to atom-I her Mon m m then-o homvmh them- no mflmt. After that I!!! Field in not olmd to AML . tent at tho had of the able. -n’alu It a. only dinner party they :1“ am. Then the handsome in. , With" mound In purl-colored at» “It!!! mm a use metres of car- W“ to I am autumnal minus and their mainly â€and when, en- 10M tic two hours spent a able. Ind ï¬n duller on; In tho nu: par- - vim an mm company named â€I everybody tailed II I! «an ; ‘volen. an. us no m than H» no tho tho «mm-am â€I: The am at Nâ€"‘ m an exception to II] lone-t u- '1 could not It" I more patient unl- III that In. Withers, I an nu.†re- Jilted Harriet. "In When will I “no. mm. public tabla." mu m "I mun m I am at Ma h a In! no: you vm any without ï¬lm over you evil punt In Mu Jim to u. ghoul-alt cookery and hmbh hour: at howls." l1lld|otnovmmndnwp~ a." m Goa-(m "You mind p.†tool In)“ «nu our tow.†I ï¬t '- M In. mum to at â€I who“ your m!- c- M man m which no null-Ina } E I. lama In mm on m of u. m via and no IO: the! nu: "ma! an... no. Do We hearth.†'n m mm. -y M cousin's nullity for no team In to been-o WI: eunvmt II In expul- I i..." It. Wuhan aid to his ï¬ne, In . mm apology. looking "I! 1 1'. Men. m 1 Don le- but .0 way.- Iy plum.- in m- all: and no nu pron-«d lull- ..u I. Com-cum to I] W. m hon. “amt-no- any couuo m-vmlhnlnulm. "a on It... I ï¬lm! tro- Ilo "Inn at Mmtunulmumhly‘ __ .._- _. _-.-,.--. v..-_._ “Ill! room Ibo beheld 5" “IN“ I (our mun. hardly a farm noun In “I“ It the loot o! the board and Mlu I “(M- mu the w. The mm um down "W. recruit hen met an clasp.- .om Mlo nd Jumod up. toll"!- "on or m mum." mu run: use. '1an It. It. now. I rain I! “I" oanuly. "The ooltmdo In «numb O on. who will In I! non worth"! a... Ono can shop :1! cu Ion I! IN M 1 but our don" Illa." . "Kan your when. "min?" om 1m. proved to be her mom. nun- hr M “In. Willem rm tun on o! mounting in “Mum "Oh in cm.- on this main. Illa II. 3m. Ir. Wine". loo. Mod I pou- - m... W". I Cu.’ I! II. "n ’n-‘fl‘l .m' "’mflm .’ h]. pi,- - all would for Came“ 0“?“ skin I. eminently mane!" to alga- m. “We Ira-M In" "I!“ '0' "on.†Com-m u. not um lousy “I can he down dlmlly. Tell him not to van for no." IN aid. hurried- ly. She did not expect In be mm at tor word. but um I»! descent to tho Before she could Invest herself In the (Inner dress that lay uppermost In her but the bell ran: to summon he! to to evening meal, end three mlnutee Matter the lootmnn lunches u Im- loot rub the mouse that Mr. Wuh- In Ind sent for her. I “the la anal-bud and : meddler,†Guided Constance. while she made a I’M toilet. "I hate to be addreued In the third person. I thought It 3 tom of much conï¬ned. In this country, to kitchen maid: and dry goods store 'clorh.†‘ } “Oh. I do not think my cousin would upprou of that!" exclaimed her em- ‘Ilntic conductress. Then she amended 'xu inadvertence. "01 course, Mrs. Withers is the proper judge of her own anions. and I would not appear to dic- hte. but my cousin is punctllious on1 some points. and the matter of isdiea’ attire is one of these. I have known him so long that I am conversant with nil his amiable peculiarities. i am con- Ident he would be pleased to see Mrs. Withers sssume the head 0! her table In full dinner toilet. But as i remarked. 1 do not presume to dictate, to 1d- vise, or even suggest. Mrs. Withers is; undisputed empress here." Having run v tripplnxly through this speech. she In- ; listed a third remarkable courtesy ." upon the novice and vanished. i‘ K CHAPTER I". CHAPTER [ILâ€"(Goxwmlna “Perhaps It would be better for me In to change my dress. I! I am likely to Inmate upon the dinner hour," said costume. It her chamber door. HARLANDEE in, Mention. “.4 the hold Mary at ONSTANCB n- Ide by her ster- eotyped, languid sane, votdcrllg only at the comm-A cency with which n In of her m1 you: and mum- INTERNATIONAL PRESS ASSOCIATION above the boa-e. that land dwindled Into I toy cottage. and the environ!“ mutation: of tree- Iike patches in n herb garden. “Th!- a life!†she cried out In I und- den transport. at: she at not do" mnmmumyno-in the than" at a cedar, tn an and wonder and “Moe. no and. a dim pro-mm. A place. ambit perpendicular. Prom mm (uric-11 and rail!!! from engtonghoanotonlmm- In" up mnlly but: by «telling Lt the "out Index-ma, and MM! herself Imam. toning “an†by tum or wiry gran. But as km on. and forgot scam; feet. can: Month and buttered hands when sh. wood ï¬nally upon a broad pints“ hundreds of feet "The! no mm with my lest! proprietor In the commendable mum a! repressing the lone» "nae! of than who cannot get their In of at- unl battle. through the window- of 3 due chm. But I shell in. my {tone I" the am" Another and A higher yen usual be: when the Ind In for “hue upon ‘I boulder crowning the Int. melting In the View 0! valley and hill, Includ- hc the bum tn met mm the Dome. Ind the phi: ape-m away! tom the ne- and mmuuou. The boul- wu like the mad 0! may and wootu "ten. The tender green male of the ante: t-pped her head n she bowed beneath their low Muel- en. ad the wide let-loch were spread in benediction above her. an wan alone with azureâ€"free [or one am hour to that In a" thought and act on her denim She laughed I. a bushy cedar lucked at her ht u the hunt that the tore her ates. upon I bra-Me. new up to no nan-It. no It. vall- ot In! ml maid through (I. rim of the rolling. A cum: 0! frames. the odor 0! m tedious woods. loved “atom unmllomuo mum of the tonal, and um mun; murmur 0! lie villa in the evergreen; Immmmmmvm I“ ’mumthnmtdumrc- «per-mo m- II than M". ell-m n4 nonhuman. â€mm tantamount. sum mankind n, «Iva-ann- IN mammmuudvimlut all: to ml Into no.0 outrun-o mu m: should chock II. out at III ‘mfluy and "own the mam mu met lo neural one. and mm. This mm "a nut «mm thanmAnm-vamm u'o acct-noun and Dunn‘s mm- Iodu m to the tonund mu- 0! m lhlrd um at the um k- nann- ,bla an the dean’s shun monoton- uhronct the ho! am «y. no (to known endless mm: at nine. "or culls. which had Milena partly“ It" by their night. began to all Ind ‘17“ ï¬lto In uplflt. Ibo now “can! It any", mmmml who. under "to numb†Inn-d Dy her m A: luau Inputs. Dom In to My bl. “than: and at u unit In con- Clan." Conan-co Ill not non low: when any slept than win. they In! line. Tho horrible mum, at in m. was not to ho ulnllonml D7 um: 00- day. It tonne-plum". In a cum. Ir. With". and II: couch cm of- leodm of n ounund typo. Harm 3, clear and mm, m magnum-chm. ....... ’ “My cousin in a man with unit-lion- above the frivoliileu or lubionnblo line. and excitement is injurioun to hil health." Min Field noiiflod the bride that day alter her home-bringing. "1 {rear Mn. Wither. will lire o! the even tenor of our way." “I like quiet," Constance replied. But Ibo did not mean execution. She Ill married in April, and on the am 0! July the ltio removed to It. Wilhen' country ml. Here Constance m to fluid that the dead level a: her nlumce had yet a lower plane of dull- neu. There wu not I noifllbor villain And the mistress oi the mansion we: let! to her own devices? By no means. If her husband were fastidious, he was also tyrannical. Ho dictated not only what dress his wile should appear in daily, but also what laces and orna- menis she should sport: at what hours 'she should take the air: whom she‘ 'muu visit and whom invite; what leans: she should sing to him when he naked for music in the evening, end when the day should closeâ€"the day so wearisome in its eimilitudo to all um had preceded and those which should {0110' It. Ibad young visitors. and there was. at the dullesi, the hope of release to con- sole her. Now she was "settled in life." could sit down with idle hands and spend her days in contemplation of her Igrandeur. She had married well. No- body looked ukunoo It her when old [maids were the lubjecis oi pity or ridi- cule. The most cenrorious could no: couple her name with the dread word “dependence." She had no household cares. Mr. Withers lad Miss Field re- llevcd her 0! all ouch. gw.- The enterpman are put eaten. an dilemt «peele- eonlnming from an to twenty times their on nun: a! (and net in. "It. x-â€" ha threatened to kick m nextitrimo “1"?“- no In society. I“ or.†Chumâ€""You have been .35. an on the downward path.â€â€"â€"1'mth. Lom Noconnt mmdlyF"! an ma any)â€: mymym the Conquer- Catalan at hull-o. it in not generally nova that all the minor com 0! hnae metal. such an penniea ond aickeia. are made at the Philadelphia link. and that nearly 100,000.00. nenniea an coined there every year. Thin large nunher in oe- cuioned by the fact that thousands of penniea are lost annually. and the govâ€" ernment haa none diï¬cnlty in IIIII~ taining a mnly. The proï¬t of that government on their manufacture in large. The hianha for making that are vunhuul (or 31 a thousand from a Cincinnati ï¬rm that producen the. by contract. Bimha lor nickela are obtained in the one way. coating Ua~ cle 8am only a cent and a hall a piece. Gold to coined in Philadelphia and an Francisco. Not enonn of it cornea in. to the nunt at New Orieana to an the coinage or it worth while. Gold nieeaa are the only eoina at the United State- whieh are worth their face value intrinsically. A donhio eagle contain! :29 north oi gold without counting tho mtath part cont. use him wall In nu should i dof' '8“ down.â€â€"-Sundml. mule-nu and «man no“ mud mt. Conan-cc urn-I. flatly «urn-u. ht dialled, and gunâ€" ed Ila flan-n. The mat bum neither and. nor confusion. Wind 1-. lined) up to let. in mud in m. bowl-g kw. um. I but. mam mile. "Unlo- l I. ml, um:- I Dan no plan" of lean a, DMD.- er‘n wife. And you no lam [ulnar with In um lld my uumuu than with my (tea. “I law-n! ma. am, “anthem-lawman concert Mr m at m lubnmmmmm mm.lldlmmw man-Incantation Ion- m- «cm mu a: mum .- In uklmlumemmm mwmunn lent! mun“ €33: bar bro-d um (In door-«u of '6? canâ€, “a. “mu (m. to M. by the can“. with unrrnllon and cold. (In in Nu tho m. or loam! mun- lty and Ibudneo. o! rul doll-Mulc- Ind poverty. which "to low hon. The Inn rm dried. but .80 mm In on It» m carpet. cluchlu «mm m It at no will Ion" um“ (I. mm of tho tool. ful- lu than u union Ind torn Mr: hr bosom beam. in) (to noon In. at ucllrmfl and a annual ’0'. upon her flu. um I emllm Incl. m b nod thrilled bar can u n- eon-lo IN- mm o! m 8 Than the notes tbs: cogeâ€" {bl-oath a golden bu. The tbrnll And the auto or the pane. nu Are what my spirit bu loaned to lute." , The strain emu! abruptly. Ind. In | place of the rapt municlu, borne above , the power of earthly wan to crulb and ‘ pelt) vexatlon. lo ulna, u woman grov- elled upon the many cunhlon. weeping hot. (nu lean. and beating “that the rough rock with I cbud'a folly of du- pcrallon the white bud llul. wore the badge or her urvlwdc. What wu the but I cued bird. m- don to mm m mthau and warble the notes In nut" dlmtod between golden blur A ll". to whom out. and um" mount on. And (be lune lbbomnt mum What had Ibo to do Medal-wad with drum. 0! beauty and {radonâ€"Ibo. who bud and any be: "bony of mm and mm. ‘volnnurlly accomlu ln Mr man the non loul aptlmr a pan no 119- ‘ rub: wonu can now? an loll In- I all to be utterly vile-yum!“ I II toll and Huh I- lb. lonely ublln- I I I fly at lbla mama ampleâ€"v. up». condom-0d na llcunblo. comm-d I song. I My eye hear: I I lane: ’ An I much 2 I burn with a ' The path 0! I loveâ€"I love I loveâ€"l low “The ohm-l vim And up In ‘ singlâ€" ‘Tn-h-tn-h! ’1'th the no! “The akylarl spring: with dew on his Vim The path otranithlnc that's It'sâ€"e. I loveâ€"I loveâ€"oh, I love the tree! I loveâ€"l loveâ€"I love the tree! (Mn steep; ‘All free]; and strong they foam along. Waking the rocks with their catanct song. My eye been n glance like the beam on I lance An 1 Inch the waters duh and dance. I burn flthAgIec. (or I love to see and chine the shortest route to the valley. babbling with all it: littio might. It was Joined. helm it had gone many (set. by other rlvuletn, and from a point midway in the descent. where the ciifla were steepest. came up the shout of a Veteran]. This, and the tireless murmur of the evergreens. ‘ made up the music of this upper Ianc- ‘ wary, until Conetance's voice rose from the rocky table, sweet. lull, exultant: "The wild streams leap with headlong sweep In their cut-bless course o'er the moun- "- II com.†up In an "on of heaven ho Pl." 0h. sweeter lu- DOWNERS _ GROVE REPORTER. and between to whom am- And the an. I had a. to do In. 0! beauty I pun no up- an {on her- nl-m,â€".A-‘ 1 calm on the amnion of the cele- bration of the Lincoln-Douglas debate there. He does not think Mr. Dem was just in his remarh in regard to Senator Douglas. and wanted at the time, if it had been a proper place. to make a retort. He says that his in- tercourse with Douglas. after the elec- ‘ tion of Lincoln. a: well as hia former acquaintance with him, both when he was in close political ailinlty as well as when they were bitterly omit, render: a {air estimate at his character ; not only poaalbie but certain. and that estimate is that Douglas was a patriot without any sham or its and ands. He was at heart a Union man of such strong sentiment that no condition of things could have made him anything elze. He certainly had better oppor- tnnltlaa to form an estimate of his character than it. been had; He an speeches. he an: “You can’t tn mar-elf rich." showing that he either cannot or will no: (in the welsh! h the Wine! protection which all Ra- pnblfcam do. awomhohunmbeenunn much to com Into diluent mm of the state except on Ms campaigning il wu not an issue between the par Jim. Aswan as it beanie an lane. ‘Pnluerwucmintobeonlhemmo- cntlc side 0! it. He wn a confluent anti-slavery inn and a such became among the called nil-Nehru“ Democrats and iii-mu the plain to and hi. comrades nude lo Lincoln was A Lincoln Republican a long a be lived. He never. homer, agreed with Ir. Lincoln on the arm. in his to- mrlu on m: subject. and in his h-lonnlor Pnlnm Is now I“) "nu old. In hln wnlk. Iln Inlk and MI Intro In n Inc-tor In nhon mm the «Ir munch M no. He mm" A rune. Mu Ipwmllr only from hnbll. and In dnlly at hi. Int oflce In (MI our u- tending to Ms urn-Nee. whlch am not nllp out 0! Mn haml- Ihlle In lhe orn- I- nc. l Ilalnl In mllud the "non-bio r mummy Ian he would no out of of- . In rllh the clue: of Mn Ierln. III: In. ‘ 3 never In III: III. bun re-clected to an I om. lndocd. In than 0! Mann" _ molly In the If. he nlrl: "I eon. Inlo luhlon about onn In In nun. but do no! mm In nun-In In (Milan long." He was plum} no" «not In 1m Mo am am run! In I» governor. lull dld nnI Io be non-ls». Ho «Inclined Ihn no-Innllon um col. lnanrnnll nought u the Pearl. con- ‘ mtIon. but ll. I'll Ilmm on M. and Domed". Theodoryolllleol‘ Ice m u that (line 01.5w m nnnnm. The comm-Hall or I870 line-nod II to “.000. ll. llel mm! A â€no-Ina- Ih, In! Ibo llmbllennn would noI an II In M. for levnnl muons. hm. Ibo Mun omlflon whkh In land I“. In Ibo mum Gen. Sheridan Ind men In the army u the um ol the Chicago In, Ind second mu they Ind made up [bolt nlndn Io nut Ogle:- by turn-rd um nine Min UnlIed States annular. Palmer wan am "In Inhlon" Ilnl 1w. He left the puny nI Ih exact an. that he discovered I!“ be In: not to be the nnny'l enn- ‘dlduo ï¬n governor and senator. Inn n In pertain unfair to my IIInI discovery was the nuns a! II. He Inn always and u Ill (Ines Dancer-Ila In Mn new: on nut-‘3 righu and tnrll. an. In; the ï¬t and In! More II, n: well an influx n low yenrn am It, Ihe ur- Eflaazanaann_-__-_ :33, Senator Monroe‘s bill to amend the ac- parole law, which has created consid- om crable discussion here, seems not to . have had much notice from the press of the state for some reason. It is as worthy oi more attention. There is a wide dliterence of opinion in regard to tn- the advisability of the present law. The police authorities at the state have lg, objected strenuously to it. while the prison ofï¬cials insist that it is work- ing good. and will not. consent to its abandonment until they have time to show that it is advantageous. It is one. o! the numerous improvements which prison reformers have advo- cated, and while this does not prove anything, it does argue that it should have a fair trial, and live or die on its merits. I am more familiar with its scope and workings at the reformstory than at the penitentiary. There a pa- role depends ï¬rst on the uniform good behavior of the inmate; second. on get- ting an offer irom some responsible person of work and oversight, and thirdly, on the Judgment oi the board of manage-rd as to whether it shall be granted. The ilrst is easily determined by the daily reports. The second is where trouble commences. lt is so easy {or the person who wants to get an inmate paroled to secure certiï¬cates from the public otilcluls. clerks of court and even iron: the Judges to the good character and standing at the sponsor that the ofllccrs oi the return:- atory tlnd themselves imposed upon and learn afterward that the person asking to stand as sponsor for the care and supervision of the prisoner during his parole Is not a proper person for such duty. The tire persons who made themselves such a terror under the "long and short" reign oi holding'up in Chicago were all paroled prisoners and their care and moral weiiare had been vouched (or by persons who were certiï¬ed to by Chicago omciala. These eases have called out a deal oi adverse criticism. but It is well to bear in mind that it is only the cases at those ‘who go wrong that ever get into the papers. Secrecy in regard to parollng is practiced and many young men are now engaged in honestly earning their living all our the state who are not known as paroled prisoners, so that I. never bar any praise oi the sys- tem. but only adverse criticism when the lad goes to the bad. """fllliflï¬ï¬ï¬ï¬ï¬w ‘ï¬ï¬Wiï¬: : OUR SPRINGFIELD lETTEfl. 2 zuuuuuuaaamuuninl Ofï¬cer George F. Osborne I: the “Il- est member of Phlladelphh’ a polio. force. He In six feet ulna 3nd one-Ml Inchet In helm A singular ease of most abnormally poethnmone interment tool: piece re. cently et Revel. 1 Russian town near the Gulf of Finland. The hotly. or reth- er mummy. thue tentily hurled, wee thet o! the Belgian eoldier of fortune, the Due Charles de Cray. who hed been commender-iu-chle! of the Rm ermy at the historian! hettle oi Nerve. in 1700. Made prieoner by the Swede- during the ï¬ght. De Croy took up Ill residence at Revel. where he died in the mum of nature, hie creditor; however. demurring to hie hurlel until ‘ ‘hle debts had been paid in hill. 80 the soldier was mummiï¬ed, end hie re- maine have stayed ever einee then in e Lutheran church. where they hen been exhibited to eighteeere ee e curi- osity. Now, at lent. amid euch pomp an that afforded by the preeence at the local authoritiee, the Dane Charles De Croy has been pieced in e new con! and properly interred in the null: oi this church, end time ende ee etrenge a chapter an the recorde of eenulture have ever contained. um. bad luck. dishonest treenten and wrecked beaks, end they wut a man in there right at in when they have conï¬dence. The lone: we have mflefld within the int few month: by the elements and the poiitkinu, the Andrews. the Drum. the Spain‘s. et 31.. in something quorum and we wmt I mm of parts, an afloat of un- inpeachahie worth. and proof mint city comptroller; V.‘_., nook Ind corner, every mm: um! township. hamlet. hill and dale. [or ot- 0cm recognition at Mo nut 'Mh. could not be reamed. The people have an tde‘ that the clue! duty at the su- perintendent of Immune. l: to Insure the state-mum loss by flood and front. by rycloao and lightning. by The covenant has ï¬nally come to (M scratch and appointed the nod \‘An clone superhuman! 0! “Hum. It In undemood (ml Van was very de~ aim-.0 to return In print. "to and Il- tend wholly to his own "mu .nm. but the demand coming up rm. every __.n. ‘_ . mud against the uni-mm lonahmm or eight year: no. and no stood by that to". Hr. Dunlap ukod MI. 10 name. I! he could. I am!- camp-Non M whit-h I majority of m expoun- did not so to labor. In. promptly replied. "The one. of cute Dell-tor." Lmlor'n cool Inluen'. or openlon' bIII. In. «leaned. on u 'II No year: ago. You cannot get out o! the mind- oI non. InI-Inon Iho Ida that I)» loll-mm qulouou of Ike m! In yearn In Ibo cmom 0! return. Thou \‘arlouo lawn punish and (mind I" comma-Hons lot-mod In "so Inlemt o! unplug up one". The uguunu whit-II Ihe muor use- In Invor oI um um Io «numbing III. «No: By the n- nlnInIou mummy 0! III.» Inn cool opt-rotor- cannot combine to torn up Ibo prk‘n of cool lo 3 “It IMo. rota. Wm: the toll of prIm. do" no no \nm of mlnnn. “'9 I"! manna-fly rrylna om mu we wont to legume Io me-vt Inhor. Thlo hm will prim thou tamed In ouch mun-(Ion no pay for labor n Inmr propnmoo than for all other upon-on. In an. anon: Ihomu-lvm upon a "ht-duh 01 mt: (hot «Ill hop "no "he. of labor up Io a Mr undard. ThIo In non Impou- nm "In mlmlnallnl barium law- nmInnI Inn-m llr. Dnnlnp opvoud II. Mr. Crawford tools for the M". H. “Id he had a Mord on IhIo ml- Ier. m- was the only mu- unotor who ollglblos mused tor nppoiéméfl†at. to place the name or lame- 0! Incl â€neg: at my head of the III! 0! The house bill (Mr. Cochran‘s) to amend the Chicago civil service law so as to give preference to veteran sol- diers in right of appointment was passed. This law was one or the two civil service acts passed last legisla- ture. the other being for the county service. For some reason no move has been made to amend the county service law. The veterans had a big time try- ing to get recognized as eligibles for omco under that law. By the rules adopted by the commissioners they were cut an entirely. The rules pro- vided that no one over 45 years 01 age should be examined for appointment. This caused a big row, and Billy Mason was retained by the old soldiers to com- mence a suit against the board. They concluded to change the rules. This is the bill as passed: "Section 1. Be it enacted by the people of the state at illinois, represented in the geneml assembly. That an act entitled ‘An act to regulate the civil service in cities.’ be amended by the addition 0! a sec- tion to be known as section 10%, which section shall read as follows: "Sec- tion wig. Persons who were engaged in the military or naval service at the ‘l'nited States during the years 1861. 1862. l861l. 1364 and lSiibrnnd who were honorably discharged therefrom. shall be preferred (or appointment» to civil calm-s. provided they are iound to poe- sesa the business capacity necessary for the proper discharge at the duties at such once. and it shall be the duty of tho examiner or commissioner certify- ing the list oi eiialbles who have taken the examinations provided (or in thin ~â€"uvu-ww.‘ mm. After 1". cant-nu. been a partisan, and afterward a most pronounced political opponent. Later he was thrown into close connectinn with him. and it is {air to believe that Palmer's estimate a! the great senator is a correct one. __ “ï¬ghtâ€! _ I ___......w"-yw_â€"" Lawmw'iliimmm {any flinch! Ash LWMH! "J.â€"Wolï¬m mmumn.m.n. W I. not by Q! h“ this.» am 375 no on I'm mood mm. "In; (at a. mahoganumawuwum Hood a Pillsu “'" "m? W Ind “lulu". depend uponpuu blood. Hood's Mil. mm pun bloat nu II I» an to at. "no": “will; m Ibo blood um loadod with Input- cm which mu ho moan], expelled or mun mun-mm. Donut-tummy Hood’s Canadian apple-growers uy thlt bu- rel-huds of paper or pulp boards pro- sen'e apples better than wood. 5/ch gum» thclyorlu .“nA-Dn. , harem excellent op nannies along the {Inc of the Chic-go North-Western R‘y In wostol’n Nlumt- and South Dc- kou for than who II" dulrolu of obtain- lug ï¬rst-elm had: upon most [IVOT‘NO rerun for general agricultural utposos as well as utoclr raisin and d rylng. or pmlcuhn and In kon' rules. apply n. 1..."..- 40 an... n-4n. m__--Â¥ . 30 Agents of The Nonh- Western line lilo and Health A Can: «chum. There In at Redear, a small vllluo In England, a wonderful pork model 0! Lincoln Cathedral. The model contalne about. one mllllon old corks. It was made by a plowman. who worked at u. all and on, {or ten years and seven months. The model is Bald to be a per- fect mlnleture or the great cathedral, lnelde and out. fun i The members of the Baptist Yong Peo- I ple's Union who contemplate one in e national meetin of that bod in In ,7, Ihould hear in m ed that there a no better qui pod line (rem the East. North or ~Von west, than the popular Bl Four Route. via Cincinnati or Lonisvil o. All :hrough pasaen er trains on this line In restibuled. equ pped with Bullet Bleepenl, with Hotel Dining Cars on an treinn. At Jinclnueti. direct connection 5 made in the same depot with the Queen a: Crescent Route, the Short Line to Chatt e, vie :he famous High Bridge. At Lou ville. with the Southern Railway and the Louis- ville a: Nashville, via Mammoth Cave and Halelzvilie, allowing stop‘over at both these )0 n I. The fare from Chicago will be extreme? Jew. r‘or rates. time card eta, cadres: . 3. Tucker, 0. N. A.. or H. W. Sparks, '1‘. P. L, 28! Clerk 8L. Chicago. RIDEA OpponI-lcy lon- nonunion. l'l' KILLS ï¬m; ’ 'l‘lo mm LI no. Loo-mam $50