The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, October 26, 1906, Image 6

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. ronnn t*. The Atlanta Georgian. JOHN TEMPLE GRAVES F.L. SEELY ••••'• . - - Editor. . . President. runisMO nut irttiitooi (Except Sundsyt By THE GEORGIAN CO. tt 25 W. Altbsmi St., Atltnts, Gi. suesctirno* fits. One Year $4.50 Six Months.. 2.50 Three Months 1.25 By csrrier, per week.. 10c Entered st thuAtUnta rcstolHeo »■ second- tins mill matter. Telephones connecting all departments. Long distance terminals SMITH fit THOMPSON. AarenIiing Repr« ent * ,ivc * '° r all territory outside ol Georgia. CHICAGO office.., - T potteb ul'Ild'no SEW TORS OFFICE-.: Its la deslrsbto that all' rommonlrttmas lnte , rd»1 i tcj P ol I 'J'^j , | l ^ n . la T11E GEORGIAN J® JiSTatth. though nisnsscrtp** th* name* will b* withheld 11 ' f 0r tJie parpoD*. mi not bo returned unlwa atoinp* *ro ~ni ior The Georgian prints no unclean or objectionable ad- vertislng. Neither doe* It print whisky or sny liquor sdrertlsements. • ■ "— Behold, a Dreamer Cometh! x • The Western snd Atlantic railroad of the state of Georgia Is destined. In the opinion of The Georgian. to plsy * big part In the future of this slate, and. In all probability. In. the future of the entire country. In saying thlk we aaautne that the road !» going to be extended to the seaeoeat And the assumption Is not by any mean* a rash one. When Hooper Alexander started out a few year, ago with the announced purpose to force that subject upon the attention of the state, casual obaenrera were Inclined to think that he had tak en a big contract on ^!s hands, and experienced politi cians were disposed to regard the proposition In a spirit of good humored levity. But Mr. Alexander had evidently planned hla cam paign with a pretty fair accounting for the tendencies of the human mind. He publicly declared his absolute conviction that the road would be built He said publicly that the only thing necessary to bo done wae to get people to talking atxnit.lt. that the thing, being in Itself Inher ently a wise god proper thing Jo do, would furnish Its own argument* as soon a* people began to discuss It. snd that thereafter It would become In Increasing degree a popular demand. Apparently the prediction Is now well on Its way to ward fulfillment, and If one may Judge from the ut terances of the press and the casual remark, of Indi vidual*. public sentiment Is crystallising now with mar velous rapidity in favor of the extension. The methods adopted by the advocate of the work were simple. He first set to work to solidify the senti ment of ono county In favor of the proposition. A. soon as DeKalb county bad lined up In solid phalanx, ho delivered addres.os In a number of cities and town, acsttcred through the state, each of whleh tracame a center of discussion from which the Idea radiated In widening clrclt*. • Thereafter the dlscuaslon of the matter before the legislature and In the press made It an object pf vision all over tho state. The effort In the last legislature, flret to sell the present road, and aftarward. to execute a new leas, on It. concentrated and solidified attention, and not- orally tho advocates of extension became the earnest lead ers of opposition to the other schemes. Their defeat has nut'behind the extension proposal an organised support. The Georgian takes the same view a* to the ultimate outcome that was expreaaed by the author of the propo- sltlon and the logic of It may be expressed In a syllo gism like this: First. Whatever Is wise and .prudent to do In pub c affairs will sooner or later be done If It once cornea to be seriously considered by a free electorate. Second. It la wise and prudent to extend the state road to the sea and the subject la now being aeriouily considered by a free electorate. Therefore the state road will aooner or later be ex tended. . There Is no doubt In the world about tha correctneas of this logic. Paealmlsts and doubters will and do ques tion the soundness of the first premise, and It la caey enough to point out many wife and prudent things which are not done though earnestly urged. Tho fallacy, how- ever, la comparing these things with the proposition under discussion Ilea In the fact that, no matter how wise and prudent a thing may be. nor how earnestly urged, its advocate, In order to succeed, must have faith In the people. ’ He cannot build from the top but must carry hla pro posal straight to the masses ofc men. The politician Is always timid. He never has faith. He waits and listens for the voices of the people. He never proposes. He only accedes. Tht man who expects to accomplish must reach the politician, not throi/flh' hla reason, but through his respon ses obtdienee to what the people think. And so we repeat again that this subject was taken straight to the people. It to a wise and prudent thing to do. The people are talking about it. Tho balance to but a question of time. The road will be built. And »o believing, we cannot abstain from asking what will be the. conaequence. And now iet u* answer the question and prophecy. The road wiil reduce chargee and yet pay large profits. The Intermediate stations will get what they never have had. a square deal. The country will blossom Jnto small Industries and grow rich Instead of being mere tributaries to the city. And yet, because of the prosperity of the small towns and the country, the centers of population will irosper more than ever. . Th* mad will have a terminus at every Georgia port on the Atlantic and at least one on the gulf. Alabama. Tennessee and Kentucky will he quick to see that by building their connections they also can be come Independent of the feudal lords now rich In privi lege. The water will be squeexed out of the other roads In Georgia because the fact will be exposed that their pres ent apparent value, constantly enhancing, to based on nothing and consists In nothing but the right to collect a tax from the people under the name of rates for ser vice. The atote will rapidly absorb the other lines and the counties and’ town* will acquire the branches. The basis of freight rates will be changed. Instead of a complicated system of; rates based on'the principle pf charging "all that the traffic will bear.’’ rates will be based on the principle : of charging, with a limited classification, only >6 much aa will warrant and secure the beet service and equipment, and'pay a fair Income over. ' It will become apparent that a passenger, who takes care of snd feeds himself, can be advantageously hauled Just as cheap os a hog of the same weight that has tp be fed and watched and moved. Passenger rates will therefore be cot down In eueh remarkable measure that railroad passenger traffic will becotno as common as street car riding and as profitable a business to tho car- r,cr - * Transportation will be completely , revoiutlontoed. The advantages of civilized progress will no longer .be withheld from the masses of men, but we will all be per mitted to enjoy on rational terms the heritago of the ages, now denied us by reason of the stupid folly that confers upon brutal privilege tho franchise tor exorcise, monopoly. The example of Georgia will bo followed by other states, and private ownership of'public opportunity will ^ Direct taxation (unless upon nakod land) will cease and an ample public revenue be collected for special uso of general rights. This, you will say, Mr. Doubter, to a vision of Utopia. Well, cut this article out and put It away with a writton record of your opinion. Then look at If ton years from today. TOM WATSON’S GREAT TRIBUTE TO SAM JONES ON 50TH BIRTHDAY Defeated Author and Statesman Congrat ulated Evangelist on His Success. Lest Wc Forget the Greater Crime. In the general letter setting forth, to the country the conditions of the Atlanta riot, the editor of Tho Gergtan urged upon our contemporaries In the North, “to help us by 'giving two words In condemnation of rape where they gave-one to the condemnation of lynching." Some of these contemporaries have boen disposed to question the suggestion and to ask what The Georgian means, Afro are glad to answer tho question because the reason for doing so has received additional emphasis In the folly and thoughtlessness of our own people. The Georgian haa been trying diligently for some months to build up a public opinion among the leaders of the negro race which would be brought with all Its pow er and effect upon the masa of the race In condemnation and awful warning ugalnst assaults upon white women. The structure has been carefully erected and diligently watched, and from it wo have been hoping for the beat things In every wdy. Now then, if at this time the newspapers of the Xorth have their columns filled from center to circum ference with columns and pages of denunciation of mobs and lynching, with scarcely a - faint and feeble para graph between, denouncing the crime which produces the mob.-why, the negro papern scattered from Alex andria to K1 Pmo wiil. copy those utterances of the Northern newspapers and .take to their hearts the comfort that the jrhplo volume of Northern sympathy Is with them against the* whito man who defends himself in the mob, and that there la scarcely on approclablo denuncia tion of the crime on his part which hpa maddened and Inspired the moh to action. And ao the public opinion among the negroes which we have sought to uge in this great problem will work not for u» but against us. These’ Northern newspapers can -form no conception of the deadly and deatructlve influence which the unwise and unbalanced construction of their editorials have upon the negro of the South. 15 they would only be Just enough to make it bait and half,'and give* half as much denunciation to rape as they'do to lynching, they would at least neutralise the'Impression of'their limitless nnd boundless sympathy with the negro without regard to his crimes and misdemeanors. The Mesttowr. Broadax will publish an article whteh It has found In some stray copy of The New York Even- tng Post, and all the nogroes who road The Broadax or hear It read will go off saying to themselves that the en tire North and the whole body of tholr own'race In the .South look with complacent Indifference upon rape and with monstrous norror upon lynching, and that they, when they are lynched, become glorified martyrs over whose wretched bddlos prayers are sung and protests aro made that will eventually overwhelm the whito man. Now this to what wo mean to our Northern friends when we say they can do us a service by magnifying rather than minifying the crime which arouses the South to lawlessness and revenge. The negroes still retain the Impresalon that the Northern iieople are without exception their friends and liberators from slavery. Consequently, whatever comes from tho North has a large and effective In fluence upon the negro mind. If this impression en courages them to believe that assault* upon white wo men are merely trivial offenses as compared with tho greater offense of lynch law, then the negro will bo much less likely to avoid the horrible' crime for which ho to mobbed aud to have oven les* fear of a fate which car ries along with It the halo of martyrdom. It Is surely a reasonable request to our contem poraries because they must realize that the annihilation of the body and of the thing better than life In a good woman, to at least as great a crime as the destruction of a brutal negro by a "iob, and realizing this, th^y cannot fall to do sufficient Justice to tho South to equalize the comments which carry the expression and the Impres sion of their attitude and opinion, to this Ignorant nnd excitable mass that to watching them constantly with anx iety and with Imitation. Sorrowful to say. our own peoplo In the South have swiftly and thoughtlessly fallen Into tho same habit that The Georgian has so earnestly condemned In our North ern friends, and In our eagerness to clear our skirts of ap proval of the slaughter of the Innocent by Irresponsible mobs, we have thundered so much and "deplored" so much along that llnp, that we ourselves have practically obliterated the- memory of tho greater and more awful crime, In the walling and lamentation that we have made over the punishment of It. We must see to It In tho South that our own servile apprehension of Northern sentiment does not so far ap proximate the nefcroos' consideration of It that we shall cloud the lesson which we have tried so long to teach, and which It to so vitally necessary that we should teach- that the crime of .all crimes to rape and that no other to to be compared wltn It lit enormity or in punish ment ; In this sentiment only ore we safe. In Saturday's Issue of The Georgian, i “A Saturday Evening," the editor contributed an article 'of appreciation and contrast on Sam Jones and Tom Watson. In It he referred to a beauti ful sketch which Mr. Watson wrote of Sam Jonea Just after the failure of the former's candidacy for the vice presl- dency In 1886. That sketch was nut available When Saturday's editorial was written, and the editor expressed tho gratlflcatlon It would give him to reproduce It. . In respqneo to that sug gestion the article In question has been Bent him by J. L. -Baskin, of Temple, Ob., • Just as . It appeared In the old "People'* Party Paper," published in Atlsnta In 1897. The paper Is dated October 22, 1897, and ls already yellow with age. 1 In offering It. Mr. Baskin writes: Temple, Ga., Oct. 22, 1906. - Colonel John T. Oraves, Editor The Atlanta Georgian: ' Deay Sir:—I see In Tho Georgian you would like to have Tom Watson’s let ter to Ham Jones on hts 60th birthday. Here tt Is. I have kept It as a souve nir of rare merit. I would love to have It reproduced. There are, or have been, tjiree men I have on my list—Sam. Jones, Tom Watson and John T. Graves. Yours In great esteem, J. L. BASKIN. P. S.—Excuse pencil, aa I can’t write with pen. 1 am nearly 80 years old. J. L. B. The article follows In full: Lastweek Rev. Sam Jones celebrated hts COth birthday. In his palatial horns at Cartersvllte, every dollar of whoso value was coined In the golrion mint of his genius, warm friends gathered about him to give evi dence of their love, and to speak In be half of all Georgians the words of praise this greatest of Georgians has to well earned. For twenty years Sam Jones has been the wonder of congregations, the de spair of Imitators, the puste of plod ders, the scandal of the “unco guld and rigidly righteous," the wayward son of the big-wig bishops, the delight of the lecture hall, and the Prince Bountiful of the people—giving away the thous ands so easily made and so charitably spent. In the good year 1877, when both of us were not so old, nor so gray, nor so wrinkled, Sam Jones lit down In this veritable town of Thomson, and began to go for the devil and hts angels In a manner which was entirely new to said devil: also new to said angels. We remember that we were then trying to begin to practice law. We walked three miles every morning to the office, toted a tin dinner bucket, like any school boy, took the mid-day meal alone undisturbed by the’rueh of clients (who were painfully slow about rushing) and looked out upon the great world In doubt as to our future lot therein. Borne one happened to remark In our hearing that there was a little preacher up at the Methodist church who was knocking the crockery around In lively style, and who was dusting the jackets of the amen corner brethren In a war which brought the double grunts out of those fuxsy fossils. ‘ Paclflc men love combative men, hence we at once strolted up to see what was going on.. As a rule we are not ravenously fond of sermons. We mnko the conleaslon with shame and humiliation. When yit have hoard the same commonplaces, droned out in the same lifeless manner, about 200,009 times, we require all of our native politeness to keep down yawns, nods and other signs of fatigue and extreme lassitude. We did not yawn the day we went to hear Bam Jones. There he was, clad In a little black jump-tall coat, and looking as much like the regulation preacher as we look like the Archbishop of Canterbury. He was not In the pulpit. He right next to his crowd, standing with in tho railing, and almost In touch of the victims . His head was down, ns If he holding on to hts chain of thought by tho teeth, hut hla right hand was going energetically up and down, with all the grace of a pump-handle. And, Lord! how he did hammer tho brethren. How he did peel the nmen corner. How he did smash their sol emn self-conceit, their profound self- satisfaction. their peaceful copart nership with the Almighty, their plucld conviction that they were the trustees of the New Jerusalem! We sinners looked on listened, grin lied. It was all we could do to keep from raying, "Sick 'em, Sam!" • . We knew some of those men.- We sinners knew their fallings. We won dered where Jones had learned it all. We rejoiced exceedingly, qnd the amen comer brethren sweated in ihclr gi-ent agony. After awhile, with solemn, Irresisti ble force, Jones called on these breth ren to rise In public, confess^ their short-comings, and kt Grace. . And they knelt. With groans, and s-ibs, and rears. thgsc old bell-weth ers of the flock fell on their knees, and cried aloud In their distress. And the little man In the short-tall coat was master of the situation. Then what'.’ He turned hts guns upon us sinners, and he enfiladed us. He raked us fore and aft. He gave ua snare and canis ter ami all the rest. He abused us ana ridiculed us; he stormed at us and laughed at us: he called us flop-earel hounds, beer kegs, and whisky soaks. Ho plainly said that we w-ere all hypo crites nnd liars, nnd he Intimated, somewhat broadly, that most of u> would steal. Oh, we had a time of It. l assure you For six weeks the farms and the stores were neglected and Jones, Jones, J0NE8. was the whole thing. And the plersentcst feature of Jhe entire display of human nature was the mnrkcd manner tn which the amen corner brethren enjoyed Sams flaying of os sinners Before the thing was over tlnwe holy men had almost recovered their bois terous h'lmlllt). which being Interpret ed means seif-rightecusness w-reng side outwards. And nobody knows this better than Sant Jones. Well, the meeting wound up. the community settled beck Into Its old w-nys—hut It has never been exactly th» same ropimunlty since. Gambling disappeared, loud profanl- thins*. ty on the streets was heard no more, and the bar rooms.were run out of the unty. • „ Seeing the manifestations of power which Mr. Jones made day after day tn these meetings, we have never felt the slightest surprise at his growth as an evangelist. We felt then, and express ed the feeling, that here was one of the men of original genius whom God gives to mankind at very rare Intervals. What ls the secret of his power? No one can tell, least of all, himself. Who can toll the secret of the laws by which one throat has the hoarse caw of a crow, and another the gurg ling sweetness of Jenny Lind? AVho can tell why one boy can declaim Pat rick Henry and put the uudlence to sleep; while another boy will declaim the same speech and break up the same audience into storms of applause? Nay, who can tell why the same mu sician or orator, or painter thrills with the current Inspiration at one moment, and at th* next It Is all gone? Men of talent have their rules, their little adages, their prim, precise regu lations. Give them certain materials and certain conditions, and they are warranted to turn you out a certain amount of work. They are valuable men—perhaps the ntoat valuable, for every-day purjioHes. We need th*»m; can't get along without them. They build good bridges, make good read*, open the mines, run the factories, op erate the railroads, cut our coats, make dresses for our wives, sit In our courts, draw salaries In out- offices, usefully act as governor*, eolonels and ptesl- d *Hut, oh, the men of genius! What would the world he without them? They carry the fleeting glories of na ture Into th* Imperishable custody of the canvas: they catch the |>aaslng dream of beauty and chain It forever in the marble hand* of the statue. Thay sing to us, und the world listens, delighted, melted. Inspired. Thef play for us und the light of their thoughts Illuminate the way for a| men down the corridors of Time, till Time shall be no more. The man of talent we ntuet have, for life has Its routine, It* drudgery—Its dray* to draw. Its wood to hew. It* wheel* to turn, its prosaic commonplaces which must be regarded. But what wruld life bo without Ha bugle calls to higher and better things, the sun-bursts of In spiration which reveal to our dellghte l vision the high table-lands of human nobility and humun happiness: the di vine unwritten noiseless music within our Innermost natures which only the man of genius can awaken? If we were asked to analyze the power of Sam Jonee we would any that the cldet element* are clear mental vision fearl-rs soul, kind heart, nnd unbridled, trretcrem. witty tongue. H's fpe.d eyes enable him to see the world just ns It Is—Its sad thing*. It* funny things. Its sham things. It* hcutal thlncv. Its terrible things, its beautlfu^ Hla fearless stul leads him to do scribe what he sees, and the immertae force of Truth and Realism becomes hla ally. His kind heart enables him to denounce, yet not drive away. to chastise, yet love, to punish, yet win the culprit. His want of reverence for other men, their ways of speech and of life, un- chaltu him from the shackles of esnt, custom, routine, nnd conventionality. It frees him from Imitation. He thus gets room for his own Individuality to grow, his own fountain to play. Being freed entirely from the chains which enslave sc- many thousands of public men, hts genius shines liko u Slut-—Inexhaustible, radiant. Put Talmagc In one pulpit, and •Tones In another to deliver one sermon In the same city, at the same time, and Talmage might equal Jones In that one sermon, and ndght get half ithc crowd, for that one time. But let thhnt start in to preach i series of thirty or sixty sermons In th same city at the same lime, and before a week could elapse Talmege would have nobody In his church but the salaried choir, tho dent man In the amen corner, and the Janitor. Jones would capture the whole business. Hla sermons would grow better day by day, as his genius expanded, his thoughts Intensified, and his heart warmed to the work. You c mid no more exhnnit Jones then you could exhaust a star; While Talmage. like all speakers of mere talent, Is tilled for the occasion, like a lamp; and when that pnrtleulnr supply of oil Is burned out, you must wait for light till the pout' thing can be tilled again Here's to you, Sam Jones! Some day we shall meet beyond the evening and the sun-set and the Crea tor of us both know that not one only of us tried to lift humanity and to make It better, wlter. happier. And because one, only, succeeded thefe Is no good reason why the fail ure should not be generous and send greeting to the success. May twenty other years come anil go, finding you constant In strength, con stant tn good works, constant In bc- nlun Influence over the erring ot a fallen world. ' T. E \V. A MONUMENT TO 8AM JONES. To the Editor of The Georgian: In view of the universal usefulness and popularity of flHm Jones a* a man, a citizen nnd a preacher, he being In a class to himself, I suggest that the people erect In Atlanta a monument to his memory. If The Georgian will accept this sug gestion and push It. there will be a proinnt response from all classes from all sections of our country. If you see proper to net upon this suggestion you may put me down for |S, payable on demand. Yours very truly, SOLON II. BRYAN. Milieu, Ga. . PROPER MONUMENT TO REV. 8AM JONES, To the Editor of The Georgian: Some writer for your paper ha* a|. ready suggested a monument to flit great Georgia evangelist. Such a move ment will strike a responsive chord In the public mind. What would be a suitable monument to Sam Jones? ir we will follow the,bent of his life and deeds we will be convinced that mar ble and bronze would not perpetuate his memory as he would have It. if suggestions are needed, as an admirer of one cf the greatest of Georgians. J would suggest that his memorv b« perpetuated In an endowment of th* Decatur Orphans' Home, tvhere tha money that would go Into cold marble otherwise will be each year alleviating human Ruffering and contributing to human happiness, and that would be like 8am Jones living. Let the trusteee of the home—Candler, Muse and Hemphill—be the custodians of the fund anil let everybody send their contributions to these custodians, nnd let It afterward be determined by the amounts given the best manner of it* disposition. W. O. BUTLER. Chk-kamauga, Ga. FORECASTING HOKE SMITH’S WORK, To the Editor of The Georgian: I am glad to see that our governor, elect, Hon. Hoke Smith, Is taking an active Interest'ln a thorobgh organisa tion of the state militia. We need nt present a large, thor- oughly organised state guard, well equipped. AVe should be prepared for any emergency that may arise. n ur governor should be provided with such means as may be necessary to enable him to enforce tho laws of the state. I ant glad to say he haa Impressed me with the belief that he Intends to aee> thst the laws-, are strictly 'enforced: not only that, but he means to give us clean, economical government. I don't think he Is disposed to gpen up ney offices for kin folks or political friends, but to the contrary, I think he Is disposed to do away with some of. flees, where one man can do what two are now doing. The people do not want to pay two men to do what one enn and should do. They are tired of -you tickle me and I will tickle you." Mr, Smith Is under no obligations to any political boss or bosses for his election. He Is under obligations to the masses of the people for the grand landslide he made in the August election. He had the manhood and courage to spenk out what he knew the people wanted. AVe hope he will be equally courageous In doing, as governor, what he knows the people want. , 8. J. COBD. ThomssvUle. Ga. THE AFRO-A~MERICAN. To the Editor of The Georgian: You are doing a work for the coun try at large that you could not have done as a member of either house of the American congress. You are at work on the greatest prob lem before the people of America, on* that challenges the earnest thought of all thinkers among us. Tn the solu tion of this problem your name will b* enrolled among the benefactors of th* human race. You are forcing this question before the nation as the question of all ques tions. It will have to be settled as t national and not as a mere local Irsue. The writer haa stood with you for yesrs In youk ndvocacy of separation of th* races, and every other solution of th* tosue we have hailed with absorbing Interest. Through your columns I wish to pre sent to tho readers of The Georgian some Ideas of Bishop J. M. Walden, of the Methodist. Episcopal church, de livered before'a meeting of preachers recently In the city of Cincinnati. Th* Northern bishop hays: - "This country will not fulfill Its objects until the ns- tlon comes to consider Its relation with the negro ns that of a guardian to a ward. This problem Is not a problem of the North alone, nor of the South alone. It Is a problem for the nation. This nation which Is so rich and pow erful must solve the, race question It self." " This man talks like a statesman. All of the South are nt work on the prob lem, but It Is too great a question to be satisfactorily settled without the help of the entire nation. Let the great go' - eminent of the Utflted States assist In the solution of the future of the Afro- A Tn dealing with thing* local we would offer tjje following suggestions: 1. Let every negro rapist or attempts rape, be castrated, branded and lit* every negro convicted of t f TL? e .v.^'.Il-behav.d negro b. '"^Implant In the mind of the negro the three Idea* of Industry, honest and home-making. 6. Let the Gospel °f Christ »* preached to the race by white mission Srles. and let the prncIpUsnfths gospel actuate tho white People as I* as possible In restoring the harmonj ,h 6. Prohibit the sale of lnf«*' r ‘"|^ liquor* throughout *h« '''h"’ e , ? Its. ern territory where toe Chlckamauga, Ga. anotherIstreet CAR JAM. To the Editor of The Georgian At «:** this afternoon. *»■"< Whitehall on a West End mr.J res votjr editorial nn to the cr IT)rt . d It Ion of our street car*. AJ JI , V a %*. “ K«l up th, "O't.^V.g^nUy^th GEORGIANS IN GOTHAM 3 New York. Oct. 2«.-Here are snml of the Visitor. In New York today-. ATLANTA-M. O. Jackson- «• Murray, Mr*. W. AA. Stew at The At'antJ Georgian Is On 8als Regularly at the F° ! ' lowing Hotels andJJewe Stands- gra^^Jiri^U'V.o'.ssJ. B noSTON! ,0 M A8S.-B*r k * r Itous*' Hotel. I\ O. Kew* Co., Ps'®"'■ p‘"l'iio iletsL *ii* '“cfsCINNATI. OntO.-Olhson Hot**- : Grand Hotel, Pslse* Hotel. „ IIENVEH, COLO.—J. Blsck. H ■* ^TxDIANAPOLIB. IND.—English U**«* °NK\V , VORK, X. Y.—Hotel AH« r . ; "oMaUa? 1 SEBn.-Useeeth at*. Co. 'tolfIpo. 1 OllVa-Jefferow' “S'&ttd. UeKInney House, tuletgh House ^