q. system. the c, b. the b. mercantile -copil dry€¦ · 2 the st. pauldaily globe....

1
THE ST. PAUL DAILY GLOBE. SATURDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 4, 1886-SIXTEEirPAGES:. 2 THE C, B. & Q. SYSTEM. A New Steam Thoroughfare Connects St. Paul With the Eest of the World. A Model Eailroad Under Model Manage- ment—Splendid E ad Bed and Splen- did Soiling Stock. The Chicago, Burlington & Northern Railway company completed its line to this city at an auspicious period in its own his- tory, and in the history of St Paul also. The corporation Dad long ago bidden good- bye to impecuniosltyand reached that point where whatever it attempted to do could be accomplished regardless of expense, while a provincial town, almost at the headwaters of the Mississippi, had expanded into a metropolis, with a fu- ture that baffled calculation. The new steam thoroughfare that necessarily had to compete with other long-established and excellent lines would have fared ill had it not been ah:-- to improve upon what had been done m. d afford the traveling public something belter than it bad previously been accustomed to in the way of accommo- dations. This the corporation above men- tioned did. Imp its capital at.d facilities were unlimited and its managers had had the benefit of * larger experience than has. pei haps, fallen to the lot of any other rail- way magnates. However this may be. they constructed one of the best railroad lines in the United States in the face of difficulties that necessitated the employ- ment of the first engineering talent to be obtained, and it is now one of the proudest monuments that has ever been reared by enterprise and fax-seeing sagacity, and dedi- cated to interstate communication and na- tional progress. It should be borne in mind that this line winds along the east bank of the Missis- sippi under the shadow of its towering bluffs, and within full view of some of the most magnificent river scenery to be found in North America. The half has not been told of the scenic grandeur of the upper Mississippi, and neither the pen of the writer nor the brush of the painter can ade- quately describe Its thousand attractions. This much may be said descriptively without any attempt at draw- ing a pen picture: A mighty \u25a0Wilier way. one of the mightiest on the planet lined on either side by bluffs thai are nearly akin to mountains in altitude whose rocky sides and summits have been carved into such fantastic shapes as no hu- man artist could imitate, by that patient architect Nature, that used the "Father of Waters*' as a chute*, and the ages as a period in which to perfect the stupendous artistic work. No one who can afford it should fail to pay the upper Mississippi a t-i_.it, now that the Chicago. Burlington & Northern .rail a ay has provided such admir- able" facilities for doing so. From La Crosse northward it is one constantly changing, but always charming, panorama of bit.ff. stream and forest, the former fre (plenty crowned by huge masses of water- worn rock, which, at a little distance, re- semble the crumbling turrets and bastions of ruined castles of the middle ages. So striking indeed is the resemblance, espe daily in the witchery of moonlight, that the tourist can scarcely credit that it Is an illusion. and for the moment is half induced, to think that he is in the old world gazing at the relics of antiquity. These bluffs by the way furnish some of the finest and most attractive building sites in the United States, and the day is coming when the;. will be dotted with palatial residences, a* the Hudson river cliffs are now. Tin- writer, who has heard the "horologue of time "strike the half century with a solemn _hime n probably will not live to see it, but who knows"." The world moves ranidlv in this age. and as soon a- some rich man with elegant tastes secures one of these miniature Rocky mountains beautifies it as money can beautify, and Meets thereon such a mansion as taste would suggest and coupons build, his ex- ample wiil be speedily followed, the Mississippi bluffs will become the fashion, and the nabob will be an unnoticed unit iv the sum of humanity who does not own one of them. .'*'\u25a0 _•.. . .. And right in this connection the writer would auggest that nor magnificent bluffs outrht to be largely appropriated by our Southern brethren for summer homes. They overlook the same lordly river that flows by his cotton or sugar plantation, and it he don't feel inclined to take a palace car on the Chicago, Burlington & Northern, let him expend a few of his superfluous thous amis in the constructing of a neat -steam yacht to convey himself and family where . humor \u25a0. .dictates during the torrid season. * The average Southerner would revel in our riven scenery, so radic ally different from the dead levels and semi- tropical forests of the lower Mississippi bottom lands. He would never weary of exploring our wild ravines and canons, and following our innumerable trout streams, while our fresh, bracing atmosphere would give him a new lease of life and lead him to consider that lie had never truly lived before. We. whose dwelling place is near the head waters of the great river, invite our u.i/.iieis ai toe outer end of it to come and see what manifold attractions we have to offer them during the heated term, and when the thermometer gets down to fifty odd below zero, we will return the visit and exchange snow drifts for magnolia blos- soms. The St. Paul Land company, which always manages to have large and valuable real estate possessions wherever the Chi- cago & Burlington railway penetrates, has a large amount of property along the new line that is worth a journey from the At- lantic or Pacific seaboard to examine for permanent or speculative investments. This sounds somewhat like a "puff," but. nevertheless, it is true, as any well-posted real estate mnn would see at a glance. The St Paul Land company? own several of the best town s us between this city and La Crosse, which it is developing with its char acteristic energy and the expenditure of whatever is necessary to accomplish the proposed end. Space will not permit a de- scription in detail of all the embryo cities that this company is engaged in building, or to enumerate the many advantages they possess. Hagar, Nelson and Cochian are among the number, and business men east, west and south, who are thinking about changing their locations, should cer- tainly visit one or all of them before set- tling down elsewhere. Each one of these sites embraces a beautiful level intervale from one to three miles in extent, with the river on one side and a line of the most picturesque bluffs that imagination can paint towering skyward on the other. The summits of the bluffs, it must be re- membered, are on an approximate level with the surrounding country, which is one of the richest and most thickly settled agri- cultural districts of the Northwest, Here- tofore the farmers of this region have had no transportation facilities for their pro- duce, save what the river afforded, but not- withstanding this untoward circumstance they have thriven marvelouslv. built hand- some dwellings and tine barns, and supplied themselves with all the multifarious ma- chinery which a Northwestern farmer has to have in these days in order to keep abreast with the times. This is exactly the kind of a community in which the retail merchant delights to locate, and there is a rare chance for a hundred of them in the places above mentioned, where the field is still almost unoccupied. But don't wait gentlemen, dealers in dry goods, hardware. drugs, groceries and what not. for these are chances that will hardly be duplicated in th s generation. So "catch on" while you can. The impression has gone abroad that our winters are .ntolerably severe, but this is a grand mistake. It is cold here in January and February, but our atmosphere is so clear, dry and bracing that SO ° below zero does not bring the shiver that accompanies 10 = below zero in localities like Chicago. The ladies heaven bless them—consider this climate in winter delightful above all others, it is so irresistibly suggestive of seal skin mantles that reach to their pretty feat, and what the ladies indorse is bound to be popular. At LaCrosse the St. Paul Land company has one of the most valuable real estate in- terests in the Northwest: nothing less than an even section of land one mile square, that embraces the test business property in this city of 25.000 inhabitants. Pour great railway stems have .leaning lines that concentrate on this huge plant, and upon it are clustered their passenger devils, freight depots, and principal machine shops, and 1 a forty-stall brick round-house has also just been completed there. The present value of this property would startle any private cit- izen, save a Vanderbilt or Jay Gould. What it will be worth twenty years from now would require a knowledge of the higher mathematics to figure out But few business men comparatively in \u25a0 any part of the country are aware of the extraordinary advantages that La Crosse possesses, especially as a manufacturing point. Leaving the river out of the ques- tion so far as steamboat transportation is l concerned, there are the tour leading rail- , way lines, reaching out to every trade . center of Uncle Sam's domain and all con- centrating in a space so small that those vexatious changes and delays incident to i ; the transferring of freight are all avoided. i greatly to the benefit of the pockets and , the temper of shippers. Then it is the: natural eutry-port for the vast product of the Chippewa and Black river pineries— the largest and, so tar as the quality of the lumber is concerned, the best that now re- main in any of the old Northern pinery states— and it is landed here at prices which afford the La Crosse man who requires it : in bis-business a tremendous advantage i over the manufacturer at Chicago or St j Louis. But this is not all, by any means; in ad- dition to an unlimited . supply of pine of a superior quality at absolutely bottom fig- j ures, for the reason that it has had no ! opportunity before getting here of passing j through the hands of a middleman, there is > an inexhaustible amount of excellent hard wood tiiube'* close at hand and accessible by the cheapest of all routes -natural water- ways that were seemingly established by nature with the view of affording this point every facility for becoming a metropolis, rich and world-famed, with the least possi- ble expenditure of time. it will be seen from the foregoing hasty sketch that La Crosse has indeed about every advantage that could be desired for the manufacturing center of the Northwest and those manufacturers will be wise who establish themselves here with as little delay as possible. Now there* is abundant opportunity; by and by, and how soon the wisest cannot foretell, the best chances will have been seized upon, the best sites pur- chased and, as is invariably the case, the slow-thinking, slow-acting, conservative will find that he has been distanced by the wide awake man of the age. who sees the golden opportunity at a glance as he speeds by on the limited express and who acts by telegraph. THE MAMTOBA KAILU'RV Hid the Rloune River Valley Coun- try. "The star of empire" continues to take its way westward in accordance with time- nonored precedent, but just now it appears obe halting over the Mouse river region in the neighboring territory of Dakota, as if to indicate to the emigrant, whose face is ever turned toward the setting sun. that acre indeed is the land of promise of which ne is in search. The wanderer will hardly find a better and. no matter how far or in what direc tion he journeys. Nature has been gracious nd generous in this region, but ever, now, vhen it is comparatively known, the good gifts which have been here bestowed are out half understood and not half appreciated. This is a wonderful country; it is all ready for the plow of the farmer; it will yield twen- ty-fivebushels of the best hard wheat to the acre, and it has direct railway commu- nication with Duluth, the greatest wheat shipping port in the United States, and with Minneapolis, where more flour is Manufactured than in any other city in the world. But there are still other advantages in the cost of shipping grain to market and the nice of that all-important commodity, ltiui- ier. While it costs on an average 14"£ '•ents per bushel to ship wheat to Chicago \u25a0rom lowa, 22).; cents per bushel from Ne- braska and 24 >_ cents from Kansas, it costs die Dakota farmer only 10 cents per bushel in ship to Duluth and Sj; cents to ship to .Minneapolis. _***; And still the story is but half told: the undulating plain that produces the splendid wheat crop is covered by a vigorous growth ol the most nutritious grass that ever afforded sustenance to flocks and herds. Cattle range here the year -round with only such feed as nature has provided. This section is attracting widespread at- tention, because of its wonderful adapta- bility for stock-raising. The ranches lo- cated there during the past three years already have over 20, 000 head of cattle and 4.000 horses, all in the finest condition. The development of this country must be accredited to the Manitoba Railway com- pany, wliich has been the pioneer in this direction, and has extended railway facili- ties a good deal further and faster than any other railway line rad.ating from St. Paul, i ins one now brings to St. Paul twice tin- amount of grain that is delivered .n this city by any other route. Indeed, the Manitoba railway is directh contributory to St. Paul and Minneapolis, and in general terms is operated for the aggrandizement of these cities. During the last year it has constructed more miieage than any other line centering in either of the Twin Cities, and its branches have opened to the homesteader a tract of country broader than a principality and r cher in products than perhaps any other area of like extent within the United States, within a twelve mouth the Manitoba Railway company nas extended its line from Elk River to Milaca. from Willmai to St. Cloud, from Devil's Lake to Minot. and from Tuitah to Aber- deen. These branches were built to d.velop this Northwestern country, and the last named extension has made con- tributory to St. Paul a wide extent of country that heretofore has regarded Chi- cago as its metropolis and supply depot. The Manitoba company graded a total of 800 miles in the year lSSti; it has 700 miles under contract to be built in 1887, and it has during the last year opened to settlers 3,000.000 acres of land, all within twelve miles of a Manitoba railway station. —^— The Wis con in Central Line. Every great railway line appears to have some especial mission to accomplish beyond the general one of transporting passengers and freight between given points. It seem- ingly devolved upon the Wisconsin Central to transform the lake region of the Badger and the lake region embraces a large and the best part of its area into a gigantic summer resort, where the ill and the weary of the country at large could rest and recuperate. The lake region of Wisconsin is charming beyond the power of words to express; these expanses of pure, sparkling water are the crown jewels of the commonwealth, and all des- tined to contribute very largely to its pros- perity. Iv 1847 the writer first visited this section as a member of a surveying party, and found it a beautiful wilderness; the other day he visited it for the second time, jour- neying by palace car oh the Wisconsin Cen- tral, and wondering, as he journeyed, whether Aladin and his lamp had assisted in them marvelous transformation that had been achieved. These lakes and the summer hotels that have sprung up in the vicinity of them can- not be here described, or even mentioned in detail. Suffice it to say thai the tourist finds the first within an hour's ride of Mil- waukee, and he coutinues to find them at brief intervals until after penetrating 200 miles through a vast unbroken forest, he reaches the shores of that gieat inland sea. Lake Superior. and is at Ashland, the grandest water- ing please in the world, with a magnificent hotel, capable of accommodating 1,000 ' guests, and commanding a view of ttnsur- ' surpassed lake, forest and island scenery. It would be impossible here to describe I all the interesting features of the country: ; the scores of streams swarming with speckled trout; the myriad ponds teeming with bass and pickerel; the fragrant forests of hemlock, oak. pine and maple, full of : deer, which special legislation permits the : hunter to shoot in the early part of August; ! the picturesque Indian villages; the un- numbered waterfalls tumbling into cool, rocky gorges in the silent woods; the ex- , tensive land-locked bay. some seventeen : miles in length, affording a safe course for amateur yach ling: the endless stock of le- gendary lore and Indian myths made familiar to the ear of every sojourner on the shores of Gitcnee Gumee. It is the agreeable task of summer wanderers in this pleasant Northern land, far from the heat and turmoil of the city, with its anxieties and cares, to seek each for himself that which best suits his temperament and taste. - \u25a0 THE DHL.OT And Iron Range Ita.il way and the Great Vermilion Iron mine. Among the thousands in all parts of the ! Cbuntry who know of Minnesota as one oi j the great grain producing states, very few ! are aware of the fact that it Is in a fall ; way to become widely celebrated for its * mineral wealth at no distant day. For j years it was believed by the best informed I in such matters that there were considerable ! iron deposits somewhere near the "divide" i separating Hudson Bay from Lake Supe- rior, but no one suspected the existence of ! mines so rich and so nearly exhaustless as those of the •"Vermilion"' range aro now j known to be within our state boundaries, ! and but a comparatively small percentage of the American people are yet aware that , Minnesota possesses such a treasure. The location of the mines was one of the i results of an exploration undertaken by ! Mr. Tower, of Philadelphia, who sent a party into that inhospitable wilderness about six years ago for the purpose of veri- fying or disproving the stories which had I become current concerning the riches said to be hidden there. For once rumor had whispered less than the truth, and the pros- pectors were__entirely satisfied after care- fully looking over the ground that the region contained some of the most extensive iron deposits in the world, if they could be worked, and facilities secured for the transportation of the product to market. This was a problem that only capital could solve. Therefore. Mr. George C. Stone set out in search of capitalists. These it was easy enough to discover in the Eastern cities. but it was not so easy to induce them to venture their millions ameng the rocks and morassess of an almost inaccessible coun- try on the extreme northern confines of our national domain. But the man was freighted with eloquent facts, and he knew how to present them. Mr. Charlemagne Tower, the elder, with some other Phila- delphia gentlemen, was finally convinced that the enterprise was one from which great returns could with certainty be count- ed upon, and then the funds were found for inaugurating it and pushing it steadily on to completion. It was a stupendous un- dertaking, and a corresponding amount of capital was indispensable. A careful sci- entific exploration of the iron-bearing dis- trict had to be made, works erected and last but by no means least, a railway con- structed about seventy miles in length through a formidable country for the most part equipped with rolling stock, officered and manned Skill, determination and money. however, constitute a powerful force. These were all unitedly employed upon the enterprise, and it progressed as rapidly as the most sanguine could antici- pate. The Minnesota Iron company for under this name was the concern incor- —secured by purchase the title to 8.000 acres of land, which embraced the best of the iron bearing district, and the site now occupied by Tower, and then proceeded to construct a railway from Two Harbors, twenty-seven miles north of Dv luth. to the mine. in aid of this work the state generously and wisely made a large donation of land; in 1884 the road was finished to Two Harbors, where extensive ore docks were erected, and then mining operations began in earnest. How these operations have succeeded an able writer described in a recent issue of the Pioneer Press as follows': "The first shipments from the mine were made by railroad July 3. 1884, and the first cargo of ore was shipped from the ore docks on Aug. 19. 1884. The shipments that year were 62. 124 tons. In 1885 the shipments reached 225.484 tons, and this season (1886) up vi Aug. «_i, inclusive, lys.soi tons nave been shipped. The total for the season will in all probability be 300.000 tons. This beats the record of any other mine on Lake Superior in the same stage of development. In less than three years it has reached an output in excess of any other mine in that region. With its pits now open and its in- creased facilities, the Minnesota Mining company can make an output of 450.000 tons with greater ease than it could produce 300.000 tons this year. It already con- tributes one-tenth of the entire iron product of the Lake Superior region, and there is no apparent limit to its capacity, except the conditions of the market. Nothing but a visit to the mines can give any adequate idea of the extent of the operations which are there carried on. "Nine pits have been opened in these iron mountains, the vast uncovered halls and chambers— whose walls are dyed in richer tints than those of the Pompeiian palaces of a prodigious treasure house, where Na- ture has stored wealth enough, perhaps, to pay the national debt. Each of these pits is furnished with all the appliances for excavating, handling and hoisting the ore and transferring it to the ore cars. They all bear the names of gentlemen connected with the enterprise. The Stuntz pit is the most eastern of the exposures. The vein at this point is from twenty to forty feet wide. The pit is 400 feet long. A tunnel has been driven in from the south to uni- water this pit at a depth of sixty feet. The ore is also brought through this tunnel and hoisted to the railroad cars. Stone pit is about an eighth of a mile west of the Stuntz. It is opened to a length of about 900 feet. This pit is worked in three slopes, the width of the deposit varying from 25 to 1:25 feet. The deepest point be- low the surface is 100 feet. The ore is taken from this pit with mine cars going dhectly into the pit and hoisted with a pair oi powerful drums. Ely pit. which ad- joins the Stone to the west, is opened for a distance of 200 feet A shaft has been sunk to the second level, and at this point the vein shows good ore 129 feet wide. Tower Pit No. lis now at a depth of 100 . feet. It is opened for a distance of 250 feet on the length of vein, and is now over i 100 feet In width. Tower Pit No. 2 has been stripped of the ore for a distance of 400 feet. The ore shows clean the entire length, and measures from 60 to 100 feet in width. A shaft has been sunk in this de- posit to a depth of CO feet. The ore is 'ken through a tunnel from the bottom of the shaft to the railroad cars by an endless rope attached to nine cars, with a capacity of two tons each. ; The Tower pits are the most elevated of de- posits in either of the iron ranges. The Breitungpit lies south ot the Tower, and is 29 feet wide and 100 feet long. A dia- mond drill is in operation here, and, though nothing of importance has vet been discov- i ered, it is expected that large bodies of ore will be found in this pit. The Lee pit, which is on the southern range, is sunk to the depth of fifty feet beiow the first level. The vein at this point shows well, and is about fifty feet wide. A large amount of ( machinery is employed in these mining op- erations. Near the Ely pit two air com- pleters are in operation for working power drilis: also a pair of engines and drums for hoisting purposes. Here, too, is the elec- tric light machinery, consisting of two dynamos of twenty lights each. These furnish light for all the pits, trestles and docks. For the mining operations are car- carried on continuously, night and day, by separate gangs of miners, with only the in- tervals required for meals, and they are as actively prosecuted in winter as in summer, even in this high northern latitude. The rapid development of the mines is largely due to the sleepless energy of the superin- tendent, Capt. Elisha Morcom, who has been in charge since the first opening. He has 1,100 men on his pay-roll, and all the pits are hives of busy industry, organized and directed by a single mind. Over $55.- --000 per month is paid out at the mines for labor alone. \u25a0Within the last few days the road has been completed from Duluth to Two Har- bors, and trains are running regularly. So the great Northwest moves forward, each year adding some new industry in estab- i lished business centers, and developing some new frontier region, which but a few j years ago was regarded as unworthy the at- ! tention of enterprise." 1 ___ Is This an Insinuation? ! New York Sun. The executive mandate closing the grounds of the White house to the general public, in \u25a0'• \ order that the president and Mrs. Cleveland j may take daily outdoor exercise without being \u25a0 anno ed by inquisitive sightseers is wise and i proper. No public-spirited citizen will object to it. no man of family will find fault with it, no sage woman will fa'" to f.>n»^-i. _. _____ BANKS. Henry P. U-p.i_.i_i, Pros*. K. II Bailey, Cashier. C. D. Oilman. Vice Pres. Wm. A. Miller, A.st. C. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF SO". PAUL, MI. N. T7XITBD «TAT*S DIPOSIT9ET. , Capital $1,000,000. Surplus $500,000. , DIRECTORS: ' H. H. Sibley, C. A. DeGraff, C. D. Gil._-_.__, " T. B. Campbell. H. E. Thompson, A. 11. Wilder, , V- H. Kelly, ii. R. ligels.w, F. B. Clarke, N. W. Kittson, J. J. Hill. C. W. Griggs, ' H. P. Upham. D. C. Shepnard, __. H. Bailer. ! SECOND NATIONAL BANK OF ST. PAUL. UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY. Business Established 1553. Organized an a National Bank 1884. >. S. EDGERTON, President. A. S. COWLEY, Tice President. D. A. MONFOKT, Cashier. 1 diiuectobb: R. P. Pr,r.«rfrt.i. **" I""* 6"*f~~~* A. S. Cowley, ' N. W. Kitteou, William B. Dean, Isaac Staples, David Day, 1. P. Wright, "**. R. Smith, George H. Ranney, Peter Berkey, 3. S. Robertson, D. A. Monfort. _\u25a0 John S. Piunce, P«*». E J. Meier, Asst. Cashier. SAYINGS BANK OF ST. PAUL, ST. PAUL, MINN. Paid in Capital, $50,000. S'rplts, $10,000. General Banking Business Transacted. foreign Exchange and Steamship T.c'iets. trustees: 8. F. Drake, .To in P. Prince, Unseal X, Brill, '/. John A. riiec Emanuel Good. __ % L. 8. R_____>, Pres. W. D. Kirk, Cashier. J- W. WAIT. Asst. Cash «r. THE CAPITAL GANK OF ST. PAUL, ST. PAUL. MINN, Capital, $100,000. Surplus., $30,000. THrectors: L. E. Reed. Reuben Warner, J. H. Sandeis, Kenneth Clark. J. L. Forepaugh, 11. D. Mathews, C. C. LoJoster, W. D. Ki.k. BANKING EO JSE OF A. ft PEABODY & CO. Established 1882. GENERAL MERCANTILE BANKERS. Deposits received subject to check < n emand. Checks payable through tho St. -:_.ul Clear- ing House. Dealers in 1 1 vestment securi- ties. Eastern money to loan on *.eal Estate Mortgage at 6 per cent. Wm. Dawson, Pres Robert A. Smith, Vice-Pres. Albert bclieffer, Casii.er. Hermann scheffer, A«st Cashier. PAID UP CAPITAL >6 i",000. BANK OF MINNESOTA, ST. PAUL, MlN_>. Established 1859. Reorganized Nov. 1, 1882. Formerly Dawson & Co. Transacts a general Hanking business. Account, sol.ci.*.. Vakes ( oltections on all access ble points ii_ " inncsota, Wisconsin, lowa, bako a. Montart a: -" __.____.t ba. with promptness aad at reasonable rateo. Issues Bills of Exeh. ige available in all parts of the world. Correspondents: Mechanics National Bank. New "fork: Kir-t National Bank and Na oaal Bans Illinois. Chic, g_; Melville. Eva-s it Co., Back- ers, Loudon. THE MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK OF ST. PAUL, MINN. Capital $1,030,000. Surplus $600,003 W. R. MERRIAM, President. C. H. BIGELOW, Vice President. F. A. SEYMOUR. Cashier, GEO. C. POWER, Asst. Cashier. THE THIRD NATIONAL BANK OF ST. PAUL, MINN. PAID IN CAPITAL, $500,000. OFFICERS: Walter MAXN,Pres. R. E. Stowkk, Cashier. Directors: Isaac Staples. Dr. C E. Smith, Dr. F. It. Smith, Walter Mann. K. E. fc.te.wer. Accounts of Banks, Bankers and others respect- fullysolicited. Interest allowed on deposits. Collections a specialty. SEVEN CC R VERS BANK. Authorized Capital, 000,000. Paid up, $50,000. R. M. Newport. Pre?. W. B. Evans, Cashier. Michael. DKriEL. Vice Pies. CL H. Hawkes. Ass't. Cashier. Jos. \u25a0___***-**__, Prest. A. Sf. Lawto-j, V'-ce Prest. Geo. H. Hosmkk, Cashier. THE WEST SIDE BANK, OF ST. PAUL. CAPITAL $100,000. !* /.erest Paid on Time Deposits. A General Banking Business Transacted. DtBBCTOIW: / O. D. Merrill. J. IT. Bishop, A. If. Lawton. S. C. Staples, Jos. Minea. H. L. Moss. Ceo. Muni. I. St. Pieri-p, rjno. R. ' J n«.,t'-r INSURANCE. S. S. EATON, INSURANCE! Hat'l German-American Ml B'ldg. Corner Fourth and Robert Sts., ST. PAUL. MINN. PRIME & SHAaDREW— INSURANCE, 186 E. Third Street, St. Paul, Minn. Liyerpool and Londcn and Globe, England .- 3~*.000,000 Northern. England 6,000,000 American, N. J 1,600,0' " Merchants. N. J 1,225,000 Norwich Uni< n, En-ad 5.000,000 Sun Fire Office, Eu. 1.. d 1G.u00.0i.0 ens Fail., N. __ 1*333,000 Peoples, Pa 3.7,0iK* Boatmans, Pa.' 410,000 WEED jTiIHEJCE, INSURANCE! 167 East Third Street, Merchants Hotel Block. ST. PAUL, MINN. HOGHSON & HSHEHWAT, AGENTS FOR FIRE, ACCIDENT. PLATE GLASS AND CYCLONE INSURANCE, Office, So. 23 East Third Street. ST. PAUL. MINN. P."- A";*"-"LO 8 GRAVES & VINTON, 301 Drake Block, St. Paul, .Minn. MORTGAGE LOANS. Western Manarers. .\_idulese__ BiiiiivinK Com- pany, of'Middietown, Conn. J. S. Mackey. President aud Manager. Minnesota Mortgage Loan Co. Room 7. First National Bank Building, Corner Fourth and Jackson St*. St. Paul. Boom 7, Mackei-Lejrjr Block, Corner Fourth \u25a0*"• ***•" 'V ' \r .* »•* *.' " '-'.. V H L "SALE MILL N RY_ N » NOTIONS. AUGUST OPPENHEIMER & CO.. Importers and Wholesale Dealers In Millinery and Fancy Goods ! 173, 175, 177, 179, 181 East Fourth Street, St. PAUL. MINN. tar* Fashion Plates sent gratis on applies cation. H. C s BURBANK. Manufacturer and Jobber of CLOTHING- ! 220, 222 &. 224 E. 3d St., St. Paul. Minn. WHOLESALE GEOCEBi P. H. KELLY, Mercantile -CopiL \u25a0 Importers aud Wholesale Dealers in GROCERIES, ST.PAUL, - - MINN. BEAUPRE, KEOGH & C 0, k WHOLESALE GROCERS, 22*5, 228, 230. 232, 234 and 236, E. Third Street, ST. PAUL, MINN. ' c John H. Allen. Daniel H. Moon. ALLEN, MOON & CO., Wholesale Grocers, 201,203,205,207 and 209 East Third Street, corner Sibley, St. Paul, Minn. MAXFIELD & SEABUSY, Wholesale Grocers ! ANDIMPORTERS. 195 to 199 East Third Street, corner of Bible] Street. St. Paul, - . - Minn XANZ, GRIGGS & HOWES, Wholesale Grocers, KOS. 2*2 TO 252 EAST THIRD STREET. ST. PAUL, MINN Vi'..vU&oA...kiioOi6 ASP SHOES- J. B. TARBOX & CO., MANOTACTUI'I.Band Jobbers OP BOOTS AND SHOES, 179, 181, 183, k 185 East Third Street, ST. PAUL, - - MINN. C. GOTZIAN" & CO., Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealer, in BOOTS AND SHOES, 187 AND 189 EAST THIRD STREET, St. Paul, - - Minn. FOOT, SCHULZE & CO., Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in BOOTS AND SHOES, 233, 235 &237 E. Third street. St. Paul, Minn. WHOLESALE LR JGS. Oldest, Largest and Most Complete Drug House in the Northwest. NOYES BROS, & CUTLER, Importers and WHOLESALE DRUGG-I3TS ! 258, 260 & 262 Sioiey, Corner Fifth St., WS&$- St. Paul. Iron Warehouse &Yards, East Fourth and Fifth sts. Buyers or Ginseng.. Sen«i_at Wax. ~RYAN CO?" Importing & Jobbing Druggists And Druggists' Sundry men. Nos. 225-227-229 E. Third St., St. Paul. Dennis Ryan. Henry D. Squires, John W. Bell. W.iuL .-A .c oqAL. Northwestern Fuel Co. St. Paul, Minn. Shippers of Anthracite &Bituminous CcaJ Distributing* Docks: Duluth, "Washburn. Green Bay and Milwaukee. Storage Capacity, 100,000 Tons. SL Paul & Pacific Coal end Iron Co., ST. PAUL. COAL AND PIG-IRON. OKI 3 COAL COM'Y, 323 Jackson Street, St. Paul. Minn. J. E. Mc Williams, Gen. Manager. Docks at Duluth, Cbicag-o k Milwaukee. LEHIGH COAL AND IRON CO., 185 East Fourth Street St. Paul. Directors : C. W. Grijrars, Prest. Arthur G. Yates. J. L. T.p'vi". *""**"" s. A. ft. v^cter. Sp -. LUMBER MANLFAuTU ERS. John Martin. Prest. H. B. Banker. Seo'y. { Philip Reilly, Vice Prest. & Gen'l Manager. F. C. Laird, Treasurer. John Martin Lumber Company, Manufacturers and Dealers in Every Variety of ' PIKE AND HARDWOOD LMBEB I j General Office: 312 Hennepin Avenue, Min- neapolis. Office, 116 West Seventh Street, St. Paul, Minn. - ' T. A. ABBOTT & CO., \u25a0 Sash, Eo;rs, Blinds, Mouldings, Frames, SASH WEIGHTS. ETC. 2 Send for Prices and Estimates on Odd Work. Office, 420 Sibley Street. Warehouse. Corner j of Fifth and Kittson Sts.. St. Paul, Minn. 71 C. E. KELLER & CO.. Wholesale __ Retail "_ LUMBER DEALERS, 90 E. Seventh St - Yards and Planing Mill,Como Ay. .Near __!•• vatur B. St. Paul. Minn. _ E. C. LONG & CO., ~ | V Railroad Contractors, j Bridge Builders' Lumber,,* ] And Bail road Material. './**. Boom 26, Gilflllan Block. - . * *. | Reed & Sherwood, Wholesale Lumber Dealers & Manufact'rs, ! i Also Manufacturers of Mi""'!, Doors, __linds j a and Mouldings. Mills and Factory at Anon*. Head offices: Room <n , x.,.,1.,. ~i-«.V or- T*. r'«*t. !• n Minn. I \u25a0 . * ! ii FARWELL, OZMUN & JACKSON, j % WHOLESALE " '\u25a0 I 1 HARDWAREI 254, 256. 256. 260 and 262 East Third I 1 Street, St. Paul. ""VKOLESALE DRY GOODS. *""* " « " Maurice Auerbach. George R. Finch, W_u. H. Van Slyek, Elbert A. Young. AUERBACH, FINCH & YAH SLICK, Wholesale Dry Goods "Auerbach, Finch & Van Slyck, the leading Dry Goods in the Northwest. Established in 1856. \u25a0 Powers Dry Goods Company ! Importers and Jobbers of Dry Goods, Notions, etc., and Manufacturers of *~~\ Men's Furnishing G-oods, 233, 230, 233, 236. 238 and 240 East Fourth St., ST. PAUL, MINN. The most rapid growing house in the North- west. Motto: Large Sales and Small Profits. LINDEKES, WARNER & SCHURMEIER, WHOLESALE Dry Goods and Notions ! Corner Fourth and Sibley sis., St. Paul, Mlnu. MANNHEIMER BROS. Importers and Retailers of Dry Goods ! Largest aad most complete establishment of Its kind iv the Northwest. We deal with nearly 7,000 out-of-town customers through the mall order department annually. Corner Third and Minnesota streets, St. Paul. 361 Broadway, New York. Lanpher, Finch & Skinner, Jobbers and Manufacturers of HATS. CAPS, FURS. GLOVES, STRAW GOODS, UMBRELLAS, AND RUBBER CLOTHING, 186 and 168 East Fourth Street. ""\u25a0"£" Fur Coats and Robes a specialty AR ST & PHOTOGPA'HEESV SUPPI E_. ZIMMERMAN BROTHERS, ~ 1»_...L1.RS IN Photographic Supplies, Artist.' Materials, Frames, Alburns and Photographic Specialties. AMATEUR OUTFITS. 371 and 373 Sibley Street. send for Illustrated Catalogue. -C. O. ZIMMERMAN. C. A. ZIMMERMAN. V-.H LE A^K PAPER AND ST..T.J-V Sf. The St. Paul Book & Stationery i \u25a0- COMPANY, Jobbers and Retailers 121 57 East Third Street. RT. PATH,. MINN". D.D. MERRILL, Pres k Mgr. D. D. MERRILL, Jr., Sec. & Treas AVERILL, CARPENTER 4CO~ Paper Manufacturers AND WHOLESALE STATIONERS, PRINTERS* STOCK, BLANK BOOKS, St. Paul. Minn. Nos. 191 and 193 East Fourth Street. \gents for VVt> tney's Child) i's Carriages. FU I MANUFACTURES. CHAS. A. ALBR ECHT\ Successor to E. Albrecht & Bro., Fur Manufacturer, 4.'*! E. Third St. LADIES' SEAL A D MINK CLOAKS AND Fine Gents Coats a Specialty. Cash paid for raw furs. ~MEKRELL RYDER, Dealer and Manufacturer of Ladies' Furs, Gentlemen's Fur Goods, Buffalo and Fancy Robes, and snippers of Raw Furs. No. 389 JACKSON STREET. ESTABLISHED 1860. WHOLESALE AND RETAIL H.RJWM. THE ST.PAUL HARDWARE CO. H. E. Humphrey, Man gr. . r- _*i ; Dealers In Hardware and Cutlery, Guns t And Snorting Goods. Fine Building Hardware and House Furnish- ing Goods. A i r_.iud-> »l Gun Kt.t>«t«i(l_r. Nos. Jit <* "Hi E. Seventh street. HERTZ <S_ BLISS, Dealers In Hardware and Fine Cutlery, Stoves. Ranges, Furnaces aud House Furnishing Goods. No. 74 Ka«t »c th «... t P- <1 Mnn AGRICULTURAL.IMPLEMENTS P. P. Mast,' f resident, Spring-field, O. J. H. Burwell, V. P.. Treas. &Gen. Mgr, St. Paul, Minn. John R.Warner, Secy, St. Paul, Minn. MAST, BUFORD & BURWELL Coapiiiy, Jobbers In AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTS CARRIAGES, BUGGIES & WAGONS, Sleighs and Harness. Buckeye Seeders, Buckeye Drills, Buford Plows, Buckeye Pumps &Iron Turbine Wind Engines. ST. PAUL, MINN. O. Lunn, President. Wm. Dawson, Treas. H. H. Miller. V.-Pres. F. C. Miller. S^c'y. ST. PAUL PLOW WCR 23. St. Paul, Mirn. Manufacturers of the Norway Clipper Plows, '•. \u25a0'\u25a0'* Breakers. Harrows, Cultivators. Directors: O. Lunn, President; H. H. Mil- ler. Vice President; Win. Dawson, Pres. Bank sf Minn.; C. H. Bi/elow. Pres. St. Paul Fire k Mar ne Ins. Co.; Jno. Kerwin, A. H. Wilder, _f Merriam & Wilder; F. C. Miller, Secretary. RUSSELL & CO. Manufacturers of rhreshinsr Machin 8, Horse Powers, Portable and Traction Farm Engines. CAMPBELL, WALSH k JILSON, Successors to J. G. Freeman & Co. MACHINERY AND MILL SUPPLIES. 225 & 227 East Fourth .St.. St. Paul, Minn. St. Paul Storage Forwarding & Implement Co. Storage, Implements k Binding Cord. {59 to 389 E. Third St St. Paul. Minn. GUNS, PISTOLS AND SPORTING GOODS. WILLIAM R. BURKHARD, .-. Wholesale and Retail GU ns 1 jmmmitfos, Fishing Tackle, Skates, Cutlery and Sporting Goods Generally. The larsrest c c usive a.ortiug Goods house a the Northwest and ai^o the oldest, being stablisbed in 1855. JVERPLANCK BROS^" Manufacturers and Importers or CIGARS! 18 and 120 East Seventh Street, Cor. Robert. Factory No*- 1P.*~"~ .*&_«:_. Ist <W-t vv.it'a. CARRIAGES, BUGGIES AND SLEIGHS. C. B. THURSTON. w _ 3. THURSTON. C. B. THURSTON & SON, WHOLESALE FARM MACHINERY! Carriages, Buggies and Sleighs and General Storage. No. 25 W. Third Street, St. Paul, Minn, Warehouse, Corner Eagle ana Spring streets. E. _. HALLOWELL. C _ HALLOWELL. G. W. HALLOWELL. E. M. HALLOWELL & CO., CARRIAGES. 503 t > 511 Minnesota Street. Bet. Ninth and Tenth. PAPER BOX MANUFACTURERS. EDWARD S. MEKRILLT - Successor to Elvidge & Smith, Manufacturer of every Description of PLAIN ANDFANCY BOXES. SPECIALTIES : Druggists' Fine Boxes, Plush an**" § tin To? Candy coxes, Plush Odor boxes. Estimates Furnished. 15 1 and 156 East Third Street. Mr. E. S. Merrill has just recently pnr- cn* s d the establishment of Elridge & Su, t i, aim eirig \u25a0* capable workman and shrewd basne-'s mm, mo.t undoubtedly deserves siccus. Tne above concern certainly de- serv s iredii cs leing: the onl house in the Wtsttuat makes plush and satin woik. __GyL A IZEI> IRON 0 SICES. S. F. POLLOJK^ "" Manufacturer of Galvanized Iron Cornices! Window and Door Caps, Skylights. Patent Fire-Prooi Shutters and Doors, and Other Sheet Metal Tiimmings for Buildings. 59 EAST NINTH STREET. LEFEBVRE& DE3LAURIERS, Manufacturers of GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES. . ST. PAUL, MINN. j" \u25a0*-^— \u25a0_ »_.- ROOFING SLATE", ETC" " PENNSYLVANIA SLATTCO" Wh< le ale aid Retail ROOFING SLATE & SLATE BLACKBOARDS And all kinds of Manufactured Slate, FLOOR AND HEARTH TILES, Blue Stone Flying and Curling. Representing the B i igor. Peach Hill aud Chipman. Perms IvHuia Quarries; Merrill's I" row ville & M nson Maine Quarries: Eu- reka aud New Empire, Vermont Quarries. Office—Corner Third ana Robert Sts., (Chamber of Commerce.) WHITE LEAD, OIL AND PAINTS. St. Faal White Lead and Oil Company, Manufacturers and Jobbers WHITE LEAD, M!XED PANTS, COLORS, Putty, Polished Piate, Ornamental and Ameri- C:in Window Glass, Varnishes, Brushes, etc., etc. Oil M 11 at Mankato. 405 Sibley 6treet, St. Paul, Minn. THE OLD PHOENIX INSURANCE \u0084 CO,, OF HARTFORD, CONN. CASH CAPITAL, 52.009,000. TOTAL LOSSES PAID, $10,000,000 A. K. MURRAY, State Agent, No. 167 East Third street. St. Paul. "R>N T FO.ND ES- C. M. Power, Sec. and Treas. Alex. Adams, Superintendent. ST. i AUL FOUNDRY CO. . ..uiulaeturers of Iron "Work for Buildings. General Founders. Blacksmiths and Machin- ists. Rolled Iron Beams in Stock. Works on St. P., M. & M. By, near Como Ar. Office, 118 East Fourth St., St. Paul. Minn. HENRY ORM, Manufacturer of Iron and Brass Castings, Bells, Babbitt Metal, Spelter, Solder. Etc. Cor. Armstrong St, Drake Sts., St. Paul, Minn. ST.PAUL BRASS WORKS, VV. F. BAILEY Proprietor. Manufacturer of Brass Goods, Babbit Metal, Battery Zincs, Tinman and Spelter (•older. Prompt attention given to orders fo> Brass Repairs on all kinds of machinery. Co rnei Eighth and Minnesota streets. DRAIN IRON COMPANY. SOUTH PARK, - WEST ST. PAUL. MANUFACTURESS OF SOIL PIPE. PLUMB A\'D STEAJI-FIT- TEES' SUPPLIES. PLUMBERS A..D GAS FITTERS. H. P. RCQG. C. A. FtLLER. G. P. HUGO. H. P. RUGG&CO., 318 Sibley Street, - St. Paul, Minn. Jobbers of Pumps k numbers' Supplies, Etc. RUGG FULLER & CO., 127 aid 129 Souti First Street, Minneapolis, .num. J. T. HOLMES, Sanitary Plumbing, Gas Fitting, Estimates Furnished to- Plumbing', Gas Fit* tin* aud Bte. m . ittiug. Office and Shops, 343 Minnesota Street. J. J. DUNNIGAN, PLUMBER AND GAS FITTER, Dei 1 r in Fine Chandeliers, Cut and Colored Globes. State Agent tor Matthews & holt's Gas Machine. 220 East Seventh St. Tele., hone 408-4. Sanitary Plumbing- a specialty. Fairbanks' Standard Scales FAIRBANKS, MORSE & CO. 871 and 373 Sibley Street. St. ?aul. 220 Nicollet Avenue, Minneapolis; TIN CAN MANUF. C I "i E2S- HORNE & DANZ, Manufacturers of CANS AND PIECED TINWARE. * Sole Manufacturers of DANZ' PAIENT FOLDING DECOYS. Corner Fourth and Exchi n_re. ~ DRY PLAT¥FACTORY. ST. PAUL DRY PI ATE CO., Manufacturers o EXTKA RAPID GELATINE PLATES. Room 30, Davidson Block. ' "^ CKA.G, LARKIN & SMITH, CROCKERY, ... 5M Pthler Street. \u25a0 - . St. Paul. Minn. ~~~»~~~~~~*'~~~~~~~'*******************— l '^*^—^™^ M^"^— —^ MINNESOTA SOAP CO., St- Pa<o_* >'.a Minneapolis

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Page 1: Q. SYSTEM. THE C, B. THE B. Mercantile -CopiL Dry€¦ · 2 THE ST. PAULDAILY GLOBE. SATURDAYMORNING. DECEMBER 4, 1886-SIXTEEirPAGES:. THE C, B. & Q. SYSTEM. A New Steam Thoroughfare

THE ST. PAUL DAILY GLOBE. SATURDAY MORNING. DECEMBER 4, 1886-SIXTEEirPAGES:.2

THE C, B. & Q. SYSTEM.A New Steam Thoroughfare Connects St.

Paul With the Eest of theWorld.

A Model Eailroad Under Model Manage-ment—Splendid E ad Bed and Splen-

did Soiling Stock.

The Chicago, Burlington & NorthernRailway company completed its line to thiscity at an auspicious period in its own his-tory, and in the history of St Paul also.The corporation Dad long ago bidden good-bye to impecuniosltyand reached that point

where whatever it attempted to do couldbe accomplished regardless of expense,while a provincial town, almost atthe headwaters of the Mississippi,had expanded into a metropolis, with a fu-ture that baffled calculation. The newsteam thoroughfare that necessarily had tocompete with other long-established andexcellent lines would have fared illhad itnot been ah:-- to improve upon what hadbeen done m. d afford the traveling publicsomething belter than it bad previouslybeen accustomed to in the way of accommo-dations. This the corporation above men-tioned did. Imp its capital at.d facilities wereunlimited and its managers had had thebenefit of * larger experience than has.pei haps, fallen to the lot of any other rail-way magnates. However this may be.they constructed one of the best railroadlines in the United States in the face ofdifficulties that necessitated the employ-ment of the first engineering talent to beobtained, and it is now one of the proudestmonuments that has ever been reared byenterprise and fax-seeing sagacity, and dedi-cated to interstate communication and na-tional progress.

It should be borne in mind that this linewinds along the east bank of the Missis-sippi under the shadow of its toweringbluffs, and within full view of some of themost magnificent river scenery to be foundin North America. The half has not beentold of the scenic grandeur of the upperMississippi, and neither the pen of thewriter nor the brush ofthe painter can ade-quately describe Its thousand attractions.This much may be said descriptivelywithout any attempt at draw-ing a pen picture: A mighty\u25a0Wilier way. one of the mightiest on theplanet lined on either side by bluffs thaiare nearly akin to mountains in altitudewhose rocky sides and summits have beencarved into such fantastic shapes as no hu-man artist could imitate, by that patientarchitect Nature, that used the "Father ofWaters*' as a chute*, and the ages as aperiod in which to perfect the stupendousartistic work. No one who can afford itshould fail to pay the upper Mississippi at-i_.it, now that the Chicago. Burlington &Northern .rail a ay has provided such admir-able" facilities for doing so. From LaCrosse northward it is one constantlychanging, but always charming, panoramaof bit.ff. stream and forest, the former fre(plenty crowned by huge masses of water-worn rock, which, at a little distance, re-semble the crumbling turrets and bastionsof ruined castles of the middle ages. Sostriking indeed is the resemblance, espedaily in the witchery of moonlight, thatthe tourist can scarcely credit that it Is anillusion. and for the moment is half induced,to think that he is in the old world gazingat the relics of antiquity. These bluffs bythe way furnish some ofthe finest andmost attractive building sites in the UnitedStates, and the day is coming when the;.will be dotted with palatial residences, a*

the Hudson river cliffs are now. Tin-writer, who has heard the "horologue oftime "strike the half century with a solemn_himen probably will not live to seeit, but who knows"." The worldmoves ranidlv in this age. and as soon a-

some rich man with elegant tastes securesone of these miniature Rocky mountainsbeautifies it as money can beautify, andMeets thereon such a mansion as tastewould suggest and coupons build, his ex-ample wiil be speedily followed, theMississippi bluffs will become the fashion,and the nabob will be an unnoticed unit ivthe sum of humanity who does not own oneof them. .'*'\u25a0 _•.. . ..

And right in this connection the writerwould auggest that nor magnificent bluffsoutrht to be largely appropriated by ourSouthern brethren forsummer homes. Theyoverlook the same lordly river that flows byhis cotton or sugar plantation, and it hedon't feel inclined to take a palace car onthe Chicago, Burlington & Northern, lethim expend a few of his superfluous thousamis in the constructing of a neat -steamyacht to convey himself and familywhere . humor \u25a0. .dictates during thetorrid season. * The average Southernerwould revel in our riven scenery, so radically different from the dead levels and semi-

tropical forests of the lower Mississippibottom lands. He would never weary ofexploring our wild ravines and canons, andfollowing our innumerable trout streams,while our fresh, bracing atmosphere wouldgive him a new lease of lifeand lead himto consider that lie had never truly livedbefore. We. whose dwelling place is nearthe head waters of the great river, inviteour u.i/.iieis ai toe outer end of it to comeand see what manifold attractions we haveto offer them during the heated term, andwhen the thermometer gets down to fiftyodd below zero, we will return the visit andexchange snow drifts for magnolia blos-soms. The St. Paul Land company, whichalways manages to have large and valuablereal estate possessions wherever the Chi-cago &Burlington railway penetrates, hasa large amount of property along the newline that is worth a journey from the At-lantic or Pacific seaboard to examine forpermanent or speculative investments.This sounds somewhat like a "puff," but.nevertheless, it is true, as any well-postedreal estate mnn would see at a glance. TheSt Paul Land company? own several of thebest town s us between this city and LaCrosse, which it is developing with its characteristic energy and the expenditure ofwhatever is necessary to accomplish theproposed end. Space willnot permit a de-scription in detail of all the embryo citiesthat this company is engaged in building,or to enumerate the many advantages theypossess. Hagar, Nelson and Cochian areamong the number, and business meneast, west and south, who are thinkingabout changing their locations, should cer-tainly visitone or all of them before set-tling down elsewhere. Each one of thesesites embraces a beautiful level intervalefrom one to three miles in extent, with theriver on one side and a line of the mostpicturesque bluffs that imagination canpaint towering skyward on the other.The summits of the bluffs, it must be re-membered, are on an approximate levelwith the surrounding country, which is oneof the richest and most thickly settled agri-cultural districts of the Northwest, Here-tofore the farmers of this region have hadno transportation facilities for their pro-duce, save what the river afforded, but not-withstanding this untoward circumstancethey have thriven marvelouslv. built hand-some dwellings and tine barns, and suppliedthemselves with all the multifarious ma-chinery which a Northwestern farmer hasto have in these days in order to keepabreast with the times. This is exactly thekind of a community in which the retailmerchant delights to locate, and there is arare chance for a hundred of them in theplaces above mentioned, where the field isstill almost unoccupied. But don't waitgentlemen, dealers in dry goods, hardware.drugs, groceries and what not. for these arechances that will hardly be duplicated inth s generation. So "catch on" while youcan.

The impression has gone abroad that ourwinters are .ntolerably severe, but this is agrand mistake. It is cold here in Januaryand February, but our atmosphere is soclear, dry and bracing that SO ° below zerodoes not bring the shiver that accompanies10 = below zero in localities like Chicago.The ladies —heaven bless them—considerthis climate in winter delightful above allothers, it is so irresistibly suggestive of sealskin mantles that reach to their pretty feat,and what the ladies indorse is bound to bepopular.

AtLaCrosse the St. Paul Land companyhas one of the most valuable real estate in-terests in the Northwest: nothing less thanan even section of land one mile square,that embraces the test business property inthis city of25.000 inhabitants. Pour greatrailway stems have .leaning lines thatconcentrate on this huge plant, and upon itare clustered theirpassenger devils, freight

depots, and principal machine shops, and1 a forty-stall brick round-house has also just

been completed there. The present value ofthis property would startle any private cit-izen, save a Vanderbilt or Jay Gould.What it will be worth twenty years fromnow would require a knowledge of thehigher mathematics to figure out

But few business men comparatively in\u25a0 any part of the country are aware of the

extraordinary advantages that La Crossepossesses, especially as a manufacturingpoint. Leaving the river out of the ques-tion so far as steamboat transportation is

l concerned, there are the tour leading rail-, way lines, reaching out to every trade. center of Uncle Sam's domain and all con-centrating in a space so small that thosevexatious changes and delays incident to i

; the transferring of freight are all avoided. i

greatly to the benefit of the pockets and ,the temper of shippers. Then it is the:natural eutry-port for the vast product ofthe Chippewa and Black river pineries—the largest and, so tar as the quality ofthelumber is concerned, the best that now re-main in any of the old Northern pinerystates— and it is landed here at prices whichafford the La Crosse man who requires it :in bis-business a tremendous advantage iover the manufacturer at Chicago or St jLouis.

But this is not all, by any means; in ad-dition to an unlimited . supply of pine of asuperior quality at absolutely bottom fig- jures, for the reason that it has had no !opportunity before getting here of passing jthrough the hands of a middleman, there is >

an inexhaustible amount of excellent hardwood tiiube'* close at hand and accessibleby the cheapest of all routes -natural water-ways that were seemingly established bynature with the view of affording this pointevery facility for becoming a metropolis,rich and world-famed, with the least possi-ble expenditure of time.

it will be seen from the foregoing hastysketch that La Crosse has indeed aboutevery advantage that could be desired forthe manufacturing center ofthe Northwestand those manufacturers willbe wise whoestablish themselves here with as littledelay as possible. Now there* is abundantopportunity; by and by, and how soon thewisest cannot foretell, the best chances willhave been seized upon, the best sites pur-chased and, as is invariably the case, theslow-thinking, slow-acting, conservativewill find that he has been distanced by thewide awake man of the age. who sees thegolden opportunity at a glance as he speedsby on the limited express and who acts bytelegraph.

THE MAMTOBA KAILU'RV

Hid the Rloune River Valley Coun-try.

"The star of empire" continues to takeits way westward in accordance with time-nonored precedent, but just now it appearsobe halting over the Mouse river region in

the neighboring territory of Dakota, as ifto indicate to the emigrant, whose face isever turned toward the setting sun. thatacre indeed is the land of promise of whichne is in search.

The wanderer will hardly find a betterand. no matter how far or in what direction he journeys. Nature has been gracious

nd generous in this region, but ever, now,vhen it is comparatively known, the goodgifts which have been here bestowed areout half understood and not halfappreciated. This is a wonderfulcountry; it is all ready for theplow of the farmer; it willyield twen-ty-fivebushels of the best hard wheat tothe acre, and it has direct railway commu-nication with Duluth, the greatest wheatshipping port in the United States, andwith Minneapolis, where more flour isManufactured than in any other city in the

world.But there are still other advantages in the

cost of shipping grain to market and thenice of that all-important commodity, ltiui-ier. While it costs on an average 14"£'•ents per bushel to ship wheat to Chicago\u25a0rom lowa, 22).; cents per bushel from Ne-braska and 24 >_ cents from Kansas, it costsdie Dakota farmer only 10 cents per bushelin ship to Duluth and Sj; cents to ship to.Minneapolis. _***;

And still the story is but half told: theundulating plain that produces the splendidwheat crop is covered by a vigorousgrowth ol the most nutritious grass thatever afforded sustenance to flocks andherds. Cattle range here the year -roundwith only such feed as nature has provided.

This section is attracting widespread at-tention, because of its wonderful adapta-bility for stock-raising. The ranches lo-cated there during the past three yearsalready have over 20,000 head of cattle and4.000 horses, all in the finest condition.The development of this country must beaccredited to the Manitoba Railway com-pany, wliich has been the pioneer in thisdirection, and has extended railway facili-ties a good deal further and faster than anyother railway line rad.ating from St. Paul,i ins one now brings to St. Paul twice tin-

amount of grain that is delivered.n this city by any other route.Indeed, the Manitoba railway is directhcontributory to St. Paul and Minneapolis,and in general terms is operated for theaggrandizement of these cities. During thelast year it has constructed more miieagethan any other line centering in either ofthe Twin Cities, and its branches haveopened to the homesteader a tract ofcountry broader than a principality andr cher in products than perhaps any otherarea oflike extent within the United States,within a twelve mouth the ManitobaRailway company nas extended its line fromElk River to Milaca. from Willmaito St. Cloud, from Devil's Laketo Minot. and from Tuitah to Aber-deen. These branches were built tod.velop this Northwestern country, andthe last named extension has made con-tributory to St. Paul a wide extent ofcountry that heretofore has regarded Chi-cago as its metropolis and supply depot.

The Manitoba company graded a total of800 miles in the year lSSti; it has 700 milesunder contract to be built in 1887, and ithas during the last year opened to settlers3,000.000 acres of land, all within twelvemiles of a Manitoba railway station.

—^——The Wis con in Central Line.Every great railway line appears to have

some especial mission to accomplish beyondthe general one of transporting passengersand freight between given points. It seem-ingly devolved upon the Wisconsin Centralto transform the lake region ofthe Badger—and the lake region embraces a largeand the best part of its area —into a giganticsummer resort, where the illand the wearyof the country at large could restand recuperate. The lake regionof Wisconsin is charming beyond thepower of words to express; these expansesof pure, sparkling water are the crownjewels of the commonwealth, and all des-tined to contribute very largely to its pros-perity.

Iv 1847 the writer firstvisited this sectionas a member of a surveying party, andfound it a beautiful wilderness; the otherday he visited it for the second time, jour-neying by palace car oh the Wisconsin Cen-tral, and wondering, as he journeyed,whether Aladin and his lamphad assisted in them marveloustransformation that had been achieved.These lakes and the summer hotels thathave sprung up in the vicinity of them can-not be here described, or even mentioned indetail. Suffice it to say thai the touristfinds the first within an hour's ride of Mil-waukee, and he coutinues to find them atbrief intervals until after penetrating 200miles through a vast unbroken forest, hereaches the shores of that gieat

inland sea. Lake Superior. and isat Ashland, the grandest water-ing please in the world, with a magnificenthotel, capable of accommodating 1,000

' guests, and commanding a view of ttnsur-' surpassed lake, forest and island scenery.

It would be impossible here to describeI all the interesting features of the country:; the scores of streams swarming with

speckled trout; the myriad ponds teemingwith bass and pickerel; the fragrant forestsof hemlock, oak. pine and maple, full of

: deer, which special legislation permits the: hunter to shoot in the early part of August;! the picturesque Indian villages; the un-numbered waterfalls tumbling into cool,rocky gorges in the silent woods; the ex-, tensive land-locked bay. some seventeen

: miles in length, affording a safe course foramateur yach ling: the endless stock of le-gendary lore and Indian myths madefamiliar to the ear of every sojourner onthe shores of Gitcnee Gumee. It is the

agreeable task ofsummer wanderers in thispleasant Northern land, far from the heatand turmoil of the city, with its anxietiesand cares, to seek each for himself thatwhich best suits his temperament andtaste. - \u25a0

THE DHL.OT

And Iron Range Ita.il way and theGreat Vermilion Iron mine.

Among the thousands in all parts of the! Cbuntry who know of Minnesota as one oijthe great grain producing states, very few

! are aware of the fact that it Is in a fall; way to become widely celebrated for its

* mineral wealth at no distant day. Forjyears it was believed by the best informed

I in such matters that there were considerable! iron deposits somewhere near the "divide"iseparating Hudson Bay from Lake Supe-rior, but no one suspected the existence of

! mines so rich and so nearly exhaustless asthose of the •"Vermilion"' range aro now

jknown to be within our state boundaries,! and but a comparatively small percentageof the American people are yet aware that

, Minnesota possesses such a treasure.The location of the mines was one of the

iresults of an exploration undertaken by! Mr. Tower, of Philadelphia, who sent aparty into that inhospitable wildernessabout six years ago for the purpose of veri-fying or disproving the stories which had

Ibecome current concerning the riches saidto be hidden there. For once rumor hadwhispered less than the truth, and the pros-pectors were__entirely satisfied after care-fully looking over the ground that the regioncontained some of the most extensive irondeposits in the world, if they could beworked, and facilities secured for thetransportation of the product to market.This was a problem that only capital couldsolve. Therefore. Mr. George C. Stone setout in search ofcapitalists. These it was easyenough to discover in the Eastern cities.but it was not so easy to induce them toventure their millions ameng the rocks andmorassess of an almost inaccessible coun-try on the extreme northern confines of ournational domain. But the man wasfreighted with eloquent facts, and he knewhow to present them. Mr. CharlemagneTower, the elder, with some other Phila-delphia gentlemen, was finally convincedthat the enterprise was one from whichgreat returns could with certainty be count-ed upon, and then the funds were foundfor inaugurating it and pushing it steadilyon to completion. Itwas a stupendous un-dertaking, and a corresponding amount ofcapital was indispensable. • A careful sci-entific exploration of the iron-bearing dis-trict had to be made, works erected andlast but by no means least, a railway con-structed about seventy miles in lengththrough a formidable country for the mostpart equipped with rolling stock, officeredand manned Skill, determination andmoney. however, constitute a powerful force.These were all unitedly employed uponthe enterprise, and it progressed as rapidlyas the most sanguine could antici-pate. The Minnesota Iron company —for under this name was the concern incor-

—secured by purchase the title to8.000 acres of land, which embraced thebest of the iron bearing district, and thesite now occupied by Tower, and thenproceeded to construct a railway from TwoHarbors, twenty-seven miles north of Dvluth. to the mine. in aid of this work thestate generously and wisely made a largedonation of land; in 1884 the road wasfinished to Two Harbors, where extensiveore docks were erected, and then miningoperations began in earnest. How theseoperations have succeeded an able writerdescribed in a recent issue of the PioneerPress as follows':

"The first shipments from the mine weremade by railroad July 3. 1884, and the firstcargo of ore was shipped from the ore dockson Aug. 19. 1884. The shipments that yearwere 62. 124 tons. In 1885 the shipmentsreached 225.484 tons, and this season (1886)up vi Aug. «_i, inclusive, lys.soi tons navebeen shipped. The total for the season willin all probability be 300.000 tons. Thisbeats the record of any other mine on LakeSuperior in the same stage of development.In less than three years it has reached anoutput in excess ofany other mine in thatregion. With its pits now open and its in-creased facilities, the Minnesota Miningcompany can make an output of 450.000tons with greater ease than itcould produce300.000 tons this year. It already con-tributes one-tenth of the entire iron productof the Lake Superior region, and there is noapparent limit to its capacity, except theconditions of the market. Nothing but avisit to the mines can give any adequateidea of the extent of the operations whichare there carried on.

"Nine pits have been opened in these ironmountains, the vast uncovered halls andchambers— whose walls are dyed in richertints than those of the Pompeiian palaces —of a prodigious treasure house, where Na-ture has stored wealth enough, perhaps, topay the national debt. Each of thesepits is furnished with all the appliances forexcavating, handling and hoisting the oreand transferring it to the ore cars. Theyall bear the names of gentlemen connectedwith the enterprise. The Stuntz pit is themost eastern of the exposures. The veinat this point is from twenty to forty feetwide. The pitis 400 feet long. A tunnelhas been driven in from the south to uni-water this pit at a depth of sixty feet. Theore is also brought through this tunnel andhoisted to the railroad cars. Stone pit isabout an eighth of a mile west of theStuntz. Itis opened to a length of about900 feet. This pit is worked in threeslopes, the width of the deposit varyingfrom 25 to 1:25 feet. The deepest point be-low the surface is 100 feet. The ore istaken from this pit with mine cars goingdhectly into the pit and hoisted with a pairoi powerful drums. Ely pit. which ad-joins the Stone to the west, is opened for adistance of 200 feet A shaft has beensunk to the second level, and at this pointthe vein shows good ore 129 feet wide.Tower Pit No. lis now at a depth of 100 .feet. It is opened for a distance of 250feet on the length of vein, and is now over i100 feet In width. Tower Pit No. 2 has

been stripped of the ore fora distance of400 feet. The ore shows clean the entirelength, and measures from 60 to 100 feet inwidth. A shaft has been sunk in this de-posit to a depth of CO feet. The ore is

'ken through a tunnel from the bottom ofthe shaft to the railroad cars by anendless rope attached to nine cars,with a capacity of two tons each. ;The Tower pits are the most elevated of de-posits in either of the iron ranges. TheBreitungpit lies south ot the Tower, and is29 feet wide and 100 feet long. A dia-mond drill is in operation here, and, thoughnothing of importance has vet been discov- iered, it is expected that large bodies of orewillbe found in this pit. The Lee pit,which is on the southern range, is sunk tothe depth of fifty feet beiow the first level.The vein at this point shows well, and isabout fifty feet wide. A large amount of (machinery is employed in these mining op-erations. Near the Ely pit two air com-pleters are in operation forworking powerdrilis: also a pair of engines and drums forhoisting purposes. Here, too, is the elec-tric light machinery, consisting of twodynamos of twenty lights each. Thesefurnish light for all the pits, trestles anddocks. For the mining operations are car-carried on continuously, night and day, byseparate gangs of miners, with only the in-tervals required for meals, and they are asactively prosecuted in winter as in summer,

even in this high northern latitude. Therapid development of the mines is largelydue to the sleepless energy of the superin-tendent, Capt. Elisha Morcom, who hasbeen in charge since the first opening. Hehas 1,100 men on his pay-roll, and all thepits are hives of busy industry, organized •and directed by a single mind. Over $55.---000 per month is paid out at the mines forlabor alone.

\u25a0Within the last few days the road hasbeen completed from Duluth to Two Har-bors, and trains are running regularly. Sothe great Northwest moves forward, eachyear adding some new industry in estab-

i lished business centers, and developingsome new frontier region, which but a few

j years ago was regarded as unworthy the at-! tention of enterprise."

1 ___Is This an Insinuation?

! New York Sun.The executive mandate closing the grounds

of the White house to the general public, in \u25a0'•\ order that the president and Mrs. Clevelandj may take dailyoutdoor exercise without being

\u25a0 anno ed by inquisitive sightseers is wise andi proper. No public-spirited citizen will objectto it. no man of family will find fault with it,

• no sage woman will fa'" to f.>n»^-i. _.

_____ BANKS.Henry P. U-p.i_.i_i, Pros*. K. II Bailey, Cashier.C. D. Oilman. Vice Pres. Wm. A. Miller, A.st. C.

THE FIRST NATIONAL BANKOF SO". PAUL, MI.N.

T7XITBD «TAT*S DIPOSIT9ET., Capital $1,000,000.Surplus $500,000.

, DIRECTORS:' H. H. Sibley, C. A. DeGraff, C. D. Gil._-_.__," T. B. Campbell. H. E. Thompson, A. 11. Wilder,

, V- H. Kelly, ii. R. ligels.w, F. B. Clarke,N. W. Kittson, J. J. Hill. C. W. Griggs,

' H. P. Upham. D. C. Shepnard, __. H. Bailer.

! SECOND NATIONAL BANKOF ST. PAUL.

UNITED STATES DEPOSITORY.Business Established 1553.

Organized an a National Bank 1884.>. S. EDGERTON, President.

A. S. COWLEY, Tice President.D. A. MONFOKT, Cashier.

1 diiuectobb:R. P. Pr,r.«rfrt.i. **" I""* 6"*f~~~*A. S. Cowley, ' N. W. Kitteou,

William B. Dean, Isaac Staples,David Day, 1. P. Wright,"**. R. Smith, George H. Ranney,Peter Berkey, 3. S. Robertson,

D. A. Monfort. _\u25a0

John S. Piunce, P«*».E J. Meier, Asst. Cashier.

SAYINGS BANK OF ST. PAUL,ST. PAUL, MINN.

Paid in Capital, $50,000. S'rplts, $10,000.General Banking Business Transacted.

foreign Exchange and Steamship T.c'iets.trustees:

8. F. Drake, .To in P. Prince, Unseal X, Brill,'/. John A. riiec • Emanuel Good.———— __

%L. 8. R_____>, Pres. W. D. Kirk, Cashier.

J- W. WAIT. Asst. Cash «r.

THE CAPITAL GANK OF ST. PAUL,ST. PAUL. MINN,

Capital, $100,000. Surplus., $30,000.THrectors: L. E. Reed. Reuben Warner, J. H.

Sandeis, Kenneth Clark. J. L. Forepaugh,11. D. Mathews, C. C. LoJoster, W. D. Ki.k.

BANKING EO JSE OF A.ft PEABODY & CO.Established 1882.

GENERAL MERCANTILE BANKERS.Deposits received subject to check < n emand.

Checks payable through tho St. -:_.ul Clear-ing House. Dealers in 1 1vestment securi-ties. Eastern money to loan on *.eal EstateMortgage at 6 per cent.

Wm. Dawson, Pres Robert A. Smith, Vice-Pres.Albert bclieffer, Casii.er.Hermann scheffer, A«st Cashier.

PAID UP CAPITAL>6 i",000.BANK OF MINNESOTA,

ST. PAUL,MlN_>.Established 1859. Reorganized Nov. 1, 1882.Formerly Dawson & Co. Transacts a generalHanking business. Account, sol.ci.*.. Vakes( oltections on all access ble points ii_ " inncsota,Wisconsin, lowa, bako a. Montart a: -" __.____.t ba.with promptness aad at reasonable rateo. IssuesBills of Exeh. ige available in all parts of theworld. Correspondents: Mechanics National Bank.New "fork:Kir-t National Bank and Na oaal Bans

Illinois. Chic, g_; Melville. Eva-s itCo., Back-ers, Loudon.

THE

MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANKOF ST. PAUL, MINN.

Capital $1,030,000. Surplus $600,003

W. R. MERRIAM,President.C. H. BIGELOW, Vice President.

F. A. SEYMOUR. Cashier,

GEO. C. POWER, Asst. Cashier.

THE THIRD NATIONAL BANKOF ST. PAUL, MINN.

PAID IN CAPITAL, $500,000.

OFFICERS:Walter MAXN,Pres. R. E. Stowkk, Cashier.Directors: Isaac Staples. Dr. C E. Smith, Dr. F.

It. Smith, Walter Mann. K. E. fc.te.wer.Accounts of Banks, Bankers and others respect-

fullysolicited. Interest allowed on deposits.Collections a specialty.

SEVEN CC R VERS BANK.Authorized Capital, 000,000.

Paid up, $50,000.R. M. Newport. Pre?. W. B. Evans, Cashier.

Michael. DKriEL. Vice Pies.CL H. Hawkes. Ass't. Cashier.

Jos. \u25a0___***-**__, Prest. A. Sf. Lawto-j, V'-ce Prest.Geo. H. Hosmkk, Cashier.

THE WEST SIDE BANK,OF ST. PAUL.

CAPITAL $100,000.!* /.erest Paid on Time Deposits.

A General Banking Business Transacted.DtBBCTOIW: /

O. D. Merrill. J. IT. Bishop, A. If. Lawton. S.C. Staples, Jos. Minea. H. L. Moss. Ceo.

Muni. I. St. Pieri-p, rjno. R. 'J n«.,t'-r

INSURANCE.S. S. EATON,

INSURANCE!Hat'l German-American MlB'ldg.

Corner Fourth and Robert Sts.,

ST. PAUL. MINN.

PRIME & SHAaDREW— INSURANCE,186 E. Third Street, St. Paul, Minn.

Liyerpool and Londcn and Globe,England .- 3~*.000,000

Northern. England 6,000,000American, N. J 1,600,0' "Merchants. N. J 1,225,000Norwich Uni< n, En-ad 5.000,000Sun Fire Office, Eu. 1.. d 1G.u00.0i.0• ens Fail., N.

__1*333,000

Peoples, Pa 3.7,0iK*Boatmans, Pa.' 410,000

WEED jTiIHEJCE,

INSURANCE!167 East Third Street,

Merchants Hotel Block. ST. PAUL, MINN.

HOGHSON & HSHEHWAT,AGENTS FOR

FIRE, ACCIDENT. PLATE GLASSAND CYCLONE

INSURANCE,Office, So. 23 East Third Street.

ST. PAUL. MINN.

P."- A";*"-"LO 8GRAVES & VINTON,

301 Drake Block, St. Paul, .Minn.

MORTGAGE LOANS.Western Manarers. .\_idulese__ BiiiiivinKCom-

pany, of'Middietown, Conn.

J. S. Mackey. President aud Manager.

Minnesota Mortgage Loan Co.Room 7. First National Bank Building, Corner

Fourth and Jackson St*. St. Paul.Boom 7, Mackei-Lejrjr Block, Corner Fourth

\u25a0*"•***•" 'V ' \r .* »•* *.' " '-'..

VH L "SALE MILL N RY_ N » NOTIONS.

AUGUST OPPENHEIMER &CO..Importers and Wholesale Dealers In

Millineryand Fancy Goods !173, 175, 177, 179, 181 East Fourth Street,

St. PAUL. MINN.tar* Fashion Plates sent gratis on applies

cation.

H. C s BURBANK.Manufacturer and Jobber of

CLOTHING- !220, 222 &. 224 E. 3d St., St. Paul. Minn.

WHOLESALE GEOCEBi

P. H. KELLY,

Mercantile -CopiL\u25a0

Importers aud Wholesale Dealers in

GROCERIES,ST.PAUL, - • - MINN.

BEAUPRE, KEOGH & C0, k

WHOLESALE GROCERS,22*5, 228, 230. 232, 234 and 236, E. Third Street,

ST. PAUL, MINN.' cJohn H. Allen. Daniel H. Moon.

ALLEN, MOON &CO.,

Wholesale Grocers,201,203,205,207 and 209 East Third Street,

corner Sibley, St. Paul, Minn.

MAXFIELD & SEABUSY,

Wholesale Grocers !ANDIMPORTERS.

195 to 199 East Third Street, corner of Bible]Street.

St. Paul, - . - Minn

XANZ, GRIGGS & HOWES,

Wholesale Grocers,KOS. 2*2 TO 252 EAST THIRD STREET.

ST. PAUL, MINN

Vi'..vU&oA...kiioOi6ASP SHOES-

J. B. TARBOX & CO.,

MANOTACTUI'I.Band Jobbers OP

BOOTS AND SHOES,

179, 181, 183, k 185 East Third Street,

ST. PAUL, - - MINN.

C. GOTZIAN" & CO.,Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealer, in

BOOTS AND SHOES,187 AND 189 EAST THIRD STREET,

St. Paul, - - Minn.

FOOT, SCHULZE & CO.,Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in

BOOTS AND SHOES,233, 235 &237 E. Third street. St. Paul, Minn.

WHOLESALE LR JGS.Oldest, Largest and Most Complete Drug

• House in the Northwest.NOYES BROS, & CUTLER,

Importers and

WHOLESALE DRUGG-I3TS !258, 260 & 262 Sioiey, Corner Fifth St.,

WS&$- St. Paul.Iron Warehouse &Yards, East Fourth and

Fifth sts. Buyers or Ginseng.. Sen«i_at Wax.

~RYAN CO?"Importing & Jobbing Druggists

And Druggists' Sundry men.

Nos. 225-227-229 E. Third St., St. Paul.Dennis Ryan. Henry D. Squires,

John W. Bell.

W.iuL .-A .c oqAL.

Northwestern Fuel Co.St. Paul, Minn.

Shippers of Anthracite &Bituminous CcaJDistributing* Docks:

Duluth, "Washburn. Green Bay andMilwaukee.

Storage Capacity, 100,000 Tons.

SL Paul & Pacific Coal end Iron Co.,ST. PAUL.

COAL AND PIG-IRON.OKI 3 COAL COM'Y,

323 Jackson Street, St. Paul. Minn.

J. E. McWilliams, Gen. Manager.Docks at Duluth, Cbicag-o k Milwaukee.

LEHIGH COAL AND IRON CO.,185 East Fourth Street St. Paul.

Directors :

C. W. Grijrars, Prest. Arthur G. Yates.J. L. T.p'vi". *""**""s. A. ft. v^cter. Sp -.

LUMBER MANLFAuTU ERS.John Martin. Prest. H. B. Banker. Seo'y.

{

Philip Reilly, Vice Prest. & Gen'l Manager.

F. C. Laird, Treasurer.

John Martin Lumber Company,Manufacturers and Dealers in Every

Variety of 'PIKE AND HARDWOOD LMBEB I j

General Office: 312 Hennepin Avenue, Min-neapolis. Office, 116 West Seventh Street, St.Paul, Minn. - '

T. A. ABBOTT & CO., \u25a0

Sash, Eo;rs, Blinds, Mouldings, Frames,SASH WEIGHTS. ETC. 2

Send for Prices and Estimates on Odd Work.Office, 420 Sibley Street. Warehouse. Corner j

of Fifth and Kittson Sts.. St. Paul, Minn.

71 C. E. KELLER & CO..Wholesale __

Retail "_

LUMBER DEALERS, 90 E. Seventh St -Yards and Planing Mill,Como Ay. .Near __!••

vatur B. St. Paul. Minn._

E. C. LONG & CO., ~| V

Railroad Contractors, j '»

Bridge Builders' Lumber,,* ]And Bail road Material. './**.

Boom 26, Gilflllan Block. - . * *. |Reed & Sherwood,

Wholesale Lumber Dealers & Manufact'rs, ! iAlso Manufacturers of Mi""'!, Doors, __linds j a

and Mouldings.Millsand Factory at Anon*. Head offices: Room

<n, x.,.,1.,. ~i-«.V or- T*. r'«*t. • !• n Minn. I\u25a0 . * ! ii

FARWELL, OZMUN & JACKSON, j %WHOLESALE

" '\u25a0 I 1

HARDWAREI254, 256. 256. 260 and 262 East Third I 1

Street, St. Paul.

""VKOLESALE DRY GOODS.———— *""* " « "Maurice Auerbach. George R. Finch,W_u. H. Van Slyek, Elbert A. Young.

AUERBACH, FINCH & YAH SLICK,

Wholesale Dry Goods"Auerbach, Finch & Van Slyck, the leading

Dry Goods in the Northwest. Established in

1856. \u25a0

Powers Dry Goods Company !Importers and Jobbers of

Dry Goods, Notions, etc.,and Manufacturers of

*~~\ Men's Furnishing G-oods,233, 230, 233, 236. 238 and 240 East Fourth St.,

ST. PAUL, MINN.The most rapid growing house in the North-west. Motto: Large Sales and Small Profits.

LINDEKES, WARNER

& SCHURMEIER,

WHOLESALE

Dry Goods and Notions !

Corner Fourth and Sibley sis., St. Paul, Mlnu.

MANNHEIMER BROS.Importers and Retailers of

Dry Goods !Largest aad most complete establishment of

Its kind iv the Northwest. We deal withnearly 7,000 out-of-town customers throughthe mall order department annually.

Corner Third and Minnesota streets, St. Paul.

361 Broadway, New York.

Lanpher, Finch & Skinner,Jobbers and Manufacturers of

HATS. CAPS, FURS. GLOVES,

STRAW GOODS, UMBRELLAS,

AND RUBBER CLOTHING,186 and 168 East Fourth Street.

""\u25a0"£" Fur Coats and Robes a specialty

AR ST & PHOTOGPA'HEESV SUPPI E_.ZIMMERMAN BROTHERS,

~

1»_...L1.RS INPhotographic Supplies, Artist.' Materials,Frames, Alburns and

Photographic Specialties.AMATEUR OUTFITS.

371 and 373 Sibley Street.send for Illustrated Catalogue.

-C. O. ZIMMERMAN. C. A. ZIMMERMAN.

V-.H LE A^KPAPER AND ST..T.J-V Sf.

The St. Paul Book & Stationeryi \u25a0- COMPANY,

Jobbers and Retailers121 5 7 East Third Street.

RT. PATH,. MINN".

D.D. MERRILL, Pres k Mgr.D. D. MERRILL, Jr., Sec. & Treas

AVERILL, CARPENTER 4CO~Paper Manufacturers

AND

WHOLESALE STATIONERS,PRINTERS* STOCK, BLANKBOOKS,

St. Paul. Minn.

Nos. 191 and 193 East Fourth Street.\gents for VVt> tney's Child) i's Carriages.

FU I MANUFACTURES.

CHAS. A. ALBR ECHT\Successor to E. Albrecht &Bro.,

Fur Manufacturer, 4.'*! E. Third St.LADIES' SEAL A D MINK CLOAKS AND

Fine Gents Coats a Specialty.Cash paid for raw furs.

~MEKRELL RYDER,Dealer and Manufacturer of Ladies' Furs,

Gentlemen's Fur Goods, Buffalo and Fancy

Robes, and snippers of Raw Furs.

No. 389 JACKSON STREET.ESTABLISHED 1860.

WHOLESALE AND RETAIL H.RJWM.THE ST.PAUL HARDWARE CO.

H. E. Humphrey, Man gr.. r- _*i ; • Dealers In

Hardware and Cutlery, Gunst And Snorting Goods.

Fine BuildingHardware and House Furnish-ing Goods. A i r_.iud-> »l Gun Kt.t>«t«i(l_r.

Nos. Jit <* "Hi E. Seventh street.

HERTZ <S_ BLISS,Dealers In

Hardware and Fine Cutlery, Stoves. Ranges,Furnaces aud House Furnishing Goods.

No. 74 Ka«t — »c th «... t P- <1 Mnn

AGRICULTURAL.IMPLEMENTSP. P. Mast,' fresident, Spring-field, O. J. H.

Burwell, V.P.. Treas. &Gen. Mgr, St. Paul,Minn. John R.Warner, Secy, St. Paul, Minn.

MAST, BUFORD & BURWELL Coapiiiy,Jobbers In

AGRICULTURAL IMPLEMENTSCARRIAGES, BUGGIES & WAGONS,

Sleighs and Harness. Buckeye Seeders,Buckeye Drills, Buford Plows, Buckeye

Pumps &Iron Turbine Wind Engines.ST. PAUL, MINN.

O. Lunn, President. Wm. Dawson, Treas.H. H. Miller. V.-Pres. F. C. Miller. S^c'y.

ST. PAUL PLOW WCR 23.St. Paul, Mirn.

Manufacturers of the Norway Clipper Plows,'•. \u25a0'\u25a0'* Breakers. Harrows, Cultivators.

Directors: O. Lunn, President; H. H. Mil-ler. Vice President; Win. Dawson, Pres. Banksf Minn.; C. H. Bi/elow. Pres. St. Paul Fire kMar ne Ins. Co.; Jno. Kerwin, A. H. Wilder,_f Merriam & Wilder; F. C. Miller, Secretary.

RUSSELL & CO.Manufacturers of

rhreshinsr Machin 8, Horse Powers,Portable and Traction Farm Engines.

CAMPBELL, WALSHk JILSON,Successors to J. G. Freeman & Co.

MACHINERY AND MILLSUPPLIES.225 & 227 East Fourth .St.. St. Paul, Minn.

St. Paul Storage Forwarding & Implement Co.Storage, Implements k Binding Cord.

{59 to 389 E. Third St St. Paul. Minn.

GUNS, PISTOLS AND SPORTING GOODS.

WILLIAM R. BURKHARD,•—.-.——Wholesale and Retail

GU ns 1jmmmitfos, Fishing Tackle, Skates,

Cutlery and Sporting Goods Generally.

The larsrest c c usive a.ortiug Goods housea the Northwest and ai^o the oldest, beingstablisbed in 1855.

JVERPLANCK BROS^"Manufacturers and Importers or

CIGARS!18 and 120 East Seventh Street, Cor. Robert.Factory No*- 1P.*~"~ .*&_«:_.Ist <W-t vv.it'a.

CARRIAGES, BUGGIES AND SLEIGHS.C. B. THURSTON. w

_3. THURSTON.

C. B. THURSTON & SON,WHOLESALE

FARM MACHINERY!Carriages, Buggies and Sleighs

and General Storage.No. 25 W. Third Street, St. Paul, Minn,Warehouse, Corner Eagle ana Spring streets.E. _. HALLOWELL. C

_HALLOWELL.G. W. HALLOWELL.

E. M. HALLOWELL & CO.,

CARRIAGES.503 t > 511 Minnesota Street.

Bet. Ninth and Tenth.

PAPER BOX MANUFACTURERS.

EDWARD S. MEKRILLT-Successor to Elvidge & Smith,

Manufacturer of every Description of

PLAIN ANDFANCY BOXES.SPECIALTIES :

Druggists' Fine Boxes, Plush an**" § tin To?Candy coxes, Plush Odor boxes.

Estimates Furnished.

15 1 and 156 East Third Street.Mr. E. S. Merrill has just recently pnr-

cn* s d the establishment of Elridge & Su, ti,aim • eirig \u25a0* capable workman and shrewdbasne-'s mm, mo.t undoubtedly deservessiccus. Tne above concern certainly de-serv s iredii cs leing: the onl house in theWtsttuat makes plush and satin woik.

__GyL A IZEI> IRON 0 SICES.S. F. POLLOJK^ ""

Manufacturer of

Galvanized Iron Cornices!Window and Door Caps, Skylights. PatentFire-Prooi Shutters and Doors, and OtherSheet Metal Tiimmings for Buildings.

59 EAST NINTH STREET.LEFEBVRE& DE3LAURIERS,

Manufacturers of

GALVANIZED IRON CORNICES. .ST. PAUL, MINN. j"—\u25a0*-^———\u25a0_ »_.-

ROOFING SLATE", ETC" "

PENNSYLVANIA SLATTCO"Wh< le ale aid Retail

ROOFING SLATE & SLATEBLACKBOARDSAnd all kinds of Manufactured Slate,

FLOOR AND HEARTH TILES,

Blue Stone Flying and Curling.Representing the B i igor. Peach Hill aud

Chipman. Perms IvHuiaQuarries; Merrill'sI"row ville & M nson Maine Quarries: Eu-reka aud New Empire, Vermont Quarries.

Office—Corner Third ana Robert Sts.,(Chamber of Commerce.)

WHITE LEAD, OIL AND PAINTS.

St. Faal White Lead and Oil Company,Manufacturers and Jobbers

WHITE LEAD, M!XED PANTS, COLORS,Putty, Polished Piate, Ornamental and Ameri-C:in Window Glass, Varnishes, Brushes, etc.,etc. Oil M 11 at Mankato. 405 Sibley 6treet,St. Paul, Minn.

THE OLD

PHOENIX INSURANCE \u0084 CO,,OF HARTFORD, CONN.

CASH CAPITAL, 52.009,000.

TOTAL LOSSES PAID, $10,000,000

A. K. MURRAY, State Agent,No. 167 East Third street. St. Paul.

"R>NT FO.ND ES-C. M. Power, Sec. and Treas.

Alex. Adams, Superintendent.

ST. i AUL FOUNDRY CO.. ..uiulaeturers of

Iron "Work for Buildings.General Founders. Blacksmiths and Machin-

ists. Rolled Iron Beams in Stock.Works on St. P., M. & M. By, near Como Ar.

Office, 118 East Fourth St., St. Paul. Minn.

HENRY ORM,Manufacturer of Iron and Brass Castings,

Bells, Babbitt Metal, Spelter, Solder. Etc.

Cor. Armstrong St, Drake Sts., St. Paul, Minn.

ST.PAUL BRASS WORKS, VV. F. BAILEYProprietor. Manufacturer of Brass Goods,

Babbit Metal, Battery Zincs, Tinman and Spelter(•older. Prompt attention given to orders fo>Brass Repairs on allkinds of machinery. Co rneiEighth and Minnesota streets.

DRAIN IRON COMPANY.SOUTH PARK, - WEST ST. PAUL.

MANUFACTURESS OF SOIL PIPE.PLUMB A\'D STEAJI-FIT-

TEES' SUPPLIES.

PLUMBERS A..D GAS FITTERS.H. P. RCQG. C. A. FtLLER. G. P. HUGO.

H. P. RUGG&CO.,318 Sibley Street, - St. Paul, Minn.Jobbers of Pumps k numbers' Supplies, Etc.

RUGG FULLER & CO., 127 aid 129 SoutiFirst Street, Minneapolis, .num.

J. T. HOLMES,Sanitary Plumbing, Gas Fitting,Estimates Furnished to- Plumbing', Gas Fit*

tin* aud Bte. m . ittiug.

Office and Shops, 343 Minnesota Street.J. J. DUNNIGAN,

PLUMBER AND GAS FITTER,Dei 1 r in Fine Chandeliers, Cut and Colored

Globes. State Agent tor Matthews & holt'sGas Machine. 220 East Seventh St.

Tele., hone 408-4.Sanitary Plumbing- a specialty.

Fairbanks' Standard ScalesFAIRBANKS, MORSE & CO.

871 and 373 Sibley Street. St. ?aul.220 Nicollet Avenue, Minneapolis;

TIN CAN MANUF. C I"i E2S-

HORNE & DANZ,Manufacturers of

CANS AND PIECED TINWARE.* Sole Manufacturers of

DANZ' PAIENT FOLDING DECOYS.Corner Fourth and Exchi n_re.

~DRY PLAT¥FACTORY.

ST. PAUL DRY PI ATE CO.,Manufacturers o

EXTKA RAPID GELATINE PLATES.Room 30, Davidson Block. '

"^CKA.G, LARKIN & SMITH,

CROCKERY, ...5MPthler Street. \u25a0 - . St. Paul. Minn.~~~»~~~~~~*'~~~~~~~'*******************—

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MINNESOTA SOAP CO.,St- Pa<o_* >'.a Minneapolis •