TWICE-A-WEEK.
PLAIN DEALER
TUESLAY,
MAY
12, 1905
BY MEAD PUBLISHING CO.
OFFICIAL PAPER OF COUNTY
PRESIDENT SPEEDING EAST
SPECIAL TRAIN LEAVES DEN
VEE, FOR CHICAGO.
Roosevelt Discusses Question of Rail
road Rate Legislation at Ban
quet Tendered Him.
Denver, Col., May 10. The presl
ffentlal special train, consisting of a
baggage car, buffet car, sleeper,
private car of the general man
ager of the road, and the
president's private car "Rocket,"
pulled by one of the new monster en
gines, left the Union depot here over the
Union Pacific railroad for Chicago
promptly at seven o'clock Tuesday
morning. Tha ourtains in the presi
dent's private oar were closely drawn
and all was quiet within. Quite a crowd
had assembled at the station to see the
president off, but no demonstration was
made when it became known that the
president was slumbering.
The huge engine was literally smoth
ered in decorations consisting of tri
colored effects in bunting. Several large
portraits were displayed on the sides
of the engln»-cab. Preceding the presi
dent's train by ten minutes went a jfr
lot train of one coach. Trackwalker*
and inspectors were ordered out at day
light all along this division of the Union
Pacific and every precaution was taken
to insure the president's safety on his
eastward journey.
The first stop made by the special was
at Fort Morgan, Col. The president made
a one-minute speech from the rear end,
in which he predicted increased pros
perity for the state.
At the banquet given by the Denver
chamber of commerce Monday night
jthe president discussed government
regulation of railroad rates, declaring
such regulation, in a conservative man
tier, to be a necessity. On the subject
of the Panama canal the president said
*"The ethical conoept upon which I acted
.was that I did not Intend that the Unit
ed States should be held up." Irrigation
•by the government was also touched
upon. "Three years ago when this law
lavas passed it was hard to make some
people believe that whatever was built
upon these intermountain states would
add to the prosperity of the whole Unit
ed States."
NAMING INDIANS NOT EASY
(Native Sioux Describes Laboriousnesa
of Deciding on Cognomens
for Tribesmen.
The fact that two of the most inter
IMttng native races of tHTworld are not
idecreaslng was brought out at the Sat
jnrday meeting of the Twentieth Cen
tury club by Dr. Charles H. Eastman, of
kmherst, a Sioux Indian, and Miss WU-
Ihelmina 8. Bain, who gavean account of
Khe Maoris, of New Zealand, says the
Boston Herald.
Dr. Eastman told about'the work he is
(doing in the naming of the Sioux Indians
*nd thus facilitating the recognition of
Ithelr title to inherited land. "I am not
renaming them," he explained, "but sim
ply emphasising their namee. A little
over a year ago the Indian commissioner
sent for me to Washington and told me
Snterview
he president wanted to see me. In my
with President Roosevelt the
difficulty which many of the Indiana
jbave in establishing their right to in
herited property, due to the fact that!
{the Indians do not have family names,
Iwas discussed. A great many of the
names, moreover, are incomprehensible^
inconveniently long, or improper, alt
of which makes it difficult to swear in
court where an Indian belongs or who
bis relatives are.
"Leaving out the medicine men, the
Indians, so far as I can find out, are
not hostile to the American government,
except when undue pressure is brought to
bear upon them and they are turned out
of their home. The Indians like to go
to the government schools, end have
made great progress under the instruo
tlon
ot
the missionaries' zeal, and I am
one of them."
SAILING IN AN AIRSHIP.
rany
tftueer Sensations Visit the Aero
naut—Feels No Sense of
I $ Motion.
I "It la a singular fact," says A. H.
tfCnabeashue, in the St. Louis Olobe
Oemocrat, "that when one Is going as
jarach as 16 or 20 miles an hour in an
airship one has no sensation of moving
(Whatever, The air beats in your face
pou move along, but it only creates the
Impression that one Is standing still in
S strong breeze.
"Then are no objects flying past you as
when you are traveling on the surface of
the earth, and as you must keep your
•yes looking ahead of-you you observe
•nly distant objects, so distant because
ef your HTfch point of view that you ap
proach them apparently so slowly you do
sot seem to move at all. 2 consider this
•M ot the queerest sensation in a trip
through the air, and the impression of
icareely moving or of not moving at all
It so strong, even on the most expe
rlenced aeronaut, that It Is probably
Sue to this so many of them push their
motor to the extreme limit and It 'dies'
In consequence. When a speed gauge
IB Invented for an airship It will cause
tower breakdowns of motors due to
irowdlng power."
I
Woman's Reasoning.
He—So you are In the habit of talk
ing to yourself?
She—Yea You see, I've tried to tell
mmebody, and if I tell It to myself
iX'm sure that It won't get any further,
Chicago Journal.
j—Ch
Hope.
Knicker—Do you think it will be
for a rich man to enter the king*
om of Heaven?
Boeker—Not If they judge him by
tke taxes he pays.—N. Vi Sun.
STILL WAITING FOR THE OPENING GAME.
BEASTLY PRIDE.
I
nresiBwr,
Srtor
HIM
/byr
ROJESTVENSKY LEAVES VICIN
ITY OF VANFONG BAY AFTER
SEVERAL DAYS' STAY.
FRENCH OFFICIALS SEND
ORDERS TO IN DO-CH INA
Divisions of Czar's Squadron Must
Not Join in Waters Within Three
Mile Limit—Japanese Threats Not
Taken Seriously at St. Petersburg.
Nha-Trang, Annam, May 10.—Admir
al Rojestvensky's squadron, which has
been cruising for several days off Van
fong bay, sailed Tuesday morning.
France Takes Action.
Paris, May 10. Orders have been
sent to the civil and naval authorities
in French Indft-China not to permit the
junction within French waters of the
Russian naval forces under Rear Ad
miral Rojestvensky and Rear Admiral
NebogatofF. Instructions have also been
sent to Admiral De Jonquieres, the
French naval commander, to see that
Rojestvensky fully observes the prom
ise he has already given to leave French
waters.
These orders resulted from the receipt
of a detailed dispatch giving an account
of Admiral Be Jonquieres' meeting with
Rojestvensky. The dispatch says the
Russian squadron made a four-days'
cruise on the high sea outside the three
mile limit and then returned last Sat
urday, anchoring at Kong-Hai bay,
coast of Annam, to take on provision*
and fresh water. When Admiral De
Jonquieres was informed of the Rus
sians' return, he proceeded to Kong-Hai
and requested Admiral Rojestvensky to
immediately withdraw outside terri
torial waters.
Promised to Leave.
The Russian admiral gave De Jon
quieres his wcpd that he intended to
leave his anchorage and take to the
open sea. He also informed De Jon
quleres that In his communications
with the land he bad not violated any
of the neutrality regulations and that
the stops of the Russian squadron along
the Indo-Chlna coast were for the pur
pose of resting the crews. The Russian
admiral said he would depart the fol
lowing day.
The French admiral then returned
from Kong-Hai to advise the French
government of the result of the inter
view. He returned to Kong-Hai Mon
day to see whether Rojestvensky's
promise to go to sea had been carried
out, and found the Russian warships
still at their anchorage, but preparing
to depart. Admiral Rojestvensky as
sured him that the entire squadron
would leave during the night.
Threats Not Taken Seriously.
St. Petersburg, May 1Q. The Japan
ese threats against France are not tak-.
en very seriously here. The Russian au
thorities continue to maintain that Ad
jnlral Rojestvensk has not overstepped
the limits of neutrality. In view of the
excited state of the Japanese over the
possibility of the fruits of their previ
ous land and sea victories being swept
iaway Japan's protests are oosaldered
quite natural, but her minatory atti
tude toward a chivalrous country Mce
prance is regarded ae a fchwde*.
Strong Feeling Agal&st Troii.
Toklo, May 10. The feeling ot re
sentment against France tor the
assistance given the Russian second Pa
cific Bquadron continues to run Ugh and
,1s finding expression in a variety of
ways. The nearness of the Russian
squadron and the nature of the prepara
tions which Admiral Rojestvensky is
known to have .agf^ig
Fstttfil
wrftm
seem to have suddenly convinced many
people that It would have been impos
slble for Rojestvensky to come
the far east without outside assistance,
which has given a sinister tone to the
popular resentment. In the crisis many
eyes are turned toward Great Britain
for assistance. It is argued that France
.rescued Rojestvensky from absolute
failure to reach the China sea and that
the final aid given to the Russians In
Indo-Chlna amounts to an act of bellig
erency, and there are many demands
that Japan invoke the alliance with
Great Britain.
MASSACRE LASTS TWO DAYS
Twelve Persons Are Killed and Fifty
Wounded in Long Riot at
Zhitomir,
St. Petersburg, May 10.—The report
that there had been a massacre of
JewB at Zhitomir, government of Vol
hynla, southwestern Russia, is con
firmed in a dispatch to the Novosti,
which says the rioting began May 7
and continued for 48 hours. Orthodox
Christians fell upon the Jews in the
streets. The Jews were armed and
fought their assailants, many being
killed or wounded on both sides.
Private dispatches from Zhitomir
attribute the attack upon the Jews to
articles in M. Kroushevan's paper.
Twelve persons were killed and 50
were wounded. On Sunday the Jews
telegraphed to friends in St. Petersburg
to ask the authorities to take strong
measures for their protection and or
ders to that effect were sent. A renewal
of the fighting was expected Tuesday.
Commenting on this news the Novosti
remarks upon the coincidence that M.
Kroushevan (the former editor of the
Bessarabyetz of Kishlneff, held to be
responsible for the massacre of 1903 at
that place), had hardly returned to
Kishlneff and started the publication
Of a new paper, the Friend, before
Jewish massacres commenced in the
neighborhood.
Stock Hen Meet
Denver, Col., May 10.—The'Amer
ican Stock Growers' association, which
was organized last January by seced
ers from the National Live Stock asso
ciation, began Its first annual conven
tion in this city Tuesday, Addresses
of welcome were 'made by Gov. McDon
ald, Mayor Speer and John W.
Springer, former president of the
National Live Stock association, and a
response by W. W. Turney, president
of the Texas Cattle Raisers' associa
tion.
Senator Gives His Opinion.
Naples, Ma ylO.—Senator Henry Cabot
Lodge, who is here, received a visit
Monday from the head of the Italian em
igrant'department. The senator ex
pressed the opinion that Italian emi
gration will not be opposed by the Unit
ed Slates, if it is directed towards agri
cultural states.
Take Notice
GO to R. Wentwortb, opposite Tow
mill to get wagon boxes, second-hand
buggies and stoves, wagon and buggy
repairing and all kinds of blacksmith
ing done. oct 1
Ar* Ton I.iO( illin'i Vgot-Eata?
Shake Into your shoes Allen's Foot
Ease, a powder. It cures Corns, Bun
ions, Painful, Smarting, Hot, Swollen
feet At all Druggists and Shoe
Stores, 28c. Uw4 v«?
OAnTOH A
B«ar
tu /i
Blgu-'m
r:,
VV
ClfpeiANO
*eAt)e.
Tha Kind You Have Always Bought
SIX
v/1
VIII.
WHEN
to
Killed by Hie Little Sister.
Cedar Rapids, la., May 10.— While
playing with a ri£!« whlsh was not
known to be I Harvey Schleuter,
12 years old, was. Ui lad by his little
slater.
How British Cities Man-,
age Public Utilities
Manchester Occupies First Place In England In the
Volume of Its Municipal Work—Nearly All Public
Utilities Are Owned by the City
The city of Manchester came to the
rescue. It raised $25,000,000 from a
bond issue and became-a partner in
the enterprise. The company could
not meet itB interest, and again the city
came to its aid. The canal was opened
to traffic several years ago and has
done for Manchester all that its advo
cates claimed for it The city now
has invested in the enterprise $34,000,
000 and has a bill before parliament
authorizing it to advance $10,000,000
more for the purpose of deepening the
canal so as to permit the passage of
ships of the greatest draft The mu
nicipality is represented on the canal
board by eleven of Its twenty-one mem
bers. This stupendous work when com
pleted will probably entail an expendi
ture of $100,000,000 and is likely to be
come exclusively the property of the
municipality of Manchester. The city
has already made an investment larger
than any previously pledged by any
municipality in the world for a specific
business purpose.
Chicago's drainage canal was not de
signed to yield revenue, but the Man
chester ship canal is primarily a busi
ness enterprise. It may therefore be
classed as the moet conspicuous exam
ple of municipal ownership in Great
Britain or elsewhere.
Even eliminating the ship canal, Man
chester easily occupies first place in
England in the volume of Its municipal
work. It has constructed dwellings and
Manchester has expended $£000,000
and more In erecting quarters for its
laboring class. Those first provided
and those now under way show In
striking contrast the development
which has been made along this line
in Great Britain. Electric transporta
tion had not then developed t» a point
where it was possible, for the irortjng
man to live in the environs of the city.
It was assumed that he was forever
fated to live in tenement houses, and
those who wished tp make his life
more endurable bent their energies to
ward planning and building the best
of tenement structures.
When the timef comes—and I am
enough of an optimist to believe that It
will come—when, every worklngman in
Manchester, London, New York, Chica
go and all populous centers shall be
able to rent'or own a houae and a plot
of ground, be will gaze "with amaze
ment at such structures sis now front
on Oldham road, Manchester, and the
gloomy p|ies which London has reared
In Miilbfank and other central sites.
The tenement house is the worst single
feature lu a civilization which has
been unevenly developed frofca the rap
id perfection of the machine. "There can
no mote be a "model tenement house"
than there can be a molel dtath trap,
and a tenement house Is a -tenement
house, be it next to a tqrnnery "with rent
rates of $1.50 a week, payable in ad
vance, or dubbed an 'Vapartment house*
dff Fifth avenue wi'tli "suites" calling
for the payment of fc4,000 a year.
When Mancliestf decided to erect
tenement houses her 'officials went
about it in no hall? hearted way. There
was a district In Oldham road where
death reaped an at mual harvest of from
60 to 80 eut of very 1,000 who were
condemned to. llw? there. It was a vile
district, nd in 893 the city razed the
hovels, purchased the land and built
homes for its pq ople. As it stands to
day it is undouK tedly the finest "model
tenement" in Vreat Britain, and any
criticism I way? make of it is not direct
ed against tha traildltag or it* manage
ment, but a&i<fovt tb«^ whole system Of
mualcijmi teijBoiJfcrt
E E I A A A S
[Copyright, 1904, by Frederick Upham Adams.]
Manchester aspired to
commercial and manufactur
ing greatness Liverpool at
tempted to choke it with dis
criminating railroad rates. Manchester
lies only an hour's ride from its older
rival, but it cost more to ship freight to
Liverpool than it did from Liverpool
to New York. Threats, entreaty and
influence were all In vain. The fate of
Manchester depended on securing cheap
communication with the ocean. Liver
pool was relentless. Manchester declar
ed that she would cut her way to the
sea and becqme a port Liverpool smll
«d. The citizens of Manchester form
ed a canal company, raised $40,000,000
and began their titanic ta6k. When
this amount was exhausted they bor
rowed $10,000,000 more. When this
was expended they were at the end of
their resources. The canal was not
completed and no more private capital
could be raised.
I
So 'far as any scheme which contem
plates housing a thousand, more or less,
persons in a limited area can be a sue-
an expenditure of about .$750,000. The
death rate has fallen from 50 to less
than 30. There is not a room in the
building which does not open directly
to the street or to an enormous court,
and there Is not better ventilated
structure In the world. No room is less
than nine feet hifrh. anil the smallest
rooms cover 10S square feet, or about
10 by 11 feet. Most of the apartments
are of two rooms, imd the rent aver
ages $1 a week.
is built around an Immense quadrangu
lar court about "150 feet square. This
was designed for a playground, but I
noticed that the children preferred the
streets. The walls are of red brick.
With stone and terra cotta trimmings,
and the architectural effect far excels
that of the average first class flat or
apartment building in American cities.
Everything In reason that money and
sanitary science can render has been
done, but the building Is not popular,
though most of the rooms are taken,
and it is a paying Investment from a
financial point
ferent style of dwellings. They are
not so ornate, and they are not so ex
pensive, but in the opinion of the high
est civic authorities in the world they
represent the type of the future. On the
edge of the city the municipality has
purchased several hundred acres of land
and on it Is erecting cottages, which
will be rented to persons of small
means. Bach cottage will have its gar
den, and there will be parks and play
grounds, schools and churches and all
of the ordinary comforts of a normal
existence. This may be too good for a
man who simply works for a living,
and it is possible that Manchester and
other British cities are assuming more
responsibility than normally attaches
to municipal, governments. I shall not
argue this, but it may be set down as
a self evident proposition that crime,
a
cottages for its laboring classes. It has I tftnH(Jrn„mher the mo
an extensive system of baths and wash
houses. It owns three municipal ceme
teries, with burial grounds set aside for
members of the Church of BncJand,
Dissenters, Roman Catholics and Jews.
Manchester owns and operates success
fully an electric light and power gen
erating plant Its municipal gas works
turn a large annual revenue into the
city treasury. It owns $5,000,000 worth
of markets, which are a large and
steadily Increasing source of revenue.
Its department for the scientific han
dling and disposal of refuse is the moat
extensive in the world and has brought
about a huge manufacturing plant and
a farm of 3,681 acres, the whole giv
ing employment to an army of 2,500
men. Its publicly owned and operated
tramways rival those of Glasgow and
excel those of the Scottish metropolis
in some particulars. It has a well or
ganized works department which ex
ecutes most of the taaks formerly let
by contract, -and it contemplates a tele
phone system, which when installed
will complete the list of the ten utili
ties mentioned in the introduction of
this article as the more popular' objects
of municipalization in Great Britain.
a
houses number the more stories, where
people are crowded Into the smaller
areas and where they are denied con
tact with the soil. The great dtles of
England and Scotland have learned this
lesson and are profiting by it
Premature Burial.
'Although premature burial is ex
tremely rare, except perhaps on the
battlefield, the possibility of such an
occurrence cannot be denied. It Is well
known that owing to this possibility,
remote as it is, many otherwise strong
minded persons have lived under the
shadow of a great fear and have In
their wills directed payments to be
made to physicians who should be will
ing to run the risk of homicide to pre
vent live burial. It may safely be said,
however, that the horrors of the acci
dent are imaginary rather than real.
If a person In a state of trance were
to be burled while life still persisted in
a latent state, It is scarcely conceivable
that the victim could awake. The un
consciousness of catalepsy would sim
ply deepen until It became fixed in the
dreamless sleep of death.—British Med
ical Journal.
Tiger Hunting In India.
"Tiger hunting is not, as is generally
supposed, a popular sport In India. It
is a very expensive business and re-
newer
quires a lot of preparation" In the fi^st Good Stabling in Connection.
place you must have a number of na
tives scour the jungle until they find a
deer or animal of some sort that the
tiger has killed. It is usual for a tiger I
to eat part of his victim, then after be
gets hungry return again. When a
partly eaten animal Is found your serv
ants arrange spring mattress in one
of the trees, and you lie upon this and
Wait till the animal comes to feed,"
says an Indian traveler. "Tiger hunting
can never be done on foot and rarely on
horseback. It is usually carried on
from a a a I W
method of beating the jungle for a tiger attended t». Charges moderate.
Is employed."
A Creeping Death-
Blood poisons creeps up towards the
heart, causlDg death.
3.
E. Stearns,
Belle Plalne, Mlun.. writes that a
friend dreadfully Injured his hand,
which swelled up like blood poisoniDg
Bucklen's Arnica Salve drew out the
golsoD,
healed'the wound, and saved
is life. Best in the world for burns
and sores. 26c
drug store.
at P. A. Clemmer's
Farmers and Horsemen.
Are your horseB afflicted with Heaves?
If so you should at once procure a bot
tle of
I/CBBS HEAVE DBOFB,
fail.
a sure
cure for Heaves Short-wiudedness
Coughs and Indigestion. For sale by
Shuttle worth Drug Co.,
P.
mer's, Wm. Connolly, iiDd Lomas &
Mllz lOOyl
Mother bray's Sweet Powder for Clilldfeo,
Successfully used by Mother Gray,
nurse in the Children's Home in New
York, Cure Feverishness, Bad Stom
ach, Teething Disorders, move and
regulate the Bowels and Destroy
worms. Over30,000 testimonials.
Women as Well as Men Are Dad%
miserable by Kidney and
Bladder Trouble.
Kidney trouble preys upon the mind
discourages and lessens ambition beauty,
vigor and cheerful
ness soon disappear
when the kidneys are
out of order or dis
eased.
cess, this one fully meets all require- passage, it is yet afflicted with bed-wet- I
ments. Those who formerly lived in I ting, depend upon it, the cause of the diffi-'
1
They\
At all druggists, 25c Sara-1
Die FREE Address Allen S. Olmsted,
Le Boy, N. Y. Uw4
Neglected colds make fat grave
yards.1' Dr. Wood's Norway Pi eSyr
up helps men and iremen to a happy,
vigorous old ege.
Kidney trouble has
become so prevalent
that it is not uncom
mon for a child to be
born afflicted with I
weak kidneys. If the
child urinates too often, if the urine scalds
the flesh, or if, wlien the child reachesan Droits
age wlien it should be able to control the
wretched dens now are tenants in an culty is kidney trouble, and the first 7 -,
edifice which with the land represents step should be towards the treatment of
^Estate Bought and bold
these important organs. This unpleasant
trouble is due to a diseased condition of Jl
the kidneys and bladder and not to a sS&nww*
habit as most people suppose.
Women as well as men are made miser-
able with kidney and bladder trouble
1
and both need the same great remedy.
The mild and the immediate effect of
Swamp-Root is soon realized. It is sold
by druggists, in fifty
cent and one-dollar
size bottles. You may
have a sample bottle
by mail free, also a Homo of Bwimp-Boot.
The building is five stories high and pamphlet telling all about Swamp-Root
Miss Lauraine Mead
Pupil of
W.:n.
Sherwood, Chicago
TEACHER OF 'PIANO PLAYING.
RATES OF TUITION:
Term 20 hour lesssons, $12.00
20 hour 10 00
20 hour 6 00
There is a distressing sameness about
the quarters. When you have looked
at two rooms you have seen all there Is
to see. There Is too much brick and
mortar. It bears the aspect of a per
son. It is a thousand times better, no
doubt, than the quarters which were
torn down, and it is vastly superior to
the habitation of the average laborer,
no matter what his country, but Man-1 Miss Mead studied in Boston one
Chester will never erect another tene- year, part of the time was under my
ment house on so elaborate a scale. Immediate Instruction in the branch
KEKEttUHCKS:
Miss Mead is a conscientious and In
telligent music teacher.—-Wm. H.
Sherwood.
The city is now at work on afar dif-1 of piano. Miss Mead is very studious
and her progress was entirely satis
factory. She has had experience
ID
teaching and it affords me great pleas
ure to recommend her.—F. M. Davis,
Professor of Piano and Violin, Boston
Training School of Music.
Goal, Wood, Posts.
Lime, Cement.
Market Street, Cresco, Iowa
DELIVERED FREE IN TOWN,
2000 Lbs.
Fora-Ton Every Time.
Quality, Honest Weight and Accurate
Measurement Guaranteed.
WM. F. EATHEET.
My stable is turnighed with New Riga
with Good Horses and Caretul Driv
ers when wanted. I am paepared
to give the public first-class service
at reasonable prices.
Barn opposite the Dapot, Cresco, la.
ARLINGTON HOTEL
$1 PER DAY.
L. J. LONG, Proprietor.
P. G. BUTTON, Y. 8.
Assistant State Veterinary
Surgeon.
Honor Qraduate of the Ontario Veterinary Col
lege, Toronto, Canada, member of tbe Onta
rio Veterinary Medical Association.
I ITreats all diseases of tbe domesticated ani
mals by the most approved methods. Speolal
.. .—.
0
perat40ns
a
Also WOOL in season and
STOCK at all times at
Feii Goettel's Heat Met.
.TOIJN FAltNSWOHTII.rr.
n. W.YOUNG,Oaebler.
BElCHIM)
1
including many of the thousands of testi-
monial letters received from sufferers WEBSTER, Pres.
5^8 C. W.
RKED,
Kilmer & Co., j'
cured. In writing Dr. ---,
Binglianitoii, N. Y., be sure and mention
this paper. Don't make any mistake,
but remember the name, Swamp-Root,
Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the ad- owner aud Proprietor of the
dress, Biughamton, N. Y., on every ^. _r, t. j. piete
bottle.
[CRESOO, lOWA.iJfj
D.kp? irfii
leetiot'*.
Livery and Sale J.L. Scriplnre, ffl.P.
Stable.«
w. 0. LENTH, PROP.
1
Corner of Market and Elm 8trcots
2This house has been Newly Refit
ted and Befurnlshed. t-
Electric Lights
MIS
p£S M0INt5
A. Clem-
TENT &
MFRSOF^KINDS
0|rCANVAS
GOODS-
WRITE FOR CATALOGUE & PRICCI
ENGLtSH
OrlflnnT r.v/' iU'iiulne.
AFK. AU»y-« rci. Immltl
for CUlOHfiS' F.i.-s KNGL1SH
in 2'KI at'l UK-iulli'i boxes, sealed
uitli riiiix'it Ta!.c-ito oilier.
I ItotiffurouA fcutMtlftitloflft nnd liuitu*
U0n»« Uu? uf four Dn^gi t. or m-art 4*. ia
A if
tinlUlL
10,000TmUowDI*U.
SoMby
eltnrufilguTr Cli'&hn-U-r (3^,
MadlMD 0auATt« I*E
1 w»* /'T
Mdi.
buys ami Hell* Government
Bom1
uul uther SIICURLTIBP. ftnl «IOPS geiierul bank
IK luMncsN
B. F.
PhYsician and Surgeon
Cresco, Iowa.
Kooms 8
mi
ir night, prompt
ar.'-enaed to. unarpen moaerate.
Oillce and Hospital flrst door west o( Armory
building, Cresco.
Northern Iowa Telpplirrp fltce No. 12
Residence lfcSM Standard Telephone No 40
2000 Hides Wanted
Highest Price Paid.
.•
iV
on Eurwpe for Sale
improved avd Unimproved li eft-
on Commission.
Passage Tickets at Reduced Bitter,
AMERICAN
Loan aud Trust
Cifetm
CRESCO, IOWA
,steL
Vice Pre
DAVIS.
Seeretarj
Only Com
IT 9F ABSTRACT BOOKS
In Howard Connty.
Abstraots of Tit.le to Lends anc
Town Lots furnished on short notice.
Special advantapen for making Farm
Loans and selling Real Estate.
J0HN McCOOK
Attorney and Counselor at
-f ilty^CBESGO, IOWA/
Will practice In at! the courts of the state*
make loans, and attend to buying and selling
real estate and aeourltle«.
Office over Orenco Union Savings bank.. -.
Attorney and Counselor at Law.
'.J'M
Lyric Hall Block,
JOSETH eeilFlK
Attorney and Coureelor
at Law.
ESIj'JUCA.,
Offloe over Oonwsy'i Furniture Store.
Will Praotloe in All the Courts of tli*
-f.?
t~'
1
State-"
'f -V
M. WOpW,
JUSTICE OF THE PEACE,
OBBSOO, IOWA.
Office with Barker & Upton, In Trior Ctf
cgi Bank Building.
snd 4, over J.
Drug Store.
vslii
Luer'e 4^1
John M. Cannon
Attorney aid Cornier At-Lsv
Real-Estate','Agent and Genera
Insurance 'Business
ron Booms In Piatt Bnlldiop.
CRESCO, A
DR.R1.M0RT0N,
DENTIST.
Roomto second floor .Thomp
son's new buinding, North
PostoflBce, Cresco -4*
N A. Blackburn
Attorney and Counselor
at Law.
Front Rooms over Kellow's Gro-
HH '*ery,
V.6co,iow.
E R- PRECIOUS
Veterinary Surgeon
Cresco, 'la.
Special attention given to all diseaseg of do
mestlo animals'. All calls, both In town ana
country receive promm attention.
Office over Olemmer's
Drug (Store.
K. KBUOSS, X». D,
B,a
i'.. ntlnc
4
Booms 7 and 8 Berg Blook,
I'ltEBCO, IOWA
All oparatlom rendered palnlem by tbe u«e
of Aerated Hypnotic or Pure Narcotized Atr»
»»i«uworld.,(8a'
auaatbetlc known to tb*
QB. O.H.KBMOGO,
hfj DENTAL SURGEON,
OBESOO, IOWA.
ciit in bis lire I
irnlirn
CtTet in
lr»r rf Mui
DON'T BE FOOLED*
Si
Take the genuine, orlgloal
ROCKY MOUNTAIN TEA
on*y MudUon McrfJ*
vi.t* C'j., W|$.
yot welt Our tra
»iu
f*
.Vj
*9
aiti*