st. paul daily globe (saint paul, minn.) 1884-05-21 [p...

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VOL. VII. SUPERIOR, WIS. Its Great Natural Advanta- ges, the Town Site and the Harbor. Union or Water and Rail Trans- portation. A Lake Shore Railroad Center. Possible Manufactures. Will not a Great City be Built at This SpotS Nature Favors It. Will Not Man Accept and Wisely Use Her Free Gifts? Our Correspondent Visiting; at Superior Bay Writes of What He Sees There. ! Special Correspondence of the uiooe.i Superior, Wis., May 18. —A few brief weeks since I stood on the docks at Buffalo New York, and gazed upon the immense number of crafts, steam and sail, with their consorts, the spacious barges, that were daily expecting their winter vacations to be eudi-d. Here were great propellers, carrying within themselves the vast machinery which should soon throb with vitality and drive them fast to that far northwest so rapidly developing. They were iv their best attire, cleansed aud garnished from stem to stern, with elegant apartments for their freights of tourists who will admire aud enjoy, in the journey westward, the magnificent attractions of scenery and healthfulness afforded by a voyage over this great system of inland seas. Hidden from sight were the vast receptacles far the pro- ductions and manufactures of our own east aud the offerings of foreign ports, des- tined to be exchanged for the cruder pro- ducts of the mammoth wheat fields, the rich phi. >i!vcr and iron mines, and the exten- sive cattle ranges of the golden northwest. Capacious barges, awkward but useful con- sorts to these powerful and graceful leaders, lay near by, awaiting their cargoes of thou- sands of tons of freight. Hundreds upon hundreds of slower craft depending upon nature's original motive power, the wind, to carry them to their destinations, crowded the wharves and docks. Here a broad, blunt, old-fashioned schooner humbly seeks protection beneath the tower- ing side of a perfectly-modeled, and proud- sailinur vessel whose acres of canvas, spread upon its five lofty masts, invite the favors of the god of winds to speed it to its western port. Vessels of all sizes, and all models lie here, read}- and waiting for winter to remove his frosty fingers from the surface of the lake and allow them to spread their wings, or till their steam-fed lungs, and fly away to the far west. THE EASTERN LAKE METROPOLIS. Behind me stood the great city of Buffalo, the outgrowth of the extensive commerce of the lakes. Following the development of the great northwest, with which it has the most direct and the cheapest communication, Buf- falo has made rapid strides and ivthe last few years has increased its population fully one- third. A beautiful city, rich in culture and commerce, it stands the key to the greatest lake water line in the known world. From this prosperous eastern ter- minus my mind passed to the far west, to the o v.her terminus of this system of inland navigation, a thousand miles toward the orient, and I naturally asked myself " Where will be the GREAT WESTERN LAKE CITY? What point is to be enriched and refined to metropolitan importance by this fast increas- Ing traffic?" To-day Istand at the far western end of this wonderful water highway and look eastward. The icy fetters are broken, and fast the fleets, urged forward by wind and steam, are speeding to the new land. Freights of iron, coal and merchan- dize are coming, aud for seven months will the coining and going continue before king frost again asserts himself. As I look around me here, at the head of the greatest lake, Iknow I have found the entrance to that grand and prolific country; that im- mense northwestern empire, whose capabili ties are beyond computation ; that land which will furnish the world with its food, and its minerals, and which extends from the great lakes westward to the srreat ocean, offering to industrious millions, homes and wealth, through its fertile prairies, its ex- haustless mines, and its boundless stock ranges. It is in the immediate pres- ent that this great country has been made available by the completion of that wonder- ful railroad, the Northern Pacific, and its settlement and developement has really but just commenced. Of course the connections can be made from fifty points by railroads, but there can be but one point of connec- tion for water and rail, and at that point must grow up a great city, which shall, like Buffa- lo, stand without a peer and without a rival. Nature has as surely formed and located the site of that future commercial center as it has created and placed the planets. It re- mains with man to build the city. Look at any correct map of the United States and you willbe convinced that this town of SUPERIOR is naturally the entrepot for the vast territory of which I have spoken, always providing it can furnish the facilities and answer the re- quirements necessary to so important a place. Come here as I have, and you will quicklybe satisfied that not only are all re- quirements fulfilled, but that nature has made it a simple and easy task for man to build a city here, and that, although compet- itors may for a time secure more promi- nence, necessity will demand and force the building of that city, as surely as the sun will shine forth after a storm has spent itself and passed. There are several factors necessary to the successful establishment of a city, commer- cial intercourse and resources, location, phys- ical attributes, and energy combined with industry and liberality. Of the first part of these Ihave briefly written—the vast traffic between the east and west,—the exchange of goods not only with the different sections of our own country, but with foreign nations beyond both the Atlantic and the Pacific oceans. In location no city in the union is so fa- vored. Naturally, a railroad seeking the east will select the southern shore of Lake Superior, in fact there is no alternative, as it would be an almost impossible feat, even in these times of engineering triumphs, to con- gtruct a road along the north shore, through the immense iron and granite ranges. Again if such a road were practicable, there would be nothing to support it save the produc- tions of a few miningand lumbering camps. On the south it would pass through a rich portion of a rich state, the productions of which are annually increasing in quantity and value. Coming then from the far west in almost a direct line what is the firstavail- able lake port the railroad -will reach?— S- uperior. Chicago's greatness was the result of cir- cumstances, for it had the location although it lacked the physical advantages, while Mil- waukee, the elder of the two cities, has never advanced beyond mediocrity because, while well endowed in local situation, it was wrongly located to convenience the require- ments of traffic. Superior possesses a rare combination of situation, conformation and location. It is located at the point where water and rail communication should blend, and it is so situated that the work of trans-shipment is reduced to the simplest and easiest process possible, for, while the railroads find an abundance of convenient and natural laud aloug the lake for yard room in which to move all cars that would be required in a traffic of indefinite proportions,the water front affords safe dockage for an immense number of vessels. IT IS JfST TIIIIITY YEAUS AGO that a number of prominent, sagacious and wealthy men, —representative men from many parts of the Union, selected this site, convinced that ou it must develop a great city. Chicago was then an infant, but the tide of emigration set through the center of the country and the grand re- sources of the great northwest were undreamed of. The fertility aud extent of the boundless prairies whose "No. 1 hard" wheat is famous throughout the world, was unknown. Wild Indians and buffalos ranged unmolested through the rich stock ranges, aud over the buried mineral treasures, aud even the idea of opening those, the.n, distant regions, was treated with contempt. War and financial disasters came, and while Chi- cago and other cities, near the heart of the union, continued to exist, if not to flourish, this isolated region was left neglected and unsought. It was not until about 1870 that the eyes of the country were agcin directed to this portion of the national domain, being attracted by the renewed effort to construct the great Transcontinental railway aud the discovery of the fertility of the Dakota prairies. Slowly the work went on, until within the last few years dur- ing which the rush of immigration to the long neglected region has been marvelously rapid. Hundreds of thousands of fertile acres are yielding bouuti fully of the best grain in the world, rich mines have been discovered, and the far west is united to the east by an iron road. Now the city which the wise men proposed to fouud is needed and iheir impressions aud confidence will be emphatically endorsed by every observing man who visits this spot. Superior is PECULIARLY SITUATED. It lies on the south side of a land-locked bay, the northern shore of which is formed of a high range of rocky hills and a sandy point run- ning about seven miles into the lake, almost meeting another point. Between these two capes is a deep, wide channel permitting the entrance of the heaviest vessels to the most secure and spacious harbor to be found in the whole lake system. At the western end of the bay thus formed, the St. Louis, a large and rapid river, finds entrance and its current serves to keep the channel dfic.n through the bay to the deep waters of the lake. Near the east end of the town site is another deep, but more sluggish river, the Nemadji, and beyond that is another bay Allones. Between the latter bay and the St. Louis river lies the site of Supe- rior, whose physical attributes fit it most eminently for the situation of a great city. Here are no steep and lofty eminences, or rocky bluffs to be leveled at vast expense, or to be left as unsightly obstacles to a city's growth. Here is no narrow, circumscribed strip of land, to dwarf and limit the conven- ient arrangement of thoroughfares. It is a broad, spacious and almost level plateau located about thirty-five feet above the level of tbe water and almost imperceptibly rising back from the lake, with sufficient fall to afford the best of drainage. At the lake front perhaps five hundred feet from the main street, the land is a slight, but suffi- cient distance above the water forming a lower bench in front of the town, a natural and useful provision for the easy carrying-on of the transportation business by railroads, while ample space is available for large ware- houses and freight depositories. The town is laid out in regular, rectangu- lar blocks, with broad avenues and streets, of generous width. Throughout this town there is scarcely a place needing filling or leveling, so uniform is the surface. Could the most skillful engineer have planned the situation, he would not have conceived or adopted a single idea which nature has not supplied. THE HARBOR ATSUPERIOR. One of the strongest evidences that nature intended that a great city should exist at the head of Lake Superior, is found in the splen- did harbor, this extensive sheltered bay, where thousands of craft can find perfect security. In fact there is not elsewhere on the chain of lakes a harbor that compares with it. The approach to it from the deep water of the lake is through a spacious natural canal which has been secured and improved by the most scientific engineering. The absolute safety of vessels is insured by two piers 400 feet apart, extending far into the lake, and the depth of the water in this entrance channel is always sufficient for the heaviest laden craft that sail the lakes. The entrance is be- tween two lights and the piers afford protec- tion from the severest storms. Within the bay there is a broad, deep channel running, with a plentiful depth of water, from St. Louis river to the lake, thus making the entire length of the city's front available for dockage, a distance of over four miles. Two commodious piers have already been built, one belonging to the Northern Pacific Railway company and the other to the town. On the former a fuel company receives its coal, and, at the time of my visit, there were thousands of tons de- posited on it awaiting distribution. The government has as yet done little for Supe- rior in the way of dredging, and yet the depth of water in the channel is excellent. More money cip andnvill be used to advant- age, and the dredging to be done will of course add to the value and desirability of the harbor. The water at the piers, be- tween sixteen and seventeen feet, admits of|the floating of the largest craft that come through the Sault Ste Marie canal, an advan- tage enjoyed by no other place at the head of Lake Superior. Navigation opens early in May, and continues until late in November. The system of railroads already centered at Superior will necessitate the erection of many more piers, and it can be but very few years before the front of the town will be fringed with a multitude of these traffic depots, bear- ing great warehouses and enormous wheat elevators, aud entertaining marine visitors from all parts of the world, for navigation from Superior bay to the Atlantic ocean is uninterrupted. The Nemadji river at the eastern part of Su- perior is, !"as the place grows, destined to prove of»inestimable value. It is perhaps three hundred feet wide at its mouth and is navigable quite a distance, while it is unob- structed by rapids for at least ten miles. It has a good depth of water and boats drawing as much as eight feet can ascend it for sev- eral miles. For the convenience of shore warehouses and for manufactures it will be found very convenient. It penetrates a heavily timbered country, containing the best varieties, and large deposits of copper ore are known to exist on its tributaries. Its course is through some of the best farming land in the north aud its banks are extreme- ly picturesque, affording a delightful interior boat excursion. THE ST. LOUIS lUVER. which enters Superior bay at its head, is a most important tributary. It takes its rise very near the headivatars of the Mississippi, aud is really the primary source of the St. Lawrence. It is a long, winding stream, very variable in width aud depth, and fre- quently Indulging iv laughing leaps down rocky descents. Much of the country it tra- verses is extremely fertile and productive, and much is covered with a dense growth of valuable timber. There are extensive meadows in its course, producing an unri- valed quality of hay. The St. Louis river is navigable for steamers for twenty miles to the village of Fon dv Lac. Careful sur- veys have demonstrated the fact that over 03,000 horse-power can be easily made available from the wster below the rapids without impairing the navigation of the river and that at a small cost the channel can be deepened sufficiently to allow the approach of the largest vessels to the flouring aud saw- mills that would bo found profitable. From this section of the neighboring country the wealth of Superior would be enhanced, as it will contribute agricultural productions, lum- ber, minerals, building stone and slate. LOCAL ADVANTAGES. It will now be understood that Superior pos- sesses ail the necessary physical attributes re- quired in the development of a large city;— an admirable confirmation of surface over an area of nearly ten miles square, ex- tending from the unequaled water front to an extensive range of hills at the south, and from St. Louis bay to and. beyond Alloues bay, eastwardly. It is provided with two convenient natural canals penetrating its limits, and making easy the processes of commerce, manufacturing and transporta- tion. Its regularly level surface makes ev- ery part available for teaming, while the gen- tle incline to the lake affords ample drain- age. MANUFACTURES. No city in the country is better located for he profitable transaction of manufacturing, and the country in the immediate neighborhood will supply the ma- terials for the production of many staple articles for which the market is always ready and certain. The great wheat fields comparatively so near this port will supply the best grain known, and it can cer- tainly be ground into flour cheaper here than further cast, while a saving will be made on the freight to eastern markets. The pro- ducts of the fast developing mines of the great western territories will lind their way to Superior, where the reduction of the ores will become a source of profit. Blast fur- naces, foundries and smelting works will have an abundance of occupation, the iron, copper and silver ores be- inir supplied from the rich mineral districts around and near this convenient center. The manufacture of lumber is destined to be the chief industry and it has already de- veloped to a considerable extent, there hav- ing been two hundred millions of feet cut in 1883. Superior stands almost surrounded by the best pine timber in the northwest, and the most reliable computations place the amount easily availyble at over twelve thou- sand millions of feet. This would afford employment for a vast number of mills for more than half a century and furnish mate- rial for the building of countless towns and villages on the broad, open, treeless plains to the west. The St. Louis and Nemadji rivers anil the north and south shores will all contribute to this industry for the prosecution of which Superior is admirably adapted in water and land conveniences and means of distribution. There are in the forests adja- cent to this favored point, red oak, maple, bass, elm, black oak, black birch, poplar, white birch and white cedar timber, and hence the establishment of a variety of cer- tainly profitable industries is feasible, among them beina: the manufacture of furniture, tubs and pails, matches, wagons, agricultural machinery and wood-pulp paper. The existence of minerals in inexhaustible quantities in this vicinity, is as well known as the more obvious presence of vast forests. Immense deposits of iron and copper are con- cealed in the hills in Douglas county,of which Superior is the county seat,and in the extensive ranges on the north shore. There are also great veins of copper mixed with silver. The iron is known to be the purest and best in the world, and its manufacture must add to the importance of this commercial and pro- ducing metropolis. The reare vast quarries of granite, red sandstone and slate near by, and excellent brick are produced from the underling clay in the vicinity. There is another industry which is con- stantly increasing, and which musi; become of great value: the fishing interest. The fish of the lake, owing to the regular temper- ature of the water, are possessed of a flavor and richness that make them eagerly sought when fresh, and very popular everywhere when salted or smoked. Lake Superior trout, white fish and herring have a national repu- tation, and the business of catching and shipping them should become a most impor- tant factor in the commerce of Superior. AGRICULTURE. It must not be thought that this region of country is dependent on the outside world for the necessities of life, nor that fish is the only article of food produced. There are in the immediate vicinity of the town many acres of the best farming land, the red, rich loam of which produces all grains, vegeta- bles and small fruits in unlimited abund- ance. As long ago as 1858, Mr. James S. Ritchie (still livingin Superior) was awarded a special diploma at the exhibition of the United States Agricultural society held at Richmond, Va., for specimens of winter wheat, corn, potatoes, tobacco, and all kinds ot vegetables grown on this town site. The lake appears to act as a regulator of the cli- mate and sudden, disastrous changes are un-. known. Agriculture is profitable and the raising of stock has been found eqally so. Herein Superior can be independent as re- gards the necessities of life. THE RAILWAY CONNECTIONS. I have endeavored as briefly as possible to show the advantages of Superior as a port, a harbor, a manufacturing center and as a point for large commercial transactions. I have said it was a natural place for the rail- road center, and that such is the fact is shown by the number of railroads now here and coming. Of course the Northern Pacific is the most important, as it unites the com- merce of the Pacific ocean with that of the Atlantic, Portland and Superior being the ports bound together by the iron road. "With but two trans-shipments the products of west- ern Europe are conveyed to the shores of western Asia, and vice versa,a.nd the offerings of the world are interchanged at a minimum of . cost. The Northern Pacific makes its regular away to Superior as the first available and the most practicable lake port, and here it has extensive possessions in yard room on the lake front, a massive dock and a great quantity of property, business and residence, in the town. Its improvements already amount to over a half million dollars, and the sum that will probably be invested here in the near future must be immense. The quantity and value of the freight which this railroad will bring to the lake, as the coun try develops, is simply beyond calculation. The Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis & Omaha railway, with its thousands of miles of road through a thickly settled country, has sought and obtained admission to Superior Bay and it has two main lines. One is to St. Paul and thence to southeastern Minne- sota, Dakota, lowa, Kansas and Nebraska, and it is a signiflcent fact that Omaha is three miles nearer to Superior than it is to Chicago. The other direct line is by-Euu Claire to Chi- cago and Milwaukee, thus opening a vast country to the reception of freights brought by lake to this port. This company recog- nizing the inevitable future fof the head of the lake, has secured a large tract of land for its necessary facilities, and is rapidly making improvements, among which will be a line depot in the heart of the town, and ware- houses and docks by the lake. The company will invest certainly .$1,000,000. The St. Paul, Minneapolis it Manitoba rail- way managers have purchased a tract of 100 acres on the bay, and its trains now iind en- trance over the tracks of the Northern Paci- h'c, but an Independent line is contracted for from St. Cloud, a distance of 120 miles, and by this, central Minnesota will be tapped and central Dakota, will be levied upon. The Chicago, Milwaukee it St. Paul line utilize the tracks of the St. Paul & Oma- ha road while constructing their own, and the Wisconsin Central have already surveyed an extension of their line from Ashland to Superior Bay. The Minneapolis A St. Louis railroad has determined to avail itself of this port, and but one hundred miles of line are required to make the connection. A solid company has been organized to complete the air line to Chicago, part of which is liuished and purt graded. Even the people oE the lower Red river valley are ambitious for a direct line to a lake port, and it will be built in the near future, placing the wheat fields of north Minnesota and north Dakota and the great western Canadian provinces in communication with lake navigation. The projecting and building of all these rail- roads to this point are the results of absolute demand, not of competition and jealousy, and the fact that every road of importance in the vast northwestern system is seeking this outlet argues conelusivehthat it is the one and only natural point capable of accommo- dating the immense traffic between the east and west by water and rail. Superior has now a population of about 3,000 and is an orderly, well governed town. The society is excellent; churches and schools are prospering and many metropol- itan ideas are rapidly being 'introduced. The water, found in wells at all points, is pure, soft and cool, fuel is cheap and living is far from expensive. There will be a de- mand for all classes of business, and if Superior does not become a Chicago, and that quickly, the blame will Jdc with man, and not with nature. "but!" I have alluded to another factor neces- sary to the fruition of the evident design of Nature, and that is, man's work—energy, in- dustry and liberality. Will the owners of this favored spot develop the great natural advantages by a liberal policy and energetic measures, and accept and improve the boun- ties Nature has bestowed, and the railroads are ready to bestow, or will they, by exhorbi- tant demands,and unreasonable restrictions, so hedge in the property as to make it flh- possible for its development to proceed, and drive to' much less favored localities the prosperity and importance which they might attain. The proprietors should pool their issues,and act as a unit in building a cltv here. If they do not, commerce will, although per- haps at a great disadvantage, build other towns, dredge other channels, and, abandon- ing improvements,leave the place to crumble and decay. Can it be that any men are so short-sighted as to risk such a result? Will they lose all they have, or will they gain a thousand fold? I am indebted to Mr. J. Bond, Jr., the chairman of the committee of correspondence of the chamber of commerce for many favors during my pleasant visit to Superior, and would advise all who wish full and reliable information of any description relating to this vicinity to address him, or, better still, I would recommend a visit to this delightful place, where the air is $o pure, bracing and healthful, where the sailiag is so invigorating, where the fishing is so fascinating and excit- ing, either in the trout streams or the lakes, and where the opportunities for profitable in- vestment of capital are or should be so many and certain. J. H. H. M. E. CONFERENCE. Report on Temperance Adopted and Church Editors Elected. Philadelphia, May 20.—At the Methodist conference fraternal dispatches from the Presby- terians at Saratoga, and Bishop Cheney of the Reformed Episcopal church, were read and an- swered. The judiciary committee reported, pro- viding for the appointment of a committee of five legal, anil two ministerial members to consider the matter of the tenure of church property. The report of the committee on temperance urges the people to use tneir influence to banish the social glass, the formation of juvenile tem- perance societies, in Sunday schools that shall be on a temperance lesson on each question in the Sunday school series; also the of state legis- latures, requesting them to introduce instruction as to the »cc of alchohol the in state universities and public schools. It is the liquor traffic which is the chief source of the widespread intemper- ance which is the most gigantic evil of the day. The committee recommended the formation of conference temperance societies in all annual conferences, and that the complete legal prohibi- tion of the liquor traffic is the duty of the civil government. The people ought not to allow themselves to be controlled by party organiza- tions managed in the interests of the liquor traffic. Several motions postponing action were defeat- ed, and « motion prevailed for the previous ques- tion. Yeas 24, nays 100. It was announced that the Rev. D. J. M. Buckley received 281 out of the 324 votes for edi- tor of the Christian Advocate. The election then took place for editor of the Western Advo- cate. Rev. Drs. Baylesa, B. W. Mendenhall, F. S. Hoyt and B. F. Rawlins were placed in nomi- nation. Rev. Dr. Arthur Edwards, the present incum- bent, was nominated and elected editor of the Northwest Christian Advocate. The report of the committee on Episcopacy which was presented by Dr. Curry, stated that by unanimous vote they recommended the elec- tion of a missionary bishop for Africa. The Rev, Dr. Hartzell, Louisiana, said there were no legal difficulties in the way, and it has time the conference said whether they intended to give up Africa. Xo bishop had visited that country for seven years. ' The first ballot for editor of the Western, Christian Advocate resulted in no choice, and another ballot was ordered. The conference then voted for editor of the Central Christian Advocate and the Rev. Dr. Frye was chosen. The second ballot on the Western Christian Advocate showed no choice. J. M. Phillips wrs elected treasurer and the Rev. Dr. Earl Cranston assistant treasurer of the missionary society. The Rev. Dr. Bayliss was elected editor of the Western- Christian Advocate on the third ballot. The Rev. O. H. Warren was re-elected editor of the Northern Advocate. The ballot for the editor of the Pittsburg Ad' vacate showed no choice, the Rev. Dr. Smith receiving 180, being six less than necessary The conference adopted a motion that five legal and two ministerial members of the con- ference be appointed a committee to consider the matter of tenure of church property, and the report relating to temperance was also adopted by a large majority. The committee on the'Frecdman's Aid society adopted a report upon the entire question of ed- ucational work in the south among the whites and blacks. There will doubtless be a long and livelydebate. The report recommends that an appeal be made to the church to raiae §500 000 during the centennial year,for work in the south. The committee say inthe report, that mixed schools and mixed congregations may, in some places, be the most desirable and best for all concerned, in t other places one class or other, or both, may prefer - separate congregations, and separate schools If so, such is their right and we heartily concur The report further states, it is the judgment of this committee, that the entire educational work of the Methodist Episcopal church in the south- ern states should be under the direction of the society, and that in view of the great enccesß of the Freedman's Aid society the past four years in carrying forward the educational w ork in the south, we believe this society ought to have full charge of the work Kavanagh will commence the great dry <*oode sale at 422 Wabashaw street at 9:30 this mornin" Doors will opes at 9 a. m. ST. PAUL, MINN., WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY 21, 1884. TARIFF BEGGARS. Chicag-o Meeting of Pretended Pro- ducers Who Say Their Busi- ness Doesn't Pay. Wherefore, Consumers Must Submit to a Forced Contribution for Their Benefit. Chicago, May 20.—The national mass meeting of the wool growers of the United States re- sumed at 10 o'clock this morning. The com- mittee appointed to prepare an address to the wool glowers of the country, submitted the fol- lowing: To the Wool Growers and Sheep Breeders of the United States: Gektlemen: At the national convention of the wool growers and sheep breeders of the' United States, held in Chicago, the 19th of Jlay, 1884, and which was attended by delegates from twenty states, n committee was appointed to draw up an address to the wool growers of the country for the purpose of arousing them to a proper realization of ,the necessity that exists for immediate and energetic action if they would rescue the great industry in which they are en- gaged from its present depressed condition aud from impending dangers. The undersigned, members of the committee, firmly belfeve that the existing sad condition of the interest you rep- resent has been brought about largely, if. not altogether, by adverse congressional legislation, and that it will not again be prosperous until congress shall revise its action of its last session and restore the rates of duty to those which pre- vailed under the tariff of 1867, by which, for the first time in the industrial history of the country, equitable relations were established between duties ou wool and those on woolen goods. It cau be conclusively shown that the tariff act of that year gave to American producers of both wools and woolen goods steady markets, a secure expansion of production. It gave to customers cheaper wool and woolens than were ever before known iv Ameri- ca, aud brought prices for all goods of ordinary wear, and of many of far finer and luxurious wear, lower, or as low as known in Europe or elsewhere. The repeal ot the tariff of 18(57 ou wool and woolens was not asked for, as has been alleged, by the conservative business sentiment of the country, or by any considerable number of the American people. It was brought wholly through the efforts of importers and others in- terested in securing in the United States a mar- ket for foreign wool, aided by a few parties who desired to make use of the foreign product as a whip with which to subdue the American mar- ket, and menace the American producers, upon whom they were necessarily compelled to relf for nine-tenths of the wool required in their business. These combined influences, unpatri- otic and un-American, led to the passage of the unwise, abortive and suicidal tariff act of 1883, to which we firmly believe may be attributed the present depressed condition of the wool indus- try. You have doubtless, gentlemen, heard much of late touching the soundness of the policy of put- ting the raw materials of the manufacturer, in- cluding wool, on the free list. We trust you will resent such a proposition whenever and wherever made with the indignation which it justly mer- rits. '\u25a0 Wool is the finished product of a million of flocks of. owners, who have, by years of intel- ligent and patient labor and expenditure of large sums of money, brought their product \u25a0to the present high standard of excellence. To class it simply as raw material, as something that hag been produced almost without cost or expen- diture of time and labor, is an injustice against which we trust you will enter an effective pro- test. ' The arguments used in defense of the principles of protection apply at least as forcibly to wool as :to - any - article on the tariff schedule. \u25a0 The growing of . wool is - equal \ with the "growing of food and of the forests and with the 'manufacture of iron and steel. - The maintenance of a 1commer- cial marine, and navy, of a national militia, a primary element of a national defense in war, and of financial security i and independence in peace, the loss or neglect of which would de- range our entire monetary system, and place the entire country inall its interests in a condition of industrial and colonial vassalage to foreign producers, and equally fatal to the happiuness, and unbecoming to the . dignity and honor of a nation, whose annual increase in wealth is now three fold that of any other nation, and whose population now gives it the second rank among civilized empires and first among free self gov- erning and enlightened people. The appeal finallydeclares that the wool grow- ers have a right to ask congress for the restora- tion of a measure of protection, and concludes in the following terms: Finally, believing that desperate diseases require heroic remedies, we especially urge yon to sustain at the polls for legislative officers only such candidates as are in favor of adequately protecting and encouraging the great industry of sheep husbandry by voting to restore the wool tariff of 1867, or ,- rates of du- ties at least as protective as - those embodied in that act. \u25a0 The report was unanimously adopted. The remainder of the session was taken up by a dis- cussion of the methods for united action in the pending political canvass and in making the power of the wool growing industry felt. Ad- journed. . The convention reassembled at 4 o'clock, and appointed a committee of three Republicans to attend the Republican national convention, and three Democrats to attend the Democratic na- tional convention, to urge the claims of the wool growers for the restoration of the tariff of 1867, on wool, and present the ultimatum of the flock masters as set forth in its platform and ad- dresses.., - ASTROLOGY. . : ' MADAME G ANDERSON, Astrologist and magnetic Physician! Special attention given to DEBILITY, NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM, and all' chronic and nervous diseases. Speedy cure guaranteed. Also advises on all domestic and financial affairs, etc. Ladies, special atten- tion. . . '. . . Room 1, 424 Wabashaw street. . The most Elegant Blood Purifier, Liver Invigora- tor, Tonit, and Appetizer ever known. The first Bitters containing Iron ever advertised in Ameri- ca. Unprincipled persons are imitating the name; look out for frauds. See /CL /fTij' that the following Bigna- /llJciJx) '\u25a0 V tnr» is on every bottle and ficjTjT/i^///f tat? none other: /fy'^'- ' lyU*<^r\ ST. PAUL, MINN. L/ Druggist & Chemist \u25a0 - MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS. WE CLAIM And can prove to our patrons and the public, that the Pianos and Organs which we offer for sale, EXCEL ALL OTHERS Of both American and European manufacture in Power, Purity, Length and Sweetness of Tone, leaving nothing to be desired.. -! STEINWAY And HAINESPIANOS, never fail to give perfect satisfaction and are byall means the most desiia- ble instruments to obtain. A fine assortment of Uprights and Grands we are now offering upon favorable terms. ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS. N. B.—.New Upright Pianos for rent, and rent payments applied if purchased*. MRS. M C.THAYER, .. 418 Wabashaw street. Sohmer and other Pianoes, Newand Second Hand ORGANS. New England, Smith, American, Bay State and Sterling. SCHALL BANJOS. Everything in the line of Musical Merchandise, at lowest prices and best terms. ' 130-ly For Pianos & Organs For Easy and Best Terms, For Catalogues and Lowest Prices, \u25a0•'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'• ; I'or Asroecies and Territory. Address C. W. YOUNGMAN, 115 B. Seventh street, ST. PAUL. AMUSEMENTS. - GRAND OPERA HOUSE. One Week, commencing Monday, May 19. Engagement of the Popular Tragedian THOS. W. KEENB! Supported by a Specially selected Company under the management of Mr. W. R. Hayden. ' ..\u25a0 kepertoibb: TO-NIGHT, -;.-. Hamlet, Wednesday Ev'g, " 21, Hamlet. \u0084\u25a0•\u25a0:: Thursday Evening, " 22, Julius C-ESAK. . Friday Evening, : " 23, Macbeth. ' Saturday Matinee .The Lady op Ltojts. Saturday Evening, last ap- ' * pearance of Mr. Keene.. .Richard 111. Seats now on sale at bos office. \u25a0 Usual prices. MARKET HALL! - Grand Oratorio Night! " HANDEL'S MESSIAH! Thursday Evening, Bay 29, '84 250 "ESP SUBGERS JSSsit: 40 MUSICIANS! SIGNOR A. JANNOTTA... ...Musical Director. p Sale of seats commences on Thursday morning, May 22d, at 9 o'clock,, at R. C. Munger's music store, 107 East Third street. Admission SI. Reserved seats $1.50. \u25a0 St. Pail Alelic Cl SPORTS, AT WHITE BEAR, MAY 30, DECORATION DAY. S3 00-00 IN PRIZES. . PROGRAMME : 100 yards in heats championship gold medal of Minnesota; 120 yards hurdle race, Ist prize elabo- rate silver medal, 2d, silver cup; Quarter mile championship of Minnesota, Mayor's cup, value $40; 1 mile championship of Minnesota, Marvin cup, value $40; 3 mile handicap walk, the Barnes cup, value $40; 5 mile handicap race, Ist prize, valuable silver medal, 2d, silver cup; Putting the shot, Ist prize silver goblet, 2d, silver cup; Vault- ing with the pole. Ist prize, silver taukard.2d, sil- ver cup Tug of war teams of four, valuable championship medal; ; Throwing the \u25a0 LaCrosse ball, prize silver cup; Running long. jump, prize silver cnp; Running hop step, prize silver cup; Sparring four rounds, prize elaborate gold medal; 75 yards fat man's race, to weigh over 200 lbs Sack race 50 yards and return, prize silver cup: Grand LaCrosse, match bySt. Paul LaCrosse Club; and grand cricket match, St. Paul vs. Minneapo- lis. The above sports are open to amateurs only. Entrance fee to each event 50c; all entries must reach the manager on or before May 21. 129e0d JOHN S. BARNES, Manager Gives Special Bargains in KNASEann Olough & Warren Organs. 86 X Third Street, - St. p mo TROTTING STOCK AUCTION. ;\u25a0'\u25a0'' li**^ HIGH-BRED AtPublic Auction, WEDNESDAY, JtTNEH, t^^^M^ _ 18^4, rain or shine, at %?*'*s\u25a0?? ;; V;;^;^^^B|WHR Adjoining the city limits of St. Paul, Minn MB&SPtg&WtSaSKEfS&m mm "i' Com. X.W. Kittson, Chas. A. DeGrafland Djfl George \V. Sherwood, about 70 head of hi"h- TMp^^^^WM HH'j bred Trotters, consisting of young Stallions «jHi , yfiß| « ' Fillies, Brood Mares and Geldings, sired prin- ' ' VSfk ,-,,,- yff^ \W cipally by such noted Bullions as Smng"ler \u25a0g^^Ba^fe-E^^^jM^^^^fe. Volunteer, Peacemaker, George Wilkes, Yon '-'^aßß^^^^^nF ="^P«^^;: Arnim, B1?.ck^ oo, d '• jr., Alexander, Baymont, --.^- t?t^^^^^^^g^te rEJi.*3rZr Indianapolis, Belmont, Administrator Blue n^^^HPWIBiHBHHSSsAii^?? I**?l **? Bull, and Kavenswood. W=-^^^nHaf ii '" " jj""*^" Terms of Sale—Cash. Jc::^^ li^^tf^^P*^^Sj^.-^-rgr-;-.Ii^^tf^^P*^^Sj^.-^-rgr-;-. for catalogue, to B. at 10 a. m. sharp. Send j~^^gss^B]gyay«w.^P3!l^-—' for catalogue, to B. D. WOODMAXSEE, St. Paul, Minn. , NO 142 CLOTHING. SAILOR LADS. The peculiar cut oJ the Clothing worn by the ideal sailor indicates more of comfort than oi beauty. The looseness and general careless- ' ness of the fit would not satisfy a landsman who had the least spark oi good taste in dress. A good fitting garment is the first requisite, and any observing person can readily detect gar- ments bought at "Thb Boston" by the perfec- tion of fit. Our medium and low priced Suits are cut with as much care as the better grades. Substantial linings and trimmings and strong sewing (buttons and seams) are also impor- tant features in well- made garments, which, coupled with moderate prices, gives to our cus- tomers full value in whatever priced suit they purchase. Nothing that savors of shoddy oi poor workmanship is ever offered to the pa- trons of "The Boston." We are continually add- ing to our stock and can now show with pride an assortment of Suits in every department that eclipses any similar stock in the west. Not to be suited at The Bos- ton is an impossibility. We have often told you about our Hat and Cap Department, but, if through force of habit, you may still inadver- tently stroll into some other store for your hat, we would simply say Dont, for we can save -you at least 20 per cent, on your purchase, and give you the largest va- riety of all the new and best styles to select from. Mothers and those who have to provide clothing for their boys are alrea- dy well posted on the fa- cilities we offer, and there is no occasion to say more to them on the subject. Everybody knows we are headquar- ters for goods in our line that are worth buying. Bear in mind that shod- dy, poorly made and ill- fitting clothing is dear at any price, and it will be economy, to always patronize the BOSTON" "ONE-PRICE" CLOTHING HOUSE, ' Corner Thirl and RoM streets,' ST. PAUL.

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Page 1: St. Paul daily globe (Saint Paul, Minn.) 1884-05-21 [p ]chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn90059522/1884-05-21/ed-1/seq-1.… · nature's original motive power, the wind, to carry

VOL. VII.

SUPERIOR, WIS.Its Great Natural Advanta-

ges, the Town Site andthe Harbor.

Union or Water and Rail Trans-portation. A Lake Shore

Railroad Center.

Possible Manufactures. Will not aGreat City be Built at

This SpotS

Nature Favors It. Will Not Man Acceptand Wisely Use Her

Free Gifts?

Our Correspondent Visiting; at SuperiorBay Writes of What He

Sees There.

! Special Correspondence of the uiooe.iSuperior, Wis., May 18. —A few brief

weeks since Istood on the docks at BuffaloNew York, and gazed upon the immensenumber of crafts, steam and sail, with theirconsorts, the spacious barges, that weredaily expecting their winter vacations to beeudi-d. Here were great propellers, carryingwithin themselves the vast machinery whichshould soon throb with vitalityand drivethem fast to that far northwest so rapidlydeveloping. They were iv their best attire,cleansed aud garnished from stemto stern, with elegant apartmentsfor their freights of tourists who willadmire aud enjoy, in the journey westward,

the magnificent attractions of scenery andhealthfulness afforded by a voyage over thisgreat system of inland seas. Hidden fromsight were the vast receptacles far the pro-ductions and manufactures of our owneast aud the offerings of foreign ports, des-tined to be exchanged for the cruder pro-ducts of the mammoth wheat fields, the richphi. >i!vcr and iron mines, and the exten-sive cattle ranges of the golden northwest.Capacious barges, awkward but useful con-sorts to these powerful and graceful leaders,lay near by, awaiting their cargoes of thou-sands of tons of freight. Hundreds uponhundreds of slower craft depending uponnature's original motive power, the wind, tocarry them to their destinations, crowdedthe wharves and docks. Here abroad, blunt, old-fashioned schoonerhumbly seeks protection beneath the tower-ing side of a perfectly-modeled, and proud-

sailinur vessel whose acres of canvas, spreadupon its five lofty masts, invite the favors ofthe god of winds to speed it to its westernport. Vessels of all sizes, and all models liehere, read}- and waiting forwinter to removehis frosty fingers from the surface of the lakeand allow them to spread their wings, or tilltheir steam-fed lungs, and fly away to thefar west.

THE EASTERN LAKE METROPOLIS.Behind me stood the great city of Buffalo,

the outgrowth of the extensive commerce ofthe lakes. Followingthe development of thegreat northwest, with which it has the mostdirect and the cheapest communication, Buf-falo has made rapid strides and ivthe last fewyears has increased its population fully one-third. A beautiful city, rich in cultureand commerce, it stands the key tothe greatest lake water line in the knownworld. From this prosperous eastern ter-minus my mind passed to the farwest, to the ov.her terminus of this system ofinland navigation, a thousand miles towardthe orient, and I naturally asked myself

"Where will be theGREAT WESTERN LAKE CITY?

What point is to be enriched and refined tometropolitan importance by this fast increas-Ing traffic?"

To-day Istand at the far western end ofthis wonderful water highway and lookeastward. The icy fetters arebroken, and fast the fleets, urged forwardby wind and steam, are speeding to the newland. Freights of iron, coal and merchan-dize are coming, aud for seven months willthe coining and going continue beforeking frost again asserts himself. As Ilookaround me here, at the head of the greatestlake, Iknow Ihave found the entrance tothat grand and prolific country; that im-mense northwestern empire, whose capabilities are beyond computation ; that land whichwill furnish the world with its food, and itsminerals, and which extends from the greatlakes westward to the srreat ocean, offeringto industrious millions, homes and wealth,through its fertile prairies, its ex-haustless mines, and its boundlessstock ranges. It is in the immediate pres-ent that this great country has been madeavailable by the completion of that wonder-ful railroad, the Northern Pacific, and itssettlement and developement has really butjust commenced. Of course the connectionscan be made from fifty points by railroads,but there can be but one point of connec-tion for water and rail, and at that pointmustgrow up a great city, which shall, like Buffa-lo, stand without a peer and without a rival.Nature has as surely formed and located thesite of that future commercial center as ithas created and placed the planets. It re-mains with man to build the city.

Look at any correct map of the UnitedStates and you willbe convinced that thistown of

SUPERIOR

is naturally the entrepot for the vast territoryof which Ihave spoken, always providing itcan furnish the facilities and answer the re-quirements necessary to so important aplace. Come here as I have, and you willquicklybe satisfied that not only are all re-quirements fulfilled, but that nature hasmade it a simple and easy task for man tobuild a city here, and that, although compet-itors may for a time secure more promi-nence, necessity will demand and force thebuilding of that city, as surely as the sunwillshine forth after a storm has spent itselfand passed.

There are several factors necessary to thesuccessful establishment of a city, commer-cial intercourse and resources, location, phys-ical attributes, and energy combined withindustry and liberality. Of the first part ofthese Ihave briefly written—the vast trafficbetween the east and west,—the exchange ofgoods not only with the different sections ofour own country, but with foreign nationsbeyond both the Atlantic and the Pacificoceans.

In location no city in the union is so fa-vored. Naturally, a railroad seeking theeast will select the southern shore of LakeSuperior, in fact there is no alternative, as itwould be an almost impossible feat, even inthese times of engineering triumphs, to con-gtruct a road along the north shore, throughthe immense iron and granite ranges. Againif such a road were practicable, there wouldbe nothing to support it save the produc-tions of a few miningand lumbering camps.On the south it would pass througha rich portion of a rich state, the productionsof which are annually increasing in quantityand value. Coming then from the far westin almost a direct line what is the firstavail-

able lake port the railroad -will reach?— S-uperior.

Chicago's greatness was the result of cir-cumstances, for it had the location althoughit lacked the physical advantages, while Mil-waukee, the elder of the two cities, has neveradvanced beyond mediocrity because, whilewell endowed in local situation, it waswrongly located to convenience the require-ments of traffic. Superior possesses a rarecombination of situation, conformation andlocation. It is located at the point wherewater and rail communication should blend,and it is so situated that the work oftrans-shipment is reduced to the simplestand easiest process possible, for, while therailroads find an abundance of convenientand natural laud aloug thelake for yard room in whichto move all cars that would be required in atraffic of indefinite proportions,the water frontaffords safe dockage for an immense numberof vessels.

IT IS JfST TIIIIITY YEAUS AGOthat a number of prominent, sagacious and

wealthy men, —representative men frommany parts of the Union, selected this site,convinced that ou it must develop a greatcity. Chicago was then an infant, but thetide of emigration set through the center ofthe country and the grand re-sources of the great northwestwere undreamed of. The fertilityaud extentof the boundless prairies whose "No. 1 hard"wheat is famous throughout the world, wasunknown. Wild Indians and buffalos rangedunmolested through the rich stock ranges,aud over the buried mineral treasures, audeven the idea of opening those, the.n, distantregions, was treated with contempt. Warand financial disasters came, and while Chi-cago and other cities, near the heart of theunion, continued to exist, if not to flourish,this isolated region was left neglected andunsought. It was not until about 1870 thatthe eyes of the country were agcin directedto this portion of the national domain, beingattracted by the renewed effort to constructthe great Transcontinental railwayaud the discovery of the fertility ofthe Dakota prairies. Slowly the workwent on, until within the last few years dur-ingwhich the rush of immigration to thelong neglected region has been marvelouslyrapid. Hundreds of thousands of fertileacres are yielding bouuti fully of the bestgrain in the world, rich mines have beendiscovered, and the far west is united to theeast by an iron road. Now the city whichthe wise men proposed to fouud is neededand iheir impressions aud confidence will beemphatically endorsed by every observingman who visits this spot.

Superior isPECULIARLY SITUATED.

It lies on the south side ofa land-locked bay, the northern shoreof which is formed of a highrange of rocky hills and a sandy point run-ning about seven miles into the lake, almostmeeting another point. Between these twocapes is a deep, wide channel permitting theentrance of the heaviest vessels to the mostsecure and spacious harbor to be found inthe whole lake system. At the western endof the bay thus formed, the St. Louis, alarge and rapid river, finds entrance andits current serves to keep the channel dfic.nthrough the bay to the deep waters of thelake. Near the east end of the town site isanother deep, but more sluggish river, theNemadji, and beyond that is another bayAllones. Between the latter bayand the St. Louis river lies the site of Supe-rior, whose physical attributes fit it mosteminently for the situation of a great city.Here are no steep and lofty eminences, orrocky bluffs to be leveled at vast expense, orto be left as unsightly obstacles to a city'sgrowth. Here is no narrow, circumscribedstrip of land, to dwarf and limit the conven-ient arrangement of thoroughfares. It is abroad, spacious and almost level plateaulocated about thirty-five feet above the levelof tbe water and almost imperceptibly risingback from the lake, with sufficient fall toafford the best of drainage. At the lakefront perhaps five hundred feet from themain street, the land is a slight, but suffi-cient distance above the water forming alower bench in front of the town, a naturaland useful provision for the easy carrying-onof the transportation business by railroads,while ample space is available for large ware-houses and freight depositories.

The town is laid out in regular, rectangu-lar blocks, with broad avenues and streets, ofgenerous width. Throughout this town thereis scarcely a place needing fillingor leveling,so uniform is the surface. Could the mostskillful engineer have planned the situation,he would not have conceived or adopted asingle idea which nature has not supplied.

THE HARBOR ATSUPERIOR.

One of the strongest evidences that natureintended that a great city should exist at thehead of Lake Superior, is found in the splen-did harbor, this extensive sheltered bay,where thousands of craft can findperfect security. In fact there isnot elsewhere on the chain oflakes a harbor that compares with it. Theapproach to it from the deep water of thelake is through a spacious natural canal whichhas been secured and improved by the mostscientific engineering. The absolute safetyof vessels is insured by two piers 400 feetapart, extending far into the lake, and thedepth of the water in this entrance channelis always sufficient for the heaviest ladencraft that sail the lakes. The entrance is be-tween two lights and the piers afford protec-tion from the severest storms. Within thebay there is a broad, deep channel running,with a plentiful depth of water,from St. Louis river to thelake, thus making the entire length of thecity's front available for dockage, a distanceof over four miles. Two commodious piershave already been built, one belonging tothe Northern Pacific Railway company andthe other to the town. On the former a fuelcompany receives its coal, and, at the timeof my visit, there were thousands of tons de-posited on it awaiting distribution. Thegovernment has as yet done little for Supe-rior in the way of dredging, and yet thedepth of water in the channel is excellent.More money cip andnvill be used to advant-age, and the dredging to be done will ofcourse add to the value and desirability ofthe harbor. The water at the piers, be-tween sixteen and seventeen feet, admitsof|the floating of the largest craft that comethrough the Sault Ste Marie canal, an advan-tage enjoyed by no other place at the head ofLake Superior. Navigation opens early inMay, and continues until late in November.The system of railroads already centered atSuperior will necessitate the erection of manymore piers, and it can be but very few yearsbefore the front of the town will be fringedwith a multitude of these traffic depots, bear-inggreat warehouses and enormous wheatelevators, aud entertaining marine visitorsfrom all parts of the world, for navigationfrom Superior bay to the Atlantic ocean isuninterrupted. The Nemadji riverat the eastern part of Su-perior is, !"as the place grows, destined toprove of»inestimable value. It is perhapsthree hundred feet wide at its mouth and isnavigable quite a distance, while it is unob-structed by rapids for at least ten miles. Ithas a good depth of water and boats drawingas much as eight feet can ascend it for sev-eral miles. For the convenience of shore

warehouses and for manufactures it will befound very convenient. It penetrates aheavily timbered country, containing thebest varieties, and large deposits of copperore are known to exist on its tributaries. Itscourse is through some of the best farmingland in the north aud its banks are extreme-ly picturesque, affording a delightful interiorboat excursion.

THE ST. LOUIS lUVER.which enters Superior bay at its head, is amost important tributary. It takes its risevery near the headivatars of the Mississippi,aud is really the primary source of the St.Lawrence. It is a long, winding stream,very variable in width aud depth, and fre-quently Indulging iv laughing leaps downrocky descents. Much of the country it tra-verses is extremely fertile and productive,and much is covered with a dense growth ofvaluable timber. There are extensivemeadows in its course, producing an unri-valed quality of hay. The St. Louis river isnavigable for steamers for twenty miles tothe village of Fon dv Lac. Careful sur-veys have demonstrated the fact thatover 03,000 horse-power can be easily madeavailable from the wster below the rapidswithout impairing the navigation of the riverand that at a small cost the channel can bedeepened sufficiently to allow the approachof the largest vessels to the flouring aud saw-mills that would bo found profitable. Fromthis section of the neighboring country thewealth ofSuperior would be enhanced, as itwill contribute agricultural productions, lum-ber, minerals, building stone and slate.

LOCAL ADVANTAGES.Itwill now be understood that Superior pos-

sesses ail the necessary physical attributes re-quired in the development of a large city;—an admirable confirmation of surfaceover an area of nearly ten miles square, ex-tending from the unequaled water front toan extensive range of hills at the south, andfrom St. Louis bay to and. beyond Allouesbay, eastwardly. It is provided with twoconvenient natural canals penetrating itslimits, and making easy the processes ofcommerce, manufacturing and transporta-tion. Its regularly level surface makes ev-ery part available for teaming, while the gen-tle incline to the lake affords ample drain-age.

MANUFACTURES.No city in the country is better located for

he profitable transaction of manufacturing,and the country in the immediateneighborhood will supply the ma-terials for the productionof many staple articles for which the marketis always ready and certain. The great wheatfields comparatively so near this port willsupply the best grain known, and it can cer-tainly be ground into flour cheaper here thanfurther cast, while a saving will be made onthe freight to eastern markets. The pro-ducts of the fast developing mines of thegreat western territories will lind their way toSuperior, where the reduction of the oreswill become a source of profit. Blast fur-naces, foundries and smelting workswill have an abundance of occupation,the iron, copper and silver ores be-inir supplied from the rich mineral districtsaround and near this convenient center.

The manufacture of lumber is destined tobe the chief industry and it has already de-veloped to a considerable extent, there hav-ing been two hundred millions of feet cut in1883. Superior stands almost surroundedby the best pine timber in the northwest,and the most reliable computations place theamount easily availyble at over twelve thou-sand millions of feet. This would affordemployment for a vast number of mills formore than half a century and furnish mate-rial for the building of countless towns andvillages on the broad, open, treeless plainsto the west. The St. Louis and Nemadjirivers anil the north and south shores will allcontribute to this industry for the prosecutionof which Superior is admirably adapted inwater and land conveniences and means ofdistribution. There are in the forests adja-cent to this favored point, red oak, maple,bass, elm, black oak, black birch, poplar,white birch and white cedar timber, andhence the establishment of a variety of cer-tainly profitable industries is feasible, amongthem beina: the manufacture of furniture,tubs and pails, matches, wagons, agriculturalmachinery and wood-pulp paper.

The existence of minerals in inexhaustiblequantities in this vicinity, is as well knownas the more obvious presence of vast forests.Immense deposits of iron and copper are con-cealed in the hills in Douglas county,of whichSuperior is the county seat,and in the extensiveranges on the north shore. There are alsogreat veins of copper mixed with silver. Theiron is known to be the purest and best inthe world, and its manufacture must add tothe importance of this commercial and pro-ducing metropolis. The reare vast quarriesof granite, red sandstone and slate near by,and excellent brick are produced from theunderling clay in the vicinity.

There is another industry which is con-stantly increasing, and which musi; becomeof great value: the fishing interest. Thefish of the lake, owing to the regular temper-ature of the water, are possessed of a flavorand richness that make them eagerly soughtwhen fresh, and very popular everywherewhen salted or smoked. Lake Superior trout,white fish and herring have a national repu-tation, and the business of catching andshipping them should become a most impor-tant factor in the commerce of Superior.

AGRICULTURE.Itmust not be thought that this region of

country is dependent on the outside worldfor the necessities of life, nor that fish is theonly article of food produced. There are inthe immediate vicinity of the town manyacres of the best farming land, the red, richloam of which produces all grains, vegeta-bles and small fruits in unlimited abund-ance. As long ago as 1858, Mr. James S.Ritchie (still livingin Superior) was awardeda special diploma at the exhibition of theUnited States Agricultural society held atRichmond, Va., for specimens of winterwheat, corn, potatoes, tobacco, and all kindsot vegetables grown on this town site. Thelake appears to act as a regulator of the cli-mate and sudden, disastrous changes are un-.known. Agriculture is profitable and theraising of stock has been found eqally so.Herein Superior can be independent as re-gards the necessities of life.

THE RAILWAY CONNECTIONS.Ihave endeavored as briefly as possible to

show the advantages of Superior as a port, aharbor, amanufacturing center and as apoint for large commercial transactions. Ihave said itwas a natural place for the rail-road center, and that such is the fact is shownby the number of railroads now here andcoming. Of course the Northern Pacific isthe most important, as it unites the com-merce of the Pacific ocean with that of theAtlantic, Portland and Superior being theports bound together by the iron road. "Withbut two trans-shipments the products of west-ern Europe are conveyed to the shores ofwestern Asia, and vice versa,a.nd the offeringsof the world are interchanged ata minimum of . cost. TheNorthern Pacific makes its regularaway to Superior as the first available andthe most practicable lake port, and here ithas extensive possessions in yard room onthe lake front, a massive dock and a greatquantity of property, business and residence,in the town. Its improvements alreadyamount to over a half million dollars, andthe sum that will probably be invested herein the near future must be immense. Thequantity and value of the freight which thisrailroad will bring to the lake, as the country develops, is simply beyond calculation.

The Chicago, St. Paul, Minneapolis &Omaha railway, with its thousands of milesofroad through a thickly settled country, hassought and obtained admission to SuperiorBay and ithas two main lines. One is toSt. Paul and thence to southeastern Minne-sota, Dakota, lowa, Kansas and Nebraska,and itis a signiflcent fact that Omaha is three

miles nearer to Superior than itis to Chicago.The other direct line is by-Euu Claire to Chi-cago and Milwaukee, thus opening a vastcountry to the reception of freights broughtby lake to this port. This company recog-nizing the inevitable future fof the head ofthe lake, has secured a large tract of land forits necessary facilities, and is rapidly makingimprovements, among which will be a linedepot in the heart of the town, and ware-houses and docks by the lake. The companywill invest certainly .$1,000,000.

The St. Paul, Minneapolis it Manitoba rail-way managers have purchased a tract of 100acres on the bay, and its trains now iind en-trance over the tracks of the Northern Paci-h'c, but an Independent line is contractedfor from St. Cloud, a distance of 120miles, and by this, central Minnesota willbe tapped and central Dakota, will be leviedupon. The Chicago, Milwaukee it St. Paulline utilize the tracks of the St. Paul & Oma-ha road while constructing their own, andthe Wisconsin Central have already surveyedan extension of their line from Ashland toSuperior Bay. The Minneapolis A St. Louisrailroad has determined to avail itself of thisport, and but one hundred miles of line arerequired to make the connection. A solidcompany has been organized to complete theair line to Chicago, part of which is liuishedand purt graded. Even the people oE thelower Red river valley are ambitious for adirect line to a lake port, and it will be builtin the near future, placing the wheat fieldsof north Minnesota and north Dakota andthe great western Canadian provinces incommunication with lake navigation.

The projecting and buildingof all these rail-roads to this point are the results of absolutedemand, not of competition and jealousy,and the fact that every road of importancein the vast northwestern system is seekingthis outlet argues conelusivehthat it is the oneand only natural point capable of accommo-dating the immense traffic between the eastand west by water and rail.

Superior has now a population of about3,000 and is an orderly, well governed town.The society is excellent; churches andschools are prospering and many metropol-itan ideas are rapidly being 'introduced.The water, found in wells at all points, ispure, soft and cool, fuel is cheap and livingis far from expensive. There will be a de-mand for all classes of business, and ifSuperior does not become a Chicago, andthat quickly, the blame will Jdc with man,and not with nature.

"but!"I have alluded to another factor neces-

sary to the fruition of the evident design ofNature, and that is, man's work—energy, in-dustry and liberality. Will the owners ofthis favored spot develop the great naturaladvantages by a liberal policy and energeticmeasures, and accept and improve the boun-ties Nature has bestowed, and the railroadsare ready to bestow, or will they, by exhorbi-tant demands,and unreasonable restrictions,so hedge in the property as to make it flh-possible for its development to proceed, anddrive to' much less favored localities theprosperity and importance which they mightattain. The proprietors should pool theirissues,and act as a unit in buildinga cltv here.Ifthey do not, commerce will, although per-haps at a great disadvantage, build othertowns, dredge other channels, and, abandon-ing improvements,leave the place to crumbleand decay. Can it be that any men are soshort-sighted as to risk such a result? Willthey lose all they have, or will they gain athousand fold?

I am indebted to Mr. J. Bond, Jr., thechairman of the committee of correspondenceof the chamber of commerce for many favorsduring my pleasant visit to Superior, andwould advise all who wish full and reliableinformation of any description relating tothis vicinity to address him, or, better still,Iwould recommend a visit to this delightfulplace, where the air is $o pure, bracing andhealthful, where the sailiag is so invigorating,where the fishing is so fascinating and excit-ing, either in the trout streams or the lakes,and where the opportunities for profitable in-vestment of capital are or should be so manyand certain. J. H. H.

M. E. CONFERENCE.Report on Temperance Adopted and

Church Editors Elected.Philadelphia, May 20.—At the Methodist

conference fraternal dispatches from the Presby-terians at Saratoga, and Bishop Cheney of theReformed Episcopal church, were read and an-swered. The judiciary committee reported, pro-viding for the appointment of a committee of fivelegal, anil two ministerial members to considerthe matter of the tenure of church property.

The report of the committee on temperanceurges the people to use tneir influence to banishthe social glass, the formation of juvenile tem-perance societies, in Sunday schools that shall beon a temperance lesson on each question inthe Sunday school series; also the of state legis-latures, requesting them to introduce instructionas to the »cc of alchohol the instate universities and public schools.It is the liquor traffic whichis the chief source of the widespread intemper-ance which is the most gigantic evil of the day.The committee recommended the formation ofconference temperance societies in all annualconferences, and that the complete legal prohibi-tion of the liquortraffic is the duty of the civilgovernment. The people ought not to allowthemselves to be controlled by party organiza-tions managed in the interests of the liquortraffic.

Several motions postponing action were defeat-ed, and « motion prevailed for the previous ques-tion. Yeas 24, nays 100.

It was announced that the Rev. D. J. M.Buckley received 281 out of the 324 votes for edi-tor of the Christian Advocate. The electionthen took place for editor of the Western Advo-cate. Rev. Drs. Baylesa, B. W. Mendenhall, F.S. Hoyt and B. F. Rawlins were placed in nomi-nation.

Rev. Dr. Arthur Edwards, the present incum-bent, was nominated and elected editor of theNorthwest Christian Advocate.

The report of the committee on Episcopacywhich was presented byDr. Curry, stated thatby unanimous vote they recommended the elec-tion of a missionary bishop for Africa. TheRev, Dr. Hartzell, Louisiana, said there were nolegal difficulties inthe way, and it has time theconference said whether they intended to give upAfrica. Xo bishop had visited that country forseven years. 'The first ballot for editor of the Western,Christian Advocate resulted in no choice, andanother ballot was ordered.

The conference then voted for editor of theCentral Christian Advocate and the Rev. Dr.Frye was chosen.

The second ballot on the Western ChristianAdvocate showed no choice.

J. M. Phillips wrs elected treasurer and theRev. Dr. Earl Cranston assistant treasurer of themissionary society.

The Rev. Dr. Bayliss was elected editor of theWestern- Christian Advocate on the third ballot.

The Rev. O. H. Warren was re-elected editorof the Northern Advocate.

The ballot for the editor of the Pittsburg Ad'vacate showed no choice, the Rev. Dr. Smithreceiving 180, being six less than necessary

The conference adopted a motion that fivelegal and two ministerial members of the con-ference be appointed a committee to consider thematter of tenure of church property, and thereport relating to temperance was also adoptedby a large majority.

The committee on the'Frecdman's Aid societyadopted a report upon the entire question of ed-ucational work in the south among the whitesand blacks. There will doubtless be a long andlivelydebate. The report recommends that anappeal be made to the church to raiae §500 000during the centennial year,for work in the south.The committee say inthe report, that mixedschools and mixed congregations may, in someplaces, be the most desirable and best for allconcerned, in t other places one classor other, or both, may prefer -separate congregations, and separate schoolsIf so, such is their right and we heartily concurThe report further states, it is the judgment ofthis committee, that the entire educational workof the Methodist Episcopal church in the south-ern states should be under the direction of thesociety, and that in view of the great enccesß ofthe Freedman's Aid society the past four yearsin carrying forward the educational w ork in thesouth, we believe this society ought to have fullcharge of the work

Kavanagh will commence the great dry <*oodesale at 422 Wabashaw street at 9:30 this mornin"Doors will opes at 9 a. m.

ST. PAUL, MINN.,WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY21, 1884.

TARIFF BEGGARS.

Chicag-o Meeting of Pretended Pro-ducers Who Say Their Busi-

ness Doesn't Pay.

Wherefore, Consumers Must Submit to aForced Contribution for Their

Benefit.

Chicago, May 20.—The national mass meetingof the wool growers of the United States re-sumed at 10 o'clock this morning. The com-mittee appointed to prepare an address to thewool glowers of the country, submitted the fol-lowing:To the Wool Growers and Sheep Breeders of the

United States:Gektlemen: At the national convention of

the wool growers and sheep breeders of the'United States, held in Chicago, the 19th of Jlay,1884, and which was attended by delegates fromtwenty states, n committee was appointed todraw up an address to the wool growers of thecountry for the purpose of arousing them to aproper realization of ,the necessitythat exists for immediate andenergetic action if they wouldrescue the great industry in which they are en-gaged from its present depressed condition audfrom impending dangers. The undersigned,members of the committee, firmly belfeve thatthe existing sad condition of the interest you rep-resent has been brought about largely, if. notaltogether, by adverse congressional legislation,and that it willnot again be prosperous untilcongress shall revise its action of its last sessionand restore the rates of duty to those which pre-vailed under the tariffof 1867, by which, for thefirst time in the industrial history of the country,equitable relations were established betweenduties ou wool and those on woolen goods. Itcau be conclusively shown that the tariffact of that year gave to Americanproducers of both wools and woolen goodssteady markets, a secure expansion ofproduction.It gave to customers cheaper wool andwoolens than were ever before known ivAmeri-ca, aud brought prices for all goods of ordinarywear, and of many of far finer and luxuriouswear, lower, or as low as known in Europe orelsewhere. The repeal ot the tariff of 18(57 ouwool and woolens was not asked for, as has beenalleged, by the conservative business sentimentof the country, or by any considerable numberof the American people. It was brought whollythrough the efforts of importers and others in-terested in securing in the United States a mar-ket for foreign wool, aided by a few parties whodesired to make use of the foreign product as awhip with which to subdue the American mar-ket, and menace the American producers, uponwhom they were necessarily compelled to relffor nine-tenths of the wool required in theirbusiness. These combined influences, unpatri-otic and un-American, led to the passage of theunwise, abortive and suicidal tariff act of 1883,to which we firmly believe may be attributed thepresent depressed condition of the wool indus-try.

You have doubtless, gentlemen, heard much oflate touching the soundness of the policy of put-ting the raw materials of the manufacturer, in-cluding wool, on the free list. We trust you willresent such a proposition whenever and wherevermade with the indignation which it justly mer-rits. '\u25a0 Wool is the finished product of a millionof flocks of. owners, who have, by years of intel-ligentand patient labor and expenditure of largesums of money, brought their product \u25a0to thepresent high standard of excellence. To class itsimply as raw material, as something that hagbeen produced almost without cost or expen-diture of time and labor, is an injustice againstwhich we trust you will enter an effective pro-test. ' The arguments used in defense of theprinciples of protection apply at least as forciblyto wool as :to -any -article on the tariffschedule. \u25a0 The growing of . woolis - equal \ with the "growing of foodand of the forests and with the 'manufacture ofiron and steel. - The maintenance of a 1commer-cial marine, and navy, of • a national militia,aprimary element of a national defense in war,and of financial security i and independence inpeace, the loss or neglect of which would de-range our entire monetary system, and place theentire country inall its interests in a conditionof industrial and colonial vassalage to foreignproducers, and equally fatal to the happiuness,and unbecoming to the . dignity and honor of anation, whose annual increase in wealth is nowthree fold that of any other nation, and whosepopulation now gives itthe second rank amongcivilized empires and first among free self gov-erning and enlightened people.

The appeal finallydeclares that the wool grow-ers have a right to ask congress for the restora-tion of a measure of protection, and concludesin the following terms: Finally,believing thatdesperate diseases require heroic remedies, weespecially urge yon to sustain at the polls forlegislative officers only such candidates as are infavor of adequately protecting and encouragingthe great industry of sheep husbandry by votingto restore the wool tariffof 1867, or ,- rates of du-ties at least as protective as -those embodied inthat act. \u25a0

The report was unanimously adopted. Theremainder of the session was taken up by a dis-cussion of the methods for united action in thepending political canvass and in making thepower of the wool growing industry felt. Ad-journed. .

The convention reassembled at 4 o'clock, andappointed a committee of three Republicans toattend the Republican national convention, andthree Democrats to attend the Democratic na-tional convention, to urge the claims of the woolgrowers for the restoration of the tariffof 1867,on wool, and present the ultimatum of the flockmasters as set forth in its platform and ad-dresses..,

• - ASTROLOGY. . : '

MADAME GANDERSON,Astrologist and magnetic Physician!

Special attention given to

DEBILITY,NEURALGIA,RHEUMATISM,and all' chronic and nervous diseases. Speedycure guaranteed. Also advises on all domesticand financial affairs, etc. Ladies, special atten-tion. . . • '. .. Room 1, 424 Wabashaw street. .

The most Elegant Blood Purifier, Liver Invigora-tor, Tonit, and Appetizer ever known. The firstBitters containing Iron ever advertised in Ameri-ca. Unprincipled persons are imitating the name;look out for frauds. See /CL /fTij'that the following Bigna- /llJciJx) '\u25a0 Vtnr» is on every bottle and ficjTjT/i^///ftat? none other: /fy'^'- ' lyU*<^r\

ST. PAUL,MINN. L/ Druggist & Chemist

\u25a0• - MUSICALINSTRUMENTS.

WE CLAIMAnd can prove to our patrons and the public, thatthe Pianos and Organs which we offer for sale,

EXCEL ALLOTHERSOfboth American and European manufacture inPower, Purity, Length and Sweetness of Tone,leaving nothing to be desired.. -!

STEINWAYAnd HAINESPIANOS, never fail to give perfectsatisfaction and are byallmeans the most desiia-ble instruments to obtain.

Afine assortment of Uprights and Grands weare now offering upon favorable terms.

ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS.N. B.—.New UprightPianos for rent, and rent

payments applied if purchased*.

MRS. M C.THAYER,.. 418 Wabashaw street.Sohmer and other Pianoes, Newand Second Hand

ORGANS.New England, Smith, American, Bay State and

Sterling.SCHALLBANJOS.

Everything in the line of Musical Merchandise,at lowest prices and best terms. ' • 130-ly

For Pianos &OrgansFor Easy and Best Terms,For Catalogues and Lowest Prices, \u25a0•'\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0'• ;I'or Asroecies and Territory. Address

C. W. YOUNGMAN,115 B. Seventh street, ST. PAUL.

AMUSEMENTS. -GRAND OPERA HOUSE.

One Week, commencing Monday, May 19.Engagement of the Popular Tragedian

THOS. W.

KEENB!Supported by a Specially selected Company under

the management of Mr. W. R. Hayden.

' • ..\u25a0 kepertoibb:

TO-NIGHT, -;.-. Hamlet,Wednesday Ev'g, " 21, Hamlet. \u0084\u25a0•\u25a0::Thursday Evening, " 22, Julius C-ESAK. .Friday Evening, : " 23, Macbeth. ' •Saturday Matinee .The Lady op Ltojts.

Saturday Evening, last ap- '*pearance of Mr. Keene.. .Richard 111.Seats now on sale at bos office. \u25a0 Usual prices.

MARKET HALL! -Grand Oratorio Night!

"

HANDEL'S

MESSIAH!Thursday Evening, Bay 29, '84250 "ESP SUBGERS

JSSsit: 40 MUSICIANS!SIGNOR A. JANNOTTA... ...Musical Director.p Sale of seats commences on Thursday morning,May 22d, at 9 o'clock,, at R. C. Munger's musicstore, 107 East Third street.

Admission SI. Reserved seats $1.50. \u25a0

St. Pail Alelic ClSPORTS,

AT WHITE BEAR, MAY 30,DECORATION DAY.

S3 00-00 IN PRIZES.. PROGRAMME :100 yards in heats championship gold medal of

Minnesota; 120 yards hurdle race, Ist prize elabo-rate silver medal, 2d, silver cup; Quarter milechampionship of Minnesota, Mayor's cup, value$40; 1 mile championship of Minnesota, Marvincup, value $40; 3 mile handicap walk, the Barnescup, value $40; 5 mile handicap race, Ist prize,valuable silver medal, 2d, silver cup; Putting theshot, Ist prize silver goblet, 2d, silver cup; Vault-ingwith the pole. Ist prize, silver taukard.2d, sil-ver cup Tug of war teams of four, valuablechampionship medal; ; Throwing the \u25a0 LaCrosseball, prize silver cup; Running long. jump, prizesilver cnp; Running hop step, prize silver cup;Sparring four rounds, prize elaborate gold medal;75 yards fat man's race, to weigh over 200 lbsSack race 50 yards and return, prize silver cup:Grand LaCrosse, match bySt. Paul LaCrosse Club;and grand cricket match, St. Paul vs. Minneapo-lis. The above sports are open to amateurs only.Entrance fee to each event 50c; all entries mustreach the manager on or before May 21.129e0d JOHN S. BARNES, Manager

Gives Special Bargains in

KNASEann

Olough &Warren Organs.86 X Third Street, - St. pmo

TROTTING STOCK AUCTION. ;\u25a0'\u25a0''

li**^ HIGH-BRED

AtPublic Auction, WEDNESDAY, JtTNEH,t^^^M^ _ 18^4, rain or shine, at

%?*'*s\u25a0?? ;; V;;^;^^^B|WHR Adjoining the city limits of St. Paul, MinnMB&SPtg&WtSaSKEfS&m mm "i' Com. X.W. Kittson, Chas. A. DeGraflandDjfl George \V. Sherwood, about 70 head of hi"h-TMp^^^^WM HH'j bred Trotters, consisting of young Stallions• «jHi , yfiß| « ' Fillies, Brood Mares and Geldings, sired prin-

' ' VSfk ,-,,,- yff^ \W cipally by such noted Bullions as Smng"ler\u25a0g^^Ba^fe-E^^^jM^^^^fe. Volunteer, Peacemaker, George Wilkes, Yon'-'^aßß^^^^^nF ="^P«^^;: Arnim,B1?.ck^ oo,d '•jr., Alexander, Baymont,

--.^- t?t^^^^^^^g^terEJi.*3rZr Indianapolis, Belmont, Administrator Bluen^^^HPWIBiHBHHSSsAii^?? I**?l**? Bull, and Kavenswood.W=-^^^nHaf ii '" " jj""*^" Terms of Sale—Cash.

Jc::^^li^^tf^^P*^^Sj^.-^-rgr-;-.Ii^^tf^^P*^^Sj^.-^-rgr-;-. for catalogue, to B.at 10 a. m. sharp. Sendj~^^gss^B]gyay«w.^P3!l^-—' for catalogue, to B. D. WOODMAXSEE,

St. Paul, Minn. ,

NO 142

CLOTHING.

SAILOR LADS.The peculiar cut oJ

the Clothing worn by theideal sailor indicatesmore ofcomfort than oibeauty. The loosenessand general careless- '

ness of the fitwould notsatisfy a landsman whohad the least spark oigood taste in dress. Agood fitting garment isthe first requisite, andany observing personcan readily detect gar-ments bought at "ThbBoston" by the perfec-tion offit. Our mediumand low priced Suits arecut with as much careas the better grades.Substantial linings andtrimmings and strongsewing (buttons andseams) are also impor-tant features in well-made garments, which,coupled with moderateprices, gives to our cus-tomers full value inwhatever priced suitthey purchase. Nothingthat savors of shoddy oipoor workmanship isever offered to the pa-trons of "The Boston."We are continually add-ing to our stock and cannow show with pride anassortment of Suits inevery department thateclipses any similarstock in the west. Notto be suited at The Bos-ton is an impossibility.We have often told youabout our Hat and CapDepartment, but, ifthrough force of habit,you may still inadver-tently stroll into someother store for your hat,we would simply sayDont, for we can save-you at least 20 per cent,on your purchase, andgive you the largest va-riety of all the new andbest styles to select from.Mothers and those whohave to provide clothingfor their boys are alrea-dy well posted on the fa-cilities we offer, andthere is no occasion tosay more to them on thesubject. Everybodyknows we are headquar-ters for goods in our linethat are worth buying.Bear in mind that shod-dy, poorly made and ill-fitting clothing is dearat any price, and it willbe economy, to alwayspatronize the

BOSTON""ONE-PRICE"

CLOTHING HOUSE,' Corner Thirl and RoM streets,'

ST. PAUL.