1
6 \u25a0ffIPBUSMIS. The Minneapolis office of the Daily Globe has been removed to 213 Hcnnepin avenue. The Daily Globe ' an be found on sale every morning at the fol lowingnews stands: \u25a0 i ":;~;?^ Nicollet IIoUBe news stand, St. James Hotel newsstand, J. W. \u25a0 Ayers, South Third street,' between Nicollet and Henccping avenue, W. E. Gerrigh, 601 South Washington . avenue, W. H. Stxkney, 517 Cedar avenue. H. J. Worth, oppo- site Manitoba depot. Geo. A.'Morse, 200 Central avenue, K. A. Taylor, 386 Hannepin avenue, C. R. Murphy, 806 Hennepin avenue, 11. Hoefiaer, 1321 Washington avenue north, and Heddcrly & Co,, 55 Central avenue. \u25a0 MIK>'£AroJLIS GLOJiIXJSTS. The board ofpark commissioner:; will meet Ibis afternoon. The Ames Zouaves held a drill meeting in their armory last evening. Amonthly meeting of the press club will be held to-morrow in the office of the Fio- ruer Press. The A. O. 11. will meet Sunday aiternoon it Market hall, South Minneapolis, at 2 o'clock. A workman at the Union depot yesterday morning fell from a scaffold and dislocated a finger. Winn Brackett and Jimmy Stoildart are both working for the Republican nomination for sheriff. Twenty-three warranty deeds were recorded by the register of . deeds yesterday, amount- ing to $41,303. . The assault and battery case against Ole Westgdrd; 'was dismissed yesterday for want of prosecution. - The Manitoba Railway company is . con- structing 400 cars at their shops forthe wheat traflle in the fall. 0j The Illinois association went out to Lake Minuctonka yesterday and enjoyed a very pleasant excursion. A Milwaukee employe yesterday, while under a car, cut a bad gash in his scalp by raising his head too previously. The reserved scat 6ale, for the Wallack Theater company's engagement next week, t! at tlie box office this morning. During tlie months of July the clerk of the :ourt issued 134 marriage licenses. rldentry a good mouth for nuptials. Ibe Prank Daily kidnapping case was brousr.nl up in the municipal court again yes- day, but it was continued until August Bth. Detective *Caswell expresses the opinion that the girl in the case which is attract- ing bo much attention is not the daughter of Mrs. Burner. Mrs. Burner, the alleged procuress, aud Madame White, held to the grand jury for s':(iotintr Mrs. Jones, occupy the same cell in the county jail. Claude Adams, tbe housekeeper, so-called, ata .stylish fordell at No. 119 North Second street, paid a fine in $5^.50 in the municipal hi it yesterday. Henry Barrett was arraigned before Judge Bailey yesterday, charged with selling liquor without a license. His trial was continued until August sth. Muny of the police are still of the opinion that Dun Wood is really the man who shot Wiukler, despite his apparently straight for- ward story to the contrary. The Hygeine and Heredity society will hold a mother's meeting at the Friends' church, eonier of Ilennepiu avenue and Eight street, Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock sharp. The colored citizens pretty generally cele- brated emancipation day yesterday in a pic- nic :it Lake Calhoon. They held full poB- -session throughout the day and were happy ;t.-; kin^s. Walter Lundahl, an insane Swede, entered a lioiikc ut 209 Seventh avenue south, knocked anvnm&u down and robbed her of *!.->. He vhbs arrested and taken before the probate court. Burglars made an unsuccessful attempt to to through O. E. Smith's house on North Main street. Mr. Smith was awakened and he sent two bullets aa a reminder t lint their company was not wanted. Unfortunately lie is apparently a poor marksman. The monthly report for the municipal cour tor July shows a total of 208 cases disposed of during the mouth, tbe total receipts being 11,728.65; criminal cases 189, receipts H,559.70; civileas.-s 12S, receipts $198.95. The decrease in total receipts below those of June is $140.58. Francis Smith, the man arrested on the charge of entering John H. Long's residence ii! tlie corner of Fifth street aud Nlcollet avenue, was arraigned in the municipal court yesterday. Ho waived an examination :uk! wu held to await the action of tho icrund jury, and in default of bondb iv $BuU and w:is remanded to custody. The last old soldier of 1812 is dead again. lie died this time in Onclda county, New York, ut the ripe old ape of ninety-live. Journal. What Is the matter of Nathaniel F. Hind, the patriarch from Yonkers, New York, ninety-three years of age, whoattended the National encampment, and was present at the Minnesota enmp lire on the night of Thursday, July .Mi The family of Alderman Lawrence yester- day bad for dessert at dinner corn starch pudding, and of the six persons who par- took of the dtsh, live were taken violently Bick before tbeajbad Qdished eating. It is thought the pußing contained poison, but in such large quantifies as toproduce nausea. Yor.iiiimr rif etMirse followed ami probably averted tittal results. At 2 o'clock yesterday morning the oily scavengi r found the body of a fully devel- oped male child in a privy vault at the board- ing house No. 309 Seventh avenue north. The coroner was promptly notified and he had the remains carried to Connelly & Reilly's morgue. The body was In a badly decomposed state. The coroner has not yet decided upon whnt coarse to pursue. James Brenuau, the worthless inebriate, ft as before his honor again yesterday. It wns the same old offense. Brennan believes in irrigation ~- under certain circumstances.' Ihiii Is, he believes in the constant Irrigation of his stomach, but not with aqua pura. '\u25a0Fort-.- rods" volts him to a T. The court took pity on him and suspended sentence. Be promised to leave at once for the Piue Tree state. Mis-; Ida Peterson, a comely Swede girl, 21 years of age, who recently came to Minne- apolis from Chippewa Falls, has been mis- sing since Saturday, ami the la^t trace of her was when she visited K. Doagtasa 1 employ; i lent bureau. Douglass declares that the girl employed herself to the steward of the Hotel Lafayette, but fbe steward moat cm- !>!utic:iiiy denies) the allegation, and states that lie knows nothing whatever of the girl, it is. then a question between Doojtlass and | the steward. Meanwhile Charles Olafson is scouring the city, in search of her. MINM AI'OLIS rBBSOMAU. Qov. Sherman, oflowa,' ls in the city. Congressman Milo White it- in the city. Dr. R. m. Reynolds, of Fergus Fall*, is in the city. K. A. JcwetW cashier of: the First National bank, Fergus Fulls, is in the city. C M. Palmer, of the -WiA»o*t«wt .Vmit. yesterday returned from Pipestone City, where he was. called .by the sickness of his father. /* ' fudge Unite if Wanted to Ine<trentrl<* Them. The. reader* of the Globe are familar with I i»e irou clad provisions of the liquor ordi- sauce which establish the so-called "active Mtrol*' district.- They will also remember fed a test case al five saloon whose names appear in to-day's municipal court record made, they having been tried i by juries which Juries found them guilty. A littleover a week ago the arguments wero ma \ and lax citations snbmittevl to the courts. YesterJav Judge Bailey' imposeil Bfnter.ee. tilling each sal> »a keeper tin) sad ordered ; thtsn committed to the ; county jail for a term of thirty days.; This result, . being from Judge Bailey filled everybody with surprise. The hardship of .imprisoning a man for a nildemeanor after exacting from hi-n' a com- petent flue is apparent. It :is outrageously unjust, aivd no one suspected bis intention of subjecting the defendants to a test case,, es- pecially to such extreme penalty, and, more- over, many people expressed their 'doubts to the correctness of the statement when made last night. Even the aldermen who passed the ordinance were surprised, and, as a mat- ter of course,' the mayor was. He | simply wanted the matter of imprisonment left to the discretion of the court. . Cha's: Ebert, attorney for the defense, at once, to protect bis clients j from the; out- rage, secured a- stay of proceedings and will take an appeal to the supreme court. "KOs-ECKAKS." Who Shall Have Her.'—frank Daily] the Father, or Mrs. Hulett— A Strong '.Ef- fort Being Made to Prove Sirs. Hulett Im- moral. Jy : }li \u0084 < ••/.. \u25a0. ; '.'- ,; The Daily-Hulett habeas corpus ease is to decide who shall have the custody of the girl Lillie "Rosecrans," daughter of Frank Daily. Daily's wife died when the child was very youug and she was given into the keeping of Mrs. Hulett, who was then Huldah E. ! Stinson, who. adopted the child. Daily claims now that Mrs. : Hulett is an improper person to have charge of his daughter, who is thirteen - years old, and about a month ago applied for a - writ of habeas corpus, which was granted. On the night of the day the writ was granted he for- cibly abducted the child from the house of Mrs. Hulett, but subsequently returned her to the court, and she was committed to the care of the sheriff.. The court room .yesterday ' morning was crowded with witnesses, -and spectators, many of whom were ladies. Sea- grave Smith appeared for Mrs. Hulett; Judge Shaw and Albert Knittle for Mr. Daily. .. Mrs. Hulett was first examined. She tes tified, substantially, that she took the child when it was four days old; when it was two years old its father signed a relinquishment to all claims; the child hau been sick a num- ber of times and she had bought medicine and nursed it; sickness prevented the girl from going to school regularly; concerning the charge that she abducted, .the girl from the school at St. Paul, she acknowledged that she went there with her brothers and took the child. The sisters had denied her the privilege of seeing the jrirl and she did not desire j a separation. .She afterwards took her to lowa, and " dyed her hair partly because the child wished jit and partly lor a disguise. Daily came to see his daughter several times, and claimed the reason that be was not allowed to see her was because the child was at a neighbor's play- ing. Concerning the abduction of the girl by Daily, Mrs. Hulett said that a man came to the house in the afternoon, claiming he was a real estate agent. ;He came again at 9 o'clock in the evening -and asked to see the little girl. She told Lillie to run out of ' the back door. Afterwards heard the child scream and saw Daily put- ting her into a hack in front of the house. Mrs. Hartwick, a neighbor of Mrs. Hulett, testified that she witnessed the . abduction. She saw four men one of whom had the girl in his arms, she remonstrated with them but without avail. LILLIE "ROSECRANS." The girlherself was the next witness. ™Ie is thirteen years old, bright and somewhat precocious; she was very neatly dressed and seemed to enjoy the sensation created. It was easy to see which side she preferred, for she spoke of Mrs. Hulett as "mama" and of her father as "Mr. Daily;" she substan- tiated much of Mrs. Hu'.ett's testimony and said she did not want to go to her father. She said when her father - took her from Mrs. Hulett's house that he held his hand over her mouth and swore at her. She also said he struck her once when he was taking her to Chicago. Detective Quinlan, who was a patrolman on the beat where Mrs. Hulett was alleged to have kept a disreputable house on Western avenue. His evidence simply went to show that girls of an immoral character had re- sorted to her restaurant, and that he, as an officer, had been compelled to drive them away. ID TUB AFTF-HN'OOX ' Frank Daily, the father was put on the stand. He testified that when LUllc's mother died tutit he was living on the Rum river and could not gut home before she died. The child was ti>cn with this woman aud he saw ii the .day after the funeral. He lefthis daughter with her and went back to the woods agaiu and it was three mouths before he saw her again.' There was no price or agreement but Mrs. Hulett continued to keep Lillie and. he paid her $400 in all. At the time he signed the release he had given Mrs. Uulett $200 more than she was entitled to. He took a mortgage for the $200. Afterward she wanted to sell the property and be released her. Three years ago he wanted his daughter to go to school and paid for three months tv- ! ition at a good school. Daring this time the child was only sent about three weeks. Alter this Mrs. Hulett moved into Tenth avenue north. A year ago last fall parties told him the child was running loose and should be sent to school. He bought clothes for her and ar- ranged f or her to stay at the Sisters' school in St. Paul. The sisters found out Mrs. llu- lett was an improper person, and would not let her see Lillie. Mrs. Hulett after- wards took the child away from there and took her to lowa. July 5 a stranger came to his store and told him his daughter was running around with one of the woman's divorced husbands, a iman named Thomas. He Inquired aud i found Thomaß had taken Lillie over on the cast side one evening and had stayed in a house with her over night, near the Catholic "cemetery. On the , night of t>;e abduction he was at ' the back door of the house. He caught her and carried her to the hack; took her to his borne and then drove to Eden Paradise and j took the tram for Chicago, when be placed ; her in a convent to be educated. Had never said he would kill his daughter, but had said he would rather see her dead than In the hands of Mrs. Hulett. He had heard numerous reports to the effect that men came to the house of Mrs. Hulett's at allhours of the night; that there were im- proper women there, etc. When asked who told him this he gave the names, that of a man named Galagher who said he had slept with Mrs. Hulett; a man named Murphy, who keeps a saloon in the neighborhood, and two neighbor*, Sutherland and Fcunors; he also mentioned a Miss Black. I). B. Sutherland testified that be knew Mrs. Hulett when her name was .Thomas three years ago when she lived on tenth street. She bore a bad reputation. She had two fctnnie boarders who were sup- posed to be of bad repute. He did not speak of his own knowledge but of what was currently rumored about in the neighborhood. Albert Marsh, an expoliccman, was called, but as he had only seen Mrs. Hulett twice in three years find testified from hear say his ; evidence was excluded as incompetent. L.Btdmore, and ex-policeman, used to have a leal on Western averinc where Mrs. Hulcit kept a candy shop and restaurant. Mrs. Hulett also kept rooms to rent on the second Boor of a bitildiug several doors dis- tant from where she lived. Had seen men go in ami out of j.^her" place at night; also a back thereat night; had seen Lillie, the pirl, running; rr 'im-l with a girl calico Annie who was supposed to be kept j by a man named Sullivan, iv a room rented \u25a0 by Mrs. Hulett over the «lruer store. \ I Jacob Stats, ori-V'ViS-policeman who had been ,t on the : \u25a0 same : beat, testified substantially \' ; the . same thing. Had told Mrs. Hulett the girl Annie must not come to her place The -irl left about two wrecks tXterwacd. ' , Mary Dubois ha.i cooked for Mrs. Hulett: had not seen anything wrong; saw Mr. Thomas 110 away with Lißle one night; nad" seen Dally drunk once at Mr?. Hulett's. John Craig knew Mrs. Huletfs "place en Third arcane north. Had taken In a women there an istayed over night: did not see Mrs. Hulett at the" tirzo. The hearing of the case will be resumed at 9 o'clock this in. ratal *; ;-,;ia!t Pnrkrr. I In the municipal court yesterday Mart Gorman aud Frank Parker, the two mea ar- rested \rllh C-ctiiCY. Vcri arraigned. "' Tie county attorney appeared for the V state and moved the dismissal of the charge of assault with a dangerous weapon, and they were then arraigned upon a charge of disorderly conduct. Their trial was set for August Bth. The bonds in the case of Gorman were fixed at $100,.while Parker's bonds were placed at $200; : The county attorney \u25a0 holds that the - two men cannot be charged with complicity in the murder as they manifestly had nothing to do withthe shooting. : . BOLD UURGLAKIKS. An Industrious Gang Enter a Jewelry Store at Two Different Times in Broad Daylight and Get Away with $600 Worth of Goods. '..',. / ' A. E. Gregory owns a jewelry store at No. 527 South Washington avenue. The clerk, it seems, has been in the habit of dosing up to go ;to supper. On Saturday evening, while the clerk was so at supper, the burglars broke in and got away with a trunk full of cheap jewelry. Again on Tuesday the store was locked up, and the second raid was ef- fected. The haul this time consisted of about a dozen watches of the value of $200. The detectives were notified, and began ; an *';i industrious investigation which led to the arrest of Charles Harming. Alarge amount of the jewelry. was found in his posession. .: In the hopes of recovering the balance of the property, it . was decided to have' nothing said about j the .arrest, but yesterday Har ming was' arraigned, when it became public property and was given to the papers for publication. The prisoner's ex- amination was set for August 9th. KILLED. BY THECARS. William Rowland, a Farmer, While Driv- ing a flock of. Sheep is Run Over by a Manitoba Train.Near St. Alba and In- stantly Killed. Yesterday morning a William Rowland, who was visitinghis son Herman, a butcher who owns a slaughter house near St. Albans, was instantly killed. Mr. Rowland was deaf and aged, and was engaged in driving a flock of sheep to his sou's slaughter house. IHe was crossing the Manitoba tracks when a train steamed up and he was run over and instantly killed. The body was badly mangled, and was brought to the city and given into the charge of the coroner, who. at once went to scene of the accident to make an. investiga- tion. An inquest will be held to-day, al- though it is evident that, the railway em- ployes were in no way responsible for the casualty. The deceased came to this county last April from Buffalo, and was to return home on Monday. He was seventy-six years old . THE COURTS. , Probate Court. [Before Judge Ueland.] ' Henry Robertson, insane; examined and committed. / f &s*&li'*% Matts Lindahl, insane; examined and committed. ' . ' , Municipal Court. . . [Before Judge Bailey.] Mark Gorman and James Parker, assault with a dangerous weapon ; dismissed upon motion of ti.e county attorney. Frank Daily, kidnapping; continued until August 8 at 9 a. m. Frances Smith, attempt to commit larceny; held to the grand jury in $800 bonds. Joseph Prevrost, obstructing streets; case dismissed upon motion of the city attorney. Henry Barrett, selling liquor without license; continued until August 8 at 9 a. m. Ole Westgard, assault and battery; dis- missed for want of prosecution. Tom Rextad and Charles Peterson, drunk- enness; committed five days each. James Brennan, drunkenness; sentence suspended. Sam Earnest, drunkenness; paid a fine in 87.50. Mark Gorman and James Parker, disor- derly conduct: continued until August 5 at 9a. m.; bail fixed iv the case of Parker at #200 and in the other ense at sloo. Fred Kupul, Conrad Buzha, (justave Deus- tin;r, Geo. Kaulten and Peter Saurer, selling liquor without license; fined $50 each and ordered committed thirty days each in the county jail. Claude Adara3, keeping a house of ill fame: paid a five in $5:2.36. Charles Banning, larceny; continued un- til Angust 5 at 9 a. m. Will uot be Surprised. "Father." Thus spoke a fair girl about whose sweet young face there clustered a bang like a solid stone wall around a flower garden, and in whose voice were miuglod the soft notes of the flute and tbe silvery tones of a dinner bi 1!, half an hour late. The person address- ed was a cold, hard man, with iron gray hair and corkscrew whiskers, aud with tbat stern look in his eye which prompts a man to go elsewhere to borrow a dollar. He was sitting in bis cilice reading the paper. "Well, girl, what is it?" he replied, look- ingat the head lines of the Chicago grain market. ''Father, Gerald bas asked me to marry him. aud I have accepted him." '\u25a0I don't doubt it." •Yes, father, aud I thought I would tell you, so it would not surprise you when be asked you for me." "Don't worry yourself, girl. Don't worry yourself. I will not be half as much sur- prised as Gerald will, my darling," and he reflectively threw lilt, right leg over hl6 left kuce, and ran his hand carefully around tbe toe of his boot. Merchant Traveler. Told to a Child. It happened that one evening Ethel's mainma lit the nursery, instead of Minna, the German maid. "Wbat makes the li^ht come, mammal" queried the child, with 1 the air of one who leuew already, but wished Id test her parent's knowledge. "Why." ex- plained mamma, rather vaguely, 'it is a sort of air that burns. It is shut up in the pipe, and when we turn the knob it rushes out and we light it with a match." "I thought you didn't know," the little oue remarked, "or you would be more afraid of it. I know all about it. Minna told inc. A dragou lives in that pipe, und his tongue is made out of burning Hre. He is a friend of Minna's, so when she. turns the knob he just sticks out i the tip of his tongue and makes us a nice lit- lle lisrht: but he hates children, and ifBobby or I should thrn the knob he would rush right out in this room and eat us aG up in a min- ute. This is true, brcansc Minna told me." j Th;> small narrator relapsed into satisfied J silence, aud her tnith-lovtng mamma fell to Iwondering which was- really better her own lame attempt at scientific explanation or the highly colored fiction of German Minna, which, while an absolute falsehood, appealed at once to the vivid imagination of the child, and effectually prevented her pursuing any personal investigation of the gas. Boston t'ouri'T. \u25a0A Broadway, New York, policeman ar- rested a thief in the very act ofpicking t a stanger's pocket. The proof was over- \u25a0 whelming. "What explanation or excuse have you got!" asked the justice before whom the de- linquent was brought. | "I found the pocket book." "You found it in that gentleman's pocket didn't you:"' ••Of course I did. If I were to say I found it on the sidewalk, evil winded pcopie might think, there was something crooked about the. tran section. Why, yourself, judge, would j We all confidence in me,, ifI were to claim I that I found it in some out of the way place. I Hi " took it to show the gentleman how easily he might bo robbed if - he kept on car- ryinghis money in his overcoat pocket. I wanted to teach him V lesson. '^ 1was : just about to band the pockctbook back to i him. and tel! him never to carry it again in ; an outside pockat, when this evil-minded J ' cop grabbed me and called m. a thief. v The very fact that this policeman arrested me and called me a thief shows that I am innocent.; Tbe police never bother ; any real;; thieves: Just now they want to make the : Roosevelt committee ; belie re they are full of; zeaL : '-_ I know' all. about them. I used to be a police captain myself." - •'That : settles it,'.' \u25a0. responded the i judge; ! "I hold you for triaL—Te xas Sillies*. " ONE OF WEBSTER'S STORIES. Hou> a low Suit Was Won inNetv Hamp- shire, Daniel Webster was fond of a good story and told a few, illustrating his early life in New Hampshire, One evening at a con- vivial party, where he and several distin- guished lawyers were present the conversa- tion happened to turn on the legal profession. "When I was a youug practioner," said Mr. Webster there was but one man at the New Hampshire bar of whom I was afraid, and that was old Baruaby. Tnere were but few men who dared to enter tbo lists with him. Ou one occasion Barnaby was employed to defend a suit for a piece of land, brought by a little crabbed cunning lawyer called Bruce. Brace's case was looked upon good as lost, wbeu it was ascertained that Barnaby was retained against him. The suit came on for trial and Barnahy found that Bruce had worked hard and left no stone unturned to gain a victory. The testimony for the plain- tiff was very strong, and, unless it could not be impeached, the case of the defendant was lost. The principal witness introduced by the plaintiff wore a red coat. In summing up for the defense old Barnaby commenced a furious attack on the witness, pulling his testimony all to pieces and appealing to the jury if a man who wore a red coat was, under any circumstances to be believed. "And who is this red-coated witness?" exclaimed Barnaby, "but a descendant of our common enemy,who has striven to take from us ourlib- etty, aud would not hesitate now to deprive my poor client of his land by making any sort of red-coated statement? 7 ' During his speech Bruce was walking up and down the bar greatly excited, arid convinced that his case was gone, knowing, as he did, the pre- judice of tbe jury against anything British. Barnaby was gesticulating and leaning for- ward to the jnrj' in his eloquent appeal his shfrt bosom opened slightly and Bruce acci- deutly discovered that Barnaby wore a red undershirt. Bruce's countenance brightened up. Putting both hands in his coat pockets he walked to the bar with great confidence, to the ostoni&hmoDt of his client and all lookers on. Just as Barnaby concluded Bruce whispered in the ear of his client, I'/e got him your case is safe," and appiuacb- ing the jury, be commenced his reply to the slaughtering argument of his adversary. Bruce gave a regular history of the ancestry of his red-coated witness, proving his patri- otism and devotion to the country, and his character for truth and veracity. "But what, gentlemau of the jury,"broke forth Bruce in a loud strain of eloquence, while his eye flashed fire, "what are you to expect of a man who stands heretodefenda cause based ou no foundation of right or justice whatev- er; of a mau who undertakes to destroy our testimony on the ground that my witness wears a re.d coat, when gentlemen, of the jury when, when gentlemen of the jury!" here Bruce made a spritig,and catching Bar- naby by the bosom of the shirt, tore it open, displaying his red flannel, ''when Mr. Bar- uaby himself wears a red flannel coat con- cealed under a blue one'" The effect was electrical; Barnaby was beaten at his own game, and Bruce gained tbe cause. San- Francisco Examiner. Sew England the Summer Resort of the Xation. The traveler through tbe billcountry o* New England fcpis that ita use to the nation is a thing of tbe past. Many of the once thrifty towns, famous for religious power, for educational privileges, for social life, and especially for sending out noble men and women, are now struggling villages with small and poorly supported churches, with scarcely sufficient school privileges to pre- pare the young people for the academy or high school. Tbe farms are poorly cultivated, thiu and worthless grasses, and stubborn and prevailing weeds are taking the place of the richer products that once flour- ished. The young men have gone, and the farming is done by tiiose who are growing old; and the prospect seems to be that, in a few years the larger part of the farms will be tenantless, and the country, so dear to the hearts of the descendants of the Pilgrims, will be a useless waste. It seems a provi- dential mistake that such a noble population as New England could once boast of should bo planted upon such a coast and among such rocky hills that must desert them and leave the results oflong toil to depreciate in value, and schools and churches to decline. Yet God is wiser than men. Within a few years past there are intimations that a new U3e is to be made of these beautiful uplands. They have bold and lofty hills, lakes and streams. They have the seashore and the forest. They have the grand scenery and the quiet retreat. Our crowded cities and our overworked population have created a new waut. The vacation for all classes of work- ers, from the national president down to tbe cash-boy, has come of late to be an es- tablisbed thing. If tbe tendency to sum- mer on these coasts and among these hills increase as rauidly for the years to come as it bus done in a few years past. New Eng- land will be none too large to accommodate all who flock to it. It must furnish summer residences for the rabidly increasing popula- tion of our cities and tbe vast valley of the Mississippi. It shares advantages with other places of resort. Its wida range for excur- sion, its delightful drives, its cool and invig- orating summer climate and its freedom from winged pests, make it superior to many resorts. Then it has, what scarce any other portion of the country can ciairn, tbe old as- sociations, dear to the children and grand- children of those who lived here when-New England WU in its prime. It was thinly- scattered but good homes in which to receive those who come for retirement and recrea- tion. Not far off are the cities and flourish- ing towns, and in easy reach are distin- guished places of learning, while tbe whole region centers about the intellectual focus of tbe nation. Let tbe New England farmer shape his movements to meet the new turn in affairs. Still more significantly is there found a reason why tlie Christian people of the land should not allow the weak churches on these hills to die. Many of them have their small congregations in the winter, have their congregations largely increased by sum- mer visitors. A large share of these are members in the city churches, andiftlK-y find in their vacation season church privileges and responsibility they will go back better fit- ted to work in the home church where they spend the remaining six or eight months of the year. The Cholxra inEurope. The Toulon correspondent of the Paris Qautoix has had another interview with tne celebrated Dr. Koch, who sticks to tbe theory that the cholera is tbe work of microbes or microscopic organisms whica are taken into the system with food and water. "AH my \ autopsies," said the doctor, "leave no doubt whatever in regard to the Asiatic character of Ithe plague. I have found precisely the same phenomena as were discovered in the cases ' that I studied in India. Tbe Disrobes were ; the sims, and were more numerous than in cases that I have examined ia Egypt. Messrs Straus and Roux, who were present at the autopsies, also recognized in Egypt the pres- ence of tbe Indian \u25a0sfenbe, but itwas always accompanied by other; but iv the cases here in Toulon the Indian microbe has an extra- ] ordinary preponderance. In addition to its other detractive qualities this microbe se- } crete? a genuine poison, which produces in- -1 sensibility and brings on the dry cholera, I which is the most deadly and rapid of all. Al I have already said, the contamination is not carried in the air, but is brought about through tbe absorption of the microbes tbat infest alimentary matter, and particularly j water." "And this theory." said tbe GwvoU corres- j pondenU ''explains your advice to the au- | thoritips to close the wells, to order people to drink only wat«?r that bad been boiled or tak- en from distant localities ?" ' ••Precisely." said the doetor. "And it is also necessary to take only food <bat is well cooked: for bear in mind the microbe dies in a hi^b, and above all a dry temperature. The first precaution to take is to subject the I bedclothing of tbe victims to a high temper- !ature withdry air and phenic acid more or less condensed. The microbe cannot live in condensed solutions of phenic acid or in dry air. It must net be forgotten tbat it devel- opes and multiplies is humidity. It bas been found in the ponds of the countries where cholera exists. Acting upon this the- ory, I advised the closing and thorough beat- ing of the apartments infected." Correspondent What v jour opiuion. doctor, as to the origin of the present epi- demic? Dr. Koch—l believe itis safe to say that, in view of the precautions taken by the navy the cholera could only have been brought here by 6omc merchant vessels, probably by an English ship; for on board English ves- sels there is little scruple about concealing the deaths during a voyage or about falsify- ing the books. The Paris suys that Germau societies have bought up all the phenic acid in the market, and are now selling it at double its value, while at the same time German soientlflc lectures are being widely published in which the use of phenic acid is strongly recom- mended as a preventive against cholera. SOME APPROPRIATE REAMNGr For Our Germau Fel luw Citizens. I Boston Post July22.J The fact that the leading prohibitionist of the country has endorsed the Resublicun can- didate as entirely orthodox oa that issue, seems to give the Cincinnati Commercial Gaxelte great uneasiness and it attempts to show that Blaiue is merely a prohibitionist of expediency, iv other . words, and when he went to Maiue filled with a big ambition he found public sentiment back of prohibi- tion and fell iuto live.' This is not very high ground for taking a position of a lifetime ; but that he has taken it there can be no doubt. A Bangorcorrespondent of the Albany Anjus writes : ' In 1882 Hon. Neal Dow published an1 arti- cle; on prohibition in Maine, in which he quotes what he calls "testimony from , the highest authorities" in the state, obtained, he declares, iv1872. He quotes what Hannibal Haralin, Lot M. Morrill and Wm. I. Ftyfi said, and declares: "Mr. Blaiue adds to this—'l did not reside in the state prior to the enactment of the first" prohibitory law, and therefore cannot make a comparative statement from my own knowledge; but. so far as my knowledge extends, derived from 20 years' observation of the couse of temper- ance in this state, I most heartily concur in all that is said in the foregoing letter," Now what was said in the foregoing letter? This,among things: "At the time of the enactment of the law, in 1851, the traffic existed openly and everywhere in Maine, as it now does in those states where it is not prohibited. The immediate effect was to outlaw the trade. The favorable effects of this change are great and every- where apparent to the most casual observer. *** We do not believe the people would again sanction the policy of license to drink- ing houses and tippling shops." This opinion was gratuitous on Blames part, given to make himself strong at home. It remains to be seen whether bis bigot's creed will add to his strength in the country? ; ON A CAKE OF ICE. /h j ; ANovel and Uncomfortable Sort of Gam- bling. "Jimmy Tough" is probably :' the most widely known of the Pittsburg, (Pa.) news- boys, says the Reading News. He is about a yard high, is' extremely careless about his personal appearance, has a very,, very ro- guish eye, and Is agreat gambler- He crossed sth avenue, in that city, recently, to where "Limpy" McMahon stood in front of Tony Newell's, and with a bluffing swagger said "I ken beat you runnin' for a nickel. 'Limpy.' " "Limpy," who travels with the aid of a crutch merely responded: "Umph! Any- body kin do that!" "Well, if you want to gamble," said "Tough," "I'llbet I kin 6it on One 0' them cakes 0' ice longer'n you kin." "Limpy" felt about in the uttermost re- cesses of- his pocket and gathered together five pennies, and without saying a word, banded them to one of several bystanders who had been interested. "Tough" follow- ed this action, and each gravely sat down upon a cake of ice which lay on the side- walk. The stakeholder took out his watch. For five minutes they sat there, and then "Tough" began to squirm. He complained that his pants were not what they should be, and that he was therefore at a disadvantage. At five minutes and a half he could stand the chill no longer, and jumped up and ran across the street, crying that the ice was burning. "Limpy" sat still thirty seconds longer, and captured the dime. SALATHIEL'S STOKY Instructs the Neif/hborslin Swine Surf/pry— Telia Why Pork Swells in the Barrel. "I don't guess nothing about it; I know tis so, and that's all there is to it," suidSala- thiel Ward, taking out a quid of navy plug and shifting his position. Salathicl's re- marks were occasioned by a discussion among some of his neighbors and a Boston Globe reporter as to whether salt made pork swell in the barrel. He came along and joined them in the debate at a very opportune time. ;.-*.: -fr "\u25a0'\u25a0. "Let me tell you he continued, it was in the fall of '72 that I had a shote just like un- to your'n looked near enough like him to be his twin and he wouldn't fat, nary bit. -I gin him more'n thirty bushels o' meal, and he war poorer when I got done than he war when I fust begun. I knowed what ailed him at once. 'Twas a black, hol- ler tooth that wouldn't let him fat. So one day I justtuk and yanked out the tooth, and then I did something by accident like that made me sure o' what I'm a-tellin' ye." '\u25a0What's that Artemas?" asked two or three; this name, Artemas, being one they had given him because he had no resem- blance to the great humorist of that name. "Wait till ye hear. It war this way. I knowed as I had to put some salt in a hole cut on the back on his neck afore he would lay on flesh any. so I caught him and got his head right atween my shins, ami, ..do you believe me? as soon as the critter felt the knife a-cuttin' into his . neck he made a squeal and a jump anil went out from under me quicker' scat. He jest ranned through atween my legs and drawed that knife the bul length "on him. It cut a purty gash clean from bis ears to his tail." . '•I don't see whar that has got to do with what makes pork swell," remarked an old farmer, who was watching a flock of crows that had just alighted la hi- corn-field. "You jest hold turn - i li Igit done, will you! As I was a-saying, that cut was a bad one, and the critter wasn't wuth sewing up. So I jest htt up a kittle of water, and stuck my knife into totber side of his neck, and dressed him and salted him down. Itwas mighty mean pork and no mistake, and I reckoned we should Lev. to fare slim for pork en' cabbage that winter. By gosh, the rine in some places war thicker'n the meat, llowinsoever, I laid it down in salt, 'and thought no more about it tillMi randy come to me 'one day and ecz, sez she; 'Slath' .the pork barrel's busied.' I went down cellar.and there, sure enough, every hoop was broke clear'n two. I got some new Norway iron . ones over. to the ! blacksmith shops, and when I come to take the pork eout V that barrel, by Jeems, if it hadn't growed in thickness nearly double. It was in big, white chunk's good's you can buy at the store. I fixed up the barrel, put in a lot more salt, threw the pork back, covered it with pickle and left it be. Weil, sir, by hokey, that pork kept on a-swellin' and grow- in' till it overrun the barrel, an J I had toget another to hold it all. It was white, and fat, and clear, and some on it would cut upwards o' six inches.". \u25a0\u25a0 - . '' - \u25a0 "That is queer," said the nervous farmer; i "how do you account for it?" 'I account fur it in this yer way. I reck- on that hog was »ich a bur eater and he et so much that my thirty bushels of meal passed into his meat afore it swelled. Itdidn't do I him, no good, you tec. .'. It, was jes.' lying locked up in tb ;• system awaitin,' and when the salt, got' in there it turned the meal into fat end busted ray barrel." '•Well, l do declare, said a chorus of voices, as : the farmer hastily departed, leaving Sala- tbiel by the roadside alone. \u25a0 ;":>\u25a0•* :\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'*':-'\u25a0\u25a0 ' t; ; '- ~- \u25a0 ~~ '' \u25a0' \u25a0: '* We have observed that when our troops are whipped by the Indians " the affair is casually alluded to a3 a *'repuis«," but when the Indians are scattered by our troops the- event is ostentatiously, heralded as a "disas- trous defeat." The Cincinnati "saloon keepers are worry- ing the aUte in the Scott liquor law caug*>, and rnr-an to demand a jury- in each case, there being over 300 suits. ;..; ; : . WHY SHE AVENT TO NEWPOKT. Told in a Tratln Secret by Andrnmnda to Hcnrleo. Yonkers Gazette: "Andromeda! there be such tidings i' the air this morn as will thine interest fire to fervid fever." "This likes mine ear, good sir, for I've but just returned from formal round, and hints mine arm of something like tbe 'shakes.' " "Then is thy preparation fit, me maid, for there is further agitation i' me news." "Give it to me, then, that I may break me Quaker silence with a quake." ''Have at thee, damosel! Thou knowest Lucuilus Marcia? 1 ' "He that is sire to that jade Beatrice, whose alti freights the sabbath air with onion taint?" "The same, Andromeda!" "I know him as the parent of a witch whose garments fit her as the pod doth fit j the, bantling pea." "Or as these tidings fit thine ear, mayhap. This same Lucullus Marcia hath suspension made, aud weighs his assets i' the lesser scale." "Hath what, Henrieo? Pare off the fur- bisbments of this, thy news, and give jt me in naked Anglo-Saxon." "It being yet a stripling bit of news, thus do I strip it girl. Lucullus, then, hath failed!" "Failed, saidst thou? Failed! Oh, that the fates had spared me this, Heurico!" "Spared tiiee which? Why, thou btsciized- ed one, this hampers not thy credit nor thy sire's, an' wherefore should it grieve thee, then, I pray!" "Grieve me, thou beetlehead! Dost thou not weigh the outcome of all this! Her fa- ther fails, Beatrice goes to Newport or the Branch and drives a dog-cart through the summer-tide! With difference twixt Ihe slim per cent he pays and that imposing item whica he owes, she and her sire willa dal- liance make with ease and luxury, buy them new poodles arul rare bric-a-brac, pose them as objects of the world's quaint sympathy, and, ere the autumn wanes, hie them to Eu- rope for a round of months, and hither bring them back again blazoned Avitu some new lie in heraldry!" "Marry, Andromeda, au' thy wits are- ripe !" "Would that me father's were as ripe:, Henrico, for often hath he poised him'on the very verge where failure would have whelm- ed us with its weal, and then some hint of oldentime integrity would win him ironi't, and, like a dog, he'd back to work for honor and the empty fame it brings. O, good me lord! well is It said that he who helps him- self sets quickest i'the tide of booming for- tune!" They are ill-discoverers that think there is no land when they can see nothing but sea. *** Because it is silly to believe every- thing, there are some so wondorous wise as to believe nothing. Samuel Maunden. Lord Ruportswood, an Australian cattle man, who lives in a four million dollar house in Miloourne, is said to be richer than Wil- liam H. Vauderbilt, %jL . —t^l Will r.r-!fvthe BROOD, roprrt- mjsJ| laic t,?, VEX ami KIDNEYS, , TH3rl_"l-E i . and REfiTOms THE HEALTH \£SftSS§\ and VIGOK of YOUTH. Drs- \«E!i™&si» pensla. Want of Appetite, In- x73*wfr\ digestion. Lack of Strength, and Tired FecHiigabsolutely cured. lioiies. muscles Mid *' \u25a0 lsi "Bia Enlivens the mind and M ' «i »» hi ma *S? -supplies Brain Power. 9 £*\u25a0» \u25a0 X" *S Suffering from complaints fcs«-^X<* 1 ' B Bbi <S3» peculiar to their sex will find inDE. HARTER'SIROW TONICa safe and speedy cure. Gives a clear, healthy complexion. Frequent attempts at counterfeiting only add to the popularity of the original. Do notex- periment—get the Ouiuikal. and Bust. HARTEE'S °^SaS' LlWLgl IrILLDCMPE.SiSKEH or leave a.!t.uKmmmn*mfnnxarißXKt* BOWELS CONSTIPATED. Persons suffering from TORPIDITYof the LIVER or Inactivity ottiie Bowels, will find a permanent CUSS by ton use of these Pills. No mediclno Bhonld ba t "ki>n without first Clßsnstni} tbo Sfomnch end Bowels with a dofo of HAKTZB.'SJLrv-EB PILXiS. Sample doao Sent Frno on application by postal, CSeod yonr address to The T>r.HnrterMed.ro. "v St. Lords, Mo., for our "DREAMBOOK." 4 Full of strenso and useful information, free, Assessment for Paving and CiirMni St. Peter Street Office of the Board or Pojilic Works, ) Cityof St. Paul, Minn., July 31, 1831. I The Board of Public Works inand for the cor- poration of the City of St. Paul, Minnesota, will meet at their office, in said city, at 7:80 p. m., on the Bth day of August, A. D., i B4, to make an assessment of benents, costs and expenses arising from the paving and curbing of St. Pe- ter street, from Third (3rd) street to Martin street in said city on the property on the line of paid improvement and benefited thereby, amount- ingin the aggregate to $41,567.35. All persons interested are hereby notified to be present at . said time and place of making said assessment and willbe beard. JOHN FAKKINGTOX,President. Official: K.L. Gorman, Clerk Board of Public Works. 214-316 Assessment for Paying and. Cnroing .' ;i j Fourth Street, Office OF THE Boatid of Public Works. | Citt of St. Paul, Minn., July 81, 1331. f The Board of Public Works in and for the cor- poration of the City of st. Paul, Minnesota, will meet at their office in said city ct 7:30 p. m. on the Bth day of August, A. 1). 1884. to make an assessment of, benefits, costs and expenses 1 arising from the paving and curbing of Fourth ! (4th)street, from Jackson street to Seventh (7th) street iv sail city, on the property on the line of said improvement and benefited thereby, amounting inthe aggregate to $34,899.30. All persons interested are hereby notified to be present at said time and place of making said assessment and willbe heard. JOHN FARRINGTON", President. . Official: I£. L. QotOUK, Cierk Board of Public Works. 214-213 i Assessment [or Paw and Mug \ rillli Street Office or the Board op Public Wan ) City st. Paul, Minn., July 31, 1884. f The Board of Public Works i;; and for the cor- poration of the City of St. Paul. Minns* will i meet at their office 1:1 soid city at 7:80 p.m. on the I Bth day of Auga^, A. D. 1884, to make an assess- : inent of benefit?, coats and expenses arising I from the paving and curbing of Fifth street, '\u25a0 from Broadway to St. Peter street, (except that part of sni'i Fifth street, between Jackson and blbley streets,) insaid city, on the property on I the line of ca'.d improvement and benefited thereby amounting in the aggregate to 327,521.35. All persons interested aro hereby notified to bo present at said time and place of making said assessment and 'will be h<?ar<l. 'i ions, FAEKIN'GTOX, President. ; Official: K. L. Gokjjax, Clerk Hoard ofPublic Works. 214-213 , . Assessment lor Paying: aM Mm Fiftii Street. ! Orricr or the BoabO or Public Works, ' ) Cityof St. Paul, Minn., July SI, 168-1. f \u0084 \u25a0 Tbe Board of Public Work* in and for the cor- IpoTation of the cityof St. Paul, Minnesota, will i meet at their office in said city at 7:30 p. m. on the Mb day of A a gust, A. D. 1684, to make an as- eesament of ber.outs costs and expends i aristag from the paving and curbing of Fifth ! street between Jackson and Sibley streets, {ex- j : cept east 150 feet,) In said city, on the property !on the line of sail ; improvement and benefited ! thereby, amounting inthe aggregate to52,330.80. All persons interested are hereby notified to be prevent at said time end place of making said as- i sessment and willbe heard. \u25a0 ';v JOHN F AHKISGTOS, President. Official: . . .. '\u25a0 K. L.GoiUfAS, Clerk Board of Public Work*. SI4OSS ] Estate of John F. Mclntosli iMHismTors she. Notice is horeby given, ,that on Wednesday, Auguut C, I£S4, at 10 a. m. at the front door ol the butcher shop of Messrs .Davis * & McAuley, on Robert street, in the cityof Saint Paul, Ram- sey county, state of Minnesota, ouch shop being on the property hereinafter described, pursuant to the order of the Probate Court, of said county, made in the matter of the estate of John K. Mcln- town deceased, I 1 the underpinned, as the admin, istrator of euid estate, will sell at publicauction, to the highest bidder for cash, the followingde- scribed personal property, to-wlt: Tho uueipired term of tho lease held by the said deceased at th« lime of his death in or to the south one-third oi lots 1, 2, 3, in block 11, in Saint Paul Proper, it said county, and the leasehold interest, and all rights in paid property belonging to said estate, such lease terminates July 1, 1830. The sale will be subject to all the terms and, conditions of said lease, which is In my posses* sion, and which any one can examine; and will also be bubject to the leases made by said admin- istrator to the present occupants of said premises. Ultf L. LAMPREY. Administrator of the estate of John P. Mclntoeh, deceased. 210-219 thrives on Horiici'a Food," write hundreds of grateful mothers. Mothers' milk contains no starch. HORLICKS' FOOD FOR INFANTS (free 'from starch) requires nocookinor. The best food in health or sickness for INFANTS. Thebeet diet for DYSPEPTICS and INVALIDS. Highly beneficial tonursing mothers as a drink. Price 40and 75c. All . or ug-Kists. Bock onthe treatm^ntof "I lw!iev<s ft to be «operlor toanything of th» Iliadfor children."—D. Simmon,, X.!>., Sim York. '•LDheattntinzly pronounce it tho beat Feud ia the market."— V. M. Barrett, If. D., Boston. "One of thebest substitutes for mot::«'s irilk." 11. G. Prt-'.on, X.[>\u0084 Brooklyn, X. T. Willbe Bent by mail on receipt of price in stamps. HOKLtCR'S FOOD CO., Racine, Win. . \u25a0ft^-L'sa HOBUCK'sDcrEITBACT op SUI.T~Sja Minneapolis Advertisements. AMUSEMENTS. THEATRE OOMIQUE 219, 331, 333 First Aye. South, W.W. BROWN Manager JAMES WHEELER. . .Bnsiness &Stage Manager WEEK OF JULY 2 1ST, 1884. ; ANOTHER SHOWER OF , ¥audߥli]B_ Stars ! Muldoon Quartette, Emma La Manse, Lillia Morris, Sheffer &Blakely, Alice Jennings, Eddie O'Brien, Lottie Dyencort, MillieLa Fonte, Kyi Ross, Lottie Laviere, Lulu Roy, May Holton, Lue Browning, and the Regular Stock Com- pany. : Matinees Thursday and Saturday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. ISP-popular PRICES_acS P p SWEIM it it hJ 6 I JLillr\JJUj.I I lOOfasMit'nAys.Soni (Under Northwestern National Bank,) MINNEAPOLIS, - MINN, -Lludl JubliLlLGj INSURANCE AND TICKET AGENT Js?~Tickets sold to and from allForeign ports, also drafts on all the principal cities of Europe* Lands for sale or exchange in Wisconsin, Min- neseta and Dakota. 155-3 m DRUGS. ' " " * Mm r- Will Cure All kinds hard or eoft corns, callouses and bunion causing no pain or soreness; dries Instantly; will ao toll niiythiiit?, BDd never fails to elicit a cure. Prlca £Sc;bymall, 30c. The genuine put up In yelloW wrappers and manufactured only by Jos. K. llutDlu, druggist «nd dealers In ail kinds of Patent Medicine^- Knots, Herbs, Liquors), Paints, CiU VurnUhe* Brushes, etc. Minneapolis Mluu. MEDICAL. . 31 Bird St, i, Minneapolis, Minn. Treat all Chronic, Nervous Diseases of . Men mid Women. DR. SPINNEY Is well known as the founder of the Montreal (C. E.) Mkihcax, Institute, and having given his entire attention for the pact twenty years to the treatment of chronic and special diseases in- cident to both eexcx, liin success has produced astonishing remits. Isy his method of treat- ment, the suffering arc fullyrestored to original health.' He would call the attention of the afflicted to the fuct of hi- long-standing and well-earned reputation, as a nufllcient assuranco of his (-kill and nocceps. Thousands who have been under bis treatment have felt and expressed. emotions of gratitude welling up from hearts touched for the first time by the silken chord that whispers of returning health. Those suffering from Catarrh or Bronchitis, can be assured of a perfect cure by bis new method of treatment. , DR. SPINNEY can detect the slightest di». case of the Chest, Lungs or any internal organ, and guarantees a cure in every cane he under- takes. It matters not what your troubles maybe, icome and let the Doctor examine your Case. If itit i nulu WILL TKLL YOU so; IT not. 118 will tkll you that; for lie will not undertake a case unless? he is confident of affecting a cure. Itwill cost} >v nothing for consultation; so please ' .i.l and satisfy yourselves whether the Doctor understands your case. YOUNG MEN 1 Who may be suffering from nervous debility i -.'.-ill do well to avail themselves of this, the greatest boon ever laid at the altar of suffering humanity. Dii.SPINNEY will Guarantee to Fokfbi* Kivk lltrsnnr.D Dollars for every case of weak- ness or disease of any kind or character, which be undertakes and fails to cure. IleCtfould theiefore say to the unfortunate sufferer who may read this r.otice, that yon are treading on dangerous ground, when you longer delay In 1 peeking the proper remedy for your complaint. You may be in the first stage— remember that you aro approaching the last. If you are border- Ingon th,e last, and are suffering some or all of its ill effects, remember that if yon obstinatoly preset inprocrastination, the time must come when the most skillful physician can render you no \u25a0 -Istance: when th.: door of hope will be closed again.-- you; when no angel of mercy can bring you relief. In no case has the doctor failed lof success. Then let not despair work Itself upon your im^iiiatiou. but avail yourself of the beneficial results of his treatment before you< ca*e it beyond the reach of medical shill, or be- fore grim dentil harries you toa premature grave. PilesC'uretl without litiugKiiifeorLigatur MIDDLE-AGED MEN. There are many at the ego from thirty to sixty ' who are troubled with frequent evacuations of the bladder, often accompanied by a slight smarting or bnrnins seneatlon and weakening the system in a manner the patient cannot ac- count for. On examining the urinary deposit* a ropy sediment willoften >»: . found, and . some- timer small particles of albumen, v.ill appear, or the color will fee of a thin, or milklsh hue, again changing to a dark and torpid appearance.' There are many men who die of this difficulty. Ignorant of the cause, which is the second stage of wesiknefs of vitalorgans. .Dr. S. will guarantee a perfect core in all men cases, and a healthy restoration of these organ*. - . ' . Only one interview required in the majority o! cast*-. JJalance . of treatment can be taken at borne without say interropliort to business. All letter* or - cor;.rjiuni. ;strictly confi- dential. !, Medicines packed to as not -to excite cariosity, end sent by express, if f nil description of case it given," but a personal interview in all cases preferred. * Or/ice Boras—o to 12 a. m., 1to 5 and 7to 8. .p. 7a. Sunday,' 'i to 10 a. m. only. . Consultation * iree. : ' . THE ST. PAUL DAILYGLOBE. SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 2, 1884,

u25a0ffIPBUSMIS. John F. - Chronicling America « …chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn90059522/1884-08-02/ed...\u25a0ffIPBUSMIS. TheMinneapolis office of the DailyGlobe has been removed

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\u25a0ffIPBUSMIS.The Minneapolis office of the Daily Globe has

been removed to 213 Hcnnepin avenue. •

The Daily Globe'

anbe found on sale every morning at the followingnews stands: \u25a0i":;~;?^

Nicollet IIoUBe news stand, St. James Hotelnewsstand, J. W. \u25a0 Ayers, South Third street,'between Nicollet and Henccping avenue, W. E.Gerrigh, 601 South Washington . avenue, W. H.Stxkney, 517 Cedar avenue. H.J. Worth, oppo-site Manitoba depot. Geo. A.'Morse, 200 Centralavenue, K. A. Taylor,386 Hannepin avenue, C.R.Murphy, 806 Hennepin avenue, 11. Hoefiaer,1321 Washington avenue north, and Heddcrly &Co,, 55 Central avenue. \u25a0

MIK>'£AroJLIS GLOJiIXJSTS.

The board ofpark commissioner:; willmeetIbis afternoon.

The Ames Zouaves held a drill meeting in

their armory last evening.Amonthly meeting of the press club will

be held to-morrow in the office of the Fio-ruer Press.

The A. O. 11. willmeet Sunday aiternoonitMarket hall, South Minneapolis, at 2o'clock.

A workman at the Union depot yesterdaymorning fell from a scaffold and dislocateda finger.

Winn Brackett and Jimmy Stoildart areboth working for the Republican nominationforsheriff.

Twenty-three warranty deeds were recordedby the register of .deeds yesterday, amount-ing to $41,303. .

The assault and battery case against OleWestgdrd; 'was dismissed yesterday for want

of prosecution. -The Manitoba Railway company is . con-

structing 400 cars at their shops forthe wheattraflle in the fall. 0j

The Illinois association went out to LakeMinuctonka yesterday and enjoyed a verypleasant excursion.

A Milwaukee employe yesterday, whileunder a car, cut a bad gash in his scalp byraising his head too previously.

The reserved scat 6ale, for the WallackTheater company's engagement next week,

t! at tlie box office this morning.During tlie months of July the clerk of the

:ourt issued 134 marriage licenses.rldentry a good mouth for nuptials.

Ibe Prank Daily kidnapping case wasbrousr.nl up in the municipal court again yes-

day, but it was continued until August Bth.

Detective *Caswell expresses the opinionthat the girl in the case which is attract-ing bo much attention is not the daughter ofMrs. Burner.

Mrs. Burner, the alleged procuress, audMadame White, held to the grand jury fors':(iotintr Mrs. Jones, occupy the same cell inthe county jail.

Claude Adams, tbe housekeeper, so-called,ata .stylish fordell at No. 119 North Secondstreet, paid a fine in $5^.50 in the municipal•

hiit yesterday.Henry Barrett was arraigned before Judge

Bailey yesterday, charged with selling liquorwithout a license. His trial was continueduntil August sth.

Muny of the police are still of the opinionthat Dun Wood is really the man who shotWiukler, despite his apparently straight for-ward story to the contrary.

The Hygeine and Heredity society willhold

a mother's meeting at the Friends' church,eonier of Ilennepiu avenue and Eight street,Saturday afternoon at 3 o'clock sharp.

The colored citizens pretty generally cele-brated emancipation day yesterday ina pic-nic :it Lake Calhoon. They held full poB--session throughout the day and were happy;t.-; kin^s.

Walter Lundahl, an insane Swede, entereda lioiikc ut 209 Seventh avenue south,knocked anvnm&u down and robbed her of*!.->. He vhbs arrested and taken before theprobate court.

Burglars made an unsuccessful attempt toto through O. E. Smith's house on NorthMain street. Mr. Smith was awakened andhe sent two bullets aa a reminder tlint theircompany was not wanted. Unfortunatelylie is apparently a poor marksman.

The monthly report for the municipal courtorJuly shows a total of 208 cases disposedof during the mouth, tbe total receipts being11,728.65; criminal cases 189, receipts

H,559.70; civileas.-s 12S, receipts $198.95.The decrease in total receipts below those ofJune is $140.58.

Francis Smith, the man arrested on thecharge of entering John H. Long's residenceii!tlie corner of Fifth street aud Nlcolletavenue, was arraigned in the municipalcourt yesterday. Ho waived an examination:uk! wuheld to await the action of tho icrundjury, and in default of bondb iv $BuU andw:is remanded to custody.

The last oldsoldier of 1812 is dead again.lie died this time in Onclda county, NewYork, ut the ripe old ape of ninety-live.

—Journal. What Is the matter of Nathaniel F.Hind, the patriarch from Yonkers, NewYork, ninety-three years ofage, whoattendedthe National encampment, and was presentat the Minnesota enmp lire on the night ofThursday, July .Mi

The family of Alderman Lawrence yester-day bad for dessert at dinner corn starchpudding, and of the six persons who par-took of the dtsh, live were taken violentlyBick before tbeajbad Qdished eating. It isthought the pußing contained poison, butin such large quantifies as toproduce nausea.Yor.iiiimr rif etMirse followed ami probablyaverted tittal results.

At2 o'clock yesterday morning the oilyscavengi r found the body of a fully devel-oped male child in a privy vault at the board-ing house No. 309 Seventh avenue north.

The coroner was promptly notified and hehad the remains carried to Connelly &Reilly's morgue. The body was Ina badlydecomposed state. The coroner has not yetdecided upon whnt coarse to pursue.

James Brenuau, the worthless inebriate,ftas before his honor again yesterday. Itwnsthe same old offense. Brennan believes inirrigation~-

under certain circumstances.'IhiiiIs, he believes in the constant Irrigationof his stomach, but not with aqua pura.'\u25a0Fort-.- rods" volts him toa T. The courttook pity on him and suspended sentence.Be promised to leave at once for the PiueTree state.

Mis-; Ida Peterson, a comely Swede girl,21 years of age, who recently came to Minne-apolis from Chippewa Falls, has been mis-sing since Saturday, ami the la^t trace of herwas when she visited K. Doagtasa 1employ;ilent bureau. Douglass declares that thegirl employed herself to the steward of theHotel Lafayette, but fbe steward moat cm-!>!utic:iiiydenies) the allegation, and statesthat lie knows nothing whatever of the girl,itis. then a question between Doojtlass and |

the steward. Meanwhile Charles Olafson isscouring the city,in search of her.

MINMAI'OLIS rBBSOMAU.

Qov. Sherman, oflowa,' ls in the city.

Congressman MiloWhite it-in the city. •

Dr. R. m. Reynolds, of Fergus Fall*, is inthe city.

K. A. JcwetW cashier of:the First Nationalbank, Fergus Fulls, is in the city.

C M. Palmer, of the -WiA»o*t«wt .Vmit.yesterday returned from Pipestone City,where he was. called .by the sickness of hisfather. _» /* '

fudge Uniteif Wanted to Ine<trentrl<* Them.The. reader* of the Globe are familar withI

i»e irou clad provisions of the liquor ordi-sauce which establish the so-called "activeMtrol*' district.- They will also rememberfed a test case al five saloon

—whose

names appear in to-day's municipal courtrecord

—made, they having been tried i

by juries which Juries found them guilty. Alittleover a week ago the arguments weroma \ •

and lax citations snbmittevl to thecourts. YesterJav Judge Bailey' imposeilBfnter.ee. tilling each sal> »a keepertin) sad ordered ;thtsn committed to

the ;county jail for a term ofthirty days.; This result, . being fromJudge Bailey filled everybody with surprise.The hardship of.imprisoning a man for anildemeanor after exacting from hi-n' a com-petent flue is apparent. It:is outrageouslyunjust, aivd no one suspected bis intention ofsubjecting the defendants to a test case,, es-pecially to such extreme penalty, and, more-over, many people expressed their 'doubts tothe correctness of the statement when madelast night. Even the aldermen who passedthe ordinance were surprised, and, as a mat-ter of course,' the mayor was. He|simplywanted the matter of imprisonment left tothe discretion of the court. .

Cha's: Ebert, attorney for the defense,at once, to protect bis clients jfrom the; out-rage, secured a- stay of proceedings and willtake an appeal to the supreme court.

"KOs-ECKAKS."

Who Shall Have •Her.'—frank Daily] theFather, or Mrs. Hulett—A Strong '.Ef-fort Being Made toProve Sirs. Hulett Im-moral. Jy :}li \u0084

< ••/.. \u25a0.;'.'- ,;

The Daily-Hulett habeas corpus ease is to

decide who shall have the custody of the girlLillie "Rosecrans," daughter ofFrank Daily.Daily's wife died when the child was veryyouug and she was given into the keepingof Mrs. Hulett, who was then Huldah E.!Stinson, who. adopted the child.Daily claims now that Mrs.:Hulett isan improper person to have chargeof his daughter, who is thirteen

-years old,

and about a month ago applied for a-writ of

habeas corpus, which was granted. On thenight of the day the writ was granted he for-cibly abducted the child from the house ofMrs. Hulett, but subsequently returned herto the court, and she was committed to thecare of the sheriff..

The court room .yesterday'morning

was crowded with witnesses, -andspectators, many of whom were ladies. Sea-grave Smith appeared forMrs. Hulett; JudgeShaw and Albert Knittle for Mr. Daily. ..

Mrs. Hulett was first examined. She testified, substantially, that she took the childwhen itwas four days old; when it was twoyears old its father signed a relinquishmentto all claims; the child hau been sick anum-ber of times and she had bought medicineand nursed it; sickness prevented the girlfromgoing to school regularly; concerningthe charge that she abducted, .thegirl from the school at St. Paul,she acknowledged that she went there withher brothers and took the child. The sistershad denied her the privilege of seeing the jrirland she did not desire ja separation. .Sheafterwards took her to lowa, and

"dyed her

hair partly because the child wished jitand partly lor a disguise. Daily came to seehis daughter several times, and claimed thereason that be was not allowed to see her wasbecause the child was at a neighbor's play-ing. Concerning the abduction of the girlby Daily, Mrs. Hulett said that a man cameto the house in the afternoon,claiming he was a real estate agent. ;Hecame again at 9 o'clock in the evening -andasked to see the little girl. She told Lillieto run out of'the back door. Afterwardsheard the child scream and saw Daily put-ting her into a hack in front of the house.

Mrs. Hartwick, a neighbor of Mrs. Hulett,testified that she witnessed the . abduction.She saw four men one of whom had the girlin his arms, she remonstrated with them butwithout avail.

LILLIE "ROSECRANS."The girlherself was the next witness. ™Ie

is thirteen years old, bright and somewhatprecocious; she was very neatly dressed andseemed to enjoy the sensation created.Itwas easy to see which side she preferred,for she spoke of Mrs. Hulett as "mama" andof her father as "Mr. Daily;" she substan-tiated much of Mrs. Hu'.ett's testimony andsaid she did not want to go to her father.She said when her father

-took

her from Mrs. Hulett's house thathe held his hand over her mouth and sworeat her. She also said he struck her oncewhen he was taking her to Chicago.

Detective Quinlan, who was a patrolmanon the beat where Mrs. Hulett was alleged tohave kept a disreputable house on Westernavenue. His evidence simply went to showthat girls of an immoral character had re-sorted to her restaurant, and that he, asan officer, had been compelled to drive themaway.

ID TUB AFTF-HN'OOX'

Frank Daily, the father was put on thestand. He testified that when LUllc'smother died tutit he was livingon the Rumriver and could not gut •

home before shedied. The child was ti>cn with this womanaud he saw ii the.day after the funeral. Helefthis daughter withher and went back tothe woods agaiu and it was three mouthsbefore he saw her again.' There was noprice or agreement but Mrs. Hulettcontinued to keep Lillie and. hepaid her $400 in all. At the time he signedthe release he had given Mrs. Uulett $200more than she was entitled to. He took amortgage for the $200. Afterward she wantedto sell the property and be released her.Three years ago he wanted his daughter togo to school and paid for three months tv-!ition at a good school. Daring

this time the child was only sent

about three weeks. Alter thisMrs. Hulett moved into Tenth avenue north.A year ago last fallparties told him the childwas running loose and should be sent toschool. He bought clothes for her and ar-ranged forher to stay at the Sisters' schoolin St. Paul. The sisters found out Mrs. llu-lett was an improper person, and would notlet her see Lillie. Mrs. Hulett after-wards took the child away fromthere and took her to lowa.July 5 a stranger came to his store and toldhim his daughter was running around withone of the woman's divorced husbands, a

iman named Thomas. He Inquired audifound Thomaß had taken Lillie over on thecast side one evening and had stayed in ahouse with her over night, nearthe Catholic "cemetery. On the

,night of t>;e abduction he was at'the back door of the house. He caught herand carried her to the hack; took her to hisborne and then drove to Eden Paradise and jtook the tram for Chicago, when be placed

;her in a convent to be educated. Had neversaid he would killhis daughter, but had saidhe would rather see her dead than Inthe hands of Mrs. Hulett. He hadheard numerous reports to the effect thatmen came to the house of Mrs. Hulett's atallhours of the night; that there were im-proper women there, etc. When asked whotold him this he gave the names, that of aman named Galagher who said he had sleptwith Mrs. Hulett; a man named Murphy,who keeps a saloon in theneighborhood, and two neighbor*, Sutherlandand Fcunors; he also mentioned a MissBlack.

I). B. Sutherland testified that be knewMrs. Hulett when her name was .Thomasthree years ago when she lived on tenthstreet. She bore a bad reputation. She hadtwo fctnnie boarders who were sup-posed to be of bad repute. Hedid not speak of his own knowledge but ofwhat was currently rumored about in theneighborhood.

Albert Marsh, an expoliccman, was called,but as he had only seen Mrs. Hulett twice inthree years find testified from hear say his;evidence was excluded as incompetent.

L.Btdmore, and ex-policeman, used tohave a leal on Western averinc where Mrs.Hulcit kept a candy shop and restaurant.Mrs. Hulett also kept rooms to rent on thesecond Boor of abitildiug several doors dis-tant from where she lived. Had seen mengo in ami out of j.^her" place atnight; also a back thereat night; had seenLillie, the pirl,running; rr 'im-l with a girlcalico Annie who was supposed to be kept jby aman named Sullivan, iv a room rented \u25a0

by Mrs. Hulett over the «lruer store. \I Jacob Stats, ori-V'ViS-policeman whohad been ,ton the:\u25a0 same :beat,testified substantially \';the . same thing.Had told Mrs. Hulett the girl Annie mustnot come to her place The -irl left abouttwo wrecks tXterwacd.

' ,•Mary Dubois ha.i cooked for Mrs. Hulett:

had not seen anything wrong; saw Mr.Thomas 110 away withLißle one night; nad"seen Dally drunk once at Mr?. Hulett's.

John Craig knew Mrs. Huletfs "place enThird arcane north. Had taken Ina womenthere an istayed over night: did not see Mrs.Hulett at the" tirzo.

The hearing of the case will be resumedat 9 o'clock this in. ratal

*; ;-,;ia!t Pnrkrr.I In the municipal court yesterday MartGorman aud Frank Parker, the two mea ar-rested \rllhC-ctiiCY.Vcri• arraigned.

"'Tie

county attorney appeared for the V state andmoved the dismissal of the charge of assaultwith a dangerous weapon, and they werethen arraigned upon a charge of disorderlyconduct. Their trial was set for August Bth.The bonds in the case of Gorman were fixedat $100,.while Parker's bonds were placed at$200; :

The county attorney \u25a0 holds that the - twomen cannot be charged with complicity inthe murder as they manifestly had nothingto do withthe shooting. :

. BOLDUURGLAKIKS.

An Industrious Gang Enter a JewelryStore at Two Different Times in BroadDaylightand Get Away with $600 WorthofGoods. '..',. /

'

A. E. Gregory owns a jewelry store at No.527 South Washington avenue. The clerk,

it seems, has been in the habit of dosing up

to go ;to supper. On Saturday evening,while the clerk was so at supper, the burglarsbroke in and got away with a trunk fullofcheap jewelry. Again on Tuesday the storewas locked up, and the second raid was ef-

fected. The haul this time consisted ofabout a dozen watches of the value of $200.

The detectives were notified, andbegan ; an *';iindustrious investigationwhich led to the arrest of Charles Harming.Alarge amount of the jewelry. was found inhis posession. .:Inthe hopes of recoveringthe balance of the property, it.was decidedto have' nothing said about jthe .arrest, butyesterday Harming was' arraigned, when itbecame public property and was given to thepapers forpublication. The prisoner's ex-amination was set for August 9th.

KILLED.BY THECARS.

William Rowland, a Farmer, While Driv-inga flock of.Sheep is Run Over by aManitoba Train.Near St. Alba and In-stantly Killed.Yesterday morning a William Rowland,

who was visitinghis son Herman, a butcherwho owns a slaughter house nearSt. Albans, was instantly killed. Mr.Rowland was deaf and aged, and wasengaged in drivinga flock of sheep to hissou's slaughter house. IHe was crossing theManitoba tracks when a train steamed upand he was run over and instantly killed.The body was badly mangled, and wasbrought to the city and given into the chargeof the coroner, who. at once went toscene of the accident to make an.investiga-tion. An inquest will be held to-day, al-though itis evident that, the railway em-ployes were in no way responsible for thecasualty. The deceased came to this countylast April from Buffalo, and was to returnhome on Monday. He was seventy-sixyears old.

THE COURTS. ,Probate Court.

[Before Judge Ueland.]'

Henry Robertson, insane; examined andcommitted. / f&s*&li'*%

Matts Lindahl, insane; examined andcommitted. • ' . ',

Municipal Court. „.. [Before Judge Bailey.]

Mark Gorman and James Parker, assaultwith a dangerous weapon ; dismissed uponmotion of ti.e county attorney.

Frank Daily,kidnapping; continued untilAugust 8 at 9 a. m.

Frances Smith, attempt to commit larceny;held to the grand jury in $800 bonds.

Joseph Prevrost, obstructing streets; casedismissed upon motion of the city attorney.

Henry Barrett, selling liquor withoutlicense; continued until August 8at 9 a. m.

Ole Westgard, assault and battery; dis-missed for want of prosecution.

Tom Rextad and Charles Peterson, drunk-enness; committed five days each.

James Brennan, drunkenness; sentencesuspended.

Sam Earnest, drunkenness; paid a fine in87.50.

Mark Gorman and James Parker, disor-derly conduct: continued until August 5 at9a. m.;bail fixediv the case of Parker at#200 and in the other ense at sloo.

Fred Kupul,Conrad Buzha, (justave Deus-tin;r, Geo. Kaulten and Peter Saurer, sellingliquor without license; fined $50 each andordered committed thirty days each in thecounty jail.

Claude Adara3, keeping a house of illfame: paid a five in $5:2.36.

Charles Banning, larceny; continued un-tilAngust 5at 9a. m.

Willuot be Surprised.

"Father."Thus spoke a fair girlabout whose sweet

young face there clustered a bang like asolid stone wall around a flower garden, andin whose voice were miuglod the soft notesof the flute and tbe silvery tones of a dinnerbi1!, half an hour late. The person address-ed was a cold, hard man, with iron grayhair and corkscrew whiskers, aud with tbatstern look in his eye which prompts a manto go elsewhere to borrow a dollar. He wassitting in bis cilice reading thepaper.

"Well, girl, what is it?" he replied, look-ingat the head lines of the Chicago grainmarket.

''Father, Gerald bas asked me to marryhim. aud Ihave accepted him."

'\u25a0I don't doubt it."•Yes, father, aud Ithought Iwould tell

you, so it would not surprise you when beasked you for me."

"Don't worry yourself, girl. Don't worryyourself. Iwill not be half as much sur-prised as Gerald will, my darling," and hereflectively threw lilt,right leg over hl6 leftkuce, and ran his hand carefully around tbetoe of his boot.

—Merchant Traveler.

Told toa Child.

It happened that one evening Ethel'smainma litthe nursery, instead of Minna,

the German maid. "Wbat makes the li^htcome, mammal" queried the child, with

1 the air of one who leuew already, but wishedIdtest her parent's knowledge. "Why." ex-plained mamma, rather vaguely, 'it is a sortof air that burns. Itis shut up in the pipe,and when we turn the knob itrushes out andwe light it with a match." "I thought youdidn't know," the little oue remarked, "oryou would be more afraid of it. Iknow allabout it. Minna told inc. A dragou livesin that pipe, und his tongue is made out ofburning Hre. He is a friend of Minna's, sowhen she. turns the knob he just sticks out

i the tipof his tongue and makes us a nice lit-llelisrht: but he hates children, and ifBobbyorIshould thrn the knob he wouldrush rightout in this room and eat us aG up in a min-ute. This is true, brcansc Minna told me."

j Th;> small narrator relapsed into satisfiedJ silence, aud her tnith-lovtng mamma fell toIwondering which was- really better

—her own

lame attempt at scientific explanation or thehighly colored fiction of German Minna,which, while an absolute falsehood, appealedat once to the vivid imagination of the child,and effectually prevented her pursuing anypersonal investigation of the gas.

—Boston

t'ouri'T.

\u25a0A Broadway, New York, policeman ar-rested a thief in the very act ofpicking t astanger's pocket. The proof was over-

\u25a0 whelming."What explanation or excuse have you

got!" asked the justice before whom the de-linquent was brought.|"Ifound the pocket book.""You found it in that gentleman's pocket

didn't you:"'••Of course Idid. IfIwere to say Ifound

iton the sidewalk, evil winded pcopie mightthink, there was something crooked about the.tran section. Why, yourself, judge, would

jWe all confidence in me,, ifIwere toclaimI that Ifound itin some out of the way place.IHi"took it to show the gentleman howeasily he might bo robbed if

-he kept on car-

ryinghis money in his overcoat pocket. Iwanted to teach himV lesson. '^ 1was : justabout to band the pockctbook back to ihim.and tel! him never to carry itagain in;anoutside pockat, when this evil-minded J

'cop

grabbed me and called m. a thief. v The veryfact that this policeman arrested me andcalled me a thief shows that Iam innocent.;Tbe police never bother ;any real;;thieves:Just now they want to make the :Rooseveltcommittee ;belie re they are fullof;zeaL:'-_Iknow' all.about them. Iused to be a policecaptain myself."- •'That :settles it,'.' \u25a0. responded theijudge;

!"Ihold you for triaL—Texas Sillies*."

ONE OF WEBSTER'S STORIES.

Hou> alow Suit Was Won inNetv Hamp-shire,

Daniel Webster was fond of a good storyand told a few, illustrating his early lifeinNew Hampshire, One evening at a con-vivial party, where he and several distin-guished lawyers were present the conversa-tion happened to turn on the legal profession."When Iwas a youug practioner," said Mr.Webster there was but one man at the NewHampshire bar of whomIwas afraid, andthat was old Baruaby. Tnere were but fewmen who dared to enter tbo lists with him.Ou one occasion Barnaby was employed todefend a suit fora piece of land, brought bya little crabbed cunning lawyer called Bruce.Brace's case was looked upon good as lost,wbeu it was ascertained that Barnaby wasretained against him. The suit came on fortrial and Barnahy found that Bruce hadworked hard and left no stone unturned togain a victory. The testimony for the plain-tiffwas very strong, and, unless itcould notbe impeached, the case of the defendantwas lost. The principal witness introducedby the plaintiffwore a red coat. In summingup for the defense old Barnaby commenceda furious attack on the witness, pulling histestimony all to pieces and appealing to thejury ifa man who wore a red coat was,underany circumstances to be believed. "Andwho is this red-coated witness?" exclaimedBarnaby, "but a descendant of our commonenemy,who has striven to take from us ourlib-etty, aud would not hesitate now to deprivemy poor client of his land by making anysort ofred-coated statement? 7

' During hisspeech Bruce was walking up and down thebar greatly excited, arid convinced that hiscase was gone, knowing, as he did, the pre-judice of tbe jury against anything British.Barnaby was gesticulating and leaning for-ward to the jnrj'in his eloquent appeal hisshfrt bosom opened slightly and Bruce acci-deutly discovered that Barnaby wore a redundershirt. Bruce's countenance brightenedup. Putting both hands in his coat pocketshe walked to the bar with great confidence,to the ostoni&hmoDt of his client and alllookers on. Just as Barnaby concludedBruce whispered in the ear of his client, I'/egot him

—your case is safe," and appiuacb-

ing the jury, be commenced his reply to theslaughtering argument of his adversary.Bruce gave a regular history ofthe ancestryof his red-coated witness, proving his patri-otism and devotion to the country, and hischaracter for truth and veracity. "But what,gentlemau of the jury,"broke forth Brucein a loud strain of eloquence, while his eyeflashed fire, "what are you to expect ofaman who stands heretodefenda cause basedou no foundation of right or justice whatev-er; ofa mau who undertakes to destroy ourtestimony on the ground that my witnesswears a re.d coat, when gentlemen, of thejury

—when, when gentlemen of the jury!"

here Bruce made a spritig,and catching Bar-naby by the bosom of the shirt, tore itopen,displaying his red flannel, ''when Mr.Bar-uaby himself wears a red flannel coat con-cealed under a blue one'" The effect waselectrical; Barnaby was beaten at his owngame, and Bruce gained tbe cause.

—San-

Francisco Examiner.

Sew England the Summer Resort of theXation.

The traveler through tbe billcountry o*New England fcpis that ita use to the nationis a thing of tbe past. Many of the oncethrifty towns, famous for religious power,for educational privileges, for social life, andespecially for sending out noble men andwomen, are now struggling villages withsmall and poorly supported churches, withscarcely sufficient school privileges to pre-pare the young people for the academy orhigh school. Tbe farms are poorly cultivated,thiu and worthless grasses, and stubborn andprevailing weeds are taking theplace of the richer products that once flour-ished. The young men have gone, and thefarming is done by tiiose who are growingold; and the prospect seems to be that, in afew years the larger part of the farms willbe tenantless, and the country, so dear tothe hearts of the descendants of the Pilgrims,will be a useless waste. Itseems a provi-dential mistake that such a noble populationas New England could once boast of shouldbo planted upon such a coast and amongsuch rocky hills that must desert them andleave the results oflong toil to depreciate invalue, and schools and churches to decline.Yet God is wiser than men. Within a fewyears past there are intimations that anewU3e is to be made of these beautiful uplands.They have bold and lofty hills, lakes andstreams. They have the seashore and theforest. They have the grand scenery and thequiet retreat. Our crowded cities and ouroverworked population have created a newwaut. The vacation for all classes of work-ers, from the national president down totbe cash-boy, has come of late to be an es-tablisbed thing. If tbe tendency to sum-mer on these coasts and among these hillsincrease as rauidly for the years to come asit bus done in a few years past. New Eng-land will be none too large to accommodateall who flock to it. Itmust furnish summerresidences for the rabidly increasing popula-tion of our cities and tbe vast valley of theMississippi. Itshares advantages with otherplaces of resort. Its wida range for excur-sion, its delightful drives, its cool and invig-orating summer climate and its freedomfrom winged pests, make it superior to manyresorts. Then it has, what scarce any otherportion of the country can ciairn, tbe oldas-sociations, dear to the children and grand-children of those who lived here when-NewEngland WU in its prime. Itwas thinly-scattered but good homes in which to receivethose who come for retirement and recrea-tion. Not far off are the cities and flourish-ing towns, and in easy reach are distin-guished places of learning, while tbe wholeregion centers about the intellectual focus oftbe nation. Let tbe New England farmershape his movements to meet the new turnin affairs. Still more significantly is therefound a reason why tlie Christian people ofthe land should not allow the weak churcheson these hills to die. Many ofthem havetheir small congregations in the winter, havetheir congregations largely increased by sum-mer visitors. A large share of these aremembers in the city churches, andiftlK-yfind in their vacation season church privilegesand responsibility they willgo back better fit-ted to work in the home church where theyspend the remaining six or eight months ofthe year.

The Cholxra inEurope.The Toulon correspondent of the Paris

Qautoix has had another interview with tnecelebrated Dr. Koch, who sticks to tbe theorythat the cholera is tbe work of microbes ormicroscopic organisms whica are taken intothe system with food and water. "AH my

\ autopsies," said the doctor, "leave no doubtwhatever in regard to the Asiatic character of

Ithe plague. Ihave found precisely the samephenomena as were discovered in the cases'that Istudied in India. Tbe Disrobes were

; the sims, and were more numerous than incases that Ihave examined ia Egypt. MessrsStraus and Roux, who were present at theautopsies, also recognized in Egypt the pres-ence of tbe Indian \u25a0sfenbe, butitwas alwaysaccompanied by other; but iv the cases herein Toulon the Indian microbe has an extra-

] ordinary preponderance. In addition to itsother detractive qualities this microbe se-

} crete? a genuine poison, which produces in--1 sensibility and brings on the dry cholera,I which is the most deadly and rapid of all.

AlIhave already said, the contamination isnot carried in the air, but is brought aboutthrough tbe absorption of the microbes tbatinfest alimentary matter, and particularly jwater."

"And this theory." said tbe GwvoU corres-j pondenU ''explains your advice to the au- |thoritips to close the wells, to order people todrink only wat«?r that bad been boiled or tak-en from distant localities ?"

'

••Precisely." said the doetor. "And it isalso necessary to take only food <bat is wellcooked: forbear in mind the microbe diesin a hi^b, and above all a dry temperature.The first precaution to take is to subject the

Ibedclothing of tbe victims to a high temper-!ature withdry air and phenic acid more or

less condensed. The microbe cannot liveincondensed solutions of phenic acid or in dryair. Itmust net be forgotten tbat it devel-opes and multiplies is humidity. Itbasbeen found in the ponds of the countrieswhere cholera exists. Acting upon this the-ory,Iadvised the closing and thorough beat-ing of the apartments infected."

Correspondent—

What v jour opiuion.

doctor, as to the origin of the present epi-demic?

Dr. Koch—lbelieve itis safe to say that,in view of the precautions taken by the navythe cholera could only have been broughthere by 6omc merchant vessels, probably byan English ship; for on board English ves-sels there is little scruple about concealingthe deaths during a voyage or about falsify-ing the books.

The Paris suys that Germau societies havebought up all the phenic acid in the market,and are now selling it at double its value,while at the same time German soientlflclectures are being widely published in whichthe use of phenic acid is strongly recom-mended as a preventive against cholera.

SOME APPROPRIATE REAMNGr

For Our Germau Fel luw Citizens.IBoston Post July22.J

The fact that the leading prohibitionist ofthe country has endorsed the Resublicun can-didate as entirely orthodox oa that issue,

seems to give the Cincinnati CommercialGaxelte great uneasiness and itattempts to

show that Blaiue is merely a prohibitionist ofexpediency, iv other . words, and when hewent to Maiue filled with a big ambitionhe found public sentiment back of prohibi-tion and fell iuto live.' This isnot very highground for taking a position of a lifetime;but that he has taken it there can be no doubt.

ABangorcorrespondent of the Albany Anjuswrites:'

In1882 Hon. Neal Dow published an1arti-cle; on prohibition in Maine, in which hequotes what he calls "testimony from ,thehighest authorities" in the state, obtained, hedeclares, iv1872. He quotes what HannibalHaralin, Lot M. Morrill and Wm. I. Ftyfisaid, and declares: "Mr. Blaiue adds tothis—'l did not reside in the state prior tothe enactment of the first" prohibitory law,

and therefore cannot make a comparativestatement from my own knowledge; but. sofar as my knowledge extends, derived from

20 years' observation of the couse of temper-ance in this state,Imost heartily concur in allthat is said inthe foregoing letter," Now whatwas said in the foregoing letter? This,amongthings: "At the time of the enactment ofthe law,in 1851, the traffic existed openly andeverywhere in Maine, as itnow does in thosestates where it is not prohibited. The immediateeffect was to outlaw the trade. The favorableeffects of this change are great and every-where apparent to the most casual observer.* * * We do not believe the people wouldagain sanction the policy of license to drink-inghouses and tipplingshops."

This opinion was gratuitous on Blamespart, given to make himself strong at home.

Itremains to be seen whether bis bigot'screed willadd to his strength in the country?

; ON A CAKE OF ICE. /h j ;

ANovel and Uncomfortable Sort of Gam-bling.

"Jimmy Tough" is probably :' the mostwidely known of the Pittsburg, (Pa.) news-boys, says the Reading News. He is about ayard high, is' extremely careless abouthis personal appearance, has a very,, very ro-guish eye, and Is agreat gambler- He crossedsth avenue, in that city, recently, to where"Limpy" McMahon stood in front of TonyNewell's, and with a bluffing swagger said"Iken beat you runnin' for a nickel.

'Limpy.'"

"Limpy," who travels with the aid of acrutch merely responded: "Umph! Any-body kin do that!"

"Well, if you want to gamble," said"Tough," "I'llbet Ikin 6it on One 0' themcakes 0' ice longer'n you kin."

"Limpy" felt about in the uttermost re-cesses of- his pocket and gathered togetherfive pennies, and without saying a word,banded them to one of several bystanderswho had been interested. "Tough" follow-ed this action, and each gravely sat downupon a cake of ice which lay on the side-walk.

The stakeholder took out his watch. Forfive minutes they sat there, and then"Tough" began to squirm. He complainedthat his pants were not what they should be,and that he was therefore at a disadvantage.At five minutes and a half he could standthe chill no longer, and jumped up and ranacross the street, crying that the ice wasburning. "Limpy" sat still thirty secondslonger, and captured the dime.

SALATHIEL'S STOKY

Instructs the Neif/hborslin Swine Surf/pry—Telia Why Pork Swells in the Barrel.

"Idon't guess nothing about it;Iknowtis so, and that's all there is to it,"suidSala-thiel Ward, taking out a quid of navy plugand shifting his position. Salathicl's re-marks were occasioned by a discussionamong some of his neighbors and a BostonGlobe reporter as to whether salt made porkswell in the barrel. He came along andjoined them in the debate at a very opportunetime. ;.-*.: -fr"\u25a0'\u25a0.

"Let me tell you he continued, itwas in

the fallof '72 thatIhad a shote just likeun-to your'n

—looked near enough like

him to be his twin—

and he wouldn't fat,nary bit. -I gin him more'n thirty bushelso' meal, and he war poorer when Igot donethan he war when Ifust begun. Iknowedwhat ailed him at once. 'Twas a black, hol-

ler tooth that wouldn't let him fat. So oneday Ijusttuk and yanked out the tooth,and then Idid something by accident likethat made me sure o' what I'ma-tellin'ye."

'\u25a0What's that Artemas?" asked two orthree; this name, Artemas, being one theyhad given him because he had no resem-blance to the great humorist of that name.

"Wait till ye hear. Itwar this way. Iknowed as Ihad to put some salt in aholecut on the back on his neck afore he wouldlay on flesh any. so Icaught him and gothis head right atween my shins, ami,..do youbelieve me? as soon as the critter felt theknife a-cuttin' into his .neck he made asqueal and a jump anil went out from underme quicker' scat. He jest ranned throughatween my legs and drawed that knife thebul length "on him. Itcut apurty gash cleanfrom bis ears to his tail.". '•Idon't see whar that has got to do withwhat makes pork swell," remarked an oldfarmer, who was watching a flock of crowsthat had just alighted la hi- corn-field.

"You jest hold turn-iliIgit done, will

you! As Iwas a-saying, that cut was abadone, and the critter wasn't wuth sewing up.So Ijest htt up akittle of water, and stuckmy knife into totber side of his neck, anddressed him and salted him down. Itwasmighty mean pork and no mistake, and Ireckoned we should Lev. to fare slim for porken' cabbage that winter. By gosh, the rinein some places war thicker'n the meat,llowinsoever, Ilaid it down in salt, 'andthought no more about it tillMirandy cometo me 'one day and ecz, sez she;'Slath' .the pork barrel's busied.'Iwent down cellar.and there, sure enough,every hoop was broke clear'n two. Igotsome new Norway iron .ones over. to the

!blacksmith shops, and when Icome to takethe pork eout V that barrel, by Jeems, ifithadn't growed in thickness nearly double. Itwas in big,white chunk's good's you can buyat the store. Ifixed up the barrel, put in alot more salt, threw the pork back, coveredit with pickle and leftitbe. Weil, sir, byhokey, that pork kept on a-swellin' and grow-in' tillitoverrun the barrel, anJ Ihad togetanother to hold itall. Itwas white, and fat,and clear, and some on it wouldcut upwardso' six inches.". \u25a0\u25a0

-. ' '-\u25a0

"That is queer," said the nervous farmer;i "how do you account for it?"

'Iaccount fur itinthis yer way. Ireck-on that hog was »ich a bur eater and he et somuch that my thirtybushels of meal passedinto his meat afore it swelled. Itdidn't doIhim,no good, you tec. .'. It,was jes.' lying

locked up in tb ;• system awaitin,' and whenthe salt, got' in there itturned the meal intofat end busted ray barrel."

'•Well,ldo declare, said a chorus of voices,as :the farmer hastily departed, leaving Sala-tbiel by the roadside alone. \u25a0 ;":>\u25a0•*

:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0'*':-'\u25a0\u25a0'

t; ; '- ~-—\u25a0

~~ ''\u25a0' \u25a0:

'*We have observed that when our troops

are whipped by the Indians"

the affair iscasually alluded to a3 a *'repuis«," but when

the Indians are scattered by our troops the-event is ostentatiously, heralded as a "disas-trous defeat."

The Cincinnati "saloon keepers are worry-ing the aUte in the Scott liquor law caug*>,

and rnr-an to demand a jury- in each case,there being over 300 suits. ;..; ;:.

WHY SHE AVENT TO NEWPOKT.

Toldina Tratln Secret by Andrnmnda to

Hcnrleo.Yonkers Gazette: "Andromeda! there

be such tidings i' the air this morn as willthine interest fire to fervid fever."

"This likes mine ear, good sir, for I'vebut just returned from formal round, andhints mine arm of something like tbe'shakes.'

""Then is thy preparation fit, me maid, for

there is further agitation i'me news.""Give it to me, then, that Imay break me

Quaker silence with a quake."''Have at thee, damosel! Thou knowest

Lucuilus Marcia? 1'

"He that is sire to that jade Beatrice, whosealti freights the sabbath air withonion taint?"

"The same, Andromeda!""Iknow him as the parent of a witch

whose garments fit her as the pod doth fitjthe,bantling pea."

"Or as these tidings fit thine ear, mayhap.This same Lucullus Marcia hath suspensionmade, aud weighs his assets i' the lesserscale."

"Hath what, Henrieo? Pare off the fur-bisbments of this, thy news, and give jtmein naked Anglo-Saxon."

"Itbeing yet a stripling bit of news, thusdo Istrip it girl. Lucullus, then, hathfailed!"

"Failed, saidst thou? Failed! Oh, thatthe fates had spared me this, Heurico!"

"Spared tiiee which? Why, thou btsciized-ed one, this hampers not thy credit nor thysire's, an' wherefore should it grieve thee,then, Ipray!"

"Grieve me, thou beetlehead! Dost thounot weigh the outcome of all this! Her fa-ther fails, Beatrice goes to Newport or theBranch and drives a dog-cart through thesummer-tide! With difference twixt Iheslim per cent he pays and that imposing itemwhica he owes, she and her sire willa dal-liance make with ease and luxury, buy themnew poodles arul rare bric-a-brac, pose themas objects of the world's quaint sympathy,and, ere the autumn wanes, hie them to Eu-rope for a round of months, and hither bringthem back again blazoned Avitusome new liein heraldry!"

"Marry, Andromeda, au' thy wits are-ripe !"

"Would that me father's were as ripe:,Henrico, foroften hath he poised him'on thevery verge where failure would have whelm-ed us with its weal, and then some hint ofoldentime integrity would win him ironi't,and, like a dog, he'd back to work for honorand the empty fame it brings. O, good melord! well is Itsaid that he who helps him-self sets quickest i'the tide of booming for-tune!"

They are ill-discoverers that think there isno land when they can see nothing but sea.* * *

Because itis silly to believe every-thing, there are some so wondorous wise asto believe nothing.

—Samuel Maunden.

Lord Ruportswood, an Australian cattleman, who lives in a fourmilliondollar housein Miloourne, is said to be richer than Wil-liam H. Vauderbilt,

%jL. —t^l Willr.r-!fvthe BROOD, roprrt-

mjsJ| laic t,?, VEX ami KIDNEYS,, TH3rl_"l-Ei. and REfiTOms THE HEALTH\£SftSS§\ and VIGOKof YOUTH. Drs-

\«E!i™&si» pensla. Want of Appetite, In-x73*wfr\ digestion. Lack of Strength,

and TiredFecHiigabsolutelycured. lioiies. muscles Mid*'

\u25a0lsi"Bia Enlivens the mind andM'

«i »» hi ma *S? -supplies Brain Power.9 £*\u25a0» \u25a0 X" *S Suffering from complaintsfcs«-^X<*1'B Bbi <S3» peculiar to their sex willfind inDE.HARTER'SIROW TONICa safe andspeedy cure. Gives a clear, healthycomplexion.Frequent attempts at counterfeiting only addto the popularity of the original. Do notex-periment—get the Ouiuikal. and Bust.

HARTEE'S °^SaS'LlWLglIrILLDCMPE.SiSKEH or leavea.!t.uKmmmn*mfnnxarißXKt* BOWELS CONSTIPATED.Persons suffering from TORPIDITYof theLIVERor InactivityottiieBowels, willfind a permanentCUSS by tonuse of these Pills. Nomediclno Bhonldba t "ki>n without firstClßsnstni} tbo Sfomnch endBowels withadofo ofHAKTZB.'SJLrv-EB PILXiS.

Sample doao Sent Frno onapplication by postal,

CSeod yonr address toThe T>r.HnrterMed.ro. "vSt.Lords, Mo., for our "DREAMBOOK." 4Fullof strenso and useful information, free,

Assessment for Paving and CiirMniSt. Peter Street

Office of the Board or Pojilic Works, )Cityof St. Paul, Minn.,July 31, 1831. I

The Board of Public Works inand for the cor-poration of the City ofSt. Paul, Minnesota, willmeet at their office, in said city,at 7:80 p. m.,on the Bth day of August, A. D., iB4, to makean assessment of benents, costs and expensesarising from the paving and curbing of St. Pe-ter street, from Third (3rd) street to Martinstreet in said city on the property on the line ofpaid improvement and benefited thereby, amount-ingin the aggregate to $41,567.35.

Allpersons interested are hereby notified to bepresent at. said time and place of making saidassessment and willbe beard.

JOHN FAKKINGTOX,President.Official:

K.L. Gorman, Clerk Board of Public Works.214-316

Assessment for Paying and. Cnroing.';ijFourth Street,

Office OF THE Boatid of Public Works. |Citt of St. Paul, Minn., July 81, 1331. f

The Board of Public Works in and for the cor-poration of the City of st. Paul, Minnesota, willmeet at their office in said city ct 7:30 p. m. onthe Bth day of August, A. 1). 1884. to make anassessment of, benefits, costs and expenses

1 arising from the paving and curbing of Fourth!(4th)street, from Jackson street to Seventh(7th) street iv sail city,on the property on theline of said improvement and benefited thereby,amounting inthe aggregate to $34,899.30.

Allpersons interested are hereby notified to bepresent at said time and place of making saidassessment and willbe heard.

JOHN FARRINGTON", President. .Official:

I£.L.QotOUK, Cierk Board of Public Works.214-213

iAssessment [or Paw and Mug\ rillliStreet

Office or the Board op Public Wan )City a» st. Paul, Minn., July 31, 1884. f

The Board of Public Works i;;and for the cor-poration of the City of St. Paul. Minns* willimeet at their office 1:1 soidcity at 7:80p.m.on theIBth day of Auga^, A.D.1884, to make an assess-:inent of benefit?, coats and expenses arising

Ifrom the paving and curbing of Fifth street,'\u25a0 from Broadway to St. Peter street, (except thatpart of sni'iFifth street, between Jackson andblbley streets,) insaid city, on the property onIthe line of ca'.d improvement and benefitedthereby amounting inthe aggregate to 327,521.35.

Allpersons interested aro hereby notified to bopresent at said time and place of making saidassessment and 'willbe h<?ar<l.

'i ions,FAEKIN'GTOX,President. ;Official:

K.L.Gokjjax,Clerk Hoard ofPublic Works.214-213 , .

Assessment lor Paying: aM MmFiftii Street.

! Orricr or the BoabO or Public Works, ' )Cityof St. Paul, Minn., July SI, 168-1. f

\u0084\u25a0 Tbe Board of Public Work* in and for the cor-

IpoTation of the cityof St. Paul, Minnesota, willimeet at their office in said city at 7:30 p.m. onthe Mb day of Aa gust, A.D. 1684, tomake an as-eesament of ber.outs costs and expendsiaristag from the paving and curbing of Fifth!street between Jackson and Sibley streets, {ex-j:cept east 150 feet,) In said city,on the property!on the line of sail;improvement and benefited!thereby, amounting inthe aggregate to52,330.80.

Allpersons interested are hereby notified to beprevent at said time end place of making said as- isessment and willbe heard.

\u25a0 ';v JOHN FAHKISGTOS, President.Official: . . . .

'\u25a0

K.L.GoiUfAS, Clerk Board of Public Work*.SI4OSS ]

Estate of John F. MclntosliiMHismTors she.

Notice is horeby given, ,that on Wednesday,Auguut C, I£S4, at 10 a. m. at the front door olthe butcher shop of Messrs.Davis

*& McAuley,

on Robert street, in the cityof Saint Paul, Ram-sey county, state of Minnesota, ouch shop beingon the property hereinafter described, pursuantto the order of the Probate Court, of said county,made in the matter of the estate of John K.Mcln-town deceased, I1 the underpinned, as the admin,istrator of euid estate, willsell at publicauction,to the highest bidder for cash, the followingde-scribed personal property, to-wlt: Tho uueipiredterm of tho lease held by the said deceased at th«lime of his death in or to the south one-third oilots 1,2, 3, inblock 11, in Saint Paul Proper, itsaid county, and the leasehold interest, and allrights in paid property belonging to said estate,such lease terminates July 1, 1830. •

The sale willbe subject to all the terms and,conditions of said lease, which is In my posses*sion, and which any one can examine; and willalso be bubject to the leases made by said admin-istrator to the present occupants of said premises.

Ultf L.LAMPREY.Administrator of the estate of John P. Mclntoeh,

deceased. 210-219

thrives on Horiici'a Food," write hundreds ofgrateful mothers. Mothers' milk contains nostarch. HORLICKS'FOOD FOR INFANTS(free

'from starch) requires nocookinor. Thebest foodinhealth or sickness for INFANTS. Thebeet diet forDYSPEPTICS and INVALIDS.Highlybeneficialtonursing mothers as a drink. Price 40and 75c. All. or ug-Kists. Bock onthe treatm^ntof

"Ilw!iev<s ft to be «operlor toanything of th»Iliadfor children."—D. Simmon,, X.!>.,Sim York.'•LDheattntinzly pronounce it tho beat Feud iathe market."— V.M. Barrett, If.D., Boston."One of thebest substitutes for mot::«'s irilk."11. G. Prt-'.on, X.[>\u0084 Brooklyn,X. T.

Willbe Bent by mail onreceipt of price instamps.HOKLtCR'S FOOD CO., Racine, Win.. \u25a0ft^-L'sa HOBUCK'sDcrEITBACT op SUI.T~Sja

Minneapolis Advertisements.AMUSEMENTS.

THEATRE OOMIQUE219, 331, 333 First Aye. South,

W.W. BROWN ManagerJAMES WHEELER...Bnsiness &Stage Manager

WEEK OF JULY 21ST, 1884.;ANOTHER SHOWER OF ,

¥audߥli]B_ Stars !Muldoon Quartette, Emma La Manse, Lillia

Morris, Sheffer &Blakely, Alice Jennings, EddieO'Brien, Lottie Dyencort, MillieLaFonte, KyiRoss, Lottie Laviere, Lulu Roy, May Holton,Lue Browning, and the Regular Stock Com-pany. :

Matinees Thursday and Saturday afternoon at2:30o'clock.

ISP-popular PRICES_acS

P p SWEIMit it hJ 6IJLillr\JJUj.II

lOOfasMit'nAys.Soni(Under Northwestern National Bank,)

MINNEAPOLIS, - MINN,

-Lludl JubliLlLGjINSURANCE AND

TICKET AGENTJs?~Tickets sold to and fromallForeign ports,

also drafts on all the principalcities of Europe*Lands for sale or exchange in Wisconsin, Min-

neseta and Dakota. 155-3 m

DRUGS.'"" *

Mm—r-Will Cure

Allkinds hard or eoft corns, callouses and bunioncausing no pain or soreness; dries Instantly; willaotollniiythiiit?,BDdnever fails toelicita cure. Prlca£Sc;bymall, 30c. The genuine put up In yelloWwrappers and manufactured only by Jos. K.llutDlu,druggist «nd dealers Inailkinds ofPatent Medicine^-Knots, Herbs, Liquors), Paints, CiU VurnUhe*Brushes, etc. Minneapolis Mluu.

MEDICAL.

. 31 Bird St, i,Minneapolis, Minn.Treat all Chronic, Nervous Diseases of

. Men mid Women.

DR. SPINNEYIs well known as the founder of the Montreal(C. E.) Mkihcax, Institute, and having givenhis entire attention for the pact twenty years tothe treatment of chronic and special diseases in-cident to both eexcx, liin success has producedastonishing remits. Isy his method of treat-ment, the suffering arc fullyrestored to originalhealth.' He would call the attention of theafflicted to the fuct of hi- long-standing andwell-earned reputation, as a nufllcient assurancoof his (-killand nocceps. Thousands who havebeen under bis treatment have felt and expressed.emotions of gratitude welling up from heartstouched for the first time by the silken chordthat whispers of returning health.

Those suffering from Catarrh or Bronchitis,can be assured of a perfect cure by bis newmethod of treatment. ,

DR. SPINNEY can detect the slightest di».case of the Chest, Lungs or any internal organ,and guarantees a cure in every cane he under-takes.It matters not what your troubles maybe,

icome and let the Doctor examine your Case. Ifititinulu WILL TKLL YOUso; IT not. 118willtkllyou that; for lie will not undertakea case unless? he is confident of affecting a cure.Itwillcost} >v nothing forconsultation; so please'.i.l and satisfy yourselves whether the Doctorunderstands your case.

YOUNG MEN1Who may be suffering from nervous debility i

-.'.-illdo well to avail themselves of this, thegreatest boon ever laid at the altar of sufferinghumanity.

Dii.SPINNEY willGuarantee to Fokfbi*Kivklltrsnnr.D Dollars for every case of weak-ness or disease of any kindor character, whichbe undertakes and fails to cure. IleCtfouldtheiefore say to the unfortunate sufferer whomay read this r.otice, that yon are treading ondangerous ground, when you longer delay In

1peeking the proper remedy for your complaint.You may be in the first stage— remember thatyou aro approaching the last. Ifyou are border-Ingon th,e last, and are suffering some or all ofits ill effects, remember that if yon obstinatolypreset inprocrastination, the time must comewhen the most skillfulphysician can render youno \u25a0 -Istance: when th.: door of hope willbeclosed again.-- you; when no angel of mercy canbringyou relief. Inno case has the doctor failed

lof success. Then let not despair work Itselfupon your im^iiiatiou.but avail yourself of thebeneficial results of his treatment before you<ca*e it beyond the reach of medical shill, orbe-fore grim dentil harries you toa premature grave.PilesC'uretl without litiugKiiifeorLigatur

MIDDLE-AGEDMEN.There are many at the ego from thirty to sixty'

who are troubled withfrequent evacuations ofthe bladder, often accompanied by a slightsmarting or bnrnins seneatlon and weakeningthe system in a manner the patient cannot ac-count for. On examining the urinary deposit*a ropy sediment willoften >»: . found, and . some-timer small particles of albumen, v.illappear, orthe color will fee of a thin, or milklsh hue, againchanging to a dark and torpid appearance.'There are many men who die of this difficulty.Ignorant of the cause, which is the second stageofwesiknefs of vitalorgans. .Dr. S. willguaranteeaperfect core in all men cases, and a healthyrestoration of these organ*.

- . '. Only one interview required inthe majority o!cast*-. JJalance .of treatment can be taken atborne without say interropliort tobusiness.

Allletter* or -cor;.rjiuni. ;strictly confi-dential. !, Medicines packed to as not -to excitecariosity, end sent by express, iffnildescriptionof case itgiven,"but a personal interview inallcases preferred.* Or/ice Boras—o to 12 a. m., 1to 5 and 7to 8.

.p.7a. Sunday,' 'ito 10 a. m.only. .Consultation *iree.: ' .

THE ST. PAUL DAILYGLOBE. SATURDAY MORNING, AUGUST 2, 1884,