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fe Millinery hundred $1.00 giri8 and Misses' felt hats, values to $3.00...... $10.00 Ladies' Velvet Trimmed Hats............... $4.00 Shirt Waist Suits Same as cut above, worth $15.00 In women's tailor-made-Suits, value to $15.00 $ 1 Household rood equaled faclUtlea and lowest rate*. Packing by experienced men. Boyd Transfer & Storage Co., 46 so. 3rd St Telephones Slain 656both exchanges. mi GIFTS One beautiful Parlor Rug, worth $10.00. One beautiful quartered oak, solid Parlor Center Table, worth $6.00. One handsome solid oak Rocker, worth $5.00. fe.' ',r Friday Evening-, AT COAT -AND- Dsefnl Holiday Presents Ladies' 8-inch leather ||A Hand Bags, in black, Jbi Si if tan and brown IpHiW Women's Blended Rat Fur Storm Col lars, worth $15.00 $8.50 Take your choice of our large collection of ready-to-wear Eats at Half Price Odds and Ends ANOKA BO GAYE ALARM THO SERIOUSLY BURNED, EARL KINNEY RUNS SEVERAL BLOCKS TO SAVE CITY'S GAS PLANT. Please remember that we seU the best, highest class merchan dise made our prices the lowest we are not in. the high rent dis- trict and can therefore give you more for your money than can be obtained on Nicollet avenue, .'i\ Select these premiums on display at our store and same will be delivered to you free of charge from the great and liberal housefumishing headquarters, viz.: Hartman^ Furniture Carpet Co. Holiday Excursion Rates Via North Western Line. Boundi trip" tjefets will be on sale Dec. 12 to 22/with return limit of Jan. 12, 1905, to following points at rates shown: Albany, N. $40 Boston, Mass 40 Halifax, N. S 56 Montreal, Que 35 Portland, Me 40 Quebec, Que 40 Springfield, Mass 40 Toronto, Ont 30 Troy, N. 40 Tickets and sleeping car reservations can be secured at 600 Nicollet avenue, Minneapolis. cr^^^^USp- MOUSE ^3. 43-45 Washington Ave. 80. CHRISTMAS With every $15 purchase and over of the World's Best Clothing, Hats, Caps, Shoes and Furnishings (Men's & Boys'). CHOOSE FROM One 43-piece handsomely decorated China Dinner Set, richly designed in white, gold and colors, that exclusive crockery dealers ask $10 for* One beautiful Parlor Lamp, worth $5.00. One handsome gilt framed Picture, worth $5.00. One beautiful Japanese Bust Parlor Ornament, worth $7.00. i-A,\ o,' land k. &)kM$Afe&il^Si^ iMMMia ^r,T *V? ..'^^'wflR'TP* Our offerings for Saturday represent the limit of low prices. We have made preparation to care for the rush, which we are bound to have. Every item speaks for itself. POSITIVELY, THE GREATEST MONEY SAVING CHANCE OF THE YEAR $35.00 Tailor-Made Coat Suits $20 Satin-Lined 3- Qnarter Coats 2S?.. $6.00 Taffet a Sil Petticoats at $ 3 60a Nicollot Avonuo .-=i flAMfc 27 inches long in sizes 34 UVdld and 36 only fife Pf& black or tan, worth Sfcfia 5*111 $15.00 V IwV For Holiday presents. On sale at only Taffeta Silk Waists In black or colors, our $7.50 quality Leather Belts In the latest styles, make nice Christmas presents, choice lot.'. ELECTRIC GRIDIRON Anoka, Minn., Dec. 9.Thru the ex plosion of gasolene, caused by an acci dent to an engine, a serious fire was started in the Anoka gas plant early last evening. Earl Kinnoy, a 13-year-old boy, who was near the engine, was seriously burned, but ran to the fire enginehouse, three blocks distant, and turned in an alarm, In the meantime, the flames spread. electric roads being built or planned to the top of the building and also to the vicinity of some large gasolene tanks and barrels that had been filled in the afternoon. The firemen, at the risk of their lives, fought the flames, while the crowd of spectators stood a block away, fearful that any moment might bring an explosion of the tanks. The fire finally was put out. As the building was of wood, and as the fire did not reach the machinery, the loss is not extensive. San Francisco, Dec. 9.A surprising as well as one of the most interesting phases of the state's development is ,the number of suburban and interurban to be built. It is weil known, of, course, how H. E. Huntington, E. H. Harriman and I. W. Hellman have built and are still constructing electric lines in the south, with Los Angeles as a center. H. E. Huntington alone is to use Fresno as a center for several lines, one of which will run into the. Yosemite. E. H. Harriman is interested in several .elec tric road projects with San Josef^as a center. Paul Shoup, a Harriman rail road agent, is a director in th pro posed electric line up Mount Hamilton. E. H. Harriman also contemplates one of two lines out from Stockton. A line between Marysville and Dow nieville is fast assuming shape. It is to be sixty-five miles long. There are two rival schemes on foot for electric lines* between San Jose and. San Mateo, via Palo Alto. Again, a company has been organized to build a line forty miles in length from Colusa north to St. Johns. Ultimately this line will go thru Eed Bluff to Redding. Captain John Cmss is building an electric road between, Benicia and Vallejo and Napa, and lines are contemplated' between Sa linas and Monterey and between the latter and Carmel Mission. A new line between Santa Rosa and Petaluma is almost ready for operation, and a hun dred men are grading for a line to con nect lone with Jackson, Sutter Creek and Amador City. DISCIPLINES TWO WISCONSIN MAN AND HIS HOUSE KEEPER TARRED AND FEATH- ERED BY MASKED BAND. Chippewa Falls, Wis., Dec. 9.John Pauline and his housekeeper, living near Pine Lake, last night were stripped of their clothing and tarred and feathered by a band of about fiftv masked men. When the men arrived at the house they demanded that the inmates,o cometh out. When the latter did not do1 mob broke open the door and dragged the man and woman to trees and bound them. Pauline and his housekeep er were ordered to leave the community at once. Pauline, his neighbors de clare, has had six housekeepers in one year. Mariorie Kleinmets, 10 years old, was horribly injured bj an explosion of a dynamite cap and it is not believed she will recover. She found the cap in a trunk and picked it with a pin. IOWA MUST WAIT Cannot Have Dennison at Present New Court Order. Lincoln, Neb. Dec. 9.The supreme court last night issued a new mandate in the case of Thomas BennisOn of Oma ha. It orders the rearrest of Denni son and his detention until such time as he has perfected an application for a rehearing in the state supreme court or has appealed his case to the United States supreme court. In the mean time the officers at Omaha are charged not to accept bail from Dennison until further orders of the court and, on the other hand, the mandate of yes terday is changed so that officers from Iowa are barred for the present from taking him to that state. SOLD TO AMALGAMATED Indian Queen Copper Mine Changes Hands for $200,000. Butte, Mont., Dec. 9.-The Indian Queen mine at Apex, a small mining camp about twenty-six miles south or Butte, has been sold to the Amalga mated Copper Mining company for $200,000 by S. Marchesseau and Wil liam Farlin. Two for One Saturday. Double amount S. & H. green stamps at the J^cke! Plate. tradingi BK SOUND S DAOffW JIRSI^OUITO State Famous fbrvinsect tion which will enable him JURY'S VERDICT FO BOTE SIDES TO P" anc Interior of State Being Rapidly paVffr w^SiS"^ Developed by Trolley Con struction. Dee rk TT United btates district court last night the jury found a verdict for the Farm ers Independent Elevator company of Denbigh against the Hartford Insur ance, company for-: $1,568.25, represent ing msurai.ce m.building and maehin- THE MINNEAPOLIS December 1904. est Is Freed from Thrall by Science. Trenton, N. J. Deo? 9."4Thja of the Jersey mosquito are numbered. And there are not many of them, even at that, according to a report which Gov ernor Murphy is s.oon to receive from State Entomologist Smith. 'Professor Smith has spent more than three years investigating and experimenting with the Jersey mosquito problem, and now believes that he hag i secriredoinforma- rid the state of the insect pest '-Which has so lonffbeen a source of jannoyance and dis comfort. One important point,made in the re port is that the breediirg- places of the insect are not widely scattered, as has long been supposed, bht are massed, so that work in one locality will often pro duce results for miles around. All of the natural conditions that keep down the mosquito population are carefully considered. The claim that the dragon flies are valuable mosquito checks is not highly rated, but it is admitted that there are other insect'inhabitants of the pols and marshes that -do much in killing off the pest. It is contended in the-report that little figb,. commonly known as minnows, arertriature's most effective check against the mosquito hordes. In dealing with artificial methods of control it is shown how it is often pos sible to take advantage of the limita tions imposed by nature. The aim should be to destdoy mogquito breeding places rather than the mosquitoes that breed in them. Draining and filling of marshes are the chief of the perman ent measures advocated) but:there are others which are considered important when these are not available or practi cal. Nearly the entire. Atlantic coast line, the Delaware Bay shore and a long stretch of the Delaware river shore have been: surveyed, the mosquito breeding places have been located and the measures necessary to clean them out have been determined. It is shown that much progress has been made and at little expense in mas tering the mosquito problem and there is great promise that the day is not far distant when the state will be almost entirely free from this annoying and distressing pest. SUIe 9-~In th a on "-am in the building. The insur ance had been assigned to Edwards: Wood_ & Co.. as collateral for -monfiv -bilatera for money loaned, and the firm ,aippeared.?" as, .the real plaintiffs.'. Simila'r cases against ..hree other companies? have been trans ferred to Fargo for-trifti: ^il.U u^ Rubies, A A A S?- i prive Pearls, Opals, Emeralds, Rings, Sapphires, Pendants, LOOSE DIAMONDS. $ 18-00 buys our best 1-4 carat. 28-00 huya fine white .3-8 carat. 38-00 buys fine white 1-2 carat. 70-00 buys fine white 3-4 carat. 85-00 buys fine white 1 oarat. 125-00 buys fine white 11-8 carat. Larger stones in proportion. BROOCHES AND PENDANTS. $ 25-00 buys 1-4 K. 35-00 buys 3-8 K. 43.0 0 huys 1-2 K. 78-00 buvs 3-4 K. 102-00 huys 1 K. 85-00 huys 11-16 seven stones. 65-00 buys 7-8 K, nine stones. 130-00 buys 1 3-4 K, seven stones, and up to $70000 each. WADENA, MINN.-The Wadenn cracker fac tory will L,e rebuilt at once and the new struc ture will be two stories high and basement.- The capacity will be almost doubled. :.'-_ -Uifev'-'-sWi Brooches, Necklaces. most exquisite collection-of'-diamonds and other precious stones ever seen in Minneapolis, and at prices 'that will convince you that this is the best place to buy' the best jewels at the lowest prices. Ideal Christmas gifts here" that will last along time and be good investments besides. Do not forget that our diamond offices are on the second, floor, and that our expenses for rent, etc. are at a minimum. 518 NICOLLET AVENUE. LET H&RTMA "TEATfliBB tOUfi NEST $ 1 000 0 0 buys Diamond and Pearl Neck lace, worth $1,400.00. $650-0 0 buys Single String Pearls, worth $800.00. Combination Rings from $10-00 up to $120000 We can show BLACK PEARLS, PINK PEARLS, WHITE PEARLS, Both loose and mounted. Loose Diamonds in White, Blue White, Steel Blue, Blue. FANCY BROWNS, all sizes. FANCY CANARIE. Rubies from $1 0 0 0 up to $1000 0 0 GEAND MEADOW,. MINtf.A. F. Wagner ar rived here. today from Staples with the body of Wi3. wi$@ who filed there Dec. C: She was the paufibter. John Seiss of Grand Meadow. f^Vf ^very_elemen- of worry. No payments required when you are sick or out of its many benefitsa. Ours is a most generous credit idea. It is unchanging in its broad concessions and of f^l ^^i?^1^ i^^m-m"/: PRAIRIE DTT CHIEN, WISFrancis York, aged 18, of York's Landing, had his head crushed and neck broken in a runaway accident near Yellow river. and we'll say to you, "Make our credit plan serve your convenience: take advantage