i-'jlWllSf WS) Y"W'" TWV''""" m -vvflpr ' -rr' 'fvrrprr" T)rTT'-'y CITY CITY COURIER, SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1889 l r FAST MAIL ROUTE ! 'FX'Tf' VL 2 DAILY TRAINS - 2 TO AtchUon, Lt-nvcnwo'tb, St. Joicph, Kansas City, St. Louis and nil points South, East nnd West. Tlc illrcct line to. 1ft. Scott, I'nrsons. Wichita, Hutchhuon nnd nil principal points In Knnsns. The only roml to the Great Hot Springs of Arknnnns, Pullman Sixeit.uh and Frcu RrcuNi.su Cham Cars un all trains, H.G. HAM, R. P. R. MILLAR, Pitt Ti" ARcn Gcn'l Agent. SALE PRINCIPAL POINTS EAST, WEST, NORTH and SOUTH 1044 O STREET. & WttWAUKEl 'tMJl Owns nnd operate 5.500 miles of thoroughly Quipped rond tn Illinois, Wuconsln, Iowa,, Mlsourl,Mium'S0tn nnd Dakota. ,, ., it Is the lient Direct Itoute betwwn nil tbo Prluclpnl Points In the Northwest, Southwest nd Far West. . For maps, tlmo (utiles, rates of nnssngo nnd freight, etc., nuply to nenrcst station agent oJ Chicago, Milwaukee a St. Paul Raii. way, or to nny Railroad Agent nnywhere Is It M tU.EH, A. V. H. CARPENTER, n.nml l',f'r floil'l Inii. AT'kt Act. F. TUCKER, GEO. H. HEAFFOUp, Un. Ocn' Mgr. Asst. U. 1. & T. Agt. Milwaukee, Wisconsin. twVo: Information In referenee to ?jindt ud Towns owned Uy the Chicago, Milwau kee A Bt. Paul Hnllwny S-'tl'&iuvi: O. HAUOA,Uind ComiuMoner.Mlllwaukeo Wisconsin. Fremont, Elkhorn & Mo. Valley K-&.IXiK.OJ5k.XJ. JSpOperntes and con. trols Its own service between ."' L1NC0EN,EB., and OMAHA, CHICAGO, MILWAUKEE, SIOUX CITY MINNEAPOLIS and ST. PAUL. fit Tim UhHuO on "JjfjJI TO AXjXj HEH (W Through Tickets and Baggage Checked to U points In United Butes and Canada. Yefrtlbule Sleepers, Palatial Dining Cars and Union Depots, i CITY TICKET OFFICE 1 115 Bouth 10th strwt, - Lincoln GEO. Ml FOKESMAN", Agent. a. O, Bout, J. K. Hucbakax, General M'ger. an'U'M. Ag 't OMAHA, NEB. MRS. KAT'liEIUNE CHASE. A TALK WITH A WOMAN WHO HELPED MAKE HISTORY. HAS HU Hit n I'nrtii Nrnr WiuliliiRtnii Now Whloli Hhn Mnuairrs llnwolf Tim llntigli (cr f Ono of tlm "War SecretnrlrV Wtin.o I.lfn Him Is Writing. (Special Corroioinlcneo.) Wahiii.noto.v, Aug. Q. On a hill over looking tlio capital city, in a houso so old tlmt nolKHly known when It was built, lives .Mm. Kutliotlno Chaso. Tlio former social queen nnd national belle la still ft lienutirul woman. "Thcro Is only ono accomplishment of which I am proud," slwunys. "and tlmt is tlio art of taking caro f onu'n solf. I do claim to bo n mas tor of that art, not only for myself, but for my children. I am nlwnys well, nnd for a woman to bo nlways well is in theso times to bo quito abnormal extra ordinary. I havo had my sliaro of trou tiles in this world, but ovon my greatest troubles I havo endeavored to bear in a philosophic manner. Since becoming a farmer I havo learned that it is very bad policy to borrow inonoy, but- oven bor rowing money is proforablo to borrowing troubl . I never borrow either." . "Then you arc a farmer now?" "Oh, yes. My placo hero I mnnngo nil alone. I havo a farmer, but ho works rnthorlhnn manages. If I had to pay for suporlntcndcnco I am afraid I shouldn't mako fanning pay. What I don't know about farming I try to make up in caution. All my plana aro very carefully laid. Hero, bco, I havo sketches of idl my ileitis. Tlieso I mark just how I want them plowed and planted, mid then take good caro that my plans aro followed. Often I go out into tlio Ileitis and literally follow tlio plow, walking along behind tlio farmer as ho turns the first furrows, wntchlng to bco that ho lays out tlio ground nicely. Then I como Into tlio house, go up stairs and look out tlio windows to hoo how tlio work np Jwars from a bird's eyo viow." Mrs. Chase's house stands on a hill almost in the center of tlio farm, and a viow from tlio windows brings all tlio Melds within easy rungo of tho eyo. Ono of Mrs. Chuso's theories is that with small additional trouble and no extra expense n llttlo landscape art can bo applied to practical agriculture. Though sho has not as yet worked out nil her ideas in this direction, ono would havo to travel n long ways to find a prettier farm than tho ono which lies along tlio slopes of Edgowood. Mrs. Chaso not only man ages tho farm, but gees almost overy day to town to buy supplies. Everything that comes to the place is purchased by hor, from reaper to wrench, from draught horso to pullet. Sho is a good financier, and actually manages to mako her farm ot'somo llfty acres pay a handsomo profit. It is nn exceedingly valuable farm. But a mllo from tho o'.ty limits, and only two miles from tlio Capitol, it Is already surrounded by suburban villas. An oleo trio railway runs through tho property, making it exceedingly desirable as n Eito for dwellings, nnd ovory day of her llfo tho handsomo and amiable mistress of Edgowood Js collc-J upon by reaj estate operators who want wfrurcHaso tho farm and subdivide it into lots. Mrs. Chae Is not ready to sell. Her Idea is that the farm, for which sho could now got prol ably $2,000 an acre, will ultimately bring twico or thrlco as much, and that her children will, somo years hence, havo greater need of tho proceeds than thoy have now. Besides, Mrs. Chaso loves tho old placo, nnd hopes to lie able to keep it ns long as bIio lives. It has hal lowed memories of her father clinging about it, and Mrs. Chaso's lovo for her father is deep and tender. Mrs. Chaso is now engaged upon a task that could lie fairly called a labor of this lovo. Sho is writing tho life of her father, Salmon Portland Chaso. Sho has been engaged nt this for threo or four years, and cannot yet say when tho first volume will appear. "I work very hard," sho said tho other day whtlo slt tlng'on tbo veranda of Edgowood houso looking down upon tho Capitol that was tho scene of 60 many of her father's tri umps, "but find Uiat I am making slow progress. I rarely .retire beforo 2 or 8 o'clock in the morning, becauso I llko to. work after everybody elsuds asleep and I know 1 shall not bo disturbed. In this work I am harassed by a wealth of ma terial. You nave no Idea or tlio enor mous quantity of stuff that has poured in upon me. Letters, newspaper articles and documents aro stacked up two or three feet thick all around tho shelves of my work room. Tlio most precious material I havo is my father's diary. Throughout his public career it was his dnily habit lieforo going to bed to tako a few minutes or sometimes half an hour to jot down memoranda concern ing tho occurrences of tho day. In this way ho has left behind him a record of overy cabinet meeting that was held whllo ho was secretary of tho treasury. It la a record which cannot bo disputed, and which 'probably nobody will try to discuto when it is inado public. This dlafy I prizo so 11151117, not only be cause it was kopt by my father, but for Its' intrinsic worth as a contribution to history, that I kpep it in a burglar proof, fireproof vault. Whilo, tho actors In thoso scenes still lived tho state se crets recorded in my father's diary could not havo been inado 'public with out a violation of tho proprieties. Dut now that tho men aro dead, tlie diary does not belong to mo, but to tho coun try,' and tho country shall have it. A great deal of my manuscript is finished, and I hope soon to bo able to get out the first volutno, though of tho many offers made to mo by publishers I havo not yet accepted ono. "I am working carefully and slowly, bocauso I do not want a singlo statement in my book that cannot bo supported by tho proofs. I do not want to bo com. polled nftcr publication to wish a singlo lino of it had been omittod. I am un willing to write history as Mr. Hay ami Mr. Nlcolay havo been doing it by tho distortion of facts, tho quoting of parts of sentences, the omission of vital words and other garblings. I cannot afford to da my work in that manner. It Is my present intention to issuo tho Ixwk In two volumes, tho first to deal with tho period in which my fnther wai a mem ber of tho Lincoln cabinet. My father's career was really divided Into four epochs! First was his natural career as n Iirlvnto citizen nnd lawyer; then camo its career as governor of Ohio and sena tor of tho United States, involving nil tho great questions of thoso times fitato rights, Mixsouri compromise nnd tho Kansas-Nebraska bill) third, and to my mind most Important of all, was his nor vlco as a nioinbor of tho government during tho war and his creation of tho fiscal system, which historians havo al ready declared savnl tho Union. My father's uervices to his country In this respect linvo, of courso, loon appreciated in n general way by Ills countrymen, but tho keenest insight into tho vnhto of thoso services, tlio licst comprehension of what thoy signified, I havo found, oddly enough, nmong distinguished for eigners, notably Mr. Morgan, founder and London partner of the great firm of Droxol, Morg' n & Co." In tho fort'icomlug volutno Mrs. Chaso will not pndcavor to glvo many of her personal recollections of tho great men and women whom sho has mot on both sides of tho Atlantic. Sho says sho is not fond of gossip, and that tho writing of her recollections would bo to her a dlfllcult and ungrateful task. Such a book sho tuny bring out later on, but for the present her hopes and her energies nro fustoncd upon tlio llfo of her father. No one is so competent ns sho to describe tho career, tho dally llfo and work of tho great statesman. Uy circumstances as much as by disposition forced into tho self reliance of womanhood whllo yet a mero girl, her father early learned to trust her witli Ills conlldonco nnd to seek her advice. When no mora than 14 years old sho was at tho head of hor father's houso, tho governor's mansion, at Columbus, O. Even nt that tender age sho had iniluonco in tho af fairs of state. Politicians sought her friendship, nnd mothers and fathers, eager for pardons for their erring sons, counted tho bnttlo half won if they could enlist tho governor's daughter on their side. Yet sho know her father well enough to havo a very firm conviction that it would novcr do to ask him for clemency on any but tho lwst of grounds, nnd bo she formed tho habit of carefully investigating overy enso that was pre sented to her. When sho tnndo her re port, cither for or against a pardon, tho governor usually ratified with his slgna turo and tho seal of tho stnto tho conclu sions of his girl minister. Governor Chaso found tho girl so apt at this work that ho naturally fell into tho habit of turning many of his pardon cases over to her. "It oftcu wrung my heart to disap point tho petitioners by handing in an ndverso report," says Mrs. Chaso. "Thero was ono case I will remember to my dy ing day. Tlio mother of a convict camo to rny houso lo saonio. I was busy al tlio moment with another caller, and tho woman Eat down on tho doorstep. Pres ently our big cat walked up to her purr Ingly, and tho poor woman seized tho cat, held it in her arms and said: 'Kitty, you know tho troublo I am in, don't you? You would help mo oui of it if you could, wouldn't you, Kitty?' And then sho told tho cat tho wholo story of how her boy had been led Into ovil ways by bad companions and finally sent to tho penitentiary. It wasdono sonnturally hor heart was bo full sho had to pour out her anguish on somebody that Iwas deeply allected. But tho circumstances wero such that I could not recommend tho young man's pardon." Miss Chase took warm interest in tho public institutions of her state. Sho was known to tho Inmates of tho homes and asylums, and it Is said that at ono timo sho know overy prisoner nt tho pen itentiary by name. Largely through her efforts, put forth before sho was a woman, tho Ohio idiot asylum, still a useful institution, was founded. "I can hardly remember when my father did not placo confidence in mo far beyond my years," says Mrs. Chase. "When I was a mero chick of u girl, not moro than 7 or 8, wo lived in tlio outskirts of Cincinnati, where father practiced law. Every evening he used to drive homo along tho turnpiko, ho nnd I together. Tho horso was n fiery, speedy animal, which very much dis liked to havo nny other horso pass it on tho road. To mako matters worso, tills turnpiko was used by tho owners of fast horses as a speeding track, and great numbers of sulkies wero whizzing along In both directions at tho hour when wo usually drovo homo. Well, father had a habit of sitting in tho car riage entirely oblivious to everything that was going on about him. On such occasions ho handed tho llnc3 to mo, ap parently with full confidenco that I could maungo tho spirited animal and escape all tho dangers of tho road. How I con trived to get fathor and myself homo alivo is moro than I over understood. Probably it was tho capacity of the horse." In speaking generally of tho national sin of decrying peoplo when their backs aro turned, Mrs. Chaso said: "My father was a model mau in this respect, if in no other, In all tlio years of my confiden tial relationship with him I novcr heard him utter a disparaging word of any ono." Mrs. Chaso has with her at Edgowood her three daughters and a son, tho last named, and eldest of tho children, being now nearly 23. Ho is employed in a printing otllco, but wishes to becomo n civil engineer. Tho eldest daughter, Ethel, now 10, and a bright and pretty girl, has been in Now York studying for tho Ptage. Sho worked bo hard that her health was threatened, and Mrs. Chase brought her home for a long rest. The Misses Spraguo aro all accomplished and daring lwrsowomen, and are often Been galloping along the country roads. It would not bo easy to find a moro Inter esting family. Tlio remarkablo woman viho engaged tho confidenco of many great statesmen, and from whom even Abraham Lincoln has said he was often glad to take advice, is as vivacious and fascinating as when tho social world was at her feet. Walteh Wcllman. ODDS AND ENDS. Tho wheat yield In Kansas is estimated st 0-1,000,000 bushels, which is Just doublo that of last year. A Washington county, O., fanner 1)0 years old nfislsts tlio hands In (ho harvest floKI. A gentleman of Pouoma. Cat., says that only II vo days havo pokmmI sinco March, 16SS, that ho has not had fresh strawberries on his tabla. Tho actual consumption of sugar by tho peoplo of tho United Kingdom amounted In 1S83 to 1,033,000 tons, Tho consumption In 1BSS was 100,000 tons mora than in lt3. Tho Ilulgnrlnn government has concluded a loon of S,000,000 with a Now York bank. A syndicate was prepared to ndnnco 00, 000,000 to tho government. Aluminum for dental purocs Is said to Iw coming Into favor. It Is pronounced better than rubber, being bright, strong, odorless and wholesumo, nnd less costly than gold, Orinitli Williams and a family of eight havo loft for Wales. Thoy nro survivors of tho Johnstown flood. Ono of tho children, who was lorn in tho attlo of a houxo that was floating along tho stream, has been chris tened Moses. i Havana dispatch says that numerous fissures havo suddenly nppeared In tho earth near Mntauzas and havo created -;reat alarm among tho Inhabitants of thnt vicinity. Somo of tho fissures nro COO feet long, "I foot wid and SO feet docp. A Cincinnati man usod 10,000 gallons of water on his lu wn last year. Ills uclghbor trusted to ProvMcnco to sprbiklo his, and when tho fall cntno ho had tho best lawn. Eighteen Cincinnati grocers offer their cus tomers 3 per cent, discount If they will carry homo their purchases. They can afford to do oven bHtcr than this, ns somo of them hnvo to l;eop as many ns eight hones, wag ons and drivers. A purso of $10 was put up that two Ar kansas men might mako a test as to which could stand tho mosquitoes tho longest. Doth stripped and sat down lu n swamp. Ono gave In after twenty minutes, and tho other stood It ten minutes longer. Tho nntlvo doctors of China aro to a great extent solf constituted. Any orsou who is lu want of a livelihood, and who can road nnd write sulllclently well to be nblo to copy out proscriptions from n medical book, can tot up In practice without fear of govern ment or other Interference To bo ambitious of truo honor, of tho truo glory and perfection of our natures, is tho very priuelplo and incentive of vlrtuo; but to bo ambitious of titles, of place, of coro monlal rcioct8 and civil pageantry Is as vnln ami little ns tho things aroswhtchwo court. Sir P. Sidney. A Greenland expedition lias been planned for uoxt summer. Seven men, under tho command of un officer of tho DauUh royal nnvy, will leavo Copenhagen In tho spring, taking with them provisions sufficient for two and a half yours. Their destination will bo tho cast coast of Greenland, nud they will cxploro it between tho degrees of W nud 73 north latitude, Ono method of keeping tho railroad track clear of saud near tho Caspian sea Is to poak tho road led with sea water. In other places it is protected with an armor of clay. Pali sades are erected somotiuics to stop drifting. Another method employed Is tho cultivation of hardy plants, such as aro used for tho samo purpoiw on tho banish coast. Thcro aro fow that aro not nvvaro, at ono tlmo of their life or another, that thoy know a better way of living, of doing. Goodness consists in living thus better, In doing thus better. What is noodod, then, is a school for learning, not so much whnt is to bo dono as to do what wo know ought to bo done, Ivan Panln. A now candle has been brought out which extinguishes itself in an hour. This It does by means of a tiny extinguisher of tin, which is fastened In tho wax by wires, and which effectually performs its task. It Is only nec essary to removo this dimlnuti vo oxtingulshcr when Its work is dono, nnd thocaudlo U again ready to bum another hour. TJ10 hugo organ for tho town hall, Sydney, has been completed in Loudon. Its most re markablo feature Is a sixty-four foot stop. Tho lowest note of tho stop, expressed In organ builders' languago as "CCCCC," Is two octaves below tho lowest C on tho pianoforte, and n. It gives only eight vibrations in a second It cannot bo perceived as a note at alL Its effect lies wholly in the extraordinary richness aud power of Its upper harmouics, by which It ro-enforces notes given by tho higher pipes. Wurncil Away from Urazil. Emigrants to Brazil aro warned by tho expe riences reported of thoso from Great Britain. Up to now tho fatluro of British immigration in Brazil, has been appalling. Cnnauea had at ono tlmo -M British colonists, whoso sur vivors left in despair In 1878. Tbcro nro now only threo British families thero in tho forest without any road in any direction. Assuu guy, which U ouly sixty miles from Curitiba, tho capital of Paranca, has now only about 100 British colonists out of 1,000 who wero plant ed thcro somo twenty years ago, tho remainder having all died, or, like thoso at Cananca, having boon transported back to England nnd Ireland at tho public expenso and In tbo utmost misery nnd degradation. Even to day no sort of roads for carts havo been mado to Assunguy from any where, although the hard working Central Immigration society mado a special request lu tho namo of tbo rca lduo of tho colonists at Assunguy as lately as May, 1SSS. Although Italians aro supposed to withstand tho climate better, thero has been a perfect blight upon Italian Immigrant children during 18S3 lu tho provlnco of Sao Paula Londou Letter, Origin or Vitality. What is tho vital spark which nulmatcs or gnnlo llfo I Tho origin of vitality is as truly ono of nature's dark secrets, utterly htddon from (ho eyo of tho bclentulo man of today ns from tho perceptions of tho earnest Inquirers of 4,000 years ago. Tbnr is more known of tho mtthoJ of its manifestations nnd growth than they know, but whether a correlative or substantive of heat, light or electricity, whether measurable or Immeasurable, thero ,ls ono thing pretty well ascertained, and that Is that thuro is a fixed quantity apportioned to things and to mankind, and that vitality U an individual allotment, a separate charac teristic, so to speak, bestowed upon each In dividual member of tbo organic creation, no two things of tho snmo variety and genus ro eclvlug tho samo quantity. New York Tele gram. No Samples. This llttlo reconter reminds me of a young teacher who stood high in his profession throughout tho state, but whoso easy manners and convention and absolute lack of da gogtcal air caused him to bo classed as every thing but a teacher when off his native heath. Bitting down opposite a traveling man one day in tho col's, tho latter immediately leaned . forward and inquired: i , "Say, pard, what lino do you carryr "Brains." "Don't carry nny samples, do youf" St. rul Pioneer Press. Hi IBwlMWHMIBi Wo Only jfW Where all .ilnds of Buggies, Carriages or Saddle Horses, . Can be had nt nnv ue, Day or Night, on short notice, Horses Boarded ind w .aken caro of at Reasonable Rates Call and sc us, 102- Q street, or give all orders by Telephone 147. fgsggggE9ggHsBiaw TirnjiBglJrKsiHiBBk Itntcs reiiMinnlifo. Everything new nnd complete. Prompt service nml the beet menu In Onuihn. Hot nnd cold wnter In every room. Olllco and dining hall on flrfct floor. All mod ern improvement!. Mncnlultex al ways receive a cordlnl welcome. Cnll nnd eo us,v. hlle lu Oinnlm. You enn get Into tho cars nt ilepot and tnko HAHNEY ST., CAULK l.INB DIHECT TO THE DOOlt. Cor. Ilth and Harney. ' s In. l'.IIianv. Cioric. U. SILLOWAY.JI'roprlotor. tWAOQOAINTBD WITH. THE OEOOHAPHT Or THE 00UNTH7, WILL OBTAHf MUCH VALUABLE INFORMATION rROM A STUDY OF THIS MAP OF J't'--''V"l!.J'-.Ijffifeii.JjP ' i THE CHICAGO, ROCK ISLAND & PACIFIC RAILWAY, Including1 main linos, branchos and oxtonslona East and West of tbo Missouri Kivor. Tne Direct liouto Peoria, La Salle. Molina, Rock Island, In ILLINOIS Davonport, Muscatine, Ottumwa, Oskaloosts, Dos Molnes.Wlntcraot, Audubon.Hnrlan.and Council Blutrs, in IOWA-Mlnneapolla and St. Paul, in MINNBSOTA-Watortown and 8louz Falls, In DAKOTA Comoron, St. Joseph, and Kansas City, la MISSOORI-Omaha, Falrbury, and NolHon, in NEBRASKA Horton. TopekR, Creels, Klngiushor, Fort Rono, in the INDIAN TERRITORY and Colorado Springe, Donvor, Pueblo, In COLORADO. FREE Roclintngr Cmatr Cars to and from Chicago, Caldwell, Hutchinson, and Dodgo City, and Palaca Bloop lncr Oars betweon Chicago, Wichita, and Hutchinson. Traverses now and, vast areas of rich farming and grazlnsr lands, affording the best facilities of Intercommunication to all towns and cities oast and west, northwoBt and southwest of Chicago, and Pacific and transoceanic Seaports. MAGNIFICENT VESTIBULE EXPRESS TRAINS, Loading all competitors In splondor of oquipmont, cool, woll ventllatod, and rreo from dust. Through Goachos, Pullman SlooporB, FREE Reclining; Chair Cars, and (oast of Missouri River) Dining Cars Dally between Chicago, Dos Moines, Council Blulia, and Omaha, with Froo Rocllnlng Chair Car to North Platte, Neb., and betwoen Chloojro and Colorado Springs, Donvor, and Puoblo, via St. Josopb, or Kansas City and Topoka. Splendid Dining; Hotols (furnishing moajs at aoasonablo nours) weat of Missouri River. California Excursions daily, with CHOICE- OF ROUTES to and from Salt Lake, Ogden, Portland. Los Angeles, and San Francisco. Tho DIRECT LINE to and from Pike's Peak, Manltou. Gordon of tho a ode, tho Sanitari ums, and Bconlo Grandeurs of Colorado.' VIA THE ALBERT LEA ROUTE, Solid Express Trains daily between Chicago and Minneapolis and St. Paul, with THROUGH Reclining Chair Cars (FREE) to and from thoso points and Kansas City. Through Chair Car and Blooper betwoon Peoria, SplrltLoko, and Sioux Palls, via Rook Island. Tho Favorlto Lino to Plpostono, Water town, Sioux Falls, and tho Summor RoBorts and Hunting and Flshiner Grounds of tho Northwest. THE SHORT LINE VIA SENECA AND KANKAKEE offers facllltlOB to travel botwoen Cincinnati, Indianapolis, Lafuyotto, and Council Bluffs, St, Joboph, Atchison, Leavenworth, Kansas City, Minneapolis, and St. Paul. ForTlokots, Maps, Foldors, or destrod information, apply to any Ticket Ofllco In tho United States or Canada, or oddross E. ST. JOHN, General Manager. CHICAGO, ILL,. 100 Engraved Calling Cards And Copper Plate, for $2.50. If yoii' have a Plate, we will furnish 100 Cards from same, at $1.50. i j VESSEL PRINTING CO. Courier Office. Telephone 253. FINEST IN THE STATE. ELITE - STUDIO 226 S. 1 1th St. make a specialty of FIno I'liotogrnplilj nnd Crayon work. Ground Floor Studio in Lincoln Call and See Dur Work. FINEST LIYERY RIGS in the City all come from the Graham Brick Stables 1O27 Q STREET, THE MURRAY Omaha's Leading Hotel. Opened Hept. 1, 1S$$. Finest Hotel in the West to ana from cnicago, Joitot, Ottawa. JOHN SEBASTIAN, Oea'l Ticket ft Pass. Agcr:. New Burr Block '? W- ? '.-.JsSMHtiuj l Vr'TJ tJJj (L - mjmIaj". . i