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12 -rv 'v An Impressive Moment. It was an impressive moment and one felt almost as if the people were hold- 1 guns in the navy .yard boomed twenty- royal salute. The King's Brief Speech. The king and his family who, from the roof of one of the p_alace wings, where they saw the home coming of Princess Margaret last summer, wit nessed the imposing spectacle, now came out on the balcony in front of the palace and received a tremendous ovation from the people. Afterwards this' was re peated in the yard of the palace, whef the people thronged to sing the national anthem and where the king appeared in a window trying to make a speech. But on account of the tremendous noise he was obliged to content himself with say ings, "Thanks, a thousand thanks, my dear friends." Ceremonies to celebrate the .event took place simultaneously all over the city, in the barracks, in the navy yard and in all the public schools, where a holiday afterwards was given. The Children at Skansen. A little after noon took place the children's parade at Skansen, the open air national museum of Sweden and the pride of Stockholm. The "school dren and the young people: electors tend. K- itfj\ SWEDENz&AILS HER NEW "CLEAN" FLAG Flag Day Is Impressively Observed in Stockholm and All Thru the Kingdom The Approaching Struggle over Electoral Reforms-Move to i Abolish First Chamber Possible. By HUGO VALLENTTN. Stockholm, Sweden, Nov. 1.The lst'ltion, of November will henceforth be cele brated as the flag day of Sweden. This morning at 9 o'clock the "clean" Swed ish flag, the blue ground with the yellow cross and without the union jack, in fact the old Swedish flag used before 1814, was hoisted all over the country and usually with impressive ceremonies. In this, of course, the capital took the lead. Altho the morning was dull and gray and a thick mist hung over land and water, large crowds assembled in the central parts of the city long before the appointed time to witness the cere mony. The crowds were densest around the royal palace, on whose roof stood a bluejacket beside the empty flagstaff. On the roofs of most public buildings, on the roofs of and in the windows of many private ones also men stood ready to hoist the new Swedish colors at the given signal. A SWEDISH CARTOON ON NORWAY'S NEW KING WILL HE DARE TO STEP' IN? Uncle Edward (In the lifeboat)Getrr In,' m"y: boy. There is no danger. I here. Prince Karl of DenmarkYes, but It seems rather cold. -Stockholm Puck. ing their breath. Just before 9 the J'liberal colleague and minister of .finance, steam whistles'of the mills and work- will not remain in the cabinet even if shops let their Shrill voices be heard, the other members, who are mostly of a blowing off work and reminding the conservative turn, should stay. The people of Stockholm what was about to happen. As *1WK-eloefes began to strike, i would then be filled, up, most.likely, by the royal flag on the palace roof two blank names and the so-called coahr mounted proudly up and in the next tion cabinet would in realty be a con- moment the whole town was flag-be- seryative one. That such a government decked, the principal streets showing could solve the franchise question in a long vistas of felue and yellow while the camechil- -b thousands and assembled 'round the reindeer mountain," where speeches always are made in this beautiful park. Here Professor Montelius, the celebrated antiquarian, in the presence of the king and bis family, after the,new flag had been hoisted and saluted with twenty one guns, made a fine speech, laying special stress on the fact that, altho the Swedes are always ready to. defend their country and their independence, they had shown and would show that they would not wage war against any other nation. Their love of the fatherland and of its flag they would show in peace ful work. Here, too, the king was loudly cheered. this, the restaurants and cafes are this, the restaurants and cafe are crowded and the guests give vent to their patriotic feelings by! constantly calling on the bands to play tn national anthem. A Battle for Franchise Reform." So the day has passed off well and one can only hope that the new. Sweden of Which the new flag is the symbol, will, be rejuvenated in other ways than by merely outward signs. To this end a real and thoro reform of the franchise* making the majority of the citizens mas ters in their own house, is absolutely necessary. The general elections this fall in no uncertain way indicated which way the wishes of. even the present Gut of 200,000 voters (Sweden has only about 300,000 voters out of an adult male population of l,560,t)0'0yv'120,- 000 voterssdeclared for a radical fran-, chise reform,', while 80,000'' declared] C against it,, of. for a reform^ with thel/ guarantee of proportional representa tioh. After this,, the king ought to have no difficulty in knowing where to look for his new cabinet. As you know, of 3.V course, the coalition cabinet where both parties met and where were found the leaders of both, had as its reason for ex istence the solution of the union ques- This being now practically settled:, the entire cabinet has tendered its resig' (the union aca ES tasked fiT^t'S&Ell', J^^gffitf ^t^n^f remain in office for some time, as he ,na i^public, his drama pie^ does not consider this vital question fo question)have altogethesamfinished. The cabinet: cannot the opin ion as its members promised to stay as long as was necessary* for the .final set tlement, and would not have tendered their, resignations until they considered that everything for whieh they had gone to work.was settled for good and all. The fulfilment of the. agreement with Norway can easily be looked after by any cabinet of any political shade. Pressure on the Liberal Members. To this-view Mr. Staaflf, leader of the liberal party and member of the coali tion cabinet, gave expression in an inter view which Dagens Nyheter presented two days ago. Altho great pressure has been brought to bear upon them, I am sure that both he and Mr. Biesert, his cies in the Lundeberg cabinet a satisfactory to the nation is im possible. one times, saluting the national emblem.1 (Since Mr. Vallentin wrote this let- The church bells-began tolling ioyous ter, the*king has in fact named a lib- peals, hats and caps flew in the air and era rousing cheers went:up from the crowds.' therefore, very -pertinent.:Editor Jour- In the harbor all vessels ran up the nal.) new colors. A man-of-war from Chile, Probable Course of the Liberals, here on a visit, followed the example, hoisting a big Swedish flag on her main-! Of course, even if the king asks Mr. mast and decking herself rainbow fash- i Staaff to form a liberal cabinet, it is ion, while she let her guns go in the very unlikely that such a government cabinet. The following comment is,, will be able to carry a franchise reform I thru the riksdag, as the first chamber certainly would veto it. But the impetus i thus given to the progressive majority il in the second chamber thru a liberal government will certainly carry* the "My New Discovery Quickly Cures Catarrh." C. E. Gauss. Catarrh As iiot only dangerous in this way, but it causes bad breath, ulceration, death and de cay of boves, loss of thinking and reasoning power, kills ambition and energy, often causes loss of appetite, indigestion, dyspepsia, raw throat and reaches to general debility, idiocy and. insanity. It needs attention at once. Cure it -with .Ciauss' atarrh Cure. It is a quick, rad ical, permanent cure, because it rids the sys tem of the poison germs that cause catarrh. In order to prove to all who are suffering from this dangerous and loathsome disease that Gauss' Catarrh Cure will nctually cure any case of catarrh quickly, no matter how long standing or how bad, I will send a trial package by mail free .of all cost. Send us your name and address today and the treatment will be sent you by re turn mail. Try it. It will positively cure so that you will be welcomed instead of shunned by your friends. C. E. GAUSS. 4333 Main St., ijarshall, Mich. Fill out coupon below. FREE This coupon is good for one trial package of -Gauss' Combined Catarrh Cure, mailed free in plain package". Simply fill in your name ana address, on dotted lines below and mail to C. E. GAUSS, 4333 Main Street, Marshall, Mich, Ss^* nSTTEKESTING MACHINES USED I N THE GOVERNMENT MINTSA MILLION PENNIES A DAY. Chicago Chronicle. V8^*L?* problem a long way on its road to Wpilitir is then dumpe^ into a receptacle Just iibn. If the government-passes a fs&n chise reform thru the second chamber and this is vetoed by the first, the lib eral cabinet will dissolve this reaction ary assembly. .If after a new election the first chamber returns as stubborn as before, the liberals will move the fight on to another plane. I will then be, as it was once in England: "Not, what:, will the lords do, but what shall we do with the lords.'' I fancy that the: first chamber is too fond of its own existence to let its resistance go too far. The spectacle just now witnessed in Russia is a not ill timed avis aux senateurs'' (notice to the senators).' Naturally enough, all here are very much interested in the course of affairs in Norway. Altho we really have noth 'ing to do with the matter, the .accession of a Danish prince to the Norwegian throne is not viewed with favor here. The conservatives, who cannot be sus pected of any great love for a republic, would perhaps not unwillingly see onecost in Norway, as they imagine that it would not make things easier for our former brethren. On the other hand, whichKonge-npoetao the a once prophesied would come as a letter by the post, should not dare, go to the length of their convictions and establish a republic at once. A great deal of fun has .been made of this here and T.send you a cartoon depicting .the situation taken from the political-comicwqekly, Puck. -vfc:..-.,v.,-..y UNCLE SAM, MONEYMAKER A million pennies a daythat' is the capacity of a strange machine which Uncle Sam uses in the Philadelphia mint to count the coin of smallest value made by this government. The machine, known as a counting table, is exhibited in the government building as a part of Uncle Yarn's $800 000 display.On the peninsula in Guild's Lake at the Lewis and Clark exposition. The counting board is about as large as a big kneading board such as house wives use. The surface of it is wide enough to hold a row of forty pennies. When the pennies are to be counted several thousand are heaped onto the board, which is placed above a hopper. Then the operator tips the board back ward and forward and sideways so that the pennies slide about, and finally set tle in the grooves made by the brass partition strips. "When the board is full there are 1,000 pennies on it. I ?'here For Street or Dress Wear You will find at NEW SHOE HOUSE 514 NIc.flv.,Next ta flndru* Bldg. Ladles' Gopher BootsNew gun metal calf, button and lace, patent colt and vici kid, per pair $3.50 Ladies' Pelt Shoes and warmS slipS-' I Overshoes, Alaskas and Rubbers- hape Style S an School Shoes Misses' box calf and vici kid lace and button, Goodyear^ A A A welt, sewed Misses' kid calf lace schoo ...........$1-5Wl 0 p^B:.perand I mmmu First News Section. & i ffTHE MINNEAPOLISJOURIJ&L* v: Sunday, November 19, igos. outside the H&pper -an# the .pennies which have slipped off the board into the hopper are caught by a box under neath. Pennies are coined at the Phila delphia -mint, ajtid^the..government finds the coining of'them profitable, because the value of the metal.they contain is only about three-fourths of a cent. ^he upsetting maehipSe is another in teresting mechanical, bntrivan:ee. I is used for turning thj$ edges of coins. The coin disks, oi the '-proper 'size and thickness, but with their edges still rough, are put into tubes. made to fit them. These tubes are placed upright beside a round-topped, revolving table. At each revolution of the table one of the disks drops into iji groove .between the table and an outer shell, and the pressure on the edges of the jlisks makes }th,4mtnloota. ^"i 5 Stamprn# the coin is the last" process, and this is done by means of a great machine which weight-fifteen tons and $15,000. There "are twenty-four such machines in the Philadelphia mint. The disks which are to be coins are placed in a tube,- as in the case of the upsetting machine. Two steel fingers take hold of'the bottom disk and move it over the die. Then the die above, presses down on the disk so that the im pression is made on both sides. At the same time the edges of the disk are milled and when the upper die raises the steel fingers push -the finished coin out of the way and bring a disk into position. The machine at the Portland exposi tion, which is used in stamping $20 gold pieces, has a" capacity of ninety a min ute. A pressure of: 180 tohs is neces sary to stamp' a silver dollar* but 130 tons' pressure will stamp a double* eagle..- Smaller coins require less pres sure. In connection with the exhibit at the western world's fair coins of this year's make in all denominations except the silver dollar are displayed. None of the mints is now coining dollars, be-r cause the government has on hand 600,- 000,000, which are being held for the urpose of redeeming silver certificates, is also on exhibition at Portland the first coining press ever used by the. United States governmenta crude ma-, chine, which was operated by hand and" was used in 1793. for" making copper pennies. 'HTEE TOURISTS:) T? -Philadelphia: Press.' ''Miss Blassay is the queerest gfriif ever met so eccentric, you know. She told me she haa'beeh out of town for several months." "Ye s, she's been traveling in Eu- rope." ""That's what I mean She1 Men's Gopher wearing and never told me that I found it, out from some |n else." When the kinj^ vi Siam has on his full regalia he is Supposed to repre sent an outlay of more than $1,000,000.^ Shoes The *esfc| nKtst stylish shoes made, all styles, all & E A leathers, per pair,...'NJOBv" Prices from. and styles to be ^orn this winter. Prices s low as|ossibleAior.*firs Remember, Boys and Girls, an elegant Pocket Knife with every, pair of School Shoes. FullasBortmentofallthenew8hape Young Men You are especially invited to inspect our new shapes this fall. They aire snappy and fit like gloves To Oklahoma, Indian Territory, Kansas, Colorado, Texas, Arkansas, Louisiana ':t Mississippi, Alabama, Etc., Via the Minneapolis & St Louis O Tickets on^alttrN^^aiber^,J^J^VrdPMi Oklahoma, O. and re turn IS 18.20 Fort Worthy Texas/ and return ..:.v'..". i $21.50 Galveston, Texas, and return .-...'.,.^...$28.15 El 'Paso, .Texas',and re turn $33.35 Dallas, -Texas and re turn $21.50 dTess, A. B. OXJTTS, ^%d ,*^Gen. Pass. & Tkt.fi return 3 School Shoes Boys! blizzard calf, double sole to heel, the best wearing shoe made. Try one pair you will have no other Boys' box calf school shoes, good serviceable soles, pair. $2 FREE re- Cubaif and 'fl-^'- Havani _turjr Mobile, iXAil&y^r^d turn^ -','-.^^L.... New' Qrleans', 5^!La., and return Z.. }& $^5j50 Mexico City,.'j^ex5., $605 re-4 'and, :J Correspondingly low rates to other ^points in states named^ajJoyeVUalfe I eral limits and stop-over privileges granted. For particulars call*"%i^or^d :^^jJfs (A. J, G. BIC ^f''42fk] MinneapolisiJiSpainji ..$53i85 Denver, Col., i^aid 'Ten* -vturn .1.. $25.70 pi .Avenue^ js ?w Minneapolis, ,M| Jleprets of Clothes j' 'If your'food is adulterated,you Have right to know it. If the Clothes you buy are not hon* estly made, then it is also your privilege to knofa it1 so that you can hereaftei avoid the Spurious, in favor of Clothes Sincerely made. In this age of Investigation and seeking after truth, we feel-that it Is necessary to tell the Public the secrets oi Clothes-making.- Is it enough ^to'tell.^ you'that the Styles: axe absolutely correct? You. are able to- determine that lot^^ yourself.'',. Is it finqu^A .-tb tell you* that if you buy a certain iriake of Clothes that you will look.jtisf^lis^*'swell'' as.the. menlin:ithe picturesr^r We think net.. %^:-:,-4r-- There's a great deaV of hocus-pocus about such statements. We believie that the Intelligent, Thinki Ing men ot.today want to know more about the" WAY Clothes are made. It is fairly astounding to realize that SO fer'cent, of "All'*'Clothes receive final* Shaping M)ih. the ai.'*f o- the Ho Flat- I, iron.v.: In other wdrds, the errors that nat urally occur in the making of Clothes are corrected by Flat-iron Shrinking oi Stretching. This process, so widely employed, answers the. purpose TEMPORARILY -^ti|I^he goods are sold. ^Butyoti 1 know the results otthis kind of tailoring when you wear S Fiat' Iron-shaped Coat on a Damp day. The moisture uncovers the DEFECTS, of course. What more can you expect It is the Cure-all method of the Cloth ing business. It saves money for the maker. But it is a Fraud, nevertheless Accepted-by 80 per cent, of the Clothes buying public. Faults creep into the making of "SIN- CERITY CLOTHES too but Listenl we correct the errors by Needle-Revision, by good, honest hand-stitching. Therein lies the great Difference. That is thS reason why "SINCERITY P^W$V:retain their Shape^uiitil worn threadbare,and why dartipness does not cause the lapel to bulge away from the vest,or the back to wrinkle\ or look humpy over your shoulder-blades, or the arm-holes to bind. There is hot a Seam that escapes the searching -Inspection of "Sincerity" Ex* aminer8 after the Clothes leave the Tailor's hands. If a flaw is found,and there are some even in "SING E I CLOTHES"^ this stagethe gar meat goes to the REVISION ROOM, afid there is corricted by careful Hand- Needle-Work.^ ,...^J,,.J Jjj 'Itcosts44w*..fe do-it thi'a'way,rr-but it produces "SINCERITY CLOtHES," in all that the name implies. If you want SINCERE tailoring-^if it's wprth anything to you to get it,then gos to a "SINCERITY'* DEALER. If yqtt have any. trouble in getting what 'yon ^wanlv we will furnish you the name iqt a "SINCERITY" Dealer. ^#he/X^EL in SINCERITYi pLC-THE^" reads as follows: KUH, NATHAN & FISCHER CO. CHICAGO From the most healthy cows, grazing in the most fertile and purest pastures, made, thoroughly clean and absolutely pure through our pasteurizing" and clarifying process, is what you get when you buy the BOTTLED WEL From the MINNEAPOLIS MILK CO. 902-906 Sixth Street South. Send roar Nameand Address Today. S Holiday Edition Dpaldson's Catalogue aiaiMiJ:&ias^^i^i^^E:Ni WILLIAM DONALDSON & CO.* Minneapolis. -^^w^ This EditionContains Illustrations and Descriptions of Toys' and Merchandise Suitable for Christmas Presents. Send for It Now Toys and bolls Sporting Goods Leather Goods Hoasefumishing8 House Goats, Robes Ladies' Belts Fancy Toilet Sets Comb and Brush Manicure Sets Jewelry Fans Silverware Books THOUSANDS OF IDEAS AND SUGGES- TIONS FOR CHRISTMAS PRESENTS. WE SEND THIS CATALOGUE FREE and To Ont-of-ToTrn Customers. The Way to Tell a Good Piano is to FORCE IT! Many pianos have an agree able tone quality under light playing. Few makes will stand Forcing One is conscious of "striking botto m" in many pianos where the surfaee tone re veals a pretty singing quality. True test When the tone retains its musical qualities under heav ier forcing, the piano shows perfect scale and solid .con struction. The Everett Is pre-eminent for its depth, purity and refinement of tone as, well as solidity of con struction. I will stand and please under, the most exact ing tests. DIAMOND BARGAINS Our regular $25 and $30 Tiffany and Belcher 14k Gold Kings, mounted with a Perfect White Diamond While they last only $18.00 and $20.00. Other jewels sold at similar reductions. PflEQEL JEWELRY MF6. CO., 22 Third Street S. Tou cover the field thoroughly when you advertise in Minneapolis' leading & newspaperThe Journal.