helical hem-do remote er 0. thie plotter. hem "g neolotlonuy pleeh or the neveetion in mocha vehem- - he nmted iheit ednpiioe. 0o . h â€I be defended ihe mum . . m el ovevthrowine the lute. Ed.) 0! the nmlee snort, It then he ‘ ~ ("it which he grown for the teen-t «on Name on o! m nâ€"j .~ he “nun ihei it ie poeeihte ‘ fl 0. moieeiioe 0! en ledevndeet P “I to am the mm. of â€1 Client eel protect than eeierel F m mine: on teveeiee "on m gum n however poweriol F†be the eniegoniling eleoente. g h than. to which I tenet oonlee ny- g,‘ height I on do nouns he: ex- is. “e Chet one oneetion which Ir. he ht-eel «mm to he the ever- :m Into 0! ihie compeign l ' e Into vealed when I reed thie . Item l-t whet It. Bryn by... will he the mm of e h the med-re oi velne t thie country . .nnmthihemnmn ’H II. Bryn could ehow no thet by -.nnmwetohnveeoroe , ' Conn-Id he incteued I will My to eepport him. beanee i ' u no tee: of emperity absolute- _'_~el|hle except the rete at wages b inure When we come to hww Ir. Bryon (229ch to increeee men of lebor we and ourselves h e men of contradiction. No . toil how or where or when the of the .011!an ere to be inâ€" : bet on no who examine the an no thd the inevitabie ten- ». , the inevitehle connquence of I'eheueent in the eteedetd of nine he e reduction in the rote of .d that in the conspiracy In Io mints ere enticed“ lb PHI to Chem the Bethe. ‘Iew, Ir. Bryon tom no the he a.“ to dance- the doller; me he I" b tween-e the votune of money. Old believe the: my men who ever eeele Quite unceretend e pope- yhet money is; further whjieva it in e deetrehie ‘6 thet he in not very e means by which - on n. mum to ' gen-ion then the mistake um " "hi roperty ere identian. They ' Then only be A very lame , u medie- eel very . . The knee of mar my to no dam on km of ‘ ‘ the tune by on tndtvidnel ’ . note would ehow en " d lb We M I W ' n hue-n {h ï¬e enlisted to 'efen tween ie mom. that ‘ e drone mi of e deereeee to .f flint the volume or money. - ‘ m of money Get onete. QQQEUiz‘OEleas-enu-nou- 'l-te-ez 1 â€We would look in vain through the pooch dolivered here one week ago to an I In. statement of the issue in- flict! in thin canvass. Indeed, I be. In. a is doubtful it the candidate “quite undomtunds the nature of 1.0 mm which he professes. I say IM- Iot in criticism or his ability. but 'h Mica to his morality. I believe {lot it to himself understood the in- Cm consequence: of the doctrine this. he reaches. his own hands , "Id In the very lint to tear downthe '- [lotion- on which he stands. We nil ,QI‘ remember thot lurid rhetoric Ilia glowed u (lonely in tho weltorn ,_ fli- no that sunlight which through 9 Ito H wool foretold tlto torrid lint » d tho ensuing tin; and hero upon this â€on: u iind tint some rhetoric u did. u inllpid no the water: of o out-4 m' I. lie to a candidate who no no ihlto the nomiontion by n one o! â€*1 onthunium nynkeood by ap- polo' to pnludico nod need. He too mt. rig mm tint thin to! o molotluuuy lion-out. no nooaor hid Ilmult taco to “1:0 with the m feeling thou he mllud tint 0h nil in oot propiuotn to revolu- lluâ€"(Int tho â€out. oi thb country .- not ohm tho imitation which hit load (to into oud experiences at Q do†ior intuition- honed upon .0 Wk dram of populist ulto- “ lht tho Munich notion will wan-oat to uuhatituto for the n- “ at “national. of “Com Ind im- m mom. a n mum, Imuutnrnn." ‘ ’Mr clap nu hu- main Lil“ vagina-1min. €12. Chairman. ladies and Gentte- ’ applause): With the inspiring e! that national son. still Ham 1 on! are. who can doubt the .ï¬le of this campaign? (Applause) m at all verbal disguise it is on he at common honestyâ€"an issue he- .“ eh honest discharge and the m repudiation of public and pri- ‘, "ohliaetlons. it is a question as to Mother the pawns oi this government m he used to protect honest indusâ€" _m I to tempt the citizens to dishon- fly. (in this question honest men allot tiller. it is one oi morals and Se! Mice. it involves the existence at 1 new order. it ls the contest (or civil- ' bani! itself. '1 Opens ï¬re on Brynn. . â€We would look in vain through the .eeoh delivered here one week ago to I“ s use statement oi the issue in- some in this canvass. Indeed. l he- vaed st lsdison Square Gsrden. New York. Tuesdsy evening. Au. is. in ' ' reply to William J. Bryen‘ s speech“ the week previous. ] to. I can tske s 310 gold piece and I can defy all the power oi all the gov- ernmente oi this earth to take 5 eentsoi value irorn it. Hsvins earned it by the sweet of my brow, having earned it by the exercise oi my hrsin. hsvinx earned it by the exchnnge of my commodities. I can so to the uttermost. ends oi the earth. end wherever I present it its value will he unquestioned end unchsl- ‘ longed. That [old doilsr. this meeting, the democratic party. the honest mess- es oi this country. Without distinction oi party divisions, demand shall 'be paid to the laborer when he earns it, and that no power on earth shall cheat him of the sweet oi his brow. It is periectiy clear that the purpose at the populist is to put up the prices at cer» tain commodities. Mr. Bryan's isn- gnsxe is that he is going to improve the conditions oi the people oi this country. Now. it he got possession of 1" ohllfltlons. It is a quentï¬on as to Mar the pawn-a 01' till: xniernment m be and to protect honest Indusâ€" _0:' I to tempt the citizens to dishon- ‘1. On this question honest men allot (ï¬ler. It Is one of morals and d “In. It involves the existence of ' huh! odor. It In the contest (or civil- " hum Itself. i BOURKE-.BOGKMN’S' ’ SPEEGH vwnhuiunnunuu‘ unvaanrcâ€! ‘huh - dfll clo- About m lam-o. wmmmumumer of Nah-uh II «flaring under the Wt 91 t m contacted under Inï¬llï¬léh In: mm mm in who in but t populism manor. mm!- at the lumen In“ no "Ir. Brynn would in" you believe that pro-verity In Inn-cod by cheap.- In the role at was. hot the MI in the rule of won: olwr'u «one. from o narrow production. no narrow produc- tlonmticnhltthdemudfor llbor II the hunt. When, alter the male 0! If", the price of labor fell to ’0 cant- I day, It was harder to obtain labor than when the rate of labor wu :2. and the dtflerenee between the pop- mm. who seeks to cut down the nu of wuss. and the democrat. who seeks to protoet it. in tint the dmocrnt believes that high wagon Ind prosperity are anonymous. and tho populist want; to cut the rote of wnggg In order that he mly tempt tho tumor to make at upon his own workingmen. Who Am the (fr-alto"? “Now. the populist loves to say that the creditor In a person who oppreoaeo tho I tumor; the creditors of ttm ' are not the bankers; they are not the Io-afled «mull-ts; they are the uhororu, and It in u the ex- ypenu or labor thtt thi- chango II male. The Inhorer to always I end- ttor for a tent on day‘ a work. When any m cashew m a “but" who has been â€M h “moo for I day's work I will show him a laborer who II I. debtor. The laborer In, by the very hwdhlmtmtoruhut one «n m m WWW], t cred {tor tor a woek'a work or two weeka' work. Every [rut industrial enter- prtu has tor m cud creditor-w m own laborers The hunted iceonw't In every What 0! Industry what- ever it any be, h than the wage: mot. In his. u would w 10 pr on: In «mm M mm W bu. ad (on. â€my" «2" we would all. '9 would In My In lln an 1.va Hon. fluo- btl n h Km ll not the Ian. I. t conclusion which m- populm moi-Hon cola-pm... “mu. an. In In It I. n Inca- In (I. am. ol mm.- ud ulo'u In Inc: to III“. (at lull. I! (I. prion o! cot-nodal. h hem-ad and (M price I! labor in kn “nanny. why. um man u mum do" of no run at can I! lull“ at a dollar In!“ eon-Inn of n .m- gummy t! [old can! to It. can "cry-hm In the world, wlu: ll. mm“ m at m cant-Ahab": “any.“ II dolhn worth IO can sch, why. to can only m In" .- noel 'III I day'- nm a lo inn now. 'Wmâ€"unen.‘ Ir. Bryn An. 'ho' nu nu. a gold undue “ the "ram-c roun- of tho dollar 1: do. Into It more dual: u ohm. We: 0! nm doll-r. They I". an unlov- men In M.- pom-mt. to. of work more mmk ud "away-at h- cemm.‘ "A novel-amt never can be gener- ous, News. It I! be moron: Io one It mm In W" to â€other. not M- anuel-t when coma-plat" III In» cm» In tho price of attain coal-odi- tlou. “'0 an coming no! pm" clean to m. voodplk behind which an A!- rlcnn l- conoo-lad. Now, I! everything In this world, or in nu. country, In- cluln' later, be lucmudh ulna to- mmov I m. wrap, pot on on I‘ w blue!“ u’ut' ll ovary- m‘umflnwuwmu lthe gov v“ T-to-morrow he would not cmï¬néï¬fmm thins of value by may exercise of governmental power in the world. No power ever yet exer- cised by tyrant or by constitutional monarch can cause a bsrren ileid to become irnltlul; can cause two blades oi grass to grow where one grew be- (on; can bring together the «tones that compose this buildinx and raise them into n stetely temple dedicsted to po- litical discussion. No. it requires the labor 0! men. and the lsbor oi mnn‘ alone, to create wealth. it Mr. Brysn ‘ is going to enrich somebody, the thing which he means to bestow on him be must'teke nom somebody else. Who is to be tie-police snd who is to be en- riched by the exercise of this new scheme at government? (A cry of “Bil. vet-mine ovum") My friends, the silver-mine own: will set chested with the sat. by a chm; but by the whole nation. Wilt labor ha [lined that shall it keep. The rIte of wages paid to it to- day is the lowest rate we will ever 1 willingly accept. We look forward to a further and further increase in the prosperity of workiagmem not merely by an increase in the daily wage.hu£ by I further increasing in the purchasing power oranges. Men who tell us that the prices of term nrodncte have fallen and that the farmer for that reason is I sufferer forget that while the price of wegee has risen oil the term the efldeacy of labor has increased; that the coat of production has been reduced through the aid of machinery, while the wage. of the individual lIhorer may have r'iIen. While wages remain at their present rate 1 hope there will he I further and further continuance 0! decrease in the cost 0! living. There bu min which lean bead-mm! toIghI‘not dod- bounty use» "In a convention of extremists the uncut extreme will deny- be talented (or n lender. Your min are not bail. I merely desire to all the atten- tion 0! this gathering to the cbmcter of that speech. to the underlying spirit that pervedee it. end then to ask the wall-men of this country. to an the cltlnene of this netlon If the gov- ernment would be trusted to the hand: of men whose conception of civilised eociety is one or wnriare and strife. Eocene. o! (kiln-clan. “We believe thet the very essence of civilinum in mutual Interest. mutual? forbwance, mntml co-aperatlon. We‘ believe the world bu got put the time when men'e bands are at each other-'3 throats. We believe to-dey tlnt men stand shoulder to shoulder, working to- gether for n common purpose beneï¬cial to all. (Applause) And we believe thnt this attempt to mil wages. which mean: In nttempt to attack the prosperity of nil, will be resisted. not mu. m mauso- o! m. I. on a! routed: M Chicago It. Bryn de- dud: 'Wbcl you can Man on and MI II (in '0 null disturb your bul- Ie- Interâ€"u we reply am you In" disturbed our inclu- Iutm' (A voles: "Ho '- flchL") H. m. my Mend. When I Inn Iona I" m hohul MM teddy“ that pos- nu my. (laughter) "Mar you Ind mull-u m- bled you Im lad diam-1m proceed- lumthQMyIIu-nmm m. u out other II 13* um; A Dry-- In and Iv... "Anytliu M lunch (ht but: a! III-u mm to s also must mumm- m I Now null-t no IOII‘IHOII 0! tech! order. Ink 0' Cull-loan. “Underlying the whole uhemo of olvlllutlon [I the conï¬dence men have In each other. Coufldonce In their hot:- enty: conï¬dence to their Integrity; con- ldonce In their Industry; conï¬dence tn their tutu". I! we want dlvor cotnnl'o to-Inorrow, I! we even «has our and.“ or value. man my that 1“" you would have the some property you have to-doy: you would Ill" have "no lune loll; you would sun Run the unto continent, And It In true. But no did the Indian hon tho unto river- thu toll put our cm- Md turn the that. ol commerce no they you. So the mountain- pttod full at natural trunn- 400 your: no. The non ntâ€" noophoro envy-3w this continent; tho an. not! covered an Bolas: tha no on none In Mono, IM yot thou In Ion but tin norm mm In the out." 0! war through the traction tom- and tho mm ban no dul- llvtu this: except tho India to Its one. pot-lulu : path“: of or Medan. hm III to Induurlol co- omtto- been“ m. loot-o 'u a an†and old not nan-um! the pnnctplu by whkh not: old out other In toting fro- the bosom o! It:- urth the mm: which ulna "to burnt. and unto,- the htolllcnco which III.- «vim-non. "Mr. Bryan did not crate it. No man cm create e movement lllre thle. The forces that created it are active and have been working in a thousand dlflerent directions. Mr. Bryan, rep- resenting thla theory, is but lllxe a drop of water on the crest of the wave, more conspicuous, but no more important 1than the millions of drops that Korm- lte base. The populistlc movement in the attempt 0! these proteulonal (arm- on, of the-e men who are unwilllng to share with the laborer, to appeal to their greed. He II the enemy oi' pub- lic order; he in an obstacle to progrms; he lo a cousplrator Iglinst the peace and prosperity of the industrlal masses I o! the country. any man who never has psid waxes :ut sll it he could get out of it? Wlll you submit to this conspiracy between the professional farmers, the farmers who cultivate the quarrels of their neighbors. the farmers who labor [mil their luvs, populist agitators of the west and the unteconclled slsvehoiden oi‘ the south. This is a conspiracy be- tween proi'eesionsl farmers who wsnt to pay low wages sud the unrecouclled slaveholders who would like to pay no waxes at all. (Applause) Here is the ‘ real root of this conspiracy. Amul- Io tho ‘I‘ollan. "Men of New York, tollero or Amar- lcn, guardl-n- or your own homes, will you allow your rate of wages to be at- tecled (cl-lei 01’ "Never." "Never!") by flIWp‘mpoo-l o! the mull-u ï¬rm Inâ€" utoot to own-tho tumor 13 I eon-pl- ‘noy tn Nuance. paid this laborer am In my love I. lm‘propmlon o! No own products. and tho; ore will- In: to cut. down tho Inso- ot ovary man who work: In omen, who toll: at the bench, who dig-Inthemlnoo. who man-zoo tho train. In tho hope um they can ride Into power on a wave of mummy and greed Awakened in tho brunt of the voter. ii the trial (If the if. dim no mo: thlnk may hon- maubwtwwm P‘por rnmltnnl Just at present an experiment in be- ing made .1 building all the furniture of unpretentious {arm of compressed paper. Thin does for the living room what. aluminium has done for the kitchenâ€"literally decreases the weight to a point where a. child is able to move the ingest Diem It is not pro- posed in thin proceu g! detract In the lent from beauty of «lamps or grace and einboratenm of ornamentation. but to lessen the cost as well u the labor- ol Managing. fled polio within collimation din- tnnce of each other, fro- the Algeria output; to the French Boodnn. end no protect the existing end ancient can- no routes and encourage thnt for- ot trnneit that is ï¬tted to then. in- hospitable regions. At yrenent n unnâ€" van iron the ninth may take yenrn in accomplishing itn journey, and urine, if it encnpen the Tonnrex pirnten of the desert. depleted by the hinchnniiing of the tribes to which it has pnid toil. The Arab: oi the Interior ere (rent trnders. Their moot iucrntive trade in in eleven; they have lost their bent market: ior thene weren hy the French ‘ occupation in the north and by the Engiinh occupation oi Egypt in the east; they cling desperately to whet re- ‘ mains, either in the cities of Morocco or in Femn, Tripoli end the Sender- hence their determination to oermit no living European to enter their countries, end, with this object in View, they eneournxe the Tounregs to thwnrt every attempt of the French to enter. and hitherto with nlrnost complete nuc- cesn. "Betrnyed by guides," "neutered at wells," "poisoned at tnhi "â€"wordn such as thene describe the fate of each intrepid pioneer into the mysterious lands held by the imonhsg (block reiied) or lmghnd (rrhite veiled) Taun- regn or into the out: and cities peo' pied by Arnhe. negroes and Berbere. The most MIMI mu I It" not . MOM! 0.. Th. innoâ€"ï¬nbnrlln nilvny In a pm- )oci mu Ii but consider-lion. «an the Colic-won" Review. The lint Mm“ runny now ruck†Ill-In. and night In carried on at any lino try Mn io marsh; m dllculiy of alumina and: animating antenna would he can! to and the French have to were.“ a. tutor apply (In by â€lain cello wni 0! nm would no longer ho I nation obnllcle. Beyond Dunk. also, line and the anal.- well will moon the way. but I can leap. nan-ma Inn a pollual on. In u nlhsy m an Dalian. Tum In noi mac ml: to pay for ii and ii‘ can never be a country (or u. wanna colonial. l1 idea would be. am the finale-l Ind determined hostility of Ila Anh merchant: and Tour†trib- lml hoe- overcome. to establish toruâ€" M In“ I. I. A‘n-tuo horn-l “You shall not rob him or study, of progress in the skill of his craft and by the careful organisation of the mem- bers who work with him at the same bench. You shall not obecure the sold- en prospect of a further improvement in his condition by s turthor chnpenâ€" ins or the cost 01 living, as well as by the further depreciation of the dollar which is paid to him. (Applause) The man who raises his hand against the progress oi the workinzman mises his hand against prosperity. He seeks to restrict the volume of production; he seeks to degrade the condition of. the man who is steadily improving himself. and In his own improvement ; is accomplishing the improvement of all , mankind, but this attempt will tail. Poop]. Will noun. “I do not regret. this campaign. The time has come when the people oi this country will show their cspocity for neliqorernment. They will prove that the men who hsve led the world in the psthway of progress will be Jealous guardians oi liberty and at order. They are not to be seduced by appeals to their cupidity or moved by threats of injury. They will tort-var guard, and ioaionsly mud, and trim the lamp 0! enlightenment and progress. They will ever relentlessly press and crnuh under their heals the flaming torch of populist di-ent. populist agitation and populist destruction. When this tlds or s‘itstion shall hsve receded. this tide oi populist uitstion, this assault upon common honesty and upon in- . dustry shsii have been shstod forever, the ionndsiions of this ropubilc will romnin undisturbed. This government will still shelter a people lndissoluhiy wedded to liberty slid order, jealously forbidding distinction of burden or o! privilege. consort/inn property. minin- talnins morsliiy. resting forever upon the breed heals of Amwricsn patriotism sod American intelligence." CUE-39 -â€"â€".â€".--uâ€"wrg sâ€"n--_.. THANS-IAHARIAN RAILWAY. ' ‘Whiie we have in enltence I nylâ€" te‘na ol Intuei co-operetion. which in but mother none for civilised society. I" are ednitteii to n were in every bounty which Providence ehowere upon the eerth. The dweller in the tenement, scooping over hie bench. who never eeee n iieid o! wnving corn. who has never inhnled the perfume oi moses end of flowers. is yet made the participetor in nil the bountiee ot Prov cidence, in the purifying influence. of the atmosphere, in e ripening ray: of the aim, when V product at the soil In nude cheeper to him every day by the abundance of the her-vent. (AD- piauee.) It Illâ€!!! hie ehnre in this bounty thnt the populist wants to ex- clude the Amer-inn workingman. To him we any in the name of humanity. in the home of progress, you shall neither pres I. crown oi! thorne upon the brow of inbor n0r press a ecourgo upon hie-beck. (Applause) no matches «at wink-Ia «mum-m2. .. â€M A v A lulle out Imam St. Joseph the etrlp or land between the river's curves I: fully ï¬ve mllee wide. It In predlcted by those who have watched the erretle llswurl'e course and bungee for a an-rtor o! a century that it In only e qnntlon of a Ihort tlme nntll that nu- row neck of land In Kansas Se eaten â€my end the Mleeom-t’e channel In an- der the eastern slope of the Mg, round blulfe thet rnnge along the western horizon. When that happene, St. Jo- Ieph, wlth lts magniï¬cent meme â€Item, will be en Inland town. Mn and dry. and lte great steel rellrond‘ bridge vm he spanning the nucleus of e fertlle farm, or. at best. I ehnllow lagoon. E'fl'om tn prevent Inch au- etrophe by rip-rapping are wasâ€; In prostate. lnto the western slag of this city the river sweeps ctr-lam from a. want. Here It turns directly south for 3 mile. then turns westward Inn. Am over yonder, where the ends of the arm are closest. only a mlle In!) of loamy Kama soll man between a manual of the waters. And this ll duly becom- lng narrower. The river in eating Into it every hour. until lt now but; ro- umblnnce to a vast pcnlnmh. When the Mar I- ma; mill) 1: ban on In current any mm thing Now a bout. hall brain, mt can, you "In" by. bobbin; u. and do" In an nought Again the body at u drowned unlock or a noun; «Mm 1M n treeâ€"m "eras“. a pin or a cedarâ€"borne on tha he. at u an- lncbe. mum. from In m upon some bald momma aid. :14 Mt In the gliding mow arms. Bird- ion! In In curving bracket :14 In «a flyuutmesmd roll-In mm mam. In!» the high hunk the arm: ‘ mm, nd the “mm odd!“ (for! m ‘ ran In tho whlrlpool at". M a the has of the wmm ftp-rand Into the bank. And no It Mu. gurgling. roaring, never Inning. never unto. A thing of an, of grandeur, of wonder 1nd mnterhu chm. but ul- vnya to be avoided~when the rim ll tiling flDldly. } standing on tho when u! u. too! of ‘ Felix "not, for Ibo "tenet null. 70“.!†there. In I mull" and tantr- lu than: In the teen um (I. rim I: run: mmly. Ton upon ms at loan from «In (In- und- In" (ll-col. and (I. 'Iflf um In down- If. u [mantle to m II“! a and It“ or cake. Tho rlvulou fro- the an- m â€than that lay down a. foothills of no fir-Q'I! moo-ulna, “In limb gulch and n). Ila nun lumen. m changed *0 Mn! and II- I“... but (be tum-g sud: at the ID» no." and tho so" of the tar- Ind d-pIy dllcolor. not Mm. A In Miami crunch! on the cup ml. from the rum. current of (ho atm- vu lever brewed not mind by m. Then he «and: mm by the but In the (men Ind (mu. MM Ind l‘llchl‘l the rich Muck no", In and" Ind- and patch". crumble and roll Into the random hu 0! the unenc- oo- topun~-whon the run- In mm rapid". Along the shore on either lldo of th- IuJo-iic strum the comforubio (Inner â€in down the um and panic: hi- ltook to roam Into the upland. that rum any from tho mvtriu Malt. standing like grim, wnkolul unlimi- nbon the ï¬rmâ€. ere-huh“ tho river I: rising rapidly. When the rlver In rising rapidly the cotter along the shore takes I new no! In the bus-urn (but hold MI maul homo to the bank bone-Lb the â€noun. and the slew: of the midnight mum: In n‘oen over the gloomy rule of Illa-t, for It I- unsafe lo sleep 3: such | an. -â€"wben the river I. man rapidly. The plain announcement that tho river I: nun; causes a town; of no to creep over the poverty-stricken boat dweller u be gathers MI (mil: tbout Mn: and stand: on the Ihon. using unneo at the mining. muddy cur rent. It creep- Itendlly. Itedthlly, ro- nlstleuly up, Inch by Inch, foot by foot. until the bottom at the leaky boat I. lubmerxcd. m onemchmtl In like the van n! the dreaded math". “The river I. rmnz very rnpidly," in A simple statementâ€"one frequently ‘ found in the column- of the dnily pa.- perl. Always at this season, under pro- uic headlines, perhaps. and tucked nway in some remote corner or the page. But for the old reeldantl don; this great stream it has u never telling charm. 1n the mighty river that slide. swiftly by the city's ante. wuhlnc, cutttng, grinding. eating away the and: wnlled foundation, (here in autumn. more majestic than the tranquil us; there In a distant power of movement ‘ that carries with it a hint at uncon- quernbie tort-e. a river untettcred uld uhdammed, and beyond week mortar- win. cry has changed. Fun: have loosened and dropped Into the remorseleu stream here and there; other lum- havo cropped up nndnr the guise of giant and ban, altering the swift cur- rent. use]! than an mountable YMMV. "I VAOARIES. ONE 0? TN. "051' BEM‘RKADLB RIVERS. ()N'Ylfl’IIE~ 7BR} , MUDDY. I light, nun-II ha may ï¬ll Fur- nu unv- 'nn- Ilp l- land nunâ€"Conan"! mm at It. Jonah. " the needing water: run out the damage done by the rise II t becoming nppmnz, h . any. 3 St. Joseph, i; am. mom of n- i“ out. due. Along the shore: the ma- HE Missouri that In. been on It. accustomed mnmu m- mgmï¬w’fllm'ri III In I'm- “ aunt-In a. cum: u loam: PERFECTION WELLPOINTI Hal-Ina, l.â€" Rcrol I 1.39.355 R F. :3. as... .3...â€" 3:83. “H39: odpnnflun. Duo! “in“... PATENTMBABEMABKS STEIN WORK “fl-is MIDDLE SOUTH“ mï¬m'mmrm'm m2. 9. nun-cumulon- I‘lmuflt M n" Manner A. Helm a San. "than. 10.7. l 0 gm ‘0. BLIND. an BLEEDING ‘ 8-;- mn‘: 'M m.- "than" m.blm¢l.t.m .flll gun. ' Um 34¢!" 10ԠInk]: ul mark/1 In. ‘d 'w. " Kano Drum Id. 2 I m 7: ho" I [mu .Hoqu .7icmlu Jam on m?†luv u no“. noun a human; nu!“ to: 25¢. by asking and dammit? II your dock: WILL NOT “My you we will. lllllfllS TIE m If â€TIE BRIE. Why paythe same ROSSMAN'S Pile Cu re. I. H. C M. Cor. P. o. Instâ€. N. la". mammm Pinon. “Imam; u. 3...". 'm. an llwlrysinllahk. â€can Novel Window unen- A beautiful novelty for n window screen is made of silk bolting cloth. This is intended to hang close to the window. and upon its transparent sur- face may be painted a. broad effect in water colors, embodying a border of conventional design. using alternately salmon pink. blue. India red. tawny or foxy brown and any outlining in long stitches of silk in appropriate colors. Inside of this border may be worked A design in water lillles, with foliage pointed and worked in silks, the water suggested by broad touches of grey blue, with an occasions! gleam or silver thread. These are but sugges- tions 0! what may be done with this species at screens. so there are many elegantgnaterlsls and combinations 0! color. but All depend for their beauty on the artistic nuke up end the rare qualities 0! their embroidery. You nom- upon Itch. red blooduulyouwfll â€Donavon. Bloodnmmbudpunb, u'cket uéht, CiIlEago, m.‘ Inuw ‘ Wale-it " ' to hire advantage at the lowest rate ever made to St. Paul and Illnenpolle. on the ecu-Ion oi the Thlrtleth An- nual Encampment of the G. A. IL. the on: week In September. Only one cent per mile for the round trip to the rote mgde. (ought tor end eltahllnhed by the hlenxo Great Western Roller-y (Maple Des! Route) for the "boys la blue" and their frlendl. whlle the tick ete are good (or return at nny tlme wlmln thirty days. Th1: In your oppor- tunlty to vlslt the "Twin Clues" and the Great. Northwest. The Chloe‘o Great Western otters every luxury on the Journeyâ€"Compartment Sleepers, Free Chair Cars, Dlnlnx Care on the European plan. Teke your tamlly wlth you and remember the road that deserves your patronage is the Chlcego Great Western. Full Information as to rates, sleeping our reservation, special trnlne, etc.. wlll he turulshed by_F. HHLOIE: general pnseenser and Inn-hum «Eu-1mm mmamme-Qdmsm W’mwufllfl“ AYllBHT OPEBIAL IAMUND DPEBIAL 2‘3: PILES 04v ' TRAIN lily- flI-I'n-l lug-u Sarsaparilla Feed NIGHT EDUCATIONAL. Ml mars. '99" ELF! r07... i-Zt‘ié'mam hum 00-O- rt, any,- [tax I! “FHA."