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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Nov 1900, p. 6

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SSS • mtKm §K,fast. Dante, | circumstances nemr I be is indulgi aowti as the call up vi la past , i^p^-ljMds of ther?d IfTeceiied by such feWlVate. ^idance now b^ing^Jield in. iand Kiowa reservation^ Ifritory is not believid late ^ yguch terrible scenes. ^ i:named are to -b« || to white ^settlers when the ail of lands to Indians sh|ll •hav and the red men feaf, e paleface gCis in ated^ tilfe #HH of tribal power will l^en numbered. With the v preventing the impending aider chiefs have o Gatxtuer, Yorifc BO pleased 11 «£ w t i t i n g all on stories and novels, whf|k ;dealt whol- Mrs. tJrtgfcf. ly vrefc'fociety, and for which puMish- efs'il^si'jy bid, It #aa then she feme -Sa, near founding a Salon as was pos- .„t~. In New York. Her houses at titter Bay and in the city were the rendezvous of persons of both sexes with literary and artistic tastes*- After the death of Mr. Cruger and the discovery that wealth was not hers, Btrs. Cruger dipped deeper into the strewn of light fiction, and under the no-m de plume of "Julian Gordon" wrote cleverer sketches than ever. Then came the desire to live abroad and for the past year or more Mrs. Cruger has occupied «t charming la in Florence. f&Vr' BIANKI. •> V • Leader of the Ghost Dance, glroetdance, which will, they hope, i keep the white men away. leader of the ghost (h priest in his tribe and as well. He is a quiet man 50 and 60 years of age, of maauier and with a thought? ^Wijtenartce, according well with I tribal positions as chief priest and . > • } A Gait) est on Hero. *tfbere are few men in Texas ttth such a well developed propensity foi getting into disagreeable jobs as Col. Hunt McCaleb, who was adjutant gen­ eral of the city forces when Galveston waa under martial law. When Gen. Thomas Scurry was appointed to the military command of the city by May­ or Jones he at once offered the ap­ pointment of adjutant general to Col. McCaleb. Why he did so nobody £p- peared to know, for McCaleb is not popular. In normal times he Is an unassuming newspaper plodder of the most ordinary stripe. But he seems fairly to ravel in a. row, and perhaps "that is why Gen. Scurry, appointed him to the respoasib ĵBbitiou of adjutant generalhis hands the mass - , It usually is at this season year that the native hunter (jfttite, the man who hunts and excitement the sport __ Ms outfit in shape f*r the IW1 or win tjer outing and sets himself the of deciding upon the place at which he will make his oantp. He has a wide territory to look over and a va.- riety of big game from among which to choose hj$ quarry. A glance at the accompanying map, upon which the habitats of the big game are charted, will convince even the most skeptical that there are still tast areas fn the United States and in British North • America "where primeval stillness reigns" and where man is only an occasional nightmare to the 'beasts which dwell therein. Years ago it was the ambition of the American huoter of big game to bring down a mountain sheep. That ambition has faded away, not so much because of a too plentiful sup­ ply of mountain sheep, but largely be­ cause the region inhabited by th**e sheep or some species of them is more accessible than it used to be. Speak­ ing generally, the mountain nheep roam over the region of the Rockies, from New Mexico t* northern Alaska. The four species of mountain Sheep and the localities in which they are found are: Nelson's, in the southern ranges of the Rocky mountain^; the big horn, which range from the mid­ dle Rockies to British Columbia; Stone's big mountain sheep, which recently have been discovered hy him in the Stlckine river region, north of British Columbia, and the white, or Ball's, species, which are found from la^d tojpenatrate. & the and la the surnmerthe open country is colr^ed iritk iwa^i that are al­ most impassable. The Indians of this region are by no means anxious to helpth«-whlti» Next to- the States to be the {gs^E-hotR ope Ariz __ Colorado ( Wyoming, kill the game in the United to extinction is . Those antel- be found lit nortihwestern lly in Routt county), n Montana, Idaho, Nebraska, South Dakota, Washington, Manitoba, and. the Northwest Terri­ tory. But k is unlawful to kill an­ telope at any time in Texas, North Dakota or Utah. The moose i3 one of the most sat­ isfactory kind's of big game to get after. He may be hunted from Maine to Alaska. Any nimrod who lives in the east and wants to distinguish him­ self has the opportunity of going up into Maine and killing the King of Moose, the monster "specter" that carries around in his interior a lead mine, the gift of unsuccessful hunt­ ers, who, after emptying their maga­ zines of bullets, have taken to the tall trees or to the nearest cave. And at Cook's Inlet, Alaska, was killed the largest moose that ever has been bagged. So here's the range of the moose: Maine, New Brunswick, Cape Breton, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, Quebec, the Ottawa district of Canada, around Georgian bay, in northern Minnesota, and in the region of the Rockies as far south as northern Wy­ oming, and running north in Alaska to Cook's Inlet, and beyond. No moose, kso, Nebraska, Utah, Montana, North Dakota or Oregwn, but m»y be feasted in British Columbia, Manitoba, North­ west Territory, Washington. Nova Scotia and Newfoundland. Bears are to be found almost $v«rr- whire. The bear, in fact, is * sort of household animal with the big -̂game hunter. In some parts of the east a mail can go out into his backyard and shgtot a bear, akd he has to do it oc­ casionally,: if he wants to save his 'winter's supply of bacon. The black bear ranges over half the states in the Union. To particularize a few locali­ ties, he is found in Florida, Louisiana, Pennsylvania, in the Catskllls and Adirondacks of New York, in Maine, northern Michigan, around Georgian bay in Canada, in Wyoming, . Mon­ tana; in fact, in all the Rocky moun­ tain states, from New Mexico north, and across the line in British Colum­ bia. The grizzly bear is found anywhere and everywhere in the Rockies, from New Mexico to Alaska. California has two grizzlies of her own, one species found in the north and the other in the south. "Way up north there are some interesting species of bears. The Yakutat, a big brown fellow, is found around Yakutat bay in Alaska. The Kadiak bear, the largest of all bears, is named from his principal haunt, Kadiak, one of the Alaskan islands. The polar bear ranges across North America along the edge of the ice, and in summer he gets somewhere further south. Mountain lions, which is a general name for cougars, pumas and the like, are found nearly everywhere .in the Baker. te 0700.600* j Alvord. note hitler in ihaTi>aj*k Kit New York h a s ; s t o l e n $ 7 0 0 , 0 0 0 o f ' thfe bank's funds-' am has abscond- S edl The bank's of- ficl |rs positively de­ ny] that anyone in th<l bank or that any of its deposit- j ora Was in collu--; sion with Alvord. ̂ He had been twen-: fey years in the| bank's employ, six years as its note teller, and had the implicit confidence of * its Officers. It is probable that Al- the greater part of the pie stole in speculating in the the very entrance to which g 'Ipd millions of dollars. George g % t#r, president of the bank, has? this statement: '".1 aggregate of the false entries, to 1709,000, has been off on the books of the bank, Wtthe reserve fund, without di- HN® surplus, and profits of ||lt^tS reported in it3 last pub- it. It is expected that flfcfjptage will be materially re- ' lly a substantial sum, of which ®i a fair prospect of recovery.'* *' Count Coming. I Von Sternberg, who has been retary to the German embassy several years, has been trails* to a new ; will be Count Its jU3t -j.-- --J Is now okiag for a suit- •ble residence. Quadt has his Mfe in service and man of great and social lUwtibn. The wmr-rri-- 18 a daughter of 8tg*> ^or Martino, the ItaSlan ambassador ^1: Denmark. -' ;• guide him save according to his needed a law right a case which presented at the adjutant general's office Count Quadt. Tbe late Lord Russell once presided pit a 'toner given to Sir Henry Irving tatter's return from America, the dinner was In progress Lord fipfc»n suggested that Comyns Car? |W«»e8e fifis Henry's health. "I can't j^NtSpeeclies, you know/' said he. jfttP Henrr gently replied: "I heard *°u make a fine speech before th^Par- •ell commission " . ItMP^teh-^^un- '.•®®w«fifc; "Oh, yes,, but Mngfllltalk about." COL. McCALEB. he would grind one out as fast as his stenographer could work a typewriter. During the ten days of martial law forty-six general orders were issued. Gen. Scurry says they were models of military conciseness. In these forty- six orders this newspaper plodder, whom the hurricane had tossed into a position of despotic power second only to the -military governor himself, gave to the town a code of laws which brought order out of chaos, defined the common law rights which would be respected and indicated in no un­ certain terms the common law rights which ceased to exist under this fear­ ful and peculiar military despotism. But more wonderful than this was the fact that the people proper, who had been governed with an iron hand and often at the muzzle of a rifle, rose up and proclaimed against the proposed abrogation of martial law. It was McCaleb who first suggested to Gen. Scurry that the time had come to get back to civil government. As the ad­ jutant general <had been in the closest touch with the people, Gen. Scurry placed great store on his opinion. He saw the correctness of it, and told the mayor that martial law must cease, and in twenty-four hours the machin­ ery of civil process was again in mo­ tion. . MOOSE • MITISM COLUMBIA MANlTQBa AST&j»* Ootstc flgf"' y Tlx AS I i B«tlk-fco1wnMa î)rtt ZUkHhttmi pan? tile immigrant who p:|«* York bay will make .landing on free soil in one of 1 spacious buildings which aire Kk of erection on Ellis is- •j; *n«|;-;New York toy. The main struc- AS IT LOOKS NOW. m nearing completion and is y be ready for occupation next month, in fact commissioner is pian BNlnove his force from the vto the island early i» No- of the other buildings for occupancy before _ - Dr. Thomas H. Norton. Aweri^ah consul at Harpoot, Turkey, recently gave a dinner to the members of the Phi Beta Kappa society resident in Pera. Nearly a dozen persons were present, representing Harvard, Prince­ ton, Yale, Vassar, Hamilton, Bowdoin, Amherst, Williams and Columbia. Mi® Pearl Robinson of Chicago had to go all the way to Newark to meet her fate. He isn't much of a inches, at least. But neither is. sihe. For Pearl, though twenty years old, and a daughter of Ida Robinson, the strong woman, who weighs 250 pounds, is only thirty-five inches tall and weighs Just thirty-«even pounds. Albert J. Crigui, to whom this very small sized Pearl has just announced her engagement, is t h i rty-eight „ eight Inches tail ear* Robinson, and weighs a pound an inch. So it is rather a diminutive romance all around. • • ~ • • < -v,i' Major Crigui, as litf,,ftjime a . o n t h e v a a l d t v U l e p r a n ^ RoUnaoa met on wltb Chw Ifis against the law to kill mountain sheep at any time in Montana, North Dakota or Utah. The mountain goat ranges from (he Cascade mountains, in the north­ ern part of the state of Washington, northward into, Alaska, probably to Cook's Inlet, It is found also in New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Wyoming. Idaho, Montana and California. It is the musk ox which has taken the place of the mountain sheep in the heart of the big game hunters of America. To come back from the northern part of British North Amer­ ica with proof that you have killed a musk ox stamps you as a sportsman whose stories are entitled to respectful consideration. There are three regions in which the. musk ox may be hunted. These animais roam north and east of the Great Slave lake, as far east as the Great Fish river, coming down to 60 degrees of latitude. Then they may be found near Franklin bay and In East Greenland. Hunting the American buffalo is a lost art, because there are no more running wild in the United States to hunt. But one may go way up in British North America and try his luck there. A herd of bison, num­ bering, according to various accounts, from 75 to 150, inhabits the region south of and about opposite the cen­ ter of the Great Slave lake, and run­ ning southwest for about '200 miles. Many well-known hunters have tried their skill in this region, but it is not on record that- a white man ever killed one of these bison. It Is \ MAP SHOWING WHERE BIG GAME IS TO BE FO however, may be killed at any time in New Hampshire, Michigan, Wyom­ ing, North Dakota or Idaho. Of the woodland caribou a few are found in Maine, though it Is not law­ ful to kill them, but they may be hunted in Newfoundland, New Bruns­ wick, Quebec, Nova Scotia, Cape Bre­ ton, Manitoba, northern Canada, Min­ nesota, northern Idaho, Washington, and then north to northern Alaska. If they are found In New Hampshire, Michigan or North Dakota it is un­ lawful to kill them. The barren ground caribou inhabits about the same region as the musk ox, but they range 400 or 500 miles further south. A new species of cari­ bou found recently in the Sticklne river region, north of British Colum­ bia, has been named in honor of Its discoverer Stone's mountain caribou. Best known, perhaps, of all the spe­ cies of deer, because of the wide ex­ tent of territory in which it is found, is the Virginia deer. It is a brush- loving animal, being most persistent in this respect, and, therefore, is 'a favorite among hunters. Its principal haunts are in Florida, Virginia, the Adirondacks of New York, Maine, New Brunswick, Canada, the northern parts of Michigan, Wisconsin and Minne­ sota, in Montana and in the Rockies. The home of (he mule deer also is in the Rockies. The black-tailed deer are found in the Cascade mountains, northern California, Oregon, Washing­ ton and northward into British Co­ lumbia. Elk may not be killed in New Mex- mountain forests of the. Pacific slope, from Mexico to British Columbia. Peccary, or wild hog, are found in southwest Texas, Mexico and Arizona. And sport with the alligators of Florida, Mississippi and Louisiana must not be omitted In the list of big game. Yellowstone Bark, of course* abounds with big game, but hunting t$ugf$T is forbidden. , A •Cos Letter May Joseph Leiter, the rich young Amer­ ican, has left Paris for his home, and the gossips say that he has won his suit with Mrs. Stuyvesant Le Roy, and that they will be married very .soon. Mrs. Le Roy and her mother are coming to America, soon and have given up their Parr is home. . Leitsr. Commander Robert H. J. Stewart of the British navy has been specially promoted to the rank of captain, with seniority from Sept. 6,1900, for service in connection with the capture of the Taku forts in China. Isabella, the former queen of Spain, who for years has been living in Paris, is now making efforts to be allowed to return to (her native, country, from which she was banished twenty-three years ago. ^ v :;-JE 4 r. > rzs- ' ^ - * • i !.XV "r ?"• i memorial to Mr. Vanderbilt's motfcer, Maria Louise Kissam. It was Iffjgnoil .'the- eminent architect, Rlchaard H. Hunt, and is one of the most comitfodl- anm structures of its kind in " V- the new 4oa?^tofy aderbilt university by Jit It.and dedteated d' Mm Im mm P6QW.'%«nainM milt* Wtantf^laaor, ornamentation in cut stool, basement forme a great dining frail, 'with seating capacity for 300 students. Above this are four stories, containing living rooms for 204 persons. Steam •heat and electric light are furnished from the university plant. From the windows of every floor may be had a superb view over the prettiest por­ tion of the blue grass region. James Bryce, the distinguished Eng­ lish statesman and author, is in Paris for his first genuine visit to the French capital. He says that when­ ever he has been there before he was simply passing through, and that he is leas acquainted with Paris than any of the other great continental cap- , itals. Tfce emperor of Austria lias ordered ft full length portrait of tiimMlt wfclofc he will present to Sir Horact the retiring British amhas- .A., y » V 'M;- '"i • * 0 V' ^ .y>V - , , Z,.„&...4..! 'J.jT : York wortttless im- " Jyr|^igatipn • ht ecwpany, tt :iiC|i*SSPSal a prepa ration in imitation of Fletehsirs toods was being prepared by the Palesttne Company of No. 10? South See- street, and sold by a few drug- Warrants were sworn out for the imitators. Yesterday John Blck, president of the offending company, *nd Benjamin Chireaun, chemist for the concern, were arrested, but later WW released on bond. The cases will be tried before Judge Clark of the Court of Criminal Cor­ rection. The Ceti'taur Company has determined to protect the public from worthless Imitations of their goods.-- St. Louis (Mo.) Republic, Sept 30, Vm. • Uifew mt tfc» Tory WoM Pepprey--That was a fierce fight you had with Gussie. He claims he licked you, Chollp--Oh, thff boastah! It's twue lie wumpled my cwavat dweadfully, bat when it was all ovah his collah was fwlghtfully wilted. -- Philadelphia l^rsss* HO! FOR OKLAHOMA! MOO/MO •creenew lands to open to MttMnffif.' SaifioribefDr THE KIOWA CHIEF, dtfrottd to tofor- BMktton aboot tkM land*. One year, aijOO. Single •ow.ttc. " " ' M>, . - *b«Te, 11.75. Address Dick T. Morgan. Perrr. O. *. A ITaefal Song. "What shall I sing, Clarence?** "Sing that lovely old-time stmt, "Oh, I see; you're fixing to get a good long nap."--Chicago Record. * Coaching ImA to Conaamptlon. V Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough ;»t bnce. Go to your druggist today and get a sample bottle free. Sold la IS and 50 cent bottles. Go at once; ^delays are dangerous. , your measure for a new suit of clothes. Young man--I have no objections, but th*t*B all you wttt ever (get for them.--Detroit Fress Press. 8BND NAMES OP FRIENDS end we give ydu semi-monthly paper 8 months. Csiivssseni wanted. Big cash commission. Ad- flmitor terms to (geots, sample oopies. etc.. BUBAL YOUNG PKOPL*, Milton, Pa. ' Olsnr of Hla. f OhfliBy--Yaas, I'm going to Work. I've made up my mind, doncher know. Miss Pepprey--You have? What a delicate operation! -- Philadelphia Times. * AB-O, lh« Slow Dsmrt, pleases all the family. Four flavors:-- Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Straw­ berry. At your grocers. 10 cts. Try it today. Any photographer will tell you that Jots of people will sit for a picture and- then won't stand for it. ^MM.««IEMVTOI|>SO. boWM wtSeBre tmjr or by 8 bosses 5T Booklet free, write •IfMEKA CHEMtOAb. CO., La Crosse. Wl* -- ^ ^ THE PURE GRAIN COFFEE Orain-O Is not a stimulant, like Coffee. It Is a tonic and its effects are permanent. A successful substitute for coffee, because It kss the coffee flavor that everybody likes. p Lots of coffee substitutes In the market, but only one food dxialpm Gxain-O. - AB groom j lSo. ndm. DEBUIFS Curassll TtmMtnndLaaf AflfcctbiM. -' COUGH SYRUP OetUwgcaslae. BeAisesaiMtltntes. 3flfvsflos ii*ag«lk , K. Aenulna • Carter's. Little Liver Pills. Mu*t Signature of : Sftefc •w»sgs-- .CURE SIOK HEADACHE. HOW WEAK CHILDREN ARE HADE STRONG, VIGOROUS AND WEIL S.fe'A ,. '.V» TT HALMJWS ! ®r. and Mrs. Thomas Hallows, of Peckham St., Globe Mass., have cause to thank Dr. Greene's Nervura for restoring probably preserving the life of their little son. Almost from ii Hallows was troubled with indigestion and nervous troubles, ana not seemed to help him. Finally Dr. Greene's Nervura was reoommended and 1 with success. A few bottles were sufficient to effect a eure, and 1 -̂day the Uttte ] one Is enjoying the best of health. By the UM of Dr. Greene's Hervux* J)M,j ohild was sickly i was transformed into a happy, hsarty. robust boy. Dr. a . Nervura Blood amd Narvm Thousands of other children can thank Dr. Greene and his wonderful] remedy for the strength and health fhey enjoy. Children to whom it Is gives] have less sickness, better health, better growth, and longer and more vigorous] lives. Parents should realize that it Is weir duty to give it to every child «ks| U not in perfect health. There are no diseases more dreaded by parents fit% epilepsy, and St. Vitus' dance. Yet no child would be troubled by .If Dr. Greene's Nervura were given when the first symptoms appear. Oharims I• MoBay, a highly esteemad afflow, who roskb* mt #4 Myriim Sim, Nmw Mmrnsm, BMysi „ "About two years ago my little daughter became run down in health sad fly1! waa prostrated by rheumatism, which seventy hsr pains dinpMated, dM was again •Restored, ana she was able to at mm! to pnjr tti ervtira blood and nerva knew* Pr. Orssas, «ff <9 spsdWHflt ta WM«( •'

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