popular wants.popular wants. popular ......

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THE PAINT PAUL DAILY GLOBE: FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 4, 1891. r POPULAR WANTS. SITUATIONS OFFERED. »— \ - 31j»I«'>«. i A GENT wanted to sell m«p of Minnesota. >— » Apply ill Endicott Arcade. BAh_h-\\ auieu, A No. 1bread and cake baker right away: married man pre- ferred; easy work: steady employment. Ad- dress Scott T. Stewart. Fergus Fulls, Minn. V).\Kiii-.i; Wanted, first-class barber at 4J4;t) South Robert St., West St. Paul; steady. Job. ; eAK lit-It—Wanted, a first-class barber at the Manhattan Tonsorial Parlors. OAKISKK wanted for Saturday. 470 Uni- 'Jj vcrMtyav. W. R. •OAKIJEK—A lirst-cinss barber wanted at I 33 S. Raineri's. Xorthfield. Minn. at I S. Raineri s. NorthfieW, Minn. i tjAßßEK— Wanted, barber, at 437 st. Pc- I »J ter st. for Saturday. " *;. c. Meisel. \u25a0T>AK»_tt wanted at 551 Rice st. i Alt It Etc wanted at 4J7 St Peter st. G. j C. Meisel. j BOY to take care of horse and cow for board; may go to school. IS9O Marshall ay.. Merriii m park. I BOY wanted to drive butcher wrgon; acquainted with city. Address X., Globe. | CANVA*Si-.KS— Salary and commission. Wheeler it Wilson Manufacturing Com- pany, 3"2 West Third st. Col.l.l.iTOli- Wanted, an active young man for position as collector and tire Insurance solfcitor. Address V 73, Globe. OLNTKK MAN— Wanted, an experi- enced oyster counter man at Mi East Sixth st. " [\u25a0 DAIRYMAN— Wanted, young man for JJ dairy work; one who understands milk- ing. 1094 Edmund st., corner Leziugton. ! fMKKMAK— Wanted, competent man to I- run healing plant in wholesale house; must do other work as required. Address Z SO. Globe. HAKNKSNMAKEKS AND STITCH- ers wanted. Address Bristol «_ Sweet, Fargo, N. P. Oli OF CAKI'I-.STtK WORK, to let. J. McGnire. <>:> East Seventh st. ' ~~ MILLKK wanted for custom mill in the country. Apply at 31J Fuller st., hi. Paul. '_ rOKE>S.\IAN At once, iirst-class, sober IX Gordon pressman: gooa wages; steady employment Brown. T»eacy & Co. |OHINGLfc.KS wanted. Corner Marshall iO ay. and Mackubin st. :>OOLICI TO Us Wanted, men of energy T iJ and tact to solicit for Bankers' Life As- sociation of M. Paul, Minn. Salary or guar- antee as pieferrcd. Address C. B. Secor, St. Paul. Minn. WAMKW- A bright young mnu. sixteen VV* 1 to twenty, to learn the clothing busl- •ness; must speak German. 465 Wabasha st. 117 ANTED—Salesmen on salary or com- »V mission to handle the New Patent Chemical Ink-Erasing Pencil: the greatest telling uevelty ever produced; erases ink . thoroughly in two seconds: no abrasion of fearer: 200 to 500 er cent profit: one agent's tales amounted to $620 in six days: another $32 in two hours; we want one energetic gen- eral agent for each state and territory. For ;terms and full particulars address The Mori- roe Eraser Manufacturing Company, La Crosse Wis. \u25a0 mSI!»KSS chances. f- .tli.scrcllnncous. FOX Saloon and lunch counter in best country town inMinnesota; doing .^ood business; price. $900 complete; one-half time if desired : cheap lease, full informa- tion at Anheuser-Busch Brewing Associa- tion. 3 ( >o Chestnut si. ; call forenoon. FOR SALE— A clean slock of boots and shoes in a prospering city of 4,000 Inhabitants in Southern Minnesota; nest lo- cation in city; must be sold soon: good rea- 'boii- given for selling. Address J 81. Globe. i'poK SALE— best saw and planing JC mil! in Le Sueur county, cheap: reason for selling, accident. Address August lleck- «rt. St. Pe;er. Minn. FOX SALE—The best-located cigar, con- fectionery and news stand in Minne- apolis; a bargain if taken at once. C. C. [Dunn, 63 Loan and Trust Building, Minne- apolis. IT 7 A I El) TO Hi: V—A grocery store in a »» good location for cash, a ' 77. Globe. U' ANTED— At Fosstou, Minn., a physi- cian : population of town 75.1: no doc- (tor within a radius of forty miles: raying practice guaranteed. For information call . on or address Postmasteror Bank of Posston. 1 11 7 ANIE 1) A man to establish an ex- \u25a0 » V change bank In a live Minnesota town. Address J. Globe. \X[ ANTED—A suitable man as clerk to » » take charge of a branch office in St.— iTaul for a manufacturing concern as man- 'agerand cashier; reasonable amount cash security required. ' Address for interview. S ~\n. Globe. Minneapolis. boabi) 01 1i:ki:i>. Boa HI) Large, furnished front room with two closets, and board. C33 Wa- ;l>asha. \u25a0 Boa Xl) Well-furnished rooms, with first- class board; bath; piano; terms reason- able. 270 Pleasant ay. BOAKD— Cedar— Ly tie Terrace— For rent, three front parlors, with alcoves v.'ith riiEt-class board; furnace heat. OOAlCD— Furnished rooms, with board, Jj for gentlemen and ladies, £3.75 per 7>er week. 1-1 Iglehartst. BOAKD— Front mi m with board, reasona- ble to one or two young ladies. 31) Sum- mit ay. fnoAllli- r.inoni House. Corner Eighth ;13 and Minnesota— Best $1 day house in the City; no bar in connection; regular board and rooms 85 per week. |"jY<»liWool> HOUSE— East Ninth. Near : l.y Wabasha— Warm rooms, with excellent [board, $4 and to per week: table board, £12 1 month ; transients, SI per day. $ BOARD WAXTEI>. jOOAHU— Wanted by gentleman, pleasant 1-iJ room and board for the winter in strict- Jy private family; St. Anthony hill; refer- -"iji-os excliaiieed*. Address (.» 80.' <;lobe. i'- HOKSBS A^i) CABKIAOE. (T^oii SALE— A m>ire in the tens, adapted x for any kiud of labor, at 342 Pleasant. ousV - WINTERED— Good care, warm stable: single and box stalls. Address i.. T. Whitt-her. Macalester. WANTED— Span oi carriage horses to match; must be sound in every re- *l->ect. Apply at '.".'1 East Seventh st. WANTED— A few more horses to winter; single and box stalls. 11. C. Barton, r Grove. WANTED— Horses to keep for the win- » ter; good feed. warm Quarters: best of care guaranteed. Inquire at 27 Davidson j'.l' ck. M»!ST ASD FOl)WI>. BOOKS LOST Two library books, ) \u25a0"Mervyn"' and "Evelina." A liberal reward will be paid for their return to 102 iEnst Third si. CioW LOST—Tuesday evening, a dark brown cow. with white suols, large }ioi! ; .-. nine jeurs old. Finder will please re- tiir it or notify B. Resale. $04 Dakota ay. AVivKCOAT LOST— 9IO Reward At KJ manual training school, Wednesday c\emu(r, black Melton overcoat; please re- *nrn to I"*i Kiahlli st. : tk> iiestions asked. WOBKS. l" . i;oi ii i. \. N. W. Steam Dye Works j' office, 118 Robert St., Ryan block Works, :i'iand !7 Indiana ay. ~t A 1 > ON a: «.r.. New York steam Dye \u25a0«* Works; ladies' and gouts' tiotiuuga spe- \u25a0 . M \\ esl Sixth st. T7AHLKKI & M INTEL. Minnesota XV Steam Dye Works, 241 East Seventh. . I»ATi:.\TS. AM !•; it 1CAN Patent Market and Novelty jl Factory. A. M. Carlson, solicitingat- torney and manufacturer and seller of pat- e:ils. ' til:') and oi7 Mississippi st.. St. Paul. MUSIC JX. •"|)IA>O H NEK Address E. Crutchett, X Box 402, Pobtoflicc, St. Paul; price. $1.5!): references-. MOKl: AMD BAB FIXTURES TVTEW AND SECOND-HAND. LOON IV Bxtnrea, iceboxes, mirrors, pool and billiard tables, counters and shelvin. SU- \YatiiU!_ic_-ye corta Mioneai<oiis.g POPULAR WANTS. SITUATION OFFEBKP. females. ' . _13 ft r|— itANGS HANGS cut ~-D~V'~.L/ and curled, 15 cents: will keep in curl from three to nineteen days in all kind of weather. Bon Ton Hair Parlors, 4*-4 Wabnshn. corner Seventh. ALL LAD IKK tut Id >l its I i.A>K- lin. Davidson Grand block, tor tine gray switches at cost for thirty days: baugs cut, curled. 15 cents. 318 IVabash* st. CHOCOLATE Dll'-'Kti Wanted, a | chocolate dipper who ' is experienced i and first-clara: none other need apply- at ! Yenra'n, Seventh nrid Cedar. j COOK. Wauled, good Kill cook: bring i reierences; call before noon. 4i9 i <;'.•(•> si. i C".M«iv —\s aiiied, a good cook, washer and j v> ironer: also a chambermaid; null fam- i ily:Kiifily morning*, it, 1 . Nelson ay. nININiiKOOM GIKLS Wanted, two ] first-class diningrroom g-ri*. Apply I Fl*t2ts. 'The Albioa,'* comer Western and i Seibyavs. tBI Gi-.Ii.MAN (i)hl,Mi,.i!;:dill -? Jia&t sev- ' enth st. Mrs. Bowes' Office. :lUt'SKWUKK- Wanted, competent girl I for general housework. Mrs. C. H. Scliliet, 414 Fort, between Sixth ana Ninth sts. OUSEWOKK— Warned, a good girl for general housework; German preferred 4K2 Cedar. OU*k worm.— Wanted, a girl for gen- eral housework; good pay to right per- son. Call tioom 4, Forepaugh Block, sereu corner*. |_j OUSEWOKK— Wanted, a good girl for Ii general housework. Inquire "<»> Olive st. II OISEWOKK— Wanted, girl for general XI housework. 298 Aurora. 11 OIM-.UOKK- General servant by Dec. ll 15 for family of two; steam-heated flat, st. Anthony bill; must be good plain cook, and wellrecommended; pleasant place for good girl. Address V75, Globe office. JJOUSEWORK Girl wanted. a>-8 Wa- XX couta st. DASiKY COOK—Wanted, female pastry JL cook at Hotel Gladstone, Jamestown, N. I). SECOND GlKl.— Fcrt YntCß, N. D... near Bismarck; 520. Douglass 1 Intelligence Agency, 35 Seventh. WANTED -A respectable \ouus lady of *V good appearance to work in store mid attend oyster parlors; references required. Apultat 13.* West Third nt. SITUATIONS WASTED. tittle. _ BARKER— Situation wanted in a Darber »hop; eight mouths' experience. Ad- dress V76, Globe. DOOIiKKKI'KK— situation wanted as XJ bookkeeper or assistant by young man of twenty; good references: posted in short- hand and typewriting. Address 077, Globe. OOKKEEPKK— Gentleman employed during the day wants work after p.m.; has had a number of years experience as bookkeeper and correspondent, and can give the best of reierences; can furnish his own typewriter, if desired. Address J. W. R., Globe. ;.-..'\u25a0 OOKKEEFKR— An ex-cashier of a bank i -' desires a position as bookkeeper in an engineer's office,machine shop or foundry ; knowledge of shorthand : also speed forty per minute; good references. Address Box L 45. Globe. ' OYs KOK PLACES, places for dovs; employment bureau for poor boys, free. Newsboys' club Room. Chamber of Com- merce building; open from 11 to l- a. m. and from I to S»t"fi p. m. ,: RKAMKRy MAN— situation wanted by a first-class creamery man and steam en- gineer, in the country or city: can give first- class references. Address F. Wm. Anderson, Cannon Kails, Minn., Box 63. M I'LOYMENT- Wanted, situation by a -C> respectable youth: good references. Ad- dress 11. I).. 351 L'Orient su \u25a0 IVltlillcs. ' CMIAMBi.KAIAI D— French young lady Vv desires a situation as chambermaid in a respectable family. Address French Consul- ate, Union Block, city. COOK wishes a position as cook where there is no washing or Ironing; 740 Pleasant »v.; good reference. - . 'piiKKK competent German girls; one X nurse; want places at once. " Ladies' Employment. 4t3ti St. Peter st. FOR SAI.E. V)(i- Full breed St. Bernard dog. one year XJ old, for sale cheap. Address G 7G, Globe. OK SALE. OHTRADE for groceries or dry goods. Portland cutler, nearly new, thirty-foot office rail, No. 9 Hub range. T 78, Globe. . \u25a0 « . POX SALh-A complete banking outfit, X. including safe, counters, desks, check punch and (stationery, in ' a Wisconsin town: county seat and only bank in county: good reason for selling; write for particulars. Box 215. Mason. Wis. LUJKNITI KE For sale, Magee range, 1- dishes, pictures, shades, draperies, car- pets, easy chair, bureaus, toilet sets, kitchen tables, ice cream freezer, clock, lamps, fur- n:ice coal. 277 East Tenth. ' ~ fi^aScmjai.. M. N'EWI'OKT Ac SON, INVEST merit Bankers, loan money on im i roved property in- St. Paul and Minneap- olis at U per cent "on or before. " Offices. New Pioneer Press Building, St Paul, and Reeve Building. Minneapolis. A —MONEY TO LOANON" _i« Pianos, Horses, Carriages, wagons. Household furniture. Diamonds, watches. Warehouse receipts. Mortgage notes, and Commercial paper bought or taken as col- lateral. Property to remain In your own pos- session. Our rates are and always have been the lowest. Partial payment received at any time and interest reduced in proportion. Your own time for payment. . All business confidential. Private parlors for ladies. Cail or address Minnesota Mortgage Loan Com- pany. Room 13-14, First National Bank Buiidinir. corner Fourth and Jackson sts. I>O VwU \»a>T TO UOKItOW money at a tower rate than you can torrow through any other agency? The Anierican Mortgage Loan company. Room 7, Fim National bant building, corner Fourth end Jackson sis., will let you have an; amount, $10, $_U, J'JO. f4c, $75, Sli'O oi J_OO— fact, tiny turn you wirii onvour (.old watch. d;amonoti. Household furniture, horse, buggy, piano, carriage, etc. vita lower nue lhan you can possibly get it elsewhere. Cocas can remain in your possession, and you can nay a part any time you want and Mop interest Business private and confi- dential. You ran have your own time in paying up principal. JL. STUAt'CH, Room 10. Globe Build- Ing, is prepared to niHke loans in any amount quickly and privately on house fur- niture, watches, diamonds, etc., lowest rates, easy return i payments, honorable treatment. Alt«ih. A.MOUN i> of money to loan on improved properly nt 6 per cent. Gil man & Co.. New York LifeBuilding. LOW RATE MOiNEY In bums to suit on furniture, pianos, dia- monds, watches or goods in storage; easy re- turn payments; no publicity.- TaKe elevator to Room 16, Gcrmania Bank Building, Fifth and Wabasha; private room for ladies. MONEY 'x O i.o A*i without delay, ironi 510 upward, on furniture, horses, jew- elry, etc. : time checks, notes and second Teal estate mortgages bought. Minnesota Loan Co.. 117 Enst Fourth st. \,|O.\i;Y LOANED on life insurance poi- iTX icies; or bought. L. P. Van Norman, <>1 Guaranty Loan Building. Minneapolis. -F-R-I-V-A-T-E- Money loaned on diamonds, watches, pianos, furniture or goods in storage at lowest rates, and small monthly return payments; notes and mortgages bought; most private loan rooms In the city. Ohio Investment Com- pany, 133 Globe Building: take -elevator II ANTED— a good 6 or 7 per cent mort- »» gage on improved property, for $10,000 to $12,000, with one or two years to run. Odin G.Clay A: Co.. 207 Bank of Minnesota. \t! !\u25a0. MOItITZ.y->_> IMONEKI4 I'KESS \u2666V Building Mortgage loans made promptly; C 7 and ß per cent; mortgages bouebi. <j£l r\ (\( \( \TO LOAN on real estate n *pi*Ji\J\J\J any sums. P. H. Simpson, 011 Pioneer Press Building. WA.\TM>,TO BUY. AT WANTED—WiII pay $3 forafirst- ' class ratter: cail Saturday. A.F.Bar- clay. 416 Third ay. noith, Minneapolis. pOIXTEKS- anted, about eighty feet V.^ good second-hand store counters." Van :>lyke Bros. & Jenson. Benson, Minn. \u25a0 ' ptRTKE MAP OF ST. I'AUL. Ad- V^ dress, with price. D 74, Globe. fjU T KN'lTi:i*K— Wanted to buy. all kinds of household goods; highest. cash prices paid in city. Cardoso Furniture and Auction Co.. 45S to 462 Jackson st., between" Eighth Bad Ninth M*. POPULAR WITS. , FOR _H_T_.'. . Hawses. -.- ; ~ —WE RENT HOUSES, STOKES, OF- . FICES. TAKE CHARGE OF RENTED PROPERTY. TAYLOR RENTING AGEN- CY. QLOBK BUILDING. Fort RUST-Houses, stores and offices in nil parts of the city; call and examine our lists; tie may have just what you are looking for. The St. Paul Trust Company, Knd.cott builaing. East Fourth st. BOI'SK For rent, house seven rooms, vviih modern improvements. .East University, near Canada; rent, 522.50. IJIOI'SK—Nine rooms. 78 Tilton st; all Ii modern improvents; willrent whole or part very cheat). Inquire at SBO St. Peter. HOUSE— for rent, a warm six-room house, with modern improvements; near cars: twenty minutes' walk I ram the posiol'.ice. 025 Marion st., near Sherburue ay. Hoi BK— For rent, 8-rooro brick house, No. 56 i Westminster St.; modern improve- ments. J. M. liohrer. ' . HOUSE— For rent, nicely furnished eight- room house, $15 a month. Address L. -M.. Globe. \u25a0 Stores. ' UILInNG —To rent, four-story brick building. No. 188 East Fifth st. ; mi table tor wholesale purnoses; will change to suit tenant. James B. Weed. 167 East Third 81. oil SALK ok RENT— I'J4 East Seventh s\, between Jackson and Sibley; In- aiiire on premises. Booms. A— i.Oi'i.l, iJKL>!» vViCa, tor gentle- men only; fifty modern steam-heated rooms by da/, week or mouth. .' ' potLEGK AY.. 24, WEST- Furnished vy front room, with or without board; steam* heated and use ot bath. ICE ST.. 251— Corner College— Nicely lut- nis&ed rooms, with or without board; modern improvements; rent reasonable. poo.MMATK— A young lady wants a XV roommate. Inquire at 138 West Fourth st. OT. I'KTKK ST., 387— Near Sixth—Pleas- O ant furnished rooms; steam heat, elec- tric light and bath. StITH AY.. 135—Near Sixth St.—Pleas- ant alcove room; with modern conven- iences: also single room. 'pr.NTH ST.. 31, EAST— Furnished room, 1 with or without board ; also front parlor. ABASIIA ST.. 505-Furnished heated VV rooms, $5 to $8 per mouth. W" ABASHA. Corner. Eighth-Suite of handsome front rooms, $12; heated; also small room. ABASHA Corner Tenth St.. Over Drug Furnished rooms for rent. WASTED TO REST BARN— Wanted, to rent baru and shed room for horse and buggy near Selby and Mackubln. X71, Globe. FA KM—Wanted, to rent a farm within twenty miles of city: stale number of acres and terms. Address Z., Globe, Minneapolis. II OUBE— For not over $40 rent; anywhere XJ east of Western ay. "Moundsview," P. O. Box -'487. St. Paul. ROOMS— furnished rooms and fur- nished or unfurnished kitchen for light housekeeping; rooms must be finely fur- nished and modern; with bath. etc. ; pleas- antly located, wall lighted, etc. ; In private house with no other roomers; would like one floor by ourselves: rent for winter must be cheap; only man and wife; will care for own rooms; a small furnished house would answer; must give street and number when answering this. Address X 72, Globe. ROOMS for party of gentlemen who wish to attend Republican convention; will pay good prices to get them reserved now. Address N 73. Globe. ROOM— Wanted, pleasant furnished room for man and wife in private family where there «re no other boarders; must be desirable locality. 1) 75, Globe HsAB OUTLIVED HIS SENTENCE. Singular Longevity of a Man Con- demned to 100 Years' Banish- ment A certain housebreaker was -con- demned in the latter part of the last century in France, and under peculiar circumstances, to 100 years in the gal- leys, and, strange to relate, 'this man recently made his appearance in his own native province at the advanced age of one hundred and twenty, he being about twenty years of age when the sentence which condemned him to so dreadful a punishment was passed, It is difficult to conceive what the feel- ings must have been with which he re- turned,comments the New York Ledger, as soon as emancipated from the shackles that had enthralled him for a j century, to breathe once more the cher- ished air of the scenes of his infancy. I BounCi in the department of Am, was ! his native home; but time had so much changed the aspect of the whole place that lie recognized it on.lv by the old church of Brou, which was the only thing that had undergone no alteration. He had triumphed over laws, bondage, man. Time everything. Not a relation had he left; not a sinirle being could he hail as an acquaintance; yet he was not without experiencing the homage and respect the French invariably pay to old age. For himself, he had forgotten everything connected with his early youth; even all recollection of the crime for which he had suffered was lost, or, if at all remembered, it was but as a dreary vision, confounded with a thou- sand other dreary visions of (lays long cone by. His family and connections for several generations all dead, him- self a living proof of the clemency of heaven and the severity of man, regret- ting, perhaps, the very irons which had been familiar to him* and half wishing himself again among the wretched and suffering beinsrs with whom his fate had been so long associated well might he be called the patriarch of burglars. ACROSS THE SAHARA. Speculations on the Railroad Which May Up Built There. The traffic of the Trans-Saharian railway will comprise two classes of business the first, local, between oasis and oasts.or the Sahariau traffic proper; the second, the business between ex- treme ends of the line, between Algeria and Franc** and the Central Soudan, says a writer in Scribner's. Once given railway transportations, depots and markets will spring up along the line, for the surveys cross the lines fol- lowed by the caravans that carry on the commerce of the desert. The ex- port of cereals from Algeria to the Tou- aregs and to the Au country, and the export of salt, which is not found in the Soudan, will give importance to the salt wells of Amadrhor. Upon the other hand, it is certain that a constant stream from the south will pnur into Algeria, bringing chiefly hides and leather. An estimate of the yearly income to be de- rived from the Saharian business may be put at 6,265,000 francs. Dividing this sum by the length of the line from Bis- kra to Lake Tchad, 3,100 kilometers (1,923 miles), the earnings are equal to 2,000 francs per kilometer. Central Soudan is rich enough to fur- nish a vast commercial business to a railway; spices, ostrich feathers, gold dust, indiio, hides, leather, cereals and fruits, palm oil. cotton, ebony and dye stuffs. The exports and imports of the Soudan ought to provide an income of 7,310 francs per kilometer. Finally, there remains the passenger traffic, which may be expected to grow into importance. In round numbers, I may say that the trans-Saharian traffic would result in earnings of about 10.000 francs per kilometer of line. As the construc- tion cost would average 100,000 francs a kilometer, interest at 4% per cent will require 4,500 francs per kilometer. The running expenses of one train a day in either direction would be between 5.001 and 5,500 francs per kilometer per year. From a financial standpoint the enter- prize, if well manaeed, ought therefore to proveSremunerative. This alone, apart from other considerations, should warrant a trans-Saharian railway. ~ . : !V Man's Best Gift. \u25a0" The best gift that can be conferred POPULAR WANTS. heat; estate FOR SALE. Itlinccllncous. OK SAKE CHEAP— Fifty feet south frontage with a good bouse, opposite Col. Merriam'K stone mansion: any one wish- in? a home central and nicelylocated willdo well to look this up. C. Bernhard, 438 Wa basha. . O KXCIIANOE-Equity in University avenue lot for property in Duluth o Superior. Address R. F., 21 Globe building. Suburban. ANTKI) TO BUY- From 10J to 200 acres of good, level laud, not over ten miles from St. Paul; land must be of good quality, suitable for Block . farm for horses and adapted for growing tame grasses. Ad I dress, with description, location and price, L 70, Globe. At\ OK S3 ACKhS of land for sale or trad rrVy for city property ; 525 per acre. Box 48. South St. Paul. - - PEfISOSTAUS. A_ A TTKNTION— Stars of Mystery "A Mme. and Prof. Lorenz Free! I Free! Free test; the wonderful trance me- dium : every hidden mystery revealed ina de»( trance; tells the full name "of each caller, and of future husband or wife, with age and date of marriage: give advice on divorce, contest- ed wills, speculations, etc. remove trouble, evil influences; bring the separated together, locate lost persons or stolen property: not a fortune teller, but genuine spirit medium; can convince the most skeptical: six ques- tions answered by mail, %l: send lock of hair: Sunday included. 457 5t. Peter st. AIMK THOKSON, Magnetic Healer \u25a0 Boom 115, Moore Block, Seven corners; Turkish and hot-air baths. KSS. -M. A. IX' BSKY, 223 East Eighth St. , Magnetic and massage treatment for nervous clUeases, paralytic and rheumatism; also clairvoyant. Hours, 1) a. m. to Bp. m. KATKMOSklNs-M»guetic healer psychometric and trance medium. 2_sVt \1 est' Seventh st.. St. Paul. \\f ANTED- Parties having incurable old t W ulcers, old sores, fever sores, etc.. to I send their address to Box 369. Minneapolis. \u25a0' PROFESSION AI,. ELtOTKIC AM) VAPOtt BATHS. i-i - Mrs. F. Bagnall. 150 West Seventh. STORE ASP BAB FIXTURES. I ifgfl|a^ jr Manufacturers of B!i|Sjffl|j lIGB-Soif I BILLIARD AM) POOL TABLES AND I BILLIARD SUPPLIES. Warerooms. 405 and 407; Omce and Factory, 411 and 413 Fifth avenue south. Minneapolis. Mine ONTHACT WORK—GRADING (t()FF v^ AVENUE— of the Board of Public Works, City of St. Paul, Minn., Nov. 24. 1891. —Sealed bids will be received by the Board of Public Works in and for the corpora- tion of the City of St. Paul, Minnesota, at their office in said city, until 12 m. ou the 7tQ day of December. A. D. 189!, forgrading Goff avenue from Dearborn street to the north line of Bidwell's addition to West St. Paul, in said city, according to plans and specifications on file in the office of said Board. . Abond with at least two (2) sureties, in a sum of at least : twenty (20) per cent, or a ' certified check on a bank of St. Paul in a sum I of at least ten (10) per cent of the gross amount bid, must accompany each bid. Said check shall be made payable to the Clerk of I said Board. i The said Board reserves the right to reject any and all bids. J. C. QUINItY, President Pro Tern. Official: J. T. Kerker, Clerk Board of Public Works. nov2s-10t ' upon a man is the treasure that cannot be purchased, because itis not a mar- ketable commodity— a loyal and loving wife. She is ever by her husband's side to pilot him among: and through the j shoals and rocks that beset life's critical journey. She is ever will- ing to sacrifice her own comfort, She is ever ready to cheer and to en- courage. She is always anxious to let in sunshine and happiness. She is con- stantly planning to save his resources and subserve his comfort. In fact, there is no limit to what she can do and willdo ifshe is given the opportunity. Beside her all possessions fade into in- significance. Money cannot bring the joy that a loving wife can bring. Ambition cannot satisfy the high- est demands of the nature quite so thoroughly as a loyal wife. Fame and honor are gewgaws, empty baubles, when placed side by side with the substantial comforts that cluster around the happy fireside. Who makes the happy firesides? Can men make them? No, because man is in no sense a home maker. He is below the birds of the air and the beasts of the field in this respect. Only a woman, an affec- tionate and true woman, can complete a man's life and make him truly happy. JAPANESE FLOWER SHOW. People Who Have Exquisite Taste in Arrangement and Colors. In Lafcadio Ream's paper in the November Atlantic, "The Chief City of the Province of the Gods," he describes a Japanese flower show. He writes: Often in the streets at night, especial- ly on the nights of sacred festivals (motsuri), one's attention will be at- tracted to some small booth by the spectacle of an admiring and perfectly silent crowd pressing before it. As soon as one can get a chance to look one finds there is nothing to look at but a tew vases containing sprays of flowers, or, perhaps.? some light, gracious branches freshly cut - from a blossoming tree. It is simply a little flower show, or, more correctly, a branches freshly cut from ming tree, it is simply a 'er show, or, more correctly, a free exhibition of master skill in the' ar- rangement of flowers. For the Japanese do not brutally chop off flower heads to work them up into meaningless masses of color, as we barbarians do they love nature too well for that; they Know how much the natural charm of the flower depends upon its setting and mounting, its relation to leaf and stem, and they select a single graceful branch or spray just as nature made it. At first you will not, as a western stranger, compre- hend such an exhibition at all; you are yet a savage in such matters compared with the commonest coolies about you. But even while you are still wondering at popui^r interest- in this simple little show the charm of lit will begin to grow upon you, will become a revelation to you; aud despite your Occidental idea of self- superiority you will feel humbled by the discovery that all flower displays you have ever seen abroad were only monstrosities in comparison with the exquisite natural beauty of these few simple sprays. You will also observe how much the white or pale blue screen behind the flowers enhances the effect by lamp or lantern light. For the screen has been arranged with the special pur- pose of showing the exquisiteness of plant shadows, and the sharp silhou- ettes of sprays and blossoms cast there- on are beautiful beyond the imagining of any showing the exquisiteness of mt shadows, and the sharp silhou- es of sprays and blossoms cast there- are beautiful beyond the imagining any Western decorative artist. Hatch Loves Birds. Chicago Herald. Kufus Hatch, the New York capital- ist, who recently stopped some days al the Richelieu, displayed a trait ol character somewhat odd for a man whe is supposed to be immersed in matters financial to the exclusion of everything else.. Each morning after breakfast Mr, Hatch would go out on the walk in front of the hotel and feed the little birds which pick up a precarious livingin the Lake Front park. For this purpose Mr, Hatch would supply himself with bread, which he would crumble and scatter on the pavement. . It took the little aerial wanderers but a short time to learn that a feast was be- ing spread for them. - Each morning, atter the first few days, the feathered tramps would congregate by the hun ; dred outside the hotel entrance aud wait POPULAR WANTS AUCTION SALE. \u25a0Hayanagli-JoUnson's Anc lions ARPETS, HTC, AT PUBLIC Al'C- ,tlon— We willsell at public auction la the store No. 53 East Third st. (in Scbune- man &Evans" old stand), commencing on Friday, Dec. 4, at 10 a. m., the Michaud Car- pet company stock, consisting of carpets,flne tors, portieres, Bilks.curtain Roods of all kinds and wall papers: if you want bargains, at- tend this saje. Kavauagh & Johnson, Auc- tioneers, 186, 183 and IP')' East Sixth st. ' HORSES AT AUCTION— We will sell at auction, in front of our store. Nos. 180 I*Band 190 East Sixth, on Saturday, Dec. 5 at 10 o'clock a. m., four good work horses; \u25a0Old to satisfy mortgage. Kavauagh &John- sou, Auctioneers. I I:". IIISCELXAJiEOIIS.. ";i \u25a0'-"' W. COyiNGTON, CONTRACTOR and builder; all Kinds of Jobbing and repairing promptly attended to. 515 St. Peter. 1/J ASQUKKADK and theater costumes, M*- masks, wigs,beards, grease paint. Mrs. L. NeUmann, 50 East Seventh. \u25a0 , PKI\ATK HOSill'Al,, nCHUOI, OP Midwifery— Mrs. H. Steuzel. 205. Martin st DKESSMAKi^G. ";.!;*? DRESSMAKING—Wanted, dressmaking ' ' at home; can get good reference. Call at 549 Pine st. QHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE UN der Judgment of Foreclosure— Stale of Minnesota, Count? of Ramsey— ss. District Court, Second Judicial District. ' The St. Paul Trust Company, Plaintiff, vs. John Kerwiu and Hannah . Kerwin, his wife. John J. Watson and Joanna B. Watson, his wife, James McNaugbt and others. Defendants. Notice is hereby given, that under and by virtue of a judgment and decree entered in the above-entitled action, dated on the four- teenth day of November, 1861, a certified transcript of which has been delivered to me, I, the "undersigned, sheriff of said Ramsey county, willsell at public auction, to the highest bidder, for cash, on Saturday, the second day of January, 1692, at ten o'clock in the forenoon, at the Fourth street front door of the Court House, in the City ef.St Phul. in said county, in one parcel, the prem- ises and real estate described in said judg- ment and decree, to wit: All that tractor parcel of laud lyingand being in the County of Ramsey and .State of Minnesota, described us follows, to wit: Commencing at a point on easterly line of lot two (2). beiug the west- erly line of Minnesota street, in block twelve (12) of Robert &Randall's addition to the City I of St. Paul, as shown upon the later maps of said city, twenty-five and thirty-three one- hundredths (25 33-100) feet southerly from the northeast corner of said lot two (2), run- ning thence westerly, to the westerly line of lot three (3) in said block twelve (12) to a point nineteen (19) feet southerly from the intersection of said westerly line "of lot three (3) with the northerly line of said lot two (2). extended westerly in a straight Hue to I said werterly line of lot three (3): thence i southerly along said westerly line of lot three (3) one hundred (100) feet to a point: thence ] easterly to the easterly line of said lot two I (2) to a point one hundred and twenty-five and thirty-three ono-huudredths (125 33-103) { feet southerly from the said northeast corner |of lot two «2) : thence northerly along the j easterly line of said lot two (2) ' to the place I of beginning, according to the plat thereof on file in the office of the Register of Deeds in and for said county, together with all the hereditaments and appurtenances thereuuto j belonging or in anywise appertaining, or so , much thereof as shall be necessary to pay and satisfy he costs and expenses of bucn sale, and the sum of one hundred and ten dollars and twenty-one cents, the costs and disbursements of said action, aud the sum ot j one hundred dollars attorney's fees, ana Ibe i sum of eight thousand six hundred and I twenty dollars and sixty-twocents, ($8,620.6.) ! ,the amount adjudged to be due said plaintiff I for principal and interest, with interest 1 thereon from November 14tb, 1891. « j ' ED. S. BEAN. j• , : / Sheriff of said County of Ramsey. w ' ' . By Charles F. Dana, Deputy Sheriff. . \u0084 Haisvey Officer, Plaintiff's Attorney. Ie : Dated November 18th, 1891. for their almoner. When he appeared -they would alight ou the ground, and J gather around him as tame as chickens I in a barnyard. .While he was. feeding | them they would keep up an incessant t, chatter and chirping. Tne last thing | . he did before stepping into the cab tobe I driven to the railway station en route home was to feed his pets. : KILLING A MAN. A Soldier's Graphic Picture ef Real and Horrible War. Detroit Free Press. They do not call itmurder when men meet to slaughter each other in battle. They simply report so many dead, wounded and missing. When you fire into the smoke concealing the other battle line you fire in the hopes to kill or wound. It is your duty. Battles cannot be won without killing, and the j result of battles changes the whole svs- I tern of governments. You load and tire" —load and tire—move to the right or ! left— advance or retreat, and when the battle is over, you may have fired fifty rounds and yet you.have not had a near sight of the enemy; you have simply fired at him, and you cannot vouch that one single one of your bullets has found a livingtarget. Here is a brigade of us la battle Una across an old meadow; our right and left join other brigades. We have thrown down the rail fence, gathered logs and brush and sods, and erected a breastwork. It is only a slight one, but enough to shelter us while lying down. A division of the enemy breaks cover half a mile away and comes marching down upon us. The field pieces behind us open on their solid columns, but they [ are not checked. Under the smoke we | can see the work of the shells, but they cannot halt that mass or men. . The grape and canister does awful execu- tion, but there should be a dozen guns behind us instead of six. They are going to charge us: The guns cannot prevent that. Orders run along the line, and we are waiting until every bullet, no matter if fired by a sol- dier with his eyes shut, must hit a foe. 1select my man while he is yet beyond range. I have eyes for no other. He is a tall, soldierly fellow wearing the stripes of a sergeant. As lit comes nearer I imagine that he is looking as fixedly at me as lam at him. 1 admire his coolness. He looks neither to the right nor to the left. The man on his right is hit and goes down, but he does not falter. :: .vr-^-.-v/.^ ;-v 1 am going to kill that man! .1 have ,a rest for my gun on the breastwork.' and .ivhen,the order comes to fire 1 can- not miss him. He is living his last min- ute on earth! We are calmly waiting uiitilour.volley shall prove a veritable' flame of death. Now they close up the , 'gap*, -and we can hear the shouts of I .their officers as they make ready to i eoarge. My man is still opposite me. Me still seems to be looking at me and no one else. I know the word is com- ing in a few seconds more, and I aim at i His chest. L could almost be sure of hitting him with a stone when we get the word to fire. Thete is a billow of flame- a billow of smoke— a tierce crash, and 4,000 bullets are fired into that compact mass of advancing .man. Not one volley alone, though that worked horrible destruction, but another and another, until there was no longer a giving man to fire at. . The smoke drifts slowly away—men cheer and yell—we can see the meadow before us heaped with dead and dying men. .We advance our line. As we to forward i look for my victim. He is lying on his back, eyes half shut and fingers clutching at the grass.. He gasps, draws up his legs and straightens them out again, and is dead as 1 pass on. 1 have killed my man! My bullet alone struck him, tear- ing that; ghastly wound in his breast, and lam entitled to all the honor. Da I swing my cap and cheer? ' Do I point him out and expect to be congratulated? No! I have no cheers. I feel no ela- tion. I feel that I murdered him, tear- that ghastly wound in his bxeast, lam entitled to all the honor. Do ring my cap and cheer? Do1 point out and expect to be congratulated? 1 have no cheers. I feel no ela- . I feel that I murdered him, war or no war, and that his agonized face will haunt me through all the years of my life. -\u25a0'_\u25a0\u25a0- \u25a0 \u25a0 '<\u25a0 Jolley Off for Washington. Special to the Globe. , Ykr^jlliox, S. D., Dec. 3.—C01. Jolley left Tuesday afternoon for Washington •to take his seat in the bouse. pONFIRMATION OF ASSESSMENT FOR SLOPES ON ALLEYS IX ROGERS AND , V> DRAKE REARRANGEMENTS— Office of the Board of Public Works, City of St. PauL Minn., Dec. 3, 159 L —The assessment of benefits, damages, costs and expenses arising from condemning and taking an easement in the laud aoutting on the alley in Rogers' Rearrange- ment of block 7 of McLean's Reservation St. Paul, and the alley in block 8 ol Drake's Rear- rangement of blocks 2, 8, 9. 10 and part of 11 of McLean's Reservation. St. Paul, in - the City of St. Paul, Minnesota, necessary to construct the slopes for cuts and fills In grading said alleys to the p * » sned grade, as shown by the profile of said grade on file in the office of the Reglst-.ro Deeds in and for Ramsey county, and in the office of the City Engineer, said Klope3to extend H* feet on said land for every foot of cut or rill as indicated on the plan of said slopes on rile in the office of the Board or Public Works Inand for said city, having been completed by said Board; said Board will meet at their office in said city at 2 p. m. Ol L' if ' 4th day of December, A.D. 1891, to hear objections (if any) to s»id assessment, at which time and place, unless sufficient cause is shown to the contrary, said assessment will be confirmed by said Board. The following is a list of the supposed owners' n<imes, a description of the property ben- efited or damaged, and the amounts assesse against the same, to wit: Rogers* Rearrangement of Block ?, McLean's Reservation, St. Paul. Balance to Balance Supposed Owner and Description; Lot. Block. Benefits. Damages. Owner. to City Henry Budde 15 7 $0.50 $0.00 $0.00 $0.50 same H 7 0.50 0.00 . 0.00 0.50 •same 13 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Christian Jenson ' 12 7 0.50 0.09 0.00 0.50 same 11 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Wm. Thompson 10 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same.. 9 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same 3 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same 7 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same 6 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Joseph Metzuer 5 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Ail lou Vogt. 4 7 0.5 ) 0.00 0.03 0.50 John Kasxailo ....3 7 0.50 0 00 0.00 0.50 Berthold Karditzky ...2 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 o.r>o Rudolph Gundermann ...1 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Theo. H. Tubbesing 16 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 d 50 Cbas. Jt Schroeder 17 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 50 Augusta. Fischer ...18 7 0.50 0 00 0.00 0.50 Ch. Hanson ..: 19 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 .0.50 same 20 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Knute C. Arlund.. 21 7 0.50 0.00 ; 0.00 0.50 George W. Faber *S 7 0.50 0.00 0.03 0 50 Ann Lynes 23 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Wm. Lynes 24 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Ja«;ob F. Jagger 25 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 «me 26 7 0.50 0.00 . 0.00 0.50 same... 27 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0..V) Frank Cervenka 28 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Andrew J. Ericksou 29 7 0.50 0 00 0.00 0.50 John M. Railing...: 30 7 0.50 0 00 0.00 0.50 Drake's Rearrangement of Blocks 2, 8. 9. 10, and Lots Ito 11, Block 11, in McLean's Reserva . ; . - \u25a0 tiou, St. Paul. . ..' -• \u25a0 '\u25a0 '-. . - Balance Balance - Supposed Owner and Description. Lot. Block. Benefits. Damages, to Owner, to City Martin Bach * 15 8 $0.50 $0.00 $0.f.0 $<!.f>o S. D. liyau .....14 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same..... 13 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same. 12 8 0.50 0.00 O.CO 0.50 Adolph Hirsch 11 8 0.50 0.00 0 00 0.50 same 10 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 John Walsh 9 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 George Grose 8 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Hermann Hobensee 7 8 0.50 0.00" 000 0.50 Wm.F.Stiebm 6 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same 5 8 0.50 0.(0 0.00 0.50 Robert Stewart 4 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same 3 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Adolph Hirsch 2 8 0.50 0.60 0.00 0.50 Wm. T. Nelson ... 1 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 f0 Thomas S. Simonds 16 8 0 50 0.00 0 00 0.50 John F. Broderick ...17 3 0.50 O.CO 000 0 "SO same 18 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same 19 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Adolph Hirsch 20 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 John F. Broderick » 21 & 0.50 0 03 0 00 050 same ...22 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same 2J 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same 24 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Wm. F. Kochsick 25 8 0.50 : 0.00 0.00 0.50 Joseph Wermus 26 8 0.50 0 00 0.00 0 50 S. D. Ryan 27 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same... 23 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 same 29 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 "me 30 8 0.50 0.03 0.00 0.50 Allobjections to saia assessment must be made in writing and filed with the Clerk of said Board at least one day prior to said meeting. R. L. GORMAN, President Official: J. T. Kekkeb, Clerk Board of Public Works. dec 4— lt CONFIRMATION OF ASSESSMENT FOR SLOPES ON THE ALLEYINBLOCK 23. AD- V> DITION TO MACKUBIN* & MARSHALL'S ADDITION— Office of the Board of Pub- lic Works. City of St. Paul. Minn.. Dec. 3, 1891.— assessment of benefits, damages, costs and expenses arising from condemning and taking an easement in the laud abutting on the alley in block 28, addition to Mackubin and Marshall's addition, in the City of St. Paul, Miuuesota. necessary to construct the slopes for cuts and fills in grading said alley to the establisned grade thereof, as shown by the profile'bf said grade on rile in the office of the Register of Deeds in and for Ramsey county, and in the office of the City Engineer, said slopes to extend IVa feet on said land for every foot of cut or fill, as indicated on the plan of said slopes on file in the office of the Board of Public Works in aud for said city, having been completed by said Board said Board will meet at their office in said city at 2 p. m. on the 14th day of December. A. p. 1801, to hear objections (if any) to said assessment, at which time and place, unless sufficient cause is shown to the contrary, said assessment will be confirmed by said Board. The following is a list of the supposed owners* names, a description of the property benefited or damaged, and the amounts assessed against the same, to wit: P^Ttif Block 28, Addition to Mackubin and Marshall's Addition to St. Paul. : ..; Balance balance Supposed Oirnerand Description. Lot. Block. Benefits. Damages, to Owner, to City I Patrick J. Brennan 1 28 1 80.50 \u25a0\u25a0 $').OO $0.00 $0 50 same 2 28 0.50 " 0.00 0.00 0.50 John C. Biggins 3 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Hannah A. White 4 28 0.50 0.00 0 00 0 50 Geo.J.Mitsch 5 28 0.50 o.oo' 0.00 o*so snme 6 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Martin N. Kellogg 7 28 - 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50. Stiles W. Burr ; 8 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Wm. Biacltmann. ..9 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 50 Charlesßeard 10 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 50 George M.Nelson..;. 11 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 •0.50 Joseph M. Nolan 12 28 0.50 0.00 0 00 0 50 Geo. W.Howard: 13 28 0.50 : 0.09 \u25a0 ;' 0.00 0.50 .Sheridan J. Hutchius 14 28-. 0.50 0.00 ' 000 050 Patrick . I. Brennan ::. 15 28 .Q. 50 - , 0.00 . 0.00 050 Nellie Ho well 16 28 0.50 0.00 " 000 050 Geo. L.Marshall 17 28 0.50 0.00 . 0.00 0.50 Ezra C. Escbelby ;. 18 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 John Craig ...19 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 50 Chas. £.. Mackeon 20. 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 050 Christopher Schroth \u0084; 21 28 0.50 0.00 0 00 0 50 Minnie Laudeusch lager 22 28050 000 000 050 same ... 23 28 0.50 0.01 0.00 OJio John 11. Blake 24 28 0.50 0.00 0 00 0.50 The Diocese of Minnesota 25 28 ' 0.50 0.00 000 050 same 26 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 Herman Haupt. 27 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 50 same..... 28 23 :\u25a0;-. O.EO. O.CO 0.00 050 same 29 38 0.50 0.00 0 00 0.50 same 30 28 ,0.50- 0.00 0.00 0.53 Allobjections to said assessment must he made in writing and filed with the Clerk of said board at least one day prior to said meeting. R. L. GORMAN. President. Official: J. T.Keeker, Clerk Board of Public Works. dec4-lt I ( CONFIRMATION OF ASSESSMENT FOR SLOMSS ON THE "ALLEY IN BLOCK I V> ARLINGTON HILLS ADDITION-Office of the Board of Public Works city of St. Paul, Minn., Dec. 3, 1891. The assessment of beuefits. damages, costs and expenses arising from condemning and tnkingan easement in the laud abutting on the alley in block 5, Arlington Hills addition to st. Paul, in the City of St. Paul, Minnesota, necessary to construct the slopes for cuts and tillsin grading said alley to the established grade, as shown by the profile of said grade on filein the office of the Register of Deeds in aud for Ramsey county, and in the office or the City Engineer, said slopes to extend lvs feet on said land for every foot of cut or till as indicated on the plan of said slopes on file in the office of the Board of Public Works in and for said city, having been completed by said Board; said Board will meet at their office in said city at 2 p. m. on the 14th day of Decem- ber, A. I), ISOI, to hear objections lifany) to said assessment, at which time and place un- less sufficient cause is shown to the contrary, said assessment will be confirmed by said Board. . The following is a list of the supposed owners' names, a description of the property ben- I efited or damaged and the amounts assessed against the same, to wit: Arlington Hills Addition to St. PauL J Supposed Owner and Description. Lot. Block. Benefits. Damages, to Owner to CUv Patrick H. Carney 1 5 $0.50 $0.00 $0 00 ' SO 50 \u25a0••••\u25a0\u25a0 .....2 5 0.50 0.00 . 0.00 050 John Relchel . 3 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 els Olson bHndberg 4 5 0 50 0 00 0 00 0 50 Clara McKeuney 5 5 0.50 0.00 000 o"oO G , U V a IrSOU 6 5 °- 50 °- 0() -°° 0"50 OlofCOlberg. , 7 5 0.53 0.00 0.00 0 50 Johnson 8 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 o*so Frank Sctterholm : 9 5 0.50 0.00 0 00 o*so C O. Maimstrom . 10 5 0.50 0.00 0 00 050 Sinens and Cbas. Anderson 11 5 0 50 0 00 0 00 o*so John Peterson 12 . 5 0.50 0.00 000 050 same..... ....13 5 O.nO 0.00 0.00 050 same 14 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 050 * nm e-------v-- 15 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 050 Robert A. Smith \u0084 16 5 0.50 0.00 00 0 50 els Hanson 17 5 0.53 0.00 0.00 050 Simeon B. Dickson 18 5 0.50 0 00 0 00 O-V) same.. 19 5 0.50 0.00 000 o*so same. 20 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 050 Beniamin J. Kuapp 21 5 0.50 0.00 0 00 0 50 5ame........ 22 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 050 G.H. Hutchins r 23 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 50 Chas. P. Sander 24 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 050 James U. Johnson 25 5 0 50 0.00 0.00 050 P. H. telly 26 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 050 some.... •• 27 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 o*so Margareth Hennemuih 28 5 0.50 0 00 0 00 050 :Matiida Deiber : : 29 5 0.50 0.00 0 On 050 Herman Theide... . 30 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50 - = All objections to said assessment must be made In writing and filed with . the Clerk of said Board at least one day prior to said meeting. R. L. GORMAN President. - Official: J. T. Kehkjsr. Clerk Board Public Works. AJI * Weslfleut- dec4-lt \u25a0•- -; r^rr STATE OF MINNESOTA. COUUTT OF Ramsey— ln Prot>a+e Court. Special Term. Idtht matter of the application for license to sell certain real estate of Robert Stewart, minor. On reading and filingthe petition of Kath- arine b. Stewart, guardian of the person and estate of Hobert Stewart, minor, praying that license and order of sale be to her granted to se'l certain real estate owned by said minor, Minuted in the County of St. Louis and State uf Minnesota, viz.: The undivided two- ninths (-Mi) of blocks one hundred and thir- ty-seven (i;JT). oue huudred and sixty-seven (167). one huudred and seventy dTOi and one hundred and seventy-seven (177). of Rices Point, of Dmuth. according to the recorded plat of said Rice's Point as recorded in the office ot the Register ofDeeds of said St. Louis county, and it appearing by said petition that it ia for the benefit and interest of said minor that the same should be sold, and the pro- ceeds thereof invested in such security as may be authorized by law ; Itis thereforeordered. That the next of kin of said Robert Stewart and all persons inter- ested in said estate appear before the said Probate Court at a Special Terra thereof, on the Loth day of January. A.D. 1892. at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, at the court house in the City ot St. Paul, in said Ramsey county, then and there to show cause (if any there be) whya license and order of sale should not be granted to said Katharine S. Stewart, as guardian aforesaid, to sell said real estate at private sale, according to the prayer of said petitioner. And it is further ordered. That notice of sueD hearing be given to all persons iuter- ested in said estate by publishing this or- der once ineach week for four successive weeks in the St. Paul Daily Globe, a news- I paper printed and published in the City of I tst. Paul, iv said Ramsey county. Dated at St. Paul, Minnesota, this 3d day of December, 1391. bj the Court, JOHN B. OLIVIER. A. E. Horn, m Judge of Probate. Attorney ofPetitioner. Minneapolis, St. Paul&Sault Ste. Marie!/ tickeS'olfices [ M S^n^:!^^ .^B^ _ M'tl-BoEtouExlv:NtPaul(A)6:>.l -.-jfe^SSS |m; M'tl-Boston Ex lvMpls(A) vJXTfI ' :io Pn>: Wisconsin Div. lv Mpls I* BliZfl I") * a m; Minn. Div. lv Mluue- mifffmauolis (13) S:4> a m; (B)6:0Jp If fJlJJ^in: St Croix Falls ac. lv St.Paul fgJgSlS****"'^ A,daily from Union station : B, except Sunday from Union sta- i tion; C, except Sunday, from Broadway sta- tion, St. Paul. flHlfSSi§}TO CALIFORNIA I The most comforu F*JS^^y^B R Reb ' c way l 0 reacli Call Hliy^ira Hfornip. is via Chicago S^y?B^Vin;«-ha. Ror Kansas City, from '\u25a0^^\u25a0\u25a0"•\u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0s™^ which points ihrougU cars run without change. For rates and fur- ther information apply to S. M. O3GOOD, Gen. Agt, or W. M. WOODWARD, Tarv. Agt., 15 Guaranty Loan Building, Minueap Olis Minn. /Chicago, St. Paul &K.City Ry. trains leave \u25a0 v^uuiondepot 7:40 a. m. ex. .Sunday, 1 Mi p. m. aaily ; arr7: 3oa.m. daily,10:^0 p.'m.exSun NT PUWPM Ph D v Analytical and .illilliJJJN Technical Chemist Office and Lab., No. 133 East Fifth street, St. Paul, Minn. Personal attention given to all kinds of assaying, Analyzing and Testing. . Chemistry applied for all arts :and manufactures. ALWAYS ON TIME Ticket Offices— EM East Third street, St. Paul; LI >'icollet Ilonse, Minneapolis, and Union Depots In St Paul. Minneapolis and Stiiiwater. Minneapolis. St. Paul and Still- * water Trains— Leave St. Paul t7:*>,B:3\.sl:'ni, C:3sandlO:r>a. in.. and 12:15, s>: 10, 4:05, 5: A C:2°, +7:30, *9:4> and 1 10:23 p. m. Returning, leaTeStlllwaterts:3o, 7:33,8:10, 9:40andsl0:?» a. m., and tl2:"8, i :40, 4:03, 5:10, 5:20. sfi:loand 8:3") p. m. (•Daily, tEx. Sun. JEx Moo. sSumlay only.) Leave. Arrive Through Trains. Si Paul St PauL Chicago "Daylight"Ex *7 am *1 :00pm ; Chicago Vestibule Llm'd *7 pm +7 :25 am WessSuperlor ........ I 19:3.>ani +5:00p m anclDuluih ..j »10:25pm \u25a0•8:50 ana •"\u25a0:\u25a0.-<. Ashland. Hurley .... f t9:3sam *S:QOp ra Bayfleld&Washburnf *10:25©m *6:soan) ' ChipvewaF'llsißlkßiv +5:05 pm +6:lspn> Si Joseph & Ktiu^&sCitj- *7 :35 am +7 :35 am Omaha AKansas City... •7:55 pin itttLtn Sioux City. Shakopee. } *7 :35 pm 16:53 pa Denver & San Fran- V - v- . dH.o ...... ) *7 :55 pm *7:3sata Pipestoue & Sioux Falls. »7:35 pm +6:40 Din ShckopeeA Maukato. .. t5.(0 Dm +10:30aa Tracy .Wht'townA Pierre +7:55 pm t?:33 ana GREAT NORTHERN R'Y LINE. TipyrTP i 5 East Third St, St Paol; lll!\L I A 3 " Nicoliet At., Minneapolit 7 »nd Union depota lnbothciiiei X.EATB St. Paul Union Depot. AumirfT bs.-«Ja.m. W»yx«U.Lltchfield*WUlmar h6:3op.nu bß:3t».m. Fer. Falls, Fargo A G. Fork* bC:lop.rak bß3op.m. O»»eo, Clearwater 4 St. Cloud bU2sa.ta . bS:3op.m. Anoka St. Cloud & Willmar b13.-sSa.ni i3UKp.ni. ..Exceltlor and Hutchlnson.. bU^s* vi fWillmar, iSloux City, 1 Sioux Falls. bWatertown, bHuron, Wahpcton.bAb- C6:3ip.m. \u25a0 erdeen, bEllondale, {Far- a"U3 a.tn» go, bCasselton. Gra.tan, Winnipeg and Pacific Coast, f {Anoka, St Cloud, Saaki Center, Fergus Fall*, Far*I a7^op.n». go, Crookston, G. Fork* ' eJ&m m.m. Great Falls, Helena, ißulte and Pacific Coast, j Eastern Minnesota.— r Duhith ,W. Superior, Elk\ L 1.05. 05 p.m. \u25a0{ Hirer, Milaca, Hinckley, V b7.-oo a .nt; 1Princeton, Anoka.* ) "™9-i* .daily; b, «xcept Sundays. «Bu ~et parlor e«i entrains to Duluth and West Superior, tBuffet ileepers. tDiningcari, palac* sleepers and Ores colonist Bleepi Chicago, illllwankee As St. Paul «y« Trains leave St Paul Union Depot as follows: For Winona, LaCroase, Milwaukee, Chicago, B, 7:35 a. in.; A. 2:45 p.m ;A,4:55 p.m; A, 8 p.m., Mason City, St Louis, Kanm.B City. A, 9:15 a. m.;C, 7:18 p. in. Subuque & Rock Island. B, 7:35 a. m.; C, 7:15 p. m. Aberdeen, Mitchell, A, 6:15 p. m. Calmnr, Daven- port, 15,9:15 a. m. Austin A Way. A, 8:15 a. m.;A, 4:25 p. m.: C, 7;15p. m. MilbankA Way, B. 8:00 a, m.; Red Wing i Rochester, B, 4:40 p. m. ->. [ A means daily; B,ex. Sunday; C, ex. Saturday For lurtlierin:oriuation see Company tables Ticket Offices. 184 East Third St. and Union Daptj t Chicago, Burlington &Northern Railroad Leaves for Chicago, St. Louis and aowa river points, 7:.V) a. m.; arrives, 1:45 p.m. dally, except Sunday. Leaves for Chicago and St. Loula,7^)pt m. ; arrives. 7.35 a. m., daily. \u0084 NORTHERN PACIFIC THE DINING CAB LINK ToFarco, Winnipeg, Helena, Butts ami the Pacific Northwest, ______ St. PauL Dining Cars on Winnipeg and —\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 Paclflc Coast Trains. Lv. Ar . Pacific Mail, for Fargo, Bis- ~~ " r ~T mArck, Livingston, Bozemao, Helena, Buite, Misßoula, Spo- kane, Seattle, Tacoma, Olympia 4:15 5:55 and Portland p.m. pirn. \u25a0 Dakota Express, for Fergus Falls. Wahpeton. Moorhead, Fargo 8:00 7:05 and Jamestown. p.m. a.m. Manitoba Express, for Crookston, Grand Forks, Gratton and Win- 8:00 10:33 nipeg .- p.m. a.m. Fargo 'Express, for Anoka, St. Cloud, LittleFalls, Brainerdand -8:15 10:30 \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 ; Fargo. ' : . . ... .-; r: .-f.i a.m. a.m. j , 1 AllTrains Daily, except that Dakota Express : does not run west of Fargo on Sunday. Pullman Sleepers daily between St. Paul <*n1 Graflon, Grand Forks, Winnipeg, Fergus Falls and Wahpeton, Pullman First-Class and Tour- '. IstSleepers ana Free Colonist Sleepers are run a a •through Pacific Mail Trains. a E. STOVE.. City Ticket Agent, 162 East Third Street. St. Paul. O. F.MtNEILL. City Ticket Agent. 19 Kicollet House Block, Minneapolis. WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES. leave (Northern Pacificß.R.Co.Lessee.) abkivk. I M1....p.M..| Si. P»»L I foe ChipvnfmXlm,E»«i B>. P»^. MlM^liZ" I ">.«5 P. U. II.M P. r.l3 l i."Uf* l il!LWAiij. 7.»». M. I 9.»A. M. jjj^. M.I T.1>P. M. gEE£ C^JCASO. MM. 4.13 P. M. Aut«i_ ra.D_,. MINNEAPOLIS & ST. LOUIS RY. ',EAYE HUBERT lIEA JJOUTH. ARRIVB St. Paul I stations. [St. Paul' *9.45am ( For Waterville, Mankato, Albert ) *7.20 pin < Lea, Dcs Moines, Cedar Rapids, V +6.25 pm I Chicago, Kansas City and West. > +9.10 am Jfi.2s pm St. Louis and the South. 19.10 am *8.00 am Wntertown Express. \u25a0 \u25a0 *5.10 pm *3.45 pm Waterville Express. *10.20 am tDaily. 'Ex. Son. DEx. Mon. JEx. Sat. ' ELEGTRSG BELT PATENTS* W ' TH ILICTRfI- * IEST *Sffl§? MAfINITIC - ' IMPROVEMENTS. "^ssls^ SUSPENSOIT. TTIil ear* without medicine all Weakacu rtfultlng tntt •rertaxatlon ofbraia, aerre fare«i, exeeues or indlicrction, aa sexual exhaustion, dralai, loiiei, ntrvous debllltT, sites. . Uuiisi,languor, rhcum»tiam. Waif, liTer and bladder c«m- --?!»lut«,l»me back, lumbago, iel»ti«», geaeral ill-b«altb,ete. hit electric belt contain! Wonderful Inpraveßcata otu all ethers, and giT« a current that it Imtmtly fait by the wearer or we forfeit $3,000.00, and will core ail of the above diiea- •Mornopajr. Thousands bar*been eur«d by tbia m»nr»l««» Inreatton after all other remedies failed, and we fire hen- drediof testimonial! Id thii and every other ttate. Our powerful improved ELtI'TRIC fU'SPKNSOBT It -'At greatest boon ever ollered weak men; FRBB WITH ALI. BELTS. Health aa& Tlgoront Slrenrth Cl iKA.VTEIDla «0 to 00 RATS. Send for large illustrated pamphlet*. MsUtd. tee* by mail. Address \u25a0• « SANDBIT 101-T)r!TR.IO CO Cor. 3d st. and £dav.S., Minneapolis, Minn. DR. MILES' I f F YOU have one ef ths following NEW CURE I' HEART SYMPTOMS, FOR THE I \u2666 \u2666 \u2666 LOOK OUTI HEART. Is a safe and relia- /^"^tf^S """^^-vT^B*^ ble remedy for Pal- | |jilation of Heart, A-— v \S^P^^'i Fluttering.Dropsy, / DR. MILES ]a/%2k^i*. \ Oppression, Wind / DR. MILES Kggi in Stomach, Irreg- *^t SEW J|^^-^^g|^vJ ular Pulse, Chok- Lmc.dt k^sgß ing Sensation in r^ntART \^&x%£S) Throat, Uneasy 7 CURE. 'W^^^^*T^ Sensation inChest, mi, i A^§^*"?!^2' -• Smothering Spells, *Vy4fiiook \l\z?jg^&^- Dreaming, Night- W\u25a0 " m £Jz~jh mart, &c. Get Dr. - I r!Hu*ii^v^ Miles' book, 'New *\u25a0\u25a0">>../ v and StartUng Facts,' FREE AT ALL DRUGGISTS. DR. MILES MEDICAL, CO., Elkhart, Ind. BJ& IHESEHTIOU(reFRIEND. r Oar Perfection Syringe free with every bottle. Does not Stain. PREVENTS STRICTURE. Cures Gonorrhoea and Gleet in 1to 4 days. Ask Druegifts. Sent to any address for SI.OO, •- MALYOOR MANUPG CO.. LANCASTER. 0. Spauiding&Go. Incorporated. 1 ' ' GOLD AND SILVER SMITHS Chicago,' State and Jackson Streets. .' . ; Our Suggestion Book" mailed free on ap- .;. "• * plication, will aid distant purchasers lv ; ? making selections,.

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THE PAINT PAUL DAILY GLOBE: FRIDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 4, 1891. r

POPULAR WANTS.SITUATIONS OFFERED.

»—\

- 31j»I«'>«.i A GENT wanted to sell m«p of Minnesota.>— » Apply illEndicott Arcade.BAh_h-\\ auieu, A No. 1bread and cake

baker right away: married man pre-ferred; easy work: steady employment. Ad-dress Scott T. Stewart. Fergus Fulls, Minn.V).\Kiii-.i;— Wanted, first-class barber at4J4;t) South Robert St., West St. Paul; steady.Job. ;

eAKlit-It—Wanted, a first-class barber atthe Manhattan Tonsorial Parlors.

OAKISKK wanted for Saturday. 470 Uni-'Jj vcrMtyav. W. R. •

•OAKIJEK—A lirst-cinss barber wanted at I33 S. Raineri's. Xorthfield. Minn.

at IS. Raineri s. NorthfieW, Minn. i

tjAßßEK—Wanted, barber, at 437 st. Pc- I»J ter st. forSaturday.

"*;.c. Meisel.

\u25a0T>AK»_tt wanted at 551 Rice st. i

AltItEtc wanted at 4J7 St Peter st. G. jC. Meisel. j

BOY to take care of horse and cow forboard; may go to school. IS9O Marshall

ay.. Merriiim park. I

BOY wanted to drive butcher wrgon; •acquainted with city. Address X., Globe. |

CANVA*Si-.KS—Salary and commission.Wheeler it Wilson Manufacturing Com-

pany, 3"2 West Third st.

Col.l.l.iTOli-Wanted, an active youngman for position as collector and tire

Insurance solfcitor. Address V73, Globe.OLNTKK MAN— Wanted, an experi-

enced oyster counter man at MiEastSixth st.

"[\u25a0

DAIRYMAN—Wanted, young man forJJ dairy work; one who understands milk-ing. 1094 Edmund st., corner Leziugton.

!fMKKMAK—Wanted, competent man toI- run healing plant in wholesale house;

must do other work as required. AddressZ SO. Globe.

HAKNKSNMAKEKS AND STITCH-ers wanted. Address Bristol «_ Sweet,

Fargo, N. P.Oli OF CAKI'I-.STtK WORK, to let.

J. McGnire. <>:> East Seventh st. •'~~

MILLKKwanted for custom mill in thecountry. Apply at 31J Fuller st., hi.

Paul. '_rOKE>S.\IAN

—At once, iirst-class, sober

IX Gordon pressman: gooa wages; steadyemployment Brown. T»eacy &Co.|OHINGLfc.KS wanted. Corner MarshalliO ay. and Mackubin st.

:>OOLICITOUs— Wanted, men of energy

TiJ and tact to solicit for Bankers' Life As-sociation of M. Paul, Minn. Salary or guar-antee as pieferrcd. Address C. B. Secor, St.Paul. Minn.

WAMKW-A bright young mnu. sixteenVV*1 to twenty, to learn the clothing busl-

•ness; must speak German. 465 Wabasha st.117 ANTED—Salesmen on salary or com-»V mission to handle the New Patent

Chemical Ink-Erasing Pencil: the greatesttelling uevelty ever produced; erases ink. thoroughly intwo seconds: no abrasion of

fearer: 200 to 500 er cent profit: one agent'stales amounted to $620 in six days: another$32 in two hours; we want one energetic gen-eral agent for each state and territory. For

;terms and full particulars address The Mori-roe Eraser Manufacturing Company, LaCrosse Wis.

\u25a0 mSI!»KSS chances.f- .tli.scrcllnncous.

FOX—

Saloon and lunch counter inbest country town inMinnesota; doing

.^ood business; price. $900 complete; one-halftime if desired :cheap lease, full informa-tion at Anheuser-Busch Brewing Associa-tion. 3(>o Chestnut si. ; call forenoon.

FOR SALE— A clean slock of boots andshoes in a prospering city of 4,000

Inhabitants in Southern Minnesota; nest lo-cation in city; must be sold soon: good rea-'boii- given forselling. Address J 81. Globe.i'poK SALE— best saw and planingJC mil!in Le Sueur county, cheap: reasonforselling, accident. Address August lleck-«rt. St. Pe;er. Minn.

FOX SALE—The best-located cigar, con-fectionery and news stand in Minne-

apolis; a bargain if taken at once. C. C.[Dunn, 63 Loan and Trust Building,Minne-apolis.

IT7 A IEl)TOHi:V—A grocery store ina»» good location for cash, a

'77. Globe.

U'ANTED—At Fosstou, Minn., a physi-cian:population of town 75.1: no doc-

(tor within a radius of forty miles: rayingpractice guaranteed. For information call .on or address Postmasteror Bank of Posston.1117ANIE1)

—A man to establish an ex-

\u25a0 » V change bank Ina live Minnesota town.Address J. Globe.

\X[ANTED—A suitable man as clerk to» » take charge of a branch office in St.—

iTaul for a manufacturing concern as man-'agerand cashier; reasonable amount cashsecurity required.

'Address for interview. S

~\n. Globe. Minneapolis.

boabi) 011i:ki:i>.

Boa HI)—

Large, furnished front roomwith two closets, and board. C33 Wa-

;l>asha. \u25a0 •

Boa Xl)—

Well-furnished rooms, withfirst-class board; bath; piano; terms reason-

able. 270 Pleasant ay.

BOAKD— Cedar— Lytie Terrace— Forrent, three front parlors, with alcoves

v.'ith riiEt-class board; furnace heat.OOAlCD—Furnished rooms, with board,Jj for gentlemen and ladies, £3.75 per7>er week. 1-1 Iglehartst.

BOAKD—Front mim with board, reasona-ble to one or two young ladies. 31) Sum-

mit ay.

fnoAllli-r.inoni House. Corner Eighth;13 and Minnesota— Best $1 day house in theCity;nobar inconnection; regular board androoms 85 per week.

|"jY<»liWool> HOUSE— East Ninth. Near:l.y Wabasha— Warm rooms, with excellent[board, $4 and to per week: table board, £121 month ;transients, SI per day.

$ BOARD WAXTEI>.jOOAHU—Wanted by gentleman, pleasant1-iJ room and board for the winter in strict-Jy private family; St. Anthony hill;refer--"iji-osexcliaiieed*. Address (.» 80.' <;lobe.

i'- HOKSBS A^i)CABKIAOE.(T^oii SALE—A m>ire in the tens, adaptedx for any kiud of labor, at 342 Pleasant.

ousV-

WINTERED— Good care, warmstable: single and box stalls. Address

i.. T.Whitt-her. Macalester.

WANTED—Span oi carriage horses tomatch; must be sound in every re-

*l->ect. Apply at '.".'1 East Seventh st.

WANTED— A few more horses to winter;single and box stalls. 11. C. Barton,• r Grove.

WANTED—Horses to keep for the win-» ter; good feed. warm Quarters: best

ofcare guaranteed. Inquire at 27 Davidsonj'.l'ck.

M»!ST ASD FOl)WI>.

BOOKS LOST—

Two library books,) \u25a0"Mervyn"' and "Evelina." A liberal

reward will be paid for their return to 102iEnst Third si.

CioW LOST—Tuesday evening, a darkbrown cow. with white suols, large

}ioi!;.-. nine jeurs old. Finder willplease re-tiiritor notify B. Resale. $04 Dakota ay.

AVivKCOAT LOST— 9IO Reward—

AtKJ manual training school, Wednesdayc\emu(r, black Melton overcoat; please re-*nrn to I"*iKiahlli st. :tk> iiestions asked.

WOBKS.l" . i;oiiii.\.N. W. Steam Dye Worksj'• office, 118 Robert St., Ryan blockWorks, :i'iand !7 Indiana ay.

~t A 1>ON a: «.r.. New York steam Dye\u25a0«* Works; ladies' and gouts' tiotiuuga spe-

\u25a0 . M \\ esl Sixth st.

T7AHLKKI & MINTEL. MinnesotaXV Steam Dye Works, 241 East Seventh.

. I»ATi:.\TS.

AM!•;it1CANPatent Market and Noveltyjl Factory. A. M. Carlson, solicitingat-torney and manufacturer and seller of pat-e:ils.

'til:')and oi7 Mississippi st.. St. Paul.

MUSICJX.•"|)IA>O HNEK

—Address E. Crutchett,

X Box 402, Pobtoflicc, St.Paul; price. $1.5!):references-.

MOKl: AMD BAB FIXTURES

TVTEW AND SECOND-HAND. LOONIV Bxtnrea, iceboxes, mirrors, pool andbilliard tables, counters and shelvin. SU-\YatiiU!_ic_-ye corta Mioneai<oiis.g

POPULAR WANTS.SITUATION OFFEBKP.

females.' .

_13 ft r|—itANGS—

HANGS cut~-D~V'~.L/ and curled, 15 cents: will

keep incurl from three to nineteen days inall kind of weather. Bon Ton Hair Parlors,4*-4 Wabnshn. corner Seventh.

ALLLADIKK tut Id >lits Ii.A>K-lin. Davidson Grand block, tor tine gray

switches at cost for thirty days: baugs cut,curled. 15 cents. 318 IVabash* st.

CHOCOLATE Dll'-'Kti— Wanted, a |

chocolate dipper who'is experienced i

and first-clara: none other need apply- at !Yenra'n, Seventh nrid Cedar. j

COOK.—

Wauled, good Kill cook: bring ireierences; call before noon. 4i9 i

<;'.•(•>si. i

C".M«iv—\s aiiied, a good cook, washer and jv> ironer: also a chambermaid; null fam- i

ily:Kiifilymorning*, it,1. Nelson ay.

nININiiKOOM GIKLS—

Wanted, two ]first-class diningrroom g-ri*. Apply I

Fl*t2ts. 'The Albioa,'*comer Western and iSeibyavs. tBI

Gi-.Ii.MAN(i)hl,Mi,.i!;:dill-? Jia&t sev-'

enth st. Mrs. Bowes' Office.:lUt'SKWUKK-Wanted, competent girlI• for general housework. Mrs. C. H.Scliliet, 414 Fort, between Sixth ana Ninthsts.

OUSEWOKK— Warned, a good girl forgeneral housework; German preferred

4K2 Cedar.OU*kworm.— Wanted, a girl for gen-

eral housework; good pay to right per-son. Call tioom 4, Forepaugh Block, sereucorner*.

|_j OUSEWOKK— Wanted, a good girl forIigeneral housework. Inquire "<»> Olive st.IIOISEWOKK— Wanted, girl forgeneralXI housework. 298 Aurora.11OIM-.UOKK-General servant by Dec.ll15 for family of two; steam-heated flat,st. Anthonybill; must be good plain cook,and wellrecommended; pleasant place forgood girl. Address V75, Globe office.

JJOUSEWORK—

Girl wanted. a>-8 Wa-XX couta st.

DASiKY COOK—Wanted, female pastryJL cook at Hotel Gladstone, Jamestown,N. I).

SECOND GlKl.—Fcrt YntCß, N. D... nearBismarck; 520. Douglass 1 Intelligence

Agency, 35 Seventh.

WANTED -A respectable \ouus lady of*V good appearance to work instore mid

attend oyster parlors; references required.Apultat 13.* West Thirdnt.

SITUATIONS WASTED.tittle. _

BARKER—Situation wanted in a Darber»hop; eight mouths' experience. Ad-

dress V76, Globe.DOOIiKKKI'KK—situation wanted asXJ bookkeeper or assistant byyoung manof twenty; good references: posted in short-hand and typewriting. Address 077, Globe.

OOKKEEPKK— Gentleman employedduring the day wants work after p.m.;

has had a number of years experience asbookkeeper and correspondent, and can givethe best of reierences; can furnish his owntypewriter, ifdesired. Address J. W. R.,Globe. ;.-..'\u25a0

OOKKEEFKR— An ex-cashier of abanki-' desires a position as bookkeeper in anengineer's office,machine shop or foundry;knowledge of shorthand : also speed fortyper minute; good references. Address BoxL 45. Globe. '

OYs KOK PLACES, places for dovs;employment bureau for poor boys, free.

Newsboys' club Room. Chamber of Com-merce building; open from 11 to l-a. m. andfrom Ito S»t"fi p.m. ,:

RKAMKRy MAN—situation wanted bya first-class creamery man and steam en-

gineer, in the country or city: can give first-class references. Address F. Wm. Anderson,Cannon Kails, Minn.,Box 63.

MI'LOYMENT-Wanted, situation by a-C> respectable youth:good references. Ad-dress 11. I)..351 L'Orient su \u25a0

IVltlillcs. '

CMIAMBi.KAIAID—French young ladyVv desires a situation as chambermaid in arespectable family. Address French Consul-ate, Union Block,city.

COOK—

wishes a position as cookwhere there is no washing orIroning;

740 Pleasant »v.; good reference. -.'piiKKK competent German girls; oneX nurse; want places at once.

"Ladies'

Employment. 4t3ti St. Peter st.

FOR SAI.E.• V)(i-Fullbreed St. Bernard dog. one yearXJ old, for sale cheap. Address G 7G, Globe.

OK SALE.OHTRADE for groceries ordry goods. Portland cutler, nearly new,

thirty-footoffice rail, No. 9Hub range. T 78,Globe. . \u25a0 « .POX SALh-A complete banking outfit,X. including safe, counters, desks, checkpunch and (stationery, in '

a Wisconsin town:county seat and only bank in county: goodreason forselling; write forparticulars. Box215. Mason. Wis.LUJKNITIKE

—For sale, Magee range,

1- dishes, pictures, shades, draperies, car-pets, easy chair, bureaus, toilet sets, kitchentables, ice cream freezer, clock, lamps, fur-n:ice coal. 277 East Tenth.

'

~fi^aScmjai..

M. N'EWI'OKT Ac SON, INVEST• merit Bankers, loan money on imiroved property in- St. Paul and Minneap-olis at U per cent "on or before.

"Offices.

New Pioneer Press Building, St Paul, andReeve Building.Minneapolis.

A —MONEY TOLOANON"•_i« Pianos,Horses,Carriages, wagons.Household furniture.Diamonds, watches.Warehouse receipts.Mortgage notes, andCommercial paper bought or taken as col-lateral. Property to remain Inyour ownpos-session. Our rates are and always have beenthe lowest. Partial payment received at anytime and interest reduced in proportion.Your own time for payment. .All businessconfidential. Private parlors for ladies. Cailor address Minnesota Mortgage Loan Com-pany. Room 13-14, First National BankBuiidinir. corner Fourth and Jackson sts.—

I>O VwU \»a>T TO UOKItOWmoney at a tower rate than you can

torrow through any other agency? TheAnierican Mortgage Loan company. Room 7,Fim National bant building, corner Fourthend Jackson sis., will let you have an;amount, $10, $_U, J'JO. f4c, $75, Sli'O oiJ_OO— fact, tiny turn you wirii

—onvour

(.old watch. d;amonoti. Household furniture,horse, buggy, piano, carriage, etc. vitalowernue lhan you can possibly get it elsewhere.Cocas can remain in your possession, andyou can nay a part any time you want andMop interest Business private and confi-dential. You ran have your own time inpayingup principal.

JL.STUAt'CH,Room 10. Globe Build-• Ing,is prepared to niHke loans in anyamount quicklyand privately on house fur-niture, watches, diamonds, etc., lowest rates,easy return ipayments, honorable treatment.

Alt«ih. A.MOUNi>of money to loan onimproved properly nt 6 per cent. Gilman &Co.. New York LifeBuilding.

LOW RATE MOiNEYIn bums to suit on furniture, pianos, dia-monds, watches or goods in storage; easy re-turn payments; no publicity.- TaKe elevatorto Room 16, Gcrmania Bank Building,Fifthand Wabasha; private room forladies.

MONEY 'x O i.oA*iwithout delay, ironi510 upward, on furniture, horses, jew-

elry, etc. : time checks, notes and secondTeal estate mortgages bought. MinnesotaLoan Co.. 117 Enst Fourth st.

\,|O.\i;Y LOANED on life insurance poi-iTX icies; or bought. L. P. Van Norman,<>1 • Guaranty Loan Building.Minneapolis.

-F-R-I-V-A-T-E-Moneyloaned ondiamonds, watches, pianos,furniture or goods in storage at lowest rates,and small monthly return payments; notesand mortgages bought; most private loanrooms In the city. • Ohio Investment Com-pany, 133 Globe Building: take -elevatorIIANTED—agood 6 or 7per cent mort-» » gage on improved property, for $10,000

to $12,000, with one or two years to run. OdinG.Clay A:Co.. 207 Bank of Minnesota.\t! !\u25a0. MOItITZ.y->_> IMONEKI4 I'KESS

\u2666V • Building—

Mortgage loans madepromptly; C 7 and ß per cent; mortgagesbouebi.

<j£lr\ (\( \( \TOLOAN on real estate n*pi*Ji\J\J\J any sums. P. H.Simpson,011 Pioneer Press Building.

WA.\TM>,TO BUY.AT WANTED—WiII pay $3 forafirst-'

class ratter: cail Saturday. A.F.Bar-clay. 416 Third ay. noith, Minneapolis.

pOIXTEKS- anted, about eighty feetV.^ good second-hand store counters." Van:>lyke Bros. & Jenson. Benson, Minn. \u25a0

'

ptRTKE MAP OF ST. I'AUL. Ad-V^ dress, with price. D 74, Globe.

fjUT

KN'lTi:i*K—Wanted to buy. all kindsof household goods; highest. cash prices

paid in city. Cardoso Furniture and AuctionCo.. 45S to 462 Jackson st., • between" EighthBad Ninth M*.

POPULAR WITS., FOR _H_T_.'. .

Hawses. -.- ; ~

—WE RENT HOUSES, STOKES, OF-.FICES. TAKE CHARGE OF RENTEDPROPERTY. TAYLOR RENTING AGEN-CY.QLOBK BUILDING.

Fort RUST-Houses, stores and offices innil parts of the city; call and examine

our lists; tie may have just what you arelooking for. The St. Paul Trust Company,Knd.cott builaing.East Fourth st.

BOI'SK—

For rent, house seven rooms,vviih modern improvements. .East

University, near Canada; rent, 522.50.IJIOI'SK—Nine rooms. 78 Tilton st; allIimodern improvents; willrent whole orpart very cheat). Inquire at SBO St. Peter.

HOUSE— for rent, a warm six-room house,with modern improvements; near cars:

twenty minutes' walk Iram the posiol'.ice. 025Marion st., near Sherburue ay.

HoiBK—For rent, 8-rooro brick house, No.56iWestminster St.; modern improve-

ments. J. M. liohrer.' .

HOUSE— For rent, nicely furnished eight-room house, $15 a month. Address L.

-M.. Globe. \u25a0•

Stores.'

UILInNG—To rent, four-story brickbuilding.No. 188 East Fifthst.;mitable

tor wholesale purnoses; will change to suittenant. James B. Weed. 167 East Third 81.

oilSALK ok RENT— I'J4 East Sevenths\, between Jackson and Sibley; In-

aiiire on premises.

Booms.

A—i.Oi'i.l,iJKL>!»vViCa, tor gentle-• men only;fifty modern steam-heatedrooms by da/, week or mouth. .' '

potLEGK AY.. 24, WEST- Furnishedvy front room, with or without board; steam*heated and use ot bath.

ICE ST.. 251— Corner College—Nicelylut-nis&ed rooms, with or without board;

modern improvements; rent reasonable.poo.MMATK—A young lady wants aXV roommate. Inquire at 138 West Fourth st.OT. I'KTKK ST., 387—Near Sixth—Pleas-O ant furnished rooms; steam heat, elec-tric lightand bath.

StITH AY.. 135—Near Sixth St.—Pleas-ant alcove room; with modern conven-

iences: also single room.'pr.NTH ST.. 31, EAST—Furnished room,1 with or without board ;also front parlor.

ABASIIA ST.. 505-Furnished heatedVV rooms, $5 to $8 per mouth.

W" ABASHA. Corner. Eighth-Suiteof handsome front rooms, $12; heated;

also small room.ABASHA Corner Tenth St.. OverDrug Furnished rooms for rent.

WASTED TO REST

BARN—Wanted, to rent baru and shedroom for horse and buggy near Selby

and Mackubln. X71, Globe.

FAKM—Wanted, to rent a farm withintwenty miles of city: stale number

of acres and terms. Address Z., Globe,Minneapolis.IIOUBE— For not over $40 rent; anywhereXJ east of Western ay. "Moundsview," P.O.Box -'487. St. Paul.

ROOMS— furnished rooms and fur-nished or unfurnished kitchen forlight

housekeeping; rooms must be finely fur-nished and modern; with bath. etc.;pleas-antly located, wall lighted, etc. ;Inprivatehouse with no other roomers; would likeone floor by ourselves: rent for winter mustbe cheap; only man and wife; will care forownrooms; a small furnished house wouldanswer; must give street and number whenanswering this. Address X 72, Globe.

ROOMS for party of gentlemen who wishto attend Republican convention; will

pay good prices to get them reserved now.Address N 73. Globe.

ROOM— Wanted, pleasant furnished roomfor man and wife in private family

where there «re no other boarders; must bedesirable locality. 1) 75, Globe HsAB

OUTLIVED HIS SENTENCE.

Singular Longevity of a Man Con-demned to 100 Years' Banish-ment

A certain housebreaker was -con-demned in the latter part of the lastcentury in France, and under peculiarcircumstances, to100 years in the gal-leys, and, strange to relate, 'this manrecently made his appearance in hisown native province at the advancedage of one hundred and twenty, hebeing about twenty years of age whenthe sentence which condemned him toso dreadful a punishment was passed,Itis difficult to conceive what the feel-ings must have been with which he re-turned,comments the New York Ledger,as soon as emancipated from theshackles that had enthralled him for a

jcentury, to breathe once more the cher-ished air of the scenes of his infancy.IBounCi in the department of Am, was!his native home; but time had so muchchanged the aspect of the whole placethat lie recognized it on.lv by the oldchurch of Brou, which was the onlything that had undergone no alteration.He had triumphed over laws, bondage,man. Time

—everything. Not a relation

had he left; not a sinirle being could hehail as an acquaintance; yet he was notwithout experiencing the homage andrespect the French invariablypay to oldage. For himself, he had forgotteneverything connected with his earlyyouth; even all recollection of the crimefor which he had suffered was lost, or,if at all remembered, it was but as adreary vision, confounded with a thou-sand other dreary visions of (lays longcone by. His family and connectionsfor several generations all dead, him-self a living proof of the clemency ofheaven and the severity of man, regret-ting, perhaps, the very irons which hadbeen familiar to him* and half wishinghimself again among the wretched andsuffering beinsrs with whom his fatehad been so long associated

—well

might he be called the patriarch ofburglars.

ACROSS THE SAHARA.

Speculations on the RailroadWhich May UpBuilt There.

The traffic of the Trans-Saharianrailway will comprise two classes ofbusiness

—the first, local, between oasis

and oasts.or the Sahariau traffic proper;the second, the business between ex-treme ends of the line, between Algeriaand Franc** and the Central Soudan,says a writer in Scribner's. Oncegiven railway transportations, depotsand markets will spring up along theline, for the surveys cross the lines fol-lowed by the caravans that carryon the commerce of the desert. The ex-port of cereals from Algeria to the Tou-aregs and to the Au country, and theexport ofsalt, which is not found in theSoudan, willgive importance tothe saltwells of Amadrhor. Upon the otherhand, it is certain that a constant streamfrom the south will pnur into Algeria,bringing chiefly hides and leather. Anestimate of the yearly income to be de-rived from the Saharian business maybe put at 6,265,000 francs. Dividing thissum by the length of the line from Bis-kra to Lake Tchad, 3,100 kilometers(1,923 miles), the earnings are equal to2,000 francs per kilometer.

Central Soudan is rich enough to fur-nish a vast commercial business to arailway; spices, ostrich feathers, golddust, indiio, hides, leather, cereals andfruits, palm oil. cotton, ebony and dyestuffs. The exports and imports of theSoudan ought to provide an income of7,310 francs per kilometer. Finally,there remains the passenger traffic,which may be expected to grow intoimportance. In round numbers, Imaysay that the trans-Saharian traffic wouldresult inearnings of about 10.000 francsper kilometer of line. As the construc-tion cost would average 100,000 francs akilometer, interest at 4% per cent willrequire 4,500 francs per kilometer. Therunning expenses of one train a day ineither direction would be between 5.001and 5,500 francs per kilometer per year.From a financial standpoint the enter-prize, ifwell manaeed, ought thereforeto proveSremunerative. This alone,apart from other considerations, shouldwarrant a trans-Saharian railway.

~ .:!V Man's Best Gift.\u25a0" The best gift that can be conferred

POPULAR WANTS.heat; estate FOR SALE.

Itlinccllncous.OK SAKE CHEAP—Fifty feet south

frontage with a good bouse, oppositeCol. Merriam'K stone mansion: any one wish-in? a home central and nicelylocated willdowell to look this up. C. Bernhard, 438 Wabasha. .

O KXCIIANOE-Equity in Universityavenue lot for property in Duluth o

Superior. Address R.F., 21 Globe building.

Suburban.ANTKI) TO BUY-From 10J to 200

acres ofgood, level laud, not over tenmiles from St. Paul; land must be of goodquality, suitable for Block .farm for horsesand adapted for growing tame grasses. Ad

Idress, with description, location and price, L70, Globe.At\ OKS3 ACKhS of land forsale or tradrrVy forcity property ;525 per acre. Box48. South St. Paul. - -

PEfISOSTAUS.

A_ A TTKNTION— Stars of Mystery"A

—Mme. and Prof. Lorenz

—Free!I Free! Free test; the wonderful trance me-

dium:every hidden mystery revealed ina de»(trance; tells the full name "of each caller, andof future husband or wife, with age and dateof marriage: giveadvice ondivorce, contest-ed wills, speculations, etc. remove trouble,evilinfluences; bring the separated together,locate lost persons or stolen property: not afortune teller, but genuine spirit medium;can convince the most skeptical: six ques-tions answered by mail,%l: send lock ofhair: Sunday included. 457 5t. Peter st.

AIMK THOKSON, Magnetic Healer\u25a0 Boom 115, Moore Block, Seven corners;

Turkish and hot-air baths.KSS. -M. A.IX'BSKY, 223 East Eighth St., Magnetic and massage treatment for

nervous clUeases, paralytic and rheumatism;also clairvoyant. Hours, 1) a. m. to Bp. m.

KATKMOSklNs-M»guetic healerpsychometric and trance medium. 2_sVt

\1est' Seventh st.. St. Paul.

\\fANTED-Parties having incurable oldt W ulcers, old sores, fever sores, etc.. toI send their address to Box 369. Minneapolis.

\u25a0' PROFESSION AI,.

ELtOTKIC AM) VAPOtt BATHS.i-i- Mrs. F. Bagnall. 150 West Seventh.

STORE ASP BAB FIXTURES.

Iifgfl|a^ jr Manufacturers of B!i|Sjffl|j

lIGB-SoifIBILLIARD AM) POOL TABLES ANDIBILLIARDSUPPLIES. Warerooms. 405 and

407; Omce and Factory, 411 and 413 Fifthavenue south. Minneapolis. Mine

ONTHACT WORK—GRADING (t()FFv^ AVENUE— ofthe Board of PublicWorks, City of St. Paul, Minn.,Nov. 24. 1891.—Sealed bids willbe received by the Boardof Public Works in and for the corpora-tion of the City of St. Paul, Minnesota, attheir office in said city, until 12 m. ou the7tQ day of December. A. D. 189!, forgradingGoff avenue from Dearborn street to thenorth lineof Bidwell's addition to West St.Paul, in said city,according to plans andspecifications on file in the office of saidBoard. .

Abond withat least two (2) sureties, inasum of at least :twenty (20) per cent, or a'certified check on abank ofSt. Paul ina sum

Iof at least ten (10) per cent of the grossamount bid, must accompany each bid. Saidcheck shall be made payable to the Clerk of

Isaid Board.i The said Board reserves the right to reject

any and all bids.J. C. QUINItY,President Pro Tern.

Official: J. T. Kerker,Clerk Board ofPublic Works.

nov2s-10t'upon a man is the treasure that cannotbe purchased, because itis not a mar-ketable commodity— a loyal and lovingwife. She is ever by her husband'sside to pilothim among: and through the

j shoals and rocks that beset life'scritical journey. She is ever will-ing to sacrifice her own comfort,She is ever ready to cheer and to en-courage. She is always anxious to letinsunshine and happiness. She is con-stantly planning to save his resourcesand subserve his comfort. In fact,there isno limit to what she can do andwilldo ifshe is given the opportunity.Beside her all possessions fade into in-significance. Money cannot bring thejoy that a loving wife can bring.Ambition cannot satisfy the high-est demands of the nature quiteso thoroughly as a loyal wife.Fame and honor are gewgaws, emptybaubles, when placed side by side withthe substantial comforts that clusteraround the happy fireside. Who makesthe happy firesides? Can men makethem? No, because man is in no sensea home maker. He is below the birdsof the air and the beasts of the field inthis respect. Only a woman, an affec-tionate and true woman, can complete aman's lifeand make him truly happy.

JAPANESE FLOWER SHOW.

People Who Have Exquisite TasteinArrangement and Colors.

In Lafcadio Ream's paper in theNovember Atlantic, "The Chief City ofthe Province ofthe Gods," he describesa Japanese flower show. He writes:

Often in the streets at night, especial-ly on the nights of sacred festivals(motsuri), one's attention will be at-tracted to some small booth by thespectacle of an admiring and perfectlysilent crowd pressing before it. Assoon as one can get a chance to lookone finds there is nothing to look atbut a tew vases containing sprays offlowers, or, perhaps.? some light,gracious branches freshly cut

-from

a blossoming tree. It is simply alittle flower show, or,more correctly, a

branches freshly cut fromming tree, it is simply a'er show, or,more correctly, a

free exhibition of master skillin the' ar-rangement of flowers. For the Japanesedo not brutally chop off flower heads towork them upinto meaningless massesof color, as we barbarians do they lovenature too well for that; they Know howmuch the natural charm of the flowerdepends upon its setting and mounting,its relation to leaf and stem, and theyselect a single graceful branch or sprayjust as nature made it. At first youwillnot, as a western stranger, compre-hend such an exhibition at all;you areyet a savage in such matters comparedwith the commonest coolies aboutyou. But even while you are stillwondering at popui^r interest- inthis simple little show the charmof lit will begin to grow uponyou, will become a revelation to you;aud despite your Occidental idea of self-superiority you will feel humbled bythe discovery that all flower displaysyou have ever seen abroad were onlymonstrosities in comparison with theexquisite natural beauty of these fewsimple sprays. You will also observehow much the white or pale blue screenbehind the flowers enhances the effectby lamp or lantern light. For the screenhas been arranged with the special pur-pose of showing the exquisiteness ofplant shadows, and the sharp silhou-ettes ofsprays and blossoms cast there-on are beautiful beyond the imaginingof any

showing the exquisiteness ofmt shadows, and the sharp silhou-es of sprays and blossoms cast there-are beautiful beyond the imaginingany Western decorative artist.

Hatch Loves Birds.Chicago Herald.

Kufus Hatch, the New York capital-ist, who recently stopped some days althe Richelieu, displayed a trait olcharacter somewhat odd for a man wheis supposed to be immersed in mattersfinancial to the exclusion of everythingelse.. Each morning after breakfast Mr,Hatch would go out onthe walk in frontof the hotel and feed the littlebirdswhich pick up a precarious livingin theLake Front park. For this purpose Mr,Hatch would supply himself with bread,which he would crumble and scatteron the pavement. .

Ittook the little aerial wanderers buta short time to learn that a feast was be-ing spread for them.

- Each morning,atter the first few days, the featheredtramps would congregate by the hun;dred outside the hotel entrance aud wait

POPULAR WANTSAUCTION SALE.

\u25a0Hayanagli-JoUnson's Anc lionsARPETS, HTC, AT PUBLIC Al'C-,tlon—We willsell at public auction la

the store No.53 East Third st. (in Scbune-man &Evans" old stand), commencing onFriday, Dec. 4, at 10 a. m., the Michaud Car-pet company stock, consisting of carpets,flnetors, portieres, Bilks.curtain Roods ofall kindsand wall papers: if you want bargains, at-tend this saje. Kavauagh & Johnson, Auc-tioneers, 186, 183 and IP')'East Sixth st.

'

HORSES ATAUCTION—We will sell atauction, in front ofour store. Nos. 180I*Band 190 East Sixth, on Saturday, Dec. 5at 10 o'clock a. m., four good work horses;\u25a0Old to satisfy mortgage. Kavauagh &John-sou, Auctioneers.

II:". IIISCELXAJiEOIIS.. ";i \u25a0'-"'W. COyiNGTON, CONTRACTOR• and builder; all Kinds of Jobbing and

repairing promptlyattended to. 515 St. Peter.1/J ASQUKKADK and theater costumes,M*-masks, wigs,beards, grease paint. Mrs. L.NeUmann, 50 East Seventh. \u25a0 ,

PKI\ATK HOSill'Al,, nCHUOI, OPMidwifery—Mrs. H. Steuzel. 205. Martinst

DKESSMAKi^G. ";.!;*?DRESSMAKING—Wanted, dressmaking

''

at home; can get good reference. Callat 549 Pine st.

QHERIFF'S SALE OF REAL ESTATE UNder Judgment of Foreclosure— Stale ofMinnesota, Count? of Ramsey— ss. DistrictCourt, Second Judicial District.

'

The St. Paul Trust Company, Plaintiff, vs.John Kerwiu and Hannah .Kerwin, hiswife. John J. Watson and Joanna B.Watson, his wife, James McNaugbt andothers. Defendants.Notice ishereby given, that under and by

virtueof a judgment and decree entered inthe above-entitled action, dated on the four-teenth day of November, 1861, a certifiedtranscript of which has been delivered to me,I,the "undersigned, sheriff of said Ramseycounty, willsell at public auction, to thehighest bidder, for cash, on Saturday, thesecond day of January, 1692, at ten o'clockin the forenoon, at the Fourth street frontdoor of the Court House, in the City ef.StPhul. in said county, inone parcel, the prem-ises and real estate described in said judg-ment and decree, to wit: All that tractorparcel of laud lyingand beingin the Countyof Ramsey and .State of Minnesota, describedus follows, to wit: Commencing at a pointon easterly line of lot two (2). beiug the west-erly line of Minnesota street, in block twelve(12) ofRobert &Randall's addition to the City

Iof St. Paul, as shown upon the later maps ofsaid city, twenty-five and thirty-three one-hundredths (25 33-100) feet southerly fromthe northeast corner of said lot two (2), run-ningthence westerly, to the westerly line oflot three (3) in said block twelve (12) to apoint nineteen (19) feet southerly from theintersection of said westerly line "oflotthree(3) with the northerly line of said lot two(2). extended westerly in a straight Hue toIsaid werterly line of lot three (3): thencei southerly along said westerly line of lot three• (3) one hundred (100) feet to a point: thence] easterly to the easterly line ofsaid lot twoI(2) to a point one hundred and twenty-five• and thirty-three ono-huudredths (125 33-103){ feet southerly from the said northeast corner|of lot two «2) :thence northerly along thej easterly line of said lot two (2)

'to the place

Iof beginning, according to the plat thereofon file in the office of the Register of Deedsin and for said county, together with all thehereditaments and appurtenances thereuuto

j belonging or inanywise appertaining, or so, much thereof as shall be necessary to payand satisfy he costs and expenses of bucnsale, and the sum of one hundred and tendollars and twenty-one cents, the costs anddisbursements of said action, aud the sum otjone hundred dollars attorney's fees, ana Ibeisum of eight thousand six hundred andI twentydollars and sixty-twocents, ($8,620.6.)!,the amount adjudged to be due said plaintiffI for principal and interest, with interest1 thereon from November 14tb, 1891.« j

'ED. S. BEAN.

j•,: / Sheriff of said County of Ramsey.w''.ByCharles F. Dana, Deputy Sheriff. .

\u0084Haisvey Officer, Plaintiff's Attorney.

Ie: Dated November 18th, 1891.

for their almoner. When he appeared-they would alight ou the ground, and

J gather around him as tame as chickensIina barnyard. .While he was. feeding|them they would keep up an incessantt,chatter and chirping. Tne last thing|. he did before stepping into the cab tobeIdriven to the railway station en route

home was to feed his pets.

:o£ KILLINGA MAN.

A Soldier's Graphic Picture efReal and Horrible War.

Detroit Free Press.They do not call itmurder when men

meet to slaughter each other in battle.They simply report so many dead,wounded and missing. When you fireinto the smoke concealing the other

• battle line you fire inthe hopes to killor wound. Itis your duty. Battlescannot be won without killing, and the

jresult of battles changes the whole svs-Itern of governments. You load and tire"

—load and tire—move to the right or!left—advance or retreat, and when the

battle is over, you may have fired fiftyrounds and yet you.have not had a nearsight of the enemy; you have simplyfired at him, and you cannot vouch thatone single one of your bullets has founda livingtarget.

Here is a brigade of us la battle Unaacross an old meadow; our right andleft join other brigades. We havethrown down the rail fence, gatheredlogs and brush and sods, and erected abreastwork. Itis only a slight one, butenough to shelter us while lying down.A division of the enemy breaks coverhalf a mile away and comes marchingdown upon us. The field pieces behindus open on their solid columns, but they

[ are not checked. Under the smoke we|can see the work of the shells, but they

cannot halt that mass or men. .Thegrape and canister does awful execu-tion, but there should be a dozen guns• behind us instead of six.

They are going to charge us: Theguns cannot prevent that. Orders runalong the line, and we are waiting untilevery bullet, nomatter if fired by a sol-dier withhis eyes shut, must hit a foe.1select my man while he is yet beyondrange. Ihave eyes for no other. He isa tall, soldierly fellow wearing thestripes of a sergeant. As lit comesnearer Iimagine that he is looking asfixedlyat me as lam at him. 1 admirehis coolness. He looks neither to theright nor to the left. The man on hisright is hit and goes down, but he doesnot falter. ::.vr-^-.-v/.^ ;-v

1am going tokill that man! .1have,a rest formy gun on the breastwork.'and .ivhen,the order comes to fire1 can-not miss him. He is livinghis last min-ute on earth! We are calmly waitinguiitilour.volley shall prove a veritable'flame of death. Now they close up the,'gap*, -and we can hear the shouts ofI.their officers as they make ready toi eoarge. My man is still opposite me.

Me still seems to be looking at me andnoone else. Iknow the word is com-ing ina few seconds more, and Iaimat iHis chest. L could almost besure of hitting him with a stonewhen we get the word to fire. Thete isa billow of flame-a billow of smoke— atierce crash, and 4,000 bullets are firedinto that compact mass of advancing

.man. Not one volley alone, though thatworked horrible destruction, but anotherand another, until there was no longer a

giving man to fire at. .The smoke drifts slowly away—mencheer and yell—we can see the meadowbefore us heaped with dead and dyingmen. .We advance our line. As weto forward ilook for my victim.He is lying on his back, eyeshalf shut and fingers clutchingat the grass.. He gasps, draws up hislegs and straightens them out again, andis dead as 1pass on. 1have killed myman! Mybullet alone struck him, tear-ing that; ghastly wound in his breast,and lam entitled to all the honor. DaIswing my cap and cheer?

'DoIpoint

him out and expect to be congratulated?No! Ihave no cheers. Ifeel no ela-tion. Ifeel that Imurdered

him, tear-that ghastly wound in his bxeast,lam entitled to all the honor. Do

ring my cap and cheer? Do1 pointout and expect to be congratulated?1have no cheers. Ifeel no ela-. Ifeel that Imurdered him, war

or no war, and that his agonized facewill haunt me through all the years ofmy life. -\u25a0'_\u25a0\u25a0- \u25a0

\u25a0

'<\u25a0 • Jolley Off for Washington.Special to the Globe. ,• Ykr^jlliox,S. D., Dec. 3.—C01.Jolley left Tuesday afternoon forWashington •to take his seat in thebouse.

pONFIRMATION OF ASSESSMENT FOR SLOPES ON ALLEYSIXROGERS AND ,V> DRAKE REARRANGEMENTS—Office of the Board of Public Works, City of St. PauLMinn., Dec. 3,159L—The assessment of benefits, damages, costs and expenses arising fromcondemning and taking an easement in the laud aoutting on the alley in Rogers' Rearrange-ment of block 7 ofMcLean's Reservation St. Paul, and the alley in block 8 olDrake's Rear-rangement of blocks 2, 8, 9. 10 and part of 11 of McLean's Reservation. St. Paul, in

-the City

of St. Paul, Minnesota, necessary to construct the slopes for cuts and fills Ingrading saidalleys to the p* » sned grade, as shown by the profile of said grade on file in the office ofthe Reglst-.ro Deeds inand for Ramsey county, and in the office of the City Engineer, saidKlope3to extend H*feet on said land for every foot of cut or rillas indicated on the plan ofsaid slopes on rile in the office of the Board or Public Works Inand for said city,havingbeen completed by said Board; said Board will meet at their office in said cityat 2 p. m.OlL'if

'4th day of December, A.D. 1891, to hear objections (if any) to s»id assessment, at

which time and place, unless sufficient cause is shown to the contrary, said assessment willbe confirmed by said Board.

The followingisa listof the supposed owners' n<imes, a description of the property ben-efited or damaged, and the amounts assesse against the same, to wit:

Rogers* Rearrangement of Block ?, McLean's Reservation, St. Paul.Balance to Balance

Supposed Owner and Description; Lot.Block. Benefits. Damages. Owner. to CityHenry Budde 15 7 $0.50 $0.00 $0.00 $0.50same H 7 0.50 0.00 . 0.00 0.50•same 13 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Christian Jenson

'12 7 0.50 0.09 0.00 0.50

same 11 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Wm. Thompson 10 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same.. 9 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same 3 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same 7 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same 6 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Joseph Metzuer 5 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Aillou Vogt. 4 7 0.5) 0.00 0.03 0.50John Kasxailo ....3 7 0.50 0 00 0.00 0.50Berthold Karditzky ...2 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 o.r>oRudolph Gundermann ...1 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Theo. H.Tubbesing 16 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 d 50Cbas. Jt Schroeder 17 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 50Augusta. Fischer ...18 7 0.50 0 00 0.00 0.50Ch. Hanson ..: 19 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 .0.50same 20 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Knute C. Arlund.. 21 7 0.50 0.00 ; 0.00 0.50George W. Faber *S 7 0.50 0.00 0.03 0 50•Ann Lynes 23 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Wm. Lynes 24 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Ja«;ob F. Jagger 25 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50«me 26 7 0.50 0.00 . 0.00 0.50same... 27 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0..V)Frank Cervenka 28 7 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Andrew J. Ericksou 29 7 0.50 0 00 0.00 0.50John M. Railing...: 30 7 0.50 000 0.00 0.50

Drake's Rearrangement of Blocks 2, 8. 9.10, and Lots Ito11,Block 11, inMcLean's Reserva.;. -\u25a0 tiou, St. Paul. ...' -•

\u25a0 '\u25a0 '-. . •-

Balance Balance- Supposed Owner and Description. Lot.Block. Benefits. Damages, to Owner, to CityMartin Bach

*15 8 $0.50 $0.00 $0.f.0 $<!.f>o

S. D.liyau .....14 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same..... 13 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same. 12 8 0.50 0.00 O.CO 0.50Adolph Hirsch 11 8 0.50 0.00 0 00 0.50same 10 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50John Walsh 9 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50George Grose 8 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Hermann Hobensee 7 8 0.50 • 0.00" 000 0.50Wm.F.Stiebm 6 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same 5 8 0.50 0.(0 0.00 0.50Robert Stewart 4 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same 3 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Adolph Hirsch 2 8 0.50 0.60 0.00 0.50Wm. T. Nelson... 1 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 f0Thomas S. Simonds 16 8 0 50 0.00 0 00 0.50John F. Broderick ...17 3 0.50 O.CO 000 0 "SOsame 18 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same 19 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Adolph Hirsch 20 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50John F. Broderick » 21 & 0.50 0 03 0 00 050same ...22 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same 2J 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same 24 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Wm. F. Kochsick 25 8 0.50 : 0.00 0.00 0.50Joseph Wermus 26 8 0.50 0 00 0.00 0 50S. D. Ryan 27 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same... 23 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50same 29 8 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50"me 30 8 0.50 0.03 0.00 0.50

Allobjections to saia assessment must be made inwritingand filed with the Clerk of saidBoard at least one day prior to said meeting. • R. L.GORMAN,PresidentOfficial: J. T. Kekkeb, Clerk Board of Public Works.

dec 4—lt

CONFIRMATION OF ASSESSMENT FOR SLOPES ON THE ALLEYINBLOCK 23. AD-V> DITION TO MACKUBIN*& MARSHALL'S ADDITION—Office of the Board of Pub-lic Works. Cityof St. Paul. Minn.. Dec. 3, 1891.— assessment of benefits, damages, costsand expenses arising from condemning and taking an easement in the laud abutting onthe alleyinblock 28, addition to Mackubin and Marshall's addition, in the City of St. Paul,Miuuesota. necessary to construct the slopes for cuts and fills ingrading said alley to the

establisned grade thereof, as shown by the profile'bf said grade on rile in the office of theRegister of Deeds in and for Ramsey county, and inthe office of the City Engineer, saidslopes to extend IVa feet on said land forevery foot of cut or fill,as indicated on the planof said slopes on file in the office of the Board of Public Works in aud for said city, havingbeen completed by said Board said Board willmeet at their office in said city at 2 p. m. onthe 14th day of December. A.p.1801, to hear objections (if any) to said assessment, atwhich time and place, unless sufficient cause is shown to the contrary, said assessment willbe confirmed by said Board.

The following is a list of the supposed owners* names, a description of the propertybenefited or damaged, and the amounts assessed against the same, to wit:

P^Ttif Block 28, Addition to Mackubin and Marshall's Addition to St. Paul.: ..; Balance balanceSupposed Oirnerand Description. Lot.Block. Benefits. Damages, to Owner, to City

IPatrick J. Brennan 1 28 180.50 \u25a0\u25a0 $').OO $0.00 $0 50same 2 28 0.50 " 0.00 0.00 0.50John C. Biggins 3 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Hannah A. White 4 28 0.50 0.00 0 00 0 50Geo.J.Mitsch 5 28 0.50 o.oo' 0.00 o*sosnme 6 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Martin N. Kellogg 7 28 - 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50.Stiles W. Burr ; 8 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Wm. Biacltmann. ..9 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 50Charlesßeard 10 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 50George M.Nelson..;. 11 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 •0.50Joseph M. Nolan 12 28 0.50 0.00 0 00 0 50Geo. W.Howard: 13 28 0.50 : 0.09 \u25a0 ;' 0.00 0.50

.Sheridan J. Hutchius 14 28-. 0.50 • 0.00 '000 050

Patrick.I.Brennan ::. 15 28 .Q.50 - , 0.00 . 0.00 050NellieHowell 16 28 0.50 0.00

"000 050

Geo. L.Marshall 17 28 0.50 0.00 . 0.00 0.50Ezra C. Escbelby ;. 18 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50John Craig ...19 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 50Chas. £.. Mackeon 20. 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 050Christopher Schroth \u0084; 21 28 0.50 0.00 0 00 0 50Minnie Laudeusch lager 22 28050 000 000 050same ... 23 28 0.50 0.01 0.00 OJioJohn 11. Blake 24 28 0.50 0.00 0 00 0.50The Diocese of Minnesota 25 28

'0.50 0.00 000 050

same 26 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50Herman Haupt. 27 28 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 50same..... 28 23 :\u25a0;-. O.EO. O.CO 0.00 050same 29 38 0.50 0.00 000 0.50same 30 28 ,0.50- 0.00 0.00 0.53

Allobjections to said assessment must he made in writingand filed with the Clerk ofsaid board at least one day prior to said meeting. R. L. GORMAN. President.Official: J. T.Keeker, Clerk Board of Public Works.dec4-lt

I(CONFIRMATION OF ASSESSMENT FOR SLOMSS ON THE "ALLEY IN BLOCKIV> ARLINGTON HILLS ADDITION-Office of the Board of Public Works city ofSt. Paul, Minn., Dec. 3, 1891.

—The assessment of beuefits. damages, costs and expenses

arising from condemning and tnkingan easement in the laud abutting on the alley inblock 5, Arlington Hillsaddition to st. Paul, in the City of St. Paul, Minnesota, necessary toconstruct the slopes for cuts and tillsingrading said alley to the established grade, as shownby the profileof said grade on filein the office of the Register of Deeds in aud for Ramseycounty, and in the office or the City Engineer, said slopes to extend lvs feet on saidland for every foot of cut or till as indicated on the plan of said slopes on file in the officeof the Board of Public Works in and for said city, having been completed by saidBoard; said Board willmeet at their office insaid city at 2 p.m. on the 14th day of Decem-ber, A. I), ISOI, to hear objections lifany) to said assessment, at which time and place un-less sufficient cause is shown to the contrary, said assessment willbe confirmed by saidBoard. .

The followingis alistof the supposed owners' names, a description of the property ben-Iefited or damaged and the amounts assessed against the same, to wit:

Arlington Hills Addition to St. PauL

J Supposed Owner and Description. Lot. Block. Benefits. Damages, to Owner to CUvPatrick H.Carney 1 5 $0.50 $0.00 $0 00'

SO 50\u25a0••••\u25a0\u25a0

• • .....2 5 0.50 0.00 . 0.00 050John Relchel . 3 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50els Olson bHndberg 4 5 0 50 0 00 0 00 0 50Clara McKeuney 5 5 0.50 0.00 000 o"oOG,UVa IrSOU 6 5 °-50 °-0() -°° 0"50OlofCOlberg. , 7 5 0.53 0.00 0.00 0 50Johnson 8 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 o*soFrank Sctterholm : 9 5 0.50 0.00 0 00 o*soC O. Maimstrom . 10 5 0.50 0.00 0 00 050Sinens and Cbas. Anderson 11 5 0 50 0 00 0 00 o*soJohn Peterson 12 . 5 0.50 0.00 000 050same..... ....13 5 O.nO 0.00 0.00 050same 14 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 050*nme-------v-- 15 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 050Robert A. Smith \u0084 16 5 0.50 0.00 00 0 50els Hanson 17 5 0.53 0.00 0.00 050Simeon B.Dickson 18 5 0.50 0 00 0 00 O-V)same.. 19 5 0.50 0.00 000 o*sosame. 20 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 050Beniamin J. Kuapp 21 5 0.50 0.00 0 00 0 505ame........ 22 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 050G.H. Hutchins r 23 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 0 50Chas. P. Sander 24 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 050James U.Johnson 25 5 0 50 0.00 0.00 050P. H. telly 26 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 050some.... •• 27 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 o*soMargareth Hennemuih 28 5 0.50 000 0 00 050:Matiida Deiber : : 29 5 0.50 0.00 0 On 050Herman Theide... . 30 5 0.50 0.00 0.00 0.50- = Allobjections to said assessment must be made Inwritingand filed with. the Clerk ofsaid Board at least one day prior to said meeting. R. L. GORMAN President.- Official: J. T. Kehkjsr. Clerk Board Public Works.

AJI* Weslfleut-

dec4-lt • \u25a0•-

-;—

r^rr

STATE OF MINNESOTA. COUUTT OFRamsey— ln Prot>a+e Court. Special Term.

Idtht matter of the application forlicenseto sell certain real estate of Robert Stewart,minor.On reading and filingthe petition of Kath-

arine b. Stewart, guardian of the person andestate of Hobert Stewart, minor, praying thatlicense and order of sale be to her granted tose'l certain real estate owned by said minor,Minuted in the County of St. Louis and Stateuf Minnesota, viz.: The undivided two-ninths (-Mi)of blocks one hundred and thir-ty-seven (i;JT). oue huudred and sixty-seven(167). one huudred and seventy dTOi and onehundred and seventy-seven (177). of RicesPoint, of Dmuth. according to the recordedplat of said Rice's Point as recorded in theoffice ot the Register ofDeeds of said St.Louiscounty, and itappearing bysaid petition thatitia for the benefit and interest ofsaid minorthat the same should be sold, and the pro-ceeds thereof invested in such security as maybe authorized by law ;Itis thereforeordered. That the nextof kin

of said Robert Stewart and all persons inter-ested in said estate appear before the saidProbate Court at a Special Terra thereof, onthe Loth day of January. A.D.1892. at 10o'clock in the forenoon, at the court house inthe City ot St. Paul, in said Ramsey county,

then and there to show cause (if any therebe) whya license and order ofsale should notbe granted to said Katharine S. Stewart, asguardian aforesaid, to sell said real estate atprivate sale, according to the prayer of saidpetitioner.

And itis further ordered. That notice ofsueD hearing be given to all persons iuter-ested in said estate by publishing this or-der once ineach week for four successiveweeks in the St. Paul Daily Globe, a news-

Ipaper printed and published in the City ofItst. Paul, ivsaid Ramsey county.

Dated at St. Paul, Minnesota, this 3d day ofDecember, 1391.bjthe Court, JOHN B. OLIVIER.A.E. Horn, m Judge of Probate.

Attorney ofPetitioner.

Minneapolis, St. Paul&Sault Ste. Marie!/tickeS'olfices [MS^n^:!^^

.^B^_

M'tl-BoEtouExlv:NtPaul(A)6:>.l-.-jfe^SSS |m;M'tl-Boston Ex lvMpls(A)vJXTfI':io Pn>: Wisconsin Div.lvMplsI*BliZflI")*a m;Minn. Div.lv Mluue-mifffmauolis (13) S:4> a m; (B)6:0JpIffJlJJ^in: St Croix Falls ac. lv St.Paul

fgJgSlS****"'^ A,daily fromUnion station :B,except Sunday from Union sta-

i tion; C, except Sunday, from Broadway sta-tion, St. Paul.

flHlfSSi§}TOCALIFORNIAIThemost comforu

F*JS^^y^B RReb'c wayl0reacli CallHliy^iraHfornip. is viaChicago

S^y?B^Vin;«-ha. Ror Kansas City, from'\u25a0^^\u25a0\u25a0"•\u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0s™^ which points ihrougUcars run without change. For rates and fur-ther information apply to S. M. O3GOOD,Gen. Agt, or W. M. WOODWARD, Tarv.Agt., 15 Guaranty Loan Building,MinueapOlis Minn.

/Chicago, St. Paul &K.City Ry. trains leave \u25a0

v^uuiondepot 7:40 a.m. ex. .Sunday, 1Mip.m. aaily;arr7: 3oa.m. daily,10:^0 p.'m.exSun

NT PUWPM Ph Dv Analytical and.illilliJJJN Technical ChemistOffice and Lab.,No. 133 East Fifthstreet,St. Paul, Minn. Personal attention givento allkinds of assaying, Analyzing andTesting.. Chemistry applied for all arts

:and manufactures.

ALWAYS ON TIMETicket Offices— EM East Third street, St.

Paul; LI >'icollet Ilonse, Minneapolis, andUnion Depots In St Paul. Minneapolis andStiiiwater. Minneapolis. St. Paul and Still-

*

water Trains— Leave St. Paul t7:*>,B:3\.sl:'ni,C:3sandlO:r>a. in.. and 12:15, s>:10,4:05, 5:AC:2°, +7:30, *9:4> and 110:23 p. m. Returning,leaTeStlllwaterts:3o, 7:33,8:10, 9:40andsl0:?»a. m., and tl2:"8, i:40, 4:03, 5:10, 5:20. sfi:loand8:3") p. m. (•Daily, tEx. Sun. JEx Moo.sSumlay only.)

Leave. ArriveThrough Trains. SiPaul St PauL

Chicago "Daylight"Ex *7 am *1:00pm ;Chicago Vestibule Llm'd *7 pm +7:25 amWessSuperlor ........ I19:3.>ani +5:00p m

anclDuluih ..j »10:25pm \u25a0•8:50 ana •"\u25a0:\u25a0.-<.Ashland. Hurley .... f t9:3sam *S:QOp ra

Bayfleld&Washburnf *10:25©m *6:soan)'

ChipvewaF'llsißlkßiv +5:05 pm +6:lspn>SiJoseph & Ktiu^&sCitj- *7 :35 am +7 :35 amOmaha AKansas City... •7:55 pin itttLtnSioux City.Shakopee. } *7:35 pm 16:53pa

Denver & San Fran- V-

v- .dH.o ...... ) *7:55 pm *7:3sataPipestoue &Sioux Falls. »7:35 pm +6:40 Din

ShckopeeA Maukato. .. t5.(0 Dm +10:30aaTracy .Wht'townA Pierre +7:55 pm t?:33 ana

GREAT NORTHERN R'Y LINE.TipyrTPi5 East Third St, St Paol;lll!\LIA 3 "Nicoliet At.,Minneapolit

7 »nd Union depota lnbothciiieiX.EATB St. Paul Union Depot. AumirfT

bs.-«Ja.m. W»yx«U.Lltchfield*WUlmar h6:3op.nubß:3t».m. Fer. Falls, Fargo A G. Fork* bC:lop.rakbß3op.m. O»»eo, Clearwater 4 St. Cloud bU2sa.ta .bS:3op.m. Anoka St. Cloud & Willmar b13.-sSa.nii3UKp.ni. ..Exceltlor and Hutchlnson.. bU^s* vifWillmar, iSloux City,1

Sioux Falls. bWatertown,bHuron, Wahpcton.bAb-

C6:3ip.m. \u25a0 erdeen, bEllondale, {Far- • a"U3 a.tn»go, bCasselton. Gra.tan,Winnipeg and PacificCoast,

f {Anoka, St Cloud, SaakiCenter, Fergus Fall*,Far*Ia7^op.n». go, Crookston, G. Fork*

'eJ&m m.m.

Great Falls, Helena, •ißulte and Pacific Coast, j

Eastern Minnesota.—r Duhith ,W. Superior, Elk\

L1.05.05 p.m. \u25a0{ Hirer, Milaca, Hinckley, V b7.-oo a.nt;1Princeton, Anoka.* ) "™9-i*•.daily; b, «xcept Sundays. «Bu ~et parlor e«i

entrains to Duluth and West Superior, tBuffetileepers. tDiningcari, palac* sleepers and Orescolonist Bleepi

Chicago, illllwankee As St. Paul «y«Trains leave St Paul Union Depot as follows:For

Winona, LaCroase, Milwaukee, Chicago, B, 7:35 a.in.;A.2:45 p.m ;A,4:55 p.m; A,8 p.m.,Mason City,St Louis, Kanm.B City. A,9:15 a. m.;C, 7:18 p. in.Subuque & Rock Island. B, 7:35 a. m.;C, 7:15 p.m.Aberdeen, Mitchell, A,6:15 p. m. Calmnr, Daven-port, 15,9:15 a. m. Austin A Way. A,8:15a.m.;A,4:25 p. m.: C,7;15p. m. MilbankA Way, B. 8:00a,m.;Red WingiRochester, B, 4:40 p.m. ->. [

A means daily; B,ex. Sunday; C, ex.SaturdayFor lurtlierin:oriuation see Company tablesTicket Offices. 184 East Third St. and UnionDaptj t

Chicago, Burlington &Northern RailroadLeaves for Chicago, St. Louis and aowa

river points, 7:.V) a. m.; arrives, 1:45 p.m.dally,except Sunday.

Leaves for Chicago and St. Loula,7^)ptm.;arrives. 7.35 a. m., daily. \u0084

NORTHERN PACIFICTHE DININGCAB LINK

ToFarco, Winnipeg, Helena, Buttsami the Pacific Northwest,______

St. PauLDining Cars on Winnipeg and —\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0

Paclflc Coast Trains. Lv. Ar.Pacific Mail, for Fargo, Bis-

~~ "r~TmArck, Livingston, Bozemao,Helena, Buite, Misßoula, Spo-kane, Seattle, Tacoma, Olympia 4:15 5:55and Portland p.m. pirn. \u25a0

Dakota Express, forFergus Falls.Wahpeton. Moorhead, Fargo 8:00 7:05and Jamestown. p.m. a.m.

Manitoba Express, for Crookston,Grand Forks, Gratton and Win- 8:00 10:33nipeg .- „ p.m. a.m.

Fargo 'Express, for Anoka, St.Cloud, LittleFalls, Brainerdand -8:15 10:30 \u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 ;Fargo.

':..... .-; r:.-f.i a.m. a.m. j,

1

AllTrains Daily, except that Dakota Express :does not run west ofFargo on Sunday.

Pullman Sleepers daily between St. Paul <*n1Graflon, Grand Forks, Winnipeg, Fergus Fallsand Wahpeton, Pullman First-Class and Tour- '.IstSleepers ana Free Colonist Sleepers are runaa

•through Pacific Mail Trains. a E. STOVE..CityTicket Agent, 162 East Third Street. St. Paul. O.F.MtNEILL.City Ticket Agent. 19 Kicollet HouseBlock,Minneapolis.

WISCONSIN CENTRAL LINES.leave (Northern Pacificß.R.Co.Lessee.) abkivk.

IM1....p.M..| Si. P»»L Ifoe ChipvnfmXlm,E»«i B>. P»^. MlM^liZ"I">.«5 P. U.II.MP. r.l3li."Uf*lil!LWAiij. 7.»». M. I9.»A. M.jjj^.M.I T.1>P. M. gEE£ C^JCASO. MM. 4.13 P. M.Aut«i_ra.D_,.

MINNEAPOLIS & ST. LOUIS RY.',EAYE HUBERT lIEA JJOUTH. ARRIVBSt. Paul I stations. [St.Paul'*9.45am (For Waterville, Mankato, Albert ) *7.20 pin< Lea, Dcs Moines, Cedar Rapids, V+6.25 pm IChicago, Kansas City and West. > +9.10 amJfi.2s pm St. Louis and the South. 19.10 am*8.00 am Wntertown Express. \u25a0 \u25a0 *5.10 pm*3.45 pm Waterville Express. *10.20 am

tDaily. 'Ex.Son. DEx. Mon. JEx. Sat.'

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ethers, andgiT« a current that itImtmtlyfait by the weareror we forfeit $3,000.00, and willcore ail of the above diiea-•Mornopajr. Thousands bar*been eur«d by tbia m»nr»l««»Inreatton after all other remedies failed, and we fire hen-drediof testimonial! Idthiiand every other ttate.Our powerful improved ELtI'TRIC fU'SPKNSOBT It -'Atgreatest boon ever ollered weak men; FRBB WITHALI.BELTS.Health aa& Tlgoront Slrenrth CliKA.VTEIDla «0 to 00RATS. Send for large illustrated pamphlet*. MsUtd. tee*by mail. Address \u25a0• «

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