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Mia If 3 1 GENERAL LABOR NEWS. Knights of Labor Eeleased. PARSONS, Kansas. August 2. The executive committee ol! the Knights of Labor, who for the past for ty-five days have been confined in the county jail at Parsons, Kan., for the non-payment of fines imposed for con spiracy against the Missouri Pacific Railway company, v. ere released on Aug. 12 by the county commissioners. The Knights of Labor were given to understand that if thev would pay the costs of the suit the committee would be released, the lines to be held against them to secure their future good behavior. The train from the south, arriving here at 3 o'clock, brought them to this town. They were met at the depot by 400 people, princi pally Knights of Labor and their fami lies, and escorted to the Knights of Labor ha!I, upon which had been hoisted a new United States flag, above whice floated the banner of the Knights of Labor. Boycotted Brewers. A St. Louis, Mo., dispatch says: The Central Labor union has got at last a genuine fighting issue with the brewers who have been quietly testing their strength with their union employ es ever since the latter part of May, when Sclinaider's and Stifel/s beer were boycotted by the union. Last Fri day night at the regular meeting of the union, Richard-Schlagmtvveit, delegate from the brewer's union, of which he is president, read to'the assembly a ser ies of resolution which he said had been presented to the brewers at their last meeting and had been adopted and signer! by all of they except Miller Bros. The resolutions declared that unless the boycott was removed by Sept-, every union man in their employ would be discharged. The resolution was re jerred to a committee of three to be present to the local unions for action. President Schlaginiweit said, after the meeting, that the adoption of the reso lution indicated that the brewers had hurt by the boycott, which would not be removed, but be made firmer. A Printers' Strike. Several days ago, in accordance with an: order of the Cleveland Typo graphical union, the union printers em ployed on the Leader and Plaindealer, of that city, demanded that the price of composition be increased from 35 cents to 40 cents per 1,000 ems. The demand was refused by both papers. Las!: Fri day night the union printers decided to quit work, whereupon the increase was granted, pending arbitration, by the Plaindealer and the men went to work in that oflice. In the meantime the union priliters employed by the Leader, supposing that the Plaindealer com positors were out on strike, quit their cases UK! left theclnce. The non-union men remained and the Leader was is sued this morning as usual. Ail the Plaindealer printers are members of the union, hence if there had been a strike at That office it would have been im possible, perhaps, to get out a paper. The Leader declined to arbitrate, but promptly advanced the rates to 40 cents. Grocery Clerks Organize. Grocery clerks to the number of fifty two met at the hall at 250 Hennepin avenue last Friday evening and pro ceeded to orgavize the Grocery Clerks' association. Not much was done be side organizing and talking over plans for the future. The following gentle men were elected officers of the associa tion President, W. .13. Hall vice president, Gal Gilbert secretary, Harry Waldron assistant secretary, A. J. Chamberlain treasurer, W. Welch. A. committee consisting of H. P. Christopher, W. B, Cleator, E. S. Thompson, Col. Gilbert and A. J. Chamberlain, was appointed to draw up a constitution and present it at the next meeting of the association, which will be held in the same hall August 25. A committee consisting of A1 Waters, T. P. Edwards and C. H. Dean was appointed to secure a hall and report at the next meeting. Much enthusiasm was manifested by those present and it is expected that the as sociation. will be a strong one. Eeady for a Strike. Between 200 and 300 meat handlers in the packing house of Robert Warren & Co., at the Chicago stock yards quit work at 9 o'clock Friday morning. The reason assigned is that -they were re quired to load cars handled by the im ported switchmen. Ever since the strike of the Lake Shore switchmen trouble has been expected from them in the packing-houses, who were regarded as the natural allies of the strikers. The employes of several packing houses liave given their employers to under stand that they would not handle Lake Shore freight or load the cars of that company. No attempt was made to load such cars at the Warren house until this morning, when half a dozem empty beef cars were run up to the house and the men ordered to load them. They refused peremptorily and threatened to strike if the order was re newed. The firm again ordered the cars loaded and the men stopped work and went out of the house. "I have ordered my house closed," said Robert Warren. "We sold out our hogs that •we bought this morning, and now the men can have all the strike they want." "J»'. .E A Vagrant Tells How He Was Once ressed and Protected by an Elephant. "I'm a tramp. Whether I was driven to the road by hard luck or a de sire to lead an easy life is none of your business. I'm no better or no worse than the average. Some men, with my advantages, would have been !n Con gress to-day. Some others, with my temptations, would have been in State prison long ago. If the world owes me any thing I'll forgive the debt. If I owe the world any thing she'll have to dust around lively to collect the debt. A year or two ago, while I was tramp ing in Indiana, I struck a streak of hard luck. It ad come on winter and my toes were out, my pockets ditto, and 1 was dressed in summer clothing. I tramped fourteen miles alon^ a thickly settled highway one day and failed to turn up even a slice of bread. On the other hand, I was bitten three times by dogs, and several farmers threatened to shoot me. When night came I was half frozen and the other half starved. It was no use to apply to a house for lodg ings, and I got my yye on a straw stack and stowed myself away. "Now, then, there's nothing mean abojita straw-stack, but it doesn't begin with a first-class hotel for comfort. You may work into a stack your length and chink up the hole behincl you and you'll find it cold. The air seems to sift from all directions, and you fail asleep to dream of floating over a cold sea on an iceberg. The weather was about zero and by midnight I found I must get out of that or freeze to death.. "There was a barn about forty rods away, and I crawled out and "took a run. One of the small doors was un locked, and I crept in to find the placo a thousand times more comfortable than the stack. It was dark as a pocket in there, and I had no matches to strike a light. I began feeling my way across the lloor, hoping to strike some bags or blanket.- for cover, when suddenlv some thing soft and warm touched my arm, glided around, my waist, and I was lift ed off my feet, Did I yell? No, sir. I was too frightened to open my potato trap. I dropped my arms, and my hands came in contact with—what do you think? "An elephant had his trunk around me. He pulled me gently up to him, and then felt me over with his trunk, as if to see what manner of man I was. As he offered no violence to me my .nerve came back pretty soon, and I patted hk on the.head and called him pet names. He had a big stall to him self, and as soon as I could give him the slip I began to back off. But he wouldn't jhave it that way. He reached out, took 'hold under my arms, and swung me around into his manger, packed with hay, and I'm blessed if the keeper didn't find me there and fast asleep in the morning! I was pretty well satisfied that rhe beast had no intentions of mak ing my tramp existence any worse than it was, and as soon as I got warm I went to sleep. "What aroused me iu the morning was that elephant trumpeting, away iii high dudgeon, and I turned out to'find that she wouldn't lot her keeper come within tei feet of her. He coaxed and scolded but she was firm While she would trumpet at him, she would caress me, and it was from my hands that she got her breakfast. You see, she was a cicrus elephant in winter quarters, and tiiere were a good many other animals in and about the barn. The long and short of it was, I was hired to take care of Empress through the winter, and I should have gone on the road with her in the spring but for my own stupidity. One day I got drunk and stirred up a lion with a pitchfork. He struck "me through the bars of the cage, raking my left- arm from shoulder to wrist, and the doctors had to amputate it to save my life. That's all, gents, and if you have an old coat, a pair of boots, or any thing else to help a tramp trim up for the spring campaign, I shall be for ever grateful."—Detroit Free Press. A HORSE'S JOURNEY. Why Horses Should Not Be Driveni Over Thirteen Miles a Day. According to the Hon. John E. Rus sell, secretary of the Massachusetts Board of Agriculture, the regular jour ney of a horse should not exceed twelve or thirteen miles. This is as great a ^distance, he thinks, as can be economi cally allotted a horse as a day's journey for every day in the week. If he has a longer daily journey he must have a day or two off each week. This day's work of the traveling horse is based on the experience of stage and car com panies. For the stage, where more speed is required, ten miles have been found the limit of an economical day's journey. But a great deal depends on the speed. Give a horse plenty of time and he can do a longer daily journey than ho can if urged beyond an easy gait. In emergencies a good horse can do fifty or sixty miles in a day. Sev enty-five and eighty miles ha.ve been driven. But suck long, fast journeys are very trying to the horse,' and he needs to' be managed with great care and judgment to prevent harm from such violent, continued exertion. Such driving can not be repeated often with safotyl The regular day's journey should be lengthened or shortened ac cording to the. condition and character of the i"\id and the weight of the load. Then there is a difference in individu als, and what one horse does with ease, may be very hard for another. Feed and care are also factors in the problem not to be overlooked.—Chicago Times. —The unusual severity of the past winter gave Englishmen an opportunity of indulging in nany sports common to colder countries, but rarely enjoyed there. Skating has been general, and during the weexthat followed the new year many toboggans and sleighs were seen in and about the vicinity of Lon don but all these amusements were eclipsed by a man who built an ice yacht and was able -to sail it for two weeks in January on the frozen surface of the Reading reservoir, to the delight of the whole neighborhood. —In The Times oflice in Savannah, G-a., is hung up a human skull, on the back of which is labled: "Last of a man wbo came in to see the editor." 'Prevailing Fashions in Clothes and Dogs forXadles and Gentlemen. I it is customary in the spring of the -year to poke fun at the good,clothes of jour friends and well-wishers, the ladies, ibut it occurs to me that this spring 'there is a small field for the witty and jsarcastic critic of female attire. There has not been a time since I first began to make a study of this branch of science when the ladies seem to have manifested 'better taste or sounder judgment in the •matter of dress. Even bonnets seem to be less gro tesque this season than heretofore, al though the high, startled bonnet, the 'bonnet that may be characterized as the excelsior bonnet, is still retained by some, though how it is retained has al ways been a mystery to me. Perhaps iit holds its place in society by means of a long, black pin, which apparently 'passes through the brain of the wearer. Street costumes of handsomely fitting ,and unobtrusive shades of soft and com jfortable goods will be generally in favor, and the" beautiful and symmetrical American arm with a neatly fitting Isleeve on the outside of it will gladden .the hearts of the casual spectator once Jmore. The lady with the acute elbow and italicized clavicle will make a strong ef fort this season to abolish the close-fit tfkg and extremely attractive sleeve, •but it will be futile. The small dog will be worn this season in shades to match the costume. For Vlark and brown combinations in street [dresses the black-and-tan dog will be very much in favor, while the black-and jdrab pug will be affected by those wear ing these shades in dress. Small pugs that are warranted not to bag at the ,'knees are commanding a good price. S.pitz dogs to match lynx •or fox trimmed garments or spring wraps are now being sprinkled with camphor and laid aside for the summer. iCoach dogs of the spotted variety will be worn with polka-dot costumes. Tall, willowy hounds with wire tails will be •much affected bv slender young ladies and hydrophobia. Antique dogs with weak eves, asthma and an air of lan guor will be used a great deal this sea son to decorate lawns and railroad crossings. Young dogs that are just {budding into doghood will be noticed :through the spring months trying their 'new teeth on the light spring pantaloons of male pedestrians. Styles in gentlemen's clothing have not materially changed. Lavender pantaloons, with an air of settled mel ancholy and benzine, are now making •their appearance? apd young men try ing to eradicate the droop in the knees of last summer's garment may be seen in their luxurious apartments most any calm spring evening. An old nail-brush, with a solution of ammonia and prussic acid, will remove traces of custard pie from light shades in pantaloons. This preparation will also remove the pan taioous. The umbrella will be worn over the shoulder and in the eye of the passing: pedestrian, very much as usual on picas-! ant days, and left behind the door in a" dark closet on rainy days. Gentleman will wear one pocket-: handkerchief in the side pocket, with the corner greatly emerging, and another in the hip pocket, as they did last season, the former for decorativq purposes and the latter for business. This is a wise provision and never fails to elicit favorable comment. The custom of wearing a few kernel^ of roasted coffee or a dozen cloves in .the little cigarette pocket of the cuta-: way coat will still continue, and the! supply will be replenished between the' acts as heretofore. Straw hats will be chased down the streets this spring by the same gentle-, men who chased them last spring, and in some instances the same hat3 will be used. Shade trees will be worn a little: .lower this summer, and will therefore: •succeed in wiping off a larger crop of '.plug hats, it is hoped. Linen dusters, with the pockets carefully soldered to gether, have not yet made their appear ance.—Bill Nye, in Chicago Times. Humane Treatment of Prisoners. Here is a description of what they do 'with their. prisoners in the Canton of Neuchatel. A good handicraft is taught •to every prisoner, and all who are well 'behaved are, after a period, placed with a master of the trade which they have Severally The Latest Advertising Dodge. Another effective advertising scheme has been invented in England. A lead ing confectioner was ordered to put up 10,000 tin boxes of candy, hermetically sealed with an advertisement of a cheap watch in each box, and in some of the boxes, in addition thereto, a coupon en titling the holder to one of the watohes. On the occasion of the Oxford and Cam bridge boat raoe, the 10,000 water-tight boxes were thrown into the river, to be 'dived and grappled and raked for by anybody who thought it worth while to take so much trouble to set the sweets, and possibly a watch. NO little exoite ment and talk was oaused, and the ob ject of the enterprising watch-vender— the getting of much advertising—waa fully attained.—N. T. Sun. —Jacob C. Barrett, of Newport, ta., while working in the-woods, hung his vest on a bush. The woods caught fire,i and when Barrett went for his vest ontyj the buttons remained, His gold watch! lay on the ground ticking steadily inj spite of the fare. —Pittsburgh Post. The Extravagance of the Roman Emperors and Their Nobility. The history of the Caesars, with some exceptions, is the narrative of a contin ual orgie. Take the notorious group at random—Commodus, Caligula. Tibe rius, Verus, Vitelus, Nero, Heliogaba lus, Domitian. These men spent their lives in a round of monstrous debauch eries. The day and night, we are as sured, were not long enough for their revels. Yerus, the first to increase the number of guests from nine to twelve, prolonged his supper throughout the night. Nero sat at table from midday to midnight Tiberius spent two days and a night at the festive board. They had huge appetites—not only the gigan tic Maximilian, who devoured forty pounds of flesh meat and drank five gallons of wine at a meal, but finical dandies like Commodus, who ate •even in the bath Vitellius, who osased eating only when he :slepft: Domitian, who "ate out of his •hantf' to stay his stosuach in the inter vals of regular repasts. Heliogabalus was perhaps the most elaborate, Vitel lius the mo3t extravagant, in his daily fare. The latter squandered in seven .months £7,000,000, chiefly on his table. •The total staggers belief, but let U3 ex amine the figures on the other aide. The Roman empire is reported to have •paid £55 or so for a mullet a brace of [pigeons cost £1 12s. At an entertain fc gf th iseven thousand of the .rarest birds were iserved up. One individual spent the, :sum of £5,000 on a single dish made of! the tongues of the choicest sin gin gi •:birds. The Roman bon viVanl, sup-4 ing on the brains of peacocks andi 'pheasants, the tongues of nightingales .and the roes of the most delicate fishes,: swallowed thousands of pounds at a meal and we need only multiply the individual expense by the number of the guests to form a notion of ihe cost of a high class dinner in the days of the Cessars.' iment given to Yitellius by his brother itwo thousand of the rarest fish and A supper in the Apollo meant one or two thousand pounds thrown to the purveyors. But the Emperors were certainly the most reckless in the prof ligacies of the table. Seneca and Taci tus are among- the authorities who tell us that Heliogabalus spent £20,000 on one supper that Nero, master, of "the House of Gold,'' ate a dish which cost over £30,000, and drank a Lumper still more precious,. It is asserted further that the Emperor Yerus treated twelve friends to a feast which cost £46,000, and Seneca is responsible for the state ment that Caligula spent £80.000 on a supper. The magnificencc of the Em perors was imitated, if not equaled, by citizens like the Apicii: like JSsop, the actor, and his son Genius like Vedius Pollio, who fattened his lampreys on the flesh ?f murdered slaves.—JV-me teenth Century. THE LETTER "R." It Divides the United States in Three Dis tinct and \V«ll-Delined Sections. The use or misuse of the letter "h" in England determines a man's social po sition. He may drive in a carriage' with outriders in livery, and his wife rustle in satin and "glitter with jewels, yet if they say "orse" for horse and "heye" for eye, their excommunication from so-called polite society may be' -taken for granted. Of course no one twill deny that many excellent English! :men and women have led useful lives,: died and have gone to Heaven, wha never once put the "h" where it prop erlv belonged, aud wrere in every way' superior to those who could pronounce! it as Hamlet enjoins, "trippingly on the tongue." In the United States it is "r" that un mistakably proves a man's origin, if not his social standing and his mora! character. In New England find the Middle States the natives have a peJ culiar way of dislocating the potent' liquid. They detach it from words, like "near" and "dear," making them '"nea" and "dea," and tack it on to •others like Judea and Isaiah and Em 'ma, making them, respectively, "Ju dear," "Isaiaher" and "Emmer." This, it has been argued, is a fault .peculiar only to the uneducated classes. ?But learned, under the oversight iof the police and of a member of a voluntary committee. This committee is composed of 1,400 active members, out of a total population of 102,000. The prisoner, when "provisionally liber ated," has to present himself 'every week, to his patron, who receives the reports of his master and of the police. The patron sends an abstract of these reports to the governor of the prison, and in this way, if his conduct remains good, the man's liberty is gradually restored, and he regains his position in society—with the additional advantage of experience of discipline and knowledge of a trade. M. de La veleye, in describing this system, says that a Swiss canton is in some things a 'century in advance of the rest of the world.—N. Y. Post. unprejudiced and truthful ob servers declare that they have heard it [from persons of unquestionable culture, ifrom lecturers, authors and clergymen, 'even in the inmost sanctuaries of Bos jton itself. In the West the Eastern itourist is impressed by the manner in 'which the ,'r" is rolled. It seems the .most prominent letter in the Western alphabet while in the South it is heard very rarely. The people, however, do not imitate their Eastern fellow-coun try men by adjusting the balance, and making the letter suffix where it is wholly superfluous. And their soft, musical tones make the fault rather pleasing to ears accustomed to catarrhal gutterais and high nasal tones sharpen ed by east winds. The side-show man, the vender of patent medicines who varies the monotony of selling his nos trums by strummidg upon a battered guitar, or sawing an asthmatic fiddle 1 the leading man of the traveling theat rical company, the ringmaster of the perennial circus, the negro minstrel—all these drop the final 4,r as an affecta tion of extreme gentility. We can •never hojJe to be a really united people) until representative from ail sectional of the country meet in convention and! [agr^e upon a National pronunciation' to? the letter «'r.' '—Interior. —A Cincinnati gentleman was walk-! Ing along the street the other day withj a.young lady hanging on each arm when ia thief stepped up and relieved him on his watch. The young man saw the' deed and strove to oatoh the thief, but] the alarm of the girls for his personal! .safely was. so great that they clung to! his arms and implored him to desist, asj the robber would kill him. Of coursej he had to stop and argue the case withj the ladies, and in the meantime the thief escaped.-—Cincinnati Time3._ }•.. —A little fellow at San Juan, CaL, recently received a present of a shot-1 gun for committing to memory one! thousand verses of the Bible. The next day the youthful prodigy accidentally shot his grandmother in the knee, lacer ating it so badly that it will have to be amputated.—Ban Francisco Call. OF FOE SALE •BY 312 Hennepin Avenue. Lot between Twenty-ninth and Thirtieth, on Harriet avenue: only S1.250. Six lots on A Id rich avenue south, between Thirty-second arid Thirty-third streets, lull size: only 8(550 each. 1 lot, east front, corner Lyndale avenue and Thirty-second street $1,050. 1 lot on Pleasant avenue, between Thirty-first and Thirty-second streets south, full size only $1,050. Fine til yixlzl foot let on Nicollet avenue, be tween Twenty-fifth and Twenty-sixth streets, ?s,.m Pine lot on lildgewood avenue, 100x217, for 87,000. 82f4 feet on Oak Grove street at §125 per front foot. :i lots on Fourth avenue south and Twenty ninth street at ft 1,250 each. 3 US-loot lots on Thirteenth avenue south and Thirtv-hfth streets, east fronts, on corner, $800. 8 east front 55-foot lots, corner Twenty-third avenue north andSixtu street only SI,000. 2 lots on Park avenue, between Thirty-fifth aud Thirty-sixth street: each $1,000. 1 lot corner Twenty-ninth street aud Portland avenue, east front. Price, 81,500. 1 lot oil Portland avenue, between Twenty ninth andThirtieth. Price £1,800. 1 lot B0 feet front, in Lake of Isles addition, on Franklin avenue only $1,500. 2 lots on Aldrich avenue, between Twenty fourth and Twenty-fifth streets south, SI,500 each. 1 lot corner Twenty-sixth street and Eigh teenth avenue south lot 58x127, only $1,500 east front. 1 fine east front lot in Monroe Bros", addition. $500. 1 lot on Ciinton avenue, between Eighteenth and Nineteenth streets, §5,000. 98 feet, east side Mary Place, at 23.05 per frent foot. One 80 foot lot on Aldrich avenue, between Fifth and Sixth avenues north. $2,500. 5 lots, east front, on Fourteenth avenue south, between Twenty-sixth aud Twenty-sev enth streets, &1,150 each. 2 lots on .Second avenue south, between Thirty-fifth and Thirty-sixth streets, for SI. 100. 2 lots corner Fortieth aud Fourth avenue south, §375 each. 2 lots, between Twenty-lirst and Twenty-sec ond, on Tenth avenue south each §1,300. FARMS, Wild Lands, Stocks, Etc., For sale cheap or exchange for City Property. Houses and lots SOLD FOR SMALL PAYMENTS DOWN, BALANCE MONTHLY. A. Manufactures Jewelry, Repairs Watches, and Loans Money On Watches, Diamonds and Jewelry. NO. 8 WASHINGTON AVE. NORTH. G.P. GOULD, N. P. LI ljknghen, Pres,, See. and Treas. V.-P. and Gen'l Mgr. LILJENGREN FURNITURE AND LUMBER CO. MANUFACTURE TO ORDER Art Furniture OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. Japanese Furniture in new designs, Upholstering, Bank, Office and Eesi dence Furnishing a Specialty dealers in all kinds of Hard Wood Lumber, also Kiln Dried Lumber. Store and Office, 1216 and 1218 Pirst Avenue South, Telephone call 133-4. MINNEAPOLIS. JAMES R. CORRIGAN, Attorney and Coun sellor-at-Law, 110 Hennepin Avenue, Min neapoliB. Minn. Opposite City" Hall. JT. BYRNES, Attorney and Counsellor-at Law, 112 Hennepin Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. FOHN B. QUINN, Attoruey-at-Law, Minne apolis, Minn. 400 Temple Court. JOHNSON & KN1TTLE, Lawyers, 213 Nic ollet ave., rooms 10, etc., Minneapolis, Minn. WWashington ILLIAM KENNY, Attorney-at-La-w, 43 avenue s., Minneapolis, Minn. OHN J. MacHALE, Attorney and Coun sellor-at-Law, 43 Washington Ave. South. Room 4. CHItlS. A. GALLAGHER. JOHN H. STEELE. Q-^GHEE* STEELE, Attorneys and Counsellors-at-Law, PRACTICE IN STATE AND UNITED STATES COURTS Room 565 Temple Court, MINNEAPOLIS, MINN. AT YOUR OWN PRICE. aloon Counters, Ice Boxes, Mirrors, Store Counters, Shelving, Circle Front Grocery Bins,etc. •, A Full Stock Always on Hand! Please give us a call and conrtnee yourself. The. Chicago Saloon aid Store Fta Co., 217 First Avenue North, corner Washington Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. J. T. GORTON, IBstrtoer S3aop SOI JS IcoUet Avenue, Hair eutt:inr a specialty. Turkish and Elec tro Thermal Baths. -Plairt Baths, cents. Open all day Sunday. 10 cents a shave. P. DONOHOE. J. Contractor Builder Plans and estimates furnished for ail classes of buildings. 2011 Bloomington Ave. S« Alterations and Bepairs Promptly Executed. UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS, 324 Cedar Avenue -ALSO 223 Plymouth Avenue* V3*VA complete stock of everything in our hno always on hand. Open day and nnrht. Cedar avenue call, ti-15-2. laid Mi? Pate! Turkish, .Russian, Electric, Medicated, Sham pooing. Hot and Cold Ladies' day, Tuesday, from 9 a. m. till 4 n. m. Oents hours, every day, except ladies' dav, lroui ba. m. to 9 p.m. Sunday, from 0 a. to 1 p. m. Private room l'or ladies aud children. Hair cutting and shampooing-. Scheig & Scheig, Proprietors, Turkish, 31 'Russian, SI Electric, «1.25 Shampoo Bath. 50 ets.: massucotreatment,31.5o', THE POPULAR liSt Has removed to his uev,- store, 91S Nicollet Avenue, Where he will be glad to see all his old friends and customers. Special Attention Paid to Pine Custom Work Repairing done with neatness and dispatcb. Painless Dentists Dr. W. J, Hurd, Manager and Prop. 3? Washington Ave. S.! lirst-clnss workmen, low prices, and the only pain less establishment in tlie city. mmmmm The White is King! The Gri'eat Double Feed Sawin^Machine TUB MiTJc IS A Beautiful, Reliable, unit!:. Lk ht "Run ning, PERFECT SEWING MACHINE, With its Automatic Bobbin-Winder. New Patent Vibrator, Perfect Belt Ke placer, Double Feed and Elegant At tachments is the Best Satisfying Sew ing Machine in the World. Repairing all makes of machines a 1 specialty. Call and see us. F. W. BARRETT, 314 fllOOLLET AVENUE. r* vh