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UTB MINNEAPOLIS A hoodlum was arrested by Jailer Bross in South Minneapolis last evening for most eross'y insulting two ladies. He will be a candidate for sixty days before Judge Bailey this morning. A Swede lady named Lizzie Hendrick son, of Kokatc, came to the city on the sth of July accompanied by a girl eleven years old named Ella Baxtram. At the depot here she met two Swede women, per fect strangers to her, who asked that the girl be allowed to go with them for a short time. She let the girl go with them and has not seen the three since. MINNEAPOLIS PERSONALS. Mrs. Alice Vrooman has returned from the east. Mr?. Paris Gibson is home from the city of Brotherly Love. J. R. Coykendall and family have gone c ist by way of the lakes. D. J. Knox, auditor of Aitkin county. was at the Nicollet yesterday. Coi. Hans Matteon. U. S. consul at Cal cutta, arrived home Sunday. Rev. T. G. Field has left for Columbus, I >hio, to attend his father's funeral. Senator J. N. Castle and E. W. Durand. Stillwater. were in the city yesterday. Col. King ana wife left yesterday noon for New York City, to be away during the -urnmer. Nelson Sanders and Mrs. Hapgood and daughter, of Randolph. N.Y.. are quartered .-- Nicoliet for a lengthy s tay. Hon. D. J. Marrell. general manager of the Cambria iron works, was in the city yesterday, the guest of Col. King. Gen. W, D. Washburn. accompanied by his brother. Hon. E. B. Washburne, of Illi nois, left last evening for Livermore, Me. •T'.;.lge Sea^rave Smith returned yester clay from a trip through central Dakota. He reports wheat looking badiy, and says the oat crop iv that regicu tnurt prove a failure. Prof. A. Bradish. portrait artist, wh: lived in Minneapolis live years ago, and well known here, arrived in the city again yesterday. Since he left Minneap olis ha has been engaged in his profession in Chicago. Detroit and Buffalo. the Assessment roll. City Assessor Case Completes his Work l'l>on all Personal Property Sure That of the Fifth Ward. S. W. Case, city assessor, has completed the assessment of all personal property in the city with the exception of that of the Fifth ward. He makes the increase in valuation about forty-five per cent, over Last year, and there is shown a very large increase in names as well, and conse quently there will be scarcely any rise in the per cent, of taxation, notwithstanding the large amount of money that must be realized from that source. THE FOLLOWING IS THE SUMMARY.'. . ~i I i i T | i || II 11 lif Ward. l" V~ «- a w a .= = i© ie § I II ii = I o j © i x = a ■= = = 2 « I < < i >.;'«" First 566 723' $97,0041 *523,493 131,000 Second...: 525 704 780,803 1,226,847] 1(14,400 Third.... 567 1062 409,760 704,876 311,750 Fourth.... 1526 2180 5,106,672 7,283,526 833,350 Fifth 1460* j 2.534,151 .......... 889,470 Sixth 604 642 456,321 561,722 332,550 Seventh. -- j -_"St; 168,482 207,550 Eighth .: 1 .... j 264 ; ; 189,004 256,150 Total. .. i t9,784.731!t10.967,950' $3,086,000 *Kot completed. Minneapolis Markets. The receipts and shipments at and from Minneapolis yesterday were as follows: Receipts — Wheat, 37.500 bushels; corn, 1,200 bushels; barley. 590 bushel-: lum ber. 160,0 feet; millstuff, 12 tens; hay. I:.' tons: coal, 52 ton*: wood, 14 cord?; barrel ttoek. 1 car. Shipments — Flour. 9,826 barrels: wheat, 1.500 bushels: millstuffs, 314 ton*; coal, 189 tons; lumber, .".00,000 feet; wood, 8 cords. Following were to-day's grain inspec tion?, showing number of cars and grades: Wheat — Xo. 1 hard. 29 car?: No. 2 hard, 8 car?: No. 1,51 cars; No. 2, 29 cars; Xo. 3, IS cars: rejected, 4 oars: condemned^ 11 cars Total care, }.'-•''>. Cora -No -. 2 car.?. Wheat — There was but little in the mar ket ou "ehijiiire, and the receipts were small and so was the demand, yet there were buyers for all offered at current prices. For No. 1 hard $1.09 was bid without bringing out any: $ 1.09)5 was paid for one car, but that price was not paid for any more: si. 01 was the bid for Xo. 2 hard, but $1.05 was bid for a single car of choice. The highest bid forXo. 2 northern was .'7c. which was declined. Good samples were iii demand. There was not much trading in them and they were held pretty stiff. Flour— Quiet Quoted as follows: Pat ents, $6.25 a •;. 7." straights, £5.35(0,5.75; choice, $5 (5; 5.25; low grades, $2#i.?.. Corn — Was extremely sick. One car No. 2 was offered first at 47c, then at 4Gc ana lastly at 45c in store but it did not sell. Oats Quoted at 33e for No. 2: some asked 2c more. A car or two of sample sold at 33c. Holders were firm. Shorts — Good going at 9.50 per ton. Mixed Feed — Market decidedly dull and the best to be done in quotations is to gue-s. On track $17iy IS and free on board $17.50^18.50. Bran— Firm and higher with very few offerings. Bulk lots billed out at $0.75. Sacked lots were selling at $2 2.50 above bulk. Manufacturers controlled stocks and they felt disinclined to make any con cessions to effect sales. Corn Meal — Inactive and very dull, at about $1 less than mixed feed per ton. Hay — The season for baled hay is pretty well over. Small sales are made at (5@7 per ton for wild, according to quality. GENERAL MABKETS. Butter — Only in moderate demand ex cept packing stock, which is lc higher ow ing to the small receipts, and the tendency 13 upward. Eggs — Pretty firm, receipts fair, prices unchanged. Apples — A slight advance, other fruits steady except green apples, which have fallen 10c per box. Beans— Hand picked navy, $2@2.25 per bushel; medium, $ lift 1.50; dirty and com mon lots, 75c to $1. Dry peas, $1,250; 1.50 per bushel. Very little demand. Lard Prime, 10*/ lie per pound; com mon. 9(ffi9 1 Berries — Strawberries, Michigan, 16-box cases, $1(2,1.25 per case; Wisconsin, 24 --box cases, $2.25@ 2.50 per case; Minneso ta, per quart, 12c: per case, $2.75@3. Gooseberries, §3fa3.50 per crate. Rasp berries, black, $3.75 per case; red, s3 per case. Blackberries, £4^,4.50 per case Cherries, choice red, §2.50@2.75 per crate: choice white, $2.25 per crate. Plums. S3 (:! 3.50 per crate. Peaches, California. >1.75@2 per crate. Apricots, §2^2.25 per box. Mayor Maodonald of St. Cloud has ve toed a bill passed by the city council, pro viding for the organizing of a chain-gang. AIL AROUND THE GLOBE. The port of New Orleans is vigorously qnaranticed. There were fifty-seven deaths at Demi etta on Monday. The Malagassy embassy sailed from Liverpool for Madagascar yesterday. Fifty American wheelmen arrived at Toronto yesterday on a tour through Can ada. Two merchant firms were burned out at Eatonville, Ga.. on Sunday with a loss of $21,1)00. Charles Marshall, twelve years old, was drowned at Shelbyville, Term., while bath ing yesterday afternoon. James Keenan and Geo. Guizel row three miles with a turn race at New York for $1,000 in a few days. A prize fight is being arranged between Jimmy Murray and Geo. Fitzjames for $1,500 a side at New York city. Burglars robbed the house of John Pierce, near Williamsburg, 0., last night, securing $400 and a gold watch. An old maimed seaman committed sui cide by jumping from an upper story win dow, at Bellefontaine, 0., yesterday. The trial of Charles Upton commenced at Rochester yesterday for overdrawing his account in the Preston City bank. James Alexander of Erie, Pa., dropped dead yesterday on the dock while wheeling a wheelbarrow in loading the propeller Raleigh. B. Stanbin, translator to the British house of commons and a French writer, dropped dead in the streets of London yesterday. The English say the American rifle team i~ slow in getting the range of the bull's eye, but when they do they hang to it with great tenacity. The report that Marcus R. Meyer, Ab bey's manager, had died in San Francisco is denied, his name having been mixed up with another man's. The rumor that the Montreal Orange ! men assisted by their brethren in Ontario ! are to make a general parade in the for mer city is denied. President Xordheimer of the Federal Bank of Toronto, has accepted the service : in the writ in the Farley suit for $100,000 damages for libel. The steamship Nante from New Orleans to Liverpool with cotton, is aground in the south pass and tug boats and barges are trying to get her oil. A few more of the ring leaders in the Ely riot, in Mew Hampshire, have been ar j rested, and no further demonstration by the miners is expected. The customs and internal revenue re ceipts of the government for the first week in July were (540,769 more than in the same week in 1882. * A large number of witnesses are sum moned to the meeting of the investigation committee at the Bath, N. V., Soldier's home, which meets to-day. The night watchman of the Franklin furnace at Middletown, N. V.. shot a burglar dead while robbing the store of the iron company on Sunday night. The cattle plague is ended by the death of all the cattle in the Behera district in Egypt and now the cotton worm has com menced putting in his destructive woik. Judge Dawson, of Denver, fined Willard Teller $500 yesterday for contempt of court for filing an answer in the case of Tabor vs. Bush which was of a scandalous nature. Francis B. Webber of Cambridge has been arrested and committed in default of $15,000 bail for swindling the Alta Gold and Silver Mining company of Mexico out of $60,000. A continuous stream of people passed through the Episcopal residence at Cin cinnati yesterday, to view the remains of Archbishop Purcell. The body will be placed in the cathedral to-day. During the excitement of a small blaze in the Appleton manufacturing company's machine shop at Appleton, Wis., yesterday a little daughter of Anton Guberes was drowned in a water works tank. Ex-Senator Tabor denies the rumor that he paid Architect Hill $5,000 to secure the location of the Denver postomce buildings. He says he never had any dealings with Hill except in the most public manner. John Gilmore, colored, before the court yesterday, denied having confessed to tiring the Bridgewater almshoose and i? held for examination to-day. An escaped inmate named Wheeler is hald as a wit ness. Locusts are making sad work in Vene zuela. They are penetrating inland and destroyed ail vegetation in the neighbor nood of Moran in one night. It is feared they will soon reach the- fertile valleys of j the Caracas. The representatives'of the lines between Chicago and the Ohio river, known as the Ohio river pool, held two secret meetings at Cincinnati yesterday without coming to an agreement, and adjourned to Chicago. July 19. Members of the firemen's charitable as sociation of New Orleans have volunteered to extinguish fires on shipboard, steamers and other craft, free, of pay, salvage or costs, to see if they cannot put an end by this action to incendiarism on water craft and consequent salvage claim? at that nort. ;s?*°£veiy color of the Diamond Dyes is per fect. See the samples of the colored cloth at the druggists. Unequalled for brilliancy. sportou NOTES. Clingstone Disabled. Cleveland. July 9. — Owing to a cracked heel developed after his engagement, Clingstone could not be exercised and conditioned properly to trot with St. Julien in Chicago this month, and Mr. W. J. Gor don, the owner, announces to-day that the race is off and Clingstone will remain here, but the other entries of his stable. Wm. H., Clemmie and George V., will be sh" pod to Chicago to-morrow. liase Ball. At Fort Wayne-Toledo C: Fort Way- 6 i' At Peoria — Pooria 10; Grand Ra^ da 3 AtQuincy — 8; Saginaws 4. At Springfield— Springfields 5; BS7 City i. Hegman Wins tin- ltaee. Rochestek, N, V., June — H. W. Heg man, English bicyclist, defeated Jno. S. Prince, American champion, in a twenty mile race to-day. Time one hour, nine minutes and fifty-seven and three fourths seconds. "BCCHU-PAI BA." Quick, complete cure, all annoying Kidney, Bladder and Urinary Diseases. $1. Druggist A Home Crop Report. Milwaukee, July — The correspond ents of E. P. Bacon & Co. throughout Wis consin, Minnesota and lowa, write that wheat and oats are doing well and promise a large crop, but corn and barley seem to have suffered from the cold and wet. _ — "MOTHER SWAN'S WO KM SYRUP." Infallible, tasteless, harmless, cathartic; for feverishness, lestlessaesF, •worms, constipation. 25c. itj Democratic Jubilation. Annapolis, Md.. July — At a municipal election, Dr. Claude, the Democratic can didate for mayor, is elected by a majsrity of fifty- six, and the Democratic candidate for city counsellor by forty-seven majority. Three Democratic and two Republican THE ST. PAUL DATIY GLOBE, TUESDAY MORXIXG, JULY 10, 1883 councilman are elected, and one tie. For the* first time for years the Democrats car ried the city, and to-night they had a torch light procession. MINNESOTA NEWS. Burglars have turned up in Albert Lea. The general report is that "corn is on the boom." The work on the telephone lines in Man kato is progressing rapidly. Measles are having a ran in Le Sueur. Some deaths have been reported. Lieutenant Governor Gilman delivered an oration on the Fourth at O?akis. Reports from Easson indicate the prom ise of a good corn crop to be favorable. Sneak thieves and burglars are on the rampage in Mazeppa and neighborhood. F. B. Frost, last week was robbed of $80 at the depot in Ramsey, Anoka county. The bicycle riders of Rochester have adopted a uniform of navy blue flannel. A Sleepy Eye justice fined a man $50 and costs $17, for selling glandered horse es. Reports from Mantorville say corn has made a surprising growtht in the last two weeks. St. Thomas church, Winona, has a hand some new organ, which was constructed in St. Paul. The total value of personal property assessed in the town of Mazzeppa for 1883 is $42,706. The Universalist church in Glenville, Freeborn county, will be dedicated on Sun day, July 15. The creamery at Lake Crystal has not been suspended as reported. It is in suc cessful operation. The new iron bridge in Le Sueur has been completed and accepted by the coun ty commissioners. The only regular Fourth of July cele bration in Freeborn county this year, was at the village of Freeborn. Only a slight sprinkling of drunken men was seen during: the 4th of July celebration in Marshall. Encouraging. The other day while bathing, a young man named Nesvold was drowned in the Chippewa river near Montevideo. The Fourth was celebrated at Zumbrota last week. Gen. S. P. Jennison delivered the oration and it was a good one. The other day at Crookston, Rudolph Cbiniqay, was accidentally and fatally shot by the discharge of a shot gun.; Wasoca residents who hail from the Green Mountain state, Vermont, are ar ranging for a basket picnic July 26. Robert Hall of Kalmar, Olmsted county, exhibited in Rochester last week a three year-old mare colt which weighed 1,160 pounds, a handsome and active animal. The other night a sneak went into the barn of H. D. Brown of Albert Lea, cut harness, saddle etc. The miscreant is sus pected. Two beautiful deer were seen on a farm in Goodhue county. They went — they did not stand on the order of their going — they ran. The Winona Herald says "the county treasurer paid $200,000 into the city treas ury on Friday last, on account of the June settlement." -^ jsjjgg ■&&%& Henry Ward Beecher is open to lecture engagements in Minnesota daring the month of August. This will be his last lecturing tour. Morrison county has voted by a ma jority of 256 to Issue bonds to the amount of $12,000 to build a bridge over the Mississippi river. The Sabbath school convention at Duke's Grove, Fairmont, Martin county, the first Sabbath in July 13 said to have b?en a splendid success. Over 300 per sons were present. John Murphy, of Hayward, has a n c acre field of corn that was forty mc s high ten days ago. and his wheat had com menced heading oat. Miss Laura Batholomew was run over in the streets of Mankato the other day by an unmanageable horse. She was painfully, but not fatally injured. Perham. < >:tertail county, is to have a new bank. The old bank it will be re membered collapsed, but it is said most of ts creditors have been satisfied. Only $1,000 of needed bonus remains to be raised to secure the location of the Presbyterian college in Albert Lea, The agent is sure of obtaining it speedily. Mr. Halvor=eu has sold one half inter est in the Albert Lea Enterprise, to Clint. L. Lose, and the paper will hereafter be conducted by the joint labors of the new firm. A pile of wood at Aitkin took fire the other da; from sparks of a locomotive. The pile contained iSO cord- and about 150 cords were burned before the fire was sab dued, involving a loss cf 5750. A little boy in Lake City had an eye badly, if not fatally injured by a fire cracker on the Fourth. Fire crackers and toy pistol? are nothing less than infernal machines, and their use ought to be abol ished. Three or four freight conductors between Sleepy Eye and Waseca were discharged last week. No reason is assigned but the '■ fact tHat they have been shadowed by de tective, leads to unpleasant inferences. During the celebration of the Fourth at Burnhoinville, Todd county, William Per ry was seriously injured in a horse r-:ce. His horse ran against a tree. He was thrown off, his collar bone broken, and he received other severe injuries. William Sommers of Hastings, actuated by jealousy, shot his wife three times the other day. One ball entered the right breast, another the left ear, and the third grazed her head. The physician thinks the wounded woman may recover. E . S . Wilson of Albert Lea has received back pension to the amount of $906,40 and is henceforth to receive $40 a month. He has already commenced the erection of a fine residence to cost in the neighborhood of $1,300. Recently in the township of High For est, Olmstead county, Ole Oleson, in one week lost live out of a family of seven children, by that terrible scourge diphthe ria. The ages of the deceased children ranged from three to nineteen years. Windom Reporter: R. Lay hart, of Del ton, has a flowing well, thirty feet deep, and has recently laid pipes to carry the water into his milk house to cool the milk, and finds it a very successful thing, saving him ice and also labor in pumping water. A principal feature in the celebration of the Fourth at Montevideo between Union troops, and rebels. Though the rebels made a bold stand, it is almost needless to say the Union troops won the day, cap tured prisoners etc. Nobody killed or wounded, but the fun was unlimited. Long Prairie A rgvs: Wm. Sheets' lit tle boy who got a shaving in his throat about the last of May, has been rapidly growisg worse during the past week and the doctor states that there is not the slightest hope for his recovery . His sor rowing parents are only waiting for death to relieve his sufferings. Refuse to Compromise. Chicago, July 9. — The proposition of Peter McGeoch to his creditors to settle at the rate of fifty cents on the dollar bids fair te fall through, owing to the refusal «f several heavy creditors to sign an agree ment to that effect, and among other firms thus refusing, George Eldridge & Co., whose claims amount to $93,000, are re ported as demanding full payment. It is also reported Wm. Young <fc Co. are oppos ed to McGeoch's proposition. PLEA SAXTRIES. While there's lye there soap. Train up a child in the way you should have gone yourself. A book -with a loose leaf should be bound over to keep the piece. Fritz says he can't eat oleomargarine because it disagrease with him. It is a little singular that a n? an will bolt a ticket he cannot swallow. "In Nantucket there are sixteen •women to one man." Happy man ! "That butter is too fresh," as the man remarked when the goat lifted him over the fence. What riles a country postmistress is to have a postal card come to the oilict written in French. A gamecock ought to be good eating. Does not the poet say, "The bravest are the tenderest? " A Vassar College girl, upon being asked if she liked codfish balls, said she never attended any. It is never too late to mend. Which is why the cobbler never has your boots done at the time promised. Thirty-two circuses are bleeding tlm unhappy land. What a tough time it is those poor old jokes are having. The force of habit example lias n.> effect on the man in the moon. EL stays sober when the moon gets full. " Six Girls " is the title of the latest novel. It is expected that a sequel, en titled "Our Broken Gate," will be issued soon. Ax Irishman, eating his first giv n corn, handed the cob to the waiter and asked : " Will ye plaze put some more banes upon me sthick ? " The tAevng typographical error shows the vast importance of a comma. At a banquet this toast was given : " Wonat — without her man, is a brute.'" Georgie (4 years old, at the tea-tabk- * : "Mamma, may I have some sardines?'" Mamma : ' ' Wait till I'm ready, Georgie. ' > Georgie (surprised): "Why, ma, it's me as wants 'em." An English servant-girl who had re turned from the United States, to visit her friends at home, was told that she "looked really aristocratic." To which she responded: "Yes, in America all of us domestics belong to the hire class." Robinson (after a long whist bout at the club) — "It is awfully late, Brown. What will you say to your wife ? " Brown (in a whisper) — " Oh, I shan't say much, you know; 'Good morning, dear,' or something of that sort. She'll say the rest." A Colorado photographer started in to be a desperado, but he lost his life the first time he tried to kill a m:m as, after covering his intended victim, he gave the victim time to draw and shoot first, by pausing to remark ere he fired : "Now, look natural !" — Boston Post. Mother (to new giri, who had been hired to amuse the children): "Mary, how is this ? These children are maMng a terrible noise • " "Well, indeed they are, ma'am, and I'm so glad you've come in. Here I've been trying to write for the last half hour, and thek noi.se is so distracting." This is the season of the year when the mince pie comes to town, and the citi zen conies down town alter dinner try ing to pry a raisin seed not of a hollow tooth with a buck-skin mitten, and he stops in the drug store and orders an other box of those powders for mdi gestion. Peck's Sun. A youxg man who lives in Austin, and whose mustache is like faith, " the evi dence of things hoped for, the substance of tilings not yet seen," called on his prospective father-in-law and gave notice that he intended marrying the old gen tleman's daughter at an early date. "It had better take place on Saturday, so that it will not interfere with your school hours," sarcastically remarked the old man. Theee is no trait of human character so potented for weal or woe as firmness. Cost of Living in France. Some one in France lms made an es timate of the average cost of living among the working-classes in that country, and lie finds that the expend itures of sixteen families, fairly repre sentative of different orders of labor ing people, varied from ?2"22 to SOOO jier annum. House accommodation, as a rule, claimed 15 per cent." of the total expenditure, clothing 1G per cent, and food 01 per cent., 8 per cent, being re served for miscellaneous purposes. In the matter of food he found that the high est expenditure registered was 72 per cent., and this item of expenditure was thus distributed: Thirty-three per cent, for bread, 14 per cent, for meat, 13 per cent, for milk, 24 per cent, for miscellaneous aliments. Ihe greatest expenditure upon bread in any individ ual case was 48 per cent. A xoo'G man who was arrested in New York, and signed his name with a "cross," was asked by the magistrate why he didn't go to school and learn something. The youth of "mark" promptly replied that he was " afraid of dying from over-study." A Rhode Island Justice refused to marry a man named Carr to a lady of the same name, on the ground that he was afraid to coupl: cars. "How did we come to possess our present dress ?" ia one of the questions by the editor of Mature. Can't say, sir. Presume the tailor didn't know you. Beauty is the mark God sets upon Tirtue. In St. Louis a man was fed seven months through a hole in his stomach, and died of a disease due to another cause. THE DAUBER OF OYEE-EIERTIOfI. A Stalwart 3lan Hecumes Weaker Than a Child and Then Recovers His Former Strength. [Waterloo, N. V., Observer.] In these days of rowing giants and athletic heroes, fine physical development is more observed than ever before since the time of the Athenian games. A man who shows the elements of physical power is looked op to far more than in the days of our ancestors, possibly because there are fewer specimens of well developed man hood than then. An emissary of this paper met a magnificent speci men of physical power a few days since in the person of Dr. A. W. McNames, of Waterloo. His muscles, which showed unusual develop ment were as hard as wood. At his re quest the writer sought to pinch him in the arms or legs, but found it wholly im possible. A realization of what is meant by an iron man was fully made mani fest. "Have you always been so stalwart as thisr'' inquired the news gatherer. t , fpfli '"Not by any mean?." was the reply. '"When a young man I was always strong and active and felt that I could accomplish anything. This feeling so took possession of me on one occasion that I attempted to lift a box which four men found it im possible to move. I succeeded in placing it on the wagon, but in two minutes from that time I was unconscious and remained so for hours, and when I recovered consciousness I voioited a large quantity of blood. From that day I began to grow weak and sickly. I believed that I had suC'ered some internal injury, and experienced a general debility, which seemed similar to the effects pro duced by malaria. My back was very weak. I had no appetite, and at times loathed food. My lip? were parched and cracked. My head felt as though it were entirely open at the top, and it pained me on the side intensely. In six weeks' time I had fallen away from 208 pounds to less than 170. I was in a most wretched con dition. I was completely discouraged.*' "What did the doctors say about you:" •'Almost everything. I consulted no less than six different physicians. They all treated me and none did me any good. At that time I was suffering intensely. I could not sit upright but was obliged to rest in a cramped uneasy position. I was compelled to urinate every five minutes and I passed over three quarts every day. I was not living. I was existing. One night (how well I remember it!) my wife had put the children all in bed when the feeling came over me that I should live but a very short time. My wife and I talked matters all over and I gave the minutest directions as to what she should do after I was gone. I was not in a flighty condi tion by any means, for the doctor, on leaving town the following day, bade me good bye, saying he never expected to see me again, for I was suffering with Bright's disease of the kidneys in its last stages. Within the next few days more than twenty friends came to bid me good bye. Among the number was Dr. John L.Clark. He asked me what I had used in the way of medicineF. I told him. He then recom mended a remedy of which I had heard much, but about which I was skeptical. If faith were an element of power it certainly was lacking in my case." % 'And so you did not try it:" "On the contrary, I did try it, and to my surprise it seemed to go to just the spot. Indeed, it was the most palatable thing I had taken into my mouth for months. I relished it."' "And did it cure you?" "Do I look as if it did:" "Yes indeed. What was it:"' "Warner's Safe Cure." "A proprietary medicine." "Of course. What of thai : I suppose I once had as great a prejudice against ad vertised medicines as any one could have. When I was studying medicine at Ann Ar bor, Michigan. I used to vow with the rest of the class that we would fight all such remedies at all times. When a man comes down to the last hour, however, and bids his wife and friends good bye. such bigot ed prejudices as these all vanish, I can as sure you and any remedy that can cure is gladly welcomed." "And how have you been since then?" "As well— or better than before." "Do you still exert your strength?" "Certainly. But Ido not oeer-exert, as formerly. My strength is increasing ev ery day. and my health is number one. I know that my life was saved by Warner".- Safe Cure, and I : believe "it is the best medicine that was ever compounded by any chemist or physician. 1 am willing the doctors should sneer at me for such a statement if they choose, but I have prov en its truth, and am prepared to stand by it." The above experience should be of great value to all who are suffering. It shows the deceptive nature of this terrible mala dy : that all symptoms are common to it and that there is but one way by which it can be absolutely avoided. The Ticket M ade ip In Advance. Hakeisbubg. Pa., July 9. — Not more than twenty delegates to the Republican state convention have arrived. The con vention promises to be lively, but indica tions are that the ticket has been up, and that Niles of Tioga will be nominated for auditor general and McHose of Berks for treasurer. The Fresh Air Fund Trip. New Yoes, June 9. — Nearly 500 chil dren of the Tribune fresh air fund left the city in a steamer this afternoon. They are under the care of missionaries and school teacher?, who assisted in selecting t ■ c children. They expect to make a land ing at Troy at 6a. m. to-morrow, where they take a special train for the Lake Champlain region. Arrangements are made for a reception of the children at different towns along the lake. Ex-Goyernor Talbot Replies. Boston. June — Ex-Governor Talbot, chairman of the board of charities, has ad dressed a letter to Governor Butler in re ply to the animadversions of the latter in a letter of June 19. "ROUGH ON BATS." Clears out rats, mice, roichee, flies, ante, bed bugs, skunks, chipmunks, gophers. 15c. Drug- Eists. ____^ ThcDa iij/ers of Prosperity. I Bishop Coxe's Fourth of July Address.! • Whatever is growing tip among 113 alien to our institutions and corrosive in its ac tion upon the morals and maxims which have insured our prosperity hitherto— that is our danger, there is our foe, such 13 the evil we must uproot, or it will uproot us. Undoubtedly, the disorders bred of pros perity are upon us prematurely — extrava gance, luxury, wastefulness, excess in eve ry indnlgence. A St. Oatukkine s (Canada) jmry o> twelve enlightened and thinking men who were called to judge the facts of a case wherein a murder had probably been done — its victim a — came to the fore with the conclusion, " Died by the visitation of God under suspicious circumstances." The palmy days of a boy's life are those in which he gets properly spanked 1 by his mother. ' THAT'-,KNOW'I.EL»Gh: I> I'OWK*:. ' NEEDS NO DEMONSTRATION*, AND HE WHO BY EXPERIENCE KNOWS THE VALUE OF TAB RANT'S StLTZEK APERIENT DOES NOT NEED TO HE TOLD THAT HE HAS IT WITHIN HIS POWER TO WARD OFF FEVERS, BILIOUS ATTACKS, HEADACHES,. AND ALL THE ILLS ARISING FROM A DISORDERED STOMACH. LIVER OR BOWELS. A TEASPOONFTL IN A GLASS OF WATER, BEFORE EATING, ACTS LIKE A CHARM. AND NO WISE MAN WILL BE WITHOUT IT. FOR SALE BY ALL DRUGGISTS. SVUVL.A.STJ.V JtJSIIUJ&S. There is food for thought in the fol lcwing : "Lor, missus," said the old darky, " what mek you pay money fur to send the chile to school ? I got one smart boy. Jonas, but I lams him my self." But, Aunt Charlotte," replied the lady, " how can you teach the child when you don't know one letter from another?" "Howl teach him? I jis mek him tek de book an' set down on de flo, and den I say, ' Jonas, you tek ye eye from that book, much less leggo him, an' I skins you alive !' " COLD COJIFORT. A great Persian poet was very poor, and went down the street without any shoes on, crying " no shoes, no shoes !' aud he thought it was awful hard for the first poet in 511 Persia. " But what do yo a think !" exclaims our friend Talruage. " One day he saw a man come down the street, who had no feet !" There was some balm in the greater misfortune of ther fellow, to be sure. But not enough to warm the poet's toes. Cold comfort, that sort, after all. "Be yer takin' much interest in poli tics this fall, Bill?" asked the first tramp. "Skursely," answered the sec ond tramp ; " but I expect to be runuiu' for suthin' myself purty soon." " "What do you s'pose yer'l run fur, Bill ?" " The poor-house wagon." The science of life may be thus epit omized — to know well the price of time, the value of things, and the worth of people. No man* is more miserable than he that hath no adversity. Morris ox Heady, a Kentucky blind man, is fond of chess. He has chessmen with projecting points, so that he may distinguish by the touch between them* He is hard to beat LYDIA E. PifJXHAM'S VEGETABLE COMPOUND, Is rt ositive Cure For all tfeoac- Fainfal Complaints Bad Weaknesses no c<in:::iou to oar best female population. A Medicine for Woman. Invented bj a V.'omaa. Prepared by a Woman. The Crratc.l X-nir&l I>i-.-,,Ti>rr Si ire .:•• Dawn of Hi trim?. t3"lt revives the oroopi^S spirits, invigorates and h:;n:inn!z-.'- th? organic functions, give-; elasticity and {Irmr.c-s to the step, restores the natural lustre to the eve, ami plants on the polo ch»>k of woman tl-e t resh ro «s of life"? .-pring- and early siiE-.raer tim?, »i7~Ph; si^ans Use it anri Prescribe It Frcc!> It removes faLatncsT, Catalency, destroy? aii craving for stimulant. &.ul rc!:OTC3 weakness of the ti' imaoh. T'.'.r.i fc.l'rrT of b ari.i^ <lovrn, causing psiri. vreiarht and backache, :s al?rays permanent'?" cured ! y its use. For the cure of K": Jner Complatetsor either sex this ConixM>uail U unsurpassed. I-Ti> \r:. PI.VKHAM*S BtO >» PURIFIES xviil eradicate ... of KunKTS from tlie Blood, and give ton# and MreEsth to tbe ' -"l, at man woman or child. la>itt on having it. Both the Compound and E'.o xl PuriSrr r.re j-rpjifirea at i"3 and 2H."> "Wo tern AveniieJ Lynn, Mass. Price o£ eit!:er, §1. S::: b- (ttfus for $3. Sent b" mail in the form 0-I'"' or oflozeagesi on receiptof prieej $1 per bo* foreita . Jlr?.Piakhamfresly answers a3l letters ot icaciry. EnUo&jSct.rts::'.?. Send for pccaplilet. tsmilT should be without LYDIA Tl. PIXEH.ora UVT^ii i'ILLS. Th-.-v ciie constipatiur, bilious-. sa &Ddtcrp£di£7 c£ the iivei. £j c-vuts per l.'>^. £7*Saldby a!il>«-!:s£rists.-C3. (i mmmmmmm E FOR THE PERfIfiAMEST CURE OF 3 I CONSTIPATION. 1 C ' 0 — No other disease 13 so prevalent in this coon- JO •" try cs Constipation, and no remedy lias ever — 0 equalled tbo cc-:cbi=.ted Kidney-Wort as a c £ crvtrc. ""!:- • — _i~tlic cause, hoT.'ever obstinate .1 tlie case. tl.:s rsaiedy -.—ill overcome it. a. a] 135 6 E?Q THIS distressing com- jOj rßfatWi p.ai_t is very apt to be ~| complicated "Br.i;}iCG.iit.ipa-icii. Kidney-Wort J • •+, BtrengtJiens lie v.e-.lie^cd parts and quickly qI ■ C cures all Icinds of Piles even when physicians £*] '• and medicines have before failed. c! •g 42- CITIf you.hsve either of these troubles pi "*, PRICE SI. i USE I Druesrists Sell * [t KlffN£Y-WQRTiJ * A Af PTf||^ t No time should gfn\l iLE I IBM be lost if the stom- H U^mfT. 1 . «*, Hver and bow- t els are attected to adopt the sure rem edy, Hostetter's Stomach Bitters . Diseases of the or gans named beget : others far more se. : rious, and a delay iis therefore has ardous . Dyspep sia, liver com plaint, chills and fever, early rheu- fefek. STOMACH 0* matic twinges.kid- P M«SI? mfw% *fc ney weakness Kb B ir jB" SF ■■ *f* hring serious bodi- Ifl iSI Bl» ly tronbleif : rifled with. Lose do time in using this effective and safe medicire. Fo sale by all D: legists and dealers generally Z^?/^7^^£7S\/^ BELL BANJOS YON & HEALY, State and Monroe St., CHICAGO Will i.^Tl prepaid to «nva<Mrew their Illustrated Priet ivtof liateat Style Banjos. •T'i-iT the instrument for Picnics. Camping Parties. Snm •sr r.wainjr serpnrwi es.etc. Now the rage In best M>Ci< ■■• Prices 9 3 and upwards. TAILOKIKG. ieTaloit 146 EAST THIBD STREET. miss LAURA W. HALL, teaches op ; PIANO, ORGAN AND HARMONY. Residence, h. 102 Western Avenue, St. AnfhonyiHiJl, ST. PAVZ, MXMW. C^-Also Agent for BRAINARD'S MUSICAL WORLD, published at Cleveland, Ohio. It has been published over 20 years, and is acknowl edged to be the ablest and beet, as well as the oldest musical journal in the country. Every teacher, amateur and pupil should have it- Price $1. 50 a year. Address as above. Notified by postal oard, Miss H. will call at any residence in tVio pity anil r»ypivp Mjhefrinti^nc. DISSOLUTION DISSOLVED! The firm of Dreis & Mitsch having bees dissolved P. J. DREIS Has established himself in business bun tMrilf! til & 01. PETER olrthjlo Where will be four.d the finest and best of Drugs, Perfumery, Toilet Articles, Patent Medi cines, etc. Also, all kinds of Garden and Flower Seeds. PRESCRIPTIONS A SPECIALTY FTTEfi DEALSSS. Full weight and measure guaranteed by 18 i Belial Foil Fin OF GRIGGS & FOSTER, 41 East Third Street. Established in 1864. COAL & WOOD At bottom prices. Grate and egg $9.25, store 19.50, email nut $9.50, Briar Hill, $8.50. All grades of fresh mined bituminous coal at equally low prices. We are making a specialty of dry body oak and birch wood mixed at $6.00 per ; cord, nearly equal to maple. Dry pine slabs $3.50, bass-wood $4 and maple $7. Remember the place 11 East Third street. THE PAUL GLOBE, DAILY, SUNDAY AND WEEKLY. ENLARGED AND IMPROVED. SPECIAL WIRE FROM ST. PAUL TO THE EASTERN NEWS CENTERS FULL ASSOCIATED PRESS PRIVILEGES. Hr*ISBUED EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR._« The St. Paul Globe is now acknowledged to be the LEADING PAPER IN THE NORTHWEST. The Globe has recently been enlarged to an £3?- EIGHT PAGE PAPER. «^J It is cut, folded and trimmed. It has a special wire for its exclusive use, which connects its editorial room direct with Chicago, New York and Washington . It has, beside?, full Associated Press privileges, which supplemented to its special telegraph wire, puts it in the front rank of American newspapers. Politically the Globe opposes all monopolies »nd stands by the interests of the people. It is not chained down, but meets issues as they arise fearlessly and vigorously. It invites subscriptions Because IT FURNISHES ALL THE NEWS better than any other paper. Because it Fnmiehes the BEST MARKET REPORTS. Because it Stands by the INTEREST OF THE PEOPLE. Because it Approves the right and opposes the wrong, re gardless of who suffers thereby . The Globe invites those not alreay enrolled to make a trial subscription. You caa obtain it of your newsdealer or order it direct from the publication office, Inspect it and judge for yourself. All editions postage paid. TERMS OF BUBSCBIFnOS. THE DAILY" GLOBE. SEVER ISSUES PER WEEK. Daily acd Sunday Globe, ONE DOLLAB PER MONTH. SIX ISSUES PEE WEEE — BY MAIL. Ore month {0 90 Throe months 2 50 Sir months 5 (X) Twelve months 10 CO The Weekly Globe is an eight-page paper, the came size as the Daily Globe. It is the best paper for the farmers in the State. It is sent to any address, one year, postage paid, FOR ONE DOLLAR AND FIFTEEN CENTS, For three months on trial for 125 cents. All subscriptions payable invariably in advance. Address, GLOBE PRINTING COMPANY. St. Paul, Minn. [Dobbins 5 Starch Polish.- \An important /discovery by which every family may give their lin en that beaa tifal finish $0. collar to fine laundry wrx. Ask J9*r $•■,-/■•?. i i£B.DCi>;siNl Phil*ri*<~-.% Sb> HEALTH IS WEALTH Dr. E. C. West's nerre and brain treatment, a specific for hysteria, dizziness, convulsions, nervous headache, mental depression, lots of memory, premature old age, caused by ever exertion or over-indulgence, which leads to mis ery, decay and death. One box will core receni caj-efe. Each box contains one month's treat ment. One dollar a box or six boxes for fir dollars, sent by mail prepaid on receipt of p*-w We guarantees six boxes to care any case. Witt each order received by us for six boxes, accom panied with five dollars, we will ae^d the par chaser oar written guarantee to return the money if the treatment does not effect r core. Guar antees issued only by Lambie <fc Co., cornet Third and Wabashaw streets, rit. Patu, !« n.t,, CW--8 by mail promptly attend**} ro. 5?