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OPEN A-' at 8:30 A. M. Close at 5:30 P. M. Except Saturdays. 500 Pes. Printed Lawns. Black Lawns. r. A Week for Final Stock Reduction in Our "Great Alteration and Improvement Sale.if Chicago Merchants Cancel Orders! Greatest Wash Goods Sale Ever. ATELY we have bent every effort toward reducing stocks. The present favorable weather together with radical price cutting caused enormous clearances, particularly in the Wash Goods. So we felt justi- fied in buying heavily in this line from manufacturers who were forced to sacrifice immense quantities of goods for 'what they could get be- cause the big merchants of Chicago were compelled to cancel orders on account of the great strike. Fancy Printed Batiste, white grounds, floral designs, 'Sale'' price, yard CPECIAL for this "sale" we offer Just five hundred pieces pretty Printed Lawns in very neat designs on white grounds. We have limited the quality and A must refuse to sell to dealers at this extremely small price. Yard 5c Printed Batiste and Lawns, small designs on white grounds, "Sale" per yard... O Fine Printed 30-inch Batiste, white and tinted grounds, floral designs 12Jc value, "Sale" price, yard O Remnants VLace Striped Novelties, in solid shades of black and tan 12c value for this "Sale," yard..... 7&c Remnants of AH White Pique, Checked Madras, Voiles, etc. good 15c values, all in the "Sale" at, yard 8c ^Shetland Lace Striped Suitings and Scotch Mixed Suitings, right for summer suits 20c and 25c values at half and |A_ less, per yard IV/w Extra Special 25c I Values to 75c Printed English Batistes ments: values to 75cthe "Sale" price 50b to 75c Values. 200 Pieces Best""Mefcerlle^ Eng lish grenadines, black grounds with emb. stripes, lustrous, rich as silk, 50c to 75c values, every 'JP- day"Sale" only yard. A^ .Mid-Summer Sale of Embroideries Thousands of Yards in this "Sale" at One-quarter, One- third, Even ONE-HALF LESS than Regular Values. MOST TIMELY SALE FOR YOU! Right in the midst of our "Great Alteration and Improvement Sale" which we inaugurated for the purpose of reducing stocks comes this enormous shipment of embroideries. Forced to extreme measures we have marked them at V. extraordinarily 'low prices. The benefit to you we hope will make their stay with us very short. Over 25,000 yards in this sale. Secured from one of the largest and most prominent makers of St. Gall, at prices that are but fractions of the real values. All Past Embroidery Sale Records Will be Exceeded. We Advise You to Come Early. Our Annual June Sale of Muslin Underwear Soft Muslin Corset Covers, full front and Marguerite effects, all sizes.! Our "June Sale" price while they last.... iXorset Covers of fine cambric, "V" neck trimmed1 Regular low prices were reduced for our "Great Alteration and Improvement Sale*'have been further reduced for this sale. THIS COMBINATION OF CIRCUMSTANCES lends a donbly power- ful attractiveness o this particular occasion. It would be well for you to supply yourself with enough for the year. Our enormous stock gives you endless assortments to choose from. Every piece is well made, of generous measure, and include every new and popular style of the season, whether plain neat effects or the lavishly trimmed creations styles to suit all tastes. Appropriate with this sale we offer great values in Kimonas, Sacques, Silk and Mercerized Petticoats, etc. Corset Covers. ,8C with em broidery good values at 25c Our "June Sale" price each YJU'^K* Chemise. ^Women's fine Nainsook and soft Cambric Chemise, short or long, trimmed with lace or em broidery and finished with rib bon, ruffles on bottom, trim med. Kinds that are worth $1.89. Our "June d?| 0 Sale" price each ....*P1 Drawers. Cambric Drawers with deep circular ruffles, trimmed with lace, insertion and lace edge, perfect shapes in closed and open styles good values at 39c. Our "June Sale" 'J^ry price garment Extra Fine Muslin Drawers, full ruffles, trimmed with tucks and insertion extra values at 49c. Our "June Sale" 2 price, garment, *50v ^Monday Evening,|| NICOLLE.T Avenue, 1st AT S.&5thSt. MINNEAPOLIS. Fine Printed Batiste, sheer grade, immense variety of styles, -g c\ 15cquality this ''sale,"yd. 1UC Embroidered Striped Printed Ba tiste, pretty designs fine sheer grade, 15c qual., yd. lUC Mill Remnants of Fine Printed Percales, corded and satin striped madras waistings 15c values, in this "Sale" at yard VC TpHESE are Remnants and short pieces of 40-inch Black Lawns of fine Sheer quality the lengths are goods Altho they are the regular 15c kind we put them in this Clearance "Sale" at a quick selling price. Choice while the lot-lasts at, per yard yard:...... 12^C Mercerized Printed Crepes, white and tinted grounds, floral designs 25c value regularly t^KL^ "Sale^ price yard.... fJ hm/"? splendid assort- ^^J^^ choice at yard.. ^Regular 50c Values. Siftf' 11 fie embroidered Suitings and Waistings, solid colors, also in printed effects, 50c values. 'Sale'' at half E r yard XOC Gowns. Muslin Gowns, good width tucked yoke, embroidery and lace trim med, Empire and Hubbard styles well worth 59c our "June 'X'"jr, Sale" price, each...... %j JC* Soft* Muslin Gowns, trimmed with fbur rows torchon insertion be tween clusters of tucks a snap at 75c our "June Sale" A/\n each...........i., T"OC price, Kimonas. 25 dozen Short Kimonos, made of dimities, lawns and batistes, in colors and white, with yoke back, large kimono sleeves, all sizes, ex tra values at 79c, our A I "June Sale" price, choice T*a ^Petticoats. Muslin Pefcticoats, made with deep flounce and dust ruffle, trimmed with clusters of hemstitched tucks a bargain at 69c i our' 'June Sale'' price, ea. ^rO Fine Soft Muslin Petticoats made with deep lawn umbrella flounce, trimmed with cluster of pin tucks Xnd finished with a deep lace edge good values at $1.00, our ^71^ "June Sale" price each.. 1 Women's Fine, Soft Nainsook Chemise, daintily trimmed with beau- tiful laces well worth $2.25, our "June Sale" price, each.... A* $1.45 Mk&'/&, CITY NEWS THOUSAND S SE E TH E ELEPMTS MONSTER OIBOUS IN MINNEAP- OLIS TODAY. The Forepaugh-Sells Show Arrived Yes terday and the Tented City Was Erected with Unusual QuietLarge Crowds See the Parade and the "Big Show." The Forepaugh-Sells street parade to day, which attracted crowds of specta tors to the down-town district, was a glittering pageant of gold and gor eousness, with many unique and in eresting features. A body of trum peters and mounted heralds led the pro cession, followed by a military band and a number of chariots of allegorical significance, embellished in golden bas reliei. A group of fourteenth century knights in picturesque-costume, mount ed upon richly caparisoned horses, fol lowed. The second division, led by a band chariot, consisted of an equestrian dis play, remarkable for the attractive character of the horses a large float, carrying fourteen Russians, men and women, costumed in the gowns worn at a Russian wedding feast three herds of elephants, including "Congo" and "Zeffa," African war elephantst said to be the only two of this species in captivity a caravan of camels, fol lowed by a float bearing a group of Japanese in their native holiday dress. The musical clowns.leading the third division created considerable merri ment. In this division were a body of mounted hussars two Roman racing chariots, drawn by eight prancing steedsj several allegorical floats a military display representing the Amer ican armies of the wars of 1776, 1812, 1848, 1861, 1898 open cages contain ing lions, tigers and other wild ani mals, and an enormous tank cage show ing the hippopotamus. The fourth division consisted of a military band, many elaborately dec orated' floats, several open cages of polar bears, the performing Shetland ?erests, 5c. AH White Mercerized Fancy Striped Poplin, good lengths, good styles 25c values at half tmlA^, I^^C Best Printed Voile Suitings, all navy grounds, neat patterns the well known 25c gradeinTnese: -C -g this "Sale" at 1Z Lot MMENSE LINE of Embroidered Batistes, Embroid ered Swiss Fancy Repps, Dot Linens, Embroidered Crepes, Plaid Linens, /2 onie and many other features of in- Great Crowd in Tent. An immense gathering witnessed the opening of the afternoon performance. Elephants danced, clowns cut merry ca pers, and the laugh of the small boy resounded thru the great arena, where fully ten thousand of his mothers, fathers, brothers and sisters kept him company. A series of interesting historical tab leaux in which nearly one thousand ac tors, horses, elephants and camels por trayed the changing scenes incident to the opening of the Panama canal, opened the main performance, after the spectators had spent an hour in the monster menagerie. Following this spectacle, which vanished like a mir age, twenty odd elephants bounded into the. three rings, and waltzed, walked upon their hind legs and interlocked trunks in fanciful combinations. A shriek from the host of children welcomed the regiment of clowns which broke into the hippodrome oval as the elephants swung their clumsy bodies back to the menagerie. The reign of joy continued until the acrobatic spe cialties began. Wonderful equestrian acts.came next. "Bud" Gorman a'nd assistants, exhibiting a string of thoro bred equine tricksters, won admi ration. The final performance in Min neapolis will be given this evening., Coming of the '-KfflfiK totiBmSkj&tim&jk a The Forepaugh-Sells combined show is one of the big three, Barnum & Bai ley and RiWeling Brothers being the other two. It arrived here yesterday morning and leisurely put itself away on the Dig lot at Fourth avenue S any Thirty-fourth street. During the day the scene was visited by thousands of people who found it an exceedingly in teresting place. The tents were all up except the main top or arenic tent. Part of the day was devoted to a gen eral cleaning up. The horses and mauy of the aniimals were given baths, after which the employees turned in for rest and the tented city was as quiet as a tomb. The good order and quiet about the circus grounds was a remarkable fea ture. At 8 o'clock last night the lights were out, excepting a few used as guides. The Sunday quiet that wag maintained was creditable. LIKE LADDRY CHECKS CENSUS BLANKS RETURNED BY LOCAL CHINESE WORRIED THE ENUMERATORS. Superintendent A. A. D. Rahn has discovered that he should have secured a Chinese enumerator to make his con gress of enumerators complete. The enumerators in the river districts of the fourth, fifth and sixth wards have been developing into Chinese puzzles that defv all their skill and put to the bad all the printed directions and brass bound rules'of the census enumerators' night school. "V^hile many of them can."go,some*' in several languages, there are none who tackle the chinks'' with anything but English. The celestials are as shy as a crow and refuse to be counted. Saturday a willing hand was secured in the person of the local Chinese king. He was given an outfit of slips and told to get every slant-eye- in the town. This morning he walked into head quarters with Sis breakfast-food smile. "Me girtum," he said and handed out his slips. Superintendent Eahn took one-look and then called for the doctor. The slips were covered with crosses and pictures of junks, dragons rampant, and rising suns. Clerk Austin suggested that the "chinks" called in .-the, family hens, and-afterhad inking their feet had turned them loose and the slips. The bureau will be assisted by the police force when it is necessary to compel people to 'give information. Chief Doyle has issued orders to his bluec'oats to play an assist whenever needed. The enumerator who is turned down now can call the officer on the beat and the two will play a return engagement. There has been little need of this blue-coated assistance, as most seem anxious to be counted, an swell the total. eopl help COULDN'T SAVE BABY Infant Weighing About Two Pounds Dies .at Incubator Hospital. A little Incubator babe at "Wonderland park hospital, weighing two pounds and one ounce, died Sunday morning between 1 and 2 a.m. Up to midnight the little patient's temperature had improved arid It looked as tho the incubator were going to save a case which had been considered hopeless, but the babe's vitality proved Insufficient. Statistics show that chil dren weighing less than two pounds and three ounces generally die the day of birth. The other occupants of the incubators at Wonderland hospital are all doing finely and were viewed by, many hundreds of people Sundayv/ Defective '*^L On TTie Road Catching trains if H' Missing connections Getting breakfast early::: Dinner late One meal underdone The next dried up, Upsets the stomach Liver won't work Once in a while use Red Raven By acting promptly on the stomach, liver and bowels Red Raven keeps the system open and clears the body of things indigestible For sale everywhere Price 16c STATE CAPITOL BUNNELL'S TITLE HEL IN QUESTIO N CODE EDITOR SAID TO BE ILLE- GALLY APPOINTED. Legislature Had Power to Create the Position, hut Not to FiU It, So It Is ClaimedClash Between Editor -and Printing Commission Over Specifica tions for Book. M. H. Dunnell of Owatonna, who was appointed by the legislature to edit and annotate the revised statutes, may- have to defend his title to the position. Since a clash has come between Mr. Dunnell and the commission which is to let the printing of the volume, the point has been made that the editor is holding his place illegally. He was named by an act of the legislature, and it fs claimed that the legislature only has authority to create such a position, and not to fill it. To be valid, the act should have created the place, leaving it to the governor or the supreme court to make the appointment. The clash has come on account of Mr. Dunnell's refusal \o make out specifica tions for the printing of the code, which the printing commission must have be fore it can advertise for bids. The com mission wants to advertise right away, so as to get the best possible terms, but Mr. Dunnell is unwilling to make the specifications until he knows how large the annotated work will be. The secretary of state, attorney general and state expert printer, who constitute the printing commission, are chafing at the delay, which, they say, means that a St. Paul concern will get the contract with out competition. The maximum price the publishers may ask for the work is $5, but it was hoped to reduce that fig ure by competitive bids. The only way to oust the editor would Jbe .by quo warranto proceedings in the TWO DONE COUNTING Enumerators Finished Census Work in Three Days. Two state census enumerators made their final report to the bureau today, having finished the canvass of their districts dn three days. R. O. Andrews of South Stillwater was the first man to report, bringing his in person this morning. The rec ord came by mail from Martin Rogan of Tynsid, enumerator for district No. 30, Polk county. The state board of health is sending a circular to all enumerators, asking them to secure a complete record or deaths in their districts during 1904. The reports made by town authorities are believed to be incomplete as a rule. They are sent to the enumerators, who are asked to send in reports of any ad ditional deaths they may find and pay for this e?tra work' is guaranteed them by the board of health. TEST VOTING MACHINES New Commission Will Hold First Meet ing June 12. The state voting machine commis sion will have its first meeting at the state capitoi Monday, June 12. The commission is created to examine vot ing machines offered for use in the state and to decide whether they com ply with the election laws. Applica tions will be received at the meeting, it is understood, from at least three companies-which desire an examination made. The commission consists of At torney General Young, Professor J. Gt. Flather and F. W. Cappelen of Min neapolis. THE MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL. June $, 1905: 7 L_...... New Incorporation. The Empire Beal Estate & Mortgage company of Minneapolis has filed ar ticles of incorporation with the secre tary of state capital stock, $100,000. Charles J, Anderson is president, J. L. Everson vice president and secretary and B. E. Bailey treasurer. 1 fight tire-foes that spoil your health (That's why I'm dressed In metal) ^r I bring you food for Red Blood Wealth Keep you In finest fettle. .t-#Sf, My motto is "Get Rosy," and The food I preach is right, For it's atrength-foodand dellcibvtaI'm H THE AP-I-TE-ZO KNIGHT. FAMILY RANGE- Large size cast Iron range, six hole top. large square oren, iron linings, fitted with duplex grate, beautifully nickel trimmed, absolutely nothing but pure gray iron castings used in the construction of this range which insures its durability, a guar anteed baker, special #10 1 Price 9lilW 81.50 Down and 50c Weekly. MORRIS CHAIRS-Made of selected quarter sawed oak or mahogany finish rames.hand polish finish.extra strong and durable, reversible cushions.made of best grade imported French velours, a variety of desirable colors and pat terns, patent back adjust- "f ment. Special price 11 '1 $1.00 down, 25c weekly. RBPRIOBRA TORS., All hardwood refrigerators, golden oak finish, galvanized iron lined, cast brass trimmings, removable ice chamber, has all modern hygienic and ice sav ing appliances. Hart-A Cfl man's special price fOiQU $L00 down. 26c weekly. NINETEEN NEW PASTORS Graduating Exercises Held at United Nor* weglan Lutheran Seminary* Nineteen theological students were graduated from the United Norwegian Lutheran seminary Saturday evening. I 4L1R HABT1AR "TEATHEB YOTB IBSf." 1 Hartman's Credit. Plan is tht Most Pleasant Sort* of An Arrangement for YOUR CONVENIENCE We call ours the "Modern" Credit'Plan, and it well deserves the name. When one compares it with other credit plans he realizes how thoroughly justified we are in claiming ours to be the most just and lenient credit plan that is serving Minneapolis people today. It is the most liberal plan, gives the greatest privileges, and grants the most generous concessions. With conscientious, straightforward business methods, by fulfilling every promise made, and by keeping faith with the people, Hartman's have built up thia great business organization. GO-CARTSWe are offering one-third oft on all sleeper Go-Carts. It would be to your advantage to see the extraordinary values we are offering. Go Cart like illustration, beautiful pattern, hand woven of full reed, large automobile tires, steel handle, por celain handle bars, satin parasol, regu- #14 A A larprice$21.00, this sale.... #J*tiUU $1.50 Down, 50c Weekly. BUFFETSMade of selected quarter-sawed oak, in golden or weathered oak finish superior workman ship has lined drawer for silverware, beautiful French bevel mirror, nicely carved, fitted with patent cas ters and all brass trimmings. Special #41 E A Price ZlsQU $2.60 down, 60c weekly. LIBRARY TABLE-Made of selected quarter sawed oak o* mahogany finish. Beautifully hand polished, large drawer, cast brass handles, an exceptional value. 0lf E Price- ...#IUi09 ,41.00dtjwjjand25pwiekly.**:- -_- C" They will be ordained for the ministry at the annual convention of the church to be held at Augustana church, Seventh street and Eleventh avenue S, on June 18. The graduation program Included ad dresses by President T. H. Dahl of the United church, President M. O. Bockman of the seminary, Professdr E Kr. John- i- r !X# r'if -"-\$i HARTMAN'S SPECIAL IRON BED, Bpring and mattress combination. This bed is made of heavy seamless tubing, three coats of enamel baked on in all colors also one 40-pound well made mattress, a guaranteed woven wire spring. Special offer this week complete, bed, spring and mattress.. lilw $1.00 down, 25c weekly. LEATHER ROCKERSAn excep tionally large, roomy and comfortable rocker, upholstered in best grade of, genuine leather, beautifully diamond tufted, frame made of selected quar-ij ter-sawed oak, hand pol- #4A I E ish finish. Special price# 9fe I W $8.00 down. 60c weekly. iiit CHINA CLOSBTS-made of se lected quarter-sawed oak, bent glass ends neatly carved, adjust able shelves, fitted with patent casters, piano polish finish an extra value. 61ft Cfl .Price vlOiUfl i -""."#1.75 down and 56c weekly. son and W. Trygstad, president of th^ class. The graduates were: A. H. BergV ford, A. J. Bergsaker, P. A. BJelde, J. A* Bjerke, O. E. Eide, A. J. Eikeland, Hagen, O. Hill, H. Noss, C, J. Noelstadiffrp.P N. O. Roegver, E. Soevik, C. J. Tjoma* land, W. Trygstad, R. Wareburg, T. HoW erstad, J. M. Langseth, O. H. Lund andl M. A. Kvammen. r?" Tl CROOKEDMAN" This most exciting tale relating an unusual adventure of will appear tn The yournal some 3 day next week. These-complete detective stories are thef^ original Sherlock Holmes adventures -l written by Cpnan Doyle. One of them appears each week in THE JOURNAL vii "c^,* :f' 1 v*i i*\'H I i w+mmmtmm ^M^fiS^dE^i