Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DIED IN THE STORM YYRTHER REPORTS OF LAST WEER’S ‘TERRIBLE BLIZZARD, Already Five Bodies Have Been Found at Different Points, and Several Other People Who Have Been Reported Missing Are Prob- ably Lying Under the Snow— Blockade Still Continues. St. Paul, Dee. A large section of the Northw: est he still snowbound, and it is feared that when communication is resumed with the remote blizzard- Stricken districts the loss of life will be found to have been quite large. Already five bodies of victims of the storm haye been recovered. D. ‘C. McKeever, a farmer near Kensel, N. D., was found frozen to death yes- terday at Moorhead, Minn. The body of Thomas Anderson, the seventeen- year-old boy who lost his way during the blizzard Thanksgiving night, was found by August Probst, farmer, this morning within a quarter of a mile of the Daniels house. Anderson had covered his head with his over- coat, loosened his clothing and huddled up to keep warm. He wore no oyer- shoes and one of his mittens were missing. He had become bewildered and traveled away from town, in the opposite direction from his home. Sev- eral other people are reported missing at various points, and it is probable that their bodies are under many feet f and will not be recovered un- til spring. Still Snowbound. Jamestown, N. D., is still snowbound, with no pros that railway com- ation will be opened eastward ome time yet. No mails have been received since Thursday. East of Jamestown a cut a mile and a half long is drifted in thirty feet deep with frozen snow. All cuts are level full. There is plenty of fuel and provisions in the city to last some time, and there it nor suffering. ny points he ed under d are complete- With two ro- engines working out of Fargo on orthern Pacific since Saturday ‘o. 4, snowed in five miles ley City, was reached at 10 morning. Only half a mile was cle: 1 yesterday. Drifts in the cuts are from to fifteen feet deep, and frozen like ice, mixed with sand. Dynamite is used to loosen it up. The Southwestern branch to Lisbon and Edgely is still frozen up, and people in towns along the line are out of wood and coal. and there seems ho prospects of open up the road for three ox four da. mall towns along the main line are also out of fuel. In the wreck of a snow plow this morning John 'T man, fir a baal. of Barnesville, Minn. has been completely stopped. A larg number of freight and passenger i led there. About one-third of ns are running to St. point. No train from reached there since ince Thursday m reached Fertile, Minn., to-day, nging a number of passengers who > been snow-bound at Winnipeg Junction for thirty hour In South Dakota, \ number of points in South Dakota are still snowbound, and many are still stalled in cuts. £ ngers and traiumen are compelled to bu food of farmers living near the rail- roads. “Last night was the coldest of the St. Paul,” said Observer “The cold wave was weep and covered the s far south as Mem- al for this entire gountry, phis, with a rigor season of the year. such 2. visi- tation as might usually be expected in Janua The temperature at St. Paul went as low as 10 degrees below zero. The coldest point was at Battleford, where the thermometer registered 38 degrees below zero. It will continue cold to-night. To-morrow there will be a very slight rise in temperature, but cold weather will continue for some days.” MADE IT MANSLAUGHTER, Kreft Jury Deliberates Thirty Hours at Fairmont. Fairmont, Minn., Dec. 2. in the Kreft e returned to court jate last evening, after being out thir- ty hours, and brought in a verdict of ‘The —The jury manslaughter in the second degree. This morning he was_ sentenced to twelve years and six months in the state prison at Stillwater. Miss Taylor on Trial. St. Paul, Dec. 2. — The cas . Rebecca Taylor, charged with minal libel, was called before Judge in the police court. The action s brought at the irsta e of James ©. Schoonmaker, attorney-at-law, who alleges that on Oct. 18, of the present year, Miss Taylor published in Truth, a weekly publication of which she is said to be the editor, an article relative to the alleged arrest of Judge Schoon- maker in Minneapolis in 1889, which the latter claims is untrue and a libel. Held by the Pollce, Minneapolis, Dec. 2.—The police have in custody three suspects whom they allege are responsible for the numercus hold-ups which have taken place late- ly. Fritz Bode, alias “Dutch Fritz,” nk Loftus, a well known young man of the North side, and James Rijey. who is known as a tramp, are the three men arrested. Bode was identified by Frank McCabe, who was held up and shot last week at Eighth street and Third avenue south, as one -of the men who held him up. North Dakota Editors. St. Paul, Dec. 2.—William Miller of the Minnewaukon (N. D.) Siftings, the “main pipe’ of the North Dakota Edi- torial association, marshaled his hosts in St. Paul yesterday and led them against Galveston, Tex., by way of the Omaha, leaving at 8:15 jast night. The North Dakota brethren have deen gath- ering slowly for three or four days, coming in on delayed trains, but about seventy-five, including the ladies, gath- ered for the annual excursion. The party will spend about ten days on their excursion. x DEATH AT A FETE Terrible Occurrence At 2 Celebra- tion in a Town in India, Bombay, Dec. 1.—A fete organized at Baroda in honor of the visit of the earl of Elgin, viceroy of India, has had a terrible outcome in the killing of twenty-nine persons and the injuring of many others by a great crush of numbers, or a panic which occurred in the course of the fete. Nothing is known as to how the panic developed. Sofia, Bulgaria, Dec. 1— The elec- tions to the sobranje, which occurred to-day, were accompanied by sevious disturbances, and the troops and po- lice had to be called out to disperse the mobs here and in the provinces as the result of which many persons were wounded. The police fired into the crowd at Zaribrod, killing several per- sons. WHEAT FOR EUROPE. * Demand Upon This Country Proba- bly Greater Than the Supply. Chicago, Dec. 1—The Times-Herald says: Wheat last week advanced 7a8c per bushel, and on Saturday touched the best prices on the crop, 82 3-8¢ for December and 857-8c for May. The incentives during the week were chief- ly foreign ones, particularly the numer- ous estimates made abroad as to the extent to which Europe weuld need to eall upon America for wheat supplies. All these figures were startling, the estimate which put the Turopean re- quirements from America at 17,000,000 pushels per month up to Aug. 1, as well as the other one which computed the Atlantic side would furnish 104,- 000,000 bushels during the balance of the crop year, and those cthers who re- duced the necessities a little, but which kept them still over any total believed to be possible by the statisticians on this side. Exports in five months, wheat and flour, have reached 80,000,- 000 bushels, and the European esti- mates are for exports during the next Seven months at a rate even faster than this. That seems beyond the ca- pacity of +bis side. BURNED TO DEATH An Entire Family Wiped Out of Ex- istence. Perry, N. Y., Dee. 1. — The home of Luther Greenman, a farmer four miles northeast of this village, was de- stroyed by fire this morning and the . entire family, consisting of five per- sons. were burned to death. The dead are Luther Greenman, aged 40; Mrs. Greenman, 37; Alme Greenman, 8; Lottie Greenman, 3; Arthur Green- man, 11 months. The building was entirely consumed. All of the bodies were recovered in a horribly charred condition. The fire was undoubtedly caused by a defective stovepipe. An inquest will be held to- morrow. CLEVELAND MAY BE DEAN, Rumor That He Will Be Head of Princeton Law School. New York, Dec. 1.—President Cleve- land’s purchase of a home in Prince- ton, N. J., and the arnouncement he will make his home there after he re- tires next March has been received with joy by every one in Princeton, sularly by the faculty of the ident intends to identify himself with Princeton's great instituticn. He is, so the rumor goes, to become dean of the Princeton law school. When the pro- ject of becoming dean of the school was broached to him he regarded it favorably. Mrs. Cleveland, too, thought well of the project. She liked the uni- versity air that surrounded the place, the society, and the opportunity her husband would have of identifying his name with that of a great seat of learning. Then, too, she looked upon it as the most dignified position an ex- president could possibly occupy. Be- sides, there was a precedent for it, ex- President Harrison having occupied a similar position with the Leland Stan- ford university in California. Possible Legislation. Washington, Dec. 1.—It is not prob- able that the house at the coming ses- sion of congress, which begins next Monday. can dispose of much of the proposed legislaticn which encumber its calendars. Little is usually accom- plished at the short session beyond the passage of the regular supply bills. Still the house, with its instrumentali- ties for the expedition of business, can accomplish a great deal in a brief time. The question of legislation for addi- tional revenues for the government will depend on the senate, to which body the house sent the Dingley bill almost a year ago. Should it be im- possible or be deemed inexpedient to press that measure through the senate, there is, of course, a possibility that the proposal to increase the revenues by an additional tax on beer or the imposition of a duty on tea, coffee, ete., may take tangible form. SHOT ID THE BACK. An Attorney at Perryville, Ohio, Is Brutally Murdered. Perrysyille, Ohio, Dec. 1. — Horace L. Stearns, a wealthy and aged citizen of this place, was shot and instantly killed this morning by Elias Keyster. The murder grew out of a lawsuit in which Keyster was defeated and in which Stearns acted as the attorney for the successful party. Keyster had threatened to kill Stearns. This morn- ing the latter was walking past Key- ster’s house, when he was shot in the back, falling dead in the stieet: Key- ster was arrested and declared th: he had not felt happier in ten years. The murderer had a bad reputation, and so intense was the feeling against him that it was deemed necessary to remove him to Ashland jail to prevent violerce. Stoned to Death, Chicago, Dec. 1. — Louis Maverich was stoned to death and robbed of $30 on the tow path near Summit. Two negroes are held. Watchman Overboard. Duluth, Dec. 1—The Selwyn Eddy, which arrived to-day, reports having lost overboard, twenty miles out from Duluth, a watchman named Thomas O’Hara of Detroit. He was _ pulled overboard by a fender which he was attempting to adjust. The Eddy turned and steamed back over the course and lowered a boat, but of course the man could not be found. < Harrison of St. Paul beat Tom Gal- lagher of Chicago in a billiard match in Chicago. MINNESOTA interesting Happenings in the North Star State. Patrick Kelly was brutally assault- ed and:robbed in St. Paul. Josie Van Delli committed suicide at St. Paul by taking carbulic acid. Work is to resumed on the Minnesota iron mines sooner than expected. The State Immigration essociation will ask for a legislative appropriation to help on the good work. ‘The new Catholic church at Austin was formally dedicated by Bishop Pothen. The four-months-old child of Mrs. Scripits of Winona died from suffoca- tion. Salvation Army men have arrived in Barnesville, with the intention of start- ing a barracks, The supreme court has ousted Mr. Copeland and reinstates the St. Paul board of public works. The state board of arbitration makes a decision in the matter of the publish- ers and printers of the Twin Cities. J. J. McCafferty has been appointed a member of the board of inanagers ef the St. Cloud reformatory, vice R. A. Smith, resigned. Rean & Co., shoe dealers of Stillwa- ter, made an assignment to Theodore B. Wheelock. No statement of assets and liabilities has been filed. The daily output of the prison bind- er twine factory will be increased 2,000 by the purchase of twelve spinners and one breaker. George Chantler, a former mail car- rier between Le Sueur Center and St. Peter, has been indicted for assault in the first degree. Three Minneapolis women were burned by a gasoline explosion. One will surely die, and the recovery of an- other is doubtful. At Pipestone fire destroyed the steam laundry, together with all its contents, and also did considerable damage to adjoining buildings. Loss, over $1,000; partly insured. Iver Larson, was knocked down by a locomotive and seriously injured at Milaca. He was walking by the side of the main track. and did not hear the backing engine until too late. Threshing is completed at Rapidan, but there is still some clover left in the fields that will not be hulled this fall. Corn-husking, if the weather remains good, will be finished this week. Alex. Bartocuski, aged sixty-seven, attempted to drive across the Northern Pacific tracks at Sauk Rapids ahead of Passenger Train No. 1, was struck and himself and team instantly killed. Nels Norer, while at work in the woods fifteen miles below Milaca, was Scriously injured. A branch of a tree fell on him and fractured his skull, He is from Minneapolis, where his family resides. M. R. Baldwin, of the Supe In- dian commission; Rev. A. Gilfillan, W. H. Hendrickson, J. Perrault, T. Beauleau and R. J. Holland paid the White Ook Point Chippewas their an- nuities of $7 each. Emily Shortridge, a prominent young lady of Dassel, aged fiftcen years, died of scarlet fever, after an illness of six weeks. ‘This is the second death from this disease in this family during the past four months. The store of Senator George Geissel at North Prairie was entered and the safe blown. The burglars secured $25. An equal amount in the till and also a large quantity of stamps was -over- looked. On account of the prevalence of scar- let fever in Alexandria ail churches and schools have been closed for a week. No public meetings of any kind will be allowed. There are at present twelve cases, all of a mild form. Plans are being rapidly matured at Duluth for the promotion of a scheme set on foot last summer for the build- ing of a railroad, to be known as the Duluth & Southwestern. The proposed line will follow almost an air line from Duluth to Red Wing. George Benham, otherwise known as “Black George,” professional hunter, accidentally shot himself through the ankle at Wright station, twenty-five miles east of Carlton, on the Northern Pacific railway. He was taken to the Duluth hospital. The foot will have to be amputated. Architect C.K. Aldrich of the State university, was at Great Rapids, and is well pleased with the building im- provements now being completed at the Northwestern Minnesota Experi- ment farm. He finds that more build- ings will be needed next season, par- ticularly for the live stock department. Au arrest at Winona has brought to ight a system of robbery from Jaco- bi’s clothing store, which has been go- ing on for some time. A young fellow who gives the name of J. A. Jones is the guilty man. He has confessed to having taken $200 worth of stock and sold it. Joseph Green and Mike Inhofer, two ‘West Newton farmers, were killed in- stantly by the explosion of a threshing engine. No particulars as to the cause of the explosion can be obtained, but it went so quick that some of the men working about the machine did not even know that any one had been killed by the shock. The accident oc- curred on Louis Bushard’s farm, just about supper time. John Hardcastle Hall; the man who lost his identity on arriving in Manka- to, some weeks ago, finally consented to a hypnotic experiment to restore his memory. Prof. Harlow Gale, of the state university, conducted the experi- ment, but got very little satisfaction. He seemed to have Hall under control, but the latter was guarded in his an- swers, and revealed nothing of im- portance regarding his past life. Prof. Gale believes him partially unbal- anced and not entirely honest in his statements. George Hanson, alias G. H. Fisher, is wanted at Grand Rapids on a charge of obtaining goods on a representation that he had a timber contract. He is six feet four inches tall, talkative on general business, clean-shaven, wears no jewelry, and dresses like a fairly- well-to-do lumberman. He is supposed to have gone to Walker or Brainerd. William Voss and S. Matowski have ‘been arrested at Winona, charged George Griffin with having knocked him down in Matowski’s saloon and robbed him of $40. } DIRECTORY OF THE HOUSE. N EWS. The Roster of Minnesota's House of Representatives. Below is published a complete and correct directory of the next house of representatives. The last house was composed of ninety-four Republicans, two independent Republicans, nine Populists and nine Democrats. The new house will contain ninety Repub- licans, a loss of four seats; eight Dem- ocrats, a loss of one; fourteen Popu- lists, the latter gaining the Republican and Democratic losses; one Citizens’ anti-ring candidate and one sound money Democrat, both the latter hav- ing been indorsed by the Republicans. Thirty-seven of the members of the last house were re-clected and four have had legislative experience in pre- vious years. The list pie .-Honston -Spring Valley Lanesboro: Lane L. West (Rt). €. Scribner ( Sinn G. Johnson (R) Henry Drommerbausen (R). 5-8. J, Abbott (R)** 6—Thomas Torson (R)' Daniel Shell (R)* Ole O. Holman A. 8. Dyer (R). 8—George M. Laing 9—James A. Larson (I) Henry Heimerdinger (P). 10H. C, McLean (R).. William Jamieson (R). Nels Nyquist (R).. 11—John Wilkinson (R). 12—George E. Sloan (R) 13S. . Littleton (It Cooleyville 15—R. B. Basford (I) 8. ©, McElhaney (R). A. H. Hi’l (D). Charles Goss (P) 16—George E. C'ds (It) J. H. Mane’ ester ( 17—Renton Severance (It) 18—William Mansfield (2) 19—H. -Le Sueur w. ib Le Sueur Center 20—Duran F. K Northfield L. M. Hollister (R). rles Kigenbrodt (I) Faribauit Bi -Zumbrota Red Wing -Mazeppa - Wabasha = Withrow Dr. W. Fe? 1 23-0. TR Sonie| ame F. B. Yates (R) 2¢—Henry Johns (R)*. Ferdinand Barta (1)*. MeDonald (R) Scott (It). Martin (D) in Snodgrass ( C. H. McGill (R) 29—Alpheus Dale (Ry) Jacob Foell (D). 30—Fred B. Snyder (R). Matthias Tellman (D). Lovejoy (It)? Minneapolis: Minneapolis Minneapolis Minneapolis Hans Simonson (I). John F. Dahl (R)*. M, Belden (R). . Dare (K)*. Sampson (R) - H. Reiner (R) 4i—Henty Feig (R)* A. Bergley (I 42-3, E ©. A. Fosnes (2) 44—August J. Anderson (It)* 45—J. G. Hayter (P). Fred Joseph Kraker (S. M. D. rE. S$. Mall @). uk Rapids 4G—A. F. Ferris ( Brainerd Hartshorn ( aples, Jones (R)* Prairie J. H. C. Head (R) 47—C. P. Reeves (1)* Princeton lenwood - Alexandria Finney (1 ‘oss (RY 50—W. B. Douglass (It) D. FP. MeGrath (R)* Joseph _C. Wood (I) 3 Duluth Dr. P. C. Schmidt (R). Duluth Patrick Vail ( Republicans . Populists Democrats Citizens’ A. Sound Money ‘*Re-elected. **Served previous to 1895. JUMPED FROM THE TRAIN, Young Criminal Attempts to Escape and Fails, Fergus Falls, Minn., Dec. 2.—Hatless and coatless, his feet shackled, the mercury 25 below zero and wind bit- terly cold. Those were the conditions under which Ed J. Johnson struck off through the town of Aurdale. shortly after midnight. Johnson is a young man whose home was near Henning, Otter Tail county. Two years ago, when he was about nineteen years oid, he decided to become a robber bold. He got some guns and a mask, and going to a neighboring town, Deer Creek, held up the station agent. He was soon captured, gun and all sleep- ing in a barn, and was sentenced to Stillwater under the reformatory plan. His parents interceded for him and he was finally paroled. He broke his pa- role and went to Montara, where he was captured. He was being taken back by Deputy Warden Lomen on the midnight train on the Great North- ern. As it stopped to give the neces- sary two whistles before crossing the Northern Pacific track, a sudden yearn- ing must have seized the young man to spend more time in Otter Tail county, for he jumped from the train under the circumstances described above. The train was put under way and the first telegraph station which had a night operator was Evansville. Froin that place the official telegraphed back and a search was begun by the police. Jobnson had on a sweater and trousers but no overshoes. He got into a barn where he got some burlaps and blank- ets, which he wrapped around himsel? and started in the direction of Arundel. Sheriff Billings and others started af- ter him and found him twelve miles from town. Milled in Collision, Valley City, N. D., Dec. 2.—In a col- lision this morning near here on the Northern Pacific between a train and a snow plow, Hans Hanson, section foreman, of Wheatiand, was killed and four others were seriously injured. Hull a Laundry Hand. Stillwater, Minn., Dee. 2.—J. C. Hull, the St. Paul wife poisoner and ex- clergyman is working in the laundry department of the state prison. Alma City | -Morristown | -Cannon Falls | BIG FIRE IN ST. PAUL An Elevator Is Totally Destroyed BX Flames, St’ Paul, Nov. 29.—Fire last night completely destroyed Elevator A. owned by the St. Paul Elevator and Warehouse company. ‘The elevator was built twenty-two years ago at a cost of $100,000 and contained 100,000 bushels of oats, valued at $20,000. There was $30,000 insurance on the building and $20,000 on the grain. The elevator located on the side of the bluff alongside the river, and the up- per portion was about three stories above the level of Third street, mak- ing a building about ten stories in height. It is not known how the fire started, but soon after it was dis- covered it was seen that the building was doomed. A high wind was blow- ing, but, fortunately, it was coming from the northwest and blew the flames toward West St. Paul, and con- sequently did no further damage. On’ the river side of the elevator are the hastily removed to a place of safety. upon the railroad tracks, setting fire to the ties, and the ice on the river -was covered with small pieces of burning wood. The sparks were, in many cases, carried to West St. Paul, about a third of a mile. A close watch the sparks. lapsed and buried the railroad tracks under tons of burning debris. OVER, $200,000 IS LOST. Two Express Companies Said to Be the Victims of Conspiracy. Kansas City, Nov. 29. — George E. Ross, missing money clerk of the Pa- cific and United States Express com- panies, has been located in St. Louis his bond, and is now under surveil- \ lance. It is stated that the express company officials had all along known of Ross’ exact location, but kept it quiet because there are, it is said, others implicated. The officials refuse to give out in- formation of a definite character, but enough has been learned to merit the statement that there is evidence of a collusion between certain employes to rob the express companies. Last Sun- day there was handled through the of- fice over which Ross presided money packages containing $110,000. Already $2,300 of this amount is known to be missing, and the books are still being gone over. Shortage checks have been coming in so regularly since the ex- amination began, it is said, that the officials have renewed their efforts, and now fear the whole $110,000 may never have reached its destination. As the system of checking is neces- sarily slow, the packages having been destined for various points, the re- sult will not be known immediately. In the meantime the express officials absolutely refuse to give out any state- ment for publication, other than that Ross has been located. KENTUCKY OFFICIAL. McKinley's Official Plurality Is 281— 12 of the 13 Electors, Frankfort, Ky., Nov. 29.—-The etate ednvassing bogrd met to-day. In view of the Democratic threats to contest the election of twelve Republican electors, great interest was felt. The eanvassing board had already footed returns and read them with explana- tions of their action in cases where the returns were technically irregular. In every case they had waived unim- portant technicalities and counted re- turns as made. The Democrats re- ceived greater benefits than Republic- ans from this course. The official foot- ing gives Kash, the leading Republic- an elector, 218,171 votes, and Smith, the leading Democratic elector, 217,- 890 votes. McKinley’s official plurali- ty in the state is 281. Smith, who headed the Bryan electoral ticket, de- feats Wedding and Howes, the two lowest McKinley electors, who are tied. The electoral college will decide which of these electors shall vote. The court gives McKinley Kentucky by 281 plurality and twelve out of thirteen electors. The canvass of congressional returns made no changes. A Tornado in Texas. Waco, Tex., Nov. 29. — A tornado that raged in a section twenty miles from here yesterday devastated a strip one mile wide ard eight miles in length. A number of farm houses were demolished in the vicinity of Mart, McLennon county, and informa- tion comes from Reisel, six miles from Mart, that the residence of Buck Douglass was totally destroyed, his wife severely hurt and one of his children was killed outright. Five persons were more or less injured as far as heard from. The temperature ranged nearly at summer heat prior to the storm. In passing over the prairie the cyclone took away every- thing it touched, leaving the earth bare of grass. Frank James a Candidate. St. Louis, Nov. 29.—Frank James, a brother of Jesse James, the notorious train robber and ex-member of the James’ gang of outlaws, is an aspirant for the honors of a St. Louis police commissionership and Chief Harrigan will be his friend in the race. The ex-outlaw declares himself a candi- date. “I’m not out after office,” he said, “but I’d take the place if it were offered to me. And if it were given to me I would do my duty without fear or favor.” Benjafin Apthorp Gould. Caurbridge, Mass., Noy. 29.—Benja- min Apthorp Gould, famous as a scholar and astronomer, is dead. As he was ascending the stairs in his res- idence last night he fell back and struck on his head. He was rendered unconscious and passed away a few hours later. Appointed by the President. Washington, Nov. 29.—The president has appointed John H. Rogers of Ar- kansas United States district judge for the Western district of Arkansas. Judge Rogers was at one time in con- gress and was known as a forcible speaker. Bishop Walker Accepts. Fargo, N. D., Nov. 29.—Yesterday Bishop Walker announced the fact of his acceptance of the election as bishop of Western New York to succeed the late Bishop Coxe. Milwaukie railroad trackp, and a | number of cars loaded with grain and | merchandise of various kinds were | Large chunks of burning wood fell | was kept and no fires were started by | The building finally col- | by the surety company that furnished | His Cheek Saved Him. . + ‘A master was once taking a class of boys, and, observing one boy coming in late, he said to him: “Now, then, sir, what are you late “School, sir,” answered the lad qui- etly taking his seat among the remain- ing boys. Too Much to Ask at the Start. She—Now, that we are engaged, dear, I shall expect you to kiss mother when you see her. “Do you think that me fair?’ “What is?” “To test my love ‘so soon ?”— York World. Hope and Fear. Friend—Your little daughter recites very well for a child of her age. Papa-—I think so. Sometimes I am afraid she will grow up to be an elo- cutionist; but perhaps she will out+ grow it.—Puck. New Persons you meet every day, WILL DIE OF BRIGHT’S DISEASE or some trouble of the kidneys, urinary female WHAT CAN BE DONE? In such a serious condition you must secure the best remedy you can find in the market AT ONCE, ‘There is only one absolutely sure cure for these troubles, and that is Hawn aN QUESTION THE BEST AAD SHORTEST LINE ty re Plna T wi Shap ‘LEAVES Minneapolis and St, Paul every Tuesday LOS ANGELES via the Maple Leaf and Santa Fe Routes, receiving passengers at all points between Minneapolis and Kansas City, ari Angeles at noo: i following Saturday. ‘These carsare new and complete in every respect, supplied with curtains, pillows, ding ana all modern conveniences, and are in charge of a competent, For full partioulars as to ates ar an any other infor mation desired, apply to agent of th CiIc\GO. GREAT WESTERN RY. t any of the following: NICOLLET) AVE. AND FIFTHST., Om TENTH AND WASHINGTON AVES. SOUTH, MINNEAPOLIS. FIFTH AND ROBERT STS., oR UNION DEPOT, PAUL Dictionar Invaluable in Office, School, and A thorough revision ofthe 2 Unabridged, the, hich has the ‘proviaion of ment, aes in tained favor #4 The Choicest of Stee for Christmas. Ix Vaniovs Stries or Bixpixc. ipecimen pages sent on application to * & C. MERRIAM CO., Publishers, Springfield, Mass., U.S.A. 2 DRU OPIUM ae UNKENNESS BED-WETTING @uah. Sitstion Wa: GRAIN AND PROVISIONS Bought and sold for future, delivery. 2c to Be per bu. deposit. Sample sales a ity. Correspondence and consignments MASON BR 13 tan B Baren treet, Mem JERS CHICACO BOARD OF TRADE.