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THE AEGTJS. WEDNESDAY. MAUCH J 3. 1901. s Professional Cards. ATTORNEYS. McCASKRIN & McCASKBIN, Attorney t Law. Rock Island and Milan. Rock Island office over Krell & Hath a store. Milan office o Main street. Tl. C OORNIIXT. B. D. COHWBIXT. CONNELLY & CONNELLY, Attorneys at Law. Money loaned. Office over Thoirik' drug store, corner of Second avenue and Seven teenth street. JACKSON & HURST, t . Attorneys at Law. Office in Rock Island National Bank Building, WM. I- I.I7DOLPH. ROBBBT. B. RsTKGLDS LUDOLPH & REYNOLDS, Attorneys at Law. Mnnev to loan. General legal business. No tary nubile. 1705 Second avenue. Butord block. B. n. 8WKKMST. C. I WALKIB SWEENEY & WALKER, Attorneys and Counsellors at Law. Office In Bengstonlblock. C. J. BKABLB, a B. MA BS HA LI, SEARLE & MARSHALL, Lawyers. Moncv to loan on good real estate security. Mitchell & Lyroe block. Kock Island, Illinois McENIRY & McENIRY, Attorneys at Law. Loan money on Rood security; make eolleo tlona. Reference, Mitchell A Lynde, bankers. Office, Mitchell & Lynde buuoing, JOHN K. SCOTT, Lawyer, City attorney of Rock Island. Room 4, Mitcheu Lynae buuaing. pnrsiciANS. DR. CORA EMERY REED. Homoeopathic Physician. Special attention to diseases of women and children, also diseases of eye, ear, nose and throat. Office hours 9:30 to 12 a. m., 1 to 4 p. m. azi jjiiieentn street, kock jsiano. N. M. MOORE. M. D. Star Block. noun I0:i)0 to 11:00 a. m., 3:00 to 4:00 and after : p. m. VETERINARIANS. DR. S. II. MILLER, Veterinary Surgeon and Dentist. AH diseases of horses and cattle treated on approved principles. Surgical operations per formed m a soientino manner. jUogs treated. All calls promptly attended to. Residence, 1110 Fourth avenue. Telephone 406. Office ana lnnrmary, Prick & Kautz s livery barn. DR. M. A. HOLLINGSWORTH, Graduate Veterinarian, Office,' Harper House Pharmacy. Night DKNTISTS. DR. H. G. TRENT, Dentist. Office Hours: 9 to IS: 1 to 5. Avenue. OverMcCabes. 172 1 IJ Second DR. C. W. GRAFTON, Dentist. Rooms over the Boston Shoe Store. Office hours from 8 to 12 a. m. and 1 to 0 p. J. T. TAYLOR, Dentist. umee noura 8:30 to is a. m., i:ro to 5:oo p. m 2i Eighteenth street, opposite union office seiepnone sac. ARCHITECTS. DRACK & KERNS, Architects and Superintendents. Skinner Block. Second floor. FLORIST. HENRY GAETJE, Prop. Cnlpplannock Nursery, Cut Flowers and Designs of all Kinds. City store, 1807 Second ayenue. Telephone Colon a Sand Stone Quarries 8awed building StOne. Ashlar and Trimming a specialty. For cheapness, durability and beauty excelled by none. This tone does not wash or color the wall with alkali, etc Flans sent us for estimates will receive careful attention and be returned promptly as our expense. , Quarries 12 miles from Bock Island on the C. B. A Q. R. R. Trains Nos. 6 and 10 will stop and let visitors o7 and on. Bridge stone, corn crib blocks and foundation stone, any size desired. Samples of Stone and Photos uf buildings can be seen at Boom No. 12, Mitchell & Lynde's build ing. Address: - ARTHUR BURRALL, Manager I Ro2 Island or Colon. HI. 1 KEARNS STRUCK IT RICH How Utah's New Senator Made His Great Strike. A HUE ILLTJSTEATION OF PLUOZ. The Poor Irish Lad Worked Sixteen Hoars a. Day Before He Found Pay Dirt la the 3Iyflofr Mine Then He Seesred the Silver Kins Great ly Respected by All Parties la Utah. Ou Easter morning in the year 1S90 Thomas Kearns, miner, now United States senator from Utah, made his strike and laid the foundation for his fortune. For years he had had the "miner's fever." With a run of Lad luck that would have disheartened most men and lasting seven years, he kept steadily at it, believing that in time he would make his strike. And he did. The story of bis trials and tribulations reads more like a romance. But, then, it has often been said that truth is stranger than fiction, and his case at least fur nishes one of the strongest proofs. Born in Woodstock, Ont., of Irish parentage, young Kearns removed to this country with his family when 10 years of age. His father was a farm er of moderate circumstances, and ho received his first wages as a farmhand. A few years later, when gold was dis covered in the Black Hills, young Kearns moved with the flood of pros pectors westward. For several years he engaged in the business of freight ing and with his "desert ship" hauled provisions and miners' tools Into that wild region, which was swarming at the time with redskins. It was no easy undertaking, fraught with Innu merable dangers and requiring the hardest kind of work. But this associ ation with miners proved to be the best sort of schooling for the man who a few years later was to startle the min ing world with one f the biggest dis coveries on record. His honesty and frankness won the admiration of all whom he encountered, with the result that young Kearns was much sought for when any freighting was to be done. Gradually the great railroads of the country threw out their arms, and in a few years the "ships of the desert" gave way to the puffing steam engine. His occupation gone, young Kearns followed a group of miners one day and located at the mining camp of the Ontario mine, which is still one of the best paying mines in the west. En dowed with the happy disposition of lirin's sons, he cheerfully took up the work of miner aud with pick and shov el engaged with the Ontario shift. He furnishes one of the best illustrations to the youth of this couutry of what pluck and integrity can do. Interesting though the life of Sena tor Kearns may be, the reading public is more concerned with the actual sto ry of his strike tLan anything else. It was the Mayflower that brought over the pilgrims and showed them a new and beautiful country. It was the Mayflower mine that opened up a ner life for Senator Kearns and brought him wealth. While he was working in the Ontario mine he prospected one day in the vi cinity of the Mayflower, as yet an un developed property claimed by a man who had found on the surface a few pieces of galena ore. Day after day young Kearns prospected the property and after awhile became convinced he had found a mine that it would pay to develop. He told his story to his partner, and then the two set about to acquire the property. First of all it was necessary to "bond" it that is, to give a sufficient bond and proceed with the develop ment of the property, the idea being to finally purchase it. A shaft was sunk. and there is no better illustration of the character of the man than this he worked 16 hours a day during the next year. Eight of these hours he devoted to the Ontario mine for wages; the other eight he spent in the May flower working for himself. Deeper and deeper went the great shaft until IS men were necessary to carry on the work. Just at this time the property got in to litigation, and a man of less deter mination would have thrown up the whole matter, disheartened. As yet, however, no ore in considerable quan tities had been found to warrant the belief that the mine was a rich one. t On Easter Sunday morning, after the drills had been at work for hours. Kearns stopped the men and directed that the mine be "shot." This means that the holes drilled were to be filled with giant powder and touched off. There had been many such operations before, but they bad not materialized lore in any quantity. It was -always Kearns, "Well, the next one will Utlll 111V Vl AUU J W "i .) this instance, for after the blast had gone off an immense piece of lead ore weighing in the neighborhood of 200 pounds and as large as a man's body was found lying near the scene of the explosion. At last his financial light had shone, and he fervently thanked God for his good fortune. But was it to be good fortune? The mine was still in litigation, and if it had ever become known that such a largo body of ore had been found the fight against him would have been waged with greater energy. As it was, he was enjoined by the courts from mak ing personal use of the small amount he had been taking out and was re quired regularly to pay it In to the court. In the Mayflower mine 18 men held a secret that meant. If it were divulged. ruin perhaps to the ambitions of v to rare juugmeni, now ever, these men were kept in the mine, find not even the engineer on the sur face knew of the great good fortune that had happened right under his very feet. For weeks and weeks he was kept iu ignorance, and one day, as Kearns returned from the successful termination of his suit, innocently re marked that . he believed they were about to make a strike, since he had I noticed lots of ore in the dirt hauled to the surface. "It was only the trash,' said the senator to a Washington Star man in recounting this Incident, add ing significantly, "There was $3,000 or $40,000 worth of ore piled up right uu der the man's feet, and he knew noth lug of it." I Believing in the future of the miue and convinced that the vein extended In the direction of the Silver King, , Kearns proceeded to acquire that prop erty. It was owned by two old men who had prospected a little, but who were without funds to develop it. For $07,000 the tlaiui was purchased, but i cost five or six times that amount to , acquire the adjoining property in or der to protect the mine. The May flower vein led to the Silver King, and the development of this latter mine i made every one connected with it inde pendently wealthy. There are other mines in Utah in which Senator Kearns has a large In terest, but none of them is as impor tant as the Silver King. The mine is worth today close on to $20,000,000. The acquisition of wealth has not turned the head of Senator Kearns He is still the plain, blunt business man of long ao, scrupulously honest and who regards his word as his bond Every miner in Utah loves him, and it is to these qualifications more than anything else that he has attained the high political position he now holds. Senator Kearns has been Identified with the politics of Utah for a number of years. He was a member of the city council of Park City in 1S93; was chosen a member of the constitutional convention the same year, and in 1S9G was a delegate to the Republican na tional convention at St. Louis. He was one of the bolters that withdrew because of the silver plank, but last year his differences had been forgotten and he was a delegate again to the Philadelphia convention and an out and out McKinley man. He has been n member of the Republican state com niittee since Utah obtained her state hood and before that was a member of the territorial committee. There are few men in Utah who can boast the popularity of Senator Kearns. Broad and liberal in his religious views, he commands the respect of all sects: cenerous to a fault and a philan thropist of no small parts, he has won for himself the loving admiration of all classes. One of his recent benevolent acts was the building of a church or phanage at a cost of $100,000, under the direction of the good Sisters of Charity, where the poor and needy children of the state, without regard to religion or race, find refuge and means for acquiring an education with which" to take up the battle of life. STRIKERS NOW BOSSES. Mlllmen liaised Money aud Unlit Their Own Sawmill. Sawmill operatives who went on strike In San Francisco recently ara now running a big co-operative mill. Seeing no other way to supply the un ion carpenters of the city with union mill material and failing to induce the mills to start up on the eight hour ba sis, the strikers decided to raise the money to build a mill of their own with the assistance of organized labor. The unions have now erected the big gest mill in the state of California The wheels of this concern are running on full time, and its perfect machinery is turning out eight hour mill work as fast as 2,000 union carpenters can place It on the buildings in the city. The mill is equipped with the best machinery in the market. Three shifts of 75 men each run the mill night and day. This is the first time in the history of organized labor where such an effort was put forward to win a strike. The new concern Is owned by the Progressive Tlaniug Mill company, a corporation formed by delegates repre senting the various local unions in the city that have subscribed for the stock. It was chartered with a capital of $100,000, or 20,000 shares at ?5 per share, which were sold only to bona fide local unions and not to individual members. The company is entirely free from debt. Cash has been paid for everything purchased to date., The value of the plant is about $23,000. Some of the employers are offering as high as $7 per day to any of their old, experienced hands who will return to work, but the men are determined not to go back until they get the eight hour day. Hatehet For Mrs. Katlan. The Kogers Silver Tlate company completed a full sized hatchet, heavily plated with silver, which has been shipped to Wichita, Kan., addressed to Mrs. Carrie Nation, the saloon wreck er. The instrument was inclosed in a leather case, so airanged that Mrs. Nation may carry it handily when on her crusades. The express package containing the hatchet and case was Inscribed, "ftrom Thomas S. Turrell. Medina, N. Y., who will gladly furnish more hatchets if they are needed." Strange Gases. An immense deposit of an unknown gaseous substance is said to have been discovered near Rio Grande City, Tex. It ignites quickly and gives out a strong flame, which -lasts for a remarkably long time. Scientists are quoted as faying that the substance is either an unknown mineral or ordinary clay highly charged with natural gas. In either case the value of the deposit as fuel Is immense, as it covers many thousands cf acres aud is of great a a. SFIDER TAUGHT INVENTOR. Flying: Machine Builders Solve Prob lem of Alighting. The spider suggests the idea for a flying machine on which E. W. Apple man of Clermont. Ia.. Is at work. His flying machiue consists of a boat equipped with a screw and propeller, like u modern steamship, and a bal loon, which is to hold the vessel in the air while it travels. Heretofore the difficulty iu airships of this pattern has been in reaching the ground when the craft was once fairly launched. Here Is where the spider set the ex ample. Mr. Appleman had noticed the manner in which the spider lets itself down and draws itself up by the use of one slender filament, and he applied the same Idea to his machine. His ves sel Is attached to the balloon by means of nu Iron cable, which is wound around a drum in the body of the ves sel. The drum is operated b.y a two horsepower naphtha engine. The Inventor proposes to let the bal loon go up. filling it with enough gas to permit it to reach the desired height, then to wind up the cable until his ves sel has reached the balloon and is ready to start on a voyage. . If there is wind, he will use a sail. If there Is none, locomotion will be fur nished by the screw propeller. The machine is shown by working model in the Inventor's shop at Cler mont. The vessel proper is conical in shape, built of oiled canvas covered with asbestus to protect it against storms anl fire. Iu the body of the vessel are the drum and the naphtha engine. The screws are at each end or if so desired can be placed so as to extend perpendicularly from the sides They are of mortised wheel shape. somewhat resembling windmills. The iron cable runs up through the center of the deck and through the hollow mast, just the length of the vessel which Is fitted securely to the deck This mast is fitted with a peculia umoreiiahke attachment which can serve as a parachute. When the ship is moving ahead, the umbrella spreads out like a mutton leg sail. At the end of the mast is a long, spiral spring through which the cable passes. It serves to lessen the swing on the vessel which the balloon sway ed to aud fro by air currents would otherwise give it. and at the top of the spring is a ball bearing swivel which permits the balloon to whirl as much as it wishes without disturbing the ac tion of the vessel below. THE SERVANT PROBLEM. Syracuse Women Think They Have Solved Domestic Problem. One group of women believe they have discovered the key to the domes tic service problem. They are the members of the Household Economic association of Syracuse, X. Y., who have been studying and experimenting on the subject for ten years. Their solution comes in the form of what they call a model home school which they have just opened. "We have been at this domestic business so long," said Mrs. C. C. Hall president of the association, to a re porter, "that we think we know what the trouble is and how to remedy it. Our association Is composed of a large number of women who employ servants and who are especially desir ous of Improving home conditions and the relations between mistress and maid. AVe have watched the experi ments made In other cities where cook Ing schools and similar things have started and failed, and we shall avoid the mistakes they have made. "The model home school we have opened is a place wlsere every branch of housework is taugha cooking. dining room service, laundry and housemaids' work. It is in charge of Mrs. I... A Scattergood, a professional aud prac tical housekeeper. She instructs the classes in the school and has some out side classes. She will also eive pri vate lessons at any home if desired. and she has one public lesson every week. "There is a dining room In connec tion with the school, which Is a sort of sample of what the school turns out. We have also a registry bureau for the benefit of employers and servants and a woman's exchange, where all sorts of articles made by women are sold or exchanged." Swedish Waterfalls to Be Ftllised. Sweden is a country whose inherent powers of nature are worth barrels of gold, writes a Copenhagen correspond ent. There are so many waterfalls which might be utilized as motive pow ers for works of every description, but want of capital leaves the most of these natural sources of wealth Inac the. A few waterfalls have been taken into the service of factories and other works through the application of for eign capital, but too many are left un used. As the waterfalls belong to the crown a certain reasonanie rent is paid. There Is a movement on foot to erect a large station for the production of electricity at the waterfalls of Saarl koski and SaukokoskI, in Norrbotten. . An Application. Howdy. Mr. Congressman, p'lite as you fin be; wish you'd bundle up some seeds and. send em round to me. I'd like a lot of marigolds, with colors so intense. To decorate the pathway from the front door to the fence. I'd like some phlox and foxglove, bo's to beautify the scene. And s lot of "everlasting" to be jovial and green. Eend round some morning glories to make the window gay. And perhaps we'd better start s patch of sun flowers right away. ( We ought to have some hollyhocks to help things out a bit. And Japanese chrysanthemums wouH make hit. , And If perchance there are some specimens that we've forgot. Just put em in the bundle, and we'll take 'em with the lot. And I'll -vote for you right freely, and I'll rise op snd declare That this country's agriculture is s mighty fine affair. v .xLT. -Washington Star, i I III " : i '4- t Jr. A i i i I i Klectlon Notice Notice 1 hereby given th;u Tueiday, tie id day of April, A. U. 1 10 1 . in the city of Kock Island, IU., au election will be held for the following ofllcers, to-wlt: CITY OFllCKBS. One mayor for two years. One city clerk for two years One ciiy attorney for two years. One city treasurer for two years. 0-e poliie magistrate for four years One alderman in the First ward for two years. One alderman in the Second ward for two years. One alderman In the Third ward for two years. One alderman in the Fourth war! for two years, One alderman in the Fifth ward for two years One alderman in the Sixth ward for two years. Oce alderman in the Seventh ward for two yeats. TOWBT liKl'ICEKS. One f ssessor for one year. One collector for one year. One assistant supervisor for one year. Four assistant supervi-ors for two years. Five jusli e of the peace for four years. Five constables for four years. Which election will be open at 7 o'clock in the moining and continue open until 5 o'clock In the a'ternoon of that day. Places of registration and votiu;? wi'l be as follows: First Ward First precinct, 103 Fourth ave nue. First Ward Second preciact, ail Fifth street Second Ward First precicet, 1014 Third avenue. Second Ward Second precinct, 1100 Sev- eth avenue. Third Ward Fir,t precinct, l:VXJ Third avenue Third Ward Second precinct, 1111 Seventh avenue Fourth Ward First precinct, Frick & Kiut. livery stable, iun luiro avenue Fourth Ward Second precinct, M. Levy's carriage house. Nineteenth street between bitlb bnd Seventh avenues. Fifth Ward First precinct, Hose house on Twenty-secor.d street Fifth Ward Second precinct, Sciiraid crocery. f-ja Twentieth street. t-ixib Ward First precinct, old No :i Hose house, Twenty-sixth street, near Seventh avc nue Sixth Ward Second precinct Twenty ninth street cbapel, corner taeventh avenue aru Twenty-nin-h street. Seventh Ward First precinct, :1I0 Fifth avenue. Seventh Ward Second precinct, old No. 7 school house. H. c. Schaitkr, f'itv and Town Llerk. Rock Island. 111., March 11, r.01. Banker Koala a Roblier. J. II. Garrison, cashier of the hank of Thornville, ()., had been robted of health by a serious lung trouble until he tried Dr. King's New Discovery for consumption. Then he wrote: "It is the best medicine I ever used for a severe ccld or a bad case of lung trou ble, i always keep a bottle on hand." Don't suffer with coughs, colds or any throat, chest or lung trouble when you can be cured so easily. Only 50 cents and f 1. Trial luttles free at llartz & Ullemeyer's drug store. Many School Children Are Sickly. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for children, used by Mother Gray, a nurse in Children's home, New York, break up colds in 21 hours, cure feverishness, headache. stomach troubles, teething disorders, move and regulate the bowels and destroy worms. Mrs. Emily Marono, Meri- dcn. Conn., says: "It is the best medicine in the world for children when feverish and complaining." Sold by all druggists or by mail, 25 cents. Sample sent free. Address Allen S. Olmsted, Lelioy, N. Y. Like Oliver Twist, children ask for more when given One Minute Cough Cure. Mothers indorse it highly for cronp. It quickly cures all coughs and colds and every throat and lung troable. it is a specific for grip and astnma ana has long been a well known remedy for whooping cough. ts. ti. isieDer and llartz & Ullemever. Eucaline is a powerful antiseptic ana snouiu do in every no trie, it will prevent diseases that affect the mu cous membrane, such as diphtheria, bronchitis, etc. It is unexcelled for an effectual antiseptic and deodorant in a sick room, tor sale by all drug gists. CASTOR I A Tor Infants and Children. Thfl Kind Yos m A!w3js Ccugbt Bear th Cigartuxtf of 00 -1- -2. -3- -4, 1 5" Woman's nerves are very delicate and are readily influenced by certain con ditions. Nervousness is a teal and grievous affliction. In women, nervousness is usually associated with those diseases peculiar to women It may be due to stom ach disorder, however, or it may be due to heredity. When due to heredity, it is bard to overcome, and the woman must be patient and watch caief ully these con ditions. Taking cold often brings on such conditions. Otm S) cases oust f 13 Hudyan will be found beneficial, and the tenth case can get money back if the woman will write to the Hudyan Co. and send the Hudyan wrapper." Women who sutler with headache, as in figure I sunken eyes and dark, heavy circles around eyes as in figure 2; pale, thin face, as in figure3; palpitation of heart.as in figure 4; weakness of limbs, as in figure 5 should use Hudyan. You may be dizzy, you may have pains in back, pains in side, bearing down, dragging pains why then use Hudyan. Hudyan cures women who suffer with Leucorrhcea, falling of the womb, ovarian and uterine troubles. Hudyan cures women who are all run down, pale, sallow faces, no vim, no vigor all languor. Hudyan cures the func tional derangements of the heart not organic heart troubles, but fluttering heart, due to gases pressing on the heart, or nervous imaginary heart lapses. Don't get afraid if you have a pain over the region of the heart it may be just due to a bad stomach cure stomach and you cure heart trouble. No cause for alarm. Try Hudyan it does help it will help you, Get Hudyan from your druggist, or get it direct from Hudyan Remedy Co., San Francisco, Cal. Hudyan is sold 50 cents for one package six packages $2.50. Hudyan is gcod Hudyan is true. You may write in confidence to Hudyan doctors free. LADIES' TAILORING JOHN PECM offers to his customers first-class garments, perfect in every detail fit, workman ship and finish. Silk lined suits to order at $32. JOHN PECH, 1S12 Second Avenue. jr. r. Bohiksou, President L. 1). Mcdgi, Vlee President. B. E. Castssi Cashier Central Trust and Savings Bank, Rock Island, III. Incorporated Under State Law. Capital Gtock, $100,000. Four Per Cent Interest Paid on Deposits. Trust Department. Estates aud property of all kinds are managed by this department, Which is kept entirely separate from the banking business of the company we act as executor of and trustee under Wills. Administrator, guardian and conservator of estates. Receiver and assignee of insolvent estates. General financial agent for non-residents, women, invalids and others. Rock Island Savings Bank Rook Island. 111. Incorporated Under the State Law. Monkt Loaned Ow Pjcksonal Collatkkal Ob Rsal Estatx Secubiti. OFFICERS J. M. Burord, President. John Cnibsuch, Vice President. P. Greenawa.it, Cashier. 8a sn business July 2, 1SC0, snd ocouptsa S. J corner of Mltobell wm buUitcp. Administrator's Notice. Estate of James Milton Silvis, deceased. Tbe undersigned bavins; oeen appointed ad ministratrix ol tbe estate of James Milton bil- vis. late of the county of Rock Island, state of Illinois, deceased, hereby gives notice that she will appear before the county court or tiocn Island couaty, at tbe count; court room. In the cltT of Kock Island, at the April term. on the first Monday in April next, at which time all persons having claims axainst salo estate are noticed and requested to attend. for the purpose or having the same adjusted AU persons indebted to said estate are re quested to make Immediate payment to tbe undersigned. Dated tbts nth day or r ebruary, A. u. I0l Maugis I'obtkr, Administratrix. m BIWA . : liSlf. l It's Quality that Counts In Coal it's quality that makes heat, It's quaUty that retains it, it s quality tbat makes possible consumption of 90 per cent of the combustible part of it, leaving- a light, clean ash: lastly, it's quality that lessens your fuel bills you re not ray Ins; for dirt, refuse or uoburnaoles. The coal we handle both hard and soft deserves all tbe good things we and our patrons say for It. A ton will talk as loudly as a carlo sd. E. G. FRAZER. Telephone 1133. If in3(sirw0aas Di3diQiyi(0)ra 3 Four Per Cent Paid on Deposits. DIRECTORS H. 8. Cable, Wtn. WUme John Crubaufih, Pbll Milcb H. P. Hull. L. Simon, E. W. Hurst, J. M. Bufora John Vol. Solln! tors Jackson and Hurst Money Loaned Privately ON HOl'SEHOLl KLKS1TI KK, 1'IANOS, HOrtSKS, CARRIAGES, WAGONS, LIVE STOCK A Til) OTHER TERSONAf. TROl'ERTT. In suras to suit, without publicity or removal of the property. Should you owe a balance on Furniture or llano or have a loan on the same you can have it paid up for you und carried as long as dt sired. Our ollloes are so arranged that all w ho call may be waited upjn promptly and with entire privacy. In formation cheerfully given on applica tion. Fidelity Loan Co. ROOM 38, MITCHELL & LYNDE BUILDING. Open Wednesdaj and Saturday Evenings. BMW vwm. v w y : -..Ami. SEVEN THROUGH TRAINS Every Week Day f rm TRI-CITIES TO CUICAQO (Six Trains on 5unda ) via GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE BEST DINING CAR SERVICE PCTJJ1AN SLEEPERS ON NIQHT TRAINS Parlor Car on the Chicago Limited For reservations, rates, and full information, call on or address. Ticket Agent, Davenport, la.. Rock Island or rvline. 111.