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Va Ca 11 UNION LABEL. 4va0h- '.I ,rS 4 OF AMERICA TRADE MAfK HeoiMFRPj ••an This Label th« Mork Bros. GROCERIES AND MEATS. 529 and 531 West First St. Beef Pot Roasts IOC DULUTH MUSIC CO. 222-224 West First Street, Dcduth, Minn. Beef Rib Roasts 12% to 15c Beef Shoulder Steak 12c Beef Round Steak 15c "Wo have the largest and most complete stock of pianos west of Chicago. We offer yon the best and most artistic products of the world's greatest factories on terms to suit yon. Beef Sirloin Steak 16c Beef Porterhouse Steak.... 18c Pork Chops 15c Pork Roast Shoulder 12 Vic Pork Sausage ioc Hamburg Steak 10c Legs of Mutton 15c Mutton Chops 12% to 18c Fresh Dressed Poultry at right prices. Full Line of Fresh and Salt Fish Inspect them: Steinway, Knabe G&bler, Kranich & Bach, Ivers & Pond, Emerson, Richmond, Dyer Bros., and many others. DULUTH MUSIC CO. BOTH 'PHONES. MARSHALL-WEHS HARDWARE CO. WHOLE SALE 222-224 West First Street, Duluth, Minn. SMITH SMITH, DRUGGISTS. 101 W. SUPERIOR STREET. DULUTH, MINN. Our Drugs are always FresH and Pure We keep complete lines of the latest remedies, Patent Medicines, Toilet and Proprietary Articles, Perfumes, Stationery, Imported and Domestic Cigars, eto. Physician's Prescriptions and Family Recipes compounded with care. HAVE YOU TRIED THEM? DO SO and BE CONVINCED THAT THE (LAVERDAP AND LA LINDA. il Cigars are the finest that money will buy, and that skilled labor can produce. [Ron Fernandez Cigar Company DUIOW TUB TBEI WMHnmmmmmmmmmmmrnrnrn mm lefc _j HARD WARE DtJL.TJTH. faun? xnawft Cftimltayiif GUJLMERE LEAVES FEZ. TANGIER, Nov. 29.—The American minister, Mr. Gummere, is reported to have lett for Fez, the capital, Nov. 26, without obtaining satisfaction from the sultan in regard to the claims for in demnity .made bV- ditlzens of United States tor .alleged outrages 9r assur ances regarding the safety of American citizens president in Morocco. Mr. Union Man:—Notify your cloth ier that the Bell'Phone is Unfair. HOME MADE. MANYFACTURED BY A Mamesit* Ml Agency Gener&l Insurance ^Surety Bonds TORREY tfLD'Gi III- FLOOR SPOKANE UNIONS ARE STILL VERY ACTIVE (Continued from Page One.) Locomotive Firemen, are in Spokane and will remain for a few days. Mr. Cochran is general chairman for the firemen on the Great Northern sys tem, and Mr. Hawley is an inspector for the Interstate commercial com mission. Both men will probably visit the lodges at Leavenworth and Seat tle. H. B. Smith, member of the grand executive doard, whose home is in Spokane, accompanied Mr. Haw ley and Mr. Cochran to the meetings of lodges No. 571 at Hillyard and lodge No. 133 of Spokahe. Tinners in Spokane have just re ceived an increase of 50 cents a day, making the wages 54.50 a day. There was no trouble. Officers of the union made a request for an advance on the builders and structural trades several months ago, but no attention was paid to it until a few days ago. when a score of new buildings were ready for tin. Then the tinner presented a de mand, which was honored at once. This means that all tinsmiths and roofers will receive $4.50 a day here after. Councilman John Gray has resur rected an ordinance providing rigid rules for the conduct of employment agencies in Spokane. The ordinance Increases the annual license of em ployment agencies from $100 to $250 and provides that an agent found guil ty of imposing on a customer may be fined a sum not exceeding $100 for each offense. It also stipulates that agents must furnish employment when an applicant pays a fee to secure such, or that the money of the appli cant must be returned. It provides that no false representations may b« made by employment agents to appli cants for work. Provision is also made that each agent must keep a permanent record of all persons whom the agent agrees to furnish employ ment. The mayor is given authority to revoke the licenses without appeal to the council. Trouble which has existed for some time between teamsters' union 202 and teamsters' union 101 has been amica bly settled and the two unions will hereafter work in harmony. According to the settlement the team sters will not hereafter accept owners of one team, and it is likely-that the proposed new union Of teamsters will not be perfected. SLEEP. The use of certain sets of muscles does not hinder sleep. Couriers on long Journeys often have been known to sleep in the saddle. The soldiers of Sir John Moore during his retreat to Coruna slept steadily while the£ marched. It is said that Dr. Franklin slept for nearly an hour while swim ming on his iSack. ASHANTEES OF AFRICA. The Ashantees of Africa are perhaps the most cruel and demoniacal of the races that people the earth. Their drums are decorated with human skulls and bones. Mr. Union tya^:—Notify your confec tioner that the Bell 'Phone is Unfair tyr. Union Man:—Notify your laun dry man that the Bell 'PEone is Un- 5#, J8 STILL JAIL PEOPLE FOR DEBT IN El Over 11,000 Debtors -Are Put in Jail in England Last Year Under Old Law* Most of These People Are Work ing-men—Barbaric MethodU Still Riile There. A*- More than 11,000 persons wim prisoned in England last year fd# non payment of debt. About one-half of these owed less than $10. They were victims of the credit system In its worst form, which depends on the threat of imprison ment for its evlstence. The facts set out above, throw a flood of light on the dark side of "cred it trading. Although Imprisonment for debt was nominally abolished many years ago, the number of persons act ually Imprisoned tor non-payment of civil debts Is. increasing every year, and now constitutes a scandal. "Half the lmplsonments for debt last year were for small shop debts, contracted with tradesmen who rely pushing the credit system," said Jo seph Colllnson, honary secretary of the criminal law and prison, reform committee. This system flourishes chiefly ii? the poorest districts. Tallymen are em ployed to go 'round and sell goods on the installment plan to ignorant peo pie, and very often to wives without their husband's knowledge. They deal largely In cheap clothing and Jewelry, and the system rests on the fact that there is the power of imprisonment to help It out. The husband may be sent to Jail for debts his wife has contract ed for one shilling or upward, and he may be sent to prison fifty times ror* the same debt. Poor Families Are Chief Victims. "It wrong to suppose that a man cannot be imprisoned more than once for the same debt. If he owes sever al pounds the Judge may make, an order for payment of a few shillings a week, and he can be sent to Jail for the non-payment of one week's a mount after anothed. The result is that whole, families are thrown on the public purse. The husband goes to Jail for not paying a few shillings, and the wife and child ren have to obtain poor relief or go to the workhouse. *"T have known of a case where a commitment order hap been made a gainst a man lying ill in bed, and the officer has sat at his bedside waiting for him to get well enough, to go to Jail. /'About 200 persons were committed at Salford last year, not one of whom owed more than $1, and Major Grif fiths, while Governor of New Yofk prison, found thalt hdndreds af agri cultural laborers were committed for small sums, and their inability to pay was proved by the fact that they served the full terms for which they were committed. We have secured the support of a large number of members of Parlia ment and County court Judges in fav or of completely abolishing imprison ment for ordinary shop debts. Such a thing does not exist in' Scotland, and more careful about letting people con tract debt. Debt Collectors Presecute Cases. "In England the tradesman who adopts the credit system need not even appear, at the County court to prove his case. He can put the matter in the hands of a prdofesslonal debt sollector, who can carry the whole pro cess through the court. In-Bow Coun^ ty court last year 1,000 cases of this sort were dealt with without a credit or appearing. The full, evil of this kind of credit trading is, of course, not shown by the County court returns, for there is a large proportion of cases Where the threat of imprisonment Is held over women to Induce them to procure the money. This is one of- the worst fea tures of the system. "Moreover, the man who is sent to prison as debtor is now treated as an ordinary offender. Before 1898 he was specially treated, but since the act of that year he ranks with ordinary crim inals, and enjoys no privileges which were formerly extended to debtors. "England and Ireland are the only civilized -countries where- imprison ment for debt is allowed. In all other civilized lands it has been abolished." The church army frequently comes in contact witfc families which have suffered through the credit system as worked by the more unscruplous class of credit "traders. "Imprisonment for debt in the case of poor people is usually open to ob jection," said Prebendary Carllle, the head of the churcli army. "The husband, in many instances, has had nothing to do with the con traction of the debt.^and perhaps nev er hears of it until he Is arrested and taken to Jail. Favors Probation for Debtors.. "If the debt must be paid it would be better to put debtors under proba tion, and let a. probation officer admin ister their wages, so that the debt may at length be liquidated." An officer of the church army, who visits prisons, said: "It makes my blood boil to.hear the tales told by men in prison for debt. "The first time they are arrested I often find that they know nothing about the debt until they are commit ted. Their wives are persuaded by tallymen, ^ho can talk them ihto buy ing anything, from ready-made cloth ing, dress materials, and boots, to jew elry and family Bibles. "All tradesmen Who give cred|t are not bad, and It is astonishing to find the amount of credit that small shop keepers will give the poor in cases of sickness and unemployment. But there are 'firms who employagents alp over the country to pysh credit'trade. The'agent is often a man who vas out of a Job, and he does all he cah to persuade women to take things they don't want. Mr. Union Man:—Notify your res taurant man that the Bell 'Ph6ne is Unfair. .. I *-w *~.j Wilis MD El mm •By Paul S. Gillette. There is apprehension in many quarters that trades unions are con stitutionally opposed to technical training schools. That this is untrue .both with, respect to mechanical and academic training may be seen by 7jading the .history of these ancient tools fpr. the dpllft of the world's toilers. The one thing thejr nAve op-, P9®ed in schools teaching *the theory the Jjtfdec is the effort that has keen some of the eastern cit- lea to market with men who are givf^'va mere smattering of the trades IA some of the places of In struction. When one or more persons claim to teach a trade In three months °r six months, as it is claimed the plumbers and bricklayers* trades can be taught by certain institutions in Ohio, we can afford to smile at the very inconsistency of it, for every ex perienced man knows how utterly Impossible It is to complete a trade In, that time. He also sees a great danger in the perpetuation of any method that puts an inferior grade of workmen in the field. Such men by their v6ry numbers, and as much by their Inferior product, will tend to re duce the Income and opportunity of employment for finished craftsmen. It. is for this same reasftn that we find physicians of the bona fide schools securing the passage of laws that will protect them against a flood of pqorly trained quacks. The M. D. sp'ends four years of close study to become fit for public service, and it Is not to be wondered at that they take drastic measures to bring all practitioners up to the standard. By their educational requirements both in school and out they make the way even more difficult than it is in trades. Still there is little blame thrown on them. The craftsmen who seek special train ing as well as general. The story of their progress, as set forth by the most authoratlve statisticians and his torians,clearly shows that they have at all times pursued the, way that seemed to promise the highest cult ure possible for them to attain. We will on this occasion consider the theme as it is illustrated In the his tory of our own beloved United States. Says Carro}l D. Wright: "Educa tion and all that education means was preached as the surest m&ans of reaching all the aims of the labor or ganizations." This was written in reference tp the- period when Amer ican workmen were struggling to es tablish a standard working day of ten hours. It was at the time when the United States President, Van Buren, issued his proclamation establishing a ten lyur day in the navy' yards in 1840. It is only a matter of qoutation from jhlstory to show that trades un ions have at all periods in which their story has been preserved, stood for education as a part of their sys tem. It must be borne- In mind that they are* not primarily designed for the establishment of schools. Their main purpose is to Improve the con ditlons under, .jwhich. men and women toll. But tradesunlonists are human, they' niu«t therefor have the ambit ions common to all men, and one. is the, craving for culture, which natur ally enough must be of the kind that fits them, to become more efficient as craftsmen, pr better qualified* in some thing useful. Let It be understood that the education most sought by the working, people of America is utilitaria.n in character, not that they confine their studies to the Industrial sciences, but they seek to be self-sup porting and a support for dependents. They endeavor to enhance their economic value in some occupation, artisan, professional or otherwise. The founders of the Knights of La bor saw this when they incorporated Into their principles compulsory at tendance at school of children ranging in age from seven to fifteen years, and the furnishing of text books by the state free of charge. This, was only characteristic of the entire movement to protect child life. The leaders who protected children by placing an age limit on those en engaged In continuous employment, by urging compulsory attendance at school, recognized the great psycho logical law that a child's mind is Just plastic enough and just at the right age to be Impressed with a fund amental education between seven and fifteen years. They 'furthermore have more hours for, recreation, the de velopment Of brain and brawn, than if confined from 7 A. M. till 5 P. M., as the law of California subscribes for those eighteen years of age or under. California has a school law providing that parents, or guardians, having charge of a child between eight and fourteen years of age, must send it to school not less than five of the school months, and at least eighteen weeks of -their attendance must be consec utive. Fines 'are imposed on persons in charge for failure to comply without, good and sufficient cause, as provided. Massachusetts preceded this, for the legislature of that State 'enacted a law -in 1836, making edu cation, of working children compul sor.y, and in 1866, child labor was reg ulated by law, a commission being appointed in the same year to probe the question of hours. Thi* is one of the most vital factors in education— time. We have schools in plenty, li braries are numeYous, books may be purchased at reasonable figures for our private collection, but more. than anything else do the adult working people lack hours to themselves In which they cah store the mind with knowledge, the. Information. which is useful at their business as well as es sential to the spclal. life of the com munity, and political welfare of the city, State and Nation. By the combined/ good results of Improve^ machinery' and appliances, together with the in,cespant efforts of the worklngmen to shorten the work dfcy, wei have become more intellect ual with eacfi passing year. In 1806, sh|p carpenters worked fourteen houra d^tyy. The men ofthis craft united to reduce the time tb ten hours, tout without immediate su&ess. Dur- Brery Day Increases the Dcmnl 7 "COMMANDER FLOUR"** EVERy PACKAGE GUARANTEED. Manufactured by GREGORY BLISS A CO. Commander Mills, Dnlnth, Mian. All Grocers. ing 1882 the carpenters' association met with some reward for the struggle going on among tradesmen. Says E. Levasseur, in his exhaustive treatise entitled "The American Workmen:" The first industrial convention, an aftermath of the Pittsburg convention, was held in New York in 1845, and a second in Chicago In 1850. The ob ject of both was to secure a ten-hour day. Such persistency was not with out effect, and by 1853, eleven hours became the general custom. The cot ton factories of New England, In many of which the work lasted only ten hours," tell of the beginnings of the ten-hour day in 1865 In the United States. The time is now reduced to nine hours in many places, and eight hours in all national work, while all State and municipal labor is limited to the $ame time for a standard day. The traides in which the eight-hour system is most prevailent at present are the building trades and printers. Out of forty-two building trades un ions investigated in New York during 1894, there were seven working nine hours for the first five days in the week and eight hours on Saturday, while thirty-five of them were on the straight eight-hour basis. Although their wages are the best, they had undergone no reduction as a result., During the steady reduction of time there has been a corresponding in crease in the education standard of the working man and woman of America. The hours of leisure they had craved gave the opportunity for mental training. The Industrious schoolmaster was not slow to step in to the opening, nor were authors want ing to write on all manner of themes. Great book concerns increased their output many per cent, and magazines of an economic and technical char acter now find ready sale on new^ stands. Easily 75 per cent of them were unknown thirty years ago. Ver* ily nature unfolds the progress of man as well as the growth of plant life simultaneously with the shorter workday came the advantage of'sys tematic education. The much mooted problem of ap prentices is steadily being reduced to more satisfactory methods. This has approximated to the highest degree of efficiency in the eastern cities of Bos ton, New York City and Chicago. Es pecially does Chicago seeem to have put into operation the most liberal and satisfactory system. For all that has been said of tfie refusal of trades organizations to cooperatfe with their' employers or the public, we have here an example which illustrate that they are' not entirely wanting' in the ad Ji^ptment of mutual interests. The machinery of the Chicago school for apprentices consists of the Carpen ters' Union, Bricklayers* Union, Car penters and Builders' Association, and the Board of Education. They have met with, very satisfactory results con sidering the short time this organiza tion lias been formed. Following the building trades lockout of 1900, there came a suggestion from Mr. A. Land quist, an -extensive building contract or, to give every apprentice boy three months in school each year of. the four he is indentured to the trade. As the system now stands each boy is paid the minimum wage during the school term, amounting to from $5 to $8 per week. The proposal met with hearty approval by the latfor organiz ations, and they began to perfect their part of it. Naturally there were some boys who tried to avoid the confine ment of study. Most of them who objected were moved by the smaller wage, for the older apprentices drew ^.s much as thirty cents per hour and some of them as much as forty cents. This, in connection with the briskness of trade preceding and during the school months of this year, made tem tation very strong for some of the boys to continue at work where pos sible, and many subterfuges were tried. At such times each case is in vestigated to learn if the excuse is valid. In the Carpenters' Union there are two hundred, and ^orty indentured ap prentices. Out of these sixty asked Jor permits to go to work. Or* the 4th %f last January the Joint arbitration board of the Carpenters' Unioji, met to consider the enforcement of the ap prentice rules. Out of the sixty pet itions only three were allowed. Now the powerful influence of the union steps in and teljs the boys they must attend school regularly and conduct themselves in an orderly manner" or their quarterly working card will be withheld and they will stand dishon ored bpfore the union. The effect of this was well illustrated recently. The apprentice boys attend school in two places, at Twenty-sixth street and Wabash avenue, and at Cass and II inois streets. They had not conduct ed themselves according to the rules of the school, and Principal Bogan made complaint. The matter was then taken up by the arbitration board. It resulted in posting a notice at the schools to the effect that if the boys absented themselves without ex cuse, were guilty of ungentlemanly conduct or did not obey the instruct or, they would not be given their Ap ril working cards. Following this episode the schools were visited by the secretary of the Carpenters' Ex ecutive Council, who brought the boys to terms In short order. Principal Bogan paid, high tribute to the In fluence of the union two days later, when he said it was remarkable what a change-had come over the lads., Al though the school discipline had failed, the union enforced Immediate obedience. The result of this training, "both by school and actual work at the trades, is bringing out a better class of work men. They are intellectually superior to the- unschooled man. Such a Sys tem established in all- the -large cities tf'mi would excellently supplement the need of manual training institutions, so Car as apprentices are concerned, at least., Let It at all times be borne in mind that the natural tendency of man is to add to his mental .store as well as ma terial. This is one Of the ruling am bitions of mert.* They take pride in giving proof of their attainments, and every night of. this age of education there are hundreds pf thousands of them who, having ^one^home from a day. of arduous toil, will still drive their tired brain to the task of prob lem solving. Be the problem what it may, mathemetical, structural, legal or economic, the workihgmen of A:merica are the silent giants wlio by the sheer forces of their persistent effort are ris ing, rising and by degrees laying their brawny hands on the rudder of the nation's welfare.' They are doing it because their minds are grasping a better understanding of human right and need, through the clear white light of education. ELEANOR JENKINS AGAIN IN DULUTH Miss Eleanor Jenkins, who will be remembered—plesantly—by Duluth music lovers as the sweet voiced prima donna of the Northwestern Opera company which played a summer en gagement at the Lyceum three years ago,^ is the soprano of the Technau quartet at the Bijou this week. The quartet has a vaudeville con tract for a prominent house in New York and will sing the bedroom scene from Fra Dlavalo late in the season there. Miss Jenkins is delighted to be in Duluth again and spends most of her time when off duty with one g-roup or the other of her many friends here. She is in good voice and is a devotee of vaudeville. "The public," she said last evening, "is devoted to vaudeville—and the public is the best Judge of the sort of entertainment it desires. I can't quarrel with anyone" who thinks the finest scene In any entertainment, musical or dramatic, loses little by being taken out of its setting of the commonplace—and it Is the quintes sence of the opera or drama that goes to make up the brief act in vaude villes "Duluth has grown so much. You have no idea how changed Superior stret is. So many new buildings— so many new enterprises. You know Miss Cornish—you remember Sylves ter Cornish?—Miss Cornish and I feel that we have proprietory rigHts in Duluth. We bought some mining stock here, and it wasn't the same old story—we won. "I felt quite as if I was coming home, when I got into Duluth and always brag about having spent a summer here—and such a summer. I've not seen such weather since. It was glorious. "And now, tell me all its news." Here followed a broadside of ques tions and the Interview for the mat ter of extracting news from Miss Jenkins was at an end. Mr. Union. Man:—Notify your retail liquor dealer that the Bell 'Phone is Unfair. Mr. Union Man:—Notify your baker that the Bell 'Phone is Unfair. "GIGGLE WITH YOUR FEET" When the Preacher Said That the Young Folks Wished to Dance. A Methodist minister in Indiana who is a great admirer of Rev. William A. Quayle svas telling a story a few days ago of a lecture delivered by the minister which almost broke up a camp meeting. "It was at the Battle Ground camp meeting," the minister said. "Dr. Quayle spoke in the afternoon to a great audience. He. gave one of his delightful lectures on the duty of Christian living. He' told young and old that they should fill the world with gladness and the way he hammered the long-faced Christians was funny to behold. "There is no room in this world for gloomy Christians, he told them 'lift up your voices and shout and sing and giggle with your feet,' he said. "When Dr. Quayle finished his lec ture it was almost time for his train. He grabbed his suit case, which he took with him to the meeting and hur ried off to the railway station. "Then the camp meeting associa tion's troubles began. Some of the young people talked about dancing and they quoted Dr. uayle as saying a Qhristian might dance. 'Doesn't giggle with your feet mean dancing?' a young woman ar gued. 'Brother Quayle certainly didn't mean it that way,' replied one of the deacons. 'But he did say it, Indeed he did,' the young woman contended. "They went to the dictionary and found .the following: 'Giggle, to laugh, to titter.' Now,' said one of the young wo men, 'How can, your feet laugh and titter without dancing?' "The young people seemed so deter mined to dance that at last a young minister had to get into the pulpit and say: 'While Brother Quayle is not pres ent to speak for himself, his views are so well known to us all that there is Jio room for argument. He has cer tainly been misunderstood, for there is no minister of the Methodist Epis copal church who Is more seriously opposed to dancing than Is Brother Quayle.' "That put an end to the contention but at one time it looked Tike it might disrupt the meeting." Out of the Public.' When I was a very littlefboy, writes Sir William Gregory, my grandfather, who was then tinder-secretary for Ire land, took me to the chief secretary's room, in Dublin castle and formally introduced me to Lord Melbourne. After I had been with him for some little time, he said: "Now, my boy, is there anything here you .would like?" "Yes." I anstverered. pointing--to a very!lafge stick of sealing wax.. "That's right," said Lord Melbourne, pressing on me? a. bundle of pens, "be gin life early. All these things belong to the* public, and yoVir business must always be to g'et' but 'Of much as you can." 13 'the public as Why She Couldn't. "No, I didn't have a very good time," she said. "I wanted to talk, and there wasn't a man there." •"But there .were plenty of otheiu girls." 7 "Oh, of course, but-that was no-sat isfaction, for they all .-wanted to talk too."/ N RED GROSS PHARMACY WEST SUPERIOR STREET. QUALITY COMES FIRST. We ba*e th« well deserved rep utation of being one of the best and moat reU*»l* Drug Stores importance. For high grade prescription work, for drug store articles that are perfectly reliable and for prices unbeaten anywhere in the Northwest this store is the place. wn CARRY A mi. LDIB OF HOMO KIDB CNIOJT CIGARS. MAX WIRTH'S MD CROSS PHARMACY". 18 Wert Superior St. NEW BIJOU THEATER. Horn* Rtflmd Vaudtvillr. ILLUSTRATED SONGS. M0V1NQ PICTURES. 3 SHOWS DAILY a PRICES T$ SUIT THE MASSES 10, 15 & 20o. Good 8eats at 10e. PILES" Md In Duluth by S. P. Boyoa, for free ssmnlsb 1 SmoKe CLUB ROOM Union Label Five Cent CIGARS. DULUTH CANDY CO. Distributors. Ucfct Vi A eon (urutMi If yarn im "m Suppository •ftm -. moMm." Sr. a. D, MtOtn, CUrfei»«r(, ftu., WHIMI ptMtiM «t St jwn, I har« (ouid nat to I Hn, N 0Mb. Simple* Vim. 8*1* AllTIN RUDY, LANCASTER, M. K? TURKISH BATHS. A Turkish Bath will positively cure rheumatism, kidney trouble and. cold. Gentlemen's parlor, and ladies' parlors, 24 and 26 West Sup erior street. Open day and night. Both 'phones. SI. Z. KASSBIIR, Proprietor. PRIVATE HOSPITAL FOft LADIES. m. V. a. UliD, OltADCATBO Hrowipa Treatment of all Diseases Peculiar te Women. 418 Tth Aire. Duluth, Mlaa Zenith Phone 1225. Qj 1 pijer's Beer. ot'the people nm FOR THE PEOPLE 4IHBD ST THX PEOPLE FItger Brewing Co. FurflSsh Electric (Torrents W* I.IQHT AND MWBS. BY TliE AND Duluth Fashion Clvars are the best 10c smokes on the market? Well they are." Try them. For sale by all dealers. ir WAY Are you aware «t the fact that the LA VAN 1 \i