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{ q t ae oF lie = ig ES — ee eee WASH BLUE, ~ Costs ro cents and equals 20 cents worth of any other kind of bluing. ‘Won't Freeze, Spill, Break Nor Spot Clothes OIRECTIONS FOR USES" Wiggle-Sticks Ground in the water. Tipped the Wrong Porter. A lively looking porter stood on the rear of a Pullman car in the Pennsyl- vania station. A fussy and choleric looking man clambered up the steps. He stopped on the platform, puffed for a moment, and then turned to the young colored man in uniform and Said: ‘‘Porter!” “Yes, sir.” “I’m going to St. Louis to the fair. I want to be well taken care of, and can pay for it. Do you understand?” “Yes, sir. I hope—” “Never mind what you hope. You listen to what I say. Keep the train boys away from me. Dust me off} whenever I want you to. Give me an extra blanket, and if any fellow has the berth above me, slide him off int® another one. I want you to—” “But, I say, boss—” “Don’t talk too much, young man. Here’s $2. Now, | want to get the good of it. Not a word, sir.” The train was starting. The porter swung off to the platform. | “All right, boss,” he shouted. “I’m powerful sorry you wouldn’t let me talk, but I ain’t going out on that train.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Shouting Their Praises. Friarpoint, Miss. Aug. 22 (Spe- cial).—Cured of Bladder and Kidney Trouble after 26 years of suffering, Rev. H. H. Hatch of this place is telling the public the good news and shouting the praises of the remedy that cured him—Dodd’s Kidney Pills. Rev. Mr. Hatch says:— “I have been suffernig from Blad- der and Kidney Trouble for 26 years and ! have tried everything that peo- ple said ~would do me good. But nothing did me any good except De Kidney Pills. I haven't felt a pain since I took Dodd's Kidney Pills. They gave mej health and I feel like a new man alto-} gether. Dodd’s Kidney Pills are the best I ever had.” All Urinary and Bladder Troubles are caused by diseased Kidneys. The iral way to cure them is to cure kidneys. Dodd’s Kidney Pills never fail to cure diseased kidneys in any stage or place. They always cure Backache and they are the only remedy that ever cured Bright’s Dis- ease Restrained. Migs Sayso—Does Miss jead a happy life? Miss Worldly—Oh, dear, no! 1s.—New York Press. Goodgood She’s For Your Perfect Cornfort At St. Louis Exposition, which is very severe upon the feet, remember to take | along a box or two of ALLEN’S FOOT- | EASE, a powder for Hot, Tired, Aching, | Swollep, Sweating Feet. 30,000 testi- monialsof cures. Sold by all Druggists, 5c. DON'T ACI *T ASUBSTITUTE Some creatures have the faculty of swallowing insults and growing fat on the strength of them. aoe Piso’s Cure cannot be too highly spoken of as a cough cure.—J. W. O'BRIEN, 322 Third Ave. N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. 6, 1900. Some women have the faculty of say- ing funny things without being re- garded as bright. Gles @rbolisalve Instantly stops the pain of Burns and Scalds. Always heals without scars. Band Se by druggists, or mailed on receipt of price by J.W. Cole & Co., Black River Falls, Wis EAS po aaae FOA acts on dough perfectly, bringing out the wheaty fiavor and nutriment of the flour, and changing it into tich, life-giving bread. Bread raised with Yeast Foam is Light Bread but not too light. It is evenly well raised through- out—fresh, sweet, moist. The secret is in the yeast. Yeast Foam is the best of'yeast —made of malt, hops, corn, etc. It is sold by all grocers ‘at 6 cents 8 package—enough for 40 loaves. “How to Make Bread” — free. WORTHWESTERN YEAST CO. CHICAGO. thege has been no change in t in power, many of the evils prophesied Mave come under Republican rule, Extravagance Charged. “The receipts of the government for the year ending June 30, 1902, the first fiscal year of the present administra- tion, showed a surplus over expendi- tures of $91,000,000, but for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1904, instead of a surplus there was a deficit of $41,- 000,000. From the first of July, 1904, to Aug. 10, or for about a month and a third of the present fiscal year, the expenditures of the government have exceeded the receipts by $21,715,000. “Our Republican friends are prone to refer to the great commercial growth of the country under their rule, and yet the census reporcs show IS NOTIFIED HE FORMALLY ACCEPTS :DEMO- CRATIC NOMINATION FOR VICE PRESIDENT. SIMPLICITY MARKS CEREMONIES JOHN SHARP WILLIAMS OF MIS- SISSIPPI DELIVERS THE NOTI- in the party | _ WOMEN 1 POOR DETECTIVES. Be * yeah = i They Cannot Be Relied Upon in Emer- gencies. The Manager of an uptown detec- tive agency, who had warned women not to reply to his advertisement, said the other day: ‘ “Outside of special lines In depart- ment store work, women do not make g00d detectives. They look at facts as they want them to be, not as they are, and work on those lines. They jump at conclusions quickly and cling to them beyond all reason. ‘They work for spectacular effect and not for land- ing the goods. “A woman detective is sometimes successful in entrapping a man, but there must always be an element of TORTURING PAIN, | Half This Man’s Sufferings Would Have Killed Many a Person, But Doan’s Cured Him. A. C. Sprague, stock dealer, cf Normal, IIL, writes: “For two whole years I was do- ing nothing but buying medi- cines to cure my kidneys. I do not think that any man ever suffered as I did and lived. The pain in my back was so bad that I could not sleep at night. FICATION ADDRESS. DAVIS INDORSES THE PLATFORM THE PRESENT MONETARY STAND- ARD OF VALUE IS IRREVOCA. BLY ESTABLISHED. White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., Aug. 19. — Henry G. Davis was yesterday formally notified of, and formally ac- cepted his nomination by the Demo- cratic party for vice president of the United States. The ceremonies took | place in the open air in the grounds | of Greenbrier, White Sulphur Springs, and was marked by _ simplicity in every detail. Mr. Davis was es- corted to the flag-draped platform at 1:30 o’clock in the afternoon by Rep- resentative John Sharp Williams of | Mississippi, who delivered the notifi- cation address. Mr. Williams occu- pied an hour in speaking. It took Mr. Davis ten minutes to read his formal acceptance speech, but he prefaced this with a beart-to-heart talk of a like duration to several thousand friends and neighbors, who were gath- ered under the trees as his audience. Mr. Davis was the center of interest throughout the day. When it came his time to respond to the notification ad- dress he was kept standing some min- utes while the audience expressed its enthusiasm. Mr. Davis Accepts. Mr. Davis said in part: “The official notification which you bring of my nomination for the vice- presidency of the United States by the national Democracy gives me a feeling of the sincerest gratitude to my party for the honor conferred. “I heartily indorse the platform, and with the convention and its nom- inee for president, regard the present monetary standard of value as irre- vocably established. “In the campaign preceding the Jast election much stress was laid by Re- publican speakers upon fhe prosper- ous condition of the country, and fore- bodings were heard of the ill results, especially to the laboring man, which would follow any change in the polit- ical complexion of the government. It is true that the times were then good, but it'is no less a fact that, while PR OOOO OOOO HASTY EXODUS OF NEGROES. Threatens Shortage in Labor Supply in Georgia oCtton iFelds. Statesboro, Ga., Aug. 20. — Beyond the whipping of a number of negroes in this county and of one at Clayton, twenty-five miles from here, nothing developed yesterday in the situation in this part of Georgia. The exodus of negroes continues and already has threatened a shortage in the labor supply in the cotton fields, where the picking is soon to commence. Exag- gerated reports have been sent from here since the burning of the negroes Reed and Cato Tuesday. These re- ports have created the impression abroad that life is unsafe and prop- erty threatened. The contrary is true, for the lesson of Tuesday has made a profound impression on the negroes. It is to preserve this condition that the efforts of all classes of whites are directed. No violence has been di- rected Against the Better Class of negroes. There is evidence that ir- responsible marauders have commit- ted some of the: violence against the negroes, and the shooting of an aged negro, Roberts, and his son in their cabin Tuesday night has been depre- cated by all. He has lived seventy years in this community and com- manded the respect of every good citizen. Offers of assistance if it be needed to subdue the negroes, have come from Brunswick, Valdosta and other Georgia towns. The question most discussed yester- day is the alleged mismanagement of the troops during the trial of the ne- groes Reed and Cato. A non-commis- sioned officer of the loca] military company declared to the Associated Press correspondent that two officers of his company have prepared their resignations to the governor, and that a majority of the company have SENATOR HOAR RESTS QUIETLY. Congestion Has Not Spread but His Condition Is Very Serious. that from 1850 to 1860, under Demo- cratic rale and the Walker tariff the percentage was greater in population, wealth, manufactures and railroad mileage. The Money Question. “The Republicans now claim great consistency in their attitude upon the currency question, and the president in his recent speech of acceptance, said that they know what they mean when they speak of a stable currency, ‘the same thing from year to year,’ and yet in the platforms of their party in 1884, 1888 and 1892 they favored the double standard of value. In the platform of 1888 they said: ‘The Re- publican party favors the use of both gold and silver as money, and con- demns the policy of the Democratic administration in its efforts to de- monetize silver.’ Parker a Fine Man. “I congratulate your committee, and the constituency it represents, in the selection by the delegates to the national convention of the nominee for the presidency. He is a man of courage, yet prudent, of high ideals, yet without pretense, of the most wholesome respect for the Constitu- tion and the majesty of the laws un- der it. Rights of Labor. “In the language of our platform, the rights of labor are certainly no less vested, no less sacred, and no less inalienable than the rights of capital. The time is opportune to em- phasize the truth of this utterance. The more sacred right of property is the right to possess and own one’s self and the labor of one’s own hands, capital itself being stored-up labor. Years I worked in the ranks of the wage-earner, and I know what it is to earn my living by the sweat of the brow. My experience as a wage- earner and my associations with labor have taught me the value of Demo- cratic principles. Local Self-Government. “I beg my countrymen, as they value their liberty, to guard with great care the sacred right of local self government, and to watch with a jealous eye the tendency of the times to centralize power in the hands of the few. “It will be my pleasure and duty, at a time not far hence, to accept more formally, in writing, the nomination which you have tendered in such graceful and complimentary terms, and to give my views upon some of the important questions now com- manding the attention of the coun- try.” Asked for Dismissal from the service. Leading citizens are endeavoring to dissuade them from this intention. This officer de- clared that the members of the com- pany were required to give up their loaded cartridges that had been is- sued and that other and smaller cartridges were issued to less than half a dozen members of the company. He said orders were given that there should be no firing. The local men lay the blame on the officer command- ing, the captain of the Savannah com- pany on duty here. It is de- clared that the mob with the two ne- groes on the way to the stake passed within a few yards of the soldiers sta- tioned about the jail. It is declared these soldiers even then could have rescued the negroes and held them against the mob. REGISTRATION PICKS UP, Devils Lake Excursions Are Attract- ing Large Numbers. Devils Lake, N. D., Aug. 20.—Yes- terday the largest number since the first day registered, the total being 648. On account of excursion rates in | effect it is expected the last two days | of registration will be the largest. The police yesterday were notified by Cass Lake authorities that two col- ored men were being held there. hay- ing been found in possession of arti- cles alleged to have been stolen from H. N. Hilgren’s tailor shop here Tues- day night. Steps already have been taken to fetch the men here. Railroad Employe Killed. Marquette, Mich., Aug. 20. — Peter O'Connell, aged fifty-six, employed in the railroad shops. was instantly killed while at work. He was struck in the breast by a fragment from a pulley, which exploded while in mo- tion. MUST RETURN THE PROPERTY. Minister Bowen Makes Polite Request of Venezuelan Government. I could not ride a horse, and sometimes was unable even to ride in a car. My condition was critical when I sent for Doan’s Kidney Pills. I used three boxes and they cured me. Now I can go anywhere and do as much as anybody. I sleep well and feel no discomfort at all.” personal passion or revenge in it. If this is the case you are not sure of her. “With their own. sex, women sleuths, are not good at all. Clever women criminals can always play on their credulity and vanity. Women detectives in fiction, except in ~ the A TRIAL TREE—Address Foster- field of high diplomatic circles, are| Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y. For sale untrue to those we find in real life—j by all dealers. Price 50c. New York Press. 4 | Cause and Effect. “What’s the matter with Whimsley? He looks completely broken down.” List of Patents Issued Last Week to qaust peck: rom is: yScauOu Northwestern Inventors. Petron Mice Frees: George Horst, Jackson, Minn., car- ‘ x rier for target traps; Henry Heulster, Many Children Are Sickly. St. Paul, Minn., binder: Carl Johnson, Mother Gray’s Sweet Powders for Children, Duluth, Minn., combined harrow and Te ee oe arnameede Cauda Bie ee ome, New York, cure Summer Complaint, mead ze a CaHAe ationtter cee} Feverishness, Headache,Stomach Troubles, ey ; x Teething Disorders and Destroy Worms. At Show, Excelsior, Minn., railway signal | all Druggists’, 25c. Sample mailed FREE. apparatus; Lewis Stetler, Minneapolis, Address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Minn., rotary engine; Claus Swenson, SET ae ee Minneapolis, Minn., detachable heel ealk for shoes. Se ee Johnson. patent lawyers, 911 nd 912 Pioneer Press Bidg., St. Paul. g PATENTS. | Surely the Easter rabbit knows its business better than the hen, since the eggs it lays come ready boiled. Mrs. Winslow's Soothii 8; For children teething, 2 27) luces tm Just So. Sammation, allays pain colic. ' 25¢.a bottle. “Pa, what is intuition?” “Merely the feminine of suspicion, my son.—Harper’s Bazar. A light heart makes a lighthouse in a dark world. b : ‘ A : $3 - ‘Mrs. Rosa Adams, niece of the late General ‘Roger Hanson, C..S. A., wants every woman to know of the wonders accomplished by 6 D t Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. “Deak Mrs. Pivxgam : —I cannot tell you with and ink what good Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound did for me, suffering from the ills peculiar to the sex, extreme lassitude and that all gone feeling. I would rise from my bed in the morning feeling more tired than when J went to bed, but before I had used two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound, I began to feel the buoyancy of my younger days return- ing, became regular, could do more work and not feel tired than I had ever been able to do before, so I continued to use it until I was restored to perfect health, It is indeed a boon to sick women and I heartily recommend it. Yours very truly, Mrs. Rosa ADAMS, 819 12th St., Louisville, Ky.” 4 Any women who are troubled with ir- regular or painful menstruation, weak- ness, leucorrheea, displacement or ulcer- ation of the womb, that bearing-down feeling, inflammation of the ovaries, back- ache, general debility, and nervous pros- tration, should know there is one tried and true remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. No other medicine for women has received such wide-spread and unqualified indorsement. No other medicine has such arecord of female cures. “Dear Mrs. PrnkuamM:—I am very pleased to_ recommend Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound for womb and ovarian diffeul- ties from which I have been a sufferer for years. It was the only medicine which was at all beneficial, and within a week after I started to use it, there was a great change in my feelings and looks. I used it for a little over three months, and at the end of that time I suffered no pain at the menstrual period, nor was I troubled with those distressing pains which compelled me to go to bed, and I have not had a headache since. This is nearly a year / ago. I always keep a bottle on hand, an me a week, for I find that it tones up the system and keeps me few doses every feeling strong, and I never have that tired out feeling any more. ink that every woman ought to try this grand medicine, “T certain! tA Yours very truly, Miss Erste DANFORTH, 203 for it would proye its worth. De Soto St., Memphis, ‘Tenn.” FR MEDICAL ADVICE TO WOMEN. Don’t hesifate to write to Mrs. Pinkham. She will understand fectly, and will treat you with kindness. Her advice Port of Spain, Trinidad, Aug. 21. — Advices were received yesterday from Caracas saying that the American minister, Mr. Bowen, in the name of Worcester, Mass., Aug. 21. — Ata late hour last night Senator Hoar was resting quietly. He had been given a very little opiate. Although the con- ur case free, an e address is Lynn, ‘ass. No woman ever regretted ving written her, and she has helped thousands. Co., Lynn, Mass, BEGGS’ BLOOD PURIFIER CURES catarrh of the stomach. gestion in his left lung has not spread, the senator’s condition is very seri- ous. He has been informed of the multitude of messages of sympathy and is deeply moved by them. No one saw him, yesterday excepting the members of his family. the United States, has requested Ven- ezuela to remove Mr. Carnock, the re- ceiver appointed to take charge of the property of the New York and Bermu- dez Asphalt company, and to return the asphalt lake to the American com- | pany. THE BURLESQUE SEASON. Thirty-five High-class Shows Open In Thirty-five Cities Aug. 21. The burlesue season begins Aug. 21, and the prospect was never brighter, the outlay of money for costumes, scenery and printing never more lav- ish. Thirty-five burlesque companies of the forty included in the “Wheel” wert rehearsing simuitaneously in New York yesterday, the other five starting for distant points, where they are to open the season. In the “Burlesque Wheel” this sea- son will be five theaters which will be practically new. Altogether there are as many theaters as companies. Ac- cording to the figures obtained from Sam A. Scribner, president of the Traveling Managers’ association, there will be about 1,600 players employed in responsible burlesque companies that will go out this season. The high- class vaudeville talent accompanying these companies is the best that can be procured. The Star theater, St. Paul, and the Dewey, Minneapolis, are included in this circuit and open for the regular season Aug. 21. Appreciative. Housewife—Here you are at last. I am lying in wait for you. Iceman—Thanks. I will reciprocate by lying in weight for you the rest of the season.—Detroit Free Press. Important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORTA, safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Co fftbidia Signature of y edi. Ip Use For Over 30 Years, The Kind You Have Always Bought. Finding flaws in the sermon is easier than following it, any day. The Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago. send Home Eye Book free. Write thet about your eyes The man who is too meek to speak in meeting gets over it before electicn. Women may not be seekers after praise, but they want a fair share of it. while visiting the State Fair are invited to call and see us at our store and creamery, corner th and Wabasha streets. We haVe a new pl for buying cream and a price t will interest you. Also ure and see our butter ibit in Dairy hall, Fair rounds—the greatest exhibit nd ever made in Am- Talk with our man there. 4 If you do not visit the Fatr, write us for price and partic- Your SONS and DAUGHTERS by giving them a complete course in BOOKKEEPING, PENMANSHIP. SHORTHAND, _TYPEWR. and TELEGRAPHY at the be: and most modern School in the orthwest. Over 1,000 graduates now holding positions of trust and honor. Send for Catalogue “A.” HESS BUSINESS COLLEGE, . ST. PAUL, MINN. THERE 1S MONEY IN TIMBER LAND Get full particulars by. calling or writing for maps and prices of my choice meadow and timber lands in Central Minnesota. U: stock and dairy farming. E. Sime, 311 Jackson street, St. Paul. Minnesota, opposite Merchants otel. Ship Us YourCream | THE CRESCENT ( * CREAMERY Co. ! 7. PAUL, MINN. | i i College practicing and In government positions. Catalog tree. Dr. d. H. WATTLES, 1130 Holmes St., Kansas City, Mo. AGENTS WANTED "2" Ibe, 400 and up. Portraits 30c, 508 and up. Catalogue and Samples Free. HUDSON PORTRAIT CO., 1286 W. Madison St., Chieage, 1. When Answering Advertisements, Kindly Mention This Paper. N. W. N. UL —NO. 35— 1904. FOR 'T if we cannot forthwith produce the original letters and signatures of ESREEM sas, yhich will prove their absolute genuineness, $5 00 / be Tydis E. Pinkham Med. ESTABLISHED 1879 wns Woodward & Co., Grain Commission, OULUTH. See ree } ORDERS FOR FUTURE DELIVERY EXECUTED IN ALL MARKETS.