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The Minneapolis journal. [volume] (Minneapolis, Minn.) 1888-1939, September 16, 1902, Image 3

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83045366/1902-09-16/ed-1/seq-3/

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i1&jam^mHMjHHlllwin
Chapter IIIContinued
When my master -vsas on shipboard he
enjoyed the sea even less than the free
air of these broad stretches foi while he
could cast an e about and approve of
something tinder the sk perhaps a
church steeple 01 the coloi of a thatch
which filled me with joyhe could no*
approve of anything aboard a ship In
deed, it waa a pity to ha\e no delight in
Cleaving the watei and in the fai off
spouting of whales to sa\ nothing of a
living world that udes m undulations
For my part I lo\ed e\en the creaking
of a ship, and the unceitaintj of t\er
coining to port and the anxiet let.t a
black flag should show abo\e every sail
we passed The slow progress of man
from point to point in his experience
while It sometimes enrages on the whole
interests me, and the monotony of a
Voyage has a sweetness like the monotonj
of daily bread
I looked out of the grenier window upon
the high road, and upon the June sun in
the act of setting for we had supped and
gone early to rest after a haid dav Post
horses were stamping underneath all
ready for some noble count who intended
to make another stage of his journey be
fore nightfall
Small obtrusive cares such as the de
sire that my shoes should last well into
Paris, mingled with joy in the smell of
the earth at sunset and the looking for
ward to seeing Madame de Ferrier again
I wrapped mjself every night in the con
viction that I should see her and more
freely than I had ever seen her in Amer
ica
There wis the noise of horses gallop
lng end the expected noble count ar
rived being no other than De Chaumont
and his post coaches He steppod out of
the first, and Ernestine stepped out of
the second carrying Paul She took him
to his mother The door flew open and the
woman I adored received her child and
walked back and forth with him Annabel
leaned out while the horses were changed
I saw Miss Chantry and mv heart mis
gave me remembering her brother s pro
longed lament at separation from her
He was I trusted already shut into
one of those public beds which are like
cupboards for the day had begun for us
at 3 in the morning But if he chose
to show himself and fall upon De Chau
mont for luxurious conveyance to
Paris I was determined that Ske
nedonk and I should not ap
pear I wronged mv poor master who
told me afterwards he watched through a
crack of the cupboard bed with his heart
in his mouth
The pause was a very short one for
horses are soon changed Mme de Fer
rier threw a seaiching eje over the land
scape It was a mercv she did not see
the hole in the grenier through which I
devoured her daring for the first time to
call her secretlyEaglethe name that
De Chaumont used with common free
dom! Now how stiange is thisthat one
woman should be to a man the sum of all
things' And what was her charm I could
not tell, for I began to understand theie
were many beautiful women in the world
of all favors, and shapely perhaps as the
one of my love Only her I found drawing
the soul out of my body and none of the
others did more than please the eye like
pictures
The carriages were gone with the sun
and it was no wonder all fell gray over the
world
De Chaumont had sailed behind us and
he would be in Pans long before us
I had first felt some uneasiness and
dread of being arrested on our journey
though our Breton captainwho was a
man of gold that I would travel far to see
this day, If I could, even beneath the At
lantic, where he and his ship now float
obtained for us at Dieppe, on his own
pledge a kind of substitute for passports
W e were a marked party, by reason of
the doctor's lameness and Skenedonk s
appearance The Oneida during his for
mer sojourn in I ranee had been encour
aged to preserve the novelty of his Indian
dress As I had nothing to give him In
Its place, it did not become me to find
fault And he would have been more
conspicuous with a cocked hat on his bare
red scalp and knee breeches Instead of
buckskins Peasants ran out to look at
him, and in return we looked at them with
a good will
We reaohed the very barriers of Paris,
however, without failing into trouble And
In the streets were so many men of so
many nations that Skenedonk s attire
seemed no more bizarre than the turbans
of the east or the white burnous of the
Arab
It was here that Skenedonk took his
role as guide and stalked through nar
row, crooked streets, whioh by comparison
made New York my first experience of a
city appear a plain and open village
I do not pretend to know anything about
Pans. Some spots in the mystic laby
rinth stand out to memory such as that
open space where the guillotine had done
its work the site of the Bastille and a
long street leading from the place of the
Bastille, parallel with the river, and this
I have good reason to remember It is
called Rue St Antome I learned well,
also, a certain prison, and a part of the
ancient city called laubourg St Germain
One who can strike obscuie trails in the
wilderness of nature, may blunt his fine
instincts on the wilderness of man
This did not befall the Indian He took
a bee line upon his old tracks, and when
the place was sighted we threaded
what seemed to be a rivulet between
cliffs, for a moist depressed street-center
kept us straddling something like a gut
ter, while with outstretched hands we
could brace the opposite walls
We entered a small court where a grufr
man, called a concierge, having a dirty
kerchief around his head, received us
doubtfully. He was not the concierge of
Skenedonk's day We showed him coin,
and Doctor Chantry sat down in his chair
and looked at him with such contempt
that his respect increased
The house was clean, and all the stairs
we climbed to the roof were well scoured
From the mansard there was a beautiful
LAZARRE
With Illustrations
Copyright 1901, by
The Bowen Merrill Company
WANDERING
TUESDAY EVENING,
By
Mary Hart well Catherwod
By Andre Caatalgme
v lew of Paris, with forest growth drawing
close to the heart of the city For on that
side of the world men dare not murder
trees but ai e obliged to respect and. cher
ish them
My poor master stretched himself on a
bed bv the stooping wall, and in disgust
of life and gieat pain of feet, begged us
to order a pan of charcoal and let him
die the true Parisian death when that s
not met on the scaffold Skenedonk said
to me in Iroquois that Doctor Chantry
was a sick old woman who ought to be
hidden some place to die and it was his
opinion that the blessing of the church
would absolve us We could then make
use of the pouch of coin to carry on my
plans
My plans were more ridiculous than
Skenedonk s His at least took sober
shape whi'e mine were still the wild
emotions of a young man's mind Many
an hour I had spent on the ship, watching
the foam speed past her side, trying to
foresee my course like hers in a trackless
world But it seemed I must wait alertly
for what destiny was making mine
We paid for our lodgings three com
modious rooms, though in the mansard,
m\ secretary dragging himself to sit
erect with gioans and record the increas
ing debt of myself and my servant.
Come Skenedonk," I then said "Let
us go down to the earth and buy some
thing that Doctor Chantry can eat "
That benevolent Indian was quite as
ready to go to market as to abate human
nuisances And Doctor Chantry said he
could almost see English beef and ale
across the channel, but translated into
French they would, of course, be nothing
but poulet and sour wine I pillowed his
feet with a bag of down which he had
kicked off his bed, and Skenedonk and I
lingered along the paving as we had many
a time lingered through the woods There
were book stalls a few feet square where
a man seemed smothered in his own vol
umes, and victual shops where you could
almost feed yourself for two or three
sous and people sitting outdoors drinking
w lne as if at a general festival I thought
Paris had comfort and prosperitywith
hereditary kings overthrown and an up
start In their place Yet the streets were
dirty with a smell of ancientness that
sickened me
W e got a loaf of bread as long as a
staff a pat of butter in a leaf, and a bot
tle of wine My servant, though unused
to squaw labor, took on himself the por
terage of qur goods, and I pushed from
street to street, keenly pleased with the
novelty, which held somewhere in its vola
tile ether the person of Mme de Ferrier
Skenedonk blazed our track with his
observant eye, and we told ourselves wo
weie searching for Dr Chantry's beef
Being the unburdened hunter I undertook
to scan cross places, and so came un
expectedly upon the Rue St Antoine, as a
man told me it was called, and a great
hurrahing that filled the mouths of a
crowd blocking the thoroughfare
Long live the emperor'" they shouted
Ihe man who told me the names of the
street a baker all in white, with his
tray upon his head, objected contemptu
ously
The emperor is not in Paris, he is In
Boulogne '
You never know wherp he ishe is
herethereeverywhere'" declared an
other workman, in a long dark garment
like a hunting-shirt on the outside of his
small clothes
Long live the emperor'long llvo the
emperor! '
I pushed forward as two or three heavy
coaches checked their headlong speed,
and officers parted the crowd
There he is' admitted the baker be
hind me Something struck me in the
side and there was Bellenger the potter,
a man I thought beyond the seas in
America His head as I saw it that
moment put the emperor's head out of my
mind He had a knife, and though he had
used the handle I foolishly caught it and
took it from him With all his strength
he then pushed mo so that I staggered
against the wheel of a coach
Assassin'' he screamed, and then Paris
fell arc|und my ears
If anybody had seen his act nobody re
frained from joining in the cry
"Assassin' Assassinl To the lamp post
with him' '
I stood stupefied and astonished as an
owl blinking in the sunshine, and two
guards held my collar The coaches
lashed away carrying the man of des
tinyas I have since been told he cailed
himselfas rapidlv as possible, leaving the
victim of destiny to be bayed at by that
many-headed dog, the mongrel populace
of Paris
(To be continued to morrow )
If you don't believe all the nice things
Dr Dick says about Red Raven Splits,
ask the man in any drugstore, hotel, cafe
or club
The Official Route to G A. R. Encamp
ment, Washington, D. C
The Chicago Great Western railway has
been named the official route for the vet
erans of Minnesota by Department Com
mander Perry Starkweather The spe
cial train of Pullman and tourist sleeping
cars and free chair cars will leave Min
neapolis at 7 p m , St Paul, 7 35 p m ,
Saturday, Oct 4, arriving at Washington,
D C , early Monday morning on the Bal
timore & Ohio R R No change of cars,
$23 90 for the round trip, $3 00 for berth
in tourist sleeping cars through to Wash
ington For further information apply to
L C Rains agent, corner Fifth street
and Nicollet avenue, Minneapolis.
The Apostles of "Diet."
The high prices of almost everything
in the line of food stuffs has made it a
good year for the faddists Those who
don't eat meat, or go without their break
fasts, or don't eat vegetables, or eat
fruit only when cooked, can all combine
on golden grain belt beer It contains the
strength of bread and meat, which all ad
mit is a necessity for health, and be
sides It is easy to digest It is a tonic
and a delicacy in one, thus satisfying the
two requirements of a perfect food.
^^^"'"fifW*^"^- '" ^ij"^ i^f^v /n* ^r-^^p-
IS IT AN EPIDEMIC?
Vital Statistics Show an Alarming In
crease in an Already Prevailing
DiseaseAre Any Exempt?
At no time in the history of disease has
there been such an alarming increase in
the number of cases of any particular
malady as in that of kidney and bladder
troubles now preying upon the people of
this country
To-day we see a relative, a friend or an
acquaintance apparently well, and in a
few days we may be grieved to learn of
their serious illness or sudden death,
caused by that fatal type of kidney trouble
Bright's disease
Kidney trouble often becomes advanced
into acute stages before the afflicted is
aware of its presence, that is why we
read of so many sudden deaths of prom
inent business and professional men,
physicians and others They have neg
lected to stop the leak in time
While scientists are puzzling their
brains to find out the cause each indi
vidual can, by a little precaution, avoid
the chances of contracting dreaded and
dangerous kidney trouble, or eradioate it
completely from their system if already
afflicted Many precious lives might have
been, and many more can yet be saved,
by paying attention to the kidneys
It is our mission to benefit our readers
at every opportunity,and therefore we ad
vise all who have any symptoms of kidney
or bladder trouble to write to-day to Dr.
Kilmer & Co , Binghamton, N Y , for a
free sample bottle of Swamp-Root, the
celebrated specific which is having such
a great demand and remarkable success
In the cure of the most distressing kidney
and bladder troubles With the sample
bottle of Swamp-Root will also be sent
free a pamphlet and treatise of valuable
information.
Don't make any mistake, but remember
the name, Swamp Root, Dr Kilmer s
Swamp-Root, and the address, Bingham
ton, N Y , on every bottle
LIYED A DOUBLE LIFE
Clarence A. White, Killed in New
York, Believed to Be Curtis
0. Shaw of Iowa.
New York, Sept 16 It is learned that
Clarence A White, who was mistaken for
a burglar and shot dead at 1 o clock Sun
day morning: in his boarding house at 60
South Arlington avenue, East Orange, was
living: under an assumed name Letters
found in his trunk make it appear that his
real name was Curtis O Shaw The let
ters were evidently from relatives and
were sent fiom Davenport, Iowa*
In a note book he carried In his pocket
was written. "In case of accident please
notify B li Stahl, 8 Franklin building,
Davenport, Iowa," and signed Clarence A
White On the reverse page was the sig
nature Anthony Clarenoe Wlfite
It has also been learned that Miss Te
resa M Stern, daughter of Mrs Henry
Stern, of Irving-ton, was his sweetheart
It is further understood that White was
a married man and that his wife got a di
vorce from him White served in the
Spanish war with Company G, Sixth Illi
nois volunteers, and after receiving his
discharge went to South America
FEEE SILVEE NAILED
Senator Cockrell Shows Why It Is
Not Needed Now.
St Louis Mo, Sept 16 "As long as
these conditions and ch cumstances exist
it is neither wise nor judicious, nor for
the best interests of our people and coun
try, to work for the free coinage of sil
ver "
Tihs significant utterance was made by
Senator C D Cockrell last night in an
exhaustive speech on political subjects
with which he opened the campaign in
Missouri
After expressing his fealtj to the theorj
of bimetallism, Mr Cockrell showed how
the abnormally laige increase in the pro
ductlon and imports of gold has resulted In
a large increase in the volume of money
In circulation, concluding with this state
ment
"The effect of this increase in the vol
ume of money has been precisely what the
blmetallists claimed would be the result
of the increase of money by the free coin
ago of silver and fully sustains the quanti
tative theory of money With this ln
creased volume of money, prlcea have ris
en, industries ha\e re\ived and prosperitj
has been brought in "
SUICIDE OF LIEUT. MORRIS
A Rumor That He Knew the Cause
of the Destruction of the Maine.
Boston, Sept 16 Lieutenant John R
Morris, TJ S N , was found dead in his
stateroom on the Lnited States ship Olym
pla by a fellow officer He had committed
suicide by shooting with a revolver Lieu
tenant Morris was the engineering officer
of the Olympla and began his duty on that
ship Jan 25 last No cause is known for
his act
Lieutenant Morris was appointed to the
naval academy from Missouri and is the
second officer of the Olympia, Dewey's
flagship, to commit suicide within five
days
Kansas City, Sept 16 John R Morris
was one of the few survivors of the battle
ship Maine At the time his rank was
that of assistant engineer It has been
stated that Morris knew the exact cause
of the explosion and that this knowledge
drove him insane
Half Rates to Cleveland, Ohio, from Chi
cago via the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad
On Sept 26 and 27, the Baltimore &
Ohio railroad company will sell excursion
tickets from Chicago to Cleveland, Ohio,
at rate of one fare for the round trip ac
count Hungarian celebration, 100th anni
versary of birth of Louis Kossuth Ti k
ets will be good for return until Sept 29,
but may be extended until Oct 28 by de
posit and payment of 50 cents
For further information call on or ad
dress local ticket agent or R C Haase,
N W. T. P A , B. & O R R , St Paul,
Minn.
You can save time and money by ad
vertising in the Journal s want columns
Let a Journal want ad find a house, board
or rooms for you, it will save time,
energy and money The cost is very small
and the results are prompt and satis
factory.
Jim Dumps a little girl possessed
Whom loss of appetite distressed.
" I des tan't eat I" t he child would screa m.
Jim fixed a dish of " Foroe " with cream
Sire tasted it, then, Joy for him 1
She begged for more from "Sunny Jim."
44
FORCE
ijttaflWjnimnrnii*i-ft^wmMif riy
The Beady-tovSerre Cereal,
a good fairy to \ -
all youngsters.
THE MINNEAPOLIS JOUKNAH
s ? e
[Grand Fall Opening and Special Opening Sale.
(F
See Our Furs.
You will see the
best kinds for
the m o n e y
every piece de
pendable.
^
The Newest and Best Fall Suits
Sketch of a costume on sale here. Drawn
from life 1B our suit Store The dress Is of
camel's hair cheviot, the coat Is the new
Eton style, trimmed with silk and braid.
The skirt has the new habit back with box
pleat and three-flounce effect The hat Is
one of the picture style, with Marie Antoin
ette plume
$10
with inverted pleat and slot seam the thirteen gore
kind flare skirt, tailor stitched at bottom in plain
cheviots and fancy cloths kinds that you will see
priced from $13.50 to $16.50.
V.
Walking Skirts m a collection of about
twelve kinds, materials and fashions
skirts with box pleats with habit back
SEE THE THINGS OF WHICH W E SPEAK AND JUDGE FOR YOURSELF.
Millinery Opening
Wednesday, September 17
The ladies of the Twin Cities are cordially invited to
visit our fall display of imported and domestic models.
Also the very choicest and newest patterns turned out
of our work rooms, cleverly designed and beautifully
finished. Sole agency for the famous Connelly hats, All lovers
of high art millinery will appreciate this exquisite
showing.
d-
"I'm Wearing Away My Heart for You." (Harris), 15o Wednesday only.
Phohn0*1185'
Mao'sMission onEarth
Medical Book Free.
"Know Thyself," a book for men only, sent
free postpaid, sealed, to any male reader
mecfoning this paper, 6c for postage "The
Science of Life, or Self-Preairvation," the
Gold Medal Prize Treatise, the best Medical
Book of this or any age, 370 pp , with engrav
ings and prescriptions Library edition, full
gilt, only Jl Get the best Address The Pea
body Medical Institute, 4 Bulflnch street, Bos
ton, Mass , the oldest and best in tUs coun
try Write-to-day for these books, secret keys
to health, happiness and VIGOROUS old age
Consultation by letter or in person
The Peabody Medical Institute has many
Imitators, but no equals.Boston Herald
A
BARBER? SUPPLIED
*rWj ^ , Jkf sfeST * ^J^^^m^^MkMS^ I K
ANDCVTLBRY.
Shemrm. Rum and Cllpp*r*
Mi
R. B. HEQENER.
SOT MIOOLLKT AVKNlJB,
99
,^Ji.^*,
m
^
J
That lends the distance to the picture. Scrutinize the foreground.
Our pride is our exclusiveness of styles and lowness of prices.
How are the two possible?
Those who serve us and serve us well know that they will do so next year
and the year after. They send their designers to Europe with that idea
they buy their cloths with that idea they hold their working people
with that idf a. They ean figure their expense a year ahead
and know that with additional fixed clients it may be less.
not common and
M. E. WALLACE.
'You run no risk at Goodfellows
oodfellow's
GEO. LOUDON. 8E0. D. DAYTON. J . B. H10SHER.
Silk Leaders of the Northwest* Now at 7th and Nicollet.
The essence.the cream, the best of the fall fashions in dress are here for you,
ready to meet your critical judgment and receive the praise that is due.
And there will be naught but praise for never was a gathering freer from
freakish extremities in style and more conservative with the canons of taste.
Dress Suits to $125.00
Walking Suits to $62.50
oo
It's time to buy your fall shoes.
We can please and fit you. d -j H/\
Over 100 styles at *- & U
For children, misses and boys, from
Goodfellow Dry Goods Co., now at 7th and Nloollet, Minneapolis* Minn,
Sweet* crisp flaKes of wheat
and malteaten cold.
School Shoes
25c to $3.00
PB0P0SALS FOE. CONSTRUCTION OFFICE
of Chief Q M , St Paul, Minn September 12
1902 Sealed proposals in triplicate wUl be
received at this office until 11 o'clock a m
October 11, 1902 and opened then for the con
struction of one double set of Lieutenants
Quarters, one double set of Captains' Quar
ters one Barrack one Guardhouse, one Bakeiy
and set of Hospital Steward s Quarters at
Fort Lincoln, N D Plans and specifications
may be seen and blank pioposals with full in
structions had upon application here or at the
office of the Constructing Quartermaster, Bis
marck, N D United States reserves the right
to accept or reject any or all proposals or any
part thereof GEO B POND, C Q M
- Perfect Food for Children.
Wheat Is a perfeot summer cereaL and efforts should be made
.to teach ohildren to eat it."Louisa B. Hoour, in "How to Feed
Children."
A RED NOSE
CURED AT YOUR HOME
f*x
THE DAYLIGHT STORE
"You run no risk at Gooajelloufs"
That is how our styles
our prices low. That is
truths like these:
Walking Suit of
the Norfolk
style of all wool
$19.75 $15
fancy cheviot, black-white and blue
white effects skirt has habit back
and box plaits money back if you
can match it under $25.
TXT
I can positively oure red nose, red
kfeoe
$251Walkinf
Norfolk, the fly front and the box jackets mixture
materials, men's wear materials, meltons, cheviots
and flake effectsan array at a popular price that is
equalled by few stores in the land. The values are
from $30 to $32.50
and blotohv, pimply, ugly skin,
no matter what the oanse. Oon
isultation in person or by letter is
free and strictly confidential.
JOHN H.W00DBURY, Dermat. Inst
163 StateStreet, Chicago.
Dress Skirts to $85.00
Walking Skirts to $35.00
m
^
are how
hood o a dozen styles to please your
every fancy there are the blouse," the
SEPTEMBER 16, 1902.
common
we can tell you
with new cuff sleeve skirt has
box pleats over drop lining. Is
worth in any other store every
cent of $22 50.
g Suit is also in the neighbor
Two reasons for this sale:
OneTo spread the news of the most complete drapery store in
the Northwest, which we will do by yearly sales to be held in
September TwoAn unlooked for reason. The change of managers in this
department caused some misunderstanding in the buying. The
resultthe same kind of goods from different makers This
means over-stocks in various lines and
to bring them down to normal size. What makes it pleasant for
you is that everything is of the newest, scarcely unboxed The
quantities are enormous the
your house furnishing chance
Ruffled eurtams that were to
sell at 82.50 and $3 d | r\Q
a pair, go at ^leVO
Buffled curtains that were to sell
at $4.50 and $5, go d ^ % A O
Brussels curtains that were to
sell at $4.50 and $5 d - rtO
a pair, goat 47%JVO
Irish Poiats, Brussels, Arabians,
ruffles and the like, over 100 pat
terns that were to sell at $5 50 to
6800 a pair, they
go at
Fine hand made Renaissance and
Saxony Brussels curtains that
were to sell at $12.50 to $25.00
a pair, go at $9.75 t | Q 7 F
" \
Dress Suit of all wool
cheviot, navy and
black: blouse coat
"I'm Wearing Away My Heart for You," (Harris), 15c Wednesday only.
September Sale of Lace Curtains.
Sacrificing Cuts in Price
Couch Covers
Fifty covers that were to sell at
$6.00 go
for The Rugs and Art Furniture are on this floor. ^-Tbird Floor.
STORAGE
Household goods a -meotaltr.
equaled faculties and
Packing by experienced men.
1 lowest rotes.
rja-
BoyaTransfer5StorageCo,, 46 So.34SL
Tetepnone Mala
Umrn Vnn Sore Throat, Pimples, Copper-Col-
IlaVu lUU ored Spots, Aches, Old Bores, Ul
cers la the Mouth, Hair falling? Write for
proofs of permanent cures of worst oases of
blood poison in 15 to 35 days Capital $800,000
100-page book FREE. No branch offices.
COOK REMEDY C0.,
J
" You run no risk at GoodfeHow's '
$4.85 $4.39
2S4
r
varieties magnificent Here is.
Note the savings
c^tIr
Order by Mail
and get as much
satisfaction a s
if you were on
the ground your
self.
V J
The Linen Sale
' You run no risk at Goodfellow s '
More Linens go on sale for Wed
nesday. Hand embroidered Scarfs,5 dozen
entirely new designs, regular re
tail price 4 50 Ford?'') o B[
the sale ^AiO)
Odd Napkins m half dozen lots,
leavings of the first day's ., -
selling, will go at , 7 3 Oil
Barnsley cream damask, satin,
all our $1.50 kind d | \\
goes at ^ * - 1 "
P?""Linen Place.
Visit the Uluslo Department.
Dressmaking Needs
"You run no risk at Goodfellow* "
Brush edge skirt binding, all col
ors, always sold at 7c a \\f c
yard. Opening price .. 0/^v
Mohair skirt braid, all the want
ed colors, always sold at 5c -3 _
a yard. Opening price. O C
DreBS shields, light weight and
stockinet, all sizes, sold up f|
to 18c pair. Opening price, V C
Visit the Music Department.
/ *
* Lacese Venic batiste and Irish crochet,
worth to 50c a yard, ^gj
opening price ZOC
Toilet WaterViolet and lilac
odors, sprinkler top bot "^ C^-*
ties, opening price ... JL%J\*
Pillow RufflesMade of fine
silk ribbon in all the new color
ings, per ruffle,
opening price
Igg^Thlrd Avenue
Galloon bands of heavy
'$2, $1.25
Bed Sets
Sets in white and colors, with
curtains to match
$6 00 bets for $5 00.
$7 50 Sets for $6.00.
Oriental Stripe Tapestries
Like all the restjut.t here audi
of the newest designs
50c Tapestries 38c.
60c Tapestries 45c.
75c Tapestries 60c.
They are the kind you want for
door drapes and cozy corners
There are fringes and trimmings^
to match.
Portieres
Tapestry, rep, silk and velour
Portieres, from A \ f\C\
$3.00 to ^'rU.UU
Lace Notifc
Hand made lace Motifs, in Ara
bian and Renaissance, from e
$5.00 each down to ^ C
lor It. Itfeoftnnot
fcupplir Vah aryel,
iccepl no other, bat send
tamp for illustrated book
r-sealed'. 3ft gives full par
ticulars and directions lnvaluar
titetoladlM. MABVJBfc CO.,
^KoomftSl flakes BIO*, M. IT.
Snt by mail or express to any address, pre
paid? Ur
S3. H. WEaiYHOXiD, DRUGGIST,
SSS Nloollet qv Weit Hotel Dras
tore, BOO Hennepin Avenss,
mpl *
Every Woman
Is Interested sod should
know about the wonderful
MARVEL Whirling Spray
The new Syringe, fyteth*
and Suction. Best Bei*
estMost Oo&Tenfent.
JtoleanteslDiteatiy,
' 4 *
- ^
r\

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