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if, I vr (Continued fio:n 3rd page.) v")s eide by aide, and are not by law incontro vertible witb each other, that money which id intrinsically and commercially the cheapest will drive the dearest out of circulation. The debtor will always pay with the cheaper dollar, and the buyer al ways buy with the cheaper dollar, while the dearer dollar will be ithu/»w»i irom circulation and disposed of as bullion or at its bullion value The element of inter controvertibihty being wanting under the act of 1792, silver, giadually depreciating in value until reaching a ratio of nearly 16 to 1 by 1834, through the force of the rule I have described, had driven ail our gold money out of the country To remedy this evil and bring back the gold into cir culation, the coinage ace of l&3-i, fixing the ratio at 18 to 1, as it is today, wa- p&e^d. This was a slight o\ ervalua 1^T gold, and hence, under the rule or circulation described t« vou, gold drove our silver out cf circulation To cure this evil and keep some silv**" tn cuculation, the act of 1"^, providing for a greatly de-every u«»esd coinage? of small subsidiary silvet woinu, w&c passed Save and except those debased subsidiarv coins, gold was the only money of the national government in circulation from 1840 down to 1862, at which time our national government first acquired paper currency, and this cur rency remained «t only circulating me dium from that time until specie payment resumed in 1879. Only Technical Demonetization. From these facts it is apparent that when silver w«*s demonetized in 1873, it •was not in circtilacion and had not been since 1840, and that we then were, and ever since 1862 had been, on an exclusive paper basis, so that the demonetization was, as a matter of fact, technical rather than practical. I 1878, one year before specie payment was resujued, silver, under the Bland law, was demonetized and a true state of bimetallism inaugurated by adopting, for the first time, and as a matter of fact, the principle of incontro vertibility, without which no real practi- national bimetallism. Th Bland law provided for the purchase and coinage of from two to four million dollars' worth of silver bullion per month, and for the issu ance of silver certificates upon such coin age. Under this law over 400,000,000 of silver dollars have been coined. cal bimetallism can exist, outside of inter- silver it would take years to supply the Owing to the almost universal demone tization of silver in Europe since 1872, and the greatly increased production thereof throughout the world, in spite of the Bland law and in spite of the Shermaa law of 1890, under which the government was required to purchase silver bullion at the rate of 54,000,000 ounces per year and issue paper currency thereon, silver has, ever since 1872, gradually depreciated in value until today its commercial ratio is less than 32 to 1, and before the repeal of the purchasing clause of the Sherman law it had reached a ratio of less than 28 to 1. In all these years, aside from India, the United States has been the best friend that silver has had. Until the repeal of the purchasing clause of the Sherman law and the suspension of coinage in India, both occurring in 1893, these countries consumed upwards of two-thirds of the world's entire supply of silver. An yet, spite of the efforts of these two coun tries to sustain silver, it kept on, from the causes already described to decline in price so rapidly that it became evident that India and the United States com bined could not sustain the burden alone. On the first day of June, 1894, the United States carried in circula tion $647,500 000 of silver as against $666, 200,000 of gold, of which $100,000,000 is kept the treasury as a redemption fund for $346,000,000 of greenbacks France has a silver circulation of Si700,000,000, as against a gold circulation of §800,000,000 while India, with its population of 255,000, 000, has a silver circulation of $900,000,000 as against no gold, and $28,000,000 of un covered paper and China, with its 400,000,000 of people, has $700,000,000 of sil ver, passing on its bullion value, in circu lation. These statistics indicate, if we take into account our population, our whole field of currency, and our mode of doing business, that Sflrer Has Not Been Stricken Down, as some reformers allege, but that on the whole it is as much in favor here, for use as money, as anywhere in the commercial world, and that our country is today in a sound state of local—as distinguished from international—bimetalism. Our o* coin age history, from 1792 to 1834, and from the later date until the Bland act of 1878, has demonstrated that the free coinage of both metals, on a ratio almost approxi mating the commercial ratio, failed to give us real bimetallism—the uninter rupted circulation of both metals side by side. There being no complete system of international bimetallism, and there being no actual or legal incontrovertibility be tween the two metals, under the inexor able operation of the Gresham law, silver, as the cheaper metal, during the second period, drove gold out of circulation, and gold, as the cheaper metal, during the second period, drove silver out of circula tion, except as to the debased subsidiary coin, to which I have already referred. I is a truth demonstrated and confirmed by our own history, that in spite of free coin age, we never had any real bimetallism— any real, uninterrupted circulation of the two metals, side by side and on a parity until since 1878 Prior to that time, so far as metallic currency was concerned, gold or silver, but only one at the time, held the field of circulation. Which ever, for the time being, was the cheaper metii, was in exclusive possession and control. An this proves to all who are capable or willing to receive the truth l*7^ 48,86tt, 00 that free coinage alone will not give us *88J 50,155,783 practical or real bimetallism. An I take it that we are all binietallists in the sense of wanting both' gold and silver to be in actual circulation as money. None of us want to drive either gold or silver out of circulation. Th commercial or intrinsic value of the silver dollar is today hardly 50 cents of the gold dollar, and it is only current and received as equivalent to the gold dollar because you can, at all times, exchange or convert it into the latter. An this is what we understand by the term incontrovertible. If a 50 cent silver dollar can at all times be converted into a hundred cents gold dollar we are as anx ious to receive solver as gold. But to keep up this state of interconver tibility there must not only be a law for it but the actual ability to maintain it must also exist. An today the United States is possessed of both of these qualities. "We have the law ana have a gold dollar for every silver dollar $a. existence. I other words, we float our silver currency with a gold redemption fund. France does the same thing, he is today floating a' f700,± OOO.OOOJaUver curr&icy yith*30u,Q0Q,000 in gold. Last year the equilibrium of "the two metals was threatened, The owners of silver bullion sold the same to the fed eral government and received in exchange therefor treasury notes under the act of and then, is though deaibttng the ability of the government (an incident of the change of administration), they ao once procured the redemption of these notes in gold, and this gold was in its torn hurried out of the country to Europe, for various purposes, especially to aid Austro Hungary to place itself, like the rest of Europe, on a gold basis. This Great Outflow of Gold was threatening the interconvertibility of the two metals and was fast drifting us into a state of silver monometallism, or exclu sive silver circulation. The gold was rush •Vig out of the country faster than the sil ver was rushing into the treasury This threw the financial and business world into a panic Money disappeared from ciiculation and went into hiding. I was as hard to borrow money for the rich as it was for the poor. Under these conditions and to relieve the tention, distrust and alarm, congress repeated the purchasing clause of the Sherman law—that feature requiring the government to purchase month 4,500,000 ounces of silver. This was not the demonetization of silver. It was, in effect, merely the suspension of silver coinage, or the enlargement of our silver currency. It was for the purpose of keeping up the equilibrium of the two metals and to keep them from running from each other. In other words, it was for the purpose of keeping up the inter convertibility of our silver with our gold, for, as I have pointed out, we need gold dollars to maintain and float our 50 cent silver dollars. The moment a silver dollar is not con vertible into a gold dollar, silver, now as in the early days of our nation, will en tirely usurp the place of gold and drive the latter out of circulation and into hiding. This would reduce us to a state of mono metalism, a state of exclusive silver circulation. Our $666,000,000 of gold would at once disappear from cir culation. Instead of having a combined gold and silver currency, as we have to day, amounting to $1,313,700,000, we would be reduced to an exclusive silver currency oi $647,000,000. Even with the free coinage vacuum, and in the meantime the country would be suffering under an immense and extraordinary contraction of the currency. The country would be in afar sadder state than it is ,wn today. W would all suffer and be oppressed, except the owners of silver mines and silver bullion. They would reap a big harvest, but it would be at the expense of all the rest of us—of the entire country. No, my friends, silver monometallism is at least as dangerous as gold monometal lism. No Lonest man, having the good of bis crfmtr* oo heart, wants either. W want Honest, genuine bimetallism. W have it in a measure and to a limited ex tent today. An the substantial, the statesmanlike and the patriotic question is, how to maintain and enlarge it, not how to destroy it. W can, by ourselves, sustain it to a limited and local degree, as we have ever since the Bland act of 1876, and as we never succeeded in doing be fore. W can enlarge it to its greatest limit and put it on an enduring basis by international agreement among the lead ing commercial nations of the world. The former is bimetallism, the latter inter national. 'Ifie former rests on the prin cipJj»of tatai-convertibility, the latter on mutcs agreement In the former case a 50 cent silver dollar passes current because it can be converted at will into a gold dol lar In the latter case the same silver dollar passes current the world over, be cause all great commercial nations have agreed to receive it as such on a parity with gold. A free coinage which sustains and upholds bimetallism is desired by all friends of good government and honest money. A free coinage which would at one fell blow Strike Down Bimetallism and reduce us to a state of silver mono metallism, not desired by anybody except the most extreme inflationists and theducts, owners of silver mines and silver bullion. The farmers of this country have no silver to sell or to coin, and theirs would not be the inflation harvest. Why even the sil ver monometalism of China is more honest than the silver monometallism sought here, for silver circulates there on its com mercial or bullion, value, and not on its coin or token value. And yet, in spite of this fact, silver has gone down in that country from a value of $1.67 per tael in 1871, to a value of 99.4 cents per tael in 1893, and this in the face of an exclusive silver circulation. But it is urged that there is an insuffi cient amount of money in circulation for the healthy business of the country, and that this scarcity of money is one of the chief causes of hard times and low prices, particularly the low price of wheat. This in on is untrue, and is not warranted by the facts, as will appear from the fol lowing statement, compiled by the bureau of statistics, showing the population and per capita circulation for every year since 1866, and the average price of wheat per bushel for every year since 1869: A statement of the population and per capita circulation of money in the United States from 1867 to June 1,1894, and value of wheat per bushel from 1870 to 1893: 1867 38,211,000 1868 3 ,975,000 i8b9 3 ,7 6,000 1870 38,558,371 1871 39,55 ,000 1X7-* 4,59 i.O to 1873 ...4.B77.O0O 1874 42,798,0J0 1875 4',951.000 1W6. 45,137,000 1877 43,353,030 1878 4T,5»8,000 1881 oney in Value of Circulation Wheat Per Capita. Bushel. $18.28 18.39 17.6) 17.50 18.10 18.i9 18 04 1813 17.10 16.12 15.58 15.34 16,75 19.41 21.71 22.37 22.91 2J.66 23.02 21.85 22.45 22.88 2.'.52 22.82 23.41 24.44 23.87 24 54 Popula' ion Years. June 30 51,316, (00 1*82 2,495,00» 1881 53,69J,000 1884 54,911,000 ls85 56,14S,000 1886 574)4.000 18 7 58,680,0)0 liS8. 59,974.000 1889. .»l,'J,0 0 190. 12,828,250 1891 63,975,00 1892 65,403,000 189* 66,826,000 1894, June 1.68^75,,o01 $1.UJ 1.258 1.24) 1.150 .941 HO) 1.031 1.082 .777 1.108 .951 1.193 .881 .910 .651 .770 .687 .681 .873 .« 8 .624 .624 From this statement it appears that we have never had a higher per capita circula tion than on the 1st day of June, 1894, when it reached a maximum of $34.54 per capita, and we all know that wheat never was lower than in 1894. In 1883. when our per capita circulation was $24.87, wheat $.53.9 per bushel, while in 1871, with aper capita circulation of only $16.10, wheat was worth $1.25.8 per bushel thus demonstrat ing that the volume of currency has no ap preciable bearing on the price of wheat, and this becomes still more apparent on a close-inspection of the entire statement. Thes»nguresal80 show that during the five years, when stiver was demonetised, from 1878 to 1878, of which so much com plaint has been made, the average price of wheat was SL04.1 per bushel, while in the next five years, from 1877 to 1883, under the Bland law, the average price was only $.98.2 per bushel. If the per capita amount of circulation governed the times and reg ulated the price of wheat, we ought today to have better times and higher prices than at any time since 1866. Fe countries have a greater per capita circulation than ours. All exclusive silver countries have much less—notably India, China and Mex ico. Only one country, France, exceeds ours in any material degree. An there more money is needed than anywhere else, for the reason that payment by check is little in vogue, and for the further reason that the French peasant keeps his surplus, not in the banks, like our people, but Hoarded at Home in his chests and in his stockings. Besides, it must be remembered that Fiance keeps a $300,000,000 permanent gold redemption fund on hand, while we have only $100, 000,000 for alike purpose. The following statement from the bureau of statistics gives the population and the per capita circulation ot the several countries of the world. The figures are very instructive and elucidate what I have said. A statement of the population and per capita circulation of money in the follow ing countries in 1893: Per Countries. Population. Capita. United Kingdom 18,000,0J0 $i8 42 France 39.OUO.0OJ 40 E6 Germany 49,5,K),000 18 54 Belgium 6,100,00J 25 53 Italy 31,000,000 9 91 Switzerland 3,000,000 14 67 Gieece 2,200,003 9 09 Spain 18,000,000 16 5 Portugal 5,(00,003 19 00 Austro-Hungary 41,000 0 J0 9 75 Netherlands 4,500,00.) 28 88 S andinavian Union 8,630,010 8 12 Russia 113,000,000 7 16 Turkey &},000,000 2 88 Australia 4, 00, 00 26 7» Egypt 7.00 ,000 16 43 Mexico 11,600,000 4 91 Central America 3,000,000 84 South America .35, 03,030 19 14 Japan 40,000,000 4 99 India 225,000,100 3 64 China 4CO.OLO,000 1 75 Canada 4,500,030 13 56 Cuba, Hayti, etc 2,000,00) 31 0) The truth is that reliable statistics, as well as our own experience and observa tion, demonstrates to us that there is no lack of circulating medium, that we never had a greater per capita amount of money in circulation than now, and that the vol ume of circulation does not necessarily regulate orfixthe measure of prices, but that this is now, as ever, mainly governed by the law of supply and demand. The same currency buys a bushel of wheat at 50 cents, and a bushel of potatoes at the same price. A this figure wheat is very cheap and potatoes very high. The one product is overplenty, the other over scarce. An this makes the difference, not the volume or the quality of the cur rency. There is an undoubted lack of currency among our farmers in many localities, especially in the upper country, but this lack comes, not from a scarcity of money in the state or nation, but from the lack of products to exchange for money. Compare the counties of Free born and Polk, if you please. In the for mer, with 20 townships of land, 18,000 peo ple, 24 creameries and a great amount of dairy products, a large number of cattle, horses, sheep and hogs and an advanced system of diversified farming, money is not scarce, and the times are far fro*n hard and depressed, In the latter, with 88 townships of land, 35,000 people, only two creameries, a not numerous amount of cattle, still fewer sheep and hogs, a scanti ness of dairy products and a system of farming mainly devoted to wheat culture, money is quite scarce and times are vevv hard and trying. What makes the difference' They both e" ist under the same currency and the tame flag The difference is this. In the county of Freeborn the farmers ha\ a lauje and ^aluable ^a^ety of farm pro bringing a fair price, to exchange for money Thie makes money plenty and times easy. On the other hand, in the county of Polk the farmers ha\ little to exchange for monej except wheat, and that as a ery light crop, and the pnees, o' sug to a glut in the foreign market, it ^e^J low This makes money scaiee and tipies ery hard Faimeis ot the Red n\e valley, if you look at ihe situation IU its true light, is it not lain to you that relief cannoc come frum the referendum, fioni saloons kej.t by the state, lrom government ownership imlioad«, from female suffrage or from tne unconditional free coinage of silvei at the latio or lb to 1. DEnnS DOES'NT LIKE IT. The California Attorney Objects to Being Called Off by Olney. Lo A N E E S Cal., Aug 1.—Unite States District Attorney Dennis was shown a dispatch from Washington, in which it is stated that Attorney Goneral Olney has decided to dismiss the suit recently begun in the district court against the Southern Pacific and Th some 35 other railroads. 6uit is in the nature of a petition in equity, and relates that the railroad companies named havo unlaw fully combined together in restraint of trade and commerce. The Washingto dispatch quotes Attorney General Olney as determined to dismiss the suit, as he had not authorized and is displeased that such action was taken by District Attorney Dennis. Dennis was aston ished when shown the Washington dis patch. "I have heard nothing of the kind," said he, "nor have I received any inti mation to that effect. Of this I assure you." "Will you dismiss the case if Mr. Olney orders you to do so?" he was asked. "Yon can easily understand that I cannot discuss such a point at present," he replied, and that was all he would say. Mr. Dennis is convinced of the just ness of his big suit, and is eager to push it. 'The Attorney General Denies. WASHINGTON, Aug. 2.—AttorneyGen eral Olney has not directed United States District Attorney Denis at Los Angeles.CaL, to digiwia^ the suit re cently brought by him against the Southern Pacific Railway company, nor, so far as can be learned, has be de cided what action, if any, will be taken. The attorney general declined to talk upon the subject for publication. $€ JjWewa Not SHANGHAI, Aug. 2.—The report of a second naval engagement between [Japanese and Chinese TOODBIB is not con firmed. An even mouthful of Climax Plug gives more satisfaction than SSEK2B£P DON'T Find fault with the cook if the pastry does not exactly suit you No with your wife either—perhaps she not to BLAMiE It may be the lard she is using for shortening. Lard is indigestible you know. But if you would always have YOUR Cakes, pies, rolls, and bread palatable and perfectly di gestible, order the new short ening,"COTTOLENE," for your WIFE SOLD BY ALL GROCERS. Sold In three and five pound pails. Made only by N. K. FAIRBANK & CO., CHICAGO. Send three centsin stamps to N K. Fairbank & Co Chicago, for hand some Cottolene Cook Book, contain ing six hundred recipes, prepared by nine eminent authorities on cooking. I^MM' ITT V- 3i .... iXj S ue.Asmc. ^.b. CuUuOVAN F? iv E vru" cUJ-JCALr" ., *4JJ5.5P FlNECALF&K&»i8AKl $ Z."^ POLICE^ SOLID. ^£Mt ,L_ ••, r. ._ "fLS l.'-i Oilf^Obflu.^,,-^_. nsjW* A I E S 3JJOC.TON, JIA5... You can eive hi r-,-Jasiu!x VV. fj. ii f- Because, we are the largest manufactures of «herased "-lioi"* in the -world, an 1 guant-tce the \a"u ^y st^ "p.i'4-ft t-.ii 'Tpnceon the botto: v.: .h j» r*r 0 \L I '*ist high prices and the midilt ,au prou^ Ourshoe? equ-xl cu-.t ivo--.^ sti 't _•» fitting am' Yrearinij qua i-s Wo thera sold every where at low *r ijriro 'o- t.ie value given than any other make lake no substitute. If your dealer cannot supply you, we can. Sold by JET oheyde) Agent. HEAR DISEASE* Fluttering, No Appetite, Could Not Sleep, Wind on Stomach. "For along time I had a terrible pain at my Heart} which fluttered al most incessantly. I had no appetite and could not sleep. I would be com pelled to sit up in bed and belch gas from my stomach until I thought that every minute would be my last, There was a feellingof oppression about my heart,andl was afraid to draw a tml breath. I could not sweep a room without resting. My bus-•ille, band induced me to try Dr. Miles' Heart Cure and am happy to say It has cured me. I now bave a splendid appetite and sleep well. Its effect was truly marvelous.n ... MB8. HARRY E 8TABB, PotteTttle, Pi Pr.MpwHear&qoreliaold on a AUdrassteM Climax Plug is much the best Carbuncle* Large as Hen' Egga Mrs. NANNIE GOUMJMAN, of Bevlahvitle, King William Co., Va., writes as follows: „", yeara my father. Col. T. U. Fogrg, of West Point, Va., was laid up with carbuncles, the worst that I ever saw. He tued everything' be heard of, his doctor could do nothing for him. Had six or seven carbuncles at a time, as large as ben's eggs. He got so weak and suffered so much he could not walk step. In 1872 he had his bed put in the middle of bis room and got on it to die. COL.T._ O MONEY I S REFUNDED JULIUS KRAUSE." IfVUNTER A E For Crouj), Whooping Cough and Cold of children, Cubeb Cough Cure is'inval uable. For sale by druggists in 25 and 50 cent bottles. Sold by Andrew T. Eckr Htein. Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sciatica, Kidney Complaints, Lame Back, A SR. SMDEN'S ELECTRIC BELT I«teat PatcitarBent ImprmrmmemU Witt cure without medicine all Wwkaai Maultfwr troa •reMaiaUonof brtin «r forces. «TCc«m»«?iid? "ration, BCTTIMM debility, ilecpieaaea. lansmor i.tne back, tambago, sciatic*, all female oomplaimr ES?SS#25l!r2£. to a bulging mouthful of any other tobacco for the reason that No one expected him to get well. He saw Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery advised for all blood disorders. Before he bad taken half-a bottle of 'Discov ery* tbey began to FOGG,. go away. Two bottles entirely cured bim. He is now 78 years old. and enjoys good health." PIERCE CURE oUw*. Current fc wtU curealtof the abore dbeaces or no nay. Thoi 2*fL£L *iFUFB&iea and we gtv nundre •ftesttaonUtotathiBiintailed, every otberttatee E^nJUS^SSL^^ men, FKCT Willi. d!'«J%S /r 1 K!•r??,,?t,,e,,ft,, OCABAaTIBDl 60 •0*J% Bend forIllng'U Pamphlet, mailed.reaied, li.. SANDEN ELECTRIC CO., s«i A db S 4 at a & A O S I Constant coughing will, if neglected, inflame the entire mucous membrane lin ing the air passage to the lungs. Cubeb Cough Cure is the only remedy to be re cied npon to give quick relief and allay Inflammation. I issoothingiu its effect, is most pleasant and agreeable to take ihihlren like it. Sold by A Eckstein -"Ins Li*»v9ry 8aved Hit Life. Mr. G. Cnillonette, Draggu&t, Beavers* 111., says: "To Dr, Kings New Dis covery I owe my life. Was taken with La Grippe and tried all the physicians for miles about, bat of no avail aad was given op and told I could not live. Hav ing Dr. King's New Discovery in myGtftlpf*SMl» store I sent for a bottle and began its me and from the first dose began to get better, and after using three bottles was Op and about again. It is worth its' weight in gold. Wi wont keep honse or store without it," Get a frea trial at O. M. Olson's Drag Store. 2 Bakers Gooks Kverybody I A N E House ami Sign Painting of all kinds and the most satisfactory paper haaorjnor guaranteed. Shop on Minneso ta street south of Chicago House. RSIIUfA EITHER SFX. This rm»c I I A t*"1* inj««i directly to the st_ those diseases of the Gemto-Urraarr Or FORs XITBE S SFX Thi Ttm-C icing injected directly to the st oa( those diseases of the Gemto-Urraar O •cans, requires no change of ift nauseous, mercurial or poisonoui icmcsto be taken intemaUj. Ku used AS A PREVENTIV7 jy either sex it Is impo«siblotocon( any venereal aisease, but in the thoso already Uit»oiiTini».SLr \ri with Gonorrhoea and Gleet, gu 1 «*. tee a ct.rc. Price by mail, posUot) 0.1. a irOfcousforQ* O. M. Olseu Druggist. Ne Ulm. E O J. SCHMIDT. Cotraetor & Builder Prompt attention paid '. t» all orders. Leave sana at post»ffice in ". N Of Interest toMill Owners W. S. A having had six years experience in Mill-wright work, can be lelied upon to give satisfaction in con tracts of all natures. Repairing of all kind also performed in the quickest and best way. Address: W S. A Ne Ulm. Minn. Should use best flour Wljitthe Iiily. Manufactured by the Empire Mill Co. of N Ul has this reputation and deser ves it. I makes the whitest bread. Call for if of your grocery dealer. EMPIRE MILL CO. Building Stone For Sale. The N Ulm Stone Company is rea dy to sell building stones at the Quarry. For prices inquire of J. Pfenninger, W Boesch, A. Schell or Chas. Stolzenberg, Redstone. NOTICE.—The use of land for pastur ing or cutting of wood or quarrying and hauling of stone is not allowed unless by a written permit from the company. N E W STON E CO Say If is a fact That the place to Cliri&tmus Presents, Fine Watches, Clocks. Jewel ry, Silverware fc-cetu s, Rinus Ornament« and Ear-ringo is the store of J. C. TOBERER WOOL!. The undersigned wishes to announce to the public, and especially to his old customers that on the corner of Minneso ta and 2 south streetin NewUlm.he has opened a Wool and Woolen Goods de partment, where he keeps blankets, flannel, kr.itting-yarn, stockings and woolen-patting of his own manufacture, for sale and in exchange for sheep-wool. B. a Manufacturer of Woolen Goods. New Harness Shop! I will keep on hand a complete assort ment of light and heavy ROBES, WHIPS. COLLARS, SADDLES, HARNESSES. and everything that pertains to the sadd lery business. Fine custom work a specialty. 1 in vite an inspection of my goods from the public O N KRETSC Jr. Minnesota Street N Ulm GEO.BEHZ & Co. Importers and Wholesale !Dealersin Wines & Liquorj. 117 A 119 E. 3rd St. St Paul Mian N Cure. N Pay N Mustaci-o N Pay Caller Write. PROF. 6 BIRKKGLZ !011 Masonic Temp'.t Chicago. HSW IS YOUR HEAB? If it aches why don't you try a box Tbey have cured others, tbey will core yon. Every box sold -on A positive gnaraateeby •».M.Oison,Dn^.^ xeridiaa Block 'I ^1