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8 TRIAL GF LIEUT. MANEY, ul.yer OF capt. hedberg, begins at fort snelling DN WEDNESDAY MOIINING. Col. Barr, Judge Advocate. Ar rived From Governor's, Island Yesterday, and Is Quartered nt the Aberdeen — One of the Most Important Courts Martial Ever Hold nt the Fort. Lieut Col. Thomas F. B.trr, of Oov srnor's Island, arrived in the city yes- V-rday morning, and is stopping at the fc'.ierdeen. He is deputy judge advo rite general of the United Slates army, md has been selected as the judge ail vocate of the court martial which meets it Fort Snelliug Wednesday morning at 11 o'clock for the trial of First Lieut. Limes A. Maney, of the Fifteenth in fantry, who shot and killed Capt. lleil berp at Kurt Sheridan on Oct. SO. Col. Bur is the iirst of the non-rest lent members of the court iii.itli.il to inive in the city. Seen at his rooms In .he Aberdeen last evening. Col. Barr illuded to his former residence in tins My and his acquaintance with many >ld residents here. He was stationed ti this city, with headquarters in ihe army building on Kobert .treet. for seven years. lie was then lttached to the staff of Cen. Terry. i\ lien Gen. Terry was promoted to the rani; of major general in 1&0 and re moved to Chicago, Col. Barr went with ■im and was subsequently ordered to Sovemor's Island, where he is now nationed. Col. Barr was afterwards lationed in this city for the period coy- Ired between October, IS;'.'', and Sep ember, ISS6, He has a large experience s a judge advocate, and has been thirty (ears in the army. The court martial will be conducted is publicly as civil courts. The prose cution will be conducted by Col. Barr. The following isa copy of the order hade for the court martial: War Department, Washington, May 1, 1894.— 8y direction of ihe president, a leneral court martial is appointed to aeet at Fort Snelling. Minnesota, at 11 fclock a. in. on Wednesday, the 22d ay of May, 1594, or as soon thereafter s practicable, for the trial of First lieutenant James A. Maney, Fifteenth ttfantry. Detail for the Court- Col. Edwin C. lason, Third infantry; Col. John C. Sates, Second infantry; Col. Charles C. Jyrne, assistant surgeon general; -tent. Col. Hamilton S. Hawkins, Twenty-third infantry; Lieut. Col. /alias Bache, deputy surgeon general; -ieut. Col. William L. Kellogir, Fifth .if an try; Lieut. Col. Jacob F. Kent, Eighth infantry; Lieut. Col. George M. s_ui._l.il], Eighth infantry: Mhj. ohn M. Hamilton. First cavaliy; r".f.j. Wirt Davis, Fifth cavalry; '.apt. James M. J. Sanno, Seventh in aiitry; Capt. Albert G. Forse. First avalry; Capi. Hugh G.Brown, Twelfth lifantry. Lieut. Col. Thomas F. Barr, deputy ridge advocate general, judge advocate i the court. The court is euiDowered to proceed rith the business before lt with any .uiitier of members present not less tan the minimum prescribed by law. Daniel S. Lamont, Secretary of War. Upon the final adjournment of the ourt the members thereof will, by ircction of tne secretary of war, return & their proper stations. The travel i.joihed is necessary for : the public ervice. ■ » » * * » By command of Maj. Gen. Scholitld. GEOKGK 1). RuO.GI.fiS, Adjutant General. SUICIDK Oil ACCIDENT. In tin know n Man Walks Into the Mississippi. An unknown man walked into a ratery grave shortly after midnight at lie foot of Sibley street. Officer James ogan was attracted to the river by the ries of men on the steamer Sidney, that '.'is loading sacks of Hour from the Dia lond Joe warehouse. He ran to the r iter's edge and saw a man floating in tie river about the ropes that moored lie Floating Bethel. The current is 'cry swift and the river very high, and tefore assistance could bo given lie mau passed from view under J'.e Bethel boat. He was near enough he ropes to have caught them, nit seemed to give no heed to cries to Bich the ropes, and disappeared with nt making any outcry. The water is kiranciug up Sibley street. The learner Sidney was just a little ahead f the Bethel. The hands on the f.duey saw the man walk into te river without making any outcry •id in a few moments was carried tin lit* the Bethel by the strong current. It las not known whether it was suicide .** a mistake in attempting to walk, as r:ie man may have supposed, upon the i.'ihel. The identity of the man is l.known. He is described by John Iree n, a deck hand on the Sidney, as |e!l dressed in a dark suit of clothes, le was about five feet eight or nine Relics tall, wore a white shirt and col ir and a black necktie, with a black •erby hat. A switchman in the yards Cd that he saw a man hurrying down acksou street of the description given. le then walked down the railroad racks. It is probable this is the same lan. The people of the Sidney and (it Bethel could give no account of the I, an. and no one knew whether it was tiicide or accident. Itwas 12:20 when Jie man was discovered in the river, .search was made immediately, but he body was not recovered. t. I-aul and the National En campment, ' Col. J. 11. Davidson returned yester py from _ visit to Canton, 0.. where he 1 tended the Grand Army encampment f the state, to present the claim of St. 'aul for the national encampment in KS. > A strong committee was present from touisville. but no representatives were herefrom Atlanta. .Resolutions were ffered instructing the Ohio delegates to he national encampment at I'itts r.irg to favor Louisville for 18SS, and hey were ably urged by numerous (leakers. Col. Davidson addressed re encampment in behalf of St. aul, and the resolution instructing for Louisville did not pass as reported by he Associated Tress. Before the en kmpment adjourned, however.a motion impressing the preference of those pres nt for Louisville was adopted. In view i the proximity of Ohio and Kentucky inch action was very natural. Fire in a ilestaurant. r-The die department prevented se- Jous results from a blaze that started hortly after 9 o'clock last night in the cstauraiit of James C. Gilbert at 851 lobert street. The lire caught in the asement kitchen shortly after the (lace had been closed for the evening. 1 plentiful supply of water cut the fire hurt. The damage will not exceed 800, chiefly caused!)}* water. FACTS AND FANCIES. Thiel's .Detective Service, Vtablishnd 1573. Loca! oftice, Germania lfe Insurance building, corner Fourth id Minnesota streets. General de ctive business transacted for corpora diis anil individuals in all parts of the iiited States. THE NEGRO IN THE SOUTH. A Rosy Picture of the Condition Now existing;. To the Editor of the GloDe. If there be any virtue in the quick im pressions of short experience, I may then deduct a few conclusions from my , recent visit to the South. Under the espionage of the cultured native South ron, environed by members of the press,, of the country: embracing everywhere receptions which were . matchless in hospitable facilities for. instructing the visiting Northern hosts, 1 feel that the first, fresh iinpres-i ms of Southern conditions, social and political, acquired through such intelligent agencies,- are entitled to value in our estimate of tire South. • Throughout the region, from Ken tucky to the gulf, there lives an ever presi-nt picture ot social and commer cial thrift and personal content. What ever may he surging within political i volcanoes; whatever .race discussion may be tormenting the mind of other sections, none of these seemingly per turbs the South. In the utterance of fervent patriotism, in pledges of fealty to our common wea!, in a manly defense of all that is American, no tongue speaks with greater passion; no heart wells with the inspiration of a keener pride; no minds apply a surer logic, than those which express themselves iv that lair land— aland where the memory of Lincoln and Lee are alike revered. He who, forty years ago, declared that the two races of the South could never live together in peace and har mony under a condition of social and political equality, did not see the South in the dawn of the twentieth century. For as the Northern student amplifies his book-gotten knowledge ofthe South with the vivifying touch of personal contact wilh the factors and conditions of that section, a newer and broader sense of our attitudes modifies the the ories which have persistently warped his conclusions. The South is today most interesting to the political economist as a study in black and white. Avoiding for the moment a million features in the well being of that section, the question of the negro iv his native heath is indeed in teresting. To those of the North who have only observed the negro life of tlieir own section it is apt to suggest a difference of judgment. The two fact ors, the Southern negro and the North ern sophistication of him, are twe very different and distinct entities. See the negro in Dixie -the trustful, simple mimic of the higher civilization around him, the contented servant of the white, the obedient, unworiied laborer of the field and town, the voluntary devotee of old Southern homes. There is no race friction in the South which is born of prejudice based on native hi-man qual ity. The negro instinctively concedes the mastership, the intellectual ami moral superiority of the white, and hi is never so happy as when he expresses this acknowledgment in the forms o! deference and respect. He clings with his brood to the worn mansions of slave thrift; it seems he would rather servi his ante-bellum "inassas" than assume the attendant strife and labors of po litical freedom.' The responsibility o! enfranchised citizenship does not ap peal to him in any measure like tin-* emotional attachment for the old clays and old forms of his easy Southern activity, in a land of peace and plenty. In the North an aire of rampant ma terial development is last stampeding from off the human plane many of tin sweeter virtues of a happier existence and prolonged life-service. Into thi. vortex a newly-constituted colored mat has been created, of whom no com mentary* is intended, 'lhere is an lm- i pulsive accord in the South between the ; white and the negro; the love the latter bears the former is manifest In every j home and shop, every field and factory. That he is naturally emotional accounts lor his esteem o; and trustful devotion | to the warm-hearted people from whom alone he' got sufficient discipline of civilization to enable him to acl at all under the franchise of the fifteenth con stitutional amendment Certainly a half century of abuse did not beget "the af- | fection now so manifest. There is no ] avoidance of the whites and the blacks I because of hatred. Obviously, too, i there is not a physical nor moral as-^ sociation. But there is no aversion by : the one or the other, for it is here you I see enacted a scheme of life and en- j deavor which teaches the observer that ! there are two distinct planes of social, j moral aud mental quality. I What is it, then, which periodically I lights up th* Northern sky with the I flame of the so-called race problem? Is ' it ignorance? Instinct and environ- ' ment may breed affection, honesty and i other impulses of the heart. These the negro has in goodly measure, both by the impress of one generation refining the next and by the natural impulse to love his benefactors. But the federal laws have harnessed him with a privi lege — a duty — which rightfully de mands the exercise of some mind in contradistinction to the deplorable and periodical exercise of merely brute mat ter. The indiscriminate right to vole, the ponderous and menacing abuse and misdirection- or at least unintelligent exercise of the right— by the, negro in the South, is the bete noir which any people— be they of the North or South have a moral and political tight to con demn. He needs to be qualified by at least the rudiments of education, as much as he needs the pants he wears at the pools. Just illumine his mind with even the faintest lavs of a cultivating light; emancipate his mentality as you freed his body, and then you may rea sonably expect the nemo to attain to the development of a fair citizenship. The affairs of the South are serene. There are no strikes to disrupt; the abortive Coxeyite is not indigenous to that soil; anarchy has neither nest nor cause in Dixie land; but all work in that general human sympathy which is typical of these people. While both classes are at peace with circumstance, so both would extend the scope gj n» . _-. 1 American Celebrities 1 1 Coupon. I May ai - I i c**— — <» g m Bring- or send one of these Coupons, together with -3 2-- Ten Cents in coin, to the Coupon Department of this 22 ST paper, and the part called for will be delivered to you. 3 g Enclosed find . . . . .". . . Cents, for which send =§ §i Part to 3 gr Name »»— —_«_> S= Town :2 .... ............ .^^ g — —^ S~ State irs g__ ••« ......... _^ §£ ADDRESS ; :; ; =| £jj PORTRAIT COUPON DEPARTMENT, Globe, St. Paul, Minn. H THE. PAINT PAUL BAILY GLOBE: MONDAY MORNING. MAY 2t, J894. and enlarge the work *of that circumstance. They have ' a desire for progression, while the North lias more ot tlie means of. aggres sion. The spectacle ot the negro's ser- ' vice to the whites is only excelled by the loyal service of Southern sons to our common country. Tho spirit with which they vouchsafe this thrills one to renew the bond of Northern and Southern fellowship. No; the negro is not the excrescent » heritage of our* own social or political, body.-- The vermin upon our body pol itic is not sebaceous of that body itself, lt Is the alien scurvy engrafted, which breeds the strife and chronic disorders of our government. Willi tl c enlight enment which should be inculcated into him by the nation which charged him • with the righteous use and . intelligent direction of his franchise, the Southern negro will bear himself well to the credit of progressive statehood. Unlike a large decimal of our imports of our raw human material, the negro will not plot to revolutionize — but lie will live to evolutiouize. In this work tho South is i today calling for every fair Northern and Western influence, that there may not be a section line upon our maps; that there may be a coalition of the brain, the heart, the might and arms of one undivided country. Hanky W. Wack. Atlanta, Ga., May IS. COMMERCIAL M ING. , Event in Minneapolis of Vital In terest to Hoth Cities. Wednesday at 2:30 p. in. a commer cial convention will be held in Minne apolis, in which St. Paul mercantile men will unite with the Minneapolis contingent in considering matters of vital interest to the commerce of this section. The following circular is sent out by St. Paul men concerning the matter: St. Paul, Minn.. May 16, 1804.— Dear Sirs: The undersigned desire to call your attention to the commercial con vention to lie held in Minneapolis, Wednesday, May 23. The matter to be taken up at that time (that of home patronage), cannot but be of vital interest to every citizen in the Northwest. This matter is not to be discussed in the interest of any city or locality, but as it interests every portion of the Northwest ami merchants of every class, manufacturers, jobbers and retailers are alike concerned in the .successful consummation of the plan of organization as outlined. This plan contemplates a growth of loyalty and preference on the part of the North western consumers to goods manufac tured by Northwestern workmen or of fered through Northwestern merchants. A general invitation has been issued to merchants and manufacturers in all parts of the Northwest urging them to ue present, and numerous tellers of ac ceptance have been received. We think every merchant in this city is interested i i this matter, and all are uiged to be present to assist in organization. The meeting will be held in Ex change hall. Lumber Exchange, Minne apolis, at 2:30 p. in. Yours truly, i. L. Blood. B. Kuhl, George F. Kuhles, George i!. Finch, A. Guiterman, J. A. Gregg, Frank Luger, E. Vanish, •V. J. Footner, W. K. Dorr. George L. Farwell, E. S. Warner? George W. Freeman, John F. Brocerick. MED. I'OHEi.— ln St. Puul. at late residence. Hill Keaney street, Saturday, .May 111. ato:4.*. p. in., Thomas V. Toiler, aped forty-five , fi years. Koliee of funeral hereafter. WILLIAM J. SLKPPV, Funerel Director, Undertaking Rooms. 4U5 and i-JT Selby. cor- ' ncr Mackubin. Kcsidence, s_f_ Davion ave nue, next to Presbyterian chinch. Tele phone call, £.27. AMI'SF.MK'iTS. METROPOLITAN. | Last Two Performances The Distinguished Actor, IMr tamPQ fl'Npil! Ami JOillyd U 3 VI? lii si To„i g ViRGINIUS. _ 'TfeST MONTE CRISTO. . i - ...... I Thursday and Balance Week, MeGibnSy ' ■" I Family Opera Company in I PRINCESS OF TREBIZONDE l GRAND !„&!?* j Friday and Mn v ... 3nr ] HP and S tnrday I Saturday, Hidj L'J dllU CV Malin^e, i Magnificent Spectacular Production, j " ROB ' ROY " '-SATKERIfMt.IB CLANS" The fam us Three- Act Scottish Drama. Grand Scenery, Unique Sauces, Splendid Vocal and Instru ment _:1 music TICKETS- — Reserved Seats, $!.00. Gallery, 25c ■*-* THE NAME FOR YOUTO REMEMBER IS ABSOLUTELY PURE AND FULL MEASURE. COMMERCIAL ST. PADL That the tide has turned is generally con ceded. The re cent periodical spasm of depression reached high-water mark in 1893. . In the rebound, discerning minds.-,' plainly see days and years of prosperous activity. St Paul may be congratu lated upon having stood firm as a rook through the recent com mercial upheaval. ||§| . v So much for the past. Let turn to the. future. 1894 promises to be a good crop year. For a year past light orders have been placed for stocks of merchandise. Empty shelves must soon be replenished— from St. Paul. The recently opened line of the Great Northern railroad to the Pa cific coast means a material expansion of our trade. The rapid development of the lake carrying tonnage means cheaper fuel and rates' on merchandise from the East. Our rapidly devel oping manufacturing and industrial enterprises point to an increased population, greater prosperity of the laboring classes, and a vast increase in the volume of our businessyearly. Our banks, jobbing houses, and all classes of business men are upon a sound footing. Our sails having been trimmed and the financial storm weathered, St. Paul invites the Northwest to its doors with the new era of brightening skies, points with pride to its record as the Commercial Metropolis of the new Northwest, and assures all friends, competitors and patrons of a continuance of that spirit of fair dealing which has made the city great. - A.MERIGAN ELECTRIC BELT Co fin 13-1 I ... :.< ..il Arcade, St. Paul ** CURES dgSShb RHEUMATISM AND CHRONIC DISEASES. y/ *K Catalogues Free.' 'Zffi?' mjtSl!sS^ : Jos. SCHL,iZ BREWING co -' s 't '_,;." 'Pi? ' Celebrated KilwanKca :.y.r 7 .-Sly EXPORT BEERS •'lft^^^l^^^-'-' AND MALT EXTRACT. 'X^^^^^S DEPOT, FOOT OF SIBLEY iPi#j^^^^Pl|f!lL ■■ .TOLSPMOSE 507-2: gg|jl DOES £GF ' MFAN FRIT 2Th 3 Bar-Lock is not as old as UUCO mL/i.'V mLtill ? 80n)e other machines. .Neither are tiie other machines as old as a steel pen. nor the steel pen as old as (he quill. New tiling's represent progress. It is the new automatic sictions and the new visible writing feature which make the Bar-Losk the model writing machine of the world. •■■• fso Full details of its automatic movements mailed free. * ':■ 98 East Fourth Street, St. Paul, Minn. BOGGS & HOIT, Wholesale Grain, ; : Jisjf and Seeds, firas» Seeds a Specialty. ':.--. ST. PAUL. *■-:'-. ■ . - . minx POPULAR WAITS. The Globe -v./ - ; Reduced in Price. _-•-■ --THE LEADING ■ NIIRTHWF^TFfiS HS-TOiIPFR liUl^liigsLUlLmi ill. Ig Ul (I Ll Placed Within the Reach of All. From and after May ist the subscription rates of the St. Paul Daily and Sunda3' Globe will be as follows: *, Daily and Sunday by mail or carrier, ( f - ' " ;; : §10:^ Fifty Cents Per Month. Daily and Sunday by mail in advance, > .; -i One Year, Four Dollars. Daily (6 week days) by mail or carrier, , Forty Cents Per Month. Daily (6 week days) by mail in advance, One Year, Three Dollars Sunday Globe— — «_bss£ss_w J;-- ; Five Cents Per Copy; -Three Months^ mail or carrier, Fifty Cents. One Year by carrier, $1.50. One Year by mail, $1.25. The Week=Day Globes » Two Cents Per Copy Everywhere Except on Railroad Trains. There will be no deterioration in the Globe as newspaper owing to this reduction si ':.-. THE GLOBE LEADS II EVERYTHING! Others Follow in a Few Things. While Building Our New Studio. S IBso#-^^£22^1894 GALLERY NO. 9 W. THIRD. ! Exquisite Photography ! IT CABIN and ONE on Bxlo y $3.00. to^K^ Out-Door and Commercial Wort a Specialty I Telephone— lo7l. .:*__::.';• - _. _ -*CSsMI"- ZIMMERMAN'S PERSONAL l^S^ ATTENTION to APPOINTMENTS. Breed and- Baxery Goods ! of unexcelled merit. Not the cheapest, but the Lest. Try our : Gluiena Bread— the true health food." .'.,. • „■ . - {2_F"t!ouutry orders promptly attended to. : . lI< HOREJS BROS., ;" 461-403-1105-1107 \V. Seventh St. 1.. BISK WEISS. " ; r -2 Ilnmm Brev.iiii Company. y t ichlitz nrewiug Co,, foot of Sibley street. ;•' : uii.i_.iaui> BALLS. J. Kausclier. v* V. est Third meet. Billiard and Ten Pin Balls and Ten Pius. r^;;; : i\'?£tt liITKR^. j'} The Bar-1i33.c, ;)* 13 ut Ifjart-i sirjat "_. . * | WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES, .—NORTH —v DAILY. SOUTH.— I,f a.ti'pin S :U0 am St. Paul . . 1 :_.-.■* pm 7 :1» pm Iti i :il> pin 8:40 am Minn'p'ls 12:45 pm 0:25 pm . ."•1:50 am 7:40 pm Mihv'kee 8:35 am 7:15 am I • 10:41) pm *>:00pm Chicago.. 7:15 am|lo:J6 am I Direct line to Eau Claire, Milwaukee, Chi cago and tbe East and Sonih. I- Vestil •ed t-leepers and Dining Cars. • - City Oiuce— lo4 East Third St., St. Paul. j*' . " = .Leaves Union Depot fo Chicago, _ St. Louis and down-river points, 7:_l.i a. m. Arrives from Chi cago 2 :3 ) p. in. Daily. Leaves Union Depot for Chicago and St. Louis. 7:40 p.m. Arrives from same points 7:13 a. in Bail* . lipilf] Mill __a_n________a_______J *-H"-__rT»-i *■ Will secure a splendidly bound copy of the great Magic City, which has just been published , in 18 parts. The Globe will ' send bound copies for Three Dollars on receipt of the money, express charges for delivery to be paid by the purchaser. St. Pan! & White Bear R. R. CO. /, TIME TABLE. *• In Effect May liilli, 1894. For North St. Panl-G:4O a. m., 7:10 a. m., S:ls n. m., oa. m., and every half , - - .' hour until 11 pi ill., then 11:45 p.m. * j For Wildwooil— fi:4oa m.. Oa. m., and every half noun until 9:30 p. m. For 3lalitonieii— G:4on. m., 10 a. m.. 1:30 D. m., 'i p. m., 5:30 m., 7:30 p. m.,f p. m. Notice— B:4o a. m., 7:40 n. m. trips not run on Sunday. On Sunday the 8:15 a. in. car runs to Wil K.d only. ■ iHiliiiii Thro' Trails Leave St. Paul Psion Depot. Chicago— a. m. i 6:25 p. m. *8:10 p. 111. , Su City, Omaha, Kan. City— a. m . *7:55 p. m. Duhiih and Superior— +lo:ss a. m. »ll:C0p. ni. Mankato A Tracy— to:os p.m. *Dally. tEx. Sim. TICKET OFFICE, 150 East Tnntn Streut. NORTHERN PACIFIC! The Dining Car Lino lo Fargo. Winnipeg, Helena. Butte and the Pacific Northwest. -*.''' 'J' "Zi I bt. Paul. Dining Cars on Winnipeg and! - i'uciiic Coast Trains. Lv. | Ar. I'acillc Mail (daily) lor Fargo, *"~ j' Jamestown. -Livingston. Helena, I . Buue, Missoula. Spokane, Ta 4:15 7:11 coma. Seattle and Portland. ... p. m. a. m. akoia aud Manitoba- Express (daily) lor Fergus Fulls, Wahpe ton. Crookston, Grand Forks, Grafton, Winnipeg, Moorhead, f:OD 7:3". Fareo and Jamestown p. m. a. in. Fargo local (daily except Sun day,,for St. Cloud, Brainerd and 0:0.1 6:1) Fargo... a. m.jp.m. 1) kci.i Express .I..e__ not ru , west _Kar_;n.s_i.ii days. Pullman Sleepers dally between St. Pat, i nd Grand Forks.Grarto.i.Winuipeii, Fergus Falli- Wahpetoa ml Fareo. Pullman First-Class an I -Vour.etSleepers are run on througn Pacific Co.ij: -Trains. II K. BIONis, Cily Ticket Agent, IS* _\i Ihird Street tit Paul . ■ -- TO FAT TICKETS 6" mM H>9 E. Third St., St.Paul MnflTHE H " 300 Nicollet Avenue, " OAIIVVAY MISSKAPOLIS. TV* 1 -" Onion Dapots both Cities. leave. j Sl. Paul Union Depot. I akuivk. a7:4> pm J Wash ing ton Line al0:.!0am oU:30 pm JVV Innipeg Line. a7:JT>am bs :i)5 am Willmar. Morris & Br. Val. I>T -00 pm bS:33 am Fergus Falls. Or Forks bj:j"i pm !.;> ::j0 pni Osseo and St. Cloud ... bli :d"i am b3:3J pm Anoka And Willmar. . .. bl'i ::"..-. am b1 :33 pm Excelsior. Hutchinson... bli :.">.*> am bS:U5am Will., S.F'ls.Y"k'n & S.C. b7:K)pm bl :05 pm Duluth. West Superior*. :55pm a. daily; b, exce-.it Sunday; *Buffet parlor cars ou trains to Duluth and W.Superior; tDining and Buffet can, Palace sleepers. Tourist cars. SOO LI3STE, Sl'.PAll UNION DEPOT. Dally as follows : Leave. Boston, Montreal and New England points 2:00 p.m. Vancouver. N. Whatcom and Pacific Coast points .... • 7:50 p.m. For further Information and time nf local trains, call at ticket office or consult folders. Chicago, Milwaukee A St.Paul Uy •_. Le.— St. Paul— Ar i lilc: go Day" vim-ess ...... i>.i*_i.i. j i-rr-Up.u Chicago "Atlantic" express *25ip m I*l2 l> I Chicago "Fast Mall" .. *B:5o iv I *2: ,■ a Chicago "Vestibule" Lira... *8:lnp in*:sj i a Chicago via Dubuque. ____ 14: lV in f10:50.a in Dubuque via La Crosse ........ 18.0*\ m , (10 45 m St. Louis aud Kansas City.. »B_:isj ml "t>:2s pin and Aberdeen a Hi a in j «i. iv 11 Milbank and Aherdee i « ft lip I .'4. a ll •D'ly. lEx fun. :Ex. Hut. "i Ex. Mon. For detail in ormatio.i call nt ticket ofllee. CIHICAGO GREAT WESTERN RAILWAY v_y Co. Trains leave Union Depot City Office. 3-J4 Robert Street, corner Fifth. 'Daily tDaily ex. Mind | Leave l Arrive -.Chicago Fast Express. ... s:i'jamj.| :i pm Uowa, Mo. & Kansas Ex... 1 8:00 am ll:i.'.piu I 'Dodge Center Local 3:35 pni|iu:j?am * Chicago Limited ....... .. 7:30 pm 7 :3T>ara DcbMoines, St. 4. XX. C* ">M pmi i ;35am j __ - |=— — i "CALLED •:' :: \''|^.;;^S«Wj'iiM«.:''. ■ l)Ifll7'-*} . Constantinople and M^ IB I I _%, /' 5i Midway Plaisance. \j g\ Vill jj Reference: Mark Twain. ,. lj __-m______-______m_m_m_________m_____m____\ ■ -.-'•'-':'' "-"•'"• These eight have left their cards, and the rest of them (72J : ; Rebecca fieise: mm, are com i g as fast aa I we can find accomj Constantinople and I • 11 Midway pl ißance - 8 modations for them. ; 1 I ■' World's Prince Mere Hemcy, -— % Of Syria. Fair Midway Plaisance. * — — — - j^rj; j Portfolios." Yoo-Ka-Lucke. (Second Series >. I" Johnny Jump Up.") * Esquimaux Village. I IVnOWn aS i I | "Portrait I soil DooksM ____, Ty|}£S ! _ . v „ Cf the Esquimaux Village. l^m__________________________________m__m Midway ."■.:.- Plaisance." H&ulanw gawfa. ;/ ' . Bedouin Entertainer. | I Bring back to us, iti Midway Plaisance. hj ' £ 1 ! I _'a_ : <_.; ":.'■ denizens of Nortli countries, South coun tries, West countries !-; WONG XI, j East countries these From China. | | men and women fron: Midway Plaisance. § '-■'•' 1 J 1 ' • 1 I— — , » jungles and plains ana I cities and islands— i — . a barbaric folk and civ« barbaric folk and civ« I ilized; — bring back to | Mrs. Ah Que, us these familiar Mid; From China. . I way characters, in por- Midway Plal 9f .nce. I trait and story, thai ________ ..«.__.wj.Li..._.. l |||n mum „•; j i | we may see and read about them and their lives, that are so differ. ent from our lives. i ! The terms of distribution are: A Coupon Will be published once each week in The Coupon will appear as a Corner Card beside the heading of the paper on the First Page. Cut the single Coupon and send to the Globe, with Ten Cents, and you can secure one part each week. The Coupon for PART ON£ Appeared the second and last time in the Sunday Globe of May 20th. Get a copy : and secure Part One. Coupon for Part Two next Sunday. There will be ten parts in all. Total cost of the Great Series' One Dollar.