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About The McCook tribune. (McCook, Neb.) 1886-1936 | View Entire Issue (May 19, 1899)
M'COOK TRIBUNE , F. M. KIMMRLt , , Publisher. McCOOK , - - NEBRASKA NEBRASKA A library Is to be established in tl high school at Newport. Prof. Norton , principal of the AB ] land schools , died last week. Humboldt is perfecting arrangi ments for her Fourth- July celebn tion. t A new grain elevator is one of tl improvements Teltarnah is figuring c for this summer. Cora Bless of Wilcox took a dose i paris green with suicidal intent. SI is likely to recover. The Sure-Hatch Incubator compar lias commenced the erection of a fa tory at Clay Center. The Superior Creamery company sending out from one to two cars ( butter per week all going to Butt Mont. The St Paul creamery has startt up again. The old building ws burned last summer , but the owne : rebuilt. The contract for building the ne court house at Wayne has been I to Rowles & Moore of Omaha f < ? 25COO. There Is not a vacant business buili ing in the town of Friend and dwel ings are very scarce. Every contrai tor has work for months ahead. Joseph H. Ruby committed suicic near Beemer by shooting himse through the head with a revolver i the house of Miss Mary Vlach , wl shot herself a few days before. Tht T/ere betrothed. Hon. D. A- Harris of Unadilla h ? accepted a position in the United Stat < customs service in Cuba and will lea ; for Havana to take up his duties i soon as his commission arrives. H salary is $2,700 per annum. ' There will be about 200 Russiai transported from Hastings to Peori 111. They will leave Hastings Monde and will go direct to Peoria , whei they -will be taken into the country I work in sugar beet fields. They wi return to Hastings next fall. A telegram from Governor Poynt ( to W. H. C. Chinn announced the nevi of the severe wounding in the knee < his son , Grant Chinn , serving in con pany K of the First Nebraska reg ment in the Philippines. Young Chin enlisted In company K from Columbu "Alliance is a mignty busy plac these days , " says Assistant Gener ; Solicitor Kelby of the Burlington , wh has just returned from a week ther < "Every house in town is filled , and is impossible to rent one anywher The hotels are so filled that I had t eleep in a chair the first night I ai rived there. " York county is overrun with insui ance agents , who are soliciting nearl every kind of insurance in the country A number do not have authority froi the auditor to solicit and some hav been soliciting for companies that ar not authorized to do business in th state. Hail insurance agents ar thick and agents representing differed companies are fighting for business. Not for eight years has North Platt witnessed the erection of so many ne < huildings as are now in course of con struction , and before the close of th year fully $50,000 will have been ex pended in this direction. These im provements , together with the fact tha there are absolutely no vacant resi dences in the city , has had a tendenc to stiffen prices on all classes of realtj Henry Brown , a farmer living si miles west of Trenton , was found dea on the prairie. He was a soldier of th civil war. He obtained a divorce fror his wife at the last term of the distric court and had been living alone fo some time. His neighbors supposei he had gone to the Soldiers' Home a Grand Island until his body was founc He had not been seen for about twi weeks and from the condition of th body he has probably been dead al that time. W. E. Krause , vice president of th First National bank of West Point , me with a serious and almost fatal acci dent He was returning from Omah ; and inadvertently stayed on the trail until it left the depot on its journe ; west. After a block or two Mi Krause realized where he was an > seizing his valise he rushed to the plat form of the car and jumped off. Thi occurred nearly three-quarters of i mile from the depot , when the trail had attained a speed of twenty-fiv miles an hour. He was picked up un conscious and his injuries may prov fatal. Oscar Yeager of Decatur -was brough to Tekamah last week and lodgei in jail , charged with the murder o John Egleton. It appears that Egletoi was plowing some lots in the Decatu townsite that he had cultivated fo the last twelve years , and that recentl ; Oscar Yeager purchased some lots ad joining. The dispute was over when the line ran or who held the title t < the lots. Oscar Yeager saw Egletoi plowing there and remonstrated witl him regarding the matter. It is sai < that Egleton told Yeager to get a sur veyor to run the line , then he woul ( know where the boundary was. Mr Yeager returned to his team a fev hundred feet distant , unhitched then and taking off a singletree he returnei to where Egleton was and dealt hin a blow on the side of the bead tha ; felled him on the spot. Yeager thei left the premises , leaving Egleton ly ing "in the furrow. He was removec to his house by friends , but never re gained consciousness. Mary Vlach , daughter of Josepl Vlach , living about thre miles nortr of Beemer , committed suicide by shoot ing. She had for a long time suf fered from a sore leg , and this it is thought , is what induced self-destruc tion- Manager Weitzer of the Norfolk su gar-factory has received orders to pro ceed * with improvements at the fac tory which , when finished , will mean enlarged facilities for carrying on th-7 work The changes to be made con template an enlargement of the filter Tress room , and placing of new filter presses and the entire rebuilding of the refining department. Affidavit Supporting Motion t Dissolve Injunction. IT IS FILED BY ATTORNEY GENERA He Insists tliut the Injunction is Not Sn tallied Facts In the CIIRC Do NoCSu jiort Move by llontlgiuen ContentU liaised Not New. Lincoln dispatch to the Omaha Bei Attorney General Smyth filed a lor affidavit in the district court here t day in support of his motion to dS solve the injunction obtained by tl Bartley bondsmen to prevent the fu ther prdsecution of the case again them on the bond until after the sta first prosecutes and determines tl liability of the Omaha National bar on its depository bond for $201,884 < Bartley's shortage. In the aflldivit filed the attorney gei eral insists that the injunction is n < sustained by the facts in the case. r says a number of the allegations in tl petition for a permanent injunctic are untrue , especially wherein it is a leged that the principles and the sur ties on the depository bond ever agret to indemnify the sureties of Bartl ( on his individual bond from loss , Car age or liability by reason of the coi version , diversion or loss by embe zlement of the deposits in the Omal National bank. He also denies that tl petition tells the truth when it sa : Bartley's bond was never approve by the governor. Mr. Smyth furtbj avers that neither the governor nt himself has ever claimed , nor did th < ever claim , that the Omaha Nation bank is liable on the depository bor for the whole or any part of the mo : ey embezzled by Bartley. Neither it true , he adds , that the bondsmt of Bartley "are not able to plead , n < are they wholly remediless , except t the interposition of a court of equit to sue at law and get justice in tin way. In fact , says Mr. Smyth , the ; is not enough truth in the allegation contained in the petition to justify tl issuance of any injunction by tl * : ourt. The contention raised in this sui the attorney general explains , is by i means a new oneBartley's bond men raised it and argued on the poii before Judge Dickinson during the tri ; in Omaha of the suit when it was ; first brought. Judge Dickinson hi held against the contention in a wrl ten decision which the attorney gei eral says he will submit to Judge Fro ; before whom the injunction suit is i be tried in the district court here. Tl same question was argued at lengin i the briefs filed by the bondsmen wh the supreme court passed on the cas and the attorney general points to tl fact that the supreme court decided tl case generally in his favor as rath ( indicating what its stand in the ma ter was. In Memory of Stotsenberg. Governor Poynter has received printed copy of an order read befoi the Sixth cavalry , United States arm ; at Fort Riley , Kan. , concerning tl death of Colonel John Stotsenberj The order is as follows : The regimental commander annoum es to the regiment the death of Captai John M. Stotsenberg , Sixth cavalr ; U. S. A. , and colonel of the First N < braska volunteer infantry regimen at Calumpit , Island of Luzon , wlii : gallantly leading his regiment again : the intrenched insurgents. Captai Stotsenberg was born at New Alban ; Indiana , November 24 , 1858. He er tered the military academy July : 1897 , and graduated therefrom June 1 1881 , and was assigned second liei tenant of this regiment. Captain Stotsenberg served with thi regiment continuously from the tim Qf his joining until September , 189 ! and was distinguished for fidelity , so ilierly qualities and devotion to dut } He was a distinguished graduate c the infantry and cavalry school c Fort Leavenworth , Kan. , class of 189' In that year he was detached as in structor of military science at th University of Nebraska and so favoi ibly impressed the governor of tha state that he appointed him major c the First Nebraska volunteers at th jutbreak of the Spanish-American wa ind later he was promoted to be col anel of that regiment He served with distinguished coui ige and capacity in the campaign tei minating with the fall of Manila an in the subsequent campaign agains the Filipino insurgents. Captain Stotsenberg was a man c tireless energy , careful and conscien Lious in the performance of every dutj His genial nature and sterling , manl jualities made him beloved and re spected by all with whom he came i : contact. As a special mark of respect th afficers of the regiment will wear th usual badge of mourning for thirt ; lays. The order was signed by First Lieu : enant F. C. Marshall , acting adjutan : o the regiment , and was drawn up b ; jrder of Major Lebo. Homes on Nebraska Lands. Now that the deeds to the Nabraski ands have passed to the companj says the Omaha Bee , the land depart nent of the Union Pacific railroad wil eave nothing undone which will tem , o induce settlers to come to Nebrask' ' md locate along its line of road. Appraisers have been in thefiel < 'or several weeks putting new value m the Union Pacific land and relist ng it. The old classification has beej bund unsuitable. _ Much of the lant vas listed for farming purposes , whicl s now being put under the head o grazing lands. There is also a read ustmeat of prices with the tendenc ; ; enerally lower. These lands havi leen out of the market for a year , am , special effort will be made to attrac ttention to them on the part of home eekers. Other lands of considerabli contracts of sail which the .rea , on iad been allowed to lapse , will also g ( in the market again. The companj /ill take full advantage of the sum aer homeseekers' excursions to brinj ut prospective settlers , and a travel ag agent will be located at Chicago STATUTE OF USES. State Supreme Court Holds as Not Force In This Statn. Chief Justice Harrison has writt an opinion for the supreme court , ho ] ing that the "statute of uses" is not force Ju this state , it not being of t of Nebraska. This "statute " involves a point of the comm IAV handed down from the time Henry VIII. of England and has i v/ays been a much disputed poi among Nebraska attorneys. The E preme court has never ruled on it I fore , hence the importance of the t clsion to the lawyers of the state. The decision is in the case of t Farmers' and Merchants' Insuran company against Ivers Jansen , tak to the supreme court on error from t district court in Saunders county. T court adheres to its original decisi in the suit , which was a reversal a remanding of the case , and holds th the "statute of uses" is not of the 1 ; of the state and therefore cannot enforced. The original statute of us adopted during the reign of Hen VIII , was set forth in full in the plea ings and the following interpretati was placed upon it by one of the i torneys in the case : "If A , owning real estate , shall co vey or will it to B , under an agreeme between them that notwithstanding t conveyance A , or some other person corporation , shall have the rents profits arising from the real esta notwithstanding the conveyance ma by A under that agreement , he shi have the title he had before he ma the conveyance. " In the case in Question the defen ant transferred his property to 1 wife and the wife transferred it to third person who afterward transfc red it back to her. Jansen claim all this was done with the agreeme between himself and wife that t property was to be for his use and remain under his control and directic When there was a loss on the insi ance policy the insurance company serted that the property had chang title , without the consent of the coi pany , and that the transactions we directly contrary to the terms of t policy. The original owner claim the property had not changed hands , least that there had been no change the insurance interest. Re claim that he had the same title he had I fore the conveyance was made , arg ing on the supposition that the st ute of uses was in force. The low court gave Jansen a judgment again the insurance company , but the deci ion of the supreme court reverses and remands it for another trial wi instructions to the court below th the statute of uses is not in force. Some lawyers assert that the "sts ute of uses" if applicable at all in t ! United States , would not be in ti states comprising the Louisiana pu chase , that territory never having be < under the control of England or su ject to its common law. Missouri the only state in the territory th has given a decision on the point , ai it is considered of importance b cause in that state there is a statu on the subject In a number of eas ern states the courts have held th the statute of uses is still in force. State Employment Bureau. All persons desiring help and all o of employment should write at on to the state labor bureau and let the wants be known. The legislature 1896 and 1897 passed a law makh this a free employment bureau for tl entire state. Those who want help should state their applications exactly what kii of help is wanted , in what branch < labor , etc. Those who want situatioi should state sex , age , height , weigh trade or branch of labor , length i service or experience , references , et All information received by the bi reau will be held strictly confident ! and all services rendered will be fre Absolutely no fee will be charged : any case. This is a free employmei bureau and is designed to do awe with the private employment agent nuisance in the cities , by which s many worthy people are victimized. All desiring help of any kind ca penters , brickmakers , mill men , far : hands , city laborers , cooks , servai girls , or help of any kind , should in mediately apply to this office and the will be put in communication wit those in the line of service desired. Persons out of employment shoul ilso write without delay. All unfille ipplications should be renewed aft < thirty days. Communications should be addressee : o State Labor Bureau , Lincoln , Neb. Boy Charged \Vith Murder. The second arrest of Ernest Bush i Denver on the charge of having kille Silas Bailey near Benkelman , Nebc February 7 , has revived the interei n that case and has created some tal ocally because Bush's parents are sai x > live in Omaha. He claims his fat ! sr's name is John Bush and that h parents moved there from Hone Dreek , la. , recently. At the time the murder cccurre Bush , a lad of sixteen , was workin with Silas Bailey for a ranchman nan jd Morris in Dundy county. One da Bailey disappeared and no trace coul be secured of him. His body wa inally recovered from the Republica iver and it was found that he ha jeen killed by a load of buckshot. Sus licion rested upon Bush and he wa aken into custody. Owing to his ag t was not believed possible for hii o have killed the old man , so he wa lischarged at the preliminary exami lation. Since then more evidence ha jeen secured which , it is believed , wi : onvict him of the crime. He was Ic : atecl in Denver , placed under arres ind is now awaiting trial in Benkel nan. Raising Figures on Bills. W. D. Houck , W. V. Houck and 1 V. Kennedy were brought to Omah rom Fairbury by Deputy United State Marshal Keim and lodged in the conn y jail to await the action of the Unit id States grand jury. The men ar ; harged with mutilating United State : urrency by raising and changing th igures on bani : bills. Their work wa nest clumsy , and for this reason the ; ucceeded in getting rid of but a fe\ if the bills before they were caught. When the Houcks and Kennedy wer .rrested a number of indelible pencil /ere found in their possession Members of Commission Wil ing to Grant Requests. T E EILIPINOS SEEK TO PARLE Proposal Is Probably Prompted by Nati Congress ut San Isidor Ten ItXcn Su prise and Put to Itoute Force of Ti Hundred Insurgents Matters at M nila Continue Quiet. MANILA , May 15. The civili ; members of the United States Phili pine commission are favorable to t meeting with a Filipino commissic which was suggested yesterday on t half of Aguinaldo by Lieutenant Ro of the staff of General Gregerio E Pilar , who came to General Lawti under a flag of truce , bearing the pr posal. It is thought by the Americ ! commissioners that the idea may ha resulted from a recent meeting of t so-called Filipino congress at Si Isidor. The local Filipino commissic which is in close communication wi the leaders of the rebellion , is doii its utmost to secure peace. Ten members of Major Gener Lawton's band of scouts , under W. ] Young , the old Indian fighter , enter the town of San Miguel , about fiftei miles north of Norsegaray , not awa of what place it was. They found 2 Filipinos there , but the rebels , takii the scouts for the advance of Gener Lawton's army , fled after firing a fe shots. Young and another scout we wounded and have been brought Manila. The Ninth infantry and a mounta battery of six guns have been sent the front. The uniform quiet now. prevailii in Manila has led the authorities Telax the rule under which the ci streets were cleared from 7 to 8 : ' p. m. and there is in consequence tl largest and most brilliant assemb of pedestrians and people in carriag at the concerts on the Luenta that hi been known here since the Spanian left. left.Prof. . Schurmaan , president of tl United States Philippine commissio gave a farewell luncheon today to AI miral Dewey , at which Prof. Dean ' Worcester and Colonel Charles Denl of the commission , with General Ma Arthur , Mrs. Lawton and others , we present. The health of the admir was drunk with the utmost cordialit WASHINGTON , May 15. The fo lowing dispatch from Major Gener Otis , giving the status of the militai situation as it now exists in the ope ations against the insurgents , w : received at the war denartment toda : "MANILA , May 14. Adjutant Gel eral , ( Washington : Situation as fo lows : Lawton from Balinag has tak Ilde Fonso and San Fernando nort. with slight loss and driving conside able force of enemy ; gunboats ar canoes will accompany 1,500 men tmd < Kobbe up Rio Grande river froi Calumpit , departing May 16 ; Mai Arthur remains at San Fernand covering country. * * * Yesterda a messenger from Aguinaldo expres : ing a wish to send commission to Ms nila for conference with United State commission to arrange terms of peace directions given to pass body of repr < sentative insurgents to Manila shoul it present itself. "OTIS. " Strain Too Great for Irving. LONDON , May 15 Sir Henry li ving , whose recent work in the tit : role of Sardou's famous drama , "Rob < spierre , " at the Lyceum theater l\s been exceedingly trying , was take seriously ill Sunday morning with a affection of the throat. Dr. Farrar , specialist , was immediately summone and as the result of his advice it i announced this evening that Sir Her ry's part during the present week wi be taken by his son , Lawrence. Lav , rence Irving is Sir Henry's understud in several notable roles. The announcement of the illnes brought a large number of profession ; callers this evening to Sir Henry Ii ving's residence in Grafton street , bv his medical adviser has forbidden hii to receive any one at present. It is hoped that with complete res he will be restored to his usual healt by the end of the week. Nchrasliaii Attempts Suicide. CHICAGO , May 15. John E. Degett of Nebraska City , Neb. , attempted t commit suicide this morning abon 10:30 o'clock by shooting himself a the Victoria hotel , in the presence c his bride of a little less than tw months. It is said that the youn , couple had had a quarrel over a birtli day present which Pegette was goin to give his bride and coming to th conclusion that she did not love hin : he decided to do away with himsell Degette was left $150,000 by his fathei a banker of Nebraska City , two year ago. One Hundred Thousand un Hour. BUDA PEST , May 15. M. Puiter director general of the electricity com pany , read a paper on a new systen of rapid telegraphy invented by Pol lak & Virag , by which it is claimei 100,000 words can be transmitted with in an hour. Experiments showed tha even that number of words did no limit the transmission. Telegrams however , must be previously perfor ated on slips of paper in the Morst alphabet. To Defy Tammany. NEW YORK. May 15. Acting unde : > rders from the national democratii lommittee , it is said , ICO Chicago plal orm democrats met tonight in thii iity and took steps to at once thor lughly organize the city and later th < itate of New York to defy Tamman : tall. A committee of twenty was ap soSnted to at once arrange the fiv < loroughs to systematically work them ames R , Brown presided at the meet ng and after the meeting said tha . contesting delegation of Bryan am "hicago platform men will be sen rom this state to the next nationa onvention. BLAME SANGUILLY. Cubans Say Ho Is at the Bottom of U favorable Reports. HAVANA , May 15. General Com has sent a message to Governor Ge eral Brooke that he will do hims < the pleasure of calling at headquarte tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock for further conference regarding the pa ment of the Cuban troops. The appoir ment for the interview is the resi of a direct inquiry as to what Gene al Gomez intended to do in view of tl resignation and non-appearance of : the Cuban officers nominated by him represent the several corps in the di tribution of the M3.000.000. Gener Brooke is determined to disregard f the present the reports that reach hi from various sources as to the allegi intention of Gomez to withdraw h co-operation and thus to throw in confusion the carefully atured plai for distributing the fund. He believes that the personal inte view tomorrow ought to adjust tl temporary perplexity. He is unwil ing to consider Gomez as insincere i as acting in bad faith , but the gove nor general still retains the discreti ( reposed in him by President MeKinl < to abandon the effort to disband tl late insurgents with the gratuity ar to send back the entire amount to tl United States. The Cuban general , Raefel Rodr guez , speaking for Gomez today , sa that the reports of a difference wil General Brooke were absolutely ui true. The attitude of Gomez , ne d clared , had undergone no change ar the principal generals of the Cuban a my , as well as the rank and file , coi tinned to support Gomez as they a ways had. He flatly denied that there had bee any meeting of Cuban officers i which Gomez had been present or he with his approval where a decisic had been reached not to surrender tl arms , and he explained that all tl talk about a revolt in the army again : the surrendering of the arms was tl work of members of the former mil tary assembly , "a group of malcoaten behind Manuel Sanguilly , who can gh no trouble and are not worth conside ation. " In explaining the withdrawal of tl Cuban generals who were appoints to serve with the Americans in dii tributing the $3,000,000 General Rodr guez said that Rojas probably witl drew owing to the anti-Gomez infii ence ; Nodarse because General Broot had not appointed him civil governc of Havana , and Monteaguedo becaus he was busy in the province of Sam Clara , giving Major General Wilson it benefit of his co-operation there. Rot riguez expressed himself as confidei that other officers of equal prominenc and authority would be found to a < with the Americans. As early as Marc 22 , Gomez agreed that the arms shoul be stored in the military custody of tl United States. This plan was clearl understood by the Cubans. Neverth < less the politicians and some of tli more restless Cuban officers are toda talking in a warlike strain , spreadin axciting stories about "taking to tfc woods" and fighting the American ! and attributing to Gomez things L aever said. Year of Jubilee Decreed. WASHINGTON , May 15. The pap ? bull issued in Rome within the las few days decreeing that the year 190 shall be a jubilee throughout tb church is expected here shortly an will be announced in all churche throughout the country. The issuance of a bull on the subjec gives it special solemnity. It has bee the custom to hold jubilees of th church every twenty-five years , an at one time these were the occasio for the gathering of vast concourse at Rome to receive the special dispen sations and indulgences allowed dui ing jubilee years. It is expected , how 3ver , by the highest church authoritie here that the jubilee next year will b tiuite generally celebrated throughou the world , thus giving it a more uui /ersal aspect instead of being centere it Rome , though doubtless it will lea to many pilgrimages to Rome and th gathering there of distinguish churchmen. The jubilee next year is considere more important than that held ever ; twenty-five years , as it ushers in ; new century and comes at a time whei Pope Leo is old and very feeble , hi )0th ) year having been completed ii March. To Preserve Friendships. SAVANNAH , Ga. , May 15. The offi ies of the Thirty-first Michigan regi ment , which is to be mustered out o : he service next Wednesday. wer < lined tonight by the officers of tin ? irst Georgia , who were mustered on ast fall. During the time the Firs Georgia was in the service it wa : ) rigaded with the Thirty-first Michigai ind a fast frienship sprang up betweei he two commands. The eiitcrtainmcn ; onight was given as a last token o he hospitality of the Georgians am i mark of their love and esteem foi .he men from Michigan. Before tin Michigan regiment gets away the ofii : ers expect to present a loving cui o the officers of the First Georgia. Ijs-Govenuir Dr.ike ill. CHICAGO , 111. , May I. . Word wa eceived here that ex-Governor F. M ) rake of Iowa is critically ill at hi ; ome in Centerville , la. Mr. Drake as been in ill health a number ol ears but when he retired from tlu residency of the Indiana. Illinois own. railroad at the time of the sale f the road about a year ago. his riends hoped he would regain his trength. He was taken seriously ill \vo weeks ago and since that time ha een very low. Ke\oliitlcm in the Oil Trade. PHILADELPHIA , Pa. , May 15. It s reported that the British steamship lobert Dickinson , which arrived here estenlay from Shields , in ballast , will oad a cargo of bulk oil at this prvi sr Calcutta , and will afterward en- ; age in the oil trade. The Dickinson fill be the first tank steamship to oad oil for the far ( i.st , and it the eport of the intention of her owners s true , it indicates a revolution in he oil shipments and marks the cud f sailing ships in the eastern oil trade. A southern man who recently re turned home after a visit to Boston said to a neighbor : "You know these here round , white beans ? " The other admitted that he did. "We feed 'ern to bosses down our way. " "Yes. " "Well , sir , up in Boston they take them beans , boil 'em for three or four hours , slap a little sow belly an' some molasses and other truck in with 'em and what do you suppose they do with 'em ? " "Gosh , I do' no. " "Well , sir , " said the first speaker , sententiously - tiously , "I'm d d if they don't eat A coincidence is the antiquated plea of the plagarist. 44 Keep to Your Place and Your Place will Keep You. ' ' Without good health twe cannot keep situations or en joy life. Most troubles origi nate in impure blood. Hood's Sarsaparilla makes the blood rich and healthy , and 'will kelp you ' ' keep your place. Built Up " Was tired oat , bad no appetite until I took Hood's Sarsaparilla. It built me right up and I can eat heartily. " ETTA M. HAOER , Athol , Mass. Hood's 111 Is cure liver Ills , the non-Irritating and paly cathartic to take with Hood's Sarsapartlia. Annual Meeting German Baptists , ( Dunkards , ) Roanoke , Va.5 May 23 , i 899. OUR Tickets trill be good going May 1C , 19 , 2O aud , Returning good until June 34. 1 890. One stopo\er Mill be allowed tii return trip. subject to local regulations of the over vi Uicli ticket For fall information regarding ticket ? . rates and routes and time of trains , call en agents "Big Four Route' * ' or address the undersigned , E. 0. KcCGRMICK , WARREN J. LYNCH , Pass. Traffic Mgr. Asst. Gen. Pass , i : TJst. ASS. CINCINNATI. O. THE Spalding i OFFICIAL League Bail Leas je and inu i beu eil in all paroes Each bail warranted. ACCEPT NO SUBSTITUTES If a dealer dee < not car-v Spalciinr's athletic good's m stork , send your nume and address to us and hK fx > for a copy ot our handsomely illustrated cat&losrue. A. C.SPALDINC&BROS. 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