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WM Ml ll ."•- i. ''i: J- v\ V: h11 1 M®' a ia&bkk IK ALTGELD'S GREAT LABOR DAY The future of labor and the hope of mankind depend on the dynamic'force of Ideas, and the conquering power of Justice. These two forces. have given the world Its progress, and lifted man above the beasts. Justice may tarry long, but she has sever missed a date on the calendar •f the Almighty. Her feet step with the music of the universe, And her hands destroy him who maketh a dis cord. Ideas are living forces, Indestructi ble, and produce a harvest after their kind. Whether good or bad they mold men, they shape law* and they crystal live into Institutions* All the lnstltu tlonsupon earth today are simply the product of the Ideas which preceded them. tofty Ideas elevate the race, while sordid Ideas degrade and destroy. A century and a half ago the world was studying the rights of man, It lifted Its eyes upward, and It evolved the principle of equality, the principle of freedom—freedom of conscience, free dom of thought, freedom of speech and freedom of action. In the course of years these principles put an end to the criminal career of kings, and In America they founded a republic, based on an entirely new theory of govern ment, the theory of equality of rights, the principle of freedom. These ideas had a quickening and Inspiring effect oh the human mind, they enlarged the soul and broadened the intellect. XJnder the stimulus of freedom men became great in all lines of human activity, moral, material and Intellect ual. The nineteenth century was the product of the ideas embodied In the Declaration of Independence. The death of human slavery in America was the necessary result of .these ideas. No matter how firmly grounded an institution may be, nor how strong ly protected by material forces. If It has In it the element of wrong, it must go down before the combined power of lofty ideas and eternal justice. During the last century there were many movements of new thought, which first met with fierce opposition, but which withstood all attack, and Anally were enacted into laws—Anally crystallized into institutions. OUR GREEDY COMMERCIALISM. We oannot stop to discuss, these, but I wish to notice a wage, or rather a dflUdge of thought that has enveloped the earth, and Is threatening our civil isation—this Is the deludge of commer cialism. The Impetus which has. been given to the human mind by the Ideas of lib erty and independence produced great chants, engineers, financiers, and great generals of Industry. Men not only studied the stars but they laid bare the secrets of nature, and harnessed her forces to the wheels of labor.. Then men began to dreaim of riches they turned from the sun to look for dollars. From the contemplation of great principles the world turned to money getting. For more than half a ceuntry Europe and America created alters to Mam mon, and everything was measured by a yard-stick—weighed by the pound, or counted in dollars. We are now reaping the harvest that has grown out of these commercial Ideas, and it Is a harvest of corruption, a harvest of bribery, a harvest of mor al decay. A harvest that is lowering mil high ideals, and is destroying Am erlcan manhood and republican lnstltu tions. Looking back at the working forces we find that like attracks like simi lar forces appeal to each other. Thus when the Ideas of human rights and of freedom occupied men's minds, men ap pealed to what was lofty and noble In each other they made Justice the standard. From this came a generation of men and women who enthroned duty and built domestic alters of right eousness, and thus bred a race of giants. But when commericalism took posses sion of men's minds, and it became an end instead of a means, men appealed only what was sordid in each other. The dollar appealed to the love of the dollar. Man's character sodri becaihe the image of the thing which occupied his mind everything was brought to a low level. Money-getting having become the principal aim and object of life, the end was held to justify the means, and their consciences to get money. In' stead of studying the stars, commer cialism is like a hen in a barnyard scratching for insects, and holding its eyessp close to the ground that it never sees the. mighty landscape out side. When commercialism sharpen* the appetite It wrinkles the mind and shrivels the souL Left to itself it will in time destroy commerce. instead of government being a shield for the weak, money laws, franchises, bonds, and a .thousand other corrupt agenoles, government, both federal, state, and municipal. Is used to despoil the, American people. The American people are a wonder ful people, composed of the vital fiber of all nations having the benefit of the. Inventions, the Ideas and the In telllgence of the age, and having anew continent, with a wonderful climate to aid them. It was manifest that they must reach a high state of development Aid that their wants, should he great and those men who simply sat down by the wayside of commerce waxed rich. Nobody complained of this, hut thiy were! not content with legitimate gains, they controlled elections and de bauoh«4 governments,, and thus ems* sod fourtunes that stagger credulity. EFFECT OF INWIVIDUALS. These fortunes acted like a fever on the men whp had them and on their famlleii There cime first the flush of intoxication new houses, new finery, new yachts, fast horses and fast living Then -came the slow process of diaso lution that follows a poison* Innocent chUdreaWent.to premature i*sf\f2ku wawafCTTBgare..^.^ ... ..... ••.••^.,-.»r ^..»:- the gutter and daughters turned their feet toward, destruction. Look back over 30 years and see how the families of bribe-givers and bribe takers have rotted down. Railroad men, merchants, bankers, manufactur ers, politicians, all going down in a moral leprosy. Corrupt commercialism destroys the men and the famlles that succeed in it, while it strews the wayside with the wrecks of those who fall in it. Com mercialism may be a link in the chain of human development, a state through which than must pass to reach higher things, but standing alone—it cannot point to a single great idea or noble monument. EFFECT ON THE COURTS. History records the facts that the courts of this Country represent what Is for the time being the dominant force For nearly a third of a century the United States Supreme Court was dom inated by. the Federalists, then for a third of a century it was absolutely controlled by the slave power, and for more than third of a century it has been-controlled by the syndicates that Is, by concentrated capital.' The syndi cates did not buy decisions, they saw to it .that no man was appointed judge whom they not believe th«y could control. That Is they aimed to get men whose mental organisation, taste, ideas, environment and association were such that they could be relied on to favor syndicates. For one hundred years the supreme court had held that an Income tax was constitutional, and that the rich should bear'their share of the burdens of gov ernment. Finally the syndicates ob jected, and the majority of the court came to their relief, and held the tax to be unconstitutional, thus reversing its decisions of a hundred years. Judge Shiras changed his opinions over night in order to bring about this result. For nearly one hundred years the su preme court held that the constitution followed the flag, and that our repub lie being founded on the principle of equality and freedom could not have subject colonies that they must be either part of us or else strangers. Finally the syndicate wanted this changed so that they might despoil weaker people without permitting them to trade free with us, and the major ity of the court, reversed its decisions of nearly a hundred years, and thus gave the syndicates what they wanted. The right of trial by jury has beeifi called by all statesmen the bulwark of Anglo-Saxon liberty it Is guaranteed by both federal and state constitutions,' but when the American corporations wanted to break the back and crush the Splrlt of labor, they wanted trtal a$a tie Ted^ral courts are wiping it away with a mere wave of the hand. The right of assembly and free speech lies at the foundation of all free institutions, yet at the demand of the corporations the courts are stabbing it to death with their injunctions. For centuries the law was ample to protect life and property and to pre serve order and punish crime, and this was so during the hundred yearn in which our cities, and our country was developed. But after all this was done the man ipulators, the syndicates and the fierce birds of prey gobbled up the fruits of other people's toll, and then demand ed a new system of government, a sysr tem which honest men did not need, and at once the federal courts re sponded with government by injunc tloni whereby a judge becomes legisla tor, court and executioner, a despot such as Europe never saw and all this in order to comply with the demand of the corporations. Formerly only parties with clean hands could come into equity courts. This barred the trusts. Now the motto seems to be: 'Anything you want and. no questions asked." Formerly when a man who was charged with contempt of court denied the accusations under oath he had to be discharged and could only then be prosecuted by indictment. All this has been changed in order to de stroy trial by Jury. Jefferson prophe sied that the federal courts, being based on the aristocratic principle, and not being amenable to the. people, would destroy American liberty, and we have lived to see that prophecy partially fulfilled. EFFECT ON LEGISLATION. Today corrupt commercialism seeks to absolutely control the press of the land, the lecture rooms of the land, the pulpit of the land and the thought of the land and so far as it can de vbase them all. It has destroyed the statesmanship of America, and made politics a cess pool In which men become slimy, slip pery and contemptible the man who will seek the votes of labor and then betray It Is so absolutely contempti ble that even satan will handle him with tongs. We seem to fiave scarcely any states men left. The majority of our public men &re only conveniences controlled by special Interests, and .manipulated by corrupt lobbyists. An ex-Governor of New York told me a couple of years ago that a then re cent session of the legislature of that great state had been run by telephone from New York city that the bosses simply telephoned to Albany what was wanted, and the! members -of the legis lature abjectly acted as directed, the bosses in turn sijhply voicing the de mands of the corporations and corrupt politicians. The same story could be told of almost every legislature in this country. There was a time when the congress of the United States, and especially the senate, commanded respect, bat that time has goneby. EFFECT ON THE EXECUTIVE. In the spring of '98 the president, in speaking of the possible annexation of Spanish territory, said that forcible an nexation was not to be thought of that forcible annexation would be criminal aggression. Then the syndicates thai wanted to Hspoll weaker people de-. iin% iff 1A .•/• October th*1presidentdeliberately plan ned to do that which in April he had. called a orlme. On various prior occ|j* sions the president had said that'# could not conslstently hpld subject colo nies then the syndicates demanded subject colonies,, and the president saMl yea, yea. yk In December the president sent ft' message to congress stating that plain duty required us to make the Porto Ricans citisens of our republic, so that they could trade with our people free of tariff duties theh the tobacco syndi cate objected, and in six weeks the president Swallowed his words and abandoned plain duty, the trusts being more potent in Washington than seven ty millions of American people. Congress and the president had sol emnly assured the world that Cuba should be free and independents and that we were not going to assert sover eignity, but would leave the 1 Standi to be governed by the people of the island* The president repeatedly' said this pledge involved our honor and ihust b* made good. But when It came to With drawing, and keeping our word, the syndicates objected, and the president has approved the measures denying Cuba her Independence and keeplng her in a state of vallalage. Today we stand before the world with our word dishonored, and our solemn pledge §P®t upon, all because commercialism rules at the White House and makes laws at the capital. In the spring of '98 America was shocked at the barbarities practiced by Weyler in Cuba. The American people rose as one man and demanded that these Cuban- horrors be ended. Amid the applause of mankind we went on .a mission of humanity. Then the aristo cratic government of Great Britain, ac tuated by lust for gold and greed of land, determined to assassinate two South African republics. Had our gov ernment then intimated to England that we should regard the destruction of two sister republics as an Unfriend ly act, England would have halted. En gland did not want our displeasure. By a mere manly and mere friendly pro test we could have saved those two re publics. But unfortunately we had a tuft-hunting secretary of state, who valued the privilege of taking breakfast with some British snobs more than he did free institutions upon earth. He gave England assurances of our moral support in everything she might do. The newly made criminal millionaires of our land who wanted to be Intro duced at court demanded that we sup port England and the president said "Amen." The attitude of this great re public Influenced other nations We thus prevented intervention and arbi tration so that by Indirection we haye helped to destroy two sister republici. Today- that brutal butcher, Kitcftnite Is perpetrating horrors in South Africa in comparison with which Weyler's operations in Cuba were innocent amusements. And we are lending moral support to It all. Only three years ago all America rbee to put Sa end? to W«y!s*!!s bmtaUtJe*^• ^JDuh|u Today a Republican administration If making us a. silent partner fo thb com mission of greater horrors than wera ever dreamed of by Weyler. Verily, Tom Reed wak right when he said this was a syndicated adininistra tion. Commercialism has no consci ence. Corporations have no soul, and the syndicates which control this ad ministration have neither conscience, soul nor principle. WHAT IS MORAL WORLD POWER? For half a century this republic was t' greatest world-power on earth, its in.jence lncircled the globe. Not through Its armies, nor Its navies, for It had none, not through Its wealth or e* hibtion of brute force, for there were a number of nations that surpassed us in all these things. But It was through high Ideals, through lofty standards, We stood for human rights we stood for liberty we stood for humanequali ty we stood for justice, and the schol ars and the statesmen of the earth pointed to our republic and said: There, there Is the hope of the world." Every country in Europe was following In our wake and slowly adopting our institutions. Now we have stepped down from that high plane. Vulgar commercialism has pushed us down on to the low level of brute force. We are taking a position beside the despotic governments of Europe, and are Adopt ing their principles and their methodb. From being the great moral force of the world, shaping civilization and elevat ing humanity, we are indulging in low swagger and boasting of our army and navy. And this is not all. There are men who Insult our intelligence by telling us that this Is expansion, that this is prog ress, and that we are becoming a world power. Surely this talk is the delirium of a fever. A thousand bitter expert ences in history admonish that brute force is the«ame in all lands, and^in all times, and that murder and pillage are the same no matter, under what flag or what sky they are committed. It will take our so-called Christian civilisation a thousand years to wash Its hands of the blood and the loot of the helpless Chinese. The practice of despotism abroad means the sapping of liberty at home, and if the present corrupt and brutal spirit shall continue, to rule, then free Institutions must persih from America, Instead of progress It Is a return to barbarism. THERE'S A NJBW TIME COMING. You ask what will this corrupt com merciallsm lead to? I believe It will lead to better things I believe it Is the muddy chrysalis out of Which will yet come the. beautiful coloring of a new civilisation. Without intending It the leaders of this commercialism are hastening events towsird an economic and Indus trial condition, in which there will be a more equitable distribution of the fruits of labor. Morgan and Rockefeller are putting the -question squarely to the American people,' whether the monopolies own the people or whether the people shall own the monopolies. Put In that concrete form, there only one answer, and that answer Is coming from all parts of the-land. It is already written on the sky—that the people must own' the monopolies. The trusts, by consolidating the In dustries and proving that they could be -J1' '•tiN^:$eeple!' the solution otfcgir ih-' dustrlal problems wlU JCH^eaay. You Mk bow can^iiretf^ .^monopo lies? WTcan take them'Just likea raii road nW takes a main's'farm, by hav ing the jury-ascertain their Value aside #?6A watered stoek -aott paying for them. When once the plau ls fully de termined on, the details will be easily solved. Will if *iot In sortie cases cost more than 4hejr ate worth? Yes, but what of it*. If we can get industrial freedom, and get our govern ments, federal, state "and municipal, baclt,/out of the-influence of brlbe-glv lng, no price can be top great. And when the government takes the monop olies bribe-giving and public debauch ery will to a great extent cease. It will then again be possible to get legisla tion In the Interest of the people, which you, cannot do now. "But," says an other, "Will not th* .enormous patron age that will bo thus- 'givOn to govern^ ment make it impossible to oust the parly In power?" Not necessarily. The industrial de partment of this government could be made wholly Independent of ^ie politi cal department. What Is jnpre Important jthan all, no government on: earth could or would coerce its employes as much for po litical purposes as the, corporations do now. Today the corporations act a a unit in this despicable business, and there Is no grand jury to Interfere, as there would be with a government officials ORGANIZED LABOR'S CONDITION. word about organized labor: It was inevitable that the principles of the declaration of independence should give birth to a monument for the eman cipation of labor on both sides of the Atlantic. The leaven of justice once in motion, must leave the whole, lump. Magna Charta extorted from King John freed the barons. The American Magna Charta gave. to. all the people their political rights, but left labor in serfdom. Independence of labor was the .next step in the evolution, of human rights. Tliis meant a struggle between the producers on the one hand. and the parasites on the other. Modern society li a parasitic organization. The church, the bench, the bar, In fact nearly the whole fabric rests on the backs of the men and women who toll with their hands. It is ridiculous to say that capital matas labor just the contrary 1b true, Watch .the growth of a new community,'there' is first the small shop of the mechanic, gradually this Is enlarged by the-industry within until It becomes a great factory. To be sure capital is a great convenience, but labor is first. !AS a lawyer I beloitg^o the parasites* I believe thut In ourf'jpreMnt civilisa tion. the various machinery of modern society Is necessary,, and If controlled by justice, no one would complain. The trouble Is thjit the patm*U«c make and construe the Iftws, all the jregu- i|»si ai^' j|^|(i own favor. As I laboris crushed beneath aloud of hdpstfce* Before he asserted himself £be laborer had no tlce In anything, a^ was reduced to a beast of burden. Under the inspira tlon of the spirit of freedom, labor lift ed up Its-head and l^ok«d at the sun that great refdnnsr of the unlv^rse. Capital being organised noUilng could be done by lahor without organization so it organised. Many' mistakes were made, 4t pould -not be otherwise. Many leaders betrayed their trust and accept ed bribes. Considering how general this is among other classes, this, too, was to be expected. Yet when all Is told, the progress of organised labor has been wonderful. It adopted the strike as a weapon because it possessed no other. It lost hundreds of strikes and hundreds of organisations went to pieces, but every time, it w$nt to the earth, it got new strength and came up again. In a few years It began the fight, over, and when It camped with out dispute on the ground from which It had been driven* Step by step it has thus gained one disputed point after another. Though losing many strikes, it yet went forward and it must continue to fight and go forward until all men shall get their rights until the hand of toll shall be giyen a fair share of its own earnings until no parasite on this earth —be he kind, Judge or capitalist, shall dare strike the back of laobr with the lash of injustice. The men who toll with their hands, who clear forests, who build roads, who build shops, who build cities, jnrho build schools and churches, they are the men who make civilisation possible. Others are useful* Indeed but the laborer Is Indispensable, therefore he must have Justice. :vu ':.- As a rule capital can win any strike by protracting it capltal nfeeds no bread, while labor,,doei. .• '_ But It Is abio ti^ tliat':tht: victoty Is generally a barreii one. for In a few yean* labor oomes up again, the strug gle Is resumed, and the disputed point is conceded. Labor wins in the end because justice requires it It Is further true that capital has rarely ever suffered by recognising or ganised labor, knd dealing dlreotly with the organisation. Only pride has suf fered, that is alt And the wiser em ployers realise this fact and deal di rectly with the unions. History shows that a remarkable fa tality follows the Wttmlng of strike bycapltslisttjcagents. A few yeais ago there was one of the most noted strike* in history by the engineers Of a Missouri raUroad, with head^uarteis In St toUis. A Mr, Hoxle 'ought th* Strike for! the railroad, and in. the end won, but he did not long survive the fates called him away. President Qowep QrOphed labor on the Reading railway andi then #ent to At lantic City and blew his brains out Mr. Pullman won tlie strike against the railroad men, bjftt tub grass Is grow ing oVe* his grave. Ma has left only a memory that Is odious and a fortune that 1s the curse of his sons, while or ganised labor!* marclilng on with new hope and ntw courage. Mi*. Morgan may win the steit strike, but organised ltfbor will yet walk .over hlSg&YA. But progress never moves continu ously upwardj rson^etimes Bit a valley must be jcrriiftrtl. At Kretent labor Is facing a'crieig.'^'^ Trial by Jury,- tree" ftpeech 4nd tie r.i-1 ,r.V^y^g^^ja^«Mh»ww „. ..^ 3 ...v^ w--J'".-.i-i„^-:i ,-x ,i"i --V w./r..w i:... -_ .'/, ./V 7.! .- ARBUTUS CLEAB HjevAMA. 196 NunH NIVERSALj rXTEKT, ^4 v»W*' i—-r -~'i3 Xi44 4 .4, »-iVSt A «. V* THECLOTHIER. 41 UNION LABEL $18/$20 and $25. •PRIHO OVERCOATS, with Vslra Label, at— VfflOff LABEL HATS. at- All the Latest l»tis« Btwelcs. REMEMBER, we sraarantea eaeM wvesr astiols bonsrht of u,so yea t«s so stok wlstatan CHA5. W. ERICSON, 219 WEST SUPERIOR ST. HOLDING YOUR OWN Is a pleasure when yqu can hpid it In the brewing of beer that will com pete with the hest breweries In this country or Europe In the manufacture of pure,, rich and creamy bottled beer, that possesses the Qualities of all with the palatable flavor and strengthening qualities of the best' beer. Try it as an appetiser and tonic^-it Is good. 1BITHER PHONE 24L Bmidinc HOMEMADE. Union Label. union UM. Best Five Cent Cigar in the City. Manufactured HAVB YOU TRIED THBM DO SO AND BE CONVINCED THAT THB la Vcrdad mm! IF YOU WISH A: DEuaou^ WHOLESOMEf PALATABLE SMOKERS. Unkn-i la LHHla. CIGARS ARE THE. FINEST TliAT MONEY WILL BUY, AND TBTAT SKILLED LABOR CAN PRODUCE. MAiliiniirriUIUI.Bl 7 v:. Ron Fernandez Cigar Gompany. W, A. SCOTT. President B.L.HoOOBMICK. Vlce-PretH A.S.I Dulutb, Miim. Bsyvsid, Wis, HOME HAM. TMT WT-IT-OFF NUIT IS bad. If your Wife wsAts. to try a sack of Dufuth Universal Flour wVy ,not *et it at onpey You will be more I get it at once? You -Wilt be more Of^Boerdof VRMls. BothPhonss. OAkLON VAL BLATZ BREWING CO "•TAir iMllwaukew Beer, See that this label anoears oh the box from which vou mre served. le int iMiMMati ilMtel "®$ ®w 2 c-1 i"9- ,*- NOTICE OR (22), Auditor ptTLUTH the quent to SMOKE .andlSsas 3 4191. EXPIRATIOM or ii« j^^agDEMTOOir.PKRIOD. STAVE OF MINNESOTA, COUNT* et 8t. Louls-ss. To Peter P. Peterson: Take notice that the following de* scribed piece or parcel of land, situated in the?1County of. St'Louis antfv«tat# of ^Minnesota, to-wlt: The west one halt of the northeast oite-qvart# and the south one-half of the northwest one-quarter, except railroad right of way, (w% of ne% and s^ of nw%. ex* cept R. R. right of way) sectlon twen* ty-two township fifty-eight S8)y north range eighteen (18), containing 165.39 acres^ more or less. according to the government survey thereof, was on the fourth day/of Wak *. 1. lilt. biS in for the state for the sum of three dollars and sixty-three cents, pursu ant to a real estate tax judgment enter ed In the District .Court in the said County of St Louis Oh the twenty first day of Mafbh, A. D. ItM, tn pro ceedings to enforce payment ofv.Uxef delinquent upon real estete for the year 1896, for the sSid Cotiaty of 8t Louis, and was On the lUteinth day of Septem ber, A. D. ItM, sestgtifiMSy the State of Minnesota for_eight dollars ana twenty-one oents. That the amount re quired to redeem snoh lands frap such assignment exclusive of ti|e coa to accrue upm tMS jjQtloe Ji the said stun eight dollars ana twenty-one cents with interest thereon at the rate df one per cent her montlt from said fifteenth day of September, 1899, to the tlme/Of such redemption, and delinquent taxes, penalties and costs accruing subsequent ts said as signment with interest thereon to the time Of such redemption, that said de linquent taxes, penalties and costs ac cruing subsequent to said assignment amounted to the sum of S13.29 on the 29th day of July, 1901, and bear lhtereet at the rate of one per cent per month from the said 29th day of July, A. D« 1901. to the- time of such redemptioi and the time within Which said la can be redeemed from assignment will entire sixty service of this notice and proof has been filed in the office of the ty Auditor in and for said 8t Louis County. Minnesota, in manner pre# scribed by Section 87 of Chapter €, year 189B, for St. sal aft General Laws of Mlnnetfota for the year 1877 and amendments thereto. Dated, Duluth, this ninth day of September, A.'D.~ 1901. (Seal) O. St Louis County, Minn* (Labor World. Sept. 28, Oct. MS.) 4192 NOTICB OR (BXPIRAnoX Of «E DEMPTHMT PERIOD. STATE of OF MINNESOTA. COUNTY St. Louis—ss. To Mesaba -Monarch- Iron Co.: Take notice that the following de^ scribed piece or parcel of land. sltWited in the County of St. Louis and State of Minnesota, to-wlt: The south one* half of the northeast ode-quarter {*hk of neK) section thirty-two (St), town ship fifty-eight (68). north of range eighteen (18) containing 80 acres, more or less, according to the government survey thereof, was an the-fourth day of May. D. 1898, bid In for the state for the sum of one dollar and ninety nine cents, pursuant to a real estate tax judgment entered In the District Court in the said County of St. Louis tin the twenty-first day of March, A 1898, in proceedings to enforce payment of taxes delinquent upon real estate for the said County of Louis, and was on the fifteenth day of September, A. D. 1999. assigned by the State of Minnesota for fowr dOUtd and thirty-eight cents. That the amount required to: redeem such lsnds from such a|dgnnlent excluaive of tlMI cost to accrue upon this libttee Is vbm of one per ceBtjir -ssfrath ^Ireea fifteenth day of September, 18N, tojnn tlme of such rednnbtloi^ emd ^dilH" quent taxes, penalities and costs aneni-f ing subsequent to said assignment With said assignment amounted to the sum of 16.99 on the t9th day ot July. .tell 1901. and bears Interest at the rai from said one per cent per month from day of July, 1101, to the tUne «f reds iemption, and the assignment will expire sixty days ra tow at* said land can.be relemed^Nunj! service of this notice and proof has been filed In the office of the OMk* ty Auditor In and for said St l^pnli County. Minnesota, In manner pr ed by Section S7 of Chapter C, Laws of Mlnneeota for the yetf and amendments thereto. Dated. Duluth, this ninth day September.,A. D. 1901. (Seal) 6. HALDBN. Auditor St Louis County, 3ttm«' (Labor World. Sept. 88. Oct f*lt) Order for Hearing and lotiee jS» plleatioa Apyelstnest of AdaaiKtsteatev. STATE OP MINNESOTA. COUlfTY of St Louis—ss. in Probate Court. Special Term, September 25, 1901. In the matter of the estate of TTiiiittMis Paquette, deceased: On reoeivlng and filing the petiWNa-,#fr-&• Marie Paquette^. of the Countr Wt Louis, representing, """"g other things, that Eustache Paquette. lata, ot the County of St. Louis In the stats of Minnesota, on the lith day Of Assinf A. D. 1900, at the: oounty of St died intestate, and being an inhabU of this county at the time of nls dt leaving goods, chattels and estate in this county, and that the said tioner Is the widow of said decs and praying that administration, of estate be to Marie Paquette granted It Is ordered, that said petition tttf heard before said court oa .lCondi 21st day of October, A. D. 1901. o'clock a. tn., at the Probate Or the Court HOuse in the City of In said comity. Ordered further, that notice thereof be given to the heirs of said deceased and to all persons Interested, by ptib*. llshlng this order once In each wMtfir three successive weeks prior to saJ' of hearing, in the Labor World, a ly newspaper printed and phbr Duluth, In salo county. Dated at Duluth. MImms^ day of September. A. D.1ML By the Cdurt, W. O. BONXAlKi Judge effSSrtfr (Seal Probate Court, St Louis Co., Minn.) (Labor World. Sept,28 Oct. ORDER TO BXAM1HB ACCOUXTS^ Kd STATE OF MINNESOTi of St Louis—ss. In Pr Special Term, October*, tm. In the matter of the estate" of gart SWanson, deoeased: T4 estate jot Karl SWaasoi presenting, anon has fuliy admlnt th«! rH he?' said braying that a time and place be for examining, settling and alloWlti the final account of his admlnlstratloi and for the assignment of the resldu# of said estate to^ the parties entltlea thereto by law. It Is ordered, that said account be ex-: amined, and a petition heard by thlst court on tlife:28th day of October, A. -D^ 1901, at ten O'^Hiwa. m., at the Pro-i: "iiWe bate Office In Cou^t House In tha^i^ City of Duluth In said county. And it is further ordered, that notlfce .hereof be given to all persons lntf ested, by publishing a copy of this oi er once In each week ftr three sqiSei stve weeks prior to. said dhy of hearing, l#,the Lkbor -WoxwJi kly n«wsp» per printed and ptfbllshi&cSt Duluth a?Dpluth.,|Pnh-, the 2nd of Qetober. D. (Seii^of j*obate^^&^°NHAli* St. ^LouIs eo. MiSi)^£ in Labor World, October 5-1&-19,) tr