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Mower County transcript. [volume] (Lansing, Minn.) 1868-1915, May 27, 1891, Image 2

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MINNESOTA NEWS ITEMS
Battle Lake is now a full-flulgetl in
corporated village.
The postoffice at Ely has been placed
in the presidential class.
Three persons died last week at Min
neapolis from injuries received by being
struck by electric cars.
Minneapolis mills ground 14i,075 bar
rels of flour last week, against 129,940
the coresponding week last year.
Fred (x. L. Hunt, a Minneapolis bicy
clist, contemplates making a journey
around the world on his wheel.
The Minnesota Farmers' Alliance In
surance company has filed articles of
incorporation. Ignatius Donnelly is
president.
Judson N. Cross, of Minneapolis, is
one of aboard of three commissioners
to go to Europe and examine into the
immigrant question.
The homeopathic physicians of Min
nesota held their twenty-sixth annual
convention at the capitol at St. Paul,
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of
last week.
At the special county election at
Northern Pacific Junction the question
of bonding the county for $25,000 to
build roads and bridges was carried
almost unanimously.
Commencement exercises are being
held at the Winona normal school this
week. The graduating class numbers
fifty, the same number as last year, of
whom forty-five are ladies and five
gentlemen.
Dr. E. M. Morehouse, mayor of Owa
tonna, died Saturday morning, having
lived just a week after receiving injur
ies by falling down stairs. The funeral
occurred Tuesday, and was in charge of
the Masonic fraternity.
Two children of Mr. and Mrs. Felix
Lawler were burned to death in a fire
which consumed their dwelling at Min
neapolis Saturday. Mrs. Lawler was
so badly burned in attempting their
rescue that she may also die.
At the annual meeting of the "Mount
Vernon association." which took place
at Mount Vernon last week, Mrs. Judge
Flandrau, vice regent for Minnesota,
presented $1,050 as Minnesota's contrib
ution to the Mount Vernon fund.
Two well known Indian guides, Pete
Morrison and Jackson Caribon, were
drowned in North lake while endeavor'
ing to rescue a Frenchman from drown
ing. The Indians were drunk at the
time the accident occurred, and upset
their canoe.
Glanders has appeared among the
horses in the vicinity of Alexandria,
Minn., and several have died from the
disease. The local boards have taken
steps to root out the scourge. Probably
as many as 100 horses have been infec
ted throughout the country.
The big lumber yards of J. W. Day &
Co. at Minneapolis, were wiped out by
fire about 3 a. in. Wednesday, involving
a loss of between 19,000,000 and 20,000,
000 feet of lumber, mostly last season's
cut, worth about $12 a thousand feet,
The total loss is placed at $223,000 in
surance $140,000.
There is a postoffice in Pine county
called Sandstone. It is on the Kettle
river, and a railroad building through
that county has a town not a great way
off called Sandstone. Some of the
people in the vicinity want to get the
two offices amalgamated and some do
not. The matter has been appealed to
the department for settlement.
A De Lacy Wood, editor of The Two
Harbors Iron Post, is soon to pull up
stakes and move to Grand Marais,
small village on the north shore,
A De Lacy Wood is famous as the Two
Harbors editor whom the alleged White
Caps, who recently tarred and feathered
and shot a citizen of the place, ordered
to leave town on peril of his life.
At Duluth, T. R. Yolton, proprie
tor of the Saddle Bock restaurant,
was arrested at the instance of a woman
who claims that she is his wife and that
he ran away from her two years ago
with $6,000 belonging to her. Yolton
has been living here with a woman
whom everyone supposed was his wife
A curious fact is that just as wife No. 1
arrives woman No. 2 skips out with
$3,000.
At Fergus Falls Saturday, Adelbert
Goheen, the murderer of Bosetta Bray
was sentenced to be hanged at such
time after ninety da as the governor
shall decide upon, lie took his sen
tence in the same unaffected manner
that he has shown throughout the trial
There is a rumor that he attempted to
hang himself in jail, but it is denisd.
His counsel are making an effort to
have his sentence changed to life im
prisonment, and all but one juror signed
the petition. The judge, however, in
sentencing him. said there were no mit
igating circumstances.
J. V. Brower, the commissioner of the
new Itasca state park, established by
the last legislature, is taking active
steps to look up the abstracts of title in
order to secure lands within its borders,
owned by private parties. The park is
situated in the northern part of the
state, about twenty miles from Park
Bapids, and contains about thirty-four
squre miles. The pioneer party to this
park will be made up of Professor
George D. Alton and Superintendent
W.
West, of Faribault, who, with
friends, will start about the
of June for a* stay of several
M.
several
middle
weeks.
An interesting case has been decided
at Fergus Falls. Several years ago
Thomas H. Canfield, the well-known
farmer at Lake Park, sold one Owen
Cowles a valuable horse, taking his
note and security on the horse. About
four years ago Cowles desired to dis
pose of the horse and Mr. Canfield
changed his security, taking a third
mortgage on Cowles' farm. The sum
due Canfield at that time was $741. The
mortgage was made out for $750. The
principal and interest now amount to
$1,100. Mr Canfield attempted to col
lect by foreclosing his mortgage.
Cowles set up the claim of usury, claim
ing that tbe difference between"the $741
and $7o0 was" usurious. Mr. Canfield
claimed it was disbursed by him for
making out and recording the papers.
The jury decided that the $9 was usuri
ous. So Canfield loses his $1,100, if the
supreme court doesn't reverse the de
cision.
Oldest Mason Dead Again.
BURLINGTON, Vt., May 25.—John B.
Hollenbeck, who was a lieutenant in
the war of 1812, died Sunday, aged 99
years. He was the oldest Mason iuthe
world, having been initiated in 1S13.
THE WEEK'S EVENTS.
Hews of Importance Given Brief Men
tion.
The czarewitch has so far recovered
from his wound that he has left Japan
from Vladivostock.
Mrs. James G. Blaine denies that
Hattie Blaine is engaged to Truston
Beal, of California.
Peru will send to the world's fair the
Saimondia collection and an exhibit
from the school of mines.
At Magnolia. Miss., Henry Sheridan,
colored, who murdered Dr. Varnado, in
Osyka. in 1888, was hanged Friday.
A bill postponing payments of bank
deposits for twenty days has been
adopted by the Argentine chamber of
deputies.
J. M. Heims, of Indianapolis, has
been elected president of the Bnai Brith,
now in session at St. Louis. The lodge
will meet in Cleveland, Ohio, next year.
In the trial of her novel dynamite bat
tery the Vesuvius fired nine shots, six
of which would have sunk a first-class
man-of-war had she been using one as a
target.
The Morgan ship, El Sol, Capt. Haw
thorne,broke the record from New York
to New Orleans, having made the run
from wharf to wharf in 4 days, 28 hours
and 15 minutes.
A mob stopped a train at Bardsley,
Thursday night and took from the
sheriff, Tennis Hampton, colored, who
is charged with the murder of E. H.
Weber. He was probably lynched.
The South Dakota railroad commis
sion has just completed a tour of the
Milwaukee lines east of the Missouri
They report that all sections traversed
were visited by the late rains, and that
all crops are in a promising condition.
A 14-year-old girl, Bosie Duce, is un
der arrest for attempting to set fire to
the Naumkeag, Mass., mill No. 1. She
she says that she thought if she could
burn the mill she would not have to
work.
A letter has been written by ex-Queen
Natalie to M. Paschious, the Servian
prime minister. She declares that the
object of her expulsion from Servia was
neither for the good of the country or
for the king's welfare.
Near Gainesville, Tex., Thursday
evening, during a thunder storm, light
ning struck a group of negroes who had
taken shelter under a tree, killing a
young girl and knocking senseless her
mother and a young man.
Translations of the pope's enclvclical
will be distributed among working mqn
of all countries. The document is re
garded-as an endorsement of the views
of Cardinals Manning and Gibbons as
contrasted with those of Bishop Frep
pel.
The prefect of Belgrade and an in
spector of police have been retired and
the minister of finance granted a long
leave of absence owing to the regent's
dissatisfaction with the way in which
Queen Natalie's expulsion was carried
out.
Fever is raging at Malta and there is
an average of forty of the officers and
men .of each of the vessels of the British
fleet prostrated with the disease. The
Malta hospitals are already terribly
overcrowded by the unceasing influx of
patients.
It is estimated that the new French
tariff will diminish British exports to
France to the amount of about £7,000,
000 pounds annually, and British manu
facturers do not know where to find a
market for their goods thus barred from
French markets.
Col. W. L. Brown, chairman, says
that the newly formed Irish national
federation at New York has already
cabled $15,000 to Archbishop Croke for
the evicted tenants, and has $25,000 on
hand, besides $7,000 or $8,000 subscribed
and not yet collected.
A Madrid dispatch says that a large
body of Spanish troops is being massed
at Bakajos, near the Portuguese front
ier, and that a Spanish squadron is
cruising near Lisbon. The Spanish
government makes no secret of its in
tention to intervene should a republic
be declared in Portugal.
A Berlin dispatch says that the re
ported engagement of marriage between
the Czarewitch and the Princess Helene
of Montenegro created no surprise as
the two families are closely connected.
Such an engagement will' greatly
strengthen the claims of the Montene
grin prince to the sovereignty of Servia.
The kaiser is said to be bent upon the
complete nationalization of the German
railways, and this was his chief reason
for retiring Herr Maybeck, who had
failed in attempting to" carry out that
charge. The kaiser is thoroughly im
bued with Bismarck's idea of a grand
network of railways controlled by the
reich.
SIXTY-ONE ROUNDS.
Tlie Jac! snn-Corbett Match Resulted in
a Victory for Neithor Ulan.
SAN FRANCISCO, May 22.—The great
fistic encounter between Peter Jackson,
colored and heavyweight champion of
Australia, and James Corbett, Califor
nia's young prize fighter, for $10,000, of
which $1,500 goes to the loser, came off
before a large and enthusiastic audience
in the gymnasium of the California
Athletic club. The contest was fought
with five-ounce gloves under Marquis of
Queensberry rules." Jackson was the
favorite in the betting all day, as he has
been from the start. He was at the
long end with wagers standing at 100 to
65, but there was little betting, done,
Corbett money being somewhat scarce.
The men entered the ring shortly after
9 o'clock, Jackson being seconded by
Sam Fitzpatrick and "Bill Smith and
Corbett by John Donaldson, Billy De
laney and Harry Corbett. Hiram Cook
acted as referee. The fight started out
Decidedly Lively and Scientific,
the honors for the first twenty rounds
being evenly divided, Jackson appear
ing, if anything, the fresher. Jackson
wcrked hard and landed several light
blows on Corbett's jaw and ribs, but
Corbett's agility saved him from severe
punishment. In return Corbett got in
several pretty stiff blows on Jackson's
wind. During the nest ten rounds Cor
bett came to the front, forcing his
opponent to the ropes several times and
apparently working for a knock out.
Jackson rallied in the thirty-second and
took the aggressive. From that to the
fortieth round both men were wary, no
blows being struck. Bound forty-one
and forty-two were lively, but from that
time till* the referee declared a draw in
the sixty-first round it was little else
than a walk around, both men being
plainly t«» tired to deliver an effective
What is the matter with the Al
bert Lea folks, any how? They
seem to have the "hypo" in regard
to Austin. Every time anyone
sneezes in Austin they think it is
thundering. For example, read the
following from the Albert Lea En
terprise:
At last tbe festive residents of Austin have
come to tbe conclusion tbat it is a fact tb.-.t
tbe summer races of tbe Southern Minnesota
Trotting Circuit will take place in this city
July 3 and 4, and in tbe clay bank town July
and 8, but not until after tbe secretary of tbe
association bad allowed it to be advertised
all over tbe north-vest tbat Austin would
bave tbe former dates. Tbere was nothing
gamed for them by so doing but it i3 a char
acteristic of that place.
Austin is satisfied with the dates
assigned by the circuit. Why should
not Albert Lea be content?"
When Baby was sick, we gave her Castoria.
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria.
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria.
When She had Children, she gave them Castoria.
A Mechanical Wonder.
The Decoration Day issue of tbe
Albany, N. Y., Telegram will be the most
original, unique and popular paper ever
presented to tbe American public. Noth
ing like it ever attempted by a newspaper
in the nineteenth century. As a mechan
ical wonder and a military library tbere
will be nothing to even compare with it
issued in this country. It will be printed
on red, white and blue paper and consist
of 16 pages. If there is no agent in your
town you can have the paper mailed to
you at 5 cents a copy.
Cookery at Sea.
The English Shipmasters' association
has proposed that a cooking school for
ships' cooks should be established. Hith
erto the one qualification for the post of
cook in the merchant service has been
to be a negro. It is true that occasion
ally a Spaniard or other nationality of
exceptionally dark complexion has been
shipped as cook, but such exceptions
have rarely had the approbation of in
telligent seamen. So, too, if the cook
has accidentally gone overboard the cap
tain has been compelled to detail the
most worthless of the sailors to act as
cook but this has been done of necessity
and not of choice. The proposal to es
tablish cooking schools shrvws that the
old fashioned cook, whose raly concep
tion of cooking was limited to boiling—
or in the case of exceptionally dark
cooks, to boiling and
frying—is
doomed
to vanish,
The modern sea captain desires the re
finements of shore cookery, and hankers
for "mauevilins." Possibly he dreams
of game suppers prepared from cooped
partridges, and perhaps pudding more
recondite than the simple duff of the sea
would meet his views. The old fash
ioned captain is being driven from the
ocean by steam, and it is perhaps fitting
that the old fashioned cook should fol
low him. It is even possible that the
"tramp" of the future will carry as a
cook a young woman who has just
graduated from a cookery school and
who will ornament the galley with
flower pots.—Paris Herald.
A Disastrous Fire.
The fire in the Leiter house was a sad
blow to the social ambitions of the fam
ily. With one daughter in the height of
bellehood and another having just made
her debut, the Leiters had arranged a
social campaign of great splendor. On
the very day that ushered in the short
season of nine weeks the home was dam
aged by fire. The most pathetic thing
about the disaster was the destruction of
apart of the Parisian wardrobe of the
young ladies, recently imported at a cost
of $4,000.
Poor Nannie Leiter, bundled out of
bed and ths house in great haste, caught
a glimpse of a number of her blackened
and burned Worth gowns, and straight
way went into hysterics. At the house
of Mr. Rock, a neighbor, she lost all con
trol of herself for a time and filled the
air with her lamentations. Her grief
was short lived, however, and she is now
as gay and charming as ever in the full
whirl of Washington society. The rental
paid by Mr. Leiter to Mr. Blaine has
been generally overstated. When Mr.
Leiter took the house h^did pay $11,500
a year, but when the lease was renewed
some time ago the rental was reduced to
$8,000 a year and the taxes and insurance,
or $8,500 in all.—Washington Cor. Chi
cago Herald.
What Asafetida Is.
Asafetida is a gum derived from the
root of a plant which grows in Persia,
Afghanistan and other parts of Asia.
The. root is cut, and a thick, milky juice
exudes, which, when dried, gives the
asafetida of commerce. The overpower
ing, offensive smell is due to a volatile
oil, which can be removed by dissolving
the gum in alcohol and distilling the
compound. Disagreeable as it is to
western olfactories, in Persia and many
parts of the east it is used as a condi
ment for food.—St. Louis Globe-Demo
crat.
Xjtood Umber and'
wagoni You can't afford
to buu Without first seeing
RuSHf8RDVWAG0N
Dealers should write usforfe
because it to sell the BESTand
siwqhs made
or
sold by
RE THE
BEST that
rr,one=,sftffl ^science, can pro
Au-wS. iffagr6 j3
Y.O
jjou. ¥?if£ -us
agent near
tor
cifc-uiars.
WjHWIrVIaQOH
Co..WiNONA,MmN.
Temperance Column.
"No license and total abstinence."
MRS.
c.
J. SHORTT AND MRS. E. B- CRAKE.
D1TOBS.
Our worthy District President of tbe
Woman's Christian Temperance Union,
though still upon crutches, is able to
engage in much helpful work. She can
write, and but few know how much is
required of her in that iine. She can ride,
and last week went to Glenville, a
distance of twenty miles, to preside at
the annual convention of Freeborn
county. She reports a meeting of much
interest every union but two in the
county being represented.
There arose a mighty famine in tbe
city—in our city, and only last week!
Probably this statement will be doubted
bp every individual reader of it, never
theless it is true. But in this age of
electricity and steam there is no such
prolonged sufferings from lack of
supplies as was experienced by the early
settlers, and a message over the wires to
Milwaukee depicting the case in all its
horror, started a special train from there
at one o'clock in tbe morning of the 23d,
wtych drew up at the Kansas City depot
about two in the afternoon, laden with
62 half barrels, 74 quarter barrels and 80
eighth barrels of tbat which was needed
to allay the suffering of the thirsty por
tion of the community. Now, in view
of this swift response to such a call, who
for a moment can harbor the thought
that the milk of kindness has run entire
ly dry in the human breast.
THE ECONOMY OF PROHIBITION.
Whkt Abolishment of Liquor Selling
Would Do for the Country.
A tremendous stimulus and boom in
every branch of trade and in every de
partment of industry to startle the world
with its extraordinary advantages would
certainly follow prohibition of the liquor
traffic.
Besides this marvelous increase in the
business of the country a great reduction
of taxes would inevitably follow the
moral and social revolution.
The immense expanse of our courts,
our police and their accompaniments,
prisons, lunatic asylums, poorhouses, re
formatories and many other depart
ments of charities and corrections, is due
in a very large proportion to the rav
ages on society caused by the liquor
traffic.
Probably not less than one-half of the
present taxes both in city and country
are required to protect society from the
depredations of this destructive business
of liquor selling.
The insatiable appetite for alcoholic
beverages has become a juggernaut of
passion leading to a holocaust of waste
and destruction, so that the business and
material aspects of this question of pro
hibition is astounding, in fact is over
whelming.
The great question of the economy of
prohibition therefore has a ver^ wide,
significant and formidable compass, cov
ering every department of business, and
in fact includes our whole civilization,
whether applied to the beautiful in art,
the utilities of industry, the benefit of
education or the necessaries of life.
The large proportion of the people's
earnings carried by this insidious mael
strom of temptation, to be swallowed up
into its vortex of destruction, is simply
an awful waste, a colossal, wanton
waste. War, pestilence and famine of
the past centuries have not equaled this
waste of the people's energies.
In an intelligent and careful considera
tion of this destruction of the people's
earnings how the mind is staggered
with the magnitude of the cost of the
liquor traffic! How awful is the effect
of this blighting curse on the wage earn
ers of the people! How surely has every
man, woman and child to share and en
dure the burden of this terrible jugger
naut of passion, crime and misery!
A careful estimate of the cost of alco
holic beverages has put this amount at
eleven hundred millions of dollars an
nually in the United States, and then
certainly another eleven hundred mill
ion is required to take care of the inevi
table consequences of this terrible war on
the lives and health of the people, be
sides the appalling, stupendous waste of
the people's earnings. Twenty-two hun
dred millions of dollars of the people's
hard earned money—all gone to satisfy
the terrible cravings of a vicious appe
tite, to burn, con-ode and consume the
bodies and destroy the minds and morals
of the people.
If through prohibition these thousands
of millions could be put into the regular
channels of trade, if we could have this
vast amount of money spent for the or
dinary necessaries and luxuries of life,
what a tremendous boon and impetus
the country would have in every'de
partment of our industries!—W. Jen
nings Demorest in Woman's Temperance
Work.
Bucklen's Arnica Salve.
The best salve in tbe world for cuts,
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rbeum, fever sores,
tetter, cbapped bands, chilblains, corns, and
all skin eruptions, and positively cures piles,
or no pay required. It is gu»ranteed to give
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded,
Price 25 cents per box. For sale by Dorr &
DR. P. B. PECK
ENTISTRY
want a
Office over
Keysor&Gin
ncy's Store,
wbere be is
prepared to
do all kinds of
work in Den
tistry.
AUSTIN. MINNESOTA.
Rates $2.00 per day. Free Bos to all trains
STKICTLY FIRST CLASS.
HOTEL ROBINSON,
AUSTIN, MINN.
J. E. ROBINSON, Proprietor.
Main Street, opposite corner from Postoffice.
DO YOU WANT TO
T. W. DONOVAN,
-DEALER INT-
Furniture,
Caskets,
Coffins,
Carpets, Quilts, Feathers,
PICTURE FRAMES AND MOULDINGS.
5O0 Maple Street,
South Court House. AUSTIN, MINN
AUSTIN
Produce EMange
ISAAC GUY, Prop.
I am not a Dutchman,
And so I cannot fly
But at wholesale meats in Austin,
I am bound to try.
I have everything in stock
That any heart could wish,
From the clxoicest kinds of meats
TJ the best kinds of fish.
The value of this enterprise
Our people all will feel,
As the basis of our business,
Is cash on every deal.
Ail my friends who deal with me,
I will always warmly thank,
And fbr reference I give
The First National Bank.
MATTE!
HOME INTERESTING
And pleasant for your wife and family? If so, call at
And look over one of the best assorted stocks of Mu
sical Instruments ever kept in one store in Minnesota.
The Celebrated Bash & Gert's Piano, W. W. Kimball, Chickering and others.
W W. Kimball, Chicago Cottage, Estey, Newman Bros., and Lake Side Organs.
White, Domestic, Favorite, Household, Standard Seving Machines.
We guarantee prices ten to twenty per cent, lower than
you can buy the same goods at any large city. This statement
we mean to stay by and guarantee as correct and true.
M. J. KEENAN,
Main Street. AUSTIN, MINNESOTA.
WitMn tie last fev lays yon bare enjoyed a cup of
VAN HOUTEN'S COCOA
Best & Goes Farthest-The Standard Cocoa of the World.
J3§r°Please remember that this is the cheapest, health
iest, and most delicious beverage and article Qf diet in ex
istence, costing less than half a cent a cup, find guarantee
ing absolute safety from dyspepsia. DQn*t deprive your
selves or your children one moment looger-of this delightful,
nutritious drink-food. The stromgr may use it with
pleasure, the most delicate with benefit, & delight to all.
For sale by every grocer.
Tbat the Unanimous Verdict of (lie intelligent reading public of the
ENTIRE NORTHWEST in that the
IS THE REPRESENTATIVE NORTHWESTER! NEWSPAPER.
TUST ^%AI9 ^*1 Stands in the Front Rank of Modern Jfewiroapera. Its New*
I ilB WAIL ilbvDB is always Freab, Readable aqd Reliable. It you want
a daily paper you cannot afford to be without it.
Tur llfEWI HDC Has every attractive feature of a First-Claps Weekly,
I nc, VVEBIVb WbVtfla OB well a* maljy Original and Exclusive ones peculiar
to itself. To read it is to enjoy it and endone ail claims made for it. It btand* Preeminent laont
NOKTIIWESTKUN WEE.
YOUR
MUSIC STORE,
BUY THE
MLIWAPH!
BECAUSE IT IS THE
BEST EITIRfi MACHINE MADE.
Send for Circulars.
Kortbwestern Typewriter Co,
2 Fifth Street South, MINNEAPOLIS.
£&~Mention this paper,
One Dollar
BUYS
20 lbs. granulated or A sugar.
21 lbs. light brown sugar,
io cans best Austin Corn,
io cans Blackberries.
io cans Gooseberries.
io cans Blueberries.
4 doz. California Oranges.
HcBride,
THE
Grocer.
E
MM A H. WASHBURN, M. D.
Graduate of Woman's Hospital Medical Col
lege, Chicago.
Office and residence, opposite Tryon House,
two doors east, Austin. may6'9I
KNOW YE ALL MEN BY THESE PRESENTS.
THE ST. PAUL GLOBE PUBLISHING COXPASY has, at A great outlay of money, purchased the right to USE
Houghton's New Reversible Political Map""S&r1 Rand, McNally&Co.'s Map of the U.S.
and has contracted for the printing of the enormous number of 190,000 «op!es. for the benefit of those who
become subscribers to the GLOBZ within tbe years 1891 and 1292. The regular price of these maps is & O.OO but
we are enabled to offer it, together with the GLOBE, at the following
ASToklSHHT&XiY LOW TEHM8.
St. Paul WEEKLY GLOBE, one year with map, 82.00 without map, $1.00.
St. Paul SUNDAY GLOBE, one year wltli map, $3.00 without map, 82.00.
St. Paul [DAILY GLOBE, six months with map. $5.00 without map, $4.00.
St. Paul DAILY GLOBE, one year with map, $9.00 without map, $8.00.
Do you know a troorf thins? when you see it I If no you will ha-'tsn to take advantage of thiy CQAUH FJ
AGENTS WANTED :n every section of the country, to whom liberal terms will be ofTered-OilfiRU Ull Lit
Address: GLOBE PU3LISHIHG C0MPANY, St. Paul, Minnesota.
t3T Bond for Bi iple Copy of tli* GrXiOBS. J£3
1

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