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UNEEDA BISCUIT Fresh Fig Bars, always 15c pound, special... IMPURITIES O ANY KIND IN Absolutely Pure Ground Bla,ck Pepper at, pound Underwood's Oil Sardines, less than J@ boxes 10c. Hr for A Quit the cellar or attic habit" 4 advertise the "outgrown things." C&YLCN AND INDIA GREEN TEA. Put up in sealed lead packets to preserve its ma ny excellent qualities. 60c and 70c per pound. AT ALL GROCERS'. HIGHEST AWARD, ST. LOTJIS. 1904. Nicollet Ave... .Fifth St... .First Ave. So... .Minneapolis Pure food grocery and meat depts. than any other market in the city. We invite you to visit our modern sanitary cooling rooms to see this and our other many lines of choice meats. We will take orders for cuts of the "blue ribbon cattle** to be delivered Saturday, at our regular low prices...no advance. These specially reduced prices for Wednesday only. pkgs for beet State Fair 1st prize steers. yHESE are 2-year-old Hereford cat.tle raised and fed by Wood- 1 ward & Son, Langdon, Minn. Exhibited and blue ribbon winners at our recent State Fair, sold live to Swift & Co., of South St. Paul, and sold dressed to our meat department at 914c per poundthe highest price paid for beef in Minneapolis in two years. \X7E HANDLE this quality of beef regularly and we sell greater quantities c-F- MEAT DEPT., Grocery dept. cracker spcls. 3 Merchants use ^"l%l*l WITT, 7 manager. ALL 10c Packages, special each Fresh Chocolate Bars, always 15c lb, special. TelephonesN. W. Main 4700-1-2-3-4. T. C. 162-202-1917. ...8o 12o 25c 15c SAFOLIO to cakes special S for 20th CENTURY SOAP Regular 10c IB cans cans, Wednesday, ^frfor never Famous'1 Superba Not a $35.00 Range for $23.50, but the best .a.ii^ ic/vi^toi ever shown in Minneapolis. WE HAVE A FEW ODD RANGES WE ARE CLOSING OUT A FACTORY PRICES 0 aiooia-MiroK 82 IMCOUCT' ThV" Journal $ & h.n*n W~~tZ~^ """*"most vs.jbmc --$?:. ^^f^+^sg, ig STATE IS BELYING O N A MRSE GIRL Evidence of Miss Metz May Pin Murder of Miss Blydenburgh to Des Moines Man. MiSS MURTLE METZ, Whose Evidence Is Expected to Unravel a Murder Mystery. Special to The Journal Des Moines, Sept. 18.A pretty nurse girl who was with Miss Irene Bly I denburgh, of Eldora, the las?few hours -f- before that girl's untimely ana clerP*VlVrtT*s exclusively bv upon by the grand jury dence to wairantd an indictment for murder against Herbert Dickinson. If the insurance solicitor is ever con victed of murdering the Blydenbuigli girl, and if phvsicians who helped with the criminal operation performed are ever brought to justice, it will be thru the testimony of these two rather pe culiar persons. The witnesses furnish very interesting stories. Miss Murtle Metz, the nurse, a beau tiful girl, who was on hor first case when she attended Miss Blydenburgh, recently graduated from Mercy hospi tal in this city. To the countv attor ey she says: Story of the Nurse. I was called to attend Miss Ed wards, as they called her, and I did not know until after the death that her name was Blydenburgh. I found a beautiful young girl apparentlv very ill. Her temperature was very high and she was weak, and I immediately began keeping a chart of her case. That chart I have and will bring it in as evidence. I asked Dr. E. E. Gadd, who called me, what was the matter with the girl. He said it was a case of peritonitis. I did not suspect that the girl had been the victim of some man until she stretched out her hands to me a few hours before she died and said that she had not always been a bad girl. Then I knew and I was so sorry for her. The doctors came often and said every fame that she could not live. The girl did not betray her lover to me, but she made no secret of the case of her ruin and death." Of the Preacher. Just how Kev. E. T. Covle, the minis ter, butted into the case the police are mystified to know. They had been working upon it only a few days when it was ascertained that persistent ef forts had been made on the part of a rather fancy-looking preacher to talk with the girl. Rev. Mr. Coyle said that the girl had come to him several weeks before and had said that she was in trouble due to her intimaev with Herbert B. Dickin son, a married man of Peoria, 111., who is a life insurance solicitor and is now in jail chargeu with murder in the second degree. The girl had insisted that Dickinson wished to help her avoid disgrace, and put her in a position where she could go back to Eldora and work again in the telephone office where the other girls and her brothers and sisters would be none the wiser. "She said 1hu she had not the monev tq^go to a hospital," said the minister, "and I agreed to advance $50. This was purely out of friend ship for the poor girl who maintained that until she met Dickinson she was innocent. "When Dickinson and the phvsicians learned that I was assisting the girl thev removed hex to another house and there I was forbidden her sight. I en tered the house disguised as a telephone operator and had some talk with the girl. She knew several days in advance that she would die," but was kept from people 30 that she could make no ante mortem statement. Knowing this I called the police." Seems to Have Had a Record. County Attorney Miller was at first impressed with the intentions of Rev. Mr. Coyle and had asked him to be piesent this week to give testimony in the case. When Coyle jumped town Saturday night and removed all his be longings the authorities began to won der whether he had skipped to avoid a grand jury summons. Todav Covle could not be traced. In his rooms he left photographs of several pretty girls. I was learned that he formerly conductod a bucket shop at Cedar Rapids and was more re cently engaged in bartering stocks to farmers near Tama ind Eldora. Xo evidence has been secured +OMP dicato that he knew Miss Blydenburgh before tbo ?irl came to Des Moines to hide her shame, but the police are trac ing the minister's past. That he was a great lover of women thcie seeirg to be little doubt. He was ordained in theful Congregational church in Ohio, but nev er had a charge^preferring to confine his efforts exclusively to the evangel istic field. Attitude cf Mrs. Dickinson. Dickinson's wife remains true to him thru his ordeal. He is in iail un der $5,000b bonds, which he canno give.t Lament,Corliss^Co.,ARta..78Hud8onst..N.Y.8 Hes secured promise of bonds from pro- sl na on Dickinson has whispered scandal_ about,him to me, but I have let it go in one oar and out of the other. He was always good at he provided well for us and I meresk notmng eise l~^^ Particularly into wheat food that ixfc awn GRADUATE OF YALE IN PRISM AS THIEF Three-Year Sentence, for Charles F. Bronson, Scion of Rioh Family. Xournal Special Service. Watcrbtirv, Conn., Sept. 18.Charles F. Bronson, son of the late Deacon L. I. Bronson, president oi the Benedict c* Durham Manufacturing company of this citv and one of the wealthiest man uiactiuers in Connecticut, has been senttneed to throe years in prison for the wholesale Ihett ot brass and cop pei fiom Spiingheld lactones. Ho re ceived his sentence with a laugh, re marking: "Well, my triends, won't wony ibout me for awhilo now, any way A giaduntcof Yale, lavish with his money anil enioying a piominent social position Bronson optuutcd foi years in this and other cities along the lines made famous by fiifi"les. His first exploit was the lifling of a clothesline at a school foi young wo rn ^n. Afterward he picked the pockets of the inmates and hcu maUP a spe cialty of stealing icwels from women he met at dances. At iii&fc his exploits were the result of a reckless disposi tion. Whon cornered he usually re stoie I his plunder with a ioke, and his mi'lionaire father gave thousands in payment for what he called the boy's pranks. A senes of similar escapades at last foiced his despairing father to disown hiin. Then the young man became des perate in his thefts. He robbed' the Yale dormitories, passed bad checks on army officers and finally degenerated into an unpieturesque, but very busi ness like crook. ROBBED EVERY SUMMER New Find York Doctor Returns to Home Looted Again. Journal ^-ci"! Scrric?. New York, Sept. 18."I reported the robbery of my house just as a matter form, said Dr A. Mitchell of uciure uiut gin untimelyT*-\4-e a nere Tinni avenue, vviioi a a returnedjk andd a clergyman, who is not occupied fiom his summer vacation and found ^-r/OuaiiroiT Utr preaching, are depended his home looted. an jury to furnish evi- "I's really nothin deatm here, Edgemont, A vi avenue, who hadLi:m returneduiii rl-*-v tn ni annimnv vonof nn **~%.i out of the ordi nary,t he continuedg. "It happens every summer and I have come to ex pect it and 1 just let the police know that 1 have leturned and found my un known guests visited me as usual." The bmglais had lived a week or more in Dr. Mitchell's house. Badly Affected With Sores and CrustsExtended Down Behind the Ears Sonie Years Later Painful and Itching Pustules Broke Out on Lower Part of Body-Son' Also Affectedi A TRIPLE CURE BY CUTICURA REMEDIES "About ten 3rears ago my scalp be came badly affected with sore and itching humors, crusts, etc., and extend ing down behind the ears. My hair came out in places also. I was greatly troubled understood it was eczema. Tried various remedies, so called, with out effect. Saw your Cuticura adver tisement, and got them at once. Ap plied them as to directions, etc., and after two weeks, I think, of use, was clear as a whistle. I have to state also that late last fall, October and November, 1904, I was suddenly afflicted with a bad erup tion, painful and itching pustules over the lower part of the body. I suffered dreadfully. In two months, under the skilful treatment of my doctor, con joined with Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment, I found myself cured. "Six years ago my son was laid up with a severe cold, a hard cough, ana finally painful eruption all over the body. I procured the Cuticura Remedies as soon as possible, and after his faith ful use of same was as well as ever in two weeks, as well as I can recall. He has never had a return of the illness, as far as I know, A I have always been pleased to com mend the Cuticura Remedies, and testify as to their efficacy. I am a veterarr of the late Civil War, '61-'05, between seventy and eighty years of age. Yours truly, H. M. F. Weiss, Rosemond, Christian Co., 111., Aug. 31, 1905." Compfets TxtPrnal and Internal Treatment for every Humor, from 1 lniples to Scrofula, from Infancy to Age, consisting of Cuticura Sonn,25c Ointment, jlc RCBOW nt, 50i (in fnrm of Chocolate Coated Pil], 25c. per rial OffiO),may be had of all druggiita. A single set often curei the moit distressing cases when all else falls. Potter Drug JkChem Corp .Sole Propj lioston, Ainss. ota- .Mailed Free, How to Cure Eciaraa,"ftnd"AH About the Skin, Scalp, Hands, end Hair. DeiTf i a Crank About Your Food from homp," rjnpcT8. ^fQ^ JQ cents. But Be Sure It.Is Healthful As Well As Good To Bat. It is undoubtedly true that some people carry to an extreme their ideas about prope" eating, therefore being dubbed "cranks" by the skeptical, but the importance of Selecting our food with intelligent care cannot be dis puted. Our health depends to a great extent on what we eat. Particular care should be taken to select food which supplies much nourishment and is not hard to digest. We know of no other food that is so nutritious, so easy to digest, so health ard so good to eat ac Malta-Vita. It is a pure grain product, made from finest whole white wheat and rich bar ley malt extract, clean nnd unadulter ated After the wheat has been thor oughrv cooked and matured it is mixed with the malt extract, which is an im portant digestive agent. Tho malt ex tract makes all the valuable food ele ment of the wheat to bso turning the starch of the wheat into mal lU rmu m^i^uux IUUWUUHIIIB I. dame on Saturdayt, bu tose, or malt sugar."easy Maltoadigess i th3 bondsmen upon looking up his his- strengthening ahd so easily 'digested that phvsicians everywhere rec tory ascertained that he had beer in- xna i pnysicuwi cvcivwueri i re volved in a banking scandal in Peoria it. Malta-Vita is rich in malt and backed out. Mrs. Dickinson, who visits her husband daily, says: mc A A mend je. The malt extract not only makes Malta Vit i soo easy digest and 50 1 will stand by him. He is no worse but giveo it that fine Malta^Vit an other men are. Mr. Dickinso hn taste Tim mn.Up.r1 whonf is mllon -_ ___-- nun Th malted wheat is rolled into been involved in other cases, according little wafer flakes and baked until to^rumon Several times persons have "done to a tum," crisp and brown. _.,... Malta-Vita is always ready to eat. No cooking. Get some today. Eat it with mil or cream or fresh fruit. There' nothing else lik no other healthfula compares tas $2.49 $4.19 CretonnesYard, 15c SeEAillWi the best Anthracite Northwestern Fuel Co., 34 3a st S.' 8^Sx$$xS*Sx^3Sj^ -emit-.^n-.r'-w, Why "half-advertise" it? A Jour- A compare ,with it. All $ nal want will fully advertise it. $ Those New Fall Rugs 27x54 inches, $1.3 5 38x63 inches, $1.8 5 6x9 feet, $6.5 0 7-6x10-6 feet, $9.5 0 PAIR Arabian Curtain with real Arabian edge, 48 in. by 3 yds. and 18c SilkolineYard, 12VzC. Dimities, Ticking and Hungarian ClothYard, 30c SateenYaM, gOc an 3 25c- DAYTON'S-- -.Seventh and Nicollet NORTH WESTERN FUEL COS as by the price. We show only Rugs of unquestioned good TTHE selectionu of a Rug should be governed by its beauty of design anddura- Mfrtyra te in pattern and excellence in materials, at the same time contenting ourselves with a moderate margin of profit. KASHMIR RUGSIn Body Brussels weave, reversible good, oriental patterns for dining rooms, bedrooms, etc. Handsome rugs that will wear well. Both small and room sizes. E a distinct merit both in style and in mesh in the lace curtains we on our third floor. Many new styles and patterns are offered. CLUNY CURTAINS, made pn good, strong Arabian net, a large assortment of patterns with beautiful edges and insertions at $ 2 S2.50 $2.75 $ 3 $8.50 $ 4 S4.50 $ 5 $5.5& $ 6 $6.50 $ 7 $ 8 $ 0 and $10 pair. DENTELLE ARABIAN CURTAINS -Corded on both sides, made on best cable net at very low prices$3.75 $ 4 $4.50 $ 5 $5.50 $ 6 $6.50 and $7. BRUSSELS NET CURTAINS at from $3.00 pair to the finest Saxony curtains. A. large and complete assortment, in new designs and styles. FOUR SPECIAL VALUES IN LACE CURTAINS FOR WEDNESDAY PAI Arabian color Cluny Curtains, 2$ yds. by 48 in. Made on good Arabian Net. A 9x9 feet, $10 9x10-6 feet, $11.5 0 9x12 feet, $13 10-6x12 feet, $16 ROXBURY TAPESTRY RUGS-These are a practical rug for a pop- ular price. They resemble in pattern and wear Body Brussels. A good line of Oriental patterns: 7x9 feet, $13.56 8-3x10-6 feet, $18.75 9x12 feet, $22.50 Splendid lines of French Wiltons. Royal Wiltons, Axminsters and Oriental Rugs are now shown. Lace Curtains of Quality THERshois $2.89 A $1.90 The New Champagne-colored Curtains at $7.5Q, $8.00, $9.0 0 and $10.0 0 Pr pair. Cotton Draperies and Comforter Coverings ,UR new fall selection of Cretonnes, Figured Dimities, Art Ticking, Hungarian Cloth Silkoline etc., presents the most attractive display of-light draperies and coverings ever shown in this section. The best productions of note are to be seen in our assortment at remarkably low prices. INVESTORS Desiring a good rate of Interest with abundant security should call and exam ine the first mortgage iarm loans for sala by Minneapolis Trust Company Fourth Street and Hennepin Avenue. Journal want aus are react by peo- A $ pie who are buyers. That's why $ The journal carries the most classl- A 6 fled advertising. A PAIR Brussels Net curtain, 48 in. by 3 yds. Excellent in style and pattern. PAIR Arabian Color Cable Net, 48 in. by 3 yds. Good selection of patterns. Monks Cloth and Tapestry ClothYard, 35c DenimPlain, yard, 20 and 22c. BurlapPlain, 15c BurlapFigured, 20c. fl fe DAYTON'S OID SORES CURED ALLEN'S UI.CERlN^SKv3T 1 \"i Cures Chronic Ulcers, Bone Ulcers,Varicose 1 -5. Ulcers, Scrofulous Ulcers, Mercurial Ulcers,.1#'J* Fever Sores, Gangrene, Blood Poisoning, Whiter 9 weMng.Mrikl^g.Poisoned Wounds, niL2? ,.oflon "i *4Jn Posmrel norer falls. Urwi out11 poison. Seres axponie and nfltorlng. tar permanent'VwjmU by draggisU. Mall Xeaiui J. ALLEN MSDIOUB CO* Sz. I'iVU-lBXM. mo. Why keep the "don need things" O and worry about the "can't *et things?" A Journal want ad nego S tiatea a trade.