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The Denison review. [volume] (Denison, Iowa) 1867-current, March 08, 1905, Image 2

Image and text provided by State Historical Society of Iowa

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn84038095/1905-03-08/ed-1/seq-2/

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N W Time
East Bound.
Table
a 2.45 p. m.
7.50 p.m.
No! 10, Mall train iViVniS'
Ho. 46. Way freight
West Bound.
No.
fe
•21. Council Bluffs local 7.06 m"
ow ft*
No.
No. 1
No. 5
No. 3
No. 11...
J-'~
i%' 1 x1
•&<*/
9 35 p. m.
1.07 m.
5 23 a. m.
6.34 a. m.
No. 9. Fast mall.
No. 15, Fast mail..:.......•• u.«p.
Boyer Valley
No 46 Leave S £S
No 48 ""....
No 41 Arrive...
No 45
2:50 a
..2:40 pm
..5:50 pm
Illinois Central R. R. Time Table
-East Bound
Ho. 4 Omaha, St. Paul. Mlnneapo-
Us & OhicagoJiExpress, (Dally) 9.1i A.. M.
-No. 98 Co. Bluffs & Ft. Dodge Way
Freight, (Dally exceptSunday) 10.35 A. M.
No. 32 Oo. Bluffs & Ft Dodge Local
(Dally except Sunday)
tr-
No. 2 Omaha, St. Paul, Mlnneapo
lis & Chicago Limited (Dally) 9. 38 P. M.
—West Bound
No. 1 Chicago, St. Paul &1Mlnn
eapolls Limited, (Daily) 6.18 A. M.
No. 31 Ft. Dodge & Co. Bluffs
Local, (Dally except Sunday) .8. 32 A. M.
No. 91 Local Way Freight, (Dally ..
except Sunday) uo r. m.
No. 3 Chicago, Minneapolis. St.
Paul & Omaha Express, (Daily) 8-J3 P. M.
Nos 1 and 2| stop only at Rockwell City
"Wall Lake, Denison and Logan.
No. 3
Btops
at Arion, Dow City, Dunlap,
Woodbine and Logan.
No. 4 stops only at Wall Lake and Bockwel
^K&s. 1,2, 3, and 4 are dally Nos. 31, 38, 91
and 92 dally except Sunday.
cir&srP^RTkrAt Arion.
West Bound
No. 1 Passenger 6. 22 A, M.
No. 3 Passenger 1. 52 P. M.
No. 91 Freight 8.15 A. M.
East Bound-
"No. 4 Passenger 9.11 A. M,
'No. 6 Passenger 7. 25 P. M.
No. 94 Freight 4.07 P.M.
No. 1 going west and no 6 going east are
dallies. ..
Nos. 3 and 91 going west and nos. 4 and 49
going east daily except Sunday.
EDITORIAL MISCELLANY.
Verily Denison has been walk
ing in the valley of the shadow of
Death. Every heart has been
touched by the sad events of this
week. The man rich in years has
been called to his fathers, the man
still in the strength of his man
hood has been suddenly taken
from those who loved and honored
him, the babe has been taken
from the cradle despite a mother's
tears. It is a time, when, without
epidemic, Death, mysterious and
awful, casts his dark shadow over
our community and. garners his
harvest, bringing peace to the
dead, but.. Jteaf3 and sorrow and
brcWRPKwffira the living. It is
a time that calls for all the love
and sympathy and kindness we
Jhave for cur neighbors, that takes
•us out of the rut of selfishness and
makes us fellow mourners with
the widow and the fatherless and
with those who know the deep
grief an infant's death can bring.
No community could rally with
more generous hearts to the com
forting of its afflicted, no people
stand better the test that sorrow
brings.
-si-
the inaugural address of President
Roosevelt. It is brief, it touches up
on nothing that cannot find a res
ponse in the breast of every true
American. We ask every reader
of THE REVIEW to read the Pres
ident's address to read it and then
totryanp putthemselves in per
fect harmony with the exalted
spirit of Americanism which it
breathes in every line.
TV
Commissioner Garfield has
made a report as to the beef
trust and finds that no exorbitant
profit has been made during the
past few years. He finds how
ever that the private car lines op
erated by the beef magnates have
netted from seventeen to twenty
two per cent profit. It is too early
to criticise the report of the com
missioner because the text of it
has not been made public. To us
it seems however that the Com
missioner erred in not taking all
the elements of the packing busi
mess into consideration. The
publication of the complete report
will be awaited with interest by
shippers and consumers.
Russia is going through a
terrible crisis a revolution ap
proaches which may be more
bloody than the French revolu
tion. The Russian masses are more
-ignorant and more cruel than
were the French of a hundred
years ago and their vengeance
against despotism is apt to be of
the most violent character.
Greatly as we prize liberty, we do
not belief the Russians as a whole
are prepared for it. We believe
•it would simply mean a reign of
anarchy were the people given
control of affairs. The Czar is
evidently unequal to the situation.
His entire reign has been charact
erized by impotence, incompeten
cy and sensationalism. He has
been the -'yellow" monarch, striv
ing for dramatic effects and he is
likely to get all the "drama" he
wants before his reign closes.
The Russian situation has gravely
endangered that sacred European
institution known as the "balance
of power." Not unnaturally the
nations of Europe are very jealous
and for centuries it has been the
object of statemen and warriors to
preserve the balance of power.
In other words to see to it that no
one nation became so powerful
that it endangered others. Russia
has been regarded as one of the
strongest of nations. There is no
doubt to day but that if the en
normous resources of Russia could
be brought to bear, Japan
would have but small hopes of
success. Russia has shown how
ever that it is weak in adminis
trative ability and has further
given proof that no army can be
successful unless the units have
intelligence as well as discipline
The overthrow of the Russian
government as now constituted
would release many warring ele
ments upon Europe. Relieved of
any dread of Russian designs
upon Constantinople, the Turk
would find himself at liberty for
depredations unless at the same
time the Balkan States, no longer
in fear of Russia should again be
in revolt. The strained relations
between Austria and Hungary
would come to ahead if a revolu
tionary wave swept over Europe
and the ambitious William oi:
Germany would find in this his
opportunity to enlarge the empire
of the Hohenzollerns' at the ex
pense of both Austria and France.
England is in truth the only
country that stands to win by
Russia's humiliation. England
has long coveted additional terri
tory in Asia and has only been
held in check by Russia. A sam
ple of what England would 3o
were Russia powerless is found in
Col. Young husband's Thibet ex
peditions. Again the Socialist
element in Germany, France and
Italy, encouraged by the active
campaign in Russia may be count
ed on to make trouble for the con
stituted authorities. Phophecies
of war are perhaps lruitless and ill
omened, but it does not take much
of a prophet to foresee the possi
ble consequences of Russia's down
fall as an autocratic empire. It
is more than probable that it is
but the curtain raiser of a bloody
drama that shall change the po
tlitical map of the entire worldand
We publish in an another column the United States may consider
itself more than fortunate if it
shall continue free from entang
ling alliances. When the Japanese
crashed through the Russian left
in Manchuria last week the last
blow was struck at Russia as a
'world-power" for many decades
to come.
•X*
The Russian armies have su
stained a crushing defeat. Out
numbered, out-generalled, out
flanked and out-witted the Rus
sian army is left thousands of
miles from home with defeat,
death and starvation staring it
in the face. The horrors of Napol
eon's retreat from Moscow would
fade into insingificance before any
attempt to drag the Russian army
back to Europe. The Siberia
that has been the tomb of so many
of the best and noblest of the
Czar's subject seems now about
turn its cold, forbidding justice
Oon the jailers of the northern
steppes. Unless the Russian
armies are speedily surrendered
it is safe to estimate that not one
tenth of them will ever see their
home again.
NOTICE OF FINAL REPORT.
In the estate of Johann O. C. Berndt deceas
ed.
In the District Court of Iowa in and for
Crawford county.
No, 1191 Probate.
To Sophia Berndt, Frlederlka Green, Min
nie Petersen, Fredrick C. Berndt Wilhelm
O. Berndt, Emma Berndt. and Carl C. Berndt.
You are hereby notlBed that the undersign
ed Wilhelm C. Berndt. icutorof^the Estate
of Johann O. O. Bet-no sfinal report there
in in the office of the erk of the District
Court In the aforesaid County, and has ask
ed for its approval and his discbarge from
further duty or responsibility therein, and
that said report and application gor discharge
will come on for hearing before/ the Court
aforesaid, ati
Denison, on the &ith day of
March A. D, 1905, at which time and place you
can appear aad show cause, if anu you have,
why said final report should not bp approved
ana the um
further duty
rstgned discharge!
lonslbllity thfl:
ILHELMC. I:
P. J. KLINliER.t
Attorney Mr Executor
from any
rein.
ERNDT
Executor.
8-3t
ROOSEVELT SPEAKS.
Inaugural Address as Delivered
By the President.
NATIONAL RESPONSIBILITIES.
Is the Theme of the Rrief, But Patri
otic Speech Made by the Nation's
Chief.
My Fellow Citizens: No people on
earth have more cause to be thankful than
ours, and this is said'reverently, in no
spirit of boastfulness in our own strength,
but with gratitude to the giver of good,
who has blessed us with the conditions
which have enabled us to achieve so large
a measure of well being and of happiness.
To us as a people it has been granted to
lay the foundations of our national life in
a new continent. We are the heirs of the
ages, and yet we' have had to pay few of
the penalties which in the old countries
are exacted by the dead band of a bygone
civilization. We have not [been obliged
to fight for our existence against any. alien
race and yet cur life has callsd for the
vigor and effort without which the man
lier and hardier virtues wither away.
Under such conditions it would be our
own fault if we failed: and the success
which we haye bad in the past, the suc
cess which we confidently believe the
future will bring, should cause in us no
feeling of vainglory, but rather a deep
realization of all which life has offered us
a full acknowledgment of responsibility
which is ours and a fixed determination
to show that under a free government a
mighty people can thrive best, alike as
regards the things of the body and the
things of the soul,
Much has been given to us, and much
will be rightfully expected from us. We
have duties to others and duty to our
selves, and we can shirk neither. We
have become a great nation, forced by the
fact of its greatness into relations with
other nations of the earth and we must
behave as beseems a people with such re
sponsibilities. Toward all other nations,
large and small, our attitude must be one
of cordial and sincere friendship. Wemust
show not only in our words but in our
deeds that we are earnestly desirous of
securing their good will by acting toward
them in a spirit of just and generous
recognition of all their rights. But justice
and generosity in a nation, as in an in
dividual, count most when shown not by
the weak, but by the strong. While ever
careful to refrain from wronging others,
we must be no less insistent that we are
not wronged ourselves. We wish peace
but we wish the peace of justice, the
peace of righteousness. We wish it be
cause we think it is right and not because
we are afraid. No weak nation that acts
manfully and justly should ever have
cause to fear us, and no strong power
should ever be able to single us out as a
ubject for insolent aggression.
Our relations with the other powers of
the world are important but still more
important are cur relations among our
selves Such growth in wealth, in popu
lation and in power as this nation has seen
during the^century and a quarter of its
national life is inevitably accompanied by
a like growth in the problems which are
ever before every nation that rises to
greatness. Power invarably means both
responsibility and danger. Our forefath.
ers faced certain perils which we have out
grown. We now face other perils the
very existence of which it was impossible
that they should foresee. Modern life is
both complex and Itense, -and the tre
mendous changes wrgjght by the extraor
dinary industrial development of the last
half century are felt in every fiber of our
social and political being. Never before
have men tried so vast and formidable an
experiment as that of administering the
affairs of a continent under the forms of
a democratic republic: The conditions
which have told for our marvelous mater
ial well being, which have developed to a
very high degree our energy, self reliance
and individuality, have also brought the
care and anxiety inseparable from the ac
cumulation of great wealth in industrial
centers. Upon the success of our experi
ment much depends not only as regards
our own welfare, Jbut as regards the wel
fare of mankind. If we fail, the cause of
free self government throughout the
world will rock to its foundations and
therefore, our responsibility is heavy—to
ourselves, to the world as it is today, and
to the generations yet unborn. There is
no good reason why we should fear the
future, but there is every reason why we
should face it seriously, neither hiding
from ourselves the gravity of the
problems before us nor fearing to
approach these problems with the ui
bencing, I unflinching purpose to
solve them aright.
Yet, after all, though the problems are
new, though the tasks set before us differ
from the task set before onr fathers who
founded and preserved this republic, the
spirit in which these tasks must be under
taken and these problems faced, if our
duty is to be w. done, remains
essentially
unchanged. We know that self govern
ment is difficult. We know that no people
needs such high traits of character as that
people which seeks to govern its affairs
aright through the freely expressed will
of the freemen who compose it. But we
have faith that we shall not prove false
to the memories of the men of the mighty
past They did their work, they left us
the splendid heritage we now enjoy. We
I
i*rr
tr
in our turn have an assured confidence
that we shall be able to leave this heritage
unwasted and enlarged to our childrenand
our childen's children. To |do so we
must show not merely in great crises, but
in the every day affairs o£ life, the quali
ties of practical intelligence, of courage,
of hardihood and endurance, and above all
the power of devotion to a- lofty ideal,
which made great the men who founded
this republic in the days of Washington,
which made great the men who preserved
this republic in the days|of Abraham Lin
coln,
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS.
Tuesday, Feb. 2S, 1905.
John Lamaak and wife to Fred
Lamaak frK wV4 nwM4 Jackson
41a 8 2152 50
John Larson and wife to Swan
Maurltz neuwH and w!4 nw& 13 Ot
ter Creek :20a 9000 00
EmilGroth and wife to John Groth
und yt of ne}4 8 Goodrich 6000 00
Alfred Clauson and wife to Jacob
Krofg n'/S seswneM 27 Stockholml5a., 75 00
Henry Hast and wife to Wm Lueck sH
nw} and swswK 3 Washington 6500 00
Helnrlck Boyens and wife Anna Boy
ens, his wife, to Carl Hubner sH
sew 10 Hanover 5440 00
Henry Soils and wife to WmJ Ladwlg
fr'/4 swM 19: neseK 24 Hanover
12" 8-100a 11000 00
Wm Ladwig and wife to August
Schurke nH nw!4 32 Stockholm^ 6700 00
Wed. Mar 1st, 1905..:,
Nicotine Von Dohlen, Wllhelmf.Von
Dohlen to John Peper lot 1 bit 18
DeDlson .... 270fl 00
Wm N McBrlde and wife to Julius,
Sonksen eH seM 9 neneK and lot 1
sub dlv of seneH JW Denison 141-63
100a 10600 00
Walter A Seldler and wife to CarlFr.
'A
Setdler und
lnt in nK neM 2 Mor­
gan 307 00
Justus Lund and 'wife to Peter Ha
mann sH ne!4 and
n%
seK 36 Morgan 12000 00
Wilhelm Schuldt' and wife to Jo.l*n
Ehler seK nd sw!4 3 Soldier.... 16000 00
Geo Knight and wife to Johannes
Riessen lot 3 blk 8 Charter Oak 1600 00
Jane E and Walter Campbell to Thos
Hayes sH nel-4 29 Nlsbnabotnv 4200 00
Frank Reinclte and wife to John Ehler
wV4 swl-4 4 0tter Creek 4200 00
Detlef Westphalen and wife to Hans
Chr Christiansen ei4 28 Hanover 320
a 16000 00
John Ehler and wife to Franz Reinclte
sel-4 and swl-4 3 Soldier 240a—18800 00
John Ehler and wife to Hans Marth
wV4swe-44 Otter Creek 7300 00
UG Johnson and wlfetoChas Hart
wig nwl-417 Goodrich 8000 00
John KUnker and wife to Fred Lenta
sK se 33 Willow nYi nel-4 s&nw 3 nH
swl-4 3 Boyer 12000 00
Chas Hartwlg and wife to O'Brien
sH nel-4 13 Denison 6000 00
John Way, widower. toP Uarquardt
nwl-4 2 Willow 11300 00
O'Brien and wife to UG Johnson
lot 10 blk 69 Denison 2150 00
Thursday,Mar 8, 1905.
Chas Menagh and wife to Margaret R,
Elizabeth A., Mary E Stella D., Ce
celia C. Meehan lot blk 134 Denison., 1850 00
Ohas Hart and wife to Marshall
Jones el-2 swl-4 ex of my und
1st in nwswl-4 22 Charter Oak 11500 00
Marshall Jones and wife to Wm
Tlmm wl-2 nwl-4 and nenwl-417
Charter Ork 9500 CO
Hans Butter, widower, to Henry But
ter sesel-4 13a of nesel-4 ande 6a of
35a of nwsel-4 and 9a of swsel-4 6
Stockholm 70a 4500 00
CW Payne and wife to John E Smith
68 feet of lot 4, Payne's first add
68 ft of lot 1 sub dlv of seswsel-4 13
West Side "00 00
Abram Hart and wife to Henry
Plagge all that part of swl-4 29 Char
ter Oak of of of C, Mil & St
47 50-100a 3577 00
Friday, March 3rd, 1905.
Louis Greene and wife to John Tebbe
sl-2 nel-4 8 Paradise 4000 00
W Kemp and wife and O Kemp,
unmarried to John Way-sene and
el-2 sel-4 23 Charter oak ex rof w... 8800 00
Ferdinand Lamp and wife to Edward
Georcius wl-2 swl-4 10 and sesel-4
Iowa
8700 (0
Henry Giermann and wife to Fred
Quade wl.2sel-4 9 Stockholm 8000 00
Andreas Kuhlmann and wife to AH
Wendt 150a of sl-2 18 Soldier 8700^00
Herman Ellfert and wife to Peters
wl-2 swl-4 23 Jac.son |5s00 00
Adam Scbnecklotli and wife to Her
man Elflert wl-2 nel-4 swnwl-424 all
of track of nwnwl-4 24 and all
of RiR track ofswsw-1-3 14 West
Side '.. 5150 00
John Tebbe and wife to Wm Kuehl el-2
swl-4 18 Hanover
5600 00
Johannes Koster and wife to Jacob
Carstens lots 14-15-16-17 and 18 blk 10
Asplnwall 2200 00
Frances I Glynn and Glynn to
Bridget Molseed lot 2 blk 3 Vail 1500 00
olynn and wife to Bridget Molseed
lot 21 blk 5 Vail y00 00
Emll Kruger and wife to Walters
lots 4 and 5 blk 22 Schleswlg 200 00
Jurgen Scliroeder and wife to Lena
Kahler lots 1-2 and 3 blk 4 Klron 2500 00
Jurgen Scliroeder and wife to Lena
Kahler lots 11 a~d 12 blk 3 Schleswlg 225 00
Lizzie and Miller to Van
Slyke and Strause.-lot 5 and
1-2 of lot 4 blk 18 Manilla 1000 00
Saturday March 4
Jacob Carstens and wife to D. L.
Swane lot 11 blk 9 Aspinwull 750 00
John Rorah and wife to Edward
Remede wVi swM section 30 Boyer... 3750 00
Western Town Lot Company to Peter
Johnson lot 5 blk 7 First add Klron. 75 00
Christina Anderson widow to Henry
Giermann nw!4 section 17 Stock
holm township bOOO 00
Ole S Olson and wife to B. Smith
swnw'4 section
27
Nlshnabutny twp.
'A
Ask Your
OwnDoctor
If he tells you to take Aycr's
Cherry Pectoral for your
severe cough or bronchial
trouble, then take it. If he has
anything better, then take that.
But we know what he will say
for doctors have used this
cough medicine over 60 years.
"I hare used Ayer's Cherry Pectorml (or
hard colds, bad coughs, and influenza. It has
done me neat good, and I believe It Is the
best cough medicine In the world for all
throat and lung troubles."-.ELI C. 8TUABT,
Albany, Oregon.
Au
brj, O. Aj*T Co., Lowell, Mw.
Alio na&ttftotomi of
SARSAPAULLA.
yers
John Mount
Claud Raynor
Albert Sturm
PILLS.
HAIR VIOOR.
Keep the bowels open with one of
Ayer's Pills at bedtime, Just one.
Saturday
Shoppers.
UNDER
'THE
I s.
Bennett
Wm Ackelbein
Chas Dugan
JR Coleland
A Waterhouse
Rickie Bruns
A Vore
Gustav Erickson
Henry Koester
Dieter
Malone
Daniel Wingrove
Rud'lph Volkmann Otter Creek
Wm Miller 3rd Ward
W Moffitt
Ferman Newcom
Henry Pruhs
2400 00
John Ullrich widower to A Kadoch
neli section 20 Hanover township.. .10000 00
Elizabetn Hurley widow to Anne Hur
ley n!4 section 22 Boyer township 1 00
Hans Hagge and wife to Wm Ruchti
tract of land lying of & St
lty Coin the extreme inw corner of
sesex section 30 Charter Oak twp
2 70-i00 a 270 U0
Fred Boettger and wife to W Bulllng
ton
a'A s'/i
nwl-4 and
nwl-4 sec 34
Goodrich township 6120 00
W Tucker to Amelia Lehmann lot 1
sub div of lot 2 subdivof
Yt
March 6
Walters and wife to Peter Ha
mann lots 4 and 5 blk 22 Schleswlg... 1625 00
Hans Miller and wife to Johannes Bot
ger 1-2 WK section 8 Otter Creek 7000 00
Lizzie Aylward John Aylward to
Robert Glockzien 1-2 sw 1-4 section
11 Charter Oak township 4900 00
Wiley and wife to Fred A Maurer
all nwne 1-4 sec 2 of Arion less
of W lot 2 sub div of sw ne 1-4 2
1-2 se 1-42 sw 1 4 2 less of W nesel
4 less of W lot 2 sub dlv of nwsel-4
3 lot 2 subdiv sene 1-4 3 lot 2 sub div
1-2 nw 1-4 section 2 Union 448 a.. .25000 00
Patrick Flneran and wife to Timothy
Fineran 1-2 1*3 sw 1-4 and 1-2
se 1-4 section 18 Denison 118.740 6600 00
Patrick Flneran and wife to James
Flneran s-2
sw 1-4 section 18 Deni
son 118,74a 6600 00
FOB SALE.
—Six room house with closets, two
lots and barn. Two blocks east and
one block north of I. C. Depot. Inquire
of MRS. MAHONEY, at house.
WEST-
Bonsall Dunlap
Charles Jensen Goodrich
Charles Mohns Iowa
Charles Wickwire Ch. Oak
John Hansen
Jonn Quade
Fred Precht
Chas Goswiller
N Hansen
W Roehr
swnwl-4
section 1 Denison township 1600 00
George Menagh and wife John Witt
Jr lot 1 bly 149 Denison H50 00
•m vatm
All work done in the latest styles
PETIT JURY, MARCH TERM, 1905.
Called for Monday, April 3rd, 1905,
1:30 p.m. 2d Monday.
Itadje Morgan Schleswig
Dunham Boyer Dow City
Norton Vail prct Vail
Frank Stegemann Otter Creek Schleswig
Woolhiser
Kuhl
ILIN0IS CENTRAL RAILROAD.
Low Homeseekers' Rates to the
South and Southwest February 7
and 21 and March 7 and 21.
•FOR-
Tlie Best S3 Cent Dinner* in Town.
On the above dates the Illinois Central will
sell at 125.20 for the round trip tickets from
Denison. Iowa to Jackson. Miss.. Vicksbnrg,
Miss., Natches, Miss New Orleans, La., and
to all Illinois Central and Yazoo& Mississippi
Valleys. R. points In the states of Missis
sippi and Louisiana. Also on same dates.
will sell from above station tickets at 820 00
for the round trip to Jennings, La., Lake
Charles, La., Beaumont,Tex., Houston, Tex.,
San Antonio, Tex. and to points on the
Southeran Pacific R. R. In the State of Louisi
ana(west of and including New Iberia, La)
and Texas (east of and Including San Antonio,
Tex.) Return limit of 21Jdays.
Also Colonists' one way rates on Feb. 21
and March 21 to the same points at exceed
ingly low rates.
Tickets and full information of ageats of
the Illinois Central and connecting lines.
A. H, HANSON, G, P. A., Chicago.
FOR SALE.
Two acre lot, plenty of fruit, barn
for four horses, good well, hog lot,
sis-room bouse, well finished, good
cellar. Enquire of
"a NlfflJS MONTGOMERY, Prop.
Up to date Tailoring
.m
mm
Spring Samples are now in.
Call and see latest in suit designs.
and guaranteed to give satisfactio
Next door to Review offce, Denison, la
West Side pr W Side
Iowa
3rd Ward
Paradise
Denison
Milford
Hanover
Vail pr
E Boyer
Charter Oak
Jackson
Union
Morgan
2d Ward
Jackson
Union
Washington
Manning
Denison
Dow City
Denison
Vail
Ricketts
Boyer
Denison
Manning
Charter Oak
Denison
Kiron
Goodrich
Stockholm
3rd Ward
Denison
Paradise
Nishnabotna
Denison
Denison
Dow City
Manilla
BARGAINS
IN WATCHES AND JEW
ELRY OF ALL KINDS.
Repairing a Specialty.
All work guaranteed to give sat
isfaction or money refunded. at
N- STAININGER'S
Jewelry Store.
Illinois Centf
Vail
Manilla
Ch. Oak
Herring
Dow City
Schleswig
Denison
West Side
Dow City
Arion
Kiron
Denison
Washington Buck Grove
Milford Deloit
Charter Oak C. Oak
EXCURSION RAW.
Excursion tickets will be sold
Illinois Central, to the points, and at
as follows:
TOURIST RATES.
il
WM. DANNELS, 8-tf
Crawford Co. Phone 190, Denison, la.
—FOR SALE—Good registered Here-ill
ford bull9 cheap. J. L. RIGGLEMAN,
Deloit, la- 4-tf 1
AT THE
AY
Inter?
Tickets on sale daily during the
with long limit, to Hot Springs, Ark.,
burg, Miss., Gulf port,'Miss., Hammon
New Orleans, La.. Havana, Cuba
Panama, and many other points in Missi sslpnl
Louisiana, Florida, Cuba, Porto Rico, 1 ex as
Mexico, Arizona aud California.
ricks-
1, La.
Jolon,
Write for rates and free folders or boo
about any of these points. 1
ONE FARE PLCS $2.00
1
Home-seekers. Excursions. West, 8outh
South-east and South-west, February 7 and
SI. March 7 and 21, April and 18.
New Orleans, La.—Mardl Gras, March 8-7
Write for free irdl Gras Book.
ONE-WAY, SECOND-CLASS RATES
LESS THAN REGULAR FARE.
Colonists' tickets to principal points in Cal
ifornia, Washington, Oregon, Montana and
Utah, 011 sale daily March to Nay 15, 1905.
Colonists' tickets to points on the Illinois
Central and Yazoo A-. Mississippi Valley Rail
roads south of the Ohic River. On sale Feb
ruary 21 and March 21.
Settlers' tickets to points in the Southeast,
on sale Feb. 7 and 21, March 7 and 31 and
April 4 and 18.
THREE-FOURTHS OF ONE FARE.
Special round trip Home-seekers' excur
sions to pointssouthwest and In the states of
Tennessee, Mississippi and Louisiana. On
sale February 7 and 21. March 7 and 8],
limited to 21 days.
For particulars as to dates of sale, rates,
etc.. apply to any Illinois Central Tlcktet
Agent or address the undersigned.
J. F. MERRY,
Asst. Gen 1 Pass. Agent.^
Oubuque, la.
CURSE OF DRINK.
Drunkenness cared to stay cared by
White Ribbon Remedy. 1
No taste. No odor. Any woman' can
give it in glass of water, tea, cofff or
food without patient's knowlegde.
White Ribbon Remedy will cure or
destroy the diseased appetite for all al
coholic drinks, whether the patient is a
confirmed inebriate, a "tippler," aooial
drinker or drunkard. Impossible for
any one to have an appetite for alcohols
ic liquors after using White Ribbon
Remedy. It has made many thousands
of permanent cures, and in addition re
stores the victim to normal healthj
steadying the nerves, increasing the
will power and determination toresisl
temptation.
Write Dr. W. R. Brown, 218 Tremont
St,. Boston, for trial package and letter I
of advice free in plain sealed epvelope.!
All letters confidential and destroyed
as soon as answered. White Ribbon
Remedy sold by druggists everywhere
also sent by mail in plain package, price
$100.
ri
-m?"

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