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Minneapolis Commercial from Minneapolis, Kansas • 5

Minneapolis Commercial from Minneapolis, Kansas • 5

Location:
Minneapolis, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

and the machines are kept in constant KANSAS STATE NEWS, motion. The yield promises to be bet 1 Six JVot'er Free, will be sent by Cragrin to sny one in the U. S. or Canada, upon receipt of 25 Dobbins' Electric Soap wrappers. See list of norels on circular around each bar.

Soap for sale by all grocers. a rt and sixty million dollars would leave two hundred and ten million dollars worth on hand, and if the limit was advanced upon it tho amount would be one hundred and sixty-eight million dollars. Add the two together ter than had been anticipated. The largely increased acreage will result in, bringing many more thousands of dollars into the country. The southerm portion of the county will average' much better than for the last three or? four years.

Stnmdad. "Yes, tho yacht was completely wrecked; hut the captain saved himself by climbing to the bight of a rope." "H'm his bark appears to have been worse than his He "When an Indian gives a present it is always with the expectations of getting something in return of equal or greater val-u." She "Why, how funny. That's just exactly like our wedding present system, isn't it." Positively Cured with Vegef fe.eCefndle. Hare cure ttOuanls of wsts. sur patrol i'i nounred hopctess bjr oest Krom fir: ivmptoiris diSBftpeur; in tfn Outs at )esst tw-ihsrfla ftii ympioio9 removed enti Ire book ef miranutous cures Ten days' tretaint fre by nit.

if 1 i or1fr ir si. Ptnd 10c. frtunjpfl topar potf. Dr.H II.UK'ckv ons A anta.i, a. It jou order tntt return thi tops.

The one Johnnie A Suit for Damages, wears for week days. and we see that there would be out standing on the first day of January 61S three hundred and thirty-four million dollars; this is the sum total of the The Fhillips county Fair association have set the dates for their next exposition at Phillipsburg September 23,: 24, 25, and 26. In some sections of the state, iar-vesting work was not stopped for the Fourth of July. Much harvesting has been done by the light of the moon, especially in Labette county. Concordia Daylight: While in Indiana, Mayor Brown partially completed arrangements for bringiog an excursion into Cloud county during the coming falL Arkansas City Dispatch: The troops stationed at Chilocco are making some improvements which seem to indicate that they will be in camp there a long time.

inflation. This would be rapidly re turned by sale of the produce. The Disability fr i I in a Ja--. Sftldiprsditbled B'nce the war Hre emifiert. Widsn who are dependent are inclutled.

Also fare-Ht dependent to-day. whose non dit fram effect a of Army er-ritm. If yon wih jronr claim epeetiiJy and settled, add Van JAMES TANNER, late Com mi si "ner ff Pensions. imhingtoii, I. Cm After the system has been perfected the good sense of the people' guided When Baby wa eick we gave her Caetoria, When she was a Child she cried for Caetoria, When she became Miss, she clung to Caetoria, When she bad ehildren she gave them Castoria.

by experience will dictate to them what articles to add and what to re ject, for all Democrats believe that DEPENDENT PENSION BILL has become a law. I2 PER MONTH to nil honorably discliarg Soldiers and tailors of tha late war, wiio are from earning a support. Widow the same, without rPsrri to cause of death. Dependent Parent and Minor Children also interested. Ove" 20 years' experience.

in all pni ts of the eoonti-y. tin charge if nnsKCTexeful. Write at once for "Copy of bl inks and instructions ALL fbeb to K. McAI.LltilfcH CO. (Successors to Wm.

Ccmrd 1. O. Box 715. Waahloe-toa. t.

c. The Phillipsburg Dispatch says that 4 the people are and will remain fully competent to manago their own affairs, and they will surmount every obstacle that hinders their progress of liberty. This is only disputed by Cedar Vale Star: We hear of no trouble from chinch; bugs in this part of the country, but see that they tajokling the corn fields around Havana. aid Bolton in Montgomery gbing into them from the wheat Leavenworth county farmers express the opinion that the wheat crop will be as good as it has been for Bey-eral years back. Harvesting is over in, sortie portions of the southern part of the county and threshing has already begun.

Clearwater Sun: Wheat in vicinity will average not less than een bushels. Only one field is known that went under fifteen, and tlsat was planted very late. Many yields of over twenty and some as high as twenty-five bushels to the acre are The quality is a3 good as the quantity. Kingman have, a specimen of oats from th farm of William Sibley, southeast of, town, that is ahead of anything we ha ve seen this season. It measures thirty -eight inches from ground to top of heads.

The heads are very heavy ani the grain is large and plump. It is a new variety called the "yellow side." Again the Facetious Jeweler. Sign-writer I can supply you with any kind of signs' you want. weler All right. Paint me a few signs of a rushing spring trade.

A Cold Reception. An ice-cream party. B-openlnr a Thoroughfare. In order to guard against results utterly subversive of health, it is absolutely essential that the grand thoroughfare or avenue of the6ystern. the bowels, should be re-opened ea speedily as possible when they become obstructed.

If they are not, the bile is misdirected into the blood; the liver becomes tor. pid; viscid bilious matter gets into the stomach, and produces indigestion; headaches ensue, and other symptoms are produced, which a prolongation of the exciting cause only tends to aggravate. The aperient properties of Hostetter's Stomach Bitters constitute a most useiul agent in overcoming constriction of the bowels, and promoting a regular habit of body. It is infinitely superior to tha drastic bfathartics frequently used for the purpose, since it does not, like them, act violently, but produces a natural, painless effect, which does not impair the tone of the evacuatory organst which it invigorates instead of weakening. The stomach and liver, also, indeed, the entire system, is and regulated by it.

Married men ought to oppose the single tax. "You've been riding a bicycle I hear, said one department clerk to another. "Just for exercise you "It has reduced your weight some, I think." ''Yes I have fallen off a great deaL" aristocrats. Again, Colonel Mills sny "the sub- 4 i treasury system will lock up and keep out of the markets the products A Eeply to Milli Objoction to tha Sub-Treasury. Harry Tracy, of Texas, in reply to Congressman Mills' objection to the Bttb-treusury bill says: It will not do to bnso the estimate bf warehouses on the cost of granite court-houses, for it is well known to very one who has investigated the matter that substantial cotton warehouses 400 by GOO feet can be erected for less than $20,000.

One of these warehouses would hold more cotton than the present statehouse of the (State of New York, which cost about 117,000,000. His second objection is that under the workings of the sub-treasury bill the government will absorb all the private business of the people. This proposition is wholly refuted by the facts; for under the workings of the sub-treasury system the people elect the agent in the same manner that they now elect any other county He, like the rest, will elect his own assistants, and as a matter of course will select them from his constituents. This el so upsets Colonel Mills' assertion that the system will fill the South full of Republican federal office holders. These agents duty is to re ceive, store, and when desired by the owner to advance money on produce stored.

He has no power to in any way dispose of any of this produce until after twelve months have expired, i The statistics clearly show that all of these products must be consumed within the year or the wheels bf civilization must stop; hence the depositor runs no risk of having his produce sold at auction by the agent Under the provisions of this bill no agent can receive over $1,500 annually for his services, therefore it is seen that a price is put japon the labor of the agent, for every agent elected under this bill two will be displaced who are now self ap necessary to feed and clothe the hu A arw method of oovnoovBdinc Tmr. SURE CURE for FILES, SALT RHEUM man family, and of course will bring with it distress and suffering among uid.liakl IMwaan. Send 3 iMUmM forFr pie with Book. TO s.ild br all Iirarirtst nd hy A U-UID CV, KL, Cfcleac. Prtoe.ter.

ft FT nOLLIDAT, Agents. lopctt.Kl all the poorer classes of the people." If Colonel Mills had remained with his committee while the friends of this bill were explaining its workings The speaker asked if decay had already begun in the agriculture of this country and proceeded to show statistics to prove it had. While in 18G0, 53 per cent of the wealth of the country was in the hands of the agricultural classes, but 40 per cent was in their hands in 1880, and but 35 per cent in 1890. This was a most startling statement, but it was nevertheless true. He then alluded to the abandoned arni3 in all tho Eastern staiSs, not by the hundred but by the thousand, and of commissioners being appointed by the state legislature to secure the poorer classes of foreigners to locate upon, them because they could live so much less than American farmers.

He then showed the reduction in the value of farms in all the Eastern states, a remarkable decline, whilo the manufacturing interests had most wonderfully increased and were dividing great profits. Mortgages on farms were also increasing with wonderful rapidity and if those who owned the mortgages should foreclose they would own half the farming lands of many of the states. History, ho said, was repeating itself and the time was coming when the majority of the farmers would be tenant farmers instead of landlords as now. Another evidence of lack of prosperity was the lack of new buildings going up on our farms. Where 75 per cent of the students of the colleges were formerly farmers' sons not 5 per cent were now, because farmers were not able to give them collegiate educations.

What, the spsmker asked, had brought about this waning power of farmers? Class legislation legislation that robbed one class to enrich legislation that made the rich richer and the poor poorer; legislation that robbed the farmer to enrich the broker and the manufacturer; legislation that had demonetized silver and refused to remonetize it; legislation that had taxed the plow-holder and exempted the bondholder; legislation that had allowed the bondholder draw full interest on their bonds in gold and in addition giving them $90,000 in national baak currency, on every $100,000 in bonds to draw interest upon that at the highest per cent they could get with the power to contract or inflate the currency at their will; legislation that originally made the bonds payable in currency in which the soldiers were paid, but which afterward changed them so as to make them payable in gold, no matter what the greenbacks' were worth with which they were bought; legislation which had contracted the currency in volume far below the wants and necessities of he would have been far from making KANSAS RAILROADS. J. J. THOMAS Wholesale shippers of C0L0BAD0 GOAL. 1609 Curtis DENVER, COLO.

Special Sates to Clubs and FARMERS' AXLIANCES any such assertion, he would have learned that these products will not Hoisington Dispatch: The Missouri Pacifio is now busy hauling a contract of 600 cars of et el -west over their line. This makes business very Pbrisk with the railroad men. HAti'S CATARRH CURE is a liquid and is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the system. Write for testimonials, free. Manufactured by F.

J. CHENEY Toledo, O. There is more real heartache in a square yard of suspense than in an acre of realization. The latest distinguished horse on the turf is named Semicolon. It must be rather difficult to bring him to a full stop.

be withheld from consumption, one hour under the proposed system, but that it will facilitate that delivery to them H3 fast as needed and at even lower prices than they now pay for them. The colonel would have found out that it is intended through the medium of this system to carry on ireerrb mud folly e-dena Big; tba eslF asset lc for laacarvaincara of thla 6'm. O. H. IWO RAM AV.V- A imwaM, K.

T. We here ml4 Blf er Dir jramrs, as 4 It baa Traffic Manager Hanley, otthe Santa Fe, is quoted as having taid. in Denver fl to itB.J asami sws al Krtoair aysba I that the Santa Fe would sroa. shorten more than half or. tne loreciosures ui.

Phillips county are against non-residents, or on property which has been, traded. Jewell City Eepublican The two National banks at Mankato have consolidated. The day for three or lour banks to flourish in every little town has gone by. The farmers have quit speculating and got down to business. From Phillipsburg: Tha assessed valuation of property in Phillips county is $2,988,499, an increase of half a million over last year.

In Phillipsburg it is $184,575, a gain of $20,000 over last year. Kanopolis Kansan: The second boiler of one hundred horse power has arrived for the Koyal Salt Company's works, and is in place. The brick lay-Brsarq building the brick casing around it. -Westphalia Tiroes: Wheat threshing has commenced in this neighborhood, and the yield is excellent. Pest offers bo far are from 65 to 75 cents per bushel, but most farmers prefer holding for better prices.

Lyons Eepublican: Hertofora dur-irjg the month of June a larger number of mortgages have been placed on file than were released, but this year the releases have exceeded the mortgages placed on record in this coumty. Mound City Clarion: The- new flax crop will soon begin to come "into the market. Dealers here are now offering one dollar for any amount, notwithstanding the fact that there is twice as much flax in this part of the county as there was last year. Ness City Times: As the cane crop is very promising, the Sugar compnxiy have determined to sirik a deep "well to guard against the possibility of a -carcity of water. The well will be put down to a depth until a never-failing supply is secured.

Ashland Clipper: The first wheat on the Ashland market was brought in by Will Long last Tuesday. It weighed 60 pounds per bushel under test, "and graded No. 2. Mr. Long's crop threshed Eyas we aaai eaixe D.

A. DTCHI Calcac. ilL il.00. Bold 17 Sr(lU, the business without the intervention fU fa enter to lem ha many Jveorla wad a a vertiaeaenta, I will aen4 tree of all charga ay iSoth. the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken it is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the system effectually, dispels colds, headaches and.fevers andcures habitual constipation.

Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever produced, pleasing to the taste and acceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and $1 bottles by all leading druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it. Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO, 8AN FRANCISCO, CAL.

uumvius. Kr. new renx. s.r. mail, to each one woo atatoa ia wMca paper offer haa been naa 10 cent box 1J9 Color, TO of such worthies as "Old Hutch" and kindred gentlemen who manipulate all other produce with the same re mm aw Book en Cage Btrdi, vmm Book oe lr, Li Km Book ob Horses, Cowa aa Poultry, mn4 one tarelone of Arnica Conrt Plafttr.

or a 10 rt box Core. up its through rate and maintain the fastest JtVlic coast freight schedule of any road in the country. From Junction Senator John K. Wright has begun. grading for the new Union Pacifio freight depot and the new park whie'0 the company intends to fit up jus, south of the present passenger depot.

From Kansafi City: The Journal announces the rjonfirmation of tne rumor that the Kansas, City, Wyandotte, Northwestern railroad has been sold to Dropsy. We call the attention of those suffering with dropsy to the fair proposition of Dr. H. H. Green Sons in their advertisement on this page.

Try them; it costs you nothing to do so. We suppose that the language of a parrot may be termed polyglot. It is only a national history that "repeats itself." Your private history is repeated by your neighbors. sults as "Old Hutch" does wheat. Piaster.

Dr. FROXEFIELD, N. Sd Inrentor of the best Horae. Cattle and Poaltry Poweer ia. world.

Imigt papers 2j ceata by mail, or dopes FREE. The process through which these worthies gather unto themselves $221,000,000 annually of other peo pointed, and ther nlace their own THE STATE llQEIlliL SCHOOL Is the Or eat Teachers Training Scoool of ftae-sas. Enrollment last year 1120. bt Kansas Conntie and 10 States represented. Diploma a.

Life em-, tificate TO Teach. K-R. fare in excess of refunded to all Kansas students. Ample facilities. In the way of Librartes.

Apparatus, etc Address the President, A. H. TAVLOlt, Emporia, Kansas. ple's earnings is now known by all intelligent people, they first skin the producer out of his produce, hoard it 'the Missowri Pacific. Notice has been up and then skin the consumer till served on 'the stockholders of the calline in their stock transfers.

two-thirds of the producers and con PThe Nrth western svstem includes a College Horns for Young Ladies; ILLINOIS FEMALE COLLEGE, Jacksonville; 111. Location, Buildings, Terras, Literary, 6ical and Art Departments unsurpassed. ForCat-alogne. address W. F.

EHORT. D. President. sumers go half fed and half clothed, because they can't pay the "Old rt FEKSICN Bill ADA0I1 BlGUfll PENSIONS folalwa, skeiy line fr om Kansas City to Beatrice, "and a line from Leavenworth to Carbjndale, with a survey, franchise, etc, as far south as Wichita. The formal transfer will occur in about two weeks.

The Kansas City Journal, in discuss- roaltiveIycurd bj era and Fathers are en cneae utile ruis. They alio reUeve Dis titled to 9 13 a mo. Fee IG when you fret Tour money, blanks free. MSKIV H. UtaTfcK.

Atur. Waakiacua. A- C. CARTER'S KITTLE The best cure for obesity is to board for the isummer at a farm house where you will be treated like one of the family. Obesity Superfluous Ft.

The Anti-fats have had their day, and its victims who occupy a permanent position in the neighboring cemetery, are numbered by the thousands. Any treatment, no matter what it is, if reduction depends upon its destruction of the elements of digestion, it is dangerous. Dr. Snyder, of Chicago, successfully reduces superfluous fiesh 15 to 25 pounds per month, by the scientific application of harmless herbal remedies that act in harmony with nature in removing the cause of the accumulation of fat and stimulating its removal, without injuring the health, or in any way impairing the functional action of the secreting organs. No starving necessary.

This is not an experiment, but an actual scientific fact demonstrated beyond the question of a doubt. See his ad in this issue and write to Seaside flirtations do not last because they are builed on sand. treaa from dlgestlea ui TooHwut A. perfect rem- 'inp the alleged purchase of the Kansas mdy It 1 i we- SMS a ease aaaa 1 T.erfnced 15 to iS pound's pea LmI I I 1 month by harmiew herbal I 1 I 1 1 it remedies. No starriufr, no I la I I VS Bail inconvenience.

Conlidex Send c. forcircutars and testimonials. Address, ML. U. W.

r. SSIKLR, 84 State Caleats, DT Fleaae mention this paper. Urowalnem. Bad 1'maW: i iv out 680 bushels. Some of hife best I PILLS.

Tongue, Pain in the Side Ji the people, making money far more valuable and the farmers' property wheat made 30 bushels per acre find th. poorest 15. AMD ORGANS. regulate we Bowel Purely Vegetable. Prlee Hutches" their price, then to hide their robbery they shriek over-production in the fall and laziness in the spring as the cause of all the poverty they create by spoliation.

Now the question of questions is, what is the cause of this universal depression of agriculture in the densely populated agricultural districts? The answer is that in all countries the circulating medium is mainly bottomed on mstalic money. The production of which for a long series of years has been nearly uniform, hence the volume bf money in circulation is practically inflexible. This feature is disastrous to agricul far less valuable. What, he asked. was the late war debt, or, indeed, two CAZTS3 uxsicnrx KZTYoas.

tA.H.Wfcitneyt..1ate WnitneyatHolmes Organ Co.l and Finest Stock in tht West The Wichita News-Beacon offered to furnish transportation from WioTaita to St. Paul, and over the different roads of or three such war debts, in compari Small Small Dose. Small Price. Pfamis. all styles, from KU9 onwM; onrsns.

all tries, from 60 upward. All warranted. 8atifacto City, Wyandotte, Northwestern road by the Missouri Pacific, saya: The distance from Kansas City to Carboudale by this line is seventy-five miles. Fifteen miles of track would make a connection with the Missouri Pacific at Cteage City, shortening the distance from Kansas City about twenty-five miles, and effecting a great saving of time in the through train service. The Missouri Pacific will also have by this route a good working line to Topeka via Bichland.

The rOad will also be valuable as a feeder to the system, as it passes through a riih country and has a good local traffic. price upon their labor and compel the farmers to pay it, for the warehousemen and elevator associations Ifix the prices, and under the present systems the farmers can not escape them. Foreigners are fast absorbing all the elevators, and will soon take in the mills and breweries. Thus it is seen that under the workings of the sub-treasury bill the farmers will be enabled to escape the merciless cold grip of the usurer and peculator as well as the warehouse and elevator combinations, and again take charge of their own business, which every one knows is utterly impossible under existing conditions. Colonel Mills says in effect that the ub-treaaury bill will be of no financial benefit to the farmers, but, on the contrary, will drive them into bankruptcy.

Under the workings of the sub-treasury bill the farmers will save $77,000,000 in interest, in the economy of handling iheir produce, $20,000,000 in insurance, $88,000,000 in the price of their grain, $18,000,000 in the price of their cotton, and at least $1,000,000 in the price of their tobacco. All these savings added together make the snug sum of $221,000,000 that the (American farmers will save annually by the adoption of the sub-treasury ibill, which, with the entire system of elevators and warehouses provided for, will not cost $20,000,000, and in Jaddition will place mills in the grain districts and cause the erection of tmUicy. 111. Established Xt years. son to the robbery which had been perpetrated in the name of legislation upon the people? Alliance Tribune, Es that city, to the most popular teaaher in Wichita schools, to be decided by rotes cast by the school childrei i of tha Topeka Kan.

PATE fi TSaK nl Ivi irilorof ltrnts. Patents and Patent Law a Specialty. Btate Courts and D. 8. Mo.

4 Kansas Topeka, Kanaaa. city. Miss Amiclon received )YZ votes more than any other teacher. From Salina: Mrs. Mike Herine, A volume "(recently published on WOMAN, heal thyself by using Pr.

A(sa Buck's (ioiden Specific, a pure cure for all female diseases, such aa leucorrhoea, whites, ulcers, inflammation, falling of the womb, enlargement of the womb, painful menstruation, etc Do not fail to try this wondorful treatment. Call or write for free sample treatment. It coats you nothing lo try it. Large box $1.00 by mail, postpaid. WOOLVEKTON druggists, 8C Kansas Topeka, Kansas, Western.

Aceftta. Ae.lou u.illuKKls, Watalstnsrwon, D.C. Prosecutes Claims. living nine miles west or eaiipa, was buined to death. She was trrir? to the farm in terests of our country presents some suggestive facts for those who think that there has been a a 1 i a i I.ato Hrincinal Examiner U.S.

Pension Bureau. adjust a stove-pipe, when it fell, knock I 3yrs la last war, laartjHuicatiogclaima, att.T atneo. KANSAS CHURCHES. ing down some explosive poisons, yhich. i Writeni for new law.

ture because the farmer secures the product of a whole years productive effort practically at one time and consequently demands money for all his surplus at one time, to meet matured obligations. This creates a demand Sent free, nessrters ra-Uevod. Saccsss aa tea. Topeka Journal: The English Luth no decay in what ougnc to oe me chief interest of so vast an agricultural domain. For instance, we are confronted by the fact that the Amer-: to yra.

oxaariaaca. A.W. eran church has extended a call to If cOanalck Boas. Waahiastsa. D.

Ciaciaaatt, O. Bev. F. M. Porch, of Abilene, to become It is great fun to get engaged, but a young man should not be deluded into the idea that he can increase his amusements by getting engaged to more than six girls at once.

its pastor, he has accepted. Pfffn8l CLAIMS prosecotesl under Sew sCtldiiJH Law- Ctreulata showlnr wbe as eoi.iieo sent tree. Fee lt If tocceasful: otaer-wise nothing.T ALLM AUU TALLM AIM. Ji, Chicago, anil llaaubigtou, 1. C.

A True Combination of MOCHA, JAVA and RIO. Picture Card Given With every pound package. For Sale everywhere. Oberliq, Opinion: The Presbyterian pew over her and ner cmidren." tine struggled heroically with the flames, saving her children and the house, but perished herself. Belle Plaine News: The fair? association of Sedgwick county are improving their grounds, erecting flew buildings, enlarging the stall and stabSng capacity, and grading the It is their determination to secure the presence of all the military and band ican farmers in the year 1850, possessed GO per -cent of the capital power of the Union, but this sank to surgeon church has been re-painted on the in "These are cut rates" said the who sent in bis hill.

side ard re-papered, and presents quite a fine 'appearance. The Ladies1 society wlii pay yon a salary of-j pr week to work tar up it vour locality at hmne, L.ifrlitc ADIE iarjKi-ar awrwsaH last fttr Bjarf. I rg fasZtlarj iffiMt C-, 5, CalMf rais'd the funds for the work and de serves great credit for the same. 53 per cent in 18G0, and continued to decline untd in 1880 it had gone down to 40 per cent, and it is probably not more than 35 per cent to-day. This decline is absolute as well as from Nerrous Debility, VI- A great nrany of would be reformers are like the man who stays up all night trying to get people to go to bed.

Billings: Well my boy, are you satisfied with married life? Benedict: Satisfied? Why I am perfectly satiated with it. Atchison Champion: Bev. C. J. Bed imi WEIK.

organizations of the state at their fair tal Wasting etc Send for any free Honk of Remedies and core your this fall. ding, -well Known in Atchison, son-in-law of Welcome Nance, one. of Topeka Capital: Chas. Higgs, of Atchison county oldest settlers, has selves at home. ir.J.Rennert,4lS.

Clark KEW PENSION UW! sion list. Rejected and Delayed Claires Technicalities wiped out. Have your latm settled without delay. Patrick O'Farrell. Washington.

B-C been called to temporarily supply the cotton manufactures all over the for money greatly in excess of the supply, hence the demand for money being more pressing than the demand for products, the price le product that must be sold submits the dictation of the money holder; this compels the farmer to turn loose at less than cost of production, and this is called fluctuation, which is the creature of the speculator and the destroyer of the prosperity of the farm. Now the one thing of all others to be attained is the stability of prices, because when this is the case speculation is impossible All true economists know that a fluctuating demand for money met by a volume that fluctuates exactly to correspond with the fluctuation in demand will be attended with stability of prices. These admirable features can be found only in the sub-treasury system. pulpit of the Congregational church in Chicago. Mr.

Jledding, a few years for in 18G0 the value of farm property averaged $3,904 per farm; in 1880 it was $3,019. In 1870 the property of the farmers of six New England States was in 1880 it had fallen to $071,846,058. The state of affairs all over the country ago, was a switchman in the Central Branch yards of this city. In the OPIUM Habit. The I ertal and easy Car.

Dr. J. I Stephens. Lebanoa. OHtet to core Blllonsness.

Slok Headache. Constipation. Malaria. Ltrer Complaints, take the aaXa and certain remedy. SMITH'S BILE BEANS TJe tne SMALL SIZK (40 little beans te the bottle).

They are the most convenient: suit aU ar Price of either size, 36 cents per bottle. tVlvJOllHWl panel sUe of tbls picture tot 4 tents (copper or stamps). J. F. SMITH 4 Makers of BUe Bean.

St. Loots. Wo. KIBrjnV I MARRIAGE PAPER and particn-ftlHittl I lars of marriage association that paystuOO totoOOO free. Gunnel's Monthly, Toledo, O.

great strike of 1886, he lost his posi tion. ALLIANCE MATTERS. F. A.I.atHMAWIT Wahinalon. D.C.

for circular. PATEIMTS iSouth. I trust that Colonel Mills and others of his way of thinking will not fail to observe that all these savings are left in the pockets of those who produce them. We, as Democrats, cannot fail to remember also that to this very end democratic government was instituted among men. An Austin shoemaker ia writing a book.

There will probably be a great many foot, notes, brand of sausage has been named after Explorer Stanley. This is a dog-gone good compliment. The man who is "looking out for a rainy day" is often so far sighted that he cannot see the comforts that bob up under his very nose. "Thought you were tending bar, Jack?" "Was been fired." "What for "Couldn't raise 10 cents' worth of foam on 1 cents' worth of beer." 36.V23 K. N.

TJ. T. Newton Commoner: The Alliance of Wha aaswerinc: any of these adysrtisemamta. please mention this paser. the Seventh congressional district will hold their convention to nominate a candidate for congress, July 22, at Vith these savings in the pockets of Great Bend.

THE FAttHEES IN AH GEE. Kensington Trumpet: The Phillips shows a decline in the American farmer's economic power, and especially is this seen in his growing dependence for his capital on the successful men of other occupations. Fifty years ago farm mortgages wera rare in America; to-day they are the rule in many localities. The farmers are not the lenders of money, but the borrowers, a fact that cannot be ignored, even by those who contend that all is well with the agricultural population. Christian Evangelist.

Norman J. Colman, in a speech at Cape May has been revived by the presence of the, President's family. Som day the country will have a Coney Island "president and then there will be job lots of fun. Best Cough Medicine. Recommended by Physicians.

Cures where all else fails. Pleasant and agreeable to the taste. Children take it without objection. By druggists. an Alliance picnic at Warrensburg, county democratic) delegate convention at I hillipsburg was composed of delegates from only five townships.

Everything passed 'off smoothly, with no speeches, not- resolutions, and no -enthusiasm. Democracy has evidently Missouri, July4, after paying a tribute to the day and urging the importance of keeping the deeds and heroism of Fadman: The paper says the Speaker spoke in a rapt voice. Fangle: Ah: I seel Sort of muffled tones. afedggawaeimwawaaHaM been swallo wed up by the alliance. e55v From Kingman: The peopled party central committee, elected last Friday, met in this city 'and called a county i if "How is she your sister? By marriage?" lU-no." stammered Chappie.

Quite the r-reverse, you know. B-by re-fusal of m-m-mar-riage." The Ladies Home Journal has an article entitled, "How to Treat a Sweetheart." About the way to treat a sweetheart at present is to treat her to ice cream. The Kansas railroad commissioners have decided against the Alliance con rent: on to be held on Tuesday, Aug ust 5. S. A.

Bidge, B. B. Bane, Daniel Bedder, and John Nichols were named as delegates to the congressional con upon its demand ior a lower grain rate to Missouri river points. The board in its argument declare that the reduction demanded by the Alli vention at Great Bend. The committee meetine was held with closed The man who hasn't money enongh to build a woodshed is usually the man who spends the most time studying the plans for new house in the building magazines.

doors. ance would be an injury to the farm tf-irhe old proverb be'true. Independence Star and Kansan This will be an active month for the alliance in this vicinity. On the 11th there will Parkdale, exhibited a cow at Garfield park on the Fourth tha enjoys the distinction of being, in, hSl probability, the smallest in the world. It is three years and six months old, weighs but 150 pounds, and is ondy twenty-seven nnd one-half inches high.

It is a thoroughbred HereSorQ. From Lawrence: 'the board of education have purchased from tho Unitarian church the old bell which bs hung tor so many years in the city block. The bell is known as one of the finest-toned in Kansas, and when fb was being cast a Boston lady threw 200 silver dollars into the bell metal a present to the Unitarian society of this city. Sedan Times-Journal: July 20th will be the twenty-sixth anniversary of the battle of Peach Trfee Greek, the battle in which our nevefred President Harrison won his star. There are so many survivors of thftt event in the vicinity of Cloverdafe hat the G.

A. R. post of that place is preparing to celebrate the day. ia the 20th falls on Sunday this year, the 19th will be observed. Oswego Staterman: Chetopa has struck oil again.

This time it is at the creamery workp. west of the railroad. In boring for water, at a depth of only sixty feet a considerable flow of oil was loosened. It is probably the same vein that was struck in the HugginB well, and indicates a great treasure in the earth waiting to te hrted. It has caused no little enthusiasm and again raised tie hopes of Chetopa to a high pitch." Wellington Press: W.

II. Maddy some time ego contracted to supply the northern part of the state with peaches, and he is kept rustling to supply the demand of his contractors. sHe has contracted with Treasurer Sturm to purchase that gentleman's entire peach crop, crated and delivered at Corbin, for a very handsome price. Our own Sumner is about the only peach county in the state this year, the supply being larger than last year with the quality almost as good. From Iola: The term of the district court has been occupied mainly with the trial of the Carter cases.

A special venire of one hundred jurors has been necessary, and 200 witnesses have been in attendance. Three of the defendants, charged with complicity in tha mob which attempted the life of Carter about two weeks before he was killed, have been tried. Two were acquitted. One, Bichard Mattox, was found guilty, and was sentenced by Judge Stiillwell to five years in the penitentiary. Thers are seven defendants yet to be SAPOLI is dreader Hmn ers of Kansas because it places the Missouri farmer nearer market and would bring said farmers in closer competition.

However, the board is willing to reduce the local on be a meeting of the county alliance in this city. On the 17th occurs the picnic at the Logsdon grove at the edge of the city, and on the 19th the county convention to nominate the people's ticket will be held. When a religious association changes its creed it shows the members know what they believe and can fix their book accordingly. "I see here, Hoxley the English scientist, says he is an agnostic and don't know anything." "What a pitty he don't come over here. He could make his fortune as a juryman in murder trials." It is not possible to say many more original things about original Fin, and the fashionable preacher wouid do well to pound some of the fashionable sins of fashionable sinners of the present time.

royeJ lytts el rTty itHn your nex house-cleaning: Grocers keep th DO YOU LIVE IN GREASE? As a true patriot and citizen yon sliould naturalize yourself by using the best inventions of the day for removing euch a charge. To live in Grease is utterly unnecessary "when SAFOXJO is sold in all the stores, and abolishes grease and dirt. grain to Missouri river points, and if the reduction could be equal to the Kansas portion of the through rate this would settle the whole contro Medicine Lodge Index: The Barber county alliance ill run a full county ticket, this action having been decided on by a committee one from each township last Saturday. The basis of representation will be one delegate for versy between the farmers and the railroads for the present at least. Alliauce Tribune, Topeka, Kan.

jthe farmers, it won't be long till the farmers of America will own the farms of America. When this condition exists, our republic will be perpetuated. While under existing tendencies, which are unavoidable under existing conditions, within twenty years from to-day three-fonrths of the farmers of America will be tenants. When this condition exists, democratic government cannot live. Homos breed patriots.

Boarding houses breed Democratic government draws its life-blood from patriotism. Tramps are the worst enemies a republic can have, because the tramp of to-day will be the anarchist of tomorrow. The colonel is terribly frightened about the great inflation of the circulating medium that will follow the adoption of the sub-treasury bill. The cotton crop of 1889 amounted, all told, in round numbers, to Suppose thief entire crop put through the warehouse system, and stored during the months iol September, October, November, and December, how would the account stand on the first day of following? Under this system $20,000,000 would be sold to consumers monthly, making one hundred and four millions consumed; this would leave two hundred and eight millions worth on deposit; then suppose the full limit had been advanced on every bale, the amount outstanding on the first of January would be one hundred and sixty-six million dollars. We will now estimate the grain to be stored nt three hundred and sixty million dollars for it must be remembered that two-thirds of the grain crop must bo retniruxl on the farm for consumption.

Now suppose this grain lis all stored during the months of August, September, October and November, how would the account stand on the first day of January following? Under this prstem thirty million dollars will le delivered monthly to con-Bnmers; this would amount to one hundred and fifty million dollars tM frcra tfc tkrt? hundred. every ten legal voters in an alliance, Trusts still keep on multiplying in The nominating convention will be held Strong "I've" goat good dog I'd like" to sell you," said a fancier to Fangle. "Not much" replied Fangle; "why, I've got four manageable daughters." The play is not always mirth-provoking that is full of ticklish situations. the patriotic forefathers ever green in the memory on account of the freedom which they had secured, asked how their sacred trusts had been discharged and whether the equal rights and equal privileges for which they had staked their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honors had been maintained or whether vicious class legislation, by which one portion of the people had been made rich at the expense of other classes and particularly the farming class, which he was here to address, had been permitted. He asked if history was repeating itself; if the solution of the problem which had settled the destinies of other republics and other nations had already commenced in this.

The speaker then proceeded to show that Egypt, Palestine, Greece, Borne and other nations had had their days and years of prosperity, growth and power as this nation had had; that it was agriculture that had made all those nations great; that it had built up in them great populous cities; that the country surrounding these cities had teemed with bounteous harvests and well filled granaries; that the hillsides had been covered with smiling vineyards and orchards of dates and palms and figs; and that so long as the rights of those who cultivated them were regarded, so long as they had the dominating power in government, the people were contented and happy and all classes prospered, but when tho agricultural classes lost their power and influence and the rich and powerful got the reins of government in their hands they threw heavy and unjust burdens upon agriculture, and this destroyed the prosperity of the farmer, to whom they were indebted for all their power, the decay of all those nations Weak Arms the United States. We now have trusts in the following articles: Gas, nail, zinc, sugar, starch, match, Arms said "You are a man after my own heart, nickle, copper, whisky, cordage, jute bag, cigarette, oil cloth, steel rail at Medicine Lodge on Friday, August 1st. Emporia dispatch: The Farmers' Alliance and kindted organisations cnitei in one of the grandest demonstrations ever held in this city, the occasion being addresses by L. L. Polk, president of the national Balpb Beaumont, and other prominent members of the order.

A five mile procession and 20,000 people were on tho ground. Th streets were filled and literally blockaded. No such tjiraout the watermelon to purchaser. Most American ladies do not seem to be troubled so much about the propriety of riding on horseback man-fashion as they do about the difficulty of getting a horse. borax, linseed oil, slate pencil, ultra They're VsA t.

same level when XsE marine, straw board, school book, gutta percha, dressed beef, barbed wire, cotton seed oil, paper envelope, undertakers, iron nut and washer, kerosine oil, distillers and cattle feeders' trust Alliance Tribune, Topeka, Kan. I rTj juu tuii un ttui- you wash with. Putting pepper on strawberries is a very aid wrinkle, sought to bo revived here this season after the strawberries had disappeared. Nothing to Brag Of. First Little Girl (proudly): Wo nro going to Europe this summer.

Second Iattte Oirl (contemptuously): Pooh Ve shust game from dere. ine. The woman who is strong can keep her of farmers was ever witnessed ia this, crrnrrtri fnr rA tlir woman i wpntr A call has been issued for a conven part of the stats before. Hutchinson News: Recognizing the superior advantages of Hut( hinon over all other cities in Kftnsfs, the trustees of the Farmers' State Alliance have chosen it as their headquarters, and the president of the alliance, B. H.

Clover, has removed to. this place. Wichita, Topeka, and others tried to secure them, but thev selected Hutchinson as tha most central city, and the Isn't 60 cents rather steep for this tea? Dealer (sompwhat loaf): Steep for it? Of course you didn't think of roasting it did you? STOCK AND FARM. tion in Nebraska to place a farmers ticket in the field. It provides for the holding of the convention at Lincoln, July 29, and the convention will be composed of 930 delegates.

The primaries ar to be held July 24 win leei tnat sne is strong, iz isn i me woman tnac uoes the work it's PEARLINE. So it is with the clothes. They needn't be strong. The: finest things fare as well as the coarsest. They all last longer, for they're saved the rubbing that wears them out.

Work was never so easy never so well done. And safe, too. Nothing that is washable wa3 ever hurt by Pearline. If it zvcre otherwise- do you think we would continue ia sell enough Pearline yearly to. supply every family in the land with several packages.

girls It is said salt water bathing gives fresh complexion. and the county conventions two days later. From Junction City: Wheat continues to give an average yield of from twenty to thirty bushels per acre. Ness City Times: Owing to the large crop of wheat and the scarcity of machines, in some portions of the county the harvesters are running day and It takes a man with sand to sell sugar be-Joy cost. "Friday is the day of suspense in hinging states.

"Never jude fcy This is The Minnesota Farmers' Alliance one most easily reached frtora all points on account of its extra railroad facilities. The headquarters are established temporarily until the annual election in October, when they po doubt wil be will hold a convention at Faul July 16 and nominate a full state Peddlers and somttanscropulous grocers viil tea you, tm is (Z.JKY Y'f or "the same as Pearline." IT'S FALSE tCLX Pearline is never redded, and if your pecer sends yea scme- commenood and did not stop until a UckS, fiPti of bonds srs used, jrpansntly located Wra i intended tor ttie absconding cashier. le ia fiudfod bv hi diaaiiweRcaaco." tJmr lory had CUflg ia placs Of Fca? Sine, 43 tho bonest wf it A. UMFS FYU Ke Yorte.

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About Minneapolis Commercial Archive

Pages Available:
2,007
Years Available:
1886-1892