNTY   OF 

ST.    LOTTIS.    CITY    OF    DULUTH-SS. 

Notice  Is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  commou 
council  of'sald  city  of  Duluth.  and  filed 
n  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell 
mtox  eating  liquors  for  the  term  com- 
mencing on  March  18,  1897.  and  terminat- 
ing on  March  18,  1898.  by  M.  J.  Dahlsten, 

a  ^^  Second   avenue   west. 

Said  aijplication  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth,  at  the  council  chamber 
in  said  city  of  Duluth,  in  St.  Louis  Coun- 
Z'  Minnesota,  on  Monday,  the  29th  dav 
of  March.  1897,  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m.  of 
that  day. 

Witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  said  city 

D    iS)"***'    *''''   "**"    ****"   **'    March,    A. 

C.  E.  RICHARDdON, 

,.  (Corporate  SeaU  ^"^  *^'"*'- 

Duluth  Evening  Herald  March  16  to  29  Inc 


Contract  Work. 


Office  of  Board  of  Public  Works, 
City  of  Duluth.  Minn.,  March  8,  1897 
Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
board  of  public  works  In  and  for  the 
corporation  of  the  City  of  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota, at  their  office  in  .said  city  until  10 
J^^vT^i'  *^"  the  22nd  day  of  March,  A.  D. 
1897,  for  the  construction  of  wooden  cro.ss- 
walks  in  said  city  for  the  year  ending 
February  28.  1898,  according  to  plans  and 
specifications  on  file  in  the  office  of  said 
board. 

A  certified  check  or  a  bond  with  at 
least  two  (2)  sureties  in  the  sum  of  fifty 
dollars   must  accompany  each   bid. 

The  said  board  resei^ves  the  right  to 
reject  any  and  all   bids. 

M.   J.   DAVIS, 
Official:  President. 

(Seal.) 
R.   MURCHISON, 

Clerk    Board    of    Public    Works. 
Duluth   Evening   Herald.   March   8  lOt. 

^'£^'^?r9J^o^l,'^^'ESOTA.   COUNTY   OF 
o  1 .    L<OUIS— SS. 

District  Court,  Eleventh  Judicial  Dis- 
trict. 

In  the  matter  of  the  as.signment  of  By- 
ron B.  Inman,  Insolvent: 
NOTICE  IS  HEREBY  GIVEN  that  the 
Duluth  Trust  Company,  as  assignee  of 
Byron  B.  Inman.  insolvent,  will  sell  at 
public  auction  for  cash,  to  the  highest 
bidder,     subject     only     to     the     approval 

?L       *'^'^      .  ^°"'"^'  ^"         Its       right, 

title  and  Interest  In  and  to  cer- 
tain property  belonging  to  the  assigned 
estate  herein,  consisting  generally  of  lum- 
ber shop  supplies,  office  fixtures,  restau- 
rant outflttings  and  carpenter  and  shop 
tools  subject  to  all  liens  against  the 
same  or  any  part  thereof,  a  list  of  which 
property  is  open  for  Inspection,  at  the 
office  of  said  assignee  in  the  Difluth  Trust 
Company  building,  in  the  city  of  Duluth, 
in  said  county, 

NOTICE  IS  FURTHER  GIVEN,  that 
said  sale  will  be  held  at  the  Northern  Pa- 
cific dock  at  the  foot  of  Seventh  avenue 
west.  In  said  city  of  Duluth,  on  Thurs- 
9,^1^'  \^,^  ^^^^  ^^y  of  March,  1897,  at  ten 
(10)  o  clock  in  the  forenoon  of  that  dav 
and  that  application  for  confirmation  of 
said  sale  will  be  made  to  the  said  court 
at  a  special  term  thereof  appointed  to  be 
held  in  and  for  said  county  at  the  court 
house,  in  said  city  of  Duluth  on  Satur- 
day, the  20th  day  of  March,  1897,  at  nine- 
thirty  (9:30)  o'clock  in  the  forenoon  of 
that  day. 

^       ^       DULUTH  TRUST  COMPANY. 
As  Assignee  of  Byron  B.  Inman,  Insolv- 
.ent. 
Duluth   Evening  Herald,    March-15-16-17. 


PALESTINE  LODGE  NO.  79,  A. 
F.  &  A.  M.— Regular  meetings 
first  and  third  Monday  even- 
ings of  every  month  at  7:30 
p.  m.  Next  meeting  March  15, 
1897.  Work,  Summons.  W.  A.  Mc- 
Gonagle,  W.  M.,  Edwin  Mooers,  secre- 
tary. 


4^ 


IONIC  LODGE  NO.  186.  A.  P.  & 
A,  M.— Regular  meetings  second 
and  fourth  Monday  evenings  of 
every  month  at  7:30  p.  m.  Next 

mu,  ^  ^     meeting   March    22,    1897.    Wori:. 

Third  degree.  P.  W.  Kugler,  W.  M.;  J.  D. 

Macfarlane,    secretary. 


4^ 


KEYSTONE  CHAPTER  NO.  JO, 
R.  A.  M.— Stated  convocation 
second  and  fourth  Wednesday 
evenings  of  each  month  at  7:30 
p.  m.  Next  meeting  Tue.sdav. 
A  u— ,  March  23.  1897.  Work,  Royal 
Arch  degree.  John  F.  McLaren.  H.  P  • 
George  E.   Long,   secretary. 

D  U  L  U  T  H  COMMANDER Y 
No.  18,  K.  T.— Stated  conclave 
nret  Tuesday  of  each  month 
7:30  p.  m.  Next  conclave 
Tuesday,  March  16,  1897.  Work. 

n      Ai#    .,  T^^^f^C     ^-      ^-    Denfeld,      E. 
c,  Alfred  LeRlcheux,  recorder. 


Templar 


THERE'S  ONLY  ONE 
RAILROAD 

That  operates  its   trains  on  the  famous 

block  system  between  the  Twin  Cities. 

Milwaukee  and  Chicago; 
That    lights     its     trains     by     electricity 

throughout: 
That  uses  the  celebrated  electric    berth 

reading  lamp;  "cim 

That  runs  four  splendidly  equipped  pas- 

sengt-r  trains  every  day  from  St.  Paul 

and    Minneapolis   through   to   Chicago 

via  Milwaukee; 
And  that  road  is  the 

CHICA80,  MILWAUKEE  A 
ST.  PAUL. 

It  also  operates  steam-heated  vestlbuled 
trains,  carrying  the  latest  private 
compartment  cars.  library  buffet 
smoking  cars,  and  palace  drawing- 
room  sleepers. 

Parlor  cars,  free  reclining  chair  cars  and 
the  very  best  dining  car  service. 

United  States.  Canada  or  Mexico,  ap- 
ply to  ticket  agents,  or  address 
J.  T.  CONLEY, 
Ass't  (Jen'l  Pass  Agt., 
Tj/.*.^r'i  .,  ^t.  Paul.   Minn. 

Note-Elegantly  equipped  trains  from 
p/nrfo  st*'V^^  Minneapolis  through  from 
Pfcorla.  St.  Louis  and  Kansas  City  dally. 


A.  O.  U.  W.-FIDELITY  LODGE  NO.  105. 
Meets  every  Thursday  In  the  Kalama- 
zoo block,  third  floor.  18  West  Superior 
street.  James  McDowell,  M.  W.;  J.  H. 
Powers,   recorder. 


~S!SS^!f?^ASJL^SARD^OFPJBRlSD. 

ROOM  AND  BOARD  CHEAP.  102  FIRST 
avenue  east. 


FURNISHED  R(X)MS.  BOARD  IP  DE5- 
•ired.  The  Daootah,  U7  West  Second 
■troet. 


HAIR  DRBaSINO 


TILLIE  JORGENSON  (FORMERLY 
with  Midtsund  sisters,  of  St.  Paul.)  has 
opened  hairdressing  parlors  at  room  417 
Lonsdale    building. 


PILES 


Williams  Indian  Pile 
Ointment  i«  a  sum  core 
forPILEV.  It  absorbs 
tumors.  Stop"  itching. 
GIVES  RBLIKF.  60e 
and  $1.    At   Drussiata. 


•I"M"I  I  r.I.  H-I.ii.  I..I  .M.,i..H..T, 


The  evening  paper  is  always     care- 
fully read,  especially  In  the  home  circle, 
and  is  therefore  an  excellent  advertis- 
ing medium.  Advertisers  In  The  Even-I? 
mg    Herald  always  get  full  value. 


Fire  Insurance^ 
Life  Insurance^ 
Investments. 

I  have  for  sale  a  few 
choice  commercial  loans — 
$500  up. 

A.  R.  Macfarlane 

13  EXOHANOE  BUILOIHa. 

■MIIIIHFII!II!1itl!IlM..H. 


BEST  LINE 

ST.  PAUL 

AND 

MINNEAPOLIS 


ST. 


TO 

LOUIS. 


0 


FOR 


Liquor  License. 

STATE  OF  MINNESOTA,  COUNTY  OF 
ST.  LOUIS.  CITY  OF  DULUTH-SS 
Notice  is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  said  city  of  Duluth.  and  filed 
in  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell  in- 
toxicating liquors  for  the  term  commenc- 
ing on  March  12.  1897,  and  terminating  on 
Mat^h  12.  1S98.  by  W.  P.  Wheaton  at  No. 
222  Lake  avenue  south. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth,  at  the  council  chamber 
in  said  city  of  Duluth.  in  St.  Louis 
County,  Minnesota,  on  Monday  the  22d 
^f\,?\  -March.  1897,  at  7:30  o  clock  p.  m. 
of  that  day.  ' 

Witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  «aiH 
«;ty  ^f  DuJutfi.  this  Sd  day  of  March    iJ 

C.  E.  RICHARDSON, 
(Corporate    Seal.)  City  Clerk. 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  Mareb  4  to  19  inc 


"1 


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ONLY  EVENINa  PAPER  IN  DULUTH 

TIE  EeiNGHiLD 

AN  INDEPENDENT  NEWSPAPER.  j 

Published    at    Herald    buHdln^,    SO   West  Uvays  carried,  and  tin.. u«h  it  tli."  «i...a"k- 
auperior   street. 


raised.  Each  congress  must  make  rules 
for  itself,  but  at  the  beginning  of  each 
it  hu.s  b^fii  the  I'ushiuii  f.jr  stime  nu-ni- 
b*r  to  move  that,  until  the  committee 
on  rnk's  has  prt-pared  its  report,  thf- 
Miie.-^  iif  the  prei'eding  (•ongrcss  shall 
remain    in    effect.      This    motion    Is   ul 


THE     DULUTH     EVENiyG     HERALD:   WEDXEPDAY.    MARCH     17,     1897. 


Duiutii  Publishing  &  Printing  Go. 

TELEPHONE  CALLS: 

Counting  Boom— 3-J4,  two  rin«B. 
Editorial  Booms— 3:24,  three  rinff«. 

TEN  CENTS  A  WEEK 

Every  Evening.  Delivered  or  by  Mail. 


t-r   perpetuates   his    own    auturatir    li- 

cens."  unless  a  committee   of  his  own 

partiisans   .sees   tit    to   revoR.'   it,    which 

is  nt-ver  done.     It   has   btn-n   suggested 

that,  instead  of  adopting  the  rules  of 

the    preceding   congress,    some    one    f»f 

the  recognized  parliamentary  manuals 

j  should  be  used  to  bridge  over  until  the 

j  committee   is    forced    to    report    a   full 

I  set  of  rules,   which  then   become  sub- 

I  Ject  to  analysis  and  debate.     As  it  is. 

congress    chains   itself   tight    and    fast 


been  and  always  will  be."  The  people 
of  his  state,  he  added,  have  known  his 
views  f.ir  many  yf-ars.  an.J  in  th.' 
sp«'e(  h  hi-  tnade  to  the  Democratic 
•  aurws  lu'fori*  his  latf  flt-clion  to  the 
senate  he  left  no  ground  for  doubt  us 
to  hl.s  attitude  on  the  tariff.  Tlip  tariff, 
he  thinks.  sh.niM  be  takun  out  <jI"  poli- 
tics, being  a  purely  economic  qiu-s- 
i  'n  and  having  n>»  place  'i  p.rtlsan 
tliscussion. 


THE  MATURE  BELLE. 


j  by  adopting  the  rules  of  the  preceding 
• -^  j  congress,  and  has  no  oportunity  to  re- 


montlu ;  2S  centa  for  tliree  months. 


Single  cory,  dally 

One  month ^ .45  ,'  ,     , 

Three  months _ 1.80    *"''    against    the    undesirable    in    them. 

8ix  months 2.60    f^'^"  they  cannot  be  Inought  under  dis- 

OnoyeM 5.00    cussion  except  through  the  committee. 

Weeldy  Herald.  $1.00  per  year;  50  cento  for  six    This  was  d.>ne  by  the  congress  which 

,  met  last  Monday. 

'      It    is    certain,    as    the    Kansas    City 
Journal    says,    that    the      cmstitution 
never  contemplated    the   v.'sting   of   so 
much   power  in  one  man   as  has  been 
assumed    by    the  speakers   of  eongress 
in  r.>cent  years,  and  it   is  equally  cer- 
tain that  an  effort  to  ref<)rm  this  evil 
will  meet  \Vith  p.ipular  applaus*-.     The 
functions    of    parliamentary    rules    are 
fully  performed  when  they  provide  for 
;  an  orderly  i  ondu.t  of  public  business. 
I  and  when  they  gt)  beyond  that  an.l  givf 
any  congressman  powers  or  i)rivileges 
greater  than  another,  they  become  re- 
volutionary ami  un-Anieri>an. 


Entered  at  the  Dolath  poetoffice  as  second 
class  Blatter. 

LARGEST  CIRCULATION  IN  DULUTH 

Official  Paper  of  tlie  City  of  Ouluth. 
HERALD'S  CIRCULATION  HIGH-WATER  MARK 

17,148. 


Mexico  lost  h.-r  greatest  general  the 
other  day  in  the  person  of  Guadelupe 
Lopez,  who  died  from  pneumonia  after 
five  days'  illness.  Gen.  Lopez  was 
known  as  the  greatest  Indian  fighter 
in  the  republic.  As  a  full-blooded  In- 
dian, he  was  able  to  cope  with  the 
savages  with  their  own  tactics.  He 
was  regarded  as  the  best  offlcer  in  the 
army,  and,  owing  to  his  universal 
kindness,  was  known  all  over  the  re- 
public as  "Uncle  Lupe." 

The  News  Tribune  quotes  from  the 
Topeka  ^''apital  a  statement  that  the 
reduction  in  mortgage  indebtedness  in 
Kansas  during  the  past  seven  years 
shows  a  decrease  of  45  per  cent,  or 
over  $105,000,000.  since  Jan.  1,  1890.  And 
how  has  this  decrease  been  accom- 
Jilished?  Hy  sheriffs'  sales.  The  fore- 
closure of  mortgages  and  sales  there- 
under have  wiped  much  of  the  indebt- 
edness off  the  books. 


THE  WEATHER. 

T'nifed  States  Agrii  altiiral  lVi>artmont. 
WVather  Bureau.  Duluth.  Synopsis  oi' 
Weather  c.»ndltioris  for  the  twent.v -four 
h.'ins  ending  at  7  a.  m..  (Central  i;rae>. 
ilarch  IT.— An  extensive  baronietrie  dc- 
pressinn  i.verlies  the  far  Northwest.  an<l 
is  ilivi.ie«i  into  two  disturbances,  one  of 
which  is  central  in  South  Dakota,  while 
th'-  pressure  Is  lowest  over  Saskatche- 
wan. Ueneral  cloudiness  and  rain  ;s  re- 
ported in  the  Mississippi.  Lower  Missou- 
ri an.l  Reil  River  valleys,  an.l  the  South- 
west, and  the  temperature  has  ri.sen  verv 
<!»-c!deiiIy  in  all  districts.  Marked  di^■er- 
ences  in  temperature  exist  in  North  an.l 
South    Dakota.     Manitoba    and    Montana. 


THE  DUTY   ON    LUMBER. 

The  <hief  opposition  to  the  restor- 
ation of  the  duty  of  $2  per  thousand 
feet  on  imported  white  pine  lumber 
comes  from  Michigan,  where  reside  a 
large  number  of  American  owners  of 
pine  in  Canada.  Naturally  these  men 
favor  a  duty  of  only  Jl    in   i>referenc. 


With  thermometer  readings  ranging  fn.ni  « 

zero  at  Williston  to  32  above  zero  at  Win-  I  ^f*    the   higher  duty,   although   they   no 

I^''^^/f;?k^*^:^i:;n^:;;id''.;'i^s!^^i;!;!i  '^^:    ^"•^^  -o"'^  rather  see  no  duty  at  all 


ley    the     temperature    at     7    ocloVk     thi ; 
morning    range.l    from    10    at    Sault    S:e 
Marie   to  58  at   Memphis. 
I..>west    temperatures    last    night: 


Calgary 
Prince  Albert 
Minnedosa  . . . 
Swift  Current 
Williston  ..  . 
Port  Arthur 
Marquette    .. 

Havre    

Huron    

Duluth    

La   Crosse    . . . 

Lander    

I->aven|K)rt    .. 

Detroit    

l)<Hlge  Citv  .. 
N-.rth  Platte 
St.    Louis 


—  Denotes  l)elow  zero 


H  Battleford 

it?  Qu"   Appelle   

»> 'Medicine    Hat    .. 

2<i'Helena  

-  2  Winnipeg    

1"  Miles    City    

£0  Bismarck' 

^  M.iorhead    

?2  Sault   Ste.    Marie 
2?  Rapid    Citv    

*'•  St.    Paul    ". 

22  Chic-tgo    

3»;  .Milwaukee 

21   Denver    

12  Omaha    

4')   .Memphis    

i4   Kansas   Citv    


12 

20 
4 


a.    m.    today. 
22:    minirnain 


Duluth    temperature    at 
2>;:      maximum    .vestenlay. 
yesterda.v.    •}    bcjow    zer..." 

Local  forecast  for  Duluth  and  vicmitv: 
Ram  or  snow  this  afternoon  and  tonight- 
clearing  by  Thursday  afternoon  and  r-o.)I- 
er  Thursday:  northeast  win.is  becoming 
brisk  anil  shifting  to  westerlv  .luri!i„' 
Thur-sday.  JAMES     KKNEALY. 

Local    Forecast    Officii^l. 


The  American  lumbermen  who  own 
n.)  pine  in  Canada  generally  favor  the 
higher  rate.  The  lumbermen  of  the  Du- 
luth district  are  included  in  the  latter 
class,  and  they  are  naturally  anxious 
that  the  $2  duty  shall  be  retained  in 
the  tariff  bill  as  it  has  been  introduced 
20  '  by   .Mr.   Dingley. 

"Z  j      The    Detroit    Journal    discusses    this 
3R  j  question,    not    from    the   standpoint     of 
:^]^  '  either    the    owners    or    the    non-owners 
il  I  "^^  t'anadian  pine,  but  from  the  stand- 
^l  I  point  of  .\merican   labor,   which,  after 
"■1!  !  all.   should   be   the   point   of   view    from 
which    every    protective    tariff    should 
;  be   judged.    It    must    be   «-onceded    that 
the    lower   rate    offers    an    inducement 
•  to  American  owners  of  Canadian  pine 
j  to  move  their  mills  to  Canada  an.l   do 
I  their   manufacturing    there   instead   of 
i  here.  Or.  to  put  it  in  another  way.  the 
j  $1   rate  would  make  it   possible   to   do 
so   with    profit    when    a   $2   rate    would 
I  not.    Even   with   logs   on   the   free  list, 
many  lumbermen     agree     that       there 
would    be    more    profit    in    sawing   the 


A  reader,  residing  .)utside  «»f  Duluth. 
whose  letter  was  mislaid,  n-cently  re- 
•  luesled  The  Herald  t.v  answer  whether 
an  ai.Iernian,  elected  before  the  adop- 
tion of  the  constitutional  amendment, 
can  hold  office  until  theexpirati.mof  his 
term,  although  he  ha.s  not  taken  out  his 
.second  pai)ers  of  citizenship.  The  new 
law  does  not  affect  him.  and  he  can 
legally  serve  at  his  term  as  alderman. 

A  Massachu.setts  judge  who  presided 
at  the  trial  of  a  prominent  citizen  con- 
victed of  embezzling  $:!()00  laid  down 
this  principle  in  reply  to  a  plea  for 
clemency:  "I  do  not  think  that  per- 
sons well  surrounded  In  life  should  be 
more  leniently  dealt  with  than  those 
in  the  Ignorant  walks  of  life."  He 
then  .sentenced  the  prisoner  to  five 
years  in  the  penitentiary. 


San  rranei.o  ArE.inauf:  The  rulinr 
w.nnan  of  th.-  pr.,sent  day  Is  the  matafe 
woman.  The-  ...^i.len  of  bashful  I.-,,  th- 
I'Ud  of  IS,  the  ,  lear-eyed  girl  ..f  -j,  a), 
must  stand  usjje  for  their  ..Id.,-  .sister 
Wli..  lea.ls  f|„.  laoces.sion.  Tlu-  atf.-  ,'t 
\l  :!ir'  ^lTr\  "'T  •^"•"-'^^-J  t"  -xerc-ls.' 
V  rinu^  .Vr  r'  ,'?'•*'''"  X'"'''^  ^ith  the 
iVii.,\i     ,1  laslii.in     an.l     tiuste.     In     (lie 

Klizabethan    ,.,a    it    was    U.     Olh.rb.4o- 
ines   as  .•.•l..|„;,,e,l   in   their  d.iv      ,  ,1   «.  , - 

ir-ic'Soves ''''''•,  w  *'>"  "-«ti>;^iio.-^';;r 

isiiV'.i     .Vi       '    «<'ntury    ago.    Balsaz   .ist...,- 

shed    his    countrymen    by    claiming    un- 

m."n"or-{o''"'"^  '"  '\''^'-'"'^ti'^n  uTtZ^  ^^ 

U-action  '^"  '"'■"■■"''ti.m  of  cjquetti^sb  at- 
iiaciion  At  the  present  dav  the  uerio.l 
of  beauty  and  charm  has  bben  extende 
even  further.  lialzac's  30  has  recHved  an 
dd  tional  ten  years.  Women  of  lo  -ue 
no  longer  looked  upon  as  ruins  in  which 
th.'   antiquarian    may   trace   relies   of   bv 

ferm  '^VV""' ■  ^^'^'^  t>«'  vanishing  of  U^.I 
term      .d.l    m.-iid.'    the    old    maid    hers.'lf 

IV^/iirs'^'V^'K;"  "'^"  '''''  Place^'oV  depVi-te'l 
.-  ij  .  'J  %'•■'"'•<'  an  unmarried  girl  of 
2a    Is    looked    upon    as    d.-ad    stock      f,>.- 

ToiJiv    'I'^^'Tv,  '-^    '"^»*^'»*^    l>"t    a    conve   t 

h,de,?enden/^'„  ''"'**^'^  ^^«»^«'  women  of 
niu.  ptnaent    means,    women    of    socinti- 

man-v'  u^X  ''..':"  -'[-»PPorti"ng.'";'an'  •.•- 
M,  ..  •    .'.'"'V''^  .2;..    and    generally    pm    o'f 

There  are  many  reasons  for  ih«,  n.-os- 
r^!. '*^l'*"  "''  "'"  ">ature  In-lle  SI  is 
Ulre^,H  ::;!'V:  •■•  ••"''-'•"tan.ls  h.nnau  '  na- 
i.1      ..    I         •    !''•'"   '"■'■  younger  sister    Sne 

.,...,  I  V  "  "  '■•'  1"-  ••<•<•au.se  she  h.is 
le.iin.d     h..w     t..    tak..    .are    of    hvr"^ 

iw     ntv''.l.  V'"."""     '■"'•'"•^•'•'y    mined    Vh-ir 

htlle    fivsh    aii.      .Vow    th.y    kl.ov        liter 

;t./  ;  V.  ■•'wrn;''  r'""'»"-'  «-..maii.  wh.!  Is 
II  >i  in.i  vsoiked  .ir  .)Ver  worried  I  i..u->i 
about  the  s.in,e  ..^e  a.  40  as  sl,'\,.rat 
2|..  With  h.M-  a.lditi.mal  years  has  ■  ome 
a.f.htional  wis,|,.m.  If  she  has  .,♦  tT  - 
engaging  simplicity  tli.at  was  1  ers  at  S 
she  h.is  th.-  kri..wl.dg..  .))■  !„,.„  ;,nd  ii.  i 
•'ers  whi.h   mak.s  her  a   tn'.K,.  i    ,:.."!,   : 

V-'vM ';•'/".»"•  'I  '"""*■•  '"^■"'''-  '".mail  ,;.  r 

Lxp.-n..nce    h.,s^iv.ien    her    th..    Kilt    of 

.s 


"TO  COLUMBIA." 

The  following  poetic  tribute  to  <^olu».i- 
bia  by  Michael  S.-anlun.  In  honor  of  llie 
centennial  anniversary  of  h.-r  indep.-n- 
<lence,  f^„  happily  blends  humor,  patho.^ 
and  devotion  with  th.'  patriotic  .sentim  nt 
as  to  easily  place  it  in  the  l.-ad  of  any- 
thing In  Its  class.  It  eaiin.)!  but  tin.l.  .".r 
create,     a    resp..iisive        cl^rd     in    .v,  rv 

o-;?r-n  "^  "':""  ''"'  «'"'^-"^"  "^  <^in.o!.li..g 
I>atil<,tn-  s.,iitiinents  so  r.'a.lilv  as  (he 
la..'    in.m    whi.h    it    sprang.       "        •      '" 


LIBERATED  I 


Henry  W.  Corbett,  who  has  been  ap- 
pointed I'nited  States  senator  from 
Oregon  by  Governor  Lord,  served  in 
the  senate  one  term,  from  IStJG  to  1872, 
and  will  be  remembered  as  being  con- 
nected with  some  of  the  most  impor- 
tnat  legislation  enacted  in  the  days  of 
reconstruction. 


sympathy^^  of  wl.u-h   tl^^  j.Aing  ^iri"  ..V 
n..t  ling.  T..  m-n  she  ha.s  c.,me   to  r.  o  ■.' - 
s.nt_n..t    only    all    that    is    graceful     ui 
^,7';/;.7ri  •'■"•'  <='/^f'fV'  '"  wor^anhJ.;..  •   u 

A  n.  .  . '   i  .Vl"'  ^""'  ^•■"•'^■'"  '^"O  feminine 
A  noiij,'    workiriK    w.)men-fn)m    the    ar- 

n.t  r.r  /„"''  "'•'"•  W'^'king  woman-  lu. 
.  ,nt  ThJ"V"  •"■"  "■'.''•"•""y  in  the  ascvn- 
<»s  is  the  ni.vice  whom  no  one  kn.nvs 
or  cares  mii.-h  about.  It  is  when  he 
y.Virs  ol  endeavor  have  been  pas".*d  .-  n.l 
min.l  and  hea.  t  havo  reached  their  full- 
.si  powers  of  .  oinprehension  and  feeling 
thai  she  IS  at  the  pinnaol.'  of  her  de  'eT: 
oi.m.-nt.  n  th.s..  da.vs  of  hurrv  ami  pr.^s- 
sure  an.l  intensity  of  effort,  siich  a  fea- 
ture naturally  takes  precedence  over  ihV. 
untrie.l  Kirl  who  is  waiting  with  expeet- 
ant  e.ves  for  th.-  messag,-  of  the  tmmo 
I'.xistence  is  t.jo  full,  the  struggle  too  sel 
rious  for  the  return  of  those  davsnlufn 
fh"*.^.:  '^'""'••■' ".<•*■•  '^fai'ty  and  loily  wor" 
the  gieat  requisit.  s  of  women.  The  times 
are  .stirring,  th.-  pressure  of  existence  des- 
lera  ely  earnest,  and  man  in  his  strug- 
Kle  deman.ls  a  helpmate  who  .-an  assis' 
him  ..luyard  noj  .irag  him  back  Chiv- 
alr.v    in  its  .l.nvnialj.  carried  awav  m    tiv 

th  .■h!l.l-wif,.  l:anKing.  fright-n.-d  and 
lalnt-h.arte.l  ..n  her  husbands  stalwart 
aitn.  >'<i>Kii  I 


Cohiinbia,   jigra.   just  hear  awhile 

A   soldier   .>f    the    rank   and    file 

A  nativ.-  of  the  Emerald  Isle    ' 

><>ur    uniform    adorning; 

Who   omes,    his  poor  respects  to   pay 

In  the  good  old  democratic  way 

And  wish   you  on   this  centenniiu  day 

Ihe   very    cream   o"    the   morning- 

a"  i  i''-':^  y"V'  maam,  if  you  would  wear 
Amid    the   glory   of   your   hair 
Right  in  that  nest  of  cupi.l  there. 
Plus   emblem   of   his   sireland 
J<ed  Dy  .soft  winds  and  heavenly  dew 
Wept  .lovvn  from  skies  of  deepest  bk^e 
I^.f  «mr.Ie  sprig  of  shamrock   grew 
Near   the   very   heart   of   Ireland. 

\\  h.>   Hash    ui>on   you   late   an.l   soon 

(JoHv.  n'"'',  V"""   "^•'  «"mmer  moon, 
''Utrivall.'.l  by  your  gl.»ry! 

Hut   in   the  .lay.s  when   .voti  were  vouna- 
hung.'""""""""     ""     yo>.r     footste-ps 

•Tvv\s-''n?/,'''''*';'.^"^''^  *'"^'"  tongue- 
ivN.is   then  a  .hiTerent  st.»rv. 

(  l.'l    ir'/'"r'"    ''•■"■•*    ■''"''    ''''^""dv    days 

Aii.i    bii-k.-d    your   throne-up.setting   wavs 
In  the  la...  or  ra.k  and  pri.sun:       **       ^ 
And    Kav.-    y.,u    all    sh.-    ha.l.    asth..re 
Strong  aim.s.  tru..  h.arts  an.l  I.,  ■'    Kaio'-o 
Ad  <•  u..r..,l  y„u  fr.>m  h..r  s..a-lK'at  smir,' 
I  111  ail   your  stars  had   risen.       *''^'^""'^< 

^y'^b"!?'""  '""'  •"•"•"•'ff  fi-om  wars  alarms 
J:  ck    ]{;,rr.y    t.j..k   you    in    his   arms 

n     a'!"',?  s!"  iT,  •'.""'■  ■'""«""«  '•Harms 
I.    «•,  .  •   ^atri.ks  morning. 

-A-i      "  V"*''   •^■""   '"    'lis   Hag  an.l  said- 
Uh..n  thnmes  are  mnuMering,  monarchs 

Ami.l  the'  stars  youll  hold  vour  head 
1b..ir  i.etly  kingd..ms  s.ornin^^-  ''''' 
M.mtgomery   was  standing  near 


....      ••     ""•^  ■^KiiKitii;^    near 

W^^  '    ;  ^i:;:"  J^;  ""•«  _eharging%he.., 


of 


ChicaK.v  March  17.— For  Wisconsin: 
Rain  this  afternoon  and  tonight,  with 
warmer  in  east  portion:  Thur.sdav  f.ur 
and     colder    in     w^est     t».rtion:     southeast  ,       ^     .......i    .,.    ^a.»  ma     me 

Z^:^-  Zl^  ^""^H^^ro^:'"^,:^^  I  '-^^  •"  ^^"^da  and  shipping  the  lum- 

fair   and   colder;    fresh    east    to   northerly 

winds. 


President  .McKinl.  y  can  hardy  make 
a  better  ch.>i(  e  than  Charlemagne 
Tower,  of  Philadelphia,  for  amba.s.sador 
to  Germany.  Mr.  T.)wer  is  well 
e.|uipped  by  education  and  nature  for 
a  dipl.miati*'  positi.m,  and  would  be 
a  splendid  representative  of  America 
at   Berlin. 


SecretaiT    Sherman    is    starting    out 

well.    Senor  de  Lome,  the  Spanish  niin- 

■   .        ..  1  «*iw.  ii  iiiiii      ,,,    j;,^.,   j,,^.   J  nit- .t  states  imnorte.l   ■{  »•! 

ister.  threatens  to  resign  because  Sher-S4-!''>i>5    pounds   ...    cane   sugar     vai„.-.'l    •It 

man  demands  fair  treatment  of  Ameri-  '  !!l^.?!*'•*:'.'.'.•..:^"/^•■:'^'•=*?^^^\I;"l''''^•'^    "f    b.-'ct 

»i  J.. 9.3.041.    As    the    con 


BEET  SUGAR  INDUSTRY. 

Chicago  Times-rierald:  The  forecast  oi 
the  sugar  sche.lule  to  be  reported  in 
the  new  tariff  bill  naturally  attracts  ,,ub- 
ic  att..nti.>n  t..  tli,.  n.markable  growth  of 
-.ed  ''r*.'\  ""*-'.■•"•  i"<'u«"-y  in  this  ...ulmrv 
.u.l  Its  i..).ssil>iliiu.s  under  the  fav.n-ai.ie 
leKisl.uion  pr..i)os,.d.  In  ..oiisidering  the 
p.>licy  .)t  the  K..\ernment  with  reference 
t..  the  supar  in.laslry  it  must  be  kepr  in 
min.l  that  this  M.untry  does  n..t  export 
>u:;.-ir  to  iiny  -r.  at  exL-nt.  being  able  to 
.;=  upply  only  a  small  p.-r.-eiitase  of  dom.-s- 
tic  .•.)nsumption  During  the  fiscal  vo  ir 
VL\^^   'h*-   l-nitd  States  import.^d   3.8.^i.- 


man  demands  fair  treatment  of  Ameri- 
cans in  Cuba, 


THE    AUTOCRATIC  SPEAKER. 
A  recent  issue  of  the  Cincinnati  En- 
quirer  contains   an     account     of     the 
growth   of  the   power   by     which     the 
speaker  of  congress   is   made  sole   ar-  '  stead  of  lumber 
biter  of  what  legislation  shall  be  acted        r,    :„    hor^tiv-   „„„^ 

upon.     The   recent    Republican   caucus  i  .vill^^o^th.l  7   '°   '''''"*   °"' 

at   v\-act,ir,c.t-.«    1^     I       .»        ^     .  M^"""  of  these  proposed  rates  of  duty 

Th.     rf    f        ^^'^'°P^^  *  ^^^'"-^  »n    would  be  in   the  interest   of  American 
he  part  of  some  members   to   correct    ,abor.    A   mere  statement  of  the  facts 
the  abuses  which  have  grown  up  un-      •  "«.ti.«« 

der  the  autocratic  power  thus  exercised 


A  Minneapolis  man  is  being  re- 
quired t.)  establish  the  identity  of  his 
own    children.      This    is    reversing    the 


ber    from    the    mills    there      into      the 

United   States   at   the  $1    rate  of   duty    „ ..^.^,, 

than  to  raft  the  logs  to  our  ports  and  |  usukl  order^of  thin^ 

convert  them  into  lumber  on  this  side  '  — 

of  the  border.  But  the  J2  rate  of  duty 
would  discourage  that  plan  and  en- 
courage   the    importation    of    logs    in- 


The    Republican    leaders    propose    to 


break  the  record  in  the  passage  of  the  I  In^  for^^^lUiy^'l^Ji^'^ei'^,^^;:;]^^!;'^';^ 
tariff  bill,  but  the  senate  may  check  ''"'f»'^  Kingd.)m  e<iual  to  the  bountvVi 
their  Plans.  "'i^K-..'"  ..V^'!  '•'"^'  "^.  .Production.       ' 


their  plans. 

No  one  can  hereafter  gratify  his  de- 
sire to  inspect  the  fortifications  of  the 
United  States,  unless  he  enlists  in  the 
army. 


shows  that  the  higher  rate   would   be. 
by  the  speaker,  but  they  were  largely    f"  ^^"^  T""  T^^  Canadian  labor  would       Gen.  Draper  wants  to  be  minister  to 
in  the  minority  and  after  a  few  fit-     .?  "r^r/^.*?.^""^^'-*   ^^^   logs  into    Italy  _and    when    Pre.„dent    McKinley 


in  the  minority  and  after  a  few  fiery 

speeches   the  matter  was  dropped.     It 

is  a  subject  that  will  come  to  the  front 

again,  however.    One  of  the  rules  which    .-.V  emp,;;^;d   i^  The^-ma^ura'c^u;:  ':; 

has  been  m  force  through  many  con-  |  lumber.       It  is  a  matter  of  some  mil- 

gresses  recites  that  "when  any  member  j  li.ms   of   dollars  every   year. 


lumber,  and  in  the  other  case  American  '<  offered  his  a  consulate  he  nearly  faint 
labor    would    be    emploed    to    do    that,    ed 
The  difference  is  no  small  item  to  la- 


desires  to  speak  or  deliver  any  matter 
to  the  house,  he  shall  rise  and  respect- 
fully  address   himself   to   Mr.    Speaker, 
and,  on  being  recognized,  may  address 
the    house,"    etc.     It    is   also    provided 
that  "when  two  or  more  members  rise 
at   once,    the   speaker   shall    name    the 
one  who  is  first   to  speak."     It  would 
seem  from  this  that  any  member  was 
entitled   to   the   floor   for  any   purpose 
so  long  as  it  was  not  a  disorderly  one. 
but  this  is  not  the  effect  of  the  rule, 
for  the  speaker  has  the  power  to  recog- 
nize or  not,  just  as  it  strikes  his  fancy. 
Out   of  this  privilege     accorded     the 
speaker  has  grown  his  custom  of  recog- 
nizing no  one  who  has  not  first  made 
arrangements    with    him    for    securing 
the   floor  for  a   certain   purpose.     Th..' 
speaker  must  know  what  motion  is  to 
be  made   before  he  will   recognize  the 
member  who  desires  to  make  it.  and  if 
bf  any  chance  a  member  rises  without 
first  arranging  with  the  speaker  he  is 
greeted  with  this  question:     "For  what 
purpose    does    the      gentleman      rise?" 
While  the  speaker  is  thus  demanding 
information    the   member   is 


The  coal  trust  will  probably  claim  the 
diamond  that  was  found  the  other  day 
in  a  scuttle  of  coal  in  New  Jersey. 

The  empress  of  Austria  is  opposed  to 
the  deadly  cigarette.  She  prefers  to 
smoke  a  cigar. 


There  is  no  gambling  in  Chicago  at 
present.  All  the  sports  have  gone  to 
Nevada. 


Some  advocates  of  the  Jl  rate  seek 
to  strengthen  their  contention  by  say- 
ing a  $2  rate  of  duty  on  lumber  im- 
ported from  Canada  might  provoke 
Canada  to  put  a  high  exf^ort  duty  on 
logs.  So  far  as  that  is  concerned  Can- 
ada   might   do   so   if   the   import    duty  

port  a„,  „„  ,„.,„.  c^:;i":r;  I S;  r.srr  c:;;.'"^  ^"""  ^"'°"- 

The  concert  of  the  powers  does  not 
please  Greece.  King  George  objects  to 
the  music. 


her  lumber  admitted  free  of  duty,  but 
it  is  not  to  our  advantage  to  shut 
down  our  mills  and  use  lumber  made 
by    f.>reign    labor. 

Therefore  the  Detroit  paper  concludes 
that  from  the  standpoint  of  American 
labor-and  that  is  the  standpoint  from 
which    all    political    parties    are    look- 

dmy'isT  on?7'^'    '''^''r    '^''    "f'J°"--':    p-ofVhTj.direstXaVuTc^;of 
uuiy   IS   the  one  to   be   preferred.   The    inauguration  day  was  the  sight  of  ex 

ways    and    means    committee    of    the    '^""' """'        —       •    -~   - 

house  favors  the  $2  rate,  but  it  re- 
mains to  be  seen  what  the  house  and 
senate    will    agree    to, 


BURKE'S  GREEN  BOTTLE. 

Washington     letter     to     Minneapolis 


tmeiii.il  governm.nts  have  nearly  all  re- 
sorted t.j  the  bounty  system  of  developiuf,- 
the    beet   sug.-.r   in.Iuslry.    but   are   n.'.iilv 

;')  .t  '?''\..^'"""1^''''^  »f  ^I'Bar.  it  follows 
that  a  .liff.r.nt  economic  question  is 
pre.sente.l  in  this  c.uintry.  and  one  that 
must  be  regar.led  from  a  .lifferent  st.-.rd- 
'"V"'-.  The^su^^ar  planters  in  the  Briti.sh 
.•olonies  which  are  compelled  to  compete 
with  th..  houniy-.-overed  product  of  the 
contMiental  ountries  are  already  clamor- 

"" ''"        '  he 

id 

Thi.s    protection   which    is   demanded    bv 
the    su.gar    planters    of    the    British    coio- 
nies    against     the    product    of    countries. 
!v.V.  .h'*V-^'    *^.':""*''*-"'    l/restnts    a    problem 
which    has    Its    parallel    in    this    country 
ami  has  been  promptly  m.  t  bv  the  w:iv-< 
.and  means  committee.  Although  the  new 
tariff  may  cause  a  trilling  advance  in  th.. 
|.rii...   of   sugar    to   the   consumer,    it    -.vill 
.loubtle.ss   giv..  a   marked   Impetus   to   the 
be^et    sugar    industry        in    this    country 
which    may    be   said    to    be   in    its   experi- 
mental stages.    So   far  the  state  of  Cali- 
fornia  has   outranked   all  other  stato-;   in 
the    su.sceptibility        of    its    soil     to     be-t 
sugar  cultivation,   but   it  is  believed  th  it 
I  nnder    the    stimulus    of    adequate    protec- 
tion the  in.lustry  ..an  be  establisjied  with 
proht   in   other  states.    The   total   pr.o.Ua  - 
t  on   of   beet   sugar   in   California    for  the 
tliree    years    1892.    1893    an.l    1891    was    U".  - 
0«...0.>9   i)ounds.      In    :^'ebraska   the   prouiic- 
tton    for    the    same    period    was    12  48o ''00 
[tonnds.  -.^ou,-w 

In  all  future  legislation  affecting  the 
sugar  Industry  congn.-.ss  should  k.-en 
.stea.lily  in  view  the  possibilitv  of  sucli 
devebipment  of  I.eet  sugar  as"  to  result 
in  the^  production  of  all  the  raw  material 

?tI,*^*'^   c^"!'  "^^^'^^      manufacture   in    the 
I'nlted   States. 


1 

Wh ile   t he  shamrock"  was^ adorning 

th'im'"'"''"*''       ^'''''^    '»"^1    "^^"w 
An.l  along  the  Continental   line. 
That^,-h«.r   was   mussed   with   nine   times 

On  that  St.  Patrick's  morning. 

w."-  l^'^Y   ^*^r^*"t    thos..   misty   things 

I  ut  yet   Irom  out  those  sha.lows  sn rin 's 
\our    brightest,    highest    glory        ''P'^"^'" 

V.m   ^^  J^       Side   the  Jasper  Greens, 
ioii  were  a   maiden    'out  of  teens" 
And   may  forget  the  story 
'l'oTr-.']'/'vm.^"''  had  come  once  more, 
Vm,   ;^lf^l'-'  ''•''  '"  '^'^y^  of  yore,- 
^    n   met   him   on   the   sounding  shore 
An      .l.ared    th..    mighty    foeman; 
An.    Jackson  sho<.k  your  b.inner  free 
An.l   .^won.   by    "the   eternal,    she  ' 

fehall  h.>ld  her  eours,-  oer  land  and  sea 
An.l   cringe  or  stoop  to  no  man." 

V.  • 

An.l   in   your   fullest    womanhood 
huie    lr..lau<l  s  s.)ns   .ibout    vou   stood 
An.l   ireelv   i,our..<l   th..ir  warmest  bbiod 
•<.>r  you.   their  s.con.l  mother. 
^^  her.- ..r    al.mg    the   battle-tide 

Y"''  fV-   .^■'"""  '"'^■•"'   'barged  an.l   died, 
-An    Irishman    was   by    his   side 
Jake    brother    unto    broth. r. 
rho     sunder.'.l    in   the   ])u))lic   mart 
^ou    .annot    tell    their   grav..s    apart, 
Tw.)   in   rate,    tho'   one  in   heart 
i'or  G.Kl  and  Oodlik.-  freedom. 
When.,  er    the    dre.i.l    occasion    come 

I..).  .It   th..   rattle  ..t   your  drum. 

J  hey  re  ready   when  you  need  them. 

VI. 

lour  ch.^eks   like   r.-ddest    ros.-s   blow 

Vonr  I"'''"   ''■'^''.  .'"■''^''t   traditions  glow, 
\our  bos„m.   whiter   than   the   snow, 
I  an   hear   th..  world's   inspection- 
in  l.joks.   in  act.  in  pride,  in  mien 
Y  on  seem  Ilk..  Nature's  newborn  queen 
Darlin.   a   little   bit   of  green 
\\  ould    suit    your    fine    complexion. 
H>    tears   liedewcd.   by  martvrs  blest 
1  was  borne  on  many  a  gallant  cre.-^t, 
iwas  worn  on  many  a  queenly  breast 
And   shone  'mong  golden   tresses- 
And  he  who  to  this  emblem's  true 
nAV  .']''  '■'■•  '^^'■•'-  ^^"  false  to  vou. 
Jill   the  .'inerald  fields  whereon  it  grew 
Are  turned  to  wildernesses. 

VII. 

Just   stoop   your  regal    head   awhile- 
.\o  wonder,    darlin'.    that  vou   smile— 
A  .soldier  of  the  rank  and  file 
Has   mighty   awkward   fingers 
About   a    troop   of   'wilderlng   curls 
But  his  faith  is  truer  than  an  earl's. 
His    heart    as    gentle   as    a   girl's 
Don  t   blame  him  if  he  lingers     ' 
About  your  wealth  of  golden   hair, 
lo  set  ol(l  Ireland's  shamrocks  ther-^— 
May   blackest  sorrow   be  his  share    ' 
W  ho    would    the    twain    dissever 
Now   lift  your  head  to  all  mens  view. 
(  olumbia!  while  I  drink   to  vou. 
The  green,  the  red.  the  white,  the  blue, 
I'orever   and    forever. 


-\n  Indian's  love, 
wlun  it  ..lue  exists,  is 
nnpaiallclcd.  lieu  on  Ui 
Uo      tliDuj^li     f.iv     and 

_^ water  to   riye   a    tritr.d 

_. frccdotn.        Not    r.ccef- 

-■-,—. sarilv    jK-rsonal    lilK-riv, 

-  j  5>iit      r.ii     emancipation 

j  — ~    iiomlhcslavcryct  j.ain. 

J-" '  Arc    \OA    a  dyKpcjuic.' 

3~   ~         l^o  V'-tnc.-'.!iz'j"ti.:;t  il,;:t 

._     ttrrible  gnawing  .it  \our  \  it:.U, 

.  '.hat  taint  feeling,  that  contini;. I 

-  ,  {'ro\\ir;^   weaker,   Ih.-.t    n.  rvcus- 
ress,  that  everLntinjj  longinj;  icr 

-.__  I'XKi    that    never    *atiblics,  and 
.  many  other  firr.il.'-r  ►yniptoi/.s, 

ait- ».ijt  tlie  distant  foot  »;«.);h  c.t 

^        the  fan:  pproatliin;^,', most  rcitr.:- 

iCES    o!    «f:.ec lit  loners  —  deatii     f;cni 

nta-valion.    That'.*  actually  the  ov.t- 

conio      ot      dy.jHrpvia  — de.'ttli      (tr.t 

what  you  wili,,  from  an  inability  of 

the  s:oniacIi  t.>  al-.-orb  r.ourjshniint 

t  .  .  irom   food,  or  c.f  tliC  bUxid  f.  if,t'\i-v 

such  nourishment  to  different  p:.rts  of  i!:c  bodv  f.a-  tl,:.  u-pl.-nish,  ^n,  ot  t?  luV 

But  tbc.c  IS  hope :  tiiou.sands  have  been  curc.l,  von  can  b.-.     Look  to  ,i"c  I.liian  "o; 

aid.     ill.  Knowledge  ot  medicine  jjivcu  hi:.,  l.y  nati:re  is  unpreccdentcJ 

Kickapoo    Indian    Sagwa, 

Nature's     own     remedy,     simple,     l...rn.Icss,     but     cfiective,     alwavj     run-      .-.11 
^tomuch  troubles.     It  purifies  the  blood,  rc.tovcs  a  health  v  ::ction  to"  the  .t.^n.a.  lI 
liver  and  kunu^ys,  and  by  iru  igoi-atin;j  tiu-se  -rc;.t  or-an  ,'  the  >utlerin-  Dv.^p.pii," 
IS  biou.ht  l).-ick  troni  a  lite  of  n  i-cvy  tollic  ^uns!m^.•^f  st:-cr„;th  and  rencwj      .  -. 

5^-    /.    tb.    h'-""'  -rTf  "'  *'■•'•    ^'-'^^^--'^   ^vhi).  there's   vet   lime.cVoer 
diu-;,^t  has  this  wont!crtulp,cp:tiation.     T::!:c  no   substitute.     A    ;ro.'xl    result    i, 

'r^?'!  i;'h       7,''?;;     'y '''"•'"*' ""'''"^'''''^'^^^  l.;..PIunev;  i.  within  the  .each  ol  all. 
s".ixj  a  iJottk-;  (>  bottles  ior  ^--i.jj. 


FLASHES  OF  FUN. 

Chicago  Record-  Patient— Say,   doctor? 


.^eZy^:^W^  *^'""'"^  his'case  Of  m- 


Patient— Remember,    we   are   insnre.l    in     ^Tu-' ""^  fi-eai  ^eann.inni.in  (Head 

the  .same   mutual  conipany!       *"^"'^^''        '  wI?!?„'?_'^'^^^P*'*'^">' allayed  their  appre- 


ha.d  at  a  banquet  been  placed  by  mis- 
take at  the  bottom  .jf  the  table,  on  per- 
ceiving which  considerable  amotion 
arose  among  the  company,  wh..  dr.-aded 
the  consequences  of  the  supposed  indig- 
nity, but  the  great  Ceanncinnidh  (head 


He— What's    the 


Detroit     Free     Press 
matter,    my  dear? 

She— I'm    speechless    with    anger. 

Then   she   talked  a  blue   streak   for   fif- 
teen minutes. 

Life:  Hunker-It  is  odd  what  an  afflni-v 
the  presidential  office  has  f.,r  working  n 
J""<^;,.H"'-kin^--What  do  you  mean?  liun- 
ker-V\  ashington  cut  down  .-i  cherry  uee 
I.incoln  split  rails  and  all  the  presidents 
have  been  cabinet  makers.  '-»'"''"is 

rful'^^T'- 1^"."^-  Todate,  (aghast)-Brother 
I.ildad.  that  is  the  fingerbowl  you  are 
drinking  from.  Uncle  Bildad  Comeon  (be- 
tween gulps)-Peart  name  fer  it  sister 
1    .swow.    It   does    take   ev'rv    linger   aiVl- 

I'il'Hn.""*  /'■'',  ^"k-'  ^'\f''  ^'''"«  ^^hile  he's 
gittin    a  drink,  b  gosh. 

Detroit  Journal:  "Oh.  ves  "  the  'ar- 
wandering  Clysses  further  repli,.,!  '  -i 
guess  th.re  were  other  w.-.ys.  If  the  h.nse 

!,,.)■■'."'  f'V'i'"  ^  '^"V-  I  "''«ht  have  tri...l 
;,.'  f  .,  '"''acco.  1  suppo.se.  1  was  Doun.l 
t..  get  th..  h..rs..  on  the  Tnjjans  In  one 
lorm  or  another." 


henslons  by  exclaiming     emphaticallv 
Where   the   Macdonald   sits,    know    vV 
gentlemen,    that    is    the     head    of     th" 
table."  " 


.^^L1FE  STORY, 
lie  IS  t..o  young  to  know  it  now 
But  some  day  he  will  know. 

AI)ove    her    little    sufferer's    bed. 

\\  Ith  all  a  mother"s  grace. 
She  stroked   the  curly,   throbbing  head 
And    smoothed    the    fevered    f-i<e 
'Me  does  not  know   my  love,   mv   fear; 
My  toil  of  heart   and   hand- 
But  .some  day  in  th.-  after  vears 
Sonn.  day  he'll  underst.in.l"; 
Some  day  hell  know 
I  l.)ved  him  so, 
Some    day     hell     understan.l." 

A  wild  lad  plavs  his  thoughtless  t>art 

A.s    fits    his   chlldhoo.is    lot 
And   tramples   on    his   m.nh.rs   b<.art 

Ofttim.s  and   knows   it   not. 
II.    plays   .-imoiiK  his   n.iisv   mates 

Nor   kin.ws    his    truest    f ri.iid  ■ 
Hisnioth.r  siKhs.   as  still   she 'waits 

■■'>onie   day    hejl   cmprehend; 
The   day   will    be 
When    h.'   will   see. 

Some    day    he'll    comprehend " 


Chicago  Tribune:  "i  wonder."  mused 
Allen  Sparks,  looking  over  the  bill  the 
plumber  had  s.'Ut  him  for  making  sun.lrv 


his    strenuous 


NAMED  AFTER  STATES. 


(le%  eland  Leader:  The  mini.ster-My 
good  man.  do  you  believe  in  a  hereaf'er^'" 

bhotw.-ll-A  hereaffer?  Shid  .say  l' ,\U\ 
1  m  married  to  a  new  woman.  1  bleve  fii 
sheveral   hereafters. 

Puck:   Kindly  visitor  (noticing  the  emp- 

death^  •^'""''  '"'"'^'■y  *1'^'  a  natural 

Little  Reginald  fpromptly)  —  Ye- 
ma  am;   the  eat  ate   him.  ' 

Tit  Bits:  Willie— Are  you  the  nearest 
relative  I  ve  got.   mamma? 

Mother— Yes,  love,  and  your  papa  Is 
the  closest  relative  j'ou've  got. 

Indianapolis  Journal:  "I  am  looking  for 
a  man  by  the  name  of  Isaac  Dilderga.sh," 
.^aid  th<.  lawyer-looking  man  who  stepped 
off  at  a   little  ()klah.»ma  station. 

They  wuz  a  cuss  by  that  name  here  ' 
answered  Rubberneck  Bill,  "hut  he  got 
into   a    boss   trouble  and   died  " 

'Er— was   his   death   violent?" 

'Violent?  Naw!  Peaceful  as  could  le 
He  never  even  wiggled  from  the  time  the 
boys  hung  im  to  the  time  they  took  im 
down    an'    planted    'im." 

Puck:    Little   Clarence— Pa? 

Mr.  Callipers— Well,  mv  son? 
•  ^U.*'®  Clarenct— Pa,  is  a  man  who  lives 
in    Topeka   called    a    Topekaboo? 

Truth:  Sunday  school  teacher— \nd 
what    did    David   do   to   Goliath 

Chimmy— Aw.  say:  He  di.ln't  do  a  t'ing 
to  him: 


His   mother  waits  alone 
An.l   soon   he   finds    an.nh'er  heart 

rhe  mate   unto   his  own. 
She  gives  him  up  in  joy  an.l  woe. 

T-i^'J '',.''•■'    *''''    >'""">^    bride's    hand. 
His   mother   murmurs.    •Will    he   know 
-And    ever    understand? 
When  will    he   kn.tw 
1   love  him  s.i; 
WI.en   will    he   understand?" 

■^^P^,  ''^r**??  ^-1"  ^^^'«  his  battling  davs, 
rhe  fijrht   IS  hard  and  grim 

H.^^^V-^;''^   '1''^'"'   o'd-fa.shloned  ways 
n-K     \^   bttle  charm   for  him. 
The  dimness  falls  around  her  vears 

The  shadows  'round  her  stand", 
one  mourns  in  loneliness  and  tears 
'He  II    never    understand. 
He'll   never  know 
I  loved  him  s.j; 
He'll   never  understand." 

A  bearded  man  of  serious  vears 

Bends   down  above  the  dead. 
And  rains  the  tribute  of  his  tears 

Over  an  old.  gray  head. 
He  stands  the  open  grave  above. 

Amid    the   mourning   bands- 
Ami  now  he  knows  his  mother's  love 
And  now  he  understand.s. 
Now  doth  he  know 
She    loved    him    so. 
And   ntjw   he  understands 

-SAM  WALTER   FOH.-?. 


The   Chicago  Chronicle  of  yest^FdS; 
thus  became  humorous  at  the  expense 
^.    ,^      -  .  .  "f't    in    a  :  of  the  Tribune:    The  hour  is  approach- 

state   of   recognition,    and    if   the    pur-  ,  mg  when  a  terrible  conflict   will    take 


means    committee    of    the  '  */o^'*'>'nor  Burke  of  North  Dak.)ta  on  tho 

treasury  stand  that  faced  the  mile 
stretch  of  Pennsylvania  avenue,  down 
which  the  procession  came  from  the 
capitol.  The  first  glimpse  I  had  of  him 
was  as  he  was  coming  up  the  aisle 
with  a  sizable  green  bottle  tucked 
snugly  away  under  one  arm  anu  two 
bags  of  peanuts  under  the  other. 
Everybody  l.)oked  askance  at  the  bottle. 


PLEASANT  ANTICIPATIONS. 
Cleveland  Le.id.r:  While  there  may  b.- 
some  disappointment  Jim.mg  the  -jmi.e 
seekers  who  have  flocked  to  Washinff- 
ton  only  to  find  that  few  places  are  to  bn 
given  away  at  present  It  will  do  most  of 
tiiem  some  goo.l  t.)  wait.  Anticipation 
It  is  said.  IS  sw.Hter  than  realization,  an.l 
in  that  sense  ih.iusands  of  men  who  .ire 
anxious  t.)  serve  their  country  will  get 
considerable  plea.sure  out  of  the  delav  in 
the  distribution   of  tho  spoils. 

FACINCx  A  HARD  PROBLEM. 
St.  Louis  Glob.-Democrat:  It  is  said 
that  Spain  is  supporting  at  home  and  in 
the  colonies  an  army  of  370,(X)0  men.  The 
task  of  doing  this  with  an  empty  tr.-as- 
nry,  is  not  the  least  of  the  troubles  at 
Madrid. 


-    r-    I      -       ..........  comuei   will    take    *"•TP•*^'■'^"^.^''  ^'^^  '^'**'l  ^^as  turned  sup- 
pose IS  not  to  the  liking  of  the  speaker.    Place  in  the  office  of  i  .;   .t^^r.  Pi^'iously  inward.     But  it  was  nothing 


have  been  several  very  recent  instances 
when   a   member  secured   the   floor   to 


speak   to  a  certain   subject  or  motion,  i  reports  of  a  brutal   prize  fight  in   Ne 
only  to  talk  about  something  else,  and  '  vada.    The  high-minded  editorial  force 
in  each  he  was  promptly  called  down    «hich  has  .set  its  face  against  such  de 
by  the  speaker,  who  said:    "The  gentle-    moralizing  practices,    is  determined   to 
man    has   not    the   floor   for   that   pur-    keep   this   matter  out.       Things     have 
^^C  ^  reached    that    point    where    something 

Why  are  such  autocratic  procedures    ^*ill  have  to  give,  and  when  it  does  the 


.      --„    ,   .,v..^„   suing  on     ■•"«»«•=  »^aier.     i  Kuow,  lor  1  nave  lived 

among   the   telegraph   editors    to   flood    Ll^  prohibition  state,  and  I  can  tell  the 
the  columns     of     the  npwar^a,,^..     ....*i.     ainfrence    between    water    and    "con 


tK..  «„,.  uiiierence     netween 

the  newspaper     with    gresslonal  cold  tea"     What  is  funnier 

still.  Governor  Burke  did  not  even  have 


NOT  SO  CRAZY  AS  IT  LOOKS. 
Kansas  City  Journal:  It  must  be  ad- 
mitted that  a  number  of  wild  measures 
have  been  enact.-.l  this  winter  In  various 
\V  estern  states  which  were  In  no  sense 
amusing,  especially  to  the  corporations 
and  Institutions  against  whom  thev  were 
leveled.  But  most  of  the  queer  bills  the 
Eastern  press  has  taken  .so  seriously 
and  regarded  as  evidences  of  Western 
in.sanity  were  simply  evidences  of  ,ol- 
lity.  The  Western  legislature  is  not  naif 
as   (.raity   as    th.-   .ffete    East    imagines 


tolerated  by  a  majority?  Because  the 
majority  is  really  powerless.  As  a 
matter  of  fact,  the  speaker  can  per- 
petuate his  power  against  the  wishes 
of  the  majority,  paradoxical  as  it  may 
seem.  The  rules  of  congress  are  pre- 
pared by  a  committee  composed  of  a» 
equal  number  of  members  from  each 
party,  and  of  this  committee  the  speak- 
er is  ex-oflficio  chairman.  By  appoint- 
ing partisans  of  his  own  and  holding 
the  decisive  vote,  he  is  enabled  to  con- 
trol  absolutely  the  making  of  rules. 

"h.  re  ■;  one  wav,  h  .wever,  by  v/hich 
a  majority  of  congress  may  secure  a 
chance  to  overhaul  the  rules  against 
which  so  much  complaint  is  now  being 


re.sult  will  be  awful. 


The  pope  has  set  aside  a  sum  of 
nearly  $100,000.  the  interest  on  which 
will  be  employed  in  constituting  a  cer- 
tain number  of  prizes  for  the  best 
Catholic  historical  works  which  may 
he  published  in  Italy  or  abroad.  With 
this  object  his  holiness  has  appointed 

an  official   commission  in   order  to  ex- 

„„  •  ..  ^  ""•"  '"•^•»e.iii  me  meiee.  hut  he  skir, 
amine  the  works  and  has  himself  mlshed  around  and  got  a  good  share 
sketched  out  the  program  of  the  com-  '  "'  ,\^1  ammunition,  and  he  laughed 
r.«»i*i^«  I  ""tll  he  seemed  a  prospective  victim 
of  apoplexy. 


a  cotkscrew  with  him.  but  pecked  away 
at  the  cork  until  a  man  took  pity  on  his 
delimma  and  passed  him  one. 

Later  In  the  day  the  spectators  In 
the  rear  were  much  annoyed  by  those 
below  standing  up.  Police  persuasion 
and  gentle  hints  pjoving  of  no  avail, 
the  sufferers  took  matters  into  their 
own  hands,  and  whenever  any  one 
stood  up,  ignoring  the  fact  that  he 
was  not  opaque,  he  was  immediately 
swamped  by  an  avalanche  of  orange 
pels  and  crusts  of  bread.  One  man  at- 
tempted to  assert  his  freedom  as  an 
American  <ltzen  and  raised  his  um- 
brella as  a  defiant  protection.  In 
exactly  three  seconds  he  was  glad  to 
capitulate  for  the  sake  of  the  umbrel- 
la. I  w.m  t  say  that  Governor  Burke 
was  active. in   the  melee,   but  he   sklr- 


petition. 


United  States  Senator  Samuel  D.  Mc-  THEY  GO  TOGETHER 

Enery.  of  Louisiana,  is  credited  with  t.^'"".l'?>'"*^  Courier-Journal:  Vhe  silver 
having  recently  declared  that  he  is  "a  I  ai^il'^i(;;%a"r;'i  1>in.'"feaX*%h'^^  l^r.^ 
Sam  Randall     Democrat,     always  has    Protectloni.sts  themselves,  free  silver  and 

'protection  being,  indeed,,  twlna. 


The  following  gives  the  names  of  ihe 
states  as  towns  In  other  states,  says  the 
Boston   Globe: 

Alabama  is  in  New  York  and  Wiscon- 
sin. 

Arizcma  Is  In  Louisiana  .and   Nebra.ska. 

Aliiska  is  in  Indiana.  Michigan.  West 
Virginia    and    Wisconsin. 

Arkansas   is   in   WLsconsin. 
I  ^'j''5l»r'V'.'  '"  '"   Iowa.   Kentucky.   Mary- 
latid.  Michigan.  Missouri.  Ohio  aiid  Pen-a- 
syivania. 

<'olorado  Is  In  Illinois  and  Texas. 

re  ,\t;l\'""*^  i?  *"  Arkansas.  Indiana.  low.a, 
Kentucky.   New  Jersey  and   Ohio. 

h  lorida  Is  in  Illinois.  Indiana,  Massa- 
Oh"r  ^^^  ^''^^^'  ^°^^^  Carolina  and 

V'^'orgia   is  in   Indiana   an.]   Vermont. 

!?''.?.?.  "*  '"  Alabama.  North  Carolina 
and   Ohio. 

Indiana    Is   in    Pennsylvania. 
Iowa    is    in    Louisiana. 
Kan.s.'is    is    in    Alabama.    lUlnols.    Ken- 
tucky.   Ohio  and  Tennes.sec. 
Louisiana  Is   in   Missouri. 
N^'^'j*.  i^  •'"  Minnesota.   New  York  pnd 
Maryland  is  In  New  York 
Michigan   is  in   North   Dakota. 
Montana  is  In   Arkan.sas.    Kans.as    Mis- 
•''"nri.    New   Jersey   and    Wisconsin  ' 

Nebraska  is  in  Arkansas,   Indiana,  Ohio 
and    Pennsylvania. 

Nevada    is    in    Illinois,    Indiana,     Iowa 
Kentucky.       Mississippi,       Missouri,   Ohio 
and  Texas. 
New   Hampshire  is  in  Ohio. 
New  York  is  in  New  York  and  Iowa. 
Ohio    is    in    Colorado.    Illinois.    Kansas. 
Missouri,    New   York  and   Texas. 
Oklahoma  is   In   Virginia. 
Oregon    is    in    Arkansas.    Illinois,        In- 
xt'".1"  ;5*'*'"^'.'""^"^    Michigan,       Missouri, 
"r  T...*^"'*''^"."'^"   Pennsylvania.   Tennessee 
and  W  Isconsin. 

Tennessee  is  in  Illinois. 

Texas  is  in  Alabama,  Georgia,  Ken- 
tucky. Maryland.  Michigan,  New  York, 
Ohio  and  West   Virginia. 

Utah   is  in  Illinois  and  Pennsylvania 

\ermont    is    in    Illinois.    Indiana 
Missouri. 


A  man  from  Me 
Once   purchased   a   se. 

It  had  long  been  his  ardent  wish. 
In  sunshine  an   re, 
lie  worked,   but  In  ve. 

For  he  never  caught  any   fish. 

—Chicago  Tribune. 

Tit  Bits:  Family  doctor— Well,  let  me 
congratulate  vou. 

Patient  (very  excltedly)-Ara  I  going  to 
recover? 

poctor--No.  not  exactly— but-well, 
after  a  long  consultation  we  find  »liat 
.vour  .lisea.se  is  entirely  new,  and  hav^ 
decided  to  name  it  after  you. 

Judge:  Essie  sat  listening  to  the  niut- 
terings  of  thunder  that  preceded  a  sum- 
met;  shower.  '•Listen,  mamma,"  she  s-ld. 
with  tiny.  cautioning  hand  uplifted; 
zey  re  tackin"  down  carpet  in  heaven.  ' 
Ihen.  when  the  storm  burst  and  the  rain 
came  pouring  down:  "Zare.'"  she  re- 
marked, disgustedly,  "somebody's  upset 
ze  water  pitcher  an"  It's  eomlii'  troo.  I 
guess  zat's  granpa.  He  alius  was  so 
callls  when  he  was  here." 

EXCUSABLE. 
She  wore  her  high  hat  to  the  plav. 
It    made  the  boys   behind   her  gay. 
Yet  not  a  harsh  word  did  they  say. 

No  usher  came  adown  the  aisle 

And  asked  her  with  a   warning  smile 

To  kindly  stow  the  towering  tile. 

No— there  she  still  demurely  sat.  ' 

Beneath  the  shadow  of  that  hat. 
Unmindful  of  the  law's  flat. 

She  sat  until  the  curtain's  fall. 
As  quiet  as  her  own  pet  doll- 
She's  four  years  old  and  three  feet  tall. 
—Cleveland   Plain   Dealer. 


Subscribers  to  The  Evening  Herald 
Who  do  not  get  their  paper  regularly 
will  please  promptly  report  the  matter 
at  once  to  this  office.  It  is  the  intention 
to  have  The  Herald  delivered  promptly 
and  regularly. 


TO     EXAMINE     ACCOUNTS, 


and 


POWDER 

Absolutely  Pure 

Celebrated  for  its  great  leavening 
strength  and  healthfulness.  A.ssures  the 
food  against  alum  and  all  forms  of  adul- 
teration common  to  the  cheap  brands. 
ROYAL  BAKING  POWDER  CO..  NEW 
TO&K.  .  . ^xik  I 


•-1^ 


AN  AUSPICIOUS  OCCASION. 
Judge:    Muldoon— OI    be    afther    hearin' 
thot   O'Hooley   Is   dead.    He    wor   a   foine 
felly. 

O'HooIihan— Thrue,  fer  yez,  me  bhov. 
He  doled  happy,  thlnkin'  phwat  an  fl- 
igant  wake  he'd  give  th"  bhoys  on  Saint 
Pathrick's  ave. 


TRUST. 

Detroit  Free  Press:  "Harold,"  she 
said,  almost  in  a  whisper,  "am  I 
the  first  girl  you  ever  kissed?" 

"You  are,"  he  answered  with  eager 
earnestness. 

"I  believe  you,"  she  replied,  looking 
him  full  in  the  face. 

"Sincerity  must  command  confi- 
dence." 

"Yes,"  she  went  on  with  a  far-away 
look  in  her  eyes,  "sincerity  must  ever 
show  for  itself  with  those  who  think. 
And  the  amateur  is  always  siricere. 
You  are  the  most  inexperienced  kisser  I 
ever  encountered." 


THE  HEAD  OF  THE  TABLE. 
Boston  Herald:  In  an  editorial  the 
other  day  on  Mr.  Sherman's  position  in 
the  coming  cabinet  we  quoted  the  say- 
ing, "Where  Macdonald  sits,  there  if 
the  head  of  the  table."  A  correspon- 
dent, who  holds  that  the  boast  was 
made  by  Macgregor,  takes  us  to  task 
for  attributing  it  to  Macdonald.  He 
thinks  that  the  only  authority  for  our 

version  is  found  in  Emerson's  essay,  "...ec  ui  i./iiiuin.  m  saia  countv  on  Mon- 
"The  American  Scholar,"  and  says  if  we  ^ay,  the  27th  day  of  September'  AD  1897 
have    other   authority     he    would    very    at  10  o  clock  a.  m.  .      •      • 

much  like  to  know  where  it  can  'oi  fr^L'^.v.'^'l.^^l^''  0'"<*ered,  that  six  months 
found.  He  will  find  it  in  "The  Clans  ol  [or^  to  nr™w^^*?'  ^f  allowed  to  cred- 
the  Scottish  Highlands,"  by  James  i  Se  at  tlfeel*?.!*^ /inn  ^ 
Logan  In  the  article  on  the  Glen-  !  all  el^i^'s  *not  "pr'^esemed  %  said 'VouT 
garry  branch  of  the  Macdonalds,  Logan  or  not  proven  to  Its  .satisfaction  shall  be 
says:  forever  barred,  unless,  for  cause,' shown 

"At  the  castle  of  Aros  the  lords  of  the  '  ^"^^Q*"*"  '*'"«  "♦e  allowed, 
isles  held  their  parliament  and  passed    ^nH  ..^^^l  l^^lu^^i,  ^^^,^  notice  of  the  time 
the  regal  decrees,   which  distant  tribes-     of    said    cTalms*"  aZ  Tm^lr?""^'".f''?" 
were  bound  to  respect.  The  simple  form    g. ven^' by " ptl^lfshlnl  thiro"rder -^nce  Vn 


ORDER 
ETC.— 
^State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

3rd"  iSr'^'^*^  ^*'"'"^"  ^P^'^''^'  '''«'■'"•   March 

In   the  matter  of  the  estate  of  Rosa  A. 
Wood,   deceased: 
I     On    reading    and    filing   the    petition    of 
I  Benjamin    G.    Templetou    and    Alfred    H 
lorter,    ..xecutors   of   the   estate  of  Rosa 
A.    Wood,    deceased,    representing  among 
other  things  that  they  have  fully  admin- 
istered   said    estate,    and    praying    that    a 
time   and    place    be   fixed    for   examining, 
.settling  and  allowing  the  final  account  of 
their  administration,   and   for  the  assign- 
ment of  the  residue  of  said  estate  to  the 
parties  entitled   thereto  by  law. 

It  is  ordered,  that  said  account  be  ex- 
amined and  petition  heard  bv  this  court 
?^"  ,??i"''^'*J'-  the  27th  day  of  March.  A. 
IJ.  189..  at  10  o'clock  a.  m..  at  the  probate 
office  In  Duluth.  in  said  countv. 

And  It  Is  further  ordered,  that  notice 
thereof  be  given  to  all  persons  Interest.-d. 
by  publishing  a  copy  of  this  order  once 
in  each  week  for  three  successive  weeks 
prior  to  said  day  of  hearing  In  The  Du- 
luth Evening  Herald,  a  dally  newspaper 
printed  and  published  at  the  city  of  Du- 
luth. in  said  countv. 

Dated  at  Duluth,"  Minn.,  the  3d  day  of 
March,  A.  D.  1897. 

By  the  Court, 

PHINEAS  AYER. 

,_     ,  ^  Judge  of  Probate. 

(Seal.) 

Duluth   Evening  Herald.   March-3-10-17. 

ORDER  FOR  HEARING  ON  CLAIMS  — 
State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

— .ss. 

■>  \^  iSr,*'*'^*^  Court.  Special  Term.  March 
jrU.  1897. 

In  the  matter  of  the  estate  of  Isaac  Per- 
shing, deceased: 

Letters  te.st.amentary  on  the  estate  of 
•said  deceased  being  this  day  granted  unto 
Joseph  Moore,  of  said  county 
J.},Jt  ordered,  that  all  claims  and  dc- 
mfinds  of  all  persons  against  said  es- 
tate be  presented  to  this  court,  for  ex- 
amlnatlon  and  allowance,  at  the  probate 
H?v^^/"  Si'^"i^'  *"  5.a«<l  county,  on  Mon- 


in  which  important  ri-ghts  w-ere  con- 
veyed by  these  princes  may  be  illus- 
trated by  the  following  brief  but  bind- 
ing charter,  which  loses  in  translation 
from  the  original  Gaelic:  'I,  Donald, 
the  chief  of  the  Macdonalds,  sitting  oii 
the  hill  of  Dun  Donald,  give  the  Mac- 
Aodh  a  full  right  to  Kilmahomar  from 
this  day  till  tomorrow  and  so  on  for- 
ever.' A  lesson  was  afforded  by  one  of 
these  lords  which  might  greatly  benefit' 
some    sticklers    for    precedency.      He 


each  week,  for  three  successive  weeks 
prior  to  the  day  appointed  for  such  exam- 
ination in  The  Duluth  Evening  Herald    a 

ar'^ulStrKald"c^S'.  ^"'    ''"'"^'^^' 

By  the  Court. 

PHINEAS  AYER, 
fSeal.)  -^""^^^  °^  Probate. 

FRYBERGER  &  JOHANSON. 

Attorneys   for  Executor. 
Duluth   Evening   Herald.    March-S-lO-l? 


».■•—".."»••..»<•< 


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Ma>-Wi 


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THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD:  WEDNESDAY,  MARCH  17, 


1897. 


Suits  Ready 

To  Wear 


Spring  Suits  without  a  tiaw,  with  the  perfect  fit  of  the 
tailor-made  gown.  Every  detail  of  our  Tailor-made  Suits 
shows  the  touch  of  latest  fashion;  the  hang  of  the  sleeve, 
the  fit  of  the  bodice,  the  sweep  of  the  skirt,  all  the  little 
consetjuentals  that  mean  so  much,  are  in  these  garments. 
You  can  avoid  worry  and  save  money  by  inspecting  our 
Ready-made  Suit  Department. 

Special  orders  taken  for  Suits,  made  by  New 
Yorl^'s  most  skilled  tailors;  they  range  in  price 
from  $4.98  upwards. 


Commissioners  Take  Action 

Toward  the  Erection  of 

a  Poor  House. 


THEY  AREPUZZLED. 

Laybourn's   New   Bill  Is 
Exactly  Understood. 


Not 


Three  Members  of  the  Board 

Will  Visit  Other  Poor 

Houses. 


Special  for  Tomorrow' 

39  cents 
25  cents 

Tlie  most  complete  line  of  Laces,  Embroideries  and  Ribbons  in  the  city. 

An  elegant  Ime  of  50  cent  Belts  of  the  latest  designs.  These  Belts  are  on  sale  tomorrow  at  ort  ««« 


30  pieces  of  50-cent  Novelty  Dress  Coods 

of  the  nRwest  designs  at — 

pci  yaru •«•«.•.....,.,,., 

We  have  a  few  dozen  $2.03  and  $1.50  Gloves, 
slightly  damaged,  that  we  place  on  sale  tomorrow 
at — per   pair 


Large  Appropriation  For  the 

Improvement     of    the 

Crane  Lake  Road. 


igns.  These  Belts  are  on  sale  tomorrow  at .25  oents 


HcCairs 
Patterns 
10  and 
15  cents. 


THE  BOAT  CLUB. 


Discussion   of  This  Season's 
Prospect  Last  Evening. 

At   the   adjournotl     nieetingr     of     the 
Boat  clul>.  Iiehl  last     evenini?     at     the 
SpaMinp.   a  <<>niinittee.     consistinj;     of 
Messrs.  Viele.  Shepard  and  Davis,  wa.s 
appointed   to  consider  the     ways     and 
means  of  keepini;  the  club  house  op.-n 
during  tht-  coming  sea.«on.     The     com- 
mittee  will  report  April  11'.  and.  mean- 
time, tht-  directors  will  end,-a>.)r  to  coN 
lect    the   dues    and     assessnient.s     now 
owiner.   brinsrins  suit  if  n.'cessary     and 
advisable.     On  the  report  of  the  spc-eial 
eoni;nitt-e  on  ways  and  means,  and  the 
showing     made     in     the     t-olK-ttion     of 
money  due  the  elul>.  de|»ends  the  cjues- 
tion  of  whether  or  not   the  club  house 
shall  l>e  closed  dVj^ng  the-  season. 

About  twenty-nve  m.-mbers  were 
present  at  the  meeting,  and  the  aflfairs 
of  the  dub  were  fully  discussed.  Secre. 
tary  McLc-nnan  read  a  statement  of  the  i 


•r^1^^L'*;^;ii;c-/:.v-c.^ 


good  time  to  all  v.ho  will  be  fortunate 
enough    to    secure    tickets,    which    will  : 
be    limited    to    the    capacity      of        the 
church.    .Among    those    whose    .services 
have    been    secured    are    the   following: 
Aeolian   Ladies'    ciuartet    will   give   two  I 
.selections;   Franz    Schultz   will   sing     a  I 
bass    solo.      -Monarch    of    the    Woods;"  I 
Miss  ODonnell  will  give  two  readings.! 
•Toms    Little   Star"    and    "Ye   Needna ' 
be  n.urtin-  at  .Me:"  xMrs.  Franz  Schultz 
wd   sing  a   duet.    "I    Feel     Thy     .Vngel 
Spirit;"    Mr.s.    Hurt    Holcomb    will    sing 
an  alto  solo,  and   .Mr.  Joerns   will   play 
the    vit>lin.    accomi)anied    by    hi 
daughter.    Frsula.    on    the 
piano,    mandolin    and 
will   be  given    by   Mrs. 
Hrotheis  Croucliau. 


NOT  INDIVIDUAL  DEPOSITS. 

Postoffice  Receives  Only  Those 
Made  By  Other  Offices. 


The  special  meeting  of  the  county 
boai-d  yesterday  afternoon  resulted,  as 
expected,  in  a  mati  rialization  of  plans 
looking  toward  the  construction  of  a 
new  poor  house.  County  Phy.sician 
Uraden  spoke  at  some  length  in  favor 
of  the  proposition,  stating  that  it  would 
be  an  economy,  fb-  argued  this  from 
the  fact  that  many  cases  now  in  tiic 
iiospital  at  a  cost  of  $20  per  month 
t  ould  be  cared  for  at  $5«  a  year  at  the 
new  poor  house. 

Acting  County  .\ttorney  Phelps  out- 
lined the  law  on  thi-  subject,  and  after 
the  board  had  listened  to  him  for  some 
time,  it  passed  a  resolution  appointing 
Commissioners  Dinhani.  Williams  and 
Kauppi  a  committee  to  take  a  trio  and 
look  over  hospitals  and  poor  houses  iii 
this  and  other  states.  The  committee 
was  authorized  to  employ  Wangenstein 
«&  Hray  to  plan  a  jioor  house  under  ii.s 
direction. 

.\  petition  was  received  from  a  laige 
number  of  jobbers  and  business  mtn 
asking  the  board  to  appropriate  some 
mciney  to  get  the  Crane  Lake  road  in 
shape.  The  petition  was  referred  to  the 
proper  c-ommittee.  and  later  it  recom- 
mended the  appropriation  of  $S000,  ' 
which  will  be  added  to  the  .$1200  to  b- I 
received  from  the  state. 
$!«20(»  will,  it  is  beli.ved. 
Lake  loaci  in  fair  shape. 


The  ofTlcials  of  the  range  roads 
scaicely  know  what  to  make  of  Repre- 
sentative Laybourn's  l»ill  that  has  been 
agreed  to  by  the  house,  permitting  in- 
dependent ore  shippers  to  furnish  their 
own  cars  when  the  railroad  companies 
fail  to  do  so.  In  speaking  of  the  bill 
to  a  Herald  reporter  today  a  prominent 
railroad  man  said: 

"The  idea  is  absurd.     It  is  impracti- 
cable and  there  is  no  excuse  or  demand 
for  such   legislation.     There  has   never 
been   a   time    when    there    has    been    a 
scarcity  of  cars  on  either  of  the  roa.ls 
traversing  the  Minnesota  iron  ranges 
but   supposing  there   should    be   such   a 
rush  of  business  as  to  make  it  diffu-ult 
for  shippers  to  get  c\ars.  thev  could  ob- 
tam    them    only    through    the    railroad 
companies,  f<»r  in  case  of  an  emergency 
the  shipper  would   be  c-ompelled  under 
the    bill    to    procure    their     own      cars 
which  could   not   be  done  except  aft.-r 
great  delay.    Then  the  rush,  if  any  ex- 
isted,  would   be  over  and   there   would 
l>e  no  n.se  for  the  private  cars.    Capital 
woidd    be   slow    tr)    invest    in    cars,    for 
''V.'ii   if  they  wero  in  demand   through- 
out    the    entire    shipping    season     they 
Would  be  in  commission  but  six  months 
in  the  yc»ar,  and   the  leinainder  .if  the 
time  would  have  to  be  cared  for  at  an 
'expense  that   would  cmsume  all  possi- 
ble prolit.s.     I  can  not  understand  what 
there  is   behind    this   measure  for  upon 
the  face  of  it  there  is  no  reason  f(»r  its 
i>eing.    It  certainly  could  be  of  no  prac- 
tical use  this  year,  for  it  would  be  im- 
possible for  anyone  to  get  cars  for  use 
before  next  season." 

It  is  quite  likely  that  the  promoters 
of  the  bill  hope  that  under  its  provis- 
ions the  board  of  railroad  commission- 
ers would  be  able  to  afford  them  relief 
Irom  the  prevailing  freight  charges  by 
allowing  a  liberal  mileage  rate  on  pri- 
vate cars,  which  they  would  be  able 
to  do.  This  would  amount  to  practical- 
ly the  same  thing  as  a  flat  reduction 
in  rates  provided  private  cars  could  be 
used  at  the  option  of  shippers  instead 
of  only  when  the  railroad  companies 
were   unable    to   supply   them. 

LOGGING  OPERATIONS. 


in 
In- 
medical  (rcat- 
tlie  stimulus  of 


Few  Camps  on   Either  Shore 
Are  Working. 


PICKED  ITP  ON  BEOADu  AY. 

A  True  Incident.-A  woman  was  picked  upin  the  :treci  In  un  nncop..c;onrenn. 
ditmn  and  hurried  to  the  nearest  hospital.  On  exun.ioat  ion  her  bod .  u  as  ioood 
to  be  oov^rcHl  with  sores  caused  by  tin-  hypodermic.  h,j...,ion  c.f  morphine 

Ihis  mere  wreck  of  a  woman   liad  once-  lu-ld  un  honorable  and  lu.-rativo 

position  in   a   larn-e  publi.-,hiug-  hou; 
New  York.     Her  hcaltli  he«-an  to  fail, 
stead  of  takiufr  nst  and 
ment.  she  resorted  to 
morphine. 

'i'he  ht>spital  j)liy.siciaiis  discov- 
ered that  her  primary  trouble  was 
an  afiection  of  the  womb,  which 
could  readily  have  been  cured  in 
the  first  stages. 

If,  when  .she  had  felt  those  se- 
vere paiiisjn  llic  back,  the  terrible 
headaches,  the  constunt  .sense  of 
fullness,  soreness  and  pain  in  the 
pelvic  rcMjion.  she  liad  used  l^ydia 
E.  I'inkhams  Vcg-etable  Com- 
ixjund.  it  would  have  dissolvc^d  and 
pa.s.scd  oft"  that  polypus  in  ilic> 
womb,  and  to-day  she  wcjnld  have 
been  a  well  woman  silting-  iu  her 
Ofliee. 

W  liy  will  womc-n  let  thenisehvs 
go  iu  lliisway'.*  Jt  seems  passinj-- 
stran^re  that  a  woman  liKcHiis  one 
.o  lii-lily  educated,  and  so  well  placed,  should  liave  de- 
pended on  mcM-phinc,  instead  cd  seekln}r  a  radic-al  cure 
There  is  no  excuse  for  any  woman  who  suffers-slie  need  not  po  without 
help.  Mr.s.  Pinkhain  stands  ready  to  helj)  any  woman  :  li 
Lynn.  Mass.  Write  to  her;  it  will  cost  you  notliin<'- 
bottle  of 
store. 

M 

to  Mr.s.  Pinkham:  'I  can  hardly  lind  words  with  which  to  thank  vou  for 
what  you  have  done  for  me.  I  suffered  nearly  .seven  years  with  backache 
and  sideache,  leucorrhnea,  and  the  worst  forms  of  womb  trouJ)Ies. 

"  Doctors  failed  to  do  me  any  o-ood.     I  have  taken  four  bottles  of  F.vdia  F 
Pinkharas   Ve<rctable  Compound  and  one   bcjx  of  Liver  Pills    and  u-cMl'one 
packatre  of  Sanative  Wash,  and  now  can  say  i  am  well  an.l  Iiave  be.  n  stead- 
ily   g-aininj?    flesh:    am    stouter    and   heartier    n<Kv    than    I 
years.     I  am  recomraendins-your  Veiretable  Compound  to 
I  thank  you  for  the  good  health  I  am  enjovinf'."" 


cr  address     is 
In  the  meantime  get  a 


liave   been   for 
my  friends.     Again 


IN  THE  DAKOTAS. 


]  comcMJy  reveals  iintnlil   iiossibilities  whic  ii 
will     give    the     keelie.^t     jov     |o     the     U  nii- 

nine  ambition. 


IS  little 
piano.  A 
guitar  selection 
Kngels  and   the 


receipts  and  disbursements  since  th^' 
regular  annual  meeting,  and  a  stato'- 
ment  of  the  assets  and  liabilities  was 
made,  showing  a  balance  of  a  little 
more  than  $iH.»o  of  dues  and  asse.ssments 
due  the  club  ovi-r  all   liabilities. 

C.  S.  Davis  moved  that  the  club  house 
be  nat  opened  until  all  labor  claims  and 
other  indebtedness  be  paid;  that  pay- 
ment of  dues  and  assessm  nts  be  forced 
V>y  suit,  if  necessary,  and  that  when  all 
that  was  possible  on  these  lines  had 
iH-cn  acx-omplished,  a  special  meeting 
should  be  called  to  decide  on  the  course 
to  be  pursued. 

\V.  C.  Sargent  opposed  closing  the 
house,  as  it  might  be  construed  as  a 
permanent  suspension  of  business  and 
render  the  collection  of  money  difhcult, 
if  not  impossible.  He  offered  an 
amendment  i)roviiling  for  the  appoint- 
ment of  a  ways  and  means  committee, 
to  which  D.  K.  MeLennan  offered  an 
amendment  providing  that  the  commit- 
tee report  on  .April  1l'.  and  that  mean- 
while the  directors  should  T>roceed  to 
collect  dues  and  assessments  as  already 
instructed,  both  of  the  amendments  l>e- 
ing  adopted  and  the  motion  carried. 

Several  other  measures  were  suggest- 
ed, such  as  putting  the  club's  affairs 
into  the  hands  of  a  trustee  anci  giving 
a  chattel  mortgage.  It  was  felt,  how- 
ever, that  the  m.-thod  adopted  will  re- 
sult in  the  specjdiest  settlement  of  the 
club's  tinaneial  difficulties.  It  is 
thought  that  the  running  expenses  for 
the  seascm  can  be  c  ut  down  to  $1000  or 
ilJii)  from  Ji'ooo.  the  figure  for  last 
year.  It  is  possible  that  a  resolution, 
excluding  from  the  dull  house  all  mem- 
bers whose  dues  are  not  paid  up  tc 
:March  1  will  i>e  passed  at  the  nsxt  meet> 
ingh. 

Kdward  Mahoney  was  made  an  hem- 
orary  member  in  recognition  of  his 
faithful  services  during  the  eleven 
years  he  has  been  employed  by  the 
club. 

A  vote  of  thanks  was  tendered  the 
members  of  the  club  and  the  eommlttee 
that  arranged  and  carried  out  the  pro. 
gram  for  and  assist :>d  in  the  recent 
concert. 

The  fiuestion  of  the  annual  ball  was 
broached,  but  no  action  was  taken.  It 
is  possible  that  no  ball  will  be  given 
this  year. 


Miss  Palmer's  Pupils. 

The  pupils  at  Two  Harbors  of  ]\Iiss 
Clara  Palmer,  of  Duluth,  will  give  a 
violin  recital  at  that  place  next  Wed- 
nesday evening  at  the  home  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Thomas  Owens.  They  will  be  as. 
sisted  by  Miss  Dorothy  Nichols  and  one 
I  or  two  pupils  from  Duluth.  The  pre 
I  gram  is  as  follows: 

;  Assembly  class,  "America" 

.      ^. Ten  Violins 

'      First  violin.s— Mrs.  HoUiday.  Rev    W 
I  W.     Xewell,     Mr.     Xordbv,     Mi.ss     Ivv 
Wright.  Miss  Nellie  Grieve. 

Seccmd  Violins— Miss     Olive     Wright, 
Mr.     Walstrum.     Miss     Ethel     Sinclair. 
Miss  Clara  Vinson.  William  Grieve. 
Violin    solo.     "Little     IJrown    Jug," 

"Nearer  My  God  to  Thee" 

Miss  Ethel  Sinclair 

Violin  duet 

...Mrs.  Holiday.  Rev.  W.  W.  Newell 

Viloin  solo,  "March  de  Grande" 

I  Piano  solo,  "Fantasia"   

i  Mi.ss   Dorothy  Nichols 

Violin  solo.  "Sonata"   

Miss  Clara  E.    Palmer 

Assembly  class,  "Columbia"  

Ten  Violins 

Violin  solo.  "Perie  Waltz"   

Miss  Olive  Wright 

Violin  duet   

Little  Clara  Vinson    and  Miss 
Palmer. 

Violin  solo,    "Peasant's  Song" 

Miss  Nellie  Grieve 

Violin  duet.  "Allegro  Allegretto"... 

Mr.  Nordl»y  and  Miss  Palmer 

Violin  solo.  "Dancia  .\ir"    

Rev.  W.  W.    Newell 

Violin  solo,  "Mo2art's  Minuett" 

Mrs.  HoUiday 

Violin  duet   

Little  Ivy   Wright  and  Miss  Palmer 
Assembly    class,     "Star      Spangled 
Banner"  


NO  FAITH  CORE 


In   the  annual  statement  of  the   Du- 
luth postoffice  for  the  year  1S96,  which 
has     been     pul>lished     and     circulated, 
there  appears  among   the   receipts   the 
following  item:     "Cc?rtificates  of  dev)osit 
issued,   $2.j8,S70.87."     .Many  people   ha\e 
'  gained   the   idea   that    this   item   reprt- 
,  sents    money    deposited    by    individuals 
i  In   the  postoffice  for  safe  keeping,   thus 
I  makin-g  the  office  perform  the  function 
I  of  a   postal    savings   bank,   except    that 
I  no  interest  would   be  paid.     Recently  -i 
I  Herald  man  heard  a  group  of  business 
!  men  talking  this  tnatter  over,  anu  they 
;  all  agreed  that  there  must  be  some  pro- 
;  vision  of  the  law   permitting  the  post- 
office  to  do  this,  and  they  professed  to 
see  in  the  large  amount  deposited  proof 
that    the    common    jieople    still    have    a 
;  good  deal  of  money  left. 

From     Postmaster     Henenski     it     is 
learned  that  these  conclusions    are    all 
incorrect.     The  item   represents  money 
deposited      by     smaller     money     nrocr 
offices.      I'nder     the     law    the    smaller 
postoffices,  such  as  those  on  the  ranges, 
are    not    allowed    to    have    over    $50    of 
money  order     funds     on     ahnd  at   one 
time.        All   in   excess   of   that   amount 
they   are   reciuired    to   deposit    in   some 
postoffice  which  is  designated  as  "   de- 
pository  for  such   funds.     The   Duluth 
postoffice   is  one   of   these  depositories, 
and    the    postoffices    in    all    the    ran.-,-e  I 
towns,    the   towns   along   the   Northern  ! 
Pacific   road    as   far  as   Aitkin,    and    in  I 
Northern  Wi.scimsin  as  far  east  as  Iroii  I 
River   send    their   excess   money    order 
funds  here.     Sometimes  a  single  remit-  I 
tance  from  an   office   will   run  as   hirjh  | 
as   $J00  or  $600.     The   total   amount    iv-  , 
ceived  in  the  year  18%  is  that  given  in 
the  statement.  $2r.8,S70.S7. 

Postmaster  Helenski  .says  that  ther< 
were  undoubtedly  many  people  wli.: 
have  been  depositing  their  savings  in 
the  postoffice  during  the  hard  time:; 
throu'gh  the  medium  of  money  orders 
If  the  postmaster  is  sure  that  a  person 
in  buying  a  money  order  is  simply  doin;; 
It  to  leave  the  money  on  denosit,  h. 
can  refuse  to  issue  it.  But  when  a  per- 
.son  walks  in  and  asks  for  a  money 
order  on  the  West  Superior  office  it 
cannot  be  refused,  and  there  is  nothing 
to  prevent  him  from  holding  it  a  year 
or  two  years  if  he  wants  fo.  Air.  Helen- 
ski  is  positive  that  there  has  been  con  i 
siderable  of  this  done.  He  is  also  I 
thoroughly  in  favor  of  the  inauguration 
of  a  system  of  postal  savings  banks. 


Practically  all  logging  operations  on 
both  the  north  and  south  shores  have 
i>een  stopped  for  the  season.     AH  north 
shore    camps    with    the     exception     of 
This  total  oi' !  f^'**"   ^   Holston's   near  Two   Harbors, 
put  the  Crane  ,  "^^''"  *''ther  broken  up  entirely  or  are 
i  about  to  do  so.    The  Cranberry  Lumber 
The  following  assistant   county  phy-  \  ''•^'^ipany    has   been    forced   to   suspend 
sicians,    recently    let    out    for   economv,  1  "iirk  because  of  the  exhaustion   of  its 
were   reappointed:     Dr.    Pierson.    Wtst  '  '■"^'  supply,  and  it  can  not   be  replen- 


Duluth;  Dr.  Rood.  Ilil.bjng;  Dr.  Moore, 
Eveleth;  Dr.  Miller.  Virginia;  Dr.  Hum- 
phrey. Hiwabik;  Dr.  Noble,  Tower;  Dr. 
Shipman.  Ely.  Th.-  West  Duluth  man 
gets  $350  and  the  others  $:ji)0 
each   a   year. 

The  county  surveyor  was  instructed 
tp  make  weekly  reports  on  L.  H.  John- 
son's progress  on  his  bridge  contracts. 
The  county  treai^urer  was  in- 
structed to  charge  the  $12,000  loss  in 
the  Iron  Exchange  l)ank  to  th 
fund.  The  ccmtrac  t  for  plastering  the 
mortuary  vault  at  the  poor  farm  was 
let  to  Baker  &  TcxM  for  $77. 

The  board  considered  in  executive  ses- 
sion a  proposition  from  N.  J.  L'pham  to 
furnish  funds  for  the  poor  house.  The 
matter  was  referred  to  the  acting 
county  attorney  to  report  at  4  o'clock  1 
tomorrow  afternoon 


AMUSEMENTS. 


"BRIDES  OF  GARRYOWEN." 
Tonight  the  St.  Patrick's  day  enter- 
tainment will  be  given  at  the  Lyceum. 
The  sale  of  seats  has  been  very  large 
and  a  fine  performance  is  promised. 
Bishop  McGolrick  will  deliver  an  ad- 
dress and  "The  Brides  of  Garryowen" 
will    then   be  presented.   It  is  a  drama  i  prices    a.s   prev 


The    cast    will    be    as  !  last  fall,  if  not  better. 


by    Boucicault. 

follows: 

Myles  na  Coppaleen.. Arthur  W.  Lahey 

Hardress  Cregan..    ...\lfred  E.  Nugent 


ished  until  navigation  opens.  A  little 
work  is  still  being  done  with  teams, 
however,  and  t  is  possible  that  a  mil- 
lion feet  will  be  iianked  in  this  way 
this  month,  but  it  is  not  Ikely  that  the 
railroad  will  be  operated  t)cfoie  the  first 
of  May. 
From  the  best  information  obtainable 
at  this  time  it  is  estimated  that  the  log 
output  in  the  Duluth  district  this  wnter 
wll  not  exceed  80,000,000,  while  the 
general  j  prospects  at  the  opening  of  the  logging 
season  were  that  from  125,000,000  to 
150.000,000  feet  would  be  banked.  This 
added  to  the  170.000.000  feet  of  old  logs 
will  make  250,000.000  feet  available  for 
the  mills  this  season.  The  log  short- 
age that  exists  here  is  not  peculiar  to 
this  section  for  operations  in  all  lum- 
'cr  districts  in  Michigan.  Wisconsin. 
Minnesota  and  Canada  have  been  on  a 
much  smaller  scale  than  usual,  so  the 
visible  supply  of  lumber  is  very  much 
curtailed.  The  effect  of  this  condition 
on  the  market  is  already  beginning  to 
make  itself  manifest,  for  prices  are 
more  firm  and  incjuiry  from  prospective 
I'uyers  more  active  than  for  several 
months.  It  is  not  expected  that  there 
will  be  any  boom  in  the  lumber  mar- 
ket in  the  near  future,  but  all  signs 
certainly  point  to  a  healthy  improve- 
ment that  should  result  in  as  good 
•ailed    l>ef<jre    the    slump 


-N'ORTH  DAKOT.A. 

In  Sargent  county,  as  in  all  other  parts 
of  the  Northwest,  this  winter  has  no  par- 
alkl.   .Startling  storic\s  are   lold   of  gigan- 
ti<-   snow    banks,    not   among   the   letist    of  , 
which   is  that   a   farmer  m  Harlem  town-  ' 
ship    who    claims    to    have    added    thirty    '. 
Iiv<>    left    of    tubing    to    his    well    in    order  | 
to  bring  the  water  to  tlie  surface  oj    the 
snow.      Z.    ().    Patten,    proprietor    of    the  ' 
Washburn    hotel    here,    has   found    it    iiee-  i 
e.^sary    to    build    a     barbed        wire    fence  ' 
around    the    roof   of   his    barn    to    pr.vent  ' 
further  damage   by   sirav   stock.    ;i    bug"  i 
horse   having  fallen   through   the  roof  re- 
cently    while    walking    over    a    supposed 
snow    drift.    Sidney    Alullin    vouehes    for  ■ 
the  correctness  of  the  statement   that    he  i 
has   <Iiig   down    thirteen    feet    into   a    drift 
to  find  the  top  of  his  windnilll.  The  «|op-  ' 
ing  roof  of  a  large  gr.iin  house  is  said   to  I 
be    the    summit    of    a    most    excellent    to- 
boggan   slide    at    Havana— and    there    are 
othc-rs. 

Owing  to  the  delay  of  trains  bv  a  storm 
in  llie  Red  River  valley  Judge  Aniidon 
and  other  officers  of  the  Tnited  States 
court  were  unable  to  reach  Bismarck  to 
oi>en  court  yesterday.  A  large  number  of 
cases  Mie  on  the  calendar,  including  that 
of  Sittine  Bulls  son.  who  is  charged  with 
rape,  alleged  to  have  been  committed  on 
Standing    Rock    reservation. 

10.  D.  Irvine,  who.  unjil  a  short  t!m<' 
ago  conducted  a  drug  store  in  Kmera-lo. 
is  badly  wanted.  He  handled  the  monev 
of  the  local  lodges  of  Foresters  a-iil 
Woodmen.  The  two  lodges  itiiss  about 
$720.    which    is   about   equ.illv   divided. 


Danny    Mann. 
Kyrle  Daly..   .. 

Father    Tom 

Mr.    Corrigan.. 
Bertie   O'Moore. 
Hyland    Creagh, 

Servant 

Kily  O'Conner.. 
Anne    Chute..    . 
Mrs.   Cregan..    . 
Sheelah 


R.    H.    Cox 

Norton  Mattocks 

Robert    Hamp 

Walter    Murphy 

..     ..James    S.    Lynn 

Vincent    Grady 

Frank   Dacey 

.  ..Miss  Satie  McNea! 
...Mrs.  W.  F.  Henry 
..Mrs.  F.  N.  Phelan 
Miss    Kate    O'Donnell 


ABOUT 


STUART'S       OYSfEPSU 
LETS. 


TAB- 


They  Cure  Stomach  Troubles  and  IndigeS' 
tion  Anyway.  Whether  You  Have  Faith 
in  Them  or  Not. 


Fine  Progi^am  Prepared. 

Arrangements  for  the  grand  concert 
to  l>e  given  in  the  Lakeside  Presby- 
terian church  by  the  ladies  of  the  Sec- 
ond division,  while  not  completed,  are 
in  such  a  condition  as  to  guarantee  a 


BEAUTIFUL 


SKIN 


Soft,  White  Hands  with  Shai>cly  Xails,  Liizil> 
riant  Ilair  with  Clean,  Wholesome  Scalp,  pro- 
duced by  CCTICUR.4  Soap,  the  most  efTective 
skin  purifying  and  beautifying  soap  in  tbe 
world,  as  well  as  purest  and  sweetest,  for 
toilet,  bath,  and  nursery.  Tbeonly  preventive 
of  inflammation  and  clc^ging  of  tbe  I'obes. 

Qticura 

Soap  ii  told  throughont  the  world.  PoTTSB  Daco  avd 
Cum.  CoKP.,  Sole  Ifrof.,  BoitOD,  V.  8.  A. 

mr"Uow  to  Purify  and  Beaatify  th«  Skin,  Sctip, 
and  Uair,"  mailed  tie*. 

BARV  UlllinDC  Itchittc  aiMi  teair,  inatantly  r«- 
OMII  nUmUnd  UaTcd  V  Coxicoaa  lUiuoiu. 


Mere  faith  will  not  digest  your  food 

for  you,  will  not  give  you  an  appetite, 

will       not     increase     your     flesh     and 

strengthen  your  nerves  and  heart,  but 

Stuart's  Dyspepsia  Tablets  will  do  these 

things,   because  they  are  composed   of 

the  elements  of  digestion,  they  contain 

the  juices,  acids  and  peptones  necessary 

to  the  digestion  and  assimilation  of  all 
wholesome  food. 

Stuart's  Dyspepsia  Tablets  will  digest 
food  if  placed  in  a  jar  or  bottle  in  water 
heated  to  98  degrees,  and  they  will  do 
it  much  more  effectively  when  taken 
into  the  stomach  after  meals,  whether 
you  have  faith  that  they  will  or  not. 

They  invigorate  the  stomach,  make 
pure  hlcjod  and  strong  nerves,  in  the 
only  way  that  nature  can  do  it,  and 
that  is.  from  plenty  of  wholesome  food 
well  digested.  It  is  not  what  we  eat, 
but  what  we  c\igest  that  does  us  good. 

Stuart's  Dyspepsia  Tablets  are  sold 
by  nearly  all  druggists  at  50  cents  for 
full  sized  package,  or  by  mail  from  the 
Stuart  company,  Marshall.  Mich. 


Mrs.  A.  J.  Sawyer  Dead. 

Dr.  Collins  has  received  a  telegram 
announcing  the  death  of  Mrs.  A.  J. 
Sawyer,  which  cxrcurred  at  Minne- 
apolis this  morning.  Mrs.  Sawyer  has 
been  in  poor  health  for  several  months 
and  her  death  was  not  unexpected. 
For  several  years  Mrs.  Sawyer  resided 
in  Duluth.  and  her  many  friends  here 
will  regret  to  hear  of  her  demise.  One 
son,   Bert  Sawyer,  survives  her. 


Physical  Culture  Class. 

The  ladies'  physical  culture  class  had 
its  first  drill  last  evening  at  the  Y.  M. 
C.  A.  There  were  fourteen  present,  and 
they  went  through  eight  exercises,  con- 
sisting of  free  arm  work  and  club  and 
dumbbell  exercises.  Setting  up  exer- 
cises were  given.  The  lesson  was  given 
in  the  hall  on  the  second  floor,  but  here- 
after they  will  be  given  in  the  regular 
gymnasium.  The  work  contemplate!^ 
wand  drills,  marching  movements,  etc., 
in  addition  to  the  work  done  last  even- 
ing. It  is  probable  that  the  afternon 
class  for  ladies  will  be  on  Tuesdays, 
from  '2:.',(>  to  4  o'clock. 


Are  worthless  names  forged? 
Or  unpopular  goods  imitated? 

No.      ■ 

Because  it  isn't  worth  while. 
Therefore  the  extensive 
counterfeiting  of  our  labels 
and  capsules  is  the  strongest 
evidence  of  the  merit  of  our 

''Canadian 
Club" 
Whisky. 

Beware  of  these  counter- 
feits, and  write  us  regarding 
anything  which  you  suspect. 

The  quality  of    .♦.     .-.    ... 
"CANADIAN  CLUB" 
is  always  fully   maintained. 

*.     •.    Imitations  are  always 
inferior. 


Kathleen    Creagh... 

„.     ••.• M'ss    Agnes    Maginnis 

Wedding     Guests— Friends    of     Myles. 

"LA  BELLE  RITSSE." 
"La  Belle  Russe  "  had  a  very  small 
audience  last  evening,  and  the  engage- 
ment of  the  company  in  Duluth  could 
not  have  been  very  profitable,  even 
though  the  numbers  was  not  large.  The 
total  receipts  would  hardiv  pay  rail- 
road fares  in  and  out  of  the  city. 


GEORGE  R.  WENDLING. 

Next  Wednesday  evening  George  R. 
Wendling  will  lecture  at  the  First 
Methodist  church  <'n  "Saul  of  Tarsu.s." 
The  Syracuse  Standard  said  of  this: 
"Thou.sands  of  handkerchiefs  waved 
and  20.000  men  and  women  wept  and 
cheered,  and  thenceforward,  for  twt> 
hours.  Wending  proved  himself  en- 
titled of  right  to  ihe  appellation  given 
to  him  by  Governor  Hendricks,  of  In- 
diana, 'the  master  of  assemblies'  " 

The  Chicago  Times  said  of  Wendling: 
"Hon.  George  R.  Wendling.  always  ac- 
counted brilliant,  has  more  than  earned 
the  right  to  that  characterization.  His 
solid  and  unanswerable  facts  are  so  in- 
terlarded with  rhetorical  embellishments 
as  to  make  his  lecture  particularly 
fascinating.  His  elocution,  too,  is  al- 
most faultless." 


TRIPLE  TRAGEDY. 

Philadelphia    Father's     Early 
Morning  Deed  of  Blood. 

Philadelphia.  March  17.— Fred  Franks 
shot  and  killed  his  son,  William,  aged 
!t  years,  shot  and  badly  wounded  his 
(laughter,  aged  5  years,  and  then 
turned  the  revolver  on  himself,  sending 
a  bullet  into  his  breast  near  the  heart, 
at  his  home  in  this  city,  this  morn- 
ing. Franks  r.,nd  his  daughter  were 
taken  to  a  hospital,  where  the  father 
died  a  few  hours  later  and  but  little 
hope  is  given  for  the  recovery  of  the 
child. 

Franks  made  deliberate  prepar- 
ations for  his  terril>le  work.  Franks 
told  his  wife  to  go  to  the  grocery 
store  for  something  for  breakfast 
while  he  made  the  coffee.  When  she 
had  left  he  locked  both  doors  and  com- 
mitted the  crime.  Mrs.  Franks  on  re- 
turning   found    the   family   dying. 

The  murderer  had  gone  up  stairs 
and  sent  three  bullets  into  his  .son's 
heart  and  body.  He  then  shot  the  little 
girl  under  the  chin  and  went  down 
stairs  and  fataliy  wounded  himself.  It 
is  believed  the  mai;  was  suddenly 
seized   with  a  fit  of   insanity. 


THE  MOST  SUCCESSFUL  SPECIAL^ 
1ST. 
The  remarkable  cures  performed  by 
Dr.  Greene,  the  distinguished  specialist, 
are  the  best  proof  of  his  skill  and  the 
efficacy  of  his  treatment.  Dr.  Greene's 
wonderful  remedies,  in  fact  the  only 
effectual   remedies  in     many     diseases, 


NO  BLOCKADE  OF  CRETE  YET. 

Canea,  March  17.- No  change  in  the 
blockade  of  the  island  has  yet  been  pro- 
claimed, and  all  statements  to  the  con- 
trary are  untrue.  It  is  understood, 
however,  that  the  blockade  may  be 
proclaimed  at  any  moment. 


Dr.  Bull's  Cough  Syrup  has  always 
been  kept  up  to  the  standard.  It  is 
the  same  it  was  forty  years  ago,  the 
best  sold. 


HIRAM  WALKER  &  SONS,  Um'4. 
Walkerville,  Canada. 


Keep  up  hope.  There  are 
thousands  of  cases  where  re- 
covery   from    Consumption 

havp  made  his  name  famous  through-  1  haS  been    COmpletC.        FlentV 
out   the   country.    If   you   are   afflicted  t      r  r       i       •  i  n 

oi  iresh  air  and  a  well-nour- 
ished body  will  check  the 
progress  of  the  disease.  Nu- 
tritious foods  are  well  in  their 
way,  but  the  best  food  of  all 
is  Cod-liver  Oil.  When 
partly  digested,  as  in  Scott's 
Emulsion,  it  does  not  dis- 
turb the  stomach  and  the 
body  secures  the  whole  bene- 
fit of  the  amount  t^ken.  If 
you  want  to  read  more  about 
it  let  us  send  you  a  book. 

SCOTT  &  BOWNE.  N«w  YoriL 


SOrTH  DAKOTA. 
Pierre  merchants  are  getting  things  in 
shape  for  a  quick  move  out  of  their 
bascme?n  ancl  cellfrs  in  ca.se  of  nond 
whin  the  river  breaks  no.  The  fact 
that  there  has  l)een  nearly  seventv 
inches  of  snowfall  in  the  Missouri  vallcv 
in  North  Dakota  makes  them  fearful  of 
results.  Officials  in  most  counties  of 
the  state  are  fastening  their  bridges  with 
cables  to  .save  their  loss  in  freshets.  The 
Jim  river  .section  will  suffer  most  from 
that  cause,  as  there  are  drifts  of  snow 
an<l  ice  almost  filling  the  valley  :roni 
bluflf  to  bluff.  These  drifts  will  hold  the 
water  as  ilams.  and  there  will  be  im- 
mense floods. 

\V.  W.  Sweet,  county  judge  of  Bon 
Hommie  county,  died  yesterday  at  Tyn- 
d.dl.  He  has  been  sick  eighteen  months. 
His  successor  in  office  will  be  named  bv 
(loverncn-  Lee. 

Rotary  plows  are  raising  the  block.tdo 
on  all  lines  of  the  Northwestern  and 
trains  are  closely  following  with  fuel 
and  merchandise  for  points  mostiv  .n 
need.  The  Milwaukee  lin<-s  north  liom 
Tv'.ke  Preston  and  Wolsev  will  not  be 
open  for  several  days  and  it  will  be  a 
week  or  more  before  trains  can  come 
through  from  Watertown  to  Huron  over 
the   Great    Northern. 

Itev.  T.  IT.  Richards,  tlie  Episcopal  min- 
ister at  Dell  Rapids,  charged  with  a 
nameless  crime,  waived  examination  and 
was  bound  over  to  the  circuit  court  in 
the  sum  of  J500  at  Sioux  Falls.  IJ.nids 
were  furnished.  Bishop  W.  H.  Hare  in 
a  published  interview  exonerated  Rich- 
ards, and  some  members  of  his  church 
have  signecl  a  resolution  deiiounc-ing  his 
accusers.  Evidence,  however,  in  tlie  iia.ids 
of  the  state's  attorney  is  said  to  be  most 
damaging. 

Lee  Fflandin.  a  <lance  hall  piano  player, 
who  had  been  in  the  Hills  since  early 
times,  died  yesterday  morning  at  Ra.-;K"d 
Top.  He  was  at  Lead  City  in  the  morn- 
ing .and  went  home  in  the  evening  well 
(ilkd    with    liquor. 


SPRING  GARDEN   PROPERTY. 

Clearing   and    Road    Building 
Furnishing  Labor. 

The  sales  of  land  In  ten-acre  traits 
at  Spring  Garden,  immediately  back  <if 
Lakeside  and  within  and  adjoining  the 
<ity  limits,  will  cause  this  district  t.i 
become  (juite  a  scene  of  activity  dur- 
ing the  coming  spring  and  sumnier. 

A  grocery  store  is  to  be  c^stablished 
here.  Several  dairy  farms  and  sto(  k 
farms  and  many  tru«  king  fainis.  Some 
who  have  i)urchased  will  get  others  to 
clear  their  land  for  cultivation,  .\bout 
four  miles  of  roadway  is  to  be  con^ 
structed.  making  u  go«jd  public  road 
from  Lakeside,  clear  through  these 
lands,  extending  to  the  puldic  road  that 
liorders  them  on  th.-  north,  and  other 
roads  opening  up  to  the  Spring  Garden 
district.  The  Herald  here  sees  a  chance 
for  some  work  for  men.  The  selling  of 
these  lands  is  as  good  for  th-  deveh.p- 
ment  of  Duluth  as  it  is  the  advantage 
to  those  buying  and  getting  a  home, 
which  they  can  improve,  and  from 
which  they  can  make  a  living.  Then 
again  a  purchase  of  ten  acres  hei-e 
means  that  the  mone.v  put  there  is  safe, 
that  a  living  can  be  made  from  it,  and 
that  it  will  most  surely  grow  in  value 
from  the  mere  fact  that  the  growth  and 
development  of  the  city  in  that  direc- 
tion will  continually  add  to  the  value 
of  the  land  in  that  neighborhood.  To 
those  looking  for  work  by  contract  or 
day  labor;  to  those  who  may  want  ti. 
clear  and  cultivate  lands  for  some  of 
the  purchasers,  or  to  tho.se  who  want 
homes  for  themselves.  The  Herald 
v.cmid  direct  them  to  S.  F.  Snivcly, 
room  lOS  Providence  building,  where  lie 
can  be  found  during  the  day  or  anv 
evening,  from  8  to  10  o'clock.  In  Mr. 
Snively's  absence,  parties  should  call 
upon  George  H.  Crosby,  who  will  in 
such  instance  represent  Mr.  Snively. 
Mr.  Crosby's  office  is  tOC  and  107  Provi- 
dence building. 


consult  him.  You  can  consult  Dr. 
Greene  personally  or  by  letter  free. 
Call  or  write  to  Dr.  Greene,  35  West 
Fourteenth  street.  New  York  city.  He 
has  developed  the  most  perfect  and 
successful  system  of  cure  through  cor- 
respondence. The  effects  of  overwork, 
excesse  and  all  diseases  of  the  blood 
and  nerves  are  Dr.  Greene's  special 
practice.    A  cure  is  practically  certain. 


CASTORIA 


For  Infants  and  Children. 


Tbe  fae- 

tifflile 

■iguture 

of 


O- 


'  ten 

WTftppW. 


Smoke  the  "Tom  Dlnham"  cigar,  sol 
by  all  tbe  leading  dealers. 


CONDENSED  DISPATCHES. 


The  Rhode  Island  Republicans  have 
nominated  the  following  state  ticket:  I'ur 
governor.  Elisha  Dyer.  Providence:  lieu- 
tenant governor.  Aram  J.  Polhierat. 
Woonsocket;  secretary  of  state,  Chaiies 
P. .Bennett.  Providenc-e;  attorney  genertd. 
\V.  B.  Tanner,  Providence;  general  treas- 
urer.   Samuel    Clark,    of    Lincoln. 

Three  men  were  fatally  burned  bv  an 
explosion  of  molten  metal  at  the  Emma 
blast    furnace    in    Cleveland    yes^erdav. 

Charcoal,  the  Indian  murderer  of  Ser- 
geant White,  of  the  Northwest  mounted 
police,  was  hanged  at  Fort  Macleod,  N. 
\V.    T.    He   died   gamely. 

Kansas  City.  Mo.,  had  a  $50,000  cloth- 
ing house  fire  last  night. 

The  Brooks'  Locomotive  works  at  Dun- 
kirk. N.  Y..  are  to  start  up  on  full  time. 
They  employ  1500  men. 

At  Omaha.  Nt*.,  D.  B.  Myers  shot  his 
wife  and  himself  last  evening.  Mvers' 
wounds  may  prove  fatal  but  his  wife  is 
not  seriously  injured.  Jealousv  is  said 
to  be  the  cause. 

The  insurgents  in  Pinar  Del  Rio  blew 
up  a  train  which  had  nearly  600  Spaniards 
troops  on  board  just  as  the  train  was  on 
a  high  bridge.  There  were  about  'S<0 
killed  and  the  balance  were  taken  prison- 
ers and  held  as  hostages  for  the  release 
of  twelve  insurgents  who  are  Spanish 
pri.soners  at  .\rtemi.sa.  The  Spaniard.^  ad- 
mit the  story  of  the  capture  of  the  train. 


FEMININE  TRAGI-COMEDY. 
New  York  Journal:  An  amusing  com- 
edy in  political  life  at  Washington  has 
come  to  light.  There  was  a  cynical 
Si)anish  monarch  who  was  wont  to  .s.iy. 
"Who  was  she?"  when  any  mysterious 
Imbroglio  was  brought  to  his  notice.  The 
interested  public  don't  need  to  put  this 
cjuery  as  to  the  shelving  of  ex-Governo;- 
Merriam  of  Minnesota.  who  was  sup- 
po.sed  to  have  been  the  choice  of  I'resi- 
dent  I^IcKinley  for  ambassador  to  Ger- 
many.*^ The  quarrel  between  the  lovely 
fair  In  this  matter,  which  has  culminated 
in  this  diplomatic  faux-pas,  is  a  matter 
of  ancient  history  in  Minnesota.  "Pretty 
I'cggy  ■  Timberlake  set  society  in  an  up- 
roar In  .Jackson's  time.  But  not  since  tien 
has  there  been  such  a  nice  little  politico- 
feminine  sensation  at  tlie  capital.  Wo- 
men play  many  amusing  antics  in  mod- 
ern American  societ.v,  but  they  do  not 
get  a  chance  to  mix  in  higher  political 
intrigues  hen  as  often  as  they  clo  abroa;!. 
Perhaps  it  is  coming  to  this,  however. 
The  extension  of  wiiman's  sphere  is  one 
of  the  shibboleths  of  contemporary  re- 
formers.    The   Davis-Merriam   diploma  tic 


Stop  drugging  yourself  with  drug 
nostrums  or  "cures.  "  Get  a  well- 
known  pharmaceutical  remedy  that 
will  do  the  work.  Catarrh  and  cold  in 
the  head  will  not  cause  suffering  if 
Ely's  Cream  Balm  is  u.sed.  Druggist 
will  supply  10-cent  trial  size  or  ."id- 
cent  full  size.    We  mail  it. 

ELY  BROS., 
5C  Warren  street,  N.  Y.  fflty. 

Rev.  John  Reid.  Jr.,  of  Great  Falls, 
Mont.,  recommended  El5''s  Cream  Balm 
to  me.  I  can  emphasize  his  statement. 
"It  is  a  positive  cure  for  catarrh  if 
used    as    directed." — Rev.    Francis    W. 


Poole,      Pastor     Central 
church.    Helena.    Mont. 


Presbyterian 


Dr.  Miles'  Nervine  Victoricxis. 

Physical   and   Mental    Exhaustion   Gives 
Way  to  Vigorous  Activity. 


R 


,EV.  W.  T.  HODCK.  the  talented  pas- 
tor of  Grace  U.  B.  church,  Carlisle, 
Penn..  writes  September  28. 1895:  "  I 
always  enjoyed  good  health  until  In  1892,  at 
which  time  my  duties  as  a  clergyman  were 
of  a  peculiarly  trying  nature,  aubjecting 
me  to  several  severe  nervous  shcxks  which 
together  with  overwork  and  anxiety,  im- 
paired my  general  hefdtb  and  nervous  sys- 
tem. Indeed  I  was  in  such  a  condition  that 
the  mere  sight  of  a  large  congregation  so 
wearied  me  that  It 
would  require  a  day 
or  more  for  me  to  re- 
cover from  the  ex- 
haustion. It  affords 
me  great  pleasure  to 
say  that  Dr.  Miles* 
Restorative  Nervine 
and  Restorative  Tonic 
have  done  me  untold  gcxxl.  I  preachcjd 
three  times  yesterday  and  I  feel  as  fresh 
and  vigorous  this  Monday  morning  as  I 
ever  felt  in  my  life,  thanks  to  your  remedies. 
Dr.  Miles'  Remedies  are  sold  by  all  drug- 
gists under  a  positive  guarantee,  first  bottle 
benefits  or  money  refunded.  Book  on 
Heart  and  Nerves  sent  free  to  all  applicants. 
DR.  MILES  MEDICAL  CO..  Elkhart.  Ind. 


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6 


THE    DULUTH    EVEi^lNG    HERALD:     WEDJfESDAY,    MARCH 


More  Beautiful 

Than  the  Poet's  Dream 

Are  the  New  Spring-  Goods,  consisting-  ot  the  latest  fads  in 

Dress  Goods,  Silks,  Wash  Goods,  Trimmings,  Cloaks, 
Suits  and  Muslin  Underwear. 

We  would  draw  your  attention  at  this  particular  time  to  our  superb  stock  of  Mus- 
lin Underwear,  containing  all  kinds  from  the  plain  serviceable  to  the  most  elaborate 
articles  made  of  Fine  Nainsooks  and  Laces  that  always  appeal  to  the  lovers  of  Dainty 

Underwear— and  all  are  sold  at  the  smallest  of  small  profit  prices. 

After  looking  at  the  display  in  the  window,  come  in  and  be 
shown  the  stock— It  will  more  than  interest  you. 


17,     1897. 


Cambric  Corset  Waists 

—Tucked  front,  pearl  button, 
ready  tor  fine  trimming 


Cambric  Undershirts 

—Umbrella  flare, 
tucked  and  runled 


riuslin  Drawers 

—  Flam  and  serviceable, 
well  made,  tacked  and 
wide  flare 


Muslin  Drawers 

— Tucked  and 
embroidery  trimmed 


Cambric  Drawers 

—  Fine  quality,-  six  tucks, 

embroidery  flounce — 

to  close 


Muslin  Skirts 

— Flounce 
embroidery  edged 


29c 
50c 
I9c 
21c 
50c 
49c 


46c 


Muslin  Night  Robes 

— Good  muslin,  sacque 

or  yoke,  embroidery  trimmed 

Night  Robes 

—  In  the  Empire.  Bishop,  Gertrude  and 
Eton  Lace  and  Embroidery  Trimmed  at — 

$1.35,  $1.39.  $1.48,  $1.75, 
$3.25  and  up  to  $5.50. 

Fine  Skirts 

—In  Cambric,  Lawn,  Nainsook  and  Dim- 
ities, Umbrella  Flare,  embroidery  and  lace 
trimmed,  double,  triple  and  knee  flounce 

At  $1,  $1.25,  $1.39,  $1.48, 
$»«75  up  to  $6.50. 

Fine  Drawers 

— In  Cambric,  Lawn  and  Dimities,  Um- 
brella shape,  embroidery  and  lace  trim- 
med, at  59c,  65c.  75c.  98c,  SI  up  lo  $2.50 

ONE  LOT  OF  COLORED  LAWN  SKIRTS 

—In  high  colors,  such  as  pink,  blue  and 
other  colors,  just  the  proper  skirt  for  Or- 
gandie and  Grenadine  Dresses,  well  made, 
tucked,  ruitled  and  lace  trimmed, 
from    tl.65  Up. 


Woman  of  Good  Appearance 

and  Demeanor  Arrested 

For  Drunkenness. 


Told     a    Rather   Odd    Story 

In  Explanation  of  Her 

Appearance. 


Failed  to  Satisfy  the  Judge 

and  She  Was  Sent 

Up. 


All  New  Goods  sold  on  close  margin  plan^ 


Power  &  Settle. 


%.. 


BEFORE  THE 
STRUGGLE 

(Continued  From  Page  1). 


for  half  a  mile  or  more  before  the  mon- 
otony is  broken  by  anything  worthy  of 
attention.  Fitzsimmons  was  in  excel- 
lent spirits  and  really  in  good  humor, 
talking  as  much  as  usual  to  his  asso- 
ciates, and.  of  course,  abused  Corbett 
speaking  of  the  fight  as  his  own.  His 
confidence  seemed  to  be  so  great  that 
there  was  no  need  for  encouragement 
from  his  companions. 

"We    will    have    the      purse      coming 
back."  said  Fitzsimmons. 
■'Sure."  said  Stelzner. 
'How  will  Corbett  get  out  of  town"" 
asked  Hickey. 

•In  a  box  car."  growler  Julian,  "with 
Jim  m  the  middle.  ' 

All  laughed  at  this  allusion  to  a  pos- 
sible funeral.  About  half  way  between 
Cook's  ranch  and  town  the  road  runs 
over  a  little  hill,  from  Avhich  can  be  seen 
the  upper  part  of  the  rough  frame 
building,  three  miles  away,  in  which 
Corbett  did  his  indoor  work.  It  stands  I 
out  prommently  owing  to  the  clearness 
of  the  atmosphere,  and  the  more  so  be- 
cause the  construction  boards  are  not 
yet  weather-stained.  A  turn  in  the  road 


acquaintance  or  an  admirer.  No  tinv- 
was  lost  inside  city  limit.s.  the  horsts 
going  at  a  good  jog  through  the  streets. 
the  arena  being  reached  without  mis- 
hap. As  Fitzsimmons  reached  his 
dressing  room  he  was  rubbed  down, 
and  in  a  short  time  was  prepared  to  an- 
swer a  summons  to  face  his  antagonist 
in  the  ring. 


A  woman  of  about   30  years  of  age, 
of  good  appearance,  her  demeanor  and 
apparel    indicating   a   respectable    sta- 
tion   in    life,    was    arrested      about      0 
o'clock  last  evening  in   an  intoxicated 
condition    by    Officer    Fritz,    on      West 
Michigan  street,   in   the  vicinity  of  the 
old    street    car   barn.       She    had    been 
peranibulatins  nhrtut  the  neighborhood 
for  some  little    time,   affording  amusa« 
ment  to  quite  a  number  of  people  who 
had    been   attracted    by   her  antics. 
At    the    police    station    she    gave    the 
;jnanie   of   Alr.s.    Brandt   I'cterson.       She 
I    SHid  that  she  lived  at  Eau  Claire.  Wis.. 

I  and  was  en  route  ttt  join   her  husband. 

■  I  who  was.  she  thought,  at  Mahtowa. 
•Minn.  A  small,  new  satchel  she  had 
{'with  her  bore  out  the  story  that  sh- 
!  I  was  a  traveler.  She  had  no  money,  but 

•  j  was    provided    with    a    ticket    to    Mah- 

•  :  towa.  She  said  sho  had  arrived  in  the 
•I  city  in  the  morning  and  had  taken  an 
•j  Eastern  Minnesota  train  for  her  desti- 

•  ]  nation  by  mistake  This  had  necessi- 
! !  tated    her    returning    to    Duluth       and 

■  j  staying  over  night,   she  said,    and   she 

•  had  started  to  look  up  a  lady  whom  she 

•  used  to  know.  who.  she  thought,  kept 
;  a  boarding  house  here,  but  whose  name 
J I  she  was  unal.le  to  recall. 

■  I  This  morning,  before  Judge  Boyle! 
jjshe    told    the   same    story,    it    transpir- 

•  [  ing,  further,  that  in  the  search  for  her 
!  I  friend  she  had  made  inquiries  at  vari- 

I I  ous  saloons,  at  some  of  which  she  had 

I  taken  a  nip.  probably  to  help  her  bear 

•  I  up  against    the  disappointment   conse- 

•  quent  upon  her  failure  to  fmd  any 
• :  trace  of  the  peison  for  whom  she  was 
; I  in  search. 

I I  Attorney  Cro<  ker  made  an  appeal  in 
the  prisoners  Lehalf.  He  said  that  she 
was  unstrung  on  account  of  having 
been  on  the  witness  stand  for  several 
days  recently  in  an   important   case  in 

-      I  Michigan    and    was    excusable    for    in- 
the    f'l'lsinK    »»    something    to    steady      her 


Flames   Discovered   In   the 

Top  of  Exchange  Building 

This  Afternoon. 

Fire    Looked     Serious     For 

a  Time  But  Was  Easily 

Controlled. 


Evidently  Caused  By   Fric- 
tion In  Elevator  Machinery 
—Damage  Light. 


tials.        No    niercy    was    shown    to 

bluffer    and    he    was    unceremoniouslv  I  "^j;^^' 

hustled    off    the   grounds.        In    justice   '      There    cropped    out      remarks,      how- 

however,  it  must   be  said  that   the  po-  |  ^'''^'^-    '^"      the     cross-examination       to 

""    which   Judge   lioyle  subjected    the   pri 


lice 


THE  BIG  ARENA. 

Carson.  Nev..  March  17.— The  arena 
in  which  the  great  fight  was  pulled  off 
is  situated  about  one-third  of  a  mile 
from  the  main  street  of  the  town  and 
is  located  in  the  center  of  the  race 
track.  The  structure  is  entirely  of 
undressed  lumber  and  has  no  top.  Ar- 
rangements were  made  for  a  canvas 
covering  in  case  of  inclement  weather, 
but  unless  the  snow  came  down  in 
great  force— and  it  rarely  comes  down 
in  any  other  way  in  Carson— the  men 
were  to  be  compelled  to  fight  practic- 
ally  in   the  open  air. 

The  arena  is  a  twelve-sided  affair, 
each  of  the  sides  being  a  section,  and 
each  section  ct>ntaining  about  15lK) 
seats.  The  seats  in  each  section  were 
divided  into  three  classes,  those  near- 
est the  ring  held  at  $40;  the  seats  next 
alwve  them  at  $20,  and  those  at  the 
top,  which  were  not  numbered,  were 
sold  at  $5.  All  of  them  were  good,  al- 
though the  view  from  cheaper  ones 
was  somewhat  distant  and  the  fine 
points  of  the  fight  could  not  be -seen 
from  them.  The  ring  was  raised  about 


arrangements  were  excellent  and 
that  there  was  very  little  trouble  in 
getting  the  spectators  to  their  seat^; 
The  ushers,  for  the  most  part,  knev 
their  business  and  there  was  no  more 
•lifticulty  in  handling  the  crowd  than 
there  would  have  been  in  a  metro- 
politan theater  of  much  smaller  size. 
I  nder  the  seats  at  the  west  end  of 
the  arena  was  a  small   sheii  about   Id 


Fire  broke  out  in  the  Exchange  build- 
ing at  the  corner  of  Superior  street  and 
Third  avenue  west  between  :J:30  and  3:45 
o'clock  this  afternoon.  The  first  sign  of 
the  blaze  was  given  by  the  presence  of 
smoke  in  the  building  and  the  fire  was 
quickly  located  above  the  elevator  shaft 
and  in  the  vicintiy  of  the  machinery 
which  operates  the  elevator.  Friction 
in  the  machinery  was  probably  respon- 
sible, for  there  are  no  chimneys  and  no 
electric   wires  near   there. 

Th.-  alarm  was  turned  in  by  J.  A 
Stephen.son.  Several  people  on  the 
street  watched  the  smoke  raising  from 
the  roof,  thinking  it  came  only  from 
a  chimney.  Before  the  department  ar- 
rived, the  flames  broke  out  through  the 
roof  and  it  looked  as  though  the  build- 
ing was  doomed.  Smoke  began  to  oozo 
out  of  the  upper  floor  windows  and 
through  the  roof  around  the  cupola. 
The  tenants  mfide  preparations  to  get 
out,  and  in  the  American  Exchange 
bank  the  force  of  clerks  at  once  pro- 
ceeded to  put  everything  in  the  vaults. 

The  fire  proved,  however,  to  be  less 
serious  than  appearances  indicated. 
ITpon  the  arrival  of  the  dapartment 
the  chemical  engine  was  at  once  put 
in  play,  the  aerial  ladder  was  raised 
and  hose  taken  up  over  the  roof.  A 
stream  of  water  was  also  obtained 
through  a  line  of  hose  taken  up  through 

The  damage  will  be  light,  the  water 
causing  but  little.  Ihe  water  that  was 
used  fell  down  the  elevator  shaft  and 
very  little  in  th-  building.  The  :ire 
proved  to  be  less  wicked  than  was 
feared  and  within  fifteen  minutes  was 
almost   entirely   subdued. 

The  damage  to  the  building  was 
light. 


Annual  Marcli 
Dressmakers' 


and  Notions. 


THURSDAY,  FRIDAY 
AND  SATURDAY. 

Dress  makers  especially,  and  observing-  ladies  in  general 
will  at  once   note  the  money  saved   them  at  the  great  annual 
event.     These  prices  are  those  at  which  other  stores  buy  them 
and  we  as    the  largest  buyers  at  the  head  of  the  lakes,  alone 
offer  such  as  these: 

8WAN  BILL  HOOKS  AMD  EYES-Nos.  2.  3.  4.  white  or  black,  regular 
price  per  card  3c,  for ^ 


"HUMP"  HOOKS  AND  EYES-Black  or  white,  Nos.  3  and  4.  regul 
price  per  card  5c.  for ^         ^'   ^ 


ar 


°^  ^JllT"*'  *7°  EYE8-N0S.  2,  3.  4.  black  or  white,  regular 
price  per  card  IOC,  for fi""*' 


MILW^RD'S  NEEDLES- Regular  price  5c  per  paper,  for 

SEAMLESS  STOCKINET  SHIELDS-Nos.  2.  3,  4.'wonh*i'oc.'  12c  iic' 
per  pair  resoectively,  special,  any  size.... ...     ..  ^ 


"''rrVo;%e?jr?o?:".^'.:'":'^°^T.':?:^->-f-v"'-    125c 


s<  ner.  that  sh  ■  might  he  awav  from 
home  on  a  less  laudable  errand  than 
looking  for  her  husband.  The  judge  in- 
timated that  the  fact  of  a  woman  of 
her  appearance  being  away  from  home 
without  funds  and  in  an  intoxicated 
condition,  with  no  definite  idea  of  her 
destination.  led  him  to  believe  that 
the    'half   had    not    been    told."    in    the 


by  lu  feet  which  was  set  apart  for  the    ^\'^''j'^  "f   t^^  song.   The  circumstances 
use    of    Fitzsimmons    as    a       dressing    "*  * 

room.  The  dressing  room  of  Corbett  is 
situated  at  the  .south  side  of  the  arena 
The  passages  by  which  the  men  entered 
the  ring  were  at  right  angles  to  each 
other.  The  dressing  rooms  were  .so  lo- 
cated in  order  that  there  would  be  no 
possibility  of  the  men  or  their  train- 
ers coming  in  contact  and 
trouble. 


at    least    warranted    her    being    taken 
care  of.  he  said,  and  he  imposed  a  fine 
of  $10  and  costs.  In  default  of  payment 
the    woman    was    committed      to      the 
county   jail    for   ten   days. 


causing 


fl^^F^l  .u^   building   squarely   in    the  I  four  feet  above  the  floor  of  the  arena 
Itf^  J  ^.f^^y-  and  they  could  not  i  and  at  each  corner  was  an  iron  post 

heads  doTn^  «nH"tH^?  *^K  ^^  held  their    which  was  carefully  bound  up  in   cot^ 
do     a^    th^v    t^l**"*-   *^^^  ""'^"'^   not    ton  batting  to  protect  the  men  in   the 
no-t  fu^m^n^ar;;.  Tl^U^  S^^^^i^^''''  ^' •''''"'  ^^'""^  ^^^'^^  '^- 
ture  at  the  same  time  and  it  naturally 


provoked  talk 

■'Will  they  carry  him  in?"  asked  Fitz- 
simmons. 

"They  will  carry  him  back."  replied 
Julian,  whereat  all  chuckled. 

"I'll  scMjn  have  my  chance  to  do  him 
up.  said  Fitzsimmons.  "And  stop  his 
wmd.     put  in  Stelzner. 

'Yes."  said  Fitzsimmons.  'That  is 
all  there  is  to  him.  I  only  want  to  land 
once  on  him." 

SAW  THE  PENITENTIARY. 

While  passing  the  penitentiary  just 
beyond  the  outskirts  of  the  city  very 
little  was  said.  Fitz  being  particularl- 
I'lT^'  "fuH"^  visited  the  institution 
and  saw  the  footprints  of  the  pre-his- 
toric  man  supposed  by  geologists  to 
have  been  fourteen  feet  high.  While 
walkmg  in  the  vicinity  the  feet  of  Fitz- 
simmons had  not  made  as  large  an  im- 
pression in  the  mud.  but  the  other  end 
or  him  IS  so  organized  that  it  is  not 
impossible  that  he  thought  he  was  jus. 
as  big  a  man  as  his  predecessor  who 
;2  oi^.!^*^^  exercise  about  or  more 
than  2|,0.000  years  ago.  It  was  pretty 
fu"^J^*'  *^nown  about  town  what  time 
the  fighters  were  due,  and  the  siuewalks 
were  crowded  with  people  when  th* 
I-itzsimmons  party  drove  by.  There 
was  no  particular  enthusiasm,  merely  a 

i.li^w.   "^  ,?'°"'    '^'*^-"    "'^    "Wish    you 
luck,     or  a  limited  cheer  or  two  from  an 


„  .    ^  ^     _ The 

floor  of  the  ring  was  covered  with  can- 
vas yesterday,  although  Corbett  pre- 
ferred to  fight  on  the  bare  boards  as 
the  canvas,  he  said,  was  likely  tt.  hin- 
der the  foot  movements  of  the  fight- 
ers. 

The  entrance  to  the  arena  was 
through  the  gate  only  and  this  was  the 
mam  one.  which  was  used  for  similar 
purposes  when  racing  was  in  progress. 
From  the  gate  to  the  side  of  the  arena 
stretched  a  sidewalk  of  loose  plank- 
ing which  afforded  the  spectators  a 
passage  over  the  mud  that  during  the 
last  few  days  had  been  turned  into 
almost  quagmire  by  the  many  people 
who  had  been  tramping  around  the 
arena  to  see  how  it  looked.  There  are 
four  tunnels  in  the  side  of  the  build- 
ing, one  each  from  the  north,  south 
east  and  west.  Above  the  entrance  to 
eacti  one  of  these  tunnels  was  placed 
last  night  a  large  white  cloth  bearing 
m  black  letters  the  letters  of  the  sec- 
tions which  could  be  reached  by  the 
passageway  underneath.  Four  stair- 
ways on  the  outskirts  of  the  building 
lead  up  to  the  $10  seats. 

ARRANGEMENTS  EXCELLENT 
Big  ushers,  each  armed  with  a  hupe 
cane,  were  located  at  the  entrance  to 
each  passageway,  and  at  the  bottom 
?L^^^  stairway,  and  it  was  hard  lines 
for  the  man  who  attempted  to  enter 
the  arena  without   the   proper  creden- 


To  Pearline  Users  Only. 

You  have  confidence  in  Pearline.    You 

must   have,   or  you   wouldn't   be   using   it. 

^^   But  what  do   you    do  with   it,    besides   the 

ordinary  washing  and  cleaning?     There's 

a  long  list  of  things   in  which  Pearline 

ought  to  be  helping  you.     Why  isn't  it 

doing  so  ?     For  every  purpose  for  which 

you  would  use  soap  and  water,  Pearline 

IS  better.      You  ought  to  be  ready  enough 

to    beheve    that,    with    what    you    must 

know  of  Pearline. 

U5£ 


SUPERB  WEATHER. 

All  That  Could  Be  Desired  By 
the  Sports. 

Carson.  Nev.,  March  17.— The  dawn 
of  the  battle  day  in  Carson  City  was  uU 
that  could  l>e  desired  by  the  several 
thousand  people  who  have  traveled 
many  miles  to  this  snow-bound  state  to 
see  the  great  Corbett-Fitzsimmons 
fight.  Late  last  night  the  weather  was 
bitterly  cold,  the  s|ky  was  overcast  with 
clouds  and  little  flurries  of  snow  fell 
several  times,  with  every  indication 
that  daybreak  would  find  the  »rospect 
for  a  cold,  cloudy  day  ahead  and  per- 
haps several  inches  of  snow  on  the 
ground,  and  then  there  would  have  been 
great  disappointment  in  this  section  of 
the  world,  for  it  had  been  ofllciallv 
stated  that  the  battle  would  not.  occur 
unless  the  sun  was  shinnig  so  that  the 
verascope  could  be  worked  at  the  ring- 
side. 

But  the  reputation  of  Carson  weather 
at  this  season  of  the  year  asserted  itself 
and  a  little  after  6  o'clock  the  sun  rose 
over  the  snow-covered  mountains,  and 
in  a  short  time  the  whole  valley  and 
the  white  mountains  on  all  sides  of  it 
were  glistening  in  bri-ghtness.  Not'  a 
cloud  was  to  be  seen  anywhere,  and 
w^hlle  the  air  was  cool  and  sharp  an.l 
there  was  a  covering  of  white  frost  on 
the  streets,  there  was  noticeable  morl- 
eration  in  the  atmosphere,  and  it  could 
be  readily  predicted  that  when  the  sun 
was  a  few  hours  higher  the  day  would 
be  a  perfect  one. 

No  news  has  been  received  in  town 
from  either  training  quarters  this  early 
in  the  morning,  but  with  all  the  weather 
conditions  favorable.  It  was  known  that 
there  was  no  reason  to  change  the  pro- 
gram which  had  been  made.  The  town 
was  astir  early  and  crowds  began  to 
gather  at  the  hotels  and  railway  sta- 
tion waiting  for  incoming  trains.  All 
were  eager  for  any  i)iece  of  news  or 
gossip  in  connection  with  the  fight 


THE   F1;NAL   RETTING. 

Carson  City.  March  17.- There  was 
absolutely  no  change  in  the  bettinp- 
ring.  Corbett  still  ruled  favorite  at  10 
to  61/2.  Julian  and  Brady  are  inside  the 
arena  and  Corbett  and  Fitzsimmons 
are  undergoing  final  preparations  It 
is  said  there  are  4000  people  seated  and 
another  special  train  to  arrive. 

Billy  Madden  announces  he  has  de- 
posited $2500  Avith  Warren  Lewis,  of 
New  York,  in  behalf  of  Joe  Goddard, 
to  fight  the  winner.  He  also  says  Tom 
Sharkey  has  $2500  up  with  the  same 
object  in  view. 


ENGINEERING  WORK  IX  INDIA. 
The  triumpli.s  of  modern  eii^rineers  over 
natural  obstailes  know  no  limit.  The  lat- 
est achievement  which  has  been  broutrht 
into  public  notice  is  the  diversion  of  the 
river  Periyar  from  its  natural  outlet  in 
the  Indian  ocean  to  the  bed  of  the  Vaitrai 
which  flows  eM.stward  into  the  Bay  of 
^J^'i?^'-,.  ^='>=^     *he    Chicago    Chronicle. 

The  di-strict  around  Madura,  in  the 
Madra.s  presidency,  had  long  suffered 
from  want  of  watty:  for  irrigation,  and 
It  was  dec-ided.sowie  few  years  ago  to  re- 
lieve it  in  the  manner  described.  The 
work  involved  the  construction  of  an 
enormous  dam.  17»  feet  in  height  im- 
pounding the  Witters  of  the  Perivar.  and 
tormiuR  a  lake  which,  when  at  its  high- 
est level,  will  have  an  area  of  74.54  acre.s 
or  nearly  twelve  square  miles.  An  open 
cutting  over  a  mile  in  length  and  twentv- 
otie  feet  wide,  followed  bv  a  tunnel  of 
about  the  same  length  and  with  a  sec- 
tional area  of  ninety  square  feet,  con- 
yey.s  the  stream  across  the  watershed  to 
the  \aigai.  Eighty  miles  lower  down  it 
IS  distributed  by  artlHclal  canals  in  the 
Madura  district. 

To  provide  for  floods,  which  at  times 
are  very  severe,  an  overflow  "saddle" 
has  been  provided  in  the  watershed  sepa- 
rating the  two  districts,  so  that  when 
the  level  rises  thirty-one  feet  above  the 
cutting  It  shall  escape  by  this  means, 
rhe  difficulty  of  the  work  may  be  imag- 
ined when  it  is  state<l  that  it  was  car- 
ried on  in  an  uninhabited  jungle,  twenty 
miles  from  the  nearest  cultivated  land 
and  eighty  miles  from  a  railway  station 
and  that,  owing  to  the  unhealthiness  of 
the  climate,  at  certain  .sea.sons  and  the 
prevalence  of  Hoods,  the  engineers  could 
only  work  for  three  months  of  the  vear 


ORIGIN  OF  NATIONS. 
St.   Louis  Globe-Democrat:     The  As- 
syrians became  a. nation  at  the  foun- 
dation of  Nineveh.  2245  B.  C. 

The  first  mention  of  the  Siamese  is 
by  Portuguese  travelers  in  1511  A.  D. 

Brittany  is  inhabited  by  the  de- 
scendants of  the  original  Britons  or 
Bretons. 

Persian  history  claims  that  the  Per- 
sians are  descended  from  Perseus  and 
Andromeda. 

The  Austrians  were  originally  the 
Oester-Reichers  or  inhabitants  of  the 
Eastern  empire. 

The  Belgians  are  the  children  of  the 
Belgii.  w  ho  are  first  named  in  "Caesar's 
Commentaries." 

The  Burmese  are  mentioned  first  as  a 
nation  at  the  foundation  of  the  present 
dynasty,  in  1750  A.  D. 

The  Babylonians,  according  to  tradi- 
tion, became  a  nation  under  Belus,  the 
Nimrood  of  the  book  of  Genesis. 

The  Lapps  are  first  mentioned  as 
being  conquered  by  the  Swedes  and 
Norwegians  in  the  thirteenth  century. 

The  Hittites  were  first  mentioned 
about  900  B.  C.  as  a  commercial  and  mil- 
itary nation  to  the  north  of  Palestine. 

The     Lombards    were    originally    the  , 
Langoljardi  or  Long-beards.    They  mi- 
grated into  Italy  from  Northern  Prus- 
sia. 

The  Arabs  claim  that  they  are  direct- 
ly descended  from  Ishmael.  the  son  of 
Abraham  and  Hagar.  born  1810  B.  C. 

The  native  Australians  are  said  to 
differ  in  several  important  respects 
from  every  other  race  of  people  on  the 
earth. 


CORD  EDGE  BRAID-For  slgrt  facing,  in  black,  worth  8c  per 
yard,  for "^ 

VELVETEEN  SKIRT  FACING-Two  inches  wide,  all  colors.'  sold  by' 
some  at  6c  per  yard,  for ' 


DRESS  STAYS-Same  exactly  as  the  celebrated  Twin  Stav,  in  packaees 


package,  for 


'^''*?orTh  3c!'?or'^"!™''.Tf °°  ^^'^  'P°°''  ^^^'^  "'  ''*^"^'  ^»  """^bers. 

BASTE  COTTON— One  large  spool,  any  number,  worth  ^c 
tor -^  • 

KING'S^  BASTING  COTTON -500-yard  spool  sold  the  world  over  for's'c.     " 

MARSHALL'S  SPOOL  LINEN-AU  sizes,  blac'k.'whiie.'  unbleached! 

the  best  in  the  world,  worth  loc,  for 


CORSET  CLASPS--W.th  reinforced  back,  in  black,  white  and  drab, 
5-hook,  worth  12 'jr.  for 

NEW  HOME  LINEN  THREAD-AlUizes  and  worlh  at  wholesale 

2oc  per  dozen,  each  for 


ASSORTED  TAPE-In  packages  of  5  pieces,  amounting  to  11 H  yards 
worth  IOC.  for ^ ".......: 

HAIR  PiNS— Plain  or  crimped,  2  dozen  in  paper,  some  get  qc 
for  them,  for ^., |^^_   _  ^ 

BRASS  THIIKIBLES- All  sizes 

CORSET  LACES-In  gray  only,  3  yards  long,  and  sold  usually  for  ^c 
each,  now -* 

MOURNING  PINS- With  glass  heads,  worth  4c,  for 

MOURNING  PINS-PJain,  worth  7c,  for 


THE  DIRT  REVEALED. 
New  Y'ork  Times:  "People  could  learn 
if  they  would."  says  a  New  York  physi- 
cian, "a  practical  lesson  from  the  .snow- 
that  is  to  be  seen  in  the  back  vards  a 
short  time  after  a  snowstorm.  It  is  dirty 
sooty,  black,  and  apparently  covered  with 
all  manner  of  impur'ties.  yet  a  citv  back 
yard,  in  a  good  residence  part  of  the  city 
.seems  to  be  sufficiently  retired  to  be  out 
of  the  way  of  dust  and  dirt,  which  is  to 
be  found  at  the  other  side  of  the  house 
where  the  general  traffic  is  going  on. 
Many  people  put  articles  of  food  outside 
in  cold  weather,  and  cover  them  verv 
little,  if  any.  It  is  an  unsanitary  prac- 
tice. The  accumulations  on  the  snow  .show 
the  amount  of  dirt  in  the  air.  and  this  is 
only  the  visible  part;  the  many  danger- 
ous microbes  cannot  be  seen  bv  the 
naked  eye." 


LADIES'  SIDE  ELASTICS-With  fancy  fiiUed  edge,  same  clasp  as 

on  the  celebrated  Lindsay,  pretty  buckles  and  ribbon  bow.  in  all 
colors,  worth  299,  for 

MEW  BELTS. 

Oar  line  for  this  spring  is  more  nearlv  perfect  than  that  of  any  other 
house  in  the  city.    Ladies'  Belt  in  caif  leather.  I'A  inches  wide,  stitched 
and  leather  lined,  celluloid  eyelets  to  match,  leather  covered  CA** 

buckies,  m  tan.  brown,  black,  green  and  navy 0"C 

Ladies'  new  style  Belt  in  elephant  grain  leather  i>^  inches  wide, 
with  black  edges  and  back,  stitched,  leather  covered  buckles,  in 
all  leading  colors 


Ladies'  imitation  monkey  grain  leather,  with  oxidized  harness 
buckles,  iu  green,  tan,  slate  and  wine  


Ladies'  white  Kid  Belts,  with  kid  covered  buckles  in  the  harness 
patterns 

NEW  STAMPED  LINENS. 

LUNCH  CLOTHS— In  all  linen  with  fine  drawn  work,  size  36x36, 
one  of  the  best  we  have  ever  shown 

TBAY  CLOTHS— In  all  linen  with  fringed  border 


SIDEBOARD  COVERS- In  fine,  all  linen.  22x90,  fringed  and  with 
beautiful  drawn  woik 


BETTING  ON  ROUNDS. 
Carson.  March  17.— The  arrival  of  an- 
other batch  of  Eastern  and  coast  sports 
gave  another  start  to  the  betting,  but 
the  odds  remained  unchanged  at  10  to 
6^^.  Jimmy  Colville.  Corbetfs  time- 
keeper, laid  $500  to  $325  at  Coleman  & 
Corbett  s  pool  room  before  breakfast  on 
the  number  of  rounds.  The  talent  are 
almost  unanimous  in  placing:  the  limit 
at  ten  and  the  favorite  number  is 
seven. 

WILL  WATCH  HER  HUSBAND 
Carson  City.  March  17.— Late  this 
morning  Mrs.  Fitzsimmons  changed 
her  mind  about  not  coming  to  the  fight 
and  decided  that  she  would  watch  her 
husband  do  battle  for  the  champion- 
ship, and  she  will  be  in  a  box  close  to 
the  ringside. 


ARBITRATION  TREATY. 
Washington,  March  17.— The  senate 
committee  on  foreign  resolutions  to- 
day asked  Chairman  Davies  to  report 
the  Anglo-American  arbitration  bill  to 
the  senate  tomorrow.  The  treaty  will 
be  amended  as  heretofore  indicated 


•A  DISTINGUISHED  SHEEP. 
On  the  farm  of  John  P.  Ray,  of  Hem- 
lock, N.  Y.,  lives  and  browses  a  very 
distinguished  sheep  thdt  never  will  ful"- 
fll  so  commonplace  a  destiny  as  chops 
or  a  saddle  of  mutton,  even  if  prize 
winners  of  this  blue  blood  ever  met 
such  fate,  says  the  New  York  World. 
There  are  nine  other  sheep  almost  as 
distinguished  that  had  the  honor  of 
raising  on  their  backs  the  fieece  that 
made  the  wool  that  made  the  cloth 
that  was  cut  into  the  suit  of  clothes 
that  Maj.  McKinley  will  wear  inau- 
guration day. 

Ten  fleeces  were  shorn  from  the  big- 
gest prize-winners  in  Mr.  Ray's  stock. 
Unwashed  they  weighed  from  fifteen 
to  twenty-two  pounds  six  ounces  eac-h 
and  yielded  38  per  cent  of  clean  wool. 

At  the  head  of  this  flock  of  wonder- 
ful fleecemakers  is  Don  Dudley.  No.  520 
Standard  American  Merino  Register, 
the  winner  of  twenty-two  first  prizes 
and  eleven  flock  and  sw^eepstake  prizes, 
amounting  to  $350.  Mr.  Ray  is  secre- 
tary of  the  New  York  Sheep  Breeders?' 
association  and  the  Standard  Ameri- 
can Merino  Sheep  Breeders'  associa^ 
tlon.  He  has  been  breeding  sheep  thir- 
ty-seven years  and  has  exported  to 
Japan,  Argentina.  Australia  and  South 
Africa. 


HANK  ADVERTISEMENTS. 


First  National  Banl( 

OF  DULUTH. 

United  States  Government  Dei>oaitar]r 
CAPITAL,  ONE  MILLION  00LUR8. 


i.  L.  Oboban, 
President. 


J.  H.  UlOHT, 

Cashier. 


W.  8.  Bishop 
Aset.  Cashier 


S    5030  yards  Machine  made  Torchon  Lace,  2  to  6  inches 
as  wide,  your  pick,  per  yard 


Money  Sent  to  All  Parts  of  the  World. 

Aeooiuts  of  Merchants,  Banks,    Corporation' 
and  IndlTiduals  Beceived. 

Interest  Allowed  on  Time  Deposits. 


IN  ADDITION 

To  the  above  most  wonderful  Bargains  we  will  offer  the 
following  gigantic  inducements: 

iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij^ 

I  LACES  !  BAR6AIN  COUNTER  NO.  I.    I 

1  5c| 

S    6200  yards  Fancy  Laces,  jast  the  proper  thing  for  trimming  Wash        S 
ss:  and  house  dresses,  prices —  s: 

I    Ev.r„ardw,r.kd,»bl..  jg^    JQq^    jgg^    25C   | 

.^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiii 
|iiiiiiiiininiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitii!iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii^ 

f  Outing  Flannels. 


BAReAIN  = 

COUNTER  NO.  2.    = 


Have  The  Herald  In  yoUr  ttomes; 
oents  a  month. 


H.  M.  PEYTON.  Prosident 

JAMES  C.  HUNTEE,  Cashier. 

WILLIAM  G.  HEQAEDT,  Ass't  CasLr 
THE 

American  Exciiange 

BANK.  j 

Dulutii,  Minnesota. 

Capital,  $500,000.  Sarplos,  $100,000. 

HAMILTON  M.°P'MSS?"»' 

MELVIN  J.  FOEBE8, 

JUDGE  J.  D.  RNSIGN, 
JOHN  H.  UPHAM, 
GEORGE  8PENCEB, 

ANGUS  B.  MACFABLANE, 
JAMES  C.  HUNTEB 

STOCKHOLDERS'    MEETING.— 

The  regular  annual  meeting:  of  the  Du- 
luth   PrintinK    and    Publishing    Company 
will  be  held  at  the  compan.v's  office  in  Du- 
luth.  Minn.,  on  Tuesday,  the  30th  day  ot 
March.   A.   D.  1897.   at  3  o'clock  p.   m. 
Dated   Duluth,    Minn..   March  17th.    1897. 
GEO.  W.  BUCK. 
Secretary. 


10,000  yards  Manufacturers'  Remnants 
of  the  finest  Outing  Flannels,  goods 
worth  10c,  12>^c  and  15c, 
beautiful  patterns,  price 


8c 


^iiiiiiniiiniiiiniiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiniiiiiiiinniiniiiiiiiiiinii^ 
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiiiiiii^^ 

I  Ladies'  Shirt  Waists.  | 

=            BARGAIN  COUNTER  NO.  3.  = 

S       Mew  Ones— Two  Big  Drives.  = 

S  '      The  prices  will  surprise  you.     Get  posted  where  to  = 

=          buy  and  when  to  buy.  ~ 

iliiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin 


Panton  &  White. 


■        »  ■    ■  i      ■  Ml.       ■    ■ 


■tr 


I        I 

I 

I 


♦ 


I  i»  »• 


-aMaMtaaa  fa_M 


^ 


I 
tmm  ,m<      a  )■■    ■  I  ia«» 


Yourself 


THE     DULUTH     EVENING     HEBALjl     WEDNESDAY,    MARCH 


The  Crowd  Began  to  Gather 

at   the   Arena    Quite 

Early. 


THIS    LIST    OF    SYmPTOMS 

TELL    IF    YOU    HAVE 

KIDNEY  DISEASE. 


No 


When  Gates  Were  Opened, 

There  Was  a  Terrific 

Rush. 


Doubt     Many     Are     TroubimI     Who 
Know    Not  Wliat    Ails    Thcm-Tho 
Guide-Post   to    Kidney    Know- 
lodge— Oodd's  Pills  the 
Cure. 


Challenges  to  the  Winner  on 

Behalf  of  Sullivan  and 

Goddard. 


March 


night 


Ringside.    Carson    City.    Xev. 
!"• — As    early    as   8    o'clock    this    morn- 
ing there  was  a  small  gathering  at  the 
gate  of  the  arena.  No  one  was  admit- 
ted and  the  crowd  gradually  increased. 
At   9  o'clock  about   500     people       were 
gathered  in  front  of  the  gate.      There 
was  also  a.  procession  of  people  along! 
the   quarter  of  a    mile  stretch   leading 
to    the    grounds   and    these    constantly 
increased  the  size  of  the  crowd.  It  was ' 
given  out  that  tht-  gates  would  not  be ' 
open  until  10  o'clock,  and  as  the  crowd 

became   impatient,   cries  of   'open    up  ' 

were  heard,  but  they  had  no  effect.      At 

»    o'clock    a    wagon    containing    a    nice 

zinc  bath  tub  drove  up.  and  as  the  tub 

was   for   the   use   of   the   heroes   of   the 

day   the   gate    was  opened.   The   crowd 

tried  to  get  In.   but  a  burly  special  po- 
liceman   brushed    them    back. 
The  gates   were   opened   at   9:30.   and 

there  was  a  rush  to  get  in.     Tiie  press 

was  so  great  that  it  was  imposible  for  , 

the    gate   keepers    to   take    the   tickets. 

Holders  of  pasteboards  were  re<iuested 

to    hold    them   above   their   heads,    and 

in   that   fashion     hundreds     of     people 

rushed  Into  the  enclosure.     There  were 

three    women    in    the    first    hunch,    and 

they  were  as  eager  to  get  in  as  the  rest. 

There  were  plenty  of  ushers,  and  there 

was  no   confusion   in   seating   the   peo- 

pie.     Five  dollar  standing  room  tickets 
seemed  to  be  most  popular,  and  |10  un- 

reserved    seats    were   in    great    demand 
at  first. 

THE  FIXISHIKG  TOUCHES. 
Holders  of  reserved  seats  and  boxes 
•were  leisurely  in  their  movements  and 
came  strolling  in.  When  the  crowd  was 
first  admitted,  working  men  were  still 
busily  engaged  in  putting  the  finishing 
touches  on  the  arena.  Half  an  hour 
after  the  gates  opened  there  was  about 
1000  people  comfortably  seated.  They 
put  in  the  time  looking  with  interest  I 
on    the    platform    where    Corbett    and  I  rener     iin«    h^»    „^  .      m 

The  floor  of  the  ring  was  of  inch  pine  '  —  ._^ 

boards,    closely    drawn      together     and  ,'  tu^  _ 

spnnkled    liberally    with    rosin  The    I   ^  '"^"  proceeded   to  strip 

fused   to   shake   hands 


Were  you  one  of  the  lucky  ones? 
Were    you    one    of    those    who    carried 
away    a    blue    Ik..ic    of    h.-alth-giving    I'ills 
to   cure   your    Kidney    trouble? 

Perhaps  you  think  you  have  not  got 
Kidney  trouble.  Well,  we  hope  you  m.ik.> 
no  mistak.'.  There  is  an  insidious  somo- 
tn.nB  that  gnaws  ut  the  vituls  of  many 
a  man  however,  that  he  would  give  nuu^i 
to  diagnoj^e  or  be  a.ssured  what  it  wa.s. 
It  may  be  Kidney  Dl.sease  or  It  may  not. 
Perhaps  his  doctor  cannot  tell  him.  The 
Inclpiency  of  Hrights  Dlsea.se  for  in! 
stance,  cannot  be  told  a.s  readilj-  u.^  can 
a  felon  on  a  thumb  or  nearsightedness 
or  any  ailment  of  the  external  organs. 

But  here  art-  some  of  the  symptoms  of 
Kidney  di.sease.  and  if  any  (not  all)  are 
round  in  your  case,  you  would  better  de- 
cide quickly  whether  .vou  are  going  to 
let   your  kidneys  go   uncured   or   not 

Hot.    dry   skin. 

Great   thirst. 

Loss    of    tlesh. 

Loss  of  memorv. 

Fits  of  'the  blues." 

Ravenous    appetite. 

Shortness   of    breath. 

Impaired   sexual    power. 

Inability   to  sleep  Well. 

Nervous    irrltabilitv. 

Burning  hands  or  feet. 

Soreness   of   the   bowels. 

I'uftiness    under   the  eyes. 

Ueil-iolored   or   pale    urine. 

Milky   deposits    in    the    urine. 

Heudache   and    neuralgia 

Piijn«  'n  the  back  and  loins. 
1.  hills  and  fever  especially  at 
Looseness   or   dec:iy   of   teeth 

^i'r,'A*'*:.i3"  "''.-  exhaustion  after  exenion. 

Fluttering  of  or   pain   about   the   heart 

Con.>=tipation   with  occasional  diarrhoea' 

^SweUii.gs  m  the   lower  limbs  and  aUlo- 

lim"™""^    '"    "''^    muscles    of    the    lower 

Scalding  feeling  when   making   water 

waterT.ssea'''''"^''    '"    ^***'    '*'"''""'    ''^ 

coagurttin.'"    "'^    "'^"^    ""    «»'**^"     ">• 

Failure  of  strength  .Tnd  paleness  of  face 

riiv-"'  **"  to  throat  troubles  and  ple.j- 

i     Severe   pains   in   the    back  after  sudden 
exertion    or    excitement. 

1  «/X*^"^"'/'*^''"'^  '°  urinate  when  In  bed. 
or   when   standing  erect. 

Tendency    to    rheumatism,    face    rani,Hv 

fj^^'ne  wrinkled  and  skin  becoming  y.ul- 

f^r^^-St^^   swellings    of    the   ankles    and 
goiit  tenderness    and    diathesis    of 

^/'??'*L*l'  ^^^  above  symptoms  are  thos. 
?L  Ik'**'*^.""?  ^•""^  o^  lirighfs  niseas. 
v^.1  .u  T.'k'*^  "^^'^r  Kidney  complaints. 
Not  all  of  them  will  be  manifest  in  ai.v 
one  case,  but  all  are  indicative  that  he 
Uon  "'"'"  '•"'"'■'^^''■''^  ""I'      need  atten- 

noDDS  KIDNEY  PILLS  are  the  spe- 
,'.'t,H'  T^?"".  f'ehumati.sm.  Urights  Disea.s.. 
and   Diabetes,   and  all   other   KIdnev   Ills 

lif  "/**  A'''"*'k*'-  ^  t'^-ftaln  cure.  A  "quick 
relief.    One    box    costs    50    cents.    Half    a 


FLOODED 


Eight  Hundred  Square  Miles 

of  Arkansas  Is  Under 

Water. 


17,     1897. 


LONELY  OLD  PEOPLE. 

How   the   luniei   ol    Life   May   Bo   Made 
Moot  Charmiag. 


A   Startling    Announcement 

Made  By  the  United  States 

Weather  Bureau. 


Wild    Rumors  of    Loss    of 

Life  Brought  In  By  Negro 

Refugees. 


Memphis,    Tenn.,    March      17.— The 
United    States    weather    bureau    today 
gives    out    the     startling      information 
that   800  square   miles   of   the   state    of 
Arkansas  is  under  water  and  that  the 
Mississippi   river  will   continue  to  rise. 
Many    wild    and    altogether    improb- 
able  reports   are  circulated   as    to   the 
number    drowned,    by    the    negro   refu- 
gees in  an  endeavor  to  stir  sympathy 
One   negro    gave    out    that    twenty-five 
persons  were   drowned    near  his   place 
the  total  number  of  lives  lost  thus  far 
are   represented   officially    to   the  relief 
committee  as  one  dozen. 


-tTilf '^J^^  '7'^^,  "i?"^'  t'*^*''"'>'  ladies,  whoso 
strength  is  feeble,  whose  digestion  is  poor 
and  for  whom  life  ha.s  no  pleasure.  There 
are  othera  who  arc  the  very  picture  of 
health.     Do  you  know  why** 

i Jih.!f"Ki  11?*-"'^"'  ''"swer.  The  truth 
is  that  healthy  old  people  are  those  who 

In^'^-i'i*  ^*'*'  most  vitality  and  whoso 
digestions  are  good.  Women  who  are 
week  in  advanced  years,  hick  this  vital 
it.\.  If  they  would  be  strong,  they  must 
gently  stimulate  the  system.  Thousands 
of  elderly  people  hiiv.^  discovered  a  wav 
or  doing  this,  and  some  are  giving  othei4< 
the    benefit   of   their  » xperience 

-Mr.  Alfred  P.  Chapman,  of  ar  Hanover 
street.  Baltimore.  savs:  ''My  grand- 
mother, who  is  now  past  90  "vears  of 
age.  has  been  using  Duffy's  pure  T.alt 
whisky  for  .some  time  past  and  It  has 
acted  almost  like  a  eharm.  giving  her 
an  appetite  and  allaying  all  disorders  of 
the  stomach.  I  am  convinced  that  it  is 
a  .splendid  thing  for  elderlv  people  who 
require  a   tonic  as   well  as  a  stimulant." 

Dr.  S.  \>elr  Mitchell.  recently  '■•■nhi- 
"The  .safest  drink  for  people  who  wish  to 
enjoy  a  hale  and  hearty  old  age  Is  pure 
whisky.  "  It  should  be  remembered 
however,  that  there  is  only  one  nhno- 
lutely  pure  whisky  and  that  Is  Duffv  s 
pure  malt.  It  is  a  pure,  healthful  stim- 
ulant which  builds  up  the  system  re- 
stores lost  vitality  and  makes  "weak 'peo- 
ple strong  and  well. 


diet  was  contrary  to  law  and  not  Justin 
fled  by  the  evidence.  The  motion  will 
be  argued  In  special  term  Saturday 
r  ;,Mk  Fo^^'^r  has  sued  F.  E.  Searle 
for  51500  on  a  note.  Mathlas  Drema  has 
aued  John  Polski  for  $500  on  a  note. 

J.  L.  Cromwell  has  been  appointed 
receiver  for  W.  P.  Lardner  in  supple- 
mentary proceedings. 


THE  PINNACLE 
OF  EXCELLENCE. 


RAINING  AT  ST.  LOUIS. 
St.  Louis,  March  IT.^About  midnight 
last  night  rain  commenced  to  fall  here 
and  has  been  coming  down  steadily 
e\er  since.  It  became  a  deluge  by  day- 
break, raising  the  water  in  all  the 
small  streams  hereabouts.  The  rain- 
fall was  pretty  general  throughout 
Missouri.  Kansas.  Nebraska  and  lowl 
I  IS  expected  that  there  will  be  a  ron^ 
sidei-ab  e  ri.se  in  the  Missouri  and 
Mississip|)i    rivers. 


DULUTH  L^  OFFICE. 

Senator  Culkin  Will  Be  Regis- 
ter or  Receiver. 

TlIi'^'^H  l"f  ,T- ^v.*'"*^*'  n.-cspecial  to 
tTon    "'^'^•^  'Ll-The     first   recommenda- 

Viorr  ^hl,''^''!"'"^^  '^^"^  Congressman 
Of  W  right  county,  for  register  or  re- 
ceiver of  the  Duluth   land  office      This 

alSiTi^i";;^"""  ^••-"-">-  —  an 


MORRIS  WILL  GET  IT. 

Will  Be  on  Rivers  and  Harbors 
Committee. 

Washington,  March  17.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Rejiresentative  Morris 
will  be  a  member  of  the  house  com- 
mittee on  rivers  and  harbors  in  this 
congress.  There  is  no  longer  any  doubt 
regarding  this  matter.  The  information 
today  is  that  Speaker  Reed  has  as- 
sured certain  members  of  the  Minne- 
sota delegation  that  the  Sixth  district 
representative  will  be  given  the  place 
he  so  much  covets  and  the  one  upon 
which  he  can  l>e  of  more  use  to  his  own 
constituents   than   ujmn  any   other. 

It  Is  learned  further  todav  that 
Speaker  Reed  has  changed  his  mind 
about  the  appf)intment  of  committees 
at  the  extra  session  and  will  name  all 
of  them  within  three  weeks.  His  for- 
mer plan,  it  will  be  recalled,  was  to 
only  appoint  the  committee  on  ways 
^r'^.  'ni'^ns.  He  now  sees  the  necessity 
of  having  the  house  transact  regular 
work  while  the  senate  wrestles  with 
the  tariff  bill,  after  the  house  has  sent 
Jt  over  to  the  other  end  of  the  capitol. 

THE  STATE  SENATE. 


IS  STILL  IN  SESSION. 

Grand  Jury  Shows  No  Signs  of 
Getting  Through. 

The  grand  jury  was  in  session  all  this 
morning,  but  it  made  no  outward  sign 
that  it  was  in  existence.  The  question 
of  when  the  grand  jury  will  adjourn  is 
still  shrouded  in  more  or  less  uncer- 
tainty. The  jury  had  some  witnesses 
subpoenaed  for  this  afternoon,  and  so 
far  as  was  known  this  noon  the  task  of 
i.stening  to  them  was  all  there  was 
left  to  do.  However,  the  jury  has  sev- 
eral times  been  as  near  an  adjourn, 
ment  as  this,  so  there  is  no  certainty 
about  it  at  all. 

No  bench  warants  have  been  issued 
on  the  two  Indictments  returned  yes- 
terday. The  cases  cannot  be  brought 
to  that  for  some  days  yet,  so  the  au- 
thorities are  in  no  hurry  to  apprehend 
the  indicted  parties.  If  the  grand  jury 
returns  more  indictments  the  parties 
will  probably  be  all  rounded  up  at 
once. 


is  a  way  up  point  of  elevation,  not  easily  reached,  but 


BLATZ 


The  STAR 

Milwaukee 
Beer 

is  up  there,  and  has  been  up  there  ever  since  1851.    So  do  not  wondei  at  the 
popularity  of  Blatz,  but  call  for  Blatz,  and  see  that  "Blatz"  is  on  the  corl; 

VAL  BLITZ  BREWING  CO.,  Duluth  Branch.   Tel.  62. 


l-:07  p.  na. 


boards  were  unpadded,  and  comments 
on  the  probability  of  the  fighters  knock- 
ing their  heads  on  the  hard  surface  in 
case  of  a  knock-down  were  not  fev 
Billy  Brady.  Corbetts  adviser,  was  ou 
hand  early  and  tested  the  ropes,  etc.  He 
did  not  find  things  to  suit  him.  and 
under  his  direction  the  ropes  were 
tightened.  Tom  Sharkey,  ready  to  chal- 
lenge the  winner,  came  in  early  and  ex- 
amined the  ring  with  the  air  of  a  con- 
noisseur. Sharkey  was  resplendent  in  a 
•  •oiled  shirt,  square-topped  derbv  hat  a 
gorgeous  diamond,  a  green  tie  and  an 
enormous  green  badge  in  honor  of  tht 
day. 

At  10  o'clock  the  crowd  was  still  filing 
through  the  gates  and  the  ticket-tak- 
ers had  but  small  trouble  in  recovering 
the  yellow   boards. 

At  10  o'clock  John  L.  Sullivan  en- 
tered the  arena  and  took  a  seat  in  a 
box  close  to  the  ring.  His  appearance 
was  the  signal  for  an  outburst  of 
cheers.  But  beyond  a  broad  smile,  the 
ex-champion  paid  no  attention  to  the 
demonstration.  As  the  day  wore  on 
the  sun  rose.  There  was  no  wind  and 
the  weather  conditions  were  perfect 
for  the  fight.  No  one  seemed  to  have 
any  definite  idea  of  the  hour  when  the 
fighters  were  to  go  in.  but  it  was  under- 
stood to  be  at  11  o'clock. 

At  10:30  o'clock  Billy  Jordan,  of  San 
Francisco,  entered  the  ring  and  made 
the  following  announcement:  'Frank 
V.  Dunn,  of  Boston,  on  behalf  of  John 
L.  Sullivan,  will  challenge  the  winner 
in  this  contest  for  $5000,  and  he  will  put 
up  $1000  as  a  deposit.  Jordan  put  the 
money  in  the  hands  of  the  New  York 
World.  This  was  greeted  with  cheers, 
and  Sullivan  was  called  for,  and  when 
he  reached  the  ring,  he  said:  "Gentle- 
men, there  is  no  necessity  of  me  saying 
anything  more.  I  mean  what  I  say.  I 
am  going  to  try  one  more  battle.  There 
is  one  more  fight  in  me  yet.' 

This  speech  was  greeted  with  shouts 
of  "Good  boy.  John."  Then  there  were 
calls  for  Sharkey,  but  he  was  not  to  be 
seen. 

Billy  Madden  then  entered  the  ring  and 
said:     "I     have     deposited     $2500    with 
Warren  Lewis,  of  New  York,  for    Joe 
Goddard  to  fight  the     winner     of     this 
fight,  giving  his  time  inside  of  one  year,  i 
I  have  a  check  for  $2500  for  Sharkey  to 
fight  the  winner,  which  will  be  deposit- 
ed at  once."  ! 
In  response  to  calls.  Sharkey  climbed  \ 
into  the  ring  and  said:     "Gentlemen.   I 
have  met  both  these  men  and  I  would  ; 
like  to   have  a  chance.    I   don't   think  '< 
that  either  of  them  have  anything  on  ' 
me."                                                                     I 

Shortly  after  1»  o'clock  Fitz  arrived 
and  went  direct  to  his  dressing  room.  | 
He  stood  near  the  stove,  so  as  not  to 
get  cold,  and  cheerfully  chatted  with 
his  attendants.  At  11  o'clock  there  was 
about  3'JOO  people  present,  and  the 
crowd  seemed  to  have  stoped  coming. 
About  a  dozen  good-looking,  well- 
dresed  women  were  in  the  crowd.  A 
few^  wore  veils,  but  the  majority 
braved  the  gaze  of  the  men.  Corbett 
did  not  start  from  his  camp  as  soon 
expected,  and  id  not  reach  his  dressing 
room  until  after  Fitz. 

One-eyed  Connelly  made  his  way  to  , 
the  ring  and  got  through  the  ropes 
amid  great  uproar.  In  spite  of  the  ef- 
forts of  the  two  officers,  he  succeeded 
in  making  his  little  speech,  which  was: 
"Ladies  and  Gentlemen:  I  am  here  to 
challenge  the  winner.  I  am  a  little  dis- 
figured,  but  still  in  the  ring." 

At  11:58.  Fitz  appeared  in  the  ring, 
and  the  crowd  cheered  him  loudly. 
He  was  bareheaded  and  attired  in  a 
Japanese  bath  robe. 

At  11:59^,  Corbett  arrived,  and  an- 
other demonstration  took  place. 

Behind  Corbett  are  Charley  White. 
Dailey  and  Jeffries.  McVey,  Joe  Cor- 
bett.  Billy  Woods  and   Al   Hampton. 

Fitz  walked  leisurely  round  the  ring 
and    chatted    pleasantly    with    all    the 
people.    Corbett    did    a    little   jig    step, 
In  his  corner.  Both  men  were  looking  I 
m   the  finest  of   shape.    Billy   Muldoon  I 
^eets    Fitz.    asking:       'Fitz,    how    are 
you?"  He  replied.    "Oh.  bloody  fine  "     !  », 
..  Maddea  introduced   ihe  refer^   and  [ '"°''^  "^*^"' 


Fitz  re- 
Time  called   at 


SULLIVAN_AT  CARSON. 

The    Old    Champion    Gets    a 
Warm  Reception. 

Carson  City,  March  17.— At  10:30  a. 
m..  the  arena  was  rapidly  filling  up  and 
the  streets  adjacent  to  it  were  black 
with  people.  All  the  notable  sports  of 
this  continent  are  gathered  together  to 
see  the  battle.  John  L.  Sullivan  has 
just  appeared,  resplendent  in  a  shin- 
mg  silk  hat. 

Sullivan  was  greeted  with  tumultous 
applause.  Next  came  George  Siler 
upon  whose  judgment  pends  the  fate 
of  the  modern  gladiators.  It  is  expect- 
ed that  Corbett  and  Fitzsimmons  will 
be  in  the  ring  before  11  or  11:30  o'clock. 

BETTING  WAS  BRISK. 

Heavy  Odds  Were  Offered  on 
Corbett. 

San  Francisco,  March  17.-The  local 
pool  rooms  were  crowded  with  people 
long  after  midnight.  Betting  was  brisk 
m  small  sums,  but  there  was  a  lack  of 
I-itzsimmons  woney,  notwithstanding 
the  tempting  odds  of  10  to  6%.  It  was 
generally  anticipated  by  competent 
judges  that  Corbett  might  be  a  10  to  5 
favorite,  but  that  the  short  end  should 
go  begging  at  6U.  came  in  the  nature 
I  of  a  surprise,  especially  as  there  are 
I  many  speculators  who  take  the  short- 
end  irrespective  of  their  opinions  of  the 
merits  of  the  men. 

John  Humphrey,  the  bookmaker,  was 
around  last  night  to  bet  $1000  on  Corbett 
against  $700.    but   he   was   not   able    to 

ti^^'Ll,*'^  l\fL  "^  ''^"'■^^  *^^t  'ess  than 
$100,000  will  be  wagered  in  this  city  on 
the  fight. 

There  was  a  decided  change  in  the 
betting  on  the  Hawkins-Flaherty  fight 
last  night.  The  California's  stock  has 
materially  advanced  in  the  past 
twenty-four  hours,  and  the  betting  last 
night  was  $10  to  $8  on  Flaherty.  On 
Wednesday  some  of  Hawkins'  admirers 
got  $10  against  $4.  They  are  naturally 
elated  as  they  have  an  excellent  chance 
to  hedge  if  they  so  desire  this  morn- 
mg. 

Most  of  the  betting  on  the  Smith- 
Green  fight  has  been  at  even  money, 
but  Smith  is  first  choice  at  $10  to  $8 
this  morning. 


IN  NEWEL'S  INTEREST. 

Senator   Nelson   and     Editor 
Wheelock  Visit  McKlnley. 

ThY'^H^'"?!''"'  •'^Ja'-ch  17.-(Special  to 
The  Herald. )-Among  the  Minnesotans 
^^^-^ived   by  President   McKinley  todav 

T™  ^^"f^\?''  *'^^'«"""  Representative 
Tawney.    Editor    Wheelock.    of    the    St 

Tnd  T  p"*'»'"  ^'"^  ^'"^  •^"•^"  Goodnoi 
and  T.  E.  Hyrnes.  of  Minneapolis  Nel- 
son and  Wheelock  called  in  the  nter- 
est  of  Stanford  Newel,  of  St.  Paul  who 
i^^J^,*-^"diflate    for    minister  to     The 


„.         KNIGHTS  OF  LABOR. 
Washington.  March     17.-The    execu- 

dav  ho^^i  u  **^''  ^'"'^•^^^  "f  Lab.fr  to. 
«^?i  I  ^"  "'^  'luarterly  meeting,  whiel, 
will    be  in  session     for     several     day. 

hZTJ'T'^''''''  MeGuire,  Martin  tno 
Hajs  are  In   attendance.      The     board 
f"^f";'==ed  a  d.nial  of  published  rep.Trt^ 
that    there   is   dissatisfaction    with    tho 
administration  of  Secretary  and  Trea 
surer  Hays  and  that     he     will     rJsign 
Sovereign  and  McGuire  will  so  to  New 
York  tomorow  to  speak  against  the  ar- 
bitration  treaty  at  the  meeting  of  the- 
Minority  league.     "We  do    not     oppose 
the  principle  of  arbitration."    .said  Mr 
Sovereign     "but   we  do   not   believe  iii 
placing   the  interests  of  a  republic   in 
the  hands  of  one  whose  business  it  is  to 
destroy    republics." 


Several  New  Measures  Intro- 
duced at  St.  Paul. 

St.  Paul,  March  17.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.)— Among  the  new  senate  bills 
were  these: 

Sperry,  to  provide  for  bonds  for  city 
treasurers. 

Sperry,  to  create  a  board  of  commis- 
slonei-s  of  public  printing,  defining  their 
duties  and  repealing  all  existing  laws. 
Printing. 

Lloyd,  to  tax  sleeping,  drawing-room 
and  parlor  cars  4  per  cent  of  gross  earn- 
ings.    Taxes  and  tax  laws. 

Miller,  to  tax  Insurance  compaines 
upon  gross  eamint,'s  to  the  extent  of 
4  per  cent.    Taxes  and  tax  laws. 

Stockton,  to  prohibit  use  <»f  tobacco 
by  minors  under  18  years  of  age,  and 
by  students  in  schools  and  universitv 
Temperance. 


CITY  BAND  CONCERT. 

Program  to  Be  Given  at  the 
Lyceum  Next  Week. 

The  annual  concert  of  the  Duluth  City 
band  will  be  given  on  Friday  of  next 
week  at  the  Lyceum.  The  band  will  be 
assisted  by  Mr.s.  Hoelscher,  pianist;  P. 
Doran.  tenor;  A.  Hoelscher,  flutist ;Aelion 
Ladies  quartet;  High  School  Musical  .so- 
ciety, under  the  direction  of  A  F  M 
Custance;  a  grand  male  chorus  of  (Iftv 
voices  under  the  direction  of  Mark  C 
Baker;  and  an  orchestra  of  twentv 
pieces.     The   program    is    as    follows: 

PART  1. 

a.  Gipsy  chorus  in  "Precio.sa  ".Von  Wober 

?;."^*'S'^,."'  *^''  Vikings"".. Eaton  Fanning 

Hlgn    School    Musical    societv,    under    the 

direction  of  A.   F.   M.   Custance. 

Piano    .solo— "Kigoletto"" Liszt 

Mr.s.   A.   Hoelscher. 

i^-  !'.l^^^^ ^^^r^^"     KJeiulf 

.b.  "The  Quaker' 

Arranged    for   the   Ladles'    Aeolian 

quartet  by  A.  F.  Custance. 

Ladles"  Aeolian  quartet. 

Tenor  .solo— "'Waiting"    Millard 

P.  Doran. 

Grand    male   chorus— ""Le   Carnival   Le 

Russe"    Demmersnian 

A.   Hoel.scher. 

Waltz   song— "Kstudiantina"    ..La   Comiie 

Hlgn    School    Musical    society,    under    Ihe 

direction  of  A.   F.   M.  Custance. 

PART  II. 

Duluth    City    band    

Under  the  direction  of  Ernest  Meier. 

March— "'Enquirer    Club"     Brand 

Overture— ""Rienzi""    Wagner 

Two  quotations  by  Sousa— 

a.  "1  too,  was  bom  in  Arcadia"' 

b.  "In    Darkest    Africa' 

Overture— '"William    Tell" Ro.ssini 

(By   re<iuest.) 
Selection— "El    Capitan""    Sousa 


WISCONSIN    TOLL    ROADS. 
Madison.  Wis..  March  17.— Assembly- 

ITk.^v.^^^^  *''"•*  *  »^ep  this  morning 
which  is  of  vast  importance  to  the  en- 
tire state.  By  a  state  law  toll  roads 
are  required  to  pay  a  license  fee  into 
the  state  treasury  and  also  to  make  re- 
ports to  the  governor.  Since  1888.  Mr 
Hoyt  claims,  not  a  single  toll  niad  in 
the  state  has  complied  with  this  law 
and  he  introduced  a  resolution  for  the 
appointment  of  a  committee  to  investi- 
gate and  report  why  the  charters  of 
those  toll  roads  should  not  be  declared 
forfeited. 


PRISON  LABOR. 

Wisconsin   Legislators  Spend 
Time  in  Discussing  It. 

Madison,  Wi.s.,  March  17.— Senator 
Thayer's  joint  resolution  providing  for 
the  appointment  of  a  commission  to  in- 
vestigate the  prison  labor  problem,  was 
referred  to  committee  by  a  vote  of  l,j 
to  14.  McGilllveray's  bill,  for  labelling' 
prison  goods,  passed  by  a  vote  of  14  to 
13,  after  amendment  including  Wiscon- 
sin prison  was  made  and  approved  that 
only  those  who  knowingly  sell  good*-- 
not  labeHed  shall  be  liable. 

Only  Owen's  bill,  providing  for  inter- 
change of  messages  between  local  tele- 
phone companies  and  long-distance 
lines,  was  reported  unconstitutional  and 
referred  to  committee.  When  the  anti- 
pool  selling  bill  was  reached  in  the 
assembly,  a  motion  to  refer  to  judiciary 
committee  was  passed  with  little  oppo- 
sition. Austin's  resolution  limltin-g 
business  at  the  recess  session  to  re- 
vision of  statutes  was  concurred  in. 


ON  RICE'S  POINT. 


The  span  on  the  Duluth  side  of  the 
Duluth-Superior  bridge  is  nearing 
completion.  The  large  wooden  tra- 
veler used  for  hoisting  the  heavy  iron 
Mrtjrk  is  being  taken  down  and  the 
work  of  putting  it  up  on  the  Superior 
side  span  is  progresing  rapidly.  Owing 
to  an  accident  caused  by  the  parting 
of  a  chain  while  hoisting  one  of  the 
immense  batter  posts  on  the  draw 
span,  which  caused  a  break  in  the 
drum,  work  has  been  delayed  con- 
siderably on  the  draw. 

Mrs.    Louis   Trudeau    Is   dangerously 
ill    with  pneumonia  of   the   lungs. 

Mrs.  Joseph  Andre  is  suffering  with 
a   severe  attack  of  the  grip. 

A  watch  raflled  last  night  at  the  foot 
of  Garfield  avenue  was  won  by  Mr 
Butterfield. 

Miss  Mary  Colt  Is  visiting  friends  in 
Old    Superior. 


N;>ri('E   OK   MORTdAGE   SALR 

♦  i„.     ^'"i'^    ^^^   {*een   made   in    the   condl- 
.lliVlv    iV^«Jl  p.  'n«C'*fage  execute*!  and 
delivered  by  William  Lavanway  and  Jan- 
A.    Lavanway,    mortgagors,    to   Abbie    e' 
?,?rv  ■  I2?''^^'',?f^'  '^'^^ed  the  tenth  day  of 
Julj,    iSDo.    with    a   power   of   .sale    there- 
in   contained,    recorded    in    the    office    of 
the  register  of  deeds  in  and  for  St.  Louis 
?,?K"V«b- ^l"2^°^^.'    ""   the   Llth    day    of 
..,;.'  ^^"j,^^  fi^'e  minutes  past  two  o'clock 
in  the  afternoon  of  said  day  in  Book  UG 
of  mortgages  on  page  73  of  said  records, 
o Ji    .J^'emises  covered  by  said  mortgage 
and   thereby   mortgaged,    are   situated   In 
the  county  of  St.  Louis,  state  of  Minne- 
sota,   and   are   described   as    follows,    to- 
wit:     The    north    thlrty-flve    feet    of    thn 
soiitherly  seventy  (70)  feet  of  lot  one  (1)' 
and  the  north  thirty-five  (35)  feet  of  the 
southerly   seventy   dO)   feet   of  the   west- 
erly half  of  lot  two  (2),  in  block  number 
ninety    (90).    of    the    Endlon    Division    of 
Duluth.    according    to    the   recorded    plat 
thereof  on  file  In  the  office  of  the  regis- 
ter of  deeds  in  and  for  Saint  Louis  Coun- 
ty,   Minnesota,    with    the    appurtenances 
and    hereditaments    thereunto    belonging 
Said    default    consists    in    the    non-pav- 
ment   of  the   semi-annual    installment   of 
Interest  on  the  debt  secured  by  said  mort- 
gage, which  by  the  terms  and  conditions 
JaI!.''!?'  became  due  and  payable   on   the 
10th  day  of  January,  1897,  and  In  the  fail- 
ure of  said  mortgagors  to  keep  said  prem- 
^s^s    insured    as    in    said    mortgage    pro- 

Said  mortgagee,  on  account  of  the  de- 
faults above  mentioned  has  elected,  and 
hereby  does  elect  to  declare  the  whole 
f.o!^  secured  by  said  mortgage  due  and 
payable,  and  there  is  therefore  claimed 
to  be  due,  and  Is  due.  on  said  mortgage, 
at  the  date  of  this  notice,  the  princi- 
pal .sum  secured  by  said  mortgage, 
to-wlt:  The  sum  of  eighteen  hundred 
dollars,  with  interest  thereon  at  the  rate 
of  (  per  cent  per  annum  from  the  10th 
day  of  July,  1896,  amounting  to  seventy- 
six  and  30-100  dollars:  also  the  sum  of 
twenty-five  dollars,  which  amount  was 
^^r.  'iy  t*^'^  mortgagee  on  the  11th  day 
of  February,  1897.  for  Insurance  on  said 
property  as  provided  by  said  mortgage 
amounting  in  the  aggregate  at  the  date 
of  this  notice  to  the  sum  of  nineteen  hun- 
dred one  and  30-100  dollars,  and  no  ac- 
tion or  proceeding  has  been  instituted 
to  recover  the  same,  or  any  part  thereof. 

Now,  therefore,  notice  is  hereby  given 
that  by  virtue  of  the  IJower  of  sale-  con- 
tained in  said  mortgage,  which  has  be 
come  operative  by  reason  of  the  defaults 
aforesaid,  and  pursuant  to  the  statute 
in  such  case  made  and  provided,  said 
mortgage  will  be  foreclosed  by  sale  of  the 
mortgaged  premises  above  described,  at 
public  ^auction  to  the  highest  bidder 
for  cash,  by  the  sheriff  of  said  county  of 
Sst.  L.ouls  at  the  front  door  of  the  county 
court  house,  in  the  city  of  Duluth  in 
said  county,  on  Thursday,  the  1st  day 
of  April,  189(,  at  ten  o'clock  In  the  for^'- 
noon  to  satisfy  said  mortgage  and  in- 
terest, and  insurance  so  paid,  and  the 
taxes  (if  any)  on  said  premises,  and 
fifty  dollars  attorneys'  fees,  as  stipu- 
lated In  and  by  said  mortgage  In  case 
of  foreclosure  thereof  and  the  costs  and 
disbursements  allowed  by  law:  subject 
to  redemption  at  any  time  within  one 
year  from  the  date  of  sale,  as  provided 
b.v   law. 

Dated  February  17th.    1897. 

ABBIE  E.   REED. 

ALLEN.    BALDWIN   &   BAI^^Wm^^*^" 

Attorneys  for  Mortg.agee. 
Duluth       Evening       Herald,       Feb-H-"!- 

March-3-10-17-24. 


At  Maynard  Hall. 

The  primary  and  intermediate  de- 
partments of  Maynard  school  will  give 
an  entertainment  tomorrow  afternoon 
at  4  o'clock.  An  extra  car  on  the  Wood- 
land line  will  leave  Third  avenue  west 
at  -3:30  o'clock.  The  program  will  be  as 
follows: 

Little  play— "No  Cure,  No  Pay" 

French    song   and    recitation 

Mluet 

German  song 

Recitation •'"..  Gr^e    Western 

T  Little    play— "Precious    Pickle" 
Sunflower  song 


A  BLAZING  VILLAGE. 
Greenwich,  Conn..  March  17.— A  dis- 
astrous fire  completely  beyond  the  con- 
trol of  the  residents,  is  now  raging  in 
the  village  of  Mianus  Landing.  Already 
the  damage  is  estimated  at  $150,000,  and 
the  fire  is  still  raging. 


POLICE  SAY  "NO." 

Proposed  Reception  to  Corbett 
Abandoned  at  Trisco. 


INTEREST  IN  LONDON. 
London,  March  17.— The  greatest  in- 
terest is  taken  .here  in  sporting  circles 
in  the  prize  fight  between  James  J 
Corbett  and  Robert  Fitzsimmons, 
scheduled  to  be  decided  today  at  Carson 
City.  The  "sports."  however,  cannoi 
understand  the  odds  offered  on  Corbett 
in  the  United  States,  as  even  money  is 
the  rule  here.  They  recall  the  fact  that 
fitzsimmons  is  alleged  to  have  "set- 
tled" a  fight  to  Jim  Hall  in  Sydney 
N.  S.  W..  and  the  betting  is  light.  No 
American  money  is  in  sight,  and  an 
offer  of  $1000  even  on  Fitzsimmons  at 
the  National  Sporting  club  was  noi 
taken.  Corbett's  supporters  asking  for 
odds. 


San  Francisco.  March  17.— Alfred 
Bllinghouse  and  his  associates,  who  had 
arranged  for  a  boxing  entertainment 
and  grand  reception  to  Jim  Corbett  at 
the  Mechanics  Pavilion  tomorrow 
night,  were  greatly  disappointed  when 
they  learned  that  the  resolution  grant- 
ing a  permit  for  the  entertainment  had 
been  withdrawn  by  the  health  and 
police  committee  just  before  the  recent 
meeting  of  the  board  of  supervisors. 

The  health  and  police  committee  at  a 
previous  meeting  had  agreed  to  report 
favorably  upon  the  petition  for  a  per- 
mit,  and  a  resolution  for    the     permit 
had  been  proposed,  but  the  committee 
withdrew  the  resolution  granting     the 
permit  because  It  claimed  to  have  been 
deceived  as  to  the  character  of  the  pro- 
posed entertainment. 
!      Ellinghouse,  the  promoter  of  the  pa- 
I  vUlon     entertainment,   who  had  heard 
of  the  action  of  the  health  and  police 
committee  last  night,  stated  that  this 
a  knock-out  blow  to  the 
mterftrigg.  , 


SWIFT'S 
SPECIFIC 

it  far  ahead  of  any  blood  r«m0dy  on  the 
market,  for  it  does  to  much  more.  Be- 
■idea  remoTingimpuritiea,  and  toning  up 
tbe  run-down  aystem,  it  cure*  any  blood 
diBcase.  it  mattera  not  how  deep-seated  or 
obatinate,  which  other  aoKialled  blood 
remedies  fail  to  reach.  Tt  is  a  real  blood 
temedy  for  real  blood  diseases 

Mr.  Asa  Smith,  of  Greencastle,  Ind., 
writes :  "I  had  aach  a  bad  case  of  Sciatic 
Bbeumatitm  that  I  became  alMolutely 
nelpleas— unable  to  take  my  food  or  handle 
myself  io  any  way.  I  took  many  patent 
medleines,  but  tftey  did  not  reach  my 
trouble  One  docen  bottles  of  8.  S  8. 
cured  me  sound  and  well,  and  I  now  weigh 
170."  ® 

..  ^22!S  *"*  '''*'<^  *°<*  •''*°  diaeaaea  mailed  free 
by  Swift  SpMiflc  CompMjy,  AUanU,  Oa. 


THE  WOOL  SCHEDULES. 

May  Be  Enacted  as  an  Emer-, 
gency  BilL 

Wiushington,  March  17.— A  proposition 
to  enact  the  wool  schedule  of  the  new 
tariff  bill  as  an  emergency  bill  to  chock 
the  heavy  anticipatory  Importations  of 
wool,  is  being  considered  by  the  RepuD- 
llcans  of  the  ways  and  means  committee 
?"<|^?«'l'uj>lican  leaders  in  both  houses. 
If  this  policy  Is  decided  upon  the  sched- 
ule will  be  Introduced  as  an  independent 
measure,  passed  by  the  house  after  a 
short  debate  and  sent  to  the  senate  with 
the  hope  that  it  will  be  quickly  pa.s.seil 
°y  *'iat  house.  In  the  form  proposed  it 
would  l>e  operative  from  the  date  of  its 
enactment  until  the  tariff  bill  itself  took 
effect. 

If  congress  has  the  tariff  bill  under 
consideration  for  two  or  three  months  It 
IS  probable  that  enough  Importations  will 
nave  been  made  In  the  meantime  to  d<"- 
prive  the  government  of  revenues  from 
wool  for  a  year  or  more,  alter  the  new 
nlll  goes  Into  effect. 


Wants  More  Tonnage. 

John  Gordon,  manager  of  the  Great 
Lakes  Steamship  company,  which  last 
season  operated  the  steamer  Globe  be- 
tween Buffalo  and  Manitowoc,  wants 
more  tonnage  for  the  purpose  of  char- 
tering boats.  Mr.  Gordon  wants  to  get 
the  steamer  John  W.  Moore  for  the  en- 
tire season,  and  has  made  an  offer  for 
her.  The  matter  will  probably  be 
closed  up  soon.  The  figure  offered  is 
not  far  from  $17,000.  The  new  trans- 
portation company  will  probably  need 
another  steamer  in  addition  to  the 
Moore  and  the  Globe.  The  Moore  is  a 
very  handy  boat,  and,  although  not  as 
large  as  some,  she  is  a  good  package 
freight  boat. 


The  evening  paper  Is  always  care- 
fully read,  especially  In  the  home  circle, 
and  is  therefore  an  excellent  advertis- 
ing medium.  Advertisers  in  The  Even- 
ing   Herald  always  get  full  value. 


MORTGAGE    FORECLOSURE   SALE.- 
Default   having  been  made  in   the   pav- 

"'^i'*^,^^^^ •"/-.*'"'"  "f  '^'f  hundred  eight 
and  IG-ino  ($608.16)  dollars.  which  is 
claimed  to  be  due  and  is  duo  at  the  date 
of  this  notice  upon  a  certjiin  mortgage 
duly  executed  and  delivered  by  William 
KlinglH-ll  and  Maryanna  Klingbcll  his 
wife,  mortgagors,  to  Katarzvna  Tobota 
mortgagee,  bearing  date  the  30th  day  of 
January,  1893.  and  with  a  power  of  "sale 
therein  conUuned.  duly  recorded  In  the 
office  of  the  register  of  d<^eds  In  and  for 
tbe  county  of  St.  f.,ouis  and  state  of  Min- 
nesota, on  the  30th  day  of  January,  1893 
at  4:30  o'clock  p.  m..  in  Book  67  of  mort- 
gages on  page  TAi,  and  whereas  the  said 
power  of  sale  has  become  operative,  and 
no  action  or  proceeding  having  been  in- 
.stltuted  at  law  or  otherwise,  to  recover 
the  debt  secured  by  said  mortgage  or  any 
part  thereof. 

Now.  therefore,  notice  Is  hereby  given 
that  by  virtue  of  the  power  of  sale  con- 
tained in  said  mortgage  and  pursuant  to 
the  statute  in  such  case  made  and  pro- 
vided, the  said  mortgage  will  be  fore- 
closed by  a  sale  of  the  premises  de- 
scribed in  and  conveyed  bv  said  mort- 
gage, viz:  All  that  tract  or  parcel  of 
land  lying  and  being  in  the  county  of 
St.  Louis,  state  of  Minnesota,  described 
as  follows,  to-wlt:  The  west  half  (wV.) 
of  the  northeast  quarter  (neV4)  of  sectlo'i 
twenty-seven  (27).  in  township  fifty-two 
(52)  north,  of  range  fourteen  (14)  west  of 
the  4th  P.  M..  with  the  hereditaments 
and  appurtenances;  which  sale  will  be 
made  by  the  sheriff  of  said  St.  Louis 
County,  at  the  front  door  of  the  court 
house,  in  the  city  of  Duluth,  in  said 
county  and  state,  on  the  23d  day  of 
April,  1897,  at  10  o'clock  a.  m.,  of  that 
day,  at  public  vendue,  to  the  highest 
bidder  for  cash,  to  pay  said  debt  and  in- 
terest, and  fifty  (50)  dollars  attorneys- 
fees,  as  stipulated  in  and  by  said  mort- 
gage, in  case  of  foreclosure,  and  the  dis- 
bursements allowed  by  law;  subject  to 
redemption  at  any  time  within  one  year 
from  the  day  of  sale  as  provided  by  law. 
Dated    March   10th,    A.    D.    1897. 

KATARZYNA    TOBOTA, 
Mortgagee. 
AGATIN,    ©AVIDSON   &   CARE-jr, 

Attorneys   for  said   Mortgagee. 
Duluth     Evening    Herald,   March-10-17-»«- 
31-Aprll-7-14. 


^^RI?  SALE  i*«RTGAGE    FORECLOS- 

^^^i'i'uP'^*'  default  has  been  made  In  the 
condtlon.s  of  a  certain  mortgage,  exe- 
cuted    and    delivered    by   John    Andereon 

AVhi^r^''^'  a'^",^  ^"^"=^t  Anders.  nTnd 
Albertina  Anderson,  his  wife,  mortea- 
gors.    to   Duluth   Loan.    Deposit    &    Trust 

edTun'l"iX;h%S?/P'""^^'°"'  mortgagee,   dat- 
edJune^l0th,1893,  and  recorded  In  the  reu 
ster  of  deeds'  office  for  St.  Louis  Coun- 

hlrty"S/^A-T  -l""*^  "'*>•  '893.  at  eight 
l,:^l^  1^'?"^  o  clock  a.  m.  In  Book  one 
hundred  twenty-four  (124)  of  mortgaEes 
on  page  fifty-eight  (58);  which  mort|fga 
^^^i.^o^^^^P^^  ''>'  said  Duluth  Loan  Dc- 
P^olVrtnJ''.^"^  Company  to  Ellzab"  h  A. 
inth  Tia"/  ^^:,  *'"  instrument  dated  July 
10th  1S93  and  recorded  In  the  register  of 
deeds-  ofllce  for  St.  Louis  County  Mln- 
?X^:T  J"'y  ^-^^-  '8»3.  at  cigl  ■•  thirty 
(8.30)  o  clock  a.  m.,  in  Book  fifty-five  (-xi) 
of  mortgages  on  page  three  hundred 
fh^'"^on"  ^^'^>  such  default  consisting  m 
the  non-payment  of  the  principal  and  in- 
terest money  secured  by  said  morteaM 
t'/fyfble  July  1st,  1896,  and  the  fur^th^r 
sum  of  eleven  and  20-100  (11.20)  doll'ir^ 
heretofore  paid  by  said  assignee  of  mort- 
n^^iJ'"''  '»«"'-'i"<\^  premiums  uponTa^ 
premises  In  accordance  with  the  nrovi- 
s'ons  of  said  mortgage,  and  ^ 

W  hereas   there  is  therefore  claimed   to 

s«irt  m^^.f"'*   ^^.^\^   *«   actually    due    upon 
tfJ     "lo'^tsage  debt  at  the  date  of  this  no- 

and  3I^fM'7"?^,n"''t  '.'""''••ed  flfty-scN^n 
;l..l.^  ^^5  .(oo7.31)  dollars  principal,  in- 
WK^J'"**  «nfV''^"^«  premiums  paid,  and 
Whereas  said  niortgage  contains  a  pow- 
er of  sale  which  has  be<ome  opt-rativo 
by  reason  of  the  defaults  aboxx-  men- 
tioned and  no  action  or  proceeding  at 
law  or  otherwise,  having  been  Instituted 
an.vTarT'tht'r^of'^'^'''   ''"^^'^   thereS'^'^'r 

th^^^fJu.,^'^'^,  mortgage  and  pursuant  to 
17h..h  Ik*''''  in  such  case  made  and  pro- 
\ided  the  .said  mortgage  will  be  fore- 
st rfh£,  V^'   *^^   "=^'«    °'   ^he   premises   de- 

,n^  J?'**'**'"J^J?  *^«  county  of  St.  Louis 
and  state  of  Minnesota  described  as  fol- 

n^M.*^*"^"-.  ^°^  numbered  seven  (°  . 
In  block  numberer  ninety-six  (96).  West 
Duluth  Fourth  (4th)  Division,  accordhfg 
to  the  recorded  plat  thereof  on  file  in  the 
office  of  the  register  of  deeds  In  and  for 
said  county  and  state  which  said  prem- 
ises  with  the  hereditaments  and  appur- 
tenances will  be  sold  at  public  auction 
lo.i*^^  ^i^^®^'  bidder  for  cash  to  pay 
s.iid  debt,  interest  and  Insurance  pre- 
miiims  paid  and  the  taxes  (if  any)  on 
said  premises  and  twenty-five  (25.<)0)  dol- 
lars attorneys'   fees  as  stipulated   in  and 

■  1.^  mortgage,  in  case  of  foreclosure, 
and  the  disbursements  allowed  by  law 
"y  }^^  J'^eritr  of  said  St.  Louis  County 
at  the  front  door  of  the  court  hou.se  in 
the  city  of  Duluth  In  said  county  and 
f^^'^  °P  ^^}:^J^?y-  the  3d  day  of  April. 
1897  a  ten  (10)  o'clock  a.  m.  of  that  day 
subject  to  redemption  at  any  time  within 

°P^^  71*'' ,''"°'"   **ie  day   of  sale   as   pro- 
vided by  law.  * 

Dated    February   16th,    1897 

ELIZABETH   A.    PICKERING. 
TOWNE  &  DAVll!"^""^  °'  Mortgagee. 
Attorneys  for  Assignee  of  Mortgagee 
l^^-lfW  ,puluth    Trust   Compail*    BWg., 
Duluth.  Minn. 

^i'J"*^^    »   Evening       Herald.       Feb-17-24- 
March-3-10-17-24-31. 


NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 

Market  Was  Quite  Depressed 
at  the  Opening. 

New  York,  March  17.— Cable  advices 
announcing  marked  heaviness  on  the 
London  exchange  for  American  securi- 
ties, which  were  down  %@l  per  cent, 
exerted  a  depressing  influence  on  local 
speculation  at  the  outset,  whJch  was 
most  marked  in  the  case  of  tlie  inter- 
national shafes.  Foreign  house©  offered 
moderate  amounts  of  St.  Paul,  the  sell- 
ing being  effected  by  a  decrease  In  the 

^*'iJi','i*^^  ^^^  ^^^  second  week  of  March 
of  $116,210,  which  was  attributed  to  the 
snow  blockade  in  the  Northwest 
Omaha  fell  off  %c  on  profit  taking  and 
Sharp  losses  were  also  shown  in  some 
of  the  industrials  on  liquidation. 

Ttie  Court  Filings. 

*J"c^*'®  *^*^«  o^  E''"«  Stacklie  against 
the  St.  Paul  &  Duluth,  In  which  a  ver- 
dict for  the  plaintiff  was  return'jd  last 
term,  the  defendant  has  filed  notice  of 
a  motion  for  judgment  notwithst;  mding 
the  verdict  on  the  ground  that  th^  ver- 


Sent  Freejo  Men. 

INDIANA  MAN  DISCOVEES   A   BE- 

MARKABLE  EEMEDY  FOE 

LOST  VIGOE. 


Simples   Will 


Ba   Stnt   Free 
Write  For  It. 


io   All   Who 


James  P.  Johnston,  of  Ft.  Wayne,  Ind., 
after  battling  for  years  against  the  men- 
tal and  physical  suffering  of  lost  man- 
hood has  found  the  exact  remedy  that 
cures  the  trouble. 

He  Is  guarding  the  secret  carefully  but 
Is  willing  to  send  a  sample  of  the  medi- 
cine to  all  men  who  suffer  with  any  form 
of  sexual  weakness  resulting  from  youth- 
ful ignorance,  premature  loss  of  memory 
and  strength,  weak  back,  varicocele  and 
emaciation.  The  remedy  has  a  peculiarly 
grateful  effect  of  warmth  and  seems  to 
act  directly  giving  needed  strength  and 
development  wherever  needed.  The  rem- 
edy cured  Mr.  Johnston  completely  of  all 
the  Ills  and  troubles  that  come  from  years 
of  misuse  of  the  naturally  ordained  func- 
tions and  is  said  to  be  absolutely  reliable 
in  every  case. 

A  request  to  Mr.  James  P.  Johnston, 
Box  1001,  Ft.  Wayne.  Ind.,  stating  that 
you  would  like  a  sample  of  his  remedy 
for  men,  will  be  complied  with  promptly 
and  no  charge  whatever  will  be  asked  by 
him.  He  Is  very  much  interested  in 
spreading  the  news  of  this  great  remedy 
and  he  Is  careful  to  send  the  sample 
securely  sealed  In  a  perfectly  plain  pack- 
age so  that  its  recipient  need  have  no 
fear  of  embarrassment  or  publicity. 

Readers  are  requested  to  write  without 
delay. 


STATE  OF  MINNESOTA,   COUNTY  OF 
ST.   LOUIS— SS. 

District    Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 

Second  National  Bank  of  Mauch 
Chunk,    Pennsylvania, 

Plaintiff, 
vs. 
Syndicate  Investment  Company, 
the    Duluth    Trust    Company, 
as   assignee   of   the   Syndicate 
Investment     Company,      John 
McKlnley,    Wayland    W.    San- 
ford.    George   A.    Elder,    John 
H.   Harris,   Robert  H.   Harris, 
William  McKinley.  W.  T.  Col- 
born,    Bessie    Margaret    Whit- 
will,  Ada  Gregory,  Mark  Whit- 
will.  Mark  Whitwill,  Jr.,  Edith 
Beatrice       Whitwill.      Thomas 
Dowse.  A.  E.    Humphreys  D.    J. 
W.  Clarkson,  C.  S.  Shannon,  C. 
M.  Gray,   N.   F.   Hugo,  A.   M. 
Prudden,  Thomas  Moser,  F.  O, 
Perrin,  Wllmot  Saeger,  James 
Billings,  C.   E.   Dlckerman,   P. 
S.  Bemls,  American  Loan  and 
Trust   Company   and    William 
E.  Richardson,   as  assignee  of 
said  American  Loan  and  Trust 
Company. 
State  of  Minnesota  to   the  above  named 
defendants: 

You  and  each  of  you  are  hereby  sum- 
moned and  required  to  answer  the  com- 
plaint of  the  plaintiff  in  the  above  enti- 
tled action,  which  complaint  Is  filed  In 
the  office  of  the  clerk  of  the  district 
court  of  the  Eleventh  judicial  district  In 
and  for  the  county  of  St.  Louis  and  state 
of  Minnesota,  and  to  serve  a  copy  of  your 
answer  to  the  said  complaint  on  the  sub- 
scribers at  their  office  in  the  city  of  Du- 
luth. In  the  said  county  of  St.  Louis 
within  twenty  days  after  the  ser\'ice  of 
this  summons  upon  you,  exclusive  of  the 
day  of  such  service  and  if  you  fail  to 
anrwer  the  said  complaint  within  the 
time  aforesaid,  the  plaintiff  in  this  action 
will  apply  to  the  court,  for  the  relief  de- 
nianded  In  said  complaint  together  with 
plaintiffs  costs  and  disbursements  here- 
Dated  February  26th.  1897. 

TOWNE  &  DAVIS, 
,A«  ,A„  -^  .    Plaintiff's  Attorneys. 
103-106  Duluth  Trust  Co.   Building, 

I>"luth  Evening  Herald,  MSrch^-10-l7-21. 
ai-Apru>7. . 


MORTGAGE  FORECLOSURE  SALE.- 

Defaiilt  having  been  made  in   the  pay- 
ment of  the  sum  of  one  hundred  sixte.-n 
dollars,   which   is  claimed  to  bo  due  and 
is  due  at  the  date  of  this  notice  upon  a 
certain     mortgage     duly     executed     and 
delivered    by   Betsey   F.     Eaton,     widow 
mortgagor,  to  Elizalieth  A.  Eberle    mort- 
gagee, bearing  date  the  I6th  day  of  Ktb^ 
ruary,    1895,    and    with    a    power   of    salo 
therein    contained    duly    recorded    in    the 
office    of    the    register    of    deeds    in    and 
for  the  county  of  St.  Louis  and  state  of 
Minnesota,  on  the  l.Mth  dav  of  February 
1895.    at   4    o'clock    p.    m..    in    Book    95    of 
mortgages  on  page  178;  which  said  mort- 
gage   together  with  the  debt  thereby  se- 
cured,  was  duly  assigned  by  said   Eliza- 
beth A.   Eberle.   mortgagee,  to  Henry  M. 
Bradley      by    written    assignment    dated 
the  3rd  day  of  June,  1S9C,  and  recorded  In 
the  office  of  said  register  of  deeds  on  the 
6fh  day  of  August,   1S9C.  at  1:15  o'clock  p 
m.,  in  Book  107  of  mortgages  on  page  442- 
and  no  .action  or  procetling  having  been 
instituted,  at  law  or  otherwise,  to  recover 
the   debt    secured    by   said   mortgage,    or 
any  part  thereof. 

Now,   therefore,   notice  is  herebv  given, 
that  by  virtue  of  the  power  of  .sale  con- 
tained   in    said    mortgage,    and    pursuant 
to  the  statute  In  such  ca.se  made  and  pro- 
vided,   the    said    mortgage   will    be    fore- 
closed   by    a    sale    of    the    premises    .le- 
scribed    In    and    conveyed    by   .said    mort- 
gage     viz:     The     west    one-half   of    tlio 
northwest  one-quarter  (w»4  of  nw^4)  and 
the  west  one-half  of  the  southwest  one- 
quarter  (wV^  of  sw>4)  of  section  twenty- 
four    (24).    township    fifty    (50)    north,    of 
range  .seventeen  (17)  west  of  the  4th  prin- 
cipal   meridian,    containing    one    hundred 
and  sixty  acres  more  or  less,  according  to 
the    government    survey    thereof,    in    St 
Louis    County    and    state    of    Minnesota, 
with    the    hereditaments       and    appurte- 
nances;  which  sale  will  be  made  bv  the 
sheriff  of  said   St.   Louis  County,   at   tho 
front    door    of    the   court    house,    in    tho 
city  of  Duluth.  in  said  county  and  state 
on   the   second   day   of   April,    1897,    at    10 
o  clock  a.  m.,  of  that  day,  at  public  ven- 
due,   to   the   highest    bidder   for  cash,    to 
pay  said  debt  and  interest,  and  the  taxes 
if  any,  on  said  premises,  and  twenty-five 
dollars   attorneys'    fees,   as   stipulated    In 
and  by  said  mortgage  In  case  of  foreclos- 
ure,   and    the    disbursements    allowed    by 
law;   subject  to  redemption   at   any   timo 
within   one   year   from    the   day   of   sale 
as  provided  by  law. 
Dated  February  17.  A.  D.  1897. 

HENRY   M.    BRADLEY. 
•r.T^  .  X  x,^    „  Assignee  of  Mortgagee. 

PEALER  &  FESLER. 
Attorneys  for  said  Assignee. 
42-43  Exchange  Building, 
Duluth.   Minn. 
Duluth        Evening      Herald,       Feb-H-"!. 
March-3-10-17-24.  c"  i<  -» 


ORDER  FOR  HEARING  APPLICA- 
TION FOR  APPOINTMENT  OF  AD- 
MINISTRATOR.— 

^State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

gth'^  fm^^^^  Court.  Special  Term,  March 

^'Lw  •'^   matter    of    the    estate    of    James 

Thompson,  deceased: 

On  receiving  and  filing  the  petition  of 
Fred  R.  Strong,  of  the  city  of  Portland. 
Oregon,  representing  among  other  thing.^ 
that  James  Thompson,    late  of  said   city 

A  ^°'"i*J^"'*' »*'",}*'*'  22d  day  of  March. 
A.  D  1896,  at  said  city  of  Portland,  died 
Intestate,  and  being  an  Inhabitant  of 
said  city  of  Portland  at  the  time  of  his 
death,  leaving  real  estate  within  this 
county,  and  that  the  said  petitioner  is 
one  of  the  principal  creditors  of  said 
deceased  and  prayltig  that  administra- 
tion of  said  estate  be  to  Ross  L.  Mahon 
granted : 

It  Is  ordertd  that  said  petition  be  heard 
before  said  court  on  Thursday,    the  first 
day  of  April,  A.  D.  1897.  at  ten  o'clock  a 
m..    at   the   probate   office,    in   Duluth     In 
said  county. 

Ordered  further  that  notice  thereof  be 
given  to  the  heirs  of  said  deceased  and 
to  all  persons  Interested,  by  publishing 
this  order  once  In  each  week  for  three 
successive  weeks  prior  to  said  day  of 
hearing  in  The  Duluth  Evening  Herald 
a  dally  newspaper  printed  and  published 
at   Duluth,    m  said   county. 

*^?^*^?ooV  Duluth,  the  9th  day  of  March. 
A.   D.   1897. 

By  the  Court. 

PHINEAS  AYER. 
(Seal.)  -^"^^^   °'   Probate. 

HENRY    S.    MAHON. 

Attorney    for    Petitioner. 
Duluth  Kyenln*  Herald,  March.lO-17-34. 


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SPRING 
HATS 


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THE  ]>bL.-m  EVENJ.no  herald  WEDNESDAY.  MARCH 


IT.     ISflT. 


''CM'-S^ 


The  following- 
Exclusive  Styles 

oi  proprietary  Hats, 
representing  the  best 
Hats  in  vogue  in  New 
York  Citj,  Boston. 
Philadelphia  and  Balti- 
more may  be  found  at 
the  Burrows  Corner — 


J 

f 
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J  The  Youmans, 
f  The  Stetson 

"  Special. 

I  The  Qoidon, 

J  The  Broadway, 

J  The  Dickerson 
f  &  Brown, 

!  The  Burrows 

f ...  ---- 


4 

The  Borrows  (3.00  Hat.    A 


Two  Seine  River  Men  Arrive 

Here  With  Fine  Rock 

Specimens. 


-Registered. 


I  THE  DOYLE  CASE. 

Judge    Cant    Refuses  to  Dis- 
miss It. 

The  district  court  was  in  a  vorv  calm 
level  of  placidity  today,  in  Jud^e 
Canfs  lourt  thr  i-ersonal  injury  case 
*.f  Lottie  I)„yie  aKainet  the  tity  was 
drawing  veny  quietly  to  a  close,  the  last 
bit    of    testnn.my   KOlng   In      about      11 

mZJ^:^     ''^"^''      ^^'''^      ^">'      Attorney 
Kic-hards   mov^d    the  court    to  direct   a 

verdut  for  th,.  .ity  on  the  ground  that 

the  plaintifr  i,a.l   failed   to   make  out   a 

ca.se       He   sh-.wed    thai      the     supreme 

<ourt    had    decided    in    this    state    that 

Larfie   Amount  of   Supplies;  Hrmlt'?7'"*'"'' •'" ''''^'*'"*^''*« '"  ^^is 

-MHMiivo  I  ,  Innate  did  .i,,t  constitute  nesliRenc... 
1  Ins  was  admitted  by  the  plaintiff.  Air 
Kichards  argued  that  there  was  no 
evidence  in  the  case  that  there  was 
any  obstrucii,,n  on  the  sidewalk  on 
\vhirh  the  plaintiff  received  her  injurv 
The  plaintiff  ,]|,|  not  know  wh.'ther 
when  she  slipped  she  .stepped  on  a  level 
or  a  shjpe.  .she  had  testified  that  she 
knew  that  can-  was  ac(iuired.  and 
When  with  this  knowledRe  she  as.saved 
!«>  walk  up  the  steps  she  to(d<  the  risk 
The  motion  was  denied,  and  at  no..ii 
the  attorneys  were  arffuiuR  to  the 
jury. 

After  the  Dnyje  case  was  Riven  to  the 
jury  this  afienioon  the  ca.se  asains* 
Kiihard  Harper,  indicted  fni-  forsery 
in  the  .seenjid  d.-Hrree,  was  taken  up.    "    I 

In  .lutlfre  Kiisisin's  court  the  ca.se  of  I 
the  ITpper  Peninsula  llrewins?  com-  ' 
l><iny  againsi  Predin  <t  Wilson  and 
thtirbondsm.il  was  draKgin^  its  weary 
engih.  Theiv  are  a  large  number  of 
liens  which  have  to  be  pnn'ed.  and 
this  makes  the  case  a  very  dry  one.  As 
soon  as  it  i.s  (oncluded  the"  case  of 
Henry  Brown  against  C.  M.  Hill  will 
be  taken   up. 


WEALTHY 


and  Mochinery  Being 
Siiipped  In. 


Canadian    Government  Has 

Made  Appropriations  For 

Improvlnfi  Roads. 


ThicU- 
loadi  d 


r.il.  I).  .M.  Klackwu.ul  and  J.  M 
ens    arriveil    in    the    city    today 
with    many    choice   spe(  linens   of   gold- 
bearing  ore  from  the  Seine  river  coun- 
try and  an  unlimited   amount  of  con- 
fidence  and   enthusiasm  over  the   pro.-;- 
pccts     for    wondeitul    developments    in 
the  near  future.    They  came  from  Aline 
Center  by  way  of  the  Crane  Lake  n)ad 
and  Tower.    In  one  day  of  their  journey 
from    Rainy      Lake     they    met    twenty 
loaded  teams  headed  for  the  gold  fields, 
and  at  Tower  they  found  large  ciuanli-  | 
ties  of   machinery,   provisions,   suppliii:| 
and  hou.s<-hold  goods  waiting  to  be  for-  I 
warded.     The  condition   of   the   road    is 
not  g<H>d.  the  deep  .«n<>w  making  it  ditti- 


YOUNG  LAD  RUN  OVER. 

His   Leg    Painfully    Hurt    By 
a  Horse's  Foot. 


There  is  a  wealth  of  worth  in  our  $11,45  Suits  that  can  be 
appreciated  only  by  examining  the  goods.  You  need  to 
pull  apart  the  warp  of  the  fabrics  to 
learn  the  truth  of  them,  to  inspect  the 
trimmings  and  linings  and  to  get  at 
every  part  of  them  to  learn  the  honesty 
and  worth  of  these  $9  45  Suits.  There's 
a  variety  of  colors  and  patterns  for 
you,  and  the  styles  are  up  with  the  fash- 
ion plates.  There  is  not  the  slightest 
doubt  as  to  the  character  of  these  $!).45 
Suits.  They  are  like  Ca-sar's  wife. 
We  don't  sell  all  the  clothing  sold  in 
Duluth,  but  we  would  do  it  if  all  the 
people  would  be  convinced  as  a  great 
many  of  them  are,  that  when  we  offer 
a  garment  at  a  price,  that  price  stands 
for  genuine  worth.     The  test  of  this 

truism  is  in  our  $9  45  Suits.  They  were  $12.00,  $1:5  00, 
$1400  and  $1500.  It's  a  tremendous  thrust  into  the 
vitals  of  regular  prices,  but  you  are  the  beneficiary. 


Men's 
and  Boys' 
Outfitters. 


f 
f 
f 
f 

f 

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9 
f 
f 

f 

f 
f 
f 

f 


MANHATTAN  SHIRTS. 

-Made  up  in  genteel  patterns 
that  please  Dressy  Men 
Stitches  that  sta\ — Button 
holes  that  hold     Strain  points 
reinforced.     Mat  rial  and 
finish  do  their  own  talking. 
Feel  and  see  the  fit  of  these 
popular  Shirts  jourself. 
Money  back  if  not  right. 
All  ready  to  put  right  on  and 
wear.     Guarantee  eame  satis- 
faction as  if  you  had  them 
made  specially  to  order. 


} 


4 

t 

I 


$1.50,  $2 


M.  S.  BURROWS 


4 
4 
4 

J 
t 

4 
4 
4 
4 
4 


B    A.  B.  Siewert  &  Co.,    3 

g^  LOMSOALE  BUILDING.  Z^ 

g5ilk  Umbrella  and  ^ 

^Mackintosh  Coat  Sale!^ 

^  Three   Days-Thursday,   Friday  ^ 

^  and   Saturday— This  Week.  ^ 

^  Ladies*  and  Uentlemen's  Silk  ^ 

J^  Umbrellas— entire  assortment.  ^ 

^  Men's  Mackintoshes— complete  line.  ^ 

-^  3  only-Ladies'  flackintoshes  -samples  ^ 

^:  of  this  Spring's  styles.  r:^ 

B  25  per  cent  Discount  I    3 

^  ^'■0'"  reKularprices.^le  is  for  cash.     3 

Ia.  B.  siewert  &  CO.  i 

t  Successors  to  KILGORE  &  SIEWERT,  304  West  Sup3rior  Street  Z^ 


cnlt    of   passag*'    lor    luadeil    teams,    al 
though  light  rigs  pass  over  it  with  t-oin- 
'  'larative  t-a.'se. 

The    omrials    of    the    Duluth    &  'Iron 
Mange    Kailroad  eompany  are  jiueresl- 
ing  themselves  in  the  proposed  iniprove- 
!  ments  to  the  Crane  I^ake  road,  and  will 
^  lender  the   eounty   eummissioners   sul>- 
I  stantial  assistance  as  soon  as  they  ar..' 
ready  ti>  hegin  work  upi>n  it.    They  also 
propose   to  liuild  a  teli-graph   line   from 
Rainy    Lake  to  Tower   this  spring  and 
ihus  make  the  means  ofcommuniealioii 
with    the    .American    side    much    ltetl<;- 
than  it  n<iw  is  with  Canada. 
The   Canadian    government,    however, 
j  has    not    lieeti    slow    to    appreciate    the 
po.ssihilities  of  the  country  al»out   Mii.c 
Center.   lor  an   approiuiation   of   $;5N.(mi(» 
I  has  l»een  made  tor  the  improvement  of 
the  roads  that  lead  to  the  mining  i>ro;i- 
eities.     The   Canadian    raciiic    railroad 
has  inojected  an  extension  to  Mine  Cen- 
ter from  Waliigoon,  a  distance  of  sever.- 
ty  miles,  and  it   is  possiltle  that    it   will 
lie  laiilt   this  year.     A   wa.goM   road  wii! 
l>e    Ituilt    at    once   in    an>-   event,    and    a 
telegraph  line  put  up.    There  is  a  semi-  I 
,  weekly     mail     service    to    Mine    Center 
,  from  the  American  side,  while  the  Can-  , 

adians  have  as  yet  provided  only  a 
I  monthly  servi(  e.  The  ade«iuate  "ini- 
:  provement  of  the  Crane  Lake  road 
j  means  that  practually  ail  of  the  l.usi- 
j  ness  of  this  growing  camp  will  Ije  don  > 
I  with  Duluth  instead  of  Rat  Portage. 
j  The  distance  from  Tower  to  Mine 
;  Center  i>y  the  route  now  traveua  is 
about  ninety  miles,  but  Mr.  Thickens, 
who  has  walked  the  distance  several 
!  times  and  obtained  an  excellent  knowl- 
edge of  the  topography  of  tne  country, 
I  says  that  this  can  be  shortened  bv 
I  seventy  miles  by  making  a  short  cut  l:, 
I  the  end  of  the  2S-mile  portage  and  not 
gf>  by  way  of  Crane  lake. 

-Mr.  Thickens,    who  has    had  a  great 
ileal   of  experience  in   gold   mining  dis- 
i  tricts    in    different    parts    of    the   coun- 
try.   Is   (onvinced  after  careful   person- 
I  al    examination     that    the    Seine    river 
and    Rainy    Lake  country   will    soon   be 
recognized   as   the   greatest    gold   coun- 
try.   He   appreciates   the  fact   that   this 
I  is   an   extravagant    statement,    but   de-  ! 
dares  that  it  is  fully  warranted  by  the 
,  facts.     In    the    neighborhood    of      Mine 
Center,  he  says,  about  200  mining  loca- 
j  tions   have   been   made  and   veins   have! 
been    found    in    all    of    them.    When    h^\ 
first   visited  the  country  he   was  afraid 
that  the  surface  indications  would  not  i 
hold  good  when   shafts  had  been  such 
;  but     developments    have    proven      this 
fear  to  be  groundless,  for  without  ex- i 
ception    ore   has   impioved    with   dl^nh.  | 
;  The    Little    American     which        is      on 
,  .American    soil    at    Rainy     Lake,    both 
[  <- ol.    Blackwood    and    Mr.    Thickens    is 
develf)ping  into  a  wonderful  mine    Col"  ' 
Blackwood  insisting  that  it  has  no  su- 
perior in   the   country.   All   (ire   between 
the    walls    of    the    vein    he    says    show 
color  and  even  the  slate  carries  gold 

rhere  are  over  500  people  in  and 
ahoijt  Mine  Center,  all  of  whom  are 
busily  engaged  in  preparing  for  the 
^^™! V""^"?-  ''■*"'"  navigation  opens. 
^rlu        ''""^""fi^«    are    in    process      of 

hofJ     1. '^'"""'^    ^^^"^    '^^''"^   a      good 
hotel.    As   soon    as    lumber   can    be   ob- 

talned    buildings    will    be    erected       in 

e'n?.r'"''T-  '^'^^  ^^^f  ^"o^v  has  pre 
\^nted    much    work    in    developmen     or 
prospecting,    but    with    the    arrival    of 

r^in  "^l.^"''^'^^'  ^'""^  these  I  ni; 
»>egin  with  renewed  vigor.  A  Cana- ' 


Hugh  F.eai).  :i  lad  7  years  of  age  re- 
siding at  14-4  W.St  li'irst  street,  was'  rim 
over  Ijy  a  deliv.  ry  team  about  4  o'c-lock 
yesienlay    afternoon,    on    Sui>erior    slu-t 

w,;!''.  ^'■'"•\   •!^-'""'    wvst.    the    calf   of   his 
IJ^Ilt    leK    belllH    punctured    clear    throuer 
bv   the  caulks  of  ,,ne  ot   the  hor.s,-s  shoe- 
He    was    taken    to    his    home    by    SeiKeant 
Nel.soii     where  tlie  injury   was  dre.s.s,.d   |,v 
a    l)hyslclan.    Th,    shin    hone    was    bruis,.,i 
but    no    Ixjnes   w-  iv    broken    and    it    is   e^- 
pected    thai    III,,    injure.l    la.l    will    be'  jii.lV. 
to    be    about    in    :i    couple    of    w,-eks     The 
driv.-r    or    ownet     of     the    te.im    aiv     un- 
known,  alihoiii,'!,    there   v.,  r.-  several    n  r- 
sons     m-ar     at      ilie         time.       The     .Irjv.r 
Whi|>|)e<l    up   .ni.l    passeil    ,>ti    without    ever 
sto|,|,in.tc    to    .s,.,.    i,ow    badly    th,'    bov    was 
hurl.    Mr.    Bean   s.ild    to<lay    ili.it    some   of 
the    older    childn  11.    with     Hugh    when    it 
occurred     say   tint    tlie    t.,ini    b.-lonK,-l-io 
.1     commission     ;,im     on     West     Miehur.in 
street.    The    iiijincl    t).i.\ .    with     liis    ,om- 
panioiis.    was  e.ii.hiiiK  a    ride  on   .i   sl.if h 
mmiediately    in    ifont    of    the    team    (ha- 
ran  ov,  r  him.   when  he  lost    his   hol.l  .-mi  I 
in    I r. lilt   of  the  hor.ses. 


Williamson  &  MendenhalL 


126-127 

West  Superior 
Street. 


Commercial  Light  &  Power  Co. 

(Successors  to  Harlman  General  Electric  Co.) 

FURNISH 
ELECTRIC  CURRENT 

FOR  LIGHT  AND  POWER. 

OFFICES-Hooms  4,  5  and  6,  216  West  Superior  street.    -    -    .    Duluih   Minn. 


f. 


^mm\  ws 


Nothing  second  rate;  always  the  best 
goods  for  the  least  money  here. 

FOR  THURSDAY ! 

A  wonderful  value  giving  event:  Bar 
gains  that  will  crowd  this  store  with 
eager  buyers. 

Tlie  Spring's 
Best  Mercbandise 

derteoS,!*'-®  P"*^  *""  tfa"  *al»  «'  a  ^^"^ 
wlfl  nff«P  V  ^""^  mpveniPnt .  No  ot  her  store 
wUI  offer  yon  anythiDR  as  irood  fortbo  pric-. 

Read  the  Values. 
TARLE  COVERS. 

10  dozen  Turkey  Red  Linen  Table 
i-overs.  warranted  fast  colors 
size  .S-4,  well  worth  «Lco-        '   nr 
sell  Thursday  at-each.: 75C 

TOWELS. 

25  dozen  Linen  Huck  Towek 
size  33x1s,  hemojed  red  border 
the  15c  kind;  ^  g^ 

for  Thursday-each HJC 

Muslin  Underwear. 

Ladies-  Night  Dresses,  made  ot  good 
(luality  cotton,  trimmed  nicely  with 
embroidery.  $1.25  value;  nC*» 

for  Thursday— each ({^Q 

SHOES. 

Ladies'  Dongola  and  Tan  Strap 
iJlippers,  bow  and  buckle,  hand  tain 
warranted  not  to  rip  • 

sell  Thursday-per  pair ^50 

Ladies'  genuine  hand  turn  Button 
ohoes.  needle  or  coin  toe- 
very  flexible;  S3  25  value,'    OJO  Cn 
for  Thursday-per  pair....ih6.0U 


DRESS  GOODS. 


.      MAY  CUnilM  OFF. 

Electrician    Palmer's   Job    Is 
In  Danger. 


!  The  aldermen  are  now.  it  is  under- 
stood, looking:  f  .r  a  third  man  v.ho  will 
,.be  acceptable  t  .  the  friends  of  Da  vies. 
l!iisham  and  Kustg:ard  as  a  candidate 
for  the  office  for  assistant  citv  attorney 
I  P  to  a  late  hour  this  afternoon  .such 
a  one  had  not  been  discovered,  it  wa^ 
renorted. 

The  fire  commissioners  are  sironKiy 
against  any  cut.  of  salaries  in  the  tin 
department,  it  is  said,  although,  it  m 
ruinort.d,  they  have  indicated  that  thcv 
will  conseiit  to  sacrifice  Electriciiiii 
Palmer  in  the  cause  of  economv  Ti.e 
Iritter  draws  *l:'t>rt  lor  his  services  u- 
superintendent  ot  a  force  com'jo.sed  <.i 
two  men  besides  himself,  this  beins  it 
IS  said,  the  extent  of  his  .luties.  Many 
of  the  aldermen  teel  that  Mr.  Palm;— 
can  be  dispensed  with  under  the  cir- 
cumstancos,  and  it  would  seem  that  the 
file  commissioners  concede  that  there 
is  force  in  their  argument.  The  fire  hal! 
at  Woodland  will  also  be  closed  it  is 
said.  ,     V   .. 


MISS  FANNING  DEAD. 

Contracted  a  Cold  at  a  Duluth 
Ball. 


UNION  RINK. 
Skating  every  afteFn«K>n  and  evening 
this  week.     Music  Welnesday,     P^ridav 
and  Saturday  evenings. 


;■■■■■•■•■•■•■ 


St.  Paul.    March  17.— (Special  to     Th.^ 
Herald.)— Miss  Isabel   Fanning,  of  New 
York,   died   this  morning  at   7:1.">  at   St 
Joseph's  hospital.       She     was     onlv     17  1 
years  of  age.    A  few  weeks  ago,  while  I 
visiting       friends     at     Duluth.       what 
seemeil    like     an     ordinary     cold     sore 
lormed   on   her   lower   lip.     She   treated  j 
,  It    locall>,    but    paid    little    heed    to    \\  ' 
I  otherwise,  and  went  to  a  ball  given  at 
j  the  Spalding  hotel.     It  is  thought  that 
a  cold  settled  in  the  sore.     .\t  any  rate 
;  It    l)egan    to    fester.     The   inflammatioii 
.  spread   rapidly,   and     soon     the     entire 
right  side  of  the  neck  and  breast  were 
involved. 
j      Miss  Fanning  came  to  St.  Paul  about. 
I  three   week.s  ago   and  on   the  advice  .if 
I  a  iJhysician  went  to  St.  Joseph's  hospi- 
I  tal.    where    a    consultation     of     physi- 
;  cians.  the  ablest  in  the  city,   was  held.  ! 
I  and   It  was  decided  that  the   only  hone 
I  for  life  lay  in  a  very  critical  operation    I 
The   operation    was    performed    by   th.'  ' 
latter    physician,      assisted      by        five  ' 


I  Cosy  Flat"$i6.  j 

All  modern  conveiiiencos,  .1  rooms,  | 

water  rent  paid.  J 

S260  Buys  a  Good  Residence  Lot.      .• 

Cooley&  UnderhilL  j 


?po  yards  of  two-toned  Novelty  Diess 
t  abrics,  chic  up-to-date  colors  ar  d 
designs.  "Jamestown  make," 
late  spring  weaves;  75c  quali-    Oft** 
ties,  for  Thursday— per  yard..u"C 
400  yards  of  Black  Mo'iair  Novelties 
the  kind  that  usually  sell  at  85c 
and(j5cayard;sellTnursdiv   CO-, 
at-peryard OQC 


SILKS. 


15  pieces  of  Figured  Silk  Crepes, 
ligDt  grounds  and  figures; 
always  valued  at  50c  and  75c; 
sell  Thursday  at— per  yard,.! 

'5„P}^5es  of  Changeable  Taffeta  Silk. 
sell  Thursday  at—  IS  A* 

f'cr  yard f)\fQ 


29c 


If  you  wish  to  drink  a 
Choice  glass  of  Lager 
call  for 

FITGER'S  BEER. 


®®®®A 


DETlGTiVlS 


A  GREEK  TEA. 

Somerset  Y  Will  Give  a  Novel 
Entertainment. 


others,  and   was  apparently  successful,  i     Anyone  requiring  the  servicoe  of  erporienced 

The    condifinn     .^f    th^    .>.,*.•  —  *     I  otftcorB  In  civiI  and  criminal  cases,  can  eecare 

same  by  calling  on  or  addressing 

Benson's  Detective  Agency 

Exchange  Budding,  Dnluth. 


wil 


eosr  S7o"oo.i 't   """^"?^   ^   steamboat    to 

a^  and'T';;' F^arn'r"'^^"    ''"^    ^«'-^- 

The  specimens  brought  down  by  Col 

si^I  hv""' .  ^"^  Mr.  ^Thickens  "^uwe 
s^een  by  a  large  number  of  interested 
persons  at  the  St.  Louis  hote  this 
afternoon.  They  contain  m,Kh  frel 
and  wire  gold  and  if  they  are  flZ 
samples  of  the  rock  wVth  which  th-lt 
-'.un  ry  abounds.  Mr.  Thickens  sjustf 
fled  In  predicting  that  Mine  Cente.  is 
'".VpTeVreer-''"^^-   '""-  ^am^uSlLa'n 


3        Endion  Club  Tournament. 


The   Somerset   Y    will  give   a    -Gretk 
tea"    Saturday    evening      in    the    First 
!  Methodist  church  pariors.     A  line  pro- 
I  gram  has  been  arran-ged  and  there  will 
;  be  other  features.  Fortunes  will  be  toLl 
I  tea  served,  candy  and  fl.nvers  sold,  and 
I  there  will  be  dainty  maidens  attired  i-i 
■  Oreek  costumes.    The  funds  derived  will 
be   used   for  the  purpose   of   furnishin-^ 
one   of   the   rooms     in     the   new    Home- 
building    The  program  is  as  follows: 

Piano  solo        Miss  Kva  Willcuts 

Tableaux— Three  Cupid  and  Psvche 

\  (»Cal    solo    vrjoti    vj'vv.i 

!  Tableaux-  '^'^  ^'''"' 

•Dido     confessing     her     love     for 
Aeneas"   

"Aeneas  relating  his  adventures  to 
Dido"    

•Dido  imploring  her  sister's  heVp'- 

Dido  s   sacrifice'    

■•Dido's  dream  " 

"Death  of  Dido"   ...       

tS^s^i ::::M[ssPaimcr 

"Aenaes  and   the  Sibyl" 
"Descent  into  the  lower  world" 
"Aenaes    in    the    shade    of    Paliii- 
uru.s"    

••.•\enaes     meets     the  ' '  .shade' '  of 
Dido      

"Aenaes  offers  the  golden  ijow'to 

Persephone"    

"The  P:iysian  fields" 

'^''^^•*'  '*"'•»  Miss  McMillan 


The  condition  of  the  patient  grew 
worse,  and  though  everything  that  skill 
could  do  was  done,  the  patient  grew 
steadily  worse.  Miss  Fanning  was  a 
cousin  of  Mrs.  A.  C.  Severance,  from 
whose  residence  the  funeral  will  take 
place  tomorrow   afternoon. 


LACKED  ENOUGH  VOTES 
St.  Paul,  March  17.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.)— The  traveling  library  bill  was 
called  today  for  the  second  time  in  the 
house.  The  bill  lacked  two  votes  of 
passage,  vote  standing  iie  to  49  58  be- 
ing needed  to  pass.  Speaker  Jones  was 
the  recipient  of  a  high  testimonial  from 
the  members  of  the  house  in  the  pres- 
entation of  a  large  oil  portrait  of  him- 
self. 


CARLTON  SIVIALL  FRUIT 
AND  PLANT  NURSERY. 

Catalogue  mailed  free  to  any  address. 
I  will  set  out  any  variety  of  .Strawberries 
myeolf,  npar  the  city  nf  Oulmh,  (guaran- 
tee ail  to  live)  for  $1.50  per  100,  if  ordered 
before  April  15th. 

E.  G.  BOVEE, 

Carltou,  Minn. 


CLOAK  ROOM. 

Ladies'  New  Cloth  Skirts,  made  from 
good  quality  Figured  Black  Mohair, 
lined  with  percaline,  bound  with  vel- 
veteen, correct  make  and  finish; 
should  sell  readily  at  $300;  0  |'  AO 
sell  Thursday  at— each . . . .  ip  1 .  UO 

Ladies'  New  Cloth  Suits.  Jackets 
lined  with  silk,  made  from  fancy 
materials,  new  shaped  skirt,  lined 
throughout;  you  would  consider  same 
good  value  at  $10.00;  C7  CA 

sells  Thursday  at— per  suit  ip  I  .OU 

Ladies*  Silk  Shirt  Waists,  made  from 
Jap  Silk,  well  lined,  colors— black, 
navy,  rtd— a  few  figured  ones  in  the 
assortment— $4  50  kind;        ino  An 
greatest  value  yet,  at— suit  ipu.^9 

25  dozen  Ladies'  Shirt  Waists,  made 
ot  good  Pc-rcale  and  Lawn;  new  shape 
sleeves  and  back,  new  detachable 
collars,  really  worth  $1.00;         CA*. 
sell  Thursday  at-cach OJfC 


CITY  BRIEFS. 


L.  MKNDENHALL. 


E3TABL<aHED  1><69. 


Mendenhall  &  Hoopes 

FIRST  NATIONAL  BANK  BUILDINO.  X'^^'^ 

$12,500.00  to  Loan  on  Improved  Property. 


"Quality 
First 
and 
Always." 


DULUTH 

IMPERIAL 

FLOUR 


The  Leader 
with  all 
First-class 
Dealers. 


-ntinue  iS^^SglE;^?^^^^^^   "'" 

Two  Birthdays  Celebrated. 

onjoyed  Che  event'  InTa Kt^of  f^'s 

^  Pleasantlv?'  '''''''^'''  '""^  '-'^sion 
'"pa'^antly  tor  many  many  years. 

Bought  the  Cram  Plant. 

dredging    contract    recently 
by    himself    and    Williams. 
VN  illiam.s.    The   plant 
six    dredges. 


MTSICAL. 
E.     B     Stogdill.    teacher      of      piano. 
(Room  for  two  pupils.)  A  special  course 
for  young  pupils  in  sight  reading    Les- 
sons, 50  cents.  Studio,  508  Lowell  block 


the 
obtained 
Green      & 
consists  of  about 


Awarded 
Highest  Honors— World's  Fair. 

Mm 

^  CREAW 

BANNfi 

mmsL 


Ctillum.  dentist.  Palladio.  Phone  No.  9. 

Smoke  Endion  cigar,  W.  A.  Foots. 

uendling.  the  great  orator,  March  24. 

The  death  of  Willis  O'Connor,  the  IS- 

months-old   son    of   William   and    Rolly 

O  Connor,      from      pneumonia,    at    thr- 

mmil.'      residence.       Fifth     street     and 

Twentieth    avenue    west,    occurred    last 

evenin,?  at  5  o'clock. 

The  trial  of  Joseph  Romano,  charged 
with  stealing  a  tub  of  Imtter  fi-om  th^ 
store  room  of  the  Weir-Mears  Commis- 
sion company,  was  this  morning  con- 
tinued to  Friday  afternoon  by  Judge 
Kdson.  Romano  will  be  tried  by  a  jury 
of  six  from   the  regular   panel. 

The  Duluth  Historical  and  Scientific 
association  has  received  its  charter 
from  the  state  authorities,  and  it  will 
be   framed   and   hung. 

The  Alert  Cinch  club  was  entertained 
by    Miss  Truelsen    last  evening.       Mrs  i 
Van   Wagner   won   the   lady's   prize.    C   I 
E.    Richardson,    II.    Ennis    and    H     W 
Cheadle  tied  for  the   first  gentleman's  ' 
prize,    the   trophy    falling  to   the  latter 
on  the  cut. 

The  following  births  have  been  re- 
ported t<i  the  health  department:  A 
daughter  to  Arnoe  and  Hannah  Camp- 
bell, of  1125  West  Michigan  street;  a 
son  to  William  and  Julia  Byron,  of  liiJ 
Mesaba  avenue;  a  daughter  to  Louis 
and  Ellen  Wain,  of  2408  West  First 
street;  a  son  to  James  R.  and  Bridget 
(^rady,  of  109  Wicklow  street. 

The  death  of  Willie  O'Connor,  aged  I 
year,  of  2008  W^est  Fifth  street,  of  pneu- 
monia, has  been  reported  to  the  health 
department. 

Ren     Junisen,     a     lumberman,     was 
brought  in  from  McPherson's  camp  on  I 
the    north    shore    this    morning    with    a  I 
broken  leg.  the  injury  being  caused  by  I 
a  log  rolling  on  him.     He  was  taken  to 
St.    Mary's    hosoital. 

The  Ancient  Order  of  Hibernians  at- 
tended the  cathedral  in  a  body  this 
morning  in  honor  of  St,  Patrick's  day 
Solemn  high  mass  was  celebrated  ami 
R.ev.  Father  Corbett  preache<l  an  elo- 
quent   sermon. 


PALMS! 


A  NEW  LOT,  GOOD  ONES, 

From  One  Dollar  Up. 

These  are  the  Greatest  Bargains  ever  offered. 

Fern<»  and  other  Pretty  Plants  of  all  kinds. 

livery  purchaser  of  one  dollar's  worth  of 
Plants  at  the  Greenhoases  may  select  to  the 
value  of  $1.25.  Ttija  offor  is  good  for  March  only. 
Visitors  welcome. 


LINDSAY'S  GREENHOUSES, 

52nd  Ave.  East.  Lakeside  Car  Line. 


REOPENED! 

THE  ST.  JAMES  HOTEL. 

Everything  new  and  cheerful. 
Cuisine  nnexception&l.  Kxcellent  eervice. 
SI. 50  PER  DAY. 
I  Special  Rates  to  Permanent  Guests. 


WASH  60008. 

I  case  of  short  length  Outing  Flan- 
nels, light  and  dark  colors; 
well  worth  loc  a  yard,  1?  _ 

sell  Thursday  at— per  yard Ofj 

25  pieces  of  Figured  Challies  and 
Lawnf,  none  worth  less  than  7c,    J  ^ 
go  on  sale  Thursday  at— per  yd. .  4C 

35  pieces  of  Figured  Dimities  and 
Organdies,  all  the  late  colors 
and  styles;  sonae  tell  you  they  are 
worth  2SC  a  yard;  |ai 

sell  here  at— per  yard I  a2v 

CROCKERY  AND 
HARDWARE  OPTS, 

The  Grett  Closing  Out  Sale  will  only 
last  about  ten  days  more,  and  then  we 
start  to  pack  to  save  moving.  Crockery 
and  Itardware  has  been  cut  to  almost 
nothing.  If  you  want  Bargains,  now  is 
the  time. 

I  beautiful  Decorated  Haviland 
China  Dinner  Set,  the  last  one 
we  have  to  be  sold  at 


■  n  ■ 


$29.75 


FREE  LAND ! 

1  wdl  give  40  acres  of  land  to  all  persons  pnr- 
ch asms  40  acres  of  land  from  me  at  J5.W  nor 
acre  and  give  yon  five  ynars  time  to  pay  for  it. 
Buy  now.  wlnln  this  offer  is  good.  It  is  better 
than  money  m  bonds  at  10  per  cent,  and  no  dan- 
ger of  busting, 

JOHN  6.  HOWARD, 

10  East  Michigan  8t.,  Doluth,  Minn. 

'****"**"■■••••■■••■•■•■■■■■••••••■•••••...... 

I   COPYRIOHTa,  TAVKATa.  TbADBMABKS.  ! 

I   PATENTS,  i 

MASON,  FENWICK  &  LAWRENCE,        I 

J4MES  r.  WArsoN.  : 

I    Patent  Lawyers,  Solicitors  and  Exports.    I 

R-t^h'-l      Washlnutoa,  D.  C.       IMl,         ; 

,407  Palladio  Bnildinj,',  Duluth,  Minn.        • 

(laveriu)nt  imide  book  free,  1  I 


A  few  more  Decorated  Vase  Lamps 
worth  up  to  $3.00—  no  A 


at — each . 

Silk  Shades,  worth  $1.25, 
at— each 


49c 


per- 


MOST    PERFECT   MADE. 


Superfluous    hair,    moles,    etc 

manently    destroyed      hv     ^i     *  r^'    I  

without   injury.       Face   massate         i' '  ^  P"'®  ^"P«  ^ream  of  Tartar  Powder,     Free  I 
complexion  treatment.      Mrs    Tniin    r    1  "°'"  Ammonia,  Alum  or  any  other  adulterant.  | 


UNION  RINK. 
Skating  every  afternoon  and  evening 
this  week.     Music  Wednesday,     Friday 
and  Saturday  evenings. 

Pure  Spring  Water. 

Delivered  daily.      Telephone  orders  to 
Stewart's  livery,  telephone  No.  334. 


Massage  of  the  Face  and  Neck 

tar  the  removal  of  wrinkles. 

Would  jfou  preserve  your  hair? 

Thpn  call  and  see  ua,  as  we  treat  all  hair  and 
scalp  difeasps.  Artistic  hair  drestinir  and 
manicuriug,  latest  styles. 

KNAUF  SISTERS.  lOl  W.  Superior  St. 
Over  Smith  &  Smith's  Dm«  Store. 


Beautiful  China  2-qt  Water  Pitchers 
worth  up  to  $1,25,  CO-," 

at-each 5)5(} 

HARDWARE  DEPT. 

2  qt  Blue  and  White  Enameled  Steel 
Odi  Meal  Cookers,  worth  8qc;  J  O^ 
Thursday _;.  4oC 

9  and  lo-inch  best  Tin  Pic  T'ns 
Thursday ' 

2  qt  Tin  Stew  Pans, 

worth  1 2c,  Thursday 


2c 
5g 

10  and  i2-quart  Galvanized  Slop 
Pails,  worth  3q:  and  48c,  OC-* 

Thursday— each fiOC 


i^lWViTWS 


I  ! 


I 

t 


— « 


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■I- 


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FOURTEEN    PAGES- 


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Put 

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Criits    II 

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Hoc    Thf    Uerahl     | 

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Hoitf. 

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DULUTH  EVENING  HERAL 


For  irrKKNTH     ^fak. 


THl  KShAV,     MAItrH     IS,     ]S!>7. 


■!» 


MVE    O'CLOCK    EDITION. 


r+ 


! 


Important  Announcement ! 

PIANOS!  AEOLIANS!   ORGANS! 


About  April  1st,  we  shall  open  one  of  the  most 
complete  Piano,  Aeolian  and  Oro^an  stores  in  the 
Northwest,  under  the  management  of  fir.  James 
Pilkey,  whose  experience  in  this  line  extends 
over  eighteen  years,  nine  of  which  have  been 
spent  in  Duluth. 

We  invite  intending  purchasers  to  wait  until 
our  stock  is  in  place,  as  it  will  pay  in  the  way  of 
price  and  the  advantages  of  an  entirely  new  stock 
are  very  important.  Every  instrument  is  person 
ally  selected  and  bought  for  spot  cash,  which  will 
make  our  prices  from  $25.00  to  $iOO.OO  below 
competitors. 

We  sell  instruments  on  the  mosff  lib- 
eral terms  of  payment.  a 


Lnybourn  Saves   the    $70,- 

000  Appropriation  For  Du- 

luth's  Normal  School. 


French  &  Baslett 

First  St.  and  Third  Avenue  Wei  . 


There  Was  Much  Opposition 

But  the  Duluth  Man  Was 

Victorious. 


St.  Louis  County  Delegation 

Quite  Prominent  In  House 

Business-Measures. 


>b. 


$175.00 


^imiiiiirKmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiJiii^-  iiiiiiiiiiinmiiiiuii 

A  Good  Upright 

I'iano  at 

THIS  IS  A  SNAP. 

Pianos  and  Organs  (or  rent     Expert  tuning  &  repairing.    = 

I        _     DULUTH  MUSIC  GO.      E.  G.  chapman.  H.n.ger.   I 

S    SALESBOO>l!>    PhfHnix  Hlock—:'nd  floor:  Funrtli  Avenne  West  ac!l  Soperjor  Street.         5 

;imiiiimiiiiiiMniiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii!tiiiiiiii]iii:ni!iiiiiiiii!iiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiin:iiiiir; 


••••••••■iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 

PIANOS! 


.«!t.  Paul.  March  IS.— The  house  nor- 
mal school  tommittee  late  yesterday 
had  several  liills  up  for  consideration. 
That  i:i  which  Duluth  is  most  inter- 
ested was  the  general  appropriation 
for  normal  schools,  including  $70.0tJ0 
for  the  Duluth  huildin?.  Decided  op- 
position was  presented  to  the  Duluth 
it€m  and  it  was  only  through  the  care- 
ful and  shrewd  moving  of  Mr.  Lay- 
liourn.  the  Duluth  member  on  the  nor- 


noxious  weeds  from  empty  freig-ht  ears. 

S.  F.  :!4!»,  Cronkhite.  to  <'ontinue  in  ex- 
istence the  board  of  audit  created  l>v 
general    laws   of    1S9:!. 

Senator  Yale  introduced  a  bill  limit- 
ing the  amount  of  land  that  may  be 
ai(iuired  by  corporations  other  than 
those  organized  for  the  conati-uction  of 
railroads,  turnpikes,  etc..  to  5000  acres. 
Hailroad.  turnpike  and  canal  companies 
are  limited  to  such  as  may  l)e  projier 
for  the  onei-ation  of  their  roads  or 
canals. 

Senator  Dunn  came  in  with  a  bill 
providing  for  the  employment  of  an 
official  stenographer  to  take  testimony 
in  trials  before  justices  of  the  peace, 
when  requested  by  either  party  to  the 
action.  It  is  provided  that  the  party 
making  the  request  shall  l>ear  the  ex- 
pense. 

DULUTH"MEiVIBERS. 

Quite  Prominent  in  Last  Niglit's 
Legislative  Worl(. 

St.  Paul,  ilarch  IS.— (ripecial  to  The 
Herald.)— Everyone  of  the  Duluth  dele- 
gation eame  to  the  front  last  night  in 
some  form  or  other  in  the  liouse.  In  the 
first  place.  Air.  Laybourn  was  called  to 
pr<'side  over  the  commiltee  of  the  \Vholo 
and  he  held  his  own  in  good  style,  not- 
withstanding .several  somewhat  ob- 
streperous members  were  inclined  to  trv 
to  run  things  and  had  to  be  kept 
straighi.  Senator  Silencer's  bill  com- 
pelling the  furnishing  of  pure  water 
and  pioviding  penalties  for  violation  of 
the  law,  which  hail  been  slightly 
amended  by  the  judiciary  committee, 
was  favorably  reported.  .Mr.  Schmidt's 
bill  authorizing  the  condemnation  of 
property  for  dock  purposes  was  at- 
tacked by  Johns,  of  Kamsy.  and  Dahl, 
of  Hennepin,  who  feared  it  might  af- 
fect their  cities.  Mr.  Schmidt,  with  his 
customary  smoothness,  guarded  his  bill 
past  the  shoals,  changing  its  cour.'^..- 
I  very  slightly,  and  finally  reaching  the 


FLOODS 


Horrible  Tales  of  Suffering 
and  Death  In  the  Missis- 
sippi Floods. 


Rescue  Steamers    Bringing 
•  Crowds  of   Refugees   to 
Overtaxed  Memphis. 


1 ~~— 

I  Office  Supplies! 


nial  school  committee,  that  this  pro- 1  dock  for  which  he  .sailed.  Mr  Vail's  bill 
vision  was  preserved  in  the  bill.  Its  |  reducing  fees  of  sherifts  to  $3  for  sale  of 
..r-ponents  first  wanted  to  kn.K-k  out  lands  of  execution  was  al.so  recom- 
the   Duluth    school    entirely   and    when  i  mended  to  pass. 

I..aybourn   argued  them  out  of   the   in-  <  

tentitm  they  proposed  to  reduce  the 
appropriation  very  materially.  There 
is  a  rule  of  the  hoihse  that  all  bills 
I  carrying  appropriations  must  go  to  the 
committee  on  ai>propriations  after 
being  reported  from  the  various  other 
committees.  The  oi>p<ments  of  the  Du- 
luth school  were  finally  convinced 
that  it  was  the  province  of  the  appro- 


Pitiable  Condition  of  Those 

Rescued— Many  Cases  of 

Death  Expected. 


THE  ONLY  COMPLETE  LIXE  IS  THE 
CITY  IS  AT  - 


Chamberlain  &  Taylor's 

l300KStOre.  323  west  superior  street.  Ouiulh. 


■;■■;„;  ;„;„;,.;  ,t„;..i„i  i.,i,.t.. 


Wasliington  Annoying. 

Washington,    March    18.— (Special 
priations   «-.:tnmittee  to  say   how   great  I  The   Herald.)— The   presence     of     John 
should    be    the    appropriation,     if    anv',,      ^  ,  ,„    „    J, 

there    shoul.l    be.    The    (  hief    oppVments  !  "''"^."''''' '''"''  ^-  ^'  ^'^'"^^ '"  ^'^-^«^""*''- 


Memphis,  March  18.— Four  rescue 
steamers,  including  two  government 
boats,  arrived  in  port  this  morning  from 
the  overflowed  country  north  of  Mem- 
phis, landing  400  refugees  and  1000  head 
of  stock  to  lie  cared  for  by  the  already 
overtaxed  bluff  city.  The  condition  of 
the  refugees  is  pitiable.  Some  are  i)ar- 
tially  clothed  and  sick  almost  unto 
death  from  exposure  and  long  suffering. 
Seventy-five  of  the  total  brought  here 
today  have  been  standing  for  hours  in 
water  waist  deep,  awaiting  the  arrival 
of  the  rescue  steamers.  One  woman 
from  the  north  of  Marion  experienced 
the  horrible  .sight  of  having  her  infant 

I  die  in  her  arms.     When     the     steamer 

,„....       hands  lifted  her  to    safety    she    clung 

Goodnow  and  Byrnes   Visit  to' r^"^"''"^  ^°  ^^e  dead  babe.  Another 

family  of  four  rescued  said  that  two  of 


AN  INTENDED  BLOW. 

Fitzsimmons  Talks  of  the  Blow 
That  Finished  Corbett> 

Carson,  Nev.,  March  18.— Fitzsim- 
mons did  not  leave  for  San  Francisco 
last  night  as  he  had  intended  and 
spent  the  night  at  his  old  training 
quarters  at  Cook's  ranch.  He  will  leave 
for  San  Francisco  tonight.  He  showed 
very  little  marks  today  of  the  severe 
punishment  he  received  in  the  ring. 
His  lower  lip  was  split  somewhat  in 
the  center  and  was  slightly  swollen^ 
but  there  were  no  other  marks  about  f 
him  to  indicate  he  had  just  gone 
through  a  hard  battle. 

"My  lips  are  very  thin,"  said  Fitz. 
"and  crack  open  without  being  hurt.  I 
know  that  I  lost  some  blood  yester- 
day, but  it  did  not  weaken  me  at  all. 
and  things  looked  much  worse  with 
me  than  they  really  were.  There  was 
not  a  time  in  the  fight  that  I  was  not 
sure  of  winning,  and  after  the  sixth 
round  in  which  they  say  Corbett  had 
me  going,  I  told  my  man  after  I  had 
leturned  to  my  corner  that  I  was  going 
t<)  lick  Corbett  to  a  certainty.  I  saw 
that  he  was  able  to  keep  his  head  out 
of  my  way  and  then  I  began  to  lay 
for  the  body  and  1  finished  him  just  as 
I  did  Sharkey.  There  is  no  sense  in 
saying  that  it  was  a  chance  blow  and 
all  that  sort  of  thing.  It  was  just  the 
kind  of  a  blow  that  I  was  waiting  for 
a  chance  to  deliver,  and  when  my 
chance  came  I  sent  it  home  and  won 
the  fight.  That  was  all  the  chance  that 
there  was  aliout  it." 

James  Manderson,  who  was  to  have 
been  one  of  the  contestants  in  a  shoot 
for  the  silver  cup  which  is  now  held 
by  Elliott,  of  Kansas  City,  has  en- 
tered suit  against  Dan  Stuart  for 
$500.  He  claims  that  he  was  induced 
to  spend  money  and  time  in  coming 
to  Carson  City  and  that  after  he  had 
arrived  the  shoot  was  declared  off. 
Stuart  says  he  declared  the  shoot  off 
because  there  were  not  sufficient  en- 
tries. 


Steamer  Rialto,  Blazing  and 
Ready  to  Sink,  Aban- 
doned at  Sea. 


Steamer   Carthaginian  Res- 
cues Every  One  of  the 
Officers  and  Crew. 


Plate   Seams   Gaping    With 

Heat  When  the  Vessel 

Was  Deserted. 


CLOSE  TO  THE  THRONE. 


opi 
of  the  Duluth  ai>pr(^|)riation  held  that 
instead  of  building  a  new  sch<M»l  more 
money  should  lie  spent  on  the  Im- 
provement of  the  schools  already  es- 
tablished. Finally  Mr.  Laybourn  se- 
cured a  favorable  vote  on  the  Duluth 
school    expense    and    the    bill    was    re- 


ton  IS  an  annoyance  to  some  of  the 
members  of  the  Minnesota  delegation, 
and  even  more  than  an  annoyance  to 
many  of  the  men  seeking  office  from 
that  .state.  Goodnow  and  Byrnes  ap- 
pear to  be  too  close  to  the  executive 
throne  to  suit  them.    Since  their  arrival 


ported   to  the  house  this  morning,  and    here  they  have  had  two  or  three  private 


-H-J-^•^^-^«-l- 


the  favorable  repf)rt  was  adopted,  the 
bill  then  going  to  the  appropriations 
committee. 


L.  MEXDENHALL. 


ESTABLIBHED  1869. 


T.  W.  HOOPES. 


Mendenhall  &  Hoopes 

FIBST  NATIONAL  HANK  BUILDING. 

$12,500.00  to  Loan  on  Improved  Property. 


t 


y 


Commercial  Light  &  Power  Co. 

(Successors  to  Kariman  General  Eieciric  Co.) 

FURNISH 
ELECTRIC  CURRENT 

FOR  LIGHT  AND  POWER. 

OFFICES— Rooms  4.  5  and  6.  216  West  Superior  street,    .    -    -    Duluth.  Minn. 


HOUSE  COMMITTEES. 


MR.  MUNGER  RETURNS. 


Speaker  Reed  Will  Not  Appoint  Story  as  To  Selling  Out  Has 
Them  Now.  No  Truth. 


ua^i^l 


Washington,  March  IS.— Speaker 
Reed  has  deflnitely^decided  that  for  the 
present,  at  least,  he  will  not  appoint 
any  of  the  regular  committees  of  th? 
house,  beyond  the  three  already  an- 
nounced. In  thiri  way  all  miscellaneous 
legislation  will  be  blocked,  and  the  en- 
tire attention  of  the  house  focussed  on 
the  tariff  bill.  The  bills,  which  are  be- 
ing introduced  by  the  hundreds,  wili 
have  to  wait  until  the  committee  go 
under  the  natural  order  of  things  are 
appointed.  It  is  not  even  lik-lv  that 
the  appropriation  committee  will  be 
appointed. 

As  so<m  as  the  tariff  bill  has  been 
sent  to  the  senate  the  three  appropria- 
tion bills  as  they  were  sent  to  the  pre- 
sident and  the  deficiency,  as  far  as  was 
agre<iHl  to  in  conference,  will  be  put 
through  under  special  orders  which  the 
rules  committee  will  bring  in  for  that 
purpose. 

By  avoiding  complications  which 
might  arise  if  the  legislative  mill 
should  be  thrown  open  to  an  indis- 
criminate grind,  the  house  leaders  be- 
lieve they  can  materially  expedite 
hnancial  legislation  in  the  senate  by 
rendering  delay  in  the  uoer  branch 
of  congress  on  the  tariff  all  the  mor^ 
ronspicuous  by  the  inaction  of  the 
house. 


R.  S.  Mi'.nger.  president  of  the  Du- 
luth &  North  Dakota  railroad,  re- 
turned last  evening  from  Montreal. 
He  characterizes  as  false  the  report 
in  the  morning  paper  to  the  effect  that 
he  was  negotiating  a  sale  of  the  road 
to  the  Canadian  Pacific.  He  went 
there  fi>r  the  purpose  of  making  a  traf- 
fic arrangement  with  that  road  and  ho 
has   bright   hopes   for   success. 

Mr.  M linger  is  not  prepared  to  say 
very  much  about  what  he  has  accom- 
plished. He  found  both  the  Xorthen 
Pacific  ajid  Great  Northern  roads  bit- 
terly opposed  to  his  project.  He  has 
not  yet  sold  the  bonds  of  the  road, 
but  believes  he  will  be  able  to  do  so. 

The  report  of  his  .selling  out  annoys 
Mr.  Munger,  because  he  (Joes  not  want 
the  men  interested  to  believe  that  he 
would    do   any    such   thing. 


THE  TARIFF  BILL. 

Vote  to  Be  Taken  in  the  House 
March  31. 

Washington,  March  is.— The  ways 
and  means  committee  have  decided  to 
report  the  tariff  bill  tomorrow.  The  de- 
hate  will  begin  on  Monday  and  close  on 
or  before  the  last  day  of  March.  The 
iinal  vote  in  the  house  will  l>e  taken 
March  31. 


WISCONSIN  LAWMAKERS 
Madison.  March  18.— Another  m«;eting 
of  the  comrnitiee  appointed  to  investi^ 
gate  charges  of  bribery  in  connection 
with  the  medical  bill  was  held  this 
morning.  The  bill  to  establish  a  sub- 
state  fair  at  Chippewa  Falls  caused 
some  debate  in  the  asSembly.  Agen.  oi" 
Superior;  Buffington,  of  Eau  Claire,  and 
Stanley,  of  Chipoewa  Falls,  sooke  in 
favor  of  the  measure,  and  it  went  to  a 
third  reading.  Church  taxation  was 
killed  by  a  vote  of  58  to  34  after  a  call 
of  the  house  was  made. 


JACKSON  AND  WALLING. 

Their  Approaching  Doom  Will 
Unseal  Their  Lips. 

Cincinnati,  March  IS.— The  announce- 
ment in  the  Cincinnati  Enquirer  that  it 
will   tomorrow  morning   print  a  state- 
ment from  the  condemned  murderers  of 
Pearl    Bryan,    is   in    confirmation    of   a 
rumor  to  that  effect  that  has  been  cur- 
rent.   Jackson  has  been  appealed  to  by 
every  known  argument  from  every  pos- 
sible  source   to  clear   up   the   mystery,  i 
and  though  it    appears     that     he     and  j 
Walling  have  so  far  kept  the  compact.  I 
evidently  entered  into  at  the  beginning  ' 
to  stand  by  each  other,  new  views  seem 
to  f  ome  to  him  as  the  end  of  his  life  ap- 
proa<'hes. 

The  mutual  compact  has  been 
strengthen -d  by  keeping  the  prisoners, 
confined  together,  and  hitherto  by  the 
hope  of  executive  interference.  The 
removal  of  the  last  hope  doubtles.'? 
prompts  the  revelation  which  shall  be 
made. 


I         HOUSE  MEASURES. 

Tired    Crowd    of   Legislators 
I         Slow  In  Assembling. 

i      St.  Paul.  March  IS.— (Special    to    The 
!  Herald.)— The    members    of    the    house 
I  were  a  bit  slow  getting   to   work   this 
morning,   their  late  night  .session   hav- 
:  ing  worn  on  them.    Numerous  commit- 
I  tee  reports  were  presented,  several  bili- 
being  killed.    The  Foss  bill  to  allow  em- 
ployment   of    vagrants    on    roads    was 
killed.     Hollister's   county   local   option 
,  l»i!l    .vas   recommended     for     indefinite 
I  postponement  by  the  temperance  com- 
mittee, and  Gllbert.son  moved  to  reverse 
the  committee's  action.    Jacobson  spoke 
vigorously  in  support  of  the  motion  to 
place  the  i)ill  on  general  orders,  as  also 
did    Feig    and    Staples.     The    roll    wa.< 
called  on  the  motion  to  refer,  resulting 
4S   to  41,    and   the   l>ill   goes   to   general 
orders.         Among    the    new    bills    wer  > 
these: 

Douglas,  to  prohibit  use  of  tobacco  bv 
minors  under  16.  Crimes  and  punish- 
ment. 

Hall,  to  provide  for  50  per  cent  abate- 
ment of  taxes  where  the  property  has 
depreciated  50  per  cent.    Taxes. 

Abbott,  to  amend  the  law  providing 
for  storage  of  grains  in  elevators. 
Grain  and  warehouse.  Ordered  print- 
ed. 

Schmidt,  to  extend  the  time  for  pay- 
ing delinquent  taxes.  Taxes  and  tax 
laws. 

The  house  adopted  the  report  of  the 
committee  ofl  crimes  and  punishment, 
recommending  that  H.  F.  616.  be  indefi- 
nitely postponed.  This  bill  provided 
that  organized  clubs  might  be  licensed 
with  authority  to  conduct  glove  con- 
tests and  sparring  exhibitions. 

The  following  bills  on   the     calendar 
were  passed:    S.  F.  134.  Steven.s,  relat- 
1  ing  to  title  insurance  companies. 

S.  F.  277.  Morgan,  relating  to  insol- 
vent estates. 

S.  F.  246.  Thompson,  to  amend  insur- 
ance laws. 

S.  F.  163,  Fuller,  relating  to  the  as- 
sessment and  collection  of  taxes. 

S.  F.  300,  Potter,  relating  to  fire  de- 
partments. 

S.  F.  35.  Spencer,  penalties  for  impure 
water. 

S.  F.  148.  Knatvold,  relating  to  illumi- 
nating oils. 

S.  F.  44.  Sperry.  relating  to  the  state 
public  school  at  Owatonna. 

S.  F.  30,  Potter,  relating  to  perman- 
ent school  funds. 

S.  F.  331,  Miler,  relating  to  rates  foi 
common  carriers. 


interviews  with     President     McKinley. 
They   regard   themselves  as   the   origi- 


their  number  were  drowned  just  a  few 
minutes  before  the  boat  arrived. 

Rain  began  falling  yesterday  after- 
noon at  4  o'clock  and  at  10  o'clock  thit» 
morning  was  c(»ming  down  in  torrents, 
causing  a  rise  in  the  river  of  0:2  ir» 
eighteen  hours.  The  gauge  registers 
.'16.08.  Local  packets  cleared  on  time 
today,  taking  extra  hands  to  aid  in  the 
work  ol  rescuing  the  hoinel.\ss  an<l  to 
strengthen  the  levees  in   weak  spots. 

Several  small  breaks  in  the  old  levees 
are  reported,  causing  additional  dam- 
age and  suffering.  Islands  40,  Z^.  3S.  37, 
36,  35,  and  34  are  reported  entirely  sub- 
merged  today.     These   contain   several 


CORBETT  STILL  ON  EARTH. 

San  Francisco.  March  18.— When  Cor- 
bett was  told  a  rumor  was  about  that 
he  was  dead,  he  was  having  a  broken 
tooth    tinkered    with    by    a   dentist 
was   rather  fractious. 

"Dead,  am  I'.' "  he  roared  in  a  voice  of 
thunder.  "I  wish  the  Associated   Press 


New  York,  March  18.— The  Allan 
State  line  steamer  Carthaginian  which 
arrived  this  morning  from  Glasgow, 
rescued  the  crew  of  the  Wilson  line 
steamer  Rialto.  which  took  fire  and  was 
abandoned  March  5.  in  latitude  31.32 
and*  longitude  22.45.  The  Rialto  was 
bound  from  Newcastle  for  this  port 
loaded  with  a  general  cargo,  including 
a  large  quantity  of  chemicals,  fhe  left 
port  on  February  21,  and  experienced 
strong  westerly  gales  gradually  in- 
creasing in  violence  until  March  3 
when  a  veritable  hurricane  was  blow- 
mg. 

At  6  o'clock  in  the  morning,  a  terrible 
explosion  in  the  forehold  blew  the 
j  hatch  covers  into  the  air,  killed  one 
and  I  seaman  and  injured  a  chief  mate 
Dense  columns  of  thick,  yellow  smoke 
poured  out  of  the  open  hatch  and  a 
choking,     penetrating     odor     pervaded 


would  tell  everyone  that  I  am  the  most    the  ship.    The  crew  were 


lively  corpse  you  ever  saw,"  .and  he 
shot  out  his  fist  in  pantomime  at  the 
dentist,  who  retreated  to  a  safe  dis- 
tance. 

Corbett  says  he  will  show  himself  on 
the  street  as  soon  as  he  is  through  with 
the  dentist,  just  to  show  his  friends 
how   well    he   is. 


nal  McKinley  men  from  Minnesota,  and  i  i"^.!"'"^''".'   eotton    plantations   oi.   lou 


it  looks  now  as  though  the  president 
so  regards  them  and  will  treat  them  as 
such. 

Just  what  they  want  Is  akso  causin.g 
worry  among  the  meml)ers  of  the  Min- 
nesota delegation  and  likewise  among 
the  officeseekers.  No  one  can  discover 
whether  they  want  oflice  personally  or 
whether  for  friends.  Many  fear,  at  any 
rate,  that  they  will  attempt  to  block 
the  ofticeseeking  arrangements  of  some 
one  and  may  succeed.  There  will  be 
unrest  in  the  Minnesota  colony  here  un- 
til they  depart,  and  pf  haps  after  their 
plans  are  made  public,  if  they  ever  ara. 

Goodnow  still  Insists  that  he  is  not 
seeking  office  himself,  nor  will  he  ad- 
mit that  he  is  having  anything  to  do 
with  patronage  matters,  but  the  wily 
Minneapolis  politician  is  not  being 
trusted  by  the  interested  ones.  They 
fear  that  Goodnow's  visit  here  bodes  ill 
to  some  one. 


WEDGE  IS  DISCONSOLATE. 

Wanted  a  Judgeship   That  Is 
Not  Vacant. 

Washington,  March  IS.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— W.  C.  Wedge,  of  St. 
Paul,  who  was  an  active  candidate  for 
a  territorial  judgeship  in  Oklahoma,  has 
discovered  that  the  term  of  the  present 
incumbent  does  not  expire  until  1899. 
and  has  gone  home  disconsolate. 

W.  H.  Dunwoody,  one  of  the  Minne- 
sota delegates  to  the  national  monetary 
conference  at  Indianapolis,  is  here 
working  in  the  interest  of  monetary  re- 
form. He  was  introduced  to  Speaker 
Reed  by  Representative  Fletcher  to- 
day. 


acres,  operated  by  500  negroes,  and  250 
head  of  stock.  The  stock  has  been 
abandoned,  but  the  owners  and  hands 
have  been  landed  safe  in  Memphis  and 
Cairo,  III.  A  special  train  left  Memphis 
this  morning  via  Valley  route,  contaiii- 
'\r:^  material  to  strengthen  the  Delta 
levees.  This  was  sent  in  resoonse  tu 
urgent  telegrams  calling  for  assistance. 

People  in  the  flooded  districts  gained 
hope  yesterday  from  the  reports  of  the 
United  States  weather  bureau  that  the 
river  had  fallen  an  inch.  Today  the 
same  officials  came  out  in  a  strong  de- 
nial, saying  an  error  had  been  made  in 
taking  the  gauge  by  an  experienced 
employe,  and  that  in  truth  a  rise  of  .-t 
fraction  of  a  foot  had  taken  place. 

At  noon  today  comes  a  report  of  ?. 
continued  rise,  which,  with  awful  but 
unsupported  news  of  great  loss  of  life, 
has  almost  caused  a  panic  in  Mem- 
phis. 

The  governor  of  Arkansas  has  refused 
aid  to  the  Memphis  relief  committee, 
saying  he  could  do  nothing.  Memphi- 
sians  are  angry  at  his  action,  as  all  the 
relief  extended  thus  far  has  been  to 
Arkansas  people.  A  general  appeal  foh 
relief  was  issued  today  to  citizens  of 
all   Southern  states. 


SIX  DROWNED. 


T'  •*' 


Promises  to  Go  Home. 

Robert  Stees.  who  was  arrested  at  the 
Exchange  building  yesterday,  was  fin.>d 
$10  and  costs  by  Judge  Boyle  this  after- 
noon. The  prisoner  cliiimetl  thut  he  las 
a  family  at  i;24  Columbia  street.  St.  Paul, 
and  promised  that  he  would  go  home  at 
once  if  released.  It  was  directed  that  the 
<ommitment  be  not  made  out  until  the 
truth  of  the  story  could  be  investigated. 


IN  THE  SENATE. 
St.  Paul.  March  18.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.)— The  senate,  in  committee  of 
the  whole  today,  discus.sed  S.  F.  457,  au- 
thorizing the  state  board  of  equaliza- 
tion to  require  from  county  auditor.^  a 
report  on  the  real  and  personal  iirop- 
erty  assessment  of  any  individual,  firm 
or  corporation.  The  bill  provides  that 
the  state  board  may  increase,  but  may 
not  decrease,  the  assessments  of  the 
parties  reported  upon. 

Senator  Spencer  offered  an  amerul- 
ment.  authorizing  the  state  board  to 
decrease  as  well  as  increase  the  indi- 
vidual as.sessments,  but  the  Spencer 
amendment  was  voted  down. 

The  bill  was  recommended  to  pass, 
with  an  amendment  providing  that  the 
state  board  give  the  parties  interested 
a  hearing  before  their  assessment  was 
raised. 

Senator  Miller's  bill,  authorizing  countv 
commissioners    in    selecting       the    officiMj 
county   paper   to   take   Into   consideration 
the    circulation    of    the    papers    and    their 
relative    value    as    advertising    mediums 
was  recommended  to  pass  without  oppo- 
istion. 
The  senate  passed  the  following: 
S.   F.   497,   Sperry,    to  amend   probate 
code,     relating     to     appointments      of 
guardians. 

S.  F.  286,  Stevens,  relating  to  the  ser- 
vice of  summons  upon  ministers  in  cer- 
tain cases. 

S.  F.  4.52,  Miller,  to  amend  general 
laws  of  1895,  relating  to  the  spread  of 


PATENT  FIRE  ESCAPE. 

New  York,  March  18.— A  young  wo- 
man, after  attempting  a  sensational 
cescent  from  a  window  of  the  St. 
Cloud  hotel  by  means  of  a  patent  fire 
escape,  is  suffering  now  from  internal 
iti juries.  The  inventor  of  the  fire  es- 
cape, George  L.  Kingsl)ury,  of  Enfield, 
C(mn.,  and  his  general  agent,  John  S. 
Kilby.  were  arrested  and  taken  to  the 
Jefferson  Market  place  court  and  re- 
leased on  their  own  recognizance  and 
to  await  the  result  of  the  girl's  Injuries. 
The  name  of  the  young  woman  is 
Hedwig  Newmark.  She  is  a  gymnast, 
and  has  frequently  made  descents 
from  windows  by  means  of  the  same 
apparatus,  which  consists  of  a  finely- 
woven  cable  of  wire,  a  frame  and 
lever  by  which  the  sj-eed  of  the  descent 
is  regulated  and  the  two  straps,  which 
serve  as  a  saddle. 

The  descent  was  made  from  a  win- 
ilovv  seventy  feet  above  the  street. 
The  passersby  in  Forty-second  street 
i'.nd  Broadway  saw  a  handsome  young 
woman  lift  a  top  story  window,  st«p 
li.fchtly  upon  the  stone  window  sill  and 
then  start  dovvn  the  wire  escape.  She 
glided  down  'easily  until  she  was  with- 
in thirty  feet  of  the  ground.  Then 
she  bumped  against  the  side  of  the 
building.  She  tried  to  steady  herself, 
while  at  the  same  time  regulating  her 
downward  speed  by  means  of  the 
lever.  The  crowd  then  saw  that  she 
lost  all  control  of  the  apparatus  and 
she  descended  like  a  shot.  She  lay  still 
and  insensible  where  she  first  landed, 
in  plain  view  of  thou.sands  of  sight- 
seers. Physicians  were  summoned, 
but  were  unable  to  say  whether  her 
injuries    would    prove    fatal    or   not. 


Refugees'  Boat  Capsized    By 
a  Whirlpool. 

Memphis,  Tenn.,  March  18.— According: 
to  a  well-defined  report,  six  people  w-ere 
drowned  yesterday  between  Marion  and 
Jerico  while  trying  to  reach  the  rail- 
road track.  The  names  of  the  people 
could  not  be  learned,  but  it  is  said  that 
there  were  two  women,  one  man  and 
three  children  in  a  small  boat  when  it 
capsized  with  them.    They  all  perished. 

The  people  were  trying  to  reach  the 
railroad  track  so  that  they  could  thus 
go  to  Marion,  where  relief  could  l)v 
given  them.  Theye  were  not  far  from 
Lloyd's  swamps,  where  the  water  is 
rushing  madly  through  the  gap  in  the 
Kansas  City.  Fort  Scott  &  Memphis 
tracks,  and  the  boat  in  which  they  were 
navigating  was  caught  by  a  whirlpool 
and  turned  over.  This  report  gaineil 
such  wide  circulation  as  lo  amount  to 
almost  verification. 


CHICAGO'S  PLAINT. 

Thinks  St.  Louis  is  Getting  the 
Best  Through  Rates. 

Chicago,  March  18.— The  board  of  ad- 
ministration of  the  Western  Freight 
association  is  in  session  today,  listen- 
ing to  complaints  of  Chicago  shippers 
that  they  are  discriminated  against  in 
favor  of  St.  Louis  by  the  present  sy.s- 
tem  of  constructing  rates.  The  trans- 
portation committee  of  the  Chicago 
board  of  trade  is  applicant  in  the  mat- 
ter. The  complaint  is  ba.sed  on  the 
fact  that  rates  from  trans-Mississippi 
points  to  points  in  the  East  via  St. 
Louis  and  other  Mississippi  river  gate- 
ways are  from  i/i  to  4  cents  lower  than 
those  from  Chicago. 

The  sympathies  of  exclusively  Chi- 
cago roads  are  all  with  the  applicants 
for  a  revision  and  equalization  of  the 
rates,  and  it  is  said  their  infiuence  will 
be  thrown  that  way.  The  trouble  all 
arises  from  making  the  Mississippi 
river  the  basing  line  on  which  to  con- 
struct the  rough  rates.  Chicago  roads 
want  Chicago  made  the  basing  point. 
The  controversy  is  not  likely  to  be  set- 
tled today,  but  will  be  taken  under  ad- 
visement by  the  board  of  administra- 
tion. Should  the  decision  be  against 
them,  it  is  said  to  be  the  intention  of 
the  Chicago  shippers  to  appeal  to  the 
interstate   commerce  commission. 


A  Ferry  Steamer. 

The  council  committee  in  charge  of 
the  matter  of  procuring  a  steamboat 
for  the  canal  ferry  has  in  view  the 
steamer  Romeo,  of  the  Mackinac  and 
Petoskey  line.  She  is  a  vessel  of  about 
300  tons,  with  a  powerful  double  engine 
that  enables  her  to  turn  within  her  own 
len^rth.  The  price  wanted  is  $6500.  It 
is  understood  that  a  report  favoring  the 
purchase  of  the  boat  will  be  made  to  the 
council. 


PLUMS  FOR  PATRIOTS. 

McKinley   Adherents    Reaping 
Their  Expected  Reward. 

Washington,  March  18.— President 
McKinley  today  sent  to  the  senate  the 
following  nominations: 

State— Powell  Clayton,  of  Arkansas, 
to  be  envoy  extraordinary  and  minister 
plenipotentiary  of  the  L'nited  States  to 
Mexico;  William  M.  Osborne,  of  Massa- 
chusetts, consul  general  of  the  United 
States  at  London;  J.  K.  Gqwdy,  of  In- 
diana, consul  general  of  the  United 
States  at  Paris;  Joseph  H.  Brigham,  of 
Ohio,  to  be  assistant  secretary  of  agri- 
culture; Perry  S.  Heath,  of  Indiana,  to 
be  first  assistant  postmaster  general. 

War— Capt.  James  H.  Shaler,  ordi- 
nance department,  to  be  major;  Henry 
L.  Marindin  (an  assistant  in  I'nited 
States  coast  and  Geodetic  survey)  to 
be  a  member  of  the  Missippi  river  com- 
mission. 

Interior— Sylvester  Peterson,  of  Min- 
nesota, to  be  register  of  the  land  office 
at  Crookston,  Minn. 


BLOCKADE  OF  CRETE. 

Powers  Have  Ordered  It  Com- 
menced on  Sunday. 

Canea.  Island  of  Crete,  March  18.— .\ 
blockade  of  the  island  will  begin  Sunday 
mcrnlng.  It  will  be  general  against  all 
Greek  vessels,  but  other  ships  will  be 
allowed  to  land  goods.  The  admirals 
of  the  powers  will  request  all  Greek 
warships  to  remove  from  Cretan 
waters,  and  if  they  do  not  comply  force 
will   be  used. 

The  Austrian  gunboat  Zebnico  haft 
fired  upon  and  sunk  a  Greek  vessel 
loaded  with  provisions  and  munitions 
of  war,  near  Candia.  The  Zebnico  was 
r.red  upon  by  a  party  of  insurgents, 
I'ut  she  returned  the  fire  and  sank  the 
ship. 


at  once  called 
to  quarters,  a  fire  hose  was  stretched 
and  the  pumps  started.  It  was  neces- 
sary to  batten  down  the  hat<-h  to  pre- 
vent the  fire  having  full  vent. 

Meanwhile  the  ship  was  wallowing 
In  the  mountainous  seas  and  o<-casion- 
ally  burying  herself  under  a  giant  com- 
l»er.  The  lifeboats  were  smashed  by 
the  seas  and  the  crew,  with  death  star- 
ing them  in  the  face,  worked  with  des- 
perate energy,  but  in  spite  of  the  ef- 
forts, the  fire  gained  headway  steadily. 
At  2  o'clock  in  the  afternoon  the  Car- 
thaginian was  sighted  and,  in  reply  to 
signals,  promised  to  stand  by  until  the 
weather  moderated  sutticiently  to  per- 
mit boats  to  be  lowered.  The  Rialto's 
crew  did  not  relax  their  efforts  to  sub- 
due the  fire  which  steadily  crept  further 
into  the  cargo  and  the  deck  plates  grew 
hotter  and  hotter. 

For  forty  hours  and  until  the  early 
morning  of  the  5th,  the  Allen  liner  stood 
by,  and  when  the  weather  moderated 
enough  to  make  it  possible  for  a  life- 
:boat  to  live,  the  Rialto's  boats  being 
'all  gone.  Capt.  France  of  the  Cartha- 
ginian ordered  his  manned  and  after 
a  great  struggle  the  entire  crew  were 
taken  off  without  mishap. 

Capt.  Rippeth  said  that  when 
he  abandoned  the  Rialto,  the  plate 
seams  were  giving  and  and  there  was 
fifteen  feet  of  water  in  the  main  hold 
and  that  her  sinking  was  only  a  matter 
of  a  few  hours.  The  rescued  crew 
saved  none  of  their  effects. 

The  Rialto  was  built  in  1878  at  Hull. 
She  was  310  feet  long  and  1799  tons  bur- 
den. She  was  owned  by  Thomas  Wil- 
son, Sons  &  company,  and  her  agents 
here  were  Sanderson  &  Sons. 


KILLED  IN  A  COLLISION. 
Denver,  Col.,  March  18.— Patrick 
Casey  and  Hugh  McBride,  age  15  and 
16  years,  respectively,  were  scalded  to 
death  this  morning  in  a  wreck  caused 
by  a  collision  of  engines  on  the  Union 
Pacific,  Denver  &  Gulf  railway  in  this 
city.  Ed  J.  Hayes,  aged  36,  was  so 
badly  burned  that  he  died  in  a  few 
hours.  John  B.  Berndt,  aged  40,  was 
severely  injured.  The  four  were  em- 
ployed in  factories  and  were  riding  to 
the  city  on  an  engine  tender  when  the 
collision  occurred. 


A  LIBERAL  ELECTED. 
Montreal,  Que.,  March  18.— The  elec- 
tion to  the  Canadian  house  of  com- 
mons for  the  county  of  Bonaventure 
has  resulted  in  the  return  of  Francois 
Guite,  the  Liberal  candidate  by  about 
750  majority.  Great  interest  was  mani- 
fested in  the  election  on  account  of  the 
efforts  of  Manager  Blais  to  secure  a 
promise  from  Mr.  Guite  to  vote  against 
Mr.  Laurier's  settlement  of  the  Mani- 
toba school  question,  a  promise  which 
Mr.  Guite  refused  to  make. 


MISSOURI  FLOODS  FEARED. 
Minneapolis,  March  18.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— A  Pierre,  S.  D.,  special 
to  the  Journal  says  that  there  are 
.serious  apprehensions  of  a  flood  in  the 
Missouri  at  that  point.  The  Bad  river 
broke  up  last  night  and  poured  its 
flood  out  onto  the  ice,  which  is  still 
firm  In  the  Missouri.  The  Cheyenne  is 
expected  to  start  today  and  this  will 
probably  gorge  the  Missouii.  Settlers 
on  the  flats  are  moving  out.  At  Canton, 
S.  D.,  the  Sioux  river  is  out  of  its 
banks  and  all  bridges  are  likely  to  go 
out. 


BUT  FOUR  SURVIVE. 

Terrible  Sufferings  of  the  St. 
Nazierre's  Survivors. 

New  York,  March  18.— Out  of  the 
eighty-two  persons  comprising  the  pas- 
sengers and  crew  of  the  steamer  Villc 
De  St.  Nazierre,  which  sailed  from  this 
port  on  March  6  for  Port  Au  Prince, 
Hayti,  but  four  are  known  to  have  sur- 
vived the  disaster  which  befell  the  craft 
about  forty-eight  hours  later.  These 
four  passed  through  an  experience  .such 
as  has  been  fortunately  the  lot  of  few, 
seeing  one  after  another  of  the  thirty - 
one  others  who  left  the  steamer  in  tlie 
large  boat  perish  of  ex|>osure  to  tlie  cold 
or  die  of  hunger  durin-g  the  seven  days 
in  which  they  drifted  helplessly  with<mt 
sail  or  compass,  some  suffering  pangs 
that  drove  them  t<j  madness  before 
death  came  to  their  relief.  Among  the 
survivors  is  Senor  Tagado,  a  San  D«j- 
mingan,  who  was  compelled  to  witness 
the  death  of  his  wife  and  four  children 
without  being  able  to  alleviate  thtir 
sufferings. 

What  became  of  the  forty-four  per- 
sons besides  those  mentioned  above  can 
be  only  too  well  surmized,  although 
there  is  a  remote  possibility  that  one  or 
more  of  the  three  boats  in  which  they 
left  the  sinking  steamer  in  the  midst  of 
a  fierce  March  storm  off  the  always 
perilous  Cape  Hatteras  has  been  picked 
up  by  a  sailing  vessel  which  has  not  yet 
made  port. 


CLAIMS  $600,000  DAMAGES. 
Akron,  O.,  March  18.— Samuel  J. 
Ritchie  today  brought  suit  against 
Judge  Stevenson  Burke,  of  Cleveland, 
and  the  executors  of  the  wills  of  Henry 
B.  Payne  and  Thomas  W.  Cornell  for 
$600,000  damages,  claiming  stock  in 
Canadian  iron  and  copper  mines  he 
gave  them  as  collateral  for  loans  which 
was  depreciated  in  value  •  by  a  con« 
spiracy  of  the  defendants. 


OCEAN   STEAMSHIPS. 
New  York— Arrived :  Teutonic,  Liver- 
pool. 

Philadelphia— Sailed: 
Antwerp. 


Hernlands,    for 


THREE  MURDERED, 

Another  Badly  Hurt  and  the 
Slayer  Dead. 

Wamago,  Kas.,  March  18.— William 
Fees,  a  farmer  living  five  miles  west  of 
here,  blew  out  his  brains,  after  a  mur- 
derous assault  in  which  he  attempted 
to  exterminate  a  whole  family.  Three 
of  his  victims  will  probably  die,  and  a. 
fourth  is  terribly  wounded. 

Fees'  wife  recently  left  him  and  re- 
turned to  the  home  of  her  parents,  Mr. 
and  Mrs.  S.  R.  Johnson.  After  she  had 
positively  refused  to  return  to  him.  Fees 
went  to  the  house,  and,  in  a  terrible 
rage  shot  down  his  wife  and  her  mother 
and  his  sister-in-law.  Miss  Johnson, 
and  his  wife's  father.  None  of  the  three 
women  can  recover,  and  it  is  doubtful 
whether  Mr.  Johnson  will  live.  Fees 
then  returned  to  his  own  home  and 
killed  himself. 


THE  CHESS  CONTEST. 
New  York,  March  18.— The  twelfth 
game  of  the  Pillsbury-Showalter  chesa 
match  was  finished  early  today,  Sho- 
walter  winning  on  his  fifty-eighth 
move.  Score:  Pillsbury,  5;  Showalter 
5;  drawn,  2.  The  thirteenth  game  of 
the  match  will  be  played  tomorrow  at 
the  Hamilton  club. 


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An   Importation   of    Coolies 
From  Japan  Causes  Trou- 
ble In  Honolulu. 


Attempt  to  Be  Made  to  Prove 
a  Violation  of  Immigra- 
tion Laws. 


Japan's  Crown  Prince  Said 

to  Have  Fallen  a  Victim 

to  Smallpox. 


San  Francisco.  March  18.— The  fol- 
lowing advi<es  from  Honolulu  were 
broug-ht  by  the  steamship  Australia: 

Serious  trouble    is    anticipated     here 
over     the     refusal     of     the       customs 
authorities  to  permit  the  landini?  of  r.t'7 
Japanese  lalx^rers  brought  here  recent- 
ly by  the  Kt»be  Immiifration  company's 
steamer     Shinshiu     Alaru.       The     local 
agents  of  the  Japanese  company  have 
been  placed  under  arrest  charsjed  with 
a  vidlation  of  the  immigration  laws  and 
Oapt.    Hishakima.    commander   of     the 
steamer,   has  been     refuseti     clearance 
papers  unless  he   agrees  to   take   back 
to  Japan  the  rejected  immigrants  who 
have   been  detained   at   the  quarantine 
station  since  their  arrival  in  port. 

The  rejected  immigrants  who  have 
been  detained  at  the  quarantine  station 
since  their  arrival  in  port  threaten  open 
revolt  and  they  have  the  sympathy  of 
the  entire  Japanese  population  of  the 
island.  It  has  been  carried  into  the 
courts  and  if  the  Japenese  fail  to  find 
relief  there  they  will  probably  present 
the  case  to  their  consul.  In  case  the 
consul  does  not  interfere,  trouble  is 
sure  to  follow. 

The  customs  authorities  are  sure  that 
they  have  unearthed  a  gigantic  attempt 
to  import  Japanese  into  this  country  in 
violation  of  the  immigration  laws  "and 
they  propose  to  make  it  so  warm  for 
the  schemers  that  they  will  not  dare 
attempt  it  again.  Trie  feeling  runs 
equally  strong  against  the  Anglo-Sax- 
ons of  Honolulu.  There  is  a  diversion 
of  opinion  on  the  part  of  the  present  lot 
of  immigrants  whether  or  not  to  remain 
on  the  islands.  While  the  bulk  of  the 
people  are  not  informed  on  the  law 
touching  immigration  of  Japanese  in 
Hawaii,  either  free  or  contract,  still  the 
belief  is  current  there  is  a  defect  in  the 
statutes. 

The  men  placed  under  arrest  are:  W 
J.  Gallagher.  W.  B.  Humisze.  president 
of  the  Immigration  company.  By  rea- 
son of  their  prominence  both  men  were 
released  on  their  own  recognizance  At 
present   the   affair  stands  in  satu   quo 


A.  man  fears  and 
abhors  the  high- 
wayman who  at 
the  point  of  the 
revolver  robs  him 
of  his  money.  The 
mere  thought  of 
the  ruffian  who 
robs  by  violence 
makes  a  man 
shudder.  There  ta 
a  deadlier  enemy 
,  ,  than  the  highway- 

man that  robs  men  not  onlv  of  their  money, 
but  of  their  ability  to  make  it,  and  of  their 
health  and  life.  And  yet  men  actually  court 
the  advances  of  this  deadlv  enemy.  It3 
name  is  consumption.  Thousands  of  bright 
men  and  women  are  passive  victims  in  its 
clutch.  Its  daily  victims  are  numbered  by 
thousands. 

A  sure  cure  for  this  dread  disease  i.s  found 
m  Dr.  Pierce's  C.olden  Medical  Discovery. 
It  goes  directly  to  the  seat  of  the  trouble. 
It  restores  vigorous  action  to  the  digestive 
organs,  tones  up  the  liver,  and  makes  the 
appetite  good.  It  makes  the  assimilation 
perfect  and  supplies  the  blood  with  the 
elements  that  build  up  healthy  tissue.  It 
acts  upon  the  lungs  driving  out  all  impuri- 
ties  and  disease  germs.  It  soothes  the  shat- 
tered nerves  and  they  resume  their  normal 
function  of  imparting  healthy  activity  to  all 
the  organs  of  the  body.  All  DruggisU  .sell, 
it.    Nothing  else  is  "just  as  good." 

•*'  Dr.  Pierce.  I  am  one  of  your  most  grateful 
patienU."  wntfs  Mrs.  Aiiute  M.  Norman  of 
Equinunk.  Wayne  Co..  Pa.  "I  have  taken 
Golden  Medical  Discovery.'  also  '  Favorite  Pre- 
scription '  and  'Pellets*  with  wonderful  results 
I  am,  as  many  of  my  friends  tell  me,  like  the 
dead  bronifht  to  life.  The  doctors  said  I  had 
consumption  and  death  was  onlv  a  matter  of 
time.  That  was  six  years  ago.  i  concluded  to 
tr>'your  mtdiciue.  I  continued  until  I  had  taken 
nine  txittlcs  of  '  Discovery '  and  several  bottles 
of  •  Pellets.'  I  frot  well  and  have  done 
deal  of  hard  work  since." 


THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD:  THURSDAY.  MARCH 


Its  Sporting  Crowds  oF  Visi- 
tors Have  Nearly  Ail 
Departed. 


Trainer  Wliite  Discourses  on 

the  Proper  Metiiods  of 

Training. 


a  great 


What  more  need  be  said  of  a  book  after 
the  one  statement :     '•6So,ooo  copies  sold  at  i 
I  $1.50  each  ?  "      That  book  was  Dr.  Pierce's 
I  Common  Sense  Medical  Adviser.     In  that  i 
many  homes  it  is  known  as  the  best  medical  l 
I  book  ever  published  in  any  language.    Sev-  ' 
I  eral  chapters  relate  exclusively  to  diseases  i 
I  peculiar  to  women.    There  is  now  ready  an  I 
I  enormous  edition  that  is  absolutely  free. 
This    edition    is    bound    in    heavy  paper! 
Send  twenty-one  one-cent  stamps  to  pay 
cost  of  mailing  only.     If  fine  French  cloth 
binding  is  df'sired,  send  10  cents  extra  Ui 
cents  in  all).     Address,  World's  Dispensary 
Medical  .Association,  Buffalo,  N.  Y 


Hawkins  Beats   Flaherty  In 

One  Round— Green  Bests 

Smith. 


yenrs"  ini!)ri.«onmeiu  for  falsifying  tho 
bunks  record.s.  was  released  vesterdiy  at 
fciioii.x  Falls,  having  completed  bis  ttrin 
Mosher  spent  five  mouths  in  jail  bcf.jre 
coming  to  Sioux  Fulls.  \U'  strved  i.i'tv 
rnonths  heri-.  which,  with  the  good  time 
allowances  made  by  the  federal  st  r- 
utev.  completes  the  sentencf.  He  took 
the  train  for  Omaha,  where  he  goes  to 
an.^wer  several  indictmeiil.s  in  connection 
wiih  the  affairs  of  the  wrecked  bank 
l-rom  there  he  goes  to  Chicago,  wii'-re 
his  brother  is  now  keeping  a  boardlcg 
house  an.t  where  his  wife  is  now  livin;?. 
Mrs.  Mosher  is  now  quite  111.  and  Mosnep 
IS   very   anxious   to  see   her. 

It  rained  all  Tuesthiy  night  and  Wed- 
nes<iay  morning  at  Watertown,  and  .1 
warm  wind  is  blowing  from  the  south- 
east thawing  the  snow  fast.  People  are 
moving  from  the  bottoms  to  avoid  the 
high    water. 


CONDENSED   DISPATCHES. 


pending  the  action  of  the  courts. 


STRICKEN  JAPAN. 

Crown  Prince  Dead--The  News 
Kept  Secret. 

San  Francisco.  March  IS.— Capt.  S.  A. 
Day.  United  States  army,  late  com- 
mandant at  Fort  Mason,  this  city,  and 
more  recently  of  Fort  Calby,  Wash.,  r^?- 
turned  from  a  several  months'  stay  in 
Japan  on  the  steamer  Peru,  and  says 
that  the  crown  prince  of  Japan  is  dead 
and  that  the  sad  event  was  being  fipen- 
ly  discussed  in  diplomatic  circles,  al- 
though at  the  same  time  the  news  was 
a  state  secret  and  was  kept  from  the 
public. 

The  heir  apparent  to  the  Japanese 
throne,  according  to  Capt.  Day,  passed 
away  at  one  of  the  palaces  of  the  royal 
family  between  Yokohama  and  Klo  a 
few  days  before  the  sailing  of  the  Peru, 
but  for  various  reasons  the  fact  has  not 
been  publicly  announced  as  yet.  Japan 
has  Just  recovered  from  a  month  of 
mourning  over  the  death  of  the  em- 
press dowager,  during  which  period 
I'usiness  was  suspended  and  festivities 
of  all  kinds  avoided.  To  inflict  the 
whole  empire  with  another  siege  of 
grief  and  mourning  at  this  time  has 
been  deemed  inadvisable,  and  for  that 
reason,  so  the  story  goes,  the  death  of 
the  crown  prince  is  being  kept  a  secre: 
for  the  time  beinv?. 

Capt.  Day  .said  that  it  was  reported 
in  Yokohama  that  the  death  of  the 
crown  prince  had  completely  prostrated 
the  emperor,  whose  health  has  not  been 
the  best  of  late.  A  rumor  was  curcu- 
lated  that  the  emperor  was  dead,  but 
this  was  quickly  emphatically  denied 
One  rumor  had  it  that  smallpox  had 
broken  out  in  the  emperor's  palace  and 
that  the  queen  dowager  and  the  crown 
prince  had  Iwth  died  from  this  dis- 
ease. 


The  No.-thwos-tern  Miller  gives  the  Hour 
output  at  Minneapolis  as  :»;.760  barrels 
last  week,  against  l'll.:{lo  barrels  for  the 
same  week  a  year  ago  and  170,8«0  bari"ls 
two  years  ago. 

Emperor  Williams  health  is  in  a  se- 
rious condition,  and  it  is  not  a  closed 
oj.inion  that  his  mind  is  a  little  bit  un- 
balanced. 

Brodie  Williams,  the  high  diver,  last 
night  jumped  in  a  ball  oi  fire  from  a 
seventy-live  foot  tower  into  Lake  WorMi 
at  Palm  Beach,  Fla..  and  struck  ihe 
bottom,  breaking  his  nock.  He  died  with- 
in  a   few   hours. 

Ex-Presldent  Harrison  appeared  as 
counsel  in  the  supreme  court  of  fny 
Lnlted  States  yesterday  at  Washington 
in  the  case  of  the  I'ity  Railroad  com- 
pany of  Indianapolis,  v.s.  the  Citizens" 
Kailroad  company,  of  the  same  citv  The 
entire  seating  capacity  of  the  court  room 
was  occupied  by  persons  anxious  to  ne  ir 
the  ex-president  speak,  ex-Secrct;try 
Tracy  and  ex-Attorney  General  Mlll'-r 
two  members  of  the  Harrison  cabinet 
being  .imong  the  auditors. 

Secretary  Sherman  has  called  for  the 
resiKnation  of  Clinton  Furbish  of  tbe 
bureau  ot  American  renubllcs  and  the 
I)lace  IS  to  be  filled  by  the  appointment 
of   Joseph    Smith    of  Ohio. 

The  secretary  of  the  Byron  society  at 
London  has  received  a  telegram  from 
Athens  stating  that  tht*  sultan,  lesir- 
Ing  to  preserve  peace,  has  offered  to 
withdraw  the  Turkish  garrison  from 
Crete  and  to  assign  the  Lsland  to  King 
Oeorge  to  be  occupied  and  administer -ii 
by  Greece. 


Carson.     Xev..     March    IS.— All      the 

special  trains  left  last     night,     taking 

home  the  San     Francisco    crowd     and 

most  of  the  Eastern   people  to     Reno, 

where  they  made  connection  with    this 

I  morning's  train   for  Denver  and  Oma- 

j  ha.     The     regular    trains     north     and 

j  south  this  morning  took  away  the  re- 

I  inaining  visitors— those    from     Nevada 

towns,   and    Carson    has     resumed     its 

normal  condition.    The  majority  of  the 

people  are  glad   that   the   fights     were 

held  here  as  the   visitors  left   a   large 

amount  of  money. 

The  hotels,  boarding  houses,  restau- 
rants, livery  stables  and  gambling 
houses  got  about  all  of  it.  but  the 
storekeepers,  in  addition  to  the  pro- 
fits of  from  the  little  trade  they  had 
will  ultimately  receive  a  large  part  of 
it.  so  they,  too.  are  pleased.  The 
ministers  and  their  congregations  aiv 
the  only  ones  who  feel  any  chagrin 
and  speak  of  the  disgrace  brought  upon 
Carson  by  entertaining  a  lot  of  pugil- 
ists and  their  friends  and  admirers. 
The  fakirs  have  disappeared,  having 
gone  away  with  the  wheel  of  fortune 
but  the  gambling  houses  are  open  us 
usual,  having,  however,  dropped  back 
to  their  customary  games.  The  sports 
from  abroad  patronized  them  night  and 
day,  but  it  is  said,  did  not  take  home 
with  them  much  of  the  capital 

Charley  White  left  for  San  Francisco 
early  this  morning,  taking  with  him 
Corbett's  other  trainers.  Despite  the 
fate  of  his  man.  White  was  congratu- 
lated on  all  sides  for  his  work  in  put- 
ting the  ex-champlon  Into  the  superb 
condition  in  which  he  entered  the  ring. 
White  was  given  free  swing  in  hi.s 
training  and  used  his  own  method  with 
such  success  that  he  has  taken  tirst 
rank  in  his  profession.  "I  consider  it 
of  the  highest  importance."  he  said  in 
explaining  his  system,  '"to  get  an  ac- 
curate opinion  on  the  condition  of  the 
man  before  beginning  work  from  a 
first-class  physician.  Upon  that  opin- 
ion the  training  must  be  based,  the 
work  being  varied  to  suit  the  man.  The 
exercise  must  be  begun  graduallv.  the 
speed  and  weight  of  the  work  'being 
gradually  increased  up  to  within  a 
short  time  before  the  fight. 

"Then  the  different     exercises     must 
be  shifted  dally  .so  that  those  in  which 
he  Is  the  weakest  or  the  slowest  shall 
be  used  at  wide  intervals,  thus  bunch- 
ing the  kind  of  work  in  which  the  man 
shows   the   best     form.     As     the     time 
for  the  contest  draws  near  the  boxing 
should  be  done  at  the  hoiir    at     which 
the  fight  Is  to  occur,  and     great     care 
should   be  taken   in  the  foad  work     to 
prevent  injury  to  the  wind.     In  train- 
ing Corbett.     I     hammered     his     face 
arms  and  breast  ever>-  night  with  small 
bags  containing  a  powdered     prepara- 
tion  which  hardened  the  skin  and   his 
skin  was  not  broken  at  any  place.  Cor- 
bett would  certainly  have  beaten  Fitz- 
simmons  if  he  had  practiced  his  usual 
ring  tactics  and  stayed  away.    In  fight- 
ing that  Is  Fltz's  own  game  and  that 


In\"1eff'  ^'"HH^^^fo^'owed.  Green  got 
,winJ  ^  ""  ^'^**  Stomach  and  a  right 
a  not  one  in  the  ribs. 

Round  5  was  like  all  the  rest  a  sue, 
cession  Of  clinches  and  Jabs  by  Sreen 

Round  6-Smith  went  to  the  floor  a.; 
the  result  of  a  left  bander  in  the  face 

cHn?H     "   ^"^   '°"^   ^«   ^^   ^0"ld   in    the 

ed  on  ci.  '^•"  'Y  '■'';'"•*  ^'^^^l  he  lanS- 
id  on  c.ro.n's  jaw,  but  did  no  damage 

,„J?"""^  ."-Smith  rushed  matters  a  biti 

rouncrur'^r'"'"  ""*"  *h^  ^-"d  "f  the 
rviVh  o  ''!.'"  he  sent  Green's  head  back 
with  a  riKht  swing  on  the  mouth 

Round  s-In  the  wrestle.  Smith  was 
thrown  Green  then  tried  for  a  knock! 
out  with  his  right,  but  missed. 

Hound    !»-(}reen     played     constantly 

bZ.ll?*'""'''"^-  ^"*  ^"'•^h  managed  to 
block  him  every  time. 

Hound  ID-Green  had  It  almost  all  his 
own  way.  binding  a  succe.ssion  of  lefts 
in  the  stomach  and  body  that  badly  de- 
moralized Smith,  who  appealed  to  the 
referee  for  protection. 

Round  11— Green  wanted  to  end  the 
affair  and  rushed  Smith  against  the 
ropes.  Smith  got  his  right  twice  in  on 
ureen  s  ne(  k  and  was  jabbed  in  the 
stomach.  Smith  was  very  tired,  and 
When  the  bell  rang  he  had  gone  to  his 
corner,  his  seconds  threw  up  the  sponge 
and  the  fierht  was  given  to  Green. 


18,    1897. 


CORBETT'S  RELATIVES. 

A  Stricken  Family  Plunged  Into 
Deep  Melancholy. 

San  Francisco,  March  18.— There  was 
deep  gloom  at  the  Corbett  home  on 
Hayes  street  yesterday.  Gentleman 
Jim,  who  is  the  son  of  a  livery  stable 
keeper,  formerly  lived  with  the  family 
over  his  father's  stable  at  518  Hayes 
street.  That  was  before  he  became 
famous.     Yesterday  all  his  sisters    and 

!^!i*T^'"'^  '^""^  ^'^  ^""ts  gathered  ir. 
their  home  and  anxiously  awaited  news 
from  the  tight,  which  came  over  a  spe- 
n  I  VJ'^  ^'''*""  Corbett's  pool  room.  At 
nrst  they  were  hopeful  and  fuil  of 
pectation.      afterward      no 


PAR8HALL  IS  DEAD. 

And  With  Him  Went  the  Solu- 
tion of  a  Mystery. 

Indianapolis.  March  18.— John  Par- 
shall,  aged  65.  of  No.  40,'-)  West  Eleventh 
street,  died  from  heart  disease  today. 
He  leaves  a  widow,  but  no  family.  He 
was  a  carpenter  by  trade  and  an  old 
soldier.  He  was  a  member  of  the  Alex- 
ander expedition  sent  to  Salt  Lake  City 
to  force  Hrigham  Young  to  vacate  his 
office  and  allow  the  successor  whom 
President  Buchanan  had  api)ointed  to 
take  his  seat.  Parshali  was  the  driver 
of  one  of  the  ammunition  wagons,  and 
with  his  own  hands  burst  an  iron  gate 
\vhi<h  was  preventin-g  the  entrance  of 
the  enemy  into  the  Mormon  capital 

He  was  also  one  of  the  men  who  dis- 
posed of  John  Wilkes  Booth,  the  as- 
sassin of  Abraham  Lincoln,  Parshali 
attended  the  performance  at  Ford'-, 
theater,  saw  the  fatal  shot  fired,  and 
was  one  of  the  soldiers  who  pursued 
the  assassin  through  the  wings  to  the 
stage  door.  When  the  murderer  was 
finally  shot  and  taken.  Parshali  was 
one  ot  the  six  men  deputed  to  dispose  of 
his  remains  in  such  a  manner  that  the 
secret  of  thelf  resting  place  should 
never   be   known.        They    were   swoin 

^PiV  ei.u''^'^^}  *h^^''  ^^^•'•^'t.  Parshali 
IS  the  fifth,  so  far  as  known,  and  he  has 
steadfastly  kept  his  oath. 


Contract  Work. 


of   public   works 'l~n  "and    for   the    ^'^"^^  ^^ave  been  d"uly  appointed  hvTh. 


rifv  ^'V^T?',  ^?^^^  of  Public  Works. 

^ii^^.^'  P.^'"th,  Minn,,  March  8.  1897. 
board   of    null.''''"    ^^    received    by    the 
coroori^fnrf  «f '^u  ^?r^^    i"    and    for    th. 
ne^o?«    „?  t»,°f  ^^^  C:ity  of  Duluth,    Mln 
am    'on  fhf'Vf  *^:^  i"  S'*^'**  city  until  10 
ISff:    fnrfhJ^^J^".^  ^"^y  ot  March.   A,   D, 
ollthif.  «i!il„.*^?>"^*'""^tlon  of  tile  or  gran- 

the    year  l^d  L'^^"',j:"r''   '»  ^^^^  ^'tv   for 
coMint    t«    ..1..^    February    28.    1898.    ac- 

fl?e  In  th..  offlV.« 'Af    «"?    speclflcatlon.-i    on 
nie  in  tbe  ojjjpg     f  ^j^j^  board. 

A  certifieil  check  or  a  bond  with  it 
'f.^«t  two  (2)  sureties  in  the  sum  of  flfn^ 
(50)  dollars  must  accomnanv  Jrn^i,*'L3"*^ 


NOTICE. 


.^o"ce  is  hereby  given  that  the  under' 


The 


accompany  each   bid 
said    board    reserves    the    rie-ht    t 
reject  any  and  all  bids.  ^"*   * 

M.  J,   DAVIS, 
President. 


Official: 

(Seal,) 
R.   MURCHISON. 

Clerk    Boanl    of    Public    Works. 
Duluth   Evening   Herald.   March  8  lot 


OLIVER  OPTIC. 

Famous    Story  Writer  is 
His  Death  Bed. 


on 


tiOB 


FOR 


CHICAGO  POSTMASTER. 

Washington  Hesing's  Succes- 
sor is  C.  U.  Gordon. 

Washington.  March  18.— It  is  said  that 
the  resignation  of  Washington  Hesiiig 
as  postmaster  at  Chicago  will  be  ac- 
cepted today,  and  If  so,  it  is  understood 
that  the  name  of  Charles  U.  Gordon, 
who  has  been  agreed  on  as  his  succes- 
sor, will  be  sent  to  the  senate  at  once 
The  nomination  of  William  M.  Osborne, 
of  Massachusetts,  to  be  consul  general 
at  London  probably  will.be  sent  in  to- 
day. 


ex- 
group    of 
mourners  \\as  so  melancholy  as  they 
in  an  upper  room  were  gathered  Jim'.-i 
wife,  mother  and  sisters.  Mrs.  Charles 
King    Mrs.  John  Boyd.     Miss     Corbett 
Miss  Kate  Corbett  and  Miss  and  Master 
C  orbett  and  Jim's  sister-in-law,     Mrs 
Harry  Corbett. 

About  2  o'clock  there  was  not  one  of 
them  who  had  dry  eyes.  Their  faces 
were  swollen  with  weeping,  and  Mrs 
Jim.  who  is  i>retty.  was  almost  unrecog, 
nizable  Not  only  had  their  athletic 
hero  fa  len,  but  the  fortunes  of  the  house 
ot  Corbett  as  well,  f.,r  it  is  aid  that 
Corbett  s  father  put  his  little  all  on  his 
son,  and  has  lost  even  the  livery  stable 
which  has  afforded  the  family  susten- 
ance for  many  years. 

It  was  hard  to  see  any  member  of  thh 
family.     They   had   never  prepared   for 
this  contingency,   and   the  catastrophe 
fell   on   them   as  from   a  clear  sky      It 
had   never  occured   to   them   that   Jim 
could  lose.     .Mrs.  Jim  Corbett.  who  has 
been  taken  into  the  family  circle  and  ia 
known  as  Vera,  said  through  a  fiood  of 
teai^:     "He  is  the  siime  old  Jim  to  me. 
Nothing  can      change      that,"      which 
proves  that  the  fallen  champion  is  still 
the  undefeated  conqueror  of  her  heart 
Mrs.  Corbett  would  not  say  v.-hat  she 
thought   of  Jim's   promise.    She   is   on 
record    as    saying   that    she   knew    Jim 
would  win,  because  he  promised  her  he 
would.    Jims    mother   had    loving    ex- 
planations to  shield  the  boy  from  any 
criticisms,    after  a    way   that    mothers 
have.     "If  Jim   had    trained    longer    it 
would  have  been  all   right,"   she  said, 
"He  thought  he  w^as  in  fine  condition, 
but  he  had  a  very  hard  man  to  fight 
and  I  think  his  theatrical  life  unfitted 
him  for  his  work.     While  we  felt  very 
badly  over  it.  we  ar«  getting  reconciled 
to  It  now.  and  are  feeling  better." 

WINNERS  AND  LOSERS. 

Small  Betters  Won  Generally- 
The  Talent  Dumped. 


Boston.  Mass.,  March  IS.— At  his  home 
in  Dorcester  avenue,  Harrison  square, 
William  T.  Adams,  "Oliver  Optic,"  is 
lying  in  a  critical  condition  from  a  com- 
plication of  troubles,  which,  combined 
with  a  naturally  weak  heart,  has 
brought  about  a  state  from  which  no 
hope  ot  recovery  is  given  by  his  phy- 
sicians. 

Mr.  Adams  reached  home  from  a  trip 
to  Jamaica  three  weeks  ago  Sunday 
and  two  or  three  days  later  became  ill 
It  was  cold  when  he  arrived  here  ami 
the  change  from  the  warm  weather  ex- 
perienced while  away  had  a  resulting 
effect  in  a  severe  cold.  From  this  he 
has  not  rallied.  He  was  in  a  delirious 
slate.  His  daughter,  Mrs.  Sol  Smith 
Hus.sell,  is  with  him,  and  her  husband 
spent  Sunday  at  the  home. 

Mr.  Adam's  age,  which  is  75  years,  is 
one  factor  against  his  recovery. 

PEARL  BRYAN'S  HEAD. 

Newspaper  Promises  to  Tell 
Where  it  Is. 

Cincinnati.  Ohio,  March  IS.— The  En- 
quirer this  morning  announces  that  it 
will  print  in  tomorrow's  issue,  a  full 
confession  of  the  murder  of  Pearl  Bry- 
an, by  Scott  Jackson  and  Alonzo  Wall- 
ing, signed  by  the  murderers,  who  are 
now  awaiting  execution  on  Saturday  It 
also  states  that  it  will  contain  an  ac- 
count of  the  disposal  of  the  unfortu- 
nate girl's  head. 


Liquor  License. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  application 
eo.^n  rr'^  /"'^'•*\  '".  writing  to  the  common 
fnmv'/ffl. '''"''  '"'^y  of  Duluth,  and  nled 
in  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell 
intoxicating  liquors  for  the  term  com- 
niencing  on  March  10,  1897,  and  termimit- 
>l).f  ""  M=»St-h  10  1898.  by  H.  Brown  at  No. 
■Ui  West  SiiiKrlor  street. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
lermlnod  by  said  common  council  of  the 

city  of  Duluth,  at  the  council  chamber  in  I  the'wVst^Hv'V.'n*;  ''V  "'i"'  Parallel  wit! 
said  city  of  Duluth,  in  St.  Louis  Conn-  to  the  rtil^  P""  ""^  ^^'^  ^''^^t-  150  fee: 
M-\r^h 'S''^'tT.,^^^'''J^^',^  "'^^  ~'d  day  of  ^.*''^/J5'^t;:'f:.^'ay.  of  the  Duluth  & 
tti.ircn,  isu/,  at  7:30  o  clock  p.  m.  of  that 

^.''^jitfie.^s  my  hand  and  seal  of  said  cltv 
^oL^"*"'"''   this  9th  day  of  March.  A.   D. 


common  council  of  the  city  of  Dulutl 
nL%^l!!^^'f^^°"^^^  '"  condemnation  pro 
nrlJ.7F  ^"""i^^  purpose  of  Viewing  th.. 
hi^h  f.""".^  assessing  the  damage: 
of  nHvpt/^'^  occasioned  by  the  takin, 
Of  private  property  for  the  purpose  o 
Of  DuluTh  ?„;'«ht-f-^vay  by  the  citj 
works,  from  the  pump  house  now  li 
process  of  erection  on  lot  1.  section  35 
township  51  north,  range  13  west  t^ 
Lester  river.  The  property  to*  b 
acquired  being  as  follows;  to-wit: 

(1)  A  strip  of  land  66  feet  In  width 
the  center  line  of  which  is  described  a- 
follows,  to-wit:  Commencing  on  thi 
northerly  boundary  line  of  a  tract  here 
tofore  deeded  to  the  city  of  Duluth  a- 
a  site  for  a  pumping  station  for  water 
mmh^  on  lot  1,  section  35.  townshfp  5 
north,  range  13  west,  at  a  point  24.23  fee 
easterly    from    the    northwesterly   cor 

northe./v''"'     ''''?.'    P'-^'^^^'^i"^    ^henc.' 
wester  i^,°"   ^   ""^   parallel   with   th. 
deeded  V  ''""'^^'''y  ''"^  «f    said     trac 
tance  of  "L^r  'l^'^PJns  station,   a   dis 
tance  of  566  feet  to  a  point.  _^_^_^ 

the  cente? llL''','^"^  ^  f^«t  in  width 
fonows.  '%o-wi?  ''V'''  '«  described  a> 
nnint  KRR  fl^4.  Commenc  ng    at    j 

erly  line  of  h^r*'^'"'-''  ^'^"^  the  north 
:„  .^,.""?.  "f  the  tract  heretofore  ,1a«h«/ 


to  the  ritv  ,^,f  "fr,.rr^'",*^*^'"^tofore  deede<* 

thenc< 


feet  distant 


1897 


C,  E.  RICHARDSON, 

(Corporate  Seal.)  ^"^  ^•^'■•^•■ 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  9  to  22  Inc 

NOTICE. 


easterly     thereof- 
proceeding  along  said  lin"  ' 


Iron  Range  Railroad  company. 
(3) 


is  where  he  won. 


IN  THE  DAKOTAS. 


NORTH  DAKOTA. 
During    the    session    of    the    legislature  ' 
at  Bismarck  a  large  number  of  bills  were  j 
introduced    amending    the    game    laws    of 
the  state.  So  numerous  were  these  mea';- 
ures   that  a  special  joint   committee   was 
in)polnted    to    draft    a    substitute    for    all 
measures    pending.     The    bill    offered    by 
this   committee    which     pa.ssed     and     has 
bef  n  approved,  makrs  very  few  changes 
and  those  are  of  minor  importance.  I'nder 
the    new     law     the    .reason    for    shootMiir 
prairie  chickens  will  cpen  Aug.  2ij  in.stead 
of  St-pt.  1    as  heretiifore,  a.«.al.so  will  the 
sea.son    for   hunting      ducks   and       geese 
Kuffalo.    moose,   elk.   deer,    antelope,   cari- 
bou or  mountain  sheep  mav  be  killed  be- 
tween Oct  15  and  Dec.  l.i.  Killing  of  ouall 
Knpbsh    and    Chinese    pheasants    is    pro- 
hibitwl    until    19f)«.    and    beaver   and    otter 
cannot    be    trapped    or   killed    before    ijuS 
Shipment  of  game   from   the  state  is  ah- 
.'^olutely    prohibited.     The   license    fee    for 
resident   hunters  is  73  cents  and  for  non- 
residents.  $23.    af?    heretofore.     There    was 
a    strong   sentiment   among   the   members  ' 
of    the    legislature    that    the    lic^-nse    ice 
for  non-resident  hunters  is  altogether  too 
h'gh.  and  that  it  should  he  reduced  to  $10 
but    In    yie   excitement   of   closing     hours 
of    the    ses.slon    this    matter    was    over- 
looked.     A    large       number    of    wealthy 
.sportsmen    from    all    parts    of    the    iiast 
spend    their    vacations     hunting    in     the 
state,    and    In    many    instances    have    be- 
come   so    favorably    impres.sed    with    Jie 
country   that   they   have   made   heavy   in- 
vestments.    A  Chicago  party  made  a  trip 
to   the   state   last   fall   hunting   ducks   and 

the  little  village  of  Daw.son.   as  a  result 
North    Dakota    cannot    afford     by    legis- 
lation of  this  character,   to  prevent  caul- 
tal  from  coming  to  the  state. 

A  thaw  has  been  on  for  twenty-four 
hours  at  Dickinson  and  the  stockmen  are 
rejoicing  for  many  of  them  had  no  feed 
for  their  stock  and  could  not  graze  on 
account  of  deep  snow.  The  first  fifteen 
days  of  this  month  were  intenselv  tryinjr 
to  the  stock  Interests,  causing  a  consid- 
erable loss. 


DARING  ROBBERY. 

Steals  a  Tray  of  Diamond  Rings 
In  Broad  Daylight. 

Spokane.  Wash..  March  18.— The  most 
daring  robbery  ever  committed  in  this 
city,  took  place  last  evening  when  a 
tray  containing  about  J3500  worth  of 
diamond  rings  was  stolen  from  the 
jewelery  store  of  I.  Dornberg.  situated 
on  a  popular  thoroughfare  and  at  a 
time  when  the  sidewalks  were  lined 
with  pedestrians.  A  well  dressed  man 
entered  tbe  store  and  asked  to  be  shown 
some  diamond  rings. 

Max  Goldstein,  a  clerk,   who  was   in 
charge     of     the     store     at     the     time 
brought  out  a  tray  of  diamond   riags 
from  the  safe.     As  he  placed  the  tray 
on  the  show  case  he  was  blinded  by  a 
handful  of  potvder  thrown  into  his  face   i 
The  robber  grabbed   his  tray  of  rings  I 
and  hurried  out  and  despite  Goldstein's  i 
cries,  escaped  with  his  booty. 


THE  milNOR  FIGHTS. 

Hawkins  Beats  Flaherty  and 
Green  Wins  From  Smith. 

Carson.  March  is.— The  Flaherty- 
Hawkins  fight,  the  first  of  the  two 
minor  contests  of  yesterday,  was  set  for 
3  o'clock,  but  it  was  4  before  the  men  en- 
tered  the  ring.  At  that  time  there  were 
about  laOO  persons  present.  Both  men 
weighed  125  pounds.  The  fight  was  soon 
over.  There  was  one  exchange  of 
blows,  a  clinch  and  a  knockout,  Flah- 
erty going  down  as  though  he  had  been  i 
shot  It  was  all  over  in  one  minute  ' 
and  four  seconds.  The  ofl^cial  timer 
gave  the  time  as  ^our  seconds,  but  in 
his  excitement  he  knocked  off  a  minute 
.\t  the  call  of  time,  Hawkins  lost  no 
time  In  going  at  his  man.  He  swung 
his  left  hard  on  Flaherty's  jaw  and  the 
latter  countered  on  the  body.  Then 
they  clinched  hanging  on  to  each  other 
for  a  few  seconds.  After  the  breaks 
away,  Hawkins  landed  a  right  swing 
on  Flaherty's  jaw  and  followed  the 
same  in  an  instant  with  a  left  swing  on 
the  same  place.  Flaherty  fell  over 
backward,  his  head  strikiijg  the  floor 
with  great  force.  He  lay  perfectly  still 
and  was  counted  out.  Then  his  seconds 
carried  him  from  the  ring. 

The  fight  between  "Mysterious" 
Billy  Smith  and  George  Green,  welter- 
welght.s,  followed  immediately.  Smith 
had  the  worst  of  it  until  the  end  of  the  j 
eleventh  round,  when  he  gave  up  the 
fight,  saying  that  his  arm  had 
broken  in   the  fourth   round 


San  Francisco,  March  18.-^At  a  con< 
servative  estimate  $125,000  was  bet  on 
the  three  fights  in  the  local  pool  rooms. 
The  money  was  wog  principally  by  the 
small  betters,  the  talent,  as  a  rule,  be- 
ing on  the  wrong  side.  The  larger  part 
of  the  money  wagered  was  placed  at 
Corbett's  pool  •rooms. 

Among  th,^  big  winners  was  Maj. 
Frank  McLaughlin,  who  is  said  to  have 
cleared  up  something  like  $20,000  off 
the  victory  of  Fitz.  He  has  been  an 
ardent  supporter  of  the  Cornishman 
ever  since  he  came  to  America,  and 
has,  on  several  occasions,  furnished  the 
backing  for  the  red  headed  fighter 

The  second  biggest  winner  on  the 
fight  in  San  Francisco  is  Adolph  Spreck- 
les.  It  is  reported  that  he  won  ovct- 
$12,000.  Riley  Grannan  made  a  good 
clean-up,  as  he  went  to  Carson  espe- 
cially to  back  Fitz  and  Hawkins,  but  Ed 
Purser,  th^  horseman,  missed  it  by  go- 
ing to  the  fight.  He  backed  Corbett 
while  his  colt,  Rey  Del  TIerra,  practi- 
cally unbacked,  won  at  t^e  Oakland 
track  at  50  to  1, 


rp,,  IJUCKLEN'S  ARNICA  SALVE. 
The   best   salve   in    the   world   for   Cuts 
Bruises    Sores.  Ulcers.  Salt  Rheum,  Fever 

rnrtf-  P^'^^iS^.^PP^^  «^"d9.  Chilblains, 
Corns  and  all  Skin  Eruptions,  and  posi- 
tively cures  Piles,  or  no  pay  required.   It 

or^"nn?^"l^^  to  give  perfect  satisfaction 
or  money  refunded.  Prlc«  25  cents  per  box 
For  sale  by  Duluth  Drug  company. 

COREAN  THRONE  TROUBLES. 
San  Francisco,  March  18.— Prince  Eui 
\V  ha,  who  is  expected  to  succeed  to  the 
throne  of  Coiea  upon  the  death  of  hi-- 
father,  the  reigning  king,  is  at  present 
restrained  of  his  liberty  by  a  band  of 
Corean  exiles  in  Yokohama,  with  the 
full  knowledge  and  consent  of  the  Ja- 
panese authorities.  Such  is  the  infor- 
mation that  was  brought  from  th" 
Orient  by  the  steamer  Peru,  and  froin 
the  same  source  comes  the  informali.tn 
that  the  Coreans  In  question  are  plan- 
ning a  raid  into  Corea  for  the  purpo.si 
of  dethroning  the  king  and  placing  thtir 
princely  prisoner  and  protege  on  the 
throne. 

That  such  a  scheme  is  on  foot  and  is 
receiving  the  moral  support  of  the  gov- 
ernment is  vouched  for  by  a  returned 
missionary  from  the  Orient,  Rev.  J.  s 
Gale,  who  arrived  on  the  Peru  after 
spending  nine  years  in  Corea  and  a  year 
in  Janan. 


Ofllce  of  City  Clerk, 

Duluth,  Minn..  March  6,  1897. 
Notice  is  hereby  given  that  an  assess- 
ment of  damages  made  by  the  commis. 
sioners  in  condemnation  proceedings 
for  obtaining  a  rlght-of-wav  for  public 
thoroughfares  as  shown  by  the  plat  of 
the  same  on  file  in  the  office  of  the  city 
clerk  has  been  returned,  and  the  same 
will  he  confirmed  by  the  common  coun- 
cil  of  said  city  at  a  meeting  of  said 
common   council,   to   be     held     at     the 

oo'*"h"''o,  :?^^'",''?'''  °"  Monday.  March 
22nd.  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m..  unless  objec- 
tions are  made  in  writing  by  persons  in- 
terested in  any  lands  required  to  be 
taken. 

Following  is  a  list  of  the  property  pro- 
Pf'sed  to  be  so  taken,  with  the  names 
Of  the  supposed  owners  and  the  amount 
of  damage  awarded  for  the  taking  of 
same: 

Charles  A.  Homer,  James  A.  Gary 
Julian  J  Chisholm.  For  the  taking  of 
1.34o  acres  in  the  nei/4  of  the  se%  of  the 

,"0  r^,^"?  *^^  ^^^^*  of  "'^^  of  section 
13-50-14,  being  a  strip  of  land  66  feet  in 
width  extending  from  First  street  in 
Gordon  &  Whiting's  addition  to  First 
street,  in  East  Duluth  and  First  addi- 
tion to  East  Duluth.    Damages,  $1. 

Same.  For  the  taking  of  2.02  acres 
m  the  nei/i  of  the  nw%  of  section  13-50- 
14,  being  a  strip  of  land  66  feet  in  width 
the  center  line  of  which  is  described 
as  follows,  to-wit:  Beginning  at  a 
point  on  the  northerly  line  of  section 
13-50-14.  at  the  distance  of  289.8  feet 
westerly  from  the  north  quarter  corner 
of  said  section  13.  thence  extending 
southwesterly  on  a  line  making  an 
angle  of  47  degrees,  57  minutes,  39  sec- 
onds, to  the  left  of  the  aforesaid  north- 
?rl?f  J*"^  of  section  13,  a  distance  ot 
1412.09  feet  to  a  point,  the  above  de- 
scribed center  line  being  at  right  angles 
with  the  line  of  Thirty-fourth  avenue 
east,  as  platted,  (formerly  St.  Clair  ave. 
nue)  in  First  addition  to  East  Duluth 
Damages,  $1.50. 


*u».  ^  ®*'''P  of  land  16  feet  in  width 
thb  center  line  of  which  is  described  ^ 
follows  to-wit.  Beginning  at  a  point 
'1^  feet  northerly  from  the  northeHx 
eTerr^ed'Tonr,  "^  »»?' ^'•^^^^   '^"^^'of' 

city  of  Duhffh^r'"^  ^^^"^  ^^"-^^^  to  th, 
cjiy  or  uuluth  for  a  pumpins'  statior 

and  measured  on  a  line  parallel  w|?f 
the  prolonged  westerly  boundarv  lim 
of  said  tract,  and  24.23  feet  d'lstani 
easterly  thereof;  thence  proceeding  ?,! 
the  same  direction  and  parallel  with 
the  westerly  boundary  line  of  said  be. 
Set't'^rS'  ^'■^^'-  ^  '^'^^-^  Of  ?S( 
(4)    A  sti-ip  of  land  16  feet  in  width 

Snow^*^";  ""^..^^  ^'^'^^  '«  described  a^ 
follows,     to-wit:      Commencing      at    r 

;TA.V.";'^^""/_"'l'-'y  "oundao'  line  o', 


the  Duluth  &  Iron  RangeTai.Voa^l  ght 
of- way  on  a  line  parallel  with  the  pro 
onged  westerly  boundarv  line  of. 
n,'!r.nK^'^^°^°':*'  '^«^<?ded  to  the  city  oi 
Duluth  as  a  site  for  the  pumping  sta 
eHv  r'^  -t-^  ^^'^^  easterly  of  saidVesl 
erly  boundarr  line;  thence  proceeding 
in  the  same  direction  and  parallel  with 
the  westerly  boundary  line  of  sa  J 
tract,  a  distance  of  120.34  feet  to  a  point 
Thence  by  a  curve  to  the  left  with  a 
radius  of  7.5.3  feet  to  its  point  of  inter 


a 
inter- 
westerly  boundary 
on   35,    township   51 


(5)    A 


strip  of  land  80  feet  In  width 

rSn'f ''    ^'°"\  ^"'^    P^*^'"^'    With    the 
nght-of-way  of    the    Duluth    &    iron 

Range  Railroad  company,     the    center 

Ime  (if  which  strip  is  240  feet  northerly' 

from  and  parallel  with  the  center  line 

Of  said  railroad  right-of-way;  .said  strit 

extending  from  the  northerly    to     thf 

nw'/^ofM,*"^^  ?;  '*2'^  ^  ^"^  <'  ^"'l  the 
nwli  of  the  SW14  of  section  34-51-13. 

(6)    A   strip  of  land     80     feet     wide 
northeriy  from  and  parallel    with     the 

Dulffh  rr*"'  *^^  right-oif-way  of  the 
Duluth  &  Iron  Range     Railway    com/ 

Sy- Z^*"  ?u"*f''  ""^  of  which  "strip  1« 
240  feet  northerly  from  and  parallel  with 
the  center  line  of  said  railroad  right-of- 
way,  said  strip  extending  from  the  east- 
erly to  the  southerly  lines  of  the  se%  ol 
the  sey*  of  section  33.  township  51  north 
range  13  west.  "o'm, 


Hogan,  of  Chicago,  was  referee,  and  he 
had  his  hands  full.  The  men  clinched 
repeatedly  and  were  loath  to  break- 
away. Smith  devoted  most  of  his  at- 
tention to  infighting,  and  in  the  clinch- 
es would  get  Green  around  the  neck  a«id 
with  his  right  arm  free,  play  a  tatoo  on 
the  San  Francisco  boy's  ribs.  Green 
constantly  Jabbed   with   his     left     and 


CORBETT  AT  SAN  FRANCISCO. 

San  Francisco,  March  18.— Pompa- 
dour Jim  Corbett,  vanquished  but 
hopeful  of  another  chance  at  the  Cor- 
nishman, arrived  in  this  city  at  930 
last  night  after  a  flying  journey  from 
the  scene  of  his  defeat.  He  left  the 
prize  fight  city  at  2:33,  and  came  right 
through  without  a  stop.  He  was  met 
by  a  large  crowd  of  people  at  the  fer- 
ry. As  he  stepped  from  the  gang  plank 
it  was  noticed  that  he  was  dejected 
and  appeared  moody  and  morose. 

The  only  outward  sign  that   he  had 
been  in  a  fight,  however,  was  the  swol- 
len condition  of  his  left  cheek  and  tem- 
pie.     He  did  not  say  much  of  his  de- 
been  1  f^at,  except  that  it  was  a  chance  blow, 
Malachy  |  that  deprived  him  of  the  championship 


FAVORS  ARCHBISHOP  IRELAND. 
St.  Cloud,  Minn.,  March  IS.— Receiver 
O.  F.  Macdonald  and  Register  Theodore 
Bruener  of  the  United  States  land  oflice 
have  promulgated  the  most  important 
decision  that  has  ever  been  issued  from 
this  office  by  granting  the  application 
of  John  Ireland  to  i)urchase  certain 
lands  situated  in  Traverse  county,  as 
provided  Ity  section  5  of  the  act  of 
March  3,  1887.  The  application  involved 
about  24.000  acres  lying  in  Traverse 
county,  within  what  is  known  as  the  in- 
demnity belt  of  the  main  line  of  th( 
St.  Paul,  Minneapolis  &  Manitoba  rail- 
road. 


A  CHILD  MURDERER. 
Sedalia,  Mo..  March  18.— Mary  Ar- 
nold, colored.  and  her  10-year-old 
daughter.  Geneva,  are  under  arrest 
charged  with  murdering  an  illegitimate 
son  of  Mrs.  Arnold,  aged  1  year.  Ac- 
cording to  the  child's  story  the  mother 
left  home  yesterday  morning,  promis- 
ing to  give  her  $5  if  she  would  kill  the 
baby  before  her  mother's  return.  The 
girl  has  confessed  that  she  beat  and 
kicked  the  baby  to  death. 


going 


CATARRH 


SUOTH  DAKOTA. 
Charles    W.    Moaher,    ex-presldent    and 
wrecker  of  the  Capitol  National  bank  of 
i^incoln,  Neb.,  who  was  sentenced  to  five 


A  LOCAL 

DISEASE 
A  OLIHATIO 

AFFECTION. 

Nothing  hot  a  In<>i%l 
rpm">dy  or  clian^n  of 
climate  will  core  it. 
6*>t;  a  well-known 
pharmaeeatieal 
remerty, 

Elf's  Cream  Balm 

It  ia  qniekly  ab^orbfld 

Gives  reli  -f  at  onc^. 

Od'-ub  and  clean  as 

♦  h^  na»al  oanva^iM.       ^%^»,  ^^7— 

HeaU  and  protects  the  V^UU  '"l 
membrane.    Reatoree  the  Mn»e*  of  taB*e  and 
?^  "•  Jr<>.  cocaine,  no  merenry,  do  icJarioD* 

S  by  mall"  ""'^•*'**^""  '^'  "»  ^'^»«»»"« 

-   ELY  BBOTHEBS,  M  Wamm  St.,  New  York. 


HOMESEEKERS'    EXCURSIONS. 
Homeseekers*   excursion     tickets     at 
half  fare  to  all  poiDts  In  -the  South, 
Southeast  and  Southwest  via  the  Min- 
neapolis &  St.  Louis  railroad.  Tickets  on  -    -        —    „. 

sale  Feb.  2  and  16,  March  2  and  16,  April  l  ^oon  had  Smith's  nose  and  mouth  in  a 
2  and  20,  an5d  May  4  and  18.  good  for    P"'Py  Condition. 

twenty-onedaya^  It  was    noticeable    that     Smith     re- 

frained from  using  his  left  arm.  which 
had  been  broken  three  months  ago.  and 
he  could  only  land  an  occasional  right 
swing. 

Round  1— The  men  clinched  immedi- 
ately and  Smith  b^gan  his  work  on 
Greens  ribs.  On  the  breakaway  Green 
punched  Smith  in  the  stomach.  There 
was  another  clinch  and  both  got  in 
blows  on  the  body. 

Round  2— Smith  swung  his  right  In- 
effectually and  clinched.  Green  jabbed 
him  in  the  mouth  with  his  left.  An- 
other clinch  and  Green  jabbed  again 
with  his  left,  causing  Smith's  mouth  to 
bleed. 

Round  3— Green  played  alternately  for 
Smith's  nose  and  stomach,  landinp 
neariy  every  time.  In  a  wrestliuR 
match  Green  was  thrown  and  remained 
down  three  seconds.  As  the  round 
closed.  Green  got  in  two  more  jabs  with 
his  left. 

Round  4— Smith  rushed  at  Green  and 


and  that  he  had  Fitzsimmons  , 
when  the  terrible  blow  was  struck.  He 
wanted  it  distinctly  stated  that  he  was 
conscious  at  all  times  and  that  the  in- 
tense pain  caused  by  the  blow  drove 
everything  else  out  of  his  mind.  He 
says  he  will  force  Fitzsimmons  to  fight 
again  and  Intimated  he  would  follow 
the  champion  from  town  to  town  to 
bring  about  another  battle. 

Jim  was  very  anxious  to  know  how 
the  news  of  his  defeat  was  received  in 
this  city  and  seemed  pleased  when  he 
heard  that  the  majority  of  the  people 
were  sorry  for  him, 

"I  will  get  another  chance,  son)e  day," 
he  said,  "and  then  I  will  win." 

FREE  STOP-OVER  AT  WASHING- 
TON. 
On  all  through  tickets  between  the 
East.  West.  North  and  South,  reading 
via  Baltimore  &  Ohio  railroad,  a  stop- 
over at  Washington  can  be  secured, 
without  extra  charge  for  railroad  fare, 
by  depositing  the  ticket,  upon  arrival 
at  Washington,  with  the  B,  &  O,  station 
ticket  agent  at  that  point.  Washing- 
ton is  always  attractive  to  visitors,  and 
particularly  so  while  congress  is  in  ses- 
sion. This  arrangement  for  stop-over 
privilege  will  doubtless  be  appreciated 
by  the  public,  and  will  bring  to  the  na- 
tional capital  many  travelers  to  view 
Its  superb  public  buildings,  monuments, 
museums  and  thoroughfares. 


OLDEST  MAN  DEAD. 
Los  Angeles,  Cal.,  March  IS.— Ignacio 
Francisco  De  La  Cruz  Garcia,  who  was 
said  to  be  the  oldest  man  in  the  United 
States,  died  here  yesterday,  aged  117. 
He  was  a  native  of  Sinaloa,  Mexico,  but 
came  here  when  he  was  25  years  of  age. 
His  age  has  been  questioned,  but  he  had 
documents  which  sustained  his  claim, 

NEW  MEXICO'S   ENTERPRISE, 
Santa  Fe,  N.  M.,  March  18.— The  as- 
sembly has  voted  to  appropriate    $1430 
each  for  the  Omaha  and  Tennessee  ex- 
positions. 


William  Howell's  estate".  For  the 
taking  of  0.2  acres  from  the  sw^i  of  sec- 
tion 12-50-14,  being  a  strip  of  land  the 
center  line  of  which  is  described  as  fol- 
lows, to-wit:  Beginning  at  a  point  on 
the  southerly  line  of  section  12  afore- 
said, at  the  distance  of  289.8  feet  west- 
erly from  the  south  quarter  corner  of 
said  section  12.  thence  extending  north- 
easterly on  a  line  making  an  angle  of 
132  degrees.  02  minutes.  21  seconds,  to 
the  right  of  the  aforesaid  southerlv  line 
of  section  12—135.81  feet  to  a  point  the 
above  described  center  line  being  at 
right  angles  with  the  line  of  Thirty- 
fourth  avenue  east  (formerly  St.  Clair 
avenue)  as  platted  in  First  addition  to 
East  Duluth.    Damages,  $0.50. 

East  Duluth  Land  company.  For  the 
taking  of  lots  2,  3,  4  and  5,  block  4,  in 
the  plat  of  First  addition  to  East  Du- 

lu*^'  ^-^^°J^'''"^    to    the    recorded    plat    ^^'erk  of  said  city  of  Duluth;  and  that 
thereof     Damages.    $0.50.  ,  the  undersigned  as  such  commissioner- 

t^harles  A.  Homer,  James  A.  Gary,  |  " '"  meet  at  the  oflice  of  the  city  clerk 
Julian  J.  Chisholm,  For  the  taking  of  1  •"  the  city  hall,  in  said  city  of  Duluth 
1.23  acres  from  the  nei4  of  the  nw%  of  |  «"  the  24th  day  of  March,  at  10  o'clock 
section  13-50-14,  being  a  strip  of  land  '  >"  the  forenoon  of  said  dav,  and  thence 
66  feet  in  width,  the  center  line  of|P''oceed  to  view  said  premises  and  to 
which  IS  described  as  follows,  to-wit:  hear  any  evidence  or  proof  by  the  par- 
Beginning  at  a  point  on  the  easterlv !  ties  interested,  and  when  their  view 
io"fn"  ^^^  "^^  of  the  nwi4  of  section  !  and  hearing  shall  be  concluded  to  de- 
ld-50-14.  where  it  is  intersected  by  the ,  termine  and  assess  the  amount  of  dam- 
dlvidmg  line  between  lots  2  and  3.  block  i  ages  to  be  paid  to  the  owner  or  owners 
4,  First  addition  to  East  Duluth.  thence  of  each  parcel  of  property  propo<!ed  to 
extending  northwesterly    on    the    pro-  '  be  taken  for  the  purposes  aforesaid    op 


r^^lL  \  ^^S'P  "*'  '^"d  80  feet  in  width 
northerly   from   and   parallel   with   the" 
fot".!^!;  ''Z  the  right-of-way  of  the  Du- 
luth &  Iron   Range  Railway  company, 
the  center  line  of  which     is     240    feet 
northeriy   from   and   parallel   with   the 
center  of  line  of  said  railroad  right-of- 
way    said   strip   extending     from     the 
northeriy  line  of  section  4.  township  50 
north,    range   13   west,   to   the  easterly 
boundary  line  of  Lester  Park.   Fourth 
division,  according  to  the  recorded  plar 
thereof  on  file  In  the  oflice  of  the  regis- 
ter of  deeds  in  and  for  the  county  of  St 
Louis,  state  of  Minnesota. 

That  the  undersigned  have  duly  qual- 
ined  as  such  commissioners,  and  have 
entered  upon  the  discharge  of  their 
duties  as  such;  that  the  undersigned  as 
such  commissioners  have  caused  a  sur- 
yey  and  plat  of  the  property  proposed 
to  be  acquired  for  .said  purpose  of 
rights-of-way.  or  which  may  be  di- 
rectly or  indirectly  affected  thereby  to 
be  made  by  the  city  engineer  of  the  city 
of  Duluth.  showing  the  lands  or  parcels 
of  property  required  to  be  taken  for 
said  purposes  as  aforesaid,  or  which 
may  be  damaged  thereby,  and  have 
caused  said  plat  to  be  filed     with     the 


MOTHER! 


Icngation  of  the  dividing  line  between 
lots  2  and  3  aforesaid  814.68  feet  to 
a  point,  being  a  prolongation 
of  the  center  line  of  Thirty- 
third  avenue  east  (formerly  Mackinac 
avenue)  in  the  plat  of  East  Duluth. 
Damages,  $1.00. 

Same.    For  the   taking  of  0.65  acres 
from  the  ne%  of  nwi,4  of  section  13-50- 
14,  being  an  extension  from  the  westerly 
line  of  First  additon  to  East  Duluth  to 
the  northerly  line  of  said  section  13.  of  1 
Thirty-fourth    avenue    east    (formerly ' 
St.  Clair  avenue)  as  platted  in  the  plat  ' 
of  East  Duluth.    Damages,  $1.00.  , 

William  Howell's  estalte.  For  the ! 
taking  of  4.215  acres  from  the  sw%  of  | 
SW14  of  section  12-50-14,  being  a  strip  I 
of  land  66  feet  in  width,  the  center  line  I 
of  which  is  described  as  follows,  to- 
wit:  Beginning  at  a  point  on  the' 
southerly  line  of  section  12  aforesaid,  at  i 
of    360.19    feet     westerly  ' 


which  may  be  affected  thereby. 

FRANK  P.  TIMS.  ! 

LOUIS    K.   DAUGHERTT. 
D.  W.  SCOTT, 

Commissioners. 
Duluth,  Minn.,  March  10,  1897.  1 

Duluth  Evening  Herald.  March  11  lot. 


Contract  Work. 


look  forward  without  dread  or  gloomy 
forebodings  to  the  hour  when  she  ex- 
periences the  the  joy  of  Motherhood. 
Its  use  insures  safety  to  the  lives  of 
both  Mother  and  Child,  and  she  is  left 
stronger  after  than  before  confinement. 

Sent  by  Mail,  on  receipt  of  price,  fl.OO  per  bot- 
tle. Book  to  "  Expectant  Mothers  "  will  be  mail- 
ed  free  on  request,  to  any  lady,  containini:;  val- 
oable  iuformatlon  and  voluntarjr  testimonials, 

Tke  Bradfleld  Hefsktor  Co.,  Atlaata,  Gi. 

•OLD  BY  ALL  ORUGQItTS. 


Office  of  Board   of  Public   Works 
I     City  of  Duluth,  Minn..  March  8,  S] 
j     Sealed    bids    will    be    received    by-  th« 
board    of    public    works    In    and    for    thi 
corporation   of  the  Citv  of  Duluth     Mint 
nesota,  at  their  oflice  In  said  city  tintll  10 
V"'r°"  the  22nd  day  of  March    AD 
m,    for       furnishing       and       lavine    in 
trenches    on    the    line    of    Grand 


The  sweetest 
and  the  most 
expressive 
word  in  the 
English  language  and  the  one  about 
which  the  most  tender  and  holy  recol- 
lections cluster  is  that  of  Mother— she  I  the  distance 

who  watched  our  tender  years;  yet  the  I  ^''om  the  south  quarter  comer  of  sec- 
life  of  every  Expectant  Mother  is  beset '  t'o"  12;  thence    extending    northwest- 
With        ■■■■  ■        ma  ml  ^^'^  on  a  line  making  an  angle  of  42 

ereat      MAthlll''A    LriAllnr'®^'"*'^*'''  ^^  minutes,  21  seconds,  to  the 
ff^L,  IfilllllHI    A   rriKllll    '^'^^t  of  the  aforesaid  south  line  of  sec- 
danger  If  I U  III  Ul     U    I   I  lUllll  I  tion  12-1964.75  feet  to  a  point,  being  the'  _.,„--••    j;.^    »...-    ui    urana    avenue 
so  assists  Nature  in  the  change  taking    point  of  intersection  of  the  prolonga     tv-th  rd      !>,.^l!*'  ^'"O'"  the  center  of  six- 
place  that  the  Mother  is   enabled  to  I  < 'on  of  the  center  line  of  Thirty-fourth  :  street  and  theSce  j,io^n*^*r-o.!,'{  Cambridge 

avenue  east  (formeriy  St.  Clair  avenue)    to    the    center    line    of    v^i^'lt^^J^''''''^ 
as  platted  in  First  addition  to  East  Du-  !  east,    about   11,600   lineal    feet   of   10 'inch 
luth.  with  the  prolongation  easterly  of '  <^ast  iron  water  pipe  and  appurtenances 
the   center  line   of   Victoria   street,    as  :  mf  °i!l  ..?  'o„Plans  and  specifications  on 
platted  in  the  plat  of  Glen  Avon,  First  1      »    -J?,^  0.'*'^?  «?  said  board 
division;  thence  extending  westerly  on 
the  prolongation ^of  the  center  line  of 
Victoria  street  aroresald.     817.29     feet, 
more  or  less,  to  the  westerly  line  of  sec- 
tion 12  aforesaid.    Damages.  $3.00. 
C.  E.  RICHARDSON, 
City  Clerk. 
(Corporate  Seal.) 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  t  tr 
19  inclusive. 


on 


A    certified    check    or   a    bond    with    at 
i^n',,^'^^^2>.^"''^tles  m  the  sum  of  fiN 

pany  ea^h'bld.^^^^  *'*'"'""^  """"^  ''^^°"»- 
■The    said    board    reserves    the    right    to 

reject  any  and  all  bids. 

M.  J,   DAVIS, 

Official:  President. 

(Seal.) 

R.   MURCHISON, 
Cl^k    Board   of   Public   -Vtrorks. 

Duluth  Evening  Herald.  March  8  lOt 


• 


•m^-m^umm^'-^^t 


" 


+■ 


! 


I  aia 


>*■■  » 


m 


r^= 


- 

1 . 

/• 

n        mm< 


1 


i 


E 


^•Wi 


■     ■    !■      I    ■  '    f 


WEST  END 


Rainy  Lake   Gold   Develop- 
ments Are  Interesting  West 
Duluth  People. 


W.    S.   Kilton   Has  Several 

Properties  That   Make 

Good  Showings. 


United  Workmen  Surprised 

By  a  Large  Party  of 

Lady  Friends. 


21  0 

15  & 

8  «4> 

12  @ 


22 

16 

9 

13 


11^4® 

12»4 

11    © 

12 

12    ® 

12% 

10 

9    & 

10 

6 

12%® 
9    li) 


13 
11 


12^®     13 


12^6 
lUi® 
11    ^ 
11    U 


12 

livj 

iiy* 


There  are  quite  a  number  of  people 
in  the  West  End  who  are  showing  great 
interest    in    the   gold   developments     in 
the   Rainy    Lalte  and    Seine   river   dis- 
tricts and  sevei-al  of  them  have  exten- 
sive intert-sts  there.     \V.  S.   Kilton  has 
made  several   trips  into     the     country 
and  owns  several  properties  in  the  vi- 
cinity of  Aline  Center  that   has  shown 
excellent  surface  indications.     It     was 
rumored   on   the  streets   today   that   he 
had  sold  one  prospect  for  a  good  round 
sum.     In  an  interview  with  an  Evening 
Herald  reporter  he  said  that  he  had  ef- 
fected a  sale  to  Michigan   parties,    but 
was  not   ready  to  name   the  purchaser 
or  the  consideration.     He  has     had     a 
number  of  assays  made  of  surface  rock 
taken   from   his   land   and    they     have  j 
shown  gold  ranging  from  $7  to  the  ton  j 
upwards.     The  average  of  all     assays,  i 
not  including  some  choice  specimens  in  | 
which  there  was  considerable  free  gold 
and  which  ran   well  up  into  the  thou-  I 
sands,  was  $22.50  a  ton.     Mr.  Kilton  will  ! 
leave  for  Mine  Center  next  Monday  in 
company     with  John     Culbertson.     He 
says  that  a  party  of  about  twenty-five 
will  leave  Duluth  for  tUe  gold  fields  on 
that   day.      E.    B.    Beebe.   of   the   North 
American  Telegraph  company,     is     in- 


11 
10 
90    (§  100 


THE  PRODUCE  MARKET. 

Michigan   street   Is   livening   up   greatly 
nowadays,  but  prices  are  not  fluctuating. 

K.^YJ.J'I^  V^'T^.'"  *loy?^er.   than  usual  and' 
buying  Is  fairly  brisk. 

V  .     Dt^LUTH  QUOTATIONS. 

Note— the  quotations  below  are  for 
goods  which  change  hands  In  lots  on  the 
open  market:  in  tilling  orders.  In  order 
to  secure  best  goods  for  shipping  and  to 
cover  cost  Incurred,  an  advance  over  Job- 
bing prices  has  to  be  charged.  The  fig- 
ures are  changed  daily. 
„,  BUTTER, 

cream.,    separators,     fancy 
ualries.  fancy,  special  make 

Packing   s»tock    

Dairy,    fair    

_  ^  CHEESE. 

Turns,  flats,   full  cr'm.   new 
Full    cr'm,    Toung   America 

Swiss  cheese.   No.  1 

Brick,    No.    1 

Limb.,    full   cream,    choice.. 

Primost    

„      ,  EGGS. 

Candled,    strictly   fresh 

Candled,    storage 

HONEY. 

Fancy  w^hlte  clover 

Fancy  white  clover.  In  jars 

strained,    per    lb 

Golden    rod    

Dark    honey 

Buckwheat,  dark   

MAPLE  SUGAR 

>  ermont.    per    pound 

Ohio.    i)er   pound    .', 

Maple   syrup,   per  gal    

^^   ,                      POPCORN. 
Choice,    per    lb 

NUTS. 

Soft  shell  almonds,  per  lb.. 
Soft  shell  walnut.'*,  per  lb.. 
Hard    shell   walnuts,    per   lb 

Brazils,     per    lb 

Pecans,  per  lb 

Filberts,    per   lb 

Peanuts,  roasted,  per  lb..!!! 
Raw    peanuts    

VEGETABLES. 

Sweet  potatoes,  per  bus 85 

Sweet    potatoes.     Muscatine 
per  bbl 2  00    ©2  2.") 

Celery,  per  doz  25    W      SJ 

Carrots,  per  bus 35    ^     -tu 

Beets,    per    bus 40    «i)      50 

Onions,   per  bus i  Cw    (M  i  75 

Turnips,    per    bus 40    @      50 

Holland  seed  cabbage,  100  lb    2  50 
'  Minn  cabbage,  per  100  lbs... 

Potatoes,    per    bus 

Mint,    per   doz 

Parsley,   per  doz 

Parsnips,     per    bus !!!! 

CauUHowers.    per  doz 

Horse    radish,    per    lb !!!! 

Hubbard   squash,    per   doz.. 
California    cabbage,    crates. 

t'alifornia  celer>-,  doz 

Florida  tomatoes,  basket 

Oyster  plant,  doz  bunches.. 
Green  onions,   doz   bunehes. 

Splnsich,    per   bus 

New  beets,  doz 

Spanish   onions,    per  crate.. 
Bermuda   onions,    per   crate 

Lettuce,  per  box 

Lettuce,    per    doz 

Horse  radish  roots,   per  bbl 
„  PEAS  AND  BEANS. 

Fancy  navy,   per  bus l  15 

Medium,    hand   picked,    bus.        90 
Brown    beans,    fancy,    bus.,       90 

Green  and  yellow  peas 75    @     90 

65 


THE     DULUTH     EVENiyG     HERAI.D:    THURSDAY,    MAfeCH    18, 


Trading  in  Wheat  Very  Light 
Today  and  the  (Mar- 
ket Dull. 


Lard.   March.  4.$17;  May,  $4.27;  july,  $4.37- 
September.  $4.47.  Ribs.  March.  $3  82-  Julv' 
$4.85.  Whisky  on  the  basis  of  $1  17  for  fin- 
ished goods.     Cash,   wheat.   No.   2  red*  S6 
(a>89c:    No.   3   red.    78<??84c:   No.   2      sprin- 
74c:  No.  3  spring.  70^ 73c:  No.  2  hard  v.ln- 
ter,    78®82c:    No.    3    hard    winter,    724})75c- 
No.    1    northern    spring.    76c.    Cash,    corn. 
No.  2    '23yfl%c:  No.  3    21V^e^^e.  Cash,  oats 
No.  2,   16»4®',ic:  No.  3.   Iftgl7c.  Cash,   rye 
33c;    May,    34c;    July.   35V4c.    Barley     ca.sh 
No.  3,  22@32c.  Cash.  flax.  78c:  Northwest- 
ern. 80»^c:  May.  78^4c;  July.  79%<f|80c;  Son- 
t(>mber.  81«4c.  Timothy,  cash.  $2.75;  Maron, 
$2.75. 


One  Cent  a  Ward, 


THAIVXD    NUXaX. 


IP  TOU  WANT  A  TRAINED  NURSH. 
leave  your  order  at  Boyce's  Drug  atorai 


TrAMXmM-Jf^MAUi  HKI^. 


Opening  Decline  Due  to  More 
Peaceful  Aspect  or  Euro- 
pean News. 


12 
12 
11 

8 

9    @      11 
11 
7 


5% 
90 


Crop   Damage   Reports   Re- 
ceived, Especially  From 
East  or  the  Missouri. 


I 


70  0  J  00 

25  (g)  27 

25  @  30 

25 
.  55  ^  60 
1  50  fi  2  25 
6  ®  7 
1  50  (a)  2  25 
3  50  @  3  75 

85 

C5  @     75 

50 

25  (pi   40 

90  @  1  00 

15 
225 
3  50 

90 

40 
f"  50 


Wheat  opened  easier  this  morning  at 
prices  Vic  under  yest3rday's  close.  The  de- 
cline was  due  to  the  more  peaceful  a.s- 
pect  of  European  news  as  reflected  in  a 
•»c  advance  in  British  consols  and  a 
small  opening  decline  at  Liverpool.  This 
was.  however,  soon  followed  by  a  Id 
advance,  which  rather  took  the  iireath 
out  of  the  speculators  for  a  moment, 
and  caused  a  quick  recovery  in  prices. 
Crop  damage  reports.  especially  froin 
east  of  the  Missouri  river,  continued  to 
come  in,  and  attracted  considerable  at- 
tention.   Northwest    receipts    were    light, 

1 


@  1  GO 


terested  with  Mr.  Kilton.     Frank  Knit 

tel,  of  the  firm  of  Mosher  &  Knittel,  has  •  ^reen   peas,    bus.. 

also  acquired  large  interests  in  the  vi-  I  i,^i„_.,,-  „t,„„,K    ^.^''^^S. 

cinity  of  Mine  Center  and  he  v.  ill  visit  !  ^i^SLf '^rr^r,!Jz'^&„^e"e2' 

his  property     as   soon     as     na\igation  j  California    navel    oranges... 

opens.     Mr.  Knittel  expects  to  do  con-    Seedling  or.inges    

siderable  development  work  on  two  or  '  California   pears,    per   case, 
three  of   his   prospects   on   Shoal    Lake  '  i*"na"as.    bunches 


35 

65 

3  25 

200 


0 


as  soon  as  the  weather  will  permit. 


Lemons,  per  box.. 
Cocoanuts.  per  doz... 
Cranberries,  per  bbl. 
Cranberries,    bus 


SURPRISED  THE  WORKMEN 
Last  night  about  thirty  ladies  of  the  I  Malaga  grapes,    per  keg. 
Degree  of  Honor  lodge     formed     in     a  I  ?!s^-    ^^^   'b- 
l>ody  and  at  9  o'clock  surprised  the  A. 
O.  U.  W 


doz. 


lodge  in  the  midst  of  its  sec- 
ret work  and  demanded  admission.  The 
demand   was  an   unusual   one.    but    the 
size  of  the  surprise  party  was  so  great 
that     after    some     discussion     it     was 
deemed   wise  to   throw  open   the  doors 
and  turn  the  hall  over  to  the  visitors, 
to  prevent  the  determined  ladies  from 
taking  forcible  possession.     The  secrets 
of   the   order,    were   first,    however,    se- 
curely   locked    in    the   iron   chests,    safe 
from  the  prying     eyes     of     the  wives, 
daughters       and     sweethearts     of     the 
Workmen.     The  ladies   brought     excel- 
lent music  with  them  and  the  evening 
was  passed  very  pleasantly  in  dancing 
and  card   playing.     A   most  appetizing 
supper  was  carried  in  baskets   by     the 
visitors,   which  was  thoroughly   appre- 
ciated  by  the   Workmen. 


40 
lit 
375 
2  50 
2  00    W  2  .50 

1  25    @  1  .50 

2  75    @)  3  50 
70 

5  50    0  6  00 
1  75    @  200 

6  r.    ©  7  50 
12    @      15 

3  00 
(S>      10 


CHURCH  ENTERTAINMENT. 
The  entertainment  given  by  the  schol- 
ars of  the  Westminster  Presi)yterian 
church  last  night  was  the  most  suc- 
cessful of  the  series  and  elicited  many 
hearty  marks  of  approval.  The  recita- 
tions were  admiral)ly  rendered  and  evi- 
denced most  careful  preparation.  The 
tableaux  were  particularly  striking 
and  picturesque,  their  arrangement  be- 
ing really  artistic.  The  musical  pro- 
gram was  carefully  selected  and  the 
chorus  numbers  were  particularly  good. 
The  attendance  was  all  that  could  be 
expected. 


Pineapple,    per 
Dates,     per    lb 

APPLES  AND  CIDER. 

Apples,    per   bbl 175    @  2  50 

Mich,  sweet  cider,  per  keg...    2  50    @  2  75 
DRESSED  MEATS. 

Veal,   fancy  7    @       71^ 

Veal,   heavy,   coarse,   thin...         5 

Mutton,    fancy   dressed 6    @       6% 

LIVE  POULTRY. 

Live   turkeys    10 

Sprink  chickens,  per  lb 6    @       7 

DRESSED  POULTRY. 

Turkeys,   per  lb 10 

r'hickens,   per  lb 6    &      7 

Geese,    per    lb 10    (ffi      11 

BRAN  -AND   SHORTS.   CAR  LOTS. 
Bran.  200  lbs.  sacks  included    8  W 
Shorts.    100   lbs,    sacks   inc..    9  00 
Shorts.    200   lbs,    sacks   Inc..    8  50 

Red   dog 12  00 

Ground  feed  No.  1 10  OO   @10  50 

Ground  feed.  No.  2 10  00    @10  50 

HAY.   CAR   LOTS. 


Choice  south.    Minn. 

Northern   Minn    

Medium   

Tame,   ton,  choice  timothy. 


6  50  0  7  M 

4  00  (S!  6  50 

4  00  0>  6  50 

8  00  (Q)  900 


Minneapolis  and  Duluth  reporting  a  tota 
of  205  cars,  compared  with  328  last  wee! 
and  672  on  the  corresponding  dav  of  the 
year  before.  The  Id  advance  a"t  Liver- 
pool was  disputed  by  private  cables,  and 
the  buying  flurry  soon  died  down,  prices 
sinking   to   below   opening   flguri's. 

Apart   from   crop  damage  reports  there 
was    nothing    new    in    the    days    develop- 
ments   to    Induce    people    to    buy    wheat. 
The  clearances  from  Atlantic  ports   wore 
again    disappointingly    light,    and    unioss 
Russia     and     the     Danublan     jxjrts     iiave 
much    lncrea.sed     their        shipments     thl;-! 
week,   the  smallness  of  the  world's  ship- 
ments this  week   must   have  brought    tl.e 
time  a  little  nearer  when  a  demand  from 
abroad  must   become  much   more  urgeiu. 
Closing    cables    were    firm,    except     ironi 
Antwerp,     which    notcil    a    decline    equ.il 
to    1V4C    per   bus   in    Walla    Walla    wheat, 
fierlin  was  \i,  mark  higher,  Paris  as  mucii 
higher   for  July   and   August    dellverv   as 
Antwerp    was    lower    and    Liverpool"  un- 
changed. Chicago    receipts    were    13    cars, 
and    the    out    Inspection    35,000    bus.    The 
price    here    tended    downward    until    ne;ir 
the  close,  when  there  was  a  sharp  rallv 
Rusincss  on  the  Duluth  board  was  vei  v 
dull,    but    four    trades    being   recorded    oh 
the   books.     May  wheat   opened    %c  lower 
at  T4V4C  hut  soon  advanced  to  74>/>c.   Then 
it    turned   weak    again    and   at    noon    was 
down    to   74«^c.    It    rallied   near    the    close 
to  74%c  and  closed   with   buyers   at   74'^-.c, 
unchanged    from    yesterday.      The    mills 
bought  10,000  bus  of  cash  stuff  at   >4c  un- 
der May.   and  the  elevators   took  .500iJ  1ms 
ut    »,2C    under    May.    Following    were    the 
closing  prices: 

Wheat— No.  1  hard,  cash,  76c;  Mav,  70%c. 
No.  1  northern,  cash,  74c:  Mav.  74V.c  bfd: 
July.  75c  bid;  September.  76%c.  "No.  2 
northern.  71»^c.  No.  3.  68(f|70c.  Rejected, 
5<VVi(&65^4C.  To  arrive— No.  1  hard.  76o: 
No.  1  northern.  74c.  Rye.  33V«c.  No.  2 
oats.  ITc;  No.  3.  oats.  16^c.  Flax.  TS<  ; 
May.  80c. 

Car  Inspection— Wheat.  62;  oat.s.  9;  rye. 
4:  barley.  7;  flax,  9.  Receipts— Wheat,  s.-.- 
117  bus;  oats.  48.756  bus;  rve.  7681  bj.-s; 
b'lrley.  4283  bus;  flax.  2992  bus.  Shlpmtnts 
—Corn,  744  bus. 


NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 

An  Irregular  Opening  With  the 
Changes  Unimportant. 

New  York.  March  18— The  stock  mar- 
ket opened  irregular,  the  variations, 
however,  unimportant.  The  interna- 
tional shares  displayed  steadiness  in 
sympathy  with  the  improved  tone  of  the 
London  market.  Trading  was  of  mod- 
erate volume.  Omaha  sagged  slightly 
on  realizations,  but  Chicago  Gas  was 
conspicuous  for  a  gain  of  %  on  good 
liuying.  Values  appreciated  slightly 
throughout  the  list  after  10:15  under  the 
leadership  of  the  grangers,  but  the 
gains  were  of  brief  duration,  as  the 
pressure  against  the  low-priced  stocks 
resulted  in  a  general  selling  movement. 
Omaha  was  exceptionally  heavy  and 
lost  a  point.  C.  C.  &  St.  L.  yielded  '-, 
and  other  Vanderbilts  a  less  amount. 
Standard  Rope  stock  and  bonds  re- 
ceived some  support  at  the  outset,  but 
later  succumbed  to  the  'general  depres 
sion.  with  the  6  per  cent  bonds  at  11 
a.  m.  declining  2%  per  cent  to  65%. 

The  temper  of  the  speculation  under- 
went a  decided  change  after  11  o'clock 
on   the   appearance  of   heavy  commis- 
sion   orders,    which    covered     a       wide 
range  of  stocks.  Pool  support  was  evi- 
dently in  some  instances  and  the  trad- 
ers were  active  in  bidding  up  prices  in 
the   list   of   active   stocks.    The   trading 
was    in    considerable    volume    and    the 
bulls    were    much    encouraged    by    the 
brisk    inquiry    of    the    standard    prop- 
erties.  The   shorts  covered    extensively 
and  marked  activity  developed  in  some 
of  the  usually  inactive  stocks,   notably 
Pacific   mail,    which   rose   l%c    to   27%c. 
Sugar  gained  l^iC"  on  belief  in  the  abil- 
ity  of   the  company   to   make   its   divi- 
dends  under    the   sugar   tariff.    Omaha 
recovered    the   early    loss   and   Chicago 
Gas  made  a   further  rise  to  79%c     as 
compared  with  78%c.  yesterday's  close. 
The    bond    market    was       moderately 
active   and    generally    higher   for     the 
speculative    is.sues.    Standard    ropes    6s 
were  supported  by  insiders  at  the  de- 
cline  and    recovered   to  67.       Atchison. 
Colorado  and  Pacific  first,  which  have 
been   conspicuous   for  recent     strength 
owing    to   the   organization    of   a    pro- 
tective   committee,    fell      exceptionally 
2%c  to  2814c.  Sales  to  noon  were  122,000 
shares. 


WANTED-SEWING  GIRLS  AT  ONCH: 
at  French  tailoring  institute,  room  16 
Metropolitan   block. 


WANTED-A  COMPETENT  GIRL  FOR 
general  housework,  at  907  East  First 
street.  • 


One  Cent  a  Word. 


^}^}F^  ^^^  ALWAYS  FIND  GOOD 
girls  and  eighty  girls  can  find  good 
places;  also  the  best  and  cheapest  Tialr 
??°if'^^T}^^^^^  **"^  chains  at  Mrs.  M. 
C.  Slebolds,  225  East  Superior  street. 

WANTED-A  LADY  AND  GENTLE- 
man  to  solicit  orders  for  household 
goods:  sold  on  easy  payments.  No  ex- 
IJI  w'^®*  required.  John  Gately  &  Co., 
706  West  Superior  street. 


WAirriBn-MAZK  hjet^ip. 


WANTED-ONE    SALESMAN,    SALA.RY 
and  commission.   $60  to  %m  per  month 

wJ?„i,  .  ?l*^*-..  No  experience  needed. 
Work  In  the  city.  The  Singer  Mannfa'-- 
turlng    company.        614    West    SuperiJr 


All  advertisements  of  "situ- 
ations" wanted  inserted  FREE. 
We  invite  as  many  repetitions 
as  are  necessary  to  secure 
what  you  advertise  for.  The 
Herald's  50,000  daily  readers 
will  be  sure  to  fill  your  wants. 

fJTgj[r.roy«  wATom. 

^\fi\7.  ^  D-WASHIXG.  IRONING, 

scrubbing,  house  cleaning  or  anv  kind 
of  day  work.  Address  or  call  "at  Wl 
!•  irst   avenue   west,    up  stairs. 


YtH'NG   MAN   WANTS  WORK  OF  ANY 
kmd.   Must   have   it.     L  86.    Herald. 


RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES. 


St  Paul  &  Duluth  R.  R. 


Dolnth. 


t9A>a.iD. 
*1 :55  p.  m. 

•11 :15  p.  m 


•Dtily.  tBxeept  Bni^ 


ST.  PAUL. 
MINNEAPOLIS. 


Arrive 
Dnlath. 


*(  :S0  a.  m. 
*1  :aO  p.  m. 
t?  :45  p.  m. 


j/.riS^L^'**'"'  Depot  CITY  TICKEr  O ?FICB. 
«M  W.  Superior  street,  eorner  FaU«dio  baUdinc. 
Telephooe  218.  —«»««. 


EASTERN  UILWAY 

OF  ■INNESOTA. 

CITX  TICKET  OFFICE  432  W.  SUPKRIOB  ST. 
iieaTeDolnth 


Arrive  DuUith 


WANTED-WASHING  AND  IRONING 
to  take  home.  Gentlemen's  under  cloth- 
ing a  .specialty;  also  house  and  office 
cleaning.  Call  on  Mrs.  Clark.  104  First 
avenue  west,  up  stairs. 


SALESMEN  FOR  CIGARS.  BIG  PAY 
ii.xperlence  unnecessary.  Monopole  Ci- 
gar company,  Galesvllle,  Wis. 


WANTED-AGBNTS  TO  SOLICIT  SICK 
ana  accident  insurance  for  the  Union 
Men  s  Mutual  Insurance  company  of 
Duluth.  Liberal  terms  to. the  right  par- 
ties. Call  or  address  307  Palladio  build- 
ing.    Duluth.    Minn. 


TO    RBNT—JtOOMS. 


FOR  RENT-BASEMENT  OF  1020  EAST 
Fourth  street;  very  warm;  $3  per  month; 
water   free. 


TO  ^BJfT—HOVSBS. 

FOR  RENT-SeVeN  ROOM  HOUSE  ON 
IMneteenth  avenue  east,  near  London 
road,  at  $10.  water  free.  Carpets  to  sell 
cheap,   all   laid.     Address   P  81,   Herald 


AN  EXPERIENCED  AND  COMPETENT 
dressmaker  would  like  to  go  out  bv 
the  day  or  take  work  home.  Innulfe 
second  floor  126   East   First  street 


WANTED-CARPET   LAYING   OR    ODD 
Street. 


Jobs.     E.    W.     Warner.     7    West    Fifth 


EXPERIENCED  WAITRESS  DESIRES 
situation  either  in  city  or  outside.  Ad- 
dress L  17,  Herald. 


t»2 :40  p.  m. »     ST.  PAUL  AMO     (   f-wn. 
*ll=15p.m.^    ■lAwW^LIS    i   ^7  5»  t 


m. 
m. 


W-OMAN  WANTS  WORK  OF  ANY 
kind  by  the  day.  Call  at  527  West  Sec- 
ond street. 


WANTED-BY    YOUNG       LADY.    Posi- 
tion   as    stenographer    and    typewriter 
Good    references   and   experience.    P   71 
Herald.  ' 


^S^  RENT  -  HOUSE  315  WEST 
Fourth  street;  all  modern  improve- 
ments; will  be  renovated  to  suit  ten- 
ant. A.  C.  Volk  &  Co.,  Palladio  build- 
ing. 


TO  RBNT—FT.ATS. 


FOR  RENT-COZY  FLAT.  $10.  ALL 
modern  conveniences,  five  rooms.  Ware- 
rent  paid.  $250  buys  a  good  reslden-e 
lot.   Cooley   &    Underbill. 


FOR  RENT-A  FIVE  ROOM  MODERN 
nat,  London  road  and  Eighteenth  ave- 
nue east.  Apply  to  Commercial  Invest- 
ment  company,    Torrey    building 


WANTED-SITUATION  BY  A  COMPK- 
tent  cook  in  private  famllv.  or  place 
as  housekeeper.  Address  L  85,  Herald. 

WANTED-WASHING,  IRONING  AND 
mending.  Work  called  for  and  deliv- 
ered. 416  East  Fourth  street. 


YOUNG  MAN,  20  YEARS  OLD,  STRONG 
and  willing  to  work,  would  like  place  in 
commission  house  or  as  delivery  man. 
I-amiliar  with  care  of  horses.  Address 
A.  G.,   Herald. 


*DaiIy.    tKxcept  Sunday. 

Buffet  Parlor  Cars  on  Day  Tivlna. 
New  Sleeping  Cars  on  Night  Tnilae. 

^  Direct  oonnections  with  Great  NortheratralM 

FAR60,  GRAND  FORf:S 

WmwiPEO,  HELENA. 

BUTTE,  SPOKANE, 

l»ORTUIIID,  SEAHLE 

AND  JAPAN. 
At  St.  Paxil  connections  are  made  forall  pointa 
East,  West  and  Sonth.    Through  tickets  and 
baggage  checked  to  destination. 


Duluth,  South  Shore  &  Atlantic  Ry. 

H  Trains  for  all  poinU  East  leave 
Dnlath  Union  il  ■  |  n  D  U 
Depot  at  4ilU  r.  Ml 
Dally  EXCKPT  SATURDAY, 
with  WAGNKB  PALACK 
—  8LKEPIN(J  (;aK  for  Saolt  Bta 
Mane,  ana  liming  Car,  eerrin^  supper. 

SDlfoA?'"'*  train  arrives  11 :20  a.  m.  EXCEPT 
Jt&^^^t'^  ^"""'^"^  Hotel  BaUdin, 


Dnimii,  Soperior  &  Western  Ry. 


WEST, 
P.  M. 


*Daily  except  Suaday. 


HOUSE  CLEANING,  SCRUBBING 
^*°''^?^*'"^  offices  to  clean.  Mrs.  Jack- 
son, 390  Lake  avenue  south. 


ACCOUNTAXT  ANIt  AUDITOR. 


CHAS.  EA'ANS  HOLT,  507  CHAMBER 
of  Commerce.  If  you  want  anything  in 
my  hne-accounting,  auditing,  aook- 
keeplng-^temporarlly  or   regularly,    call 


CARD  READING. 


rboiamtr>h«ii 

rroai  IJf.. 


REViVO 

RESTORES  VITAUTY. 


Made  a 
i^tDa,.  r^^^Jr^Well  Man 

THE  GREAT       30th  Da^ 

prodnces  thn  above  results  In'30  days.  It  artj 
VouDK  men  will  reBain  their  lost  manhood  and  old 
ttKVlvo.    It  quicklrandiiiirplvro«»nr««  v^-.^ . 


CARD      READING.      PAST,      PRESENT 
and  future.  1330  West  Superior  street. 


HIDWTFK. 


PRIVATE  HOSPITAL-MRS.  BANKS 
midwife,  330  St.  Croix  avenue.  Male  pa.^ 
tients  cared  for  also. 


9   FOOT   RANGE.   lOG  EAST  SUPERIOR. 

FOR  SALE-FITRNITURE  (ALMOST 
new)  of  fivp  room  iioiise.  A  snap.  House 
(centrally  located)  can  be  rented  if  d.-- 
.«ire<l.  Apply  W.  D.  Gordon.  17  First 
avenue    west. 


^?-^    h^^r^P^J^.  ^DELIVERY    WA- 
Kon,   $J0.   Apply  716  East  Third  street. 

1200  CASH,   BALANCE   IN  BOARD  AND 
room:     will     buy     furniture     of     25-room 

boarding   house;      central      location.   A 

snap.     P  91,  Herald. 


SEVENTY-FIVE  DOLLARS  AND  BAL- 
ance  monthly  buys  a  fourteen  room 
house  within  seven  blocks  of  the  Spald- 
ing hotel.  Chas.  W.  Hoyt,  405  Chamber 
of  Commerce. 


•3:05 
4:05 
6:13 
7:40 
7:03 
8:00 


EAST. 
A.  M 


0 
23 

76 

94 
109 


Lv Duluth  Ar 

^f ■•  Cloquet Lv 

Ar....  Swan  River Lv 

Ar Hibbing  Lv 

Ar..  Grand  Rapids Lv 

Ar....  Deer  River  Lv 


•  11:40 
10:41 
8:40 
7:15 
7:50 
6:56 


Duluth,  Missabe 

&  Northern 
RailwayCompany 


ST.  PATRICK'S  SOCIAL. 
—  The  St.  Patrick's  social  given  by 
Mr.  and  Mrs.  Jewell  for  the  benefit  of 
the  Ladies'  Aid  society  of  Asbury 
church,  was  a  decided  social  and  finan- 
cial success.  A  large  number  of  people 
were  present  and  entered  heartily  into 
the  varied  forms  of  enjoyment  provid- 
ed for  the  evening's  entertainment.  A 
delightful  program  was  rendered,  after 
which  a  bountiful  luncheon  was  served. 


IN  CHICAGO. 
Chicago,        March      18.— Butter, 
creamery.     Wilfk-:    dairies.    9«il6c. 
steady;  fresh,  9K.C. 


Arm; 
Eggd, 


WEST  DULUTH  BRIEFS. 

The  result  of  the  Carson  mill  was  a 
disappointment  to  a  majority  of  the 
WVst  Duluth  sports  yesterday,  as  most 
of  them  backed  Cor7>ett  to  win.  Quite 
a  little  betting  was  done  and  no  small 
amount  of  money  changed  hands. 

A.  E.  Rosenbusch,  has  gone  on  a  trip 
to  Georgia  and  other  Southern  states 
in  search  of  a  desirable  place  in  which 
to  locate. 

The  social  and  ball  given  by  Pearl 
Hive  lodge  at  the  Phillips  hotel  last 
night  was  well  attended  and  proved  a 
most  enjoyable  affair. 

Dr.  C.  R.  Keyes  is  suffering  from  an 
attack  of  the  grip  and  is  unable  to  visit 
his  patients. 

J.  O.  Hancock  and  family  left  yester- 
day for  Minneapolis  wnere  they  expect 
to  make  their  home. 

The  funeral  of  Mrs.  E.  L.  Kelsoe, 
wife  of  Patrolman  Kelsoe,  was  held  at 
the  Oneota  M.  E.  church  at  1  o'clock 
this  afternoon,  the  pastor.  Rev.  Robert 
H.  Craig,  conducting  the  services. 
There  was  a  lar^e  attendance  of  friends 
and  relatives. 


IN  NEW  YORK. 
New  York.   March  18.— Butter.      steadv: 
Western    creamery,    ]3(ai9c;    Elgins.     lOc; 
factory.   7(f«ll»2C.   Egg.s,   steady;  state  and 
Pennsylvania,    10>t.«11c;    Western,    lO'^c. 

Valuab'le  Property  Sold. 

The  transfer  ofl  the  title  to  the 
property  at  the  southwest  corner  of 
Superior  street  and  First  avenue  west 
to  David  H.  Moffat  from  Ira  and  Lucy 
Pendleton,  the  consideration  being  $65,- 
000,  was  completed  and  the  deed  re- 
corded yesterday  afternoon.  The  prop- 
erty is  described  as  lot  18,  block  5,  Cen- 
tral division  of  Duluth.  It  has  a  50-foot 
frontage  on  Superior  street.  It  is 
vacant  at  present,  but  was  formerly 
occupied  by  a  3-story  frame  building, 
one  of  the  oldest  in  Duluth,  the  struc- 
ture being  destroyed  by  the  authorities 
after  having  been  damaged  by  Are  a 
number  of  times. 


NEW  YORK  MONEY. 
New  York.  March  18.-.Monev  on  call 
easy  at  W^ii'i  per  cent.  Prime  mercantile 
paper  3>4(&i4  per  cent.  Sterling  exchanjj:e 
firm  with  actual  business  in  bankers 
bills  at  «.87fr4.87Vi  for  demand  an<I  at 
H..«.'>H<'«4.85'^  for  sixty  davs.  Poste<l  rates 
t4.St;'?i  J.8»)»i8  and  $4.8»ft4.88<...  Commen-ial 
bills  $4.84^t.  Silver  certificates  6214f(tr4. 
Bar  silver  62Vi.  Mexican  dollars  48.  Gov- 
ernment bonds  tlrm.  New  4s  registered 
and  coupon.  $1.13>a.;  ."is  registered  and  cou- 
pon. $1.14;  4s  registered.  $1.11;  coupon. 
11. 11 '4:  2«  registered,  SSU;  Pacific  Cs  of 
'98.    $1.00%. 


quickly  and  surely  re.s tores  Nervous- 
Lost  Pmv^,.  p.iv  ^''  i™P°'ency.  Nightly  ErniKsions. 
iS*i^f,::rJ'*'l?*.*'^°""->--  Wasting  Diseases,  and 


THE  LIVERPOOL  MARKET. 
Liverpool,    March    18.— Closing.       wheal, 
spot  firm;   futures  strong;  March,  iJs  '^d; 
May,    6s    2'«id:    July,    Ok    3d.       Maize,    .spot 


firm;    futures    stronir; 


March,    2s 


Blasting  the  Roof. 

The  work  of  blowing  out  the  roof  of 
the  Lakewood  tunnel  was  begun  today. 
There  is  about  ten  pounds  of  dynamite 
in  each  blast  and  there  were  to  be  fifty 
blasts  in  all.  It  was  originally  intend- 
ed to  make  but  one  blast,  or,  perhaps, 
two  or  three  at  most,  but  this  Idea 
was  abandoned  on  account  of  the  dam- 
age of  shaking  the  foundation  walls  of 
the  pump  house.  It  was  expected  that 
the  work  would  be  finished  tomorrow. 


April,  2s  8d;  May.  2s  i>%i\;  July,  2s  10«id. 

THE  MINNEAPOLIS   MARKET. 
Minneapolis,  March  18.— Wheat  dull  and 
.'Ueady;   close:    May.   Tl\it'a^i^(^•.  July,   TilV^c; 
September.  fiHc.  On  track— No.  1  hard.  /'*; 
No.   1   northern,   73c.    Receipts,    143  cars. 


CATTLE  AND  HOGS. 
Chicago,  March  18.— Estimated  receipts 
hogs  today.  22.(i00;  left  over.yJaOO.  Mark'^t 
active,  averaging  5c  lower.  Light,  $3.S3'U 
4.05;  mixed,  $3.8,V&4.07V,j;  heavy,  $.S.<kku 
4.07'^;  rough,  $3.65<fi3.70.  Cattle,  receipl.s. 
SOU).  Steady  to  stronger.  Beeves,  $3.7jf« 
5.75;  cows  and  heifers,  $2.0O'Ji4.3O;  Texas 
steers.  $3.25**4.20;  stockera  and  feeder.-i. 
$3.40«i4.30.  Sheep,  receipts.  9000.  Strong  lo 
10c  higher.  Hogs,  official  receipts  yester- 
day. 27,341;  shipments,  6107.  Cattle,  offi- 
cial receipts  yesterday.  11.788;  shipments. 
3795.  Sheep,  official  receipts  vesterdav. 
13,454;  shipments.  2afi9.  Estimated  receipts 
hogs  tomorrow.  20,000. 


Competitive  Lodge  Drill. 

The  Odd  Fellows'  lodges  of  the  city 
are  to  have  a  competitive  drill,  the  win- 
ning lodge  to  receive  a  large  silver 
trophy.  The  dates  upon  which  the  dif- 
ferent lodges  will  drill  are  as  follows-: 
Duluth  lodge.  No.  28,  March  19;  Central 
Link  bxlge.  No.  175,  March  22;  Zenith 
City  lodge.  No.  168.  March  2.^;  West 
Duluth  kxjge.  No.  160.  March  30;  Silver 
lodge.  No.  200,  March  31.  The  judges 
will  watch  each  lodge  and  take  down 
the  points  scored. 


Must  Make  a  Fight. 

Representative  Laybourn  says  that 
from  now  on  every  inch  of  ground 
must  be  fought  to  get  bills  through, 
especially  that  providing  for  an  appro- 
priation for  the  normal  school  here.  Ho 
he  states  in  a  letter  to  City  Clerk 
Richardson,  received  this  morning,  ac- 
knowledging^ the  receipt  of  blue  prints 
of  the  school  site  sent  by  the  latter. 
Mr.  Laybourn  expresses  hope  of  satis- 
factory results,  however.  He  closes 
with  an  inquiry  as  to  the  attitude  of 
Duluth  people  in  regard  to  the  uniform 
charter  bill. 


A  PIECE  OF  PARCHMENT. 
When  unwritten  on.  Is  not  more  colorless 
than  the  cadaverous  countenances  of 
those  unfortunate  persons  whom  we  are 
accustomed  to  call  'confirmed  invalids." 
What  a  misnomer:  implying,  too.  des- 
Pu'""'  .^,^^■^"^  "P  f'^''  ''>«t!  As  long  as 
Vll  «u/*-"^  power  of  Hostetter's  Stom- 
ach Bitters  can  be  felt,  and  that  Is  pos- 
.sible  .so  long  as  there  Is  no  absolute  col- 
lapse of  the  faculties,  fresh  vitality  can 
be  infused  into  wasted,  feeble  frame"  • 
color  and  flesh  can  be  brought  back  id 
wasted,  pallid  cheeks  with  this  vrand 
sheet  anchor  of  the  debilitated  and  the 
.sickly.  It  is  a  tonic  of  the  greatest  po- 
tency and  the  utmost  purity,  and  a  rem- 
edy for  and  preventive  of  dyspepsia,  bil- 
ious, malarious,  rheumatic,  nervous  and 
kidney  complaints.  Appetite  and  sleep 
are  greatly  aided  by  it;  it  counteracts 
the  effects  of  undue  fatigue,  or  excite- 
ment, and  nullifies  the  often  perilous  con- 
sequences of  exposure  In  lncle:n'»nt 
weather  or  damp  clothing. 


Roof  Fell  In. 

The  roof  of  the  Glen  Avon  rink  fell 
in  this  afternoon,  owing  to  the  heavy 
weight  of  snow.  The  building  was 
badly  wrecked,  according  to  report.^ 
received  in  the  city. 


GOSSIP. 
Received  over  private  wire  of  B.  E.  Baker, 
grain  and  stock  broker,  room  107  Cham- 
ber of  Commerce  and  307  Board  of  Trade. 

Chicago.  March  18.— Trade  in  wheat  was 
dull  today  and  a  desperate  effort  w.xs 
made  b.v  local  bears  to  depress  prices. 
Several  dips  were  made  to  the  vicinity  of 
the  put  price  but  no  wheat  came  out  and 
sellers  were  obliged  to  cover  at  higher 
prices.  The  close  both  here  and  at  Liv- 
erpool is  the  same  as  yesterday.  The 
St.  Louis  market  was  active  and  higher 
and  many  buying  orders  were  recelveii 
here  from  that  city.  There  was  no  new- 
statistical  crop  or  war  news  that  would 
affect  the  market  but  the  trade  is  lear.i- 
ing  by  experience  that  the  short  side  at 
present  is  not  safe.  Reactions  from  bre  U:s 
are  sudden  and  a  verv  nervous  feeling 
prevails.  The  possibility  of  foreign  war 
or  of  more  damage  to  our  growing  wheat 
are  factors  which  overbalance  the  dull- 
ness of  trade  or  the  long  time  tradition 
hegarding  March  breaks. 

Corn  and  oats  stea<ly  without  matcriil 
change.  Rlxport  business  continues  re- 
markably large  in  corn. 

Provisions  strong  and  higher  at  t-'ie 
clo.se.  There  Is  good  buying  on  all  the 
declines  and  the  market  shows  evidences 
of  further  advance. 

Puts.   May   wheat,   735i(ii73%c. 

Calls,    May  wheat,   74%(&75c. 

Curb,  May  wheat,  74^4c  bid. 


5^irh.?^«»  self-abuse  or  excess  and  Indiscretion, 
,Toi  «„i^  "  "^  w^  '""^  """^y-  »"'«0'-'S8  or  marriage.  It 
oot  only  cures  by  sU.tiaK  at  the  «,,t  of  disease,  but 

nl  b^lc  ThT^I  T'^  '"  '  •"*»'"»  ^nlXiXer.  bring 
;?orin^  th«  «i^  "•*,  Klow  to  pale  clieeks  and  re 
storing  the  fire  of  youth.  It  wards  off  Jnsix.  ty 
and  Consumption.  Insist  on  having  RKVIVO.  no 
Jther  It  can  bo  carried  in  vest  pocket.  By  mi\ 
•  1.00  per  package,  or  six  tor  85.00,  with  a  posl 

J.- J*""*"*"^ «•""*"*««  *«  <^o'«  or  refand 
ine  money.   Circular  free.   Addreu 

*^m  lEDICIBE  CO.,  271  Waliasll  Ave..  CHICAGO.  ILL 
ror  — U  to  Dulutli  by  B.  r.  B«yo«.  dniwH 

LDDD  POISON 

A  specialtySS 

itlwyJ^LUOO  POISON  permanentlf 
caredin  16to85  days.  Ton  csnbe  treated  ak 
|nomeior  aame  price  nnder  eamegiiaraa' 
ty.  If  yon  prefer  to  coma  here  wewllloon. 
tract  to  pay  railroad  fareand  hotel  bHl8.and 
Doebam.lf  wefail  to  cure.  If  yon  have  taken  mer- 
cury. Iodide  notash,  and  still  have  aches  and 
Mms,  Mucoas Patches  in  mouth.  Sore  Throat. 
Fimples.  Copper  Colored  Spots,  Ulcers  on 
any  part  of  the  body,  Hair  or  Kyebrows  falling 
out,  it  is  this  Secondary  bLoOD  POISON 
we  iraarantee  to  cure.  Wo  solicit  the  most  obstl* 
nato  cases  and  ctiallenge  the  world  for  » 
^5S  "1®  cannot  cure.  This  disease  has  always 
baffled  the  skill  of  the  most  eminent  ph  V8i« 
elans.  SSOO.OOO  capital  beh.nd  our  nnccidi. 
Uonal  fmaraoty.  Absolutejproofs  sent  sealed  on 
application.  Address  COOK  REMEDY  Gol 
1107  Maewnto  Temple.  CHlCAOOb  "Jn^ 


J-OST. 

LOST-  WEDNESDAY  EVENING 

ii'Pi^V,  pup  'log.  Reward  if  returned  t<) 
1717  East  First  street. 

WATCH  LOST,  BETWEEN  SIXTH 
avenue  east  and  Third  street  and  Ninth 
avenue    east    and    Sixth    street,    a    gold 

r^"o?I''t'^''*''o-^^!'"  '■^=*'"-  Finder  return 
to  914  East  Sixth  street  and  receive  re- 
ward. 


JUU8IV. 


R-  B-  STOGDILL,  TEACHER  OP  PIANO 
(Room  for  two  pupils.)  A  special  course 
for  young  pupils   in   sight   reading.   Les- 

.sun.s   0(1   eent^;.    Studio,   508   Lowell    blooK 


mJiAJfCTAXs 


LOANS  ON  DIAMONDS,   FURNITURE 

$.*.?m*^°"""2'"*^'^'    paper   bought.   Room 
m  Torrey  building,  "uum 

MONET   TO     LOAN,     ANT     AMOUNT 
Cooley  &  Underhlll.   104  Palladio. 


}!^^^^^2:Z^lSCJELLA\ROVa. 

WANTBD-TO    RENT,    ABOUT    MAY    1 
.'-mall   five  or  six   room   cottage  or  flat 
with  modern  conveniences;  centrallv  lo- 
cated or  handy  to  street  car  and  reas- 
onable rent.       Good   responsible   tenant. 
Address  Tenant.   Herald. 


7 :45  a.  m. 
10:45  a.m. 
10:44  a.m. 
11  :S6  a.  m. 
11 M)  a.  m. 
11 :25  a.  m. 


Lt Uulutn Ar 

Ar Virginia Lv 

Ar Eveloth.„.Lv 

Ar Biwabik  . Lv 

At Mt.  Iron Lv 

Ar -Hibbing    — .Lv 


9.-00  a.  m.  ;  Lv Virgiuia Ar 

1:&  p  m.    Ar Wolf Lv 

ll:J5a.m.  I  Ar Uibbinc . Lv 


3  •M.'t  p.  m. 
12:45  p.  m. 
10  -M  a.  m. 
12:28  p.  m. 
12:30p,  m, 
12:13  p.  m. 


1 :45  p.  m. 
10:33  a.m. 
12 :13  p.  m. 


Daily,  except  Sunday.      J.  B.  Hansojt,  Q.  P.  A. 


DULUTH  &  IRON  RANGE  R.R 


8:15  p,m.    I  Lv Duluth Ar 

7:15  p.m.     Ar Virginia Lv 

7:40p.m,      Ar Fveleth Lv 

T^SOp.  m.    I  Ar.     Kly  Lv 


Daily,  Sunday  excepted." 


12:0im. 
8K)1a.  m. 
7 :;«  a.  m. 
7  :*i  a.  m. 


FURNISHED   R06MSrB0ARDlFnD& 
:i^i    ^^*    Dacotah.    U7    West    Second 


•treet. 


FREE  TO  MEN. 


A    GfARANTKJ£l> 

<'IRE. 


Lost  Manhood  nestoreU,  PdRltlvc  Cure  for  Abuse, 
EinlMsfons,  iJebillty,  81  xiral  Wcakiiessi,  Varipocpir 
"leeiN  Slrirtnrp,  PariH  Knlargeil.  KIdnry,  BladUir 
and  Prostate  Oland  Diseases  pcriiianenlly  cured,  h'.s- 
tabllslied  2«  yearc.  Valuable  book  (seuledi  with  full 
information  for  borne  cure  gent  free.  Address: 
MARSTON  IJEMKPV  CO..  laG  Park  PI.,  New  York. 


DEAFNESS  CANNOT  BE  CURED 
By  local  applications,  as  they  cannot 
reach  the  diseased  portion  of  the  ear. 
There  Is  only  one  way  to  cure  deafness, 
and  that  is  by  constitutional  remedies. 
Deafness  Is  caused  by  an  Inflamed  condl- 
VKilJ'V^f  ™"S?u^  "n^ng  of  the  Eusta- 
chian Tube  When  this  tube  gets  in- 
flamed you  have  a  rumbling  sound  or  im- 
perfect hearing,  and  when  It  Is  entirely 
closed  deafness  Is  the  result,  and  unle.<»s 
the  Inflammation  can  be  taken  out  and 
this  tube  restored  to  Its  normal  condition 
hearing  will  be  destroyed  forever;  nine 
cases  out  of  ten  are  caused  by  catarrh 
which  Is  nothing  but  an  Inflamed  condi- 
tion of  the  mucous'  surfaces. 

We  will  give  one  hundred  dollars  for 
any  case  of  deafness  (caused  by  catarrh) 
that  cannot  be  cured  by  Hall's  Catarrh 
cure.  Send  for  circulars,  free 

L.J- S^I^^^'^Y .^  £0.,  Toledo.  Ohio. 

Sold  by  druggists,  75c. 

Hall's  Family  Pills  are  the  best. 

Have  The  Herald  Id  your  bomee;  46 
oeota  a  month. 


NEW  YORK  STOCKS. _ 

Name  of  Stock.        Open  High  Low  Close 


Whisky 

Atchison 

Sugar  Trust 

Canada  Southern... 

C,   B  &  Q 

St.   Paul 

Chicago   Gas 

Del.,  Lack.  &  W.... 
General  Electric... 

Erie 

Reading 

Louis.  &  Nash 

Manhattan 

Missouri  Pacific 

Tobacco 

Chicago  &  N.  W... 

N.  P.  preferred 

Rock    Island 

Union    Pacific 

Western  Union 

Leather 

Lake   Shore 


134 

n% 

5<X 

ns 

78 

78X 


35 

49V4 
H6 

18K 

77H 

37  9i 
08^ 

fen 

69% 


I3H 
12 

ur>% 

5I« 

78H 
78H 
19% 


85H 

"m 

49H 
86V4 
19 
77H 
lios 

S7)t 
60X 

7 

86^ 
60H 


US 
US 
lUH 
SIX 
77X 
78 
78X 

49% 
8« 
18H 
78H 
109^ 
31% 
6HH 
6X 
86 
59K 


12 
114H 

na 

78 
79M 

MX 

"2ii 

49H 

i8y« 

'.7 
69H 

7 

86 
B81K 


THE  CHICAGO  MARKET. 
Chicago.  March  18.— Close,  wheat. 
March.  73%c:  May,  74>i,c;  July,  73V^c;  Sep- 
tember. 70%c.  Corn,  March,  23\c;  Mav 
24?4^%c;  July.  26'5fcc;  September.  27%c. 
Opts,  March.  16V4o;  Mav,  17V4c;  July,  17Uc 
Pork.  March,  |8.80;  May,  $8.90;  July,  $8.97. 


NOTICE  or  MORTGAGE  FORECLOS- 
l  RE  SALE.— 

Default  has  been  made  In  the  conditions 
of  a  certain  mortgage  containing  a  nowcr 
of  sale,  executed  an<l  delivered  by  Gar- 
rett T.  Johns  and  Priscilla  C.  Johns,  his 
wife,  mortgagors,  to  W.  Vernon  Bootii. 
mortgagee,  dated  the  22d  day  of  Janu- 
ary. 189«>,  and  recorded  In  the  office  of  the 
register  of  deeds  for  St.  Louis  Countv 
Minnesota,  on  the  22d  day  of  Januarv 
181(6,  In  Book  93  of  mortgages,  on  page 
497;  said  mortgage  was  given  to  secure 
the  payment  of  one  principal  note  for  one 
thousand  dollars  (JIOOO.OO)  and  six  intc-est 
notes  representing  the  several  install- 
ments of  interest  on  said  principal  note 
as  they  came  due  on  the  1st  of  August 
and  1st  of  February  in  each  year,  said 
interest  notes  bearing  interest  at  the 
rate  of  eight  per  cent  per  annum  after 
they  became  due;  and 

Whereas,  default  has  been  made  in  the 
payment  of  the  interest  note  for  for<^y- 
two  dollars  ($42.(X)).  which  became  diie 
on  the  l.st  of  August,  1896;  and  default 
has  also  been  made  In  the  pavment  of 
the  interest  note  for  forty  dollars  ($40.00), 
which  became  due  on  the  1st  of  F-b- 
ruary.  1897;  and  said  defaults  have  con- 
tinued to  the  date  of  this  notice  and  now 
continue;  and. 

Whereas,  the  amount  of  interest  now 
claimed  to  be  due.  and  actually  -Jue  is 
eighty-four  and  ."iS-lOO  dollars  ($84.55),  and 
no  action  at  law  or  otherwise  has  been 
commenced  for  the  recover>'  of  the  debt 
or  any  part  thereof,  .secured  by  said 
mortgage. 

Notice  Is  hereby  given  that  said  mort- 
gage will  be  foreclosed  by  public  sale  of 
the  niortgaged  premises,  which  are  de- 
•scribed   in  said   mortgage  as   follows: 

Lot   number  sixteen   (16).    In   block   thir- 
ty-five   <X,).    Endion    Division    of    Duluti. 
according    to    the    recorded    plat    thereof 
said  premises  lying  and  being  in  St.  Louis 
County.  In  the  state  of  Minnesota,  to  pav 
said     mortgage     debt     and     interest     and 
the    costs    of    this    foreclosure,    including 
the  sum  of  fifty  dollars  ($50.00)  attomevs' 
fees   stipulated     for     in     said     mortgage. 
Said   .sale  will  be  made  by  the  sheriff  of 
St.     Louis    County,        Minnesota,     at    the 
front    door    of    the    court    house,    in    the 
city   of   Duluth,    St.    Louis   Countv.    Min- 
nesota,   on   the   Ist  day   of   May.    1897,    at 
I'',  o'clock   a.    m..    subject    to    redemption 
within  one  year  from  that  date. 
Dated  Duluth.  Minn..  March  18th.  1897. 
W.     V'ERNON    BOOTH. 
ALFORD   &   HUNT.  Mortgagee. 

Attorneys    for    Mortgagee. 
.......       _  Herald. 


S-roCK  HOLDERS-    MEETING^^: 

i.,Tk    T^*',^"i!^'"  annual  meeting  of  the  Du- 
.11  u^^'".*j"^    and    Publishing    Company 
u\\i    »».    '°  ''*  **}J?  company's  office  in  Du- 
luth.  Minn.,  on  Tuesday,  the  30th  dav  of 
^^^^.\  ^  ^-  l^-  at  3  o'clock  p.   m. 
Dated   Duluth,    Minn.,    March   17th,    1897 
GEO.  W.  BUCK, 
Secretary. 

NOTICE    OF    MORTGAGE     SALE- 

Whereas  default  has  been  made  In  the 
conditions  of  a  certain  mortgage  dulv 
executed  and  delivered  by  Ronald  M. 
Hunter  and  Josephine  C.  Hunter,  his 
wife  mortgagors,  to  William  E.  Lucis 
mortgagee,  bearing  date  Julv  first  (1st) 
»»..  and  which  was  duly  recorded  in 
ivmnf^  "^x/.  "'  ''l^^'^'  "^^^♦^  <■"•■  St.  Louis 
mthi  ^-fio?""."^^?.*^'.  ?"  •^"'•^'  nint'teenth 
(19th>.  1895,  at  1:40  o'clock  i>.  m.,  in  Book 
one  hundred  thirty  (130)  of  mortgages,  on 
pages  two  hundred  ninety-eight  (29«)  iv.r> 
hundred   nniety-nlne   (299)   and   three  hun- 


ANYONE  WISHING  TO  STORE  A 
piano,  free  of  charge,  in  a  pcrfectlv 
secure  place,  would  do  well  to  call  at 
202  King  block. 


HIGHEST  PRICE  PAID  FOR  GENTLK- 
men  s  cast  off  clothing.  Give  us  a  trial 
Send  address  and  will  call.  Star  Cloth-^ 
ing  company,   511  West  Superior  street. 

WANTED-TEAMS  TO  HAUL  WOOD 
to  West  Superior.  F.  A.  Hamilton,  TM 
vV  est  Superior  street. 


NORTH-WESTERN    LINE. 

C,  St.  p.,  M.  &  O.  Kv. 
Office:  405  West  Superior  St.         'Phone  No.  20. 
Leavei__[  »DailyJ^tExcept  Sunday 


tlO  45  am 

♦UOOpm 

»5  10  pm 


St.  Paul,  Min'plfi  and  Weet 
St.  Paul,  Miu'plB  and  West 
('faicago  Limited 


Arrive 

t".  10  pm 

»7  00  am 
•10  :<o  am 


I'arlorCars  on  day  irainB;  Wagner's  Finest 
oleepore  on  uight  trains. 


Of 


WBATKBmrrnH 


'th'fJJ!^\l^''^t°^'-  ^^'^""^  mortgage,  with 
the  debt  thereby  secured,  was  thereafter 
duly   a.ssigne<l    by   said    William    E     Lucas 

«.i  't^^  an  Instrument  of  assignment  dat- 
whi,^?^^'""''^'',  twelfth  (12th).  1895.  i-nd 
which  was  duly  recorded  in  the  reglsf-r 
of  deeds  office  for  St.  Louis  Countv 
Mbine.sota,  on  December  twelfth  (12th)' 
1S95,  at  four  (4)  o'clock  p.  m..  In  Book 
one  hundred  eight  (108)  of  mortgage."  on 
page  three  hundred  sixty-three  (363)  th^re- 
n,'vm"nt  '^,'^fH""t  t'onslsting  in  the  non- 
payment of  the  two  semi-annual   Install- 

^nT*''*'^/^'"^*'''*^*'^  "P'*"  «»id  mortga?". 
and  of  the  coupon  notes  given  for  fhe 
'^^"m^k  *'^k'^  amounting  to  the  sum  of  $175. 
Which  became  duo  resnectivelv  on 
JUI.V  1st,  1896,  and  January  1st,  %7  no 
':'rt  «/  ^-ither  of  which  has  ever  been 
paid,  by  reason  whereof  said  assignee's 
of  said  mortgage,  after  said  " 
and    each    of    them,      had 


PALESTINE  LODGE  NO.  79,  A, 
P.  &  A.  M.— Regular  meetings 
first  and  third  Monday  even- 
ings of  every  month  at  7:30 
~«  „.P-,  *"•  Next  meeting  March  15, 
1897.  Work,  Summons.  W.  A.  Mc- 
Gonagle.  W.  M.,  Edwin  Mooers,  secre- 
tary. 

IONIC  LODGE  NO.  186,  A.  P.  & 
A,  M.— Regular  meetings  second 
and  fourth  Monday  evenings  of 
every  month  at  7:30  p.  m.  Next 

_,^,  ^   ,     meeting    March    22,    1897.    Worlc. 

Third  degree.  F.  W.  Kugler,  W.  M.;  J.  D. 

Macfarlane,    secretary. 


>.^ 


^ 


defaults, 
continued    fur 


more  than  ten  days,  elected  to  exercise 
the  option  to  them  given  by  the  terms  of 
said  mortgage,  by  declaring,  and  do  h 


Duluth     Evening 
April-1-8-15-22, 


March-18-:5- 


by  declare,  that  the  whole  principal  sum 
secured  by  said  note  and  mSrtgr.ge 
^^2T\u^  *°  $5000,  with  all  accrued  fn- 
ffl!  ^J'^'r^"'  P'ff-hange  and  attorntVs 
payable  ^P^'^'A^d-    are   now   due   .-nid 

And  whereas  there  is  therefore  claimed 
to  be  diie,  and  there  is  actuallv  due 
upon  said  mortgage  debt,  at  the  date  of 
this  notice  the  sum  of  five  thousand  four 
hundred  thirty-nine  and  64-100  ($54^.64) 
thereon.  '""'"^''P'^''    ^terest   and   ex?hanpe 

nr^il  ^^^'■Pas  said  mortgage  contains  a 
power  of  .sale  In  due  form,  which  has 
become  operative  by  reason  of  the  de- 
faults above  mentioned,  and  no  action 
or  proceeding,  at  law  or  otherwise  hi" 
been  itistituted  to  recover  the  debt  secuivd 

^VoS"' ,^'''"^,^^^^'  °''  «"y  part  thereof, 
f  J!?  K  tf^t'refore,  notice  Is  hereby  given, 
that  by  virtue  of  .said  power  of  sale 
In  said  mortgage  contained,  and  pursuant 
to  the  stattJte  In  such  case  made,  said 
mortgage  will  be  foreclosed  by  a  sale  of 
*2"a  PV«'»n'ses    described    therein,    sitn.ite 

n.  f^n^*'"''''.*^*'"'?^*''  Minnesota,  describ.d 
as   follows     to-wit:   All   of   lots   numbeivd 

drlfi^fl'jJ'"""''*'  ,l''i>'  (^"^^  and  three  hun- 
9^,"^  ^^\y:V^^  ^^-^'  '"  *>lof'k  thirtv-eight 
(.ffl).   Duluth   Proper.   Second   Division,   .ic- 

?^o  i^f.  1°    ^^^   recorded    plat    thereof    in 

Pm,„75'''lf.'"  "^  ^f^^'  °'«C''  fo'-  St.  Louis 
county.  Minnesota;  which  premises,  with 
the    hereditaments       .ind    appurtenances 

rUL^t  ^^\^  ^^'  }^^  ^^^^^^  of  St.  Louis 
County.  Mlnne.sota.  at  the  front  door  of 
the  court  hou-se;  In  the  city  of  Duluth    in 

^ol.  S°«  *^  •I"'U^t^*^'  on  the  first  (1st) 
day  of  May.  A  D.  1897.  at  ten  (10)  o'clock 
hi^^^'  ♦*  public  auction,  to  the  highest 
bidder,  to  pay  said  debt  and  interest,  and 
the  taxea,  if,  any,  on  said  premises,  and 
one  hundred  dollars  attorney's  fees,  stip- 
ulated for  In  .said  mortgage  in  caae  of 
foreclosure,  and  the  disbursements  -tI- 
lowed  by  law;  subject  to  redemption  at 
any  time  within  one  year  from  the  day  of 
sale,  as  provided  by  law. 
Dated  March  17th,  1897. 
A.  H.  PORTER  and  T.  S.  CHILDS,  Trus- 
tees, 

Assignees  of  Mortgagee 

FRANCIS  W.  SULLIVAN, 

Attorney   for  Asslgneea 
Duluth      Evening      Herald,      March-18-25- 

April-1-8-15-22. 


KEYSTONE  CHAPTER  NO.  aO, 
R.  A.  M.— Stated  convocation 
second  and  fourth  Wednesday 
evenings  of  each  month  at  7:30 
p.  m.  Next  meeting  Tuesday. 
.  -,-,  March  23,  1897.  Work,  Royal 
Arch  degree.  John  F.  McLaren,  H  P  • 
George   E.   Long,   secretary. 

D  y  L  U  T  H  COMMANDERY 
No.  18,  K.  T.— Stated  conclave 
first  Tuesday  of  each  month 
7:30  p.  m.  Next  conclave 
Tuesday,  March  16.  1897.  Work. 

r.      *i,     ..  T^'^JC?*'^      K-      E.    Denfeld.      B. 
c,  Alfred  LeRlcheux,  recorder. 


Templar 


\P-  P-  W.-FIDELITY  LODGE  NO.  1(B. 
Meets  every  Thursday  in   the  Kalama- 
zoo block,   third  fioor,  18  West  Superior 
street.   James   McDowell,   M.   W.;  J.   H 
Powers,   recorder. 


FOR 

Liquor  License. 

STATE  OF  MINNESOTA,  COUNTY  OF 
ST.  LOUIS.  CITY  OF  DULUTH-SS 
Notice  Is  hereby  given  that  application 
?,^f  .,^n*^"  ,™^15  '".  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  said  city  of  Duluth,  and  filed 
In  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell  In- 
toxicating liquors  for  the  term  commenc- 

M^r**h  ^""^^o  ^r:  ^^'  ^^"•'  terminating  on 
March  12,  1898,  by  W.  P.  Wheaton  at  No. 
2J.'  Lake  avenue  south. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth,  at  the  council  chamber 
in  said  city  of  Duluth,  In  St.  Louis 
(bounty,    Minnesota,    on   Monday,   the   22d 

fK^?^.  March,  1897,  ut  7:30  o'clock  p.  m. 
of  that  day. 

Witness    my    hand    and    seal    of    said 
D^W  ^"''"^^'  ^^^^  ^  '^ay  of  March.  A. 
C.   E.   RICHARDSON, 

(Corporate    Seal.)  City  Clerk. 

Duluth  Evening  Herald.  March  4  to  ^9  ino 


HAIR  DRRSSiya 


■^"tkJ^,,.  JORGENSON  (FORMERLY 
with  Mldtsund  sisters,  of  St.  Paul.)  has 
opened  hairdressing  parlors  at  room  417 
Lonsdale    building. 


PILES 


Williams  Indian  Pile 
Uintment  m  a  sum  euro 
for  PILE*.  It  absorbs 
tumors.  Stopn  itching 
GIVES  BELIEF.  6O0 
and  SI.    At   Dru««let8. 


If  you  wish  to  drink  a 
Choice  glass  of  Lager 
call  for 
FITQER'S  BEER. 


^'£^'^?^9.^oMINNESOTA,  COUNTY  OP 
£51.    JjOijIS. — 

District   Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 

In  the  matter  of  the  a.sslgnment  of  the 
People  s  Savings  Bank  of  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota: 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  People's 
bavlng.s  Bank  of  Duluth.  Minn.,  on  Feb- 
ruary- 27th,  1897,  duly  made  and  filed  in 
tne  office  of  the  clerk  of  the  district  <-ourt 
or  St.  Louis  County.  Minnesota,  a  deed 
of  assignment,  assigning  all  its  property 
to  me.  the  undersigned,  under  the  gen- 
eral assignment  laws  of  this  state  lor 
the  benefit  of  Its  creditors,  and  that  I 
have  qualified  as  assignee  under  said 
deed.  All  persons  desiring  to.  participate 
in  the  benefits  of  .said  assignment  should 
forthwith  make  and  file  with  me  for  al- 
lowance their  verified  claims  as  provid- 
ed by  law. 
Duluth.  March  15th,  1897. 

ERNST   A.    SCHULZE, 

ALLEN,   BALDWIN  &  BALDWuif^^^' 

.   Attornej's    for  Assignee, 

Duluth   Evening  Herald.   March-16-18-2a 


Contract  Work. 


Office  of  Board   of  Public  W^orks, 

City  of  Duluth,  Minn.,  March  8,  1897. 

Sealed  bids  will  be  received  by  the 
board  of  public  works  in  and  for  the 
corporation  of  the  City  of  Duluth,  Min- 
nesota, at  their  office  in  said  citv  until  10 
iVo-T™;'  °\}^^^^  22nd  day  of  March,  A.  D. 
i«97,  tor  the  construction  of  wooden  cross- 
walks in  said  city  for  the  year  ending 
February  28,  1898,  according  to  plans  and 
specifications  on  file  in  the  office  of  said 
board. 

A  certified  check  or  a  bond  with  at 
least  two  (2)  sureties  In  the  sum  of  fifty 
"^lars   must   accompany  each   bid. 

The  said  board  reserves  the  right  to 
reject  any  and  all   bids. 

M.  J.   DAVIS, 
Official:  President. 

(Seal.) 
R.    MURCHISON. 

Clerk    Board    of    Public    Works. 
Duluth   Evening   Herald,   March  8  lOt. 


FOR 


Liquor  License. 


S'TATE  OF  MINNESOTA,  COUNTY  OF 
ST.  LOUIS,  CITY  OF  Dt:LUTH--SS3 
Notice  is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of-.sald  city  of  Duluth.  and  filed 
in  m.y  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell 
intox  eating  liquors  for  the  term  com- 
mencing on  March  18,  1897,  and  terminat- 
liig  on  March  18.  1898,  by  M.  J.  Dahlsten 
at   No.    19   Second   avenue   west 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  th- 
city  of  Duluth.  at  the  council  chamber 
In  said  city  of  Duluth.  in  St.  Louis  Coun- 
ty, Minnesota,  on  Mondav.  the  29th  dav 
of  March,  1897,  at  7:30  o'clock  p,  m.  of 
that  day. 

Witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  said  cltv 
of  Duluth,  this  16th  day  of  March.  A. 
XJ.    1887. 

C.  E.  RICHARDSON, 

(Corporate  Seal.)  ""''''  '"'''''■ 

Duluth  Evening  Herald  March  16  to  29  inc 


■-■( 


r* 


j 


■  »»■ 


* 


I 


i 


ONLY  EVENINO  PAPER  IN  DULUTtl 

ffliillD 

AN  INDEPENDENT  NEWSPAPER.     I 

Publiahed   at    Herald   building,   220   Weet  I 
Superior   street. 


OulutI)  Publishing  &  Printing  Co 


toration  cannot  be  stopiwd  entirely,  but 
It  «itukl  lie  rHstriot«'(l  to  a  prrt-at  extent 
if  the  ht'iiMh  luianl  Im-kum  a  <rusa<l.' 
against  thi>s.«  who  indulge  In  the  dls- 
RUsliPK  hal>it  and  had  the  t-arni-st  m- 
"in'rntii>n  of  tlie  police  dcpaitint  nt  anil 
of  tile  strtHt  «ar  «ondu<tors.  The  anvst 
and  punishment  «>f  a  few  ofFender:^ 
Would  have  an  e.\<'ellent  rlT«>rt  towards 
break! nir  up  the  iiraitke. 


THE     DULUTH     ENENTNG     HERALD:   THTTRSPAY,    MAKCH     18,     1897. 


THE  DINGIEY  TARIFF. 


TELEPHONE  CALLS: 

Conntingr  Room— 3:;4,  two  riii<?«. 
Editorijil  Booms— 324,  three  rinca. 

TEN  CENTS  A  WEEK 

Every  Evening,  Delivered  or  by  Mail. 

Single  copy,  daily f  .02 

One  month .. 45 

Three  moctha ^ 1.80 

Bix  months . 2.80 

One  year 5.00 

Weekly  Herald,  $1.00  per  year ;  SO  eenta  for  au 
muntba ;  2S  cents  for  three  months.  i 

Kntered  at  the  Doluth  poatoffico  as  second 
el  ass  matter, 

LARGEST  CIRCULATION  IN  DULUTH 

Olficial  Paper  of  the  City  of  Duluib. 
HERALD'S  CIRCUUTION  HIGH-WATER  HARK 

17,148. 

THE  WEATHER.  j 

T'niteil  States  At:rirultural  Department.  | 
WeHther  IJureau.  Lmiutlj.  Synopsis  «.;"  I 
weather  eonditions  for  the  twenty-foi.i 
hours  endinp  at  T  a.  m..  (Central  time) 
Mareh  IS.— The  air  pressure  lontinu-.-s 
lowest  in  the  far  Xortiiwest.  and  lias 
diminishtHl    In   all   districts.  — «»    .«    „.,.,.    ..•    iviu.- 

':.''\^}nIi'i^urL:^''!f'\^&  '^Z  !  tion  to  franchises   for  other  purposes 


MUNICIPAL    FRANCHISES. 

Recent  y  ars  have  been  rrlarked  by  a 
g:reat  awakeniuK  in  regard  to  the  value 
of  public  fi-anchises.  and  the  feeling 
that  municipal  corporations  should  not 
i  srant  franchises  without  adeijuate  re- 
turn has  steadily  grown.  It  Is  still 
making  headway,  and  it  is  safe  to  pre- 
dict that  the  time  is  not  far  distant 
whei.  no  i)rivilese  which  has  a  value 
will  be  granted  without  provision  for 
brinpinfr  return  to  the  city. 

Hecent  e.xamples  of     the     growth     of 
pul>lic  sentiment     on     this     jKiint     are 
worthy  of  note.      Boston's     mayor     re- 
cently vetoed  a  pneumatic  tube  bill  be- 
eau.«»e  it  promised  the  city  no  share  In 
the  earnings  of  the  ct>nipany.     Xow  the 
mayor  of  X.w   York  has  approved   the 
'  P'ord  pneumatic  tube  bill,  with  the  rec- 
ommendation,  however,   "that  a  bill   be 
passeil  recpiirini;^  the  company  referred 
;  lo  to  pay  to  the  city  of  Xew   York  not 
less  than  3  per  cent  on  its  gross  receipts 
for  the  first  twenty     years,     and     that 
each    twenty   years   thereafter  a   read- 
justment of  the     amount     to     be    paid 
I  should   be  made   by  the   municipal   au- 
I  thoritit-s."    The     recommendation     will 
j  be  popularly  approved.     Doubtless  New 
I  York  and  Brooklyn  need  the  pneumatic 
I  tube  for  «iuick  transportation  of  mails, 
but  they  could  afford  to  wait,  if  neces- 
I  sary.  for  the  f ram-hiss's  to  be  appreci- 
ated.    The  same  thipg  is  true  in  rela 


pisi  twi-nty-iour  hoi;rs  in  the  lake  rt 
gion.  the  Mississippi  valley.  Minnesota 
and  the  eastern  jnirtions  of  the  Dako- 
ti's.  the  rainfall  being  light  to  mtid^rate 
In  <|uantity,  except  in  the  I..ower  Alissis- 
sij»pl  valley,  where  it  amounted  to  J.tM 
inches  at  Memjihis.  (Mouily  weather  still 
prevails  in  the  Missis^sippi  valUy  and  the 
lake    region. 

Th«'  temperature  was  above  the  freez- 
ing point  in  the  central  and  south-rn 
sections  of  the  t-onntry  at  the  hour  or' 
ob.-servation  this  morning.  and  in  the 
Northwest    it    rangeii    from    1    above    zero 


If  no  one  is  willing  to  pay  for  them, 
cities  can  afford  to  wait  until  then- 
value  Is  appreciated.  They  will  not 
long  be  without  takers. 


in     the    S;iskatrhewan    vallev.     to 
South    Dakota. 
Lowest    temperatures    last    nighi: 


m 


Calgary 

Prince   Alliert 

Mintiedosa 

Swift    Current 

Williston    

Tort    Arthur    . 

Mar<pietie    .. 

•  lavre    

iluron    

Duluth    

I  ..a    Crosse    ... 

Lander    

DaveniM>rt    .. 
Detroit    

r».Hlge    City     . 
North    Platte 
St.    Louis    


—   ;'.;tttIeIord 

4IMe<iiclne    Mat    . 

3l)  Oir    Ap|>e!le    

I'ilWinnipeg    

-  Helena     

.■fti'Ikismarek    

:M  Miles   City    

.:0'M.M>rhead" 

tl  Sault    Ste.    Marie 

:C  Rii>id    Citv    

a;  St.     Paul    

a>  Chicago    

42  Milwauk.*e    

34  Denver    

W 'Omaha    

«  Memphis   

.'.o' Kansas    City    .... 


PRESBYTERIAN  UNION. 

The  movement  for  the  reunion  of  the 
Presbyterian  church  of  the  T'nited 
States  and  the  Presbyterian'  «hurch 
South  has  l>een  revived  in  a  form  that 
promises  to  be  more  successful 
the  previous  efforts.  The  •  "present 
movement  has  been  initiated  by  the  in- 
dividual churches  of  both  bodies  in 
Louisville,  whose  members  have  held 
several  meetings  for  consultation,  and 
have  finally,  at  a  general  meeting, 
agreed  upon  steps  to  bring  about  action 


4 

IS 
12 
i4 
S-t 
10 

•» 

2S 

28 

^  '  at  the  next  sessions  of  the  g^-neral  as- 
semblies. To  this  end  an  effort  will  be 
made  to  get  both  bodies  to  appoint  their 
sessions  at  Louisville  in  ISOS.     The  diffi- 


iio 

•IS 


Washington        special    to    the    Chic.i.Lr<t 
Ueconl:      Tht'    reciprocity     in     tlu"    tarlil" 
bill    Is   a    lumibiig.      It    will    be    ltn|)ossible 
for   the  sci-ret.-iry   of  slate   to   negotiate  a 
treaty    of    coiisopieine    with    any    nadoii 
upon    the    b;isis    presented    there.    Inia.4iiii' 
lloraci-       I'orter.       oiir      atnbassador       (o 
laris.   w.'ilkiiiK  up  to  ihe  president   ol    t'le 
I'reneh    repiihlic  and   asking   liini    to   make 
a     treaty       e.sclianging       ginger    ale    and 
eliiekle    for    our    tldiir.     Mr.     Dinglej-    .unl 
Ids   associates   are   tun   well    infornn-d   i.lso 
lo   suppose    thai    the  (German   governmi-nt 
womUI    remove    the    embargo    they     have 
placed    upon    our    breadsluffs    ami    provi- 
sions   if    we   oidy   offeieil    to    take    part    of 
the   duty   oft    mineral    waters.    A|)ollinaris 
is  the  ihitf  export  of  this  kind  from  tJ-'r- 
many.     and     the    spring     from     whic-li     it 
comes    is    owned    in    lOngland.    The    Carls- 
had   and    Hunyaili    waters   are    from    Aii;;- 
iria.   and   are  valuable   for  medicinal   p'lr- 
poses.    but    the    Increase    in    their    export 
is  not  :i  matter  of  consequence  to  the  oec- 
pl«'  o(  tlijt  empire. 

Does  ai.ybody  siippo.se  that  the  mem- 
bers of  the  committee  on  ways  and  me;tns 
are  so  simple  as  to  expect  any  gt)vera- 
nient  to  offer  i-onci'ssions  for  our  mer- 
chandise because  we  are  willing  to  iid- 
mit  as.ses"  skins,  or  that  the  secretary  of 
st.lte  shoidd  be  expected  to  recover  the 
market  that  has  been  lost  for  millions 
of  b.irrels  of  oar  Hoin-  in  sugar-gniwlng 
(•onntries  by  offering  to  reiluce  the  tar- 
iff on  that  prodnet  s  per  cent?  Tiie 
ori!.!itial  arraiig.ment.-  with  <'iiba.  Puerto 
Hii'o  and  other  tropical  countries  nro- 
\  ideil  for  thi'  admission  of  sugar  free, 
and  one  govenuneni  will  have  to  :uunil 
it    again    if    those    arrangements    are    re- 

IHWed. 

There    Is    no    use    of    asking    .-i    foreign 
government     to    make    a     tr.atv    of    r.vi- 
prociiy     unless     we    .ffer       .-JoriiethiH;;     it 
w.iius.  something  that   will  be  for  its  ad- 
vantage,  or  is  demaiiiled   by   tin-   interests 
of  its   people,   and   there  is  "not  a  govern- 
ment  on   larth    that   would    not   l.iugh   at 
every     it. in    i>roposed     in     ilr.     Dingley's 
bill.      It     is    one    of    the    ailvaiUages    jiad 
beiietits    of    reciproc-ity    that     bv    its    ap- 
plication   the   people   cd'    the    I'nited    StatcJS 
may    receive    articles    that    they    need    at 
low    rates    of    duty.      if    customs    ecjnces- 
sioiis   are    to    be    made    at    all.    th.v    mu.^l 
be    such    as    will    beneiit    both    pai'ties    to 
the    agreement.    Kven    Mr.    Dinglev    him- 
self could    not    with   a   sober   face   explain 
what  adv  uitage.x  the  people  of  the  fnltid 
States    would    enjoy    in    having    the    duty 
on   argois    or   crude    tartar    reduced    from 
Hi    to    1    cent    a    pound;    or    the    duty    on 
chickle   from   S»  to  7  cents  per   |)ound;   or 
the-  duty  on   •mineral   waters'   and    •imi- 
tations   of    mineral    waters    ami    artiluial 
mineral   waters   in   ^:reen   or  colored   gli-;s 
bottles  of  not   more  than  one  pint"   irom 
2S  to  -/i   cents  a   dozen. 

Mr.    Dingley    is    probably    surprised    be- 
oau.-ie     the     70.(X»t>.I.K)(»    of     people     composing 

this  enlightened  n.ition  do  not  imnu-diite- 
ly  get  up  and  call  him  blessed  because 
he  offers  to  admit  champagnes  'in  bot- 
tles of  not  over  a  quart  at  J6  a  dozeu' 
and  -laces  of  silk,  or  of  which  silk  is 
the  component  material  of  chief  value 
at  35  per  cent  ad  valorem."  There  wa.s 
never  a  more  absurd  legisl.-itive  prop-j- 
than  ' -"'''*'"  offered  in  the  rnltcd  Stat^-s  or 
elsewhere-  on  earth,  than  the  recipr.i.itv 
.section  .if  tlw  taritT  bill.  Hut  it  is  the 
natural  result  of  th.-  policy  of  the  com- 
mittee. Most  of  the  mem'bers  have  no 
knowledge  of  the  subject,  and  they  ha^e 
pci-slstently  declined  to  receive  informa 
tion. 

This  remarkable'  provision  has  one  re- 
deeming teatuic.  however.  It  is  said  lh.it 
no  effort  is  made'  In  the  world  witliout 
.some  g.jod  result,  and  th;it  no  force  is 
e-ver  lost.  The  rc>ciprocitv  section  has 
contributed  a  great  deal  to  the  amu.se- 
ment  of  the  diplomatic  cor|is.  and  wini 
that    its   usefulness   is   ende^d. 

If  Mr.  lilaine  wen-  living  lie  would 
probably    smash    an(»ther    hat     upon     .Mr 


COLDS 

aiunyon-.^  Cold  Cure  cures  colds  in   the 
head,   .olds  on   the  lungs,   old    <o Ids     n,  w 

oi    i,rip.    htops  .sn.'czui.g,   diseharg.-s    from 

h-  n..se  an.l  ,,ves.  prev.nts  eatanh    c   nh- 

r'.o/V  "";p''"'<'"ia  and  .-.11  thrc,   t  and  Ig 

S .UHv'^'r"  ';'"'"="."   '*"'"  4'<-'lols  ar^ 

ne.ss    PH.!!; ':?;,.=' "^*  prevenfMl  much  sick- 

5l 


8ANTA.  OLA  (/a  80AP, 


BANTA    OLAUa  aOAP, 


Improved  Homoeopathic  Home  Rem- 
«  y  ^"mpany  put  up  a  separate  cure  f^r 
oL^^  *^'?*'''-^'-  M  all  druggist.s.  mosOv  1^ 
cents.   Guide  to   Health   free.         '"""">    -' 

Personal  letters  to  Professor  Munyon 
1,K)D  Arch  street.  Philadelphia.  Pa  an- 
dKsease.'^''^  ^'"^'^  "'^'^'"^'  advice  for  a,.V 


TICKLISH  TIPS. 


Cleveland 

don't     believ." 

"Sot   since 
i-espondenis." 


Plain      D.'aler:      "Then 
ill    the   .\naiii.is    st.)ry-." 
I  met  th.ise   Key    West 


Detroit   Free   I'r.'ss:   "What  .1..  th. 
m.ii   .lo   HI    the  h..l    weather,    i.apa-.'- 

It  tak.s  th.in  all  summ.r  i.t  figure 
their   prolit.s.    uiv  .son." 


>  ou 

r'or- 
COIll 

up 


■'■"cle   .Tames,    what 


mlst'"'^'      '  "*'"'  •"""•'''•   ^^''>->f   •«   -'L   l><^f^-i- 

••(Jh:  h.^'s  any  sort  of  an  .>ld  thing  tli:it 

w.>n  t  enjoy  his  ie."  c-ream   today   becaii.se 

m-^s    afraid    h.-    wont    have    any    tonior- 

Lifc^:    I!ellboy_Kour    hundred    and    four 

rilom       '   "^*'""'    '•'■'^'•"^   '^''^'•^"   '^"rst    in    his 

Clerk— Charge,  idm  for  a  Ru.ssian  bath. 

Chl,-,go  Tribune:  "T'ejor  soul!"  ck- 
•'•vc'.'"'?'     til*'     sym|)athetlc        h.iusekeep.M-. 

\Miat  ever  dn.v.-  you  lo  this  w.iy  of 
making  a   living.'-  "^ 

T„J^"/1-'^    '"""    -"tory,    mum."    replied 
Tufr.|ld    Knutt.        rea.hing       for    anclth-r 

slummiek.'-"""   '  "'"■'  '■''''  ""  ='"  ••'""'>■ 

Chicago    Record:    "There    is    one    thing 

■.r.VlT''^  '^''""f  '^'''^'^^  •«*'ho  are  named 
alter   great    men. 

■"Wh.it   is  that?" 

•They  us-ually  puni.sh  their  parents  f6r 
11    wnen    they    are    grown." 


from  Sun  to 
Sun, 

A  Woman's 
work  by 
Noon  is 
done— 

if  she  uses  Santa  Claus" 

Soap.     It  cleans  qui( 

well,  the   clothes  you  wear,  the  dishes^<. 

you  use.     In  the  laundry  it  saves  clothes,  and 

makes  your  work  light.     Get  a  cake  of 


said 
now 


Duluth  temperature  at  7  a.  m.  todav. 
Sti:  maximum  vesterdav.  33:  minim"ni 
yesterday.  iM:  rainfall  for  the  twer.'.v- 
four  hours  ending  at  7  a.  m.  todav.  .I'l 
inch. 

Local  forecast  for  Duluth  and  vicinitv: 
Partly  cloudy  and  cooler  tonight:  Fri- 
day i)robab|y  light  rain  or  snow  and 
cooler;  southwest  winds  shifting  to  easi- 
frly.  JA.MKS    KKXK.ALY. 

Local    Forecast    Official. 


culty  has  be.^n  all  along  that  the  chuich    i>->>Kley's  table,  as  he  di.l  in  the  commii- 

tee    room    of    the   senate    when    the    tariff 


Chicago.  March  IS.— For  Wisconsin: 
Generally  cloudy  tonight  and  Fri.iav:  we^t 
to  southwest  winds.  For  Minnesota  • 
Partly  cloudy  tonight  and  Friday;  va- 
riable winds. 


South,  which  long  before  the  war  sep 

arated   from   the  national   body  on    ac 
I  count  of  its  delivei-ances  against  slav 

er>-,  has  hitherto  demanded  the  rescind-  <  P'  opie  of  the   rnlteel  Stat.'s  can  a' 
ling  or  expunging  the  censures  passed  ' —''""    '"''*•"'*■    ='"*'    l"-"^-^'^'      ^"i'l 

on  slavery  and  secession,  and  this  the 

Northern  Presbyterians  cannot  consci- 
entiously do. 
As  the  Springfield  Republican  says.  It 

seems  to  be  really  a  case  where  com- 


law    of    ISJui    was    under    c-onsielenition 

A    clo.se    examination    of    the    tariff    'lill 
however,    shows    that     high    duties    have- 
not    been    placed    upon    everything.    The 

least 

They  an-  also  pernili'teei  to  bring  in  ill 
acorns  th.y  wish,  dry  or  undriecl,  but  If 
they  are  ground  they  will  have  to  pav 
duty.  There  is  no  tax  ou  mo.ss  agates 
or  alizarin,  either  natural  or  artificial 
or  unm.inufacturcHl  amber  or  ambergris 
and  there  will  be  great  re^joicing  to  dis- 
cover   naphthazarin     is    free 


ev,  I  V^ '•'"*'    Ll='<^<''-:    Algy-I   always 
that   George  Gilders   was   crazy    and 
hes   proved    th.tt    I   was   right'  " 
Fr,^.ldie~How  s    that?        ^ 

..      ?f-7r^^''^'-  •^""  l^'if'W  he  married  Hora- 
j  tio    Millyuns   only   daughter,    but    in    spite 
c.f    that    fact    he    is    holding   on    to    his    oi.l 
.lob  and  working  for  a  living. 

Indi.inapolis     Journal:      "Er-vou       see 

de^'rlv'-Is-'h   ""'"'^  ,V'"   -'"""^    "i"'"'-    «•"    ten: 
<leil.\    .is    he   c.)iild.    •you   see.    father     v<>ii 

are  jnst  u  bit  of  an  old  fogy." 

I    Kuppo.se    I     iim.-     admitted     the    old 

1  wtts'^om'a^.^"^  ''"'■  ^'^'"'^   «->■  ^'-" 

CinHnnati^  KnquircT:  "I  sent  a  doll.u- 
la.st  VM-ek.  sai.l  the  Good  Thing  •in 
■I  V!^^^  V'  V'"'*  a.lverti.sement  offeri.  g 
billJT^'-  saving    one-half    my    gaS 

"And  you  got—" 

e,'l-^    '.'•''"'♦^t'    •'^'ip   directing   me    to    paste 
th.^m   in  a  .scrap  book." 


at  once,  and  give  it  a  trial.     Sold  everywhere. 

Made  only  by 

THE  N.  K.  FAIRBANK  COMPMY,  CHICAGO. 


kGO.       i 


THE     \VAXDI:rixG     niXKEYE. 

Is  gwine  back   t'   Canton. 

Hit   ain't   no  us.-  t"   liiurer' 
I   fought   I'd  mill  some  office  down 
I'-z   easy  s    snap    my    linger. 
Hut    I    find   a   million   ucid.ilis 
Poor   deliKled    iUl.  keye    brudtlah.s. 

An    Is  gwiiie  back  ez  soon  ez  i  kin 

itaise — cle — dough." 

—Chicago   Tribune. 


DANGEROUS    TO     HEALTH.  | 

The   Minneapolis   board    of   health   is 
proposing  to  pay  some  attention  to  tii  ■  ' 
subject  of  expectoration.     The  Herald  ; 
trusts   that   the   Duluth    hntard   will   do  { 
likewise.     In  New  York  and  in  Chicago  ' 
the  health  authorities  have  done  much 
to   put  a  stop   to   this   disgusting  and 
rtangerous    practice.      The    Herald    has  I 
been   urgin-^  for  some   time  past    that 
the  health  board  of  this  city  take  up  the 
s-ubject  and  deal  with  it  in  an  eflfectiv..- 
manner.     It    is   a    matter   that    vitally 
affects  the  health  of  the  people.    Health 
Officer  Murray  can  demonstrate  that  he 
is  the  right  man  in  the  right  place  by 
enforcing  regulations  that  will  put  an 
end    to   the   spitting   habit     in     public 
places. 

Commenting  on   the  proposed  action 
ojf    the   Minneapolis    board,    the    Times 
points  out  that  the  practice  of  spitting 
in   public  places   is  not  e:)nly   offensive, 
but  dangerous.     It  is  the  means  of  dis- 
seminating    germs     of      consumption, 
diphtheria,  influenza  and  other  diseases, 
and  in  seasons  of  cholera  it  m'ght   be  i 
deadly.    Catarrhal  affections  and  others 
lire  perhaps  communicated  in  this  man- 
ner to  a  degree    we     canhot     realize. 
Women  are  the  principal  carriers  of  the 
gerrn-s.  as  their  dresses  are  often  worn 
in  such  a  way  as  to  sweep  through  the 
filth  of  the  walks,  and  even  when  fash- 
ion has  a  moment  of  sense     and     the 
srkirts  are  sh.jrtened.  they  are  still  long 
enough  to  drag  on  'going  up  and  down 
the  stairs  of  public  buildings,  factories 
und  shops,  and.  worst  of  all.  the  street 
cars.    Not  unfrequently  the  street  cars 
are  almost   unfit   for  decent   people   to 
travel   in.   and   it  is  a   common   occur- 
rence   for    ladies   to    find    the    edges    of 
their  skirts  badly  soiled  as  a  result  of 
this   practice   of  spitting  on    the  street 
car  floors. 

The  Minneapolis  paper  says:     "Prob- 
ably no  law  can  be  made  strong  enough 
to  entirely   stop     public   expectoration. 
The  health  of  the  individual  might  often 
suffer  from  such  a  restraint.     But  it  is 
easy  for  those  who  must  spit  to  do  so 
■on   the  street   instead   of  the  sidewalk, 
and  to  use  cuspidors  that  are  generally 
provided  so  freely  in   this  country— to 
the    astonishment    of    foreigners;      but 
there  is  no  excuse  for  a  man  to  enter  a 
street  car.  where  these  conveniences  are 
not  provided,  with  his  mouth  full  of  to- 
bacco, and  so  defile  it  as  to  make  it  un- 
fit for  women  and  cleanly  men  to  ride 
in.    Tobacco  chewing  is  a  national  vice 
that  is  responsible  for  a  good  deal  of  the 
offensive   condition    of     sidewalks   and 
floors  of  cars  and  buildings,  and   tho.se 
^vho   are   addicted    to   this    filthy   habit 
Jiecome  very  careless  and  inconsiderate, 
as  well  as  personally  noisome  and  un- 
sightly.    They  often   eject  saliva  from 
windows    and    platforms    of    cars    and 
Tipper  flcjors  of  buildings,  recking  noth- 
ing  of   what    or   who   may    be   passing. 
The  recipient  of  their  attention   would 
probably   have  good     cause  of     action 
against  them,  if  it  were  possible  to  iden- 
tify and  arrest  them." 
It  is  probably  true  that  public  expec- 


,        ,  " '■''    '''"'"*'•        -Vnnatto 

promise  is  inadmissible;  the  church  |  Ji^;^;^', rValiT^irgiU^r^m J' l">:^i^ 
south  should  follow  the  example  of  the  \  ?tu1f'  d  birds  may  be  admitted  witiiout 
Southern  people    in    returning    to    the 


L'nion.  and  whil?  cherishing  their  los. 
cause  as  much  as  they  please,  concede 
that  it  is  lost,  and  work  together  with 
their  Northern  brethren  in  amity.  They 
could  do  this  without  any  l.j.ss  of  char- 
acter  or  surrender  of  conviction:  but 
the  church  s  are  apt  to  be  the  last 
homes  of  bitterness  in  respect  to  dead 
issues. 


duty    if   they    are   not    suitable    for    milli- 
nery ornaments,  and  there  is  no  embargo 


on    catgut    or    books 
libr.ir.v  of  congress 


for   the   use  of    tht 


Leo  XIII.   has  just   entered     cm     the 
twentieth    year  of  his  spiritual    reign, 
and  some  of  the  more  superstitious  in 
Rome  look  on  the  year  with  dread,  be- 
,  cause  of  the  story  that  on  the  eve  of 
j  his  election  a  young  Franciscan  monk 
i  had  a  vision,  in  which  he  was  told  that 
the  new  pope  would  hold  otlice  twenty 
years.    When  so  old  a  man  as  Cardinal 
Pecci   was  chosen  the     visionary     was 
mocked.    Now  some  fear  that  his  reve- 
lation will  prove  too  precisely  true. 


KELLER'S  MASTER   EFFORT. 

Rube   Allyn   in   the  Crookston   Tribune: 
I    was    fortunate    enough       to    be    in    the 
hou.se   of     representatives     on     Thursday 
v.hin    they    held    a    jfjhit    session    between 
the  hours  of  11  and  12  to  pa.ss  resoluti.>ns 
of    congratulations    to    President    McKin- 
.  lay.    his    wife   and    mother,    on    his    intiu- 
I  gurati.ju.  There  were  some  fluent  speech-  < 
I  made,    but    the    two    which    stood    out    in 
grea\  contrast   and    furnished   all    the    fun 
were "  those    of     Ignatius    Donnelly    and 
Senator    Keller,    the    rosebud      stat<'!jm:<n 
of  Stearns   county.    Keller   is   a    wil.l-ev.'d 
Cleveland    Democrat,    whose    English       is 
mostly  German  and  his  gestures  borrowed 
I  from    a    windmill    in    the    third    sttige    of 
I  consumption,     while    his    voice    suggests 
'  a   factory    for  sharpening   saws. 
j      Donnelly   rose,    and   in   calm,    well   mod- 
I  ulaled    tones,    paid     McKinlev    a    glowing 
tribute,  not  forgetting  Uryan  as  his  eteo- 
tion  pi-ogre.ssed.  and  when,  at   the  heiget 
I  of  his  capjicity,    he   pointed   dramaticallv 
I  t.j   the   clock   and   said: 

I       -fUit    above    all    we    should     fe-el     most 
grateful  and  sincere  in  our  thanks  to  t  i.? 
Giver  of  all   good    things   that    when    tb.it 
I  li-ind   points   to   the   hour  of  12,    the  most 
I  stupendous     failure     who     has     ever    dis- 
graced  the   White  House,   will   have  irone 
I  out  of  offlce.- 

;     Ami.jst      the    applause    which    followd 

I  i  tonnelly  s    utterances.       Senator       Keller 

.-Iirung  up  into  the  air  and  yelled: 

'       -Mister  Chairmans,    House  and  Senate- 

i  I  kenel  sid  in  my  sead  und  listen  to  dot 

bl.ialed  ra.scal  talk  like  dot  woy  apoud  a 

great  statesman  .lot  is  more  able  to  black 

1  his   own   shoes   than   dot   man   is   tit   ena- 

,  how.      It    IS    a    big    aisgracc>   to    dis    hotis 

und  senate  for  the  senator  to  Dokota    lo 

. (speag    dot    way    apoud    Crofer    Glefelan.l 

r.„„,,.      ,  i  ='«    the   biggest   v.iilure  dot   has   e?er   tiis- 

t-ourth-class  postmasters  are  not  un- I  Kraee^d    the    Wide    Hoiis.    He    speags    dot 

der  the  civil  service  rules.    There  seems  i  j^oTs   h^l^y"c:n?i^'^;l'A'.l^;!l;'Vim^^[.^^  l^t 
to   i)e  a  very  general  misapprehension    biJ"-"-    '   trow  it   up  in  his  eves,   dot   »rreat 

on  this  subject.     The  ciuestion  of  niac-     "'""•   '^i '♦''"♦'';' "*'     '«    the    'greatest    states- 

..  ^"c  iiue&uon  OI  piat  -  ^  man     dot    has    ever    di.sgraec-d    the    Wide 

mg  them  under  the    classified    service  '  Hous.  and  I  defy  him  .)der  ena  oder  nop 

'  to  prove  dot  I  am  right.  (Great  and  ilr.j- 
longed    laughter.)" 


Great  Britain  is  shocked  at  the  al- 
leged ungallantry  of  President  Krue- 
ger  of  the  Transvaal  republic  in  refer- 
ring to  Queen  Victoria  as  a  "vicious 
vvoman.  '  On  the  other  hand,  however. 
It  is  contended  that  the  English  eciuiva- 
lent  of  the  president's  characterization 
is  merely  "peculiar  woman."  But  most 
women  would  consider  it  almost  as 
much  of  an  insult  to  be  called  peculiar 
as  to  be  told  that  they  are  vicious. 


IRON  AND  STEEL. 

Market  For  Those  Commodities 
Still  improving. 

Chicago.  March     18.— The     Industrial 
today  says:    Further    improvement   in 
the  Western  iron  and     steel     tt-ade     it. 
noted  this  week.     It  Is  not  confined  to 
rail  or  to  the  cruder     forms     of     steel, 
where  the  activity    has     been     mainly 
centered  during  the  past  several  weeks 
but   IS     broadening     out     to       various 
branches    of     the     manufactured     pro- 
ducts.    The   better   trade   is   not   wholly 
uniform,     nor     are     prices     uniformly 
stronger.     Some      heavy      transactions 
nave  resulted  from  concessions   grant- 
ed _  Pig  iron   is  quoted   on   a   basis     of  I 
$10., o  for  northern  foundry.  No.  2.  and  i 
$10.6  for  Southern  foundry.  No.  2.  Raii-^ 
are  firm  at  $i-l  for  heavy  sections.    In  ! 
addition  to  the  better  sales  of  iron  and  i 
steel,   inquiries  are  much  more  numei 
ous. 


MORTGAGE   FORECLOSURE   SALE.- 

^^'"^r^as  <lelault  has  been  made  in  the 
conditions  oi  a  certain  mortgage  dulv  ev- 
e-iit.-ei    and    delivered    by    Hetiry    oVens 
and   M.ary   Owens,   his   wife,    mortgagetrs 
to    J.    J.    Janeway,    executor,    mortgagee 
bearing    date    the    1st    day    of    May     ms 
and    with    a    power    of    sale    therein    ecui- 
tainod.  duly  recorded  in  the  office  of  "he 
rc'gister  Ol  deeds  in  and  for  the  county  of 
St    Louis  ami  state  .if  Minnesota,  on"  the 
Knh   day   of   May.    im.   at  2:10  cfclock   o 

.'?-•  !,'V  ^^''•J'*  '"-  '";  mortgages  on  pager's 
2Uj,   I'W.  and  2G7,   and 

ci^ee^noV'!  f.'"'^  mortgage  and  the  prin- 
cipal note  thereby  se.>ured  contain  pro- 
visions  that  if  def.-uilt  shall    be   madi>   in 

ci.,e  o,?'.  n'l^  *"•  "!'-^' ."''"  "f  t'lf-  biterest 
bv%  iv  -^=''<  l>'''"^'!.>al  note  as  evidenced 
uy  aiy  of  the  semi-annual  coupon  notes 

OS, 'ml  ^"^''•^'V'    "'^    »''«    (lay    whereon 

f-i.  It  sbfu"'  "'•?-'"'  l'^'^•«^^l'^  ""d  such  de- 

KW)  ti,i.\s.  that  then  and  in  everv  such 
case  the  whole  of  the  principal  s7m  an 

1  accrued  interest  thereon  shall  imme- 
diately become,  tmd  at  any  time  Vhe?e- 
alter  be,   due-  and  payable  at   the  .jntion 

v'itM'*^    '■^'''  ^^'^'^''^''  of  *''^'^»  Principal  not" 

without   any    notice   of  such   option,    and 

W  hereas  default  has  been  made  in  tie 

payment  of  the  sum  of  $22.50  of  the  semi - 

Juu"^ist"' ^lir'  ^r  ?1  -"^e'd  Prlncipal^note 
i    ',    J.^t,   Ibyo.   and  default  ha-s  also  been 

T%^  ^'i^}'»>''"^".^  of  the  further  sum 
OI  ,5j_.m)  Of  the  semi-annual  interest  due 
on  said  principal  note  January  1st  1^97 
and  such  defaults  have  coiuinued  for 
more  han  ten  (10)  days,  by  reason  where^^- 
?L  H  ''i^!'^  mortgagee,  who  is  now  the 
legal  holder  of  said  principal  not.'  h-  s 
decicled  to  exercise  said  op  ion  and  does 
hereby   declare   the  whole   principal   sum 

secured   by  .said  note  and   mortgage   and  '  ""-    i'""oc;    venuue.    oy 
H.L  "^■"■"^'•J    interest    thereon    to    be    ncjvv  I  '-'Junty    of   St.    Louis    : 
due  and   payable,   and                                "°^^     "nesota.   at  the   front  d 
\\lu^reas    there    Is    claimed    to    be    due    '  "' *    "^ '  "   '" 


^ ^WILCOX  GOMROUNO 

VkNSY%RILLS 

The  only  reUable  female  reenlator 

Nevnr  FallH.  Sold  bv  druggists.  S'i.OO 

S^iiet  4e.  for  Woijian's  isategiiard. 

VQiCSS  USSICAL  CO.  228  S.  8th  St,  FUl».Fft. 

^'t^^I^^'^' «  iT^  -'^lORTGAGE    FORECL^s' 

Whereas  .lefault  has  been  made  in  the 
conditions  of  a  certtiin  mortgage,  macie 
cxtH-uted  and  delivered  bv  John  A  Bir- 
giii.  mortgagor,  to  A.  R.'  McDonell  and 
1  nomas  Irvine.  morigagtH-s,  dated  the 
senenteenlh  (17th)  day  of  January,  A  D 
is!-<..  and  re^corded  in  the  office  of  the 
r(;£rister  of  deeds  in  .tnd  for  the  county 
of  bt.  Louis  and  sluite  of  Minnesota,  oh 
the  twentieth  (20th)  day  of  January,  A. 
D.  ISiW,  at  the  hour  of  eleven  o-clock  and 
forty  minutes  in  the  forenoon  of  said 
elay.  in  Book  ninety-three  (!13)  of  mort- 
gages on  page  four  hundred  and  ninetv- 
iive  (!*»:)). 

And  whereas  such  default  consists  in 
the  non-payment  of  the  principal  sum 
and  interest  secured  by  the  said  mort- 
gage and  there  is  claimed  to  be  due  and 
therc»  is  now  due  on  said  mortgage  at 
the  date  of  this  notice  the  sum  of  four 
Inindre-d  and  f.^rty-thr-e  dollars  and  elev- 
en cents  ($113.11)  principal  and  interest. 

And  -whereas  no  proceeding  or  action 
has  been  instituted,  at  law  or  otherwise, 
to  recover  the  debt  secured  by  said 
mortgage,  or  luiy  jiart  thereof. 

Now.  therefore,  notice  is  hereby  given 
that  by  virtue  of  a  power  of  sale  con- 
taine^d  in  .said  mortgage  and  of  the  stat- 
ute in  such  c^ase  made  and  provided,  the 
f-iid  mortgage  will  be  foreclosed  by  the 
sale  of  the  premisc^s  therein  described, 
at  public  vendue,  by  the  sheriff  of  the 
Louis  and  state  of  Min- 
oor  of  the  district 


MORTGAGE   FORECLOSURE   SALE  - 

W  hereas  default   has  been  m.ade   In   the> 
conditions    .if    a    certain    mortgage    .Inly 
V.''*T.V.V''    •*"•'    delivered    by    Willl.iin    W 
M.-.\lillan  and  Louise  McMillan,   his  wife 
m..rigugors.   to   William   10.   Lu.-as,   niort- 
gag..e.    b.-aring  date   the  first   day   ..f    D.-- 
.■.•mb.-r.    lN«.il.    an.l    with    a    in^wef   ..f    sale 
th.t-eiti    c.inlain.d.    .lulv    re.-or.le.l    in    th.' 
ofhc-e  of  the  register  .>r  deeds   in  und   for 
the    cotinty    of    St.    Louis    and    stat.-    of 
Miiin.-.sota    e.n   the  2:tth  day  of  D.cemb.r 
IV'l.  at  11:J0  ocl..ck  a.  m..   In  Rook  Ml  of 

"'V.m"''''P"  ""  '"'•'**'*  '^"-  l-'"0  i>nd  r.i. 

Which  said  mortg.'igo.  togcth.r  with 
the  debt  thereby  secured,  waa  dulv  as- 
signed by  said  William  E.  Lucas,  mort- 
gagee, to  Mary  L.   Rlakeman.  bv  written 

'^•^f.'^t'i.iS''"*  i*^'*^***'  \^^t  2Dth  day  of  Janu- 
ar.^  \^l,  and  recorded  in  the  office  of  said 
register  of  deeds  on  the  2Gth  dav  of  Jan- 
uar.v:.  1S92  at  9:10  o'clock  a  m?  in  B.iok 
0.   of  mortgages  on  page  5»j.   and 

Whereas  .said  mortgage  and  the  nrin- 
cipal  note  thereby  secured  contain  nro- 
visions  that  if  default  shall  be  made  in 
the  payment  of  any  part  of  the  interest 
due  on  said  principal  note,  as  evlde-n.-ed 
by  any  of  the  .semi-.annual  coupon  not.  s 
attachcHi  thereto.  on  the  dav  whereein 
the  same  is  made  payable,  and  such  .ie- 
faults  shall  continue  for  the  space  of  t«  n 
(10)  days,  th;it  then  and  In  every  stu  h 
c-ise  the  Whole  of  the  principal  sum  and 
ail  a.  crued  Interest  thereon  shall  im- 
meciiat.ly  become.  and  .nt  anv  time 
t  leroafter  be.  due  and  payable  at  the  <.p- 
lion  of  11,..  le.cral  holder  of  sai.l  i.rinel- 
pai  note  without  any  notice  of  such  op- 
tion, ajid 

..)v,',V'.T;^'''','^"J"-'^"'t  has  bfvn  made  in  the 
MMuent  .If  the  sum  of  fifty  (.'V))  d.dlars 

•i,  ,  b,:,1  n''r'"\""=^'  inter'-st  due  on  sai.l 
,lef-    .1,  '*'  J-'.nuary  1st,  1S.'.7.  and  such 

( i.ii  .1  cs  1^/""^'""^'*'  fo''  "lore  than  i.-n 
sien  ;  -0.=  !'.-'  r^'*'"'.'  thereof  the  sai.l  as- 
Uk-  hoi.ier  l/"*""  ';^"'''-  '^^■ho  is  now  the 
leg.ii    hoiclc>r   of   said   jirincinal    not.-     >  -is 

t^vXy  •^ecbi^'^tT'^  "t'  •"'''^'  '^><''  '1'-^ 
s.V-11  -.ll  '''^'="?  the  whole  prii!cii,al  .sum 
s.cuied  by  said  n..t..  an.i  m.atg age  and 
all  accrued  interest  thereon  to  be  liow 
due  und  payable,  and  ^ 

Wherea.s.  there  is  claimed  to  be  due  and 
there  is  actu.-.IIy  due  on  said  mort"aI'e  ^t 
the  d.ate  of  this  notlcH^  the  sum  oi'j^M  a^ 
princ,p.al  and  _  interest,  and  lifty  eloila^ 
«.0.)   attorney's   fee.s.       a  sum   .^xce..    ir 

In  'sJ'r'"""";  *'''^'"*''  ^"-^"^  ■•'tipulaied  for 
in  said  mortgage  as  attorneVs  fee.s  in 
case  of  foreclosure  thereof,  and  no  ac- 
tion or  proceeding  having  been  Institut- 
ed, at  law  or  otherwise,  to  recover  the 
part  ^^:^l^f.  '''■  ^^'-^  ™««^-Se  or  an';; 
Now,  therefore,   notice  is  hereby  given. 

t'l  s!.,f  .e""^'.''  mortgage,  and  pursuant  to 
viVie/i  ,K  *"<  ^^""^  *^"-^'-  '"•ide  and  pro- 
f. Ins./.  {  .*"  •''"''',  mortgage  will  be  fore- 
clo.sed    by    a    .sale    of    the    premises       de- 

lage'^'viz-  ^AH  ^rrr'*  by^id'mon- 
gage,  Mz.  All  that  tract  or  parcel  of 
""^ /'tuate,  lying  and  being  in  the  c-oun- 
y  ° f..^^-  Louis  and  state  of  Minnt>sot  i. 
de.scniHHl  as  follows,  to-wit :  The  n.nh^ 
east  one-quarter  (ne'4)  of  the  .southeast 
one-quarter  (set,)  of  section  thirteen  (kF) 
in  township  fifty  (.50)  north,  of  raitge  /: 
te^en  do)  west  of  the  4th  principal  meri- 
dian according  to  the  I'nitcHi  States  eoV- 
enjment  suT;vey  thereof  subject  to   r.^er- 

(onw".ne^c-^*-  ^'J"'  ,*  I^"'"th  Rallr.iad 
Cnipany  f.ir  right-of-way  and  drairatr,j 
purposes,  with  the  hereditaments  an  -,7i! 
purte.uim^.^s:  which  sale  will  be'  nmcle  Iv 
th,.  sherifl  of  said  St.  Louis  Ce.untv,  at 
tne  fr.int  door  of  the  court  house.  In  the 
city  of  Duluth.  in  said  county  and  state 
on  Uie  3d  clay  of  April.  ]s^7.  at  10  o'clock 

t,\  ^•-  .'  ^^l^./i^^'-  '^^  ''"""c  VcMidue.  t.. 
tno  highest  bidder  for  ctish.  to  pav  s.iid 
debt  of  one  thousand  jind  sixty-four  (lOiit) 
dollars  and  interest,  and  the  taxes  if  an-, 
on  .said  iiremises  and  fifty  (.->0)  dollars  at- 
torneys  fees  as  af.)resaid.  and  the  dis- 
bursements allowed  by  law;  subject  to 
r-'demption  tit  any  time  within  .me  v,ar 
from  the  day  of  sale,  as  provide.!  bv  law 

Dated  February   l."<th,   A.    D     is'iT  ' 

MARY   L.    BLAKEMAX. 
DAN'L  G.  CASH.''^'^"'^"  °'  Mortgagee. 

-Attorney   for   Assignee  of  Mortg.igee 
J^"l"th       Ev.-ning        Herald       Feb-lS-25- 

March-4-11-18-25. 


„„,,   ,1,  „ r    '-.'.  ^'"""cii    lo    oo    Que,,   e<>urt    house   of  .said    county,    in    the   city 

and   there  is  actually  due  on  said  mort-     "^f  5>ubith,   St.   Louis  County.   Minnesota 

■  '  '  on  Saturday,  the  third  (3rd)  day  of  April, 


entt?-^?!'^r^'V;'^ll?"n  '"Merest,  and  sev- 


A.    D.    1S!)7.    at    ten    o'clock    in' the    fore 

"']"."  of  siiid  day  to  satisfy  the  amount 

fr.,.,.i„       ■    :".:   '""i   '"""t^-tBe   III    case   or;    ^^"ich    shall    then    be    due    on    the    said 

forcclo.sure  thereof,  and  no  action  or  nro-     mortgage  with    interest   thereon   and   the 

ceriinfr  h:ivinnr  h.„..,   .-„....•»...,       -   ,     ■  <.osts  and  disbursements   of  the  sale  and 


nb!t:/i''V  ^'^-^  ^^•'"•''^•'^  ^ittorney's'fet^stip: 
mated    for  in   said    mortgage   in    case   of 


ceding  having  been  instituted,   at  law  or  -   -^   —    •-.--  ...... 

c^therwise.    to    recover    the    debt    secured  1  twenty-live  dollars  ($2.x(J0)  attorney's  fees, 
b>   said  mortgage  or  any  part  thereof.       '■  -''« /tipulated    in    said    mortgage   in   case 
ivow    thoT.ofr,.-u    «.^*!,.„  .„   ■ ,         .   ^_^    j  of  foreclosure. 

The    premises    described    in    said -mort 


X-         /ii       "  *'^  "'  "">    pare  tnereo*^        ■  -•    - 

Aow,   therefore,  notice  is  hereby  siven    '  *'f  foreclosure. 

lilt     hv    I'lfeiirt    nfi    4U..    -       J     &..V.1,    ( 


was  discussed  during  the  last  adminis- 
tration, but  it  was  not  adopted.  All  post- 
masters of  whatever  class  will  be  al- 
lowed to  serve  out  their  terms,  how- 
ever, and  therefore  they  should  be  hap- 

py. 


President  McKinley's  clerks  say  that 
from  Feb.  17.  1896.  up  to  the  time  Maj. 
McKinley  left  Canton,  a  week  ago  Mon- 
day, he  received  and  answered  98.33! 
letters.  The  number  received  since 
Maj.  McKinley  arrived  in  Washington 
*s  much  greater  in  proportion. 

Berlin  is  talking  about  the  feat  per- 
formed by  Princess  Marie  Von  Hohen- 
lohe.  wife  of  the  imperial  chancellor. 
While  hunting  on  her  estates  in  Russia 
she  killed  a  bear.  The  princess  is  68 
years  old. 


Well,  well,  well!  Only  to  think  that 
Fitzsimmons  should  win,  when  so 
many  pugilistic  experts  thought  he  had 
no  chance! 


Ju.stin  McCarthy  says  that  "during 
the  dinner  hour.  Demosthenes  himself 
could  not  hold  the  house  of  commons." 

The  Missouri  legislature  has  rejected 
the  bHI  to  tax  bachelors.  In  other 
words,  it  opposes  the  single  tax. 

Look  out  for  below  zero  weather.  The 
St.  Paul  Dispatch  yesterday  published 
an  "Odt  to  Spring." 


FREIGHT  COMMISSIONS. 

Transcontinental    Lines    Will 
Hold  a  Conference. 

Chicago,  March  IS.— A  call  has  been 
issued  for  a  conference  of  all  lines  in- 
terested in  the  transcontinental  com- 
mission problem.  It  will  be  held  here 
Thursday,  March  25.  The  organiz- 
ations to  be  represented  are  the  Trans- 
continental, Western,  Southwestern. 
Chicago  &  Ohio  river  and  Southern 
Passenger  associations. 

The  question  to  be  discused  is  how 
to  equalize  commiss-ions  paid  through 
Chicago  and  St.  Louis  with  those 
through  New  Orieans.  The  existing  In- 
equality is  caused  by  the  refusal  of 
trunk  linos  and  Central  Passenger  as- 
sociation roads  to  pay  commissions, 
while  those  in  the  Ohio  river  and 
southern  associations  pay  them.  The 
result  is  to  divert  business  to  the 
Southern  loutes  and  leave  roads  west 
of  Chicago  and  St.  Louis  out  in  the 
cold.  Another  result  has  been  to  de- 
moralize intermediate  commissions.  A 
settlement  of  some  kind  is  deemed  of 
I»s.ramount  importance   to   the  roads. 

PENNSYLVANIA  MAY  BUY  IT 
Chicago.  March  18.— A  report  has 
been  circulated  and  obtained  con- 
siderable credence;,  that  the  Pennsyl- 
yanla  road  has  opened  negotiation  for 
the  purchase  of  the  Columbus,  Hock- 
ing Valley  &  Toledo  road,  which  Is 
now  In  the  hands  of  receivers. 


THE  CHICAGO  SUICIDE. 

Anotiier  Identification  of    tiie 
Dead  Girl. 

Chicago,  March  18.— G.  O.  Borgstede, 
of  St.  Louis,  has  arrived  in  Chicago 
and  identified  the  body  of  the  young 
woman  who  shot  and  killed  herself 
Tuesday  night  at  304  Chicago  avenue, 
as  that  of  his  cousin.  Miss  Maoei 
Strassacker.  Mr.  Borgstede  went  im- 
mediately from  the  depot  to  Rolston's 
undertaking  rooms  and  after  looking 
at  the  remains,  said  they  were  those 
of  his  cousin.  He  could  give  no  reason 
why  she  should  have  killed  herself. 

An  inquest  was  held  over  the  remains 
and  the  coroner's  jury  returned  a  ver- 
dict of  suicide.  Mrs.  Van  Ness,  who  I 
was  the  principal  witne.ss  said  that  the  ' 
girl  had  frequently  told  her  that  her 
pai-ents  were  wealthy  and  that  they 
lived  in  St.  Louis. 


that  by.virtue  of  ihe  power'of  sSifcon-' 
turned  in  said  mortgage  and  pursua-it 
I  *  M'J'  ^'^f*''.^"^^  »"  «t"-h  case  made  and 
cb?sH''H'/''^  ^^"•  mortgage  win  be  fore 
scrn\^i''^  ''  •T'''  of  *he  premise^s  de- 
e.".  vi^'."  A^l,"'/,  ^''^-PV"!  by  said  mort- 
e"ge.  Mz:  All  that  tract  or  parcel  of  l-ind 
•situate,  lying  and  being  in  the  county  of 
.}rr.n  %^^^  and  state  of  Minnesota  de- 
scribed as  follows,  lo-wit:  All  of.  lot 
""'»&1,f'f'U,  <•">.'  •"  '''ock  twen°y-flve 
7;2-'  ♦ .°  .k'"'*^  Division  of  Duluth.  accord- 
ing to  the  recorded  plat  thereof  on  file 
ot  record  in  the  office  of  the  register  of 
deeds  in  and  for  said  county  of  St 
Louis,  with  the  hereditaments  and  ap^ 
purtenanc;es;  which  sale  will  be  made  bv 
the  sheriff  of  said  St.  Louis  County  a^t 
the  front  door  of  the  c-ourt  house,  in  the 
*-'"-\,of  „?"'"th.  in  said  county  and  state 
on  the  3d  day  of  April,  1897.  at  10  o'cloek 

;\;  "\-,°^  ^I'"^*.  A"-^'-  '^f  public  vendue,  "to 
the  highe.st  bidder  for*cash  to  pav  said 
-n,L  o,f  ,  hftwn  hundred  and  ninety  and 
oO-lOO  dollars  and  interest  and  the  "taxes 
;£.''">'•„""  i^'iirt  premises  and  seveutv-five^ 
(.a)  dollars  attorney's  fees  as  stipulated 
in  and  by  said  mortgage  in  case  of  fore- 
closure, and  the  disbursements,  allowed 
by  law;  subject  to  redemption  at  any 
time  within  one  year  from  the  day  of 
sale,  as  jirovided  bv  law. 

Da»ed  February  isth.   A.   D.   1S97 

J.    J.    JANEWAY,    Executor, 
DAN'L    G.    CASH.  Mortgagee. 

•,  Attorney   for  Mortgagee. 
Duiulh       Evening         Herald       Fcb-lS-25- 

March-4-]l-lS-25. 


;  gage  and  so  to  be  sold  are  the  tracts  and 
'  parcels  of  land,  situated  in  the  county 
;   of  St.  Louis  and  state  of  Minnesota  and 

Known   and  described   as   follows,   to-wit- 
.;    The  southwest   quarter   of   the   southeast 

quarter  (swU  of  seU)  of  section  eleven 
!.  (Ii).  the  northwest  quarter  of  the  nejrth- 
^  east  quarter  (nwVi  of  neJ4),  the  northeast 
•  quarter  of  the  northwest  quarter  (nc-14  of 
I  i.wVi)  and  the  southetist  quarter  of  the 
:  northwest  quarter  (se^j  of  nw^i)  of  sec- 
'  tion  fourteen  (14).  all  in  township  fiftv- 
;  eignt  (oS)  north,  of  range  twelve  (12)  west 
8  «>f  the  fourth  principal  meridian. 
'i  ^t,V?''^ted    Duluth,    Minn.,     February    I5th, 

Kr^^:,^?^'^^^^^^^     and     THOMAS   IR- 
VINE, 

Mortgages, 


BURLINGTON  INSPECTION  TOUR 
Denver,  Col..  March  18.— President  C. 
E.  Perkins,  of  the  Bui-lington  railway. 
Vice  President  G.  B.  Harris,  General 
Counsel  C.  F.  Manderson,  General 
Manager  C.  W.  Holdredge,  and  several 
division  officers  of  the  road,  have  ar- 
rived in  Denver  on  their  annual  tour 
of  inspection.  Ex-Senator  Manderson 
spoke  enthusiastically  of  the  outlook 
throughout  the  countty  and  inore  es- 
spee-ially  along  the   Burlington  system 


Ai?eo2u£ely  Pure 


Celebrated  for  its  great  leavening 
strength  and  healthfulness.  Assures  the 
food  against  alum  and  all  forms  of  adul- 
teration common  to  the  cheap  brands. 
ROYAL  BAKING  POWDER  CO.,    NEW 


MORTGAGE  SALE.- 

Whereas  default  has  been  made  In  the 
conditions  of  a  certain  mortgage  dated 
January  16th.  1895.  duly  executed  and  de- 
livered by  Henry  Schwalm  and  Carrie 
Schwalm.  his  wife,  ol  St.  Louis  Countv, 
Mimiesota,  mortgagors,  to  Edward  J. 
Duffles,  of  Duluth.  Minnesota,  mortgagee, 
and  filed  for  record  in  the  office  of  the  reg- 
ister of  deeds  in  and  for  the  county  of 
St.  Louis  and  state  of  Minnesota,  on  the 
16th  day  of  January,  1895,  at  4:40  o'clock 
p.  m.  of  said  day  and  duly  recorded  in 
Book  lOo  of  mortgages  on  page  232;  by 
which  default  the  imwer  of  sale  con- 
tained in  said  mortgage  has  become 
operative. 

And  whereas  there  is  claimed  to  be  due 
on  said  mortgage  at  the  date  of  this  no- 
tice the  sum  of  three  hundred  and  eigh- 
teen and  08-100  (318.68)  dollars  and  the  sum 
of  twenty-five  dollars  attorney's  fees  as 
stipulated  for  in  said  mortgage,  In  case 
of  foreclosure,  and  no  action  or  proceed- 
ing at  law  or  otherwise  having  been  insti- 
tuted to  recover  the  debt  secured  by  said 
mortgage  or  any  part  thereof. 

Now  notice  is  hereby  given  that  by  vir- 
tue of  a  power  of  sale  contained  in  said 
mortgage  and  pursuant  to  the  statute  in 
such  case  made  tind  provided,  said  mort- 
gage will  be  foreclosed  and  the  premises 
de^scribed  in  said  mortgage,  viz:  Lot  two 
(2),  block  nine  (9),  Bay  View  Addition  to 
Duluth  number  one  (1),  according  to  the 
recorded  plat  thereof  of  record  in  the  of- 
fice of  the  register  of  deeds   in   and   for 
the    county    of    St.    Louis    and    .state    of 
Minnesota,  all  of  said  property  being  in 
the  county  and  state  aforesaid,   together 
with    the    hereditaments       and    appurte- 
nances  thereunto   belonging  will   be  -sold 
at    public   auction    to    the   highest   bidder 
for   cash   to   pay   said   debt   and   interest 
on  .said  amount  at  the  rate  of  10  per  cent 
per  annum  from   the  date  of  this  notice 
to  the  date  of  sale,  as  mentioned  in  this 
notice,    and    the    taxes,    if    any.    on    said 
premises    and    the    sum    of    twenty-five 
dollars  attorney's  fees,  and  the  disburse- 
ments   allowed   by   law;    which    sale   will 
be  made  by  the  sheriff  of  St.  Louis  Coun- 
ty.   Minnesota,   at   the  front  door  of   the 
court  house.  In  the  city  of  Duluth,  in  said 
county  and  state,  on  the  9th  day  of  April, 
1897,  at  10  o'clock  a.  m.  on  that  day,  sub- 
ject to  redemption  at  any  time  within  one 
year  from  date  of  sale  as  provided  bv  law. 
Dated  Feb.  23,  1897. 

EDW^ARD  J.  DUFFIES. 

Mortgagee. 

JOHN  E.  DA  VIES. 

Attorney  for  Mortgagee. 
Duluth   Evening  Herald,   Feb-25-March-4- 
11-18-25- April-1. 


HENRY   S.    MAHON. 

Attorney  for  Mortgagees. 
Duluth  Evening  Herald.  Feb-lS-25-March- 

4-11-18-25. 

^'p'^fCE  o>~mortgXge~foreclos- 

Whereas  default  has  been  made  in  the 
conditions  of  a  certain  morttrage.  made, 
ex«>cuted  and  delivered  by  Aiigus  Camp- 
bell, of  Duluth.  Minnesota,  (single  man), 
mcirtgagor,  to  John  Mc-.Alpine,  of  Duluth, 
Minnesota,  mortgagee,  datt^d  the  twen- 
t.\--_sixth  (26th)  day  of  February,  A.  D. 
lS.to.  and  recorded  in  the  offlce  of  the 
r.;gister  of  dcn-ds  in  and  for  the  countv 
of  St.  Louis  and  state  of  Minnesota,  on 
the  lust  (1st)  day  of  March,  A.  D.  ISU.'i. 
at  the  hour  of  foiLr  o'clock  (4  p.  m.)  in 
the  afternoon  of  said  dav.  in  Book  nine- 
t>--flye  (9,))  of  mortgages  on  'page  one 
hundred  and  ninety   (190). 

And  whereas  saicl  mortgage  was  there- 
after duly  assigned  "by  the  said  Jerhn  Mc- 
f."^m'L.  "mortgagee,  lo  Alex  B.  McDonell 
and  Ihonias  Irvine  by  deed  of  a.ssign- 
ment  elated  the  fou.rteenth  day  o.'  Au- 
gust, A.  D.  1896,  ar?d  duly  record  M  in 
the  oflice  of  the  regl.vter  of  deeds  for  the 
county  of  St.  Louis  !",.nd  state  of  Mfnne- 
.sota,  on  the  ninth  (9l;h)  dav  of  Seprem- 
ber,  A.  D.  1S96.  at  the  hour  of  eight 
o  clock  and  forty  minu.tes  in  the  forenoon 
of  said  day  in  Book  one  hundred  e-.nd 
seven  (107)  of  mortgages  on  page  four 
hundred  and   forty-eight   (448). 

And  whereas  said  ■  lefault  consists  ir, 
the  non-payment  of  th. ;  principal  sum  and  1 
interest  secured  by  the  s  aid  mortgage  and 
there  Is  claimed  to  be:  due  and  there  is 
now  due  on  said  moi  tgage  at  the  date 
of  this  notice  the  sun  of  four  hundred 
and  eighteen  dollars  and  ninetv-two 
cents   ($418.92)    principal     and    interest. 

And  whereas  no  proce  e«Jing  or  action  ha.'t 
been  instituted,  at  la\  r  or  otherw^s.^  to 
recover  the  debt  secu  red  by  said  mort- 
gage, or  any  part  thei  *K)f. 

Now.  therefore.  notif;e  is  hereby  given, 
that  by  virtue  of  a  power  of  sale  con- 
tained in  said  mortgafe-e  and  of  the  stat- 
ute in  such  case  made,  and  provided  th.- 
said  mort.gage  will  be  foreclosed  bv  the 
sale  of  the  iiremises  t  herein  described,  at 
public  vendue,  by  the  sheriff  of  the  coun- 
ty of  St.  Louis  and  st  ate  of  Minnesota,  a: 
thi?  front  door  of  the  district  court  houso 
of  said  county,  in  the  city  of  Duluth.  St. 
J.'O^'f^.^otinty.  Minij'-sota,  on  Saturday, 
the  third  (.Ird)  day  .:,f  April.  A.  D.  3897. 
at  ten  o  clock  m  the-  forenoon  of  said  da-.' 
to  .s-atisfy  the  amoint  which  shall  then 
be  clue  on  the  .said  mortgage  with  inter- 
est thereon  and  the  costs  and  disburse- 
ments^ of  the  sale  and  twenty-five  dol- 
lars (523.00)  attorney  's  fees,  as  stipulated 
m  said  mortgage  In    case  of  foreclosure. 

The  premises  des  cribed  in  said  mort- 
gage and  so  to  be  s«  dd  are  the  tracts  an.l 
parcels  of  land  .situ  ated  in  the  county  o*" 
at.  Louis  and  sfa.1  e  of  Minnes.7ta.  and 
known  and  de.scril?  ed  as  follows,  to-wit: 
The  east  half  of  the  northwest  quarter 
(c''2  of  nw^i)  and.  the  southwest  quarter 
of  the  northeast,  quarter  (swii  o-f  nei4) 
of  .section  nineteen  (19),  township  sixty- 
seven  (67)  nortn,  of  range  eighte  ?n  (IS) 
west  of  the  fourth  principal  meridian. 
,0.5^*^*^    Dulu-:h.    Minn.,    February     15th, 

"^JiF^^^TXT?.-    ^'fcDO^'ELL     and    THO.MAS 
IRVINE, 

HENRY   S.  .M^^'(S'''  °'  Mortgagee. 

Attorney    for    Assignees    of   Mortgagee. 

^i'  I'l^i'o  Kwnlng  Heiald.  Feb-18-a=>-Marah- 
4-ll-18-2o. 


^«<r'^^\^^r"i^^"^'-^'ESOTA,   county  OP 
t' J  .    Lt'L  IS — SS. 

District    Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 
Jacob   Fawcett, 

Plaintiff, 
vs. 
Mary    P.    Foster,    Thomas    H.    Mc- 
Cague.    as    receiver   of    the    Ger- 
man Savings  Bank  of  Omaha.  Ne- 
braska, (jerman  Savings  Bank  of 
Omaha,  Nebraska.  Julius  Larsen. 
Frank  Genery,  Oie  Haasen,  Mary 
PhUoma    Foster,    as   executrix   of 
the  last  will  of  Clarence  H.   Fos- 
ter,   deceased,     Marv    P.    Foster 
as    general    guardian    of    the    fol- 
lowing namcHl  defendants:  Alfr.-.l 
Landry      Foster.      Clarence      Ber- 
trand    Foster.    Harold    Ce)ok    Fos- 
ter,   Charles    Usebe    Foster.    Ella 
Maud      Foster.      Frank      i\iwcett 
foster,    and    S.    C.    McCormick. 
Christian    Haug       and    J.    Henrv 
Haug.  co-partners  as  C.  H.iug  & 
Son.    Lizzie    M.       Hovt.    Andrew 
Johnson  and  Gustav  j'ohns.in.  co- 
liartners       as    Johnson       &    Co 
Thomas  A.   Maxted.   Idum.  whie-ii 
is  ji  cori)oration   organized   under 
th.-   laws   of   the   state   of   Minne- 
sota,  .-ind   is  otherwise  known   as 
Norwegian     Young     Peoples    So- 
ciety,   Wincenty       Kosinskl.    Chi- 
cago   Hotel    Cabinet    Co.,    Daniel 
Cox,  R.  L.  Polk  &  Co.,  (a  corpo- 
ration).  John   E.    Fritzen,    Water- 
bury  Button  Co..  (ii  corporation). 
Albert  Wieland.  Duluth  Ice  Cj.,  (a 
corporj'.ion),    J.    R.    Car.'v,    New- 
man C.  Harvey.  Walter  E.  Wicks 
and  William  W.  Hoopes.  co-part- 
ner.s    .-is    N.    c.    Harvey    &    Co.. 
R.  H.  Pendergast.  Manus  Brown. 
Edward   H.    Foster.    Camille   Poi- 
rier  and  Duluth  Trust  Company, 
as  receiver  of  all  unexempt  i)rop- 
erty   ot   said   Camille   Poirier.    in- 
solvent,   and   Charles    E.    Budden. 
„,         ^  Defendants. 

Ihe   slate   of     Minnesota     to     tlie   above 
named   defendants: 

You  are  hereby  summoned  and  required 
to  answer  the  complaint  of  the  plaintlJf 
in  the  above  entitled  action,  which  is 
bled  in  the  offlce  of  the  clerk  of  the  dis- 
trict coui-t  of  the  Eleventh  judicial  dis- 
trict, in  and  for  the  county  of  St.  Louis 
and  statV  of  Minnesota,  and  to  .serve  a 
c-oiiy  of  your  answer  to  the  sai.l  com- 
plaint on  the  subscribers,  at  their  office 
in  the  city  of  Duluth.  in  said  countv' 
within  twenty  days  .ifter  the  service  of 
this  summons  upon  you.  exclusive  of  the 
day  of  such  .service;  and  if  vou  fail  to 
aiiswt-r  the  said  complaint  within  th« 
1  time  aforesaid,  the  plaintiff  In  this  ac- 
J.'op  ,^"'  -iPPly  to  the  court  for  the  re- 
lief demanded   in   the  complaint. 

D.ated    October    26.    1896 
DRAPER,  DAVIS  &  HOLLISTER 
u«  ...    T..     .    Attorneys  for  PlaintiflF.. 
409-414   First   National   Bank    Building. 
~,         ,  .     .      «  Duluth.    Minn. 

The  object  of  the  above  action  is  to 
fort^close  two  mortgages  given  bv  Clar- 
ence H.  Foster,  deceased,  during  his  life, 
in  which  defendant.  Mary  P.  Foster,  hlti 
wife,  joined.  The  lands  affected  are  lot  28.-,. 
Lake  avenue.  I'ppcr  Duluth;  lot  50.  Lake 
avenue.  Lower  Duluth;  lot  9.  in  block  156 
Portland  Division,  and  the  undivided  one- 
half  of  lot  100.  St.  Louis  avenue.  Upper 
Duluth.  all  in  the  city  of  Duluth,  St. 
Louis  County.   Minnesota. 

No  personal  claim  is  made  against  any 
defendant. 
DRAPER.  DAVIS  &  HOLLISTER. 

Attorneys  for  Plain'.ilT. 
409-114    First   National   Bank    Building, 
_    .     ,  Duiulh,    Minn. 

Duluth    Evening    Herald,    Marc-h-ll-lS-25- 
April-1-8-15 


Bl^  O  u  ft  aon-puisodoos 

i*nie<ly     for     Gonorrhoea. 

«le«t,  Spcrmatorrha'a, 

I  Whites,  nnnctiiral  dli. 

I  chargea.  or  any  iutlumtiia'* 

Won,  irritation   of  ul<*ra- 

I • —      tion  of    mucous   ni. m- 

tTHEEvAWS  CheuimiCo.  Dfanes.     Non-a8trin(?ent. 
>»M  hy  Draccfata, 
or  aent  in  plaiii  wrapppr, 
by   expmM,    pr-pai.l.    fox 
{I.OO.  or  3  Lotdfii,  ^.7.5. 
Oirceilar  wst  ci»  nt»(^»i 


MADC  ME  A  MAN 

AJAX  TABLETS  POSITIVELY  CUBE 
At,Ii  AVrroua  /Xj««-o«m.— FailioK  Mem- 
ory, Inipotdncy,  Kle!ieplusKne«8,  etc.,  cnasad 
DsrAbune  and  other  Exc«Mses  and  Indis- 
cretions.      T/iry  i/uieklv  and    aurtifw 
restore  Lost  Vitality  in  old  or  }oanff,  ana 
fita  man  for  study,  buHiness  or  marriaga. 
.  ir     . — Ti'  *^Y*Dt    Insanity  und    Consumption  U 
taken  in  time.  TheiroBe  show.!  immediate  improv*. 
ment  «ud  effects  a  CURE  wbere  all  others  tail.    In. 
■ist  upon  hanng  the  sennine  AJax  Xable^     Thoi 
nave  cured  thousands  and  will  cure  you.    We  ^ive  • 
positive  written  guarantee  to  effect  a  cure  in  each  caa» 
or  refund  the  money.    Price  50  cents  per  packase.  or 
nx packaaes  (full  ti^atment)   for  »2.60     Br  mail,  in 
plain  wrapper,  upon  receipt  of  price.    Circular  free. 

AJAX    R^MEDlf    CO..   '»^^;^l^ 

For  sale  In  Duluth  by  S.  P.  BOTCH.  SXl 
Weet  Superior  street.  MAX  WIRT^.  U 
Wart  Suparlor  itreet. 


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ITBB    DtrrtTTH    EtTENING    HlBlCgrD:    THURSDlJY,    MARCH    18,    1897. 


Celebration  In  Honor  of  the 

Emerflid    Isle  at  the 

Lyceum. 


Bishop  McGoIrick  Tells  Why 
Irishmen  Should  Not  Cele- 
brate Victoria's  Jubilee. 


Production  of  the  Charming 

Irish  Drama  "The  Brides 

of  Garryowen." 


The  Lyceum  wns  crowded  last  even- 
ins  at  the  St.  Patrick's  day  entertain- 
ment  and  standing  rtx)ni  was  at  a  pre- 
mium. Every  seat  was  taken,  all  the 
lx>xes  were  tilled  and  a  great  number 
stood  in  the  rear  of  the  seats.  The  en- 
tertainment oiK'ned  with  an  address 
by    I'.ishup    MiCloIrick. 

He  referred  to  the  faet  that  on  June 
2il».   1837.   the   kins  of  England  died   and 


Are  worthless  names  forged? 
Or  unpopular  goods  imitoted? 

No. 

Because  it  isn't  worth  while. 
Therefore  the  extensive 
counterfeiting:  of  our  ial)els 
and  capsules  is  the  strongest 
evidence  of  the  merit  of  our 

''Canadian 
Club" 
Whisky. 

Beware  of  these  counter^ 
feits,  and  write  us  regardinf^ 
anything  which  you  suspect. 

The  quality  of    .-.     .•.     ... 
"CANADIAN  CLUB" 
is  always  fully   maintained. 

*.     *.    imitations  are  always 
inferior. 

HIRAM  WALKER  &  SONS,  Llai'4. 
Wolkerville,  Canada. 


Sort  Weather  Is  Ruining  the 

Road   to   the   Gold 

Fields. 


YESTERDAY'S  FIRE. 

Small  Fire   Broke  Out  Again 
About  Seven  OXIock. 


Some  Freight  May  Have  to 

Be  Doubled  Back  From 

Tower, 


With    Good    Roads    Duluth 
Might  Receive  Much  Busi- 
ness From  There. 


THAT  IS 

STYLISH  AND  DURABLE 


The  total  loss  oceasioned  by  the  fire 
in  the  Exchange  building  yesterday  is 
it  was  announced  to  a  youns'  piil  that  estimated  at  about  $8t)0,  ineiudiiiK  th. 
shf  was  (jufen  of  tlnpland.  Next  June  j  damagre  to  the  elevator  machinery, 
she  will  have  reipned  sixty  years  and  a:  There  was  seareely  any  daniaRf  caused 
great  movement  is  und*r  way  all  over,  by  water,  as  it  nearly  all  nassed  down 
the  British  dominiins  for  a  eelebra- .' the  t- levator  shaft.  A  hurried  examina- 
tion of  the  completiim  of  the  sixtieth  tion  made  in  the  smoke  yesterday  after- 
year  of  her  reitin.  The  bishop  said  ht  roon  failed  to  disclose  any  expostd 
had  nothing  to  say  i)ersonally  aRain.st  '  wires,  but  a  bunch  of  telephone  wires 
that  pood  queen,  but  he  did  wish  to  was  diseoveied  later,  from  which  tbt» 
give  some  reasons  why  Irishmen  |  fire  may  have  caught, 
should    take    n<>   part    in    that    celebra-        Flames     broke     out     again     about 


tion.    He    re<ounted   the  history   of  the 
fcmine  in  Ireland  in   1S46-7  and  its  at 


o'clock   in   the   evening,    but   were   soon 
extinguished     by    a    stream     from     tht 


tendant   horrors  and  severely  censured    chemical,    which    was   summoned    )>y   a 


the  i;ritish     government.       which       he 
claimed  was  directly  responsible  for  it. 


still  alarm. 
There   was   lively   scrambling   amony 


having  brought  it  about  by  a  subtle ;  the  tenants  when  the  alarm  was  sound- 
and  horrible  process.  When  Ireland  tjl.  The  clerks  in  the  American  Ex- 
in  this  extremity  called  to  England   to  I  change  bank   took  the  most   important 


assist  her  she  was  not  begging.  Each 
year  England  has  taken  millions  from 
her  In  provisions  and  had  revluced  her 
people  to  subservience  by  awfu! 
methods.  The  theory  of  the  English 
government  in  governing  has  been  to 
•divide    the    people   and    you   can    rule 


books  across  the  street  to  the  First  Na 
tional  bank,  the  rest  being  placed  in 
the  \aults.  A  stream  of  water  which 
wiif4  running  ••wild"  Hooded  the  bast- 
ment  of  the  Lonsdale  building,  damag- 
ing a  stock  of  paper  stored  in  the  pre.ss 
rw.m  of  the  Xews  Tribune  to  the  extent 


The  soft  weather  is  playing  havoc 
with  the  freighting  business  between 
Tower  and  the  gold  fields.  For  the  past 
few  weeks  the  Crane  Lake  road  has 
offered  many  obstacles  to  heavy  loads, 
owing  to  the  deep  snow,  and  frequently 
teams  have  been  stuck  on  the  way.  J. 
C.  Foley  and  party  that  left  here  over 
a  Week  ago  had  much  trouble  In  getting 
through,  being  over  three  days  on  the 
road  from  Tower.  The  thaw  will  make 
the  road  still  more  difficult  of  passage, 
and  it  is  feared  that  much  of  the  heavy 
machinery  and  other  material  now  at 
Tower  bound  for  the  gold  country  will 
have  to  be  returned  to  Duluth  and  for- 
warded by  way  of  Rat  Portage,  if  ii 
ever  reaches  its  destinatifjn. 

Duluth  merchants  have  rec  -ived  con- 
siderable business  from  miners  and 
prospectors  in  and  about  Rainy  Lake 
and  Seine  river  during  the  past  few 
weeks,  becaus  -  with  the  Crane  Lake 
road  in  fair  condition,  it  was  more  ad- 
vantageous to  buy  here  than  in  Can* 
ada,  but  with  the  road  impassable  all 
supplies  will  be  forced  in  order  to  gain 
admission  to  go  in  by  way  ot  Rat  Port' 
age,   and    the   steamboat    line   to     Fort 


MAY  BEAR  SOME  TRUTH. 

Some  of  the  Possibilities   of 
R.  S.  Munger's  Mission. 

The  report  from  New  York  that  R.  S. 
Munger.  president  of  the  Duluth  & 
North  Dakota  railroad  company,  is  in 
Montreal  negotiating  with  the  Cana- 
dian Pacific  railroad  company  for  the 
sale  (tf  his  line  to  that  corporation, 
probably  has  some  foundation.  When 
Mr.  Munger  left  Duluth  it  was  with  the 
intention  of  interesting  capital  in  the 
Farmers'  road,  and  in  order  to  do  this 
he  realized  that  it  would  be  necessary 
to  close  an  advantageous  traffic  ar- 
rangement with  the  Canadian  Pacific 
for  entrance  to  Duluth  over  the  Du- 
luth. Superior  &  Western.  With  this 
done  he  thought  th.-re  would  be  little 
difficulty  in  convincing  capitalists  that 
the  enterprise  would  prove  i)rofitable 
and  that  an  investment  in  its  l)onds 
would  be  safe. 

It  was  undoubtedly  to  get  a  suitable 
contract  with  the  Canadian  Pacific  that 
Mr.  Munger  went  to  Montreal  and  it 
is  not  improbable  that  overtures  have 
been  made  to  him  to  sell  the  property 
of  his  company  outright,  for  the  grade 
already  built  and  the  right-of-way 
|)rocured  by  the  Duluth  &  North  Da- 
kota could  be  utilized  to  advantage  in 
the  extension   of  the  Duluth.   Superior 


Francis.     If  much  of  the  freight  now  at  I  &  Western.    That  the  Canadian  Pacific 


her  linger  in  every  y^^-^J^^^^-'^'^l''  "consi'dimbl'rexcitement  was  caused 
every  country  to  be  independent,  ex-  i.y  ^  tilt  between  Sergeant  D<movan 
cept  Ireland.  .     ,     '  ami  a  man  who  objected  to  moving  on 

He  detailed  the  policy  P"ff'U«'d  .''>;  promptly  enough  to  suit  the  officer  The 
England  of  doing  nothing  in  this  tiir..- ,  latter  gave  the  man  a  shove  that  se-it 
of  famine.  America  loaded  a  ship  with,  him  up  against  the  wall  of  the  buildnv 
provisions  and  sent  it  over  and  the  day  ;  and  in  return  received  a  bunt  that 
it  entered  Cork  harbor  sixteen  vessels  j  doubled  him  up.  Two  more  officers  ap- 
loaded  with  surplus  provisions  going  j>eared  and  the  man  was  handcuffed 
to  the  English  people  left  there.  He ,  and  loaded  into  tlie  patrol  wagon.  .M- 
told  how  theological  hatred,  the  worst  though  badl.v  handicapped,  he  was  still 
of  all  hatreds,  was  instilled  into  the  j  full  of  fight  and  jumped  out  of  the 
people.  He  rehearsed  the  practice  in  i  wa'gon  twice  before  he  Vvas  subdued, 
vogue  today  of  opening  letters  of  Irish- j  At  the  station  he  gave  his  name  as 
men  and  other  evils  which  he  asserted  j  Robert  Steer. 
England   practices. 


For  all  of  these  wrongs  he  claimed 
that  it  would  ill  become  an  Irishman 
who  loves  his  countr>'  to  take  any 
part  in  the  celebration  of  Victoria's 
reign.  He  closed  with  an  eloquent  per- 
oration. 

The  production  of  Dion  Boucicaulfs 
play.  "'The  Rrides  of  Garryowen." 
followed  the  Itishop's  address.  The 
play  is  a  familiar  one.  It  is  one  of  the 
simple  and  touching  Irish  dramas  that 
were  so  popular  years  ago  with  all  peo- 
ple and  will  nevr  lose  their  place  in 
the  heart  of  the  Irishman.   It   presents 


ONE  OF  THE  BEST  FEATURES 


Tower  is  doubled  back  over  the  Duluth 
&  Iron  Range  road  to  Duluth  and  thence 
forwarded  by  the  Canadian  route  it 
should  prove  a  practical  object  lesson 
to  Duluth  and  St.  Louis  county  that 
will  teach  the  necessity  of  immc^diatc 
and  effective  steps  to  secure  to  Duluth 
the  immense  trade  that  is  naturally 
tributary  to  this  city. 

The  officials  of  the  Duluth  &  Iron 
Range  Railroad  c<impany  hav,^  already 
taken  an  active  interest  in  the  matter, 
and  their  efforts  should  be  supplemen- 
ted by  the  business  men  who  may  hope 
to  reap  a  direct  benefit  from  an  easy 
means  of  communication  with  Rainy 
Lake.  Mine  Center  and  other  towns  in 
t heboid  country  that  give  promise  of  a 
big  growth  within  the  next  few  months. 
With  a  telegraph  line  and  good  wagon 
road  from  Tower  the  bulk  of  the  busi- 
ness of  the  country  would  come  to  Du- 
luth. and  as  the  telegraph  line  is  al- 
ready an  assured  fact,  all  that  is  need- 
ed is  a  wagon  road  that  will  offer  as 
few  obstacles  as  possible  between 
Tower  and  the  waterway. 


intends  to  extend  its  Duluth  line  to  the 
wheat  belt  and  eventually  to  a  direct 
connection  with  Winnipeg  is  manifest 
to  all  for  as  long  as  its  terminus  is 
where  it  now  is  the  road  must  be  oper- 
ated ^t  a  loss. 

It  will  not,  however,  be  an  easy  mat- 
ter for  Mr.  Munger  to  negotiate  the 
sale  of  his  line  as  it  is  owned  by  a  large 
number  of  stockholders,  many  of  whom 
will  oljject  to  the  property  passing  into 
the  hands  of  a  great  corporation.  The 
grading  that  has  already  been  done  is 
the  result  of  the  work  of  farmers  liv- 
ing along  the  line,  who  took  their  pay 
in  stock,  their  object  in  interesting 
themselves  in  the  project  being  to  es- 
tablish an  independent  railroad  to  Du- 
luth that  would  give  them  a  low  rate 
on  wheat,  and  relieve  them  from  the 
power  of  the  big  companies.  Former 
negotiations  for  the  purchase  of  the 
property  have  been  opposed  by  these 
stockholders  and  it  is  not  likely  that 
the  Canadian  Pacific  will  be  looked  on 
with  more  fa\or  than  John  D.  Rocke- 
feller or  Jim  Hill. 


SAM  MENIECE  EXPLAINS. 

Why  Work  on  the  Bridge  Ap- 
proach Drags.. 

To  the  Editor  of  The  Herald: 

Will  you  kindly  give  me  space  in  your 
valuable  paper  to  state  the  facts  In  re- 
gard to  the  i)rogress  In  the  bridge  ap- 
proach matter.  When  I  was  awarded 
the  contract.  W.  T.  Bailey  sent  a 
friend  of  mine  to  me  to  get  him  the  fur- 
nishing of  the  lumber,  knowing  that  the 
gentlemen  he  sent  would  get  the  prefer- 
ence from  me  on  the  bill  of  lumber,  he 
to  furnish  him  with  the  lumber.  W.  T. 
Bailey  then  got  on  the  bond,  the  board 
of  public  works  asking  for  him.  He 
then  said  he  had  a  cinch  on  the  bill  of 
lumber.  He  was  to  furnish  the  bill  be- 
fore the  middle  of  January  last,  but  up 
to  date  has  been  able  to  furnish  about 
123.000  feet  out  of  294,000  feet,  of  which 
50,000  feet  has  been  accepted,  and  the 
balance  being  culls.  About  two  weeks 
ago  he  came  to  me  and  got  an  order 
from  me  on  the  city  of  Duluth  for  80 
per  cent  of  all  lumber  in  the  approach 
at  $8  per  M  feet,  and  then  failed  to  fur- 
nish any  more  lumber,  so  the  city  or- 
dered the  lumber  and  refused  to  take 
any  more  of  his  lumber  in  the  work. 
When  I  stopped  his  sweeping  order  he 
got  in  a  rage  and  got  the  board  to  do 
as  you  said  In  your  Issue  yesterday. 
The  public  can  guess  his  reasons  for 
so  doing. 

J.  W.  Preston,  another  of  the  bonds- 
men, has  had  the  contract  to  build  the 
east  half  of  the  approach  from  the  first, 
but  could  not  get  along  with  the  work 
on  account  of  W.  T.  Bailey's  failure  to 
furnish  lumber,  so  you  see  the  bonds- 
men have  bc-en  strictly  in  it  from  the 
first.  What  M.  J.  Davis  says  about  me 
being  responsible  for  the  trouble,  and 
having  the  bridge  at  too  low  a  figure  is 
pure  rot.  and  M.  J.  Davis  well  knows 
that  is  a  fact,  but  I  in  so'me  way  raised 
the  Ire  of  his  majesty,  and  by  both  word 
and  act  he  is  trying  to  get  even.  In  re- 
gard to  the  timber,  he  says  I  dumped  it 
on  the  ice.  Mr.  Bailey  sent  about  30,000 
feet  on  two  cars  of  2-inch  plank.  The 
first  he  sent  goes  on  toi)  of  the  approach 
after  the  rails  are  laid.  So  I  unloaded 
it  as  close  to  the  approach  as  I  could, 
as  my  contract  with  Mr.  Preston  was 
to  do  .so.  When  I  laid  it  down  the  city 
rejected  it  all.  and  I  notified  Mr,  Bailey 
about  it,  so  it  was  Mr.  Bailey  that  let  it 
freeze  in  the  ice,  as  I  am  not  respon- 
sible for  culls.  SAMFEL  MENIECE, 
•Duluth,  March  17. 


What  is 


Castoria  is  Dr.  Samuel  Pitcher's  preKoriptiou  for  lut'aiitsS 
and  Children.  It  contains  neither  Oi»inm,  Morphine  nor 
other  Xarcotic  suhstance.  It  is  a  harmless  substitute 
for  Paregoric,  Drops,  Soothing  Syrups  and  Castor  Oil. 
It  is  Pleasant.  Its  guarantee  is  thirty  years*  use  by 
3Iillions  of  Mothers.  Castoria  is  the  Children's  Panacea 
—the  Mother's  Friend. 

THE  FAC-SIMILE  SIGNATURE  OF 


APPEARS  ON  EVERY  WRAPPER. 


THE  CCNTALiR  COMPANY.    TT   MUflRAV  C~ 


STANDS  AT  THE  HEAD. 
Aug.  J.  Bogal,  the  leading  druggist  of 
Shereveport,  La.,  says:  "Dr.  King's  New 
Discovery  is  the  only  thing  that  cures  mv 
cough,  and  it  is  the  best  seller  I  have."  J. 
F.  Campbell,  merchant  of  Safford,  Ariz., 
writes:  "Dr.  King's  New  Discovery  is 
all  that  is  claimed  for  it;  It  never  faih, 
and  is  a  sure  cure  for  Consumption, 
Coughs  and  Colds.  I  cannot  say  enough 
for  its  merits."  Dr.  King's  New  Discovery 
for  Consumption,  Coughs  and  Colds  is 
not  an  experiment.  It  has  been  tried  for 
a  quarter  of  a  century,  and  today  stands 
at  the  head.  It  never  disappoints.  Free 
trial  bottles  at  Duluth  Drug  company's 
drug  store. 


A  HANDFUL  OF  DIRT  MAY  BE  A  HOUSEFUL  OF  SHAME  " 
KEEP  YOUR  HOUSE  CLEAN  WITH 

SAPOLIO 


Taken  to  Owatonna. 

Judge  Ayer.  in  probate  court  yester- 
day, ordered  three  bright  looking  boys, 
the  sons  of  William  Anglin,  to  the  state 
school  at  Owatonna.  The  boys  have 
been  living  ui)on  charity  for  six 
months,  their  father  having  aban- 
doned them.  Their  names  are  Edward 
Andrev.  William  Wallace  and  Rob- 
ert Bruce. 


SPA8fs..f?SMHT 


euarnnU'idCure  fur  LOSTMMHOUB  •»«»  ' 


aik 


^'1  p^,Z%^i  '"."'"^  ?"''  iiuddl»-at!c,l  in,  n  ai.d  women.  The  awful  elTwt.  of  JoGzH- 
t:  V_*'''"OKs,  shrunken  or  uiicieTwIoptxl  oin:uu«,  weakness,  NtrvouH  P.billly,  Niehilr 
?.'".'.^'.'"A"j_*:""»""'.^i'"'  I"'«'iit;-.  Exhaust.ng  drama  and  lore  of  powic  of  the  ^.  n- 


erntive  Orpns,  unllttiDKone  fc.f  study,  huainesi  and  marriaire/i.s'qulckTy  im-j'by 
■tr.  UodrlKuec  Bpimlah  >erve  GraliiA.   They  not  only  cun- bVKtartintr  at  the  wut 


Kemlta  ot  treatment. 

Sold  in  Duluth  by  MAX  "WIRTH,  Druggist 


POhlelKMtcr'a  EncUah  DIanond  Brkad. 
ENNYROYAL  PILLS 


Dr.  Bull's  Cough  Syrup  has  always 
been  kept  up  to  the  standard.  It  is 
the  same  It  was  forty  years  ago,  the 
best  sold. 


any    interfsting    characters    in    both    tff^ots 


Of  the  Pyramid  Pile  Cure 

Is  the  fact  that  it  cures  every  form  of 
piles  without  <me  particle  of  pain. 
This  desirable  point  is  not  obtained  by 
the  use  of  injurious  opiates  which 
simply  deaden  and  paralyze  the  nerves 
of  the  parts  and  make  matters  worsfc 
in  the  long  run.  But  it  is  done  solely 
by  its  remarkable  healing  and  soothing 


in 

"the  higher  and  lower  walks  of  life  in 
the  Emerald  Isle.  Arthur  W.  Lahey 
Ava.s  Myles  na  Coppaleen.  the  big- 
"hearted  Irish  smuggler  and  he  played 
the  i>art  excellently.  His  songs  were  re- 
ceived with  great  applause.  R.  H.  Cox 
gave  a  fine  character  picture  in  the 
part  of  Danny  Mann  and  was  well  re- 
ceived. Robert  Hamp.  as  Father  Tom. 
was  exc<^!lent  and  Norton  Mattocks, 
as  Kyrle  Daly.  A.  E.  Nugent,  as  Hard- 
ress  Cregan.  Walter  Murphy,  as  Mr. 
Corrigan.  and  James  Lynn,  as  Bertie 
O' Moore,  were   good. 

Miss  Patie  BIcNeill  made  a  very 
pretty  Eily  O'Connor  and  received 
much  applause.  Her  songs  were  very 
T'leasing  and  received  encores.  Mrs. 
W.  F.  Henry  in  the  part  of  Anne  Chute 
•was  a  favorite  with  the  audience  from 
the  start.  Mrs.  F.  N.  Phelan  took  th<» 
flifficult  part  of  Mrs.  Cregan  and  was 
excellent.  Miss  Kate  O'Donnell  made  a 
ilecided  hit  as  Sheelah.  the  old  Irish 
peasant  woman  and  when  she  danced 
the  Irish  jig  it  brought  down  the 
house. 

Mrs.  James  McAuliffe  between  the 
acts  sang  Molloy's  "Kerry  Dance."  a 
very  pretty  number,  and  received  a 
well-merited  encore. 


A  Happy  Wedding. 

Miss    Anna    Johnson    and    Ole    John- 


son were  married  last  evening  at  the 
residence  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  C.  K.  Mc- 
Donald. 517  West  First  street.  Rev.  C. 
C.  Salter  officiating.  The  bride  was  at- 
tended by  Misses  Josephine  and  Clara 
Anderson,  and  the  groom  by  H.  Cal- 
son  and  W.  Gustafson.  The  parlors 
were  handsomely  decorated  and  the 
Avedding  was  a  very  pretty  one.  After 
the  ceremony  a  flash  light  picture  of 
the  nuptial  party  v.as  taken.  A  wed- 
ding supper  followed,  after  which 
dancing  was  indulged  in.  Only  the  in 
timate  friends  and  relatives  of  the 
bride  and  groom  were  present.  The  j 
couple  will  reside  in  Indianapolis,  i 
where  the  groom  has  a  responsible  po-  i 
-•^ition  with  a  cement  company.  Thev 
\vill  leave  for  their  home  in  about 
thiee   weeks.  ' 


¥ 


BABY 
HUMORS 

Instant  relief  for  skin-tortnred  babies  and 
rest  for  tired  motiiers  in  a  warm  bath  with 
CcTictR.*.  Soap,  and  a  sinj^le  application  of 
CuTiciTKA  (ointment),  the  great  skin  cure. 
Tlie  only  si»eefly  and  economical  treatment 
for  itching,  burning,  bleeding,  scaly,  and 
pimi>lv  humors  of  the  skin,  scalp,  and  blood. 

(gticura 

hiold  throu^hnntth*  world.   Pottee  Dmco  axdCbem- 
ic»i.  Ciik;<ikvtii>>.  SoW  Proprietor*,  Bo-ton. 
tg-  "  Uow  to  Cure  Evtry  Baby  Uumor," mailed  free. 


rVnd  while  It  thus  gives  Immediate 
relief,  at  the  same  time  the  disease  is 
not  merely  checked,  but  a  radical  cure 
is  rapidly  accomplished. 

And  the  p()int  we  want  to  make  clear 
is  that  all  this  is  done  without  a  par- 
ticle of  pain. 

This  fact  is  one  reason  for  the  great 
popularity  of  the  Pyramid  Cure  and 
constitutes  one  ver>-  great  difference 
between  it  and  almost  any  other  kind 
of  treatment  for  piles. 

Every  kind  of  surgical  operation  for 
piles  is  excrutlatingly  painful,  besides 
endangering  the  life  of  the  patient  and 
in  most  cases  is  not  to  \>e  compared 
v.ith  the  Pyramid  Cure,  neither  in  mak- 
ing successful  cures  without  pain  nor 
in  cheapness  and  safety. 

The  Pyramid  Pile  Cure  has  been  be- 
fore the  puldic  too  long  and  its  merits 
recognized  by  too  many  people  to  allow 
U  to  be  cia-ssed  with  the  many  salves, 
suppositories,  pills,  etc.,  and  you  run 
no  risk  in  trying  it,  as  is  often  the  case 
with  new  and  untried  preparations. 

If  you  are  ever  troubled  with  any 
form  of  piles  or  rectal  disease,  do  not 
forget  the  Pyramid  Pile  Cure.  Pre- 
pared by  the  Pyramid  Drug  company, 
of  Albion,  Mich.,  and  sold  by  druggists 
at  50  cents  per  package. 

AMUSEWENTS. 

GEORGE  R.  WENDLING. 

George  R.  Wendling's  coming  lecture 
is  exciting  gr3at  Interest.  He  has  been 
heard  here  before,  and  is  recognized  as 
one  of  the  finest  lecturers  that  has  ever 
appeared  "here  in  the  Star  Lecture 
course.  "Saul  of  Tarsus"  is  the  subject 
of  the  lecture,  which  he  will  deliver  at 
the  First  Methodist  church,  next  Wed- 
nesday evcninj^.  It  is  a  discussion  or 
orators  and  oratory.  The  Detroit  Free 
Press  says  of  him: 

"He  has  the  oratorical  gift,  is  a 
trained  speaker,  and  his  style  of  compo- 
sition is  graceful,  flowing  and  often 
poetical.  *  •  *  The  lecture  Is  an  ex- 
ceedingly clever  presentation,  worthy 
its  author's  reputation,  and  an  admir- 
able example  of  apt  illustration,  bril- 
liant and  beautiful  metaphor,  thrilling 
eloquence  and  lofty  thought." 


peclal  Gold  Medal  and  Diploma 


AWARDED  . 


r.  Price's  Cream  Baking  Powder 


Original  and  Only  Genuine. 

9ikFC,    always   reli&ble.     «.aoics  ask 
Druggist  for'Chichcster'$  B.tgluh  Ttia- 
Ifflond  Brand  in  Ked  and  Gold  metallic^ 
Jbexes.  staled  witti  Dliie  rikbon.    Take 
^jno  otber*  Ite/v^e  datjgcroun  auhttitU' 
^tiomt  and  imitatwng.  Ai  l>ruggiat8,  or  aeod  4«* 
in  stamps   fur   particulars,    testimonials   and 
"  Itcliuf  for  Ladiem"  in  Uittr,  br  retam 
,        Hail.     10,000  Ti'ilimonials.     ^ime  Paper, 
.    Chlchc»ter t.'neinlcalCa». Martin jn  Haul 
toU  bT  ul  Local  Uragfiisu  i'hUada... 


md  published 
day     of 


"aper. 


BY  THE 


CALIFORNIA  MIDWINTER  INTERNATIONAL  EXPOSITION. 


"THE  DEVIL'S  AUCTION." 
Among  the  many  new  features  offered 
by  Charles  H.  Yale's  "Forever  Devi^^ 
Auction"  for  this  season  is  a  new  ab- 
surdity entitled  "The  Bashful  Maid- 
ens," a  screaming  episode  of  song  and 
pantomlne,  produced  under  the  sobri- 
quet of  "Weary  Willie,"  which,  accord- 
ing to  reports  received,  has  met  with 
since  its  initial  production,  greater  suc- 
cess than  Mr.  Yale's  famous  theatrical 
travesty,  which  he  very  ai»tly  dubbed 
"On  the  Rialto."  Another  of  this  sea- 
son's "hits"  is  the  timely  burlesque  on 
"The  Bicycle  Craze,"  regarding  which 
a  writer  has  stated  and  truthfully  that 
"there  are  bikes  and  there  are  bikes, 
but  it's  dollars  to  doughnuts  no  one 
f»v»-r  saw  a  more  varied  assortment  a» 
glided  around  the  stage  in  the  'bike' 
parade  in  the  'Forever  Devil's  Auc- 
tion.  The  Devils  Auction  "   will  be 

at  the  Lyceum  next  Monday  and  Tues- 
day. 


BABY  BLEMISHES 


Prerentcd  and  Curert   br 
CUTICURA  SOAK 


TO  HOT  SPRINGS.  ARK. 
The  Minneapolis  &  St.  Louis  railroad 
is  the  short  line,  and  only  line  with  din- 
ing  cars   and   compartment     sleepers. 
Excursion  tickets  on  sale. 


In  singling  out  Dr.  Price's  Cream  Baking  Powder  from  all  its  competitors, 
and  bestowing  updn  it  a  special  Gold  Medal,  the  California  Midwinter  Fair 
concurred  in  the  verdict  given  by  the  World's  Fair  jury,  which  awarded 
both  medal  and  diploma  to  Dr.  Price's  Cream  Baking  Powder,  declaring  it 
superior  to  every  other  brand. 

The  victories  won  by  it  at  all  the  great  fairs,  and  its  wonderful  growth 
in  popular  favor,  due  to  its  purity,  uniformity,  wholesomeness,  keeping  qualities 
and  excellence,  have  confirmed  and  emphasized  it  as 

.      "THE  FOREMOST  BAKING  POWDER  IN  ALL  THE  WORLD." 


MORTGAGE    FORECLOSURE    S.\LE.- 

Whereas  default  has  been  made  in  the 
conditions  of  a  certain  mortgage  execut- 
ed and  delivered  by  Herbert  W.  Colfln 
and  Mary  E.  Coflln.  his  wife,  mortgagors, 
tr>  William  A.  Jcnner,  mortgagee,  bearing 
d  ite  the  1st  day  of  February,  1893,  and  n-- 
corded  in  the  office  of  the  register  of 
deeds  in  and  for  the  county  of  St.  Louis 
and  state  of  Minnesota,  on  "the  3rd  day  of 
February.  1893,  at  three  (3)  o'clock  p.  m. 
in  Book  one  hundred  four  (104)  of  mort- 
gnges  on  page  tifty-sevcn  (57),  which  said 
mortgage  was  given  to  secure  the  pay- 
ment of  the  sum  of  forty-five  hundred 
(4500.00)  dollars  and  interest  thereon  ac- 
cording to  the  terms  of  one  certain  prin- 
cipal promissory  note  and  six  (6)  interest 
coupon  notes  thereto  attached,  all  of  even 
date  with  said  mortgage  and  all  ma<1,i 
by  said  Herbert  W.  Coffin  and  Marv  E. 
Coffin,  payable  to  the  order  of  William 
A.  Jenner,  and, 

Whereas,  the  said  mortgagee  has  paiil 
the  sum  of  sixty-eight  and  06-100  (GS.O-i) 
dollars  as  insurance  pri-mlums  for  in- 
surance upon  the  building  situate  on  the 
property  described  in  and  conveyed  bv 
said  mortgage,  said  mortgagor  having 
failed  to  keep  said  proiierty  insured, 
which  i)ayment.  In  and  by  the  terms  of 
.said  mortgage  is  made  a  part  of  said 
mortgage  debt,   and. 

Whereas,  such  default  consists  in  the 
non-payment  of  said  principal  sum  se- 
curtMl  by  said  mortgage  and  of  intere.-st 
thereon,  from  August  1st,  1896,  which  de- 
faiUt  has  continued  for  more  than  ten 
(10)  days,  and  insurance  premiums  paid 
as  aforesaid;  upon  which  mortgage  del)t 
there  is  claimed  to  be  due  and  there  is 
due  at  the  date  of  this  notice,  tlie  sum  of 
four  thousand  seven  hundred  sixty  anil 
5»;-100  (4760..'.6)  dollars  principal.  Interest 
and  insurance  premiums  paid,  and  no  -u - 
tion  or  proceeding  at  law  or  otherwise 
having  been  instituted  to  recover  the  said 
debt,  secured  by  said  mortgage  or  any 
part  thereof. 

Now.  therefore,  notice  Is  hereby  given, 
that  b.v  virtue  of  the  i)ower  of  sale  con- 
tained in  said  mortgage  which  has  oe- 
come  oi)erative  by  reason  of  the  defaults 
above  mentioned  and  pursuant  to  th* 
statute  In  such  case  made  and  provir.e.l, 
the  said  mortgage  will  be  foreclosed  by 
the  sale  of  the  premises  described  in  and 
covered  by  said  mortgage,  to-wlt:  AU 
that  tract  or  parcel  of  land  lying  and  b<;- 
ing  in  the  county  of  St.  Louis  and  stato 
of  Minnesota,  described  as  follows,  to- 
wit:  Lot  four  (4).  block  twenty-nine  (29». 
frlen  Avon,  First  Division,  according  to 
the  plat  thereof  on  file  or  of 
record  in  the  office  of  the  register  of 
deeds  in  and  for  said  county  of  St.  Louis, 
which  said  premises  with  the  heredita- 
ments and  appurtenances  will  be  sold  at 
public  auction  to  the  highest  bidder  for 
cash  to  pay  said  princi!)al  debt  and  inter- 
est and  the  taxes  (if  any),  on  .said  prem- 
ises and  the  said  insurance  premiums  paid 
and  seventy-five  (75.00)  dollars  attorneys' 
fees  as  stipulated  in  and  by  said  mort- 
gage in  case  of  foreclosure,  and  the  dis- 
V)ursements  allowed  bylaw,  by  the  sheriff 
of  said  St.  Louis  County,  at  the  frojit 
door  of  the  court  house,  in  the  city  of 
Duluth,  in  said  county  and  state  on  Sat- 
urday, the  twenty-fourth  day  of  April. 
1897,  at  ten  (10)  o'clock  in  the  forenoon  of 
that  day,  subject  to  redemption  at  any 
time  within  one  year  from  the  day  of 
sale,  as  provided  by  law. 

Dated  March  10th.  1897. 

WILLIAM    A.    JENNER, 
Mortgagee. 
TOWNE  &  DAVIS, 

Attorneys    for    Mortgagee, 
103-106  Duluth  Trust  Co.   Building. 
Duluth,  Minn.  ^ 

Duluth    Evening    Herald,    March-ll-18-'J5- 

Aprll-1-8-15-22. 


ORDER   FOR   HEARING   ON    CLAIMS- 

State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 
-•ss. 

In  Probate  Court,   Special  Term,  March 
2nd,    1897. 
In   the   matter  of  the   estate  of  Michael 

Noonan,   deceased : 

Letters  of  administration  on  the  estate 
of  said  deceased  being  this  day  granteu 
unto  George  F.  Chester,  of  said  county. 

It  is  ordered,  that  all  claims  and  de- 
mands of  all  persons  against  said  estate 
be  presented  to  this  court,  for  examiua- 
tion  and  allowance,  at  the  probate  office 
in  Duluth.  in  said  county,  on  Mondav, 
the  27th  day  of  September,  A.  D.  1897, 
at  ten  o'clock  a.  m. 

It  Is  further  ordered,  that  six  months 
from  the  date  hereof  be  allowed  to  cred- 
itors to  present  their  claims  against  said 
estate  at  the  expiration  of  which  tim' 
all  claims  not  presented  to  said  court,  or 
not  proven  to  its  satisfaction  shall  be  for- 
ever barred,  unless,  for  cause  shown,  fur- 
ther time  be  allowed. 

Ordered  further  that  notice  of  the  tim-> 
and  place  of  the  hearing  and  examina- 
tion of  said  claims. and  demands  shall  b^ 
given  by  publishing  this  order  once  in 
each  week  for  three  successive  week-, 
prior  to  the  day  appointed  for  such  ex- 
amination in  The  Duluth  Evening  Herald, 


a   daily   newspajier  printed 
at  Dulutli,  ill  said  county. 

Dated    at    Duhith,    the    second 
March.    A.    D.    1S97. 

By  the  Court. 

PHINEAS  AYBR, 
,„     .  ^  Judge  of  Probate. 

(Seal.) 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March -4-11-li. 


MORTGAGE   FORECLuSl'RE  SALU.- 

Default  having  been  made  in  the  pay- 
ment of  the  sum  of  ten  thousand  one 
hundred  and  forty  dollars  ($lo,14<).00». 
which  is  claimed  to  be  due  and  is  due  at 
the  date  of  this  notice,  upon  a  certain 
mortgage,  duly  executed  and  delivered 
by  George  B.  Kirkbride  and  Mav  S.  Kirk- 
bride,  his  wife  and  Charles  T.  Thompson 
and  Kate  H.  Thompson,  his  wife,  mortga- 
gors, to  James  M.  Sharp.  mortgagi-i\ 
bearing  date  the  first  dav  of  June,  1892 
and  with  a  jxiwer  of  sale  therein  con- 
tained, duly  recorded  In  the  office  of  the 
register  of  deeds  in  and  for  the  county  of 
St.  Louis  and  state  of  Minnesota,  on  the 
fifteenth  day  of  June,  1892,  at  eight  oclock 
a.  m.  in  Book  67  of  mortgages  on  page  .!17. 
Which  said  mortgage,  together  with 
the  debt  secured  thereby,  was  dulv  as- 
signed by  said  James  M.  Sharp,  mortga- 
gee, to  The  First  National  Bank  of  New- 
vllle,  Pennsylvania,  by  written  assign- 
ment dated  the  31st  day  of  Deceml)er. 
1896.  and  recorded  in  the  office  of  said 
register  of  deeds  on  the  16th  day  of  Jan- 
uary, 1897.  at  10  o'clock  a.  m.  In  Book  108 
of  mortgages  on  page  470,  and  no  action 
or  proceeding  having  been  Instituted,  at 
law  or  otherwise,  to  recover  the  debt 
secured  by  said  mortgage  or  any  part 
thf-reof. 

Now,  therefore,  notice  is  licrebv  given 
that  by  virtue  of  the  power  of  sale  con- 
tained in  said  mortgage  and  purstiant  to 
the  statute  In  such  case  made  and  pro- 
vided, the  said  mortgage  will  be  fore- 
closed by  a  sale  of  the  premises  described 
In  and  conveyed  by  said  mortgage,  viz: 
Lot  seventy-two  on  West  First  street 
Duluth  Proper.  First  Division,  according 
to  the  plat  thereof  on  file  and  recorded  in 
the  office  of  the  register  of  deeds  of  St. 
Louis  County,  Minnesota,  .said  lot  lying 
and  being  in  St.  Louis  Countv  and  state 
of  Minnesota,  with  the  hereditaments  and 
appurtenances:  which  sale  will  be  made 
by  the  sheriff  of  said  St.  Louis  Countv. 
at  the  front  door  of  the  court  house,  in 
the  city  of  Duluth.  In  said  countv  and 
state,  on  the  10th  day  of  April,  1897,  at 
ten  o'clock  a.  m..  of  that  dav.  at  publi.* 
vendue,  to  the  highest  bidder  for  cash, 
to  pay  said  debt  of  10,140  dollars  and  in- 
terest and  the  taxes,  if  anv,  on  said  prem- 
ises and  100  dollars  attornevs'  fees,  as 
stipulated  In  and  by  .said  mortgage  in 
case  of  foreclosure,  and  the  disburse- 
ments allowed  by  law;  subject  to  redemp- 
tion at  any  time  within  one  year  from  tho 
day  of  sale,  as  provided  bv  law. 

Dated  February  25th.  A.  D.  1897. 
THE     FIRST    NATIONAL     BANK      OP 

NEWVILLE, 

. , Assignee  of  Mortgage. 

ALFORD  &   HT'NT. 

Attorneys   for  Assignee   of   Mortgage 
Duluth   Evening   Herald,    Feb-2.5-March-4- 

11-18-25-April-l. 

Whereas  default  has  been  made  In  the 
conditions  of  a  certain  mortgage  made, 
executed  and  delivered  by  Rose  St." 
Amour  and  William  St.  Amour,  her  hus- 
band, mortgagors,  to  Sarah  E.  Benson, 
mortgagee,  dated  August  21st,  1S95,  and 
recorded  in  the  office  of  the  register  of 
deeds  in  and  for  St.  Txiuis  County.  Min- 
nesota, on  the  26th  day  of  August,  189.5. 
at  3;40  o'clock  p.  m.,  in  Book  177  of  mort- 
gages on  page  18,  such  default  consisting 
in  the  non-payment  of  the  .semi-annual 
installment  of  lntere.«^t  which  by  the 
conditions  and  covenants  of  the  said 
morigagt-,  and  the  term.s  of  the  note  .se 
cured  thereby,  came  due  on  September 
1st.  1896;  and 

And  whereas  said  mortgage  contains  a 
provision  that  if  default  should  be  made 
In  any  of  the  conditions  or  covenants  in 
said  mortgage  on  the  part  of  the  mortga- 
gors, to  be  kept  or  performed,  then  the 
whole  sum  thereby  secured  should  imme- 
diately become  due  and  payable  at  the 
election  of  the  mortgagee  without  notice; 
and  whereas  the  mortgagee  has  elected 
and  does  hereby  elect  to  declare  the 
whole  sum  thereby  secured  to  be  due  and 
payable;  and 

Whereas  there  is  therefore  claimed  to 
be  due  and  Is  due  upon  said  mortgage 
debt  at  the  date  of  this  notice  the  sum  of 
twelve  hundred  eighty  and  64-100  ($1280.64> 
dollars,  and  no  action,  at  law  or  other- 
wise, has  been  Instituted  to  recover  the 
mortgage  debt  or  any  part  thereof. 

Now,  therefore,  notice  is  hereby  given, 
that  by  virtue  of  the  power  of  sale  there- 
in contained,  the  said  mortgage  will  be 
foreclosed  by  a  sale  of  th©  mortgaged 
premises  therein  described,  situated  In 
the  county  of  St.  Louis  and  state  of  Min- 
nesota, to-wit:  Lot  numbered  fourteen 
(14),  of  block  four  (4),  of  Gay's  Division 
of  Duluth,  according  to  the  recorded  plat 
thereof;  which  sale  will  be  made  at  pub- 
lic auction  to  the  highest  bidder  for  cash 
to  pay  said  moitgage  tlebt  and  Interest, 
seventy-five  dollars  attorneys'  fee  stipu- 
lated for  in  said  mortgagpe,  and  the  dis- 
bursements allowed  by  law,  by  the  sherlfC 
of  said  St.  Louis  County,  at  the  front 
door  of  the  court  house.  In  the  city  of 
Duluth.  In  said  county,  on  March  26th. 
1897,  at  ten  (10)  o'clock  a.  m.  of  that  day. 

Dated  February  11,   1897. 

SARAH  E.  BENSON. 
Mortgagee. 
McGIFFERT  &   HUNTER. 

Attorneys  for   Mortgagee, 
200  Herald    Building, 
Duluth,   Minn. 
Duluth     Evening     Herald,      Feb-ll-I8-25» 

March-4-11-18. 


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Our  Mackintosh  Coats!  I  HtLuyH  I 


Are  all  mide  up  double  texture  and 
are  absolutely  waterpioof. 


I  Here's  a  Special  We're  Offering  for  a 

I  Few  Days,  and  a  World- Beater  it  is. 


■■■■- 


$7.50 


5  Jui.1  25  Men's  Black  Cheviot,  loose 

5  tiuing  box  back,  extra  long  cut. 

E  elegantly  finished,  fancy  plaid 

5  lir.ing,  deep  velvet  collar,  very  swell 

s  etfect,  worth  $12.00.  special 

=  price 

2  Have  ycu  noticed  on  the  street  lately  those  swell  looking  light-giay  = 

s  Mackintoshes,  made  up  doable-breasted  style,  cut  extra  E 

S  long  with  a  deep  velvet  collar?    They  were  bought  here.  E 

I  Men's  Rain  Coats  $1.50  and  up.  | 

I  Boys'  Rain  Coats  and  Maclvintoshes.  | 

Umbrellas  for  Men  and  Women.  I 


Case  Against    Richard  Har- 
per Submitted  Without  the 
Defendant's  Testimony. 


Trial  of  Frederick  Davis,  Ex- 
Surveyor,  Will  Be  Bej^un 
Tomorrow. 


UFFELft^o 

Friday,  Saturday  and  Monday, 
Special  3=days'  Sale  of 

MESTICS! 


•  I  • 


We  are  determinedn 
That  Fridays 
Shall  be  busy  days 
At  the  New  Store... 

There  is  one  way  to  accomplish  this- 
And  this  is  the  way: 


Read  the  Prices  Carefully! 
It's  Dollars  Saved  to  You! 


Rubber  Footwear 
of  all  kinds. 


Investigation  Cases  Will  Be 

Put  to  Trial  as  Fast  as 

Possible. 


I  Prett}^  lieadwear 
I  For  Cute  Children== 


BOYS'  OEPT. 

Take  i;i<»vator- 
Becotil  Floor. 


An  advance  showing  ot  Spring  Styles. 


E  A  lot  of  pretty  Taras  like 

^  thii  cut,  iu  ^lue,  r:d  and  brew.:, 

=  tlounce  neatly  iiimtn-'d 

2  with  lhri;e  rows 

=  while  bra'd  around 

J  band , 


^<«:^^      I 


2Sc 


-^' 


A  lot  of  Misses'  and  Children's  = 

beautiful  Tarns  lil^e  this  cut,  blue.     = 
black  ana  red  colors,  ladies'  cloth,   E 
cutely  trimmed 
with  white,  black 
and  brown  leather. 


50c 


'>' 


s  A  lot  'i{  \iiss>^'  far.ry  le^tncr 

=  x:ppc«i  Tams  Jilic  \K>  cut  !n  rare 

S  cooibiration -—bltir  bmwn.  b!.ick 

=  ST-'i  r»  i  rrlor;,  stlin  tnn  nm>g, 

5  silk  stitchiEg— 

I       50c, 


A  special  lot  of  Mioses'  fancy  ~ 

featber  tipped  Tam^,  mostly  like  5 

tais  cu*,  a  line  cf  samples  closed  ^ 

out  frouj  a  leading  nianufacturer,  ~ 

in  a  beautiful  selection  of  combina-  = 

tions  and  colorinjrs,  worth  $3.op,  2 

$1.50  and  $1.00,  cfifcred  at  special  ^ 

price  of—  — 

$1.00,  75c,  50c  I 


iurrows.| 

^Uiiii!iHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiii]iiiiiir.iiii:iiiiii.iiniiiiiii<j]<iiiin!iiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii]iiiMiiii^ 


Judpe  Cant  iliLs  mornlnjr  heard  the 
•  ase  against  Rithanl  Harper,  a  youns 
man  who  is  aciuseil  of  forsery  in  th? 
.st'tond  degree.  The  indiitment  against 
him  alleKod  that  he  passed  a  eheek  for 
about  $S  on  xVususl  ytahlhush,  having 
I  first  signed  to  it  the  name  of  a  ficti- 
tious film,  (.'anipl)ell  &  Williamson. 
The  state's  testimony  was  very  brief 
and  the  defense  put  in  none  at  all.  so 
;  that  while  the  lase  was  l)e8un  the  last 
thing  last  night  it  was  given  to  the 
.im>'  at  noon  to(ia\ . 

\V.   C.    MeAdainl    who   defended    Har- 
I  jier.  moved  to  dismiss  the  ease  on  the 
I  grounti    that    the   state    has     failed     to 
i  prove  that  any  offense  had   been  com- 
niitted.     This   motion    was  denied,   and 
j  y\v.  Me  Adam  moved  that  the  court  di- 
rect a  verdict  for  the  defendant.     This 
motion  was  also  denied,  .so  the  defend- 
ant  rested    without   evidence   and     the 
ease  was  argued  to  the  jury. 

The   jury    brought    in    a    v.Mtlict    this 
afternoon  Jindijig   Harper  guilty. 
Tomorrow  will  l>e  the  first  day  in  the 
I  most  interesting  part  of  the  term.  Th. 
I  trial   of  the  investigation     indiclnienis 
found  l>y  the  late  grand  jury  wid  begin 
with   the  case  of  Frederick   Davis,   the 
former     county     sui"ve>-or,      who       has 
against  him  eight  indictmeuts  for  put- 
ting in  illegal   bills.     The  biJIs  were   for 
locating  section   and     (luaiier     section 
rorners  under  a   law  whicb  the  courts 
declared    unconstitutional.       The     liills 
1  \.ere  put  in  l)y  Davis  and  i)aid  after  the 
law     was     dechued       unconstitutional, 
and    the   indictments   also    alleges   that 
ihey  were  jiadded  to  help  out  ilie  sur- 
.veyor's  Income. 

I  When  th'^  I>avis  cases  are  concluded  it 
I  is  expected  that  the  trial  of  the  investi- 
gation ca.ses  w  ill  proceed  rapidly  until 
all  have  been  settled  tme  v. a\-  or  an- 
other. -Monday.  March  2t»,  the  bribery 
ca.se  agaitist  Willis  J.  Holmes  will  be 
called,  and  Tuesday.  April  G.  the  cases 
against  County  Auditor  Odin  Halden  ] 
will  be  tried  in  Carlton  county.  The 
other  cases,  together  with  .he  regular 
criminal  business  remaining!,  will  be 
trietl  before  and  after  the  Halden  and 
Hotnies  cases. 
j  Yesterday  afternoon  the  jury  in  the 
case  of  Lottie  Doyle  against  the  city  of 
Duluth  returned  a  verdict  for  the  de- 
fendant. A  stay  of  twenty  days  was 
granted. 

The  testimony  in  the  long  and  weary 
case  of  the  Ipper  Peninsula  brewing 
comi>any  against  Fredin  A:  Wilson  and 
their  bondsmen  was  all  in  last  night, 
and  most  of  this  nm.rning  was  spent  in 
a  motion  to  direct  a  v.^rdi<t  in  favn' 
of  the  sureties.  This  vras  granted  I'y 
Judge  Knsign.  and  the  case  pioceeded 
against  the  firm.  The  arguments  to  the 
jury  were  left  over  to  this  afternoon, 
and  they  were  expected  to  take  up  a 
greater  part  of  the  seasion. 

The  next  case  on  call  was  that  of 
Henry  Brown  against  Clarence  M.  Hill, 
and  it  was  thought  that  there  would  be 
time  to  draw  a  jury  in  that  case  before 
adjournment. 


Bleaclied?„«h  Muslins. 

'■W,v.iii:iinr";;;.iml,  M^.^iiu  £S-* 

(:(HiiJ^  HViiit  Loo/ii  I  Et-  por  yard  OC 
"J)w)srht"  :io-iiicii  Muslin,  O  *»> 

value  lie;  sui,,  prico— lu-r  yard OC/ 

■'UticV  :W-iucli  Muslin,  0\/ j^ 

value  r-'!'ic;  8uli>  price-nor  yd.  .O/sC 
"Pri.li-  of  f Ln  West' '  'X  inch  I  O .•». 

Mnsliu,  value  Kic;  sale  prico I  dCC 

•Firel  Prizo'  ;W-iDch  Muslin, 

valuoVc;  .sttl(>  j)i  ico 

"t^afCDs"  eilrj  line  (^firnlnic  for 
L.a(li03  I  uderwenr.  worth  lac  ; 
salo  price _ _  _ 

"Knights"  Cambric,  regular 
value  10c:  eale  price 


6c 

9c 
Be 

Unbleached  Huslins. 

ORchef 

6c 
6c 


Bed  Spreads. 

Wiiito  Hod  Sprciids,  "liommcd 

rnsdy  for  use."  9()c  grade 

Ued  Sprftdds.  "hpminpd  ready 

for  U90,'  $l.i'i  grade 

Bed  SprnPds.  "hemmed  ready 

f.-riHo,"  $1  :;r)  grade 

All  the  dillerpnt  stvlns  in  ft  IT     g\f\ 
Hod  Spreads  from  50c  to  9  9  ■  W  V 


Lace  Curtains. 

worth  90c,  at—  >1  Q  ^ 


Lace  (^artaias 
per  pair.. 

Jjacc  Curtains,  worth  $1.00 ; 
roduced  for  throe  daje,  to- 
per yard 


2-1  pieces  "Pacoiel"  iH  inch  L  nbleRched 
Mu- lin.  Worth  7c  :  for  three 
dajs 

LM  p'eces  '  Crajaloue"  :«5-iuch 
I  ublpachi'd  ,\iu!-liD. 

Vttlue9c;  for  thire  days 

20  pioces  "Carr.er.m"  :'C  iach 
Unbleached  Muslin,  v.ilue  ^e ;    **  0/  ** 

for  three  days. \#/4C 

;»  pec>8  "Paciflc"  SG-inch 

Unbleached  JUaslio,  worth  10c;  fi3/-» 

aalM  prico O/^  C 

li  pieces  "Pfunof"  :ki-inch 
I  ubieaciied  Moulin,  worth  10c 
three  d*js  piicc... 


Lace  Curtains,  worth  $1  2."i, 

Three  dayp  price— r>or  yard 

Lace  (^urtsins,  worth  Jl  .50  ard  A  O  ^ 
$1.25,  three  days  price— per  pair%y  OC 


69c 
79c 


5 


3/< 


Long  Cloths. 


patterns, 

5J4c 


One  lot  ot  Outing  Flannels,  31  inches 
wide,  good  desirable  patterns, 
new  cloth,  spring  col- 
ors; would  be  cheap 
at  8c— for  Friday... 

Satin  Finished  Foulard  Prints 
full  widths,  serviceable  colors; 
worth  9c  a  yard— 
for  Friday — 
per  yard 


Large  assortment  of  staple  colored 
Plaid  Ginghams, 
worth  lie  a  yard- 
Friday's  price 


:;  coiors; 

colored 

6c 


Wool  Suitings,  spring  styles, 

double  width, 

good  value  at  40c  a  yd, 

Friday's  price — 

per  yard 

250  yards  of  White  Cheese  Cloth, 

30-inches  wide,  slightly  soiled; 

regular  price  loc  a  yard 

will  sell  for— 

per  yard 


23c 


4c 


AH  Remnants  and  Odds  and  Ends, 

throughout  the  store, 

will  be  sold  at  the  customarv 

FRIDAY  CHEAP  PRICES. 


.7Kc 


'■Superior  •  r^iug  (;ioth  for 
Ladies'  Underwear -per  yard 
Lyman's  Twilled  Long  Cloth, 

very  fine— per  yard 

IStirleigb  Long  Cloth, 
reduced  to— per  yard 


lie 

I3c 

I2K2C 


There  will  be  many  other  materials  selected 
from  the  different  departments  that  will  be  marked 
at  special  low  prices  for  Friday. 

You  owe  it  as  a  duty  to  yourself  to  trade  where 
you  get  the  best  material  for  the  least  monev,  and 
that  place  is 

j  Power  &  Settle's 


PERSONALS. 


Spscial. 


19pioceB  Ln  (dale  Mjslin, 
th«  10c  grade,  at  

10  jiieces  Finest  Lonsdale 
0»?nil)ric,  llcTrailo,  at 


&%C  !         Table  Linens. 


.9^C 


Sheetings. 

r>  pieces  10  4  (Jarli'ie  Ideachedf  >|  \/^^ 

Sheeiing,  worth  tic,  at •*r/2C 

K  pi.^crsIM  .Vanink  ag  'Twillod" 
Shooting,  worth  ;55f,  OOl  '.«. 

a«  - ^^l/zC 

Uohaw<  7-4  hleachod  Sheeting. 

w.)rtii  13c:  g  <51/^^ 

for  three  d^js  s.r |  %5/2C 

Mohawk  S  4  i-  Isftchoil  t^heetiug,    t  HZ.  ^^ 

worth  20c.  rttiiic'd  to ..IOC 

Moli».wlf  !•  4  Hh'-phed  .Sheeiing. 

worth  23?.  for  tliree  days 

liioa  9-4  Blcach'd  Sheeting,         O  I  ^* 
best  made,  worth  He.  lale  prico  fi!  I  C 
Utica  10-4  Bl->ncbi\i  fheetiug, 
vt-ry  ha-A.  worth  i'.c :  O  ''3  ^\ 

for  threudnys A  ^C 

Pcppr rr  11  ii  4  UuWeRched         I  >|  l/^\ 
Sheeting,  re.iuc^d  to i^v/aC 


t 


I7c 


"Pillow  Casing," 

lOc 

I2V.C 
14c 
16c 


A'lAnda'c  45  incii  HL-achod 
Pillow  Casing,  w;rth  14c,  no» 
I-'tica.">-4  Pilluw  I'sjinK, 
(v^ry  bsftt;  wor;h  loc,  now... 
Lewiston  50-iu''h  i'illow  Cas- 

ii'P.  regular  price  lOc,  now 

Pillow  Case  "Ti^binir," 

42  inch-per  yu  I 

Pillow  Case  'Tubing,  ' 
45iucdi— per  yard 


i;  pieces  Turkey  Ued  Table  i  tZ  ^ 

Lmeu,  worth  25c.  for  this  sale..    9  v#  C 
4  pieces  Hloacheil  Table  Liaen,  rktS.^ 

regular  valno  tOc,  n«.w id.OC 

Hleached  Table  Linen, 

t)55  grade,  now 

Ble.ichpd  Table  Linen, 

79c  (jiiality,  now... _. 

Hloaciied  Tsihle  Linen, 

7i)c  (laalily,  now 

HloRched  Table  Linen, 

».ic  quality,  now 

Ble-ched  J'able  Linen, 

$1  00  nuality,  now 

nieached  Table  Linen, 

$1.25  iioality,  now 

Bleached  Trtble  Linen, 

$1.50  (jQality,  now 

Lub'.c-ached  Soft  Finish  Tabic 

Lincu,  tJOc  (luality,  now 

Dnbleachod  Soft  l?inish  Tublo 

Linen,  65c  ((Uality,  now 

Unhlrached  Soft  Finish  Table 

Linen,  Tie  (jaalitj  ,  now 

Unbleached  Soft  Finish  Table 

Liaen,  ;hJc  quality,  now 

Unbleached  Soft  Finish  Table 

Linen,  $1.15  quality,  now 

5-8  Bleached  Napkins, 

7.1C  <iuahty,  now 


69c 
63c 
63c 
65g 
39c 
98c 
39c 
48c 
66c 
63c 
79c 
69c 


vue.st    at    the 


Special. 


100  of  <ho  h-^st  J1.:,0  Soil  Finih  Hod 
Spreads,  all  hemmed,  nt «»  -. 

«t ^oc 


Wl;  FtAR  NO 

LOMPKTITIO.V, 
OUR  PRICES  ALWAYS 
TriE  LOWEST. 


THEY  AREJ^VTEREST£D. 

John  WcKinley  Says   Eastern 
Capiialis^.s  Know  Duluth. 


ilfliiiiiiiiii m 


J.ihn  AioKraley,  who  has  beeu  in 
iht:'  East  f«tr  several  months,  ha.s  jv- 
:urnf<i.  Kr  says  ht-  look.s  for  Dulutlr  i) 
i«il   the  return  of  prosperity,   when 


I  in    this    section    have    become    so    uo;! 
j  known  that  it  has  advertised  this  set  - 
'  tion    ,?reatly    and     turned    otluT    eve*: 
this  way. 

Mr.  iicKinley  does  not  look  fur  a!;y 
sudden  return  nf  prosperity.  He  thin'Ks 
it  will  be  a  irraduai  pro<ess.  iiut  is  ciii- 
ridt-nt  that  the  worst  of  the  depression 
has   i)een   seen. 


It  I 


Carelessness  Is  Alleged. 

nit.«     .ir    IT.  .  '      '^^^^'  afi--^w.i-   -if    th.'   deffn<iaiit    in    th 

nies.  MU  .i  ker  than  any  other  Woet.  mt.  .  rase  ..f  j.  a   Jeffr. 

round   a    great    deal    <>f    t;  ilK 
aiierning    Duiuth    in    the    East.     7  lie 
■X'jt   thf.t  s».  nianv 


it 


t'ii 


.     ..  joominent    East*  rn  I 

■  itpjtai.' sts    have   ac.fuired    interests     in 
Jind  around    Duluth   ha.    caused  otht  is: 
'■'   1"'>K    this   way.     Thi-   Lake  Superi  >r  i 
•■'unny     generally     is     :ving     dose;  y  I 
"ed.     The   extent    of   the   iron    d*  -  1 
i.s    pretty    generally    understood.  ' 
ti'i   the    value  of  the  lumber   inteie.=?lr- 
!.-_  a:so  appreciated.     Then  on  the  soutn  I 
•shore  the  » f)pper  mines  awakened  a  n-w  '< 
interest   in    that    country 
the  recent  heavy  rise  i 
stork.-*.     The  interests 

'  'arnegie  and  other  wealthy  met.  j  gaged 


ys  asrainst  th*-  .\onii 
em  Pacific  Ttailway  cotnpanv  has  bt 

Th^r"a'i^**.r"''''''  Slates  .irVuit  couvt.  |at  Duluth  and  Minnoapoli.s. 
The  road  enters  a -general  d-.-nial  to  ili      - 
complaint  and  asserts  that 


the  injurit-s 
were  cau.sed  by  the  plaintilfs  ou  n  nc,'- 
ligence  and  carelessness.  Washburn. 
Lewis  &  Bailey  are  the  defendant's  at- 
torneys. 

Jeffries  was  injured  last  sprtn.e:  in  thi- 
fire  which  destroyed  the  N'orthtrn  I\i- 
cific  warehouse  which  was  liting  buiic 
on  the  bay  front  off  Uic-s  Poiit.    .Jt  f- 


ry  by  reason  of  ,  freys  was  employed  in  the  building  and  I  L  V  ,t,  '?»,"*''^''''?*^''''  ^' 
n  copr>,;-r  mminsr  assisted  in  fighting  the  fire,  a  hoa\y  I  '^.,*^"'"^"-  J^'"  P'''J.i**'-t<^»i-« 
of  the  Hr>ckeftl-  ;  timbor  falling  on  him  wlHie  he  was  tn-  I     ,",     ^.  •^"V^'^^'*'-'***^'"  raihvi 


in  this. 


Rates  Not  Good. 

The  following  dij^patch  from  Des 
Moines.  Iowa,  was  published  in  thi' 
Minneapolis  Journal  a  day  or  two  ago: 
J.  T.  McCullough.  general  manage 
of  the  Newton  Wagon  company  at  Ba- 
tavia.  111.,  is  anxious  to  locate  a  big 
wagon  factory  here,  provided  he  (ai. 
set  a  concession  in  land  and  build- 
ings and  induce  capitalists  to  take 
stock  in  a  company  capitalized  for 
»2.".ti.(joo.  McCulJough  is  a  practical 
wagon  builder  and  was  for  years  su^ 
perintendent  of  the  Fish  Bros."  plant 
at  itacine.   He  is  also  figuring  to  locat.? ' 

but  thinks  i 
he  can  gnt  l)ettei-  freight  rates  intoj 
Des  Moines  for  his  raw  material  and; 
also  niak<'  a  good  thing  out  of  thej 
cheap  steam  cheap  coal  to  be  secure:! ! 
at  the  mines  here.  He  has  his  plauL- 
already  prepared  and  the  commerciai  i 
exchange  is  making  an  effort  to  se- 
cure the  big   plant." 

ft    cannot    he    learned    that    Mr.    Mr- 
Cullough   has  negotiated  for  a  location 

f   the    Du- 
ay  will  prob- 
ably imd  in  this  an  argument  in  fav 
of  the  construction  of  their  road 


UfFEL 


F.  Le  Seuer,  special  agent  of  the 
T-nited  States  land  oflice.  returned  frimi 
.\itken  several  days  ago  and  has  been 
conlined  to  his  home  until  today.  He 
was  ill  two  weeks  or  more  at  Aitken 
with  pn,  umonia. 

Mason  W.  Hurt,  of  EIv,  is  at  ih^ 
Spalding. 

F.  S.  liiglerand  V.  11.  Webster,  of  Chi- 
cago, are  registered  at  the  SpaUiing. 

Matt    Clark   came   up   from    St.    Paul 
this    morning.      He    is    a 
■■Spalding. 

W.  .1.  Dillon,  of  Pittsburg,  is  amon? 
today's  arrivals  at  the  Si)alding. 

J.  S.  .Sanborn,  of  North  Toiiawanda. 
N.  Y..  arrived  in  Duluth  today  and  reg- 
istered at  the  Sjialding. 

Mowiy  Bates,  superintendent  of  the 
Hale  mine  at  Biwabik,  is  at  the  Si. 
Louis. 

C.  M.  Taylor  and  wife  came  down 
from  Mountain  Inm  today  and  regis- 
tered at  the  St.  Louis. 

W.  W.  Wright,  a  Swan  River  nier- 
<  hant.  is  ainong  today's  arrivals  at  the 
St.  Louis. 

Bryan  Ripley  came  up  from  Iron 
River  today.  He  is  a  guest  at  the  St. 
Louis. 

Robert  B.  Bi  iggs.  an  Eau  Claire  lum- 
berman, is  a  guest  at  the  St.  Louis. 

M.  Steinhauer.  a  horse  dealer,  of  Ait- 
ken, is  at  the  St.  Louis. 

P.  J.  McCann  and  E.  G.  Cummings,  of 
St.    Paul,    are    registered     at     the     St 
Louis. 

Louis  McCullough  is  dov.n  from'  Clo- 
quet  today,  a  guest  at  the  St.  Louis. 

J.  P.  Sims,  a  Minneapolis  lumberman, 
IS  among  todays  arrivals  at  the  St. 
Louis. 

John  T.  Condon  arrived  from  Chi- 
cago this  morning.  The  season  of  his 
theatrical  company  closed  there  Sun- 
day atier  a  very  successful 
South. 
Thomas  Merritt  and  John  C.  Mav- 
j  dougall  left  this  afternoon  for  the  Seine 
River  countrv. 


LYCEUM  THEATER.! 

%  L.  .V.  SCOTT.  Manayrr.  f 

i 


TWO  NIGHTS  ONLY 
Commer.cing  Monday,  March  22. 

The  Event  of  the  Season, 

CHA3.  H.  YALE'S 

''FOREVER  DEVIL'S  AUCTION"* 


i 

! 

« 

The  leader  and  te»oher  of  .sper.tical  roplcte  i 
with  novelties  from  Karcpo  and  America.      f 

See  the  funny  trolley,  the  bike  craze,  tiiol 
hoboe'a  poiree,  the  b»>.shfnl  mai«Unt>.  the  ^by 
<ld   maids,  the  ninfirnl  tiirsea,  the  erand 


I 


au(i 


Rrand  i 

bedt    ^ilOW 


transformatioTi,  ii.r>  bi^tt-i  __ 
vititing  Didnth  this  t-casoj. 

All  at  rrjrniar  prices.    Buats  on  (ale  Batar- 
day  at  Ha.  m. 


58iu3  of  Tarsus" 


AT   FIRST   M.   E.   CHURCH,  WED 
NESOAY  EVE,,  MARCH  24. 

(.Star  Lecture  Courh*.i 
TiiketB  .',0c.  Reserved  seat  nolo  b'^gins  Sat 
nrday  morning  at  Chamberlain  St  Taylor'n. 


.t 


diiuii:iiaiiniiitiiiniiiiiiiiiii:iuiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiii»u 

I  FOR  SALE.  I 


—  Fivo-rf<om  hotiEo,  near  to  school,  electric  ~ 
S  line,  on  graded  street;  all  taxes  and  as-  S 
tour  of  the  |  —  set.saients  pnid,  in  Wef^t  Unluth,  for  $.iO  •; 
S  cash  and  $10  a  month,  including  0  per  S 
5  cent;  interest,  or  $yOJ  cash.  = 

s      Other  property  on  similar  easy  terms.       5 


Do  not  be  hoodwinked, 
as  good."  Salvation  Oil 
want  when  in  need  of  a  s 


L'se  no  "just 
is  what  you 
:ood  liniment. 


CUSTOIW  OFFICE  WANTED. 


I 


CITY  BRIEFS. 


"or 


A.  B.  SIEWERT  &  CO 

LONSDAL'H  BUILDING. 
Successors  to  KU  QORB  &  SIEWERT. 


"1 


•  ( 


The  Mackintosh  Goat  and 
SI  Umbrella  Sale  .».„„„„.„. 

Lt.dies!  Don't  miss  getting  a  fine  Silk 
Umbrella  on  this  sale. 

91:0/  DISCOUNT  FROM 
L u/0  REGULAR  PRICES! 

Three  days  only-- 

Today,  Friday  i  Saturday. 


Peter  Has  'Wheels." 

Pettr  Kfski  was  hruuRlu  to  the  coun- 
ty jail  this  morning  on  the  supposition     — „.,.„ 

that  he  is  suffering  from  an  aggravated  I  is  l)elievv.'d  that  such 

case  of  •wheels."  and   his  examination  |  made  as  will 

was   set    for  this  afternoon    in    pnd.at.- 

court.  He  was  found  wandering  around 

through   the   woods  at    Flood  wood  in   a 

vain  t^ndeavor  to  escape  from  the  devil 

whom    he    imagined    to    be    after    him. 

the  devd.  he  claims,  has  assumed   the 

sliape  of   a    woman   and    has 

all    his   other   extensive 

lursue   Keski. 


;i Rainy  Lake  and  Seine  River 
People  After  One. 

The  people  of  Rainy  Lake  and  Seine 
river  are  making  an  effort  to  have  c. 
custom  house  located  at  Seine  city  h.v 
the  Canadian  government,  with  full  au- 
thority to  give  clv-arance  papers  10 
American  boats  plying  on  the  lakes  ani 
collect  customs  on  .\merican  importa- 
tions in  any  quantity.  There  is  a  cu;=- 
itims  ofHcer  located  there  now.  l>ut  he 
Is  authorized  to  collect  import  duties  on 
small  lots  of  goods  only,  his  duti.'s  he- 
ing  largely  to  previ'nt  smuggling  and 
10  supervise  the  importation  of  the 
lindted  amount  of  supplies  Inought  in 
during  the  winter  in  sleighs  and  in  i^um^ 
mer  hy  canoes.  Steamers  jdving  he- 
tween  Kettle  Falls.  Minn.,  and  Seinr 
city  are  now  compelled  to  do  busines.* 
with  the  custom  house  at  Fort  Fran- 
cis, which  is  the  only  port  of  entry  on 
the  Ijorder.  This  necessitates  a  round 
about  trip,  and  has  a  tendency  to  dis> 
courage  an  (  xtensive  bu.siness  with  the 
-American  side.  George  H.  Young,  the- 
Canadian  collector  of  customs  at  Win- 
nipeg, has  laid  the  matter  before-  the 
customs  department  at  Ottawa,  and  ii 

a  shov.ing  will  bi, 
as  will  convince  the  governmcni 
oiTicials  that  it  will  prove  a  decided  ad- 
vantage to  the  people  oiiening  up  the 
tnining  country  to  make  Seine  city  a 
port  of  entry. 


given 
operations 


up 

to 


Sues  on  a  Contract. 

J'dm  Lundberg  this  morning  l)egun 
.^iJit  apainst  the  Hutledge  Lumber  and 
-Manufacturing  company  to  recover 
alleged  to  bo  due  on  a  logging 
is  alleged  that  the  partie.» 
entered  into  a  contract  by  which  Lund- 
berg vai.  to  cut  all  the  timber  on  some 
land  n  l.M'l  and  land  it  on  Pine  river. 
The  amount  sued  for  is  a  balance  re^ 
maming  unpaid.  Fryberger  &  Johan- 
attorneys. 


SI  407.47 
'  optract 


son   are  the 


SALE  IS 
FOR  CASH. 


A.  B.  SIEWERT  &  CO., 

304  West  Superior  Street.  } 


s^wO' 


Is  Sampson  Slated? 

Rnmor   has    it    that    Noble    Sampst.n 
:f,^,t';;'f    ^^^*?hts     and     measures,     s 
slated  to  go.     It  is  sahl  that  his  decap- 
taUon   was  determined  ut.on  at  one  of 

t    J         y^/.V,  '/  a">''0dy.  has  been  set- 
V    «'*"^^m/J  '  ""'  ••"^'t'"n  is  not  known. 
\  .    S.    ^^  ilkin.sun    is    the   only 
who  ha.H  filed  an  application." 


Have  Gone  to  Toronto. 

D.  M.  Hhokwood  and  J.  W.  Thickens. 
the  Mine  Center  miners,  left  this  after- 
noon for  Toronto,  where  they  will  me  't 
a  numljer  of  capitalists  interested  in 
Rainy  Lake  and  Seine  river  properties. 
They  took  with  them  the  handsome 
sp.K-imens  that  they  had  on  exhibition 
at  the  St.  Louis  last  night  and  this 
morning.  They  will  return  to  Duluth 
in  about  three  weeks,  and  on  their  ar- 
rival at  Mine  Center  will  push  the  work 
of  development  with  new  zeal.  The 
company  in  which  they  are  interested 
owns  the  Mine  Center  townsite,  where 
it  is  expected  to  see  a  typical  mining 
city  spring  up  during  the  coming  sum- 
mer. 


Cullum,  dentist,  Palladio.  Phone  No.  9 

Smoke  Endion  cigar.  W.  A.   Foote. 

AVendling.  the  great  orator,  March  24 

Liberty  Loyal   Orange  lodge  installed' 

officers   last     evening   in    tlie     Masonic 

Temple  block  hall.  About  l.-.O  were  pr.  s- 

ent  and  after  the  installation  there  wm 

dancing. 

There  failed  to  be  a  quorum  at  the 
chamber  ot  commerce  meeting  yester- 
day, the  tire  at  the  Exchange  buildiri,- 

I  proving    too    strong   an    onposition    ai- 

;  traction. 

j     James  Waters    and    Harry    Thomas 

I  went  up  this  morning  for  a  sojourn  0! 

;  ten  days  on  the  rock  pile  for  drunken- 

I  ness. 

j      The  High  .school  basket  ball  team  has 

.  been    challenged    by    the    Y.    M.    C.    A. 

I  team  to   play  a  game  at   the   Armory! 

I  Saturday  evening,  and     has    accepted. 
.\fter  the  game  there  will  be  an  infor- 
mal dance. 
The  Duluih   Rubber  company  will  go 

I  into   voluntary   liquidation     and     retire 

I  from  business  on  April  1. 

I      ICeily  is  the  champion  clothes  cleaner. 

j  A  girl  was  born  to  Mr.  and  Mrs.  F.  D. 
Culver,  of  31  East  First  street,  vester- 
tiay. 

In  the  case  of  Mikkelson  &  Jentoft 
against  the  Street  Raihvay  lompany  lor 
damages  caused  by  one  of  the  defer.- 
daiit's  cars  running  into  a  team  cd"  the 
plainliffs".  a  verdict  in  the  latters'  favor 
for  $Si'  was  returned  this  morning. 

The  case  of  E.  J.  Tvedt  against  Heur3- 
\V.  Wheeler,  in  which  the  plaintiff  asivs 
$2>0  as  damages  for  injuries  alleged  to 
have  been  received  by  being  caught  in 
the  pullies  of  an  elevator  in  the  imildin;; 
at  102  and  104  vvest  Miihigan  street. 
was  on  trial  in  the  municipal  court  ihis 
alternoon. 


HEALTH 
BATHS 

Bi(;ht  in  your  own 
homo  you  can  en- 
jay  dry  and  steam 
vjtpor  oxy^Pii  Kud 
porfumnd  baths  by 
r.sior'  th«  Kobin- 
soc  Foldiufr  Bath 
t'abioet ;  a  perfect 
»nd  epcpdy  cure  |- 
for  coldp,  rher.niH- 1 
tisni,  otc.  Holpfu! 
iu  L-vcry  way. 

J.  M.  MALONEr. 

State  Agent, 

301  Ghanihet'of  Commerce,  Duluth 


^  Dalotli  Trust  Co  - 


I  Unio]  and  Zenith  Buiiding  and  | 
I       Loan  Associations.        | 

I      Office  No.  2  First  Avenue  West.      I 
7lllilMlliii!liilUIIIII(llllllll|||||||iliiitl|||l||i;|||||| 


CARLTON  SMALL  FRUIT 
AND  PLANT  NURSERY. 

Catalogue  mailed  free  to  any  addrese. 
I  will  set  out  any  variety  of  Straw  berrioa 
myself,  uoar  the  city  f^f  f»nlnth.  (guaran- 
tee all  to  live)  for  $1.50  rt'r  100,  if  ordered 
before  April  15th. 

E.  G.  BOVEE, 
Carlton.  Minn. 

srsggagae.^tiasEBMKtMBcw 


OETEGTIVES 

Anyone  rpq&irinff  tho  gervicce  of  experienced 
iiiHcors  in  civil  and  criminal  cabcs,  cansocuie 
same  by  calling  on  or  addrepsiug 

Benson's  Detective  Agency 

Exchange  Bailding,  Dalutb. 


Writes 


^  Fire  Insurance.  ^ 


LMS! 

A  NEW  LOT,  GOOD  ONES, 

From  One  Dollar  Up. 

Those  are  the  Great«at  Bargains  ever  offered. 

Ferns  and  other  Pretty  Plants-  of  all  kinds. 

Every  purchaRer  of  one  dollar's  worth  of 
Plants  at  rho  Greeohonsee  may  «6leet  to  tliA 
value  of  $l.:i.5.  This  olfer  is  good  for  March  only. 
V  igitors  welcome. 


fifQf  Msfinnsf  Donki^iNDSAY's  greenhouses, 

IllaS     llUllUiiai     DOlin  52nd  Ave.  East.  Lakeside  far  Line. 


Pure  Spring  Water. 

Delivered  daily.       TeIet)hone  orders  to 
Stewart's  livery,   telephone  No.   334. 


Imbibed  Too  Much. 

Eva  Peterson,  an  inmate  of  Frankie 
Young's  place  on  the  point,  had  trouble 
with  the  Young  woman  la.st  night  over 
some  money  the  latter  alleged  the  for- 
mer owed  her.  As  a  result,  she  was  jmt 
out.  The  incident  so  worked  on  her  feel- 
ings that  she  imbibed  copiously  of  the 
ardent  and  about  9  o'clock  drifted  out 
onto  Lake  avenue,  where  she  was 
found  by  Officer  Smollet  raising  high 
jinks.  She  was  taken  to  headquarters 
ai»l  given  a  bunk  in  the  women's  de- 
Iiartment,  where  she  slept  off  her  po- 
tations. This  morning  she  was  allowed 
to  go  on  her  promise  not  to  do  so  again. 


OF  DULUTH. 

United  States  Oovnrument  Depositary 
CAPITAL,  ONE  MILLION  OOLLARS. 


i.  L.  OtOJEAN, 

Preaideut. 


J.  R.  OlOHT, 

Ce.»bier. 


W.  8.  BiBHOF 

Aset.  Caehier 


Money  Sent  to  All  Parts  of  the  World. 

AccounU  of  Merchants,  Banks,    ('orporatioot 
and  IndlvldaaU  Heceived, 

Inferist  AI3n»«(|  oa  Timn  Depakit*. 


REOPENED! 

THE  ST.  JAMES  HOTEL. 

Everythinv  new  and  cheerful. 
Cuifino  Qnexceptional.  Excellent  eervice. 
SI. 60  PER  DAY. 
Special  Rates  to  Permanent  Guests.  I 


aspirant 


TEACHERS  AND     STUDENTS 
SHOULD 


TAKE 


ACID    PHOS- 


HORSFOUD'S 
PHATE. 
supplies  Just  the  material  that  ia 
most   wasted   by   brain   work  and  ner 
NOUS  exertion— the  phosphates. 


It 


f( 


99 


77 

breaks  up  a 

COLD 

ihathansson. 


ELECTRIC  BITTERS. 
Electric  Bitters  is  a  medicine  suited  for 
any  sea.son,  but  perhaps  more  generally 
needed  when  the  languid,  exhausted  feel- 
ing prevails,  when  the  livtT  is  torpid  and 
sluggish  and  the  need  of  a  tonic  and  al- 
terative is  felt.  A  prompt  use  of  this 
medicine  has  often  averted  long  and  per- 
haps fatal  bilious  fevers.  No  medicine  will 
act  more  surely  in  counteracting  and  free- 
ing the  system  from  malarial  poison. 
Headache,  Indigestion,  Constipation,  Diz- 
ziness yield  to  Electric  Bitters.  50c  and 
$1.00  per  bottle  at  Duluth  Drug  company's 
drug  stor«- 


Tou  may  never  know  It  happened  If 
you  fail  to  read  The  Evening  Herald. 


H.  M.  PPJYTON,  President. 

JAMKS  (;,  HUNTKB,  trashier. 

WILLIAM  a.  HEGABDT,  Aae't  Caabr 
THE 

American  Exchange , 

BANK.  ° 

Duluih,  Minnesota. 

Capital,  $500,000.  Snrplns,  $100,000. 

HAMILTON  M°p'^Y^tW?««' 

MEIA'IN  J.FOHBES, 

JUDGE  J,  D.  KNSIGN, 
JOHN  H.  UPIiAM, 


FREE  LAND  I 

1  will  give  40  acres  of  land  to  all  persons  par- 
chasms  40  acres  of  land  from  me  at  f5,ro^r 
acre  and  give  yon  five  yoare  time  to  pay  for  it. 
Bay  now.  while  this  offer  is  good.  It  is  better 
than  money  in  bonds  at  10  per  cant,  acid  no  dan- 
ger of  busting, 

JOHN  G.  HOWARD. 

10  East  Michigan  bt.,  Dalnth,  Minn. 


GEOBGE  SPEN'cER, 

ANGUS  E.  MACFARLANE. 
JAMES  U.  HUNTER 


Massage  of  the  Face  and  Neck 

/  or  the  removal  of  irriiikles. 

Would  you  preserve  your  hair? 

Th»n  call  and  see  as,  as  we  treat  all  hair  and 
scalp  difeaees.  Artiitic  lair  dreseing  and 
mamcuriug,  latest  styles. 

KNAUF  SISTERS.  101  W.  Saparior  St. 
Orer  Smith  i  Smith's  Drag  Store. 


Umrn^ 


•t- 


I*i«-<' 


"II— •» 


T 


" 


t 


'»<       I  I  ■■■ 


-mm~ 


1 


}' 


■*■»>■ 


ANNUAL 


FINANCIAL  STATEMENT 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HER^VLD:     THURSDAY,    MARCH    18, 


imr. 


FtTXDS. 


—  OF  — 


St.  Louis  County,  Minn. 


FOR  THE 


Year  Ending 


tuntl     I      •>.!  ^] 

rity  of  Diiluth  bond  sinkltiR  fiimiL..r."!.. 

City  of  Diiluth  bond  Intorost  fund! 

City  «if  Lakosido  Kenoral  fund 

City  of   I^akoside  streets 

City  of  Kly  general  

City  of  Kiy  street     assessments.. 

City  of  Kly  bond  interest  fund 

City  of  Kly  bond  sinking  fund 

City   of •  Kly    tire  department 

City  of  Kly  eourt  and  polioe 

City  of  Tower  general  fund 

<'ity  of  Virginia  general  fund 

City  of  Virginia  l>ond  interest  fund 

<'ity  of  Virginia  streets 

Village    of    I'roctorknott    general 

fund 

Village  of  Ifibbing  general  fiind..". 
\  illage  of  Hibbing  street  a.sse.««- 

ments    

Village  of   Hibbing   bond    Intere.st 

fund     

Village 
Village 
Village 

fund 
Village 
Village 

fund  , 
Village  of  Biwabik  general  fund!!! 

Village  of  Kiwabik  streets 

Village  of  Biwabik  judgment 

Village  of  Mountain   Iron  general 

fund  

Village  of  Mountnin  Iron  judgment 
Village  of  Mountain  Iron  streets. 
Village    of    West    DuUith    general 

fund 

Village  of  West  Duluth  .streets!!!. 
Village  of  West  Duluth  special  re- 
fund     

Village  of  McKinley  general  fund 


H 

1              O    1 

HE 

ollectio 
Year 
2d,  1897 

:  Kg 
:|3 

3  ^ 

:^^ 

3 

-2 

:  3t 

§3 

.     T  ft- 

Si* 

23 
3o 

:  3 


o 

Of? 

o 


0 

KlC 

'£ 

SCO 

3* 

Pic 

c 

.''  ro 

-1 

:  <R^ 

0 

3 

:  an 

^ 

•  p 

X 

^ 

» 

■/. 

■  %^ 

•    rj:  ,1. 

►n 

>    m^  ^~* 

C3 

3  r 
c  -^ 

re  3 


P 


.54 


20  80 
22  591 
22171 

2  48' 

25  711 

109  04 

28  741 

51961 


52  77 

214  35' 
I 


4,393  91 

15.771  00 

«n,019  21 

a.  771  75 

813  68 

1,.530  62 

26  36 


435  27 
1.863  90i 
3,853  81 
2,509  44 

897  67 
1.685  09 

778  20 
1,868  45 


of  Morritt  general  fund. 

of  Merritt  judgment 

of   Fond   du   Lac   general 


of  Mesaba  general 'fund., 
of    New    Duluth    general 


99  83| 
118  te! 


654  751 

921  67 

3  95 

10  13 

2!t,0'»7  45' 

15,771  Oi>| 

61,019  21 

1,771  75 

813  68 

1,5.'/!   )2 

48  95 

22  17 

2  48 

•!«0  4! 

1.972  9} 

3,882  .'.51 

2.561  40 

897  67 

1,685  09 

778  201 
1,921  221 

1,869  10! 

921  671 
103  781. 
128  181. 


15.4.".8  87 

59.7i3  K4 

1.7:S9  12 

676  0! 

1.540  65 

48  95 

22  17 

2  48 

446  8.0 

2.611  93 

3.S4S 

2..'wl  93 

881  41 

1,651  48 

77S  20 
1,S76  02 

1,869  10 

900  15 


29,007  45 

312  ],-{ 

1,255  S7 

32  63 

137  64 

10  77 


13; 


ISTORIOALi 


FUNDS. 


2  72 


20  78 

380  85 

98  72 

921  94 

690  50 

2.014  96 
ISl  94 
237  171 

7,4.37  381 
20,250  60 


191  331 
23  50l 

380  851 

98  72! 

921  941 

C90  £01 

2,014  961 
181  941 

237  171 

7,437  381 
20,2.50  60' 


34  01 
29  47 
13  26 
33  61 


45  20 


126  73 
15  29 

305  37 

9S  72 
921  94i. 
690  oOi. 


21  52 
103  78 
128  IS 

64  60 
8  21 

75  48 


1.03041 ;       1,030  41, 

201  219  271  219  471 . 


2.01.^  26 
176  55 
23<,i  59 

7,126  20 
19.473  07 

50  82 


1  70 

5  39 

6  58 


311  IS 
777  53 

979  59 
219  47 


Deiluet 
court 


overdraft 
and   police. 


City     of     Ely 


^$   35,896  22:«  518,747  lOi$  554,643  32  $  503,687  21]$   51,595  10 


I 


$  35,896  2211518,747  10$  554!643'32i$5(c!687'2ii$  50,956  11 


... 


January  2nd,  1897. 


sinking 


Duluth,  Minn.,  Jan.  2,  18">7. 


OFFICE  OF  COUNTY  AUDITOR  / 
St.  Louis  County,  Minn.  j" 

To  the  Honorable  Board  of  County  Commissioners  of  St.  Louis 
County.  !Minnesota. 

Gentlemen:  I  herewith  submit  a  statement  of  the  receipts  and 
disbursements  of  this  county  during  the  fiscal  year  ending  January 
2nd,  1897,  and  the  assets,  liabilities  and  balances  in  county  funds 
on  said  day.  Yours  respectfully, 

O.  HALDEN, 

County  Auditor. 


Town 
Town 
Town 
Town 
Town 
Town 
Town 
Town 
Town 


Town 
Town 
Town 
Town 
Town 
Town 
Town 
Town 


Town  of  Biwabik  general /und... . 

Town  of   Biwabik   road   fund 

Town  of  Breitung  general  fund... 

Town   of  Breitung   road   fund    

Town  of  Canosia  general  fund 

Town   of   Canosia    road    fund 

Town    of    Canosia    bond    interest 

fund    

Town     of    Cano.><ia     bond 

fund    

Town  of  Cli»ton  general  fund  !! 

of   Clinton   ro.id    fund 

of    Culver    general    fund. 

of  Culver  road  fund  

of  Dinh.im  general  fund  ... 

of  Dinham  roail   fund   

of  Duluth  general   fund   ... 

of   Duluth   road   fund    

of  Floodwood  general  fund 
of  Kloo<lwood  road  fund... 
Town  of  Fond  du  Lac  general  fund 
Town  of  Fond  du  Lac  road  fund.. 

Town   of  Gnesen  general   fund 

Town  of  Onesen   road  fund 

Town  of  Grnnd  Lake  general  fund 
Town  of  Grand  Lake  road  fund..i 
of    Herman    general    fund..' 

of    H<rm;in    ro.id    fund I 

of  Industrial  gi  neral   fund..' 

of   Industrial    road    fund i 

of    Kelsey   general    fund I 

f>f    Kelsey   road    fund 

of   Mesaba   general   fund ( 

of    Mesaba    road    fund.. 


3  07| 

7  6SI 

16  0O( 

17  151 


Town  of  Missabe  Mountair  generall 


2  Oil 
2  131 


950  041 
578  56' 

1.259  67| 
367  071 
395  67: 

1,118  33 

678  12 

1.807  43 

459  »i 

405  49 

79  27 

79  27 

4  00 

707 

444  02 

1,490  821 
101  601 
101  60 
401  881 
443  481 
311  36{ 
T79  531 
156  941 
446  .561 
307  56 I 

1.833  01)1 
174  19 
17-!  201 
446  56| 
146  .551 
268  2()l 
307  40l 


953  111 
586  20 

.275  671 
384  221 
395  671 

,118  33i 

678  12 


1,807  43 

3.59  84 

405  49 

79  27 

79  27! 

4  00| 

7  07! 

444  021 

1,490  821 
101  60 I 
101  60 1 
4(n  88 1 
443  481 
311  361 
779.531 
356  94! 
446  56 
307  561 

1,833  00 
174  191 
174  20! 
146  561 
146  .55( 
270  21 1 
309  831 


953  11 

586  20! 

1.26(1  42 1 

362  291 

39.'.  671 

i,ns  3;!!.. 

678  12 i 

1,807  43!. 
352  401 
392  29 

79  27  . 
79  271. 


4-14  02 

1.490  82 1 . 

101  60|. 

101  6()i. 

401  881. 

44.'?  48'. 

311  36l. 

779  .531., 

156  911. 

446  56 1 . 

307  56l. 
1,833  00  . 

174  19  .. 

174  20I., 

146  561., 

146  .551.. 

270  18 

309  80 


7  44 
13  20 


4  00 
7  07 


TABULAR  STATEMENT 


—  OF  — 


Receipts,  Disbursements  «>«  Balances. 


FUNDS. 


Coimty 
County 
County 
Coimty 
County 
County 
terest 


i  3 


3- .J 


-"'2"? 

•     1*3 


3  ^ 

3 


revenue   fund   

ixior  fund  

special   road   fund !!! 

bond  interest  fund 

bond  sinking  fund !!! 

road  and  bridge  bond  Jii- 

and  sinking  fund 

interest  and   sink- 


-     I 


3  -» 

53 

3  0 


o 

a 


c 

C3 

::?s-^~ 

C-- 

2^00- 

•  3 

"  _  C  -! 

^4 

■■     3? 

3  r 

3  "* 

:  M    5- 

-  0 

•<2 

:  2"., 

«i3 

:      -  X 

:  "t 

SH 

.  —'i 

53 -I 

•  "  2  0 

^-6 

•     ■/. 

fund  

Town   of   Missabe   Mountain   road 

fund    

Town    of    Morse    general    fund 

Town   of   Morse   road    fund 

Town  of  Morse  bond  interest  fund 
Town  of  Morse  bond  sinking  fund 
Town  of  McDavitt  general   fund.. 

Town  of  McDavitt  road  fund 

Town  of  New  Independence,  gen- 
eral   fund    

Town   of   New  Independence  road; 

fund    I 

Town  of  Nichols  general  fund I 

Town  of  Nichols  road  fund | 

Town    of   Nichols     bond     interest 

fund    

Town  of  Nichols  bond  .sinking!!!! 

fun<l 

Town    of    Oneota    general    fund!!! 

Town  of  Oneota  road  fund  

Town  of  Oneota  bond  interest  fund 
Town  of  Rice  Lake  general  fund.. 

Town  of  Itice  Lake  road  fund 

Town   of  Stuntz  general   fund    ...| 
Town  of  Stuntz  road  fund | 

Total   town    funds 

Independent    school    district. 

Loeal    mill    

Special    tax    

Building   fund    

lltiildiiig,     .''iiiking 

fund . 

St.ite    apportionment     

County  apportionment  ., 
From  school  district  No. 
From  school  district  No. 
From   school   district   No. 


1611       1,512  05 


3  95! 

7  881 
19  51' 
32331 

10  18' 


1,513  661       1,464  48 


5  50 1 

5  .Vi 

991' 

25  62 


1,6(k3  93 
350  351 
875  ffil 
72:J  57 
125  19 
174  60| 
174  62 


13  37 

5108 


128  83 

128  33 
1,710  07 
1,310  99 

184  £8 

46  07 
42  75 

127  19 
51  3:j 

361  23 
1.18!  62 

2»<  02 

561  84 


1,667  881 
358  23 
895  36 
755  90( 
135  67 
174  60 
174  62 

133  83 

1.33  83i 
1,719  98! 
1.336  61 

1^  28 

46  07 
42  75 

127  19 
51  331 

374  601 
1,235  70l 

2Kt  021 

561  841 


1..545  70 
339  75 
849  16 
691  75 
U'l  04 
174  60 
174  62 

133  83!. 

133  83 
1.700  65 
1.283  16 

180  18 


03 
03 

49  18 

128  IS 
18  48 
46  20 
64  15 
14  63 


19  33 
53  45 

4  10 

1  03 


and     interest 


..I. 




•J    32,310  66 

$    .32,310  66 

222.177  38 

222.177  38 

.5.545  73 

5.515  73 

16.176  98 

16.176  98 

19,;{48  62 

19,348  62 

467  38 

467  SS 

272  41 

273  41 

1,315  37 

1,.315  37 

1,482  84 

1.482  84 

45  04 

«J  75..., 
327  19..., 

51  33!.... 

371  60!..., 

1.2;i5  70|.... 

281  021.... 

561  84'.... 


27,619  851$        461  68 


S|)ecial   tax   

To    Indei)endent    school 
State    apportionment     . 
Count.v    apportionment 
School  district  No.  17. 

I..ocal   mill   

Srtecial    fund     

State    apportionment... 
County    apportionment 
School  district  No.  18. 

Local    mill    

Special  fund   

State   apportionment    .. 
County    apportionment 
School  district  No.  19. 

Local    mill    

Special    tax    

Building   fund    

State    apportionment 
County  apportionment 
School   district  No.   20. 

Local    mill    

Special    fund     

State    apportionment     . 
County    apportionment 
S.school  district  No.   21. 

Local    mill    

Special  tax   

Building    fund     

State   apportionment    .. 
County    apportionment 
School   district  No.   22. 

Local    mill     

Special     fund     

Building    fund    

Building,     sinking     and 

fund    

State    apportionment     . 
County  apportionment 
School  district  No.  23. 

Local    mill    

Special    fund    

Building,      sinking      and 

fund   

State   apportionment    .. 
County    apportionment 
School  district  No.  24. 

Local    mill    

Special     tax     

State    apportionment    . 
County  apportionment 
School  district  No.  25. 

Local   mill    

Special    tax    

State   apportionment    .. 
Count.v    ai>portionment 
School   district   No.   26. 

Local    mill    , 

Special    tax    

Building  fund    

State    apportionment     ., 
County    apportionment 
School  district  No.  27. 

Local    mill    

Special     tax     

Huilding    fund     

State    apportionment     

Count.v    apportionment    ... 
School   district  No.  28. 

Local   mill    

Special     tax     

Building   fund    ! 

State   apportionment    

County    apportionment    ... 
School  district  No.  29. 

Local    mill    

Building    fund     

State    apportionment    

County    apportionment    ... 
School   district   No.   30. 

Local    mill    

Special    tax     

Building    fund    

State   apportionment    

County  apportionment    

County  school   funds,   fines 

State    apportionment     

County    apportionment    ..., 


a 

o 

q 

»3 

ollec 
Yeai 
2d,  1 

3^ 
05  S_ 

03  ^ 

-S    c 

s>- 

1 

23 
3o 

■  So 

a>C 

p 

.    3 

3  "* 

■     —  3 

-     r^ 

•    3" 

:  r^i 

^O 

3 

:  o 

-=^o 

:  jhT!! 

:  "^ 

i-^O 

•  o 

oo3 

•   c  rr- 

:  2 

m3 

:  »5S 

:  3q 

•     •< 

•    "<  — 

•  o 

1 

^     d 

K 

><G<rr 

ca 

burseme 
ouchers 
uring 
ear 

g  = 

:  »    S 

^0 

•     P5         K 

•<  2 

-■     ^^ 

u>3 

o. 

a^ 

:     » » 

-  << 

!  ^^ 

Si 

■  ^  r^ 

f-  'V  ^ 

-j» 

:  P 

district. 


31; 

254 

55  65 

2  47 


324  931 

482  96 


140  46 

132  48 

18  99 

50 

3,54  77 
867  87 

35  44 
68 

189  23 

3.59  41 

91  08 

42  55 

1  00 

513  371 

743  36 

45  88 

"115 

314  31 

2,482  22 

74  92 

153  08 

3  59 


etc. 


43  00 
"i.57  25 


Total    J 


903  86 1 

3,080  291 

19  68! 

200  73! 

5  90' 

138  75 

142  70 

142  67 

54  88 

1  21 

152  19 1 

263  80 

12  99 

45 

171  87i 

88  201 

426  36' 

14  441 

50 

639  04 I 

24,377  .501 

1.57  25 

■I- 


324  93 
482  96 


140  46 

132  48 

18  "9 

50 

357  90 

870  41 

91  09 

3  15 

189  23 
359  41 

91  081 

42  551 

1  00 

526  66! 

.      758  381 

90  93! 

3  15 

'  319  .59! 

2,500  32' 

80  09! 

325  331 

11  251 

740  83' 

6,318  331 

3,979  541 

I 

613  821 

1,747  281 

60  34 1 

I 

123  821 

8  381 

8  3s! 

15  66 

36 1 

I 

384  251 

2,288  241 

751  431 

25  96 

462  84 

2.107  70 

136  25 

4  70 

136  81 

'  104  781 

75  19! 

32  Oil 

1  11! 

913  371 
3,101  041 

19  871 

304  OS! 

10  49' 

I 

138  751 

143  701 

143  67! 

54  88] 

1  21I 

1.52  19! 
263  80! 
12  99!.. 

45  .. 


32i  931. 

482  96!. 


140  46!. 
132  48i. 
18  99 
60 

353  96 

865  67 

76  65 

2  65 

185  94 

356  07f 

91  08 

18  00 

15 


3  94 

4  74 
14  44 

50 

3  29 
3  34 


496  70 

704  80 

62  05 

2  15 

300  62 
2.421  36 
55  97 1 
237  25! 
8  21! 
I 
740  831. 
6  318  .^31. 
3,979  511. 

613  82i. 

1,747  281. 

60  34  . 

121  lol 
8  38  j. 

8  381. 
7  00 
06 

I 

376  491 

2.242  931 

507  351 

17  571 

456  22I 

2.081  351 

113  151 

3  91 

134  09 
104  7S|. 

75  I9I. 

21  90 


24  S5 
•    85 

29  96 

53  .58 

28  88 

1  00 

13  97 
78  96 
24  12 
88  08 
3  04 


UUJflJUt.^  «Jxj.  t^_*^  ti^ 

mil  I  Ti  iiiit  iMiiiji  _ 

Marcus  Simpson   

A.  W.  Speyer  

W.  J.   Stevenson   

J.  D.  Stryker  

E.  F.  Sutton    

E.  G.  Swanstrom  . . . '. 

J.  D.  Taylor  

Cornelia  S.  Tuttle   

Union  Building  and  Loan  as- 
sociation     

T.    W.    Wahl    1 

W.  Wahl  

H.  A.  Ware   

M.  B.  A.  Webber  

Alfred  M.  Wen  berg  

West  End  Building  and  Loan 
association    .... 

H.  W.  Wheeler  '..'.'.'.'.'. 

Mark   Whitwell    

C.  C.  Wieland   

R.  F.  Willcuts  

E.  L.  Williams  ■.'.■.■.■.'. 

E.  L.  Williams,  trustee 

Nellie   Windolph    !!!"" 

Zenith  City  Lodge  No.  160,  1. 
O.  O.  F 

Cancelled  receipt  No.   382a!!!! 


■     /  8  45 

J ''1.424  32 

20  .52 

32  S8 

127  14 

68  31 

22  58 

3  85 

163  17 

37  95 

208  47 

$  3.055  15 

162  01 

6  69 

45  94 

50  99 

.•57  00 
18  68 
14  88 

249  07 

37  28 

2,386  65 

270  40 
13  94 

331  99 
76  13 


Total    j52,i5i  7, 

REFUND  ORDERS  CANCELLED. 


90! 

76[ 


8  66 

30 

7  76 
45  31 

244  08 

8  39 

6  62 

26  35 

23  10 

79 

2  72 


10  n 
35 


com- 


913  37(.. 

3,101  041.. 

19  87!.. 

304  08|.. 

10  49!.. 

1 

138  751.. 

142  701.. 

142  671.. 

54  881.. 

1  21!.. 


149  47 
263  80 


■    I 

171  871 

88  20| 

■126  361 

14  411 

501 

682  041 

24.377  .501 

314  501 


171  87! 

88  201. 

426  36|. 

14  44!. 

501. 

618  041 

24,377  .501. 

314  50|. 


12  99 
45 


64  00 


Recapitulation  of  county  funds  $ 

State    funds    ". 

Cities  and  villages  funds  

Town    funds    

School  funds   


U63  14|?  385,691  07!$  389.8-54  211$  368,123  .55!$"  21,730  GG 


Additional  taxes  collected  and 
not   apportioned   


;   .31.645  871$ 
217.8<ift  811 
5.197  78  i 


1.5.847  34 

7,66:5  (K» 

65  31 


mi  79 

4.367  .54 

317  95 

329  74 

ll,r«5  62 

402  07 

272  41 

1,315  37 

1,482  8! 


198,087  68!  $ 

2,296  851 

35,896  221 

245  041 

4.163  14l 


-1 

531..527  .551$ 
139.484  01 ! 
518.747  10! 
27.S46  19 I 
385,691  07 


729.615  23!$ 
]41.7X(*86l 
554,643  ?.2\ 
28,081  53 1 
389.854  21! 
I- 


-!• 
422.182  .53;  $307,432  70 

""' 5,.508  23 

50,9.56  11 

461  68 

21,730  66 


136,272  63 

.503,687  21 

27,619  85i 

368,123  55 


$   240,678  931  $1,603,296  22!^}ll.S43.975  15IW,457,885  77  $386,089  38 

........... i         70,892  44 1       70,892^141  I    7f)  rq9  ji 

$_240^67^3|  $1.674,188  66{$1,914,867  59*$i!457!^-ii!$4lSi  U 


DETAILED  STATEMENT, 


M.  H.  Alworth $ 

E.  E.  Bonn   !!!!!!! 

Wilhelm    Boeing    Estate ! ! ! 

A.  H.  Bradley   

Bradley  and  Hanford,  by  j.  D. 

Holmes    , 

Francis    Brown    ..!!. 

H.  C.  Burns   ! 

J.   C.   Carey    !!!! 

Cloquet  Lumber  company  !     * 

B.  P.  Crane  " 

J.  H.  Dight   !!"" 

Eston    &    Britts,    by      R.      B 

Swift   

M.  D.  Field  !!!!!!!! 

Joseph  Foley  

Ed  Gallagher  ! 

R.  S.  Goodfellow   !!""" 

John  P.  Green   !!! 

Sarah  W.  Hargreaves   ..   . 

George  Haskins   ! ! ! ! 

Highland    Lumber   company 

Charles  F.  Houghton   ".!' 

Ironton  Structural  Steel 

pany 

W.  C.  Kilgore  for  Avery  &  Co. 

A.M.  Larke 

Martin  Leveson,  agent  ..!!!!!! 

M.  E.  Lewis ! ! ! ! 

David  Mair  !.!!!!!!! 

T.  J.  Marsh,  agent  !!! 

Thomas  H.  Martin,  agent 

Ed    Mcintosh     !!! 

McKinley  Township  company, 

A.    Miles    

Henry  F.  Miller  ...!!!!! 

X.  S.   Mitchell   !!!! 

A.  D.  Morse * 

Mosher  &  Knittel  .!!!!!!!!!!!! 
National  Investment  company 

Jemima  Nelson    

C.    N.   Nelson     Lumber 

pany     

s.  c.  Nicholas !!!!!!!!!!! 

G.  W.  Norton,  by  J.  R.  Carey, 
agent  

Henry  Noble,  agent  ...!!!!!" 

O.  H.  Olson  !!! 

Mrs.   Franklin   Paine    .. 

E.  W.   Peet   !!!! 

Pine  Tree  Lumber  compariy!! 

Pioneer  Fuel  company   ... 

W.  M.  Prindle 

C.  W.  Renard  

A.   D.   Sang   

U.  S.  G.  Sharp  

W.  D.  Sohier  !" 

Security  Trust  company    .!!!' 

W.   W.    Spalding    

Viola  M.  Stoddard   

Cornelia    S.    Tuttle ! 

Union  Building  and  Loari 
company  

G.   C.   Warfield    ! 

H.  W.  Wheeler  !! 

John  Olson   


7  27 
4  31 

10  .52 
44  89 

190  94 

28  35 

2  79 

2  79 

97  89 

56  92 

11  35 

23  53 
14  90 
2  79 
21  09 
19  31 
2  35 
34  65 
72 
SO 
74 


19 

4 

165 


46 
23 
46 
02 


82 

8 
•» 

3 

15  97 

45  20 

403  28 

7  53 

11  71 

6  20 

218  91 

2  79 

1  40 

26  02 

35  57 

471  57 

4  83 


com- 


S5 
81 


254  .33 

8  15 

7  92 

5  25 

119  84 

5  15 

28  46 

61  17 

42  85 

47  69 

28  51 

1  03 

38  40 

34  14 

630  38 

4  70 

30  17 

42  03 

106  13 

41  37 


Total    }  3,662  35 

BURIAL  EXPENSES  COUNTY  POOR. 


State  loan 
16  paid 
district 


to  school   district   No. 
by    Independent   school! 


.  $  135.325  5<;  $  196.252  29  $  331.577  79|$  163.835  .37$  167,7421: 


2.795.39 
16.22611 
22,52745 


58.630  S8i 
39.625  55| 

4,857  101 
6,486  86 


58,630  S8i 
42.420  94I 
21,083  24! 
29,014  31  . 


72.774  76 

80482  39 

5,419  50 


15.6*3  71 
29,014  31 


$i8,t;n  1 
1.116  07 


32.791  08 

37.761  45 

86  ISl 


!- 


^^■r. 


JLaw^-^afe. 


Railroad   bond 

:ng   fund    

Infectious   diseases    ..!! 

New  road    fund    

Private  redemption  fund 

Surplus    fund    

Refunded  account   .!!!!! 


Deduct    overdraft    as    per 
statement     Januarv      4 
1896. 

County  poor  fund  

Refunil   account    

Deduct     overdraft     Janu- 
ary 2d.   1897. 

County  poor  fund 

County  .special  road  fund 

Refund    account    

Total  county   funds   .., 


State    fund    

State  school  tax  fund  !!!!!! 

State  loan  to  school  district  No. 
State  loan  to  schr»ol  district  No    ., 
State  loan   to  school  district  No.  3i' 
State  loan  to  school  district  No.  9| 
State  loan  to  .school  district  No.  12' 
State  loan  to  school  district  No.  14i 
Slate  loan  to  school  district  No.  15! 
State  loan  to  school  district  No.  16'. 
State  loan  to  school  district  No.  I7I. 
State  loan  to  school  district  No.  18| 
State  loan  to  school  di.-trict  No.  19 . 
State  loan  to  school  district  No.  2o|., 
State  loan  to  school  di.strict  No.  211 
State  loan  to  school  district  No.  22  .. 
State  loan  to  school  district  No.  23i 
State  loan  to  .school  district  No.  24|.. 
State  loan  to  school  district  No.  25| 
State  loan  to  school  district  No.  26' 
Stale  loan  to  s.-hool  district  No.  27; 
State  loan  to  school  district  No.  28' 
State  loan  to  school  district  No.  29.. 


25.679  7i        9.330  11       35,009  85;       7,635  00      27,381  85 


2,921  (X* 


11,883  72 
49196 


15,565  .55 

2.517  63 

150.000  00 

4.3,569  31 

'    4!692"27 


:$217,85<J  90  $531,527  5.' 


18.486  55| 

2.517  63| 

150,000  001 

55,453  031 

491  96| 
4,692  27! 


.55«}  OOi 

652  93! 

34,836  48 I 

52,151  76. 

491  961. 

3,662  38  . 


17,936  .55 

1,864  70 

115,163  .52 

3,301  27 


19,76322 


$  749,378  45  $  422,182  53  $  378,071  36 


19,763  22 


70,638  W 


!$  168,087  68;$  531..527  .55;$  729,615  23;$  422,182  531$  307,432  70 


1 


1,22090! 

I 

'i!225  25l 
375  66] 


110  351 

65  231 


172 


OOi 


83  T» 


24  ■ 

10181 
191011 

#47j 

I 


•I- 

77.772  90!$ 
46.  two  96 1 
2.394  47 1 
1,173  Oil 
1.007.591. 
1.024  14 
1.539  82 
61  25 

r>i  471 

792  251 

81  95 

763  131 

l;:o  14 ; 

2.V,  lj8l 

703  95! 

1,830  76 

20  95 

i.VH  13 

43S  90 

49  08 
992  95 

72  941 

46  90 


77.772  901$ 
46.680  95| 
3,615  .37( 
1.475  01 1 
2.232  Ml 
1,399  m 
1,539  82  ( 
171  60| 
319  70I 
792  251 
81  95; 
935  981 
120  111 
255  061 
786  74 
1,830  76 
20  95 
1,1(M  .13 
466  73 
59.  26 
1.186  96 
78  41 
46  90 


75.952  27|$ 
45.6,^3  SSl 
3.615  37l... 
1.112  .50[.., 
2.232  841... 
888  25 
791  671 
'     55  00 
1«1  .50 
540  OOl... 
87  001... 
575  OOi 
llO.OOl... 
230  001 
675  00 
1,400  OOl 

34  101... 
891  251... 
420  001 

35  00J 
725  00] 

72  .50! 
34  50! 


Deduct    overdraft    as    p<r 
statement   Jan.    4th.    1896 
State  loan  to  district  No    • 
State  loan  to  district  No 
State  loan  to  district  No. 
State  loan  to  district  No. 
State  loan  to  district  No. 
State  loan  to  district  No. 
State  loan  to  district  No 
State  loan  to  district  No.  „ 
State  loan  to  district  No.  34 
State  loan  to  district  No.  17 
State  loan  to  district  No. 
State  loan  to  district  No. 
State  loan  to  district  No. 


$     3,490  22  $  139,484  Oi$  142,974  23  $  136,272  63 


$362  511 
12.  94  36 
1«.  252  25' 


17. 
19. 
20. 

23! 


19. 
23. 
24. 


2  60i 
89  781 

3  291 
7  1.5i 

41  151 

310  28! 

7  65 

79  64 

54  30 

127  40 


Total  county  funds 


1,193371, 


$  198,087  85 


$  139,4*1  01 


1,193  37 


1,82«)  63 
1,027  07 


5M  .55 
6.53  79 
116  fi) 
178  20 


360  98 

"  iira 

111  74 
423  61 


46  73 

24  26 

401  96 

5  91 

12  40 


$     5,777  22 


CITIKS    AND    VILLAGES.  I 

City  of  Duluth  general   fund |$., 

City      of  Duhith      street      a.ssess- 

ments.    sewer,    etc    

<'ity  of  t)uluth  fire  department!!! 

«'ity  of  Duluth  public  park  

City  of  Duluth  public  library 

Village  of   IHiluth    bond    interest. 
Village    of    Duluth    bond    sinking 


-1- 


$  14a.780  86  $  136,272  6:j 


.1?  126.710  80$  126. no  80'$  134,190  3* 


268  99 


$     5,508  23 


9,481  40 


114,609  9li 

94.626  021 

ai.542  021 

7.341  39| 

9,162  661 

I 


11  l.iJW  91 

94,626  02 

31.512  02 

7.341  39 

18.914  06 


112.369  91 

92.753  04 

30.917  70 

7.170  41 

8,406  00 


$     2,520  46 

2,240  Ut) 

1,872  98 

624  :<> 

170  98 

10.538  06 


Deduct  amoimt  paid  l)y  Indepen 
dent  school  district   for  school 
district    No.    16    


School  district  No.  1. 

Lo«il    mill    

Special    tax    

Building,     sinking    and    InterestI 

fund I 

State   apportionment    

Count.v    apportionment    

School  district  No.  2. 

Local    mill    

Special    t.ix    

State    apporti;>nment     

County    apportionment    

School  district  No.  3. 

Local    mill    

Special    tax    

School   district    No.   5. 

Local   mill    

Si)ecial    tax    

Building    fund    

State   apportionment    

County    apportionment    

.S<hool  district  No.  6. 

Local   mill    

Special    tax    

Building    fund    

State    apportionment    

Coimty    apportionment    

School    district    No.    7. 

Local    mill    

Special   tax    

State    apportionment     , 

County    apportionment    

School    district   No.    8. 

Local   mill    

Special    tax    

Building    fund    

State    apportionment     

County    apportionment     

School    district   No.   9. 

I..ocal   mill    

Special   tax    

Building    fund     

Sinking  and   intere.st   fund    ... 

State    apportionment    

County    apportionment    

School   district    No.    10. 

Local    mill    

Special    tiix    

State    apportionment     

County    apportionment    

School  district  No.  11 

Ijocal    mill    

Spe<-ial    tax    

Building,     sinking     and   interest 

■  fund     

State    ai)portionment     

County   apiwrtionment    

School  district  No.  12. 

Loftal   mill    

Special    tax    

Building    fimd     

Sinking  and   interest   fund    ... 

State    apportionment    

County    apportionment     

S<hool  district  No.   13. 

Local    mill    , 

.Special  tax  

Building,  sinking,     and     interest 

fund    

St.-ite    apportionment    

Count.v  apportionment   

School  district  No.   14. 

Local  mill    

Special    tax    

State   apportionment    

I'ounty  apportionment   

School  district  No.  1.5. 

Local   mill    

Building    fund    

Special    tax    

State    apportionment     

County    apportionment    

School  district   No.   16. 
Local    mill    


$  299,097  371$  29ft,097  37i$  278,229  04  $   20,868  3:j 

1 '  482  9^ 

$  299,097  371$  299,097  37  $  278,712  0(t$    20,868  33 


$  299,097  371$  299,097  37;$  278,712  OO 


ItECEIPTS    INTO    THE    COUNTY 

Taxes  for  general  purpo.sos  collecteil  during 
Penalty  and  interest     on     delinquent  taxes 


REVENUE   FUND, 
fiwal    year.$ 


77,50.'»  07 
73,773  49 


-    $151,276  56 


482  96 


12311 
58  311 


47  70 
212 

244  411 

58814 

4830 

31 


68  10 
1.004  87 

924  07 

81  ,54 

2  *M 

46  78 
149  70 


8 .56 

47  93 

2  32 

16165 

719 


2  791 

2  91! 

71  55| 

318 


819 
12 

01 

53  00 

236 


138  42 
1,065  78 

325  01 

1,422  .52 

637  33 

76  76, 

1  82 

475  79 

2.187  63 

187  94 

314  16 

759 

215  07 

802  34 

92  76 

2  63 

278  60 

11,401  32I 

.31  121 

144  751 

3  411 

.5»;t  941 

4,980  06 

7  69 

156  88 

1,261  15 

29  15 

303  81 

1,5.?7  27 

64  .54 

1  53 


128  47 
50  18 

45  34 

11  22 
28 

439  19 

4,300  65 

3S08 

3  42 

784  28 

19  92 

380  16 
641  16 


•  80  41 
1,063  IS 

924  07 

129  24 

4  36! 

291  19 

737  84 

48  30 

31 

138  42 
1,065  78 

325  01 

1,422  52 

637  ,"« 

76  76 

1  821 

475  79 

2,487  tsl 

•  187  941 

314  16! 

7  591 

215  07 

802.34 

92  76 

2  63 

287  16 
1,119  2:5 

33  44 
306  40 

10  60 

561  94 

4,9S<)  06i 

7  69 

1.56  88 

1,261  15 I 

29  15| 

I 

306  601 

1.540  181 

136  09| 

4  711 

128  471 
50  181 


45  34! 

11  22 
28 


77  03 
1,057  X 

924  07 

65  70 

2  27 

291  19 

737  84 

48  30 

31 


13.- 
,04<J 


87 
>i  13 


$    20,385  37 


3  38 

586 


63  .5-1 
2  09 


253 
19  65 


325  01 

1,422  52 

6:?7  33 

76  76 

1  82! 

475  79 

2,4.S7  63! 

187  94! 

314  36] 

7  59 

210  03 

782  71 

22  00 

19 

2S3  33 

1,439  30 

;K  44 

222  65 

771 


5<;i  JM 
4,9}>o  o<; 
7  69, 
1,56 
1,261  ]5i.... 
29  451... 

300  Xil 

1,510  67| 

98  55 

3  4li 

128  471. 


BANK     INTEREST. 

First  National  Jiank  of  Duluth 

American   Exchange  Bank 

Marine    National    Bank    !.'! 

National  Bank  of  Cornmerce   !!! 

Security  Bank   

First  National  Bank  of  Tower   ....!!.!   

First  State  Bank  of  Tower  

Bank  of  Ely   ! 

Exchange  Bank  of  Ely .........!!!!! 

Commercial   Bank   !.'.!.'.! 

Manufacturers  Bank  of  West  Duluth...".!.'! 

Bank  of  Virginia 

Security  Bank  of  Hibbing  ! ! .'..".  ..'.'..' 

Lumbermen  and  Miners'   Bank  of  Hibbing 

New  Duluth  National  Bank   

New  Duluth  State  Bank  


69 

95 
?.H 
42 


MISCELLANEOUS  RECEIPTS. 


2.183 
1,065 

711 

414 

216  95 
49  00 

100  95 
2  SI 
93  99 
86  90 
67  86 
22  21 
29  05 
10  28 
13  44 
19  54 


W.  C.  Barrett  

M.  J.  Durkan  &  Co 

Biwabik   Hardware   company 
Virginia  Furniture  company 

S.  H.  Rothernell  &  Co 

John  Winberg   

W.  H.  Congdon  &  Son  

n.  C.  Ray   

M.   Vail   


58  00 

400  95 

118  90 

213  .50 

25  25 

197  00 

52  .50 

8  00 

S  00 


BOARD    AND 


CARE 
POOR. 


OF 


$    5,088  40 


5  04 
19  6.3 

70  76 
3  44 

3  83 
9  95 


Si 


S3 


Clerk  of  court  fees  

Register  of  deeds"  fees  !.!!!!!  .!. 

Clerk  fees  and  advertising  !!!!   !!!*, 

Clerk  of  court— Jurors'  fees  !    

Received  from  Lake  county  for  arrest  of  insane     

Fees.   Chapter  58,   Laws  1893 

Received  from  Lake  county  for  work  doiie  in'register  of 

deed's  office    

Bastardy  case  of  John   Shonska   ...!!!! 

Bastardy    case    Frederickson-Halvorson    !!!! 

Bastardy  case  Scott-Havala 

Apportionment  of  mining  tax  1894-1895!!    ! 

Received  from  plat  commission— Lakeside  cemetery 

Received  from  plat  commission— Pillsbury     Addition 

Hibbing    

Money  returned  from  state  for  fire  w  ai-dens 

Account  transferred  from  surplus  fund 


...$  20,322  62 

..       6,876  20 

378  84 

156  00 

22  .55 

134  98 


112  60 

100  00 

250  80 

25,00 

11,088  41 

75 


to 


22  50 
54  48 
341  60 


$  39,887 


Total 


C  25 
29  .51 
37  .54 

1  30 


47  92 

53  21 

1  32 

151  47 

257  08 

52  77 

128 

273  55 

280  (6 

720  OR 

54  4.^ 

1  18 

169  67 

4.3^  191 

4,300  651 

38  08 

3  42 

784  28 

19  92 

388  35 
641  28 

47  93 

106  21 

368 

1.51  47 

257  08 

52  77 

1  28 

2?2  55 

280  05 

720  08 

54  43 

1  ISi 

169  67 


50  18 

45134 
11  22 

28 

4.39  19 

4,»)0  65 

38  08 

3  42 

784  28 

19  92 

1 

374  23 

615  83 

14  12 
25  45 

45  95 

73  00 

253 

1  98 

33  21 

1  15 

151  47 

2.57  08 

52  77 

1  28 

;•;••••• 

2t>7  041 

•1T6  m 

702  661 

27  001 


5  51 

3  43 

17  42 

27  43 

95 


169  671. 


REDEMPTION       ORDERS 
CELLED. 

S.    D.    Allen    

J.    F.    Appleby    

Walter  Ayers 

W.    T.    Bailey    

Barnard    Lumber   company... 

Mary  S.  Baker 

W.  J.  Bates  

Julia  S.  Baylis   

Bradley,    Hanford    &   Co 

G.  W.  Buck  

J.    T.    Burnside    

R.  A.   Casson    

G.    A.    Cain    

M.    E.   Chambers    

Caroline  V.  Cram   

B.   P.   Crane    

Sarah   Collins    

Thomas  J.   Davis    

E.  E.    Dearborn    

Marion  Douglas  

W.    R.    Dutton    

Farmers'    Banking    company. 

Sam   D.    Flagg   

James   Foley    

Henrietta  Fruen   

H.    Gibson     

R.   S.   Goodfellow    

John    Green    

F.  R.  Green   

H.  R.  Gummey  

H.    R.    and   Charles   F.    Gum- 
mey     

James  T.  Hale 

Elira    Hargreaves    

Sarah  Hargreaves    

Nora  J.  Hill   

T.  W.  Hoopes  


f 


CAN- 


197  92 

328  53 

2,558  10 

1  68 

186  06 

18  21 

36  39 

463  64 

271  15 

275  51 

58  34 

291  43 

44  15 

9  76 

85  09 

889  58 

330  12 

54  33 

39  93 

4  47 

52  49 

25  90 

148  50 

38  91 

9  08 

226  43 

3  44 

23  06 

323  93 

112  86 

1.942  15 

6  87 

1,359  53 

219  09 

.59  84 

455  37 

$196,252  29 


executor.. 


W.  J.  Holzcr  ... 

W.  F.  Howard  . 

E.   L.   Johnson, 

Hy  J.  Jensvvold 

William  Kellett   '. 

H.   H.   Knox   !!'    ■■■ 

C.   P.   do  Laittre    

G.  P.   Lange   

George  W.  Leslie  

M.  E.  Lewis   

A.  B.  Levermore  ! 

London  and  Northwesterii 
American  Mortgage  com- 
pany    

Marine  National  bank  ..!!! 

Mary  E.   Matthews    

A.  A.   McKitchie   ! 

L.    Mendenhall    

J.  Ross  Myers  ! ! ! ! ! 

Minnesota  Loan  association  !! 

Moon  &  Kerr  Land  com- 
pany    

L.  D.  Moses  

Motor  Line  Improvement 
company    

National  Investment  com- 
pany, St.  Paul  12  510 

Henry  Neinstedt  'io,<? 

George  W.  Norton  

A.   G.   Osman   

Robert  G.  Peck  

E.  W.  Peet   

T.  W.  Pemberton  

Kmilie  Peterson   ,.. 

J.  B.  Phelps 

Ella  M.  Pollack  

W.  M.  Prindle  

D.  H.  Roe   !.! 

Rouchleau     Ray     Iron     Land 


6  74 

125  26 

173  07 

299  27 

480  76 

59  94 

64  (13 

72  25 

9  42 

359  77 

33  85 


6,310  27 

2  30 

166  23 

522  98 

14  05 

382  92 

18  35 

100  91 
27  32 


U  71 


Iver  Olson   . 

S.  Jernberg   , 

W.  H.  Noble 

Nick  Member    

(^harles  Fergrove  

Olof  J.  Kofted  

\V.  H.  Campagne 

.S.  Jernberg 

Mary  Nadon 

And.   Hockala    

John  Lindstrom   

Mrs.  W.  S.  Henley  ..., 

Iver  Olson   

W.  H.  Noble 

W.  B.  Watson  

Brun  &  Jacobson   

John  Bergman  

W.  L.  Sea  ton 

S   Jernberg 

John  Lindstrom 

And.  L.  Johnson  

Iver  Olson 

Caroline  Paulson   

Mrs.  Emma  Bouchain 

W.  H.  Noble 

And.  L.  Johnson  

Minnie  Okerstrom  

Emma  Bouchain  

S.  Jernberg 

Iver  Olson   f... 

Robert  Bishop  

W.  H.  Noble 

Mrs.  William  Thorsell. 

.Tohti   Lindstrom 

Nels  W.  Olson  

Anna  Luna  

W.  H.  Noble 

J.  G.  O.  Heron 

J.  G.  O.  Heron 

Iver  Olson 

A.  L.  Johnson  

John   Lindstrom 

S.  Jernberg  

Emma  Bouchain 

Iver  Olson  

A.  L.  Johnson  

John  Lindstrom  

S.  Jernburg 

E.  Larvier 

W.  H.  Noble 

J.  G.  O.  Heron  

J.  G.  O.  Heron 

Heodoy  Eklund   

Ivan  Olson   

Eli  Larvier 

M.  S.  Colson  

Mrs.  J.  G.  O.  Heron  .... 

John  Lindstrom 

J.  R.  Humphrey  

A.  M.  Martin 

Iver  Olson  

John  Lindstrom  

Mrs.  J.  G.  O.  Heron  ... 

Josephine  Bates 

Eli  LaRivere 

Mrs.  Aas 

A  nna  Anderson  

Iver  Olson 

Dan  Horgan 

J.  G.  O.  Heron  

St.  Louis  hotel  

F.  Rait 

Mrs.  J.  G.  O.  Heron 

Mrs.  Walter  Fish  ^ 

Sarah  H.  Banks  

Iver  Olson  

John  Baling 

Maggie  O'Keefe 

Anna  Amundson  

Walter  Fish  


$  1,082  10 
COUNTY 

.$  6  00 

5  00 
40  00 

9  .50 
10  00 

6  00 

4  50 

5  00 

15  (H) 

16  25 

6  00 
58  93 

C  00 
40  00 

17  97 
23  25 
16  00 
58  T.i 

5  00 

6  W 
6  00 
6  00 
3  00 

40  20 
33  <)0 
6  00 
SO 
77 
00 
00 
00 
00 


b 
20 

5 

6 
15 
31 
20  t>0 

6  00 
14  88 

4  00 
40  00 
10  00 


39 
00 
00 
IN) 
00 
3S 
CO 
00 
00 
(iO 


240  92 

2,624  08 

10  14 

3,714  77 

63  46 

2  78 

14  27 

149  18 

1.3.36  89 

2,208  48  I  Helen  Hardahl 


1  Steven  Moe 
Iver  Olson 


9 

6 

G 

0 

5 

16  66 
14-  00 
10  00 
10  77 
10  (N» 

6  00 
21  oO 

2  75 
20  10 

6  00 

28  00 

18  00 

6  00 

6  IMJ 

20  78 

8  00 

21  50 

9  00 

10  00 
6  00 
9  25 

20  77 

3  00 

12  80 

4  02 
16  08 
25  00 

i  00 
20  00 

13  50 
12  00 
20  77 

6  00 

11  00 
6  00 


1» 


•jr 


"— T 


T 


' 


» < 


F 


I 


'■■■    ^'f  ' 


I 


1r 


I- 


— 


i 


mmf 


i1  .T'OWil «    iJllr— >■■■  tl 


I 


,-!.., 


1 — 


J 


i-4 


••i 


■ 


* 


::' 


^'  m 


.»- 


to 


Andrew  Olson 

Fred  Ratt   

E.  P.  Savage  

Erick  Lapouta  

William  Smith  

Rethel  Branch  

Fred  Ratt 

Mrs.  Walter  Fish 
Andrew  Olson  ..".., 

Iver  Olson 

Lerander  Rohja  .. 
John  Lampa 


6  00  !  Jaak   Karap    

18  OO  ;  Mary  S.  Ram  pa  . . . 
St.  Mary's  hospital 
St.   Ltike's  hospital 
Woman's  hospital 
Woman's  home  .... 
Virginia  hospital   .. 

W.  H.  Murray   

John  IJndstmm   ... 
Emma  Houchaine  .. 


4  00: 
6- 00 

5  00; 
11  93  ! 
18  W, 
20  10  I 

6  iK» 
6  0<» 

29  00 
46  40 


16 

i*l 

IS  00 

.  2.857  85 

3.692 

27 

579 

•50 

41S 

78 

546 

r.9 

8? 

50 

C  00 

17 

13 

and 
jail. 


Jail. 


SALARIES  OF  COUNTY  OFFICERS  AND   EMPLOYES. 

O.    Halden,    auditor 

L.  H.  Whipple,   treasurer 

John    Owens,    elerk   of   district    court 

Georpe    E.    Arhury,    attorney 

Charles  A.    McPherrin.    assistant   attorney    . 

Phineas  Ayer.  judge  of  probate 

Mrs.  Julia  Ayer.   clerk  of  judge  of  probate.. 

P.   J.    Borfrstrom,    register  of  deeds 

W.    H.   Stultz.   superintendent  of  schools 

Thomas   H.   Little,  jailer 

George    E.    Randall.    Jailer 

F.    W.    Xorqulst.    jailer 

William   Haycroft,   fireman,    court   house 
R.    S.   Cowden.    fireman,   court  house   and 

George   K.  Swan,  janitor 

William   Keir,   wati  linian  at  court  house 

A.    F.    Swansti;om.    watchman   at  court  house 

J.   T.    Rus.oell.   watchman   at   court  hou«,e 

Josephia    Butihart,    matron,    county    Jail 

Charles    G.    Miller,    county   conimlssii>nor.    First    district.. 
H.  T.  Dinham.  county  commissioner.  S,hoh(1    district.... 

J.  C.  Helm,  county  commissioner.  Third   district .. 

E.   Morcom.   county  commissioner.   Fourth    district 

Albert   Swenson.   county  commissiciner.     Fifth  district 

Alexander    Schutz.    auditor's    clerk.... 

W.   G.   Gillespie,   auditor's   clerk ". 

P.   W.   Sture.   auditor's  clerk 

J.    Wasgatt.    auditor's   clerk 

A.    Marvin,    auditor's    clerk /* 

B.    Perry,   auditor's   clerk 

Asa    Dailey.    auditor's    clerk ♦. ' 

Amelia    Smith,    auditor's    clerk » .,__ 

Victor    Siirderall.    auditor's    clerk .... 

Andrew    Gcxlenius.    auditor's    clerk '*'*_ 

Charles   L.   Rak«>wsky.  auditor's  clerk. ........ 

Edwin    Clow,    auditor's    clerk .!!.!!! 

C.    A.    Peterson,    auditor's    clerk 

Brimer.    auditors   clerk ........     .. 

Hailing,    auditor's   clerk 

Holt,  auditor's  clerk [[ 

Broughton.    auditor's   clerk ...... 

Vina  Hood,  auditor's  clerk .....'..... 

H.    E.    Hansen,    auditor's    clerk ..... 

X.    X.    Oie.    auditor's   clerk ......'...... 

S.   S.   Williamson,   treasurer's  clerk ......    ...!......... 

A.   W.    Ingalls.    treasurer's  clerk 

William    Frank,    treasurer's    clerk 

^\'.    M.    Hillis,    treasurer's   clerk 

<^.    H.    Fos.ssett.    treasurer's    clerk 

Andrew    Godenius.    treasurer's    clerk..'.""''     *     ///_ 

Frank    L.    Carey,    treasurer's    clerk ...... 

C.   J.   Hailing.    trea.>-urer"s   clerk 

Pea'hey.    deptity    clerk    of   court... 

West,    deputy  clerk  of  court 

Kennedy,   deputy  clerk  of  court].  i.[ 

Millar  deputy  clerk  of  court 

Ab<^l.    deputy   clerk   of   court ' 

iloody.   deputy  clerk  of  court 


A. 

L. 
T. 


N. 
C. 
A. 
C. 


s. 
J. 

A. 
A. 


s. 

E. 

w 

J. 

w 

A 

F. 

R. 

D. 

H. 

J. 

S. 

H. 

c. 

A. 

He 

Wedmark.  deputy  clerk  of  court 

»lt.    register  of   deeds'    clerk 

Thomas  Clark,   register  of  deeds'   cleric" 

P.  O.  Loe.  register  of  deeds'  clerk 

W.  F.  Marcus,  register  of  deeds'  clerk  ' 
C.  W.  Dorsey.  register  of  deeds'  clerk  " 
Emily  Luson.  register  of  deeds'  clerk  ' 
Fmma  Johnson,  register  of  deeds'  clerk 
Gust  Wtdan.  register  of  deeds'  clerk. 
Mrs.  E.  R.  Mather,  register  of  deeds' 
Su.«ie  H.Mmes.  reqrister  of  deeds'  clerk 
Otto  Erickson.  register  of  deeds'  clerk 


clerk. 


I  9,459  1.5 


.$  ."5,499  92 

,       3,()00  00 

.      .-^.ttOO  iK) 

.      2,499  92 

.      1.000  00 

.      3.000  «M) 

480  00 

.      3,000  00 

.      1..-.00  00 

7S0  OQ 

660  So 

119  15 

718  CA 

121  .'56 

780  0« 

30  Ok'". 

484  37 


S4  -JS 
366  00 
7.S0  00 
7.'.0  OO 
7.">0  OO 
850  00 
750  00 
1.430  00 
945  00 
1,080  00 
1,150  00 
1,050  00 
960  00 
960  00 
900  0»> 
910  00 
237  4!» 
852  .->0 
680  00 
670  00 
197  01 
229  55 
47  .-.0 
685  00 
62  50 
350  00 
233  33 
1.500  00 
1,020  m 
960  00 
960  DO 
900  00 
309  20 
252  30 
195  00 
1.100  00 
1.500  tlO 
1,060  00 
80  00 
780  00 
900  <X) 
770  00 
27  .'.0 
780  00 
1,275  tXi 


1.) 

r.o 


690 
377 

518  sr. 

287 
625 
615  00 
125  10 
60  iM) 


.»o 
00 


5  60,274  32 


HUMANE    OFFICER. 
Henry  Haskins , .^  ^^^ 

DISTRICT  COURT. 

W.    W.    Butehart.    sherifTs    fees 13  "30  f 9 

John   Owens.   « It- rk  of  court   fees l"'o07  s" 

Deputy    sheriffs,    court    term .■ "..  .'.'.*.'    .*.'.""  i'848  ij 

Spviial    attorneys,    interpreters,    etc '48  s* 

Deputy   clerks,    ct>urt    term '.'.'.'  .'.'.'.'.,',] 897  (»0 

C.  C.  Teare.   services  in   Elder  case Kn  ixn 

G.  H.   Vivian,   deputy  clerk ,     2 

G.   G.    Vivian,   deputy  clerk ,  JJ; 

W.  T.  James,  deputy  clerk «  JjC 

E.  W.  Coons,  deputy  clerk ' .'.    J  }^ 

Draper.     Davis    &    Hollister.    attorneys'    fees ."    ........'..'.."  75  f«) 

Fred    Grant,    costs    in    case   vs.    county  commissioners....    ! 16  46 

George   E.   Arbury.   expenses  for  oountv 40  S> 

O.   W.   Baldwin,   attorney.  Taxpayers'  league 380  i  0 

O.    W.    Baldwin,    attorney,    county   surveyor "oa  nX 

G.    H.    Vivian,    deputy   clerk -?  iv) 

J.   G.   Vivian,   deputy  clerk ,  -^ 

J    R.  James,  deputy  clerk t^ 

George   P.    Stillman,    transcribing   testimonv.. ..      07  oa 

George  P.    Stillman.   transcribing  testimony....                lo  aa 

William  Elder,  tsrpewriting.   county  attorney 09  co 

G.    H.    Vivian,    deputy   clerk '^i  ^ 

W.    F.    James,    deputy   clerk J  "„ 

L   G.   Vivian,   deputy   clerk '  ;!" 

J.    R.   James,    deputy  clerk »^ 

Charles   Johnson,   conveyance   for  prisoners             00  oa 

William    Elder,    typewriting    for    county   attoriiey." iq  ]« 

C.   A.   McPherrin.    traveling  expenses...                  ^ "J? 

A.    A.    Farrington.    transcribing  testimony....                   0,%,? 

George    E.    Arbury.    expenses   to    St.    Paul              1=7- 

W.  T.  James,  deputy  clerk  "  ' ^ 

J.  R.  James,  deputy  clerk ,;?-'' 

George  E.  Arbury.  copy  articles  Minnesota  Iron  company  V. .".". tm 

J.  R.  James,  deputy  clerk l^ 

George  R.  Stillman.  transcript  of  testimony ,1  n- 

\\illiam  Elder,  typewriting  county  auditor            c  "- 

George  L.  Kelly,  transcript  of  testimony  ..               .'  „*  *;^ 

George  E.  Arbury,  traveling  expense^.....   .      p  ^' 

G.  J.  Norby.  traveling  expenses  for  sheriff      ^,  rr, 

George  E.  Arburj-.  traveling  expense^!..  ""  „ ' 

Ea.st  End  livery,  conveyance  for  grand  jury 9  a! 

<.eorge  H.  Vivian,  deputy  clerk  ....  tI 

J.    R.    James,    deputv   clerk    ^,1  \! 

W.  T.  James,  deputy  clerk J  J"? 

George  E.  Ari)ury.  traveling  expenses...   "  ^!; 

«>eorge  H.  Vivian,  deputy  clerk  ^X  ^;; 

J.  R.  Jame.s.  deputy  clerk i  •''[ 

W.  T.  James,  deputy  clerk    '.WW'.'.] .[' I i^ 

".   T.  James,  deputv  clerk    j  Y^' 

George  H.  Vivian,  deputy  (lerk *  [^l 

J.    G.    Vivian,   deputy   clerk    H  \/ 

«■  *\. ^^^■,?';""'  ''■aveling  expenses  Smiili'iasV.V..'. ■.■.■.■.". i^  Xj! 

u.  M.  Elder,  t.vpewriting  county  attorney  ij  JT! 

<.eorge  H.  Vivian,  deputy  clerk  ^T,  ? 

J.  R.  Janios.  deputy  clerk -^ 

J.  G.   Vivian,  deputy  clerk J,  ^* 

W.  T.  James,  deputy  cierk    "^  ^' 

George  H.  Vivian,  deputy  clerk f ''*' 

J.^  R.  James,  deputy  clerk *  :?** 

William    Elder,   typewriting  county  attorney .«  -'! 

^it^-^^.S^S:^:r^P^l"'^ "'>•'» •vs;s..-i.„u eountv::    ,Z s: 

George  H.  Vivian,  deputv  clerk °J  ** 

Wimam   Elder,  typewriting  county  attorney  .'."." ,  f|- 

C.  R.  Smith,  transcript  of  evidence  "'' 

George   P.   Stillman.   transcript   of  evidence ?  !? « 

A.  A.  Farrin-gton.  transcript  of  evidence         „? 

G.  H.  Vivian,  deputy  clerk 2o  20 

J.  G.  Vivian,  deputy  clerk   ^  ^'^ 

W'.  T.  James,  deputy  clerk   '.. ^^  00 

J    R.  James,  deputy  clerk  .                       12  50 

M.  W.  Earhart.  reporter 19  •''0 

I.   G.   Stearns,   reporter   ,'.'.".".' 220  00 

A.  A.  Farrington.  reporter 1,669  35 

George  P.   .Stillman,  reporter   ...        1.142  60 

Witness'  fees  and  mileage  1.710  35 

Petit  Jurors  and  mileage 3,877  56 

Grand  Jurors  and  mileage                 8,664  OS 

0.  W.   Baldwin    1.963  60 

h"  w^wlJoI?^'^'"  «rCo"imerce  Buiiding  company,"  costs  in  tax"  c^e' '  ?!  tl 

H.  \\ .  \\  heeler,  costs  in  tax  case  case..  ij  34 

t"  n   ^r-^"-  ^-^P^"s^s  of  Judge  Brown'attending  September  "court"  li  b- 

j    n  ^rTif"-  7r"^^^  ""^  •^"'^'^^  Williston  attending  September  couri"         it  S 
J.   D.  Ensrgn,   telegrams  to  judges    Hi«^"i"er  court.  44  35 

P.   Beneteau.  costs  of  judgment  in  tax  case ,$  ^^ 

V^  e  r^Vu  ^^^^^^''^-  ^osts  Of  judgment  in  tax  case"  ■.;■.:".    JI  ?? 

h:       ^;,?^^''P'  *^"^*^  "f  judgment  in  tax  case ^Ih 

Steve   Christopher,   special   attorney    1'  -^^ 

J.   H.   Norton,   special  attorney 29  61 

William    Doyle,    special   attorney     90  00 

1.  E.  West,  special  attorney '.".'.'.'. 1-1- 

H.  C.  Osterhout,  special  attorney 63  00 

L.  H.  Corcoran,  special  attorney -*  00 

John  Gonsky.  interpreter " 3  00 

H.  a.  Gearhart,  special  attorney ^  12 

T.   W.    Smith,   special  attorney   ....', 20  00 

H.  R.  Tinkham.  special  attorney *W 

E.  Lynch,  special  attorney <5  00 

W.  G.  Joerns,  special  attorney *  00 

W.  W.  Brown,  special  Attorney  2  00 

Stans   Polski.   special  attorney  20  00 

I.  H.  Potter,  special  attorney  ...        20  24 

M.  H.   Crocker,  special  attorney  ^0  00 

J.  J.  Squire,  special  attorney     .  95  00 

N.  H.   Wilson,  special  attorney        40  CJ 

R.  s.  Powell,  special  attorney  ::::::::::^::::.:::::::::\::::::::-    u j; 


THE  DULUTH  EVENINg  HERALD  THURSDAY,  MARCH  18, 

John   Ealurd,   special   attorney 

L.  U.  Titus,  special  attorney ' 4  24 

W.  C.  McAdam.  special  attorney ^5  00 

J.  Van  Rosencrance,  spectol  attorney ^0  00 

M.   Roach,  special  attorney   .               40  00 

W.  N.  Edson,  special  attorney 120  00 

M.   R.    Davidson,  special  attorney ^0  00 

C.  H.  Johnson,  special  attorney         20  00 

John  Ruatgard,  spt?cial  attorney l^  00 

Chris  Sattler,  interpreter 15  00 

Peter  Olson,   interpreter   116 

W.    Vesloon,   interpreter    .' 116 

John   Stabler,   interpreter 4  00 

1  24 

PROBATE  COURT.  -  $50,881  79 

Dr.  J.  E.  Bowers,  examination  of  insane... 

Dr.  C.  A.  Stewart,  examination  of  insane  ..! 366  20 

Dr.  J.  A.  Braden,  examination  of  in.sane..... 137  50 

Dr.    P.    Bakke,    examination    of    insane       73  30 

Dr.  W.  Wilson,  examination  of  insane.. ^^0 

Dr.  C.  L.  Codding,  examination  of  insane..     ''  '^^ 

Dr.   Murray,   examination  of  insane                  17  20 

Dr.  VV.  T.  Fullerton.  examination  of  insane 112(50 

Dr.  Ma?:ie,  examination  of  insane 10  ♦'O 

Dr.  Frank  Lyman,  examination  of  iri;iane ^  "^'^ 

Dr.  H.  H.  Chase,  examination  of  insane... 10^0 

Dr.  J.  W.  O.  Tuf te,  examination  of  insane   .    ^  "^0 

Dr.  A.  T.  Ritchie,  examination  of  insane  ...!! 1^  ^0 

Dr.  Maas.  examination  of  insane 10  60 

Dr.  J.  J.  Eklund,  examination  of  insane ^^ 

W.  W.  Butehart,  examination  of  insane.     1^  ^0 

J.   E.   Meehan.  witness   2.416  05 

P.  W.  Jacobson.  witness   .' *.' 2  20 

Wellington  Simons,   witness   "^00 

A.  D.  Brown,  witness 1  24 

Joseph  Mitchell,  witness  ..." ."' 10  GO 

Agnes  Hunter,  witness  124 

Agnes  Baker,  witness .'. 172 

Lewis    Frost,    witness    ..'. 172 

Charles  Carsten,  witness  .*.   .'..'. 124 

E.  P.  Harbour,  witness  1  24 

O.  C.  Matherson.  witness  .' 124 

M.  A.  Sather,  witness 1  24 

Sarah  Sather,  witness ...[ 124 

Jennie    Johnson,    witness 124 

E.    P.    Kimball,    witness ....' 124 

M.   W.  Turner,  witness   1  24 

Fred  A.  Scovill,  witness 124 

Lucia  J.  Bellinger,  witness ..,'. 124 

Rosa  Aronheim.  witness ....    124 

J.  J.  Hibburd,  witness   1  24 

Robert  Smollet,  witness  '.   ...'." 124 

Henry  Haskins.  witness ....* 124 

Max  Bloom,  witness   124 

George  McGurian.   witness 124 

James  Bloom,  witness  .....'. 124 

A.  J.  Briggs,  witness  124 

Laura  Kennedy,   witness   '. .'.' 172 

Fannie    Pipps.    witoess    172 

Alice  Cary,  witness   '. ...'. 9  40 

Ole  O.  Rols.  witness   '.'.','.'.'.'. ".'.    '. ^40 

O.    Shurdstrom.    witness    .!.'"!! '. 124 

Nellie  Carlson,   witness    "  124 

Gust    Fallquist,    witness    '. '. 112 

John  F.   Brown,  witness   * '.". 1  24 

W.  W.  Butehart,  witness  ' 11^ 

Dennis  Haley,  witness  2  00 

Mrs.  F.  A.  CutlifTe.  witness 13  88 

Eliza  Featherlv,   witness    124 

S.  A.  Thompson,  witness   '   "" 124 

W.  W.  Brown,  witness  ."..".."..' '..'.".'.'.'. ^  ^4 

O.  C.  Halverson,  witness 11  20 

E.  P.  Burnseth,  witness   124 

C.  R.  Keyes.  witness  ..'..'. '.".'... 1  24 

A.   J.    Briggs.    witness [\ 172 

James  Anderson,    witness "' 1^2 

Hans  Sunden,  witness !.!..!! ^  ^^ 

O.  C.  Freidberg,  witness   136 

S.  C.  Dennett,  witness  ....'. 14  80 

z  K  Brown,  witness .'■.■..■.■.■■■.■■..:::::"•     i5  !J 

M.  Jacobs,    witness    lo  bO 

W.   E.    Turry,   witness    .■..■.■." '.■.■.".■.■.■.'.  ]  I? 

O.  C.  Smith,  wltne.ss 124 

F.  E.  Plnkham,  witne.ss  112 

H.  S.  Mockford,  witness   '. ..'!.';.". ' }  p 

O.  J.   Kliripen.   interpreter ""  112 

F.  \V.  Norquist.  interpreter ..', 2  00 

Ivan   Hanson,   interpreter   .."'**    2^ 

Ivan   Hanson,   interpreter   "^ 

O.  K.  Klippen,  interpreter }.  ~^ 

John  Johnska,  interpreter  .' -00 

O.  J.  Klippen,  interpreter .....[ ?  ^ 

F.   N.   Nortiuist.   interpreter    '    2  80 

A.    M.   McDonald,   v  itness ..',', 2  00 

Frank  Cowden,   witness    .'.' 112 

J.  Hansen,  witness  ...            1  12 

A.   J.   Braden.    witness ^  ^-' 

Mary   Goodhard,    witness 148 

Joseph  Goodhard,    witness .'//, 148 

Thtunas   R.    Mayo,    witness    '....'.   ^  *^ 

Frank  Bubolz,  witness  ' ^  ^^ 

Kate  Bubols,   witne.ss   ...         136 

Mrs.    M.    Subiski.    v,  itness    .'. ....'..'.".* I  ^^ 

O.  J.   Klippen.  witness  .'.'. 2  80 

Aexander  Carlson,   witness  112 

James  W.   Mayland ".'.'.'.'.'.   ..'. J^ 

Edward  Devine.  witness  ..."    *..'' 112 

L.  A.   Larson,   witness J  ^^ 

John  Norrisky.  witness {  ^"^ 

Dr.  David  Graham,  examination  of  insane J  f * 

Dr.  F.  O.  Drenning.  examination  of  insane  - '. ^^  ,0 

W.  C.  McAdam,  ser .  ices  as  court  commissioner i-  f ? 

DO  40 

-        '         •-  •  ^  ■*       L  ,  I  $3^488  29 

CORONER'S  INQUEST. 

Dr.  W.  S.  Fullerton.  autopsy  , 

Dr.  E.  M.  McGlffert.  autopsy  *  12  40 

Dr.  A.  T.   Richie,  autopsy   .'. 43  40 

Dr.  A.  J.  Braden.  autopsy ^  ^^ 

Dr.  J.  M.  Robinson,  autopsy 18  60 

Winess  and  Jurors'  fees   '. ."/,',    ^20 

John  Ryan,  livery 496  26 

Dr.  J.  J.  Eklund,  ci.rk's  fees  ......  '.'.".'.'.' ^  ^ 

J.  W.  Lang,  typewriter,  deputy  coroner oj  w 

J.  R.  Humphry,  autopsy   \] 34  96 

A.  D.  Brown,  constable  fees  ®  00 

E.  H.  Schur,  liverj'  14  70 

William    Walls,    constable    .....".    ,a  2^ 

J.  A.  Newheinen,  clerk's  fees  *     ' 19  75 

Thomas  Colgin.  livery  10  50 

John  Flod,   livery   5  50 

Bayha  &  Tibbetts.   livery   ........' „„  ^ 

Frank    Ansley.    liv<  ry    -8  70 

Seth   Sellers,   livery    '.'.'.".'.'.    "^0 

George  E  Arbury.  railroad  fare  ....'. , ^  50 

W.  J.  Richards,  livery   .*.';; 15  00 

W.  J.  Crockett,  ser\  ices  for  deputy  coroner  !,... ,5  ?9 

Max   Shapira,    livor.v    10  80 

Richard  Williams,  clerk's  fees 10  00 

William  O'Hai-a,  e  bistable   '.    '/,[ 2  5o 

J  R.  Humphrey,  autopsy  ^  !•• 

John   F.  Bowden.  clerks  fees   .'.*.'.'    .'.'.'.'. V  0 

C.  M.  Scott,  services  for  coroner ';!.*, 

W.  W.  Brown,  office  rent   r  "0 

o  00 

MUNICIPAL  C!OURT,  CITY.  *^'^^''  ^" 

Jurors'  fees  

Witnesscss  and  int<  rpreters'  fees *  '''S^  ''^ 

Agnes  M.  Stebbins.  transcript  of  testimony"...".' '22^^ 

Agnes  S.  Hepwortii,  transcript  of  testimony   .......'.  '.".'." ilc  o- 

JIUNICIPAL  COURT,  CITY  TOWER.  ^*'^^^  '* 

Court  fees   . 

Constable  fees  *       ^^  99 

Witness   403  92 

-  7fi  7o 

Jurors  'o  '» 

," 7  44 

$554  13 

MUNICIPAL  COURT,  CITY  ELY. 

Constable  fees , 

Court  fees  .  $       57  50 

(3  42 


$130  92 


MUNICIPAL  COURT,  VIRGINIA. 


Jurors   

Interpreters'  fees 
Constable  fees   .. 

Court  fees   

Witness  fees  


Justice  fees  .. . 
Constable  fees 
Witness  fees   . 
Attorney's   fee: 


JUSTICE  COURT,  VIRGINIA. 


$   12  32 

2 

12 

35 

50 

128 

55 

11 

76 

$190  25 


$ 

159  85 

308  71 

111  31 

407  59 

JUSTICE    COURT,  FLOODWOOD. 

Justice  fees       

C-^nstctlile  fee<«  .■■    ■ 

Witness  fees ^'.'.i'.\'.'.'.'.'.Z'.[[.['.[.  '.■I'.v.. ;;";;. 


■•••••••« 


$987  46 


IS  40 

15  25 

8  44 


1897. 


42  09 


> 


JUSTICE  COURT,  BIWABIK. 


'  Justice  fees  . . 
Constable  fees 
Witness  fees   . 


..I 


41  SO 

42  30 
1  12 


Justice  fees 


JUSTICE  COURT,  HIBBING. 
JUSTICE  COURT,  EVELETH. 


85  22 


43  05 


Justice    fees    . 
Constable  fees 


Constable   fees 

Court  fees   

Jurors    


Justice   fees 
Constable    . . 


JUSTICE  COURT.  MOUNTAIN  IRON. 


$        79  45 
5  50 

$        84  9S 


JUSTICE  COURT,  HERMANN. 


$ 

4  50 

4  85 
6  00 

$ 

15  35 

$ 

6  55 
-)  70 

REGISTERING   BIRTH s  AND  DEATHS. 


12  25 


Ji    R.   Humphrey,    Biwabik 

J.  G.  Vivian,  Biwabik  

C.  J.  Lowman,  Breitung 

C.  D.  Hibbard,   Duluth   

H.  B.  Hill,  Fond  Du  Lac  

W.  W.  Routh,  City  Duluth 

W.  J.  Goffe,  (;ity  Duluth  

W.  C.  McCrimmon,  Canosia   

Joseph  Rristow,  Canosia  '.' 

D.  C.  Rood,  Hibbing  

William  Janzig,  Hermann 

3.  H.  Hooper,  Nichols   

B.  A.  Wintergrist,  Culver 

J.  A.  Johnson,  Culver 

N.  Kasnirick,  Gnesen ." 

Charles  Schelen,  New  Independence..! 
H.  E:  Worden,  City  Ely 


$    11  00 

5  'iO 

10  25 

50 

75 

362  75 

131  50 

1  50 

1  00 

11  50 

5  r,o 

6  00 

1  00 

25 

3  25 

50 

24  00 

W.  W.  Butehart 


BOARDING  COUNTY  PRISONERS. 


BLANK  BOOKS  AND  STATIONERY. 


.$10,077  50 


Rankin  &  Greer   

B'own,  Tracey  &  Co 

A,    B.  Lange  &  Co 

Ci  mmercial  Printing  company 

Plielps  &  Hoopes   

Chamberlain  &  Taylor  

J.  J.  LeTourneau   

Christie  &  Collier  

J.    L.   Thwing    

W.  S.  Booth  &  Son  

Pioneer  Press  company 

R    W.   Ulingsworth    

C.   E.  Judd    

Gtrorge  D.  Bannaru  &  Co  

G.    A.    Selpel    

Nugent  &  Brown   

Duluth  Paper  company  


.$   129  22 

11  40 

116  65 

5  60 

14  25 

3  20 

891  10 

.   1,415  75 

.   1.479  J<0 

97  6{ 

62  K, 

4  !.0 

90  SO 

1.020  68 

:zt:  ss 

446  50 

928  39 

$  6,855  1( 


PRINTING. 

Duluth   News  Tribune    

Doluth  Evening  Herald $      992  U 

Duluth    Press    2,3.58  r.l 

Commonwealth   ;;    -53  95 

The   Pioneer   Press 18  05 

C.   A.  Smith   ; 150 

Mesaba  Range 1100 

R.C.Mitchell 2  20 

Christie   &   Collier    *  01 

W.  B.  Dura  &  Co   350  00 

Duluth    Posten    ".'    "" 1^25 

Vermilion  Iron  Journal 15  85 

Ely   Times    ';    ' H  10 

Hibbing   News    2  25 

Hibbing   Sentinel 2  08 

Duluth    Scandinavian ^  ^^ 

A.   B.  Lange 12  60 

P.    E.    Dowelling 50  70 

Diiluth  Volksfreund    23  35 

The  Sun    ; 13  60 

G( orge  Jensen    [ 10  70 

Vi'glnia   Enterprise    '.'    ..".,", Ir  ?2 

M.  Wessenberg  " '    "   " ' i\ 

Minnesota  Swed  Tribune .."    ,,  - 

John   L.    Morrison »  i^? 

Ely    Miner 3  6» 

Rjnkin  &  Greer   ;l  f^ 

J.  J.  LeTourneau .>]?,. 

Eveleth   Star    -4^00 

Tie    Hustler »  »0 

J.  E.  Copperson  ?  ^2 

0  6i 

•  $  4,305  28 

ELECTIONS. 

A.  L.  Brainard,  taking  ballots  to  Proctorknott    .                                         t  i  40 

C.  J.  Lowman,  taking  ballots  to  Breitung  on  en 

John  Auger,  taking  ballots  to  Floodwood    To  ?n 

H.  B.  Hill,  taking  bollots  to  Fond  Du  Lac    '.    a  VJl 

S.  Ryan,  taking  ballots  to  Clinton .,-  ^ 

J.  G.  Vivian,  taking  ballots  to  Biwabik ii  r^ 

George  Nesbett,   taking   ballots   to  McDavitt    '.'.'.'.'. 14  .>o 

P.  E.  Schelen,  taking  ballots  to  New  Independence          c  in 

B.  Wintergrist,  taking  ballots  to  Culver..                    I  X(. 

M.  F.  Marion,  taking  ballots  to  Tower.  . .    .                ,„  ^^ 

,      E.  J.  Poirier,  taking  ballots  to  Moi-se '.". 04  gn 

Martin  Kossmerlck,  taking  ballots  to  Gnesen             "4  00 

R.  Parkins,  taking  ballots  to  Grand  Lake   '.*.'.'.'. 400 

James  H.  Hooper,  taking  ballots  to  Nichols 1700 

F.  C.  Brown,  bringing  returns  from  Tower •>o  00 

J.  C  Vivian,  bringing  election  returns    from  Biwabik       1790 

E.  J.  Poirier,   bringing  election  returns  from  Morse  ..." 04^ 

W.  J.  Irventhen.   bringing  election  returns  from  Breitung '." "  -"^o  00 

H.  Gilmark,  bringing  election  returns  from   Virginia  fg  00 

Peter  Byers,  bringing  election  returns    from   Virginia   is  00 

W.   Mathews,   bringing  election  returns  from   Kelsey   li)  60 

William  Vine,  bringing  election  returns  from  McDavitt  '  i'  80 

James  H.  Nettle,  bringing  election  returns  from  Breitung  '>o  00 

f.  .Vinsle.v,  bringing  returns  from  Clinton   1440 

David  H.  Jackson,  bringing  returns  from  A'irginla  ]«  im\ 

H.  .1.  Eaton,  bringing  leturns  from  Virginia    '.'.". js  00 

i^^ouis  Breekton,   bringing  returns  from  Nichols .   .  15  70 

C.   A.    Davis,   bringing  returns  from   Stuntz 18  CO 

J.  C.  Harris,  bringin-g  returns  from  Virginia   '   '. 17  00 

Mat  Preltner,  bringing  returns  from  Missal)e  Mountain    1540 

J.  A.   Reed,  bringing  returns  from  M<junt:jin  Iron "  ig  00 

H.   Langton,  bringing  returns  from  Industrial    1440 

William    Scott,    bringing   returns   from  Ely '.". ;c,  ^^ 

Swan  Antlerson,  bringing  returns  from  Ely .' •'^-,  00 

M.    H.   Godfrey,  bringing  returns  from  Mf.iiiitain  Iron I6  00 

John  Armstrong,  bringing  returns  from  Ely  '  •>5  00 

Thomas  McDonald,  bringing  returns  from  Missabe n  'lo 

C.  W.    Miller,    bringing   returns   from  Virginia ig  oo 

D.  W.   Owens,    bringing  returns  from  Tower  Junction ............  20  00 

C.  J.  Lowman,  bringing  returns  from  Tower  Junction   ^0  00 

P.   W.  Healey.   bringing  returns  from  Missabe  17  o,, 

M.  C.  Pierce,  bringing  returns  from  Missabe  Mountain  •>o  00 

H.   H.   Salmon,  bringing  returns  from  Biwabik  "  ^9  00 

C.   M.  Stevens,  bringing  returns  from  Floodwood    ....        u  H) 

Robert  Parkins,  bringing  returns  from  Grand  Lake   '.       *"  4  oo 

H.  P.  W^est,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth '"  1  10 

Lewis  Owen,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth 'MO 

H.  Beroen,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth 1  00 

Granher  Pulver,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth              1  30 

H.  A.  Kuschler,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth  ....  1  10 

Cordy  Edwards,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth  .  1   'o 

Grant  Wyatt,    bringing  returns   from  city  of  Duluth   ....                 '  1  co 

H.  J.  Schneider,  bringing  returns  from  citv  of  Duluth          ....          "  1  10 

J.    Mutch,   brin'ging  returns  from   city  of  Duluth  "  1  fio 

W.  B.  Hartley,  bringin-g  returns  from  city  of  Duluth "  ox, 

E.  F.  Heller,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth i  "( 

F    E.  Kennedy,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth  *.'""  o  on 

Charles  Rossen,  bringing  returns  from  town  of  Duluth  "  1  20 

Emanuel  Matson,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth ^  20 

James  Campbell,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth  9  go 

.\]ex  Kennedy,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth 1  in 

John  P.  Mason,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth  1  ,n 

J.   C.   McLean,   bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth   ...           1  in 

M.  McLean,  brin'ging  returns  from  city  of  Duluth |  ,n 

C.  D.  Partinson,  bringing  returns  from  citv  of  Duluth  .      1  in 

John  Boyer.  bringing  returns  from  city  of  iJuluth  .....       ,  .,„ 

(  .  H.  Glass,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth  ..             i  Tj[ 

D.  N.  Morgan,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth 'on 

K.    VV.   Nichols,   bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth             T  Tn 

;^'^-    Bears,    bringing    returns    from  city  of  Duluth           1  ca 

G.  T.  Johns,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth               ?  ?« 

E.  Krefting,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth        5  {« 

B   -V.  Ransberg,  bringing  rettims  from  city  of  Duluth i  ul 

S    wf ^*  Schelin,  bringing  returns  from  New  Independence ■.■.■.;: 7  In 

B.   Wintergeist,  bringing  returns  from  Culver                         om 

niT'^r^^fu  ^^'  ^""5*"S  returns  from  Hermann  ■.■.■.■."■.:::::"   ?  Jx 

Olai  Gulbranson.  bringing  returns  from  Fond  du  Lac                  ^  An 

Aup,   BoquiBt,   bringing  returns  from  Conosia  %1^ 

M. ,1-eperk.  fringing  returns  from  Gnesen  ..!....  ..... /. l^ 

A.  L.  Rlllje.  bringing  returns  from  New  Duluth                 ,  ?X 

Jf'^A^s?°°'^ey..  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth  ;*. ?  S 

D.  D.  Nixon,  bnnsins  returns  from  city  of  Duluth     ,    l^ 


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THE 


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James  Connolley.  brinKing:  returns  from  city  of  Duluth  o  »« 

J.  t.  McLaren,  bringringr  returns  from  city  of  Duluth  T  ?« 

Oeorge  R.   Laybourn,   bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth i  «,, 

K.    ^\.    Mack,    bringing    returns    from  citv  of  Duluth  ^1,1 

H.  A.  Douglas,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth  ...         '  i  .)L 

A.  F.  Sv.-anstrom.  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth    ..      T  ^n 

Thomas  Grady,  bringing  returns  from  .iiv  of  Duluth  .        \  .,., 

i^.  U.  Mc.\dam.  bringing  returns  from  <  itv  of  Duluth  .        i  -,[ 

C.  E.  Buden.  brin-ging  returns  from  city  of  Duluth   ..              ,  .',- 

J.  t>.  Xlartm.  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth   .,  Xj! 

L.    .\.    flames,    bringing   returns   from  city  of  Duluth  ..     ~>   -q 

R.   F.   Marvin,   bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth     To!, 

R.   A.    Fulkerts.   bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth .  vn 

K.  H.  McQuade.  taking  ballots  to  town  of  Duluth                1  .m 

\\.    H.    Day.   taking   ballots   to  Hibbing '   ,'  -" 

>\ilham  Janzig.  taking  ballots  to  Hermann    ...       7*Y. 

Fred  Seymour,   taking  ballots  to  Rice  Lake .* !.  Ji, , 

^\.    O.   aicCrimmon.   taking  ballots   to  Conosia      H  S.', 

w.  T.  Jame.>*,  taking  ballots  to  Ely  ,:f  ?,{ 

Fred  Lenh.  taking  ballots  to  Missabe  Mountain To  «J! 

K.  S.  Smith,  takimr  ballots  to  Virginia.                     i^  ,7; 

J.  O.  Connors,  taking  ballots  to  Hibbing            I8  .  , 

W.   W.  Rrowne.  taking  ballots  to  Biwabik        17?,, 

Janus    H.    Hoopcs.    taking    ballots    to  Nichols".".'.'. .' ic  Un 

Fred  Seymour,  taking  ballots  to  Rice  Lake                         9  en 

E.  J.  Poirier.  taking  ballots  to  Morse  ....          «-  -J! 

W.    C.    McCrimmon.    taking    ballots   to  Coiiosia ^  rn 

C.  R.  Wethen.  taking  ballots  to  Mesaba                    ,«  , " 

J.  O.  Gilgrichst.  taking  ballots  to  Mountain  Iron    la  Im 

James  iJoddney.  taking  ballots  to  Industrial                       r  Zr, 

Peter  Schafcr.  taking  ballots  to  Ely  ..                        ^i.^ 

John  Anger,  taking  ballots  to  Floodw  (x  d           Tt  in 

G.  C.  Blackwood,  taking  ballots  to  township  50-20".'.'.  ". it  aft 

H.    AOwens     bringing  returns    from  Proctorknott  '..'.■■.".".■.■ -'oo 

?•  ^-  ll?'"'."^  ^  bringing  returns  from  Proetorknott  ' ' ' '  r  l, 

J.  D.  Wade,  bringing  returns  from  city  of  Duluth  1  on 

H.   ».  salmon,   bringing  returns  from  Biwabik lo  fjn 

t..  U.  t.lass.  bringing  returns  from  citv  of  Duluth                              r  ^ 

,/\"^*",^'""'*'-   l^ringing  returns  from  Virginia  .".".".'.'.".■ is  5o 

tV  \; '^i*'»^K''^of'i'.  bringing  returns  from  township  .".0-20   '"  91  il» 

«••,;       '''"*'«'''^ni-   JiMge  of  election   in  township  .-)0-20  "r  -Ji 

»Mli!am  i<ing.  jutig.-  ..f  election  in  township  ,")0-20  7  rn 

Janies    Morrison,    clerk   of  election    in  township  r.2-10 4  so 

John  Reed,  canvassing  returns   i«  a<i 

W.  W.  Brown,  canvassing  returns »»  Iia 

J.  C.  Helm.  (■anva.«sing  returns  ,.3^, 

O.   Halden.  canvassing  returns o  7^ 

^[orris  Kalstad.  bringing  returns  from  McDavitt it^,) 

Charles    E.    Hudden.    bringing   returns  from  city 1  "o 

W.  X.  Donaldson,  bringing  returns  from  city 1  o,* 

A.  J.  Beers,  bringing  returns  from  city '.  .'...'. j  ^!J 

J.  H.   Delaney.   bringing  returns  from  city 1  4^, 

W.  C.  Ould.  liringing  returns  from  city i  tn 

Charies  Schelin.  bringing  returns  from  Nvw  Independence" ".'.'..". s  20 

K.   D.    McNeal.   bringing  returns  from  Missabe  Mountain  "■■  ic  jn 

Jred    Lerch.   bringing  returns  from  :Missabe  Mountain  "  is  oo 

C.  J.  Haihng.  bringin-g  returns  from  eity ■"'  j  jj^ 

John   J'eterson.   bringing  returns  from  McDavitt  ...     .       10  of! 

B.  O.    Wiggan.   i<ringing  returns  from  Virginia 170,1 

J.    D.    Moore,    bringing    returns    from  Whiteface                        94  i- 

B.  C.  Vront.  taking  ballots  to  Eveleti. Xt.,]i 

J.  D.  M'>ore.  taking  ballots  to  Fioodwo.  d   ...                         ^l  ^x 

Henry  Johnson,  taking  ballots  to  53-1-; ,2  C 

^Villiam  Janzig.   taking  ballots  to   Ileimann    .".' -,  n.l 

Martin    Kosmerack.    taking   ballots   to  Gnesen                          '*  nn 

H.  B.  Hill,  taking  ballots  to  Midwav t^' 

W.  J.  Fergus.son.  taking  ballots  to  citi '  f  .m 

J.  C.  He«sian.  taking  ballots  to  city   !  ;„ 

James  Crannoiley.  taking  ballots  to  citv .>  T.' 

Amos    Daniels,    taking    ballots    to    city ...'. T  ^o 

C.  J.  Holliday.  taking  ballots  to  city  \\\   i  ;/ 

A.  L.   McGregor,  taking  ballots  to  citv ,  jj ' 

Thomas  Fossett.  taking  ballots  to  citv ';;.■,* J  "" 

"^  .  H.  Rickard.  bringing  returns  from  city "i  tr, 

Charles   M.   Thomas,   bringing  returns  from  city 1  ja 

Martin   Lapek.   bringing  returns   from  Gnesen 3  so 

iMe  I'fUlbran.-son.  bringing  returns  froPc  Midway t  00 

H.  Langton.  bringing  returns  from  inilustrial  ...      c  4r, 

John  cm.  bringing  retums  from  Nich  'Is                        jg  q^ 

^<'^r.  ^r'%'?"-  »'i-Jnffi^*r  returns  from  Missabe  Mountain".. ■.■.".■.'.■.■;..'.■.'.■ '  20  00 

O.   p.   Wailner.   bringing  returns  from  city  "  jn 

M.   A.   Snyder,    bringing  n-turns   from  Floodwood  "..".'.".'.".'."..■■ ^70 

t.  J    Runna.-k.  bringing  returns  from  Virginia  '. 90  n.t 

S.    P.    Ireland,    bringing   returns    from  Morse...                                          "  9^  L 

J.    O.    Vivian,    bringing    returns   fron>  Fayal                             on  «„ 

H.  L.  P  Ai-mes.  b! mgmg  returns  froni  Eveleth      .  9,,  «,, 

\».  P.  Chmn.  bringing  returns  from  !>reitung                                9,;^; 

C.  J.  Lowman.  bringing  returns  from  Breitung                      2»)  0 1 

J.    H.    Jafery.    bringing   returns    froia  Breitung .....'.'. 9,.  ni 

I).  U.  t)'.,tr.s.  bringing  returns  frori  I'leltung  ..                     -             9,,   ,, 

l;'-''"///*^"^^'--    "i-inging  returns  froM  Sucker  River '.;'; 4  ■„, 

p.   \\.  Haley,  bringing  returns  from  :\'esaba  ..                                      ic  ',- 

A.  A.  Hall,  bringing  returns  from  FicK:dw<x)d                         19  !!,> 

Thomas  F.   Brady,  taking  ballots  to  f'ibbing          \t  L 

Henry  Agnew.  taking  ballots  to  Hibbing .,  V' 

John  Costin.  taking  ballots  to  Virginie.                         ^^  . ' 

Georgf  Lerch.  taking  ballots  to  Missabe  Aioiintain i.-   m 

C.  J.  Li.wman.  taking  ballots  to  Breituig  .                                  i^  "  • 

M.  F.  Mariim.  taking  !>aI!ots  to  Tower     .             .'"  j' 

Charles  Schilin.  taking  ballots  to  Indei  endance          r  I,\ 

^^esIey  Mathews,   taking  ballots  to  K.  Isey  ...                     i.w^ 

Frank  Ainslie.  taking  ballots  to  Clinton                      1?,.; 

p.  <».   Turn  burg,  clerk   for  FJoodwood..             v-» 

John  Wair-n.  ju<lge  Floodwood  o  -,\ 

Henry  Johnson,  judge  and  making  ball,  t  boxes ;r  !,1 

John   Hfllman.  judge  Flood w(M.d    "v  -» 

Alex   Rodgei-s.  clerk  town  .JO-20  ^  ;" 

B.  F.  Clough,  clerk  town  .'O-20  •-  -  , 

U.  J.  Eaton,  bringing  returns  from  Virginia '. i'  nn 

Richard  William.^,  bringing  returns  fi.m  Biwabik  ...".." i^  j  J 

B.  \\  intergrest.  bringing  returns  from  Culver  *  -  oft 

C.  E.  Evans,  brin-ging  returns  from  ciJv *  Vy 

Thomas  Gordon,  bringing  ret  urns  from  city 9  «(. 

B.  W.    Stack,    bringing    returns    from  city  T  •  ft 

r>aviil    Nelson,    bringing  returns   from  city  '. ,  ^^ 

I.  H.  McPherson.  bringing  returns  from  city \  V\ 

C.  D.  Peterson,   bringing  returns  from  city i  ^,| 

J.  A.  Blixt.  bringing  returns  from  cicy t  ?^ 

L.  A.  Barnes,  bringing  returns  from  city  .....'  .>  ."a 

Robert    Moore,   bringing  returns  from  city  ......" 9  H, 

W.  A.  Thayer,  bringing  returns  from  citv" 0  r.i 

P.   A.   Falstad.   bringing  returns   from  city t  .L 

J.    L.    Hensley.   bringing  returns   from  city To, 

J.  S.  Martin,  bringing  returns  from  citv '. .,  "J 

G.  \V.  McAdams.  bringing  returns  fror.i  city  ! T -,, 

A.  G.    Osman.    bringing   returns   from  city  \  !,][ 

T.  B.  Scott,  bringing  returns  from  cilv., i  "^ 

H.  M.  King,  bringing  returns  from  ci:\ f  "': 

Wallace  Warrjer.  bringing  return.^  froir  city  . . .  .....*.'.  .* i  40 

John  C.    Wessenberg.   bringing  return     from  city  .... .' 9  9^ 

(jeorge  W.  Danielson.  bringing  returns  from  city  ..                  T  9!, 

W.  J.  Quinn.  bringing  returns  from  citv ,  "" 

John  Tobin.  bringing  returns  from  Kesey  .    -  -' 

Lewis  Erickson.   bringing  returns  froi..;   Kelsey  ...    -  ?1, 

E.    B.    Engren.    bringing  returns   from  Canosia 94^, 

J.  M.   Evans,  bringing  returns  from  S!untz  ....                -.'^  ,!f, 

Joe  Kepperton.  bringing  returns  from  Ely 9^  on 

Frank  Keah.  bringing  returns  from  Ei\ ^rTiI 

J.  A.  Larson,  bringing  returns  from  B.wabik Tor! 

B.  Wintergrest.  taking  ballots  to  Culvfi '^  ''" 

Joseph  Bristom,  taking  ballots  to  Grant]  Lake      i-i 

John   Peterson,   bringing  returns  from  Grand  Lake" 4  Ijo 

A.  J.   ."Jullivan.   bringing  returns   from  Missabe  Mountain 17  ,w 

J.  .\     Rude,   bringing  nturns  from   M   untain  Iron ir  Jj^ 

p.  A.  Cameron,  bringing  returns  frou:   Biwabik    il  Z\ 

James  Campbell,  bringing  returns  fn-  <•  Rice  I.ake                  ^  ', 

And.  Gulbranson.  b.-inging  returns  froi-   Hermann            .",  «, 

U  "i;  -\'.'f '">'"•■•  bringir.-.,'  n-turns  frn;;!  Sluntz ".'. ,0  ^'l 

h.  F.   Neal.   oringing  returns  from    Elv -n     I 

J.   1>.    Murphy,   bringin-  returns  from  Tower   ....   r„  V! 

J.   J.   Zesl.y.   judge  at    Whit.faco '^  ^* 

J.  -M.  (rtiig.  ebctioii  r-tunis  from  Clitton ,-  ,J! 

I'eter  ^f.ndrickson.   us.-  bouse  for  tb-.  >  ion                  %. 

Mikf  McNeal.  ju.lge  at   Whiteface   .'.' 1.  ^'* 

Carl  Sandberg.  clerk  at  Whiteface   "/_l '  '!** 

W.  J.  Smart,  election  returns  from  citv     ^  '^' 

.    Halden.  canvassin'g  returns   •"  - ' 

J.  C.  Helm,  canvassing  r»'t urns  ..'.,........... 12  00 

W.    W.    Brown,   canvassing   returns .,, ?,"^ '"* 

Vivian   Prince,  canvassing  i>-turns   il!^ 'I" 

O.   Halden.  canvaissing  returns    ...          o2  20 

■  <^  .  Helm,  canvassing  returns  -i  in< 

u.   >V .   F5rown.  canvassing  returns T,. 

Vivian   Prince,  canva.«sing  returns   j^'S  0.) 

D.   Lindstrcjm.  rent  of  house 0820 

D.  S.  Blanchard,  election  returns  froni  city ?  "^^ 

M.   A.   Snyder,   clerk  of  election   town  .53->i I  '*'J 

<  25 

"   **■'  -.    '  •  12,459  70 

FUEL  FOR  COURT  HOUSE. 

Ohio  Coal  company  , 

Northwestern   Fuel   company   *  ,',„.? 

H.G.Johnson ^^^  P 

Duluth  Fuel  company  '.'.',',[  !."".!!.'!. ",*."."|. 199 -!! 

^  $      483  58 

FUEL  FOR  COUNTY  JAIL. 

Duluth   Fuel  company   j 

Northwestern  Fuel  company '    %l  f. 

Ohio  Coal  company ..'...■.■..■.■.".::;         68  oO 

J      609  it  ■ 

INSURANCE. 

I»avid.<ioii  \.   M.-Jtae.  ..n  jail   -  , 

Clark*  Dickerman.  on  jail  '  / -  '"^ 

Graves- Manl*>v  agencv,  on  jail ;I5  "" 

W.   Van   Brunt,  on   iail   vf  "" 

F.  J.  Salter,  on  jail  \l'"^ 

Brace.   Eckstein  &  Forest,  court  hoiise ?.n','l 

C.  A.  &  E.  D.  Field,  courthouse ^*J^ 

Little  &  Nolte,  court  house "^  Vx 

Northern  Banking  company,  court  house i-  ma 

Mendenhall  &  Hoopf^s.  court  house  ....     ISi  J,^ 

W.  M.  P.ind!-  ft  Co..  curt  hous^ ^  ^^ 

Northern  Banking  »wmpany,  court  b'i'ise  ...."..'.'.".*.'.!'.*.'..'.'.'.'.'.'.  '.'. 30  "a 

,^__        ^^ .     •  I     813  00 


( 1 

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i 

DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:      THURSDAY,    MARCH    18,    1897. 


MISCELLANEOUS  COUNTY  JAIL  EXPENSES. 


Duluth  Gas  and  Water  company,  water 

Commercial  Light  and  Power  company. lighting  ., 

R.  Dinham,  gold  dust  and  brooms  

Farrell  &  Sullivan,  plumbing 

R.  Dinham,  -gold  dust  and  soap  '. " 

J.  Jonas,  pillow  slips?,  etc 

R.  C.  Kruschke,  keys  [', "' 

Rlc  hard  Dinham.  gold  dust,  etc 

Fred   Grant,   labor  and   material    .".*..!!!!"".....!;." 

Robert  Barnett,   labor  and  material   

W.  Benevirs,  labor  anrl  material   

Duluth  Iron  and  Metal  company,  material 

Standard   Salt  and   Cement  company,  material 

William   Tackabury,   dray    

Richard  Dinham,  gold  dust  and  soap!.' .! !!..    ...'.'. 

Deitz  &  Co..  labor  and  material 

Burgess  Electric  company,   labor  anci" material".*. 

M.   P.  Crosby,   plumbing 

R.   Dinham,   gold  dust  and  soap .'.'.' 

R.  Dinham,  biooms  and  soap 

R.  H.  Rathbun.  gold  dust " 

Smith  &  Smith,  medicines ..         ........ 

J.   R.  Quigley.  labor  and  material   !"*.!..  .....' 

C.  H.  Oppel.  blankets 

C.  H.  Oppel.  clothing ''.' 

Crowley  Electric  company,   lamps"     '"........ 

Emil  Ebert,  labor  ' "■" 

R.  Dinham,  soap  

C.  H.  Oppel  &  Son.  brushes  .......'.".'.'.'.'.['.[.... 


Billson,  Congctcm  &  Dickinson,  opinion  on  bond  issue  .. 
t.  Da\  s,  description  en   Pioneer  P'uel  comi>any  property 

t.  mvis,  plat  of  auditor's  rearrangement  

1*.   Davis,   services  on   plat  commission 

t.  Davis,  map  of  auditor's  out  lots         

F.  Davis,  cemetery  ma;)  countv  auditcir ...".'. 

George  D.  Barnard  .t  Co..  rubber  type 

Lewis  Larson,  taking  care  insane  man 

Commerc;ial  Light  and  Power  company,  light  court  house'.'. 

iJuiuth  Gas  and  Water  company,  water  court  house  ... 

trowley   Electric  company,   labor  and  material  

James  \A  atts,  labor  and  material 

Costelio  Hardware  company,  hardware 

Donaur  &  Co..  mallets  court  house  

Silberstein  &  Bondy.  window  shades     " .' 

Goodale  &  Eberiing,  li-ioleum  for  court  house  ". 

Henry  Lyes,  hauling  ashes 

R.  Dinham,  matches  

La Vaque  Paint  and  Wall  'Pap'er'comp'.'iny."  i)"aint'brii"s'hek  ".".".".■.■.■.■ 

George  K.  Swan,  washiirg  towels  

East  End  Ice  comi)any,  ice 

Thomas  Holder,  spring  water 

DirinVh"*^r'""  ^'eK^gr.iph  compaiiy.'  c'loc'k  service " a"nd"tel'e'gra'm" 
Du  uth  &  Iron  Range  Railroad  company,  telegrams   .... 

Duluth  Trust  company,  office  rent  for  surveyor    

T     •;•  ^•■^"^^'ff  &  Co.,  ofnce  rent  Judge  Moer 

L.  JL  Taussig  &  Co.,  otJice  rent  county  attorney    

t.  Davi.s.  surveying  and  plans  four  lots 

*.  Davis,  transcribing  plats  

North   American   Telegraph   company, ' tel'eg'rii'm's 'c'ouii't'y'attorri'ey" 
DnlTh  r''''  ^^"l^^/'*"'^  Power  company,  lights  court  house  ..^. 

Duluth  Gas  and  Water  company,  water  court  house  ... 

George   K.    Swan,    washing  towels   

Kelley  &  Killoren,  hardware  ...  


51S  5.3 

456  82 

19  0^< 

12  20 

17  00 
24  00 

1  50 

18  50 
90  75 
59  73 
24  00 


10 


2 

19  7.> 
15  50 
17  00 

5  95 
29  98 

2  75 

17  00 

18  SO 
24  00 

50 

70  6-, 

135  CO 

94  20 

22  50 

6 

9 

4 


10 
00 
40 


$  1,736  19 

.$      100  00 

53  00 

28  00 

8  00 

44  00 

21  00 
1  10 

22  55 
58  70 
33  70 
14  4f 

4  05 
2 
1 
6 


45 
50 
60 
74  95 
3 


if, 
00 
45 
56 
75 
75 

ir 

79 
20  00 
41  00 
50  00 


1 
2 
1 
3 
1 
6 


172 


00 

OK 


I  a 

59  80 

33  52 

1  62 

4  12 


56 
00 
00 
00 

75 
00 
0:) 


MISCELLANEOUS  EXPENSES  GENERAL  FUND. 

Duluth  Gas  and  Water  company,  water  court  house  ........  $       49  19 

Hartman  General  Ele.tric  compan.v,  lighting  court  house  ....■..';.""■  7^  97 

Strykei-.    Manley    &    Buck,    office   rent  Judge  Moer .               ■"  \'k  ^.n 

L.  J.  Tau.ssig  &  (>,.,  ofFice  rent  Judge  Morris   90^0 

L.  J.  Taussig  &  Co..  otlice  rent  county  attorney   5^  Txi 

Duluth  Trust  company,  office  rent  county  attorney inZ 

George  K.  Shaw,  washing  towels 1     "^ 

Joseph  Glcjckle,  waste  burner ..       ..             r 

R.  Dinham.  soap  '.'.'."   "              '.. - 

A.  J.  Jc)hnson,  putting  on  storm" sash  !.'!.....    ...'..'.'.'.'    .'.'.'.'.' r 

K.  ^i.  Chambers,  carjxnter  work              '    o 

Henry  Lyes,  hauling  ashes  ...            '""                   « 

East  End  Ice  company,  ice '.'. ".'.'.'..'.'. 4 

German  &  De  Ward,  making  vaJuatiim  on  c-ourt  h'ouJ?"e"'and  "jail" !! !! !"  m  00 

Lloedel  &  Eblmg.  oCio  tables  for  court  hou.se Vi  Z 

fmhfth"pi^''V'-*  '''"''  ^^'^^  P^'^*''"  ^"mP'iny.  Painting  and  papering  !  i." !  74  5 

Duluth  Plumbing  ccminany,  plumbing .     .  44  r. 

imperial   Electric  company,   labor  and  material    9]  °"- 

tnjwley  Electric  company,  labor  and  material  20  \^ 

T^",    !u  Jt'I^'Phinp  con^pany,  telephone  county  auditor   .'■ 99  94 

T^",    M?  Telephone  company,  teleuhtme  judge  probate ""■■  "q  ro 

Duluth  Telephcme  c-onpany,  telei>hone  sheriff    -.r^iX 

Western    Union    Telegraph    cx)mpany,  telegrams  county  ofn'cers" 7^ 

F.  Davis,  service  on  i>!at  commission  " '  *  s  nn 

F.   Davs.  establishing  boundary  lines  58-17   ;■.' J^Z 

F.   Davis,   establishing  boundary  lines  58-17  7400 

K  Davis,  subdividing  section  n-.-,S-16.. 7  , ,0 

Duluth    Paper   compa.iy.    toilet    paper  court  house  '.    tZ 

Duluth  Gas  and  Watei-  company,  water  court  house  44  ^ 

Hariman  General   Ele.tric  company,  lighting  court  house  ." ." 494^ 

Thomas    Holder,    snri.ig    water    court  hou.-^e    '  '„,,;' 

Meining  Hardware  company,  hardware  emit  house 700 

Ed    trh>ss,    cleaning    .  himneys    court  hous,"  kZ 

SlW.,?.ir2.''n    '^r'"^"'""''  ^-'"iPany-  ^'lo^'k  service  and  telegram" ."."  .'i:  4  64 

Silberstein  &  Bondy,  c;irpets  and  shades J  co 

George  K.    .Shaw,   washin-g  towels ^  r^ 

BloedelA  Ebeling.  fili.g  ease  clerk  court   ■.;.. .1  Z 

htn^lTZtl^  ^"''  ^^  all  Paper  company,  glass  for  court  house  ..:.':  i  S 

ihomas   Reinhart.   mailing  clock   ..     ?  "a 

Henry   Lyes,   hauling  ashes    ..                '  ..                            i  , -' 

F.   Davis,  making  map  Biwabik   ....'.'.' .'.'.'.'.'.'.. soli 

F.   Davis,  recording  n..tes  survey  5.S-17 4c  ,11 

Biar-gess  Electric  company,    labor  and  material  '.'.V.'. {^U 

^^l^^J,*^  Llectric  company,  labor  and  material   9  .^ 

E.  F.  Barker,  rubber  stamps „  i' 

^'7^V'-n?^^^^''y   *    ^'utdc.    office    rent  Judge  Moer  ..■.!'..::':.■;    7  ^^ 

Duluth  Trust  company,  office  rent  county  .surveyor '   '   "'  9n  00 

L.  J.  "Taussig  &  Co.,  oilice  rent  countv  attorney %^Z 

h    ri,  ^^"l"''^  *  ^"-    'f"^^  rent  for  Judge  Moer ;;   \\\\"  20  "o 

H.   T.   Dinham.  expcm.ses  to  St.  Paul.. 97!^ 

O.    Halden.  expen.ses  to  St.   Paul.            9  7^ 

f^.h.^jfc^"*'    Light   and    Power   company,   lighting  coii'rt"  house .'.' ."i  l."  5131 

DJiluth  t,as  and  Wat-r  company,  water  for  court  house 43  on 

rhoma.s   Holder,   spring  water  for  court   house son 

Henry  Lyes,   hauling  ashes  from   court   house IZ 

George  K.  Swan,  washing  towels  for  court   house 150 

C-' ..■ ,  o"  VJ*"*"'   ''^'*"'"  ^"^   material    for  court  house ""'  9  r.o 

Kettel&Helberg,  labor  and  material  for    curt    house 2?  1» 

East  End  Ice  company,  ice  for  court  h)use ""  4  ^J, 

iJening   H.ardware  company,   hardware  for  court  house...".   ".".".".    ■""'  s  00 

Ilolston    Sash    and    Door   company,    lumber    for    court    house tm 

F    p^''2"''„    ""'"V""'    ^'^"   ^^P^''   company,   card  sign  for  auditor  100 

E.  F.   Barker,   ruber  stamps  for  auditor iZ 

L.  J.  Taus.sig  &  Co..  office  rent  for  Judge  Moer '..'. olZ 

f!'  .    .u    rJ^*^^'^  *  ^"•'  "^^^  '"^"t  for  county    attornev .' 9500 

«r"  ."•           .V^^    company,    oflice   rent    for  couhty  survevor ""  9000 

William    Alden.    surgi-al    treatment    for   pris.mer....    :...                       "  ia  on 

filers  ""   Rar.ge  Railroad   company,  telegrams  for  county  "ofl 

F.  Davis,    survey   of   <>ut    lots.". .'.".".    ""......    '  ro  ^ 

F.    Davis,    survey  of   auditor's   rearr.anglmont '    .".".".".". fis  fl* 

F    Davis,  senices  .01   plat  commission j^  oo 

ve -o"      *^*'*""*y  Abstract  company,  abstract  of  lot  fen-  county  sur- 

Wobstcr    Derr'ing:"ln';-ry"  fo'r"s'h'c;t^i'ff"ai"Biwabik'.; ".'..."".".'..  "..'.'."  .'."  %  S 

Jniiuth  Gas  and  Water  company,  water   for   court    house 4?   )« 

(oniniercial    Light    .md    Power   c-ompany.    lighting   court    hou.se.'.""  64  61 

N.ist  Knd  b-e  coini)nny.  ice  f(»r  <c.nri  house 

dIIIm!!!    ^^'/'I^lj''"''    '"'T>Pany.    stan.I    for    tel.phone    for  "auditor".".".: ".".  l'5  00 

r               To  .-phcme    company,    telephom'   nnt    for  auditor....  1  ^r. 

noM  H    ,7:•■^•"^'>ne    company,    telephcme  i.ni    for  register  of  deed-s!!  3  36 

n         h     I^'^^Pion,'    company,    telephone    rent    for   county   attorney..  12  .-".O 

nu  uth    Te  ephonc-    company,    telephone  rent  for  clerk  of  court  •;  •>-> 

n.".    M  .''^l!"""'    ^""iPany,    telephone  ivnt  for  probate  judge.. .! !!  ^^>  m 

Duluth*  Telephcme    <  ompany.    telephone   rent    for   sheriff...  19  r,A 
Duluth  &  Iron  Range  Railroad  company,   telegrams  for  county  "aN 

tornoy •«  t\M 

Western   Union   Telegraph  comp'an'y,"ciock"  service  for"  coiirt  hoiise .".'  6  67 

t*"  ..    ,2'^^""'  '"'"'"'■'  ^"''  ^""rt  house 9  4t 

K  B.Johnson,  photos  of  county  prisoners 9  on 

Meining    Hardware    company,    hardware    for   court    house..  ..".".";"*"  550 

Henry  Lyes,   hauling  ashes  from  court    house ""4^0 

George  K.  Swan,  washing  towels  for  court   house " ".".    1  qo 

E.  J.  Wilson,  fixtures  for  auditors  office 0775 

T     W-  Thompson,  carpenter  work  at  court  house r:o  rn 

J.  E.  Cooley    expenses  to  Aitkin,  county  business .' «  6^ 

^r,?r.f^   '^-     f  ^^^^»^-  expenses   to  Aitkin,   county   business...!    .".""  6  65 

Duliith   Trust  company,   office  rent   for  county  surveyor...  9000 

^;  3.     1"^°"'    services   at    land   office  for  county 9^X0 

Virginia  Cemetery  a.sociatoion.   land   for    cemetery 40000 

A.  G.  Barnard.  5000  copies  of  immigration    journal 100  Ort 

^V.H.Tvf^*    ^'^J'X.r^''^  ^"''■^'"  company,  lighting  court  house...:":!  ^iS  31 

Duluth  Gas  and  Water  company,   water   for   court   house .^7  so 

Ed  Clow    services  in  land  office  on  county   records 70  oo 

^■.   ;».^^'''"!:i*    ser\ices   in   land   office  on  county  records ::::  70  oO 

T^",   lu    2^^'^P|?one   company,    telephone  rent  for  clerk  of  court....  12  50 

nUnl  H    J^'^P^""^    company,    telephone  rent  for  county  attorney....  12  50 

n^^!h    J^^P^o"^    company,    telephone  rent  for  judge  of  probate..  12  .r.0 

1^       iu    Te^Phone    company,    telephone   rent   for  sheriff 19  «;o 

DoHth    ?!!''k''"*'    ^^mpany.    telephone  rent   for  county  auditor...:  12  fiO 

Duluth    Telephone    company,    telephone  rent  for  register  of  deeds..  12  50 

T     t;?^?,?"!;.^'''   ^^*'^'"  ^"^   niaterial   for  court  house. Je  40 

b  .T"  "J"-x.?.?''^'"^  ^"''  ^o"'t  house  grounds 4^ 

Kelly    &    Killonn.    hardware    for   court    house "  IZ 

East  , End  Ic-e  company,  ice  for  court  house : IZ 

George  K.  hw.-in.  washing  towels  for  court    house 1  r" 

H.    L.   Shepard,   plats  for  auditor...             ..                                       19  ™ 

Smith.  Farwell  &  Steele,  door  mats  for  court  "house. '.'.'."..'.: Voo 

T*.   Davis,  making  auditor's  plats                                                          ^Z  Z 

F.  Davi.«;.    transcribing    plats :..:... 1^  ^ 

S,rinThV'T"r°"^*''^^'"*^*'..''''"''*"^''  ^'^♦^'^  ^^'•vi'^e  for  court  house:.  2  00 

n    ",  5   Tr..T  ^""^'^  Rai^oad  company,  telegrams  for  attorney....  si 

Duluth  Trust  company,  office  rent  for   county    surveyor 20  00 

L.  J.  Taussig  &  Co..  office  rent  for  Jud  ge    Morris .......     5  48 

^•'    ,,  f.?^**^  ^  *1°'  °^^^  '■^*»t  for  county  attorney 32  00 

n«;  ^r^V^lT^'   ^^'cultural  report.    Kelsey  . I  oo 

Otto  Zebott.   agricultural  report  Hermann.. IS 

^-  5«*'r*"'  a^f^wltural  report  Culver |^ 

A.  E.  Beokman.  agricultural  report  Independence ";;::'"*""  |  oo 

Hearjr  Norman,  agrcultural  report  Fond  du  Lac *  «  no 

Andrew  Quaal.  agrcicxUtural  report  McDavitt™!::  V."  .:'.;*  ;:::::::  IS 


T 


Nl^ 


-h- 


'•'•  ft  - 


'  I- 


• 

__,-'- — -- 

t 

1 

1      III 

i 

iS^aH 


i 


^ 11 

Paul   Lepak.    agricultural   report  Gnesen ...VT'  •  ana 

William   Farr,   agricultural   report   Rice  Lake IZ 

Charles    Borg.    agricultural    report    Clinton IZ 

William  McComber,  agricultural  report  Canoaia ".'."".. IZ 

\ictor  Johnson,   agricultural   report  G  and    Lake ""■  s  no 

iu^*?''"'T,^^"^"'*"''^'  '•^PO'^  I"<^"strial .'.'.■'..■""  ^M 

Charles    Rosen,    agricultural    report   Duluth "■  1}1 

John    Courtney,    reward    for    arrest    of    A.    A.    Austin!    count'y.   prjl 

Duluth  Gas  and  Water  company,  water  for  court  house.            u  in 

Commei^cial    Light   and    Power   company,    lighting    court    house::::  5493 

Duluth  Trtist  company,  rent  for  county  surveyor ,a  XX 

L.  J.  Taussig  &  Co..  rent  for  county  attorney 3"  XX 

H.    E.    Hanson,    services   at   land    office    on    county   records..   7n  Z 

Commercial    Light   and    Power   company,   lighting  court  house::*'"  ei  fl-> 

Duluth    Gas   and    Water  company,    water    for   court    house                  '  97"^ 

Harry  Doran.  services  on  county  records ,1  ;^ 

u.  G.  Gillespie,  services  on  county  records \&Z 

Duluth    Telephone    company,    telephone  rent  for  register i«  un 

no  I!!^    Telephone    company,    telephone   rent  for  judge  of  probate!!  19  Z 

Du  uth    Telephone    company,    telephone    rent    for   sheriff....  iZ  Z 

Du  uth    Telephone    company,    telephone    rent    for    treasurer 19^ 

Du  uth    Telephone    company,    telephone   rent   for  attorney...    ^t  Z 

Duluth    Telephone    company,    telephone    rent    for    auditor.       19  ^ 

Duluth    Telephone    company,    telephone   rent   for  clerk  of  cciu'rt  " "  19    c„ 

Matt  Clark,   town  plats  for  auditor "  i--..  1..   50 

F.  Davis,  transcribing  plats  for  register  of  deeds '.'.'., l  ~(^ 

E.  F.   Barker,  rubber  stamps  for  county   officers ^  !^ 

H.  H.  Close,  labor  and  material  for  court   house ^,1^ 

Ernest  McCook.  c-harges  for  treasurer ?,  " 

L.  .1.  Taussig  &  Co..  office  rent  for  attorney '..■"■ " '^" 

Duluth    Trust   company,   office   rent   for  survevor f.^  ^ 

K.  L.  Polk  &  Co..  city  directories  for  county  officers c ,  ij; 

Henry   Lyes,   hauling  ashes  from   court   house ,  *Jx 

Marshall-Wells   Hardware     company,    handcuffs  for  sherili'   f  Kn 

Sf J„     T'   f^""""    ^"^'"^    ^''°'"''^'    labor  on  vault  for  clerk  of 'court::  2^ 

George  K.  Swan,  wa.shing  towels  for  court    house...  7  -a 

R.  Dinham.  mops  and  soap ^  f' 

iSv!\^T"'''"  'telegraph  company,"clcck  service  for 'coii'rt'ho'us^::  900 

East  End  Ice  company,  ice  for  court  house j:  "" 

R.  C.  Kruschke.  labor  and  material  fo'"  court   house.... «  ,- 

Silberstein   &   Bondy,   shades   for  court    house ,11} 

BilLson.   Congdon  &   Dickinson,   service-s    for    county    commissioii"e"r's  9^01 

Commei  cial  Light  and   Power  company.    lighting    court    house  si  0? 

L.  J.  Taussig  &  Co.,  office  rent  for  county    attorney....               ,,  xl 

Duluth    Trust   comptny,    offic-e   rent   for    surveyor ,£  XX 

J.   H.  Dibbell  &  Son,  labor  and  material  for  St.   Louis   Countv'Asl 

ricultural    society "  •ij'    Ag  „.. 

J.  B.  Noyes   lumber  for  St.  Louis  County   Agricul't'u'ral" .society:: ""    '  Inn  nn 

St.    Louis   County  Agricultural    society,    labor    and    material....  ^niui 

S.     .i^"'5  .^""""^^  ^^'"'^"'tural   society,    labor    and    material....       "'  r,XX  XX 

East  End  Ice  company,  ice  for  court  house •*"?  ?V 

Thcmias  Holder,  spring  water  for  court  house '.   J  r- 

Crowley  Electric   company,   electric  lamps   -^  ^ 

East  End  Ice  company,  ice   '  :? 

Henry  Lyes,  hauling  ashes   ^1;? 

Lewis  A.   Larson,  inspecting  boilers tZ 

Robert  Burnett,  labor  and  material X,. 

F.  Davis,  making  auditor's  plats  1-2-3 ,77  «„ 

F.  Davis,  services  on  plat  commission ^  a  XX 

L.  J.  Taussig  &  Co.,  office  rent  for  county  attorney  09  XX 

L.  J.  Taussig  &  Co.,  office  rent  for  Judge    Morris    't  Z 

Du  uth  Trust  company,  office  rent  for  county  surveyor  ...        on  Z 

Duluth  &  Iron  Range  Railroad,  telegrams  for  court  house Z 

Western  Union  Telegraph  company,  clock  service  and  telegrams"   ""  9  «« 

H    L    Shephard,  township  plats "•  ,,X  XX 

Ed  Clow,  services  in  land  office ^nZ 

5'- t"^^'..?'^^""'^"   *  Co-  plumbing  at  court  house  ."."..::::: 70  XX 

H.  L.  Shephard,  township  maps  for  auditor ,"  XX 

LaVaque  Paint  and  Wall  Paper  company,  gla^s,  etc.,  cou'rt'hoiise : '  ?? 

Kelley  Hardware  company,  hardware q  i^ 

George  K.   Swan,  washing  towels ^  fi 

P.  Davis,  making  plat.s.  auditors  out  lots    o^Z 

F.  Davis,  transcribing  map  register  of  deeds    7  ^a 

F.  Davis.  ser\'ice  on  plat  commission .iZ 

C.  W.  Thompson,  labor  and  material " ,1?  V7 

Thomas  Thut.  labor  and  material ..til 

Henry  Older,   labor  and  material    '.'.'.■.'. 7  ^iJ 

Burgess  Electric  company,  labor  and  material   ".".".'.'.'.   i  Z 

East  End  Ice  company,  ice  for  court  house  i  V- 

Western  Union  Telegraph  company,  clock  service  and  tele^ams""  -.no 

E.  F.  Barker,  rubber  stamps :  V; 

French  &  Bassett,  repairing  office  chair  o  i- 

Levi  Forest,  translating  deed  for  register  of  deeds   . . . . : r  Z 

James  Porter,  rebate  cm  personal  tax ,  VJ! 

Poirier  &  Nordstrom,  awning  for  court   house 1,  «« 

George  E.  Arbury,  telegrams  for  county  attornev   .,  V" 

Lakeside  Cemetery  association,   lands  Tor  county   cemetery    .::: -.oo  00 

George  K.  Swan,  washing  towels V  r^ 

Henry  Lyes,  hauling  ashes i'Z 

East  End  Ice  company,  ice ,  2- 

Poirier  &  Nordstrom,  awnings    ::..    ..:.:::: ,^7^ 

Crowley  Electric  company,   material  and  labor W  Z 

C.  Thomson,  material  and  labor  for  register  of  deeds  ....        99  ^ 

Zenith  City  Stamp  Works,  check  punch  for  sheriff : : , X  XX 

Zenith  City  Stamp  Works,  rubber  stamps    7- 

^•,*^\_^"^^P''''  I'^okins  up  mining  and   railroad  lands    !.:.    11  in 

Duluth  Trust  company,  office  rent  for  surveyor   iX  iX 

T     W.  Thompson,  labor  and  material  for    treasurer 117  XV 

L.  J   Taussig  &  Co.,  office  rent  for  cou  nty    attorey    : ..i  XX 

Western  Union  Telegraph  company,   clock  service  for  ccmrt  house"  2  oo 

Duluth  Gas  and  Water  company,  water  for  court  house   .         "''"^^•-  2  00 

Commercial   Light  and  Power  company,  light  for  court  hoiise: r,,  4? 

Gecn-ge  D.  Bernard,  vault  fi.vtures  for  auditor  and  clerk  of  court  "'  99,  aA 

F.  Davis,  re-establishing  section  and  quarter  section  corners  28-50-15  TOS  on 

F.  Davis,  services  as  plat  commissioner  , ^  XX 

F.    Davis,   re-establishing  section   corners   ,!a  XX 

F.  DavLs,  re-establishing  section  corners  12-51-18    ! iao  XX 

F.  Davis,  re-establishing  section  comers  2-50-16  i^lZ 

F.  Da\is,  re-e.stablishing  section  corners   30-51-13    «^  XX 

F.  Davis,  re-establishing  section  corners   34-51-16    f ^  XX 

J.  B.  Noyes  &  Co.,  lumber  for  agricultural  society ^XX  XX 

Kelley   Hardware   company,   hardware ow  m 

E.  F.  Barker,  rubber  stamps „  , „ 

Farrell  &  Sullivan,  water  and  gas  fixtures   '.'.'.'..:: 77  l^ 

Henry  Lyes,  hauling  ashes   ''^'i 

George  K.  Swan,  washing  towels  ,1, 

Duluth  Gas  and  Water  company,   water .f  J- 

Commercial  Light  and  Power  company,  lighting 7,  ,? 

L.  J.  Taussig  &  Co.,  office  rent  for  county  attorney    : 99  „„ 

Duluth  Trust  company,  office  rent  for  surveyor    oX  XX 

Henry  Lyes,  hauling  ashes "*"  Vx 

Thomas  Older,  spring  water  ■.'.■.■ ' :     *  ^" 

?.!i  ^^"}  ^  duluth  railroad,  services  for  flagman  sii'or't  "Line  iPar'k " " "  11  In 

Ed\vard  F.  Bowers,  labor  and  material ]\Z 

N.  W.   McMillan,  plumbing   ..     ..                             i^-r 

George  K.  Swan,  washing  towels '.'.".". ,  ?^ 

Panton  &  White,  brooms,  etc i" 

Western  Union  Telegraph  company,  clock  service   ..:.!!:: 9;;^ 

East  End  Ice  company,  ice .  r  Vx 

John  L  Russell,  back  salary  night  watchman  ...!!!!!!!!!  ! 47=  XX 

R.  S.  Cowden,  back  salary,  fireman 2^2 

F.  Davis,  making  description  blanks oX"x 

P.  Davis,  etabllshing  corners  HZ 

F.  Davis,  establishing  corners  :*  X? 

George  E.  Long,  services  on  county  rcH^ords «-  XX 

N.  A.  Linderberg.  services  on  county  records   on  ^7 

C.  J.  Hailing,  services  on  county  records    ,,  gi 

George  E    Arbury,  traveling  expenses  ccjunty   attorm.y    .::::": Ti  ?« 

William  Elder,  type-writing  county  attorney  {',  Xi 

John  Haeley.  conveyance  for  prisoners " -"„, 

Duluth  Paper  company,  toilet  paper  court    house 1700 

George  D.  Barnard  &  Co..  steel  omnibus  treasurer  104  on 

E.  Morcome.  tele^ams  county  attornev " a^ 

John  Owens,  livery,  clerk  district  court -  , 'j 

W.  G.  Gillespie,  work  on  tax  duplicates  for  auditor   ..   :: 4   j, 

R.  H.  Doran,  work  on  tax  duplicate  for  auditor IZ 

A.  John,  making  assc^s.smcnt  of  land,  town  of  Industrial     tZ 

A.  Deif.s,  labor  on  court  house I"' 

C.  H.  oppel  &  .Son.  soap  and  g<.ld  dust,  court  house*!! n  -a 

Crowley  Electric  company,  electric  lamps,  court  house. .       14  xa 

Western  Union  Telegraph  company,  clock  .service,  court  hoiise:::::::  2  00 

POSTAGE  ANND  EXPRESS. 

Phineas  Ayer,  judge  of  probate .' •  .„  r, 

L.  H.  Whipple,  county  treasurer  r^A  'll 

C.  Halden,  county  auditor  onnil 

P.  J.  Borgstrom,  register  of  deeds   177  co 

John  Owens,  clerk  of  district  court 10700 

George  E.  Arbury,  county  attorney ,7?? 

W.  W.  Butchart,  sheriff  // \ ,?J  JJ 

W.  H.  Stultz,  superintendent  of  schools .'... ,',' '  ] ',  ]  [  ]  \  \  [  79  JJ 

$1,308  29 
OLD  SOLDIERS'  BURIAL  ACCOUNT, 

J,  W.  Stewart,  expenses  burial  James  E.  Fosset   $  35  00 

APPROPRIATIONS. 

D.  A.  Petre,  appropriation  for  Immigration  association  $  100  00 

ASSESSORS  OF  UNORGANIZED  TOWNS.  ' 

Alexander  Fraser,  assessor's  fees «  .,c  -„ 

W.  H.  Bassett,  assessor's  fees  l-'l  Z 

c.  A.  Peterson,  clerk  for  assessor -:!!!:'.:::::'::.:::::::  mo  m 

$1,033  50 
RECAPITULATION. 

Total  amount  orders  and  warrants  issued    and    charged 

to  the  county  revenue  fund "  t  ififi  nsj  cmi 

Total  amount  of  orders  and  warrants  paid    and      can"  • 
Tntaf  l^^^,^  the  county  treasurer  during  this  fiscal  year.$163.835  37 
Total  amount  of    orders    and  warrants  issued  during 
Tot Arj^m!.r«r  *"f  redeemed  during  this  fiscal  year. .      3,255  87 

fi.^'2°"'^^  °^    °^^^^^    and  warrants  Issued  during 

this  fiscal  year  and  redeemed  uunns,   .^-v -«  -^ 

IoC,d<9  aO 

Outstanding  orders  and  warrants  Issued     during      thig  :-■  •■-    '" 

fiscal  year  '••";-^;^^;^^;;^ .... t     w  46 


V 


»'*ni'  •!>«■    1 1 


exe  ! 


1 
•i 

1 

1 

1 

i 


K^  ■     »" 


»■  '» 


\ 

i 

1 

■ 

». 

, 

" 

^ 

■ft* 

1 

'. 

' 

1 
1 

i 

A 


I«tf 


^•» 


f  "^ 


-i^  » 


12 


SCHOOL  FUND. 
H.  G.  Webster,  fine  imposed  on  Peterson  


'-L'j:i-^:l|^Aityii^j^^^'j 


THE    DULUTH    EVEyiyg    nER.VLD:      TnrnSDAY,    MARCH 


18,    1897. 


00 


COUNTY  PHYSICIANS. 


Dr.  .\.  J. 
Dr.  John 
Dr.  C.  G. 
Dr.  J.  B. 
Dr.  J.  R. 
Dr.  C.  W. 
Dr.  D.  C. 
Dr.  C.  W. 


Braden  — 
Pearson  . . . 
Shipman   .. 

Noble   

Humphrey 

Miller 

Rood  

Moore 


.$  1 


,500  00 

;<.")0  00 

5(J0  00 
450  00 
201)  00 

300  m 

300  00 
75  00 


I 


%  3,675  00 


OVERSEER  OF  COUNTY   POOR    F.\RM. 

A.  F.  Rockwell   j      750  qo 

SEX^RET.\RY  OF  BOARD  OF  ASSOCIATED  CHARITIES. 

J.  W.  Miller j  1.020  00 

INTEREST  ON  COUNTY   POOR  ORDERS. 


I..  H.  Whipple  .. 
M.  H.  Wardwell 


212  67 
64  23 


,|      276  90 


POOR  FARM.  PERSONAL  PROPERTY. 


P.   Sullivan,   two  cows   

James  Pilkey.  one  cow  

Ernest  Miller,  cows   


75  00 

30  00 

135  00 

240  00 


SUPERINTENDENTS  OF  POOR. 


A.  P.  Cook  

James  M.  Gray  

Charles  Shoeran   , . . 


SUPERINTENDENTS  COUNTY  POOR  BILLS  ALLOWED. 


W.  W.  Brown 
J.  P.  Noble  . . . . 

C.  G.  Shipman 

D.  C.  Rood  ,... 


STATE  INSTITUTIONS. 

A.  C.  Ropers,  superintendent,  fur  Anna  Stevenson  J 

I.  N.  Tate,  superintendent  deaf,  for  Anna  C  Johnson  

I.  N.  Tate,  superintendent  deaf,  for  Maud  Hossler  

I.  N.  Tate,  superintendent  deaf,  for  Eva  Gorton    

I.  N.  Tate,  superintendent  deaf,  for  Sadie  Caploe   

J.   n.  Dow.  .superintendent   blind,  for  Emma  Branden   

A.  C.  Ropers,  superintendent  institute  feeble   minded,    for  Olga     Hol- 
strom   " 


.$  1.290  00 

noo 

ao 

720 

00 

$2,910  00 

$   201 

92 

lOS 

29 

149  99 

91 

63 

clothing 
tobacco    . 


551  83 


30  00 

29  t'l 

30 

20 

25 

28 


14 

0» 
90 
49 


30  00 


193  5S 


MISCELLANEOUS  COUNTY  POOR  FARM  EXPENSES. 

John  Peterson,  labor 

Fuda  Lardsoerk,  labor 

Helen   Johnson,   labor    

K.  Dinham.  groceries  

Simon  Clark  grocery,  groceries   

L.   J.   Klippen.    groceries    

J.  C.   Peri->-.   feed 

J.   H.   Constantine,    repairing  harness,  etc 

1.  Freimuth.  dry  goods  

Meining  Hardware  company,  hardware 

Bayha  &  Co..  mattresses  

A.  Hjelm.  cutting  wood  

F.  A.  Holder,  wixxl   

Elder  &  Bowers,  blacksmithing  

Duluih  Telephone  company,  telephone  rent 

Schiller.   Hubl>ard  &  Co.,  tobacco   

A.  Wieland,  shoes 

Charles   W.    Ericson,   clothing    

John    Peters<^>n,    labor 

Tilly  Lardsoerk,  labor 

Jennie  Young,   labor 

F.  K.  Hicks,  meat 

J.  C.  Helm,   assignee,  groceries   

Simon  Clark  Grocery  company,   groceries 

R.  Dinham.  groceries 

N.  O.  Nelson,  groceries 

Union  Mercantile  company,  groceries 

J.  C  Perry,  feed   \, 

l?loedell  &  Ebeling.  cots  and  pillows   

Mfining  Hardware  company,  hardware 

I.  Fi-eimuth.  dry  goods ] 

A.    Poirier,   wood   

T.   A.  Older,   wiwd    .......!..." 

Karl  Kruger,  wot>d \\ 

A.    Hjelm.    wood    \\\ 

Elder  &  Bowers,  blacksmithing 

Charles  W.  Ericson.  clothing "" 

Williamson  &    Mendenhall.   clothing    ..... 

John  Peterson,  labor \\\\ 

Tilly  Landsoerk.  lal>or 

Jennie  Y<>ung,  lal>or ." 

T.  K.  Hicks,  meat   

J.  C.  Perry,   feed 

R.  Dinham.  groceries .", 

Hill  &  Fergusson.  groceries   \\\\ 

M.  M.  Gasser,  groceries \\\\ 

.\.  Hjelm.  wood !...!!! 

Karl  Kruger,  wood  ' . ,  * 

A.   Poirier.  wood 

T.  A.   Halden.   wood    '.'.'.'..    .......'. 

Elder  &  Bowers,  blacksmithing 

Meining  Hardware  company,  hardware ..,\ 

J.  H.  Constantine,  repairing  harness 

I.  Freimuth.  dry  goods  \'' 

Williamson   &    Mendenhall.    clothing 

Charlt-s  W.  Ericson,  clothing 

J''hn  Peterson,  lalx>r .'.!.'."* 

Tilly  Lardsoerk.   labor ..^. ......    ... 

Jenni**  Yourrg,   labor 

Mrs.   Bliss,  labor ..,...!,.. 

Thomas   K.   Hicks,   meat 

Noonan  &  Lynch,  groceries 

Richard  Dinham,  ?rroceries 

M.  M.  Gasser,  groceries   !,.!!! 

J.  C.  Perry,  feed 

Meining  Hardware  company,  hardware 

A.  Hjelm,   wood   !!!!!!!!!! 

Elder  &  Bowers,  blacksmithing 

Duluth  Telephone  company,  telephone  rent 

Graves-Manley  company,    insurance    

Williamson  &   Mendenhall,   clothing '" 

Charles  W.  Ericson.  clothing ,...,.!!.' 

Schiller  Cigar  company,  tobacco 

John  Peterson,  laV)or  ." 

Maggie    .Sheedy,    lai»or 

Josephine  Erick.'son,  labor 

Jennie  Young,  labor   

R.  Dinham.  groceries 

H.    H.    Rathbun,   groceries    ......'.'.'. 

M.    .M.    Gasser.    groceries 

♦  >lsi»n  &  Peterson,  groceries   ....'. 

Thomas  K.   Hicks,   meat    

Cox   Bros.,    meat    

J.  C.  Perr>-,  feed 

Meinin-g  Hardware  C(jmpany,  hardware 

I.   Freimuth.  dry  goods  

LaVaque  Paint  and  Wall   Paper  company  ........ ., 

Elder  &  Bowers,  blacksmithing .'.'.'.* 

A.   Hjelm.   wood 

Williams^»n  &   Mendenhall,    clothing    !!!.!!.!!!.... 

Charles  W.  Ericson,  clothing 

A.  Wieland,  shoes 

John   Peterson,   labor 

Maggie    Sheedy,    laljor    .....!.!!!.!..!.!!!! 

Josephine   Erickson,    labor 

Cox  Bros.,  meat 

T.  K.  Hicks,  meat  .'.."!!.'.!!'.!    '.",'.'.".'.".'."..".".* 

R.  Dinham,  groceries 

B.  Linden,  groceries .,...,.  

R.   H.   Rathbum,   groceries    ..!...!.!...!..    !!.!.,.'.'..!.'.', 

M.   M.  Gasser,  groceries   ...     .  

J.    C.    Perry,   feed .. 

Elder  &   Bowers,  blacksmithing   

J.  H.  Constantine,  repairing  harness,  etc ', 

Meining  Hardware  company,  hardware ". 

M.   W.  Turner,  wagon   

A.   Hjelm,  wood   ,'!.,.!.'!.'." 

Kelly  &  Killoren.  hardware  

Charles  W.  Erickson,  clothing 

William.sf>n  &  Mendenhall,  clothing '..'.V.V.V.V.V.V    i!!'.!'.!!:; 

Schiller  Cigar  company,  tobacco 

John  Peterson,  labor  ., 

Maggie    Sheedy.    labor    

Ji>sephine  Erickson.   labor   ..,...,., 

Helen  Mollinger,   labor    

Bert  DeNewton,  labor  .'. .'.'   '.\\\, .......'.'.'   \\\ 

Minnesota  Mercantile  company,  groceries 

R.   H.   Rathburn.  groceries   .'.!"!.!.!..... 

M.    M.  Gasser,  groceries 

Richard  Dinham.  grroceries 

Cox  Brothers,  meat  \ 

.    K.   Hicks,   meat   

J.  C.   Perry,  feed   "  .'.'....,    

I.  Freimuth.  dr>-  goods ..'. 

^',!J'^  t  Killoren.  hardware w."  i::::::::::'".:.:. 

Elder  &   Bowers,   blacksmithing   

Duluth  Telephone  company,  telephone  rent ....*. 

Williamson  &  Mendenhall,  clothing .' 


30  00 
20  Ort 
12  (10 
57  15 
105  09 
33  00 
47  SO 
17  00 
3S  67 
15  49 
9  mt 
35  .W 


30 
24 
7 
9 
12 
71 


00 
50 
80 
lO 
55 
00 


30  00 

20  00 

8  00 

55  <(0 


79 
25 
45 
79 
60 


13 

39 
123 
U 
35 
37  35 
15  0.-, 
23  75 
28  39 
153  OO 
120  W 
75  0<» 
SO  00 
15  00 
.58  /,5 
IS  75 
30  1)0 
20  00 
12  OO 


59 

;{5 

50 
2.> 
74 
55 
75 
34 
135 
15 
29 

6 
17 

8 


34 
10 
00 
,']tl 

70 

•to 

00 
50 
00 
25 
95 
5,5 
2S 
75 


'  Charles  W.  Erickson.  clothing  

'A.    Wieland,    shoes    

I  Schiller  Cigar  company,   tobacco 

'John  Peterson.   labor   

j  Maggie  Sheedy.   labor   

1  Helen   Mollinger,   labor    

Burt    Newton,    labor 

;  Frank  CotninskI,  labor  

■  E.   D,  Johnson,   labor    

R.  H,   Rathburn,  groceries   

Olson  &  Peterson,  groceries  

B,    Liuden.    groceries    

R,    Dinham.    groceries    

George   D.   Munsey.   meat    

A,   Booth  Packing  company,  fish   

J,  C,  Perry,  feed  

W.   P.   Heimbach,   lumber   

E.  J,  Bunker,  lumber  

Kelly  Hardware  company,   lumber 

I.    Freimuth,   dj-y   goods   

J,    H.    Constantine,    harness 

Elder  «Sr  Bowers,  blacksmithing  

Smith  &   Smith,   medicine   

Williams(m   &    Mendenhall.   clothing    . 

Charles  W.  P^rickson,  clothing  

Schiller  Cigar  company,  tobacco   

John   Peterson,   lalior   

Hellen    Mollinger,    labor    

Maggie   Sheed.v,    labor   

George  I,    Munsey.   meat    

M.   M.  Gasser,  groceries   

R,   H,   Rathburn.  groceries   

Richard    Dinham.   groceries    

J,    C.    Perry,   feed    

Kelly  Hardware  company,  hardware., 

H,  M.  Wel>ber.  crockery  

Graves-Manle.v  Agency,   insurance   

Smith  &   Smith,   medicine   

Elder  &    Bowers,    blacksmithing    

C,  W.  Erickson.  clothing 

Williams  &  Mendenhall. 
Schiller  Cigar  company, 

John   Peterson,    labor   

Maggie   Sheed.v,   labor   

Helen   Mollinger.    labor   

Mrs.  J.   D.  Wright,   labor  

Richard    Dinham.   groceries   

P.  L.  Johnson,  groceries  

R.  H.  Rathburn,  groceries  

Henry  Foize,  groceries    

.M,  M.  Buffer*  Co.,  meat   

George  S.   Munsey.   meat   

J.  C.  Perry,  feed   

P'Ider  &  Rowers,  blacksmithing 

Meining  Hardware  company,  hardware 

J.  G.   Harris,   veterinary  surgeon    

Duluth  Telephone  company,  telephone  rent 

Williamson   &    Mendenhall,    clothing 

C.   W.    Erickson.   clothing    

Schiller  Cigar  company,  tobacco   

I.    Freimuth.   dry   goods    

John   Peterson,   labor   

Maggie   Sheedy,   lal>or    

Keirn    Budrisk,   labor 

Julia   Bilk,   labor   

Maggie   O'  Keef e,   laljor    

C.   H.   Oppell,   groceries   

Richard    Dinham.    groceries    

Gust   Bergquist.  groceij^es   

McEiver    Brothers,    groceries    

M.   .M.  Gasser,  groceries   

R.   H.   Rathburn.  groceries   

Olsen  &   Peterson,   groceries    

J.   C.   Perry,   feed    

George  S.  Munsey.  meat  

Elder  &   Bowers,   Idacksmi thing   

Kell.v   Hardware  company,   hardware 

F.   Scott  &  Co..  medicine   

C.    W.    Erickson.   clothing   

Wiliamson    &    Mendenhall,   clothing '..,. 

A.   Wieland.   shoes    

Schiller   Cigar   company,    tobacco 

X.    M.    Buffer  meat    

•John   Peterson,   labor   

Maggie   Sheedy,    labor   

Sween    Budyniski.    lalior    

M.    M.    Gasser.   groceries    

R.  H.   Uathlmrn,  groceries  

Richard   Dinham,  groceries   

Sutphin  C(mipany.  empty  pork  barrels 

J.  C.  Perr>-.  feed    

W,   P.   Heimbach,   lumber 

I.    Freimuth,    dry  goods    

Smith  &  Smith,  medicine  

.\.  Poirier.  wood  

Peter  Grant,   wood    

J.  H.  Constantine.  harness   

Elder  &  IJowers.  lilacksmithing  

.Albert  Ostrich,   blacksmithing    

Kelly   Hardware  company,   hardware 

Duluth   Paper  company,   stationery- 

Charles    Kugler,    labor    

Charles   W,    Erickson.   clothing    

Williamson   &    Mendenhall,    clothing 


MISCELLANEOUS    COUNTY  POOR   FIND. 


Smith 
Colvin 
R.    S. 
D.    P. 
A.    P. 


& 


Smith,    nudicine.., 

Rolib,   lumber 

Li'rcli,    conveyance,. , 

Fox.    conveyance 

Cook.    |)ostage 


44  00 

30  00 


20 

12 

4 


00 
00 
00 


50  31 
20  75 


for    coutn.v    physician 


of  poor.. 


60 
53 
41 
24 
60 
18 
12 


59 
75 
97 
89 
00 
35 
50 


48  00 
20  25 
30  00 
14  80 
.30  00 
20  00 

8  00 

4  00 

28  90 

:55  85 

35  95 
22  25 
50  58 
13  37 
34-  50 

49  40 

50  09 

36  27 
16  50 

00 
75 
90 
40 
00 


poor. 


poor. 


97 
16 
58 
6 
30 
20  00 


0<J 
90 
80 
75 
4G 


12 
58 
19 
30 
22 
30  50 
38  70 
55  29 

10  25 

11  30 

12  67 
95  00 
28  50 

7  24 
30  95 

17  25 

18  35 
30  00 

20  00 
6  fK> 
3  33 

18  00 
27  :»o 
37  90 

33  91 

34  75 
47  34 
12  27 

21  25 
5 
8 

14 
12 
31 


Silberstein   &    Bondy.   dry  goods 

J.    L.   Thwing.   blanks   and   stationery 

Duluth    Paper    company,    stati<mery 

^  Duluth    Telephone    company,    telephone    rent. 
Duluth    Telephone    company,    telephone    rent 

It.  C.  Sloan,  otnce  rent  for  county  physician 

Home  Bros.,  office  rent  for  assistant  superintendent 

Maternity    hospital,    rent 

Alexander*  Co.,  labor 

Smith    &    Smith,    medicine 

A.   P.    Cook,    postage  and   express 

Duluth    Paper    company,    stationery 

H,    G,    Jfihnson,    grain 

John    Wallace,    draying 

R.  C.  Sloan,  office  rent  for  county  physician 

Home    Bros.,    assistant    superintendent   of    poor.    rent. 
W.  M.  Prindle  &  Co.,  office  rent  for  superintendent    of 

Maternity  hospital,  rent 

R,  S,  Lerch.  conveyance  for  poor 

I>.   P.   Fox,   conveyance  for  poor 

Peaslee  &   Victor,  coal  for  assistant  superintendent    of 

D.  P.  Fox,  conveyance  for  poor 

R.    S.    Lerch,    conveyance   for    poor 

Alexander  &   Co,,   furnishing  labor 

D.    M.    White,    furnishing   labor 

Dr.  A.  G.  Gibson,  medical  attendance \     ,\\\ 

Duluth    Paper    company,    stationery.. 

J.    L.   Thwing.    books    for   superintend^'nt 

Herman    Beier.   office  rent  for  superintendent ...... 

'Some  Bros.,  office  rent  for  .assistant  superintendent .. 

R.  C.  Sloan,  office  rent  for  county  physician 

Maternity    hospital,    rent    of    hospital '......... 

R.   S.   T.,erch,   conveyance  for  poor \\ 

Webster  Dunning,  conveyance  for  poor ....".!."! 

D.   P.   Fox.  conveyance  for  jioor ..'........ 

I'easlee   &   Victor,   coal  for  assistant   superintendent   of   poor's   office 

W,  M.  Prindle  &  Co..  office  rent  for  superintendent   of   poor 

Home   Bros.,  office  rent  for  assistant  sunerintendent    of    poor 

Fi.  C.  Sloan,  office  rent  for  county  physician .... 

Woman's   hospital,   rent   for  hospital 

Xels  J.  Benson,  medicine  for  county  poor ...... 

S.   O.   Sterrett.   medicine  for  county  poor .\\ 

Smith  &  Smith,  medicine  for  county  poor .... 

Alexander   &   Co..    furnishing   labor  for  county  poor. .   .....,..,.    .... 

<;reat   Northern    Railroad   company,   freight  for  county  po«)r.. ..    ....' 

H.  (;.  Johnson,  draying  for  county  poor 

John  Pearson.   M.    D.,   medicine  for  county   poor . .    ...!."." 

A.  G.  Braden,  medicine  for  county  poor , . ...    !...!.!. 

Duluth    Telephone    company,    telephone  rent  for  superintendent 

county  poor • 


of 


telephone 
telephone 


rent 
rent 


for 
for 


county   i)hysiclan. 
asistant    superin- 


express     for 
stationery 


superintendent    of    poor. 


60 
15 
00 

ro 

50 


T>uluth    Telephone    company, 
Duluth    Telephone    company, 

tendent   of  county  poor 

.\.  P.  Cook,   postage  and 
Duluth    Paper    ct)mpany, 

R.  S.   Lerch,  conveyance 

D.    P.    Fox,    conveyance "'  ." 

R.    Downey,    conveyance 

H.    G,    Johnson,    dray ,..."     "     \ 

Alexander   &.   Co.,    furnishing   labor .."......... 

W.   M.   Prindle,  office  rent  for  superintendent 

Home  Bros.,  office  rent  for  assistant  superintendent    of  "poor 
R.  C.  Sloan,  office  rent  for  county  physician 

Woman's  hospital,   rent '.'.'.'".**.'. 

A.    P.    Cook,    postage 

J.   L.  Thwing.   blanks ■"■    " 

Duluth    Paper    company,    stationery 

Smith    &    Smith,    medicine ..,...,.. 

A.    J.    Braden,    medicine 

John    Peai-son,    medicine 

M.   M.   (Jasser,   seed 

R.  S.  Lerch,  conveyance 

D.    P.    Fox,    conveyance ] 

K,     Downey,    conveyance .'!!!!!! 

H.  G.  Johnson,  draying ...'.". 

A.    J.    Braden.    medicine *.'". 

Smith   &   Smith,    medicine . 

John    Pearson,    medicine 

-Mexander   *    ri^.,    furnishing   labor.!!'     V.". 

F.  A.  Cohvf-ll.  rent  for  superintendent 
\\.  M.  Prindle,  rent  for  superintendent 
Home   Bros.,    rent    for  assistant 

Woman's  hosjiital,   rent 

La  Vaque  Paint  and  Wall 
perintendent  of  poor,.    ., 


22  70 
4  00 
8  55 
30  00 
20  10 
10  00 
25  50 
15  00 
25  50 
42  S«i 
32  iO 
20  00 
47  15 
53  SI 
13  60 


poor. . , 


24 
12 

28 


43 
•30 
50 


28  34 
16  32 


5 
17 

18 

16 

39 

9 


S5 
75 
20 
66 

95 
05 


of    poor. 


30  00 
10  00 
20  00 
68  05 
39  80 
32  87 
41  95 
30  80 
6 


» 

18 
00 
50 
00 
SO 
75 
75 


20 

40 

2 

14 

37 

16 

9 

30  00 
20  00 
10  00 
4  00 
28  45 
22  35 
59  50 
28  03 
14  47 
53  03 
117  35 
13 


Duluth   Paper  company,   stationery  for  superintenedent  of 
A.   p.   Cook,   postage  for  superintendent    of   poor. 

M.  M.  Gasser,  seed 

Home   Bros.,    seed 

R.  H.  Rathbun,  seed !! 

William   P.   Raley,   seed 

Peaslee   &    Victor,    seed !!.. 

Peaslee  &  Victor,  coal  for  assistant  superintendent 

R.  S,  Lerch,  conveyance  for  poor 

E.    Downie,    conveyance   for   poor ....     !.! 

H,   G.   Johnson,   draying   for  poor 

Webster  Dunning,  draying- for  poor .!!. 

Dr.   H.   B.  Allen,  medicine  for  poor 

Smith   &   Smith,   medicine  for  poor !!!!    !!!!     !!! 

A.  J.  Braden.  medicine  for  poor !!!     !!!! 

John    Pearson,   medicine   for  poor !......, 

Alexander   &    Co,,    furnishing  labor   for  poor....   .'..'.*."'" 

Woman's   Home,    rent    for   hospital .'. 

R.   C.    Sloan,   office  rent  for  county  physician....    ..!.. 

Home  Bros.,  office  rent  for  assistant  superintendent    of 
T.  A.  Caldwell  office  rent  for  assistant 

A.   P.   Cook,   postage 

J.    L.   Thwing,   blanks   for  assistant 
Christie  &  Collier,   stationery  for 
Duluth    Paper  company,   stationery   for 
P«>or ,.     ^ 

Duluth    Telephone    company,    telephone  rent  for   a!.ssistan"t  "superin 

tendent    of    poor 

Duluth    Telephone    company,    telephone 

tendent    of    poor 

Duluth    Telephon-^ 
Smith  &  Smith 


superintendent 


poor 

of  poor.. 


1 

2 
47 
12 
61 

6 

2 

3 
42  00 

2  00 
26  15 

1  00 
10  00 

7  75 
20  00 
10  00 

9  60 
45  00 
;?0  00 
12  00 


superintendent   of    poor 

assist   ant   superintendent    of   poor- 
assistant  superintendent   of 


rent   for   assistant   superin- 


22 

4 

60 

17 


50! 
55  i 
50  ' 
50 

70 


12  50 


poor. 


3 
41 
12 

29 
24 
10 
36 


50 
50 
50 
50 
85 
40 
79 


30  00 
20  00 


poor 


4 

10 
6 
42 
31 
16 
31 
21 
49 
17 
34 
27 
15 


00 
00 
00 
02 
10 
25 
31 
40 
45 
46 
50 
25 
00 


18  02 


05 

85 

25 

10 

00 

7  34 

30  00 

20  00 


5 
47 
22 
14 
11 


12 
105 
45 
35 
12 
48 


00 
30 
SO 
00 
50 
05 


9  68 
31  97 

3  70 
60  00 


1.35 
26 
17 

6 
21 

5 
15 
47 
50 


00 
40 
SO 
00 
7S 
13 
00 
85 
00 


$  7,106  79 


:;s 

121 
11 


65 

2S 
00 
50 


00 


1 

67 

.4   ir, 

IS  07 

7  2.'> 

15  00 

12  00 
45  00 

13  00 
119  36 

5 

5 

4 

6 
15 
12 


43 
33 
00 
00 
00 
00 
40  00 


company,    telephone    rent    for    county    physician 

medicine  for  county  poor 

A.  J.  Braden,  medicine  for  county  poor !!!!!!!!. 

John   Pearson,  medicine  for  county  poor !!!!!! 

J.  :M.  O.  Tufte,  M.  D.,  medical  attendance    for 
R.  S.   Lerch.  conveyance  for  poor 

E,  Downie,    conveyance    for   poor 

D.  P.   Fox,  conveyance  for  poor 

W.  W.   Browne,  conveyance  for  poor 

F.  O.  Palmer,  wood  for  poor 

Alexander   &    Co.,    furnishing   labor   for   poor... 

Thomas  G.   White   &   Co.,   freight 

Northern   Pacific   Railroad   company,   freight 

H.  C.  Kendall,  dray 

Duluth  Paper  company,  stationery   

A.   P.  Cook,  express  and  postage   '. 

T.  A.  Caldwell,  office  rent  superintendent  poor  ... 
Home  Bros.,  office  rent  assistant  superintendent 

R.  C.  Sloan,  office  rent  county  physician 

Woman's   hospital,    rent    .,,.,!!!!!!!!!! 

A,  P.  Cook,  telegrams  ...,.!!!!!!!! 

H.  G.  Johnson,  dray !!!!,,!!!!!!!! 

E.  Downie,    conveyance    ......!!!!!!!!!! 

D,  F.   Fox.   conveyance    !!!!.!.!.!!! 

P.   S.   Lerch.  conveyance    !!!,!!!!.,!!! 

M.  Stewart  &  Co.,  conveyance !,!!!!!!..!!!! 

Woman's  home,  rent  

W.  M,  Prindle  &  Co..  rent   !!!!!.,..,..,..!!! 

H,  C.  Sloan,  rent  county  physician  .,  !!!!!!!!!! 

Duluth    Paper   company,    stationery    .,'.!!!!!!!!! 

C.  W.    Ericson,    clothing    ,,...,!!!!! 

Smith  &  Smith,  medicine  ..,,.,..,!!!!!! 

John    Pearson,    medicine    !!!!!!!!.!!!!!!! 

.\.    J,    Braden.    medicine    ..'    !!!!! 

J.  E.  Bowers,  medical  service .!!!!!! 

H.   Speier,   medical  service   !!!!!  !!!!!! 

W,  AV.  Brown,  conveyance   \\\\ 

Martin   Tims,   dray    ....,,....!,..!!!!!! 

H.  G.  Johnson,  dray   .!!!!!!!!!!! 

E.  Downie.  conveyance   !!!!.!!!!! 

R.  S.  Lerch,  conveyance   !!!!!! 

D.  P.  Fox.  conveyance   * !.!!!!!!!! 

W.  H.  Alexander,  furnishing  labor  !,!!!!! 

A.J.  Braden.   medicine   !!!.!!!!! 

.lohn    Pearson,    medicine    ,,,.... 

Smith  &  Smith,  medicine ....,,.,..,!!!! 

Donaldson  &  Kespehl,  artificial  limb  .!!!!!! 

R,    C.   Sloan,   office  rent   physician    !!!! 

Home  Bros.,  office  rent  assistant  physician !!! 

Woman's  hospital,  rent 

Duluth  Paper  company,  stationery  superintendent  poor  !   !!!! 

i:)ukith  Telei>hone  company,   rent  telephone  superintendent  poor   ...! 
Duluth  Telephone  company,  rent  telephone  assistant  superintendent 

poor 

Duluth  Telephone  company,  rent  telephone  county  phy.sician  

E.  Downie,  conveyance   

J.  H.  Dil)l)ell  &  Son.  conveyance       !! 

R.  P.  Lerch.  conveyance   !!!! 

M,  Stewart  &  Co..  conveyance !!.!!!!!!!! 

A.  P.  Cook,  postage  ! ! ! ! 

Duluth  Paper  company,  stationery   !!!! 

W.  H.  Alexander,  transfer   !!!! 

Thomas  G.    White,   furnishing  labor    ,, !!!! 

H^  G.  Johnson,  labor  and  conveyance  

W.   M.  Prindle  &  Co.,  office  rent  superintendent  poor  

Home  Rro.s.,  office  rent  assistant  superintendent  poor  

Woman's  hospital,  rent  

K.  C.   Sloan,  rent  for  county  physician !!! 

Smith  &  Smith,  medicine 

A,    J.    IJraden.    medicine    !!.' 

J.    J.    Ekiund,    medical   attendance 

Smith  &  Smith,  medicine  

J.  G.   Hunker,  medicine \\ 

R.    Humphrey,   medicine !!!!!!! 

John  Pearson,  medicine 

A.  J.   Braden,  medicine 

A.  J.  Braden,  expen.ses  to  Red  Wing 

H.  T.  Dinham.  expenses  to  Red  Wing.. 

J.   W.   Miller,  expenses  to  Red  Wing   ,    

A.  P.  Cook,   postage  for  superintendent 

Donaldson  &   Kespehl.  artificial  imb 

D.  P.  Fox.  conveyance .• 

R.   S.   Lerch,   conveyance 

K.  Downie,  conveyance 

M.  Stewart  <&  Co,,  conveyance '. 

Alexander  &  Co..  furnishing  labor   

Home  Bros.,  office  rent  assistant  superintendent    

W.   M.   Prindle.   office  rent    , 

R.  C.  Sloan,  office  rent  ph.vsician 

Woman's  ho.spital  rent 

Duluth.   Missabe  &  Northern,   transportation    

Thomas  G,  White,   furnishing  labor   ., 


12 
12 
31 


20  00 
5  00 
2  00 

60  00 

2  00 

10  00 

4  00 
20  00 

11  00 
10  28 

5  06 

3  00 
1  49 

10  00 
22  50 


26  00 
45  00 
22  50 
15  00 

1  72 
25  75 

6  70 
5  00 

20  00 

2  00 
2  00 
2  00 
1  50 

10  00 

15  00 
30  00 

16  00 
12  00 
20  00 

5  00 

7  30 
75  00 
15  00 
24  00 
45  00 

70 
12  50 


12 

12 

14 

2 

14 


TEMPORARY     RELIEF     BILLS     AL- 
LOWED. 


45 
58 
9 
6 
16 
62 
19 


00 
00 
50 
75 
00 
00 
65 
5  00 
36  00 
8  17 
70  00 
20  00 
12  00 
15  00 
45  00 
52  00 
00 


50 


3 
23 

6  75 
20  00 


12 
15 
45 

1 

12 

118 

7 

4 
12 

5 
40 

12 
12 


00 
00 
00 
90 
30 
19 
85 

IO 

00 
00 
21 

50 
50 


17 
14 


of  poor .... 

of    pqor 

superintendent    of 


poor. 


Paper  company.   lettering  door  for    su- 


4 
8 

3  75 
42  00 

4  00 
4  00 

4  00 
25  80 
20  00 
12  00 
15  00 
45  00 

2  25 
18  50 

2  19 
32  50 
20  00 

5  00 
148  7-1 

54  00 

10  00 
5  00 

3  0-1 

20  00 

21  35 
5  00 

16  95 

11  25 
10  00 

12  00 
45  00 

1  50 


Mrs,    Matt  Johnson    .. 

Mrs.  Ryan   , 

George  Storey   

Mrs.   James   Vermette 

Fi-ank   Glabaka    

Abraham  Fish   

Mrs.    Ellen    Rodgers    . . 

John  Salila 

Mrs.  A.  McLeod   

Mrs.  Amanda  Brula  ... 

Annie   Trevathau    

(5us  Anderson    

.\nnie  Anderson   

Tilda   Bousier    

J\lis.   Chipman   

Gus  Puhakka    

Mrs.  Dinah  Hanson  ... 

Mr.s.   R.    WiKson    

Mrs.  Sebastein    

Nic   Pedro   

J.  J.  Holland 

J.    Hanson    

T.  H,   Solem    

Mrs,   Jameson    

M  r s.    Pef eff er    

Christ  Messell   

James   Levandowski    . . 

P.  Ferkelson   

Homer  Craig   

N.    Maichaud    

Mrs.   Reamer    

S.  D.  Jones 

Mrs.  Colby   

Mrs.   Imlileum    

Simon  Snellman   

J.  Owens   , 

Hellen  Olson  

O.  Peterson   

Mrs.  A.  Lebinger  

Mrs.  Boget  

M.  Fennell   

Anton  Kartznlski   

Mary   Hamberg    

J.  Austin  

Mrs.    Poison    

Mrs.  Butchard 

Thomas  Hadley  

Alexander  Gardner   

E.  H.  Browning 

M.   Laus    

Mrs.  A.  Ander.son   

Mrs.  McKay   

Fred   Bott    

Samuel  Crawford    

Mrs.   Richardson   

Fred    Hazeltine    

Mike   Donate 

Joseph   Lessard    

Mrs.  Jennie  Nelson   .... 

William  Hill   

Charles  Rossiter 

Charles   Gilbert    

O,  C,   Hokanson    

L.  M.  Magneson   

Mrs.    E.    Archambault    ,, 
Mrs.   Elizabeth   Spencer 

Mrs.  Mary  Howey  

James   Tobert    

John   Connor    

Mrs.   Mary  Hanson    

Peter  Gonyea   

Mrs.  Engel  Anderson    . , . 
S.  P.  Krokan  


102  ,50 
54  67 
42  ,50 


24 
97 
44 
34 
5 
63 
97 
61 
60 
14 

135 
15 

1.36 

13 

13 

26 

9 

3 

4 

13 

41 

54 

33 


20 
20 
00 
00 
00 
00 
50 
00 
'>5 
75 
50 
00 
00 
00 
50 
35 
00 
00 
50 
00 
50 
00 
50 
00 
00 
3  00 
9  00 
3  00 
33  00 
40  00 


59 
5 

35 
4 

42 
8 


Dennis  Curry    

Mis.   Charles  Hildebrand 

Mrs.  Jennie  Bergen   

Peter  Strand    

Jonas  Peterson   

„  Mrs.  Annie  Torquist   

,*.i   .;^  I  Larson  Olson    

Olof    p:istrom    

Thomas  Olson   

James  Allard    

Knute    Anderson    

Sarah   Riley    

Phoebe   Dewey    

Mrs.  Mar.v  Olson 

Alexander   Ohlstrom    

Olof  Shewstrom    

Mrs.  Annie  Peterson  

Mrs.   Laurin    

Mrs.  B.  Wan  berg 

Hans  Thorson   

Mrs.    Janus    

Mrs.  Shirder  

j  Roliert   Richmond    

Hugh  Wakefield  

James  Cole   

Mrs.  B.  Frank   

N.  A.  Linderburgher  

Alfred  Erickson    

C.  A.  Thompson   

Mrs.  Annie  Peterson   

Mrs.  Mary  Pierson   

O.  C.  Rosedahl 

John  Dahlquist   

\j.   Burns   

Mrs.  A.  Bousquet  

M.    Rosmiskis    

Mrs.  Annie  Johnson  

Mrs.   ().   Sandberg   

Christine  Johnson  

Mrs.   Richter    ..: 

Mrs.  Martha  Hanson  

O.  C.   B.  Jorback   

Mrs.    E.    Przybelska    

T.  Toolan    

Mrs.  Russell   

L.   Hill    

Mrs.  Magnison    

Mrs.   Maggie  Carpenter   .. 

Mary   McLeod    

Mrs.  A.  Miller  

Paul   Mendika   \... 

Anton  Shellerbergher   

Martin  Hanson   

Mrs.  B.  Seglund   

Mrs.   Silvester  Russell    .... 

Mrs.  John  Sanberg  ;. 

Mrs.    A.    Siverston    

Rose  Cheminski   

P.  M.  Skahill   

Mrs.  Grasshopper   

Mrs.  A.   M.   Rhodes   

E.  P.  Dockens   , 

Kalmon  Lite 

George  Wallinson    

Mike   Kallard    

Prank  Johnson    

Mrs.   Engdahl    

Matilda  Anderson   

Bergita  Johnson 

Mrs.  M.  Olson   

Mrs.   Ransburry   

James  Mekash 

80  40}  Mrs.  J.  Johnson  

60  00    .-v.   A.   Buckland    

84  75 !  c.  W.  Thompson  

51  50  j  Charles  Carlson 


4 
31 
3S 

9 

3S 

34 

15 

11 

4 
•> 

3.5 
3 
3 
37 
58 
86 


00 
00 
00 
50 
00 
00 
00 
.-)0 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
70 


16  69 
39  25 
66  10 
57  15 
34  50 
15  00 
64  00 
52  00 


36  I  Mrs.  Mary  Gabes   

00  ,  c.  Shara   

83  i  Albert   Rehbein    

55    William  Beddell   ! 

00    Ha ns  Munson    ..!!!. 

40    Mary  Zuara   ! 

70    Mary  Johnson   !!!!    !!!!!! 

50    James  Cox 

Eric  Olson   !!!!!!!! 

M.  Dolan  ' !  " 

L.  D.  Bolson   ] ! 

Andrew  Schmidt   ..', 

Andrew  Johnson   ! 

Mrs.  Rice  

W,  Kaine !  ] 

A.  P.  Hanson  

Mike  Dombrisky    

Mrs.  Charles  Hanson   

Christine  Peterson 

Martin  Thompson  

Alphonza  Malzak   

Eliza  Gu.stafson 

Lizzie  Hager 

George  Vertin   

-Anna  Koewesta  

George  Knowles    , 

W.  Myer 

Mrs.  Bell  Yobe'.*.  !!!.*."!!!   !!!!, 

Manus   Numi    

Henry  Laf  rame   .!!.!. . .    ! . ! . ! 

Josephine  Aho  !..!..!! 

Oliver  Clarm<mt  ......       . 

Mrs.  G.  Erickson   . . . ! 

Mrs.  Paul  Rolander  . ! ! ! ! 

Mrs.  C.  Grooning  !!!!!!.! 

Mrs.  Sam  Anderson  . . 

O.  G.  Land   \\ 

Mrs.  M.  Torske    !!!! 

Henry  Anderson 

Mrs.  P.  Englund  , 

Elizabeth   Wilder    

Fred  Hoftner  " 

Peter   Infelt    .'. 

Erick  Olson  

Elizabeth  Westermln  

John  Peterson   

E.  A.  Dante  

Tony  Banke   

1^00    Andrew   Skogstrom    

1^  *^"    S.  Mattson  

4,)  OO     Mrs.   Colsey    

'•00    Mrs.  Olson  !!!! 

13  10    Mrs.  Anderson 

4  00    Hilda  Johnson   

1',  -0    D.   Wilson    

3S  OO    Mrs.    Kennedy    

P.  R.  Samuelson   

Mike  Zunberg  

Mrs.   l^.rooks   

P.   Olof  son    

W.  W.  Hancock  ."'!!! 

Mrs.  B.  Halverson   

Mrs.  Clark   

Martin  Fink 

Dan  Lewis  

C.  A.   WaldrifE 

John   Heden    

James  Rile.v 

Charles  Bodun  

Peter  Rosene   

John  Beloit   

A.  P.  Lacey 

John  Hai   

John  Grabosky  

Charles  St,  George 

Charles  Perry   

J.  P.  Garagan   

Nicholas  Rossiter 

George  Baun  

A.  F.  Greiner 

Anton  Void 

J.  J.  Campbell  

W.  H.  Thompson 

Andrew  Kariala  

50    William  Escola  , 

50    John    Harling    

00    Gust  Sterling 

00    Mrs.  Slycher  

00    Ole   Waning    

52  00    John  Peterson 

4  10    Mrs.  Anna  Peterson 

147    Frank  Olson   

15  75    Andrew  Magesoeska  

1  00    F.  E.  Bean  

8  00    Gabriel  Christianson 

45  00    Mrs.   J.   Hanson    

12  00    Holder  Sivertson  

■4-T  00    E.  Erickson   

15  00    c.  M.  Batasford   

12  95    L.  O.  Lar.son  

20  00    E.  A.  Wheatcraft  

00  (  Neil  Cameron   

05  ■  Frank  Carlson  

5    Mike  Przybelska , 

50    Anton  Sandusky  '.   .... 

00    Carl  Smith  

20  00    Mrs.  Charles  Miller 

26  00    T.  H.  Browniivg 

14  00    A.  J.  Johnson  

14  00    Tilly  Anderson    

2  52    Mrs.  Lars  ICnstead 

75  00     Mr.'^.  Charles  Nelson 

11  00    Alex  St.  James 

30  00     C.  J.  ICrickson  

Alex    Robert    

Nels   Rasmuson    

Rose    Schurster    

(^'hrist  Carl.son  

M.    Kassimere    

Mrs.    Eberling   

Mrs.    Emmons    

Mrs.  John  McFall   

Mrs.    Laflex    

Mrs.   Olund    

B.    Baffsky    

Nels    Engdahl    

John    Anderson    

M.    Kalemberg 

V.    Bergreen    

Anton  Sharon   

Christ  Larson   

F.    Firing    

S.  Carlson    

Andrew    Holston     

John   Hall    

Mrs.  Annie  Hanlain   

Mrs.    Marcellena  Archambeau 

Jacob  Matson   

30  50|Mr.s.   G.  Olson    

34  00  i  Mrs.  Mary  McCarthy  

53  .50,  Sacri  Lappi  

119  55  i  John    Hermaker    

29  50    Fred  Zerby    

106  00    P.    C.    Ruscitte    

T.    Perry   

F.    Dexter    

F.    Calsoner    

P.    Engdahl    

F.    Hackett    

Joseph    Pryor    

Mrs.    Witz     

T.  H.  Brown  

J.    D.    Wright    

H.   Hanson    

O.   P.    Barker   

J.    Bruneth    

A.  E.  Miller 

P.  S.  Comb   

Mrs.    Ross    

P.   C,  Larson    

Hans    Berring    

Gust   Johnson    

Mrs.    H.    Johnson    

August    I?rown     

Paul    Geskie    

Frank  Underwood    

C.    Stafford     

John  Quackenbush   

R.    Thomas     

.\dam   Walinzak    

Mrs.    Helen   Ward    

Martin     Berg     

Stans    Wychank     

Mrs.    Eckers    

Homer    Bloille    

Charles    Hogland    

Peter    Jurgenson     

Mrs.   P.    Backlund    

Mrs.    Brigham    

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Mrs.    J.    Smith    

Charles    Galinski  •  . 

H.    F.    Newell    

A.    M.    Olson    

T>an   Harding    

H.  S.  Reynolds  ... 
L.  M.  Johnson  ... 
Mrs.  John  Langill 
William  Green  ... 
William  McFall  ... 
O.  F.  Erickson  . , . 
Gust    Erickson,    . . . 

P.    Como    

Nels   N.   Johnson    , 

Nels    Munson    

John    Molestky    

H.   Neil    

Mrs.    Shaw     

Mrs.    Lundquist     .. 

Mrs.    Carson    

A.  G.  Nelson   , 


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Anthony    Staveny    

John    Xeystrom     

Mat   Mahoney 

Lewis     Nelson     

John    Carlson     

Moris    Peilerson     

John    Henry     

Mrs.    Parber 

Emil    Manson     

R.    Loken     

Ole    Anderson     

Mrs.  Bessie  Melander  . 

Hoka  n    Htikanson    

Mrs.    K.    Olson    

John    Elm     .'.' 

Alfred    Johnscm     

Andrew    Xelson     

Mrs.    VV.    Miiier    ... 

Joe    Schwartz     

Charles    Anderson    

John    Walezak     

Herman    Hurtip    

Mrs.    Mondenholm    

Barbara    X«)vatsky    

E.     Kuhlniay     

Mrs.    H.    Hartman    

I,  Mrs.     Skocluntl     

Mrs.     Frectlniaii     

Robert     Alflti-k     

FYank    I'li>nsiska     

Mrs.   Carrie  Eritkson    .. 

Mrs.    Smith     

M.     Todd     

Mi-s.    Wanoick 

Mrs.     Breakfield     ........ 

K.   W.   Warner   

^        John    Westerpakka    ..... 

A.     Perrin     

H.    Wyman ' 

Mrs.   Mary   Finn    .'. 

P-  J.  (lUstafson   

AuKust    Kaultenhauser  ' 

Ro.sey   Szymaonka    

M.  Lindstrom   

Charles  Kopoka 

Carrie  Dtieken   ...'. 

Herman  Mattson   

Sidney   Halverson    

Matilda  Strand   

Mrs.  Mary  Rodda 

R-  J.  Lenton  

Julius  Olson    ..'. 

August  Pearson 

J.  (*.  Ponderson 

August  Huthc  

F.  « Trover 

Carl  Carlson 

P.  Johnson  

Thomas  Whalen  .. 

T.  J.  McConnell ' 

Elston  Roorson  

P.  Werh.  trnik   

A.  Tunil»ull 

Mrs.  Julia  Mack  

P.  Thowze 

:Mrs.  McDonald ."." 

Matilda  Peterson 

O.  Lundpren 

J'seph  Mushynski  

Emil  Xelsi  «n 

Mrs.  .\.  O.  Farsusson 

Sarah  Com l)s 

John  Perran 

Peter  Foss ....... 

Alfred  Peterson  

Mrs.  T.  OConnell  ....'.'.'.'" 

:Marfin   Hlazik   

Andrew  Wosoloski  

John  Olson 

Mar>-  Peerson 

Hans  Peterson " 

Sam   L'rbanick  

Mr.  Reed   ■' 

Selina  Anderson 

William  Bernise .. 

M'illiam    Rurk !. 

John  Burk .[] 

Mrs.  Carls.m  ....... 

Peter  Lindstmm  . . 

S.  Tonzaek   '.'.." 

William  Holder "  .' 

Ed  Combs '   ' ' ' 

Mrs.  Annie  Bergren  ...... 

Fred  Larson .' ' ' 

Mrs.   French    

Mary  .Mgrer 

Ole  Johnson   , ..... 

Charles  Johnson    

Matt  Kiskila 

I^ouis  Larson '.'.' 

:Mrs.  J..hn  Xordstrom  ... 

Mrs.   Maher   

J.  T.  Arnson 

H.  Mat  son '/// 

il.  Cameron  ....... 

E.  PJrif k.«s< in 

Nick  Anders<}n  ...... 

<iiist  Carlson   '. 

Frank  Kar>ick 

Mrs.   Wicklund    '..'..'. 

J.  Simson 

John  A.   Lilja   ........"' 

Severt  Koam  

F.  Wade 

H.  Hebcrt   !.'."'!.".'!." 

I  John  Sullivan 

Leonard  Beamson 

Xels   Leaf  .'.'.".'.'."." 

Charles   Petersf>n '. '. 

James  Bristow 

John  Sturland .....'. 

Conrad  Wicklund  

Otto  Simonson   

Andrew  Strumskie 

F.  Raiekey 

Andrew   Pears<:>n    

J.  Harris 

Richard  Johnsnn .... 

Dan  Larson   

C.  J.  Freed ".'.'..'.'.." 

John  Hurtig' 

Mrs.  Levail 

A.  Her? '.'. 

Carl  Brown 

Oust  Xiomi   " . '  * 

Hanna  Erickson .. 

Calixtz  Que.xand   .'..'.'. 

John  Sig^valdson 

Mrs.  Alice  Carey ..[ 

Mrs.  Minnie  Paura 

Wel)ster  Dunning: 

Mrs.  Stasrmaster 

Xick  Olson  "  " 

A.  L.  Johnson  

Oscar  <;illen   ...... 

William  Bean  ...... 

Otto  Swandson 

Peter  Larson  

Mrs.  Itebecca  Thacher. ."'..' 

Mrs.  .A.  Xelson  

K.  < Jransky 

Andrew  Kopzinskie   ....... 

Mrs.  H.  Hannon   

P.  M.  McLean   

M.  Millan 

J.  Perault 

Robert  Mills ........'. 

Sam  Krojewski   ...[ 

Leander  Sundstrom   . . . .    '. . 

Lars  Kahana 

I'eter  Quinn ...[ 

fSust  Starks .. 

James   Walts   

ottoOckers '//'] 

The'  >d<  »re  rjrate  

Mrs.  Schultz   .'..'. 

Andrew  Lind 

.\ndrew  Janoskik ." 

K.  Jackson  .. 

E.  P.  Lind '.'.'.'.'.'.'.".[ 

Anton  Jen totTt '..'.]] 

E.  Johnson 

Charles  Pickthorn 

Mrs.  Fred  Boner  ...... 

Jf>hn   Magnuson    

John  Johnsf)n  '.'.'.'.'" 

Fred    Weise    

Mrs.  St.  Arand 

McVicker 

Mrs.    W.    Wilson    '.'.'.'..'.." 

M.    Finker    "" 

Jennie  Carlson 

H.   Carlson 

Karl  Anderson    

John    Willet    '."■■ 

Alexander  Ostrand 

Oscar  Silta 

Clara  (Jurs 

Swan  Swendson   [ 

Mrs.   Soular   

Matt    Makki    .'*' 

Martin  Ho^an   

Mrs.  Tillis  Immonen    

Mrs.    Elizabeth   Perry   

John  Sa  i  berg 

Mrs.   Poland 

Andrew    BroJ>erK 

Nick  Lingsted   „  ".. 

Hants  Ericks4^ui   

J.    Matella   .".'.'.'.' 

L.  F.  Hokanson  .'"' 


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Anton   Becker    

John  Smoke   

Mrs.  O.  Heron   ...... 

Gust  Strandberg   . . . .  * 

John  Alokse   ••••• 

Phillip  Larvee   ... 
Mi-s.  Annie  Hanson'.' 
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Mrs.    Louis   Marciniak" 

Aupru.st   Carl.son   

J.    Dulinskie 

Mrs.   I.,etour    .....' 

John  Trader " 

Peter  Valkoiac  ... 

A.  H.   Smith    .' 

Henry  Mu.solf   .. 

K.    Kelly    ■..'■ 

Charles    Larson    

Itla  Woods    '. 

^     Hokan    Hendricksoii    .. 
00    Amond    Olson 

^1  t'O     M.  J.  Cain   '.'■.." 

^8  -•>     Mrs.  R.  Jt-nson  

•J-  (^*     Mrs.    .\cker    ', 

James  W.  Caffell   

I^.  <1.  Johnson    

Barne.v   Beiler   

Nellie    Xt^son    

H.    Holder    ..'. 

Isaac  Wick    '. 

-Mrs.   Ditman 

Mrs.  Sweeney  

C.   H.  Hillson   ;.* 

-Mrs.   Xellie  Sorby   

A.   Flemminti   

Frank  Traff   " 

Eli    Lacey    

-Anna  Moreen   

Andrew   Dombroski    

Andrew   Swenson    

S.  Zunski 

r.   Jollin    [ 

C.  H.  Arneson   

Mi-s.  Anna  Johnson   

Martin    Lewis    

I..ouis   Dofoe    

Frank    Freidlund    ...... 

Mike   Jacob    

Mike  Banak    '. 

Susi  Hanson   

John   CofToll    

S.  Overman   

H.   Levander  

Jfrs.   Johnson    

Charles  Olofson    

Mrs.  Anna  Jacobson 

Mrs.  Julia  Sali   

Mrs.  Joseph  Matrothifts 
Mrs.   Mar.v   Peterson    ... 

Matt    Kaskila    

Mrs.  Charles  Erickson    ... 

Mrs.  Lizzie  Erickson   

Mrs.   Ideali   0<xidwin    

Mrs.   Catherine  Oleason    . 

John    Matson    

Mrs.    Handcock    '. 

Carl    ISerquist    

C.  P.  Lutison   ." 

Mrs.   (loska   

Fred  Schultz   

Charles  Wessell    

Cyrell    Sherra    

John  Allen   

Jacob  I>abon  

John   RIadquist    

William    D.   Snirk    

Mrs.    Ellerson    

John    f^kmarre    

James  Haley  

Mrs.  St.  James   

John   Berplund    

L.  M.  Johnson   

Louis    Martin    

Mrs.   Corwin    

Mrs.   Trader   ." 

Mrs.  E.   Dittaney   

Mrs.  C.  Sampson   

Mrs.  J.  Erick.son   

Mrs.  C.   Remit   

'  Jeorpe  L.  Orchard   

Mrs.  Andrew  Erickson   

Ole  Olson    

O.  D.  Carlson '. 

Mrs.   Xels  Swanscm    

E.  S.  Anderson 

J.    Peshi    

Mike    Cosey       

J.    Inpram    

.Andrew  Dahl 

Mrs.  Louis  Matton 

James  Lasker   

Orlando   Sondscm    

P.  <:.  Pulstrom '. 

Mrs.   Mary  Jakeolewitz   

.Jacob  Omoke 

Frank    Indiher    

Mrs.  Mary  Abrahamson 

Josejih  Moravitz 

Mrs.    Summers    

James     Laird     

Mrs.    Friedsburs:     

Mike     Broeveritzs     

Mrs.   A.    Luther    

Andrew    Huber    

Charles   Wren    

Mrs.    Enpdahl 

f>.    Anderson     

Mrs.    Waldriff     

V.  C.   Donaldson    

E.  A.    Moore    

F.  A.   Lett.son    

Jacob    Sencor    

D.    Morsenor     

S.    Walker    '. 

Mrs.    Conolly     

Swan    Peterson    

Paul    Geskie    

Mrs.    Trodor    

H.    Smith     ."."' 

Mrs.    Halvorson    

William   Scarlett    '. 

A.    (}.    Larson    

Alfred   Broadbridgre   

Oscar    Hajjer 

Joe    Orchard    

Fred    Bondy    ..'_ 

William    F^scow    

Robert    Woods    ..'. 

Mrs.  J.   Anderson    

Mrs.    S.    K.    Hill    

Mrs.    Gillespie     

O.     Berran     

Lars   Randall    

Hans    Thorson    

Mrs.    Senium     

Anna  Johns(m    

F.    G.    Koska    

J.    B.    Carter    

Stans    Wyocher 

Peter    Larr    

Mrs.    Elm    

Mrs.   Gafrnon    

Mrs.     (^)nrid     

Lauiitz    Roning    

Mrs.     Fooley     

P>ank    Wripht    .' 

Mrs.    Caroline   Sjosvard    

Mrs.     Stron.p     

Mathew    Black     .' 

E.  Charlson     

John    Coran    

F.  Peren    '. 

Martin    Otefson     

James    Xason    ]. 

Martin   Canster    .., 

Mrs.    Cair    .' 

George    Frazier    .., 

Anton    Simini     ."'[ 

John     Ramac     [ 

Jacob    Barto    * 

James   Schumack    

William    Schlai     .'. 

Adolph    Johnson 

Axel    Lund 

J.    G.    Volna    

Mrs.    Josie    Harsh    '. 

P.    Archambault    , 

Joseph  Poirier  

Gust    Matasola    

Paul    Sancha    

Jo.seph    Marcinsko    

Hanna    P^route    

William    Sancha    

Matt    Boubennu    

John   Mackie    

Matt    Deforest    

Lawrence    Lepotka    

Anton     Dominis     

Eric    Eckholm     

Ole    Xess    

Fred    Malcolm     

Henry   Matson    

Josephine   Warmanda    

John    James     

Mrs.    Taylor 

Mrs.    A.    Anderson    ! 

John    Newell    


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THE  DULUTH  EVEXiyG  HERALD;  THCRSDAY,  MARCH 


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30  90 
16  <Hi 

20  00 

21  65 
16  00 

6  00 


2& 
33 


10  00 


~  OOj  Nels  Cajo  

•*  00  j  Carl    Youngbergr    

48  00  ,  Mrs.    Jordby     

Emil    Thorp     ......* 

Mrs.   Charles  Hilderbrand 
Mrs.    Wiliam    Grebtune    .. 

Fred    Hazeltine    

David    McLaughton    ...... 

James    Argall     

Steven   Wozmerl    

William    Ryley    '' 

Frank    Franson 

John    HoRlund     .'."'*." 

Hans    Seaberg    

Gust    Eckholm     ......'.'.'..'. 

John    Paulson    .,.\. 

Mrs.    Hanson     

William    Coakley    ....'.'.'.'... 

Richard  Jf>hnson 

Anton    Aglandi 

Mrs.    C.    Prime    

C.    F.    Brandner    

Mrs.    Melville    ['[ 

Ena    Anderson     '.'" 

Mrs.    David    Frank    ........ 

Selem    I'arks     ' 

Anna    Severson    

P.    A.    Dean    .'. 

Z.    Zolin    

Matt    Wick    

W.    WriRht     

Christ    Balin    ■" 

C.  A.    McDonald    .'..'. 

Otto    Severson    

Robert    Fennell     ......'..'." 

Charles    Hogland    "" 

Mrs.   O.   Severson    

D.  Patterson     

Mr.s.  John  Kontomet  . . ...... 

Thomas    Macey 

•Mrs.    John    Wilson. ".....'* 

A'.    Patterson •. .. 

Mrs.    John    Konihomet.!    .. 

Jf:e    Bouchord 

Mrs.    John    Xelson ... 

Carrie    Braton 

A.    G.    Torsbeck 

Ed    Kromki 

I.    Daniel ',' 

.Mrs.    Sarah    Reed.. 

Mrs.    Bellingen    ""...*." 

John    Ymya '*." 

Andrew    Mackola 

-Martin    Penoshy 

Peter  Tuoby 

Herman    .Anderson ... 

Mrs.    liobinson '". 

I'rick  Jacobson 

-Mrs.    Frank    Smith ..'..'. 

Siloa    Bersen ... 

Frank  Erickson .... 

Ilobert    Johnson ....' 

John    Henry '""' 

L.    S.    Reed" ...... 

John    Kalka 

Mrs.    Enpel   Anderson.. 

Pat    Dolan 

I.     Danielson.., 

Mrs.    Levelle 

John    O'Brien ••••• 

Dan    Sullivan '..... 

Martin    Peterson ...... 

A.    L.    Larson 

A usr.    Peri nir *.*. . '  ] 

D.  Palson 

A.    Hendrkkson .!!.!! 

William   Johnson 

E.  A.    Parool 

David    Lessar 

Mrs.    Levelle 

Mrs.    Charles    Miller..... 

Mrs.    Thomas " 

John    tJustafson .... 

.Abraham    Ranim *, 

Jacol)    Hill 

Gust    Alma 

S.    Johnson 

Ole    Larson .'."' 

All)ert    Lannon .......' 

James    La  n na 

James    Deninpr .', 

Ferdinand   Turner 

W.    H.    Dunning- .* 

James    Forator .'/' 

Mrs.    Milliner 

A.    Fish .'.'.*"" 

Mr.s.    Christina    Salla..  .."!.*  [^ 

Rosa  Johnson ' 

Andrew    Bonkala ........ 

.Vnt(m    Jervis 

Mrs.   H.   Carlberg....  \..'.".'." 

I'eter    Xorana 

Mrs.   Tautloff 

Fred    Ardin 

Mrs.    Ada    Floyd 

Mrs.    J<.sei)h    Patton 

Mrs.    Fred   Thomas 

Oliver    Bootler 

Tony    Low 

S.    Walker .'.'.".'!.".".'!! 

Anton    Galurdo .... 

O.    Boileau 

<^r)rge  McXabb .......... 

Mrs.    Mary   Connor .. 

J.    Salmi  m *" 

Homar  Olson 

Mrs.    Walker 

H.    Older '.'.'.'.'.'.'. 

A.    Johnson 

Mr.s.    B.    Mitchell .....'. 

J.  J.  Evertson 

Andrew   Danberg 

V.   Meketa '...'.'.'.' 

fUm    Lind 

Fred    Evanson 

Aaron  Olson '. 

Mrs.   Ed  Paller ......' 

Fred   Hodgen "' 

Charles   Xickson 

Matt   Forguson 

:Mrs.  O.   Dostler ...... 

Jim    Azinsk.v .[[[ 

Matt    Sunderson .'.* 

Jnhn    Berren ''[ 

A.   Berg !!!.!! 

Aug.    Koscinski 

Annie  Xelson 

Christ   Erickson 

S.   P.   Baker .'■■■.' 

George    Bond 

Caroline   Jo.seward 

Charles  St.  George 

Mrs.  Mary  Lee 

Thomas    Hadlev 

Mrs.  Olson .[ 

Mary  Johns 

Peter    Wobl ........ 

Mr.s.    (^oldstine '. 

Mar.v   P.    Foster .. 

Martin    Moe \[ 

Dan    Vaughn ''.' 

.John   Goraz 

John    Thompson 

Erick  Seiple 

Frank    Gray .[[[ 

Hans  K.  Hayle 

Ole   Alserth .' 

.Mrs.    T.,aurin 

Mrs.    X'^els    Swerson 

Henry  Smith .'. 

V.    Boucher 

Mrs.    Oakley ['.'.'.] 

E.    Bert  rand ,* 

Mrs.  Augusta  Erickson..    ..   .'. 

J.     Diebriel 

Tillie    Larson '.' 

Charles    .A.    Peterson .......' 

E.  G.    Sang 

Andrew    Peterson 

Sam    Scott ....!." 

A  nd  rew   Peterson . . 

Andrew    Olson 

Mrs.  Hanson   

F.  Sinfure 

Martin  Sorenson .'*.' 

William  Anderson 

Charles  Peterson 

C.  B.  Peterson   '.'.'.'.'.'. 

.Andrew   Knuttser   .....'. 

Christ   Peterson 

Mrs.  Ira  Fowler 

J.  L\  Miller '..'.'.'.'.'. 

Henry  Nifjuette 

Mrs.  Hull '.'.'.'.'.'.'. 

John  Oss * ' 

Mrs.  Branchine  ....... 

.lames  .Aschuski    ."." 

Mrs.  E.  .Anderson 

Mrs.  y:.  OKson .".'* 

Mrs.  C.  Peterst;n 

Frank  Olson   .'' 

William  Holder 

Mrs.  Hanson   


18,    1897. 


5  00 


25 

IH) 


11  00 
9  25 

H  65 
23  05 
23  00 
19  70 

12  70 

7  50 
3  00 

26  00 
11  20  ' 
17  00 

8  00  , 


A. 
H. 

S. 
P. 


4 
4 
4 

14 

7 

8 

4 

12 


00 
00 

00 
S5 
00 
00 
00 
75 

7  00 
4  75 

8  00 

4  00 
3  00 

8  75 

5  00 

3  m 

4  00 

5  00 
7  00 
7  50 

14  43 

9  00 
5  00 
3  00 

00 
7.5 
00 
00 
00 
50 
25 


A. 
.A. 
V. 
A. 
E. 
C. 


6 

20 


6 

13 
16 


2  00 
10  .50 


3 
4 


4 
4 


00 
00 
5  00 
5  50 
9  50 
50 
00 

5  r,o 

6  no 
5  00 

16  90 

25 

13  00 

3  20 

8  25 
3  75 

22  35 

10  !(0 

2  00 

9  25 


9  70 
2  00 

12  70 

4  25 
2  00 

9   tM» 

15  75 
2  00 

5  25 

13  00 
2  00 

18  00 
5  00 
2  50 
50 
00 
00 
O-l 
50 
50 
00 
00 
00 
75 
OOj 
00  I 
00 


3 
4 
4 

4 

11 

•7 

7 
2 
5 
3 


6 

S 

16  00 
2  4S 
5  00 
7  00 
100  00 
5  00 
5  00 

10  00 
5  00 
S  99 

25  00 

10  00 
3  00 

12  fxi 

3  00 

4  00 

3  00 

4  00 
14  25 


Snudt  

McGowan  

Johnson  

Olafson   

Christo  Erickson  . 
Charles  Waller  ... 

Swan  Mattson  

D.  Goldstein 

Mrs.  Sebastlen  ... 

1.  Robeaur 

Matt  Johnson  

John  Sanders  , 

B.  -Anderson 

Mrs.   Holm   

Charles  Johnson  .. 

T.  McGougan   

Mr.s.  Lewis  

D.  C.  Prescon 

John   Martin 

Frans  FIxcelslons  . 
P.  R.  Samuelson  .. 

A.  Buckland 

Hanson 

Burgen .... 

Anderson 

A.  Dante 

L.  Caho  

John  Westerpakka 

-A.  G.  Bango  

Nick  Murphy  

K.  Johnson  

P.  S.  Chubb 

Christ  Carlson  

O.  P.  Baker 

John   Peterson   

J.   Brunette   

W.  Smith  

]'.  Engdahl 

Silas  Flatt 

John  Silas  ..'. 

Matt   Langshire   ... 

John  Peterson 

Jacob  Pelda 

John  J.   Hecker   

John  Haley 

Jacol>  Belt 

Mrs.  F.  Glabaska  .. 
Theodore  Dewman 

William  Lolo , 

J.  I'eterson  

J.  Gilies   

F.  S.  Dexter 

D.  G.  Johnson  

J.  Steele  

H.  Wyman '.'. 

F.  Colsonor 

R.  B.  Lyon '.'..'. 

W.  W.  French   

Theodore  Dewman  .. 

Jes  Holder   

-Mary  Hill 

.1.  X'elson   

Mrs.  Wilson  ..' 

J.  Gulbertson 

Gulbertson 

P.  Gustafson  

Moran 

J.  Stocker  

C.  Larson  

Samr)son 

Benack  

Elston  Pearson   

P.  Thonze 

(Jeorge  Storer  

M.  M.  George 

Mabel  Ready ..... 

J.  Benson  

John  Smith  '  ..' 

Dennis  Ready 

Ed  Skelley 

J.  H.  Perkins 

P.   P.olin  

H.  W.  Van  Etten 

J.  O.  Pondorson 

'>.  Lundgren 

Tver  Hanson 

P.  Weshomick , 

G.  Clobuncar  

J.  Bowncr 

Mrs.  Season 

George  McGill ..' 

Carl  Carlson   

J.  Benson  

James  Joslln . 

Peter  Johnson   . . . . 

-A.  Hanson 

Robert  McQuillan  ..'..'. 

-Mrs.  App 

S.  R.  Boman   

E.  Freske  

Lillian  Ayers ] 

John  Salida   

H.  McDimald  '  . 

A.  Munson ' 

T.  Reimy "  .' 

H.  Madsim   . 

F.  A.   San  ford   .... 

Ed  R.van V 

Malt  Craig   

John  Martin '.['. 

James  Jf)slin   .. 
H.    Hubert    .... 

Wade '...'. 

Bown  .'.' " 

Simpson   .'. 

P.  Hankinson  

Camei-on    ... 
Mack   

i^ullivan   " 

Erickson 

Reed 


J. 
J. 
R. 
-A. 
P. 
N. 
c. 


F. 
E. 
J. 
A. 

yr. 

M. 
T. 

{'. 

J. 


4 
4 
7 
4 
10 


00 
00 

so 

00 
25 
00 
20 
00 
25 
00 
00 
J  3 
25 
00 

00 
00 
00 
3  00 

1  75 
26  90 

2  00 
1  .^,0 
1  15 

26  S5 


10 

15 
o 

4 
4 
4 
4 


12  00 

85 

2  50 


50 


00 
65 
00 
60 
75 
75 
65 
50 
00 
3  00 

3  00 

5  15 

6  50 

4  00 


TRANSPORTATION      FOR 

POOR. 
iC.    Beldin    


$17,460  65 
COUNTY 

•I        n  10 


-Anna  Brown  

T.  J.  McConnell  '.' 

H.  Mat.son 

J.  Pemult  .'.".". 

A.  Gruson  

J.   Berault   

P.  Peterson 

H.  Calgren .'..'■.; 

Mary  Hagen 

H.  Calgren   

-Mrs.  Matson 

P.   Ryan    

W.   McGinty .'.' 

E.  M.  Erickson 

-Axel  Munson ... 

P.  Cumber 

Mrs.    Stevenson    

Mr.  Fren<h ' 

F.  P.  Rodger '.., 

J.    Berns    

Carl  Swenson    .... 

P.    I^arson    

-A.  .Johnson   

P.  Larson " . . 

-Alexander  Olstrom   .... 

Mrs.  James  Venetland 

Mrs.  J.  Vernetti   

M.   Wagner   

J.  P.  Chullin   ."   " 

C.   Mertin    

L.  C.  Burke 

James  McGuire 

William   McConnell 

P.  McLean 

J.    Berg 

Sam  Hibanock    

.Anna  Steven.son 

I>.    Langon    

Oscar   Gillon 

John  Lilja 

N'al   Kukar  

H.   Kallen   .'.",'" 

Mrs.    Ricks    

H.    E.   Ol.son    

Mrs.   Thompson    

K.   H.   Kittson    

G.   C.   Haskell    

C.  C.  Parker 

Peter  Spritznagce  

F.  G.  White 

Mrs.  M.  Barker 

R.   Tague    

J.  Gunderson   ... 

T  .McBrlde    

John  Hokkaner   

Peter  Rasernife 

S.  A.  Chase 

Nels  Bergholm   

S.   Overman    

John   Smoak 

F.  M.  Hold   

Charles   Gilbert    

-A.   Swanson    

P.  M.  Emerson   

W.  Kennedy   

K.  S.  Anderson 

E.    Dodd    

Charles  Ol.son    

J.   Callender   

George   Laselle    ......... 

Mrs.  Annie  Poison  

Mr.s.  Ryan 

Mrs.  R.   Mills  

John  Webster 

S.    Zinski    ........ 

Mrs.    Soular    ........ 

C.  H.  Arneson 

S.   Galsen    

H.  Johnson   

Mary  Fitzgerald  . ........ 

V,  Kuhar 


sv  -  -    '-J,.-    j»J 


^ 


T""* 


■•^ 


'  i 

I 


8  77 
6  80 

18  25 

35  00 
30  00 
45  38 
16  75 
20  00 

9  60 
15  CO 

6  30 


1  23 

1  30 
5ij 

5  24 
13  60 

7  30 
16  .50 

2  15 
54  45 
40  00 
13  59 

4  38 
30  00 

9 
17 


50 
50 
50 
50 
50 
50 
50 
30 
.!() 
50 
30 
50 


30  (iO 
20  00 
10  10 


5  So 

6  SO 

1  6S 

1  CS 

1  30 

1  30 

3  90 

13  43 

19  33 

20  00 

5  15 

12  00 

-}   V". 

60  00 

19  00 

9  90 

3  13 

26  27 

7  60 

2  25 

18  33 

2  15 

6  19 

3  66 

5  00 

2  40 

IS 
32 
36 


12 

4 
17 
19 

8  00 


10 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
4 

•> 
i> 

1 
1 
1 
1 


45 
15 

50 
30 
50 
50 
50 
00 
50 
30 
30 
50 
27  10 
19  85 
12  90 
54  00 
7  90 
42  ';o 
9  10 
9  25 
60  00 
2  47 
21  50 

18  90 

20  0(» 

17  51 

36  00 

6  25 

40  00 

1   85 

20  (.0 

I  50 

6  50 

1   30 

1  30 

1  30 

8  60 

20  OQ 

1  70 

6  30 

6  20 

38  32 

60  00 

30  00 

4  00 

35  50 


11 
8 
1 
1 
1 
1 
1 


34  00 
25  30 

7  71 


61  67 
32  79 
17  00 
39  94 
06 
.".0 
SO 
60 
00 
96 
90 
00 
50 
00 
00 
45 
00 
50 
50 
40 
13 
93 
50 
05 
00 
30 
75 
00 
40 
55 
00 
55 
95 
50 
00 
00 
10 
40 
90 
00 
50 
00 
60 
9.S 
30 
70 


Peter  Spitngle  

Matt  Kaskula  

Ed  Lyst    , 

S.   Caterin    

E.  Erickson    

A.  Johnson  

R.   McKenzie    

J.    Pishe    

John  Matson 

Mrs.   Mysland    

F.  Maunool   

Wm.  Slewey 

C.  P.  Luston 

C.    Peterson 

Peter  Hanson 

E.   Erickson 

S.    Bergguist    

Peter   Lingren 

Chas  Carlson 

G.  W.  Fulton .'. 

45     J.    Falkner 

(JO    O.   D.   Carlson 

20  \)i)    Mrs.  E.  Richard   

62  35    James  Ingrham   

S  SO    C.  Latour  

42  95    J.  Cunningham   

19  67    John   Mik   

7  60     M.    Letour    

35  00    Joe  Dunning  

35  00    Ely  Lacoy '." 

35  00    Orlando  Samuelson   . . . 
27  50    Oscar   Erickson    

2  !»4    Mrs.  E.  Norton   

10  00    Swan  Peterson    .... 

3  64     T.    O'Reilly    

C.  Charlson    

T.  C.  Donaldson  

John  Lanby    

D.  J.  Mansoner  

Mary  Donate   

Franke  Donate   

Mike    Donate    

-Mike   Donate,   Jr 

G.  D.  Johnson   

E  .A.  Moore   

E.  B.  Erickson .' 

J.  Cunningham   

Jacob   Simcer    

B.   W.  Summers   

-Allon  Patties 

Matt  Johnson   

S.  Laka   

Maud  Clifton   

O.  Le  Turneau   

F.  -A.    Lundstrom    

O.  -Anderson    

Mrs.  J.   Heira    

W.   Wilson    

C.  T.  Brandon   

O.    Voldstrom    

I^eter  Scott 

<).   Olson    

I>.  Paleson 

A\'.    J.    Ca nelson 

-Nina    Finch 

Trafele   Lunlaub 

.J.    Daneson 

John    O'Brien 

Ban   Custanance 

Lars   Hakana 

I^.   Johnson 

P.    A.    Dean 

Anna  Olson 

otto   Olson 

Matt    Macki 

J.    Lesard 

1-ric    Jernberg 

Jake   A'olz 

-Matt    Weirmad 

r.lary  G.   Christianson.. 

Wishart    Kukka 

Ai.    McKenzie 

Ed    A.    Parson 

.^.    Ij.   Larson 

Mrs.    Roi)ier 

Matt  Weik 

O.    Hendrickson 

J.    J.    Evertson 

Matt    Sunderson 

-Andrew    Danburg 

M.    Dermano 

F.  F'ieno 

H.    Noble 

M.  Stennison   

R.   E.   Smithson 

G.  Sohnomy 

A'.    Mikato 

Thomas  Connors 

Charles    Serring 

ohn    Newell T 

Chailes   Shipman 

Willia!!!    Anderson 

Lena  Anderson 

M.    Erickson 

C.    B.    Peterson 

Ole    Ra.saas 

-Andrew   Olson 

Mrs.   Charles   Luas 

Mrs.    D.    Robler 

N.    Lapein 

Chailes   Xeckson 

Mat  Fagerston 

-A.    C.    Puleston 

-\.    Colombo 

Jacob   Grant 

Peter   Gonyca 

Knute    Larson 

Rosa    Lynch 

C.   Peterson 

E.    P.    Ariinger 

N.    Nalonet 

J.    E.    Ernest 

S.   H.   Hailson 

-Aron    Scotten 

C.  Porter 

John    Erickson 

nstav   Anderson 

P.    Langers 

L.    Peterson 

Phillip   Smith 

Frank   .Johnson 

D.  M.    Paula 

Mrs.    C.    T.    Anderson 

-Alexander    McCann 

Mrs.    R.    Lander . .' 

Mrs.    Johns 

Mrs.    F.    Ross 

John    Olson 

Otto   Peterson 

G.    Campbell 

Aug.    Laspet 

Aug.    Nelson 

Felix    Sawyer 

Davis    Gilboy 

Mike   Kangos 

Mat    Shannon 

Hans    Olson 

Mike    Zckorich 

Charles  Davis 

Andrew  Lindnuist 

Mrs.    Bellinger 

A.    E.    Carlson 


20  00 
9  33 


IS  (d) 
30  00 
20  00 

19  00 

8  60 
4  60 

20  00 

9  SO 
40 
97 
90 
00 
45 


mM 


!<■■> 


1  70 

2  60 
1  30 

46  00 
20  00 
60  00 


13 


18 
57 
1 
1 
1 
1 
35 


RECAPITULATION  COUNTY  POOR  FUND 

during  the  fiscal  year 


Total  amount  of  orders  and  ■warants  issued 
and  charged  to  the  county  poor  funds 

Total  amount  of  orders  and  warrants  paid'and'canceil'e'd'by"" 
the    county    treasurer    during    this  fiscal    year    $72 

■total   amount   of   orders   and   warrants  issued  during    pre- 
vious   years    and    redeemed    during  this  fiscal  year....   21648  3'' 


$55,977  25 


74  76 


Total  amount  of  orders  and  warrants 
fiscal  year  redeemed    


issued     during     this 


..-   51.126  44 


60  00 

12  00 
17  36 
40  00 
10  00 
2  76 
25  00 
19  75 
30  00 
19  15 
15  00 


Outstanding  orders  and  warrants  issued  during  this  fiscal  year..... 

SUPERINTENDENT  OF  COUNTY  ROADS. 
John  Hawkinson  

■■••■•       •.■< 

MISCELLANEOUS  COUNTY  ROADS. 


■  -(. 


12 

25 

3 

11 

1 

1 

or 


30 
00 
90 
48 
70 
70 
25  00 
20  00 
30  00 
50  00 
16  07 

39  15 
20  00 
19  62 
28  60 

40  00 
40  00 
40  00 
26  00 
19  90 
25  00 
50  00 
19  20 
40  00 
13  12 

1  70 

6  30 

1  30 

1  30 

65  10 

50  00 

50  00 

IS  47 

44  85 

60  00 

19  00 
11  87 
17  20 
46  00 

20  00 
4  03 

29  SS 
25  00 
IS  .55 
1: 


11 
16 


8  50 
1  00 
3  90 

49  78 

50  00 
1  70 

12  40 
1  30 
1  30 
12  07 
15  55 
10  00 

18  15 
28  50 
33  55 
27  00 
40  00 

19  80 
19  55 
27  50 
24  00 
36  91 
IS  90 
55  00 
60  00 

1 
1 
1 
1 
1 
12 


1 
3 
2 

6 


30 
50 
50 
50 
50 
90 
00 
00 
ijS 
40 
IS 
85 
50 
51  00 
16  SO 
35  00 
41  50 

24  00 

25  45 
9  03 
4  03 
2  76 

44  00 
8  60 
12  90 
47  9JJ 
27  00 

32  94 
30  00 

33  00 
14  50 
40  00 

6  50 
23  31 
40  00 
17  80 
35  05 


John  Hawkinson,  traveling  expenses  .. 

John  Ilawkin.son,  freight 

R.  .S.  Lerch,  livery  !..!.!! 

Andrew  Johnson,  assorting  tools!.!.".'.".'.'..       .".' 

F.  Davis,  making  description   !.! 

F.  Davis,  services  on  maps  for  county'roads'!. !!!!!! "! 

John  Hawkmson,  freight  on  tools 

F.  Davis,  making  map  Sturgeon  La'ke'road  '.'.'.*.'.' 
t.  Davis,  services  on  county  road  map 

FmrnP^'M/'n""   ^.7"^    estimate    bridge  s'hori 'Line'p^rk" 
Kmma     McDermott    specifications   for  bridge 

i/.i       i"-^"^^"-    '"warding  coiinty   road  team ".'.". 

i-^idei-  &  Bowers,  shoeing  road  teams 

^  ■{■  Jf'{!.o"rneau,  Order  books  for  couuty"ro'ad.s'!!'. 

Duluth  Paper  company,  stationery  for  county  roads 

F.  Davis,  survey  and  estimate  of  bridge 

F.  Davis,  plans,  etc 

-Aug.  -A.  Holt,  labor !!!.!!!!!! 

East  End  livery,  boarding  team    !! 

S.   Collins,   shoeing  team    !!!! 

J.  H.  Constantine,  repairing  hariiess 

J.   Hammell  &  Co.,  one  team  ' 

F.  Davis,  index  plat  !!!!!!!!!!!! 

F.   Davis,  plans  and  estimate  bridge   ! 

Prescott,  Mars  &  Co.,  tools   ' 

S.    Collins,    blacksmithing 

M.  Kennedy,  shoes  ...!!!!!!!. 

J.   H.   Constantine,    harness,   etc!!! 

Ea.st  End  livery,  boarding  team ' 

F.   Davis,   survey  bridge    

John   Hawkinson,   freight  on   tools*!! 

Otto  Anderson,  hauling  tools  .  

S.    Collins,    blacksmithing    ....         

A.  Oestrich,  blacksmithing  

E.  L.  Toomey,  blacksmithing  ....     

East  End  livery  boarding  team   ...  

C.  Borg,  hauling  tools 

p.   Davis,   survey  Short   Line  bridge 

East    P:nd    livery,    boarding    team    ....   

John  Hawkinson,   freight  county  roa-ds.   . 

J.  H.  Constantine,  sweat  pads   

E.  L.  Toomey,  shoeing  horse  ...       

Duluth   Paper  company,  time  boo'ks"!'"! 

S.  Collins,   blacksmithing  

P.  Oa vis,  measu rin-g  earth  work'  Short '  Li'ne  'Park ' ! 

L.  L.  Meining,  foreman  on  roads   ..  

Ole  Sassos,  foreman  on  roads  

George   R.    Hall,    bridge    inspector"!.!'!!! 

L  S.  Giover,  foreman  on  roads  

I'..  Friterger,  compass 

King  &  Steele   labor  and  material 'shoi-t 'L'i'n'e'iPark' br'i'dge' 

L  b.  Grover,  inspector  county  roads 

„'f„r'^'^^"'''-  inspector  county  roads   

T     ii'^'V   ^^y^*^'-  inspector  county  roads !!    

i-i.  (  .  Meining,  inspector  county  roads  

John  Hawkinson.  freight   

William   Doyle,   freight 

A.    Oestrich,    Idacksmithing '! 

S.    Collins,    blacksmithing    ".   

J.  H.  Constantine.  repairing  harness   !!!!!!!!'!.! 

J'.ast  P.nd  livery,   boarding  team   ...       .  

J.   G.  Harris,   medicine    

Lewis   &    Kranse.    blacksmithing    ! 

James    Drohan,    blacksmithing  

Duluth  Paper  company,  stationery"!!"!!! 

P.  Davis,  railroad  fares  

Meining  Hordware  company,'  h'al-dvVare  and'  too'ls' '.'.'. 

w.   H.  (  ongdon  &  Son,  powder 

E.  Fcil)eger,  tools  

R.  li.  Forward  &  Co.,  tools?   ! 

Poirier  &  Nordstrom,  tents   !!!! 

Duluth    Hardware   company,    tooi.s !!! 

Lake  Superior  Powder  company,  dynamite'.!.".'.!'.'.'. 

-A.    Hawkinson,    tools    ...  

Prescott  &   Mars  company,  "tools' ! 

John  Hawkin.son,  freight  on  tools  ....!'...!! 

T  ■  r?\c^?^"'   inspector  on   bridges  and  roads   '.'.'.'. 

L.(.  Meining.  inspector  (m  bridges  and  roads  ...      

7\,     J^^"^'^^'  inspector  on  brid-ges  and  roads   ....     '. 

„!^,,.^^^''^5:^-    inspector  on   bridges   and  roads  ....       

\y  illiam  Doyle,  inspector  on  bridges  and  roads 

Nels   Nelson,   moving  house    ..  

Marcus  Skomars,  moving  house 

East  End  livery,   boarding  team    ..    "   ". 

To„1i^/''\I''"''  '•'•'"l?any,  stationery  for  superintendent'.!!" 
Lewis   &   Kran.se,    blacksmithing    .. 

•S.    Collins,    blacksmithing    

P.   Davis,    railroad   fares    !!!!!!!!! 

Kelly  Hardware  conipanv,  powder 

Marshall-Wells  Hardware  company," tools' !!'.!! 

\\.  H.  Congdon  &  Co.,  tools   ..  

.lamts  Tippetts,   blacksmithing  

Lamb  &  McNaughton,  tools  '' 

Pre.scott  &  Mars,  tools 

Eveloth  Hardware  company,  tools 

Lake  Superior  Powder  company,   ciy'iulniite".!'.!'..".' 

Andrew  Hawkin.son,    tools    

E.   Feibeger,   tools    

Henry  Neeker,  labor  ! .'. 

A.    Oestrich,    blacksmithing - 

William   Doyle,   freight   

Poirior  &  Nordstrom,  tents 

McKay  &  Hall,   tools   .'.'.".' 

L.  C.   Meining,   inspector  roads   !!! 

William  Doyle,  inspector  roads  

Ole   Sassas.   inspector   roads    .!..! 

George  R.  Hall,  inspector  bridges 

Joseph   Tippett.    blacksmithing       

S.  Collins,  blacksmithing   

East  End   livery,  lioarding  teairi    

^l^?^-^^  I^  King,  steel  bridge  on  Short 
William  Doyle,  inspector  roads 


$  4,850  SI 


$  1,345  00 


108  95 

5  99 

15  00 

3  00 

4  00 
65  33 

2  93 
48  39 
63  00 
30  00 

3  25 
18  00 

75 

0  ~- 

1  <■! 

4  80 
133  .50 

34  60 

70  00 

29  25 

3  75 

2  25 
1S5  vi) 

56  00 
70  60 

3  50 
2  50 
2  00 

15  20 
35  00 
32  SO 
11  .36 
10  00 

16  90 


31 

4 
.35 
12 
62 
35 


70 

00 

00 

00 

16 

00 

04 

25 

50 

00 

S5 

80 

20 

25 

44 

25 

00 

74 

00 

00 

85  00 

S5  oO** 

12  52 
52 

1  50 
6  90 

2  45 
35  OO 


12 

^- 

39 
138 

68 

6 

,72S 

85 

85 


3 

7 
't 

4 

22 

169 

43 


50 

10 

40 

00 

35 

15 

"il 

i)2  59 

40  21 

110  ^0 

105  60 

45  .30 

6  88 

89  62 

10  82 

•>o 


85 

85 

85 

85 

6 

50 

35 

3 
•) 


Line  Park  road 


50 
00 
00 
00 

fH) 

10 
15 
00 
.50 
65 

5  50 

20  04 

21  50 
78  90 
35  51 

6  40 
2  75 

20  02 

6  SO 

52  78 

28  47 

6  00 

12  00 

11  45 

1  10 

28  (Mt 

34  20 
85  00 
85  m 
85  (Ki 
65  54 

3  75 
5  25 

35  00 
2,420  07 

55  01 


3  00 
13  75 
24  72 
40 


BYRNE  ROAD. 


^'   $  8,139  49 


31 

12 

29 


15  60 

16  45 


4 
26 
37 
51 
17 
34 
25 
18 
49 
54 
37 
28 
66 
23 
45 
11 
11 
52 
12 
40 
4 
6 
40 
25 
18 
28 
34 
38 
15 
36 
30 
39 
33 
■  25 
40 
49 
60 


1 
2 

3 
1 
3 

19 
8 

36 


$691,630 


te:mporary 


RELIEF, 
DERS. 


CASH     OR- 


Annie  Peterson 

-A  nnie    Peterson 

Mrs.    J.    Lightheart... 
Barbara   Novalsky..    . 

Mrs.    B.    Wanberg 

Mrs.    Charles   Hanson. 

Mrs.    N.    Laurin 

Mrs.    Seglurd 

Matilda   Anderson 

Christine   Johnson..     . 

Mary    Pearson 

Mrs.    Charles    Miller.. 

Peter  Becklund 

John    Hall 

Mrs.    Prybelski 

Carrie    Erickson..     .. 

Lars    Erslod 

Frank    Hodgen 

Mrs.    Elm 

Mrs.    Halverson    

Fred    Weiss 

Mrs.    Wanvig 

Mrs.    Wicklund 

Mrs.    B.    Halverson.. 

Mrs.   J.    B.    Carter 

Jahn   Hall 

Mrs.    E.    Boardine..     .. 

John  Henry 

Mrs.    Nels    Swanson.. 

Charles    Lord 

O.    C.   Anderson    ..     .. 

liichard  Johnson 

.John    Henry     

Tiars   Rindall , 

Henry   Szymathik 


...$ 


17  50 
25  00 
10  00 
7  50 
17  .-0 
10  00 
10  00 
12  50 


William    Byrne 

A.    Paquin     

Johnson    

Murphy    

Grandin     

Naslan     

Mungerson    ., 

F.   Shelden 

Petterson    ... 

Naslan    

Paquin     

Johnson    

Petterson    ... 
.   F.   Sheldon   . 

Davis    

Murphy    

Peterson     . . . 

Naslan    

Naslan    

O.   Lars(m    . . . 


C. 

C. 

J. 

M. 

J. 

W 

J. 

E. 

A. 

C. 

N. 

W. 

J. 

c. 

E. 
M. 
E. 
J 


12 
12 
17 


50 
50 
50 
00 
00 
50 

r.o 

50 
50 
50 
50 
50 
50 


7 

7 

12 

O 

2 

2 
2 

2  50 
18  50 
7  50 
5  00 
5  00 
2  50 
5  00 
2  50 
2  50 
2  50 
5  00 
2  50 
2  50 
2  50 


MarshaJI-Wells 

compan.v    

William    Byrne 

D.  Midleworth  . 
W.  F.  Sheldon  , 
M.  N.  Nelson  ... 
K.  O.  NeKson  ... 
A.   Grandin    ....; 

E.  Naslund    

M.    Milan    

Victor    Lund    ... 

J.   Gradin    

Victor  Lund  ... 
A.  Johnson  .... 
J.   O.    Larson    . . . 

N.  X'^aslund  

J.    Peterson    . . . . 

N.   Peterson    

W.    Byrne    

W.    Byrne    

W.  Byrne  

D.  Midleworth 
J.    Grandin    .... 
A.    Grandin    .... 

M.    Milan    

V.    Lund    

C.  Johnson    

C.    Johnson     

E.  Peterson    

W.  F.  Sheldon  ... 
A.  Hawkinson  . . 
N.    M.    Nelson    . . , 

J.    Pederson    

Peter  Jansen  . . . 
Fred  Balender  .. 
Morris    Kolsta    .. 

J.   Griden    

A.    Griden     

K.    NeLson     

Olaf    Larson    

N.  M.  Nelson  ... 
N.   M.   Nelson    ... 

I   Pederson    

Fred    Belender 


Hardware 


0  53 
37  00 
20  25 

14  63 
6  38 

16  87 

15  00 
10  12 


9 
4 
7 
3 
11 
10 


13  50 

5  25 

12  00 

40 

18  00 


J.    Gradin    

.1.    Gradin    

-A.    Gradin    

Ole    Larson    

E.   Neslund    

C.    Yanser    

C.    Yanser    

L.   Peder.son    

K.  O.  Nelson    

K.    X.    Xelson    .... 

John    Carlson    

Earnest    Kuhlmay 

X.    M.   Nelson    

N.    M.    Nelson    

N.    M.   Nelson    

X'.  M.  Nelson    

Ole    Larson     

C.    Johnson    

E.    Peterson    

M.    Bryn     

E.    Naslund    

Majk    Meloun    

Majk    Meloun    

E.    X'aslund    

W.   T.   .Sheldon    .... 

K.    O.    Nelson    

Oscai"  Larson    

.1.    Gradin    

A.    Gradin    

Fred  Nesbett   

John    Davett     

John    Peterson    

Fred    Belender    

Lars   Olson    

K.    N.    Nelson    

Steve    Husted    , 

A.   Treol    , 

Morris  Kastad    

N.  M.  Nelson  


11 

1 

12 
15 


50 

00 
00 


12  75 
9  75 

1  50 

8  25 

2  25 
C  00 

60  00 
33  .37 
10  .50 
20  00 
4  00 
12  00 
14  62 

9  37 
10  87 
10  87 


15 

15 

1 


37 
.•!7 
.50 
00 


37 
37 
37 
12 
S7 


6 
12 
15 

6 

3 
13 
10 

6  75 
10  .50 
12  75 

4  50 

3  00 

4  .50 
3  fKl 

16  00 


6 
16 
11 
11 

8 

12 

6 

7 


$     283  50iMorris  Kolstad 


50 
85 
60 
60 
60 
00 
00 
85 

3  35 

4  85 
8  16 

10  00 
7  50 

6  00 

7  50 
6  75 
6  00 
6  75 

6  75 

7  50 

19  00 

14  00 

15  00 
10  50 

20  25 


r  $  1.081 

BIWABIK   CEMETERY   ROAD. 

William    Petherick 
Biwabik    Hardware 
William  Hocking  ... 
William   Hocking   .. 

John   Meads    

Matt  Stoddell    

Anton  Zaic   

Joe    X'arron    

Joseph  Noraoetz   ... 

Prank   Krach    

George    Gleason     . . . 
Thomas  Travers   . . . 

John  Meskum   

John    Sleipels    

James    Land    

Erick    Peterson    

S.   Rendowe    , 


00 


$ 

1  00 

company 

11  05 

•>  or. 

19  00 

10  00 

6  25 

10  62 

10  00 

10  00 

18  00 

6  25 

7  50 

10  00 

62 

1  25 

1  25 

31  50 

CRANE    LAKE    ROAD. 
F.  Davis  ! J 


157  14 


7o  00 


i 


V 


s«  t- 


i 


•=*^  ' 


k 
ft. 


"•  * 


m  ^ 


t 


.  ai.  - .  ■!      I      ■  (  ill  I 


4^ 


■  ■I  I  jiii|   m    ■■    k> 


T 


»■*  'mtntttt^>*mm% 


p  I     ■   ■ 


^ 


?■■■- -lllUl'-fciiii 


"f- 


4-^...--.^-., 


■  r^^ 


t 


^ 


in 


i'""^*"^ 


■«i*«iMMMifiWi 


■'    '    ■■'        '■ 


14 


THE    DULUTH    EVENING    HERALD:     THURSDAY,    MARCH    18,    1897. 


John  Churchill  . 
George  Moulton 
Thomas  Coad  .. 
Henr>'  Hardy  . . 
John  P.  Kelly  .. 

Emll   Keif    

Charles  Pergene 
Thomas   Hart    . . 


CULVER   ROAD. 

F.  Davis   

Meining  Hardware  company 

K.    Feibeger    

Poirier  &   Xoi-dstrom    

E.  Feibeger  

K.  K.  Coe  

G.  Davis    

A.  Richardson   

K.  J.   Beleche   

F.  Davis   

James  Eriokson   

G.  Berquist    

J.    Colombo    

B.  Wintergrist    

Jacob   Watts    

F.   Davis 

Frank  Keene   

AVilliam  Randall   

H.   Thompson    

Kd  Warde   

J.   D.  Campbell   

Krwin  Sawyer  

John    Hoai::    

o.    C.    Olson    

Louis    Haskinson    

Stenitz  Swartz    

James    Keene    

Freeman    Keene    

Froem:in    Keene    

William    Randall    

M.    Thompson    

Kd    Ward    

John    Hold     

t>!e  Oleson    

Stars   Schwartz    

James    Keene    

t^  us    Peterson    

John    Rroms    

J.    D.    Campbell    

J.   T.    Morgan    

I.ouis   Hokanson    

JIat    Rakakala    

F.    Keene     

F.    Keene    

James    Keene    

Kd   Ward 

<  >Ie    Olson    

John  J.   Holmes  

Stans    Swartz    

Li'uis   Hokanson    

Mat   Rakala    

Gus  Koski   

J.ihn   Broom    

James   Ernckson    

John    Broom    

Freeman    Keene    


1  50 
18  00 
5  2.> 
3  IW 
3  00 
27  00 
8  00 
1  50 


142 


$ 


15 
20 
63 


00 


-•J 
75 
22  0") 
52  93 
50  00 
30  00 
22  50 


1 

I 

1 

■26  00 
42  50 
58  00 
14  50 
21  00 

14  50 
13  0«.> 

13  t'O 
12  00 

15  75 
11  12 

1  50 
55  25 
65  00 
S.J  00 

1  62 
37  50 
19  25 

17  87 
21  25 

14  38 
7  12 

14  62 

18  00 

16  00 
23  40 

1  SO 
95  f^O 

37  r.o 

60  00 


Peter  Hogan..   .. 

H.  J.  Carlson 

O;  O.  Godenins  . . 

Hime   Bros 

John  Armstrong. 
R.  D.  McSorley.. 
Alex  McDonald.. 

Chas  Burman 

Christ  Skogan.. 

John  Perry 

Ralph  Greer 

A.  Stanley 

John  Armstrong. 

Ja^.  Briston 

A.  J.  Briston 

Jas  L.afave 

Peier  Hogan , 

K.  J  Carlson  . . . . 
Robt    Hawkins... 

Robert  Stanly 

Ri(  hard    Hoad    .. 

A.  J.   Briston    

Joseph  Lafave  .. . 

A.  Anderson , 

Jolm  Bowman  ... 

Peter  Hogan    

K.  J.  Karison 

R.  Dinham  

01..f  Dahl 

Home  Bros 

James  Brsiton  . . . 
C.  N.  Srickson  ... 
C  .X.  Erickson  .. 
James  Bristow  .. . 

A.  G.  Bristow 

E.  A.  Whcatcraft 

O.  C.  Hanson 

Robert  Parkens  .. 

C.  Johnson   

Joseph  L.afave  . . . 

Peter  Strand  

H.  Fosseli   

Ri:hard  Hood   

Joan  Boman   

E.  J.  Erickson 

Peter  Hogan 

James  Bristow  ... 


16 
14 
10 
62 
24 
1 
1 

1 
1 
1 


65 

15 

5 


24 

32 
7S 
76 


00 
00 
60 
00 
00 
00 
00 
25 
50 
00 
00 
25 
50 
00 
00 
25 
25 
25 
75 
00 
25 
iM 
50 
25 
00 
00 
9  00 
0  75 
6'J 
70 
15 


o 

32 

23 
8  lo 
8  75 

32  50 

16  50 
5  50 


6 

13 
4 

!» 

1 
26 

1 
22 
13 


00 
50 
50 
75 
00 
50 
50 
00 
50 
00 
75 


I   1.4ST 


CANOSIA  ROAD. 


21 
7 

11 
6 

I 

8 
8 


00 
62 
00 
39 
50 
61 
34 
8  62 


_«> 

.;> 

10 

50 

10 

.50 

10 

50 

10  50 

« 

15 

5 

55 

5 

15 

5 

15 

4 

25 

o 

00 

43 

25 

21 

SO 

4 

50 

62 

50 

30  00 

20  10 

•)•» 

00 

20  40 

20  SO 

13  20 

S  25 

IS  r.o 

34  75 
18  75 
20  65 
22  00 
25  00 

15  3.5 

16  00 

11  25 

12  25 


$  1,265 

'      CULVER    EXTEXSIOX    ROAD. 

X<'ls    Xelson     % 

John    Hanson    

A.    P.   Johnson    

Ed    Johnson     

Victor    Anderson     

Peter   Winter    

Andrew  Olson  

M.    Gulstrom    

G.    Mickleson     

E.  N'eis  on     

F.  Colombus  

Xels    Xelson     

"M.    Gulstrom     

Poirier  &  Xordstrom  

X.    Xelson     

J'  'hn    Hanson    

Ed   Johnson    

A.  P.  Johnson  

Victor  Anderson    

Peter  Winter   

Andrew    Olson    

« T.    Mickelson    

F.    Telson    

Ausrust    Carlson    

A.    H.    Holder    

August    Johnson    

A.    H.    Steffer    

.**ivert    Rikstod    

«»tto  Simonson    

Zeek   Livingston    

Gust    Erickson     

J'>hn    Ericckson     

E.    Onchot    

E.  A.   Sandberg   

X^ick    Olson     

August    Peterson    

J.    Hendrickson    

X.    Xelson    

J.    Werleck    

John    Murrick    

John  Dermick   

Ji>hn    Rees    

Xels    Xelson     

J.    Hanson    

Ed   Johnson    , 

A.    H.    Hanson 

August  Johnson   

Severt    Rigkstod    

Otto   Simonson    

Xick    Lingstod     

Gust    Erickson    

Ed  Sundberg  

Xick   Olson    

August    Pearson    

August   Carlson    

E.    Fred»»rickson    

C    Peterson    

Julius    Arndt    

Laran  T'nsky  

Lans  Thavne   

L.   W.    Misboldt    

E.    Chapul    

L.    Hendrickson    

Xels  Xelson    

M.   Xelson    " 

J.    Hanson    

Gus  Erickson   .'* 

Kd  Johnson 

?.  Rikstad    ."."..".." 

•'.  Frederickson  

Julius  Arnold  

E.  O.  Destor  ,\[ 

Joseph  Ragnett * 

August  r*arlson    

Xi<  k  Olson  

Auuusf  Johnson .. 

E  ("rapofe  

T^onis  Craporn   

A.    H.    Haldrn    .'..'. 

K.   Nelson    

K.  \.  SundbfTg 

Juliiis  r.,lmber 

.'.    Mpiiflrixson    

X.  Xelson   


%  1,9.>6  15 
CLOQUET  RIVER  ROAD. 


Poirier  &  Xordstrom   $ 

Ole  Hanson   

C.  E.  Peterson   ' 

Gust  Wister 

Peter  Strand "." 

C  Johnson 

C.  Erickson \ 

Henry  Fostel 

E.  A.  Wheatcroft   ."..' 

Alex  Erickson   

H.  Johnson    [/\ 

John  Peterson ." 

O.  A.  Godearns 

Poirier  &  N'^ordstrom 

K.   Pel  b»-ger   

K.    F»'ibeger    

.Jr>s<-ph  Briston  ,, 

A.  < :.  BrI.ston ' 

J«)«*  Lavre   '" 

Pfter  Hogan   ..,', 

Rol>ert  Stanley   

A.  Bowman 

Hugo  Bowan ' 

C  E.  Peterson  

Gust  Chester 

O.  c.  Hanson  

«'.  Johnson  

C.  Eri'kson 

A.  Fosseli 

R.  Hood 

IZ.  A.  Wheatcraf t  .' 

C.  A.  Erickson  

Alex  Eri'^kson  

Pat  Stardt 

K.  J.  Carlson 

John  Peterson 

John  Boman 


4 

00 

10 

50 

52 

90 

186 

30 

25 

00 

1 

50 

16  50 

3 

75 

55 

0*) 

29 

00 

16 

15 

16 

.55 

21 

25 

16 

20 

17 

50 

12 

65 

18  15 

17 

15 

13  90 

29 

25 

>> 

00 

16  00 

IS 

35 

10 

75 

6 

3t» 

6 

<•< 

4 

50 

E.  Feibeger 

John  Armstrong 
John  Armstrong 
R.  D.  McSorley  .. 
Alex  McDonald  . 
Jacob  S.  Kogan  . 

John  Perry 

R;ilph  Green   

.\.  Stanley 

Otcar  Anderson 

Xfil  Benton  

Fled  Jaquin 

Li.uis  Honet   

Joseph  Wolf  

L.  Berg 

Andrew  Johnson 

Gus  Johnson  

Victor  Johnson  .. 
John  Armstrong 
Jthn  Armstrong 
Jt  hn  Armstrong 
R.  X.  McSorley  . 

A.  McDonald 

Ja  cob  Skogan  . . . 

J'  hn  Perry 

R  ilph  tJreen 

A.  Stanley 

Gus  Johnson    

Oscar  Anderson  . 

X'il  Peaton  

F:-ed  Jaquin , 

Louis  Hood   

Jcseph  Wolf   

Lawrence  Berg  .. 
A.idrew  Johnson 

Jf.mes  Harris 

J'hn  Armstrong  , 
J'  hn  Ai-mstrong  . 
J(  hn  Armstrong  . 

Jj.mes  Harris 

i:    D.  McSorley  . . , 

A    McDonald 

Ji  cob  Scogen 

Ralph  Green    

A.  Stanley 

Gas  Johnson   

Oscar  Anderson  . . 

Fred  Jaquin 

L  «ns  lionet 

Joseph  Wolf 

Liwrence  Berg  .. 
.\nna  Johnson  .. . 
John  Armstrong  . 


.$ 


48  77 

50  00 
80  00 
15  csO 

15  !'0 

16  65 
12  ■NO 


13 

19 
15 
11 
14 
14 


40 
.50 

75 
30 
!>5 

1:0 
20 
10  00 
10  uo 
20  20 


H 

25 

157 

85 

65  00 

103 

00 

17 

i)j 

17 

1 1 

18 

72 

6 

45 

7 

00 

29 

30 

21 

17 

20 

62 

4 

51' 

11 

30 

20 

62 

21 

12 

lU  12 

IS  62 

14 

82 

193 

68 

45 

00 

60  00  1 

47 

00 

•> 

62 

4 

30 

it 

40 

O 

50 

IS  60  i 

1 

40 
50 

5 

0 

30 

10 

5o 

o 

50 

5 

40 

1 

6o 

IMJ 

00 

Andrew  Erickson    . .  .w 

El  in  Erickson    

Jacob  Taakin   

Fred   Dallin    

John  Anderson  

Olo  Moe  

J.  [Running  

John   Hontalle   

Mat  Bealt 

Jacob  Hill    

Xels  Xelson    

Joseph  Goperitz 

W.    Fiso    

Joe  Praerquist  

Thomas  Colgin 

Frank  Erickson    

John  Lnrson  

Joe  Boxon    

Xick  Bergovick   

Frank  Hamel 

James  Bracco   

W.  T.   Bailey-  

A.   Hawkinsnn 

Eveleth  Hardware  company  .. 

Lake  Superior  Power  company 

Prescott,   Mars  &  Oo 

Otis  Sassas 

C   Johnson    

Erick  Jacobson   

Isaac    Wilson    

Erick  Jacobson    

Xick  Mancher   .; 

Frank   Erickson    

Jacob  Oxa   

Isaac  Jacobson 

Oif   Moe    

Johanna  Running  

.Jchn  Hatala 

Jacob  Hill    

Ei-ick    Erickson    

Matt  Bola  

Chris  Afattson    

John  Lar^son   

Seth  Selle.-s   

Frank  Hannel   

James  Japoritz 

Andrew  St ro/n   

Ed  Xewberg:    

Ed  Xewberg    

Ed  Xewberg    

Lars  Wan gstein   

Xick  Berwick    

Xick   Berwick    

John   Mattson    

Jjicob   Korgas    

W.  J.  White 

Erick  Erickson   

Ole   Moe 

John    Running 

Lars  Wargsten 

Ji?ka  Hill 

Ed    Xorberg 

Charles  Mattson 

J;-'cob    Oxa 

Erick   Jacobson 

Xick    Mancher 

J>  spt   Ja>iperitz 

Aiat   Beln 

William   H.    Bozoiiko 

Nick   Mancher 

.-\ndrew   Str<mi 

John    Hontala 

Charles   Jr)hnson 

Ole  Moe 

John  Running 

Lars    Margstein 

Jaka    Hill 

G  eorge  Xorburg 

Jacob   O'Xeil 

J'  'sse  Jacobson 

John    Berson 

Xels    Olson 

Hans    Franstadt 

William    H.    Bozarka 

X'ck  Purrick 

Soth  Sellers 

Cust    Johnson 

Jtsse    Jacobson 

0]e   Solberg 

Jr.kull    Jake 

Mike    Maxwell 

('le'Sequist 

John    Benson 


EAST       DULUTH        AXD 


3 
12 
11 
6 
6 
12 
12 
12 
11 
12 
11 
11 


3 

25 
7  50 
6  00 

2  00 

19  00 

6  75 
5  63 

5  00 
5  25 

3  00 
1  20 

20  90 
37  15 
39  05 

17  .37 
35  00 

21  75 

7  00 

16  62 
20  25 
54  00 
10  00 
20  62 

15  75 

19  50 

18  75 

17  25 

18  75 

20  25 
18  00 

16  S7 

17  25 

4  00 
7.5 

12  75 

15  75 

G  75 

6  75 
3  75 

15  00 
9  00 

5  00 

6  00 

:;  00 

2  62 
00 
00 
37 


J.   H.  Gllmoure 
*.  J.  Witchel   .. 

.A.  Anderson    

Jiimes  Erickson 

F.  Davis   

J.  S.  Daniels  .... 

I.    Anderson    

S.  Koljisckl  .... 
A.   Bronchar  

F.  Peterson    

A.  Anderson  .. .. 
I.  Christopher  .. 
H.  Christopher  . 

G.  Johnson   

t;    Anderson  

C.  Johnson  

H.   Lamb    

J.  Bacon   

C.  E.  Fonton  .... 
C.    Fitspatrick   .. 

J.  Weiland   

A     Aron    

J.  Rens 

H.  Rens  


15  37 
15  37 


13 
12 
22 
65 

3 
21 

5 


20  63 


0  63    Jesse    Mobratson. 


7  SS 
22  50 
21  38 
20  6:: 
20  13 


11 

20 
SO 
36 
20 
28 
24 


H.    Longton    

H .  Hanson  

Z.  Joel    ■ 

J.   Pilletier   

O.    Olson    

L.  Johnson    

A.  C.  McLern  ....'... 
Sione-Ordean -Wells 

J.  S.  Daniels 

C.  E.  Fenton 

J.  Bacon 

J.   Willard    "... 

O.   Oleson    

n.  Smith '  ." 

C.    Fitzpatrick 

J.   Kalowiski    

.Anton  Anderson  


company 


23  63 
19  50 
26 

6 
23 
14 
17 

1 

166 

57 

86 


Martin    Saxharg.. 

Henry  Soln 

Honry  Soln 

Julius    Hustod 

John   O.   Brotan.. 
Gus  Leander..    .. 

C.   F.  Holt 

Sam  Johnson..    .. 
Fred  Belander..    .. 
Charles    Carlson... 


12 

18 

9 

15  00 
18  00 

16  .50 
10  00 
16  .50 
15  00 
4S  00 
12  00 

9  00 
44  36 
70  0() 

2  25 

25  11 
28  11 

9  37 
5  61 
<>  25 

26  61 


Johnson  

Peterson    ... 

Christopher 

Anderson  ... 

Iteno   

Zolz   

Aron   

Verquist    

R'no    

Leebemp   . . . . 

Hanson    


Stone-Ordean-Welis    company 


17 
16 

n 

24  75 

18  3S 

11  13 

20  00 

17  25 

17  43 

13  75 

20  25 

2   IS 

9  75 

10  00 

16  50 

10  75 

6  00 

101  26 


Jacob    Orke 

I.    Jacobson 

Gus   Llnd 

Frank    Ansley 

Xick   Murcher 

Charles    Berg 

Charles    Anderson 

Martin   Saxharg 

Henry    Sain 

Gus    Leander 

Peter    Johnson 

Andrew   Dreaal 

Julius    Horston 

Sam    Johnson 

Ch  ris    Christopherson . . 

John    Hanson 

Erick    Stard 

C.  Jusitin 

Gus    Mobrotson 

Pat    Fitzpatrick..    .      .. 

P.    M.   Bodler 

Gus    Lind 

Gforge    Waboose 

Aug.  Anderson 

Charles   Carlson 

Gus   Tiind 

Fiank    Ansley 

Charles    Born 

.Aug.    Anderson 

Charles    Anderson 

Henry    Salom 

Gust    Larendcr 

M.    Saxharg 

John    McRea 

Frank    Angel 

Mike  Molwell 


IXDUSTRlAL   ROAD. 


$  1,984  62 


So 
14 

7 


7 

12 

6 

1 
4 

4 
4 

4 
4 


50 
25 
50 
50 
25 
87 
50 
Ot) 
00 
50 
50 
50 
50 
75 
50 
50 


$  1,478  5lt 


166 
57 
26 
14 

14 
10 


10 
15 
50 
75 
75 
30 
50 


12  fA 
16  00 

•i     Jo 

1.*  ^.* 


14 

;*'• 

It; 

4". 

14 

..* 

15 

75 

13 

50 

;) 

,".0 

s 

45 

*» 

(Nl 

68 

rm 

143  05 

company 

company 

company 
company 


IS 

&5 

•> 

00 

6 

75 

17 

75 

13 

25 

11 

75 

19 

25 

18 

35 

O 

*> 

25 

.32 

25 

14  00 

21 

50 

14  00 

10  SO 

50 

•j:t 

;»5 

0<» 

2S 

50 

27 

00 

20 

62 

27 

75 

10 

50 

10  .50 

11  00 
16  00 

16  r-> 

!»  00 


15 
6 
S 
3 
4 
6 
.M 
24 


ELY  AXD  FALL   RIVER. 

L.   T.   Harris    5 

H.  Scott   

George   Woods 

Junes  Van  Kervis  ..,.'. 

Alfred  Jarva 

Theo  Latula  ,,'. 

I.'-aac  Hummer 

Peter   Balotor   .' 

John  Dougherty  

Paul   Monlray   

Xic  Xankor  ' 

M.  Mancharger ' 

h.  Brant ." 

K.   Laluen    '  * , 

Charles  Gosga    ....'. 

Andrew  Jackson ....' 

James   Horgate    

:Mike  Makie  

Frank  Lesser    

-Anton  Lesser  

John   Ker.sell    []// 

Joe   Perctell    [\[ 

Jack  Kangas .[ 

Charles  Jack   [ 

.\.   Lassie    

John  Lincoln  

Charles  Johnson    .'. 

Richard   Whiteside    

F.  Davis   [ 

Chandler  Iron 

F:.  Whitesides 

Knox  Lumber 

M.  Vail    

Chandler  Iron 

(handler  Iron. 

It.  Whiteside 

K.   Whiteside    

R.   Whiteside   

Charles  Brown , 

John  Smith    

H.   H.   Sheridan   

H.  Whiteside   

Ole   Xelson    

-A.    Wakala   

Sam   Sorbby    

Eli   Linti    

Onto  Johnson    

'harles  Masten 

< 'scar  Alakki   

Isaac   Hammer    

A.    Xervin    

L.   F.  Harris   

Herman  Sheet 

I'aul  Montray   

R.  Whiteside    

\\'.  H.  Bazonka  

Xick  Bensirtch  

I.  Jacobson   

Andrew  Stann  

John  Katula 

Chris  Johnson   

John  Matson 

I.   Wilson    

Frank  Hodge  

M.   Vail    

Knox  Lumber  company 

Richard  Whiteside 

1).  C.  M.  Tavish   

A.   Whiteside    

Charles   Brown    

.John   Smith   

Harry  Sheridan   

.August  Jackoln   

Eli  Linti    

Charles  Mastin  

Oscar  Maki   


1  62 

1  62 
20  37 
12  47 

4  12 
20  00 

1  62 

82 

15  60 

10  65 

6  00 


William 
William 


RIVER  ROAD. 

Cavanaugh 

Cavanaugh 


E. 
K. 
A. 


Iverson.. , 
Lockti . . 
Mann.... 


$ 

1.461  24 

LESTER 

$ 

27  50 
37  00 
13  S7 
13  S7 
10  12 

ERICKSOX    ROAD. 


4  50 

2  45 

2  45 

2  45 

2  00 

2  00 

2  00 

2  70 

2  70 

2  85 

2  85 

3  00 

3  00 

3  00 

3  00 

8  00 

1.34  75 

22  00 

1  75 

47  00 

10  65 

16  43 
1  25 
3  18 
20  00 
32  00 
IS  00 


< 

7 

7 
46  :.'a 
30  00 
16  00 
13  50 
13  50 
18  00 
18  00 


14 

16 

4 

2 

'> 

6.5 
93 
65 


John    McEwen..     ..     •• 

John    McGirk 

Charles  McDermott.. 

John    Mattala 

Martin   Tims 

M.  W.  McDonald..  .. 
M.  W.  McDonald..  .. 
M.  W.   McDonald..    .. 

Stans  Xort 

Charles   Augusta 

M.  Olson 

Jacob  Wallein 

Jacob  Wallein 

.\ndrew  Berber 

<;us    Berquist 

John  Hendrickson..  .. 
John    Hendrickson..     . 

Aug.    Carlson 

Aug.    Carlson 

Joe   Levardusky 

Frank    Xybeck 

Xick    Lingstad 

John    Jacobson    

Jake    Hill 

Charles   Erickson    ..    . 

Charles  Erickson 

v..   Hendrickson    

Peter  Lowry 

August  Anderson  ..  . 
August  Anderson..    .. 

George  Smith 

C.    II.    DibbcU 

William    Quinn 

Gust  Carlson 

Stans  Schwartz 

1*.    McEwen 

«»tto  Simonson 

.Vlexander  McDonald.. 

Peter  La  fare 

Joseph    Osborne 

Isadnr   Manoni , 

.\lbert   James 

Joseph    Jaura 

\ug.   I'arson 

Xick    Olson 

Willi;im    Malone..     .. 

Charles   T..apoint 

Henry  Folz 


102 


79  25 
21  36 
29  00 
10 


S 
22 
17 
26 
16 
21 
17 

3 
IS 
13 

6 
12 

6 

7 
13 
19 
14 
24 

1 
13 
14 

1 
14 
15 
12 

6 

16 

4 
o 

26 

7 
7 


IS 
IS 


1 
1 

214 


00 
50 
50 

25 
7S 
75 
28 

40 

00 
50 
88 
00 
38 
00 
41 
50 

25 

p.* 
i;> 

13 

42 

82 

50 

65 

00 

75 

00 

75 

00 

75 

90 

50 

00 

75 

75 

5S 

12 

5S 

26 

66 

00 

90 

20 

20 

78 


GRANT  ROAD. 

.'..  Hukanson    

\v'illiam  Grant  

Jf.  O.  Ayers  

.*=.  Thompson  

Charles  Ayers   

J  a  ck    Murphy    

August   Beskie    

James  Grant   

John  Larson  

I  sirs  Larson   

\\'illiam  Grant  

Eveleth  Hardware  company 

William  Grant  

\V.  S.  Ayers   

S.  Thompson  

Charles  Ayers   

-August  Beskie   

James  Grant  

Lars   Olson    

J<),mes   Talbot 

Knute  Etterlund 

John    Berlin    

John  Ridgy   '' 

James  La  Blanc 

John  Paradis   

John  Worcher 

I'ligene  Demance   

Talva  Oxa    

Xick  Wadhar   

^Villiam  Grant  

Herman   Stolbeig    

-August  Johnson 

r.  S.  Ayers   

Lirs  G.  Olson   

Erick  Franks   

.)ohn   Kangas    

S.   Thompson    

Cheilas  -Ayer 

oiaf    Christenson    

Jacob  Jacobson    

.Tohn   Law    

Ercik  Erickson  

-Xick  ZMancher 

Chris  Erickson    ,.., 

Knute  Etterstail   

ICrick   Bakinson    

Herman    Hirt    

.'ohn    Lundgreen 

Anton  Funti   

John  Lamont  

Herman    Stolber.g    

-Vugust  Isaacson    

S«nert   Thompson    

.Tohn  Lundgreen  

Xick  Massher   

.'ohn  Ecklund   

Henry  Pointer  

Lurs  Saniuelson   

'"'rank  Rose    

.Tohn   Martinquist    


9 
26 
15 
13 
12 


10  .50 


12 

32 

6 


00 
00 
75 
2  69 

2  56 

4  82 
50  00 
21  00 
21  .50 

5  10 
13  14 
80  00 
13  81 
17  71 
13  65 
10  48 

8  98 

9  36 
7  20 

3  on 

00 
50 
00 
47 


John 
J(  hn 
Gust 


3 


1 
4 
36 
56 
34 
30 
24 
3 
11 
34 
10 
12 
10 


10  50 
13  50 
00 
00 
00 
00 
50 
50 
25 
00 
00 
50 
50 
00 
00 
00 
00 
75 
75 
50 


Peterson 

Peterson 

Westor 

Ed  ward    Hansen . , 

C.    E.    Peterson... 

Carl   Johnson 

Robert   Stanley... 

John    Erickson 

P''ter   Helgemo... 

Oie   Berg 

Christ  Boland 

John    Peterson.. 

Charles   Johnson.. 

Erick   Erickson . . . 

Qip  Berg   

E  Iward  Hasen  .. . 

Christ  Boland 

John  Peterson   

John  Peterson    

Robert  Stanley  ... 

J<hn  Erickson   .... 

Henry  Stanley  .. .. 

G  list  Wester   

C.  E.  Peterson   .... 

X.  Peterson   

John  Peterson   

C.  E.  Peterson  .... 

John  Peterson 


JAXZIG  ROAD. 


12 

30 

12 

21 

19 

25 

8 

12 

34 

25 

22 

24 

19 

3 

3 

6 

13 

7 


$  1,017  87 
GRAXD    LAKE    ROAD. 


%    834  61 
FATAL  AXD  ELY   LAKE  ROAD. 

F.   Davis $        12  00 

GRAND    LAKE    STATION    ROAD. 

I 


.\.   Amonson 

.loseph  Bossi 

.'''rank   McMorley.. 
'{ichard   Congdon.. 

;~rank  Mand 

Man  Rose 

.VI  rs.    S.    Rose 

!.  Parker 

\da   Johnson..     .. 

J.   Early 

Chris    Belma    ..     .. 
.\I.    Morrenson .... 

M.    Sorrenson 

.K*.  Avonson 

>i.    Congdon 

';*''rank   McMarty..    . 

Oan   Rose 

Virs.   D.   Rose..    ..    , 

'"•hris   Balman 

.Inhn  ICaiiy 

'"harles  Johnson.. 

Andrew    Olson 

Alfred   Soren.son..    . 
M.    Sorrenson..     .. 

\1.   Sorrenson 

Mciuinj;    Hardware 


45 

11 

9 

11 

11 

11 

19 

11 

5 

6 

16 


Randolph  Long  

VA'illiam  Slicker  .. .. 

Eli  Lataux   

J:ikovitz  Ches 

Louis  Archambault 

COarles  Meed 

Otto  L.  Bait 

-A If  Wagner  

-August  Wagner  ... 

Ji>hn  East  

Frank  Slycher  

Louis  Anderson  

William  Janzig 

T.  Groat   

Hi"rman  Stobler  .... 

A.  C-  McLean  

Randolph  Lang  

Otto  Zabbott  

William   Janzig    .... 

-August  Wagner 

•A iliert  Wagner 

John  East  

Louis  Amundson  .. 
Hermon  Stubler  ... 
William  Slycher  .. . 

Frank  Slycher  

1  ouis  Archambault 

Elis  Luben  

Chris  Jokovitz    

Hans  Johnson  

George  Gekpirger  .. 

Emil  Keeley  

George  Johnson    

Charles  Jokovitz  

George  Erickson  

Peter  Fisher  

Frank  Slycker  


30  00 
50  85 
62  00 


15 
16 
16 
27 
17 
16 


;o 


company 


■)0 

00 

60 
30 
3  00 

14  70 

15  00 
47  511 
70  15 
35  30 


598 


lloWAltD    A.\l>    <JXESEN    ROAD. 


Xordstrom. 


26  00 
62 
13  25 
12  75 
22  62 
17  00 
22  62 


$  1,071 
EVELETH  AND  FAYAL  ROAD. 

•    ••         •••■•■•••■•  s^  ,J^ 


0.  C.  Sassas  .. 

1.  Wilson  

T.  Wilson  

Erick  Jacobson 
Chris  Johnson  , 

J.  Exa  

I.  Jacobson  .... 
Nick  Nunchor  . 
Mat  Hopola  ... 


16 


•  •  •  •  •  •  ) 


16  87 
16  12 
13  50 

10  fin 

34  00 

11  25 


F.    Davis, 
Poirier   & 

E.  Feiberger 

H.   L.   Cha.sman 

J.  H.  Gillmore 

-A.   J.   Mitchell 

J.  Bacon 

Louis  Johnson 

F.  Davis 

J.  S.  Daniels 

C.    E.    Fenlon    

7j.  Zolin 

J.   Kaliski 

Z.    Whiteman    

J.   Anderson 

H.    Christopreson 

J.   Christopherson 

J.  Beta 

L.  Johnson 

J.   A.   Anderson 

J.  Peterson 

<'.  .Tohnsoii 

•  '.    Fitzpatrick 

H.    Reno 

J .   Reno 

I  J.  Anderson 

G.  Johnson 

A.  Voucher 

R.  Arund 

H.  Liant ., 

Market  Grocery  company 
H.  L.  Chapin  . 

-  --        .■■.., 


34  00 
28  00 
96  03 


William    Myer 

Joseph    Bristol!.. 

M.    Kusirnick 

L.    H.    Kusirnick. 
W.    Modjeska.. .. 

John  Thans 

William  Henry.. 
T.   J.    Wei  don..    . 
William  Kline..    . 

J.   C.  McLean 

-Vlartin   Miller 


•  t 

00 

7 

50 

10 

00 

3 

75 

3 

75 

0 

75 

100  00 

54 

SO 

43 

84 

36 

53 

8 

50 

KEL.SEY  ROAD. 

William  Mathers $ 

William  Mathers 

Morton  Mathews  

Harry  Sizler   

Vv'illiam  Mathews '. 

Charles  Sodgern  

C.  J.  Linstrom  

Gus  Anderson  

r;iick  Matson  

VA'.  Mathews  

W.  Mathews  

C.  J.  Linstrom   

C  harles  .Soderlund 

C us  Anderson  

Lrick  Mattson 

John  Tabin  

D.  Belilngham    

J.  C.  Barlei-gh  

W.  Mathews  

J.  H.  CJordon  

-\.   L.  Merritt   ". 

John  Tobin    

.\.  L.  Hurley  

F.  Davis 


LAVAQUK  ROAD. 


38 
19 
19 
17 
17 


45 
23 
23 
30 
30 
20  00 


35 
48 
11 
12 
12 
11 
12 


10  .50 
3  00 

3  75 
00 
00 
00 

r.0 

.50 
00 
5  75 
5  75  , 
B  6f>l 
9  75 

4  40 
75  901 


4 
11 
11 
19 
10 

9 


HIBBING  ROAD. 

.A  etan   Powder   company $ 

INDEPENDENCE   ROAD. 


275  42 


6  85 


Andrew   Carlson 

...$ 

1  50 

-Martin    lirodohl 

4  ,50 

$ 

6  00 

IRON     JUNCTION     AND 

EVELETH 

ROAD, 

Poirier   &    Nordstrom 

...$ 

21  34 

-A.    Hunakinson 

32  73 

Charles   Borg 

•  •  • 

10  00 

Aug.  Anderson 

•  •  • 

6  00 

Charles    .Anderson 

,  , 

.3  75 

Charles   Carlson 

•  •  • 

4  50 

Martin    Saxharg 

•  •  • 

5  25 

Henry    Solomon 

•  ■  • 

4  50 

Julls    Huslaid 

■  ■  • 

4  50 

.lohn  0.   Brotan 

.   >  • 

4  50 

Gus  Leander 

•  •  ■ 

6  00 

Peter  .Tohnsion 

•  •  • 

1  50 

Gus   Lurd 

•  •  • 

7  50 

Charles  Borg 

•  •  • 

25  00 

Ang.    Anderson 

•  • 

21  00 

•  •  ••  m^m  I 


42.3(il|CliarIes  Anderson.. 


K.  B.  Engrcn  

-Vugust  Boquist  .. . 

o.  <;.  Vintson 

G.  C.  AMntson 

H.  Butler  

Hur  Forge.son    

A.  F.  GoKfielden  .. 
Louis  Olson  

Anna  Gilbert  

Gust  Anderson  

James  Brintnall  .. . 

.Tohn  Brindose   

Samuel  Samuelson 

E.  B.  Engren 

1-;.  B.  Engren  

E.  B.  Engren 

-August  Boquist  .. . 

G.    Vinsterson 

C.  G.  Brinston  .... 

Harry  Butler 

Hans  Forgeson  .... 

A.  F.  Getsfield  

Louis  Olson  

Ames  Gilbert 

G U.St  Anderson    

Joseph  Brindos   

Samuel  .Samuelson 

-A  ndrew  Johnson   . . 

Henry  Dahl  

-Albert  Aaron  

James  Bacon   

Anton  Anderson  ... 

Arthur  Briston  

Anton  Kruskee  .... 

S.  Moleski   

Peter  Noskata   

Frank  Kattcl 

John  Brindos   

E.  B.  Engren   

E.  B.  Engren 

Albert  Aaron  

An  aron  Johnson  ... 

fJust  Anderson  .... 

Louis  Olson 

21  00  j  Anton  Anderson  . . . 
35  25   Arthuc  Briston  .... 


27  00 

24  75 

9  00 

33  '.5 


23  25 
33  CO 
33  75 


28 
18 
6 
4 
9 
6 


66  00 

24  00 

3  00 

0 


47 

28 
27 
28 


28  12 
25  50 
33  00 


15 
15 
28 

6 
28 

7 
16 
16 


20  67 
3  00 

14  62 
10  12 
10  12 

8  00 
60  00 
27  .50 

15  00 
15  00 
12  00 

12  00 

13  .50 
3  00 

36  00 
5  00 


Hardware 


$  1,160  69 


.$        41 

25 

10  00 

15 

79 

15 

00 

42 

75 

11 

12 

16 

50 

9  50 

10  06 

2 

25 

2 

25 

27  02 

14 

25 

5 

63 

10 

50 

16 

00 

24 

75 

8  00 

SS  00 

IS  00 

17 

00 

22 

50 

26 

25 

5 

25 

12 

GO 

65 

00 

6  00 

39 

company. 


551  99 


22  50 


11 

25 

12 

00 

12 

00 

12 

00 

9  00 

13 

5(; 

12 

00 

10 

50 

12 

on 

7 

50 

0 
0 

75 

1 

50 

1 

50 

4 

00 

') 

00 

38 

75 

12 

00 

10 

50 

15 

75 

15 

10 

10 

50 

15 

75 

12 

00 

18 

00 

12 

00 

20 

25 

21  UO 

9  00 

6  00 

38 

00 

11 

25 

11 

25 

30  00 

5 

25 

4  00 

21 

00 

485  00 


20 

GO 

20  00 

19 

25 

18 

00 

15 

(hj 

3  93 

3 

43 

rs:j 

en 

1 

48 

65 

CO 

20 

77 

14 

1 1 

20  S7 

5 

'.)2 

24 

36 

21 

7! 

15 

33 

80 

73 

2S 

00 

14 

00 

12 

00 

12 

00 

14 

Oil 

4.5s  21 


22  '0 

20  00 

11  62 

12  75 

10  15 

12  00 

10  50 

9  00 

3  10 

6  00 

4  15 

6  00 

1  50 

5  85 

62  50 

6  8S 

52  00 

17  33 

17  7S 

14  8S 

5  25 

17  8S 

15  75 

5  25 

19  3S 

10  .50 

46  06 

18  08 

9  00 

11  08 

4  50 

5  90 

1  00 

2  75 

2  75 

2  75 

1  50 

12  SS 

145  85 

62  50 

9  75 

14  13 

12  88 

2  25 

1*  94  1 

2  50' 

Peter  Stand  

S.   .Vlolaska  

S.  Molaska  

Thom  Kolska 

Frank  Koslistki  ... 
Charles  Banning  .. 
G.  O.  Brintson  .... 

Fri>d  Johnson  

Charles  Johnson  .. 
C.  G.  Brintson  .... 

M.  Labert   

Barney  Anderson  . 
-August  Boquist  ... 

Peier  Magosta 

E.  B.  Engren  

Marshall- Wells 

company 

E.  B.  Engren   

Andrew  Johnson  .. 

Gi:st  Anderson   

Anton  Anderson  .. 
G.  A.  Brintson  .... 

C.  G.  Bruston  

M.  Labud 

Charles  Johnson  .. 
Magnus  Anderson 

Gust  Johnson   

Joe  Wolf  

John  nodberg   

Giist  Anderson  

Ivi'r  Oakstrom  

Alton  Anderson  .. 

Fied  Jaklon  

-Ai  drew  Johnson  .. 
August  Boquist   ... 

E.   B.  Engrcn  

Kelly  &  Kellorin   . 

E.  B.  Engren   

E.  B.  Engren   

Andrew  Johnson  . 
Gust  Anderson  .. 
Anton   Anderson    ., 

Gust  Johnson    

Joe    Wolf    

Mignus  Anderson 

Fied    Joquein    

M.    Labud    

G.    O.    Bunston    ... 

John    Aogberg    

C.  G.  Bunston  ... 
Aigust    Boquist     ., 

Iver    Exton    , 

Cliarles    F^ssar    

John  Redberg   

E.   B.   Engnen    

Kelly  Hardware 
A'ldrew  Johnson 

Gis  Anderson   

Gust   Johnson    

J(.e   Wolf    ■■;■ 

A  uton   Anderson 

Fred   Jackson    

G.  O.  Bunston   

E    G.   Bunston    ' 

I\  ar    Exton    [ 

C  'larles    Cusser    *  * 

M .    Labud    , .[ 

Magnus    Gnanson 

John    Rodberg    

Alolph  Larson    

Rudolph    Edqulst 

Oscar   Anderson    

Fi-ed  Johnson 

AA'illiam    McLoud    

E.    B.    Engren    

A  ad  rew  Berquist  

E.    B.    Engren    

V.'illiam   McEwer    

Frank  Peffer   

AVilliam   Biffering   

G  ^?orge    Tischer    

William  Carl    [ 

\^'ilIiam   McLeod    

C    Falkner    

Fred   Little    

Tan    Mc-A.rthur    

V.'illiam   Edwards    

Albert    Dixon     

Euncan    Buchanan    

Gust    Berguin    

Ever  Exton    

William    Plaster    ] 

iatt    Brier    ] 

Grant    

Brenson  , 

Brenson   

Gustfield   

Meritz    

Tischer   

K  enzie   McLeod    

Andrew   A'allant    ..'. 

G eorge  Erickson    

Phil    Doran    \ 

A  ugust   Boquist    '. 

R.    Dinham    

George  Tischer   

Rfatt   Brier    

George    Tischer    

William  Carl   

William  McLeod   

C.    Falker    

Fred    Cattle     

I>avid  McArthur   

-^rthur   Dixon    

luncan    Buchanan    

Fvar  Excom    

AVilliam    Plaster    

John    Grant    

C'.  G.  Beerdon  

C.  C.  Beerdon   

A.   Gustfield    

John  Mortiz 

John    Tischer 

William   Thompson    

Kennie    McLeod    

Thil   Dolan    

A  ugust  Bancrost   

William    Edwards    

.9  am    May    

A  rchie  McPherson   

I'hil    Dugan    

Gust    Anderson    

George    Andersson    

James    Satler    

Henry  Dahl    

rHe    Charlie    

Sam    Samuelson    

Ifelmer  Hansen   

Lon    Leonard    

Frank  Kulspie   

r;ust   Bergon    ." 

George    Ti.scher    

IVJeining   Hardware   company. 
ICelley    Hardware    company.. 

Thomas  Leonard   

I'rank   Kalo.ski    

( 'arl    Buss    

H.    Norton     

C.  E.  Brenson    ..'. 

Eber    Extrom     

\Villiam    l^irch    

f>.  <  J.  Brenson   

John    Mathews    

Sam    Higgins    

<  ieorge  Tischer  

John    Tischer    

William    Carl    

AVilliam   McLeod    

A .    McPherson    

C.    Falkner     

Fred    Kitto    

Wil  liam    Denby    

Gust  Berquist    

August    Anderson     

K.    McLeod    

Andrew  Anderson  

I'at    Dugan    

Dan    McDonald    

James    Salter    

Frank  Jaquin    

Matt   Brier    

J.  Gimorks  

James   Kospiski    

Jack  Leonard    

John  McDonald   

Thomas  Stack   

Allen  McDonald  

F.  Mermuskie   

F.   Kehtel    

Peter  Cathro  

George  Fischer  


J  )hn 
A.  G. 
C  E. 
E.  F. 
J  )hn 
John 


10  38 
5  50 


2  25 

1  50 

13  C3 

10  00 

53 

53 


11 
12 
11  88 


1 

36 

5 

125 


S  00 
55  00 
11  25 

11  00 

8  00 

12  12 

13  37 
S  62 
7  50 

13  "u 

12  87 

13  12 
5  65 

5  75 
2  00 
4  00 
4  00 
7  50 

16  00 
96  10 
27  45 
65  00 

6  25 

21  % 

22  50 
22  50 
22  14 
18  54 
21  25 

17  10 
12  82 
20  62 

9  94 

11  52 
53  00 
15  57 

12  44 


6 
172 


24  50 

22  50 

1  62 

18  25 

19  37 
18  17 

1  42 

13  S7 

14  65 


20  50 


11  50 

11  75 

7  50 

2  00 
37  50 
62  50 
36  00 

111  63 

8  CO 

3  25 
2  50 

42  50 
6S  00 
15  00 

12  30 
11  50 
14  50 

5(t 
15 
45 
0-. 


8 

12 
11 
12 
10  00 


10  50 
6  40 


39 
5 

7 
4 
•» 

4 


50 
50 
00 

00 
00 
40  00 
94  70 

14  80 
67  50 

100  00 
22  00 

13  20 

15  65 
20  00 

4  75 
8  15 

14  25 

6  75 
4  75 
8  90 

7  50 
13  75 

20  00 
98  00 

21  25 


(;> 


18 

13  75 

14  00 
3  00 


13 
13 
13 


14  00 

11  00 

10  90 

7  50 

7  50 
20  80 

6  00 
14  90 

3  25 

20  75 

240  00 

30  00 

1  75 

8  90 
34  00 


7  85 
3  55 
3  Of> 
3  (>0 
5  90 
5  65 
9  15 

11  00 
62  50 
82  00 
78  (Ki 
19  00 
18  30 
16  05 
15  55 
30  00 
2  00 
2  25 

15  10 

16  00 
16  75 
60  55 

15  80 

13  05 

16  05 
16  00 

14  75 

8  55 
8  25 

11  00 

22  00 

5  25 

5  25 

8  25 

264  75 


Ernest  Kuhlway  .. 
Christian  Skogan 

Isak  Xelson 

Anton  Lakke 

Peter  Peterson    . . . 

H.  Lakke  

Andrew  Carlson  .. 

M.   Brodahl   

M.  Brodahl   

Andrew  Johnson  .. 
Alfred   Berquin    .. 

L.    Ronning    

Ole  Solem    

K  -Anstad 

John  Carlson 

A.  Berquin   

Chris   Skogan    

Martin  Brodal   

Peter  Peterson    . . . 
August   Anderson 
Earnest  Kahmaey 

Ole  Solem   

-Anton  Lakke    

Frank  Johnson 

Hsns  Lakke   

Otto    Dow    

Alfred  Berglond    .. 
-\ndrew  Johnson  .. 
Carlson  .. 


Andrew 


13  .50 
4  00 

17  25 
36  00 
7  .50 
10  50 
17  25 

15  75 
39  37 

9  75 

14  62 
17  25 
17  25 

16  87 

10  50 

11  62 
14  62 

12  00 
12  00 
10  S7 

9  37 

12  00 

4  00 


$      836  80 


MIDWAY  ROAD. 


Fred   Davis    

E.  Feibiger 

F.  W.  J  off  rev   ' 

F-  W.  Jeffrey   

Oliver  Martin    

P.  Milligan   

C.   Mill    

Thomas  Shovin    . . . 

A.  Mann   

J.  Matreand   

C.   AV.  Jeffry 

Marshall  -  Wells 

company 

C.  W.  Jeffry   

B.  Mulligan   

Oliver  Martin    

F.  Shoevin   

J.  Mortred    

Gust  Erickson  

Ed  I^rickson 

P.  Thoin    

C.  W.  Jeffry  

Charles  Mill    

A.   A.   Mounce    

\y.  Campbell  

E.  Peterson   

William   Thurley   .. 
Mome   Brothers    . . . 

C.  \V.  Jeffry   

C.  W.  Jeffry  

A.  Manna 

Ed  Erickson   

Gus  Erickson 

VA'.   Hurley   

E.    Peterson    

E.   Letta   

C.  W.  Jeffry   

Charles  Mills   

George   Leytcheson 

Ed    Gibbons    

C.  W.  Jeffry  

C.  W.  Jeffrv   

C.  W.  Jeffry   


Hardware 


5  40 

65  00 
19  r.o 
18  00 

16  25 
14  25 

17  25 
23  45 

2  38 
.38  00 
87  00 
38  25 
36  75 
17  25 
21  00 

58  n 

1  12 
67  50 
33  00 
13  00 
21  00 
31  50 

2  00 
1  50 

90  00 

66  50 
11  50 
11  .50 
50  00 

5  00 
8  00 


MOUXTAIX 


993  40 
t 


IRON     AXD 
ROAD. 


HIBBINO 


John  Kanosky 

Lant  McXaughton   

Aetna  Pou'der  company 

Anton   Kapas    

Fred    -Anderson    

A  ugust  Sasey   

Ola  Bacha  

August  Setta   

J  >hn  Jackson   

Peter  Rohney   

J')hn   McKensie    

James  Noack   

Charles  AA'iLson   

Dan  Costello    

Ben  Hansen 

John  Reckavar 

-Anton   Stiffancheck   

Joe  Mattson    

Roland  T.  Schur 

August  Costo   

Seth   Sellers    

-Anton  Ksipus   

William   AAilson    

R.   Scheir   

-August   Costo    

Otto  Ander.son    

-Alexander  Burns    

Joe  Dumar 

John  Matonsie   

Mat  Mat.son    

Mat  Matson    

-August   Somelberg   

riemo  Maki   

John  Hadila  

A.    Mattila    

AVilliam    Jackson    

D.    Muntsy    

A.    Blav    

P.    Richerto    

D.    McTa\ish    

Rolland   Schur    

L.   Larsaic    

Joseph    Xovoak    

John   Kohiver    

A  ndrew  Sarri    

John   McKenzie   

Gust   Wilson    

Fred  Anderson   

L.    Legard    

A.    Stephanchick    

Joseph  Gralion   

Peter  Thompson    

Mat  Anderson   

Pon   Marthyon    

Dan  Kostagle   

H.  L.  Seldon  

-Arthur   Powder    

Anton    Kupers    

Joe  X'ovalk    

•lohn    Rochman    

.lohn    HcKenzie    

Fred    Anderson    

Dan    Costello    

-A ndrew    S<jrri    

Charles    AViison    

l.iouis    Lt^gard    

Antrm  Stefandii    

Joseph  Sontain 

1\    Thompson    

Mat  Anderson   , 

I'on    Marthyon    

George  Lf>isee   

Peter  Robutte  

D.   McTavLsh    

R.    Schur    

John  Mat.son   

A.   Burns   

R.    Schur    


25  50 
38  00 
22  50 
17  25 
29  25 
21  75 
33  00 


21   (H) 


6  (M) 


1,346  42 


%  4,706  29 


LAKKE  ROAD. 


-\na  -Anderson   .. . 

Hans  Lakke   

-\.   B.1eiklund   

Martin  Brodahl  . 
Peter  Peterson  . . . 
Chris  Skogane  . . . 
Isaac  Xelson  .. .. 
Andrew  Carlson  . 
Alfred  Bjerklund 

Anton  Lakke   

Martin  Brodahl   . 

John  Carlson  

A.  Bjerklund  

August  Anderson 


20 

31 
13 
31 


60 
25 
12 
50 
50 


28  12 

29  25 

18  00 
14  25 

19  S7 
8  00 

56  25 
24  75 


MORRIS    THOMAS    ROAD. 

Jacob   Nelson    %  57,50 

Chris   Christenson    34  50 

August  Beck   IS  OO 

Aron    Lindgren    17  25 

Charles    Lardgren    <»  ()o 

August   Johnson    <>  oo 

J.  O.   Johnson   900 

Jacob    Nelson    92  00 

Henry  Zabott   9  oo 

G.  Gulbranson 9  qq 

Charles  Johnson    36  00 

Julius    Knitt    16.50 

Thomas   Grote    <j  qo 

Charles    Lundgren    8  00 

Emil   Peterson    400 

C.F.Johnson  500 

A'.    Helmer    4  00 

Charles  O.   Johnson    4  00 

Andrew  Johnson   4  oo 

Charles  Erickson  13  50 

Nels  Peterson    15  (Ki 

Harkon   Peterson    c  m 

Peter  Johnson  4.50 

John  Johnson   4.50 


?      401  25 


MAPI>E 

R.   Hall    .... 
M.  Stowell 


G. 

\V. 

Otto    Klug 


GROVE    ROAD. 


30  75  j  John  St  James 


I .  t .  *  • . « 


52  .'0 
69  50 
17  50 
29  20 


U- 


9 

t 

1 

1^ 

- — I  > — , 


-.Mi 


! 


■h-r 


■ 


^» 


!i        : 

!  I 

: 


James    Lovy    

Ed    Wergen     

Barney  Krohanberg 

John   Ewin    

A.    Kiebler 

Carl  Lusk   

Ous   Luske    

S.    Krokanberg    

John    Muslel    

P.  L.  Johnson  

O.  R.  Hall   

G.  R.  Hall  

W.   M.   Stowell    

John  St.  James  

James    Long    , 

O.    Klug    

John  Ewing  

X.    Kellar    

M.   Whalen   

Ed   Nergen    

Oust    Luste    

Carl   Lusk   

John   Mush    

George   R.   Hall   


50  1 


16  60 
26  42 

6  75 
18  00 
13  40 
16  50 
16  50 
13  50 
13 
48 

1  94 
20  00 
26  50 
S  25 
4  75 
4  75 

3  16 

4  75 

5  50 
9  00 
1  50 

6  75 
5  25 

18  S4 


Mat  Mergener 

J.    Sibisky    

P.  E.  Michel  .. 

P.   (Jurnet  

J.    Waess    

M.   Kumonti   .. 

M.   Wagner   . . 

P.  L.  Wagner  . 

P.   L.  Wagner 

Thomas  Stack 

Thomas  Stack 

P.  Fitzgerald  .. 

W.  Varnick 

W.  Varnick  ... 

P.  Farmlstsk   .. 

J.  McDonald  ... 

Jans  Ansten  ... 

P.  Cattle  

P.   Cathro    

F.  Garnett   

Thomas  Stack  . 


5  50 

3  00 

3  00 

3  00 

3  00 

2  '.♦O 

7  .-.n 

12  :>u 

10  10 

22  50 

15  00 

40  ir. 

3  61 

6  89 

4  40 

7  ::s 

15  30 

12  11 

7  50 

12  75 

67  SO 

THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD:  THURSDAY, 


^lARCH    18,    1897. 


478  92 


ri-miimm 


McKIXLEY    AND    VIRGINIA    ROAD. 

...$  4  50 


Proscott.  Mars  &  Co 

Lake    Superior    Powder  t?om- 

pany    

A.    Hawkinson    

Ole    Sassas    

Isaac  Wilson    

( '    F.   Sandberg    

C    F.    Sandberg    

.Andrew  Jackson    

Andrew  Jackson    

Sam  Peterson    

Charles  Peterson  

E.    Pavalo    

E.    Erickson    

Erick  Jacobson  

G.  Evanson  

O.    Evanson    

O.  C.  Fribrand   

Nels   Olson    

Xels   Olson    

J.  Turnquist    • 

H.  Salmon   

Mat    Nick    

John    Bolisk    

H.  A.  Kamke  

Jake    Smoke    

John  Poslinak  

J.    B.    Furney    

John  Nick   

J.  R.  Ford  

W.   G.   Dundas   

George  Llsick 

Gunder  Olson   

George  Jones 

Charles  Norquist  

Tom  Thompson   

Christ  Olson   

Otto  Johnson   

Walter  Johnson  

Mike  Cupina  

Louis  Sterk  

Frank  Zakrackke   

Anton  Sttck   

William  Hunter 

H.    Stalberg    

Gust  Jacol>son    

W.  G.  Dundas  

Amos  Peterson   

Ed  Olson  

Jake  Smok^-  

Chris  (»lson   

G.  Olson  

F.  Thompson 

J.  I'attlnsak   

Henry   Kank    

Mat   Milk   

John  Milk  

Charles  Noniuist 

John   Babny   

George  Lestic  

Mike  Supina  

Otto  Johnson   

Anton  Sleek   

Frank  Zakarachek  

Lewis  Steck   

T.  R.  Toald 

AVilliam  Hunter  

T.  R.  Tuald 

J.  B.  Turhney 

Charles  Hitt   


20 
05 
.50 


i:; 


8 
52 
36 
16 
15  r, 
11  «; 
13 
25 
25 


I  1.932  4S 


NORMANNA   ROAD. 

Kelley  Hardware  company 
Meining  Hardware  company 
A.  Larson   


12 

24 
31 
16 
15  .37 
22  50 

20  25 
3  75 

12  00 
35  W 

21  00 
21  00 

12  00 
21  00 
31  00 
16  50 
21  00 

8  00 

4  50 

ID  50 

19  13 

13  :.o 

IS  75 

12  00 
19  25 

13  50 

12  00 

13  50 
12  00 
12  f'O 
12  (rt) 
11  25 

7  13 
63 
50 


A.  Hjelm 

J.  Uenning  

J.  Salom  

Amdt  Anderson 

F.  Flodon   

.\rmond  Lee   

P.  F'.  Hagenses 

A.   Kunseth   

Anton   Larson   .. 

A.   Hjelm    

J.  Ronning  

J.  Soimn   

•A.  Anderson   

F.  Ploden   

.\mond  Lee   

Ole  Kruseth  

And  Anderson  .. 

P.  Hagen.sen  

John  Johnson   .. 

H.  Older  

J.    Ronning   

Anton  Larson    .. . 

A.   Larson    

A.  Helm   

J.  Solmn   

Amdt   Anderson    . 

P.    Floden    

A.    Lee    

Ole  Konseth   

-A.   Hansen    

P.  Hagenson  

J.  Johnson   

J.    Ronning   

J.   Ronning   

A.   P.  Larson   


9 

S5 

21 

— * 

65 

00 

16 

.50 

Xi 

00 

31 

50 

•>•» 

1*1 

5f! 

25 

r<<i 

15 
24 

65 

.>!> 

9 

29 
34 
17 
31 

38  25 
36  75 
30  00 
22  50 

6  00 
10  00 
19  00 
30  00 

3  00 
16  50 

4  5(t 

7  50 
4  50 
9  00 
7  50 
4  50 
4  50 
9  75 
2  50 


PRAIRIE    LAKE 


42 
24 
24 


22 

S7 

k>  > 

62 

23 

f.2 

23 

62 

<i2 

3 

00 

IS 

V5 

23 

62 

9 

(M> 

2:1 

62 

23 

02 

23 

•;2 

•t 

00 

!» 

00 

<» 

00 

'.1 

•  Ml 

24 

75 

19 

S7 

13 

87 

.»•> 

13 

11 


$  1,256  84 


McCOMBER  ROAD. 


I"   I       I      »—— •* 


Poirier  &  Nordstrom 
E.   Feibeiger   

IE.  Feibeiarer  
P.  L.  Wagner  
P.  L.  Wagner 
M.  Merginer  
M.  Merginer  

Edward  Riley  

Edward  Riley  

Peter  Cotheo  

C.  E.  Wilson 

C.  E.  Wilson  

M.   Kaminskie   

,     M.  Kaminskie  

C.  Diffman  , 

Anton  Andrew  

Frank  Klimmick , 

August  Branz   

John  Sebisk  

M.  Wagner  

John  Anderson 

John  Novitzke  

John  Novitzke  

Stans  Fimiski  

Stans  Fimiski  

F.  Sink 

H.  Black 

John  Waisz 

W.  Austin  

T.  A.  Holder 

George  Stephen  

Joe  Meodizke 

James  Bernhardt  

M.  Novitzke   

P.  Bault  

M.  Novitske 

Fred   Ruf   

W.  B.  Logan  

Itiehard  Whiteside 

Thomas  Stack   

P.  Cothea   

I.  Fitzgerald   

Charles  Nelson    

John  McDonald    

William  McComl>er 

Fred  Galeske 

Fred  Ti.seher   

M.    Novitske    

Thomas  Norveitzke  .... 

Mikf  Norveitzke 

U.  Dinham   

Thomas  Stack  

M.   Mergener   

M.  Mergener  

Ed  Rellie 

John  Sobiskie  

John   Sobiskie   

Tom  Nomtzky   

Joe  Meodzik   

Joe  Bern  hart  

Stans  Fimlnski   

J'lhn  AVasey   

John  Wasey   

Mike  Norwitzke 

Peter  E.  Michaels  

Michael  Kamenske  

Frank  Garnet  

Frank  Garnet  

M.  Wagnf  r 

P.   L.   Wagner   

M.  Norwit.skf  

George  Stephen    

T.  A.  Holder 

H.  F.  Black 

M.  Fitrgerald  

Andrew  Ruf  

W.  B.  Logan 

Fred   Ruflf   

P.   L.  Wagner  

Thomas  Stack  

Peter  Cothea 

I.   Fitzgerald    

J.  McDfmald  

Thomas  Montzke 

W.  Moritzke  

r.  Fisher  

«■    Banning  

J.  Galiske  

AV.   Novietzke   

F.  Gevall   

W.  Peterson   

Halven  Songar 

R.   Dinhajn    

Thomas  Stack   

Ana  Rup  

Ana  Rup  

T.    Fitzgerald   

J.   Fitz^-^rald   

C.  A.  £iIUe  A.. 


0 

n; 

12 

i3 

1 

70 

•> 

03 

1 

70 

*» 

03 

19 

20 

31 

50 

6 

21 

6 

09 

* 

71 

0 
0 

01 

10 

79 

16  62 

24 

00 

16  66 

4 

15 

25 
82 
16 
14 
7 


M.  Koskie  

M.  Johnson    .... 

A.   Johnson   

M.   Peterson    .... 

O.   Aho   

H.   Hendrickson 

AI.   Mattson    

J.    Nasse    

AI.  Jacobson   .... 

J.    M«-Girk    

J.    -McGirk 

J.   Martrela   

P.    Murphy    

George   Langhom 
George  Langhom 

J.  B.  Pankor  

T.  B.  Bank«)r  

Margaret  Banker 

J.  Randon   

A.   Bendon 

J.    Bjelnek    

M.  Bellinger  .... 

F".  A.  Miller 

B  A.   Haulst   .... 

L.  Lankeller  

J.   Makke    

A.  Gustafson    

G.  Johnson    

B.  Hendrickson    .. 

A.   Peterson   

M.  A.  Snyder  

M.   A.   Snyder  

H.  Longhney  

iXi     rierman   Hill    

4  SO     \L   Pane    

IS  23    C.  E.  Swanson  .... 

6  OS     P.  Hansen   

46  42    .T.   Samson    

12  41     P.  O.   Turnbury   .. 

6  57     E.    Sameson   

4  S*'^     :■?.   Smith    

12  2s     X.  Wattala 

14  <0     A.    Larson    

22     K-  Rhja  

'•>     P.    Burg   

E.   Sweskl    

A.  Kenderney    .... 

John  Jacobson  

.1.    Swolden    

I.  Schardy   

P.  Lesondy 

N.  Northworth 

W.   Gustafson    

S.  Peterson 

S.   Hill    

B.  F.  Roberts   

M.  Loughney   

K.   Perker   

C.  Peterson  

M.  Jansen   

K.   Erick.son    

F.    Freyburg    

J.  A.  Thornton  

H.    Peterson     

Gus    Hendrickson 

Henry  Peterson    ... 

Home   Bros 

.M.Kay  &  Hall   

Duluth    Hardware 

-V.  G.  Walker  

U.    Ronney    

R.   Ronney  

P.    Murph.v    

.V.    <Joo<l\vin     

.1.    B.    Barker   

AI.  Looney  

K.   Kimmorson    ... 

H.    Hendrickson    . 

J.    Masse    

t.     McGirk     

M.    Banker   

fl.    Hill    

'Just  Johnson    

•  '.    Swanson    

M.    A.   Snyder    

M.  A.  Snyder  

.<.    Smith    

n-.    AVakea    

H.    Rihja    

\.    Larson    

A'ictor   Ganto    

George   Loughney   . 

E.    Limbia    

M.    Jans<^n    

E.    Erickson    

N.  Northworth  .... 
William  Gustafson 

S.   Hill    

E.  Peterson  

B.  F.  Roberts  

E.    Perkia    

O.    Hansen    

.T.    Thornton     

A.   Kendernit   

Hans  Peterson    

G.  Hendrickson  ... 
Henry  Peterson  . . 
August    Woetia    . . . 

i^.   Rahja   

K.    Herronson    

M.   Llndstrom    

T.    Anderson    

f >le  Berg  

John  Lane  

M.    Tillimink     

A.    Martinlove    

y.   Martinlove    

M.    Paul    

J.   Mor>-i    

A.  Johnson   

Hans  Berg 

3.    Ball    

Home  Bros 

R.    Rougbney    

Herman    Hill    


70  00 

1 

850  35 

ROAD. 

$ 

6  00 

6  00 

5  50 

16  2.- 

6 

4 

11 

11 

4 

4 


16 

16 

25 

25 

50 

16 

2  tH) 

31  .S3 

70  00 

24  64 

16  SO 
36  55 

!t  10 
15  61 

5  4«> 
13  07 
IM  25 


company 


16  50 
18  60 
15  90 
18  7.^ 
18  35 
10  00 

4  15 
18  <t^ 
20  ("0 
18  W> 

5  00 
18  00 

15  00 
33  W 
25  50 

10  50 

16  (K) 
24  00 

11  63 

24  00 
13  .50 
16  50 

25  .50 
16  50 

7  50 
16  .5(1 
12  5^' 

4  40 
.53  00 
50  7h 

3  50 

12  00 

10  70 

11  0(1 

7  00 

13  90 
22  .50 
22  50 
22  50 
11  00 
15  00 
IS  00 

8  50 
8  50 
8  50 
8  50 

13  50 

8  50 

8  50 

8  50 
13  50 

8  50 

8  50 
13  50 

S  25 
8  50 
8  50 

8  50 

3  00 
.3  00 

4  50 
4  50 

113  00 
56  82 
24  .39 

9  75 
56  40 
67  50 
17  25 

21  00 
42  0«t 

22  fM» 


Gust  Anderson  , 
James    Sobreth 

C.    Home    

Emil  Peterson  .. 
Charles  Johnson 
Charles  Stark   . . , 

Ole  Strom    

V.  Helmer  

John  Johnson  

A'ictor  Swanson  . 
Aron  Stark   

F.  Gulbranson  .. 
Emil  Helmer   

G.  Gulbranson  .. 
Andrew  Johnson 

Peter  Nelson    

Andrew  Parson   . 

John   Fann    

Gustaf  John.son  . 
Lars  Norman  ... 
Seth  Johnson  ... 
Erick  A'estman  . 
Theodore  Grath  . 
Gust   Lindquist   .., 

Albert    Belin    

P.  Johnson   

Ole   Home    

Charles  Stark   

Jake  Johnson   .... 

A'.    Helmer    

Emil  Peterson   .... 
Andrew  Johnson   . 

August   Stark   

Emil  Helmer   

John  Stark   

Charles  Johnson    . 

Ole   Strom    

Ole    Helm    

Ole    Helm    

C.   Holm    

Gust    Anderson    ... 
Joseph    Joberth    .. 

N.   P.   Johnson    

Emil    Peterson    .... 

Aron    Stark    

Albert  Bolin   

John  Zeborth   -. 

John  O.  Johnson  .. 
Victor  Swenstrom 
Andrew  Peterson  . 
Henry  Norman  ... 
August  Erickson  .. 
.AI.  P.  Peterson  .... 
Charles  Amquist   .. 

David   Nel.son    

John  Thonn   

Erick   A'estman    . . . 

Charles  Stark   

Louis  Norman    

Ole   Strom    

Theodore  Graph  

Charles  Johnson    ... 
Andrew  Johnson   ... 

V.  Helmer  

Emil    Helmer    

Ole  Holm  

Herman   Diedrich    .. 

John  Stark  

Ole  Holm 

George  R.  Hall  

C.  (}.  John.son   

P'mil  Helmer 

Alfred   Peterson   

C.   Johnson    

O.  J.  Slorni 

John  Faven   

\'.  Helmer 

E.  G.  Westman 

Charles  Stark  

Andrew  Johnson 

C.  G.  Johnson  

Emil  Helmer  

Emil  Piterson   

v.  Helmir 

Ole  Holm  

C.  Helm   

rjust  .Aiidfison   

Joe  Za'imit   

ilust  Kalgren  

Ole  Holm  

v.  Helmer   

August  Stark  

Ole  Holm  


14  00 

10  00 

8  00 

10  12 
7  12 

6  75 
4  87 

7  12 

8  62 

11  25 
10  12 
14  25 

6  75 

14  25 
3  75 

13  50 

15  00 
15  00 
13  50 

15  00 
13  50 
13  .50 
10  50 

2  25 

4  50 

4  50 

52  00 

16  00 
16  00 
24  00 
20  00 
18  00 
20  00 
16  00 
16  00 

16  00 
18  00 

17  .50 
67  50 
40  50 


STONE Y  BROOK  ROAD. 


15  25 

16  75 

13  12 

14  25 
9  00 
4  50 
9  00 

10  50 
4  50 
9  37 

11  62 
11  62 

4  87 

21  37 

9  00 

9  75 

.50 

,50 

50 

50 

(5 

50 

00 

75 

75 

00 

00 

00 

00 


4 
4 
4 
4 

9 
4 

6 

9 

6 

104 

12 

4 

31 


Meining  Hardware  company 

Ole  Home 

Gust  Kal'gin   

Fred  Nell ■." 

Martin  Nell  ..'" 

Frank  Johnson 

J.  L.  Dcskie []\] 

Andrew  Boberg  

Charles  Gustafson 

S.  Navich 

K.  Nell ■;;;; 

Ole  Nelson 

Ole  Dahl .■■.;■■ 

Burnt  Benson   .'/," 

Ole  Home  "'//' 

Ole  Home  

Gust  Kalgin   ..', 

Frank  Johnson   .." 

John  L.   Besky   ,[[ 

Andrew  Grobin  ,][ 

Charles  Gustafson ., 

Sten  Nowack  

K.  Nell .■;;■■ 

Stans  Swartz 

Peter  Larson    

Frank  Koobick .'.'.,[ 

Peter  Swanson 

Charles  Schelen   

Fred    Nell    

Martin  Nell    .".''■ 

Adolph  Swanson .,[[] 

E.  A.  Backman  

Charles  Nell   

Olaf  Olson   

Olaf  Olson    '///_[ 

E  A.   Rinquist 

G.  Sachelin   .■.;; 

John  Jacobson    

Ole  Nf Ison  

Otto  Dow   .■.■■■■_■ 

Burnt  Benson    ,,[[ 

Frank  Johnson ' 

Peter  Schelen    

Ole   Helm 

Ole    Helm    

Ole  Helm .;;;■ 

Gust   Kalgin 

Fred  Nell   ""■ 

Martin   Nell    

Charles  Nell   

K.  Nell 

G.   Schelen    .'.'.'■■ 

E.  A.  Rinquist  ..,', 

John  Jacobson    " 

John   Daske 

Ole  Dow   '//' 

Peter  Swenson 

Frank  Johnson   ....* 

Frank  Kobeck  ...... 

Adolph  Samoson   " 

Burnt  Benson 

Anton  Jackson    

Gust   Stark 

Ole   Home    


9 

32 

11 

9 

4 

7 

6 

6 

6 

6 

7 

37 

34 


50 
00 
00 
12 
12 
75 
75 
75 
75 
50 
50 
00 

20  00 

11  00 
65  00 
23  50 

12  .37 
15  75 

17  25 
10  87 

7  25 
19  .50 

18  75 
18  75 
18  75 
18  75 
15  75 

21  75 
12  37 
18  00 
IS  00 
15  00 

2  25 
00 
50 
50 
00 
50 
00 
00 
00 


John  Warra  

George   Johnson    

.Martin   Johnsoft    

August   Mattali    

Isaac    Kacki    

Mike   Gangas    

F.   O.   Turnberg   

Charles  Patterson   ... 

Henry    Patterson    

Charles  AVannerstrom 

Andrew  Klama   , 

Joe    Ganges    

Henry  Johnson    

Henry  Johnson    

George   Johnson    

A.  Klema   

M.    Ganges    

M.  Alba   ■ 

George   Ganges    

H.    Peterson    

A.  Lorin 

Suppela  ." 

Johnson    

O.  Tumberg  

Wintola    

A.  Hoist  

Smith    


15 

00 

6 

25 

6 

25 

6 

75 

4 

17 

6 

75 

6  25 

9 

S"? 

A. 

M 
T. 

N. 
D. 
S. 
Henry  Johnson 


2  25 
5  25 
1  58 

16  92 
47  50 

17  00 
20  50 

24  75 
19  50 
13  00 

3  00 

25  00 
13  00 
17  00 
17  00 
17  92 
11  75 
15  00  I 
56  83 


W 


*      467  58 


11 

10 

7 

6 

26 

54 

24 

4 


TOWER  AND  ELY  ROAD. 
$ 


34 
or 


9 
6 

I 

9 
11 

9  00 
10  .50 

5  75 
12  00 


00 
00 
06 
00 
00 
00 
00 
00 
10  00 


00 
50 
50 
50 
00 
50 
50 
(K) 
00 
(10 
00 
00 


943  96 


SCHULTZ     ROAD. 


S 

s 

4 

S 
16  00 

8  00 
62  50 
36  (Ml 

9  .-.0 
9  12 

20  (ID 
20  1)0 
19  0.t 
8  0() 
30  00 


II 

4 

<M> 

•>•» 

42 

16 

13 

16 

5 

14 

18 

72 

12 

.S3 

6 

67 

7 

52 

4 

78 

4 

7S 

15 

5.S 

^^^\ 

15 
7 

14 
1 

42 


RALPH  ROAD. 

E.  Ralph  

J.  H.  Sullivan   

L  H.  Sullivan  

Louis  Faber 

T.    Richer   

John  Anderson 

John  Anderson 

James  H.  LeRoy  

James  H.  LeRoy 

\'ictor  P.ucher 

v'ictor  Buchei- 

.fames  McCarty  

.fames  Anderson 

.fames  Anderson  

.fohn  Timm  

V.  N.  .Anderson 

J.  A.  Sullivan 

.fohn  Anderson  

S.  Richard   

Andrew  McKinney 

Kobert  Hurrey  

Louis  Faber  

John  Timm 

'lobert  Linden  

Peter  Peterson  , 

Alex  Nelson    

John  Bunnick  

Allck  Mancher  

•V.  N.  Anderson 

Lake    Superior   Produce   com- 
pany   

A.  N.  Anderson 

J.  H.  Sullivan  

John  Anderson  

Steve  RIchta 

Andrew  McKinney 

lioberf  Harney 

Louis  Faber   

John  Timm    .] 

Albert  Sondas   

August  Linstand 

John  Branick  

Peter  Peterson  

John  Groff   '."" 

,f.  H.  Sullivan   

Suth  Sellers 


i  1,322  56 


.50  00 
10  50 
20  00 

27  00 
30  75 
15  50 

13  00 
12  .^0 
17  50 

14  75 
17  50 

28  50 
20  CO 

7  50 

25  511 

10  00 

10  0^ 

6  (J> 

6  00 

6  :io 

6  00 
3  75 
3  75 
'5 
75 


3 


109 


00 
0-.) 
50 


20  42 

41    !>5 

11 
24 


:.) 
2o 
75 
50 
75 
25 
/5 
50 
75 
75 
23  25 
16  50 
16  5u 
30  00 
2  00 


21 
13 

i: 

24 


E  Feibiger  

J.  R.  Anderson    .... 

Jacob  Olson    

Tom   Holder   

Tom  Holder  

Tom   Korn    

S.    Nelskie    

John   Parr   

Murrey  Rickner   

Alexander  Morrison 

Sam   May   

Edwin   Fisher   

Dennis   Driscoll    

P^dward  Ferric  

Frank  Kehler    

A.  F\  Anderson   

ftichard  Dinham   ... 

John   Parr   

John  Parr   

Dennis   Driscoll    

I'kl  wai-d  Ferry  

Sam  May   ..' 

Murray  Rickman    ... 

S  Nieski    

Tom  Kurse 

Frank  Keita 

•Alexander  Smith  

John  Dinkel    

Ferdinand  Hermann 

.A.  T.  Anderson  

J.  R.  Anderson  

G.  Balls  

Peter  Smith    

Peter  Smith 

Charles  Schaffer  

Tom   Holder   

A.  F.  Anderson  

R.  Dinham 

J.  R.  Anderson   

Sam  May   

May  Recknin   

Frank  Keitel    

S.   Mylski    

Tom  Kirsh  

Charles  Schaffer   

A.  L.  Anderson     

S.    Maliskie    

J.  R.  Anderson   

J.  R.  Anderson   

T.  A.  Holder 

J.  A.  Holder 

A.  Dixon   

C.  Schaffer 

VV.  Edwards  

H.   Norton    

T.   Holder 

J.  Earley  

N.   Neriski    

M.   Jenette   

-A.  Young 

J.   Dinkel    

P.  Mitchell   

It.  Dinham  

H.    Barthddi    

J.  A.  Holder   


SEVILLE  ROAD. 


F.    Davis    

F.   Davis   ■■■ 

R.   AVhiteside   ."] 

A.  AA'inehester ..,, 

R.    Winchester 

Chris   Brown    

L.   F.    Harris    .' ." 

Herman   Scoot    

O.   C.   Nelson    '.'//,'. 

Aron    Jakola 

Andrew   Beuria    ... 
16  00    Sam   Snobby    .... 

48     Ely  Tinddy   '.■."■ 

Garritt    Johnson , 

H.    Sheridan     

H.    Whiteside    ." 

John    Demrish    

J.   Holliday    \[\ 

R.    Roberts    ." . . 

Duncan  McTavish   .......... 

Chris    Martin    ..." 

John  Smith  

J.    DeMarth 

Frank  Hodge  

R.    Whiteside    

P.  R.  A'ail   ;■■■ 

W.  H.  Congdon,  Sr 

James  Tippett  

R.    Whiteside    

R.    Whiteside    .".* 

R.    AN^hiteside    \ 

J.    DeMars 

J.   DeMars    , ' , 

Chris  Brown 

John    Smith    

H.    Sheridan    

H.    AVhiteside    

O.  C.   Nelson   '.'.'.'..'. 

A.    Wakola    

Swan  Inobby 

Eli    Lingti 

G.  Johnson   

J.    Holliday    .'!!."!!."!;.' 

R.    Roberts    

D.   McTavish    '.'. 

20  10    Charles    Masten     .. 

20  00    O.    Makke    '..' 

19  00    I.    Hammel 

A.    Moer    

K.    AVhiteside    ...'..'.' .' .' ." ' .' ." .' .' '.  [ 

J.    Zgairer " 

Joseph    Skuddi 

Joseph    Sapaneck 

Alvis    Blockneck    

Mike   Skafca    

Mike    Videtz    '.'.'.'.'.'.. 

Mat  Normoneck    

Mat    Marich    '.'.'."" 

Paul   Biske    [''" 

Anton    Auzots 

Anton  Zlipichaneck 

Louis   Sondav 

C.   John.son 

Joseph    Muhich    ......!..!..." 

James    Skalla    ..'. 

.Tames    Souppchicker    ........' 

Joe    Zinner 

-Anton  Zaidarisch   . . .... . .    . . " 

Anton  Orzaupi 

Paul  Piskert  ... 

Mat  Nuwanack   ........ 

John  Dennich 

John    Demmick 

Mike   Bistich    '.'."■■ 

Albert  Farson   .....' 

Albert  Thompson   

Southall   Manufacturing  com- 
pany    


1: 


00 
on 
•jO 


20  00 

20  00 

5  00 

5  00 
5  00 
5  0(1 
5  00 
5  00 
(N) 
00 
00 
00 
00 
50 
50 
00 
00 
2u 
00 
00 
00 
75 


M.  McCann   

D.  C.  AVIllard  .... 

J.  McCoy 

Frank  Carlson    .. 

Fred  Johnson  

Thomas  Dowd  ... 

Charles  Harris   .. 

John  Smith  

Mose  Staneford   . 

Albert  Tonchette 

James  Foley  

James  Foley  ..... 

Sam  Dewness   . . . 

James   Bergan    . . . 

M.  McCann  

D.  C.  Willard  .... 

Frank  Carlson  ... 

Fred  Johnson    

Thomas  Dowd   ... 

John  Smith   

Albert   Fonchette 

Thomas  Baker  

Martin   Clayton    .. 

T.  H.   Winchester 

J.  W.  Fuller  

Thomas  Johnson  . 
A'ictor  Solomon  . . . 
Charles  Johnson  .. 

August   Lee    

Felix  Lemar  

C.    Bedard    

James  Foley  

John  Eger  

f).    Erickson    

John  Bruner  

James  Foley   

T.  H.  AVinchester 

Felix  Lemar  

A.    Hopper    , 

Z.   Dutick   

C.   McNamara  


•>?. 


^.i  87 
25  62 

25  62 
24  87 
19  62 
.53  50 

26  50 
14  .50 
13  62 

8  87 
138  00 

62  50 

9  59 
17  34 
17  25 

9  00 
9  00 
5  00 

10  .50 
16  .59 
19  34 
34  50 
19  34 
66  00 

5  18 

11  .59 
11  59 
32  50 
28  00 

.  7  50 
7  50 

144  44 
3  00 
3  00 

3  00 
17  50 
28  00 

1  50 
6  00 

4  50 
9  50 


TOAVER    AND 


EMBARRASS 
ROAD. 


$  1,325  89 
RIA'ER 


Joseph    Tippett 


.$ 


4  70 


P.    Hollander    

John   Harth    

Andrew   Tynkella 
Frank    Carlson     .., 
James    Sunderl>erg 

P.   Pearson    

A.    Lundquist    

Andrew   Anderson 

John    Smith    

Leonard  Hoffman   . 


TOWN 

Swen    Lilja    

Gust    Lund    

Gust  Berg  

S.   Johnson    

Gust  Moberton 
John  Hanson  .. 
Julia  Hanstud  .. 
Steve  Hustud  . 
Alfred  Hansen  . 
C.  P.  Holte  .... 
John    Mobanten 

Ole  Lund    

Andrew  Quaal  . . 
K.  Ellerstod  ... 
August    Lund    .. 

Gust    Borg    

Sam  .lohnson  . . 
Jess    Moberton 

J.   Hanson    

Julius  Hostad    . 

S.    Hostad    

A.  Hanson   

C.  F.   Holt   

John    Mol>erton    . 

Ole    Lund     

Aron  Quaal   

K.    Ellenstad    .... 

Swen    Lilja    

August    Lund    ... 


TOWER  AND  MESABA  ROAD 
$ 


15 

39 

57 

50 

7 

10 

4 

60 

4 

00 

3'* 

•'5 

32 

25 

19 
8 
17 
16 
17 
.34 


92  !)0 


34 

1 
11 

4 
44 
71 
71 
10  12 

7  00 
18  00 

16  62 

17  12 
17  «2 

16  02 

17  12 

16  12 

17  62 
17  62 

7  62 
14  75 

1 
17 
14 


6 

It 

0 

*> 

00 

6 

69 

7 

44 

20  15 

21 

70 

35 

(i2 

35 

62 

31 

35 

70 

00 

59 

00 

3 

00 

22 

.50 

61 

87 

14 

.35 

8 

80 

5  65 

8 

35 

12 

15 

16 

50 

44 

37 

43 

47 

4 

50 

4 

50 

4 

50 

4 

50 

4 

50 

3 

00 

I 
119 
16 
16 
16 
15 

4 

3 
12 
44 
12 

9 
12 

12 

61 

14 

14 

12 

14 

14 

15 

14 
4 

14  25 
3  75 
7  50 

20  00 

5  67 


00 

62 

25 

00 

00 

24 

50 

50 

50 

Oi) 

50 

75 

00 

00 

75 

00 

75 

75 

00 

75 

02 


<■> 
25 
25 
00 
25 
50 


$  1.212  01 


8 
2 

13  75 

7 
36 
28  75 
12  06 

5  38 


1 
11 
11 

28 


TISCHER     ROAD. 


Meinmg   Hardware   company.} 
Kelly  Hardware  company 

George  Tischer .[ 

Joe  Tischer  /.\ 

J.   Mohen 

George  Tischer 


799  9i 


25  50 
10  98 

2  L5 

3  00 
36  00 
60  0*i 
23  90 
18  16 

4  71 
17  S3 
14  00 
27  .50 
20  00 
35  00 
49  00 
67  50 


31 
4 
7 
9 
t 

6 

21 

9 

21 

22 

'4 

31 

21 

6 

17 

4  .50 

15  00 

7  75 

12  75 

15  00 

6  50 

3  00 

10  25 

2,50 

50 

»• 


RICE  LAKE. 


4 

11 

3 

8 


00 
25 
7  75 
12  75 


24 

8 
7 


>>A  «••••••••«,»••••• 


17 
1 
10  i2 
20  4S 

2  35 

2  96 
43  7S 
88  06 
12  00  i 

2  OOj 

1  00! 

2  00, 

i  m  Ole 


I 

26 

a 
9 

10  50 

32  39 

34  44 

112  42 

275  00 


.f(».>^fph  Bri.sloii   . . . 

.folin  Pet<Tson   .. . 

G.  A.  Speann   

Arthur  Biiston  .. . 

A.   Fausi    

Joe  Rodh  

•^.   P.  TrafT  

S.  Malaskie 

('.  M.  Nel.son  

John  Martin   , 

Tom   Kruskie   

U.  .Ad(|uist   

H.   Haveburg  • 

John  Nobiskie   

Martin  MilUr  

Sam  Miller  

James  Briston   

James  Briston   

-Arthur  Briston  

Joseph  Bilston  

John  Peterson   . . . . 

S.  P.  Traff  

Tom  Holder  

Frank  Tarnoskie  .. 

-V.  Faust  

Joe  Rodh  

C.  W.  Nelson  

S.   Molaskie    

Tom  Kruskie 

John  Infelt  

R.  Adquist  

W.  Masjzski 

Joe  Holder 

John  Fenskie 

Fred  Kettler 

N.    Noviskie   

Tom  Holder 

John  Fenskie,  Jr.. , 

.Tames  Briston   , 

James  Bristol!  


19  .50 

30  50 

4  00 

4  .50 

7  00 

7  00 

20  Oti 

6  00 

6  75 

5  00 

2  91 

•>  'f, 

1  50 

1  50 

1  50 

4  0.» 

36  00 

5  01 

37  50 

45  00 

43  00 

43  J<0 

47  56 

40  00 

13  01 

13  41 

5  50 

14  .50 

12  50 

11  CO 

14  00 

11  50 

14  00 

2  00 

1  50 

1  50 

.3  00 

1  i.O 

.50  0»> 

53  72 

William  JelTry  

Archibald  McMillan 

A.   Th<»nison    .'. 

George  Walker   

Louis   Petei-son    

Charles  Andei-S(ni   . . 

Olaf  Johnson    

Fred  Olson    

Peter  Peterson  

(Jeorge    Walker  

Melvill  Thompson   .. 

Henr>'   Hansen    

P.   L.  Johnson    

William   Jeffry   

William  Jeffrey    

Archie  McMillan   

Andrew   Thompson    . 

George    AValker    

I-Hiuis    Peterson    

Charles  Anderson   . . . 

Henry    Hansen     

Melville  Thompson  .. 
P.   L.   Johnson    


$  1,211  36 


60  00 
30  75 
20  00 
75 
50 
50 
25 
15 
15 
00 
30 


15 
16 
16 
13 
4 
4 


69 

IS  7- 

68  42 

9,s 

30  00 

13  ."^0 

13  .50 

6  50 

5  60 

5  JM) 

6  70 
35  00 
25  30 


483  50 


I      644  .50 


PROCTOBKNOTT 

Somes 


i  2.357  49 
ROAD. 


SELLWOOD   ROAD. 

F.  Davis  $ 

SWAN  LAKE  ROAD. 

W'iUiam  Riness    | 

Charles  Gustafson 

-Andrew  Groberg    

.Tohn  Crrlpcn   

Earnest  Kolncy  


.'4  00 


'*••  ••^••4**  ^c*^^^**^        2^   dO  I 


20  wO 


F. 

F. 

F. 

C. 

W. 

A. 

L. 

L. 

T. 

A. 

J. 

A. 

F. 

J. 

F. 
C. 
H. 
F. 
P. 


SCHULTZ   ROAD  EXTENSION 
t 


A.    Holder 

A.  Holder 

A.   Holder 

Sehafer    . . 
Edwards 

Discon    . . . 

Noviski    .. 

Milski    .... 

Kersky    . . . 

Tappen   . . . 
Earley    

Young    . . . 
McMurtie  . 

Musgood    . 
Drake    

Kettle   

Bening    ... 

E.  Norton 

Norski  

L.  AA'agner 


Richard  Dinham 


62  00 
45  00 

10  61 

11  51 
10  86 
24  90 
18  46 

17  21 

18  71 

10  S2 

11  17 
10  97 
10  31 

19  95 
26  65 

9  45 

14  25 
1  82 
3  69 

15  11 
67  40 


J.    Holder 

I.   Holder    ..■;■; 

1     D.   Mear 

11     C.   Farkner 

43    T.  Pfefer 

08    F.   Little    .'■.■.■ 

92    Joe  La^ross ..] 

30    Dan  McArthur   '. 

11     J.  Danby   \[] 

0    E.  L.  Benson   '.'.'..'. 

50    M.  Bagba  

90    W.  Plaster  .''.'■ 

00    George  Tischer    

Meining  Hardware  company! 

E.  Feibeger  ". . 

George  Tischer 

John  Tischer   

J.  Derby   '.'.'..[ 

James  Lunas  

C.  Forkner  

F.  Little    

F.  Pieflfer  

K.  L.  Benson   '  

Dan  McArthur 

William  Carlson    

George  Ti.scher  

William  Plaster   

J.    Holder   

F.   Holder   

I.    Dubi    

D.  Mears    

James  Baden   

John  McDonald    

John   Dahlqijrist    

A.   McPherson    

Phil   Dolan    

.Albert  Dixon   

August  Nelson    

George   Tischer    

John  Tischer 

George  Tischer  

George  Tischer  

Tom  Haider   

Fred  Little   

O.  Falkner  

-August  Nelson    

Dan  McArthur   

William  Plaster   

F.    Phelper    

Phil  Dolan   

John  McDonald    

James  Holder   

A.  Dixon   

William  Edwards  

John  Daley   

F.  Erickson  

R.  Dinham   


7  90 

1  50 
10  00 
12  00 

3  50 
16  00 

2  00 

4  50 
12  00 

3  00 

3  00 

4  50 
2  50 

1  90 

2  85 
1  45 


A.    Thorp     

Ben    Peterson    

J.   Bystrom    

E.  Kaigen    

Tom    Baker    

A.  W^eidan  

Matt   Thomas   

A.   Bark    

W.  Swanson   

Abe   Bildoe    '. 

John   Henik    

Peter  Baral   

Fred   Johnson 

F.  Swanson    

Mat  Maiga   '. 

Andrew    Tynkeller    . . . . 

Gus   Larson    

John   Ekenberg    .^ 

H.    Smith     

Charles  Johnson  

Ij.    Robinson    

C.  Borg   

Andrew  Thorpe   

Ben    Peterson    

James  Bystrom    

Erick  Koryen    

M.  Thomas   • 

Andrew  Basque   , 

W.    Swanson    

A.    Bildon    [ 

John    Hfiit    

P.    Beral    

Fled   Johnson    

Ed    .Swanson    

Mat   Mai.va 

August    Kinquola    

Gust    Larson    

John    Ekenberg    

Thomas   Shandwitha    ... 

John   Herman    

Mat   Thomas    

James    Berga    

L.    Robin.<!on    

.T.  Wheeler  

Henry    Smith 

Aron   Thorpe    

W.  H.  Congdon  &  Co.   .. 
Howe   Lumber  company 

D.    Gransom    

Jonas    Bystrom    

John  Turch  

M.    Corey    

M.    Tomville    '..[ 

Thomas    Baker    

Eugene  Maxwell    

Chris  Johnson   

Louis  Leonard    

Aron    Thorpe     '. 

A.    Thorpe    

John    Herman    

.Tames  Bergin    

Ed    Swanson    

John   Ekenberg    


36 
22 
22 
22 
21 

20  25 

19  13 

17  25 

17  63 

17  63 

16  13 

16  13 

15  00 

7  50 

7  50 

4  .50 

4  50 

7  50 

24  00 
20  00 
12  00 
35  00 
58  75 

7  50 
10  .50 

30  75 
12  00 

25  50 
16  .50 
.•:0  75 

.•:3  ;:i 

22  50 

31  81 
.33  31 
22  .50 
29  94 
28  81 
.31  81 
11  25 
28  48 


9S 
.._  00 
38  (rt)  I 
'.'6  00  1 
11  20  ' 
20  70 
42  98 
2  62 
2  C3 

1  to 

14  25 

23  25 

24  75 
70  00 
36  00 

::  00 

70  84 
45  00 
23  00 
— .  /.) 
11  .50  I 
13  f.O 


Kelly  Hardware 
D.  Patterson  .. 
D.    Patterson    . . . 

88     D.    Patterson    ... 

13    L   Freiniuth    

13    I.   Freimuth    

13    S.  P.  Trapp  

00  I  P.   Erickson    

P.   Johnson    

S.   Palmquist   

S.   Palmquist    

J.    Sackreson    

G.    AVedfans    

A.  Carlson   

A.    Carlson    

Mrs.  Patterson    .. 
Mrs.  Patter-son   .. 

D.  Dougherty    . . . 
T.   Bates   ..." 

0.  Johnson  

R.  Tol>en    

F.    Sobiskie    

F.   Bench    

E.  .Salbei-g  

George  S.  Munsey 
D.  Patterson   

D.  Patterson   

S.  P.  Traff  

1.  P^reidman    

I.    Freidman   

.T.  Erickson  

F.  Johnson  

I).    Dougherty    

G.  Carlson   

I.  Sokerson  

C.    Nelson    .... 

K(l  Selby   

F.  Soirbiskie  

Mrs.  Patterson  

P.  John.son   

A.  l..indquist  

Carl  Olstm   

E.  Rehbun   

P.  Skoghill  

R.  H.  Rathburn  .. 

F.  Johnson  

Jacob  Stubler   

F.  Seymour  


VERMILIO.N    ROAD 
company 


•  ■$    2  2.'> 

.33  75 

18  75 

10  00 

30  00 

24  00 

60  ,S0 

36  00 

24  25 

21  00 

4  50 

35  25 

27  60 

11  25 

20  25 

7  .50 

30  00 

13  85 

.50  10 

.  •   2  25 

36  i>0 

15  ;>•• 

10  «;> 

4  50 

4  62 

.30  /.3 

41  25 

16  K() 

.32  00 

2  0(( 

17  0<» 

3  75 

26  25 

24  :r, 

13  5i» 

17  2.-. 

23  25 

14  25 

26  25 

|.> 

13  .50 

10  .50 

S  25 

6  6<i 

12  ,S5 

4  (Ht 

37  50 

2  (•(» 

VIRGIN  LA 

J.  A.  Scott 
WEST 


$      919  25 
AND    MOUNTAIN     1H(.N 
ROAD. 


SWAN    LAKE 


Henry  .Tohnson   . 
P.  O.  Turn  burg  . 
fJeorge  Johnson 
Martin  Johnson 
Constant  Loman 
M.  .A.  Snyder  .. .. 


...1 

n 
1 

1.'. 

ROAD. 

...$ 

15 

(  H 

9 

(Ml 

it. 

iH* 

»  Ofl 

1 

20 

7 

50 

RECAPITULATION  COUNTY  SPECI.AL  R(1AD  FUND. 

fiscal    year   and    charged 


56  70 


Total  amount  of  orders  issued  during  this 
to  county  special  road  fund  

Total   amount  of  orders  and   warrants  paid 
by  the  county  treasurer  during  this  fi.scal 

Total  amount  of  orders  and  warrants 


and     cancelled 

year   

issued      durine 
vious  years  and   redeemed  during  this  fiscal  year 


,$.55,067  27 


pre- 


Total  amount 
and 


..$80,182  .39 

33.593  30 

redeem'^ed"'."^."!'..^"*^..'''^"'*"^'  '"^"^'^  '^"""^  t*''"  fi«f-al  year 


4  50 
13  05 

6  25 
2  55 

65  00 
93  20 

7  50 

8  25 
21  50 

19  30 
21  50 

2  25 
23  75 

9  75 
9S  00 
36  60 

20  00 
34  00 

6  9:5 
54  40 
14  15 
13  65 

1  95 
9  50 
S  05 

7  75 

2  50 
1.50  90 

25  20 
25 
20 
45 
45 
45 
45 
45 
4.5 
45 
.50] 
70 

'>5 


Outstanding  orders  and  warrants 
HOWARD    AND    GNESEN    ROAD. 
$ 


16 

25 

4 

5 

i> 

5 
5 
9 
5 
4 
1 
5 
5 
4 


15 

00 

3  75 

5  25 

39  95 


85 


SAVAXXA    ROAD    EXTENSION. 


Marshall -Wells 

company   

S.  BaU   , 

K&axy.  J[olui80A 


Hardware 

••••••       •••••••1^ 


9  73 
40  10 
16  dO 


TOWER  AND  ITASCA 

Howe  Lumber  company   ... 

James  Tippett 

W.  H.  Congdcm 

James  Foley  

Thomas  AVinchester 

Thomas  DeWitt   

James  Brigam   

Ed  McKenzie   

M.  McCann 

James  Riston   

Frank  Carlson  

James  Foley  

T.  K.  Winchester 

Sam  Duett  

James  Bergin 

Ed  M«Kenzle 


S  1,025 
ROAD. 


20 


..$ 


•  •••••••••I 


•••••• 


1  35 

3  70 

10  89 

:;2  50 

36  Oo 
13  50 

12  75 

13  50 
13  50 
12  50 
10  m 
63  75 
39  50 
25  62 
25  62 
fe4  87 


H.  AA'allace 

Kelly  Hardware  company   . 

Morris  Thomas 

Meining  Hardware  company 

M.  Thomas  

L.  Stockman   

S.  Thomas 

G.  Johnson  

P.  Haggart  .'. 

R.  Richard.son  

D.  Miller   

L.  Denvill    

M.  Martin   

S.  Pardonske  

John  Lobbud  

M.  Kurnsigroch 

Mike  Konasky  

John  Anderson  

Martin  Sekore  

Jtjhn  Wise 

J('hn  Kuske  

M.  Halverson 

William  .lassk  

-Auprust  Forslund   

H.  Walekawick  

Joe  AValeka wick  

Martin  I^epok  

Jacob  Kusk ., 

Martin  Miller  ', 

Sam  Johnson  

M.  Thomas 

George  Steffln 

John  Seagert 

George  Jassk 

E.  Fehlardt  

M.  Fergart  

Ijot  Kirby 

Charles  Carlson  

Mike   Jacobs 

(jeorge  Stephen  

H.  Kalkburne 

.Tohn  Musolf 

George  Monsolf  

Stanley  Monsolf  

Thomas  Sbarack 

Peter  Kagarock 

H.  Fisloin  

B.  Hartman  

F.  Hartman  

Mat  Johnson  , 

John  Sandberg  

Oscar  Johnson  

M  ike  Johnson  

John  Michelson  

Christ  Kusmereck 

Frank  (Jrams    

V.  Sternal  

John  Mady  

A.  H.  Arenson 

Alf  Wicks  

O.  Crowley  

John  Matson  

H.  Korby 

J.  Davidson  

Frank  Tainoek 

J.  Aainosk  •. 

Henry  Kubchinsky 

M.  Thomas....    .i 

M.  Thomas 


75 

00 

19 

05 

21 

50 

IS 

50 

40  00 

24 

00 

48 

1.1 

12 

30 

38 

95 

12 

40 

11 

65 

12 

90 

10 

(i5 

16 

02 

18 

IS 

8 


<•>  I 

75 

70 

20 

10 

0(. 


i 

7 
IS  3.', 

8  50 
11  25 

;♦  (K» 

5  70 
15  00 
14  70 
14  '.S 
42  50 
19  '.Kt 
138  00 

3  (X> 


6 
7 
,5 
6 
4 
6 
8 
16 


10 
25 
25 
7tJ 
00 
00 
00 
15 
75 
25 
53 
25 
95 
20 
20 
00 

45 

^— 

(!) 

75 
75 
25 
10 
25 
25 


2 
2 
1 
10 
1 
1 
1 
5 


*••••••■ 


25 
75 
75 
75 
S3 
83 
73 
75 
7.5 
9  00 
222  18 


L.  Stackman 

L.    Stackman 

S.    Thomas 

Gil    Johnson 

M.    Marti . 

W.  Zanski 

George    Zanski 

S.    K.    Kusinereck.. 

Jacob    Krisk 

John    T^ablud 

-Mike    Jacobs 

.Toe  Walkawick 

Frank    Hartman.... 

A.    H.    Aronson 

Martin   .Miller, 
f  j  Otto   Crowley.... 
,    H.    Cockburner 

F.    Farnonski 

I  J.    Farnoski 

M.   Kivissigsich.... 

M.    Thomas 

Pliil    Hagert 

George    Steffen . . . ... 

M.    Laprack 

Henry  A\aIkowick..*. 

John  Krandall 

C.   Fablardt 

It.    Kimal 

I-.ouis    Oouvell 

John    Sidgert 

M.   Sikard '.'. 

Aug.    Forslund 

M.    Sulivan 

S.   Paderski ', 

John   Sands 

Ed  Thomas 

William   Johnson 

Sam    AA'ilson 

-M.    Cotshom 

H.    Fislow 

John    Fislow 

K.    Kubscliinski ' 

F.    Conan    

William  Jagzk  

r^an   Miller  .. 

Thomas   Fullan    ., 

Martin   Halverson    ... 

M.    Thomas 

William  Jayske    ...... 

George   Jayske    

John    Hans    .., 

Robert    Richard.son    . 

H.    Kalburner    

O.   Fahlardt   

L.  G.  Darwell   

H.    Teslow    

J«>lui     Tet;jo\v     

John    Kriske    .'. 

M.   Thofuas^ 

M.    Thomas    


4«,.58»  m 
.$  8,478  IS 
11  70 

:{6  (N) 

67  60 

8  00 
4  00 

6  00 

9  25 
9  75 
9  75 

11  00 
3  00 

7  00 
13  70 

7  .50 
25  85 
18  05 

13  10 
2  Wi 
9  75 

14  75 
180  .35 

8  50 
24  05 
n  25 

12  25 
10  no 

1  .50 
1  80 

14  00 
7  25 

10  95 

13  .55 
18  95 
10  .50 

75 

1  30 

35 

70 


5 
2 

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-       14 


00 
25 

00 

00 

65 

00 

25 

2  85 

10  00 

48  00 

6  (Ml 

6  00 

6  00 

2  65 


t-' 

50 
50 
5<l 

45 


232  7(» 
37  20 


$  2,183  S2 


RICE   LAKE    ROAD. 


Gronseth    &    Olson 
J. '  C.   McLean    >-. . . 

Ge(>rgo    Hall    

Ri  D.  Nixon 


••••••••••1 


33  48 
3«  53 
36  53 
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16 


Getirge    Clark 

F.    Davis    

Georgre  Stevens 
Martin    .Marten 
Dan    Wheeler    .. 
AVilliani    Henry 
T.  J.   Weldon    ... 
AVilliam    Kline    . 
George   Clark    .. 

F.    Davis    

Ktlly   Hardware 

C.    Fiebepor    

F.   J.    Armory 
F.   J.    Armory 
Jihn   Xorrell    ... 
Dan   Anderson    .. 
Aug.    P'orslurd    ., 
Alfred   Zanbergr 
And   Xy Strom    .. 

Joe   Cork    

John    Astro    ..    . 
George    F?annock 
And    Kayuk    ..    ., 
C   «;.   Winter  ... 

E.    Kittle    

John    Dinkle    ..    . 
<;eorge    Mardorf 

John    Waoak    

Thomas    Siozuk 
Henry  Trealke    .. 
Kalph    Babeock    . 
John    Malcomb    .. 
A.    G.    Aronson    .. 

And    Green    

S.    Monsolf    

J.  Sobieske  . .  . . 
ilatt  Mugerer  ... 
John   Monsolf    .... 

M.    Lebrer   

John    A.    Fieska.. 
W.    Mllukuljosia    . 

n.    Mair    

Burney  Kooenk  . . 
N.  Coekburner  ... 
Charles  Anderson 
Peter   Kogierek    .. 

B.    Wisten    

O.    X.    Brueth    .... 

S.   Millr   

T.    Hollander    

"X'ictor    Larson    

William   Deboney   . 

H.    Xesbett    

Joe    Helmski     ..     . 

W.    Swaney    

H.  Teslow    

Herman  Hamberg 
Thomas   S.    Karack 
I^.    Maererrowski    . 
Alo.    Maererrowski 

Frank   Olson    

Victor  Carlson    

Martin  Topawek    .. 

I'.  Harlan  

K.  Magnusson    

John  Osk    

Andre\f    Olson    .... 

John    Kermsk 

Thomas  Ralph  

Gust    Anderson    ... 

Henry  Hanson    

Frank  Crak    

Jacob    Kleps    

Frank    Hurdafke    ... 
Foothof  Henderson 
Martin    Halv(»rson 

F.    Tanowiske    

Charles  Jaoksnn    ... 
Majtin   Pembske    ... 

John    Fenski    

George    Bannock     . . 

J.    Johnson     

H.   Mattson    

J.   Erickson   

J.  Davidson  

-'.    Mattson    

H.   Corpa   

Stone-Ordean- Wells 

pany  

Ed  J.   Amory    

Kelly  Hardware  company 

P.    Carlson    

E.  J.   Mmory    

John   Morrell    

A.  Anderson   

Ralph  Yomberg   

Andrew  Olson    

A.   Wingstad    

J.    Helinski    

Frank  Perdjeski  

Frank  Conk   

Her   Hinstron    

Ed    Riley    

H.    Hanson    

T.    Tarneskie     

H.    Xesbett    

John  Finska   

J.  A.   Fenska    

Andrew    Xystrom     

Charles  Jackson   

Fetchof  Anderson   

Mike    Labbud     

M.    Henderson    

J.    Kleps    

A.  J.   Aronson    

Malcom   

Amory    

Andf  rson    

Sobriskie    

Hartland    


company 


com- 


J">hn 
i:.  J. 
Gust 

John 
IVter 


Andrew   Green    

Thonias    Sacyk    

'•Jmamel    Magnuson 

David    Wair    

S.   Miller    

♦  'harles  Anderson    . 

F.  Olson    

J.    For.«k    

John    Wacke    

AV'illiam    Capeskic    . 

V.    Carlson    

C.   E.    Wilson    

George   Barnack    ... 

George   Barnack    ... 

Victor  Larson    

Mat    Meyerin    

Henry  Xuleck   ...... 

John    Kurbuske    

John    Kurbuske     

Andrew    Kopeck    . . . . 

H.  Mattson   

J.    Johnson    

Kens   Sapola    

John    Pulen    

Andrev.-   X'ystrom    ... 

Frank   Ol.son    

V.    Carlson    

M.  Johnson   

Alf    Youngl)erg    

Emanuel   Magnuson 

John  Scheland  

John    Subject     

Xols    Xelson 

J.    Fenska    

John   A.    Fenska    

Stans  Podgaka  

Frank    Podgaka    

Jacob   Kl»f>s    

Thomas    Subject    .. 

c..   W.   Martin    

August   Anderson    

John  Gronleqd  

.Fohn    Martin    

A.   G.   Aronson    

Stone-Ordean  -  Wells 

pany    

E.  J.  Amory   

W.    Williams    .'. 


;!4  61 
52  00 
10  00 
10  00 
75  00 

:;o  76 

5  64 

6  «.H» 

r.  20 

16  00 

11  25 
1  00 

40  OO 
172  00  I 

10  to 

12  6.".  I 
3  83 

11  20 
10  70 

12  20 

10  ;.". 

S  Hi 
12  10 

11  S.S 
7.'> 

6.T 

25 
10 

83 
43 

50 

78 
fa 
40 


A.  Biglow  

C.  D.  Patterson 
August  Miller  .. 
J.  J.  McGlow  ... 

R.  E.  Long 

A.  Hall   

G.  L.  Craig 

W.  W.  Hoyt  .... 
F.  Davis 

0.  B.  McCraig  . 

W.  H.  Hovt 

C.  Campbell  .... 
R.  Quigley   

1.  S.  Spoort  

C.  Mahl    

S.    Palovinsk 

I.  McGIode  

F.  Davis   

Mrs.  P.  Hughs  .. 


25 

96 

24 

23 

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13 

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10 

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00 

23 

07 

17 

30 

52 

00 

59 

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33 

33 

28 

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15 

34 

25 

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22 

50 

31 

15 

54 

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13 

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$  1,704  5S 


10 

3 

9 

10 

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21 


ST.   LOUIS  RIVER   ROAD. 

R.  Dinham  « 

K.  W.  Xichols 

H.  McLean   .'.* 

C.  Krelwiz   ' 

M.  Gibson   

J.  Cameron 

H.  Xequith  "" 

F.  Davis  


S 

S 

1 
14 
11 
10  65 
31  90 

2  75 

3  40 
(>i 
65 
5.S 
«*0 
00 
20 
1<» 
15 
00 
75 


H.  E.  McLean  ... 

H.  Xequith 

C.  Krelwitz 

M.  Gibson  

John  Cameron  .. 
Thomas  Leonard 

B.  Moore 

F.  Davis  


61  25 
23  o: 
2S  }»4 
23  07 
19  23 

19  23 
17  30 

20  00 
23  6S 
13  S4 
11  53 

11  53 
13  42 

8  00 
4  00 

12  0*) 


George    Clark 
E.  A.  Wallace 

E.  A.  Ritchie  . 

L.   Bisier   

Felix   Lemier   . 

J.    Finlard    .... 

F.  Davis   

C.  Johnson   

H.    Wheeler   ... 
E.  K.  Coe 

G.  Davis   

J.   H.   Gilmore 
A.   Richardson 

E.  J.  Berrack  . 

F.  Davis   

V.  H.  Paradis 
A.   L.   Gordon   . 
J.  H.  Gilmore  . 


R. 
W 
F. 
H. 


E.   White   ... 
S.   Douglass 

Davis   

L.  Chapin  ... 


James  Coaroy   ... 

George   Hall    , 

r..   H.   Merritt   

B.  Mitchell   

G.  Peterson   

M.  .Armstrong  . . . . 

B.  Zixon    

T.  Kelley  , 

H.   Visoqque   

F.  Davis    

C.  Johnson 

G.  L.  Woodworth 
J.  J.  Wheeler 


5      309  it9 


S 

*> 

6 

6 

34 


12 

11 

26  35 

2  15 

12  Oi> 

6  75 

6  90 

11 


11 
6 

10 
5 
9 


25 
40 
15 
43 
75 
SI 
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65 
70 
7.5 

38 

05 

OS 

55 

90 

OS 

05 

75 

.^1 

50 

02 

25 

15 


MILLER  TRUXK  ROAD. 

F.  Davis I 

F.  Davis 

L.  T.  Greerson 

Totman  Bros 

James  Shea  

H.  C.  Kendall  [[," 

M.  M.  Gasser [ 

Gronseth  &  Olson .' 

R.  Dinham 

R.  H.  Rathbun ."■.■.' 

T.  H.  Winchester ' 

William  Doyle  .'. 

William  Doyle  

M.  OKeef ".    

William  Flint  

John  R.  Davis 

F.  Davis ".",' 

John  Corleisson 

John  Wheeler 

W.  G.  Wood  wort  h   .....['.[.[".'. 
J.  H.  Gilmore 


05 

05 

05 

223  93 

53  70 

S  94 

52  50 

5  33 

15  60 

7  f3 

4  93 

5  08 

10  40 

10  65 

5  60 

10  65 

13  93 

4  3S 

10  65 

3  75 

8  85 

2  15 

7  33 

3  20 

5  48 

9  90 

6  37 

8  S3 

16  ;« 

36  00 

61  20 

1 

6 

;» 

s 

19 


!'0 
I  •* 

:mi 

40 
65 
28  40 
IS  15 
5  65 
24  15 
5  3S 
65 
65 
45 
40 
80 
00 
50 
15 
00 
55 
55 
40 
40 

i: 
l- 

4.- 


9 


58 

40 
33 

OO 

o.> 

00 
00 
00 
00 
33 
00 
00 
83 
S3 
50 


J.  O.  Blazer 

John  Wheeler  

J.  -A.  Mitchell ' 

R.    E.    Oberne    

C.  H.  Barney  

W.    Peckman    

John  Clark 

C.  D.   Partinson   

Gus  Johnson   

F.  Davis 

Mitchell  Lor  "' 

H.   W.  Xichols   

Hugh  McLean    

D.  .VIcClure    

.VI.  Gibson   

C.  Krelwitz   

J.  Bacon  

P.   Larson    

H.  -N'equett  ', 

F.   Davis   

M.  S.  Cook 

J.    X.  Gordon 

.\.  E.  Wilson   

J.  Morgan  

J.  Keene  

D.  McMillan   ."."' 

n.  White  

J.  Colby   

William  Merritt   

J.  H.  Parades  

F.  Davis 

E.  K.  Coad  

A.  F.  Rudolph  

J.  Davis  

John  Cameron   

M.  Clelland   ."." 

A.  Rachardson  

C.   Peterson   

S.  Polski '.', 

Malcolm ,[[ 

John  Helving 

F.  Davis   ." 

<i.  H.  Prudden 

Totman  Bros 

B.  H.  Rathbun .' 

M.  M.  (Jasser 

Sletler  Bros.  &  Talboys 
Fayal  Store  company... 

A.   J.   Shea 

Dick  &  Halenk 

r>uluth  Paper  company 

.\.  T.  .Albert.son   

F.   Davis   .'" 

VV.  G.  Woodworth 

J.  H.  (Jilmour 

J.  S.  Gouch 

J.  ♦>.  Blaiscr  ..'.,'. 

John  Wheeler 

A.  J.  Mitchell   

R.  E.  Obern .'.., 

W.  Peckham  " ' 

^.  H.  Barney 

John  Clark  .. "' 

James  Johnson    

F.  Davis 

E.  K.  Coad 

.A.  P.  Rudolph  

G.  Davis  .W 

J.  Cameron   

W.  Clelland  ■/.   ,■.'.■ 

C.  A.  Peterson .' 

-A.    Richardson    

J.  S.   Pulski   

J.  A.  Mallion  

E.  K.  Banacke  

F.  Davis    

F.   Davis    ■■■■■ 

John  Carlson 

D.  Wheeler  

Wallan   '.'.[\ 

W.  Xichols  .. 

W.   McLean    .. 

Davis  


H. 
R. 
H. 
F. 

C.  Krelwitz  .. 
M.  Gibson  ... 
H.  Xequitt    ... 

D.  McClure    . 

J.  Bacon   

P.  Larson  

F.  Davis  

T.  H.  Paradis 
J.  H.  Gordon  . 

E.  A.  Wilson  . 
J-  F.  Keins  .. 
J.  F.  Morgan  - 


com- 


10  05 

103  S3 
116  20 

4  0<) 


J  2,600  61 
SWAX    LAKE    ROAD. 

J 


George  L.   Davis. 

N.    K.   Wright    

Charles  F.  Campbell   .... 

Mrs.    Olson    

J.   S.   Sproat    

Mrs.  Sarah  J.  Hammond 

Mrs.   P.   Hughs    

R.   R.  Quiglund    

H.   C.   Murray    

R.  E.  Risck  

C.    M.   Ahl    

Arnold    Bigler    

C.  D.  Patterson   

Ben    Benson    

F.    Davis    

R.    Dinham    , 

.McKay  &  Hall    , 

John    Colnsson    

George   L.   Davis    

N.    K.    Wright    

C.  F.  Conghill    

J.    S.     Sproat     

R.    Quigley    

H.  C.   Money    

«"'.   M.    Ahl    

R.   E.   Risch- 


100  00 
75  00 
30  00 
30  00 
15  00 
15  00 
20  00 
50  00 
45  00 
45 
45 
45 
45 
6 


71 
11 

75 


80  76 
60  57 
60  00 
50  00 
50  00 
22  50 
45  00 
25  9t> 


R.  G.   White 

VV.   J.    Merritt    

P.   Colby    

M.  O'Brien 

Mrs.  L.  M.  Dick  ....'.'.'. 

F.   Davis   

D.   McMillan   .... 

V.  H.  Paradis  '..■■ 

.\1  Gordon   

J.  J.  Morgan  

J.  T.  Cane  "■ 

D.  D.  McMillan  .... 

R.   E.   White   

Pat   Colby    

W.  J.  Merritt  

E.  R.  Wilson 

C.   Borg  

F-   I>avis   

William  Flint    

William  Doyle  

John  R.  Davis 

Elisha  Hill  

Frank  Tanner  

Albert  Duchane   

Charles  Johnston   

William   Flint   

R.  Dinham  

R.    H.   Rathburn    '. 

McKay  &  Hall 

Freight  Store  company 

.McKay  &  Hall  

A .    T.    ,A  1  bertson 

Totman    Brothers    

F.   Davis   

F.   Davis    '.'. 

William    Henry 

T.  F.  Wildon   '.    ! 

William    Cline 

J.  H.  Camfcron  


27  59 

13  00 

9  25 

22  00 

56  75 

12 

121 

54 

145 

102 

12 

65 

10 

45 

65 

19 

80  x)0 
60  0(1 
15  00 
50  00 
27  00 
30  00 
00 

00 

50 


25 

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10 
12 


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26  00 
10  50 


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34 
23 


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26 
61 
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96 
96 
96 
00 
6ii 
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l.>  40 
15  40 
15  40 
10  40 
13  SO 
13  SO 

15  55 

23  (•.- 

16  Of) 
61  54 
40  40 
22  3i 
26  92 
26  92 

24  23 
24  23 
24  23 
24  2;' 
"4  00 

28  00 

10   IHI 

16  («t 

102  S5 

173  ,V» 

2  7; 

14  2S 

43  63 

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16  30 

29  99 
:i4  12 

100  00 

30  00 
13  25 
16  15 
50  0<) 
28  85 


John  W.  Clark  

G.  H.  Barnev  , 

F.   Davis   

H.  E.  McLean  

H.    Xequitt    

C.  Krelwitz   

M.   Gibson    

J.   McGlade    

C.    H.    Barney    

J.    Wolvin    

F.   Davis    

T.   Leonard    

T.   Leonard    

F.   Davis   

J.  W.  Xew   

William   Flint    

Elisha  Hill   

Frank   Farrell    

Albert    Duchalne    

E.  W.    Bishop    

William    Flint    

W.   H.   Randall    

Charles  Chaffee    

Gulbranson   Brothers    . 

P.  R.  Healey 

S.   B.   McMeekln    

D.    Congdon    

M.  Sorenson  

F.  Davis    

F.   Davis    

W.  H.  Congdon  &  Son 

Gasper  Williams   

.A.  T.  -Albertson  

.Are    A.    Shea    

R.  H.  Rathburn   

McKay   &    Hall    

Jackson   &   Co    

Fayal  Store  companv  .. 

A.  Kitz     

H.    L.    Chapin    

James    Amory    

George  Hall  

L.    H.    Merritt    

B.  Mitchell     

C.  Peterson    

M.    Armstrong    

T.    Kelley     

D.  Xixon     

H.    Vesyaque    

F.  Davis    

C.    W.    Erickson    

C.   Johnson    

G.  L.    Woodworth    

C.    B.    McCraig    

J.    J.    Wheeler    

E.  J.    Bricker    

J.    W.    Clark    

C.    Barney    

S.    Polski    

F.  Davis     

William    Henry    

T.  J.  W^eldon   

William    Kline     

George    Clark    

A.    Ritchie     

Ed    W^illace     

Louis    Bisier    

Felix    Lesner     

John    Funlund     

John    Erickson     

P.    Helstrom     

John    Sioquist    

F.    Davis    

F.    Davis    

John    Carlson    

D.    Wheeler    

V.    H.    Parodes    

H.   E.  McLean   

R.    E.    White    

William    Rivers    

F.    Davis    

.AI    Gordon     

\V.   S.    Douglas    


25 
45 
45 
45 
52 
50 
37 
30 
25 
36 
45 


95 
95 
00 
(»0 
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III) 
00 
5't 
00 
00 
55 
00 
5o 
50 
25 
07 


7 

13 

26  00 

104  00 

75  00 

75  00 

54  SO 

61  .53 

46  15 

10  00 

20  76 

30  76 

27  69 

23  07 

17  30 

17  30 

32  00 

100  00 

63  46 

50  76 

42  30 

42  3it 

42  .'ift 

38  07 

38  07 

95 


C.     Murphy     

K.   H.   Coe 

(}.    Davit    

J.   H.  Gilmore   

.M.    (Jibson    

A.     Helvip)     

K.    J.    Benmek    

V.    Davis    

William   Flint    

F..    Hill    

Frank    Farmer    

A.     Ducharm     

C.    W.    Bishop    

William    Flint    

Charies    H.    Chaffe    . 

P.    McDonnel     

Gulbranson    Rr^s.... 

W.    H.    Randall    

J.    O.    Blai.ser    

M.    Sorenson    

P.    R.    Healey    

J.    S.    Grover    

Don  Callahan    

William   Jeffrey    

S.    B.    McMellan    .'. ... 

F.    Davis    

F.    Davis    

A.    Kitto    

R.   H.    Rathburn    

W'.  H.  Corydon  &  Son 
Foliman    Brothers    ... 

Abbiz  A.   Shea   

C.  B.  McCraig  

E.  J.    Bricken    

E.   J.   Bricken    

I.  J.   Wheeler    

J.    W.    Clark    

Ed    Ward     


^1 
24 
52 
10 
7 
20 
13 
13 


li 
1: 
12  11 
16  15 
5  20 
14  Of» 
65  00 
40  00 
18  00 

25  00 
7  .50 
7  .50 
4  00 

16  50 

43  72 

124  75 

39  21 

26  51 

33  75 
8  19 

34  00 
78  03 
15  50 
73  07 
54  80 
43  R4 
34  61 


Charles    Barney 

F.  Davis    

E.  K.   Coe    

G.  Davis    

J.    H.    Gilmore    . 

J.    Carlson     

P.  Helstrom  , 

F.  Davis    

F.    Davis    

W'illiam    Henry    . 

D.    Wheeler    

John  Carlson  ... 
W.  H.  Hoyt  .... 
H.    S.    Wolvin    ... 

F.   Davis    

V^    H.    Paradis    .. 

H.   M.   Lenn    

C.   Sorensim    

W.   S.   Douglass   . 

F.    Davis    

H.   L.   Chapin    ... 

James  Curry    

George  Hall  

L.    H.   Merritt    ... 

B.  Mitchell   

C.  N.    Peterson    ., 
W.  Armstrong  ... 
F.    D.    Kesley    .... 

M.    Gibson     

H.     VIsgaque     

J.    Hendrickson    .. 

F.  Davis   

William    Flirt    ..   . 

E.    Hill     

Frank  Tanner  ... 
Albert  Ducharme 
C.    M.    Bishop    .... 

Pat    Gramey    

Charles  Johnson    . 
William    Flint     ... 

G.  A.   Selpel    .. 


I 


THE    DULUTH    EVENIXQ    HERALD:     THIKSO.VV,    MKrcH 


36  53 
29  42 
29  42 
17  30 
17  30 

12  00 
38  00 
12  00 
8  00 
100  00 
60  00 
23  05 
45  00 
45  00 
52  00 
100  00 
41  53 
11  .53 
28  84 
15  57 
52  00 
50  00 
37  50 
30  00 
25  00 

25  00 
22  .50 
22  50 
22  50 
22  50 
22  50 

26  00 
8  00 

100  00 
50  00 
45  00 
.36  34 
52  00 
80  76 
48  4A 
40  38 
40  38 
19  38 
12  10 
11  00 
42  00 
4  00 

4  00 
104  00 

5  1» 
150  00 
140  00 

45  00 

45  00 
9  00 

49  .50 

629  00 

1.423  13 

2.859  40 

56  6ft 

70  83 

56  65 


IS,  1897. 


CRAXE  L.AKE  ROAD. 

Magnls   Harlon • 

Gus  Jacobson....    ...'.    .' 

Andrew  Gustafson.. .. 

Charles    Forlgerj-    

Charles    Carlson .... 

Nels    Walstrom 

M.    Smith ■.".■  ...■.■.*..■■■ 

Emil  Peterson ....   .!!!!! 

Mat   Kavanson. 

1.   Therilla '...,'.'.*"."'" 

J.    Johnson 

Oscar    Berg 

Blais  &  Robinson!!!.  *.".'.".    !"" 

J.    Winchester !!'" 

D.    Graham 

Swan   Johnson 

Dan    Ryan ..!!!!!!'!'"' 

Sam    Xoden !!!!..!!!' 

R.    Lackora !!!!" 

Blais  &  Robinson 

J.    English !..    ...V    '"' 

C.   Engstrom .... 

J.    Flannley .'.    ....    !!! 


45  00 


J.    J.    Wan 

Andrew    Erickson. 
Magnis    Hiarlon... 


9  00    Magnis  Hartcn. 


9  00 

12  90 

9  75 

9  00 

S  30 

8  00 

11  .50 

11  30 

11  30 

11  50 
16  00 
44  00 

12  90 

13  00 
8  40 

21  00 

6  10 

43  00 

8  10 

9  00 
9  00 


Carl    Polenlerg 

Mat    KooalWase.... 

J.  Timilia 

John  Johnson 

0.scar    Berg 

Thomas   Wiirchester 

D.    Graham 

S.  Johnson 

Dan    Ryan 

I  Sam    Xobcn 

Robinson    &    Blais.. 

J.    Wald 

Andrew  Eridison 

Anton    RItz 

Albert  Tuckette..    ... 

Charles  Hengrove 

R.     Lockney 

M.   Harlon 


I   J 


8  80  '  Funds  in  treasury,  apportioned 

9  50    Funds  in  treasury    unappo?tioned ^S^'^^^  ^^ 

'4'  m    Surt ''h^r ''  '^'•'"'  I'undiSgs  and'  peVsonal-  -properiy  " ! ! ^S  1* 

40  00    Court  house  square  and  buildines  50  ooo  fin 

7  25    Furniture  in  court  house  and  nffl. 


house  and  oflices.... 


50,000  00 
125,000  00 


"""Tn^king^tnd '^^•'^^'^ '^"'^•^^■^^-'-■'i'^'y  ^ 


20,000  00 
10.000  00 


bonds  outstanding 


LIABILITIES. 


Old  county  ^_ 

County  bonds  maturTngTg'oV 
County  road  and  bridge  bonds  ■maturing 
County  road  and  bridge  bonds  ma  ur  '  t  ,909 
^°!!'\^J:  !!°^^  ?-i  \'^-  \-^-¥  maturing  IS 


$44,555,016  95 


10  00 
9  55 

51  00 

9  10 

12  00 

11  45 
24  00 
50  00 

12  90 
12  75 

11  80 

12  00 
4  00 
8  30 

173  10 


..% 


1908 


P:.  H.  Gay  &  Cc 


Total   amount 


MISCELLAXEOUS  XEW"  ROAD. 

negotiating  county  road   bonds 

RECAPITULATIOX  NEW  ROAD  FUND. 


$  1,016  50 


..$  14,000  00 


?°}i."*„^.  '■'i^'^  ^"d  bridge  bonds  maturing  lan 

s  maturing 
d  unpaid., 
d  interest 

T„.         .  — •  •..>*vi4.'ing  Jan.  1 

n  :!!!^    ""  ITA^  VHJ^.  maturing  Jan.  {.  189 


Municipal  railroad  aid  bonds  mtturn?      oj- 
County  bond  interest  due  and  unpaid  •• 

.ounty  road  and  bridge  l)ond  interest '  dim "V; 

^tllf.  :^!?  !!2"!l«  mi  -aturing"iar5.Vs97^." 


county   new   ,^^ad1und  '''"'''    '^"''"^  '"^'^  ""^'^  ^^^'^  ^"^  '^^^^^^ 

''rLTEfl;;.ry^;^^^'^^'-"'^'---'''"^^  "^y    ■  -unty     -t^easureV  '''''''' 

35,087  51 

Outstanding  orders   issued   during   this    fiscal 


year. 


%  12,401,72 

ACTUAL  EXPENSES  OF  COUNTY  REVENUE    FUND    RECAPITUL.ATED. 

Salaries  of  county  offlcers  and  employes 

Humane    officer... u  employes $60.274  32 

District   court  expenses..         300  00 

Probate    court 50,881  79 

Coroners'  inquest ....!.!!!! 3.488  29 

-Municipal    court,    city    of    Duluth!!!! 1,755  12 

Municipal  court,  city  of  Tower ! 4,64198 

Municipal  court,   city  of  Ely......    .   554  13 

Municipal  court,  city  of  Virginia. 

Justice  court.  Virginia 

Justice  court.   Flood  wood 

Justice  court.   Biwabik 

Justice  court.   Hi))))ing 

Justice  court.  Eveleth !!' 

Justice  court,  ilountain  Iron   !!..!!! 

Justice  court,   Hermann 

Registering  births  and  deaths "!" 

Boarding  county  ])r!soners ' 

Blanks,   books  and   stationery ...!..! 
Printing ' 

Election !!!!!!!! 

Fuel  for  court  house ! 

70  83  j  Fuel  for  county  jail !!!!!!!! 

55  Oft ;  Insurance    

48  60  j  Miscelaneous  county  jail  expenses!! !!"' " 

1  30,  Miscellaneous    expenses,    general    fund 
10  00    Postage  and  expivss....    . 

T  r:n  I  ni/1    cr^l/li.^..<,'    i :,i    


In  erest  on  bonds  1909  ma  u ring  Jan  '  1897 
Interest  on  bonds  1910  maturing  Jan!  1  IsS 
Interest  on  bonds  1911  maturing  Jan  i  1897 
Interest  on  bonds  1923  maturing  Oct    1    1896 

County  road  bonds  maturing  1916      

Interest  on  bonds  1916  maturing  Jan.'  i',  "mi  '.'..'.'.'.."    " 


unpaid 


Assets  over  liabilities 


1,000  00 

91.150  00 

40.000  00 

30,000  00 

50.000  00 

30,000  iX) 

250,000  00 

955  00 

45  00 

2.734  .50 

l.OOft  (H) 

675  00 

1.125  txt 

12,.500  00 

3,125  00 

31,236  17 

606  00 

3,301  27 

150,000  00 

3,000  00 


$       702.452  'M 
$43,852,564  01 


.o„4ro'/ii:Kr^s„„7rM?„'„'iifrr?„r.a?Tia?„srS:.-""- 


„„j    ..-   ..^..^    buri.il   account.. 


7  50 1  Old   soldiers 

^8  58     .Appropriations 

Assessors    of    unorganized 


104  34 
11  65 
26  43 
16  39 
157  96 
100  00 
75  00 

44  44 
50  00 
15  45 

45  00 
45  00 
45  00 
32  96 
45  00 
54  00 
34  .=i5 

4  00 
57  69 
37  03 
50  00 
24  57 
45  00 
45  00 
26  66 
54  00 

100  00 
60  48 
48  30 
40  30 
28  00 
25  96 
22  49 
25  95 
36  33 

19  03 
1  23 

3  00 
54  00 

108  00 
75  00 
75  00 

100  00 
60  00 
12  96 

4  00 
54  00 
19  44 
11  66 

3  00 
100  00 
60  00 
50  00 
3  70 
16  00 
45  00 


towns. 


RECAPITUL-ATIOX  COUXTY  POOR  FUXD. 

County  physicians,  salaries   ...  '  f^'* 

Overseer  poor  farm,  salary  

.Secretary   l)oar(i   .\ssociated  Charities,  salary 

Interest  on  county  poor  orders    

Poor  farm  personal  property  ! 

Superintendent.';  of  poor,  salaries 

Superintendents  of  poor  bills  allowed,  salaries 

State  institutions 

Burial  expenses  county  poor  !!..!. ..! 

Board  and  care  poor !!!!!!!.!! 

Mi.«cellanoous  county  jjoor  farm  expenses 

MiscellantH.us  (oimlv  poor  fund  

Temporary   relief  bills  allowed    ..!!!! 

Transportation    for  countv   noor         

Temporary  relief  cash  orders" ! 


RECAPITULATION  COUXTY  SPECIAL  ROAD  FUXD. 


130  92 

190  25 

987  46 

42  09 

85  22 

43  05 

84  95 

15  35 

12  25 

576  25 

• .  10,077  50 

•  •  6,855  17 

..  4„305  28 

.  2,459  70 

483  58 

609  44 

813  00 

.  1,736  19 

.  12,205  89 

.  1,308  29 

35  00 

100  00 

.  1,032  50 

$166,084  96 

^— . ^— 

.$  3,675  00 

750  00 

.  1,020  00 

276  9.; 

240  00 

.  2.910  00 

551  S3 

193  68 

.  1,082  b) 

9.459  15 

7,106  7!! 

4.046  45 

17,460  65 

6,916  30 

288  50 

O.  HALDEX, 

County  .Auditor. 
(Seal.) 


J.  C.  HELM, 

Chairman. 


$55,977 


54  00 

1.55  00 

1.55  00 

46  .50 

46  90 

29  35 

63  25 

1,.377  .37 

1,297  10 

2,8S5  60 

752  59 

76  50 


85  00 
85  00 
85  00 
85  00 
85  00 
85  00 

24  00 
35  SS 
82  96 

13;i  60 

8  05 

12  00 

30  00 

100  00 

25  00 
25  00 
50  00 
45  00 

.5  19 
22  .50 
.52  IM* 
KK)  Oil 
60  00 
47  00 
3  00 
1  25 
52  00 
104  00 
100  00 
75  00 
75  00 
75  00 
8  65 
52  00 
100  fW) 
60  00 
41  92 
1  50 
52  00 
100  00 
75  00 
60  OQ 
50  00 
50  00 
50  00 
45  00 
45  00 
34  60 
45  00 
4  on 
52  00 
120  00 
110  00 
40  33 
40  33 
26  33 
19  00 
4  00 
69  01 
126  00 


Superintendent  county  roads,  .salary 

Miscellaneous   county   roads    

Byrne  road    

Biwabik  Cemetery  road  !!!!!!! 

Crane  Lake  road ! .    ! 

Culver  road   ...... 

Culver  Extension  road  ........ 

Cloquet   River  road   !...    ! 

Canosia  road   !.!.!. 

Ely  and  Fall  Lake  road ...... 

Evelet  h   and  Fayal   road    ! ! ' 

East  Duluth  and  Lester  River  road  !! 

Erickson    road    

Fayal  and  f:iy  Lake  road  ........"..!!' 

Grand  Lake  Station  road " 

Grant  road 

Grand  Lake  road  .!!!!!..!!!.! 

Howard  and  Gnesen  road  !!!   ! 

Mil>bing  road !    !!! 

Independence  road   .......! 

Iron  Junction  and  Eveleth  road  .!.!. 

Industrial   road    

Janzig  road .*  ....*. .  ! ! ! 

Kelsey  road   ..........    !!! 

La Va(iuo  load    

I..akke  road   .....! 

Midway  road   !!!!!!..!!!!!! 

Mountain  Iron  .tnd  Hibbing  i-oad     ! 

.Morris  Thomas  load  ! ! ! ! 

Maple  (;rove  road    ......!! 

I^IcKinley  and  Virginia  road  ..!!.!.. 

McComber  road   

Xormanna  road  

Prai rie   Lake  n )ad    ..........!! 

Proctorknott  road 

Ralph  road '.'.".'. .!!!'!! 

Rice  Lake  road  ...!!!!!!! 

Sell  wood    road    ..." 

Swan  Lake  road 

Stoney  Brook  road !!!!!! 

Schultz  road  

Seville  road   !!!!!!!.!! 

Schultz  road  extension   ..............! 

Savanna  road  extension  

Tower  and  Ely  road   .'.'..' 

Tischer  road !'_ 

Tower  and  Itasca  road .......!!!!! 

Tower  and  Eml>arrass  River  road   !   ! 

Tower  and  Mesaba  road   

Town  Line  road .'.   ! ! ! ' . 

Vermilion  road    ....!.!.!!!!! 

Virginia  and   Mountain  Iron   road ! 

West  Swan  Lake  road  

...  .  .....  ..JasiJSt^ 


.$  i„345  on 

.  8,1.39  49 

.  1.081  00 

1.57  14 

142  25 

.  1,265  33 

.  1,936  15 

.  1,487  76 

.  1,478  59 

.  1,071  .55 

1,4-61  24 

102  36 

834  61 

12  00 

1.984  62 

1,017  87 

598  55 

275  42 

6  85 

6  00 

1,160  69 

551  99 

485  00 

458  21 

4,706  29 

836  SO 

993  40 

1,346  42 

401  25 

478  92 

1.2.56  S4 

1,932  4S 

850  35 

2,357  J9 

1,322  56 

799  92 

644'  50 

24  00 

20  50 

943  96 

1.211  36 
483  50 
423  85 
467  58 

1.212  01 
1,025  2i) 
1,325  89 

4  70 

1,474  48 

480  25 

919  25 

7  15 

56  70 


Send 

The  Duluth 

Weekly 
Herald 

To  Your  Friends 
In  the  East. 


■■-r-oitA^f 


"^n. 


RECAPITULATION  COUNTY  XEW  ROAD  FUXD. 


Howard   and   Gnesen   road    

Hi(e  Lake  road   

Swan   Lake  road   ....... 

St.    Louis   River  road   !! 

Miller  Trunk  road   

Oane  Lake  road   !!!!! 

Miscellaneous  new  road  expenses 


$55,067 


.$  2,185  82 
.  2,«00  61 
.  1,704  5S 
309  ;i9 
.  25.671  73 
.  1,016  .50 
.    14.000  00 

$47,489  23 


COUNTY  BOND  INTEREST. 


Disbursements  of  coupons.  No.  37.. 
Disbursements  of  coupons,  No.  Ss!! 
Disbursements  of  coupons.   No.  39!!, 


....$ 


45  00 
2,689  50 
2,685  00 


$  5,419  50 


COUNTY  ROAD  AND  BRIDGE  BOND  INTEREST. 


Disbursements  of  coupons,  1  to  40  inclusive  5  per  cent..$  2  000  00 
Disbursements  of  coupons,  41  to  70  inclusive  414  per  cent.  1  350  00 
Disbursements  of  coupons,  71  to  110  inclusive       4»^      per 

cent    ....   1,800  00 

uishursements  of  coupons.   111  to  120  inclusive  4>i  per  cent       4.50  00 
Disbursements  of  coupons,  121  to  150  inclusive  i^  per  cent    *»  0'>5  00 


MUNICIPAL    RAILROAD  AID  BOND  INTEREST. 
Disbursement  of  coupons  No.  2 s       550  00 


$    7,625  00 


550  00 


$  26,671  73 


ASSETS. 

As.ses8ed  valuation  of  taxable  real  property     $38,417,039  00 

Assessed    valuation   of   taxable   personal   property    '  5170  •?7'  00 

County  revenue  taxes.  1895.  outstanding '  '34467  64 

County   poor  taxes   1895,   outstanding 27!!)74  36 

County  special   road  taxes  1895,  outstanding '  17''>.33  74 

County  bond  interest  taxes  1895,  outstanding I'y'S  41 

County  bond  sinking  taxes  189.5.  outstanding  i!723  42 

County  road  and  bridge  bond  interest  taxes  1895,  outstanding  3!446  78 

County  railroad  bond  interest  taxes  189.5,   outstanding    6*893  74 

Infectious  diseases  taxes  1895.   outstanding  832  48 

County  taxes  prior  years  outstanding 69,758  99 

County  taxes.  1S96.  now  due l.f»3!963  52 

Penalty   and   interest   uncoUfccted,   estimated 22,000  00 


'Twill  do  Duluth  good. 
Always  8  pages  and  often  12 
and  16. 

Containing  all  the  best  news 

from  the  .Daily  and  many 

special  articles  about 

The  Vermilion  and  Hesaba 

Iron  Ranges, 

The  Rainy  Lake  Country  and 

the  Shipping,  Marine  and  Grain 

Interests  of  the 

Head  of  the  Lakes. 

Mailed  anywhere  in  the  United 

States,  Canada  or  Mexico  for 

3  Months  for    =    -    - 

6  Months  for  =    =    -    -  50c 

I  Year  for     -    -    -    =  $,.00 


!    I 


(    • 


•^ 


The  Weekly  Herald 

Herald  Building, 
DULUTH.  -  MINN. 


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Many  Money  Saving 
Biiryaitis  AreOffm^l 
By  Mntfrprising  Mer- 
rUant.t  in  Th"  Urrahl 
Toni'fhf- 


BULUTH  EVENING  HERA 


MINNESOTA 

HISTORICAL 

SOCIETY. 


TT 


th^tmrni 


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■|nM|«i 


FOI'IMKFNTII     VEAK. 

Our  Great 
Annual  Sale 
Black  Clay 
...Worsteds. 

Same  standard  grade  of  cloth,  same  first-class  tailoring  as  we've  always 
given  you,  arid  now  the  nlagnet  pi  ices.  Can't  match  them  anywhere,  because 
the  nnuiue  advantages  we  enjoyed  in  getting  the  goods  places  us  out  of  11 
competition.  or  ^ 

All  Told  About  1,200  Clay  Worsted  *Z 

Suits  for  this  Great  Sale - 


Any  style  you  wish, 
duplicate  it. 


Pick  it  from  the  latest  fashion  plates;  we'll 


FOR  THIS  SALE— Hundreds 
of  ir>-ounce  All-Wool  Fast 
Black  Clay  Worsteds  in  round 
and  square  cut  sacks  and  y 
button  cutaway  frock  Snits; 
same  quality  as  you  see  else- 
where at  $10  and  $13; 
choice  here 


FOR  THIS  SALE- Hundreds 
of  18  ounce  Fast  Black  Fine 
Clay  Worsteds  in  any  style; 
same  as  the  latest  fashion  plates 
dictate — same  cloth,  same 
trimmings,  same  finish 
as  made  to  order  for  $3u.oo; 
choice  here — 


FOR  THIS  SALE— Hundreds 
of  20-ounce  Fast  Black  Fine 
Clay  Worsted  Suits,  any 
style  desired,  fitted  by  our 
experts  without  extra 
charge:  other  stores 
ask  $15.00; 
choice  here— 


FOR  THIS  SALE- Hundreds 

ot  20-ounce  Fast  Black 

Finest  Clay  Worsteds  in 

all  styles,  best  of  make  and 

trimmiogs  throughout, 

best  fitting,  best  values  ever 

oflfered;  tailors  get  $25.00 

for  none  better;  choice 

here 

Final  Wind-up  of  All  Remaining 

Winter  Overcoats  and  Ulsters, 

Boys*  Reefers  and  Ulsters. 

All  the  way  up  and  down  the  broad  aisles  of  these  departments  the 
proht-clipping  scissors  have  been  worked.  All  garments  have  received  still 
auotiier  extra  cut  in  price  for  this  last  Special  Wind-up  Sale. 


■•a's 
and  Bays' 
Oirtfittars. 


Williamson  6c  Mendenhall. 


126-127 

West  Suparlsp 
Street. 


j»  I  ♦  :■»  I  ♦  i»;»i»:»i»i»i»i  ♦  ;»i-»  i»  i  ♦■i»  i  ♦ :  ♦  i  ♦  i  ♦ ;  ♦  i»i  ♦■;■♦■:■♦■ 
^   Avoid  La  Grippe  by  Keeping  Your  Feet  Dry. 

Special  Bargains  in  Reliable 
Footwear  for  Tomorrow. 


LADIES'  SHOES. 

Ladies'  $4  00  and  $5.00  grade  pointed  toes,  finest  vici-kid, 

Gray's  and  Ford's  makes  in  button ;  your  choice 

Ladies'  $4  00  ana  $3.50  button  and  lace,  square  or 

round  toe,  easy  and  neat  Shoe,  at 

Ladies'  plain  opera  or  common  sense  S3.50  and  $4.00 
Shoes;  your  choice 

MEM'S    SHOES. 

Oar  best  grade  Enamel,  Patent  Leather  and  Calfskin 

$6.00  Shoes  at 

Many  have  taken  advantage  of  this  bargain  and  you  can  also 
Men's  Enamel  and  Calf,  cork  sole,  pointed  toe,  $5.00 

Shoes;  your  choice  at 

Men's  $4.00  pointed  toe,  cork  sole,  at— 


$3.25 
$2.50 
$2.00 


11*  ■■IM 


$4.50 

n  also. 

$3.50 
$3.00 

Case  after  case  of  New  Shoes  for  Spring  and  Summer  Wear  arriving  daily. 

RUBBhRS— We  only  sell  the  best  kinds. 

A.    WIELAND, 

123  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET.  ^ 


L.  MENDENHALL 


ESTABLISHED  1S«9. 


T.  W.  HOOPES. 


Mendenhall  &  Hoopes 

FIRST  NATIONAL  BANK  BUILDING. 

$12,500.00  to  Loan  on  Improved  Property. 


FKIDAV,     MARCH     VX     1S07. 


VHE  WEATHER. 
Rain  and  Snow  To- 
night: Decidedly 
Voider  Saturday; 
HVt^    Wind^ 


ore™ 


Reeves'    Tonnage  Tax   Bill 

Stirs  Up  a  Warm  House 

Discussion. 


lo  (livido  tho  question  and  a  voto  was 
taken.  The  St.  Louis  county  mpinbers 
and  enemies  of  the  hill  voted  against 
the  motion,  but  it  was  <'arried  liy  a 
vote  of  63  to  43. 

The  deliate  was  prolonged  at  the  af- 
ternoon session.  The  indications  are 
there  will  be  no  more  amendments  and 
that  the  bill  will  pass  Ijy  a  close  vote. 


Jacobson's   Five  Cent  Tax 

Amendment  Carried  By 

Twenty  Majority. 

All   the   Duluth    Delegation 

Worked  Hard  But  They 

Were  Outvoted. 


IN  THE  SENATE. 
St.  Paul,  March  19.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.)— In  the  senate  today  Senator 
Cronkhite  introduced  a  bill  to  prohibit 
members  of  the  railroad  and  warehouse 
commission  from  engaging  in  other  oc- 
cupations while  members  of  the  com- 
mission. He  explained  that  the  bill 
was  aimed  at  Judge  Alills,  who,  while 
a  member  of  the  commission,  had  sev- 
eral times  appeared  before  legislative 
c-nnmittees  as  an  attorney  for  matters 
not   connected    with   the  commission. 


S^t.  Paul.  March  19.— (.=;pecial  to  The 
Herald.)— The  lieeves  mine  tax  bill  was 
a  special  order  for  yesterday  afternoon 
in  the  house,  and  it  called  out  one  of 
the  most  prolonged  fi-ghts  of  the  ses- 
sion, being  very  generally  participated 
in  anil  lasting  right  through  the  supper 
hour.  There  was  a  full  attendance  and 
the  debate  was  somewhat  informal. 
Mr.  Snyder,  of  Hennepin  county,  pre- 
sided. 

Several  amendments  were  proposed 
and  adopted.  First  came  up  the  defini- 
tion of  operative  and  non-operativo 
mines,  Mr.  Jacobson  wanting  to  dei^ar" 
mines  producing  not  over  I'tJOO  tons  to  l;e 
mineral  lands  under  the  orovisions  ot 
this  law.  Mr.  Reeves  suggested  .'>0.(KMt 
tins  as  more  adequate,  and  it  was 
finally  agreed  to  fix  it  at  lO.lMK)  tons  a 
year. 

In  the  course  of  a  speech  Mr.  Stock- 
well  «|uoted  a  Mr.  Metcalfe,  of  Fiiwabik, 
as  classing  Mr.  Vail  as  a  corporation  ' 
man,  and  Mr.  Vail  very  promptly  o!>- 
jected  to  the  statement.  He  said  that 
he  was  willing  to  allow  Mr.  .Sto<kwell  to 
(•ontrol  his  vott-  on  one  phase  of  thi.*-- 
((uestion  to  show  that  he  was  not  a  cor- 
poratiofj  man. 

Mr.  Keevts  spoke  at  consideralde 
length  in  support  of  his  bill,  and  Mr. 
."^chmidt  and  Mr.  Laybourn  both  joined 
Mr.  \'aii  in  opprtsing  it  at  all  stages, 
ith  sneaking  strongly. 
Mr.  !.,aybourn  presented  an  amend- 
ment striking  out  section  4  of  thi- 
Keeves  l)ill.  that  Ijeing  the  tonnage  tax 
provision,  s  cents  on  each  ton.  Mr.  Ftig 
spoke  with  some  fone  against  hasiy 
action.  Mr.  Jacol)son  opposed  the  Lay- 
bourn  amendment  as  a  blow  at  the 
who|».  iiiii.  and  claimed  that  Duluth 
members  in  the  past  had  always  op- 
posed any  action  whatever.  He  asserted 
that  never  had  anybody  in  St.  Louis 
county  tried  to  raise  any  tax  on  this 
property  until  recently  they  realized 
that  they  had  got  to  do  so. 

Mr.    Jacol)son    classed      laybourn    as 
being  "as  fair  a  man  as  had  ever  been 
.-ent    from    St.    Louis   county,"    but    in-  | 
sisted  that  he  was  mistaken  in  this  in-  | 
stance.      Mr.  Schmidt  replied  to  several  1 
of  the  other  speakers  with  an  emphatic  ! 
protest    against    injustice    to   St.    Louis 
ccumty   and    its    interests.     He   did    not 
believe  in  treating  that  county  different 
from  others. 

Speaker  Jones  opposed  the  Laybouru 
amendment  as  killing  the  bill  by  chang- 
ing its  entire  principle,  and  he  therefore 
wanted  a  vote  soon  on  that  amend- 
ment. 

Mr.  Douglas  believed  in  a  tax  on  out- 
put, thereby  fixing  the  tax  on  those  who 
could  afford  it.  In  general  he  believed 
in  the  Reeves  bill. 
I  Mr.  Stockwell  resented  some  criticism 
of  the  Duluth  people,  claiming  that  in 
<jtf)position  to  the  old  mine  tax  law  the 
Duluth  people  were  awake,  »)ut  the  peo- 
ple of  the  rest  of  the  state  had  l>een 
asleep.  Mr.  Donnelly  opposed  the  Lay- 
bourn  amendment. 

A  call  of  the  house  was  ordered,  con- 
siderable time  l>eing  given  to  considera- 
tion of  the  cases  of  ai)sentees.  Dr.  Milli- 
gan  was  rer)orted  as  at  home  at  Wa- 
basha attendin'g  to  the  practice  of  hi.-i 
professi<m.  and  an  excuse  for  him  was 
refused.  Excuses  for  Davies  and  Yatts 
were  al.so  refused.  Meml)ers  enjoyed 
themselves  with  bogus  resolutions  for 
over  half  an  hour,  three  absentees 
finally  coming  in  and  proceedings  under 
the  call  being  suspended.  The  vote  was 
finally  taken  a  little  before  7  o'clock. 
The  amendment  was  defeated  by  a  vote 
of  27  to  76. 

Several  amendments  were  then  pro- 
posed to  the  tfmnage  tax  feature.  Mr. 
Jacobson  wanted  it  made  5  cents  in- 
stead of  8  cent.s,  as  provided  in  the  bill. 
Mr.  Schmidt  nronosed  to  make  it  2 
cents,  and  after  a  little  further  discus- 
sion a  substitute  was  offered  by  Mr. 
VaM   fixing  it  at  3  cents. 

Without  coming  to  a  vote  the  house 
adjourned  until  this  morning  and  took 
up  the  special  order  again  immediately 
after  the  approval  of  the  Journal. 
TODAYS    PROCEEDINGS. 
By  the  defeat  of  Mr.  Laybourn's  mo- 
tion   to  strike  out   section  4,   the   house 
last   night  apparently  decided  in  favor 
of    the    tonnage    tax,    leaving    pending  I 
the  various  figures  proposed   by  Jacob- i 
son.    Vail    and    Schmidt.    This    morning i 
Schmidt    withdrew    his    motion    for      2' 
cents  and    Vail    withdrew   his   proposi-l 
tion    for   a   3-cent    tax.     leaving       the! 
Jacobson  amendment  for  a  5-cent   tax,  | 
as  against   the  8  cents  provided   for  in 
the   bill.   A   call  of  the   house  was   or 


THE  WRIGHT  REPORT. 

Judge  Morris  Thought  It  Was 
Made  Public. 

Washington,  March  l!).— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— The  attention  of  Judge 
Morris  was  today  called  .to  an  interview 
with  Maj.  Haldwin  printed  in  The  Her- 
ald, in  which  the  latter  .'^tatod  that  he 
would  request  Morris  to  reintroduce 
the  Towne  resolution  instructing  the 
secretary  of  the  interior  to  send  the 
Wright  report  <m  the  investigati<m  of 
the  Chippewa  pine  estimates  to  con- 
gress. 

Judge  Morris  said  that  he  was  under 
the  impression  that  this  report  had  al- 
ready been  made  public.  He  will  take 
no  action  in  the  matter,  until  requested 
to  do  so  by  some  of  the  parties  inter- 
ested. 


INTRODUCED  BY  DAVIS. 

Bills  Which  Are  of  interest  to 
Minnesota. 

Washington.  March  ly.— (Special  to  Th(» 
Herald.)— Senator  Davis  today  introluced 
the  following  bills  of  lorul  interest  lo 
Minnesota:  F'ixlng  the  salaries  of  dorks 
of  the  circuit  and  district  courts  in  Min- 
nesota at  $3501):  amcn.liiig  the  Indi.iii 
depredation  law  to  incliiil''  piisons  who 
had  declared  then-  iiiti  n(ion  to  liccoinc 
citizens  and  limiting  cliiinis  to  be  acttti 
upon  to  those  already  lilcd  in  the  court 
of  claims;  to  enable  timber  and  stone 
applieants  to  make  k»h  oinl  entries,  pro- 
videtl  botli  entries  do  not  cover  more 
tlnin    1(R)   acres. 

ib'  also  introduced  a  lesobition  author- 
izing the  secretary  of  the  interior  to  i.-s- 
siie  <bipli<'ati-  Sioux  scrip  upon  proof  Mial 
the  (»rigiiial   liad   liceii   li.si   or  «lisij-oyf:.l. 

TO  CONTROL  THE^ICES. 

Morris  Will  Select  All  Sixth 
District  Officials. 

Washington,  March  I'.t.- (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Representative  Morris, 
it  is  said  by  a  shrewd  Minnesota  poli- 
tician today,  is  going  to  be  able  to  con- 
trol all  the  appointments  within  the 
confines  of  the  Sixth  district.  He  may 
not,  however,  have  much  to  say  ai>out 
Minnesota  in  his  district  seeking  office 
outside  of  it. 

Morris  will  doul)tless  »)e  pretty  well 
satisfied  if  the  two  Minnesota  senators 
do  not  atempt  to  interfere  with  the 
post  office,  land  office  and  other  ap- 
pomtments  of  a  like  nature  in  his 
district.  The  Minnesota  delegation,  bv 
the  way.  has  not  yet  made  any  attempt 
to  hold  a  caucus  and  tiy  to  settle  dif- 
ferences existing  over  the  patronage 
question. 


LEE'S  SUCCESSOR. 

Gen.  Draper  May  Yet  Be  Sent 
to  Havana. 

Washington.  March  lit.— Gen.  Draper, 
'f  Massachusetts,  may  yet  go  to  Ha- 
vana as  consul  general  to  succeed  Gen. 
Fitzhugh  Lee.  He  admits  that  Presi. 
dent  McKinley  has  solicited  hiin  to  ac- 
cept the  position,  and  while  he  is  aver.s" 
to  doing  so,  he  does  not  feel  like  refus^ 
ing  the  president's  wish  in  the  matter 
It  IS  the  belief  that  the  Cuban  question 
wdl  be  solved  in  a  few  months,  and  if 
it  is  settled  an  attempt  will  be  made  tn 
Jiave  the  ministerships  of  Spain  and 
Russia  laised  to  ambas.sadorships. 
When  this  is  done,  if  Gen.  Draper  is  | 
persona  grata  to  Spain,  he  may  receive 
that  appointment.  If  not.  the  minister  I 
selected  for  Russia  may  l>e  transferred  : 
and  Gen.  Draper  given  the  mission  to 
St.  Petersburg. 


Commercial  Light  &  Power  Co. 

(tuccessors  to  Hartmin  G«n«ral  Electric  Co.) 

FURNISH 
ELECTRIC  CURRENT 

FOR  LIGHT  AND  POWER. 

0FFICE8-Roo«i4,  5  and  6,  216  Watt  Superior  Strort.    -    -    -    Duluth.  Minn. 


dered  and  the  sergeant-at-arms  sent 
after  unexcused  absentees,  and  during 
the  interval  the  St.  Louis  county  dele- 
gation were  especially  active  in  ar- 
guing with  individual  members, 
Schmidt,  Vail  and  Laybourn  each  be- 
ing the  center  of  an  excited  group. 
They  had  been  talking  late  last  night, 
at  the  hotels  and  started  in  at  it  again: 
early    today. 

After  half  an  hour  proceedings  under 
the  call  were  suspended  and  debate 
on  the  rtoor  resutned  Abl)ott  opposed 
the  Jacobson  motion.  Mr.  Donnelly 
claimed  thait  Minnesota  had  squan- 
dered its  natural  wealth  outrageously. 
He  took  the  ground  that  the  so-called 
tonnage  tax  was  not  a  tax,  but  was 
simply  the  state's  share  in  the  natural 
wealth,  and  opposed  the  Jacobson  mo- 
tion. He  demanded  a  division  of  the 
question.  Jacobson  talked  in  support 
of  his  motion.  He  thought  the  8-cent 
tax  was  too  great  a  jump  from  1  cent 

Mr.  Reeves  agreed  finally  to  the 
Jacobson  motion,  saying  he  thought 
that  was  probably  as  much  increase 
as  should  be  made  at  this  time.  He 
called  attention  to  questions  as  to  why 
he.  a  country  mem»>er.  not  from  a  min- 
ing district,  should  take  so  much  in- 
terest in  this  subject  and  explained  that 
he  was  here  for  the  good  of  the  whole 
state  and  he  was  not  going  to  apolo- 
gize  for  his  actions.  The  house  refused 


SOUTHERN  CYCLONE. 

Several  Mississippi  Localities 
Badly  Wind  Shaken. 

Jackson,  Miss.,  March  19.— A  severe 
wind  storm  struck  Jackson  this  morn- 
ing about  6  o'clock,  coming  from  the 
southwest  and  accompanied  by  a  heavy 
down-pour  of  rain.  So  far  as  known 
there  has  been  no  loss  of  life,  although 
heavy  trees  were  blown  up  l)y  the  roots, 
houses  unroofed,  fences  and  outbuild- 
ings destroyed  and  signs  blown  awav. 
Jackson  is  entirely  isolated  in  the  mat- 
ter of  telegraphic  communication  and 
on  account  of  that  nothing  can  be 
heard  from  the  surrounding  country, 
but  it  is  probable  that  serious  damage 
has  been  done.  1 

It  is  reported  at  Glendale.  Miss.,  that 
the  levee  has  broken  there  and  that  I 
Lake  Tchula  has  risen  four  feet.  It  is 
reported  from  Raymond,  Miss.,  that  the 
property  at  Coppers  Wells,  a  summer 
resort  near  there  has  been  considerably 
.damaged  by  the  cyclone. 

ANOTHER  OFFICE  SEEKER. 
Washington,  March  19.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— A  nephew  of  ex-G«ver- 
nor  Ramsey,  of  Minnesota,  Alexander 
Ramsey  Spiele,  of  St.  Paul,  is  in 
Washington  making  a  strong  elTort  for 
appointment  as  auditor  of  the  navy  de- 
partment. 


PRESIDENTIAL     NOMINATIONS. 

Washington,  March  19.— The  .  presi- 
dent sent  to  the  senate  late  this  after- 
noon the  following  nominations:  Jus- 
tice—Willis Vandevanter,  of  Wyoming, 
to  be  assistant  attorney  general,  vice 
Isaac  H.  Lonl>erger,  resigned;  Samuel 
;  '^f'^'^eval,  of  Indiana,  to  be  marshal 
of  the  United  States  for  the  district  of 
Indiana;  Albert  W.  Wishard,  of  Indiana 
to  be  attorney  of  the  United  States  for 
the  district  of  Indiana. 


WOODMEN  EXTEND  RELIEF 
bt.  Louis,  Marcli  19.— The  Sovereign 
camp  of  the  Woodmen  of  the  World,  now 
Jlu  f  i"''i'  '"  t^iimp,  donated  $200  for  the 
relief  of  flood  sufferers  at  Memphis,  the 
^fiVl^  *°  "*®.  expended  by  the  Memphis 
relief  committee. 


A) 


-^ ft- 


FlYK     OTUHK     EDITION. 


TWO  CENTS. 


6OOO  Extra  Fine 

CARNATIONS 

Saturday,  2  doz  for 

35  cdirrs. 


n  SATURDAY 

J  AT  THE  BIG 


6000  Extra  Fine 

CARNATIONS 

Satordajr,  2  doz  for 

35  CENTS. 


GLASS  BLOCK 

STORE  * 

Last  Saturday  was  a  busy  day  at  the  Big  Store,  made  so  by  the  Bargains  we  offered 


WE  TELL  YOU  AGAIN 


IT  PAYS  TO  READ   OUR  ADS. 

IT  PAYS  TO  KEEP  POSTED  WHERE  TO  BUY. 

IT  PAYS  TO  TRADE  AT  THE  BiQ  STORE. 


Ladies' 
Waists 

Extra- 
ordinary. 


— 2.'i  dozen  Ladies'  Fancy  Sliirt  VVaiets. 
worth  np  to  $l-8aturday  40o. 


Again 


25  dozen  Lawn,  Dinaity, 
Percale  and  ftrass  Liueu 
Hliirt  \Vaists,  worth  up  to 
Sl.'iO.  Saturday 


Are  you  looking  for        manufacturers 


Whiet,  (irand  or  Eiichro 


Bargain  Counter  Ho.  2.     I    Bargain  Counter  No.  3.  Bargain  Counter  No.  I. 


REMNANTS  of  all  kinds  of 


PRIZES?    La.cefi  ▼ 

URDAY—  B^SVlW^^V     ■ 


SATURDAY — 

We  will  put  on  sale  50)  pieces  of 
Real  Cut  Glass  Pin  Trays, 
Olives,  Vases,  Etc.,  at 

25c  and  50c  eacii. 

Wortli  50c  up  to  $1.25  each. 

PEPPERS  AND  SALT8- 

1000  Cut  Glaea 

P»pper8  and  Salts. 

bilver  plated  Tops- 
Saturday  13c  each, 
or  two  for 


Lotl-Only lOe  a  yard 

LofJ-Oniy ,„.  |6o  a  yard 

iota— Only 26o  a  yard 

ORIENTAL  AND  TORCHON. 


LACES 

15,000  yards,  wortli  from 

10c  to  aOc  per  yard— 

SATURDAY 

PER  YARD  ONLY... 


Saturday 

SOc 

Per  Yard. 


Dress  Goods 

Sensation^ 

We  are  making  great  preparations 
to  make  Saturday's  Dress  Goods 
selling:  the  largest  in  the  history  of 
the  Glass  Block,  and  this  is  the  way 
we  are  going  to  accomplish  it. 

$1.00  Tailor  Checks,      Chnirf> 
$1.00  Snulile  Cloths,      ^""»^'= 
$1.00  Pebble  Cloths, 
$1  oo  Carri  Novelties, 
Sqc  Black  Serge, 
8gc  Black  Henriettas, 
89c  Black  Etamines, 
89c  Black  Brocades. 

Lining  ^^Fiyep."* 

A  sample  of  one  of  our  many  bar- 
gains in  this  department  Saturday. 
36-inch  Rustle  Taffeta,  lengths   A  1  ^ 
from  I  to  8  yards  at  per  yard. . .  ^20 

Wash  Goods  ^^Fiyer" 

36-inch  English  Percales, 

30-inch  Black  Sateer, 

Navy  mixed  Chambray  Ginghams, 

values  up  to  1 2Kc  a  yard.  a^ 

choice  Saturday,  at QC 

Great  Suit 

Sensation. 

25  beautiful  Suits, 
navy  and  brown, 
made  with  the 
new  English 
Walking  Jacket. 
Skirt  lined 
throughout  with 
taffeta,  worth  $8  50, 
choice  Saturday 


Ladies'and 
Children's  Hosiery 
and  Underwear. 

Ladies'  40-^auge  Hermsdorf  Black 
Cotton  Hose,  double  sole,  high- 
spliced  heel,  our  regular  25c     |  171/^ 
hose— Saturday  special I  I  zC 

Children's  U.  S. 
School  nr  Bicycle 
Cotton  Ribbtd 
Hose,  absolutely 
fast  and  seamlesF, 
elastic  circle,  dou- 
ble knee,  6  to  10 
inches; 
Saturday 
Special,. 

Ladies  Silver  Gray  Jersey  Ribbed 
Vests  and  Pants,  Fleece  lined, 
worth  35c— Saturday .' 


Ladies'  Kid  Gloves. 


<^-^ 


25c 


25c 


$5.00 


25  dozen  Ladies'  fine  percale  Wrap- 
pers, that  are  worth  up  to  QQa 
$1 .50,  choice  Saturday «f  Ou 

Stationery  Dept. 

Crepe  Paoer— 211  rolls  of  imported 
Crepe  Paper  in  six  colors,  that  is  now 
selling  for  13c  per  roll,  to  close     C#fc 
Saturday OC 

Book  Dept. 

Raphael  Tuck  and  Sons'  "Belle  of 
Newport,"  the  most  beautiful  series  of 
dressing  dolls  ever  published,  each 
belle  has  a  wardrobe  of  four  handsome 
dresses  and  four  chic  hats.  Tuck  & 
Sons  publish  them  at  25c  per        Q^ 


series,  our  price  Saturday 

Drug  Dept. 

Paines  Celery  Compound 


69c 


Children's  Ribbed  Heiv/  CoUon 
Heece-lined  vests, -regular        OCa 
value  45c-Saturday £Qf} 

Saturday 

We  will  put  on 
sale  another  big 
shipment  of 

LADIES'  MUSLIN 
UNDERWEAR. 

Come  and  see  the 
exquisite  things  we 
have  to  show  you. 

Gents'  Fine 
Furnishings..... 

AT  CORRECT  PRICES. 

Gents'  Fine  Dress  Shirt?,  laundered, 
long  or  short  white  or  colored    AQa 
bosoms,  worth  $1.50— Saturday  «loC 

Gents'  full  seamless  i2o  needle 
Half  Hose,  heavy  heel  and  toe, 
fast  and  stainless  black  or  tan;      A^ 


Saturday  we  will 
have  put  on  sale 
25  doz  of  Ladies' 
2-clasp,  nndressed 
Mocha  Kid  Gloves 
in  black  and  all 
the  desirable  col- 
ors, every  pair 
fitted  and  warrant- 
ed, at  only,  per 
pair 


$1.00 


50  pair  of  Ladies' 

pauntlet  street 

Gloves  in  ex  bloods  and  other  col-r-, 

worth  $1.25  a  pair,  at  per 

pair 


75c 


worth  15c;  Saturday  special, 


OFFER  EXCEPTIONAL  ! 

Gents'  best  2-thread  silken  fiaish 
real  maco  cotton  Half  Hose,  tan 
or  black,  double  sole,  high-spliced 
heel,  regular  value  50c  a  oair— 
Saturday  special  only      tfl  |    A  A 


3  pairs  for. 


With  each  SI  purchase  one  pair 
Fine  Silk  Garters  Gratis. 


Jewelry  Dept. 

New  Side  Combs -The  best  imitation 
of  the  real  shell  ever  made,  in  all 
widths  and  lengths,  the  very  newest 
pattern,  worth  up  to  50c  per      ORa 
pair,  Saturday HvC 

Motion  Dept. 

Ladies,  how  is  this?  Feather  stitch 
Braid  in  the  12-yard  pieces  in  all 
widths  and  patterns  at  the  price  vnu 
now  pay  us  for  a  6-yard  |  r  ^ 

piece,  Saturday 1  vU 


Gants'  heavy  ecru  Royal  Rib  Shirts, 
Lorabed  Egyptian  cotton,  satin  faced; 
•in  elegant  75c  Shirt;  we  have  no 
Drawers  to  match;  therefore  to  J  A-^ 
close  shirts— Saturday  special. 4«fC 

Drapery  Dept. 

CAST  YOUR  EYES  OVER  THESE. 
SILK0LINE8. 

25  pieces  ol  the  best  qualify, 
worth  the  world  over  12 '/ic — 
Saturday— per  yard ......... 

CURTAIN  SCRIM. 

Slic— so  pieces  36inch  Curtain 
Sciim,  good  pattern.*,  cream        03gx 
color— Saturday U4C 

SMYRNA  RUGS. 

$1  59  each— Saturday  we  will  put  on 
sale  50  Smyrna  Rugs,  size  30x63 
inches,  in  good  patterns        0t    CA 
at  each H.OSI 


5C 


Mew  Veilings. 

We  have  up- 
wards of  300 
pieces  of  Silk 
Veilings  10  se- 
lect from,  prires 
range  from  15c 
up  to  $1  a  yard 
See  the  new, 
ready-made 
Veils,  the  swell 
things  can  be 
had  here. 

Shoe  Department. 

RUDDER  GOODS. 

In  order  to  close  out  our  stock  of 
Men's  goods  we  make  the  follow- 
ing low  prices. 

Men's  Rubber  Boots,  worth  ff  I    CA 
$300,  for ipl.OU 

Boys'  Rubber  Boots,  worth  at   AC 

»225.for 9i.C0 

Youths'  Rubber  Boots,         0  f   A  A 

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200  pairs  Men's  Pilgrim  and  Puritan 
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Women's,  Misses  and  Chil- 
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Visit  Our' 
Art  Dept. 

Many  new  exquis- 
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found  here  and 
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Crockery  Specials. 

500  JapaDese  Oat  Meal  Bowln,  C^ 

pretty  decoratione,  each OC 

100  Fancy  Decorated  ("hina  Susara    4  O^ 

and  Creams,  a  bargain I  «f  C 

300  lodividaal  Tea  Pota  in  old 
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1000  Fancy  Jap  Work  BasltetB 60 

300  Red  Fiber  Waah  Basins —13c 

JOO  Hammers,  full  size,  a  hummer  for     1 0o 

1897  Bikes 

For  Ladies, 
Gentlemen 
and  Children 
now  on  sale. 


SILVERWARE. 

To  introduce  you  to  our  New  Silverware  Department  we  will  ofTer  for  Saturday— 

23c 

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M  dr.zon  Roger  &  HamUton's  and  Roger's  best  Knivor,  Forks 
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PANTON&WHITE 


( 


BWBgJ^MIi^ag-l  I  11    I .  I 


■-* — 

' 

-^ — «. 

■ 

••» 

i 

i 

1 

^I'l 


-^ 


BEeiEO 


Jackson   and   Walling    Tell 

the    Story     of     Pearl 

Bryan's  Death. 


Dr.    Waj^ner   Is   Claimed  to 

Have  Cut  Her  Head 

Off. 


THE    DULUTH    EVEyiNa    HERALDt    FRIDAY,    MARCH 


Three  Chapters  of  the  Uni- 
form Charter  Bill    Have 
Been  Finished. 


Confessions  to  a  Certain  Ex- 
tent  Make   Walling   Ap- 
pear Less  Guilty. 


Cincinnati.  March  19.— Both  the  En- 
quirer and  Commercial  Tribune  prints 
this  mornin.sr  confessions  by  ScDtt 
Jatksi>n  and  Alonzo  M.  Walling,  signed 
respectively  by  their  authors.  The  text 
of  these  confessions  Is  copyrighted. 

Jackson  lays  the  blame  for  the  con- 
dition of  Pearl  Bryan  on  William  F. 
Wood  who.  he  says,  solicited  him  by 
letter  to  give  her  relief  from  disgrace 
for  his  sake.  He  alleged  that  it  wa* 
all  Will  Woods  notion  to  send  her  here, 
and  that  i>ut  ol  friendship  u>  Wood  he 
imderto<ik  the"  task  of  concealing  her 
shame  I'p  to  Wednesday  nis^ht,  Jan. 
:;!>.  the  story  does  not  differ  greatly 
from  that  already  related  in  this  case.  I 
He  said  he  engaged  Walling  to  nnd 
someoii-  who  would  perform  the  deli- 
laie  ta.-ik.  that  on  Wednesday  Walling 
told  him  that  ht-  had  sent  Miss  Bryan  ; 
to  a  iloctor.  I 

On  Thursday   Walling  received  word  j 
to  come  out  to  Dr.   Wagner's,  at  Belle- 
vue.      Ky..     nt-ar     Newport.       He     and  I 
Walling  both  went  out.   but  did  not  gf» 
in.     Th.:'y     arranged,     however,     to     be 
there  again   on    Friday   night.   Jan.   31.  i 
They    both    went    there.     Wagner   sent  i 
him   to  Fort   Meyer's     drug     store     for 
some  ergot,  and  he  went  and  obtained 
it.     When  he  returned  all  were  excited. 
The   girl   was  unconscious,   and   it   was 
determined  to    take    her    away.     Wag. 
ner  obtained   the  wagon  and   the  bod.v 
was  carried  out  the  back  way  and  put 
into    it,    and    all    three     got     into     the 
wagon.   Wagner  driving. 

Arriving  at  the  place  on  the  Alexan- 
dria pike,  between  Mr.  Locke's  and  Mr. 
Stone's   farms,    they     stopped,     carried 
the  body  in  to  where  it  was  afterwards 
found.     Wagn?r  thought  her  dead,  and 
told  Jackson   to  hold   her  head,    which 
he   did.      Then     Wagner     severed     the 
head  from  the  body  and  wrapped  it  up 
in   the  girl's     cloak.       Walling     canied 
the  cloak  to  the  wagon.    Jackson  says 
that    when   h»   let   go   of   the   body    the 
head  was  at  the   top  of  the  bank,   but 
fell  forward.     Wagner  left  them  out  at 
the   Newport    bridge.     He  and    Walling 
went  to  Cincinnati   and   parted.    Wall- 
ing going  to  Heder's  hotel  and  Jackson 
to  his  room  with  the  girl's  valise,  which 
contained  the  clothmg  which  he  threw 
into    the   river.     The    blood    inside     the 
vaiise  came  from  a  sack  worn   by  tht- 
giri.  which  was  put  in  it.    Wagner  took 
the  head  with  him. 

Alonzo  Walling's  statement  is  that 
Jackson  solicited  him  to  help  a  girl  out 
of  trouble  into  which  she  had  been 
V»rought  dy  Will  Woods,  of  Greencastlc. 
Ind.  He  first  heard  of  this  trouble  to  i 
Pearl  I'.ryan  some  time  in  November. 
189:">.  but  was  not  asked  to  assist  until 
after  Jackson  ru-turned  from  CJreen- 
castle.  early  in  January.  He  agreed  to 
fln«i  someone  that  could  perform  an 
abortion.  Accordingly  on  Jan.  I'l  he 
wrote  to  one  of  his  friends.  May  Smith, 
asking  her  for  such  information. 

on  Jan.  2-S  he  received  a  letter  from 
her  advising  him  to  see  Dr.  Wagner,  of 
Bellevue.  and  saying  that  she  had 
written  Wagner  to  call  at  the  college. 
The  same  day  Wagner  called  at  the 
college  and  inquired  for  Walling,  agreed 
to  perform  the  operation  and  gave  his 
address.  On  that  afternoon  Walling 
met  Pearl  Bryan  on  the  corner  ot 
Fourth  and  Race  str:'ets,  and  directed 
her  how  to  go  to  Dr.  Wagner.  On  the 
next  day.  Jan.  30.  Wagner  told  him  by 
mail  to  bring  Pearl's  clothes  out  to  him, 
saying  she  was  under  his  care.  He  and 
Jackson  took  the  clothes,  but  did 
not  go  inside. 

Next  evening.  Friuay.  Jan.  .31.  he 
ami  Jackson  went  out  to  Wagner's. 
Heie  Walling  tells  the  same  story  as 
Jackson,  aboirt  Jackson's  \islt  to  the 
drug  store.  Pearl  Bryan's  unconscious^ 
ness  and  the  trip  to  the  country,  end- 
ing with  the  decapitation.  He  says  he 
was  too  much  excited  to  remember 
particulars,  but  he  knows  that  Jackson 
and  Wagner  removed  the  head.  Hb 
staid  that  night  at  Herder's  restaurant, 
in  Cincinnati. 

The  Enquirer,  this  morning,  contains 
a  special   from   Nicholas  Vellkey,   stat- 
ing that   Dr.   Wagner,   who  is  implicat- 
ed by  the  Jackson  and  Walling  confes- 
sions,   was    formerly    a   son-in-law     of 
William  Hendren,  a  wealthy  farmer  of 
that  county.  Wagner  then  was  a  mini- 
ster   or"   the    Reformed    church    at    Sul- 
phur Well.  About  the  middle  of  Janu-; 
ary.    1896,    Mrs.    Wagner   wrote    to    her 
brother    Hendren    that     her       husband; 
wa.s  losing  his  mind  and  asked  him  to} 
come    to    Belevue.    Hendren    went    and 
says  that  on  Jan.  23  he  took  Dr.  Wag-j 
ner    with    him    to    Nicholasville   to    the: 
house    of    William    Hendren,    where   h'ei 
remained    until    Feb.    23.       This    corre- 
sponds with  the  statement  of  the  fam- 
ily   when   the   "Belevue"   clue   was  first 
sprung  near  the  time  of  the   trial  and^ 
which  caused  its  collapse  at  that  time,  i 
No   doubt    the   Wagner    family       and' 
friends    will    clear    un    the    matter    by' 
means  of  certain  telegrams  and  postal 
cars    sent    on    dates    between    Jan.    22 
and    Feb.  23,   which   they  say  will   bear 
out    their   alibi    for   Wagner. 


A  woman's  lookin^-plass 
docs  not  lie  to  her.    If  she 
looks  carefully  and  owns 
the  truth  to  herself,  .«he 
will  acknowledge   that 
it    shows   to  her,  as  it 
1^  shows  to  others,  a  face 
■full  of  the  URliness  of 
sutl'ering  and  pain.     If 
a    woman    wants    her 
mirror  to  reflect  a  pain- 
free     face    she    should 
take   proper  care  of 
her     womanly     self. 
She  should  see  that 
the     organs     that 
are  distinctly  fem- 
inine    are      kept  I 
free   from    weak- 1 
ness    and    disea.se.     By    this    means    only 
can    a   woman    remain     fresh-looking   and 
attractive. 

Women  majr  erase  from  their  faces  the 
lines  of  suflfenng  by  using  Dr.  Pierce's  ra- 
vorite  Prescription.  Over  90,000  women 
have  testified  in  writing  to  its  marvelous 
merits.  It  acts  directly  on  the  womanly  or- 
gans. It  makes  them  strong  and  healthy. 
It  cures  all  weakness  and  disease.  It  allays 
inflammation,  soothes  pain,  and  calms  and 
steadies  and    invigorates   the    pain-racked 

nerves.    It  prepares  for  wifehood  and  moth-  '  c     .  ,      «  j      •■ 

erhood.     It  does  away  with  the  discomforts  j  SChOOl     BOard     Members     lO 
of  the  expectant  period.     It  insures  baby's 
health  and   makes  it.-^  advent  easy  and   al-  I 
most  painless.      .-Ml  good  druggists  sell  it. 

"  I  am  going  to  write  ami  tell  you  the  henefita  ' 
I  have  received  from  takiag  vour  medicines." 
writes  Mrs.  J.  B.  Clough,  Box  x>3. 1.islxjn.  Orafton 
Co..  N.  Hampshire.  "  I  am  the  mother  of  a  nice 
baby  four  and  a  half  months  old.  ffe  is  a  perfect 
child  and  weighs  about  eighteen  ptjunds.  If  you 
remember  I  wrote  you  about  a  year  ago  about 'my 
condition.  I  cannot  give  too  much  praise  to  your 
*  Favorite  Prescription '  as  it  saved  me  a  great 
deal  of  suffering.  I  Rot  along  remarkably  well, 
this  being  ray  £.-8t  baby." 

"Knowledge  Is  power."     In  a  thorough 
knowledge  of  the    human    body  lies    the 


Two  Houses  of  the  Council 

to   Be     Elected    In 

May. 


IGNOMINIOOS  DEATH. 

A  Brave  Man's  Pear.  Real 
Tangible  Danger  Met 
Heroically. 

The  Terror  of  Donbt  Makes  Cowards 
of  the  Bravest. 


19,    1897. 


The  Indian's  Methods  of  Avoiding  Pit- 
falls.-A  Lesson  for  All. 


Be  Chosen  at  the  Same 
Time. 


St.  Paul,  March  19.— (Special    to    The 
Herald.) — The  revised   and  final  copies 
of   the    first    three    "titles"    of   the   new 
uniform  charter  bill,  which  a  commis- 
<i...v^.. .^v.Bv    wi    mt    uuiuaii    uouy  lies   rac    ^ion  of  St.  Paul.  Minneapolis  and  Du- 
power  that  will  at  last  stamp  out  weakness    luth  men  Is  preparingr.  have  been  issued. 

D^'pler^cf  Lf  ^k'^^'iTotg^o'ok"fnt'^'iS;  ^^^^  "-^  ^'^'^  *«  ^^^-^^^  ^"  organization 
future  through  his  "  Common  Sense  Medi-  ^"'^  makes  the  usual  provision  that 
cal  .Adviser.  •  •  It  is  full  of  just  such  knowl- 1  <ill«'s  of  50.000  or  more  which  come 
edge  as  will  do  the  family  the  most  good. 
This  book  of  over  1000  pages  and  finely  il- 


lustrated  has  had  an  unprecedented  sale. 
About  700,  ono  copies  have  been  sold  at  fi  ep 
per  volume.  Now  it  can  be  had  in  paper 
covers  for  21  cents  in  one-cent  stamps.  In 
fine  French  cloth  for  ten  cents  more.  Ad- 
dress.  World  s  Dispensary  Medical  Associa. 
tioQ,  Buffalo,  N.  Y. 


I  POSTAL   CLERKS. 

Railway  Mail  Service  Meeting 
I  in  San  Francisco. 

San     Francisco.     March    19.— At    yes- 
terday's   session    of    the    United    States 
^lailway    mail    st-rvice    convention,    At- 
I  lanta,    tJa.,    was    unanimously    selected 
'  as  the  city  in  which  to  hold  the  asso<'i- 
ation's  convention  one  year  from  Sep- 
tember next. 

The  election  of  offlcers  for  the  en- 
suing term  resulted  in  J.  M.  Hutler,  of 
Lincoln.  Xeb..  being  made  president  of 
the  association  and  C.  E.  LaGrave  sec- 
rotary.  The  election  of  vice  presi- 
dents from  the  various  divisions  re- 
sulted as  follows:  First.  S.  \V.  Shee- 
hardron:  second.  W.  K.  McFadden; 
third.  John  W.  Holiday;  fourth.  Wil- i 
liam  H.  Arnold:  Hfth.  W.  Hanss: 
sixth.  W.  M.  Traycr;  seventh,  F.  A. 
Sharon:  eighth.  Harry  Lewis;  ninth. 
W.  A.  Nichols;  tenth,  W.  A.  Madagani 
eleventh.    H.  C.  Voss 


under  this  law    may  sue  and   be  sued, 
own   real   estate,    personal  and     mixed 
property.     Section   ."?  says:     "All    prop- 
erty   and    estates    whatsoever   of   such 
cities  shall  be  and  remain  severally  and 
respectively  vested  in  them,  and  all  pro- 
ceedings for  the  acquirement   of  parks 
and  parkways,  and   for  the  making  of 
local    impi-ovements    and      the    making 
and  collecting  of  assessments  therefor. 
whU  h  would  otherwise  come  within  the 
provisions  of  this  act,  the  assessments 
for  which  shall  have  been  made  before 
this  act    becomes   fully   operative   upon 
such  cities,  shall  bi-  proceeded  with  and 
c()mpleted  as  nearly  as  may  be  in  con- 
formity   with    the    provisions    of      law 
under  which  they  were  commenced,  and 
by  the  same  procedure  as  if  this  act  had 
not  been  pa.ssed;  and  all  causes  of  ac- 
tion, <lebts,  taxes,  contracts,  claims  and 
demands  of   whatever  nature,   existing 
prior    to    this    act    becominir   operative 
upon  any  city,    whether  in  favor  of  or 
against  such  cities,  or  any  of  them,  <.i' 
between  other  parties,  shall   remain  in 
full    force,   and   shall   be  sustained   and 
enforced   notwithstanding  this  act,   but 
as  far  as  practicable  in  conformity  witii 
its    provisions   as    to    methods    of    pro- 
cedure, except  as  hereinbefore  already 
provided," 

Section  4  provides  that  nothing  in  the 

act  Is  to  be  considered  as  repealing  or 

I  modifying  any   city   ordinance,   resolu- 

I  tlon,  order  or  rule  In  force  at  the  time 

the  act  becomes  operative,  except  thosi- 

incompatable  with  its  provisions. 

It   is   provided   that  all   political   and 


HE  insidious  foe  is  the  one 
ino-st  feared.  He  who 
strikes  unseen  and  with- 
out warning. 

It's  the  same  with 
disease.  A  pniufiil  acute 
malady,  one  we  have  be- 
come conversant  with,  by 
noting  its  effect  on  others, 
has  no  preat  terrors.  We 
know  after  an  interval  of 
more  or  less  discomfort  the  tionbio  will  have 
"rnn  its  coufh',  '  Nature  will  repair  the  dam- 
ape, and  we  will  be  oursehvs  a^ain.  It's  Nat- 
ure's inability  to  throw  off  poisons  collected  in 
the  system, that  ^^-_ 

causes    sick-         _^  (       (  ^i 

nesses  that  have         ^  V_^A' 

fatal    termina- 
tions. 

It's  when  wo 
feel,      without 
apparent  caus.' 
tired,  desjKJuil- 
ent,  exi)erience 
8leei)less:<.ess, 
loss  of  appetite, 
and  dull  pains 
in  various  parts 
of    the    body ; 
notice  our  faces 
are  blotched,  sallow  or  covered  with  pim- 
ples, —it's  then  we  realize 
"  That  of  all  jfood  glftH,  ever  hath  been  health 
Countert  the  first,  and  long  of  U  to  bo 
The  hardest  thinjf  to  bear." 

Don't  delay  after  Nature's  warnings;  take 
her  own  remedy,  Kickapoo  Indian   Sagwa. 

It  ptwitively  re- 
lioves  all  serious 
Bymjitoms  at  once, 


such  compensation  as  shall  be  fixed  by 
the  common  council,  not  exceeding 
$1200  per  annum;  and  such  .secretary 
may  be  removed  .  by  th?  mayor  at 
pleasure. 

Section  30.  The  mayor  shall  have 
authority  to  expend,  from  the  executive 
contingent  fund  appropriated  for  that 
purpo.se  by  the  common  council,  such 
moneys  as  may  be  necessary  in  case  of 
emergency  to  secure  information  and 
evidence  of  crime,  and  arrest  criminals 

Section  31.  He  shall  sign  all  bonds 
and  obligatiims  on  behalf  of  the  city, 
and  all  warrants  and  orders  drawn  on 
the  city  treasurer,  unless  otherwise 
provided  by  law.  He  shall  also  sign  all 
contracts  on  the  part  of  the  city.     • 

Section  32.     He  shall,  upon  service  of 
ootlce,   summons  or  process  upon    him 
in  any  action  or  proceeding  against  the 
city,  forthwith  inform  the  city     attor-  ! 
ney  and  common  council  thereof. 

Section  33.  The  mayor  shall  receive 
an  annual  salary,  to  be  fixed  by  the 
common  council,  of  not  less  than  $1500 
noi-  more  than  $2500. 


IN  THE  DAKOTAS. 

NORTH  DAKOTA. 
Grand  Fork.s  now  has  dreams  of  waur 
communuation    in     three    directions.    Nut 
only  down  to  Winnipeir  and  up  to  Fargo 
with    gn-ater    depth    of    water    than    now' 
but   south   from   Fargo   to    fiig  Stone   lake 
.•111(1    into    ibe    Minnesota    river   and    later 
the    Mississippi    just    below    Minnenpolis 
also   west   to   the   Red   lake   countrv.   Col. 
\\  .   A.   Jones,   in  charge  of  engineers   fur 
the    work    of    the   upper    Missi.ssippi,    etc., 
after    investigating    the    feasibilitv    of    a 

rivers.     saCs*  thn.     ,h  "*^' .  '"i=.,^^<l.^.'.','>'^  I  ea?«   and   so    to    be 


rivers,     says    that    the    following"  resuf's 
can  be  obtained:    The  creation  of  ii  water 
-rT,    or     transportation     extending     from 
rhief    River    falls    to    the    head    of    Red 
lake,    a   distance  of  eighty-four  miles   on 
the    river    and    fifty    miles    on    the    laki' 
From    the   east   end    of   Red   lake   u   canal 
can    be    very    cheaply        cut    through     to 
Ua  ny    river— a    marsh    covers    the    whole 
(ll.stance— thus     opening    a     great     streten 
of    country    bordering   a    navigable    river 
including    the    Lake    of    the    Woods     The 
I)ermanent  Improvement  of  the  Red  River 
ol    the    North    from    Urand    Forks    to    ihe 
international    lioundarv.     giving    a    navi- 
gable  d«i)th   of  over   four   feet.   The   con-  i 
l)lete   protection    of   the   lower   Red    Luke  ! 
river    valley    from    floods,    and    the    same  I 
alto   to  a   considerable  degree   to   the   val- 
ey  ol   the  Red  River  of  the  North  below 
t.rand     Forks.       For    the     foregoing    n-a- 


^ure^^aS:  5<^^tgage  foreclos- 

r.^^},^J^^^  d9fault  has  been  made  In  the 
o»2^»V^V^  ot  a  certain  mortgage,  made, 
«on  Ji^(«'ii'l"'*,1f"^'<^''ed  by  Bent  John^ 
^m«  m^!?^'  "^  ^*-  I-°"'''  County,  Mlnne- 
Thom^  rfxf.^"'''  *o  A-  B-  McDonel  and 
fl^^  nf.i  7'"*"'  ,"l?'-»Kaepes,  dated  the 
first  (1st)  day  of  November.  A  D  1891 
and  recorded  n  the  oflUe  of  th^  register 
of  deeds  In  and  for  the  county  of  St  Louis 
and  state  of  Mlnne.=?ota,  on  the  second 
day  of  November,  A.  D.  1S94  at  the^our 
of  ten  o'clock  and  ten  minutes  (lo  lO)  "n 
the  forenoon  of  said  dav,  in  Book  ninitv 
live  (95)  of  mortgages  bn  page  one  hun^ 
dred   and   seven   (107).  "" 

And  whereas  such  default  consists  It 
the  non-payment  of  the  principal  sum 
and  Interest  secured  by  the  said  mortga^. 
and  there  is  claimed  to  be  due  and  there 
nf  "t?,YL  *!"•;  o"  ?ald  mortgage  at  the  date 
of  this  notice  the  sum  of  three  hundred 
and  sixty-eight  dollars  and  sixty-sev.n 
cent.s    (l36S.fi;)    principal   and    interest 

And  whereas  no  proceeding  or  action 
has  been  instituted,  at  law  or  otherwise 
to  recover  the  debt  secured  by  said  mort- 
gagft  or  any   part  thereof. 

Now,   therefore,   notice  is  hereby  given 

hat  by  virtue  of  a  power  of  sale  con! 
tamed  in  said  mortgage  and  of  the  stat- 
ute in  such  «ase  made  and  provided  the 
sa  d  mortgage  will  be  foreclosed  bv  the 
f.^Ki .?,.*'"',  "'""''""'ses  therein  described,  at 
public  vendue,  by  the  sheriff  of  the  coun- 
\  ?!  ^V  ''''"'?  a"J  state  of  Minnesota, 
at  the  iront  door  of  the  district  court 
\\?^^^''  oi  •''?"^  »ounty,  in  the  city  of  Du- 
iuth.  St.  Louis  County.  Minnesota,  on 
Saturday,  the  tenth  (10th)  day  of  April 
f^f  R\}  \'-  ^'i  **""  9'f>"f^k  in  the  forenoon 
.  ^?"3w"^'*^'.  '**  satisfy  the  amount  which 
shall  then  be  due  on  the  said  mortgage 
with  interest  thereon  and  the  costs  and 
disbur.sements  of  the  sale  and  twentv- 
tlye  dollars  ($ij.0O)  attorney's  fees,  as  stin- 
iilated  m  .said  mortgage  in  case  of  fore- 

The    premises    described    in    said    mort- 
sold   are   the   tracts 


NOTICE. 


Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  under- 
signed have  been  duly  appointed  by  the 
common  council  of  the  city  of  Duluth 
as  commissioners  in  condemnation  pro- 
ceedings for  the  purpose  of  viewing  the 
premises  and  assessing  the  damages 
which  may  be  occasioned  by  the  taking 
of  private  property  for  the  purpose  of 
acquiring  a  right-of-way  bv  the  city 
of  Duluth  for  a  force  main  for  water- 
works,  from  the  pump  house  now  In 
process  of  erection  on  lot  1,  section  35 
township  51  north,  range  13  west  to 
Lester  river.  The  property  to'  be 
acquired  being  as  follows,  to- wit: 

M 

(1)  A  strip  of  land  66  feet  In  width 
the  center  line  of  which  Is  described  as 
loiiows,  to-wit:  Commencing  on  the 
northerly  boundary  line  of  a  tract  here- 
a  iu'!!  f'^^"'^'''^  t"  the  city  of  Duluth  as 
fvnrlo  ^  jumping  station  for  water- 
north  .""  '"'  ^'  f'<?<>tion  3.5,  township  51 
easfeHv^'T''  ^^  ''■^^*-  ""^  *  P«'"'  24.23  feet 
ner  r.V*  V"*  ^'^'^  northwesterly  cor- 
northeru^^'*^  ^'''''  proceeding  thence 
westerh^b^n','  ""^  "^'•^"^'  ^^''h  the 
deeded  fot^'^^''*'  ""*^  "^  «^d  fact 
fance  of  rpfi'^r  I'Umping  station,  a  dis- 
tance of  566  feet  to  a  point 


thfcente?nL''^'^1^  ?«  f*^*^t'in  widuT 
follows       to  wu    '''^   ''  '"  described  as 

weste^/riir^yiaS^ur -Fii 

l^cetS 'alo^nl^lS  .S^^iu:!'£ 
\^VZ'^l?'lK  1"^  «f  «^«d  tmct    150  fee^ 

&- 


and  parcel.s  of  land  situated  in  the  coun- 
ty of  St.  Louis  and  state  of  Minnesota 
and  known  and  described  as  follows  to- 
wit:  The  southwest  quarter  of  the  south- 
ea.st  quarter  (SW14  of  sey*)  and  east  half 
of  the  southeast  quarter  (eV^  of  seU)  and 

'^ip^'^x^?^  (^)^^^n^oTh,^^Jr-Wn^^e  V^^  !  to-the"rTght-<^-way  ^rt^rAlJ"?, 
onejl)  west  of  the  fourth  principal  ml  \  Iron  RanJeVaiSd 'i'ompln^"'"'^ 
jj,I?ated    Duluth,    Minn.,    February    15th,  ' 
^S'lNE   ^^^^^^^^     and     THOMAS   IR- 

IIENRY   S.    MAllON,  ^^^tg-igees. 

Attorney  for  Mortgagees. 
l^-^i^G-April-T  "*'■'*'''•   Peb-2C-March-5- 


andquicklvdisiiels    "^ons,  and  the  fact  th.it  the  mservoir'caiii 
be   created   by   constructing  a   short,    low 


the  unseen  cause, 
by  completely 
cicansiiiir,  stimulat- 
ing, and  restoring 
to  their  natural 
condition  the  i)rin- 
cipal  lire-maintaia- 
ing  ori;ans  of  the 


<lam  at  the  outlet  of  Red  lake  at  a  verv 
.sni.ill  exi.ense.  the  colonel  recommends 
tins  locality  as  worthy  of  improveine.-ii 
A  suiyey  can  be  made  at  a  cost  of  $-,(Wi» 
Um'v  in  the  Kuiiiy  river  near  its  mOuth 
<onimunicatlon  would  be  had  to  the 
north  with  Rat  Portage  and  the  gold 
(ields  of  the  ui)per  end  of  the  Lake  of  the 
Uoods.    and    to    the    east    as    far   as    the 


NOTICE. 


Office  of  City  Clerk, 


blocni.  Itlmscured 
thousand!!,  and  can 
always  bedeiiended 
on.  No  harm  can 
follow  it^  u.se,  as  i! 
is  made  from  herbs, 

barks,  and   contains  no  minerals  or  othei 

poisoiious  imrreilicnts. 
Can  bo  procured  of  anv  drugijist,  $1.00  pel 

Ijottle,  G  bottles  for  $.').0O. 
One  of  our  staff  of  doctors  will  gladlv  give 

yon  any  medical  adviw  yoti  may  desirc,//^c, 

ifyou  will  write  us  describing  voiirsvinptoma. 

Kickapoo  Indian  Medicine  Co.,  New  Haven, 

Conu . 


IkkIv,  the  kidncvs. ;  .  ^  .  .     „-„-■•■     — •-    "••'    »"■    ««•->    i-"^- 

liver,' stomach  anti  !  :\!:!'ir.^'L';".^..."f  ?."!">'. .'»»^'^-  a. distance  of 


The  folowling  directors   were   elected,      ,-  •-  —    '" " 

by   the  convention:   W.   J.   Bulrichs,   "w.  | '^.""^""^'.trative  boundaries  shall   bo  un 
J.  Watterman.  A.  C.   Mclntyre.   C.  Hll-  ' 


C.   A.    Schemer  and 


Wag- 
and   A. 


ton.    \V.    Meredith 
J.    B.    Dillon. 

Legislative  committee — C.  B 
ner.  .M.  Burns.  K.  A.  Kidwell 
A.  Ferguson. 

On  Saturday  evening  the  last  ses- 
sion of  the  convention  will  be  held.  Su- 
perintendent Flint,  of  the  local  divi-  ' 
aJon.  was  host  last  night,  to  all  those 
delegates  who  cared  to  accept  his  hos- 
pitality. Seventy  of  the  visitoi-s  availed 
themselves  of  the  chance  and  th^^y 
took  in  the  sights  of  the  city. 


CONDENSED   DISPATCHES. 

Bulgaria  is  enjoying  a  cabinet  crl.-«is 
and  M.  Soiloff  has  been  intrusted  with 
the  task  of  re-forming   the  ministrv. 

Cat.t.  •.\.    B.    Johnson.        Fnit'd    ,=^tnte>» 
I  army,    died    yesterday       at    San    Antonio. 
!  Tex.,    from    Hrights  disease.  He  was   woo 
known   in   Minnesota. 

At  Bath.  Me.,  the  schooner  Frank  A. 
I'nimer  was  launched  yesterday.  It  i-< 
th.>  largest  ve.ssel  of  its  clas.s  in  the 
World. 

Sylvester  Scovel.  the  American  new.— 
paper  correspt)ndent.  has  been  released 
from  captivity  in  Cuba,  has  paid  his  res- 
P-cts  and  thanks  to  the  Spanish  authori- 
ties and  will  be  allowed  to  remain  on  the 
isl.md   as  a   correspondent. 

Wreckage  marked  -Ttrecht  "  has  been 
picked  up  along  the  French  coast  mai 
Brest  for  several  days.  It  Is  believed  to 
be  from  the  Dutch  steamshii)  of  that 
nam.',  which  is  now  supposed  to  have 
foiniilered    with  all   hands  about   March   4. 

John  S.  John.son.  the  bicyclist,  who  has 
been  seriously  ill  for  some  time  left  To- 
ronto last  evening  for  Chicago.  From 
Chicago  he  will  go  direct  to  his  home  .:■ 
Minneapolis.  His  health  Is  greativ  ini- 
proyed. 

The  charges  against  Luis  Dav.  .m 
American,  who  was  arrested  at  Boa  la 
Cuha.  last  December  and  confined  in  th<- 
tafjanas  prison,  have  been  dismissed  He 
has  been  set  at  liberty  and  expelled  from 
the  island.  Charles  Scott,  the  American 
and  Lastban  Venro.  a  naturilized 
American,  have  been  ordered  set  at  lib- 
erty. 


lASKJI  NO  LONGER  CONSUL. 
Washington.  March  18.— The  Turkish 
minister  has  declared  vacant  the  office 
of  consul  of  the  Ottoman  empire  at 
Boston,  Mas.s.,  held  by  Joseph  laslgi, 
who  was  placed  under  arrest  some 
weeks  ago  on  charges  of  embezzlement 
of  trusts  funds  in  his  custody. 

A  LOSING  TURFMAN. 
San  Francisco,  March  19.— Dave  Gi- 
deon, the  New  York  turfman,  returned 
home  last  night  via  Los  Angeles  and 
New  Orleans.  He  was  a  heavy  loser 
by  his  .sojourn  in  California.  Previous 
to  leaving  this  city,  he  signed  Henry 
Martin  to  ride  for  him  this  coming 
sea.son.  Martin  will  have  a  great  chance 
to  go  to  the  front  as  Gideon  has  a  verv 
strong  stable,  having  captured  no  less 
than   three    futures. 


changed  except  as  provided  In  the  act, 
and  that  the  population  of  any  city  ;^o 
far  as  the  act  is  concerned  shall  be  tha^ 
of  the  last  federal  or  state  census. 

Under  the  heading  of  "elections  and 
general  provisions  concerning  officeis" 
the  following  appears:  The  elective 
officers  shall  be  a  mayor,  a  controller, 
a  treasurer  and  nine  (9)  a.ssemblyme'. 
and  seven  (7)  members  of  a  board  ol 
education  to  be  elected  from  the  city 
at  large,  and  one  (1)  alderman  to  be 
elected  from  each  ward.  Judges  of  the 
municipal  courts  established  in  such 
cities  shall  in  each  case  be  elected  at 
the  regular  city  election  next  preceding 
the  day  when  the  regular  terms  of  the 
judges  of  sui  h  courts  whose  places  ar^- 
t<»  be  lilkd  respectively  will  terminate 
by  law.  But  such  judges  are  not  en.- 
braced  within  the  meaning  of  the  tern, 
"elective  officers."  as  used  in  this  act. 

Section   9   proyides   that    the    first   bi- 
ennial   elections    shall    be    held    on    the 
first  Tuesday  of  May.  189S.     In  all  other 
respects    this     law    shall    first    become 
operative  upon  such  cities  last  described 
on  the  first  Tuesday  of  June.  lSi»8.     On 
the  first  Tuesday  of  May  in   the  even 
numbered  year  next  following  the  cen- 
sus year,  state  or  national,  the  first  bi- 
ennial elections  are  to  be  held  In  .such 
cities  as  by  the  returns  of  such  census 
appear    to    have    then    first    attained    a  ', 
population  of  .50,000  or  more  inhabitants.  , 
In  other  respects  the  law  becomes  oper-  j 
atlve   upon    the    first    Tuesday   of   June  ; 
thereafter. 

Section    10 — In   all   cities  upon    whlcli 
this  law  shall  have  become  fully  ojiera- 
tlve  the  city  elections  shall  be  held,  and  1 
the  elective  officers  provided  for  by  thit 


such  interest  sliall  forfeit  his  said  of- 
fice;   and    any    money    whifh    .shall    be 
paid  on  such  ontract  by  the  city  mav 
be  recovered  back  from  any  or  all   the 
I  persons   interested    therein    by   a  joint 
or  several  action. 
Section  20  makes  the  violation  of  sec- 
]  tlon  19  a  misdemeanor,  forfeits  the  of- 
fice and   makes   the  violator  liable  for 
loss  or  damage  sustained  by  the  city. 
i      Section    21— In    all    cases'  where    the 
I  salaries  of  offi(  ers  are  fixed  bv  the  com- 
mon   council   they   shall    be   fixed       by 
resolution,    and    the    salaries   of  all    of- 
ficers shall  be  paid  monthly.  The  salar- 
:  les  of  officers  whose  terms  of  office  are 
i  fixed  by  this  act,  shall  not  be  increased 
or   diminishetl    during   the     term       for 
which   su<'h  officers   have  been  chosen. 
n<»r  during  the   period   intervening   be- 
tween   the   election   or   appointment    ot 
any    such    officer    and    the    commence- 
ment of  his  term. 

Section  22— Ev-rv  elective  and  ap- 
pointive officer  and  all  boards,  except 
members  of  the  council,  shall  annual- 
ly, on  or  before  the  first  Tuesday  In 
April,  transmit  to  the  common  council 
full  and  detailed  reports,  verified  by 
affidavit,  of  the  business  of  such  office 
or  department  for  the  preceding  fiscal 
year,  together  with  a  true  and  full  in- 
ventory of  all  moneys,  property  and 
other  effects  of  the  city  in  possession 
of  such  office  or  board,  or  under  their 
lespectlve  control.  Such  reports  shall 
show  all  the  ojierations,  transactions, 
receipts,  disbursements  and  accounts 
of  such  officers  and  boards,  all  moneys 
received  and  from  what  source  re- 
ceived; all  moneys  paid  out,  and  on 
what  account  paid  out,  with  the  num- 
ber and  description  of  the  warrant  up- 
on which  the  same  were  paid,  and  a 
reference    to    the    law.    ordei 


nearly  KMi  miles  from  the  mouth  of  Raiiiv 
riv.'r  in  each  instance.  If  the  Canadian 
govenimeiit  imi)roves  the  lock  at  the  foot 
01  i{ainy  lake,  as  is  promised,  navigation 
ui  that  direction  would  be  extended  di- 
rectly to  the  new  gold  lipids  of  Ralnv 
lake,  belne  rlver  and  the  Manltou  \il 
these  water  courses  would  open  a  mar- 
ket that  in  a  few  years  will  be  very  val- 
uable. 

The  Northern  Pacific  elevator  at  James- 
town, now  the  property  of  the  Consoli- 
dated Elevator  company,  of  Duluth  is 
being  torn  down.  The  material  will  be 
used  in  the  construction  of  an  elevator 
at  New  Rociiford.  taking  the  place  of 
one  destroyed  by  lire.  The  building  is 
equqtped  with  line  machinery,  but  lor 
several  years  has  ben  idle,  th;-  construc- 
tion of  branch  lines  and  the  development 
of  tne  county  having  diverted  much  of 
the  grain  to  near-by  stations. 

Since  the  acceptance  by  the  govern- 
"i/llt  of  the  .site  donated  by  the  citizens 
of  Bismarck  for  a  military  post  and  the 
anticipated  expenditure  of  at  least  $1  00((  - 
OiX)  in  the  construction  of  the  post,  there 
has  been  a  great  improvement  in  busine"; 
and  the  price  of  desirable  business  and 
li'dlv"*'*'     '^'■"'*''''t>'     ^^   advanced   mate- 

The  body  of  an  unknown  man  was 
found  at  Buffalo,  it  is  not  known  whether 
It  IS  a  case  of  foul  play  or  a  freezing  in 
the   reeent    blizzard.    Mrs.    R.    H.   Court     a 

^??"'  ■'^l'."^"   """S    highly    respected   setiler 
died    \\  ednesday. 

J.  H.  Bo.ssard  had  Patrick  Burns  ar- 
rester at  Grand  Forks  charged  with  lar- 
ceny of  a  dee<l  from  his  office.  He  wa« 
arrested  at  East  Grand  Forks,  The  deed 
was  valued  at  $900. 


Duluth,  Minn.,  March  6,  1897. 
Notice  Is  hereby  given  that  an  assess- 
ment of  damages  made  by  the  commls. 
sioners  in     condemnation     proceedings 

for  obtaining  a  right-of-way  for  public    "1^  -"-uiii  oc  iron  nange  railroad  right 
thoroughfares  as  shown  by  the  plat  of    "t-way  on  a  line  parallel  with  the  pro- 
the  same  on  file  in  the  office  of  the  city    '""ged   westerly     boundary     line    of  a 
clerk,  has  been  returned,  and  the  same  i  ]^^?^  heretofore  deeded   to  the  city  of 


(3)  A  strip  of  land  16  feet  In  width 
the  center  line  of  which  Is  described  ai; 
follows,  to-wlt.  Beginning  at  a  poi^ 
715  feet  northerly  from  the  norther"r 
boundary  line  of  the  tract  heretofore 
referred  to  as  having  been  deeded  to  th* 
city  of  Duluth  for  a  pumping  stat  on 
and  measured  on  a  line  panUlel  w  th 
the  prolonged  westerly  boundary  In? 
of  said  tract,  and     24.23     feet    distant 

thf  ^s';"^  '''t'^"'=  ^^^"^'^  proceeding' 
the  same  direction  and  parallel  with 
the  westerly  boundary  line  of  said  be. 

feeTVorS:'  '''^'''-  ^  ^'^'^^'^  -'  i«o 

(4)  A  strip  of  band  16  feet  in  width 

Sno«^"*^';  ""^.  ""^  ''^^'^'  '^  described  i^ 
follows.     to-wIt:      Commencing      at    a 

rhe"A.TM'^"T'"'^^^'''y  bounda^  line  of 
the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range  railroad  right- 


will  be  confirmed  by  the  common  coun- 
cil of  said  city  at  a  meeting  of  said 
common  council,  to  be  held  at  the 
council  chamber,  on  Monday,  March 
22nd,  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m.,  unless  objec- 
tions are  made  in  writing  by  persons  in- 
terested in  any  lands  required 
taken. 


Following  Is  a  list  of  the  property  pro- 
posed to  be  so  taken,  with  the  names 
of  the  supposed  owners  and  the  amount 
of  damage  awarded  for  the  taking  of 
same: 


Duluth  as  a  site  for  the  pumping  sta- 
tion and  24.23  feet  easterly  of  said  west- 
eriy  boundary  line;  thence  proceeding 
in  the  same  direction  and  parallel  with 
the  westerly  boundary  line  of  said 
"-  T^r  •  ^  l'^t'^"^e  '^f  120.34  feet  to  a  point, 
to  be  ^"/nt^e  by  a  curve  to  the  left  with  a 
radius  of  73.3  feet  to  Its  point  of  Inter* 
section  with     the     westerly     boundary 

norf»,°     '""*    1.    section    35,    township    51 
north,  range  13  west. 


SOUTH  DAKOTA. 
Ssouth   of   N'ermillion  on   what   is  known 
as   the  island,   is  a  large  amount   of  madi 
land,   which    has  heen   .idded   in   time   pi-.st 
to   leguliTly   surveyed   land    bv    the   river 
Ihere  are  In  all  about  3000  acres,  most  ol 
which  IS  valuable  for  timber.  On  i)urtion^ 
ot    the   land   are    trees    which   show    their 
age   to   be  .forty    years.    About    live   y ear- 
ago  a   number  of  squatters  .settled  oh  th. 
land,    but    were  driveti    off.    Now   anothei 
party  has  gone  to  the  land  and  will  brir.f. 
the    matter    into    court.      These    accretioi 
land    ca.-cs    are    becoming   quite    frequent 
along  the  Missouri,  and  have  been  decid- 
ed   by    the    courts    both    ways.      The    «u- 
preme   court    has   han.led   down    the  <1eci- 
slon  that  ground  added  to  surveyed  land 
by  the  changing  of  the  natural  course  ol 
a    stream,    becomes    a    part    of    the    sur- 
veyed  land   and   belongs   to   the  owner  (d 
that  land.  But  In  a  noted  c.ise  In  Nebra.s- 
ka    three    excejitions    were    taken    to    ihi 
law   of  accretion.    First,    land   which    had 
hist  been  farmed  as  an  island  and  after- 
ward   Joined    to    the       mainland;    omltt-d 
land,    that    Is.    land    that    had    never    b.-e> 
surveye«i.    which    often    happened    in    th. 
early    government       survevs.       espechill', 
along    the    river;    and    lastly,    abandone- 
rUer  beds.  The  land  in  question,  over  01 

i!i 
_    -       _  il    reports    a° ' '^'^'"^^^  under  the  <>xceuMon>j    Tiw.ro  su  ., 

tl^   regular  city  electl^s;- and   aifthc  ]  \n7zZ^LXToPl7;'onl\XorriuX\  ?'  '-^'^  --'  -'^'^h.  do  doubt;  wet^;;  gJW 

elective  officei\s  provided  for  by  this  act    officers  and  board««haiiiUri,t?ri      t"^"    i'b?   before  the   lirst   survey   was   made 

shall  hold  office  for  a  term  of  two  years    evei-   reouestfTbv  fh.   Jn^X^^tj  ''*'''"'     .«^I">"«  brought   to   VermlUion  by  par- 

commencing    on    the    first    Tuesday    ol    ^n  '    al-l  ff.  Jh^m  n  Jir^^nT^^"    ^''""^    IP    living    along   the    Mis.souri    are    thai 

June  next  succeeding  such  election,  and;  choi^™LK?*»^u^  ^'"V.'^r'^P"''*  «^^'*^':   "verhas^  risen   five   feet   and   is   stil 


Charles  A.  Homer,  James  A.  Gary, 
Julian  J  Chlsholm.  For  the  taking  of 
1.345  acres  in  the  ne"  "  " 
nwi4  and  the  neV*  -.  .. ..  „  „.  „^^wv,.. 
13-50-14,  being  a  strip  of  land  66  feet  In 
width  extending  from  First  street,  in 
Gordon  &  Whiting's  addition  to  First 
street,  in  East  Duluth  and  First  addi- 
tion to  East  Duluth.    Damages,  $1. 

Same.  For  the  taking  of  2.02  acre« 
in  the  ne»4  of  the  nw-i^  of  section  13-50- 
14,  being  a  strip  of  land  66  feet  In  width, 
the  center  line  of  which  is  described 
as  follows,  to-wit:  Beginning  at  a 
point 
13-iSO- 

westerly  from  the  north  quarter 
of  said  section  13.  thence  extending 
southwesterly  on  a  line  making  an 
angle  of  47  degrees.  57  minutes.  39  sec- 
onds, to  the  left  of  the  aforesaid  north- 
erly line  of  section  13,  a  distance  ot 
1412.09  feet  to  a  point,  the  above  de- 
scribed  center  line  being  at  right  angles 
with  the  line  of  Thirty-fourth  avenue 
east,  as  platted,  (formerly  St.  Clair  ave. 
nue)  in  First  addition  to  East  Duluth 
Damages,  $1.50. 


(0)    A  strip  of  land  80  feet  in  width 

northerly   from   and   parallel   with   the 

right-of-way  of    the    Duluth    &    iron 

Range  Railroad  company,     the    center 

1.    r  or  ine  taking  of    i'"*^  °^  w'hich  strip  is  240  feet  northerly 

ie^4  of  the  se^  of  the ,  "'^tnati'^,  Parallel  with  the  center  line 

A  of  T\xv%  of  section    ?t/'*'°,''^''^oad  right-of-way:  said  strip 

trir.  r.f  io„^  ec  «__..  ._  t  extending  from  the  northerly     to     the 

westerly  lines  of  lots  3  and  4.  and  the 
nwi^  of  the  sw^4  of  section  34-51-lJ. 

„/^?,  ^  ^l*"'^  °^  '^"^  «0  feet  wide, 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  the 
center  line  of  the  right-of-way  of  the 
Duluth  &  Iron  Range  Railway  com- 
o.^"/'  }^^  center  line  of  which  strip  is 
240  feet  northerly  from  and  parallel  with 
the  center  line  of  said  railroad  rlght-of- 


'oows.    lu-wit:      beginning     at     a    ,  ,\        ^    "^  "**'"  rauroaa  ngnt-of- 

on  the  northerly  line  of  section  I  ^^'f >"•  said  strip  extending  fr«m  the  east- 

14.  at  the  distance    of    289.8    feet    f^^  to  the  southerly  lines  of  the  aeM  ot 

rly  from  the  north  quarter  corner '         ^^^  "^  section  33,  township  51  north. 
i,i     c<>n«i^n     10      4.1 -    X       ,.         ranee  ia  wpst 


range  13  west. 

(7)  A  strip  of  land  80  feet  in  width 
northerly  from  and  parallel  %vtth  the 
center  of  the  right-of-way  of  the  Du^ 
luth  &  Iron  Range  Railway  company 
the  center  fne  of  which  is  240  feet 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  the 
center  of  line  of  said  railroad  right-of- 
way  said  strip  extending  from  the 
northerly  line  of  section  4.  township  50 
north,  range  13  west,  to  the  easterly 
boundary  line  of  Lester  Park.  Fourth 
divl.sion.  according  to  the  recorded  plat 
thereof  on  file  In  the  office  of  the  regis- 
ter of  deeds  in  and  for  the  county  of  St 
Louis,  state  of  Minnesota. 


.    contract 

act   whose  places  afe  to  be  fined 'shalii  so    naiS-^iL'?*,"'''*"^  ^^^  ^^""^   *^  '^^    . 
be  elected  on  the  first  Tuesday  in  May!  '         '    ^"^    **'''    common    council    is  I  river  bed.s, 

in  each  and  evcrVe  vn  nSem^^  *«'="'{'•    the   squatters    think   wffi    a: 

I  ..  u.iu  t.»ii.v     >en  Munioeitd  jtai.    g.    number    of    said    annual    reports    asKl^me  under  the  exceptions.  There  is  en. 

1  necessary,  not  exceed-    '".^V    tract    of   l(i2    acres    which    has    tre<^-^ 


and  .such   elections  shall   be  known  a; 


June  next  succeeding  such  election."  and    shall   exhifdt  to The.^Tnt''K''7"''i  ^"l 
until    their   successr.rs   are   elected   and  ,  Ije  mnt       «ner«  ^^T    }l  ^^^  ''""J^"  "' 

"I  account,    papers    and   other   records   or 


have  qualified,  except  as  otherwise  pro 
vlded  by  this  act. 

Section  12  makes  a  plurality  of  votes 
sufficient  to  elect,  and  In  case  of  a  tit, 
lots  shall  be  cast  in  the  presence  of  the 
council  in  joint  session.  Offlcers  ap- 
pointed by  the  common  council  mus; 
receive  a  majority  vote  of  all  its  mem- 
bers to  constitute  an  appointment,  such 
vote  to  be  had  viva  voce  on  roll  call  in 
joint  session. 

Section  13  says:  Any  elective  officer 
provided  for  by  this  act  or  any  officer 
appointed  by  the  common  council  may 


property  kept  or  controlled  by  such 
officers   or   boards  respectively. 

Section  23  provides  that  all  such  rec- 
ords and  property  shall  be  turned  over 
to  the  city  or  to  the  succes.sor  at  the 
expiration  of  the  term  of  office. 

Section  24— No  officer,  or  member  of 
any  board,  or  clerk,  or  employe  of  any 
such  city,  shall  directly  or  indirectly. 
In  or  about  the  performance  of  the  dut- 
ies of  his  office,  receive  any  gift,  com- 
mission, gratuity  or  reward,  or'  other 
valuable     thing    whatever;    and    every] 


.such  officer  and  member  shall  account!     •. -, - - c....a  o..v,r 

'  '  melting  fast.  The  first  train  through  fi-on 


rising.  The  ice  still  remains  unbrokei 
although  free  from  the  shore.  It  was  re- 
ported that  a  strip  a  mile  long  betweer 
Meckling  and  Gayville  was  clear  of  Jet 
yesterday  morning,  but  the  report  ha. 
not  been  verified.  Peoi)le  are  still  movinj. 
off  from  their  farms  onto  the  hills  aiu 
there  is  not  an  empty  house  in  this  city 
A  man  came  across  the  river  yesterday 
morning  by  means  of  a  boat  which  in 
I)ushed  in  front  of  him.  The  ice,  he  re 
ports,  is  very  solid  and  shows  no  signt 
of  breaking  up  for  three  or  four  davs  ai 
least.  The  weather  yesterday  and  toda\ 
has  been  very  warm,  the  thermometvi 
reaching  60  degrees.  Reports  from  Mir- 
chell  and  points  farther  .south  this  morn- 
ing by  wire  show  warm  weather  and  snow 


such  commissioners  have  caused  a  sur- 
vey and  plat  of  the  property  proposed 
to  be  acquired  for  said  purpose  of 
rights-of-way.  or  which  may  be  di- 
rectly or  indirectly  affected  thereby,  to 
be  made  by  the  city  engineer  of  the  city 
of  Duluth.  showing  the  lands  or  parcels 
of  property  required  to  be  taken  for 
said  purpo.ses  as  aforesaid,  or  which 
may  be  damaged  thereby,  and  have 
caused  said  plat  to  be  filed  with  the 
clerk  of  said  city  of  Duluth;  and  that 
the  undersigned  as  such  commissioners 


MUST  BOTH  HANG. 

Jackson  and  Walling  Will  Die 
at  Newport  Tomorrow. 

Frankfort.    Ky.,   March  19. — The  gov- 
ernor at  noon  positively  refused  to  In- 
terfere In  the     case    of    Walling    and 
Jackson.  The  troops  to  help  keep  order 
at  tomorrow's  execution  will  leave  this 
afternoon  instead  of  this  morning,  hav- 
ing been  held  up     until     the    governor 
could  make  at  least  a  show  of  consider- 
ing the  confessions.      But     the     latter  ' 
have  m-ant  nothing  to   him  from  the  ' 
first.     He     evidently     thinks     there     is  1 
little  of  anything  in    the     confessions 
There  is  little  doubt  about  the  double 
hanging  tomorrow,  and  has  been  little 
since     the     day     the    appellate     court 
passed  on  the  case. 


shall  be  removed  except  for  cause-  nor    rJ^^^   If  ?•       %  Preceding    month    by   Aberdeen,    formerly   a    resident   of   loni.i 
unless  he  ha.s  first  been  furnl.Zd'wUh    otherwise  SmwJeTb^S  ^"  ""^^  be   Mich..  Is  dea<L 

s<ra\'>y  opV^rtuniT/toireVeard'^ln  per-"  i  J^'^J.'^T'  ^^'^?  i?"  "^^^  "'  "^^^^'1     Subscribers   to   The   Evening   Heral. 

son  or  by  counsel.  In  his  ow,   defense        *  "J*   P,"^"' 1?''  ^t   f""«^«:  "^^o  do  not   get   their  paper  regularl> 

Section    16    provdes    that    vacancies '    >,f^*"'"  -**;,    The  mayor  shall  be   the    will  please  promptly  report  the  matte, 

may   be   filled    by    appointment    by    the  I  'w'^^f  executive  officer  of  the  city.   He    at  once  to  this  office.  It  is  the  Intentloi 

common  counclMnjUn    session.  When-    ^t*^^"    l^J^T  .T"^   *^^*    **^«   ^^«•«   ot   the'-  —  --"  "-—  ..,o.._„. 

ever  a  vacancy  occurs  In   the  office  "f  r*"**"^  and   the   ordinances   of   the  city 

mayor    by    removal,    less      tLn        six' fh!  ^ul^  ''^'!r7w^/'''l?  ^^"J"''^^**  '^'t»»'" 

the  city;  and  that  all  other  officers  of 

the     city     discharge     their     respective 


Scott's  Emulsion  is  Cod. 
liver  Oil  prepared  as  a  food. 
At  the  same  time,  it  is  a 
blood  maker,  a  nerve   tonic    {^r.'Le'h^'*^4U';;  f^^t^^^^^^^  their   respective 

and      an      Up-builder.  But    |  rjo'irSslo*;^    ^V^n^er^^^  vS^';    -"^cU"o'f  ^n'd^a^^^^^^^^ 

prmcipallv    it    is    a    food    for   l"'''"'^   »"   the   office   of   alderman.    as- 1  SI  t!'' *""*!""«  "^  P"'*'^.!*''^^"^  ^*=^^*"st  any 
Y       ^    Y    *y     *••    "    **    luuu    lur   j  semblyman.    comptroller   or    treasurer  I  <^ell«iquent  officer.    He  shall  from  time 

by  removal  less  than  six  months  be-'  **'  ^'""^  ^'^'*"  ^^^  common  council  such 
fore  the  expiration  of  the  term  such  "'*^"^^t'""  ^"^'  recommend  such 
vacancy  shall  be  filled  by  appolritment '  "i^^a^^res  as  he  shall  deem  advantage- 


to  have  The  Herald  delivered  promptly 
and  regularly. 


tired  and  weak  digestions; 
for  those  who  are  not  getting 
the  fat  they  should  from 
their  ordinary  food ;  for  chil- 
dren whom  nothing  seems 
to  nourish;  for  all  who  are 
fat-starved  and  thin. 

It  is  pleasant  to  take;  at 
least.  It    IS    not    unpleasant.    ^J  wwch"he 


Catarrh 


by    the    mayor.    Whenever    a    vacancy !  ""a  to  the  city. 

occurs  In  any  of  the  elective  offices  six!  Section  27.  During  the  ab.sence  of  the 
months  or  more  before  the  expiration'  "^^yor  from  the  city,  or  In  case  of  his 
of  the  term,  such  vacancy  Is  to  be  filled  <31sablllty  for  any  reason  to  discharge 
by  a  special  election,  on  the  Tuesday  ^he  duties  of  his  office,  the  president  of 
next  folowlng  the  expiration  of  forty  ^^^  board  of  aldermen,  or  in  case  of 
days  after  the  removal,  excluding  the  ^'^  absence  or  disability  the  president 
day  of  such  removal.  ,  of  the  assembly,  shall  for  the  time  be- 

Sectlon  19  says:  No  officer  or  employe;  '"S  exercise  all  the  powers,  and  dls- 
of  the  city  shall  vote  for  or  make  any  charge  all  the  duties  of  the  mayor.  The 
contract  in  behalf  of  said  city  or  any !  President  so  performing  the  duties  of 
department  thereof  with  himself,  or  the  mayor  shall  be  styled  the  "acting 
with  any  firm  of  which  he  Is  a  member,!  "^ayor,"  and  his  acts  while  so  acting 
^\  ^^  uV  if  "w  ^oH'oration  or  association  '  as  mayor  shall  have  the  same  force  and 
r-k'IJ  Ti        -^  J        I      /-       <        ^^"'^^.V  J^*-''^  ,*"   offlcer  or  director:;  validity  as  if  performed  by  the  mayor 

V-.niiaren    like  it  and   ask  for     "°'"  shall  he  be    n  any  manner  direct-!      Section  28.     The  mayor  shall  lie  the 

i^„^r  i!?ui,'"*^„'^i!j  Interested  in  any  con-!  chief  magistrate  of  the  city  and  shall 

In  ^.Vi^K  »«^f*      w  ^'-i*"*^  *"y  contract!  have  command  and  control  of  Its  entire 
in  which  any  such  officer  or  employe  is  I  force  of  police 

onH    K^ir«tf  .'^'rr^K. '"**'^»ted  shall  bei     Section  29.    He  may  appoint  a  secre- 
laSd   anv^,1ch*'nffl^^    absolutely    void,    tary,  who  ihall  perform  such  ditfls  as    ^ 
iand   anj    such  officer   by   the   fact   oil  the  mayor  may  prescribe,  and  receive    •« 


Mrs.  Josephine  Polhill,  of  Due  West, 
S.  C,  had  a  severe  case  of  catarrh, 


13-50-14,  where  it  is  intersected  by  the 
dividing  line  between  lots  2  and  3,  block 
4.  First  addition  to  East  Duluth,  thence 
extending  northwesterly  on  the  pro- 
longation of  the  dividing  line  between 
lots  2  and  3  aforesaid  814.68  feet  to 
a  ,  point,  being  a  prolongation 
of  the  center  line  of  Thirty- 
third  avenue  east  (formerly  Mackinac 
avenue)  in  the  plat  of  East  Duluth. 
Damages,  $1.00. 

Same.  For  the  taking  of  0.65  acre.": 
from  the  neVi  of  nw^  of  section  13-50- 
14.  being  an  extension  from  the  westerly 

line  of  First  additon  to  East  Duluth  to    

the  northerly  line  of  said  section  13,  of   civTMnMH — 
Thirty-fourth     avenue    east     (formerly ,  state  of  Minnesot. 
St.  Clair  avenue)  as  platted  In  the  plat  Minne.sot.i 

of  East  Duluth.    Damages.  $1.00. 

William  Howell's  estate.  For  the 
taking  of  4.215  acres  from  the  sw»4  of 
^wi^  of  section  12-.50-14.  being  a  strip 
of  land  66  feet  In  width,  the  center  line 
of  which  is  described  as  follows,  to- 
wit:    Beginning  at     a     point     on     the  i 


ternilne  and  assess  the  amount  of  dam- 
ages to  be  paid  to  the  owner  or  owners 
of  each  parcel  of  property  proposed  to 
be  taken  for  the  purposes  aforesaid,  or 
which  may  be  affected  thereby. 


FRANK  P,  TIMS. 
LOUIS    K.   DAUGHERTY, 
D,  W.  SCOTT, 

Commissioners. 

Duluth,  Minn.,  March  10,  1897. 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  11  lot. 

I_j,g  County  of  St.   Lonia 

J  District    Court.    Eleventh    Judicial 

The  Valentine  IJIalz  Hrtwlng  Com- 
pany,   a    Corporation, 

.      ,     ^  Plaintiff, 

Against 
Ellen  Lund, 


nis- 


southerly  line  of  section  iT aforesaid,  at  :  '^^^  ''tate  of  Minnesota  to"  the'  above 
the  distance    of    360.19    feet     westerly       "amtnl  defendant: 

from  the  south  quarter  corner  of  sec- ^o  ."nswcT  the  ^o^L^lllfr^^^  required 

tlon  12;  thence  extending  northwest-  in  he  XvV  entuTed  ae  ion  whJI,'**"""' 
erly  on  a  line  making  an  angle  of  42  Plaint  h, is  been  filed  In  !he' offlee  ^r,'?: 
dee-rPPs    0!)   mlmifoo     Ol    =«.<,«„.«»     t^   ♦  I,,    clerk    nf    th^    H%Ji-._.   " -';"^  ".'"ce   of   the 


\j.  »^.j  iinu  •*  cm^.-iu  v<«..jv.  »»•  v«i>.>----,  I  eriy  on  a  line  maK 

Which  finally  became  so  deep-seated    degrees,  02  mlnutes,"2l  secondirto'the'^Frk'  orthT'dis'irtct '  com  ''in*' and'  for 

*u>.  „K.  ^..  „„*;-„,„  H..f „  I  „.„u.  „.  ..„  — -,ald  south  line  of  sec-    yj^nneS-'n^',   f^'    L""««    ''^^  «tate  'o? 

;  to  a  point,  being  the    ^,'""l!°ta,   and  to  .serve  a  copy  of  your 


more. 

Som*  drugeUu  have  a  "ju«t  as  good"  VmA.    Unt 
me  kind  aU  othcn  try  to  equal  (ood  enough  for  you  •• 


that  she  was  entirely  deaf  in  one    right  of  the  aforesaid  soum  line  or  sec-  ;.-,        --•....    01    d.    l,ouis    anu    state   n 

ear,  and  part  of  the  bone  in  her  nose    tlon  12—1964.75  feet  to  a  point,  being  the  answer"  tA  '^^^  *"  •''"^'**  ^  ^^^^^  «'  •'^o" 

sloughed  off.    The  best  physicians    point  of  inter-^ection   of  the  prolonga  subscriber   at    hirofflei'"J^'"in^    "/}    "''; 

♦-«.?^^  K»-  i«   ,r.i«    -«.!  aho  nood  I  tion  of  the  center  line  of  Thirty-fourth  Duluth,  In  the  said  .^onnti    JJlt.  '".'^'    '"^ 

avenue  east  (formerly  St.  Clair  avenue)  ty   day's   after^  '"he   serv?c^ '  oT  thl"    sTm' 

as  platted  in  First  addition  to  East  Du-  tn^ns  upon  you.   exclusive  of  the  day  of 

luth,  with  the  prolongation  easterly  of  f^"^"  service;  and  If  you  fail   to  answer 

the   center   line   of   Victoria  street,    as  s^ti" ..?  '^°™P'al"t  within  the  time  aforc- 

platted  In  the  plat  of  Glen  Avon.  First  judgment ''a''iin^tvo!l'%''r".^^^  ''■'"  ^''^% 

division:  thence  extending  westerly  on  three    hundrlddollirs    ($% 'with  "hlter 

the  prolongation  of  the  center  line  ol  e«t  at  the  rate  of  7  per  cent  ner  an.mm 

Victoria  street  aforesaid,     817.29     feet  ' "^"  "*"  " '  '        ^''"J-Pt'r  annum 

more  or  less,  to  the  westerly  line  of  sec- 
tion 12  aforesaid.    Damages,  $3,00. 
C.  E.  RICHARDSON. 
City  Clerk. 


CURED  BY 


various  appli- 

cations   of 

sprays  and 

washes   to  no 

avail.     Fourteen  bottles  of  S.  S.  S 

promptly  reached  the  seat  of  the  dis 

ease,  and  cured  her  sound  and  well 

~  8.  S.  S.  never  fails  t< 

cure  a  blood  disease,  ani 
it  is  the  only  remed; 
which  reaches  deep-seatet 


cues.    Guaranteed  putt  j  (Corporate  Seal.) 


from  the  4th  day  of  August,  1.S9.1  togeilier 
with    plaintiff's   costs   and   disbursem.nts 

Dated   March   10th,    A.    D.    1897 

M.   H.  CROCKER, 
<«A   rtw  P'alntlff'8  Attorney, 
410   Chamber   of   Commerce 

Dulu^th^Evenlng   Herald,  ^MarJh-l^-fe- 


^ 


ri- 


■William  Howell's  estate.  For  the 
taking  of  0.2  acres  from  the  SW14  of  sec- 
tion 12-50-14,  being  a  strip  of  land  the 
center  line  of  which  is  described  as  fol- 
lows, to-wit:  Beginning  at  a  point  on 
the  southerly  line  of  section  12  afore-       _,. 

said,  at  the  dhstance  of  389.8  feet  west-     <,    ?^'  *"^  undersigned  have  duly  qual- 
erly  from  the  south  quarter  corner  ol    '''^"  ^^  ^"ch  commissioners,  and  have 
said  section  12,  thence  extending  north-    ^"tered    upon    the    discharge    of    their        "^ 
easterly  on  a  line  making  an  angle  of'  ^"ties  as  such;  that  the  undersigned  as 

132  degrees.  02  minutes.  21  seconds,  to    ^"ch  commlsslon«^ra  haim  r.o.,<,»^  „  

the  right  of  the  aforesaid  southerly  line 
of  section  12—135.81  feet  to  a  point,  the 
above  described  center  lirte  being  at 
right  angles  with  the  line  of  Thirty- 
fourth  avenue  east  (formerly  St.  Clair 
avenue)  as  platted  in  First  addition  to 
East  Duluth.     Damages,  $0.50. 

East  Duluth  Land  company.  For  the 
taking  of  lots  2,  3.  4  and  5,  block  4,  in 
the  plat  of  First  addition  to  East  Du- 
luth, according  to  the  recorded  plat 
thereof.     Damages.    $0.50.  1 -.-. «..v.^  dc  ou^n  conumssioners 

Charles  A.  Homer,  James  A.  Gary  ^^'"  "^^^^  ^^  ^^e  office  of  the  city  clerk 
Julian  J.  Chisholm.  For  the  taking  of  '"  *"^  ^"^  *^^"'  i"  said  city  of  Duluth. 
1.23  acres  from  the  ne%  of  the  nw%  of  ,""  ^^^  24th  day  of  March,  at  10  o'clock 
section  13-50-14,  being  a  strip  of  land  |  '"  *"^  forenoon  of  said  day.  and  thence 
66  feet  in  width,  the  center  line  of ,  P'^o'^^ed  to  view  said  premises,  and  to 
which  is  described  as  follows,  to-wit:  "^*f  *"y  evidence  or  proof  by  the  par- 
Beginning  at  a  point  on  the  easterly !  *'^'''  interested,  and  when  their  view 
line  of  the  ne^4  of  the  nwi4  of  section    ^"^  hearing  shall  be  concluded,  to  de 

l^-.'iO-l^       ^vhoT-a     if     io     {ry*ar-cnr>tn.^     V,,.     II.-       tCrmiUe    and    nssess    tho    gmr>iin»    r^f   An.^ 


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■»'■■■> 


i««» 


THE  PRODUCE  MARKET. 


THE     DULUTH     EVENDfg    HEMfALD:    FRIDAY,    MARCH    19,    1897. 


MlchSffan  street  is  livening  up  greatly 
nowadays  but  prices  are  not  fluctuatinK. 
They  are  lower  however,  than  usual  and 
buying  IS   fairlv   brisk 

v  .     VJ'^^  "^"  QUOTATIONS. 

•^"'^n*:  quotations  below  are  for 
Ifoo<l3  which  change  hands  In  lots  on  the 
open  market:  in  nilinp  order.-<.  in  order 
to  secure  best  goods  for  shipping  and  to 
;  over  cost  incurred,  an  advance  over  Job^ 

West  Dululh  Sun  Demands  nl"!  PH""^!-^'!":.^"  J??>harged.  The  ng. 


o  Three  Cent  Fare  For 
School  Children. 


Call  on  the  West  End  Alder- 
to    Push    the 
Matter. 


men 


Orange    Lodge    Installs    Its 
Officers- Rlx-Patton  Mar- 
riage Last  Evening. 


II  & 

9    & 


V-^^19      13 


The  West  Duluth  Sun  has  inaugur- 
ated a  fight  for  a  3-eent  fare  for  school 
children,  and  calls  upon  the  West  End 
aldermen  ti»  i)ush  it  in  the  council. 
There   are  a   go*>d   many    U  est   Duluth  ,  Sweet    potatoes 


students  in  the  high  school  and  the  ex- 
pense of  street  car  fare  is  a  heavy  tax 
upon  them.  It  is  claimed  there  are 
many  others  who  are  prevented  from 
availing  themselves  of  the  advantage? 
of  the  iiish  schixd  I>ecau.«e  of  their  in- 
ability to  pay  fares.  The  ."^un  calls  upon 
the  iH'oplf  uf  West  Duluth  to  make  an 
emphatic  demand  ot  the  council  to 
afford  the  required  relief. 


ures  are  changed  dallv. 
^  HTTTKR. 

«-ream..    separators,     fancy       21    & 
ualrlea,  fancy,  special  make       15    ^ 

Packmg   stock    s    & 

Dairy,    fair    12    h 

_  „  CHEESE. 

Turns,   flats,   full  cr'm.   new 
Full    cr'm.    Young    America 

Swiss  cheese.    No.   1 

Brick,    No.    1 

Limb.,    full   cream,    choice.. 

Prlmost    

^      ..  EGOS. 

Candled,    strictly    fresh 

Candled,     storage 

HONEY. 

Fancy   white  clover 

Fancy  white  clover,   in  Jars 

strained,     per    lb 

Golden    rod    ',', 

Dark     honey     .'.'.' 

Buckwheat,  dark   ii 

MAPLE  SUGAR 

\  ermont.    per    pound 

Ohio,    per   pound    

Maple   syrup,    per  gal 

„^    .                        POPCORN. 
Choice,    per    lb 

NUTS. 
Soft  shell  almonds,  per  lb.. 
Soft   shell   walnuts,   per  lb.. 
Hard   shell   walnuts,    per   lb 

Brazils,     per    lb 

Pecans,  per  lb 

Filberts,    per    lb .'.'.'] 

Peanuts,  roasted,  per  lb 

Raw    peanuts    

VEGETABLES. 
Sweet  potatoes,  per  bus 

"  Muscatine 


22 

16 

9 

13 

134 

12 

12»4 

10 


13 
11 


_J 


GriKit  Reductions. 


After  a  Bearish  Disposition 

Early,  the  Wheat  Market 

Became  Firm. 


One  Cent  a  Word. 


TRAXNKD  ximaK. 


12X4 
11    & 


12 

11'^ 

llVi 


11 

10 

90    «)  1  00 

2Vi@       3 


12 
12 
11 

8 

9 
11 

7 

4H!@ 


Thirty-One  Boat  Loads  Re- 
ported as  Worked  at 
New  York. 


tF  TOU  WANT  A  TRAINED  NURBBJ. 
leave  your  order  at  Boyce'a  Drug  aton? 

WANTEIV-A  gIrL  FOR  GENERAL 
housework.  Apply  I131  East  Second 
street. 

GOOD  GIRL  FOR  GENERAL  HOU3E- 
work  in  family  of  three.  Must  be  a  good 
cook  Mi-s.  H.  Neuman,  32  Main  street, 
u  est   Duluth. 


@     11 


This   Did   Not    More    Than 

Counteract    the    Small 

Clearances'  Effect. 


85    @ 


54 
90 


0FFI(*P:R.^  INSTALLED. 
A  public  installation  of  the  newly 
ele«  tell  officers  of  the  W»'St  Duluth 
lodge  of  Orangemen  was  held  in  thf 
lod^e  rodm  last  night  and  the  followini,' 
officers  wci(>  instalW'd:  .•^.  Caruther;-. 
(i-  .M.:  William  Clifford,  recording  sec- 
retary: William  Ward,  treasui-er:  O.  S. 
Olson.  iMiancial  secretary:  Fred  Hag  >!- 
tine,  chaiilain:  F.  Richie.  I.  T. ;  C.  VV 
Hoyt,  M.  T.;  L.  Owen.  F.  of  C.  At  the 
conclusion  of  the  impressive  ceremonies 
the  lodge  room  was  cleared  and  <lanc- 
ing  was  indulged  in  until  a  late  hour. 


per  bbl  2  00 

Celery,  per  doz  

Carrots,  per  bus 

Beets,    per   bus 

Onions,   per  bus 

Turnips,    per   bus '.'.'.'. 

Holland  seed  cabbage,  100  lb 
Minn  cabbage,  per  100  lbs,.. 

Potatoes,    per    bus 

Mint,    per   tloz .\ 

Parsley,    per  doz 

Parsnips,     per    bus 

Caulitlowers.    per  doz 

Horse    radish,    per    lb 

Hul>bard    squash,    per   doz.. 
California    cabbage,    crates. 

California   celery,   doz 

Florida  tom.itoes.  basket 

Oyster  plant,   doz   bunches.. 
I  (Jreeii  f>nions,   doz   bunches. 

Spinach,    per   bus 

N»  w   beets,  doz 

Spanish   oniuns,    jxt  crate.. 
Bermuda    onions,    per   crate    3  .'»0 

Lettuce,   per  box 90    @)  1  00 

Lettuce,    per    doz 40 

Horse  radish  roots,   per  bbl    ."J  30 
PEAS  AND  BEANS. 

Fancy  navy,   per  bus 1  l.l 

Medium,    hand    picked,    bus.        90 
Brown    beans,    fancy,    bus..       9o 

Green  and  yellow  peas TS    fj)     90 

Green   peas,    bus 65 

FRI'ITS. 


1  65  ig)  1  75 
40  @      50 

2  m 

70  @  1  00 

25  @      27 

25  @      30 
25 

55  @     60 

1  50  @)  225 

6  @       7 

1  50  (ii.  2  25 

3  W  ^Z  75 
&-> 

6."i  <ii      75 

25  (f?      40 

90  «i-  1  00 
1.-. 

2  £> 


RIX-P.\TT<  )X  MARRIAGE. 

The    marria-gf'    of      Frederick    Patton    „,     .,  

and  .Mi.s.«!  Charlotte  Rix  was  solemnized  '  C-  ,^  strawberries,  per  qt 
at  the-  residence  of  the  brides  parents  I  ^„ni''i'",l-  *'*''",  '^."^  bunches 
n7  Fifty-si.xth  avenue  west,  las'^  r^ight!  gSl&Va?re's  "'I^.T"" 
Key.   ueorge  K.   Keithley.  pastor  of  th-  i  California    pears,    per   case 

Uestminster  Presbyterian  church,   otll- |  Bananas,    bunches    

ciating.     John    Hlx    was   best    man    anc'     1-^nions.  per  box 

Aliss  Jeannette  Carmichael  was  maid  ot  '  Cocoanuts,   per  doz 

honor.     Only  the  relatives  of  the  bride  j  ^j!""^^"*^^-    Ef,!;  ^^^ 

apd  groom  were  in  attendance.  Mr.  and     Malag^Trapes     per   keg" 
Mrs.  Patton  will  begin  housekeeping  at     —  srapts,    per   Keg. 

-0   Fifty-seventh   avenue   west. 


t>5 


doz 


WEST  DULUTH   BRIEFS. 

The  grip  epidemic  has  extended  to 
Proctorknott.  and  many  cases  of  the 
trouMesome  disease  have  I>een  reported 
from  that  village. 

Thomas  Carmichael  and  family,  of 
Xegaunee.  Mich.,  are  visiting  relatives 
in  West   Duluth. 

John    Hess    has    returned    from    Bis 
marck,  where  he  has  been  for  the  pa.-,l    Turkeys,   per^lb 


©     40 
&      75 

3  25  ^  3  75 

2  00  ®  2  50 

2  00  (H)  2  50 

1  25  ©  1  .50 

2  75  (g>  3  50 
70 

5  50  @)  6  00 
1  75  @)  2  00 

6  75  @  7  50 
12  0      15 

3  00 
9  0      10 


two  months. 

Mrs.    Emilly    Merritt    will    leave 
Kin.srsville.  Ohio,  in  a  few  days  to  pay 
a   visit   to  her  sister. 

The  Young  Peoples  Temperance  so- 
ciety will  give  an  old-fashioned  spell- 
in  jr  school  at  the  Oneota  M.  E.  church 
this  evening. 

C.  Ii.  Gilbert,  who  has  been  living  at 
Hibbing  for  the  !>ast  six  m<jnths.  hai^ 
returned   to    Proctorknott. 


Figs,    per   lb 
Pineapple,     per 
Dates,     per    lb 

APPLES  AND  CIDER. 

Apples,    per   bbl 173    @  2  50 

Mich,  sweet  elder,  per  keg...    2  50    (S  2  75 
,.     ,  DRESSED  MEATS. 

>  eal,   fancy   7    —       — 

Veal,   heavy,   coarse,   thin...         5 

Mutton,    fancy   dressed 6    @       6% 

LIVE  POULTRY. 

Live   turkeys    10 

Sprink  chickens,  per  lb 6    @       7 

DRESSED  POULTRY. 
10 


Wheat   opened   steady  at   a    trifle  high*  r 
this    morning.    Wheat    was    helped    at    the 
opening   by    an    advanct    of   ■•••.,d    at    Liver- 
pool.    The     Northwo<t     receipts    were     iTt 
cars    against    172    la.^t    week    and    5<)9    is.st 
year.     The  temper  of  the  traders  seemed 
raiher  bearish  In  vlcv  of  LiverpooPs  lib- 
eral   receipts.    Chicago     received    only     is)  ' 
cars    and    inspected    out    US.OfJO    bus.    Tlie  j 
quantity    of    wh»-at    ;ind    rtour    cleared    at  1 
Atlantic    norts    was    cijual    i(T  182,00'l    bus.  \ 
It    was   later   in    the   day    when    a    repoi  i 
of   some    demand    for   export    cropi>ed    u).  ! 
at  New  York.   A  short   time  after  that   it  j 
was    announced     that     thirty-one        boai- 
lo,»ds   had    bf'en    worked,    six   of    them    foi 
prompt     and     twenty-ilve     for     May     and 
June       shipment.       That       annouiieemem 
caused    a     little    more    confidenci'    in    ilic 
minds  of  holders,    but   the  (juantlty   tak- n 
for   export    was    not    luavy    enougJi    to    do 
more  at   the   time   than   to  counteract    the 
effect  of  the  small  clejirances.  Closlnj^  ca- 
bles gave  Liverpool  Jrom  '^.d  to  ■'Vjd  iiigli- 
er  for  the  day:   Puri^  eiiuaf  to   le  per  biss 
lower,    and    Berlin    \   mark.      It    was    esti- 
mated     that     Duluth     wheat     stocks     will 
shi  w  an  increase  of  :»Xi.UW>  »)us  this  week. 
Trailing    was    very    dull    on    the    Dulutli 
board.     May   wheat   opened   unchanged   at 
74',ic.   advanced    »>,c   but   soon   fell    back   to 
74-S«c.       During     the     last     half     hour     t/ic 
market    became    (Irmer    and    Mav    wheat 
sold    up    sharply    to    7.'c.    The    close    was 
firm   with   buyers  at  7V's<'.   an  advance  of 
"kc    for   the   day.     The    mills   bought   22,lH«t 
bus  of  cash  stuff,    paying   the   Mav   price 
for  20.0tM>  bus  and  '^c  under  May   for   iho 
rest.      The   elevators    took   :5<J((0   bus    at    'Ac 
under    May.    Following    were    the   clewing 
prices : 

Wheat— No.  1  hard.  cash.  7fi%c;  Mav. 
i7-%c.  No.  1  northern,  cash.  74"so;  May. 
7o-%c  bid:  July.  ln%v,  September,  71^8j. 
No.  2  northern.  72%c.  No.  3.  (»V(»(r(70'/sC. 
Rejected.  51^'U«)%c.  To  arrive— No.  1 
hard.  7t>^^c:  No.  1  northern.  74%c.  Rve, 
34c.  No.  2  oats.  17c:  No.  3  oats,  PJVjc.  Flax. 
<8%c:  May.  7»%c 


TboHMRtft  Ot  Dollar*  Worth  of  Goo<ls  Mud 

be  Mcrincotf  at  Imi  than  half  thair  value. 

Best  patent  Floor,  $2.25  per  100;  choice 
patent,  $2.15;  uood  family  Floor,  $2.00 
per  100;  strictly  pure  Buckwheat.  2c 
per  lb. 

CHOICE  POrATOES.  2Se  PER  BU. 

Choice  OatmeaJ,  fi  60  half  bbl.;  50 
chests  choice  new  Teas,  half  price,  8c. 
IOC,  2oc^  25c,  35c  per  lb;  5000  lbs 
choice  Coffees,  12c,  iSc.  i8c,  20c,   30c 

Eerlb;  choice  California  Sugar  Cured 
jams,  7c  per  lb;  fancy  Hams,    loc    per 

lb;  dried  salt  pork  and  bbl  Pork,  5  &  6c  per 

lb;  choice    Bacon  gc  per  lb;  best  Silver 

Leaf  Lard,  5c  and  6c  per  lb;  Evaporated 

Apples  7c;  Peaches  and  Pears,  loc  per  lb; 

Prunes,  from  5c  to  8c  per  lb;    En^lisb 

Currants.  5  toioc;  Raisins,  5to8c;  choice 

Dairy       butter.    loc     to    i8c;      fancy 

Creamery.  i8c  to  20c  per  lb;  endless 
j  line  of  Canned  Goods,  choice  Toma- 
I  toes.  Corn,  Lima  Beans.   String   Beans 

Peas     and    other    brands,     from     75c 

to     85c    per     dozen    or     4    for    25c' 

large    line      of     California      Peaches.' 

Egg    Plums.    Green   Gages,    Apricots, 

Pears,  $1.50  per  doz,  or  15c  per  can;  45 

bars  good  Soap  for  $1.00;  32   bars    best 

Soap  for     $r.oo;     Kerosene    oil,     per !  wanted-one  salesman,   sala.rv 

tal,  gc  in  bbl  lots;  Guaranteed  Good 
Iggs,  loc  per  dozen;  strictly  tresb 
Eggs,  I2>^c  per  aozen;  25  lbs  good 
Rice  for  $Loo  or  4c  per  lb.  Gasoline 
I2r  a  gallon.  Choice  Java  and  Mocha 
Coffee,  20c  lb. 

Choice  Winter  Apples.  $2.00  per  barrel. 

Prioea  sobjoct  to  market  ehangee.  Mail  or 
ders  promptly  attended  to,  send  money  order  or 
cash  for  about  the  amount  of  bill  and  save 
delay.  All  goods  guaranteed,  prices  and  qaality. 

Dry  Goods  and  Shoes  must  be  closed 
out  regardless  of  cost.  Come  and  take 
them  at  your  own  price.  Will 
sell  the  entire  stock  for  50c  on  the  dollar 
on  actual  wholesale  cost. 

Prompt  delivery  will  be  made  to  all 
points.     Terms,  cash. 


One  Cent  a  Word, 


wanted-sewing  CxIrls  at  0N(^E 

at  French  tailoring  institute,  room  16 
Metropolitan  block. 

^^i?P^  S^^  always  find  good 

girls  and  eight  girls  can  find  good 
places;  also  the  best  and  cheapest  hair 
goods,  switches  and  chains  at  Mrs.  M. 
C.  Siebold's.  225  East  Superior  street. 

wanted-a    lady    and    oentle- 

"la"  to  solicit  orders  for  household 
goods;  sold  on  easy  payments.   No  ex- 

PS'^^V^e  o^^'T*^-  •^'*»»"  Gately  &  Co.. 
705  W  est  Superior  street. 

WANTED-A  BOY  18  OR  20  YEARS  OlIj 
for  shippmg  clerk  and  general  work 
aljout  warehouse.  Address  with  refer- 
ences. L  87.' Herald. 


and  commission.  $eo  to  «00  per  "month 
V)t'i"i  =  made.  No  experience  need-^d. 
V\  ork  in  the  city.  The  Singer  Manufa'-- 
turing  company,  614  West  Superior 
street. 


Alt  advertisements  of  "situ- 
ations" wanted  inserted  FREE. 
We  invite  as  many  repetitions 
as  are  necessary  to  secure 
what  you  advertise  for.  The 
Herald's  50,000  daily  readers 
will  be  sure  to  fill  your  wants. 

STTUATtOXa    frAr~tBSk 

^r.y^y^^  MAN.  22  YEARS  OF^\GE 
wants  work  of  any  kind.  Must  have  it 
Address   916    East    Seventh    street 


SITCATION  WANTED  -  WASHING 

ironing  and  house  cleaning.  Take  work 
home  or  go  out  by  the  day.  Mrs.  Ross. 


:!17  Mesaba  avenue. 


W   A  >.  T  E  D-WASHINO.  IRONING 

.scrubbing,  house  cleaning  or  any  kUui 
of  day  work.  Addre.ss  or  call  "at  Ii ' 
First    avenue   west,    up  stairs 


RAILROAD  TIME  TABLES. 


^■■»    •  l»'»l»    »  »  !■■■**■»♦■»  »■ 


St.  Paeil  A  Duluth  R.  R. 


Leara 
Dnlath. 


t»:00a.m, 

•1  rf55  p.  m, 

*ll;15p.m 


*Oaily.  tRxcspt  Sooday 


ST.  PAUL, 
MINNEAPOLIS. 


Arrive 
Dulath. 


*6:a0a.m. 
•1 :30  p,  m. 
t7 :45  p.  m. 


iftFtS^a^''^*'?  ^^POt-  CITY  TICKET  OFFICB. 
401 W.  Superior  itreet,  comer  PaUadio  buUdin*! 
Telephone  218.  "wiim*. 


EASTERN  RAILWAY 

OF  ■milESOTA. 

CITY  TICKET  OFFICE  432  W.  SDP8RI0B  8T 


Leave  Dulnth 


Arrive  Duuith 


p.  m. 
m. 


Hi  :40  p.  m,  /     »T.  PAUL  AMD     (   f'-'Un 
*ll=15p.m.r    ■IMMCAPOmS    1   *7.^a 

*Daily.    ffixeept  Bonday. 
Buffet  Parlor  Cars  on  Day  Trains. 
New  Sleepins  Cars  on  Night  Trains. 

Direct  connections  with  Great  Northern  tralne 


foi 


J.  WILKEY, 

Wholesale  and  Retail  Depariment  Hoase, 

203  &  205  E.  Superior  St,.  Duluth,  Minn 


SALESMEN  FOR  CIGARS.  BIG  PAY 
Experience  unnecessary.  Monopole  Ci- 
gar^ company,  Galesvlllc,  Wis. 

WANTEI>-AGENTS  TO  SOLICIT  SICK 
and  accident  Insurance  for  the  Union 
?f,?i  fu  ^fMl"^' ,  Insurance  company  of 
J?.i"V?„^'^^''*J,t^'"'"''  to  the  right  par- 
\l^-  ^?V  ♦HT  \*V?''^^«  307  Palladlo  bulld- 
Ing,    Duluth.    Minn. 


YOL'NG  MAN  WANTS  WORK  OF  AN  v 

kind.   Must    have   it.     L  8C.    Herald. 


WANTED-WASHING      AND    IRONING 

o  take  home.  Gentlemen's  under  dotii- 
Ing  a  specialty;  also  house  and  office 
.leaning.  Call  on  Mrs.  Clark,  104  First 
avenue  west,   up  stairs. 


AN  EXPERIENCED  AND  COMPETENT 
dressmaker  would  like  to  ^'o  out  bv 
the  da.v  or  take  work  home.  Inquire 
second  floor  126  East   First  street. 


FOR  RENT-BASEMENT  OF  1020  eXsT 
Fourth  street;  very  warm;  ^  per  month; 
water   free. 


EXPERIENCED  WAITRESS  DESIRES 
situation  either  in  city  or  outside  Ad- 
dress L  17,  Herald.  "^^'ul.   au 

WOM.\N  WANTS  WORK  OF  ANY 
kind  by  the  day.  Call  nt  527  West  Sec- 
ond street. 


FARGO. 
WINNIPEG. 
BUTFE. 
PORTUNO. 


GRAND  FORftS 
HELENA. 
SPOKANE, 
SEATTLE 


\\-ANTED-DY  YOUNG  LADY,  Posi- 
tion as  stenographer  and  typewriter. 
Good  references  and  experience.  P  71. 
Herald.  ' 


A  FALSE  REPORT. 

IMr.    Hotchkiss    Not    Working 
inst  a  Lumber  Duty. 


ro   KKST—HOtSBS. 

FOR  RENT-SEVEN  ROOM  HOUSe'oN 
Mncteentli  avenue  east,  near  London 
road,  at  $10.  water  free.  Carpets  to  sell 
cheap,    all   laid.     Address   P  gl.    Herald. 

^'i^  .KENT  -  HOlisE  315  WEST 
Fourth  street;  all  modern  improve- 
ments; will  be  renovated  to  suit  ten- 
ant. A.  c.  Volk  &  Co.,  Palladlo  build- 
ing. 


The  last  issue  of  the  Northwestern 
Lumberman,  of  Chicago,  in  its  Saginaw 
column,  contains  a  statement  to  tho 
effect  that  L.  L.  Hotchkiss.  manager  of 
the  Cranberry  Lumber  company,  has 
been  in  Washington  opposing  the  $2 
duty  on  lumber. 

Mr.  Hotchkiss  was  \ery  much  sur- 
prised to  read  this.  He  was  in  W'ash- 
ington  but  twelve  hijurs  to  witness  tho 
inauguration.    The  status  of   the  mal- 


^  TO  HEyT—SrATS 

FOR  RENT-COZY  FLAT.  $10.  ALL 
modern  conveniences,  five  rooms  Water 
rent  paid.  $250  buys  a  good  residence 
lot.    Cooley    &     Underbill. 

FOR  RENT-COZY  FLAT,  $16.  ALL 
modern  conveniences,  nve  rooms.  Wato" 
rent  paid.  $2r,0  buys  a  good  reslden:-e 
lot.   Cooley   &    Underbill. 


WANTED-SITl-ATION  BY  A  COMPE- 
tent  cook  in  private  family,  or  place 
as  housekeeper.  Address  L  85,  Herald. 

YOUNG  MAN,  20  YEARS  OLdTsTRONG 
and  willing  to  work,  would  like  place  in 
commission  house  or  as  delivery  man 
J<amillar  with  care  of  horses.  Addre.ss 
A.  G.,    Herald. 


AND  JAPAN. 

At  St,  Paul  connectione  are  made  forall  pointe 
East,  West  and  South.  Throogh  tickets  and 
baggage  ch?cked  to  destination. 

DuluthTSouth  Shore  &  Atlantic  Ry, 

^— JJV^^  ^9,'  *11  Pointa  East  leave 

Duluth  Union   A  .  I  n   D      II 

D«pot  at  .  .  <i-ilU  r.  M, 

^?i*''«r*^^U^^PT    SATURDAY, 

with  wa(t\kh  Palace 

j_-j_ SLEKPI.NG  car  for  Sanlt  Ste 

Mane,  aaa  laming  Car,  serving  supper. 

sdn'day?"'**'"*'^""'^^""'*-  "••  *^^<^EPr 

an^d'ten'"Bt!K>t*''  '^*^'''*"'  "°*«^  «""«''-« 


f/iff  >/////>/// 


HOUSE  CLEANING,  SCRUBBING 
^^""■^S,.^"^  offices  to  clean.  Mrs.  Jack- 
son, 390  Lake  avenue  south. 


9   FOOT   RANGE.   lOil   EAST   SUPERIOR. 

FOR  SALE-FURNITURE  (AL?vIOST 
new)  of  five  room  house.  A  snap.  House 
(centrally  located)  can  be  rented  if  de- 
sired. Apply  W.  D.  Gordon,  17  First 
avenue    west. 


Dilotli,  Soperlor  &  Western  Ry, 


WEST. 
P.  M, 


♦Daily  except  Sanday, 


•3:05 
4:05 
6:13 
7:40 
7:02 
8:00 


EAST. 
A.  M 


0 
76 

94 

109 


Lv. 

Ar.. 

Ar.. 

Ar.. 

Ar.. 

Ar.. 


....   Duluth  .... 

Cloquet  .... 

..  Swan  River  . 
....  Hibbing  ... 
Grand  Rapids 
..  Deer  River  . 


.Ar 
.Lv 
.Lv 
.Lv 
•  Lv 
-Lv 


11:40 
10:41 
K:40 
7:15 
7:50 
6:55 


FOR  RENT-A  FIVE  ROOM  MODERN 
nat,  London  road  and  Eighteenth  ave- 
nue east.  Apply  to  Commercial  Invest- 
ment   company,    Torrey    building. 


$200  CASH     BALANCE    IN   BOARD  AND 
room;     will     buy     furniture     of     25-room 

Itoarding   house;       central       location     A 

snap,     p  91,   Herald. 


Car    inspection— Wheat.    93c;    corn,       1;     t^''-  according  to  Mr.  Hotchkiss,  is  this 

Rt-     The  Cranberry  comi)any 


ACVOUNTANT  A\D  AUDITOK. 


oats.    9;    rye.    5;    barley,    lt»;    flax,    8. 
ceipts— Wheat.    74.186    bus:    corn.    412    bus 
oats,   12.ta9  bus:  rye.   38S.">  bus-   barley.   J(M9 
bus;    flax,    6052    bus.    Shipments— None. 


I'i 


7 
11 


NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 

Opening    Was    Irregular 
Mainly  Higher. 


Chickens,    per  lb 6    ® 

fori  Oeese.    per    lb 10    ifi 

'  BRAN  AND  SHORTS.  CAR  LOTS." 
Bran.  200  lbs.  sacks  Included  8  00 
Shorts,  100  lbs.  sacks  inc.  9  00 
Shorts.    200    lbs,    sacks    inc..    8  50 

Red  dog 12  00 

Ground  feed  No,  1 10  OO    @10  50 

Ground  feed.  No.  2 10  00    mO  50 

HAY.    CAR    LOTS. 

Choice   south.    Minn 6  50    0  7  SO 

Northern    Minn    400    fJCSO 

Medium    400    (©650 

Tame,    ton,   choice  timothy.    8  Oo    (g  9  00 


CATTLE  AND  HOGS. 
Chicago.  March  19.— Hogs,  receipts.  19.- 
000.  Market  active.  S^iltX-  higher.  Light, 
$3.9OTj4.10;  mixed.  $3.90(?/4.15:  heavv,  $3.70'?i 
4.15;  rough.  $.S.7(V{|3.75.  Cattle,  receipts. 
■3500.  Steady  to  strong;  nothing  ch<d<-e  on 
sale.  Beeves.  $3.7.')<ri.">.15;  cows  and  heifers. 
$2.tW(&4.30;  Texas  steers.  $3.3U(ii4..30;  stock- 
ers  and  feeders.  $3.30(5*4.30.  Sheep,  re- 
ceipts,  6000.   Strong   to  shade  higher. 


But 


IN  NEW  YORK. 
N.w    York.    March    19.— Butter,    stead v 
Western    creamery.       la/iilSc;    Elgins,    19c. 
Eggs,    steady;    Western.    lOi^c. 


Xew 
market 
higher. 


-j      OPPOSED  TO  CRUELTY. 

York.     March     li».— The     stock  '  

opened    irregular,     but  mainly    A   Highly   Workcd   Up  IndlvidUal 


has  four  inter- 
ested parties,  one  of  them  b^ing  Arthur 
Hill,  who  is  opposing  the  duty.  In  def- 
erence to  his  views,  it  was  decided  that 
the  Cranberry  Lumb.  r  company  should 
take  no  part  as  a  company  in  the 
movement  in  favor  of  the  duty,  not 
signing  any  petitions  or  doing  any 
work  for  it.  Mr.  Hotchkiss'  visit  to 
Washington  had  nothing  to  do  with  the 
duty. 


CHAS.    EVANS    HOLT.    507    CHAMBER 
of  Commerce,  If 


SEVENTY-FIVE  DOLLARS  AND  BAL- 
ance  monthly  buys  a  fourteen  room 
house  within  seven  blocks  of  the  Spald- 
ing hotel.  Chas,  W,  Hoyt,  405  Chamber 
of  Commerce. 


JWXA^iJNcV^J!.. 


Duluth,  Missabe 

&  Northern 
RailwayCompany 


7 :45  a.  m, 
10:45  a.  m, 
10:44  a.  m, 
11  ^6  a.  ni. 
llKWa.m. 
11:25  a.m. 


9.-00a.  m. 

1 :25  p  ni. 

11  :V>  a,  m. 


f-^ -l>uluiU Ar      3:;<>  p.  m, 

Af Virginia  ....Lv  \  12:»5  p.  m. 

*'■ Kvel^th  ....Lv  I  10  56  a,  m. 

f' Hiwablk  ....Lv  ,  12:2'i  p.  m. 

^ Mt  Iron  ....Lv    12::«  p.  m. 

Ar Hibbi-ig    -.Lv  '  1*:13  n,  m 


I/v Virgiiiia Ar 

Ar Wolf Lv 

Ar Htbbine Lv 


1  M  p.  m. 
10 :33  a.  m. 
12:13n.  m. 


Dai;y,  except  Sanday.      J.  B.  Haxsok,  G.  P.  A. 


mV^llnrSJi^ti^'^g';  ^^diffi'^'C^o^':     "-^t^^f^o^^^^^f^ONDS.   FURNITURE, 
keeplng-temporarlly   or   regularjy,    call         ^*''-    <^o"""'«-'''»'    '-"-    »^""'"^*     « 


CAJtD  READING. 


NEW   YORK   MONEY.  i 

New    Y'ork.     March    19.— Money    on    call  I 
l''2(&2    per    cent.    Prime    mercantile    paper 
3>VuA  per  cent.  Sterling  exchange  steady: 
actual  business  in  bankers'  bills  at  $4.87''(i 
4.87' 2   for  demand  and   at   $4. S.")4«& 4.8.5*4    for  I 
sixty    days.    PosKmI    rates    $4.S6<?i4.86»/2    and  ' 
$4.88(fi4.8S>2.    Commercial    bills   $4.Mi;*sfi4.M '4 
Silver    certlHcates       62%(f|ai.        Bar    silver 
ti2=H,.    Mexican    dollars       4S'*i.    Government 
bonds    Wf-aker.    4s   registered,    $1.23*^4;    cou- 
Von.    $1.21'4;    5s    registered     and     coupon. 
$1.13'«;   2s   registered.   $1.2.5'/,;   Pacific   6s   of 
'98.   $1.02"^,. 


THE  BRIDGE  HILL  AGAIN. 
Washington,  March  19.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Senator  Nelson  lodav  re- 
introduced the  Duluth  bridg-  bill, 
which  Senator  Vilas  succeeded  in  kill- 
ing last  session.  He  irf  now  hopeful  of 
securing  Its  passage. 


Visits  the  Officials. 

A  man  giving  his  name  as  Johnson, 
and  who  seems  to  be  much  wrought  u|) 
over  the  cruelty  being  practiced  on 
horses  and  dogs,  called  at  police  head- 
luarters  .yesterday  afternoon  and  de- 
manded of  Chief  Hansen  that  he  puc 
'  on  a  number  of  extra  policemen  to  stoi. 


The  railways  tended  toward 
improvement.  The  suppression  in  the  j 
London  market  was  ignored  and  effec-  ' 
tive  support  was  renderetl  to  the  inter- 
national shares  aside  from  Reading 
first  preferred,  which  fell  %  on  heavy 
offerings.  The  industrials  were  easier. 
Rubl>er- shares  showing  a  decline  of  1 
cent  on  common  and  \%  on  preferred, 
on  reports  of  a  conflict. 

Chicago  Gas   was  taken   in   hand  and    ,y,         .,      ,  .,_       . 

in  an  hour  advanced  to  80  by  the  in-|  '"^  ^  "■  ^"  ^^^^  ^^^  ^'^^  ^^'^^  unable  to 
terests  which  have  been  conspicuous'  stand  the  expense,  he  said  he  was  will- 
in  the  purchasing  of  it.  The  industinal !  ing  to  mortgage  his  homestead  near 
sha.-es  also  developed  an  improved  Two  Harbors,  which  is  worth  $100  000  to 
t.ne.  with  Rubber,  preferred,  excep-  raise  the  necessary  funds 
tionally  rising  to  64c.  The  gains  in  the;  Failin-g  to  arouse  any  interest  at 
railwayis  were  quite  uniform,  but  con- 1  headciuarters.  he  went  to  the  citv  hall 
hned  to  the  fraction.s.  Toward  11  j  and  interviewed  the  city  officials  wind- 
o  clock  the  market  displayed  a  reac-  ing  up  this  morning  with  the  mayor 
tionary  tendency  on  realizing  andbear  whom  he  endeavored  to  interest  Mr' 
aggression  against  the  specialties  in  Johnsons  conversation  was  rapid  and 
Which    almost    all    of   the   earlier   gains    somewhat  jumbled,  and  he  startled  his 


THE  CHICAGO  MARKET. 
Chicago.  March  19.— Wheat,  March.  ;4i  : 
May,  7iic;  Jul.v,  73c:  September.  7i)^4C. 
Corn.  March.  24'hc;  M.iv.  25'hc;  July.  2i>'sc: 
September.  27»4C.  Oats.  Manh.  16%c;  Mav. 
\l\'ii\2K-.  July.  ISV4C;  September.  !}.•. 
pork.  March.  $8.S2V'2:  iMay.  $.S.92'i''(i95;  Julv 
$9.U5.  Lard.  March.  $4.20;  Mav.  $4.30;  .Uilv. 
$^^.37^^'fJ4.40;  Septembor.  $4.47';.iri4..50.  Ribs. 
March.  *4.85:  May.  $4. Si;  Julv.  W.x7',... 
Cash,  wheat.  No.  2  red.  8*&9<lc;  No.  ;; 
red.  8(K(<8.5c;  No.  2  spring.  84'/ic;  Nu.  Z 
spring.  71fi73c;  No.  2  hard  winter.  79'a8."'': 
No.  3  hard  winter.  70<?»75c;  No.  1  nori  1- 
ern  spring.  755t76c.  Cash,  corn.  No.  2. 
24c;  No.  3.  21-5  22c.  Cash,  oats.  No.  2,  KP/.c: 
No.  3.  16^V4<-.  Barley,  cash,  No.  3.  22'v2'ri 
32c.  R.ve.  cash.  33c;  May.  34.  Whisky  quiot 
on  bosls  of  $1.17  for  finished  goods.  I-^lax. 
cash.  Northwestern,  71c;  Mav.  78cfj7Svjt  ; 
July.  80s.  Timothy,  lash.  $2.75;  March. 
$2.8-i. 


PIIETTY  OLD  PEOPLE 
Chicago,  March  19.— .\dam  Adami- 
cek,  a  Pole,  has  just  celebrated  his 
112th  birthday.  His  wife  is  still  living 
and  is  87  years  of  age.  lioth  arc  almos: 
lotall.v  blind  from  old  age,  and  yet  theii 
general  health  is  oth -rwise  remarkably 
.good. 


CARD      READING.      PAST.      PRESENT 
and   future.   1330  West   Superior  street. 


'WWJJFH. 


PRIVATE  HOSPITAL-MRS.  BANKS 
midwife,  330  St,  Croix  avenue.  Male  pa- 
tients cared  for  also. 


LOST. 


LOST-  WEDNESDAY  EVENlNtJ 

?"l'*''   P"S  ^'oe-     Reward  if  returned  u\ 
171 1   East  First   street. 


^^-T^^^f^^nr^^  »'-^*»'  ^-"5  DULUTH  &  IRON  RANGE  R.R 


I 


MONEY    TO     LOAN,      ANY     AMOUNT 
Cooley  &  Underhill.   104  Palladlo. 


ANYONE  WISHING  TO  STORE  A 
piano,  free  of  charge,  in  a  perfecilv 
i^r.r",^*-  P'»^e.  would  do  well  to  call  ;it 
202  King  block. 


HIGHEST  PRICE  PAID  FOR  GENTLK- 
men's  cast  oft  clothing.  Give  us  a  trial. 
Send  addre.ss  and  will  call.  Star  Cloth- 
Ing  company,   ,511   West   .Superior  street 


8:15p,m.  Lv .Uuluth Ar 

7:15  p.m.  Ar Virginia Lv 

,i9  **•"*•  h^f Evaleth..    Lv 

7:50 p.m.  |  Ar Ely  Lv 


Daily,  Suuday  excepted7 


12  M  m. 

«--0')a.  m. 
7 :3.'i  a.  m. 
7:30  a.  ro. 


NORTH-WESTERN    LINE. 

C,  St.  P„  M,  &  O,  Ev. 
Office:  405  West  Superior  St.         'Phone  No.  20. 
Leave       |  *Dady  j    tEiccpt  Sanday    I  Amvn 


VBATERNITItSS 


tlO  45  am 

»U  00  pm 

*510pm 


St,  Paul,  Mln'pls  aud  West 

Sc.  Paul,  Min'pig  and  West 

...Cbicago  Limited... 


t.'i  lu  pm 
•7  00  am 
•10  m  am 


FURNISHED   ROOMS,    BOARlTlF   DE 
ilred.    The    DacoUh.    117    West    Second 
•treet. 


THE   MINNEAPOLIS   MARKET. 
Minntapolis.    March    19.— Wheat,    .strong, 
close,    .May.    7.'?c;    July.    Ti%r;    S:'ptember. 
6^«,ic.    On    track— No.    1    hard.    7.".?4c;    No.    1 
northern,    73%c,    Receipts.    204   cars. 


Were  eradicated. 

The  market  offered  little  feature  dur-  t 
ing  thf  second  hour,  but  sagged  on  ' 
slight  offerings.  The  inquiry  for  tho 
higher  granger  stocks  abated  very  ma-  1 
terially  and  operations  were  largely  ' 
confined  to  the  recognized  speculative 
stocks.  The  bond  market  was  appai- 1 
ently  very  business-like.  Sales  to  noon 
Were  94.500  shares. 


auditors  by  running  excitedly  to  tne 
windows  every  minute  or  so  to  call  at- 
tention to  some  shocking  case  of  cruel- 
ty. He  was  finally  furnished  with 
Judge  .\yer's  address,  being  advised  to 
lay  the  matter  before  him,  and  lie 
trudged  off. 


KNIGHTS  TEMPLAR. 

Inspection     of    Duluth     Com- 
mandery  Next  Wednesday. 

Xext  Wednesday  the  annual  inspec- 
tion of  Duluth  commandery.  Knights 
Templar,  will  take  plac^.  Grand  Com- 
mandt-r  John  H.  Randall,  Deputy  Grand 
Commander  15.  F.  Farmer,  Grand  Sword 
Bearer  Dr.  J.  W.  Chamberlain  and  sev- 
eral of  the  past  officers  from  St.  Paul 
and  Minnf-aoolis  will  be  here.  Capt. 
Dudley  of  the  United  States  army,  one 
of  the  grand  officers  of  the  grand  en- 
campment, will  be  here.  A  number  of 
these  distinguished  visitors  will  remain 
over  Thursday  and  visit  the  Scottish 
Rite  that  evening.  The  thirtieth  degree 
will  be  worked. 

Zion  commandery.  Knights  Templar, 
of  Minneapolis,  has  completed  a  third  of 
a  century  of  its  existence,  and  on 
March  31  will  celebrate  the  event  by  an 
observance  of  the  spring  festival  of 
Malta.  Invitations  to  the  command- 
erles  of  the  state  and  countrv  have 
been  i.ssued  and  the  affair  will  be  con- 
ducted on  a  large  scale.  A  number  of 
Duluth  Knights  Templar  will  go  down 
and  take  oart. 


ABDUCTOR  KILLED. 

Shot  Dead  By  Detectives  Who 
Had  a  Tip. 

Houston,  Tex.,  March  19.— Walter 
Hughes,  a  carpenter,  was  shot  to  death 
by  detectives  last  night  while  in  the 
•ict  of  entering  the  house  of  Frank 
Dunn,  a  wealthy  pawnbroker.  His 
!»urpo.se  was  to  abduct  Dunn's  small 
child,  who  was  to  be  held  for  ransom 
in  the  sum  of  $40,000.  His  sc  heme  was 
betrayed  by  a  confidant.  Hughes  find 
twice  at  the  detectives,  and  was  then 
literally  riddled  with  four  loads  of 
buckshot.  He  had  a  largj  knife,  and 
also  a  bottle  of  chlorofornf  on  his  per- 
son. 


REAL   ESTATE  TRA.VSFERS 
T.  W.  Wahl  to  O.  M.  Jorgenson.  lot 

8.  block   129.    Portland   division $ 

Kate    Meeh.m    to    ii.    O'Rourke.    lot 

9.  block   10.    Hibbing    

C.  J.  Fredrik.-on  to  H.  H.  Christian. 

part  lots  15  and  16,  block  62,  Port- 
land   division    

I.    W.    Pendleton    to    D.    H.    Moffat 
lot  18,  block  5.  Central  division... 

Total    % 


000 
1,123 

2.950 
65.000 
69,(!ra 


Land  Patents  Received. 

Patents  were  received  at  the  United 
States  land  office  today  for  the  follow- 
ing persons: 

St.  Louis  county— Charles  A.  Olson, 
John  P.  Brander.  Peter  Olander,  All>ert 
Olson,  Matthew  Brier,  Hokan  OTson, 
Henry  F.  Schubrimg.  Jr.,  Annie  French, 
H.  Hanson. 

Carlton  county— LeRoy  H.  Fish,  An- 
drew Johnson,  three  patents. 

Itasca  county— John  W.  Howard,  Al- 
bert H.  Powers  (three).  August  John- 
son. Joseph  St.  Peter. 

Ramsey  county— W.  G.  Clark.,  three 
patents  for  Matthew  Clark. 

Wright  county— Nancy  Desmond. 

Steele  countj— W.   W.  Arms. 

Douglas  county.  Wis.— Michael  Calla- 
han. Edward  Bielohlaerech. 

Penzie  county,  Mich.— Charles  H. 
Fultz. 

Baraga  county,  Mich.— Peter  Peter- 
son. Peter  A.  Edwards,  Peter  O.  West- 
rom. 


NEW  YORK   GRAIN. 
New    York.       March       19.— Close.    whc:.t. 
March    SlTic;    May,    80V:    July.    79c;    tiep- 
I  tember,    86'4c.    Corn,        May.    30%c.    Oats. 
.May,  21%c. 

GOSSIP. 
Received  over  private  wire  of  B.  E.  Baker, 
grain  and  stock  broker,  room  107  Cham- 
ber of  Commerce  and  307  Board  of  Trad'*. 
Chicago.  March  19.— .A  better  openln:^  in 
wheat  on  account  of  higher  cables  was 
succeeded  by  weakness  following  ratrnr 
a  heavy  selling  of  July  and  Septombrr. 
mainly  upon  St.  Louis  orders.  The  feeling 
at  the  close  was  much  stronger  and  Ic 
advance  established.  The  cause  of  the 
firmness  was  the  much  better  cash  de- 
mand both  here  and  at  the  sealward 
with  reported  good  export  takings  at 
New  York.  The  local  scalping  crowd  got 
short  of  May  wheat  on  tho  early  selllni; 
of  July,  and  th»-  attempt  to  cover  Ma.v 
widen(>d  out  the  difference  materii'.ll.'.'. 
The  foreign  political  news  is  not  calcri- 
lated  to  make  the  bears  rest  easy  and 
though  there  are  no  new  developmeni;-. 
in  the  crop  situation  today,  the  outlook 
will  bear  close  watching.  Wheat  looks 
as  if  it  might  gradually  work  higher  and 
still   be  a   salo  on   all   the   little  upturns. 

Corn  and  oats  strong  and  higher  caMe< 
on  corn  have  quoted  \i.d  adva>.-e  daily 
at  Liverpool  for  the  past  four  days--  .mil 
the  present  price  of  pork  is  equal  to 
about  3r.c  a   bushel   for  corn   in   Iowa. 

I'ri>vlsions       experienced       considerable 
liquidation    at    the    advance    but    the    gen- 
eral tone  of  the  market  continues  str<m>.'. 
Puts,    May    wheat.    74'M/74%c. 
Calls,    May    wheat,    75%-76©73%-%c. 
Curb.  May  wheat.   75%c  asked. 


NEW  YORK   STOCKS. _ 

Name  of  Stock."      Open  High  Low  Close 
Whisky 


Atchison 

Sugar   Trust 

Canada  Southern. 

C,   B  &  Q 

St,   Paul 

Chicago   Gas 

Del..  Lack.  &  W.. 
General  Electric. 

Erie , 

Reading , 

Louis.  &  Nash 

Manhattan 

Missouri   Pacific... 

Tobacco 

Chicago  &  N.  W.. 
N.  P.  preferred... 

Rock    Island 

Union    Pacific 

Western  Union 

Leather 

Lake  Shore 


12X 
\' 
114 

"ViH 
78H 
78H 

■34" 

A«% 
m 

763( 

l'!91|t 

Z'\ 
C9!ii 

84% 
60 


12 

1I5X 

"78 '4 
78^4 
SOH 

"siii 

24 
49K 

86H 
181^ 
77 

llOH 
3T* 
69>4 
63K 
85 
60 


l2^ 
11* 

114 

"77^4 

*3IH 

MX 

49H 
8BH 
18^ 
76!^ 


114H 

"774 

794 

"844 

"28X 
49Sft 

18H 
16^ 


ARTICLES  OK  INCORPORATION  OK 
NORTHER.V  HARDWARE  COMPANY. 
The  undersigned  hereby  associate  them- 
selves for  the  purpose  of  forming  a  cor- 
poration under  the  provisions  of  Tiiuj 
2,    of  Chapter  34.    General    Statutes   1894. 

Article  1.  The  name  of  said  corpoi  i- 
tion  shall  be  Northern  Hardware  Com- 
pan.v. 

Article  II.  The  general  nature  of  llir> 
business  of  said  corporation  shall  be  buv 
ing  and  selling  miners'  and  mill  supplies, 
hardware  and  other  merchandise,  com- 
monly sold  in  hardware  stores,  and  the 
principal  place  of  business  shall  be  it 
Duluth,    Minnesota.  _ 

Article  ill.  The  time  of  the  Commence, 
ment  of  said  corporation  shall  l)e  March 
22,  A.  D.  1897,  and  shall  continue  for 
thirty   years. 

Article  IV.  The  capital  stock  shall  W 
twenty-live  thousand  dollars  ($2.o.'KW.(i()). 
divided  Into  two  hundred  and  fifty  (im) 
shares  of  one  hundred  dollars  ("$100.(Ki) 
each,  and  shall  be  paid  in  at  such  times 
as  the  board  of  directors  shall  require. 
Provided,  that  no  stock  shall  be  Issued 
until  it  Is  fully  paid  up.  The  blithest 
amount  of  in<iebtedness  or  liability  lo 
which  the  said  corporation  shall  at  any 
time  be  subject  shall  be  twentv-Hve  thou- 
sand   dollars    ($25.0<W.<KI). 

Article  V.  The  names  and  places  of 
residence  of  the  persons  associated  in 
forming  this  corporation  are: 

E.  A.  Moye.  Duluth.  Minn.;  W.  F 
Quayle.  Duluth.  Minn.;  E.  P.  Stone,  Sag- 
inaw,   Mich. 

Article  \'I.  The  government  and  man- 
agement of  this  corporation  and  its  af- 
fairs shall  be  vested  in  a  president,  vice 
president,  treasurer  and  secretary,  wiio 
shall  be  selected  from  and  elected  bv  the 
board  of  directors.  The  office  of  tre-ts- 
urer  and  president  or  vice  presi- 
dent may  be  held  by  the  same  person,  but 
the  secretary  shall  not  hold  any  other 
office  in  said  corponitlon.  The  names  of 
the  first  board  of  directors  are: 

E.  A.  Moye.  Duluth,  Minn.;  W.  K. 
Quayle.  Duluth.  Minn.;  E.  P.  Stone,  Sag- 
inaw.   Mich. 

Article  VII.  The  directors  shall  ha 
elected  at  the  annual  meeting  of  the 
stockholders,  which  shall  be  held  on  the 
first  Tuesday  after  the  22nd  dav  of 
Mareh.  Provided,  that  the  president  shall 
call  a  special  meeting  of  the  stockholders  of 
any  time  on  the  written  application  of  a 
majority  of  the  stock  issued,  such  meeting 
to  be  calli-d  in  the  time,  place  and  manner 
as  shall  be  provided  in  by-laws  adopted 
b.v  the  stockholders  at  anv  annual  or 
regularly  called  special  meeting  of  the 
stockholders,  at  which  a  majority  of  the 
stock  then  issued  shall  be  represented  by 
the  holders  thereof  In  person  or 
by  proxy,  and  filed  with  tne 
.secretary;  and  at  any  such 

special  meeting  of  the  stockholders  anv 
director  may  be  removed  from  the  of- 
fice of  director  and  the  vacancy  in  the 
board  thus  (•reate«l  may  be  filled  bv  vote 
of  the  holders  of  a  majority  of  the"  stock 
voting,  either  in  person  or  bv  proxv.  each 
share  of  stock  being  entitleci  to  one  vote. 
In  witness  whereof  we  have  her-eunto 
.set  our  hands  and  seals  thLs  9th  day  of 
March.   A.   D.   1897. 

EDWARD    A.    MOYE,        (Seal.) 
EDWIN     P.     STONE,  (Seal.i 

,    WILLIAM   F.  QUAYLE.   (Seal), 
bigned.    sealed   and  dULvered    in   presence 

F.  W.  Parsons. 

John  B.  Adams. 
^T^"^?   OF   MINNESOTA,   COUNTY  OF 

ST.   LOUIS— SS. 

on   this  9th   day  of  March,    A.    D.   1897. 
fjefore    me.    a    notary    public    within    and 


8.^<4' 
57X 


i^\ 


SELL   REAL   1»TATB 
By  mean  A  of  10  Evenitiff  Herald  "waot 
»d." 


10^^  I  1C8« 

^«'  *«^  (?''c,^"''^  county,"  personaIlV"appearecrL\ 
au'  »5v  ^  •  ^^°"*'-  E-  ^'^-  Moye  and  W.  F.  Quayle. 
MH  to  me  personally  known  to  be  the  person.^ 
who  signed  the  foregoing  articles  of  in- 
corporation, and  each  acknowledged  that 
he  executed  the  same  as  his  free  a:t 
and  dped. 

- ,  .         _  F.    W.    PARSONS. 

i     /^?^*P'.  public,   St.  Louis  Co..   Minn. 
I     (Notarial  Seal.) 


STOCKHOLDERS'    MEETING.- 

The  regular  annual  meeting  of  the  Du- 
ll) th    Printing    and    Publishing    Company 
will  be  held  at  the  company's  office  in  Du"- 
luth,   Minn.,  on  Tuesday,   the  30th  diy  of 
March.   A.   D.  1897,   at  3  o'clock  p.   m. 
Dated   Duluth,    Minn.,   March   17th,    1897 
GEO.  W.  BUCK, 
_^ Secretary. 

Notice  of  Aiil 

FOR 

Liquor  License. 

STATE   OF   MINNESOTA,   COU'NTY  OF 

ST.   LOUIS,   CITY  OF  DULUTH-SS. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  m.ade  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  said  city  of  Duluth,  and  filed 
in  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell  in- 
toxicating liquors  for  the  term  commenc- 
lijg  on  March  12.  1897,  and  terminating  on 
March  12.  1898.  by  W.  P.  Wheaton  at  No. 
Ill  Lal<e  avenue  south. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined oy  .said  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth.  at  the  council  chamber 
In  .said  city  of  Duluth,  in  St.  Louis 
County.  Minnesota,  on  Monday,  the  2'2d 
day  of  March,  1897,  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m. 
of  that  day. 

Witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  .said 
city  of  Duluth,  this  Sd  day  of  March,  A. 

C.   E.  RICHARDSON, 

,n>  *      o     .  V  .  City  Clerk. 

(Corporate    Seal.) 

Duluth  Evening  Herald.  March  4  to  ^9  mc 

NOTICE    OF    MORTGAGE    SALE.- 

Whereas  default  has  been  made  in  the 
conditions  of  a  certain  mortgage  which 
was  duly  executed  and  delivered  by  Wil- 
liam Sibbald  and  Hattie  Sibbald,  his 
wife,  mortgagors,  to  N.  A.  Tyler,  mortga- 
gee, bearing  date  the  1st  day  of  April, 
1S93,  and  which  was  duly  filed  for  rec- 
ord in  the  office  of  the  register  of  deeds 
in  and  for  the  county  of  St.  Louis  and 
state  of  Minnesota,  on  the  4th  day  of 
April,  1S93,  at  4  o'clock  p.  m.,  of  that 
day,  and  was  duly  recorded  in  Book  C3 
of  mortgages  on  iiage  570. 

And  whereas  there  is  claimed  to  be  duo 
and  there  is  due  at  the  date  of  this  no- 
tice upon  said  mortgage  debt  six  hundred 
and  fourteen  and  34-100  ($«14.34)  dollars 
principal  and  interest  and  also  the  sutri 
of  hfty  ($50)  dollars  attorney's  fees  as 
provided  for  in  said  mortgage  in  cas- 
of  foreclosure,  and  no  action  or  proceed- 
ing, at  law  or  otherwise,  having  been  in- 
stituted or  commenced  to  collect  .said  i 
mortgage  debt,  or  anv  part  thereof  | 

Now,   therefore,  notice  is  hereby  given 
that  by  virtue  of  the  power  of  sale  con- 
tained in  said  mortgage  and  pursuant  to 
the  statute  in  such   case  made  and  pro- 
vided   said   mortgage  will   be  foreclosed, 
and   the   premises   described   and   covered 
yy  f''^'?,  mortgage,    viz:    Lot   number  six 
(6)    In  block  number  two  (2),  Sharp's  Ad- 
dition   to    Duluth,    Minnesota,    according 
to  the  recorded  plat   thereof,   all  of  said 
property  being  in  the  county  of  St.  Louis 
and    state    of    Minnesota,    will    with    the 
hereditaments    and    appurtenances         be 
S"i^  at  public     auction     to       the   highest 
bidder  for  cash,  to  pay  said  debt  and  in- 
terest,    together    with     fifty    (.Vi)    dollars 
attorney's  fees  as  stipulated  for  in  said 
mortgage  in  case  of  foreclosure  and  the 
disbursements       allowed    by    law;    which 
sale  will  be  made  by  the  sheriff  of  said 
St.    Louis   County,   at   the   front  door   of 
the   county   court   house,    in   the   city   of 
Duluth,  In  said  county  and  state,  on  the 
2(h   day  of  March,   1897,    at  10  o'clock   in 
the  forenoon  of  that  day,   subject  to  re- 
demption   at   any   time    within    one    year 
from  date  of  sale  as  provided  by  law. 
Dated  this  11th  day  of  February    1897 
N.   A.    TYLER. 
JOHN   E.    DAVIES,  Mortgagee. 

Attorney  for  Mortgagee, 
214  Chamber  of  Commerce  Building, 
Duluth.  Minn. 
Duluth     Evening     Herald, 
March-5-l2-19.  ' 


■4 


)^ 


PALESTINE  LODGE  NO.  79.  A 
F.  &  A,  M.— Regular  meetings 
first  and  third  Monday  even- 
ings of  every  month  at  7:30 
TT-''-,™'  ^^^'^  meeting  March  13, 
1897.  Work,  Summons.  W.  A  Mc- 
Gonagle.  W.  M.,  Edwin  Mooers.  secre- 
tary. 

IONIC  LODGE  NO.  186,  A.  P.  & 
A.  M.— Regular  meetings  second 
and  fourth  Monday  evenings  of 
every  month  at  7:30  p.  m.  Next 

rr.  .  J  ^     meeting    March    22,    1897.    Work. 

Third  degree.  F.  W.  Kugler,  W.  M.;  J.  d! 

Macfarlane,   secretary. 

KEYSTONE  CHAPTER  NO.  30, 
R.  A.  M.— Stated  convocation 
second  and  fourth  Wednesday 
evenings  of  each  month  at  7:30 
p.  m.  Next  meeting  Tuesday. 
A^v,-,  March  23.  1897.  Work,  Rovkl 
Arch  degree.  John  F.  McLaren.  H  P  • 
George    E.    Long,    secretary. 

%.#D  U  L  U  T  ii  COMMANDERY 
'^i.  ^°\  %  K-  T.— Stated  conclave 
first  Tuesday  of  each  month 
7:3(?  p,  m.  Next  conclave 
Tem,.in^  Tuesday,  March  16,  1897.  Work, 
Templar  degree  R.  E.  Denfeld.  E. 
c,  Alfred  LeRlcheux,  recorder. 

A.  O.  U.  W.-FIDELITY  LODGE  NO.  m. 
Meets  every   Thursday   in   the   Kalama- 
zoo block,   third  floor,  18  West  Superior 
street.   James   McDowell,   M.   W  •  J    H 
Powers,    recorder.  '      ' 


Parlor  Cars  on  day  traim;  Wagner's  Finest 
Sleepers  on  night  trains. 


THERE'S  ONLY  OME 
RAILROAD 

That   operates   its   trains  on   the  famous 

M?fw\X^|'^n'd^'S'ig^'^  '"'^'^  ^'"«»- 
"''^VhrS^out?"  *'~''"^"  ""^  electricity 
That   uses   the  celebrated  electric     berth 

reading  lamp; 
That  runs  four  splendidly  equipped   pas- 

senger  trains  every  day  from  St.  Paul 

S in*^  11??,'""^^''""^  through   to  Chicago 
via  Milwaukee; 
And  that  road  is  the 

GHICAOO,  MILWAUKEE  A 
•T.  PAUL. 

It  alsc)  operates  steam-heated  vestlbuled 
traln.s,     carrying     the     latest     private 
compartment     cars.       library     buffet 
smoking    cars,    and     palace     drawing- 
room  sleepers. 
Parlor  cars,  free  reclining  chair  cars  and 

the  very  best  dining  car  service. 
For    lowest    rates    to    any    point    in    th« 
United  States,  Canada  or  Mexico,  ap- 
ply to  ticket  agents,  or  address 
^     .    J.  T.  CONLEY. 
Aas't  Gen'l  Pass  Agt., 
>T„*      T-.1  ^,  St.  Paul.  Minn. 

Note-Elegantly  equipped  trains  from 
o  .  "L*"*'  Minneapolis  through  from 
Peoria,  St.  Louis  and  Kansas  City  dally. 


HAin  DRESSINO 


'^"•y'L..,y°"i^'^^'SO-^  (FORMERLY 
with  Midtsund  sisters,  of  St.  Paul  )  has 
opened  halrdressing  parlors  at  room  417 
Lonsdale    building. 


PILES 


Williams  Indian  Pile 
Ointment  is  a  snrn  cnri- 
forPILEtf.  It  absorbs 
tumors  Stops  itchinjr 
GIVES  RELIEF  6O0 
and  f  I.    At   Uruiririets. 


If  you  wish  to  drink  a 
Choice  glass  of  Lager 
call  for 
FITQER'S  BEER. 


FOR 


Liquor  License. 


STATE   OF  MINNESOTA,   COUNTY  OF 
ST.   LOUIS.   CITY   OF   DULUTH-SS. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  application 

nas  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common  ,  .^ .  _ ...    „..„    .„ 

council  of 'said  city  of  Duluth,   and   filed  !  corporation   of  the  City  of  Duluth    Mln 
in   my  office,    praying  for  license   to  sell    """■"♦''    "*  "■"'-  -— —   = ■-     •-       ' 


BEST   LINE 

ST.  PAUL 

AND 

MINNEAPOLIS 

TO 

LOUIS. 


ST. 


Contract  Work. 


Office  of  Board  of  Public  Works 
City  of  Duluth.  Minn.,  March  8,  1897 
Sealed    bids    will    be    received    by    the 
board    of    public    works    in    and    for    the 


Feb-12-19-26- 


Intoxicating  liquors  for  the  term  com 
mencing  on  March  18,  1897,  and  terminat- 
ing on  March  18,  1898.  by  M.  J.  Dahlsten, 
at   No.    19   Second    avenue   west. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth,  at  the  council  chamber 
in  said  city  of  Duluth.  in  St.  Louis  Coun- 
ty, Minnesota,  on  Monday,  the  29th  dav 
of  March,  1S97,  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m.  of 
that   day. 

Witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  said  city 
of   Duluth,    this   16th   day   of   March,    A 
D.    1897. 

C.  E.  RICHARDSON, 
,p,„„^„.     _     ,.  City  Cletk. 

(Corporate  Seal.)        -      ... 
Duluth  Evening  Herald  March  16  to  29  Inc 


nesota,  at  their  office  in  said  citv  until  10 
f-  m.,  on  the  22nd  day  of  March,  A.  D. 
1897,  for  the  construction  of  wooden  cross- 
walks In  said  city  for  the  year  endlnif 
Febni.ory  28.  1898,  according  to  plans  and 
specifications  on  file  In  the  office  of  said 
board. 

A  certified  check  or  a  bond  with  at 
least  two  (2)  sureties  in  the  sum  of  fifty 
dollars   must   accompany   each   bid. 

The  said  board  reserves  the  right  to 
reject  any  and   all   bids. 

M.  J.   DAVIS, 

r.~  .  ,  President. 

Official : 

(Seal.) 
R.   MURCHISON. 

Clerk   Board    of   Public    Works. 
Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  8  lOt 


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ONLY  EVENiNQ  PAPER  IN  DULUTtl 

MEliliD 

AN  INDEPENDENT  NEWSPAPER. 

Published    at    Herald   bulldln«,    220   Weat 
Superior  street. 


Duluth  Publishing  &  Printing  Co. 

TELEPHONE  CALLS; 
CoTUitinc  Boom— 3124,  two  rinxs. 
Editorial  Booma — SU,  three  rinca. 

TEN  CENTS  A  WEEK 

Every  Evening.  Delivered  or  by  Mail.        i 

Single  copy,  daily ^ •  .02 

One  month "^  ' 

Three  montha I  JO  I 

Six  montha 2.60  | 

One  year 5.00  . 

Weekly  Herald,  Sl.OO  per  year ;  SO  oacta  for  six 
montha :  2S  centa  for  three  montha. 

Entered  at  the  Dnlnth  poatoSioa  aa  seeood 

elaas  matter. 

LARGEST  CIRCUuTtION  IN  DULUTH 

Official  Paper  of  the  City  ol  Dulutb 
HERALD'S  CIRCULATION  HIGH-WATER  MARK 

17,148. 


done  and  the  Sixth  district  wns  heart- 
lessly outriigr«^d.' 

The  let^isliiiui-f  must  Ink*'  notice  of 
these  serious  iharjies.  If  brlltery  h.-is 
taken  place,  let  the  corruptionists  in 
tile  it visiatiiii-  lie  thrown  out  without 
ferernony  an«l  let  tlie  ItrilH^-^ivers  out- 
siile  l»o  treated  to  the  punishment  that 
they  ileserve. 


THE     DULUTH     EVENING     HERvi;i>:  FRIDAY.    MARCH    19.     1807. 


THE  WEATHER. 


AN  ULTRAMONTANE   DEFEAT. 

The  result  of     the     election     in     the 
county  of  Bonaventure.  Quebec,  where 
a    IJI»eral   and    supixJrter     of     Premier 
I^aurier   was  chosen   a  member   of   the 
Canadian   parliament,   is  significant   of 
the  great  change  which  is  taking  place 
among    the   adherents   of    the    Catholic 
church  in  that  province.     It  was  a  vic- 
tory of  great  importance  for  the  Laurier 
ministry,  because  the  Liberal  candidate 
was  opposed   by   all   the   power  of   the 
church.       Monsignor      lilais     and      his 
priests    having  given     notice     that   all 
Catholics  who  voted  for     the     Laurier 
candidate  would   fall   under     the     con- 
ilemnation  of  the  church.     Despite  this 
threat,  the  ITitramontane  candidate  was 
defeated  by  over  ?.>»>  majority. 

Hut  a  few  short  years  ago,  tht»  voi<-e 
of  the  bishop  was  omnipotent  in  the 
j  tleetions  in  Quebe<-.  The  hierarchy 
controlled  the  elections  almost  ab.so- 
lutely  wherever  the  Catholic  vote  was 
in  the  majority.  The  Catholic  people 
to4»k  their  politics  us  w.ll  us  their  re- 
ligion from  the  bishops  and  priesLs.  The 
Honaventure  «'le<tion  is  therefore  a 
striking  indication  of  the  change  of  .sen- 
timent, of  the  revolution  which  ha.^ 
taken  place  in  the  attitude  <)f  the  Que- 


.sent  to  Washington  to  be  analyzed. 

Fourteen  states  have  been  set  apart 
in  which  to  make  the  experiments  and 
jjiMX)   tons  of   seeds   have   btM>n      bought 
to   b»'  distributed   as   alM>\e     describc'l. 
It    is    necessary    that      blocks     of     live 
farmers    be   organizeil    in    ever   county 
of    the   states    to    b«»    included      in      the 
fourteen   ti>   be  chosen    for   the   exiM^ri- 
ment.     Of  course,   Minnesota   is  in   this 
list,  and  our   farmei-s  nnist    take  some 
action  looking  to  sharing  in  this  experi- 
mental   enterprise.      It    should    be   easy 
to  find  five  farmers  in  each  county  will- 
ing  to   set   apart    an   acre    f»)r     raising 
sugar  beets,  as  the  best  quality  of  seeds 
will  be  furnished  free  of  charge.     The 
legislature  might  appoint  a  committee 
to  look  into  this  matter  and  obtain  the 
necessary  information  for  the  farmers. 


advanced  by  a  New  York  expert.  It  is 
called  the  "toxlr  ba.sis  of  neyral  dis- 
eases" and  will  beat  "em..tionaI  Insani- 
ty" with  a  jun,^ 


According  to  u  Lon.hm  <-abiegram 
the  <iriginai  manuscript  <.f  Keat.s'  TOn- 
dyniion"  has  just  been  sold  for  $.147.-.. 
which  is  without  doubt  much  more 
than  Keats  ever  receivetl  for  his  entire 
poetical  works. 


ROUNDS  OF   MIRTH. 


want      to 
ailvi'iiise- 


T-nit.d  Sfat.s  A.u'ri.  i.ltural    IVpartnunt.  I  '"^''  Catholics  towards     the     hierarchy. 


It   is   popularly     supposed     that     the 
order  of  F*resident  Cleveland  extending 
the  operations  of  the  civil   service  law 
would    protect    chiefs   of   division     and 
other  publie  officials   holding   lucrative 
positions.     Such  is  not  the  case.     There 
is  a  very  simple  way  of  getting  around 
this  apparently  insurmountable  obsta- 
cle.    When  the  chief  of  th«>  division  is 
included  in  the  classified  .service  he  be- 
comes amenable  to  civil   service  rules; 
he  can  Ije  either  reduced  or  promoted. 
A   $2.'".(M)  chief   becomes   a     $1B00     clerk, 
whib-  a  $l»;oo  <-lerk  of  the  .same  political 
complexion  as  the  administration  takes 
his  place.     This  is  simply  the  operation 
of  the  "merit  system"  and  no  complaint 
can  be  found  with   it. 


Thank  heaven,  exclaims  the  Chicago 
News,  that  Piizsimmons'  baby  is  too 
young  to  talk.  We  can.  therefore,  have 
only  its  picture  and  not  a  two-column 
special   copyrighted  interview. 


It  is  stated  that  the  sugar  trust  does 
not  like  the  new  .sugar  schedule.  This 
should  ensure  the  adoption  of  the 
schedule   by  congress. 


Before  the  hearing  in  his  case  has 
ended,  the  News  Tribune  may  learn 
how  to  spell  Commissioner  Lamoreux's 
name. 


There   isn't    a    ladv 


Weath«r  Bureau.  Duluth.  Synopsis  of 
weather  conditions  for  the  twenty-four 
hours  t-nding  at  7  a.  m..  (Central  tinii->. 
March  13.— In  consequence  of  the  advanc>.' 
of  a  barometric  depres.>»i<>n  from  Montana 
to  Missouri,  general  rains  have  fallen  In 
the  Mississippi  and  Lower  Missouri  val- 
levs.     Minnesota     and     the    western     part 


and  of  the  emphatic  refusal  to  bow  the 


The  .Springfield.  Mass..  Republican 
says:  "If  our  system  of  politics  were 
developed   on    PJnglish   or   French    lines 


head  to  priestly  dictation.     Mr.  Laurier  '  *'•*•  Ilet-d  would  today  be  the  undisput- 


has  not  been  on  good  terms  with  thf- 
bishops  for  many  years,  as  he  long  ago 
declined  to  acknowledge  their  author- 
ity in  political  affairs.  He  was  willing  to 


of   the   upper   lakf    region,    and   still    con 

linue  in  those  distriits.     The  quantity  of  ,  take  his  religion  from  the  church  of  his 

^^/^;^'^.^*'?nS:ef  ^!niV'^t'>d;;S  l  ^--fathers,  but  he  refused  to  be  bound 
while"  between    St.    Louis    and    the    head-  |  by   their  directions  politically.     And  so 

riedTrom'?S%'^.'"I.^nch."^^^^^  Bonaventure    have    en- 

The    temperature    has    generally    fallen  |  dorsed   his  attitude  and  have  declared  I  ^*^  have  an  immediate,  even  if  a  transi 
10  to  24  degrees   in  Western   Montana   and 
the    adjoining      Canadian      provinces,     in 


ed  leader  of  his  party,  as  much  so  as 
ever  Gladstone  was.  But  our  system 
is  perpetually  thrusting  the  natural 
leader  aside  in  favor  of  some  man  who. 
through  the  accident  of  locality  or  a 
large  majority  in  some  minor  election 
or  the  sentimental  association  of  his 
name  with  some  transient  policy,  .seems 


their    independence    of    the    bishops    in 
whi»h  strtions.   it  was  lowest  at  7  a.  m.     matters  political.    No  one  who  is  un-- 
tiMlay.     ranging    from     18    above    zero    at     jn>niiaiT.t>./»  ».uk  tu.^  .»i.i  .......     *     ar    • 

Heleiia  to  1.;  below  zero  at    Edmonton,   a  I  a^iuamted  with  the  old  state  of  affair* 
siation    in   the  extreme   northern   j.art    of  i  in   the  Quebec  constituencies  can    fullv 
Alberta.     In   the  Central  valleys,   the  lake  '.,,,,,_„,.:„,„  ,1,^  ,.^^.,„.„,  ,  ,     . 
r^•gion  and  the  Southwest,  it  ranged  from     •^^""^^'  '^''^  ^^^  remarkable  change. 


tory.  political  leadership  in  this  coun- 
try is  comparatively  feeble." 


24  at   Port  Arthur  to  tC  at   Memphis 
Lowi'St   temiH-ratiires  last   night: 


«'algar>-    

0  Medicine    Hat    ... 

•> 

I'rituf    All^ert    ... 

t   Battb'ford    

t; 

Minneilosa     .. 

1!S  iWinniiH-g    

*> 

Swift   Current    ... 

O'Qu'    .Appelle    

8 

WiIlL-;ton    

4  Bismarck    

14 

P.>rt    Arthur    ..    . 

22  Helena   

IS 

Marquette    

28  Sault   Ste.    Marie 

24 

Havre    

•;  Miles    Ciiv    

.»., 

Huron    

S2  St.    Paul     

."M 

Duluth    

."^1  Mo«irhead    

■Si 

L.i  Crosse  

■U  Milwaukee    

.•u 

I.ander    

2i>  Rapid    City    

— > 

I>avenport    

42  Omaha  

4<> 

I>elrolt    

k>  Chicago    

?A 

Podge  Citv    

G»;  Kan.«as    City    ... 

rA 

North    Platte   .... 

r»2   Denver   

28 

St.    Louis    

,"S  Memphis 

60 

Duluth  temperature  at  7  a.  m.  today. 
32:  maximum  yesterday.  40:  minimum  yes- 
terday.   32. 

LiK-al  forecast  for  Duluth  and  vicinity: 
Light  rain  turning  to  snow,  with  cooler 
tonight:  Saturday  fair  and  decidetlly 
colder:  high  northeast  winds  diminish- 
ing tonight  and  shifting  to  westerly  by 
Saturday    morning. 

JAM»="='    • 
Local    Forecast    Official. 


The  opposition  of  the  bishops  to  the 
Liberal  candidate  was  based   upon   his> 
refusal  to  promise  that  he  would  vote 
again.st  the  approval  of  the  settlement 
of  the  Manitoba  sChcK.I  question  effect- 
ed    by   the    Laurier  government.      The 
-settlement  is  distasteful  to  Archbishop 
I^angevin.     of     Manitoiia,     and  to     the' 
French  bishops  and  priests  In  Quebec, 
and  they  have  declared   that   no  Cath- 
olic can  be  faithful  to  the  church  and 
^  I  vote  for  the  approval  of  the  t^rms  of 
settlement.     This  was  the  first  election 
in   a  French   constituency  for  a   mem- 
ber of  parliament  since  the  settlement 
was  agreed  upon  by  the  -Manitoba  and 
Dominion  governments.      A  few     days 
ago  the  Manitoba  legislature,     by 


It  is  the  opinion  of  naval  officers  that 
-Admiral  Walker  will  finally  be  landed 
In  the  offite  of  a.ssistant  secretary  to 
Mr.  Long,  for  they  say  he  wants  that 
place  and  usually  gets  what  he  is  after. 
The  admiral  is  a  cousin  and  intimate 
friend  of  Senator  Allison,  who  has 
asked  the  appointment,  and  Mr.  Allison 
generally  gets  what  he  asks.  Some  of 
-Admiral  Walker's  opponents  have 
found  a  law  which  provides  that  the  as- 
sistant secretary  of  the  navy  shall  be 
appointed  from  civil  life,  but  Mr.  Alli- 
son will  undertake  to  have  that  law 
repealed  or  amended. 


overwhelming  majority,  approved  th? 
settlement,  and  the  result  in  Bonaven- 
ture leads  to  the  belief     that     it     also 

Chicago.    March~iriForecast   until  8  p.  i  '' '" .   ^^     confirmed   by     the     Dominion 
m.    tomorrow:    For    VVi.sconsin:    Showers  >  Parliament.     It  is  a  heavy  blow  to  the 
this  afternoon  and  tonight  with  colder  in  !  Ultramontane  fart  ion 
west  portion  Saturday:  colder:  fresh  east.   '  ^  ""^'non^ane  taction, 
backing   to    northerly    winds.    For    Minne- 
sota;     Showt-rs    this       afternoon:    partly 
c'.oudy    and    colder    tonight    with    rain    or 
snow   in   extreme  east    portion:    Saturday 
fair    ;in<l    colder:    northtrlv    winds. 


A  London  theater  manager  recently 
adopted  a  novel  method  of  stemming 
the  tide  of  popular  first-night  disappro- 
val by  offering  to  refund  the  entiiv 
an  i  purchase-money  to  any  dissatisfied  pat- 
ron leaving  before  the  close  of  the 
first  act,  or  one-half  to  anyone  leav- 
ing before  the  end  of  the  first  scene.  It 
is  almost  needless  to  say  that  not  a 
penny  was  given  back. 


It  is  said  Corliett's  father  bet  his  liv- 
ery stable  in  'FiLsco  on  th.'  fight  and 
lost.    And  the  blow  almost  killed  father. 

A  CHANGE  IN  CUBA. 

New  York  Tribune:  No  better  bit  of 
news  has  come  iroin  Cuba  siiuc  the  w.ir 
bigan  than  the  announcement  that  the 
Spanish  governiu.iit  there  has  adopu.l 
a  new  polity  t,,wanl  American  citizens 
suspet-fed  of  coiiiiilUity  with  the  rev«ilu- 
tion.  huih  person.^,  it  is  .said,  are  here- 
after to  be  tried  pioniiitly.  If  found  inno- 
<<-nt  they  are  i,,  be  released.  If  found 
guilty  they  .tre  to  be  expelled  from  Uie 
isianu.  with,  no  doubt,  a  warning  of 
sterner  treatment  if  caught  there  again. 
New  Aork  World:  The  vi.gorous  -Amer- 
icanism which  resulted  in  the  promiit 
relea.se  of  Mr.  Scovel  gives  our  n  l,i- 
tions  with  Spain  ui"  •■ntirely  new  aspect 
and  excites  the  strongest  hopes  that  .»ur 
good  ofHces"  with  the  Spanish  govern- 
ment may  soon  pm  a  stop  to  the  Cuban 
war.  The  season  in  which  Spanish  troops 
can  keep  the  ii,i,|  is  almost  over,  and 
the  Weyler  campaign  has  been  a  fail- 
ure. l<or  eight  months  to  come  Spiiin 
can  hope  to  accomplish  nothing,  and  be- 
fore then  end  or  that  time  peace  ought 
to  be  <leclare<i  on  a  basis  of  Cuban  free- 
dom  and    independence. 

New  York  Sun:  Our  consul  at  Havana 
is  better  safeguarded  in  these  davs  than 
he  has  been  at  any  other  time  s"ince  ue 
took  the  office.  He  has  received  iussur- 
ances  from  the  Sp.mish  authorities  there 
that  means  have  been  taken  to  prevent 
any  hostile  demonstration  .igainst  him 
and  that  the  consnlate  will  hereafter  be 
umler  the  direct  protection  of  the  Si)aii- 
i.sh  .soldiery  in  th.  city.  It  .seems  that 
<..en.  Ahnmada  h:is  taken  unusual  pains 
in  the  case.  His  forethought  ought  to  l)e 
worth  something. 

Washington  TIm.s:  We  are  gli<l  to 
see  It  state.1  that  (Jen.  Fitzhugh  Lee  is 
to  l)e  retained  and  supported  In  his  i»res- 
ent  posititm.  We  hopi-  and  believe  that 
this  IS  true.  It  is  what  should  have  been' 
♦•xpected  from  the  sturdy  Americani-^m 
ol  I'resident  .McKinU-y.  Cen.  Lee  has  tloiic 
Ins  «luly  under  trying  and  adver.se  cir- 
cumstances like  ;,  gallant  soldier  and 
gentleman. 

Chica.go  .lournal:  Poor  Mephistophcles 
\\eyler  He  had  a  man  locked  up  whom 
he  couldn't  torture  or  kill.  Scovel  is  re- 
leased. 

Chicago  Tribune:     Th 
tion    in    Washin 


Detn.it  .Tournal:  Editor— I 
•  •ritleijM^  your  ••help  wanted" 
nieiits." 

ftusini>ss  m:inager— Yes? 

Editor- Yes.  Th.'y  have  so  iminv  im- 
possible sitnatioiLs  ill  ih.-m.  Thev  are  lik.  - 
ly  to  be  mistaken  lor  a  seri.il  story. 

Somerville  Journal:  So  many  peot.le 
ate  poets  nowad.ays  that  it  gives  an  edi- 
tor g<>nuine  iileasure  to  meet  a  mm  or 
womiui  who  never  made  a  rhyme. 

Indianapolis  Journal:  "WhafTo'  vou 
anghin'  in  church?"  asked  voung  Ras- 
tus    mother. 

"Preacher's  finger  reminded  me  of  ol  ■ 
I  nc     Lsom  s    huntin'    dog.' 

•How'?"  ^ 

"it   was  a   Ubbah-cullud   pointer." 

Washington  Star:  -Ifs  nonsense  •  ev- 
Jlaimed  the  comic  opera  .soubrette  'to 
insinuate  that  members  of  theatrical 
conipanies  have  to  walk  home  everv  now 
aiul   then. 

"Isn't  it  true?' 

'•Certainly    not 
this    troupe   who    travel.s   without  "having 
her  bicycle  in  the  baggage  car."      "''*'"*' 

Detroit       Journal:    "No.^^    .sighed        the 

hrtir^'oV'^",,''*-'""''  "«  »>"  *"mbe.l  from 
the  tug   into  Charon's   boat,    "there   is   no 

d  H  mV.."';''  ^•"••'••••^•,T<'«l''.v  I  had  a  won.an 
vr,\\   XL,'    "'  .'"'   '•'•:i>hant   hereafter,   an.l 

•^ '■  „  *^  1^  '",  •'•"'•■  ''«■•«'■''  '!«"'•  ""Oi"-  about 
Keing   reduced    to   one  trunk."" 

Chicago  Record:  "Those  people  next 
door  persist   in  bowing  to  me." 

;;.Arent    yon    aec|naiiited    with    them''" 
-Not    t In-    least    in    tin-    world:    we    hav 
incr.l.v   used   their  telephone  h.ilf  a   doz.n 
tunes. 

Philadelphia  Record:  "You  lie  in  vour 
teeth       hissed    the   villain   to    the   hcW.ine. 

who  in  private  life  was  the  heroines 
gi.mdson;  '-she  is  donblv  fals.-  i  was 
with  her  when  she  bought  the  set  at  th" 
<lentist  s. 

Washington  Star:  •'Dah's  only  one 
time.  .said  Cncle  Eben.  "wh.'U  it's  safe 
ter  conterdici  a  man.  an'  dafs  when  he 
puts  on  a  melancholy  loftk  an"  stahts  m 
ter  tell     bou^   how  old   hes  gittin'   to  bo." 

ih^.f''?^^  K""^''  ^''"^r-  "G*'o>'g«'  told  me 
th.it  one  of  my  golden  hairs  could  draw 
him  like  a  team  of  oxen.^' 

"Yes?" 

""And  then  when  the  harness  broke 
dow-n  he  asked  me  if  I  had  a  rope  in  mv 
pocket. 

Cleveland    Plain    Dealer:    "What's    your 
line  of  work,   young  man?'" 
I^I'm   in   a   dentists   offlice.   sir." 
,"And    is    your    business    reviving''" 
"That's  just  what  it  is,  sir.  I  shake  un 
the    customers    after    the    old    man    gives 
em   laughing  gas."  '' 


:  Drinks 


"»    luc    nome — me   jovmg  wit^   and   i 

Blatz 


jThe  Mild  Eyed  Goddess 

of  the   home-the  loving  wif^  and   mother— 

The  star: 

Milwaukee; 
Beer  .  .  .\ 

:VAL  BLITZ  BREWING  CO.,  Dulufh   Branch.     Tel.62.ii 


■miun,Kfnimmimmi 


new  administra- 


BUSINESS  BEFORE  SPOILS. 

Philadelphia  Press:  The  McKinley  ad- 
ministration is  an  administration  with- 
out an  ax.  It  has  no  ax  to  grind  and  it 
has  no  ax  to  use  on  the  offices.  It  nro- 
of°her  }J\  ^'"'■•"•••'^  tlH-  laws  and  it  has  no 
1  ,^.  iV'"*^'-',''  .'"■  '•"••pose  and  one  law  Prcs- 
Ulent  McKinley  proposes  to  enforce  in  let- 
law""      "'     '^   '"  "*^'  '■'^'''  •''*'''^'^'t'  rcfoim 

..i^h^'rXl;'^^  Mail  ;,„d  Express:  Confront- 
r.i.M?  •'!'"<  ,-.'PI>"'-l't"'ns  for  40  offices,  Prcs- 
dent  Mclvin  ey  is  pi-obably  more  anxious 
than  ever  that  the  mills  shall  be  open 
and  tempt  the  i)lace  hunters  into  otlier 
occupations.      "The    cure    for   the    habit    of 


X'EXATJONS. 
\\nat  wondrous  days,  indeed,  are  thes" 

When   science   shows   a   light 
On  any  pathway   that   you   please. 

That    you    may   turn    aright. 
\ct  life  is  filled  with   terrors  new 

The   hours   grow   dull   and    long.  ' 
For  everything   you   care   to   do. 

The    doct(U'    says,    is    wrong. 

Who    tries    to   warble    is    forbid 
Lest   germs   attack   the   throat. 

riie  dan<'ei's   prowess   must   be   hid. 

,  Though   h.-  may  screech   a   note. 

Who   dines   in   <arele.ssness   complete 
Is   tempted   by   the   throng. 

Ibii  he  who  likes  to.  may  not  eat; 
The  doctor  says   its   wrong. 

You   shun   the   w:iter.   sparkling  fair 

Lest    Iocs    lurk    then'  disguised; 
iou    miisnt    bre.ttlie    unless    the   iiir 

Has   been   well   analyzed. 
TiKHightle.ss.  .vou  turn,  as  is  vour  wont. 

With     an    affection     strong 
To   kiss   your   baby.     Hm    yon   ,l,,n't 

The    doctor    .s.iys    its    wrong. 

— Wiishington   Star. 

QUICKENING  CURRENTS  OF  TRADE 
St.  Louis  01obe.,0emocrai:  That  iii- 
crea.se  of  nearly  $4,lXKi.0OO  in  the  loans  of 
the  New  York  banks  in  the  week  iust 
ended  is  an  eloquent  indication  of  grow- 
in.p;  business  conlidence.  Enterpri.se  is  he- 
ginning  to  quicken  all  over  the  country 
Mills  are  resuming  work,  the  stock  atid 
bond  markets  are  firmer,  and  the  better 
times  for  w  hich  everybody  has  been  look- 
ing for  four  years  appear  to   be   in  sight. 

EXPERT  OPINION. 
Chicago  Chronicle:  If  Mrs.  Cora  Weed 
of  Iowa,  who  wishes  to  be  a  consul  is 
as  handsome  as  her  picture  makes  her 
out  to  l)e  she  should  be  persona  grata 
anywhere. 


NO  MODIFICATION  NEEDED. 
Chicago  Tribune:  ""Transmississippi" 
IS  a  long  word,  even  for  an  exposition. 
Can't  the  Omaha  people  shorten  the 
n«me  a  little  or  put  in  a  hyphen  for  a 
resting    i)lace? 


SHERIFFS    SALE    OF    REAL    ESTATE 
',NI)ER   JUDGMENT   OF   FORECLOS- 

State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Lotiis 


District   Court.    Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 
Fannie  S.  Janewav 

PlalntlflT, 

Columbia   Investment   Company 
■ind    Frank   Cia.ssw.ller   .-is  as- 

\ehtment  Company,   Insolvent. 
T^T^.j       ■     ^       ■  Defendant. 

bx^viM^./^f^'"''*-*',^''*'"'  '"•>'•  ""''''r  •«»<» 
er.V  1.^    .^  •■}  JU'lsment   and  decree  en- 

n  .  1,  .Wt'^'c'^^TT  .^"'ii'-'l  »«tlon  on  the 
until  day  of  October.  !«*:.  a  certifleil 
ranscrlpt  of  whi.h  has  been  delivered  to 

me.    I.  the  undersigned,   sheriff  of  said  St 


in  s.iid  county,  in  separate  parcels,  tho 
preniises  and  real  estate  described  , 
said    judgment     and    decree,     to-wit:     -All 


Proner""T!.H.-:Ji     ^hiVty-onr""  (131),  "buiuth 
i  roper.   Third   Division,   according  to  the 

fo-    Q. "V*'  "/  ^^^  register  of  deeds  in  and 
lor    St      Louis    County.     Minnesota.    The 

bt.    Louis    County.    Minnesota. 
Dated    March    3rd,    1897. 

WILLIAM  C.  SARGENT 
Sheriff  of  St.  Louis  County 

By  V.  A.  DASH. 

^■^7;  -^^^'M.    HARRISO-N.  ^'■""'*- 

Plaintiff's   Attorneys. 

A  "rV/-"^^'*""'"*^  Herald,   March-.V12-19-26- 


offlce   .seeking   is   busines.V  prosperit.v' and 
country      needs     a      vigorous    "appli- 


this 


ciUion    with   the   least    po.ssible   delay" 
.._.*'^'*'J/'""7^?'"'*''':     While  there  may  oe 


AN  UNSATISFIED  THIRST. 
Chicago  Times-Herald:  Ailvices  from 
Constantinople  say  that  the  sultan  is 
chafing  under  the  inaction  of  the  Eu-o- 
pean  powers.  No  wonder;  he  has  been 
comoelled  to  let  un  on  the  Armenian 
butcheries  until  he  .gets  the  Crete  <risis 
ofT  his  hands,  and  his  cutthroats  can 
hardly  be  restrained  from  pulling  off  an- 
other bunch  of  ma.ssacres  in  the  mean- 
time. 


TBB   ASYLUM     SCANDAL. 

The  members  of  the  legislature  dis- 
play a, strange  aversion  to  investigat- 
ing the  charges  of  corruption  in  con- 
nection with  the  Vote  whereby  the  loca- 
tion of  the  proposed  fourth  insane  asy- 
lum was  changed  from  .Anoka  to  Has- 
tings.   The  legislature  cannot  afford  to    area  of  twenty  acres,  and  is  about  two 
remain  silent  while  such  grave  accusa-    .mies  away  from  the  public  square  of 
tions  are  made  against  its  honor  and  in-  |  Nashville 
tegrity 


-A  well-known  clergyman,  Rev.  Dr. 
Rankin,  cites  in  the  Independent  the 
following  from  Longfellow's  journal: 
"As  I  was  standing  at  my   tiont  door 

a  lady 
In  black  came  up  and  asked:  Is  this 
the  house  where  Longfellow  was  born?" 
No,  he  was  not  born  here.'  "Did  he  die 
here?"  "Not  yet.'  'Are  you  Longfel- 
low?" *l  am."  "I  thought  you  died  two 
years  ago."  "' 


THE    TENNESSBB    EXPOSITION. 

The    international    exposition,    which 
is  scheduled  to  open  May  1  in  the  city 

of  Nashville,  promises  to  be  an  event  ["this  morning."  says  the  poet 
which  will  reflect  great  credit  upon 
the  people  of  Tennessee,  who  under- 
took the  enterprise  in  celebration  of 
the  one-hundredth  anniversary  of  the 
admission  of  their  state  into  the 
Union. 
The  site  of  the  exposition  covers  an 

Discouragements  for    the    opponents 
of  woman  suffrage  multiply.    Professor 
If   the    charges    are    true     i  o  '        h  ,  ,   '^^^    buildings    are   nearly !  Goldwin  Smith  has  been  writing  to  the 

it    tne    charges    are    true,    no  .  ready  and  last  week  a  track  was  laid    Toronto  papers  dilatlne  unon   the  «w 
doubt  there  are  some  members  who  do    to  the  site  of  the  government   building'  ^  ^ 

not  court  an  inquiry  which  would  re-  f^r  the  construcUon  of  which  and  a 
suit  m  the  presentation  of  evidence  that  government  exhibit  congress  appro- 
would  di-sclose  their  corrupt  actions,  but  |  priated  $130,000.  The  Greek  style  of  ar- 
the  great  majority  of  the  members  must  ,  chitecture  prevails  in  the  buildings  All 
be  free  from  such  fear,  and  they  should    but  the  Parthenon,  which  is  of  brick  are 


SPEAKER  REED. 

Indianapolis  Journal:  The  renomlnation 
of  Speaker  Reed  by  acclamation  and  the 


considerable    i)leasure    out    of  "the    delay 
ni   the  distribution   of  the  spoils  ' 

Minne:ii)olis  Times:  Impatient  office- 
seeking  patriots  should  not  grieve  undulv 
n^it.';  the  deliberation  with  whicii  the  ad^ 
mini.stration  is  moving  in  the  matter  of 
appointments.  There  is  sure  to  be  a  four- 


MODERN  AND  ANCIENT  SNOBBERY. 
Chicago  <"hronicle:  The  recent  publi- 
cation of  a  subscrintion  book  sold  at 
$1(HX»  and  $2,')00  u  copy  and  dealing  with 
the  world's  u!)p<r  ten  of  nobility  recalls 
a  description  of  a  Roman  book  canxiis- 
ser  in  the  days  of  the  empire:  ••The  snow- 
white  Mauritanian  steeds,  with  the  heav- 
ing flanks,  the  pointed  ears,  the  crimson 
nostrils,  are  reined  up.  From  the  char- 
iot descended  the  master,  who,  giving 
his  flowing  toga  an  extra  graceful  fold, 
entered  a  hou.se  on  the  Via  Aurelia. 
Presently  a  Scythian  slave  followed  his 
lord,  bearing  in  his  sturdy  arms  a  preci- 
ous fassiculus,  fully  illustrated,  up  to 
date,    and    superbly        bound 


M*^RTGAGE   FORECLOSURE  SALE.- 

Default  having  been  made  in  the  pav- 
^S!}\  ,  }l*^'  ^""^  '^f  one  thousand  nine 
uq\7-W  ""r^-three  and  16-100  dollars 
which  s  claimed  to  be  due  and  is  due  at 
the  date  of  this  notice  upon  a  certain 
mortgage  duly  executed  and  delivered  bj 
John  W.  Irwin,  of  the  county  of  It.i.s.a 
state    of    Minnesota 


ind 


mortgagor. 


y 

I. 
to 


Daniel  J.  Sullivan,  of  the  county  of  St 
Loui.s,  and  state  of  Mlnnesotte,  mort- 
gagee, bearing  date  the  21st  day  of  Oc- 
tober, in  the  year  of  our  Lord,  one  thou- 
sand eight  hundred  and  ninety-five,  and 
■with  a  jMiwer  of  sale  therein  contained 
duly  recorded  in  the  offi.ee  of  the  register 
of  deeds  in  and  for  the  county  of  St 
Loni.s  and  state  of  Minnesota,  on  the 
21th  day  of  October.  A,  D.  ISitt,  at  .s-4<t 
o  clock  a,  m.,  in  Book  93  of  mortgages 
on  page  433;  and  no  action  or  procee<linK 
having  been  instituted  at  law  or  other- 
wise to  recover  the  debt  .secured  by  .said 
mortgage  or  any   part   thereof. 

Now,  therefore,  notice  is  hereby  given 
that  by  virtue  of  the  power  of  sale  con- 
tained in  said  mortgage  and  pursuant  to 
the  statute  in  such  case  made  and  pro- 
vided, the  said  mortgage  will  be  fore- 
closed by  a  sale  of  the  premises  de- 
scribed In  and  conveyed  by  said  mort- 
gage, viz: 

Ail  those  tracts  or  parcels  of  land  ly- 
ing and  being  in  the  county  of  St.  Loiils 
and  state  of  Minnesota,  described  as  fol- 
lows, to-wit: 

An   undivided   one-half  Interest    In   lots 


in    Persian 

cloth.   It  was  a  Pliny  in  sixteen  volumes.  .  —  -— ^.. ^..^ 

a  subscription  book.  Such  were  the  meth-  H.'^s'"."*"''^^  thirty-one  (31)  and  thirtv-two 
ods  of  the  canyas.ser  in  the  palmy  davs  |  '"l^^ ,'"  block  numbered  nine  (9).  town  of 
of  Rome."   In  this  style  should   the  moil  '"""  '      "  -    -      - 


ern    book  of  snobs    be   hawked   about. 


insist    upon   an   investigation    that    will 
l>ring  «iut   the   whole   truth,    no    matter 
whom  it  affects. 
The  Minneapolis  Times  the  other  dav 


constructed  of  heavy  planking,  the  ex- 
terior being  finished  in  staff  of  pure 
white.  Dire<  tly  in  front  of  the  Parthen- 
on, for  the  fine  arts,  stands  the  collosal 


ful  consequences  to  society  which  must 
follow  If  women  should  be  allowed  to 
practise  law.  But  despite  his  opposi- 
tion, a  young  Toronto  woman.  Miss 
Clara  Brett  Martin,  has  been  admitted 
to  the  bar.  What  is  worse,  she  has 
just  won  her  first  case. 


published  an  interview  with  I.  A.  Cas-  |  figure  of  Pallas  Athene  by  Miss  -Aenid 

Yandell,  a  daughter  of  the  late  Dr.  L. 
P.  Yandell,  of  Louisville,  who  was  a 
Tennesseean,  the  building  and  figure 
being  an  exact  reproduction  of  tho.se 
that  crown  the  hill  at  Athens.  -Among 
the   notable  features  of  the  exposition 


well,  editor  of  the  Anoka  Herald,  in 
which  he  made  specific  charges  of  at- 
tempted bribery.  He  said  that  ex- 
Sheriff  Chapel,  of  St.  Paul,  attempted 
to  bribe  Sheriff  Block,  of  St.  Peter,  in 
a  room  adjoining  Judge  Sackett"s  office 


in  St.  Peter.     The  judge  overheard   the  j  are  to  be  the  woman"s  building,   which 
offer   and    he   alleges   that   an    affidavit     was  designed   by  a  woman   and    which 


One  of  the  two  young  women  who 
were  admitted  to  the  Suffolk  county, 
Mass.,  bar.  the  other  day,  says  her  am- 
bition is  to  become  a  perfectly  honest 
lawT,er.  We  shall  now  expect  to  hear 
some  cynic  ask,  with  a  sneer,  if  this 
does  not  prove,  what  has  so  often  been 
contended,  that  woman  is  wholly  unfit- 
ted for  the  practical  affairs  of  life. 


children's  building,  the  result  of  their 
G.  Dunham,  j  efforts;  the  commerce  building  one  of 
G.  H.  Wyman.  G.  W.  Swank,  S.  W.  Gil- 
patrick  and  E.  S.  Page.  Anoka;  Harris 
Richardson.  St.  Paul.  The  •publication 
occasioned  much  talk  and  has  not  as 
yet  been  denied  by  those  charged,  so 
far  as  The  Herald  has  noticed. 

Hon.  A.  N.  Dare,  editor  oT  the  Elk 
River  Star-News,  who  represents  Sher- 
burne  county   in    the     legislature,   also 


Legislative  life  is  robbed  of  much  of 
was    the   first   building  completed;    the    ^^^  monotony  by  the  disinterested  zeal 


of  outsiders  in  promoting  legislation 
Milwaukee,  Peoria  and  St.  Louis  are 
generously  supporting  representatives 
in  Des  Moines,  merely  to  impress  upon 
the  legislature  the  folly  of  permitting 
the  manufacture  of  booze   in   Iowa. 

Young  Sewall  wants  a  consular  ap- 


to  that  effect  is  in  existence.  Those  who 
were  told  the  story  by  Mr.  Block  were: 
Ed  Weaver,   Mankato;    D 

I 

the  largest  of  the  group,  591  by  256  feet 

the  agriculture   building,   also     of     the 

first   cl£iss;   the  auditorium     and       the 

building  devoted  severally  to  trans- 
portation,   machinery,     minerals       and 

forestry,    and    last,    but    by    no    means, 

least    in    interest,    is   the    negro    build-' ''"'"^'"^"^ '°'' ^^^'^^'"^ '"  ^'^^^  ^^^f^^t  of 

Ing.       This   is  one   of    the    handsomest  i  ^^^  father,  and  the  Omaha  World-Her- 

structures  of  the  whole  group  and  its^  ^'*^  thinks  he  should  have  It.  When  a 
makeschargesof  corruption  on  the  part  I  contents  will  show  specimens  of  workj^'^""^  ""a"  "J^e  Sewall,  Jr..  starts  out 
of   those    who   engineered    the   deal    in  !  done  by  the  negro  race  in  all  the  walks ^"^  advertise  himself  as     a     Jerusalem 

of  life.  I  pony  he  should  be  given  plenty  of  post- 

There    w  ill    also   be    many    novel    at- ;  '^^^  ^"^  acres  of  dead  walls 

tractions    for    the    diversion     of       the 

crowds  expected  to  visit  the  fair,   and 

there  is  no  doubt  that  large  numbers 

will    attend. 


favor  of  Hastings.    He  says  in  the  Star- 
News:        "Several   members   who   stood 
loyally  by  the  Sixth  district  in  this  mat- 
ter were  approached  by  parties  repre- 
senting Hastings  with  propositions  that 
there  was  "something  in  it'"  to  vote  for 
Hastings,  and   this   fact,   together   with 
the  further  fact  that  the  southern  part 
of    the   state    was    practically   solid   on 
geographical     grounds,     explains     the 
cause  of  the  defeat  of  Anoka.    This  is  a 
proposition  that  evidently  did  not  occur 
to  Commissioner  Powers  when  he  wrote 
his  book  on  the  'Purchasing  Power  ui 
Gold."     I  have  no  hesitation  in  saying 
that  it  was  the  most  outrageously  un- 
just act  perpetrated  by  the  house  this 
winter,  and  I  am  equally  as  sure  in  my 
own  mind  that  the  facts  and  equity  had 
less  to  do  with  the  result   than  many 
might   suppose.     Hastings  has  had   an 
industrious  and   not  overly  scrupulous 
lobby  here  all  winter,  and  by  veiled  in- 
sinuations of  fraud  on  the  part  of  the 
commission,  of  which  there  was  never 
a  scintilla  of  evidence  to  prove,  promis- 
ing votes  to  public  institutions  for  ap- 
propriations,  and    the   aid   of  St.    Paul 
and  a  big  bank  account  the  deed  was 


indicates  that   the  goou 

prevailed    .md    that    tht    ...„^„ ,,, 

in  the  safeguards  which  the  present  rule:, 
aflord. 

Washington  Star:  There  is  cause  for 
cr)ngratuIation  in  the  fact  that  as  the 
two  offices,  the  presidency  and  the  speak- 
ership, are  of  such  transcendent  weight 
in  our  scheme  of  government  they  should 
be  tilled  at  so  critical  a  time  iii  affairs 
by  two  men  who  understand  and  esto-^m 
each  other,  and  who  therefore  may  be 
expecteil  to  work  together  harmoniously 
for  the  general  welfare.  To  be  three  times 
speaker  of  the  house  Is  indeed  a  great 
honor,  and  to  dserve  the  honor  adds  to 
the    felicities    ol    the    occasion. 

St.  Louis  Globe-Democrat:  The  speaker- 
ship is  the  .second  office  under  the  gov- 
ernment in  dignity  and  power,  and  thit 
jiost  never  had  an  abler  or  worthier  in- 
cumbent than  the  man  who  today  will 
be  cho.sen  to  it  for  the  third  time.  Clav 
\\inthrop.  Blaine.  Carlisle  and  other 
men  who  have  held  the  office  have  been 
•among  the  greatest  statesmen  of  their 
day,  and  ^homa.s  B.  Reed  is  the  peer  of 
them  all.  He.  has  given  the  speakership 
a  loftier  rank  and  greater  potency  than 
it  hitherto  pos.sessed.  and  has  imparted 
to  it  a  new  attractiveness  for  statesmen 
of  commanding  ability  and  influence 

Philadelphia    Press:      Mr.      Reed      is     so 
great  a  debater  that   no  one  who  admin's 
sui)erb    parliamentary    fence    can    fail    to 
miss    him    from    the   floor    and    to    regret 
sometimes    th.it    he    is    not   there    to    illu- 
minate  discussion   with    the   lightning  of 
his    wit    and    to    relieve    dreariness    with 
the  bolts  of  his  logic.  But  he  Is  so  much 
more    powerful    and    useful    a-s    speaker 
that    men   consent    to  be   deprived   of   the 
Joy   of   his   debate    for   the   advantage   of 
his  captainship.     With  the  transformation 
which   has   been   gradually   going  on.    the 
speaker  has  come  to  exerci.se  almost  un- 
limited   power.     He    not    only    holds    ihe 
reins   over   the   house   in    the   pathway    it 
takes,    but   he  does   very   much   to   decide 
what   pathway   it   shall   follow.    He   Is   al- 
most as   great   a   power  in   legLslation   as 
the    president       is       in       administration. 
Through    his    committees    and    his    auto- 
cracy under  the  rules,   through  eves  tha* 
see  onl.v  what   he  wants  to  see  and  ears 
that  hear  only  what  he  wants  to  hear,  he 
is  well  nigh  ab.solute.  For  this  work  Mr 
Reed    has   supreme   genius.    His   overto-.v- 
erlng    intellectual     force    is    united     with 
ovtrtowering  will  and  determination.    He 
is    a    born    leader   of   men.    What    Is    still 
better,  his  power  has  been  exercised  with 
the    conscientious    purpose    to    serve    the 
public  Interests. 


;ense  ot  members  i  ^""^'^Jf'Ctionable.  will  be  allowed  to  "sei  ve 
majority    lieiieve    *^"t    their   terms 


A    BACHELORS   REFLECTIONS. 

New  \ork  Press:  A  woman  hates  io 
nave  a  tooth  filed  most  as  much  as  she 
does  to  cut  a  piece  of  lace. 

The  best  thing  in  the  world  to  keep  a 
man  out  of  business  "schemes""  is  a  wife 
and  babies. 

A.s  soon  as  a  bachelor  begins  to  reflect 
out  loiKl.  all  the  married  people  he  knows 
get  down  on  him. 

The  average  woman  would  wear  a  dress 
^■m  if"  "••''nKt',  peel  if  the  dressmakci- 
said  it  was  the  fa-shion. 

H.o^i!.'^",'^'"''"  ^''^J-^  ^^  hasn"t  made  up 
hi.s  miml  about  a  thing,  it  is  a  sign  he  has 
asked   his  wife  about  it 

When  a  man  is  away  on  a  trip  and 
does  .something  he  ought  not  to.  he  .siis 
down  and  writes  a  nice  letter  to  his  wife. 

SILVER  REPUBLICANS. 
Minneapolis  Press:  Since  the  provision- 
al organization  of  the  national  silver  Re- 
publicans,  that   political  organlzaffon   ha., 
materialized   in   many  purt.s  of- 'tfie  coun- 

.i7*.'"i  *^'',^'*'"''i^'<?-'*t'  Nebraska  takes 
the  lead  and  under  ttie  Tmvne^Teller  Du- 
bo|««  call,  a  provisional  coAimltl*?  for  -\o- 
^h^'^^""  •■•^"^'sting  of  RepF;Psentati\es 
^nX^e".  ^>""«te'-  and  Fi^nk  L.  Loomis 
r",^'*''?^*"'"^..^''-'"*^*  T.  -Ransom  and  E. 
V.  ..  '^^•"O"-  have  Is.suejft'  a  call  for  a 
meeting  for  conferertee  at  Lincoln.  Marcii 
^•oy^*""/.',  ("■o^'W'WnaJ  state  central  corn- 
el LS^  i^'ll  be  chosen,:  to  set  the  ball  roll- 
ing m  Nebraska. 

Minne.sota  will  shortly  follow.  National 
Chairinan  Hon.  O.  A.  Towne  is  shoitlv 
to  be  In  the  state,  when  undoubtedly  tlie 
initatory  -•jteps  will  be  taken.  That  for- 
mer Republicans,  all  over  the  United 
bt.ites  are  foremost  in  their  reorganiza- 
tl|jn  emphasises  the  earnestness  in  which 
they  will  remain  in  the  battle  for  bi- 
metallism and  monetary  reform  to  ihe 
end. 


LESSON   FROM  A  LADY. 
As  my  pet.  in  dresses  trailing. 
Tightly    clinging   to    the    railing. 
Of  the  stairs,  descends,  she  cries: 
"I'm   a   l:id.v— largest   size," 
Bonnet   tied   beneath   her  curls. 
Happiest  of  happy  girls. 
Hut  on  the  lowest  steps  she  slips; 
Ilealong  to   the  floor  she  trips. 

Finery  is  all   unheede<l. 
Tears  are  flowing  unimpeded. 
To  my  lap  she  straightway  flies. 
There  to  hide  her  tear-stained  eyes. 
"You're   a    lady:   musn't  cry.  " 
Answer  comes   with   a  sob  and  sigh, 
-\s    I   smooth    a    tangled   curl: 
"No;  I'm  just  your  little  girl." 

We  may  stride  with  plume  and  feather 
Proudly    through    the    sunnv    weather. 
Itiit   when   clouds   of   trouble   fall 
Round  about  us  like  a  pall, 
All   unheeded  garments  fine. 
Straight  we  .seek  the  breast   Divine; 
Far   from  worldly  cares  and   harms. 
Humble  children  in   His  arms. 

-JOSEPHINE    P-VGE. 


LOVE  AND  YOUTH. 
Love  roused  me  from  my  peai-eful  sleep. 
Sharp    was    the    pain    that    pierced    my 

heart. 
"Wake:"    cried    the 
depart!'" 
Then  o'er  a  thorny  path  and  steep 


god.    "Thou    Shalt 


is 


FREE    SUGAR   BEET    SEED. 

The  new  secretary  of  agriculture 
credited  with  being  an  enthusiast  on 
the  subject  of  sugar-beet  raising.  Sec- 
retary Wilson  thinks  that  our  soil  is 
peculiarly  adapted  to  growing  saccha- 
rine roots  and  will  do  his  utmost  to 
stimulate  active  interest  in  the  devel- 
opment of  sugar  beet  growing  with  the 
end  in  view  of  shutting  German  beet 
sugar  out  of  the  market.  One  of  the 
first  acts  upon  entering  office  was  to 
commi-ssion  a  special  agent  to  go  to 
Missouri  to  organize  the  farmers  into 
blocks  of  five  in  each  county  of  the 
state,  for  the  purpose  of  experimenting 
with  sugar  beets.  To  each  of  such 
blocks  of  five  he  will  forward  necessary 
seeds  to  sow  as  many  acres  as  they 
will  devote  to  sugar  beets,  conditioned 
upon  the  stipulation  that  at  the  end  of 
the  season  a  part  of  the  crop  shall  be 


It  is  generally  understood  in  Canada 
that  four  mayors  of  Canadian  cities 
will  be  knighted  by  Queen  Victoria  at 
the  celebration  of  the  sixtieth  anniver- 
sary of  her  coronation  next  June.  They 
are  Simon  N.  Parent,  of  Quebec;  R. 
Wilson-Smith,  of  Montreal;  Robert  J. 
Fleming,  of  Toronto,  and  Edward  Alex- 
ander Colquhoun,   of  Hamilton. 

It  is  now  said  that  Representative 
Draper,  of  Massachusetts,  will  be  ap- 
pointed minister  to  Spain,  but  will  be 
given  a  term  of  service  at  Havana  as 
consul  general  before  he  goes  to  Mad- 
rid. If  this  report  be  true.  ex-Governor 
Hubbard  may  yet  be  selected  to  go  to 
Italy. 


Rooms  are  quickly  rented  when  ad- 
vertised in  The  Evening  Herald.  It 
costs  but  1  cent  a  word. 

Have  The  Herald  in  your  homeB;  4f) 
«>nt*i  n  month 


It  is  rumored  that  David  B.  Hill  will 
be  a  candidate  for  congress  in  the  Al- 
bany district  next  year.  It  is  not  an 
improbable  story.  Those  who  imagine 
that  David  B.  is  dead  politically  will 
get  a  big  surprise  some  day. 

Criminal  lawyers  will  hail  with  joy 
the  new  theory  as  to  mental  ailments 


CULKINS  PLITM. 
St.  Cloud  Journal  Press:  It  is  announced 
froin  Washington  that  Congressman  Mor- 
ns has  recommended  Senator  W.  E.  Cul- 
kln  of  VVrlght  county  for  receiver  of  the 
Duluth  land  office  the  appointment  to 
be  made  in  a  few  days.  Senator  Culkin. 
It  will  be  remembered,  had  the  endorse- 
ment of  his  own  county  as  a  candidate 
lor  congress,  but  gracefully  withdrew 
when  It  was  deemed  advisable  to  nom- 
inate Morris,  and  Culkin  did  valiant 
work  for  the  whole  part.v.  No  man  in 
J  Sixth  district  has  a  better  record 
T^"1  "*s  appointment  to  a  position  In  the 
Duliith  land  office  will  be  a  recognition 
by  Congressman  Morris  that  the  Repub- 
licans in  this  section  of  the  district  will 
appreciate   and   commend. 


Love  bade  me  go.  In  vain  with  tears 
From  that  rough  road  I  turned  aside. 
Love    quickly    humbled    all    my    pride. 

Vet  in  a  whisper  calmed  my  fears: 

"I   .give  thee  youth  to  smooth   thv  wav,"" 
Thus  spake  the  god.  Fail  wan  the  morn! 
Rich  were  the  fields  with  golden  corn. 
With  radiant  hope  smiled  that  bright  day! 

Fair  was  the  morn  when  forth  I  went. 

Now.  dark  the  skies,  since -sad.  alone. 

Youth   I   no   longer  call   mv   own. 
Love's  service  all  my  strength  hath  spent; 
—MARTHA   A.    KIDE>KR. 


Hibbing,  according  to  the  recorded  tilat 
thereof  in  the  office  of  the  register  of 
deeds  in  and  for  said  county  of  St 
Louis,  excepting  and  reserving  thirty 
(30)  feet  of  the  north  end  of  said  lot 
thirty-two  (32),  extending  twentv-Hve  (r<) 
feet  west  on  same  lot  and  excepting  and 
reserving  ail  ores  and  minerals  beneath 
the  surface  of  said  lots  with  the  heredi- 
taments and  appurtenances;  which  sale 
will  be  made  by  the  sherilt  of  said  St 
Louis  County,  at  the  front  door  of  the 
court  house,  in  the  city  of  Duluth.  in 
said  county  and  state,  on  the  27th  dav 
of  March,  1897,  at  10  o"clock  a.  m.  of 
that  day.  at  public  vendue,  to  the  high- 
est bidder  for  cash,  to  pay  said  debt  of 
one  thousand  nine  hundred  thirty-three 
and  16-100  dollars  and  Interest  and  taxes 
■  If  any,  on  said  premises  and  twenlv-flve 
doll.nrs  attorney's  fees  as  stipulated  in 
and  by  said  mortgage  in  ca.se  of  fore<:los- 
ure.  and  the  disbursements  allowed  bv 
law;  subject  to  redemption  at  any  time 
within  one  year  from  the  day  of  salt 
as  provided  bv  law. 

Dated   February    12th.    1897. 

DANIEL  J.   SULLIVAN. 
JOHN  G.   WILLIAMS.  Mortgagee. 

Attorne.v    for    Mortgagee. 
Duluth      Evening     Herald,      Feb-12-19-26- 

March-5-12-19. 


POWDER 

Absolutely  Pure 

Celebrated  for  its  great  leavening 
strength  and  healthfulness.  Assures  the 
food  against  alum  and  all  forms  of  adul- 
teration common  to  the  cheap  brands. 
ROYAL  BAKING  POWDER  CO.,  NEW 
YORK.  .      .     .      I  ._ 


PATRIOTISM   OF   THE   GREEKS. 
New  York  Tribune:     Lord  Byron  found 
in  Greece  "The  sun.  the  .soil,  but  not  tiie 
slave  the  same;"  but  men  and  conditions 
have  changed  there  since  his  time.     Tiie 
Greek  is  no  longer  the  "craving,  crouch- 
ing slave"   whom   the  bard  found   skulk- 
ing about  the  scene  of  Thermopylae,  but 
.s   rather   like  one  of  the  300  who   made 
that    pass    a    place    of   deadly    memori-.s. 
There  is  not  a  patriot  from  Moesia  to  the 
Cytherean  isles  who  would  not  apparently 
brace    up    and    fight    all    the    continental 
powers    single-handed    if    need    were     re- 
viving the  traditions  of  valor  which   be- 
long  to    the    heroic    age    of    his    countrv. 
Even  her  dispersed  sons  as  far  off  as  the 
MissLssippI    and    the    mining    centers    -.f 
the    Rocky    mountains    feel    the    thrill    of 
patriotism    animating    their    bosoms,    and 
are  ready  to  take  ship  for  home  and  re- 
enact  the  courageous  exploits  of  Theseus 
and  Hercules.  It  is  no  longer  to  be  said 
of  the  land  that  "  'Tis  Greece,  but  living 
Greece  no  more."   It  is  verv  much  aUve, 
indeed,    with    a    determined    assertion    of 
vitality  which  the  great  powers  flnd  a  tri- 
fle Insubordinate,   but  which   public  opin- 
ion everywhere  greets  with  sympathy  and 
ardor. 


A  COLORADO  HINT. 
Denver  Times:  The  supreme  court  of 
Missouri  has  held  that  women  are  eligible 
to  any  office  in  the  state  from  which  thoy 
are  not  barred  by  statute.  This  is  uh 
easy  way  out  of  a  very  uneasy  difficulty. 
It  saves  election  costs.  campaigns, 
.schisms  In  families  and  encouragement 
of  drinking. 


^U?.?.^^^'S    SALE    OF    REAL    ESTATE 
U  NDER  JUDGMENT  OF  FOItECLOS 
URE.— 

State  of  Minnesota,  County  of  St.  Louis 

— ss. 

Di:strlct   Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    IM.s- 
trict. 
Michael  Helsler, 

,'  Plaintiff, 
vs. 
George    S.    Broughton    and    Mina 
Guernsey, 

Defendants. 
Notice  is  hereby  given,  that,  under  and 
by   virtue  of  a  judgrnient  and  decree   en- 
tered in  the  above  entitled  action  on  the 
tenth  day  of  March,  1897.  a  certifled  trans- 
cript of  which  has"  been  delivered  to  nie. 
I.     the    undersigned,    sheriff    of    said    St. 
Louis  County,  will  .sell  at  public  auction, 
to  the  highest  bidder,   for  "ash.  on  Mon- 
day,   the    26th    day    of    Anril.    1897.    at    10 
o'clock       in       the       forenoon       at       rhe 
front       door       of     the       court       house., 
in    the    city    of  Duluth,    in  said  oountv. 
in  one  parcel,   the  premises  and   renl  es- 
tate dei^cribed   in  .said  judgment   and   de- 
cree,   to-wit:   All   that    tract   or  parcel   of 
land  lying  md  being  in  the  county  of  St. 
Louis  and   state  of   Minnesota,    described 
as   follows,   to-wit:   All   that   part   of  lots 
two  hundred  and  sixty  (260)  and  two  hun- 
dred sixty-two  (262).  in  block  twenty  (20). 
in  Duluth  Proper.  Second  Division,  includ- 
ed  within   the   following   described    boun- 
daries,  to-wit:  Commencing  at  the  inter- 
section of  the  center  line  of  Third  street 
now  Garfleld  avenue  with  the  center  line 
of    Railroad    alley,    thence    northwesterly 
along  the  center  line  of  said  Third  strce"t 
to    a    point    sixty-seven    (67)    feet    distant 
at   right   angles,    from   the  center  line  of 
said    alley,    thence   northeasterly    parallel 
with    Michigan    street    to   a    point    fifteen 
(15)    feet    distant    at    right    angles    south-  i 
westerly    from    a    line    between    lots    two 
hundred    and       fifty-eight    (258)    and    two 
hundred    and    sixty    (260).    in    said    block 
twenty  (20).  thence  at  right  angles  south- 
easterly sixty-three  (63)  feet  more  or  less 
to  the  center  of  .said  alley,  thence  by  di- 
rect Ijne  to  the  place  of  beginning. 
Dated   March   11th.   1897. 

WM.  C.  SARGENT. 
Sheriff  of  St.  Louis  County 

By  V.  A.   DASH. 
DeiJuty. 
J.   H.   WHITELY. 
Plaintiff's    Attorney. 
412   Providence    Building. 
Duluth.  Minn. 
Duluth    Evening    Herald,    March -12-19-26- 
April-2-9-16. 


NOTICE   OF    MORTGAGE   SALE.- 

Default  has  been  made  In  the  condi- 
tions of  a  certain  mortgage  containing  a 
power  of  .sale  duly  made  and  delivered 
by  John  B.  Sutphin  as  guardian  of 
Charles  E.  Lindbeck.  Andrew  P.  Lind- 
beck.  Anna  L.  Lindbeck,  Frederick  Lind- 
beck and  John  D.  Lindbeck  mirtors. 
mortgagor,  to  A.  Buchanan,  mortgagee, 
bearing  date  the  19th  day  of  April.  1895. 
and  duly  Hied  and  recorded  in  the  office 
of  the  register  of  deeds  in  and  for  St 
Louis  County.  Minnesota,  on  the  17th 
day  of  May.  1895,  at  9:10  o'clock  a.  m.,  In 
Book  122  of  mortgages  on  page   280. 

And    whereas    said    default   consists    in 
the  non-payment  of  the  sum  of  one  hun- 
dred   eight    and    50-100       dollars    interest, 
which  became    due    and  payable     by  the 
terms  of  said  mortgage  and  the  notes  se- 
cured  thereby  on  October  19th,   1896.   and 
which    is    yet   due   and   owing   upon   said 
mortgage;  and  also  In  the  failure  to  pay 
ninety-four    and    28-100    dollars    premium 
for  insurance  upon  said  premises  as  pro- 
vided   in    said    morgage    and    heretofore 
paid  by  the  undersigned  thereby  becoming 
a  part  of  the  debt  secured  by  said  mort- 
gage; now  by  reason  of  said  several  de- 
faults   It    has     by    the     terms    of     said 
mortgage      become      optional    with      the 
holder   of   said   mortgage   and    mortgage 
notes   to  declare  the  whole  debt  secured 
by  said  mortgage  to  be  immediately  due 
and  payable,  in  the  exercise  of  which  op- 
tion the  whole  amount  of  said  debt  has 
been  declared  and  Is  hereby  declared  and 
claimed   to   be   due.    to-vfr^lt:   The   sum   of 
forty-four  hundred  ninety-nine  and  87-100 
dollars    principal    and    interest,    and    the 
sum  of  ninety-four  and  28-100  dollars  pre- 
mium      for       Insurance       as       aforesaid, 
amounting  In  all  to  the  sum  of  forty-flve 
hundred    ninety-four    and    15-100    dollars, 
which  amount  Is  claimed  to  be  due  upon 
said  mortgage  at  the  date  of  this  notice. 
And   whereas   no   action    or   proceeding 
at  law  or  otherwl.se  has   been  instituted 
to  recover  the  debt  secured  by  said  mort- 
gage or  any    part  thereof. 

Now,  therefore,   notice  Is  hereby  given 
that  by  virtue  of  said  power  of  sale  and 
pursuant     to     the    statute   in   such   ca.se 
made   and    provided,    the    said    mortgage 
will  be  foreclosed  by  a  sale  of  the  prem- 
ises therein  described  and  situate  In  St 
Louis  County,     Minnesota,     to-wlf     Lot 
number  three   hundred   twentv-flve   (325) 
in   block   number   fifty-three   (53).    Duluth 
Proper.  Second  Division,  according  to  the 
'■'ou'^^^fu     ^l'^^    thereof,     which     premises 
with    the    hereditaments    and      appurte- 
nances will  be  sold  bv  the  sherlfT  of  said 
.'-t.  Louis  County,  Minnesota,  at  the  front 
'.P2'"  w'  ^^'^^SJ";*  house,  of  said  county  in 
the  city   of  Duluth,    In   said  county   and 
state,  oil  Saturday,  the  twentieth  day  of 
March.  1897.     at    10    o'clock    In  the  for^- 
i?.H^'    **    ^"'''J^    auction    to   the    highest 
bidder  for  cash  to  pay  said  debt  and  in- 
terest.   Including     Insurance     so    paid    a.s 
aforesaid,  together  with  seventy-five  dol- 
lars   attorneys"    fee.    stipulated     in    said 
mortgage  to  be  paid  in  case  of  foreclos- 
ure,   and    the   disbursements    allowed    bv 
law;  subject  to  redemption  at  any   time 
within  one  year  from  date  of  sale  as  bv 
law  provided.  ' 

Dated  February  5th.  1897. 

A.  BUCHANAN. 
RICHARDSON  &  DAY,  Mortgagee. 

Attorneys    for   Mortgagee, 
Duluth.   Minn. 
Duluth      Evening      Herald. 
26-March-5-12-19. 


Feb-5-12-19- 


.        >^    ■     , 


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gHE     PULUTH     EVENiyg     HERALD:    FRIDAY,    MARCH  -  l<i. 


1897. 


A  Word  to  the  Wise 

Why  pay  $;\  48  and  $2.q8  when  you  can  buy  Men's  Sprine  Shoes  for 

FOR  MEN 


a. 


Men's  fine  Calfskin  Shoes,  all 
shapes  and  styles;  others  get 
$4.cx}  for  them;  our  price — 

$3.00. 


A.  J.   Miller   Will   Establish 

One  Between  Kettle  Falls 

and  Mine  Center. 


WISCONSIN  WOMAN  TRIES  EVERY 

METHOD  TO  SAVE  HER 

LIFE. 


SOFFERINGS  WERE  DREADFUL 


'«^*5l      -if'. 


P^^T 


fess 


':«:i;i.r.i.J- 


Men's  Stylish  Shoes,  all  shapes 
and  kinds,  lieavy  or  light  sole; 
others  get  $3.50;  our  price  only 

$2.50. 


1  ' 

Will  Operate    In    Connection  |""   Self-Inflicted   Torture   Was    Un- 

UIUU   I     I    u  .    ^  I         necessary -There  Was   a   Remedy 

WItn  J.  J.  Hayes     Crane  *>"»  she  Did  Not  Know  It-Dodd's 

,     ,       ^,  Kidney  Pills  Cured   Her,  and   Now 

Lake  Steamer.  she  is  Well  as  Well  Can  Be. 


Grand    Jury    Presents    Its 

Statement  and  Receives 

Its  Discharge. 


Gentlemen,  we  have  a  fine  line 
of  regular  $2  50  Shoes  which  we 
are  going  to  close  out  Satur- 
day at— 

$1.98. 


Frank   McCormIck  Is   After 

the   Contract   For   the 

Telejiraph  Line. 


Asliland.     \Vi 


Doc.    It;.— Pictiiro       ;iio 


FOR  LADIES. 


Ladies  new  Coin  Toe  Lace  and  Button  Shoes 
patent  or  dongola  tip,  hand  turn  or  welt    others 
get  J4  00;  our  price 

Lidies'  new  Coin  or  Sharp  Toe,  new  spring 
stvles  lace  and  button  Shoes,  all  sizes;  others 
get  $3.50;  our  price  only 

Ladies'  Fine  Dongola  Shoe?,  opera  or  razor  toe, 
heavy  or  light  sole,  very  stylish;  other  dealers 
get  $275  for  them;  our  price  only 


Misses'  Shoes.  BOYS'  SHOES. 


Misses  $2Shoesonly tl.25 

Misses'  Si.;o  Shoes  only.  ..(1.00 
Misses'  $1  Shoes  only 79^ 

CHILDREN'S  SHOES. 

Children's  $1  Shoes  only. . .  75^ 
Children's  75c  Shoes  only. .  5O0 
Children's  50c  Shoes  only. .    4O0 


J2  00  Shoes  only gi.25 

$ t.jo  Shoes  only g |  qq 

Sl.oo  Shoes  only TOo 

Infants'  Shoes  only  19c.  25c  and  40c. 

COMPARE  our  $3.uu  Shoes  with  tLo 
*(  0(>  Shoes  of  other  houses. 

COMPARE  onr  f2..W  Shoes  with  the 
S3..)0  Mioes  of  other  houses. 


3PEGIAL --  P*i".  ¥?■>'«  *^.G0  Shoes  that 


we  booKhf  for  half  their  regular 
price ;  we  put  them  on  sale  Saturday  at— 


REMEMBER-We  do  Just  as  we  advertise. 


$1.25 


THE 


FAMOUS  SHOE  STORE. 


111  WEST  SUPERIOR  STREET. 


HAVE  NOTJTHE  POWER,      j    KINDERGARTEN  MEETING. 

County   Board    Cannot    Issue  Teachers.  Mothers  and  Others 
Poor  House  Orders.  to  Meet  Tonight. 


sayinK     that     the 
lx)und  to  build     a 


') 


The  county  commissioners  held  a  spe- 
cial meetins  yesterday  afterno<.n  to 
consider  the  building  of  a  new  poor 
house  and  hospital.  Proptisals  were 
received  in  executive  session  from  V 
J.  I'pham  &  Co.  and  Hartman  &  Patter- 
son to  take  the  temporary  loan  notes 
provided  the  legality  of  the  notes  was 
established. 

County  Commissioner  Williams 
moved  to  re.scind  the  a-.tion  taken  at 
the  previf>us  meeting  appointing  a 
junketing  committee  and  iToviding  for 
securing  plans. 

-Mr.    Dinham    took   the  floor   and   de- 
fended   the   project, 
county  was  in  duty 
suitable  jw>or  house. 

Commissioner  Williams  wanted  to  go 
on  record  as  t>eing  opposed  to  the  pro- 
position, and  Messrs.  Hauppi  and  Berg 
took  opposite  sides.  As  Commissioner 
Morcom  was  absent  this  made  an  equal 
divi.sion  of  the  board,  but  Mr.  Will- 
iams' motion  failed  of  a  second  so  it 
was  snowed  under. 

N.  J.  rpham  &  Co  offered  to  pay  par 
for  6  per  cent  notes  if  they  were  legal, 
but  the  attorneys  are  agreed  that  under 
the  present  law  they  would  not  be  le- 
gal, so  it  was  decided  to  appeal  to  the 
legislature.  The  board  instructed  Act- 
mg  County  Attorney  Phelps  to  draw 
up  a  bill  to  send  to  the  local  represen- 
tatives with  a  request  for  them  to  put 
it  through.  The  bill  will  allow  counties 
to  i.ssue  temporary  loan  notes  in  am- 
ounts not  to  exceed  2U  mills  of  the  as- 
se.<-;ed  valuation,  for  the  purpose  of 
building  a  po<jr  house  or  hospital  or 
b«'th.  The  notes  are  to  run  not  to  ex- 
ceed five  years  and  the  interest  is  not 
to  exceed  6  per  cent,  payable  semi-an- 
nually. The  bill  also  provides  for  a 
special  taxing  of  not  less  than  one-half 
mill  to  be  made  each  year. 

The  board  adjourned  until  its  April 
met-ting.  until  which  time  it  can  do 
nothing. 


A  meeting  will  be  held  in  the  kinder- 
garten rooms  of  th,^  Jackson  school  to- 
night   In    the   interest   of   kindergarten 
work    in    Duluth.   The    idea   is    to    give 
parents  and  other.s   who  are  interesteti 
a  l>etter  idea  of  the  kindergartens  and 
their  aims  and  result.^.  The  benefits  of 
the    kindergarten    in    the   home,    school 
and    chunh    will    be    discussed.    Mem- 
beis  of  the  school  board  will  talk  upon 
"How    the    Kindergarten    Trains      For 
<Jood    Citzenship."    R.    E.    Denfeld    will 
I  talk    upon    -What    the      Kindergarten 
j  Has  Aconiplished  in  Duluth."  and  Mrs. 
I  J.    D.    Titcomb    will    <liscuss   "Discipline 
'"  ./he    Horn.'      and        Kind«|rgarten.- 
I  while   Dr.   Humason.   Mrs.    Bishop     and 
i  others    will   speak   brieflv.   The   kinder- 
igartens   wil  furnish  music.   Miss  Bak.-r 
will  read  from  Kate  Douglas  Wiggins' 
story  -Patsey"  and  Henry  Brearly  will 
!  sing. 

i  The  astronomical  section  of  the  Du- 
luth Historical  and  Scientific  associ- 
ation will  hold  its  first  meeting  to- 
night. 

Ravelings.  a  juniot   class  publication 
appeared  at  the  high  school  yesterday.' 


Setting  of  Cases. 

The  following  ca'l  of  court  cases  has 
been  made  for  next  week  in  the  dis- 
trict  court: 

Monday— 2,  10.  11.  12.  21,  22,  23,  24,  23. 
26. 

Tuesday— 31.   24,    36,   39,   40,   43,   45,   46. 

4S.   49. 

Wednesday— 52,  54.  57,  62,  63,  64,  66, 
67.  68,  69. 

Thursday— 70.  72.  73.  75,  77,  79.  80,  SI, 
85.   93. 

Friday— 98,  99,  100,  103,  107,  116,  117. 
31*<.   119.  12.'. 


Dr.  Bull's  Cough  Syrup  has  alwavs 
been  kept  up  to  the  standard.  It  is 
the  same  it  was  forty  years  ago,  the 
best  sold. 


■  ■  -    •      ■  r'    •  •    >- 


ECZEMA 

Most  Torturing,  Disfiguring, 
Humiliating 
Of  itching,  burning,  bleeding,  scaly  skin 
and  scalp  humors  U  instantly  relieved 
by  a  warm  bath  witli  Cuticlra  Soap, 
a  single  application  of  Ccticuba  (oint- 
ment), the  great  skin  cure,  and  a  full  dose 
of  Clticcka  Resolvext,  greatest  of  blood 
purifiers  and  humor  «iues. 

(yticura 

Kkmebixs    speedily,    permanently,   and 
economically  cure,  when  all  else  fails. 

POTTIR  D«CO  AWB  COKM.  COKP..  8oI«  Prt>p«..  BoatoB. 
•^'*  How  to  Cure  Every  Skin  ana  Blood  Humor,'  fr««. 


At  Maynard  Hall. 

The  enieitainment  given  by   the   pri- 
mary and  intermediate  departments  of 
Maynard    hall,      yesterday      afternoon 
was  a  delightful  afftiir,  reflecting  gnat 
credit    on    the    young    folks    who     took 
l>art.   Th»-   i)rogram   began   with  a   play 
entitled   "No  Cure.  Xo  Pav."  the   prin- 
cipal role  in  which,  that  of  the  fashion- 
able invalid,   was  tJiken  by  Miss  Cath- 
erine   Macfarlane.   A    farce  entitled   "\ 
Precious    Pickle"    was    also   given    and 
was    highly    enjoyetl.       Miss   Catherine 
hchenck.   in   the  role  of   a  colored   wo- 
man,  was  excellent.   A  minuet,   danced 
l>>    Anna    Macfarlane.    Jessie    Hartley 
Helen  Marble  and  Julia  Hunter    elicit- 
ed great  applause.   Marnie  Ray   gave  a 
recitation  in  French  and   Fanny   Hicks 
Crosswell  one  in  German.  The  program 
closed  with  a  sunflower  song  in  which 
the   primary   department    took   part     \ 
living  illustration   of  a   sunflower  pro- 
duced  a  happy   f>ffect.   About    I.jO   per- 
sons   Were    present. 

Culver's  Rink  Won. 

In  the  fiiack  medal  contest  at  the 
curiing  rink,  C.  W.  Culvers  rink  de- 
feated Charles  McMillen's  rink  yes- 
terday afternoon  by  a  score  of  14  to  10. 
Culver  was  ab.sent  and  F.  W.  Bold- 
rick.  who  plays  third  for  him.  skipped 
the  rink.  The  players  were:  C.  A.  Dun- 
can. A.  H.  Smith.  L.  W.  Rolleston.  F. 
VV.  Boldrick.  skip;  F.  McLaren.  D.  r. 
Cutler.  C.  v..  Wodruff.  Charies  McMii- 
len.  skip.  This  brings  C.  W.  Culver'.^ 
nnk  into  the  finals  and  he  must  plav 
n.  J.  MacLeod  to  determine  who  gets 
the   medal. 

The  ice  is  in  pretty  bad  condition, 
being  sticky.  It  requires  considerable 
force  to  get  a  stone  down  the  ice  Un- 
less there  should  be  another  cold  snap 
the  season  may  be  put  down  as  closed. 

A  Masque  Ball. 

The  "Our  CiicK"  Whi.st  club  gave  a 
masquerade  fmll  last  evening  at  the 
Kalamazoo  block  hall  in  honor  of  the 
festival  of  Purim.  About  sixty  were 
present  and  the  costumes  were  remark- 
ably good.  The  ball  room  presented  a 
brilliant  scene  and  everyone  was  hand- 
somely entertained. 


A.  J.  Miller  has  g..n<-  to  Rainy  Lake, 
where  he  intends  establishing  a  steam- 
boat line  to  run  from  Kettle  Falls  to 
Mine  Center.  He  has  a  boat  hull,  cap- 
able of  accommodating  about  fifty  pas- 
sengers in  which  machinery  will  be 
placed  in  time  to  have  it  ready  for  busi- 
nes  by  the  opening  of  navigation.  It 
u  111  be  run  in  connection  with  Capt.  J. 

bou^l^tni''^'''^'"*'''  ''"  ^''■^"^  ^-ake.  Both 
.(.at.s  uiii  connect  with  the  stage  line 
that  will  operate  between  Lake  Ver- 
milion and  Crane  lake,  all  to  be  con- 
ne<ited  with  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range 
\  er^llion  steamboat  line  on  Lake 

bnVi7«''.'*'*"  '"t^it'on  of  Capt.  Hayes  to 
I'u  Id  a  larger  boat  f..r  u.se  th-  coming 
season  but  he  has  decided  to  enlarge 
the  old  one.  making  it  as  big  as  the  one 
owned  by  Mr.  Miller,  and  to  be  ope.ated 

making'',"""  ''''^  •'•  These  boat... 
making  elose  connection     with     trains 

eLsv  ^"'"'*^  f  '^"^^*"-'  ^^"'  «"ovide  an 
eas>  means  of  communication  between 
this  city  and  the  gold  fields,  with  the 
exception  of  the  stretch  of  twenty! 
three  miles  between  Vermilion  lake  an.t 
I  C  lane  lak..  The  expenditure  eon- 
,  templated  by  the  county  commissioner!* 
f»r  the  iini.i-ovement  of  this  road  will 
relieve  the  trip  of  many  of  its  disagree- 
able features. 

Frank  McCormick  will  leave  here  fo^ 
lower  in  a  day  or  two  for  the  purpose 
ot   inspecting  the  route  of  th>^  propose.! 
telegraph   line,  connecting  T.,wer  with 
Mine  Center.     He  will   put   in  a  bid   for 
he  construction  of  the  line,  and  lio|.e.s 
to  get  the  contract.     The  plans  of  the 
P  omoter.s  of  this     enterprise     contem- 
plates laying  a  cable  under  Rainv  Lake 
to    Seme   city,    which    can    be   done   at 
small  expense.     The  telegraph  line  is  to 
>e  built  by  private  enterprise,  a  num- 
i»er  of  Tower  business   men  and   prop, 
erty  owners  in  the  gold  country  havinc 
undertaken  it.  '^^'"t^ 

American  railroads  that  will  profit  by 
the  expec-ted    rush    to   the    Rainy    Lake 
country   have  been  slow   in   publishing 
maps   and   other  information   concern- 
["u.'*^  "L  ^^'^  respect  being  somewhat 
behind  their  Ca-.adian  competitor,    the 
Canadian   Pacific,    which    has   isued     a 
handsome     colored     folder,     containing 
many  facts  that  will  prove  of  value  to 
the     prospective       gold       hunter.       The 
Omaha  road  has  a  Rainv  Lake  folder 
in   press,    however,    that    will   be   ready 
for  distributicm  in  a  short  time,  and  it 
IS  expected  that  competing  lines  will  be 
quick      to      follow      its    example.     The 
Omaha  folder  will  contain  an  excellent 
map  that  is  d-signed  to  show  the  inani, 
fold   advantages   of   the    Duluth-Tower 
route  over  that  of  the  (^anadian  Pacific 
and   Fort   Francis  steamboat  line. 

Talk  of  a  wagon  road  from   Hibbing 
to    Rainy    Lake   City   is   being  revived 
and  it  is  said  that  the  Duluth.  Mesaba 
&    Northern   is   interesting  itself  in    it 
as  it  would  open  a  way  for  it  to  get  a 
share   of   the   business,    which   now   all 
goes  to  the  Duluth  &  Ircm  Range. '  An 
effort  will  be  made  to  get  an  appropria- 
tion for  this  road  through  the  legisla- 
ture,   but    it   is   not   likely   that   it    will 
prove      successful.      A    good    highway 
from    Hibbing   to   Rainy     Lake     would 
also  give  the  Duluth-Superior  &  West- 
ern and  Duluth,  Mississippi  &  Northern 
a  chance  to  compete  for  this  business, 
and    would    relieve    travelers    from    St. 
Paul  and  Minneapolis  and  all  southern 
points    of   the    necessity    of   coming   to  > 
Duluth.     However,  a  road  from  Hibbing 
would  not  make  that  route  popular  for 
travelei-s,  although  it  might  be  used  to 
a   large   extent   for   freight    traffic.    As 
stated  in  The     F:vening     Herald     some 
time  ago  there  is  some  likelihood  of  the 
Duluth,  Missabe  &  Northern  extending 
its  line  to  Rainy  Lake,  which  seems  to 
be  the  only  means  it  has  of  getting  a 
fair  share  of   the  business  developing 
there. 


honors  of  self-.«tarv;ition:  Abst.-iiniiig 
from  food  not  beeanse  you  don't  w.iiu 
it.    but    befiiiise   you    ciilit   eat   ii. 

Thjif.  briefly  is  the  distre.ss  In  which 
Mr.s.  George  Reany.  of  L'lll  Kast  Thin! 
street,  this  town.  foiin<l  li.rself.  Her  ro.-^- 
tonition  to  health  is  the  reigning  seiis..- 
tioii  of  the  hour  in  this  imrt  of  Wiscon- 
sin.    ,She    h;id    been    ill    .seventeen    years. 

Wh.it  cured  her?  Let   liec  tell. 

MOW    SHK    W.AS    .M-KLICTi.:D 
"To  your  cOrrespoiKlem   .Mrs.  Reanv  told 
this   remarkable  tale: 

■f  had  be«>n  in  jmor  h.-alth  sevent««n 
yeRrs  suffering  all  the  time.  Had  f.iken 
medkine  tor  lung  di.seas.'.  liver  and  .stoni- 
aeli  trouble,  heart  disease  and  fern  tie 
eomi.Iai.it..  Kveiy  physician  had  soii.e 
different    name    for   mv   malady. 

"Wd  they  cure  me?  No!  |  was  get^^iiiK 
worse  all  the  time.  I  began  taking  patent 
medicines.  Everything  was  a  failure  1 
was  bloated  all  the  time,  and  so  short 
of  breath  an.l  weak  that  I  could  not  saiV- 
ly  leave  home.  If  I  went  i..  vi.sit  a  neisrh- 
bor  I  would  be  certain  to  have  a  weak 
spell,  and  sometimes  had  ilitficulty  to  ''et 
home.  I  coul.l  not  bear  my  clothe.s  on 
and  my  nerves  were  in  a  terrible  state' 
My  eyesight  failed  mc  and  1  could  get 
no  relief  except  when  I  refrained  fioin 
eating  and   drinking. 

"1  wa.s  starving  myself  all  .summer.  If 
I  ate  the  le.ist  little  thing,  or  toott  a 
ornik  of  water.  I  wouM  suffer  for  da-s 
Could  not  sleei.  at  nights.  Kven  on  fioi 
nisrhts  in  summer,  I  had  to  have  a  lire 
on.  and  sit  with  my  le,  t  in  hot  mus- 
tard water  to  keep  from  having  »hills  1 
had  nervous  h.vsteria  until  I  would  think 
I   could   live  no  longer. 

WHAT  CIRKI)   UKR. 

'wa.s    weak    and    .ilniost    .starved       to 

<lcath  when   I   read  in   the  Shelburne   Free 

r.ss   of   the   wonderful  ciues    made       •)»• 

DODDS    KIDXKY    PIIJ„S.    I    sent    to   To- 

n.nto    for    two    boxes.    The    lirst    )>,,x    ..- 

I'ved    me    of    all    the    bloating.    ;ind'    full 

lee  ing    in    my   stoma,  h.    I    l>eKan    t..      at 

and  s  <-ep.     1  sent  for  more  pills  and   now 

am   able   to    visit    my    neighbors    and    <  an 

walk    (luife    a     distance.     li     is    just     one 

month  since  I  began  tu  s"  out  niu\   I  feel 

^'\V^i\':\L  "'     '     ''•"'     "'"     t-iken     UODDS 
KIDNK'i    PILLS   I  <-oul.l  have  lived  but  a 
short   time  longer. 
"I   thank  God  for  the  relief  given  m.^    1 

vr'v".V,".'V  J'""  "i"'ker  of  UODDS  L-ID- 
Ai-.\  1  ll.l.b.  as  1  owe  my  life  Ut  them. 
Dnrins    tlie    seventeen    vears    that    I    wis 

'."u'  ,^^;'.*?  '"'^■'■'"  'o'"'  •>>  -"'.v  doctor  that 
I  had  Kidney  Trouble.  Now  I  know  that 
that  was  the  cause  of  all  mv  suffering" 


It  Criticizes  Bids  and  Con 

tracts  For  the  Miller 

Trunk  Road. 


Persona!  Tax  Case  Afjainst 
ttie  Water  Company  Dis- 
cussed at  Length. 


DODD'S  KIDNEY  PILLS  are  now  on 
sale  at  every  drug  store  in  this  vicinity 
or  they  may  be  obtained  by  addre.s.-siik'^ 
the  DODDS  MEDICINE  CO..  i.f  [he 
}."!j<f  St'.tes.  (a8-<M2  Kllicott  sqM.ire: 
I.uflalo.  N.  ^.  Price  50  <  ents  a  box  Hi'lf 
a   dozen   boxes  $2..^J.  ^>,     " 


AMUSEMENTS. 

"THE  DEVILS  AUCTTON.' 
Next  Monday  and  Tuesday  Charles 
H.  Tales  "Forever  Devil's  Auction" 
company,  as  he  is  pleased  to  call  the 
famous  spectacle  this  year,  will  appear 
at  the  Lyceum.  Among  the  new  sjcenio 
features  offered  for  this  season  is.  "The 
Cavern  of  Gigantic  Heads."  "The  Magic 
Vaults  of  i?enedictine."   "The  Gardens 

of   the    Blue   Dragon, Phe   Palace   of 

Roses,"  and  a  magnificent  transforma- 
tion scene  of  eight  distinct  changes 
which  for  novelty  of  conception,  beauty 
in  design  is  undoubtedlv  the  hand- 
somest and  grandest  pictorial  illustra- 
tions of  the  realms  of  fairyland  ever 
presented.  The  bicycle  craze  is  aptly 
burlesqued  and  pantomimely  illustrat- 
ed. The  main  point  in  the  success  of 
the  "Bicycle  Craze"  is  that  it  is  timely 
while  the  subject  itself  is  treated  in 
such  an  absurd  manner  as  to  prove 
more  than  funny  to  the  most  blase 
theater-goer. 


The    grand    jury    adjourned    at    4:30 
yesterday    afternoon,      presenting       a 
short   report,   five   indictments   and   re- 
ports of   no   indictments   in   six   cases. 
Those  thus   released   from   the  charges 
against  them  were  William   Meinhardt 
and    Norman      Murray,      accused        of 
gambling,    and    Frank    Willett,    Hugh 
Cameron,    Martin    C.    Miller   and    John 
McDonough.    charged    with       soliciting 
bribes.   The   five   indictments   were   not 
given   out.    but   it   is   understood     that 
two   of   them    are   against    Pat    Liston 
and    J.    D.    Zein,    accused    of    sulTering 
gambling   instruments   on   their    prem- 
ises.   The    report    follows: 

"In  compliance  with  the  instructions 
of  the  court  we  have  not  investigated 
the  condition  of  the  jail,  poor  house 
or  other  matters  in  and  about  the 
court  hou.se,  they  having  so  recently 
been  investigated  and  reported  upon 
by  the  last  grand  jury.  We  have  given 
our  chief  attention  to  the  routine  busi- 
ne.ss  that  has  come  before  us.  and  in 
the  discharge  of  that  duty  have  con- 
sidered twenty-two  criminal  cases, 
have  examined  6ver  100  witnesses  and 
f<.und   fifteen   indictments. 

"The  jury   has   had    before     it     com- 
plaints   from    reputable   citizens   in    re- 
gard  to  many  things  that  were  proper 
subjects    foF    investigation.        Commit- 
tees   were    apfiointed    to   examine     the 
capes    and    report    at    am     adjourned 
meeting    whether    th^    evidence      pre- 
sented   would    warrant    further    inves- 
ligati()n.   Our  report  in  regard  to  some 
01    the.se   ca.ses.    in    its   criticisms     and 
recommendations    shows   the    result    of 
the    committee's    work.    In    regard      to 
others,   considering  the   instructions  of 
the  court,  which   indicated  a  desire  for 
a  short  session,  we  have  thought  it  not 
wise    to    make    further      investigation 
and    therefore    make    no    reoort    upon 
them.   We  have   though,    so    far  as   we 
konw.    not   neglected    action   upon    any 
<ases    where    such    action    would    sup- 
plement   or   strengthen    the       valuable 
work  of  the  last  grand   jury 

CAN    SUPPRESS    GAMBLING. 
This  jury  desires  that   the  cases  of 
wrong    doing,    which    that    grand    jury 
.rought   to  light,   be  fully  investigated 
■—    the    court   and    that    its   recomend 


IF  YOU  HAVE  HEARD 

of  the  great 
popularity  of 

"Canadian 
Club" 
Whislcy 

and  feel  disposed  to  try  it. 

If  you  are  already  one  of  Its 
admirers, 

BEWARE 

of  the  counterfeits  of  our  labels 

and  capsules. 

They  are  very  dangerous. 

So  is  the  whisky  the  public  are 

thereby  Induced  to  purchase. 

You  can  Invariably  tell 

"CANADIAN  CLUB" 

by  its  fine  quality. 
When  you  find  apparently  good 
labels  but  undoubtedly  bad 
whisky,  please  write  to  us. 

MIRAM  WALKER  &  SONS.  LlmM. 
Walkerviile.  Cuiad*. 


Gronseth  &OlseD 

CASH  GROCERS, 

401-403  EAST  FOURTH  STREET. 
TELEPHONE  292.  EsUblishid  1887. 


__  USE 

BIG  WOI^DS 


parties  above  named  to  stii)ulate  the 
facts  in  the  case  as  they  agree,  or  to 
abandon  the  agreement  and  place  the 
case  on  the  calendar  for  the  May  term 
of  court  and  have  it  tried 
CANNOT  UNDERSTAND  DELAYS 
"The  jury  cannot  understand  why 
these  delays  and  omissions  occurred 
The  county  attorney  and  his  assistant 
have  entire  control  of  all  actions  in 
which  the  county  is  interested,  unless 
they  are  placed  in  the  hands  of  some 
other  attorney  esfjecially  employed  by 
the  county  commissioners. 

"There  are  other  cases  pending 
against  the  gas  and  .water  company  for 
the  taxes  of  other  years:  in  fact  the 
taxes  now  due  from  said  c(mipany  ag- 
gregate, with  interest  and  penaltie-? 
about  $60,000. 

"The  county  of  St.  Louis  has  $232  . 
462.90  in  insolvent  banks;  the  city  of 
Duluth  has  $90..^84.69  tied  up  in  the  same 
manner.  An  investigation  by  the 
grand  jury  shows  that  suits  are  pend- 
ing for  the  adjustment  of  these  claims 
As  these  amounts  are  so  large,  it  is 
probable  that  all  kinds  of  pressure  and 
every  known  legal  <.bstacle  will  be  in- 
terposed to  delay  and  oppose  the  efforts 
of  the  county  commissioners  and  the 
city  council  to  realize  anything  from 
this  source.  We  therefore  urge  the 
county  commissionei-s  and  the  city 
council  to  i)ay  .strict  attention  to  these 
facts. 

FRANK   L.   CAREY. 
Foreman. 
Duluth.   Minn..   March  IS.   1897. 


Land  your 
fist  on 
the  hearts. 
You  are 
liable  to 
get  Fitz. 

Don't 


.  The  best  gets  Fitz  in  fights.  Corbett 
IS  not  a  corpse  yet.  We  have  no  time 
tor  pugilists  nor  bull  fights.  The  animal 
powers  should  not  predominate  man. 
Irain  the  brains  and  you  will  reach  your 
biuthers"  hearts  a  good  deal  ««s<Vr.  We 
are  in  the  fight  too,  we  are  trying  to  serve 
our  patrons  with  the  best  eatables  in  the 
market  at  the  lowest  prices. 


by 


NO  FAITH  GORE 


GEORGE  R.  WENDLING. 
Next  Wednesday  evening  George  R. 
Wendling  will  lecture  at  the  First 
Methodist  church  on  'Saul  of  Tarsus." 
it  being  a  discussion  of  orators  and 
oratory.  The  Harrisburg,  Pa.,  Tele- 
graph said  of  this  great  lecture:  "All 
agreed  that  a  more  eloquent  speaker 
has  never  been  heard  in  Harrisburg. 
He  led  his  audience  from  city  to  city 
painting  the  progress  of  St.  Paul  in 
vivid  language  and  presenting  wonder- 
ful word  pictures.  It  was  such  a  lec- 
ture as  one  never  forgets— not  only  be- 
cause of  its  eloquence,  but  also  for  the 
remarkable  way  in  which  facts  were 
presented." 


ABOUT 


STUART'S   OYSkEPSIA 
>  LETS. 


TAB- 


They  Cure  Stomach  Troubles  and  indiges- 
tion Anyway.  Whether  You  Have  Faith 
in  Them  or  Not. 


PIMPLY  FACES 


Fuiiflcd    kad     Bcaatifird    Dy 

cuticl'Ba  soap. 


WHAT  WE  SUFFER  FROM. 
Nearly  all  disea.ses  are  curable,  but 
only  the  specialist  who  has  devot-d 
his  life  to  their  study  can  treat  them 
with  uniform  success.  Dr.  Greene,  of 
3.^  West  Fourteenth  street.  New  York 
city,  the  most  distinguished  specialist, 
is  world  famed  because  of  his  cures. 
\yhy?  Because  he  has  studied,  inves- 
tigated and  discovered  the  true  rem- 
edies for  the  cure  of  diseases.  You 
can  consult  Dr.  Greene  personally  or 
by  letter,  free.  He  has  developed  the 
most  perfect  and  successful  system  of 
cure  through  correspondence.  Write 
him  if  you  desire  to  be  cured. 


Mere  faith  will  not  digest  your  food 
for  you,  will  not  give  you  an  appetite, 
will  not  increase  your  flesh  and 
strengthen  your  nerves  and  heart,  but 
Stuarfs  Dyspepsia  Tablets  will  do  these 
things,  because  they  are  composed  of 
the  elements  of  digestion,  they  contain 
the  juices,  acids  and  peptones  neces.sary 
to  the  digestion  and  assimilation  of  all 
wholesome  food. 

Stuarts  Dyspepsia  Tablets  will  digest 
food  if  placed  in  a  jar  or  bottle  in  water 
heated  to  98  degrees,  and  they  will  do 
it  much  more  effectively  when  taken 
into  the  stomach  after  meals,  whether 
you  have  faith  that  they  will  or  not. 

They  invigorate  the  stomach,  make 
pure  blood  and  strong  nerves,  in  the 
only  way  that  nature  can  do  it,  and 
that  is,  from  plenty  of  wholesome  food 
well  digested.  It  is  not  what  we  eat, 
but  what  we  digest  that  does  us  good. 

Stuarts  Dyspepsia  Tatdets  are  sold 
by  nearly  all  druggists  at  50  cents  for 
full  sized  package,  or  by  mail  from  the 
Stuart  company,  Marshall,  Mich. 

Maccabees'  Masquerade. 

Duluth  Tent,  No.  1.  Knights  of  the 
Maccabees,  gave  a  masquerade  ball  last 
evening  in  the  Kalamazoo  block,  to 
which  all  the  members  of  the  order  in 
the  city  were  invited.  There  were 
about  150  guests  present  in  costume. 
The  music  was  furnished  by  Hurl- 
bert's  orchestra.  Supper  was  served  in 
the  hall  on  the  upper  floor.  The  enter- 
tainment committee  was  compQsed  of 
C.  J.  Hector,  I.  N.  Chellew,  F.  Savard 
and  A.  F.  Dorner.  The  floor  commit- 
tee were  H.  Harrington  and  J.  McDon- 
ald. 


ROBERT  CLUFF'S  DEATH. 

He  Was  a  Sober,  Industrious 
Young  Man. 

The  Herald  has  received  a  letter  from 
C.  P.  De  Laittre,  of  Aitkin,  taking  ex- 
ception to  a  statement  in  a  Grand 
Rapids  dispatch  respecting  the  death 
of  Robert  Cluff  from  freezing.  Mr.  De 
Laittre  says: 

"That  report  does  great  injustice  to 
the  young  man.  Mr.  Cluff  came  here 
from  Woodstock,  N.  B..  several  years 
ago  and  is  well  and  favorably  known 
about  here  as  a  young  man  of  most 
exemplary  habits.  He  has  during  most 
of  the  past  three  years  been  in  my  em- 
ploy and  during  all  that  time,  neither 
at  camp  nor  here,  when  surrounded  by 
companions  all  clamorous  for  him  to 
drink,  have  I  ever  known  him  to  take 
a  single  glass  of  liquor.  Neither  have  I 
heard  him  utter  one  profane  or  ob- 
scene word.  He  was  an  honorable,  up- 
right, steady,  industrious  young  man 
with  no  bad  habits.  He  made  friends 
with  all  and  he  was  returning  from  a 
visit  to  Joseph  Grasshopper,  an  Indian 
who  lives  with  his  wife,  regularly  mar- 
ried, on  his  small  farm  on  Prairie  lake 
and  who  has  worked  for  us  in  the  woods 
and  on  drive,  and  whom  I  esteem  as  a 
man  highly. 

Mr.  Cluff  left  his  house  about  5  a.  m. 
and  was  found  about  six  hours  after- 
ward, having  walked  three  miles  in  a 
narrow  snow-shoe  trail,  lying  on  his 
back.  Where  he  had  dropped  without 
a  struggle.  It  was  no  doubt  a  case  of 
paralysis  or  heart  failure.  Myself  and 
his  other  friends  are  positive  that 
whisky  had  nothing  to  do  with  his 
death." 


ations  be  promptly  and  fully  carried 
out.  and  we  especially  emphasize  their 
words  that  the  mayor  with  the  police 
force  can  suppress  the  gambling  in  the 
city.  If  he  will,  and  tbat  It  ls*hiVduty 
to  do  so.  and  we  further  believe  that 
he  can  and  should  prevent  the  saloons 
from  becoming  a  resort  for  minors,  and 
sliould  use  his  official  power  and  influ- 
enie  t<i  discourage  other  unlawful  and 
I  demoralizing  acts  and  influences  which 
seem  incidental  to  an  ill-regulated  or 
non-regulated    liquor    traflic 

"In  regard  to  the  bids  and  contracts 
for  the  building  of  the  Miller  trunk 
|;"ad,  we  find  that  the  bids  made  and 
I  accepted  are  ver>-  indefinite  and  in- 
I  cornplete,  giving  prices  on  some  items 
in  the  specifications  and  not  on  others 
and  then  naming  a  lump  sum  as  the 
contract  price.  We  find  it  impossible 
us  to  compute  the  amounts  that 
would  become  due  under  these  con- 
tracts. We  find  al.so  that  were  the 
amounts  that  will  have  to  be  paid  for 
these  Items  on  which  no  price  has 
been  named  in  the  bids  added  to  the 
price  at  which  these  contracts  were 
let.  the  results  would  show  in  some 
ca.ses  that  the  contracts  were  notTet 
to  the  lowest-  bidders 

CORPORATION  TAXES 
"We   desire   to   call    the   attention   of 
the  court  to  the  personal  taxes  of  large 
corporations,  that     are    largely    in  ar- 
rears,  and  urge  that  the  county  com- 
missioneis  or  others  who  have  author- 
ity in   the  matter  take  immediate  ac- 
tion towards  their  collection.     We  call 
particular  attention    to    the    following 
facts  in  regard  to  one  such  ca.se-     at- 
torney William  B.  Phelps  was,  by'reso. 
lution  of  the  board  of  county  commis- 
sioners, employed  to    take    charge    of 
such  tax  and  bond  cases  for  the  county 
as  might  be  agreed  upon  between  him 
and  the  county  attorney.    Pursuant  to 
that  agreement,  the    assistant    county 
attorney,  McPherrin,  by  a  wrilen  order 
directed  the  clerk  of  the  court  to  make 
copies   of   the   answers   in   certain   tax 
cases,  which  answers  were  delivered  to 
Attorney    Phelps,    who    prepared    those 
cases  for  trial,  and  they  were  disposed 
of  at  the  first  term  of  court  held  after 
the  receipt  of  such  copies  of  answers. 

"It  appears  that  there  was  then  pend- 
ing  a   personal    tax    case   against    the 
Duluth  Gas  and     Water    company    in- 
volving several  thousands     of    dollars, 
for    whom    Draper,    Davis    &    Hollister 
had     appeared     and     answered.      This 
case   was  on   the  September,   1896,   dis- 
trict court  calendar,    but  was  omitted 
from   the  November,  1896,  calendar  by 
direction  of  the  county  attorney,     Mr. 
Arbury.  with    the    understanding    be- 
tween him  and  Mr.  Davis,  of  the  above 
law  firm,  that  the  facts  should  be  stipu- 
lated and  the  case  determined    by    the 
court  on     such     stipulation.      Attorney 
Phelps    came   into    the   employ    of   the 
county  about  the    first    of    November. 
1896,  and  not  finding  such  case  on  the 
calendar,  and  not  having     received     a 
copy  of  the  answer  from  the  county  at- 
torney   with    the      others      mentioned 
above,  was  ignorant  of  the  pendency  of 
such  action  until  about  the  close  of  the 
November,  1896,  term,  when  it  was  inci- 
dentally mentioned  to  him  and  a  con- 
tinuance promised.    From   the   files   in 
the  case  it  appears  that  Dec.  9,  1896,  a 
stipulation  in  writing  was  made  by  and 
between  Draper,  Davis  &  Hollister  and 
the  county  attorney,  continuing  the  case 
to  the  January,  1897,  court,  but  as  the 
case   was   not  on   the   November.    1896. 
calendar,  this  stipulation  was  inopera- 
tive.    It.   therefore,     remains     for     the 


INSANE  MURDERER. 

Kills  One  Man  and  Himself  and 
Wounds  Others. 


Odebolt,  Iowa,  March  19.— Dave  Pen- 
nington, loaded  a  shot  gun  and  started 
out  to  kill  a  number  of  people  who  had 
incurred  his  enmity.  He  first  hunted 
for  A.  P.  Walter,  against  whom  he  had 
a  grudge.  But  Walter  saw  him  coming 
and  hid.  Then  Pennington  went  to  the 
house  of  Hiram  Johnson  and  fired  at 
Mr.s.  Johnson,  seriously  wounding  her 
in  the  shoulder  and  back.  He  then 
empti^pd  both  barr,e^a,intp  Luther ..Trst* 
-v*r;  «9  .ftS^Xlrn'ati,-  IdHing  him  instant- 
ly. Theh- he  pointed  the  gun  at  Mrs. 
Frank  Stolt,  a  neighbor,  who  came  to 
the  door  on  hearing  the  noise.  She  ran 
into  the  doorway,  closing  the  storm 
door  behind  her.  but  he  fired  through 
the  door,  wounding  her  in  the  alicfo- 
nien. 

Pennington  retreated  across  some 
vacant  lots,  loading  his  gun  as  he  called 
to  an  officer  and  dared  him  to  shoot. 
He  exclaimed:  "Well,  if  you  haven't 
got  the  nerve  to  shoot,  I  have."  Then 
he  placed  the  muzzle  of  the  gun  to  his 
forehead  and  blew  the  top  of  his  head 
off,  scattering  brains  and  pieces  of 
skull  fifty  feet.  Pennington  was  un- 
doubtedly insane.  It  is  thought  that 
Mrs.  Stolt  cannot  recover,  but  Mrs. 
Johnson's  injuries  while  severe,  are 
not  fatal. 


Saturday  and 
Monday  Offerings 

Lemons,  fancy  large,  dozen fQo 

Extra  Fancy  Sweet  Potatoes,  12  lbs  for  25o 

Puree.  W.  Flour,  12  !bs  lor 25o 

Whole  Codfish,  per  lb ■.'.*     5^ 

Codfish,  2.|b  brick 11^ 

Finnan  Haddies,  per  lb "j^ 

Smoked  Whitefish,  per  lb 71,^ 

Cromarty  Bloaters,  4  for .* .'.'.'.'      5^ 

Domestic  Sardines,  per  can 3^, 

New  York  Cheese,  per  lb 13^ 

Potatoes,  per  bush 25o 

Mavy  Beans,  (limit  10  lbs)  per  lb i'.^, 

Lima  Beans.  6  lbs  for 25o 

Best  California  Hams,  per  lb Qq 

Best  Bacon,  per  lb 7o  and  8c 

BestPoik.  per  lb 5^ 

BestLard,  per  lb q^ 

Fancy  Dried  Peaches,  per  lb  80  and  lOc 
Best  Dried  Apples,  ring  cut,  per  lb  . .  5^ 
Prunes,  per  lb..  m^ 

Extra  Fancy  Apricots,  per  lb 12 ' -O 

Soda  Crackers,  in  box  lots,  per  lb ... .      4^ 

Best  Ginger  Snaps,  per  lb 5^ 

Dew  Drop  Corn,  per  can |Q^ 

Dew  Drop  Tomatoes,  per  can iQo 

Kirk's  White  Cap  Soap.  6  bars  for. . . .  25o 

"Viking"  Soap.  9  bars  for 25c 

Babbitt's  Soap,  7  bars  for 25c 

"Viking"  Fancy  Patent  Flour,  49-lb.  S105 
"Viking  Pride,"  Flour.  49-lb  sack. .  .$1.00 

Gran.  Sugar,  per  1 00  lbs t5*.40 

Lay  in  your  Sugar  now  belore  it  advances. 
Macaroni.  Julian  Renan.  I5c  box  for.    H^ 

Pearl  Barley.  10  lbs  lor 25o 

White  Hoop  Hofl.  Herring,  pir  keg 75Q 


6RQH8ETH  A  QKSEH 


GHASTLY  RELICS. 

Reminders  of  Garfield  Shooting 
Removed  From  Sight. 

Washington.  March  19.— The  marble 
tablet  that  rested  in  the  south  wall  of 
the  ladies'  waiting  room  of  the  Balti- 
more &  Potomac  Railway  company's 
depot,  and  the  brass  star  placed  in  the 
tilted  form  of  the  apartment,  to  mark 
for  all  time  the  spot  on  which  Presi- 
dent Garfield  fell  when  assassinated, 
have  been  removed.  A  superstitious 
dread  on  the  present  traveling  public 
of  a  constant  reminder  of"  a  tragedy 
seems  to  have  led  to  the  removal  of  the 
monuments. 

The  immediate  cause  of  the  removal 
of  the  tablet  and  star  was  the  fire, 
which  occurred  on  the  night  of  March 
4.  which  damaged  the  tablet  to  such  an 
extent  that  the  officials  of  the  company 
declared  that  it  was  not  in  condition  to 
be  replaced.  A  portion  of  the  marble 
tiling  had  also  been  removed,  and  al- 
though the  metal  star,  placed  where 
the  president  fell,  might  have  been  put 
back  in  its  place,  it  was  permanently 
removed,  and  the  spot  is  now  marked 
only  by  a  piece  of  red  tiling,  which 
would  pass  unnoticed  except  to  those 
familiar  with  the  place  and  the  tragedy 
that  was  enacted  there. 

It  was  said  that  there  has  been  much 
complaint  of  the  present  traveling  pub- 
lic of  having  the  horrors  of  the  assassi- 
nation constantly  recalled  to  their 
minds  in  going  through  the  depot  or 
waiting  for  trains.  To  such  an  extent 
has  this  feeling  prevailed  that  the  com- 
pany has  long  regarded  the  reminders 
of  the  tragedy  as  a  disadvantage,  and 
it  is  believed  by  many  that  the  officials 
were  only  too  glad  to  have  an  excuse 
to  obliterate  the  monuments. 


NOTicK  OK  mort<;agk  salk  - 

Whereas  default  h:i.;  been  made  in  the 
condltion.s  ot  a  eert;iin  mortgage  dulv  ex- 
ecuted ;ind  delivered  bv  IXivid  i:  CI  »rk 
and  Maggie  (Mark.  !ils  wife.  mortga;,'ors 
to  Julia  M.  Landon.  mortg.ige-.  be.u-iiif; 
date  Dec-ember  twentv-eifirhih  CiSth).  1894 
and  which  was  didy  recorded  in  the  lee- 
ister  of  deeds'  office  ;or  St.  Louis  Couh- 
tv.  Minnesoia.  on  December  thiriv-ili-si 
Cilst).  189J.  :it  four  (0  o'<-lock  |>  in.  in 
I'.ook  one  hundred  twentv-seven  'I'T)  of 
mortgases.  on  page  ihree  hundred  "fiftv- 
four  (.3.54);  such  default  conslstinR  in  the 
non-payment  of  the  semi-annual  insiall- 
meiii  of  interest  ui)on  the  debt  seeuu-d  l.v 
•said  mortgage,  and  of  the  coupon  .not'»» 
given  for  the  same,  which  became  du» 
on  January  lirst  (1st).  1S97.  amounting  to 
the  sum  of  $2U.  no  part  of  which  has 
ever  been  paid;  by  reason  whereof  said 
mortgagee  has  elected  to  exereise  thi- 
option  to  her  given  by  the  terms  of  .said 
mortgage  and  the  principal  note  therehv 
secured,  by  declaring,  and  she  does  hen" 
by  dc»clare.  the  whole  principal  sum  se- 
(iired  by  said  mortgage  and  noM-.  with 
all  accrued  interest  and  exchange  there- 
on,   to   be   now   due   and   pavahle. 

And  whereas  there  is  therefore  elaimed 
to  be  due.  and  th<'ie  is  actuallv  due 
upon  said  mortgage  «lebt.  at  the  <i;.t(  nf 
this  notice,  the  sum  of  five  hundred  twen- 
ty-eight and  (JS-100  f$.-.28.6S)  dollars,  priu- 
cii)al.   interest  and  exchange. 

And  whereas  said  mortgage  contains  a 
I)Ower  of  sale  in  due  form,  which  has  be- 
come operative  by  rea.son  of  the  detaults 
above  mentioned,  and  no  action  ur  pro- 
ceeding, at  law  or  otherwis*-.  has-  been 
instituted  to  recover  the  delit  secured  ly 
said  mortgage,  or  any  part   thereof. 

Now.    therefore,    notice  is  hereiiv  given 
that    by   virtue   of   said   power   of'  sale   iii 
said  mortgage  contained,  and  pur-<uant  In 
the    statute    in    such    case    made,     said 
mortgage    will    be    foivciosed    b.\     a    sale 
of  the  premises  dest-riocd  therein,  situate 
in      St.    Louis      County,      Minnesofi:       de- 
scribed as  follows,   to-wit:  Lots  number.-d 
iive    (.1)    and    six    (6).    of    block    numbere.l 
eighteen    (18).    West    Duluth.    First    Divi- 
sion.  according  to  the  recorded  plat  there- 
of in   the  register  of  deeds'   offlc--   lor  St 
Louis    County.    Minnesota;    which    1  rem- 
ises will  i>e  sold  by  the  sheriff  of  said  Si 
Louis   County,    at    the    front   door   of    th.- 
court    house,    in    the    city    of    Duluth     in 
said  (ounty  and  state,  on  the  twentv-s^v- 
enth    (27th)    day   of    April,    A.    D.    1837     ;•! 
ten   (10)  o'clock  a.   m..   at   public   auction, 
to    the    highest    bidder    for    f-nsh.    to    pay 
.said    debt    and    interest,    and    the    taxes, 
if  any.  on  said  premi.ses.   and  twentv-Vive 
dollars   attorney's    fees,    stipulated    i'oi    in 
said  mortgage  in  case  of  foreclosure,  and 
the  disbursements   allowed    bv    lav;   sub- 
ject   to    redemption    at    any    "time    within 
one   year   from   the  day  of  sale,    as   pro- 
vided  by   law. 
Dated  March  10th.  im. 

JULIA   M.    LANDOX. 
Mortsat''«»e. 
PRAXCIS    W.    SULLIVAN, 

Attorney  for  Mortgagee. 
Duluth    Evening    Herald,    March-l2-19-'>6- 
Apri  1-2-9-16. 


The  dealer  who  doesrit 

show    The    Gordon    hat 
tries  to  "explain" 


NO  PRIZE  FIGHT  PICTURES. 
Springfield,  III.,  March  19.— Repre- 
sentative W.  O.  Lamont,  of  Chicago, 
today  introduced  a  bill  in  the  legisla- 
ture, with  an  emergency  claim  at- 
tached, which  will  prohibit,  if  it  be- 
comes a  law,  the  reproduction  of  the 
pictures  of  prize  fights,  and  fixes  a  se- 
vere penalty  for  violating  it.  Mr. 
Lamont  has  had  it  in  mind  ever  since 
it  was  announced  by  the  press  that  the 
Corbett-Fitzsimmons  fight  would  be  re- 
produced in  this  manner.  During  the 
last  three  days  he  received  a  large 
number  of  letters  from  business  men 
and  fathers  advocating  the  passage  of 
such  a  bill.  The  bill  prohibits  the  ex- 
hibition, not  only  of  pictures  of  prize 
fights,  but  of  any  other  act  prohibited 
in  the  criminal  court  of  the  state. 

SELL   REAL   ESTATE 
By  ^means  of  an  Evening:  Herald  "want 


FOR 


Smoke  the  "Tom  Dinham"  cigar,  boI 
by  all  the  leading  dealeri. 


Liquor J^ieense. 

STATE  OF  MINNESOTA.   COUNTY   OF 

ST.   LOUIS,   CITY  OF  DULUTH.-SS. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  said  city  of  Duluth.  and  filed 
n  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell 
Intoxicating  liquors  for  the  term  com- 
mencing on  March  10.  1897.  and  terminat- 
ioo^S?  March  10.  1898.  by  H.  Brown,  at  No. 
333  West  Superior  street. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  «aid  common  council  of  the 
city  of  Duluth.  at  the  council  chamber  in 
said  city  of  Duluth,  in  St.  Louis  Coun- 
ty. Minnesota,  on  Monday,  the  22d  dav  of 
March.  1897.  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m.  of  thut 
day. 

Witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  said  ciiv 
of  Duluth.  this  9th  day  of  March.  A.  D. 

C.  E.  RICHARDSON. 

//-.  *      c.     .  ^  City  Clerk. 

(Corporate  Seal.) 

Duluth  Evening  Herald,  March  9  to  22  Inc 


■"WLW'.l^l.  C»»  J  I        m<3 


t 


■►-•■'•imAiH  r„M»l 


^H&'  -iwi-*  "^  "**  * ' ^.va; 


■t 'J  Hill 


' 

< 

* 


'       *  r 


-t 


ii< 


> 


1' 


..^ 


4 


■i^"^i 


6 


RATHBUN'S 


CASH  GROCERY. 

21  E.  Superior  St.       Simon  Clark. 
Telephone  666. 


Manager. 


THE    DULUTH    EVEx^NG    HERALD:     FRIDAY,    MARCH 


10,     1897. 


Saturday 
Specialties 

Interesting:  to  wide-awake 
buyers 


Stnctly  Fresh  tpgjr.  per  dozen., 
No  limit  ami  every  egg 
anteed  strictly  new  laid. 


gu.ir- 


(Saturday  only) 


Pure  Leaf  Lard 
per  lb 

Home  Grown  Potatoes,  per  bush 

40-lb  sack  best    Patent  Flour. . . 

Plantation    Java    Coffee,     extra 
.?ood  value,  per  lb 

Hoffman      House     Java      and 
Mocha,  per  lb 

Crushed  Coffee.  2  lbs 

Rio  Coffee,  in  the  bean,  per  lb. 

New  Green  Onions  and  radish, 
3  bunches 

F'lorida  Strawberries,  per  quart, 

Home  Grown  Lettuce,  4  heads. 

Jersey  Sweet  Potatoes,  4  lbs.... 

Cranberries,    good  quality,   per 
quart 

Monarch  brand 
lo  bars 


13o 


5o 


Creditors    Inquire  How  Har-  = 
ris  Got   Security   Stock 
From  the  Merritts. 

A.  A.  Harris  Was  Called   Up  = 

on   Supplementary   Pro-      = 

ceedin«is  Yesterday.         = 


Busier  Than  Ever  1 1 

Why  shouldn't  we  be  busy? 


only  reliable  goods;  the  stvle^Irrthrr-/.  .^^^  ^^V^^^^^^e  best  values  for  yourmoney;  we  handle 
&     u!,,  me  styles  are  the  latestt  the  colors  are  the  newest;  the  prices  are  the  lowest. 


.^!..?"™!!!*^.!^         ^*"^  *"^  ^'^'^^^  *"^  ^^^^  "™^^®  ^"^^  P''^ces  irresistible, 

j  Suits 


i 


Faucy  checked  Skirts,  jacket  solid  color  to  match    N%  ¥  f\      f\i\ 

check  jacket  lined  with  changeable  taffeta,  dres-  J)  \\Wm\W\W 
sy  and  stylish,  for-per  suit ^K  *  ^^  •  ^^  V-T 


25o  Court  Will  Have  to  Determine  j  s 

Had        = 


Laundry  Soap, 

>  •  •  •  •   >  ■ 

Beans, 


extra    lint    lot. 


Hand  picked  imall  Navy 
''  lbs 

Finan  Haddics, 
per  lb 

Whole  Codfish,  new  lot,  extra 
nice,  per  lb 

CANNED  VEflETABLES- 

1  can  Corn 

1  can   Peas 

I  can  Tomatoes 
A  line  of  ^oods  that  give  uni- 
versal satisfaction. 


81.10 

25o 

30o 
25o 
15oi 

lOo! 
35o 
lOo 
lOo 

5o 

25o 

I 

lOoi 


Whether   Inquiry 
Any  Results. 


Suit  Dept.! 

It  is  with  pnrdonable  pride  that  we  draw! 
your  attention  to  our  line  embraciri,'  the  I 
newest  fabrics  in  all  the  prevailing  styles  ! 
—Etons,  Boleros,  Tighl-futing,  etc- fault-* 
less  in  construction,  perfection  in  finish  I 
and  correction  in  every  detail.  \ 


A.  A.  Harris  appeared  yesterday  in 
supplementary  proceedinff.s  before  C. 
II.  Smith,  a  referee  appointed  l>y  the 
court,  to  disolo.se  his  title  to  the  Se- 
curity Land  and  Exploration  company 
stock  received  by  him  from  the  .Mer- 
rills. The  proceedings  wt-iv  ordcrt-d 
in  the  case  of  George  H.  Kathman 
asainst  Alfred  Merritt  et  al,  one  of  a 
numlK-r  of  suits  in  which  t  reditors  of 
the  Menilts  have  endeavored  to  get  t 
hold    of    this    stock     to    satisfy     iheir  I 


7o 


5o 


^  3  cans 


25c 


Special  value  in  Dairy  and 
Creamery  Butter. 

3-lb  cans  California  Apricots, 
Peaches,  Plums  and  Grapes. 
per  can 

Full  line  of    Smoked    and 
Fish  at  Popular  Prices. 

Large  bars    Kirk's    White 
Soap  (it  floats  I  per  bar.. 

Garden  City  Japan  Tea,  35o 

perlb,3  lbs 

Once  tried  always  used. 

Boneless  Bacon  (Saturday  onljj 
per  lb 


Salt 


Cap 


12o 

5e 
Sl.OO 

To 


liMHB!IN'S.''sffiT, 


CITY  BRIEFS. 


ilaims. 
I      The   examination    was    cuiuliicttd    by 
A.  L.  Agatin.  who  is  Rathmans  attor- 
ney, and  whether  or  not 
!  '^          was          prodiutive          of         any 
results     will      have      to       be       determ- 
ined   by    the    court.       r.)|.    Harris    ap- 
peared alone,  he  having  stipulated  that 
the  rights  of  other  niemliers  of  his  fam- 
ily  who  held   sUKk    weiv   the   same   as 
his.   and   it   thus   being  unnec«'«sary   to 
examine  the  others.     His  claim     as   to 
the  stock  was  practically  the  .same  as 
in    the    suit    brought    by    the    Merritts 
He  claimed    that   the   stock   was  given 
to  him  as  additional  com|»en.sation   for 
legal      .services,      while      the      i.lainii'f 
sought  to  draw  from  him  an  admission 
that  It  was  given  not  as  compensation 
but  as  collateral  for  his  compen.salion 
he  knowing  that  the  Merritfs  finances 
were  not  prosperous. 
Asked    if    he    knew    at    the    time    he 
contract  to  work  for  Jlu.OOo, 
financial    standing    of    the 
said   he  did   not.       He   re- 
lied   on    their   word.       The    Hoekefeller 
suit  was  not  then  in  prospect,  only  ihe 
llarge    company's    suit,    although    the 
.Merrills  had  complained   to     him   that 
Rockefeller  hatl   beat   them.   When   the 
Rockefeller      suit     came     up     witness 
tnought   it   was  right   that    he     should 
have  more  compensation,  and  the  stock 
given   for  that   purpose.     He   was 
why   there  was   no   contract     to 
and  he  said  that  he  relied 
(m  their  word.     He  was  asked   why.   if 
believed  that   he  could   rely  on    the 
word,  there  was  a  contract  in  I 
place,   and    he  replied   that 
It  was  a  matter  of  business. 

The  examination   was 
Monday. 


=  ;  A  Nobby  Suit, 

SS  J         consisting  of  Fancy 

^  I         Checked  Skirt, 

=  :         Fly  Front  Jacket, 

3S  ■         for 


=  :  A  Stylish  Suit  in 

SS  :         Green  and  Sal- 

S  !         mon-colored 

~  ;  check,  skirt  and 

S5  :  jicket  to  match, 

SS  I  Fly- front, 

SS  ■  tor 

^^^  ■  'wa   ....    ...a    •*••    , 

S  I  Handsome  Blue  and 

as  :  Black  Cheviot 

S  I  Bolero  .Suits. 

S  •  Jacket  and  skirt 

SS  I  braided,  silk 

=  I         lined 

S  f  Broadcloth  Suits  in  all  the  new  color?, 

=  :  braidtrimmed 

S:  I  Separate  Skirts  and    separate  J.irkets   in 

^  I  every  sort  of  fabric  at  all  sorts  of  small  prices.  I 

S5  ••••"—«•-•....-......,.,■„,.,„,., ........^ ^1 


Onyx 
Hosi- 
ery. 


Lidies'  fast  Black  Onyx  Hose,  High 
spliced  heel  and  toe,  double  foot, 
fine  gauge;  reasonable  at  75c;  for.. 

Fancy  novelties  in  all  the  late  fads 
of  dififerent  styles  and  new  ef- 
fects; Onyx  Hose  warranted 
fast  colors  at  from ... .  6O0  to 


We  handle  the 
Onyx  brand  of 
Hosiery.     It  is  the 
best  hosiery  made; 
none  other  will 
equal  it.     Every 
pair  warranted  in 
color  and  quality.    We  are  now  showing  the 
lates  fads  in  Ladies'  Hosiery,  all  the  new  ef- 
fects in  silk  plaid?,  all  colors,  Lace  Stripe, 
Lisle,  Persian  Silk  Stripes,  Gauze  Lisle, 
colored  silks,  lace  effects  in  silks  and 
other  novelties. 

Ladies'  Fast  Black  Onxy  Hose, 
one  seim,  worth  25c;  for 


Notion 


$151, 


Ladies'  Fast  Black  Onyx  Hose, 

high-spliced  heel  and  tr>e,  ribbed 
top,  reasonable  at  40c ;  for 

.adies'  Seamless  Black  Hose, 
good  value  at  soc;  for 


15c 
25c 


I  Containing  all  the  little  knick 

I  knacks  and  small  wares;  all  those 
:  essential  small  trifles  that  are  so 
I  necessary  to  ladies  contained  in 
j  this  department,  and  ..11  are 
i  marked  at  small  profit  prices. 


I  Fine  Face 
Veiling.... 

:/^^|l      ^A        At              IWT                                   I  l^'ack  Silk  Vi'ilinp.  open  meeh,  plain  not— 
•Wdll     Hi      tnC      New  i        «"<"*  ^'^'"""^  "<:  a  J"J-for 

74         •                      ^.                    __                                                 :*^lackSilk  Veiling,  fancy  Tne«L  with  dot  - 
^gj        Store  Tomorrow.!   -°^-'-^- =«--*" -"•'t 


'■^ 


made  the 
about    the 
Merritts   he 


was 
asked 
that  effect. 

tl 
he 

Merritts' 
in   the  first 


S    New  Dress  Goods.        New  Wash  Goods. 

p     New  Trimmings.         New  Ribbons, 

^     New  Muslin  Underwear.  New  Silks. 

=  ALL  SOLD  AT  SMALL  PROFIT  PRICES. 

sn.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiii„|,|||||||Hiii,„„,,H,,,,„^ 

PERSONALS. 


•  niack  Silk  VoiliDff,  plain  mesh-  ^ood  value 
for  :i5c  -selling  at ___ 


""■"■■•■•••■•■■>■■■■■■■■■■■■••■«■■■■■■■■■■ 


.  5cj 
15cj 
15cj 


WER 


■■*•■■■■■■■■■■•■«■«•■■■ 


SETTLE. 


large 
taken 
arrivinir 


1 


continued     to 


Cullum,  dentist,  Palladio.  Phone  No  9 

Smoke  i:ndion  cigar.  W.  A.   Foote 

A\  f  ndling.  the  great  orator,  March  24 

Ur.    Murray,    the   new    health    offict -■ 

liH.k  the  oath  of  ofTue  before  City  CK-rk 

Richardson  this  morning.    He  will  enter 

i:j.on  the  duties  of  his  office  April  1 

The  Scandina\ian  Union  Christian 
Ttinperance  committee  will  have  the 
next  mass  meeting  on  Sunday  after- 
noon. March  2s.  at  :{  o'clock,  in  the 
Swedish  Lutheran  church.  Twentieth 
avenut?  west  and  Third  street 

Ex-Comptroller  Ten  Brook  this 
mornmg  bt-gan  the  work  of  bringing 
the  l>ooks  of  the  comptroller's  office 
to  March  1.  It  is  expected  that 
work  will  take  some  days.  After 
completion,  the  annual  statement 
be  prepared. 

Leona  F.ussling.  an  inmate  of  one  of 
the  bagnios  on  the  Point,  was  arrested 
last^  evening  while  making  things  hum 
in  &t.  Croix  alley  under  the  stimulus  of 
a  large  cargo  of  the  ardent.  .She  failed 
to  appear  in  municipal  court  this  morn- 
ing and  the  bail  of  $10  deposited  by 
her  last  night  was  declared  f<.rfeited" 
The  Central  Gun  club  will  have  a 
shoot  tomorrow  at  IM  o'clock 
foot  of  Twenty-first  avenue  west 
will  he  two  swee|>stakes 
pi-actice  shoot. 

oJ*?^.,^'"**.*^^***'"''"''"'   ^^as   called   out 
at    l.:..o   o  clock    this    afternoon 
chimney  fire  on  Lake  avenue 
canal. 
Tht- 


MR.  TOWNE  RETURNS. 

Will  Bring  the  National  Silver 
Headquarters  Here. 

Ex-CongreiJsman    C. 


up 
the 

its 
will 


events 


at  the 
There 
and  a 


by    a 
near  the 


taken  place  ui 
this     evening   ha^: 


the 
Her- 


tion    •,.'^'";l^''Sarten  meeting  and  exhibi- 
tion which  was  to  have 
the  Jackson  .'wrhool 

a«'onn?'?r?I!'''^  ""'i'  Tuesday  next  on 
account  of  the  weather 

wJi""",  *'^r'""l?    '"'^^"^    reception    that 
Aitth.V^  »''^''u^**"   ^'''*'"   at    the    Fir.<i 
Methodist     church     this     evening     has 
been  rK>stponed  for  one  week 
Owing  to  Inclemency  of  the  weather 

*ooieTJ^nf"l-''^  the  Ladies'  Missionarv 
soc  et>  of  First  Presbyterian  church 
will  be  held  Saturday.  March  20  at  3 
o  clock  p.  m.  .   «t  •> 

Families  who  study  economy  in  their 
ni^r'^r     P""hases     should    Vead 
ICathbun   Grocery   ad   in 
aid. 

In  the  case  of  Thomas  Morrison 
agamst  Herman  Schmidt,  to  recover  fo" 
a  (amp  outfit  sold  the  defendant 
municipal  court,  the  jurv 
verdict  of  $164.30  for  the" 
morning. 

The  Young  Men's  league  of  the  Fir«<t 
Presbyterian  church  has  securwi  t^J 
Christopher  Columbus  for  her  fil^t  ex- 
cursion of  the  season,  and  the  league  L| 
aleady  making  preparations  for  th^ 
trip.    A  good  band  will  be  secured    and 

vi^xt*"  ^^■'"  '^  "'^'^^  "^^  thei;j;at 

^The   champion      clothes     cleaner     is 

«..aaI< 

Went  to  the  Rock  Pile. 

Joe   Mack 
along  about 


A.  Towne  rc- 
turaed  today  from  Washington.  He  is 
in  excellent  health  and  spirits  and  is 
full  of  energy  and  vigor.  Ho  expects  to 
remain  here  a  week  or  so  and  will  then 
go  to  Washington  and  sp.nd  several 
weeks  there,  during  the  cour.se  of  which 
time  he  will  speak  in  a  number  of  East- 
ern cities. 

Th«  temporary  headquarters  of  M, 
rowne.  a-s  chairman  of  the  national  sil- 
\er  commis.sion.  will  be  in  Washing- 
ton, but  he  will  eventually  establish 
h.mselt  here  in  Duluth.  He  will  ha  e 
the  work  to  d.»  and  can  have  his  head- 
quarters where  he  chooses,  anc  hu. 
preference     naturally    is    Duluth.    evcu 

th^n^  tK^  -^ -,"'''  ''^^  »"""•*•  i»<^-'nvenient 
man   other  places. 

Ml    Towne  said  the  hardest  work  he 
did    during   the  season    was  in   gettine 

inJ.t..'^^*"'"'^"'*^''^"    f^^*"    Duluth    harbor 
improvement    in    the   sundry   civil    bin 
appropriation    f,.r    a    hydrographic 
be   located    her.-   and    the    ap. 
of   $1.-,0.000    f,,r    the    survey 

Se*  latf  r  ■'th''  ""  ^"^'^  ^''''-  ^'>'  ^^<^«l>tini 
tlelf  »  th  S^*'.v^'nmenl  committed 
U'«eit    to    the    proj.d     and        everv<.ne 

i.n    ^■'''"'*    ^^'^    «"^^t    hopes    that    the 

stands"^fn  ''^^  ^'■^"^'"^  c-ongress  as! 
It  stands.  In  any  event  the  work  of  1 
securing   the   appropriations   w         no^v 

seeVers*"';vl"Mr%''''*"'"''""      ^'''h      o.Rcr-  ' 
^.teners.  .^.js  Mr.  Towne.  und  the  d.inaiul  1 
tim.-.s  Kr..al..r  than   ihe  sui)i.|y       I 
an  inUrview  wiih   }'n-s-  i 
days   ago   and    ih..  I 
that  he  Intondt-d  t..  ' 
bring  about   inui 


and  C. 
are  guests 


the 

office   to 
propriation 


^Iiss  Edith  Casey  r.-uirned  home  thi--- 
morning  for  a  month's  visit  with  hi  r 
mother  and  friends.  She  holds  a  posi- 
tion as  stenographer  for  the  Fiizsiir- 
mons-Derrig  company  at  Great  Falls 
Mont. 

L.    M.    Johnson,      foimerlv     a 
farmer  near  Litchfield,  Minn.,  ha^^ 
up    his    residence    in    Duluth. 
here  this  morning. 

James  H.  James  arrived  in  the  city 
today  from  IJoise  City.  Idaho.  H>  h.i's 
spent  considerable  time  in  the  mining 
districts  of  Idaho,  and  is  highly  pkasci 
with  the  country.  He  will  return  and 
make  some  investmenl.s. 

Frank  Kennedy  returned  vesterdav 
from  .Mine  (Vnter.  He  was  givaily  im'- 
pres.^ed  with  the  mining  prospects,  aiu! 
will  return  there  as  soon  as  navigation 
opens. 

Ira    Wilson,    of    the     Pullman      com- 
pany,  camf  up     from     St.     Paul     this 
morning     and     r?gistered     at     the     St 
Louis. 

F.  M.  Hamilton.  D.  O.  Barber 
H.  Scott,  of  Detroit,   Mich 
at  th<-  St.  L<.uis. 

John  .Mc.Mpin.  the  F:au  Claiiv  lumber- 
man, is  in  Ihe  city,  a  guest  at  the  St. 
Louis. 
I      A.  J.  McGee  came  up  from  Two  Har- 
bors  this   morning.     He   is  at   the     St 
I^ouis. 

A.  C,   Mackey,  a     well     known'   Still- 
water  lumberman,    is   among   the    late 
arrivals  at  the  St.  Louis. 
j      Dr.  D.  \V.  Cowan,  of  .Sandstone,  Is  in 
the  city  today,  a  guest  at  the  St.  Louis. 
I      K.   H.  Wilsim,  of  liismarck,  N.   D, 
i  at  the  Spalding. 

I  James  Griffiths,  of  Seattle,  Wash., 
;  arrived  in  the  city  this  morning  and 
I  registered  at  the  Spalding.  • 
I  J.  F],  .Xichols,  of  Cincinnati,  is  among 
I  today's  arrivals  at  the  Spalding. 

E.  M.  Trout  came  up  from  St.  Paul 
this  afternoon. 

Jam.'s  N.  Hill,  .son  of  J.  j.  Hill,  of 
Si,  Paul,  was  in  the  city  a  few  hours 
this  morning.  He  returned  home  this 
afternoon. 

Ed  ]).  Kohn.  of  Minneapolis,  regis> 
tered  at  the  Spalding  thiy  afternoon. 

W,  H.  Coates.  of  Saginaw.  .Mich.,  i.s 
in  the  city,  a  guest  at  the  Spalding, 

John  G.  Brown  returned  yesterday 
from  Chica.go. 


SENATOR  DAVIS. 


i!!lMi!"llllllliinillllll!lll!ll{fllf}!!!}fl|»i|[||in 


CANNOT  DANCE. 


Favors  the  Arbitration  Treaty  Bicycle    Girls    Are    Loos 

Their  Dancing  Grace. 


as  Amended. 


ing 


comn;u- 
was   lis- 

li'c 
t'ae 
senator  hail 
there  was  a 
Uie 
ar- 


;      Washiiigiun,    .Miinh    ID.-Senator   Davis. 

chairman    of    the    committee    on    for^sn 

I  ivlatioiKs   spoke  in    length   in   the  execa- 

tive  session  of  the  senate  today,   preseii!- 

iiig  the  views  of  liie  majority  of 

tee   favorable  to   the  treaty   and 

'*'";'«'    '•'   ^vith    lii,    utmost   atteni.iii 

I      Many   seiiaor.s  gathered   togcihcr  in 

.<eats    neare.st     th.     si)oaker.     It     was 

I  first    si)eech    the    .Minnesota 

,  made   upon    the   siiljjnct   and 

general  feeling  that  he  would  present 
,  law  and  the  precedents  and  that  his 
Piitneiit  would  exhaust  all  that  <ould  )«. 
said  in  behalf  of  the  agre.m.  nt.  Mr  Da- 
vis went  into  the  history  of  the  negotia- 
tion ot  the  irtiity  at  some  length  .m.I 
made  a  strong  iippe;,!  f,,r  its  ratitieation 
as  the  lirst  important  .step  bewteen  iw. 
nations  in  recoj.'iiition  of  the  gre.ii  i.riii- 
ciple  of  peatefiil  adjudication  of  diifer- 
enecs.  Me  said  thai,  as  amended,  the 
treaty  oflfered  i.erfect  security  against  a 
violation  of  Un  iirerogatives  of  the  sen- 
;ae.  .-IS  an  iiK.^iTal  part  of  the  treaiv 
aia.cuig  powers  of  tiie  I'nited  States,  niu\ 
that  under  the  ])r.nisions  of  tlu-.sc  amend- 
ments there  was  no  danger  of  snap  iudg- 
nieni  from  any  interpretation  umler  ifu 
treaty. 


The  bicycle  girl  has  been  forced  to 
confess  that  the  wheel  is  an  injury  to 
her.  This  has  been  brought  al)out  by 
the  winter  dancing  season.  The  young 
woman  who  during  the  summer  and  fall 
has  had  a  daily  spin  finds  that  the- 
dance  has  lost  its  fascination  and  that 
It  IS  almost  impossible  for  her  to  make 
perform  the  graceful  move- 
by  the  waltz,  says  the 


IS  I 


THEIR  IMPLEMENTS  UNCHANGED 
In  almost  every  kind  of  trade  known 
to  man  the  years  have  brought  mani- 
fold changes  in   the  way  of  tools,   imv 
proved    machinery,    advanced   ideas 
to    the    manipulation    of    material 
numberless  aids  from  the  fields 
ence,  the  workshop  of  the 
inventor  and  the  artist, 
one    trade    in    which    no 
been  made  and  that  is  in 


er's  trade,  says  the 
The  same  tools  and 
ances  are  used  now 
when  .Solomon  built 
the   art    flourished    in 


as 

and 

of  sci- 

chemist,  the 

Hut   there  is 

advance    has 

the  goldI)eat- 


Atlanta  Journal, 
the  same  appli- 
as  in  the  days 
his  temi)le  and 
ancient      times. 


MA\'E   YOUR 
I'mbrellas   repaired  at   the     City 
store,  404  West  Superior  street. 


Gun 


IS  many 

Mr.  Towne  had 
Idem   McKinlev  a    few 
president  assured  him 
do  all   in  his  power  to 
national    bimetallism 


in  thei 
returned    a 
plaintiff  thi.^ 


got  full   last  evening  and 
11  o'clock  he  took  his  sta- 
tion at  Superior  street  and  Third  ave- 

w^frh'^Kf*-  ''■'Jf  *^  ^"^  '"^^•^  "'Sht  hideous 
^Vr^  l^  ^■''"*  ""^^'  gathered  in  by 
h^/i  ^t""^'  ■^'^  ^^  appeared  like  a 
hard-working  man  and  it  was  his  first 
offense,  he  was  let  off  with  a  fine  of  'l 
and  costs  by  Judge  Boyle  this  after- 
This  was  tjeyond  his  pile,  ho\s- 
he  will  take  a  whack  at  the 


R-\ILROAD     POOL  CASES 
New    \ork.    March    19. -Argument    of 
the   appeal   from   Judge    WheSs   de 
ns Ion    brought   in   the    name     of     th; 
I  nited  States  again.st  the  J^fnt  TrafSe 
association,     alleged     to  be  an     intga^ 

ormerJrth'   '*"'   '"^'"•"^^    '"^'"'«ts 
formed   for  the  purpose     of     defeatinir 
compe  ition  and  for  the  pooling  of  fraf^ 
fie   and  earnings,  was  continued  todav 

oftrcir'^^f   '"''^"^^^  and    Ccomf..; 
of  the  circuit  court  of  appeal.s.      \t  the 

nri^';'  ■'   '''^^  announced  that  the  En- 
tire day  would  be  given  to  the  hearfng 

E   f  ^prf"»«/»y  James  C.  Carter  aSd 
^Jw  r^"'^^'  ^"''  ^^^  J"'"t  Traffic 
i.^Vh    •tt*"'^  against   the  appeal 
by  the  United  States  government 


asso- 
taken 


HIS 
Illustrated 


noon 
ever, 
rock 


and 
pile. 


Heavy  charge. 

nunciation  of  his  own  n  me      H*.  h^a^/^ 

Srif  i^^\TtFi~:r^ 

"^^iJ^sSSsij^i^.^-I^S^H^r-i^b-: 
noi.se  .and  tell  me  what  Is  your  nam V-i 
sad      he    judge    impatiently.    ••Ssss-^ss- 

h^^!^i^rei;T'^^:^ffi-^'  "-i;.,r\i:^1:^ 

man  charged  With?"     -i  think  '^'•' 

or,    he  s   charged   with   sodv 


CHARGED  WITH  GAMBLING. 

Several  People  Arraigned  Be- 
fore Judge  Cant. 

Before  Judge  Cant  this  afternoon  Ed 
Dormady,  of  502  West  Superior  street, 
was  arraigned  on  a  bench  warrant 
charging  him  with  offering  gaming 
tables  or  gambling  to  exist  on  his 
premises.  He  was  given  one  day  to 
plead  and  was  released  under  $250  bail. 
Hayden  &  Caverly  on  the  same  charge 
pleaded  not  guilty  and  were  released 
on  their  own  recognizance.  Hernhart 
Kangas  was  arraigned  and  pleaded  not 
guilty  to  a.s.sault  in  the  second  degree 
committed  upon  John  Saunders,  with  a 
knife,   at   Virginia. 

New       indictments      -were      returned 
against  J.  D.  Zein  and  Pat  Llston 
a  gambling  charge,        , 


j  When   Tyre  and   Sidon   ruled   the  seas 
when  Carthage  disputed  with  Rome  the 
supremacy  of  the  world,  the  goldbeat- 
ers of  those  days  worked  with  the  same 
implements    as    those    u.sed    nowadays 
It  is  a  very  singular  thing  that   in  all 
this   endless   change,    this    rearranging 
and    shifting,    the    goldbeaters'      trade 
should  still  be  conducted  on  its  ancient 
basis  and  stand   r)rimitive  in  relations 
to  the  other  trades  and  arts  that  have 
progres.sed  so  steadily  and   important- 
ly.     Another    curious    feature    of      the 
trades  is  the  badge  of  the  cooks  caj). 
It  is  the  same  cap  nowadays  as  the  cap 
worn    by    the    cooks    who     .served      up 
nightingales'  brains  for  LucuIIus,  Vitil- 
lius    and    the    Roman    epicures.      The 
cooks  of  the  days  (.f  Shakespeare    of 
Charlemagne,  of  all  ancient  time,  wore 
the  same  shaped  headgear— the  inevit- 
able cook's  cap  that  the  chef  of  a  fash- 
ionable modern  hotel  wears.    The  times 
change  and  people  change  with  them, 
but    in    this   labyrinthian    moving   anci 
changing  it  must   be  remembered   that 
there  still  exists  two  symbols  sent  down 
through  the  ages  as  they  were  in   the 
beginning. 


isn't 


on 


ycjur  hon- 
Jy-water." 


•juauijuii  pooa  b  jo  paeu  ui  uaqAv  ?ubav 

nox  ■^v^M.  St  no  uo^baibs    ..-pooa  sv 

jsnf,,  ou  dSQ     pdjfutMpooq  aq  ^ou  oq 


The  Ladies'  Aid  society  will  give  a 
musical  and  literary  entertainment  at 
Grace  M.  E.  church  this  evening  A 
fine  program  will  be  rendered,  after 
which  refreshments  will  be  sei-ved  in 
the  church  parlors.  Tickets  for  enter- 
tainment. 15  cents;  refreshments  10 
cents  extra. 


CASTORIA 

For  InfantB  and  Children. 


Costly  Mishaps. 

While  running  to  the  chimney  blaze 
on  Lake  avenue  near  the  canal  this 
iioon  the  hwjk  and  ladder  truck  broke 
down,  the  accident  being  caused 
tire  on  one  <if  the  wheels  giving 
•I"!  »t<:amer  No.  1  stalled  in  a 
drift.  It  will  cost  about  $125  to 
the  damage  to   the  apparatus. 


by  a 

way. 

snow- 

repalr 


SIXTY-TWO   YEARS   AN    M.    P 
To    represent     one     constituencv  'for 
sixty-two   years   in    the   house  of 'com- 
mons Is  somewhat  of  a  record.    Charles, 

•fo^if'"  ^^lu'^'L^'  i'*^"  '«  f-alleJ  th3 
rather  of  the  house  of  commons."  has 
represented  Wolverhampton  for  that 
time  without  interruption  He 
ly  celebrated  his  ninety-fifth 
at  his  London  residence,  anu 
the  congratulations  of  a 
friends  of  both  political 
right  honorable  gentleman  takes  a 
great  interest  in  public  affairs  and 
spends  much  time  reading  and  attend- 
ing: to  his  correspondence. 


recent- 
birthday 
received 
large  circle  of 
parties.      The 


PEC  ['LIAR,  NOT  VICIOUS 

Cleveland  Plain-Dealer:  "Yes,  Johnnie 
IS  considered  a  vicious  bov,  but  he 
responsil)le  for  that." 
"Why  not?" 

"Because  he  is  peculiar," 

!'In  what  way?" 

"In  a  great  many  ways.  One  dav  his 
father  told  him  to  go  to  the  store  and 
come  right' back.  He  didn't  come  and 
when  his  father  looked  for  him  ho  was 
playing  ball  with  some  boys  in  the  back 

•"Indeed!" 

"Yes,  and  that  isn't  the  worst  of  it  " 
"No?" 

"He  hadn't  been  to  the  store  at  all'" 

"How  strange!" 

"At  another  time  his  sister  said  he 
shouldn  t  eat  so  many  panc-akes-  that 
eleven  were  enough  for  any  bov  " 

"Well?"  '' 

"Well,  he  ate  thirteen!" 

"No!"       ' 

''Yes.  Not  long  after  that  his  Sundav 
school  teacher  cautioned  him  agains't 
the  sin  of  lyin-g.  The  next  day  he  broke 
down  the  clothes  line  and  said  it  was 
Jimmie  Hanigan   that  did   if" 

;;l  want  lo  know!  " 

"Yes.  it's  a  great  comfort  for  me  to 
remember  that  If  Johnnie  ever  gets  in 
any  trouble  it  will  be  so  easy  to  prove 
that   he   was    'peculiar.'  " 

The  evening  paper  .is  always  care- 
fully read,  especially  In  the  home  circle 
and  Is  therefore  an  excellent  advertis- 
mg  medium.  Advertisers  in  The  Even- 
ing   Herald  always  get  full  value.  '       ' 


her  limbs 
i^ents  required 
New  York  Journal. 

It  has  l)een  demonstrated  that  wheel- 
ing causes  the  muscular  portion  <jf  the 
calf  of  the  leg  to  bulge  out  considerably 
beyond  its  natural  line,  and  anv  bicy- 
clist will  admit  that  after  a  ride  of  ten 
or  fifteen  miles  walking  is  irksome.  He 
hasn't  good  walking  legs.  His  muscle.'- 
have  slipped  a  cog. 

Dr.  Earl  S,  Bullock,  the  well  known 
authority  on  bicycling  and  its  effect  on 
the  general  health  of  riders,  .said: 

"Big  muscular  development  does  not 
accompany  grace.     We  do  not  look  for 
grace  in  a  black.smith.  While  the  mod- 
erate use  of  the  wheel     would,     in    my 
opinf)!!,    prove    detrimental    in    no    way 
to  the  dancer,  yet.  as   I  think  is  often 
the  case,  when  Indulged  in  to  excess,  it 
would     c  rtainly      detract     from       the 
;  dancer's  grace  and   ease  of  motion    iiy 
!  over  developing  all  the  muscles  of  the 
j  legs  and  some  of  those  of  the  back  and 
I  abdomen.     The  muscles    of     the     arms 
I  and  the  rest  of  the  body  are  but  little 
'  u.sed. 

I  "In  dancing,  all  the  muscles  of  the  i 
l>ody  are  brought  into  play  and  gently  ! 
and  evenly  developed,  A  woman  hav-  ! 
ing  all  her  muscles  evenly  developed 
will  be  more  graceful  than  the  one  wh(> 
has  over  developed  the  muscles  of  the 
leg,  l)ack  and  abdomen.  It  is  also  prob-  j 
able  that  many  women  who  have  be- 
come infatuated  with  the  wheel,  indulge 
in  the  sport  to  excess,  neglecting  danc-  | 
ing  altogether.  j 

The  young  women  who  dance  at  the 
theaters  ruefully  admit  that  their  affee-  ! 
lion  for  the  wheel  has  caused  them  no 
end  of  trouble.     Said  one  young  woman, 
whose  merry  eyes  have  gained  for  her 
an  international  reputation.  "I  took  up 
the  wheel  for  exercise,  don't  you  know, 
and  liked  it  ever  and  ever  so  much,  but 
what  was  my  surprise,  after  1  had  been 
riding    awhile,    to    find   jLhat    for    soim- 
reason    or  other   it     was     \ery     mucii 
harder   for   me  to  dance     than   it   haci 
been  before.     Finally  I  went  to  sc^e  my 
doctor  and  asked  him  if  there  was  any- 
thing wrong     with     my     muscles.      He  j 
looked  me  all  over  carefully,  and  then  | 
.said    the  only    thing    that    was   wrong, 
so  far  as  he     could     juclge,     was     the  I 
wheel,  I 

"He  said  that  riding  the  wheel  dead-  ! 
ened  the  muscles  that  1  used  in  dancing 
and  that  every  night,  when  1  had  been 
riding  in  the  day,  I  would  find  that  the 
mu.sch^s  for  dancing  wouldn't  act  as  If 
I  had  not  been  riding. 

"Walking  does  not  affect  me  that  way 
at  all.  1  can  walk  miles  and  miles  and 
feel  just  as  well  as  ever  at  night,  sc 
far  as  the  muscles  are  concerned,  i 
have  had  to  give  up  the  wheel,  much 
as  I  hated  to.  You  see,  dancing  is  my 
bread  and  butter,  and  as  I  find  that 
riding  the  wheel  hurts  my  dancing,  1 
simply  had  to  stop  it.  I  couldn't  make 
the  little  kicks  and  twirls  with  my 
Ic^gs  that  I  ought  to  in  order  to  make 
my  dance  perft-ct.     Awful,  i.sn't  it?" 


EARLY  PUSSY  WILLOWS. 

"Harl)ingers  of  Spring"  is' the  placard 
announcement  in  a  Broadway  window, 
said  harbingers  being  sc>me  sort  of  diy 
snoods,  the  name  of  which  none  but  iht 
initialed    would    attempt    to    chronicle, 
5-a>-s  the  New  York  Sun.    A  great  many 
women   and   some   men   slop   to   regard 
with  interest  these  forerunners  of  May- 
time.    But  very  few.  either  men  or  wo- 
niiu,   pause  for  a  .elance  at  a   windo\ 
across  the  street.     Yet  in  that  windov 
there    are    some      real      harbingers    ciT 
spring,  and  the  name  doesn't  come  from 
i'aris,   cither!     A    'litchcr   full   of   puss\ 
v.illows  in  the  midst  of  hothouse  rose:-- 
.•;nd  violets  and  Easter  lilies,  bloomin- 
before  their  scheduled  time.    The  news- 
paper man  isn't  a  florist,  and  the  sigl.:. 
of   tho.se    imssy    willows   seemed    Ilk.-   ^ 
\  irue  glimpse  of  spring.     They  brought 
I  up  a  picture  of  rude  April  streams  eat- 
j  ing  away   the  muddy  banks  under  th,' 
I  willows,  of  the  orange-colored  switches, 
j  deepened    into    rich    brown    and    green. 
showing  their  silver  toes  sc^attered  along 
the  stem.     One  could  almost  smell   tin 
fivsh,   lirst   days  of  the  goodly  siMsoii 
I  uut  there  in     snowy,     noisy     Broadwav 
I  No  wonder  that  one  should  go  jn  anil 
I  ask   the  fiorist    whence   came   his   hai  - 
i  bingers  of  spring.     No  v/onder,   that  i.-. 
I  that    an    ignorant   penson.    unskilled    iv. 
tli>'  tricks  of  the  floi  ist's  trade,  should 
I  do  this. 

But  the  fiorist  only  .smiled  a  pitving 
I  smile— after  h.»  was  sure  that  he  wa'sn't 
being  guyed.    And  he  said  that  the  onlv 
I  springtime    to    be    thanked     for     tho.^e 
I  pussy  willov.s  was  the  springtime  of  his 
steam-heated  shop.     He  said  that  any-  ' 
one  c-oiild  go  out  and  cut  some  withes  '■ 
of   willow,   stick   them   in    water     in     a 
warm  rocun,  and  grow  pussy  willows  aL 
•  home.    He  said  that  they  would  last  six 
weeks.  Evidently  this  is  a  case  of  bring- 
ing the  mountain  to  Mahomet. 


LYCEUM  THEATER. 

L.  X.SCOTT.  ilun„;,,r. 


TWO  NIGHTS  ONLY 
Commencing  Monday.  March  22. 

The  Event  of  tte  Soaeoo. 

CHAS.  H.  YALE'S 

•'FOBEYER  DEVIL'S  AUCTION" 

Ihe  li^ador  and  tearher  of  .spertienl  repkto 
with  noveltiofl  from  Earope  aud  America, 

S-'ethefiinny  trolley,  the  biko  craze,  tlip 
liciboe  6  Foirpp,  the  bRs^lifnl  maiil-Ufi,  the  s-liy 
old  niaide,  the  mntic^al  turses,  the  grand 
trapsformatlou,  the  biggrest  and  best  show , 
vjeitiog  Dnlnth  this  eeasoo. 

All  at  reRolar  prices.    Boats  on  cale  Satur- 
day at  11  a.  m. 


I-ECTCBi: 


I    "Saul  of  Tarsus'' 


FIRST   M.   E.   CHURCH,  WED- 
NESDAY  EVE.,  MARCH  24. 

(Star  Lecture  Course.)  1 

Tickets  ^ks.  Reeerred  seat  sale  begins  Sat-  ' 
nrday  morning  at  Chamberiain  A  Taylor  s. 

^  ■  '      -  -     —  -  -  


AT 


!  IN  THH  DARK  AOES. 

.\s  early  as  the  sixth  century  the  wo- 
man    (luestion   was  a   knotty'  problen., 
puzzling  the  wise  men  of    that  period. 
I    '.Are  Women  Human  Beings?"  was  thi 
I  startling  inquiry  proposed  by  a  bishop 
at   the   famous   council   of   Macon,    and 
several    sessions    were    devoted    to    the 
consideration  of  the  imiwrtant  subject, 
says    the    Cincinnati    Rnciuirer.         Thi> 
point    was     not    considered     joculai'  or 
frivolous,  and  the  good  fathers  earnest- 
ly and  'gravely   undeitcj.»k   the   task   of 
assigning  to  woman  her  proper  place  in 
creation.    They  finally  dc^cided  that  she 
did   not   belong  to  the   "world  of  mut- 
ton,   beeves     or     goats,"    but    was,    in 
reality,  a   human  being.     This  decision 
was   made    only   after   something   of   a 
Plruggle,     As  it  was  not  an  ecumenical 
council,   the  fathers  were  advised   that 
the     decision     was     not     binding 
them. 


WHY  BE  HUMBUGGED? 

Abcjut  one  person  in  fifty  may  have  a  slicbt 
scalp  discjasfl ;  for  50c  wo  Koa.autooa  euro 

WWE.  BOYD  &  WILBUR, 

Ground  Floor,  lluntc-r  I?uildicg 


on 


and 


Will  Start  Next  Week. 

D.  I-I.  Holston  iV:  Co..  the  sash 
door  manufacturers,  expect  to  start  ui. 
their  factory  next  week.  The  mill  has 
been  shut  down  for  some  time,  but  the 
improvement  in  trade  condtions  war- 
rants starting  up  at  this   time. 


CARLTON  SMALL  FRUIT 
AND  PLANT  NURSERY. 

Catalogue  mailed  free  to  any  address. 
I  will  set  out  any  variety  of  Strawberries 
myself,  noar  the  city  of  Duluth,  (guaran- 
tee ail  to  live)  for  $1.50  per  lUO,  if  ordered 
before  April  15th. 

E.  G.  BOVEE, 

Carlton,  Minn. 


STARTLING    STATISTICS. 
Philadelphia  Record:     1  have  discov- 
ered with  the  aid  of  statistics  that  more 
money  is  expended  in  the  United  States 
for    cigars    than    for    all    the    common 
schools  In  the  country.    It  has  l)c='en  es- 
timated that  the  cost  of  washing  linen 
that   might  just   as   well    be   worn    tue 
days  longer  amounts  to  enough  in  this 
country   to  more   than    defray   the   e.v- 
I)enses  of  the  American  board  of  foreign 
missions.     The   expense  of   Ijuttons   cjn 
the  backs  of  our  coats,  where  they  are 
of  no  earthly  usc\  is  equal  to  the  sup- 
port of  all  our  orphan  asylums.     It   is 
estimated   that    the  value  of  old   boots 
thrown   aside   which   might    have    been 
worn  at  least  a  day  longer  is  more  than 
enough  to  buy  a  flannel  nightgown  for 
every  baby  in  the- land.    Also,  that  the 
cost  of  every  inch  of  the  full  shirt  col- 
lars of  our  young  men  is  equal  to  th- 
sum   necessary   to   put   a   Bible   in   the 
hands   of   every   Hottentot     in     South 
Africa.    And  If  a  man  had  his  hair  cut 
every  two  weeks  the  barbers  would  get 
rich. 


DEAFNESS  CANNOT  BE  CURED 
By  local  applications,  as  they  cannot 
reach  the  diseased  portion  of  the  ear 
There  is  only  one  way  to  cure  deafness' 
and  that  is  by  constitutional  remedies 
Deafnc^.ss  I.S  caused  by  an  inflamed  condi- 
tion of  the  mucous  lining  of  the  Eusta- 
chian Tube.  When  this  tubo  gets  in- 
flamed you  have  a  rumbling  sound  or  ini- 
pertect  hearing,  and  when  It  Is  entirelv 
closMl  deafness  is  the  result,  and  unless 
the   inflammation   can   be   taken   out   and 

ho'.fr^n^'® j:m'S''^''i°  }^^  normal  condition, 
hearing  will  be  destroyed  forever;  ninc^ 
cases  out  of  ten  are  caused   by  catarrh 

Jinn'nf  "fui"'^'"^  ^"^  ='"  Inflamed  condil 
lion  of  the  mucous  surfaces 

We  will   give   one   hundred   dollars   for 

any  ease  of  deafness  (causc-d  by  catarrh) 

that  cannot  be  cured  by  Hall's  Cit'irr-i 

cure.  Send  for  circulars,  free  ^^t-*"-* 

sAin-hv^i^^^'^T.-^  ?0-  Toledo,  Ohio. 
bold   by  druggists,   ^^^c 

Hall's   Family   Pills  are  the  bast 


DETECTIVES 

Anyone  rpqniring  the  services  of  experienced 
oHicers  in  civil  and  criminal  cases,  can  secure 
same  by  calling  on  or  addrepsing 

Benson *s  Detective  Agency 

Exchange  Building,  Duluth. 


BAA'K  AD  VERTISEMENXa. 

RrsHJafiFBank 

OF  DULUTH. 

United  Statas  Government  Depositary 
CAPITAL,  ONE  MILLION  DOLURS. 


A.  L.  Obobam, 
President. 


J.  H.  OlOBT, 
Caahier, 


W.  S.  Bishop 
Aiwt.  Caahier 


■oney  Sent  to  All  Parts  of  the  World. 

Accounts  o'  Merehai^rBanks,    Corporatiotu 
and  IndlTldnals  Keceived. 

Iirtwraat  Alletwd  •■  Tlmti  Oe»»olU. 


HEALTHi 
BATHS 

Right  in  j-our  own  I 
home  you  <*au  en 
joy  dry  and  steam 
vapor  oxygon  and 
perfumod  bathe  by 
usioc  the  Kohin- 
8on  Folding  Bath 
CabiD»t;  a  perfect, 
and  f.po'^dy  euro 
for  colde,  rhorma- 
tisu!,  etc.  Helpful 
in  evpry  way, 

J.  M.  MALONEY, 
State  Agent, 
301  Ohamber  of  Oowworc*.  Outlitfi; 


"•  ¥;,L?fyTON,  President 

'''^'^^wTV-r¥F.'?TKR,  (ashler. 
i                 WILLIAM  a.  HEtx.VIiDT,  Aw't  Caahr 
THE 

American  Exchange 

BANK. 

Duluth,  Minnesota. 

Capital,  $500,000.  Sarplns.  $100,000. 

HAMILTON  M."p'f\pT?.li;?"«» 
MELVIN  J.  FORBES ' 

JOHN   H.  UPHAM, 

GEORGE  8PENCBB, 

ANGUS  EM  ACF'aRLANB 
JAMBS  C.  HUNTE 


I 


■   ■  ^-m    »    ■■     m^-^wm- 


M 


I  *■■  ■  I  ■  w 


^ 


1 


i«M> 


;  f 


♦■■^ 


ii 


.^m-kKm, 


•imm 


h- 

■ 
1 

■'•»-— 

' 

i 

\ 

t" 

I  Have  you  seen 
I  That  Pants 

Window? 


Third 

Ave. 

West. 


Well,  it  tells  the  tale  of 

Price  Reductions  for  Tomorrow. 

Kveryihing  you  could  wish  for  in  the  Pants  line  i:>  in 
that  window.  Your  own  eyt s  cettainly  oan't  deceive 
yoo;  otherwise  youM  hardly  believe  such  good  Pants 
could  be  sold  so  cheap. 

IOC  pairs  Mens  $2.50  purely  all-wool 
Cassmiere  Trousers 

ipo  pairs  Mens  $voo  Gray  Hair  Linen 
Trousers 

150  pairs  Men's  $4  00  Fancy  Cassinaere 
Trousers 

150  pairs  Men's  $4  50  Tailor-Made 
Worsted  Trousers 

159  pairs  King's  finest  $7,00  and  iS.oo 
Tailor-Made  Trousers 


; 
t 


Floods  Are  Reported  From 

Nearly  All  Sections  of 

the  Country. 


$2.00 
$2.50 
$3.00  * 
$350  I 
$6.00 1 


The     Mississippi     Breaking 

Through    Levees— Miles 

of  Land  Covered. 

Wires  Down,  Bridges  Washed 

Out  and  Some  Loss  of 

Life  Recorded. 


IJW-  S.  BURROWS^  The  Clothier  j 


TARIFF  DISSENTIONS. 


GREECE  BACKS  DOWN. 


St.  Paul,  March  19.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.)— A  special  from  Rock  Valley, 
Iowa,  to  the  Dispateh,  say.s:  A  very 
heavy  rainfall  in  this  vicinity,  comin:; 
as  It  did   upon   the  fast   melting  snow 

and  ice  has  raised  Rock  river  at  this    Ftncy  Bananas,  per  dozen  only         to 
pomt  two  feet  higher  than  the  highest 7----    1-tf 


ANDERSON 

Cash  Grocery  Co. 

A  Few  of  Our 

SPECIALTIES! 

1 0  lbs  pure  Buckwheat  Flour 25o 

6  lbs  Potato  Flour 25o 

10  bars  Gold  Leaf  Soap 25o 

Choice  Early  Rote  Potatoes 25o 

White  Rye  Flour.  491b  sack qQo 

49-lb  sack  Athlete 81.10 

9-lb  package  yellow  Corn  Meal  lor. .      ]0o 

20  lbs  nice  Brown  Sugar Sl.OO 

A.  B.  C.  Soda  Crackers,  by  the  box, 

per  lb 

Green  and  Yellow  Peas,  per  lb 

Aunt  Jemima's  Pancake  Flour,  per 

package 

Fine  Table  Syrup,  bring  your  jug,  per 

gallon,  only 

Fine  Butter  Scotch  Syrup,  bring  your 

jug.  per  gallon,  only 4O0  I 

Strictly  Fresh  Eggs,  per  doz 15^  j 


e^v%% 


♦♦^♦♦^THE  BIG^^«^4^« 


AUCTION  SALE 

OF  THE  BIQ  STOCK  WILL  BE  AT 

319 


5o 

1^0! 


lOoi 


I80 


Democratic  Congressional  Com-  Her  Gunboats  to  Be  Recalled 
mittee  Members  Disagree. 


From  Cretan  Waters. 


Washington.   Mareh     1!>.— Discussions 
have    arisen    among    the    IVmoeratic 
members  of  tht-  ways  and  means  com- 
mittee which  may  result  in  the  presen- 
tation of  two  minority  reports  on   the 
tariff   J.ill.     Mi.    Bailey,    of  Te.xas.    wh. 
IS  at  the  head  of  the  minority  lommit^ 
tee.  hy  virtue'  of  his  position,  will  write 
the  main  r-port.  and  it  is  not  improb- 
able   that     some     of     the     Democraiie 
members  will  decline    to    sign    jt.     Mr 
Bailey  differs  from  his  Demoeratie  eol- 
leagues  radically  on  the  sul>jv.'ct  of  free 
^^ool.  and  yesterday,  when  Mr.  McMiN 
!m  and  Mr.     Wheeler    oflfered     amend- 
ments in  the  committer,   the  former  to 
place  wool  on  the  free  list  and  the  lat- 
ter   to    make   the   revenue   collected    on  : 
wool   not  to  exced  75c  ad  valorem,     he 
voted   against     the     McMillin     amend- 
ment, and  declined     to    vote    for    that 
offered  by  (;en.  Wheeler. 

Mr.  Bailey  takes  the  position  that  the 
t  hicago  platform  implication     opposed 
tree  raw  materials,  and  especially  free 
wool,    the    srreat    product    of   the    West 
The  plank   of     the     Chicago     platfortii 
n-ld  that  tariff  duties  should  be  levied 
for  purposes  of  revenue,  the  "schedules 
to  be  so  adjusted     to     operate    equally 
throughout  the  country,     and     to     dis- 
crimmate   between   class     or     section   • 
Mr.  McMillin  and  several  other  Demo- 
cratic members  of  the  ways  and  means 
committee,  who  are  ardent  silver  men. 
cling  to  the  free  wool  idea,    but   claim 
that    the    Chicago    platform    does    run 
counter  to  their  position. 

But  some  of  the  Democratic  members 
like  Gen.  Wheeler,  who  favor  free  wool" 
are  still  opposed  to  free  coal  and  corn 
which  were  class  >d  as  "raw  mat»>rials  • 
by  the  supporters  of  the  original  Wil- 
son bill.  In  fact.  Oen.  Wheeler  made  a 
speech  against  these  features  of  that 
bill. 

In  addition  to  the  di.ssensions  over  the 
question  of  free  wool  were  -free  raw 
materials."  There  is  a  strong  intimation 
that  Mr.  Robertson,  of  Louisiana,  one 
of  the  new  Democratic  members  of  thi> 
committee,  will  in  words  indorse  th.^ 
sugar  scheilule.  It  is  po.ssible.  however, 
that  the  ijresent  complications  may  be 
smfK>thed  out  in  some  way.  and  that 
Mr.  Mailey  may  be  able  to  write  a  re- 
port  in  which  all  his  Democratic  col- 
l^-agues  can  j.in.  Eff«>it.s  to  this  end 
are  now  being  mad-,  as  the  Democrats  : 
are  e.xtremely  anxious  to  go  into  the 
tariff  tight   with  a  solid  united  front. 


water  mark  ever  known.  Several  new 
highway  bridges  are  out,  and  also  the 
Milwaukee  railroad  bridge,  one-quarter 
mile  in  length,  just  west  of  this  place, 
went  out  at  midnight.  .\  freight  irai'i 
Js  standing  on  the  west  side  unable  to 
come  ahead  or  make  grade  to  backup 
Two  familie.s  living  .  n  the  island  north 
of  town  are  to  be  seen  in  their  upper 
stories  frantically  crying  for  help, 
which,  owing  to  th-  liood  ice.  will  be 
a  very  dangerous     undertaking.     Hail 


:      Athens.  March  19.— The     Greek     gov- 
I  emment  has  decided  to  recall  the  gun-  i 

boats   .-Vlphois  and   Pinos   from  Cretan  ' 

waters.     The  former  is  now  coaling  up.  ' 

The  cabinet  was  in  .se.ssion  until  2  a.  in.     load  traffic  west  and  south  of  here  will 

I     •«  "ffifjial  y  stated  that  only  ISO.)  out     be  at  a  standstill   for     soVne     time 
:  oi   the  b.,.iwo  army  reserve  men  called  !  tome. 

,  out    have   failed    to   respond,    thus   set-  I  

I  ting   at   rest    the  stories   circulated     uf 

wholesale  failure  to  answer  the  call  to 

.arms. 

A  dispatch   from  Canea   today,     says 
that  an  Austrian   newspaper  man  and 
printer,   who  recently  visited   the  camp 
of  Col.  Vassos.  commander  of  the  Greek 
army  of  occupation,   has  been  arrestetl 
and    there     detained      under     a     close 
guard.     Col.  Vassos  remains  at  Akium 
The   Greek    warship   Nanarchis    Maulis 
has  arrived  at  the  Piraeus,   having  on 
boanl  twelve  prisoners  who  were  cap-  I 
tured   there   during     a     recent     attack  I 
which   the  Turks  made   upon     Monon- 
dondri.  near  Platania.  ' 

Three  emissaries  of  the  Turkish  le- 
gation at  Athens  have  been  arrested 
in  the  camp  of  Col.  Vassos. 


MANY  ARE  DROWNED. 

Official  Figures  Say  Fifty  Peo- 
ple Are  Dead. 

Memphis,  Tenn..  .March  19.— Rumors 
of  a  sensational  nature  are  afloat  to- 
day as  to  the  breaking  of  the  levees 
below  this  city,  and  also  of  the  con- 
sequent serious  damage  to  property 
and  stock.      So  far  the.«e  reporfs  have 


O 

Nice  juicy  Oranges,  per  dozen  only.       |0o 

Fancy  Navels,  par  dozen 30  to  35o 

Choice  Dairy  Butter,  per  lb ig^ 

Jolly,  assorted  llavors,  each 25o 

Good  Dairy  Butter 15^ 

j  A.  B.  C.  Ginger  Snaps,  4  ibj  lor. . . .      25c 

[  Choice  Lemons,  per  dozen  only jQo 

Calitornia  Shoulder  Ham.  per  lb....      Q'^q 

j  Choice  Vedlum  Ham,  per  lb iQq 

j  Choice  Bacon,  per  lb g^ 

;  Choice  Salt  Sides,  per  lb 5  to  60 

Pure  Leal  Lard,  4  lbs  for 25o 

ANDERSON 

CASH  GROCERY  CO. 

Cor.  First  Ave.  East  and  Superior  St. 
Telephone  555 


West  Superior  Street 


t 


I* 


.•'..fic'tr 


SpriiiKdiilf  iiiul   Lynn.  Sioux  City  subnrhs 
are   tlooded   by   the   tioixl   and   the  bott  Jin.-; 


PUGILIST   ("tRERN    HAPPY 


not  been  verified  In  full,   but  sufficient  I  *"  "u'  ^'''*'  '""''  ""'^*"«'  wat.-r.  Every  biiib.-e 

if  ^""1  V:^?r^"^  ''-  statement  that    '^^^^'l^^'i^i^^y'^'^:^  t  "^"^^i^ 
Derore  nightfall  an  additional  two  hun-     i'^'S'-:  'ts  water  is  reported  five  feet  u.-p 


&an     l-ranci.sco.     March      it»._Qeorge  I  '^^'t't's   are    alleged    to    have    failed 

Green  and   his  trainer.   B..b   .Mc\rthur     -  - 

returned  from  Carson  with  Dan  Haw  k 
ins  last  night.     Green  was  met  by  quite 
a  crowd   at   the   ferry,     manv     of     the 
Olympic  club  meml)ers  being  there. 

•I  am  especially  pleased  with  my 
victory.'  he  .said,  "because  it  in.sureV 
the  match  with  Tommy  Ryan.  Articles 
to  fight  him  for  the  welterweight  cham- 
pjonship  and  purse  at  Syracuse.  April 
-..  have  already  been  made  and  th» 
mat<  h  announced.  It  was  conditioned 
on  the  outcome  of  Wednesdav's 
with  Smith." 


fight 


Funeral  Wotice, 

All  mombers  of  Silver  Lodge  No.  2eo,  I. 
B  n'  *'  '^r^^^^'i^PSKid  to  m.'ot  at  OtU 
follows  hail  Saianliiy.  JJarcli  if),  at  1  p. 
m.  sharp,  to  attend  the  faupral  of  Slstor 
Plannt.  Faneralwi!!  start  from  the  Fir-it 
Preab>terian  church  at  2  n.  m. 

_Jas    McchLE,  N,  G 


BADGER  ATHLETES. 

Cost  $15,233.69  to  Stiffen   Up 
Wisconsin  Muscles. 

Madison,  March  19.— The  statement  of 
the  University  Athletic  associati<m     of  ' 
moneys  disbursed  for  athletic  purposes  i 
was   presented   to  the     assembly     this 
morning.     The  statement     poinds      out 
that   no  state   funds  are  expended    for 
athletics,    but    the   money   is   raised    by 
private  subsecription   and   by  charging 
admi.ssion     to     football     and     baseball 
games.     Money  was  expended     in     the  , 
following  ways: 

Baseball.  $1728.98;  football.  $7470.05;  ! 
acquatic  sports.  $26::7.7S;  tennis.  $120.tt5-  i 
track       athletics.     $694. uS;     repairs 


riTKKL    WORKERS    RESUME 
Patterson,    March    19.— The   200    strik- 
ers   of    the    Enterprise    silk    mill,    who 
went   out    for  an   increase 


be 

dred  square  miles  of  territory  will  i.e 
submerged.         The     i>oints    where    the 

__ are 

remi»te  from  telegraph  stations  mak- 
ing It  impossible  to  get  authentic  in- 
formation. 

The  territory  covered  by  the  relief 
committee,  under  the  supervision  of 
the  committee  of  Memphis,  appalling 
facts  came  to  light  this 
Drowning  of  negro  men,  women  and 
children  are  officially  reported  until 
'"^ J'sl  n«^v  numbers  half  a  hundred 
The  relief  committee  thus  far  have 
ample  funds  to  feed  and  doth  all  the 
afflicted  men  in  the  city,  but  the  work 
IS  naturally  slow.  Several  steamers 
were  sent  out  this  morning,  and  are 
expected  to  return  with  several  hun- 
dred  persons. 

The  government  is  aiding  in  the  res- 
cue work.  A  dispatch  from  Washing- 
inton  authorized  the  government  en- 
gineer to  land  men  and  service  to  fur- 
ther the  work  of  protecting  life  and 
property.  The  gauge  this  morning 
reads  ;b.l.  a  rise  of  :i  in  eight  hours. 

-A  family  of  six  f.^und  a  watery 
gi-aye  by  the  capsizing  of  a  dug-out 
\vhile  making  for  high  land.  Two  of 
the  family  were  infants  in  arms. 

The  Memphis  levee  is  a  sight  wonder- 
ful to  l)ehold.  For  a  distance  of  half  a 
mile  there  is  a  <ongregation  of  negroe?, 


in  Hawarden  streets.  It  is  said  the  North- 
western road  has  lost  iiearlv  everv  briiltfo 
between  Huron  and  Hawarden.  The  Mil- 
waukee briilge  here  across  the  Flovd  will 
go  .soon.  The  Mls.souri  is  reported  ' bi.uk- 
ing  and  gorging  near  Onawa.  but  no 
change  is  yet  observable  here.  Trains 
on    ne.-irly    all    roads    are    al)andoned. 


Auction!    Nothing  reserved  at  this  sale.    Everythin .       ,,^ 

going  to  make  a  change  in  our  business  and  must  have  monev  on  sh 
notice.    1  herefore  we  will  offer  our  entire  stock  of 
FIRST-CLASS,  HIQH=GRADE 

WATCHES 


JEWELRY,  SILVERWARE,  I 


CLOCKS, 

At  public  auction,  commencing  Tomorrow  at  2  p 
and  7  p.  m.  o'clock  and  will  continue  every  aftern 


m. 
rnoon 


and  evening  until  the  stock  is  disposed  of.  No  shoddy 
Ooods  and  no  goods  misrepresented.  AH  ^.roods  guar- 

at  pri 
out  of  business. 


anteed  same  as  at  private  sale,  as  we  are  not  going 


j  BIG  MUDDY  IS  DANGEROUS. 

morninir  i  ,.*^«"^'is  ^''tV-  March  19.-While  the 
''^  '  Missouri  river  at  this  point  is  still  low 
for  this  time  of  the  year,  it  is  gradually 
rising,  and  fears  of  a  flood  are  ex- 
press.-d  l>y  river  authorities.  The  river 
has  risen  about  a  foot  a  day  for  three 
or  four  days  and  today  that  mark  was 
slightly  increased,  it  is  said,  bv  tlu 
heavy  rains  north  of  here.  All  point.'- 
between  here  and  Omaha  have  heavv 
rainfalls,  and  it  fs  feared  that  when 
the  accumulated  waters  reach  here,  the 

•  lamag-  will  result.  So  far  as  known 
the  river  has  not  yet  overrun  its  banks 

•  It  any  point  within  ino  miles  of  here. 
The  Mis.souri  here  is  n\e  feet  above  the 
low  wat.M-  mark. 


>..  .  **^  wages  of    stamling,  sitting,  and  reclinin.'    nwatt 

The"old's?ii    ''f "'■"^^'    K'    ''''i^    '"•'^^-     '"^  individual    ""turns     f?.r      eUef     Th; 

terson.   The  strike  i,i    the   Ph^etlix    silk    .Illgh"   rise     *"'''""''   '^""''^   ^^■*'"^^«   " 

mill   IS  still  on.    but   the  mills  are  run-  

ning  with  non-union  hands  and  the 
proprietors  say  that  they  will  not 
make  any  attempt  in  inducing  the 
strikers    to   return   to    work. 


TARIFF  DEBATE   RULES. 
Washingtcm.  Man  h  19.— The  house,  by 
a  vote  of  179  to  32.  the  Democrats  and 
Populists  comprising  the  minority,   to- 
day  adopted   a   rule  providing  for  ses- 
sions beginning  at  10  o'clock  each  dav 
with  sessions  at  night  for  debate  on  th*- 
tat-iff  l^ill.  the  vote  to  be  taken  on   the 
bill  and  pending  amendments  at  3  p    m 
March  ;{1. 


SEVENTJEN  LIVES. 

Flood  Fatality  Reported  From 
a  Missouri  Point. 


After  the  adoption  of  the  rules  of  tlu 

»-.-r...«.i  •  .     •.,• ""  '  tariff  debate.  Mr.   Harrison  presented  n 

grounds  an.l  buildings  used  by  the  ath-    special  rule  for  the  immediate  consid- 

The  total  ex-    erati-.n   ot   the   four  approi)riation    bilis 


letic  a.ssociation,  $2583.13. 
penses  amounted  to  $1.^.233.69. 

This  statement  includes  all  moneys 
for  the  pay  of  the  coaches,  traveling 
expenses  of  the  athletic  teams  and 
rowing  crew,  and  money  expended  for 
keeping  up  the  tennis  courts.  The  re- 
ceipts from  the  great  football  game  with 
Minnesota  as  given  are  $2tXtO.      The  ac- 


which  failed  in  the  last  congress    forty 
minutes  to  be  allowed  on  each  biii. 

S  PAX  I S  H    DISTURBAXC«ES 
Madrid.    March    19.— At    the    inaugur- 
ation   ot    a    new    republican    club    here 
last    evening,    revolutionary 
were    made    and    led    to   a    tumult    a-id 


quatic  department  lost  money,  but  the    fighting   during   which   several    perscms 
expenses  of   this  department   the  com-     ^^f't    injured.        Several    arrests     were 


munication  states  are  made  up  by  sub- 
scription of  the  people  of  Madison. 

lOWAS  COMING  SENSATION. 
I>es  Moines.  Iowa,  March  19.— The 
new  revenue  bill  passed  the  .senate  this 
morning.  36  to  7.  practically  as  it  came 
from  the  ways  and  means  committee. 
All  important  features  of  the  bill  re- 
main. It  is  .said  that  it  will  b-  some- 
what radically  changed  in  the  house. 
The  committee  to  investigate  charges 
against  the  speaker  has  not  finished, 
and  promises  startling  developments, 
involving  other  persons,  showing  the 
attack  on  the  speaker  which  was  in- 
spired by  members  tt»  weaken  his  in- 
fluence. 


made. 


SENATE  CONFIRMATIONS. 
Washington.  March  19. -The  senate  has 
confirmed  the  following  n<iminatio::s: 
John  Hay.  to  be  amba.ssador  of  the 
I  nited  States  to  Great  Britain:  Hora.-e 
Jorter.  to  be  ambassador  of  the  Unifd 
States  to  France;  Henry  White,  to  U- 
secretary  of  the  embassy  of  the  United 
States  to  Great   Britain. 


St.  L..uis.  March  19.— Advices  from 
Caruthersville,  Mo.,  a  town  on  the  Mis- 
sissippi river  bank  in  the  extremt 
southeastern  part  o  fthe  state  are  to 
the  effect  that  a  levee  flfty  miles  be- 
low that  place  is  reported  to  have 
broken  and  that  seventeen  lives  have 
been  lf)st.  Efforts  are  now  being  made! 
to  verify  the  story.  The  river  continues 
to  rise  at  Caruthersville  and  the  pres- 
sure on  the  levee  is  great.  All  weak 
spots  are  being  strengthened,  but  the 
work  is  handicapped  by  rain  as  the 
earth  u.sed  in  repairs  is  turned  into 
mud. 

speeches  ,  ^f-^Y  ^»/"»'^s  living  on  the  river 
peetnL.  ,,an^  ,„  ^^^^  country  have  abandonel 
their  hou.scs  and  taken  refuge  in  Caru- 
thersville. A  large  amount  of  stock 
has  been  lost  on  the  Tennessee  side  of 
the  river,  almost  the  entire  bottom  for 
miles  being  inundated.  The  levee  near 
Cottonwood,  about  eight  mjles  from 
Caruthersville.  is  expected  to  break  al- 
niost  any  hour  and  overflow  that  part 
of  the  country. 


MILWAUKEE    ROAD'S    PEARS. 
Milwaukee.  March  19.— Reports  to  the 
offices  of  the  St.  Paul  railway  say  that 
all      the     rivers     and      small     streams 
throughout    the    western      nart    of     tli. 
state   are    in   a   threatening     condition. 
The  ice  in   nearly  all  of  them  is  going 
out   rapidly,    as   a  result   of   warm   an-1 
hedvy   rains,   and  considerable  damage 
is  liable  to  result  to  railroad  and  other 
property   on    the    low    lands.     The    tirst 
real    washout   of   the  st;ason   on   the   St. 
Paul    railr()ad   occurred     this     morning- 
near  Wau.seca,  about  twenty  miles  east 
of   Prairie    Du    Chien.     About    eighteen 
feet  of  a  high  bank  was  washed  away 
to  a  de|)th  of  about  six  feet,  causing  a 
I  delay    to    trains    of    two    hours.         The 
trouble    was    temporarily    overcome    by 
the     railroad    being  'ciibbed    up"    with 
timbers,  so  as  to  permit  the  passage  of 
trains  until  the  complete  repairs  can  lie 
made. 

The   reports    at    the   general    office   of 
the  Wisconsin  Central  are  to  the  effeci 
that  the  water  is  exceedingly  high  and 
In  some  places  threatenin-g,  but  no  dam 
age  to  railroad  tracks  has  been  done. 


/  ip       a- 


^ 

k 


Get  the  Finest  Goods  in  the  market 
At  your  own  price. 


OFFICIAL  WARNING. 


HIS  rb:signation  accepted. 

Washington.  March  19.— The  presi- 
dent, after  ctmsideration  of  the  subject 
by  the   full   cabinet   at   noon,   accepted 


THE   OMAHA   EXPOSITION. 
Omaha,    March    19 —Active    work     on 
the         trans-Mississippi  exposition 

grounds    was    comm.enced    this 
ing      • 


Government  Advises  People  to 
Leave  Certain  Districts. 


the  resignation  of  Washington  Hesing  the  first  dirt  on  Arbor  day  Anrll  '"o" 
a^  postmaster  at  Chicago,  and  sent  C.  ■  when  a  great  demonstratbrn'^wUM"  in: 
\.  Gordons  name  to  the  senate  as  his    dulged  in.  "^  '" 


successor. 


Stop    drugging    yourself    with 


BLAXTHER   UNDER   ARREST 
„     »  ..  „  drug  !      San    Francisco,    March    19.— The    do- 

nostrums    or     cures."       Get     a     well-  i  lice  have  been  notified  that  Joseph    F 
known    pharmaceutical     remedy     that  I  Blarither.    who   murdered    Mrs. 


will  do  the  work.    Catarrh  and  cold  in    '"«"  Longfeldt  last  May  and  then  mvs 

the    head    will    not    cause    suffering    if    *""' '  '  '" 

Ely's  Cream   Balm   is   used.     Druggist 


A    LITTLE    ASSIGNMENT. 
St.  Louis    March  19.— VV.  E.   Stephons 
&  Son,    lithographers,   assigned     today 
tor    the    benefit    of   creditors.    There    Is 

IIP- ^S^."^'*''''"^*'-  '^^^  liabilities  are  about       „,     ^. 

$oo,000  and  the  a.s.sets  are  estimated  at  ashington.  March     19.- The    heavy 

$4d,000.      ^^ I  rains  of  the  past  forty-eight  hours  in 

j  the  center  valleys  will   cause  a  rise  in 

!  the     Cumberland,       Tennessee.     Lower 

Ohio  and  Mi.ssi.ssippi  rivers  and  inten- 

-    slfy     th.>    threatened     flood     condition.- 

Arraiigements    are    made    to    turn :  Previously  announced.     It     is    probable 

that  the  floods  in  the  Lower  MLs.slssip^ 
pi  valley  during  the  next  ten  days  or 
two  weeks  will  in  many  places  equal 
or  exceed  in  height  those  of  any  prevl- 
(ms  year.  Additional  warning  is  given 
to  residents  of  the  threatened  district* 
in  Louisiana.  Arkansas  and  Western 
Missi.ssippi  to  remove  from  the  region 
of  the  danger. 


morn- 


PADUCAH    IS    FLOODED. 

Paducah.  Ky..  March  19.— Paducah 
is  both  surrounded  and  invaded  by 
water.  Every  inch  of  low  land  in  Mc- 
Cracken    county   is  covered. 

Every  stream  in  West  Kentucky  is 
out  of  its  banks,  streets  are  flooded, 
bridges  swamped,  houses  wrecked, 
fences  swept  away  and  roads  rendered 
impassable.  No  lives  were  lost,  but 
every  hour  may  bring  news  of  drown- 
ings and  fatal  disasters.  The  loss  to 
property  within  a  radius  of  five  miles 
around  this  floo<l-ridden  town  alreadv 
amounts  to  thousands  and  still  the 
skies  are  overcast  and  the  rain  drops 
come  down  to  make  the  torrent  higher. 

WIRES  ALL  DOWN. 
Memphis.  March  19.— All  telegraphic 
communication  with  New  Orleans  was 
cut  off  today.  The  lines  south  and 
both  sides  of  the  Mississippi  river  were 
interrupted.  The  wires  from  St.  Louis 
and  Memphis  were  lost  almost  simul- 
taneously. Nashville  soon  afterward 
reported  the  circuits  from  that  city  to 
New  Orleans  also  brought  to  a  stand- 
still and  no  avenue  left  into  the  Cres- 
cent City.  The  floods  were  assuined  to 
be  the  cause  of  the  stoppage. 


Nathan 


JEWELER^ 


are  not  so  much  feared  as  they  were. 
In  Montana  there  is  no  snow  left  and 
all  over  the  banks  it  is  going  rapidly. 


RAILROADS  SUSPEND  TRAFFIC. 

Yankton,  S.  D.,  March  19.— .Ml  trallic 
on  the  Great  Northern,  the  Milwaukee 
and  the  Northwestern  roads  has  been 
suspended  here  owin-g  to  the  high  water 
and  washout   bridges  and   culverts. 


will    supply    10-cent    trial    size    or   50- 
cent  full  siae.    We  mail  it. 

ELY  BROS.. 
56  Warren  street.  X.  Y.  City. 
Rev.  John  Reid,  Jr..  of  Great  Falls, 
Mont.,  recommended  Ely's  Cream  Balm 
to  me.  I  can  emphasize  his  statement, 
"It  is  a  positive  cure  for  catarrh  if 
used  as  directed."— Rev.  Francis  W. 
Poole,  Pastor  Central  Presbyterian 
ehurch,    Helena,    Mont 


teriously  disappeared,  is  in  jail  in  Aus 
tin,  Tex.  A  local  detective  has  been 
sent  to  Austin  to  identify  the  pri- 
soner. Blanther  is  an  ex-ofllcer  in  the 
Hungarian  army.  After  the  murder 
he  robbed  Mrs.  Longfeldt  of  her  dia- 
monds. 


THE    TREASURY   COXDITIOX 
vV  ashington,         March       19.— Today's 

trerrT^hls*!'^    /SKlTcas'h  £^'   "^^''^^  ''''''^'   '^  '^^  ^^ '   ^-- 


SIOUX  CITY  FLOODED. 

Its  Suburbs  All  Under  Water- 
No  Trains. 

Minneapolis.   March   19.— (Special   to  The 


OHIO  RISING  AGAIN. 
Pittsburg,  March  19.— It  is  raining 
hei;e  and  at  all  head  waters  of  the 
Ohio.  It  has  been  raining  here  inter- 
mittingly  for  twenty-four  houre  and 
the  indications  are  for  a  steady  rain 
all  day.  Up  to  8  o'clock  this  morning 
the  rainfall  was  3.1-100  of  an  inch.  The 
rivers  are  rising  slowly  with  eight  feet 
on  the  Davis  Island  guage.  The  raise 
is  reported  at  all  points  between  fiitts- 
burg  and  the  head  waters  of  both  the 
Monongahela    and    .\llegheny    rivers. 


NEAR  LA  CROSSE. 

.Minneapolis.  March  19.— (Sp<cial  to  The 
Herald.)— A  special  from  La  Crosse.  Wis., 
.'^avs:  Rains  and  melting  snow  have 
brought  the  La  Crosse  river  up  so  that 
the  West  Salem  marsh,  east  of  this  city, 
is  flooded.  The  fast  mail  and  noon  (rains 
got  over  but  they  will  be  the  last  until 
there  is  a  change.  The  Dnbuaue  division 
trains  came  by  way  of  Prairie  du  Cliit-n 
on  account  of  Root  river  which  is  pour- 
ing out  great  floods  of  water  .md  masse.s 
of  ice.  The  Southern  Minnesota  division 
is  under  water. 


FAKE  CONFESSIONS. 

Judicial  Opinion  of  the  Jackson- 
Wailing  Papers. 

Alexandria,  Ky.,  March  19.— Judge 
Helm  has  just  given  orders  to  keep 
Jackson  and  Walling  separate.  It  is 
known  their  confessions  were  written 
while  they  were  together,  and  the  story 
shows  that  the  two  men  had  agreed  on 
the  main  points,  evidently  in  the  hope 


arcus^ 

319  West  Superior  St.  J 


WOMK.V  IX  f;UTTKR  JOfRNALlS  M 
Mjtrch  Arena:  In  the  world  of  ni.xli  rn 
wikl-cat  journalism  the  W(»maii  reporter 
lasts  about  four  years.  She  hrings  her 
education,  h.r  i)ersonal  attr.ictions,  her 
youth,  her  illusion.s,  her  energy,  her  am- 
bition and  hor  enthusiasm  to  the  ernoun- 
ter,  and  the  lirsi  year  .she  rises  ripllh 
The  second  and  third  vear  sh.'  enjoys  iiio 
zenith  of  her  popularity;  with  the  "fouii'i 
year  she  begins  her  descent,  lingers  about 
th<'  horizon  for  a  time,  and  then  she  dis- 
appears  from   view. 

There  is  no  vocation  into  which  women 
have  entered  where  disillusions   niateri;il- 
ize   so   rapi.lly    as   they   do   in   jouni;ili;:r.i 
J  he  stage  is   looked   upon  with    horror   \>v 
conservative    i)eople    whose 


:  ance.    1217.990,425 
*  390,552. 


gold    reserve,    $151,- 


Sloux   City   aays:     Every    stream    in    this 

I'iS?!"^  'SO"'.'''  ''=^  h-'^nks  and  the  situ- 
hourly    growing    worse.    Leeds, 


ation    is 


A    MINNESOTA    CORNER. 

Minneapolis,  March  19.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— A  special  to  the  Journal 
from  Luverne,  Minn.,  says:  The  Rock 
river  there  is  a  mile  wide  and  is  pouring 
a  vast  mass  of  water  into  the  Sioux. 
A  dozen  bridges  in  Southwest  Minne- 
sota have  gone  out  and  have  stcppeJ 
traffic  on  several  branches  of  the  Great 
Xorthern.  Milwaukee  and  Northwest- 
ern lines  running  Into  Northwest  Iowa 
and  South  Dakota. 

Reports  from  the  Red  River  of  the 
>  orth  say  that  the  snows  are  going  off 


FLOODS  IN  WISCONSIN. 
Milwaukee.  March  19.— A  special  to  the 
Wisconsin  from  Richland  Center.  Wis.. 
says:  The  worst  flood  in  years  prev.iils 
here.  Water  is  running  "  tfirough  the 
streets,  cellars  are  flooded  and  sev.ers 
overflowed.  Teams  and  men  are  at  work 
bnnking  up  the  river  which  is  rising  fast. 
Mills  and  lumber  .vards  are  in  great  dan- 
ger. A  si>ecial  from  Black  River  Falls 
says:  Black  river  is  rising  rapidly  and 
cellars  and  lowlands  are  Hooded.  Should 
the  ice  move  in  its  pre.sent  .sound  condi- 
tion   a    great    disaster    will    result. 


,    .      ,  ,      -       -  ,  knowledge    of 

.t    IS    ba.sed    entirely    upon    prejudice;    lujt 
that   they  would   raise  a  question   that  1  '".  comparing    the    career   of    the    aetr's-< 

would  cause  a  stay  of  execution  at  i  h'!!''  .V'""'}  "■!  i-^**  "*'w-'<i'"l)cr  woman  l 
i^o»t  D,.*  ♦!,  ■  .  .  cji.c«.uiiun  ai  have  no  hesitation  in  a.s.serting  that  Ih' 
least.  But  their  plan  is  apparently  too  I  experiences  of  the  actress  who  Ittaii- 
transparent,  and  now,  on  their  last  1  ""t^t'^^ss  through  love  of  her  art  and  de- 
day,  while  separated,  an  opportunity'^,?''""  f*' , "  ''''*'  infinitely  preferable  to 
will  be  ajyorded  them  to  tell  the  truth,  i  h..r''rt,a'i  S'"'  ,>V"'^<^'^«ful  woman  who  fin>;s 
No  one  is  nermitted  to  see  them  today  :  [^[h'':;^'  ^Z.  '^or^::^'^.:^^:^i:Z,  Tl:i 
from     Judge     Helm.  1  flie   public   is   the  glare   of   th. 


in  such  a  wey  that  devastating  floods,  hours, 


MISSOURI  ICE  MOVING. 

Omaha,  March  19.— The  Missouri  riv- 
er here  is  clear  of  Ice  today  and  is  not 
unusually  high.  A  slight  fall  since 
last  night  has  been  recorded.  Alarming 
reports  from  the  north  show  that  at 
Souix  City  and  north  of  there  the  ice 
in  the  Missouri  has  not  yet  begun  to 
move  out.  The  smaller  streams  emp- 
tying into  the  Missouri  have  all  been 
flooded     for     more     than     twenty-four 


without  an  order 

Walling  is  in  the  upper  room  of  the 
jail.  The  men  ar?  unable  to  describe 
Wagner,  nor  his  house,  or  even  the  cab 
or  wagon  in  which  they  said  the  body 
was  borne  away. 

BADGER  LEGISLATIOX. 
Madison, Wis.,  March  19.— A  third  read' 
ing   was   given   to   the   bill,    ntaking     it  * 
possible  for     the     gold     Democrats     to  j 
have  a  place  on   the  ticket  at  the  next 
election.    A  resolution  to  have  a  com- 
mission    appointed  to  secure     uniform 
fish  and  game  laws  for  Michigan.  Mln-  ' 
nesota  and  Wisconsin,  was  adopted  in 
the  assembly.    The  original  resolution  ! 
providing  for  a  session  of  the  assembly 
Saturday  was  killed,  and  recess  taken 
until  Monday  evening.     The  bill  reduc- 
ing  the     exemption   o   fearnings     from 


.   ,       ^    .  -■-       footllgJlts 

s  payed  w-itb  fewer  .stumbling  blo.-ijs 
than  that  of  the  woman  who  .seeks  uul.- 
lic  ai)plause  through  a  pen  in  mode- .| 
journalism.  She  knows  more  of  jiersonal 
conilori.  she  meets  witli  f.-wer  tempt  1- 
tions  anil  sh."  has  a  lieiter  opportun*'v 
tor  cherishing  the  illusions  with  whi(  h 
sue  started  in  life. 


PEANUTS  IN  EUROPE. 
Peanuts  grow  in  large  quantities  on 
the  northwest  coast  of  Africa.  Ijut  are 
known  there  as  ground  nuts.  They  are 
dug  up  by  the  natives  and  bartered 
with  the  European  traders  for  met- 
ohandise.  tobacco,  etc.,  at  enany  placeu 
on  the  Gambia  river,  and  afterwards 
shipped  in  steamer  loads  to  European 
ports,  principally  to  Marseilles.  The 
nuts  are  not  roasted  for  retail  sale,  a-* 

.  .  „       in  this  country,  but  crushed  and  a  fine 

garnishment  from  $60  to  $40  stirred  up    oil  extricated,   which  is   valuable  com- 

a  debate,  but  was  passed  by  a  vote  of    mercially.  • 

80  to  9.  j  __^ 

"  ,,       Rooms  are  quickly   renred   when  ai' 

46    vertised  in     The    Evening  Herald.      It 
,  .     costs  but  1  cent  a  word. 


Have  The  Herald  In  your  homes: 
cents  a  moath. 


' 


I 


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1«- 


5'-^—i  '-     '■■■/■! 


m 


^  I  W  Wliili...  wnJlli  --r.-'  ■41 


1N- 


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tm 


I lLUU_Bi  i.Ui! 


h-^"- 


I  fW  »■  ■■M»rn  I  r  »iiHBii-*   -liy^i  ■.IBJailgg 


"■^ 


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■««**«« 


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f 


THE     OUHTTn     E\  RNINO     nEUALn     FHIDAY,    MARCH 


'♦V^r^,— sftf 


m'^'ia^^i'-i^ 


You  Mijjlit 


Kniii 


KPt  HH  »;<mm|  Macliiitoolio^  niiil 
Overroaia  at  soiiih  ollmr  •turo,  Imt 
wlint'ij  till'  usrt  «>f  takiiifc  tliorliniico.s— 
for  ct^iaidcr  bow  iiiiich  iiiciro  yoa'd  have 
to  i>ay  elsewhere. 


Prepare 

For  the  Rainy,  Wet,  f 
Spring  Days  that  I 
Are  Surely  Coming:  J 

Here's  a  chance  to  keep  dry  at  A 
a  price  that  never  had  an  ciiual.  j| 

A  Special  Offer  for  i 

Tomorrow,  Saturday—  i 

$6.00  $4.00  and  $3.00  | 
Raincoats  .... 


Henry  Brown  Sues  Clarence 

M.    Hill    For    That 

Amount. 


The   Case   Was   Taken    Up 
Before  Judge  Ensign  Yes- 
terday Afternoon. 


This    iVIorning's    Testimony 
Was  of  a  Somewhat  In- 
teresting Nature. 


The  case  of  Henry  Brown,  floor  maii- 
aprer  for  Paiiton  X:  White,  lo  rec-owr 
J'liHW  for  liliel.  \\;us  taken  up  in  distri<-t 
court  l>efore  Judi^e  Ensijjn  yesterday 
afternoon,  and  the  plaintiff's  <ase  was 
concluded     lieture      the      adjournment. 


Richelieu's 

SATURDAY  BARGAINS. 

tV£RY  ITEM  A  TRADE  WINNER. 

Nice  L'uecioas  Strawbarriee,  fall  .jaart  baskets. 

30  cents 

Sr  *lSk-*°*  ®'''"'*°''  ^^^^  ■°'l  Jo'cy-  aU  sizes 

45  cents 

Pep  doz-lOo  to  25c. 

3-lb  caddies  Extra  Choice  Creamery  Bntter  for 

$1.00 

Onr  Very  Host  Morha  and  Jnva  (none  Iwtter)  lb 

37  cents 

Onr  Perfection  HIend  Mooa  and  Java,  (sure  to 
plea«eyon)— i>er  III— 

32  cents 

TEA. 

UkI  it  ever  occur  to  yon  tliat  yon  are  payiuff 
too  luncb  for  yonr  i'l-a.  Let  us  have  your  next 
order  and  we  will  bLow  yon  a  saving  of  20  per 


l>een  let  out   for  invgulari- 


f  Another  flackintosh  Bargain— 

J  A  special  lot  of  Men's  Black  Cheviot       /t^"V     ■■■  g\ 

$/.50 


f 
f 
f 

f 
f 


Joose-fittino;  box  back  extra  long- 
Coats,  well  finished,  fancy  plaid  lin- 
ings, deep  velvet  collar,  worth  $12.00, 
special  


Our  New  Shoe  Dept. 


Entrance  Third  A  re. 
West  unil  Sup.  St. 


With  us  it  costs  no  more  to  buy  Shoes  that  fit  and  g-ive 
g-ood  wearing-  satisfaction  than  it  does  to  buy  Shoes  that 
hurt  and  quickly  wear  out.  Usually  it  costs  much  less. 
Let  us  pro\c  this  fact  tomorrow. 


i 


75  pair  Hei/s  Satin  Calf 

all  solid  leuiher,  plain  toe, 
lace,  worth  $2.25,  tomorrow 

Hen's  Satin  Calf,  all  solid 

leather,  plain  toe  Congress, 
hub  goic,  worth  $2.25 

I  Men's  Satin  Calf,  all  solid 

leather,  new  Coin  Toe,  lace, 


I 


worth  $2  25 . 


$1.48 
$1.48 
$1.48 


Hen's  Satin 

Calf,  all  solid 
leather,  new  Coi-n- 
Toe,  Congress, 
Hub  Gore,    worth 
$2  25 

$1.48 


;  M.S.  BURROWS 


was 


HEAPS  OF  TROUBLE. 


i  day     before     yesterday     between     Mr 

I  -weniece  and  one  of  the  oile  driver  men 

C«n««  «**u-  n  f       A'  ^  I  !"  ^^^i^^  '>  '»  rumored,  a  broadax  wu.-' 

borne  Of  the  Complications  Over' !"''"'l'''*'r'  '!*  ^^^  'a"*^>    There  hav 


the  Bridge  Approach. 

President  Davis  of  ihe  board  of  public 
>vorlts  said  today,  by  way  of  reply  to 
Ihe  open  letter  published  l)y  Contractor 
-Meniece.  that  out  of  120  contracts  let 
i-y  The  city  during  the  last  three  year--. 
•  xelusive  of  those  for  sidewalks.  Mr 
Meniete  has  had  two.  and  that  the  city 
tiad  had  more  tn>uble  with  thos»-  two 
than  all  the  others  together. 

The  history  of  the  construction  of  the 
appn.ar-h  to  the  Duluth-Superior  bridg.. 
:  bus  tar  is.  according  to  the  statements 
rnadf-  by  the  members  of  the  board  of 
public  works  and  of  the  engineering  dt- 
i-artrnent  a  <hapter  of  mishap.s 
I  rouble  began  with  the  appearance  of  a 
•nan  who  ejaimed  that  the 
■^  horn   Meniere  had 


•>r  pill 
nuniW 


men    ai 
aggregated 


man   with 
,      .  <ontracted   for  pd- 

uig  haa  taken  the  timl>er  from  his  la-ui 
ithout    permission.         The    man    wh  . 
'  'aipie.!  he  had  i^en  despoiled  naturally 
anted    s->mebody   to   compensate   hini  i 
and  he  lo«.ked  to  Mr.  Menie«  e  to  protect 
I'.im.         The    bill    he    presented    to    Mr   ' 
Meniece  exeeded  the  amount  the  latter 
ad   coniraeted    to   pay    for   the    piling 
Here   was  tangle   number  one 

»K      "k^'u   -Y^"'*'*^  »"'>  the  man   will, 
uhom  he  had  contracted  for  the  piling 

fjd  '.^l-   -^V'-   -^'•'?*r'^  Haiming  that  be 
had  been  eharged  for  culls  and  f 
I'St  m  transit.    This  was  tangl 

two. 

Then  a  man  turned  up  with  a  lot  or 
•iders  on  Mr.  Meniece  i.ssued  bv  the 
ii:an  who  had  <  ..ntracted  to  furnish  th- 
tnhxrg  for  supplies  for  his 
teams.  These  orders  „„„..^„i^v,  . 
^■Hjdly  portion  of  the  sum  to  be  paid  l,v  ' 
Mr  Meniwe  for  the  piling  under  the 
contract.  At  this  juncture  the  supply 
of  pihng  stopf,ed  and  the  city  took  hoi,"' 
to  .supply  th.-  material,  and  enough  pil- 
ing was  pnH  ured   to  start   on.   when    it 

l^r,  '^i^y'^'-'V'^'^  '^''''  '•'"^^"t  had  been 
shut  off  by  the  eoal  dealers  and  it  was 
found  necessary  for  the  city  to  guar"- 
antee  the  lulls.  This  matter  waf  ad- 
,b!  '?;  ^2'^/hen  the  man  with  whom 
the  city  had  contracted  for  piling  fell 
doun  Another  pile  man  with  whom 
Mr.  Meniece  had  contracted  came  to  the 
i-^cue.  however,  and  supplied  some 
material.  Just  as  they  got  started  the 
dues  ot  the  engine  blew  out  and  it  had 
I.,  oe  sent  to  the  shop  for  repairs 

U  hen    it    was    fixed    another    tangle 
the  number  of  which  is  unknown,  arose 
over  payment,  the  r*eople  who  made  the 
repairs^  refusing  to  release  the  machine  i 
until    Mr.    Meniece     gave     some    moi- 
orders  on  the  city.    ThTs  was  Hnally  ad-  ' 
justed  and   work  proceeded. 

Then  the  pile  driver  men  fell  out  witii 
Mr.  Meniece.  refusing  to  .settle  for  the 
eontract  price,  because  of  delavs  tu 
which,  they  alleged,  they  had  been  sub- 
jected. While  the  parties  were  arguin  • 
over  this,  somebofly  carried  off  the 
••onnecting  rod  of  the  engine.  This  inci- 
•lent  served  to  infuse  gall  and  bitter- 
ness into  the  discussion,  and  an  Inter- 
esting  scene   is  said   to   have  occurred 


been  no  developments  since  then. 

AFTER  THE  CHIEF. 

Fire    Department     Committee 
May  Pounce  Upon  Blacl(. 

The  council  fire  department  commit- 
I  tee  is  going  to  get  after  Chief  Black 
I  is  said,  on  the  ground  that  he  has  not 
kept    the    expenses    of    the    department 
down  as  low  as  he  should. 

In  this  connection  Secretary  Truel- 
sen  of  the  fire  commissioners  has  pre- 
pared   a    statement    showing    that     ex- 

»  "tl'^'^'ul'^J^-'i^'"'*"^  rentals  and  interest, 
uith  which  the  chief  has  nothing  to  d<. 
fhl  ''^^"'ting  the  expenses  of  running 
the'  headquarters  fire  hall,  hou.ses  7  ,s 
and  l.>.  and  the  fire  tug  service,  amount- 
ing to  $29,094  21,.  all  of  whbh  has  In"  n 
added  since  Chief  Black  to..k  charge  a 
reductM)n   of  $32.J3.-,.01    is  shown    in    the 

:  actual  running  expenses  for  l,s;»«-7  fron. 
th.>se    for   1893-4.    when    Mr.    Black    b' - 

.  came  cnief.     The  statement  sh..ws 
actual    running   expenses    for    1893-4 

I  have    been   598.272.21.   and    for   189t>-7    to 

*'-a«-.   ^'k       '•••^■«"'-*-*-    a    decrease      of 
5'-40..2.    the    actual    decrease      claimed 
being   reached    by   the  last   amount  the 
sum  of  $29,094.29.  added  annual 
since  189.3-4. 


the 


expense 


^  ^,    Pure  Spring  Water. 

afii?',^  ?.*"y-      Telephone  orders  to 
Stewarts  livery,   telephone  No.  334. 


voT,°f„fr^7  "*""!'■  ^"°^  *t  happened 
you   fail  ^o  read   The   ~ 


Evening 


if 
Herald 


Awarded 
Highest  Honors— World's  Fair. 

Jim 

^  CREAM 

BAHINfi 
PQWNffi 

MOST    PERFECT    MADE. 

A  pure  Grape  Cream  of  Tartar  Powder-     Free 
from  Ammonia,  Alum  or  any  other  adultcnint. 

40  Years  the  Standard. 


«!iu    an      uiiiiiiugaiea    iiar,      ana    it    is 
state*!    that    Mr.    Hill    had    heard    that 
Brown  had 
ties. 

This  morning  C.  O.  Baldwin,  on  behalf 
of   Mr.    Hill,   called   the  plaintiff   to   thi 
stand       for       cro.ss-examination.       The 
jdaintiffs  attorneys.    VV.    R.   Triggs  and 
C.  C.  Teare.  ol>jected  to  the  introduction 
of   any    testimony   on    the   ground    that 
the  answer  failed   to  set   up  a  defense. 
The   reason   tor   that    was  that   the  an- 
swer  allegt'd    a    partial    justification    of 
the    terms    u.sed    in    the    letter,    and    th.- 
I>laintif|-  tited  authorities  to  show   that 
:  the   justification    must    be   as   broad   as 
j  the    charge.      Judge    Ensign    overruled 
I  the    objection,    and    Mr.    Baklwin    i>ro- 
<eeded   to  examine  Mr.    Brown.     In    le- 
sponse    to    questions    he    gave    in    sub- 
j  stance  the   followin.g   testimony: 

He  had  been  in  the  employ  of  Panton 

*  White  for  two  and  a  half  years,  and 
he  knew   Mrs.  Samuel  Cusson.  she  who 

I  was  Mdlle.   iJagnier.   very  slightlv.     H.- 
I  remembered    having   two  conversations 
'  with    her  in    the   store,   one  of   them   in 
'  the  presence  of  John  Panton  in  the  lai- 
ters  private  office.     Witness  was  called 
in  by  Mr.  Panton.  and  it  was  stated  to  | 
I  him    that    Mdlle.    Oa-gnier   <  ame    to   see 
'  about     some    remarks    that     had     been 
made  about  her.     Witness  then  told  Mi. 
Panton  that  it  was  true  that  he  was  the 
.soune    of      Panton's    information,    and  ' 
that    he    had    told    the    same    story    to  I 
ilcorge  <.\   Howe  as  a  creditt)r  of  Mdlle. 

•  lagnier.      The    latter    had    some    got)ds 
on    approval,    and    on    account    of    that  j 
witness  employed  an  agent    to  look   u;.  ' 
her  credit.     This  agent   found  that  she 
owed   certain   bills  about    town,    among  I 
others    «>ne   at    Kreimuths.    which      she 
was    not    paying,     also    that      she    was 
about  to  begin  a  suit  against  C.  M.  Hill 

^  tor  $5000  for  undue  influence  over  hn 
or  8eductii>n.  Witness  told  this  to  Howe 
in  confidence,  as  he  was  a  creditor  of 
the  lady's.  Witness  did  not  state  thai 
he  had  seen  a  check  by  C.  M.  Hill  to  pav 
Mdlle.  Gagniers  indebtedness  at  Fivf- 
muth's.  but  that  he  had  .seen  a  paper 
signed  by  a  certain  man  agreeing  to 
pay  it.     He  did  not  mention  any  names 

The  investigation   was  made,  he  said   ', 
simply  for  the  purpose  of  protecting  th 
books    of    Panton    &    White.         It 
simply  a   business  matter. 

Mrs.   Samuel  Cus.son.   who  was  Mdlle 
•  ;agnier.  was  called  to  the  stand  for  the 
defense.      She    made    a    prt?tty    appear- 
I  ance  and   a-  most   direct   and    excellent 
witness.     She   was  asked   to   relate   her 
conversation    with    Plaintiff    Brown    in 
Mr.  Pantons  private  office  in  Mr.  Pan- 
ton's   presence.     She   stated    that    when 
Mr.   Brown   was  called   in  she  told   hin. 
she    had     come    to    see    what    he    knew 
about    her  and   the  stories   he  had   told 
about   her.     He  replied  that   he  did  not 
know  about  stories,  but  he  had  learned 
that   her  credit  was  not  rated  Al    Wit- 
ness told  him  that  she  had  never  asked 
for  credit,   as   she  did    not    have    to   IcT 
bills   run    over   ten   days.      Brown 
said  that    I.   Freimuth  had  got 
mem  against  her  and  that  he  had' seen 
C.  M.  Hill's  personal  check  in  payment 
«>r   the   judgment.        Witness   then    told 
him  that  he  knew  he  was  not  telling  the  ' 
truth,   and  said   that   it   was  a  niot   be- 
ii  I  tween  him  and  Mr.  Panton  to  ruin  her 
business. 

Witness  never  owed  such  a  bill    did  I 
not  owe  Freimuth  a  dollar  at  that  time 
and  did  not  at  any  time  owe  a  bill   of 
the    size    claimed.        Neither    Mr.    Hill  i 
nor   any    other   man    ever    paid    a    bill 
for  her,  and  Mr.  Hill  never  paid  a  bill 
of  her's  to  Freimuth  or  any  other  firm 
Indeed,  she  had  then  only  been   intro- 
duced to  him  at  her  store  by  Miss  Beers 
her    assistant,    who    was    an    old    ac- 
quaintance  of    his,    and    that    was    the  i 
only    time   she   ever    met    him.       That  , 
was  a  few  days  before  the  occurrence 
at    Panton   «&   White's. 

On  cross  examination  she  stated  that 
she  was  certain  that  she  had  made  no  ' 
mistake  about   Mr.   Brown's  statement  I 
,.  .  She  was  not  excited 

though  her  feelings  were  crushed 
she  .showed  it,  she  was  not  so 
flustrated  as  to  make  a  mistake.  She 
was  not  permitted  to  relate  her  con- 
versation with  Mr.  Panton  before 
Brown  s  arrival,  but  she  was  allowed 
to  state  that  Mr.  Hills  name  was  men- 
tioned. 

MR.    HILL    CALLEb. 
C.    M.    Hill    was    then    called    to    the 
stand    and    admitted    writing     the   let- 
ter on  which  the  action  is  based.  Asked 
I  about    the   statement    that    Brown    had 
^been   let  out.   he  .said  he  had   heard   so 
and  believed  it.      As  to  the  charge  that 
. iili'^i"  »k'*"''  .^    "thing."    Mr.     Baldwin 
•  ^K    '    .'.*'?    ^^''"ess     if      Brown    was    a 
thing,      hut   the  question   was  object- 
whv  L^Jlo.  ^\  •''■^•1   al>andoned.    Asked  ,  .„^  .atter  ma 
1^^  he  stated  m  the  letter  that  Brown  I  of  the  specT^ 
was  an   -unmitigated  liar  •  h«  «v.,ioi„^..     .u„   ■__fP^^'^.' 


California  Apricots.  Plnms  and  Gages— per  can 

12^c  cents 

Calirornia  Peaches  and  Fears— por  can 

15  cents 

7  lbs  Pure  Backwheat  Flour  for 

15  cents     i 

;  Gallon  Jug  of  Fioo  Maple  Syrun  for 

I      75  cents 

Crackers -All  reduced  from  20  to  25  per  cent  | 

Full  quart  bottle  (Tliow  Chow 

30  cents 

Can  Early  June  Peas,  can  Tomatoes,  can  York- 
State  .siiijar  ( -orn— the  throe  for 

25  cents 

Potatoeo— per  bushel 

25  cents      ' 

New  Ohio  Maple  Sogar— per  lb  | 

12^  cents 

Magra  Gloss  Starch.  Mb  package— 

6  cents 

A  FULL  OF  FRESH  VEGETABLES. 

Deliveries:    Lakeside-Wednesdays,  Saturdays 

SUTTON  &  IMAAS, 

118-120  WEST  SUPERIOR  STRtET. 


1 


RICHELIEUBXKERY 

On  Saturday  Will  Give 

6  loaves  Home- Made  Bread  for 25c 

4  loaves  Cream  Bread  for 25c 

3'.:  dozen  Doughnuts  for 25o 

3  Home-Made  Pies  for 25o 

Wine.  Sponge  or  Ginger  Cakes,    3  for.  .25o 

Everytliing  Nice  and  Fresh, 

-A.UIDLEY   BROS. 


RICHELIEU  MARKET 

118-120  West  Superior  St.  I 


then 
a  judg- 


(,,  I  as  to  the  check 
and 
and 


SATURDAY  BARGAINS 
IN  EVERYTHING. 

Fancy  Rolled  Rib  Roasts,  lb  I2^c 
Pot  Roasts  (steer  beef)  lb...  8c 

Mutton  Chops,  per  lb lOc! 

I  Corn  Beef,  per  lb 6c  j 

Mutton  Stew,  per  lb 5c 

California  Hams,  per  lb 7c; 

Choice  line  of  Poultry,  Fish,  Etc. 

ifluluthPTovisionCo.i 

I  SALARIES   FIRST. 

Council  Will  Settle  That  Ques- 
tion Before  Proceeding. 

A  numl)er  of  the  aldermen  got  to- 
gether yesterday  and  di.scus.sed  the  as- 
sistant city  attorneyship  question  and 
also  that  of  salaries.  All  of  the  sug- 
gestions made  were  of  a  tentative  na- 
ture, is  is  understood.  The  matter  of 
•selecting  a  candidate  for  the  position  of 
a.ssistant  city  attorney  will  not  be 
taken  up  in  earnest,  probably,  until 
that  of  salaries  has  bsen  adjusted,  and 
the  latter  matter  is  now  in  the  hands 


ii\w;\\\l!Ba  i^'i^JCTVilVH 


BieeEST  BAReAIN  FEAST  YET ! 

TOMORROW! 

A    Rousing  SatUrdaV==^°''*  bargains,  more  real  values  at 
trade  than  at  any  other  store  at  the  head  of  the  likes  ''"TIa'^J°a-  ♦°'"°"<"'^',  ^ig 


Dress  Goods. 

15  pieces  of  handsome  Dress  Fabric'; 
latest  weaves,  for  spring  and  summer 
wear,  changeable  colorings,  6sc  a 
yard  would  be  cheap  for  these   J  C* 
fabrics,  ttiey  sell  Saturday  at..40C 
42-in  Silk  and  Wool  Novelties,  chic 
up-to-date  materials,  were  made  to  ' 
se  1  at  $1.25  a  yard,  they  go  on  17  C-. 

sale  Saturday  at 7 |  OC 

48  inch  Black  All  Wool  Serges,  the 
wearing  kind,  always  sold  at      OA^ 
65c  a  yard,  sell  Saturday  at  . . .  o"C 
SPECIAL  SfLK  SALE  SATURDAY. 

Wash  Goods. 

I  case  of  Dress  Prints,  choicest  styles, 
worth  70  a  yard,  sell  Saturday       C    ' 

35  pieces  of  Figured  Dimities  and 
Organdies,  all  late  colors  and  de- 
signs should  sell  at  20c  a        1  Ot^ 
yard,  sell  Saturday  at  . . .  |  fi2C 


Imported  Organdies  and  Dimi- 
ties, the  most  complete  assort- 
ment in  the  city  now  on  sale 
at  our  Wash  Goods  Counter. 


For  Men. 

Men's  Laundered  Shirts,  white  body 
fancy  bosom,  well  made,  regular 
7SC  value,  sell  Saturday  at.         C  A-. 

each :.......OUC 

Men's  Shirts— White  bodies,  colored 
madras  bosom,  made  from  the  very 
best  of  materials,  style,  fit  and 
workmanship  unsurpassed,  Cf  1    AA 
Saturday,  each t^g  ,\}\) 

Grand  Sale  of  Muslin 
Underwear  for  Saturday 

Ladies'  Jersey  Ribbed  Cotton  Vests 
in  white  or  ecru,  low  neck,  sleeveless 
real  value  25c,  I  C^ 

Saturday's  price,  each |  QQ 

Ladies'  Cotton  Union  Suits,  Florence 
makcnatural  and  ecru,  all  sizes.  O  A- 
worth  75c,  for  Saturday,  each-.U^fC 
Ladies'  Jersey  Ribbed  Cotton  Vests, 
high  neck,  long  sleeves,  natural 
and  ecru,  worth  75c,  for  CA« 

Saturday,  each ftUfi 

Hosiery. 

Ladies'  Hermsdorf  black  cotton  Hose, 
spliced  heel,  double  sole,  the      f  Q^ 
25c  kind,  for  Saturday,  a  pair. .  1 OC 
Ladies'  fast  black  cotton  fleeced 
Hose,  white  feet,  35c  kind,         A  R  /* 

sell  Saturday  at,  a  pair auU 

Children's  black  cotton  ribbed  Hose, 
sizes  6  to  g'/,,  well  worth  i8c  a  1  Al  *» 

pair,  sell  Saturday  at |  fizC 

Boys'  Wool  Bicycle  Hose,  all  sizes, 
aU ays  sell  at  35c,  sell  OR/i 

Saturday,  a  pair ovC 


Kid  Gloves. 

25  dozen  Zettie  Kid  Gloves,  in  black 

and  colors,  the  best  $1.25 

Gloves  ever  sold,  sell  Sat-    Cf  1    AA 

urday  at,  a  pair ipl.UU 

Ladies  5-hook  Foster  Kid  Gloves, 
black,  brown,  tan  and  gray,  the* 
price  has  been  $1.25,  to  close    OA#k 

them  out  at.  per  pair O" C 

NEW  SILK  AND  WOOL  CHALLIE8  ON  SALE 

Drug  Counter. 

These  prices  for  Saturday  only. 

Your  choice  of  Dr.  Raub's  Cutaneous 
Soap,  Cucumber  or  Egg  White     17 -^ 

Soaps,  at,  per  cake |C 

Or  3  cakes  for  20c. 
Cashmere  Bouquet  Soap,  at  t  A^ 
per  cake I  4C 

Woodbury's  Facial  Soap,  at      1  0*k 
acake {QQ 

Three  cakes  for  50c 
15c  bottle  of  Witch  Hazel, 
sells  at,  a  bottle 

25c  bottle  of  Rubifoam,  sells 
at  a  bottle 

Tetlow's  Swan  Down  Face 
Powder,  a  box 


15c  Hair  Combs,  sell  at.  each 
35c  Hair  Brushes,  sell  at,  each 

Notion  List. 

2  spools  Black  Linen  Finish 
Thread  for 


Fair  and  square  Dress  Shields, 
all  sizes,  sell  at 

20c  quaiity  Silk  Elastic  Web 
sells  at— a  yard 

Belding  Bros.'  Knitting  Silk 
sells  at — a  spool 

Three  packages  of  best 
Hairpins  for 

Good  quality  of  Velveteen 
Binding  at— a  yard 

5  hook  Corset  Steels  sell  at— 
each 


.  8C 
20c 
14c 
7C 
18g 

5C 

15c 

lOc 

25c 

5c 

5c 

8c 


New  Stamped  Linens. 

35c 

4o 
60 

8c 


25  pair  of  50c  Stamped  Pillow 

Shams  sell  at— a  pair 

5x5  Stamped  Doilies  sell  at,. 
7x7  Stamped  Doilies  sell  at. . 
9x9  Stamped  Doilies  sell  at. . 
12x12  Stamped  Doilies  sell  at.l2/^o 
New  Ruchings  and  Belts  on  Sale. 

Cloak  Room. 


Jewelry. 

100  Belt  Buckles,  newest  design?, 
gold  and  silver,  well  worth  7;c.  OC*» 

sell  Saturday,  each ....OOC 

100  Ladies'  Shirt  Waist  Sets, 
50c  kind  at,  each 


25c 

15c 


5c 


100  gold  and  silver  Baby  Pins, 
worth  2SC,  at  each 

Handkerchiefs. 

25  dozen  hemstitched  Initial  Corner 
Handkerchiefs,  sell  Saturday 
at,  each 

17  dozen  embroidered  and  hem 
stitched  Lawn  Handkerchiefs,  well 
worth  1 8c,  sell  Saturday  at,       1  A 1  ^ 
each IfiaC 

We  have  about  10  dozen  embroidered 
Lawn  Handkerchiefs-,  slightly  soiled, 
20c  each  would  be  cheap  for  A^ 

them,  they  sell  Saturday  at,  each  VG 

Ribbon  Snaps. 

qo  pieces  of  Satin  and  Silk  Ribbons, 
No.  5,  sell  Saturday  at,  per  J  ^ 

yard , i^\) 

3S  pieces  of  Gros  Grain  and  Satin 
Ribbons,  No.  12  and  No.  9,         f  A-^ 
sell  Saturday  at,  a  yard I  Uu 

Umbrellas. 

10  dozen  26-inch  Paragon  Frame  Silk 
TmbrellaF,  worth  $1.50,  go  on    AQ^ 

sale  Saturday  at,  each if  Ov 

15  dozen  26-inch  Paragon  Frame 
Uwilled  Silk  Umbrella,  steel  rods, 
well  worth  S2,oo,  sells  0  |    A  A 

Saturday  at wi,QV 


SKIRTS. 

Ladies'  Dress  Skirts,  made  from  good 
quality  black  brocade  silk,  cut  and 
Shaped  after  the  latest  French  mod- 
els, percaline  lined  and  velveteen 
bound;  a  bargain  at  $10;  On  TA 
tomorrow  only ip  f  ,(||| 

Ladies'  Separate  Dress  Skirts,  made 
from  good  black  figured  mohair,  lined 
with  rustling  taEfcta,  correctly  made 
and  finished;  sold  at  $5;  ff  A  AO 
tomorrow  only ipoa«IO 

SUITS. 

Ladies'  new  Tailored  Suits  made  in 
a  good  Storm  Serge  and  variety  of 
fancy  mixtures  jackets,  silk,  lined 
skirts,  7-gored  and  percaline  lined; 
every  one  up  to  date;  a  regular  $5  00 
Suit;  tomorrow  0t  t    HE 

only ipil.f D 

MACKINTOSHES. 

Ladies'  double  texture  Mackintoshes, 
made  with  a  separate  double  detach- 
able cape,  guaranteed  waterproof, 
sold  all  over  at  $5.00;  A  Q  aq 

tomorrow  only ip0i«/O 

SHIRT  WAISTS. 

Ladies'  new  Shirt  Waist,  made  from 
good  quality  percale  and  lawn,  the 
new  shape  sleeves  and  back,  detach- 
able collars,  worth  $1.00;  CC#* 

tomorrow  only DvC 

Ladies'  Soft  Waists,  made  from  good 
percale  and  French  onting  cloth,  sold 
up  to  $[.25;  only  few  dozen  left; 
to  close  out  tomorrow  AA#k 

only JJIC 


Linen  Dept. 

5  pieces  Cream  Table  Damask,  heavy 
quality,  56  inches  wide,  warranted  all 
pure  linen ;  always  sells  for  J  A  a 
60c  a  yard;  sells  Saturday....  4uC 

50  dozen    Absorbent    Momie    Linen 
lowels,  fancy  borders,  size  10x^7 
worth  25c;  on  sale  Satur-  t'c^ 

day— each |  •)(; 

Saturday  we  put  on  sale  one  case 
extra  large  Bed  Spreads;  you  will 
pay  $1  75  each  for  the  same  fli  I  At 
kind  elsewhere;  our  price.. ip I .^9 

6  cozen  genuine  old  Turkey  Red  Ta- 
ble Cloths,  w.irranted  absolutely  fast 
colors;  sold  by  other  stores  HC/k 
for  $1.25;  our  price— each f  uC 

Saturday's  Big 
Shoe  Sale. 

You  want  to  see  the  qualities  to  ap- 
preciate the  wonderful  values. 

Ladies'  hand  turn  Vici  Kid  Button 
Shoes,  needle  and  coin  toe,  very  flex- 
ible, bought  of  a  manufacturer  re- 
tiring from  business,  at  less  than 
cost  of  making,  for  tomor-    ff  A  C  A 
row.a  pair ipfi.vlU 

Ladies'  Dongola  Button  or  Lace 
Shoes  in  all  shape  toes,  includirg 
doth  tops,  and  common  sense,  would 
be  a  bargain  at  $2.50,  ffl    Oi; 

tomorrow,  per  pair iPl^OU 

Ladies'  Dongola  Button  Shoes,  coin 
toe  extension  soles,  Satur-    0  |    O  A 
day's  sale  price,  a  pair  . . . .  ip  1 .0  «f 

Ladies*  Dongola  or  Chocolate  strap 
Slippers,  bow  and  buckle,  hand  turn, 
guaranteed  not  to  rip,  a  QQa 

Little  Gents'  Satin  Calf  Lace  Shoes, 
sizes  9  to  14,  spring  heel,  good 
wearers,  worth  $1.25,  AOa 

tomorrow,  a  pair «FCIv 

Misses'  sott  finish  Calf  Button  Shoe--, 
with  tip,  sizes  12  to  2—  A  |  A|\ 
a  pair ipl.UU 

Infants'  Dongola  Button  Shoes,  hand 
turn,  patent  leather  tip,  sizes  O  Ao 
2  to  5— a  pair Ouw 

Children's  band  sewed,  fancy  trimmed 
Button  Shoes,  spring  heel,  scjuare  or 
round  toes,  sizes  5  to  8—  CA^ 

hpair 580 


Crockery  and 
Hardware. 

Will  be  cheap  for  the  next  ten  days, 
as  next  week  is  positively  the  last 
week  of  the  great  closing  out  sale. 
Remember,  everything  that  is  not 
sold  will  have  to  be  packed  and 
shipped,  to  save  the  expense  of  this. 
Goods  at  your  own  price  for  just  ten 
days.  A  few  snaps  for  Saturday  that 
won't  last  long. 


Hardware  Dept 

8  qt  heavy  retined  Dish 
Pans,  worth 


All  color  wide  Fancy  Shelf  Pa 
per,  worih  5c.  at  2  for , 

No,  9  Polished  sheet  iron  fry- 
ing Pans,  worth  22c,  at 


lOc 

5c 

lOc 

48c 


Corsets. 

8  doz  Armorside  and  F.  &  P.  Corsets, 
worth  $1.25  a  pair,  sell  Sat-        QAj* 

urday  at— a  pair 0«fu 

25  dozsn  Black  Dresden  Cor-     C  A^ 

sets  sell  at— a  pair uUU 

Children's  H.  &.  W.  Waists       AT  ^ 
sell  at ^OC 


2  qt  blue  and  white  granit  oat- 
meal cooker.*-,  worth  89c,  at ... . 

Bissell's  Home  Oueen  Carpet 
Sweeper,  worth  $2.75.  Sat-    0  ■   ^Q 

All  Goods  on  our  5c  and  10c  Counters 
Saturday  at  Hail  Price. 

Crockery  Dept. 

A  lot  of  odd  pieces  in  Dinnerware  at 
prices  that  you  can't  help  but  buy. 

Pie,  Dinner  and  Breakfast, 
Plates,  worth  up  to  2sc  each.  at. 

Platters,  worth  up  to  $1.50, 
at 

Platters,  worth  up  to  $1.00, 
■It 


> . .... . . 


Gravy  Boats,  worth  up  to 
6sc,at 

IOC  Creamers  at 


5c 
50c 
25c 

15c 

;5C 


Nice  white  Semi-Porcelain  Teacups 
and  Saucers,  per  set  of  6,  J  CP 

Saturday....:. 40l 

Large  size  yelloA^  Mixing  Bowls, 
worth  39c;  Saturday—  1  OP 


DO   YOUR   SATURDAY 
SHOPPING  AT 


FREimUTH'S 


he  explaineti 


He    never 
OaRnier.      no 


any  oc- 


tisated  liar 
that  It  was  l)etau.se  of  Browns  state- 
ment a.s  to  a  seduction  suit. 

paid    any    bill    for    Mdlle. 

suit      was     ever    beeun 

aRainst    him    by   her.    and    never  spoke 

vvh        V,     '■    '''"'■*"    ''^»"    «^«?    minutes. 

tliat  Mr.  Brown  had  made  such  state- 
ments, and  he  believed  them  to  be  will- 
ful lies.  He  has  never  had 
casion  to  change  his  belief 

The  case  vyas  still  on  trial  at  noon. 

The   jury    in    the   case    of    the    Upper 

Freden"*  vv^T^'"*  ^■"'"J'any  against 
Freden   &    V\  ilson   and   their  Imndsmen 

j^il^«-"'°''"'"^  returned  a  verdict  for 
$o60.62  against  Freden  &  Wilson  and 
released  t^e  bondsmen  fn.ni  lial)ilities. 

Subscribers    to   The    Evening   Herald 

who  do  not   get    their  paper  regul^  v 

^'iU  please  promptly  report  the  matter 

I  ?*  2""^^  *"  ^»^'«  ofn^e.  It  Is  the  intention 


-  committee  appointed  at 

the   last  meeting.     An   alderman     said 
yesterday   that    the   probability   is   that 
the   choice   for   assistant   city   attornev 
will    fall    on    neither  J.      H.      Brighaui 
Judge   Davies   nor  John   Rustgard. 

Florlsrs  Horse  Runs  Away. 

A    team    belonging    lo    L.    Hanson,    a 
florist   at    Woodland,    which     was     at- 
tached to  a  sleigh  loaded  with  conser- 
vatory sashes,  ran  away  on  First  street  ' 
this  morning.     The  driver,  whose  name 
could  not  be  learned,  was  seated  on  the 
pole  driving  when  the  team  started  to 
run,  and  had  a  narrow  escape.    The  ani- 
mals   took    fright    near    Third    avenue 
east,  starting  westward,  and  when  near 
Second  avenue  east   the  driver  fell  off. 
He    e.sca[)ed     being    caught    under    the 
runners,   however,   and  a  bruised  knee 
was  the  only  injury  he  received.     The 
team    was    stopped    at    Second    avenue 
west,   and  the  driver  took  charge  of  it 
and  proceeded  on  his  way. 


COMPANY  C.  CHALLENGES. 


Invites  the  Superior  Company 
to  Another  Contest. 

Capt.  E.  S.  Resche  on  behalf  of  Com- 
pany C,  of  Duluth,  has  tendered  a  chal- 
lenge to  Company  I,  of  Superior,  for  a 
competitive  drill.  All  arrangements 
to  l»e  made'  by  a  joint  committee. 

As  is  well  known,  the  last  time  these 
two  companies  battled  for  supremacy 
in  military  accomplishments  the  result 
was  a  tie.  Company  I  challenged 
Company  C  that  time  and  Company  C 
could  not  very  well  do  anything  else 
but  return  the  honor.  If  the  West  Su- 
perior boys  accept,  committees  of  both 
organizations  will  make  all  arrange- 
ments for  the  affair.  Capt.  Resche  be- 
lieves that  at  least  one  officer  from  the 
regular  army  of  the  United  States 
should  be  one  of  the  judges,  and  this 


under  no  circumstances     favor     either 
one  or  the  other. 

Over  eight  hundred  people,  including 
about  two  hundred  and  fifty  from 
across  the  bay  witnessed  the  last 
manouvers,  and  as  every  one  that  was 
present  then  will  want  to  go  again, 
and  a  great  many  more,  arrangements 
will  be  made  to  seat  from  twelve  hun- 
dred to  fifteeen  hundred  people.  The 
delightful  music  under  the  direction  of 
Professor  Werness,  that  had  so  much 
to  do  with  the  smoothness  of  the  last 
aiTair  will  undoubtedly  be  re-engaged 
to  enliven  the  military  pageant. 


seems  but  fair,  as  such  a  man  would  |  storm, 


Today's  Storm. 

A  typical  March  storm  settled  down 
upon  Duluth  today.  In  the  morning 
it  rained  and  in  the  afternoon  the  rain 
changed  to  snow.  The  wind  between  10 
and  12  o'clock  blew  at  the  rate  of  from 
36  to  38  miles  an  hour.  Tonight  it  is  ex- 
pected to  turn  colder  and  in  the  morn- 
ing the  mercury  will  probably  register 
about  20  degrees  above  zero.  Last  even- 
ing at  Moorhead  there  was  a  thunder 


Changes  In  Regulations. 

At    the    recent    annual    meeting    of    the 
United    States    board    of    supervising    ni- 
spectors    of    steam    vessels    a     rule    w  i.-< 
adopted   which   provides    that   no   original 
rtrst-class  pilot  license  on  the  Norihwe.-st- 
ern  lakes  shall  be  issued  hereafter  to  a:iv 
person    wno    has    not    been    licen.sed    and 
.served   at   least   one   full   season   of   eli;lit 
months   as    second-class    pilot    on    sieai-i- 
ers.  sucn  service  as  second-class  pilot   10 
have    been    within    two    years    prec-diuK 
the  application   for  such   license.   Another 
amendment   in   the  rules   is   to   the   effect 
that    any    jipplicant    for   examination    lor 
licen.se  or  for  increase  of  grade  who  l,.i.s 
been    refused    for    want  of  knowledge  or 
tor  other  qualirtcations  must  wait   a  v.ar 
i>efore    undergoing    re-examlnalion.    Pilot 
rules    are    generally    amended    so    as    to 
conform  to  the  new  law  governing  l)o«ts 
propelled   by  gas,    fluid,    naphtha   or  elec- 
tric  motors,    and    the    following    rule    has 
been    adopted    for   lights    on    scows   with- 
out rudders  or  other  means  of  guidance  in 
tow    of   steam    vessels:    "All    such 
shall    carry    a    regulation    white 
each  end  of  each  scow. 


scows 

light    at 

such  lights  to  be 


^'liJiC'^wri!''*   '•"^'^   '*''^"   ^^^   f<^t   above   the 
deck.  When  scows  are  towed  two  or  r 


abreast,    they 
white  lights." 


are  towed  two  or  mor<i 
shall  carry  the  regulation 


I     » ■ 


it 


1 


■ 


I 


t 


L 


>^»> 


FOURTEEN    PAQES-PART  ONE--Pages  i  to  8 


Here's  Ymir  Siinda;/ 
Keading  Page  After 
Page  of  Interest  to 
All  Members  of  'he 
Family- 


DULUTH  EVENING 


^HISTORICALi 


;  f 


ror'KTKKNTlI     VEAK. 


THE  WKATIlKn. 
Fair  and    Lechhdbj 
Colder  Tonif/Jd:  Fair 
Suudap;      Nurthiceat 
Wintlx, 


SATI  K'DAV.     MAKri[    20,     1S97. 


FIVE     O'CLOCK     EDITION. 


I 


fr 


250  DAINTY  BEDSTEADS. 

Creamy  White  Enamel,  w.th  handsome  polished  brass  trimmings.  A  car 
load  of  these  beauties  lust  placed  on  sale— 250  in  all  sizes  and  shapes. 
Thev  are  fine,  high-grade  Beds  at  low-grade  prices. 


>wM^^ 


This  Pretty  Bed' 

In  all  sizes,  just  the  thicg  for  a 
small  chamber  where 
a  heavy  bed  would  look  out  of 
place 

A  Graceful 
Pattern- 

In  all  sizes,  and  good  encngh  tor 
any  room 


TWO  MEN 


HANGED 


more, 
fold." 


I  will  say  no  more  on  the  scaf- 


l<iB» 


A  Heavy  Brass 
riounted  Bed= 

Large  rich  brass  mountings  and 

rods  with  extension  tool; 

a  regular  $10.00  bed 


$7.50 


Jackson    and    Walling  Were   Both 

Executed  at  New  Newport,  Ky,, 

Before  Noon  Today. 


^<.s 


MOST  LIBERAL  TERMS   OF  PAYMEIv  ON  ALL  GOODS. 

mplete 
Hrtjuse-Furnishers 


French  &  Bassett, 


Final  Statement  By  Jackson  That 

He  Could  Not  Clear  Walling 

of  Murder. 


I^.v* 


i:iiiiiiiiirrimiiii>iiii[iiitniiiiiiiiiiiiiMniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii<niiii!i!Miiiiiuiiiiiniiiiiiiiiniiiini!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 

i  Dl  II lino  ^^^  $250  CASH  :e,f^^^";i^v^.s  i 

=     P^l  fl  Itll  B  ^,     '^"^  PiHiio  over  offermi  for  the  pric.-.    We  hny   f<ir  cash  and    5 
=     I      ly^lBJ  ill    can  9av8  *::5.(KJ  to  HQO.'X  to  onr  ciietoniere  iu  the  purchase    ^ 

I  DULUTH  MUSIC  CO.       E.  C.  chapman.  Manager.    I 

S    SALE8F.OUi^^     fh*iiix  Kiock—Jiid  lloor:  Fourth  Avenue  Wrst  aii<l  SutHTmr  Street  — 

;iimiiiiiiin:iiii<iuniiiiiiiiiiitiiini>iiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiniiiiiiiii!ii!iiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiH^ 


The  Latter,  However,  Protested  His 

Innocence— The  Murder  of  Pearl 

Bryan  Avenged. 


r 


{,i»aii« 


;iE^ 


a'    '    .*£?si?*S5 


A  HANDSOME  DINING  ROOM 

Whero  the  walls  aii'l  coilintrs  aro  made  dainty 
and  attraetivn  by  rich  aud  boantiful  coloring 

WALL  PAPERS 

]  13  an  ijct'utive  t..  a  failing  appetite.  At  no 
time  of  the  year  do  yonr  rooms  need  a  new 
dross  as  ranch  as  when  Spring  comes  out  in 
her  BOW  garb,  and  shames  the  <lingy  room 
where  wiator  has  left  its  impress  in  amoke 
and  dust.  Look  at  our  new  and  lovely  stock 
(if  Wall  Pauers. 

LaVaqua  Paint  &  Wail  Paper  Co., 

^      12  West  Superior  Street. 


t  . 

T 


"M-I-I-I'H-H-I-I-M-I-I-H- 


Office  Supplies! 

THE  OSLY  COMPLETE  LINE  IS  THE 
CITY  IS    ^r  ^ 


Chamberlain  &  Taylor's 
Bookstore. 


323  West  Supe.tor  Street.  Duliith.     ** 


v-H-H~^>I"I"I"I  I-I^I-M-M-I-I-I-I-H 


Xi  uport.  Ky..  Manh  20.  — Stolt  Jack- 
son and  Alonzi)  Walling  were  tiauKod 
today  tor  the  munKr  uf  IVnrI  ISryuu 
Jiin.  :^,1.  1S96.  Although  the  two  niLii 
were  hung:  simultane(;usly  from  a 
(Joulile  tr.ip  that  foil  on  pullinK  the 
same  lever,  there  wa.s  no  special  inci 
dent  at  the  galluwH.  The  scenes  were 
those  that  ordinarily  t.vke  place  on  such 
occasions.  i;i<th  men  were  cool  and 
n«  r\  y  to  the  last,  and  they  du-d  protest- 
in.i?  their  innocence  and  declaring  that 
their  confessions  were  false  and  made 
for  effec-t  on  the  governor. 

The  morning  hours  prc<'eding  the  tx- 
ecution  were,  however,  full  of  exciting 
scenes.  The  j>lan  to  gain  lime  for  .lack- 
son  and  possibly  a  respite  for  Walling 
was  worked  from  early  morning  up 
until  the  men  started  to  the  gallows. 
In  the  morning  Jackson  made  anothe« 
confession,  in  which  he  said  Walling 
was  not  guilty  of  murder,  and  tJovernur 
Hradley  was  telegraphed  ac-cordin-gly. 
Many  false  reports  wei-e  soon  <-irculated 
ahiiut  a  respite  heing  granted  Walling, 
and  these  reports  caused  much  excite- 
ment among  the  large  crowds  as- 
semlded  in  the  vicinity  of  the  jail. 

At  times  theie  were  apprehensions  of 
troulde.  l>ut  the  hical  !»olice  force  and 
the  deputy  sherifls  were  assisted  hy  a 
large  force  of  milili»i.  and  order  was 
maintained  thr"iugh<>iit  thi'  forenoo'v 
Wht  n  it  was  announced  that  (Jovernor 
IJradley   had    ordere<l    tlie   execution    nl' 


ar»pearance.  The  camera  men  were  c^n 
hand  and  the  kinetoseope  people  at- 
tempted to  take  the  execution. 

Shortly  l)efore  the  march  to  the  gal- 
lows was  commenced  Deputy  Maurer 
entered  the  jail  with  a  letter  to  Wall- 
ing from  his  sweetheart.  .Miss  Roberts. 
In  it  she  sent  her  love  and  told  him 
to  die  game.  Walling,  aft.r  reading 
the  note,  shook  Maurer  uaimly  by  the 


L.  W.'iM/.'iNUALL. 


KSTABLlriHED  lMi9. 


T.  v.".  HOOPES. 


Mendenhall  &  Hoopes 


KlIiST  NATIONAL.  BANK  BClLDlNti. 

$12,500.00  to  Loan  on  Improved  Property. 


-      ■■ 


Commercial  Light  &  Power  Co. 

(Successors  to  Kartman  General  Electric  Co.) 

FURNISH 
ELECTRIC  CURRENT 


THE  EXECUTION. 

Both  the  Condemned  Men  Were 
Strangled  to  Death. 

Newport,  Ky..  March  20.— Jackson 
and  Walling  were  hanked  togetherfrom 
the  double  trap  at  ll:41>/i.  After  the 
death  warrant  was  read  at  11 :32  both 
declared  their  innocence.  The  crowds 
cheered  loudly  when  the  signal  of  the 
black  flag  went  up. 

The  prisoners  both  stood  with  bowed 
heads  saying  their  prayers.  Wallings 
eyes  were  closed  in  prayer,  Jackson's 
open.  When  Pastor  Lee  finished  the 
prayer  Jackson  bid  him  farewell;  Wall- 
ing alsA  bid  him  farewell,  and  Walling 
whispered  to  him.  "Go.  go,  go." 

Both  died  in  great  agony.  Hotli  were 
evidently  strangled  and  their  necks 
were  not  broken,  as  the  struggling  was 
much  more  than  usual.  Both  were 
nervy  up  to  the  pulling  of  the  drop. 

.lackson  raised  his  feet  and  dropped 
dead.  Walling  drew  up  his  feet  and  his 
body  contracted  several  times  in  great 
agony.  Physicians  pronounced  both 
dead  and  the  announcement  was  made 
outside,  but  the  ciowds  still  lingered 
al)out  the  jail.  Jackson  was  dead  in 
six  minutes.     Walling  died  lirst. 

When  the  black  cap  was  removed 
from  Walling  his  tongue  protruded,  his 
lips  fell  and  were  disccilored,  presenting 
a  horrible  sight.  Walllng's  body  was 
placerl  in  a  casket  and  taken  away  from 
the  jail  for  removal  to  Hamilton  to- 
night. The  funeral  of  Jackson  v.ill  l>e 
held  here  and  that  of  Walling  at  Ham- 
ilton. 

Pastor  I/ee  was  overcome  after  hi.'? 
prayer  at  the  final  scene  on  the  scaf- 
fold and  hacT  to  be  carried  away. 


TWO  CEXTS. 


enivED 


Reeves'     Mining    Tax 
Meets  Defeat  But  Bobs 
Up  Again. 


Bill 


Spirited    Discussion 
House     Over 
Measure. 


In 
the 


the 


Bill   Will    Come    Up    Again 

Next  Tuesday  For  Final 

Action 


STORY  OF  THE  CRIME. 


ALONZO  WALLING. 


FOR  LIGHT  AND  POWER. 

OFFICES— Rooms  4.  5  and  6.  216  West  Superior  street.    -    ■    - 


Oulutti.  Minn. 


The  .<uddcii  i!i-rid.'=e  was  ;i  gr»-;il  slun  k  lo 
th<-  state  oHiciiils  and  m«-mbers  of  ihe  leg- 
islature iu;irly  iill  of  whom  he  numlxrtd 
among  his   tirm   personal    friend.-;. 


Jl.'^CKIVER  KlXr;  DEAD. 
New  York.  March  2o.— Word  was  re- 
ceived today  that  John  King,  formerly 
president  and  later  receiver  of  the  Krie 
railwav,  died  at  Heaulicni.  near  Nice, 
France.  March  17.  Mr.  King  was  a 
well  known  railway  man.  He  started 
as  a  ticket  ag;nt  on  the  Baltimore  & 
«)hi<»  railway,  some  thirty  years  ago. 
anil  rose  to  be  vice  president  and  presi- 
dcnt  F'lo  tern.  He  retired  from  the 
Baltimore  &  Ohio  to  accept  the  presi- 
d  ncy  of  the  F'ittslmrg  *  < 'onnellsville 
ilailway  comi)any.  and  afterwards  was 
n-ceiv«  r  of  the  (Cincinnati  ^»:  Marietti 
and  fh<-  Ohio  &  Mississippi  railway.  In 
1S!M  he  was  elected  president  of  the  Eric 
roacl. 


l>oth  men  to  priK-eed,  and  that  there 
would  be  no  interference  whateve:-. 
there  were  continued  shouts  of  ap- 
oroval. 

The  scaffold  wa.s  in  the  c-ourt  >-;iii!, 
where  it  could  be  seen  i>y  many  thou- 
sands of  [H'ople  from  the  surrounding 
buildings,  and  there  ua.s  .i  great  dem- 
onstration when  the  blac!v  !lag  was 
hoisted  as  a  signal  that  the  execution 
was  over.  These  signals  were  alsci 
hoisted  in  Covington  and  Cincinnati, 
where  there  was  as  much  excitement  as 
here  over  the  fal.se  retxirts  about  Wall- 
ing being  respited  foi-  four  days.  .^no:i 
after  the  execution  the  crowds  dis- 
persed, and  the  bodies  of  the  men  were 
taken  away  by  their  friends,  but  the 
large  number  oi'  visitors  reniained  in 
the  city  and  were  found  in  groups  ex- 
pressing their  satisfaction  over  the  re-  I 
••■ult.  liuite  a  large  party  of  friends  of 
the  Bryan  family  were  present  f^on;  i 
(Jiven  Castle,  Ind.,  and  they  were  very  I 
much  excited  over  the  suspense  of  th 
lorenoon. 


hand.  As  he  did  he  burst  into  tears. 
When  Maurei-  left  Jackson  was  still 
weeping.  At  the  time  the  court  house 
bell  was  tolling. 

At  !c.l.")  it  was  announced  that  Jack- 
.•;on  had  made  a  complete  confession. 
(J(>vernor  Bradley  was  then  telegraphed 

j  to  in  the  interest  of  Walling.     This  ef- 
fort to  save  Walling  delayed  the  exe- 

I  c-ution   which  was  to  have  occurred  at 

'  :t  o'clock. 

In  Jackson's  confession  he  .said  Wall- 
ing was  not  guilty  of  murder.  Jac-k- 
.son  had  Pastor  Lee.  the  death  watch. 
Walling,  and  all  stand  ujt  as  he  repeat- 
ed that  Walling  is  not  guilty.  This 
proceeding  stopped  the  march  to  the 
gallows,  as  Sheriff  Pluminer  called  in 
Walling's  attorneys  and  they  wired 
(Jovernor  Bradley.  Jackson  luoke  c-om- 
pletely  down  just  as  the  inarch  to  the 
gallows  was  ordered  to  start,  and  wept 
like  a  child  as  he  cried  out  that  Walling 
v.as   not   guilty. 

The  crowd  outside  the  jail  was  kej>t 
full.v  advised  and  became  very  imi)a- 
tient  as  the  confession  was  generally 
considered  a  dodge  to  gain  more  time 
lor  Jackson,  as  well  as  a  respite  for 
Wailing.  Walling  dropped  a  note  from 
the  jail  window  to  the  newspaper  men 
sa.ving.  "Jack.sim  has  freed  me." 

Sheriff  Plumnur.  at  lo:::0  received  a 
i.iessage  from  (Jtivernor  Bradley  say- 
ing that  he  had  a  telegram  purporting 


How  Pearl  Bryan  Came  to  Her 
Death. 

Cinc-innati.  March  L'O. — In  the  early 
morning  of  Feb.  1,  "i^'JG,  a  boy  going  to 
work  discovered  the  dead  body  of  a 
girl  in  an  obsc-ure  part  of  John  Lock's 
farm  adjoining  Fort  Thomas,  Ky.  Tlic 
murderers  had  cut  off  the  girl's  head 
to  prevent  identification  and  removed 
it  to  some  place  that  has  never  been 
discovered.  Tiie  only  garments  on  the 
body  were  a  iini')n  undersuit  and  a 
cheap  checked  wrapper,  pair  of  shoes 
lay  near,  also  a  kid  glove,  two  hair 
pins  and  a  few  strands  of  blonde  hair. 
The  shoes  were  a  woman's  No.  3,  and 
on  thc-m  was  an  opera  toe  rubber  well 
worn.  Inside  the  shoes,  which  were  of 
the  needle  toe  description,  was  the 
stamp  of  Lewis  &  Hayes,  of  Green- 
castle,  with  a  Portsmouth,  Ohio, 
as  makers.  Nearby  was  a  white 
set,  spotless,  except  from  bloody 
ger   prints. 

At  the  top  of  the  bank  where  the 
fc»et  lay  was  a  pool  of  blood.  This  spot 
was  in  the  gap  of  a  private  hedge  on 
whic-h  remained  dead  leaves.  On  both 
sides  of  these  leaves,  above  and  lie- 
low,  were  drops  of  blood.  At  the  foot 
of    the    bank    near    the    neck    was   an- 

OtI\iM-.    LuOM^t    <»f     t>In«\/J,     Oi.     th-it     morniiur 

these  fe.v  t;arments  were  the  only  c'ews 
to  the  identity  of  the  dead  girl.  Blood- 
hounds were  taken  to  the  spot  and 
they  followed  a  trail  to  the  Covington 
reservoir  and  could  be  induced  to  go 
no  further.  The  reservoir  was  drainc^d. 
but  the  head  was  not  found.  All  subse- 
quent search  for  the  head  has  been 
fruitk^ss.    Four    days    later    the    shoes, 


nrm 
cor- 
fin- 


THE   LANPHcR 

THE  EEj^T 

STYLISH  AND  DURABLE 


1*1  ED  IN   HIS  SLEEP.  I 

Springfield.  111..  Man-h  2:i.— William  M.  I 
Olenn  was  found  dead  in  l>»'d  iliis  morn- 
ing. He  hiid  been  deiid  for  ."fome  hours.  , 
Mr.  Olenn  was  widely  known  as  a  news- 
piiper  correspondent,  end  for  several  s"s. 
sions  of  the  legislature  h.as  tM'cn  in  ehartre 
of  ih»'  As.scK-iated  I're.ss  bureau  at  the 
Stilte    eapital. 

Mr.  <;ienu  retired  last  night  .tpparentl.v 
in  gooil  health  :ind  feeling  .ill  right  in 
♦•very  wii.v.  lie  smokcil  a  eifrar  in  his  j 
r«>i>m  iM-fore  ;;oiiig  to  sleep.  Death  was  | 
seemiugl.V  due  to  heart  disease  or  .ipo-  I 
plexy.  lie  v.as  fouiid  resting  naturally  , 
in    nearly    the    same    liusiiiun    as    usual,  j 


GREECE  ENTERS  A  PFtUTIOST 
Athen.s.  Manh  a>.  — In  reply  to  the  |»ro- 
test  of  the  tireek  government  against  the 
sinking  of  the  Creek  vessel  bv  an  Aus- 
trian gunboat  olT  the  coast  of'crete.  the 
.\ustrian  charge  d  iffuires  has  replied 
that  the  firing  uiwin  the  vc.-ssel  referred  to 
was  provoked  by  an  insurgent  attack 
upon  the  gunt)oat.  Thereupon  the  (Jreek 
government  c-onsented  to  await  the  re- 
sult of  the  inciuiri»s  which  are  being 
m.ide    intcj    the   aff;iir. 


TWO  RINO  FAT.\L1TIES. 
PhHadelphia.  Pa..  March  ai.— Two 
deaths,  the  result  of  boxing  bouts  have 
oec-urred  here  during  the  oast  twelv;- 
hours.  Edward  Gibbons  ili»-d  e.irly  this 
morning  at  the  Hahnem.inn  hospital  from 
the  effeets  of  a  hicjw  civer  the  heart,  ad- 
ministered by  SamueJ  S.  Perrv.  duritig 
a  "trienilly"  go  at  the  Tenth  W,iri| 
Democratic-  club  last  night,  while  ("hri.s- 
.\eilnec  ker,  ilied  at  •".  o'clock  this  morn- 
ing in  St.  .Marys  hospjt.il.  as  the  result 
of  a  boxing  match  with  Frank  «'onnellv 
on   Thursday.     Arrests    will    follow. 


THEIR  LAST  HOURS. 

Vain    Attempts   to     Postpone 
Walling's  Execution. 

Newport.  Ky.,  March  20.— The  weath- 
er was  pleasant  and  f»eople  iK>ured  intcj 
the   city    to    witness    the   exec-ution      of 
Scott  Jackson  and   Alonzo  Walling  for 
the  murder  of  Pearl    Bryan.     The  con- 
demnc-d  men  spent  a  quiet,  but  restlei^s  , 
night  and   were  out    at   :,"M.  ate  hearty  ' 
breakfasts,  indulged  in  cigars  and  ha  I  j 
a  good  tim»\    At  S  o'clock  the  jail  yard  | 
was  full  and  vast  crowds  were  outside  : 
the  enclosure,  but  Jac  kson  and  Walling  i 
were   unmoved   and     indiffcjrent.     Both 
told  friends  there  was  nothing  true  in 
their  last      confessions       to     (5overnor 
Bradley  and  that  they  played  it  as  the 
last  resort.    They  did  some  writing  dur- 
ing  the   morning,    but     their     missives 
were  to  their  relatives. 

The   directors     of   the     cemetery     at 
Green  Castle,  Ind.,  have  refused   to  let  ! 
Jack.scm  be  buried   there  and  the,  body 
will  probably  be  buried  at  Jersey 
Green  Castle  is  the  home  of     the 
ans. 

The  lever  was  arranged  .so  that 
one  jiull  both  of  the  condemned 
would  drop  together  from  the  double 
traji.  The  scaffold  was  painted  white. 
It  stood  in  the  jail  yard  and  in  the 
bright  sunlight     presented     a     i;hustly 


I'KARL  BRYAN. 


City 
Bry- 

with 
men 


to  come  from  him  (Plimimer)  stating 
that  Jackson  had  stated  that  Walling 
was  not  guilty.  It  said:  "Proceed  with 
the  execution  and  if  .lackson  makes  a 
statement  on  the  gallows  to  that  effect. 
you  may  siisiiencl  Walling's  execution 
until   further  direc;tions  from  me." 

Sheriff  Pluinmer,  on  receipt  of  the 
messagc\  ordered  the  men  to  |U"epare 
for  the  scaffold. 

After  c-oniing  from  the  c-onsultation 
with  the  prisoneis  Judge  Helm  told 
Jackson  that  he  must  hang,  and  if  he 
allowed  Walling  to  hang  with  him  he 
would  have  to  answer  to  his  maker  for 
a  double  c-rime.  He  also  impressed 
Jackson  with  the  fact  that  if  he  went 
before  his  maker  with  a  lie  cm  his  lips 
he  would  also  be  doing  a  double  wron.g. 
He  then  gave  Jackson  five  minutes  in 
which  to  make  up  his  mind,  leaving  him 
•unattended  by  the  death  watch.  At 
the  expiration  of  the  time  Jackson  said 
that  he  could  not  say  that  Walling  was 
innocent.  This  settled  the  fate  of  both 
prisoners  and  the  time  for  the  execu- 
tion was  fixed  at  ]1::;0  o'clock.  At  11:20 
they  started  to  Ihe  scaffold. 

Just  before  leaving  the  c-ell  Walling 
said:  "f  will  tell  you  now  at  the  la.st 
moment  of  my  life  that  I  was  not  there. 
I  am  innocent  of  the  whole  crime, 
.lackson  has  said  as  much,  but  it  .seems 
it  will  not  save  me.    1  cannot  say  any 


THE 


AFFOLD 
WERE 


ON     V.HICH 
HANGED. 


TIIEY 


the  glove,  the  hair  pins  and  the-  wrap- 
|)er  were  identified  at  (Jreencastle.  Ind.. 
by  her  parents  as  belonging  to  I'eari 
Bryan,  the  daughter  of  A.  S.  Bryan,  a 
well-to-do    farmer   near    Greencastle. 

This  identification  of  the  girl  wa^' 
brought  about  by  Sheriff  Jule  Plum- 
nier,  of  Campbell  county,  Kentucky, 
who  had  follo\ved  tlie  slender  clues 
furnished  by  the  shoes  and  garments 
to  a  succc^ssful  issue.  This  discovery 
also  identified  Scott  .Jackson  and 
Alonzo  Walling  as  the  perpetrators  of 
the  crime.  These  young  men  were 
room  mates  and  fellow  students  in 
the  dental  college  at  Cincinnati.  Scott 
Jack.son  spent  several  months  of  the 
.summer  and  early  autumn  of  1S9tt  at 
Greencastle.  Ind..  as  a  member  of  the 
family  of  his  brother-in-law,  Dr.  Ed- 
win F.  Post,  a  professor  in  the  DePauw 
university.  There  he  Ijecame  acciuaint- 
i^d  with  Will  Wood,  a  lad  2ti  years  old, 
the  son  of  Rev.  Delos  M.  Wood,  pre- 
siding elder  of  the  Methodist  Epis- 
copal church,  residing  at  Greencastle. 
Through  Will  Wood,  who  was  a  sec- 
ond cousin  to  Pearl  Bryan,  he  obtained 
an  introduction  to  her  and  visited 
her  freciueiitly.  She  was  a  graduate  of 
the  Greencastle  High  school,  was  vi- 
vacious, jiretty,  fond  of  society  and 
very  popular. 

Jackson,  when  absent,  kept  up  a 
c  cirrespondence  with  her.  which  was 
continued  until  within  a  fortnight  of 
the  day  of  her  murder.  The  last  two  or 
three  months  of  this  corresjJondence 
was  carried  on  clandestinely.  Will 
Wood  was  the  medium  at  Greencastle 
by  which  these  letters  were  passed  to 
their  destination.  .Jackson'.**  last  visit 
to  Greencastle  was  in  the  holidays  of 
lS9.')-6.  A  few  persons  at  Greencastle, 
confidantes  of  Jackson,  knew  that 
Pearl  Bryan  was  in  a  delicate  c<mdi- 
tion.  To  one  of  these.  Dr.  Gilespie.  a 
dentist  with  whom  Jackson  had 
worked,  also  a  relative  of  Pearl  Bryan. 
Jackson  admitted  that  he  was  the 
author  of  Pearl  Bryan's  trouble.  Gil- 
lespie, during  the  holiday  vacation, 
advised  Jackson  to  niari-y  her.  He 
said  that  he  would  not  do  anything 
of    the    kind.    There    were    others    who 


St.  Paul.  March  20.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.)— After  a  full  day  and  a  half 
given  up  to  one  of  the  hardest  and  best 
fights  known  in  recent  years  in  the 
Minnesota  legislature,  the  Reeves 
bill  for  taxation  of  mines  and 
mining  property,  was  defeated  last 
night  by  Tii)  to  r»l.  it  being  necessary  to 
have  58  votes  to  carry.  The  number 
favoring  was  m,  but  Mr.  Staples 
changed  his  vote  in  order  to  move  a  re- 
c-onsideration.  The      contest        was 

promptly  resumed  this  inorning  immed- 
iately after  the  reading  of  the  jcrurnal. 

Mr.  Staples  got  the  floor  and  said: 
"Mr.  Speaker.  I  want  to  say  that 
there  is  a  question  about  how  one  vote 
is  recorded  and  the  matter  will  be 
brought  up  at  the  proper  tiine.  ,as  it 
has  been  impossible  to  correct  the  jour- 
nal in  that  regard.  Mr.  McLean  is  re- 
corded  as  voting  in  the  negative  when 
the  fact  is  that  he  says  he  voted  in  the 
affirmative  and  several  of  his  neighbors 
heard  him  distinctly  vote  that  way.  I 
now  move  a  reconsideration  of  the  vote 
whereby  H.  F.  601,  was  defeated  and 
demand  a  call  of  the  house." 

Roll  call  showed  ten  members  ex- 
cused and  eight  absc-nt  without  excuse, 
and  the  sergeant -at-arms  was  sent 
after  them.  At  11:05  o'clock  proceed- 
ings under  the  call  were  suspended 
and  the  motion  to  reconsider  was  taken 
up,  Mr.  Schmidt  speaking  briefiy 
against  it  as  tending  to  delay  oth'^r 
business.  A  roll  call  was  taken  on  the 
motion  to  reconsider,  a  majority  of 
those  voting  being  enough  to  carry,  and 
resulted  yeas  5.S,  nays  4:!. 

Mr.  Stai>les  then  moved  the  final  pas- 
sage of  the  bill.  Mr.-  Gray  presented 
an  amendment  fixing  the  tonnage  tax 
at  .'J  instead  of  5  as  fixed  yesterday. 
Before  this  was  acted  on  Mr.  Jaeobson 
moved  that  the  special  order  be  laid 
over  until  Tuesday.  Mr.  Hicks  object- 
ed to  an.v  ppsi|)onement,  as  also  did  Mr. 
loss.  Mr;  Jai'obson  argued  lor  his 
motion,  insisting  that  the  people  had 
demanded  action  on  this  subje  -t  and 
time  was  not  wasted  that  was  given  to 
the  consideration  of  this  measure. 
Many  members  had  gone  home  over 
Sunday  and  he  wanted  them  present. 
The  bill  would  take  not  over  five  min- 
utes' time  for  final  distxisal. 

Mr.  Staples  withdrew  his  motion  to 
pass  the  bill  and  suggesteil  2::J0  Tues- 
(Jay  afternoon  and  Mr.  Jaccibson  agreed. 
Mr.  Stoc-kwell  agn^ed  to  postpone  it 
because  he  thought  the  more  light 
there  was  on  the  subject  the  surer  it 
was  of  being  defeated.  "You  tried  to 
force  this  down  cmr  throats  night  be- 
fore last."  he  said,  and  Mr.  Jaeobson 
at  once  shouted,  "f  want  to  deny  that 
i'tatement,"  but  Mr.  Stockwell  repeat- 
ed his  statement  saying,  "l  am  as  well 
informed  on  that  proposition  as  you 
are,  Mr.  Jaeobson." 

A  vote  on  the  motion  to  defer  the 
special  order  was  taken,  and  both  sides 
supported  it.  the  vote  resulting  95  to  1 
in  favor  of  iiostponement  and  the  mat- 
ter was  laid  over. 


A  BANKRUPTCY  BILL. 

Senator  Nelson  Expects  One 
to  Be  Passed. 

Washington.  March  20.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— Senator  Nel.son  believes 
that  either  the  bill  introduced  by  him 
or  some  other  voluntary  bankruptcy 
bill  will  become  a  law  at  this  sc-ssion 
if  Speaker  Reed  appoints  the  standing 
committees  of  the  house  so  that  a  bill 
can   be  reported   to  that   body. 

Senator  Davis  is  a  member  of  the  ju- 
diciary committee,  which  has  charge 
of  such  legislation  and.  if  so  inclined, 
can  materially  a.ssist  in  having  a 
bankruptcy  bill  reported  to  the  sen- 
ate. 


THEY  ARE  ANXIOUS. 

Goodnow*s  Calls  on  McKinley 
Agitate  Office-Seekers. 

Washington.  March  20.— (Special  to 
The  Herald.)— John  Goodnow  has  lefr 
town.  He  departed  from  Washington 
late  today  for  his  heme  in  Minneapo- 
lis. The  politicians  may  feel  a  little 
easier  now  that  the  Minneapolrs  man 
has  gone.  I>ut  they  are  still  on  an 
anxious  seat  regarding  the  nature  of 
his  mission   here. 

Many  Minnesota  officeseekers  woul  1 
like  to  know  what  John  learned  from 
President  McKinley  in  reference  to 
Minnesota  ai  i  intments.  Goodnow  is 
the  only  man  who  knows  the  exact 
.situation,  and  it  is  not  likely  he  will 
tell  aiiy  one  at  present.  He  had  several 
l>rivate  c-onferences  with  the  president 
while   here. 


CHANGE  OF   COLOR. 

Lights  at  Two  Harbors    Will 
Be  Changed. 

Washington.  March  20.— (Special  t<j 
The  Herald.)— The  lighh.mse  board  to- 
day issued  the  following:  "Notice  is 
hereby  given  that  cm  the  opening  of 
navigation  in  1,S97,  the  color  of  the 
fourth  order  light  at  Tw-o  Harbor's 
light  station,  on  the  point  at  the  east- 
erly side  of  Agate  bay.  Lake  Superior, 
will  be  changed  from  red  to  white,  and 
the  color  of  the  lantern  light  on  the 
outer  end  of  the  breakwater  making  off 
from  the  point  will  be  changed  from 
white  to  red." 


A  KENTUCKY  TRAGEDY. 


THE  sf:nate. 

.St.  Paul,  March  20. — In  the  senate  to- 
day Senator  Stevens  introduced  a  ball  't 
machine  bill,  authorizing  c-ounty  com- 
missioners, c-ounty  councils  or  village 
trustees  to  employ  the  automatic  ballot 
recorders  at  any  local  or  state  election, 
provided  that  they  must  give  ninety 
days'  notice  to  the  voters  by  public-a- 
ti<m. 

The  following  bills,  among  others  on 
the  c-alendar.  were  passed: 

S.  F.  ",">6. 'Miller,  to  amend  laws  1.S7S, 
relating  to  the  letting  of  advertising 
of  delin<iuent  tax   list. 

S.  F.  I.'.T.  Thorpe,  to  grant  addition- 
al powers  to  state  board  of  eriualiz- 
ation.  allowing  them  to  change  indi- 
N'idual    assessments. 

S.  F.  272.  Wyman.  to  require  annuity. 
safe  dt^posit  or  tiust  c-ompanies  to  pay 
a  fee  for  deposit  of  securities  with  the 
state  auditor. 

H.  F.  66,  Ferris,  to  secure  mortgage 
foreclosures  by  advertisement  wherein 
the  notice  of  sale  is  defective. 

During  the  discussion  on  the  Thorpe 
bill  Senator  Spencer  attacked  the  bill 
and  insisted  that  the  state  board  should 
have  the  right  to  reduce  the  assess- 
ments as  well  as  to  raise  Ihem. 

Senator  Thorpe  was  surprised  that 
the  senator  from  Duluth  of  all  others 
should  oppose  a  bill  of  this  kind.  He 
was  near  enough  to  the  large  interests 
of  the  stale  to  know  how  they  were 
I^aying  their  just  proportion  of  the 
taxes. 

Senator  Shaller  said  that  if  Ihe  state 
board  was  allowc-d  to  reduce  assc-ssments 
the  (ity  would  be  tilled  with  people  pray- 
ing for  a  reduf-tion  of  taxes,  and  c-ontiii- 
lial  sc-ssions  of  tln>  board  would  be  nec-es- 
sary.  However,  it  was  not  the  average 
taxpayers  who  protested  against  their  as- 
sessm<  nts.  It  was  the  large  interests 
w-hic-h  were  always  represented  before 
the   board. 

Tin-  bill  passed  by  a  vole  of  %  to  2<». 
Senators  Snencer,  Dunham  and  Fuller 
voting  against  it. 


Four   Murders  Over  a  Game 
of  Cards. 

Louisville,  March  20.— A  siK-cial  to  the 
Evening  Pcjst  from  Pineville,  .says:  A 
farmer  residing  on  (Creasy  Creek,  in 
Leslie  c-ounty,  brought  news  to  this 
place  last  night  that  a  battle  had  be.u 
fought  on  the  day  before  on  Upper 
(ireasy  Creek,  in  Leslie  county,  near 
Harlan  etmnty.  in  w  hicli  two  men  were 
killc^d  and  two  others  \\ounded. 

The  report  shows  that  Will  Tedford 
and  Jake  Tedford  were  Instantly  killc-d 
by  a  saloonist.  ancj  two  others,  whose 
names  could  not  be  learned,  fatally 
wounded.  The  altercation  arose  over 
a  game  of  cards. 

The  correspondent  does  not  vouch  for 
the  truth  of  the  story,  but  only  has  the 
information  from  n  prominent  farmer 
of  the  county. 


CHICAGO  WEATHER. 

Windy  City  People  Alarmed  at 
the  Darkness. 

Chicago.  March  20.— Rain,  c-louds.  fogs 
and  smoke  mixed  up  between  1  and  5 
o'clock  yesterday  afternoon,  and  sent  a 
black  shadow  over  the  city.  Thou.sands 
of  eitizc-ns  were  staitled  and  many  ter- 
lilied  from  the  sudden  transition  from 
day  to  night  and  thought  a  cvclont-  wa-: 
c-oming.  In  a  lew  minutes  the"  sun  shone 
again.  Then,  for  four  times.  like  a  succes- 
sion of  tidal  waves,  the  d;irkne.ss  swept 
over  the  (-it.\-  and  lost  itself  in  the  grey 
cloud  that  hung  over  the  lake-.  Each  w.ive 
was  less  dense  than  its  prede(-e.«sor  but 
each  was  still  dense  enough  to  compel 
attention  until  ii  h:ul  rolled  its  converse 
and    vanished. 


ROSS'  SECOND  VICTIM. 
Milwaukee.  March  20.— A  special  to 
the  Wisconsin  from  Kaukauna.  Wis., 
says:  Katie  Duprey,  the  second  victim 
of  the  murderer.  Porter  Ross,  died  last 
night  at  the  Beaulieu  place,  where  she 
received  her  fatal  wound.  She  was  17 
years  of  age. 


DUNLOP'S  SENTENCE. 

Chicago  Publisher  Will  Have 
to  Go  io  Jail. 

Washington.  March  :i0.— The  mandate 
in  the  case  of  Joseph  R.  Dunlop.  the 
Chicago  newspaper  publisher,  has  been 
i.ssued  l)y  the  ITnited  States  supreme 
court,  and  shcjuld  reac-h  the  officials  of 
the  federal  court  in  Chicago  today. 
When  delivered,  it  will  have  the  effect 
of  causing  Mr.  Dunloj)  to  be  taken  into 
custody  for  the  execution  found  in  thi; 
judgment  of  the  court,  which  imposes 
a  fine  of  *i'000  and  imprisonment  for  two 
years  for  \iolation    of    the    postal  laws. 


SOME  Ll^CKY  MICHIGANDERS. 
Washington.  March  20.— The  Michi- 
gan delegation  in  the  house  has  secured 
the  appointment  of  three  men  to  the 
clerical  force.  They  are  F.  P.  Wake- 
field, of  Detroit,  tally  clerk;  E.  L.  Al- 
ward.  of  Clare,  reading  clerk:  Col.  E. 
E.  Spiedc^e.  of  Grand  Ra)iids.  deputy 
sergeant-at-arms.  Mr.  Alward  is  sec- 
retary of  the  Republican  state  central 
committee  of  Michigan,  and  was  for- 
merly secretary  of  the  state  ,senate. 

r^EET   SlXLMl    BOUNTY. 
Washington.    March   20.— Representa- 
tive Maxwell,  of  Nebraska,  today  intro- 
duced a  bill  for  a  beet  .sugar  bounty  in 
the  house. 


OFF  FOR  CUBA. 
Punta  Gorda.  Fla..  March  20.— A 
CJuban  expedition,  with  forty  men 
aboard,  sailed  frcmi  Cleveland  on  the 
Peace  River,  six  miles  north  of  here 
at    12:30   o'clock    last    night. 


(Continued  ou  page  3.) 


OCE.\N 

New        York 
Glasgow. 

Liverpool — Arrived : 
York. 


STEAMSHIPS. 
Arrived:        Circassian. 


Cevk.        New 


THE  TREASURY  CONDITION. 
Washington.      March      20.  —  Today's 
statement  of  the  condition  of  the  trc>a- 
sury  shows:    Available    cash    balance, 
$217,200,053;   gold   reserve,   $151,485,865. 

JAPAN  WILL  USE  SILVER. 
New  York,  March  20.— Schida,  c-onsul 
of  Japan  in  this  city,  .sent  the  following 
communication  to  the  Associated  Pr.'ss 
today:  "I  am  authorized  to  say  that  oi:r 
country  will  not  dispose  of  silver,  even 
after  she  will  have  adopted  the  -gold 
standard,  as  all  the  available  stock  of 
silver  is  to  Ije  coined  into  subsidiary 
coins." 


HAWAII  .\KW  ARMV. 
New  York.  March  ?i.— The  Saxage  Arms 
c-ompany,  of  this  eiiy.  have  mad.-  a  c-uii- 
traet  with  the  Hawaiian  govc-nmient  to 
furnish  the  troons  of  that  c-oumrv  with 
the  best  grade  of  Savage;  military  rifles. 


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The  Lake  Superior  Ore  Trade 

Still  In  an  Unsettled 

Condition. 


Prices  of   Bessemer   Grade 

Ores  Will  Be  Lower 

This  Year. 


Village  of   Munising,  Mich 

Trying  to  Secure  Blast 

Furnaces. 


•1 


Ishpfininjr.  Miih..  .Manh  lU— (Spii  ial 
to  The   Heralil.>— With   the  openfnsr   i»f 
ravipati.'n  Uss  than  >ix  wet-ks  distant, 
thf  Lakt'  SiU'eiior  uie  traiU-  is  in  as  un- 
settled   a   condition   as    it    was   at    th-,- 
'ipenins  of  the   year.     Xt>  deeisi.m    lias 
Won  arrived  at  yet  re^ardin^  prices  f 
1SJ>7  product,  and  there  are  dltTicultiis 
which  have  s<»  far  proved  insurniouni- 
able.  in  the  way  of  arrivin-^  at  an  un- 
derstanding   with     each     other    by    the 
leading  producers.        The  district    is  s.' 
extensive  and  the  varieties  of  ore  pro- 
duced are  so  many  that  there  is  a  Kreat 
diversity  of  interests  on  the  part  of  the 
THining  conjpanies   raising   the  ore.     it 
may  be  set  down  for  a  settled  fact  thac 
the  range  of  prices  ..n   Bessemer  grade 
ores  will   be  lower  this  year  than   last, 
whether  the  ore   pool  <loes  or  does  not 
hold  together  for  the  season,  but  beyond 
that  favt  all  is  guesswork.    The  old  «.re 
pool   of  last  season   holds   its  existence 
\pril  ;;•>  of  this  year,   but   unless 
is  arranged  for  bt>fore  that 
may    be   arranged   for   pre- 
members  of  the   pool,   each  . 
in   the  combination   fearing 
is   about    to   do   the 


111 -health  is  the 
"Sword  of  Damocles  " 
that  hanps  .<;usnended 
by  a  slender  thread 
above  the  heads  of 
thousands  of  men.  In 
the  end-of-the-century 
rush  and  crush,  men 
forpet  and  neglect 
everything  hut  moncv- 
getting.  Thcv  forget 
that  the  facility  for 
money  -  getting  is  ie 
the  long  ran  dependent  upon  .-i  sound 
mind  in  a  sound  body.  The  man  who  it  i 
too  busy  with  his  business  to  spare  a  mo-  I 
nient  to  look  after  his  health,  will  eventu- 
ally lose  both  health  and  business.  A  man 
may  be  in  too  big  a  hurry.  The  man  who 
would  be  permanently  successful  should 
take  time  to  eat.  time  to  digest  his  food, 
time  to  sleep,  and  time  to  look  at^er  the 
most  precious  endowment-^his  health. 

Dr.  Pierce's  aolden  Medical  Discovery  in 
the  best-known  medicine  for  the  over- 
worked tnan  or  woman.  It  keeps  the  sy.*- 
tem  toned  up.  It  makes  the  digestion  per- 
fect, the  appetite  keen,  and  the  bowels  rejf. 
nlar.  It  makes  blood— pure,  rich,  iife- 
Riving  blood— and  lots  of  it.  It  builds  flesh 
and  muscle.  It  invigorates  the  nerves 
Thousands  have  testified  to  the  benefits 
derived  from  its  use.     Druggists  sell  it 


THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD:  SATTRn  vv 

You  Sneeze 

and  feel  chilly,  and  then  begin  to 
realize  you  are  *'taking  cold.'' 
But  you  shiver  and  sneeze  because 


MARCH    20,     1897. 


Big   City   Excited    Over  the 
Queen's   Coming    Dia- 
mond Jubilee. 


your  system  is  too  weak  to  resist 
cold      weather,      bleak 
draughts  and   chills. 


Parnellltes  Will  Have  a  Con 

ference  in  Dublin— A  Par- 

nell  Family  Fund. 


•  I  h.ive  used  quite  a  niitnl)cr  of  Iwttles  of  your 
;  metiicjues  .iml  haw  ncetveii  a  great  .leal  of 
I  benefit  from  them,"  writes  frban  Howill   tso 

of  Tallmanville,  Wavno  Co..  Pa.  In  iS.-to  i  took 
I  six  bottles  <rf'0.oI<len  .Me.iical  Discovery  'and  it 

cured  tne  oT  the  salt-rheum  .so  that  it  di«l   not 

brca'.j  out  aijaiti." 

"The  People's  Common  Sense  Medical 
Ao.vtser"  is  a  well  named  book.  It  is  all 
that  its  title  implies.  It  has  proved  a 
daily  help  in  over  a  million  families  • 
The  book  contains  i.ooS  pages— over  ^oo 
illu.strations.  t>,S,3.ooo  copies  of  this  book 
have  been  sold  at  Si. 50  each.  Now  an  edi- 
tion, in  heavy  paper  covers,  is  to  be  C'zcn 
a:cav  to  whoever  will  send  21  cents  in  one- 
cent  st,amns  to  pay  the  cost  of  mailing  only 
Addres.-i.  'Vorld's  Dispensarv  Medical® \s- 
sociatio!  ;afni!o,  N.  Y.  .V  copv  in  fine 
Cioth  binuing  may  be  had  for  10  cents  extra 


Papal    Delegate    Merry    Del 
Vai  Leaves  For  Canada- 
Gossip  of  the  Stage. 


London,  March  20.— (Copyright  1897 
by  the  Associated  I'rcs.s.)— The  cele- 
bration <»f  the  «iiieens  diamond  jubilee 
rivals  even  the  Eastern  crisis  in  public 
attention.  Preparations  for  the  event 
are  Koin.s?  on  everywhere  in  London,  and 
th«'  «iueen'.s  procession  will  bo 
hear.sed  early  during:  the 
Tuesday  next. 

Sir  Julian  Goldsmiths  house  on  Pica- 
dilly  has  been  let  for  ?10.()00  for  the  day 
of  the  cek'bration  proper.  June  "0 
single   windows  alons   the 
followed    l)\-   th 


Winds, 
The  best 
way  to  escape  winter's  many  dan- 
gers i§  to  fortify  yourself  with 

Duffy's  Pure 
Malt  Whiskey 

which  gives  heat  to  the  blood  and 
increased  strength  to  every  part 
of  the  body.  It  improves  diges- 
tion and  the  power  to  assimilate 
food,  and  thus  provides  a  cloth- 
ing of  sound,  healthy  flesh,  which 
is  the  surest  protection  against 
coughs,  colds,  chills,  the  grip,  or 
pneumonia. 

Ask  your  grocer  or  druggist  for 
Duffy's,  and  take  nothing  else. 


r„r]^„"^^    "^^S^^    '^'"'"W    are    reported    as 

<i^m  .*?.J,*^''    '""^^'y    winter   of    1880-81 
nonnl^  ''^^^  aj?"!  did  much  dam; 
people  are  afraid  of 


iKe  and 
repetition. 


fo]- 
tii. 
th-j 


Agricultural  Department  Will 
Watch  Over   Tlieir    Inter- 
ests Better  Tiian  Ever. 


Diversification  of   Crops  Is 

to    Be     Encouraged    In 

Every  Way  Possible. 


THE  TRADE  OUTLOOK. 

Dun  Says  That  Trade  is  in- 
creasing Steadily  in  Volume. 


New    York,    March    20.-R 
Co.s  weekly  review  of 


G.    Dun    & 

today  says: 

business    is 

v^-.rv    r.f  ■  '^■"'"me    in    former 

>ears    of    prosperity,    and 


rhouf?h    steadily    increa.sinK 
still    much    below    its 


MUNYOirS 
MARCH 


disappoint^nc:ntrVeV  tl^ere 'bi^'l^n^'S 


Foreign  Restrictions  on  Am- 
erican Products  Will  Be 
Probed  Into. 


hand; 

thp  sure 
coasumiuion. 


di.stri- 


in- 
re- 


re- 
uiorninK    of 


St. 


nntas- 
Jame.s 


imtil 

a   new   ik>o1 

<late.    sales 

viously   by 

participant 

that    his   neig^hbor 

same  thing. 

Mining:  men  are  interested  in  the  pro- 
posed reduction  of  freights  bv  the  Min- 
nesota legislature,  on  rail  lines  haulinj; 
.Mesal>a  ore.    The  proposed  reduction  oi 
-'o  cents  per  ton  would  enable  a  few  of 
the  smaller  Mesaba  mines  to  continue 
in  existence  inde|>endently,    whereas   if 
the  rate  is  not  reduced  it  is  but  a  mat- 
ter  of   two   or    three   years    before    the 
ilesaba  mines  will  all  be  controlled  by 
three  strouif  combinations— the   Rocke- 
feller  interests,    the   I'arne.sirie    interests 
and  the  Minnesota  Iron  companv.     The 
proposed    reduction    of    ore    freiL'hls    is 
n-u    relished    by    the    Rockefeller    com-  I 
bmation.   which   has  everything  to  l.i^i  ' 
nnd  nothing  to  gain  by  a  reduction,  as  I 
the  road  is  contmllfd  bv  it.    There  may  ' 
be  trouble  ahead  for  th^-  Minnesota  In.ii 
company  as  well  in  connection  with  it« 
railroad   interests.       This  companv   re- 
ceived   enormous   grants   of   land  "frojii 
the  state  of  Minnesota  something  mi>rt 
than  ten  years  ago  for  the  building  of 
the    luiluth    &     Iron    Range      railr.jad 
which  runs  from  Duluth  to  the  Mesaba 
range,  as  weil  as  to  Tower  and  Kly    the 
principal  mining  towns  of  the  Vermil-  ' 
ion  district.     There  are  allegations  that 
the   land    was   improinrly   secured,    and 
threats  that  the  present  holders  will  be 
made  to  disgorgt.     Whether  the  grant   1 
or  any   considerable  portion   i>f  it 
be   confiscated    by    the   state     is 
doubtful. 

The  Bessie  mine,  at  Humboldt,  is 
being  abandoned  by  rhe  Commonwealth 
'•ompany.  after  some  $S00«)  ha:-- 
spent  in  the  last  ninetv  davs  in 
making  a  thorou-gh  test  of  the  property 
It  has  been  effectually  determined  that 
the  ore  body  of  the  mine,  as  developed 
IS  of  too  small  extent  to  be  worked 
profitably,  hence  the  relinquishment  of 
the  option  and  the  abandonment  of  all 
work  at  the  Bessie  by  the  Common- 
wealth companv. 

The    Queen    Mining    companv.    which 
operates  the  Buffalo  group  of  mines  on 
the  Negaunee  east   range,  is  arranging 
to  connect  the  Blue  mine,  recentlv  pur-  , 
chased,    with    the   other      underground 
workings   of   the    property.      The    Blue 
w^hich   was  acquired   bv   the  owners  of 
the  Buffalo  group  for  $60,000.  is  a  prom- 
ising   property    with    large    ore    bodies 
and  product  averaging  above  the  other 
mines   of    the    immediate    localitv.    and 
now    that   it    has     passed    into    strong ' 
hands,    should      become      one    of      the  ' 
heaviest   producers   of     the     Xegaun'^  t  \ 


mg  of  the  new  town  by  an  ambiti..u^ 
land  company  two  year.s  ago.  The  ad- 
vantages of  Munising  for  a  blast  fur- 
nace are  cheap  water  shipment  for  thf- 
pig  .iron,  and  the  existence  of  a  very 
extensive  hardwood  timber  tract  with- 
in a  reasonal)le  distance  of  the  village 
the  proximity  of  the  timber  assuring 
cheap  charcoal  for  S(.me  years  to  come 
HORACE    J.    STEVENS 


Iron 
L»een 


can 
very 


WRECKED  BY  ICE. 

Three  Sheboygan  Craft  Swept 
Into  the  Lake. 

Milwaukee.   March   20.— A   special     to 
'  the  Wisconsin   from  Sheboygan,     Wis.. 
I  says     the     ice   was  swept   out   of     the 
I  river  at  that  place  last  night  carrying 
three  vessels  out  into  the  lake.  The  ves- 
sels  were   badly   damaged   by   striking 
bridges  and  docks  and     fouling     other 
craft  on  their  way  down  stream.    Manv 
other  vessels  along  the  docks  have  been 
damaged.     Two  men.  Dtto  Slaegel  and 
John    ^'orkins.   attempted   to    board    ili.- 
schooner  Baker  as  she  moved  down  the 
river,  but  wt-iv  swept  out  into  the  lake, 
rheir  fate  is  unknown.  1 

A  freight  train  on  th.-  Northwestern 
road  went  through  a  bridge  near  Piut 
\\  ashington  and  Hfteen  cars  went  int.- 
Fauk  creek.  The  I.K<.motive  was  on  ■ 
the  bridge  when  the  enjfine.^-  heard  th.- 
crash.  He  opencnl  the  throttle  an.l  th.- 
engine  cleared  the  bridge  before  it  went 
down. 


for 
in 


arnell. 
are   ii, 
I>roni;)t 
they 
famil:^  estate   in 


leir 
that 

th.- 

de- 

miU" 


district. 

The    Jackson    mine,    which    was    the 
first    iron   mining  property   opened      on 
Lake    Superior,    and    which    has    been 
producing    ore    for    more      than      fifty 
years,    is   a    wonderful    example   of   vi- 
tality. The  mine  has  apparently  been  on 
the  pcdnt  of  speedy  exhaustion   for  the 
past    twenty    years,    yet    it    has       con- 
tinued to  get  out  a   large  tonnage  an- i 
iiually  and    every  year   discoveries  ar*> 
made    which    nrolong    the    life    of    the 
mine.    Able   geologists    who   have   car,-- 
lully  wxamin.d  this   propertv.   have  at- 1 
t»-mpted   to  .le.^.ribc-   the    f..rmation     .»f 
the    ground,    but    have   only 
m  entangling   th.  mselves       an<l       th 
readers  in  .such   a   maz-  ..f   v.ords 
the   nnd.rstanding    fails    to    follow 
language.    Th.-    I^^st    non-technical 
scription  that  can  be  given  of  the 
IS    to   say   that    the   Jackson    formation 
r..-sembles    nothing   on    earth    so    much 
as  a   pan   ..f  dough   after   it    has 
thoroughly    kneaded     by      an 
housewife.    The    lenses    of   ore 
extricably  confused,   the    hanging  wall' 
.hanges    into    th.-    foot    xvall        without  I 
^^armng.    the    formation    is    constantiv' 
faulted    and    the    man    who    has    been! 
longest  with  the  mine  and  best   knows! 
Its    characteristics    can    tell    but    little' 
more   about    the   nature  of   the   ground' 
twenty  feet  ahead  of  the  miners'  drills' 
than  a  stranger.  All  that  can  be  said  of 
It   IS   that   in   fifty  years   the   mine   has 
never  failed  to  give  ore  somewhere  in 
sufficient    quantities    to     afford       ship- 
merits  each  season,  and  that  continued 
exploratory   work  in  alnv>st  anv  direc--i 
tlon    IS    usually    rewarded    by 
c-ov.-ry    of    .>i-e    in    greater 
quantifies. 

The  Cun.ly  mine,  at  Quinneser,  Men- 
ominee range,  is  mining  ore  regularly 
the  amount  secured  being  smal  but  of 
high  quality,  with  prospects  for  the 
future  of  the  propertv  growing  bright- 
er. The  ore  of  the  Cundy  diffei-s  great- 


I  RING  WAS  SMALL 

But  Corbetl  Was  Whipped  Just 
the  Same. 

Caison.  Nev..  March  20.— It  has  been 
disclosed  that  the  ring  in  which  Cor- 
bett  and  Fitzsimmons  met  last  Wed- 
nesday was  twenty-two  feet  square,  irt- 
stead  of  t«\enty-four  as  the  rule  re- 
quires. Shortly  before  the  contest  the 
ring  was  enlarged  by  shelves  con- 
stt-ucted  on  its  sides  in  accordance  with 
orders  given  by  the  referee,  but  on  the 
night  before  the  contest.  Chief  Carpen- 
ter Franklin,  acting  under  instructions 
from  Stuart  and  Wheelock.  sawed  oT 
two  feet  around  the  entire  r'ng  The 
posts  were  taken  up  and  placed  two 
It  is  claimed  that  this 
accommodate  the  kineto- 


in   Dublin, 
re   number: 
ipate. 


feet  inward, 
was  done  to 
scope  people 


Billy 


BILLY   SMITH    IN    TROUBLE 
Carson.    Nev..    March    -'O.-Mysterious 
,.-irH    ,^'"''"-^;;h<>  threw  up  the  sponge 
with  George  Gn-en  on   Wednesdav 
now  i-esting  in   the  county  jail 
son.     He  got  on  the  train  last 
to  go  to  San  Francisco,  and 
behind  a  detet-tive  he  has 
with,  c.immenced   to  strike 
neck.     Pistols   were  dr 
an.vthing     was     acc..mplislu-d.     o.Tic-ei-v 
ha.l    "Mysterious'     Billy 
were  leading  him  down 

succeedc-dir''-'''^'V^^*''  ""  »'» 

....       .1.   :..:  I.v   con.iu.  t    Tbur.sday    and     sp.  i,t      th 

iiignt    in  jail,    but    n'lw     will 

sjn-nd  a  short  lime  in  th. 


IS 

in  Car- 

evening 

walking  up 

had   trouok 

him   in   the 

n.    but    befor 


in    tow     and 
in  charg.-.     \\, 
charge  ..f  di.«,,i-d.-r- 


l.robabiy 
p.-niteiitiao. 


been 
active 
are    in- 


f>AX  STITART  SITED 
Carson,  Nev..  Mar.  b  20.-P.  G.  Dona 
hue.  the  .^an  Francis.o  architeet  who 
constructed  the  big  arena  for  Dan 
Muart,  ha.s  plastei-ed  an  attachment  on 
the-  buil.Iing  to  recover  the  money 
whi.h  he  claims  is  due.  a.c-ording  t.. 
the  cntract  made  by  Stuart.  T 
attachment  is  for  %»M.  an.l  th. 

•^"'".i"'^'..  ''"^'"  ^'"^^^^   ^^'"   ''t'  I'i'ought   up 
m  the  district  court  todav. 


'he  lirst 
s.-cond 


the    elis- 
or   smaller 


FORGER  To>-..e  COMING. 
Southampton.  March  20.— i^timer  R 
Jones,  the  American  speculator  and 
horse  dealer,  who  was  arrested  on 
Jan.  38  at  Scarborough,  on  an  extra- 
dition warrant,  charging  him  with 
forgeries  to  the  amount  of  $110,000,  said 
to  have  been  c.mmltted  in  New  York 
in  ]><>»<.  sails  today  for  New  Vork  on 
b..anl  the  American  line  steamer  New 
\ork  in  charg..  of  a  detective 
New   ^ork. 


e  20.  and 
route    to    bt 
I"""cession   are    fetch- 
ing ?.i.o.     The  insurance  companies  are 
nsuring  sightseers  against  loss,  owing 
tc>   the  abandcmment  of  the   procession 
or  a  change  of    route.       Landlords    are 
giving  tenants  of  houses  on  the  poor  r 

"l-'?i""^."''  ^^''  '■""'*'•  ""  ^he  south  sicic 
ot  the  Thames,  notice  to  quit  in  order 
to  get  big  prices  for  windows,  and  the 
newspapers  are  publishing  a  sp  x-ial 
column  of  advertisements  of  windows 
to  I,.t  along  the  route.  Finaliv,  tht 
tashions  of  18;]?.  the  year  of  the  ciueen's 
accession  to  the  thronj,  are  being  re- 
vied. 

At  a  meeting  of  the  Parnollite  mem- 
bers  .)f  parliament  on  Thursday  last  it 
I  was  c  ecided  to  request  John  Redmond 
to  call    a  conference  of   repres.^ntative 
Parnellltes    from   all    parts   of   Ireland 
to  meet  in  Dublin  during  Kaster  week' 
I  for  the  purpo.se  of  considering  the  po-' 
siti.m  and  prospects  of  the  partv    This 
I  step  was  rendered     necessary     by     the 
recent  attitude  of     Timothy     Harring- 
ton, and  it  is  intend-d  1..  mak.-  vigor, 
ous  efforts,  both  in  Ireland  and  Ameri- 
ca,  to  strengthen  the  party.     Mr.   Red^ 
mond  and  his  colleagues  are  confident 
of   success,   and   propose   to  submit    to 
the  conference'  a  complete  scheme 
the  reorganization  of    their     forces 
Ireland. 

The  lord  mayor  of  Dublin  has  issued 
invitations  to  a  mcH-ting  to  the  mansion 
house  there  to  fl.,at  a  Parnell  family 
fund.  Already  a  considerable  sum  ha''^ 
been  c.dlected  for  the  project,  and  it  i^ 
expected  it  will  meet  with  great  sue 
cess.  It  is  learned  that  not  only  Mr 
ParnMI's  mother,  Mrs.  Delia  l" 
but  her  brother.  John  Parnell 
pecuniary  want,  and  but  for  th. 
action  of  .Mr.  Redmond  aii<i  others 
^"oulil  iiave  lost  the 
Wicklovf. 

Preparations   are  already   on    f«»ot   in 
Ireland    t<>   .-^lebrate    the   centenai-y   of 
the    rebellion    of   1798.    A    central   com- 
mittee has  b.'cn  established 
j  and  it  is  expected   that   lar 
I  of  Irish-.\mericans  will  partic 

Monsignor  Merry  Del  Val.   the   paiia; 

I  delegate   to   Canada,    sails   from    Liver- 

po.jl  for  New  York  today  on  board  th. 

I  Cunard     \v.\?     steamship     I'mbria.     t. 

settle   the   Manitoba     school     question 

j  Monsignor     Del     Val     is     quite     a  dis- 

\  tin.s;ui.-<hed  looking  man.  about  32  yea'-« 

I  of  age.   and   of  c-ourtly  manners.      He 

I  IS  evidently  a  man  who   will  hear    all 

sides,   and    when   he  reach  s  a  decision 

I  he  will  put  his  foot  down  in  the  flrmes' 

j  manner. 

Monsignor  Del  Val  goes  to  Canada  in 
complete   touch    with    the  pope's   idea.s 
In  conversation  with  a  representative 
of  the  Associated  Press  yesterday.  Mon- 
j  signor   Del    Val    says:      "I    have   had    a 
I  great  mass  of  documents  and  informa- 
'  tion  placed  at  my  dispo.sal.  to  which  I 
am  giving  the  closest  attention  in  the 
sincere   hope   that   my   work   will    con- 
tribute to  the  good  of  Canada.  My  pla"-- 
I  on  arriving  in  New  York  are  undecided 
t  upon.      I    shall    probably     go     first     to  ,' 
Montreal    and    shall,    of     course,      visit 
^lanitoba.    The  expenses  of  my  mission  | 
are  not  borne,  as  stated,  in  some  new.<-  , 
papers,    by   any  of   the   parties   to     the 
controversy.     They  are  borne  absolute- 
ly by  the  pope,   v.-ho  is  very  partiv-ular  1 
in  such  matters." 

Ccmtiderable     excitement     has     bi^eti  I 
created    in    the  artistic   world   of   Pari;;  I 
by  the  refusal  of  thi-  hanging  commit-  ' 
tee  of  the  salon   to  ac-.-cpl  a  pi.  ture  i;i  I 
Jean  Weber,  called  "First  Sight.  '     The  • 
pic-ture   represents     the     int.  rior  .»r     j> 
butcher  .-drop   with   a   lino     display     of 
meat,    but    a    .lose   .-xamiiiation    of   die 
picture  shows  ihe  butch. -••  (o  be  an  al- 
legorical   Bisman-k   an.l, the     carcas.sc^ 
exposed  arc-  human  < nrpses.  and  lepre- 
sentativ.-    victims   -d'     the     chancellor:; 
riithlcssness.     Strong  fuessure  is  bcintv 
brought  to  bear  on  the-  committee,  with 
the  vi«-w  of  prevailing  upon  It   to  re- 
consider its  decision. 

An  English  edition  of  the  'Pike  Conn 
ty  Ballads."  of  Od.  John  Hav.  th«>  su  •- 
c-essor  .if  Thomas  F.  Bayanl.  as  am 
bassador  to  the  court  of  St.  Jjimes.  v.-a.'; 
issued  this  week  and  is  being  every- 
where cjuotcd  by  the  press  and  r".- 
viewed  in   the  most  favorable  terms. 

The  largest  diamond  in  the  world  ha:- 
arrived     in     London     from     KImberly 
South   Africa.     It   is  said   to  be  worth  I 
$2..500.000  uncut.  | 

In  the  Edinburg  court  of 


be 


and 

fol- 

of 


and 
em- 


ne.-ks  and  handles  of  some  larg.-  wine 
bottles  Thes.-  relics  have  been  placed 
in  the  Guild   Hall  museum. 

Arthur  Pinero's  n<-w  play  "The  Prin- 
cess and   th.-   Butterfly:   or  the   \ 
tic-s."  will  be  produced  at  tht 
theater  next  Thursday  night. 

Elizabt  Ui  Robins'  intended  round  of 
Ib.sen  s  plays  will  coinm.-nce  in  Mav 
with  the  production  of  "John  Gabri.-' 
Boc-kmai!."  There  will  also  be  a  brief 
ser-ies  of  representations  of  "The  Ladv 
From  the  Sea."  "A  Doll's  House  " 
"The  Wild  Duck."  These  will  lie 
owed  by  a  single  j.orformance 
Ghost. 

Gillette'.s  American  success  "Secret 
Service."  will  follow  "Black-eyed  Su- 
san '  at  the  Adelphi  tneater.  commen- 
cing on  .May  4.  The  tenn  of  the  Lon- 
don enga^;einent  is  for  four  weeks 
the  entire  .\merican  cast  will 
ployed. 

Sarah  Bemhardt's  London  engage- 
nient  will  commence  at  the  Adelphia 
theater  on  Monday,  June  21.  "Loren 
Gasiro"  will  be  the  first  i.roduction  and 
will  bt^  played  for  two  weeks. 

Lottie  Codins  has  been  compelled 
illness  to  cancel  her  engagement 
Prince  of  Wales'   theater  in   I 
At  the  new  play  at   Terry's 
entitled   -On   Leave."   will   be  produc-ed 
<^n  April  1.    It  is  an  adptation    from  the 
French   play     "LeSursis,"     which     hat; 
been  translated  by  Frederick  Horner 

It  is  rumored  that  the  new  Burns- 
Mackenzie  opera  at  the  Savoy  nil! 
shortly  be  withdi-awn  and  either  Gil- 
bert and  Sullivan's  "The  Gondolier«  " 
or  "The  (Jrand  Duchess"  will  be  sub- 
stituted. 

Oiga  Nether.sole  will,  if  p.  suitalde 
theater  can  be  faund.  ajipear  for  eight 
w^eks  in  London,  b.-ginning  in  June  in 
•Denise."  This  engagement  will  be 
tollowed  by  a  tour  of  the  provinc-es. 

Janos  lligo.  the  Hungarian  gyp^v 
musician,  and  the  Princess  De  Chimay 
are  staying  at  a  hotel  in  Paris  under 
the  name  oi  Riquet.  They  have  signed 
a  contract  to  appear  at  th.-  Winter  c 
den.  Berlin,  and  begin  their 
mcnt  there  .m  April  1.' 


Washington.    March   20._.Seeretary  „f 
Agriculture  Wilson  .said   today  that  a- 
soon   as   the   beef  certification    regula- 
tions,   which    took   effect   on    Mar<-h   15 
got  into  regular  working  order  and  wert 
properly    understood    by    the    shippers 
I  the  mattc-r  of  the  treatment  of  our  agri- 
I  cultural     products     abroad     would     b. 
I  taken  up.    Thei-e  m  still  some  little  mis- 
1  understanding   as    to    the    certificatioi: 
I  some  shippers  furnishing  a  copy  of  cer- 
I  tific^att-  where  the  original   is  requirt<I 
and  there  are  other  minor  deficiencies  in 
be'wll-W--   '*"'  ^■^•-•>'hing  is  expectecT  U 
.?5..!^\"','^'.'?^  '^"""  without  these  troublc- 


m.etiiig.s  i.s  biterpret.d 
an    agr.-em.-iit    will    li- 
lt   i.-j 


every    week,    with    .„„re    nan.j.s    -,.    ^v  .. 

't^tu'T  ""'"^  in  operation, "iml         '"" 
result,    large    purcha.ses    for 
cann.ii   be  long  delay-d.  In  .some  bran<-h< 
t   i.s   felt  already.   There  is  large 

ma,';;^"r"^   "'"•"'^'•"    l>'oducts.  S' 

manci    for   commrrc  al    loans   his   s)vir..i>. 

ihe''"rr'-.^^'^^'"V^ '"-  <^v^ood!:'";i;i^i 

rri,  ''"^    i^U-<.-\    businesss. 

The  progre.ss  of  th-  iron  ;md  st«-el 
dustiy  IS  hiii.lered  bv  uncertaiiitv 
ganbng  ih..  .-est  of  l.-ikV-  ore  f."  1 1  ..\-o,n 

as    evKU-nce    that 

-iw  .?■    '■'■"'■hf''-      It    '•■'    r.-p..rt..l    that    ih. 

III      .1.  I.  lied.      \\  lul,.     (  i,.|.,.     i„     „,       „r-..,, 

s  S^:  '/nc-^er^"'^  /V'"J"-l«.  th."de;^," 
LM-..-.C    ^.-   ,    '•'•'^*^'''-    *^"ntr.-iets    for   sev.-ral 
and    for".'  "'"^'•"i  '"    '''^i'/'K"    ^Te    p.-nd  ng 

n-Viis      n)     '^•'-  •■'■"''  *''"  "tniHn.l  for  wir. 
nails    ;,„.l    wii<-    .loos    n.it    abate     n.ir    iV..- 

•n.an.l  lor  i.iaek  sheet.s  reguir,-,  b, 
plat-  inaiHifa.-tiir...  Tin  t.-n.ls  lower 
U.i,  <-en  us.    vv,,),    i„.;,vy   r.-.-.-ifis  .-  n-l    will, 

i\e    at    3.37   cents,    and 
although    the   tritiing 
tion    in    this    country 


MEDICINES 


The  Learned  Professor  Gives  a  Plai 
laik  on 


tin 

.-It 


anced  by  the  small 
elsc-where. 

While    m.-inufacturer.'!    of 
ar-    looking    forward    with 
dtn.-e.    th.-    |.r.-s..nt 
to   c-xpeitation.s 


niaet- 

copper    is   w.-aker, 

ilecrc-ase   in   i.toduc- 

is    pra.-ti.-allv    ba"- 


iiurease  in  i>roductioii 


some  duties. 

That   accomplished,   inquiries 
instituted    through    the    state 
ment  as  to  the  reasons  for 
now  being  imposed,  and  the 
be  carefully  considered, 
will  hinge  on  the 
tariff  bill 


by 
at  the 
.liverpool. 
theater. 


will  1). 
depart- 
restriction^ 
reports  wii! 
Final  action 
provisions  of  ihe  nev. 
but  where  satislacthm  is  no. 
.secured  through  that  measure  the  law 
granting  the  pix^sident  authority  to  ac^ 
in  such  cases,  he  said,  doubtless  wc  ' 
be  taken  advantage  of  and 
pos.sible 


ful 
and 


Gar- 
engage- 


BRADY  ANO  CORBETT. 


OUitl 

everj'  stei 

to  nrrto^Tn"'*-''''  **"  ''^'  ^hc  governmem 
to  protect  the  mterests  of  those  afCecteo 
by  foreign   trade. 

Col.  J.  H.  Brigham.  the  incoming  as- 
sistant  secretary  of  agriculture,   in   ai. 
interview,    expressed,  the    opinicm    tha; 
the  agi-icuitural  outlook  was  very  hopc- 
and    that     the    president,    congret^.- 
the  department    would   thoroughlv 
[co-operate  in   the   interests  of  the  far- 
mere.      He   .said:      "The    administratio!: 
will    m    every    way    possible   encourag. 
tb.c  diversification  of  crops  and  make  :: 
determined  effort  to  .sec-ure  the  growin- 
in  the  Inited  States  of  everything  need" 
ed  here  which  it  is  possible  to  raise    "Wi 
are    now    buying     large    quantities    ... 
sugar,  wool,  eggs,  hides,  lieans,   barlev 
potatoes  and   other  products,   while  aV 
these  things  and  almost  .nervthing  w." 
need   for   ours.-Ives   should     be     grown 
here.    Ther  is  too  much  of  over-piodu<*- 
tion  ot  corn  and  other  pnjducts.     If  th. 
larmcrs  enter  on  this  poliev  of  divcr-.i    ' 
hcation    they   will    reduce    these   unpro    j 
fltable  areas  and  products  and  s.t  a  vol., 
a  surplus  to  bear  d.nvn  the  market,  and  I 
then    they    will      -get 


cotton    good.s 

mu<-li    cdiui- 

clr-inaml    is    ii.jt    .-<|u;il 

inp..iduc,ion.,f,;;?;;t'::f;:,,^!^':,:;-;ii;!|'-- 

the  d.-.-.n-1-d  change  in  condition.  '"""^""' 
..iTfit  '*"•;■'"•'<  'J'  wool-mainly  of  a  spec- 
ul:Uive   .-h;iracter,    in    .  xpect.-Ui<.ii    of   tie w 

■a"'lTr~^T'"'""\:l  i:^ni'""'<ably   lai^ge     Sate^ 
at   the   three  ehiof   markets    ' 
wecK  were  10.891.9(10  r>oun<ls 
w.H-i:s     iiav.-     b< 
which    li;,B28.20O 


SPRING J[SEASE.< 

One  Remedy  Gar.not  Correct  All  tti 
Changes  in  the  System 

Separalejpeclfici 

Are  Needed  ta  Prevent  the  Develop 
ment  of  Diseasss  at  the  End  ' 
of  Winter 

SEEDS  OF~CONSUIVIPTIOf 


P^WPil 


1 


for   the    past 

and  for  thr.-.- 

en     28,7&r..S0O    pounds,     .e" 

,1,      ,         were    domestic,    whereas 

•ear  -M^'t'M.""^""'*''''""^  i"  any  pr.'vious 
.xtar  .u  tins  seas.in  were  17,10.5.876  pound^= 
ILhil.r  i,'c'or':':Voi!'iing  w._-eks  of  1892.  <r 
which    n.S8t;..;2ci    were   domestic.    No    «re^i 

for^oods^"  y^",'  appeared  In  the  dc^i'n. 
ror    goods,    although    a    few    mills    have 
fcjunc^    enongh    onlers    to    start    per      ns 
anii,-,pau„K  a  future  demand.  TheTxi  «-'- 

c  m-i,"ke.s'''  '■Ti"'  .""^'^  ""I  influence 
tlie  maikets  as  might  b.-  .-xpected. 

ine  (k-mand  for  wheat  has  not  "-iven 
much  help  to  speculation.  The  ,'Lm.rts  o " 
corn   continue   heavy.    4,.5«.7u.5   bush,-[s   for 

end  quotatKins  advanced   %c 
lu-  I  .    market  has  al.so  been  almo's- 

,  litelc-ss  and  while  the  price  has  gainecl  -, 
!  sinal  fraction,  the  narrown.-ss  of  d.- 
,  mand  here  and  abroa.l  had  its  natural 
I  influence.  Reports  about  the  coming  c-nmi 
arc-  int(-r.^sting  as  u.sua!  to  spe-ul  ' 

i<  allures  for  the  week   have 
the    I  niti-.l    Stales    against    ■'«! 
I  and    fifty    in    Canada 
'  last   .vear. 


the  week. 
The  cotton 


against 


'.tors. 
I'c.-n  21*1   ill 
last    >ear. 
forty-nine 


Catarrh.  BronchiJis  and  Throat  Disease  kx 
Sown  by  the  neglect  of  a  March  Cold  " 
Munyon's  Cold  Cure  Creaks  up   the  Won 
Form  of  a  Cold  at  Once. 

WEAXjiONEYJ 

;he  Result  of  Extra  Work  on  the  Part  of  Thes" 
Organs  During  Cell  Weather  Are  PromptI 
Strengthened  by  Munyon's  Kidney  Cure, 

IMPOVERisHED  BLOOD. 

And  Deficient  Circulation  Call  far  Munyon'> 
Blood  Cure,  the  Beit  B  ood  Toric  on  th 
Market-It  Enriches  and  Purifies  the  Blood 
Promoles    Appetite    and    Gives     Renewe. 
Strength  and  Vitality. 


Professor 


of    irrc 

(-1 
new 
am.ing 
tdo.is.     slilt.-:. 
various    tarif.-' 


ftct 
the 
from 


Ex-Champion's  Manager  Does 
Some  Very  Loud  Talkin'g. 

.San  Francis.-o.   March  20.— IJill  Hradv 
IS  still  .in  the  warpath  and  seems  deter- 
mined   to    lind    some    way   of      making 
Mtzsimons  give  his  late  opponent   one 
ii.iu-e    chance    before    he    puts    into    ef- 
hls    announced    retirement      from 
business.    I?rady,    who   came    down 
the   snows  of   Nevada  yesterday 
accompanied  by  -Kid"   Egan.  Corbetts 
collie  ••Xe.i'  and  ir.ost  of  the  ex-cham- 
pion s    wardrobe,    told    a    crowd    of    hi' 
triends  on    the   train    something  about 
the   sititation. 

"It  is   all    very   well 
to  say  that  he  will   never  fight 
he  declar.d.    "You    will   remember   that 
t-orbett  made  such  a  statement  a  dozen 
times  and    yet  he  was  dragged  into  i, 
battle  by  Fitzsimmons.  Well,  now   tha« 
our  man  is  the  under  dog,   we  propose 
to   revets-?   matters  and   make    the  for- 
eigner give  Jim  another  fight,   whether 
he  wants  to  or  not.  Of  course,  Fitz  will 
be   able    to   stave   this    thing   off   for   a 
year  if  he  wants  to.  but  after  that  th- 
public  opinion   will  get  to  hot  for  him 
and  he  will  either  have  to  fight 
;  out  of  the  country. 
j      "If  Jim   takes  my  advice  he  will 

mediately    b,-gin    to    get    public    sym- 

I  pathy   on    his   side   by   accepting   offer.s 

,  trom  Maher,  Goddard,  Sharker  or  anv 

other  old  dub  who  is  after  a  flght    Ho 

j  can    lick   three  or   f<,ur   fellows   of   tha' 

I  caliber   in    a   month    and    then    he    will 

be  in  a  position  to  demand  satisfaction 

fi;om  Bitz.  .\  conditi.m  exists  in  the  pu-^ 

gihstic  w.irld  at  present  that  was  never 

known    to    .-xist    befor.-.       You    fcll.iws 

may    undcrstiind    the    newspaper    busi- 

nc-ss      but    y.iu    don't    und.^i-stan.l      th.- 

n."h!i  *".'".''"  V'l"""  "'■  '^  l>i''>ininent 
lighter.  I  do.  f  have  made  that  kin.l  of 
w.irk  my   business  about   flv.-   y.-ars  " 

Fii-a.ly    IS    t.-ilking    u{    taking"  Cot-bed 
to    .\iistral!,-i    .-in.l   sh.iwing     th.-       •.nil 
p.id.aiis    h.iw    well    Jin,    e..,n    a.-t     '    H,- 
thinks    Ih.-    trip    will    d.i     the      luigilist ' 

;vc::m'def.';"'    '"'^*'    '"^    """^    ''«    '"H 


«fi      more    for    thei 
cereals,  etc.,  than  they  .get  now.    If  thi 
.years  crop  were  only  one-half 
It  is  there  would  be  much 
for   th.-   larmc 


of  whai 
more  mone\ 

s. 

"As  to  the  fon-ign  countries,   if  th.  \ 
impose  restrictions  to  the  dctriin.nt  c.V 
t>ur     agricultural      interc-sts,    they    uu 
doubtedly  will   be  met   with  retafialio:^ 
by  this  country.     If  the  don't  give  tli. 
products   of   our   countrv   a    fair   shov> 
they   will    encounter  .similar  cmditiont 
here.     That   much   is  certain  and   po.^i- 
tive.     This  country   will    make  a  th.n- 
ough   inspection  of  our  meat   products 
and    there    will    be    no    exc'-use    for    th( 
claim    that   they    are  not   healthful     a^ 
contended  by  the  foreign  governments 
Germany,    especially,    is    doing     every- 
thing  possible    to   protect    her    farmer- 
f,^  ^.,     ,  '"  'h's  way,   while  the  interests  of  th. 

for  Fitzsimmons    people  of  Kngland  seem  to  be  sacrificec 
again,"    by  their  •government. 

"An  effort  will   be  made  early  to  ad 
just  the  matter  of  the  restrictions  no->v 
imi-osed  by  Germany.    This  will  be  do-u  I 
through    amicable   nc-gotiations   if   pos- 
sible,  but    that  failing,   retaliation   wil 
follow.      The    president    will    make    th. 
agricultural    interests    one    of    the    first  I 
things  to  be  considered  in  his  adminis- 
tration, and  he  will  see  that  it  is  prop-  ; 
erly  protected  and  fostered.     VVhatevci 
our  views  are,  we  will  not  combat  con    I 
gress.     The  discovery  of  nov  and  ran 
•    j  seeds  will  be  encouraged  and  th"ir  elii 
im-  !  cacy  tried  in  various  climates  and  thv  , 
farmeis     properly   advised.       We     wil;  ' 
furnish  t.i  the  people  choice  and   ra'i-  i 
seeds  anyway,  but  whether  to  distriiiutt  ' 
seeds  generally  is  a  matter  for  congrcs.-  i 
to  determine,  and  if  that  body  wants  i(  ! 
done,    the    dei)artmenl    will    do    it,    an-l  i 
whatever   it   provides   f.ir    will    be 
formed." 


pig 
the  re- 
sing    ai 
an  a.l- 


or  get: 


per- 


IN  THE  DAKOTAS. 


NOUTH   DAKOTA. 

•  diath  of  Andrew  WoU.rt,  wh.i 

at    A  alley    City    Sniul.-iy    night 

•  IS   Vet    a    in.Nst.  rv. 
•ni<-d    that    In-   shot 


was 

.■111.  I 


O.NE  OF  THE  BEST  FEATURES 


an 


Of  the  Pyramid  Pile 

Is  the  fa.-t  that  It  cures 


Cure 


.  i,  ,^  every  form  of  1 

piic-s  without     one     i>article     of 

This  desirable  point  is  not 

the  use     of    injurious     opiates     which 


pain, 
obtained  by 


from 


s    east    of 
Lake    .Su- 
secure    blast 
dickering    wlthj 


ly  from  that  of  the  other  mines  of  the 
Menorninee.  being  a  black  specular  re- 
sembling greatly  the   ore   from  several 
\r^l^^   Marquette   range    properties 
The    village    of    Munising.    an    aspir 
trig    young    town    forty    mile 
•Mar.juette.    on    the    shore   .if 
Iierior.    Is   endeavoring    to 
furnaces,    and    is    now 
i^everal  different  concerns  that  talk  of 
erecting    ftirnaces   there    or    elsewhere. 
The  old  village  of  Munising,  orielnallv 
a  Chippewa  Indian  village,  was  the  |o'- 
cation  of  one  o'    ---^  tirst  blast  furnaces 
built  in  the  Lake  Superior  district    and 
thirty  years  ago  was  a  place  of  some 
little   importance,    but    with    the   decav 
of  the  charcoal  iron  industry  the  town 
fell  into  a  state  of  collapse  and  had  al- 
most disappeared  previous  to  the  op^n- 


DEATH    AT   CARLTOX. 
Carlton,      Minn.,      March        ''0  — Mrs 
Belle  McFarland  died  suddenly  yester-'i 
day  from   lung  trouble  of   long   stand- 


ing.    Mrs.    .McFarland    came   to   Carltor 
sixteen   years    ago   from    North    Ireland 
and  has  been  a  constant  resident 
62    years.    She    leaves    a   husband' 
sons  and   one  daughter-.    Funeral' 
day. 


Age 

twr 
Sun- 


KILLED  BY  COAL  GAS 
Mayvil  e.  N.  D..  March  I'O.-John  Laf- 

M^.;-  r'"^e  ""i^     "^"'^^     riortheast  of 

MaMille.  a  Swede,  name  unknown,  and 

Lafstad  s     sister,      were 

Thursday  night     bv     gas 

stove.    The  .sister,  though 

sick.     Will     recover.      The 

dead. 


asphyxiated 

from  a  coal 

dangerously 

others     are 


Do  ncjt  be  hoodwinked.  Use  no  "just 
w-rf*'*^,;  Salvation  Oil  Is  what  you 
^ant  when  in  need  of  a  jood  liniment 


1 


_,    ,  ..  court  or  session.s,  on 

Wednesday  last,  the  hearing  of  the  di- 
vorce proceedings  brought  by  Lady 
H.iss  again.st  Sir  Charles  Henry  Fred- 
crick  Augustus  Lockhart  Ross,  baro- 
net of  Malangowan,  on  the  ground  of 
adultery  was  commc-need.  A  counter 
action  <.f  Sir  Charles  against  his  wife 
on  a  similar  charge,  will  be  hear.l  iii 
May.  Lady  Rosp  testifies  that  her  hus- 
band went  to  British  Columbia  in  April 
1896,  and  that  owing  to  information 
w-hich  she  obtained  during  his  absen-e 
she  began  proceedings  for  a  divorce 

James  R.  Roosevelt,  the  retiring  fii^st 
secretary  of  the  United  States  embassv 
whose  resignati.m  was  ann.iunced  thi-: 
week,  will  .v-hortly  sail  for  America.  Mr 
R..«isev<-lt  has  been  absent  from  ih.- 
enibassy  sine-  last  o.-tober.  and  sin.-.-  ! 
his  recent  return  the  relations  between 
himself  and  the  ambassador  have  been 
very  strained. 

Recently,  while  excavaticms  were  be- 
ing made  in  the  vicinity  of  the  Bank  of 
England,  the  workmen  came  upon  an 
interestirrg  find.  At  a  depth  of  about 
eighteen  feet  several  articles  of  Roman 
times  were  discovered.  These  includ- 
ed a  small,  beautiful  vase  of  glazed  red 
Samian  Avare,  having  th.- 
name  stamped  in  the 
of  the  vessel.     There 


injurious 

simply  deaden  and  paralyze  the  nerve« 

of  the  parts  and  make  matters  worse 

11  the  long  run.    But  it  is  done  solely 

by  Its  remarkable  healing  and  soothing 


effects. 

And    while 
relief,  at  the 


It   thus   gives   immediate 

same  time  the  disease  is 

not  merely  checked,  but  a  radical 


to  make  clear 
without  a  par- 


were 


maker's 

bottom, 
also     the 


•      -  -  —  -~.— .^..i.  cure 
;  i.s  rapidly  accomplished. 
i      And  th.'  point  we  want 
I  is  that  all  this  is  done 
I  tide  of  pain. 

!      This  fact  Is  one  reason  for  the  great 

;  popularity   of   the    Pyramid    Cure   and 

I  constitutes  one  very     great     difference 

between  it  and  almost  any  other  kind 

of  ti-eatment  for  piles. 

Every  kind  of  surgical  operation  for 
piles  is  exerutiatingly  painful,  be.sides 
endangering  the  life  of  the  patient  and 
In  most  cases  is  not  to  be  compared 
with  the  Pyramid  Cure,  neither  in  mak- 
ing successful  curc-s  without  pain  nor 
in  cheapness  and  .safety. 

The  I'yrami.l  Pile  Cure  has  been  be> 
fore  the  publi.-  too  |.»ng  and  its  met>it:-! 
recognized  by  too  many  people  to  allow 
it  to  be  classed  with  the  many  salves 
suppositories,  pills,  etc.,  and  vou  run  I 
no  risk  in  trying  it.  as  Is  often  the  case 
with  new  and  untried  preparations. 

If  you  are  ever  troubled  with  any 
form  of  piles  or  rectal  disea.se.  do  not 
forget  the  Pyramid  Pile  Cure.  Pre- 
pared by  the  Pyramid  Drug  companv, 
of  Albion.  Mich.,  and  sold  by  druggists 
at  50  cents  per  package, 


Th 
shot 

liied  Tnesda.v.   ri-niain.-> 
iTo    th.     last    W.iliert   .1 

j  hini.s.lf.  .-iiid  when  toiiml  he  v.as  .-anfiilly 
[cover.d  lip  with  the  Led  il.ithes.  alKl  <  h" 
sc.-ittering  or  111.-  :dlol  woiil.l  ili.li.  ;tt.-  Ih:il 
if  he  ha.l  shot  himself  h.>  wouM  hav.-  bad 
t.i  pull  the  trigger  with  hi.-  to.-,  an'l  a-. 
his  sicic  WIS  paralyzed  he  could  not  hac 
cov.-rcd  hims.'lf.  The  hired  man.  wlro  wa^ 
arrested,  is  .still  in  eu.sl.idy.  Mis  name  is 
tMibenhauser.  Tlie  stories  he  tell 
v.'i-y   c-oiillicting. 

Judge-  pollock  scH-ms  determined  to  .-lean 
np    the    dock,  t     In  fore    closing    c-ourt    at 
llillsboro.      This    is    the    fourth    w.-ek    of 
tin-   sessions.      The    .'Tritinl    jurv    found 
dic-tmciUs    a.irainsi    c-ight    biiiid"    pigg.rs 
the    c-ounty.     Seven    of    these     hav.- 
trial,    each    found    guilty,    and    each 
three    months'    imprisonment    and    a 
of  from  $200  to  $700. 

While    E.    Lathrop    was    in    Mr.    Hunt'v 
butcher  shop  at  Fes.senden  standing  on  a 
stool   assisting   in   hanging  up  a   beef,    he  ; 
fell   and   was   caught    In   the   back   of   the 
neck  by  a   hog  hook.   Although   the  acci-  1 
dent   resulted    in   great   pain,    the   attend  •  1 
ing    iihyslcian    thinks  .no    serious 
cpieiu-es  will  en.sue. 

In.suian.-e   on    the       burn.Hl       Svn.iicat! 
buil.hng    at    Grand    Forks    has    been    ad-  I 
justed  to  $40,009.  Total  incurance  was  $4J9i  j 
more. 


I!!- 

ir. 
ha.l 

gOL 

tine 


!      ^.     ^^U-'^T   BRADSTREET  SEES. 

i.li^.    L^ '"•'•. '^'''*'>''^    20.-Bradstre.-ts    t.i- 
ld\     savs:      Anoth.-r    w.x^k    of     irr.-gul-ir 
aci.ng  hnngs  an  element  of  disturb.u 

I      ..-Vt^  -':,"^'""^,^     •"•  ■'   fi-l5l   over   ih 
j  taulT  bill    and  the  disappointm.nt 

m.inufaelureis     <if     wool.-n 

cutlery    and    other   lines   .,t 

Ts  ov.'.V-'*".":- ii'^'T-''*''    tra.le    in   jobbing   lines 
IS  o\ei,  (-ollec-iK.n.s  an-  s  .iw  .-aid  ai  manv 

!  ^,".'7)-^  •     V-^''''''%   -^    request        for    cheaoer 
j  g.a.les   ol    goods. 

Threatened  overflows  in  the  Central  and 
Mississippi      vall.-y      bav.-     r.-strict,         th  ! 

»  the  Ohio  v;.ll<-y  and  in  the  South  At- 
I;",";."  V"''  •'"  '^  ^V""''-  '^'"^  ni.'v.-ment  ,.:■ 
tic  Xorthwest  bv  uiil;,v.ir.-.bl<;  weath.r 
tlie  deinaii.i  lor  cotton  g.iods  is  .iisao-^ 
som./M':;  '""^l  '"^«'">fa'«"re,-s  b..v..  mov.'.l 
.som.>  Im.-s  only  at  .-.iieessions  in  price 
Iron    and    sl.-.-l     industries    .-u.p.-.'r    leVs 

1!.  tticall.N   l.iwer  pric-es  tor  IJ.-ssc-mer 
ami  lor  billets  seem  l.i  have  b.-t  11 
•suit    . if     spe.-ulativ.-     <iver-i)ur.-ha 
tne  late  r.-vival   in   .-xpectatinn   of 
van.-.-,   whi.h   has  not  shown   it.self 

Delay  m   fixing  lake  .ire  iiri.-es   has  aK.- 
had    an    influeiu-e.    There   Is    l.-ss   demand 
t.>i    Amerii-an    iron    .-ind    st.el    for    export 
particularly    for   K.irthern    iiro.lucts 

At   most   of  the  l.irger  c-enters   the    f.-el- 
ing   If  enc-ouragement    is   stronger   amont 
merchants   at    the   prospect    for   continuc-c 
improvement  in  trade,  yet  the  increase  in 
volume    of    business    in    dry    goods,    gr..- 
cerie.s     hats  and  clothing,   eompar.-d   witi 
I  preceding  weeks,   and   with   the  like   w.-eK 
lin-previoi^  years.    d.«s   not    eciual   a».tlc-!- 
;  pations.     There  is  an  imiirovenient  in  .h- 
I  niand    for    wool,      for    which    prices    are 
I  blgher.     Eastern     wool         manufacturer- 
show  more  inc|uiry  for  good.s.   though  th. 
condition  of  this  ino.uiry  still  leaves  muci; 
J  to  be  desir.'d. 

I      The    newl.v    developed    Pacific    coast    ex- 
port   tra.l.-    IS    mark.'d    by   a    shipment   ol 
!  cI.Kirs.    sash    and    linishing     lumber     fron- 
!  Tacoma  to  South  Africa. 
I      An    additional       favor;ible      feature      i- 
I  found  in  tlie  tendency  of  prices  there  foi 
wheat     corn,    oats,    pork,    lard   and    sugar 
in   addition   to  wool   beinir  ujnvard     while 
cjuotations    for    print    cloths,    cotton 
I  troleum    and    lumber       are   firm   anci 
I  chang(-d. 

Exports    .If    wheat— flour    included     a- 
,  wheat— from    both   coasts   this   we.-k    indi- 
I  catc-   a   continuance   of   the    recent    check 
I  i*^-«i  ,"',  K^^"i}'\  movement,    aniouuting    t, 
1  ].<,...!ol    bushels,    compared    with    1..-.99.0" 
[  biislu  Is  last  week.   1.592.(V/0  buslu-Ls   in   th< 
thinl  w.-.-k  of  March,   MSHi.  2.93.S.(itl<)  in  1S9.-, 
l.JUcH)   111    ISJM.    .-ind    .-IS   .-ontrasied       witI 
2.<i.t>.0(K)  bushe-ls   in    the  c.irre^spondine 
rioci  in  1S9.>. 

Exports  of  Jn.Iian  corn,  on  the  oin.-i 
-■r.'.V':,.!".'"^""""  '^■'''■■^'  hv;ivy.  ;unountiiig  u. 
.»..».J>,.jl.S  l.u.slH  Is  this  w<-.-k.  as  t-omiiarei! 
with  ."..;no.(K)<»  bush. -Is  fast    w.-ek      1  »r' iin 

,'j!.'"li-V'r    'V    ."^"-    "'"'    •'■^    <<iiitraste.r  Willi 
.MH.iH'c)  bushels  ui  the  ..-orresponding  p.rio.i 

There  is  a  sharp  i|. -crease  in  He-  u'lin- 
b.r  ol  liusiiMss  lailm-.s  in  Caiiad.i  ihjj 
^ye.•lk.  the  totjil  being  thirty-six.  .-ig.diist 
tifiy-six  hisi  w.  i-k.  fort  v-eii,'hl  in  tie 
week  one  an.l  tw.i  years  ago.  and  as  c-rmi- 
liarcd  with  forty-one  in  the  like  week 
18m, 


Muny..iii  says:— "The  |de; 
that  one  must  take  •Spring  M.-dicin.-s'  :. 
a  great  mistake-.  It  is  true  that  at  thi 
s.a-on  of  the  year  many  chang.-s  tak.*- 
Plai-e  in  the  human  body  that  affect  lb. 
blood,  liver,  kidneys  and  nerves,  but  ii 
healthy  people  these  changes  .*ccui  wlt'i 
out  the  help  .;f  medicin.-s.  In  fact,  it  is  ; 
•sin  against  natun-  to  t.-ike  drugs  of  anv 
kind  into  the  l)ody  unle.ss  one  is  ill 
The  so-called  Spring  Medicines 
blood   are  also   bad    b.-c- 

ombin.-itioi* 

iii\.'iiieM.     fr    voiir    .^i.^n.....i 

order 


for    til- 


-o  cure  all  diseases  wHh"::;;e'"'^^-'"*^''" 
of  medicines,    [f  your  stom:i.h   i-^   .en 
™    1!   -'^    IS    absurd    t<i    tak. 
medi.ine:    if   yon    hav.-   a    c.iM.    .-,    uuin-s 

mrllorr^r^if'""^''^'^"""^'""'-   "- 


rheum  It isi; 
I 
.vou 
yiiir   liver   is   shmuis. 

onl>  one  way  to  .-uie  prompt Iv  -111.1  i„.,- 
njanentl.v.  that  is.  by  tr.-at™  g  -a: !  .|  a  . 
of  dl.se-as.-  wilh  the  ai.pr.,p,-7:,t,-  rV  „.-  V 
A  s.-p.-,rat.-  ,-ure  for  each  l>is. 
grand  ami  tru.-  prin.-iple  ..n 
Aluny.in  .system  of  treatment 
Its    lnal■^■elous    .suee-e-ss 

••If  .v.iu  h;.v.-  a  Ma'r.-h  Col.l.  the  fil-^l 
thing  IS  t.,-,-,.r,.  th-  .-ol.i.  as  this  is  n, 
.sea.soi,    wb.n    Ciripp,-    an.l    c-ol.is    hl.v.     -. 

dangerous    t.ndell.-v    to    .level 

.lisease.s    and    .-atarrh.      The 

nate  colds   yield   in  a    few   h 

yon  s    Cold    Cure.     1 

diseases    and    thr.i.i! 

prevente.1    by    this    reniedv.    Wh.-ie 

arc     c-omiili.-.it.d    bv    a    Cough 


.-ise'  is  th. 
whi.-li  til. 
has  Hainee. 


P   into   luuK 

most     obstl- 

om-s    to   Mu;i- 

neumoni.-i,    c.-itarrh-il 

troub.'.'s    ar.-   .ilwuv- 

Coll.,^ 

the    C.ihJ. 


b.-  .iltcrn.-Ke.l  witli  Munvo.i 


ture^ 
and  oft. 


pe- 
un- 


pc-^ 

othe 

iiu 


<'ure  should 
Cough  Cure- 

m^'ni-  ,*^"'''V'".»'''  ••<"'<"tion  which  aifect- 
mcny  ji.-ople  in  th.-  Spring  s.-a.«.in  is  Na- 
warning  that  .som.-  organ  is  we-'{ 
n  prec-edes  serious  dise-as.-.  It  i.^  ,1 
conditi.iii  which  ne..,is  careful  inv.-sti;:a- 
tuir     an.     which   calls  for  treatm.'n       ,1   t 

e,]  •''  ,f '"■'"'f  .Medi.-ines.  but  with  the  re"  - 
<d\  that  will  remov,-  the  cause-,  if  the 
stornach  is  disor.iere.l.  Munyons  Ovsn'.,,- 
bmv^.r?  ^■".'**'^  "'•"  ;'  ^'"mae-Ii  toni.-  aii.i. 
e,  ri  ..  '/•'""'•"'^'•-  ••'-''^i^ting  dig.sti.in.  and 
curing  suca  syiniit.ims  as  pain  or  .sor.- 
n.>ss   in    the   stomach,    indigestion   or  dis- 

Stn/i'''"  r'V'"'''-  .f"i'"''^«  in  th,-  stoma,  h, 
shortness  of  breath.  p..oi»K-ippetite.  c.iat.-d 

s^rS'-./T'"  r,  '^'"^''  '•^"«'"S  from  he 
stcimach.  heartburn,  wind  on  th.-  stom- 
ach, constipation.dizzlness.  faintne.ss  an.l 
lost  energy. 

c,',"//   V^''  "kidneys    are   aff,»ct.d.    the    lan- 

bv,;..,-''""l'^^e*H "''!'*  (•^■'*""'^'  **  ac-,-omoanie.l 
b>  pain  in  the  back,  dark  circles  around* 
the  .\v.^.s,  hea. laches  and  deiioslts  of  red 
K-M^  ,«'"^™"<M-^  '»  the  urine.  Munyon.s 
A^' A  '^  ^m'"';  '•''  f^'U'f^-nteed  to  cure  95  per 
cent   of  all  forms  of  kidnev  dise-as..s. 

-When  the  liver  is  disordered,  the 
whole  .-sy.stem  fe<>!s  the  presence  in  the 
iiloiKl  of  the  poisonous  snibstaiie-es  left  bv 
the  defective  acUoii  of  this  organ.  In  fact 
the  c-rindition  is  .me  of  g.-ner.-il  jioi.snn.: 
ing.  1  here  is  a  depression  of  spirit^ 
tir.-.T.  worn  out  f.^-ling  .-ill  the  tlm. .  b.i.i 
tasti-  in   the  mouth,   achin"' and   s.irene 


<uU:    backache,    an.l    a<-he-s 

iv.-r.   Mnnyon's  Liver  Cur.- 

liv.r    i.i    hi-althy    .-icti.m. 

perfe-e-t    cure   by    removing 


er.-ll    low 

•  Hid   \it.ilitv, 
■  ly.    ami    th.'   < 
t.i    e.itarrli. 
Munyons    Plooii 


Th.- 
ge-ii- 
i-rgy 
eas- 


.li 


CONDENSED   DISPATCHES. 


conse- ' 


it 
expe- 


SOUTII  DAKOT.\. 

At  Huron  a  claim  agent  for  the  Chicago 
&    Northwestern    railwav.     nas    made    a 
settlement    with     those    injured,     .ir    th.- 
heirs   of    those    killed    in    the    collision    at 
Arlington   on   the  evening  of  Feb.  2    18,97 
as    follows:      Heirs    of    W.    L.     Harrison, 
deceased..  $2750:    W.    L.    Loft  us.      injured, 
$M);    William    Rice,    injurc>d.    Ji'iO;    S.    V 
Griding,   injur.-.l.   $:{00.   SettU-meiit    has   not 
yet  iK-eii  ma. I.'  with   the  .-hirs  of  Condin- 
tor    Kandolph       Addingt.in.       and    Aclinc 
Baggagemaster   Frank   L.    Flosi.-.    b.ith   of 
wh.im  resided  here  and  were  killed  in  th.-  , 
.same  wrcik.  | 

A    farmer    named    Charles    Stoltenberp- 
at    Gary    reported   Thursday    that    on    his  , 
way   to  Gary  he  had   found   a   horse  and 
lojifl  of  coal  in  a  snow  drift  on  the  creek  : 
west  of  town.     The   horr.e  w.as  dead   and 
no    trace    of    the   owner   could    be    found 
The  rig  is  .supposed  to  have  bclon.g.^d   to  1 
a    Dane    named    Anderson,    but    it    i:,    not 
known  whore  .\nderson  now  is. 

A  heavy  thaw  sent  the  snow  from  the  : 
Coteaus  In  the  fastest  order  known  for  ' 
years,  says  a  Gary  dispatch.  It.  is  report-  i 
ed  that  the  old  lake  bed,  the  Big.  Meadow  j 


President  McKinley  has  accepted  the 
r«>signatioii  of  S.  W.  l.ani.iieux  as  c-oni- 
missi.iiier  .If  the-  g.-n.-r.-d  land  ottic-e  It 
IS  believed  that  Bing.-r  H.-rmann.  of  th-c- 
gon.  the  ex-congre.ssman,  will  be  his  suc- 
cessor. 

The  Michigan  supreme  court  has  de.-ided 
that  Governor  H.  S.  Pingree  of  Michi- 
gan, is  not  mayor  of  Detroit  and  an  elec- 
tion to  fill  the  vacancy  is  set  for  Aprii 
i>.  The  decision  was  unanimous. 
7'  ..  ^  ^^S*'S  Friends  again  eluded  the 
I  nited  State-s  officials  yesterday  and 
is  believed  she  has  another  Cuban 
dition   out   of  reach. 

Tht-  (ondltion  of  Capt.  Perrv.  one  of  th. 
survivoi-s    of    the     Ville    de    St.     Nazi.re. 
,  \\as   said    to   be   much    improved   at   New 
i  york    yest.^rday.    He   is   .-,ble    to    be   about 
j   ns  room  .it  thedrotel  an.l  has  taken  some 
I  U''"ii'   n<»"''i«hment.     The  c-.mdition   of  R 
'  "-.  Aia.v«^r  and  Kngineer  Stauts   was  also 
,  said  to  be  greatly  improved. 
I      Miss  Fraiices  Willard  is  in  communica- 
u}]  ^'.*l^   '■'1'^  leading  women  eiigag.-d  in 
ptillanthrophy    and    reform    work.    lu^kine 
1  ttbey  t-an  form  a  combination  when-bv 
women  throughout  the  countrv  will  agrel 
to  give  th.-ir  patronage  onlv  to  the  n.*vvs- 
papcrs    that    av.)i<l     furnishing    exu-ii.l.-.l 
accounts  ol   prize  lights. 


in    the    rigiit 
an.l  jiains  all 
.stinnilal.s    th 
and    m.ikes    a 
th.-  e-aiis.-. 

.  "ImrK.v.^rish.-.l.  thin  and  Impure  bl.M.d 
is  the  louM.lati.iii  from  Whi.h  m.uiv  div- 
i-a.sc-s  ari.^.-  in  th.-  Srning  rn<mths  " 
ixi.ir  .niahiy  of  ilu    bhi.id  results  in  a 

■" Stat.-    <if    healUi.    loss    of    ei 

Th.-  pati.-nt  t.-ik.s  <-ol<| 
f.il.Is  ar..  obstiiiat.-.  l.-.oling 
rheiini.itism  and  n.-iir.ilgla. 
,  ><"'  <'"in-  iKil  only  j.iirili.-s 
Uie-  I1I0...I,  I. ill  iiiak.s  new  bl.i.id.  1  jcli  ni 
n..iirislim.  lit  ih.it  Im  ig..r.,l.  s  ih.  whole 
^yi'^'Jti.  H  aids  the  b'-althtul  ,-..-ii..ii  ..f 
all  th<-  organs  of  th.-  bodv.  r.-vit.-iliz.  ^  ;ii| 
th-.-  ti.ssue.s.  Promot.-s  a|l|>.'titf^  driv.  ■'  o.it 
skin  diseases,  lirings  h.-althy  ...I.ir  i.> 
the-  cheeks,  clears  the  .c0jnpl."xi<iii  in.] 
.iiics  up  the  1).  rv.s,  dispelfing  .-.imiil.  i  — 
ly    the-    .lrHgge«I-out.    tir.-d    feeling   " 

N.I    matt.-r    wh.it    the    .lis.-as--.    th.-re    |s 
a    Muiiy.in    sp.-.-ifl..-    with  .vrhi.-h    cm    r.iii 
end  .-III-.-  your.s.'If.   Muavons    Im  — 
Honiueopathli-    R.-m.-dies   an-   .sol.l 
-   1  druggists,    mostly    at    2'.    e-«nis    a 

vial.  Th.-re  is  no  gu.ss  work,  .-acli  r-r«- 
plainly  l.-ibeled  with  direction*:  for 
home  tn^atment.  and  the  cure  is  ahui- 
cerfain.  Jf  you  an-  in  doubt  cs  to 
nature  of  your  disease,  a  pei-sonaj  l-t- 
uuo  ,*'>cjfe.s.sor  Muny.m.  ]:i05  Arc-h  street 
Philadelphia,  will  be  answered  with  f-.-^ 
ipedical  advice. 


d.K-t.ir 
proved 
by    all 

edy  is 
n 

lUtelv 

the 
ter  to 


HAVK   YOUR 
Umbrella-s  repaired  at  the     Citv 
store,.  404  Wc>st  Superior  street   ' 


SELL  REAL  ESTATE 
By  means  of  an  Evening  Herald 
ad. 


Gun 


'want 


CHILDREN  FATALLY  BURNED. 
Milwaukee.  March  19.-A  special  to 
the  Wisconsin  from  Kiel.  \N'is.,  says- 
Two  daughters  of  John  El :n beck,  liv- 
ing in  the  town  of  Holstcin,  Manitowoc 
county,  aged  6  and  S  years,  were  fatally 
burned  v.  hile  playing:  in  a  garret,  tlieiV 
di-essea  taking  fire  from  a  stove-pipe 
which  passed  through  the  room.  Mr^; 
Elenbeck  was  seriously  burned  in 
deavoring  to  save  her  children. 


FREE  LAND ! 


en- 


cbn^oi^iiT®^"  acroaof  land  to  nil  personp  por- 
aero  ftudgivfl  you  live  y«ar«liin«   to   pay  for  it. 


JOHN  6.  HOWARD. 

10  East  Michififsn  bt.,  Ualoth.  Mhm. 


FREE  TO  men: 


A  liiAK.ixreKo; 
riRE. J 


^LoRt  Mnnlioocl 


Have 
oeoUi  a 


The  HeraM 
month. 


in  rourbomeB; 


IT ,7.1  "1 •;"?'  l.eBtored,  Posltbc  euro  f„r  .\iiij«« 

tfhli^2fi'"'r"  '''*"'*  I>f>-Pasr.s  pormaDenlly  tund     Es. 


Yotk. 


'    ■        ■     II   >      I    I       I      in      <  I 


,  r       ,  -f  -^^^a^^    ,  .   -.^ 


rf»* 


■/trci--  ,•-  ^*- 


-b»- 


p.-.,.^ 


-^^fJ^m^mmmm^  ■■ 


t 

I 

1 

^■■^■■i. .; 


WEST  [ND 


Streets  In  a  Deplorable  Con- 
dition Because  of  the 
Soft  Weather. 


21 
15 
8 
12    # 


23 

16 

9 

13 


Lar^e  Number  of  Men  Stead- 
ily Employed  at  Proctor- 
linott  at  Present. 


Masonic    Lod^e    Will    Give 

a  Farewell  to  E.  B.  Fol- 

lett  -Other  News. 


weaihtr      has      placed    the 


THE  PRODUCE  MARKET. 

j     Michipan   street   is   livening   up   greatly 
!  nowadays,  but  prices  are  not  fluctuating. 
j  They  are  lower  however,  than  usual  and 
buying  is  fairly  brisk. 

^r  .     PULUTH  QUOTATIONS. 
'      ^i'^^^'',.  «l"otations    below      are    for 
I  goods  which  change  hands  in  lots  on  the 
j  open    market;    in    filling   orders.    In   order 
I  to  secure  best  goods  for  shipping  and  to 
cover  cost  incurred,  an  advance  over  job- 
,  bing  prices  has   to   be  charged.   The   fig- 
ures are  changed  dailv.  *" 
r...oo_                    BUTTER.  i 
'  fC  f^*"-'    separators,     fancy 
l)airies,  fancy,  special  make 

Packing   stock    

Dairy,    fair    

_  ^  CHEESE. 

Turns,  flats,   full  cr'm,  new 
Full    crm.    Young    America 

Swiss  cheese.   No.  1 

Brick,    No.    1 

Limb.,    full   cream,    choice.. 

Primost    

^       „  EGGS. 

Candled,    strictly    fresh 

Candled,    storage 

„  HONEY. 

Fancy  white  clover 

Fancy  white  clover,  in  jars 

straineil.    per    lb 

Golden    rod    ..,  ^ 

Dark    honey    11  "4* 

Buckwheat,  dark  n    51) 

MAPLE  SUGAR 

\  ermont,    per    pound 

Ohio,    per   pound    

Maple   syrup,    per  gal   

POPCORN. 

Choice,    per    lb 

NtTTS. 
Soft  shell  almonds,  per  lb.. 
Soft  shell  walnuts,   per  lb.. 
Hard   shell   walnuts,    per   lb 

Brazils,     per    lb 

Pecans,  pt-r  lb.. 


THE     DULUTH     EVENING     HERALD:   SATURDAY,    MARCH    20,    1897. 


DECLINED 


Wheat  Sold  Down  Owing  to 

a  Budget  of  Bearish 

News. 


S-^V,  -^."'y-  **-97-  l-^""^'  WlTV^:  May 
'Si?7^  =,/"'>:•  '^•37^:  September.  $4.47»^*. 
j  Ribs.  March.  $4.40:  May.  $4.Sn  July    S  s^i',"! 

■  .IM^'fJ*^  i°"  l^^  H!''"''  "L  *'■"  for  finished 
goods.     Crt.^h.    wheat.    No.    2    red     84fr9'X •■ 
!  No.  3  red.  SMiSoc;  No.  2  si-ring.  75r-  No    { 
i  spring   74c:  No.  ?  hard  winter,  78@84c-  No 

\i^^91^^-  S**-  3-  23&23C.  Cash,  oats.  No.  2. 
16i,t.?t->4C;  No.  3,  IGCfiUVic.  Rye,  cash,  3o»^c; 
May.  34%c:  July,  :j6c.  Barley,  cash  No 
3    23(g32c.  Flax    cash    W^c:  Northwestern. 

«n-   =  '^'^y\J^^''-  .''"'>■•.  ^-    September, 
81^^c.  Timothy,  cash  and  March.  i2  7S. 


One  Cent  a  Word 


TltAIXKn     NUUSB 


IP  TOU   WANT  A   TRAINED   NURSHJ 
leave  your  order  at  Boyce's  Drug  store 


11%® 

11  @ 

12  @ 
10 

9    @     10 
6 


12^ 

12 

12% 


12Vi0 
9    (31 


13 
11 


12H®     13 


1214 

11V20 


12 

IIH 

11% 


Cables   Were   Not    Encour- 
aging and    There    Was 
Lack  of  Demand. 


March,  $2.75. 

THE   MINNEAPOLIS  MARKET 
Minneapolis.    March       2iK— Wheat     dull- 
May,    ^«4C<t%c:    July,    TSC^W-;    Sepiembei': 

^i?^-  D^-  }  .^'-^"^^  ^'^'^^    ^^-   1   northern, 
73MiC.  Receipts.  268  cars. 


TWO  HEN 

HANGED 

(Continued  from  page  L) 


WANTED-SIX  SEWING  GIRLS  "  AT 
once.  French  Tailoring  institute.  Metro- 
politan  block. 


GIRL        WANTED        FOR        GENERAL 
housework.  Call  931  Bast  Fifth. 


WANTED-GOOD  GIRL  FOR  GENERAl. 
housework.  Small  family.  Apply  1318 
East  Second  street. 


One  Cent  a  IVotd, 


WANTED-AN  EXPERIENCED  GIRL 
for  general  housework  at  1016  East  First 
street. 


WANTED— A 
housework, 
street. 


GIRL      FOR      GENERAL 
Apply    1131    East    Second 


GOOD  GIRL  FOR  GENERAL  HOUSE- 
work  in  family  of  three.  Must  be  a  good 
cook.  Mrs.  H.  Neuman,  32  Main  street. 
West  Duluth. 


11 
10 
90    ©  lOO 

2%<8>       3 


The    soft 

streets  of  West  Duluth  in  a  deplorable  IC''^'"'*^-    I'*''"   ^^ .......:; 

,:^n,Mti^^    „,»4   •  .  .  Peanuts,   roasted,  per  lb 

•  ondltion.  and  in  some  places  they  are  Raw    peanuts 

almost  impassable.    The  street  cars  are 


12 

12 

11 

8 

9    @     11 
11 

7 
4>/j'§) 


Heavy  OPferings  From  Russia 

Also  Reported  and  Had 

Bearish  Effect. 


VEGETABLES, 
forced  to  Plow  their  way  through  dey,    l^^ll  K'to^s.  "^Su'sratine       ""    ® 

pools  of  water,  which,  while  it  docs  not    J^^  *>'''  2  00   0 

impede  their  progress,  often  results  in    C.nrrois.'per'bus:!: 
serious  damage  to  motors  and  involves    Beet.s.    j.er   bus.... 

Onions,   per  bus... 
making    re-  ;  Turnips,    per   bus. 


5Vi 
90 


i'onsiderable    exitense 
pair.s. 


LARGE  FORCE  EMPLOYED. 
There  are  now  about  100  families  in  the 
village  of  Proctorknott.  and  nearly  lOt) 
men  are  steadily  employed  in  the  rail- 
road shops  and  al>out  the  vards  \ 
large  force  is  kept  busy  in  the  Duluth. 
.Missabe  &  Northern  shops  overhaulinjr 
and  repairing  the  rolling  stock  of  th. 
toad,  that  it  may  be  in  readiness  for  the 
ru.-»h  of  business  that  is  exoected  on 
the  opening  of  navigation. 


25  ^      3!) 

as  @      40 

40  @      -M 

1  65  4i'  1  75 
40  #      50 

2  50 
70  (fj  1  00 
25  @      27 
25  @      30 
25 
55  @>     60 


FAREWELL  TO  MR.   FOLLETT. 

There  will  be  a  spe<ial  communication 
of  Euclid  lodge.  A.  F.  &  A.  M..  in  Ma- 
sonic hall  to  tender  a  farewell  ti>  E  H 
Follett.  late  agent  of  the  St.  Paul  & 
Duluth.  but  now  in  the  employ  of  tht 
Northern  Pacific  at  West  Superior. 
Light  refreshments  will   be  served  and    C'^een  and  yellow  peas 

.speech-making  indulged   in  Green   peas,    bus 

.  FRUITS. 

WE'ijT'  nt'f  I'Tti   unTTr'o-  Florida  strawberries,  per  qt 

T  iP„r      l^Th!?     «  7"   BRIEF;,.  Pie  plant,   per  doz  bunches. 

l^ieut.    Aithur    Briggs    has    l>een   con-    California    navel    oranges... 

nned  to  his  home  for  several  days.     He    Seedling  oranges    

wrenched  his  l)ack  severely,  and  added    California   pears,    per   case. 


Holland  seed  cabbage.  ICO  lb 

Minn  cabbage,  per  100  lbs... 

Potatoes,    per    bus 

Mint,    per   doz 

Parsley,    per  doz 

Parsnips,    per    bus 

Cauliflowers,    per  doz 1  50 

Horse   radish,    per   lb 6    ®       7 

Hubbard   squash,    per   doz..    1  .SO    @  2  25 
California    cabbage,    crates.    3  .SO    @  3  75 

California  celery,   doz 85 

Florida  tomatoes,  basket 65    @     73 

Oyster  plant,  doz  bunches..       .SO 
Green  onions,   doz   bunches.       25    0     40 

Spinach,    per   bus 9o   ®  1  00 

New  beets,  doz 15 

Spanish   onions,    per  crate..    2  25 
Bermuda   onions,    per   crate    3  .SO 

Lettuce,   per  box 90    @  1  00 

Lettuce,     per    doz 40 

Horse  radish   roots,    per  bbl    5  50 
PEAS  AND  BEANS. 

Fancy  navy,   per  bus l  15 

Medium,    hand   picked,    bus.       90 
Brown    beans,    fancy,    bus..       90 


Wheat  opened  barely  steady  this  morn- 
ing, although  pricos  were  about  the 
same  as  those  prevailing  at  the  close 
yesterday.  Cables  were  disappointing 
in  showing  only  l'4d  advance.  The  easy 
feeling  was  principally  due,  however,  to 
lack  of  demand,  most  of  the  shorts  at 
Chicago  having  covered  on  yesterday's 
bulge.  On  the  other  hand  there  was  a 
scarcity  of  offerings,  which  fact  became 
more  pronounced  as  the  session  wore  off, 
and  prices  strengthened,  a  feature  for 
the  trading  being  the  widening  of  the 
difference  between  May  and  July  options 
at  Chicago  to  2*4c.  for  a  moment.  North- 
west receipts  amounted  to  ^11  cars,  com- 
l>ared  with  109  last  week  and  661  on  the 
<orresponding    dav 


knew    about    the    affair,    among   the.m 
Will  Wood  and  Mr.  Early,  a  telegraph 

operator  at  Greencastle.  Through  Will  

Wood  some  time  in  December.  1895,  \  WANTED-SEWING  GIRLS  AT  OSrw. 
Jackson  had  sent  Pearl  Bryan  a  let-  l  ^t  French  tailoring  institute,  room  "^IC 
ter  containing  a  prescription  of  ergot  ■     Metropolitan  block. 

places;  also  the  best  and  cheapest  hair 


Ail  advertisements  of  "situ- 
ations" wanted  inserted  FREE. 
We  invite  as  many  repetitions 
as  are  necessary  to  secure 
wiiat  you  advertise  for.  Ttie 
Herald's  50,000  dally  readers 
will  be  sure  to  fill  your  wants. 


WANTED— A  RELIABLE  BOY  OF  tS 
would  like  a  position  of  any  kind  dav 
or  night.  Address  2011  West  Seventh 
street,  city. 


St.  Paul  &  Duluth  R.  R. 


LAave 
Dolnth. 


ID  KM  a.  ID, 
1 :55  p.  m. 
*H  :15  p  m 


ST.  PAUL, 
MINNEAPOLIS 


,„fw>m  Union  Depot.  CITY  TIGKEr  OKPICK, 
401 W,  Superior  etreet,  comer  Palladio  baildlnc. 
Telephone  218. 


WANTED -A  WELL  APPEARING 
young  man  of  steady  habits,  a  position 
as  cativasser  or  collector.  Address  Box 
29(,    West    Duluth. 


WANTED-BY  A  BOY  OF  17.  LIGHT 
work  of  some  kind,  ofllre  work  ure- 
'^"--'"'    Address   K  60.    Herald. 


f erred. 


never  got  the  prescription   filled.  Jack-  I 
son    visited    her    in    the    vacation    and 
Uon''"^^  '^"*''*  '^"'^  ^^^  prescrip- 

Meantime  Jaskson  and  Walling  were  ' 
arrested  in  Cincinnati,  having  in  their  ' 
possession   letters     chiefly     from     Will  ■ 
Wood   to  Jackson   in    regard   to     P.-arl 
Bryan     Pearl  Bryan's  pockotbook  and 
her  valise,     which     was    stained     with  i 
blood    were   found   where  Jackson  had 
secreted     them.     Walling's     pantaloons 
were  taken  from  his  locker  at  the  den- 
tal college,  and  they  were  muddy  and 
spotted  with     blood.      Jack.son-s     coat 
flecked  all  over  with  blood,  was  fished 
out  of  a  sewer,  in  whi.  h  it  was  found  . 
by  \A  alhng  s  direction.      Jn     Jackson's  ' 
pocket     were       a     half     dozen     hand-  : 
kerchiefs,  whic-h  were  afterwards  iden- 
tified as  the  property  of  Pearl  Bryan. 

In   the  examination   l>v  Chief  Deitch 
the      — ■ -     .       - 


goods,  switches  and  chains  at  Mrs.  M 
C.  Slebold's,  225  Bast  Superior  street. 


WANTED— A  LADY  AND  GENTLE- 
man  to  solicit  orders  for  household 
goods;  sold  on  easy  payments.  No  ex- 
perience required.  John  Gately  &  Co.. 
705  West  Superior  street. 


WANTED-MAN  OR  MAN  AND  WIFE 
on  farm.  Low  wages  and  good  home 
Address  L  31.  Herald. 


A  C.\PABLE  YOUNG  MAN.  GOOD 
bookkeeper  and  cashier;  six  vears'  ex- 
perience in  business;  desires  "to  locate 
in  Duluth.  Address  Bookkeeper,  general 
delivery.   St.   Paul. 


V.ANTBD-SlTrATION  TO  DO  OFFICE 
work  of  any  kind.  Have  had  experience 
Read  and  write  English  and  German. 
L  89.    Herald. 


A  ^OING  MAN,  22  YEARS  OF  .\GK 
wants  work  of  any  kind.  Must  have  it' 
Address   916    East    Seventh    street. 


WANTED-ONE    SALESMAN,    SALVRY 
and   commission.   $60  to  $100  per   month 
can    be    made.    No    experience    needed 
Work  in  the  city.  The  Singer  Manufa'-- 
turing    company,        614    West    Superior 


street. 


Se'^r^hir'expetti'''^^^^^^  atule  ,  and  that   both  of  them" hiri^eVwi 


prisoners     admitted     that     Paarl 
pryan^had  come  here  Monday,  Jan.  27. 

•ith 


her  until    Wednesday 


SALESMEN  FOR  CIGARS.  BIG  PAY 
Experience  unnecessary.  Monopole  Ci- 
gar company,  Galesville,  Wis. 

WANTED-AGBNTS  TO  SOLICIT  SICK 
and  accident  insurance  for  the  Union 
Men  s  Mutual  Insurance  company  of 
Duluth.  Liberal  terms  to  the  right  par- 
ties. Call  or  address  307  Palladio  build- 
ing.    Duluth.    Minn. 


75 
65 


@     90 


40 


He    i!r 


Bananas,    bunches 
Lemons,  per  box.. 


to  this  he  is  afllicted  with  grip. 

reported  better  today  and  his  Physician  ^^oanut^Vr*' doz 

JhorT  l^^i  •'*'  "■'"  '^  *'**^ '°  "^  *^"*  **  * :  cSe^ru^s.'^per'^  mii:::::: 

short  time.  Cranberries,    bus 

MIS.  John  Nevins  has  received  a  copy    Malaga  grapes,   per   keg 

of  resolutions  of  condolence  adopted  by    Figs,    per    lb 

Milwaukee  flive.   No.  iio,  of  Zilwauket    '  Pineapple,    per    doz 

Mich.,    shortly   after   the   death    of   hn"     ^^tcs,    per    lb 

husband.    John    Nevinf    Mr^.\N'evit-     Apples    p^f^b^P  ^^'^  ^^^^,\ 

l^':^^^:7'^^J^^rk^''''''-  ^-^  ^  M^.^w^et^cid^yp^rkeg::- 

M.  Haley,  a  brother  of  Dan  Halev.  oi 
Pr.Ktorknott.  has  moved  to  that  village 
from  Canada.  He  is  a  machinist  and 
will  arcei.t  a  position  in  the  Duluth. 
Mi.s.sabf  &  Northern  shops. 

Miss  Lena  Eidman.  of  West  Superior 
was  the  finest  of  her  aunt.  Mrs.  Jollv- 
more.  at  Pnxtorknott  this  week 

Mrs.  Dan  Haley,  of  Proctorknott.  has 
recovered  from  her  recent  .severe  ill- 
ness. 

Moiri.«on  *  .^kinner.  the  contravtors. 
are  erecting  a  handsome  cottage  on 
Main  stiect.  Proitorknott.  for  J.  Ijrown 

Charles  Lightbourn.  the  Missabe  loco- 
motive fireman,  has  moved  his  familv 
to  Proctorknott  from  Bay  View  Height.-*. 

Mrs.  B.  Simp.son  and  George  Jollvmoie 
are  two  Pr<Mtorkn.>tt   grip  victims. 

NEW  YORK  STOCKS. 

Decided    Heaviness    Apparent 
on  the  Opening  Market. 

New  York.  March  20.— The  st.xk  mar- 
ket opened  on  moderate  realizings,  de- 
cided heaviness  being  apparent  in  tht  ; 
Vanderbilt  and  Gould  shares.  The 
losses,  however,  were  restricted  to  frac- 
tional limits,  and  some  recoveries  oc- 
curred after  the  Initial  sales. 
preferred     and     New     Jersey 


K  (6> 

65  0      i,> 

3  25  ©  3  75 

2  00  (Q!  2  50 

2  00  ffi  2  50 

12.'.  Si  1  .50 

2  75  ®  3  50 
70 

5  50  ST  6  00 
1  75  ®  2  00 

6  75  ®  7  50 
12  @      15 

3  00 
9  «i)      10 


A    prominent  "Chicago    firm    had    a    ca- I  ." u'-   ""^''    " fonesaay   afternoon,    after 
blegram    from   Liverpool    reporting   heav-  I  '^  ""'h  each  charged  the  other  with  hav- 
ier  offerings     from     Russia,       which   was     '"K  "-'*  Jn   his  care,  and  each  declared 
instrumental   in    encouraging   the   bearish     that   he  had  seen  nothing  of  her  after 
.sentiment  which  show«l  itself  in  the  mar-     wards.     Both    admitted    that      on      th^ 

wifc         WA^^PrrA''^^^^       _ 

WANTED-TWO    FIRST  CLASS   SOLIC 

the  country  regarding  improvement'as  j  ""  the  river  and  dropped'  her  bloody!  Tai'h^rlf.^^'in^i't.?.?."'  ^iV"."^  '''^'';*.^*-  ^'.T"'"^ 
due  to  the  copious  rains.  Bradstreefs  re-  i^Iothing  into  the  river  to  hide  it  and  U  Ta''oi^"^  institute.  Metropolitan  block. 
port    of   the    weeks   clearances   of   wheat  i  conceal    the    crime.     On    Friday    night!  :  SIX  MILLION  PEOPLE  VOTED 

s  seen  to  leave        Hon.  W    ' 
...  oon  in   the  ten- 
year  before.                 '                              "    1  oerlom  district  with  Pearl   Bryan  in   a 

There  was  a  fair  bu.siness  done  on  the  hack,  and  at  the  same  time  Walling 
Duluth  board.  May  wheat  opened  V4c  low-  !  was  seen  near  the  saloon  On  Thurs 
er  at  75^c.  advanced  «4c  but  soon  reacted  |  day  afternoon  before  the  murder.  Wall- 
ing was  seen  with  Pearl  Bryan  at  Cen- 
tral station,  where  he  detained  her  un- 
til  ""  ■ 
G 


ket  after  a  small  advance  had  been  red-:  Saturday  nieht  f    Imvin..     »L  V 

ized.  The  extra  plentifulness  of  July  was  TkJ "  u fj  ">snt  following  the  murder 
by  some  ascribed  to  better  acounts  from  ;  '"'^J  "^-d  gone  to  the  suspension  bridge 
the  country  regarding  improvement  as  |  '^"  '"^  river  and  droppe ' 
due  to  the  copious  rains.  Bradstreet's  re-  ;  t^'othing  into  the  river  to  i 
port  of  the  weeks  clearances  of  wheat  i  conceal  the  crime  On  ] 
iind  flour  made  the  quantity  1.269.000  bus  i  at  7  o'clock  Jackson  wa« 
against  1.999.<X>0  on  the  wek  before  and  Dave  w-",''"^^'"''^^^^ 
1.595.000   bus  on   the   parallel   week   of   the  i  h  *1  ^.  ^^' a'''nsfoid  s  .salooi 


SITUATION         WANTED  -  WASHING 
ironing  and  house  cleaning.  Take  work 
home  or  go  out  by  the  day.  Mrs.   Rosa, 
317  Mesaba  avenue. 


W  A  NT  E  D-WASHING.  IRONING, 

scrubbing,  hou.se  cleaning  or  any  kind 
of  day  work.  Address  or  call  at  112 
First   avenue  west,   up  stairs. 


EASTERN  RAILWAY 

OF  MINNESOTA. 

CITY  TICKET  OFFICE  432  W.  SUPERIOR  ST 


Lbats  Uolath 


tl2:40p.  Ml. 
•11 :15  p.  m 


.  {     ST.  PAUL  AND     i   tiM  p.m. 


YOUNG  MAN   WANTS  WORK  OF  ANY 
kind.  Must   have  it.     L  S6.   Herald. 


WANTED-WASHING  AND  IRONP^G 
to  take  home.  Gentlemen's  under  cloth- 
ing a  specialty;  also  house  and  office 
cleaning.  Call  on  Mrs.  Clark,  104  First 
avenue  west,   up  stairs. 

AN  EXPERIENCED  AND  COMPETENT 
dressmaker  would  like  to  go  out  by 
the  day  or  take  work  home.  In(iuiri' 
.second  floor  126   East   First  street. 


♦Daily.    fExcept  Sonday. 

Buffet  Parlor  Cars  on  Day  TnHns. 
New  Sleeping  Cara  on  Night  Train*. 

Direct  connections  with  Groat  Northern  train« 

F*RGO,  GRAND  FORriS 

WINNIPEG,  HELENA. 

BUTFE,  SPOKANE, 

PORTUNO,  SEATTLE 

AND  JAPAN. 
At  St.  Paul  connections  are  made  for  all  points 
East,  West  and  South.    Throngb  tickets  and 
baggage  checked  to  dastiuation. 

DuiuthTSouth  Shore  &  Atlantic  Ry. 

-  Trains  for  all  points  East  leave 

Dulnr.b   GnioM   il.in   D     11 

Dnpot  at     ..  4.lu  r,  M, 

Daily,    EXCKPT    SATDKDaY. 
yJV,'„^*<*N '••K   PALACE 
SLEEPINti  CAR  for  Sanlt  8te 
wiuiug  <  nT,  eriTviuir  supper 

gj^^^t^^nnd  train  arrives  11:20  a.  m.  EXCEPT 

Ticket  offices:    426  Spaldioff  Hotel  BuUdina 
and  Union  Depot.  ^ 


Muki/udlc 


U\%  Soperior  &  ffestern  Ry, 


WEST, 
P.  M. 


♦Daily  except  Snuday. 


EAST. 
A.  M 


to  7r>c.  Later  it  sold  up  Vic  but  weakened 
towards  noon  and  closed  %c  lower  than 
yestenlay  at  74?ic.  The  mills  Imught  l.'i.- 
000   bus   of    cash    stuff   at    the    Mav    price. 

I  anti  the  elevators  took  lO.WW  bus  at  'oc 
under  May.  Following  were  the  closing 
prices: 

I      Wheat— No.    1    hard.    cash.    7fiV4c;    Mav. 

!  76^4c.    No.    1    northern,    cash,    74>.4c;    Mav. 

^'^\^:    asked;    July.     7.V|C:    September.    76c 

i  bid.  No.  2  northern.  Tl^c;  No.  3.  tWifr 
"OVtc    Rejected.    .^IC/Hfic.    To    arrive— No.    l 


FOR 
^,  J-  Bryan.  His  only  book.  "The 

^i    ^  ?ii*^'^'".*^  ^^"^  ready.    Agents  mak- 
ing $2o   to  $150   per   week;    the   greatest 
seller  of  the  age;  send  for  outfit  quick 
Beware  of  fraudulent  books.  W.  B    Con- 
key  compan,  sole  publishers.  Chicago. 

M  VHIV. 


YOUNG  MAN.  20  YEARS  OLD.  STRONG 
and  willing  to  work,  would  like  place  in 
commission   hou.se   or  as   delivery   man 
Familiar   with   care  of   horses.   Addres.s 
A.  G..   Herald. 


1  the  last  train  that  could  take  her  to  i  ^J^'  STOGDILL.  TEACHER  OF  PIANO, 
reencastle  had  gone  .     ^i!'"'^    progress    guaranteed    all    pupils 

Two  weeks  afte^r  the  murder  George       "nv.  "''b^ook'T'''''^"'-  ''  "°"'"  ^'"^'^^  "^ 


H.  Jackson,  colored,  admitted  to  the 
police  that  he  had  driven  two  men  in  a. 
rockawa.v  by  a  circuitous  route  to  Fort 
Thomas,  to  where  the  murder  was  com- 
mitted.    George  Jackson   was  taken   to 


FOR  RENT— FRONT  ROOMS.  309  WEST 
First  stret. 


2.tO 
"50    \i  -1  75 


7 
11 


DRESSED  MEATS. 

Veal,   fancy   ^    @ 

Veal,   heavy,   coarse,   thin...         .I 

Mutton,    fancy   dressed G    i® 

LIVE  POCLTRY. 

Live   turkeys    ]0 

Sprlnk  chickens,  per  ll> G    @ 

DRESSED  POULTRY. 

Turkeys,   per  lb lo 

Chickens,    per  lb C    & 

Gee.se.    per    lb lo    (it 

BR.VN  AND  SHORTS.  <"AR  LOTS. 
Bran.  20«>  lbs.  sacks  included  8  00 
Shorts,  ino  \\t».  sacks  inc..  9  00 
Shorts.    JOO    lbs.    sacks    inc..    8  .'lO 

Red   dog Vim 

Ground  feed   No.  l lo  0(>    (filO  ."iO 

Ground  fee<l.   No.  2 lo  00    ^10  30 

HAY.    CAR   UOTS. 

Choice   south.    Minn 0  50    0  7  TiO 

Northern    Minn    4  00    ^  6  lO 

Medium   4  00    (f?  «5  50 

Tame,    ton,   choice   timothy.    8  00    W  9  00 


7»^ 
6*^ 


oat.- 

bus;     na.\. 

800  bus. 


THE  l.l\KKP<)OI.  MARKET. 
Mv.-rpool.  March  20.— Wheat.  closinu. 
lirm  higher:  March.  Gs  2'id;  May.  ris  3'-d: 
July.  Gs  a^id.  Corn,  quiet,  unchanged  't<« 
•I'd  high<'r;  March.  L's  8i-,<l ;  April.  2s  8".d- 
May.   2s  Oi^d:  July.   2s   lO'-d. 


IN   NEW   YORK. 
New    York.    March    2i>.— Butter,    stcadv; 
Western    1  reamery.    i;WrI»c:        Elgins.    l<Jc: 
factory.   "f^flUoc.    Eggs,   steady;  .state  and 
IVimsylvania.    ll'^e;    Western.    lO'^c. 

CONFIRMED  THE  SALES. 

Disposition    of    Some    Inman 
Property  is  Approved. 


iV\''''<T  ™~''^"'/^''J-  ^  J'"''*^''''"'    Ji'*^-  ,?>*^^-     ^he  jail,  and  there  he  picked  out  W^all- 
o4c.  No.  2  oats.  l<c;  No.  3  oats,  IG'^c.  Flax,  i  inc-  from   amoncr  o   c.  ^,..  «»  "dii 

79c;   May    80c  .  I  '"»'  irom  among  a  S(  ore  of  young  men 

Car     inspection— Wheat.     HM;     corn     1  •  1  ^''^    ^^^   "'^^    ^^'^^   -''■i'    ''eside   him    and 
oats.   9;   rye.   «;    barley.   20;    flax.   G.       Re-  i  ^'onipjlled   him   to   make   the   drive   lie- 
celpts— Wheat.    51.308    bus;    corn.    7o7    bus;  )  y<»nd   Newport,   where   he   tried   to     gel 
1.3.173  bus;  rye.  r.432  bus;  barley.  16.01S    out  of  the  carriage,  because    when  em- 
7OT9    bus.    Shinments-Whcat.     ployed,    he   was   told   that   he  was  only 
going  to  Newport.     One  day  later  a  de- 
livery  stable   keeper  informed   the   po- 
lice   that    he    hired    a   »)iie-seated    rock- 
away  and  a  horse  U>  someone  unknowr- 
to  him,  and  that  it  had  been  kept  out 
j  all   night  and   returned   between   3  ami 
I  4  o'clock  on  the  morning  of  which   the 
I  corpse  of  Pearl   Bryan  was  found. 
I      Through   this  evidence     Jackson   was 
tried  at  Newport  and  found  guilty  and 
.^sentenced  to  be  hanged.     His  trial  con- 
i  tinned    from    April    21    to    May    14.     He 
was  ably  defended  by  Col.  L.  j.  Craw- 
ford,  while  the     pro.sectution     was  as- 
sisted   by    K.    W.    Nelson,    of   Newport, 
and  Silas  Hates,  of     (Jreencastle.      On 
May  28   Walling's    trial   began,   and   on 
June  18  he  was  found  guilty  of  murder  i 
and  sentenced   to  die.     Since  that  tinu- 
Walling  and  Jackson  have  remained  in 
the  Covington  jail,   which  is  more     se-  I 
cure  than     the     Newport    jail.      Every 
means   in    the   power  of   the  friends  oi' 


LARGE,  WELL  HP:ATED  AND  FIR- 
nished  room  with  two  beds;  also  small- 
er rooms.   720  West  First. 

TO  RENT-TWO  FRONT  ROOMS  FUR- 
nished,  with  steam  heat.  8  Chester  ter- 
race. 


HOUSE  CLEANING,  SCRUBBING 
stores  and  offices  to  clean.  Mrs.  Jack- 
son, 390  Lake  avenue  south. 


FARM  FOR  SALE  CHEAP.  THIS  IS  A 
bargain,  look  it  up.  Address  K  62,  Her- 
ald. 


PIANO    FOR   SALE    OR    RENT   CHEAP 
P  8.   Herald. 


9   FOOT   RANGE.   105  EAST  SUPERIOR. 

$200  CASH.   BALANCE   IN   BOARD  AND 
room;     will     buy     furniture     of     2>-room 

boarding   house;       central      location.   A 

snap.     P  91.   Herald. 


•3:05 
4:05 
6:13 
7:40 
7:02 
8:00 


OiLv Duluth  Ar 

23  Ar Cloquet Lv 

76  Ar —  Swan  River Lv 

Ar Hibbing  Lv 

94  Ar..  Grand  Rapids  Lv 

109  Ar....  Deer  River  Lv 


•  11:40 
10:41 
8:40 
7:15 
7:50 
6:53 


Duluth,  Missabe 

&  Northern 
RailwayCompany 


7 :45  a.  m. 
10:45  a.m. 
10:44  a.  m. 
11. -W  a.  m. 
ilK)>a.  in 
11:25  a.  m. 


Lv Ouiutti Ar      3:a>t.  m. 

Ar        ..ViririniH    ...Lv  i  li:45  p.  m. 

Ar i:velGth       .Lv  I  10  !>6  a.  m. 

Ar  Riwabik    ...Lv    l;i:2Sp.m. 

Ar Mt.  Iron    ...Lv    li::«  p.  m. 

Ar Hibhi-g     -.Lv  '  H:l»  n.  m 


9:00  1.  ID.    Lv Virginia Ar  |    1 :45  p.  m. 

,}:2.)  p  m.    Ar Wolf    ..  ..Lv    10::i3a.m. 

lira  a  in.  I  Ar        i.  Ribbing Lv  I  12  13  i«.  m. 


FURNISHED     ROOMS     TO     RENT     TO 
gentlemen   at  2G  West   Third. 


FOR  RENT— BASEMENT  OF  1020  EAST 
Fourth  street;  very  warm;  $3  per  month: 
water  free. 


CATTLE  AND  HOGS 
Chicago.     March         20.- Ottleial     receipt.- 
Iiogs    yesterday.       19.K27:    shipments.    tMi74 
Cattle,    official    receipts       vest»rdav.    ;;i7."i- 
shipment.s,     1GI4.     Sh»-ei).     official     receipts  : 
yesterday.    lO.tMX*;    shipments.    4343.    Market 
active;    fully    .Vs    higher.      Hops.    re<eii)ts. 
J'OOO.     Market  active  fullv  ."k-  higher.  Lijrht 
*3.9">4.15;    mixed.     $4.(KV«;4.2i>:     heavy.     $3  7"'}/ 
4.22'i:     rouph.     *.3.7.V«'3.8.'..     Cattle.  "  ri'ceipts 
300:   steady.    Sheep,    receipts.    2000.    Strong,  j 

NEW  YORK   .MONEY.  ■ 

New  York.  March  20.— Monev  on  call 
easy  at  V'.fft'Z  per  cent.  Prime  mercantile  ' 
paper  Zl'z'ftA  per  cent.  Sterling  exchang'- 
steady  with  actual  business  in  bankers' 
Itills  at  $4.S7'fj4.87H  for  demand  and  at 
$4.8".'ir«4.8.ia'4   for  sixty 


'•<J>   KBJfT-JaoVSKB, 

FOR     RENT-TWO        MODERN     BRICK 
of  Clark  &   Dickerman, 


houses.    hKiuin 

Trust   company    Iniilding. 


FOR  RENT-SEVEN  ROOM  HOUSE  ON 
Nineteenth  avenue  east,  near  London 
road,  at  $10.  water  free.  Carpets  to  sell 
cheap,   all   laid.     Address   P  81,    Herald 


SEVENTY-FIVE  DOLLARS  AND  BAL- 
ance  monthly  buys  a  fourteen  room 
house  within  seven  blocks  of  the  Spald- 

'"i^J^^^*^'-  *^^^-  W.   Hoyt,  405  Chamber 
of  Commerce. 


fiaiy,  except  Sunday.      J.  B.  II.wsom,  G.  P.  A. 


DULUTH &IRON  RANGE  R.R 


Daily,  Sunday  exceptedr 


LOANS  ON  DIAMONDS,  FURNITURE 
etc.  Comm.ercial  paper  bought.  Room 
717  Torrey  building. 

MONEY    TO     LOAN       ANY^^AMOTJNT   I  Oilice :  4a>  West  Superior  St. 
Cooley  &  Underhill.   104  Palladio. 


3:13  p.  in.  I  Lv 

7:ir)p.  in.  lAr... 

7:40i..  m.  I  Ar  ... 

7  :.'>0  p.  m.  I  Ar 


..Duluth Ai  I 

-  Vir^'in-a Xv  | 

..Evjieth Lv  I 

__--Kiy Lv| 


i:;  oim. 
^  0)  a.  m. 
7  :X>  a.  m. 
7:3>  a.  ni. 


NORTH-WESTERN   LINE. 

C.,  St.  p.,  M.  A:  O.  Hy. 

'Phone  No.  20. 


FOR  RENT  —  HOUSE  315  WEST 
Fourth  street;  all  modern  improve- 
ments; will  bo  renovated  to  suit  tcii- 
ant.  A.  C.  Volk  &  Co.,  Palladio  build- 
ing. 


$4.8-.V«4.8.ia'4   for  sixty  day.s.    Posted   rates     these  two  men  werp  evhinstori   ir.  =o„r 
«4.8«rn4.86>2  and  $4.88^/4  88Vi.    Bar  silver  C2^.     \yl,r,   from    th^ir  flt^    ,^^tK      . 
.Mexican    dollars    48I4.      State    l>onds    du  f-     f^^^m  from   their  fate,   without  success. 


jrO  RmTT—FZATS 

FOR  RENT— NICE  MODERN  FIVE 
room  flat,  centrally  located.  Volk,  Pal- 
ladio. 


Judge    Cant    this    morning   confirmed 

the  sale  of  a  part  of  the  B.  B.  Inman 

Rubber    assets  by  Inman's  assignee,  the  Duluth 

Central    Trust  company.    One  lot  was  composed 


railroad  bonds  firm;  government  bonds 
firm.  4s  registered  and  coup<m.  $1.13>4;  ■">; 
registered  and  coupon.  $l.l.>"x,;  4s  regis 
tered.  $1.11;  coupon.  $!.13'i:  2s  regiaterwl 
95S:   Paclrtc  Cs  of  "98.   $1.03%. 


Scott    Jackson    is    2S    years    old.    five 
feet  six  inches  high,  of  l)Ionde  complex-  I 
ion   and   wiry   figure.     His   eyes   are   a  i 
cold,  steel  gray.     They  glitter,  but  lack 
depth.     His  head  is  said     to     resemble  | 


FOR  RENT— COZY  FLAT.  $1C.  ALL 
modern  conveniences,  five  rooms.  Water 
rent  paid.  $250  buys  a  good  residence 
lot.    Cooley    &     Underhill. 


NEW  YORK   BANKS. 
New  York.  March  20.— The  weekly  state-  1 


thatofHolmes,  the  murderer.  He  crossed  !  ^9^  RENT-A   FIVE   ROOM   MODERN 


the   ocean    fourteen   times   when   a   lad 


opened  down  \.  but  the  latter  speedily    of  offices,  fixtures,  restaurant,  etc.,  and  :  Reserve     decrease' 
recovered   the   loss.     Sugar   was   easier, 
but  was  soon  taken  in  hand  and  marked 
up    \.     Chicago  Gas  also   received   in- 
side support  and  improved   V». 

Sugar  was  selected  as  a  vulnerable- 
point  of  attack  by  the  bear  contingent, 
and  under  liberal  sales  dropped  \Vk  Per 
cent.     "'•-  •  - 


ment  of  the  a.s.soclated   banks  shows  th  •  i  ^^'^^^   ^^^  father,  a  sea  captain.     While 
following  changes. 


Loans,     increase 

Specie,  increase  

Legal    tenders,    decrease 

Deposits,    decrease 

Circulation,   decrease 


this  was  purchased  by  J.  H.  I'pham  for 
$510.  One  parcel  of  this  lot  was  com- 
posed of  lumber  inventoried  at  $264.r.:{. 
and  it  brought  $110.  The  carpenter  shop 
and  its  tools  and  fixtures,  with  some 
paints,  nails,  etc..  valued  at  $1313.75. 
Th^   „-^oi,„..         s   .^■■' ."  ---     ^'^"^  f"*"  *^^^-     The  fixtures  and  offices 

tn    «^.r«wI,K  J^   ^     ''  -"^   ^^^^  ■''*^**    '^"^    at  Duluth.   West  Superior  and  Old  Su- 

in    tho^fH    •    T    '/a^,"«"al    concessions    perior.  valued  at  $520.  went  for  $95.  The 

^.hiVco     Th^         "^'     «*'^''^^-,  notabb     restaurant  and  its  fixtures  went  for  J5. 

i^mfirregularitv    bm'/f  ?w  vf '^^'^*'"'     '^^^   ''''"'^   '^'^^  ^"^'J^^'^   ^'^  ^   mortgage    May.  30^c.  Oats.'  May7a%c 

m^nlv   hf«v^5'\^:/i"V.       i  '  f^lpck  were    given  to  secure  an  overdraft  for  $900  on 

noinf       "^^^^-   '"^^   Omaha   yielding  a    the  American  Exchange  bank,  and  the 
^M.^r.-.^,i„.,         ^  purchaser  assumed   this  mortgage. 

Supporting     orders   were  executed  in        The   tug  Castle  brought   $25   in    ca^h 

\anous  parts  of  the  list,  which  <-hecked     It   was  inventoried  at   $7000    which   th.' 

ine   reactionary   movement    and   led    to    assignee  states  is  $2000  more  than  it   is 

a  higher  range    of     values,   most     pro-     worth,    and    it    is   subieit    to   a   <  hattt  I 

mortga-ge  for  $S20rt  held  bv  the  Howard 
Towing  a.s.so«iation.  of  Port  Huron.  The 
assignee  states  that  the  representatives 
of  the  mortgagee  have  llie  boat  and 
threaten  foreclosure,  and  that  a  sab 
under  libels  amounting  to  %:\:>m  ;> 
thieatenf<l.  Thi-  tug.  including  mort- 
gage and  lil>els.  whs  sold  to  A.  I).  Ben- 
nett, of  iv»rt  Huron,  for  $25,  and  Judge- 
Cant   confirmed  the  sale. 


I  living  with  his  mother,  in  Jersey  City. 
.$4.694.57:, ;  he  turned  .state's  evidence,  and  sent  a 
•  iS  !£;  ^'■-  I-^*t  to  the  penitentiary  for  robbing 
'6  048  0(h''*  railway  company,  and  thus  saved 
'.  6!o4«V/f    himself  from  the  .<5aiTie  fate. 

"ss.Wj  i  .   Walling  is  five  feet  nine  inches  high 


flat,  London  road  and  Eighteenth  ave 
nue  east.  Apply  to  Commercial  Invest- 
ment  company,    Torrey    building. 


WANTED-ROOM.  WITH  t)R  wTTilOlT 
board,  in  private  family,  bv  two  young 
gentlemen;  centrally  located.  K  72,"  Her- 
ald. 

TWO  YOl\NG  GENTLEMEN  WOULD 
like  room  in  small  urivale  famUv. 
where  there  are  no  other  roomers:  not 
more  than  lifteen  minutes  walk  from 
this  office.  State  conveniences,  etc  L 
42.  Herald. 


I  Leave 
;  tlO  J.!  am 
*tl00pm 
•5  10  pm 


WANTED-BY  MAN  .AND  WIFE.  FOUR 
I)lea.sant  rooms,  centrally  located,  for 
housekeeping.    Address    P   11,    Herald. 

ANYONE  WISHING  TO  STORE  A 
piano,  free  of  charge,  in  a  perfectly 
secure  place,  would  do  well  to  call  .at 
202   King  block. 


*l)aily  I    tKxcopi  Sunday 
»t.  Paul,  MiD'pi.s  and  Woat 
S..  Paul,  Miu'pis  aud  West 
t'liiciM^o  l<imitnd  ... 


Arrive 

ta  lu  pill 

*7  to  am 
*I0  :«l  am 


Parlor  Cars  en  day  trains;  Wagner'b  Fiuesit 
al'-<pors  on  ui^ht  trainB. 


HIGHEST  PRICE  PAID  FOR  GENTLK- 
mens  cast  off  clothing.  Give  us  a  trial. 
Send  address  and  will  call.  Star  Cloth- 
ing company.   511   West  Superior  street. 


CAJtn  HEAvrxo. 


The  banks  now  hold  $48,168,975  in  excess  1  has   dark   hair  and     hazel     eves     with 
rule         •■«^"""»'nients   of    the   25    per   ceni  j  heavy  eyebrows  that  almost  meet.  His 

I  »?<"  is  21  years.    In  temperament  he  ift 

stolid  and  morose.  He  is  evidently 
deficient  in  sensii)ility  and  force  of 
character,  which  made  him  all  the 
more  pliant  as  Jack.si'n  s  tool  and  as- 
-sistant.  In  his  own  confession  and  evi- 
dence he  states  that  Jackson  had  told 
him   that   he  would   bring  Pearl   Bryan 


QUESTIONS  ANSWERED  FOit  10 
cents;  pictures  of  your  future  husband 
or  wife  25  cents.  Address  M;»dpm"  I)-' 
Zoe.    P.   O.    Box   30.    Duluth.    Minn. 


NEW   YORK  GRAIN. 

,      New    York.     March        20.-Wheat.     Mav. 

«)%c;   July.    78V;    September.    75%c.   Corn 


GOSSIP. 
Received  over  private  wire  of  B.  E.  Baker 


CARD      READING.      PAST,      PRESENT 
and  future.  13.30  West  Superior  street. 


ir.'<*iiri. 


PRIVATE  HOSPITAL-MRS.  BANKS 
midwife,  330  St.  Croix  avenue.  Male  pa- 
tients  cared   for  also. 


•^?:.i7!:h.'^^W!r!3 


PALESTINE  LODGE  NO.  79,  A. 
F.  &  A.  M.— Regular  meetings 
first  and  third  Monday  even- 
ings of  every  month  at  7:30 
p.  m.  Next  meeting  March  29. 
1897.    Work.    Second    degn.-e.    W.    A.    Me- 


A 


^Jofiagle. 
tary. 


W.    M.,    Edwin    Mooers,    secre- 


4^ 


grain  and  Stock  broker^  room  107  Chain-  |  here  to  have  an  abortion  performed' on 


nounced   in   .New   York     C.ntral,     with 
Western    Union   and    New    Jersey    Cen- 
Soiiie   of   the   industrials  exhibit- 


tral 


ed  marked  irregularity,  but  the  iiiarkel 
generally  t  nded  higher,  with  the  low 
priced  Van<lerbilt  shares  conspicuous. 
The  dosing  was  irregular  with  fra<- 
ti'Uial  changes  cither  way.  Saks  lo:;.- 
200  !:hares. 


GOVERNDR  FRANKLIN. 

Arizona's  Chief  Executive  Is 
Roasted  in  Legislature. 

Phoenix,  Ariz.,  March  20.— The  clos- 
ing scenes  of  the  Arizona  legislature 
wer?    marked    by   disorder.     The    house 


MERRITT  VS.  HARRIS  CASE. 

It  Was  on  Before  the   Court 
Today. 

The  case  of  Alfred  and  Leonidas  Mer- 
rltt  against  A.  A.  Harris  &  Son,  which 


passed  a  resolution  asking  the  governo--  ^'^'"^  ""  *  couple  of  weeks  ago  and  was 
to  return  with  his  signature  bills  ex-  I  "^''^'^^^'p**  ^o^^"  to  a  question  of  the 
empting   from    taxation    for   ten    years    st'"*^'"^!?'.'?  "'-  ^"^  •^^^''^^  "'  the  capital 


ber  of  Commerce  and  307  Board  of  Trad< 

I  Chicago.  March  20.— < 'a hies  were  .-jomo 
firmer  and  exporters  reported  some  bids 
at    inena-sed    limits    but    not    near   tnougli 

,  to  do  ;uiy  business.  Shorts  rlid  Hot  want  !■> 
go    over    Sunday    wilb    the    fe.ir    of    war 

I  .-ie.ires    and    covered     May     whe.it     fn-elv. 

'  Some  good  buying  w.is  also  noticed  for 
bmg  .-iceouiit  and  some  tluii  was  evi- 
dently on  (ouiitrv  orders.  The  distaiu 
options  rnlerl  weaker  with  continued 
lifpiid.ition  of  .iidy  wlieat  which  wns 
bought  on  the  recent  erop  scares.  No 
cash    business   was   reporieil   today   either 

I  liere  or  at  the  sealM.ard  and  "this  to- 
gether  with  a  lull  in  th  crop  damage  re- 
ports cau.scil  the  market  to  .settle  back  to 

.  the  put  prie,-  ;it  the  elo.-;.  .  Becrbobin 
makes    bis   (iiial   t-stlmates   of   the    world".-^ 

i  wheat  crop  I2l.000.<K)o  bus  less  than  la^t 
year.  The  visible  is  eX|K-cted  to  deerca.-.e 
aliout    l.MMi.OOO   bus. 

Corn  and  oats  easier.  The  good  shipping 
and  export  demand  continues  for  corn 
are  receipts  are  light  but  colder  weather 
and  a  reported  cut  In  Western  rate.s 
had  a  weakening  effect. 

Provisions  suffered   some  on  liquidation 
by   longs,    but   the   buying   Is  good  on   all 
the   easy   spots. 
Puts.    May   wheat,    73'(,©73%c. 
Calls.   May  wheat,  75^4@75»4c. 
Curb.    May  wheat.  74',i.c  .isked. 


LOST. 


her  by  Walling,  and     then    afterwards  :  LOST—  WEDNESDAY  EVENING 

said  he  would  kill  her  l)y  quick  ))r)ison,        'mall   pug  dog.     Reward   if  returned   to 
and  tinaly  changed   his  mind  and   said       1717  Bast  First  street. 
he   would    poison 


her.  cut  her  inti 
pieces  and  jiut  the  pie-ces  into  (-atcb- 
basins  of  the  .sewei>.  From  Jan.  1.  ISIti! 
to  the  day  of  the  tragedy,  all  the  evi- 
dence showed  that  be  was  Scott  Jack 
Bon'K  willing  (-onfedcratc. 


I 


worif«  f  .-       •  .         ..       .  I -tofk  Of  the  .Security  Land  and  Rxploi- 

worKs  for  mineral     reduction,     storage  I  ation   <-ompany.    came    up    today.     Tlie 
reservoirs  and  canals  used  in  the  culti-  I  '*"''  value  of  the  stock  is  $9540.  "but  the 

vation   of  the  sugar  beet.     The   execu-  '  "market   value  is  said   to  be  about  $:!::.-    „  

tive  made     no   reply,     whereupon     the  !  •^^*>-    1'he  Harrises  claim  that  when  thty     ^t  hi'^y I    '^* 


PASSED  THE  BILLS. 

General    Deficiency,    Sundry 
Civil  and  Indian  Go  Through. 

Washington,  March  20.— The  house  to- 
day promptly  took  up  the  two  remain- 
ing left-over  appropriation  bills,  pass- 
ing the  agricultural  bill  after  a  charac- 
teristic warm  political  speech  from 
Champ  Clark,  of  Misosuri,  and  then 
taking  up  the  Indian  bill.  Consider- 
able   opposition    developed    to   the    Un- 

„„^  ,,^„  rompahgre  reservation  item  in  the  bill. 

NEW  YORK  STOCKS.  on    the   ground    that   it    v.f.uid   open    up 

Name  of  Stock.        Open  High  Low  Close  |  valuable  Gilsonite  and  asphalt  deposits 


BOOMS   4\It  JUt.mn    OVFKKKT). 


FURNISHED  ROOMS.  BOARD  IF  DE 
Blred.  The  Dacotah.  U7  West  8«con(' 
street 


STOCKHOLDERS'    MEETING — 

The  regular  annual  meeting  of  the   Du- 
luth   Printing    and    Publishing    Compaiiv 
will  b*»  held  at  the  companv's  office  in  Du- 
luth.  Minn.,  on  Tuesday,  the  30th  d-iy  of 
March.   A.    I>.   1897.   at   3  o'clock  p.   m. 
Dated    Duluth.    Minn.,    March   17(h.    1S9T 
GEO.  W.  BIX:iC. 
Secretary. 


IONIC  LODGE  NO.  186.  A.  F.  & 
A.  M.— Regular  meetings  second 
and  fourth  Monday  evenings  of 
every  month  at  7:30  p.  m.  Next 
meeting    March    22,    1897.    Work 

Third  degree.  F.  W.  Kugler,  W.  M.;  J.  D. 

Macfarlane,    secretary. 

KEYSTONE  CHAPTER  NO.  26, 
R.  A.  M.— Stated  convocation 
second  and  fourth  Wednesd.TV 
evenings  of  each  month  at  7:30 
p.  m.  Next  meeting  Tuesday. 
-Ml  March  23.  1897.  Work,  Royal 
Arch  degree.  John  F.  McL-ircn.  H.  J'  • 
t^'orge  E.   LfJiig,   secretary. 

DULUTH  COMMANDERY 
No.  18.  K.  T.— Stated  conclavt 
first  Tuesday  of  each  month 
7:3P       p.    m.      Next     conclave 

„.     ■      ^       Wednesday,  •      MhicIi    21,     l«t7. 

\Nork    Templar  drgrce.  R.   E.   Denfeld.  E. 

C  Alfred  LeRlcheu.x,  recorder. 


THERE'S  ONLY  ONE 
RAILROAD 

That  operates  its  trains  on  the  famoua 
block  system  between  the  Twin  Cities. 
Milwaukee  and  Chicago; 

That  lights  Its  trains  by  electricity 
throughout; 

That  uses  the  celebrated  electric  berth 
reading  lamp; 

That  runs  four  .splendidly  equipped  pas- 
senger trains  every  day  from  St.  Paul 
and  Minneapolis  through  to  Chicago 
via  Milwaukee; 

And  that  road  Is  the 

CHICAGO,  MILWAUKEE  A 
6T.  PAUL. 

1 1  also  operates  steam-heated  vestlbuled 
trains,     carrying     the     latest    private 
compartment     cars,       library     buffet 
smoking    cars,    and     palace     drawing- 
room  sleepers. 
Parlor  cars,  free  reclining  chair  cars  and 

the  very  best  dining  car  service. 
For    lowest    rates    to    any    point    in    th« 
United  States,  Canada  or  Mexico,  ap- 
ply to  ticket  agents,  or  address 
J.  T.  CONLEY, 
.Ass't  Gen'l  Pass  Agt., 
,,  .      _,  ,,  St.  Paul.  Minn. 

Note— Elegantly  equipped  trains  from 
Sr..  Paul  and  Mlnneanolls  through  from 
I  eorla.  St.  Louis  and  Kansas  City  dally. 


\Py-  W.-FIDELITY  LODGE  NO.  105. 
Meets  every  Thursday  in  the  Kalama- 
zoo block,  third  floor.  18  West  Superior 
street.  James  McDowell,  M.  W.;  J.  H. 
Powers,   recorder. 


ACVOUSTAM'  ASH  AVlHTOlt. 


house  passed,   by  a  vote  of  20   to  4    a  |  ^"'♦'•'ed   into   the  contract   to  work   for    Atchison 
resolution  declaring  "that  the  best  in-  '  t^^  Merritts  for  $10,000   per   year,   only 
terests  of  the  territory  demand  an  im-  '  the    barge   company   suit    was    in    pro- 
mediate    change    in    the    office    of   gov-    ^^^^-    ^^^    that   when    the    Rockefeller 
ernor."  i  suit  was  taken  up  the  stock  in  contro- 

In    the 


ouncil  the  resolution  was 
tabled,  and  a  resolution  adopted  ex- 
pressing implicit  confidence  in  the  in- 
tegrity of  Governor  Franklin. 


STANDS  AT   THE   HEAD 

Aug.    J.    Bogel 

Sliereveport 

Iiiscovery  is 

cough,  and  it  is  th*-  b<>st  seller  I  have 


Sugar  Trust 

Canada  Southern... 

C,   B  &  Q 

St.   Paul 

Chicago  Gas 

Del.,  Lack.  AW... 

General  Electric 

Erie 

Reading 

Louis.  &  Nash 

Manhattan.. 


versy  was  turned  over  as  extra  compen- 
sation. The  Merritts.  on  the  other  hand, 
claim  that  they  were  rtnancially  em-^ 
barrassed,  and  that  it  was  turned  over 

merely  as  collateral  for  the  attorneys'    

fees  and  for  the  money  it  was  necessary    Missouri  Paclflc 

' =—  =-     -J       -  .      _  Tobacco 

ago  &  N.  W 
>e  due     "•  ''•  preferred.. 
F.   rampb.il.   merchant   of  sifford'Arz'    '' ^k'  '^^^  f^"^^^  returned.  "    ««^'*    1"'^"^ 

writhe;  -Dr.  King'.=;  New  DiscoveA.  is'  T^^  entire  morning  u a:,  taken  up 
all  that  is  claimed  for  it;  it  nwer  faili  I  "'t^i  reading  to  the  court  the  volumin- 
and    Is    a    sur«    euro-    for       Consumption!    ^^^  papers  in  the  cai-e 


logel,  the  leading  druggist  of  t"  raise  in  order  to  carry  on  the  U<i<kc-  Tobac 
.  La.,  sa.vs:  "Dr.  King's  New  !  feller  suit.  The  .Merritts.  having  paid  £***V? 
i  the  only  thing  that  cures  mv    the   Harrises  all   thev  claim    to  be  due     „'    , 


Organs  'lor  I1.6S  per  month  rent,  at 
Coon  s. 


Ccughs  and  Colds.  T  cannot  say  enough 
for  its  merit?  "  Dr.  King  s  New  DiS'-oven' 
for    Consumption,    Coughs    and    Colds    is 

not  an  experiment.   It  has  been   tried  for  

a  quarter  of  a  century,  and  today  stands       rp^,.    r^       \ T 

at   the   head.     It   never  disappjinta    Free        ■*  "^    Greeks   are    not 
trial   bottles  at  Dulutb   Drug   comipadys  1  Greece.    S  >me  are  at  Firet 
drug  store.  1  tonight.    See  them  for 


I'nion    Pacific 

Western   Union 

Leather 

Lako   Shore 


11* 
114 
49H 

r.\ 
'9% 

"34H 
■"2ax 

49 

MH 
1«H 

rn 

36 

W\\ 

f2h\ 


n\ 

1I4«( 

44H 
77H 

77  « 
tOH 

S4H 

23V4 
49 
85«( 
18H 
76)i 
infl>4 
38H 
6«« 

58H 


IIH 
llS9i 

40H 

77H 
79?» 

314 

23 

88»* 

18 

7« 


•i"i"i"i  'I  r  r  i-i-r  1 1 1  r  i..h..i..i..:..i..:..h«h- 
I  Fire  Insurance^        | 
Life  Insurance^ 
Investments. 


23}* 

48  3t 

85)( 

1H4 

'■^% 

108^'  \C»% 

36>4l    1><SS4 

t6H\    68K 


1^  i  to  a  combination.  The  house  by  unani 
1,5U  ,  mous  consent  finally  struck  out  of  the 
114  I  Indian  bill  the  paragraph  relating  to 
J?w  I  t*i^  opening  of  the  Uncompahgre  rts- 
IVZ  I  ervation  in  Utah.  The  bill  was  then 
^^«  I  passed. 

I      At    last    night's    session    the    general 
I4f(     deficiency    bill,   carrying  $8,166,214,    was    * 
passed  by  a  vote  of  157  for  to  73  against. 
The  sundry  civil  bill,  carrying  $53,147,- 
771,   was  also  passed,  131  to  81. 


5S>4 


^    ,       WILL   RUN    KILL   TIMF:. 
halem.      March        2ii.— The        Naumkeag 
sieani  cotton  mills,  whieh  have  been  run- 
on*  1  "m"*^  ""  '^**"'  *"'""  •'*'""^''  J"ne  1.  189S.  start- 
i  r.'2."'^  ''''^^^'  '^^  f""  time,  employing  about 

'■  oor,  !  l*-'"'  men. 


CHAS.  EVANS  HOLT.  507  CHAMBER 
of  Commerce.  If  you  want  anything  in 
my  line— accounting.  auditing,  oook- 
keepmg— temporarily   or   regularly,    call 


I  have  for  sale  a  few 
chnice  commercial  loans — 
$500  up. 

A.  R.  Macfarlane 


13  EXCHANOE  BUILDING. 


«t»TiitiiTiiT_ 


BEST   LINE 

ST.  PAUL 

AND 

MINNEAPOLIS 


FOR 


58H 


THE  CHICAGO  MARKET. 
Chicago.    March    2t\-Wheat,         Closed 

7?>4c;  Sep- 


Half     price     until     April     1.       Regll, 
Jeweler.  105  West  Superior  street. 


Subscribers  to  The  Evening  Herald 
Who  do  not  get  their  paper  regularly 
Will  please  promptly  report  the  matter 
at  once  to  this  office.  It  is  the  intention 
to  have  The  Herald  delivered  promptly 
and  regularly. 


The  Ladies  will 
always  find  several 
features  prepared 
expressly  for  them 
in  The 
Saturday  Herald. 


Liquor  License. 


STATE   OF  MINNESOTA.   COUNTY   OF 
ST.   LOUIS,    CITY   OF   DI'LUTH-SS. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of 'said  city  of  Duluth.  and  filed 
in  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  .sell 
intoxicating  liquors  for  the  term  com- 
mencing on  March  IS,  1897.  and  terminal - 
ing  on  March  18,  189S.  by  M.  J.  Dahlsten 
at   No.    19  Second    avenue   west. 

Said  application  will  be  heard  and  de- 
termined by  said  common  council  of  th« 
ci»y  of  Duluth,  at  the  council  chamber 
in  said  city  of  Duluth.  in  St.  Louis  Coun- 
ty. Minnesota,  on  Mondav.  the  r9th  dav 
of  March.  1897.  at  7:.30  o'clock  p.  m  of 
that   day. 

Witness  my  hand  and  seal  of  said  clt^^ 
?5   I^J"^^'    *h's  16th  day  of   March.    A. 

D.    ISUi. 

C.   E.   RICHARDSON, 

^(Corporate  Seal.)  ^"^  ^•^^*^' 

Duluth  Evening  Herald  March  16  to  29  Ipc 


ST. 


TO 

LOUIS. 


PILES 


Williams  Indian  Pile 
Ointment  is  a  suro  car« 
for  PILE*.  It  ab^orbfl 
tumors.  Stops  itchinir. 
GIVKS  RELIEF.  60c 
and  SI.    At  Drac<lEts. 


If  you  wish  to  drink  a 
Choice  glass  of  Lager 
call  for 
FITQER'S  BEER. 


HAIR  DREHHINii 


^"lPJ^,..,.-'°^i^^-'^'SON  (FORMERLY 
with  Midtsund  sisters,  of  St.  Paul )  ba^ 
opened  hairdresslng  parlors  at  room  41T 
Lonsdale    building. 


ff 


:' 


■■  mjj-      ■mim 


m^ 


: 


f 


■MMM9 


;pwa 


•■ 

i 

1 

1  ■ 

I 


mt 


■Vb   vl''aVl^»>.I^Ha^wll 


I       ■     ■  ^«^— ^»  p 


-4- 


l« 


^■iM^a^ai^k^ 


■ 


-f 


V  -^  1-A-^-*-' 


ONLY  EVeMINQ  PAPt:R  IIS  OULUTll 

miiiLD 

AN  INDEPENDENT  NEWSPAPER.  I 

Published   at    Herald   building.    220   West  ' 


THF!     DULFTn     EVENTyO     nET^ALH;   SATrKDAT.    y\\T{CU    20. 


1S07. 


projrresa  in  other  directions  may  have  I  the  most  valuable  parts  of  the  school 
been,    and  it   is  a   soun-e  of  wonder  to   system. 


every  European  who  visits  the  Ignited 
States,  that  we  have  been  content  to 
Itave  our  roads  In  such  wretched  shape. 


at    Herald    building. 
Superior  street. 


Duluth  Publishing  &  Printing  Go. 

TEL.EPHONE  CALLS: 

CVinnting  Rciorn    3*^4,  two  rioxs. 
Bditorial  Boom« — 324,  three  rinK». 

TEN  CENTS  A  WEEK 


Every  Evening.  Delivered  or  by  Mail. 


Bingle  copy,  dally 

One  month . 

Three  montha 

Bix  muntha .„. 

Oneycar    


.-$  .02 

...    .45! 

1.S0 
...  2.60, 
..     6.00  I 


RAILWAY  BUILDING. 

Followins'  its  yearly  i  ustom,  the  Rail- 
way Ape  presents   this  week  a  list   of 
new  railway  lines  which  are  either  un- 
der construction  or  are  projected  with 
some     reasonable     pi-ospect     of     beins 
built.     Of  course  this  list  does  not  in- 
<lude  all  the  lines  which  are  talked  of; 
fi»r  there  are  tens  of  thousands  of  addi- 
tional miles  laid  out  on  paper  and  in 
various  stajres  of  ajritation  and  advtT- 
tisement.      It    is    a    somewhat    delicate 
task  to  sift   out   those  i>ri>jects     which 
seem  worthy  of  consideration  as  hoKl- 
inp  out  a  tangible  hope  of  actual  con- 
struction during  the  cominj?  year,  and 
the  Railway  .\se  has  no  idea  that  all 
the   mileaK^  shown   in   the  list   will   be 
built  in  1S97— or  in  1S9S— «ir  in  1J(99.    The 


Considerable  sTir:»rise  ha.s  been  ex- 
pressed with  those  conversant  with  thi- 
facts  over  a  rumur  that  members  of 
the  school  board  have  talked  about 
abolishini:  the  kinderprartens  and  insti- 
tuting:, in  their  place,  cookinv?  schools 
or  some  other  fad.  It  i§  amazlnp  that 
any  person  cimnected  with  the  managro- 
ment  of  the  schools  should  consider  for 
one  mnment  the  idea  of  abolishing  the 
kitulerjrartens.  Their  value  is  inestim- 
able and  steadily  increasing,  and  as  the 
people  generally  become  acquainted 
with  the  splendid  results  of  their  work 
they  grow  in  public  favor.  Let  tlie 
kindergartens  be  sparedl 


each  year  to  suply  the  needs  of  New 
York  city.  With  the  intense  heat  in  the 
summer,  lee  i.s  indispensible  there. 

The   legislauiie   cannot   afford   to   let. 
the  charges  of  corruption  in  connection 
with   the  fourth   insane   hospital     pass 
without  a  thorough   investigation. 

Minneapolis  has  found  a  city  trea- 
surer at  last.  How  long  he  will  remain 
is  a  question  that  cannot  be  answered. 


W.H»lily  Herald,  $1.00  per  year ;  M)  cents  for  cix  |  list  includes  :jOO  different  lines  in  forty- 


monthi>:  2S  eent«  for  three  months. 


Enter<>d  at   the  Dnlntb  poetoffice  as  t«ootid 
olase  matter. 

LARGEST  CiRCULATlON  IN  DULUTH 

Official  Paper  of  the  City  of  Oulutb 
HERALD'S  CIRCULATION  HIGH-WATER  MARK 

17,148. 


THE  WEATHER. 


I'nited  St;U»s   AgrU  iiliural    I  Vpartm'-nt. 
\Veaiher     ttureau.     Duluth.      Synopsis    uI 
weather    i-omlltions    t">r    the    twi>iity-foiir 
hi»urs   ending   at    7   a.    m..    tC'«'i\iral    tim-o. 
Marih  l""*.— The  storm  is  eentral  tliis  morn- 
ing   in     Tpper    Mii-hiR.-in.     having    niov,-d 
from  Missouri  acro-^s  the  Mississi[)|>i   val- 
ley   an«l    the    upper    lake    region,    caiisinsf 
general  rains  or  sn<»ws  in  those  districts. 
Minnesota    and     F'astern     Manitolta.     Th-* 
pr< cipitation    has    luen    heavies:    in    Wis- 
i-onsin.    Miehigan    and    Kastern    Miniu-so- 
ta.    amoantinK    to   .i^i   ineh    at    Detroit.    M 
ineh    .It    St.    rani.    .71    ineh    at    llaiHiuetti' 
and    l.."i»    at     Milwaukee.      Thaiulrestorms 
iK-curre<l    at    Kansas    City    and    «'hiciigo. 
Snow  and   rain  continue  in   I'pped   Michi- 
gan and  from  the  venter  of  the  storm  the 
sky    is    overc-ast       as    far    southwest    an<l 
West  as  the  Missonri  ami   Red   River  val- 
leys,   with    a    ehan.ire    of    winds    to    west- 
erly. 

The  temperature  has  fallen  decidedly 
throughout  the  re-^ion  l>etwe«n  the 
RiK'ky  mountains  and  the  Mississippi  val- 
ley, and  in  the  Canadian  Northwest. 
where  it  ranees  from  slightly  l>elow  zero, 
at  the  most  northerly  stations,  to  2* 
alnive   zero    in    Southern    K.insas. 

Lowest    temperatures    las:    night: 

Calgarj-    UMattl -ford    .. 

Prince    .Albert    ...— 4  .Medicine    Hat 


Minnedosa  ... 
Swift  Current 
Williston  ..  . 
Fort    .\rthur    . 

Mariiuetto    

Havre    

Huron    

Duhitn    

La    Crosse    

Lander    

DavenjHirt    

Detroit    

l^odge   Citv    

Xi>rth    Platte   .... 

St.    Louis    

—  Denotes  Indow 


12  Winnipeg    .. 

OQu     .Appelle 

—11' 'Bismarck    

22  Helena    

:C  Sault    Ste.    Marie 

0  Miles   Citv    

■:■■<  .«!t.   p.iui   

oJ  Moorher.d    

21  Milwaiikef 

S  Rapid  City  

3»> 'Omaha    

{•>  Chicago    

2S  Kansas   (. 
22 'Denver    .. 
>1  'Memphis 
zero. 


six  states  and  territories  aggregating 
in  all  17.511  miles.  If  20  per  cent  of  this 
total  is  actuall.v  ))uilt  this  year,  it  Will 
be  doing  well.  That  would  mean  near- 
ly as  much  new  construction  in  1897  as 
has  been  lompleted  in  the  last  two 
years  combined. 

That  more  new  lines  will  be  built  this 
year  than  in  either  of  the  last  two  there 
is  every  reason  to  expect.    The  general 
conditions     are  most     promising.     The 
break  in  the  prices  of  steel  rails  will  im- 
doubtedly  help,  even  though  the  actual 
wonomy   resulting  therefrom    (averag- 
ing,  perhaps.  $70«>  a  mile,  as  compared 
with  the  prices  rulin.g  immediately  be- 
fore the  break)  is  a     relatively     small 
item  in  the  total  cost  of  con.struction. 
!  The  item  is  suflicient  to  make  the  task 
j  of  financing  just  a     little     easier.     In 
'  some  cases  it   will   undoubtedly   be  eti- 
1  ough  to*turn  the  scale,  for  there  are  in- 
stances in  which  steel  has  been  bought 
for  new  construction  which   would   not 
have   been    l>ought    witiiout    the   break; 
'  and  when  the  steel  is  bought  there  is 
I  another   inducement    for   putting    forth 
t  every  effort  to  complete  other  arrange- 
I  ments. 

There  may  be  new  projects,  not  on 
this  list,  which  will  tome  up  during  the 
year  and  on  which  s()me  tracklayin.g 
may  be  done.  They  will  not.  however. 
I<e  many  or  of  great  magnitude.  The 
bulk  <»f  the  ccmstruction  will  be  done 
from  the  list.     The  states  showing  the 


The  Wasliington  corespondent  of  the 
Chicago  Reeord     says:     "The  president 
has   notnlnated   'Oom   Jack'   Gowdy,   of 
Indiiina.   for  consul     general     to  Paris, 
and   the  senate   will   doubtless  confirm 
him.  claybank  whiskers    and     cowhide 
boots  included.     There  is  no  question  of 
Mr.  dowdy's  honesty  or  manhood,  but 
there  is  a  scjious  doubt  as  to  the  pro- 
priety of    assigning  a  person     of     his 
habits  and  uncouth  manners  to  such  a 
position    as    the    consulate    general    at 
Paris.     While   he   has  natural   wit   and 
shrewdness,  and   while  he  is  an  excel- 
lent  farmer,   the  office   to   which   he  is 
appointed  can  only  be  properly  filled  by 
a  matt  of  the  world,  who  can  speak  the 
French  language  and   is   familiar  with 
the  foreign  trade.     Mr.  CJowdy  will  be  a 
popular  subject  for  the  caricaturists  of 
the  French     newspapers,     and     within 
thirty   days  after   his  arrival  in    Paris 
the  burlesque  actors  will  b,^  giving  imi- 
tations of  the  United  States  consul  gen- 
eral  at    the   theaters   <omique   an«.l   the 
cafes  chantant.' 


It  may  comfort  some  people  to  learn 
that  Halm  of  ciilead  is  on  the  free  list 
of   the   Dinghy   tariff   bin. 


Corbott  has  admitted  that  the  Car- 
son City  event  was  a  heart-touching 
spectacle. 


1  ACROSS  THE  TEA  TABLE.  ♦ 
♦♦♦  *««^«^4«  «^«^  »♦♦♦♦♦♦«  ^^i 

"Come,    gentle   Spring!     ethereal    mild- 
ness, come  I 
Oh:    Thompson,  void  of  rhyme  as  well 
as  reason. 
How    could'st    thou    thus    poor    human 
nature  hum? 
There's  no  such  .season." 


The  war  clouds  still  hover  over  Crete. 

ThTdiNGLEY   BILL. 


Minneapolis  'I'imes  (Ind.):  The  McKinley 
tariff  was  a  .lownhill  revenue  measure-. 
It  was  going  ;,t  a  terrillc  .speed  when  it 
was  taken  off  the  track.  Let  us  hope  th.it 
the  Dingley  bill  ),e  not  only  a  more  equit- 
able measure  than  the  McKinley  law,  but 
more  fortunate  in  its  operations  than  the 
Wilson  tariff,  whieh  it  is  destined  to 


sup- 


ity 


24 

a 

M 

20 

r. 

20 
3J 
40 
34 
24 
62 


Duhith  temp«-rature  at  7  a.  m.  tod.iy. 
S3:  maximum  .vesterday.  at:  minimum 
yesterday,  ol :  rainfall  and  meltetl  snow 
for  the  twenty-four  hours  ending  at  7  a. 
m.   today.   .'X>  inch. 

Local  fi»reeast  for  Dultuh  and  vieinity: 
Fair  amd  decidwlly  colder  tonight;  fair 
Sunday:  northwest  and  wtst  winds,  oc- 
casionally l>risk. 

.J.AM  KS    K  KN K.A L V. 
Local    Koreeast    Official. 


Chicago.  March  20.— Forecast  until  8  p. 
Tn.  ti»morrow:  For  Wis<-onsin:  Fair  to- 
night an»l  Sunilay;  ei>hler  lonischt:  fre^'i 
Westerly  winds.  For  Minne.«ota:  Fair 
tonishi  antl  Sunday:  colder  tonight; 
warmer  in  west  iMirtion  Sutida.v:  fresh 
northwest    winds,    iievoming    variable. 


.-10 
.—  « 
.  2S 
._  s  ;  greatest  projected  mileage  are:    Indian 

•  ^  I  and  Oklahoma  territories,  jointly,  1917 
miles:  Texas,  1.56.T  miles;  Missouri.  S77 
miles;  Indiana.  S07  miles;  tb'orgia,  SOo 
miles;  Illinois,  706  miles:  Louisiana,  665 
miles;  West  Virginia,  6.')9  miles;  Ala- 
bama. 6:J3  miles;  Pennslyvania,  58S 
miles;  Virginia.  .^Sl  miles;  Wisconsin, 
301  miles.  The  remaining  states  show- 
less  than  .lOO  miles  each. 

Among  the  more  imp«irtant  roads  al- 
ready under  construction  or  which  .give 
promise  of  activity  during  the  year,  the 
Age  includes  the  following:  "In  Wis- 
consin the  Minneajiolis.  St.  Paul  &  .Ash- 
land, projected  from  Ashland  to  St. 
Croix  Falls.  150  miles,  has  already  com- 
pleted twenty-three  miles  of  track,  and 
in  Minnesota  the  Great  Northern  has 
recently  made   surveys   for     the     long 


It  is  related  that  a  handsome  yoini.g 
guardsman  was  re.rding  in  the  library 
at  Windsor  castle  the  other  day  when 
the  ghost  of  Queen  Klizabeth  dropped 
in  to  see  him.  The  profane  say  that 
the  queen's  taste  has  not  changed  at  all 
pince  she  becatne  a  ghost.  It  seems  that 
the  old  librarian  at  Windsor  has  lieen 
on  the  watch  for  the  royal  spectral  lady 
for  years,  and  now  she  appears  to  the 
young  guardsman  instead.  His  name 
is  Lieut.  C.lyn.  He  is  a  relative  of  a 
bishop,  and  his  father,  a  veteran  of  the 
Crimea,  testifies  as  to  the  truthfulness 
of  his  offspring,  who  Is  said  to  be  as 
good-looking  as  Walter  Raleigh.  What 
action  the  Psychical  Research  society 
will  take  is  not  announced. 


ret'l  ■ 

our 

adminis- 

provisioii 

on  cer- 


The  Minnesota  Tax  Reform  associa- 
tion has  prepared  a  single  tax  bill 
which  has  been  introduced  in  the  legis- 
lature. It  is  of  the  local  option  variety, 
and  pr«)vides  for  a  constitutional 
amendment,  under  which  the  electors 
of  any  county,  city,  village  or  township 
of  th.^  state  may,  at  any  general  elec- 
tion or  town  meeting,  by  a  majority  of 
all  the  votes  cast  in  such  ctmnty,  city, 
villa.ge  or  township,  exempt  from  taxa- 
tion, for  local  purposes  only,  all  build- 
ings and  structures  and  other  imi)rove- 
ments  being  and  situated  in  such 
county,  city,  village  or  township. 


WHAT    GOOD    ROADS   ItVAti. 

Surely,  if  there  is  anyone  to  be  bene- 
fited by  the  improvement  of  our  coun- 
try roads,  it  is  the  farmers.  The  trou- 
ble  with  those  who  are  objecting  to 
road  improvements  is  often  that  they 
are  too  short-sighted  to  see  their  own 
advantage.  They  forget  that  every  trip 
to  town  with  a  load  of  crops  means  an 
exr«enditure  of  time  and  effort,  wear 
an  tear  («n  wagon.s  and  harness,  all  of 
which  means  dollars  and  cents  to  them ' 
in  an  indirect  way. 

Good  roads  not  only  mean  larger! 
I>>ads,  they  mean  faster  trips.  They 
mean  that  where  it  required  four! 
horses  to  draw  a  given  load  while  the: 
road  was  pcwjr,  only  two  horses  are  I 
necessary  after  it  is  i»roperly  ini- ' 
proved;  that  the  wast)n  and  the  l»uggy ; 
will  last  twice  as  long,  because  of  less  I 
hard  u.<<age 
roads.  They 

the  next  house  is  chHTeased  by  half, 
because  it  takes  only  half  as  long 
as  before  to  reach  it  with  the  liuggy. 
They  mean  that  the  farmer  can  see 
his  neighbors  oftener.  and  come  into 
closer  touch  with  the  world,  doing 
mu<  h  towards  his  higher  civilization. 
They   mean    that    his  children   can   get 


projected  extension  from  Fosstim 
Duluth,. but  it  is  by  no  means  certain 
that  it  will  be  built  this  year."  The  Age 
has  not  made  mention  of  the  Duluth 
&  North  Dakota  as  likely  to  be  con- 
structed this  year,  or  of  the  projected 
extension  of  the  Duluth.  Supericjr  & 
Western,  the  new  name  of  the  Duluth 
&   Winnipeg. 


Prcdessor  Karl  Weier.strass,  who  re- 
cently died  in  Reiiin.  and  was  ac- 
counted one  of  the  greatest  mathemati- 


to  j  cians  of  the  time,  was,  notwithstanding 
his  fame,  a  man  of  great  modesty. 
.^'ot^d  mathematicians  of  other  c-oun- 
tries  not  seldom  came  to  Berlin  for  the 
express  purpose  of  discussing  abstruse 
questions  of  .science  with  him,  and 
among  his  special  admirers  was  the 
kink  of  Sweden,  who  is  an  interested 
otudeiit  of  niatlieniaiics. 


BY  POPULAR  SUBSCRlPriON. 
.Mr.  Lovejoy,  a  Minneapolis  represen- 
tative, has  introduced  in  the  legislature 
a  bill  of  some  interest  relative  to  muni- 
cipal bond  issues.  In  cities  of  50,000 
population  in  Minnesota,  authorized  to 
issue  bonds,  all  such  securities  are  to 
be  issued  in  denominations  of  $.")0.  .$100. 
$.^00,  $1000,  so  that  the  desired  loan  may 
i)e  taken  by  popular  sul>scripti(m,  the 
bonds  l>eing  made  payable  in  from 
twenty  to  thirty  years  with  interest 
from  3  to  5  per  cent  payable  .semi-an- 
nually. The  city  council  or  controller 
is  to  advertise  for  bids  and  actual  resi- 

on   gravel   hills   and    stony'  '''""''''  "^  *^*'  ''**'  "'"''  ^'*  ^'*'  l"'^'f'''""'tl  in 
mean  that  the  distance  to'  '*"**^  "»'*'  and  no  bi)nds  can  be  sold  for 


,..';'I)I'"'{^M  Tim-s-Herald  (Rep.):  The  now 
taim  1)111  has  h.en  constructtMl  bv  su<  h 
tariff  exi.erts  as  Dingley,  Dalzell".  Ho„- 
Ivin.s-.  Grosven.r  and  Dolliver.  who  h.ive 
made  a  study  oi'  the  subjcxt  in  all  Us 
varied  a.spc-ets.  'Ihe  bill  rcDreseiits  m.in\- 
weeks  ot   p.itient.   holiest   and  cliliKeni  in- 

•  jiiii-.v   into   th.    status   of   the    various   in- 

•  lustries    to    he    atfecteci. 
«'hicago    Chr.,niele    (Dem.>:    Bv    incrots- 

ing  ta.x.-s  and  j.lacing  a  IiunliMi  on  the 
people,  of  whi.  h  I  he  government  gets  hut 
httle  heneht,  while  .•-peciili.tors  and  mo- 
nopolist.-, get  n,  arly  a.!!  the  b-  ncht.  P.-.-si- 
dent  .AfcKinlev  and  Iiis  speeial  session  ar.' 
prepai-in;r  a  U.  |.ahliean  defe;U  in  ]S!)S  as 
ov<  r\yhelmtntr  as  tho.^..  of  1S!W  and  1S92. 
.And   ihe.\-  eaniiot   see  it! 

i'hica.go  Post  (Hep.);  Of  course  the  op- 
ponents of  pro)  M( ion  already  predict  fail- 
ure for  the  n,  w  tarilf.  Thc-y  allc-ge  that 
7'"  '•'''"'«  oft  of  imports  will  he  so  h'-avv 
tliat  the  leveiju,'  will  lie  decreased  oii 
most  sehedul.  y.  It  Were  idle  to  c-cjmh,.t 
tiiese  speculative  assertions.  Time  alone 
can  prove  llie  (  oifeet  liess  of  the  Dinglev 
e.stimates.  In  imelMgc  in  husiiiess  cirel-'s 
his    fore-cast    is   K«'nerally    indorsed,    how- 

Minnevipolis  .foiirnal  (Rep.):     In     a     few 

schedules  like  wool.  Woolens.  Wine  anel 
spirit.s  and  tohac-o.  the-  .average  of  duties 
IS  as  hiKh  as  in  the  tariff  eif  ISIXI.  Triflini? 
change  from  the-  present  tariff  lias  iWii 
e-neeteel  in  the  iron  and  steel  schedule- 
and  c-otfon.  Th.'  ;,'re.it  principle  „f 
procify.  whieli  show.d  its  value-  te. 
e-ommerce  und.-r  tli.-  Harrison 
tration.  has  I)e.-ii  re-stored  and 
is  made-  f.>r  a  reduction  of  duti.  . 
tain  articles  ti»  those  e-enuitrie-s  makinc 
conce-ssions    to    the-    l-nile-d    States 

Indianapolis  .Journal  (Rej).):  One  of  the 
Jidmirahle  fe-atuns  of  the-  Dinirlev  tariff 
1)111  !s  a  provision  whh-h  reeiuires  those 
who  visit  Kun.p,  te)  pay  duty  on  all  but 
?1<M»  we)rth  e.f  ilu'  .uoods  whie-li  thev  bring 
hoine  as  lia;:g.,K,  .  I'n.ler  tlie  i)resent  law 
and  under  the  Me  Kinley  law  pa.s.'^engers 
were  permitted  to  hring  back  sue-h  wear- 
ing ai)parel   and  other   personti   e-ffe-els  as 

were  iiee-essary  and  appropriate-  fe)r  the- 
use  f)f  such  person.s."  or  for  the-ir  pres- 
e-nf  ce)mfe)rl  and  ee)nvenience-.  The  re-sult 
<>r  such  a  loose  law  is  that  thousands  of 
.Americans  went  abroad  to  do  their  own 
and   others'   shopping. 

Philadelphia  R.t-ord  (Uem.):  In  plain 
truth,  the-  only  sure  .and  sul)stantial  ,n- 
crc-ase  of  revciuies  provided  for  in  t  he- 
entire-  bill  is  in  the-  duties  on  sugar  Tht- 
eeimmittee  puri>e.se-Iy  under.stima  te-s  th.- 
revenue-s    fre)ni    sugar    from    $8.()ihi.(mh>    tei 

?lll.()(H».(l(t()    in    e.rde  r    te)    sw.-II     the-    tictitiou'; 

re-veniies  fre)ni  in.  r.-ase.l  prote-ctive  dutie-s 
upon  .Iwinellin-  imi.e)rts.  It  borrows  aiiei 
enlarges  the-  sug.ir  .sc-hediile  of  the-  pre-s- 
ent  tariff  for  tli--  i)urpe)se-  of  obtaining 
nen-ded  revc-nue-  anel  in  ne-arlv  all  the  resl 
of  the  bill  it  has  sae  ritic.-d  consiele-ra- 
lions  of  public  re-venue-  to  the  insatiate 
private  grec-d  for  tariff  spoils.  In 
"inence-.  its  esliinate^s  of  re-venue 
fal.«e  as  the  priii -iple  on  which  the 
toundcel. 

<'hicago  Tnl)uiie  (Rep.):  The  re-enact- 
ment e)f  the-  wi-ed  and  wejolens  .schedule- 
ot  I.yxj  would  hi-  the  same  as  pnltin^  a 
eluty  of  ovi-r  !Nt  per  cent  on  woolen  eloth- 
ing.  which  is  e.ni-  of  the  nec-e.ssarie-s  of 
life   in    this   ceuintrv.    That 


conse- 

are-    as 

bill  is 


mole- 


Thomas  Hood  voiced   the   feelings  of 
many  of  us  in  this  snow-covered  world. 
March  is  not  apt  to  give  us  ideal  days! 
or  be  a  season  we  wek-ome  with  joy  and 
thanksgiving,  and  the  only  way  to  look 
at  the  matter  is  to  look  ahead.     Surely 
May  cannot  be  very  unkind  to  us.  after 
we  have  borne  the  burden  of  snow  for 
five    long    months.      Wintc-r    has    never 
.seemed  se>  long.     Fervent  prayers  have 
gone  up  to  let  the  time  pass  as  quic-kly 
as  i)ossil)le,  and  give  us  bright  skies  anc< 
green    grass   and    a   sight    of    the    blu- 
waters  of  the  lake  in  spring  glory.     But 
we  are  like  Hood.    There's  no  such  sea- 
-son    for  us   in    Duluth.      Winters   cold, 
and   rains  and   fog,   usher   in   sumnur- 
we    seldom    have    much    of     an    inter- 
niediate  season,  such  as  falls  to  the  le)t 
of  thcise  in  a  milder  climate,  such  as  the 
middle  country  is  enjoying  now.  Down 
in  the  South,  Florida  and  Georgia,  and 
all    those   sunny    Southern    worlds,    the 
warm  days,  the  ripening  fruits,  the?  soft 
air.    all    charm    the      Northern    visitor- 
while   the   lains  and    floods,   the   warm 
t'un.  which  is  a  lilt  deceotive  now  and 
then,    proclaim    March     an     uncertain 
month    in    the    country    lying  just    t>e- 
tween  us  and  the  .South.     Here  is  slush 
and  snow,  and  dampness  and  rain    but 
It  means  the  fust  note  of  spring-  'that 
spring    which    will    have    many    a    set- 
back,  but    which,   al.)ng  with   summer 
IS  surely  coining  to  us.    All  we  have  to 
do  It  to  wait,  and  was  there  ever  such  a 
hard    word    to    learn'.'        The    feminine 
vocabulai-y  contains  nothing  more'difli- 
cult    to    master     than    that    one    little, 
word. 

•    •    • 
That   sprin-g  feeling  we-  all  acknowl- 
edge,   the    stirring   of    life    and   action 
c-omes   with   peculiar   force   to   womau- 
Kind.      It    is    she    who    must    stimulal - 
appetites,    freshen    the    home,    bri.ghteu 
the  days  and  start   the  spring  sewing 
so  as  to  keep  the  clothes  in  accoru  witli 
the     aswct    of      the    freshly   awakencnl 
world.     There    is    no   season    harder    te: 
tide  over  with  feminine  garments  than 
just   this  one.     The  sun  is  so  glaringly 
bright,  he  shines  so  unmcrcifuUv  on  the 
winter-worn    gowns    and    jacki>ts    an^i 
hats;     he  is  .so  pitiless  te)  dust  and  the 
worn  spot.     He  shows  the  slightest  de- 
fect.    One  hesitates  to  renovate  winter 
garments  for  spring.    Rut  it  is  rc-ally  a 
wise    prc-caution    in    this    intermediate 
sea.son.     .A   bottle  of  gasoline   for  dusi 
and  grease  .spots;  a  damp  cloth  and  a 
good  hot  iron  te)  jjiess  out  the  edges  e)f 
a  skirt;  a  sound  whipping  and  brushin-g 
will  go  a  great  way  toward  making  the 
cloth    dress    which    has    dtme    duty    al! 
winter  last  a  few   weeks  longer     "  The 
dainty  little  hat   brushes  which  are  so 
indispensable  on  the  toilet  table  have  a 
fashion   of   searching  out    the   dust   on 
hats  and  bonnets,  and  vou  will  be  sur- 
prised, my  dear  sister,  to  see  how  well 
you   will   be  repaid   by  just  such  small 
abors  now.    The  shops  are  full  of  lovely 
bright,  fresh,  fragil  goods  which  tempt 
the  dollars  out  of  the  purse-,     but   who 
wants   to   put   the  dainty,   fresh  spring 
gown  on  now.  or  even  a  month  later  to 
have   the   moisture  in   the  atmejsphere, 
and  fogs,  and    dampness    take    all  the 
fresh  c-rispness  out  of  it.     Another  thing 
fashion's   whispers  are   that   we  are   to 
have  a  change.    Skirts,  and  sleeves,  and 
bodices  are  all   t.)  have  that   indiscrib- 
altle  touch  of  change  which  marks  the 
new    from    the   old.       A    narrow    skirt 
smaller  sleeves,  even  than  we  have  been 
wearing,— a  different  cut  tej  the  4>odice 
and  a  profusion  to  the  trimming.     SavJ 
the  mark:     How  we  shall   hate  the  bc- 
rutHed,   betrimmed.     skirts.     Tlie     i)lain 
<inc-s  were  so  much  prettier    and  more 
.simpler.     But  the  advance    guard    car- 
ries news  of  all  This  and  more  too,  and 
it   is  just  as  well   to  temporize  a  little 


put  on— that  is  exceedingly  delightful,    same   time   half  close   the   bright   eyes 

but  they  must  be  watched  to  see  that 

they  are  kapt  in  good  condition.    And 

it  is  so  hard     in     this    climate,     where 

heavy  wraps  crush   fragile  trimmings, 

to  keep  up  the  necessary  repairs.  Onlv 

constant  watchfulness  will  avail. 


In   planning  for  the  spring     clothes, 
did    you   ever   realize,    my    dear   sister, 
that  you  have  a  color.  That  your  hair 
and  eyes  glisten  and  .shine  in  the  reflec- 
tion cast  upon' them  from  the  gown  or 
hat,  or  the  accessories  that  you  wear'' 
It  is  true,   though  there  are'  some  fa- 
vored individuals  who  can   wear  any- 
thing.   But  one  woman  of  my  acquain- 
tance who  knows  herself  and  her  pos- 
sibilities thoroughly  always  wears  blue 
Blue  in  varying  shades  is  the  keynote 
upon   which  she  builds  her  symphony. 
She  knows  that  it  deepens  the  rather 
pale  colorless  blue  of  her  eyes,   brings 
out  the  ro.se  in  her  comi)lexion,  shows 
the  gold  in  her  hair,  and  she  is  wise. 
Another  woman  who  is  positively  plain 
in   dark,    heavy     gowns,     is     radiantly 
pretty  in   light  summer  fabrics.   Noth- 
ing  light    or   stiff   suits   her.       All    the 
dainty  effects  of  lace  and  ribbons  bring 
out  her  beauty,  and  yet,  now  and  then, 
she  clothes   herself   in    the   tailor-made 
garment,  which  is  utterly  unbecoming. 
Dark  women   me)re  than  fair  need     te) 
study  colors  and  combinations.     Black 
and   white — when   well  chosen,     cannot 
fail  to  be  becoming  to  almost  anyone, 
but  dark  women  especially  need  to  be 
rather  liberal  in  the  use  of  white  if  the 
combination  is  much  worn.    Black  and 
i»ld  rose,  or  soft  i)ink  is  generally  a  wise 
and  pretty  union  of  effects,  and  judi- 
ciously used  is  extremely  softening  to 
certain    wrinkles   and    lines   which    the 
passing   of  youth    has   left     upon     the 
face.    Scarlet  is  the  keynote  of  the  sea- 
son, this  has  been  so  elaborately  used 
in   Paris  and   in   the. East   this   winter, 
that   we  are   bound   to     have     it     this 
si-ring.     But  since  all  fabrics  for  sum- 
mer are  transparent,  hapi)ily  it  will  be 
veiled  with  gauze,     and     old-fashioned 
liareges,  and   organdies,   and   lace,  and 
net.     For  we  are  to  have  another  sea- 
son   of   this   pretty   fashion    of   colored 
silks  and     muslins     veiled     with     thin 
goods.    It  i.s  such  a  summery,  light  and 
graceful   fashion,  and  one  welcomes  it 
gladly.     Half   worn   silks   can   thus   do 
duty  for     foundations     for     organdies, 
and  bareges.     And  you  must  take  les- 
sons in  the  old-fashioned  art  of  tuck- 
ing, this  season;  for  tuck  and  tucks  are 
to  adorn  all  these  airy  fal)rics.     Tucks 
with  lace  edge?,  and  plain  tucks,  tucks 
in   bunches  and   groups,   tucked  skirts, 
and   sleeves   and    waists;     and     to     be 
abov^e  reprejach   these   tucks   must     be 
exactly  even,   they   must  not     vary     a 
hair's  breadth  in   v.idth.     This  gives  a 
thick  and  thin  effect  of  the  goods  over 
the  gay  colored     foundation     beneath, 
V.  hich  is  very  pretty. 


without  wrinkling  her  brow  or  cheeks 
or  nose.  It  is  an  acquired  gift,  as  every 
actress  will  tell  you,  and  only  to  be 
learned  by  careful  practice  before  a 
mirror.  One  wi.shes  that  a  teacher 
might  arise  among  us  and  show  wo- 
men and  men,  too,  how  to  close  the 
mouth  and  hold  it  closed.  A  study  of 
mouths  in  a  street  car  will  convinc- 
even  the  most  casual  observer  that 
there  are  few  people  who  sit  quiet  or 
abstracted  with  closed  mouths,  and  Is 
there  anything  more  disagreeable  to 
look  at  than  the  open  mouth'?  We  will 
all  have  to  take  up  the  study  of  facial 
expression  and  the  arts  of  fascination. 
It  is  quite  the  proper  thing  now. 

—AGATE. 


BITS  OF  JOLLITY. 


Detroit  Free  Press:  "I  danced  before; 
the  ofTicers  of  the  army,"  said  the  Hist 
ballet  girl,  as  she  made  an  inshoot  with 
her  nose. 

"In  the  Mexican  or  the  revolutionary 
war?  "  murmured  the  second  ballet  giri, 
and  the  manager  had  to  call  in  assisi- 
ance. 


Cincinnati  Enquirer;  "I  v.onder."  said 
the  pale,  blonde  one.  -if  she  really  is  as 
high  in  .society  as  slie  claims." 

"I  know  she  is."  said  the  brunette 
with  the  wealth  of  raven  locks.  "Shj 
is  the  only  woman  in  town  who  dares  Vi 
have  reporteri!  received  by  the  butler." 

Truth:  Prisc-illa— Jack  is  the  oddest 
fellow.  He  took  me  driving  yesterday, 
and  when  we  were  seven  miles  from 
home  he  .saiel  if  I  wouldn't  promise  to 
marry  him  he'd  make  me  get  out  and 
walk  Ijack. 

Penelope— Did  you  walk  l»ack? 

Priscilla — No,  indeed,  but  the  horse 
did. 


New  A'ork  Tribune:  "Papa,"  asked 
Willie,  'what  is  phenomenal?" 

"It  is  phenomenal,  my  son,"  explained 
Mr.  Wisepale,  "when  a  lawyer  is  cju- 
tent  with  a  nominal  fee." 


in    this   ceuintry.    That    will    be 
than    Inxurie-.-^    like-    silks    anel    lin.-    linen  >  while,  to  put  new  bindintrs  and  Pi.'inp^ 

Kinle-y  'sai.l  ilai-s  e.f  dtltV  sh'^Vld   b.-  im-    1'^.  ^A'''^^!;  "'"'   ^^♦^  are  sure     that     the 

with  the-  needle    will     be    worth 


Lady  Wallace,  who  has  just  died  in 
London,  bequeathed  an  almost  priceless 
cdlection  of  art  objects  to  the  British 
nation  and  her  entire  fortun?,  amount- 
ing to  $40.()00,0(X),  to  her  secretary,  a 
young  Englishman,  who  acted  in  a 
similar  capacity  te)  her  late  husband. 
Her  heirs  get  not  a  farthing,  of  cour.se 
there  will  be  a  hot  contest  over  the 
will,  and  th.^  lawyers  will  reap  a  rich 
harvest. 


of  duty  shoiilel  Ix'  im- 
pose-d.  .Assur.-.ily  it  is  not.  The-refoi-.. 
this  Dinsle-y  bill  is  not  one  te)  be  f>n- 
elorsi-d  enthusiastically  and  uniese-rvedlv. 
He  who  domamls  its  e-naetme-tu  inst  as 
it  c-e)mes  from  its  framers  hands  is  no 
frienel  of  the  Republiean  partv.  The-  true 
frie  nd  e)f  the-  party  is  the  person  who  lavs 
his  hiiKer  on  ti)is  ble-mish  in  the  bill  aii.l 
urge-s  .that  it  lie-  e-ut  e)ut  s.)  as  to  e.scape- 
a    repetitiejii    e)f    th.-    elee-tions    of    IStM)   anj 


labors 
while. 


less  than  par.  The  boncls  could  even  be 
issued  of  the  dene>mination  e)f  $25  or  $20. 
The  Minneapolis  Journal  says;  "In 
France  the  pc-aple  can  inve'st  their 
earnings  in  100-franc  bonds  ($20)  and 
there  is  no  reason  why.  under  such  a 
measure  as  is  pretposed.  the  p*-e)ple  will 
not  readily  get  accustomed  tc»  invest  j 
to  school  easier,  and  will  have  to  miss  I  savings  in  such  local  bcmds,  so  the  lat-  j 
school  less  often  e>n  account  of  muddy!  ter  would  be  held  at  home  instead  of 
roads.    They    mean    that    a    shower    of  |  'n. Chicago,    New    York   or    Bostim     or  i 

London.     The  measure  is  well   worthy  ' 
the  consideration  of  the  legislature."      I 


The    Buffalo    Courier   propounds    this 
conundrum:      'If  the    McKinb-y     tariff, 
v.hich    wiped   out  $60,000,000  of  revenue 
by  putting  sugar  on  the  free  list,  was  a 
I  more  effective  pioducer  of  revtmuc-  than 
is  the-  Wilse)n  tariff,  why  does  the  pro- 
1  i>ost-d  Dingley  tariff  increase  the  exist- 
,  ing  sugar  duties  with  the  view  of  pro- 
.  uucing  inlelitional   revenue   to  an  esti- 
mated  amount    between  $20,000,000  and 
?50,000,000'.'" 


crSH    D.AVIS   ON   TOP. 

Rush   City    Post:     The    ine-vit.ible-    h.ind- 

w-riling  e)n   the-   pe)litieal   wall   is   beginnfnir 

to     loom     up     like     the     traditional     liijht- 

house    in    the    historic    fog,    and    it    ele>es 


It  IS  not  always  the  woman  who  has 
the  latest  thing,  however,  who  c-arries 
with  her  that  ind?scribable  something 
we  c-all  style.  She  may  have  a  pattern 
French  bonnet,  an  imported  gown  and 
a  wrap  which  has  cost  a  fabulous  sum, 
a  jeweled  card  case,  and  certain  acces- 
sories which  bespeak  a  long  purse,  and 
yet  she  may  loe)k  like  a  dowdy  besid>? 
anejther  woman  whose  garments  are 
home-made.  The  home-made  woman, 
as  a  rule,  is  the  woman  who  has  been 


not  need  ii,Danie-l  to  Rle-an  therefrom  the  ;  taught,  or  has  taught  herself  the  value 
lact  that  Cush  D.avis  s  on  top.  and  that  t  of  the  «iiioii  »v.i«„„  "ci»eu,  uie.  \aiue 
l>ast     Belshazz.rs     have-     le-e-e^ived     a     1  eVeiv      '  Li?t    ,      ,  ^^V^^C^'        ^^'^      knows,    or 

blow.     Mueh    !ias   been    made   of   the   as-  i  ""f'?'  ^"  '^"".^^'  '^  she  takes  the  slight. 


1 

sumption    that    I);ivis.    bein.e   chairman    of  ' 
the- se-nate  e-ommiltc-e  on  fore-ign  re-lations.  | 
is   in   a  position    te)  em'oarrass   the-  admin-  I 
isiration    anel    th.it    Mc-Kinlc-y    has    there-  : 
ten-e    eleferre-el   'o  him;   but    the   fact   of   the 
m  ittc-r    is    that    the    oihe-r    fellows    rejn-e-  I 
sent    a    morilnind    minority,    while    Divis  1 
Iliads  a    live-ly    nKijorilv.    Republic.m    i)oli-  : 
ti.  s     in    this     state-      have-      unde-rgone    a 
i-hange-.  ;inii   two  yc-ars  he-nce.   wh<n   Min- 
ne-ape)lis    trie-s    lo   fje-l    the-   senatorial    tog  i  j 
lor    hi-rse-lf.    it     will    ne)t    be-    siiri>risin.^'    if  i 
Davis'  strength  is  much  in  »-xcess  e)f  wliat  ! 
ii    was   at   his  e  leetie)n.      It    is   a    lonj;   time- 
since-   Miniie-sot  I    has   hael   sue-h   a   WDrthv 
re  prcse  nt.it ive    in    the   si-nate. 


rain  will  not  keep  the  farmers  home  on ' 
electiim  day.   when  it   is   their  duty  to 
go   to   the  polls   and   vote.   They   mean 
that    it    will    itecome    i>ossibl€-   to    de- 1 
liver  mail  throughout  the  countr>-  dis- 
tricts,   instead    of    rec|uiring    people    in 
the  country   to  go   to  town   to   get    it.  ■ 
They    mean    greatf/r    conveniences    of 
many    kinds,    and    the    many    benefits ' 


THE  KINDERGARTENS. 

A  recent  issue  of  ()utle)ok  said:  "TIk 
study  of  children  is  now  ranking  as  a 
science  with  the  study  of  plants,  of 
birds,  of  stones.     The  most   intelligent 


thf  j 
range  of  themght  of  the  mother  covers  ! 
the  whole  realm  of  childhood  as  far  as 
she  can  know  it."  i 

The  kindergarten   s.vstem   is   the 


mothers  today  are  earnestly  interested 
which  necessarily  follow  better  nieansiin  methods  of  training,  of  amusing,  of 
of  communication  with  the  world  in  educating  their  c-hildren.  This  stinly 
P«-neral.  ,  produces    the     best    results    w  hen 

It    is    a    pleasure    te>    see      that       the 
frien<ls    of    the    gejod    roacjs    movement 
are    multiplying   every   year;    that    the, 
farmers'    institutes   are    taking   up    the- 
matter  e,f   geR)d    loads;    that    the   agri- j 
cultural  »4x-ieties  are  discussing  meanp 
of   improving  country   roads;    that    the! 
succi-.ssful  anel  pi-e»);re.ssive  farmers  are! 
taking  up  the  agitation  for  better  high- 1 
ways    and    convincing    the-ir    neighbors! 
upem  the  subject;  that  toad  machinery! 
is    kjeing    purchased    in    larger    quanti- 1 
ties  each  year;  that  the  numljer  of  town' 
meetings   w  hich  vote  to  retain   the  old ! 
system    of    "working    out"    the      road! 


Henry  Walterse.n  is  at  the-  helm  of  the 
Louisville  Courier  Journal.  There  can 
can  be  no  doubt  about  it,  liecau.se  a  re- 
cent  issue  .says;  "For  a  good  old 
Gyaskutis— sleek,  self-satisfied  and  yet 
viclou.s— with  ears  like  a  schooner- 
rigged  windmill  and  a  bray  long  enough 
to  reach  all  the  way  from  Bitter  Cr?ek 
to  Hell-for-Sartin— commend  us  to  the 
Lexington   (Ky.)  (Observer." 

Ostrich  plumes  are  in  fashion  for 
many  uses,  but  Mrs.  Ellitch,  of  Denver, 
whe)  drives  a  feathered  steed,  has  a 
unieiue  use  for  them.  She  manages  a 
::cjolaglcaI  garden,  and  has  trained  an 
ostrich  she  reared  te»  draw  her  about 
in  a  high  cart,  running  like  the  wind. 


Sh 


C    11 


bloom- 
classed 
as   her 


THE    .MODERN    MAID. 
lies  a   bie-yi-le-,   of  c-ourse,   in 
e-rs  or  in  skirts. 
-M    tennis   .inel   .at   coif  alike  she's 

with  the  c-xperts. 
She   pulls   an   oar  .ilmost   as   woll 

big  brother  e-.in. 
And  drives  a  he)rse-  as  skillfully  as  if  she 
were  a  man. 

She   knows   a  lot.    too— Greek  and   things, 

that  she  has  got  from  books. 
She   paints   and    plays    Ihe   mande)lin.    and 

til  Iks   real    Fre-nch.    and   cooks. 
She  dances  like  an  angel— you  know  how 

ange-ls    dane-e-:— 
And     countless    more        accomplishments 

her   natural   charms   enhance. 


in  ;i  word  the  very 


I      The     thrifty       Britisher     believes     in 
,    ^.  em-  '  •■•)mbining  patriotism   and     patron.ige. 

bodinicnt  of  the  idea  e-ontaine.l   in   the    .m.- in  London 


She's  most  attr.-ictive. 

sort  of  jKirl 
To  make'  a  young  man  crazy,  and  set  hl.s 

brain   a-whirl: 
She-   c-ven    knows,    her    mothe-r   sa.vs.    just 

how    to    keel)   a    house. 
But  ble-.ss  you:   How  that  girl  will  squeal 

whene'er    she-   se-es    a    mouse! 

— Soinerville-    Journal. 


(?st  interest  in  such   things,  and  for  a 
woman   not   to   take  an   interest   is  al- 
most  a   crime,    that    the   pretty,    well- 
hung  petticoat,     properly     boned  as  it 
should  be  nowadays,  is  an  actual  neces- 
sity  if  one's  gown  is  to  hang  proi)ei-ly. 
She   knows   that   her  shoes  and  gloves 
should,  like  Ceasar's  wife,  be  above  re- 
proach, and  that  little  item.ejf  gloves  is 
a  vital  one  just  now.     How  any  uoinan 
can  expect  to     carry  a  muff    and     yei 
have  clc-an.  pc-arl  gray  gloves  is  aom.'- 
thin.g  impossible)  to  comprehend.     This 
winter  has  .seen  more  violations  of  that 
little-  canon  of  good  breeding  and  good 
dressing  than  ever  before.     Pearl  gray 
or   white  gloves   are  all   very   well    Un- 
dress affairs  and  calls  of  state,  but  they 
should    be     irreproachable.      To     wear 
these   light   gloves  for  shopping  is  ex- 
ce>edingly   bad     taste;     to     wear     them 
scjiled  and  tawdry  looking  is  a  violation 
I  <Jf  all  the  laws  of  refinement.     Do.   my 
I  dear  sister,  indulge  in  darker  gloves  for 
I  everyday  wear,  and  when  you  don  the 
j  light  gray  and  white  ones,  let  them  be 
I  w  ithout  a  spot.    To  see  a  woman  carry 
I  a  white  bejeweled  card  case,  exquisite 
I  and  dainty,  in  hands  encased  in  soiled 
;  light  gloves     is     enough  to  make     one 
,  swear  to  eschew  light  gloves  evermore. 
I  The    fresh   veil,    the    fresh    gloves    and 
I  shoes,  the  clean,  fresh,     dainty     petti- 


The  thinking  woman  is  led  to  meiral- 
ize  now  and  then   upon  the  tendencies 
of  the  times.   Taking  it  altogether,  she 
does   not   believe  the  times  are   out  of 
joint.    We   have   had     so-called       hard 
limes,   I    know,   but   was  there  ever     a 
period    when    so    many    avenues    were 
ojiened    to    women,    and    realizing    this 
one  feels   that    the  woman   without     a 
Iturpose  in   life  is  not  up  to  date.    She 
loses  half    the   joy   of   living,    she   does 
not    know  that   her  life  can  be   broad- 
ened,   her    scope    enlarged,    her     capa- 
cities developed  and  her  happiness  in- 
creased  by   having  a    definite    purpose. 
It  may  be  a  pet  charity.  It  may  be  the 
Woman's    club    Duluth    needs,    it    may 
be  study,   or  it    may   be   fitting  her.self 
for  some  practical   kind   of  work.    Any 
or   all    of    these   things   are   good     and 
wholesome  occupations,  but  it  must  be 
something    that    gives    her    a    purpose 
and  lifts  her  above  the  petty  frittering 
away  of  time.  The  woman  with  a  pur- 
pose has  such  a  broad  choice  she  can 
de)    anything    now    that    she    cares   to.  i 
and  all   avenues  are  open    to   her.   She 
is  no  longer  frowne-d  upein   by  society, 
but  her  earnestness  in  work  impresses 
others.  She  is  no  longer  thought  odd  if 
she  uses  her  gifts  to  some  purj>ose.  or  i 
in    helping  others   helps   herself.       She' 
knows  nothing  of  the  gossip  and  talk  of  i 
the    nursery    and    kitchen,    the   discus- 1 
sion    of   nervc^s   and    illnesses  and    dis- 
appointments   which     stimulated       the 
small    talk   of  a   generation    ago.    It    is 
certainly    beneficial    in    tendency.    It   is 
certainl.v  a   power  for  .good   this  cap.i- 
city   they    have   for    weiik   and   absorp- 
tion   in    it,   and   it   must   stimulate  an<l 
develop   the   mind    if   we>men    will    only 
realize  how-    mucli    happier   they       can 
make  themselves.  To  the  mother  with 
little  children   there  is  enough  occupa- 
tion given.  She  has  her  purpose. in  life 
right   at   her   hand,    to       make       them 
strong  and   healthy,   train    them   to   be 
good  men  and  women,  and  to  give  them 
above    all    a    happy    home.    Surely    life 
holds    no    higher    purpose.    Those    who 
believe   in    the   woman's  club   say  that 
ail  of  this  development  comes  by  that, 
and  whereas  we  have  n<j  woman's  club 
proper,    in    Duluth,    still    we    have       a 
number   of    clubs    which    are    all    com- 
pesed   of   women,    which   might   be  en- 
tered  under  one  head.  A   recent   writer 
on    the   subjc-ct   in   alayzing   this,    says 
that    the    Woman's    club    is    the     out- 
growth   of  the  sewing  circle  and    Mite 
society    of  early    day.s.   that    its   evolu- 
tion   is    easily    traced    and    that    intel- 
lectually we  owe  it  more  than  can  be 
c^stimated.       That    here    women    feel    a ; 
sense  of  mental  exhilaration  never  felt  | 
any  w  here   else.        That    to   hear   Agnc-.'i ' 
Ri-pplier    read    a    trc^nchant    essay      or 
Louise    Moulton    read    her   poems    in    a 
voice  as  musical  as  the  words,  or  Ruth 
McEnery    Stuart    read    one    of   her    in- 
imitable stories,  en-  John   Burroughs  or 
Olive    Thorne    Miller   talk   of    birds   can 
but    open    and    broaden    the    mind    and 
give  one  a   greater   and    wider  outloe)k 
in  life.  These  plc^asures  will  all    be  de- 
nied us  unless  we  centralize  our  ener- 
,gies    in    Duluth    and    organize    a    Wo- 
man's club.  The  winter's  work  becomes 
such  a  delight  then    ♦•-r  besides  all  the 
usual  study  each  c-lub  within  the  dub 
ha.s.   there  are  just  such    delights      as 
these    I    have    spoken    of.       There    are 
charming    talkers    and    lecturers      who 


Chicagei  Tribune:  "I  understand  your 
friend  Billingsby  has  fa.llen  heir  to  tlie 
property  of  a  rich  uncle." 

"Thai  is  true.  " 

"That  puts  hint  in  good  shape,  then?" 

"Well.  no.  Nothing  c-ould  do  that. 
He's  had  to  hump  him.self  too  long  in 
ejrder  to  get  a  living.  But  it  makes  him 
rich." 


Washington  Star;  "I  don't  like."  le- 
marked  Senator  Sorghum,  "to  hear  a. 
man  constantly  asking  to  be  deliven-d 
from  his  friends." 

"It's  a  common  sentiment." 

"Yes;  l)ut  it  always  sounds  te>  me  as  if 
he  had   been   borrowing     money     fre)- 
them." 


Indianapolis  Journal:  Tommy— Paw. 
what  is  aclding  insult  tei  injury? 

Mr.  Fig-g— Well,  I  onee  had  a  ch-nlisi 
at  wenk  on  my  teeth  for  half  a  day,  anl 
when  he  got  through  he  said  he  hoped 
I  had  had  a  pleasant  time. 


, Household  Words:  Mother— You  d<i:i't 
know  how  you  worry  me,  dear;  why.  nu- 
hair  is  turning  gray!  Florrie— M>\  lie)\v 
.vou  must  have  worried  grandma;  her 
hair  is  all  white! 


Tid-Bits:  "I'll  never  ask  another  wo- 
man to  marry  me  as  long  as  1  live!" 
"Refused  again?"     "No;  accepted.  " 


Life:  Dining— Lawyer— But  my  busi- 
ness is  important.  Why  c-an't  1  see  the 
judge?    Servant— His  hemor  is  at  steak. 


Tid-Bits:  He  was  watc-hing  his  neigh- 
bor's troublesome  boy  c-limbing  a  tie-i  . 
and  he  had  a  look  of  painful  anxiety  on 
his  c-ounienance.  ".Are  you  afraid  tlie> 
lad  will  fall?"  was  asked  him.  -No," 
he  replied,  "I'm  afraid  he  we)n't." 


Cincinnati  Plain  Dc^aler:  "'What  a 
distinguished-looking  man!"  ""Yes.  th-- 
last  time  I  saw  him  he  was  on  tlie 
bench."  "What,  a  judge?  "  "No;  a  suo- 
stitute  ball  player." 


PEASK  GIVKS  WAR.MNG. 
Ane)ka  rnie)ii:  Hone)r.  equity,  justlc-e, 
rease)n.  district  court,  supreme-  c-ourt. 
must  all  hi'  laid  aside-,  when  boodle  ap- 
pears. If  there  is  a  t^id  in  Israel,  the-  time! 
will  come  in  this  state,  whe-n  sue-h  tliiiiKs 
cannot  be.  If  the  Republiean  parly  eaii- 
not  rise  to  the  emerKc-ncy.  seiim-  e)ther 
parly  will.  The  pe-e)ple  are-  catching  on, 
and  then  Goel  help  the-  party  in  i>owe>r. 

THE  RKJHT  IDEA. 
Rush  City  Post:  It  is  repent  eel  ih.tt 
the-  free  silverites  will  fjive  the  adminis- 
tration full  swing.  That  is  the  prope-r 
idea.  Time  will  te-l|  whe-the-r  iHote-etioii 
and  sounel   money  are  a    wise-  preii)e»sition. 

AT  GRAND  RAPIDS. 


Grand  Raiiids.  Minn..  March  20.— 
(Special  to  The  Herald.)— The  State 
Teachers'  institute  will  begin  here  on 
Monday,  March  29,  and  will  last  to 
and  including  the  succeeding  Friday. 

The  weather  was  very  unfavorable 
for  entertainments  last  night.  It  wa.s 
snowy  anel  slushy  and  thi.s.  following 
the  rains  of  mid-week,  made  hard  tia- 
vcling.  Dr.  Forbes"  lecturi'  was  pe).st- 
lioneci  and  the  debate  of  the  Public 
."school  Literary  society  had  but  a 
moderate  attendance  of  spectators. 
The  celebration  at  the  village  hall  on 
Wcdn^^sday  evening  was  fairl.v  well 
attended  and  the  participants  succeed- 
ed in  giving  the  audienc-e  the  w-e)rth  e)f 
the  admission  fee.  The  singing  was 
particularly  good. 

Frank  Keller,  of  Ypsilanti.  Mich., 
and  Tom  Murray,  the  well-kne»wn  box- 
er of  this  place,  will  come  togethc-r  in 
a  set  to  at  O'Connell's  gymnasium  in 
the  near  future.  It  is  ligurcnl  for  a 
match  of  twenty  rounds  for  points. 

The  new  village  council  has  .selected 
ex-Cemnty  Attoiney  Chc»ster  L.  Pratt 
for  village  attorney. 


1^ 


I 


*^^ 


P' 


■ 

1-  ^ 

i 

Rev.  E.  H.  Bull,  of  Tower,  will  pn'ach 
charge  a  small  sum  fen-  an  afternoon's  upon  "Moralitj-"  at  the  Presbyterian 
or  mourning's  talk,   and   hearing  it  at   church  tomorrow-. 

all,  listening  with  the  open  mind,  it  A  case  of  liquor  selling  without  a  li- 
dces  not  take  long  for  one  to  find  thel  cense  was  heard  yesterday  against  J. 
individual    bent    and    desires    to   culti- 1  J.  McDonald,  of  Swan  River.     He  was 


coats,   are  the   things   upon   which   the    vate  it  with  a  purpose.  It  may  be  that    held  to  the  grand  jury 


above  extract.  There  the  children  of  th.- 
mcjst  tender  age  are  studied,  and  tne 
first  insti-uction  imnarte.l  to  them  ac- 
cording to  methods  that  amuse  while 
they  c-ducatc-.  The  results  are  higlily 
beneficial  to-  the  children  and  to  the 
mothers  as  well.  No  one  can  become 
fully  acquainted  with  the  kindergarte:n 
system    without     being    strongly    con- 


asks  his  rellow-subjecls, 
in  anticipation  of  the  diaiiieind  jubilee 
tei  commemorate  "a  granei  and  glorious 
occasion.""  by  purchasing  at  his  esLTb- 
lishment  a  china  mug  of  pleasing  pat- 
tern or  other  similar  article. 


,  vinced  that   it  is  one  of  the  nie)st 
taxes    ,s    growing   smaller   continually,    p^^rtant     departments     of 
and    that    the    oUl    plow     and       shovel 

methejd    of    rcjad    building 

K  ■  .....         ^         '"'       ''  I  '*^'"    '"    connection    with      the      nublic 

being  cn>wded   back  i"*"  ♦*'"  ».«.,,.„  ..r       .  * '-      jjuimc 

history.   The    farmers   of 


im-  I 

educational  i 

work.    Duluth  has  a  kindergarten  sy.s- ' 

.  ^    .      .     .  ^'^    i"ar"dly;tem    in    ccmnection    with      the 

g  crowded   back  into  the  pages  of  i  schools  that  stands  in  the  front   rank 


The  present,  "father  of  the  British 
he)use  of  c-ominons,"  C.  P.  Villiers,  was 
in  parliament  at  the  time  of  the  queen's 
accession.  He  ought  to  have  a  li'ttle 
"sexagesimal"  all   by  himself. 


this  country 
are  rea^zing  that  better  roads  mean 
everything  t<»  them,  and  it  is  safe  to 
say  that  we  are  ufntn  the  verge  of  a 
general  effort  ti»  jilaee  the  roads  of  the 
United  .States  upon  a  proper  t«H>ting. 
The  matter  of  roads  is  one  in  which 
■we  are  far  behind,  however  great  our 


and  there  are  hundreds  of  mothers  who 
can  testify  to  its  value.  There  are  now 
over  10f)0  children  in  th.-  kimlcrgarlciis 
of  this  city,  more-  than  in  any  single  one 
of  the-  grades.  Probably  few  people 
have  ne)tic-c-d  the  grow  th  e)f  this  de-part- 
mcnt.  but  from  a  very  small  beginning 
a  few  years  ago  it  has  become  one  yf 


The  appointment  of  Senator  Culkin 
as  receiver  of  the  Duluth  land  office  will 
leave  an  ctpening  for  some  other  good 
Wright  county  man  to  ge)  te)  the  state 
senate. 


If  Fitzsininions  e-ontinuc-s  wise  he  w  ill 
stick  to  his  ri>seilution  to  retire  at  once 
and  permanently  from  the  prizi?  rl:ig. 


It    takes   about   3,0<Ki,0O0    tons   of   i 


ye 


POWDER 

Absolutely  Pure 


Celebrated  for  Its  great  leavening 
strength  and  hcallhfulness.  Assures  the 
food  against  alum  and  all  forms  of  adul- 
teration common  to  the  cheap  brands. 
ROYAL  BAKING  POWDER  CO..  NEW 
YORK.  _     _  . ,  _^^  j  come  home  from  the  modistes  ready  to 


French   woman   spends   her  first  ener- 
gies.    Then    her    gloves,    and    hat,    and 
wrap  cannot  help  showing  to  advant- 
age.    In  these  days  of  slush  and  snow, 
is  it  not  well  to  plac-e  the  white  petti- 
coat on  the  closet  shelves  for  a  while? 
Nothing  is  so  indicative  of  a  disorderly 
mind   as  a  white   petticoat    which   has 
bc-t-ome  bedraggled  and     soiled,     whil^ 
the-    wearer,    unconsciousl.v,      lifts     her 
gown  to  disclose  it.      Now,   why     doe? 
she  not  reason   that  matter  out  before- 
hand?   Snow  and  slush  are  sure  to  soil, 
and    the    white    petticoat    is   certain    to 
show-  it.     Why  not  wear  the-  black  pct- 
tie-oat,  w  liicli  is  short,  ene)ugh  to  e^scape 
contact  with  the  dirt  of  the  pavements, 
and   which  can   be  wiped     off     with   a 
damp  cloth  after  wearing.     By  all  these 
things   are   ye   know-,   oh,    woman!     By 
th-       wearing     of     even     the     plainest 
clothes,  if  they  be  but  clean  and  whole. 
As  some  one    says     the     unfoi^ivable 
offense  in   the  ethics  of  the   fastidious 
woman  is  the  wearing  of  finery  which 
has  lost  its  first     freshness.     Better    a 
gown   of  coarsest   serge,   finished  by   a 
clean,  linen  collar,  than  a  gown  trirtimed 
with  gauze  and  chiffon     and     ribbons, 
about  which  there  is  the  slightest  sug- 
gestion of  tawdriness  and  wear.      The 
home-made  woman   is   here  at  an   ad- 
vantage.    By    the     work    of    her    own 
fingers,   or   with    the  aid   of   a   seams- 
tress, who  will  come  to  the>  house,  she 
can   keep  her.self  in  good   trim  and  re- 
pair.    It  is  not  sufficient  to  have  gowns 


some  woman  has  but  the  social  gift—  i      The  loggers  now   le»ok  for  the  genetal 


there  is  none  greater — the  tact,  the 
charm,  the  good  breeding  which  makes 
her  popular.  Shc>  then  is  the  proper 
person  for  a  president  for  a  club.  We 
are  behind  the  times  without  this  and 
we  miss  many  an  intellectual  treat  in 
this  way. 

•     •     e 
The  study  of  the  art  of  facial  expres- 
sion   has   always    be-c-n    more  or   less   a 
part   e)f  the  educatiem   of  gentlewomen. 
Our    grandmothers    and      great-grand- 
inoihers   succeeded     in     getting     their 
mouths  into  a  properly  prim  expression 
by  saying  "prunes  and  prisms."   whilc 
Freiich   and    English    women    have    al- 
wa.vs    been    taught   in    girlhood   ail    the 
little    arts    and     tric-ks  of    mouth  and 
eyes  and  the  use  of  the  muscles  there- 
abouts.    American  women  have  seldon.. 
as  a  rule,   been  taught  this,  but  many 
acquire    it    with   that    quick     imitative 
faculty   which   distinguishes  them.  But 
just  novv  it  is  the  proper  thing  to  study 
and  learn  the  pretty  little  uses  of  the 
facial   muscles   by    which   we   learn    to  ; 
smile,    to   laugh    in    the   properly    well-  j 
bred  fashion,  and  to  use  the  eyes  ex-  | 
pressively.    It  is  quite  a  fad  now  in  the 
East,  ami  arose  frcun  a  desire  to  imitate 
the    success    of     (^onsuelo.    duchess    of 
Marll>orough,    in   her  suc-cessful    smile. 
She  Is  beccuniivg  noted  for  its   beauty, 
and   as  her  mama,   who   was  itrobably 
taught  this  nee-c^.ssary  chaim.   had  her 
daughter  trained  in  the  art,  all  her  old 
associates  are    learning   to   she>w     just 


break  up  of  camps  and  streams. 


THE  BIWABIK  BUDGET. 


enough  of  their  pretty  teeth,  ami  at  the  j  J.  A.  Loulan 


,  Biwabik,  Minn..  March  20. — (Special  to 
I  The  Herald.)— Mrs.  A.  A.  Talle,  w  ho 
'  gave  birth  to  her  first  child,  a  boy.  t  ,vo 
weeks  ago.  ha.s  been  suffc-ring  ever  since; 
from  puerpural  insanity.  She  is  be- 
<  oining  ciuieter.  and  the  docte)r  has 
hopes  that  she  will  siMjn  recove 

J.  D.  Shilling  went  to  Duluth  Wcdnc  s- 
da.v  to  meet  his  wife,  who  was  on  her 
-.vay  heune  from  Pittsburg,  where  slu- 
h:us   bcH>n   visiting  relatives. 

Mrs.  T.  J.  Jones  is  receiving  a  visit 
from  her  sister,  Mrs.  McCann.  of  Maiii- 
'oha. 

Drs.  Shipman.  of  Ely;  More,  of  Evcl- 
e  th.  and  Brown,  of  Virginia,  were  in 
:own  this  week  in  consultation  with  Dr. 
■^umphrey  concerning  the  case  of  Mrs. 
Talle. 

Fred  Penrod  has  moved  his  family 
back  from  Tower.  He  will  have  charge 
of  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range  yard  here 
this  summer. 

Dr.  Bates  was  over  from  Virginia  this 
week  to  close  up  his  office  here  and 
ship  his  stuff  back  to  Virginia.  On  ac- 
count of  the  Biwabik  mine  shut  down 
the  Drake  &  Stratton  company  do  not 
expect  to  do  an.v  wc)rk  here  this  year. 

Miss  May  Beauclair.  of  West  Duluth, 
is  again   visiting  with   her  sister,   Mr.--. 


»■■"'»    * 


TI 


II. 


■«■«■ 


— t- 


s 


I   ; 
« 

I 


r 


r— 


M 


— !■ 


jmm  vf  Iff  ffffffffff  If  vtmtmmmmfm 

I  In  Duluth's 

i      Social  Circles  | 


mvi   DULUTn   EVEymo   herald  .-  Saturday,  march  20, 


1897. 


■Vi^ 


■4Mr«> 


Sofiety   has   had    little  or  nothing   to 
do  this  week.  The  quieter  pleasures  so 
suitaUle    for    Lenten    enj<iynient.    such 
as  snowshoeinpr.  :-ki  running  and  skat- 
inp  have   all   been   spoiled    l>y   the   soft 
weather.       Several    parties  that       had 
betn    planned  had    to  be  given   up   be- 
cause of  the  dam;>  weather.  There  are 
•  not  even  the  u.>«ual  number  of  musical 
events  durins;  Lent    this   year.    Society! 
has    Tisiially    patronized    concerts     anil 
musicals  durintr  this  season  quite  liber- 
ally, but  this  year  has  little  opportune  | 
ity.  Next   Friday   there  will  be  the  City 
band  (oncert  and  it  will  probably  drawl 
out  a  large   number. 

*    *    •  I 

Tonight    the   Somerset    Y  will   give   ;i        „ 
r.rtyk  tea  at  the  First  Methodist  church!  "Tonis    I  ittle 
rarl..rs.    The    young    ladies    will    wear    Be  CoGrtin-  at 

lun^^t'mnrf  «"''   V'V^'  ^^"'   ^r  f--i.sing  a   biss     solo, 
tune    telling,    tea    will    be    served    and    Woods"   Mrs    Kurt 
candy  and  flowers  served.  The  program,  an  alto  soj' •  h.  M    < 


Mrs.  L.  Hammel.  as  an  artist;  Mrs.  D 
A.  Cone  as  a  gyF>sy.  and  M.  Cook,  as  a 
gentleman  of  Japan. 


Miss   Eva 
Cupids 


Willcuts 


and 

Miss    Swan 

her    low      for 

his    adventures 

her      sister's 

Miss    Palmer 


■    Sibyl.- 

>•  lower   world"., 
shade  of     Palin- 


Is  as  folows 

Piano  solo 

Tableau.x— Three 

Psyche 

^"oeal    solii 

Tableaux — 

"Dido    confessing 

.\eneas" 

"Aeneas    relating 

to    Dido" 

"Dido       imploring 

help" 

"Didos    sacritice" 

"Dido's    dream"    . 

Death   of   Dido".. 

A'i'ilin    solo 

Tableaux— 

"Aeneas    and    the 
"Dtscent   into  th 
"Aeneas   in    the  : 

urus" 

"Aeneas    meets      the 

Dido- 

"Aeneas  offers  the  golden 

Persephone' 

"The    Elyslan    fields'..    ..    ....;"" 

Vocal   solo Miss    McMillan 

•    *    * 

The  Study  dub  will  meet  this  even- 
mg  with  Miss  Bessie  Strayer.  of  .Sec- 
ond avenue  west.  The  Cretan  questioi; 
Will    be   discussefl. 

t    *    * 

Miss  (leraldine  Mnak.  of  Minneapolis 
is  in  Duluth.  th>  yuest  of  Mrs.  James 
C.  Hunter.  Mis--  Moak  resided  here- 
several  years  and  was  prominent  in 
musiea!  eircles.  She  is  contemplatinp 
coming  up  here  with  .Mi.«s  I^eiTis  of 
Minneapolis,  pianist,  and  giving  a  con 
cert. 


The  arrangements  for  the  grand  con- 
cert to  be  given  by  th-  ladies  of     the 
Second  division  of  the  Lakesitle  Presby- 
j  terian  church  are  now  completed,  and 
,  present  an  array  of  talent  that  should 
I  ensure  the  church   being   packed  to  its 
utmost       capacity.     The       ladies     have 
spared  no  pains  to  make  this  concert  a 
success,  and  they  feel  sure  that  the  resi- 
dents  of  Lestf^r  Park  and  Lakeside  will 
appreciate  their  efforts  bv  their  atten- 
dance.   The  concert     will"    be     held  on 
Monday.    March  1'9.   and   the   following 
IS  the  program:     Aeolian   Ladies'  quar- 
tet party  will  give  two  selections:  Miss 
O'Donnell     will     give      two      readings. 
Star"    and    "Ye   Xeedna 
Me; "  Franz  Schultz  will 
"Monarch     of     the 
Holfoml)  will  sing  | 
ox  will  give  one  of  | 


his   ininiital)le   readings;    Mr.   and    Mrs. 

i  Franz  Schultz  will  sing  a  duet;  Hd 
Prophet  will  Kive  two  t:'nor  solos.  "The 
Be«iouin  Love  Song"  and  "Oh.  Promise 
Me;'  Mrs.  Engels  will  play  the  j.iano 
and  the  Brothers  Orouchau  will  pei-- 
form  on   the  mandolin  and  guitar;   Mr. 

I  Joerns  will  grive  a  .«;olo  on  the  violin,  ac- 
companied by  his  little  daughter. 
Urusula,  on  the  piano. 


shade       of 

•        •       •  •  •  . 

bow   to 


Mayor  Truelsen  and  daughter  enter- 
tained the  Alert  Cinch  dub  last  Tues- 
day  evening.  The  head 
by  Mr.>j.  S.  \'an  Wapner  and  H.  AV. 
ChtL'adle.  ami  the  booby  prizes  by  Mrs. 
Bennett  and  .Miss  (;illon.  The  club  will 
be  entertained  next  Tuesday  evening 
by  Mr.  and  Mrs.  S.  Van  Wagner,  of  1819 
Piedmont  avenue  west. 


Miss  Mary  S.  Bradshaw.  contralto; 
Charles  Mandalert,  baritone;  James  S 
Lynn,  tenor;  Mrs.  John  Loman.  organ- 
ist, and  Flaatens  full  orchestra  will 
present  the  "Second  Mass  in  D "  bv 
Gauss.  '' 

•    *    * 

PERSONAL    MENTION. 
D.  H.  Costello  left  Thursday  for  Pitts- 
burg. 

j      Mrs.  F.  G.  Pettibone  left  Thursday  for 
I  the  East  on  a  visit  to  friends  and  rela- 
tives.   She  will  be  away  several  weeks. 
Mrs.    C.    E.    Blanchard    has   returned 
from  a  visit  to  St.  Paul. 
I      John  C.  Macdougall  left  Thursday  for 
a  trip  to  the  gold  country. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  C.  M.  Taylor,  of  Moun- 
tain Iron,  were  visiting  here  this  week. 
Miss   PJdith   Casey,    of     Great     Falls 
Mont.,    is    here    for    a    visit    with    her 
mother  and  friends. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  C.  Farrington  are 
expected  to  arrive  in  Duluth  about  April 
1.  They  sailed  Sunday  from  South- 
ampton on  the  steamer  St.  Paul  for 
New  York. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  F.  R.  Webber  have  re- 
turned from  their  visit  to  the  East. 

Mr.s.  J.  W.  Sargent  and  children  left 
Tuesday  for  a  short  visit  to  friends  in 
5>t.  Paul. 

Mi.>5s  Charlotte  Leiand  has  been  visit- 
mg  Mrs.  Victor  Stearns,  of  1715  East 
Superior  street,   this  week. 

Mr.s.  H.  G.  Holden  and  Miss  Florence 
Holden.  of  Two  Harbors,  were  in  the 
city  this  week. 
I  B.  Silberstein  was  summoned  to  De- 
troit. Mich.,  Monday  by  a  telegram  .sav- 
ing his  daughter.  Miss  Florence,  ha. I 
broken  her  leg  by  falling  on  the  pave- 
ment. ' 

A.  H.  Vide  returned  Monday  from  a 
trip  to  Florida.  He  was  away  about 
two   weeks. 

Clark  Poole  returned  from  Dubuouo. 
Iowa,   this  week. 

Mr.  and   Mrs.   George   A.   French  lelt 
this  week  for  a  .Southern  trip. 
,  ;^''''V   •^-    '*'•   Humphreys  and  children 
left  this  week  for  Ripley,  Ohio,   for    a 
visit. 

Mrs.  F.  L.  Lyvm  and  Miss  Lyon,  of 
Ashland,  were  in  the  city  yesterday. 


But   tha   Grocer  Will  Do  It  at  Tfrnes. 


in 


It  is  rather  discouraging  to  one 
search  of  a  good  healthful  breakfast 
beverage,  when  coffee  don't  agree 
and  after  having  carefully  investigated 
the  facts  about  Postum  Cereal  coffee, 
to  have  his  grocer  advise  some  "cereal 
coffee'  "just  as  good  as  Postum."  and 
find  a  cup  of  weak,  insipid  and  flat 
liquid  served  at  breakfast,  when  a  pal- 
atable   beverage    was    expected. 

If  Postum  is  absolutely  insisted  up- 
on the  grocer  will  furnish  it.  but  it  is 
not  as  profitable  as  the  imitations.  It 
is  quite  safe  to  say  that  there  is  but 
one  toothsome.delicious  and  pure  cereal 
coffee  and  that  has  a  trade  mark  reg- 
istered in  the  United  .States  patent  of- 
fice   as    "Postum    Cereal."    A    package 

bv  ti^'r  o*"".^  '*^'  i'"'''  y^'^  f"'-  25  cents 
b>  the  Postum  Cereal  company,  limit- 
ed,   Battle    Creek.    Mich. 


AT  THE  CHURCHES. 

Services  and  Subjects  of  Ser- 
mons For  Tomorrow. 


There 
Postum 
tude  of 
good." 


is  but  one  genuine  original 
Cereal  coffee,  with  a  multi- 
iinitations  offered   as   "just   as 


A  RADICAL  ACT. 


WEST   Dru-TH    SOCIAL, 
prizes  were  won  I  ,,J^  ""*"  entertainment  was  given  Tues- 
:...    „„..   ,.     \\.   I  «lay  evening  at   Great   Eastern   hall    in 
honor  of  St.  Patrick.    An  excellent  pro- 
gram was  given. 

An  entertainment  was  given  at  West- 
minster chunh  Wedne.sdav  evening  by 
the  pupils  of  the  Sunday  school.    A  fine 
program   was  given. 
A  St.  Patrick  s  sot  ial  was  given  at  the  '  ment 


(•■  D.  Jewell 
the  la<lies  of 
large  number 
program   was 


^n!   U:/         ^"         f':«^  the  first  time  on  Wednesdav    evening    by 

Tuesday  evening     Light  exercises  were  Asburv  M    E    churdi      \ 

S.veri.    The  class  bids   fair  to  be   very  were  i.resent  an  1  a  fine 

popular  and  to  have  a  larg.-   member-  given  " 

ship.     Those  taking  part  Tuesday  were:        The   Ancient   Order  of  Fnited    Work 

n""^    ^;,.-^'  .V""'"'    •^''•^-    P''"a«-    Miss  men  members  were  surUb^vIaii^: 

BoyU^  Miss  Munno.  Mrs.  A.  D.   Robert- |  of    the    Degree    of    hon   r     cMi« c"  t       the 

son.  M.ss  Conndl.     Miss     Heard.     Miss  number   of   about      thirtv      Wednesday 


Proposed  Remedy  For  Corpor- 
ation Interference  in  Politics. 

Some  Duluth  gen tl.  men  who  have 
watched  with  much  concern  the  influ- 
ence of  corporations  in  conventions, 
legislature  and  political  campaigns 
have  <levised  a  remedy  for  it.  The  fol- 
lowing bill  has  been  drafted  and  for- 
warded to  St.  Paul,   where  it  will  prolj- 

ably    be    introduce<l    in    the    legislature 
Monday. 

An  act  to  prevent  the  use  of  money 
tor  political   purposes   by  corporations. 

Section    1.     Xo    foreign      corporation 
doing    business   in    this  state,    nor   any 
domestic  corporation  shall  pay  or  con- 
tribute,   directly    or     indirectly        any) 
money,    property  or   thing  of  value     to 
ariy  political  party,  organization,   com- 
mittee  or    individual    for   any    political  i 
purp..se   whatever,   or  for    the   purpose! 
of  influencing   legislation   of  any   kind  i 
or  to  promote  or  defeat   the  candidacy! 
of  any  person  for  nomination,  appoint- 1 
or  election  to   any  jKilitical  ofliee  ! 


Frizzell.  Mrs.  Thorborn.  Miss  NetT,  .Miss 
tJrey.  .Miss  Milner.  .Miss  Emma  J..hnson 
and  Miss  Van  Wornier. 


^  The  death  of  Mi.ss  Isabel  Fanning  at 
St.  Paul  this  week  was  sad  news  to  a 
great  many  Duluth  i>eople.  No  more 
popular  yiumg  lady  ever  visited  Du- 
luth and  her  untimt  ly  death  is  an  un- 
usually sad   one. 

•  •    • 
The  Temple  dub  grave  one  of  its  de- 
lightful parties  at  the  Masonic  Temple 
hall    Wednesday    evening.       The     next 
party   will   be  sriven    April  21. 

*  »    «" 

The  Duluth  City  band  concert  at  the 
Lyceum    next    Fridav   evening    will    be 
an   event    that    will    bring  out    a    large 
audience    and    probably    a    fashional)ie 
one     The    Hicrh    Sch-o!    Musical    society 
and  a  chorus  of  male    voices   will   sin:; 
Mrs.    A.    HoeJscher    will    give    a    piam> 
s..|o.   the   Aeolian  quartet   will   sing     A 
Holescher  will  give  a    flute  solo  and    P 
Doran  will  sing.  All  solo.-;  and  choruses* 
wi/l   have  a    full  on  hestral  aceompant 
iient.    The    second    lart    will    be    givn 
by  the  band.  The  great    "Rienzi"  over- 1 
ture  by   Wagner  will   Ik?  played 
•    *    * 
The    entertainment    Thursdav    after- 
noon at   Maynard  hall    by  the  "primarv 
and  interm.ediate  grades   was  very  en- 
joyable   to    all    who    attended.       There 
was  a  little   play  called    "No  Cure    No 
Pay."    m    which    Miss    Catherine    Mac- 
tarlane    appeared    as    the    invalid  V 

farce  "A  Pre<ious  Pickle"  was  '  also 
given,  in  which  Miss  Catherine  Si  henck 
represented  a  colored  woman.  Miss 
Marion  Ray  gave  a  French  recitation 
and  Miss  Fanny  Hicks  Crosswell  one 
in  German.  Mi.ss  .Anna  .Macfarlane 
Jessie  Hartley.  Helen  Marble  and 
Julia  Hunter  danced  the  minuet  The 
sunflower  song  was  sung  at  the  close 

•  «    • 

Mrs.    J.    D.    Stryker    entertained    the 
-Mis.sionary    society      of       Glen        Avon 
church    Wednesday   afternoon.       Those 
who  took  part    were   Mrs     W    r    She- 
WO.K1.    Mrs.    C.    C.    Salter.    .Mrs  '  D     E 
Hoist. m.    Mrs.    R.    E.    Denfeld.    Mrs     h' 
M.   iJackus.   Mrs.  J.   D.  Stryker.   Mrs.  a 
H.     rhompson.    Mrs.    W.    A.    Prvor,    Mrs 
H.  u.  Coffin.  .Miss  Jones  and  Miss  Gib- 
son. I 

*  *    * 
'»ur    Circle     Whist     dub"      ^ave    a 

masque  ball  Thursday  ev^-ning.'  in   the 
Kaianiazoo  Mock,  in  celebration  of  the  I 
festival   of   Purlin.     .About    sixlv  pei>p|e  • 
were  present.     The  costumes  were  ele-  ', 
.^ant,  and   were  designed   with  artistic 
hdeiity   to  the  parts  assumed.     Among  ' 
the  suests  in   costumes   were   Mr.   and  1 
-Mrs.   Krojanker  as  the  Prince  in   "Cin-  ! 
derdla'  and  a  dancing  girl;  Mrs.  Philip  ■ 
H.   Levy,  as  Aunt  Jemima;  Louis  Rose    i 
as  a   French  down;   P.   H.   Lew.   as  a! 
fnotl>all   play -r:   E.  Oppenheimer 
negro;   Mrs.   W.    N.   Abrahams.m! 
ffypsy  queen;  Mrs.  Jacob  Sattler 
school   girl;   M.   Mark,   as  a   gvpsy 
Zunder.  as  an   Indian  squaw  "and 
poose;  Mi.ss  Sarah  Mark  as  Night; 
I.     A  bra  ham. son.     as   a    pea.sant 
Moses  Mark,   in  a  costume  of  th« 


Tuesday  was  the  birthday  of  A.  W. 
Kuehn.>w  and  Frank  Gie -ne.  and  iii 
honor  of  the  event  Mrs.  Kuehnow  gave 
a  birthday  party  for  them.  A  large 
number  of  guests  were  present,  and  the 
evening  was  pleasantly  passed. 
•    •    • 

The  St.    Patrick's  day  entertainment 
at  the  Lyceum  was  of  great  interest  to 
a  large  number  of  peoi>le.  as  was  shown 
by     the    attendance.      Th?    play,  "The 
Brides  of  Cian-yowen,"   was  presented. 
Those  in     the     cost     were     Mrs.    F.   N. 
Phelan.   Mrs.   W.   F.  Henry.   Miss  Sati»^ 
McNeil.    Miss   .\gnes   Maginnis,   Messrs. 
Arthur   W.    Lahey.    R.    H.    Cox,    .\.    E. 
Nug;.-nt,     Norton       Mattocks.       Robert 
Hamp.  James     Lynn.   Walter     Muri.hv. 
Xincent  Grady  and  Frank   Dacey.  Mrs. 
James  ^IcAullffe  sang  a  solo  number. 
•    *    • 
Bruno   P:yferth.    the  author  of  "Aunt 
,  Augusta."  a  s|>arkling  German  comedv  i 
,  in  three  acts,   has  been   prevailed   upo-i  ! 
by  a  g<M.d  many  peopl-  to  present  the  i 
piece  in  En;ilish.  and  this  he  has  decid-  > 
ed  to  do.     It  will  be  given  about  .\prii  i 
1'.  in  the  Turner  hall,  and  a  tine  list  of  ' 
patronesses  has  been  secureil.  including  ' 
a  great  numbjr  of  the  society  people  of 
I  this  city.    The  cast   has  been  carefully 
selected,  and  among  the  players  will  be  I 
found    the   names     of     Charles     Apple- 
hagen.   Miss  .\my  Hunter.   .Miss  Emma 
Wisted.       Miss     M -ta       Eyferth,       Mr.  , 
I'.rockbhurst    and    Mr.      Eyferth.       The  : 
bulk  <»f   the   funny   situatiims     in     th- 
piece   fall   upon    .Mr.    Eyferth  and     Mr. 
.\pplehagen.   who   need   no  intro<luction  i 
to  the  public,  as  they   have  been  s-en 
a  number  of  times  in  amateur  perform- 
ances.     Mr.    Eyferth    is  a    professional, 
and  Mr.     .Applehagen.    although     not  a 
professional,    is   a  very   plea.sing   actor 
and    full   of   fun.     The   play    is   for   th;- 
benefit  of  its  author,  Mr.  Eyferth. 

•       *       a 

The  pupils  at  Two  Harbors  of  Miss 
Clara  Palmer,  of  Duluth.  will  give  a 
violin  recital  at  that  place  next  Wed- 
nesday evening  at  the  home  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Thomas  Owens.  They  will  be  as- 
sisted by  Miss  Dorothy  Nichols  and  one 
or  two  pupils  from  Duluth. 


broujjht  music  and   re- 
there  was  dancing  and 


evening  They 
frt-shments  and 
card   playing. 

Miss  Charlotte  Rix  anrl  Frederick 
Patton  were  married  Thursdav  at  th.' 
rc.sidence  of  the  brides  j.arents.  r,17 
l*ifty-sixth  avenue  west,  last  night 
Rev.  (Jeorge  E.  Keithley.  pastor  of  the 
V\estminster  Presbyterian  chunh.  ofli- 
elating.  John  Rix  was  best  man  and 
Miss  Jeannette  Carmichad  was  maid  oi' 
honor.  Only  the  relatives  of  the  bride 
and  gior.m  were  in  attendance.  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  Patton  will  begin  housekeeping  al 
I  20   Fifty-.seventh   avenue   west. 

A  farewell   party  was  given  Mr.  and 

I  Mrs.   J.   o.    Hancock    Saturdav  eveninp 

!  at  the  residence  of  Dr.  and  I.  T.   Burn- 

I  side.     Mr.s.  Hancock  was  presented  with 

a  handsome  silver  bon   bon   dish.     The 

evening     was     pa.ssed     in     progressive 

I  cinch.  Mrs.  Hancock  v  inning  the  head 

I  and  Miss  Freeman  the  boobv  j.rize    Mr 

and    Mrs.    Hancock    left    this    week    for 

I  Minneapolis,  where  they  exi>ect  to  make 

I  their  home   in   future. 

Mrs.  Emilv  .Mcrritt  will  leave  next 
I  week  for  Kingsville.  Ohio,  to  visit  her 
I  siste?'. 

,  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Thomas  Carmichad.  ot 
,  NeRaunee,  Mich.,  are  visiting  relatives 
1  h're. 

Epworth  league  of  the  Asburv  M  E 
church  will  give  an  April  fool's  social 
.Ar>ril    I. 

The  entertainment  .uiven  bv  the  ladies 
of  the  Eastern  Star  .«<aturdav  night  in 
Ma.sonic  hall  was  a  most  enjoyable 
affair,  and   was  udl  attended. 

A  dance  was  given  at  the  village  hall 
Wednesday  by  the  Plot  t(.rknott  Cornet 
band. 

.A  meeting  of  the  Ladies'  .\id  sodetv 
of  the  Congregational  ehur.  h  was  held 
Wednesjiay  afternoon  at  the  residence 
of  Mrs.  J.  R.  Brearly.  415  Fiftv-flrsi 
avenue  west. 

The  sodal  and  ball  piven  by  Pearl 
Hive  lodge  at  the  I'hillios  hotel  Wed- 
nesday evening  was  well  attended  and 
proved  a  most  enjoyable  affair. 

J.  <>.  Hancock  and  family  k-ft  \V»'d- 
nesday  for  Minneapolis,  where  they  ex- 
pect to  make  their  home. 


A  violatii>n  of  this  act  is  punishable 
by  a  fine  of  not  less  than  $1000.  nor 
more  than  $10.ooo.  in  the  discretion  of 
the  court  or  judge  before  which  the 
conviction  is  ha<l.  and  upon  any  such 
<onviction  the  coriioration.  if  a  do- 
mestic corporation,  is  dissolved-  if  a 
foreign  corporation,  its  right  to  do 
busine.ss  in   this  state  ceases. 

Section  2.  Any  person  who  shall  aid 
or  abet  a  vlolati<m  of  this  act  is  guiltv 
of  a  felony.  ^^"^-r 

Section  :5.     Violations  (,f  this  act  shall 
be   pr..secuted    in   the  county   in    which 
he    principal   office   of  the   corporation 
in   this  state   is   located. 


First  Competitive  Drill. 


as  a 
as  a 
as  a 
:     M. 

pap- 
Miss 
girl; 
na- 


tional colors;  Miss  Mamie  Schwartz,  as 
a  flower  girl;  D.  Gross  and  R.  Marcus 
as  twin  downs;  Mrs.  (i.  A.  Kbin.  a«  a 
.school  jfirl:  B.  Cook,  as  an  Indian;  Isaac 
Summerfield.  as  a  Mexican;  W.  M. 
Abraharnson.  as  an  equine:  Miss  Paul- 
ine L?vy,  as  a  Sjianish  gypsy  tambour- 
ine girl;  S.  Goldljerg  as  a  Holland  i.ea- 


SMint;     Mis-s    Sophb, 
picei.n:    D.   Cone,   as 


Freimuth. 
a    Ru.'-sian 


as 

rat 


a  I 


i!ii: 


ECZEMA 

Wlost  Torturing,  Disfiguring, 
Humiliating 

Of  itching,  I.urni  i-,  blce.linj;,  scaly  .skin 
and  .scalp  liumors  is  instiiiitiy  relieved 
by  a  warm  kith  ^ith  Ccti<  ura  Soap, 
a  single  application  of  Cuticura  (oint- 
ment), the  great  skin  cure,  and  a  full  daso 
of  CuTiccaA  Rksolvent,  greatest  of  blood 
puriliers  and  bnmor  oores. 

Qticura 

IlEMEDiES    speedily,    jwrmanently,   and 
economically  cure,  when  all  else  fails. 

PoTTtB  I)«Of;  AVn  Cn«M.  Corp  .  Solf^  Projot..  Bnttaa. 
1»—  How  <o  Core  Every  Skin  and  Blood  Humor,"  Irec. 


The    entertainment   at    St.    Clements' 

hall  Tuesday  evening  was  an  excellent 

one,  and  there  was  a  large  attendance. 

I  •    •    • 

I      The    Chautauqua    circle      will      meet 

;  Monday  evening,     and     the     following 

program  will  be  given: 
I  Roll     call:     Give    .some     interesting 
I          fat  t   learned   from   the  readings 
I          of  the   week. 
Lesson.  "A  Survey  of  Greek  Civili- 
zation." chap.  V  conchided 

Led  by  Mr.  Dunlop. 
Lesson.  "Study  of  the  Sky."     chap, 
xvi    

I..ed  Vty  Mrs.  Hoover. 

«    *    * 

The  ma.sfiuerad;-  ball  given  by  Du- 
luth. No.  I.  Knicrhts  of  the  Maccabee.s. 
Thursday  evening,  at  Kalamazoo  block, 
was  a  happy  event,  and  was  attended 
by  about  l.'iO  guests.  The  music  was 
furnished  by  Hurlbert's  orchestra. 
Supper  was  .serv.-d  in  the  hall  on  the 
upper  floor.  The  entertainment  com- 
mittee was  composed  of  C.  J.  Hector. 
I.  X.  Chellew.  F.  Savard  and  A.  F.  Dor- 
ner.  The  floor  committee  were  H.  Har- 
rington and  J.  Mcl>}nald. 

•  *    « 

On   Wednesday  evening     Miss     .Anna 
Johnson  and  Ole  Johnson  were  married 
at  the  residence  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  C.  K. 
McDonald.  .517  West   First  street.   Rev. 
C.  C.  Salter  officiating.    The  bride  was 
attended  by  Misses  Josephine  and  Clara 
Anderson,  and  the  groom  by  H.  Calson 
and  W.     f  lustafson.      The     house    was , 
prettily  decorated.     .\     wedding  supper  I 
was  giv;  n   and  dancing  followed.     .Mr.  | 
and   Mrs.   Johanson    will    reside   in    In- 
dianiipolis.  ' 

*  *    *  I 
The  Swedish  Glee  club  and  Normanna  | 

mandskor.  assited  by  Flaatens  orches- 
tra, are  arranging  to  give  a  pojiuiar 
conccrt  in  the  near  future. 


The  Odd  Felbiws*  society  held  its 
first  competitive  drill  last  evening  in 
Odd  Fellows'  hall,  the  event  being  un- 
der the  auspices  of  Duluth  lodge  No.  2.S. 
It  will  be  followed  by  others  by  the 
various  lodges.  A  silver  trophv  w"ill  b- 
awarded  the  winner.  A  large"  number 
of  visiting  members  of  the  order  were 
present,  both  of  Duluth  and  Superior 
lodges. 


Neuralgia  of  the  Heart 

Vanquished  by  Dr.  Miles'  Remedies. 


CITY  BAND  CONCERT. 

Reasons  Why  the  Band  Should 
Be  Supported. 

Next  Friday  eveniii;,'  the  annual  eon- 
cert  of  the  Duluth  City  l,;,n<l  will  be  ^iven 
at  the  Lyceum.  Th.-  Land  is  sending  out 
the  following  drcular  to  individuals  and 
societies: 

"The  City    band   taii.s   this  opportunity  I 
for   calling   your   att.iition    to    its   annual  ! 
benefit    concert    to    be    given    at    the    Ly-  I 
ceum   March   S"!.     This  is   the  only   means  I 
the   l.an.l   hiis  to  provide   for  its  .-xnenses  i 
of    nii.iMt.  nance    and    e„„j,,nient.    and    as  I 
tile   hand   already    h.is   important   eniraire-  I 
menis  at    the  Twin   ri:ies   this  .season     i,  I 
l.s  more   than   ever  essential   that   the  men 
slioubl    all     be    uniformr.l        and    provided 
w  th  iii)-to-d;.te  music.   The  tiand  attra.t-  I 
«'d    such    wide.spread    attention    at    the    (J    ' 
;V   ^•.'■"•"""bnient  in  St.   Paul,   last   vear' 
that    It    bc(  omes    almost    uniieccssarv    tt> 
.suggest    that   a   good    hand,   well   euulnned 
is  one  ot  the  most  pleasing  anil  conspicu- 
mis     reprc.s<ntatives     that       Duluth       can 
av«--both   111   and  out   of   town.     We   be- 
ieve  that  every  organization,  calling  Du- 
luth Its  home,  can  and  will  lend  its  heart v 
support    to    this    c<in<ert    when    its    objecl 
IS   understood."  ■* 

lo^s*-    '"""^'"^""   "''   ^^^'  "'^ncert   is   a.s   fol-- 

PART   I. 

a.  (.ipsy  chorus  in  "Pre(iosa"..\on  Web"r 

I.      S.n.g  of  the  Vikimrs-..|.:aton  Fanning 

Migh    School    Musical    Societv    under    the 

direction  of  A.   i<\  M.  Ciistance. 

Piano  .solo— "Ripoletto"   Liszt 

Mrs.  A.  Hoel.seher. 

iV    -^r'  r?"''*^,*^^  ".'.  Kjerulf 

I).     The     Quaker       

Arranged    for    the  Ladles'" AeiiVian 

quartet   by   A.    F.    M.  (^ustapoe. 

Ladies'    .Aeolian   quartet. 

Tenor   solo— "Waiting"    Millard 

P.   Doran. 

Grand   male   chorus— "Le  Carnival   Le 

Ru.sse"   Demmcrsman 

„,   ,  A.   Hoelseher. 

\\altz   song— "Kstudiantina"    ..La    Combe 

High    School    Musical    Sodetv    under    the 

direction  of  A.   F.  M.  Ciistance. 

^     ,  PART   II. 

Duluth    City    })and     

Cnrter   the  direction   of  Ernest 

March— "Knqulrer   Club"    

Overture— "Rienzi"    

Two   quotations   by   Soiisa— 

a.  "I   too.  was  Born  in  Arcadia 

b.  "In   Darkest  Afrba"   

Overture— "William    Tell"     

_   ,  (By    request.) 

Selection— "Rl    Capitan"     


Rev.  Dr.  Humason  will  preach  in  the 
First  Methodist  church  at  10:30  a.  m. 
on  "The  Comforter,"  and  at  7:30  p.  m. 
on  "Sabbath  Breaking."  R.  R.  Briggs 
will  give  his  eleventh  lecture  on  "Pil- 
grim's Progress"  at  9:30  a.  m.  in  the 
ladies'  parlor.  Sunday  school  at  1''  m 
.J'l^  league  at  3  p.  m.  Epworth  league 
at  6:30  p.  m. 

At   the   Unitarian   church,   corner     of 
Eighth   avenue   east   and   First   street 
Rev.   F.   C.   Southworth   will   preach  at 
10:4;,  a.   m.    tomorrow  on    "The  Higher 
at'''l^''m'"  «f  the  Bible."  Sunday  school 

In  Pilgrim  Congregational  church  to- 
morrow the  pastor.  Rev.  C.  H.  Patton 
will  preach  at  both  services.  In  the 
morning  the  subject  will  be  "The 
Changed  Face,  or  Transfigured  by 
Prayer."  In  the  evening  he  will  di.scuss 
Heart  Religion"  in  a  sermon  showing 
up  many  of  the  shams  which  pass  for 
religion. 

At  the  First  Presbyterian  church  the 
•"f ^l?'.;. ^*'^-  '^-  "•  t^leland.  will  preach 
at  10:30  a.  m.  and  7:30  p.  m.  Morning 
subject,  -Usese  of  the  Rest  Dav;  ever" 
ing  subject.  "Moral  or  Physical  Hero- 
ism ?" 

"Vows,  Their  Place  and  Power  in  Re- 
ligion." will  be  discussed  by  Rev  Wil- 
son Aull  at  the  Glen  Avon  church  to- 
morrow morning.  Sabbath  school  at 
noon.  Endeavor  services  at  4  o'clock 
and  at  6:45. 

At  St.  Paul's  Episcopal  church  ser- 
vices tomorrow  will  be  held  as  follows: 
Holy  communion  at  8  a.  m.,  Sunday 
school  at  10  a.  m..  morning  prayer  and 
sermon  at  11  o'clock,  evening  praver 
and  sermon  at  7:30  o'clock. 

At  the  Bethel  tomorrow  at  10:30  a.  in 

the  services  will  be  conducted  by  C.   F 

Robel.     In   the  evening  at   7:30  o'clock 

Rev.  C.  H.  Craig  will  preach,  exchang- 

I  ing  i»ulpits  with  Rev.  C.  C.  Salter.  Sun- 

I  day  .school  at  3  p.  m.    Y.  P.  S.  C    E    at 

j  6:30  p.  m. 

I  At  the  branch  Bethel  tomorrow  even- 
;  ing  at  7:30  o'clock  C.  F.  Robel  will 
j  SI  leak. 

I  Rev.  J.  H.  Morley,  of  Minneapolis,  wiil 
I  preach       at       Morley       Omgregational 

1  church.   Nineteenth     avenue     east   and 
First  street,  tomorrow  morningT    Bible 
study  lecture  at  7:30  o'clock  bv  Rev    W 
U'.  Newell. 

At  the  First  Baptist  church.  1026  East 
fcecond  street.  Rev.  O.  A.  Williams,  dis- 
trict secretary  of  the  Home  Mission  so- 
ciety, will  preach  in  the  morning  and 
Rev.  C.  T.  Hallowell  in  the  eveniivg  at 
( :30  o'clock.    Sunday  school  at  12  in. 

At       the      Hazdwood       Presbvterian 
church  tomorrow  at  3  p.   m.   there  will 
be   services    conducted    bv    Rev.    A.    H 
Carver,  of  Lakeside.     Sunday  school  at  I 

2  '>.  in. 

At  Highland  Presbyterian  church 
the  afternoon  service  at  3  n.  m.  will  Ije 
coiulucted  by  Rev.  Robert  Grieve.  Sun- 
iiny  schofd  at  2  i>.  m. 

The  First  Church  of  Christ.  Scientist 
will  have  .services  in  the  hall  on  the  fifth 
floor  of  the  Ma.sonic  Tein))le  at  10-4.->  a 
m     Subject,  "The  Cniversal  .\pplication 
of  the  (;ospel  of  Christ."' 

At  the  Oneota  Methodist  church, 
corner  of  Forty-sixth  avenue  west 
there  will  be  preaching  by  the  pastor. 
Fvev.  R.  H.  Craig,  at  11  a.  m.  and  7:.;0 
p.  m.  Sunday  .school  at  10  a.  m.  Ep- 
worth league  at  6::J0  p.  m. 

At  the  Second-  Presbyterian  church 
there  will  be  preaching  at  10:45  a.  m 
and  7:30  p.  m.  by  Rev.  T.  M.  Findley 
imstor.  Morning  subject.  "The  Element 
nt  Gratitude  in  Christian  Worship- 
evening  subject.  "The  Tarnished  Gold 
of  Human  Charity.  "  Sunday  school  at 
'*A->  a.  m.  Pastor's  Bible  class  at  10 
'  a.  m. 

I  At  the  Nineteenth  avenue  west  Bap- 
t  tist  church  services  will  be  held  tomor- 
row morning  at  10::iO  o'clock  and  7:3J 
ocl(Mk  in  the  evening.  Sunday  school 
at  12  m.  The  Ladies'  Fnion  society  will 
have  its  monthly  meeting  at  4  o'clock  in 
the  afternoon.  Young  People's  society 
at  6::J0  o'clock.  There  will  be  preaching 
by  the  pastor  in  the  morning,  anrl  in 
the  evening  by  Rev.  Dr.  Williams,  of 
Minneaiiolis. 

Dr.  Forbes  will  preach  in  .\sburv 
ehurch  tomorrow  at  10:30  a.  m.  and  7::;0 
p.  m. 

Dr.   Forbes  will   preach   in   the  M.   E 
church  at  Proclorknott  at  2:."}0  p.  m. 

-At  the  Lester  Park  Methodist  churdi 
there  will  be  preaching  at  ]0:4.')  a  m 
by  Rev.  J.  W.  Heard.  Subject.  "The 
Christian  I'se  of  Money."  In  the  even- 
ing the  W.  F.  M.  S.  and  the  Epwortli 
league  will  give  a  missionary  program 
at  7:30  o'clock  in  the  auditorium. 


NOW  WITHOUT  A   RIVAL! 


No  Remedy  to  Compare  Willi  Paine's 
Celery  Compound. 

Read  the  Really  Wonderful  Exper- 
ience of  Rev.  Dr.  Baiiey  and  His 
Good  Wife,  and  the  Indorsements 
of  Other  Eminent  Divines. 


Henry  Haskins  Answers. 


Meier. 
...Brand 
.  Wagner 


..Rossini 
— Sousa 


M 


PIMPLY  FACES 


Parif)«d    anil    Rnatifird 
CUriCliRA    8UAf. 


By 


Master  Chariey  Kuehnow.  .J-years-old 
Son   of   .Mr.   and   Mrs.   A.    W.    kuehnow, 
gave  a  birthday  party  yesterday  after- 
noon and  entertained  the  following  lit- 
tle folks:     Iver  Tonning,    Hannah   An- 
derson.   Rena     Drake,     Eloise     Taylor, 
Grade  Anderson,   Edith     Fitzsimmons! 
Nellie   Kilgore,    Elsie   Hartman,     Char- 
lotte Bro<kelhurst,  Daisy  Osborne,  Ce- 
i  cil   Smith.     Margaret     Plynn,     Frankle 
j  Newcomlte.     Guido     Hartman.       Asher 
I  Taylor,   Lyman   Taylor.   Johnny     War- 
wick.  Joe   McGuinniss.  James    Kilgore, 
>  Gerard     T«»hning,     Christian     Tonning, 
'  Neil  Campbell.  James   Haggertv. 

!  »   •   « 

On  Tuesday  evening,   April  27,    Mark 
C.   Baker  will  giv-  his  farewell  concert, 
j  The  Ooiinod   choir,     assisted    by     Miss 
I  Jenny  E.  Osborne,  soprano  of  Chicago;; 


RS.  SIDLEV.  of  Torrington.  Conn., 
Suffered  from  just  such  a  complica- 
tion of  diseases  as  the  extensive  ex- 
perience  and  investigations  of  Dr.  Miles 
have  proven,  result  from  impairmeut  of  the 
nervous sy.stem.     Mr.  Jas.  B.  Sidley  writes 
Oct.  25, 1893:    "  My  wife  was  taken  sick  with 
neuralgia  of   the  heart,  nervous  e.xhaiis- 
tion  and  liver  trouble.    A Ithouj^h  attended 
by  two  physicians  she  prew  worse,  until  she 
was  at  death's  door.      I    then  bepan  giv- 
ing   her    Dr.    Miles'    Restorative    Nervine 
and  Dr.  Miles'  New   Heart  Cure,   and  she 
improved  so  wonder- 
fully   from     the  first 
that  I    at   once  dis- 
missed the  physician.s. 
She    now    eats    and 
sleeps  well  and  does 
her    own    housework 
We  have  recommend- 

ed  your  remedies  to  a 

great  many  in  our  city,  and  every  one  has 
been  very  much  benefited  by  them." 

Dr.  Miles'  Remedies  are  sold  by  all  drug- 
gists under  a  positive  guarantee,  first  bottle 
benefits  or  money  refunded.   Ii(X)k  on  Heart 
Md  Nerve.s  sent  free  to  all  applicants. 
DH.  ULLEU  MEI>1CAL  CU,  Elklurl.  InO. 


INDOOR  BASE  BALL. 

Company  A  and  High  School 
Boys  to  Meet  Tonight. 

Interest   in  the  'irame  of  indoor  base- 
ball is  steadily  increasing,  and  the  game 
of  tonight  between  Company  A  and  the 
hish   school   promises   to   bring  it   to   a 
<limax.    Company  A.  confident  in  win- 
ing two  games,  will  go  in  to  slaughter 
their  unsophisticated  opponents  in  short  ! 
order,  but  they  may  fall  short  of  their  I 
ambition,  as  the  high  .school  bovs  have 
been    practicing   hard   and   claim    they 
have  learned  all  the  tricks  worth  know-  ! 
ing.        They    on    their    nart    intend    to  I 
thoroughly  annihilate   the  militia  boys  I 
on  the  start.     The  result  will  probably 
l»e,  however,  a  very  close  and  exciting 
game.      It    will    be   followed    bv   an    in- 
formal dance.    The  batting  order  is  as 
follows: 

High  Schoo!. 
..Richardson 

Summers 

Parks 

Smith 

Thomso.'i 

Mrewer 

Miller 

Dennis 

Winters 


In  regard  to  the  resolution  adopted 
at  a  meeting  of  ladies  held  at  the  Y.  M. 
C.  A.  rooms  Monday,  requesting  that 
four  meetings  of  the  Humane  society 
be  held  yearly  and  that  unsalaried 
agents  be  appointed.  Humane  Officer 
Haskins  says  that  a  lack  of  acquaint- 
ance with  the  .society  and  its  work  is 
indicated.  There  are  now  twelve  meet- 
ings held  each  year,  he  says,  and  that 
the  necessity  for  more  agents  is  not 
pressing,  every  member  of  the  police 
foice  acting  as  such  under  an  order  is- 
sued by  the  mayor.  The  police  have 
instructions  to  interfere  in  cases  where 
animals  are  being  abused  and  to  arrest 
the  offenders  if  need  be.  They  also 
are  directed  to  investigate  ca.ses  of  ill 
treatment  with  the  view  of  obtaining 
evidence  to  be  used  in  prosecutions. 


Here  is  a  letter  from  the  pastor  of 
the  most  influential  church  in  South 
l:altimore.  that  every  truth  seeker 
!:hould  read  carefull.\. 

Every  disheartened  sick  person  and 
every  man  or  woman  who  has  lost 
faith  in  the  remedies  he  or  she  has 
tried  because  none  of  them  has  done 
any  good— every  one  who  is  sick  ought 
to  be  cheered  up  and  tilled  with  new 
hope  and  determination  bv  the  letter 
written  by  Rev.  William'  T.  liailey. 
pastor  of  the  Curtis  Hay  church,  tlie 
most  influential  church  in  South  Bal- 
timore. 

On    March    :J1,    1S%.    the       Baltimore 
Sun.    under    display    headlines.        i)ub- 
lished  the  following  news  of  Rev.  Mr 
Bailey's    aflliction: 

•Rev.  William  T.  Bailey,  pastor  of 
the  Curtis  Bay  Baptist  church,  was 
paralyzed  in  the  tcrsue  while  preach- 
ing Sunday  night  and  lost  the  power 
of    speech.    The    congregation    was    at 

once   dismissed,   and    Dr.     was 

called.  He  said  Mr.  Bailey  was  suffer- 
ing from  a  severe  attack  of  nervous 
prostration  caused  by  hard  study  and 
oveiwork.  and  that  he  must  have 
and    quiet." 

The   whole   city    was   shocked, 
papers    soon    liegan    to    record    an 
provement. 

On  April  i:}.  18%,  the  following  open 
letter  was  addressed  to  the  proprietors 
of  Paine's  celery   compound: 

South  Baltimore.  Md..  April  l:;,  1896 
Messi-s.    Wells,    Richardson    &    Go., 

Gentlemen:  I  was  taken  very  ill 
while  preaching  Easter  Sundav  night 
My  doctor  could  not  help  me,  so  f 
discharged  him  and  began  to  use 
Paine's  celery  compound  with  crush- 
ing effect.  I  will  not  hesitate  to  .say 
that  it  is  the  best  medicine  in  the 
world,    I    am,  Fraternally, 

WILLIAM  T.  BAILEY 


Eighteen  doctors  have,  lirst  and  last, 
attended  her.  and  one  bottle  of  Paine's 
celery  compound  has  done  her  more 
g<iod  than  all  <.f  (he  other  medicine. 
She  and  I  are  together  using  Paine's 
celery  compound,  and  I  will  with  plea- 
sure let  you  know  the  result. 

Fraternal  I V. 
WILLIAM    T.     BAILEY. 


Baltimore,    May    IS,    ]S»6. 
Wells.    Richardson   &   Co., 

Gentlemen:  It  is  impossible  for  me 
to  express  the  emotions  of  mv  heart 
on  the  great  good  Mrs.  Bailev  and  I 
have  derived  from  the  use  of  Paine".-* 
celery  comi>ound.  I  am  a  new  man. 
We  have  taken  together  eight  bottles 
and  I  wish  to  continue  its  u.se.  The 
people  of  my  church  are  very  kind  to 
the  poor,  and  1  have  given  to  some  of 
the  poor  money  with  whiih  to  pur- 
chase the  medicine.  You  may  use  mv 
name  if  you  wish  and  I  will  with  pl-'a- 
sure  answer  all  <ommunications  sent 
me.  I  believe  the  remedy  is  the  be.-i 
in   the  world.       Yours  very  truly 

WILLIAM    T.    BAILEY. 
Pastor   Curtis    Bav    Baptist   Church. 


rest 

The 
im- 


Company  A 

Carev   

Melb'y    

La  Fans  

Maginnis    .. 
Gearhart   ... 
J.  Michaud 
Grochau  .. ., 
D.   Michaud 
Barnard  


..catcher  

..  ..pitcher 

.  ..first  ba.se  . 

. sec(md  ba.se 
.  ..third  base 
.  ..left  short  . 
..right  short  . 
....left  lidd  . 
. .  ..right  lii'ld 


New  Mining  Company. 

The  tirassy  Island  (Jold  Mining  and 
Milling  company  has  just  l>een  incor- 
porated by  Duluth  men.  principally  un- 
der the  laws  of  West  Virginia,  with  a 
capital  stock  of  $1,000,000.  The  company 
owns  a  tract  of  land  near  the  Little 
American  gold  mine  on  Rainy  Lake,  on 
which  .some  excellent  gold-bearing  ore 
has  been  found.  The  officers  of  the 
company  are:  C.  O.  Baldwin,  president; 
Charles  T.  Fitzsimmons,  vice  presi- 
dent: John  J.  Skuse.  secretary;  E.  D. 
Field,  treasurer,  who  with  O.  K.  Win- 
neman,  of  New  York,  and  J.  F.  Tillson. 
of  Duluth.  constitute  the  board  of  di- 
rectors. 


Later  in  the  year  the  proprietors  of 
this  wonderful  remedy  received  still 
another  letter  from  Dr.  Bailey,  as  fol- 
lows: 

Gentlemen:  I  propose  to  do  what  I 
can  to  let  people  know  of  your  Paine's 
celery  compound,  the  medicine  that 
has  done  me  so  much  good.  I  shall  in 
my  own  way,  in  speaking  of  my  i-apid 
and  great  improvement  from  the  pul- 
pit, give  as  is  justly  due,  tribute  to 
Paine's  celery  c<mipound.  I  married 
six  years  ago  Miss  Lillie  B.  Dunna- 
vant,  a  lady  well  known  in  social  life 
the  niece  of  Capt.  Robert  F.  Lewi.s! 
ITnited  States  navy.  During  the  whole 
six  years  she  has  been  an  invalid,  suf- 
fering from  hysteria, 
ing  and  screaming,  so 
be  heard  for  squares, 
great   deal   of  trouble 


laughing,  cry- 
that  she  could 
I  have  had  a 
and       expense. 


I  A  few  weeks  ago  there  was  published 
I  a  testimonial  of  the  great  virtue  of 
Paine's  celery  compound  from  Rev. 
Charles  L.  Thompson.  D.D.,  LL.D.,  the 
eminent  Piesityterian  preacher  of  New 
York  city.  Rev.  Dr.  Meek,  editor  of  th.' 
Central  Methodist,  recently  wrote  an 
open  letter,  telling  that  Paine's  cel- 
ery compound  had  worked  a  remaik- 
able  cure  in  his  case.  And  last  month 
the  great  temperance  evangelist,  Fran- 
cis Murphy,  told  the  public  how  Paine".< 
celery  compound  had  been  a  blessing 
in  his  family.  . 
These  are  a  f'^-w  among  thousands. 
Every  one  knows  conscientious, 
charitable  persons  who  are  too  busy, 
more  often  too  procrastinating,  to  save 
their  health  from  going  to  pieces,  and 
And  it  easier  to  help  others  than  them- 
selves. Such  persons  fill  up  the  armv 
of  broken  down  1  usiness  men  anil 
sickly  women. 

Every  one  in  this  spring  time  needs 
to  purify  the  blood  and  regulate  th-^ 
nerves,  ('arry  home  today— not  by  and 
by— a  bottle  of  Paine's  celery  Com- 
pound. Cure  nervousness,  neuralgia 
and  rheumatism  this  spring.  You  can 
now  put  your  health  on  a  sound  basis 
by  means  of  Paine's  celeiy  compound. 
Charity  should  now  begin  at  home. 
Attend  to  your  own  health  and  that  of 
your   family. 

Paine's  celery  compound  is  within 
the  reach  <if  every  family  where  there 
is  a  member  afTlicted  by  any  stomach, 
liver  or  kidney  trouble.  It  cures  per- 
manently   and    rapidly. 

It  must  be  distinguished  fnun  all 
other  remedies. 


OPF   DCTV. 
It   is  es.sential   to   the   well 
physical    economy    that    the 
bladder    should    be    eternallv    active 
they  should   never  go   'ofr  ilutv.  "    If 


being  of 
kidnevs 


the 
itiid 
that 
the:>- 


NEW  BOAT  BUILDING. 

Large    Steamer   to    Run 
Crane  Lake. 


In 


DEAFNESS  CANNOT  BE  CURED 
By  local  a|)pllcatlons,  as  they  cannot 
roach  the  diseased  portion  of  the  ear. 
There  is  only  one  way  to  cure  deafness, 
and  that  is  by  constitutional  remedie.s. 
Deafness  is  caused  by  an  inflamed  condi- 
tion of  the  mucous  lining  of  the  Eusta- 
chian Tube.  When  this  tube  gets  In- 
flamed you  have  a  rumbling  sound  or  Im- 
perfect hearing,  and  when  It  is  entirely 
closed  deafness  is  the  result,  and  unless 
the  inflammation  can  be  taken  out  and 
this  tube  restored  to  its  normal  condition, 
hearing  will  be  destroyed  forever;  nine 
ca^es  out  of  ten  are  caused  by  catarrh, 
which  Is  nothing  but  an  inflamed  condi- 
tion of  the  mucous  surfaces. 

We  will  give  one  hundred  dollars  for 
any  ca.se  of  deafness  (caused  by  catarrh) 
that  cannot  be  cured  by  Hall's  Catarrh 
cure.  Send  for  circulars,  free 

£■•, i-  GHENEY  &  CO..  Toledo,  Ohio. 

r'Old   by  druggists.   T'k-. 

Halls  Family  Pills  are  the  best. 


I  do.  the  kidneys  fail  to  secrete  from  thl 
blood   the  watery  element  and   the  impii- 

:  rities    that    should    be   thrown    off   bv    the 

!  bladder,  and  both  organs  suffer  in  or- 
i;:anic  health  from  (h.-ir  inaction,  and  in- 
cur    duiigerous     maladies.     Among     tlie.sc 

iare  ISrlKhfs  di.seas.-  of  the  khlncvs.  dia- 
betes, retention  of  the  urine,  gravd.  <trop- 
sy.  de.  These  are  no  trifles,  but  obsti- 
nate diseases,  developing  rapidiv  and 
teiminatlng  too  often  falallv.  To  prv- 
v.-nl  or  check  them,  the  safest  and  most 
I'ffectual  means  is  Hostetter's  Stome.  h 
nilters.  whbh  gives  a  healthful  Impetus 
to  but  never  excites  the  renal  (»re:aiis. 
like  the  (iery.  unmedicated  stimulants  of 
commerce.  Miliaria,  dyspepsia,  i-onstipa- 
tion.  liver  trouble,  nervousness  and  i>- 
l>Ility  are  remedied  by  the  genial  medi- 
<lne.  useful  in  convalescence  and  old  agt. 
A    wineglassful   three   times   a   dav. 


A  report  from  Harding  states  that  a 
force  of  ship  carpenters  has  been  put 
to  work  building  a  new  steamer  to 
run  on  Crane  lake.  It  is  to  be  equipped 
with  entirely  new  machinery  and  will 
be  large  enoUgh  to  accomm(»date  fifty 
passengers  comfortably.  It  will  be  run 
in  connection  with  the  Maj.  Carter. 
Capt.  J.  J.  Hayes'  old  boat,  which  is 
beins-  considerably  enlarged  and 
greatly  improved.  These  two  boats 
it  is  thought,  will  be  amply  sufficient 
to  accomin<i<late  all  <.f  the  gold  <-oun- 
try  traffic  that  will  go  in  by  the  Tower 
route.  The  new  boat  will  be  ready  soon 
after  navigation  opens.        , 


the  conditions  under  which  the  dub 
can  enter  the  L.  A.  W.  w  ill  make  its  re- 
port. It  is  said  that  seventy-five  |3er 
cent  of  the  member  are  willing  to  go 
in.  and  that  this  proportion  is  sufficient, 
but  that  no  response  has  yet  been  had 
from  the  L.  A.  W.  officials. 


WHY  BE  HUMBUGGED? 

Abnnt  one  pereon  in  fifty  may  have  a  slight 
ecalp  diseasp ;  for  50c  we  gaarautee  a  cum 
for  raUinsr  hair.  Go  to  the  reliable  and 
only  hair  store  In  the  city. 

MME.  BOYD~&  WILBUR, 

(ironnd  Floor,  Hunter  Kuildiog 


Bicycle  Track  Project. 

The  track  committee  of  the  Duluth 
Cycle  club  and  the  officers  of  the  Agri- 
cultural association  were  to  have  met 
last  evening  to  talk  over  the  project  of 
putting  in  a  cycle  track  at  the  fair 
grounds,  but- owing  doubtless  to  the 
weather  the  meeting  was  not  held.  The 
postponed  meeting  will  be  held  in  a 
day  or  two.  and  the  track  committee 
will  report  at  a  special  meeting  of  the 
Cycle  dub  next  Tuesday  evening.  At 
that  meeting.  it  is  expecte<l.  the 
committee      appointed       to      look       up 


Nibbing  Townsite  Company. 

The  Hibbing  Townsite  and  Mining 
company  filed  articles  of  incorporati  ui 
with  the  register  of  deeds  yesterday 
afternoon.  The  object  of  the  coipora- 
tion  is  t<»  cari->-  (m  the  business  of 
mining,  smelting,  reducing  and  work- 
ing iron  ores  and  other  metals.  The 
headquarters  of  the  company  w  ill  be  in 
Duluth.  The  (dlicers  are  O.  I).  Kinu'-y. 
president;  A.  M.  Chisholm.  vice  presi- 
dent, and  J.  L.  Washburn,  .secretary 
and  tr<asurer.  The  ollicers  are  als<> 
the  inc(upi>rators.  It  is  proposed  to  at 
<uice  develop  the  iron  property  in  the 
east  f«Hty  acres  of  the  townsite  of  Hib- 
bing. Sufficient  exploring  has  been 
done  to  show  up  a  large  body  of  ore  on 
the  property. 


Massage  of  the  Face  and  Neck 

For  the  removal  of' wrinkles. 

Would  you  preserve  your  hair? 

Th-n  call  and  sen  nt,  as  we  treat  all  hair  and 
■ealp  diraaars.  Artistic  hair  dresting  and 
manicariog,  latest  styles. 

KNAUF  SISTERS.  lOi  W.  Bnparior  8t. 
Ovor  Hinith  A.  Kmilirn  UruK  Hl^.m. 


' 

( 

^ 

ff*  '*'  '^  • 


1 

d 

1 

1 

*. 

* 

' 

■I 


>•«»•    lU-WWH 


•A 


mi 


4 


1 
\ 

1 

1 
1 

1 

Travel   to   the    Rainy   Lake 

Country  is  Blocked  For 

a  Time. 


*4 


77 


99 


Ji 


FOR 


The  Roads  Are  Entirely  Im- 
passable Because  of  the 
Soft  Weather. 


Cold  Snap  Necessary  Before 

Teams  Can  Go  Through 

With  Freight. 


tleorgre  M.  Smith  returned  from 
T«nver  vfsitiMclay.  He  reports  that  travel 
from  that  point  to  Rainy  Lake  and 
Seine  river  has  been  broupht  to  a  stand- 
still beeau}«e  of  the  condition  of  the 
roads.  There  is  over  two  feet  of  snow 
along  the  entire  route  and  on  the  lakes 
there  is  nearly  a  foot  of  water  between 
the  snow  and  ice.  The  warm  weather 
has  made  the  snow  on  the  trail  so  soft 
that  it  will  n>t  h«>ld  horses,  and  if  is 
impossible'  fur  them  to  travel.  A  num- 
ber of  pet>ple  are  now  at  Tower  waitini; 
for  a  (.oM  snap  that   will  srive  them  an 

•  •ppt^ntunity  to  iret  through,  anions  them 
bvinsr  Thomas  Merritt  and  John  Mac- 
lK>naM.  of  Duluth.  Owners  of  teams 
at  Tower  refuse  to  let  them  start  un- 
til there  has  been  a  ehanste  of  weather. 

\V.    A.     Preston    is    still     waiting    at  I 
Tower  for  a  chance  to  take  three  car- 
loads   of    machinery    now    on    the    side 
tracks   there,    to  Mine   C-^nter.       If   the  I 
roads  d««  not  improve  sufficiently  within 
the  next  two  weeks  to  make  this  route  ' 
feasible    he   will    ship     round     by    way 
nf  Kat   Portage     and     from     there     by 
boat    to    the    mines.        At    present    the 

•  •nly    practical   way   of  reaching   Rainy  ) 
Lake  or  Mine  Center  is  by  dog  trains  ! 


GRIP 

"Afrald-of-a-Cold" 

The  wise  man  at  this  time  of  the  year 
gives  much  thought  to  overcoats,  over- 
shoes and  umbrellas  and  other  things, 
j  which  insure  safety  in  spite  of  changes 
j  in  the  weather.  Among  the  other  things 
is  a  vial,  of  Humphreys'  "77"  for  Colds,  \ 
in  the  pocket. 

They  find  that  other  preventive  mea- 
sures may  be  forgotten— that  mistakes 
may  be  made  about  the  weather—  that 
exposure  is  often  unavoidable,  but  "77" 
in  the  pocket  meets  all  emergencies. 

A  certain  proportion  of  the  people  are 
always  afraid  of  catching  Cold  or  Grip. 
The  usual  line  of  treatment  prescribed 
by  them  is,  that  easily  spoken  injunction: 
"take  care  of  themselves."  Circumstances 
are  not  always  favorable  for  following 
this  good  advice  something  more  is 
wanted  and  it  is  found  in  "77."  It  is  the 
only  thing  that  these  "afraid-of-a-cold" 
people  can  find,  that  will  prevent  Colds 
and  Grip. 

"77"  always  breaks  up  stubborn  Colds 
that  "han'T  on."  i 


THE     m-LT'TII     EVEXIXG     HERALD:   SATURDAY.    MARCH    20,    1897. 


The  Uniform  Charter  Would 
Change  the  City  Govern- 
ment Considerably. 


baggage 
rail   and 


All  Resolutions,  Orders  and 

Ordinances  Must   Pass 

the  Two  Houses. 


Three-Fourthsof  Each  House 

and  Popular  Vote  on 

Franchises. 


A  BAD  WRECK. 

Many  Injured  on  the  Baltimore 
&  Ohio  Railroad. 

Oakland,  Md..  March  20.— At  7:30  this 
morning,  train  No.  2.  on  the  Baltimore 
&  Ohio  railroad  from  Cincinnati  and  St. 
Louis,  was  derailed  one  mile  west  of  here 
on  the  bridge.  The  engine,  po.stal  car 
car  and  forward  coach  left  the 
0,1"*^  ^^^'^^  .sleeper  rolled  Into  the 
[rick  °"^^'*  ^^'**  ^***  "°*  '**^®  ^^^ 

K^^,^  following  pa.ssengers  were  Injured- 
M.  D.  Phelps  and  wife.  Barry.  Vt  wifo 
serious;  Charles  S.  Martin.  Slilina.Kan 
.slightly  mjured  in  arm:  W.  R  Fuller 
Pullman  conductor,  right  aide  seriously- 
J.  b.  Mina.  Houston.  W.  Va..  side  hurt' 
Mrs.  James  H.,niin  Carpenter.  Meigs 
county.  Ohio,  n.-rvous  shock:  J.  H  Rich- 
i',''1''- 4r°n*  ^*'""-  "''^'^  '^"^  ^^^^  sprained - 
V-"';  r.""41l'""-  «t  S^-  ^o"'«-  missing;  J 
Knight  Thomas.  Baltimore,  back  hurt 
and  slightly  tut  in  head;  J.  D.  Cupnen- 
holmer.  m«  Madison  avenue.  New  York 
three  scalp  wounds;  George  H.  Suders' 
Alaska.  W  Va..  slight  scratches  on  head 
iind  hip.  Dr.  McComas  will  take  the  in- 
jured   to    Cumberland    on    the    transfer 

The  wrecked  train  was  running  about 
forty-five  miles  :m  hour  when  the  acci- 
dent occurred  it  was  the  impression 
that  either  the  postal  or  baggage  car 
was  first  derailed,  breaking  the  bolts  of 
the  axle  plates  and  throwing  out  of  place 
the  north  rail  which  caused  the  derail- 
ment of  the  entire  train.  The 
cause  of  the  wreck  is  not  known 


TORREIITS 


Wisconsin   Inundated   Very 

Generally  By  the  Record 

Breaking  Floods. 


Railroads,   Farms,  Bridges, 
Houses   and  Other  Prop- 
erty Destroyed. 


actual 


Dr.  Humphreys'  Homeopathic  ftlautial  of  Dis- 
easM  at  your  drnsitists  or  Mailed  Free. 

Sold  by  druggists  or  sent  on  receipt  of  25c ;  or 
five  for  $1.00.  Uomphreys'  Medicine  Co.,  Cor, 
William  &  John  Hts,  New  York. 


CITY  BRIEFS. 


or  with  snow  shoes. 

In  addition  to  the  freight  and  pas« 
senger  steamer  to  be  put  on  Rainy 
Lake  by  N.  J.  Miller,  of  this  city,  he 
!!«  having  two  small  steamers  of  light 
draught  huilt  at  Racine.  Wis.,  that  will 
l>e  suitable  for  small  exploring  parties. 


NEWSBOYS'  CONCERT. 

Will  Be  Given  Next  Month  at 
the  Armory. 

The    Evening   Herald  newsl)oys  wili.  , 
some    time    next    month,    give    a    con-  I 
cert  at   the  Armory  for  the  benefit  of  I 
the  Bethel,  as  a  mark  of  their  appre-  I 
•  ■iation    for    the   newsboy   dinner   given  ' 
them  at  the  Bethel   last  Thanksgiving.  ,' 
.\lH>ut    fifteen    of    the    little    merchant.^  i 
will   take     part     in    the  entertainment.  ' 
and  they  are  rehearsing  almost   night-  ! 
ly  under  the  direction  of  A.  C  Pearson, 
.><uperintendent    of    the    circulating    de-  ' 
partment    of    the    Herald.        The    pro-  , 
cram  will  t-onsist  <>f  songs,  dances  and 
instrumental  niusit-.       No  attempt   will 
h^    made    to    costume    the    pt'rformcr.'^. 
I>ut   they  will   appear  just  as  they  air  : 
sei'ii  in  the  streets  every     day     selling 
their  papers.  j 

The  lM»ys  gave  a  very  successful  con-t 
•  -rt  at  the  Bethel  M:ty  Irt.  isiV,.  which  ■ 
netted  $7i>  to  that  institution,  and  over 
"Jt'o  persons  w^r  turned  away  from 
the  <l»>>rs  unaVtlc  to  gain  admittance. 
The  progrum  now  in  preparation  will 
l>e  superior  to  the  first  one.  and  as  the 
boys  are  enthusiastic  in  their  work.  | 
those  who  attend  will  be  furnished  an 
evenings  amusement  of  a  unique  char- 
acter, and  will  at  the  same  time  be 
helping  along  a  worthy  charity.  Tickets 
of  admission  will  soon  be  on  sale  at  l.-> 
cents  each. 


Cullum,  dentist,  Palladio.  Phone  No.  9. 

Smoke  Endion  cigar.  W.  A.  Foote. 

Wendling,  the  great  orator.  March  24. 

The    Duluth     Hustler     has     changed 

hands.    Mrs.    S.   C.  Akin,    of   the   Labor 

World,    being   the   new    proprietor,    sht. 

taking  possession  vest:>»*day.     It  is  ur- 

der-stood  that  the  two  publications  will 

be  merged. 

Frank  Peterson,  accused  of  introduc- 
ing liquor  to  the  Fond  du  Lac  reserva- 
tion,   had    a    hearing    yesterilav    b.  fore 
j  Judge  Carey  and  was  diseharif.'J. 

Nicholas  Grasser.  a  geiitleinan  of 
al>out  SO  years  of  age.  re.^'dio'?  at  J24 
East  First  street,  was  taken  with  a 
sinking  spell  on  East  First  sire'n,  near 
Second  avenue,  about  6  o  c]ity:ti  this 
morning.  He  was  taken  to  police  head- 
quarters, where  restoratives  were  ap- 
!  plied  by  Dr.  Graham.  He  soon  recov- 
ered sufficiently  to  be  taken  to  his 
home. 

The  Thespian  Dramatic  club  will 
giv'  a  Shakespearean  recital  and  con- 
cert next  Tuesday  evening. 

The  Wi.<coMsin  Central  train  from 
Chicago  arrived  in  Duluth  three  houis 
late  today. 

The    entertainment  at     Endion    club ! 
this  evening   will   l»e   for  members  and 
ladies.     The   billiard   and    pool    tourna- 
ment will  be  in  progress  between  some 
of  the   best     players.      There     will     be  , 
music,   instrumental     and     vocal,     and  ' 
light      refreshments.     The      committee  I 
hopes  to  see  all  members  present.  ' 

Cleaning,  dyeing,  etc..  at   Kelly's.  ' 

In  Judge  Itoyle's  <ourt  this  afternoon 
Neil  Kell-y  was  found  guilty  of  drunk- 
enness and  fined  $H>  and  costs.  ; 

.\   eleven    pound  daughter  arrived   at 
the  home  of  Mr.  and  .Mrs.  John  Panton  • 
today. 


PAYNE  REFUSED. 

Does  Not  Want  Any  Federal 
Position  Whatever. 

Milwaukee,  Wis..  March  20.— A  special 
to  the  Wisconsin  from  Washington,  D. 
C,  .'^ays  Henry  C.   Payne  has  declined 
a  foreign  mission  and  the  news  is  cor- 
roborated by  friends  of  Mr.  Payne,  who 
have  been   in  constant  communication 
with    him.     Ever     since     Monday     Mr. 
Payne  has  had  under  consideration  the 
oflfer  of  President  McKinley  of  any  for- 
eign  mission  except  tho.se  to     England 
and  France,   which  have  already  been 
filled. 
The  president   was  particularly  anx- 
thereof.  stating  to  whom  and  for  whatiious  that  the  Wisconsin  man  accept  the 
purposes  issued.  [German  ambassadorship.      The      presi- 

Sectlon    3S   provides:   All    claims     and   ilent  expressed  his  appreciation  of  the 
demands  against  the  city  or  any  board  i  services   rendered    the     party     by     Mr. 
department      "  -       •     -  ••  •■ 


St.  Paul.  March  20.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.) — Six  chapters  of  the  uniform 
city  charter  are  new  completed.  Th-; 
contents  of  the  firFt  three  chapters! 
were  telegraphed  to  The  Herald  yes- 
terday. The  fourth  chapter  deals  with 
the  city  comptroller.  It  says:  It  shall 
be  the  duty  of  the  comptroller  to  keep 
regular  Iwntks  <»f  accounts,  in  which 
he  shall  enter  all  indebtedness  of  the 
city,  and  which  shall  at  all  times  show 
the  precise  financial  c-ondition  of  the 
city:  the  amount  of  all  bonds,  orders, 
warrants  or  other  evidences  of  in* 
debtcdness  which  have  been  redeemed, 
and  the  amount  of  each  outstanding. 
He  shall  i-ountersign  all  Ixmds,  or- 
ders, warrants  or  other  evidences  of  in- 
debtedness,  and  keep  an  exact  account 


More   Refugees    and    More 
Deaths   From  the  Mem- 
phis Flood  Sections. 


Boone  river,  west  of  this  city.  Neither 
of  the  bodies  nor  the  horses  and  car- 
riage have  yet  been  recovered.  Travis 
leaves  a  wife,  while  young  Klrkeberg 
was  to  have  been  married  In  a  few 
days.  These  are  the  first  flood  deaths 
here. 

DUBUQUE'S    WATER   SURPLUS. 

Dubuque,  Iowa.  March  20.— More  than 
an  inch  of  rain  fell  in  the  last  twenty- 
four  hours  and  has  sent  small  streams 
out  of  their  banks,  washing  away  a 
number  of  small  bridges.  The  rise  in 
the  Mississippi  during  the  night  was 
sixteen  inches.  The  river  is  filled  with 
floating  ice  showing  that  the  breakup 
is  extensive.  Trains  on  all  railroads 
are  behind  time,  those  on  the  Burling- 
ton and  Milwaukee  from  the  North  be- 
ing several  hours  late.  A  number  of 
washouts  are  reported  on  the  Milwau- 
kee north,  and  a  bridge  at  New  Albin 
seriously  damaged.  No  loss  of  life  has 
been   reported. 


PaTs  to  Wisconsin  bridges  and  tracks. 

1    countersigned    by    him  j  Payne's  friends  here  are  highly" grati- i  ^1^^    Central's    tracks    have    also    been 

?pt  until  delivered  by  thc-liied  at  the  manner  in  which  he  has  been     ^^'^afed  and  the  through  train  from  Si. 

,    .  „,._...,.,  *'*'"' Paul  this  morning  reached  Rugby  June- 


Artificial    Flowers. 

The  largest  a.ssoitmcnt  »'ver  shown 
in  this  city  at  very  low  prices  at  Mad- 
am neuglcfs.  Kitchi  Gammi  building. 
22  Thinl  avenue   west. 


FRANK  FLOWER*S  DESIRE. 

Wants  to  Be  Commissioner  of 
Navigation. 


PERSONALS. 


L>r.  N.  B.  McNulty  left  for  Minneapo- 
lis this  afternoon  and  will  return  Mon- 
day with  Mrs.  McNulty. 

Mrs.  Frank  Brunson.  of  St.  Paul, 
visited  her  aunt.  Mrs.  Frank  Winter-s! 
matron  of  the  Fiosser  hospital,  thi.-s 
^^  eek. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  R.  c.  Vincent  arrived 
home  this  we"k  after  attending  the  in- 
auguration. They  spent  six  weeks 
sight-seeing  in    Washington. 

Hon.  P.  H.  Rahilly.  of  l^ke  Citv.  is 
visiting  in  thn  city. 

E.  Z.  Williams  and  O.  O.  Traphagnft 
w»-re  at  the  Westminster  hotel  in  .Niu 
York  last   Wednesday. 

E.  W.  Durant.'Jr..  of  Stillwater,  is 
among  tfMlays  arrivals  at  thf  Spald- 
ing. 

I>.  M.  Philbin.  general  superintendent 
of  the  Duluth.  Superior  &  Western,  re- 
turned from  Marquette  this  morning. 

H.  C.  Mackey.  of  Stillwater,  is  at  the 
St.  Louis. 

J.  L.  Greatsinger.  president  of  the  Du- 
luth &  Iron  Range  railroad,  is  in  Chi- 
cago today. 

William  f)rr.  general  freight  agent  i>f 
lb>-  Dubith.  .South  Shore  ^t  .Xtlantic,  re- 
turned  from  Chieago  tod.-iy 

r.  fi.  MiOill.  of  .MiMnea?."oli;- 
tercd  at  the  St.  l>oui.s. 

S    K    Fr'»?t.  of  Milwaukee.  | 
at  the  St.  Luui.*;. 

G.  V.  Laughlin  came  up  from  Two 
Harb..rs  last  ni-ght  and  registered  at  the 
St.   Iv'Uis. 

n.  M  Gunri.  Itasca  county's  represen- 
tative in  the  legislature,  was  in  the  city 
today  t>fi  his  way  to  Grand  Rapids  from 
St.    Paul. 

C.  M.  Boss,  of  Bessemer,  Mich 
the  St.  Louis. 

N.  N.  Wright,  of  Saginaw.  Mich.,  is 
among  today's  arrivals  at  the  St. 
l.«iuis. 

T.  H.  Larke.  commercial  agent  of  the 
Duluth.  South  Shore  &  Atlantic,  has  re- 
turned from  Chicago. 

George  T.  Barr.  of  Mankato,  is  at  the 
•Spalding. 

H.  J.  Wade,  of  Chicago,  is  r^gisterf-d 
at   the  Spalding. 

H.  T.  <.jiiinl.ttt  ami  wife  arrived  in  the 
city  from  St.  Paul  Ibis  morning.  Thi  v 
are  guests  at  ihe  Spalding. 

K.  II.  .N'yhiio  is  up  fiom  St.  Paul  to- 
day, a  unmt  ai  ilie  Spalding. 

County  Auditor  Ifaliliii.  who  has  been 
ill  with  grip  for  several  days,  was  at 
his  oflice  ihi-s  morning. 

Miss  Pearl  Kos.ser  has  gone  to  Minne- 
apolis. 

Madame  Warde  has  returned  from 
the  East. 


IS  regi.<- 
•  a  guest 


Frank  A.   Flower,   who  has  for  years 
been  an  officer  or  leading  delegate   to 
every  deep  waterway  convention   held 
in  this  country,   is  understood  to  be  a 
,  candidate  for  the  oflice  of  commission- 
er of  navigation.  Mr.  Flower  is  certaln- 
I  ly  peculiarly  fitted  for  this  office,  says 
j  the    Marine    Review.    He   is   thonjughly 
posted  in  everything  pertaining  to  the 
shipping  interests  of  the  country,  and 
esoecially      internal      commerce.        He 
will   find    a   great       many       supporters 
among  business  men  in  the  Northwest, 
who  are  enthusiasts  on   the  subject  of 
cheap    water    transportation    from    the 
head  of  the   lakes  to  the  Atlantic  cea- 
board.        .Mthough    hi^    candida<y    has 
not    been    publi«ly    announced,    the    Re- 
view  is  in   receipt   of  two  or  three  let- 
ters  asking   that    support    be    given    to 
him.  One  of  these  correspondents  says: 
"The   <-ommissionership    is   not    much 
i>f  an   office,    but   its   duties   and   po.ssi- 
bilities  are   in   line    with   the   work    Mr. 
Flower  has   been    doing  at   private  ex- 
pense for   years.   His  knowledge   of   all 
the  details   connected   with   such   prob- 
lems as   the    big  river  and   harbor   Im- 
provements, the  (luestion  of  lake  levels, 
impounding    of    lake    waters.      Chicago 
canal    and    many    other    subje<ts    that 
have    an    important    bearing   on    water 
transportation    would    certainly    result 
In  bringing  these  matters  more  full v  to 
the    attention    of    i ungiess.     Why    is    il 
not    time,    anyhow,    that    the    lake    <'ar 


or    department    thereof,      before      they 
shall  be  allowed  l»y  the  common  council, 
I  shall    be  audited    and   adjusted    l>y   the 
'■  comptroller,    and    all    warrants    or   or- 
t  ders  on  the  treasury,  either  on  the  part 
j  of  the  city  or  its  boards  or  of  any  of- 
ficer   or    department    thereof,    shall    l>c- 
'  examined    and 
and  by  him  ke 

person    entitled    thereto,    and    he    shall 
take   and   preserve  receipts  for  all   or- 1 
ders  or  warrants  as  delivered,   and  all; 
claims  and  demands  against  any  board ; 
or  department  of  the  city  shall  be  al- 
lowed   by    the    common    council    liefore 
payment    thereof,    except   as   otherwise 
provided  by  this  act.  | 

It    is    provided    that    it    shall    be    thei 
duty    of    the    comptroller    immediately  j 
on   the    receipt  of  any    taxes  from   the| 
(ounty    treasurer   to    make    the    proper 
distribution  of  th'3  same  to  the  several 
lunds.    specifying    what    parts    of    said, 
liistribution    are    delinquent    taxes    and 
itemizing    each    distribution,    so    as    toj 
state  the  amount  of  each  year's   taxt  f> 
apportioned  to  each  fund,   with  the  in- 
terest and   penalties  stated   separately 
The  comptroller  shall  appoint  his  as- 
sistants,   and   designate   one   as   deputy 
city  comptroller.  The  comptroller's  sal- 
ary  is   to  be  not   more   than   $3500   nor 
less   than   $2000. 

Title   .'    relates    to   the    city    treasurer 
and    says:   The    trea^urer    shall    receive 
and    safely   keep  all   moneys    belonging 
or   accruing    to    the    city,    im-luding    li- 
c«mse  money  and    fines,  and   shall   keep 
accurate   and    detailed    accounts    there- 
of,   and    he    shall    be    entitled    to      and 
shall  demand   and   receive  of  the   trea- 
siuer  of  the  <-ounty   wherein  the  city  isl 
bu-ated.    on    the    tenth    (10th>    business! 
day  of  each   month,   all  moneys  whii-h 
shall    have    been    paid    to    such    county  1 
treasurer    during    the    calendar    month!  island 
pieieding,    ftir   taxes,    as.sessments    antl 
interest    and    penalties,    thereon   on   ac- 
count t>f   levies  and   assessments  made 
for  the  city  for  any  local  improvement. 
He  shall  be  the  custodian  of  all   bonds, 
certificates    of    indebtedness    or     other 
securities    held    by    the   city,    or    in    the 
sinking  fund  of  any  department  there- 
of. The  other  provisions  relating  to  the 
treasurer  are   similar   to    those   now    in 
force.    His    salary    is    to    be    not    more 
than   $5000  nor   less  than   $2000. 

Title  6   deals  with  the  powers  of   the 
common  council  and  is   very  volumin- 
ous   occupying      thirty-three     sections. 
The   council   is    tf»    be  composed    of   an 
assembly    and    a    board    of    aldermen 
which    shall     meet    separately.        Each 
(hamber   will   meet  on   the   first   Tues- 
day of  June    in   each   even     numbered 
year    at    12    o'clock    noon,    when    eachl 
shall  elect  a  president   and  vice  presi- 
<lent.  Each  member  shall  be  the  judge! 
of    the    election    and    eligibility    of    its 
own    members.    No    member    of    either 
chamber  shall  hold  any  other  office  un- 
der the  city  government,  or  be  eligible 
I  to    any    appointive    office    in    the    city 
,  during    the    term    for    which    he       was 
1  elected.    No   resolution,    order  or  ordin- 
I  ance  shall  be  valid  f)r  operative  to  bind 
;  the  city  until  it  shall  have  pa.ssed  each 
of    said    chambers.    All    orders,    resolu- 
tions or^  onlinances   must   be   approved 
by  the  ifiayor,  or  if  he  vetoes  them,  be 
passed    anew    by    each    chamber    by    a 
two-thirds   vote. 

Every  ordinance,  order  and  resolu- 
tion appropriating  money  or  creating 
any    liability,    awarding    or    approving! 


Payne,  and  regretted  exceedingly  that 
he  was  unable  to  reward  him  in  any 
way.  It  is  understood  that  Mr.  Payne 
will  not  accept  any  federal  position 
whatever.  He  will  retarn  to  New  York 
tomorrow  and  leave  the  metropolis  for 
Wisconsin    within     a     few     days.     Mr. 


Milwaukee,  March  20.— Probably  never 
before,  thus  early  In  the  season,  has  the 
state  of  Wisconsin  been  so  completely 
under  water  as  it  was  this  morning, 
and  never  has  the  damage  been  so  ex- 
tensive to  railway  and  other  property 
at  this  season  as  now.  Large  portions 
of  railroad  tracks  in  some  parts  of  the 
state  are  washed  out  or  submerged. 
Both  the  Northwestern  and  the  St.  Paul 
railroads  suffered  considerably  from  the 
high  water  last  night,  while  the  tracks 
of  the  Central  were  under  water  at  sev- 
eral points,  requiring  the  -greatest  cau- 
tion in  running  over  them  and  delaying 
trains  considerably. 

Later  advices  from  Sheboygan  are 
to  the  effect  that  the  men  who  were 
earned  down  the  river  last  night  had 
been  washed  ashore. 

The  damage  by  flood  at  Fond  du  Lac 
will  reach  between  $15,000  and  $20,000 

All  danger  is  past  at  Oshkosh.  At 
noon  It  was  stated  at  the  offices  of  the 
St.  Paul  road  that  the  serious  trouble 
was  over  and  that  the  water  was  going 
down  very  rapidly.  It  will  require  .some 
time,  however,  to  make  permanent  re 
to  Wisconsin 


THE  MISSOURI  AT  OMAHA. 
Omaha.  March  20.— The  Missouri  river 
at  noon  shows  a  rise  of  four  feet  for 
twenty-four  hours.  This  brings  It  near 
the  danger  line,  with  the  flood  from  the 
north  still  to  come.  Specials  from  Iowa 
and  South  Dakota  still  bring  news  of 
flooded  bottom  lands  and  damages  to 
bridges  and  farm  buildings.  The  river 
here  Is  rising  rapidly. 


COCKERILIL]S  ESTATE. 

Sister  and  an  Estranged  Wife 
Fighting  For  It. 


treated    by   Mr.   McKinley. 


RESIGNATION  ACCEPTED. 

Assistant   Secretary    of  War 
Doe  Has  Resigned. 

Wfishington,  March  20.— The  president 
has  accepted  the  resignation  of  the  as- 
sistant secretary  ..f  war,  Joseph  Doe.  of 
Wisconsin,  which  has  been  pending  be- 
fore him  since  March  4.  This  is  taken  to 
indicate  that  an  appointment  for  th"" 
place  has  been  decided  upon.  The  latest 
name  mentioned  for  the  place  is  that  of 
ex-Representative  Henderson  of  Illinois 
who  is  now  in  Washington,  in  supjwrt 
of  his  state  delegation  for  anvthing  he 
seeks  in   the  w;iv  of  office. 


tlon  only  twenty  minutes  late. 

The  most  serious  damage  on  the 
Northwestern  was  the  giving  way  of  a 
center  section  of  a  .-^OO-foot  bridge  near 
Port  Washington,  where  fifteen  cars  of 
a  frei'ght  train  went  down.  The  weaken- 
ing of  the  bridge  was  caused  by  gorged 
ice  and  high  water. 

All  danger  Is  past  in  the  flooded  region 
of  this  city.  No  lives  were  lost  and  the 
damage  consists  of  flooded  cellars. 


ALONG  THE  BIG  MUDDY. 

Much  Damage    Done   By  the 
Tributary  Streams. 


CRETAN  BLOCKADE, 

Officially    Announced  in  Lon- 
don—Press Comments. 

Londtm,  March  20.— The  official  Lon- 
don Gazette,  organ  of  the  government, 
publishes  a  special  supplement  today 
announcing  that  the  blockade  of  ih>> 
of  Crete  l«r  the  warships  of  the 
powers  will  commence  tomorrow.  Tlii:; 
applies  only  to  vessels  under  the  Greek 
flag.  V^essels  under  neutral  flags  may 
land  goods  on  the  island,  provided  such 
merchandise  is  not  intended  for  the 
use  of  the  Greek  troops. 

The  Liberal  newspapers  corrtinue  their 
protests  against  Great  Britain  taking 
any  part  in  the  blockade,  and  one  paper 
heads  its  announcement  of  the  block- 
ade: "The  Devil's  Work  Begins  on  Sun- 
day. " 

Another  newspaper  says:  "Tomorrow 
is  Black  Sunday." 


Foresters  Celebrate. 

Court  Central  Duluth,  No.  1727.  I.  O. 
F..  celebrated  its  first  anniversary  at 
its  court  room  on  Seventeenth  avenue 
west,  last  night.  After  a  large  class 
had  been  initiated,  the  business  session 
was  closed,  and  a  social  time  enjoyed. 
John  G.  Ross.  C.  R.,  was  made  master 
of  ceremonies,  and  he  spoke  entertain- 
ingly of  the  fraternal  features  of  the 
order.  Addresses  were  made  by  the 
following  visiting  brothers  from  other 
local  courts:  Brothers  Henderson,  Mc- 
Iver,  MorrLson  and  McKenzie.  There 
were  .songs,  recitations,  Scotch  dances, 
and  a  Gaelic  song  by  Evvin  McLeod. 


Is  Not  All  Paid. 


The  case  of  George  N.  Holland  against 
the   Duluth  Iron   Mining  and   Develop- 

ments   shall    require   a  two-thirds 

«f  all    the  members  of 

:he   count-il.    The    power.-,    <,i    me    coiiiK-iii  „n,|    !„„,.„      01,      •  1  V,      • 

and  James    Sheridan     had     paid     their 


riers 

have 

who 

ests: 

mote 

kee|> 


IS  ut 


and  the  lake  ship  builders  should 
in  that  odice  fm-  <.ii<e  some  one 
is  In  sympathy  with  tJieir  inter- 
who  tries  to  understand  ami  pro- 
their  wi'lfarc:  who  will  meet  aiut 
in  tomb  with  them:  who  is  not 
tarried  away  with  the  free-ship  notion: 
who  has  no  artificial  load-line  fads; 
who  will  help  watch  congressional  ac- 
tion and  actively  promote  that  which 
is  calculated  to  iienefit  water  trans- 
portation and  water  interests?  Mr 
Flower  is  capalde  of  marking  out  and 
carrying  into  effect  in  this  office  a  plan 
of  work  that  will  be  of  living  interest 
and  real  benefit  to  the  great  enterprises 
involved  and   to  the  per)ple  generally." 


each   bra 
powers  of  the 

at    length. 
:  The  common 
■    I'.v    resolution 

not   exceeding 
.    out    of    the 


council 

lo    ;ip- 

$10,000 

general 


TEACHERS  .WD     STUDENTS 
SIIOl'Lli 

TAKE      HORSFORD'S     ACID    PHOS- 
PHL\TE. 

It  supplies  ju3t  the  material  that  is 
10 est  •vva-';ted  by  brain  n-ork  and  ner- 
vous exertion— the  phosphates. 


MAY  .N.AMK  PnSTM.V.STERS. 
^  Washington.  Mari-h  20.— postmaster 
General  (;ary  will  continue  the  old  pol- 
icy as  to  di:-;tributing  patronage  of  the 
|>fjslotfi(-es  an<l  he  .-uinounced  to  the 
Associated  Pr.-ss  today  that  he  wouM 
not  deviaij-  from  the  practjee  n.i- 
lowed  by  his  pred<>cessors.  This,  as 
a  general  rule,  gives  to  every  .senator 
the  privilege  of  recomending  a  post- 
master for  his  home  postoffit-e  and  al- 
lows to  each  Republican  senator  the 
largest  po'-^o^^r.pj,  jn  his  district,  which 
however,  in  the  case  of  a  senator  not 
of  the  Republican  faith,  will  go  to  th«' 
Republican  committee  or  <ilhcr  ref«>ree 


Virgil's  "Aenefd,"  beautifuMv  Illus- 
trated tonight  at  First  M.  E.  church 
Admission,  15  cents. 


A  lot  of  oreajis  at  Coon's  will  be  sold 
from  $35  to  $50;  $5  down.  |3  per  month. 


<-oun« 

are   then   defined 

S«'(-tion  71   says 

shall    have   powei 

l>ri>priate   .i    sum 

n    an.v   one    year 

:'uiid  for  siK-h  purposes  as  it  may  deem 
iropei-  (o  advaiK-e  the  interests  of  the 
city.  Su(-|i  resolution  shall  only  be 
;>a.ssed  by  a  three-fourths  vote  "of  all 
miinbers  of  each  chamber.  The  couii- 
eil  shall  have  no  power  to  make  auy 
appropriation  for  any  charitable  pur- 
pose, or  for  the  use  of  any  person,  com- 
iiany  or  corporation  residing  outside 
I  his  state.  Erection  and  improvement 
of  city  buildings  of  all  descriptions 
must  be  authorized  by  a  three-fourths 
vote  of  each  chamber  and  must  be 
specifically  provided  for  by  previous 
tax  estimate  or  levy. 

The   council    can    by   a   three-fourths 
vote    grant    franchises    for    street    rail- 
ways,   telegraphs,    telephones,    furnish- 
ing   water,    light    or    heat,    etc.,    for    a 
period  not  exceeding  twenty-five  years 
provided    that    no    lu-dinance    granting 
such  rights  shall  be  effectual  until  sub- 
mitted   to    the   electors    of    the   city    for 
ratilicalion    and   appn.val    by   a    major- 
ity  of  the  electors   voting,   at    the  next 
regular    <itv    election.    No    such    ordin- 
ance shall   be  valid  unless  it  shall  ctm- 
tain    a  condition    for   the   annual    pay- 
ment   of    a    certain    percentage    of    the 
gross    earnings    under    the    franchise, 
section   says:   Save  as  he  is 
•so  to  do  by  law.   no  mem- 
common    council    shall    de. 
iTiaiid.     re<|uesl    or    solieii    anv    deparl- 
oilleer  or  employe  of  tile  cily  to 
engage  or  hire  any  person  to  work'  for 
place  any  person   upon 
the  city. 


i«!   vote!,...  ^^^  amount  due.    The  plaintiff 

n.i,  V.f  i  \^^^  niorning  filed  a  petition  stating  that 
■in.-  I    "•  ^-  '^^'i'^^'"'  J'lhn  Brown.  E.  D.  Brown 


share  of  the  judgment,  but  that  the 
other  stockholders  had  failed  to  do  so, 
executions  having  been  i.ssued  and  re- 
turned unsatisfied.  The  i>emion  is 
made  for  the  purpose  of  .securing  a 
supplemental  judgment  against  those 
stockholders  who  have  paid  for  the 
amount  (»wing  by  those  who  have  not 
paid.     The  amount  due  is  $4407.98. 


Sioux    City,     Iowa.     March     20.— Dis- 
patches from   South  Dakota  and  Iowa 
points  tell  of  serious  floods,  with  indi- 
cations that  the  trouble  has  only   be- 
gun.   The  Big  Sioux  gained  six  feet  and 
IS   still   going   up.     The   big   bridge    be- 
tween Calliope  and  Hawarden  has  gone 
out  and  others  are  momentarily  expect- 
ed  to  go.     At   Akron   the  river  is  three 
miles  wide.     At  Rock  Rapids  the  Rock 
river  is  within   three  feet  of  the  high 
water  mark  of  the  great  flood   ()f  1881. 
and  is  still  going  up.     Seventy  feet  of 
the  street  railway  bridge  has  gone  out. 
Warm  weather  and  rain  are  rapidly 
melting  the  tremendous  piles  of  snow 
in   South  Dakota  and  swelling  all   the 
streams.    The  Mis.souri  is  still  solid  be- 
tween Pierre  and  Sioux  City,  according 
to  the  latest  reports,  but  from  four  to 
six   feet   of   water  covers   the   ice.     At 
Yankton  thirty  square  miles  of  l)ottom 
land   is   under  w-ater  and  all     railroad 
lines  are  tied  up.     The  Great  Northern 
lost  a  bridge  over  the  Vermilion  at  Vi- 
borg  and  a  freight  on  the  Milwaukee 
ran   into   a  pile   bridge   near  Parkston 
and  was  wrecked.    At  Vermilion  all  the 
residents  on  the  low  lands  have  aban- 
doned  their  homes  and   taken   to     the 
hills. 

In  Northeastern  Nebraska  the 
streams  are  higher  than  ever  known 
before.  The  town  of  St.  James  is  sub- 
merged, houses  in  the  lower  part  of  the 
village  are  standing  in  six  feet  of 
water.  Much  stock  is  reported  lost 
and  trains  are  blockaded  and  railroad 
traffic  is  badly  demoralized  over  this 
section  of  the  country.  The  Floyd  val- 
ley from  Sioux  City  to  LeMars  is  a 
sheet  of  water.  Hundreds  of  families 
were  forced  to  move  out  last  night. 

Water  here  is  about  stationary  this 
morning.  Ice  in  the  Missouri  here  went 
out  today. 

At  Eagle  Grove  Dr.  Travis  and  a  far- 
mer named  Kirkberger  were  drowned. 


New  York,  March  20.— Surrogate  Ar- 
nold today  denied  the  application  of 
Mrs.  Hettie  C.  Campbell,  of  Torresdale, 
Pa.,  for  permission  to  examine  certain 
effects  of  her  brother,  the  late  Col.  John 
Cockerill,  which  reached  this  city  from 
Cairo,  Egypt,  a  few  days  ago.  Col. 
Cockerill,  who  was  well  known  as  a 
journalist  all  over  the  United  States, 
died  of  apoplexy  in  Cairo  in  April  of 
last  year.  Mrs.  Campbell,  who  is  the 
wife  of  Dr.  John  Campbell,  alleged  in 
her  petition  that  an  examination  of  the 
effects  of  her  deceased  brother  would 
disclose  the  existence  of  a  will  executed 
si>bsequent  to  the  instrument  under 
which  the  widow  of  Col.  Cockerill,  now 
Mrs.  Walter  Leinan,  is  made  his  sole 
heiress,  and  in  addition  that  Col.  Cock- 
erill had  assigned  to  the  petitioner,  his 
sister,  a  policy  of  insurance  for  $10,000. 
The  petitioner  also  alleged  that  Col. 
Cockeril  had  for  some  time  prior  to  hia 
death  been  estranged  from  his  wife,  and 
that  he  had,  besides,  instituted  here  an 
action  for  absolute  divorce. 

Mrs.  Campbell  asserted  the  belief 
that  should  Col.  Cockerill's  effects  first 
come  Into  the  possession  of  his  former 
wife,  the  later  will  and  assignment  ol 
life  insurance  would  be  destroyed. 

The  surrogate's  denial  of  the  petition 
is  based  upon  the  proposition  of  law 
that  an  order  of  discovery  and  inspec- 
tion can  only  be  granted  in  a  proceed- 
ing which  is  actually  pending. 

Mrs.  Campbell  received  the  following 
letter  fro  inCol.  Cockerill,  after  he  had 
gone  to  Japan  to  act  as  war  corespond- 
ent of  the  New  York  Herald: 

"Grand  Hotel,  Yokohama,  Sept.  20, 
1S95.— My  dear  sister:  I  am  just  start- 
ing for  Corea  and  China.  I  have  left 
some  valuables  here  In  charge  of  W. 
S.  Stone,  manager  of  the  American 
Trading  company.  Should  anything 
happen  to  me,  he  has  your  address  and 
will  communicate  with  you.  I  want  to 
say  that  whatever  I  leave  behind  is 
yours  in  the  event  of  my  death.  Be- 
fore my  wife  left  here  I  settled  with  her 
by  paying  her  a  certain  sum  in  cash  in 
consideration  of  her  relinquishing  all 
claims  against  me.  The  sum  was  $3000 
in  gold.  In  the  event  of  my  death  she 
will  have  no  claims.  My  insurance  is 
also  made  out  in  your  behalf.  Should  I 
come  out  of  the  somewhat  perilous  ex- 
pedition I  shall  return  to  the  United 
States  some  time  in  January  or  Febru- 
ary. With  best  wishes,  affectionately 
yours,  JOHN  A.  COCKERILL."  " 

In  the  affidavit  is  part  of  a  letter 
dated  Yokohama,  Sept.  16,  1895,  which 
reads: 

"My  dear  sisters:  Mrs.  C.  returned 
home  a  week  ago.  There  is  no  use  try- 
ing, we  cannot  live  together,  and  a  di- 
vorce must  be  had  as  soon  as  I  come 
back,  which  I  hope  will  be  in  January. 
Don't  say  anything  of  this  to  anybody 
save  the  doctor;  it  is  important  that 
you  should  not.  I  have  done  xs^  best, 
but  it  is  no  use.    As  ever,  J.  A.  C." 

At  the  time  of  the  death  of  her  brother 
she  says  she  was  informed  by  her 
lawyer,  C.  C.  Campbell,  of  this  city, 
that  proceedings  for  an  absolute  divorce 
from  his  wife,  brought  by  the  colonel, 
were  pending  in  this  city. 


ARTICLES  OF  INCORPORATION  OF 
NORTHERN  HARDWARE  COMPANY. 
The  undersigned  hereby  associate  them- 
selves for  the  purpose  of  forming  a  cor- 
poration under  the  provisions  of  TiUa 
2,   of  Chapter  34,   General   Statutes  18W. 

Article  1.  The  name  of  said  corpori- 
tlon  shall  be  Northern  Hardware  Com- 
pany. 

Article  II.  The  general  nature  of  the 
business  of  said  corporation  shall  be  buy 
ing  and  selling  miners'  and  mill  supplies, 
hardware  and  other  merchandise,  com- 
monly sold  In  hardware  stores,  and  the 
principal  place  of  business  shall  be  at 
Duluth,    Minnesota. 

Article  III.  The  time  of  the  commence- 
ment of  said  corporation  shall  be  March 
22.  A.  D.  1897,  and  shall  continue  for 
thirty  years. 

Article  IV.  The  capital  stock  shall  be 
twenty-five  thousand  dollars  ($2.").fii)0.U0) 
divided  into  two  hundred  and  fifty  t*iu) 
shares  of  one  hundred  dollars  (llOO.Wi) 
each,  and  shall  be  paid  in  at  such  times 
as  the  board  of  directors  shall  require. 
Pro\-ided,  that  no  stock  shall  be  Issued 
until  it  Is  fully  paid  up.  The  highest 
amount  of  Indebtedness  or  liability  to 
which  the  said  corporation  shall  at  any 
time  be  subject  shall  be  twenty-five  thou- 
sand   dollars    ($25,000.00). 

AiJIcle  V.  The  names  and  places  of 
residence  of  the  persons  associated  in 
forming  this  corporation  are: 

E.  A.  Moye,  Duluth,  Minn.;  W.  F, 
Quayle  Duluth,  Minn.;  E.  P.  Stone,  Sag- 
inaw,  Mich. 

Article  VI.  The  government  and  man- 
agement of  this  corporation  and  Its  af- 
fairs shall  be  vested  in  a  president,  vice 
president,  treasurer  and  secretary,  wl.o 
shall  be  selected  from  and  elected  by  the 
board  of  directors.  The  office  of  trea;5- 
urer  and  president  or  vice  presi- 
dent may  be  held  by  the  .same  person,  but 
the  secretary  shall  not  hold  any  other 
office  in  said  corporation.  The  names  of 
the  first  board  of  directors  are: 

E.  A.    Moye.     Duluth.     Minn.;     W       F 
Quayler  Duluth,  Minn.;  E.  P.  Stone  'Sae- 
Inaw.   Mich.  ' 

Article  VII.  The  directors  shall  be 
elected  at  the  annual  meeting  of  the 
stoAcholders.  which  shall  be  held  on  the 
first  Tuesday  after  the  22nd  dav  of 
March.  Provided,  that  the  president  shall 
call  a  special  meeting  of  the  stockholders  of 
any  time  on  the  written  application  of  a 
majority  of  the  stock  issued,  such  meeting 
to  be  called  in  the  time,  piace  and  mamier 
as  shall  be  provided  in  by-laws  adopted 
by  the  stockholders  at  any  annual  or 
regularly  called  special  meeting  of  the 
stockholders^,  at  which  a  majoritv  of  the 
stock  then  issued  shall  be  represented  by 
the  holders  thereof  in  person  or 
by  proxy.  and  filed  with  the 
secretary;  and  at  anv  such 

special  meeting  of  the  stockholders  any 
director  may  be  removed  from  the  of- 
fice of  director  and  the  vacancy  in  the 
board  thus  created  may  be  filled  by  vote 
of  the  holders  of  a  majority  of  the  stock 
voting,  either  in  person  or  by  proxv,  each 
share  of  stock  being  entitled  to  one  vote 

In  witness  whereof  we  have  hereunto 
set  our  hands  and  seals  this  9th  day  of 
March,  A.  D.  1897. 

EDWARD    A.    MOYE,       (Seal.) 
EDWIN    P.    STONE,  (Seal.) 

WILLIAM  F.  QUAYLE,   (Seal). 
Signed,   sealed  and  delivered   in  presence 

F.  W.  Parsons, 
John  B.  Adams. 

STATE  OP   MINNESOTA,  COUNTY  OF 

ST.   LOUIS-SS. 

On  this  9th  day  of  March,  A.  D.  1897 
before  me,  a  notary  public  within  and 
for  said  county,  personallv  apt)eared  E 
P.  Stone,  E.  A.  Moye  and  W.  F.  Quayle. 
to  me  personally  known  to  be  the  person.s 
who  signed  the  foregoing  articles  of  In- 
corporation, and  each  acknowledged  that 
he  executed  the  same  as  his  free  aH 
and  deed. 

F.   W.    PARSONS, 
Notary  Public,   St.   Louis  Co.,    Mina. 

(Notarial  Seal.) 


The  last 
authorized 
Iter    of    the 

•  I 
ment, 

or  hire 
the  city  or  to 
the  payroll   of 


PENSIN  GRANTED. 
Washington,  March  20.— (Special   to  Th-^ 
Herald.)— An   original   pension   was    todav 
granted  to  William  J.  Long,  of  Ely,  Minri. 

RAPID  SHOEMAKING. 
One  of  the  big  Lynn  shoe  shops  made 
a  pair  of  ladies'  boots  for  the  Paris  ex- 
hibition of  1889  in  twenty-four  minutes, 
says  Scribner's.  A  notary  public  fol- 
lowed the  operation,  watch  in  hand.  For 
this  feat  the  pair  of  shoes  went  through 
the  usual  routine  of  the  shoo,  but  at 
exceptional  speed;  flfly-seven "different 
operators  and  forty-two  machines  were 
concerned  in  the  work,  which  required 
twenty-six  nieces  of  leather,  fourteen 
pieces  of  cloth,  twenty-four  buttons, 
twenty-four  button  holes,  eighty  tacks, 
twenty  nails,  two  box-toes,  two  steel 
shanks  and  twenty  yards  of  thread. 
Since  that  time  the  division  of  labor 
upon  a  pair  of  shoes  has  become  still 
greater,  and  there  is  a  larger  number 
of  machines  employed,  with  the  result 
that  a  pair  of  ladies  boots  can  now  be 
made  complete  in  this  factory  inside  of 
twenty  minutes. 


ORDEREDJIY  ALGER. 

Government    River   Boats    to 
Render  All  Possible  Aid. 

Washington,  Manh  20.— Secretary  Al- 
•^er  has  acted  with  great  promptness 
upon  the  application  of  Senator  Collom 
for  government  help  at  Cairo.  This 
aftcrmxin  the  following  telegram  was 
sent  to  (^ol.  <;illespie,  chairman  of  the 
Mississippi  river  commission,  now  in 
New  York,  and  also  Ui  Maj.  A.  M.  Bury 
at  St.  I^ouis.  in  charge  of  the  river  anil 
harbor  work  at  that  point: 

"The  secretary  of  war  directs  that 
the  government  fleet  in  the  vicinity  of 
Cairo  be  put  In  commission  and  every- 
thing possible  be  done  to  relieve  suffer- 
ing and  prevent  loss  of  life  and  prop- 
erty in  the  flooded  districts  along  the 
Mississippi  river.  Consult  with  the 
mayor  and  board  of  aldermen  and  presi- 
dent of  board  of  trade  of  Cairo  and  J. 
P.  Roberts,  circuit  judge.  A.  McKenzie. 
acting  chief  of  engineers." 


REVOLUTIONARY   RELICS. 
Workmen    engaged    in   tearing   down 
an   old-fashioned    fireplace    in   an   oys- 
ter house  on   Delaware   avenue,   below 
Spruce   street,   a  few   days   ago,   came 
upon  a  dilapidated   looking  door  fast- 
ened   by    numerous    rusty    bolts,    says 
the   Philadelphia  Record.    After  much 
exertion    the   bolts   were   loosened   and 
beyond    the    door    was    discovered       a 
brick   vault   about   10   feet    long  and   2 
feet   wide,   on  the  floor  of  which  were 
three   muskets   literally   covered     with 
rust,   and   an   iron   pot   evidently   used 
for   melting    lead.    Beside    these    lay   a 
bar  of  lead,  a  bullet  mold   and  a  bag 
of  damp  gunpowder.       These  were  all 
gathered  up  and  taken  outside  on  the 
pavement    for   inspection.       The   small 
arsenal  had  evidently  been  there  since 
the  revolution.  Close  inspection  proved 
that    the   guns   were   of   English   make, 
a  small  plate  bearing  the  name  "Stam- 
na,  Sheffield,"  being  discovered  on   the 
stock  of  each  weapon. 


RESCUED    AT    ROCK    VALLEY. 
St.    Paul,    March  20.— (Special   to   The 
Herald.)— A    Rock    \'alley,    Iowa,    spe- 
cial to   the  Dispatch    says:   This    place 
was    full    of   excitement    today   on    ac- 
count   of    the    floods.    L. 
rescued    about    eighteen 
the    island    in    a    small 
Lyons,  of  In  wood;  W.  E 
place,    and   G.    L.    Hurd. 
Sioux  County  Bee,   ventured 
on    the    partially      wrecked 


H.    Dearborn  ! 

persons    from  | 

boat.       Grant 

Kent,  of  this 

editor    of   the 

to  go   out 

railroad 


A   WEIGHTY  QUESTION. 
In    Wiliamstown    reside    two      young 
men  of  a  scientific  turn   of  mind,  says 
the    Boston    Record.    They    have    been 
discussing  whether  a  man  weighs  more 
after  eating  than  before,  and  have  de- 
cided  that   eating  Pdds  nothing  to  the 
weight,    while   drinking    makes       itself 
known   in   avoirdupois.       Monday   they 
weighed   themselves  just    before  going 
to    dinner.        Mt-.    Porter    weighed    191 
pounds  and    Mr.    Whelden    165.       They 
al.so  weighed  what  they  ate  for  dinner 
and    the   experiment   showed    that    the 
smaller    man    was    the    better     feeder 
for,  acording  to  th  scales,  he  got  away 
with  three  and  a   half  pounds  of  eat- 
.'■bles,    while  his   companion's  capacity 
v.as  only  two  pounds.  The  men  weighed 
themselves    again    directly    after    din- 
ner,   and    both     declare       that       their 
weight   was  not  increased  at  all. 


MORTGAGE    FORECLOSURE    SALE.- 

Dcfault  having  been  made  in  the  pay- 
ment of  the  sum  of  six  hundred  twelve 
and  08-lOn  tlollars,  which  is  claimed  to 
be  due  and  Is  due  at  the  date  of  this  no- 
tice upon  a  certain  mortgage,  duly  ex- 
ecuted and  delivered  by  Wm.  H.  Coote. 
of  Garvey,  Crittenden  Co.,  Arkansas,  a 
single  man,  mortgagor,  to  Anna  P.  HII- 
lebrand.  of  Washington,  D.  C.  mort- 
gagee, bearing  date  the  2t:th  dav  of  Julv. 
1892.  and  with  a  power  of  .sale  thereiii 
contained,  duly  recorded  in  the  office  of 
the  register  of  deeds  in  and  for  the  coun- 
ty of  St.  Louis  and  state  of  Minnesota 
on  the  .Ith  day  of  August.  1892,  at  8  o'clock 
a.  m.,  in  Book  91  of  mortgages,  on  page 
124. 

Which  said  mortgage,  together  with 
the  debt  secured  therebv.  was  dulv  as- 
.signcd  by  said  Anna  V.  Hlllel)rand,"  mort- 
gagee, to  Henry  T.  Hillebrand  bv  wrlt- 
t<>n  assignment  dated  the  21st  "day  of 
June.  1894.  and  reeorded  in  the  office  of 
.said  register  of  deeds  on  I  ho  7th  dav  of 
July.  1894.  at  8:20  o'clock  a.  m..  in  liook 
107  of  mortgages,  on  i»age  89,  and  no  a<-- 
tion  or  proce<>dlng  having  been  instituted, 
at  law  or  otherwl.se.  to  recover  the  <lebt 
secured  by  said  mortgage,  or  any  part 
thereof. 

Now,  therefore,  n<itice  is  herebv  given 
that  by  virtue  of  the  power  of  sale  con- 
tained in  said  mortgage  and  pursuant  to 
the  statute  in  such  case  made  and  pro- 
vided, the  said  mortgage  will  be  fore- 
closed by  a  sale  of  the  premises  de- 
scribed in  and  conveyed  by  said  mortgage, 
viz:  All  that  tract  or  parcel  of  land 
lying  \and  being  in  the  county  of  St. 
Louis  and  state  of  Minnesota,  described 
as  follows,  to-wit:  Lot  No.  ten  (10).  block 
.sixty-two  (62).  in  the  town  of  Oneota. 
according  to  the  recorded  plat  thereof  on 
file  in  the  office  of  the  register  of  deeds. 
In  and  for  said  county,  with  the  heredi- 
taments and  appurtenances;  which  sale 
will  be  made  by  the  sheriff  of  said  St. 
Louis  County,  at  the  front  door  of  the 
court  house.  In  the  city  of  Duluth.  In  said 
county  and  state,  on  the  4th  day  oi>»Mav, 
1897,  at  10  o'clock  a.  m.,  of  that  day. 
at  public  vendue,  to  the  highest  bidder 
for  cash,  to  pay  said  debt  of  .six  hundred 
twelve  and  08-100  dollars  and  interest  and 
the  taxes.  If  any,  on  said  premises,  and 
twenty-five  dollars  attorney's  fees,  as 
stipulated  in  and  by  said  mortgage  In 
case  of  foreclosure,  and  the  disburse- 
ments allowed  by  law  subject  to  redemp- 
tion at  any  time  within  one  year  from 
the  day  of  sale,  as  provided  by  law. 
Dated   March   aoth.   A.    D.   1897. 

HENRY    T.    HILLEBRAND, 
Assl.gnee  of  Mortgagee. 
JOHN  G.    WILLIAMS. 
Attorney  for  Assignee  of  Mortgagee, 
605-6  First  Nat.  Bank  BIdg.. 
Duluth.   Minn. 
Duluth      Evening     Herald,      March-20-27- 
April-3-10-17-24. 


Assessment  Notice. 


Everything  at  half  price.     Regll's,  105 
W'est  Superior  street. 


The  talk  cf 
price  sale,  105 


the  to"/n.     Rcgli's    half 
West  Superior  stteet. 


The  evening  paper  is  always  care- 
fully read,  especially  in  the  home 
circle,  and  is  therefore  the  l>est  adver- 
tising medium.  . 


bridge.  The  water  carried  out  a  sec- 
tion of  the  bridge,  cutting  off  their  re- 
treat  and  leaving  them  on  the  remain- 
ing portion  of  the  bridge  in  mid- 
stream. After  four  hours  of  anxious 
wait  in-  th«'y  were  rescued  by  use  of 
ropes. 

DROWNED   IN   BOONE    RIVER. 
Minneapolis,    March    20. — (Special     to 
The  Herald.)— A  special  to  the  Journal 
from  Eagle  Grove.  Iowa,  says:  Dr.  E.  I 
M.   Travis  and  Oliver   Kirkeberg  were ' 
drowned  while  atemptlng  to  cross  the. 


READY   TO   LISTEN. 
Chicago  Tribune:   "Can  I  talk  to  you 
a  few  minutes?"  asked  the  life  insur- 
ance agent. 

./'^f'^'"  't'Pl'ed  the  superintendent  of 
the  factory,  "if  you  don't  mind  walk- 
ing about  the  building  with  me.  I 
haven't  really  the  time  to  sit  down  " 
"That's  all  right,"  sald.the  agent.  I'd 
move  around  a  little,   anyhow." 

The  superintendent  led  the  way  out 
to  the  pattern  ro<jm,  thence  Into  the 
wood  workers'  department,  stopping 
every  moment  or  two  to  converse  with 
some  operative,  and  took  his  caller  at 
last  Into  the  room  where  the  huge  trip 
hammers  were  filling  the  air  with  their 
unearthly   din, 

"Now,  ".  he  said,  yflling  Into  the  ear 
of  the  life  Insurance  man,  "I  am  ready 
to  listen  to  you.  Go  ahead." 


Rooms  are  quickly  rented  when 
vertjsed  in  The  B%-enin^  Herald. 
costs  but  1  cent  a  word. 


ad- 
It 


Grading  West  Third  Street. 

Office  of  City  Comptroller, 
Duluth.  Minn.,  March  20th,  1897. 
Notice  is  hereby  given  to  all  persons 
intcre-sted,  that  an  assessment  has  been 
made  by  the  board  of  public  works  of 
the  city  of  Duluth,  Minnesota,  and  con- 
firmed by  the  Hon.  S.  H.  Moer,  judge  of 
the  district  court  of  the   Eleventh   ju- 
dicial district,  to  defray  in  part  the  ex- 
penses of    grading  and  otherwise  im- 
proving West  Third  street  and  Grand 
avenue    west   from    the   center   line    of 
Twenty-eighth     avenue     west     to     the 
westerly     end     of     bridge     at     Thirty- 
seventh  avenue  west,  in  said  city  of  Du- 
luth, and  that  a  duplicate  assessment 
toll  has  been  delivered  to  the  city  treas- 
urer, and   that     the  amount     assessed 
against  each  lot  or  parcel  of  land  can 
be  ascertained  at  the  office  of  the  city 
treasurer,   and   that  the  assessment   is 
due   and    payable,   and    if   paid   within 
thirty  (30)  days  from  the  date  of  this 
notice  there  will  be  allowed  a  deduction 
of  ten    (10)   per  cent   charged     to     the 
amount  of  the  assessment   for  survey 
plans,    specifications   and    superintend- 
ence.   All  persons  so  desiring  can  have 
their  assessments  divided  into  not  more 
than   five   (D)    installments   of  not   less 
than   ten   (10)   dollars  each   by  making 
application  to  the  city  comptroller  witli- 
m  forty-flve  (4.".)  days  after  date  of  this 
notice:  said  Installments  to  become  du;^ 
and     payable     annually,     commencing 
October  1st,  1898,  with  interest  at  sevtn 
(7)  per  cent  per  annum,  payable  annu- 
ally.    Blanks  for  this  purpose  may  bt 
obtained  at  the  office  of  the  citv  comp- 
troller. 

C.  E.  LOVETT. 
^  ,     ^     „  City  Comptroller 

Duluth    Evening    Herald  March  20-27 
and  April  S  and  10. 


■  MIM 


■■ 


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f 

—fcinwiiii— iiJn i  H" 


imiiiiiuiiiin 


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■ 


Centenary  of  the  Old  Kaiser 

to  Be  Celebrated  in 

Berlin. 


K..0.1  enouRh  to  sit  in  the  legislative 
halls  they  are  fit  to  sit  even  at  a  han- 
ciuet  of  the  empon.r.  It  is  said  the 
kaisH>r  will  try  to  make  a  i.opulur  hit 
l.y  aninestlnK  a  rertain  class  of  i.ri- 
s..ners.  amonj?  whom  may  I.e  inclndr.J 
the  American  horse  „wner.  Rol)ert 
Kneebs.   convicted   of  '•ringing-   a   race 


THK     Pr'LT'TH     EVEyiyO     HERALD      SATT'RDAY 


The  Unveiling  of  an  Impos- 

inft  Memorial  Erected  In 

the  Schloss. 


Great  Parade  and  Banquet-- 

Dfssatisfaction    Among 

the  People. 


Wil- 
Mon- 


IVrlin.    March    :'(>.— The    Kait.  ;■ 
helm  I  centenary  fetes  will  begrin 
day,  whith  has  been  otTuially  tieclared 
and   will    be  every wl. ere  observed  as  a 
national    holiday.    The    Berlin    celebra- 
tion profrram  opens  at  li>  in  the  morn- 
iiiK    with    riiisious   services.       The    im- 
perial family  will  attend  special  service 
in    th>'    royal   court   chapel.   At   11:C0     a 
si-nn.l    military   function    is   to   »»e   held 
near    the    >'chloss    ij.    frimt    of    tht-    na- 1 
nioniiment.        Combined     batta- 1 
squadrons    and    batteries    of    all 
and     of    the    lH»dy 
will      form       a, 
<-astl'  throuerh 


HOURS  OF  LABOR. 

A    Question    Which     Agitates 
Fall  River  People. 

Fall  River.  Mass..  March  I'O.— The  agi- 
tation  over   the   proposed   reduction   in 
hours   of   labor   foi^  mill    employes.     Is 
very  strong   here   at    present,    both    for 
and   against    the   movement.     A    state- 
ment of  Secretary  Howard,  of  the  Spin- 
ners'   union,    that    the   competitiim     <if 
Southern   manufacturers  would  not   lie  1 
enhanced  by  the  adoption  of  shortened 
hours  in  this  section  is  met  bv  a  de(  la- 
j  ration    by  .me  of  the   most     prominent  ' 
I  manufacturers  that     in     spite     of     the  | 
;  strong  efforts  made  in  Xew  Kngland  to  ' 
improve  trade  conditions  by  a  reduction  • 
ot   stock,   the  curtailed   production    has  I 
been    more   than   made  up   by   the  new 
nulls  and   increased   production    of   the 
South. 

It  Is  pointed  out  that  in  a  i>eriod  i>f 
about  three  and  rme-half  years  the 
mills  of  Fall  River  ha.se  been  closed 
about  six  months  on  an  average  Tak- 
ing the  j.ay  rolls  of  the  mills  sloppt-d 
for  this  period,  a  loss  on  wages  «,f 
.-something  like  $4.160.tX>0  is  shown  The 
los.^es  to  the  mills  by  fixed  exp.-ns.s. 
whether  mills  run  or  stop,  would  l>e 
something  likt-  $:!.(xm.(>00  more,  or  a  total 
al>solute  loss  tf>  the  city  of  over  S7.<Mh).- 
(M>».  For  this  enormous  .sacrifice,  it  is 
dainu-d.  no  cornspondent  benefit  ha.s 
accrued,  but  Southern  ci>mpetitoi-s  have 
run  full  time  and  filled  ap  the 


MARCH    20.     1897. 


Several 


Wild  Feathered  Denizens  of 
Woods  and  Waters  Be- 
coming Extinct. 


Smithsonian   Institute   Says 

That  Soon  None  of  Them 

Will  Remain. 


the 
-hen 
island 
coast  of 
nowhere 
of  game 


Many  Species   Have   Not 
Single  Survivor  Left 
Alive. 


species  of  handsome  parrots 
were  formerly  nunieious  in  Dominica. 
Santa  Lucia  and  Martinique;  they  were 

of.if '■^V**'- ."C  '"■'"*»"»  plumage,  and 
finite  different  fnun  any  other  parrots 
Though  very  raie,  a  few  survivors  live 
to  this  day  in  inaccessible  parts  of 
islands.  There  is  a  kind  of  heath 
which  exists  to  this  day  on  the 
of  Martha's  Vineyard,  off  the 
Mas.sachusetts.  though  found 
else.  But  for  the  protection 
law.s,  it  would  have  become  extinct"lo"n« 
ago.  ^ 

The  Sandwich  islands  are  suffering 
similarly  from  a  loss  of  their  native 
bird  fauna.  A  good  many  species  of  the 
land  birds  are  already  extinct,  and 
more  are  doomed  to  disappear  within 
the  next  few  years.  This  result  is  due 
in  part  to  the  occupation  of  the  tillable 
soil  by  farmers  and  of  the  hillsides  by 
cattle.  But  the  entrance  of  civilization 
is  invariably  acct  nipanied  by  Ui  •  in- 
troduction of  animals  hostile  to  the  na- 
tive birds,  such  as  the  cat,  the  dog 
and  the  hog.  Hogs  destroy  immense 
numbers  of  young  ground  bird 
their  eggs.  Thus  the  whole 
balance  of  nature  is  upset. 
Indigenous  fauna  succumbs 


s   and 

zoological 

and  the  in- 

The  mon- 


vacuum 


tioiial 

lions. 

?,uardy.     rtgiments 

i-tMiment    of    William    I 

snuare  and  lint-  from  th 


Northern  manufacturers  have  been  try 
ing  to  create. 

F'all  River  mill  owners  state  that  it 
can  l>e  proven  beyond  question  that  the 
Southern  mills  producing  the  .same  fab- 
rics as  those  made  in  this  city,  are  mak- 
ing  satisfactory    jnoflts   at    pns.nl.    at 


The  Smithsonian  institution  sounds  u 
?iote  of  alarm.     It   declares   that   civil- 
ized man  is  sweeping  the  wild  l)irds  <»!f 
the   face   of    tht-    earth   at    such    a    rate 
that  before  long  hardly  any  species  of 
feathered    creatures    will    survive   save 
those    which     are     domesticated,    says 
Kene   nachf    in   the   B<>ston  Transcript. 
The  world  is  being  literally  depopulated 
so  far  as  this  great  cla.ss  of  animals  is 
concerned.     They    are    being   destroyed 
cverywheie    with    the   utmost   ruthless-  i 
ness.    and    nunier.)us     genera     hitherto  I 
pbntiful    in    numbers   are    being    wiped  I 
out  en  bloc,  as  it   were.     The  next  fev.  I 
years   must    witness    the   extinction    of  I 


goose  has  been  imported  into  the  Sand 
wich  Islands,  as  well  as  the  California 
quail    and    the    p:nglish    sparrow       The 
sparrow,    which   has  become   a  sort   of 
parasite  on  man,  drives  out  the  native 
birds  and  consumes  their  food  supply 
Perhaps  the  most  notable  native  bird 
of  the  Sandwich  Islands  was  the  "ma- 
I  mo.  "    which   has  l>een   extinct   for  only 
a  few  years.     It  was  hunted  very  per- 
sistently by  the  Hawaiians  for  the  sake 
of  two  little  tufts  of  yellow  feathers  on 
Its    wings.     These    feathers    were    used 
exclusively       in     the     manufacture     of 
cloaks  worn   by   the  kings  of  these  is- 
lands.   One  such  cloak,  the  original  es- 
timated  value  of   which   was  $1,000,000 
is  now  preserved,  sadly. moth-eaten,  in 
the  Xational  museum.    A  peculiar  spe- 
<ies    of   rail,    gray    In    crdor   and     very 
small,  formerly  inhabited  the  Hawaiian 
Islands,    running  about   in     the     grass. 
Thnre  was  al.so  a  kind  of  "honey-eater." 
as  big  as  a  robin,  with  a  large  bill  and 
a  long  tail.     It  is  likewi.se  extinct,  and 
only  three  or  four  specimens  is  in   the 
National  museum:  It   was  the  first  one 
known  to  science,  and  was  collected  bv 


Sparrow 

Sarsaparilla.' 


Once  upon  a  time,  the  birds  had  a  dispute  as  to  MJvich 
conld  soar  the  highest.  A  contest  was  arranged,  and  oj'.  the 
day  appointed  the  birds  all  flew  in  a  flock  towards  tlie  skv 
One  by  one  they  were  left  behind  by  the  eagle,  wlio  at  last 
reached  the  climax  of  his  flight,  a  solitary  victor.  At  this 
moment,  a  sneaking  sparrow  (whose  insigniflcant  weight 
tlie  king  of  birds  had  not  noticed)  flew  from  the  hack  " 
which  he  had  been  stealing  a  free  ride,  and.  with  an  ' 
dent  twitter,  mounted  a  few  inches  above  the  eaiilo 
song  was  short;  for,  unable  to  sustain  himself  at  ; 
accustomed  a  height,  he  fell  like  a  stone  towards  the  earth. 

MORAL. 


on 

imi)ii- 

Ilis 

>    iin- 


There 
successful 
the  eagle- 
soar   above 


IS    nothing 
man's    coat 
for  a  minute. 
A3^er's — for  a 
have  to  depend   on    their 
saparilla    that    claims    to 
stealing     a     ride    on 
sarsaparilla  and   blood 

Ayer' 


new 

tails. 


in    the 


That' 


s 


idea 
the 
That's    the  way 
minute.     They 
own 
be    " 
Ayer's     reputation.       There 


of 
way 

sparrow 
drop,   as 


hanging    on 
the    'Sparrow 

sarsaparillas 
soon    as    th 


to    a 
beat 


ey 
strength.  Don't  accept  any  sar- 
as    good    as    Ayer's."      It    is   only 

is     one     safe 


purifier.     It's  Ayer's. 


Curebook." 
l>>ee.     J.  C, 


A  story  of 
Ayer  Co., 


cures  toUl  bv 
Ivowell,   IMa.'^s. 


llie  cured. 


THK    XATIONAL   aiONfMEXT    ERECTP:D 


IN      HOXOR     OF      WILLIAM      T. 


veter- 
in    the 


:!;•  I.u.stgarten  to  and  around  the 
iix'nunjent.  A  salvo  of  loi  guns  will 
be  fired,  and  the  bells  of  all  the  Ber- 
lin churches  will  b^■  rung.  The 
ans  i;f  l>6i>  and  isTo,  foj 
Ihiergarten.  will  lead  a  procession 
wherein  will  be  represented  academic 
siudents  in  hisi-.ric  lo.stumes 
trains  and  guilds  also  in  historic 
The  procession  will  inarch  through 
xh^  Brandt  nberg  gate  and  r 
Linden  to  the  mcnument. 
will  salute  the  kaiser,  kaiserin 
princes  who  v.ill  l>e  there 
them. 


market  prices, 
nominal:  fuel, 
lost    here,    th<' 
from   sixty-six 


weekly,   and 
cent   less. 


Their  ta.xes  are 
n  many  cases,  is 
hours    of    work 
to     seventy-tW(( 


merely 
half  it's 
rangf'd 
hours 
labor  will  average  40   per 


and 
array. 


nter 
where 


to 


Den 
they 
ana 
receive 


of 

given 

play 

these 


At  4  o'clock  in  the  afternoon  a  grand 
l>an.iuet  is  to  be  h^ld  in   the  castle,   t.. 
\\  hich     representatives    of    all     classes, 
reichstag    meml>eis.    ex<epting    Social- 
ists,   nibbles    and    trading   citizens     ar- 
being  invited.   -Commers"  will   be  gen- 
eral  throughout   Berlin  and   other  cen- 
ters.  At   S  p.   m.    gala    performances 
the    historic   play    •IM'-     will    l>f 
at    the    Royal    Opera,    the    Royal 
house  and  Kroll  s  iheat^'r.  To  all 
houses    the    kaiser    invites    the    soldierv 
of   Berlin  garrison  and  the  offlcers   will 
feast    him.    The    kaiser    will    deliver    a 
political    pronouncement    at    tht>   castie 
l-anriuet.       It    is    expected    that    Prino- 
Bismarck,    if    physically    able,    will 
present. 

The  monument  is  more  of  the  nature ' 
ot  a  mortuary  temple  and   will  remind' 
many    American    visitors    of    some    of 
the  structures  of  the    Worlds    fair     at 
Chicago.   The    Ionic  columns   and    plain 
frieze  give  an  air  of  simplicitv   to   thf> ! 
white    mart>le    structure.     In    the    fore- 
grf>und  is  an    ornate  ei^iuesitria'i  statue 
"f    Wilirarn    I.    the    pedestal    of    which 


l>e 


FORESTRY  RESERVES. 

Application    Filed    to     Have 
Them  Rescinded. 

Washington.  March  -'0.— A  formal  ai- 
plication   for  rescinding  part  of  Presi- 
dent C!evelan<rs  forestry  order  of  Ffb. 
I  21'  last  has  been  filed  at  the  interior  dv  - 
I  partment  by  Senator  Wilson  of  Wasi-- 
[  ington.     .'supported     by     Representati.. 
I  Jones  of  tile  same  state.     It  gives  rer- 
I  sons  why  the  signers  lielieve  the  reser- 
vations made  in  Washington  are  preju- 
dicial  to  public   interests,    but  asks  f..r 
the  immediate   restoration   of  only  one 
of  the  reserves,   the   Washington   foresl  I 
reser\e.    the    largest    in    the    state   ani' 
embracing  :j.:";:)4,240  acres.  ' 

All    the  others   In    Washington,    how-  ' 
ever,  also  are  pointed  out  as  objection- 
able.       The    application    contends    thai 
many  millions  of  acres  of  the  best  land«  \ 
are  thus  re.served  from  settlement,  and 
the   terms  of  proclamation    controliin- 
others  are  such  that  the  latter  will  ha\" 
to    be    abandoned.      The    reservation    i    i 
termed   unnecessary,   as  the   rainfall    i - 
I"<6  inehes  a  year  over  soipe  of  the  tracts 
reserved.     In  the  largest  reserve  all  th<- 
waters   flowing    into    the    Pacific   ocean 
are  ted  by  peri.etual  snows.    The  action   | 
It    is   stated,    tends    to    keen    the    tract.-^  • 
practically    des<ilate    and    prevents    dc-  ' 
velopment    of      the    stut.-    an<l    its    re-  ' 
.source.s.  The  af.plication  concludes  that  ' 
the  reservation  docs  no  one  anv  good   \ 
while  it  harms  many.  '  ' 

A  r<-porton  the  matt.-r  has  been  mad-  • 
I  to  .Secretary  Bliss,  setting  imih  th.-  >n-  I 
j  Iginal  pHK-lamalion,  the  appli.aiiu.i  and  I 
olhi-r  doitiint  nts,  and  a  rcj^uine  of  news 
r'ar'«r  i.inini.'nis  <  lippt-d    for   ref 
I  Th.-   s<-.r.tarv    has    taken    tin 
I  under,  adxis.-nicnt. 


-r.-nc.  . 
'lUcstion 


K.VIPCROK    \r  I  LI  Ail    I. 


»>ears  allegorical  figures.  The  war- 
Hk"-  aspect  of  the  ensemble  is  intensi- 
fied by  four  lions  gathering  in  their 
paws  the  national  flag.  A  quadriga  of 
allegririial  significance  adorns  each 
end  (if  the  tempK  .V  magnificent  tent, 
with  enibroider.^d  hanging*^,  has  i.een 
erected  for  the  royal  personages.  VZm- 
perr.r  William  JI  will  stand  before  it 
<in  h.nsfba.  k  to  witness  th 
f<f  the  equfstrian 
in  fr.mt.  There 
affording 


WHEELMEN  QUARREL. 

California    Crowd    Will     Run 
Their  Own  Races. 

San  Francisco.  Mai.  h  20.— Th*-  dis- 
satisfaction in  which  the  wheelmen  of 
this  coast  have  so  often  expressed  re- 
garding the  actions  of  the  Xational 
governing    body   of   the   sport,    took 


an 


practi- 
racing  in- 


unveiling 
mon-imenl  exactly 
will  bV-  grand  stamls 
ample  snaie  for  privileged 
spe.-tators.  On  ea.-h  side  of  the  statu.- 
!o-*;  "f^-"  ^^***'"  ''u'ing  the  campaign  of 
lS.i)-,l  will  be  displayed,  and  the  cap- 
tured guns,  adorned  with  oak  leaves, 
will  be  placed  amund.  In 
garten  will  be  cannon  to 
as  .so.m  as  the  statue  is 
.\.>  cere m. my  that  the 
is  connect»»d  wiib  can  ; 
..ff  with. .Ill  ';omc  unpleasantness 
.irder  |.r.>hibjtin;;   i  ■•'•-.  ,,ii   ib 


the    Lust- 
give  a  salute 
unv.iled. 
young  kaiser 
ipparently    go 
The 
sire.-ts 


for 
the 
has 
invite 


n»ar  th»  siene  of  the  <  .-lebralton 
day?;  t«^fore  the  event,  has  stirred 
popular  blood  an. I  l|ii«  feeling 
been  deepene.l  by  (h»-  refusal  t-. 
Socialist  member.'^  .f  the  reichstaK  to 
the  banquet.  Many  members  of  that 
body,  though  not  in  favor  of  8o<>ial- 
i.-m.  protest  ag-ainst  such  an  imperial 
iittitude  toward  iwrrA'fv^.  ff  tht  popu- 
lar -jranoh  of  th-  national  legislature 
deolarinsr   that,   if    the    Socialists 


body   of 
I  organized   form    last   night.     The   Call 
j  fomia  associated  cycling  clubs 
cally  assumed  control  of  the 
terests. 

At  a  meeting  of  the  board  of  gover-  i 
nors  which  was  largely  attended  bv  the  I 
most    prominent   ..f   the    San    Pram-isco  ' 
local   clubs,    the   situation    which    tho«e  ' 
present  ha«l  to  fate  was  th«u-oughly  dis-  ■ 
cussed.    It  was  conceded  that  the  racing  I 
interests  would     shortly     break     away 
from   the   present    governing   bodv  and 
unless  controlled  by  those  interested  in  | 
keeping   the  sport   on   its   present    high 
plans    would    rapidly   decline   in    public 
favor. 

A  committee  of  five  was  appointed  to 
change  the  constitution  and  present  it 
for  .-onsideration  at  the  next  meeting 
April  ;;,  and  meanwhile  the  as.s.x-iati.ln 
l>ra.ti<-ally  assumes  < -tnlnd  of  all  tli - 
track  racing  in  <"aliforiiia. 


Dr.    P.UII 
been    kept 
♦  he  same  it 
best  sold. 


s   (.'ough    .Syrup   has   always 

Up    to.  the    standard.      It  "ir: 

v/as  forty  years  ago,   the 


Rooms  are    quickly    rent^    when 
varU9e<l  in     Thr     Evening  Herald. 
cent  «  word. 


are  .  costs  but  1 


ad- 

II 


many  species  already  bet-oming  rare 
while  .luring  the  last  .|uarter  <.f  a  cen- 
tury scores  of  other  .species  have  beti- 
totally  extirpated.  Thus  is  threatencu 
a  •great  change  in  the  fauna  of  the 
xvorhl— a  change  that  is  onlv  too  apt  b. 
be  attended  by  results  most  dainagiin 
to  the  interests  of  mankind. 

Take.    f.)r     example,   that     wonderful 
i'M-d  called  the  "rhea."  which  reru-e.sent-: 
the  ostrich  on   the  .American  (-.)ntinein 
^  Though  already  becoming  rare,  the  sui  - 
I  yivors   of   this   magnificent    species   ar. 
I'cing  hunted  systematicallv   in  Argen- 
tina and  North  Patagonia  for  the  sake 
I  ot    their    feathers.      And    what    do    y^u. 
I  suppose  the  long  and  handsome  feat'.i- 
I  ers  are  used  for?     For  millinerv?     X.  i 
a   bit  of  it.     They  are  emploved   in    th. 
manutacture  of  feather  dusters.     Thii« 
It  appears  that  .me  of  the  mo.st  beauti- 
lul  creatures  placed  on  the  earth  by  j    , 
br-neflcent   Creator  for   the    benefit   ai.d 
admiration    of    mankind    is    to    be    d.  - 
stroyed  forever  for  the  sake  of  cheapen-  I 
mg  the  production  of  feather  clusters'       I 

The  millinery  feather  market  is  sup- 
plied chierty  by  laying  waste  the  T>ree<l 
ing   nlac-es  of   birds.     This   means   tha- 
the  creatures  are  not  killed  casually  and 
here  and  there,  but  a  blow  is  stiuck  a( 
the  future  of  the   whole  species  by  at 
tacking    them    on    the     grounds    wh^rv 
ihey  reproduce  their  kind  and  destrov- 
,  ing  them  en  masse.     Whele  busim-ss  V^ 
concerned,   it   matters  not    whether  en- 
tire feathered   tribes  are  exterminatec' 
I  leaving  not  a  single  i)air  to  give  hope  oi" 
perpetuation   m   the  family.     Xaturaib 
the    most    beautiful    birds    are    selected 
for    extirpation    by    su'-h    means.      Ac- 
counts given   of   the   ravages  of  "bird- 
I  plumers"    at    breeding   stations   on    the 
Pl.>rida  coast   are  sickening.     F.nmerly 
I  tlironged  with  a  happy  feathered  popu- 
lation, they  ate  n.jw  either  made  destrl 
or  c-ise   are   resorted    to   bv   only   a   fev 
;  surviving  specimens. 

I      The  islands  .if  the  sc-a  will  be  first  to 

lose    their    avc-fauna    lor   obvL.us    rea- 

.s.ins.     The  birds  in  such  localilies  have 

I  no  place  to  which  they  can  retreat.  Tie- 

I  '•inning  of   w Is   in.-idc-nlal   to   luiina.i 

.«c-ttlemc-nt.  to  make  clearings.  de|.riv. - 
them    of    their    f.i.id    sunnly.    and    ilie\ 
starve  I.,  death.     The  lam. .us  LabradoV 
duck  used  to  be  c-ommon  enough  in  th. 
markets  of  the  I'liitc-.l  States,  niigratin  • 
iM  winter  as  far  S.,utli  .i.-,  X.-u   Knglaii.r 
In   summer  it    was   j.bntiful    along   tli- 
Labrador  coast  and  about  the  m..uih  oi 
the  St.   Lawrence  river.     Like  the  eider 
duck,  to  whic  li  it  was  allied,  it  brc-d  on 
rocky    islets,    where    it    was    sale    from 
foxes    and    other    carnivorous    cpiadru- 
peds.     But   sportsmen  visited   the  islet: 
annually    and    destroved    the    lireedin  • 
birds  wholesale.     They  had   no  asvluin 
to  turn  to.  the  shores  of  the  maiiilan-i 
being  infested   l»y  four-footed   enemie.- 
and  the  result  was  inevitable.    The  la^u 
known  bird  of  this  species  was  killed  in 
\^n'l.    There  are  now  thirty-eight  stuffe-":  t 
specimens  in  various  mu.seums.     A 
of  ^hem   now   in   the   Nati.inal 
was  shot  by  Daniel  Webster. 
I      The  bird  fauna  of  the   West   Indies  is 
I  rapidly       clisapp.-aring.        Among       th< 
1  .species  already  extinct   are  three  kinds 
I  of   petrels— birds   which    roam    the   seas 
and  usually   breed   in   the  niountainou-- 
1  interiors  of  islands.     One  of  the  i.etre:-: 
alludc^d    to    was    f.umerly    c  omnion      ii 
Jamaica,  where  it  was  p.ipularly  known 
as  the  Blue  Mountain  duck.      \  weasel- 
like animal,   called    the  mon-goos«\    wa-^ 
Imported  into  Jamaica  for  the  purpose 
cjf  killing  rats  which  attacked  the  crops. 
The   rats    took    to    the    trees,    the   mon- 
goose being  unable  to  climb,  while  th. 
latter  devcded    its  attention   to  poultry 
and  wild  birds  that  build  their  nests  .in 
the-  groun.l.      It  .so.m   c-xterminat.-d    the 
Blue  Mountain  iliick.  and  its  agemy  will 
g.i  a  l..iig  way  toward  finishing  up  th.- 
birds  of  Jamaica. 

A  species  of  macaw,  about  half  th' 
size  of  the  ordinary  macaw  of  Mexico 
used  to  be  plentiful  In  Cuba.  Not  .■ 
specimen  ha.^  been  sc:en  lor  thirty-Hv 
years,  though  it  is  believed  that  a  fev, 
exist  4n  swampa  in    the  interior. 


the 


I  .a  ir 
museui.. 


stm 


c-  Wilkes  exploring  expedition  in  1S:JS. 
The  rapid   destruction     of     tht>     avi- 
fauna  of   Xew    Zealand      is     especiallv 
distressing  to  naturalists.     The     entire 
fauna  of  those   islaids   is   peculiar  and 
stamps  Xew  Zealand  as  being  c  ertainly 
one  of   the   most   ancient   parts   of   th-- 
world.    When  the  country  was  first  dis- 
covered by  the  whites,  there  was  not  a 
single  mammal  on  the  i.sland.   large  or 
small.     The  birds  v^ere  mostiv  without 
the   power  of   llight.     One  of  the   most 
remarkable  was  the  "weka"— a  sort    of 
rail,  striped  and  with  Icmg  flulTy  feath- 
I  or.s       The    so-called     'kiwi-      included 
eight   species— renmants  of  one  of   the 
most   ancient   of   all    classes   of     birds 
j  their  nearest   relatives   being  now    fos- 
I  sil.     The    kiwi    is   otherwi.se    known    as 
I  the  "apteryx;"  it   lives  in  burr.nvs  and 
lays  only  one  large  egg,  being  n.K-tur- 
nal  in  its  habits.     Cats  and  hogs  have 
nearly  wiped  out  by  the    Kiwis    and  the 
I  wekas.     Incidentally,   the     acclimatiza- 
I  tion    maniacs    have   introduced    foreign 
birds  and    rabbit.s.     To   get    rid    of   the 
I  destructive  rabbits,  they  have  imported 
I  ferrets  and  stoats,  which  gobble  up  the 
\  flightless  birds. 

There   is   a   peculiar    parrot    in     Xew 
Zealand    which  is   becoming   very   rare 
fruits  were  its  natural  diet,  it  took   t.. 
attacking  sheep  a  few  years  ago,  using 
Its  powerful  beak  to  l)ite  into  the  flesh 
of  the  living  animals  until  the  kidneys 
were  reached  and  devoured.  The  sheep- 
herders  certainly  had  a  good  excuse  for 
endc-avoring  to  exterminate  it.     In   the 
islands   about    Madagascar   there    were 
formerly  several  species  of  little  paro- 
quets  with    long  tails:    todav   they   arc- 
nearly  or  quite  extinct.     On   the     same 
islands  were  two  species  of  large  mud- 
hens,  one  white  and   the  other  purple 
lielonging  to   the  family  of  rails-   they 
are  extinc-t   likewise.     The   Pallas   cor- 
morant,   largest   of  all   known   cormor- 
ants, u.sed  to  be  found  on  Bering  island 
in    the    Xorth    Pacific;    it     has     disari- 
pean-d.   and  only   f.iur  specimens  exist 
in     museums.       Tlie     (^aracara     eagle. 
whK-h    bi-e.l    on    th.-    island    of    (Uiada- 
loupc,   off   the  c-oasi    of     California,     is 
gone.     Only   a   few    living  specimens  of 
the-  Calilornia    c-ondor.    the   largest   bini 
of  flight  in  the  world,  remain.    This  gi- 
.gantic-   vulture   has   be<>n    nearly   extir- 
ininated    by   poison   through  eating   the 
carcases    of     aiiijiials     poisoned      with 
strychnine  by  sheepherders  for  the  pur- 
pose of  destroying  wolves  and  bears. 

Th."  Xational  mu.seum     has     rec-ently 
scMured    a    specimen    of   an    -Vustraliaii 
parrot  in  a  rather  c|ue?r  fashion.     It  is 
called  the  Xestor  parrot,  becau.se  of  its 
gray  h^-ad.  and  it  became  extinct  about 
the    middle    of    the    present       centur>'. 
The   spec-imen    referred    to    was    owned 
by  a  man  who  took  it  to  Xew   Mexicc 
fifty  years  ago.     Recently     he     became 
hard   up  and  sold  it  for  a  big  price  to 
Dr.  W.  L.  Ralph,  a  millionaire  of  lltica, 
N.    Y.     Dr.    Ralph    presented    it    to    the  i 
mu.seum.     The    authorities   of    that    in-  i 
stitution  .say  that  there  is  a  grc^at  op-  | 
portuiiity     just   now   for  rich     men     t.>  | 
make  their  names  immortal  by  sending  ! 
natural   history  collectors  to  islands  in  i 
various   parts  of  the   world    which   are 
fast     losing     their     indigencms     fauna. 
Colle.-iions  thus   made  would  stand  as 
enduring  monuments  for    centuries      to 
come. 

The  well-known  Carolina  paroquets, 
the  only  parrots  native  to  the  United 
States  are  near  to  final  extinction. 
Formerly  they  ranged  all  over  tiie  east- 
ern part  of  this  country,  as  far  north 
as  New  Ycnk  and  westward  to  Texas, 
.y  prc\sent  the  few  survivors  are  c-on- 
liii.-d  to  remote  parts  of  Southern  Flor- 
i.la-an.l  the  Indian  Teritory.  The  spe- 
cies has  been  wiped  out  in  a  m.»!;t  ruth- 
less and  wanton  manner.  These  little 
birds  sleep  inside  o|  hollow  stumps, 
hanging  by  their  beaks,  which  ar^ 
stuck  Into  crevices.  A  while  ago  the 
so-(^alk(l  "pastengor  pigeon"  flew  bv 
millions  in  the-  Ohio  valley  as  far  eas f 
as  Massachusetts.    No"w  only  a  few 


them  are  left.  They  have  been  shot  by 
wholesale,  and  while  ihev  lasted  were 
commonly  utilized  for  shooting  from 
traps. 

Before  the  white  man  came  there  was 
a   large  and  clum.';y  bird  on  the  island 
of   Mauritius,     called      the      -dodo.-     It 
was   related   to   th?   family   of    pigecjrs 
Being  incapable  of  flight  and  good   to 
eat,   the  species   was   destroyed    whole- 
sale by  .sailors,  and  the  eggs  and  young 
were  eaten  by  hogs.     .So  it  di.sappeared 
and   not  a  single  specimen   remains   in 
any  mu.seum     to     tell     its     melancholv* 
story.     Mauritius  has  al.so  a  small   but 
peculiar  owl  and  a  big  parrot,  a  large 
heron  with  short  wings  and  a  big  tail, 
all  of  which  are  now  extinct,  as  well  as 
a  good  many  other  birds,  which  are  now 
known  only  by  the  stories  of  early  voy- 
I  agers  and  the  bones  found  in  c-aves  cm 
I  the  island.     Far     to     the     eastward     of 
Mauritius,   on    Rodriguez   island,    dwelt 
I  a  near  relative  of  the  dodo,  called   the 
I  '•solitaire."     It    became     extinct     about 
the     beginning  of     the  eighteenth  cen- 
I  tury. 

Of  all  birds  recently  extinct  n.)ne  ie  i 
more  interesting  than  the  "gare  fowl  " 
or  -great  auk."  The  last  two  living 
specimens  were  .seen  and  taken  on  a 
rocky  islet  off  th.?  southwestern  point 
of  Ireland.  A  single  egg  of  a  great  auk 
was  sold  not  long  ago  by  auc-tion  fo» 
SlaOO.  .And  yet  sixty  years  ago  birds  of 
this  species  were  found  on  Funk  island, 
off  the  Newfoundland  coast,  in  count- 
less numbers.  People  from  th?  main- 
land used  to  go  over  to  the  island  in 
summer  and  kill  them  by  myriads,  to 
eat  and  for  their  feathers.  They  were 
so  fat  that  they  served  as  fuel.  Ships 
used  to  land  there  and  get  l>oat loads  of 
the  auks  by  the  simple  process  of  plac-- 
ing  a  plank  between  the  boat  and  the 
shore  and  driving  the  helpless  creat- 
ures over  It.  The  Smithsonian  insti- 
tution has  practically  a  corner  on  their 
bones.  .A  while  ago  it  .sent  an  agent  tc 
Funk  island  for  the  purpo.se.  and  he 
brought  back  nearly  a  barrelful  of  auk 
bones.  If  you  want  a  skeleton,  you  will 
have  to  send  to  Washington  for  it,  and 
it  will  cost  you  about  $600. 


en 

c-an 


can  thrust  l^is  baiiied  broach  into  a 
tooth  and  draw  out  t.lie  whole-  live  ner»e 
without  the  patient  having  the  slight- 
est sensation.  Such  an  o|iei-aiioii  vvoMlii 
be  physically  impc».-isible  without  c-aia- 
phoresls.  With  its  aid  the  most  brok 
dov^n  and  the  most  sensiii\e  t.^eth 
be  treated  without  rc-gard  for  the 
ings  of  the  patii^nt. 

The  cataphoretic-  treatment  is  not.  yet 
in  general  use  by  the  dentists,  because 
they  are  not  sufliciently  familiar  Avith 
electrical  apparatus.  Some  of  them 
have  applied  the  negative  pole  to  the 
tooth  and  the  positive  to  some  other 
part  of  the  body,  and  then  complained, 
that  cataphoresis  was  a  failure. 

The  process  by  which  the  ana.sthetie 
is  carried  into  the  tooth  is  still  a  mys- 
tery, concerning  v.hicb  only  specula- 
tions can  be  made.  One  electrician  says 
that  the  c-ocaine  is  l)iT)ken  up  into  its 
elements,  and  some  go  towar.l  one  pole 
and  some  toward  the  other.  .At  any 
rate,  the  cocaine  produces  in  the  body 
of  the  tooth  the  effect  which  it  would 
have  if  laid  on  the  surface  of  the  flesh, 
and  which  it  could  nor  have  on  the  .-en- 
ter of  the  tooth  without  the  agency  c>f 
the  current. 


THE  EVERGLADES. 


Canoe  Trip  Through  the  Grei 
Swamp. 


'.N'lll'.uiih'.v 


ia\  li;; 
sa.x  • 


MEAN  DECEPTION. 

Practiced  on  Two  Pretty  Girls 
By  Students. 

Two  mischievous  Adelbet  students 
occupied  the  front  seat  of  a  Kuclid 
motor  car  one  day  la*!t  week,  says  th" 
Cleveland  Plaindealeo-.  When  they 
reached   Dc-an   street   two   pretty     girls 


EASY  DENTISTRY. 

Which  Will  Make  Tooth  Draw- 
ing a  Pleasure. 

The  teeth,  the  most  sensitive  part  of 
the  human  body,  can  now  be  absolutely 
desensitized  by  an  anaesthetic  applied 
through  an  electric  current,  says  the 
New  York  Journal. 

Cataphoresis  is  tlie  scient'ffic-  name  of 
this  process. 
Although   it  is  not   absolutc-ly   a  new 
has  only  just  been  brought 
thor.digh    eflic-ieiic-y      f.n 
Tlie  ilentists  are  dis- 
intense    interest.     Tin- 


it 


Of 


discovery 

to   a  state   of 

dental  j.urposes 

cussing    it    with 

February   number   of   tin-   Ohio   Dental 

Journal,  a  magazine  of  high  standing 

is  exclusively  devoted  to  it. 

The  process  shall  here  i.e  described 
in  the  simplest  and  most  untechnical 
manner  for  the  benefit  of  that  vast  ma- 
jority of  the  human  race  who  look  with 
dread  on  the  dentist's  chair,  and  ap- 
proach it  less  cheerfully  than  they 
would  the  rack. 

The  operator  obtains  his  curent  from 
the  street  system  or  from  a  dry  cell 
I  battery,  the  later  being  preferable.  It 
I  is  absolutely  necessary  that  he  should 
have  an  instrument  by  which  he  can 
ccmtroi  the  current  and  regulate  it 
with  great  nicety.  For  this  purpose  he 
uses  a  fractional  volt  selector,  by  which 
he  can  increase  the  current  cme-third  to 
cme-half  a  volt  at  a  time  This  he 
keeps  under  his  hand. 

The  patient  holds  the  negative  end  of 
the  wire  in  his  hand.  The  positive  elec- 
trode, usually  in  the  form  of  a  point  ot- 
plate  of  platinum,  is  applied  to  the 
tooth.  A  piece  of  cotton  wool  is  soaked 
in  cocaine  and  twisted  around  the  posi- 
tive electrode.  This  is  applied  to  the 
tooth  to  be  operated  on. 

The  operator  then  turns  on  the  cur- 
rent very  gradually,  therebv  avoiding 
any  elcutrlc  shock  to  the  patient.  More 
than  eight  volts  are  seldom  nec-essary 
In  order  to  deprivp  the  most  obstinate 
tooth  of  sensation.  A  skillful  operator 
endeavors  to  make  the  current  just 
strong  enough  for  the  work.  As  soon 
as  the  patient  has  any  sensation  h*- 
Increases  the  curvrint.  So  effectj\e  is 
thi» -process  that  the  most  difficult  op- 
erations cause  no  pain.      The    dentist 


came  aboard  and  oc^^upied  the  seat 
which  faces  the  front  seat.  They  were 
botli  i.retty  and  lively,  and  one  of  the 
siudents  immediately  thought  up  a 
wickcHl  sell  for  their  humiliation.  Pinch- 
ing his  compaion  he  tipped  him  a  sly 
wink,  which  was  at  once  understood 
to   mean    "fun   ahead — watch    me." 

Pretty  socm  along  c-ame  the  con- 
ductor and  said  "fares."  Neither  stu- 
dent paid  any  attention.  "Fare,"  yelled 
the  conductor.  Stil  no  response.  Then 
the  fare  takei-  leaned  over  and  shook 
the  nearest  Adelbert  man  by  th(- 
shoulder.  The  student  turned  around 
quickly  and  saw  ^vho  it  was.  He 
smiled  pleasantly,  fjolnted  to  his  eai-s 
and  mouth  and  handed  over  a  nickel. 
Then  he  smiled  again  and  shook  his 
companion,  who  was  staring  vacantly 
out  of  the  window. 

The  second  student  thereupcm  went 
through  the  same  ears  and  mouth 
pantomime  and  finally  iiroduc-ed  a 
nickel.  Then  the  first  student  laughc-d 
silently  and  ma«le  s.mie  ciium'i-  finger: 
movements.  The-  other  student  laughed 
merrily,  and  made  a  few  finger  move- 
ments   in   return. 

-All  this  was  cageily  taken  in  by  th-- 
interested    girls. 

■'They  are  boin  deaf  and  dumb,"  said 
one  of  the  prett.v  girls,  with  no  at- 
tempt to  lower  her  t.me;  "isiri  it  a 
pity?" 

•"Yes."  said  Jhe  other  girl  in  a  .sin- 
gularly clear  voice,  "and  they're  quite 
good    looking   too." 

One  of  the  students  was  again  blank- 
ly staring  out  of  the  window,  and  the 
other  was  ogling  an  advertising  card 
with  an  expression  of  extreme  imbe- 
cility. 

"1  think  the  one  by  the  window  is 
the  best  looking."  said  one  of  the  girls, 
"don't    you?" 

"Oh.  I  dcm't  know,'  said  the  other 
girl,  "he  has  a  sort  of  goody-gcMidy 
look.  I  think  T  prefer  the  other  one." 

"Do  you?  It's  a  pity  his  forehead  is 
so  retreating." 

"I    don't    think    his    forehead    is    anv 
worse  than    the  other  one's    red   hair." 
"Well.    I   like   red    hair  better  than    I 
do  that  fuzzy  little  mustache." 
"Ain't    it    cute!— te-he-he" 
"Now,  Julia,  behave  yourself.  They'll 
think   we're   talking  about    them." 

"I    don't    care    what    they    think    as 

long   a.s    they    can't    hear— te-he-he'" 

"Te-he-he!" 

Bond    street 

bel   rang.  The 

"Here's  The 

students    in   a 

"That's  .';o.'" 

mellow    basso. 

-And  they  hurried  from  the  car 
ing  the  two  pretty  .<rirls  starin- 
them  with  ghastly  faces. 


Lieui.     liUKii.     i.. 

Rhode  Island  .Xaval  Reserves,  an-i  :. 
well-known  yachtsman  an.l  winter  resi- 
dent of  St.  Augustine,  having  ...n,- 
pleted  his  canoe  expedition  inlo  ih.. 
Everglades  cjf  Floiida,  writes  the  f..]  ■ 
lowing  brief  ac-'..unt  ..f  the  obj.M-i  o, 
making  a  s.-ieniili.-  survey  of  th.-  i.:;- 
known  parts  of  the  Everglades.  colU-et- 
iiig  any  ..bjects  of  interest  to  archa»- 
ology  and  natural  hist..ry  to  be  d..nai-  i 
by  liim  to  the  uiiiversitv  of  IViins\ ! 
vania,  certain  lines  .if  research  h-  " 
been  directed  by  that  institution 
the  .Savannah  .\ews. 

Lieut.  Willoughby  staite.l  i|-..:n 
Miami  Dec-.  :'«l.  1S%.  in  a  slo.ip  c-arrvin.- 
Ins  two  Rushton  <-ano.  s.  the  Hissec'and 
Coacoachee.  conveying  his  sl.nes  in- 
struments, etc.  The  c-an.Ks  w.-ie  canvas 
covered  to  afford  protc-ction  fr.im  daini.- 
r.ess  and  were  built  .-spc^c-ially  for 
rough  treatment,  as  th.-  explorer  km  w 
iiot  where  he  was  really  .g.iing  or  \\h-< 
he  would  enc-ounter.  but  as  he  sian.d 
out  determinc^d  he  had  ample  sion-s  for 
his  survey.  After  b.-ing  l.-fi  bv  tii-.- 
sl.xjp  near  the  head  ..f  Harney*  ri-.  >r 
(which  ad  never  before  been  'locatc-.l 
correc-tlyi,  Lieut.  Willoughby  in  tin- 
his  (-ompanion,  a  whii' 
Brewer,  in  the  Coac.ia- 
the  ..utfit  e.iually  and 
.»n  the  )»eril.ius  trip,  i!,.-- 
trip    to    the    M..ining 


Hissee    an. 
hunter.    E.    .A. 
chee.    divided 
started  Jan.  9 
account    of      th 


.Augustine   c-orrespondeni 


IS 


.N'ews"    St. 
.  as  follow 

j      "I   used   a   bicycle  front    wli.'el    with   a 
band  of   paddles  to  i-ee..nl  th.-  distaiu-c 
p.. led.     Platted  .-very  ,iays  woi  k  accu- 
rately. Took  .several  meridian  altitudes 
getting     ,-oi-rec-t     latitu.b-s     an.l     l..n-;;i- 
tudc^s  to  c-orrec-t  the  dead  le.-koiiing  bv 
Distance    p.,led    17.^,    miles.      U.nUe    fr..iii 
Harney    river    in    a    general    way     was 
north  well  up  t.>  Jam.-s   E.   Ingrahaia's 
line  of  his  exj.lorations.  across  tlie  Ev.-r- 
gladc^  from   Ft.  .Myers  to  the  mouth  >,( 
the    .Miami    river   in    IXHii.    betwc-en    Big 
Cypress  and   the    Big  .Sawgiass.     Th^i 
southeast-ea.st  across  the  north  end  ..f 
Long  Key.   north,  then  east   to  ih.-  bead 
of  the  Miami,  tliem-e  t..  .Miami,  leaeliing 
there  .Ian.  IM.  IS'.iT. "     Lieut.   Willoughov 
says  that  small  allov.anc-e  of  f.iod   w^is 
necessary,  as  in  the  heart  of  the  Ever- 
glades no  game  could   be  killed,  but  he 
didn  t    suffer    want,    as    his    .expedition 
was   providc-d   on   a   .s.-ientifi.-    basi.s.   s.. 
much    fctod    to   s.»   much    w..rk;    by    this 
precision    he    had    two   cigars   .iv.'r    tbf 
c  ally   allowanc.-    on    his    return.      .Many 
clilHc-ulti.s   were  .iv.r.'..oi.-.   ami   h.    h.M 
to,  after  p.)IIing  only  two  inil.-.s.  from  '7 
a.  m.  t.>   \  p.  ni..  with  li;.lf  li..ui-s  rc-sis 
for  clinner.   return   i-.  the   |M>ini    sIhi-(.-1 
from.     Sundays  w.ie  pa.ss.-d   in  r.-palr- 
ing   .an. MS    an.l    painting,    as    ib..   |i,.n- 
leiiaiit     i.s    .,ui(,.    .i.fl     »*ili,     brush    .iiel 
paints;      d.iubll.-.ss      s..m.-    i.i.-iui.-s    .1.- 
scriptivc-  of  his  exploiati.ins  will  a.-c-otti- 
!»any  his  r.-ports.     H..  sa.vs  a  v.-rv  int.  r- 
esling  island  was  discoven-.l  in  tin-  «-en- 
ter  of  the   Everglades,   whicii    ims  bt.-n 
an  Indian  camping  •groun.l  nianv  hun- 
dreds of  yeai-s.     It  is  not  nion-  than  .le 
acre   in    extent,    but    is   the   onlv   islan.! 
with  dry  land  on  it  in  a  2.i-mile  .ji.  i,- 
He  has  named  it  "Willoughbv  Key,"  as 
he  fully  believes  himself  to  be  th."-'iii»;t 
white  man  wh.»  has  set  f.iot  on  it      He 
slept  in  dry  clothes  every  night  and  di.l 
all  his  wading  in  high  rubber  boots.  His 
health  has  been  p.ife.-t,  though  he  iias 
lost  t.-n  ix.unds  of  fb-sh  jind  is  Hie  color 
of  an    Indian.       Lieut.    Willuuglibv   will 
cc.mplet.-   th.-  .surv.-y,   ehaits.   .-l.-.",    p.  i - 
formin.g  the  liy.li..giapliic-;il  w..ik  ..f  li.e 
s.ulhwest   c-o.-ist    in    th.-   inter.-st    ..f 
I'nited  States  naval  war  ...lleg, 
Will.)ughl>y  donates  all  th 
the  expeditions. 


.-Xp' 


Li 
•ns» 


lb.' 


was  passed.   The 
c^ar  slowed  down. 
-Aic-ade,"  said  cjne  of 
loud,    clear   voice, 
said  the  other  in  a  fine 


signal 
th'^ 


leav 
afte: 


Ha-ve  Tbe  Herald 
rents  a  month. 


In  your  homes; 


^'JiJ-AT  EA.STERN  AS  A  SHOW  Silil- 
The  last  days  of  the  (Jieat  Easi,.n, 
were  c-ertainly  sad,  consblering  tlie  p,ii 
pose  for  which  she  was  design.-.i  and 
the  great  work  she  did  in  cabl,-la\  iim 
tor  some  time  before  sh.-  was  bi-"..iu  li 
*ip  on  the  mud  of  tiu-  River  .Mei-v.-v 
near  Liverpool,  she  was  on  view  t.s  -.' 
show  ship.  One  r^rm  of  Liv.rpo.^ 
clolhiei-s  hir.vl  h.-r  b.r  .%  s.-as.m  an.l  it- 
addili...n  to  using  her  for  tb.-ir  a.L.  .-' 
tuliifr  purposes,  made  use  of  her  for 
cat.:h-penny  showc.  In  the  large  cabb- 
tank  a  circus  was  fitted  un  a-id  i..  r- 
tornialces  ^iven  at  s-j  much  a  Iv-a-l 
"-•h:.e  other  exhibitions  of  th-^  ~  ' 
Isla.nd  typ*-  were  spread  all 
deck. 


••.■ 


J 


■•■»• 


■  I  I  »      .    ■  ■ 

m      ■  I   ii^M  ,  »i  m ■ 

I 
■  - 


I 

:i 

-• 

J 


k. 


p- 


T 


r 


± 


.._ 


I 


^^^■•-'■■f— w 


THE     nULirrn     E\EXtNC     nEnALD     SATIRDAY.    .MARCH    20 


1897. 


i»5 


'^^^^^^^mmamimmmmmi^m 


i*^^' 


AN  ADVERTISE 

MENT 

To  prove  profitable  must  be  truthful.  ' 


'--»; 


In  order  to  convince  the  STYLISH 
DRESSERS  of  Duluth  ?L  superior- 
ity of  our  STYLES  and  WORKMAN- 
SHIP, we  shall  place  on  sale  flonday 
80  patterns  of  Foreign  and  Domestic 

SUITINGS 


OBJECT 


Taxpayers     File      Protests 

Against  the  Assessment 

Made  In  1895. 


AND 


K>*»S 


OATS 


At  the  seemingly  ridiculous  price  of 


Claim      Mining     Properties 

Were    Exempted     From 

Paying  Their  Share. 


Duluth  Trust  Company  Suit 

Against    the    City    Is 

Knocked  Out. 


GEORGE  R.  WENDLING. 

Lecturer  Whose  Power  Grows 
With  Each  Year. 

How  can  one  man  last  from  year  to 
year,    never    grew    stale,    and      always  j 
excite  the  keenest  curiosity,  the  deepest 
interest,    and    the   greatest   enthusiasm! 
among    the    best    and    most    cultivated 
people,   at   each  of  his    visits,   no   mat- 
ter  how   often   he   comes     to     lecture? 
(Jood    women    love    to    hear    Wendlins 
because    he    \n    the    fearless,    graceful  ! 
skillful  champion  of  all  those  ennobling  ' 
influences   and    high   .sanctions  so  dear 
to  them.   College   piofessors  go   to   hear' 
him  becau.se  of  his  profound  and  varied 
scholur-ship.  Politicians  go  to  hear  hini 
because    he    is    on-    of    the    men      who  I 
make    public    opinion.     Clergymen    gO' 
to  hear  him  becau.se  his  work  strength-' 
ens    theirs    and    they    get      from       him, 
thoughts    of    startling    originality    and  i 


!EDW.E._BilLE,  D.D. 

Endorses    Dr.    Charcot's    Ko'a 
Nervine  Tablets. 


The 


Most   Noteworthy   Testimonial    Ever 
G:¥pn— It  Has  Helpfld  Thousands 
of  Sick  People. 


The  test  of  a  reni'^dy  is  the  cures  tliat 
It  cfffcts.  The  next  best  is  the  testimony 
ot  people  of  tiie  hishpst  character  as  to 
the  merits  of  the  mMieino.  Dr.  Chnrcoft; 
Kola  Nervine  Tablets  have  cured  thc;V- 
sands  and  there  is  not  a  more  famous 
man  aliv(    in  Ameri.i  than  Kdward  Kver- 


$lS.S 


EACH 


Wg  solicit  your  inspection  and  guarantee  entire  satisfaction 

to  every  customer. 

THE  DULUTH 
ART  TAILORING  COMFNY 

•      French  &  Bassett  Building,  Opposite  Board  of  Trade. 


to  add  to  his  domain  the  mom  now  oc- 
cupied   by   the   health   department.   The 
latter  would,  in  the  event  that  the  citv 
clerk    should    be    given        its       present 
Muarters.    probably   be   moved   along  to 
the   office   now    occupied    by    the    build- 
ing     inspector.        Park      Commissif>n-r 
Helm,    who   has    hitherto   had    his   desk 
in    the      building      inspector's        office 
moved   across   the   hall    today    Into  the 
regular  quarters  of  the  park   commis- 
sion. 


So 


ASSUMED  TOO  MUCH. 

of   the 


Says  the    Mayor 
Grand  Jury. 

Th'^  mayor  said  today  that  in 
•  ipini-.n  the  grand  Jury  has  been  as- 
suming a  great  deal  of  which  tli'Me  is 
no  pnx.f  in  stating  that  the  adminislra- 


hi.- 


NINTH  ANNUAL  MEETING. 

Women's  Presbyterial  Mission- 
ary Society  Program. 

The  ninth  annual  meeting  of  the  Wo- 
man's   Presbyterial    Missionary  .sociei>  i 
•f  the  Duluth  presl>ytery  will  meet  at 
rhe   Second    Piesbyterian    church,    l.jl.-,  j 
West  Superior  street,  next  Wednesday   I 
rhe  program  is  as  follows: 

-MMl-xjN.;  SESSION.   10  a.    M  I 

I>.  %  otiunal  exercises   Miss  Eddy 

Music. 

Address  of  welcome Mrs.  C   S   Pier' e  i 

Response    Mrs.  I.  Thomps. .n 

Keading  of  minutes j 

•  •   •  •    Mrs.  George  M.  Smith  ' 

••re.  tmgs  from  .sister    hurches. 

Items  of  business. 

nei.orts  of  delegates. 

Reports  of  officers. 

Secretary  of  literature 

.      ••• • Mrs.  J.    B.  Campl><il 

>et.retai-y  of  young  peoples  work... 

-^    ; Mis.s  Stoddard 

I  rea^urer  of  contingent  fund 

••••••• Mrs.  C.  S."  Pierce 

Mudent  volunte«-r  movement. 

Kasket  lunch. 

Klection  of  ofTicers.  1  o'clock 

APTEKN'OOX  SESSION     '  V    M 

Devotional  exercises Mrs.  J.  P.'weir 

Rei.K>rts  continued. 
CorresiKindIng  secretary 

_      Mrs.   A.   H.  Carver 

Treasurer    Mi.«.«  ,,,,,  ^Vaugh 

The  Freedmen    Mrs.  C.  H.  Lutes 

-^L\  <t  u  ■  ;•  ■   ■  .;; -^^'^^   Harper 

Taj  Mahal   ..  .Miss  Carolyn  Blackman 

-vl'.iiical  missions 

..Dr.  Mary  Bradford.  Tabriz.  Persif. 
«">frering. 
Box  catechism. 
In   the  evening  at    1:4:.   o'clock   there 

U-hipp^   and'"XM;^v'^radS"or!;S'^'""'"    ^'^^'^   furnished   evidence 
Tabriz.  Persia  Hradfoid.    "l    of  the  existence  of  gambling  dens  to  the 

grand  jury  had  placed  the  administ ra- 
in possession  of  it  that  the  places 


suppress  gambling;, 
nients  of  the  report 
as   unjust   insinua- 


tion has  failed  to 
He  regards  the  stat 
in  this  connection 
tions. 

"The  grand  jury  should  have  required 
proof  that  the  administration  is  failing 
in  its  duty."  said  he.  "l  defy  them  to 
show  a  single  case  where  I  have  not 
done  my  duty  in  that  regard.  If  th^ 
jury  has  proof  of  a  single  ca.se.  it  is  its 
duty  to  indict  me  and  the  members  of 
the  police  department  v.  ho  may  be  le- 
sponsible. 
"I  do  not  know  that  thi-  .saloons    are 

I  resorts     for     minors.      Complaint     was 

!  made  that  at  the  W.-st  End  b..ys  were 
in  the  habit  of  <imgregating  iti  candy 
stores  and  playing  cards,  and  the  police 

.  were,   in   cmsequence.  ordered   to   keep 
a  .strict  watch  on  the  suspected  places 
I  do  not  think  that  minors  are  allowed 

I  in  salfKins." 

The  mayor  concluded  by  saying  that 


ONE  HUNDRED  DOLLARS. 

Verdict    In    Favor   of   Brown 
Against  C.  M.  Hill. 

Henry  Brf>wn  will  get  $100  from  Clar- 

.  ence  M.   Hill   because  of  the   letter  the 

latter   wrote   to   Panton   &'     White     in 

which   he  called   Mr.    Brown   a   "thing" 

and  an  "unmitigated  liar." 

The  jury  decided  this  way  this  after- 
no<m  at  2  o'clock  after  having  been  out 
about  three  hours.  The  arguments  to 
the  jury  were  made  yesterday  afternoon 
and  this  morning,  followed  by  Judge 
Ensign's  charge,  and  at  11:20  this 
morning  the  jury  took  the  case  with  it 
into  its  jury  room.  It  deliberated  over  i 
the  evidence  and  the  court's  chargt . 
not  to  mention  the  attornev's  argu- 
ments, until  -:l.-i.  when  the  above 
amount  of  damages  was  agreed  upon 
and  the  verdict  made  up  and  returned 
to  the  court.  The  jury  was  then  dis-  i 
charged  until  Monday. 
Brown  sued  for  $.")iK»o.  i 


Taxes  for  1895.  delinquent  Jan.  4,1897, 
will  meet  a  prodij^ious  amount  of  re- 
sistance, judging  (rom  the  number  of 
objections  filed  with  the  clerk  today. 
There  were  sixty  at  noon  and  it  wa& 
exepected  that  there  would  be  fully  200 
before  the  office  closed  at  night.  In 
general  the  answers  are  similar,  and 
they  bring  up  some  objections  which 
are  new  and  interesting. 

The  first  one  is  that  the  delinquent 
list  was  not  field  with  the  clerk  Jan. 
JO,  as  re(|uired  by  law.  but  on  Feb.  2. 
On  this  ground  it  is  asked  that  the  pro- 
ceedings l*-  set  aside.  Failing  in  this 
other  and  more  interesting  grounds  arc 
entered.  It  is  allege<i  that  in  189.5  and 
previous  years  taxes  were  very  unfair- 
ly assessed.  It  is  aserted  that  large 
numbers  of  the  most  valuable  mining 
and  mineral  properties  were  deliber- 
ately. intenti<uially  and  willfully  left  off 
the  tax  rolls  with  a  deliberate  design 
on  the  part  of  the  ;i^sessors  and  othei 
tax  officers  to  favor  and  exempt  the 
mining    interests. 

It  is  alleged  that  mftny  of  these 
lands  were  not  entered  at  all.  and  if 
they  were  entered  they  were  exempted 
from  taxation.  It  is  assrted  that,  the 
cash  value  of  the  lands  thus  omitted  is 
at  least  Slo.tcjo.otKi.  Those  which  were 
put  on  the  tax  lists  were  as.sessed  far 
btlow  tireir  regular  value,  it  is  stated, 
pioperty  worth  :f_'6.. 140.000  being  as- 
sessed at   $lS4.0,''d. 

It  is  claimed  that  this  threw  toe 
much  of  the  l)urdeM  on  other  lands 
■vhich  were  di.scriniinated  against,  and 
fi.v  this  reason  it  is  asked  that  the  pro- 
ceedings   be   sc^t    aside. 

CITY  IS  THE  WINNER. 

Duluth  Trust  Company's  Suit 
Is  Knocked  Out. 

Judge  Mt.'cr  sustained  a  demurrei 
this  morning  to  the  complaint  in  the 
ea.se  of  the  Duluth  Trust  company 
against  the  city  ef  Duluth.  In  thai 
.-^uit  the  Trust  comiiany  sought  to  re- 
I  ovei  $40,000  from  the  city  l)ecause  of 
!h"  latter's  failure  to  carry  out  a  con- 
tract to  issue  and  deliver  to  the  plaint- 
itYs  an  issue  of  $SO().(m»0  in  water  bonds- 
on  which  the  company  was  the  suc- 
cessful bidder.  The  reason  the  bonds 
w  .Me  not  delivered  was  that  the  t>k>c- 
tion  which  authorized  their  issuance 
Aas.  like  a  number  of  similar  electicms. 
knocked  out  l>y  the  courts.  The  com- 
pi'uy.  neverlheles.^^.  .sought  to  have  the 
(■<  ntract  carried  out.  and  because  it 
was  not  c-arried  out  it  sued  for  $40.00(' 
damages.  The  city  put  in  a  demurrei 
to  the  <ompIaint  on  the  ground  thai 
it  did  not  stale  facts  sufficient  to  con- 
stitute a  cause  of  action  and  Judge 
Moer  sustained  the  demurrer. 

In  announcing  his  decision,  he  said 
that  when  the  cMty  entered  into  the 
contract  with  the  Trust  comi)any,  it 
was  with  the  understanding  that  the 
bonds  would  l>e  issued,  but  the  mean- 
ing must  be  reacl  into  the  contract 
that  they  would  be  issued  if  the  city 
had  the  power  to  do  so.  That  i)ower 
was  taken  away  by  the  court's  deci- 
sion. In  contracts  between  individuals' 
inability  to  carry  out  a  contract  would 
not  relea.se  either  of  them.  But  if  one 
of  them  contracted  to  do  something  il- 
legal he  would  not  be  bound  to  carry 
out  his  contract.  That  applies  to  this 
case.  To  carry  out  its  contract  the  city 
must  issue  the  '.on,).,.  But  the  court 
has  enjoined  it  from  so  doing  and  it 
would  be  in  contempt  if  it  did.  There- 
fore it  is  not  bound  to  do  so.  the  jilaint- 
ifT  has  no  cau.se  of  action  and  the  de- 
murrer must   be  sustained. 


Arraigned  on  Indictments. 

J.  D.  Zein.  indicted  for  permitting 
gambling  on  his  premises,  was  ar- 
raigned this  morning  and  waj5  given  to 
Monday  afternoon,  at  2  o'clock,  to 
plead.  Ed  Dormldy,  proprietor  of  the 
Windsor,  indicted  on  the  same  charge, 
pleaded  not  guilty  this  afternoon. 
Nothing  has  yet  been  done  about  the 
ten  indictments  returned  early  in  th^ 
week,  several  days  before  the  grand 
jury  adjourned  Indeed,  those  who 
have  handled  thc'in  appear  to  have  even 
forgotten  v.  hom  the  indictments  were 
against  or  for  what  they  were  found. 


A  .V I  S  KMKSTS. 


LYCEUM  THEATER.! 

L.  y.  SCOTT.  Manager.  { 

TWO  NIGHTS  ONLY  i 

Commencing  Monday,  March  22.      I 

The  Event  of  tbo  Season.  S 

CHAS.  H.  YALE'S  j 

"FOREVER  DEVIL'S  AUCTION" 

1  ho  leader  and  teacliorof  spoctical  replet*  I 
Willi  novcltiee  from  Europe  and  America,       J 

8eo  the  fnnny  trollpy.  the  bik«  craze,  tli«»  k 
hoboe  8  Boirce,  the  bashful  niaideuB,  the  shy  I 
old  niaide,  the  mnncal  curses,  the  pramt  { 
trapFformation,  thp  bipffost  and  boet  showi 
vititioR  Dcduth  this  season,  Z 

All  at  regular  prices.  Beats  on  ealo  Satnr-  7 
day  at  9  a.  m.  A 


preacher     editor,    author   and    plillanihro- 
pi.>--l  in   New   Ensrland. 

Writing  from  Boston.  Dec.  23.  1S9.-;,  Dr. 
Ibile  says:  "I  .'.m  as.^ured  bv  c-ar-fwl  in- 
niiiry  .•iniong  le.ulinK-  physicians  and  per- 
son.cl  Iriends  who  have  used  it  and  in 
whom  1  have-  the  utmost  conlideiice.  thai 
l>r.  Charcots  Kola  .Nervine  Tablets  aie 
iiivaln.tbk-  in  insomnia  and  all  nervous 
diseases. 

EDW.    K.    HALi:." 
Fifty  cents  and  $1  .-il  druggists.  See   Dr. 
Chariot'.^    name   on    label.    Write   for   tes- 
timonials.   i<:ureka  Cliem.  &  Mfg.  Co..   L,a 
Crosse,    \Vi-. 


I.TJCTCEi; 


pc)wer  in  their  own  lidd  r)f  studv.  Stu- 
dents of  oratory  go  to  hear  him  "to  dis- 
covei  beneath  the  great  simplicity  of 
his  style  the  con.summate  art  which 
makes  him  master  of  the  platform.  I 
Old  men  and  young  men  go  because  of 
the  fascination  of  his  speech  and  the 
uiilifl   his    power   gives    them. 

As  Wendell  Phillips  lasted  for  forty 
years  and  was  always  equal  to  hi!> 
best,  and  as  Beecher  and  ( lough  last'xl 
a  lifetime  on  the  itlatform.  and  David 
Swiixg,  and  Phillips  Krooks  grew 
stronger  to  the  very  end,  so,  and  for 
the  same  reasons— industry,  original- 
ity, sincerity,  higli  purpose  and  great 
power— will  Gc^orge  R.  Wendling  con- 
tinue to  be  one  of  the  very  kings 
the    ))latform. 

Wendling  will  lecture  at  the  First 
Methodist  church  next  Wednesdav 
evening    on    "Saul    of    Tarsus." 


THE  PEPPERS  AGAIN. 

The  Annulled  Divorce  is  Again 
Reinstated. 


"Saul  of  Tarsus''    I 

r   FIRST   M.    E.   CHURnw     wrn.  I 


AT   FIRST   M.   E.  CHURCH.  WED-. 
NESOAY  EVE.,  MARCH  24.         ! 

(Star  Lecture  Cour.<e.)  f 

Tickets  50c.  Beeervcd  scat  sale  bpcins  Sat-  » 

nrday  morning  at  CLamberlaiu  k  Taylor's.    ♦ 


Wanted— To  Buy! 

Electric  Motor, 

One  to  two-horse  power. 

Address:  P99,  Herald. 


The  Pepper  divorce  pase,  which  has  be 
come   a    familiar    llguic    in    district    court  i 
during    its    .somewhat    variegated    career,  i 
came    up    again    before    Judge    Moer    this  ' 
morning,    and   il   is    probable   that    it   wa« 
for  the  last  time.     This  time  tlio  divorc- 
granted  by  Judge  Stearns  in  18S9  and  an- 
nulled  a  few  days   ago.    was    made   good 
•  igain. 

The  tc\stimony  of  the  case  in  brief,  is 
as  follows:  In  1889  Aslibell  11.  Pepper  ob- 
tained  a  default  divorce  from  Flora  A. 
"' I  Peiiper  on  ilie  ground  of  <le.sertion.  Pep- 
per lived  in  MinneaiMjlis  at  tin-  time  and 
his  wife  lived  in  St.  Paul,  but  lie  made 
an  affldavil  that  he  had  lived  in  St.  I.,ouis 
county  a  year  and  that  he  did  not  know 
where  his  wife  was.  because  of  the  falsity 
of  this  aflidavit  and  because  of  the  fact 
that  it  was  never  filed.  Judge  Moer  cheer- 
fully annulled  the  divorce  of  1889  a  few- 
days  ago  upon  Mrs.  Peppers  aitoriiev, 
John     M.     McClintock.     representing    thu 


Reception  Tonight. 

A    rece|)lion   to   the   Scandinavians  o 
the   city    will    be    given    by    the    Youn; 
Men's    Christian    association     at     their !  facts  to  hirriT 
rooms  on   Superior  street    this   evening       Put  .soon  after  the  quashing  of  the  di 

from  S  to  10  o'clock.  The  following  pro-    

gram   will   be  rendeivd: 

Piano  solo    Selected 

Mrs.    A.    Hoelscher. 


HEALTH 
BATHS 


Right  in  your  own 
home  you  can  en- 
Joy  dry  and  stram 
vapor  oxygen  and 
perf  II  mpd  baths  by 
u.siuff  the  Kobin- 
poii  Folding  Bath 
Cabinet:*  perfect 
and  Fi>(«*dy  euro 
for  colds,  rheuma- 
tism, etc.  Helpful 
in  every  way, 

J.  M.  MALONEY. 

(State  Agent, 
301  Chamber  of  Commerce,  Duluth. 


song 


i>y 


"Unfurl   the   Sails" 

Melpomene  Quartet 
Flute    solo— Xorwegian      folk 

with    variations 

A.    Hoelscher. 
Psalm    by   E.    S.    Rice,   arranged 

A.   L.  Skoog 

Scandinavian    Choral    Union,    forty 
voices. 

"Beautiful    Streamlet" 

Melpomene   Quartet. 

Psalm   128 chr.    Palmer 

Scandinavian  Choral  I'nion. 
At  the  conclusion  of  the  inogram  in 
the  assembly  hall  a  game  of  basket  ball 
between  the  Superior  Normals  and  the 
Y.  M.  C.  A.  teams  will  be  played  in  the 
g.vmnasium. 


I  vorce  Pepper  married  again  in   Minneap- 

'  oils,   and    his   seconii    wife   and   a   child   of 

'5  are  living.  When  the  divorce  was  about 

I  to   be   annulled,    the   second    Mrs.    Pt  pper, 

i  Who    had    married       Pep|»er       innocently 

■enough,    besought    the    first    Mrs.    Pepper 

to   let    the   matter   stand    for   the   sake   of 

her  child.   l'epi)er  died   a   couple  of  vear.s 

ago,     leaving     no     i)ro|iert\.     The     divorce 

was    annulled,     however,     dc^wtroving    the 

legitimacy    of    the    child.       This  '  mornins 

.Mattie   H.   Pejjper  and   Klalhe  Pe|)i>er,   thc' 

j  .-second   family  of  Pepper,   appealed  to  the 

court    to   vacate    its   order   overruling   the 

divorcc\   and    the  first   Mrs.    Pepper,    for  :i 

money   consideration,    siipulat.d    that   she 

had    MO    objection.    For    the    sake    of    the 

child  Judge  Moer  granted   the  order,   and 

I  the  dc^ceased    Pe|)pc-rs   fraudulent  divorce 

I  and   his  .second  marriage  are  as  legal    is 

they    were    before    those    late    i)roc<>edings 

I  were  begun.    P.  J.   Neff  appeared   for  the 

second  Mrs.   Pepper. 


CARLTON  SMALL  FRUIT 
AND  PLANT  NURSERY. 

('atalc)guo  mailed  free  to  any  address, 
I  will  set  out  any  variety  of  Strawberries 
myself,  near  the  city  of  Dolath,  (irnaraii- 
roe  all  to  live)  for  $1.,tO  per  100,  if  ordered 
before  April  I.'ith, 

E.  G.  BOVEE, 

Carlton,  Minn. 


I  Endion  Club  Party. 

.  The  Endion  club  will  have  an  in- 
I  formal  party  this  evening.  The  Idlliaid 
and  pool  tournaments  will  be  com- 
pleted and  several  games  will  have  to 
be  played  to  do  it.  The  games  ai  . 
pretty  well  narrowed  down.  Crossetl 
and  Thornton  are  to  iilay  in  the  bil- 
liard (o.itest  and  the  winner  is  to  play 
Itush.  In  the  pool  -games  there  are  sev 
eral  to  be  played.  There  will  be  danc- 
ing following  the  tournament. 


I 


Wants  More  Room. 

There  is  a  prospect  that  there  may 
he  a  shifting  of  r^uarters  at  the  city 
ball.  City  Clerk  Richardson  feels  that 
■i-    has    not    enough    room    and    d">-ir->' 


tion  ^^ 

would  have  been  quickly  closed.  It  is 
very  difficult,  he  said,  to  procure  wit- 
nesses who  will  testify 


You  may  never  know  It  happened  If 
you  fail  to  read  The  Evening  Herald. 


ONE  BARBEL  or  this  FLOUB 


Young  People  Entertained. 

Miss  Cora  Leitau.  of  7i>8  Fast  ;-'irst 
street  entertained  a  number  of  her 
iriends  last  .  venlnn.  The  young  people 
F)lay.><l   c-ards   and   danced.    Those    pre.s'nt 

K%!^;  AJ.'rr*^''  J"'«n'l«  Williams.  Olive 
Kemp,     Mfa     Barager.     India     Willciins 

^^H'  ?ri!'V-\v^"*'^  Wigdahl.  Jessie  Lai 
.Sdlle.  hthel  \\c;ntworlh.  Bertie  Stevens. 
Barbara  Hang.  Fsth.r  Mah-olmsen.  Anna 
Y-ung.    Olga     Hahlbus.h.    Maude    Yoi,^ 

hinith.     Rali.h      Urewer.     K.irl     .lamieson. 

Kul'"''^/"'T''-  .*"'■'■""  ♦•'•"■f-  J-^<"   Main... 
hdgar   R;;wley.   Joe  Vook.   Charles   Skuse 

James    <  larkCarl     Drlesbach.     Edmund 

.Mal.olmson.    Henry  Crochau   and   Gcoikc 


WILL  MAKE 
MORE  THAN 

300  LOAVES 

OF  THE 


m  BREAD 

YOU  EVER  AlE. 

SOLO  fcVfcHYWHEHE. 


Hayden  Denies  It. 

Thomas  Hayden  was  considerably  i.io- 
voked  today  at  the  explanation  "given 
m  the  morning  paper  and  credited  to 
him  of  h<.w  the  gambling  place  adjoin- 
ing the  saloon  of  Hayden  &  Calverlv 
was  operated.  He  denies  that  he  macfe 
the  statements  credit-d  to  him,  and 
says  he  will  make  his  statement  when 
the  trial  comes  up. 


SAID  TO  HAVE  AGREED. 

Aldermen  Settle  Upon  Salaries 
j  to  Be  Paid. 

I      The   council   c-omniittee     on     salarie:- 
I  had   a  meeting  yesterday,   it    is   iindc-i- 
j  stood,  and  agreed  on  a  report.    The  city 
attorney's  c-omncji.sation    will    be    lixcd 
It  is  e.xpecdc-d.  at  about  $J.-.00  and  that  o! 
i  health  officer  at   ^H'V)     per  annum   aii.i 
fees.    The  city  clerk's  pay  is  repented  t( 
have  been   placc-d   in   the   nc-ighborhoo<. 
of   *smt   and    fees.      Reductions  arc-   sabi 
to  have   been   made  al.so  in   the   oav  oi 
the  secrc-tary  of   the  health   board   and 
in  that  of  .some  of  the  assistants  in  tli. 
other   otHces.     The   c-omptroller's    com- 
pensation has  not   bc^en  disturbed    it  i- 
said.      The   salary   of    the    secretary   ol 
the  fire  board  may  also  be  reported  fo: 
a  reduction. 

There  Is  a  lack  of  unanimitv  anion- 
those  who  are  in  favor  of  reductions  as 
to  how  much  of  a  cut  should  be  made 
some  of  them  differing  widely  and  all 
being  determined  to  have  the  others 
come  to  their  opinion.  A  struggle  over 
the  matter  is  expected,  therefore  wh-m 
the  question  is  taken  up  Monday  night 
The  nece.ssity  of  settling  the  matter 
witho-,t  much  more  delay  is  impressed 
ufHUi  the  aldermen's  minds,  and  a  num- 
her  of  them  got  together  this  mornin.u 
and  agreed,  if  nine  votes  could  be  mus- 
tered  to  !)revent  an  adjournment  lo 
settle  the  businc-ss  at  the  next  nieetin- 
even  if  it  should  take  all  night 


Romano  Found  Guilty. 

Joseiih  Romano,  charged  with  thc' 
theft  of  a  tub  of  butter  belonging  to  the 
Weir-Mears  Commission  c<mii>any.  v.as 
•found  guilty  by  a  jury  in  Judge  Boyle's 
c-ourt  this  morning.  Romano  was  sent- 
enced to  j.ay  a  fine  of  $W  and  costs  or 
be  confined  in  the  county  jail  forty-five 
days.  A  stay  of  two  days  was  granted. 
baiU  being  fixed  at  $40,  in  default  of 
which  he  was  committed.  The  trial 
began  yesterda.v  afternoon.  It  was 
hotly  c-ontested.  and  was  character- 
ized by  freciuent  warm  interchanges 
between  opposing  counsel. 

Wrote  the  Class  Song. 

A  song  written  liy  Lawrence  E.  Hor- 
ton,  of  this  city,  has  been  adopted  as 
the  university  .song  for  this  year  at  the 
Minnnesoia  state  university.  It  is 
known  a.s  'The  .Maro.m  and  Gold."  these 
being  the  class  colois.  The  last  num- 
ber of  the  Ariel,  the  university  (taper, 
gives  the  song,  together  with  a  jticturc 
of  the  author.  Mr.  Horton  is  in  th'.' 
senior  class,  and  will  graduate  in  June. 


Great  Hotel  of  New   York. 

The  Pla/.a.  |.joncer  of  the  ui)towii 
center,  maintains  its  lead  as  giving 
the  best  value  for  the  pric.-;  European 
and  American  plans;  Fifth  avenue  and 
Plaza  sc|uare.  Quick  access  to  all  parts 
cd'  the  city  by  elevated  and  surface 
routes. 


Beautiful  tableaux  and  fine  music  at 
First  M.  ]•:.  church  tonight.  Admission 
only  ir»  cents. 


Millinery. 

AH  fashion  lovers  should  c-all  cm 
Madam- Beuglet  for  their  c^arly  spring 
hats.  Kitchi  Gammi  building,  22  Third 
avenue   west. 


WATER  PLANT  WORK. 

Some  Statistics  Concerning  the 
Men  Employed. 

A  statement  has  been  prepared  in  the 
office  of  the  board  ol  public  works, 
showing  thenationalityof  iheapplicants 
for  work  on  the  nev.  water  system,  the 
wards  they  hail  from,  the  number  of 
orders  for  work  issued  to  the  applicants 
from  each  ward  and  the  percentage' of 
such  orders  to  the  ajiplicalions  made. 

The  Eighth  ward  has  had  the  best  of 
it,  orders  for  work  having  been  issued 
to  65  per  cent  of  the  apiilicants;  the 
Fifth  is  next,  orders  having  lieen  issued 
to  .')9>4  per  cent  of  the  number  applying, 
and  the  Seventh  is  third  in  order,  .".8 
per  cent  of  the  number  from  this  ward 
applying  having  received  orders.  F«;r 
the  other  wards  the  oercentages  Are  as 
follows:  First.  4:!;  Sc-cond,  .>0:  Third,  4S; 
Fourth.    Hi;  Sixth.  47. 

The   number  of  applic-ants   fieun  and 
the  number  of  mders  issued  to  the  ap- 
plicants frcuu  each  ward  are  as  follows: 
First— Applicants.   14.'!;  orders.   61.     Sec- 
ond—Aiiplicants,  1!I7;  orders,  100.    Third 
—Applicants.   126:   orders.  54.     Fourth- 
Applicants,  155;   orders,  72.     Fifth— Ap- 
plic-ants,  ISl;  order.s,  lOS.     Sixth— Appli 
cants.  455;  orders.  216.     Seventh— Appli-    . 
cants.  ;!60;   orders,  2ns.     Eighth— Ai)i)li- I ; 
cants.  ;;4!t;  orders.  227.    Total  number  of    : 
applicants,  196;t;  orders,  1046.  I 

The  nationalities  of  the  applicaiiis  ;  S 
are  as  follows:  Swedish,  657:  Nor-  I 
wegian,  2^5;  Canadian,  267:  American,  i  ■ 
22-x;  Finnish,  I4;i;  (Jerman.  is't;  Polisn,  j  j 
76;  Italian.  52;  Irish,  .50;  English,  2.'!;  • 
Russian,  13;  Scotch,  13;  Danish,  16;'' 
French,  S;  Austrian,  8;  Swiss,  2;  Prus- 
sian. 1. 


OETECTBVES 

Anyone  reqairing  the  services  of  experience  I 
oHicers  In  civil  and  criminal  caees,  can  eocure 
aanio  by  cillin^  on  or  addrepsin^ 

Benson's  Detective  Agency 

ExcLaujro  Building,  Dalutb. 


PALMS! 

A  NEW  lot,  good  ONES, 

From  One  Dollar  Up. 

These  are  the  (Jreatost  Bargains  ever  offered. 

Ferns  and  other  Pretty  Plants  of  aU  kinds. 

Every  purchaser  of  one  dollar's  worth  of 
Plants  at  the  Greenhouses  may  select  to  the 
value  of  $1.25.  This  offer  is  good  for  March  only, 
visitors  welcome. 


UHDSAY'S  GREENHOUSES, 

52nd  Ave.  East.  Lakeside  Car  Line. 


REOFEISED! 

the  ST.  JAMES  HOTEL. 

Everylliiu^  new  and  cLi^erful. 
Cuifiui-  niie?:rei)tioual.  Kxcelleuteervicso. 
SI. 50  PER  DAY. 
Special  Rates  to  Permanent  Guests. 


;■■"••"■•■•••"•••"••••••■••*•••••••.«•..,,„,,, 

:  CopYgiggTs.  Cavkats.       Tbademaskb. 

!   PATEHSTS. 

:        MASON.  FENWICK  &  LAWRENCE, 

JiMES  T.  WATSON.  « 

Patent  Lawyers,  Solicitors  and  Experts. 

,  EHt-*b'd      Washinirton.  I>.  (;.        18«l. 

!         407  Palladio  Building,  Dnltitb,  Minn. 
J   (jDTeutora  ffuide  book  tiee.j 
'■■■■■■■*■•■■■■■•■■■«■■■■•■■■•■«■■■■■«•■■■««••■ 


Court  Filings. 


Jevvelery  half  price  sale.     Regli's    101 
\V(>st    Superior    street. 


Don't  fail  to  .see  the  Cirevk  maidens 
and  heroes  at  First  .M.  K.  <hun  h  to- 
night.    Admission,  15  c-ents. 


Judge  Cant  this  morning  nied  an 
order  denying  plaintiff's  motion  for  a 
new  trial  in  the  case  of  Emma  May 
I.undberg  against  the  Duluth  &  Iron 
Range. 

The  case  of  Andrew  Nordling  against 
the  Security  bank  has  been  .iismissed 
by  stipulation. 


Mrs.   Brandts'  millinery     and 
store   removed     to     US     West 
street. 


notion 
Fourth 


Superfluous    hair,    moles,    etc.,      per- 
manently   destroyed      by      electricity 
without    injury.      Face   massage     and 
complexion   treatment.       Mrs.   Julia  I. 
Hughes,    401    Lonsdale    building. 


Large  stock   of  renting   pianos  at    N. 
U.  Loon  3.    Call  cjuick. 


Pure  Spring  Water. 

Delivered   daily.       Telcidioue  ordern   tc 
Stcwurfa   livery,    teleplioue   No.   334. 


Awarded 
Highest  Honors— World's  Fair. 

*DR; 

^  CREAM 

BAKING 

vmm 

MOST    PERFECT    MADE. 

A  pure  Grape  Cream  of  Tartar  Powder.     Free 
liom  Ammonia,  Alum  or  any  other  .idiilterant. 

40  Years  the  Stciidard* 


Claim  Never  Heard  of. 

Acting   GcMicTjil    Ljind    Commissioner    K 
F.     Best     yc-st<-rd;iy     notilicd     the     i;niT,'d 
States   land    ortlc-t-    that    the   stale's   claim 
to   the   following   lan.is  is   held   for  rejec- 
tion:   Lot    1.    s(-(tion   22-r>4-»:    Ictt   4.    section 
:{-4!»-I4:    lot    1.    section    18-4i>-ll:    lot    3.    see- 
;  tion  ^7-50-15;    lot   3.    section   34-50-14-    lot   t> 
I  section  2-48-15;  lot  5.  sc>c-tion  9-48-15;  lot  4 
section  2t)-49-15:  the  se>,i  of  the  sw»i,  13-49- 
I  15. 

I      The    notice   was    a    surprise    for   nobodv 

snpi)osc(l    the   state    h;!d    ;inv    claim    iipoi. 

the  lands  or  bad  m.-idc  anv.    Judge-  Cai-v 

is  of  the  opinion   lluit    the   department    is 

pn)bal»lv    clc-aning    np    all     matters    i-on- 

I  nect<-d  with  the  swani|>  land  grant  to  the' 

I  state    upon    which        contingeiieies    might 

arise    and    slimiblc-d    on    to    this     As    (he 

;  Ian. Is    eit<<l     Were    all    obtaiiu-d     from     tlle 

,  government    i»rior       to    the    Krant    beinK 

made   he   does   not   see   how    there   can   be 

:  anything  else  in   it. 


BANK  AD  VERTISE.VEKT8. 

MMmAMi 

OF  DULUTH. 

United  Statae  OoTomment  UepoMtary 
CIPITAL,  ONE  MILLION  DOLURS. 


A..  L.  OODBAN, 

Praeident, 


J.  U.  fhGHT, 
t'asbier. 


W,  8.  IIXSHOP 

Asst,  (^Heliier 


Feel  Badly  Over  It. 

Fi-ank  Willett,  M.  C.  Miller  and 
Hugh  Cameron,  who  were  arrested 
charged  with  agreeing  to  accept  a  bribe 
from  J.  D.  Zein  are  still  feeling  pretty 
sore  over  their  arrest.  Miller  claims  to 
have  lived  here  fourteen  years  and 
Willett  five  years.  They  say  they  had 
nothing  to  do  with  l)eginning  the  pro- 
ceedings against  Zein,  and  thing  M'-- 
Donough  caused  them  to  be  subpoe- 
naed. They  claim  the.v  did  not  try  to 
blac-kmail  Zein  and  n-fer  to  the  fac-t 
that  the  grand  jury  did  not  indict  th*-in 
to  prcjve  this. 


Money  Sent  to  All  Parts  of  the  World. 

4eouanU  of  Merchauto.  Hanke,    (^orporatioiu 
and  Indlridaalfl  Utxeivatl. 


InteroBt  Alinwad  on  Time  OepeaH*. 


Regli's  balf  price  sale  until  April  1. 


If,  M.  PE\TON.  PraMdent. 

JAME^C.UUNTEB,  Cashier. 

WILLIAM  U,  HEGAiiDT,  Am'I  (^a«br 
THE 

American  Exchange 

BANK.  ^ 

Duluth,  Minnesota. 

Capital,  $500.000.  Snrplas,  $100,000. 

HAMILTON  M.°'eYTON?"*' 

MEf.VIN  J.FORBES, 

JUI>OE  .1.  I).  KiN^KlN. 
JOHN   H.  liPHAM, 

GEORCE  RPKNCKK, 

ANGU8  K.  MACt'jkRi.vNK 
JAMEa  C.  HUNTEK 


*'•"    >  ■      I    I  »     I.   K    I.     m 


'    -    - 


■^■ 


■irte 


H- 


■■  i>ii  • 


I 

I' 


I 


I 

!  i 


ll 

;  i 


PART  TWO- 


DULUTH    EVENING    HERAL 


iSTORICAUj 


SOCIETY. 


./ 


BREAKING 


SATIKDAV,     :\rAKriT    20.     IS!)^ 


h 


WiLi^ 


THE  ICE. 


A  GREAT  SCHEME. 


Capt.  Inman's  Scheme  for  Naviga^ 

tion  of  the  Great  Lakes  in 

the  Winter. 


Vessels  With  a   Ram    Bow    to    Go 

Under  and  Throw  Up 

the  Ice. 


Immense  Power  That  Will  Split  the 

Winrows  of  Ice  Like  a 

Wedge. 


A  patent  has  !.een  recently  applied  !  tups  to  operate  in  Duluth  harbor.  am\ 
for  l>y  Capt.  B.  B.  Inman.  the  wol! ;  ""t'  '"  the  'Sou'  river  and  one  in  the  St. 
known  tug  man  of  Duluth.  that  will  i  *^''*''"  ^"'*  Detroit  rivers.  That  will  take 
prohaMy   make   the   navigation   of   il^^\  :^:ul'lr.:^.^::^!:::: Jl^^^^,  ,^Si::^ 


jfreat  lakes  in  winter  a  possibility. 

This  assertion  undoubtedly  will  make 
the  weather  wise  and  skeptic  old  sea 
dog  shake  his  head  and  e.xelaim:  'Im- 
possible.' And  at  first  sight  it  does 
seem  almost  impossible  for  even  the 
most  modern  steamships,  with  their 
loOO  horse  power,  to  force  their  way 
through  the  masses  of  ice  that  sur. 
round  the  ports  of  entry  between  Buf- 
fallo  and  Duluth.  saying  nothing  of  the 


one 


That    is    another   proposition,    and 
that  I  will  explain  as  follows: 

■"Last  fall,  when  navigation  closed.  I 
commenced  to  think  over  the  problem 
of  ice  breaking,  and.,  remembering  my 
experience  in  the  -Soo.-  i  thought  fiut 
a  scheme  for  a  model  for  an  icebreaker, 
vvhich  can  be  better  explained  bv  the 
accompanying  picture.  The  hull  of  the 
boat  will  be  much  on  the  same  model 
as  the  Zenith  City.  Coralia  or  any  of  the 
modern 


Frank  B.  Mills  and  His  Pri- 
vate Postoffice. 

How  by  a  clover  use  of  his  advantages 
a  country  postmaster  may  become  rich 
Frank  B.  Mills,  of  Rose  Hill,  has  shown 
says  the  New  York  Sun.  Rose  Hill  lies 
twelve  miles  .south  of  Shaneateles.  It 
consists  of  a  KO.OtW  granite  house,  a  sh»-d 
and  a  warehouse.  The  house  is  the  resi- 
lience of  Frank  B.  Mills.  The  warehouse 
Is  his  place  of  business.  The  .she<l  is  his 
postoffice.  Tiu'  population  of  Rose  .Mill  is 
six;  Mr.  Mills,  his  wife,  his  two  child- 
ren, his  father  and  his  brother.  But  Mr. 
Mills'  postoffice  did  a  $7000  business  last 
year,  which  is  a  great  deal  mora  than 
any  other  postoffice  m  Onondaga  ccunty 
did.  excepting,  of  course.  Syracu.se.  Every 
letter  that  came  out  of  that  nostoffiie 
came  from  Mr.  Mills.  Every  lett  r  that 
went  into  that  postoffice  was  addressed 
to  Mr.  Mills.  He  is  literally  the  whi>l  > 
thing. 

Just  at  present  the  volume  of  mail  out 
of  the  postoffice  is  about  five  tons  a  dav. 
As  there  is  no  railroad  within  a  dozen 
miles  of  Rose  Hill  all  this  mail  has  to  be 
drawn  over  the  hills  to  Skaneateles, 
where  it  is  taken  by  the  Skaneateles  rail- 
road to  Skaneateles  Junction,  and  thenco 
by  the  Auburn  branch  of  the  New  York 
Central  to  Syracuse.  The  Skaneateles  rail- 
ro;ul  took  the  contract  for  carryine 
t^kaneateles  mails  when  there  was  nf» 
Rose  Hill  mail  worth  mentioning;  niul 
Jiow  during  the  spring  season  the  Rose 
Hill  mail  is  nbout  enual  Tn  weight  to  all 
the  rest  of  the  mail,  baggage  and  pas- 
sengers carried  over  the  road,  rharl.s 
Ketchings.  the  Ml.s.souri  mail  contract- 
or, who  secured  a  five-year  contract  for 
<!irrying  the  Borodino  mail  in  1892  for  $XA 
did  not  bid  iigain  tliis  year,  for  he  foiuid 
that  it  cost  him  JliNit  a  .vear  to  hire  a 
iMimer  to  carry  it  idl.  And  now  one 
.1.  U.  rigg.  (»r  Windsor.  Mo.,  has  tak^n 
Ui<-  (ontract  for  la-J?  a  year.  He  will 
Ml  artily  wish  he  had  not  before  his  con- 
trai't   expires. 

T<n    years    ago    Mr.    Mills    was    a    bov 
driving    into   Skaneateles    to   s.hool    every 
morning  from   his   home  near  Thora  Hili. 
Me    went    to    school    a    vear    or    two    and 
then  went  back  to  the  farm.     A  mile  from 
his    farm   Charles   M.   ttoodspeed.    a   farm-' 
er.    was    doinj;    a    f.iir    business   in    .selliu--;  i 
magazines  at   eiit   rates.  A  mile  from   Mr.  I 
Coodspeefl's  hoMse.  iind  also  about  .i  mile  ' 
from    .Mill's    liouse.    at    the    third    apex    of  ! 
the    triangle    was    Thorn    Hill    iH)stoftii-e.  1 
There    was    no    need    of    a     postoffice     it  ] 
(Joodspeeds,        but     Mr.        (Joodspeed    got 
Congressman    Melden   to   establish    a    post- 
office    at    his    hous(^— Shamrock    he    called  | 
it— and    had    himself   appointed    postmast-  i 
er.      For   p:iy    he   got.    under   the    rules   «»f 
the    department,     the    face    value    of    all 
stamps  cancelled.    In   his   business  of  tak- 
ine:  snbs<riptlons   for  magazines— a   small 
business     exclusively —he    could     write    ;is 
many  letters  and  send  as  many  eireulars 
as    he   pleased   and    his    postage    cost    him 
nothing    at    all.    He    pot    for    his    pay    a.s 
postmaster   the    full    value    of   all    stamps 
that    went    out    of    his    office. 
'      Mills    thought    about    (looilspeeds    plan 
'  an<l   the  more   he   thought   of  it   the   more 
he    thought    there    was   g«io<l    money    in    it 
for  other  people  than  (loodspi-ed.   He  sent 
to  Mr.    Belden.    and  asked   for  a    po.stolli.-e 
on    his   farm.     Thnrii    Mill    is   a    hamlet    of 


BUCILLOS 


The  Typhoid  Variety  Seem 

to  Be  Departinfi  From 

the  City. 


Many  Theories  as  to  Their 
Origin    Upset    By     Pre- 
vailing Conditions. 


Interesting  Seances  oF  a  City 

Official  With  His  Milch 

Cow. 


♦**- 


steamers,   excepting     that     the 
sixty-five  miles  of  the  St.   Marys  river  I  ^^idf"st  part  of  the  boat  will  be  at  the!"  dozen  huu.ses.  which  had  always  had  a 
that    connects    the   two   most    northern  M''"^ '^^  *^^  '^'^'^■'  ^^hh'h  will  be  about  48    !.'i',M*""^'"'''    ""*'    ''*   ^'i''^    Cioodspeed   and 
lakes  in  the  chain.  I  feet  wide,  narrowing  down  to  45  feet  at        .       «"» /heir   mail.    Goodspeeds   office. 

The  harbor  of  Duluth  is  especially '  the  turn  of  the  stern.  That  does  away  ""S  %K,ds,.e.^r'-bu7'suii  u  '"id'^more 
impregnable  in  the  winter  months.  The  ^^'^^  any  friction  on  the  entire  length  of  |  busine.s.s  than  the  Thorn  Mill  office  There 
Jce  freezes  very  thick  in  the  bay,  up  the  ^^e  boat,  with  the  exception  of  the  75  was  no  claim  that  the  Mills  office  would 
St.  Louis  river  and  in  many  cases  away    ^^^^   from   forefoot   to   the   bluff  of   the '  •''*''"^'''  »»ny"n<*  '>iit  Mills,  but  the  Rose  Hill 


out  in  the  lake  for  miles.     The  fact  is  j  ^o^^- 

that  the  icy  king  of  winter  has  exer- 1  "The  important  feature,  though  of 
cised  his  power  over  most  of  the  Indus- 1  this  proposed  craft  is  the  shape  of' the 
tries  at  the  head  of  the  lakes,  saying,  !  bow.     The  forefoot  of  the  ram  bow  ex^ 

iou  can  go  just  so  long  and  no  longer,'  tends  about  20  feet  beyond  the  pernen- 
compellmg  most  of  the  mills,  wheat  '  dicular  b(.w.  making  the  forward  part 
elevators  and  a  hundred  kindred  Indus,  of  the  .ship  something  of  the  nature  of  a 
tries  in  Duluth  and  Superior  to  dose  ploughshare,  the  ram  going  under  the 
their  business  for  about  five  months,  ice  and  throwing  it  up  and  away  from 
during  the  year.  It  is  no  wonder,  their  '  the  boat,  piling  the  displaced  ice  on 
that  much  of  the  ingenuity  and  science    either  side  of  the  vessel 

that  the  present  age  of  miraculous  in- |      "Old  .sailors  who  have     been     sailing    out   or    the   nosioni.e   in 
ven  ions  contains   should     be     directed  ,  small  craft  with  light  power  will  ife  ap!    He  ,hd   busilies.i'f.lra";. 
toward    solving    the    great    problem    of  i  to  lau.gh  at  the  idea  of  sailing  the  lakes    P't    i'*'nt    from    Inde    f 
w inter  navigation.  I  in  winter,  and  ask,  how  do  you  exnect    >f'"*^  -^f^"-  when  the  business  of  the  office 

Boats  constructed  for  the  purpose  ot :  to  go  through  the  winrows  of  ice  nftf^n    ^>*^^'>-"^^'  >*"  '"''Ke  that  the  office  was  made 
crushing  ice  have  Ijeen  in  use  with  more    found  in  th-  lake  that  are  sometimes  ''^  :  ''  t,^-;''*'"'*^'!   ""«■•       . 

itl  .K     o.       r       .  .      ^."'-     ^^-      I^"'^^"t^;  winrows  are  usually  only  about  20  feet    t"  the  last  an.uial  report,   did  a    business 
ana  tne  btraits  ot  Mackinac     Capt.  In-    in  diameter,  and  when  we  have  the  mo-  i  "^  f"""''  *han  SH.VH)  a  yiar  and  it  is  ui)on 

mentum  of  90<J0  tons  pushed  bv  ''O00oi"^t'  '"*'*.''*  "f, 'he  business  done  that  the 
horse  r.ower  such  as  w*»  »v.>oef  t.^  .  ,7.  '*'''="-^'  ''*  •'=''«'•  ^^^-  ^""«  ''"<•«  ""^t  mnke 
w!     ;.\.  .       .  w     ^\.     ^^^'^^^  t*^  l'"^!  so   much   en  a   salarv  as   he  would   if   the 

in  our  new  boats,  why  the  ram  will  split ,  former    plan    had    been    continued      but 


postoffice  was  established  and  started  in 
doing  business. 

Mr.  Mills  made  hia  business  seeds.  He 
knew  something  about  agriculture  and 
turned  part  of  his  farm  into  an  experi- 
ment station  for  seeds  and  sent  out  circu- 
lars telling  how  many  seeds  of  choice  new 
v.irieties  he  would  give  for  a  quarter  or 
a  half  dollar,  sent  by  mail.  He  did  not 
need  much  capital  for  this;  his  postage 
on  catalogues  was  nothing  and  his  i>os- 
tage  on  p.ickages  of  seeds  was  nothing. 
Postmaster  Mills  after  a  while  began 
.sending  a  mail  bag  full  of  seeds  a  day 
out   of   the    postoffice   In    his    front    room. 

ommission   of   ]im 
Sam     until     tnret 


man.  who  has  applied  for  the  patent 
referred  to  at  the  commencement  of 
this  article,  is  an  old  and  experienced 


i 


THE    INMAN    ICE    BREAKER. 


there   was   no   escape;    he   had   to   take   a 
.■^al.iry. 

Frank  B.  Mills  is  by  profession  a  Re- 
pul'liean  ill  polities.  Me  was  appointed 
during  Clevel.ind's  lirst  administration. 
.>s  ihere  was  no  one  else  in  the  newlv  es- 
tablished i)ostoffice  to  appoint  but  him- 
self there  was  no  in(iuiry  .ibout  his  p»di- 
lics.  AVhen  Harrison  came  into  office 
Mills  held  on.  but  when  Cleveland  wa.- 
re-elec-ted  it  occurred  to  him  that  some 
farmer  living  along  the  Borodino  road 
min-tit  lake  .i  notion  to  move  down  be- 
side him.  talk  free  trade  ;ind  chil  serv- 
ice reform  at  school  house  meetings  .md 
apply  for  bis  job.  So  his  brother.  WilMam 
Mills,  who  is  b.v  prf>fession  a  Democrat, 
came  down  to  live  with  Frank,  and  on 
Frank's  own  reconimenrlalion  was  ap- 
pointed postmaster.  Whether  Presidenl 
McKinley  keeps  Brother  William  in  offie.. 
or  removes  him  to  .lopoint  Broilier 
Frank  is  not  a  source  of  worry,  inas 
mueh  as  there  Is  no  one  else  who  can  be 
a    candidate. 


navigator  of   the   lakes  and    their  har- 1  the  winrow  like  a  wedge,  and  go  right  I  ;"'"'"Vk   "f  .  ..>.     * 

^  '       ^  ^"  "feni    from   the  town  of  Chester 


OAK   ISLAND'S    MYSTERY. 
Oak  street  is  situated  at  the  head  cf 
Mahone   bay.    N.    S.,    about    four   iniles 


-^  11  ~r   I    • 


bors,    and   his     experience   makes     his  I  through 
opinion  valuable  and  his  patent  worthv 
of  investigation.     In   an  interview  yes. 
terday,  the  captain  said: 

"I  have  been  on  the  lakes,  between 
Buffalo,  Duluth  and  Chicago  for 
thirty-five  years,  fifteen  of  which  I  spent 
on    old-fashioned    river     tugs     on      the 


That  is,  she  would  go  through 
a  lO-mile  field  of  ice  two  feet  thick.  The 
forefoot  and  bow  of  the  new  boat  will 
be  plated  with  steel  1>4  inches  thick, 
while  the  ordinary  boat  has  a  »/i-inch 
plate." 
Capt.  Inman  sent    drawings     of     his 


AI)out  the 
close  of  the  last  century  the  curiosity 
of  some  prospectors  was  aroused  l)y  a 
circular  space  near  the  eastern  end  of 
the  island,  says  the  New  YorK  ."'un  In 
the  center  of  this  stood  an  oxk  tree 
with  marks  and  figures  on  the  trunk. 
The  surroundings  were  su .h  that  a 
shaft  were  sunk  an<l   discoveries  were 


Kasota  with  a  big  cargo  of  wheat,  that    *^'"'y  prove  ver>'  favorable  in  working 
was   paying  the     owners     10     cents     a    fhrough  ice.   especially  solid  or  bonded 
bushel,   and    I   was  anxious   to  get   her  I  ^^'*'-  ^"^'  '**  ^'''^  ""'Y  form  suitable  for  a 
through.     When    we     got    to    the    'Soo,-  j  '"afle«l    steamer,    or.    rather.     I     should 
they  told  us  that  we  had  better  tie  up!  ***>'•    ^     steamer     having     omsiderabh 
for   we   could    never   jtet    through    Mud  i  ''^'■go   of   loaded    draft.     I   am   satisfied 
lake.     I    told    the   engine(«r    that    unless    ^hat  a  steamer  built  on     these     plans, 
he  'pounded  her  <>n  the  back'  we  would    having  good   pf»wer.   would     work     her 
prfd»ably  have  to  walk  home.     We  went  I  ^^'^^   thrf»ugh  any   ice  likely  to  be  met '  ['{{{ 
into  that  ice  with  full  sjieed.  vnd  ihey!  ^^•♦^  »"  '^^  lakes." 
all  thought  the  shij*  would  be  ounchel 
full  of  holes,  but  it  was  no'.;  the  jaiiit 
was   hardly   scrat<hed   off     her.     I     got 


Jl'ST  A  FicrruK. 
Koslon's  pusloflice  officials  are  mildly 
down  and  waU-hed  how  slie'took  to  the!  P'"""f'  '>f  the  fact   that  they  were  able 


ice  question,  and  founa  that  the  mo- 
mentum was  so  great  that  it  would 
push  the  water  aheal  of  i;ie  bow.  and 
the  ice  would  rise  and  oieak  before  we 
got  to  it.  That  gave  me  the  idea  that  I 
have  l>een  working  up  and  at  last  per- 
fected and  had  it  patented. 

"We  have  demonstrated  the  fact  that 
the  harbors  can  be  kept  open  during  the 
winter,  and  Duluth  harbor  is  the  hard 


last  week  to  deliver  a  letter  which,  be- 
sides the  name  of  the  city  and  state, 
bore  only  a  small  photogranh  of  the 
man  for  whom  it  was  intended,  says  the 
New  York  Times.  He  was  not  a  par- 
ticularly prominent  citizen,  either, 
being  only  the  local  manager  of  one  of 
the  transatlantic  cable  lines,  but  one  of 
the  solvers  of  postal  problems  happened 
to  recognize  the  picture  after  the  letter 
had  been  in  the  Boston  office  for  eleven 


est  one  on  the  whole  lakes,   as   far  as  I  h*'V  Vr,V«»r.V  u  tV    u  .       *•      '*^^k 

lee    i«    eon..ern«H      Rv    on    ^,.r.i^JJl  '  ^^V^'  ^nd  Sent  It  to  its  destination.  The 


Some  years  afterward  borings  were 
made  there.  The  augurs  iiassed  through 
oak  floorings  and  other  obstructions, 
among  them  what  was  supi>osed  t<>  be 
metal.  The  augurs  also  brought  to 
the  surface  some  g<dd  links.  No  means 
cfuild  be  devised  at  that  time  by  whieli 
the  water  could  be  kept  out  of  the 
mine,  and  little  or  nothing  was  done 
last  fall,  when  aufdher  company 
was  organized  to  dig  up  the  treasure. 
It  has  a  capital  stock  of  JfiO.OOO,  among 
the  sto<kholders  being  residents  of 
Halifax,  Amherst  and  other  Nova  Sco- 
tia towns.  Two  pumps  worked  by 
powerful  engines  were  installed,  anil 
the  work  is  now  being  pushed. 

Among  the  recent  discoveries  made 
is  a  sluiceway  leading  from  the  site 
of  the  diggings  to  the  shore,  several 
hundred  feet  distant.  By  damming 
this  it  was  found  that  the  water  in  the 
mine  was  checked.  That  there  is  a 
mystery  about  the  island  no  one  can 
doubt.  Oak  walled  underground 
sluices  are  not  accidental. 


«  ■  ■■  ^ ■  ■    '  r'    ■■■  ■'  '■* 


built  on  the  exact  model  for  an  ice 
breaking  boat.  With  her  light  power 
she  has  demonstrated  what  can  be 
done  in  harl)or  ice  work.  At  one  time. 
alKjut  six  years  ago,  she  broke  three 
feet  of  ice  and  t4)wed  the  steamer  Will- 
iam  Stevens  from  the  Northern  Pacific 
doi-k  to  the  Imperial  mill. 

"The  proposition  is  to  build  several 
tugs  on  the  Reconl  model,  with  about 
three  times  her     power— one    of     these 


I  statione<l  in  Ireland,  and  was  i)n)bably 
intended  either  to  test  the  efficiency  of 


ELECTRIC  BITTERS. 
Electrk;  Bitters  is  a  medicine  suited  for 
any  seaaon.   but   perhaps   more  generally 


.     per 

the   United   States  postal   service  or   l«i  •  needed  when  the  languid,  exhausted  feef- 
flnd  out  how  much  truth  there  was  in  '  '"P  prevails,  when  the  liver  is  torpid  and 


his  friend's  stories  of  the  fame  he  had 
won  in  America. 


TO  HOT  SPRINGS.  ARK. 
The  Minneapolis  &  St.  Louis  railroad 
is  the  short  line,  and  only  Hne  with  din- 
ing  cars   and   compartment     sleepers. 
EzcursioD  tickets  on  sale. 


sluggish  and  the  need  of  a  tonic  and  al- 
terative is  felt.  A  prompt  u.se  of  this 
medinine  ha.<?  often  averted  long  and  per- 
haps fatal  bilious  fevers.  No  medicine  will 
act  more  surely  in  counteracting  and  free- 
ing the  system  from  malarial  poison. 
Headache,  Indig«stion,  Constipation.  Diz- 
ziness yield  to  Electric,  Bitters.  SOc  and 
Jl.no  per  bottle  at  Duluth  Drug  company's 
drug  store.  < 


Typhoid  bacilltis  is  about  to  pack  his 
grip  and  depart.  That  grip  which  so 
many  other  people  are  bothered  with 
just  now  he  lays  no  claim  to;  but  he 
may  have  it  too,  just  the  same. 
He  never  fails  to  visit  us  in  the  winter, 
and  he  called  this  year  by  way  of  keep- 
ing up  his  neighborly  habits.  He  has 
not  been  as  active  as  usual,  however — 
did    not   seem    to   perk   up    and    hustle 

around  as  was  his  wont.     He  acted  just 
as   thougli   he  had   given    up   tr.ving   to 
lift     the     mortgage,   and     didn't     care 
whether    he    did    any    business    or    not. 
This  may   have  been   the  reason,   or  it 
might  have  been  the  activity  displayed 
last  year  in  getting  his  picture  Jind  de- 
scription in  the  rogues'  -gallery  that  dis- 
couraged him.    Whatever  it  was,  he  fell 
way  behind  his  record  for  Januarj'  and 
February — they   are     usually   his     best 
months — scoring  only  nineteen  victims. 
The  reasons  given  herein  for  the  lassi- 
tude displayed  by  the  bacillus  are  by  no 
means     satisfactory     to     tlie     scientilii- 
brethren.     They   do   not   agree   on   an> 
other,   either,    there   being  a  variety  of 
opinions  on  the  subject.    Many,  if  not  a 
majority,  of  the  medical  men  insist  that 
peculiar    conditions    in    the    water    in- 
fluence   the   degree   of  activity    of   the 
germ.        These   conditions   are   usually 
vaguely  described  as  "something" — not 
very  satisfactory,  certainly.    It  is  wheii 
this  "something"  is  present  is  the  lime, 
it  is  asserted,  when  the  bacillus  is  pos- 
sessed of  a  desire  to  come  ashore  and 
cultivate    intimate    relations    with    hu- 
manity,   it   being  its   method   to   do   its 
victims  up  by  first  getting  on  the  inside. 
Others  say  that  the  water  has  nothing 
to  do  with   it.     They  point  to  the  fact 
that  the  water  is  the  same  month  in  and 
month  out,  and  that  conditions  are  the 
same,  so  far  as  it  is  concerned,  in  the 
year  when  the  number  of  typhoid  cases 
is  small  as  when  it  is  great.    Many  who 
reject  the  water  theory  aigue  that  th^• 
snowfall  has  something  to  do  with  tin 
matter.  The  bacillus,  they  say,  does  not 
like  travelir.'g  ashore  when  the  snow  is 
deep,  and  even  the  efforts  of  the  board 
of  public  works  in  the  way  of  clearing 
i  the    sidewalks    does   not   seem    to   have 
rendered    the    situation    more    tolerable 
to  him  during  the  past  winter,  certain- 
ly.     Those    who    iielieve    in    the    latter 
theory    seem    to    be    supported    l)y    the 
data    as    to    the    number    of    cases      of 
typhoid  in  1S93  and  the  following  year. 
In  the  statement  following  the  number 
of  cases  in   January   and    February   of 
each  year  and  the  snowfall  during  tht 
fall  and  winter  months,  including  those 
named,  are  given.    The  record  is  as  fol- 
lows:   1S9;]— Typhoid  <-ases,  87;  snowfall, 
S7  9-10  inches;  1894— Typhoid  cases,  100, 
snowfall.   46  6-10   inches;   1895— Typhoid 
cases.  111;  snowfall,  26  6-10  inches;  WM 
— Typhoid   cases,    .')20;   snowfall,   2.5  7-10 
inches:    1897— Typhoid   cases,   19;   snow- 
fall,   64    6-10    inches. 

During  the  past  winter,  it  will  be 
noticed,  the  snowfall,  to  the  end  of 
February,  reached  the  great  depth  of 
over  five  feet  and  the  number  of  ty- 
phoid fever  cases  during  January  and 
February  touched  the  low  water  mar!< 
of  nineteen.  The  snowfall  last  winter, 
to  the  end  of  Fel)ruary,  was  the  small- 
<  St  of  any  year  since  an  official  record 
has  been  kept  here,  and  the  number  of 
typhoid  cases  was  greatest.  An  ex- 
amination of  the  figures  for  the  other 
years  di>es  not  destroy  the  effect  of 
this  contrast.  This  may  not  satisfy 
the  scientific  mind,  but  it  is  certainly 
one  of  those  "circumstances"  that  ap- 
peal to  the  layman. 

One  of  the  members  of  the  board  of 
public  works,  concerning  whose  ex- 
perience in  walking  home  from  Lake- 
wood  through  the  snowdrifts  the  other 
day  there  was  mention  in  The  Her- 
ald, then  having  l>een  noted,  the  phe- 
nomenon of  the  snow  having  been 
melted  for  quite  a  space  around  where 
he  and  another  member  of  the  board 
stood,  up  to  their  necks  in  a  drift,  as 
the  train  for  which  they  had  waited 
for  two  hours  passed  them,  has  inti- 
mated that  if  there  were  any  remarks 
calculated  to  have  such  an  effect  made 
they  emanated  from  his  brother  mem- 
ber. Hia  assertion  is  weakened,  how- 
ever, by  well  authenticated  tales  of 
the  terrilde  scenes  that  have  been  en- 
acted fm  his  place  at  Lakeside  since 
began  to  keep  a  cow.  He  and  the 
cow  had  a  misundertsanding  the  first 
day.  it  being  caused  by  the  fact  that 
he  had  lost  the  knack  <»f  getting  on  the 
right  sid<'  of  the  animal,  which  is  .so 
essential  to  a  successful  milking.  The 
argument  on  that  occasion  was  ilis- 
tinctly  heard  across  the  street.  The 
member  was  heard  to  make  several  re- 
marks whi<-h,  by  the  tone,  evidently 
came  right  from  the  heart— they  were 
not  the  formal  observations  about  the 
weather  usually  vouchsafed  to  a  new 
acquaintance— at  least,  if  the  weather 
was  the  topic,  it  was  considerably  war- 
mer than  is  usually  experienced  in  the 
latitude  of  Duluth.  Sundi-y  dull  thuds 
against  the  side  of  the  barn  indicated 
the  part  that  the  cow  was  taking  in  the 
interchange  of  civilities.  A  few  minutes 
later  the  member  returned  to  the  house 
:  his  nice  new  milk  pail  having  a  dent 
I  in  the  side  and  the  handle  broken. 

There  was  no  more  trouble  that  day 
for  the  member  did  not  go  to  the  barn 
again.  But  on  the  next,  there  was  a 
resumption  of  the  argument,  the  de- 
bate being  conducted  with  great  spirit. 
After  a  good  deal  of  racket,  the  mem- 
ber appeared  at  the  window  of  the 
hay  loft  and  was  heard  to  signal  his 
hou.se.  One  of  the  children  answered 
the  call  and  after  a  consultation  went 
back  and  returned  with  a  baseball  bat, 
which  the  meml)er  hauled  up  with  a 
rope.  He  disappeared  and  then  there 
was  another  racket  inside,  the  member 
emerging  from  the  barn  in  a  few  mo- 
ments. He  fished  his  pail  out  of  the 
window   with  a  piece  of  lath  and   rei- 


tired  to  the  house.  He  was  seen  to  pass 
in  hay  and  water  through  one  of  the 
windows  for  a  few  days,  after  which 
a  peace  had  evidently  been  patched  up 
for  he  was  seen  to  enter  the  barn  again. 
At  the  end  of  a  couple  of  weeks  it 
was  observed  that  he  had  often  as 
much  as  two  quarts  of  milk  in  his  pail 
after  a  visit  to  the  barn  and  the  neigh- 
Ijors  gradually  got  out  of  the  habit  of 
dropping  ever>'thing  and  running  to 
the  windows  when  the  member  was 
seen  going  out  with  his  pail  on  his 
arm. 

There  is  trouble  yet,  however,  once 
in  awhile,  and  the  neighbors  are  put 
on  the  qui  vive  at  times  by  hearing 
the  old  familiar  racket,  through 
which  runs  the  earnest  tones  of  the 
member's  voice,  like  a  refrain,  while 
the  structure  sways  on  its  foundation. 
Perhaps  the  member,  through  it  all, 
has  refrained  from  falling  into  the 
habit  of  unmannerly  speech  and  that 
when  his  voice  is  heard  when  he  and 
the  cow  are  communing  together  it  is 
only  in  gentle  remonstrance,  or,  may- 
hap, in  the  utterance  of  syllogisms  by 
which  to  appeal  to  the  animal's  rea- 
sons and  thus  convince  her  of  the  er- 
ror of   her  ways.    Perhaps. 


WHERE  WOMEN  RULE. 


Female  Voters  Outnumber  tlie 
Male  in  Dunedin. 

As  beseems  a  city  so  named,  Dune- 
din,  in  New  Zealand,  has  a  very  large 
Scoteh  tlement  among  its  citizens.  Its 
title  to  distinction,  however,  now  rests 
upon  something  more  novel.  It  is  prob- 
ably the  only  electorate  in  Queen  Wv- 
toria's  dominions  where  the  women 
form  a  consider.able  majority  of  the 
actual  voters.  At  the  general  elections 
last  month  the  Dunedin  women  mus- 
tered in  .=!uch  strength  as  to  outnum- 
ber the  male  eb'ctors  by  more  than 
2t>00.  There  is  a  natural  feeling  of  curi- 
osity as  to  the  choice  of  a  constituency 
.so  composed.  Out  of  eleven  candidates, 
the  electors  had  to  select  three  repre- 
sentatives, says  the  Pittsburg  Dis- 
patch. 

If  the  "predominant  partner"  (fem- 
inine) was  mainly  responsible  for  the 
choice,  it  would  appear  to  indicate  that 
the  femal"  fondness  for  variety  is 
(itvried  into  politics  at  the  antipodes. 
\Vhil<'  the  first  and  third  members 
chosen  were  Conservatives,  the  middle 
one  was  an  advanced  Radical  and  la- 
bor member.  The  first  and  second  were 
strong  supporters  of  secular  educa- 
tion, the  third  a.  denominationalist 
Change  was  the  order  of  the  day,  for 
the  three  former  members  were  ruth- 
lessly rejected.  The  gentleman  who 
haded  the  poll  was  an  exceptionally 
clever  and  adroit  speaker.  But  lest  it 
should  be  hastily  thought  that  the 
feminine  inind  is  only  accessil)le  to 
oratory,  it  should  be  noted  that  the 
third  elected  member  was  disabled 
from  addressing  the  electors  at  all  by 
ar.    obstinately    sore    throat. 

The  first  winner  had  to  overcome  a 
little  difficulty,  inasmuch  as  in  former 
years  he  had  actively  opposed  the 
grant  of  the  franchise  to  the  ladies. 
Ho  met  this,  however,  by  a  calm  as- 
surance that  he  had  voted  from  a  con- 
viction "not  that  the  franchise  was  too 
good  for  women,  but  that  women 
were  too  good  for  the  franchise  I" — 
which  little  bit  of  neat  sophistry  may 
or  fnay  not  have  bad  a  share  in  swell- 
ing   his   majority. 

The  tidings  cabled  last  month  of  a 
disgraceful  display  of  rowdyism  by 
women  at  an  election  meeting  in  Duu'^- 
din  seem  to  have  been  somewhat  ex- 
aggerated. The  meeting  was  a  small, 
semi -private  gathering  of  a  women's 
association.  One  amiable  clergyman, 
in  the  chair,  alone  represented  the  in- 
ferior sex.  A  persistent  but  unpopular 
speaker  was  greeted  with  hisses,  out- 
cries, stamping,  and,  in  a  few  cases, 
the  brandishing  of  umbrellas.  The 
proceedings  were  for  a  time  brousrht 
to  a  standstill.  That  was  all.  It  was 
from  a  much  larger  and  wholly  mas- 
culine meeting  in  the  same  town  and 
during  the  same  wcf»k  that  an  unluckv 
candidate,  after  being  disastrously 
pelted  with  evil  eggs  and  cast-off  cab- 
bages, was  escorted  home  under  police 
protection. 


m 


Her  People  and  Her  Cities. 

Her   Fruits   and  Her 

Wronfis. 


Somethinfi  About  the  Island 
Which  Is  So  Promin- 
ent Now. 


Its  Religions  and  the  Follow- 
ers--A  Land  of  Much 
Beauty. 


GOLDFISH   FARM. 

Unique    industry    in 
Hoosler  State. 


the 


The  largest  farm  for  the  breeding  and 
growing  of  goldfish  in  this  countrv  is  the 
Spring  Lake  lishery.  in  an  out-of-the-wav 
part  of  Liberty  township,  Shelbv  countv. 
Indiana,  near  Shelby ville.  There  are  in 
reality  two  farms  under  the  same  man- 
agement litivoted  to  goldlish  culture.  The 
upper  farm  is  under  the  direct  manage- 
ment of  William  Slioup.  the  (uiginator 
of  the  enterprise  and  the  .senior  member 
of   the  firm,    says   the   Boston   Transcript 

^welve  years  ago  Mr.  Shoup  imported 
directly  from  the  Rova!  aquariums  of 
Japan  a  dozen  .'^mall  goldtisli.  ;ind  from 
that  small  start,  together  with  a  few- 
common  Chinese  fish  bought  in  this 
country,  he  has  accumulated  thousands 
of  dollars  and  built  uj)  a  business  which 
reaches  out  into  every  state  and  terri- 
tory, and  some  of  the  choicest  speci- 
mens found  in  the  government  aquariums 
of  the  old  world  came  from  this  farm. 
The  entire  eight  .teres  are  devote<i  to 
lionds  for  breeding  and  rearing  fish. 
There  are  Jive  largo  breeding  ponds  in 
the  upper  i>art  of  the  gulch,  iirott^t- 
ed  from  the  winds  by  !iij;h  walls  or  em- 
bankments of  earth.  Below  these  and 
connected  with  them  are  a  large  number 
of  smaller  ponds  for  sorting  and  some 
still  smaller  for  feeding  and  coloring. 
These  latter  are  not  larger  than  a  small 
living  room.  Twice  everv  vear  all  the 
jtonds  are  in  regular  rotation  drained, 
cleaned  and  the  bottoms  allowed  to  be- 
come perfectly  dry.  The  tish  are  sorted 
at  regular  seasons,  the  larger  and  more 
Iterfect    being    saved 


A  Greek  mail  steamer  plies  weekly 
between  Piraeus,  the  seaport  of  Athens, 
and  the  island  of  Crete,  and  travelers 
who  miss  it,  and  who  do  not  care  to 
wait  a  week  longer,  usually  take  pas- 
sage on  one  of  the  many  small  Greek 
freighters.  These  freighters  touch  first 
at  the  island  of  Syra,  the  ancient  Her- 
inopolis  and  the  residence  of  the  gover- 
nor of  Cyclades  islands.  After  a  day 
in  port  there  they  proceed  to  Crete, 
touching  at  the  islands  of  Naxos,  Paros, 
and  Siphnos,  says  the  New  York  Sun. 
The  harbor  of  Canea,  the  destination 
of  the  vessels,  is  protected  by  a  well- 
preserved  fortress,  one  side  of  which 
extends  down  to  the  edge  of  the  water. 
The  eastern  side  of  the  fort  is  about 
1500  feet  long,  the  southern  side  2400. 
and  the  western  side  1800.  These  walls 
are  protected  l)y  four  ramparts,  two  of 
which  face  the  valley  and  the  other 
two  the«ea,  and  the  whole  is  surround- 
ed by  a  deep  and  wide  ditch.  The 
northern  side  of  the  city  is  built  down 
to  the  harbor,  which  is  partly  protect- 
ed by  a  chain  of  rocks  hardly  visible 
above  water.  Upon  these  rocks  is  a 
wall  1130  feet  long,  in  the  middle  of 
which  is  a  strong  rampart.  At  the 
eastern  end  of  this  wall  is  a  tower  with 
a  lighthouse,  the  light  being  visible 
twelve  miles  away.  At  the  western 
end  there  is  a  fortress  with  a  few  old- 
fashioned  guns.  Although  the  harbor 
of  Canea  is  larger  than  that  of  Can- 
dia  or  Retimo,  it  is  vei->'  shallow  and 
can  accommodate  only  small  ves.sels. 
Large  ships  usually  anchor  in  the  bay 
of  Souda,  which  is  divided  into  upper 
and  lower  bays. 

The  harbor  of  Souda  is,  strictly  de- 
fined, the  upper  bay  being  five  miles 
long  and  one  mile  and  three-quarters 
wide,  with  a  depth  of  450  feet.  On  a 
small  island  at  the  entrance  of  the 
harbor  is  a  fortress  with  twelve  Krupp 
guns.  On  the  southern  shore  of  the 
harbor  is  the  Mediterranean  navy  yard 
of  Turkey.  It  is  in  this  harbor  that 
most  of  the  European  men-of-war  sent 
to  Crete  find  safe  and  comfortable  an- 
chorage. 

The  city  of  Canea,  being  the  seat  of 
the  governor  general,  has  clean  streets, 
line  houses,  and  some  public  buildings 
of  considerable  pretensions,  such  as 
the  governor's  headquarters  and  the 
court  house,  l>oth  of  which  are  of  mod- 
ern construction.  The  military  hos- 
pital, two  armories,  and  the  health  of- 
fice also  are  fine  striictures.  The  popu- 
lation of  the  city  is  estimated  at  14.- 
010,  of  whom  47.50  are  Greeks  and  9500 
Turks,  160  Israelites,  and  200  Roman 
Catholics.  Nearly  every  European 
government  is  represented  by  either 
a  consul  or  a  consular  agent.  Most  of 
these  representatives  live  in  the  small 
town  of  Halei>a.  aljout  half  an  hour's 
walk  from  Canea. 

Halepa  became  quite  famous  on  ac- 
<-ount  of  the  well-known  treaty  of  1878 
that  was  signed  there  by  the  Cretan 
plenipotentiaries  and  the  sultan's  en- 
voys. On  lofty  ground,  covered  with 
olive,  pomegranate,  and  almond  trees, 
c-ommanding  an  excellent  view  of  Hale- 
pa  <nd  the  country  around  it,  there 
stands  the  famous  Ottoman  tower  of 
Halepa,  built  by  the  .lanizaries.  It  is 
well,  fortified,  and  has  been  a  refuge  for 
Turkish  families  in  revolutionary  times. 

The  Turkish  quarters  of  Canea  are 
around  the  Spanish  square.  It  was 
under  the  plane  tree  shown  in  the  pic- 
ture that  the  members  of  the  Turkish 
committee  usually  met  to  discuss  mat- 
ters with  the  Turkish  authorities  dur- 
ing the  la-«  rev.ution.  I  was  impos- 
sible for  a  Christian  to  pass  through 
the  square  without  being  attacked  by 
the  Mussulmans.  It  is  here  also  that 
the  Mohammedan  families  gather  in 
the  evening  for  recreation;  they  sit  on 
wooden  benches  and  listen  to  the  music 
of  the  Arab  musicians  of  Canea. 

ITntil  a  few  years  ago  the  popula- 
tion of  the  island  of  Crete  was  a  mat- 
ter of  conjecture.  The  most  trust- 
worthy census  on  the  island  was  taken 
in  ISSi,  by  or  ler  of  Governor  Photia- 
des,  and  is  regarded  by  competent  au- 
thorities, both  Christian  and  Moham- 
medan, as  fairly  honest.  It  gave  a  to- 
tal papulation  of  279,165.  Of  these  205,- 
010  were  orthodox  Greeks,  7;?, 234  Mo- 
hammedans, 253  Roman  Catholics,  8 
Armenians,  647  Israelites,  and  13  Prot- 
estants. Nearly  all  the  inhabitants 
speak  Greek.  Even  the  Mohammedan 
lu'iests  and  teachers  use  the  Greek  lan- 


for    breeding;     the 
others    are   divided    into       t'l«»ses..    tho.se    guage  in   explaining  the  Koran   or  the 

Turkish   lessons   to  their  pupils 


ready  for  selling  ;ind  those  which  hav. 
not  yet  attained  the  color  to  be  .salable 
The  goldlish  is  not  always  the  color  he 
is  when  seen  in  an  aquarium,  for  when 
lirst  hatched  he  is  a  silver  color,  and  if 
caiiglit  in  a  stream  would  be  easily  mis- 
taken for  a  common  shiner  or  bass  min- 
nf>w.  Indeed,  .some  of  the  goldfish,  for 
som«'  unknown  reason,  never  reach  any 
color.  ITsually.  however,  the  fish  are 
ready  for  market  the  next  spring  after 
hatching,  being  first  white  or  silver  col- 
ored, changing  to  a  dark  shade,  some- 
times entirely  black,  afterward  assum- 
ing the  golden  or  red  color,  and  the  odd 
varieties  of  goldfish  exhibitefl  are  usuallv 
the  result  of  this  changing  of  color. 
Some  of  the  prettiest  of  fish  are  of  more 
than  one  color.  When  perfectiv  white 
they  are  called  pearl  fish,  and  when 
looked    at   when    the   sun 


Besides  Canea  there  are  two  other ! 
cities  of  some  importance  in  Crete, 
namely,  Candia,  inhabited  by  13,000 
Turks  and  6000  Greeks,  and  Retimo, 
w  ith  a  popultion  of  6321  Turks  and  1.320 
Greeks.  Both  cities  lie  on  the  north- 
ern shore  of  the  island,  and  they  are  '■ 
only  a  short  distance  apart. 

Not  far  from  Retimo  is  a  range  of 
hills,  known  as  the  White  mountains, 
with  extensive  table  land  at  each  end, 
which  are  places  of  refuge  during  re- 
volutions for  the  Christian  families,  j 
The  mountains  are  covered  with  pine,  ' 
chestnut,  and  cedar  trees,  and  abound 
In  springs  of  excellent  water 


looked    at    when    the    sun     is    shining    on  On   the  «<rmthpm   onntt  of  Crete   tber«» 

he  water  they  present  all  the  colors  ot  \  ^^^^^l^.^^^J^l^L^J^J^L".  hl^^^^^^^ 


the  most  beautiful  mother-of-pearl. 
These  are  rare  and  consequently  valua- 
ble.   Sqpie  are   a  clear   red,    others   spot- 


ted,  white  and  red,   or  black  and   red. 

They  are  sometimes  orange  in  color, 
and  a  few  specimens  have  been  raised 
which   were   purple.     There   Is  a  popular 

idea    that    the    difference    in    coloring    is '         ,      ,  .  ^ 

due  to  the  diflferent  kinds  of  food  which  |  '"   "^^  weather.     There  are  but  a  few  i 
arc  fed;  but  that  is  a  mistake,   for  they    small  houses  at  Fair  Havens,  and  these 


are  few  settlements  of  any  Importance. 
The  only  noteworthy  spot  is  the  harlwr 
of  Fair  Havens,  mentioned  in  the  Acts 
of  the  Apostles,  chapter  27,  verse  8,  in 
which  the  vessel  carrying  St.  Paul  to 
Malta  found  refuge.  Vessels  today 
usually  seek  refuge  in  the  same  port 


all  receive  the  same  food  exactly,  and 
yet  there  is  a  vast  difference  in  color  or 
shade  between  two  H.'«h  treated  exactiv 
alike.  The  diflferent  colors  are  said  to  be 
due  to  the  action  of  the  .sun.  In  winter 
all  the  fish  in  ponds  become  much  dark- 
er in  shade,  while  in  summer  they  become 
brighter  and  change  color  rapidly. 


are  occupied  by  Turkish  officials  sta- 
tioned there  to  report  to  the  Aga  of 
Deaki,  the  chief  village  of  the  district, 
the  passing  of  vessels.  These  officials 
have  little  to  do.  On  the  east  side  of 
the  bay  there  are  the  ruins  of  an  old 
Greek   chapel    dedicated    to    St.    Paul: 


legend  has  it  that  the  chapel  was  built 
on  the  spot  on  which  the  apostle  stood 
when  he  preached  to  the  natives  of 
Crete. 

No  island  has  a  healthier  or  more 
agreeable  climate  than  has  Crete.  In 
the  hottest  days  of  summer  refreshing 
sea  breezes  are  seldom  lacking,  and 
winter,  which  begins  in  December, 
ends  about  the  latter  part  of  January. 
The  rainy  season  often  continues  until 
late  in  April,  but  it  very  seldom  rains 
in   the  summer. 

A  chain  of  mountains     divides      the 
island  into  what  are  called  the  north- 
ern and  southern  .slopes.   One-third  of 
the  inland  consists  of  rocky  slopes;  an- 
other  third    has    a   fairly     good       soil, 
which    remains   uncultivated   for   want 
of  farm  hands;  and  the  other  third  is 
cultivated    only    rudely    for    the    same 
reason.       The   cultivation    of   fruit   re- 
as  it  was  centuries  ago.      The  want  of 
progress  is  owing  to  the  repeated  acts 
of   injustice   committed     against       th'» 
Christian   farmers  by  the  Turkish   tax 
gatherers.  Olives  and  their  oil  are  the 
staple  products  of  Crete.  Valleys  from 
one  end  of  the  island  to  the  other  are 
covered  with  olive  trees.      Next  to  the 
olive  industry  comes  that  of  the  wines 
producing    many    varieties    of    grapes, 
raisins  and  wine.   Orchards  of  orange, 
lemon  and   citron,    and   almond     trees 
abound  in  the  valleys,   while  chestnut 
and  fig  trees  are  found  at  the  base  of 
the   mountains.       A  peculiarity  of  all 
Cretan    products    is      their       exquisite 
fiavor,    which    they    retain    long   after 
they    are    gathered   and   shipped.    It   is 
the  opinion  of  the  oldest  and  best  in- 
i  formel    Cretan    merchants    that,    with 
proper    facilities   for   transportation    of 
;  products  to  the  seaports,   and  a  guar- 
j  antee    against    misrule    and    arbitrary 
taxation,   Crete  could   provide  all  Eur- 
ope  with   oil   and   fruits     of      several 
kinds. 
Like   Cuba,   Crete  has   always  found 
j  her  curse   in   the   beautit>s  with   whic  h 
.  nature    has   endowed    her.       Since    the 
island    was    left    by    the    Venetians    to 
the  Turks   in    1715  no  fewer  than   nine* 
revolutions    have    taken    place    among 
Its    people.    Each    time   the   revolt    was 
pieiipitat-d   by  Turkish   tyranny      The 
mo.st   remarkable   feature    of  all    these 
revolutions  is  that  in  no  instance  have 
the-   Cretans   l>een   forced    by  defeat   to 
lay  down  their  arm.s.   Their  disarming 
ha*-   been   due  almost    to   the  interven- 
tuin   of  some   "friendly   power,"   which 
wished   to  give  an  opportunity   to  the 
lurkish    government    to    introduce    re- 
forms.   Whoever    ha.s    lived    in    Turkey 
has  his  opinion  as  to  the  good  faith  of 
rurkey  in  promising  reforms,  especial- 
ly when  they  are  exacted  by  the  threat 
of  the  demoliiion  of  the  Ottoman    dv- 
iiastly    in    Europe.    But    for    "friendly- 
foreign  intervention   Crete   would  have 
secured    her    independence     long     ago 
,  Kussian   diplomacy   has   frustrated   the 
1  hopes    and   aspirations   of    the   Cretans 
j  in   last   year's   revolution,   and,    despite 
j  «he   role   she  is   now   playing   with    th- 
j  ether  European   powers,   as  if  to  forc^ 
I  the  sultan  to  carry  cut  the  long-prom- 
ised  reforms   among   the  Christians   in 
his  dominions,  she  is  the  one  country 
directing  the  sultans  pcdicy    in        the 
Last.       There  is  rot  a  Cretan   of  any 
prominence  on  the  island  who  has  the 
least    faith    in    the    professions    of    the 
porte  as  to  carrying  out  any  reforms. 
At   present   there   is   no     man     more 
trusted  by  the  Cretans  than  the  grand 
old    man   of    Crete,    old   Costa   Veloud- 
akes,   the    permanent    president  of  the 
revolutionary  assembly,  and  a  scion  of 
one  of  th"  oldest  families  of  the  island 
He  has  just  celebrated  his  ninety-fifth 
birthday.   He   has  taken  part  in  every 
revolution  on  the  island     during      his 
time.    In    the   eight -year   revcdutlon    of 
1821   he  was  at    the   head   of  a     strong 
Cretan    force,      having       distinguished 
himself   by   liberating  sixty-eight    Cre- 
tan women  held  in  Imndage  in  a  Turk- 
ish fortress.  He  is  a  man  of  few  words, 
but   whenever  he  speaks  his  utterances 
carry  great  weight.  His  c-ourage  is  pro- 
verbial. At  the  battle  of  the  Fountains 
in   1866  he  was  fighting  beside  his  two 
sons  when  a  Imllet  killed  one  of  them. 
Without   flinching   he   gave    orders     to 
c  any  the  dead  from  the  battlefield.  H» 
continued    fighting    until    the       enemy 
was  repulsed.  In  1878  he  was  proclaimed 
commander-in-chief  of  all   the  revolu- 
titmary  forces  on   the  island,  and  was 
subsequently    selected    with    two   other 
Cretans  to  proceed  to  the  German  capi- 
tal,  during   the   drawing  of  the   Berlin 
treaty,    to    lay    before    the    representa- 
tives of  the   powers  the  claims  of  the 
Cretans. 

To  give  evidence  of  the  low  esteem 
in  which  Turkish  promises  are  held  by 
the  Cretans,  it  is  necessary  only  to 
cjuote  the  remark.^  recently  made  by 
one  of  the  most  conservative  memljers 
of  the  Cretan  revolutionary  commit- 
tee. 

"Turkish  firmans."  he  said  "grant- 
ing reforms  remind  me  of  the  story  of 
the  school  boy  caught  in  mischief  bv 
his  teacher,  and  then  resorting  to  all 
scrts  of  excuses  and  promises  of  bel- 
ter conduct  so  as  to  escape  punish- 
ment. So  it  is  with  the  sultan  and  his 
lirmans  granting  privileges  to  the 
Christians  of  Crete;  you  may  always 
Ifiok  for  them  whenever  some  high- 
handed rascality  has  been  committed 
by  his  people  and  the  foreign  govern- 
ments look  sternly  at  him.  It  is  need- 
less to  say  that  the  excitement  onco 
over  you  need  not  Icjok  for  the  fulfill- 
ment  of  his  promises." 

Public  opinion  among  the  Cretans  is 
adverse  to  the  acceptance  of  any  re- 
forms. The  prevailing  opinion  at  the 
meetings  of  the  Cretans  is  that  ihev 
should  fight  until  the  union  of  Crete 
with   Greece   is   acomplished. 

NEW   YORK'S    (JREAT    PARK. 

Harper's  Round  Table:  An  English- 
man was  showing  his  friend,  an  Am- 
erican, through  the  houses  of  parlia- 
ment in  London,  the  meanwhile  com- 
menting in  a  somewhat  arrogant  man- 
ner upon  what  he  was  pleased  to  term 
the  superiority  of  the  English  public 
btiildings  and   parks. 

"There,"  he  exclaimed,  "is  our  mag- 
nificent Thames  enil>ankment.  a  de- 
lightful spot!  Why,  you  have  nothing 
in  your  country  to  compare  with  it. 
especially  in  that  great  New  York  city; 
then  again,  every  gentleman  here  owns 
an  estate,  and,  let  me  assure  you,  sir, 
such  estates  are  no  small  bits  of  pron- 
erty." 

This  went  on  for  a  considerable  time, 
until  the  American,  growing  tired,  said. 
"But,  Lord  de  T.,  you  have  traveled  in 
our  country,  have  you  not?" 

"Oh,  yes,  my  dear  s!r;  right  across 
it." 

"Well,  then,  you  should  have  a  fair 
idea  of  its  size." 

"Very  big  place,  sir.  very  big." 

"And  you  know  New  York  city  quite 
well,  eh?" 

"Oh,   yes— yes  indeed." 

"Well.  then,  you  see,  we  didn't  want 
anything  in  the  line  of  parks  in  New 
York,  with,  of  course,  the  exception 
of  a  few  squares;  but  outside  of  the 
city  we  wanted  a  park,  and  so  we  de- 
cided to  use  the  United  States  as  a 
park  for  New  York  city." 

"Dear  me,  how  extravagant," 

"Not  at  all.  sir:  why.  we  even  con- 
templated floating  the  British  Isles  over 
and  anchoring  them  a  short  distance 
outside  the  city's  harbor  as  a  sort  (>( 
breakwater,  you  know." 


■^ 


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t*a>ir^>7t     <■ 


■U'  I    ■  ■  II'!   • 


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7- 


f.A 


•'P* 


^   ^ 


■IMM 


10 


♦ 
♦ 

♦ 


IN  THE 
LABOR  PTEUD 


I 

♦ 
♦ 
♦ 
♦ 


THE    DULUTH    EVEMNG    HERALD:     SATURDAY,    MARCH    20     1897 


The  amendment  of  the  clause  of  the 
Coe  lal>or  organization  bill,  generally 
siMJken  of  as  the  "anti-trusf '  bill,  re- 
latins  to  labor  organization  is  hailed 
with  general  satisfaction  in  labor  cir- 
cles here.  As  it  originally  stood,  the 
bill  outlawed  labor  unions.  Its  opera- 
tion would,  as  one  man  prominent  in 
organized  labor  remarked,  "wipe  the 
unions  off  the  face  of  the  earth."  After 
:i  warm  debate  in  the  house  i>n  Wodnes- 
tlay.  the  amendment  was  carried  and  it 
was  recommended  that  the  bill  pass. 
The  clause  now  reads  as  follows: 

"The  orderly  and  peaceable  asisem- 
l»ling  or  co-operation  of  persons  em- 
ployed in  an.v  calling,  trade  or  handi-  i 
«raft.  for  the  purpi>s»^  of  obtaining  an  I 
swlvance  in  the  ratf  <>f  wages  or  t-oni- 
l»ensation.  <>r  of  maintaining  such  rate. 
is  not  a  conspirii.^y.  nor  shall  any  law 
be  construed  to  mak«'  it  a  trust."  It 
was  then  rej>orted  for  passage,  with 
practical   unanimit.v. 

During  the  debate  over  the  bill.  Hep- 
rfsentative  Johns,  of  Ramsey     ooimty. 
scored    Lobbyist    McAuley.     The  repre-  | 
sentative  i-alled   the  lobbyist  a     "labor 
lawyer."     Mr.  Johns  said  he  had  great 
respect  for  labor  organizations,  but  as  | 
for  "that  little  lobbyi.st"  who  stood  as  i 
their  representative,   he    was    insigniti- 
cant   and  i-onteniptous."     the     member  | 
sai.l.    and    the   speaker  declined   to   re- 
ceive any  version  of  organized   labor's 
right    from   him.     Representative   Mar- 
tin, of  Ftamsey.  is  said  to  have  fired  up 
at  this,  and  to  have  defended  Mr.   Mc- 
Auley.     As  for  the  bill,  lie  would  say  to 
the  house,  and  "to  its  teeth,"  he  said. 
That  it  dared  not  pa.^s  it  declaring  as  it 
did  that  a  respectal>le  assembly  was  a 
conspiracy,   warning  the  house  that,   if 
it  did.  the  act  would  be  its  death  knell 

as  vrell  as  the  bill's. 

•    •    * 

Locally,   there  is  not   much  of  inter- 
est to  record  this  week.   Rumor  has  it 
that  the  labor  temple  will  be  hung  up 
for  a  time,   at   least.     The   hard    times 
renders*  the  temporary  abandonment  of 
the   idea    an    imperative    necessity    say 
the  less  sanguine.     The  latter  point  to 
the  fact  that  the  Lal»or  temple  at  ^lin-  ! 
neapolis   has   proved   loo  heavy  a  load  ! 
for  organized  labor  of  that  city  to  car-  ' 
ry.  the  temple  having  gone  under  fore-  l 
closure  recently.    There  are  those,  how- 
ever,   who    lake   a   more   hopeful    view, 
refusing    to   give    up    the    temple   as    a  , 
V'ossibiiity  of  the  near  future.     The  la-  ' 
bor  temple  ci>mmittee  has  been  ordereil  ! 
to   report   at   the  next    meeting   of   the 
Trades  Assemldy.  and  at  that  time  the  ' 
'  oursc  of  action,   for  the  present  any-  [ 
wav,   will  l>c  de<'id>'d  on,  probaldy.         ; 
...  i 

The  present  promises  to  be  a  time  | 
prolific  of  new  unions.  The  shoemakers 
•  •rganizeil  last  Tuesday  with  iwenty- 
Tive  members,  and.  an  organization  of 
traveling  agents,  and  of  stationary  en- 
gineers are  to  be  effected,  it  is  said. 


I  stuted  in   the  answer  that    there  was   an 
iigreemcnt    bctwi-cn    this    ;is.-<ociutloii    am! 
j  the    Itrewery   M'orkiitgmen's  usscinM.v.    I'.v 
th«    t.  tnis  of  wliicli  ;ill   the  brewliig  com- 
IMiiic.-j        bi'loiigJng        to     the     :issociatio!i 
shinsM    employ    oiil.v    such    men    .is    were 
'  memlwrs  of  the   "Hrewcry    \Vnr'<ii)gmcn's 
Local    assembly.     Xo.     17!)»i.     Kniglits        of 
Labor."     and     that     no     employe     of     'iiiy 
company    in    fh>>   assocl.-ition   should    work 
lor  a  longer  perio.l  than  four  wcck^  with- 
out   becoming  a    mcmlicr  of   the   loc:'.!   as- 
.s-.>mblv.      The     (l.f.ndants     avcrnd     that 
»h'    plaintirf.   Ciirr.in.   w.is   retained   as   an 
employe   of   the    Miller    HrewinK   compan.x- 
for    more    than    four    wet-ks    after    he    was 
notified    of    the    provisions    of    tlu-    agre>-- 
nienf   reqiuiring   him   to  become  a   mi-mbtr 
of    the    loi-al    .assembly.      The    «l«fen<lants 
asserted   that' on   mi>re   tli.in  one  iHcasion 
f!?i'y    re<|llesteil    the    plaintiff    to    become    a 
nvml»r   of    the    joi  al    .tssemblx-    .iiid    that 
h'-    "olistin.-iti'ly    refiise<l."    (•'inally    (^ros.,- 
berger    and     Watts.        for    tlie    assemi>ly. 
called   ni>on    the   .Miller    Mrewing  eom)i:i.iy 
and  informed   the  comp.inys  oincers   that 
:l'f  pI.aintitY.   after  repi'.-ited   requests,   h.i«l 
refused    to    become   a    member   of   the   as- 
sembly.     Till'    def<'n<lants    asserted        that  ' 
they  took  this  u>'tion  ""solely  in  i>iirsiian<e  I 
of  said  asreement  and  in  acconlancc  with  I 


overtime  and  double  time  for  Sunday 
woik,  as  well  as  for  labor  required  to  be 
done  on  public  holidays. 

The  arbitration  agreement  was  signed 
on  behalf  of  the  emiiloyers'  assooiutii.u 
by  President  Charles  F.  Elker,  A.  W. 
IJeidler  and  J.  A.  White,  and  for  the 
IJrkklayers'  union  by  President  A.  K. 
Vorkeller,  Secretary  M.  R.  Grady,  An- 
drew Krhardt.  Thomas  B,  McGnilh  and 
James  H,  Ross.  It  provides  as  follows: 

"This  certifies  that  the  representatives 
of  the  Illinois  Fireprootlng  and  Con- 
tractors' .-issoclntion  and  the  represeiu.i- 
lives  of  the  I'lUted  Older  of  American 
l-iricklavers  and  Stonemasons'  union,  No. 
Jl.  of  the  H.  &  M.  I.  V.  of  Illinois,  recog- 
nize it  Is  to  their  mutual  interest  to  .ir- 
r.'ingi!  for  a  system  of  arbitration  which 
will  be  of  a  permanent  character  anil  l"..v 
which  all  grievances  and  dithci'lties  m.'iy 
lie  amicably  adjusted,  as  they  may  arise 
from  time  to  time, 

•".\nd  the  said  representatives"  of  the 
two  organizations  above  mentioned,  De- 
lievlng  such  a  course  necessar.v  to  the 
promotion  of  a  better  understandln.g  be- 
tween their  members,  and  in  accord  with 
the  most  enlightened  thought  of  our 
limes,  hereiuito  subscribe  their  names, 
in  their  several  capacities,  and  cause  the 
.seals  of  their  organizatioji  to  be  aflBxod." 


that    Leland    Stanford    was    tried    for 
kilhng  the  best  mule  In  Placer  county, 
I  I   remember   it   as   Avell   as   if    it   hap- 
pened   yesterday.    It   must    have    been 
along  about  1851.  Stanford  was  then  a 
young  strip   of  a   fellow   with   an   aw- 
fully  pretty   girl    wife   out   from    Wis- 
I  consin.    He    had   some    money   and   he 
.  saw  he  couldn't   make  a  cent  at  run- 

ning a    law    shop   because   the   miners 
c».«^  ^c  Li.      ««*-u        .  «  ^  made    their    own    law,    and    book    law 

Some  or  the      Ghost  Stories"    "^^"  *   worth   a  cent   there,    so   stan- 

*■ '    bought   a   wagon   load   of   bacon. 


They   Tell   to 
derfeet. 


Ten- 


the    terms   thereof   an.l    without    Intent    or  I  ".Vra'^wiOr    '^^'■"*""'''""-    ''''''  '"    ''"" 


.VOAIXST  COXTRArT  SYSTE.M, 
It  has  time  ami  again  been  demonstrat- 
ed that  the  contn^ct  system  oi  public 
work  is  opposed  to  the  interests  of  the 
ptiblic  anti  the  wage  earner,  sa.vs  the 
Twentieth  ('enturv.  The  organized  li'.bor 
of  this  countr.v  has.  after  inrtnite  trouble. 
succeede<l  in  effectin.g  the  jiassage  of  t;.e 
eight-hour  da.v  law.  Hut  the  present  ad- 
ministration is  Oj>posod  to  it  and  evades 
its  i)ro\lsions  continually.  Some  work  is 
now  being  done  at  the  nav.v  yard  in 
lirooklyn  b.v  contractors  who  force  their 
men  to  work  long  hours  for  very  litile 
pay.  The  labor  unions  e;illed  the  atteii- 
tlon  of  the  secretary  of  the  nav.v  to  the 
matter.  biU  he  says  that  contract  labor 
tloes  not  come  within  the  scope  of  the 
liiw.  That  is  nonsense.  Tht'  matier  should 
be  taken  to  the  courts,  .-md  until  liiev 
hav«'  pi"ononiiced  iiiion  the  qtiestion  of  l.iw 
it  is  an  open  one.  These  rulings,  nna- 
n. I  ling 


Kicked    Into   a    Fortune  By 

an  III  Tempered  Old 

Mule. 


Luck  and  111  Luck-Fortunes 

For  Some  and  Hunger 

For  Others. 


l>uri)ose 
way."" 


to    injure    the    jilaintiff    in     any 


th. 


■<l>liit    of    the    present 


ad- 


ministtaiion.     which    is    hostile    to    labor 
and    the   masses.     The   one    thing   for    the 


r>R.\STl('  F.\rT(>RY  ACT. 
The  British  loiony  of  X'ictoria  is  now  in 
possession  of  one  of  the  most  drasti'' 
factory  .acts  in  the  world,  an  act  which 
not  only  embraies  almost  all  the  Xev 
Xe.iland  ptiints.  but  actually  est.iblishes 
for  the  tirst  time  in  history  a  le.gally  tii - 
forcible  minimum  in  wage.  As  was  re- 
marked to  a  writer  for  thi-  London 
Chrotucle  by  one  of  the  most  eminent 
of  .Vustralian  statesmen.  Mr.  Deakin: 
"The  state  by  its  tariffs  creates  these  In- 
dustries:   the    state    has    a    right    to    pre- 

1  scribe  the  conditions  under  which  thev 
may  be  carried  on.  If  it  makts  Its  mem- 
bers pay  a  higher  price  for  certain  com- 
modities, it  must  take  effective  sten-; 
to  see  that  some  share  of  the  money 
shall  go  into  the  pockets  of  the  men  who 
make  them  and  that  the  whole  of  it  shall 
not  be  appropriated  by  those  who  exploit 

.  their  labor. 

In  the  first  place  it  Is  provided  by 
,  clause  lt>:  ""X^o  person  whatsoever,  unless 
'  in    receipt    of  a    weekly    wage   of   at    least 

2  shillings  and  ti  pence,  shall  be  emplov.vl 
in  any  factor.v  or  workroom.'  '        i 

I      "Section    15—1.    In    order    to    d.termine 

the    lowest    price   or    rate    which    m  iv    i  <• 

P"iid   to  any   person,    either  inside   or   out- 

I  side  a  foctory  or  workroom.  th«*  governor 

in    coinietl    way    appoint    a    special    board.  ' 
!  ("onsisting  of  not    le.ss   than   four  or  more  ' 
than  ten  members,   and  a  chairman.    *    »  ] 
•    2.    Of   smh   members  one-half  shall   be  | 
represent;iti<-es    or   occupiers    ot    factories  ' 
and    one-half    representatives    of    persons 
employed.      3.     Rvery    special    board    shall 
detiTmine    the    lowest    price    «>r    rate    of 
pavment  payable  to  ;uiy  person.     4.    Stieri 
price  or  rale  of  payment  shall  in  the  ca=" 
itf  work   to   lie  rlone  outside  a   factor.v  or 
workroom    b.>    fixed    at    idei.e    work    prii  e 
or   rate    onl>.    hut    in    case    of   work    done 
W'thin  any   factory  or  workroom    it    .nay 
bo   fixed    at   ;i    piece    work    price    or   rat-.'. 
or  a  wages  price  or  rate,  or  both,   as  the 
special    boar-i    thinks    fit.      :,.     Kverv    sp.- 
Hal  board  shall   also  d»  t.rmine  the  nuni- 
br.   or  proimrtionaie  number,  of  ai>pren- 
tices  or  improvers. ■■ 

The  rates  are  to  remain  in  force  until 
altere<l  liy  the  board.  A  manufacturer 
convicted  three  times  of  infringing  ih".se 
provisions  loses  his   f.ntorv  license. 


,  organized  labor  of  the 
I  to  abolish  I'ntirely  the 
I  of  pid)lic  improvements. 

tem    is    responsible    for 

scandals. 


coutUry    to    do    is 

contract    s.v;4t>'irt 

The  ci>ntracl  sys- 

all    the    jobs    a'ld 


The 
Royal. 


big 
in 


room  at   Higgins'  Cafe 
new    mining     town    of 


COMMONWEALTH   IN  GEORGIA, 
.\    new    community       called    "•Common- 
wealth"  has   lately   been   t-<tablished   thir- 
teen   mill's    from    (/olumbus.    in    Muscogee 
county,    Ga..    adjoinin.g    the    Macon    rail- 
road, sa.vs  the  Altruist.   If  a  man  beconses 
a  member  of  a  ci>lon.v  he  must  add  v>h:it 
he  can  to  the  commonwealth  of  the  place, 
whether  it   ma.v  be  much  or  little.   If  it   is 
much,    it   gives  him   no  higher  stand   than 
if    it    is    little,    for    it    is    for    the    common 
gfiod,  and  he  reaps  the  benertt  either  wa"-. 
The    common    interest    is    the    concern    of 
all.  and  is  shareil  alike  by  all.  They  have 
ten  families  there  now.  and  4W  more  |k  r- 
sons  are  waiting  to  come  as  soon  as  more 
houseroom   can    be    built   for   them.    Thev 
now    live   in    two    houses,    and    all    eat   at 
one  table.   They  are  using   the  latest   im- 
proved  implements,   and   they  have  stji:k 
of  the  finest  breeds  of  horses,   cows,   hogs 
iind  chlcken.s.     Their  land  is  all  jiaid  f.^r. 
and    the.v    do    not    owe    anybod.v    for    aiiv- 
thing,   jind  so  they  will   be  entirely   iime- 
p-'Udent    and    free    from    any    obligations 
to  anybody   for  what   they   use. 


The  a.ssertion  made  by  some  of  the  re- 
tail grtuers  that  union  men  are  calling 
for  a   lH>ycotied    flour,    which   are     ad- 
vanced by  the  groiers  as  a  reason   for 
refusing  to  recognize  the  boyiott  upon 
the  article,    do   not    impiess    the     boy- 
colt  committee  as  havin,g  been  made  in 
good  faith,  so  say  some  of  its  members. 
They  say  that  they  have  been  unable, 
at    least,    to   find    any     dealer     makin.g 
such  statements   beyond  the  stage     of 
generalities,   they  all  dodged   when   re- 
quested  to     give     specific   information. 
The  complaint  of  the  cigarmaker.s'  that 
union  men  are  in   the  habit  of  buying 
non-union  cigars,    is     said     by     many 
members  of  organized  labor  to  be  well 
founded.     Such  cases  cannot  be  readily 
come   at.    however,   owing   to  the   di'Ii- 
rully   in   the  matter  of  prtwif.   and   the 
eigarmakers'   will   have  to  rely  largely 
on  the  good  will  of  their  brethren  in  or- 
ganized labor.     That,  they  are  now  in- 
clined to  believe,  is  turning  out  to  be  a  i 
weak  reed  to  lean  on.  | 


COMPT'LSION     IN     TXIONISM. 

Seven  years  ago  a  New  York  court  ren- 
fler«Hl  a  decision  against  a  labor  firgaiu- 
zation  in  which  it  declared  illegr.l  the 
practice  of  compelling  workingmen  to 
.ioln  unions  on  penalty  of  being  depriveil 
of  work.  The  appellate  court  has  ju.st 
handed  down  an  opinion  affirming  lb'- 
judgment  of  the  lower  court.  The  suit 
was  brought  in  ISSt)  against  the  Br-wer-. 
"Workmen's  Local  assembly.  Knights  of 
Labor,  of  Rochester.  X.  Y..  by  Charb-.^ 
Curran.  and  under  the  title  of  Curr.m 
vs.  Louis  Galen,  president,  el  al.  at- 
traetwl  wide  attention  among  employers 
and  organized  employes  all  over  the 
counir)". 

In  his  complaint  Curran  chargeil  th'- 
defendant  unionists  with  n.aving  ""i-on- 
federat«-d  and  consi>ired  together"  for  the 
IMMTiose  of  taking  awa.v  his  means  of 
*-arniTig  a  livelihood  and  to  prevent  him 
frurn  obt.iining  •  rapboni'^tit.  Curran  st  t 
up  thai  he  is  an  engineer  by  trade  ani 
»U»  to  IsSii  was  emidoyed  by  tl'.e  Milh  r 
Urowitig  company  of  Rochester.  X.  Y. 
lY'vioiisly  to  the  acts  mentioned  in  bis 
complaint  he  had  txeii  .ihle  to  find  steady 
employment     at     remunerative    wau'es. 

There  existed  jn  Rochester  at  that  time 
Mr.  Curran  slates,  the  la»>or  organiza- 
tion mentioned  abov*-.  ;ind  its  m»mt>er-  | 
ship  was  eom(>osed  of  men  emplo.ved  in 
the  various  breweries  of  Rochester.  The 
plaintiff  as.serts  that  this  local  organiza- 
tion assumed  to  ei>ntro|  the  acts  of  its 
memlK-rs  in  relation  to  th*'ir  work  as 
employfs    of    the    breweries,    and    require. I 

the   implicit   ol»«-di»-ni f  its  m«-mbers   to 

its  rubs  .-ind  regulations.  It  is  sai«l  bv 
«'urran  that  two  lu-ii.  Grossberger  ,in  1 
Watts,  acting  as  a  committf^e  from  the 
local  organization.  waite<l  upon  him  in 
Xovember.  ISWj.  and  told  him  that  unless 
he    jointed    the     Brewer.v     Workingmen's 


FREK    EMPLOYMENT    OFFK^ES. 
••The    practical    results    of    the    free    em- 
ployment   office   may    be   summarized    and 
recaoitul.ited     briefl.v.      In    soite    of    hin- 
drances   inciilent    to   the   establishment    of 
a   new  departure  the  percentage  of  situa- 
tions   secured    is    gradually    getting    high- 
er,   anil    the   gener.il   efficiency   of    the    •"•f- 
nce    has    been    in    everv    wav    advanced 
writes   W.   C.    Hall,    commissioner   of   th, 
bureau    of    labor    statistics    of    MissoMri. 
"The   character   of   employment    provided 
has  been  of  a  better  class,  and   the  .-ner- 
age    skill    and    intelligence    of    the    appli- 
cants   materially     raised.     Viewing     labo' 
as    a    commodity,    for    the    sake   of    illus- 
tration, the  system  conforms  strictlv  v.^iih 
the  plan  of  dealing  with  all  standar-l  ar- 
ticles on  the  basis  of  supidy  and  demand. 
In    order    that    the    largest    amount    of    .i 
commoility   may   be  disposed  of  with   the 
least   jiossible   waste  of  time   and   ene»--v 
It  is  necessary  that  there  should  be  some 
common    ground    where    supply    and    de- 
m  md   meet,   and   where,   as   near  as  po.s- 
sible.     the     one    may     adjust     the    other. 
If    there    were    no    established    places    of 
I  buying    and    selling,    no    public    marko-s 
no  union  slock  yards,  no  boards  of  trad^' 
all  commodities  of  life  would  have  to  be 
I  hawked     about     the    street     or     await     a 
customer    at    an    established    office    of    a 
'  private    place    of    business.    Such    an    i<r-  i 
I  rangement  would  be  going  backwanl  fKiv  ' 
j  years,    entailing    an    unnecessary    amount  , 
of    time   and   energ.v.    Yet    in    the   absi-pce  ; 
of  the   public   employment    office    he   w^o 
I  has  the  commodity   to  offer  to  dispose  of 
I  must    trudge   from   door   to   door,    trusting 
I  to  chance  for  a   purchaser.    His  failur.-  It- 
I  find  one   Is   not   so   often   due   to   lack   of 
demand  as  to  his  ignorance  of  where  ir.e 
d'^mand  exists.   If  there  were  some  .soarc- 
of  information   to   which   he  might   api>Iy 
the  time  spent  in  looking  for  t  mplovmeiii 
could    be   utilize<l    in    monev    making   ,;nd 
unnece.s.sary    wa.>-te   of    time    avoitled.    ♦    - 
*    A   great   deal    might    be   said    from   the 
humane    standpoint.    wher»>   labor    is    eon- 
I  sidereil  something   mi-re   than   a   <  omtiio.i- 
"/•    *.  !    *    -'**''^'    ''•   assisting   the   un.m- 
plo.ved    in    procuring   the    means    of    livc'i- 
hood.    tin    chief   benefit    afforded    th-  :i    id  I 
th-^  prrjtection  from  the  unscrupulon.s  em- 
ployment    agents,      so-called,      who     cnv 
upon  the  ne«-rts  of  the  unfortunate 


REDICED  FARES  FOR  WORKMEN. 
Senator  Henry  dimmer  of  Kan.sas  Citv 
has  introduced  a  bill  in  the  senate  to 
("ompcl  street  car  companies  to  mak"  a 
reduction  in  fares  during  certain  hour* 
in  the  day.  The  bill  w.is  prepared  by  a 
committee  from  the  packing  houses  of 
Kansas  Cii.v.  Kan.  Ttuse  men  waat  to 
ride  to  and  from  their  work  for  .'!  enls. 
The  bill  provides  that  between.-  tl  •■ 
hours  of  .'i  and  i»  a,  m.  and  .">  and  S  p,  7i:. 
street  c;tr  companies  in  any  city  shall  not 
charge  more  than  3  cents  for  fares.  An.v 
company  violating  the  measure  .and 
charging  more  will  be  guilty  of  a  nis- 
ilenuanor  and  Hiud  not  less  than  $'>  n<  r 
more  than   $jr>   for   each   oftense. 

Senator  Ximmi'r  also  has  a  bill  which 
makes  it  a  misdemeanor  for  an.v  strei't 
car  <"onipany  to  comiiel  employes  to  put 
up  a  bond  or  for  any  compan.v  to  with- 
hold a  part  of  the  emplo.ves"  wages,  as 
a  bond  for  honest.v.  The  penalt.v  provid- 
ed in  the  bill  is  a  tine  of  not  less  thaa  ?;."> 
nor   more   than   $l(»a. 


back 
the 
Randsburg,  is  filled  every  evening  with 
the  old-time  miners  of  the  camp,  says 
the  New  York  Sun.  The  Cafe  Royal 
was  built  in  four  days  of  pine  scant- 
lings and  rough  redwood  boards.  It  hao 
a  shake  roof  and  canvas  partitions. 
Three  barrels  of  v.hisky  and  brandy,  a 
few  kegs  of  beer,  .several  thousand 
cigars,  besides  pipes  and  tobacco,  com- 
prise the  Sole  stock  of  refreshments 
there.  Higgins  has  been  in  several  min- 
ing camps,  and  so  his  saloon  is  the  poj>- 
ular  silting  place  Un-  the  old-timers  in 
Randsburg,  while  the  tenderfeet  who 
are  getting  their  first  experience  in  a 
gold-inining  town  and  the  young  bloods 
from  Los  .\ngeles,  San  Franci.sco  and 
Portland,  who  would  be  the  modern  all- 
round  tougli  men  of  these  diggings, 
wander  about  among  the  thirty-two 
saloons,  gaml'Iing  places  and  dance 
halls  of  the  mushroom  city. 

At  Higgins'  there  gather  every  even- 
ing grizzled  veiei-ans  who  have  followed  j 
the   delusive    beckonings   of    fortune    to  ! 
every  miniirg  town  from  the  Rio  Grande  ; 
to  British  Columbia,  and  from  the  Mis-  | 
souri  to  the  I^acirtc.  Some  of  them  cani.>  j 
as  youths  to  California  in  the  fifties  Ir, 
wash  gold  in  i)ans  from  the  gi-avel  beds  i 
along   the  Yuba  and   the   Stanislaus;  a  : 
few    of    them    were    with    the    bonanza 
mining  kings,  .Mackay,  Fair,  Flood  and  i 
O'Brien,  when  they  were  all  poor,  hope- 
ful   young   men    together     in     Nevada; 
many  of  thiin   have  made   fortunes   ot 
$i't>,000  or  J,";(),'iiH>   in   mining,    ami   havi 
lost   the  same  more  quickly  than   they 
made  them;  half  a  dozen  of  them  havV 
been  at  some  time  worth  several  hun- 
dred     thousand    dollars,    and    some    of 
them  are  ri<  h   now,  and  have  conic  tu 
Randsliurg  to  seek   investments,    while 
two  or  thret  are  exi)erts  in  gold  mining 
and   represeiu    Western   capitalists  who 
alv.ays  get  trustworthy  information  as 
to  possilde  investments  from  every  new 
ning   camp.     The    stories   that    these 


dried 

them 

Placer 

wagoa 

There 

60 

tent 

customer 

was    immediate 

to    get     caught 

when  any  one 


burro 
could 
straw 
at- 


Af- 

with. 

creek 

In  an 


ley 


difficult 
that  have 


ceefle«l 
of   time. 


Local  assembl.v.  paid  the  initiation  f.^^* 
and  subjected  himself  to  all  the  rule-! 
and  regulations,  the  assemble  would  pro- 
cure his  discharge  by  the  Miller  Brew- 
ing comnany.  and.  further  than  that, 
would  make  it  impossible  for  him  to  ob- 
tain employment  again  in  Rochester  or 
els-where. 

When  Curran  refused  to  comply  with 
the  demand  rif  Gross'oerger  .and  Watts, 
he  sa.vs.  they  com[>lain>'d  to  Curraa's 
employers  of  him.  threatened  them  and 
finally  secured  his  discharge.  Not  satis- 
fietl  with  that.*the  complaint  alb-ges. 
Grossberger.  Watts  and  other  meml>ers 
of  the  assembly  endeavored,  in  every 
way  they  knew,  to  bring  Curran  into  ill 
repute  and  ill  favor  with  other  members 
of  his  trade  and  with  emplovers  as  well. 
Try  as  hard  as  he  might  after  that,  Cur- 
ran found  it  impossible  to  secure  employ- 
ment at  his  trade  in  Ro<-hester.  What 
money  he  had  been  able  to  save  melted 
away,  and  those  deof^ndent  unon  iilni 
were  in  danger  of  starving.  Then  h»> 
sought  work  in  other  cities,  and  found 
That  whichever  wav  he  turned  he  was 
pursued  by  the  Knights  of  LalM.r.  who 
made  it  impossible  for  him  to  ohtain  i-m- 
Tdoyment  anywhere,  f driven  to  extremes 
he    brought    the    suit. 

After  admitting  the  allegations  as  to 
the  existence  of  such  an  organization  as 
the  -Brewery  Workingmen  s  Local  a.s- 
tembly,  Xo.  ll^.  Knights  of  Lat^ir.'"  and 
as  to  the  assemblys  requirements  of  its 
members,  the  defendant's  answer  denied 
generally  and  .sptrcifirallv.  every  allega- 
tion in  the  complaint.  Then,  as  a  separat,- 
answer.  the  defendant.s  .set  up  that  there 
existed  in  the  city  of  Rochester  an  or- 
ganization known  as  the  .\le  Brewers' 
association,  of  which  the  Miller  Brev/ing 
company    waa    a    member.    It    was    uUo 


X  E  «•    <  -O-i  I PE  K  AT  I  V  E    S  Y ST  K  .M 

••t    I  he    m.iny    problems    that    have    puz- 
zl.  d  labor  leaders  the^.e  manv   vears  none 
proved     more     vexing    than     tli.it    of    co- 
operative   stores.    So    easy    in    theory,    so 
n     practice,     few    of    the    m.my 
been  started  from  tim*-  to  time 
with  KT'-Ht  fl'turish  of  trumpets  have  sue- 
in  struggling  along  for  any  I- nj;".h 
But   California    ba.s   evolved   and 
put    into    practice    a    new    idea— a    sort    of 
a    genenil    trade    t  xchange.    in    whic'i    p.. 
I  money   is   used— th.it    has 
j  satisfactory    beyond    the 
even    its    most  ".s.mguine 
new    entert.ri.se    is    known    as    the    Labor 
Exchange,   and,   as  explained   in    the   San 
Francisco   Call,    it    is   not   a    m.relv    local 
afTalr,    but   is   intended    to   be  national    in 
Its  scope. 

its    purpose    is    to     employ    everv 
wtio  has   an  opportunity   to  produce 
thing    by    finding   a    market    for   the 
fluct— to  find  .some  othf-r  man  wh^ 
the    product    and    who    has 
exchange  for  it.   It   is  liy   this  means 
the  u.se  of  money  is  dispen.sed 


■;e.    in    which 
thus   far  provt  d 
expeft:itions     of 

|>romoters.    Th  • 


Till-:  Clll.V  AS  AX  l.VDEX. 

St.   Louis  Clinique:     I   have  just  read 

Dr.  L.'uf's  letter  on  •'I'hysiognomy."  in 

the  Merical  Council,  and  am  prompted 

to  say  in  reply  to  his  request  for  con- 

'  tribulions  on  the    "chin:" 

Protruding    chins    characterize    men 
and  women  of  the  get-there  t.vpe.  Suc- 
cessful pJOi)U    usually  cary  their  chins 
thrust    forward,    with   compressed    lips. 
!  This   ( hin,    if    heavy,    with    broad    rand 
j  and  swelling  masseters,  indicates  fight- 
ing blood. 
.\  retreating  chin  shows  lack  of  force, 
I  mentally,  moraly  and  |)liysically;  u.su- 
I  ally  of  the  yielding  sort;  soon  discour- 
aged;   desires   prouction;   siuall   exeiii- 
live  force.     The  development  of     other 
1  faculties  often  makes  up  for  this  defect. 
A  small,  well-rounded  chin,  with  mo. 
bil>  and  red  cushion  of  flesh  upon,  indi- 
cates      a     plea.sure-loving     owner.       If 
dimpled,   all   the   more  so,    for  dimpled 
chins     belongs     to     coquettes.      People 
with    dimples    love    to    l>e    pett:.'d      and 
loved;  like  admiration  and  praise.  Gen- 
erally      fickle.     Usually      this     chin     i:- 
healthy,   recuperative  and   long-lived. 

Broad  chins  signify  nobleness  and 
large  dignity,  unless  vertically  thin, 
when,  if  with  it  there  be  thin  lips  of 
bloodl 'ss  kind,  you  find  cruelty. 

Square  chins  with  little  flesh  denote 
firmness  and  executive  ability.  These 
make  good  haters.  | 

Drunkards  usually  have  a  circulai  i 
line  about  their  chins.  I 

Slovens  hav?  wrinkles  about  their  i 
chins.  ' 

L<mg  th'n  chins  are  poetii-al,  unstable 
and  delicate  in  i  imstitutiim.     Such  i>eo- 
|de  are  subject  to  bowel  dirangemenls. 
If    thin   through     the     angels     of     tin   • 
mouth,  loo.  ihcy  are  prone  to  tiibercu-  I 
losis.     ( b'licrall.v   sliort-Iivcd. 

.Meditini  chins  with  a  suggestive  bi-  j 
furcation  in  the  center,  with  small  < 
mounds  of  fbsh  on  either  siile.  charac-  | 
teiize  generosit.v.  inipulsiv  ness.  cheery  ' 
natures.  (The  .saiiu-  sized  chins,  witii  , 
a  dab  «>f  flesh  just  under  the  center  of  | 
the  lower  lip.  indic.iie  meanness,  sel-  | 
lishiiess.    briitalil.v.i 

N.  B.— No  Miic  feature  can  be  taken  in  ! 
judging  character,  off.n  d'Vel.)pnient  I 
of  other  faculties  of  mind  or  featun 
entin  ly  governs.  In  each  ca.se  lake  i 
the  •toiality  of  indications"  before  | 
judgin.g.  ! 


1  m 

[  men  tell  of  varied  experiences  in  seek- 
I  ing  riches  thiou.gh  a  generation  and 
!  under  all  manner  of  circumstances  are 
j  interesting.  Luck  in  gold  minitvg  is  a 
■  favorite  topic  .iinon.g  them. 
I  Dan  Randolih.  who  sold  a  mine  in 
Silverton,  N.  M.,  for  $200,0tK)  some  twen- 
ty  years  ago,  has  been  in  every  stani- 
I  pede  to  a  new  mining  camp  on  the  Pa- 
t  ciflc  coast  since  ].S«7,  and  is  now  fiat 
,  broke,  has  an  extraordinary  stock  ot 
reminiscences  of  mining  days.  He  told 
this  story  one  evening  about  two  weeks 
I  ago: 

•"The  luckiest  man  1  ever  knew  in  any 
diggings  was  Bill  Hawkins,  who  came 
out  from  Chic-ago  along  in  about  IS?;, 
as  poor  as  Job's  turkey.  Any  man 
without  his  luck  would  have  been 
kicked  pluml*  into  kin.gdom  come  in- 
stead, of  the  fattest  diggings  down  in 
the  territorii  s.  It  was  like  this:  Bill 
was  hauling  frei-ght  from  Tucson  over 
to  the  little  silver  and  gold  camns  in 
the  Sonora  range,  and  he  considered 
himself  mighty  lucky  to  hav^  few  lay 
offs  by  his  boss  at  Tucson.  .He  was 
about  as  clumsy  as  they  make  a  man. 
and  never  made  a  trip  without  being 
kicked,  bitten  or  trodden  on  by  his 
team.  But  he  was  so  blamed  poor  that 
he  had  to  stand  all  that  or  die  of  star- 
vation. 

•'One  mule  in  the  team.  Old  Sam,  was 
a  regular  devil:  the  brute  knew  that 
Bill  was  afraid  of  him,  and  never 
missed  a  chance  to  bite  or  kick  at  hin;. 
One  day  Bill  started  from  Tucson  with 
a  heavy  load,  bound  for  John  Smith's 
camp,  eighty  miles  off.  Part  of  the  way 
the  road  was  hardly  more  than  a  trail 
along  the  side  of  the  mountains.  Halt 
a  dozen  good  teamsters  had  refused  tiie 
contract,  but  Bill  took  it  because  thi 
price  offered  was  more  than  double 
what  he  could  obtain  on  any  other 
route.  Bets  were  made  that  the  outfit 
would  go  ovt  r  the  grade,  but  Bill  suc- 
ceeiled  in  .getting  over  sixty  miles  of  the 
road  without  a  single  hitch.  Then  iie 
was  at  the  Porcupine,  a  narrow  ridgv- 
along  whiili  the  road  tan,  and  on  ea<  h 
side  was  a  deep  canon.     ,\t   no  |»lace  is 


a   couole    of    feet 

iiid   the  grade  i.-- 

tiv    ai'ros.s    sonn  - 

the  mule,  and  he 


It 
for 


n»:in 
iiny- 
pro- 
o  wants 
something    to 
that 
with. 


IS  worked  in  this  way.  A  sho.m.'ker 
instance,  wants  ii  barrel  of  flour.  Me 
gets  to  work  and  makes  a  whole  lot  of 
shoes  of  the  value  of  the  thing  he  wairs. 
taKes  them  to  the  exchange  and  receives 
the  Hour  If  he  wants  something  thet  's 
not  in  the  exchange— for  instance  If  l,e 
w:»nts  a  new  set  of  teeth-he  is  given  a 
check  or  checks  of  the  value  of  the  .ro- 
Uuct  he  leaves  there,  and  goes  aw.iv  to 
some  dentist  who  belongs  to  the 
change  and  who  therefore  will  accept 
che<-ks  for  his  work.  The  dentist 
rcTuired  to  take  the  shoes  in 
^'^^  hi!J  work-The  checks  will  be  accept- 
ed at  the  exchange  for  anything  there 
in  stock.  Nor  is  the  dentist 
to  this.  These  ch»>cks  are 
.sr-ore  or  more  of  other 
in   almost    e\ery   line  of 


IX- 

the 
is   not 
exchange 


HE  KEPT  THE  CRoWN. 
Golden  Penny:  When  Louis  Philippe 
was  slaying  at  Richmond  he  walked  by 
him.self  to  Twickenham  U>  pav  visits 
to  some  of  the  old  tradesmen  who  had 
served  him  when  he  lived  there.  On  tht 
way  an  old  man  met  him.  and.  touching 
his  hat,  hop»>d  his  royal  highness  was  in 
good  health.  •"What's  yi>ur  name,  mv 
good  man".'"  asked  the  king.  '•What 
were  you  when  I  lived  here?"  "If  y,,u 
please,  your  royal  hi-ghness."  was  "the 
man's  answer,  "I  kejn  the  Crown"— the 
Crown  being  an  alehouse  close  to  tin 
gates  of  Orleans  house.  "Did  you. 
really?"  answered  Louis.  "Why  "  m.v 
good  fellow,  you  did  what  I  was  unable 
to  do!" 


iS 

even   limit. d 

accepted    bv    a 

business    hoii.ses 

Iradi  .    :;o    wid.p,- 


has   the   movement  spreafi 

AGREE   OX    ARBITRATION 

During  the  past  yytf-k  an  arbitration 
agreement  has  been  perfected  betw.-en  the 
Illinois  Fire  Proofing  Manufacturers  and 
C  nntractor^i'  a.^-sociation  and  the  Bri  k- 
layers  and  Stonemasons'  union  of  Chi- 
cago by  which  amicable  adjustment  of 
all  disagreements  for  the  current  veir 
-s  assured  Working  rules  binding"  tiv 
two  organizations  were  adopted  for  l.«37 
The  rules  embody  the  eight-hour  day  and 
make  the  minimum  rate  of  wages  50  cent'- 
per   hour,    with    time    and    one-half    for 


A  PIECE  OF  PARCHMENT, 
When  unwritten  on.  is  not  more  colorless 
than  tht-  cadaverous  countenances  of 
tho.se  unfortunate  persons  whom  we  are 
accustomed  to  rail  "confirmed  invalids" 
\\  hat    a    misnomer!    Imnlying.    too     des- 

?u-  .•'.r'^P'"^    '"^    ff""    '"'^t!    As    long  ' 
the  vivifying  power  of  Hostettei'-s 
ach    Bitters  can   be   felt,   and   (h.it 
sible  so   lotiK  ;,s   there  is   no 
lapse   of    the   f.iciilties.    fresh 
be    infuserl     into 
color  and  fi 


IS 

Stom- 
is  )»os- 
ibsobite  col- 
vltwlitv  cm 
waste.l.  feeble  f  rimes; 
sh  can  be  brought  back  ro 
wasted,  pallid  cheeks  wit  h  this  u-ra.d 
.-.heet  anchor  of  the  debilitated 
sickly.  It  is  a  tonic  of  the 
tency  and  (he  utmo.-^t  purity 
foM^  ^'Z.V''^  preventive  of  dyspepsia,  bil- 
loiij..  malariotis.  rheumatic,  nervou.s  and 
kidney  complaints.  Appetite  and  alteo 
nre  greatly  aided  by  It;  it  count-racr's 
the  effects  of  undue  fatigue,  or  excite- 
ment, and  nullifies  the  often  perilous  con- 
.^uenees  of  exposure  n  incieai 
Weather  or  damp  clothing.    -      '"'^'^*^» 


and    the 
greatest    po- 
and  a  rcm- 


•;nt 


the   road   more   than 

wider  than   a   wagdi 

I  very    heavy.      Half    w 

j  thin'g  started  <  »ld  Sam 

I  liegan  t(S  kick. 

'  ■•Bill  wlii|.i»id  and  swore,  but  Sam 
only  made  his  heels  My  faster,  and  at 
I  last  managed  to  get  outside  of  th. 
I  traces.  Then,  as  if  satisfied  with  tb. 
fun  he  had.  the  brute  biv  down  in  the 
!  middle  of  (he  road  and  defied  Bill's 
I  every  effort  to  get  him  up.  A  couple  of 
Mexicans  hap|ietied  along,  and  at  Bill's 
I  invitation  they  took  a  hand.  One  o!' 
I  them  gathereii  a  lot  of  dry  gra.ss  and 
!  idled  it  close  to  llle  inille".s  hiiiilquarteis 
'  and  set  it  on  fire,  it  took  Sam  about 
!  two  seconds  to  change  his  position  and 
land  his  heels  on  Bill's  stomach  with  a 
force  that  sent  him  over  the  edge  of 
the  road  and  down  the  bank.  He. 
dropped  twenty-five  or  thirty  feet  down 
the  side  of  the  mountain. 

■•Where  did  he  land?  Why,  on  the  edge 
'<  of  the  Daylight,  of  course.     The  Mexi- 
cans,   in'jmlling  away   the   grass,    had 
torn  away  some  earth  that  revealed  pay 
ore  beneath  it.     Bill  had  sen.se  enough 
to    keei»    his    find    a   secret,    and    wrote 
to  his  brother  in  'Frisco  to  gather  up  all 
the    cash    he    could    and    get    down    to 
.Arizona  as  soon  as  possible.     The  first 
thin'g  we  knew   in   Tucson   and   Tomii- 
stone  a  gang  of  men  were  at   v.ork  de- 
veloping the  Daylight  mine.     The  pn.j'- 
erty  paid  $1000  a  month  almost  from  the 
start,  and  along  about   1880,   when  the 
shaft  was  down  800  feet,  it  paid  ?;1000  a 
month.     Bill  died  in   Europe  ten  years 
ago,    where   he   married   a   French    wo- 
man,  and  he  ha.d  dead  loads  of  money. 
What  became  of  the  mule?     Why,  you 
can    bet    that      Bill    never    forgot     that 
beast.      He    ixuight    the    finest    10-ai  re 
pasture  land  he  could  find  down  in  Hie 
Sonora     mountains     mar   a    Mexican's 
house,    built    a   stable    for   the    inule    io 
sleep  in  at  night,  and  paid  the  Mexican 
a    salary    to    see    that    Old    Sam    never 
wanted  a  mule's  comforts  of  life.     The 
last  I  knew  the  mule  was  living  yet. 

••Speaking  about  mules,"  remarked 
Col.  George  Layton,  the  oldest  man  in 
the  crowd,  and  one  who  saw  more  of 
the  flush  mining  days  In  the  era  of 
the  forty-niners  in  the  diggings  along 
the  river  banks  than  any  one  else  in 
Randsburg,  "reminds  me  of  the  time 


ford 

flour,  molasses,  beans  and 
apples  at  Sacramento,  hauled 
up  to  Michigan  Bluffs,  in 
ccunty,  made  a  tent  out  of  his 
cover  and  opened  a  store, 
wasn't  much  doing  during  the  day, 
Stanford  used  to  lie  down  in  his 
and  go  to  sleep  until  some 
Woke  him  up,  for  it 
hanging  for  any  one 
.stealing  in  those  davs, 
could  make  $10  a  day  by  a  little  in- 
dustry at  panning  cut  the  gold.  One 
day  a  fellow  struck  camp  on  the  fin- 
est l)urro  that  had  been  seen  at  the 
Bluffs  in  weeks.  The  fellow  unpacked 
his  belongings  and  turned  the 
loose  to  pick  up  whatever  he 
find  in  the  way  of  grub.  The 
armuid  young  Stanford's  lent 
traded  his  attention  first,  and  then 
he  commenced  nosing  around  inside. 
It  wasn't  three  minutes  until  he  had 
his  nose  in  the  dried  a])ple  barrel 
ter  eating  all  he  could  get  away 
he  sauntered  off  down  to  the 
and  took  a  good  drirk  of  water 
luur  there  was  a  dead   burro 

"The  f.wner  of  the  Jack  wanted  Stan- 
ford to  pay  for  him,  and  Slanfonl  got 
mad  and  demanded  pay  for  his  dried 
apples.  After  wrangling  over  it  all  th» 
sUternoon,  they  agreed  to  leave  it  to  -t 
jury  First  the  stranger  was  tried  for 
stealing  the  dried  ai>ples  and  acquit- 
ted on  the  ground  that  a  man  was  not 
criminally  liable  for  the  acts  of  hi-; 
liurro.  Then  Stanford  was  tried  for 
killing  the  Jack  and  acquitted  on  the 
ground  that  he  was  not  crimiiiallv 
responsible  for  the  swelling  properties 
of  the  dried  apples.  Then  they  tried 
the  damage  case  each  had  against  the 
other,  and  the  jury  reached  the  con- 
clusion that  it  was  a  si.lit,  and  fined 
them    both   the   drinks   for  the  court. 

"A   year   or  so   before   Senator   Stan- 
ford   died,    in    the    summer    of    1893     1 
was    looking   over   bis   magnificent    es- 
tate at  Palo  Alto,  and  whom  did  I  see 
walking   about,    but    the    senator    him- 
self.    I    introduced    miysijrif,    and    told 
him  how  I  remembered  when  we  were 
in  Michigan  Flats  together,  and  about 
his  trial  for  killing  a  mule.  He  laughed 
heartily    over    it,    and    made    me   go   to 
dinner,   just  as  I    was  and  in   my  old 
clothes,    up    at    his    mansion,    so   as    to 
tell    Mrs.    Stanford    what       I     remem- 
bered  about   their  efu-ly   struggles,   for 
Stanford   told   me   that   he  looked   back 
on    those    years    as    the    happiest    and 
most    satisfactory   of   his    life.' 
i      'Tve    been    ininin.g    now    since    1S64  " 
I  said  Capt.  Geor.ge  Freeman,  as  he  tilted 
i  his    chair   against    the   bar,    '•and   it    is 
;  my  opinion  that  it  is  ability  to  see  in- 
;  to  the  earth  a  few  feet  that  some  folks 
I  call    luck.    If   1   could    get    myself   edu-  : 
I  cated  .so  as   to  understand  or  see  how  ' 
i  rock  runs  in  the  earth   only  a  yard  or  I 
I  so.   why.  I'd   be  able  to  Iiuy  up'all  the 
Mackays    and    Vanderbilts"    in    a      few 
years.       Some    mineis    can    see   clearly 
for  a  few  feet  into  rock  sometimes.  But  ! 
,  what    fortune    would    be   theirs   if   th 
could  do  it  every  time! 
1      "I   could    sit    here    all   night    and    tell  j 
I  you    illustrations    to     prove    thi.s,    but  i 
j  one  will  do.  .\bout  the  time  of  the  Mo-  I 
doc    Indian    war    ui)    in    the    lava    beds } 
I  near   the    Ore.gon    lini',    I    was    working  I 
a   claim    in    Plumas    cminty.    The   mine  | 
was    called    the    Billy.        All    the      boys] 
agreed    with    me    that   the   Billy    would  j 
make   me   rich.    I    kept   at    work   on    it  I 
every  day  until  all  my  .fllOO  capital  was  ' 
gone   inuto    the    tunnel   for  grul),    tools 
and    nitro-glycerine.    I    wrote    back    to 
my   brother   near  Rochester.    N.    Y..    to 
send  me  $600.  I  keid  steadily  at   work. 
The   miners   who   used    to   come   to    see 
'  me    sweating    and    blasting,    away    in 
I  my  tunnel,   all  said  I    wjts  sure  to  get 
I  into  big  ])ay  ore  in  a  week  or  two  more. 
W  hen   my   borrowed   money   was   gone. 
1   had    put    in    two   years   at    the  work, 
and  I  was  woiTied  l)ecause  T  knew  my 
brother"  had  a  growing  family  to  sup- 
port,   and    he   had    put   a  mortgage   on 
his  place  to  help  me.  The  tunnel  was 
then   ISO  feet  in  the  rock. 

•'I  took  sick,  became  discouraged  and 
wondered  why  I  had  ever  been  such  a 
fool  as  to  lieep  pegging  along  there, 
when  1  might  have  got  as  rich  as  other 
miners  had  done  by  the  dozen  down 
in  Calaveras  < ounly.  One  morning  as^ 
I  was  gathering  up  my  tools  to  quit, 
a  business-like  man  came  up  to  the 
tunnel.  He  asked  to  see  the  tunnel, 
which  was  mostly  of  solid  rock  with- 
out timbering,  and  after  he  had  close- 
ly examined  both  walls  for  two  or 
three  hours,  asked  me  if  I  wanted  to 
sell.  I  feigned  indifference,  and,  after 
calculating  190  feet  of  tunnelling  at 
$10  a  foot,  answered  that  I  might  sell 
if  I  got  my  price.  'Well,  what's  your 
price?'  he      asked,  and      I      replied 

$2500.'   with    my  heart   in   my     mouth. 
'Come    down    to    town    and      get    your 
money,'  was  the  answer,  and  that  night 
I   went    to   the   tavern   in    Plumas,     ate 
off   china   dishes,   and    slept    with   $2.'>00 
under    my    pillow,    in    clean    sheets    for 
the  first  lime  in  two  years.  Next  morn- 
ing   the    i»ur(  baser    asked    me    to    help 
him   i>ut    ill   a   ccniple  of  shots,   iind,   of 
course,   1   Jigrced.   When    we  got  to   the 
tunnel    he   examined    the    wall    jind   S:^- 
lectcd   a  |>oint  almut   Kid  feel   from    the 
mouth.    'Let's    drill    ji    cou|)le    of    holes 
here,'   he  said.  The  miiniti'  he  laid  hold 
of  the  sledge  1  .saw  he  was  a  miner,  and  ' 
in    a   short    time   we   htul    two   hides    in 
the    rock.    When    the   sh<ds    went    off    ] 
could    hardl.v      resliain      myself       from  I 
rushing    into    the    tunnel    at    once,    and 
"vvlien    the    smoke   chared    away    1    was 
the   first  on   the  spot.    And   there  lay  a 
body  of  ore  expo.sed   which    was  after-  ' 
ward   found   to   be  three  feet   thick  and 
ran  over  .$10(i  to  the  ton.  1  had  dug  my  j 
tunnel    a    yard    away    from    the    gidil 
vein    a   year   before,    and    had    been    in 
and  out   of  that   tunnel    thousands     of 
times  and  never  knew  how    near  I  had 
passed    to    the    fortune    I  'had    hoped,  , 
prayed  and  dreamed  for  every  minute. 
I  left  the  vein,  and  the  superior  knowl-  j 
edge  of  my  purchaser  had  enabled  him  i 
to  detect  the  point   of  departure.  I 

"I   had    such   a  desire  to  know   how  I 
big  a  fortune  I  had  missed  that  T  hung  ' 
about  Plumas  for  a  few  weeks.  In  that  ' 
time  ore  that   went  as  high   as  $1200  a 
ton  was  taken  out,  and  in  six  months 
the    buyer   had    got    more   than    $15,000 
from  his  mine.  .\  year  later  he  sold  it 
for   $40,000   or    so.    That    buver    is    now 
James    B.     I<:ilswOrth,    of    "the    Creede 
bonanza     syndicate— worth       probably 
$500,000." 

"Your  telling  about  how  you  worked 
in  that  tunnel  with  not  a  dollar  coniine, 
in,"  said  a  man  of  65  years,  ••remind's 
me  of  the  easy  way  one  could  get  gold 
when  I  struck  El  Dorado  county  in  Cal- 
ifornia in  the  summer  of  1851.  I  was  a 
reckless  young  chap  then,  and,  like 
nine-tenths  of  the  men  about  me,  did 
not  exert  myself  to  get  gold  more  than 
was  necessary  to  have  an  easv  linit 
about  camp,  gainlde,  and  go  down  to 
"Frisco  for  an  occasional  frolic.  Whv. 
some  times  now  I  wonder,  w  hen  I  recaii 
those  days,  if  it  was  not  all  a  dream, 
and  whether  I  ever  really  did  see  my- 
.'^elf  and  others  washiniT  out  $25  and 
$30  worth  of  tiny  nuggets  and  dust  in 
a  day,  I  had  a  brother  who  once  panned 
out  $180  between  sunrise  and  sunset. 
You  fellows,  who  almost 


IT  MAKES  YOU  WELL 

Or.  Greene's  Nenrura  is  Just  What  You 
Need  for  the  Blood  and  Nerves. 

Life  is  not  Measured  by  Years,  but  by  Strength 
and  Vigor.  Dr.  Greene's  Nervura,  the 
Only  Remedy  which  will  Give  You  the 
Health,  Strength  and  Vigor  of  Youth. 


How  many  xrho  ought  toMie  in  their  prime, 
bear  evidences  in  looks  and  feelings  of  old  aire  r 

It  ought  never  so  to  be.  Strength  and  vigor 
sliould  be  as  iierfect  as  in  youth.    If  it  is  not 

so,  something  is  wron.g 
witli   yon.     You  liavc 
wealiened  yourself  in 
your  nnxlc  of  life  or  oc- 
cupation.   There  is  no 
sight  so  l)eaulifnl  as  viir- 
orousuiaturity.and  fresh 
and  hearty 
age;  nor 
one  so  sad 
a.s  a  ]tre- 
uiaturely 
decayed 
youth."  If 
Si)ring- 
tiiiie  verd.* 
ure.  Sum- 
mer bloom 
and  Au- 
tumn ri])e- 
ncss,  are 
the  fitting 
types  of 
the  year, 
so  are  the 
freshness 
of  youth 
and  the 
EtreiifTth, 
visror  ami 
maturity 
of  age  the 
fitting  in- 
cidents of  a 
projierlife. 
Nothing  makes  these 
so  surely  as  a  sound   Ixxly,  stron? 
and    rich    blood  to  malvc    the  boilv 
nothing  IS  so  certain  to  make  this 


fiosslble 

aerves, 

iealthv; 


stlpatiou.  Dr.  Greene  of  .3."i  West  1  Itli  .St.. 
New  York  fity,  is  the  most  successful  plnsi- 
ciiui  in  curing  diseases, 
and    can   Ije  cousulted 


iouditiou  as  iJr. 


who  work. 


Greene  s  Nervura  blood  and 
nerve  rem- 
edy.   Tliou- 
saiids  who 
have  taken  il 
testify  to  its 
potent  influ- 
enic  as  a 
source  of  jtcr- 
|ietiial  youth 
and  strength. 
It  is  the  true 
re.wnerator 
of  the  boily, 
making 
strong  nerves,  rich, 
red  liioix!,  and  restor- 
ing liie  snap,  energy  and 
vigor  of  renewed  youth 
to  the  nerve-weakened, 
exhausted  and  run-down 
system.     It  makes  the 
old  and  miilille-aged  feci 
young  and  viirorous.     It 
restores  to  yonth  the  vigor 
lost  by  excesses  and  indis- 
cretions; It  gives  strength, 
energy  and  power  to  those 
It  makes  slron;,'  meu  and  vigorous 


free,  personally  or  by  letter.  Nothing  to  i»ay 
fir  consultation,  examiiialioii  or  adviiv.  and 
the  low  price  of  his  woinlorful  curative  iiicili. 
cines  places  a  sure  cure  wiihiii  reach  of  every, 
liodv. 


in  1S,".2,  three-  young  men  of  us  left 
Hanglown  (now  Placerville)  on  a  pros- 
pecting lour  up  the  Yuba  river.  It  was 
no  trick  to  make  money  those  dav.-.. 
Everyone  had  a  sackful  or  so  of  gold 
dust  lying  around  somewhere.  We  lefi 
our  little  sacks  in  a  candle  box  at  Mark 
Hopkins'  store  in  Hanglow  n,  and  struck 
out  up  the  river.  We  packed  our 
blankets,  picks,  pans  and  shovels,  a 
rocker,  a  little  grub,  coffee  pot  and  f r> - 
ing  pan  on  a  mule,  and  struck  out  for' a 
fortune  of  $100,000  each,  for  we  had  b.\' 
:hat  lime  made  uji  our  minds  to  go  in 
for  wealth,  then  to  go  back  to  Jersev. 
marry  the  prettiest  girls  in  town  and 
'settle  down  as  the  rich  young  men  from 
California. 

••Just  above  Fentons'  bar  we  locat'.d 
claims  on  virgin  ground  and  went  to 
work.  We  worked  just  an  hour  by  Hi- 
watch.  The  clean  up  weighed,  fo-ji" 
ounces  of  clean  river  gold.  That  was  an 
ounce  apiece,  or  at  the  rale  of  ten 
ounces  each  for  a  full  day's  work.  We 
held  a  consultation.  We  were  out  for 
$100,000  before  the  rainy  season  .set  in. 
Word  had  come  down  from  Hunt's  Bend 
that  men  were  making  $1000  each  up 
there.  Ten  ounces,  or  $160  a  da;, 
wouldn't  do.  A  little  figuring  showed 
us  that.  We  struck  camp  and  left.  A 
[larty  of  youn.g  men  just  out  from  Ohio 
tt  ok  po.s.session  of  the  .ground  that  we 
iiad  abandoned,  and  they  cleaned  up 
$800,(100  in  two  years  and  went  back  to 
the  states.  They  were  smart.  We  were  j 
continental   fools. 

••-Ml  there's  of  it,  we  had  a  fortune  ii, 
oiir  hands  and  we  let  it  go.     .Ml  of  mir 
party  are  dejid   now   exccDt   me,   and   1 
long    ago    gave    up    my    idea    of    going  | 
iiack   to   Jersey   and    marrying  anyone, 
for  I've  lu'ver  seen  the  day  1   harrevin  i 
the  fare  there.  Well,  about  a  year  later, 
in   ]S.5:i,   oui"  |);irtv  of  Jer.sey   bo.vs  wric 
ivorking  sitiiccs  and  long  Toms  at  Ooid 
Hill,  near  where     Jim     Marshall  I'ouiul 
the   first    gold    ill   California.      We    wen 
"etfing  $12  a  da.v  then,  for  tbousaiids  o; 
gold-liungiy  young  lll^n  bad  come  and 
taken  up  the  best  mining  claims  in  Ciil- 
,  ifornia  by  that  time.     Three  men  from 
Illinois  came  iin  to  our  camp  om-  day 
;  and  looked  o\cr  our  .ground  sluice. 

•'  •We've  had  awful  luik,'  said  one  ol 
them,  'and  can't  you  boys  tell  where  wt 
can   wash   out   a   few   dollars?' 

"  •You  bet.'  answered  Parson  Dan,  ot 

my  i>arty.     •You  just  buy  a  few  inches 

of  water  and  start  in  over  on  that  there 

I  mesa.'     Water   rights  were  worth   then 

^7  an    inch.     The  Illinois  men  gave   u.^- 

!  three  ounces  of  dust  for  the  water  and 

I  started  in  the  next  morning.     To  make 

I  a   long   story  short,    they   worked   hard 

?ar!y    and    late,    and    in    three    month.- 

they    went    down    to    Sacramento    with 

I  SIS.OOO  in  gold  dust  and  nuggets,  while 

I  we  Jersey  boys  pegged   along  at   $10  a 

I  day.     Now,  do  you  Randsburg  men  call 

that   all   luck  or  ability     to     see     into 

things?" 

••I  knew  a  Dutchman  in  Montana  a 
dozen  years  ago,"  said  a  middle-aged 
man,  who  stood  over  near  Higgins'  bar 
"who  made  $7000  or  $8000  from  a  little 
quartz  mine,  and  it  was  the  purest  piece 
of  luck  you  ever  heard  of.  The  Dutch- 
man had  a  large  family,  and  his  chil- 
<lren  helped  him  in  his  search  for  pay 
rock.  His        10-year-old        daughter 

dreamed  that  by  a  manzanita  bush  was 
an  oiicning  into  yellow  'gold-bearing 
quartz.  The  old  man  jiaid  no  attention 
to  the  girl's  talk,  but  she  said  a  week 
later:  "Papa.  I've  dreamed  three  times 
about  that  gold  mine  by  the  manzanita 
bush.' 

•Thrn  he  thought  there  might  bo 
somethin.g  in  her  dream.  He  and  his 
boys  hunted  for  several  days  for  a 
manzanita  bush  such  as  the  girl  do- 
scribed.  When  they  found  it  they  goi 
their  picks  and  shovels 


will* 

lobi» 

was 
ever 


han.ged  if  she  has  evi-r  had  any  dream 
like   that   since." 

The  man.  Frank  Raymond, 
found  the  Farewell  mine,  i!i  the  t; 
district  of  Arizona,  in  about  IHS^, 
the  blamedest  oerson  for  luck  1 
knew  of,  "  remarked  Maj.  Phil  Mason. 
"I  knew  Hank  well,  and  was  in  the 
neighl»orhoi>d  when  he  located  the  mine, 
so  I  am  sure  of  my  facts.  Hank  and  a 
I  omrade  came  out  of  some  scientiP.c  jii- 
;?ineering  college  back  Kasi  more  than 
a  dozen  .vears  ago,  with  the  intention  of 
doing  mining  engineering.  They  went 
down  into  New  Mexico  and  .\rizona  and 
got  jobs  with  some  silver  mining  com- 
panies at  Cerilios,  Prescoti  and  Harijui 
Hala,  But  when  silver  "Itecame  gradu- 
ally cheai)er  the  mines  closed  down  and 
:  Hank  was  left  to  hustle.  He  then 
turned  prospector  and  went  for  four 
years  all  over  the  mountains  in  South- 
ern Arizona,  locating  gold  mines  that 
he  never  developed.  In  the  fall  of  1S8I> 
he  was  clean  i>Iunil)  bu.sied,  and 
couldn't  find  a  thing  in  his  profession  to 
I  do. 

"He  went  over  to  the  Globe  diggini^s 
to  .<5ay  g(Kid-by  to  his  old  college  chum, 
for  Hank  had  made  up  his  mind  to  get 
back  to  Yankee  land  somehow,  where 
'  he  might  do  something  w  ilh  that  tiiio 
education  of  his. 

"  "It's  no  use  fooling  away  my  time 
out  here  with  mines.'  said  he  to  me. 
"Why.  no  one  ever  makes  any  money  in 
them  now.' 

"Hank  loafed  about  Globe  for  a  week. 
The  afternoon  before  he  was  going  to 
start  to  work  his  way  somehow  or  ollu-r 
back  to  New  Y'ork  h'e  went  out  for  a 
walk  with  his  chum  over  the  sun-baked, 
baiiiii  hills.  11  was  a  farewell  chat. 
The  two  men  sal  down  in  a  gubh  and 
talked  for  several  hours.  Hank  Wii:<: 
poking  among  Hie  ibousainis  of  stoms 
a!id  boulders  lying  there.  ;i.s  all  we  fci- 
lows  do  from  force  of  habit  when  we 
are  out  in  the  mountains  in  a  niiniiiS 
country.  He  jiicked  ui>  a  bit  of  live 
rock. 

■•  •By  lieavensi'  said  he.  stuil.ving  it. 
"that's  got  a  ht^ii  of  color  in  it.' 

■•He  took  that  float  down  to  his  tint, 
looked  it  over  carefully,  postponed  his 
departure  fiom  Globe,  and  went  t< 
work  following  un  iluii  float  Io  the 
mother  leflge.  It  took  a  fort:iight  to  do 
it.  He  located  the  Farewell  mine  tliere. 
and  anyime  in  the  territories  will  tell 
.you  that  Frank  Raymond  made  sonic- 
thing  like  $175,000  out  of  the  Farewell 
before  it  pinched  out  a  year  or  so  ago. 
He's  in  Japan  this  winter  having  a  good 
time,  and  II  all  came  from  Im-k.  No 
foresight  about    that   Iind." 


,  .„  ,  -  ,  uncovered  th 

^«„    ^         *«.,,..,  ^   '  yourselves  i  r.ock,    pulverized    a    chunk   of    it   in    i 
rowadays  to  find  gold  mines,  don't  have  |  mortar,  and  found  it  worth  $75  a  ton 
any  idea  what  rich  fields  ^ye  used  to  i  can  prove  this  to  be  a  dead  fact   for 
work  in  day  after  day.    '^^~-  ' ^  -      •   -    ■■         •  •  --  "  **'-'•'  ^^'^ 


notice  of  AilicalioQ 

FOR 

Liquor_Lieense. 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  application 
has  been  made  in  writing  to  the  common 
council  of  said  city  of  Duluth,  and  tiled 
m  my  office,  praying  for  license  to  sell 
intoxicating  liquors  for  the  term  eoni- 
mcncing  on  March  10.  1897,  and  lerminat- 

1,",*^«V  ^'"•:'■•'  ^"-  1**^"  »'-^'  "•  nrown,  at  No. 
.5o.S   \Vest  Sii|H>rior  street. 

Said  apjdicHtion  will  be  hoard  and  de- 
termined by  said  cotmnon  council  of  tin; 
city  of  nulutb.  ,it  (he  council  chamber  In 
said  ciiy  of  Dnbitb.  in  St.  I.,oiiis  Ooim- 
ty,  Minnesota,  on  Moml.iv.  the  •JJd  dav  of 
March,  1S97.  at  7:30  o'clock  p.  m.  of  that 
dav. 

Witness 
of 


women.     Try  it  and  get  back  vonr  strength 
energy  and  yonilifnJ  vigor. 

llememlK-rtljat  Dr.  Greene's  Nervura  blood 
and  nerve  remedy  is  a  ^.hvsician's  prescription, 
indorsed  and  reeommeniJed  bv  the  ablest  doc- 
tors every  whei-e.  Dr.  (iretue's  Cathartic  I'ills 
are  the  only  i)erfect  pills 
for  biliousness  aiK' 


1897 


my  hand  and  sea!  of  said  city 
Duluth.  this  9lh  day  of  March.  A.   I>. 


RICHARDSON. 
City  Clerk. 


one  June  day.  i  married   the  girl  myself,   and  hi   be  •  Dlilu^rEvlnifriierald.  March  9  to  22  iac 


fw^-.mv    »-i  .irsCTETH 


■P^Mna 


, 


u 


iNiMi 


■^n 


•^ 


t 


I  '    ■  ■»    * 


Mk. 


<r— «t* 


!*■■■*• 


iwr>n» 


■ 


«Mp 


iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiinniiiiiiniiiiiniiininiiiiiiifiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiw^ 


AMONG  THE  I 


ir 


"^r 


I 
I 

I       SPORTS.      I 

^iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin^ 


THE  DULUTH  EVENING  HERALD  SATURDAY,  MARCH  20,  1897. 


U- 


i»i>i  I 


» 

J. 


The  week  in  local  sports  saw  little 
that  was  of  an  excitinp  nature,  nor  did 
it  give  promise  of  murh  to  come  in  the 
future.  Local  sports  were  wrapped  up 
in  the  Carson  City  event  in  the  same 
dejfree  as  the  sports  of  every  town  in 
these  United  States  were  undoubtedly 
interested,  and  the  streets  were  lined 
with  excited  people  on  the  afternoon  of 
the  fight,  followine:  the  rounds  as  well 
as  they  could  from  rumor  or  the  bulle- 
tins posted  at  various  places.  When  in 
the  si.xth  round  it  was  reported  that 
Corbett  was  puffing  the  faces  of  the 
Corhett  sympathizers  turned  several 
shades  lighter,  and  the  pallor  deepened 
when  in  the  later  rounds  it  was  appai'- 
ent  that  Fitz  was  standing  Corbotfs 
terrii>Ie  punishment  like  an  ox  and  al- 
though bleeding  profusely  was  appar- 
ently fresh  and  full  of  fight. 
•    «    • 

Then  when  the  report  spread,  as  it 
did  with  remarkably  rapidity,  that  Cor- 
l>ett  hatl  been  knocked  out  in  the  four- 
teenth round  the  Fitzsimnions  men 
came  to  the  front  and  howled,  while 
the  Corbett  men  attempted  to  grin  and 
bear  it.  There  wa.i  plenty  of  good  Cor- 
bett money  went  glimmering  Wednes- 
day afternoon,  a  great  many  peojile 
betting  on  the  favorite,  many  giving 
odds  in  his  favor.  There  was  consider- 
able betting  in  Duluth,  and  in  general 
the  result  was  a  surpri.«e,  though  the 
town  did  not  lack  for  men  who  V>elieved 
that  the  lanky  Australian  would  be 
successful.  Ther^  was  any  amount  of 
interest,  however,  among  all  classes. 
Even  those  who  abht>r  prize-fighting 
and  who  ventured  the  wish  that  the  two 
men  would  knock  each  other's  heads  otf 
were  at  some  pains  to  find  out  "how  the 
light  came  out."' 

•    •    • 

Little  interest  was  felt  in  the  contests 
between  the  smaller  fiT  that  followed 
the  big  fight,  but  after  people  had 
heard  the  result  of  the  big  one  no  more 
attention  was  paid  to  Carson  City. 
Local  sports  who  followed  the  Associ- 
ated Press  reports  are  freely  express- 
ing the  opinion  that  the  fight  was  the 
best  ever  put  up. 

«    «    « 

The  Ski  club  finished  its  season  last 
Sunday,  and  its  members  are  hoping 
that  next  season  will  liring  as  much 
snow  for  the  hills,  or  for  one  or  two 
hills  at  leiist,  as  this  season  did. 
Though  short,  this  year's  ski  running 
has  been  a  great  success,  and  while  no 
big  jumps  have  been  as  good  or  bet- 
ter than  ordinary,  the  club  feels 
well  satisfit  fl  with  the  season.  Interest 
in  skis  has  been  aroused  not  only 
among  the  genus  small  boy.  l)ut 
among  all  grailes  of  society.  Kach  ski 
running  was  witnessed  t>y  large  crowds, 
and  many  have  adopted  the  sport. 
Next  season  will  see  it  made  <me  of  the 

most  prominent  sports  of  Duluth. 
«    •    « 

The  winners  at  last  Sunday's  run- 
ning were  presented  with  the  prizes  at 
a  dance  given  Monday  night  at  Centfal 
hall.  Ralf  Hanson  made  the  highest 
average  for  three  jumps,  thirty  feet 
eleven  inches.  S.  Deily  the  second  with 
twenty-eight  feet  ten  Inches.  M.  Olson 
third  with  twenty-.«ix  feet  three  inches, 
and  A.  Hognan  and  Christ  Storm  were 
next.  A  .Rognan  made  the  longest 
jump,  sixty-two  feet  ten  inches. 
•    •    * 

There  was  another  game  of  indoor 
baseball  at  the  Armory  Saturday  even- 
ing, and  again  the  Company  A  men 
■won  out,  this  time  by  a  score  of  10  to  6. 
The  game  was  intensely  interesting, 
however,  with  the  exception  of  the  first 
three  innings,  when  the  score  was  9 
to  3  in  favor  of  A.  The  A  boys  fell  to 
pieces  in  the  first  inning,  but  they 
picked  up  after  the  third  and  from  that 
time  on  the  A  club  made  but  one  more 
score  while  the  G  boys  picked  up  three. 


all  the  games  played  on  the  local  ground 
during  any  week,  and  he  need  never 
leave  his  business  till  3  or  3:30  o'clock 
In  the  afternoon. 

Unless  something  of  unusual  general 
interest  happens  to  attract  the  atten- 
tion of  the  .\merican  people  this  year— ^ 
as.  for  instance,  war  with  Spain— there 
is  !?ver>-  reason  to  believe  that  the  .sea^ 
son  of  1897  will  be  one  of  notable  suc- 
cess in  the  baseball  world.  The  Na- 
tional league  expects  to  find  its  banner 
season  this  year,  and  the  rule  has  been 
that  success  or  disappointment  in  thf? 
major  body   affects   the  minor  leagues 

and  associations  in  a  similar  manner. 

*  •    • 

Young  Joe  Corbett  doe's  not  have  to 
rely  upon  the  fact  that  he  Is  the 
br  ither  of  "'I'onipadour"  Jim  for  fame 
in  the  sporting  world.  Joe  is  fast  gain- 
inir  a  reputation  of  his  own,  which 
will  rival  that  of  his  big  brother.  Joe's 
ao'iivements  as  a  l)aseball  pitcher 
during  the  past  season  have  been  her- 
alded all  over  the  continent,  and  he  is 
generally  acknowledged  to  be  the  com- 
ing •■phen(jni."  He  was  born  in  San 
Francisco  and  is  in  his  twenty-first 
year.  He  learned  what  he  knows  about 
baseball   during  his  school  days. 

Joe  began  his  professional  career  on 
th-'  diamond  with  the  Baltimores, 
pitching  five  full  games  for  that  star 
aggregation,  lie  was  assigned  to  the 
;  bix  in  the  game  against  Louisville, 
I  wbich  settled  the  pennant  and  cham- 
pi'nship  race.  lialtimore  won  with  a 
sc'tre  of  2  to  1.  The  Louisvilles  got 
but  six  hits  off  Corbett  in  that  memor- 
able game,  and,  what  was  equally  to 
hi.-^  credit,  the  clever  young  San  Fran- 
ciscan struck  out  six  men.  Ct)rbett 
has    signed    to    play    with       Baltimore 

again  this  year  at  an  increased  salary. 

•  •    • 

The  arrangements  'or  the  visit  of  a 
team  of  Philadelphia  cricketers  to 
England  early  next  season  are  now 
practically  completed,  and  the  com- 
m'ttee  is  simply  awaiting  the  arrival 
of  May  26,  when  the  players  leave  on 
the  St.  Paul.  The  team  that  has  been 
selected    to    m  -p    trip    is,    in    the 

opinion  of  the  committee,  the  strongest 
that  could  possibly  be  chosen,  and 
with  the  possible  exception  of  E.  W. 
Clark.  Jr..  all  the  men  will  be  able  to 
go.  Mr.  Clark  is  still  on  the  doubtful 
list,  and  if  compelled  to  decide  now 
wliether  he  could  go  or  not.  would 
undoubtedly  reply  in  the  negative.  The 
committee,  it  is  un<Ierstood.  will  not 
press  for  his  decision  until  the  end  of 
Ajiril,  and  unless  something  unfore- 
seen occurs  in  ■  "le,  it  is 
h'ped  his  reply  may  'hen  prove  satis- 
fa<tory.  Indecl,  he  is  so  valuable  to 
the  team,  both  as  a  bowler  and  bats- 
min,  that  his  declination  would  ma- 
terially affect  the  chances  of  the 
el-ven.  It  will  be  remembered  that  in 
tht'  international  matches  last  fall  he 
sciired  consistently  throughout.  and 
al?o,  at  times,  proved  invaluable  as  a 
bowler,  while  on  the  last  trip  made  by 
th-»  Philadelphia  cricketers  to  Eng- 
land he  secured  the  third  best  batting 
average. 

•    •    • 

James  A.  Murphy, 
\N  ho  purchased  Star 
Was  the  former  i)artner 
fer  in  the  Chicago  pool 


SHE  WANTED  WORK. 

How  the  Subject  of  This  Pic- 
ture Talked. 

New  York,  March  17. — This,  or  some- 
thng  like  it,  is  the  way  the  colonel  in 
chxrge  of  the  Salvation  Army  labor 
bureau  describes  the  peculiarities  of 
th'  servant  girl  of  the  period,  when  the 
do  )r  is  pushed  <»pen  and  enter  an  elder- 
ly woman,  with  a  sort  of  self-satisfied 
timidity  th&t  finds  ilts  expression  in  her 
wi  Iking  sideways  to  the  cokjnel's  desk 
ard  taking  a  sea^  in  a  wooden  chair 
Ju  it  under  his  nose. 

Well,  mother,  what  can  wo  do  for 
yoa?"  asks  the  colonel,  to  begin  wtih. 

■  Indade,  thin,  most  onythin'g.  Oi  want 
w«  rk." 

What  kind  of  work?" 

■  Most  onythink  around  the  house." 

■  What,  for  instance?" 

Phwell.  Oi  flon't  loiko  t'  wash  or 
oil  on,  an'  Oi  don't  care  much  about 
sweepin'  or  washin'  wlndys." 

■  Then,  what  will  you  do'/" 

•  Oh,  OI  loike  f  cook." 

■  Can  you  do  fancy  cooking?" 

'  Phwell,  Oi've  done  it  in  me  day. 
Ffiith,  no  wan  better." 

■  How  many  can  you  cook  for?" 

"How  many,  is  it?    Oh,  Oi've  cooked 
fei   big  noombers." 
'  Can  you  cook  for  twenty?" 

■  Oi  dimno,"  hesitatingly. 
Can  you  cook  for  ten?" 

■  Indade,  Oi  moight." 

■  How  old  are  you?" 

•  Sixty,  come  th'  ind  av  Lint,  an'  divil 
a    ie  in  it." 

■  .Are  you  married  or  single?" 

•  Vis." 

•  Single?" 

'  Indade.   Oi'm   not.  "  ^ 

'  Married,   then?" 

'  .\n'  who  tould  yez?  An'  he  was  a 
foitie  mon,  an'  it's  .sorra  th'  day  thot  Oi 
lost  him.  Av  he  wuz  aloive  now  its 
noL  his  widely  would  be  lukin'  fer 
w(  rruk  in  th'  city  av  New  York  this 
day.    .\h.  me!" 

•  What  countrywoman  are  you?" 

■  Oi've  been  in  .\meriky  most  all  me 
loife." 

■  Yes:  but  you  were  not  born  hen, 
wt  re  you?" 

■  Oi  wuz  not.    Oi'm  a  Scotchwoman." 
"Where  were  you  born?" 

■  In  th'  Norl'  av  Oireland." 

'  Well,  but  you  see,  mother,  there  is  a 
gr -at  deal  of  young  blood  in  the  markc  i. 
Aid  people  like  young  women  for  ser- 
vaats." 

Oh,  thin.  Oi  kin  do  ez  much  ez  mony 


Royal  Family  oF  That  King 

dom   Is   Sturdy   and 

Capable. 


Kinfi   George   Has    Reigned 

Now    For    Thirty-Four 

Prosperous  Years. 


Some  Description  oF  Various 

Members  oF  the  Royal 

Family. 


Of  all  the 
<*l  e  there  is 
e<]uippecl   for 


reigning  families  in  Eur- 
none  that  is  so  well 
the  duties  of  royaJty  as 
that  of  Greece.  Mentally,  as  well  as 
physically,  the  sons  of  King  George 
are  superic'r  to  the  scions  of  every 
ether  dynasty  in  the  old  world;  and, 
while  the  sovereign  himself  is  report- 
ed, after  more  than  thirty  years'  ten- 
ure of  the  throne,  to  be  suffering  from 
kidney  troubles,  yet  the  latter  inter- 
feres so  little  with  his  administration 
of  the  affairs  of  his  kingdom  that  it 
may  be  questioned  whether  the  ail- 
ment is  not  imaginai.v,  and  devised 
for  the  purpose  of  afioiding  to  his  ma- 
jesty an  opportunity,  as  well  as  an 
ocuse,  for  spendinv  a  ivw  gay  weeks 
every  year  at  Aix-le-Bains  and  at 
Paris. 

Prince  George,  the  sailor  son  of  the 
kirg,  who  is  in  command  of  the  Hel- 
li  nic  sciuadron  in  Cretan  waters,  is  the 
Aiiak  of  old-world  royalty,  surpassing 


a  Chica.gi>  banker. 

Pointer  for  $l."..t;()(t. 
of  D.  T.  Pul.^^i- 
rooin  business. 


»   ■  11     *      I         1   ■■   I 


>"  J*        '  ( '»  »■ 


The  game  of  indoor  baseball  was 
started  rather  late  in  the  season  to  be- 
come popular,  but  it  has  popular  ele- 
ments as  a  winter  game,  and  the  games 
this  winter  will  undoubtedly  plant  the 
seeds  which  will  grow  into  a  popular 
passion  for  the  game. 

•  •    • 

What  has  long  been  threatened  has 
taken  place,  and  the  Y.  M.  C.  .A.,  gym- 
nasium has  a  woman's  class.  This  has 
been  attemptecl  at  (fivers  times  before, 
but  never  until  now  has  it  reached 
completion.  The  Y.  M.  C.  A.  now  has  a 
full-fledged  class  of  young  wom^n  bent 
upon  physical  improvement,  and  the 
class  is  very  enthusiastic  and  very  ear- 
nest. The  idea  is  a  most  excellent  one, 
as  the  benefits  of  physical  exercise  are, 
it  is  to  be  supposed,  as  great  to  women 
as  they  are  to  men.  The  class  will 
start  in  with  light  exercises  such  as 
free  work,  club  and  dumbbell  work, 
etc.  Tuesday  afternoons  from  2:30  to  | 
4  o'dcK-k  will  probably  be  devoted  to  i 
the  women's  class. 

•  «    » 

The  High  School  Basket  Rail  team 
has  acreptc^d  a  challenge  from  the  Y. 
M.  C.  A.  team,  and  the  game  will  take 

place  at  the  Y.  M.  C.  A.  tr.night. 

«    *    « 

Th»-    ba.seball   season    which    is   alxiut 
to   begin    is   the   tw.  nty-seci>nd   of    the 
National   league  anci   the  twenty-ninth 
of  professional  playing;.     In  th»-se  years 
the  wr»nderful  stricles  which  the  nation- 
al   game   has  made   into  th»^   hearts  <>f 
th^  .American  people  is  hard  to  compie-  i 
hend  without  taking  up  the  figures  and 
record?.     Last  year  seventy-two  of  the  j 
principal  cities  in  the  Union  supported  | 
clubs  and   teams   w hich   played   in   the  i 
one  c-entral  organization  of  the  national  | 
agreement,  all  governt-d  hy  the  laws  ot  ' 
that   instrument.    There  can   never   be 
any  other  out  of  door  sport  maintained 
professionally   in     one-third     of     those 
cities.    This  year  the  great  baseball  cir- 
cuit will  be  no  less  extensive  and  com- 
prehensive.    Hard  times    and    exciting 
public   tf»pics     may     hold     the     "noble 
rage"   in   check,   but   it   cannot   lie  up- 
rooted from  the  hearts  of  Uncle  Sam'.o 
children. 

There  was  a  slight  setback  to  the 
game  last  year,  due  without  any  doubt 
to  the  unusual  interest  which  pervades 
the  country  during  a  presidential  cam- 
paign. Hard  times  were  advanced  by 
Rom?  to  explain  the  slight  falling  off 
in  the  support  of  the  game  during  1896, 
but  that  theory  is  not  supported  by  the 
record  of  years.  Some  of  the  most 
prosperous  baseball  seasons  have  come 
in  years  when  there  was  the  greatest 
commercial  depression.  The  explana- 
tion of  this  is  that  when  money  is 
scarce  more  people  are  compelleci  to 
stay  at  home  during  tha  summer 
months.  A  greater  number  of  clerks 
and  employc»s  can  be  sparcfl  from  busi- 
ness during  such  dull  periods  In  tracle. 
Few  feel  so  poor  as  to  Uf  unable  to  ^it 
out  to  s^e  a  baseball  ganie  oticc  or  twice 
a  week  or  every  day.  To  go  to  the  race 
track  costs  from  $2  to  |o.  without  any 
betting  being  indulged  in.  and  the  loss 
of  halt  a  day  in  time.  To  attend  a  the- 
ater means  the  company  of  a  lady  and 
an  expenditure  of  from  $2  to  )5  each 
time.    For  the  sum  of  $Z  one  caji  see 


The  owner  of  Robert  J.  and  John  R. 
Gentry  has  also  been  advanced  to  the 
bankei-s'  class  when  he  became  a  mil- 
lionaire, but  if  it  were  not  for  his  money 
he  would  probably  still  be  known  by 
his  Wall  .street  classification  of  bucket 
shop  keeper.  Mr.  Murphy  perhaps  did 
not  get  any  great  bargain  in  Star  Point- 
er, game  horse  as  he  undoubtedly  is. 
There  are  chances  to  be  taken  with  him 
that  have  not  to  be  considered  in  con- 
nectlcm  with  any  other  of  the  five  star 
pp.cers.  John  R.  Gentry.  Robert  J..  Joe 
Piitchen  and  Frank  Agan  are  all  sound. 
Star  Pointer  is  a  more  or  less  patched- 
up  horse.  He  broke  in  his  second  race 
in  1S94  and  had  to  be  retired  for  the 
rest  of  the  season.  Although  he  was 
unbeaten  all  during  1S95,  he  was  lame 
the  greater  part  of  that  year  and  has 
jogged  lame  at  times  since  then. 

Mr.  Murphy  chose  to  take  the 
chances.  And  as  he  is  a  close  obser- 
ver and  a  thoroughly  practical  horse- 
man, the  condition  of  the  pacer's  legs 
must  have  suited  him.  Mr.  Murphy  has 
been  a  great  admirer  of  the  horse  for 
two  years,  and  at  one  time  last  season 
made  an  effort  to  l>uy  him,  but  the 
price  was  placed  at  $10,000,  and  as  the 
sin  of  Brown  Hal  had  not  shown  his 
transcendent  form  the  .Chicago  man 
declined  to  pay  it.  That  he  gave  $6.">00 
more  for  him  last  week  shows  how  Star 
Pointer  has  appreciated  since  in  his 
new  owner's  estimation. 


Blue  Bell  II.. 
Lee's  book  of 


The  celebrated  beagle, 
referred  to  in  Rawdon  B. 
the  dog  as  the  mi>st  perfect  of  his  breed 
ever  exhibited,  dicHl  recently  in  New 
York.  Blue  Bell  carried  all  before  her 
on  the  show  bench  in  England,  and 
maintained  her  prestige  cm  this  side. 
She  was  the  daughter  of  the  English 
champion  Itingsvood.  many  of  whose 
sons  and  daughters  have  been  imported 
to  this  couniry  and  gained  honors  at 
dog  shows.  r,lue  Mell  was  a  small,  bluc- 
niottlcd  hound  of  the  most  i)erfect 
symmetry  and  outline,  and  excelling  in 
front,  neck  and  shouldc-is,  properties 
in  whi<h  tln'  large  majority  of  her 
breed  are  defective.  Shc»wn  in  p]ngland 
as  far  back  as  1SS7,  and  exhibited  in 
this  country  in  1S90,  she  was  never  de- 
feated. Her  greatest  vic-tory  was  when 
she  received  thc^  blue  ribbon  over  chani- 
I)ion  Lonely,  at  Southampton,  England. 
I»nely  subsequently  came  to  this  coun- 
try, and.  in  the  absence  of  Blue  I  tell, 
has  swept  the  boards.  Apart  from  her 
excellencies  from  a  show  point  of  view. 
Blue  Bell  was  one  of  the  keenest  work- 
ers that  could  be  found.  On  one  occa- 
sion she  ran  into  a  hare  after  sticking 
to  his  scent  over  twelve  miles  of  coun- 
try. She  was  also  perfectly  broken  to 
ferrets,  and  on  the  other  side  enjoyed 
a  day's  ratting  with  terriers  as  much 
a.^  the  terriers  themselves. 


The  evening  paper  Is  always  care- 
fully read,  especially  in  the  home  circle, 
ard  is  therefore  an  excellent  advertis- 
ing medium.  Advertisers  in  The  Even- 
ing   Herald  always  get  full  value. 


a  yoimg  one.  an'  mebbc  more.  Tliiin 
young  gals  now  imly  t'ink  about  eoori- 
in'  an'  spliu^hin'  about  in  foliie  elotlus 
an'  c-uttin'  uo  Ibeir  didoes  at  Coney's 
Oisland.  But  oi'm  ready  t'  do  me 
wurruk,  'cent  wance  in  a  whoilc  whin 
OI  loike  t'  take  me  bft  av  pleasure  in 
Central  Park  whin  th'  qualitv  is  all 
tbere." 

'What   church    do   you    go    to — c'ath- 
olic?" 

"Oi  do  not,    Oi'm  a  Scotch  Presbyter- 
ian." 

■f)h;  fire  and  brimstone." 

"Oh,  Oi  dunno.     There's  others." 

The  colcinel  was  so  astonished  at  this 

bit   of  up-to-date  slang  from   the   aged 

woman's  lips  that  he  stopped  catechiz- 

Irg,  put  down  her  name  and  what  she 

her    to    come    in    on 

would   try   to   place 


wanted,  and  told 
Monday,  when  he 
her. 

The  aged  woman 
ftilly.    and    with   a 


thanked  him  grace.- 
bow    that    smacked 


semewhat  of  the  old-fashioned  courtesy 
SMiled  and  withdrew. 


CATARRH 


A  LOCAL 

DISEASE 

A  CLIMATIC 

AFFECTION. 

NotbiDK  but:  a  loeal 
romndy  or  cbaD^n  of 
climate  will  euro  it. 

Get  a  well-known 

pharmaceatieal 

remedy, 

Ely's  Cream  Balm 

It  isqnickly  absorbed 
Oivep  reli-f  at  ooc. 
Opens  and  cleantee 

thn  nasal  pa««H(;A<>.  ^\M^m  ■«  >,.  ■  ■  ■■  a^i^ 
Ali.Hya  inflammation.  COLD 'N  HtAD 
Heals  aod  protects  the  VWI.1*  '  1 1  k/lV 
m»mbiane.  Restores  the  seaees  of  taste  and 
pitiell.  No  cocaine,  no  niercnrj-,  no  iDJarioas 
dr.ig.  FnUeiz3  50c,  trial  eize  10c.  at  diugKists 
or  by  mail. 

ELY  BBOTHEBS,  56  Wairen  St.,  New  lork. 


DOGS  .\TE  UP  THE  CHURCH. 
Bishop  Williams,  of  Marquette,  was 
n  cently  invited  to  serve  his  alma 
n-.ater,  Cornell  university,  as  university 
pieacher,  says  the  Troy  Times.  He  did 
so,  coming  straight  from  the  synod  of 
tl  e  Canadian  church  at  Winnipeg  and 
b  inging  this  story  with  him:  "There 
was  a  missionary  bishop  there,"  said 
Bishop  Williams,  "who  had  been  six 
weeks  in  coming,  most  of  the  way  by 
c;'noe.  He  rose  and  began  by  saying 
tliat  he  would  speak  for  himself  and 
f(  r  a  brother  bishop  who,  unfOrtunate- 
l.v.  could  not  be  present.  He  was  sorry 
t(  .say  that  his  brother's  dioces  had 
gone  to  the  dogs!  A  general  gloom 
fl  llowed  these  words.  He  went  on  to 
s;y  that  the  bishop  had  found  so  many 
irquirers  after  religion  among  the  Es- 
Tiimaux,  north  of  Hud.'^on  bay,  that  ht 
h  id  to  build  a  church.  As  there  was  no 
wood,  he  used  whale's  ribs  for  rafters, 
cf  vering  them  with  tanned  walrus  hide, 
a;id  so  made  a  church  to-  hold  eighty 
persons.  'All  went  merry  as  a  mar- 
riage beir  for  a  time,  until— the  dogs 
j  grew  famished  and  ate  the  church." 


ii:  st;iture,  weight  and  muscle  c-very 
other  priiicc>  ot  the  blood  in  Europe, 
says  ii  writer  in  the  New  York  Tri- 
bune. He  is  devoted  to  athletic  sports, 
and  was  csne  of  the  principal  organi:!- 
ers  of  the  levival  of  the  <  Hynipic  games 
at  -Mhens.  When  he  was  in  ,lapan  with 
his  cousin,  the  present  czar  of  Uiissia, 
I.e  tMKloul'teflly  sjived  the  latter's  life 
by  felling  to  the  ground  with  a  blow 
of  his  slick  the  fanati*-  who,  having 
aln  ady  struck  on<'e  at  Nicholas  of 
Icussia,  with  his  heav.v.  keen-edged 
sword,  was  in  the  act  of  delivering  a 
sc-eond  sti"oke. 

Prince  George's  stick  is  a  familiar 
<^ibject  to  the  members  of  the  courts  of 
Athens,  St.  Petersburg  and  Copen- 
hagen. It  is  of  gigantic  size  and 
veight,  was  cut  especially  by  the 
prince  in  the  woods  around  Poros,  the 
naval  arsenal  of  Greece,  and  resembles 
those  pieces  of  timber  which  cane 
and  umbrella  dealers  display  in  front 
of  their  stores  or  in  shop  windows  for 
purposes  of  advertisement.  This  stick 
was  the  despair  formerly  of  George's 
family  and  attendants,  who  repeatedly 
urged  him  to  abandon  it  fcjr  a  less  con- 
snicuous  and  less  Goliath-like  cane. 
This,  however,  the  prince  refused  to 
do,  and  even  in  the  act  of  bidding 
adieu  to  his  father  before  his  departure 
fm*  the  far  Ea.st  with  his  cousin,  he 
resolutely  declined  to  leave  it  behind, 
declaring  that  it  was  his  "mascot." 
(  n  the  occasion  of  his  visit  to  St. 
Petersburg,  after  his  return  from  the 
f">rlent  by  way  of  the  United  States, 
the  late  czar  managed  to  have  it  ab- 
stracted from  the  effects  of  his  young 
leiative,  but,  subsequently  sent  it  af- 
ter him  to  Athens,  magnificently 
motinted  in  gold  and  precious  stones, 
and  adorned  with  a  jeweled  inscrip- 
tion <<msisting  of  the  words:  "To 
Prince  George,  for  valor."  It  would  be 
interesting  to  ascertain  whether  the 
prince  has  this  "mascot"  with  him  on 
hi.s  present  expedition,  for  it  is  diffi- 
cult to  imagine  any  Russian  admiral, 
or  captain,  or  even  sailor,  raising  a 
finger  against  it  owner. 

It  may  be  added  that  Prince  George 
has  many  another  act  of  gallantry  to 


i^ 


1 

m 

1 

1 

/ 

1 

h'f.i. 


his  credit  beside  the  preservation  of 
the  life  of  his  Russian  cousin.  Two 
years  ago,  when,  during  the  course  of 
a  terrible  hurricane  raging  in  the  bay 
of  Piraeus,  the  waves  caused  a  boat  to 
capsize  in  which  a  sailor  was  attempt- 
ing to  reach  his  ship.  Prince  George 
SI  rang  Into  the  angry  sea  without  a 
moment's  hesitation,  seized  the  sailor, 
and  after  considerable  difficulty  suc- 
ceeded in  bringing  him  within  reach 
of  one  of  the  ironclads,  where  he  was 
able  to  grasp  hold  of  the  ropes  which 
were  thrown  to  him,  and  to  fasten  one 
of  them  around  the  body  of  the  entire- 
ly exhausted  man. 

Prince  George  has  four  brothers,  of 
whom  two  are  mere  boys,  while  the 
other  two — Constantine  and  Nicholas- 
are  grown  up.  Nicholas  is  a  stalwart 
V'ung  artillery  officer,  not  such'  a 
Hi-rcules  as  his  sailor  brother,  but  still 
al'ove  the  average  height  and  weight. 
H«?  la  popular  in  French  military 
ci "Cles,  and  is  much  like  in  England, 
where  he  has  spent  a  good  deal  of 
time  with  his  uncle  and  aunt,  the 
prince  and  princess  of  Wales,  who  are 
w;irmly  attached  to  him.  He  is  at  the 
present  moment  on  the  Turkish  fron- 
tier of  his  father's  kingdom,  ready  to 
defend  it  against  any  invasion  by  the 
troops  of  the   sultan. 

Constantine  is  the  eldest  of  the  broth- 
er.s.  and  has  already  achieved  consider- 
able distinction  and  fame  for  his  deci- 
sion of  character  and  for  the  masterly 
way  in  which  he  has  dealt  with  difficul- 
ties of  one  kind  and  another  that  have 
cropped  up  durin'g  the  annual  absences 
of  his  father,  when  he  is  invariably  in- 
trusted with  the  regency  of  the  king- 
dom. Married  to  a  sister  of  the  German 
emperor,  with  whom,  however,  ho  has 
net  been  on  speaking  terms  for  three 
years — in  fact,  ever  since  his  wife  aban- 
doned the  Lutheran  church  to  join  the 
Cieek  national  faith — he  is  probably  the 
m^'st  popular  member  of  his  family 
with  his  father's  subjects.  He  seems  to 
have  his  finger  on  the  public  pulse,  to 
appreciate  the  drift  of  nubile  opinion 
ar.d  to  understand  the  signs  of  the 
times.  On  several  occasions,  when  the 
government  of  the  day  has  attempted 
to  enforce  measures  that  were  both  un- 
popular and  Impolitic,  he  has  interfered 
as  the  champion  of  the  people,  and. 
brushing  aside  all  obstacles  raised  i)y 
the  ministers  for  the  sake  of  the  selfish 
advantage  of  their  i)arty,  has  made 
hi  iiself  the  defender  of  the  interests  of 
the  nation  at  large.  It  was  thus  that 
hi  brought  about  the  fall  of  the  Tri- 
coupls  cabinet  two  years  ago,  on  which 
occasion  there  was  a  great  outcry  made 
by  the  friends  of  the  fallen  premier  to 
the  effect  that  Constantine  had  violated 
the  restrictions  environing  his  office  as 
crown  prince;  but  subsequent  events, 
and  in  particular  the  general  election 
that  followed  shortly  afterward,  fur- 
ni-;hed  convincing  proof  that,  even  if  he 
hi'cl  exceeded  the  limit  prescribed  by 
ct  nstitutional  etiquet,  he  had  at  anv 
rate  known  how  to  gauge  the  national 
fe-ling,  and  to  act,  not  only  in  accord- 
ar.ce  with  the  wishes  of  the  people,  but 
al^o  for  their  welfare. 

The  Greeks  are  a  warlike  people,  with 
their  heads  full  of  dreams  of  the  re- 
vival of  all  the  former  grandeur  and 
gl  iry  of  the  ancient  Hellenic  empire. 
Thc^so  are  shared  by  tli^  crown  prince, 
WHO  is  a  soldier  to  the  core  and  ex- 
tr-  mely  ambitious.  Moreover,  he  is  a 
firm  l>eliever  in  the  truth  of  the  <jld 
national  prophecy  to  the  effect  that 
tinder  the  reign  at  Athens  of  a  Con- 
stantine and  of  a  Sophia  the  Eastern 
ei;ipire  shall  be  called  itito  life  iigaiii, 
arul  the  cross  restored  to  the  dome  of 
St.  Sophia  at  Constantinople  in  place 
of  the  crescent,  by  which  that  venerable; 
fane  is  now  surmounted.  The  crown 
l)iince's  name  is  Constantine,  while  his 
consort's  name  is  Sophia.  By  marria.ge 
he  has  become  a  grandson  of  Queen 
Victoria  and  a  brother-in-law  of  the 
emperor  of  Germany,  while  not  only  is 
his  mother  cme  of  the  most  patriotic 
daughters  of  the  reigning  house  of  Rus- 
si.i,  but  he  himself  is  (through  his 
father,  a  Vnother  of  the  widowecl  czar- 
ina) a  first  cousin  and  intimate  friend 
of  young  Czar  Nicholas.  It  is  not,  there- 
fore, so  very  improbable  that  when  the 
time  comes  for  the  Turk  to  be  bundled 
bag  and  baggage  out  of  Europe  the 
posvers  should  pitch  upon  Constantine 
of  Greece  as  the  most  suitable  person 
in  every  respect  to  succeed  the  sultan 
at  Constantinople,  which  international 
jealousies  would  prevent  any  one  of  the 
great  powers  from  retaining  in  its  own 
hands. 

Queen  Olga  of  Greece  is  the  only  petti- 
cc-ated  admiral  in  the  world.  There  are 
queens,  empresses  and  princesses  of  the 
blood  who  hold  the  rank  of  colonel  of 
cavalry  and  infantry,  and  not  only  is 
Queen  Victoria  the  chief  commanding 
officer  of  the  crack  regiment  of  dra- 
gocms  in  the  German  army,  but  she  has 
e\  t-n  been  known  to  review  her  own 
troops  at  Aldershot  arrayed  in  the  gold 
embroidered  scarlet  tunic  of  a  general, 
with  emblems  of  that  rank  aclornin-g 
her  shoulder  straps,  cuffs  and  collar. 
Queen  Olga  of  Greece,  however,  is  the 
only  she  admiral  in  creaticm,  and  owes 
11  is  unu.sual  distinction  to  the  late  czar, 
who  attached  her  in  that  honorary  ca- 
pacity to  his  Mediterranean  fleet.  The 
queen  is  passionately  fond  of  the  seti. 
u;ses  her  yachts  as  constantly  as  other 
w  omen  do  their  carriages,  and  enjo.vs 
nothing  so  much  as  a  stiff  breeze.  She 
has  passed  with  flying  colors  the  ex- 
amination required  in  order  to  secure 
the  diploma  of  a  full-fledged  sailing 
master,  and  is  certainly  infinitely  belt-.^r 
equipped  from  a  professional  point  of 
view  for  the  grade  of  admiral  than  her 
sister  sovereigns  are  ciualified  for  their 
colonelcies  in  the  army. 

It  must  not,  however,  be  for  one  mo- 
iiient  imagined  that  Queen  Olga's  en- 
tire existence  is  sjient  on  the  ocean 
wave.  A  very  great  portion  of  her  time 
is  devoted  to  pliilanthro)>y,  and  not  a 
day  passes  in  which  she  does  not  de- 
vot<'  at  least  a  couple  of  hours  to  the 
great  Evangelismos  hospital  at 
.Xthens.  which  she  created  and  which 
she  manages  in  person.  She  super- 
vises everything,  and  each  contribution 
to  the  fund  of  the  institution,  no  mat- 
ter hciw  insignificant,  jiasses  through 
her  hands  before  rc^aching  the  treasury, 
while,  no  matter  how  busy,  she  makes 
a  !>oint  of  writing  in  her  own  hand  an 
acknowledgment  for  each  donation  re- 
ceived. It  is  needless  to  add  that  she 
vists  the  sick,  especially  those  who,  be- 
ing of  foreign  birth,  feel  themselves 
a:>andoned  in  a  strange  land;  and,  as 
an  instance  of  her  kindness  of  heart, 
it  may  be  mentioned  that  she  invari- 
ady  keeps  on  hand  a  supply  of  earth 
brought  from  Russia  for  the  purpose 
of  sprinkling  on  the  coffin  of  those  of 
h-^r  compatriots  who  die  in  Greece.  Not 
only  the  Evangelismos  hospital,  but 
every  other  charitable  institution  in 
the  Hellenic  kingdom,  owes  its  origin 
and  foundation  to  this  excellent  queen, 
w  ho  is  a  daughter  of  the  late  Grand 
Puke  Constance  Nicolaewitch  of  Rus- 
sia, and  a  sister  therefore  of  the  dis- 
graced Grand  Duke  Constance,  who  for 
twenty  years  has  been  confined  as  a 
ciose  prisoner  in  one  of  the  Asiatic 
fortresses  of  the  czar  for  stealing  the 
j(  wel^  of  his  mother  of  the  imperial 
chapel  of  St.  Petersburg  in  order  to 
present  them  to  the  Philadelphia  ad- 
venturess,  Mrs.   Hattie   Blackford. 

Only  one  of  Queen  Olga's  two  pretty 
d.iughters  survives.  Princess  Alexandra 
having  died  under  tragic  circumstan- 
c<'S  at  Moscow  a  little  over  a  year  after 
lu-r  marriage  to  the  (irand  Duke  Paul. 
It  is  i>robably  due  to  the  domestic  mis- 
eries which  preceded  the  death  of  this 
universally  beloved  princess  that  King 
George  and  his  consort  are  so  reluctant 
to  fix  the  day  for  the  marriage  of  their 
remaining  daughter.  Princess  Marie, 
to  the  Grand  Dyke  George  of  Russia, 
to  whom  she  is  affianced. 

In  conclusion.  It  may  be  said  that 
King  George,  -who  is  a  son  of  the  king 


.If 


What  More  Can  be  A^ked? 

Only  this :  ask  your  grocer  for  it,  and  insist  on  trying  it.    Largest  padiage— greatest  economy . 
THE    N.    K.    FAIRBANK    COMPANY. 

Chicago,  St.  Louis,  New  York,  Boston,  PhUa-lelpbia. 


of  Denmark,  was  serving  under  the 
name  of  Prince  Willi.am  on  board  an 
English  man-of-war  in  the  lowly  ca- 
pacity of  midshipman  at  the  tiine  of 
his  elc^ction  to  the  throne  of  Greece. 
Indeed,  he  was  up  aloft,  mastheaded 
by  way  of  punishment  for  some  piece 
of  mischief  or  other,  at  the  very  time 
wiien  the  representatives  of  the  Athens 
government,  as  well  as  of  the  great 
powers  which  guaranteed  the  integrity 
and  independence  of  Greece,  arrived  on 
board  to  hail  him  as  king  of  the  Hel- 
lenes, an  honor  for  which  he  was  total- 
ly unprepared.  This  took  place  a  little 
over  34  years  ago,  and  ever  since  that 
time  the  ex-midshipman  has  adminis- 
tered the  government  of  his  turbulent 
little  kingdom  with  rare  sagacity,  and 
with  advantage,  not  only  to  his  adopt- 
ed people,  but  also  to  himself.  For, 
from  having  been  almost  penniless  at 
the  time  of  his  accession  to  the  crown, 
he  enjoys  the  reputation  today  of  be- 
ing one  of  the  wealthiest  princes  in 
Christendom. 

Since  the  Tribune's  article  appeared, 
it  is  reported  that  Queen  Olga  has  re- 
fused to  keej)  the  honorary  position 
of  admiral  of  the  Russian  navy  because 
of  the  recent  hostile  demonstration  of 
Russia  together  with  the  other  powers 
in  the  Cretan  trouble. 


NOTICE. 


EXCAVATIONS  AT  ATHENS. 
Our  Athens  correspondent  writes 
that  the  excavations  carried  out  by 
the  Greek  Archaoelogical  society  on 
the  northwest  slope  of  the  Akropolis 
have  led  to  some  interesting  discover- 
ies, says  the  London  Times.  Above 
the  Klepsydra  or  well  mentioned  by 
Pausanias  are  two  caverns  which  have 
been  generally  identified  as  the  grot- 
toes of  Apollo  and  Pan.  The  excava- 
tions have  revealed  two  other  larger 
and  deeper  caverns  connected  by  an 
aT'crture,  This  was  undoulttedly  the 
shrine  of  Pan  in  which  Myrrhina  (Aris- 
tophanes, Lysistrata)  r>roposed  to 
Kinesias  that  their  marriage  rites 
should  bo  celebrated.  A  little  to  the 
northeast  has  been  discovered  a  flight 
of  steps  cut  in  the  rock  and  apparent- 
ly leading  to  th*  summit  of  the  preci- 
pi  e.  The  steps  can  be  traced  to  the 
b£ise  of  a  buttress  of  mereval  ma.sonry 
which  supports  the  wall  of  Cimon. 
The  upper  portion  of  staircase,  which 
lies  within  the  wall,  was  discovered 
by  M,  Kavvadias  in  ISSfi.  It  now  ap- 
pears certain  that  these  are  the  steps 
by  which  the  Persians  scaled  the  Akro- 
polis, and  it  also  sems  probable  that 
this  was  the  passage  by  which  the 
Ai'rhephoroe  or  sacred  virgins  made 
their  annual  dc^scent  to  the  precincts 
of  .Aphrodite,  bearing  cm  their  heads 
the  sacred  vessels  of  Athena. 


Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  under- 
signed have  been  duly  appointed  by  the 
common  council  of  the  city  of  Duluth 
as  commissioners  in  condemnation  pro- 
ceedings for  the  purpose  of  viewing  the 
premises  and  assessing  the  damages 
which  may  be  occasioned  by  the  taking 
of  private  property  for  the  purpose  of 
acquiring  a  right-of-way  by  the  city 
of  Duluth  for  a  force  main  for  water- 
works, from  the  pump  house  now  in 
process  of  erection  on  lot  1,  section 
township  51  north,  range  13  west, 
Lester  river.  The  property  to 
acquired  being  as  follows,  to-wit: 


35, 
to 
be 


PROFESSIONAL  READERS. 
Public  men  who  are  c-alled  upon  to 
speak  frequently  on  widely  different 
subjects  find  it  necessary,  as  a  rule,  to 
employ  someone  to  do  a  lot  of  discrim- 
inating reading  for  them,  and  there  are 
men  and  women  in  this  town  who  sup- 
port themselves  by  just  that  kind  ol' 
work,  says  the  New  York  ,Sun.  It  isn't 
their  business  to  write  the  speeches,  but 
to  prepare  a  mass  of  data  from  which 
their  employer  may  select  such  facts  as 
h»>  chooses  to  use  in  his  speech,  very 
much  in  the  same  way  that  law  clerks 
look  up  references  and  cases  for  the 
members  of  the  firm.  For  instance,  if 
a  man  is  going  to  make  a  speech  on 
the  Armenian  question,  and  he  has  not 
the  time  to  gather  data,  he  may  em- 
ploy one  of  these  professional  readers 
to  prepare  his  notes.  The  public  lib- 
raries' in  this  city  furnish  books,  and 
two  or  three  days'  work  by  a  discrimin- 
ating reader  will  supply  the  speakei- 
with  all  the  facts  that  he  may  need.  If 
required,  the  reader  will  also  write  the 
speech,  but  such  demands  usually  come 
from  suburban  districts. 


HOMESEEKERS'    EXCURSIONS. 

Homeseekers'  excursion  tickets  at 
half  fare  to  all  points  in  the  South, 
Southeast  and  Southwest  via  the  Min- 
neapolis &  St.  Louis  railroad.  Tickets  on 
sale  Feb.  2  and  16,  March  2  and  16,  April 
2  and  20,  anSd  Alay  4  and  18,  good  for 
twenty-one  days. 


In  the  PATHWAY 

of  the  Expectant 
Mother  dangers  lurk, 
and  should  be  avoided. 

"Mother's 
Friend" 

so  prepares  the  system 
for  the  change  taking 
place  that  the  final 
hour  is  robbed  of  all 
Danger.  Its  use  insures  safety  to  the 
life  of  both  mother  and  child,  and  makes 
child-birth  easy  and  recovery  more  rapid. 
"•Mother's  Friend'  is  the  greatest 
remedy  ever  put  on  the  market,  and  all 
our  customers  praise  it  highly." 

W.  H.  KING  &  CO.,  Whitewright,  Tex. 

Sent  by  Mail  on  receipt  of  price.  $1  PER  BOTTLE. 
Book  '"To  Expectant  Mothers"  mailed  free. 

The  bradfield  regulator  CO. ,  Atlanta,  Ga. 

SOLO  BY   ALL  DRUGGISTS. 


Bie  S  M  s  non>poi8onnui 
remedy     for    UuDorrli<va 
Gleet,  Spormatorrhnea 
Whites,  unnatural  cliO' 
charRes,  or  any  intlamina 
tion,  irritation   or  ulcera 
tion   of    ID  u  c  o  u  8    ni<  m 
brancs     Non-astrinpcnt 
Sold  by  DmiTKUt*, 
or  sent  in  plain  wrappoi 
by   ezpreeo,   prepeid,    foi 
tl.OO,  or  3  botiluH.  $2.7.^ 
Circular  sent  '>b  ra<«;>^' 


MADE  ME  A  MAN 

AJAX  TABLETS  POSTTrVELT  CURE 
A  t.1,  Nftvoum  IHsra»r»-~VM\ijiR  Mem- 
ory, I  mpotnijry,Sleeplei<sneH8,  etc.,  caused 
by  AbUHe  and  other  Excesses  and   Indis- 
cretionu.       They  quickly  ana,   iturflu 
restore  Lost  Vitality  in  old  or  }oanc,  and 
lit  a  man  foretudy,  busineMS  or  murrjai^, 
.-    Prevent    Insanity  und     ConBumption   if 
taken  in  time.  Their  nse  hhows   imnte'iirfta   improre- 
ment  and  effects  a  CURE  where  .'ill  othors  tail.    In- 
bist  upon  lijjvin;;  the  Kenuine  Ajax  Tablels     Thej 
havo  cured  thousands  and  will  cure  yon.    We  rfi»e  a 
positive  written  guarantae  to  effect  a  cure  In  each  case 
or  refund  the  money.    Price  50  cent*  i>er  package,  or 
eiipackanes  [full  treatment)   for  $2.50     By  mail, in 
plain  wrapper,  upon  receipt  of  price.    (Circular  free 

AJAX    REMEDV    CO.,   '"'SS^'^^'iS^- 

For  sale  In  Duluth  by  B.  P.  BOYCE.  8S) 
West  Sup«rior  Btreet  IfAX  WIRTrf.  U 
WMt  Supwlor  itTMt 


(1)  A  strip  of  land  66  feet  in  width, 
the  center  line  of  which  is  described  as 
follows. ,  to-wit:  Commencing  on  the 
northerly  boundaiT  line  of  a  tract  here- 
tofore deeded  to  the  city  of  Duluth  as 
a  site  for  a  pumping  station  for  water- 
works on  lot  1,  section  35,  township  51 
north,  range  1.3  west,  at  a  point  24.23  feet 
easterly  from  the  northwesterly  cor- 
ner of  said  tract  proceeding  thence 
northerly  on  a  line  parallel  with  the 
westerly  boundary  line  of  said  tract 
deeded  for  a  pumping  station,  a  dis- 
tance of  566  feet  to  a  point. 

(2)  A  strip  of  land  66  feet  in  width, 
the  center  line  of  which  is  described  as 
follows.  to-wit:  Commencing  at  a 
point  566  feet  northerly  from  the  north- 
erly line  of  the  tract  heretofore  deeded 
to  the  city  of  Duluth  for  a  pumping  sta- 
tion in  lot  1,  section  35-51-13,  measured 
on  a  line  parallel  with  the  prolonged 
westerly  line  of  said  tract,  and  24.2.3 
feet  distant  easterly  thereof;  thence 
proceeding  along  said  line  parallel  with 
the  westerly  line  of  said  tract.  150  feet 
to  the  right-of-way  of  the  Duluth  & 
Iron  Range  Railroad  company. 

(3)  A  strip  of  land  IC  feet  in  width, 
the  center  line  of  which  is  described  as 
follows,  to-wit.  Beginning  at  a  point 
715  feet  northerly  from  the  northerly 
boundary  line  of  the  tract  heretofore 
referred  to  as  having  been  deeded  to  th* 
city  of  Duluth  for  a  pumping  station 
and  measured  on  a  line  i)arallel  with 
the  prolonged  westerly  boundary  line 
of  said  tract,  and  24.23  feet  distant 
easterly  thereof;  thence  proceeding  in 
the  same  direction  and  parallel  with 
the  westerly  boundary  line  of  said  be. 
fore-mentioned  tract,  a  distance  of  100 

■  feet  to  a  point. 

j      (4)     A  strip  of  land  16   feet  in  width, 
I  the  center  line  of  which  is  described  as 
follows,     to-wit:      Commencing      at    a 
point  on  the  northerly  l)oundar>'  line  of 
I  the  Duluth  &  Iron  Range  railroad  right- 
I  of-way  on  a  line  parallel  with  the  pro- 
I  longed  westerly     boundary     line    of  a 
tract  heretofore  deeded  to  the  city  ot 
'  Duluth  as  a  site  for  the-  pumping  sta- 
tion and  24.23  feet  easterly  of  said  west- 
erly  boundary  line;   thence  proceeding 
in  the  same  direction  and  parallel  with 
the  westerly     boundary     line     of     said 
tr.act,  a  distance  of  120.34  feet  to  a  point. 
Thence  by  a  curve  to  the  left   with  a 
radius  of  73.3  feet  to  its  point  of  inter- 
section  with     the     \\esterly     boundary 
line    of   lot    1.    section    35,    township   51 
north,  range  13  west, 

(5)  A  strip  of  land  80  feet  in  width, 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  the 
right-of-way  of  the  Duluth  &  Iron 
Range  Railroad  company,  the  center 
line  of  Avhich  strip  is  240  feet  northerly 
from  and  parallel  with  the  center  linti 
of  said  railroad  right-of-way;  said  strip 
extending  from  the  northerly  to  the 
westerly  lines  of  lots  3  and  4,  and  the 
nwi4  of  the  sw%  of  section  34-51-13. 

(6)  A  strip  of  land  80  feet  wide, 
northerly  from  and  parallel  with  the 
center  line  of  the  right-of-way  of  the 
Duluth  &  Iron  Range  Railway  com- 
pany,  the  center  line  of  which  strip  is 
240  feet  northerly  from  and  parallel  with 
the  center  line  of  said  railroad  right-of- 
way,  .said  strip  extending  from  the  east- 
erly to  the  southerly  lines  of  the  se^i  ot 
the  se«4  of  section  33,  township  51  north, 
range  13  west. 

(7)  .\  strip  of  land  SO  feet  in  width 
nurthcrl.v  frum  and  parall<*l  with  the 
(•filter  of  the  right-of-way  of  the  Du- 
luth &  Iron  Range  Railwa.v  company, 
the  center  lino  of  which  is  240  feet 
northerly  from  and  parallel  wjth  the 
center  of  line  of  said  railroad  right-of- 
way,  said  strip  extending  from  the 
northerly  line  of  section  4.  township  .^.0 
north,  range  13  west,  to  the  easterl.v 
boundary  line  of  Lester  Park,  Fourth 
division,  according  to  the  recorded  plat 
thereof  on  file  in  the  ofllce  of  the  regis- 
ter of  deeds  in  and  for  the  county  of  St. 
Louis,  state  of  Minnesota. 

That  the  undersigiwd  have  duly  qual- 
ified as  such  commissioners,  and  have 
entered .  upon  the  discharge  of  their 
duties  as  such;  that  the  undersigned  as 
such  commissioners  have  caus(!d  a  sur. 
vey  and  plat  of  the  property  proposed 
to  be  acquired  for  said  purpose  of 
rights-of-way,  or  which  may  be  di- 
rectly or  indirectly  affected  thereby,  to 
be  made  by  the  city  engineer  of  the  city 
of  Duluth,  .showing  the  lands  or  parcels 
of  property  required  to  be  taken  for 
.said  purposes  as  aforesaid,  or  which 
may  be  damaged  thereby,  and  have 
caused  said  plat  to  be  filed  with  the 
clerk  of  said  city  of  Duluth;  and  that 
the  undersigned  as  such  commissioners 
will  meet  at  the  office  of  the  city  clerk 
in  the  city  hall,  in  said  city  of  Duluth, 
on  the  24th  day  of  March,  at  10  o'clock 
in  the  forenoon  of  said  day,  and  thence 
proceed  to  view  said  premises,  and  to 
hear  ahy  evidence  or  proof  by  the  par- 
ties Interested,  and  when  their  view 
and  hearing  shall  be  concluded,  to  de« 
termlne  and  assess  the  amount  of  dam- 
ages to  be  paid  to  the  owner  or  owners 
of  each  panel  of  iiroperty  i>roposed  to 
be  taken  for  the  purposes  aforesaid,  or 
which  may  be  affected  thereby. 

FRANK   P.  TLM.^, 

LOUIS    K.    DAUGHERTY. 

D.  W.  SCOTT, 

Commissioners, 

Duluth,  Minn.,  March  10,  1897. 

DuJuth  Evening  Herald.  March  11  lot. 


I 
■■  ■  I   - 


41 


• 


mmmm  ii 


."I'l'  ■  ■  m  Itram 


:"' 


■•- 


*mm 


■■'"t 


i^ 


••^mi' 


12 


THE  DFLFTn  ErE^^^TT  HERAtD:  SATrRDAY.  MARCH  20.  1S97 


I'T 


^■ 


>»  % 


SMART    THINGS    »^OR  THE   LITTLE   ONES. 


This   will    \,v  a   season   of  conflictins 
fashions    if    the    historical    revival    t.f 
dress     in       the     "Victorian     style"     is 
brougfht  about  in  accordance  with  the 
predictions  of  the  authorities   in    Lon^ 
don;  but  as  Paris,  the  hub  of  all  thinps 
fashionable,  still  takes  the  lead  in  mat- 
ters of  the  mode,  we  may  be  sure  that 
if  ever  the   pages  of  time  are   turned 
backward  to  the  URly  skirts  and  slop- 
ins;  shoulders  it  will  be  a  long,  gradual 
and    laborious    nrf>cess.    says    the    N.-u 
York  Sun.   Wrfmen  have  learned  much 
about   the  artistic  effect   of  dress,   and 
will  not  adopt  unbecoming  stvbs  witli 
the  submisive  graee  of  sixty  years  ag=.. 
However  much  we  mav  rebel,  slopintr 
shoulder  effects  are  to  be  cultivated,  if 
we  can  believe  the  rumors,  and  It  all 
means  that  the  shoulder  seams  in  our 
summer  gowns  are  ti>  l>e  lengthened  u 
little  and  the  fulness  in  the  sleev -s  is  to  j 
droop  more    toward    the    ilbow.      The 
really  new  sleeve  is  tightly  fitted,  after 
bemg  eith-r  shirred  or  tucked,   and   a 
small  puff  or  epaulette  finishes  the  top.  ' 
>\  e   have   not   yet   become   aecusto:iiet»  '' 
to  this  dose  model,  but  whether  we  lik«-  ' 
it  or  not  wt>  must  have  it.     So  far  as  the 
new  models  in  skirts  have   put   in  ai>- 
pearan<e    they    are    distinguished     foi 
variety  in  cut  and  decoration;  but  the 
popular  bell  shape,  falling  in  full  god- 
ets  at  the  back  and  fitting  close'y  over 
th^-  hips,  will  not  be  dropped  from  the  I 


list. 

THIN    M.ATERIALS. 
It    is    in    thin    materials     that     the 
trimmed  skirt     will     flourish,     and     as 
transparent  effects  are  to  reign  supreme 
this  season,  trimmings  will  have  a  wide 
field  of  usefuIness.Nothing  can  be  pr  t- 
tier    than    the    new    grenadines,    which 
are  displayed  everywhere  in  the  shops, 
in  all  silk,  all  wool,  and  silK  and  wool 
mixed;  and  in    coloring    and     patterns 
there  are  some  novel  and  striking  de- 
signs.    Some  shades  of  red.     combined 
with  black,  covering  almost  entirely  a 
white   ground,    and    shades   of   blue   or 
white  in  a   large  conventional   pattern 
are  perhaps  the  most  striking,  and  then 
there  are  all  sorts  f.f  black  effects     on 
color,  and  grenadines  woven  to  look  like 
laee.     In  white  and  pale  colors  there  is 
a  variety  of  checks  with   pin  dots     of  ; 
silk  or  quite  plain  in  basket  weave,  like 
so  many  of  the  canvas  materials.     Can- 
vas, in  all  its  varying  weaves,  striped, 
figured,  and  plain  is  deeidedly  th-'  lead- 
ing  material    in    wool    fur   all    sorts   of 
J'lain  and  dressy  gowns  to  be  worn   in 
the   early  spring  and   all   through     the  ] 
summer.     They  have  fjuite    supersede<l  I 
the  mohairs  which  were  so  popular  last  ' 
season,    and    the   .>nly   kind   of   niohair  I 
which   is  at   all    fashionable   is'a   very  ' 
fine  and   silky   quality.     Some     of     the  i 
weaves  in  canvas  are     very     ijpen     in 
checks  or  oval  spaces,  and  then   there  < 
are  crinkled  silk  stripes,     herring-bone 
patterns  in     stripes,     and     the     basket  i 
weave,   which  is  extremely  pretty,   be-  | 
sides  the  plain  weave    of    last    season.  ' 
Other  kinds  resemble  nun's  veiling,  an 
made  of    finer     threads     more     closely 
woven,  an<i  have  a  hemstitehed  border 
over  an  inch  wide  on  both  edges.  Every 
tint  and  color  imaginable  is  to  be  found 
In  this  material,  but  pale  gray,  biscuit 
color,  and  various  shades  of  green  are 
the  favorite  hues. 

OLD  STYLE  BAREGES. 
Bareges  of  the  old-fashioned  sort, 
thin  enough  to  show  a  gleam  of  color 
through  the  meshes,  are  shown  in  great 
variety,  and  Turkish  crepe  is  another 
soft,  thin  stuff  which  tempts  the  pur- 
chaser. Crepe  bengaline,  a  mixture  of 
silk  and  wool,  is  a  ne%v  material  which 
is  warranted  to  wear  and  not  to  muss, 
and  yet  it  has  a  certain  stiffness  which 
makes  it  stand  out  in  pretty  folds. 
Crepe  de  chine,  soft  and  lustreless  and 
spotted  with  chenille  dots,  will  be  very 
I»opular  for  summer  gowns,  and  there 
are  other  thin  materials,  bordered  with 
colored  silk  stripes,  which  arc  used 
enpeeially  for  ruffles.  S<oteh  rheviots, 
with  a  cream  white  ground,  plaided  off 
with  line  stripes  of  color  and  finished 
on  the  edge  with  a  fi»ur-inch  border  of 
plaid  in  several  colors,  are  among  the 
novelties.  Other  eheviots  of  this  order 
have  narrow  stripes  of  color,  and  they 


all  sugest  yachting  dresses  in  fact,  it 
would  be  a  long  stretih  of  the  imagina- 
tion to  fancy  their  use  in  any  other  sort 
of  dress.  Scotch  cheviot  in  a  plain  beige 
color  makes  a  very  stylish  costume 
trimmed  with  an  embroidery  or  liraid- 
ing  of  silk  lord  in  darker  and  lighte^ 
shades  of  the  same  eolor. 

This  embroidery  finishes  the  edge  of 
the  bolero  and  covers  the  skirt,  whic^h 
fits  closely  over  the  hips,  for  fully  nine 
inches  below  the  waist  around  the  front 
and  sides;  and  down  each  side  of  the 
fullness  in  the  back  are  revers  widening 
toward  the  bottom  and  eovered  with 
the  embroidery.  The  vest  and  the  wide 
draped  belt  of  green  Indian  silk  form 
;i  pretty  contrast.  Another  spring  cos- 
tume of  drap  d'ete  in  a  similar •  beig.^ 
tint  is  braided  elaborately  with  white. 
Three  rows  of  braid  trim  the  front 
seams  in  the  skirt,  and  end  in  an  intri- 
cate design  at  the  foot,  an.l  the  l)olero 
is  covered  with  white  braiding.  Braid- 
ing is  very  fashionable,  especially  for 
tailor-made  gowns,  and  rows  of  braid 
are  .sewn  on  around  the  hips  in  groups 
of  three,  covering  fully  twelve  imhes 
down  frt>m  the  belt. 

POPl'LAR    IN     PARIS. 
'      A    fashion   which   is   very   popular   in 
Paris   is  the  checked  skirt  and  jaiket 
of  plain  doth  to  mat<  h  the  prevailing 
color   in    the   plaid:    and    the    array    of 
fancy    checks    shown    among    the    new 
materials   is  sufTieient    proof   that    they 
will   be  popular  here.     Blue  and   white 
I  cheek  with  a  jacket  of  i>lain  blue,  edged 
j  with   silver  and    blue   cord,    and    worn 
with  a  white  skirt,  makes  a  co<W-look- 
1  ing.  serviceable  costume,  which  will  be 
I  'luite   the  thing   for  morning   wear  on 
j  the  first  warm  days  of  spring.    Anoth-r 
,  combination     is     a  black     and     green 
I  check,    with   a   short,    loose    bolero     of 
black  cloth,  lined  with  green  silk,  and 
'  cut  out  in  tabs  around  the  !>ottom,  and 
a   black   glace   silk    vest    finely   tucked.  , 
The  revers  and  collar  are  covered  with 
I  ecru  lace. 

'  Tailor-made  coats  and  skirts  alik'-. 
of  doth,  tweed,  or  cheviot,  are  quite  as 
much  worn  as  ever,  and  there  are  no 
end  of  faney  waists  to  wear  with  them, 
the  most  pronounced  of  all  being  th«)se 
of  bright  plaid  silk,  made  up  in  the 
shirt  waist  style.  Most  cloth  skirts  are 
plain,  with  the  exception  of  braid  as 
a  trimming,  but  an  occasional  «me  has 
three  tucks  directly  at  the  bottom,  or 
trimmed  with  bias  satin  folds. 

Among  the  pretty  models  for  dressy 
gowns  of  canvas  is  one  of  cream  white, 
with  a  bodice  and  sleeves  of  soft  cream 
white  silk  flowered  in  pink  and  a  bolero 
front  of  velvet  ribbon  «rossed  in 
squares.  The  skirt  is  lined  with  pink 
silk  and  the  belt  is  of  black  velvet. 
Eglantine  barege  forms  the  next  cos- 
tume, which  is  made  with  the  fashion- 
able accordion-plaited  skirt.  The  yoke 
epaulets  and  opening  of  the  l>odice  up 
the  side  are  finished  with  a  kiltc-d  frill 
of  mauve  chiffon,  and  the  belt  is  of 
Nile  green  satin  ribbon. 

POPILAR  COLORS. 
Pale-  blue  and  petunia  and  heliotrope 
and  olil  rose  are  new  combinations  of 
color  of  this  seasc»n.  which  are  very 
effective  if  the  right  shades  are  chosen, 
and  pale  green  with  brown  is  another 
popular  contrast.  White-  grenadine 
made  over  white,  or  a  color,  is  to  be 
ver>-  much  in  evidence  later  in  the  sea- 
son for  dressy  gowns,  and  c»ne  pretty 
model  has  a  one-sided  bodice,  with  a 
lace  yoke,  a  lace  frill,  and  a  belt  and 
bow  of  rose-colored  velvet  where  it 
fastens.  Three  rows  of  lace  insertion 
trim  the  skirt.  Tn  black  gowns,  which 
are  always  worn,  there  Is  a  rnoire  ve- 
lour,  with  a  plain  skirt  lined  with  pink. 
The  front  of  the  bodice  is  of  embroid- 
ered black  lisse.  and  the  bolero  of  black 
glace  silk,  c-<>vered  with  black  net  rich- 
ly jewelled  with  turquoi.se.  silver  and 
jet.  Pale  blue  velvet  finishes  the  edge 
of  the  rovers,  being  put  on  in  a  narrow 
twist,  trims  the  collar,  and  lines  the 
bows  cm  the  top  of  the  slf»eves. 

The  bodice  is  becoming  more  and 
more  elaborate  all  the  time,  and  the 
art  of  making  this  tucked  and  trimmed 
and  shirred  c-ombination  a  distin- 
guished success  is  cjuite  beyond  the 
commonplace  dres.smaker.  Whether 
the  material  is  gathered  c.r  plailccl.  it 
li.  sUll  good  style  to  have  the  blouse 


effect  in  front,  the  fulness  falling  a 
little  over  the  belt,  whic-h  may  be  of 
an.v  width  most  bec-oming  to  the  figure. 
.V  design  which  is  pretty  for  any  color 
is  carried  out  In  black  foulard  laid  in 
plaits  and  fastened  down  by  groups  of 
narrow  black  velvet  ribbon.  The  front 
opens  in  a  very  novel  manner  at  one 
side,  where  It  is  filled  in  with  cream 
lace  over  white  and  gathered  ciuite  fuU. 
The  belt  is  of  black  velvet,  but  a  touch 
of  color  is  given  by  lining  the  epaulets 
with  cerise  velvet  or  silk  and  using  it 
at  the  neck  combined  with  cream  lace. 

!  WHITE    WAIST    MODEL. 

Another  waist  model  for  a  white  or- 
gandie or  silk  muslin  is  trimmed  w  ith 
rows  of  lace  insertion,  and  yellow  satin 
forms  the  plaited  bolero,  and  is  set  into 
the  slashes  of  the  sleeves.  White  silk 
oatterned  with  black  forms  the  next 
bodice,  and  the  rest  is  of  white  net 
embroidered  with  green  se<|uins.  The 
belt  and  collar  are  of  green  velvet, 
which  also  lin«»s  the  b!)lero. 

Tailor-built    dresses    are    usually    the 
first  to  blossom  out  in  the  spring,  and 
here  is  a  modelin  a  pale  tint  of  violet 
•  loth.     One   hand.some  jewelled    button 
fastens  the   bolero  over  a    full   vest   of 
,  green  silk,  and  dark  violet  velvet  forms 
the   belt.     Applique  embroidery  of   iri- 
descent  iM>rd   on   grc>en   silk    foriiis    the 
trimming  an  the  skirt  and  jacket.  The 
hat   is  of  ecru   straw,    with   a   twist   of 
narcissus  green   and    violet   silk  and   a 
bunch  of  violet  feathers.    Another  light 
(loth    dress    Iwjasts   a   coat    with    black 
satin    revers.    covered    with    jet,    gold, 
and    reseda  embroidery.     The    vest,    of 
reseda  moire  velour,  has  tiny  revers  of 
white  moire,   shot   with  gold  and  fast- 
ened with  gold   buttons.     A  noveltv  in 
tailor-made  gc»wns  is  the  round  bodice, 
close   fitting   in    the   back,    where    it    is 
crossed  with  black  braid,  the  last  rows 
forming  a  girdle  at   the   waist,   and   a 
sort  of  loose  bolero  front,  which  hangs 
to  the  edge  of  the  belt  and  is  also  cov-  i 
ered  with  braid. 


NEW    SPRING    WRAPS. 


I  The  new  .spring  wraps  are  not  dis- 
played in  all  tlieir  manifold  varieties 
as  yet,  but  there  are  enough  in  sight 
to  establish  the  fact  that  accordion 
jilaiting  is  to  figure  largely  in  their 
make-up.  The  most  dressy  little  capes 
or  pelerines,  which  is  a  more  suitable 
name,  since  they  shape  in  at  the  waist, 
are  a  succc:>.ssion  of  accordion-plaited 
frills  of  chiffon,  edged  possibly  with  a 
n»w  of  black  satin  or  velvet  ribbon. 
These  form  the  entire  portion  over  the 
arms,  and  the  main  part  of  the  gar- 
ment is  of  aciordion-plaited  given  and 
blac-k  changeable  silk,  or  of  a  velvet  or 
moire  silk.  There  are  all  s<u-ts  and 
shapes  in  this  little  wrap,  so  that  everj- 
figure  can  be  suited,  and  it  would  seem 
from  one  ghuK  c-  at  the  new  models  that 
any  sort  of  material,  and  any  coml>in- 
ation  of  matei  ials.  is  (juite  permissible 
here.  One-  rather  uniquc>  arran.gement 
is  a  wrap  of  ecru  linen  in  rather  a 
coarse  o|>en  and  hi^avy  <iuali(y.  checked 
all  over  with  jet  embroidery  and  lineal 
with  black  lalTefa.  and  the  sleeve  por- 
ticm  of  black  lace  and  jinked  taffeta 
silk   frills  of  petunia  and   l)lack. 

The   length   •>{  spring   wraiis   can    be 
anything  you  dc>sire.  between  the  point 
of    the    shoulder    and    the    waist      line. 
Black   and    white    lace   combinc^d    form 
some  of  the  di<^siest  c-apes,  and   there 
is  usually  a  mixture-  of  jet.   and  some-  i 
times  a  touch  of  color.    Two  novel  gar-  I 
ments  shown   in   the  illustration  are  a  ' 
combination   of   bolero    and    cape,    and  i 
velvet   moire,   chiff«m.    and   jet   are   th:'  ' 
materials   employed.     The  Jacket   is   a 
theater    wraj)    in    brocaded    gray    silk, 
with  cuffs  and   an  odd  collar  of  black 
with  an  edging  of  silver  cord  and  rhine- 
stone  eml»roidery. 

Spring  jackets  are  as  varied  as  the 
wraps  and  come  in  three  different 
lengths,  with  both  high  and  low  col- 
lars, .so  it  is  impossible  to  decide  yet 
which  will  be  the  leading  style.  They 
are  made  of  ladies*  cloth,  serge,  and 
meltcm,  in  both  dark  and  light  shades. 


and  the  pale  tint  of  yellow  ecru  lined 
with  some  delicate  shade  of  satin  is 
considered  very  elegant.  The  Russian 
style  of  coat  has  a  place  on  the  list, 
and  the  French  jackets  display  quite 
a  little  decoration  besides  buttons  and 
stitching.  An  example  of  this  is  in 
black  cloth,  and  it  fastens  on  the  left 
side  with  two  large  steel  buttons.  It 
is  lined  with  pink  silk.  The  collar  and 
crescent-shaped  rever  are  covered  with 
the  same  color  and  finished  on  the 
edge  with  a  narrow  l)and  of  black  vel- 
vet and  a  2-inch  insertion  of  yellow 
Venetian   point  above. 

FASHION   HINTS. 
Jewelled    embroidery    is    growing    in 
favor,  beauty  and  price  as  well,  and  the 
varieties    being   made   to   decorate    the 
gowns  to  be  worn  at  Queen  Victoria's 
drawing  rooms  in   London  are  a  mar- 
,  vc^l    of    j)erfection    and      extravagance. 
!  Real    brilliants    are    employed;    pearls 
are  dyed  to  match  exactly  anv  chosen 
shade  in   the  silk  brocade,  and  lace  is 
;  dotted    with   tiny  diamonds   as   if  they 
1  were  wo\ien  in  its  meshes. 
I      Tucks  are  all  the  rage,   surely,  since 
they  appear  in  thin  gowns,  silk  gowns 
I  and  all  other  materials  which  can  pos- 
sibly be  u.sed  for  the  spring  and  sum- 
mer wardrobe,  except  pej-hai)s  cheviot 
and  serge,  and  they  are  in  all   widths 
and   in   all    forms,    both   crosswise   and 
up  and  down. 

The  newest  evening  dresses  have 
trimmed  skirts,  finely  plaited  ruflles 
of  taffeta  or  lace,  or  both  combined, 
set  on  in  gioups.  is  an  old  fashion  re- 
vived. Narrow  gauge  ribbon,  with  a 
satin  edge  plaited  into  ruchings  and 
set  on  in  series  of  five,  five  inches  apart, 
in  waved  lines,  is  another  new  and  old 
skirt  trimming. 
Bodices  closely  fitted  with  a  long  point 
in  front  are  a  feature  of  the  new  even- 
ing dress. 

One  special  novelty  in  parasols  is 
called  the  ".sunburst,"  and  is  almost 
Japane.se. in  shape,  as  it  is  flatter  than 
the  other  styles.  The  frame  is  first 
eovered  with  some    light-colored     thin 


silk,  and  an  accordion  plaiting  of  taffeta 
or  chiffon  covers  the  outside  entirely, 
the  plaits  radiating  from  the  c.^nter! 
Plain  parasols  of  colored  moire  are  a 
feature  in  this  department,  and  dainty 
yellow,  white  and  pink  parasols  of  plain 
silk  have  a  lace  applique  embroidery 
on  the  edge. 

Red  foulards,  red  dimities,  and  red 
lawns  are  liberally  sprinkled  through 
the  stock  of  summer  materials,  and  the 
large  white  polka  dot  on  a  blue  ground 
is  one  of  the  new  patterns. 

A  new  cycling  skirt  has  two  straight 
plaits  in  the  back  which  aie  made  sej). 
arate  and  partially  detached,  so  that 
they  fall  gracefully  on  either  side  of 
the  wheel,  and  benc^ath  this  is  a  regular 
skirt  at  the  back  which  ccnnpleies  it  for 
a  walking  skirt  as  well. 

Picture  hats  with  an  abundance  of 
oStrich  feathers  and  flowers  for  trim- 
ming will  be  much  worn  this  season,  and 
there  are  long  plumes  among  th;^  feath- 
ers which  are  arranged  to  fall  over  the 
brim. 

The  flood  of  shirt  waists  which  has- 
appeared  in  the  stores  is  a  pretty  posi- 
tive proof  of  their  continued  popiilarity. 
They  are  made  of  lawn,  gingham,  linen, 
organdie,  batiste,  and  silk,  in  plaids  and 
stripes,  and  all  over  conventional  de- 
signs, in  every  color  knov.n,  and  while 
the  manner  of  making  them  varies  a 
little  with  the  use  of  many  tucks!  the 
main  features  are  the  same— a  pointed 
yoke  in  the  back  and  a  box  plait  in  front 
with  the  fulness  on  either  side.  White 
silk  flowered  in  color  makes  a  lovely 
shirt  waist,  and  should  have  a  made 
stock  collar  of  the  same  silk,  buttoned 
on  in  front,  where  it  ties  in  a  bow.  A 
narrow  linen  lawn  collar,  with  a  tiny 
hemstitched  hem  and  a  lace  edge,  turns 
over  the  edge  in  place  of  the  stiff  linen 
one.  Ecru  linen  batiste,  with. a  black 
strir)e  and  Dresden  flowers  sc-atteied 
over  it,  makes  another  style  of  wais\ 
which  is  very  pretty  with  the 
black  satin  stock  or  the  wide 
collar. 

A  NEW  FASHION  FAD. 
I      A  shrewd  idea  is  to  have  its  ; 
I  annual  innings  at  the   Waldorf  durins 
I  the  week  commencing  M.anh  22.      The 
I  real    value  of  this  idea   is  only  begin- 
[  ning  to  dawn  on  various  pcniple.  anions 
whom  are  the  actual  originators  th?in. 
selves.     The  outwar  and   visible     fonr. 
which   the  idea   takes   is  an  expositicm 
which  is  called  a  model  doll  show.     In. 
cidentaly.    it  is   for   the    benefit   of   tht> 
Scarlet  Fever  and   Dii>theria    hospital, 
but   the  matter  does  not  end   there  by 
any  means.    The  ramificaticms    of    th-» 
benefit,     without     any     relation  to  the 
aforesaid  hosiWtal,   are  exceedingly  in- 
teresting. 

In  the  first  place,  the  name  of  "The 
Model  Doll  Show"  does  not  give  any 
real  idea  of  what  the  affair  will  bc^. 
Neither  did  the  exposition  last  year 
promise  any  such  development  as  will 
be  shown  this  year.  Last  year  there 
was  a  collection  of  dolls  and  inferior 
manikins,  dressed  in  almost  any  style- 
that  happened  to  be  convenient  to  the 
caprice  of  the  persons  sending  them. 
There  was  one  doll,  however,  whic-h 
was  sent  by  a  dressmaker  in  St.  Paul. 


plain 
linen 


^conil 


Minn.  It  was  dres.sc>d  in  a  dainty  sum- 
mer gown  of  an  original  and  charming 
design,  and  was  devoured  by  the  ob- 
.serving  eyes  of  hundreds  of  women. 
The  success  of  the  doll  which  came  out 
of  the  West  gave  the  managers  of  the 
affair  a  clue  on  which  they  are  at  v.<»rk 
this  year.  Last  year  there  was  a  Cissv 
Fitzgerald  doll,  and  there  were  two 
Marie  Antoinette  dolls,  and  so  on.  This 
year  the  exhibits  will  be  actual,  prac- 
tical, displays  of  the  very  latest  designs 
for  all  varieties  of  women's  dress. 

This  idea  is  as  clever  as  anything 
which  has  appealed  to  the  publi.-  for 
lo:  these  many  years.  Sixty  of  the 
leading  modistes  of  the  country  will 
display  the  very  best  thing  they  can 
devi.se  in  the  line  of  their  art.  The  dolls 
used  are  in  reality  extremely  realistic 
wax  figures  ctf  half  the  average  femi- 
nine  height.  They  have  ball  and  sock  t 
joints,  real  hair,  and  the  best  complex^ 
ions  to  be  had  for  the  monc-y. 

The  exhibits  will  include  ball  gowns, 
reception  and  dinner  costumes,  stre  t 
and  tailor-made  suits,  bicycle,  ridinp. 
walking  and  yachting  gowns,  thin  sum- 
mer gowns— in  fact,  almost  every  kin  1 
of  costume  that  women  wear.  For  the 
bicycle  girl,  a  complete  half-sized 
bicycle  has  bpen  constructed  and  a 
half-sizc-d  horse  for  the  equestri-'une. 
who,  by  the  way.  has  double  joints  all 
over  her  body,  so  that  she  can  be  jtlaced 
in  any  position.  Another  doll  will  dis- 
l>lay  the  most  exquisite  dresses  in  lin- 
gerie. 

Now  the  advantages  of  this  idea  are 
exceedin'gly    far-reaching.      Of    cours  • 
the  exhibitors  themselves  come  in  for  a 
considerable    proportion.        Then    the  i c 
are  the  less  important  dressmakers  wh  > 
can  absorb  all  these  triumphs  for   the 
lirnefit   of   their  own    patr<uis.        Thi'i 
there  comes  (unquestionably  they  \cill 
I  swarm   to   the   Waldorf  in   large  "num- 
I  bers)  the  clever  w<mien  who  can  make 
I  their  own  gowns  if  they  "can  only  get 
an  idea."     They  will  be  so  j. leased  at 
I  the  chance  to  p.ay  .'lO  cents  and   get  a 
}  whole  wardrobe  of  ideas.    Also,  there  is 
the  woman  who  hires  her  seamstress  b.v 
the  day;  a  good  seamstress,  but  she  is 
j  another  one  who  lacks  ideas.     But  she- 
can   copy   what    she  .sc»es.     The   wopian 
:  who  e<ngages  her  takes  her  to  the  model 
doll    show,    picks    out    the    gowns    she- 
wants,  ami  the  seamstress  studies  every 
detail   of   them   and    goes   home    to   re- 
produce them  at  $2  a  day  and  meals  in- 
duiled. 

The  shfiw  will  be  given  un<ler  the 
management  of  Vogue,  and  there  is  still 
another  underlyin'g  theory  which  is 
much  insisted  upot'i  by  those  in  charge- 
of  the  affair.  This  theory  is  that  some- 
thing ought  to  be  d<me  tnr  the  encetui- 
agement  in  this  country  of  design  as 
applied  to  dress.  At  jiresent  it  is  the 
annual  pilgrimage  to  Paris  en-  Vienna 
upon  which  the  dressmakers  depr>nd  for 
their  novelties  in  design.  The  managers 
of  the  model  doll  show  think  that 
American  dressmakers  have  not  shown 
what  they  can  do,  and  that,  even  if  the 
dressmakers  themselves  cannot  design 
a  gown,  there  are  plenty  of  other  peopie 
on  this  side  of  the  ocean  who  can.  Tiie 
man  who  is  at  the  head  of  the  doll  show 
management  said: 
"Taste   is  something  that  no   perMtn 


A  GAME  OF  BASKET   BALL. 
(Sketched  from  life  at  Vassar.) 


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rUE     DT'LT'TH     EVENING.    HERALD:   SATURDAY,    MARCH    20.     1897. 


13 


and  no  people  t-an  monopolize.  Wht'ther 
styles  I'ome  from  Paris  or  New  York  or 
London  or  Vienna  matters  not.  The 
l>est  styles  will  certainly  prevail.  The 
American  designer  has  nolhing  to  fear 
from  the  rivalry  of  Paris  or  Vienna, 
provided  the  American  designers  ari' 
superior  in  merit.  American  womon 
now  think  for  themselves  in  matters  of 
tlress.  They  will  just  as  quickly  tako 
.American  styles  if  they  prefer  them 
as  they  will  take  foreign  styles.  If  fht-y 
4lo  not  prefer  American  styles,  nothing 
<an  compel  them  to  adopt  Americaii 
styles.  One  reason  why  there  are  so 
few  well-known  .American  styles  is  be- 
cause little,  if  anythini;.  has  been  done 
to  bring  into  play  Am»rican  talents  for 
design.  The  chief  reason  French  styles 
have  been  so  pre-eminent  is  that  there 
are  hundreds  of  persons  in  Paris  who 
make  the  many  various  arts  that  enter 
into  dress  tlesigning  their  t>ccupation. 
and  who  find  in  surh  work  profitable 
employment.  Such  talents  exist  here. 
It  is  "onlv  necessary  that  something 
draw  them  out.  That  is  a  leading  pur- 
puee  of  the  m-'del  doll  show." 

NEW  SHIRT-WAISTS. 

More  Elaborate  Than  Ever  for 
This  Season. 

Though  the  March  winds  are  yet 
Mowing,  the  fdmy  summer  shirt  waists 
c>>me.  It  is  a  more  enthusiastic  wel- 
come, nd  it  is  a  more-  enthusiastic  wel- 
I  *me  than  ever  l»efore.  The  shirt  waists 
to  be  worn  by  the  summer  girls  of  't»7 
are  well  deserving  all  the  admiration 
they  are  now  r<jceivin.g.  They  are  bet- 
ter looking  than  in  other  years,  an  i 
are  made  with  more  care.  The  ma- 
terials used  are  more  effective.  Many 
otlu  little  lou'heb  in  the  wav  of  frills 
anil  groupings  of  tucks  are  introduced, 
and  incidentally  they  are  more  ex- 
pensive. The  new  shirt  waists  show 
the  only  large  sleeves  of  the  season, 
nays  the  New  York  Journal. 

Those  which  are  demanding  the  high- 
prices  are  made  of  transparent  fai»- 
rics.  They  are  so  sheer  that  the  color 
beneath  them  shows  through  effective- 
ly. Linen  is  much  in  favor  for  these 
transparent  shirt  waists.  It  is  alway.-^ 
in  the  soft  fawn  color,  but  comes  in  a 
variety  of  dififerent  designs.  Some  of 
the  newest  patterns  have  much  the 
appearance  of  grenadine.  Others  are  ; 
exquisitely  embroidered  with  flowers.  1 
This  material  sells  from  oo  cents  to 
75  cents  a  >  ard.  It  makes  a  shirt  waist 
of  great  beauty  made  up  over  geranium 
pink  silk  or  any  brilliant  cok>r.  When 
silk  proves  too  expensive  a  lining,  it  i^ 
a  sensible  plan  to  wear  with  such  a 
shirt  waist  a  colored  batiste  corset 
cover. 

A   new   material    which     bears       th"  , 
French    name    of    neigeuse    is    to       l>e  ■ 
muih   used   for  shirt    waists    this   sea-  | 
son.  It  comes  in  a  number  of  pale  shades 
and    is    carelessly    tiecked    with    white 
These   Mower-stamped   Swisses   can    be 
bought  tor  about  'J7>  tents  a  yard. 
PRETTY    SWISSES. 
Serpt»ntine   niuli   is  a  good    new   ma- 
terial for  shirt  waists.      It  is  cool  and 
f.het>r.    yet    strong    enough    to    endur^  i 
much    hard    wear.        Foulard    lawn    is  \ 
mui  h   chea!)fr,    selling   for   li>   cents   a 
yani.  but  it  is  a  gcMjd  material  for  shiii 
waists. 

The  shirt  waists  show  two  decidedly 
new  collars.  The  petal  collar  is  ex- 
tremely pretty.  It  is  of  linen  cut  in 
the  shape  of  pctal.^.  The  pt-tals  fall 
away  from  the  neck.  They  are  whit-, 
lineil  with  a  colored  linen,  which  gen-  ; 
eially  corresponds  with  the  prevailing 
tint    nf   a    shirt    waist.  j 

Anoth«r    new    collar    is    a     straight  ! 
clerical    affair,    fastening   at    the    back.  ! 
It  is  ijiade  with  a  bit  of  an  outstand- 
ing edge  all  an>unl  the  top. 

Thf  liacks  of  th»'  new  shirt  waists  are 
a  tritle  different  than  those  of  last  sea- 
son. The  newest  is  the  box-plaitetl 
back.  This  is  mad>>  with  a  double  box 
plait  in  the  middle  and  single  box  i 
plaits  on  either  side.  Others  have  mere- 
ly a  deep  yoke.  An  odd  design  seen  in 
many  of  the  latest  shirt  waists  is  to 
have  the  yoke  ••ontinue  over  the 
shoulders,  so  that  it  is  seen  from  the 
front. 

THE  NEW  PARASOLS. 
The  umbrella  counters  in  the  big 
dr>-  gimds  shops  are  now  gay  with  para- 
sols and  the  heart  of  the  summer  girl 
to  l)e  has  l>een  made  glad.  If  she  hopes 
to  be  an  up-to-date  summer  girl,  she 
must  have  at  least  one  of  the  new 
sunburst  parasols  among  her  collection. 
Thej-  are  the  chief  novelty  of  the  sea- 
son. To  receive  the  unique  name  of 
sunburst  a  para.sol  must  be  made  of 
some  accordion  plaited  fabric  that  is 
according  to  Dame  Fashion's  present 
idea.  It  matters  little  whether  the  fab- 
ric is  flimsy  chiffon  or  rich  .satin,  the 
only  necessary  requirement  is  that  it 
lays  in  regularly  defined  accordion 
plaits.  One  of  the  most  beautiful  of 
the  new  sunburst  parasols  is  made  of 
fawn  colored  taffeta  silk,  flowered  with 
big  pink  roses.  Over  this  is  an  airy 
covering  of  cream  white  accordion 
Plaited  tulle.  The  stick  is  of  wood 
flecked  with  gilt.  At  the  top  is  a  gen- 
erous bow  of  cream  taffeta  ribbon 
scattered  with  rosebuds,  and  the  handle 
is  also  decorated  with  a  fetching  bow. 
There  are  sunburst  para.sols  of  white 
with  the  accordion  plaited 
covering  in  many  changing 
then  then-  are  the  sunburst 
made  merely  of  plait<d 
frequently    have    a    tiny 


Woman*s  Nerves. 

Mrs.  Piatt  Talks  About  Hysteria. 

When  a  nerve  or  a  set  of  nerves  supplying 
2ny  orjran  in  the  bofly  with  it.s  due  nutri- 
ment grows  weak,  thator{,'an  lan^ii.shes. 
When  the  nerves  become  exhausted  and 
die,  so  to  speak,  the  orsran  falls  into  de- 
cay.   What  is  to  be  done,'    The  answ er  is, 
do  not  allow  the  weakness  to  projrresa ; 
stop  the  deteriorating  process  at  once  ! 

Do  yon  experience  fits  of  depression,  alter- 
nating with  restlessness?  Are  your  spirits 
easily  affected,  .so  that  one  moment  you  laugh 
and  the  next  fall  into  convulsive  weeping  •> 
Again,  do  you  feel  somethinglike  a  ball  rising 
in  jour  throat  and  threatening  to  choke  you, 
all  the  senses  perverted,  morbidly  scnsiuive  to 
light  and  sound,  pain  in  ovary,  and  pain  es- 
pecially between  the  shoulders,  sometimes  loss 
of  voice  and  nervous  dyspepsia  ?  If  so.  you  are 
Kj'sterical,  your  uterine  nerves  are  v.i  fault. 
You  must  do  something  ta  restore  their  tone. 

Nothing  i.s  better  for  tha  purpose  thau  Lydia  K.  Pinkham'.s  Vegetable  Com- 
pound; it  will  work  a  cure.     If  you  do  nwt  understand  your  .symptom.;,  -ivrile  to 
Mrs.  Piakham.  Lynn,  ^Ia.ssv,  and  she  v/ill  give  you  honest, 
expert  advice,  free  of  charge. 

Mi:s.  L::vi  F.  I'i..\Tr.  Womlry.sburg,  Pa.,  had 
a  terrible  experience  with  the  iilne.-^s  we  have 
just  described,  ilcre  is  her  own  description  of 
her  suffeviugs:    -  — 

"  I  thought  I  could  not  be  so  benefited  by  any- 
thing and  keep  it  to  my.self.     I   had  hysterii 
(caused  hy  wonib  trouble)  in  it.;  vorst  for:r..     I 
was  awfr.lly  nervous,  low-spirited  and  melan- 
choly, and  everything  imaginable. 

"  Tho  moment  1  was  alone  I  wouM  crT  from 
hour  t'>  bo:«r;  J  did  not  cr.ro  v.'hether  I  lived 
or  died.     I  told  my  husband  I  believed  Lydia 
E.  Pinlrliam'ji  Vegetable  Compound  would  do 
me  goocl.     I  tool:  it  r.nd  ani  now   well  and 
stron.!.;,    and   gcttir.g   stouter.     I    b.avo    more 
my  face  than  I  have  had  for  a  year  niid  a  hiAi.     IMeas:^  .".ccept  ray 
I  hope  all  who  road  this  a:id  who  sufter  from  nervousnei:3  of  this 
kind  will  do  :i:i  I  have  done  and  be  cured." 


^I^^H^^I^^I^^H"H^^^^I^^I'^I"^^^I'I^^^^I^^^^I^^^^I^^H■I^^I"I•^H^^I^^I^^I"M^^ 


Naws  oF 


th<a  suburbs. 


color  in 
thanks. 


r 

T 

X 

^  4. 

^I^^^^I^^I^^I^^I^^I^^I"^^^^^^I^^I"^^^^I^^I^^^^1^•I^^I^^I^^I^^^■^^^^I"^^H^'^^I^^I"H"^^^^^ 

good.  Three  o'clock  in  the  afternoon 
the  Dramatic  brass  band  paraded  th^^ 
principal  streets.  The  net  receipts  fo^ 
the  evening  were  about  $50. 


NEW  DULUTH  DOINGS. 


deist 
left 


and  violet  will  be  worn.  Bright  red  is 
a  spring  and  summer  color  this  year. 
Leaf    green    and     for-get-me-not     blue 


combination 
Hats 
color 
hats 
worn 


as 
in 

are 
of 

for 


are  a  favorite  color 
well  as  violet  and  scarlet, 
three  or  four  shades  of  one 
much  the  fashion.  French 
shirred  taffeta  silk  will  be 
early  spring  and  many  tulle  hats  dur- 
ing the  summer. 

The  sailor  is  here  again,  but  it  is  so 
much  trimmed  that  all  its  old-time  se- 
verity of  style  is  now  a  thing  of  the 
past. 

The  newest  walking  hats  are  also 
quite  elaborate  creations.  One  seen  at 
Simpson,  Crawford  &  Simpson's  was 
made  of  rough  black  straw,  with  a 
ruching  of  the  straw  at  the  sides.  It 
was  trimmed  with  a  l>ecoming  shade  of 
mauve  velvet.  In  front  standing  up 
very  straight  was  one  of  the  new  i>op- 
py  pansies  in  varying  sha<les  of  mauve 
and  vioVt.  This  walking  hat  is  shown 
in  the  illustration,  and  is  one  of  the 
newest  shapes  of  the  season. 

Another  effective  hat  is  of  cream 
tinted  straw,  trimmed  with  loops  nf 
deep  blue  mirror  velvet,  shirred,  and  a 
big  bunch  of  blue  corn  flowers  mingled 
with  f»ats. 

There  are  big  hats  and  little  hats  in 
plenty  of  shapes  so  numerous  that  e\en 
the  most  fastidious  woman  in  the  land 
is  sure  to  tind  something  just  suited  to 
her  own   individual   style. 


silk 

fen 

and 

sols 

These 

la«  e  edge. 

Paras..|s  to  mat.  h  th.>  gowns  nr^-  m-.r. 
m  di-mand  than  cv.r.  S..m<-  of  th 
est    niatle    puriM).s.!y    for 
of    moir*-    n'>uvell< 


chif- 
hues, 
f>ara- 
.«iatin. 
black 


with 


.    In 
the 


n«'w- 
spnng      wear 
.  ,  f.xaiily    likt-        the 

gown   with   uhich   lluy    are  carri.-d 
these   th.    lining  coriesponds 
trimming. 

THE   SPRLV«;    FLATS. 

New  women,  frivol.. us  summer  girls 
to  ff.  siK-iety  matrons  and  .sensible  lit- 
tle home  women,  the  tinif  has  «-..m»-  for 
you.  on*-  and  all.  to  deci.b-  what  v..iir 
si.rmg  lials  ;ire  t.>  be.  That  this  is  a 
•lueslion  ..f  im|>ortan<-e  to  v.,ii  all  know 
by  pa-Ht  exp.-rifnce.  If  a  fatal  mistake 
is  made  in  the  beginning,  and  the  hat 
proves  unbecoming,  it  is  sure  t.)  mean 
the  loss  of  much  peace  of  mind  for 
months  to  come.  • 

The  most  e.xclusive  hats  are  no  longer 
worn  over  the  ?yes.  Instead  they  are 
worn  to  show  the  forehead,  a  wavy 
curl  or  two  or  the  pompa.Iour.  The 
hats  are  now  tilted  up  on  the  left  side. 
The  trimming  is  tucked  in  under  the 
brim,   raising  the  hat  effectively. 

Two  or  more  vatieties  of  straw  are 
freriuently  u.«ed  in  one  hat.  An  assort- 
ment, of  course.  f)f  rough  straws  are  all 
the  vogue.  Chip  is  also  in  demand,  and 
a  glistening  straw  <alled  silk  fib-^'r. 
.'Straws  of  more  than  one  color  are  used 
in  making  a  single  hat. 

The  brim  is  frequently  one  tint  of 
strav.-  and  the  crown  another.  A  few 
of  the  brim's  are  madp  of  bands  of 
straw  alternating  with  puffings  of  tulle 
or  silk. 

Crowns  are  all  eccentric  as  to  their 
shape.  Some  emulate  a  Tam  o'  .Shan- 
ter  in  shaj**^.  others  resembU>  an  hour- 
glass or  look  like  a  jam  pot  turned  up- 
side down..  Many  of  them  are  made 
jntirely  of  spangl.'s. 

Fl.jw.Ts  are  used  lavishly  on  the  ne>.v 
hats — either  in  big  bu!i.h<s  or  in 
wreaths  encircling  the  crr.w  n. 
Aigrettes  are  much  in  favor  and  bows 
and  roseattes  of  ribbon,  veiled  in  tulle. 
Accordion  plaited  chiffon  is  also  used 
as  a  tinmming. 

COLORS    ARE    BRILLIAXT. 

The  colors  are  ."tartlingly  brilliant. 
Until   June    all    the   shades    of   purple 


SOME  LENTED  THINGS. 

A  Modest  Garb  for  the  Present 
Season. 

However  much  feminine  New  Y'ork- 
ers  may  long  to  east  aside  winter  vel- 
vets and  woolens  and  to  appear  in  the 
many  colored  radiance  of  spring,  a  very 
definite  period  is  set  for  this  burst  of 
effulgence  and  the  strict  laws  regard- 
ing it  are  not  to  be  broken  down. 
Spring  garb  is  not  to  be  put  on  until 
i:asler,  and  the  intervening  period 
must  be  marked  by  a  becoming  sober- 
ness'of  dress.  For  this  reason  there  is 
a  style  of  dress  known  as  the  Lenten 
costume,  a  sort  of  demisaison  attire, 
w  hich  this  years  happens  to  be  more 
staid  and  demure  than  ever  before.  :t 
is  as  much  a  contrast  to  winter  el.>- 
gance  as  to  summer  gayness,  and  in- 
dicates that  the  atmcsphere  and  habits 
of  Lent  are  more  and  more  coming 
to   be  those  of  simple  unostentation.      [ 

One  of  the  most  typical  Lenten  cos-  { 
tumes  which  has  yet    been   seen  on   a  : 
New   York  woman   is  carefully   repro-  ! 
duced   here.   It   is   made  of  some  light 
soft  material  of  a  dark   purple  shade, 
and   is  cut    with   the   most    uncompro-  i 
mising   severity.       The   skirt    is     quite 
without   trimming,   and    the  gracefully  ' 
planned  outer  coat  has  its  chief  claim 
to   distinction    in   its    marvelous   fit.    It 
is    relieved    by    an    enormous    bow    of 
white    mulle    at    the      throat.        White 
gloves  are   also  worn  with   this  gown,  j 
A    BECOMING    BONNET.  | 

But  the  crowning  Lenten  touch  is 
the  bonnet,  which  is  a  charming  little  | 
affair  of  silk  of  a  shade  exactly  match- 
ing the  suit.  It  is  shirred  prettily  about 
the  brim  ami  the  silk  is  stretched  jur- 
fectly  plain  ov<r  its  little  p«'aked  crown. 
A  white  bow  in  front  is  tht-  oidy  trim- 
ming and  is  a  most  b.-oming  addi- 
j  tion  to  this  tiny  bit  of  Lenten  sim-  ' 
I  plicity.  I 

Dupli»at<s    of    this    i-ostunn-    will    be 
seen    at    every    fashionable    <-hurch     m  , 
town  during  the  next  few  weeks.  S.>m<'- 
times    they    will    be      of     solid      bla.-k 
sometimes    of   dainty    shades   of   gray, 
and    often    there    may    be    the     cimccs-  j 
si.m  to  frivolity  that-is  evidenced  by  a] 
burnh   of   fragrant    violets   or  a    white 
lily.    But   in    the   main    the   garb  of    tin 
feminine   churchg.iers    will    not     vary 
an<l    if   the    wearing  ..f   it    does   not    in 
iline    their    ta.stes      towards     such       aj 
glorious    f.ishiimaljle    Easter    as    never ' 
was  seen  l>efore.  the  powers  that  dom.-  I 
inate   the   world   of    fashion    will    have  | 
been  sadly  at  fault  | 

There  is  another  Lenten  fancy  which  , 
is  exceedingly  striking  and   which  will 
no   doubt    be   rjuickly    appropriated    by 
all   young  women   who  have  a  leaning  ■ 
tow  ards    the    j)ictur(  sque.       This    new- 
gown  was  suggested  by  the  Normandy 
bonnet  and  is  an  imitation  of  a  peas-  ' 
ant  costume.  It  is  usually  made  of  gray  \ 
Identifully    relieved    with    white.       The  i 
skirt  is  cut  with  excessive  fulness  and  ' 
shirred    becomingly   about      the     hips.  [ 
The    bodice    is   short    waisted,    and    its  i 
meeting    with    the    skirt    is    concealed  i 
by  a  wide  girdle   of  silk,   the  ends     of ' 
which  fall  to  the  bottom   of   the  skirt ' 
in   front.  The  sleeves  are  a  succession  [ 


long  that  they  fall  I 
a    most      becoming 


of  puffs  and  are  so 
over    the    hand    in 
fashion. 

The  prettiest  portion  of  this  costume 
is  the  addition  of  a  wide  turnover 
muslin  collar  and  cuffs,  which  lend  a 
most  attractively  immaculate  finish. 
In  a.ldition  to  this  a  s.iuaie  of  white 
muslin  is  let  in  at  the  front  of  the  bod- 
i.e  just  b.^ow  the  CI. liar,  this  being  so 
large  as  to  form  almost  the  entire 
front.  The  whole  costume  is  prettily 
-sugestive  of  some  faraway  Old  World 
type. 

A    LENTEN    COIFFURE. 

Among  other  interesting  and  useful 
toys  which  have  carefully  been  packed 
away  at  the  approach  of  Lent,  curling 


tongs  come  first  and  foremost.  Nor 
does  this  mean  that  any  equally  effect- 
ual substitute  is  to  be  employed  in  their 
place.  All  curls,  waves  and  frizzes, 
save  those  which  have  been  the  cheer- 
ful and  voluntary  gift  of  nature,  are 
sternly  tabooed.  There  is  an  absolute 
return  to  naturalness  in  the  matter  of 
hair-dressing,  for  seldom  has  Lent  so 
shown  its  influence  in  even  the  most 
minor  details  of  a  woman's  toilet. 

This   year    penitential     season     need 
have,  hivwfver,  no  depiessing  effect  up- 
on i)retty  women,  for  the  severe  fash- 
ions   whi.-h   are   to    prevail    during   the 
next   forty  days  almost   seem    to   have 
been    agreed   upon     for     their     beneflt 
alont'.      Women    with    long    faces    and 
high   foreheads  and   ugly  outlines  will 
no  doubt  be  strongly  tempted  to  remain 
in    comparative    solitude    until    Easter 
shall    again    peimit   collaboration    with 
the    coiffeuse.    and    a    return    to    puffs, 
loops,    frizzes    and    the    curling    tongs. 
Plain   pajtings   ami    distressingly    sim- 
ple   methods    of   coiling    the    back    hair 
are    absolutely    valueless    in    offsetting 
ilie  effects  of  plainness  or  of  age.     And 
it  is  therefore  r)erhaps  natural  that  th- 
wonian   who  has  these  foes  to  contend 
I  with    should,    while    submitting    to    the 
demand  for  simplicity,  decide  to  adopt 
very    heavy    veils    and    to     spend      the 
greater   j.art   of   her   Lenten   leisure   in 
I  the  shadowy   recesses  nf  a  church. 
A    WOMAN'S    RESOI'RCES. 
A  pretty  woman,  on  the  other  hand. 
I  can  avail  herself  of  the  season's  fash- 
I  ions  to  adopt  her  favorite  pose  of  Saint 
or    Madonna.      It    is    to    be    hoped    that 
lier  hail'  is  abundant  and   a  bit   wavy 
,  and  if  it  is  she  will  arrange  it  after  one 
I  of   the  fashions  j.ictured   on   this   page. 
One  very  simple  and  effective  method 
is    the    Duchess    of    Marlborf>ugh    coif- 
fure, which  requires  that  the  hair  shall 
be  drawn   back  from   the  face  and  al- 
lowed   to    form    a    very    loose    puff     or 
[•ompadour.     The  pompadour  once  se- 
cured,   the   rest    of  the   hair   is   caught 
:n  the  simplest  of  coils  and  at  the  to]) 
of  the  head.     This  is  probably  the  most 
trying   coiffure    that    could    be   devised 
for  the  majority  of  women,  but   when 
it  can  be  ivf)rn  at  all  it  is  exceedingly 
l)ecoming.  1 

A  method  that  Is  more  adapted  to 
the  average  woman  is  the  simple  knot 
■tt'the  middle  of  the  ba<k  of  the  head, 
formed  by  bringing  the  hair  up  very 
loosely  from  the  neck.  The  fivmt  hair 
may  be  parted  or  brought  straight 
■lack.  A  slightly  more  elaborate  meth-  ' 
od  is  that  of  parting  the  hair,  rolling  it 
loosely  at  each  side,  and  arranging  the 
back  hair  in  <a  series  of  puffs  low  in  the 
neck.  This  is  for  the  vainest  of  the 
Lenten  maidens.  A  simpler  variety 
of  this  coiffure  is  formed  by  parting 
-he  hair  without  rolling  it,  and  coiling 
.t  at  a  plain  knot  at  the  back.  j 

As  can  ea.'-ily  be  imagined,  the  sim-  ■ 
nlicity    of    the    new    methods    of    hair- 
drgssing  make  hair  that  is  curly  or  at 
least  disposed  to  wave,  in  extraordinary 
•lemand.     Straight  hair  is  the  cause  of 
more  lamentations  just   now    than   are 
the  accumulated  sins  of  an  entire  city.  | 
nor  is  the  bewailing  .>f  either  apparent-  j 
!y  productive  of  results.    There  is,  how  - 
,!ver,    one   method    of  squaring   herself 
with    nature    to    which      the     straight - 
liairci  girl  is  driven  by  the  extremities 
'f    the    sacrificial   season.     She    knows 
that  a  walk  on  a  damp  day  w  ithout  a 
veil  will  so  thoroughly  m.>isten  the  haii 
about    her    fa<e    that    it    will    fall    into 
curls  of  its  ..w  n  free  will  and  that  this 
oesirable  c..n. lilion  will  last  f.>r  a  iiuni-  ' 
ber  of   h..nrs.  ' 

VKtLETS  Ml'("n   WORN.  i 

Another  shap.'  consi'lcred  particularly  I 
appr..priale   to   Lent    is  that  of  a   toqii-'  : 
with  a   tin^■   biim.   the  crown   and   brim  j 
being    a    solid    mass    of      dark      i.nriilc  i 
violets.   ?in<l   the   proper  effect    of   height  I 
being  given  by  a  gr.iup  of  Huffy  pliinie: 
at   the  sl.le.     Niolets  are  the  only  llowtf  i 
that  is  used  in  Lenten  millinery,  a  fact  j 
which   mak.-s  this  p.ijnilar  flowei-  inof.' 
than  e\cr  in  evitlcnce.     Tiny  black  hat;-'  ! 
are     <-o»isiderid     particularly  chi.-     this  j 
year,  and     thcv  are     made   in   endless  : 
variety  to  suit  the  styles  of  the  more  oi  i 
less  chuichy   young    women   who   ha\e| 
abandoned  more  pretentious   millinery. 
Dove-gray    velvet   is   another     material 
which   has   gone  to   form    some  of   tiie 
most  channing  of  Lenten  to'iues.  ' 

This  fashionable  preponiieranc-e  of 
sober  colors  might  suggest  that  every  i 
other  woman  one  meets  has  gone  into 
mourning,  were  it  not  for  a  pretty  de- 
vice <<)nceive(l  by  certain  clever  mil-  I 
liner.<4.  This  is  the  introduction  of  a  i 
more  or  less  plentiful  i|uantity  of  whit.' 
into  the  .M-h'-nie  ..f  every  hat  or  boiinti. 
.\  very  becoming  little  hat  recently  or 
dered  by  one  of  the  best  known  young 
society  women  in  New  York  was  of  an 
exc|uisite  shade  of  violet  velvet.  Us 
brim  was  faced  with  a  full  shirring  of 
niousseline  de  sole  and  the  same  ma- 
terial was  laid  in  olaits  about  the 
crown  and  gathered  into  a  fluffy  bow 
at  the  side,  where  it  was  supj.orted  by  a 
pretty  little  ostrich  plume.  White  trim- 
ming of  this  particularly  delicate  sort 
is  not  cal'Ulated  to  resist  verv  many 
attacks  of  violent  wtather.  but  the 
.voung  woman  who  wears  it  is  quit.,' 
sure  that  it  is  suffieientiv  diirah.le  to 
meet  the  modett  demands  which  she 
will  make  upon  it. 


Clyde  Glddings.  who  has  been  a  res 
of  this  place  for  about  two  years, 
this  week  for  his  In. me  in  Michigan. 

Parties  looking  ovv  the  Atlas  works 
with  a  view  of  making  it  a  nail  factory, 
were  here  Wednesday. 

Ernest  Hurd  left  Thursday  for  Ann  Ar- 
bor, Mich.  His  frietHls  are  sorry  to  lose 
him,  but  wish  him  .~iu<cess. 

Mr.  Stog  and  family  left  Friday  for 
Stanley.  Wis.,  to  msike  it  their  future 
home. 

Hermann.  Becklinger  &  Hermann's  tur- 
iiiture  factory  is  running  again  with  a 
small    force  of   men. 

The  Swedish  Lutherans  held  services  In 
the  Baptist  hall  Thursday  evening,  eon- 
ducted  by  Rev.  A.  F.  Almquist.  of  Du- 
luth. 

Mr.  and  Mrs.  Anderson  moved  hero 
Thursday  from  Portal.  N.  D..  where  they 
will   reside  in   futin-e. 

Rev.  S.  A.  Jamic-^oii.  of  West  Duluth, 
conduwted  services  at  the  Presbyterian 
church    \Ve(lnes<lay    e\ening. 

The  midweek  meeting;  of  the  Congregi- 
tional  and  Baptist  i  liurches  was  lieKl 
Thursday  evening  ;it  ihe  home  of  Heiuy 
Hermann. 

The  boih-r  inspector  i»f  Duluth  was  iiere 
Wednesday  examining  the  boilers  of  the 
different   factories. 

The  Women's  League  of  the  Congreg  »- 
tional  church  met  with  Mrs.  Miller  Thms- 
day   afternoon. 

Rev.  K.  K.  Pope,  superintendent  of  .state 
missions  for  the  Baptist  society,  will 
preach  Smidav  morning  at  the  Baptist 
hall. 

It  is  understood  that  W.  J.  Menhennick 
and  family,  among  tlie  early  settlers  c-f 
this  suburb,  expeit  suku  to  leave  for  ,St. 
Charles.  Miim.  Th.'  news  is  received  wl'li 
great  regret  by  theii    many  friends  here. 

Mrs.  Christopher  Christophei-son  li-avc^s 
Monday  for  a  visit  with  her  sister  in 
.\orth    Dakota. 

Several  tiirloads  of  refrigerators  left 
the  Hard  Itefrig.-rnter  plant  this  week 
for  Eastern  cities. 

(^.  E.  IVaslee.  commission  merch.:n; 
from  West  Diduth,  wa.s  here  on  buslm-ss 
Tlutr.sday. 

An  entertaimnent  ronsisting  cjf  a  «horL 
musical  program  au't  :i  farce  is  being  re- 
hearsed to  be  given  soon  at  the  fire  ha'l 
for  the  benefit  of  i!ie  local  fire  depart- 
ment. 

The  weather  permitting,  an  "advertise- 
ment .social  "  will  be  given  at  the  Congr.?- 
^ational  church  Saturday  evening. 
Tableaux  representing  advertisement.s 
will  be  shown  an<l  .-i  jirize  given  the  one 
who  finds  out  the  m"st  of  them.  Refresh- 
ments will  be  serveil. 

The  twice  postponed  debate  was  given 
at  the  fire  hall  Montiay  evening.  A  large 
and  appreciative  audience  was  present. 
The  subj.ei  -Re-solved  that  Trusts  and 
CumbinRtions  of  Cai'it.d  are  a  Hindrance 
to  NatlOlNil  Progre.'is."  was  ably  handle;!. 
\V.  J.  Mehhenniek  ;.s  leader  and  (J.  W. 
Keyos  and  K.  Shavtr  as  colleagues  sjioke 
for  the  artirmativi-  iiiul  George  G!.T<.rd 
with  Dr.  J.  A.  McCuni.  A.  D.  McOill  .and 
W.  II.  lOverett  sneke  lor  the  negativ'. 
Tile  points  were  very  evenly  scored  but  I 
decided  in  favor  of  the  affirmative.  The  , 
vote  ta'Ken  fo|-  Ihe  women  to  conduct  the 
next  ilebate  was  ni'isi  imanimously  <K-  < 
against  th<'  weincn  by  themselves.      | 


SPIRIT  LAKE  AND  VICINITY. 


Edwards,    of   Smithville, 
in     Duluth    Wednesday 


Mrs.  W.  C. 
was  shopping 
morning. 

Mrs.  Margaret  Sullivan,  of  Ironton, 
returned  Monday  after  spending  several 
weeks  w  ith  her  daughter,  Mrs.  Edward 
Noonan,  of  Madelia,  Minn. 

Mrs.  Gustavson.  of  New  Duluth, 
spent  Monday  with  her  sister,  Mrs.  Ed- 
ward Johnson,  of  Smithvile. 

Miss  Lillian  Dash  spt-nt  Tuesday 
afternoon  in  Duluth. 

Mr.  Hettinger  was  visiting  in  Duluth 
Saturday. 

Miss  Vesta  Randall  spent  Tuesday 
evening  in  West  Duluth. 

The  children  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  William 
H.'  Smith  have  been  suffering  with  the 
gripe  this  week. 

G.  W.  Burrell  spent  Thursday  in  Du- 
luth. 

The  gospel  song  service  will  be  held 
at  the  home  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  W.  C.  Ed- 
wards Sunday  evening. 

Master  Carl  Lindstrom  has  been 
quite  ill  during  this  week. 

Hazen  Stevens,  of  West  Duluth,  was 
visiting  in  Smithville  Thursday. 

Mr.  Fitzpatrick  was  visiting  friends 
in  Duluth  Thursday. 

Ruth,  the  little  daughter  of  Mr.  and 
Mrs.  A.  A.  Douglas,  has  almost  entirely 
recovered  from  the  chicken  pox. 

Mrs.  V.  A.  Dash  entertained  the 
ThimJjle  Bees  Thursday  afternoon.  The 
early  part  of  the  afternoon  was  si)ent 
in  sewing  carpet  rags,  and  the  latter 
part  in  snowshoeing  and  skiing.  Those 
l.resent  were:  Mrs.  G.  W.  Burrell.  Mrs. 
A.  A.  Douglas,  Mrs.  A.  Overton.  Mrs.  G. 
W.  Edwards,  Mrs.  W.  C.  l<:dwards.  Mis. 
Folkerts,  Miss  Judith 
Florence  Piercson,  Miss 
and  Miss  Cora  Payne 

Mrs.  A.  A.   Douglass 
next  Thtjrsday  afternoon. 

P.  F.  Nacey  spent  Saturday  evening 
in  Duluth. 

Mrs.  Enright  and  son  James,  of  West 
Ouluth,  visited  Mrs.  Nacey,  of  Smith- 
'ille  Tuesday. 


Stewart,     Miss 
Vesta  Randall, 

will     entertait\ 


UNWRITTEN  HISTORY. 


Why    Cleveland'  Slighted  the 
Hendricks  Funeral. 


cided 


MESABA  MATTERS. 


Du- 


Superintendent   Drumniond,     of 
luth.   was  in  Mesaba  Wednesday. 

George  Farmer,  who  has  been  visit- 
ing with  the  family  of  Charles  Nelson, 
has  returned  to  his  home  in  Two  Har- 
bors. 

Daniel  Martin,  of  Duluth.  spent  Sun- 
day with  the  family  of  Frank  Schur. 

Master  Herman  Nelson,  of  Allen 
Junction,  was  one  of  this  week's  visit- 
ors. 

Daniel  McDonald,  of  Virginia,  was  in 
town  Thursday. 

Tom  Doyle,  of  Two  Harbors,  is  the 
guest  of  his  sister.  Mrs.  T.  McDonald. 

Eugene  Maxwell  came  down  from 
Embarrass  Saturdf.y. 

Mrs.  M.  Mattson,  who  was  danger- 
ously ill  last  week,  is  now  convales- 
cent. 

Mrs.  S.  Johnson  and  daughter.  Mary, 
returned  Saturday  fiom  a  visit  with 
friends  in  Virginia.  j 

St.  Patrick's  day  biought  with  it     a  j 
heavy  rain — the  fiist  of  the  season.     It 
"ontinued  all  day.  and  by  afternoon  the 
snow    on    the   banking  ground    was    so 
soft  that  work  was  abandoned. 

Many  people  here  waited  eagerly  for 
news  of  Wednesday's  great  fight.  The 
results  of  each  round  were  received  by 
telegraph.  The  announcement  that  Cor- 
bett  was  defeated  caused  considerable 
surprise. 

Dr.  Noble  and  wife  came  down  from 
Tower  Saturday.  The  doctor  was  called 
on  professional  business. 

Mrs.  Fred  Mann  came  down  from  Ely 
Thursday. 

Miss  Lydia  Johnson  has  gone  to  Vir- 
ginia. 

Mrs.  Kutcha  was  in  Duluth  one  day 
this  week. 

Moses  Gibeau  and  John  McDonald 
were  visitoi-s  at  logging  camp  No.  2 
on  Saturday. 

Mrs.  Klinert,  the  cook  at  the  boarding 
house,  is  ill.  Charles  l>owman  is  chef 
now. 

Charles  Simpson  was  a  passenger  to 
Duluth  Thursday. 

Two  Indians  weri^  in  town  this  week. 
They  came  from  .Mien  Junction. 

It  is  exfiectcMl  that  the  planing  mill 
will  begin  operations  the  coming  week. 

Mr.  Dubois,  a  btinber  sialer  from  Du- 
luth, is  one  of  the  late  arrivals. 


(  Behind  the  law  of  presidential  suci  i  .;- 
!  sion  is  a  curious  chapter  of  unwrilion 
history.  It  was  told  recently  l»y  a  Mis- 
sourian  who  has  been  for  many  years 
!  a  trusted  official  of  the  I'nited  States 
I  senate,  says  the  St.  Louis  Globe-Demo- 
I  crat.  It  explains  fully  an  incident,  al- 
I  most  forgotten  now.  but  once  the  cause 
I  of  much  criticism  of  President  Cleve- 
I  land.  Until  a  few  years  ago  the  law 
J  was  that  the  jiresident  jiro  tempore  of 
'  the  .senate  succeeded  to  the  presidential 
1  office  in  the  event  of  the  death  or  inca- 


ELY  EVENTS. 


i; 


BAYHA  &  TIBBETTS, 

OMOEIITikRERS. 


I 


Ely.  Minn.,  March  20.— (Special  to  The 
Herald.)— An  effort  is  being  made  to 
establish  a  free  library  in  the  city,  and 
a  c(»mmittee  is  already  at  work  look- 
ing up  suitalde  rooms  and  other  neces» 
saries. 

Miss  Maggie  Sheridan  and  Miss  Jessie 
McCurdy  have  opened  dressmaking 
parlors  in  the  Korb  building. 

St.  Patrick's  day  dawned  with  a 
heavy  shower  of  rain,  something  un- 
usual in  this  part  of  the  country  at  this 
season  of  the  year.  A  stiong  south 
wind  had  beem.blowing  all  day  before, 
.and  the  deep  snowdrifts  were  cut  down 
consideral)ly. 

Mrs.  John  Bawden  returned  last  Sat- 
urday evening  from  a  few  weeks'  visit 
in  l)uluth,  the  guest  of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  A. 
W.  Button. 

W.  T.  James,  who  has  lieen  serving 
on  the  jury,  returned  last  Monday,  be- 
ing  excused  on  account  of  sickness. 

The  different  log.ging  camps  in  this 
vicinity  are  about  to  be  broken  up. 

Nels  F:ilsberg,  the  railroad  contrac- 
tor, who  rec^ently  died  in  Minneapolis, 
was  a  well  known  figure  in  Ely.  Among 
his  last  contrat'ts  around  Ely  may  be 
mentioned  the  four-mile  track  to  Win^ 
ton.  He  also  constructed  several  side 
tracks  around  the<^ards,  and  has  done 
most  of  the  work  for  the  Duluth  &  Ircm 
Range  the  past  t»'n  years. 

The  Pioneer  Iron  company  paid  its 
employes  last  Wednesday. 

Peter  Schafer  spent  Thursday  in  Du- 
luth. 

The  Dramatic  company  gave  thei^ 
exhibition  at  the  Opera  hou.se  Wednes- 
day evening.  The  house  was  well  filled 
when  the  curtain  rose.  The  music  fur- 
nished by  the  Dramatic  orchestra  was 


pacify  of  both  president  or  vice  presi 
(lent.  In  the  absence  of  a  president  pro 
tempore  the  succession  devolved  upon 
the  speaker.  But  either  of  these  officers 
only  acted  as  president  until  congress 
could  be  convened  cjn  twenty  <|ays'  no- 
tice and  a  special  election  could  be  held. 
Early  in  the  first  term  of  Mr.  Cleve- 
land. Vice  President  Hendricks  died  at 
his  home  in  Indianapolis.  A  situation 
^\  hich  was  without  a  precedent  exist- 
ed. Up  to  the  time  of  his  sickness  Mr. 
Hendricks  had  prevented  the  senate 
from  electing  a  president  pio  tempore. 
He  had  been  able  to  do  this  by  declin- 
ing to  vacate  the  chair  and  to  recognize 
that  privilege.  The  senate  was  Repub- 
lican by  a  nariow  majority.  The  vice 
president,  having  some  political  advan- 
tage in  mind  by  so  doing,  steadfastly 
lefused  to  let  the  Republicans  organize. 
When  he  died  there  was  no  president 
pro  tempore.  The  death  occurred  be- 
tween the  dissolution  or  one  congress 
r.nd  the  regular  session  of  the  next  con- 
gress. There  was  no  speaker,  .-^t  the 
White  House  President  Cleveland  was 
completing  his  preparations  to  go  to 
Indianapolis  to  attend  the  funeral.  Sen- 
j^tor  Edmunds  was  at  the  capitol,  busy 
in  his  committee-room.  The  suggestion 
came  to  his  mind:  What  would  happen 
if  the  president  should  be  killed  or  be 
rendered  unfit  for  duty  by  an  accident 
on  this  contemplated  journey  to  In- 
dianapolis'/ 

"Senator  Edmunds."  said  the  Mis- 
sourian,  "wa«  much  disturbed.  The 
more  he  thought  of  the  peculiar  possi- 
bilities the  graver  the  situation  seemed 
to  him.  He  asked  me  to  find  some  other 
senators  and  send  them  to  him.  Only 
two  Were  about  the  capitol.  They  were 
soon  closeted  with  Mr.  Edmunds.  He 
told  them  his  opinion  of  the  situation. 
He  said  that  if  anything  should  haji- 
pen  to  Mr.  Cleveland  the  country  would 
be  without  a  head.  There  would  be  no 
one  with  even  the  temporary  authority 
to  call  an  extraorilinary  session  of  lon- 
gress.  It  would  be  imj>ossible  to  take 
any  steps.  No  special  election  could 
be  ordered.  There  would  be  no  relief 
from  the  confusion  until  the  regular 
date  for  the  assembling  of  congress 
came  around  in  December.  Until  the 
senate  cho.se  a  president  pro  temp'.ri' 
and  the  house  elected  a  sp.^aker  tiobody 
could  perform  any  of  the  duties  of  pre- 
sident. 

"The  law  then  relating  to  presiden- 
tial succession  was  laid  before  the  other 
senators.  The  anomalous  condition  had 
not  occurred  to  them.  They  agreed  at 
once  that  Senator  Edmunds  was  right. 
When  he  suggested  that  under  the  cir- 
cumstances the  president  ought  to  be 
especially  careful  they  appioved  the 
suggestion.  As  the  result  of  the  con- 
ference Senator  F^dmunds  came  out  and 
Jisked  me  to  get  a  carriage  for  him.  He 
rode  direct  to  the  White  House  .and 
told  Mr.  Cleveland  he  must  not  go  to 
Indianapolis.  He  went  over  the  ground, 
showing  the  president  that  if  accident 
happened  to  him  the  country  would  be 
left  without  an  executive  for  months, 
tintil  December  came.  The  president 
was  astonished.  He  had  not  had  the 
slightest  realization  of  how  much  de- 
pended on  his  life  at  that  time.  He 
acknowledged  the  force  of  Senator  Ed- 
.inunds'  argutnent,  immediately  can- 
celed the  orders  for  transportation  and 
remained  in  Washington." 

There  was  much  criticism  over  the 
failure  of  Mr.  Cleveland  to  be  present 
at  the  Hendricks  obsequies.  The 
newspapers  couldn't  understand  the 
apparent  lack  of  consideration.  The 
president  said  nothing.  This  is  the  first 
time  the  circumstances  of  the  senaton- 
.al  conference  and  of  Senator  Edmunds' 
hurried  visit  to  the  White  House  ha\e 
been  told. 

As  soon  as  congress  convened  after 
Mr.  Hendricks'  death  Senator  Ed- 
munds   fathered  and  pushed  to  enact- 


What  is 


Castoria  i.s  l>r.  Samuel  Pitcher's  proscription  lor  Infants 
and  Children.  It  contains  neither  Opiiiui,  3Iorphin<'  nor 
other  Xarcotic  .substance.  It  is  a  harmless  siibsl  it uto 
for  Paregoric,  Drops,  Soothing  Syrups  and  Castor  Oil. 
It  is  Pleasant.  It**  guarantee  is  thirty  years*  use  by 
Millions  of  Mothers.  Castoria  is  the  Children's  I*anncea, 
—the  Mother';;  Friend. 

THE  FAC-SIMILE  SIGNATURE  OF 


APPEARS  ON  EVERY  WRAPPER. 

TMC  cnxTAun  rov.TArjY.  tt  muoray  r.    rcet.   NrwvoHKCiTV. 


"EAST,  WEST,  HOME  IS  BEST,"  IF  KEPT 
CLEAN  WITH 

SAPOLIO 


DR.RODRlOUtZ 


A  ^oki(lT^  Wrtllpn  |  AeT  MlUlilUin  o^d  '^"  "'- 

w.  ..n.un  .n..^.nii.ni.     »  uitr'j  iiuo.l  4  II  i-f  liir  LU9  I  RIHRnVVU  tciiilir  ;rai;> 
riiiiilK,  iM.lffof  youm;«naiiiiiJ  llt<-iii;.il  in.  ii  iiial  wnimti.  Tln^  avvHiI  e<l>clsi4"  VoU :  It- 

VI     t       bl^l^fll^C       .it. ...I.. I- ..    .1 L J    ■ ».._..     .._        ,.      ... ».,       - 


sP^ 


SPANISH  TJiaTMcNT.    Ounr-jiiui.t  4  ■..•.•  r.>r 


H  L  KiiKOlCS,  f.liruiili>uc>riii  ievelopiilciitfaiis.  wcuknrsf!,  Nivvou.i  pcbiiHy,  Ni((htly 
tmissioiig,  Cijiisuiiipliun,  Iiiaaoilr,  Exliau.^ini;  drains  onU  loss  of  pi,«»>tTOI  tiie  tti  n. 
erativt  Organs,  untltting  one  for  ftiujv,  bnaiiies's  and  niBrri:iL-p,  1m  «)i:trklv»urwl  l>y 


Ketolta  of  treaXmcai. 

Sold  in  Duluth  by  MAX  WIRTH,  Druggist, 


meat  a  bill  which  made  imijossiblc  Ihe 
repetition  of  such  a  crisis.  The  law  of 
succession  now  is  such  that  a  vacancy 
in  the  ottice  of  president  of  the  United 
States  is  beyond  all  probability.  If  the 
piesidenl  dies  the  vice  ijri'sident  takes 
ih«'  office  and  holds  it  to  the  end  of  the 
term.  If  both  the  president  and  the 
vice  president  ilie  the  secretary  of  state 
succeeds  and  is  acting  presiclent  until 
congress  can  be  held,  the  law  directing 
how  and  when  the  i)roclamation  for  a 
special  election  shall  be  issued.  Suc-- 
cession  falls  in  turn  upon  the  mem- 
bers of  the  caldnet.  including  the  sec- 
retary of  agiiculture.  In  the  brief  in- 
terim which  would  i)ass  l)etween  the 
deaths  of  president  and  vice  president 
and  the  special  election  there  are  eight 
possible  acting  iiresidents. 


I  iillty*.  so  that  they  may  be  knocked 
i  down  more  easily;  but  lifleen  inches  i.^ 
I  the  regulation  height.  Tt-npin  balls  arc? 
'  scjmetimes  made  uf  losewood,  soni«  - 
j  times  of  maple,  but  lignum  vilae  is  the. 
I  l>cst  wood  for  lenpin  balls. 
I      Howling  is  more-  pupuiur  now  in   this 

countiy  than  <-ver  i)<'fcire.     Cp  to  alMiut 

fifteen  yeais  ago  the  majorily  of  bmvi- 
•  ers  here  were  (Icrmaus.  Xow  bowling 
I  alleys  ai-e  provided  in  many  clubs,  and 
j  thc-re  Hr(-  moi>'  nubile  ancl  nioi-r  privali' 
j  alleys  than  ever,  especially  at  >ic-a.shoie 
I  and  ((Mintry  residences,  where  there  ar.- 

to  be  found  alleys  claboratwly  lilted  uu 

v.ith  fine  woi  ds. 


told  his 
his  pre- 
says  the 


EDISON'S  VACATIONS. 

When  Thomas  A.  Edison's  physician 
told  him  nearly  a  year  ag(j  that  unless 
he  gave  up  his  laboratory  work  and 
went  away  for  a  c<miplete  rest  of  sla- 
eial  weeks,  his  doctor's  bill  would  be 
largely  increased,  he  packed  his  grii) 
under  protest  and  went.  He 
physician  on  his  return  that 
scription  had  been  a  g<jod  one. 
New  York  Sun. 

"I  devoted  myself  to  play  with  the  en- 
eigy  that  I  put  into  my  work,"  he  said, 
■'and  I  believe  that  I  have  obtained  as 
much  good  from  my  short  vacation  as 
the  average  man  obtains  in  twice  the 
time." 

Mr.  P]dis(m  has  certainly  lost  very 
little  time  in  his  work  since  his  vaca- 
tion, and  the  amount  <if  energy  that  h< 
exjiends  upon  it  each  day  sometimes 
suggests  to  those  who  know  him  that 
possibly  he  renews  his  strength  during 
the  few  hours  that  he  devotes  to  sleep 
by  some  mysterious  elec  trical  devices  ot 
his  own.  Mr.  Edison  is -usually  very 
ready  to  tell  newspaper  men  about  his 
new  inventiims  at  the  proper  time,  l>ul 
he  expects  that  the  men  who  are  sent 
to  interview  him  shall  know  something 
in  a  general  way  about  the  subject  on 
which  they  ask  him  to  talk.  He  dis- 
likes to  have  the  interviewer  make- 
many  notes.  Several  years  ago  a  ver^ 
green  interviewer,  who  didn't  know  th,- 
difference  between  a  volt  and  a  dyna- 
mo, asked  Mr.  Edison  to  give  him  some 
information  for  a  newspaper  that  was 
new  and  freakish.  The  interviewer 
Ijulled  out  a  large  new  notebook  that  he 
had  purchased,  for  the  occasion  and 
asked  Mr.  Edison  a  leading  ciuestion. 
The  wizard  looked  at  him  in  surprise, 
and.  instead  of  replying,  he  said: 

"Young  man,  you  aie  inexperienced 
in  this  liusiness  and  my  time  is  valu- 
aide.  If  I  talkc^d  to  you,  you  would  md 
be  able  to  )>ublish  it  straight.  I  clis- 
ciivcred  long  ago  that  a  mans  standing; 
on  a  paper  might  be  judged  inversely 
by  the  number  of  notes  that  he  to(»l^ 
during  an  iiitci-vicw.  Your  pniiaru- 
tii>ns  frighfen  me  and  the  size  of  your 
niitcbook  appalls  me." 

The  young  man  didn't  gel  his  inter- 
view. 


jDulutbTrustCo; 
I  Writes  ^ 
!  Fire  Insurance. : 


ANTAL-MIDY 


These  tiny  Capsules  are  superior 
to  Balsam  of  Copaiba,/"^ 
CubebsorlnjectonsandlMIDt] 
CURE  IN  48  MOURS  V^ 

the   came    diseases    without 
inconvenience. 

SM  //V  all  JrufTgtfts. 


riiolssranti*.! 


REViVO 

RESTORES  VITAUTY. 


Made  a 
IWeli  Man 

16th Day.  ^Pl^h^     Of  Mc. 
THE  GREAT       30th  Day. 


£3t  Day 


IX  STAID  ()LI>  BOSTON. 

The  iVlassachusetts  Fish  ancl  (lann- 
I'riiteetivc  association  held  its  aimnal 
ban<|uel  in  the  i'opley  s'luarc  hotel  last 
night.  It  was  an  overllowing  occasio!i 
in  point  of  numbers,  <tratory.  vocal  en- 
thu.siasm  and  other  things,  making  al- 
together one  of  the  most  successful  ot 
its  gatherings. 

One  of  the  first  surprises  was  the  cut- 
ting of  a  meat  pie  by  President  Mock- 
well.  There  was  no  little  dramatic 
effect  given  to  the  deed,  and  when  two 
lialiy  lions  junnjed  out  on  the  table  tiie 
denouejnent  was  all  thai  could  be 
wished  at  a  game  dinner.  The  young- 
sters were  allowed  to  pi-ance  on  the 
table  a  little,  and  were  passed  around 
among  the  guests  for  admiration  ami 
somewhat  gingerly  handling.  ^ 


produceg  the  abnvo  resuKs  in  30  days.  It  a  ts 
powerliilly  aud  .iuickly.  Cures  wbcn  all  othf  n.  fad 
VouugrmeuwiUreBain  their  lost  manhood,  and  old 
mci!  will  rcpover  tJioir  youthlul  vigor  tiv  ubins 
KKVIVO.  It  'lutckly  and  surely  r<:.storet>Nervous- 
nehS.  Lost  Vitaliiy,  Intpotency.  Nightly  tniission: , 
LofitPowcr.  lailin;?  Memory,  Wahtinir  I)ifr'a5es.  and 
all  efiVctK  ot  Ec-U-akube  or  cxre.--^  and  indiw^rktio!!, 
which  niilitb  one  tor  suidy.  biistccKs  or  niarriace.  It 
ootonly  riiroKby  Ktat'i  icattbe»«!at  of  diei  ase.  but 
iB  a  (Treat  nerve  tonic  and  blood  l>iiil«1er.  bricu- 
I'le  bark  the  pink  glow  to  pa!«»  rlirekfi  and  ro- 
atciins  tho  fire  of  yof}lb.  It  vards  off  fnKan,  ty 
and  tonKurapiioB.  Insi.n  on  bavins  KKVlVv>,  (.a 
other.  It  can  bo  carried  In  vost  i>o<:k(  t.  By  mail. 
SI .00  p^^r  package,  or  tii  for  l!«5.00.  with  a  pokl' 
•■•ve  ivrltten  guarantee  to  cure  or  refund 
Ihe  money.   Circular  free.    Address 

'\YAL  HEDICINC  CO.,  271  Watiasa  ivc.  CfllCAOO.  HI, 
Tvt  ■*!•  In  Dulutk  by  ■.  F.  B«yc«,  dmsvl* 


ILODDPOISDW 

iA  SPECIALTY^; 


TENPIN  AND  TENPIN    R.VLLS. 

Ten|)ins  uic  ma<le  of  rock  maple,  anil 
cost   $:!.,"»0    a   set.     They    formerly    c-ost 
more,  but,  w  ith  a  greater  demand  and 
increased    sales,    tirices   have    been    re-  { 
duced,  says  the  New  York  Sun.    A  per-  I 
fectly  turned  and  handsomely  polished 
rock   maple   pin    is   a  symmetrical   am' 
sightly  object.    Standing  in  the  window 
of  a  dealer  in  this  city  is  a  lenpin   of 
bird's-eye  maple  w  hich  is  beautiful  and 
attracts   much   attention.     And    bird  s- 
eye   maph^  would    be   a   good    wood   for 
tenpins,   but   it  cost   tw  ice  as  much  as 
rock    maple,   or   more,    and   the   beauty  j 
spots  w  ould  scarcely  be  vi.sible  from  the  i 
other  end  of  a  70-foot  alley.  | 

The  rejrulation  lenpin  is  fifteen  inches  ' 
high,  and  fifteen   inches  in  circumfor-  '-. 
ence  at  the  largest  part  and  two  and  a  '■■ 
quarter  inches  in  diameter  at  the  base. 
Pins  are  sometimes  made  shorter  and 
sometimes  longer  and  bigger  for  family 


B! 
A  SPECIALTYiSo^ll?: 
tiary  JtLOOU  IMJISON  permanently 
cured  in  15  to;!')  days.  7o«  can  be  treated  a« 
home  for  same  price  UBderBumegUitnui' 
ty.  If  you  prefer  to  come  here  we  will  con* 
tract  to  pay  r:Alroadfare«tid  bold  bill^  .and 
nocharffe,  if  we  t:ul  to  cure.  I  i  you  have  laUn!  iaer> 
cary,  iodide  potash,  and  eti!l  havo  octies  auU 

faln«,MuGuu8l'Htclie8in  inoucii,  SereThroat« 
'imples.  Copper  (Colored  ^pots,  I'lcern  wa 
any  purtof  the  body,  MairurKvubroiVK  fulllne 
out,  it  ia  this  Secondary  D1.00U  i>UlSUN 
weRiwranteetocure.  WeBulicitUienioMotMti- 
nato  cases  and  ckaileuee  the  world  for  • 
jase  we  cannot  cure.  Tina  dir^eaee  h.ia  aiwara 
baffled  the  skill  uf  the  moiit  euaineiu  physi* 
elans*  S600,UUO  capital  beli.Dd  oiv  uncoQdi. 
tional  gnaranty.  AbsolutejircMfsBeotaealedoa 
apRlicatkon.  ii^re86  C'WUK  JS(M^O\  CV« 
ao5  MaBonio  Temple,  cr 


r€liieli<!rt(-r'*  EncUnh  Dlanond  RrnBC 
ENNYROYAL  PILLS 
.<et-~>.  Orl£lnal  and  Only  Ccnabir. 

—    .'^*^     0»rE,    alwivs    riliatlc.     •.koics  «tk 
Drufrift  for  OifdeMer*  £,M(iiA  ln.i  A 
mondBranJ  in  Ilc4l  and  Gold  iuet>IUc\ 

Dies.  -.Lili^J  will,  oluw  ribtou.    Take 

^uotlier.  Btfusc  dantjerouM  euhMtiiU' 

tioruaiuiitKlatiuni,.  At  Urugguu.  or  aesd  4«. 

in  Maiupi    for    larticutary.    t'--t*iiuo&i»l»   snd 

*'iteUer  fop  I.AdlM."  m  UUcr.  t>  rrta.-a 

'      MbIL     1 0,000  Ti-KiimooiaU.     ^'-imc  I-aprr. 

.    Cfklello»t«>rChcinie«IC«^lUil«>a>««u« 

MtbZtilLgsalPrjfisuu  I'kUads.,^ 


1 


1 

' 

■  I 


■  ■■'  r  >    »  *■ 


i«^MP«pi 


"I 


I 


ittm 


sc 


c 


'9  ■ 


THE     DFLTTH     EVEXiyO     HERALD:    SATrRDAY.     MARCH    20, 


1897, 


♦  ♦»»»»»t^»»»^»»»»»  »»»♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦♦♦♦#  ♦♦♦♦♦♦»»4 


I 


i  GOSSIP  OF     * 


: 

: 

»♦<>♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦#♦♦♦♦•»♦♦♦»♦#<•♦»♦♦»♦♦»•♦♦ 


*  THE  STAGE. 


o 
o 


ii 


I've  read  aboul 

the  GordonHat 
/-//sec  it  f' 


wore  Miss  Fay  Davis  ami  Miss  Julia 
Opp,  ft>r  both  of  whom  ho  has  writton 
l)arts  in  his  new  remedy. 


.  DON'T  STOP  TOBACCO. 


Charit;:  H.  Yali  .-=  "F.irovor  l)o\  ils 
Auction"  company  will  appear  at  th<' 
Lyceum  rexl  'Xlonday  and  Tuesday 
This  spoctacle  has  visited  Duluth  il 
trequont  intervals  and  never  seems  to 
lose  its  popularity.  This  is  undoubtedly 
due  to  the  faot  that  the  maiiapem.^nt 
i'.as  always  maintained  a  hish  .>5tand- 
ard.  Anions  the  new  specialties  of- 
lored  for  this  year's  production  are: 
Ti.wner  a0d  Frobel.  the  aerial  grro- 
tt:!-ques;  the  Teskat  tmupe  of  comic 
bicyclists,  headed  by  Alexander  Dec- 
ta.  the  famous  triok  rider,  and  the 
Lorella  Duo.  in  fantastic  magical 
scenes.  A  number  of  speeial  features 
have  been  arransred  l>y  Manager  Yale 
to  take  the  place  of  former  successe-^. 
among  which  is  "The  Ricycle  Craze."  a 
!  antomimic  episode  both  timely  and 
funny,  in  which  some  remarkable- rid- 
itg  is  done,  and  a  number  of  bikes 
are  manufactured  from  articles  ap- 
parently gatht>-ed  in  a  hap-hazard 
n-.annor.  yet  when 
comes  a  practical 
creates  no  end  t>f 
l-lause. 

There  is  also  a  new  and  spectacular 
combinati'-n  of  song  and  pantomime. 
Ahich  Mr.  Yale  has  designated  'Wepry 
Willie'  or  'The  H<>k«>?s  Sorree  "  which 
has  mot  with  in'«;ar::rne«ius  success, 
and  must  be  seea  to  he  appreciated, 
while  his  bashful  maidens  and  timid 
o?d  maids  as  prcsonii-vl  by  ten  male 
and  female  "ingers.  dancers  and 
knofk-about  c«>m'.-dians  simply  defy 
d^scrii>tion.  It  is  a  matter  of  impos.-^i- 
'  ility  to  describe  or  particularize 
ivory  new  feature  r-flferod  by  Manager 
Yale  in  this,  the  fifteenth  edition  of 
the  'Forovcr  Devils  Aucti<m."  Suf- 
fice it  to  say.  that  ir  its  entirety  it  can 
If  trinhfully  said,  as  now  presented. 
»o  l>e  the  bfst  production  that  has  ev-r 
J.H?en  given  of  this  famt»us  spectacle. 


scoring  heavily  this  season  buth  in  his 
play,  "Old  Innocence."  and  in  his  spe- 
cialty which  he  calls  "Sir  Henry.  Hyp- 
notized." The  latter  introduces  Murphy 
as  Sir  Henry  Irving  and  the  idea  seenis 
to  be  to  have  Sir  Henry  give  imitations 
of  famous  American  comedians.  These 
include  Robson  as  Bertie  in  "The  Hen- 
rietta." Jefferson  as  Bob  Acres  in  "The 
Rivals."  Russell  as  Noah  Vale  in  "The 
Poor  Relaticm."  and  Lawrence  Bar- 
rett as  Cassias,  pictures  of  which  are 
here  given. 


put  together  be- 
machine.  which 
laughter   and    ap- 


;     The  actor's  fund  is  one  of  the  most 
i  deserving   of    theatrical    charities    and 
'  the  anual   benefits  given  for  its  main- 
'  tenance  are  always  notable  for  excel- 
lence  in     promise     and     performance. 
,  wherein  they  differ  from  other  benefits 
w  hich  are  always  excellent  in  promises, 
but    sometimes    cruelly    inade(iuate    in 
■  performance.    At  the  benefit  given  this 
'  week  in  New  York.  James  K.   Hackott 
\  enacted    Romeo   to   the   Juliet    of    Miss 
Nethersole.    thus    taking    temporarily 
the  place  he  was  to  have  had  with  the 
actress      two   seasons   ago.     This   plan 
was  defeated  l>y  Miss  Nethorsole's  im- 
portation  of    that    very    queer   Knglish 
aggregation  which  accompanied  her  on 
her   first    visit    here.    l)Ut    Hackett    was 
gainer  because  he  is  now   leading  man 
at  Daniel  Frohmans  theater  and  plays 
all  season  in  New   York.    American  act- 
ors   have    also    gained    something     !>»•- 
cause    that     experiment      cured      Miss 
Nethersole    of    the      English-company- 
for-America  idea. 


The  woman's  hat  question  has  been 
somewhat  drastically  dealt  with  by  the 
Brussels  police.  wht»  have  published  a 
prohibition  against  the  wearing  of  such 
headgv*ar  in  the  stalls  and  dress  circle 
of  any  theater  In  that  capital.  The 
effect  of  this  ukase  has.  however,  not 
been  whollj'  satisfactory,  for  the  fair 
sex.  taking  exception  to  It,  decline  to 
patroniz,'  theatrical  entertainments, 
with  the  not  unnatural  consequence 
that  the  attendance  of  the  sterner  sex 
has  also  fallen  off  to  a  very  consider- 
able extent.  It  is  difHcult  to  see  how 
the  Brussels  managers  will  be  able  to 
grapple  with  the  difflaulties  of  a  posi- 
tion that  threatens  to  play  havoc  with 
their  treasuries.  Surely,  in  these  days 
of  arbitration  some  equitable  adjust- 
ment  of  this  highly  important  matter 
might  be  arrivecl  at. 


GREEN  LEAVES. 


What  the  Medical   Profession 
Knows  About  Them. 


National   Capital  Witnesses 

Many    a   Hot    Game 

of  Faro. 


Joe  Hall's  Midnight  Suppers 

and    Some     oF     ttie 

Visitors. 


Prominent  Men  Who  Staked 
Thousands  on  the  Turn- 
ing Cards. 


K.  S.  Willard   had  an   '.inpbasant   ex- 
perience in  Chicago  the  other  day.  Th" 
siory    is    told    thus    by    the    Chronicle:  ' 
When    he  went    to    Hoolevs   box   <)(li'e  i 
upon    his    arrival    fr>>m    Milwaukee    to  [ 
Kot    his    mail    he    found    there    Stewart 
Ailon.  his  press  agent,  looking  over  the  i 
{roof   i»f    the   advertisement      for     th*:-  j 
morning's    paf>ers.      Mr.    Allen    handed 
the   Knglish   actor  the  proof   and     Mr. 
Willard  b^;an  to  read  it.     Suddenly  ho 
turned   a   shade   pah>i-   than   usual    and 
gasped  "What's  thi'^?  "     Mr.  Allen  took 
the  proiif  slip  and   read   it.     He  turned 
rod  and  white  by  turns,  and  the  treas-  [ 
urer  and  office  bciy  of  Hooley'*  thought  ! 
they  wore  going  to  see  something  new 
in  the  realistic  tragedy  line.    The  cause  t 
of  Mr.   Willards  discomtiture  and    Mr. 
Aliens  acute  distress  was  simply  that 
in  bold  "olack.  full-faced  c-apital  letters 
this    painful    anni>uncenient    appeared: 
"Mr.  E.  S.   Willard  will   appear  for  six 
nights  and   two  matinees  only  in   "The 
Middleman.'    and    on    Monday.    March 
1-"'.    for   the    first    time   In    Chicagi)    Mr. 
\Villiard    will   appear    in     The    Rogues 
wherein    he    has      made     the 
hit   of  his   life."     The   trifling 
the  ad.   is  that   "The    Rogues 
•hould      have      read        "The 
Comedy."        Henry      Arthur 
Jones'  new  play.    The  proofs  of  this  ad 
are    treasured    already    by    every    one  ' 
lucky  enough  ti>  get  hold  of  one.  ! 


Gallery, 
greatest 
error  in 
♦iallery" 
Rogue's 


A  new  tv^rror  has  arisen  for  London 
actresses  on  first  nights.  Some  months 
ago  a  society  calbnl  the  Playgoers'  club 
made  an  earnest  effort  to  restrain  the 
ribald  i-omarks  from  the  pit  and  tt>  pro- 
\ciit  the  unmerciful  storms  of  hisses 
whic  h  have  made  so  many  recent  first 
nights  in  England  almost  oi^ual  to  pur- 
gatory for  iho  actors.  This  club,  it 
seems,  enters  into  negotiations  with  the 
pit  before  the  performance  liegins.  On 
its  side  it  is  agreed  than  on  condition 
that  the  audienct  remains  quiet  imtil 
the  final  curtain  has  fallen  it  shall  then 
have  a  chanc  e  to  relieve  its  mind  at  it.-' 
own  sweet  will.  The  result  is  that  dur- 
ing a  new  play  now  the  whole  perfor- 
mance takes  place  in  a  great  calm.  At 
Wilson  Barrett's  first  night  of  •The 
Daughters  of  Babylon"  they  say  that 
you  could  ha\  e  hoard  a  ton  of  coal  droi. 
at  any  stage  "f  the  performance — 
something  quite  unusual  in  an  English 
pit.  Th,>  quiet  was  so  great  that  Bar- 
rett and  his  coMipany  wore  beginning 
to  congratulate  themselves  on  another 
impressive  st>mi-demi-religious  success, 
when.  Biff:  Bang!  down  came  the  final 
curtain,  and  such  a  succession  of  hisses 
broki  out  that  the  actors  were  fairly 
paralyzed.  "The  Daughters  of  Baby- 
lon" was  only  one  instance.  There  have 
been  an  unusual  number  of  failures  in 
London  tills  year,  and  at  each  of  them 
the  pit  has  observed  the  letter  of  its 
contract  religiously,  but  has  always 
managed  to  avenge  itself  later  on.  The 
consecjuence  is  thai  London  manage i.>- 
an<l  actors  are  now  politely  imploring 
the  Playgoers'  club  to  mind  its  own 
business  and  let  bad  enough  alone. 


The  season  of  green  leaves  is  at 
hand.  They  will  soon  bo  here  with  all 
their  beauty  and  utility.  The  scientist 
not  only  sees  how  beautiful  they  are. 
but  is  able  also  to  see  how  beautiful 
they  are.  The  green  leaves  are  oxy- 
gen-makers. Oxygen  Is  necessary  to 
animal  life.  The  free  i>xygen  of  the 
atmosphere  is  constantly  being  con- 
sumed by  combustion  and  by  breathing 
creatures.  The  oxygen  thus  consumecl 
is  rendered  unfit  for  breathing,  being 
converted  into  carbonic  gas.  Were  it 
not  for  the  green  leaves  our  atmos- 
phere would  soon  be  deprived  of  all  its 
oxygen  and  all  air-breathing  animals 
would  die.  What  we  breathe  in,  leaves 
breathe  out.  and  vice  versa.  Each 
spring  brings  joy  and  invigoration 
through  the  enrichment  of  ihe  air  by 
the  green  leaves.  It  is  at  once 
clous  and  a  trying  time  to  the 
system. 

The  sudden  jiouring  into  the 
phere  of  so  much  free  oxygen 
nervousness,  skin  erruptious.  palpita- 
tion, all  sorts  of  mental  excesses.  ,A11 
this  is  a  necessary  and  utia\-oidal>le 
accompaniment  of  spring.  Hence  a 
spring  medicine  has  c-ome  to  be  a  ne- 
cessity to  most  people.  No  better 
spring  medicine  can  be  found  than  Fc- 
ru-na.  It  regulates,  it  invigorates,  it 
rejuvenates,  it  renovates,  it  rec-reates. 
it  expurgates— in  short,  does  all  that 
any  spring  remedy  or  remedies  can  do. 
All  druggists  keep  Pe-ru-na. 

Send  for  free  book.  Address  the  Pe- 
ru-na  Drug  Manufacturing  company, 
Columl>us,  Ohio. 


Faro  was  king  at  the  national  capi- 
tal during  James  Buchanan's  term. 
The  most  pretentious  gambler  of  them 
all  was  Joe  Hall,  whose  midnight  sup- 
pers Lucullus  wduld  have  made  haste 
to  envy  could  he  hi^ve  tasted  the  can- 
vas back  duck,  stuffed  with  chestnuts, 
and  the  side  dish  of  Virginia  hominy 
done  brown,  in  butter,  garnished  with 
bacon  from  Accomac,  fed  on  acorns, 
says  the  Philadelphia  Times. 

There  were  no  club  houses,  so- 
called,  in  the  ante-bellum  days  of 
Washingttn.  And  here,  up  to  the  fall 
ot  Sumpler.  the  South  and  North,  no 
matter  how  acrid  the  days  debate  in 
congress,  when  the  members  met  be- 
fore Joe  Hall's  or  George 
gree  baize  table,  they  "let 
a  poultice 
political 


Pendleton's 

silence  like 

the   blows"  of 


a  deli- 
hunfan 

atmos- 
excites 


L.  R.  Stockwell  brcr'KO  his  leg  while 
playing  at  Seattle  last  week  and  the 
injury  was  so  serious  that  amputation 
was  necessary.  This  retires  from  the 
stage  a  very  clever  comedian  who  was 
last  seen  here  in  H<>yt'.«  'A  Temperance 
Town." 


Since  Mrs.  Frances  Hodgson  Burnett 
has  emerged  into  the  glare  ctf  the  cal- 
ciurq  as  a  full  fledgecl  dramatist,  the 
mamagers  have  had  a  new  element  to 
deal  with  and  the  particular  manager 
who  c  lashed  with  Mrs.  Burnett  has  had 
ilnally  to  ac-knowledge  defeat.  Dan- 
iel Frohman  acoeiited  from  the  author- 
ess "Th-  F^irst  Gentelman  of  Europe" 
Jind  succeeded  in  casting  it  in  accord- 
ance with  his  own  views  without  seri- 
ous trouble.  He  also  accepted  her 
"Lady  of  Quality."  and  had  to  let  it 
revert  back  to  her  because  of  a  differ- 
ence in  their  views  as  to  the  actress 
best  suited  for  the  title  role.  Mr.  Froh- 
man insisted  on  Olga  Nethersole  foi- 
the  Lady  Clorinda  an'1  Mrs.  Burnett 
said  the  play  should  not  be  given  if 
Elizabeth  Calhoun,  a  protege  of  hers. 
did  not  play  the  role.  Under  the  cir- 
cumstances Mr.  p-rohman  gave  in  and 
it  would  appt^ar  that  Mrs.  Burnett  has 
also  receded  somewhat  from  her  c>rig- 
inal  rM's^ition.  ff»r  the  new  managers 
who  have  accepted  the  i-lay  announce 
Miss  Julia  Arthur's  return  to  her  na- 
tive land  to  star  as  I^ady  Clorinda. 

Miss    Arthur,   it   will   bo  remembered, 
deserted  her  nati\^  land  for  a  London 
opening 
Irving's 


Lord  Nelson,  the  British  naval  hero, 
figures  prominently  in  two  plays  just 
produced  in  London.  The  first  aroused 
the  ire  of  the  FZnglish  public  by  having 
as  a  theme  the  relations  which  existed 
for  so  many  years  between  Nelson  and 
Lady  Hamilton.  It  is  called  "Th- 
Enchantress."  The  later  one  is  calle'i 
"The  Mariners  of  England.  "  and  shows 
the  hero  in  all  of  the  light  of  his 
achievements  on  the  water  while  hit- 
unfortunate  domestic  arrangements- 
this  phrase  is  taken  from  an  English 
newspaper — will  not  be  referred  to. 

The  same  English  newspaper  preseat.s 
a  request  for  a  set  of  historic  plays 
with  the  traclitions  of  character  re- 
versed. Richard  III  as  a  good  hero, 
and  fiishop  Wilberforce.  or  somebody 
of  that  type,  as  a  villain. 


The  Saturday  matinte  was  just  over 
The  audience  was  slowly  filing  out  Hnd 
the  actors  and  actresses  were  l>eing 
posed  for  a  flash  light  i)icture.  w  hen  fnc 
stage  door  opened  and  a  stylish  look- 
ins  young  woman  walked  up  to  the 
doorkeeper. 

"I  have  an  appointment  w  ith  Mr.  Per- 
kins, '  she  said.  "He  wished  to  see  ni'. 
immediately  after  the  iierformance." 

Then  she  made  a  dash  to  go  on  the 
stage,  but  the  d<jorkeeper  stoppect  her 
and  wont  himself  to  inform  the  actor. 

He  hurried  out.  still  wearing  the  yel- 
low robe  of  the  i)lay.  and  w<mdering — 
for  the  first  glimpse  of  the  lady  showed 
him  that  she  w  as  a  stranger — what  was 
desired  of  him. 

"This    is    awfully    good    of    you,    Mr. 

Perkins,"  was  what  he  had  a  conscious- 

and   found   it    w  ith   Sir  Henry  i  ness  of  hearing,  "so  sorry  to  have  put 


THE  MERRY  GOPHERS. 
They  are  a  sauoy  set  of  fellows, 
those  young  imps  that  throng  the 
Western  plains  and  appe^  to  the  good- 
htarted  Manitoba  farmer  for  their  win- 
ter food.  They  are  not  beggars,  either. 
The  gopher  has  far  to  muc-h  independ- 
ence and  character  for  that,  says  Our 
Anima!    Friend.s. 

They  just  walk  into  a  field  well 
stocked  with  succulent  grain,  and  they 
thrive,  as  happy  a  lot  of  bright  eyed 
young  rogues  as  you  would  wish  to 
see.  They  have  not  much  dread  of  the 
animal's  mortal  enemy — man— as  they 
show  by  the  fearlessness  with  which 
they  build,  or  rather  dig.  their  homc-s 
near  by  the  prairie  roads,  and  sport 
I  about  in  their  own  back  yards  to  their 
j  hearts'   content. 

i      We  saw  thousands  of  them  when  we 
drove    in    a    buckboard      sixty        mile? 
across  prairies   in   the   Canadian   terri- 
j  tories.    It    was    a    warm    late     August 
i  afternoon,    and    the    little    chaps    were 
j  gamboling  about   in   the  sunshine,   fro- 
licking   like    diminutive    spring    lambs, 
and  far  more  agile,  graceful  and  inter- 
I  esting.    Two    of    them    got    under    th'- 
I  horses'   hoofs,    but   the  fine  old    prairie 
I  cobs  were  to  good  natured   to  step  on 
j  the    little    fellows,    and      the       gophers 
themselves    despised    the    big      brown 
animals  with  the  cc  ntempt  born  of  an 
absolute    assurance   of    safety. 

Then  with  an  adr<)it  dodge.  they 
would  whisk  away,  scamper  off  to  th"ii- 
burrows,  sit  up  on  their  hind  <iuarters 
with  their  fore  legs  lifted  and  paws 
hanging  omically  clownward,  and  with 
a  pretty,  scampish  expression  of  In- 
nocence these  little  monkeys,  no  larger 
than  a  kitten  and  wrapped  in  their 
fur  coats  of  gray,  would  cock  their 
heads  on  one  side,  eye  us  with  those 
bright  little  black  lieads  of  eyes,  and 
—well— laugh.  When  we  had  bowled 
past,  I  always  felt  that  the  little  vil- 
lains were  making  grimaces  at  ouri 
backs. 


Lyceum   company. 


Here  is  a  brief  outline  of  a  comed- 
ian's work  in  one  performance  which 
may  serve  to  convince  those  who  im- 
agine stage  people  have  an  easy  time 
of  their  mistake. 

He  arrives  at  the  theater  about  forty 
minutes  before  the  curtain  is  to  rise 
and  makes  an  entire  change  of  raiment 
tfjgether  with  the  application  of  grease 
I>ainft.  whiskers  and  wig  necessary  to 
transform  him  from  a  young  man  of 
pleasing  appearance  to  a  tramp  of 
humorously  reckless  disregard  for  style. 
When  the  curtain  rises  he  is  "discov- 
ered" and,  as  this  is  a  farce  comedy, 
he  must  be  uncommcmly  brisk  in  dia- 
logue an<l  action  until  he  makes  his 
first  exit.  This  exit  is  merely  for  the 
l>urpoi»e  of  getting  what  may  be  des- 
••ribcMJ  as  a  rush  entrance  and  after  he 
comes  on  this  time  his  principal  exer- 
cise consists  of  tossing  lightly  in  the  air 
the  other  characters  vho  share  the 
stage.  After  this  anoth»-r  exit  an<l 
quick  change  of  costume  only  to  return 
and  participate  in  a  finale  of  lively 
dan<  ing.  Second  act — Complete  change 
of  «<loihc*s  for  opening  of  act:  another 
change  after  his  first  scene  and  a  third 
change  for  his  specialty,  which,  being 
a  couple  of  acmgs,  gives  him  his  first 
period  of  test.  After  this  he  only 
changes  cfjstume  twice,  but  the  finale 
of  the  second  act  finds  him  engaged  in 
a  rough  and  tumble  dance  which  leaves 
him  entirely  out  of  breath.  Third  act- 
Only  two  changes  of  costume,  but  a 
continuous  exercise  of  his  liveliest  at- 
tributes. 

This  is  the  barest  outline  of  the  work 
Will  West  does  at  every  performance 
of  "The  Dazzler"  and  the  fact  that 
every  entrance  must  be  made  at  exact- 
lj»  the  right  instant,  every  move  made 
when  expected  and  every  line  spoken 
with  speed  and  ccjrrectness  does  not 
make  the  work  seem  like  play,  although 
th*»  audience  must  be  given  that  im- 
pression. 


I  you  to  any  trouble,  but  1  was  just  dying 
I  to  see  how  you  looked  at  close  cjuarters. 

Thanks,  aw  fully." 
1  This  took  place  in  New  York  and  de- 
I  monstrates  better  than  anything  else 
could  that  the  New  York  young  lady  of 
the  present  day  does  not  hesitate  to 
'  seek  information  whenever  she  wants 
I  it." 


It  has  been  discoveped  by  a  close  (^h~ 
server  of  May  Irwin's  audiences  in 
New  York  city  that  fat  people  pre-, 
dominate  and  their  number  is  attribut- 
ed to  that  "fellow  feeling  which  makes 
us  wondrous  kind."  It  will  be  remem- 
bered that  she  makes  a  distinct  bid  for 
the  approval  of  fat  people  by  cheerfully 
ridiculing  her  own  breadth  of  bc>am. 
She  may  do  this  without  rc'alizing  that 
it  is  very  enjoyable  for  a  fat  person  to 
see  another  one  ricliculed  on  the  score 
of  weight;  but  certainly  all  of  the 
heavyweights  enjoy  these  remarks  of 
hers  because  it  makes  them  feel  small 
in  comparison.  No  fat  i>orson  coubl 
erer  forgc-t  her  delivery  of  that  delight- 
fully naive  verse  aliout  the  old  dress, 
which  ends: 

But  the  hooks    and    eyes    which    once 

were  friends 
Never  will  meet  again. 


FREE  STOP-OVER  AT  WASHING- 
TON. 
On  all  through  tickets  between  the 
East.  West.  North  ami  .South,  reading 
via  Baltimore  &  Ohio  railroad,  i^  stop- 
over at  Washington  can  bo  secured, 
without  extra  charge  for  railroad  fare, 
by  depositing  the  ticket,  uiion  arrival 
at  Washington,  w  ith  the  B.  &  O.  station 
ticket  agent  at  that  point.  Washing- 
ton is  always  attractive  to  visitors,  and 
particularly  so  while  congress  is  in  ses- 
sion. This  arrangement  for  stop-over 
privilege  will  doubtless  be  appreciated 
by  the  public,  and  will  bring  to  the  na- 
tional capital  many  travelers  to  view- 
its  superb  public  buildings,  monuments, 
museums  and  thoroughfares. 


Sent  Free  to  Men. 


INDIANA   MAN   DISCOVERS   A 
MAKKABLE  KEMEDY  FOB 
LOST   VIGOR. 


fiE- 


Samples   Will 


Be   Sent    Free 
Write  For  It. 


to    All    Who 


Tim  Murphy's  work 
enjoyably  quaint  and 


has  always  been 
he  ii.  said  to  be 


The  American  actress  in  general  and 
two  of  her  representatives  in  particular 
have  recently  come  In  for  the  unstint- 
ed approval  of  Arthur  Wfng  Pinero, 
author  of  "The  Second  Mrs.  Tan- 
queray,"  "The  Amazons."  "The  Notori- 
ous Mrs.  Ebl)smith."  and  numerous 
other  play.s.  Mr.  Pinero  said  he  felt  il 
impossible  to  sufficiently  express  his 
admiration  for  American  actresses  and 
praised  their  pronunciation  of  English 
—think  of  that  for  an  Rnglishman— 
their  beauty  and  their  brightness  In 
grasping  the  ideas  of  the  author.  He 
also  predicted  for  the  American  girls  a 
great  future  on  the  London  stage,  but 
in  this  overlooked  the  demand  for  her 
services  which  exists  in  her  own  native 
land.  The  two  American  girls  lo  whom 
Mr.    Pinero   made   particular   reference 


Jiinies  v.  .?ohristr»ii,  of  l-'t.  Wayne,  Ind., 
after  battling  for  yc-ars  against  "the  nn  n- 
tal  .ind  phy.siciil  suffering  of  lost  nian- 
hcjod  has  found  the  exact  remedy  that 
cures  the  trouble. 

Jle  is  guarding  the  secret  carefully  but 
is  willing  to  send  a  sample  of  the  modi- 
cine  to  all  men  who  suffer  with  any  form 
of  sexual  weakness  resulting  from  vouth- 
ful  ignorance,  premature  lo.ss  of  memory 
and  strength,  weak  back,  varicocele  and 
emaciation.  The  remedy  has  a  peculiarly 
grateful  effect  of  warmth  and  seems  to 
act  directly  giving  needed  strength  and 
development  wherever  needed.  The  rem- 
edy cured  Mr.  Johnston  completely  of  all 
the  Ills  and  troubles  that  come  from  years 
of  misu.sc  of  the  naturally  ordained  func- 
tions and  Is  said  to  be  absolutely  reliable 
m  every  ca.se. 

A  request  to  Mr.  James  P.  Johnston 
Box  1(X)1,  Ft.  Wayne.  Ind..  stating  that 
you  would  like  a  sample  of  his  remedy 
for  men.  will  be  complied  with  promptly 
and  no  charge  whatever  will  bo  asked  by 
hfm.  He  is  very  muih  interested  in 
spreading  the  news  of  this  great  remedy 
and  he  is  careful  to  .send  tlw  sample 
.securely  sealed  in  a  perrectiv  plain  pack- 
age so  that  Us  recipient  need  have  no 
fear   of   eiMbarra>4sment    i#r    publicity. 

Headers  are  requested  to  write  witliout 
delay. 


fall  and  heal 
strife. 
Joe  Hall,  w  ho  iliod  very  poor,  in  Bal- 
timore during  the  war,  was  in  the  last 
generation  the  nnst  munificent  anl 
most  continuously  successful  "high 
roller"  among  the  "gamboliers"  of 
America.  His  horses,  with  gold-tippcnl 
harness,  were  the  i  ynosure  of  all  eyes 
and  the  admiration  of  the  golden  youth 
of   Baltimore. 

In    Philadelphia    he    ran    a   gambling 
I  house    over    Dr.    McClellan's    olfice.    in 
I  Walnut,    above    Eleventh,    North    Sicle. 
I  from  1S.')6  till  the  \^  ar  broke  out.  Hero 
Thaddeus  Stevens,  the  great  commoner 
of       Pennsylvania,      hobnobbed       with 
j  James  A.  Bayard,  "i  Delaware,  and  the 
I  handsome    Ellis    S'-hnable,    who,    with 
"Bill"    Witte,    was    the    best    all-round 
stump   orator   of   whom    the    Keystone 
Democracy   ever   boasted. 
I        Here    a    young    attorney    who    had 
[  never  seen  a  card  table  before,    intro- 
duced   by    Mr.    Whitney,     an       accom- 
I  plished   member     of       congress       from 
;  Delaware,   won   $6000  in  a  single  night. 
!  and  in  ten  months  lost  that  and  $:50.(KI0 
on    top    of-  it    in    uying    to    make    an- 
other winning  from  the  false  and  fickle 
goddess  of  faro. 

An  old  habitue  of  Joe  Hall's  saw 
;  that  game,  in  which  the  tyro  at  gam- 
ing won  fifty  straight  bets,  without 
losing  one,  and  .said  such  luck  was  so 
phenomenal  that  he  had  never  wit- 
nessed anything  like  it  In  the  forty 
years'  full  practice  before  the  green 
baize. 

Joe  Hall  had  another  game  (with  the 
ten  stone  dogs  befoie  the  door),  in 
Broadway.  New  York  city,  opposite 
the  Metropolitan  hotel,  from  185."?  to 
1860.  This  spot  was  the  favorite  club 
house  of  Southern  sporting  gentlemen 
politicians,  who  set  the  pace  amons 
the  jeunesse   doroo  of   New  York  city. 

Such  a  thing  as  a  •limit"  was  un- 
known, as  Joe  Hall  was  prepared  for 
all  comers  up  t-i  $.".0,000.  The  limit  at 
Monaco  is  10.000  francs  (02000).  but  any 
gentleman  in  good  standing  could  en- 
ter his  check  for  $20,000  on  a  double 
card  or  a  case  card,  and  it  would  go 
like  current  coin  of  ithe  realm.  1 
have  seen  tJen.  Waid  B.  Burnett,  who 
was  the  rcH-ipiont  of  Gen.  Jackson';^ 
gold  snuff  box,  given  by  his  will  "tf; 
the  bravest  man,  '  when  the  "blear- 
eyed  gambler"  would  turn  the  silver 
box  over  and  close  the  game  for  the 
night — generally  about  .3  a.  m. — open 
a  "snap  game"— the  general  becoming 
banker  for  the  players — and,  putting 
up  $500  as  the  bank  roll,  play  till  day- 
light. 

Faro  and  cotton  were  in  those  days 
both  kings.  Albert  Pike  (whose  "Hymns 
to  the  Gods,"  first  publishcnl  in  Black- 
wood's Magazine,  in  Edinburgh,  were 
tran.slated  into  a  dozen  languages"), 
was  an  habitue  of  Joe  Hall's  Wash- 
ington game. 

Albert  Pike  (mce  received  $1,000,000 
when  he  IIvchI  at  Little  Rcxk,  Ark.,  and 
practiced  law,  as  a  single  fee  in  the 
Cherokee  land  case,  but  most  of  this 
the  jtoet  lawyer  iiourc^d  out,  as  a  will- 
ing libation  to  the  fickle  goddess  of 
fortune,  at  Joe  Hall's,  and  CJeorge 
Pendleton's  faro  ri'oms.  in  Washing- 
ton. There  was  only  the  most  friendly 
rivalry  lietween  Hall  and  Pendleton; 
the  latter  was  the  real  arbiter  ele- 
gantiarum  (arbiter  of  elegance) 
among  the  faro  kings  of  this  country. 
He  was  a  Virginian  and  a  cousin  of 
"Gentleman"  George,  as  George  H. 
Pendleton,  the  Democratic  candidate 
for    vic-e    president,    was   called. 

The  last  game  I  ever  saw  at  Pendle- 
ton's was  a  memorable  one.  A  few- 
night  before  Sergt.  S.  Prentiss,  that 
brilliant  and  lovable  Whig  orator  and 
member  of  congress,  a  New  England 
man,  resident  in  Mississippi,  and  a  life- 
t'me  enemy  of  Jeff  Davis,  had  first 
wen  $40,000.  then,  in  one  night,  with 
a  half  basket  of  champagne  under  his 
shirt,  he  kept  on  playing  till  the  man 
behind  the  table,  the  dealer,  had  re- 
ceived the  $40,(K>0  and  had  in  his  coat 
pockets  deeds  for  four  warehouses  in 
Natchez,  Miss.,  on  the  river,  late  the 
property  of  the  magniflc-ent  Whig  ora- 
tor. That  was  Prentiss'  last  great 
game. 

Albert  Pike  wh<i  died  at  Sa,  was  a 
man  of  great  physical  pulchritude  and 
always  wore  an  immense  gray  board. 
\lr  looked  like  an  Nor.'^e  king.  Thad- 
deus Stevens,  of  Pennsylvania,  was 
playing  mculerately  at  the  same  tabic  ; 
so  wtus  James  A.  Bayard  (but  these 
statesmen  only  played  for  amuse- 
ment, and  I  have  known  Thad  Ste- 
vens to  go  away  with  $1400  won  at  a 
single  sitting,  with  a  stake  of  only  $20 
gcdd  coin. 

But  men  like  Prentiss  and  Pike,  of 
Arkansas,  and  Senator  Green,  of  Mis- 
souri, like  Wolcott,  of  Colorado  used 
to  be,  were  always  "pluggers"  at  the 
fkro  table.  This  evening  Pike  was  in 
royal   feather. 

It  was  at  Pendleton's  game  Pike 
found  the  original  type  of  his  "fine  old 
Arkan.sas  gentleman,"  who  played 
away  his  cotton  cioi<  ad  the  faro  banks 
in  VVashingtfm  and  New  Orleans  every 
winter  unless  "the  fiv  or  some  other 
d— d  c<>ntln-gency"  cat  up  his  cotton 
fields  before  the  staple  got  to  market. 

Pike  came  in  humming  his  own  song 
about  "The  Fine  old  Arkansas  Gentle- 
man." and  was  ainusi-d  lo  see  Senator 
Green  parallel  a  bet  of  $1000  blue  chips 


How  to  Cure  Yourself  While 
Using  It. 


The  tobacco  habit  grows  on  a  mnn  until 
his  nervous  system  becomes  seriously  ef- 
fected. Impairing  health,  comfort  and 
happiness.  To  quit  suddenly  is  too  severe 
a  shock  to  the  nervous  system,  as  to- 
bacco to  an  inveterate  user  becomes  i 
stimulant  that  his  system  continually 
craves.  "Baco-Curo"  is  a  scientific  cure 
for  the  tobacco  habit.  In  all  its  forms, 
carefully  compounded  after  the  formula 
of  an  eminent  Berlin  physician  who  has 
u.sed  it  In  his  private  practice  since  1872, 
without  a  failure.  It  is  purely  vegotabl-3 
and  guaranteed  perfectly  harmless.  Yon 
can  use  all  the  tob.-iceo  you  want  whil-^ 
taking  "Baco-Curo."  It  will  notify  yon 
when  to  stop.  We  give  a  written  guar- 
antee to  cure  permanently  any  case  with 
three  boxes,  or  refund  the  money  with  ]ij 
per  cent  interest.  "Baco-Curo"  is  not  a 
substitute,  but  a  scientific  cure,  that  cures 
without  the  aid  of  will  power  and  witii 
no  inconvenience.  It  leaves  the  system 
as  pure  and  free  from  nicotine  as  the  dav 
before  you  took  your  first  chew  or 
smoke. 

Sold  by  all  druggists  with  our  Ironclad 
guarantee,  at  $1  per  box;  three  boxe< 
$2.50,  or  sent  direct  upon  receipt  of  price 
Write  for  booklet,  proofs  and  testimo- 
nials. Eureka  Chemical  &  Mfg.  Co.,  La 
Crosse,    Wis. 

Baco-Curo  is  a  vegetable  antidote  for 
nicotine  which  positively  counteracts  the 
injurious  effects  of  the  narcotic  to  the 
nervous   system. 


on  the  "pot."  as  the  space  is  called  be- 
tween the  six,  seven  and  eight  spot.-. 
Green  permitted  his  pile  of  "bluefish,  ' 
so-called,  to  remain  on  the  table  till  x.\\ 
$1000  had  Increased  to  $4000  in  two  turn.-. 
"I  rc^ckon  I've  got  enough  for  onj 
night,"  said  the  saturnine  Missouri  sen- 
ator, cool  as  a  cuc-uml>er,  as  he  cashed 
in  his  chips  and  placed  four  crisp  new 
one-thousand-dollar  bills  in  his  inside 
pocket. 

"I  can  beat  that,  I  think,"  said  the 
author  of  "The  Hymns  to  the  Gods,"  as 
Albert  Pike  laid  down  a  $1000  bill  be- 
tween the  six,  seven  and  eight  spots. 
This  was  only  permitted  to  favorit>' 
players,  usually;  chips  must  be  bought 
before  the  gambler  made  his  "turn." 

The  canaille  had  to  buy  chips,  a  fish- 
blue  or  white,  white  $1,  blue  $5,  yellow 
$2.-,. 

Pike,  with  the  utmost  nonchalance, 
laid  his  $1000  bill  down  in  the  "pot. 
Everybody  stopped  j)laying,  as  it  wa.- 
plainly  a  game  ()f  "make  or  In-eak"  be- 
tween the  gambler  at  the  box  and  tiio 
gentleman  gambler  before  the  table. 

Pike,  six  feet  two  inches  tall,  in  Ih-- 
very  prime  of  an  adventurous  life, 
looked  like  a  (Jreek  god.  His  aplomb 
was  magnificent.  Achilles  could  n«,t 
match  him.  Not  a  wend  escaped  anj- 
body's  lips.  The  silence  could  hvae  bm  n 
cut  with  one  of  Herdens  c-.arving  knives. 
The  six  spot  showed  uj*  first.  "Pay  i!i 
cash."  said  Pike.  Pike  was  $2000  to  tin. 
•^ood.  A  thousand  dollars  was  placed 
(Ui  the  bet.  Pike  won.  "It  all  goes, 
said  Pike,  nonchalantly.  "I  go  you,' 
said  the  owner  of  this  particular  tiger, 
hopefully  smiling.  The  seven  spot 
showed  its  face.  "Pike  winsl"  shoutoci 
Senator  Green.  Two  thousand  dollar.- 
in  bills  were  added  to  the  pile  on  the 
table.    There  was  $4000  there  now. 

Mr.  Dealer  grew  white  about  the 
"gills."  He  looked  at  Pike.  The  latter 
nodded.  Silence  grew  intense — more 
than  intense.  Slowly  the  dealer  pulloJ 
a  card.  An  eight  spot  showed  its  face. 
Pike  had  won  $8000.  "A  pleasant  call," 
.said  the  dealer.  Four  cards  left  in  th(> 
box,  and  the  winning  caller,  w  ho  called 
successfully,  got  four  for  one. 

"I  call  it  sixty-eight  for  eight  thcju 
sand,"   said    Pike,    without   changing  a 
muscle.    The  cards  appearing  were  six  • 
eight,    the    six     spot      first,      then    the 
eight. 

The  dealer  rose  to  his  feet  at  a  now 
from  Pendleton  and  the  sauve  king-pin 
of  that  faro  game  sat  down  and  ga\e 
All)ert  Pike  his  check  then  and  there  fo; 
$'32,000. 

And    this    is    said    to    be    the    largest 
■call"  ever  made  in  the  city  of  Wash- 
ington.    It  is  needless  to  add  there  re- 
sulted a  halcyon  and  vociferous  night. 

The  war  demoralized  a  good  many 
professions  and  the  "son  of  the  gam- 
boiler"  did  not  escape.  Pendleton  dice! 
rich,  but  left  his  entire  fortune  to  his 
valet,  who  lives  to  enjoy  ft  yet.  Joe 
Hall  was  supported  till  he  died  by  the 
largess  of  his  old  prottges.  Henry 
Cleveland,  a  gambler  with  a  nati<»nal 
reputation,  who  left  $l.i0.000  to  his  wife 
in  Cape  May  county,  played  a  faio  duo 
in  Pendleton's  house  in  1856  with  Petti- 
bone,  the  great  Tennessee  gambler,  and 
paid  the  SlOO.tWO  he  lost  in  <nie  night  in 
pai)er  money  before  he  left  Pendleton'.-- 
palatial  lair,  the  tiger's  dangerous 
jungle  homo. 

They  are  gone— all  gone — the  ol  1 
familiar  faces  I 

A  treasury  clerk  during  Garfield's  ad- 
ministration   "convoyed"   $4(t,0(H)   out   of 
the  treasury  and  spent  it  in  riotous  liv 
ing  among  the  second-class   haunts  oT 
the  Washington  tiger. 

President  Arthur,  always  a  gei*tlc>- 
man,  thought  with  Burke  that  "vic-e  in 
losing  all  its  evil  loses  half  its  gross - 
ness."  banished  the  faro  dealers  across 
the  Potomac,  and  only  furtive  games  of 
congressional  poker  lurks  now-  around 
the  hotels  and  first-class  boarding 
houses  at  the  nation's  capital.  And  the 
only  relics  <tf  the  ancient  regime  of  the 
faro  kings  in  Washington  are  (Jeorg.' 
Patker,  amiable  and  obese,  who  is  now 
a  gambler  no  more,  but  a  reputal>le  real 
estate  dealer,  and  "Coal"  Martin,  suave 
and  robust,  who  is  suspected  of  taking 
an  ocacsional  shy  at  poker  w  ith  Sena 
tor  Wok  ott  or  Senator  Pettigrew  of  Da- 
kota, en-  wanders  off  to  take  a  Christ- 
mas eve  game  at  faro  with  John  Daly, 
of  New  York. 


SANTA  OLAUH  HOAJf. 


SAMTA    ULAUa  HUAf. 


^'^^^ 


on  the  wash  board,  because  it  was 

washed  week  after  week  with  cheap' 

soap  that  was  inefifectual  to  dissolve ' 

the  dirt      There's  another  kind  of 

cheap  soap  that's  too  strong — eats 

the  clothes  as  well  as  the  dirt     If  you 

want  the  soap  that's  neither  too  weak 

or  too  strong,  get 

SANTA  CLAU3 


SOAR 


It  drives  the  dirt  out  -without  injury  to  the 
clothes.      It  washes  equally  well  the  coarsest, 
dirtiest  woolens  and  the  finest,  most  delicate  lin- 
ens and  laces.     Preserve  your  clothes  and  your 
^trength  by  using  Santa  Claus  Soap. 

Sold  everywhere.    6c.  the  cake.    Made  only  by 
THK   M.   K.    FAIRBABiK   C09IPANV, 
CHICAGO. 


Cl 


S 


IN  CLOSE  QUARTERS. 
Badminton  Magazine:  "We  were 
after  a  tiger  on  an  old  trail."  Capt. 
Ward  says,  "when  the  men  began  to 
consult  as  to  what  would  best  be  done. 
While  they  talked  I  wandered  away 
alone  up  a  small  stream,  on  either  side 
of  which  the  gra.ss  had  been  burned, 
leaving  a  fine  gray  ash  spread  over  the 
•ground.  In  this  I  found  the  perfectly 
fresh  footprints  of  a  large  tiger,  which 
we  had  evidently  disturbed.  Following: 
cautiously,  I  presently  saw  the  tiger 
about  fifty  yards  in  front  of  me,  walk- 
ing slowly  along  among  tlie  i)amboos; 
he  neither  saw-  nor  heard  me,  and 
seemed  to  suspect  nothing.  I  followed 
him  till  he  dipped  into  a  ravine;  then 
1  ran  l)ack  and  sent  the  men  round  to 
drive  him  toward  me.  There  w-as  no 
large  tree  available,  so  I  lay  down  on  a 
flat  rock,  with  a  sloping  bank  to  my 
left,  and  on  the  right  a  clear  space, 
about  eight  yards  wide,  to  the  side  of 
the  hill,  which  rose  in  a  perfectly 
straight  scarp.  I  hoped  the  tiger 
would  come  t6  my  left,  itelow  me,  but 
he  didn't.  Instead,  he  came  headed  so 
that,  had  I  left  him  alone,  he  would 
have  passed  within  six  feet  of  me». 
When  he  was  about  eight  yards  off  I 
fired,  and  as  the  smoke  cleared  I  sa"vv 
the  brute's  jaws  close  to  the  muzzle  of 
the  rifle.  I  pulled  the  trigger  of  tin 
other  barrel,  dropped  the  rifle,  rolled 
over  the  bank  and  leaped  into  a  small 
tree  during  the  next  few-  seconds.  PJut 
the  ti'ger  was  dead,  shot  through  the 
heart.  His  whiskers  were  burned  by 
the  second  charge." 


WILCOX  COMPOUND 

ykNsrmRiLLS 


The  only  rellaMe  female  reg^nlAtor 
Never  Fallft.  Sold  by  druggists,  WS.OO 
Send  4c.  for  Wouian's  etatpguard. 

WILCOZ  MEDICO  CO.  228  S.  8th  St,  FUU.Fk 


THE   QUEEN   OF  CLUBS.  . 
Clubs   of   three  and   clidjs  of  a   sc<'>re. 
Isms    and    ologic^s.    more   and    more; 
Sappho  and   Psyche   clubs  galore; 

Clubs    of    arc-haeologic    rc\search. 
Clubs  to  consider  the  sc-hool  and   churcn. 
To    olean.se        from    society       and    every 
smirch: 

Clubs  of  .science  and   clubs   of  song. 
For    the    righting    and    curing    of    every 

wrong 
That   to  mankind  can  ever  belong; 

Sanitation    is    their   despair. 
Microbes,    too.   come   in   for  a   share; 
Tenement   crowds    and    pure    frc^sh    air. 

Literature    in    every    part. 
Sculpture,   history,    knowledge,   art. 
Analysis  of   tin;   home  and   heart. 

Social   and    c>cononiic   laws. 

Crime   and    povert.v.    clause   on    clause, 

Man's   degenerac-y    the  c-ause. 

I    sit   alone   by   my   glowing  grate, 
I   feel  that  the  century  waxeth  late; 
My  wife  is  studying  Church  and  State. 

Cyclopaedias   i)iled    up   still: 

Of   dictionaries    I'x-e    had    my   fill, 

Huxley    and    Darwin.    Spencer   and    Mdl.. 

I   think  of  my  grandmother's  easy  chair. 
Her    knitting    in    peace    by    the    chimney 

there. 
Her  stories,  and  then  of  her  tranquil  air. 

And  1  wonder  sometimi»s,  though  I  never 

say. 
If  all   this  worry  and   fuss  can  pay 
That  steals *the  calm  of  our  lives  away. 

And    I    long  sometimes   with   a   pain   that 

smarts 
For  some  of  my  darling's  forgotten  arts. 
For   the  joy  and   peace   of   my   Queen   of 

Hearts, 

or  course   I'm  a  century  late,  and   thcMi 
They  say   we  are  jealous  over  again. 
We're  out   of   fashion,   wc-  stupid   men. 
I  Ibink.  I>nl   I  .s;iv  it   under  my  lireatli.  • 
That    I    fear   my   wife   will    be   <luhberi    to 
death.  —New  York  Sun. 


BUCKLEN'S  ARNICA  SAL-VTJ. 

The  best  salve  in  the  world  for  Cuts, 
Bruises,  Sores,  Ulcers,  Salt  Rheum,  Fever 
Sores,  Tetter,  Chapped  Hand?,  Chilblains, 
Corns  and  all  Skin  Eruptions,  and  posi- 
tively cures  Piles,  or  no  pay  required.  It 
is  guaranteed  to  give  perfect  satisfaction 
or  money  refunded.  Price  25  cents  per  box. 
For  sale  by  Duluth  Drug  company. 


MORTGAGE   FORECLOSl'RE   SALE.— 

Default  having  been  made  in  the  pay- 
ment of  the  sum  of  twenty  dollars  ($20) 
Interest  which  was  due  and  payable  Soj)- 
tember  20th,  ISiW,  and  which  is  due  at 
the  date  of  this  notice  upon  a  certain 
mortgage,  duly  excc-uted  anil  delivered 
by  Wilhelm  Rievo  and  C.-troline  Riovo. 
his  wife,  mortr^agors.  to  George  Lukas- 
zewski,  mortgagee,  bearing  date  the  20th 
day  of  March,  189.5.  and  with  a  power  of 
sale  therein  contained,  duly  recorded  In 
the  oflice  of  the  register  of  deeds  in  and 
for  the  county  of  St.  I.iouis  and  state  of 
Minnesota,  on  the  llOth  day  of  March. 
1895,  at  1:10  i).  m..  in  Book  105  of  mort- 
gages, on  page  2.">;{. 

And  whereas  the  said  mortgagee  and 
holder  of  said  mortgage,  has  duly  elect- 
ed and  does  hereby  elect  to  declare  the 
whole  principal  sum  of  said  mortg.nge 
due  and  payablt!  at  the  date  of  this  notice 
imder  the  terms  an<l  conditions  of  said 
mortgage  atid  the  power  of  sale  therein 
contained:  and  whereas,  there  is  actually 
clue  and  claimed  to  bo  due  and  payable 
at  the  date  of  this  notice  the  sum  of 
live  hundred  (500)  dc^lars.  with  interest 
thereon  at  the  rate  or  eight  per  cent  p<^r 
ainmm.  from  the  20th  day  of  March.  38%, 
and  whereas  the  said  power  of  sale  has 
become  operative,  and  no  action  or  pro- 
ceeding having  been  instituted,  at  law  or 
otherwise,  t(3  recover  the  debt  s<>oured  by 
said   mortgage,   or  any   part  thereof. 

Now,  therefore,  notice  is  hereby  given, 
that  by  virtue  of  the  power  of  sale  con- 
tained in  said  mortgage  and  pursuant  to 
the  statute  in  such  case  macle  and  pro- 
vided, the  said  mortgage  will  be  fore- 
closed by  a  sale  of  the  premises  de- 
scribed In  and  conveyed  by  said  mort- 
gage, viz:  All  that  tract  or  parcel  of  land 
lying  and  being  in  the  county  of  St. 
Louis,  state  of  Minnesota,  described  as 
follows,  to-wit:  The  easterly  half  (eVi)  of 
lot  ninety  (90),  on  East  Seventh  (7th) 
street,  in  Duluth  Proper,  First  (1st)  l>i- 
vision,  according  to  the  recorded  plat 
thereof,  with  the  hereditaments  and  ap- 
purtenanc-es;  wiiich  sale  will  be  made  by 
the  sheriff  of  said  St.  Louis  County,  at 
the  front  door  of  the  court  house,  in  the 
city  of  Duluth,  in  said  county  and  state, 
on  the  ninetcx'nth  (19th)  day  of  April. 
1897,  at  10  o'clock  a.  m..  of  that  day,  at 
public  vendue,  to  the  highest  bidder  for 
cash,  to  ])ay  said  debt  and  interest  and 
twenty-live  dcdiars  attorney's  fees,  as 
stipulatc^d  in  and  by  said  mortgage  in 
c-ase  of  foreolosure.  and  the  disbursements 
allowed  by  law;  subject  to  redemption  at 
any  time  within  one  year  from  the  day 
of  sale,  as  provided  by  law. 

Dated  March  4th.  A.  D.  1897. 

GEORGE  LUKASZKWSlvr. 
Mortgagee. 
AGATIN.    DAVIDSON    &    CAREY, 

Attorne.vs    for    Mortgagee. 
Duluth      Evening     Herald,    March-6-13-20- 

27-Apiil-3-8. 


STATIC   OF  MINNESOTA,  COUNTY   OF 

ST.  LOUIS.— 

District  Court,    Eleventh    Judicial    Dis- 
trict. 
In   the  matter  of  the  assignment  of  tlie 

People's  Savings  Bank  of  Duluth,   Min- 
nesota: 

Notice  is  hereby  given  that  the  Peotde's 
Savings  Bank  of  Duluth,  Minn.,  on  Keb- 
ruary  27th.  1897.  duly  made  and  filed  in 
the  oftlce  of  the  clerk  of  the  district  court 
of  St.  Louis  County,  Minnesota,  a  deed 
of  assignment,  assigning  all  Its  property 
to  me,  the  undersigned,  under  the  gen- 
eral assignment  laws  of  this  state  for 
the  benefit  of  its  creditor's,  and  that  1 
have  ciualilicd  as  assignee  under  said 
deed.  All  persons  deslrriig  to  participate 
in  the  benefits  of  said  assiginnent  should 
forthwith  make  and  file  with  me  for  al- 
lowa.iu'e  their  verified  claims  as  provid- 
ed by  law. 

Duluth,  March  15th,  1897, 

ERNST    A.    SCHULZE. 
Assignee. 
Ald.KN,   BALr>WlN  *   BALDWIN, 

.Attorneys    for    Assignee. 
Duluth  Evening  Herald,   March-H)-18-20. 


STATE   OF   MINNESOTA,   COUNTY   OF 
ST.    LOUIS.— 
In    District    Court,     Eleventh     Judicial 

District. 

Elizabeth   James, 

Plaintiff, 
vs. 

Northwestern  Loan  &  Investment 
Comapny,  C.  M.  Bailey,  Francis 
A.  Smith,  Evelyn  T.  Whltehou.se, 
Alice  H.  Symoncls,  Charles  Bry- 
ant. Walter  11.  Wing.  11.  M.  Pick- 
ard,  W.  W.  Bradstreet.  Frank 
A.  Small.  J.  E.  Briggs,  Oliver  W. 
Blake,  K.(;.  niake.  James   Andrews 

D.  W.  Pettingill.  George  H.  And- 
rctws,  Mo~nmouth  Academy  fund, 
George  H>  Andrews,  treasurer; 
Willard  G.  Hopkins,  A.  C.  Otis, 
Julia  M.  Folsom,  Clinton  Markell, 
C.  M.  Gray,  H.  M.  Blake,  O.  B. 
Clason,  H.  E.  Whitman.  A.  H. 
Bailey,  L.  O.  Cc  bb,  Eleanor  W. 
Moody,  George  W.  Hesclton.  An- 
drew J.  Williams.  Pollen  E.  Vick- 
ey,  George  A.  Pike.  Harrison 
T.  Ciough.  Viola  E.  Small,  B. 
Winston  Briggs,  Henry  Green, 
C.  I.  Bailey,  E.  A.  Bailey,  Mary 
T.  Myrick.  Addle  R.  Myrick,  Al- 
fred Hitchcock.  Howard  Owen, 
Henry  Winslow.  Rufus  K.  Blake, 
A.  R.  Crane,  Helen  A.  C.  Fliift. 
George  Bailey,  James  William- 
son. Jr.,  N.  R.  Pike.  Esther  Pike, 
Louisa  H.  Bradbury.  W.  P. 
Whitehouse.  G.  A.  Robertson, 
I..izzic  S.  Robert.son,  Hellie  M. 
Snell,  Josiah  Snell,  Lizzie  H. 
Wheeler,  J.  H.  Lowell.  L.  Es- 
telle  Park.  Marv  B.  Gould.  W.  P. 
Walsh.  Ruel  M.  Dexter,  B.  F. 
Sleeper.  W.  W.  Washburn.  Eu- 
gene  M.  Bailey,  W.  H.  Lowell. 
L.  D.  Cooke,  George  Sleeper,  H. 
Ramsdoll.  Fred  K.  Blake,  G.  W. 
Cottle.  Emery  C.  Bean,  P.  M. 
Folger,  Hattie  P.  Keyes.  Eva  O. 
Parks.  Mary  F.  Park,  Eldora  PJ. 
Tibbeits.  F.  P.  Keyes,  Thomas  H. 
\A'liite.  John  F.  Peterson,  George 
A.  Rams<l«ll.  Katie  T.  Richards, 
Oscar  J.  Morse,  George  O.  Small, 
Earl  H.  Lyford,  E.  S.  Lyford. 
George  W.  Wheeler.  J.  J.  LoTour- 
neau,  Velzera  1'.  (..'all.  ("harles  A. 
Chase.   Clara   E.   Langdell,    Sarah 

E.  Robin.son.  Charles  A.  Briggs, 
Henry  A'.  Dudley.  Samantha  S. 
Wood.  Evinda  A.  Whittier.  Mary 
A.  MoCnllum,  fU-orge  W.  Currier, 
Lester  M.  Andrews.  Ellen  Ea.st- 
man,  Charles  E.  Pike,  (Jeorge  L. 
Pike.  Sarah  C.  B.  Ramsdoll.  Flora 
A.  Brooks,  Vrv<.\  A.  Waldron, 
Adelia  R.  Waldron,  Linton  E. 
Waldron.  William  L.  Waldron, 
Mark  Rollins,  J.  C.  Atkins.  David 
H.  lOla,  Lizzie  McClough,  Thomsus 
A.  Jew-ett.  John  Metcalf.  Hora- 
tio Clark.  Flora  E.  MeCollough, 
Frank  H.  Roberts,  Ny.lia  11.  Le- 
Tourneau,  Eva  J.  Roberts.  J.  Ar- 
dine  Blake.  W.  H.  Parlin,  trues- 
tees  Methodist  Episco|»al  Church, 
of  Monmouth,  Me.,  H.  S.  Blue. 

Defendants. 
The   state     of     Minnesota     to   the   above 

namc>d  defendants: 

You  and  eacli  of  you  are  hereby  sum- 
nn»nod  and  required  to  answer  the  com- 
l)laint  of  the  plaintitt  in  the  above  en- 
titled action,  which  is  filed  in  the  oftico 
ol  the  clerk  of  sai<l  district  court  in  the 
county  court  house,  in  the  city  of  Du- 
luth. said  county  and  state,  and  tc»  serve 
a  copy  of  your  answer  to  the  said  com- 
pl;unt  upon  the  subscribers  iit  their  of- 
liees  Nos.  ."lOt^oOG  Lonsdale  building,  ni 
the  city  of  Duluth,  said  county  and  state, 
within  twenty  days  after  the  service  of 
this  summons  upon  you,  exclusive  of 
the  day  of  such  service;  and  if  you  fail 
to  answer  the  said  complaint  within  Ihe 
time  aforesaid,  the  plaintiff  in  this  action 
will  apply  to  the  court  for  the  relief  de- 
manded in  her  said  complaint. 

Dated    February    20th.    1897. 

WASHBURN.    LEWIS  &   BAILEY 
Attorneys    for    Plaintiff. 
500-505    Lonsdale    Building, 
Duluth,    Minn. 
Duluth     Evening     Herald,    March-6-13-20- 

27-April-3-10. 


ORDER      FOR      HEARING      APPLICA- 
TION   FOR    APPOINTMENT    OF    AD- 
MINISTRATOR.— 
State  of  Mlimesota,  County  of  St.  Loulu 

— .S.S. 

In  Probate  Court,  Sptnial  Term,  March 
.5.   1897. 
In  the  matter  of  the  estate  of  John  Hen- 

drick.son,    deceascHl: 

<Jn  receiving  and  filing  the  petition  of 
Hannah  M.  Hendriokson.  of  the  county 
of  St.  Louis,  representing  among  other 
things  that  John  Hendric  kson,  lale  of 
the  county  of  St.  Louis  in  the  state  of 
Minnesota,  on  the  27th  day  of  Februarv, 
A.  D.  1897,  at  the  county  of  St.  Lou's, 
died  intestate,  and  being  an  iidmbitant 
of  this  county  at  the  time  of  his  deat'i, 
leaving  goods,  chattels  and  estate  within 
this  county,  and  that  the  said  petitioner 
Is  the  widow  of  said  deceiused.  and  pray- 
ing that  administration  of  said  estate  bo 
to  her  grantcHl. 

It  is  ordered,  that  said  petition  be  heard 
before  said  court  on  Wcxlnesdav,  the  31 
day  of  March,  A.  D.  1897.  at  10  o'cloc-k  a. 
m..  at  the  probate  offlce,  in  the  city  of 
Duluth.    in   said   county. 

Ordered  further,  that  notice  thereof  be 
given  to  the  heirs  of  said  deceased  and  to 
all  persons  interested,  by  publishing  this 
order  once  In  each  week  for  three  sui> 
cesslve  weeks  prior  to  said  day  of  hear- 
ing, in  The  Duluth  Evening  Herald,  a 
daily  newspaper  printed  and  published  at 
Duluth.   in  said  county. 

Dated  at  Duluth.  the  5th  day  of  March. 
A.    D.    lt>97. 

By  the  Court, 

PtHNEAS  AVER, 

^„     ,  ,  Judge  of   ITobale. 

(Seal.) 

FRYRRRCJER  &   JcMIANSON, 
SitK-»i9-Slo.  Torrey   Building, 
Attorneys    fop    PetitiorM»r. 
Duluth    BvtuiEg   "deiald,    Ma?th -6-13-20. 


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