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c-wsi' fi TO] itai jrt i .ml.- Mmm 'ii'j*.S i-ts life-^ 'If I. ^Do You know that PICKERING gives 50c worth of merchandise for every $10.00 worth of cash pur chase checks? No time limit. The checks are the credentials and you get the goods without further question at Seven-Fourteen Nicollet. PICTURE SALE Entire stock new and un claimed pictures. Prof. Hays' oil paintings. Headquarters for framing pictures. Deep cut prices to keep four framemakers busy. ZESBAUGH'S 11 South 5th Street, OPPOSITE LUMBER EXCHANGE. Use the Long: Distance Seryice of the Twin City Telephone Co. OVER THE TOLL LINES OP THE TM-STATE TELEPHONE O -IT IS- The Cheapest and Best New Sanatorium for Alcoholism At If2 University Ave. S. E. Is Proving a Lucrative Success. The Dr. R. P. Goodwin Sanatorium at 112 University avenue SE is an other literal demonstration of the statement that this is a day and age of specialists. Dr. R. F. Goodwin, physician charge, has devoted his entire medical life to the study of the cure of alcoholism and nervous diseases. This study has evolved treatments exclusively his own, and which he is giving to the sanatorium. These treatments have been tested for years, and on the success attained these years the sanatorium made its first bid for patronage. Success has crowned their efforts from the start. Parties suffering from alcoholism or nervous diseases receive the per sonal attention and care of Dr. Good win and his specially trained at tendants. BIG HOTEL BUSINESS IS DONE IN NORTH DAKOTA Enterprises of This Sort Are Excep tionally LucrativeGood Opportuni ty to Establish Profitable Business. Special Correspondence. By W. A. OTI8. FORBES, N Jan 9 The transient traveler through this state is continually commenting on the large business in every little town done ,by the hotel men In towns of 200 and 800 population the hotels think business only ordinary when they are clearing $250 to $400 a month This is, of course, occasioned by the large number of traveling salesmen who -work this state, and by the land seekers, who are pouring in from all sections It is a little surprising, .therefore, that no one has yet located a hotel in this hustling little place The town is but six months old, bjut it already has two elevators, two lum ber jards a bank owned by Congressman Marshall, hardware, harness, grocery and meat stores Two passenger trains dailj. make the town, in addition to good freight service The town needs a good hotel, and someone will establish a good business by opening one N. Tallman, townslte agent of the Great Northern Railwaj, of Willmai, Minn controls the townslte, and says all he desires now to complete the quota Is a good hotel, and that the townsite^ company will make liberal concessions to the right man. Optician. -'i ^M EYES Examined Free. Artificial Eyes. BEST, 409 Nicollet. Furnace repairing should be done right experience is necessary. I've been at It for 18 years. Prompt attention to calls. ROBERTS 103-7 Western Ave. Both Phones. Pianos Segerstrom Piano Co. 804 Nicollet Avenue RESORTS HOTETCHAMBERLlN^^yP Old Point Comfort J\^ Open U y&r For Booklets addra OVTr Adanw.Mgr .Fortran Monro,V. J**^^ ^HE PARK HOTEL.HOT SPRINGS.ARK. onens Jan 6th. 1906, and will remain open hereafter, throughout the year. Americati ^qdi TThiroDeant Plans, Ser\ice anrd Cuisinte & thThtehes class Writ fo bookle lUciiiBATES until Feb 15th J. Waves Lessee and Manager. J. ^Walker, Assojfcte Manager. c. Saturday Evening, City News TOWN TALK If EVENTS OP TONIGHT MetropolitanWalker Whiteside in "We Are KinR." Bijou'' A Son of Best.'' Auditorium'' The Darling the Gods." OrpheumModern vaudeville. Lvcenm"By Bijjht of Sword." UniqueVaudeville. DeweyYankee Doodle Girls. Hope ChapelLecture, Christ mas in Art/' Harington Beard. University ArmoryBasket ball game, Central high school girls vs. alumnae. of H8 Two Andrews heating plants are be ing installed in Moberly, Mo. Our-address on and after Jan. 15, No'. 500 Kaaota building. S. A. Morawetz Co. Finch's next informal Masonic Tem ple, Tuesday, Jan. 16. Orchestra 8:30 program at 9. Ask about our residence trial serv ice. Thirty days free. The Northwest ern Telephone Exchange company. Jessie Maclachlan Scottish Concert company at Auditorium, Friday even ing, Jan. 19. Seat sale Tuesday, Met ropolitan Music company. W execute surety bonds and burglary S[owars olicie and settle losses in this office, & Wilson, Mgrs., U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 210 N. Y. Life. At Socialist's hall, 45 Fourth street S. tomorrow, at 3 p.m., W. J. Mahoney of Tsrre Haute, Ind., will speak in* "Facts and Day Dreams." All seats free. Mme. Rose 'Eina, the celebrated Irish prima donna, will give a song lecture on "The Music of Ireland at Holy Rosary hall. Eighteenth nvenue S and Twenty-fourth street, Monday evening. G. A. Lafayette, state organizer of Missouri will speak at state and city headquarters of the socialist party, 723 Nicollet avenue, Suday at 3 p.m. $- on 'Socialism and Its Relation to Art and Science." Dr. L. A. Crandall, pastor of Trinity Baptist church, will address the men's meeting Sunday at 3:30 p.m. at the Y. M. C. A. on the subject, "The Goal of Growth." A attractive musical program will be given by the Anne quartet and Kenney'a orchestra. Rudolph Gautsche, 25 years oM, a waiter in Hansen's saloon at 274 East Seventh street, St. Paul, was found dead in his bed at the Western lodging house in that city yesterday. Coroner A. W. Miller investigated and decided that heart failure was the cause of death. "The Class Struggle in America" will be discussed at a meeting of the Workingmen's Educational club at 8 p.m., Sunday, at 4% Washington ave nue S, third floor. J. E. Phelan is to be the speaker, but everyone will, be invited to take part in the discussion. Admission will be free. Baron Hirsch camp, No. 28, W. O. W., Victoria Grove. No. 4, and Union Grove, No. 5, W. will hold joint installa tion of officers Wednesday evening, Jan. 17, at the new Richmond halls, 225 Fifth street S. All members of the two orders are invited. Stage Manager E. M. Weil and Mrs. Ida Curie Hill will be installing officers. Division No. 7, A. O. H., held pub lic installation in Kistler's hall Thurs day evening, when the following of ficers were installed: President, Wil liam H. Donahue vice president, James Lyons recording secretary, John Cul linane financial secretary, John Fer moyle insurance secretary, Thomas Jordan. A musical and literary enter tainment was followed by a dance. MOSES K. ARMSTRONG WAS EARLY PIONEER The death of Moses K. Armstrong takes another member from the ranks of the Minnesota pioneers. died in Albert .Lea last evening and his body will be Drought to Minneapolis over the Milwaukee road, to arrive here for bur ial Monday. The interment will be at Lakewood cemetery. Mr. Armstrong was born in Milan, Ohio, in September, 1832, and in 18po he came to St. Anthony. was the first surveyor of Mower county, and wrote extensively on its early history. In 1857 he received an appointment as United States land surveyor, and in 1858 he attended the first state con vention as a delegate and cast his vote for the nomination of Henry M. Sibley as governor. was known as an early pioneer writer and was the au- thOT of The Early History of Dakota Territory in 1866" of the recently illustrated work, Early Empire Bui ers of the Great West/' and of "The Minnesota State Hymn." was a member of the Minne sota Territorial Pioneers and of the Minnesota State Historical society, and at the meeting of the State His torical society Monday evening was elected one of the members of the ex ecutive council. While living in the Dakotas Mr. Armstrong was for some years the territorial treasurer. Later he removed to St. James, Minn., where he became one of the prominent build ers of that city. was one of the leading bankers of St. James and owner of the largest hotel until about two years ago. OUTTING POLES DOWN Northwestern Telephone Co. Sacrificing Expensive Timber on Third A S. Beeause of orders forbidding over head wires in certain sections of the city, the Northwestern Telephone com pany is making haste to remove its poles on Third avenue S. The company is even going to the limit to get the work done in time and is cutting down some of the finest Idaho poles in the city. They range from sixty to eighty fe*t in height and a few years ago cost about $80 apiece. There will be less loss to the com pany than would seem at first, because the company is now using shorter poles and would be obliged to shorten those on Third avenue before using them again. On account of the frost they cannot be dug out, so the axe is resorted to as the quickest and most effective method of complying with the mayor's ruling. The proprietors of McGee'a and Car ling's restaurants and the California Wine House, all In St Paul, were ar raigned in the St Paul municipal court today charged with having grouse in their possession. The penalty for this offense Is a fine of $10 a bird. Jacob Barge, the Minneapolis restaurateur, was arraigned in the Minneapolis police court yesterday on a similar charge. $100 Reward.SlOO The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that-there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been able to cure In all its stages, and that Is Catarrh Hall's Catarrh Cuie is the only positive cure now knoWn to the medical fraternity Catarrh being a constitu tional disease, requires a constitutional treat ment Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, acting dlreetlr npon the blood and mucous sur faces of the system, thereby destroying the foundation of the disease and giving the patient ttength by building up the constitution and as rlsting nature in doing Its work. The pioprietois have so much faith In its enrative powers that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case that tt tails to cure Send for list of testimonials Address CHKNET CO Toledo, O. Sold by -all Druggists, 75c. Take HaW's-Pfttnlbr Plll tor constipation. M'MULLENPIINS W OYER OPPOSITION FOURTH WARD COMMISSIONER REELECTED AFTER FIGHT. Council Transacts Much Important Business Beside Election of Thirteen Street CommissionersFire Depart- ment Salaries RaisedMatter of $100,000 in Revolving Fund fides Back to Committee. "$ WHAT THE GOUNCIL DID Started an Investigation of Mlnne apolis hotels. Raised the salaries of members of the fire department of the grade of lieutenant and abdve. Re-elected James* R. Canterbury chief of?the fire department. Elected thirteen street commission ers. Passed resolutions on the death of Captain John Berwln, and appointed a committee to raise funds for the family. Received communication from Building Inspector J. Q. Houghton on safety of hotels and office build* Ings. Recommitted matter of the disposi tion of the $100,000 in revolving fund to the special committee having the matter In charge. Received large batch of bids for water pipe, hydrants and gates. Amended ordinance granting Mil waukee road the right to lay a spur track between Third and Fourth streets. a. Salaries Are Raised. The movement toward raising the sal aries of the members of the fire de partment, including the grade of lieu tenant and higher, was opposed by Al dermen Starkweather, Westphal and Eyan, but went thrm by a vote of 22 to 8. Alderman C. B. Holmes and others made a successful fight against the adoption of the report recommending that the $100,0u0 recently transferred from the sinking fund to the permanent improvement revolving fund be used for the payment of rebates' on excessive special assessments. His contention was that the money should be devotpd to resurfacing the asphalt streets in the heart"of the city. The matter was sent back to the joint committee on ways and means and taxes, and on motion of Alderman Westphal, instructions were given to the citv engineerand city con troller to prepare a complete report on the number and aggregate amount of claims for rebates. The ordinance granting permission to the Milwaukee railwav to lay an in dustrial spur track between Third and Fourth streets and crossing Tenth, Ninth, Eighth and Seventh avenues, was amended by striking out the fol lowing section: "The cost of such change of grade to be paid by the said railway company as well as all costs or damages to abut ting property affected by such chance of grade, whether for the purposes of abolishing grade crossings, or anv other purpose,'' and inserting in lieu thereof, the words following: ''Provided, that neither said railway company nor any person accepting the benefits of this or dinance, shall become entitled to any damage t& property by reason of any change in the grade of any track here by authorized, whether such change of grade be for the purpose of abolishing grade crossings or for any other pur pose. A contract was awarded to the Met ropolitan Surety companv for furnish ing a $200,000 bond for City Treasurer C. S. Hulbert at a premium of $750. EASY FOR ELLISON Alleged Holdup Artist Will Undoubted ly Plead Guilty to Charge. Martin Ellison, the alleged holdup ar tist, who is under indictment for rob bery in the first degree, committed last month in Charles Sather's butchershop, has practically admitted his guilt and will undoubtedly enter a plea of guilty when he is brought before Judge John Day Smith next Monday. He can be sentenced to forty years in the penitentiary, but owing to his plea and to some ameliorating circumstances, his term of years in Stillwater will un doubtedlv be considerably below the maximum. The defendant has a wife and a voung daughter, and they are in despair over the husband and father's plight. Ellison held up and shot Sather in 1fte leg, making a temporary get arfay'Twith a little over $50/ THtl?iWIINNM^EfS JOtmNAt: & -$ There was much important business before the city council last evening, as shown by the foregoing summary, and the meeting wca one of unusual import ance. Of particular interest at this time was the action of the council rela tive to the death of Captain John Ber win and the care of his family, and also the institution of a searching investiga tion regarding the condition of the ho tels and office buildings of the city with respect to fire protection. These mat ters are fully treated elsewhere in this paper. The election of the ward street com missioners produced the greatest inter est. There was no contest until the third ward was reached, when Alderman Mumm nominated Ole Rognas and Al derman Nye nominated George T. D. Baxter, who was elected on the first bal lot by a vote of 17 to 6. The big fight was over the fourth ward commissioner ship, which was won by Robert McMul len, who was elected in defiance.of the wishes of the aldermen of the ward. Alderman Starkweather nominated W. T. Kerr and in an impassioned address bitterly scored McMullen for his alleged sina of commission and omission as stroet commissioner of the fourth ward. The condition of the streets, he de clared, had been a disgrace to the en tire city during the McMullen regime. Had Little Effect. The attack had very little effect, for Robert McMullen was placed in nomi nation by Alderman J. H. an Nest of the thirteenth ward and was elected by a vote of 15 to 10 on the third bal lot. The first ballot stood 12 to 12, there being one blank ballot. On the second ballot the?'e*wore two blanks and McMullen gained a vote, the re sult showing 13 to 10 in his favor. The expected contest in the ninth ward did not materialize, as Alderman Castner, realizing that he had no show to win, did not place a candidate in nomination, but seconded William Finn's nomination by Alderman Mc Coy. The complete list of street com missioners is as follows: First ward, William Rausch second ward, Fred Baumbaeh third ward, George T. Baxter fourth ward, Robert McMullen fifth ward, John Fogarty sixth ward, Arne O. Field seventh ward, John A. Hanson eighth ward, John F. Perry ninth ward, William Finn tenth ward, Thomas Eidem eleventh ward, Adolf F. Olund twelfth ward, F. G. Cole thirteenth ward, A. H. Yeaton. THE QUESTION: ResolvedThat all elective state, district, county and city officers should be nominated by direct pri maries Held under state regulation, rather than by delegate conven tions. South high school, according to the unanimous decision of the judges, was victorious over East high school in the preliminary debate for The Journal cup, held at the East high auditorium last night. The members of the South high team who took the affirmative, were Richard Groettum, Virginia Slover and TUlie Will. Frank Walker, Abbott Sheldon and Wiliam Merrill were the East high representatives. Former Mayor James Gray. C. W. Van Tuyl and Rev. J. H. Miller acted a$ judges. The presiding officer was H. V. Mercer. Richard Groettum handled the task of opening for the affirmative with skill, laying a good foundation for his col leagues without showing too much of the hand they meant to play. charged the convention system with being responsible iojr the evils of boss ism and machine1* In taking up the case for the affirm ative, Virginia Slover" denied the charge that democracy had inherent evils and reaffirmed the charge that the conven tion fostered indirect representation, boss rule, machine politics and bribery. She urged that the complexity of the system kept many people from the polls. In this speech, as well as in rebuttal, Miss Slover showed remark able accuracy in placing her arguments and made few utterances which did not either damage her opponents' case or build up her own. The public and "private expense in cident to the direct primary waB the chief argument of Abbott .Sheldon for the negative. also pointed out the danger of corporate control of pri maries thru subsidized press. said that the direct primary would keep out good men and favor the rich, idle and self-obtrusive. also pointed out the danger that the minority might dictate the majority's nominations. Resume of Arguments. Tillie Will concluded the direct argu ment of the affirmative by giving a re sume of the arguments already pre sented. Her positive manner and skill in gathering together the loose ends of argument left the .c&se "for the affirma tive in compact shape. William Merrill, the last speaker for the negative did not recapitulate, b.u ppy^ea out, in a speech which wias tie-imost finished ar gument of the evenisg, how the direct primary would break down party lines. made a brilliant plea for the party and traced its effect upon the history of the eountry clearly. The convention, he argued, had produced, sustained v&nd unirfed the party and was needed'if party government was to continue. I rebuttal the speakers showed a slight tendency to introduce new argu ments instead of refuting those ad vanced by their opponents. The con cluding arguments aid little to shift the honors. Bo th teams common to all young debaters, a deBire guments in a given time, instead of pre senting a few arguments thoroly. Each team was supported by a large elusion of the debate was as enthusias tic as any ever heard at a football game. CENTRAL BEATS NORTH Contest at North High Assembly Hall I Spirited One. Central high on in the joint debate between teams representing the Central and North high schools at the North high assembly hall last evening. The .judges were "Frank G. McMillan, Will iam C. Leary and Fred E. Barney. The vote as announced was 2 to 1 in favor of Central high. Each team had a strong group of partizans in the hall and every speaker was cheered to the echo, the school yells being given with much gusto and vigor. Miss Ruth Ridges opened the debate for Central, which had the affirmative. She reviewed in a general way the evils which had grown up under the conven tion of nominating candidates for polit ical offices and declared that the direct or primary system of nomination was a logical movement for the elimination of the practices which had made municipal atod state elections in the United States the subject of ridicule to the entire world. Evils Not Cured. Central'tmd South Highi^ Teams Victor^in. Debate North and East High Vanquished in Preliminary Contest for The Journal CupLarge Audiences Hear Spirited Arguments at North and East High Auditoriums Debaters Show Ability and Clear Reasoning, 8 politics because not truly representative of the people. Frank Walker th|n took the floor for the negative. urged that the con vention system should be reformed rather than abolished and insisted that its evils were those inherent in .democ racy and would be carried over into the direct primary. His ease of delivery added much to the effect of his argu ment. Denies the Charge. William Andersqn, on behalf of North high, called upon the affirmative to prove that the primarv system had cured the evils alleged to have been the outgrowth of the convention system. He called attention to the election of Dr. A. A. Ames as mayor of Minneapo lis and of James C. Haynes as proof that the system did toot jnve the# city any better or even as good administra tions as the old method. "No man is free unless he is a mas ter of his vote," declared Miss Bessie Hull of Central, and she then gave a brief sketch of now caucuses were run and conventions manipulated under the former system. Earlitog Swanson argued that if the primary system had brought reform in city and county administration there was no reason to suppose that it would be of any benefit if extended to state elections. A fair geographical distri bution of candidates was impossible un der the direct system of nomination* and it had been shown that the strongest districts in population monopolized the offices. A Great Benefit. Theodore Thompson of Central ex plained that it was a great benefit to the community to have general partici- ?'he ation in the elections by its citizens, system thta brought out the voters was the best. quoted figures to show that in Minneapolis as high as 89 per cent of the voters participated in the primary election and in St. Paul 94.6 while the average number par ticipating in caucuses was only about 10 per cent or less. John Priebe of NOrth high main tained that the affirmative had as yet failed to show that the-"evilB of which it complained had been abolished. The primary system broke up parties and without parties' there would be no is sues or platforms. Issues were of Vital importance to the community. Mote l^JflB over, the primary system entailed great expense on the- candidates and it had come to the stage when the only ones who could afford to become candidates were men of wealth or the tools of corporate interests. Arguments in Rebuttal. The arguments in rebuttal were made extempore and proved rather more in teresting, than the formal debate. Earl ing Swanson called attention to the fact that no northern state had a pri mary system for state elections except Wisconsin, and he predicted trouble for that state. The political rings were as strongly intrenched as ever, for with the greater number of candidates in the field, the solid, compact ring usually won out against the divided opposition. Miss Ridges declared that parties had not been formed to ^control nominations, but to formulate issues and platforms, and this duty was still open to them. The direct primaries eliminated bosses, as had been conclusively shown in num berless instances. Mr. Priebe, while admitting that sev eral southern states had the primary system, argued that this was quite nat ural, for the south had only one party and only one issue, the negro question. In the north the system was not practi cable. Elected for Wealth. Miss Hull called upon her opponents to point to local city and county offi cials who had been elected for their wealth under the new method. Dele gates could be bribed, but it was impos sible to bribe all the voters. The new system was a representative one and for that reason was favored by the peo ple. It had simplicity and directness as opposed to indirectness and complexi of the old system and publicity as against secrecy. Mr. Anderson enlarged somewhat on the opportunities for corruption under the primary system and also reverted to the election of Dr. Ames as one of the possible fruits of the primary system. Mr. Thompson reminded the opposi tion that Dr. Ames had been elected three times under the old system, but no one believed that he would ever be elected again under the primary system. The first experiment by Hennepin co.un ty*had proven such a success that the following legislature unhesitatingly ex tended the plan to all counties in the state and the logical course ,was to in clude state elections under the same plan. HUMBOLDT BEATS CENTRAL Central High Auditorium Scene of Spir ited Contest for Cup. Humboldt high school of St. Paul won from St. Paul Central in The Jour nal debating cup preliminary last night. The Humboldt team, which had the negative consisted of Benjamin Harmon, Belle Blumenfelt and Eugene Coryne. The Central team was Ray Baugarten, Lauriz Void and Mane lElm quist. The debate was held in the Central high auditorium. Franklin Welles Calkins continuing his series, entitled "With Indian Friends," relates in The Journal Sunday magazine next Sunday the ex citing story of a hunt he once enjoyed with Chief High Wolf in the vicinity of old Fort Fetterman. The author saw a great deal of the famous Indian charac ters of the northwest, not in times of war, for he is no warrior, but at close range and usually on the friendliest and showed the fault i most intimate terms. Incidentally to to introduce the greatest number of ar- Wolf, at the risk of his life, and at the body of the rooters and the cheering' upon himself to save the lives of a between the* speeches and at the con-1 party of white prospectors en route to this story Mr. Calkins tells how High risk, too, of his friendship with Bed Cloud, Spotted Tail, American Horse, and other Indian chieftains, took it 9061 'Si Ajtemref the Black Hills.' Ttis little chief was on of the best friends the white man ever had and he was one of the bravest and most resolute of all the Sioux. VAUGHN MUST FIGHT W. Allen Will Try for Alderman of Seventh Ward, I Is Saio\ Alderman A. C. Vaughn of the sev enth ward is going to have opposition at the republican primaries. Several well-known residents of the ward have been talked of as candidates, and it is now said that W. D. Allen, one of the "young fellows,'' is certain to file for the nomination. is chief clerk in the office of the Milwaukee yardmaster, and has a wide acquaintance among railroad employees and residents of the ward. WOMAN IS MISSING Mrs. Albert Carlson and her 4-year- old daughter Marjory have disap peared from the home of the woman's brother, Godfrey Fransen^ 4144 Bryant avenue N and are causing her rela tives much anxiety. Mrs. Carlson came here from Helena, Mont., where she had been an inmate of an insane asylum. It is said that she had been acting strangely since her arrival here and it is feared that harm may come to both her and the child. They left home Tuesday morning and the police have been asked to look for PLEASE REMEMBER This Hint That when the appetite is poor, bowels constipated, sleep restless, nerves un strung, complexion bad, a few doses of the celebrated A GREAT BIG BARGAIN EVENT AT OUR PRICES. Week of Jan. 21 The Girl You AH Know. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters will set things right again. It is especially m pounded foT all ailments peculiar to a disordered* stomach and for 63 years has given complete satisfac- tion. It cures Heartburn, Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Poor Appetite, Liver Troubles, Female Ills, Colds or Grippe. Try it today, alsor get a free copy of our 1906 Almanac WJ #T Mm firVlil Yoor Cteffi C/oorf at the N*W England WELL WORTH i WORTH WHILE DON'T mss IT ANNOUNCEMENT) Interior Decorating. METROPOLITAN I 4 Nights mSffii we'd. J&iti 14 HAVER I TS MASTODON MINSTRELS BIGGER AND BETTER THAN EVER. A brilliant array 5 singers, dancers and comedians Universally Acknowledged Amer ica's Representative minstrels. I is with Much Satisfaction that we are able to announce the perfect ing of our Department of Interior Decorating, under the Direction and Practical Supervision of A Most Thoroughgoing, Capable Commercial ArtistA Man Who Possesses That Rare Quality of Artistic Ability and Business Sense Whereby W Are Able to Guarantee to our Customers That "Value Received Quality of Satisfaction" which should apply To All Commercial Dealings, and which it is The Endeavor of the "New England" To Continuously Evidence in All Its Dealings With Its Cus tomers. Estimates-t-SuggestionsSketches and Color Schemes Cheerfully Sub* mitted, and Absolute Satisfaction Guaranteed. I &Carpet 5th St., 6th St. and 1st Av. S. AMUSEMENTS AMUSEMENTS X. N. SCOTT, Manager. I 3 NIGHTS Matinee, 25c and 50c. 20c to $1.00. BIJOU THEO. L. HAYS, Res. Mgr. THE BIG POPULAR PRICE SHOW OF THE SEASON. NIGHTS and Sat. Mat. SAME NEW YORK ACADEMY OF MUSICPRODUCTION STROfjQ CASTSUPERB SCENIC INVESTITURE. SPECIAL! The management does not hesitate to pronounce this one of the season's best offerings It did a record breaking business In St Paul and press and public alike voted it a most erfjoyable stage offering. GET YOUR SEATS EARLY IN ADVANCE. Eve'gs, 15c, 2Bc _MgJ-JPrigesgZF-ghangS: LYCEUM EVA TANGUAY "THE SAMB O GIRL AUDITORIUM ^J"v ^k Both Phones, 3997. "fine THEATRE MODERN VAUDEVILLE THE HOME THEATRE Emphatic SuccessA Great Hit, RALPH STUART CO. "BY RIGHT OF SWORD" Matinees Sunday, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. Prlcefe 10c and 25c evenings, 10, 25, 50 cents. Next week "PRINCE OTTO"* I searched the whole earth for a specific for Rbeumatirmsomething that I or any physician could feel safe in prescribingsomething that we could connt on not onb occasionally but with reasonable certainty. For the ravages of Rheumatism are everywhere and genuine relief is rare. After twenty years of search and experiment. I learned of the Oerm,an chemtcal *I now employ. And I knew then that my search and my effort* were well rewarded For this chemical, in com bination with others, gave me the basis of a remedy which in the cure of Rheumatism is practically certain In many, many tests and difficult cases this prescription has with regu larity justified the confidence I bad in it. TICKETS 50c75c$1.00 [THIS WEBK MB **?&*s,*l Offers George Ade's Record Breaking Success, The COUNT CHAIRMAN The Play That Has lade All America Laugh. Same Magnificent Production. Same Cast of Famous Players. As presented here last season. NIGHTS 25c to $1.50. Matinee, 26c to $1.00 Jan. 21-22-23-24, Harry B. Smith's Musical Success, "The Liberty Bene*." Jen. 25-26-27, Eva Taylor and Lawrence Qrattan in "Parsifal." Tonight, "A SON of REST' WEEK COMMENCING SUNDAY MATINEE Hollis E. Coolej Presents America's Greatest Plaj ARIZONA 1 aa 1 6 Opening Thursday tlB Hi 111 HENRY W. SAVABE "3 4 i K* 50 HORSES 50 CAV- ALRYMEN FROM FORT SNELLING. SEE THE PARADE. NOTHING LIKE IT EVER SEEN IN MINNE- APOLIS. 99 loo TON DAVID BELASCO'S MASTERPIECE DARLING of the BOOS With Percy Haswell and Robert T. Haines SAIiERNO MIGNONETTE KOKIN HORSKY-BERGEBE OO. JAMES H. OTJLLEN GALETTTS MONKEYS KLEKKO & FRAVOLI LES ENGOLAS KINODBOME Matinee Today 25c FAMILY THEATE*. How to Cure Rheumatism Mild cases are sometimes reached by a single packagefor sale by $0,000 Druggists. Continuous Vaudeville Afternoon cad BvsatBfcJ Prices 10c, 15c, 20c, matinees 10c: bos Mate SftaJ^ DEWEY *Ti Dr. Shoop's. Rheumatic tablets Commencing TomorrowTwice Dally. M Ladies' Day Friday. 1* THE BALTIMORE BEAUTIES' INCLUDING BATTLING NELSON 1 Last Time Tonight .YANKEE DOODLE GIRLS, I don't mean that Dr. Shoop's Rheumatic Tab-* lets can turn bony jotntsl into flesh again and' never failthat is lmpdnible. But they will with reasonable certainty drive from the blood* the poison that causes pain and swelling, and then that is the end of the pain and swelling. the end of the sufferingthe end of Rheoma tism. Any Rheumatic sufferer who writes may ro ceive my little book on .Rheumatism, including professional advice as to diet, etc., free. With the book I will also send without charge, my "Health Token," an Intended passport to good health. Address Dr Sboop, box 2820, Raolna, Wis. i I t