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if •Flnie Boliecixile. iii. **ZiZ •. GOING NOI'.TIf. N 2 1 0 0 a No. 4, 12:2)? ARRIVING. NO. 22, 12:15 p. 111. No. 24, 12:10 p.m. J. A. TOWN GOING SOUTH. No. 1, 2:41a.m. No. 3. 4:40 p.m. p. Sioux Falls Line. DEPARTING. R'y- Goins South, Leaves 6:00 a. m. Going Nortli, Arrives 1!:55 p. m. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. Attorney at Law. Office over II. E. Torrance's Store. Q.#W. WILSON, Attorney at Law. Office over Bank of Worthington. j^KOHliER, Attorney at Law. Office 1st door south of Worthington Hotel. F. CROSS, Attorney at Law. Office over H. E. Torrance's store. j^DLEK C. CLAUSEN, Lawyer, Late of Minneapolis, (Skandlnavisk Advokat.) 4tf) WORTHINGTON, MINN. FJ1A. ALEXANDER, Lawyer, Attends to all legal business and makes collec tions. HERON LAKE, MINN. E. FOLEY Attorney at Law. Collections ,Real ^Estate and Insurance, dist ?.. SpeciallAgent, St. Paul Fire and Marine Insurance Company, Office over StateBk FULDA, MINNESOTA" FOR FALL TRADE. Raalizing that the eason for Selling Spring and Sumner Goods will soon slide away. We have concluded to mark down our Wash Goods on't expect us to keep you fully posted through the newspaper columns on all th'. Bargains we shall give the next OO DilVS, they are far too numerous to mention. The best way is to bear in mind that it always pays to trade at the Swedish Mercantile My Line Of Slippers Shades and Styles is Complete in Ladies, Misses, Childrens, Mens and Boys. Can 'WVWWWt'WWWW* S«it You in Style, Fit, Quality and Price. wwwwwwww* August Falk, Co. Ball Bearing Bicycle Shoes. Newest The Shoe Man. E. F. BUCHAN, O O A E All kinds of copying and enlarging an framing of oictures At Very Ivow Prices. H. CLAKK. 4 C. St. P. M. & 0. R. R. Arrivals and departures of trains at ttiii station, carrying passengers. Physician and Surgeon. Residence cor. 10th street and 6th ave., two blocks aboveCourt House. Office in G. A. R. block. QR. J. N. GOULD. Veterinary Surgeon. Office at Western House. Dr. G. S. DEAN, Wones. ill draw Ulcerated Teeth or dress nneven Cures Kingbone, Spavin, Curb and Will also do any kind of Veterinary Splint. work on short notice. "VORTHINGTOS, IIINS. NO. 21, 4:50 p.m. No. 23, 8:30 a.m. B, C. R. & N. Pi E. L. WEMPLE, fostofflce Address— 33-lyr, Rushmore Hotel, KUSHMORE, MINNESOTA. Bates 92.00 PerDay. M. PALM SON, Embalming, Undertaking. We use the most improved methods and guarantee satisfaction in all cases. Night calls receive prompt attention. pP.ED D. BROWN, Livery and Sale Stable. Connected with'the Lake View Hotel. Bigs of all kinds for hire. WORTHINGTON, MINNESOTA. S. A. Hilclretli, BARBER SHOP Bath room in connection. Base ment of Minnesota Loan and Trust Co.'s building, Worthington, Minn. JVS'GLUND & SANDIN, Contractors & Builders. Plans and Estimates Furnished, Box 79, Worthington, Minn. JQR. A. N. CHENEY, Dentist. WORTHINGTON. MINNESOTA. Office in Torrance Block. At home every Monday, Tuesday, Friday and Saturday. J)R. CURRAN, Physician and Surgeon. Offlice over W. 8. Lewis' store. Dr. Curran—residence on Hth street, 2d door nortnwest of Congregational church. WORTH1NGTON ADVANCE, THURSDAY, JULY Convention Calls, state convention, Minneapolis' Democratic August 4th. Populist state August 5th. convention. Minneapolis Populist national convention, St. Louis, July 22. CONVENTION. jv BULLETINS. Gold Men Ousted. Silverites Evidently Determined to Secure a Two-Thirds Majority. Nebraska's Gold Delegates will al so be Compelled to Walk the Plank Sound Money Men Hold a Confer ence and Decide to Bolt. They will not Leave the Hall, but will Not Support the Ticket. Hill is Defeated by Daniel for the Temporary Chairmanship. The Vote of 556 to 349 Shows Sily er Lacked a Two-Thirds Majority. Senator White of California is Se lected as Permanent Chairman. Teller's Only Hope Grows Out of a Possible Deadlock of Candidates. 10. am. It is said, Com. on creden tials have decidedto throw out Mich, gold delegates. Platform will de clare for unlimited coinage of silver at the ratio 16 to 1. Denounces issuing Bonds in time of peace. Favors lib eral pensions to old soldiess. Opposes third term for President. Denounces extravagant last Republican Cong. Big fight expected in convention. 7 p. m. Bland says committee went behind returns of Mich, be cause they found fraud had been perpretrated, chaos and confusion 7.10 ptn. Bruker of Mieh. says to adopt report of majorty would be highway robbery. 7.15 Thomrs of Col. addresfing convention to stand by majority. St. Peter State Hospital, 3T. PETER, MINX. Training' School for Nurses. There is in this hospital a training school for nurses, the object of which is to fit young men and women for the profession of nursing. They not only become familiar with the care of the insane, but are trained in general nursing as well, so that after taking a two years' course and graduating, they will be competent to do any kind of nursing and will be much better trained than the graduate of a general hospital, because the training in the care of the insane teaches them to think and act for the patient as well as to wait upon him. The course-of study is graded and extends over two years, consisting of lectures and practical instruction in all the details of the care of the sick and insane. Young men and women taking this two years' course of train ing receive an amount of culture, in dependent of their training as nurses, which will fit them for any occupa tion they may choose to take up after graduation, and it has the great ad vantage of teaching them to be or derly, methodical and accurate, be sides developing in them the power of self-control- During their undergraduate term of service, men are paid $18.00 dur ing the first month and this amount is gradually increased accordiag to merit until after six months they are paid $25.00. Graduates may for good and extended service be paid $35.00 per month. Women are paid $12.00 the first month to be gradually increased to $18.00 after six months. Graduates may be paid $28.00. Board lodging and washing without expense to nurses. All applicants should be between 18 to 20 years of age, free from dis ease or deformity, and they are ex pected to enter for the full course of instruction. Applicants on being accepted will be expected to serve two months on probation, after which, if their service has been sat isfactory,they will on agreeing to re main for the full course of instruction be accepted as pupil nurses. Pupils may enter the school at any time. Address, Dr. H. A. Tomlinson, Superintendent. ADVANTAGES OF LIBERIA. MADE THE ANNOUNCEMENT. President McCosh's Novel Method of Com plying with a Bequest. President McCosh, of Princeton, is the subject of this story, says the New York Call, whioh is vouched for by old Princeton me&c "The venerable doctor waa accustomed to lead the morning •xeroisee in the chapel every day, and doling the exercises in the chapel gave out the notices to the students. Tb» closing exercise was fervent prayer bj Mm doctor. One morning, after he bad reed the notices as EXERCISE A NECESSITY. Bsatr Decline of Physical Fowen XHae Ifostect of AtUeMw. Beyond the age of 40—at a period when so many are physically laey—tha .superior value of exercise is apparent jhnt ordinarily this is just the time when the hygient of athletics is neg lected, aptly observes Rev. F. S. Boot. iThere is no reason why a punching bag^ rowing machine, pulley weights and other apparatus should be relegated to college boys and clerks. But, having done a good deal of work in his time, it is almost impossible to persuade a business or professional man turning 40 to give any ribrt of attention to phys ical culture if such training has been prerriously neglected. It is an inexora~ bio physiological law that we can only retain our bodily or mental powers by properly using them. Exercise is not a matter of choice, but of necessity. Drinking: by Instinct. Some discussion has lately occurred, in scientific journals on the question whether newly-hatched chickens will drink water if the mother hen does not aet them the example. Mr. H. W. El liott, in a letter to Science, answers itively that chickens will drink of own accord. He has frequently placed a dish of water before a brood hatched the day before, and observed (the chickens, without any maternal teaohing or assistance, putting their bills into the water and lifting up their beads to swallow it, in the manner of fowls. positr their 9,1890. the AM«u Prof. O. F. Cook Speaks of Republic. Trof. O. F. Cook, of Huntington, L. I., who has spent the winter in Liberia, Africa, studying the plant and animal life of that region, has returned to his home. He says, accoi-ding to the Repub lic, that the advantages of Africa as a place of residence, even for the white race, are but imperfectly understood. Liberia is naturally no more unhealth ful than other tropical countries, in which civilization has taken root, such, as India and South America, and, as in these cases, the healthfulness increases ns the forests are cleared away and bet ter conditions of life rendered possible through improvements in transporta tion. Mr. Cook has spent several sea sons in Africa in pursuing his investi gation in the interest of the American and the New York State Colonization pocietics, with a view to ascertaining the possibility of resuming, under new plans, the colonization of Liberia with negroes from the United States. He says former movements in that direc tion have failed through want of proper management rather than on account of any insurmountable difficulties inhere ent in the idea of colonization or in tiho natureof the country wheresettlements of American negroes were attempted, That something is possible, he says, is demonstrated by the fact tihat many colonists who left America 15 or 20 years ago with, nothing have now coffee farms, yielding incomes greater than their owners can spend, while others have achieved independence in much less time. veubI, Wkat Towg a student come up with another notice that Prof. Xargeti French class would be at niAe oVrioek thai day, instead of Sh 80, as *mu&L D®. MeCoeix said it wu too late, tmt the etaient insisted that P»af. Vacge would be muob disappointed if tha notiea was not reed. The exerekoo w«n* on, and the (Joetor forgot all about the bo&os. He started to make the final rpragree. Be prayed for the president of -the United Stotee, the member* of Htm nshtnet, the senators and repreeeotar tl*sn, the governor of Jf©w Jemjr, •jtmpot aod other offieiale oi Princeton, end then earne to the professors and fca etousto— in the college, in the mass* time Pro#. Krog^Si notioe came into hto sated and ths assembled students weee estonMked to bear the venerabW saj: 'And, O Lord, bless ISsegs, whoss Freoch olase will be held tbh morning at nine o'ckx*k, tnntrWI oJ at SO, as usual.'" CHEERPUL PROSPECT. Had Into tor XI mtm&iyoung minister, la a nsiyhborliaf Tillage, had an nayp*saw eat experience. Tee old lady a! whose how be stayed, in showing him to bb «eoen, said: "It ain't anybody IM ptttfci Hkfe-Boem. .This bese room 1b full of snored aseootai- •ttons to me,' she went on. "My flail busfaand died in that bed wftsh bis bend on tibane pillows, and poor Mr. Jenka sitting In that oorner. Sometimes wbsn I coma into the room in the daadfc 2 think I see him sitting these otttL Ify, ttwn father died layin* right on thatj Socuage right under the window tbeapi Poor pa, he was a spiritualist, and fie alius said he'd appear in this room aftear be died, and sometimes I am iooiisA enough to loolc for him. If ytm should see anything of him to-night youfl better not tell me. It*d be a sign to me that there was something in spivttaalh ten, and Td hate to think that. Mjffio by my first men fell dead ot heart dte eass right where you stand. He was a •doctor, and there's two whole skele tons in that ofcoeet there belonged to jbim, and half a dozen skulls in thai lower drawer. Tf you are up early anjf want something to amuse yeomstl with before breakfast just open tha4| •npbeard t&ere and you will find a )od| of dead men's bones. My poor jthooght a lot of them. Well, night, and pleasant dreams.** expert to set up, start or keep the binder run- J? «i- O DEALER IN The Acme Binder, THE Best, Simplest and Lightest Binder on Market. It is a Two Horse Machine and will do the work of four and^ has achieved xl popularity among the deal ers and farmers. 'It is ^J worth your time to call and Examine this Ma-^ chine. In buying a machine from me you do not have to wait for an 0* 4? O. K. OPPEN. C. L. Peterson DEALER IN Dry Goods, Hats and Caps, Boots, Shoes,iLight Shelf Hardware And A Full Line Of GROCERIES. Farm Produce taken in Sxchang&for J&oods. My Stock is Complete and will Meet Any Competition. F. R. Patterson DEALER IN Refrigerators, Lawn Hose, Gasoliue Stoves, Light and Heavy BICYCLES. PER YEAR ,T^=It F. R. PATTERSON SUCCESSOR TO M. HAMMOND. mm JLt Bosenberg & Co'a. Old Stand, StflTxt nml *',• v© ewers, Lawn Paints, Oils, Pumps, Shelf Hardware. IJjeattij gavuess. All kinds of harness repairing promptly and neatly done including carriage tops. Only dealer in the Dubuque Hair Face Collar, The best on the market. Inter Ocean Is the Most Popular Republican Newspaper of the West and Has the Largest Circulation. TERMS 33Y MAIL. DAILY (without Sunday) $4.00 per year DAILY (with Sunday) $6.00 per year The Weekly Inter Ocean— .00 As a Newspaper THE INTER OCEAN keeps abreast of the times in all respects. It spares neither pains nor expense in securing ALL THE NEWS AND THE BEST OF CURRENT LITERATURE. The "Weekly Inter Ocean As a Family Paper Is Not Excelled by Any. has something of interest to each number of the family. Its —& YOUTH'S DEPARTMENT is the very best of its kind. Its LITER- ARY FEATURES are unequalsd. It is a TWELVE PAGE PAPER and contains the News of the World. POLITICALLY IT IS REPUBLICAN, and gives its readers the benefit of the ablest discussions on all live political topics. It is published in Chicago and is in accord with the people of the West in both politics and literature. Please remember that the price of THE WEEKLY INTER OCEAN is JXLY ONE QOLLAE FEB YEAR. Address THE INTER OCEAN, Ghicago. Children Cry for Pitcher's Castoria. 1 1 1 1 1