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15 E. SIXTH ST. Zr&Q^A9i£ifl£A ST" PAUIj¥ MINN- ' jrfnnounces "r That arrangements have been completed by 'which, a full line of r.^-rr' THE FAMOUS GORDON FURS T- * (Gordon &' Ferguson) r.'^V.-^j^-^ ":l?l\'xj^ *r r^cJ<r- vx^'j;-.;! will be carried and this line, is now on - display for -your • approval. Fur '| Garments j made sto f order if - desired. "No furs -""- today stand ' higher than , ' the Gordon Furs and the ladies of St. : Paul sh'onld' see^this line before i - purchasing. They are guaranteed with the guarantee given any 1 fur garment. - ; .;;• : SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN IN OUR , MILLINERY DEPARTMENT,,,JO FUR., HATS AND FUR TRIMMINGS. .- for the fait %fex | HONESTY IN TRIFLES LARGE MATTERS WILL TAKE CARE OF THEMSELVES When Parents Will Take What Does Not Belong to Them, How Can They Expect Their Children to Be Hon est? —Result of Petty Pilfering It is strange , that one hears so lit tle . said of honesty in small matters. The other day one of the Trudges in our local ; municipal court dis- I missed as absurd the charge against a I little boy of stealing one pear from a ' commission house. Perhaps it was ab surd" to arrest this one boy when • so many who steal in...'greater quan j tities go free,' but the principle of the' > thing" is . what counts, and while the I Judge was merciful, that .boy. may have ? taken his first downward step by that \ very action. If ,he steals V again and j something "of greater value, .he will: I probably conclude that he is, not doing ; anything very reprehensible when he j remembers the court dismissed him. It is exactly in these small, matters \ that' children should be taught to be" scrup ulously honest. It is not, on. .the ' face of it, a very heinous offense to take a pear .or peach which does ; not belong to one, but if it go unrebuked this ten dency toward dishonesty will grow in to something worse".'. .■,, . : ;.' \ g "" Boys who consider it smart to - take things when some" one .is not looking grow into men; who regard a criminal. career as . the easiest" way \to ' make - a . living, i Many arid, many an inmate of prisons has told how he began his evil life when .he found .it i was rather ex pected that . boys should help them-' selves if a ; storekeeper's.;, back was turned for a moment. , Heaven knows there is 'enough .evil, in the world now, without bringing up the younger gen eration to think it clever to steaL, How, often we see .eVen well-<Jres.sed wom en helping themselves in candy or grocery shop. These very women 'would" 1 In- ■ shocked beyond expression, "if they saw a woman picking up ribbdhs •" and gloves in a dry goods store; they would call-, her a shoplifter, and other : names more severe.-: But will some • one kind ly tell me the difference between • eat ing a man's crackers and candy, and taking his ribbons and gloves?lt would take a Philadelphia lawyer to find out. The annual : loss from this small pil fering to persons who sell eatables cuts., very largely into their profits. _;-,.•- ;- This- petty stealing is in the air. It is not safe to leave even a door, mat outside without nailing it down. 1 And in matters of this sort.it does not seem that the stealing is done from neces sity, as for the sake of doing it. One can live very well without door "mats and porch chairs, but it is a very con flying householder who dares' leave these things out over night. And boys are too often the culprits. . Their mothers and fathers should teach them early in life that whether one takes five cents ■'. or five hundred dollars, .the principle is the same. Also that stealing fruit, candy or peanuts is L wrong, even though it may be done by the nicest boys they know. If one will talk to a druggist ;he can 'a'tale un- : fold of : petty pilfering which would be an eye-opener to the parents who J live in the vicinity of his store. And this not In slum districts.*. but In the best neighborhoods., of. any city. j: :• -j *>* * Little girls.are, sadly.enough. not ex ceptions in this matter.. Almost , any day they can .be seen to take an apple or a handful of nuts from a barrel out side a grocery shop, and lif they get away without the - proprietor ■: seeing them, they -laugh joyfully and seem to think themselves especially clever. It is. a very painful sight sometimes to see these things, but when the mother and father themselves set the I example, what can be expected^ What sort of moral principle can be ex pected in a child when it : hears ? its ; mother tell' the; street ' car conductor that- it is two years younger r than s it. Is? Does a.woman suppose her son will grow ,up ■. with a . scrupulous -regard' for j meum and tuum if he sees her help herself liberally when the groceryman has his back turned! ..: ::-. %< These things , are" happening every . day. and yet when a young man goes wrong his mother - cannot understand It. and claims that his upbringing was i of the V best.' Let. these mothers and fathers not . only insist that - their chil dren be honorable in : small things, but set them an example themselves.j. And example. is always more powerful ; than precept... ■--/:. ■..■/ _.., .^. : ,.:-;-;.... ——■—— :~" '•' ' '';'::«■ Mainly About People —a The 'Phalen: Park Mothers' club will hold its regular meeting in the Phalen Park school. building . this: afternoon at 4 p. m. Dr. Edwin Olander, of this HAND SAPOLIO FOR TOILET AND BATH It makes the toilet something to be co Joyed. It removes all stains and roughness prevents prickly heat and chafing, an. leaves the skin white, soft, healthy. In t! bath it brings a glow and exhilaration whi<:' no common soap can equal, imparting th vigor and life sensation of a mild Turliisl bath. Au. G&ocx&s and Druggists. city, will address the dub on a fnedical topic of interest to all mothers. A ball w^.be.giv^n.by St. Paul Re bekah Lodge No. S4, I. 0. O. F... at Odd Fellows' hail, Fif-tb s»ud Wabasha streets, this ,e,vejiing. I; Mrs. Thomas Fdre^.'of ■Summit ave nue, f gave a;)^£ge^tea^asterd3^ after noon to Introduce her daughter. Miss : Fqley, to social JToley was as sisted ;by her '^ friends and the debu tantes of the autumn. /.• V {\ ' IV;" '■ •'■■ Mrs. ~J. P. Gribben. a bride; of last summer, - w& Mlth^' guest .■ of* honor at "^a". luncheon : givejj, yesterday by « Mrs. ;W. B. Dean, of Summit avenue. ."J ' , '. Mrs. J. A. Qo4tm. of Selby avenue, gave a luncheon Monday. . - "-""■ ■ :.*-«;"/^c-»:i-->in:» t>ir» g'«u^« :'*-'H>' "■•"■" ,;i":;rr^» '-■: 'v>--: k -t7f»vV-'~c^iS'."'-i.-.>•' - — Mrs. R. A. Lapjpher, ol Summit ave- nue, has gone to lowa. '■'^.l-^'^i ... > . Miss Allen, of TJ&ytoTTavenue, has re turned from St.. Louis..Vi a :«'-£-j -i- =>■ t, ■J Mrs. W. R. Wnnoily," of^llotfy ave nue, has gone to St. Louis. ; . ''£ Mrs. EatoWM ft* M^rl* aVerfw-. wfU . entertain the Ladjes* Aid>pf Evening Star; Rebekah" lodge Wednesday after noon, Nov. 9. ' ■■\i':'l Released and 'Banished ST. i PETERSBURG, B.—Mary Figner,*>,who" has been confined in ? the Schlusselberg fortress for twenty years, ' -has been released, .j and .; banished 1- to : Archangel, Northern Russia, .The wom an was concern ivec^ jto -life, imprison- , ment for paitjeinatin^in Ninili^l, con spiracies. 'She wavea - her handker chief as a sigr-al indicating l the ap proach ■of Alexander 11. when 'he '" was assassinated in 1&81. -Her brother, '- a famous .-Russian. singer, interceded in her behalf i with - Alexander IIL ] and ' se cured a .coimnutaljpn of, ; her, sentence .to {" twenty years' » imprisonment. . As .ttit woman. j^VoW« (2H^pWatV Xi hillstic 1 B^nttnients -fetoj- has now been banished. ■ i'«£ l'"£"?, Bs: tf'V*V* .'^"V-"", GOSSIP FROM GOTHAM ;;: Gymnasium 'Minxes. "axe' exacted to supply a vn^elt>^Ms;^^^hey; have been W'cccssluUy in Lenox by Mrs. Gboirge .w^stlhghouse in . her . country home, lijrskihe Part. As the name implies, the dance is held in the gymnasium, -tvhich in the rural homes of millionaires is no small source of worry to the architect. Such a room must *be substantial enough for prac tical use and convenient to the sleep-' ing apartments, yet', so situated as not to interfere wrfliihe' quieter tlxe of the, family. It is tb,e ftxpeJUeiii arrangement of the gymnasium in Erskine Park, in a separate: buUcjlng." that makes - Mrs. Westinghouse*S new dance popular. She and her husbapdYrecently-. gave a din ner and dance^to^fparkj-:the' retur,n fof Mr. and . Mrs. Edward Henry . afield' from a wedding trip,,. All .the parapher- ' nalia of gymnastics remained in the big hall, but. America^'beauties j were " twin ed about the French ■ foils gn the walla.. and great clusters of I? 'chrysanthemums ' were : massed among ■ the boxing :^pcres," dumbbells-; and' Indian ; clubs. Festoons of : flowers; decked . thA^Lr^ACse^.hori zontal ; bars • and "traveling tings. Sup- ; per for the - smallrirai'ty oaasTßsrred •on a giant springboard. ." The only casualty ; occurred when , one of the "butler's i as sistants, with- j^hfasJJy, Jijagfed - 4«ay. . . tripped :\ over (the, medicine ball. i\ Mrs. Spencer is 'to give a., simitar dance . next . month: in, the gymnasium of her . country .". house in j Sqrougb/« ;•> 1.7,-; ■?■■ " . ■ ■ • .".' ~"■ :'-iu;tiiw~» l t>^7l»'yiyi?«tl'' Jn-.-.r.' Simplicity ,UL^l£ Js,.a^reflße^ in^he girlish;. rocks. t worn. : l»y .Miss Gladys, Vanderbilt, .•whose mamma 'is expected . ;to '; bring: her out ; about midwinter.. ?n A.: private j letter .it-oim acr-oss the Atlantic says : the young., heiress ;JPM,3«n .with her > governess tin P*r|»V; recently in ?a r pleated • costume i}Ja&ier;»thaji.(svauld be . worn : by.; the 7 daughter iof the • average 1 prosperous; bourggijteV^lai^-rtfewt* hi \toj. say, in ? finish, tire material, of coarser being of theO»Htt»t l4RßfL«tt«Tli * brilliant r red .; was the fabric. r It t was trimmed with 1 blacK7?eTv"cT,~with" a glove" i fitting: waißt.fialn^lf /»oßnitc»f ai featherboneti. the blouse fulling ; neatly ; over • a black relvat belt. Little.' Miss Vanderbtlt was buttoned -up. the • back, the buttonholes, being worked ■' 1 through..a, broftd; b^sc j^«t*'k»Af Mack stitched linen roHar, with a ;biff.butter fly I bow, .;prodwc«4r.ai »f&V\ ett«.t:.*bGut the neck. ; The hishop sleeves, were jin gle pieces, full m*- the .-s*hauHer3-:and narrowing to % thfc.\eATet ; ban *% a*, the wrists. Nine narrow- gores ;Bhaped'thei. skirt at v.aist ao&,hips.:iUAJ2vthojtorTWtlt ; back l plea ts were taped; at i the -fkne sa: and flared widely she tripled 'along.. ":'"'• Father Knickerbocker, tor • all his good-humored -"fuVinJJr of tW quiet • Quaker, is ik>{ ,a,UQ.^ )t bm-^oiy.i^ i idea 1; or two from ; bis neighbor, of the Keystone : .4iui. hi.s wife and. ■ daughter are ficor ha*vje<3! to them selves em that -^viciibf^t ?a«s.> 'Boljertj Goelet !s busy or. ; } si^|je^io.p aggi : nating * with Mrs. George k-W.-^ Cnilds : DiexeL of Ph;l^deU>hia. ar^l . highly by her mbther-in-iaw, »Mrs.Tpg-* --den Goelet It is 40 car the shops so far-as purchase.! Christma^',jgCts ; are I roncerned -J aJid n;ake uith Her . own" ;hands%anUhe;«^]^;^jrv£n^jhe;wUl- ? "give., to;. her fri«aids'r^Mr&,£l)rcxei.| a fortnight ago coi«ciude<i '.there was no high compliment iin : a woman, of wealth bestowing costly presents any one with j an. equal fortune "could Uux. to be, . beforehand rAvii [hi. Seun£k 1 Claua, j she s«t: to n-ork on a T*>id€, y^riefy T ot faocy articles tr, be ii Ptltclsed. sparkled f -and painted by hersy^C B»th the PSUladel : phian ar^l the New Yorker ns,ve r rea- ; son to believe .Afceir clotier acquaint ances will appreciate anything that is the product th**r individual : thought and ~ labor. Other women in THE ST. PAUL GLOBE. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1904 both cities are likely to follow their shining- example. Avenue •£■ hostesses J-* were \i consumed: with envy yesterday when- they heard : Mrs. . Hermann . Oelrichs > had obtained ', a . : monopoly of vt he Princess - Mahomet' Ibrahim for the whole stay; in this city of fl IshmaeL - Pasha's % daughter. The f princess not only is of higher rank than / any . other Turkish woman wbo : ever has come ■to this! country, but she ■ •is 5 a ? blue p stocking k£o& *" international 1 reputation. Reared -" to girlhood 'in *; the = traditional seclusion insisted on' for the "daughter of >■ a I pasha, she nevertheless? studied •in her father's • palace far more 'Industriously- than ■ many s a ;Vassar or Bryn Mawr undergraduate with all the -• educational; privileges of [n.\ modern, col \ lege. *i It i soon became «apparent fto ? her "father: he 5 could r not I relegatex her bril- ' liant si mind *to t the •' dead •" level *of the :seraglio e sisterhood, ". so • when she 2 was only fourteen years old he fe gave her ]. permission 1 to' learn 'by European; meth- i ods. That, she took full advantage- of the ■ unusual" privilege •is shown by her store of ': knowledge. and the keenbeas : of her ■ intellect. " She astounded ■ Heidel- ■ berg professors last summer by the* ; clarity of i her logic in an address she' ■ made ■in the woman's international con gress • in Berlin. e irtvy-y.v-t, Medallions axe almost inseparable, from the truly fetching lace frock of the late autumnal season, being bla zoned on skirts and bodies in profu sion suggestive of the approaching ■winter's luxuriousness. Their charm is enhanced by an undersetting of bands made of bright-colored pompadour. ribbon, daintily fringed. It is essen tial the fringing be done with pace, else a tag-rag effect will be produced. wholly opposed to the spirit of the gown, which is supposed to be typical of patrician richness. One edge of the ribbon is unfrir.ged and is slipped un der the medallions, the fluffy side serv ing as a frame for the dominant not* of the pattern. Medallions also are to be worn extensively on the capes of opera cloaks, and even on the smaller theater wraps. One of the prettiest medal Honed frocks f nished with ba&d* was worn laat week by Miss Bend. Mrs. Payne Whitney received from. Paris a mcdaHioned opera cape with a setting of Persian ribbon. _ lien, who assert that all self-supporting .women outside '.; the '' learned professions look on thefr occupations only as" stepping stones :. to f matrimony.^ must acknowledge a glittering: exception in Miss Isabel Hag . ner. private .secretary, to Mrs. Theodore 1 Roosevelt, who is visiting the r- St. I*oui?, ;. fair. i ' This ' industrious; yo«na; . woman ' has a fortune ample- for a!! '■ the frivolities or 'Newport and Tuxedo, or for division of • her i life. between Fifth - avenue .* and ; Bel grade SQuare," but she prefers to-follow the useful career she : mapped oat ". for '■ herself when, with a thinner . purse, v she entered' semi-public life. Perhaps : the president* example , has influenced her. or/ it may «b« j Mrs. > Roosevelt's "quiet' devotion tto: ; duty was j the dominant cause •of her determin ation to shim the idleness of the average : society girl. Her »friends i say she needed! neither precept nor example, the necessity .toT do - something • worth while , being ; part 1 ;of her being. Anyway, when :MlssHa«ner recently came .-. into f. a- handsome ■- inher t itance , she gave 'no ; sign rof intent lon to " surrender her post. -.. it" was with difficulty Mrs. i Roosevelt f could v persuade uhsrl- to take :a> little ► trip} to - the ;. West x for ? long needed ■ relaxation. - Thomas Nelson ' Page, of i Georgia, • and : Dr. G. 'F. • Whitney, Jof Washington, are' members of. the; traveling party Hisa Hagner joined. . % \\. One of the most : interesting- young Eng lishwomen visiting America in many a year is Lady Dorothy. daughter or . the , Earl ; of s - Dartmouth, who traveled • from Boston »' to-Hanover. X. H.. with ; her'pa-: rents yesterday, to see her father lay^thal .corner stone * of'n building for the .coTS»ge -- bearing; his name., " Lady - r Dor othy -Is - a de«»p student of polit ical ,economy,: and. like " her : brother. Viscount Lewisham; is " a warm ad' mirer :.;of,[ the younger nations. The Tto count ; and his . sister . long hare watched the -"■ development. of two " wonderful peo-i 1 pie*—the . Americans» and - the Japanese. Both believe : the J world's •progress - hlng* in large measure on the J mental trend of' the Yankees of the ; West and East. Lewis ham '■: sailed. from <> Vancouver -. for. "Japan recently, and the cart's daughter stayed here to pursue a careful analysis of the United ;States and Canada.; Th« • Dartmouth* : and i Lady - Dorothy, : after a brief l sojourn ■;. with : friends ; in Hanover, win go to . Washington Tand: return to ; New York, where they -win 5 remain : until i the morning after . election "day," when they : are _ to: start - for t . England ', on . the \ Cedric.' Bis lordship is bent -on 'seeing. th« finish of a presidential campaign in what be re gards -. as. the; storm" center.. of American politics. -■": Miss Helen Gould Is eager to end her short visit to St. Leufa and return to Irvington, for she has Just finished, tim- Missouri an exhausting tour of the West. In the course of which It is estimated she shook hands • with at least ;: 20.090 young men. The youngsters so j favored are' her proteges, In a measure.' for they are mem- 1 i bers ;' of the Young ' Hen's Christian asso ciation; and most .of .'.them; belong to; the railroad branches of that organization. As her father made his millions in railroad ing, and \ her eldest ' brother has^ptled many more" on the paternal fortune by de votion ,'to" the same i business—or is "it not a t science?— Miss i Gould I naturally is * in terested warmly ;in % railroad men. Em ployes not' only of the r Gould; lines, but of , many others, look ;on < her as ■ a guardian . angel of thetr futures. It is said by men In position to know . that Jay Gould's phil anthropic . daughter. has done more i to. Im prove '. conditions . under which '-"railroad : men or .'ail^branches"*."» work -- and '•• live,' than any other -3 woman;, in the 'Union.' She gave 5; the Wabasha > employes $20, --■ 00« toward a V. ,M.rC. -A. bunding in Mo beriy. in " addition"; to 2.W0 becks* for their «library and - several Jself -playing musical -instruments. The indefatigable * traveler visited twenty branches of the association In twenty-three days. "." ■ . 7'■:••.- ■■'.• - ; r Gray Venetian : coats lined "with: squirrel' . fur. like ■ those ,in ' which- New -Tort" belles of i three"- generations • ago minced * in. their absurd ?: little r;sandals ~. along i; Broadway;: ; even j ventured as far]; up ; town; as' Four teenth street in \ the lumbering stages; of which - those :in - modern . Fifth; avenue: are the degenerate- descendants. are to I-be' worn . extensively at '. the opera . this winter. :.Mis». Constance •. Beardsley. who is ;to be come ♦ Mrs. Dos : Passes I today, has in * her ; trousseau ; one t that: is : the envy of the few ; close- friends bidden to her wedding. It la a Paris : ; production : end even more sug- • gestive •of the say/capital than ' the i aver ; age" ■ wrap ; built \by deft J French 5 fingers. The cuffs are edged with narrow bands of ;whit fox, and so: are the two ; acutely • ab breviated capes that ;: fall iin > concentric . circles ; over the ample 2 shoulders. Ris .tag? from : the upper cape is a hood lined with white ■* chiffon .• raffled and shirred • - to make a dainty nest for the soft reveries \ that: doubtless! will; flit through her pretty -head.'^ The demure garment ; looks like; a pearly dream caught from : under the sun * set's; afterglow. >It . will cause a ; reminls-"; ceat flutter in the cardiac region of'many ,B.\ still youthful-hearted * gallant left i over from the "middle jof the last' century- * ''*%?■* Nerw I' ."»Office i Boy—Miss ; Keyes, ; please ; let me look at your "'^t*;-x-"-*-" • * " Miss Key*—What; for? *•" ~~ : t "T"._ Ofßce Boy—Why. th* boss said some of ; the paint was scratched off his • typewriter ■ 1 didn't know whether he meant you or the ; —Chicago f News. '->---.-_ +S7ll*sJM JM/W COUGHSI 'Balsam S&I&I QtliiinhA >V.*g at»O FASHIONS FROM VOGUE i-..-jtanvi; ' Prepared^pcctaHy-r«ff THE GLOBE - -~•.:•% >.". >.r.' ""* The accompanying .drawing illus trates a strikingly effective, though very simple, cloth walking*£?wn. It Is of bronze colored. light-weight broadcloth', over a taffeta foundarltra of the same shade and ris made 'with a^S. triple ' flounced i skirt with the ~ edge »of each ;flounce". trimmed with " a bold Greek fret, design done in,a J-Brown 1* raw silk braid I with _, a * thread j burnished * gold woven through it. :%-^. _S>.: '<-2 The r.r upper flounce., - which g« fits smoothly over the blb«, .is £ open "to front, thus, giving the. appearance'of. a •long'" skirted coat vto th» ; costume, and ; ■ the coat is ,< ornamented ;-T>Jiari broad fichu shaped -? collar ? trimmed ''- with ' braid in the Greek fret pattern' with 7: the V.f ends crisped in 5; front and fastened with twp' large carved bronae ,buttons.;! The Sleeves:ar»*of. the leg ■o" mutton". model with the fullness laid-lntmy. tacks at t*? top and fin ished at the : wrist by double -plaiting* of f cream * colored j>,* null. Thia gown could, of 1 course^ be ; carried font; in any color and is aa excellent model for an m 1 m ' r m.iiwii I ir^i « iiil'i U m\ n«nu ■» The best test of any foott is the ability to work well on it; sleep well after it; keep well by it No article of food has stftod this test so well—so long as the soda cracker. No soda cracker has stood this test so satisfactorily as U need a Biscuit Babies have thrived on them; strong men have kept strong on them; sick folks have lived on them; well folks have kept well on them Uneeda Biscuit are always fresh and crisp—that's why they are so good; pure and clean —that's why they are so whole some; all food and nourishment—that's why they are so healthful Millions have learned this and profited by it —have you? The knowledge costs you only a nickel NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY ■ ■ Inexpensive "street:, wait,' as its trim- ;■ jning amounts to .very little in cost and r/cottldi'easily be done by even an in- : - experienced dressmaker. The hat ; ' shown •is> of f fine smooth *, brown felt with- * high crown and turned up brim ; and it is trimmed with a shade j iof brown velvet and velvet S: flowers \ shading « from warm copper tints < i through v the bronze shades to deep { brown. Now that the i fullness ZX. of ; - sleeves . has. once more returned to the upper portion of the arm there are ' both: rejoicing and lamentations to .be ; heard, the former called forth by the ' beeomingness of this style and - the i latter by the inability of even a ; genius to : transform last year's sleeves into those of the present day. The wisest i I solution of this puxilin« problem >Is to select ; a model with a bolero or triple cape coat with short attached fteeves. which might be - made 7of ; velvet lof - a tone to harmonize with the sown, and r then tee Z old sleevea could-,;be made into tight fitting underaleeves and fin ished with ha»d«ome buttons, lace or mull ruffles, etc ,-. ' : '" rf Strange -Drug ;8tor« ::•••• •- , The. pilgrim season at' Haugcbow makes •a great demand on the country round for the materials of. medicines, and the great est drug store in China is at the old capi tal. Not only- do the simple pilgrims asso ciate spiritual and .bodily healing wjth the same sacred places, out roy"long'- repute the drugs ol HangcJsow..teav« TapixW^lon for curing;; where the r same potions a^nd powders from bother' -places - are 1««s ■ ef ficacious. .^ .. _T • • -■.-, ■ - ■■■--.*: i t The big ; drug 'store "kt'the loot: nf '. the city, hill there is a sight In itself, with its many ■ stone court J yards.'; surrounded ;■ by : two-story pavilions,:: whose "'balustrades and r partitions are 'so richly carved, lacquered and 1 glided that one • takes the great.wholesale establishment for a tem ple. ;or guild « hall :at first. • < V fc \'.^ . • '-pr ■_ = One pursues - a labyrinth »at courts.'and passages,: ; ~ and ~< cornea £* upon workmen pounding - ginseng ; and - rhubarbj b >,, rolling. pins by the .million; - washing : little stone jars and toy demijohns by-the-score, and filling . them > with > nauseous ' looking ? fluids.; p Dried toads rats arid lizard* am there in wholesale . quantities, » dried hearts and. livers *of ; many- V. boasts, ' - and those ? sov ereign remedies—dragon's .blood and drag :on spume—wherever on ~ earth • they ... find . them. ■■••-.-■-vj — »• - > :u; irises* '.*;?.• "1.-r-,-.-i • A menagerie of living animals await their conversion Into :< curative" articles, and. |In • one court. there is '• a row of .sun less pens -or -' cages, --. where. spotted"» deer are kept. part of the deeiy from - Its I horns Ito • its hoofs.: is ■ convertible • into some sovereign cure for"ill«* * enduredI,t>t- warranted to endow ",the consumer with, certain of " 4 the deer's quafffues.' "WHether these harts pant for.' cooling streams., or not. they J show -* their.: loathing \of - their pens, which, nave apparently newer, been cleaned ' out, by remaining always curled upon the • dry shelf <or plartf r»ctn» alou^: one aide of the Iron r barred cages."- keeping, Ferns and PdJms £tS& lt/> . t -. . Sj^fjal sale thb week /\t M/VV'&»..64 East Sixth St. 5 Daily Trains St. Paul to Chicago And eich has a good connection for St Louis, also for New York and all Eastern points. They leave St Paul at 8:30 a. m., 4:00 p. m., 7:20 . fc, m., 8:35 p. m,, 11:00 p. m., via the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Three of these are electric lighted; all of them thoroughly equipped. Tne Fast Mai! goes at 7:20 p. m. The Pioneer Limited at 8:35 p. m. TICKETS, W. B. DIXON, 995 Robert Street- N. W. P. A., St. Paul. WRITE FOR RATES TO ST. LOUIS their dainty feet out of the deep fifth of the floors. The Augean stable was a sani tary reform exhibtt compared to these cages of animate at the great drug store and factory of Hangchow.—Chicago Trib une. Tibet's Strange Ruler No living white m«n, unless Col. Younghusband has fotmd him, has ever seen the grand lama of Tibet, who has shut himself up for three years. Dominating the mysterious city, the for bidden land whose gates are opening to the world, is the palace of the young priest king. Set on a hill which cannot be hid. rising in the center nine stories nigh, the golden roofs of the Potala palace would draw the first gaze of the first white man who carried the British flag to this corner of the earth in which it had never befora been unfurled. The world has heard little of him ex cept that he loves Russia, hates China and has great contempt for England. He has no authority for sitting among the world's kings save that a Buddhist the ory puts him there. Humbly born, twenty-eight years old, with no great gifts of his own, Tubdan Gyamtso Is the ruler of Tibet because a strange sight at his birth, real or imag ined, marked him out as the child in whom the soul of the previous ruler had been reborn. So. not long ago, the little son of a poor - fuel seller came to the throne of Tibet; so, for centuries, have the destinies of the mountain kingdom fallen to the hands of a little child. — Milwaukee Sentinel. A Page for Young Girls In the Sunday Globe. Order the Sunday Globe today by phone. N. W. Maiq 1021 r T. C. 1640.