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6 —^,_^—^— Vl —^^ -^jP^^-^/f^ p-. rtv-^Of^O ff>o *r>'f^C>€^fl^C^-^ l *^*t^*^*^'*^' > ''^ s ''^ s «^C>^C>C>C^f^**>-l^«^T>**'-~'' a - "*-^- it^v^ht* ©<_ <9<^<% <*)<9<w<v<9*v9*r9<V <%<?%<zy<v<% <kb<.o<.-<. er%*n<w<V<v <_*-<_ «»». «r»^r_ «r» <rt<^<^^B<c9<_^<^^B <TMT»<_i<_i<^<=r»<r_<" j The Boston Always Leads in Everything. Jl~— 5 MEN'S SUIT I r MEN'S OVERCOAT r— • j DEPARTMENT. h DEPARTMENT. - ' I IKS 5 We have placed before the people of this city " THE ULSTER like THIS CUT don't look j! »- 9 a much finer grade of Clothing (ready to wear) ' cheap. There is SOMETHING, about THE Cj; Wp iFMw^J ;\ 5 than has ever been carried here. OUR $28 BOSTON'S OVERCOATS that you cannot |j W\ \ W\ I 9 ' AND $30 MEN'S SUITS are the best value compare to any except the Best Rf-ercEiant S W \ °|||1 [|il| ■' . ever offered. They cannot be found outside of ■ :. Tailor's Productions, The prices we charge %|I 1° oil J%: 2 THE BOSTON at any price. range from |II I I 1 t f 5 iTou may have your choice of any $28 or $30 And we guarantee the price to be as low as ? H ~ I|| j fcl^S l^^^ 1 J ; Men's Suit in the house this week. :. | ;;; the ordinary kind are sold for elsewhere. . I ||| 111 I jIP a Corner Robert and Sixth. BOWLBY & CO. I sketched From Life. I 5 .. . - s 'v .. ~ . ~ ;: ' ' -a^«^c>c>c>«^»^<_*<j!^^^^^^^<J^ ■ - • ffEWERfIIfiPfIOJIES THE STANDARD TELEPHONE TO HE INTRODUCED IX THE NORTHWEST WITHIN THIRTY DAYS. PRELIMINARY WORK WILL PROBABLY BE STARTED IN ST. PAUL. HAL RICE AUERBACH TALKS. * Out' of Hie Local Men Who Has In vested Money in the Sew Couccriii Within the next thirty days active ■work will begin toward securing for St. Paul and the Northwest the Standard telephone, the introduction of which will place the service at such a low rate that it will be with STANDARD LONG DISTANCE DRAWER TELEPHONE. fWhen not in use the transmitter-receiver, made of aluminum, is laid in the drawer of the desk and the drawer is shut. Opening ■..->■ the drawer makes the connection.) ... in the reach of hundreds who now cannot afford the expense of having a telephone in their home or place of business. It has always been claimed that the Bell Telephone company has | monopolized the business for seven teen years. It is also claimed that neither the original cost of manu facture, the cost of installation of the plant, nor any other thing connect ed with the inauguration of a tele- \ phone exchange justifies the rates | that have been exacted from the j public for the transmission of human intelligence. But the Standard company, which has been recently organized, pro poses to break this monopoly and place the charges at a reasonable figure. There is a general company headquarters in New York city, and it will sell franchises to the differ ent affiliated companies throughout the country. The one which will con trol the business of this section is the Northern Standard company.and J Its territory will embrace Minneso ta, South Dakota, Montana, Wash ington, Idaho and Northern lowa. The headquarters will be in the Twin Cities, where all of the fifteen directors live. The St. Paul mem bers of the board are: W. B. Dean, Thomas B. Scott. William Hamm, E. "W. Winter, Dr. Charles A. Wheaton and Maurice Auerbach. Tlie presi dent is John B. De Laittre, of Min neapolis. TALK WITH MR. AUERBACH. Mr. Maurice Auerbach yesterday said to a Globe reporter: "The introduction of the Standard tele- phone is a matter of considerable im . portance, as it is not only superior to those now in general use, but our •company will be able to furnish the service at greatly reduced rates. As far as being able to meet the com- petition of the Bell people, we have no fears. While they have million; -.of. capital, I do not believe they have THE SAINT PAUL DAILY GLOBE: ,i SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER r 1,- r IBOS.— TWENTY-FOUR PAGES. -1 wealthier stockholders than our com pany. j "I have great faith in the new en ! terprise, and I have already invest * ed considerable money for stock, as - have the other directors. We have I signed articles of agreement and [ will no doubt incorporate -about the : first of the year. We have purchased la franchise from the general com pany, and, as soon as incorporated, I will be ready to sell to the local ! companies throughout our territory. There are none of the telephones in use now. as the invention is a new i one, and the general company has 1 been in existence but a short time. ! There has been some talk of using the wires of the Postal Telegram ! company, in which case it would ! take but a short time to get the new /system into general use. This point j has not been settled. The question of ■ introducing the new invention into the Northwest, however, has been decided, and I think it will not be long before we will have it in St. Paul. The ■ RATES WILL BE SO LOW . that our large hotels will doubt ! less have an instrument in each ■ room. They will all be long distance, j so that a man in St. Paul, without • going out of his own house can talk with a friend in San Francisco. The great advantages of , the system : are thus seen.". The reason that the Standard com pany's can put the rentals at a very low figure is not only that , they will in stall no telephone which does not talk at least 1,000 miles— which under their patent's they can produce at low cost but because they can accommodate any number of subscribers through the use of their improved central office appara tus. : They can; and declare that they will put the telephone into every store, office or other place of business, and into the house of every man "of moder ate means, and thus fulfill the predic tion that in three years from now they, will have 150,000 of their telephones In ; use in New York city. The aim of this company is to popularize and cheapen telephone service and if this is accom plished its end. will be attained. The Bell company has secured hun dreds of patents on the multiple switch board,thinking that the multiple j switch board would control the telephone situ ation of the future. The Standard Tel ephone company can operate at a>| ofit at a rental which would ruin any.com pany using the ordinary multiple switchboard. Inasmuch as the Stand ard does not use the multiple-switch board it does not infringe the Bell pat ents. It has no desire to infringe, as such a policy would be retrogression. Another great factor in the cost of telephonic service is the cost of line wiring in a city. The cost of wiring an exchange of 10,000 subscribers in the heart of a city, including ducts, is about $300,000 for installation and about $50,000 a year for interest, depreciation and maintenance. It Is known that the engineering force of the Standard com pany is at work developing improve- ments that will reduce this factor down to about $135,000 for installation and about $20,000 a year for Interest, depre ciation and maintenance. All Standard Telephone company exchanges have been planned for these improvements, and when they are ready they will be added. - ' •' "^'^ ' ARMED WITH DEVICES. While all of the great corporations of this country have maintained as a r.ule a policy of silence, enough Is now known of the appliances of the Stand ard company to justify the public In regarding it as the great competitor of the Bell company. It is armed with de vices whose value Is Incalculable,, and It is known to be backed by the great est aggregation of financial and polit ical Influences ever organized in this country. it Is a peculiarity of the human mind, ! in many cases at least, that prospects and results cannot be appreciated or realized unless they are absolutely tan- ; gible. For this reason the work of the j Standard Telephone company, which.its j promoters believe, will in a very brief * time be recognized everywhere as- a ' great power in the field of transmitting ! human intelligence, has not been com- j prehended or appreciated except by the few persons who have given their en tire time to the operations of that or ganization. Necessarily the value, and | capabilities of a new electrical dgv4ce I are matters which can be understood j only by careful and expert investiga- , tion. 7.7. The founders of the Standard tele phone system were convinced at the outset that the Bell Telephone company had , nothing to fear nor the public any thing to expect from a rival in the tele phone business unless that rival were possessed of appliances better than those employed by the Bell company! it was equally essential that the plans of any new concern which might hope to rank with the Bell Telephone com pany, the Postal Telegraph company or the Western Union Telegraph com pany should be laid on Ikies as broad as those of any of these corporations. It was essential that the rival "company should first and, above all, possess a long-distance transmitter over which persons might converse easily for dis tances in excess of one thousand miles.* It was equally essential that vast im provements should be controlled' in connection with the switchboard. . ' The Standard Telephone company possesses a long-distance transmitter which is novel and of great utility. The name of the material which is used in the contact is withheld, and it is. said that there are only three or four men living who know* what it is or how it is prepared for service between the elec trodes. It was the d.scovery of an American inventor in the year 1804, and is said to have proved far better adapt ed to the transmission of speech than any carbon instrument. MARVELOUS ACCURACY It is known that the material is not a semi-conductor, but can be made to vary its resist ance at its points of contact so that, in effect, as there is no "make and break," the slightest modulations of the voice are reproduced with marvelous accu racy over long or short distances. Seven appliances in connection with the transmitter, which were discovered by a Michigan inventor of great abil ity, are also part of the groundwork ot the Standard system. These inventions rest upon the employment of a new element in telephoning on which the Standard Telephone company holds a fundamental patent. ! George W. Moore, a lawyer in De troit, Mich., who is familiarly known ! by his intimates as Abe Lincoln,, be | cause of his resemblance to the great president, was one of the first to rec ognize the possibilities of the instanta neous application of electric power in a telephone transmitter. When such "application for electric power had been secured in the patent office, Marcellus Bailey, who drew the specifications for the original Bell telephone, gave as his opinion and there is no better author ity—that this Standard appliance is im pregnable. The Standard switchboard Is a novel departure in exchange work, and marks an epoch In switchboard con struction. It is exceedingly cheap to install, as well as to maintain. For an exchange' of 10,000 subscribers, accord ing to the Standard company's claim, a switchboard costs, instead of $350,000, only about $20,000. Instead of $80,000 a year for connections, its cost would only be about $60,000 and interest, de preciation and maintenance. instead of being $50,000 would be only $3,000. Each action of the switchboard has, ir.s'.ead j of 10,000 jacks, or switching terminals, I only about thirty to fifty. The limit i of the multiple switchboard now in j use all over the United States, is; at | the top notch, 10,000 subscribers. The | limit of the Standard switci -oard is, j as above stated, not reachec even at i 50,000. :-.-. r.y_ No feature connected with a greet tel- | ephone organization is of morn 'vital practical consequence than the &wif*h- j board, both as regards its utility and as regards the cost of construction. Upon the character of the switchboard depends the yearly rental which can be j charged subscribers when actual com- , petition is in full blast, the rapidity' of j satisfying their desires and tlie income I of the corporation. * 7' j CHEAPER SWITCHBOARDS. ■" - . • ■ The so-called "multiple switchboard,'' ! which is now used by the Bell Tele phone company all oyer the country, is enormously expensive. It Is the ex pense of installing these switchboards which has furnished the excuse for the high rentals t hat are charged, and the , Bell Telephone company has also fre quently referred to this matter as a bugbear to frighten out competitive investors. In the celebated contest that was waged between the people of St. Louis and the Bell Telephone com pany. It was urged by the corporation .as. a reason why the municipality could not build a plant of its own that the switchboard situation was so compli- j cated and the cost so enormous. J Tests of the practical utility of the Standard transmitter have been made ', purposely most severe, and it has al- j ways answered the demands put upon it. An experiment conducted lately by ' the chief .electrician of the company j was the transmission of a* voice mes- ! sage over a -circuit which was com posed in I part of twelve persons who ' joined hands. Under normal conditions the tick of a watch can be transmitted j over 1,000 miles and a' whisper' made j audible over an incredible length of ■ wire. After one of the late test, which j had been witnessed by a practical ex pert authority, he said of the Stand ard transmitter: "These instruments are marvels of J perfection. You have proved them to J be far superior to others. My personal opinion is. that you have the finest tele phone that has ever been invented, and I cannot but believe that with such instruments the success of your com pany is assured." 7*7v'' SALT SPRING LAND GRANT. j Tbe Government . Has Disposed; of Some of the Lauds. - State Auditor Dunn has prepared a statement showing how certain lands selected by the state under the Salt spring land grant- act, amounting to 3,434 acres, were disposed of by , the United States land department prior to the passage of the law by which the j land was granted to the state of Minne- j sota, so that indemnity will now have j to be selected for -them.* Acccordtng j to an act of congress in 1879 some 15,360. acres of Salt spring land located in the vicinity of Twelve springs were granted to the -state to be used for educational j purposes.. Part of these lands have j been used to pay for making the- state j geological survey, and the entire lands have been controlled by the board of regents of the state university. The j grant has never been filled, and at the present time there remain 3,913 acres belonging to the state. President John S. Pillsbury, of the board of regents, has taken steps to have, the grant adjusted and the entire business connected therewith ha-3 been turned over to the auditor's office. A statement of the lands that were dis posed of by the United States govern ■ ment berore the grant was made is now completed and will be forwarded to Washington, and the auditor will probably be authorized to select in demnity lands and have the matter set tled up at once. WANT TO CHANGE. i [ People In Cass Conntj- Want Be Attached to Crow Wing. i ro A petition was filed in the office Of 'J the secretary of state yesterday by the citizens of Cass county, asking thWt seventeen townships be detached train that county and attachd to that pf Crow Wing. The township***! referred to are those adjoining Crow Wing county, and the petitioners are resi dents of that section. The law requires that a petition of this kind shalll be signed by at least 23 per cent of the legal voters of the section. *|j The reason for asking that these townships be attached to Crow Wing is that Cass county is unorganized, and the greater portion of it is still a wilderness. ..If it were organized into a separate county at present the tax for paying county, officers, building j roads and other work necessasry would be altogether. too heavy for the few people now residing within its borders. At the same time these people want a | county government and have evidently ! made up their minds that the cheapest ! and -best way to secure it is by join ing Crow Wing county. If this move : ment is successful it is altogether prob | able that other portions of the county [ will be detached and annexed to the ■ other surrounding counties. "7* ! REMARKABLE EXHIBITION i Given by Prof. Gleason, Ihe Great Ilorso Trainer. There are "horse shows," and then I again there are horse shows. Mos tof the ■ "horse shows" .seen r in this city 7 for '< some months past have not been adv^& I Used as such, but have proven such j without. sL', ; . doubt. But there . was a . horse 7 show In the Auditorium last i nifcht which was everything. that was claimed for it. The great horse tamer, I Gleason, and some half a dozen vicious I horses were the star actors, and kept ; an audience of some 1,000 people thor i oughly Interested for more -than two | hours. Few men have ever : attained I the fame Mr. Gleason enjoys in his par ! ticular line, and from his work last I night it is fame honestly won, for he is ! a wonder in handling horses. His the j ory is that you cannot do anything j with a horse until you have mastered J It, and then you can do whatever you J • please with it, without being cruel or i abusing the animal. ' "■'' * **-;■! I I His first move, then, is'to master the His first move, then, is to master the . horse, and this he does quickly by I means of checks and ropes, which, in ! the case of a kicking horse, very soon ! tire the animal completely out, after ,' which it is only necessary to Instruct it ■in what he wants it to do. Last night I Prof. Gleason had six horses belonging 'to Messsrs. Dr. Dellamore, J. B. Coon, ! Jr., Li. N. Scott, Jossph Mart! arid Fred ( Schroeder, all of them vicious In cer tain directions, and all of them strong, ■ muscular animals. When they were led ' separately into the sawdust arena of j the Auditorium,' there was a lively scene i as the first horse was harnessed, and j the training began. After a few mm I utes of wild kicking the animal was j so subdued that the clatter of drums | or tin pans, the music of a brass band, j the setting off of fire crackers or the j waving of flags and umbrellas did not | in the least annoy it. It would halt j and sitand without the restraint .of halter or rein in the midst of the din. ] Prof. Gleason impressed upon his hearers the necessity of having horses j obey the human voice, and obey it too j j whenever they heard it. In this way, i I he said, the animal could be completely : i controlled. Prof. Gleason Is certainly ; a remarkable man in the controlling of I I horses, and no horse is too vicious for J him. 77; yy 77; . 7-V7 : 7 "{. '. BAR INVESTIGATION. * E. A. Jaggard Says the Commit tee Has Not Given Up. The bar investigating committee j held another meeting yesterday, but nothing was done. In fact, only a I few of. the members of the commit-, j tee were present. In sqeaking of the j matter later Edwin A. Jaggard, a J member of the committee, said to a Globe reporter: "I have just returned from Chi j cago, and have therefore been un- I able, to give the work any attention for the past few days, but the mem bers of the committee still hold them selves ready to listen to anything that members of the bar will pro- I duce. They have by no means dis | organized. The committee has had j two great difficulties with which to ! contend. The first is the fact that I they have no power to subpoena ! witnesses and therefore can accom plish no compulsory process; the sec ond is that it is very hard to get anybody to place themselves in a position of public prosecution. But notwithstanding these difficulties, I am well satisfied that much good has already been done. The publicity that has been made is the most pun i ishment they . could have received. The fact of the ~ organization of the committee has been a key to public opinion and a strong Indorsement of the course pursued by the Globe. I consider the prosecution of Mr. Fauntleroy is a great injustice, and I believe the public is of the same opinion.". \ GERMAXIA LIFE MANAGER. [George XV. Rnedenbnrg Tempo i - rarily in Charge. '.•'■■■'-' j Mr. W. A. .W'esendouck,; special di- ! i rector for the Germania Life Insurance company, who has been the city for 'some time in reference.t o, the appoint- | ment of a successor to M." J. "Boyle, who | - resigned Nov. 1 as local manager, left j the city yesterday.. Although the ap pointment has l*en made the name of | the new manager will not be given out ' until the first of the year.' 'George W. Roedenberg was appointed by Mr. Wes endouck to act as manager;! until the : man who has been appointed -shall be ; ready to begin active duties, -7 -J; r "y^. : ''■ PLUMBERS MAKE MERRY. St. Paul Union. Entertain**-* Mem bers From Minneapolis. The St. Paul Plumbers' union gave an enjoyable dance and banquet at La bor hall last evening. The entertain ment was strictly an Invitation affair, given in honor of the Minneapolis and !,Duluth unions, a large number of whom are In the city. As early as .8 o'clock the hall was crowded with members of the unions and their friends, .who, en ! joyed a selected programme of dance ■ music by the Twin City Mandolin and j Guitar club. -''•";•. '"' • At 11 o'clock the company was invited I. to the dining room, where an elaborate spread had been prepared. Impromptu i. toasts, with an occasional interlude i by the mandolin club.contributed great ; ly to the pleasure of the feast, after which dancing was again resumed, con tinuing well into the small hours. About 100 couples were present. The commute having the affair in charge consisted of: R. Stark, P. Chapel, P. Cuff, J. Delamey and P. Leonard. NATHAN HALE CHAPTER Of Daughters of ,the American Revolution Organized. I The Nathan Hale chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolu • tion met and formally perfected its organization at the home of the* regent, Mrs. Joseph -E. McWilliams, (KG Sum mit avenue, yesterday afternoon. The ! occasion drew together not only mem j bers of the new chapter, but also a I number of their friends and members ! of the already existing St. Paul chap- I ter, the state regent, Mrs. R. M. New j port, and Minnesota's vice president general in the national organization, Mrs. J. Q. Adams. ' The residence of Mrs. McWilliams was beautifully decorated with bunt ing and flowers suitable to the occa sion. The formal programme was full of Interest, and was opened with the Lord's prayer and singing of the "Star Spangled Banner." The regent, Mrs. McWilliams, gave an entertaining ex planation of the reason for the choice of Nov. 30 as the day from which to date the organization of the "Nathan Hale" chapter. She first spoke briefly J of the life of Capt. Nathan Hale, ex plained that it had not been possible to organize, either on his birthday or | on the anniversary of his' death, and j thought it quite fitting to choose Nov. j 30. the day upon which, 113 years ago, j Great Britain acknowledged the inde i pendence of America. The Declaration of Independence was read by Miss Andrews, and Mrs. Wer rlck read the poem, "Nathan Hale." Mrs; J. Q. Adams read an interesting paper on the objects of the society and how best they could be attained. Greetings from the St. Paid chapter were extended by the regent, Mrs. D. A. Montfort, and others. Mrs. R. M. Newport, the state regent, gave a practical talk on the work of the society, indorsing the idea of this second chapter as a good move and in the interest of the entire organization. She presented to the regent a gavel made of cherry wood from Washing ton's home at Mt. Vernon. 7- . Tea was served during the afternoon. GOT SOME COMFORT. Capt. Sebvreizer Finds lie Feath ers of His Andnliislans. Capt. Schweizer, of the central police i station, looked happier yesterday than | for many days. His felicity was that of the celestial hosts who. in the lan guage of Sergeant Horn, "are always hugging themselves because the've found the one what-you-call-'em and the other ninety-nine got .away." Capt. Schweizer, too, had recovered something. It was his Blue Andalu sians, his pampered poultry pets. But, like the heavenly hosts, he had not found all that was lost. Thirteen com plete blue hens disappeared some weeks ago from the captain's henroost. And yesterday afternoon, in the Juno street house occupied by George Baird, the Minneapolis chicken collector, Capt. Schweizer. his eyes filled with tears of affectionate recognition, iden tified his own, his very own,, thirteen blue hen heads with leaden eye and gaping yellow beak; twenty-six long, scaly, skinny, hind legs that once sported merrily about the captain's lawn, and a bushel of: feathers, all of that characteristic hue of mildewed in digo possessed by no chicken— be it rooster, hen or pullet— except the gen uine, .Imported Blue Andaluslan. The delighted discoverer will fill a pillow with the blue feathers. He has placed the blue heads and the yellow legs in i a jar of preserving vitriol borrowed ; from the electrical, department of the station. -•*. , -y^yi ,:•;, . BISHOP FOWLER COMING. He Will Lecture Here on the Evening of Dee. 6. Bishop Fowler is soon to favor the St. Paul people with his presence and eloquence: He will lecture in the First Swedish M. E. church on Dec. C on one of his favorite themes, "Great Deeds of Great Men." Bishop Fowler is not a stranger in St. Paul, and the an nouncement that he will again be heard in ; this city "lias' created quite a stir among his vast number of friends here. When Abraham Lincoln.* was assassi nated, Bishop Fowler was called upon by the citizens. of Chicago to deliver the funeral oration. He also delivered a memorial oration at San ! Francisco on the death of Grant,, that was de clared by the papers to be the greatest ever heard in that city. '-'. M. C. Kimberly has returned from •Boston* *7;V.;;7 7 ' ! AIiTGEIiD IS HISSED | ILLINOIS' GOVERNOR AROUSES THE IRE OF THE; SONS OF ST. .-UNDREW. HIS ABUSE OF CLEVELAND ' CREATES AN UPROAR AT THE SOCIETY BANQUET, IN . CHICAGO. STIRRED LP BY CAMPBELL. Couldn't Stand the Ohio Ex-Gov ernor's Eulogy of tbe President. Special to the Globe. CHICAGO, Nov. 30.— Gov. Altgeld was hissed tonight at the banquet of the St. Andrew's society when he began to abuse President Cleve land. He and ex-Gov. Campbell, of Ohio, were guests of the society, and the ex-governor first spoke, taking occasion to compliment the presi dent highly as an honest, pure-mind ed, patriotic and conscientious man. Why -Not Support Your Home Shoe Factories? stS ma m r „K. m East Sever n" Why Not Secure Standard Shoe C 0.,. No. 423 Wabasha ' f wv«.w street. E. Hammer, No. 989 West Seventh ■ Aug! Gundlach, No. 395 Rice street. - FOOt C_fllfOft John H. Horeish, No. 3SI West Sev- *; ~mi«iui«# enth street. ■ ■ J. J. Fi*autschl, No. 171 Concord street. . Henry Horman Co., corner South Wa- *m< • ««»• , _ basha street and Chicago avenue. I fllS Willi Pl* 1 E. N. Nelson & Co., No. 311 East Sev- * " ,0 " 1,,, ' ' enth street. Made by the AS: K,n,quist - No -":* ■"* Seventl 7 V.., • Sol. Waech, No. 1200 East Seventl street. Robert Hesler, No. 166 South Robert Working PeOple S A.! e Anderson. No. 917 Pavne avenue. A. M. Hauser & Co.. No. 153 East •-••-"•"* - . Third street. , n-ioiK-ij :■:'■■ -■■ ■ . J. B. Wall raff. No. 537 Rice street '^■;f Of Your Own City. «£& N< *«"****• N * « A «** 7.. v ,..7* „. ..- . . H. C. Dosen, No. 2SS East Seventl ' " . - ... street. - A GOOD THING TO THINK ABOUT. IS IT NOT? We think it is. Our workmen agree with us too. Wfl 77777: " should all pull together at home. Dahlen & Sons, No. BSB Rice street. W<- lm»o ,*,_.* John Kieman, Glencoe and Mississippi ™ « »„ VC gOtie 8 Plena Bros.. No. 507 West Seventh IlttO the Public PreSS street. * ■ ~en * i Geo.. C. Simmons, No. 380 South Wa- 10 lie ID OUT basha. . "" C. Larson, No. 977 Payne avenue. Retail Dealers L. Tschida, No. 360 Thomas street. V ":** * *--*wc*mw a, Hedman Bros., No. 916 Rice street. Wfirk-s-t^ (i *-**-***£> v J. M. Bach & Bro., No. 65 East Sev- " fIOSC HUme>» 6 H. street. University and Dale. AV*f» pill _*_ Hfi+_4- 1 H. Bielenberg, University and Dale. " c pUI HI JTrlrlU Call on Them. — T'^^ss^ They are in all parts >*. *&& T ■ ■^■f^jL ."^^^j They Sell Boots and Shoes Made in St. Paul by St. Paul Workmen. . * MANUFACTURED BY C.Gotzian&Co This roused the ire of Altgeld, who came after him and began his ad dress by saying he did not propose to apologize for the shortcomings ol any national administration, and much less for that of Mr. Cleveland. At this point hisses became plentiful and finally were so pronounced thai the governor was compelled to stop and wait for the noise to subside. When the hissing ceased he resumed j his talk, and was none the less se | vere on the head of the nation, but the banqueters let him proceed and ; made no manifestation. The gov ernor would not have been invited had it been known he intended to abuse the president, and it is under stood would not have said any ! thing about Mr. Cleveland had ex- Gov. Campbell's eulogy not irritat ed him. . , : .~\{ PERSONAL. 7^l Mrs. F. E. Pilcher. of Detroit, Mich., is visiting Mrs. Arthur Pilcher, of Ha* zel Park. Mrs. E. C. Short and children, ol Aurora avenue, are visiting in Wis consin. Miss Glenny, who was the guest ol Mrs. Severance, has returned to Buf falo. Miss Edith Solomon will leave foi Savannah, Ga.. on Monday evening. Mrs. Harris, of Chicago, is the guest , of her sister, Mrs. Bigelow. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Benson have re- I turned from, the East. ..... Mrs*. J. B. Woolworth has removed | to $25 Hague avenue. Mrs. Justus Rice is at the Aberdeen for the winter.