feast. 1225 OUR tfWV-i. V'^f Your Suit is We have been busy ex­ amining our new Fall and Winter Garments, but we are now ready for business. Now is a splendid time for you to sel­ ect your suit. Come in and we will show you a regular suit Grounds Free to Patrons of Newsboy. charged 10 cents. & Union Made Suits $12.50, $15, $20 Union Made Shirts Union Made Hats igfficffll Chambers' Grove AT FONDULAC. Most Beautiful Spot in Minnesota. TAKE THE NEWSBOY VJZZZZ NO LIQUOR SOLD ON GROUNDS. Refreshments served on grounds at reason­ able prices. Free nursery for children. No worry for mothers. Come and have an out* IF YOU WISH A: DELICIOUS, WHOLESOME) PALATABLE Careless. 1 191 WEST SUPERIOR 5TRBBT. DULUTH, MINN. om&letyr Hae el odPropnetarr id Domattie Cls We keep com^etyr Toilet ai ed an and Family "So you had to walk home after, your automobile ride "Yes," answered Mrs. Gazzle, "But it \yas our own fault. UWe took a, new roa£,, instead of keeping yithin,. easy Others will be JAS. SIMPSON, Mgr. Beverage CALL ON VAL BLATZ BREWING CO. 'STAR'3 Milwaukee Beer. SMITH & SMITH, Druggists. DRUGS ARB ALWAYS FRESH AND PURE. 11*1"i Wmmmmmi' Semedl agar* j£t% Phyai Redpea eom w. V/ An Inference. From the Washington Post: We ipfer thatJud&e o. P.' Thompson, of. Jacksonville.IU., has subscribed foe the' Commoner. as he,isbeing preek&tial possibility By Hamlin Garland. Jhs Outlaw. In aHrper's Weekly Hamlin Garland tells in "The Outlaw," a thrilling tale of the West, a story which illustrates the ferocity of race hatred and inci­ dentally reflects upon the quality of those cow boys whom President Roose­ velt has held up as models of Ameri-' can manhood and as infinitely better in quality and more agreeable in per­ sonality than the American farmer. Hakonuse is an Indian. He has come under civilizing1 influences and has de­ termined to cultivate the friendship of the whites. He enters a western town at a moment when a cowboy browl is in progress and becomes involved in the affair in spite of himself. His arrest follows and he is thrown into jail, charged with shooting with intent to kill. The charge was absolutely false and those who made it know it to be so. But the sheriff refuses to release him and the judge declines to interfere. And so Hakonus stays in jail. In a week or two the people of Big Snake had quite forgotten Hakonuse. If any word recalled him to their minds they merely said: "Do him good to feel the inside of a stone wall. It'll tkke the fight out of hint He'll be good Injun when he gets out. He's in luck to escape being strung up." Now the town possessed a baseball team that had defeated every other club in the state, excepting one. The Falls had proved a Waterloo to Big Snake' on the Fourth of July and so its citizens fairly ached for a chance to "do the Falls up,"- and win back some of the money they had lost. One morning about two weeks after his imprisonment Hakonuse heard the sound of far-off drums and thought the soldiers were coming at last to release him. His heart leaped with joy, and he sprang to his window and there listened long. He could hear plainly the voice of the bugle, and he fancied he could detect the marching of, col­ umned feet. His friend, the agent, was surely coming to punish his cap­ tors. He was not afraid of the soldier chiefs, for they fought honorably. They did not take their arms away. 'They made war in the open air and on the hills. A shout of joy was about to break from his lips when the jailor en­ tered the corridor much excited. He made a great many signs to his captive, but Hakonuse. only undei*stood one or two of them. "Come with me!," and "I'll kill you." He drew his blanket round him and thought, "I will go. I will "at least .escape these walls. If I die I will die under the sky where the sun call see me." He quietly followed the sheriff out­ side, but when he saw the open hand­ cuffs, he rebelled and shook his head'. The sheriff made bungling signs again and threatened him. ..Hakonuse comprehend. nothing-of all this save the- motion- toward the- gun which he took to mean that he was to be killed. The excitement of his cap­ tor, the mystery of all he did, his menacing fists were convincing. But Hakonuse was a chief. He had never flinched in battle, and as he felt the wind of the wide sky on his face he lifted his eyes and said, "I am ready— but I will die fighting." The sheriff motioned him to get into his buggy, and he obeyed—for the hand of the sheriff/was ever on his revolver— and so they roae through the4 town, which was almost deserted. Far up the street Hakonuse could hear the -noise of the drum, and his heart swelled big with sense of coming trouble. Was he being lecl out to be tortured? Perhaps he would be permitted to fight his way to death? A man at the? drug store called out, jovially. "Where are you going, Mr. Sheriff?" "Out to see the ball game. I hap­ pened to have only this on eprisoner, so I thought I'd take him along. Damned if I'm going to miss the game for a greasy buck Injun." "Look out he don't give you the slip." The sheriff winked meaningly. "There'll be a right lively fox-hunt if he does. The boys would like nothing better than to rope* an Injun today. It would draw better than a bull light." They both laughed at this notion, arid Hakonuse again understood only the menace jn the sheriff's voice. As they neared the grandstand the noice of the great crowd reached across the quite I fields, and Hakonuse could see hun dreds of people streaming along the road before him. His limbs grew tense. It was plain that his captor was driv­ ing directly toward this vast throng_of savage white people, there to torture him. He looked round him. On either side were rows of growihg corn, and beyond the field on the right, rose a grove of tall trees marking the course of the river. As he remembered this, his final resolution came. "If I am to die I will die now/' and he sprang from his seat to the ground and dived beneath the fence. He heard the sheriff's gun crack twice and thrice, but he rose un­ hurt, and with ia wild exultation in his heart ran straight across the tender corn toward the river. Again the sheriff fired, his big revolver sounding loud in the windless air. The^i, as if his shooting were a signal, squad of cowboys rose out of a gully before the fugitive and with wild vhooping high above their heads, and Hakonuse, knowing well their pitiless ierocity, turned and ran straight to­ ward the sheriff, who stood loading his ?un on the inner side] of the' fence. As *ie ran, Hakonuse could see. great ra.nks of yelling people rushing over the field! toward him. He fled now to escape being dragged to death by the cowboys, hoping the sheriff might, shoot him through the heart as he came near. The. sheriff fired rmet|- 5 twice -at-long- range but iqissed, and as the panting fugitive ran straight toward him, the white man fell to the earth as if shot^and crawled .under the fence, leaving Hakonuse to face a squad of. twenty infuriated mounted ihoboes and 'a- thousand^ citiaenS defenseless, red man, and. with brutal heels stamped- on-his face as if he were a rattlesnake.'When he »o longer breathed they stabbed the inert body a hundred' tunes and Swt it^ull ^of bul­ lets. They fought5'for 'a chance to kick it, they lost all semblance of men. Wolves fighting over the flesh'of their own kind could not "have been more heartlessly malevolent,' more appalling in their demoniac frenzy. Andv then above: the clamor of their breathless cursing and cries of hate a strong clear voice made itself heard, a vibrant manly vpice: "Stop in the name o' Christ!" and through the crowd a tall young man in the garb of a Catholic priest' forced his way. His big broad face was set with resolution and his' white brow gleamed in the midst of the tumbling mass of bronzed, weather-beaten bor­ der-men with a singular paleness. "Stand back! Are you fiends.of hell? Where is your shanje A thousand to one! Is this yotyr American chivalry? Oh, you devils!" He stood astride the fallen man like a lion over the body of his mate. His body quivered with the sfnse of his horror and hi's splendid wra|h. "God's curse on ye—if you -touch this man again." The crowd was silent now, and he went on, and his voice cut like a saber: "I have seen the beasts of the African jungles a't war, and know the*hab'its of the serpents of Nicaragua—I know your American bears and wolves—but I have never seen any malevole'ncy to equal this." Every word he spoke could be heard by the mob, every man who listened looked aside, helpless under the edge of the young priest's scorn. "You are the brave boys of which we read," he said, turning to the cowboys. "You are the Knights' of the plains—" Then his righteous wrath flamed forth again "Knights of the plains! Mother of God! The graveyard jackals would turn to lambs in ye're presence. Brave men ye' are to rope and drag a defense­ less man—and you!"—he turnedbto the slinking sheriff—"you. are of my church —I know you. The malediction of Heaven hangs over you for this day's work. Take up the body of this man. He |s dead, but his blood will yet make this town a stench in the nostrils of the world. You cannot do these things today, and not be accursed of all Chris­ tian peoples." With a contemptuous wave of his hand' he dismissed the mob, "Go home Go back to your wives and children and boast of your great-, deed. Leave the body of the dead with* me. His soul is with his Maker." The crowd slunk, a,way, leaving, the sheriff, the priest, and a doctor who had volunteered his services to examine the mass of bloody flesh that had once •been a tall and powerful commander of '^/The1nmn'isVf V«aidItfie'Sector in a tone of awe. rV'Life is not extinct!'? "Save .himrr-for. ,the love of Christ!" exclaimed .the priest fas-he. dropped on his knees beside the torn and trampled red man. "It would be ablessed mir­ acle of Christ if he withstood' such pun­ ishment. It is impossible!" "His heart is beating—and I think it grows stronger," repeated the doctor as he fell to work.with deft energy. "What is this?" asked the priest as he picked up a bloody and crumbled paper, he opened it and read aloud "I am Hakonuse. Long I hated the white man. But now I am changed, want to be friiends with the white •man." As he finished, he prayed sil­ ently with a sort of breathless intensity "whil^, the tears 'ran down his cheeks: "Lord Jesus' grant me humbleness and patience with these people. Let my heart not harden with hate of this injustice. Then looking at the poor bruised body of Hakonuse, he said: "O, God! the pity of it! The .pathos of it! His heart was good 'toward all men. I do not know when or where this was given but it breaks my heart! They took Hakonuse up the priest received him at his house, and cared for him, and he live&, bu| so battered so misshapen that his own wife did not know him. The cloud of his hate and despair never lifted. He spoke no word to any white man save the good priest and to me, and when he died neither of us knew of it. What did I do about it? Nothing. What could I do—except tell the story. STORY ON GREELEY. A new story of Horace Greeley is told in a recent biography by W. A.^Linn: The great editor, as every one knows, was generous and kind-hearted to a fault, and beggars of all types general­ ly found in him an easy victim. A few cases are on record, however, where he did not yield to the demands upon his purse. One of these is related by Mr. Linn. A visitor who called on Mr. Greeley one day found him in his sanc­ tum with a persistent,bore of the sub­ scription paper variety seated by his side. The editor's patience had evi­ dently been almost exhausted, and as he wrote on steadily he would give an occasional-kick-toward the caller, who would every now and' then put in a word. Finally, turning round, Greeley said: "Tell me what'you wailt. Tell me quick, and in one sentence."- The man said: "I want a subscription, Mr. Greeley, for a cause which will prevent a thousand of our fellow-beiiigs' from going to hell!" Greeley shouted: "I will not give you a single cent. There don't half enough go there now." As Greeley was a Universalist, adds Mr. Linn, 'this xeply was not so severe as it sounded. An Enterprising Firm. The Scotland Woolen Mills Co., who have been in this city forkover a year report a very successful business. They certainly deserve 1 the patronage they are now enjoyihg. They are very, square in their dealings andJtre&tstheir patrons1 with' utmost courtesy. Mr.fiE. Helperin .,Y VV Ts 7^ wal&f?' ,,. Tf^TT •. VJfJLwjLiJL^r IS BRYAN A* v, DEMAGOGUE .. s1. Special effort at this time is being,! made by the republican press of the country to impair th^ present standing of Hon. William Jennings Bryan before the American people, says the Seattle Mail an'd Herald. .Paragraphs of his speeches are .taken out from the verbal surroundings in which he placed them, and constructions placed upon them which the context would not warrant. He is accused ,of playing the tricks of the deniajgogue by appealing' to the prejudices and ignorance of the masses 6% his. support. Naturally, the, kind of a Democrat who is not a demagogue is one that preaches republican doctrine. The Re­ publican idea of a demagogue is a deinocrat who tells the people things that are detrimental to republican suc­ cess, he is a democrat who tries to free the people from the yoke of the trusts, and points out to them the fallacies of Republican theories, and the hypocracies of Republican prac­ tices. William Jennings Bryan has a most happy facility in doing this, there­ fore, in the eyes of the republican lead­ ers he is a most dangerous demagogue for he tries to arouse the people to think and act for themselves, in their own interest and welfare. In the opinion of the federalist party, Thomas Jefferson was an arrant dem­ agogue. In fact the men who have in every age been instrumental in lead­ ing the people up out of bondage have all in turn been classed as demagogues by those to whose interest it was to keep tljp people subject to their control. Freedom of the masses of humanity is alway^ and at, all times deemed by those to"1 whom governments devote special privileges as inimical to their rights, and therefore whoever would awaken the great common people to an understanding of their own rights, and arouse them to dare assert these rights as against the granting of special pri­ vileges to any, is a dangerous man to society and to government, and a dem­ agogue. Thomas Jefferson was a-demagogue. Patrick Henry was a demagogue, Abraham. Lincoln was a demagogue, be­ cause each in his time was great enough to espouse the cause of human liberty as against the power of the op­ pressor. Since the days of Abraham Lincoln there has been no man whose eloquence has so moved the common people as the silver tongue of William Jennings Bryan. What wonder is it, then, that the servants of monopoly and special privilege, are striving in every way to remove him as an obstacle from,vtheir path. A WORD FOR DAD. We happened in. a home the other night, and: over the parlor door saw the legend worked' in letters of red, "What is Home Without a Mother?". Across the room was another brief, "God Bless Our Home." Now, what's the matter, with "Qod Bless Our ,a^d?.' ,^igets early, lights the fire*Jboil^ an egg, gr&bs hiS^-j pinner pail'Ta^nd" wipes'ofr th'e dew of the dawn with his boots)-while many a mother is sleeping. He makes the weekly hand-out for. the butcher, the grocer, the milkman and baker, and his little pile is badly worn before he is home an hour. He stands off the bailiff and keeps the rent paid up. If there is a noise during the niglit dad is kicked in the back and made to go down stairs and find the burglar and kill him. Mother darns the socks —but dad bu^s the socks in the first place and the needles and the yarn afterwards. Mother .does up the fruit, .well, but dad buys it all, and jars and sugar cost like mischief. Dad buys chickens for the Sunday dinner, carves them himself, and then draws the neck from the rUins after every one else is served. "What's home without a mother?" "Ses, that is all right but "What is a home with­ out a father?" Ten chances to one it is a boarding house, father is under a slab, and the landlady is a widow. Dad, here's to you you've got your faults—you may have lots of them— but we miss you when you're gone. "WHO'S GOT THE BUTTON?"' Prom the Troy Press: One effect of a high duty Js related by a leading merchant tailor. He for years bought a certain superior style of button not procurable in this coun­ try from Prance, and paid prices rang­ ing from $18 to $24 for what is called a great gross. In a new tariff law a duty of $6.50 per great gross was levied on buttons of this description. Then a Frenchman came over to our shores and established a factory for their manufacture in New Jersey. While the tariff is $6.50 per great gross, he is selling the buttons themselves to the trade at $6 per great gross—a saving of at least $12, besides the development of a new American industry. So American tailors are buying the but­ tons at one-third the price, and France is losing an enormous proflt on a high class button extensively used here. Button, button, who's got the button? Why, our own Uncle Sam! Sayings from Bryan's Commoner.. Some employes have a habit of losing the last hour of the' working day by watching- the clock. Don't do that. Of course the labor that is "protest­ ed by the tariff" need, not worry .about the million or more of immigrants pouring into the country each year If the average man could do as much as he thinks he can there would be lit­ tle demand? for labor-saving machinery. By the way, if every man in the east is employed at good wages, where did those 25,000 eastern men cOme from Who went to^the Kansas and Nebraska wheat fields, and why ..did/they go? Frosty Welcome. Prom the Philadelphia. Inquirer: The St. y.Iwouis show is 'to have a snowstorm every day, .with the aid of liquid air.. "Visitors will find a summer snowstorm in St Louis a thing to be: profoundly grateful for. Volunteers "for Desperate Service." ,1 -^Profe&jor,'Wiley of the, agricultural department ha'd^do, trouble finding forty '^volunteers' on^wliicbi-r to experiment UNION LABEL RATS SMOKERS... Full Set Best Teeth Zenith Phone 168. UNION LAftfiL ...ARE YOU AFTER... UNION LAREL CUHHIIU This stetfl Is where jreu wilt find the largest assortment of Label gwMs at pepdar prices. Made Two Floors. Perfect Daylight. HAvil you TRIED THEM DO SO AND BE CONVINCED THAT THE La verdad and La Linda. CQGAR8 ARE THE FINEST THAT MONEY WILL BUT, AND THAT SKILLED LABOR CAN PRODUCE. MANUFACTURED BH Ron Fernandez Cigar Company. UNION LABEL. HOME MADE. WE ARE LEADERS IN Union Label Cigars V%? Following Are tomo of Our Choicest Brands: Epictf p, La Cub*, Leaders, White Ash, Red Cross, Union Had* Union Hade (hand). Turf Queen, Union Boquet, Dulif/h, Free Cub^, Emblems, Coronation, Navy Pride. J. J. CULLEN, 9niiiii 'WS^^MmSk '&Z-s-y' :-.V'--: by manufacture*-* III the country. We were the first firm in the city.tft introduce the "Oaten Label" on clothing. SpMM Spring SoHt, (10, (15, (18, (25 N««l, Snappy, Up-to-date Spring Qver eotls......... (12, (15, (20 W. ERICSON, 219 West Superior Street. ,'"~:'"r!"r aadSHOBS Union the largest and best RELUBLE CLOTHIER. WEST miGHISAN STREET. UJyCLE IKE HJtS Barrels of Money to Loan On Watches,. Diamonds and Jewelry 324W. Superior St. See that this label annear* on the box from which you are served. irtr intern Union-made^ Cigars. 'itijSSSSSfflM MMlNltem PATRONIZE HOME INOUQTRY. SMOKB HOME-MADE! CIGARS THAT BEAR TE& ABOVE)' Call and Be Convinced That ire ctei gir« you first-class dental work at reaionable prices. Gold Crowns $7.00 White Crowns $5.00 White FiUiags 75c Qold Fillings, upfront $1.50 Silver Fillings, up from. 75c PaitnloM Extracting.. 50c JOHMSOM & KAAKE, Metiba Biock*—4W-11 W, Saperior Street, Daiuth HOLDING YOUR OWN Is a pleasure when you can hold it In the brewing of beer that will com­ pete with 'the best 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. 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