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Bismarck weekly tribune. [volume] (Bismarck, Dakota [N.D.]) 1884-1943, September 28, 1888, Image 2

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PRESIDENT OAKES.
The Popular Vice President Elected
to First Place in the Northern
Pacific Management.
His Headquarters Will be at St.
Paul —The Stockholders Meet
aud Transact Business.
Yellow Fever Spreading to Other
Cities and the Greatest Panic
Known Prevailing:.
Annual Report of the Northern Pacific,
NEW YORK, kept. 20.— The North­
ern Pacific's annual report for the
year ending June 30th shows a
surplus over all charges of §518.685. The
company has sold all of the third mort­
gage bonds and 82,957,500 Northern Pa­
cific and Montana bonds issued on 1.183
miles of road. The proceeds will pay off
outstanding bonds ot the tour branch com­
panies and the contractors' claims. The
refusal of the Union Pacific to carry out
the joint lease of the Oregon Navigation is
noted. In conclusion the report states
that $787,552 are appreciable to dividends
on preferred stock accumulated in the
last five years. The land sales are ex­
pected to sooner or later reduce the pre­
ferred stock to 830,000,000 and .53.000,000
more if the company wins a land suit with
Manitoba. The report concludes with
prophesies of a brilliant luture. The
stockholders elected the present board of
directors with the exception ot Mr. John
C. Bullitt, who was elected in the place ot
Mr. August Belmont.
OAlvES SUCCEEDS PRESIDENT HARRIS.
At 2 o'clock the new board of directors
held a meeting and elected T. F. Oakes
president of the" company with his head­
quarters at St. Paul. Robert Harris, the
outgoing president, was elected president
ot the board of directors with residence in
this city. It was expected that the mat­
ter of declaring a dividend upon the pre­
ferred stock would come up but it did not.
The meeting then adjourned. The impor­
tant points which came up were the adop­
tion of a resolution approving the lease of
the Northern Pacific and the Montana
railroad and the approval of the north­
west equipment ot Minnesota.
COXGKPSSIOXA PR
OCEEDIN GS,
The Senate.
WASHINGTON, Sept. 20.—In the senate
Mr. Edmunds' resolution to withhold the
Chinese bill was laid on the table by unan­
imous consent. Mr. Mitchell took the floor
and addressed the senate at length on the
president's message and the tariif question.
He characterized the tariff bill as passed
by the house as in interest of the importer
and against the interest ot the laborer and
which had received the enthusiastic ap­
proval of free traders at home and abroad,
and said that on the other hand the senate
substitute would be based from beginning
to end on the Americau doctrine of protec­
tion to American labor aud American in­
dustry. Adjourned.
The Bouse.
In the house immediately after the read­
ing of the journal Mr. Burns of Missouri
•called up the conference report on the sun
diy civil appropriation bill aud the house
refused—32 to 49—to agree to it. Repre­
sentative Morrow of Colorado introduced
a resolution directing the committee on
enrolled bills to transmit the Chinese bill
to the president without delay. A point
of order was raised against Mr. Morrow's
resolution and the debate upon the point
was spirited and at times almost bitterly
personal. Mr. Payson said the bill was de­
layed because the president wants more
than the constitutional ten days. This is
part of the same performance begun by
the gentleman from Pennsylvania (Mr.
Scott) who attempted in a demagogical
way to make some capital tor himself and
his party. The speaker pro tem. sustained
the point of order. There was no law or
rule-prescribed manner in which the bill
should be transmitted to the president, but
the practice has grown up of entrusting
that duty to the committee on enrolled
billn. While sustaining the point ot order
he was not prepared to say that if the res­
olution was again brought up in a few
da} she would rule that it was not privi­
leged. So tlie resolution was not received
and tiie house adjourned.
CAPITAL CHAT.
PL'IiLIC LAND LEGISLATION.
A bill reported to the liou.se to-day from
the committee on public lands relative to
the suspension ot land entries provides
that all laws providing tor the disposal of
public lands, except the homestead laws
aud laws in relation to mineral lands and
laws touching the selection of public lands
by states for educational and other pur­
poses, shall be suspended until the pend­
ing legislation affecting the public lands
shall be disposed of or the present con
giess shall adjourn. It further provides
that during the pendency of the land for­
feiture measures no act ot railroad com­
panies interested shall in any way enlarge
their rights or claims.
In No Hurry to Go That Way.
THREE RIVERS, MICH., Sept. 20.—There
was a balloon ascention at the Centerville
fair yesterday afternoon. Among the
crowd of spectators was an old man who
as the baloon rose became entangled in the
ropes and was carried up feet foremost.
He clung to the ropes for his life and final­
ly by the aid of the aeronaut, who was
above him on the trapeze, he was straight­
ened and made the descent safely.
Minnesota Democratic Clubs Organize.
ST. PAUL, Sept. 20.—A state convention
of democratic clubs was held at 12 o'clock
to-day at Market hall. The object of the
convention was the organization of the
clubs into a league. Colonel Crooks, tem­
porary chairman, upon taking the chair
said that he had for thirty years been prac­
ticing in the democratic ranks. He thought
there would be a big democratic majority
in the state in November.
The Michigan Eldorado.
lsHPEinNG, Sept. 20.—Eight hundred
pounds of quartz carrying .$8,000 in gold
was dislodged by a single blast at the Mich­
igan mine last evening. The shaft is now
fourteen feet deep and over $20,000 worth of
^fiold has been taken from it in less than a
ijmonth.
THE CABLE SNAPPED.
An Elevator Cage Crowded With Pas­
sengers Falls Five Stories.
SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 20.—The elevator
cage in the Bankroft building dropped five
stories and several people were badly in­
jured. The elevator was run by a cable
and had a small cage that was supposed to
hold only eight. It was always over­
crowded when work stopped and yesterday
ten passengers entered on the fifth floor.
The boy pulled the lever and the cage
descended properly a few feet, then a loud
snap was heard and the cage went whizz­
ing down past the doors on the other floors.
In a moment the elevator crashed through
the light flooring on the street level and
fell on the basemeut floor, twelve feet
below. The root was splintered and among
the wreck were the groaning passengers,
some bleeding from ghastly wounds and
others lying senseless. A. Alexander of
Oakland had a thigh fractured, ribs broken
and was suffering from hemorrhage of the
lungs. He cannot recover. The elevator
boy had his back broken. Robert Critcher,
whose legs were broken, is also in a dan­
gerous condition. Several others were se­
verely injured. The elevator was examined
three weeks ago and pronounced sate. It
had safety clutches guaranteed to arrest
the descent ot the car but they did not
work. The cable parted in the basement
where the wire goes over the wheel.
ILLINOIS DEMOCRATS.
Campaign Plans Perfected Which Will
Surprise Tlielr Opponents.
CHICAGO, Sept. 20.—To-day the demo­
cratic leaders inaugurate an engagement
all along the line and it is claimed the
programme they have perfected will prove
a surprise to their opponents. Hitherto
practically the only orators on the demo­
cratic side have been General Palmer, Hon.
A. J. Bell and Judge Creighton. To-day.
however, there will be local meetings in
every legislative district in the state to­
gether with big rallies at a number of im­
portant cities. Chairman Brice of the na­
tional committee who was here last week
is credited with having suggested the plan
and considerable of the funds will come
from New York. The republican commit­
tee ridicules the hopes and claims of its
political opponents.
A Minneapolis Sensation,
MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 20.—The ugly ru­
mors which were barely whispered yester­
day afternoon in more or less direct con­
nection with the failure of D. C. Maak &
Co. ended at midnight in the arrest of Wm.
G. Ilarley. of the grain commission firm of
Harley & Peterson, on the charge of steal­
ing wheat from the Minneapolis Union
Elevator company. Harley was formerly
bookkeeper for D. C. Maak & Co. He left
them two months ago and formed a part­
nership with Peterson, a grain man of long
standing in this city. A systematic course
of robbery of the compauy has been car­
ried on in which several parties have been
interested. Owing to the construction of
the public elevator and the nature of its
business no one man could successfully
practice larceny upon its contents. Harley
was arraigned in municipal court this fore­
noon on the charge of stealing 15,000 bush­
els ot wheat from the Union Elevator com­
pany. Afterwards charge was changed to
1,500 bushels and bail fixed at 81,000. The
case was set for Tuesday. At the chamber
of commerce the affair caused a great sen­
sation.
The North Carolina Floods.
NORFOLK, VA., Sept. 24.—The freshet in
the rivers in eastern North Carolina is now
subsiding slowly. Great damage has re­
sulted on the lowland farms along the
Roanoke, Notteleg, Black water and other
rivers, the cotton and coin crops being
submerged and destroyed and live stock,
barns and outhouses, cut lumber, cord
wood, bridges, fences, etc., swept away by
the floods, which have never before been
equally disastrous. The rise in the Roa­
noke river is thirty-seven feet higher than
ever known before and overflows the low
country three miles from its banks. The
greatest destruction to the farmers is on
this river. Many dwellings were sub­
merged and swept away with the barns
and outhouses. Crops are fifteen feet under
water. Many fine plantations are utterly
ruined, and it is estimated that the loss bv
floods this season Jhere will reach 81,000,000.
Archbishop Corrigan's Silver Jubilee.
NEW YORK, Sept. 20.—To the spectators
standing at the door of St. Patrick's ca­
thedral on Fifth avenue this morning an
imposing scene was presented. The vast
array of heads that intervened between
the door and the grand high alter told of
thousands of Catholics who had assembled
to participate in the silver jubilee of Arch­
bishop Corrigan. Inside the sanctuary
rails were rows of seats filled with num­
bers of Catholic leaders from all
parts of the country. The secular and
regular clergy numbered about 480. The
alter was simply but impressively adorned
with palms. A purse of 820,000 was given
to the archbishop and addresses and tele­
grams of congratulation were received.
One was from the pope.
A New Railroad For the Northwest.
ST. PAUL, Sept. 20.—The Eastern Rail­
way company of Minnesota is now ready
tojdo business between the twin cities and
the head of Lake Superior. The track be­
longing to this company is completed from
Hinckley to West Superior, which is the
terminalpoint from St. Paul and Minne­
apolis. The Manitoba track will be used
to Hinckley until the Eastern can construct
tracks of its own. The new railroad will
give Manitoba an early outlet from the
west of the lake.
Negotiations Fallen Through.
WINNIPEG, Sept. 20.—The Hudson Bay
railroad negotiations have tumbled through
for the present. The government is not
willing to give more than 8200,000 and
without assurance that thi3 will complete
it, which the promotors are not willing to
give, have refused to aid in the extension
of the sixty miles this season.
The Army of the Cumberland.
CHICAGO, Sept. 20.—The society of the
Army of the Cumberland to-day elected
General Rosecrans president to succeed
General Sheridan. The next meeting will
be held at Chattanooga, September 18,1889
Was Not the Principal.
MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 22.—The Evening
Journal says: Developments do not im­
prove the case for D. C. Maak & Co It was
rumored on the floor this morning that in
his statement before the directors Wednes
nesday Harley stated that his connection
with the affair was that of employe and
not that of principal. This has had some
influence upon public opinion.
A Good Winning.
LONDON,
Sibil
Sept 22.—The race for the
Lancaster plate of £11,000 was run at the
Manchester autumn meeting to-day. Lord
Calthorptfs 8-year-old chestnut filly Sea
Breeze was the winner.
%-lVl
AT WASHINGTON.^
The Senate Amendment to Transfer
the Weather Bureau to the Depart­
ment of Agriculture Defeated.
The House Amends and Passes the
Bill Relating to the Suspension
of Public Land Laws.
The President Receives Official Noti­
fication of China's Refusal to
Ratify the Amended Treaty.
CONGRESSIONAL PROCEEDINGS.
The Senate.
WASHINGTON. Sept. 21.—In the senate
the house bill to make the department ot
agriculture one of the executive depart­
ments was taken up, the question being on
the amendment reported by the committee
on agriculture to strike out the fifth sec­
tion which transfers the weather bureau
of the signal service to the department of
agriculture. Finally a vote was taken on
the amendment to strike out the fifth sec­
tion of the bill and it was agreed to—yeas 33,
ncys 9. So the proposition to transfer the
weather bureau to the department of agri­
culture was defeated. The bill was then
passed, it provides that the department
of agriculture shall be an executive de­
partment under the supervision and
control of the secretary of agriculture,
who shall be appointed by the
president by and with 'he advice
and consent of the senate. There
shall be in the department an assistant
secretary of agriculture, to be appointed by
the president by and with the advice and
consent of the sena'.e, who shall perforin
such duties as may be required by law or
prescribed by the secretary. The secre­
tary ot agriculture shall receive the same
salary as is paid to the secretary of each of
the executive departments and the salary
of the assistant secretary of agriculture
shall be the same as that now paid to the
first assistant secretary of the department
of the interior. The conference report on
the sundry civil appropriation bill was then
presented and agreed to. Mr. Sherman
asked Mr. Allison if the conference report
covered all the matters in dispute between
ihe two houses. Mr. Allison replied that
the only question on which the conference
had been unable to agree was the amend­
ment as to the new library building. Ad­
journed.
The House.
In the house Mr. Daugherty of Florida
a9ked unanimous consent for the passage
of the senate resolution appropriating
8100,000 for the relief of suffering caused
by yellow fever. Mr. Kilgore of Texas
objected. The senate biil was then taken
up forfeiting the grant of lands to the
state of Michigan to aid in the construc­
tion of the railroad from Marquette to On­
tonagon. Passed. Mr. Holman of In­
diana, from the committee on public lands,
reported back the bill to suspend the oper­
ation of the pre-emption, timber culture
and desert-land laws. The bill was so
amended as to strike out all reference to a
suspension of the laws and as amended
it was passed. The committee having
arisen the house passed a number of pri­
vate bills and adjourned.
NOTES.
Mrs. Cleveland and Mrs. Folsom left
W ashington this morning for a short stay
in the Adirondacks.
The president has received official in­
formation of the refusal of the Chinese
government to ratify the amended treaty.
At the evening session of the house Mr.
Burgham of Pennsylvania called up the
bill granting a pension to the widow of
General Sheridan, but an objection was
raised and the bill was withdrawn.
The president sent the following nomina­
tion to the senate this afternoon: John G.
Parkhurst of Michigan to be envoy extra­
ordinary and minister plenipotentiary to
Belgium. Postmasters—Walter C. New­
bury at Chicago, 111., and Charles H. Tra
cey at Anaconda, Mont.
Orders have been issued to have the
United States steamer Boston, now in the
New York navy yard, put in readiness for
sea service in a few days. The vessel is
under secret orders to proceed to the West
Indies on a deploniatic mission, the precise
character of which cannot now be ascer­
tained.
The president has appointed Wm. A. J.
Sparks, ex-commissioner of the general
land office, as co-referee and chairman of
referees to act with two others, one to be
appointed by the Chicago, Kansas City &
JebraskaRailroad company and one by the
principal chief of the Cherokee nation in
Indian territory to assess against the rail­
road company the amount of compensa­
tion to be paid to the Indians for right-of
way through their lands.
Chief Justice Fuller Banqnetted.
CHICAGO, Sept. 24.—Thefriends of Mel­
ville W. Fuller, the new chief of the na­
tion's highest civil tribunal, gathered by
hundreds to-night to take him by the hand
and listen once more to his voice before
his departure for Washington to assume
the office. The occasion was a banquet
tendered to Mr. Fuller at the Palmer house
by the members of the Chicago bar among
whom he has so long been a wonder. The
attendance was not limited to the legal fra
terity, but included scores of citizens of
the west distinguished in other pursuits.
Judge Fuller and Judge Gresham made
the principal addresses.
By the Opium Route.
DUBLIN, Sept. 22.—Last evening a priest
found a lady lying unconscious in Phoenix
park. There were several bottles marked
"opium" near and three of them were
empty. She was conveyed to a hospital,
where artificial respiration was main­
tained for seventeen nours, but she died
to-day. A solicitor has identified her as
Mrs. Mary Jane Taylor of Neagara, a
guest for the past month of Lady Preston
at Kingston.
A La Boccaclo.
JACKSONVILLE, Sept 22.—Old Boccacio's
delightful imaginations are turned into
reality in this vicinity. A party of a dozen
young people have fled from the plague
stricken city, as did the Florentines in the
Italian tales, and have made a camp for
themselves at a delightful place in the
country several miles away, where the1
are passing the time as best they may unti
the plague is gone.
is
'•%Vi-^ 1%^ r^- y,^
BISMARCK WEEKLY TRIBUNE: FRIDAY. SEPT. 28,1888.
THE REVIEW OP TRADE.
An Improvement Still Noted in the Le­
gitimate Volume of Business.
NEW YORK.Septal.—Dun & Co's weekly
review of trade says: The volume of le­
gitimate business continues to improve.
The crop reports are altogether favorable
as to corn. Tlie general average of prices
has again declined slightly. In stocks a
severe reaction averaging S3 per share cul­
minated last Saturday and there has been
an average advance of $1.50 per share.
The crop which is the most important to
railroads as to financial aspects is not
large—the yield of wheat being 80,000,000
to 90,000.000 short of a full crop. Tin
heavy rains late in the season »ve also
injured cotton to some extent as to grade
and probably as to quantity, but the feel
ing still prevails that a large business may
be expected for the coming season, though
the luller supplies of money at western
and southern centers may cause the demand
upon New York to be lighter than usual..
Official reports show that the money
HI
circulation ot all kinds was about $1,361.
000,000 September 1st, against §1,321,000,000
a year ago, and the treasury has put out
this month about .52.000,000 more than
it has taken in. Besides adding to the
ciiculation the amount of gold and silver
coinage tor the past week the addition to
the circulation lias been §3,200,000 and on
Thursday .§3.760,000 more bonds were pur­
chased. Reports troin interior points show
that money is generally in ample supply,
though there is some cioseness at Detroit
and Cleveland. The market is tight at At­
lanta. Collections have improved. For
speculation money there is in abundant
supply but for commercial uses the market
is growing harder. Business ts fail ly ac­
tive at all interior points reporting and at
most it is better than a year ago, but
while the principal centers report a
good and increasing trade the accounts
from several of the unusual dullness at the
smaller towns in regions surrounding sug­
gest that the distribution may not be an­
swering expectations. Wheat has been
moderatively active with sales of 29,000,000
bushels and only a cent net advance in
price, while corn has declined cents,
outs cent aud oil cent. Pork pro­
ducts are higher. Meanwhile the exports
of wheat from this country for Julv and
August amount to 18,500,00 bushels—flour
included—against 35,750,000 bushels last
year, and tlie supply remaining for export
is probably about 24,000,000 bushels greater
than last year's exports for the rest of the
crop year.
PVGIUST JOHN LOVES ANNIE.
His Mistress at His Bedside—He Will Not
Send Her Away.
BOSTON, Sepi. 21.—When a priest en­
tered John L. Sullivan's rooms at Crescent
Beach last night he found there the pu­
gilist's mother and Annie Livingston, his
mistress. Sullivan was conscious but
weak. He recognized the clergyman.
"Who is this young woman, John, that has
just left the room?" asked the priest. Sul­
livan hesitated but finally he mustered up
courage and admitted that she was his
mistress. "You must send her away,"
said the priest. "1 cannot and will not,"
replied the pugilist. The clergyman
pleaded for some time with John but it
was no use. Sullivan's last words to the
Eriest
concerning the woman were: "Annie
ivingston has been a true friend to me in
time of trouble. She has stuck to me when
others who were nearer gave me the cold
shoulder. She has nursed me kindly the
past three weeks and I don't propose to go
back on her now."
SOLEMN REQUIEM SERVICES.
How the Close of the Pope's Jubilee Year
Will Be Celebrated,
WASHINGTON, Sept. 24.—The services of
the sacerdotal jubilee year of Pope Leo
XIII will close Sunday. In accordance
with the directions of the pope, the ser­
vices on that day in every Catholic church
throughout the world will be the same as
on All Sonls' day. On the 30th inst., there­
fore, solemn requiem mass will be cele­
brated for the repose of the souls of the
faithful departed in pursuance of an in­
creased devotion in the church for the suf­
fering souls in purgatory. Cardinal Gib­
bons in a letter addressed to the clergy of
liis archdiocese, commends the wish of the
holy father to the affectionate regard of
all the clergy and laity, and the archbishop
and bishops throughout the United States
have issued similar requesas.
THE RURALIST MUST APOLOGIZE.
It Cannot Support Matthews and be Rec­
ognized by the Alliance.
GRAND FORKS, Sept. 21.—[Special.]—
H. L. Loucks, president of the Farmers'
Alliance, to-day issues a public letter to the
Alliance and says: "The editorial sup­
porting Matthews is a trick to put the Al­
liance in a false position. Personally for
Harden the Ruralist must apologize or it
will no longer be the organ of the Alliauce."
Yellow Jack aud the Darky.
JACKSONVILLE, FLA., Sept. 22.—To-day
the records of new cases were again
broken. The score reached 163. Of these
103 were colored people, who are being
freely reported. It is now almost certain
that many hundred colored people have
bad the fever and recovered without treat­
mentor physicians. It has been demon­
strated that they are almost as susceptible
to attack as the whites, but the issue is
rarely fatal with them. Negroes never die
with yellow fever unless they call in a
doctor. The deaths reported to-day are
only six.
Harrison and the Drummers.
INDIANAPOLIS,Sept. 22.—This was Chi
cago day with General Harrison. In the
morning and early afternoon he was oc­
cupied receiving callers. The commercial
travelers from Chicago did not arrive till
after 4 o'clock. They came by special
tsain in two sections, and were accom­
panied by the Second Regiment band. The
drummers entered General Harrison's
house and as they passed through the hall
way each one shook hands with both Gen­
eral and Mrs. Harrison and left his card
on an adjacent stand.
A Destructive Hurricane.
NASHAN, N. P., Sept 22.—A severe hurri
cans passed over several of these islands
September 2d and 3d. At Padded Island
eighteen houses' were totally destroyed,
twelve others nearly so and scores more or
less injured, a.11 sponging, fishing and
trading schooners belonging to the island
are either bilged or driven high on the
shore.
Beat Her Record.
NEW YORK, Sept. 22.—it was stated to­
day in shipping circles that the Cunarder
Etruria had eclipsed the best record for an
ocean voyage. She was reported at Fire
Island at 8:85 a. m. to-day. It is reckoned
that she made the incoming trip in six
days, one hour and fifty-five minutes, a
gain of thirty minutes over her own—the
it previous record—made last July.
CASTORIA
for
infants
UNPRECEDENTED ATTRACTION!
OVER A MILLION DISTRIBUTED!
Louisiana State Lottery Company
Incorporated by the legislature in 1868. for edu­
cational and charitable purposes, and its fran­
chise made apart of the present state constitu­
tion, in 1879, by an overwhelming popular vote.
Its GRAND EXTBAOHD1NARY DRAWINGS
take place Semi-AnnU'lly (.June and December),
and Its GRAND SINGLE NUMBER DRAW­
INGS take place on each of the other ten months
In the y^ar, and are all drawn in pnblic, at the
Academy of Music, New Orleans, La.
We do hereby certify that toe supervise the
arrangements for all the Monthly and Semi
Annual Drawings of the Louisiana State Lot­
tery Company, and in person manage and con­
trol the Drawings themselves, and that the same
are conducted with honesty, fairness, and tn
good faith toward all parties, and we authoritt
the company to use this certificate, with fac•
timilet of our signatures attached, in its adver­
tisements."
We the undersigned Banks and Bankers will
pay all Prises drawn in The Louisiana State
Lotteries which may be presented at our coun­
ters.
B. H.W*LM8LEY, Pre?. LouisianaNat'l Bank.
PIERRE LANAUX, Pres. State National Kank.
A. BALDWIN, Pres. New Orleans National Bank.
CARL KOHN, President Union National Bank.
GRAND MONTHLY DRAWING
In the Academy of Mnsic, New Orleans, Tues­
day, October 9,1888.
CAPITAL PRIZE, $300,000.
100,000 Tickets at Twenty Dollars
each. Halves, $10 Quarters, $5
Tenths, $2 Twentieths, $1.
LIST OF PHIZES.
1 PRIZE OF 1800,000 is 1800.000
1 PKIZ«: OF 100,000 is 100,000
1 PRIZE OF 50,000 is 50,000
1 PRIZE OF 25,000 is 25,000
2 PRIZKS OF 10,000 are 20,000
5 PRIZES OF 5,000 are 25,000
25 PRIZES OF 1,000 are 25,000
100 PRIZES OF 500 are 50,000
200 PRIZES OF 300 are 60,000
500 PRIZES OF 200 are 100,000
APPBOXIMATION PRIZES.
100 Prizes of $500 are 50,000
100 do 300 are 30,000
100 do 200 are 20,000
TERMINAL PHIZES.
999 do 100 are 99,900
999 do 100 are 99,900
3,131 Prizes, amounting to $1,051,800
NOTE—Tickets drawing Capital Prizes are not
entitled to terminal Prizes.
and Nnmber. More rapid return mail delivery
on New York Exohange in ordinary letter. Cur­
rency by express (at our expense) addressed
M. A. DAUPHIN,
and
New Orleans, La.,
or M. A. DAUPHIN,
Washington, D. C.
Address Registered Letters to
NEW ORLEANS NATIONAL BANK,
New Orleans, La.
REMEMBER!
That the presence of Get erals Beauregard and
Early, who are in charge of the drawings, is a
guarantee of absolute fairness an'i integrity, that
the chances are all tqual, and that no one can
possibly divine what number will draw a prize.
"RESIEMBER. also, that the payment of prizes
is GUARANTEED BY FOUR NATIONAL
BANKS of New Orleans, and the Tickets are
signed by the President of an Institution, whoBe
chartered rights are recognized in the highest
courts the efore beware of any imitations or
anonymous schemes."
Third Year Opens September 25,1888,
Four courses of study—Classical, Scien­
tific, Normal and Preparatory. In the
Normal Course the Territory pays the
tuition for twenty-five, (25) students.
Free unfurnished rooms in the college
building for ladies only.
For catalogue or other information ad­
dress Eev. James Rodgers, A. M„ Frincipal,
Jamestown, D. T.
The BUYEBS' GUIDE is
issued March and Sept.,
each year. It is an ency­
clopedia of useful infor
xnation for all who pur­
chase the luxuries or the
necessities of life. We
can clothe you and furnish you with
aU the necessary and unnecessary
appliances to ride, walk, dance, sleep,
eat, fish, hunt, work, go to church,,
or stay at home, and in various sizes,
styles and quantities. Just figure out
what is required to do all these things
COMFORTABLY.
and you can make a fair
estimate of the value of the BUYERS'
GUIDE, which will be sent upon
I'eeeipt of 10 cents to pay postage,
MONTGOMERY WARD A CO.
1X1-114 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, UL
CVBED to Star
CATARRH
SuredIIBT'IUSINGbyJB
C^rrk Cure
rm a
Cures
Children*
"Ca«tori»is so well adapted to
children that I Oaitmto enrea Oolie, Oswtipattoa,
recommend it as superior to any prescription I Soar Stomach, DiarrhOM, Eructation,
known to me.'' H. A. AXCBER, M.D., I Worm*, (ires aleep, and promotes di-
U1 So.Oxtocd8fc,Brooklyn,N.Y. Wlfitajwiw
Catarrh ot
the Nasal Cavity—Chronio and Ulcerative. Catarrh
of the Bye, Bar or Throat. It is taken Internally
and acts chiefly upon the Blood and Mucns Surface
of the System. I will give SIOO.OO for any case
of Catarrh.it will not Cure. mm
Prlee. TS
cents
a» Bottle. IIIIIVFI1
FBANK FRIBBY, Proprietor, I
Bismarck,Dak. NoyesBros. lsllHr.fl
kCutler/Agents. Bz.PAUL. UVIUbM
tii.
THE CENTAUR COMPACT, 77 Murray Street, N. V.
'THREE
A OISS.
PAGES.
Hundred thousand new subscribers for the Fam
ily Journal and Ladies1 Companion wanted, It
19 the most interesting and inetraotive paper
everueued. Subscribers will receive daring the
coming twelve
MONTHS
novels written by American authors, complete in
each three numbers. The story of popular works
of notion will be retold by a novel reader* the
most interesting and unique feature ever intro­
duced in any publication, giving the substance
°f. popular and standard books by famous
w.rit©rs
in a space easily read by the busiest peo­
ple. We have engaged
FOR
this work a widely known and popular writer.
omments on current events, fashions, new and
original ideas and designs for ladies' fancy work
anl household decorations, letters from corres­
pondents and their answers* The colleges and
seminaries of the United States will be treated
one each month in an illustrated article, showing
the particular advantage of each, cost of attena
ance. etc. Invaluable to parents having sons or
daughters whom they desire should receive the
advantages of a higher education than the or­
dinary school affords. Articles on painting and
drawing, giving home instructions by a well
known artist. Atrial subscription of thisele
gant paper will be sent to any address, three
months for
TEN CENTS.
Liberal pay for literary work adapted to onr
columns, and_ for new and original drawings,
designs and ideas on any sabjeot which we can
DM.
Premium list the most complete in the world.
We oner indncenients to clnb raisers andagents
approached by no other publishing house. The
•eiebrated (Hlbert cut waist linings which we
®®nd post-paid to any one sending us two yearly
snbsoribers at 50 cents each is alone worth 75
cents.
^"Sent to any address, post-paid one year,
50 cents six months 25 cents, and a three
montns trial subscription,
for only 10 cents.
TRY IT! TRY III TRY IT!
and yon will become a permanent reader.
Address:
John Ii. Douglas, Publisher,
Broadway, N, Y.
J-3
A
N
S
His Pants
WERE ELEGANT,
Perfect Fit aid were made to
order from elf-measurement
by us for
THREE DOLLARS
Send three 2-cent stamps for
twenty samples of elbth to select
from, and rules for self-measure­
ments. Money returned if not
suited. We cfieerfully refer you
to any express company or mer­
cantile directory as to our re­
sponsibility. Send at once for
all the latest styles. Address,
EMPIRE STATE PANTS CO.
163 & 165 Canal Street,
NEW YORY CITY.
GREAT ENGLISH REMEDY.
Murray's Specific.
A guaranteed care for all nervous
diseases, such as Weak Memory,
Loss of Brain Power, Hysteria,
Headache, Pain in the Back, Nerv­
ous Prostration, Wakefulness,
Lencorrhea, Universal Lassitude,
Seminal Weakness, Impotency
T-I.I and general loss of power of the
Mnre IlKIng, Generative Organs—in either sex,
cansed by indiscretion or over exertion, and
which ultimately lead to Prematnre Old Age,
Insanity and Consumption. $1 a box or six boxes
for $5. Sent by mail on receipt of price. Full
particulars in pamphlet, sent to every applicant.
WE 6UARANTEE SIX BOXES
to cure any case, For every $5 Trade Xavk.
order received, we send six boxes,
with a written guarantee to refund
the money if onr Specific does not
effect a cure.
Address all communications to
the Sole Mannf actors,
THE MUBBAY MEDICINE CO.,
FRANK FHISI.Y, SOFCTEM. JSS55"
AUCTION SALE
CATTLE
At the Stage Bam Corral
October 6th. Twelve months
time given on approved se­
curity. I have more than I
can winter, and they will be
sold. GERALD PIERCE.
BAGS! BAGS!
OF ALL KINDS AND ANY QUANTIT
-AT-
GLITSCHKA & SONS,
DEALEHS IN
1
Groceries, Stoneware and Feed.
BISMARCK, 33. T.
GROCERIES
H. R. EASLEtCO.,
Avt., Chicago.
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