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eee onan Co ey N -7 CROWDS HEAR HIM. AN ENTHUSASTIC AUDIENCE GREETS | BRYAN A BROOKLY Qsotations From the J. Platform Rend and Ably and Defended by the Presidential Candidate—The El- ection ef the Democratic Ticket Means the Enforcement of the , Laws and the Downfall of the Trusts and Combinations—Bryan Talks to Laboring Men. Democratic Bloquently Brooktyn, Sept. 23.—Before 6 o'clock every] ventrance to the Academ. ef Mus the battleground of a howling, tumultuous mob, and* when the doors were flang open a little past that hour, it teok less than ten sminutes te fill the big building from the front steps to the rear wall. It was ® good humored crowd, and it had a great deal of amusement with itself pending the arrival of Mr. Bryan. &n one corner of the orchestra space was.a brass band which helped the fun along hy playing patriotic airs. The first note was the signal for somebody in the upper part of the house to seatter through the air a great number of small American flags, and a moment later the entire audience was on its feet wildly waving the tiny emblems to the tune of “The Star Spangled Banner.” This sort of amusement was varied by cheers for Mr. Bryan, ; The house was bare of adornment except for two large portraits of Bryan and Se- wall, draped in American flags which de- pended from the proscenium, and the small reserved for the speaker, which had ar dress. A yery considerable portion udience consisted of women, every jing a party, while a number ted upon the stage. 80 o'clock every inch of space in a By 7 : the house was occupied, except the two main aisles of the orchestra, which the police ‘kept clear until after the arrival of Mr. Bryan and his party. Full people were in the house. By 8 0 the crush had become so thick that all the doors to the academy were closed, shut- ting out a clamori 1 of thousands who thronged the cntize bicek When D. F chairman of the ings county Democracy, rapped for order ate had not yet arrived. In a . Bell named as chairman of “Fighting Judge” William few the meeting Gaynor, of the supreme court. whose name was grected with tremendous applause. The judge stepped to ‘thedittle table in the front of the stage an pounded ‘the gavel. He made a neat speech, in which he said this was a time for moral courage. “In the hour when we are being called, by those whom we created here ‘in the East, anarchists and communists, and this we are called for calmly and dispassionately de g our earnest convic‘*ons.” He concluded by nominating Senator Pat- rick H. meeting. McCarron as the After hi ratified ‘etary of the jon had been en- senator read a the , Which the meeting adopt- that the election to be is of greater importance nee the civil war, denounce cor- 1d monopolies, and compliment Bryan for the skill with which he has thus led the fight “We find our faith in him strengthened,” say the resolutions, “by the abuse -poured out upon him by the enemies of the people, the defamers of the Democracy and ‘the traitors to the Democratic cause, who, ven- turing to insult the intelligence of the an people by using the Democratic nam a decoy have at last found their fitting home licanism as it is typified by Quay of Penn- sylvania, Piatt of New York, and Mark Hanna, the labor crusher of Ohio." The document in conclusion pledges the allegiance of the county Democracy for sryan and the whole ticket. r McCarron had searcely finished nt shouts from the outside of nnounced the arrival ef the The noise grew louder and adually developing into a mufiled roar, and eventually bursting into a torrent fi in the bosom of Repub- of sound, the volume of which shook the as the building to the center, candidate swalked down the stage. se continued ; the end nich time Mr. Bryan raised his hands and finally brought about order. Without delay he stepped to the front .of the id: I esteem it a great privilege to be per mitted to defend the cause which I have espoused in this campaign, and I am glad to be permitted to present that cause to the people of Brooklyn. I only wish that distinguished divine whose name has added even to the fame of your great city, Henry Ward Beecher, were with us, that he might again champion the cause of the people in their great fight. We have commenced a ‘are aguinst the gold standard which will not ccase until victory Is won. Before self to the money question, 1 » to say something in regard to these planks in-our platform which have been as- sailed by the enemy. I only x of them because ons high in the Republican rty have called attention to them, and sought to twist them ‘nto meanings not intended to be given them, and en inter- pretation which they will not bear. Let me read to you the plank of the Chicago platform against which so much abuse ‘has been leveled. “We denounce arbitrary interference ‘by federal authorities in local affairs as a violation ef the constitution of the United States, as a crime against free institutions.” ‘That ‘s the part which they say Is bad. When did that become pad? Let me read a plank of another platform, and see how this plank which I am about to read com- pares with the one which I have read: ‘That the maintenance inviolate of the rights of the state and especially the right of each state to order and control its own domestic institutions according to its ewn judgment, exclusively, Is essential to that balance of power upen which the operation and endurance of our political fabrie de- nd we denounce the lawlss inva- rmed force of the soll of any state or territory, ne matter under what pretext, ‘as among the greatest of crimes.” vou know from what platform that taken? (A voice: “Abraham Lin- yes, from Abraham Lincoln's; that is a plank in the platform of the Re- publican party of 1890, nud when you com- pare our plank with that one rou’ will find that ours is mild in language coinpared to this one Abraham Lincoln ran for} president on that platform. He was elected president on that platform, and in his in- bugural address he quoted that plank in fuil ‘4nd reiterated it with his approval. Now, my friends, if our platform is wrong, I want these Republicans to repudiate Abraham Lincoln, Because take Abraham Ligo0ln from the Republican party you we taken from it its most sacred memory, if you my rjends. Now, let me eal’ your atten- Yon @ another thing of whic they com- tein. They say we criticise the supreme ; Zourt. Let me read you what we say on that subject. (He then read the plank of the Chicago platfrom fn regard to the income tax de- cisions.) I call attention to the faet that the court overruled the deeision of 100 years. It is a fact. Have we not a right to mention! @ fact? We declare that congress ought to use all constitutional powers which remain. Will they insist that, having taken part, ) we dare not use what they left? We de- mand that congress shall use such powers as may come from the reversal by the court it may hereafter be coustituted. Has no court hereafter a right to reverse the Geeision of this court? Jf not, then what right had this court to reverse the court of 100 years before it? This court changes from time to time; judges die or resign and new judges take their place. Is it not pos- sible that future judges may adhere to the precedents of 100 years, instead of adhering to a decision rendered by a majority of one and that one changed his mind¥ did our opponents find that a decision of a supreme court so sacred? Why, this deci- sion would not have been rendered but for the fact that the men who had to pay the income tax attacked the decision of the su- preme court and asked this court to over- turn a former decision. Every time a lawyer goes into court and asks for a re- versal of the decision of the court—and it is not an infrequent thing—every time a lawyer does it, he attacks the correctness of the decision which he desires to have re- | versed. Let me read you what the Repub- lican platform said about decisions of the supreme court in 1860: “That we condemn the recent reopening of the African slave trade under cover of our national flag, alded by perversions of judicial power.” ‘That is what that platform said. It de- clared that the decision of the court was a perversion of the judicial power. There is no language in our platform that is as harsh upon the supreme court as that Re- pubtican platform. And they call upon ‘congress in that platform to take prompt and efficient measures for the total and final suppression ef that execrable traffic. My friends, on these two questions, where we are assailed by the Republicans to-day, we have not taken as emphatic a stand as the Republican party took in the first platform upon which it elected a president of the United States. Let me read you what Abraham Lincoln said about the supreme court. This is from his inaugural address, an extract from a public speech uttered upon the spur of the moment. I read you from a state paper from the inaugural ad- dress of Abraham Lincoln: “I do not forget the position assumed by some that constitutional questions are to be decided by the supreme court, nor do I deny that such decision must be binding In any case upon the parties to the suit as the object of that suit, while they are also entitled to very high respect and considera- tion in all parallel cases by all other de- partments of our government.” I quete ugain: “At the same time the candid citizen must confess that if the policy of the gov- ernment upon vital questions affecting the whole people is to be irrevocably fixed ‘by the decisions of the supreme court the instant they are made, in ordinary litiga- tion between parties #n personal action, the people will have ceased to be their | own rulers, having to that extent practic- ally resigned their government into the hands of that eminent tribunal” Mr. Lincoln says that when it is asserted that the supreme court has a right to determine the policy of the government on great questions, then we will have re- signed our government into the hands of the suprepe conrt. Our platform is not as harsh as the language of Abraham Lin- coln. criticized it, and when he uttered those words he was standing there as 2 co-ordi- nate part of the government of the Umted States. I quote these authorities in order ‘ou may see how far-fetched is the criticism that is leveled against us. I quote these in order that you may see that the very men who use the criticism against us must, in order to do so, abandon the Republican platferm upon which Lincoln was elected. But I must apologize for quoting Abraham Lincoln as a, Repub- lican authority. He is no longer a Repub- lican authority. Abraham Linzoin believed in 2 government by the people, of the people and for the people, and that is not Republican in this campaign. Now, our opponents say that we are op- posed to the enforcement of law. I deny it. I stand as the candidate of three parties. I do not speak of myself as an individual be- cause the individual is lost in a campaign of this character. But, my friends, I want to say to you that the fear that is expressed is not a fear that if elected I will not en- force the law. I have said before, I say again, that if by the suffrages of my coun- irymen I am placed in that position which is the highest position within the gift of the people of the world, every law shall be enforced against the great as well as against the small. It is not a fear of law- lessness. Think of men who have trans- gressed the law being afraid that there will be an enforcement of the law. Think of men who have considered themselves great- er than the government who are afraid the government will not be great enough. I know why these men are afraid to have the Chicago ticket elected. It is because these great trusts, corporations, combinations, this aggregated wealth. is enjoying unjust privileges. They know that the attorney general whom I will appoint, If elected, will not stand there to defend the great corpora- when he ought to enforce the law. y remind me of the man in court, the prisoner, who seemed uneasy and the judge assured him that he need not worry, that he would get justice in *hat court, and he said, “Great heavens, judge, that is what I id of.” y say that we are trying to destroy our institutions. let me read you the lan- guage of one whose name I honor. ‘“Assid- uous efforts are making to terrify the pub- lic mind with apprehension of social dis- order, to represent the great measure of reform which is now presented to you as disorganizing and to stigmatize its support- ers as destructive and agrarian. We who now address you have been the organs cf these imputations. We. pause, therefore, for a moment to repel them. We entertain no sentiments adverse to social order, we seek not to destroy, but to preserve in their purity the institutions of our country.” Whose language is that? It is the lan- guage of Samuel J. Tilden, used in an ad- dress to the farmers, mechanics and work- ingmen, ‘There they accused the reformers ‘as being disturbers of the peace, and they asserted then, as we assert now, that we have come to save the government which we love. They had just such a contest then as we have now. Let me read you again from that same speech of Tilden: “A powerful corporation, engaged in a death struggle with the government to which it owes its existence, assails the purity of our press, the fidelity of our repre- sentatives and the freedom of our election, and by this control over the currency spread far and wide dismay, misery and ruin, in order to extort a renewal of its privileges and power from the fears and necessities of the community.” The patriotic firmness of a yirtuous peo- ple prevailed in that struggle, but the signs of the times admonished us that we | are now about to renew the same contest. ‘The great combination of political force and moneyed interests is again In the field to control elections, to change the adminis- tration of government and to re-establish the supremacy of a great moneyed corpora- tion over the currency and business of a country. My friends, if he lived to-day he couid not have deseribed the opposition to free coinage of silver in more accurate terms than he described the opposition in that day of moneyed interests. He said that by their control over the currency they spread far and wide dismay, misery and ruin, in order to extort a renewal of powers and privileges whieh it then enjoyed, from the fears and necessities of the community. That same money power exists to-day, and it is doing the same work to-day that it did then» and business men are terrified. Men who owe money are threatened with bankruptcy uniess they sell their citizen- ship. If 4 banker dares have an opinion of his own he is menaced with ruin, and half of the New York banks who terrify and intimidate their country correspondents stand with the great Londor banks which ; have padlocks on the safes of the New York banks. that struggle. I believe that the patriotism and the firmness of a patriotic people will prevail in this struggle. To think other- wise would be to despair of a government like this, My friends, we cannot have a fr > government unless the people are free When , We do not criticise the court as he | Tilden said that the patriotic ! firmness of a virtuous people prevailed in ‘ 10 tae peopie have to obtain cons ‘om a few people before they cai act, then their action will have the samd effect as that of a few people, and wa will have a Democracy merely in form. Wd wowd have a plutocracy in effect, which is the worst form of government. I have read these extracts to you, my friends, to | show you that in this day we were assailed by the same people who assailed those who were alding to make government better if | those days, who sought to lighten the } burdens upon the backs of the people, and give them a larger share in the control of the government under which they lived. This is history repeating itself, and, my friends, we should not be discouraged by these things. } . Let me read another extract: “Banded together by the same unity of interests “nrraying them in an orgarized mass, whiclt | acts and operates through all the ramifica- } tions of society, constituting property by; | monopoly and perpetuities, and binding to | it political power and establishing an aris- tocracy more potent, more permanent and more oppressive than any which has ever existed. Such is the dynasty of associated and privileged wealth, wh'ch is the ruling power at present in nearly every civilized nation.” Those are the words of Samuel J. Til- den. I repeat them to-day, that this gov: | ernment of associated wealth, this govern- | ment by corporation, is the most tyrannical government that any people ever suffered ! under. When you hear that I am opposed to governments, you know that I am opposed to governments by corporations; when you know I am opposed to a government by great aggregations of wealth, you wHl un- derstand why they call me an anarchist, | my friends. But. I do not want to dwell longer on this phase, I want for a very few mo- ments to call your attention to the present | financial system and then explain to you what we desire to substitute in place of | this financial system. If our present fiuan- cial system is good it ought to pe kept as there is nothing too good for the Amer- j jfean people. And if this is good, we ought | | to keep t. Now, is it good? That is the question. If it is bad, then we ought to. abandon it, because the American people } are good enough to have the best. The financial policy under which we are Low suffering contemplates a condition in wnich ! a few men will control the primary money. National banks will control the primary money. National banks will control the | | paper money, and the people will have ! nothing to say. Mr. Carlisle’s recent state- | ment referring to the redemption of silver dollars means that all this talk ubout retir- ing greenbacks and treasury notes in order to protect the gold reserve is a farce and a fraud, becouse they intend to start another endless chain as soon as they get :hrough | With the present one. They have ussumed | | that we are poor ignoramuses. Will they | j admit that they could not see far enough to see what the advocates of free coln- age pointed out to them, or will they admit | they sai it and thought it not wise to take | the people into their confidence? No, they want to have one kind of standard money ‘or two kinds. If we are to have two kinds they must be equal and the government mmst have the right to use them both. “If the government cannot use a silver dollar to pay the debts that it owes which ‘call only for coin, then the silver dollar fs not as good as the gold dollar. I believe this government has a right to use its silver | | dellars just as it uses its gold dollars. But our opponents have gone on a different ‘pasis and they have taxed the people of |¢his country to pay interest on $262,000,- (00 of bonds in order to buy gold. When I see bonds worth $1.19 sold for $1.04 and | try to describe what kind of transaction it was, I regret that :ny parents did not {give me more tongues with which to ex- | press my ideas. The English language does not adequately express the question. And yet the people who sell for $1.04% bonds j Worth $1.19 assume they are doing the people a kindness, and they assume that |the people who run the goverament into f corner and then persuade it to sell them bonds worth $1.19 for $1.04%4 are the only ‘people worth consulting as to the good of the common people.” ' Mr. Bryan then reiterated his former as- rertions about gold being taken from the treasury with which to buy the bonds and | added: ‘And, within a short time, some of the very bonds which were sent across the ocean at $1.0414 in order to bring gold here, came back and were paid for in go'd at nbout $1.20. So that more gold went abroad than we got here. ‘That is financiering. | But that was not the worst’ thing about j the Rothschilds contract. The worst thing | was that the government hired these people to do the best they could to protect the government. We found it a better plan than that. The administration paid them a \high price to try to get gold to come to ‘this country. We have got a new device. ‘We adopt a free coinage platform and nomi- |nate a free coinagé candidate and then ‘they bring gold here mighty qeick. Now, {I live out in the far West, and I cannot jappreclate some things which seem all | right down East. When I come here they do not call on me and make themselves | acquainted, and I know so little about them i that I think that I would treat them just ‘jike any other criminal that conspired against the government. I do not know what I would do if they got me at one of their banquets and talked to me awhile about what a big man I would be, but if I am elected I am going to avoid the possi- | pility of being tempted by them by not let- ting them get near me at all. The great trouble has been, in my judgment, that otr treasury officials, instead of being in sym- pathy with the masses of the people of the United States, have been in sympathy with the syndicates and financiers of the United States. You say that language is harsh. I never use harsh or extravagant language, but that which is within bounds, instead of beyond them. I use language less strong than others whose languige I quote. LI LIKED US. The Big Chinaman Approved of the United States. Washington, Sept. 26.—Acting Secre- ' tary Rockhill has received from United | States Commercial Agent Peterson at Vancouver, B. C., the following dis- patch under date of Sept. 4: “At an interview giver the ccnsuls of this city on board the steamship Em- press of China, just previous to her j departure for Hong Kong to-day, his | excellency, Li Hung Chang, viceroy of China, requested me to becofne the bearer of the following message to my government: “I was greatly impressed | by the courtesy and kindness extended to me by the governments of western civilization. I shall ever retain the most pleasant memories of my visit to the United States, and I desire you | to make my greetings to your country | most cordial as I take teave of Amer- iea.’” Wealthy German Killed. Madison, Wis., Sept. 26—A train bound for Portage on the St. Paul road ran down and killed Michael Schlicht, ‘ seventy-six years old, this evening. He was a wealthy German farmer living two miles north of, Madison. : Andrew J. Poppleton, an Omaha pio- neer, and first general solicitor of the Cnion Pacific railway. died at his home in Omaha early this morning, aged sixty-six. —£ Insane Man Suicides. | St. Peter, Minn., Sept. 26.—Robert Winnege, a patient of the St. Peter hospital, committed suicide to-day by throwing himself in front of a moving train on the Northwestern road, which passed through the ospital’ grounds. He was from Bird, Island, and was twenty-two years old. {n the fall there is danger ‘o the health from the sudden changes in temperature, and j from disease germs arising from decaying vegetation. The blood must be kept pure and the system must be invi; ted if these dangers are to be avoided. (ood’s Sarsapa~ rilla is the best fall medicine, because it is } the best blood purifier and tonic. It wards off colds, bronchitis, pneumonia and fevers. Hoods Sarsaparilla & the Best—in fact the One True Blood Purifier. K th Bst—In fot tho One Trae Blood Per. % Hi th ly pil Hood’s Pills #ii3.03 ts ke Grass for Lowlands. Sow the grasses on the rye and cover them with a harrow. Do this as soon as possible after the ground is dry in the spring. Sow timothy, red top and alsike clover. Use four pounds of tim- othy, three pounds of red top, and three pounds alsike clover per acre. These three varieties go nicely together. They all flourish best on low land. The over- flow should help rather than harm them, and they mature about the’same time. It is somewhat surprising that alsike clover is not more grown when we call to mind its affinity for such situations and the excellence of the hay which it produces.—Prairie Farmer. Don't Tobacco Spit and Smoke YourLife Away If you want to quit tobacco using easily and forever, regain lost manhood, be made well, strong, magnetic, full of new life and vigor, take No-To-Bac, the wonder-worker that makes weak men strong. Many gain ten pounds in ten days. Over 400,000 cured. Buy No-To-Bac from your druggist, who will guarantee a cure. Booklet and sample mailed free. Ad- = Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or New ‘ork. Trying to Please Him. Arizona Pete—Shorty Grizzle shot Dempster full of holes. Alkali Jack—That’s all right. Demp- ster was always a crank about ventila- tion.—Judge. How's This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of catarrh that cannot be cured by Hall’s Catarrh Cure. F, J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, 0. We, the undersigned have known F. J. Cheney for the past 15 years, and believe him perfectly honorable in all business transactions and financially able to carry out any obligations made by their firm. West & Truax, Wholesale Druggists, To- ledo, O. Walding, Kinnan & Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, acting directly upon the blood and mu- cous surfaces of the system. Price Tic per bottle. Sold by all druggists. Testi- moniais free. Marvin, Wholesale A Distinction. “What will it cost,” asked young Cholly’s father, “to give my boy an education?” “The Lord only knows,” replied the professor, eyeing the youth thought- ‘ fully; “but you can put him through college for about 52,000.”—Chicago 'Tri- bune. If the Baby fs Cutting Teeth. Be snro and use that old and well-tried remedy, Mns. ‘WixsLow’s SooTHING SYRUP for Chilcren Teething. Biddeford, Me., expends $20 annually for snuff for its paupers. The policing cf Liverpool $150,000 per anaum. docks casts When billious or costive, eat a Cascaret candy cathartic, cure guaranteed.’ 10¢, 25¢. The highest altitude in Connecticut is Norfolk, 1,220 feet above the sea. Segeman’s Camphor Ico with Glycerine, Cures Chapped Hands and Face, Tender or Sore Fé Chilblains, Piles, &e. C. G. Clark Co. ow Haven, Ct. Clifton, N. J., is to have a big woolen mill erected within its confines. Trips Undertaken for Health's Sake Will be rendered more beneficial, and the fatigues of travel counteracted, if the voy- ager will take along with him Hostetter’s Stomach Bitters, and use that protective and enabling tonic, nerve invigorant and appetizer regularly. Impurities in air and water is neutralized by it, and it is a matchless tranquillizer and regulator of the stomach, liver and bowels. It counteracts malaria, rheumatism, and a tendency to kidney and bladder ailments. Chicago has 760 miles of electric rail- road tracks within its limits. That Joyful Feeling. With the exhilarating serse of renewed health and strenght and internal clean- liness, which follows the use of Syrup of Figs, is unknown to the few who have not progressed beyond the old- time medicines and the cheap substi- tutes sometimes offered but never ac- cepted by the well-informed. Addison fell in love with the countess dowager of Warwick, but she did all the courting and gave him no trouble in that regard. Just try a 10c box of Cascarets, the finest liver and bowel regulator ever made. To date the government has paid nearly $3,000,000 in premiums for speed made by war yessels in excess of the contract re- quirements. | Patents Issued. 1 List of patents issued last week to Northwestern inventors: Kibbie R. Ackermann, Rochester, Minn., culinary utensil; Harry C. Ash- enfelter, deceased, Spokane. Wash., hanging and sliding door; Frederick W. + Bates, Minneapolis, Minn., bottle; Rob- ert W. Chapman, P. Borger, Newark, N. J., and J. H. Linton, Fort Snelling, Minn., bottle; John J. Moore, Lima, Mont., carpet fastener; Ole O. Ovre, Godahl, Minn., planter; Daniel Will- iams, Wilbur, Wash., poison dropper. T. D. Merwin, patent lawyer, 910, 911 and 912 Pioneer Press building, St. Paul, Minn. For Milk Lovers. necessary is to shake it well, and to | sip it slowly. Shake the milk violently for a few minutes in a covered goblet, } and then drink immediately, but not ! hastily, before it has time to separate again. After standing for some hours, as, for instance, all city milk has done on its way to town, the perfectly homo- geneous article that came from the cow is separated, first by the rising of the cream from the gaseous or Cheesy milk, and later by the tendency to di- vide into whey or curd. Although this latter process is perceptible only in | souring milk, the fluid undergoes such constant changes that it should al- wi be shaken before drinking it, un- less it is taken quite warm from the cow. Piso’s Cure for Consumption has been a| family medicine with us since 1865.—J. R. | Madison, 2409 42d Ave., Chicago, Ill. — i Shall Be Having Appendicitis Next. ! “Those new neighbors on the corner seem to be throwing on a good deal of style.” “TI should say they were. Their hir girl’s got hay fever!’—Cleveland Plain- Dealer. Cascarets stimulate liver, kidneys and bowels. Never sicken, weaken or gripe. A Microbe Story. : “Well, Dicky, did you learn anything new at school to-day?” “Yes’m; teacher says we mus’ bile every drop o’ worter we drink, coz there’s cyclones in it, an’ if we swoller ’em, they’ll kill us.’—Detroit Free Press. To make milk digestible all that is | Warner’s Safe Gure IN LARCE OR SMALL sorties. Owing to the Mauy requests from its patrons, Warner’s Safe Cure Co. have put on the market a smaller size bottle of Safe Cure which can now be obtained at all druggists at the large bottle. is not only a scientific vegetable preparation and does all that is claimed for it, but it is the only Kidney and Liver medicine used by the best people of four conti- nents. A medicine that bears the stamp of the world’s ap- proval, and maintains its posi- tion for a fifth of a century, must necessarily possess pe= culiar merit. ~~ This button with a ten cent box af ASCARETS, CANDY CATHARTIC, the ideal laxative i and guaranteed consti- pation cure, sent FREB 6n receipt of five 2-cent sto ia Reweny company, ALL PDRUGOISTS. Cyicazo; Montreal, Can. ; New Yorke JOHN W. MORRIS, | ENSION Wau zton, D.C. iccessfull sec raopenstully Rrovecutes Claims: 3yrsiu last war, 15adjudicating claims, atty siuce. OPIU PATENTS. 2332282" experience. Send sketch for ng Viee. (L, Deane, late rece fone | Patotticey Deane & Weaver-McGill Bldg Wasa oa | and WHISKY Eabits cured. Book sent FREE. Dr. B. M, WOOLLEY, ATLANTA, GA. majority of th to live, terest, and the loan cal Fresident J. J. Hill says that “if farmers would be in less haste t sell their wheat they would made mors money;” but adds that “the m are compelled to sell in «rder to get monev on whick ‘mer that Wants to hold his wheat can send it to us te store, and we will loan him 90 per cent of its value at 6 per cent im nrun as long as the wheat is in store. Ous Storage rates are as follows: The first Twenty Days Free; 2ite> that 4 (one-quarter) of a cent a bushel for each Mon ay ‘days’ OSBORN, CROSBY & CO., FLOUR EXCHANCE MINNEAPOLIS_ The ripest and “How happy could I be Were the other dear charmer away.” with either sweetest leaf and the purest ingredients are used in the manufacture of “Battle Ax,” and no matter how much you pay for a much smaller piece of any other high- grade brand, you cannot buy a better stew a “Battle Ax,” or 5 cents you get a piece of “Battle Ax” almost as large as the other fellow’s 10-cent piece. Ship your grain tous in money at once. Send us the names and nd CAR LOADS. We will treat you right. Send us th® freight receipt as soon as it starts. As soon as it reaches us we will have it weighed by the State weighmaster, and inspected and graded by the State m- Spector, and will send you their certificates. as well as a bill of 8: ale. with the P. O. addresses of 17 Farmers. and we a will send you free. every two weeks. our latest Grocery List. giving latest prices groceries and other goods. Our Prices are Rizht. Send 15 cents and we will ne ol on. |. ROBERTS" SUPPLY HOUSE, 508,510, 717, 719, 721 Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis, Minn. ESTABLISHED 1879. WOODW ARD&Co Minneapolis. C R A j Ni co M Ni i S SION. Duluth. BRANCH-CHICACO AND MILWAUKEE. &&=> Orders for Future Delivery Executed in All Markets. 2a lon; boiled, 35; New Harness, which you want. WHITE LEA and galvanized, $1.90 per hundred pounds. Send Spe els: eee i 47. us you ted on the lowest prices of =; ROBERT'S SUPPLY HOUSE, 508, 510, 717, 71f, ST. LOUIS STRICTLY PURE WHITE LEAD, §2.97 per 100 Ihs.; Strictly Pure Linseed Oil, raw, 33% cents per . Repairing Outfit No. 2, 89¢; No. 1 Root's Outfit, $1.49. per gallon. New Road Carts for $7.10 each. Buggy and Harness American Ronnd Washers, $1.80 each. in the market. 23 catalogue, Bicycle cat., Agricultural Glidden Barb Wire, $1.60 per hundred pounds for gal- Implements cat., Drug cat., free; say painted,. ‘will send you our Grocery List evers” ds of Granulated Sugar for . . Nicollet Ave., Min: half the price | € Sen er ee