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,r FAVORITE FANCIES INFASHIONABLE FDRS Models That Will Prevail in Minneap olis and Paris Next WinterO. E. Albrecht of E. Albrecht & Son Talks Interestingly of the New Things in Furs. "Whole skin effects, head and tail trimmings in neckwear, and the jaunty 'pony' eoats are possibly the most noticeable new things in furs," said O. E. Albrecht to a Journal repre sentative today. Mr. Albrecht picked up a very hand some mink neckpiece, saying: "Here is something that promises to be extremely popular. We call this Albrecht Model 77. It is of animal skins in their natural state, has fur on both sides, and has the head and tail trimmings that I told you were going to be a feature of the season. Vtewr MODEL N 77 ejftourftsf of E AlbrtehUSo* "We make this in genuine Mink and Ermine at $75.00, and it is extremely effective in Blended and Russian Sables. Now here is another typical 1907 stvle, the favorite Russian shawl col lar, satin lined, which has been im proved by the season's fancy for head and tail embellishments. This is known *s Albrecht Model 73. MODEL N9 73 By coucr S Albittht 9*m "This comes in Mink, Ermine and ther popular furs. "Muffs? Oh, yes! There are some new things and the Empire and Pillow will still be much favored. The new 'Saddle' shape is liked by many. This Pony' coat is a striking little thing that we are making in a great variety of furs. "We have it with fancy embroidered vest plain soutache braid trimmed or with the Paris fancy of gold and green. "New York leaders of fashion have about decided that the elbow or three arters sleeve in fur is not to be worn. I don't think it will be in de mand, anyway, in our colder Northwest ern air, though we are making some novelties with this sleeve. "Here is a Paris idea that I think pretty well of. It is called the 'Pare ment' sleeve, and you will notice is lined below the elbow with the same fur as the outside, and can be turned back to form a three-quarters sleeve with deep, flaring cuff. "The standard sleeve is a leg-o'- mutton shape, something like last year, but with a bit more freedom between elbow and wrist. "On the whole, garment styles show few radical changes. In neckwear, as I said, the whole skin or 'animal' effect, with head, tail and paw trim mings, is the feature. "Cold weather would help us, you say? Not as much as you suppose. It's fashionable to wear furs, and very few women care to appear singular, as nearly all now have at least a few handsome fur-pieces in their wardrobe. "You may be surprised to know that we are very busy, even on these hot days, remodeling sealskin and other garments. "And, by the way, it is remarkable that there are yet a number of people who put off having repairs and re modeling done until so late in the fall that the rush of new orders necessitates annoying delays, and even the possibil ity of our being obliged to refuse the work entirely. "It would be so much to their ad vantage to have the work done now." In answer to a question Mr. Albrecht stated that the new building of the St. Paul house, on Sixth and Minnesota streets, would probably be occupied about the middle or latter part of August. PICKERING'S Seven-fourteon Nicollet. We're going to move soon. Prices being cut to the quick. Everything reduced. lot Only the Best AMERICAN Champagne, But THE BEST OHAMPAOKE, COOK'S IMPERIAL EXTRA DRY. PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Cleane and toautiflef tho hair. Promotaa ft hurariant growth. New 7lls to Bolters Gray ALDEN-KELJIK CO., Importers of Oriental Rugs. Rugs Cleaned, Repaired and Stored. 1000-2 Nicollet Ave. Mrs! Bostwick Celebrates Ninety-Second Birthday FOUR GENERATIONS. Mr*. Eliza Bostwick (92 Years of Age), Mrs. Frank G. O'Brien, O'Brien and His Sons Kenneth and Lowell. The ninety-second birthday anniver sary which Mrs. Eliza Bostwick celebrated today, finds her frail in body, but in mind as active and as much imbued with the undaunted pio neer spirit as when she first came to the little village of St. Anthony in 1850. She has watched Minneapolis grow from a mere reservation to the present size, and St. Anthony from 250 to a great section of the larger city she has lived thru the Indian horrors aided the early pioneer in succoring refugees, and now in a quiet and peace ful old age she lives over the old times. Mrs. Bostwick, then Eliza Kennedy, was born in Wexford, Ireland, but her early life was. spent in London. When 25 she came to America and engaged in business in Toronto, Can., There she met and married N. Bostwick. Mr. and Mrs. Bostwick first lived in St. Anthony on Second avenue between Main and Second streets. The street was then known as Oak street. Later, they moved to Minneapolis and made their home en the site of the George B. New ell building. Since that time Mrs. Bost wick has been at her present home, 917 Fifth avenue S. About a year and a half ago Mrs. Bostwick fell and broke her hip, which has never healed, so she is confined to her chair, and has a nurse in attend ance. Her mind, however, has lost no power. She is as voracious a reader as she has always been, and one finds her as ready to converse on the latest fic tion as on the old masters. Mrs. Bostwick is a member of the Monday club, the-Tourist club, and the Writers' league. Before age made it impossible Mrs. Bostwick was active Hotel Keewaydin, Oottagewood, was thronged with a host of the younger people last evening and the first danc ing party ot the season was a great suo cessfl. The beautiful night had tempted the cottagers and visitors at the lake to come over to the hotel, and with a splendid floor and delightful music, all enjoyed the pleasant event. Among the guests who recently arrived at the hotel for the season are Herman Weil, Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Orcutt, Mrs. Henry 0. Hanke, Minneapolis I. W. Shirley, Omaha, Neb. L. J. Harris, Quincy, 111. Miss Louise F. Konantz, Quincy, 111. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Conway and fami ly, St. Louisx Mo. Mr. and' Mrs. E. N. Ashley of Winnipeg. Mr. and Mrs. D. P. Ronsophpulos, Dr. Ada Talbot, Dr. Emily Fifield, Mr. and Mrs. E. 0. Wagner, Mr. and Mrsr. W. G. Moffatt and family of Minneapo lis were Sunday guests at Keewaydin. Mrs. M. A. Mfltenberger and Mrs. T. O. Taylor of St. Louis arrived at the hotel Wednesday. Rev. G. Heathcote Hills of St. Mark's pro-cathedral will preach at the Camp Memorial chapel services tomorrow morning. The guests of the Bartlett House, Mound, will be entertained on an excur sion on the Acte Tuesday evening. In addition to the guests of the hotel the cottagers in the vicinity have been in vited. A quartet will furnish a musi cal program during the trip. Mr. and Mrs. William M. Crosse en tertained at a supper Thursday even ing at their summer home in E*xcelsior in celebration of their wedding anni versary. Covers were laid for twenty and.the decorataiong were charmingly carried out with masses of garden flow ers and ferns. The centerpiece was a large basket with lucious fruit. Jap anese lanterns made a pretty illumina tion on the piazza, and two large lan terns were suspended from the ceiling over the supper table. Mrs. H. W. Gibson, Miss Florence Gibson and their guests, Harold Foster and Miss Annette Wale of Fairview, Mr. and Mrs. Stuart, Stuart Patton, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Hurley of Minne apolis, Mr. and Mrs. Will Patton, Mr. and Mrs. Oooper and Miss Net- Srs.CoopeGeorge of St. Paul, and Mr. and Melvin Bassford of California, made up a delightful party at Como Park Wednesday. After the picnic sup per the party attended the band concert at the park. LAKE BEEEZES. Miss Elva Leonard 1 Tlsiting Miss Lucretla Bailey at Areola. Mr. and Mrs. John Bowe are guests of Mv. and Mrs. James I. Wyer at Excelsior. Mrs. J. B. Bell of Gideons Bay is entertain ing Mrs. B. 'K. Clement and daughter of Fari bault. Professor H. I. Harter, former principal of. toe Excelsior sehools, is spending a Tactttion In Excelsior. Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Button spent Thursday visiting Mr. and Mrs. William M. Crosse at Excelsior. Mrs. B. h. Cox and the Misses Bessie and Agnes Cox are gussts at the H. Z. Van Dusee cottage, Manitoo. Mr. and Mrs. Amor Harrison and children are Tlsiting Mr. and Mrs. )B. B. Harrison at their home in Bxceisior. i Mrs. E. Ingersoll and MM. 0. Camp of Mln neapolls were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hlgglns at the Pines over Sunday. I Mrs. Mary Curhil of Anoka and Mrs. S. O. Lum of Solbergs Point spent Tuesday as the guests of Mrs. B, H. Marks at Mound. Saturday Evening, THE MINNEAPOLIS JOURNAL. Edward J. in philanthropic work. One of her par ticular interests was the home for old ladies and children. Beside her daughter, Mrs. F. G. O'Brien, her grandson and two great grandchildren, Mrs. Bostwick has a grandniece living in the city, Mrs. V. H. Traendel. Another daughter, Mrs. H. A. Nott, lives in Toledo, Ohio. Mrs. Bostwick has two grandnieces who now live in Germany, Bessie McDon ald, who married the scientist, Dr. Rudolph Freiheirn von Hirsch, and her sister, Anna McDonald, who married Baron Ferdinand Schrottenberg. Today, in spite of the inclement weather, many friends which Mrs. Bost wick made in early days, as well as those she has become attached to as she prew older, called at the O'Brien home. Each member of the Ladies of the Territorial Pioneers carried a flower to Mrs. Bostwick. In honor of the occasion Mrs. Bost wick has composed a quatrain: "May joy and peace be ever thine* And love enthrone thee in its shrine May blessings rich attend thy stay Till scenes of earth shall pass away." Each guest received a card from Mrs. Bostwick on which the lines were engraved. Assisting Mfti. Bostwick and Mrs. O'Brien in receiving were Mmes. D. H. Wright, J. A. Harris, B. D. Button and the Misses Kate Woods Owens, Florence Lings^ Inez M. Hobart, Isa belle Wilcox, Daisy and Emma W. O'Brien. The O'Brien home will be open this evening to receive the friends who wish to present their, felicitations. Mr. and Mrs. Julius Johnson and family, Harry Miller and Mrs. O'Donnell of Minneapolis are guests at the White house, Excelsior. Mrs. K. L. Roberts and daughter, Mae, and Mrs. Alice Clifton of Sauk Center hare been spending a few days with Key. and Mrs, C. J. Swain at Kxcelsior. Mrs. E. Marks and Miss Frances Marks will leaye Wednesday for Isle Royal, to spend two weeks They will spend the rest of the summer at the Weld cottage, Mound. '.n 7" fee five Page I Announcement 1B made of the engage ment of Miss Edith Mary Pickburn of London, England, and William Y. Chute of this city. Mr. and Mrs. John Fretter, assisted by officers and Knights of Pythias, re ceived last evening in the Knights of Pythias hall, in Masonic Temple, in celebration of their golden wedding. They were married fifty years ago in Ridgeville, Iowa, the birthplace of Mrs. Fretter. The aged couple, both of whom are over 70, occupied seats on the platform, which was effectively ar ranged with palms and fragrant blos soms. Dr. Phillips, president of the Pythian Veterans Arthur L. Jones, J. Ef. Hyser and Fred Wheaton told of how they helped Mr. and Mrs. Fretter to celebrate the twenty-fifth anniver sary of their wedding. Mrs. Drew Bly myer gave a soprano solo and Professor Hill contributed a reading. Mrs. A. W. Force presided over the frappe bowl, which was set in a nest of fragrant sweet peas. Mr. and Mrs. Fretter entered into the spirit of the evening with greater gayety and freedom than many younger people. Mr. Fretter came to America from England when he was 4 years old. Ten years after their marriage Mr. and Mrs. Fretter came to Minneapolis, where they have lived ever since. Their two children, Mrs. E. R. Campbell and Edward Fretter, live in Minneapolis, and most of their grandchildren were among the guests last evening. Mrs. Ralph Parker entertained at a small bridge luncheon yesterday after noon at her home on Seventh street SE. The guests were a group of women who have met this summer at informal games of bridge. The Misses Vera and Hazel Hocum and Miss Bessie Fitterling entertained at a china shower last evening at the Hocum residence on Emerson avenue S in honor of Miss Florence Swanson, whose marriage to Marvin Hocum will take place Thursday. The appoint ments were in white and "pink, sweet peas and carnations being used. In the dining room a large cluster of the flowers occupied the center of the ta ble, and at the ends pink tapers burned. White sweet peas tied with white tulle marked the place of the bride. The guests numbered fourteen. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Schubert re turned Thursday from a trip in Chi cago. Mrs. Schubert was formerly Miss Hattie Hartley, and her marriage to Mr. Schubert took place in Chicago June 27. They will make their home in Minneapolis. Shiny, oily, muddy skin made fair by Satin skin cream and Satin skin powder. 25c. PERSOKAL AST) SOCIAL. Miss Alice Aylmer is entertaining Miss Mil dred Bowns of Baltimore. Dr. M. F. Lenox has returned from Buffalo, N. Y., where he visited his daughter, Mrs. C. F. Boyce. Miss Flora Hanson of Salt Lake City Is Luna Rest Chawley Wants Anty Drudge's Daughter's Hand. Qhawley"Mrs. Drudge, I came to seek your daughter's hand." Anty Drudge "You didt/did you? Well, you'll find it in the kitchenhugging a bar of Fels-Naptha and taking a stain out of its owner's party frock.' w^*%. r i. ,3s.-A lotting ber coualn, Mi Hazel Ghristy, 8882 Pleasant ayeaue. Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Buchanan and their guests, Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Coleman of Chicago, will spend the remainder of July at Glengarry, Leach Lake. Minneapolis people at Mew York hotels are: Belmont, N. Mackar, E. ft. Sargent Herald Square, Dr. F. T. Qerecke Breslln, J. T. Nor ton Brostell, O. A. Woodward. CLUB NOTES. The Sunday school of the Fremont Avenue Congregational church held a plenlc today at the Lake Harriet pavilion, which was enjoyed by a large crowd of 300 lu snlte ot the rain. About seventy girls from the Pillsbury board ing home held a picnic at Lake Harriet last evening. After supper the girls put out In boats and enjoyed the evening's concert from the water. Railroads POSTS DP O N RATE LAWLead NORTH-WESTERN PRESIDENT CALLS IN QOMPANY ATTORNEYS TO GIVE INSTRUCTIONS ON FINE POINTS. Special to The Journal. Sioux City, Iowa, July 14.Officials and attorneys of the entire North-West ern railroad system have been called to Chicago where, under the tutorship of President Hugnitt, a school of instruc tion in the new railroad rate law is beine held. Officials attending the conferences report that the time is exceedingly short to prepare for a strict observance of the law and in order to approximate the result, some fast work must be done, as the law becomes effective Sept. 1. Both traffic officials and the legal ad visers go over each section and give their interpretation, and from their opinions a circular will be prepared for distribution thruout the system. Among other questions to be deter mined is whether or not any of the present practices of the railroads is an infraction of the new law. As in the case of the Elkins law, an effort will be made to obtain court rulings upon the mooted questions. STATIONS ARE ORDERED Minneapolis & St. Louis Road Pushes South Dakota Work. Speoial to The Journal. Aberdeen, S. D., July 14.Officials of the Minneapolis & St. Louis road have returned from a trip over the Watertown-Aberdeen extension survey and announced that the work of laying steel will begin by Aug. 1 and that by the end of September the tracks will be laid into Aberdeen and trains in opera tion. Work on the road's line from here to Leola is progressing rapidly, and plats of the new towns will soon be placed on the market. The construction of stations is to be begun at once and the contract for terminal buildings in this city will be awarded within the next few days. Sta tions at Bradley, Conde, Mellette and Northville will be built this month and material will be rushed to those places next week. All bridges on the Aber deen-Watertown division are completed as far as the James river, and work has been begun on that structure. Your lungs have all they can do. tin /~f 0 O Tney work night and day, and are LI ll\J XCwOv faithful to the end. Then use them y well. If they are rasping and tear- ing themselves by hard coughing, come to their relief. Give them Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. It heals, soothes,quiets. Your doctorwill explain its action to you. Ask him all about it. We have no oeorets I Wepul publish eo: of the formulae of all oor mealolne.1 fmmtmv man vamuMmwupawi eala WB CORSETS BestWithou Costin Most ALL DEALERS SELL THEM AT 91.00 UPWARDS WLINGARTEN BROS., Mokirs. 377*379 BroadWap, N. Y. **-A *?*Ai fr J^-- All grocers sell Fels-Naptha soap J.O. Xo C.Afi The only part of Fels-Naptha soap that can be imitated isthename. Every now and then, we hear of a woman who cheats herself out of all the special benefits of Fels-Naptha soap. By using it,not in the Fels-Naptha way, but in the way her ancestors used ordinary laundry soap. She boils the clothes, she stirs them with a stick, she rubs them nearly threadbarewhich is all wrong! Perhaps she adds a little washing-powder, or something,which is very wrong. Her explanation, for all this unnecessary trouble and work, is It's the way I learned to wash." In all probability, she learned to wash before Fels-Naptha was invented for Fels-Naptha is one of the modern time and labor-saving inventions. Now, with Fels-Naptha soap, you don't boil the clothes there's no red-hot fire and steaming suds in the Fels-Naptha way. You don't do any back-breaking washboard labor. You simply rub Fels-Naptha soap on the clothes, put them in the tub, just covered with water aild let them stay there for thirty minutes. In this half hour, Fels-Naptha does everything that boiling and hard rubbing can do and does it better. The woman who once does awash with Fels-Naptha soap, according to the directions on the wrapper, will never go back to the before- Fels-Naptha-was-invented way of washing. Insist on get ting the soap in the red and green wrapper. Fels-Naptha is as far superior to theimitation as gold is to brass. 3 STRONG POINTS noqua led- a 4 i 1 4 1 'a 1 off CEYLON AND INDIA GREEN TEA Purity Strength Flavor Packets Only. TRIAL PACKET, 10c. At All Grocers, AT A .MOMENTS NOTICE space. With a Gas* Water Heater,, hot water is always on tap. There Is no delay at the last moment As a device, it is small and opoupies, when attached to the boiler, but little It adds tn various ways to home oom fort. On wash day, water le quickly heated at night the bath is always Beady and after meals there is no tiresome watting for dish water to heat. Best of all, it heats the water and not the house. It is Indispensable In summer. Minneapolis Gas Light Co. Nos. 16-18-20 So. 7th St aWwfton/ Very low round-trip rates to w/estern Kansas, Eastern Colorado, Oklahoma, Indian Territory, Texas and Eastern New Mexico. First and tkird Tuesdays, monthly. Liberal stop overs ana return limits. It will pay you to visit the hustling, busy, prosperous "Santa Fe Southwest," Aak for land Mian and rata*. Addrcu Santa Fe agent. Guaranty Bldtf., Minneapolis. Much of the drawing* power of a Journal want-ad depends on the way it is worded. It Is always well to tell as muoh of the story as the reader will care to know. This brings him In closer touch with your proposition at the outset, and makes his investigation more likely, tj% SlSfc 4 SantaFe NL