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ir War Department Believes the Coun try's Next War Will Be Fought in South America, And in Anticipation of This Sends Army Officers South tmStudy r . the Country.- New York Sun Special Service. Washington, Oct. IB.T he general staff of t he army has decided to send agents into South America to study military conditions there as a prepara tion for war involving the United States which may be fought in that part of- the. world. This policy is based on t he conclu sion that the next conflict, of the American government will be for the maintenance of t he Monroe doctrine. It is said to be t he opinion of the gen eral staff that hostilities ultimately will come'with one or more European powers over.the principles, embrac ed in President Monroe's message. The importa nt mission to Venezuela and to the isthmus of Panama from which Captain C. B. Humphrey and Lieutenant B. V. D. Murphy returned to Washington yesterday, was under taken at the instance of the war de partment in June, two months before the general staff l aw went into effect. I n following out t he department's ex ample the general staff is to collect data on a much more extensive scale, and several army officers will start for Sou th American capitals at once. They will be accredited as military attaches to t he United States legations. The officers have be en selected from among the younger men of t he gen eral staff, whose membership com prises the pick of t he army* Not one of them, it is claimed, owed his pref erence to any political or social co n sideration. .._ e i _. . ""' Europe I s Interested. Behind the activity of t he general staff is understood to be a reas on more immediate th an the mere opinion th at t he maintenance of t he Monroe doc trine will be settled by force of arms. It has come to t he knowledge of the authorities that military agents of European countries are busily collect ing information as to the character of the roads, t he country generally and tHe food supply in South America. While the well-established army staff organizations of Europe have been collecting data of this nature for many years in other territory, they have not heretofore devoted themselves to Latin - America. The awakening of their in terest in this connection is naturally regarded with suspicion. '"'""". -- *-'.- LOCATES EMMET'S TOMB Famous Irish Patriot I s Buried Dublin Churchyard. New York, Oct. 15.Dr. Thomas Emmet of this city believes he has solved the mystery of t he burial place 1 of Robert Emmet, his great uncle, t he I Irish patriot, who was put to death, 'by t he English for high treason at Dublin. Sept. 20, 1803V * - -- H e ha* just return ed from Ireland after three months spe nt in running down rumors as to the patriot's tomb, and the1 Northwestern Branch of the W. F. M. 8. In Session at Madison. Special to The Journal, Madison, Wis., Oot. 15.At to-day's ses sion of the Northwestern branch of the Wo man's Foreign Missionary sooiety of the M. E. church, officers were elected as fol lows: President emeritus, Mrs. I. R. Hitt, Washington, D. C president, Mrs. A. W. Patten, Evanston vice president, Mrs. T. P. Andrews, Chicago corresponding sec retary, Mrs.- F. P. Crandon, Evanston secretary of home department, Mrs. A. Bliss, Chicago recording secretary, Mrs. L. H. Jennings, Chicago treasurer, Mrs. H. B. York, Detroit assistant treasurer, Mrs. Johanathan Dunn, Detroit. The sum of $6,797 was pledged for foreign missions during the coming year. - . Careful and extensive experiments evolved Grape-Nuts, the -how famous food. Grape-Nuts contain- the brain and nerve-building food' elements in condition*for easy digestion. The re sult of eating:.. Grape?Nuts^ v.daily is easily seen iha marked sturdiness and activity'of the brain and 'nervous sys te m, making it a pleasure for one to carry on the. daily,duties without fa tigue or exhaustion. The food is in no sense a stimulant but l a simply food which renews and replaces the daily wasteof brain and nerves* - '- \ Its flavor Is charming and bei ng fully and thoroughly cooked at the factory It is served instantly -with cream. .. - i The signature of t he brain worker' spoken of, C. W . Post, is to be seen on each genuine package of Grape^-'Nuts Look in each package "for"'a copy-of" the famous .little book, "The Road to Wellville." i^i K ?A ~ &*. - &^ 7^%m U I.M14 f*JU .lii-T TO DEFEND :. - * MONROEISM '^mmm. ' ' '. Former President Cleveland Delivers an Address Before the Chicago Commercial Club. Says, Professional Politicians Should . % Jfot Be Allowed to Run the Government. Chicago, Oct. 15."Give to our peo ple something that will concentrate their common affection and solicitious careand let jhat be their country's good give.them a purpose that stimu lates them to unite in lofty e^keavor and let that purpose be a demonstra tion of, the Efficiency and beneflcienoe of our popular rule. ' TE0VBLE FOR FAITH CUBISTS They Will Be Tried Under a Manslaughter Charge. New York, Oct. IB.As a'result of the court of appeals' affirmance of the con viction of Luther Plerson, who was charged with depending on faith curlst methods instead of calling a physician for his child when it was stricken ' with pneumonia. Judge Piatt, at ^hite Plains, Will immediately overrule the demurrers to the indictments in the case of Mr. and Mrs. John Quimby and J. C. Lathrop, known as a healer. They are accused of being responsible ^for the death of little Esther Quimby, in relying solely upon the laying on of hands to cure her when ill from diphtheria. They are under indictment for manslaughter. MBS. PATTEN IS PRESIDENT Resulting from these conditions in a manner not difficult to trace, wholesome national sentiment is threatened with ut ter perversion,: ^II 'sorts of misconcep tions pervade the public thought, and jealousies rapidly taking on - the complex ion of class hatred are found in every cor ner of the,land. A new meaning has been given to national prosperity. With a hardihood that savors of insolence an old pretext, which has preceded the doom of ^ahelent^experiments in popular rule, is dally and hourly dinneda in ouer earosr w * ORIGIN Of a Famous Human Food. The story of great discoveries or inventions is always of interest. A n active brain worker who found himself hampered by lack of bodily Strength and vigor and could not carry out the pla ns and enterprises he knew how to conduct was led to study va rious foods and their effects upon the* human system. I n other words, be fore he could carry out his plans he had to find a food that" would carry him along and renew his. physical and mental strength. H e knew that a food that was a. brain and nerve builder (rather than a mere fat maker) was universally needed. H e knew th at meat with the avera ge man does not accomplish t he desired results. H e knew th at t he soft gray substan ce in brain and nervte centers is made from albumen and phosphate of potash obtained from, food. Then he started to solve t he problem. B * ivy** * ^ e w ' t0 !Siu t^^mm, WW "V * 1* DUTIES OKI* * CITIZEN Too Much Confidence. There Is an habitual associate of Amer ican, civic indifference and listlessnoss. which reinforces their malign' tendencies and adds tremendously to the dangers that threaten our body politic. This asso ciate plays the roll of a smooth, insinu ating confldence operator. Clothed in the garb of immutable faith in the invulner-' ability of our national greatness, it in vites our admiring gaze to the flight of the American eagle, and assures us that no tempestuous weather can ever tire his wings. Thus many good and honest men are approached thru their patriotic trust in our free institutions and immense national resources, and are insidiously led to a condition of mind which will not permit them to harbor the uncomfortable thought that any omission on their part can check American progress or endanger our country's continued development. Have we not lived as a nation more than a century, and have we not exhibited growth and achievement in every direc tion, that discredit all parallels in his tory? After us the deluge. Why, then, need we bestir ourselves and why disturb ourselves with public affairs? - Those of our- -citizens who are- deluded by .these , notions..-and who allqw them selves, to be brought to. such a 'fi a'rne of mind, may well be reminded of the good, old lady, who was wont to impressively declare that she has always noticed if she lived until the first of March, she lived all the rest of the year. It is quite likely she built a theory upon this experience which Induced her with - the passing of each of, these' fateful days, to defy coughs, colds and consumption, and the attacks of germs and microbes in a mil lion forms. However this may be, we know that with" no design brTntention on her part, there came a first day of March which passed without her.earthly notice. The withdrawal.of wholesome \senti ment .and patriotic activity, from jpolitfgtg action on the Rarjt in search was Anally narrowed down to St. Peter's churohyard, Dub lin, in t he Emmet family tomb. When an edict prohibiting burials? in Dublin was issued in 1840, t he headstones and tomb covers in"* St. Peter's were taken' up 'and the-ista*' face covered with a thick layer of cement. T he stones were replaced promiscuously, merely indicating that t he bddies they commemorated lay somewhere in t he churchyard. Ob jections of families whose ancestors are buried there prevented Dr. Emmet from excavating. * , those wiio are in-^ di *## to t*e#^u^^r .foolhardy4i h thetr o#ftteiismr'oa*Bns .the"way -fdarxa %uth-, less: an^*5nr.lei3tlnK Jenemy_of. our.'jfarefe coS^tsty :sr ykk^^^mm^^mm^ wii should be-on guard and the slumber "Of the sentinels Who-should-.neverv-sleep, di rectly invite the stealthy approach and the pillage and loot of the forces of sel fishness and greed. These baleful enemies of patriotic effort will lurk everywhere as long as human nature remains unregen erate, but nowhere in the world can they create such desolations as in free'Amer ica, and nowhere can they ~sd/cruelly de stroy man's highest and best aspirations for self-government. *. Corruption of Suffrage. Is not our public life saturated with the indecent demands : of selfishness? More than-this, can any of us doubt the existence of jstill more odious and detest able evils -which*, .with. steady cankering growth, .are more 'directly than all others threatening-our safety and national life? I speak of the corruption of our suffrage open and notorious, of the buying and selling of political places for money, the purchase , of political favors and privi leges, afld the traffic in official duty for personal gahr.-- - These things' are' con fessedly oomrnon. Every intelligent man knows that they have grown from small beginnings until they have reached fright ful proportions of malevolence and yet respectable citizens by the thousands and hundreds of thousands have looked on with perfect calmness, .and .with hypocrit ical cant have declared they are not pol iticians, or- with silly pretensions of' faith In our strength and luck have languidly claimed that the country was prosperous equal to any emergency, and,proof against all dangers. thd t ^^"onlsplndw have built upon the shpwy ventures of speculative wealth is a badge of our suc- cess.-- Unsharing contentment is enjoined upon the masses our people, and the? SliJT**?' Kl capital. This, of Itself, is sufficSntTy dis tressing but thoughtful men ar w without dread of sadder-developments ye to come. There has also grown up Smo2 our people a disregard for the'*?.? +8 of law and a disposition to^vade tttS? tations^-while querulous stScturX cerning the action of bur clurtl iLS undermine popular faith m t E. justice and last? but by no ^2 T complaints of imaginary or ^ shortcommgs in ou?Kci SS? nish an excuse for the fltnnnW , 2*~ tlonoraH sorts o ^ If goo*:men are to inte^rfere t 1 i political 'action whaf it sSuS h ^ .must not" suppose- they w5u" LS'-^ an open field: unbccu Vy an force. Qri the ^Qund they Lve^ they will find a host of those who in p01iti^ f l o THE MINNEApd^I^OUENAL. BESTADRANT MAN Victim Gouldn^lEay for, His Meal "2Witnesses Say Attaok Was Unprovoked. Chicago, Oct." 15.James Expapa s, proprietor of a restaurant, last night shot and killed John Cassazza, a team ster, who, he asserted, refused to pay for a, meal and attacked him. Eye witnesses declared that the shooting was. unprovoked. The ang er of the crowd in the street was excited when Expapa s, according to the police, stood in t he doorway and fired two shots at t he victim, already wounded and lying on the sidewalk. '._.... 0 . This -yvas the solution offered by for mer President'[Groyer'Cleveland as a remedy for corrupt politics, ' in a speech befdre the members of the Commercial elu' bat their annual ban quet given at the,, Auditorium last night. The subject discussed by' Mr. Cleveland was "American Good Citi zenship," and he .dwelt at length on t he necessity of every citizen doing his part to make political action what It should be. Said he: A s I understand my situation, I am un der bonds to keep the peace, if possible, by eschewing politics in the few words I shall speak to-night, and' I hope I may fulfill the condition of my bond and avoid disturbing those most suspicious of rriy conduct if I deal with that old, old topic, American good citizenship. WENMSANE FROM EXPOSURE Four Soldiers Have Awful Experi ence at Sea in a Skiff Two Drown. New York Sun Special Servioe. New Orleans, La., Oct. IB.On Sat urday last four artillerymen were de tailed from Fort Morgan, at the mouth of Mobile bay, to Fort Gaines, which is immediately opposite, this detail be ing changed every two weeks. The men attempted to cross the bay in a small boat, buty encounteri ng a severe storm, t he boat was carried out to sea. Nothing more was heard of the four soldiers until last night, when the boat was, blown. on Sand island, with two of the soldiers clinging to its sides. They were in a deplorable condition fr om exposure and both more or less insane. When they had recovered sufficient ly they explained that ail four of t he m^n had gone insane and that two had Jumped overboard in their "in- sanity and be en drowned despite the efforts of their comrades to' save them. The drowned men were Erau Seffner and James Rice. SHIPBUILDING ASE Attorneys Go ^into Question "Dunimy" Direc- torate: New York, Oct. J^When the ship-' building investigation was resumed to day, Frederic Seward.,fprmerly one of the directors' of-:, thw&nitttfc^ States! Shipbuilding company, an employe of t he Corporation Trust company, was recalled to the stand. H e became. a director of the United States Ship*., building company in 1902, at tlig're^ quesfr^of Mr. Demingt of Aleiaritlet* i& Gmeri. The witne ss could Sorsay^ why Reming wanted him to act. The witne ss said he had acted as an in corporator for from fifty to seventy five companies while he wasfemployed by the Corporation Trust company/ He had acted as director for ten or fif teen of t he companies. ' ~ 47, Mr,. TJntermeyer examined Seward oft,y at length as to t he circumstances, at tendi ng the issue to him of a tempo rary,certificate of stock upon which he qualified as a director. The pur pose of the extended showing as to the acts of t he so-called: "dumniy" di rectorate, formed in New Jersey when the shipbuilding company was first or ganized, has not yet be en disclosed/ but it is said that bondholders of the receiver may attack t he legality of t he acts ?ot the first board. These acts include the increase in t he eapital stock and the acquireme nt of t he constituent companies. The witness said th at he personally paid nothing for his share of stock and he did not know whether any one else had .paid for it. g e understood, how everh , thee share o stock belonged fc? i mthatJ * F ^doVsedf' ANTI-SALOON WORKERS Washington County Convention to B e Held at Stillwater. = 1 Special to The Journal. Stillwater, Minn., Oct, 15.A con vention of county anti-saloon workers will be held in Stillwater to-morrow afternoon and. evening. Rev. L A Johnson of St. Paul will speak In t he afternoon, and Rev. C. H. Crawford superintendent of the Minnesota Anti Saloon League, will also -make an address. Boats which cleared to-day were the Rutledge, with logs for Rock Island t he Isaac ITS STAT E Stanles,s fli with logs for Port Madison, and t hea Clyde with a similar t o00w for Guttenberg. rtoT^nA8^0^1 *^ " 1 h 225,000,000 feet of timber to this date and by t he end of t he season Will add 15,000,000 feet more to its rec ord. The funeral of Nels Hanson was held this afternoon from t he family residence: Rev. A. W . Edwins offi ciated. : The meeting of citizens-will be held at t he armory to-morrow night to hear the report of t he committee to secure' data on municipal ownership of public utilities, especially water works. n t hoef bar e subsistance S their scanty homes, to, patriotically rejoice in their country's prosperity. This la *v ^S^S?*^ * * enjoyment of benefits ?o satisfy those-who have been taught Amer ican, equality ..and ,thus has risen, bva perfectly natural process, a dissatisfies in statence upon a, better distribution of the results of our Vaunted prosperity We now- see- its worst manifest* Hrm the pparenitiy incorrigible diStlor? of the proper relations between labor handled ATJTO RACE ENDED Machines in Long-Endurance Con- tes't'' Reach Pitts-' ''-'v V r hwrg Pittsburg,. Pa., Oct. 15.T he first automobile, to reach. this ^ city * in the New York-Pittsburg endurance race wa4 car No. f in Charge of Webb J ay which arrived atAllegheny high bridge at 11:30 a. m. The.car. in-charge of F. B. Stearns of Cleveland, !led until Ecotnomy, Pa,, was reached, when it was slightly damaged by a. collision with a Wagon. StearnCso w am s the seco n2d to 'reachf t he hgh bridge, arid at nodh n d tT o S leas t'f m ^ n n e PI ^ c5 lt Tf^5. Uow warn Convention Delegaito Stjir^od by Fa vorable Reports l&om" i)enom-. -- T?** inational School. Appropriate Prelude*to feerrill's Ad dress on "Power of Christian J" :"5 ^"iEducatidi^ *. . '-" J n Speoial t6 The Journal, Anok a, Minn., Oct. 15.To-day's session of ' t he Baptist estate conven tion was open ed byi devotionals led by Re v, R. M. West. The report of t he board of visH-fets ito Pillsbury academy showed that two days in April were spent . attending t he classes.and examining t he general equipment, of the institution,. One of t he new features ?is the boys' dormi tory, which is -wearing completion. To the curriculunjs have been added annual courses ^Biblical literature and history. The Y W. G. A. and Y. M. C. A. are doing g-ood work. A s this is a Baptist academy it is inter esting to know that 70 per ce nt of t he students in 1902.-1903 were Baptists. J " tr* Threats, were heard In t he crowd, as it rushed - towards the "restaurant and the man ran inside a,nd locked the door. ...,.., ':.. . By. this time three policemen had arrived. They had to use their clubs to drive back t he crowd and secure en trance to t he restaurant. The of fleers forced t he door and seized Expapas, who stood in t he middle, jof the room holding-a revolver. The man was pale, and as the po licemen started towards the door, out side of which the crowd was still shouti ng for revenge, he fainted and fell to the floor. Later he revived and was taken to t he police station. From the treaaurer's^eport it was shown that $500 vhad heen expended for aid of students $250 for prizes and $250 for. library and scientific in- KEV. F. H. COOPER Of the Olivet Chutch1, of the The ,, secretary and treasurer's" re port &% t he Mtmesota Baptist Educational sotieW, made Spy Rev.^. The" Ancients & Honorables - - -:-V:v ei d by^lubia No. , 6 f ect d with B. B. Holcomb as driver. 0 r p^rson^enS^Sg purposes, and this ground cannot be taken without a.hand-to-Kand conflict. The at' tack must be made under the banner of disinterested good.citizenship, by soldiers drilled in lessons of patriotism. Thev must be,enlisted for life and- constantly- on duty. As- the.* crusaders fought Gen tries agd':fo%tfee' recovery of the Holy Land from infidel-possession, so with the same stubborn zeal- must to-day's crusa ders in thfccause of good government fleht to recover their holy land from the'inflfp who" would degrade and defile it - Plo' Cnre.wffl cure your coush, relieve sorg ness of the lunge, ^nd help dlgto,lt breathingf !!Vr, SULTAN IN TROUBLE. rparis, Oct. 15.The situation of the'sul tan of Morocco is gradually becoming desperate. According, to. officla- dispatches received hers- the minister of war's forces have been defeated .and dispersed,"-caus'*-' inga gneral dsmoralisatioh of the im'oer ial forces. - A GUARANTEED^CU^, FOB PILES. Piles. OINT- Itching. Blind, Bleeding 6t Proti Your druggist will refund money If HENT fails to cure yotr In 6 to 14 dart. 60c l * . EL KINS VERY ILL. *-' Philadelphia, Oct. 15.-The cohdition of Wilharo: IJ. Elkhis, the-traction magnate, continues seripys,-t .Diabetic complication is -now regarded as the., znostf- serious symptom* i4 SHERMAN STATUE UNVEILED TODAY H.conference,, Gamble was Se eeived ! and a led by Rev. H . B.!t brought out several pleaa^fbr a better jhainisterial educa tion. ". - ' %n address was made by Rev. G$E. MJerrill on "The Power of Christian Education." H e said th at Colgate University of Hamilton, N. Y., sent nipre men to t he foreign missionary "flep-- than any Baptist school. The soul is an enigma God is the solution. Gdd's.hand is seen in mathematics and chemistry. The atheist should riot tea ch philosophy. President Angell of t he University of Michigan, Cyrus Northrop of\ t he University of Minn e sota, were pdihted to as grand exam ples of the Christian educator. The Bible has its own place in educati on arid should not be relegated to t he Y. M. C._ A. and Sunday school. Christian force is 4?est in small universities. " "The Coming Year, What Shall'It Bring?" was t he subject of an able and eloquent address by Rev. W W Dawley, D . D., of Minneapolis. . H e present ed it in three points, persons purposes, purses. Re v, U. A. Williams, ,D. D., of Min neapolis, ga ve a very able address on 'Horde Missions " ^ . : t he share of stock in blank and surrendered it to' one -of t he employes of the Corpora tion .Trust company, receiving no pay ment. H e did not know what became .Denoniinatiqna l. Statistics. : Rev. DivA. D.'Ffost of th training school-in connection with t he First Baptist church-of Minneapolis, spo ke on "A Model Day 4 n the Church of God." Rev. C. H. Crawford presented t he cause of t he Antisaloon league. The* report of the state convention board was made by Rev. E . R. Pop e, corresponding secretary, who said that four missionary worke rs had left -the state during the. year^Rev. G.- G. -Cressy of Sauk Center to Washington Rev. E . E . Duley of St. Paul, to Ne braska M. A. Summers to West Vir ginia, and M. Hansen to Iow a. A t present there are 267 Baptist churches in t he state and their mem bership is about 21,765, divided among t he nationalities as follows: American churches, 136 members, 13,553 Swedish churches, 06 members, 6,056 Dane-Norwegian, churches, 23 mem bers, 1,416 German churches, 12 members, 740. The twin cities have 27 churches and 7,402 members. The country churches not on railroad lines number 85, with 5,750 members. Rockefeller's Support Withdrawn. "If the visitor thinks there is little to be done," said the speaker, "let hlrii visit the counties of Cook, Grant, Norman, Redwood, Sherburn and Stevens,, with a total area of 6 586 square miles and a population of 58,053 by the census of 1900, and in all these he will find h o Baptist church. - "If t he visitor asks about the fu ture, we will tell him more money rnuch more money, is needed. The gift of $1,000 a year, received for years from J. D. Rockefeller, ceases with this year, since he no longer has 'spe cial business interests in. Minnesota ' as t he letter from his office informs us. This dbn|c,tion has been of great he lp and unless ".theJ General Grosvenor declared Sher man's character t he most faultless brilliant and most abounding in the elements of greatness th at was given to the wor ld by any nation in t he nineteenth century. General Thomas J. Henderson of Illinois eulogized Sherman on behalf of t he Society of the Army of t he Ohio. Speaking for the Society of t he Army of the Potomac, General Daniel B . Sickles said: , Sherman nils a conspicuous page in the history of great commanders. He will always hold high rank in the estimation of Americans as one of our foremost heroes. He is grouped with Sheridan and Ihomas among the chief lieutenants of Grant. v. Th pl^f OCTOBER 15, WOZsm Continued from First Page. world so rated itbut it did not come up 0 the genius and grandeur of the cam paign immediately following it, when he carried practically the same army from Savannah to North Carolina. That was the greatest work of Sherman's life. Could the living and the dead of the civil war unite in one voice, they would say of Sherman: "He was a great man he was a great soldier he was a pure pa triot." , ! Mr. Henderso n, in t he course of his address, referred to Booth, Guiteau and Czolgosz as the "horrid, dam nable manifestatio ns of our national growth." , _ For the Society of the Army of t he Tennessee, Representative Charles H. Grosvenor of Ohio, in a long speech, said of General Sherman: His fame will go forward to future generations as the fame of a great Am err lean soldier not confined by the limits of any society, but expanding and growing and glorious, as the honor of an Amer ican soldier ever shall be. cerem Sherman's Mighty Feats. here, in t he Tiatiorial.capital is to-day to be unveiled. I t is not necessary here to go over the long roll of Sher man s mighty feats. "They are writ ten large thruout t he history of the civil' war. Our memories would be poor indeed if we did not recall them how, as, we look along Pennsylvania avenue and think of the great tri umphal march which surged down its length when at t he close of t he war the victorious armies of t he east of of the west met here in t he capital of t he nati on they had saved. There is a peculiar fitness in com memorating t he great deeds of the soldiers who preserved this nation, by suitable monuments at t he national capital. I trust we shall so on have a proper statue of Abraham Lincoln, to Whom more than to any other one mail this nation owes its salvation. Meanwhil e, on behalf of the people of t he nation, I wish to congratulate all of you who have be en instrumen tal in securing t he erection of this statue of General Sheramn. The Lessons of the Past. The living can best show their re spect for, t he memory Of t he great dead by t he way in which they take to heart and act upon t he lessons taught by the lives which made these dead men great. Our homage to-day to the memory of Sherman comes from t he depths of our being.- W e would be unworthy citizens did we not feel profound gratitude toward him, and those like him and under him, who, when the country called in her dire heed, sprang forward with such gallant eagerness to answer th at call. Their blood and their toil, their enduran ce and patriotism, have made us and all who come after us forever their debtors. They left us not mere ly a reunited country, but a country incalculably greater because of its rich heritage in the deeds which thus left it reunited. A s a nation we are the greater not only for the valor and de votion to duty displayed by the men in blue, who won in t he great struggle for the union, but also for the valor and loyalty towa rd what they regarded as rights of the men in gray for this war, thrice fortunate above all other recent wars in its out come, left, to all of us the right of brotherhood alike with val iant victory and valiant van quished. ^ , ^ Moreover, our homage must not only find expression on our lins- it must also show itself forth in our deeds. It is a great and glorious thing for a nation to be stirred to present triumph by the splendid memories of triumphs in the past. But it is a shameful thing for a nation, if these memories stir it only to empty boast ings, to a pride th at does not. shrink frorn^ present abasement, to that self satisfaction which accep ts t he high re solve and unbending effort of the fath er as an excuse for effortless ease or wrongly directed effort in the son. W e of t he present, if wte are true t t he past, must, show our lives th at 7 amount is iriade up in -other ways- its' loss means a curtailment of t he work." Rev. S. C. Davis spoke of t he needs of thg. board and" made, a strong plea f^r northern Minnesota. In v Canada. Mpntreal, Que., Oct. 15.rSpecial. A t t he luncheon tendered in Mon treal, Canada, Mtonflay evening to t he Honorable Artillery company of Lon don,. England, by t he officers of the Montreal garrison,-Pommery^ec and Brut were exclusively used. This em phasizes t he fact, that, among dis criminating Englishmen as well as Americans Pommery is the choice of all champagnes. */ ,,..,. . ,u... e '5*Xf }?arned Shermanth e spirit which gave to the average soldier t he grim tenacity a resourcefulness that ma dr e the arms of^Grant and Shem atnei n as formiStl fighting machnes as. this world has nrL8 in Popular Favor r.^ m^s closed with the benedictiorny pronunced by t he Right 5r ev V? en Yat eos Satterlee, bishop of Washington. THE PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS Lessons That Are. Taught U s by the Patriotism of the Fathers. Washington, Oct. 15.To-day we meet together to do honor to the mem ory of one of the great men whom, in the hour of her agony, our nation brought forth for her preservation. The civil war was not only in the im portance of t he issues at stake and of the outcome the greatest of modern times, but it was also, taking into ac count its duration, the severity of t he fighting and the size of the armi es en f^lred, t he greatest since the close of t he Napoleonic struggles. Among the generals who rose to high position as leaders of t he vario us armies in the field are many who will be remem- EfJf ^^ , Kinneapolii, struments, a total of ?1,000, ceived from t he Margaret Pillsbury' fund. During the year there was re ceived from the executors of the es tate of George A^Pillsfcury $246,000 . premiums of $-650 from t he estate of. Margaret Pillsbury,, $%0,QOOj. ,a total of -$266,650. Acting Principal- W. A. Shedd made a glowing address on Pillsbury, show ing its good facilities and its bright outlook. The academy is twenty seven years, old and has graduated 490 students. ,..,""" , In a general. dispuesion on the academy, t he "fbflowtng spoke: E . S. Stucker, pastor of the Owatonna churchE . Fagenstrom, a graduate 'RevS^R ' !MS.i T^stv^wPaul ?Rev. :J. .F. Hill, Northfleld John Day Smith, Min neappUsj^andT^ .^Fibwler of Mihne- 'atfolis.te-W* &*Mgm$i$>::' - - ^d^^i j Christian Education. histor y as lo ng as this history itself is remembered. Sheri dan, t he incarnation of fiery energy and prowessThomas , far-sighted, cool-headed, whose steadfast courage burned ever highest in t he supreme moment of t he crisis McClellan, with his extraordinary gift for organiza tion Meade, victor in one of the de cisive battles of all time Hancock, type of the true fighting manamon g the regulars Logan, type of the true fighting man among t he volunteers t he names of these and of many oth ers will endure so lo ng as our people hold, sacred the memory of the fisrht for union and, for liberty. : *w ' vt,.With Japan tea drinteers CEYLON AND INDIA NATDRAt fiREEN tea wMfe similar in flavor to Japan is much more healthful and economical to use, because it is absolutely pure. It is to the Japan tea drinker what "SALADA" Black is to the black tea drinker. Sold only in sealed lead packets. 50c, 60c and 70c per pouncL By all grocers. Try a Ten Gent Sample Paoket. Which makes t he great man as it makes the great nation. The Army and Navy of To-day W e cannot afford to lose the vir tues which made the men of '61 to '65 great in war. N o man is war ranted in feeling pride in t he deeds of t he army and na vy of the past if he does not back up t he army and na vy of the present. If we are far-sighted in our patriotism, there will be no let up in the work of building, and of keeping at the highest point of effi ciency, a navy suited to t he part the United States must hereafter play in the world, and of making and keep ing our small regular army, which, in the event of a great war, can never be anything but a nucleus around which our volunteer armi es must form themselves, t he best army of its size to be found among t he nations. The Duties of Peace. So much for our duties in keeping unstained t he honor roll our fathers made in war. It is of even more in stant need that-we should show their spirit of patriotism in the affairs of peace. The duties of peace are with us always those of war are but oc casional and with a nation as with a man, t he worthiness of life de pends upon the way in which the everyday duties are done. The home duties are the vital duties. The na tion is nothing but the aggrega te of t he families with in its border and if the average man is not hard-work ing, just and fearless in his dealings with those about him, then our aver age of public life will in the end be low for t he stream' can rise no higher th an its source. But in addi tion we need, to/remember that a pe culiar responsibility rests upon the man in public life. W e meet in t he capital of the nation, in t he city which owes its existence.: to t he fact th at it is the seat of national govern ment. Tt is well for us in "this place and at this time, to remember' that exactly as - there are : certain homely qualities t he lack of-which will pre vent the mo st brilliant man alive fr om - being a useful soldier to his country, so there are certain homely qualities for lack of which in the public servant no. shrewdness or abil ity can atone. T he greatest leaders, whether in war- or ln peace, must of course, show a peculiar quality of genius but t he most redoubtable armi es that have ever existed have been redoubtable because t he average soldier, the average officer, possessed to a high degree such comparatively simple qualities . as loyalty, courage and hardihood. And so t he most suc cessful governments are those in which the average public servant possesses that variant of. loyalty which , we call patriotism/ together with common sense and honesty/ Dishonest Men Must,Go. .*-V" W e can as little afford to tolerate a dishonest man in the public service as a. coward m the army. The murderer takes a single life the public life, whether.he be bribe giver or brike taker, strikes at the heart of the commonwealth. in every public service as in every army, there will be wrongdoers, there will occur misdeeds. This can not be avoided but vigilant watch must kept,s a ni d as sootn as 2Sn^ re d } h+lbe Bargain Friday Thos t e We've got about 600 pairs of samples in Ladies' plain and fancy warm lined House Slippers, Among them are fur-trimmed Juliets, in plain and fancy - patterns. There is,also an almost endless- variety of other*styles some are kid foxecland some are plain. No.t aipairjn the lot is worth less than 75c, and many are worth $1.00, and numerous styles are worth $1.25 andSL50.. In the lot are all sizes, but there are not all sizes in each style. We offer you choice- for Bargain Friday, at, pair.. ...,./.. ..t. They are displayed on tables, and we reserve the right to limit the number of pairs sold, to any one person. HnBfadl Jfanos "Pon n whom our institutions cast the initial -duty of bringing malfactors* ton thes bar.of ju vet r t l Jt U Ave *age igh. In the lo ng run, then, it defends upon uSs ourselves, on us! the as a whole whether this government s r 1 not to stanudp in th future"S as it has stood in t he past and mu y faith that it will show ho fallinw g offYs based upon my faith in t hecT character of our dutv^ tUTnShip-, 2?S V F Tr * Federation. Mrs. Bramhall of St. Paul Withdrew and New Candidate Was Then Taken Up. (Earlier Proceedings on Page 3.) . Txom a Staff Correspondent. Mankato, Minn., Get. 15. A dra matic incident of the Federation con vention election was the reading at the opening of the session to-day of a tele gram fr om Mrs. W. E. Bramhall of St. Paul withdrawing as a candidate for president on t he ground that the in formal ballot showed that there was no gener al demand for her service, such as she had stipulated as a condition of her consent to stand for the office. This announcement threw the co n vention into great confusion, but this was cleared up by ordering another informal ballot for president, since no candidate remained. ' . The result of this was a gratifying coalition on a wholly new candidate, Mrs. P. S. Allen of Dodge Center, who received 85 of 120 votes" cast. This solution of the Situation is one th at affords the federation much satis faction, as it has full confidence in Mrs. Allen's ability and lit ar ib^yh the lessono s taught by t he men who did the mighty deeds of the past. W ^ must have ih us t he spirit which made the men of the Civil war what they weS- t he Wedneined S of body, their keen and vigorous minds, and abo ve all their dominant quality of forceful character ThSr lives teach us in our own lives to strive after not the thing which is merely pleasant but the thing which it is our duty to do. The life of duty not t he life of mere ease or mere pleasurethat Is t he kind^/fof life'voted interest in the federatSfn *?th raaTch^W^ttie.? 4. *-'- IS ALWAYS RELIABLE FOR CONSTIPATION - * It removes and prevents Biliousness and Lazy Liver. DIRECTIONS:Drink half a glass on arising in the morning. Results are certain. lC orruptionlst in ^mmm wro dong musb e stopped and the wrongdoer punished Remember that in popular government we must rely on the people themseYves, alike for the punishmetan d the fn2 m r tUn - Cured at your home. ^^^"" PIMPLES blacfcheads, large pores, oily and eruptive skin, and all complexion blemishes so fatal to personal attractiveness. Full information and book free. Call or write Joltnl.'ffoodbaryB.L, 163 State St.,Chicago. sf- b t d t lU *.i it discharge t&l JSiV^ resor t th e success o their- efforts to purge t hee public service of corruption must depend upon hne^a ttitudeof the courts and of T h 0 e which she has be en actively co n nected since its organization. Mrs. A. T. Bigelow of S t Paul with drew her refusal to accept a re-elec tion as the recording secretary and will be elected. Martha Scott Anderson. draw n fro m th people Leadership is of avail only so far as there is wise and resoluteH public sn! timent behindh it. ^ T +i? l s ee n e r p NEW INCORPORATIONS. P e The Stock Food Company of America filed articles of incorporation to-day with the secretary of state. It is located at Minneapolis and the incorporators are Joseph M. Schutz, M. M. Schutz and Theodore Wetmore. The capital stock is fixed at $250,000. The Cambridge Manufacturing company of Cambridge, Minn., is incorporated, with $20,000 capital, to make a dry goods meter. A. J. Swelander is president. h e o spre mp e 0 * ^ t kee P this avera ge ?m' +T,T thl S e ncd\ if i s ene ~ J ? to kee memor y o f those mwho a , 55- t(t serv e a s samples is loftiest and best in American citi zenship. Such a man was General Sherman To very few in any gene r ation is it given to render su ch serv ices as he rendered but each of us in his degree can try to show something of those qualities of character upon which, in their sum, the high worth of Sherman restedhis courage, l ^ kindliness, his clean and simple liv ing, his sturdy good sense, his manli ne ss and tenderness in the intimate relations of life, and finally, -his in flexible rectitude of soul and his loy alty to all that in this free republic is hallow ed and symbolized by the national flag.- -3 MRS. ALLEN CHOSEN Surprising Turn in the Election, of a President of State Women's oefn ^iat It Assumes Proportions Dangerous to Life. Strikes seem to be getting more fre quent and more inimical to the pub lic welfare. Capital and. labor are ar rayed against each other with better equipment on each side and each is more determined to defeat the other. The mo st dangerous strike, however, is when the stomach and digestive or gans, abused and overworked, refuse to do their duty. More people in America-are afflicted with dyspepsia th an are involved in all the strikes thruout the whole world, and while a strike lasts usually but a short time dyspepsia is a permanent affliction unless a radical cure can be obtained. Recognizing t he crying need of such a remedy, Chase's Dyspepsia Cure was finally evolved after deep studv cov ering t he entire.field of medicine. Lit tle by. little a formula was produced which is not only superior in its class but is undoubted ly more effective for its,specific purpose than any treat ment for any kind of disease. It will not only cure the most severe case of stomach trouble of any sort but it is so prom pt in its action that the first dose gives pronounced relief. In digestion, sour stomac h, distress after ' meals, nausea, sick headaches, belch ing of gas and other symptoms will disappear immediately, after taking the first dose. There is no story con nected with the "discovery" of Chase's Dyspepsia Cure. It is simply the re sult of scientific research and was thoroly tested in every atpect before it was offered to the public. It ha* only one object to accomplish the cure of stomach ailmentsand it per for ms th at duty with absolute success ' Sold by all druggists under guarantee of Satisfaction or money refunded. f : K.r, FOR SALE BY '/ .."!""' Donaldson's Glass Block. - Powers Mercantile Company. ' ,, , .Weinhold, B. H., 6th- mi THE NATURAL LAXATIVE WATER, My name is not Hunyacii only, but Hunyadi Janos, the original, only genuine and re liable Hungari- an Natural Laxative Water. st and Nicollet' ' -i Benjamin Levy, Nicollet and Slst st Clrkler, C. H., 6th and Nicollet. Hermann. A. B., 2d av and 4th st " 1 .Gamble. & Ludwig, 3d st and Hennenln ' - 'your druggist cannot supply yon nrnmnti* vrtttftfor full particulars to - Promptly, Chase Manufacturing Co., Newburgh N T " CONSTIPATION "eld* "to** ww nTw aunt i wan Constipation^Tablets^. to cw 8 ^^,^