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MSH kr1 fe $2.50. J-"- mmm MinneapolisS15-325 Nico,llet. St. Paul7th & Robert Sts. I 340 Different Styles in Heavy Rib Mercerized Union SuitsEnglish worsted union suits, and Munsing worsted union suits. Finely woven garments, form fitting, New Silk and Merino Worsted, Un* derwear Blue and white and pink and white striped French neck, silk front and pearl buttons on shirt French backv ers, full fashioned throughout, $3.00 value y. Tuesday Evening-, Finest Quality Underwear. You will find our prices at retail the same as general merchants buy at wholesale. Everything direct, saving you (1) agent's profit, (2) commission man's profit, (3) jobber's profit. Compare! Compare! Dr. Wright's Genuine Health TJnderwear Pure wool-fleece lined. Cannot be excelled for warmth, durability and non-irritating and sanitary qualities. Sold the world over at $1.00, here, ?5c. Dunham Wool Ribbed UnderwearIn fawn, natural, pink and blue. Silk front shirts, gusseted-crotch drawers with pearl buttons, $1.00 quality 65c. Medicated Plush-Back UnderwearShirts, either single or double breasted, English fin ish drawers natural wool underwear camel's hair underwear scarlet and fine cashmere underwear. Medium and heavy weights, warm and comfortable, $1.00. Qlastenhury Health UnderwearIn single and double breasted camel's hair heavy Saxony wool ribs in salmon and blue and lisle worsted underwear, garments that embody principles of hygiene as applied to underclothing, $1.50. French Rib Balbriggan UnderwearExtra heavy, full fashioned, French neck, silk front, pearl buttons on shirt. French back, four large pearl buttons and double seat on drawers, $1.50 quality, $1.00. Wool Hose and Sea Island Cotton Ho_s,e Plain colors, fancy stripes, checks and modest figures. Two-toned shades. Double heel and toe, I2V2C. Rich Imported Spool-Silk UnderwearFull fashioned, English finish. Blue and flesh shades. Types of underwear luxury, $5.00. Finest Heavy Australian Wool Union SuitsSpring needle stitched, silk finished, extra largo lap. Also mercerized silk union suits in all colors, at $4.50. German and English Cashmere HosierySolid or split foot, in black and plain shades. Fancy effects, embracing silk embroidered stripes, neat figures and plaids. Individualized jacquard weaves of maco cotton and silk and lisle, medium and dark grounds, Weiss & Jacobs' strongest hosiery linovalues of 40c, 50c, 60c, at 25c. Lisle and Silk Plaited HosierySilk embroidered, jacquards and accord- ion knit. Novel heather mixtures, deep navy, and the newly evolved burnt onion. High spliced heel, sole and toe, 50o. Fine French Cashmere Half HoseSpliced double heel, sole and toe. Silk embroidered, vertical stripes, checks and figured patterns. Myrtle green, deep blue, tan and new brown, gray and black. Extra strong value, 50c. Spun-Silk HosieryIn black, blue, tan, white or brown. Suitable for embroidering, or to be worn plain. Decided exclusiveness in hosiery elegance, $1.50. on draw- v/ii V4.ia.w $1.95- Finest German Wool Underwear Thoroughly steam shrunk, fourteen needle stitched, natural undyed wool shade. Guaranteed absolutely sani tary and unshrinkable if washed according to directions. Worth $3.00, at :X- TOev Vv $2 Furs (NORTH STAR 5BRAND t i Zf, EXPERIENC E IN FURS. Unless one has had a very wide experience in buying Furs and is thoroughly fam iliar with the various varieties, it is well to select furs of established repu tation, and in any case it is the safest way, the durability of many furs is otherwise unknown il worn. The value of a Fur Garment hinges upon two points, the quality of the fur and the workmanship. We make Furs of every variety for men, women and children. Quality and workmanship is the best. Lanpher, SRinner (Si Co. Established Twenty-eight Years. ST. PAUL. MINN. In case your dealer does not carry our furs write directly to us, and we will advise you. 35 ^-aSjW Stef .-^v&k/Awi, $^A%to& Woman's World WHAT THE MARKET AFFORDS If you want the acme of richness and tenderness in a steak, buy one of export beef. You will only find it ma" make your eyes open wide if you not posted on the ways of the cattle market. Your export porterhouse and sirloin steaks will cost you 25 and 22 cents respectivelyexactly double what you pay for western beef. Cut an inch and a half or two inches thick for broiling, a good-sized steak won't leave much out of a dollar but it will be a delicious dish. One of these thick steaks answers admirably in place of a roast and goes much farther. In cutting the export beef, the bone of the sirloin is removed and the round is cut thick like the more delicate portions. This is very tender and juicy and at 14 cents a pound is su perior to many of the porterhouse and sirloin cuts of western beef. The usual price in the smaller shops of porterhouse is 18 cents, and most Eeople suppose they are getting the est grade of beef, but this is incor rect, for export beef cannot be sold for this price, and there is no reason why western beef should bring so much. The demand in export beef is for the choice cuts, the loin and the rib roasts the fastidious trade able to pay the prices quoted do not buy the cheaper roasts and boiling pieces. In consequence, these are sold at about the same price as the same cuts of poorer beef. If you want to try this fine grade of meat and can't afford the best cuts, find a butcher who deals in export beef and get a pot roast or a shoul der or chuck piece for roasting, and you will have something quite differ ent from the ordinary pieces of cheap beef. When housekeepers generally learn the value of these cheaper pieces of beef, pot roasts of clear meats for 8 cents a pound and plate beef at 4 cents, the standard of living will be raised and the cost lowered. WHAT WOMEN WANT TO KNOW A Plant Food.Can you give me di rections for mixing a good strength ening plaster? Also, a recipe for plant food for window gardening? Bessie. I have been unable to find any di rections which I could recommend, but I think you will find it much more satisfactory to buy the strengthening plasters than to bother with making them, as they are inexpensive. Bone meal makes an excellent plant food, as it is rich in nutritive quali ties. It can be mixed with the soil about the roots of the plants and about a teaspoonful once a 'month to a seven or eight-inch pot will be sufficient. If an immediate effect is desired, use very fine bone meal or bono dust, instead of the ordinary meal, which is sold at agricultural stores. Some people use ammonia, a tablespoonful in a pail of tepid water once a week, but it is more of a stimulant than a food and its effect is but temporary. QUESTION FOR TOMORROW Weak Ankles.I am sadly troubled with weak ankles and write to ask if you know of anything that will help me?Jennie. BLIND BOONE PLAYS Blind Boone, whose concert company gave the first of a series of concerts in this city, at the Stewart Memorial Pres byterian church, last evening, is a cu rious psychological study. For a quar ter of a'century he has been using his talents to delight audiences all over the United States, and his playing today possesses all the characteristics it pos sessed when he first took the concert stage. The strange thing about Boone's atainments is his almost utter failure in interpreting those compositions usually called "classic." His facile fingers usually accomplish the technique, but beyond the mere tones there is lit erally nothing. His playing of his own compositions, however, and his im itations and descriptive pieces could scarcely be better. To say that the audience enjoyed the concert last evening would give but the faintest idea of the amusement and en tertainment it afforded. Boone's an tics in the midst of his music, the unc tuous slapping of his thighs and the calls and grunts of satisfaction were side splitting to the audience which con tinually called for more. His singing, too, was a revelation. Nothing is too high or too low, and his rendition of the "Georgia Melon Song," and the camp meeting songs would be hard to surpass. His playing of the "Marshfield Torna- do," a' descriptive piece of his own composition, was inimitable and the thunder, hail and rain were most realis tic. His imitations of the different in struments and noises, too, were wonder ful- Miss Emma Smith, a young colored woman, with a sweet and expressive soprano voice, sang a number of selec tions, including Old Kentucky Home' and was wel lreceived. Like Boone, she excelled in those melodies dear to the hearts of the colored people. John Lang, impresario, with his suave man ner, and effective Dundrearies, added not a little to the pleasure of the even ing, ing. Henrietta Boardman. $10.00 Return Ticket to St. Louis. The Minneapolis & St. Louis railroad will sell excursion first-class tickets to the World's Fair and back for only $10.00, Nov. 14 to 26, good for return any time before Dec. 2. Two fast trains a day to the gates of the fair. Ticket office, 424 Nicollet a-fe Minne apolis. Illinois Central Railroad World's fair service to St. Louis be tween Chicago and St. Louis, leaving Chicago at 8:50 a.m., 12:04 p.m., 9:27 Eibrary,dSleepingp.m.d ,m. an 11:36 Dining, Buffet an Free Reclining Chair cars. Tickets to the fair at greatly reduced rates. Ask for time table and literature. A. H. Hanson, G. P. A., Chicago. Round Trip Homeseexers* Rates Via the North-Western Line. Tickets will be on sale at very low rates Nov. 22d to many points in Arkan sas, Indian Territory, Kansas, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma and Texas. For tickets and other information call at 600 Nicollet Ave. Minneapolis, Minn. To California. The "Rock Island" offers the quick est tourist car service to Los Angeles. A wide vestibuled tourist car leaves Minneapolis every Wednesday at 9:10 a.m., arriving at Los Angeles the fol lowing Saturday afternoon. Only 3 days en route. 'Our folder, "Across the Continent in a Tourist Car," tells you all about the trip. Call or write for one. H.J. Cobb, Excursion Agent. A. L. Steece, City Passenger Agent, 322 Nic ollet av, Minneapolis, Minn. Through Tourist Cars to California. Two cars a week with choice of routes and experienced conductors in charge. The Minneapolis & St. Louis railroad is the pioneer line and gives best service. Get rates or berths at 424 Nicollet avenue, Minneapolis. Rock Island System, Playing Cards, best in -the market. Two packs for twenty-five cents. Call or address A. L. Steece, City Pass. Agent, 322 Nicollet Ave, Minneapolis, JsfHwflS., Mf.,,./ hfiftiiWi ^^IEAPOU S The largest home- furnishing concern on earth. Base BurnerHas consuming return flues and a powerful heater has large coal magazine and new auto matic feed is beau tifully trimmed with nickel ana new auiu- $21.50 Solid Oak Dresser Extra large, prettilyr carved, rior polish, plate mirror, swell front.. $12.75 fefii-Wtv No Strict Require ment to HarLraan's Credit Plan. Domestic Steel Range Complete with high warming closet, made of the best cold rolled steel, has duplex grates, poise oven doors and other improved features, it is superior supe- $21.50 gt^R '^^^^^^^^m^s^^^^m LET HARTMAN "FEATHER YOUR NEST' BRASS TRIMMED IRON BEDThis bed is made in most every desirable color, has three coats of baked on enamel, brass knobs, rods and spindles, head board 5 feet high in every )erior in every detail of con- struction carvea supe GREA SPECIALS Read and consider each one carefully. You will learn information of value here that means dollars in your pocket if you take advantage: of them. They are bargains of the highest character and we say to you PIIARfSF VflllD DilRPIIAQE And pay us as you earn the moneyin small amounts aor UnAllIifC IUUH rUllUnHOC at such intervals as your circumstances permit. 22 Great stores through- out the United States. various colorscolors,, ranous $4.65 HarLraan's Prices Means a Saving to You. 3 BWIr Oak HeaterWill burn coal or wood, new patent fuel saving devices, very economical, full nickeled trimmed. A great special This Range is complete in every detail of con struction, for conveni ence and best results in cooking. We guarantee SideboardIn golden oak, this Afll 8% mirror larg range, ifc^l "ill lined for silverw're,, superiorrsuperio for5yrs VftllllU handsomely,$13.25",workman'p,carved. drawer plat rerw re action-ltheatsupstairs, itheats the mainfloor,and if you wish, it will send the ashes into the bin down cellar. No asliies or dust in the parlor. It's the only kind that suits particular people. It's the easiest stove in the world to run and, because of the air circulating system, it keeps your house warm and com fortable in the coldest weather and saves from to the coal you have been using. BUY IT AND BE COMFORTABL E STORAGE \r~ L f\ 1904 model, is strikingly handsome and resplen- dent with the finest high art nickel. I is triple F. H. PETERSON & CO. $ 73-75 So. Sixth St. Household goods a specialty. On- ,'jg equaled facfiltlea and lowest rate*. Picking by experienced men. Boyd Transfer & Storage Co., 46 So. 3rd St Telephones Main 656both exchanges. A little money goes a Ions way in The Journal's want columns. Only lc a word.