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About The Columbian (Columbia Falls, Mont.) 1891-1897 | View This Issue
The Columbian (Columbia Falls, Mont.), 24 Dec. 1891, located at <http://montananewspapers.org/lccn/sn85053046/1891-12-24/ed-1/seq-1/>, image provided by MONTANA NEWSPAPERS, Montana Historical Society, Helena, Montana.
• • THE COLUMBIAN REACHES MORE FLATHEAD VALLRY HOMES THAN ANY OTHER PAPER. ADVERTISERS USE IT. FIRST YEAR. BANK ........ ............ ...... . ..... . • . • . talle ' COLUMBIA FALLS. Columbia Falls, Mont. 1)111ECTORS: THE COLL MHIAN. •. . CONSTANT ADDITION KEEPS TIIE COLUMBIAN'S Jon OFFICE AT TUE LEAD. Jun PRINT- ING Is A SPECIALTY. COLUMBIA FALLS, MONTANA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24, Ism. NUMBER 36. A NEW SECRETARY. THE BIG ONES PAY. Stephen II. Elkins 'fakes Proctor's Place in President Ilarrison's Cabinet. News at the National Capital---Con- Kress Will Soon Be Grinding - Out Laws. The president has sent to the sen- ate the nomination Of Stephen B. El- kins of West ‘'irginia, to 1st secretary A. .1. Davis, . : Butte, Mt. of war. 'rho nomination was referred James A. Talbott, : Butte, Mt. to the committee on military affairs. J. E. Gaylord, : --: Butte, Mt. Mr. Elkins' earnest s'upporl of B. Tibbey : : Butte, Mt. James G. Blaine at the Chicago con - L. C. Trent, . : Salt Lake. S. T. Hauser, : : H e l ena , ate vent ion in ISKI is well known. He has held a number of offices. In 18(15- 6 he was a member of the territorial legislature of New Mexico and after- wards was attorney general, and United States district, attormy in 1870-2. Ile was then elecest as a delegate to congress as a republican, and served -two terms, from 1873 till 1877. ii is speech in 188.1 on the ad- mission of New Mexico into the union attracted much attention. A year later Mr. Elkins became interested in the West Virginia system of railroads. He was born in Perry eounty, Ohio, September 20, 184 I, and removed to Missouri when piung, graduating from the Missouri University in 18e0. Mr. Elkins served as it captain in t 111 4 Seventy-soVonth Mis:4ouri regiment in 1862-3, and in the latter year went to Bed Room Sets in Endless Variety 1 f . , orIllne ill Milling ' and tieetak raising. New Mexico. whore he aecumulated a Of late years he has Insee heat ily M- 1 uter T a bi ng , E as y an d p inc ti nfr , t„,„,t,..1 he railretad and leiniter '''. ationsin West Viiginie. James G. Chairs, Bed Springs, Y 1 Arm , u t i . ai,„. being in , s ill: hiei le the Exchange Drawn Drawn on Principal Cities of the United States and Europe. A General Banking Business Trans- neted. I.!• I, ( We. Failiture Large Assortment,: -:- :-:-Latest Designs,:-: :-:Lowest Prices! In a deckle]u nee heed to day by the uonunissioner of the OtlIttli land (Alive, it is held deposits ef e1e 1 / 2 . itable for illumine:it roitho maaliniut- ow of potteryware, not reinier the laid contain:eg such deposits subject to ently ender the mining laws. Frs. ,tee.r. Stewart addressed the scant: , ou ihat part of the president's message relating to free coinage. He said the presideut wis laboring under a units - D. P. SMMI. R. L. olavsa. apprehensioa when he stated that the SNIIII 1 & OLIVER, ailvoentee of free voinites , believed the ma of IMO would raise silver to par and licep it there. That act, he ob- ss-ved, WaS Opposed by 111 ,, demo- ..; et and anti -silver republicass, who, it It the votes of free cointge pasted the act as a compel- : Ili ie. !we:sure. lie contended it asitsinted to a pledge that the goy- ) eseneut would maintain free coinage. anItill urace. Vrents. It wit. the established poliey of the ne United State.; to maiatain two metals Geseenia on a parity with each other on prea- . _ met /sited ratio. Stewart argued at c;m ffl length in favor of free coinage. Bourke Cochran. Nov York congress- man, has surprised his frieads by coining out flat-footed for free coin- age. : row eleven's irele,e-. The corporation of tie. eity of London on the 18th, voted 2.500guin- and Pillows. F. W. DOWNER. Downer Building. Nucleus Ave. E1118. • Montana. HAL OF DENIElisViLLE. Abstracts of the Northern Por- tion of Missoula County. ANT INFORMATION concrning transfers from the Unite.I State:: Lau I Otr. including pas to provide a wedding present for Idininl Transfers, Water Rights, Coal, Placer lull Quartz Locations. and auy information Prince Albert Victor of Wales and row I on tlu• County Itt2cortls eau hr. vt,t,,iaoil Princess Victoria Mary of Teek. It at e••.r °MCC NEED has been :add the prince of Wales feels a hesitancy about asking parlia- ThE Northern Abstract Company. flask to make a grant for the proper support of his eldest son after mar- riage and that parliament might take W. A. KIRKHAM MANAGER. NUCLEUS AVENUE the initiative. It hes even been sug- gested in some quarters that the lord maylr . of ion f Lo r ndr i s d ho f uld or t s h tart , a i sub t - ------ of the royal couple. Some radicals 1 d say the country is heavily enough taxed to support the queen and her numerous relatives, and her majesty could very readily grant their allow- ance from her private purse. Will Go itunniee for CUL The cruiser San Francisco is at the Mare island navy yard ready to put CHOICE• rATS to sea at short notice. Her storage Constantly on Hand ---Whole- capacity has been filled by an unusu- ally large quantity of arms awl am - sale and Retail. munition. which gives ground for the belief that she will return to Valpar- aiso, and that a portion of her war- like cargo is destined for the cruiser Charleston. It is known that Cap- tain Henley of the Charleston re- ceived sealed order's at Honolulu, and it is believed these direct him to pro- ceed southward Meng the Mexicau coast. presumably to Acupulea, where the Charleston could be joined by the San Francisco and the transfer of COLUMBIA FALLS. 73 - A Full Line of nAmsnELL BROS. & SCIIUMACIIER, PEOPS. NOW _READY. Venue's Grist Mill has just been overhauled and put in excellent con- dition for making a first-class article of White or Graham Flour. I will surplus supplies and ammunition could be made from the latter cruiser. Naval officers believe both vessels are ing to Chili, ward Americans in general. The of- ficers of the Baltimore come ashore only during the day and the members of the crow do not come ashore at any time. The officers and crew of the other foreign men-of-war are allowed the liberty of the port at all times. Captain Schley is unwilling to sub- ject his crew to the possibility of an- other attack, and consequently the men are confined to the vessel. The captain visited the Intendente recently and informed him that he desired to send his market boats ashore early in the morning to obtain provisions. This is the custom which is followed by all the men-of-war in port, as provisions can be obtained then better than latter in the day. Early in the morning the landing pier is crowded wit It boatmen, long- shoremen and the rough characters who infest the, saloons along the wa- ter front, and Captain Schley re- quested the Intendene to give him some promise (Jr guarantee of police protection to his market boats, and also to his officers who might desire to come , ashore at night. The Intend ente declined to do so, and since then the Baltimore has been supplied with provisions by boats front the shore, which go out to the cruiser a mile from the landing pier. There is now living on the Balti- more a Dr. Stanley, a British subject, who has lived in Chili for seem , years. lit. vas a witneeei to the , attack upon Turnbull, the Baltimore sailor who received 20 knife wonnds in the affray last month, and afterward died of his injurier.. Dr. Stanley defended the Mall as well as he was able, a lel afterward took him to a hospital and cared for hint. It was known that his testi- I mon). would Is , damaging case, and ebout a wee , k after the af- fair eceured.he was assaulted at Vine del Mar and arrested. Efforts were made I., prevent his ioSibillsty being take», bta alien he was released from prison Ie. wet aboard the Baltimore for pretectioe, and has remained then. ti lies', na mar: :11), , e;ibed nearly $500 in pail alld Inirehased a 1110I111- 111ent plaee (OAT the graves of Big- gins and 'Curt:hull, their two cone ratios who were killed last multi. The monument has been suitably in- scribed and will be placed in position in a few days. senator Ne e s ss On the 20th Senator Preeten B. Plumb of Kansae, died ut Waelting e tem of apoplexy. He was one of the best hetes 71 1111)1ii . men in Washing- t , n1 and a streng friend to western in ingalli is spoken of as his sueeesser, which is an appeintment in tie. power of the governor. if you want a good hex of cigars cheap, go to Murphy & Ce. They deal with the manufacturers. M. ules Simon, the distinguished French statesman and author, is ill. A ton of blankets at the New York 1 Cash Bazar from S2.00 up to the style ' used in the White house. Queen 'Victoria has engaged two hotels at Nice for herself and suite in March next. Butter. Eggs and Cranberries at Goldberg's. Herbert Bismarck has lately at- tracted the attention of the European public by a two free indulgence in the flowing bowl. Hon. J. C. Stkultz, lieutenant gov- ernor of Manitoba, is seriously ill. He has been ailing for some time and physicians fear he is on his deathleal. Married men make your wives a present of a nice piece of silverware. Call at Fullerton's. _ The earl of Beauchamp is about to take up his residence among the poor of the East End, London, to direct mission work for the more unfortu- nate among them. We are prepared to make !ems on real estate in any sum for 3 et time at 10 per cent, interest, payable semi-annually: : Come in and see us. BLODGETT & SULLIVAN. Miss Ethel Ingalls, the daughter of Senator Ingalls, is writing a romance to be ealled \A Shadow of a Dream.\ It is probably based on some of her father's visions. With every dollar's worth of N -nuts goods bought at Fullerton's you will get one dozen Christmas tree candles. Frank R. Stockton is now 57 years old, and has learned to wait an hour for a word he wants to use to come to him. A good-sized bank account aids him in his patience. Owners of Immense Farms Depirted as tin' Coming Moneyed Men of the World. Crops in Ilie Northwest Very barge. Footnig tip 81.1111,000,000 iii the Dakotas soul Minnesota. The'new nenators from the north- west are bringing in wonderful re ports of the immense crops of wheat and other cereals which have been raised this year in the Dakotas and Minnesota, writes Frank G. Carpet - ter in ltis Washington letter. A large part of the wheat of North Dakota is yet unthreshed, and in those comities; where the greatest distress last year the crop is the largest. Hundreds of thousands of bushels of grain are Is - Mg under the snow from the lack of hands to do the harvesting. The local banks are full of money, and the Minneapolis businees men who were here at, the time of the meeting of the rein ii nal it tat committee told me that cords of money were mining from the northwest to them for in- vestment, and that the probability was that. a great amount of Money would be sent oast to 151 loaned. r. Bracket t, one Of the biggest t eperators if Nlinneetixtlis, says that about $l( ),- 100,000 have le,en get ICU out of the two Dakotas and NI nesot a this year, and the farmers of there) states are paying off thcir mortgages and art. lot 'king about for good loans. OW of the biggest farmers of the United States and the man who con - t r ,, Is iss baler as huge an amount of I'll! it lend us any Man ill the l'itited States senate is Senator Casey North Dakota. Th., carthi g ton & Casey Land co:nisei:a has a lar i ge number of square miles ef Dakota land and it lots 5,0tal acres wider cul- tivation. Senator Casey ie the bud - mess manager of this tract. and he is one of the broadest minded farmer:, It! tie, $.44ntil re. 1.I.p it •,•-• - - more like a sment teerateur t hail a farmer, and he is ote. el the :t bus- inese men and litio of the most culti- vated gentleman of the senate. 4- 1 supptr, , e,\ \the biggest farm in the [tined States the Dal- rymple farm, which is located in the Heel River valley and which behaigs to Oliver Dalrymple.. Thie farm eon - United States. 'rice day of cls•iip frllist fyD To sr il Ali t Li lands is passing away. There is very ua:in a lade 11110vellpits1 government. lands left which are worth anything, and the day has cone , when the priees of cereals MUNI rise and the peoltle must pay the farmers what their products are worth. The increased consump- tion of wheat the world over averages A sale of I he Great. Sap- 41MXX00 0 bushels of witted, every plate lit—News in (letter:LI year, and this increase will go on. Around The time will come when there is less wheat, than the world wants, and the prices will have to rise to helms) the farmers to raise it. As it his now it does not pay to raise wheat in most, parts of the United States. The state board of ;agriculture for Ohio lately in the matteer anel found that it rests $20 all nee , le raise whe a t in that state and the secretary of the board of trade of l'oledo made a situ- ilttr inveetigation and found that it ()yters, Butter and I,ggs p4),)„, acre to raise %%geed in the eteet. hey wet in front of Seat horn Michigan. Wt. find that it. Henry Nichelni butcher shop, 48 coste us about, $11 per two'. leek for North Main etrieg. talked a the tine, when whoat will be $1.'a0 a ' minute or two and then Price and ierhain aped toward 1. he e dge of the They were. evidently quarreling mid :Oen,' high vends WRITIN\ A S I ;) :. `\ 1.1()NS • initWo;tti then!, Ina no ow! All Kinds of Ammunition. Stilt fl ( I ) I f \ t,t.11 (inu.4.0N (ADP:IL That the Court cannot neeiteatize as hear t'ut,;ou;h w e s t they were quarreling about. Legal Separation rapers. D.( tOLDBEIZG,Commiseion Dealer, Written in blood ;end l'ermallv seal l'r.\\ eoildeely drew ie revolter from w ee( ie ser , . te at e to rt , eel and signed, was the paper whi e i, Poclog and said, \I'11 give you v,nir just deserts.\ A shol. %yes !Led. Ifteh.y uho......,toio or Joho,..so itV4.11 , • r\.2111 4 ] IS., 0\ itibiiO4 hi the 1 : ,•avi.li ! Tito two 111011 Ilion engaged in a dead- o u th e Wil l strilgglo la , led. several see- n, Nt\.... York also:deli. Greet was laala• (-11 11111 : 1 , •alatiti theit Woke : A way , • f. ,• rt r IT al C , t - surprise of ( 'leak 1.01 e appl i en s , f 'tot hi\' and ,t;tft.s: rin away. Idiom I strange , doom:Alit was pre 110 sl'i , '-'gn 1 \ 1, ra\ off t)... I -11 . .4(.1, and then I : 111111 it was a divorce, but greater still \ 1 .\Inlingt \Oh his I , \ foil 1 1 11 0 II , \ that ol 1111;metistein, w hen, upon re ;seater. Price, ran up to his victim I he revelver at line agsiii mei :Arming his etatemete, he was seine nit tI - cried, 'Fake thee\ Two ein, , were fired. I'. ,e,: 1 , .- tee!. De lt a.) v, eee, !1 iii neck by. 01:i. Lawreere bushel.\ Oysters, Celery and Turk,.ys for Christmas tel the , Nucleus Avenue marlea. Leave. yang order. A DI \:;13'F IN 111,000 In ejected from the court. Tl,.. oxtraordinary paper in ques- tion :vat' as fellows: \With our heart -' blood we do divoreeourselvee, e tt a l t j e t . i ll ''itt l ii r e '' .. 1 1 ' il l Y 1 e l h r ;, \ f u t i d .“ !:::, )t limit e T t r i l e ( l )l i e t t t r cal'ilig frthil t I\: '.11\:in gatig nt i 1 ' - ' Ona, died ,-;atertlay afternoon to, the i (ea ,' ' I \ ) 1 ‘'Y' vl AS 1 l \ . , The !millet had not 1 • • • go their own way and each to do as '''':\. \'Pita'. they like.\ been extracted and death resulted ! . AND .— . • • -. 9 - 4 , IN EW Y 14.,A K 2 S also, Blumenstein were attached te '\\ 27 . Year.) of nate and loaves a is ;.! •._ .• ,,.,a . ' , wet! mother in Chietigo. Ile was l':.: the paper, and :Lt:t) a :anall red , ;:ti , :e : ;dm, ell ler a time) on the Ge.el , The rate , WILS tit!' ! •1• , )ail of the Goetting, the first heving of Frank Freese, of 127 Montrose are •111 \ (• 11 \ 1 \ , '-'\ 11 t4' hot'aus\ of the di i s ,,, t1 that , , leeith he ettiel he tried to eacape free: I G I FT'S' ,............,..._........... ,,,...,„.., extension. .Just before la . nature) which apeeered befere.firi ice enue, who had presented a similar grar''. Ireoresentatives of the: Sapphire : Gremlin, who came from Tidioute, of a,-lato100 during the past ten years. I would make a Mormon elder en en 1 \ 11 ts\'.:ail lie llia a' dos - taints 30,0110 acres of the richest of Da- is remarkable. Both part ie, in ques- ad nogoliationa Flitla.Y with lin' kota lands. The finest farm itt the tion are neiieheas of lb at s,agiou of SPro. 11 Brothi'l*\ \f lit 'It', for the which belongs to E. B. amid .1. L. i n h a bit e d e y 1 h e low or „ h a , th ,„1,,_ $2,e4a1.000, one-half tf, be in cash lied This farm is in the Red River valley firm believer; that mut about 25 mike north of Fargo. it made a divorce legal it;;;111 11:: :: : s ri tl \ .. '1.1 1 1: l h e l . , . r1 \ 1:::: ' ` I -d i ; :1-'1; : I ' l. i ii ''''''''.:'''''' hA ri . ' n ' t ' 4 : 1 ::::d is ' it ': i- cultivation and it has made a profit 1 of polygamous domes: ;eat v that Penesylvania, some years ago and can be learned, it appear: that Pei - bought, a large tract of Dakota land. dents in that section hey , . leng beet, :- has from 10,000 to 15,101 acres under result has been the, making , ,f a state The land; composing it are now witlt envy, and a complication of fain - worth front $35 to ag10 par acre. systematieally arranged, and we know fished detail. business principles. Everything is tion of affairs testatnentery bv est e l, . li.. : 4 - 14 1 - fool- lavn 1 11 P , United States is the Gremlin farm Williamsburg knoweits\Dutelitowit \The big Dakota ferias are run on for some time to come, any adjudiem 111- (. utrli'\ :1 \i\'' \\\r %It'' , fc'''' vend ciase of (Iermans. From what paper as evidence of divorce. ila - affairs that will render invesible.. Ft idtt:. 1 ,1 ;;Itt a 'at oaearred 1 , The condition or affairs disclosed and itultY taallOanY of Montana purchase 0 t 0, suite Ilfit h t0110(1-, fa HS. Inilaitt't. ti fully paid up shares. 1, tiding a distant. , • „I 12 niii.:s. All rho weter righte a, the di-triet, hate I lirou;..7h e-,..---, mat purcbas , ..-. place as one orcurring h eo :,•, e , ei e• l eh. Iii'. ground p,e - Tie. re:lin:my is sleeked for fa1,0t.0 , ' '' awl the eame ‘ll4tie-, vallev. _your heart just exactly wliat everything costs The Germans themselves are sin tweiths ago. This is nit: 1 11 \I l t te;ar‘,..() in awl what everythiag is worth to its, core in their belief, :tad the est:an:I, 1d will re - 1 ; r e:, the previous outs an Kenai; , ie r , . the expeediture of considerable Call awl bc• convinced that we can A farm like ours, for instance, has its ation of the practice to the bookkesper, its overseer and its mit- time is I I _aintql by OW authorities t11 , t 111*. :Ind ii , tuit'y 10 rl • Pair 1 he damage. 1 SaV9' you from 10 to 15 per etlit. ployes. We have reports every day the willinguess of certain unprinci- I Th'' (:\I''\: veie is front 8 to 35 feet I from the'tip th ee . 1 , et wean the walls. The ground, after ' farm, showing just what has paled pettifoggers to draw i Ask for what ;mu do :se -,... and we -., ''in'. have is', held up by tim- : : been done during the day and what simple palters for a fee of from al) to 'fl u . f or _ will furnish it. : hers ,vitliout waste filling. each man, each horse and each ma- i $10 and assure: their legality. chine has done. We estimate the :Nation is of that nature which air- , pe.t wear and tear of every machine in 11 Heart Pressr g. 1 ,,,,, shicks or crumbh:s on exitosuse to the' Res c fully yours, :s ve proportion to the amount of work I alie heart of Gambetta was given et inos pm e e , th us a ll ow i ng t h e tim- ' it does, and we credit it with soon all its I sn after his d m (loath to his uet heti- 1 oers to slip from their position and i THE - NEVI YORK CASH BAZAR. mate friend, M. Paul Bert. who care- lnesen the wodge.s. repairs, and know its life and value. We know just what each acre of i fully placed it in a glass vase full of . The jury in the case' o!' Jonas Fried wheat ost us and the profits arisin !alcohol; but when he left for Tonquin , after twing out three hours last Fri- I cs g from it, and we can tell to a cent jus he deposited the heart in an iron safe. , du 3 , brought in a verdict of guilty of ! t A short while afterward M. Bert died, ' burglary in the first degree, fixing the how much of an interest, we urn get- L — a T T / r \All farming of this kind is clone til recently, wheel the preciona relic , Cary. This i th , e matter of tin' Chi- so the receptaclo was not opened tin- sentence at two soars in the peaiten- 1 ting on the capital we have invested. on a large scale. We have for in- I was taken from its long abiding place ne se rei t re, e. a t M ,ene t sl , e p. ti e: , ' stance 20 harvesters, and we can liar- I )3' Madame Bert and given to the , ago . In t L, i „,,..., is trial all tit , fold _ I HAS RECEIVED , ants were tried tee- - , lea and the samo I A fine lot of Underwear. All vest 320 acres of wheat a day. In 'charge of the committee, who had it putting in the: wheat we drill in about encased in metal and then put in a ' verdict Was giveei. sizes, all grades, all prices. 250 acres a day, and our maehines are , wooden coffer made with Alsatian all worked under the direction of a wood. This also contained a parch- ' If voe wish to make preemption fil- ! HAS RECEIVED homestead filing, give notice of I foreman, so that m:ither time nor la- ment att.esting its authenticity, and Tg' final proof, or make Your final proofs, I Large additions to his Gents' bor is lost. We can thresh from 1,200 after the usual ceremonies, it was de- : go to Langford et Blom to 2,000 bushels of wheat a day with posited in a small vault under the It is well to remember the New ! 1 one machine, and the grain runs from beautiful monument which was re- Iork Caah Bazar. Step in and see which is now Complete. the threshing machines into wagons, cently raised to the memory of the all the pretty things on sale. : HAS IN STOCK and these are dumped into the pit of great patriot at the entrance to the our grain elevator, and are carried by Jardies by the Alsatians and Lor- an endless chain of buckets to the rainers ' rooms in which we wish it to be Fred Grant is growing more and stored.\ more like his father in personal up - \Do you not think, senator, that the Itearance. To those who are not fa - tendency of the times is tcra'ard small miliar with him, and who knew his farms rather than large ones',\ father. the resemblance is said to be \No replied Senator Casey, \I do very striking. not. I think everything points to ex- pansive farming. The farms of the future in this country will be largo ones.ratliftrihna.nutill,ouetb...,,Y ing becomes more and more of a lois- fornia. ' mercial Traveling Men. Notice for Publication. 1,and ()11;c:. al Misnoulw, Mout., 1tecembor it. NA. ). Notice it: heroby givvti that Ow t\Ilowing ler lin.. filed mitten of Mit 'Aloft to make Mial priaif in 1-iipport of his claim . , and I lint wild 1r1 111:t111 , 11,4411 . /. A. Swaney, I ',mi. IT. S. circuit court, dist clef of Montana, It 'oinailiitt Far:, ,'ii' Jan. Seeorri, W111111111/10 1111I-1•mpt ion D. S. No. 14, for t It. '2 anti :ee. It, p. 01 it, r 20 west. tianior witnes:.es 90 proVe/ ltt 101111111.11/11h 111,I II ;11111 en111V3C I) iney Dail* U , O, 4/41 and 't'a xe1 4 1:ne ie., hens. stew ea. • thi %lir !,rotest agaillS9 the of • tie!, pro. ;. ‘%t,, Inowser iiny 4•.1 toll, owl,' !lo• 1:1,% /1111111W 1 . 1.411. i'ittrielc w:ts shot w ,„.„ „ i , I„• why midi (1.1t41 mu (lit. center Of Butt. al a ft , ty •'' •''' ..\' \ H .\ n \.. 1 lutilitult -' hi Its u (it lix Is Iasi Friday , ••• io II I I I tol,lit9111 Melling. ()Wing to ill(' I',''it • 1:1;i/I . :!: H II IT, Itettister. tr• 11;;••• I I VOU'i i I n rOSSi I )/‘ : - ;149 a diet:Ince het feet. The deed %Van c ( nIllil . 11toi hi' ('uiuuuitghitiuii's cousin. ( (I. D. GOI DBFFil'; 2 Th,. 1„ , t.,.. t!„ l'IL ,0 Silk oil Niuin strom, Charles It, Price Kills Ills Cousin Patrick .1. roiliniughtint in it Quar- rel Over linsities:. 1,1 II., I: . ALL KINDS OF FRUIT. Tobacco and Cig - aF, Candies and Nuts. 1.5 MAKING I\ .1 ; I N Fresh line of candy at the Model drug store. All articles in Tin and Hard - THE WILL TAKE YOUR ORDER Fur Custom Made Suits, and Guarantees Good Fits. Don't send your money to outside unknown concerns when you ONLY FIRST-CLASS HOTEL IN THE CITY. can get a perfect suit from a - NEfiCILVES' HOTEL NOV; OPLN PCBLit diday11 , OF DESIRABLE To reduee our stock as rapidly as possible ill order to snake room for HOLIDAY BEPLAY We will eater inducement,. in many lines of staple and desirable , goods at SIICII 'Di PRICES A - 3:et was never heard of in this viii ii-, Please bear in mind that. our se w ! : is the largest; our stoek is the e , lesi, and our price:. are the , near - and purse of any house Furnishing Goeds Departmetut ware. do a general custom business for farmer,. The mill be.under,tho pervision of i first class miller. Sat- I The still Am.try. There is no change in tlw attitude isfaction Guaranteed, displayed toward the Baltimore, or in JESSE VF,NXE. Prop. the nttitede of the Chitin') publie to - For pure whisky and wines go to Murphy & Co. We buy direct front distillers. Fresh Oysters at Goldberg's. --- Hurrah for the Christmas head- querters at Fullerton's drug store! iness every year, and the outlook is that from now on farming will be one of the lee.t plying hull:fairies. , ef the Pullertotee. _ _ Squashes weighing 250 -to 300 Home Merchant. ura mum= i n s m tk arzt cat Sample ROOME for the Accommodation of Com- of those fine albums at REMEMBER, Make your wife or best girl a pros- c.% p ent of one T I \ c: Chrj Sowers. 1'11,101(4,w ,..)111,1 I