Grey Highlands Newspapers

Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 13 Dec 1883, p. 3

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 .1 ylvdrop i ° make » ":eet9 ani 8 bad boys ^« Feehan: ^oya have Billy r. ' boy "^s expre,: 'coniboy. git in tbe t. f f a ladv t I hat Wo- -., ' ' IS dreaa- '-^ must be a 'bystander. =• I'mtb; ^^rge item a sleeping 'min Com. ' "^3 sheets, â- Â«="*. 16,000 towels. A "â- " 1 as soon i the linej, ae WagQer '00 woollea â-  '02 pillow. •W7 roller, he W aguer "'0 a year,' nme woodv! e domestis" le mottled, â- r. that is 3 caught' in ate grasses ast slranfs-- ipped buds) 'e winding ^^ with over- la, the sun- be seen by the lilies decting the generally »â-  upon, th9 to work, rn up fof lily carried Her rootlett ws of thaif ' T the neat^ 1 their tailt 3Jectionabl« aken away^ tie largtj led away by illy an oval sandy bot» itic verdur* have been ill over, a»^ â- feet bowery,' ule the roof Don the su :d, the mal» ling thenW" tish as ti«. and only it the golde* iskered cit»i war is aft res seem tl^ i sharp dori rals vibrat* ohe convut 1 tails sbo* their home* 3U3 is their )rced to r* Id in c^ni- icked by b$' aave, hof^ y them, tlJ^' MS), wmc% ncapible n, often A* lighbor.â€" 3 iiiefor !)*• lerved a ci ivas tbeul nule, whij lim in '• ,h yi' say reason in i [granite, ' fraid to s: iin out in 'g dua b* r i. o-called i lollen esti are lar« ibe hiif 1 taken ff ime, n»' 3 then c» lankets. aess of sly fr"° ;alty o.j 1 work »i iok oat, very e* ,rce in Bofac'" nanf»P fct teneo of P"2 j6 affec rt)ineBt johemi*' The "the ill; AiteniP' made- l^jiWS SUMMARY. terejiti" I^*"** '^**â„¢ *^* Parts of the '" World. CANADIAN. The wages of men employed by the Cana- ijn Pdciric Railway in Manitoba, have been ^nced ten percent. jlje K ii28ton Street Railway has not rtved a tinancial success. The plant is Ln to be sold to the highest bidder. Lady RosS' "^® °^ "" Johu Rose, of Lon- â- nn formerly F.nance Minister of Canada, f dead, ^he died at her residence in ijcndon. jxAlderman Lindley, of Brantford, f.rnaa Secretary of the Canadian Order of Porestfs, died at his residtnce, of consump- OOD, a few days ago. Hon. M- Bowell, Minister of Customs, has ^ue with his wife to Lower California, for .%e benefit of her health. She is suffering iom disease of the lungs. The new Cantilever railway bridge, span- jiDg the Niagara river just above the old fjjlway saspenaion bridge, is now complete jod it will be uted at ono». Kev. I'r. Duff, for many years a promin- .ntmiDister at SherbrooKe, Quebec, died re- cently in Montreal. He was also a promin- Jai nan in the Temperance wcrk. It is reported that Sir Charles Tupper has jpfn :n Paris attempting to negotiate a com- jercal treaty with France, which would prove of great advantage to Canada. Hod. Ijhn O'Connor, of Ottawa, has been appointed one cf the Commissioners for the jon'n!iilat;on (i the Dominion statutes, in •he place of the late Hon. James Cockbuin. Xl;e Hastings County Council have just 3)f.ioMali/.e'l tbp Ontario Government in be- half of Women Suffrage. The Toronto and Kingston city councils have also taken jimilar actions. A N'orth West Cjlonization C impany le- cently paid to the Interior Department at iittawa ss-J 400, being an instalment on *:1'2 Oi'.O acres of land in the Saskatchawan Dia'rict. Tne N'apanee and Tamworth railway, through Lennox and Addingtcn counties, is now nearly completed. The rails are near- ly all laid and the road is expected to be in running order in a few weeks. The Montreal city carnival will commence in that city on the 4th of February. Great preparations are being made for a week of eportB and amusements, on a more complete and extensive scale than last year. Sjarlet fever of a very virulent typ!3 is re- forteii to be raging in and about Peterboro. Mr, Jo'^eph Taylor, living in Otonabee, lost live children iu a few days, of that disease. Two cf them were buried in one day. W'orknif ii? wages are everywhere going down. A few days ago the piy of the em- ployee.s of the Kings^ton and Pembroke Railway works, was reduced from 81.50 to il per day. The men accepted the situa- tion quietly. Mr. Ceorge Stephen, of Montreal, of the Ciuuiliuii Pacific Railway Syndicate, has presented to tlie Montreal H jspital §50,000 lor the purpose of erecting a building to coiiim-'ni'jrate the memory of the late Ur. Cimpbell. Tiic I'fctrolia oil men have been sending repre.sentativea to f';tawa to ask the G'jvern- mtiit to place further restrictions upon the importation of American coal oil. They al- to Aish the inspection to be transferred from the Customs to the Inland Revenue Depart- ment. Tp.t-re arc great complaints in Toronto about the class of Irish immigrants received this y ar. It is asserted that 1,990 of those arriwiig at that city were from the union work houses of their native land. Xo Usj hail L' 4tJ0 were sent to C nada from the wnrR houses this year. Several ice accidents are already reported. A}ouiig lady in Montreal was so seriously ujureti uy the falling of an icecicle sn her head, that she died the same day. A young sian, of I) soront-^ was drowned through the ict iii the Bay of Quinte, near Belleville. iwd 111 11 were drowned while skating on the ri\ir near Ottawa. Mr. .Mul H. Stafford, a wealthy citizen of â- "•.'iiuif 111. has otfered to build a hospital, â- â- ^- that ;ty, at til expente of §7-, 000, and "â- ,i;;te K to the city. Tbo city council 'a-.v i:....kfuliy accepted the generous otJer, â- 'I'l ' ' Hoik will be commenced at once. i'rto.or t.-.n:e ladies liave cfftred to furnish a l';rt tii- wards. The wife of Hon. A. S. Iki' I'lovincial secretary, is among them. '•- i.lw uiiliuibhed government vessel was â- -r ki.,; near Digby. l^ova Scotia, re- "!::â-  The vessel liad been built at Ma- .... ..;. the Bay of Fundy, and was being 'v.,u If, Halifax, to be equipped, by the »*-t:iii 1- A'r )/â- //-,'(/. A heavy storm came up -i'l t! e hau'ter, v,ith whicn the vessel was â-ºjtii ti/ivtd parted, leaving it to drift upon t" io.i,5, \\here it went to pieces, a total ^rcck. ll.t re were ten mt ii on hoard, eight c. wlioiii weic drowusd, TMTED STATES. Thu present season of navigation on the -Mij.-i.^sippi river is reported to have been tilt-- n.ctt pre; partus cf any since 1877. A tire ccciricd in the Masonic Temple New York, recently, doing a good dial cf dtstf notion to the beautiiul building, but not completely destroying it. The I933 is estimated at about §100,000. A l.;c;igo detective said to be worth §50, 000 has I'ttn arrested for compounding a idony. Xo wonder he is so rich. If he is ^onn that much the chances are that he Hid not be convi;;t9d. It i.i said that there are over 17,0CO den- tiais :u t'ne Uuitid States,'and that over one *Jn o: pure gold is every year used for plug- ?ini; titth. In a few years the graveyards I'y-^ i e amcng the richest gold mines in the oountry. Tut National Banks, fo generally estab- lishul thrtughout the country since the ^Var, t,a\e, many tf them, broken down. I: 18 said that eighty-nine have been idaced i^ ih.^ hands of Receivers since the establisn- m ut of the tystem. The French Government has decided to remind the dtcreee forbidding the importa- tion tf American poik into France, provid- e^ the municipal authorities or the Cham- t-ers of Commerce in the localities interested will organize a system of pork inf paction. A New Orleans woman recently present- fn J*"" "'" P*" *»« necessary exam- mation for a certificate as masterof a saU- Xirh ' tl^ '^^ "^^^^^ " ^^K con- sidered by the law officers at vVasWngton whether, under the law as it stands a wo man can fill such a ponticn. ' A test of the new electric headlieht was linois A thud of a mile of track could be seen from the cab. They went twenty mil« an hour, but the li«ht never flickeredf The power 18 given by a three-horse power en- ffne attached t^ the boUer. an^^^^t steam from the bciler. Only' one tesTh^ ^en given before, at Indiinopolis, a few weetca ago, which was equally »atufactory. The forty.eighth United SUtes' Congress 18 now in session at Washington, having as- sembled the first week in t^month Mr Carlisle, a Democrat, from Kentucky, wa^ elected Speaker. The President's message was delivered the second day, and the wofk of the session began. It is generallv sup- posed that the session will be a long one. winte?"*^* P'°^*^^J^' '" P*«' *•« enti of ^^^ GREAT BRirAIX. It is reported in England that King Gete- wayo has been restored to power over hia Zulu tribes under the protection of British troops, RCardinal McCabe issued a circular to the Church dignitaries and members in In land strongly denouncing secret societies, and the Pope has just expressad his warm approval of the act. Toe trial cf O'Donnell foi the shooting of Cjrey, the informer, lasted two day, and resulted in a verdict of guilty of murder. O'Donnell was sentenced to be hanged. He was dragged from the court sh )uting and cursing in a most excited manner, amidst great confusion. The Prince of Wales is reported to be mak- ing land investments in Kansas. It is also asserted that he is already the owner of pro- perty to the value of about quarter of b million dollars in Kansas City. Capi*ial seems so abundant in England that it is hard to invest to advantage in " the tight little Island.' The Marquis of Lome recently visited Birmingl am, and in a lecture, spoke very highly in praise of Cinada. He said its cli- mate 18 healthy and salubrious, and many fevers very prevalent in the United States are not known within its boundary. He re- commended it as a field of emigraaon. London Truth says that Princess Louisa and Lord Lome took home with them to England a rare and beautiful collection of Canadian stuffed birds. There were eight cases containing about one hundred and twenty varieties. Toey are much admired by their friends. Another mob took place at Wexford, Ire- land, lecently. Major Whittle, the Chi- cago evangelist, was conducting an evan- gelistic service in a theatre, when an outside mob at ackfd it, attempting to burn the buildii g. Several gentl?men attending the meeting were stoned and the dresses of ladies nearly torn off. Tne windows of several Protestaut churches were broken, and other deprtdati' ns committed. The mob paraded 'he streets for several hours, singing " God Sive Ireland." Flesh or Fat. Alany people do not distinguish the dif- f eren je between flesh and fat in the construc- tion of their body. They want to get fat, and think they will thereby necessarily be- come strong, This is a misrake. Let us notice the wide difference between flesh and tat. Flesh consists of muscle therefore flesh and muscle are one and the same thing. The muscles constitute a great bulk of the body, and bestow upon it lorm and symmetry. The "round" of beef and the leg of lamb are nearly all muscle. It consists of fine thread- like filaments or fibres, arranged in small bundles, a number of which united together with connective tissue form a muscle. Every movement of the body is produced directly by the muscles shortening themselves, in re- sponse to the nervous influence of nerve fibres permeating them, and so drawing on the bunes to which they are attached. Fat contists of minute c lis or sacs of fat, held together with soft, delicate threads and bands of connective tissue. It is found chief- ly beneath the skin and wal's of the belly, around the kidneys and heart, and in spaces between organs. It contributes to sym- metry, facilitates motion, and constitutes a. reverse supply of fuel â€" oombutible food, for burning, or oxidation and is the first tissue to disappear lor this purpose in those who are poorly fed. Any increases of it to more than enough for these purposes is useless and burdensome. With abundance of exercise and plain nutiitious solid foodâ€" flesh, bread, a muiier- ate allowancs of vegetable, and simple pub- dings, with milk and tea and coffee m mod era^ion, the muscles, il not firm and strong, usually increase i^ size, firmness and strength, and the whole body in weight. With little exercise, excess of stiarch, veg- etable, fatty and liquid foods, the fataccum- u'a:es, though the strength may not in- •reate, but may even decrease, and will, with any great accumulation of fat. It should not therefore be an olject with any one to become "fat," but to sccuie firm, strong muscles, with the whole made plump and round by a moderate proportion' oilaX.â€" Sanitary Journal. Carl yle said, "That a good man be free and permitted to unfold himself in works of goodness and nobleness is surely a blef sing iiM'ispensabSe to him and those about him but for a bad man to be free and permitted to unfold himself in his particular way is, contrariwise, the greatest curse you can in- flict upon him,â€" a curse upon him and upon all his neighbors. Him the very heavens call upon you to persuade, to urge, to com- pel into something of well doing and, if you absolutely cannot, the one bletsiug Kft is the speediest gallows you can lead him to." ANjrristown married man can heavily discount Vennor as a prognosticator. Wneu. the former starts home at 1 a.m. he always perdicts a " storm " within an hour, and never made a miss but once and then he found his wife sound asleep when he reached home. Next morning she declared that she had been drugged. MA.BSIED IN FUN. And Sent to JaU to Bepent at Lafanrs â€"Sequel to • Lawn Party. Walter Vaughn, of Flatbush, a mere boy, waa arrested recently by hia alleged wife for failing to provide for her. The couple went through a mock marriaee at a lawn party «ome time ago. Mr. E. S. Vaughn, father of the lad who didn't know that he waa married, is treasurer of the Moen Ab- phaltic company at No. 103 Maiden lane. He ia a short, atout, and very jolly old (gen- tleman, resembling not a little ••Mr. Pick- wick." Wbenaaked what answer his son would put in to the charge of abandonment brought against him by the young lady who claims the boy for her huabaiid, e old gen- tleman burst into a spasmodic fit of laughter, which oontinued till he was forced to leare the room. Returning in a few minutes with hia hands pressed tightly against his sides Mr. Vanghn said ' Whenever I think of it I can hardly move," and straightening up with evident pain, he continued ** We shall carry this case as far as this young lady cares to have it go." " What do you think prompted Mias Hig- bie to t;ke such a serious view of the lawn- party marriage V " Oh, she didn't. I am quite sure that her mother is at the bottom of it. She is endeavoring to work her daughter off her hands. It's natural, but she has gone about it the wrong way to be successful. It is only another example ot would-be mother-in- law, and I think that young lady and her mother stand a poor change of getting Walter or his father's money." As the reporter started to go Mr. Vaughn asked if he was going to see the young lady, and on receiving an affirmative reply the old gentleman began to chuckle to himself, and as he received another hitch in his side, re- marked â- ' Drop in and let me know what she has to say. ' The Higbie family reside about midway between the penitentiary and the Flat- busn asylum. Their residence is the first in a row of eight cottages facing the gray ot the penal institution, A little figure came trippint; down the stairs humming, " I'm lonely to-night, love, without you," and, with a little scream of surprise, she peaed the door. "Is this Mies Higbie?" "Xo; I'm Mrs. Vaughn." Mi8a|Higbie, or Mrs. Vaughn â€" to be decided by the court â€" ia seventeen years of age. Her hair is dark, and her eyes are Kings county hazel. She is petite, and seemed very determined. She said her lawyer had directed her not to talk about the case at all. "You can certainly tell me when your bus Mr. Vaughn was arrested?" "It was on Evacuation day. Since our marriage I have not asked him to provide a home for me nor to support me, for it was a husband's place to look after his wife with- out being so directed. He has not done so, and I found it necessary to take some action ill the matter." " W^hat were the details of this wedding ceremony " ' ' Why, there was not much of it. We were enjoying ourselves playing croquet at the lawn sociable at John A. Case's, in the evening, whea Walter came up to me and Said: 'Come on, Annie, and we'll get married.' I took his hand and walkee over to a big trte. Charley Anson asked us the usual questions in the Methodist ceremony, and we were pronounced man and wife. I can't see anything 'mock' about that We were in earnest, and after we were married we were happy as could be. During the re- mainder of the evening Walter called me his little wife, and I was only to happy to call him my husband. When he accom- panied me home in the bright moonlight we both knew that we had been made one." "How long have you lived in Flatbush?' "Ouly a month. I'm a city girl, you know, I have made only a few acquaint- ances h'^re. It is not a very sociable place. What does mother think? Oh, she does not approve of my going to law to hold him. I am doing it all alone. Walter is a gentle- man, and I know he will not go back on his marriage vows." "Considering the newspaper stories which have brought you into notoriety, don't you regret having been married under such ciicumstances?' "No. It is a little unpleasant to be spoken of as trying to make a man remain your husband when he does not want to, but I love Walter, and I can not let the matter drop without doing everything in my power to overrule the oVjcations of his parents. I know we were a j ast a little young to enter into the matrimonial state, but now that we are man and wife I feel it my duty to erjoy my husband's company if the law 80 di- rects." W^alter Vaughn's mother was seen, but she would not talk about the circumstances of Ilia marriage. The voung man will be examined at Justice Ferguson's oflice, in New UirecLt The young lady will he represented by Counselor Lsgget, of Brooklyn. â€" Ne^o York World. -»^ffc In the Wrong Palpit. The Baston Traveller relates the adven- ture of a worthy Congregationalist clergy- man of a church in the suburbs of Boston. He had agreed to supply a Eoxbury pulpit for an absent brother. Sa came into BostoB and promptly took a Highland car for the scenes of his evening's labor. In due time he descried a steeple, and, reaching the church, got out, walked in, took off his overcoat in the vestry, and went straight- way to the pulpit. He glanced around on his congregation and proceeded, after a min- ute or two's delay, to give out a good old standard Congregational hymn. Thejcon- gregation proceeded to find the place, the organ gave the tune, and the singing began. Whils it was in progress the sexton walked up the pulpit stairs and said to our subur- ban friend, "Mr. will be here in a few minutes." The situation flashed upon him, but suppressing his emotions, he asked. "Why, isn't this Mr. â€" 's church " "Ko. sir,' calmly replied the sexton, "this is the Universalist church." There was an t X change of places a few minutes later. The friends of the suburban minister are now fnd of asking him how be came to enter the Universalist ministry. He laughs and so- l ices himself with the remark, "Well, I got I hem to sing a good orthodox hymn, any- way." I^B A QUART OF BEER. The BnyteK and Selllac of ^ivea in â- nslaad. Before Mr. Jnitice Denman, at the Livi r pool assizes, Batsy Wardle was ch'^rged with marrying Oeorge Chisnal at Escleatoa big- amwialy, her former husband being alive. "The oaee w^ a peculiar one. It was seated by the woman that as her first husband had sold her for a quart of beer she thought she was at liberty w marry again. His Lordship â€" That is not what she stated before the magistrate. She said then that he was idle and would not work. When she left him she took the child with her, and he said if she would let him have the child he would not trouble her any further. He add- ed that he would aell her for a quart of beer.PK Prisoner â€" Please your worsliip, be did so. [Laughter. J His Loraship^Is there anybody here who knows that? Yes, my lord Alice Rweby and Margaret Brown. Hid Lordship â€" Call Margaret Brown. Margaret Brown thereupon stepped into the box and was cross-examined by his lordship. She said the was present at the second marriage. She knew the first husband Wardle was alive she waa told that he had sold her for a quart of beer. His Lirdship â€" You believed it would be binding Yes, sir. His Lordship â€" And you thought it right she should marry again She wished me to give her away, and I did so. [Laughter.] His Lordship â€" You helped h^r to commit bigamy. Take care you do not do it again or you will get yourself into trouble. Alice Roseby waa next cilled, and said she saw Wardle drink one glass of the quart. His Loidship â€" Who was the bargain made with With George Chisnal. His Lordshipâ€" I am not sure that you are not guilty of bigamy, or of being an acces- sory before the fact. You must not do this sort of thing again. People have no right to sell their wive j for a quart of beer or any- thing fcUe. [Laughter.] George Chisnal, the second husband, ap- parently just out of his teens, was the next witness called. His Lordship â€" How did you come to mar- ry this woman Witness (in the Lancashire vernacular)â€" Hoo did a what? Laughter.] Question repeated. A bowt her. [Laugh- ter.] His Lordshipâ€" You are not fool enough to suppose you can buy another man's wife Oi. [Laughter.] His Lordship â€" H iw much did you give for her? Sixpence. [Great laughter His Lordship â€" Vou are as guilty as she is. You are accessary before the fact to her committing bigamy yourself. Every- body has committed bigamy in this case. [Liughter.] Go down. The witness left the box with alacrity, but was immediately recalled by his lordship, who asked him how long he bad lived with the prisoner. Witness â€" Going on for three years. His Lordship â€" Dj you want to t%ke her back again Awl keep her, if you loike. [Laughter. His Lordshipâ€" You need not keep her if you do not want. She ia Wardle's wife. Mr. Swift, addressing his lordship, said all he wished to say on be'half of this unfor- tunate woman was this â€" that she seemed to have m?t with a bid husband in the first place, and an ignoraut man in the second. Ha could only venture to tope that hialord- ship wjuld not think it a case in which she ongh' to be punishedâ€" at least not severely. H 8 lirdship directe-Lthat Wardle phonld be c Uled, and this was done without elicit- ing any answer. H.e Lordship (addressing the prisoner)â€" It is absolutely necessary that I should pass some punishment upon you in order that people may nnderstani that men have no more right to aell their wives than they have to stll other people's wives, or to sell other people's horses or cows, or anything of the kind. You cannot make that a legal transaction. So many of yon seem to be ignorant of that that it is necessary I should give you some punishment in order that you may understand it. It is not necessary that It should be long, but you must be imprison- ed and kept at hard labor tor one week. â€" London Telegraph. An Eccentric Lawyer. A famous lawyer, noted for his learning and classical scholarship, illustrated by his eccentric h'lbits an old Eaglish iong. "The loss of wealth is the loss of dirt. As sages in all times assert The happy man's without a shirt." "Billy Campbell, as he was familiarly called, made much and saved little money, for he had no idea of its value. He endorsed for everybody, and if he went out in the street with a pocketful o; change, he would return without a cent having giveu some- thing to every beggar he met. One day, the sheriff, in reply to Mr. Campbell's question, "Wfiafs the news?" "Nothing new, sir, but this, I am sorry to say. I had to sell out your house and lot for the debt you owed as security to Mr. Hdl." "Oh, that's nothing," answered Camp- bell the property is not lost it has only changed hands." Mr. Campbell was an easy going bachelor, and the reputation of being one tf the most slovenly dressed lawyers in the Stite. Oa one occasion as he was about leaving home to attend the legislature, his sister informed him that she had packed a. dozin shirts in bis trunk. "Now, brother," Bill she, "Jo be more particular about your dretis, and don't for- get to put on a shirt at least once a week. It's very mortifying to see you go about looking so dirty." On his return home at the close of the ses- sion, she congratulated him upon his hearty appearance. " Why you have grotvo as fat a? a pig,' she remarked, ";hey mast hive fed you at the capital." ' Yes, they take go )d cirdofus,"hi re- plied, "for they arealtv^ysia want of soma appropriations." Looking into her brother's trunk and fin 1- ing but two shirts she called out "Where, brother, are all those newshirts I gave you " "Don't you find them in the trun'i?" "No; I see but two." " Possibly I have some oa me." Ai examination disclosid that h; was wearing six shirts, a fact which accounted for h's apparent improvemen in flesh. Harrison, the '-boy" preacher, it is said, will spend Christmas with his graadchil- dren. WHO 18 UNACQUAINTED WITH THE MEOCRAPHY OF THIS COUNTRY, WILL SEB BY EXAMINING THIS MAP, THAT THE Chicago, Rock Island Pacific R'y, Being the Great Central Line, affords to travelers, tjy .^eaeon of Its unrivaled geo- atraphical position, the shortest and best route between the East, lyJorthcast and Southeast, and the West, Northwest and Southwest. It Is literally ^nd strictly true, that its connections are all of the principal lines of road between the Atlantic and the Pacific. By Ks main line and branches It reaches Chicago, «loi;at, Peoria, Ottawa, La Snile, Ceneseo, Moline and Rock Island, in Illinois Davenport, Muscatine, Washington, Keokuk, Knoxvlllo, Oskaloosa, Fairfield, Der, fVlolnes, West Liberty, Iowa City, Atlantic, Avoca, Audubon, Harlan, Cuthrio Center and Council Bluffs, In Iowa Gallatin, Trenton, Cameron and Kansas City- In Missouri, and Leaven- worth and Atchison in Kansas, and the hundred: of citieb, villages and towns Intermediate. The "GREAT ROCK ISLAND ROUTE," Aa It Is familiarly called, offers to travelers all the advantages and comforts kialdent to a smooth track, safe bridges, Union Depots at all connecting points, rast Express Trains, composed of COMMODIOUS, WELL VENTILATED, WELL HBATID, FINELY UPHOLSTERED and ELEGANT DAY COACHES a line Of the MOST MAGNIFICENT NORTON RECLINING CHAIR CARS ever built; PULLMAN'S Ateet designed and handsomest PALACE SLEEPING CARS, and DINING CARS that are acknowledged by press and people to be the FINEST RUN UPON ANY â- CAD IN THE COUNTRY, and In which superior meals are served to travelers at ttie low rate of SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS EACH. THREE TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and the MISSOURI RIVER. TWO TRAINS each way between CHICAGO and MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL, via tha famous t ALBERT LEA ROUTE. A New and Direct Line, via Seneca and Kankakee, has recently been opened, between Newport News, Richmond, Cincinnati, Indianapolis and La Fayette, and Oounoil Bluffs, St. Paul, Minneapolis and Intermediate points. All Through Passengers carried on Fast Express Trains. For more detailed information, see Maps and Folders, which may be obtained, as wall as Tickets, at all principal Ticket Offices in the United States and Canada, or of R. R. CABLE, E. ST. JOHN, Vioe-Pres't dt Cen'l Manager, Oen'l T'k't A Pass'r As*to CHICAGO. sn^MyUiiMi ^aittiiWiiilil^^ltii

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