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4 THE A15IZONA REPUBLICAN, SATUKDAf EIORHINU AUtiUST -,, 1900 You Must Have Fresh Am munition to Do ;Good Shooting That is tre reason why we have sold over I clay EVERY DAY for the last four days. We Tuesday we had 41,000 shells in stock; we have week or early next. The white wing game will its best now; two of our customers went out yesterday with 150 shells, and sent the rig in for 200 more. Remember, this is the only place in town handling the new I. M. C. Ar row and Xitro Club loads, with steel reinforced shell, absolutely preventing blowing back of the powder; shells in 12 ga. smokeless at 65c, 70c, 75c, 80c and 8jc per box of 2.". duns sold, rented, exchanged, and repaired. PINNEY (SL ROBINSON THE GUN STORE 40 N. Center St. NFW YORK CENTRAL INDICTED YEMERDAY Charged With Discrimination and Unlawful Freight Rates. - Jamestown. N. Y.. Aug. 24. The New York Central Railroad company was indicted by the Western New York grand jury this afternoon on a charge ot giving discr;m:nrt-'ng and unlawful freight rates on shipments of oil by the Standard Oil company, and of unlawfully failing to file a schedule of such rates with the interstate com merce commission at Washington. The Standard Oil company was again in dicted on a charge of accepting unlaw ful and discriminating freight rates on shipments of oil over the Pennsylvania the New York Central and the Ver mont Central rairoads. The indictments are closely related to those found by the same jury two weeks ago against the Standard Oil company and the Pennsylvania in the company and the Pennsylvania Rail road in the matter of discriminating rates for oil shipped by the Standard from Olean to Burlington, Vermont. GANS-NELSON FIGHT. Seats Sold Yesterday to the Amount of Twenty Thousand Dollars. Ooldfield. New. Aug. 24. the (lans-Xelson fight, on were placed on sale today, at noon amounted to nearly Scats for Labor day. The sales $20,000. It is certain that the attendance will be large. Petting in the poolrooms is brisk, and a lot of small money is go ing down at $50(1 to $450 on Gans. A bet of $5000. at 5 to 4. was placed by Larry Sullivan for some eastern friends last evening. o RIOTOUS BANK VICTIMS. Chicago. Aug. 24. Sixty policemen were overwhelmed today in a mad rush of men and women determined to get the first money paid out of the vaults of the ruined Milwaukee Avenue State bunk. Receiver Fetzer made arrange ments to pay 20 per cent to 5000 of the 22,000 depositors, and everybody was anxious to be among the 5oo0. At 8 o'clock 15,000 people surrounded the bank. Most of them were unable to speak the English language. Forty additional policemen were sent to the scene and they handled the crowd with difficulty. o $100 REWARD, $100. The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one urcanea disease that science has been ; atiir: ,u iuic in an ii tia..'es. arm inai Catarrh. Hall's Catarrh Cure is the only i m positive cure now known to the medical Jraternity. Catarrh being a constitu tional disease, reepiires a constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surfaces of the system thereby destroying the foundation of the disease and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and as sisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors have so much faith in its curative powers that they offer One Hun dred Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address F. J. CHENEY & CO.. To ledo, O. Sold bv all Druggists 75c. Take Hall's Family Pills for constipa- See It now the Grand Canyon. Through sleeper August 2Gth. CONFUSION OF DATES AND LOCAL OPTION With a General Discourse on Subject of Legal Holidays. Rather an odd case of "quien sabe" developed at the court house yesterday in the giving out of a news Item. In quiry was made in the supervisors' of fice of the progress of the prelimin aries for the local option election to be held in the Buckeye section, which includes the precincts of Buckeye. Ar lington and Liberty. It was announced that the notices of the election to be held on September 4, had been prop erly posted at the polling places; that the printing of the ballots and the preparation of the tally sheets was progressing and that they would be forwarded to the election boards the first of next week. Somebody then suggested that Sep tember 4 was Labor Day and the elec tion would be illegal. It was feared for a time that the old-time hoodoo that followed local option elections in this county was again getting in its work and that all that had been done would have to be undone md a new election project instituted. After more or less consultation and telephoning by the working men employed in the various offices of the court house, it was finally established that Labor day was on Monday, September 3d, and Hair Falls can certainly do it with Ayer's Hair Vigor. It feeds the hair, gives it strength, keeps ittn place. And .t makes the scalo healthv. cures ail H.n.i ! J keeps the hair soft and glossy. Try it 000 loaded shotgun shells per can stand this for a while, a nice big shipment due this not last much longer it is at Phoenix the election program was without a flaw. Then came a new complication. The regular monthly meeting of the board of supervisors comes on the first Mon day and the board desiired very much to meet and dispose of important business. It was believed it could not do so on a legal holiday. One man who swears by the statutes of Arizona said it was not for the reason that the session laws of the Twenty-third leg--islature took occasion to declare cer tain legal holidays. It was pointed out to him that Labor Day was made a legal holiday by congress in the Dis trict of Columbia and is made a legal holiday in various commonwealths by proclamation of the governor. Ha then contended that the governor had issued no proclamation, so the next thing was to telephone the capitol for information. The reply was that the governor had issued a proclamation, but that he intedded to. It is a frequently repeated saying! that there is no national holiday, not even the Fourth of July, and it Is true, technically speaking, but it has recog nied certain days as holidays, for com merciak purposes. iWlh the exception of making Labor Day a legal holiday in the District of Columbia there is no general statute on the subject. Certain days, however, are legal holidays in Arizona,- regardless of what the rest of the world does. The legislature of 1905 passed an act amending section I of paragraph 2909. chapter 31 of the revised statutes, to read as follows, in part: 'Section 1. Sunday, the first day of January, the 22nd day of February, the 3oth day of May. the 4th day of July and the 25th day of December, the day on which a general election is held. Thanksgiving Day and Arbor Day, shall each and all be holidays." LtAGUC BAStBALL GAMES Scores Made Yesterday Where Best Teams Pla. the NATIONAL LEAGUE. At St. Louis P. H. E. St. Louis 6 10 3 Boston 1 12 3 Batteries: Higgins and Marshall; Pfeiffer and O'Xeil. At Pittsburg R. h. E. Pittsburg 0 7 1 Xew York 3 s 0 Batteries: Lynch, Phillipi. Gibson and Phelps; McGinnity and Bowerman. FIRST GAME. At Chicago Chicago Philadelphia Batteries: Reulbach and R. H. E. 5 2 1 0 4 3 Kling; Richie and Donovan. SECOND GAME. Chicago Philadelphia Batteries: Lundgren and' Lush ajul Donovan. FIRST GAME. At Cincinnati Cincinnati Brooklyn 7 S 2 3 10 3 Moran ; R. H. E. 4 r. 1 6 10 1 Batteries: Ewing and Schlei; Pas torius, Stricklett. Rltter an.l Bergen. SECOND GAME. Cincinnati 1 r, 0 Brooklyn 0 0 0 Batteries: Weimer and Livingston; Mclntyre and Bergen. AMERICAN LEAGUE. At Boston St. Louis Boston R. H. E. .782 . r, 7 4 Spencer; Batteries: Glade. Pelty and Harris and Carrieran. . At New York: New York-Cleveland game postponed; wet grounds. WESTERN LEAGUE. At Omaha k. H. K. Omaha 4 9 o Des Moines o 9 1 Batteries: Corns and Gonding; Mil ler and Dexter. At Lincoln r. h. E. Pueblo 8 14 1 Lincoln 1 7 2 ! Lotteries: Morgan and Rennicker- McKay and Zinran. At Sioux City Denver-Sioux game postponed; wet grounds, games tomorrow. City Two AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. At Kansas City: Kansas City, 3 ledo. 2. At Minneapolis: Minneapolis, 1 dianapolis, o. At Milwaukee First game: To- ln- Mil- waukoe. 3; Columbus, 1. Second game: Milwaukee. 3; Columbus, 4. At St. Paul: St. Paul, 10; I.ouls-. villc, 5. OUR YOUTHFUL STATESMAN. If Henry Gassaway Davis runs for congress in the Second West Virginia district, of course, that other kid, William Pinkney Whyte, his chum and pal, will take the stump for him. These contemporaries of Martin Van Huren are large Hies in Dr. Osier's ointment. Xew York Sun. Losing it, day after day? And doing nothing to save it? As though you can lose your hair and keep it, too! Then StOD this fallinir Sinn iiiinn.l V.. and be happy! J. C. Aver Co.. 3 Are Broken Lines Ladies' Oxfords and Slippers at Cost or Less Buy While the Sizes are in Stock a ILe Alkire Co. The Shoe and Stocking Store, I 27-29 E. Washington St. Phone Main 274. Pheenix. AN INSANE SWEDE ARRESTED IN MESA Imagines He Has Five People WorKinj for Thousand Him. Gustave Charvilloz, of Swedish birth, who has been in the territory but two days, coining to Mesa City from San Bernardino, Cal., is In the county jail ; and will this morning be tried in the : probate court on a charge of insanity. , The two days he spent at Mesa caused j that community no end of unrest for his every action showed him to be de- j mented but his conversation was that ! j of a sound-minded person. During hi.-! residence there he made the Alhambra j I hotel his headquarters and the lasi j I night he spent in the house lie became, jsuch : nuisance that the police were; I requested to lock him up. Deputy! ! Sheriff V. W. Cunningham was called! ! from Phoenix and was w ith Marshal j Burton of Mesa w hen the an est w an I made. j j Charpilloz undoubtedly has at one time in his life been a prosperous man. ; i la rt of his talk shows high breeding-1 ;but during the few hours prior to his .arrest his talk was ramb'ing. He la- I ! burs under J lie impression that r.e is; at the head of an organization made up of some 5000 members, ail of whom iare working for him. He says he or- i !ganix.ed the order a short while after I he came to America some three and a 1 j half years ago. A short while aftei j I he arrived in Mesa he had a notice in- ! ;.serted in the local paper which reads j as follows: j j "Mr. Le Roi asks to see people who . J recently came Jrom Los Angeles, to; come and give results for the' two last ! j weeks, w hat is going on and what the 1 people have become. They have only I two days, 23d and 24th of August. See ! him in Alhambra hotel or w rite to Gus- j jtave Charpilloz. Mesa, Arizona, box No. 13. Those who refuse will be punished.! I Also all who came on him from Call-j jfornia. And p lease sincerely the wo I men of Los Angeles, to see him before 1 I this evening." ! ; He had money with which to pay his ' way at the time of his arrival in Mesa j but his funds had been exhausted by I the time he was arrested. He was told j by the officer making the arrest that he would have to be restrained and re fused to go, declaring that no one could make him go into confinement. He showed little H sposition to make (trouble after the officers took him info custody. lie admits that he was ar rested at one time'at San Pernardino. It was while preparing to take Char pilloz to the train at Mesa that word was received that a man siinnnscd in be insane was about four miles out on J the road to Goldfield and the officers were asked to take charge of him. j Charpilloz was turned over to a citizen for safekeeping and Mr. Cunningham ! and Marshal Purton started for the! section where the reouest had been sent ' In from to investigate. Arriving- there j the supposed insane man was found to j be suffering from an attack of tremens. : Mis name is Jack Snowden and he had I started to .looseyelt on that morning, i Planning to walk, lie followed the telegraph line and the buzz of the wires proved too much for his nerves. All day he stooil out in the hot sun in one place and when a rancher in the neighborhood urged him to quit his place in the sun and seek shelter he threatened to shoot. Snowden was in the county jail here some weeks ago. His only trouble was that he had been drinking and he was brought into Mesa and locked up. He will be released when he sobers un. Small Boy "Pa, what is an Opti mist?" Pa "An Optimist, my son, is' a man who doesn't care a what hap pens, so that it doesn't happen to him " Life. e We Seliiiid PRISONERS ESCAPE n EROM YUMA JAIL All Were AwaitingTrial for Violation of Federal Law. l nursuay afternoon three prisoners ; in tiie county jail at Yuma dug their I way through an adobe wall and made 'goon ineir escape. All of them were held on charges of violation of the fed eral statutes and were awaiting trial. Two of the escaped were later captured while the -third has so far evaded the officers although his apprehension is expected at any time. It is know he I lias crossed the line into California. ; According to the Yuma Examiner, the jail break occurred about 4 o'clock in the afternoon. Two escapes an American named Craig, up for selling lkiuor to Indians, and an Italian pris oner, were taken at the point of a six shooter by I'nder Sheriff Walter Riley. The third prisoner, "Shorty" Mulligan, also in for selling liquor to Indians, by jumping on a rapidly moving freight train, made good his escape, and is now in California. He will no doubt be recaptured, as the telegraph wires are being keft hot. Pilot Knob being the first stop the train will be searched there. The manner of their escape was by means of a hole in the adobe wall on the light of the prison. A place im mediately under a window, had been softened by water from within and a hole large enough for the entrance of a man's body forced through" which the three prisoners escaped. The balance of the prisoners made no attempt to follow, and it was several minutes be fore the escape was detected, as the' men made their exit through a hole in the outer wall. o . Ask about August 26th. the "Canyon excursion $15.00 round trip. See McKee's special grape juice. FOR RENT. i We have for rent 32") acres of culti vated land under the Salt River Yal- I ley canal with ample water to irrigate grain and alfalfa. There is already forty acres in a good stand of alfalfa. . The whole ranch is fenced and cross- ienced, and is surrounded by a good j , range, located on a main road into : j Phoenix and a telephone line. This j j ranch can be rented for one or two J 1 years. Fine grain, alfalfa and beet; ! sugar land. There is a large amount I of pasture now. This is a grand op-1 portunity. See E. J. Bnnitt, Center street. Phoenix. o 16 North FIGURES FULL OF HOPE. The German nationtl tuberculosis congress has received and approved re turns which siiow that there has been a decrease of .IS per cent in the number of deaths from tuberculosis in the Ger man empire, in proportion to the popu lation, since lSTn. It was also shown that the sanitariums for sufferers from tuberculosis have ben curing 34 per cent of the victims of that disease who have entered those institutions. The great majority of these patients have been of Die laboring class, and without the benefit of especially favorable con ditions nt any kind. These figures deal with many thou sands of cases treated in tuberculosis hospitals and with millions of sufferers I from the "white plague" in the whole ' German empire. In the last thirty years. The great decrease in the num ber ,,(" fatal cases, in proportion to the population, shows how possible it is to pr event consumption. The . records of the sanitariums are proof that a large pan or an victims 01 lunorculosis can 1 be cured. Both phases of the warfare! v hifli is Heirior muni M.. .. ..... . ;;-;."":. . 1 '" . i ' ij , i , , , hi ureases ai e exceedingly 1 i. . t ...ti i I lnll, i:l tl.... i.. I ... .i . I "'""ins ii"1 nyiii ior ine lives of tnou. sands of men and women who arc saved from tuberculosis and given many years of usefulness. Cleveland i deader. o ALL RIGHT AFTER ALL. Sin Would you really die for me? He No, dear, I would not. She There! I thought you wouldn't and yet you talk of love He My dear', my lova is nf the un dying sort. Philadelphia Ledger. t is mig'Hty Hard to get ,away from molt Drug Habits but it is fairly- easy to Quit Coffee if well made 0STUM is served, and one feels better day by day. There's a Reason I -I' M"! M..i......t..M- t AMUSEMENTS m ...,t if, m, m !, M ,i,.i..i.4,4,jr A crowd of large dimensions was present last night at Eastlake park to eitnt..... T .... iiy Auaiey s Secret." The I Play was a decided success and standing ,.., 1(iuld be at a premium i tonight. The scenic effects are well, worked out and the moving pictures! and the rendition of "Would You : Care?" and "Starlight" by Mr. Jones I served to prevent any tedious wails, j Tonight is excursion and dancing; night. Seats on sale at Sanichas. I Prices lo, 20, 30 and 50 cent j GROCERY Eye-Openers FOR PEOPLE WHO WILL PAY CASH. J A R S 100 dozen 1-qt. Mason extra heavy Jars, reg. $1.25, now 75c 50 dozen 2-qt. Mason extra heavy Jars. reg. $1.50, now $1.00 100 dozen Porcelain Jar Tops, reg. 40c, now 25c We lose money but cannot oarry them over. COME QUICKC. Best Standard Corn 106 Large cans best Standard To matoes 12'ZiC 200 bottles Welche's Grape Juice 30c 300 dozen Fine Lemons 20c 5-gal. can Pearl Oil $1.45 5-gal. can Red Crown Gaso line $2.15 JUST RECEIVED Carload of Kansas Hard Wheat Flour. Made in Kansas. Kot weather has no effect on it. 50 lbs. Diamond M Flour .. .$1.75 as good as any flour made or money refunded. 6 bars' Best Borax Soap 25c 6 bars Diamond C Soap 25c 6 bars Lighthouse Soap 25c 200 pkgs. Scotch Oats, pkg...15c 10-lb. box National Soda Crack ers 65c 3 lbs. Pure Eastern Leaf Lard 45c 5 lbs. Pure Eastern Leaf Lard 70c 10 lbs. Pure Eastern Leaf Lard $1.30 Fresh Ranch Eggs, per doz. . .20c 1000 lbs. Arbuckle Coffee 19c II Store FACTS FROM ALL OVER. The city of Berkeley. Cal.. th of the I'niversity of California seat now has more than sn.niia population. The Southport Kiigland police of all ranks have been forbidden to wear finger rings while on duty. j Arthur Stringer, the author, is an j enthusiastic farmer. and lias a fine I fruit farm at Cedar Springs. Out.. where he spends his summers. I John Philip Sousa, the American hand leader, has been gazetted ollicer le 1'insf ruction nublioue of l-Vance I I'o ives him the golden palms and ; osr-tfe of the French academy. j Scotland's fastest railway point-to-point runs are from Forfar to Perth. ' where the thirty-two and a half miles I are traversed twice daily in thirty-two j minutes, which means a mean speed' of I M.fl 4 miles an hour. j Denver Stout, a pilot on the Ohio : and Kanawha rivers is the first white I child born in what is now the city of j Denver, lie was born there 47 years1 ago. His parents traveled from Omaha by ox team in lKf,!t. reaching Denver! in six weeks. j A daily paper is responsible for the! statement that a single county in Xe- j vada, covering Ki.omo square miles, has ! no when within its borderfs even a mis- sion hall in ed. and yet which the gospel is preach- ! it has a population of sev- eral thousand people. In the six months ending June Stub. I 2,297.2u miles of new railroad track was laid in this country, a greater i amount of new construction than any! corresponding six months in the last ! fifteen pears, except in l!i02. when new j construction aggregated 2.314 miles i One of the national schools of do- ! mestic arts and science is engaged in ! snowing iiouseKeepers now a card in dex system can be used in the home. One of the uses of the system is sub stituting for the old scrap receipt book and the big cook book itself a box of indexcai ds. Robert !. Ingersoll, who was borji In Peoria, III., is not forgotten there. It will be seven years next August since he died, and when the eighth anni versary of that event comes around; next year, a life-six statue, to cost ! $10.(mm( ami paid for by popular- sub-; script ion. will stand at the entrance to ' Glen oak Park in Peoria. J The importance of the world's dairy industries is attested by the fact that - they warrant the calling of Interna- tional congresses for discussion of the ! best methods of dairy conduct, the I third of these having just been an- nounced for convention at The Hague during September of next year. The ! general secretary of the congress is Dr. A. J. Swaying of Tlio Hague. The prir.ee of Wales has several hobbies. He keeps pigeons, and. like the czar of Russia, lias a huge col lection of postage stamps. But his strangest hobby is . the collection of photographs of babies. It is said that the more comical the faces of the ba bies the better he likes their photo graphs; and he even includes in his collection portraits issued as adver tisements by proprietors of infants' foods. Roche-ster Democrat and Chronicle. 8 S J Cash. fl 1 Get Busy renovating and decorating and do it now. The fall season -.-.-...; - -. . ,.i-..ii',.t '1 , , ..ii With your .- 1 He next is just opening, ror me nexi tion to work, but after that there may ue ue.j. We have an elegant stock of Wall All the up-to-date the Southwest, and ideas and by the prices 15c to $3 busy before the rush. Out of Get Dorris-Heyman Arizona's Leading Phoenix, B-- f REDEWILL Pioneer Music House of Arizona 222-224. W. Washington St., Phoenix ESTABLISHED 1882 BALL PLAYING AND PIETY. Dear Sir- I have heard and read a good deal about Kvangelist Hilly Sun day, and 1 have often wondered if it is really possible for a ball player to be a good Christian. Traveling around the country as they do, and engaged in work that calls for such physical su periority, how can they give any Ijiiriougrit o: energy lo trie matter or f j ! religion? i Staten Island. KLMKH HART. Hilly Sunday, trie well-known gospel worker, ot whom Mr. Hart speaks, not only played ball, but was rated a ball player of considerable ability. In his present held he is unquestionably sin cere and effective. j Several other ball playeis. some of them still in the game, have pro- I nounced religious convictions. Dave Fultz, known to all New Yorkers and to rooters everywhere is a devout Christian and church Worker, and I dare say he found it easier lo live un his beliefs when he was plaviug the game than he does now as a Wall street lawyer. When Mr. Fultz was a I j, layer he never took part in Sunday games, olien addressing Y M. C. A. i meetings instead, and though his team ; mates never '"sot sui-fi store" bv his ' manner of living and thinking, thev i always respuctcd his beliefs and re- trained from badgering him. . Probably as unique a character as J ever brote into baseball was Pitcher Crabill. who did slab service for the Columbus club in the American asso ciation. He was a full-fledged parson and also a full-Hedged pitcher, almost ! mvincime when he was m good form. I 1 Mil. sum as a pole and with perhaps! the saddest, longest face ever seen on a ball field, he mixed up his curves withgient deliberation and perfect control. Had the home plate been a contnbutio.n piate he could not have kept a keener eye upon it. Kor the following verses, which may be of interest in this connection, ded- j cated to him by the writer about two i years ago. lie sent me as grave and solemn well be: a note of thanks as a note could You may talk all you like about Mathewson's shoots TannehiU's headwork sublime, other smooth twiilers who have their long; suits And And And win their games most of the time, may tell how Waddell with his terrible speed s the baiters that face him look ill; You M a k 1 tube holds down the score but more Iadore pitching of Parson Crabill, D. D., iteverened Doctor Crabill. The The Win' n Parson Crabill marches out to the box The girls in the grand stand applaud. And the knocker who sits in the I bleachers and knock Is silent and thoroughly awed. They know he can throw lightning inshools that go o'er the plate with the greatest of skill; Kven scoffers who sneer and who jeer must revere The The pitching of Parson Crabill, D. D., Ilevervned Doctor Crabill. Perhaps to each ball that he tends to its mark A neat little prayer is attached; p. that as it may, at speeds on it's way And ,he batter is quickly dispatched We doubters and Homers may laugh in our sleeves At the sermons i,e preaches, but still We w ill have to admit, as' a pitcher he's IT. This foxy old Parson Crabill D D The Pveverened Doctor Crabill Win. F. Kirk in N. Y. American. o FAMOUS OLD TREE. A famous old tree, one of the sights of Cairo, has fallen. This was the Sycamore at Matarieh (Heliopolis), and it was known as the Virgin's tree, be neath whose shade the holy family was said to have found shelter after Us flight into Egypt. This was doubted as a matter of history, but the senti ment attaching to the tree led tourists to carry away pieces of its bark and leaves as souvenirs. ten (lavs we can iii"M.-f ..... .. im a.. Paper far the best selection to lw had in Double Roll town people write 11s for sampler,. Furniture House Furnishers Arizona Co MUSIC CO. The "humps, according U a Iouts ville paper, arc a line dd Kentucky family. What a lot of kinfolks il.ey have ! CHICKEN, Steaks and Chops AT Ford Hotel Bar AND Grill Room East Lake Park 682; Res. phone. Black 54. Burger. Mgr. Park phone. Black C. F. Week of August II THE EASTLAKE STOCK CO, L?eaded by Mn?3 Maud Lita and an ex cellent cast. Thursday, Friday and Saturday. th Sterling Threeact Drama, " Lady Andfey's Secret Dancing Tuesday Friday and Satur- I ay nights. Prices 10, 20, 30 and on sale at Sanichas. 50 cents. Seats Less trouble and better service by buy inn WOOD AND COAL of City Wood and Coal Co. Phone Main 24. Madi son and 3rd Sts. You Must iStop for a cool room and quiet night rest... The Williams House, Maricopa, Arizona. Ship Your Live Stock to ' CLAY ROBINSON & COMPANY Stock Yards, Kansas City, Mo. Best service iii ALL. departments. Expert salesmen, cattle, sheep and hogs. Let us send you our weekly ina'-ket letter. HOUSES AT Kansas City, Denver, St. Joseph. Omaha, Sioux Gity, St.-Paul, . Chicago. Buffalo. Timely Hints Plant the following In your jar den now: Beets, Beans, Carrots, Com, Cress. Cucumbers, Endive, Lettuce. Mus tard. Onions, Parsley, Parsnip, Peas. Pumpkin, Radish, Spinach, Turnips. Hill's Seed House 22 W. ' Jefferson