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[CRAVENETTE I COATS 5 eei (lit i iiil S.- t.- llii i ilt t*- ti ill XS ri^?r"c'^~!f^,, 3 $*8SX8^K8XSK^^ insure a perfect-fitting, hygienic corset. This corset comes in twenty different models, enabling us to fit any figure. Come in and have a talk with Miss 'Hoffner. Tell her your corset troubles and she will surely-.help you. x)oes some wonderful detective work in iWliicli appears in THE JOURNAL Some night this week. These are the original Sherlock Holmes stories, and undoubtedly the best ever written by that great deductive genius, Sir A. Conan Doyle. One of these great stories appears each week in The Journal. WATCH FOR THEM Before writing a Journal want ad It is well to look over the want pages and see the styles of wording which most appeal to you. In every case you will flnd them to be the ones which spread out the whole story so you can see at sight whether or not the proposition Is suitable for you. Write your own want ad that way and you will be satisfied with the answers you receive. Wednesday Evening^5 -\&? AX** 'i *T^e*V' ^JS 1 "^rt^/^Kf^^^^^V^V^**" ^^s***^? htMUflrafi^fr^ r/ie G/t Reliable. Every lady wears one nowadays, and they are a necessity and also a great convenience. Special Prices for This Week A special purchase'of.manufacturer's samples was made by our buyer, who has just returned from New York. These are all new spring styles, in Oxfords, Grays, Tans, Mouse, Greens and Fancy Mixturesgarments which sail from $13.50 to $25.00 each. We give our customer0 the benefit of this purchase in the following prices Garments which AlA Atffe Garments which sold from $13.50 S&igfl Ull $16'5 fro Bol to $16.50, for.... UPWiWU to $25.00, for.... These make splendid Automobile Coats, as they are good dust repellers also dew and rainproof. Just the thing for morning and evening rides. NEW LINE COVERT JACKETS. Extra values bought on this same trip, nicely finished garments, good shapes, $10.00, $15.00, $16.50* MISSES' AND LADIES' OVERCOATS. A verv desirable line at $14.50, $15.00, $16.50 to $27.50. INTERESTING JUST NOW. MISS HOFFNER is here and explain ing to our patrons the peculiar and su perior points of the Our leading corset, the latest and most correct corset known to the corset world. It is a genuine whalebone cor set, all hand made. An ideal creation that is acknowledged to be the very height of corset elegance, embodying all the latest fashionable contours that ".sAw*'5'* ir"iWV' Cii i e oe i eoo i eoeo i i ti SI- 1 9 SS I.- (iii 9 mm^sMmmm^. yn VANDERBILT PATENT** New York, April 26.Following in line with his former inventions of new and useful improvements in locomo tives, Cornelius Vanderbilt has just re ceived from the patent office at Wash ington letters patent on a steam gener ating appliance which he asserts will in fifty-three particular ways work to advantage in boiler construction. In his application for a patent, Mr. Yanderbilt explains in a general way the advantages to be derived by such departures in boiler construction as planned in his new steam generating device. "This invention," he says, "has for its general object to improve the construction and increase the effi ciency of locomotive .steam engines, with special reference to the running gear or frame, which perform the usual functions, such as maintaining the axles in parallelism and.supporting the boiler and other parts of the locomotive." All claims advanced by Mr. Vander bilt were allowed by the patent office. The difference between the old boiler a rus} 7 tlia ln (S wt i* 0 ft a %mmm$m@$i$M^8$k BOILER IMPRO^E^fiNT Millionaire Inventor Declares His Device Will Work Fifty-three Advantages for Present Boiler Arrangements. VANDERBILT'S BOILER IMPROVEMENT. BLUE STAMP HOST RAIDS A STORE Women, Attracted by Rumor Failure, in Bun on Trading Stamp Concern. of New York, April 26.Bank runs of history must give way before the new est kindthe run on' the bankrupt trad ing stamp store. Eumor rides the wind when banks are in straits, but the wind blows chiefly in business quarters. A trading stamp rumor beats the wind, and moves amo'n'g the homes. When a petition in bankruptcy was filed against the Benedict & MacFar lane Blue Trading Stamp company from the Battery to the Bjronx and from Richmond Hill to Patersbn, N. J., there flocked to Twenty-third street be tween Sixth and Seventh avenues, the Blue Trading Stamp army. The terri ble tidings had, in some mysterious way, gone forth that the trading stamp concern was about to close its 1,60() odd stores a'n'd blue ruin stared in the face of every "book" holder. Pale-faced and anxious-eyed, the army began to arrive soon after daylight. It was made up entirely of women and children. Practically every other wom an had a baby carriage, and the others either had children clingi'n'g to their skirts or in their arms. And every one held in a vise-like clutch a bunch of blue trading stamp books. Desperation on Faces. No ban/k run was ever like this. Des peratii^niarkecl every countenance, and whe^^n| stamp concern opeWed its doffrspshe^elswas a mos drb^S^i^front of the building.i Tht glass.Mpf^one' of the doors was shattered in th%|scfamble and had to be boarded up. -Policemeif, after half an hour's work, succeeded in forming the mob into lines two abreast a'n'd keeping open a narrow passage for pedestrians. Thereafter the people were only, ad mitted two at a time. As the morning grew the crowd in creased in size, until at one time over 600 growling, Snarling, angry women clamored for admission to the store. Policemen O'Flahertv a'n'd Baury had the nob of theiri the Blue- Tradi'n'g Stamp company. Grief Made Them ST. FETES. MINN.Otto JohnBon died last night of injuries leceived from beinfj burled in a trench by a sudden ca^e-in of sand in the, afternoon. M\ as originally designed by Stephenson and the steam generating appliance in vented by Mr. Vanderbilt. as a lay man would see it, is that the old boiler has horizontal flues, thru which the fire blast draws heat, and these flues are surrounded by water, while Mr. Vanderbilt's boiler has vertical pipes or flues, and they are filled with water and surrounded oy the fire blast. The steam is thus generated in these multiple tubes and paases vipwarcl to two large horizontal tanks, from which it is drawn into the cylinders of the engine. By this arrangement the cold water coming into the boiler does not interfere with the water that is heated and generating steam. The exterior of the Vanderbilt mul titubular boiler will not .be different from the old locomotive in shape. Me chanics are at work at the Rogers loco motive works turning out locomotives with the Vanderbilt steam generating appliance. According to tests, it is said the new generator will work great sav ing in the cost of fuel.' PARDON SOUGHT FOR HARTZELL BASOOM, HIS PARTNER, ACTIVE IN HIS BEHALF. Petition for Clemency for Slayer of Stoddard Generally Signed in Cav alier County, the Home of the Prin cipals, but Is Without Sanction of Trial Judge and State's Attorney. Special to The Journal. Grand Forks, X. 1. April 26.B. T. com, business partner of S. L. Hartzell, Eusineses lives keepin the'unruly invectiveg hurled at women ion check and the air was blue ^i1 Sisters. A common grievance made the whole crowd km and they poured forth their tales of woe in" shrill voices that some times reached to the end of the line. Suddenly there came a wild burst of rage from the middle of the line and screams of "Say, Mr. Policeman!" "Hey, there, cop, put her out!" "She's a buttin' in!" A big fat woman, who had arrived late, had hovered around the crowd un til she saw a small hole up near the front and quietly stepped into it unly noticed, as she hoped. But a score of hawkeyed women who had been in line for hours spotted her and a perfect Babel arose. Policeman Baury approached the of fender and told her she would have to go back. "Why,, the idea! What do you mean? How dare you 1 I'll have you reported for insulting a lady! I've been here for hours!" she declared in haughty 'tones. "Oh, Just listen- to her!" "Say, whadder yer think of that for a nerve?" "Wouldn't she just jar you!" "Some people just can't be a lady under no circumstances!" "Put ter out! and scores of similar screams rent the air, followed by "Serve her right! That '11 hold her for a while!" and-long-drawn a-h's of satis faction as the intruder was forced to step out. Babies Near the Line. As the afternoon wore on, women placed the oldest children toehold their places in line while they went to care for their babies moored in perambu lators at various points in the neighbor hood. Some produced lunches from, their pockets, and whole family parties" squatted on the curbstone and consumed their repast. Late in the afternoon a woman came out of the store and confided to an anx ious group that there was nothing in the store. "They are just cleaned right out," she said. "There's nothing in there but great big things like furniture and statuary, which you have to have .just hundreds of books for. I think it's rast dreadful!" ossibl to apply himself THE MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL. April 26, 1905. Bas- who was convicted ot the murder of Byron Stoudara at Langdon and sentenced to five years in the penitentiary, is circulating a petition in Cava lier county asking for the pardon of Hartzell on the ground that'he bste^ been" sufficiently punr ished. The petition is to go io the starboard of pardons at the June meeting and. h^ts, been liberally signed in Cavalier county. O Judge Fisk, who tried the case for Judge Kneeshajv. and State's Attorney George M. Price have both declined to sign the petition, so that it is hardly expected it will be of avail. Judge Fifi'k has signed the statement of facts, which is to accompany the petition. Byron Stoddard owned a farm near Langdon, and Hartzell and Baseom owned an adjoining farm. They had quarreled over a road, and Stoddard is charged with having cut a wire fence and driven thru a wheat field owned by the others. They met at the opening where Stoddard emerged from the wheat fields, some words followed and Hartzell shot Stoddard. Bas eom was tried as an accomplice and was ac quitted. Mrs. W. N. Stewart and her daughter, Miss Myrtle Stewart, have brought actions for dam- THE BOOT OF TEE BIATTEH. He Cured Himself of Serious Stomach Trouble by Getting Down to First Principles. A man of large affairs in one of our prominent eastern cities, by too close attention to business, too little exercise and too many club dinners, finally be gan to pay nature's tax, levied in the form of chronic stomach, trouble the failure of his digestion brought about a nervous irritability making itdail lm- to. his and finally deranging the kid neys and heart. In his own words he says: I con sulted one physician after another and each one seemed to understand my case, but all the same they each failed to bring about the return of my former digestion, appetite and vigor. Ybr two vears I went from pillar to post, from one sanatorium to another I gave up smoking, I quit coffee and even re nounced my daily glass or two of beer, but without any marked improvement. Friends had often advised me ,to try a Well-known proprietary medicine, Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, and I had often perused the newspaper advertise ments of the remedy, but never took any stock in advertised medicines nor could believe a fifty-cent patent medi cine would touch my case. "To make along story short, I final bought a couple of-packages at the nearest drugstore and took two or three tablets after each meal and occasion ally a tablet between meals jrheh I felt anv feeling of nausea or discomfort. I was surprised at the end of the first week to note a marked improve ment in my appetite and general health, and before the two packages were gone I "was certain that Stuart Dyspepsia Tablets were going to cure completely, and they did not disap point me. I can eat and sleep and en joy my coffee and cigar, and no one would suppose I had ever known the horrors oi dyspepsia. "Out of friendly curiosity I wrote to the proprietors of the remedy, ask ing for imformation as to what the tablets contained, and they replied that the principal ingredients were aseptic pepsin (government test), malt diastase and other natural digestives, which di gest food regardless of the condition of the stomach." The root of the matter is this: The digestive elements contained in Stu art's Dyspepsia Tablets, will digest the food, give the overworked stomach a chance to recuperate and the nerves and the whole system receive the nour ishment which can only come from food stimulants and nerve tonics never give real strength, they give a fictitious strength, invariably fojlowed by reac tion. Every drop of blood, every nerve and tissue is manufactured from our daily food, and if you can insure its prompt action and complete digestion DV the regular use of so good and wholesome a remedy as Stuart's Dys pepsia Tablets, you will have no need of nerve tonics and sanatoriums. Although Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab lets have been in theC market Only a few years, yet probably every druggist in the United States, .[a4afd and Great Britain now sells thenoa^id considers them the most popular and successful of any preparation for stomach ^rouble. l- Black Mercerized Sunburst Petticoats Worth $1.98, qnly $1.48 A Great Coat and Skirt Sale at $5.98 137 jaunty tan covert coats, black cheviot and broadcloth coats,. also loose-back belted silk taffeta cloaks, Panama and brilliantine skirts. We guarantee every garment in this collection absolutely new and the very best styles in each one. To make a grand sensational sale, we have put goods in this lot well worth $10.00. We want your trade Thursday. If you shop here, the values offered & Cfe& will surely get it. Choice V* Ladies' CoatsTan covert coats, very swell styles, best silk linings. These garments are strictly man tailored and worth up to fft & tfb Cfe$ft $15.00. Thursday only VBPO Silk CoatsHandsome styles in black silk taffeta, 30 inches long, accordion and box pleated. Worth to $15.00. Thursday ^S "i A Sift A Big Suit Sale Just twenty-one in the lot, stylish well-made suits, all sizes, black, blue and fancy mixtures jackets 24 inches long, lined throughout with good satin. The jacket alone is worth all we ask for the suit. To close out quickly we QT Cfe$& offer this at *B BFO Shirt waist suits, made of plain and'fancy mo hairs, all colors. Worth $12.50 ^f C&SSt one days' sale, only ^CJHH* Cravenette Coats Great special value in cravenette coats for Thurs day, all bunched in one lot. C*T^ CBJ$& $10.98 and $12.98 kind go at *J* m%M99 Skirts A very special lot of the newest skirts, in plain Panama, mohair and fancy mixtures, all colors and perfect fitting. Worth $6.98 ^.8 (& choice for Thursday only *P*W"B5JFO Waists A large assortment of white china silk waists,, very handsome styles. These are worth tf* 6% 9 E $3.98 choice for Thursday M* White linen waists. A new lot, just in. We want every lady to see these. The newest novelties. Prices $2.98, $3.75 and ages against the Northwestern Telephone com pany for permanent injuries received in a run away accident on Oct. 31 last. At the time of the accident the Stewart fam ily lived on a farm in Rye township. Mrs. Stewart and her daughter bad been in the city shopping and started home in the evening. When on Skidmore avenue and near the intersection of North Fifth street, a loose wire dangling from one of the telephone poles became en tangled in the wheels of the buggy in which they were riding. This frightened their horse and it ran away, throwing the women to the ground. Mrs. Stewart was almost scalped and wits otherwise painfully bruised. Miss Stewart sustained a broken arm and was also badly bruised about the body. They were taken to a hospital, and it is asserted that their injuries have resulted in permanent disability. Mra. Stewart asks for $10,000 and Miss Stewart for $5,000. The cases will come on at the June term of the district court. Two Violent Deaths. News of a terrible accident comes from Vang, a small town in Cavalier county, near the Canadian border. Adolph Peterson, a farmer aud blacksmith, had his separatov.- at the blacksmith shop making repairs. His 2-year-old daughter was playing about the shop and machine. Miss ing the little tot, Mr. Peterson went from the ehop to find her. Near the separator, with the SXSLMYW\ DEPT. STORE CO. Nicollet and Seventh. PRICES ALWATS LESS THAN ELSEWHERE wind-stacker lying across her breast, he found the little one breathing her last. It is pre sumed that the climbed up on the machine, loosened the tirank which controls the carrier, which fell across her and crushed out her life. Mrs. Hans Bngen committed suicide at Albert, Benson county, by placing the muzzle of a shotgun against her abdomen and with a stick or some other article pulling the trigger. Death was instant. She had been in ill health for some time, and in the winter underwent an operation at the Deaconess hospital in this city. She is supposed to have been slightly demented. Hillsboro Must Fight Damage Case. Mrs. Tonnetta B. Thompson has begun an ac tion in the district court at Hillsboro against Jens Grondahl and the city of Hillsboro for damages of ?2,000. She stepped into a hole in "the sidewalk In front of property owned by Grondahl. This was on Nov. 29, 1903, and she alleges permanent injuries in the shape of a paralyzed left side.' making her helpless and unable to do any work, especially In her pro fession of trained nurse. She asks for $2,000 and interest from the date of the accident and the costs and disbursements of the action. The case will be tried at Hillsboro. BLUE EARTH, MTNN.Superintendent A. C. Tibbetts, as chairman of the last meeting of the city superintendents of schools, was author- A Source of Constant Worry and an Injury to Health. Whenever a sore or nicer refuses to heal it is a sure sign that there is something wrong with the blood. It is not healthy as it should be, but infected with some germ or perhaps old blood taint that has lain dormant in the system for years awaiting a favorable opportunity for manifesting itself. Then often an insignificant scratch, cut or bruise will develop into a festering sore that resists all treatment and becomes a source of daily care and worry, affecting the entire health and causing the sufferer many hours of anxiety. Those most usually afflicted with sores and ulcers are persons who have reached or passed middle life. The vitality of the blood and strength of the system have naturally begun to wane, and the poisonous germs with which it is saturated force an outlet on the face, arms, legs or some other part of the body and form a sore or ulcer. This being fed by a poisoned blood supply, grows red and angry, festers and eats into the surrounding tissue until it be- comes what is very aptly termed "an old sore." While the old or middle-aged are the usual sufferers, the young are not exempt if the blood becomes infected with the germs. How aggravating and stubborn these places are can best be told by some person who has nursed and treated one for years, applying salves, powders, washes and the like until his patience is exhausted and with no good results. The sore or ulcer remains and co- tinues its work of destruction by eating deeper into the surrounding flesh, and distributing its poisonthrough the circulation to all parts of the body to affect the general health. The fact that often a wart, mole, pimple. or birthmark, that for years showed no signs of trouble, will sometimes, with a little rough handling or slight cut, develop into one of these stubborn ulcers, shows conclusively that the cause is in the blood. Not only are they painful, but dangerous, because the same taint that is behind an "old sore" is back of cancerous ulcers. The practice of cutting out the diseased part and scraping the bone is often resorted to^ but these severe measures seldom do any good. The sore may be removed and for a time heal over, but the same poison that produced it the first time is still in the blood, because the blood cannot be cut away, and it will return. Nor can external applications be of any permanent benefit for the reason that the trouble is beyond their reach and they cannot possibly have any ^ffect on the germs and poisonsthe most they can do is relieve the pain. The only treatment that can do any real good is a competent blood purifierone that goes to the very root of the trouble and forces out the cause and for this purpose nothing has ever been found to equal- S. S. S. It goes to the fountain-head of the disease, drives out all poison and morbid matter, reduces the inflammation and allows the sore to heal natu- rally and permanently. Not only does S. S. S. purify the blood of all poisons and germs,{ but builds it up, making it strong and healthy and able to supply every part of the body with sufficient and proper nourishment to keep it! in perfect health, S. S. S. is purely vegetable, being, i made entirely from roots, herbs and barks, and is not! 'only the king of blood purifiers, but the greatest of all tonics to strengthen the constitution, restore the vitality, help the appetite and digestion, and tone up the system. If you have a sore that is slow in healing do not. waste time with external applications, or experiment! witi Unknown remedies, but begin the use of S. S. S. and by removing the cause, cure the| trouble permanently. ^JJox special book on sores and ulcers and any medical advice will bej given without charge. *^y^ V- Glasses Fitted By our guarantee Optieian will cureheadache and other reflexes due to eye strains. 91.00 spectacles, QCA and Corsets We invite you to visit this en larged department on second floor. We keep all the best standard makes. Our expert corset lady will fit you and guarantee comfort and satisfaction in every pair sold. We find Thompson's Glove Fitting Cor set, withtofour hoseof supporterst 1 at- tached, be one the bes we have ever 0*i A A sold at alflf Ladies' corsets, long and short hip, in white batiste, very best styles. Worth 69c ^Lftffe to 75c, Thursday *fOU Homeseekers' Bates. The Minneapolis & St. Louis R. K. has on sale round trip excursion tickets at one fare plus two dollars to points in the West, South and Southwest. Final re turn limit, twenty-one days from date of sale. Liberal stoprover privileges granted. Call on J. G. Eickel, City Ticket Agent, 424 Nicollet Ave. Some years ago I was shot in the left leg, receiving whftt I considered only a slight wound. It developed into a run ning sore, and gave me a great deal of pain and inoonven ienoe. I was treated by many doctors, and took a number of blood remedies, but none did me any good, and did not seem to check the progress of the sore. I had heard S. S. S. highly recommended for the blood, and concluded to give it a trial, and the vesuH was gratifying. S. 8. 8. seemed toget right at the trouble, and forced the poisom out of my blood soon afterwards the sore healed np and was cured sound and well. I am sure S. S. S. is by fat the best blood remedy made. Lawrenoeburg, Ky. J. H. MoBRATSR. THE SWIFT SPECIFfC COMPANY. ATLANTA, OA* j, i'i ',4 Millinery at $5.00 i Trimmed hat values at prices attainable only in this store. We take the same care in making these $5.00 hats that we do of our $20.00 hats. Everything must be correctly done. No slip-shod work here. We want every woman in Minneapolis to see these. What ever your choice may be as to shape and color, you are sure to find it in ^*R ffcfft this collection at VVlUU Trimmed hats, very stylish, in different shapes, trimmed with ribbons, flowers, and ornaments. Good value for $5.00, frQ only. 9Vl9Q Big bargains on main floor tables in ladies' ready to trim hats, made of chiffon and ^^4 O braids. $1.95, $1.50 and.......:.. O A large assortment of misses' and children's trimmed hats on bargain tables on "^Cfcflfc main floor. Special, $1.25, *75c 15 TAUT" HAjBlTnll!.ITHIR Ladies' Hose Special lot of plain black hose for women, all sizes. Thursday only, 4 A A per pair Ladies' fine hose. We guarantee these the very best at 25c. As a special 4 O A for Thursday only *FO Union suits, high neck and long sleeve, ankle and knee lengths, pure white. Cheap Ad* at 69c Thursday only W"U Ladies' vests, medium weight, high neck and long sleeves, neatly trimmed. Good OOA value for 29c Thursday ,mm^% ized to appoint a committee to investigate pen manship in the schools of the state and to report at the next annual meeting. He has appointed as this committee Superintendent P. C. Tonning of Willmar, Superintendent C. K. Frazier of Winona, and Superintendent J. M. McConnell of Mankato. See Stockwell SoonThat life insur- anceThe Penn Mutual. Andrus bldg. The records of the dajdeaths, births, marriages, hotel arrivals, rail road time tables, real estate transfers, building permits and other information of interestwill be found, together with want advertisements, on page 18 of this issue. 4 S