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rail Ifwr ii- i. I 1 no Da:1le inon lu lib t. It means that {South 1aK«tu i lit WW of our Kl.V i women shall Ii iv•• 'i W e .- I i i Iirothc .. i, 1 ]o]iii«-:n iii'fUo iinu cl-tsses and our -•i-ite, e\tn to Ii commf it 1 tXUIVUH-. r...: L-! iiU'f'tii:. A it. i i 1 I I I I I 11 i dIm I ..! 'CI- I i ill- 1. VOIIIIg V.|||,,.-| .-C! ,i Detail 1 i' .., .. 1u I10M ti. {•pO!l. 1 i.- i lo iincoi. 1 1 i iii- WilO. l.'.Ve t! I or. parade thi o-.n out of gehoo !. i e blinmrt, Hl"tt i! I a:. therare only IVn '.1 or- u n :..-• cirn't, lei then. ii-«- i.'- iiii!•' 1. quels, as lust year s.-n i i. i I" Bailey, Huron, B. 1' 1" also for of m-i -, u• ii .•, 1», g^t your ... ..lit. (•:. a K. liraw 00 1:1 :i i 'I. 11 i .(• v )t every polling place. In the country pit. or near the polling p' r-, kot dir.aerand suffra iictU- eraljublee, Every w '..ixS, all, if nothing more than hpt cofl. sandwiches. But first of all, before tion day secure 1»«kot-* of dl 1!..»dit'.-i• .1 parties, and ,s i-ev it-te uorcling to the foiif. Ml. .1 far aa possible, hold the ju.lLc V tion to the count of the ti-!%rts a 'r i ing to the law on this form. For aa account of an old time w rights raliv, and for jour own enc inent, refer \ou lo the (list tt*\en \eisih of the '.\v( i bers. Read it, and then ui'h heart trusting in th« same (in I, smd wit i ml womanly mcwlesty and di-jm'.' -.n up i-v fore the Princes of South Dakota and pre sent your just cause,-ftud the wune God will L'ive us die vic'ory. 1: l"l IK '. litis 1 jusl ordering use number only. DO YOU R3EAD j3 UUOIiStUpUiti SU THAT BBIUHT, 8r*RKi.iN«i Youx« MAI.A/.ISK" The Cheapest Illustrated Monthly in the World. 25 ots. A NUMBER. 13"*2.40 Per Yent\ (EKI.ARGED OCT. 1*89, TO 128 TAIIES.) The COSMOPOIITAS is literally what the New York Tunes calls it, "At its price, the brightest, most varied ami best edited of the ivla^azines (AN UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITY) FOK NKVV SI HS( HI ISi U*i, I on ON t: VTAU OMV. The Cosmopolitan, 1'er Vour,...™, HeriiUI Advance, S.O.O Tli«! jiriw ol" I lie tivo publn-iillon* 4 4U We w ill furnish both for only This oiler is only to new subscribers to Tili. and only for one year. "It lias more articles in It will be ft lilieral educuoir to every member of the household. Ii u i'I make the nights pass pleasantly. It will give you more for ihe money thnu you can obtain in any other form. jou want a first class MACIAZINK, giving annually 153G pftges by Ihe ablest writers, with more 'than 1JJ(X illustrations by the cleverest artists -*u. I readable a Magazine as money can make—a Magazine that makes a specialty of live subjects? "The marvel is how the publishers can c.ive BO F( (iNCI^BIKROR 1-llcd "rrs befori I 1 $i.5i .*ii l.'ll.'.lll 1NS0 l-„] nty seventh chapter of Nuin J. 175.1^: 1.M7.H i. Hf-- i. 1,31'.1.7!.' i lSK'i 1SS1 1HS" 1WS issr is,ss 1SS1I 1HU) i. ir.s.rri-.'.iij'.t i,ir.i.!iu,fi i l,4s7.VIS.ffcJ7 i,wr,i'j'2,ou I A LI„ M. I ). I The American Proteeiivo'1 aril! i.eaiiuo iHsued in pamphlet, form acom- plete refutation of the chums of the Free- Traders that our manufactured products are sold to the foreign consumer at lower price than for home consumption. The subject of this document is "Kxport Discounts" and if you desire a copy en- •Hoso a two cent stamp to the American Protective Tariff League, 2 W. St., N. Y. This Document is No. Tn T. ifals $027,WIS.:-* I I.f ever iaii-C-. iY.-t.vtioii imil JM1I7.17.1.7.H A\ei.i^e for of eleven y.-a lh5v iji ii'ree-triiiif iJe.riml/, |ht uiinimi. A^elM^e (VJ eajiifjl for jmtIu-1 of ele\ t-n }-.- rs, 3SSO-9 i i l'r.• [..•ri j. ,-i !SSI MRLI UIHT that ore r«n)able and fewer iimiiterostii.ji 1 hsiu any of us con nil pearies." Hosten Jourtiiii "The COSMOPOLITAN' rurnishes for tlie first time in Magazine Liu-iaui'-c. A Sl'I.KNDll) IlXrsTKATKIJ pKHIoi.u yi, AT A PiiicK 1IITIU:KI'O 1)KKMM l.Mrossnu.K. TKY IT roii A YKA11. much for the money." Philadelphia Evening ("all Send $".25 to this OHlce. .rd se ure bdh the Cosmopolitan am'. i! :dd-Ad E" 1 *',l »e i i icsKeil!. rofit ft -eton- r f'IS'l of i!», p« -iii ir VI' Imports Jin.l .Vim,,iint exports of i'"rei jt«. Unittril Kingdom. ... 1 ls'KO £t5ilJ',l)-l4,o il U'l 4 l'» 1*1 C94.ior.-j i K» 7 INKS v 7 1-SH3 TXVS'.'v'.iU v II a 1' near .ng, wit -out 'J he dirt 1i j* v ith a 1 p. «•:*, Alei v llli- of 'iivideno •died .viier '.' that, wh that •i hkc rts tatciuent wa ii' 1 tst vi n uu"ic with G85,'.)Sii. !."3 l.i ii 1KK5 Wa.. 7l,il'.t Ii 1:1 7 IMS et&S'U IKI Hi IHM7 64Sr.!HH7.5 i .t 4 Tlio very marked decline i i hvat Britain's imjiorts and export- set forth would prove that Free-7ra'le is de stroying England's foreign trade by pre cisely the same logic by which Mr. Vance proves Protection "to rpi lly oi proiiching the dest ruction of ear f'tovi-n commerce." Amoricau l'ottfrj. One of the large potteryupmufaeturers at Trenton thus outlines the prosjjects and possibilities of his great industry under the protective system: I "It will not bo long before the Trenton potteries will be furnishing this country all the pottery it requires, both useful and artistic. Within a year the Trenton kilns will be putting on the market is fine china and porcelain as is turned out anywhere 111 the world. Our pottery alone pays sjW.unrt.ooo in wages every year to the workmen of Trenton, more than all the importers of New York city pay out in the way of wages in ten y urs. The American potters are as skillful and artistic us any in the v\orld, and if they are properly protected they will before ury long be able to'snpolv America with not only its useful taV ware, but with valuable porcelains and bisques that are ela.- .d as works of art." he Ann rican man at' 1 mill owner" i, pay :at able them t. Ins for i le Km.'. jicr Hiimcii... .£» .."it E.veesa of IV. i- iiu'i •'-m' I'ree4r ule perind i jnr capita) a) pur eint. If the years preceding 1^1 -si liad been a Free-trade jH-iiod Senator Vance might have been justified in using the de. line in foreign trade, which he a.s sevtis took place afiei* lss|, u. evidence that Protection was injuring that trade. But the wonderful growth from ]sGr» to l^si was iilso under Protection, and Ihe very period singl -d out by him was one iri which the stream of foreign com merce, when compared to that of the most pro!»pero",- ears of the Free-trade jieriod, seems hk'1 a IMii-.—i sijn i coi:i pared to a Sehuylkill. !rdi-iiry coin liion w-iif-e hhould have siigg.-t.ed* to the senator that ii' there really was a decline it must have been due to some cause other than Protection. And then the unfairness of wresting eight Tit of the thirty years of the lite of our present, policy in order to prove his theory, es pecially when dealing with so variable a quantity as foreign commerce. Take, for instance, eight years i ain's commerce, as given in ihe'-St-: ,. man's Year Book." TO BE'I:AY AMERICAN INDUtTMV lira it Im.-i.-icIo rupeis to 15 1-r.l) I slieil with Foreian Money. A s. i'::h \'e u ii 'sauui'a y The 1 its 1' .nowii -lotie. 1 ••'turned i ith jilans and t' s' Ven p. -.iny iie seven The use of money by foreigners to control legislation and public opinion is not unknown in this country. But never, we believe, until now lias an American citizen of high standing and acknowledgt ability deliberately con spired with th" industrial and commer cial representative* of foreign nations to overthrow the settled economic policv of the United States by the use of foreign money, in order to promote he prosper ity of foreign industries and labor at the expense o( those of his own eount rvmen. Attention is called to the facts here stated with the conviction that when they are known the indignaCion of the American people will bafile ami put to naught the unnatural scheme. The in famy of Am- 1-1 v. a- 'ruiil.-•?, but it wdl be eternal. 'Tine Ideii of tlu Protect !ve Turin-. The American manufacturer who em ploy* Ins labor—and his laborer on being paid buys his wheat and corn and bacon and pork and clothes and evert hi nc else at home-and pays that la1*n. two or three times as much as a laborer would get in Europe for work of tlvi same sort, cannot expe his foreign market, and if u1 look for a foreign market where anybody who wauls the sort of r.rc speaking of now it. would b-» like carrying coals to Newcastle: it v. ould be like Vermont attempting to ship i coal to Pennsylvania—they can make enough of it themselves. That is the: whole idea of the protective tariff. What we are able to produce ourselves in this great nat ional family it is for the benefit of all that we should produce.— Extract from Speech of Senator Ed munds. Why This Foreign Anxiety? If our American citizens have to pay is it that the reign manufaijlu.vrs nf Shefheld and other places abroad loudly pp -test against the Kiulev bill If we have to foot the cost what difference can it make t- tiie-.n? The mayor of Sheffield Mii-l he could "ivneiub'/r when tho Alii--rican market found trade for one half of the population of the town." —Ex tract from Speech of S -uaior •.rill. rusuu K ven kind every doing who corun This Ilolig bitter gravo kn4»vv But tl detaii Hi lig W lo boom Tree-trade, .lMries and lu-ote -f for i- n discov, anno1 at tin M" s--!'. 1: kets of the ni•. , of cheap labor. I his scheui'1 is ic.n new. It has been known that Mr. Stone was at work at it, and counted upon the liberal support of foreign merchants, bankers and manu facturers to make it a success. The im portance of this country as a market for European products lias been stror.gly manifested of late in meetings of the businos men in variolic commercial and manufacturing centers of Kur.,pe, and in the acts of these governments, jiro testing against our mvnt tarirl' legi.-da tion. This sentiment and the determin ation to hold the markets of the United States, in spite of the will of our people and the laws which are enacted to ex press it. has now found utterance in the attempt to secure by money the ends which they have i'.nlc to *:euro by ar guments and protests. 5: .raclici lebgol knows pOSltiu •VS-n hf ViSlt* cveni Open. mndinj -1. his fo i dpiee higo. '1 he bau gashes, It is a marv not killed outright v great distance ho f. nature of the prou: i .• which he fe.. .- .• .• ous, and his village, Hi scent, were 1 came in short u-. turned half aruuua :. midair. Ho is get as couid be expect. 1 ftaneos. It is feaiv Internally, but it !. to toll tor a few dt The iioldon A^r, In t! opmion of the v. recent maga ,%•• .•• "Oil lis. fori ... f: .- or'- .. literary labt. .i..- roi i .. best novels between tho ages of Jive and forty-live: Thacke'-a, t^r" "-he"! .e-'llm)U.(j «'iiei i-.-: when i i i e iiUps lUU tliU»L li II novel in Engli-h ii: .. Kliot liod reached a nine when ••Adam Bede." first mad hor famous. But this is only another way of puttirig- an old truth, that in the mid Ke of !iie a nian\ powers are (or ought to bo) most fully developed a truth to which in literature as in everything else there are obvious ex ceptions. Many of tho iinust mindn have matured Hl1110.1t in youth, and others have reached the iruioon of their powers when w. :. aloii" toward old :ige Having Hoi,by. A man who has a hobby is apt have more or los enthusiasm, ably turned in connectioi trieity. Well develojied tricity is as yet an aim. thing, which will require study for its full unil—- tricity is the futve world, as it has alwa. although imknov. •. a:. hended for ages. i i 11 1 j. w:,i makes labor more endurable ,n recreation more enjoyable. On this point the Scientific American has n suggestion which Is well worth 1 .••• ing: Many young men ride a niecl.:" hobby, and are often build to mental machines. and i-.. "young" Pteam-engines. 'I'(1 inen. electricity oilers a most enti.-in" field. There is no end to the dire." tions in which thought innv bo profit. '•'••'-v elec it H, elee. uuknown lifetimes of ding, Eiee ol the i8 life, unrompro- That a young -man i,j hours and days of hi.- o. worse than nothing, when ho has ^ich a be:d bcore hnn, is scarcely to be believed. Let voung men awake tn the id"u that the advaiscoment of t!ie world oejiends upon them persoriaUv thnf llb» *•»•!»».. ....... .. .. hotter that the year, to come may or worse as they hoo.m to'. be idle. I hen they will .p drinking. dico-sh'aking shutting, to avail then.s- ve-. privileges before them. ,v or to beer card- of the A man p„v be abont. i,ai'ae CsirdM fi^r the Deitd* A curious fashion has corr hit vogue in Paris. In all the cerrietmeV metat boxes witn a 1 :he full amount of all duties levied upon 1 import?, as some Fre-si raders insist, why 1 slit. s:i i n^ s-ar-ap.o Wollld tn e tri.ii VL -A ith the |ja are placed on the tombstones to rece i the cards of visilors. The relative' of the. (U ecased are thus enabled to see who among the living still cher ish the r:ie or-* of the'r ..c'ccgraioiiGrs K s Wake, himaeb, nowadaya. If he choo9es to become a sot, thewn\ i-open- if jw, i hooses to become a power in the land, he can do so by goine- to work in ttit* ri^htuiro 'tion iui] knuplritr nEW TOWNS iHiflu COLD, p,'i,,!hir.^ 03, CHEAT 1 FALLS U L.: .. i.'Mitii- ,i i• .i -".wf 1 FOR THE UB EEKl nrpry prp* A Jt «%•%.' ''•'^I.iv: I i s i n i i Architects & IU!IDER^ A cf sc:cnv.fic American.'0 I'Uit K!,. I,},,.' ^jlr l"M"' bt I vlf' n,,u C"V rosuU'h-r '4,,r.. V\\ %s r'(,r 'AV* •**f* y^ar, 11 »I-^UKUS. r-— -«, i* L' -V t, n n 1 diii y. P'•••»(.. ., "j HfUiflMjii i VRADE MARKS. H'\ I:I« ii iV vi» .n 1: i i. I STILL ANOTH •v S«l"( wl 1 CHARLES D1C$ In Tv,e'.Q Larg® Tt.,- tw.'hc ni.:. fniinnm wucks, 'l "u0 0 ... COM I'l.KTI-:, I. SCiliNW-" tllilixiKl,'. ., Vri.-n' lUvi.l I ..[.lu-rflfM, Oar Mi-lo..,!-* Mrb«».y. i Ii Hart in I and POHII-V lm?"1 IE VJ-e l.m II»ril Tim^M inil tt •,UK,f,ri| Oiiv.-r Tn lit ami i. IS^.iahy Ii A T.itc »d l'UO' Tli« OIl riirioniljr t"'«l' aaa fl -toiitliV ml«nij.i I'KU^ -4-0 »vi-u wuil "The Horse, y.y Itosa UonlH'ur,a se TT»^o pre tho n.-wtj,*jK.-r. Address The Wcskiy PIcesP ST. PAUL. PATENTS Tr, I,.-Mark* .-undiict®" I nve .f'H b- ,t 'U' OAIEE IS oppei-.o' I u i'.-im iiin-nre j'ali'lits in th tn those rein'.t'' tr.m ."-end model, drio scrij»tion W« advise, tree ohai-e. Our Ice »01 i is secureii. A little book, vt'.iti v.antes ol chfi ,,J.'" ei lowji cut ee. A, o-i!e J'.-it-M