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BETHEL BOAT FOLK WANT $12,000 IN THIRTY DAYS Propose to Rebuild the Grand Block and Start a Mills Hotel-Option Has Been Secured on the Prop erty and Money Must Be Had Within a Month. The Bethel association wants $12, --©OO, and mu:st have it within thirty days. With the passing of the Bethel boat —one of the oldest charitable institu tions in the Northwest —comes the pro posal to substitute therefore a land institution which will have for its aims PLANS FOR NEW BETHEL HOTEL. 3| 8 Ki>e»t<» - = — : _ B ■_7oh_- tr -— I -Store.' CtJT*.-V<7. _____ -fitST_UIWk/n- --»—-^ —J» -^ i/ \ 1 J=i rot rujoa. ■ * I I I nil 1 Showing Arrangement of the Floor Space When the Alterations Are Made. and objects the same work as carried on by the boat workers. The Grand block, formerly the old opera house, is under consideration as a very likely abiding place for the Bethel movement and work. The officials of the Bethel have until May 1 to keep the matter of choosing the Grand block under advisement. The building could very easily be remodeled to suit the require ments of the mission and at a compar atively slight oxpense it could be con verted into an ideal home for working people on the principle of the "Mill's hotel" type. If this building is se cured it is proposed to reduce the num ber of stories to five, rearrange the in tenor to suit the various requirements, secure the maximum number of small rooms and to equip the basement with bath and laundry systems. A gymna sium, with bowling alleys in conjunc tion, will be installed, and every effort bent to the end of organizing the street boys' clubs and brigades, as one of t/ c officials said: "Those whom the Y. M C. A. cannot reach and wouldn't have around." The different floors will be given over to coffee house auditorium, chapel, sit ting room for men and rest room for women; offices and rooms for lodgers t is believed, after careful figuring that the third story could very con veniently contain forty rooms for wom en and that the fourth and fifth could hold over 100 for men. Those who are furthering this mis sion are enthusiastic in the extreme and believe that there is no end to the possibilities for doing good that may be opened up in this manner. nnJ O., attaln thls Ideal wlll require $40, --000. $12,000 of which will necessarily have to be realized within the next thirty days. An appeal has been rnnde for funds whjch may be sent to Kenneth Clark,' Merchants bank, or Rev. D. Morgan, I<l4 Van Buren street, city. WANTS WORK AND DON'T CARE FOR HEROES Smili Boy Denies That Ha Came to See the President- T i^YvJ 1 didn>t come to see Teddy; Young ? c { anlon came to St. Paul from Glencoe, Minn., where he was employ ed as a farm *and. He was picked up T2 CSES GEP £i 2 D2Z! /^y j# Hf Take Laxative Bromo Qswurie Tablets <& /fT/Ch^iT^^ box. 25c Policeman Pat Smith on Eagle shortly after 8 o'clock. At the central station he told Capt. Hanft that he came to the city Saturday. "Suppose you wanted to see the pres ident?" inquired the captain. "Naw, I didn't; I came to get a Job," promptly replied the boy. Scanlon's parents, who formerly liv ed on the Dodd road, died six years ago. Since then the boy has been cared for by friends. Last night Policeman Smith secured a job for the boy on a farm just outside the city. BREAKS NOSE, ARM AND LEG AT THE SAME TIME J. H. Byrne Fractures Several Members In Falling Down Stairs. While visiting with friends Saturday night at Woodbridge avenue. J. H. Byrne, 303 East Congress street, fell down stairs, breaking his nose, right arm and left leg. The police ambulance was called and he was taken to the city hospital. Byrne does not know just how the acci dent happened. He was about to go lmmp and had said something to the peo ple with whom he had spent the even- Ing. When he got out on the landing to the stair case in some unaccountable way he lost his balance, falling down a long flight of stairs. At the city hospital last night it was said that whllp Byrne is not fatally hurt, his injuries are serious. H -.>!OKi*o-fioort |1 ■ CLASS Root* . H Ljj •lobb» H [1 •AUDIENCE. ftOOM _\ 11 [11« I II I • mm- THIRD A/JDJDPPE.R FLOORS BOY IS SCALDED BY UPSET OF COFFEE POT Four-Year-Old Is Hurt by Spilling of the Family Urn. Adebert Johnson, the four-year-old son of Samuel Johnson, 20G Arch street, was painfully scalded by boiling coffee at noon yesterday. The child's mother was pre paring dinner and her apron caught un der the lid of the coffee pot. She did not notice It, and when she walked away from the stove she dragged the pot with her. Little Adebert was standing by her side and_the pot's boiling contents was spilled over his body. His arms and legs were badly burned, but the child will prob ably recover. SAILORS TO HAVE TWO VACATIONS Navy Officials Believe Plan Will Di minish Desertions. WASHINGTON, D. C, April s.—The enlisted men of the ships of the bat tleship squadron are to be given a net leave of ten days when the vessels are docked for repairs in about a month and a half. This is made up of the Kearsarge, Alabama, Illinois, Massa chusetts, Indiana and lowa. The men on the Maine also will be given similar leave. When the vessels of the squad ron reach the mouth of Chesapeake bay from the South, where they have been during the winter, they are to be reviewed by Admiral Dewey and Rear Admiral Taylor, the chief of the bureau of navigation, after which most of them will proceed to the Northern navy yards for docking and repairs. The de partment feels that the men are en titled to this vacation after their long winter work. Hereafter it will be the aim to allow the enlisted men two rea sonably long vacations each year, one after the winter and another after the summer work is finished. Incidentally the officials think the double vacation will tend to diminish desertions. Section of Dun9muir Destroyed. REDDING, CaL, April s.—The entire business section of Dunsmuir was de stroyed by fire today. Loss, $50,000. THE ST. PAUI, OLOBE, MONDAY. APRIL, 6, 1903. PLANS FOR JEWISH TEMPLE ARE FIXED Work Is to Begin at Once on $60,000 Edi fice. At a meeting: of the trustees of the Jewish Temple association yesterday afternoon it was decided that the plans for the new temple, to be erected at Holly avenue and Avon street, sub mitted by Architect Clarence H. John ston be accepted. The edifice will be ornate and impos ing to a degree. The particular type of architecture will be classic in de sign, and in the West will be considered an entirely new departure. There is nothing of the school west of the Al legheny mountains. The frontage of ninety-six feet will be on Holly avenue, with a depth of ninety feet on Avon street. The lot upon which the structure will rest measures 118 by 120 feet, and an ap propriate gTass setting will be one of the chief beauties of the place. The edifice will be built of pressed brick relieved by Bedford stone trim mings, and a characteristic feature of •Oe.co/'id- Floor • it will be an elaborate stone portico, embellished with columns. The roof will be flat, and crowning- all will be a dome, the base of which will be sixty eight feet above the ground level. Standing back as it will from the side walk about thirty feet, a splendid view will be presented. Immediately upon entering the tem ple one will step into a larere vestibule from which a full view of the audi torium will be available. Looking in from this point of vantage one will see directly opposite him the organ loft and galleries, and running beneath them from the floor clear upwards, a solid paneled wainscoting, forming the background of the speaker's platform. Directly in the rear of the speaker will be the Ark —this latter to be one of the richest and most elaborate in the United States. The auditorium proper will have what is known as an arch ceiling that is, the whole will be formed of four great arches lifting themselves upward, and at their conjunction will be the great window, the principal source of illumination. Under the loft and galleries will be situated the women's parlor, pastor's study, toilet rooms and clothes closets. East of the church, and under the same roof, will be situated the school de partment; in the basement, kitchen, dining and toilet rooms. On the first floor will be the assembly and class rooms, with library and reading room adjoining. On the second floor will be additional class rooms. The gallery will be provided with a stair leading from the auditorium, and a private en trance opening on Avon street. Every thing will be finished in solid oak, with the exception of the tiled flooring of the vestibule. Around the auditorium will be seven symbolical windows and over each of these will be a rose window. The fittings will be of the most mod ern type available; the heating prin ciple will be steam, and the most im proved methods of artificial lighting will be employed. Although the papers will not be sign ed until today, the agreements have all been closed, and everything Is ready for the commencement of operations. Ground will be broken "immediately in order that the temple may be com pleted by the Jewish New Year in Sep tember. It Is estimated that the cost will aggregate between $50,000 antl $60,000, though the actual figures have not been given out. Charged With Robbing the Barkeep. John Oigley, a bartender in W J Byrne's saloon, East Seventh street' was robbed of his watch and a roll of bills while asleep early Saturday morn- Ing. M. MeCue Is arrested charged with perpetrating the deed. Oigley fell asleep Saturday mornin~ and while unconscious, it is allege^ McCue and another man rifled his pockets, taking a watcjural U e4 at $60, and $20 in currency. jH«Oue was ap prehended yesterday, fcpt his alleges accomplice has not yetfttoen taken into custody. ~ i•* MUST HAVE HEADLIGHTS ON AUTOMOBILES Cars Must Be Lit Up or Chaffeur Will Be Arrested. Automobiles must be supplied with headlights. Chief O'Connor will today issue an order that the ordinance regulating au tos be rigidly enforced. Several acci dents have occurred during the past few weeks r.n account of owners of automobiles failing to obey the ordi ance. The patrolmen are Instructed to ar rest the chaffeur of any machine not supplied with lights after dusk. WASHINGTON WOMAN COMMITS SUICIDE Mrs. Louis Ames Van Weik Found Dead in Jersey City Hotel. NEW YORK, April r>.—Mrs. Louis Ames Van Weik shot and killed herself at the Hotel Washington in Jersey City today. She was perhaps thirty-five to thirty-seven years of age, a blond and good looking. She arrived at Jersey City from the West Friday over the Pennsylvania railroad. She seemed in good spirits and was well supplied with money, and numerous packages arrived at the desk from New York stores for her. She was last seen alive Saturday evening by one of the maids of the hotel. Several bundles of letters were found addressed to Mrs. L. E. Wolf bauer, care of Mrs. Pease, 1250 McCul lough street, Baltimore, and to Mrs. Edward W. Wolfbauer. 1017 Fifteenth street northwest, Washington, D. C. All these were signed by Edward W. uolfbauer and addressed the recipient as wife. The most recently dated was in 1901 and most of the letters were written from various places in Cuba. Superintendent Sylvester of the Washington police was telegraphed to. He replied that he could not find any relative of the dead woman in Wash ington. She was known there, he said, and so far as he knew Mr. Wolfbauer was still alive. Something over a year ago Mrs. Wolfbauer left Washington for South Dakota and more recently obtained a divorce there. Of her sub sequent marriiige, if there was one. the Washington chief was ignorant. MOTORMAN IS SHOT FOR STOPPING PARADE Angry Italians Shoot Chicago Car Driver and Start a Riot. CHICAGO, April s.—Because he tffed to force his car through a parade that was blocking traffic in Halsted street tonight Motorman Zorab was Stfot and seriously injured by one of the, Biacth ers. Nearly 1,000 Italians, who were in the parade, broke ranks as"fe&bit v as the disturbance began, and a jjpt £t>l lowetf, 1n which switching irons, bricks and q£her. - jriis.siles were used.«-«i«~re sponse to a riot call a score of police men wewwi the scene in a few min utes, but before quiet could be restored several persons were severely cut and bruised. Two of the Italians" whoTTT Is supposed, did the shooting were ar rested. •.••• ■'.'-• >: /'. '■""' ■' ' ■ ' ' '' _ ■ ■• n» i • ■■; -..-.■.- _ FAMILY ROTTT F loV •>.■.....■.. . ——————^———— ■ -• -ri- ' .- Ripans Tabules arc a standard household remedy* Each tabule is an accurate dose, made separately* They are for men, women and children. They regulate the stomach, liver and bowels; keep them in a healthy con dition, prevent chronic and dangerous diseases, and restore the organs to a 1111 healthy condition when they have become diseased. -^^^^m Ripans. Tabules are a most economical remedy iflMi^jy For the c ivenience of families where the tabules : P|ll|fi are in constant use, they are put up in large bottles, each *J^^^^^^^^ containing one hundred and fifty tabules* Care should '^^^^^^^ • be taken to observe that the bottle is securely corked and Sags !m •. A BOTTLE. 'JN- ' L "L < 1 - |,B»||Wy»!| bears the trade-mark on the unbroken paper seal over I the cork* The tabules should never be bought in bottles Hffl m&? I t^lat aYe been tamere^ with* The price for the Family .M^^i^T^f^ | Bottle is sixty cents — 150 doses for sixty cents. WL BFLUJUSNKSS, H tis^M^. I " y°u cannot get a Family Bottle from your drug- «^ta£— I gist, send the pnce t sixty cents, to the manufacturers, The ■?*»«* .1 Ripans Chemical Co., 10 Spruce St., New York City, and they will send you one by return mail, postage paid. i FORCE WILL GAIN NOTHING FOR IRISH Joseph Devlin Says Ireland Must Conquer by Peace and Diplomacy. "All parties and classes in Ireland are agreed that 'physical force' will do no good to Ireland at the present time." So declared Joseph Devlin, M. P. for North Kinney, at a meeting of promi nent Irishmen held yesterday at the West hotel, Minneapolis. Mr. Devlin is in the United States for the purpose of interesting the Irish- Americans in the land bill which is now pending in the British parliament. He is being- accompanied on his American tour by former Congressman John F. Finerty, of Chicago, who is the president of the United Irish League of the United States. "Whatever limitations there may be in the representative," continued Mr. Devlin, "I claim today that no man has ever come to America armed with such a mandate and supported by such a backing as I hold. "I come as the mouthpiece of a great convention of the Irish people, com posed of delegates from the national priesthood, from the Irish leagues and ; from the Order of Hibernians. I do I not come here as the representative of any will-o-the-wisp policy. #The land for the people and Irish national self government' is my platform. "All parties and classes in Ireland have come to agree on the fact that Physical force' will do no good to Ire land at the present time. The flower of the Irish people has left the Fatherland. During the past fifty years the population has been decreas j ed through emigration by rtearly 50 ! per cent. There are today 4,500,000 old men, women and children to represent the physical force' of the country. "The tight we must make is one of peace and of diplomacy. And while the land bill now pending In the British parliament can be regarded as little more than the first step toward Irish freedom, nevertheless its passage will mean the reawakening of independence the revival of the physical strength, tha happiness of the people and the prom ise of a new race, which can find its real home in its home land. '•This is a time when triumph is in the air. All we need is one last mag nificent effort to carry it through Within the last eighteen months the British government has virtually ca pitulated to the cry of the Irish peo ple. The long, quiet fight of the Irish peasants is on the verge of victory." The sentiment of the conference was expressed as favoring the extending of an invitation to Mr. Devlin to make a public address in Minneapolis on April 21. Mr. Devlin accepted the invitation and a committee was appointed to ar range for the event. He will probably speak in St. Paul also. ORIENT SQUADRON WILL BE REINFORCED Boats in Asiatic Water Will Be Under Three General Heads. 1 WASHINGTON, D. C, April s.—The Tnlted States squadron at present in the Orient will be reinforced materially •as soon as the vessels now under or ders to proceed to those waters arrive there. The navy department, in mak ing this increase, contemplates squad rons in Asiatic and Philippine Avaters HP mm i&™SLEACH fiT W POR COMPLEXION Iwill send free trial bottle of my FACE BLEACH to any lady sending name and address. m& A. R U PPE RT, 6-E-i4'- hst.,NewYorkCify. HOW TO OBTAIN \gmg^^u §T » IP^ { CLEAR Qt VV» p BEAUTIFUL y^jjt''. It is every woman's duty to Was / 'jFrg&ft^^K youthful and good looking as possible, / ffiK^V^'^rvX anc* there is nothing which adds more / 'SSskiv beauty than a lovely complexion, and / (s&MiMh«^~^i!g&£ \ there 's no remedy which will restore / i^^l^^T^jS^l \ the complexion and give one that youth / Jt/JjisSfs ♦ flflf Wf \ v' aPP earance like Mme. A. Ruppert's / *Mr a pFXaL 9 \ World Renowned Face Bleach. 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It does this in so natural a xr^mii X^S-S^ / manner as to be entirely harmless to the \|«T^rv-^-——-^__}vlfe ' / m? st delicate complexion, and. having V%ss,r^^^^^ftre / th aclion. if cannot fail to produce ex \^^\\v'v^\^^K/ A M, )St marvelous results are obtained X*^SJ^%|TO.J^ when Face Bleach is used according to r Y'*-ii'- -*^ my new Special Directions in conjunc . . , ' tion with my Egyptian Balm, which nourishes and feeds the tissues and glands of the skin, and adds the finishing touch which refines, purifies and preserves the skin in its pristine splendor giving it the glow of youth. Now, in order that every lady reader of this paper may obtain the high test possible effects from the use of my preparations, I will make the following stupendous offer : A bottle of my Face Bleach, a trial jar of my Egyptian Balm, a bar of my most exquisite Almond Oil Com plexion Soap, my New Special Directions, my book, " How to be Beautiful"— all for $2. The price of Face Bleach alone is $2 per bottle, hence you receive the other articles absolutely free. Mail Orders filled promptly. Correspondence confidential. Mme. A. RUPPERT, 6 East 14th Street, New York City. under three general beads) viz., vessels of the line of battle, roadfi up of the battleships Kentucky, Oregon ;irid Wis consin, and the monitors Monterey and Monadanock, all of which are now there except tho Wisconsin; second, the cruiser squadron, made up <if the New Orleans, the Albany and tho Cin cinnati: the third squadron made up of gunboats and small craft desismori specially for service In the stnallei bodies of water where the larger ships because of their draught, are unable tc 3 go. The idea of the three-squadron formation is a favorite one with many naval officers, who, to some extent, have arranged its counterpart with the vessels of the Atlantic fleet. _^»- That reminds mo! By paying one year's subscription to the Globe I set credit for 700 votes in the Globe's popular voting contest! I must go to the Globe office today and vote for one of my friends.