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it I fctf' ,1 'I li -IS I***-i if a.* sfei Little Girl's Obstinate Case of Eczema Instantaneous Relief By CuticuraLittle Boy's Hands and Arms Mso Were a Mass of Torturing Sores Grateful Mother Says: "CUTICURA REMEDIES A HOUSEHOLD STANDBY" "In reply to your letter I write you my experience, and ypu are privileged to use" it as you see fit. Last year, after having my little girl treated by a very prominent physician for an obsti nate case of ecaema, I resorted to the Cuticura Remedies, and was so well pleased with the almost instantaneous relief afforded that we discarded the physician's prescription and relied en tirely on the Cuticura Soap, Cuticura Ointment, and Cuticura Tills. When we commenced with the Cuticura Rem edies her feet and limbs were covered with running sores. In about six weeks we had her completely well, and there has been no recurrence of the trouble. In July of this year a little boy in our family poisoned, nis hands and arms with poison oak, and in twenty-four hours his hands and arms were a mass of torturing sores. Wo used only the Cuticura Kennedies, washing his hands and arms with the Cuticura Soap, and anointed them with the Cuticura Oint ment, and then gave him the Cuticura Resolvent. In about three weeks his hands and arms healed up so we have lots of cause for feeling grateful for the Cuticura Remedies. We find that the Cuticura Remedies are a valuable household standby, living as we do twelve miles from a doctor, and where it costs from twenty to twenty-five dol lars to come up on the mountain. Respectfully, Mrs. Lizzie Vincent Thomas. Fairmount, Waiden's Ridge, Tenn., Oct, 13, 1905." Complrt* External and Interna! Treatment lor Xrtitj Humor, from I'liuplei Scrofula, from Infnfy to Age, consisting of Cuticur* Soap, 25c, Wntmant, JOc, Raeolv nt, :-0c. i In torn of Choenlat* Coaled Pills, 25c. per vial of mar be had of all dTUgplete. A fioglo nU the incut 'iiMrraeing casrn vrlifn all else falli. Totter Drug Ohcm. Corp., Pole Prop.. Botton, Man. KT" Mailed Free. How to Cure Torturing, DUaguitaf flumore,'' and 'The Urea: Skin Book." MANAGERS GOING SOME Orpheum Tourists Go from Chicago to to Detroit in Daylight Run. Across Illinois, Indiana and Michi gan in the short half of a day is the stvie of auto driving to which G. E. Raymond, resident manager of the Or pheum theater, is beingtreated by Gen eral Manager Martin Beck of the Or pheum Circuit company. Messrs. Beck and Ravmond are enroute to New York by the auto route, and from the fol lowing telegram it would appear that the Beck touring car is sustaining its reputation: "Detroit, Mich., July 8. ''Enrl C. May, Orpheum Theater, Minneapolis: Record run. Arrived here 6 tonight. Left Chicago this morn ing. "Martin Beck, G. E. Raymond." DIES OF HIS INJURIES. Frank C. tiodbout. tne St. Vaul naekdrlver In jured, in i rminwnj- last Friday, died at the St. Paul city hospital yesterday. He was 25 years of nge and resided at 272 Central avenue. St. Paul. Pentli resulted from a fracture of the Skull. MAYOR SIGNS BOND ORDINANCE. Mayor Smith of St. Paul yesterday Blgned the St. Paul ordinance for the Issuance of $100,000 bonds for the new Fort Snelllng bridge over the Mississippi, thus assuring the bridge's construc tion. Woman's Trials. The bitter trail in a woman's life is t be childless. Who can tell how hard tha struggle may have been ere she learnt to resign herself to her lonely lot? The ab sence of this link to bind marital life together, the absence of this one pledge to mutual affection Is a common disap pointment. Many unfortunate couples become estranged thereby. Even If they do not drift apart, one may read the whole extent of their disappointment In the eyes of such a childless couple when they rest on the children of others. To them the largest amilydoes not seem too numerous. In many cases of barrenness or child lessness the obstacle to child-bearing is easily removed by the cure of weaknesfon the part of the woman. Dr. Pierce's Fa vorite Prescription has been the means of restoring health"and fruitfulness to many a barren woman, to the great joy of the household. In other, but rare cases, the obstruction to the bearing of children has been found to he of a surgical character, but easily removable by painless operative treatment at the Invalids' Hotel and Sur ical Institute. Buffalo, N. Y., over which Pierce of the "Favorite Prescription" fame presides. In all cases where chil dren are desired and are absent, an effort should be made to find out the real cause, since it is generally so easily removed by proper treatment. In all the various weaknesses, displace ments, prolapsus, inflammation and de bilitating, catarrhal drains and In all cases of nervousness and debilltv, Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is the most efficient remedy that can possibly be used. It has to its credit hundreds of thousands of curesmore in fact than any other remedy put up for sale through druggists, especially for woman's use. The ingredi ents of which tho "Favorite Prescription is composed have received the most positive endorsement from the leading medical writers on Matcrki Medica of all the several schools of practice. All the Ingredients are printed in plain English on tho wrapper enclosing the bottle, so that any woman making use of this famous medicine may know exactly what Bhe is taking. Dr. Pierce takes nis pa tients into his full confidence, which he can afford to do as the formula after which the "Favorite Prescription" is made will beai the most qareful exam ination. Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets are thw est and safest laxative for women. SJW^TO yt City News DR. TODD PLEADS FOR SANE FOURTH SUGGESTS ORDINANCE ABOLISH ALL FIREWORKS. President of Hennepin County Medical Association Shows that Many Griev ous Injuries Result from Powder Burns or ExplosionsCities Which Prohibit All Fireworks Report Pew Casualties. cago with 159 an long lists. Pass a citv ordinance abolishing fireworks of all descriptions and escape the sad aftermath of the Fourth of July." This is the advice of Dr. Frank C. Todd, president of the Hennepin Coun- j0pk business opportunities in Bu ty Medical association, and in his stand j he receives the support of Many Min neapolis physicians. The movement to abolish fireworks on the Fourth started in the east and in Baltimore and Buffalo all noise and pyrotecnic exhibitions are unlawful. Baltimore and Buffalo bovs, as a re sult, consider themselves the most abused young Americans in thtj coun try, but statistics show that there were no dead in either city as an aftermath of the 1906 Fourth, and there were re markably few injuries. Would Abolish All Fireworks. In speaking of the local situation. Dr. Todd said: I am, and have been for some time past in favor of abolishing fireworks of all descriptions on the Fourth or any other holiday. I have seen too many of the horrible results of the Fourth of July celebration to be in sympathy with the fireworks and gunpowder. I have taken both eyes from a 16-year-old boy who was in jured in the celebration of the Fourth, and a -year never goes by that some body's sight is not partially or. totally destroyed. "The matter has been brought be fore the oculists at the American Med ical association meetings, and Dr. Ran dolph of Baltimore, who succeeded securing the passage of the Baltimore anti-fireworks law, has. quoted statistics showing the remarkable decrease in in juries since the ordinance was passed. Why can the Minneapolis council not pass an ordinance similar to that in effect in.Baltimore! If enforced, it would materially lessen the number of Minneapolis casualties, and when you think it all over, we could celebrate the Fourth just as patriotically with out noise and pyrotechnics. Do a Tnoro Job. "There should be no half-way meas ure about it. .Pass a law prohibiting the use of all kinds of fireworks, big and little. I am glad to see that there were fewer casualties in Minneapolis this year than last, but while you.have fireworks you will have injuries, and if there is a possible way of averting these injuries, let us seize upon it. Dr. Todd's statements in regard to the decrease of injuries in Baltimore are borne out by this year's casualty statistics. Only five people wore in jured in Baltimore, and in Buffalo, where an anti-fireworks law prohibits fireworks, six people were reposed in jured in comparison with Mlnesrpolis, where thirty-one were injured, Milwau kee with 77, Bridgeport with 114, Chi other cities showing FIXES WOMEN'S RIGHTS ATTORNEY GENERAL AMPLHIES RECENT RULING CONCERNING PRIMARY-ELECTION LAW. Politicians, male and female, have taken a deep interest in the recent rul ing of Attorney General Young con cerning the right of women to vote at the primaries. In a further ruling made yesterday, Mr. Young affirms his former state ment, but announces that there is noth ing to prevent a woman filing as a can* didate for any office to which she is eligible. Some county auditors have taken the stand that, as women can not vote at the primaries, they cannot be candidates, but this is settled by the attorney general's ruling made yes terday in reply to a query from Miss Mary A. Hanson, superintendent of schools of Becker county. The opinion is as follows: In your favor of the 7th Inst, you refer to my opinion, recently published, holding that as the law now stands women cannot Tote at primary electionn or participate in making party noml nations for the office of county superintendent of schools, and you ask whether in view of that fact they are precluded from filing for such nom inations. You also call my, attention to section 186 of the revised laws of 1905 on the subject. The right to vote for and hold offices per taining to schools and libraries conferred on women by the constitution, should be vigorously protected but it must be borne in mind that there is a wide difference between an ejection and a primary. At the one, officers are chosen by the public at the other, nominees are chosen by a political party. The primary election is simply a substitute for a political convention. No one has a right, to vote at a party primary who could not b&ve participated In a convention before conventions were dispensed with. If the primary law were repealed we would have again to resort to con ventions, and there women could not participate unless the law expressly so provided. The pri mary law conferred no more rights on women thaii the? had before. In other words, there never has been any law enacted allowing them to participate in making party nominations. Our supreme court, in 87 Minn., 221, held that the word "election." ns contained In the con stitution, was not intended to mean a primary, where the purpose of the proceeding was merely to m'ake nominations. It would then. I think, be highly proper to.( permit women to assist in nominating the of fleers ther have a right to vote for at the election, but the primary law Is defective In not providing how.it may e done. Section 1S6, revised laws of 1005, seems to Imply that they may vote, but section 102, which prescribes the: qualifications of voters, makes it impossible. The law ought to. and no doubt will, be amend ed at the next session to remedy the defect. But women may be candidates for the nomi nation and may be legally nominated nt the. pri maries, as they frequently were nominated at party conventions. In state vs. Ella Gordon, S3 Minn., 845, our supreme court held, under the -anomalous condi tion of the law on tb subject, that a woman could hold the office of county superintendent, altho because of a defect In the law women could not then vote at the general election. "Sightseers' BxcnrsionV To the Great Wheat Belt of the North west. July 9 to 14 inclusive the Great Northern railway will sell round trip tickets from St. Paul and Minneapolis to all points oh their lihe in North Da kota east of Minot, and all points in Minnesota north and west of Brecken ridce, Glyndon and Dugdale, for $13.30, with final return limit of July 31, 1906. Stopovers will be permitted at any point within the prescribed territory. For further information write city ticket office, corner 3d and Nicollet, av. Harvest Sight-Seeing Excursions via the Sbo Iilne. STANLEY WASHBDRB IS RESTING IN MINNEAPOLIS Stanley Washburn, globe trotter, war correspondent, and worthy son of an ilustriouR family, has dotermined to "be good,*' and settle down in Minne apolis for a while. He has been in St. Petersburg, Carls bad, Paris and London since he left Minneapolis in the spring and arrived here Monday morning. Altho he was in St. Petersburg when Senator W. D. Washburn, his father, had an audience with the czar, he did not participate. He was with the family at Carlsbad for some time, however. Stanley says modestly that any man who can cover a newspaper city run well, finds it a snap to be a foreign correspondent, thereby inadvertently casting an encomium upon his experi ences- as a local newspaper man in Min neapolis, and at the same time making a high standard for members of a local staff. Altho Mr. Washburn had intended to up business opportunities in Rus sia when he left the United States, wr 4 On July 9th to 14th, inclusive, the Soo tine will sell round-trip tickets to stations Carrineton to Portal, inclu sive Porman to Garrison and Pollock, inclusive Thief Kiver Falls to Ken mare and Emerson, inclusive, at rate of $13.30, tickets being good to return until July 31^ JL906. For further e lerf the Unite State eWThis Defective Page Tuesday Evening '^^W^W" THE MlNNEAPOLI^dlJRNAi ^gfWI'' July igoCi On Friday A Trip That Will Be a Trent The famous "Twin City Fleet" of new^ fast, staunch Perry, Express and Excursion Boats tis now ready to make its formal bow to the public, FRIDAY OF THIS WEEK an "Illuminated Boat Parade" will be given in which all the handsome Twin City Rapid Transit boats will take parU. At 8:30 p. m. the Puritan, with Rossiter^R First Regiment Band aboard, will lead the way f: torn the Excelsior docks. Then will follow a paradie of all the lighted boats that will be interesting and de lightful. Tho Rowt __^_^ A TEAPO*** TES'T WILL SHOW CIGAR EDITORIALS -No. 5 In the making of GOOD CIGARS there are three primary requisites: First-The knowing ho^rthat's KNOWLEDGE. SecondThe proper facilities that's EQUIPMENT.* ThirdWanting to do#itthat's DISPOSITION. If but a single one of these factors is 'lacking in a manufacturing organization a good product is impossible. i It is the possession of thesja three essential elements, together with the ne pessary capital in- telligently applied, that has rmtde it possible for the American Cigar Company to improve cigar values to such a great extent^ during the past CEYLON AMD INDIA GREEN TEA he finds conditions too uncei tain in that country for commercial in Itiative, and has temporarily abandoned the plan. "Matters are too uncertairt over there, and I see they are growing worse," he said yesterday. think the douma will be a fiasco, ini 'that it TO BE SUPERIOR TO ANY JAPAN TEA Lead Packets Only. 6 0c and 70c per lb. HIGHEST AWARD, S T. LOUIS, 1904. improvement in quality is particularly evident in such a well-kna-frn cigar as the Anna Held now sold at 5cfthis brand repre- sents a value formerly sold ait 10c. This "A" (Triangle A) Meitit Mark on a box of cigars is the sign by whffch this improved quality may be known.-4^ The three sides of this Ttfiiangle are of equal length and Stand for "Krmukjdge, Equipment and Disposition. This "A" mark 'is insurance to the smoker that these three essential factors have been applied to give the sixioker honest cigar values. sand on A all Qrocers'. will never amount to much: It has been thrown as a sop to the people, but they have taken the meat out of it.' LEAD, S. D.W. A. Qulmby has just received word thnt the lovlnj cup presented to Mrs. Phoebe Hearst by citizens of Lead two years ago was destroyed In the San Kranelso earth quake. He Is requested to duplicate the cup, which Mrs. Hearst vnlued most highly. timary AMERICAN CIGAR COMPANY, Manufacturer to the gallant oarsmen from St. Paul, Winnipeg, Dukth, Rat Portage, Port Arthur and Fort William. lithe weather should prove unfavorable on Friday, thi Parade will occur on Saturday evening, a^., 41111 1 njoy^ ins raraoc w*i*wwwwawewa^ipHiA THE BAND WILL PLAYSEARCHLIGHTS WILL FLASHTHE BOATS WILL PASS IN RE VIEW, and for V/2 hours the most interesting boat parade ever given on Minnetonka will take place. "The Twin City Fleet" is the Electric Lighted Fleet and the effect will be indespribably beautiful. 'THE TWIN Clf FLEET." FERRYBOATS. MinneapolisSaint PaulMinnetonka EXPRESS BOATS Como, Harriet, Hopkins, Minnehaha, Stillwater, White Bear. EXCURSION BOATS. PuritanPlymouthMayftower. Treat yourself to an exhilarating Electric Car Trip In the early evening to lijnetonka, throngli the meet beautiful meadow, lake and hllUointry in all Amerlea, a^ the most entertaining features ever offered the good people of the Twin Cities. ,/J TrpT.A wn ^v ATLANTIC CITY, N. ATLANTIC CITY. N. Electric Car Round Trip, Minneapolis to the Lake and Return, including seat ticket on steam- ers to enjoy the great 1 1-2 hour Boat Parade TheHolelDennis ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Handsome new fireproof addition fully completed. Noted for its choice, location, with an un obstructed ocean view, for the liberality of its appointments and careful service. Write for Illustrated Booklet and Rates WALTER J. BUZBY THE "TRIANGLE Merit Mark Insures Honest Cigar Values- The New Cremo Wictoria Size-5 Cents is a splendid demonstration of this modern sys- tem of cigar-making which has, within the last few years, by applying processes never before attempted in the culture and development of tobacco, completely revolutionized the methods of the cigar industry. Guesswork has given way to certainty and cigars produced underour system costthe smoker no more than the ordinary kinds made in the usual haphazard way. Tickets on Sale Wednesday Morning at Ticket Off ice. Will be given at the Tonka Bay Hotel on Friday and Sat- urday afternoons and "The Twin City Illuminated Boat Parade" will be given on Friday evening as a compliment C'^iiiii^.w. -i 0 Event BOA PARADE 50c Tickets will be good only on electric ears leav ing ticket office, 13 North 6th street, ON FRIDAY EVENING, BETWEEN 6 AND 7:30 p.m. Return ing, ON ANY CARS SAME EVENING. Ticket sale will be limited to seating capacity of boats and when seats are sold no more passengers will be taken. It is therefore necessary to buy tickets in advance. i* :t*