POPE'S BRIEF ' : 4 GIVEN OUT To Provide Financial Assistance For Catholic University. BROUGHT BY CARDINAL GIBBONS Baltimore, Oct. 13. Cardinal Gib bons gave out the following transla tion ( i the brief of Pope Plus X. rela tive to the Catholic University la .Washington, which was brought by His Eminence when he returned from his attendance cn the conclave: "To our beloved son, James Cardi nal Gibbons, cardinal priest of tho Holy Uou::!i Church, with the title of Santa M.tri.i In Trastevere, nrch liiidiop of l.;iltimon and chancellor of the C;it:.:l:r I'niv. r.dty at Washing- 1 in. niliKn of the univ ri;y nt t i listcil our d"cpest inccrsi. Iu;inr:i!i as :.:' pu'imitti'd by yuur that its h flairs are : .i ncimva ;uni as wo 5 t t ii.it wt- yhouM :. of d'lr prvdi i :.sor r'a n " (( iiidili- projects, iv )i :i ; j !- ,if i;ri'at I ' 1 o;it tin1 ponnisp of In tills spirit wo are t'liip . and. as far as may in tlii- cxi-r.,isi of tin? ' t!i - inf.v.'t which wo ri.-hd toward tills dis- "Thi1 . War.h'i!-.. syt.i! 'at:. till' I I : II ' i : : : :iit :!!'. :m:' ! v. . loll, w t! Jtl t:" I i I ;. iiii'l Jan.: Lire pi. a t'l CI t r.ios' l ave , titu "V1 d Aric r i . : n f'i;ndutimi. !' w-' b'aru with irciuiine ratlsfin tit, n that the bishops charged with tli n,.rovp.l of all other;- intcr-tsti-1 in i' : h!:':t. tl;at a oil.', t! m be tn. n in hi all the cl urches thrrtuhi i; the Vnired States ninually for 11 y. ;,r - cn the flr.st Sunday of Ad vent, or ti.o first conv nicnt Sunday thcri after, with a view of enhaiiPltiK tho iliir.ity and c nlaiKias the intlu rncc of this noble pent of loarn'ni;. "This i !ar., the result of their joint delllicratif i:s, we consider most bene ficial. It is therefore, our earnest wish and prayer that all the bishops of the country, ns well as the faithful who have at heart the progress of learning and religion, should labor strenuously for the good of the uni versity. "That C,od may be pleased gracious ly to help this undertaking by His grace, we lovingly Import to you and to the faithful committed to your care the npofstollic benediction. "Given In Home, nt St. Peter's, on the Hth day of September, 1903, the first year of our pontificate. 'TIL'S TP.. X." Thirteen- c In Oi Wllmlnr ; Koeklski. : ; Polish pat i ni . d Itch wlthi . : . v , reso' i j on Bradforr T"n. lu South v Y ; ton, and In- i-.atlon show.'j ':i it j had been a ulted and then h,m I Into the w' t. From the fact that she had b . iBtlng a sick neighbor her p, : : supposed the was spending tne n. there, and made no Inquiry whon she failed to return home. A Polish christening at which much beer was drank, took place In tne neighborhood, and the police think there is a connection between this af fair and the crime, although they are as yet without a clue. Dr. Rastlan conducted a thorough examination of the girl's body, which revealed that sne had been first as saulted and then drowned. The police are being assisted in their Investiga tion by Officer J. Abokwiski, who is a native Pole. A sailor, giving his name as John Smith was arrested at his home in this city with the hope that ho can throw some light on the murder. The prisoner is a Pole, and it Is said that he recently -a:ii from Philadelphia, lie Is said to have served an appren ticeship in the navy. lb? was put thrnc'h the "sweating process, aft r which Chief of Police I'lack declined to give any informa tion. sayitK lie had not completed his investigation. The man is still held. i FABLE Hosti'i ;sia and Japan foment. NEGOTIATIONS REACH A CRISIS. BOLD ATTEMPT TO WRECK TRAIN Obstruction Placed On Southern Rail way Track at High Trestle. jCanvUIii Ya.. Oct. 12. A bold at temptwa nmd. to- wreck passenger trait Xo. -1 on the Norfolk division of ! the Southorn railway about three miles east of this city. The track had been piled wjth cross tics and a fish plate. Tho train was running at a very Flow rat" of ppoed. and but for this fact a iii-a'-;roiis wreck undoubtedly wouM have oc ".rri d. Tho ohsTm-Mim was I'Uu . 1 a: ti." end of a lii'-rh tr. Co, nr.d !: ''.is-..-ter of three w-. ks ego n. ; I v..- !,. , n duplicated. I'o--tuna ii" tr.i.-k was straight at this P1'-!'-'. : i' 1 :' tigineer got his train (low:, to :-n- i. i-p.--o.l that when lie str., k the tYs no damage resulted. Tbi.- train fr. 'in Norfolk is usually a i:.d l.a.l it been so this have reached this point It is supposed the wreck this when they placed the oliBtrui tion cn the track. There is a strong opinion here that there is a gatg vt train wreckers in this lorality, and it has been on open secret that tho railroad company be lieves the wreck of No. 97 here three weeks ag'i was caused by an obstruc tion phut d on the track at the bridge. This attempt gives color to the theory. There was a largo number of passen gers on the train. little !:.-. tin.e we:', after dark, ( rs knew BIG BLAZE AT HARRISBURG, PA. Manufacturing Plant Destroyed and State Printing Office Damaged. Harrisburg. Pa., Oct 13. Poll Bro thers" manufacturing establishment I was completely destroyed by fire, In vol vine a loss of $100,000, which Is partially covered by Insurance. The burying rejoins the state printing of f!e, which. tfd; fire and was damaged to the ex'rnt of t!0"0. The flames also c '!:.::.'. ;.;af ted to the Mulberry strct ! :: ':;', a portion of which was 'urr.-'.. This l-r: ise is owon 1 by the ity of H:trr..-iji.rg, and the !uss will '.X" about t -'.'"'.'. T.oil Vr'r).-r- man'ifactured i'on and l-rass b'-! at'' mattresses, and em ployed : l.and. Their building Is afi:::;l ,r. i;:. The fire K'.rtiteil in the ci.gii, r'x.tu and burned fcr ev- en.1 1' SHOT FOR A BURGLAR Strange Actions of Retired Trenton Hctelkeeper Mzy Cause His Death. Trenton. N. J., Oct. 12. Henry Mro.vn, n retired hotelkeeper and a man of considerable means, was mis taken for a burglar and was shot by Peter Kotz, into whose house lirown had forced an entrance. Hrown was shot twice in the head, and his physi cians have no hope for his recovery. Hrown's act in breaking into Kotz's house is unexplainable, except on tho ground of insanity. Hrown was act ing Ftrangely in the early part of tho evening, and is said to have been drinking quite heavily. Kotz lives In a suburb remote frqm Brown's house, and the two men and their families were entirely unacquainted. About 3 o'clock in the morning Kotz heard a noise down stalr$. and getting his revolver, went down to the draw ing room, followed by his wife, carry ing a dim light." Kotz demanded to know who Drown was and what he wanted. Drown made no answer, but Instead walked toward Kotz, who. thinking Drown was a burglar, and fearing for his )wn life, fired twice. Crown fell with the second shot, and has remained unconscious since. Kotz Immediately gave himself up to the police and is still under arrest Brown was taken to St. Frances' hospital. His unconscious condition permits of no explanation of bis conduct, but the supposition Is that In his bewildered condition he thought he was getting Into his own home. He made his entry through a window. London, Oct 13. All despachet from the far east indicate that war between Japan and Russia over the Korean and Manchurlan situations la inevitable, and that newB to the effect that hos i tilltles have commenced may be looked for at any hour. The latest messages say that Japan has fully occupied Ma sanpho with troops and that a declara tion of war is expected simultaneously from Tokio and St. Petersburg. The foreign official says It has no confirma tion of the movement of troops. I The correspondent of the "Morning j Post" at Che-Foo says: "It is stated that the Japanese have decided to declar hostilities on the expiration of their ultimatum to Rus ; sia. The Russian fleet lias cleared from i Port Arthur." Later, he reported that tip to Sunday no chanre had I occurred in th" filuatlon. although l hostilities were believed to be inir.ii : rent, and that the Rassian.; bad fix- d I Friday next for eginning light inc.. In spite of the reassuring : t;itn;"ti : .-. of the foreign office and Itavon II i; -a.-hi. the frequent reiteration that hu.. tilitics between Russia and Japan are imminent, the mysterious movements' of th'! Rus.;hm and Japanese fleets aod the cxi ited state of public opinion in Japan are beginning to cause disquiet in Croat Britain, which, by reason of her alliance with Japan, is so inti mately concerned In any action which the latter may take In the far east. ' Only the most sang"ine persons be lieve that in the evcRt of hostilities j they could be kept within tho limits which would free Great Britain from ; her oldigation to support her Japanese! ally. Even Daron Hayashi, who here tofore has ridiculed all suggestion of war, is not so optimistic. Indirectly j he admits tho possibility of war by. expressing the hope that In the event An Ambassadors Trials n TRYING EXPERIENCES OF HON. ANDREW D. WHITE IN GERMANY "Chapters from My Diplomatic Life," written by Hon. Andrew D. White for the Century Magazine, tells many interesting stories. . It has sometimes seemed to me, he writes among other things, while doing duty at the German capital In those days as minister, and at a more recent period as ambassador, that I could not enter my office without meeting pome vex atious case. One day It was an Ameri- 1 m .; v bit. ANKItKYV 1). WIIITK (For Many Yiars American AmLa. -adorat liiTlln, Uermuny.) can who, having thought that patriotism required him, In a crowded railway car riage, loudly to denounce Germany, the German people, and the imperial govern ment, had passed the night in a guard house; another day It was one who, feel ing called upon, In a restaurant, to pro of a crisis Japan will have the active1 ?alra ,vtery l1ol:,,ly a"dt F'lyWs sympathy of her ally, Great Dritaln While refusing to credit the reports of an ultimatum having been delivered, Baron Hayashi admitted that the di plomatic situation had changed since October 8, and that developments may have arisen from the failure of the Russians to fulfill their enggements to evacuate Manchuria on that dato. Ho however, had heard nothing from his government on the subject. favorable opinion of the f mperlor, was arrested; on still another occasion it was one of our fellow-citizens who, having thought that he ought to be married In Berlin as easily as In New York, had found himself entangled In a network of regulations, prescriptions, and prohibi tions. Of this latter sort there were In my time several cnrlous cases. One morn ing a man came rushing Into the legation In high excitement, exclaiming: "Mr. MinUter, I am In the worst fix that any decent man was- ever In. I want you to help me out of If," and he then went on with a bitter tirade against everybody Ferdinand nf Dnlararla, Mont DUIIked Holer In Europe, Stronger Th nn Ever Ilefore, "A CRIME AGAINST GOD" I Lutheran Council So Declares Dissolu tion cf Marriage Bonds. ' Norristown. Pa., Oct. M. The Gen-1 ( rat Council of th.o Kvangolieal I.uth-j eran Church, in session hero, aft r discussing the divorce question, pa.-s-cd resolutions declaring the dissolution ! of marriage bonds "a crime against ' God that cannot be mitigated or apolo-i gi.ed for by any defects or the civil ! laws or any lowering of tho rtandard prescribed in God's word on the part I of the community around them, or j those who may be regarded leaders of public opinion. Licenses issued by the state cannot be a guide to the con science of either pastor or applicants. Every movement to promote a general uniformity of legislation in our various state governments is worthy of hearty encouragement, in the interests of sound morality, so that ultimately the prescriptions tvnct-rniug marriage aji i divorce may be the some in all the Btatos and territories of the 1'nlfed States." The General Council admitted to membert-hfp the Now York and New England Synod, representing 3J.p'io communicants, and tbe Nova Scotia Synod, which has a membership of about SrtOO. Has Reached a Crisis. Berlin, Oct. 13. A dispatch from Shanghai to the Frankfurter Zeltung states that news has reached there from Chefoo to the effect that the Jap- anese have occupied Masampho, and nmvt that an official declaration of war is. 13 HOLDING HIS 0W. ( expeciea. ' The relations between Japan and Russia have reached a crlsls.aocordlng to the official newa here. The exact nature of the diplomatic exchanges be tween the two governments that brought out the present tensity appear t i bo unknown at the legation of tho two countries here or at the German legations at .St. Petersurg and Tokio, although it is understood that Great Britain is privy to Japan's movements. IHspatehes from Che-Foo report that a Russian warship and a transport with TiOO troops left Port Arthur Octo ber 4 for Corca. The Russian forces at New Chwang are reported to havo been Increased. and everything In the German empire. When his wrath had effervesced some what he stated his case as follows "Last year, while traveling through Germany, I fell In love with a young German lady, and after my return to America became engaged to her. I have now come fot my bride. The wedding Is flxpd for next Thursday; our steamer passages are taken a day or two later. And I find that the authorities will not allow me to mar ry unless I present a multitude of pa pers such as I never dreamed of! Some i of them It will take months to get, and, some I can never get. My intended bride , Is in distress: her family evidently dls- i .trust r.ic; the wedding Is postponed In definitely; and my burinrss partner bi cabling me to come bad ;o America cs soon as possible. I am ashed for a baptismal certificate a Tai:f:chci::. Now, so far as I I. now, I was never bap tized. I am required to present a cer tificate showing the consent of n.y par-, ent to my marriage I, a man years old and In a large business of my own! I am asked to five bonds for the payment of my debts In Germany. I owe no such debts; but I know no one who will giie such a bond. I am no'Sflc'" that the banns must be pnblb-Vd a certain num ber of t!:n s 1: ' the wedc'.lng. What Mni n' a country is this, anyhow?" j We did the best we could. In nn Inter- . view with the minister of public worship ' 1 was nb'.e to secure a dispensation from I the publishing of the banns; then a bond . was drawn up, which I signed and thus settled the question regarding possible i debts In Germany. As to the baptismal I certificate, I ordered Inscribed, on the j largest possible sheet of official paper, ' the gentleman's affidavit that. In the state of Ohio, where ha was born, no Taufscheln, or baptismal tertlflcate, was required at the time of his birth, and to this was affixed with plenty of wax the largest seal of the legation. The form of the affidavit may be Judged peculiar; but It was thought best not to startle the authorities with the admission that the man had not been baptized at all. They could easily believe that a state like Ohio, which some of them doubtless re garded as still In the backwoods and mainly tenanted by the aborigines, might have omitted. In days gone by, to require a Taufscheln; but that an un baptized Christian should offer himself to be married In Germany would perhaps have so paralyzed their powers of belief that permission for the marriage might never have been secured. Severe; Nervous Trouble and Dyspepsia. No Sleep for WeefcJ Because of rain. Dr. Miles' Nervine GtJ cac& rieaith. Dyspepsia nearly al ayi nrises from i fc is n. t will the emite M'strm m'iriN r? itination. I aJ brum:., ti ur ii.ni ,; ... ribie coiii. qarnrex if tint triatnl m Hvirttivi.l mill nil nrvii?v iliu n., j i , - - .-"..ii. My lie.tha was min-raHr fur u-irt,,!., ere l.rrvuus trouble end c'l--,.,,',. cn al.le l i p f r wttkiB, n.t b ing awakened wiih , , revere I'.nd not I 'C tuns w it Ik my chest rt J itt mach. Vv liir I un il le to i'o niv hi ue v .. (eciit ci ii pi. tely mini t '; l.ul d to hiM: I. e. ; lid n'lort; I. i Ii . s ;. ai m. t f ti.i r nit dim i-s I 1 irg lJr. M:!is' li. s'.irjt:ve .'. .Nirv and liver !'::'. I i,' . Vrimi the fust bull!.-..I Noni; . ili-t-O Ut'.iT th.-ii 1 !..: ! i.i nJi bcea K;i tivi:-h ,u i '. in pianv v.is. h.u t l of Nirvine mid Nmc niel l. vi,- : ra t thr e tears Lut li. c re t t l ite ns I havi! n t Silt trit; n- i , about my vci'k un entirely Uir and have rt l.hiii. lie:. I ih.r.i t mae.v eiij le. 1 i.m ;i i ;r-.r. i . ' , MihV Ncv n.d .'.i-.-r P.i':,, I . ) ml all the i.iin-. I I. el v v ; llif I'r. Miles Keiiu'iiii ."- .'.!:;. w.iN. Mecliamc b. lb, M . All ilruists nil .nr.d (--.nrr.-l tie lr. Miles' Ken-.-' I Si-t ( in NervoiK anil lb-alt !:m , I'r. Miles Medical Co., bir-han, ;tsj i' 'ttcr, n In. i t: ' It W.V,E; CLEVELAND IS HAPPY. "Silver Plate that Wsare." When You Buy Spoons knlvM, fork!, etc., buy rellnblo brsnrti, even If tliejr do coat a. little lucre. Tber rj worth the dlflereucc. I f I S4T " a part of the itamp It Inaurm gpnulH JUiKera quality, (aiuoui tut wear. Full trade-mark "1847 fold by leading dealer. For CaUloia, No. igi.addreaa tha makera, I International Slim Co. Merlden.Conn Stork Una Asnln Vlalted Rs-Prealden-ttnl llnnafhnl.l anil Heft An otlier Lllatjr Day. A eon was born to ex-President and Mrs. Grover Cleveland at their summer home, Uuzzard's Bay, Mass., on July IS. Tho new arrival is the fifth of the Ball Player Goes Insane. Andover. Mas? , Oct. 12. After fell ing his nurse with a terrific blow over the head with a stove poker, Edward Doheny, the Ilttsburir' National League base ball pltoher, for more than an hour, armed with the same weapon, held a score of neighbors and several policemen at bay. Finally ha was overpowered and after an exam ination by two physicians was ad judged Insane and committed to tha asylum at Danvers. The nurse, Oberlin Howarth, Is seriously hurt, but it is believed he will recover. MRS WILLIAMS ACQUITTED Jury in Philadelphia Poisoning Case Returns Verdict of Not Guilty. Philadelphia, Oct. 10. The jury lata last night returned a verdict of not guilty in the case of Mrs. Emma Wll lianiF, whoce trbil for the murder of her two iiii'.dien has been In proreM--here for th- pact four weeks. T. woman was an iised of adininintrriii;; arsenic to her little daughters In ord.-r to secure the Insurance on their lives. John Williams, her husband, was also Indicted for the crime, and his trial will follow. Both vehemently denied any knowlpdge whatever of the cause of the children's death. The defenue in Mrs. Williams' trial contended thct no motive had been proved, as It wa3 shown that after the funeral expenses hd been paid only a trifling sum re mained. Upon conclusion of the trial, Wil liams, the husband, was also discharg ed from custody, the district attorm-y stating to tbe court that he would lie unable to present any testimony in Ids rase different from that on which tho Jury had acquitted Mrs. Williams. Bulgaria Is nominally a tributary atate of Turkey; yet In practice it maintains a more independent posi tion, perhaps, than any other of the liallfan states. It has objected so strongly to being regarded as con nected with Turkey that the United Staw s government no longer communi cates with it through our minister nt Constantinople, but has assigned It to the territory of the minister to Greece, who is aluo accredited to Kotimania and Servia. Ferdinand, the reigning prince of Bulgaria, is tho youngest Fon of the late Prince Augustus of Saxe Coburg and Gotha, and was 20 years old when. In July, 18S7, he was elected by the national assembly of Bulgaria to succeed a prince who had abdicated In the preceding year. Ferdinand has had a hard and trying experience, Inas much as the sultan v.- not willing to confirm him. and thr prrat powers were r.ot willing to give 1:1m thnir formal ap protnl until 1816. when he had been ronie nine yrars on the throne. Ferdi nand Is not very popular In Bulgaria, n H li v nnramnn pnnsnnl tha TJTiirnnpan ' , MRS. GKOVKK CLKVELAND. ,a . ..... ....... .... . (gfce ,,.ls Just it.ronlf, a nappy Mother for rauranuriMB singling nim out. as uif mmiw tr t vr i butt of International ridicule. Yet he holds his own, and the chances, are that he will so conduct himself as to Strengthen his position and to remain Li :uri- it could be -.xtin- jruislnd. Th'' st: by i'VirAi prir.tin? off. re Is owned ' VV. Hlv, and the damag? to t!i; LuiiCii.g U covered by Insurance. F':od Cauced Suicide. E'r;:r. :. .. Oct. 12. George Her bert, a i'-'.i:i tiii-nhant and former out.'. of Carbondale, committed fculci r Ly Rhiyjtlr.g himself In the i;ea0 with a revolver. Two of his propi rties were inundated by the flood. He was brwling over the pos elbllity cf bit tenants leaving him ar;d betatue deranged. He viciously as eauited Liu wife, and then, going up stairs, locked himself In bis room and look hit life. He had been a trifle eoctnUic tor a number oi 7 ears. Midshipman Accidentally Killed. New York, Oct 12. Midshipman Jo seph Paul Ferriera was shot and killed by Midshipman Mario Heckther on board the Brizillan man-of-war Ben jamin Constant, lying in the North river. The middles were In their quarters, when In examining hit pit lol, Heeksher accidentally discharged it The ball struck Fcrrelra In the left temple, killing him Instantly. Thu youthB were chums, and Heckther wat frantic with grief at the tragedy. He Helped Capture Jeff Davit. Hutchinson, Kan., Oct IS. Captain S. I. Stauter, who wat flnt lieuten ant In chart of tha troop of Michigan cavalry that captured Jefferton Datla, It dead at bla horn her. Pennypacker Feart a Lynching. Harrisburg, Pa., Oct. 13. Governor Pennypacker has refused to honor a requisition made upon him by Govern or Hunn, of Delaware, for the return to New Castle of ETd Riley, co!ord. 1 who Is wanted for the criminal as.iault 1 of a 10-yesr-old girl. The governor ; said that he wanted full Information ! In regard to the crime with which I luiey is cnarcea, ana win make, an investigation beire he grants the ex tradition of the negro to Delaware. Ri ley la under arrest In Philadelphia. It It thought the governor feart that If? Riley It sent back to Delaware ha may be lynched. 1 ne profession 01 uiackstone evidently strikes the fancy of the ambltlout Chl goan, at there are fully 4,071 lawytn U present record. Wishing people ill luck It a utelm waste of time; it will come of itself If let alone. Humor la often mora of than It U an acouliement a dittate . FKRDINAND OF lifLGARIA. (The Man I'pon Whoae JudKmnnt Ui penOs the Peace of Europe.) j for a long time to come upon a throne Which he has now occupied for 16 years. A new cabinet came into power in Bul garia the latter part of May. The new prime minister is Gen. Petroff, who Is. recognized at a very strong and com petent Bulgarian leader. The retiring cabinet of M. DaneS had come to be re garded in Bulgaria at altogether sub servient to instruction from St. Pe tersburg. - Telephoa la Erery Salle. In New York city there are 12 hotels, each of wnlch has more than 300 tele phones. , .... . , the Flllh Time.) Cleveland children, and has three sis ters and a brother. Grover Cleveland and Miss Frances Folsom were married In the blue room of the white house June 2, 1SSG, during Mr. Cleveland's first administration, when he was 4'J years old. , Ruth, the first child, was born at No. 816 Madison avenue, New York, Octo ber 13, 1891. She was named after Mrs. Cleveland's grandmother, and as "Baby Ruth" ruled Washington soci ety during her father's second term of office. Esther Cleveland is the only child of a president to be born in tho while house, being ushered into tho world September 9. 18'J3. Mnrion Cleveland was born at Buz zard's Bay July 7, 1895. ' lib-b ird Folsom Cleveland, the stur dy little chap who has been adopted by tho Princeton students as their own especial mascot, was born at Prince ton, N. J.. October 28, 1897. Shylock was the man wanted a pound of huirx flesh. There are man Shylocks now, the convale- cent, the consumptive, it . sickly child, the pale yor.j woman, all want human ilesi and thev can cet it takd Scott's Emulsion. Scott's Emulsion is and blood, bone and muscle. It feeds the nerves, strengthen the digestive orsrans and thejf feed the whole body. For nearly thirty yea Scott's Emulsion has beentkf great giver of human flesh. We will send you a couple cf ounces free. SrnTT Mt bowne. Chemist 408-415 Pearl Street. NewY 30c tad fi.oo ; all dragguU. Ilea 1 a Unman Oatrlrh. Dr. Monnlcr has Just reported to tho Paris Academy of Medicine a case of a young man with an extraordinary stomach. He entered St. Joseph's hos pital May 19, suffering from severe pains. A bard body was felt In the stomach. He waa operated on on June 25, when the doctor extracted eight tea spoons, a three-pronged fork, a sharp pointed four-Inch knife blade, a key, a long tooth comb, and other articles, numbering altogether 25 and weighing half a pound. The man now is recover ing and states that he tried suicide In this way. C. RUTTER, M. Dl Physician and Surgeotf Port Trevorton, Pa Offers his Professional Service, the Public. All Calls Promptly H tended. jVTi-n !pvi.-ii 1 r ixni-KTi'ioI'SM aona In eut'b utile to travel for Iioiim '"''j ril eleven yrnrn unil Willi a Inrfc-e capitol.1' upon iih r linnta anil awnta fur aiicw'"' " prolltnliln line. Permanent eiitm;ftiicnt ly man aulnrv of IH nml all trnvrliliK F nlid hotel hilla atlvanivtl in ranli "''h,": Kxpcrlenr not t-aM'htial. Mention rt!!J n.,,1 t..,l..aA .lr o.l.lr....... ..,.l,ill. iR NATIONAL. 3i4 .OearbornSt. Chlco WANTKD SKVERAf. PERSON'S OK A aSSkr anil nood repiitatinn In each atat' (7J na LMiiiniy reiiireu; 10 repreaeni a lie oh! ratiihllHheil wealthy liualm-M mild financial atandlnir rialary "3 .l.li,l.....l .11 ..n.al,ll tD T direct every Wedneailay from head 2 Of ae and earriaire furn alied when n""i llefeienceo. Kneloae a U adilreased Colonial . IK1. Dearborn tit., Cblcairo . . , MANAQER WANTED. Triiatworthy lady tr gentleman to ""J bUalneaa in thlat'outilyand adjolnlnf ""j forwolland favorably known Howe Snanclal atandlnir. liM.uO atralght i"TL and eipenaaa, paid each Monday by - reot from headquartera. Kxpenae moMJl rancedi poaltion permanani, Addra I Manager, 610 Jleaea BI4f. Ckklj v-aviaa J