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>* News Section!^ \ s THE MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL, f5Wvfpi? Sunday, May 20, 1 9 0 6 . ^ ; &&IS& ttAbStS ! T
f̂c*»w** City News TOWN TALK
T :>•»•
I The* .Lake Harr ie t Pavilion is open I t o d a ^ . ? Dr.* B. L. Gedney, dentist , is now J located a t No. 713 Pillsbury building. I ^ , Windstorm Insurance, very low rates, I 3t\ 0. Bell Investment Co., I l l 4 th st 8. I "*• " M e r i t " renders perspirat ion odor
less. 25 cents a t all drug stores. Toko-T ldn. Toilet Co., Minneapolis, Minn. ^ Souvenir postals, complete l ine in ^ 'Views comics, ar t and ci ty views, a t the
Century News store, 6 Third street S. Fu r s stored in new burglar-proof
storage vaults . Eepai r ing a t summer prices. Schlawff & Reinecke, 911 Twentieth avenue N .
Never buy real es ta te without having the t i t le insured by the Minnesota Title Insurance & Trust company. Costs litt le , worth much.
The Alumni association of t h e College of Homeopathic Medicine and Surgery has elected Dr. A. E. Booth of Minneapolis as president; Dr. G. G. Balconi of Lake Wilson as vice president, and Dr. Annah Hurd, Minneapolis, secretary-treasurer.
A t Fowler M. E. church this morning Dr. J . S. Montgomery is announced to speak on the subiec't, " T h e Freedom of the F r e e . " The choir will render " S e e k Ye the L o r d , " by Roberts, *nd " W o r s h i p the L o r d , " by Watson.
< in the evening- Dr. Montgomery will speak on the popular theme, " T h e People Who S a j , ' W e Do as We P lease . ' ' ' The special selections of the choir for the evening service are, ' ' L ike a s a F a t h e r , " by Lansing, and " T h e P e n i t e n t , " by Van de Water . The Sunday evening audience of Fowler church crowds the auditorium and is largelv made up of young people. Special car service is given a t 9:10.
WILL BE HARNESSED OFFICIAL " J U I O B " SOON TO B E
AVAILABLE. v
Congressman Stevens ' Bill Providing
for Commission to Examine Meeker
Island Water Power With a View to
Employing I t for Government Light
ing Makes Favorable Progress.
SAYS HOPE OF FRISCO . IS IN TASK OF RICH
%;
J O H N D. MCMILLAN ^ E T U B ^ S ] FROM T H E STRICKEN CITY.* -V
Analyzing the Effects of Disaster, H e
Says the Weal thy Must Rebuild the
City to Save Themselves — Year
Needed to Clear Up the Wreck of
t h e City.
YOUNG MEN'S CLASS TO GIVE AN ENTERTAINMENT
Program of Music, .Reci tat ions .and
Readings Wil l Be Given a t Riverside
Chapel on Evening of May 22.
The young men ' s Baraca class of Riverside chapel is to give an entert a inmen t a t the chapel on May 22, which will close with a orie-act farce ent i t led " A n Economical Boomerang , " under direction of Charles Newton. Dr. C B. Storrs is of the glee club and Miss Clara Berdel the accompanist.
The program is as follows: Glee club, ' \netaoied", piano <«olo, James
Caldwell, reading Lulu Piper duet, "O o-ment that I Ble-w " Miss Irnm Olson and George JCewton, flute «olo, ' r.iliv la le , ' bv W ier, Will Haubon re iding, Lulu Piper tubiphone solo Mrs Schroedei piano solo, James Caldwell, Glee Club 'Tinker s Song
'A^ ECONOMICAL BOOMERANG " Oast of character*
Alexander P i' Meton Mbert Valender Mrs \ P ibbleton
* Bird Ployei Mrs Bird Plover
— The doctor Haggle tbe mild
^elma Crook Henn Field
Laura Murptn Georjje Newton jQueenie Beuv
' M e r i t ' ' destroys all body odors. 25 cents nt all busy stores Tokolon Toilet Co., Minneapolis, Minn.
Il lumination of the government buildings in the twin cities and at For t Snelling by government manufactured electricity is a closer possibility today than ever before, owing to the favorable progress of Congressman Stetv-ens ' bill providing for examination of the locks and dams between S t , Pau l and Minneapolis for avai labi l i ty as> power producers.
Engineers say tha t the upper dam, which is finished, will yield 4,000 horsepower. The lower dam, when finished, will add another 4 000 minimum horsepower. With the location of a power house between the dams the force from the surplus water will be available for commercial purposes. I t will make electricity as well as anyth ing else.
Be t t e r One Higb Dam. '
On the other hand, i t is an expert opinion tha t one dam twenty-five feet high would have been bet ter , as a business proposition, than the two dams, each 12VJ feet high. This arrangement would have been bet ter both for power and lock purposes, as one long pond is considered bet ter than two short ones. The single dam would have been bet ter for the application of i ts horsepower to machinery than the separate dams, and i t would have increased the available horsepower to some extent .
Bur ton Knows Situation.
The Stevens bill provides for a commission to report on the pract icabi l i ty of using the surplus water flowing over the dams, and a favorable report has been ordered by the house committee on inters ta te commerce. The measure will now go to the committee on rivers and harbois, tha t committee exercising -joint lurisdiction wi th the commerce committee.
Inasmuch as Chairman Burton of the harbors and r iver committee has per* sonalfy examined the lock and dam work at Meeker island i t is expectetd tha t the bill will have his discriminating a t t enton , and tha t in all probabili ty i t will have the support of the rivers and harbors committee.
REFEREES ARE NAMED FOR ST. PAUI. RECOUNT
-[ (5) " 1
VARSin CUPBOARD IS BARE OF "BONES"
W-
R E G E N T S
*
RROTff TO £ A Y l&ftliABX&g*; «<#*
•H i * T ^ - * >
Bills Due on June 1 Amount to $30,000
and Balance-in Treasury I s Only $564
—Money from May Tax Sett lements
Will No t Be Available for a Month
-—Tear's Demands, $396,526.24. '*
£
623-625 F i r s t Ave. S,
(F^\0
Actual Work of Sett l ing Who Was
Elected Mayor of St. Pau l Will Be
Taken Up Tomorrow.
Judge George L. Bunn of the Ramsey county district court today filed an order appointing Ray Todd, W. C, Otis anjd W. T. McMurran referees to recount the recent vote for mayor of St. Paul in response to the petit ion of Stanley Wood. Stan J. Donnelly, at torney for Mayor Smith, made no ..objection to Ahe recount, tho he said he believed it would be unavai l ing. r
Of the Teferees, Mr. Todd represents the complainant, Mr. Otis represents. Mayor Smith, and Mr . McMurran was named by the court.
The recount of the ballots will probably be taken up tomorrow.
" M e r i t " applied to armpits or feet destroys perspiration odors. 25 cents. At all busy stores. i
YOUNG PEOPLE TO PLAY FOR COAST SUFFERERS
John D. McMillan, vicepresident of the Chamber of Commerce, returned yesterday from California, where, with Mrs. McMillan, who had gone to the coast for her health,, he spent three months. Mr. McMillan" was a t Pasadena w,hen the ear thquake smote San Francisco. The quake, Mr. McMillan says, has created a condition difficult of close analysis from the .financial or economic viewpoint. One hears on every hand tha t San Francisco will be rebuilt, t ha t it will be a greater and
grander ci ty than ever, and much more eautiful. This is the confident ex
pression of all Calif ornians, but t ha t the wish is fa ther to the thought is too often evident.
The hope of the city is in i ts large estates. The rich property owners, even were they not full of pride and local patriotism have only one course open— they must stem the tide of anxiety, allay fear, force back pessimism wherever i t appears, and put forward the bold front. This is their salvation. Property once worth ' millions is not worth a dollar today in the sense of actual , practical , ut i l i ty . They must get the city back to where this property will again be capable of b n n ^ i n g in incomes somewhere near a fair percentage on investment value, as represented by former high prices, or s tand to see a great Shrinkage.
Efforts are being made to minimize the effect of the earthquake, and to prevent misconception of the scope and extent of the shock. "To many people in the east, who have not been to the Pacific coast, and who carry in their mind no definite idea of what a big country California embraces, the shock has condemned the whole s ta te . To them the fact tha t Los Angeles is hundreds of miles from San Francisco, and t h a t a comparison of the effect upon tha t city is like a comparison of the effect upon New York, of a disturbance at Richmond, Boston, or Baltimore, does not appear. This is an impression wholly ' wrong, yet likely to injure California tourist t ravel until i t has been dissipated.
Mr. McMillan believes San Francisco will be rebuilt and tha t ult imately a finer city will rise, but Says t h a t all this ta lk of building up the city in a year or two is foolish. I t will t ake a year a t least to clear up the wreck.
" I n my op in ion , " says Mr. McMillan, " t h e r e were many more people killed than will ever be known. The reports of 300 dead are entirely too low. Hundreds were killed tha t were never found, and doubtless many were found later and l i t t le was said about i t , for the whole energy of the people is now bent towards minimizing- the effect of the disaster and rebuilding the c i t y . "
MILWAUKEE J O MAKE: T
MANY S U P E R I N T E N D E N T S W I L L * B E S H I F T E D .
E . D. Sewall is Credited Wi th Promo
tion Which Will Give Him Charge of
Company's Vas t In teres ts in Mon
t ana and H\ B . Ear l ing Will Take
Minneapolis Office—Other Promo
t ions, ~
The regents of the s ta te univers i ty will have to borrow a large sum of money within a fe"w days, or the payroll of unversi ty teachers and employees, and expense bills, chie for payment June 1, will have to wait th i r ty days.
There is today a balance of only $564.59 in the s ta te t reasury to the credi t of the s tate university. Theoreti-cal ly ' this balance is to pay a salary list aggregat ing more than $30,000.
When the fiscal year s tar ted, Aug. 1, 1905, the regents had a balance in the t reasury turned over to them from the s ta te board of control of $15,428.12. During the yeaer the total receipts were $381,6bS.01. This made the available money aggregate $397,091.13. Demands on this amount have been $396,526.24.
Taxes Come in Slowly.
There will be no more receipts available for universi ty purposes ti l l the collections come in on the May tax settlement. These will begin to arr ive June 1. But according to past experience, i t will take fully th i r ty days for a. suffic i e n t amount, about $80,000, to be collected to meet the salary list due June 1, to say nothing of the other expenses of the universi ty, which pile up to a considerable amount a t the close of the year .
I t is est imated t h a t there is about $120,000 which the univers i ty will realize out of the May settlement, bu t the bulk of the payments into the s ta te t reasury, drag Along thru June and July , and even some of them into August, There is no question, tho^ tha t there will be plenty of money in the fund later on to meet any loan which the regents may now deem i t advisable to make. N
Who I s Moreau? J u s t a sk your neighbor or friend,
DINING ELEPHANTS WITH THE SELLS-FLOTO SHOWS
H E R R I C K REFRIGERATORS. Thoroughly sani tary and require only two-thirds as much ice as the ordinary kinds. Inexpensive. Lawn Mowers, Hose, Garland Ranges, New E r a Paints , Cutlery, Mechanics ' Tools.
Famous At t ract ion from Germany to Be
Seen Here W i t h Other Features Next
Fr iday .
WARDE'S LECTURES WILL APICAL TO STUDENTS
Great Ac to r ' s Deep Study of Shakespearian Characters Makes Him Mine of Weal th to English Scholars.
"A N igh t Off" Will Be Presented a t
Church of the Redeemer, Proceeds
to Go to Ear thquake Victims.
Oars and Oarlocks. Fishing Tackle of All Kinds.
—PRICES RIGHT—
The comedy, " A Night Off," will be produced a t the Church of the Bedeemer Fr iday and Saturday evenings, May 25 and 26, under the auspices of the Young People 's Christian Union. The net pioceeds will be donated to the earthquake sufferers of California. Those who wish to see a good production and at the frame time aid a worthy cause are requested to purchase t ickets a t the Metropolitan Music company and at tend at least One performance.
This play has been given several t imes m the city by local ta lent which stamps it a play of exceptional merit for the purpose. I t is a light comedy, abounding m amusing situations and the characters being those of modern society give the play a peculiar interest which holds the a t tent ion of the au dience.
The cast is as follows:
Rich Sweet Cream F L A V O R E D ,
S W E E T E N E D , F R O Z E N .
T h a t ' s w h a t m a k e s
Fadden's Faultless Ice Creams
Visi t our Model Ice Cream Fac tory , 123 N o . 6 t h S t .
Phones: N. W. Nicollet 446. T. C. 2140.
^Country dealer a,wrxte for our prices.
Professor Justinian Babbitt Harry Damask. . , Jack Mulberry . Marcus Burtus Snap Prow 1 Lord Mulberij Mrs Zantippe Babbitt Msbe Angelica Damask Susan . . . . . . . Maria
George Keamev . George Barrett Charles Brewster
. . . Frank Wisteuberg €harles Beery
Joan Sharpe Miss Magdaliue Oldberg
Miss Marian Nickel! Miss Mabel Kearney
Miss Justina Rhea Miss Horten/e Lawrence
The play is given under the direction of Josephine Bonaparte Rice. ^
CATHOLIC PICNIC P L A N N E D
St. Pau l Parishes to Celebrate Ju ly 4 a t Fa i r Grounds.
Catholic church parishes of St. Pau l are to unite in a big picnic and J u l v 4 celebration at the s ta te fair grounds. The proceeds are to go to the new cathedral fund. The scheme was launched at a meeting of about 160 Catholics at Knights of Columbus hall, St. Paul , last Monday evening. Every parish in the city was represented. Rev. J . J . Lawler presided. Judge E. W. Bazille was elected president; Dr. E. W. Buckley, treasurer, and J . A. Willwer-scheid, secretary. An executive commit tee -of seven will be appointed of which the officers will be ex-offieio members. A general committee also will be selected composed of a represen ta t ive from each parish o& the 'c i ty.
' ' M e r i t , ' ' dainty, harmless cream, destroys bodv odors. 25 cents. Tokolon Toilet Co., Minneapolis, Minn. =
^ FREDERICK WAEDE, 3 "Who Is to Lecture on Shakspearean *> •* Subjects at Elks' Lodes-room, J S 3k • i « • • • • > • • • • • • • • • • • • • , • • • • • • • / • • • " » ' • • • )
A man who has plaved Shakespearian roles, who has read even between the lines to discover the real significance or " p o i n t s , " as the actors call them, should be qualified to present much tha t is new and interest ing to even those who consider themselves to be thoro students of the works of the great master. The lectures bv Frederick Warde at the E l k s ' lodgerooms, therefore, part icularly appeal to s tudents of l i terature .
Mr. Warde ' s reputat ion as a great actor of course enhances his appearance on the lecture platform. I t is known tha t he is a charming speaker and a man whose personahtv is magnetic, so i t can be reckoned as a great t rea t t ha t he is to t a lk Thursday night upon ' ' Shakespearian W o r k s ' ' ; F r iday nig'ht, " H a m l e t " ; Saturday afternoon, " T h e Wit and Wisdom of Shakespear ' s F o o l s , " and " T h e Merchant of V e n i c e , " Saturday night.
The at tendance of the lectures is to be limited to 400 seats, and t ickets for both single lectures aud the course are now offered to the public. Mr. W a r d e ' s lectures in other cities have been praised as possessing real value as well as being enter ta ining to a rare degree. Several receptions are to be given in connection a t the E l k s ' club during Mr. W a r d e ' s s tav.
At the great winter carnival in Germany every year, a feature of the fest ival is always furnished by the rival anjimal dealers in the old world.
The diving elephants are the supreme card of interest a t this festival. Captain Henry Amberg, foreign agent for the Sells-Floto ^Hows, on his last visitA secured six of "'the most famous elephants a t this jn^eftng. The original coat and expense of> t r anspor t a t ion ran into t h e thousands. U)i •> - •x .
Whiles thewahawsntaxevbera, if t h e wate r is of the^pro^er temperature and the w e a t h e r ? p % ) M W t h e r e a t double herd of JSe/&$atfRSr*Sfc#8wt% will be given a b a t h ' i n the r iver or m a ppnd near the show grounds. Great ^are. must be taken on these occasions, and the keepers are continuously on the anxious seat, as i t were, 'for should Trilby or Big Mary t ake a notion, they can create consternation. In the P la t t e river a t Denver the elephants were so overjoyed, while bathing, at being for the t ime free from their t ra iners , t hey indulged in huge wate r spout jokes un t i l the whole picnic Hfook on a serious' aspect ; just as Trilby took ^a notion to swim to Omaha jafoQ. the commands of the keepers were of no avail , it became necessary to hire a t ug boat and chase her back to the herd. Then the plot thickened, the elephants all absolutely refused to re turn to the banks.
But an elephant t ra iner knows their habi ts and curiosity, so they brought over a couple of camels and caused them to give forth unheard-of sounds, which aroused the furiosity of the elephants and they all came t rumpet ing to the shore, where Tri lby was chained to a tree and given a good licking with a buggy whip tha t onlv t ickled her the more because she had enjoyed such a good time.
The Sells-Floto shows will be here Fr iday, May 25.
ON VERGE OF BATTLE AT FOET SNELLING
Speolal to The Journal, Milwaukee, May 19.—Changes in
volving a dozen or more of the importan t operating officials of the Milwaukee road, are said to be slated to t ake place on June 1. The changes are due to the construction of the Milwaukee line to the coast. Official confirmation has not been given, tho the information is deemed wholly reliable.
The changes will t ake Assistant General Superintendent H. B . Ear l ing from Milwaukee and the supervision of the Middle division to Minneapolis as assistant general superintendent of the Northern district, succeeding E. 1). Sewall, who is also president of the Chicago, Milwaukee and St . Pau l railway of Montana.
H. It. Williams, former general manager of the Milwaukee system, is now president of the Pacific Coast rai lway company, and Mr. Sewall will have charge of the eastern pa r t of t ha t road, working under President Earl ing, and will have his headquarters in Chicago.
D. C. Cheney, for years superintendent of the L a Crosse division, will be assistant general superintendent, succeeding Mr. Ear l ing in Milwaukee. P . C. Eldredge, superintendent of "the Pra i r ie du Chien and Mineral Po in t divisions, goes to the position of superintendent of the La Crosse division. E . D. Wright , superintendent of the northern division, will be in charge of the two divisions formerly under Mr. Eldredge. There will be no successor to Mr. Wright on the northern division.
P ICTURES T E L L STORY
Northern Pacific Issues At t rac t ive Booklet, Showing P r e t t y Views..
I n a book fiom the Northern Pacific road ' s press, Olin D. Wheeler tells interest ing things about an eastward t r ip from California over the Shasta-North-ern Pacific route, by way of 'Por t land , Puget sound, Spokane, Yellowstone park and the twin cities. " E a s t w a r d thru the Storied N o r t h w e s t , " is the poetic t i t le chosen for the work.
I n conformity wi th the settled policy of the railroad company the main fea ' ture of the book is pictures, le t t ing nature speak for herself in a t t rac t ive terms. The engravings are in brown, but are placed two and three to the page, showing scenes along the route.
The telling of the story is an effect ive use of Anglo-Saxon word t in ts , and ra ther embellishes the pictures, than the reverse. The book is sent out from the Northern Pacific passenger department by A. M. Cleland, general passenger agent, a t St. Psu l .
- * ~ f i
The KITCHEN STORE ,^Mn n e w . A. Q, U. W . Bldg. , be t . U n i v e r s i t y A v . a n d 4 t h S t . S . E . f
If O 3J0-312 CENTRAL AVENUE. , r ; J M H Q W 1 — * E } i "^—^——p———————————Jar—
The best laundry soap made. It need3 no introduction— v* i
for... Limit, 60c worth to customer.
Lace Curtain Stretchers
(Like Cat)
M a d e o f b a s s w o o d a n d r e a d i l y a d j u s t e d t o a n y s i z e , p e r p a i r ,
49c P r i c e s quo ted h e r e wil l hold good
t h r o u g h o u t t h e w e e k o r un t i l s u p p l y r u n s o u t .
Gasoline Stoves r.ii
Two-burner Gasoline S toves ( l ike cut ) w i th b r a s s g e n e r a t o r s and s tand-pipes . Special , t ) 1 . 9 S .
W E CANNOT TAKB P H O N E O R -* D E R S ON T H E S E tiOODS.
HEIDELBERG
W a r Almost Waged, and Then a Com
mand to H a l t and Spare Thousands of
Lives.
The Heidelberg Is a cigar in a class by itself You may not discover this by smoking only one. It is like every other good thing that you have heard about. After you have become accustomed to it you gradually become aware that you are in an intirely different world.
Winecke & Doerr 4I4 Nicollet
Local D i s t r i bu to r s
PIANO TOllY-^SSS/S * WRONG PIANO at any price. > The purchase of a K I M B A L L P I A N O is economy personified. Yoti^ wan t t he bes t a t t h e r igh t price, th i s is wha t you ge t in a K I l k B A L L | P I A N O . You also have t h e pleasure t h a t comes from the ownership of good and beautiful things. * -?
WATTE WILL ADDRESS IMPROVEMENT LEAGUE
Judge of Municipal Court 'Will Tell
Members About City Charter and
Proposed Amendments.
: FACTORY WAREROOMB F. J. Hill,
Northwestern M*r. W. W. KIMBALL C O . f t S J i ^
The " B l u e s ' * and the " B r o w n s , " each 500 men strong, marched against each other a t Fo r t Snelling Saturdav, but as they were about to part icipate in the first battle For t Snelling has Been since days when the Indians made trouble for the first arr iving whites, Inspector Francis A. French ordered the commands to cease maneuvers.
In theory, an army of 20,000 men was located this morning a t Stillwater, while another of equal size was camped at Shakopee. Each army sent a detachment of 500 men to capture and hold For t Snelling, a Btratgetic point. As a mat te r of fact , each detachment s tar ted the game about six miles from the fort. They marched toward each otfher and were about to meet in ba t t le a t a point near the center of the milit a ry reservation when the inspector ordered the maneuvers to discontinue. The inspector did not care to see a sham bat t le , tho the men were eager for the fun, and not a blank cartridge was fired. As a result, no points relat ive to the capture of For t Snelling were credited for or against either force, tho the pract ice march of each detachment was a commendable success.
ROCK I S L A N D I N E U R O P E
Commissions Will Be Establ ished to Look After Immigrants . _;
Special to The Journal. >l
Chicago, May 19.—The management of the Bock Is land road is preparing to establish immigration_„ commissions in several European cities. John Sebast ian, passenger traffic manager of the -Eock Island, the Frisco, and the East-1 e m Illinois systems ,i« going to Europe June 6 wi th a. view ta j t scer ta in ing conditions and seeing w h a t can be done not the way of establishing live immigration agencies. I t is the purpose of the Rock Island arid i t s allied lines to make e-^ery effort possible to fill up the southwest wi th r desirable set t lers . % »
$19.00—To'Boston anfr Return—-$19.00 Plus $1.00 from Chieago, v ia Nickel P la t e Road, May 31st to June 9th, m-elusive i also via N e w York City at^" excursion rates . R e t u r n l imit of Ju ly I 15th by extension of t icket . Folders , , ra tes and all information furnished b y applying to John Y. Galahan, General
Are you looking for reliable dent is t ry a t a moderate prioet
If work is not as represented wo will cheerfully refund money. No students. Pla tes $ 3 to $ 1 5 ,
Old plates made good as *ew. Gold crown and bridge work %
specialty. Established 1880. Telephone your appointment
ahead—T. C. 3003; N . W. Main 2787-L-4.
EXAMINATIONS F R E E .
DR. H. S. RAY S29 Nicollet Ave., Cor. 4th St .
M I N N E A P O L I S .
2**i
&*•>.
&8t K* i& 3 * f3&&
,.mit
s?
Judge E. F . Wai te of the municipal bench will address the Improvement league at a Special meeting to be held tomorrow afternoon in the mayor ' s reception room in the city hall. He will speak on the city charter and t h e amendments proposed by the charter commission. ^
Another interest ing feature of t he meeting will be the reports of the ward chairmen on the progress of the cleanup movement and the work of planting. Thousands of packages of seeds h a v e been distr ibuted during the last week. The main object has been t o secure the p lant ing of vacant lots and waste places with flowers and vines in such . „ r K ^ . > f t „~ — - - - - - - s * a manner as to hide some, of „the ^un- ' Agent , room 298, 113 Adams street , sightliness. - -A..i . Chicago. % " -
Hold
Bottled Milk tothe Litfht* -
,^.-,.» There** n o Se4tmeat I t ' s all pure, health-giving milk, drawn from selected cows, aerated and cooled in pure country air, then bottled and cooled by scrupulously clean machinery, ready for your table . *- *•*-*>>*
The Minneapolis Milk Co. 9fli A v e . So . i n * * t * I t .
I r.*f*£tivft Page
*
CLOSING OUT
nos
At Half Price O n l y a f e w d a y s m o r e a n d w e m u s t l e a v e t h i s s t o r e . J u s t t h i n k of b u y i n g W E B E R > S O H M E R , V O S E a n d o t h e r n o t e d m a k e s a t H A L L F P R I C E .
$ 5 0 0 W e b e r s , ~ o n l y $ 2 5 0 $ 6 0 0 S o h m e r s , o n l y $ 3 2 5 $ 5 0 0 V o s e s , o n l y $ 2 6 5
T h e y a r e s l i g h t l y s h o p - w o r n o n l y . S e c o n d - h a n d u p r i g h t s o f e v e r y k n o w n m a k e a t a n y p r i c e t o c l o s e o u t .
M A K E TJS A N O F F E R
O n a n y p i a n o s w e h a v e . C a l l o r w r i t e t o
. RAUDENBUSH & CO. 703 Nicollet Ave . , - Minneapolis.
i THE BLUE AND THE GRAY ^ A Q r e a t S n a p In TAILORINQ. W o m o k e t o o r d e r a
TWO-PIECE SUIT • . . • o f v e r y fine n a v y s e r g e , b l u e o r g r a y , $21.00
EXCELLENT BARGAINS*
5 BROWN BROS. • TAILORS, 21 SO. SIXTH ST.
i
Natural Teeth I f you would like your teeth t o look as though they were your own, come t o us
for your dental work.
F U L L SET ( tha t fit) $ 3 and $ 5 GOLD CROWN (22k) $ 3 BRIDGE WORK (per tooth) $ 3 F I L L I N G S , a t - 5 0 c »P
We guarantee tha t no better '
virorMf can be had a t any j>rice.
Union Painless Dentists, 243 Nicollet Ave., Minneapolis. |
St. Pau l Office, 376 Bobert Street .
i
We h&jto*. fifteen. Jftfferent makes of High Grade Piatt^e, no t a cheap one in tkfr-lot, bu t High Grade Pianos c h e a p T ' f t will -pay :yotf to call on ra6 before buying.
SE6EBSTR0I PIANO CO. 804 Nicollet Avenue.
THE GRIEVISH METH0I n̂. 0 F FITTING ^
J » P GLASSES _ 1 % Is Both Scientific and Practical .
GRIEVISH, Optician* iOTKlcollet Ava., Minneapolia.
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