Newspaper Page Text
RAILROADS NEW ROUTE FOR CANADIAN GRAIN CANADIAN NORTHERN PLANS A N IMPORTANT LINK. I Will Connect the Grain Fields in Southwestern Manitoba and Cana- dian Head of LakesWinnipeg Ex- pected to Protest, as Present Route Goes Thru That City. Special to The Journal. Winnipeg, Man.. June 8.The Cana dian Northern railway proposes to link up its southwestern Manitoba system, the most prolific wheat district in the west, with Lake Superior ports direct by building a connecting link of some sixty-five miles between Emerson, on the international boundary, and Vas- RflE, TOO The "Tail Enders" That Follow Gen uine Articles. I is sometimes interesting to watch the curves imitators make to get the public to buy imitations of genuine goods. Eve ry now and then some one will think there is a splendid opening to fix up something like Postum Coffee and advertise the same way and take some of the business. An imitator is naturally ignorant of food values and how to skilfully make a cereal coffee, on scientific lines. Such men first think of preparing something that looks and tastes like the original, with no knowledge of how the grains should be treated to prepare them so that the starchy part is transformed &'*'&$&. lay* W'fifeaflaVrr sar, a point on the company's main line between Winnipeg and Fort Wil liam. The new line will practically parallel the boundary and will effect considerable saving as compared with the old routes, all of which pass thru Winnipeg. This line has been surveyed some time and twenty-four miles have ac tually been laid, but merely as tap ping valuable country. Now, however, the company shows itself thoroly in earnest and tenders for construction are being considered with view to com pleting the section in time to handle the present crop from the district con cerned. The company says this strategic move is necessitated by pressure on the Winnipeg terminal, which promises to be intensified in a short time, when a new main line to Edmonton comes into full operation. Notwithstanding these representations, Winnipeg may be expected to make a lively kick against a policy that menaces her po sition as the gateway of the west and threatens the tolls she levies on traffic east and west, if not in cash, at least in kind. The whole principle of grain inspec tion will also be liable to modification under the proposed development, for at present every car of Canadian grain east-bound must pass thru Winnipeg, and an elaborate system of inspection en route has, therefore, been estab lished. While Winnipeg has also been the principal market for country farm ers and elevator concerns, at the same time exclusive interests of Winnipeg wholesalers are likely to be seriously affected by a line that will. offer an alternative entry into the .west. Considering the amount ddne by the provincial government for this com pany, and particularly the recent guar anty of $1,000,000 for the Canadian Northern terminals at Winnipeg, 3trong representations are likely to be made from influential quarters. properly and the valuable nourishing I Limited to leave Chicago, when the elements made digestible. eighteen-hour schedule takes effect Sun- Such imitations may be foisted on the public for a short time, but the people are critical and soon detect the attempt, then the imitators go out of business. Something like 400 of these little fac tories have been started in various parts of this country in the past 9 years, and practically ali of them have gone the long journey.'' Just lately a new one has come to life and evidently hopes to insert itself in public favor by copying the style of the Postum advertising in the papers. This is a free country and every man who makes an honest product and hon estly labels it, has reason for some recog nition, but the public has the right to know the facts. Postum is the one original and gen uine Cereal Coffee, made skilfully and for a definite purpose. It has stood through all the wars of the imitators, has won the approval of the Physicians and the people. People who really seek to free them selves from the coffee habit and at the same time to rebuild the soft gray mat ter in the nerve centers and thus recon struct the nervous system, broken down by coffee, can rely on Postu, There's a reason. mfiirifrfci. _, EIGHTEEN HOURS ENOUGH N. Y. Central's New Chicago-New York Schedule I Announced. Northwestern people are interested in a conference of the New York Cen tral lines in New York to determine the best hours for the Twentieth Century day, June 18. The time was decided as follows: Leave Chicago 2:30 p.m.: ar rive New York, 9:30 a.m. leave New York 3:30 p.m. arrive Chicago 8:30 a.m. This schedule can be made by the New York Central lines with the sme ease and comfort as the present sched ule of twenty hours. The officials have decided also to re duce the running time of the Lake Shore limited train, No. 22, one hour, leaving Chicago at 5:30 p.m. and reach ing New York at 5:30 p.m., instead of at 6:30, making a twenty-three-hour schedule. All HOAD NOTES. Railroads are making the changes In the Minneapolis yards ordered by the istaet labor department. Orders have been lssiild for the better safeguarding of switches and frogs. J, W. Searle will fill the new position of western industrial agent for the Great Northern road with headquarters at Spokane. He has been for fifteen yoars livestock agen tat Butte. P, P. Kline will 'succeed him with the title of traveling freight agent with jurisdiction over livestock traic. N place is sacred to the rat. From a sleeping man to An elephant, there is nothing which he will not eat. Rats have eaten their way thru a live pig, land bitten off?the legs of living birds. J&lrf'MWa*. imLik uJU.*Afi*-&*>. i&tk.". $75,000 Worth of Thursday Evening", THE MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL. TOWN IK WOODS BUMS ONE LITTLE HOME ALL THAT RE- MAINS OF SWALLOW I N NORT H- ERN WISCONSIN. Special to The Journal. Ashland, Wis., June 8.The little town' of Swallow, eighteen miles north of Lac clu Flambeau, was wiped out by fire this week. A' sawmill, owned by J. E. Marr, timber and lumber be longing to Emerson Bros., a dozen homes, an office and a general store burnedeverything except the home of James McCalby. Albert Bean, badly burned, is in the St. Joseph hospital at Ashland, and Fred Rising was injured while fighting the flames. The fire started from forest fires and first caught the mill. Dwelling house after dwelling house fell a victim to the roaring flames. The citizens had to fly for their lives and had no time to save clothing or valuables. As a result several families are badly in need of clothing. The families at Swallow were: Fred Leon ard, wife and two children J. R. Marr, wife and four children 'L. Richison, wife and two .children Philip Nogle, wife and one child John Zimple, wife and two children James McCalby and wife. The women and children were housed in the home of Mr. McCalby and the men speWt the remainder of the night sleeping on sawdust piles. The mill cost in the neighborhood of $15,000, and will probably be rebuilt. Mr. Marr also had a complete camp out fit which was destroved. AGED OHIO EDITOR DEAD Henry O. Gray, Partner of Medill, and Party Leader, Passes. Now York Sun Speoial Service. Cleveland, Ohio, June 8.Henry C. Gray, one of the oldest editors in Ohio and a partner of Joseph Medill, found er of the Chicago Tribune, a'n'd compan ion of Edwin G. Cowles and Horace Greeley, is dead at the home of his daughter, Mrs. R. M. Murray, at the age of 88 years. Mr. Gray was the last surviving member of the Ohio constitu tional convention of 1851, being promi nent in republican party politics. See Stockwell SoonThat life insur- anceThe Penn Mutual. Andrus bldg. To Portland, Oregon, Through Scenic Colorado. I The North-Western Line is now sell ing excursion tickets to Portland and return at the very low rate of $45.00. Good going via Denver and Salt Lake, with stop-overs, thence via Huntington, with 200-mile ride along the famous Columbia River, The Amazon of North America," greater in volume than the Mississippi and more beautiful than the Hudson. Choice of returning via the same route or via Northern Pacific. Great Northern or Soo-Pacific. Ge full information at 600 Nicollet Ave., Min neapolis, Minn. Those unhappy persons who suffer from nervousness and dyspepsia should use Carter's Little Nerve Pills, which are made expressly for sleepless, nerv ous, dyspeptic sufferers. Price 25 cents.. frfrffitojA.^^ The crowds that have attended the opening days of this great sale have taxed our resources to the limit. A constant stream of people, pickipg up a bargain here and a bargain there, has kept our large staff of salesmen on the jump from morning till night. We shall not carry over a single piece to our new establishment. The entire stock, consisting of must be sold. Every piece has been priced to effect a speedy clearance, and the cuts are exceedingly deep. You have never been offered such a splendid oppor- tunity to refurnish, add to your present holdings, or to start housekeeping. Don't think these bargains are going to last all summer. There will be just nine Days lore of This Great Sale and it stands to reason that the early purchaser will get the best selection. All the furniture that is here today is fresh from the factoriesthe best in the country. It is furniture that will never seem old, no matter *----vV\ how long it lasts, for it is made with all the furniture honesty possible. This good old kind of furniture is what we are offering at this Great Removal Sale, and the price of every.piece has been cut to the lowest possible notch for quick sale. Everything Purchased at this Sale Must Be Delivered Before July 15. l@w Sf@r@ Bik FARMER HfflGS HIMSELF O N HIS WEDDING DAY Glencoe, Minn., June 8.John Dam man, a farmer, who was to have'been married yesterday, committed suicide by hanging, his body being found in the barn. He was engaged to Dora Wal ters, a neighbor's daughter, whom he had known from childhood. They were born within two weeks of each other and had been friends and playmates all their lives. MRS. LOUISA COX. The wedding was to have been a big affair, the whole community being in vited, and a brass band havin'g been en gaged. The cooking for a great feast had been completed and all the final ar rangements made. The bride-to-be remained under her father-in-law's roof all night, and, after wishing her sweet- dreams, the bridegroom retired his room, and that was the last heard of him until his bodv was found. Mrs. Louisa Cox, Who Is 105 Years Old, Sleeps Like a Girl, and Says She Does Not Know What It Is to Have a Pain or Ache. Unlike other prepared roofings, Carey Roofing cannot be cheapened to fit a Once a Carey's, always a Ca- price rey 's. June 8, 1905. See W. S. Nott Co., Tel. 376, Her Only Medicine Is DUFFY'S PURE MALT WHISKEY, "The Renew er of Youth." Harrington. Maine, May 20, 1904. Gentlemen:I am 105 years old. I am well, without a pain or ache. I sleep as well as I did when I was a girl. I use your whiskey and like it very much. Duf fy's Pure Malt "Whiskey is the only med icine I use. I get water from the well, bring in wood and do my housework. Mrs. Louisa Cox. DUFFY'S PURE MALT WHISKEY. There are 4,000 men and women in this country alone who have passed the hun- dred-year mark, and nearly every one of them has publicly acknowledged that he or she owes health, strength, continued use of all the faculties, and extreme old age to Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey, the great cure and preventive of disease, the true elixir of life. We will send you free a booklet containing portraits and letters of many of these old people, and valuable medical information. If you would be strong and vigorous, and able to erljoy the work and pleasures of life to the fullest if you would live to ripe old age without aches and pains, take Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey as directed and avoid all drugs. Doctors say it's the most powerful aid. they, have in. fighting and curing diseases of throat, lungs and stomach, low fevers and all weakening, wasting, nervous, run-down, diseased conditions from whatever cause. It acts quickly and builds up the whole system. Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is used exclusively in leading hospitals. The old reliable family remedy of hundreds of thousands for over fifty years. Its purity is vouched for by chemists, and by the fact that it's the only whiskey recognized by the government as a medicine. Every testimonial is published lri good faith and guaranteed. 4,000 Centenarians Owe Health and Old Age to #"J ATOID SUBSTITUTES. -'T 7 Be sure you get the genuine Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey, sold in bottles only, by all reliable druggists and grocers, or direct, price $1.00. It is the only absolutely pure medicinal Whiskey and contains no fusel oil. Look for the trade-mark, the "Old Chemist," on the label, and be certain the seal over the cork Is unbroken. Duffy's Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N. Y. 't BR, Y&USSQ'i Hours 8:33 to 5:30 When stepping on Mat brushes sink and weight rests upon scrapers while clean ing shoes brushes rise and same action which cleans the shoes keeps the brushes clean. ^gs^ For Sale by Boutell Bros* If your dealer cannot supply you, we will d?0 A A send one, express prepaid, for *p ^vy Farwell, Ozmun, Kirk & Co., Wholesale Distributors, St. Paul, Minn. S CHICAGO GREAT MAPLE W E ST ER N L,oure '$*h %~M f?V" %*& i 3s "13 ^*7-4 :-t For one week you can have work done at these prices: $5,00 EXTRA HEAVY BRIDGE WORK for one week. $4.00 $5.00 EXTRA HEAVY GOLD CROWN, 22-k for one week. $4.00 $10.00 FULL SET O BEST TEETH for one week....... ,$8.00 Sundays 10:00 to 1:00. Scandinavian Spcken. The "BoatsmU" Qoor Mat rM (Self-Cleaning) AH Leading Grocers, Hardware Furniture and General Stores Sell Tbem RAILWAY THE RIGHT ROAD i O yy KV DesMoines, St Joseph andKansasCity Three Through Trains Daily Each Way Superbly Equipped. The Great Western Limited is Electric Xv Lighted Throughout %&$ For further information and Reservation of berths apply to ft. B. HEARD, General Agent, Nicollet Ave. an* Fifth St., MINNEAPOLIS