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I I li 1 I l|l fl ii II I I •4 $ v. fr} ISSf fflawii GENERAL LABOR NEWS. Novel Description of Boycott. A New York special dispatch says: The boycott, it seems, has taken a new turn Not only are the retail dealers in imminent danger of a temporary in junction on their business from the brewers who sympathize with Ehret, but another cloud has arisen in the shape of a combination to put down the "pint of beer in a pail." Taken literally, this movement would not seem to be fraught with much danger, especially if the combination were on the part the comsuoiers but it is a crusade inaugurated among the dealers themselves. Some of them have held a meeting to take preliminary steps looking to a thorough organization of themselves for the purpose of abolish ing the seven-cent pint from the bar. This measure of beer has been the fav orite in the past with those who "work the growlers." Just what the "growl er" is, nobody can say, and its etymolo gical signicance is wrapped in still deeper doubt. Working the growler is getting beer in a pail or can and drink ing it outside the saloon. The dealers propose to abolish the pint and sell only a quart to the growler customers, for which they will chaxge ten cents. It is very doubtful if the customers will relish the change. The pint they get now is, including foam, at least seven tenths of a quart, and it is probably as much as they care to pay for. The sa loonists perceiving this, have decided to enforce their reform by the engine of industrial agitation commonly known as the boycott, though they are careful not to use the offensive word in their manifesto. I.1hey mean to so arrange matters that all dealers who refuse to agree to abolish the seven-cent ninb shall be unable to buy beer from the local brewery. It is not claimed that the brewers are in sympathy with the movement, but it is thought that they will be by a kind of reactionary move ment of the boycott. The dealers will refuse to patronize the brewers who fail to back them up in the crusade against the seven-cent pint. That is, the new boycott is provided with an at tachment to make it kick both ways. The Knights of Labor have perfected arrangements for their mammoth pic nic next Monday. Minneapolis Typographical Union y,o. 42 met in their hall Sunday l&3t. Business of importance was trans acted. The Labor Journal of St. Paul looms up with the regularity of clock-work every Monday morning. It deserves the support of the laboring men of Minnesota. In searching for men, and attempt ing to select or judge them, we should always judge as we lind them according to the merit of their deeds. In a word: we should go to the foundation to sip the waters of evidence we cannot get them right along the brook-side.—St. Paul Labor Journal. Tho convict contract system is a great injury to all honest labor and ought to be done away with at once, but the question sinks into insigni ficance beside the eight-hour question or the employment of child labor. Therefore workingmen must insist that the two latter questions shall be solyed in connection with or in preference to the former. Do not work for any man for the legislature who will not agree to devote his time while there in making ail of them accomplished facts. If we dispose of these questions this year, next year we will be ready to go at something else. let our motto be "This one thing I do." The Scandinavian Workingmens' Union picnic at Lake Forest last Sun day was largely attended and was a great success. The train arrived at Lake Forest at 9:30 a. m. The Iwor inania band, plavinga beautiful march, headed the delegation from the depot, to the picnic grounds close to the lake, and there tne Minnaanolis people were royally received by the Scandinavians of that part of Washington county. Judge Hand spoke for upwards of an hour on the labor question, eulogizing the Knights of I^abor, and appealed to the Scandinavian workmgmen to co operate with that order. The Scandi navian Workingmen's Union is in creasing rapidly in numbers and are doing good work in the interest of la bor. The question for child labor is one of the burning issues of the day. It is enough to make the heart of any man with a particle of humanity bleed to walk through the great stores and manufacturing establishments of Chi cago and elsewhere, and see the wee little bits of children girls and boys that are compelled to work from ten to fifteen hours every day to earn their little mite towards keeping the floi^r .barrel full. These children are grotf^ ing up in ignorance and vice and tiie* places at which they are jtfe. the recognized recruiting ^Bc5s ffttltie,' jails, penitentiaries and bawdy houses. Here is a good point of beginning for gome of the so-called prison reform as sociations reform the children before they grow up to become criminals. Ko child should be allowed, to go,out to employment until it is sixteen if their parents are cot able to eaucajte them thc state should do so, and they will lie more than recompensed by the decrease in crime-—-Knights of Labor. Iketch of the Man Who Is Alleged to Have Incited tlie Recent Murders in Chicago. August Spies came to this country when sixteen years of age. He is now about thirty-two. He had little school ing in the old country, but has always been a student on his own hook. He learned the trade of saddle-maker in Chicago, but gave up this occupation when he was twenty years of age, and tramped through the West and South for a couple of years. When twenty four he went back to Chicago,$ and soon took part in politics. At that time there were no Anarchists in Chi cago. Spies himself was a Socialist, and being a good speaker he soon rose to be a leader of the Socialists, who were so strong that they cast ten thou sand voles for their" candidate for mayor, Dr. Eriist Schmidt. Spies be came afterward manager of the Social istic daily in Chicago, the Arbeiter Zei tung, which had at that time a big cir culation and great influence with the working-men. Spies urged his friends to make him managing editor as well as business manager, and he gradually molded the Socialistic Arbeiter Zeitung into an Anarchist organ after the style of the Freihdt, whose editor, Herr Most, is a particular friend ot Spies, with whom he is constantly in corre spondence. Spies destroyed the circulation and influence of the paper by the change he made, and it became simply the mouthpiece of dynamiters and the dan gerous classes. It printed Most's in structions to manufacture dynamite and bombs, and advised the toiling masses to arm themselves against their "enemies" to spare no one, not wife nor child, in the great struggle for free dom which was going to come. An incident in the life of the Anar chist leader made him a bitter foe to the police. His brother William HOW THEY Avas shot and killed by a policeman in the summer of 1884. William was a good for-nothing fellow who lived off his brother. Two months before he met his death he was a leader in a fight by which a farmer living near Chicago lost his life. He was tried for the mur der, but the influence of the Arbeiter Zeitung was yet strong enough to se cure liis discharge. He went back to his old life of idleness and lawlessness, and was shot and killed while resist ing an officer who wanted to arrest him. Then August Spies vowed ven geance upon the police, and he has kept his oath. Spies wears good clothes and is an expert shot, but strange to say, he al most faints at the sight of blood.—N. Y. Sun. FIXED IT. A. Clothing-Dealer's FJow of th® Milk oi Human Kindness. A man with a bundle under his arm called at a Michigan avenue clothing store the other evening and hesitating ly inquired if the proprietor ever bought second-hand clothing. "Vhell, I puys sooch garments vonce in awhile. Vilas you a Sheneral in der last war?1' "No, sir.'1 "Dot makes it badt. I could pay you two dollars? for dot coat if you vhas a Sheneral, and may be somebody gif me four. Vhas you a Congressman? "No." "Too badt. Shust now dere vhas a demand for Co7igressman'sold clothes. Vhas you some candidate for Governor last time?" "Not that I remember of." "Mebbe you vhas a great inventor?" "I can't say that 1 am. The only thing I ever invented was an excuse." "Vhell, you see how it vhas? If you vhas some celebrated man your old clothes go off like hot cakes. If you vhas nopody deu nopody puys'em. How mooch you vhant for dot coat?" "Three dollars." "Tree dollar! Say, you go right oudt of my blace! 1 doan' haf some time to fool away with lunatics!" "Give me two!" "Two dollar! Gif you der same price ash a great Sheneral! Please go oudt, my headt aches!" "Well, take it for twelve shillings." "My frendt, look in my eye! You vhas a poor man, und .1 like to do right py you. I haf my rules laid down not to puy clothes oxcept of great men, but I preak 'em for you. I gif you seventy five cents for dot coat, und I pin 011 him a card dot you vhas a celebrated poet. I do dot mooch to help you oudt." 'Give me a dollar and put on the card that I am a celebrated artist." "No, my frendl. Der werry best I could do vhas to gif you ninety cents und put on dot you vhas a celebrated musician." They bargained on that, and the stranger went away, saying: "You can spell celebrated with a big 'C,' and depend upon me not to give you away."—Detroit Free Press. A SMART YOUTH. The Old-Fashloned Way of Getting Mar ried Is Good Enough for Him. "Mother, young Brown was in the store to-day, asking if he couldn't have our Kate," said an old gentleman down in "Kaintuck" to his spouse. "Well,-he's a good fellow," she re plied, "and I don't believe that Kate can do better." "That's what I thought, so I told him he couldn't have her, aud invited him to leave, and what do you suppose he said?" "I'm sure I don't know." ... ".WeJl, beis.a Qnew mother, and "to*nii lltel Jrie the wink, Il*i4b!er4n-lawf I'm d£a4.oppf*se4 to,ekp ..The old gfjjflft/ nVtrrijJ Jrefn tsosutf genii fincrugfi /or is» t«as romantic as cutting it across the coun try at midnight, but, for a starter, I want the bed-clothes and milch cow and troiisseau and other knick-knacks that go with the old way. I know it will come a little higher for you, but you will have to stand it* V' "A,nd what are you going to do about a "Do? Why, sell some hogs, and rig. Kate dot, of course. It's all we can do."—Comic Weekly. —The only ordained clergyman in Congress is Representative Anderson, of Kansas. .. —C. K. Lord, the general passenger agent, is said to be the best-paid officer !f the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Com pany. His salary is §10,000. —Hugh Conway's story "Living or Dead," was, it has been discovered, written by one Joseph Williams, a Lon don seribbler.— Chicago Inter Ocean. —Mrs. Lew, aged eighteen years, of Columbus, O., is the heroine of two marriages. She was first married when but fourteen years old.—Cleveland Leader. —The Baltimore American has in its jareer of 113 years been defendant in 5fty-five libel suits, and in only one has it ever suffered a verdict for damages, iud in that one case the damages were Jrifling. —Dr. William H. Mather, of Suffield, Conn., has been convicted of libeling a lead man, and fined twenty-eight dol lars and costs. He wrote letters to Mrs. Ephraim West reflecting on the sharacter of her dead husband. —The new secretary oi the Chinese legation at Washington is named Mr. Lang. He is civilized enough to know bow to make a pun in English. At a reception the other evening he told a lady that "Auld Lang Syne" was one of his ancestors. —John Ruskin confesses that he would rather please the girls than do any other one thing. "My primary thought," he avows, "is how to serve them and make them happy and if they could use me for a plank bridge over a stream or set me up for a post to tie a swing to, or any thing of the 3ort not requiring me to talk, I should be quite happy in such a promotion." —"Ulysses S. Grant, Jr., has been out in Colorado attending to the de tails of settling up the estate of his fa ther-in-law, the late Jerome B. Chaf fee," says the Washington Hatchet "The value of the property which is left to Mrs. Ulysses S. Grant can not b« determined, as the bulk of it is in mining interests. Carefully nursed, however, it will probably "aggregate about $300,000. All this "will remain in Mrs. Grant's name." —Charles A. Da)ia is sixty-six years old, but looks fully ten years younger. He goes to the Sun office at eleven in the morning and leaves at four in the afternoon. All his editorials are dic tated to a stenographer. When dicta ting he allows no one to interrupt him, though usually accessible to all per sons, thus preserving his line of thought unbroken. His office is plain ly furnished, the walls being covered with photographs of dead friends. His health is almost perfect.—27. Y. Mail. —One of the most striking figures Been in Washington is the son of ex President John Tyler. He is now an old man bent with the weight of years. His long, white, patriarchal beard sweeps down from his venerable face, nearly covering his broad breast. He wears a soft hat slouched well down over his deeply set eyes, and is .dressed generally in a careless suit of badly cut black. He is rarely noticed, and walks the street to most people unknown. Yet in his day he was considered one of the handsomest men who ever graced the society of Washington. HUMOROUS. —"I call my wife dear," said Bagley, reflectively, "because she is."—-Phila delphia Call. —"Canyon sell me a love philter?" she asked of the handsome drug clerk. "JNo, ma'am," said he. "Don't keep filters here have to go to a tin-shop." —Chicaqo Tribune. —What She Wanted.— The moon shone sol'tly down on them And lite seemed more thau words could utter. He said: "We'll live on love, my gem." She said she wanted in sad and butter. -Merchant Traveler. —An old sea captain says he gets sick every time he crosses the ocean. It is inferred that although he may never have written any thing for the Century, he contributes to the Atlantic monthly.—Puck. —"What produces a feeling of pros tration in the spring?" asks a corres pondent. Two things will do it— doubting the veracity of a pugilist and trying to coax a bicycle ov'er a stone.— Burlington Free Press. —You have to call for sakerheit standsticker in Sweden when you want a match. Usually it is daylight before you get through and you don't need one. The Swedes are very economical people. —Somerville Journal. —It is a very easy matter for a per son to be in two places at the same time, even though those two places be thousands of miles apart. One fre quently heara of a man being in a strange country and home, sick.— Texas Siftings. —"O mamma, you'd be surprised to know how dumb Bessie Barton is. She took me into what she said was the apiary. What do you think I saw there?" "I don't know, dear." "Why, nothing but a lot of beehives. Thei*e were no apes there: not even a monkey."—Philadelphia Call, —"There's a good deal in the papers now about sending dressed beef from Texas to England," observed Mrs. Snaggs. "Yes, I noticed it," answered her husband, listlessly. "Well, now I think that real merciful to the animals in cold weather. But what kind of clothes do they put on them?"— Pittsburgh Chronicle. —"It looks like wain, old feilaw. I guess we'd bettaw have a hansom." "what do you want a hansom for? It's only half a dozen blocks and you've got your umbrella." "Yaas, deah boy. But it's my walking umbwellaw. I cawn't use it faw a wain umbwellaw.I could nevaw wap it up again, don't you know ."—Town Topics. —Bass is not only a very polite man, but he is a man who never loses his presence of mind. The other day he was standing in a horse-car. It sud denly struck a coal cart and Bass was sent to grass in short, he was knocked down. As he rose, he saw- a lady stand ing. His spirit- of ^gallantry was touched. Bowing politely, he said: ••Take my seat, madaxhe.' It, is pre sumed that she prefered to stand.—N. F. Sun. Strange Problems of the Brain for Science to Puzzle Over. There is in Great Britain a Society of Psychical Research, which is occupied with scientific examination of mesmer ism, clairvoyance, mind-reading, ghost-seeing, spiritualism and all simi lar phenomena. It is composed of gentlemen of various occupations, and various religious beliefs, who carefully examine the singular psychical phe nomena reported by spiritualists and others, to find out just what there is inJ them. One important service ren dered to the cause of truth by the so ciety was the examination and expos ure of the tricks by which Madame Blavatsky, the theosophist, was delud ing even shrewd and well-informed men in India. But the purpose of this notice of the society is to describe briefly one class of experiments made by it. It was found that the mesmer ists and other persons akin to them were able to impress their own thoughts upon the minds of mediums and to a remarkable extent. Therefore, these gentlemen tested the matter among themselves, to ascertain just how far one mind could impress itself upon another. On*, of them, being blind folded, was elated on a chair and sup plied with a sheet of paper and a lead pencil. Another left the room and drew on another sheet of paper what figure he pleased. Returning to the room, holding this drawing before him: and fixing his mind intently upon it, he stood, behind the blindfolded man on the chair. The man on the chair in a few moments began to draw, and re peated on his paper the figure his friend had sketched in the hall. An accomplished botanist, a member of the society, was selected to fix hi* mind intently on a botanical term and see whether it would be communicated to the blindfolded man. He chose the name of a rare East India plant, rer cently discovered, the name being a very unusual one and of six or eight syllables. The man on the chair wrote it at once. Other experiments were made to ascertain the distance from which one mind could so impress itself upon another, with very interesting re sults. In one case, very carefully in vestigated, it was found that the thoughts of a dying mother in England, which she expressed in words to those around her, were impressed upon the mind of her son in India. It was also found, as would be expected, that some minds would convey their thoughts and strong emotions more readily and dis tinctly than others, and that some would receive impressions with special distinctness and facility. Talking of these tests recently with a friend, who has been a professor un til within a short time in an important institution, he described a trial made at his residence by a company of ac quaintances who were spending an evening with his family. At his sug gestion and as an experiment which might afford amusement and instruc tion, a lady was chosen, was blindfold ed and seated on a chair, and was fur nished with pencil and paper. The professor left the room and in the hall drew a zig-zag, nondescript figure on a paper he held. Returning and stand ing behind the lady on the chair and fastening his mind intently on his draw ings, she began in a few moments to draw slowly the irregular lines he had put on his paper. To test the matter still further he again left the room and drew as per fect a circle as he could on a fresh pa per. Returning, and under the same conditions, the lady drew a similar circle, then hesitated a moment, and, to the surprise of all, drew a straight line from above the circle down into it. In a moment he remem bered that on going out the second time his first intention had been to draw as perfect, a rectangle as he could, and that he had carried out this inten tion so far as to draw the perpendicu lar line of one side of the figure, and inadvertently left this line on the side of the paper when he changed his mind in favor of the circle. The lady had followed a reversed order of the pro cesses of his mind, and, the first inten tion being jndistiuct in him, had in a hesitating way repeated the straight line and carried it into the circle, in stead of keeping it outside of it.— Philadelphia Call. A FRANK MAN. Why He Became an Inmate of the State Penitentiary. The superintendent of the peniten tiary, while conducting a party of la dies and gentlemen through, the estab lishment, remarked: "It is proverbial, you know, how many innocent men you find in the penitentiary. Even after being con victed, men do not like to acknowledge their guilt. Say," he called, address inga convict, "what were you put in here for?" "I was accused of stealin' a hosa." "But you didn't do it, did you?" "No, sir." "There are a few of them," added the superintendent, "who will tell the iruth. Now yonder comes a fellow who can't tell the truth. Now note his replies to my questions. Filigree, you were innocent, were you not?" "Innocent o' some things, yes, sir." "Will you answer me truly if I ask you a questionP" "Yes, sir." "Why were you put in this place? Tell the truth, now." "Because I couldn't help myself." "Ah," exclaimed the superintendent, "you shall be rewarded for such frank ness." That day at dinner the frank man re ceived two extra teaspoonfuls of bean soap.—Arkamaw Traveler. —John Bridgman was bitten on the right temple by a skunk while pros pecting in Texas. He went to Dallas, and a so-called madstone was applied and clung to the wound, five hours be fore it dropped off. The Waco Exam iner says.he was in that city a few days ago suffering from the wound and look ing. foB another madstone. The bite of a skunk is thought dangerous. vi —A Jackson (Miss.) gentleman claims to.be able to write 1,400 words 'On the blank side of a postal-card so that it can be easily read with a glass. CHURCH AND SOCIETY DIEE0T0RY. CHUBCHKS Church of the Immaculate Conception—Third, St. and 3d ave. n. Pastor, Bev. Jas. McGolrick. Church of the Most Holy Rosary—Fifth and 19th ave. south. Prior, Rev. J. A. Daly, O. P. St Anthony of Padua—Main st. and 8th ave. northeast. Pastor, Rev. F. Tissot. Notre Dame de Lourdes—No. 18 Second st. southeast. Pastor, Rev. Father Dagnault. Church of St. Stephen—No. 2,201 Clintcn ave. Rev. P. Kenny, pastor. St. Boniface—Cor. 2nd st and Tth ave. n. e. Pastor, Rev. Bartholomew Rajgelj, O. S. B. St. Joseph—Fifth st. and 11th ave. noith. Pastor, Rev. Andrew Straub. St. Elizabeth—8th street and loth ave. south. Pastor, r. St. Clotilda—Lyndale and 11th ave. north. Pastor, Rev. S. Nougraret. SOCIETIES. St. Vincent de Paul—Meets Sunday at 13:15 at Association hall. Immaculate Conception Benevolent—Meets on 2nd and l'h riday evenings of each month at Association hall. Catholic Kuights Meets the 2d and 4th Wednesday evenings of each month in Associa tion hail at 8 o'clock. Father Mathew Temperance—Meets Sunday at p. m., at Association hall Crusaders' Total Abstinence—Meets Tuesday at 8 p. m., at Association hall. Cadets—Monday at 1:30 p. m. Meet in Church of Immaculate Conception. Young Ladies' oda lity of the Blessed Virgin Mary—Sunday at p. m., at Association hall. Ladies' loly Rosary—First Sunday of each month at 12:30 p. m. at Association hall. Perpetual Adoration—Meets at Association hall 2nd Sunday of each month at 12:30 p. m. Holy Angels Sodality—Meets each Friday af ternoon at o'clock at Association hall. Orphan Asylum—For boys. Third street and 6th avenue north: direotors meet at residence of Father McGolrick on 2nd Tuesday of each month, at 7 p. m. Convent oi' Holy Angels and Boarding-school for Young Ladies—743 4th street north taught by Sisters of St. Joseph. St. Mary's Total Abstinence—Meets Sunday at 4 at Holy Rosary hall. Crusaders—Meets Tuesday at 8 in Holy Rosary hall. Cadets—Meets Sunday at 2 in in Holy Rosary hall. Holy Name—Meets 2nd Sunday of the month at 2 m. Young Ladies' Sodality—Meets Sunday at 3 iu. Holy Rosary hall. Altar Society—1st Sunday of Month, 3 pm. Meets at Holy Rosary hall. St. Vincent de Paul—Meets Sunday afternoon at 12o'clock in school-house, East Division. St. Anthony—Meeta Sunday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock, in school-house, East Division. Crusaders—Meets at school-houae, East Di visional onday evenings at 8 o'clock. Sodality of the Blessed Virgin—Meeta imme diately after Vespers at the convent, E. D. Holy Rosary—Meets first Sunday in each month, after mass, at the convent. E. D. Holy Angels Sodality—Meets Sunday after Vespers in the convent, E. D. St Joseph's—18 2nd street southeast. Meets first and 3d Mondays of each month, 7:30 p. in League of the Sacred Heart—18 Secoud street south. Meets once a month after mass. ANCIENT ORDER OF HIBERNIANS. Division No. 1—Meets 2nd and 4th Sundays of each month, 2:30 o'clock, at Windom Hall. Division No 2—Meets 1st Sunday of each month at 2 o'clock, corner Cedar and Washing ton avenues south. Division No 3—Meets 2nd and 4th Tuesday evenings of each month at 7:30 o'clock,' at Rose's hall, cor. 2nd St. and Central av.e, E. D. BUILDING AND LOAN. Meets the 1st Thursday after the 15th of each month. CHURCH AND SOCIETY DIRECTORY ST. PAUL. CHURCHES. Cathedral—Sixth and St, Peter streets Rev. John Shanley, pastor. Assumption—Ninth and Franklin streets, Rew.V. rim ruler, O. S. B., pastor. St. Mary's—Ninth and Locust streets, Rev. L. Caillet, pastor. St. Louis—Wabasha and Exchange streets, Rev. C. Geiiis, pastor. St. Stanislaus—Western avenue and Superior street, Rev. John Rynda, pastor. St. Joseph's—Carroll street and Virginia avenue, Rev. James L.Keane, pastor. St. Michael's—West St. Paul, Rev. P. Gal lagher, pastor. St. Adalbert's—Charles street, Rev. D. Ma~ jer, pastor. Sacrecl Heart—Dawson and Arcadfe streets Dayton's Bluff, Rev. Chas. Koeberl, pastor. St. Francis de Sales—West Seventh and James streets, Rev. J. N. Stariha, pastor. St. Patrick's—Mississippi and Case streets, Rev. D. Reilly, pastor. SOCIETIES. Catholic Benevolent—Meets first Wednesday in each month in Crusaders' hall. Pius the Ninth Benevolent—Meets first Thurs day in each month, in Crusaders' hall. St. Clement's Benevolent—Meets every sec ond Wednesday of each month at hall on Ex change street, near St. Peter. St. Peter's Benevolent—Meets first Monday in each month Exchange street, corner Ninth. German Catholic Aid Association—Assump tion hail, Exchange, near Ninth. St. Joseph's German Catholic Orphan's so ciety—Meets first Tuesday of each month, cor nec Exchange aud Ninth. St. Vincent de Paul societies, connected with the Cathedral, St. Mary's, St. Michael's, St. Joseph's, St. Louis, meet every Sunday. Society of L' Union Francaise Benevolent— Meetlfirst and third Mondays of each month, in basement of St. Louis church. TOTAL ABSTINENCE SOCIETIES. Crusaders—Meet every Sunday at 3 p. m., in Crusrders' hall, on Wabasha street. Father Mathew—Meets every Sunday at 4:30 p. m. in basement of Cathedral. League of the Cross—Meeta every Monday evening' in St. Michael's hall, in West St. Paul. St.. Patrick's—Meets every Sunday at 9:30 a. m., in school house adjoining St. Patrick's church, on Mississippi street. St. Joseph T. A. society—Meets every Sunday at 8 p. m., in basement of St. Joseph's church. Cathedral Cadets—Meet every second Sunday at 2 p. m. in Crusaders' hall. West St. Paul Cadets—Meet every Monday at 7:30 p. m.,inSt. Michael's hall. Home of the Good 3hepherd—Minnehaha, near Victoria street. St. Joseph Orphan Asylum {German)—15)9 West Ninth street. St. Joseph's Hospital—Exchange, between St Peter and Ninth. St Mary's Home—571 Westminster. Young Girls' Home—t. Peter street, near Igletart. Ancient Order of Hibernians, Division No. 1. —Meets second and fourth Mondays of every month. Division No. 2—Meets fir3t and third Wednes days of everv month. Division No. 3.—Meets second and fourth Thursdays of every month.' St, Aloyeius Young Men's society (German)— Meets third Sunday in each month in Assump tion hall, on Exchange street. Young Mien's Catholic Union Meets at Knauft's hall, on Seventh street. Catholic Orphan Asylum—Carrol street, cor ner Victoria. AT YOUR OWN PRICE. aloon Counters, Ice Boxes, Mirrors, Store Counters, Shelving, Circle Front Grocery, Bins, etc. A Full Stock Always on Hand! Please give us a call and convince yourself. The Chicago Saloon asd Store Fixture Co,, 217 First Avenue North, corner Washington Avenue, Minneapolis, Minn. isi-lop T^eYce-iI P. J. DONOHOE, Contractor Arriving Trains—At Builder ANI) Plans and estimates furnished for all classes of buildings. 2011 bloomtngto Nt AY. S. Alterations and Repairs Promptly Executed. Gleason & Byorum, UNDERTAKERS AND EMBALMERS, 324 Cedar Avenue AI.SO 223 Plymouth Avenue. A. complete stock of everything in our line always on hand. Open day and night. Cedar avenue call, 015-2. Wisconsin Central Line. The Palace, Sleeping and Parlo/ Car Koute to Chicago. Commencing Monday, July 2Sth, the follow ing time caul will be in efiect from St. Paul and Minneapolis via our new through line to Chi cago and Mihvaukee: Departing Trains—From Minne'p'lis Chicago Day Express Milwaukee, Chicago, Oshkosb, Fonddu Lac Neeriah. Waukesha & Ea,u Claire Chicago NufiitExpress— St. Paul. 1:45 p. m. Milwaukee, Chicago, Oshkosh,Fond du Lac*,j Neenah, Waukesha & Eau Cluire 2:26 p. m. 8:20p.m. I 9:00p.m. St. Minne'p'lis Paul. Chicago Day Express— From Chicago, Mil waukee Oshkosh,Fond du Lac and Neenah... 7:50 a. in. 7.15 a. in. Ciiieapo Might Express— From Milwaukee, Chi cago, Oshkosh, Nee nth and Kond du Luc.. 3:40 p. ni. I 3:00 p. m, All trains daily, Sundays included. Chicago Day Express arrivesatChieago.. 1 a. m. Chicago Night Ex preys arrives at Chicago 2 i.i. in. Through ear service. All trains curry elegant day coaches, superb sleepers and luxurious dining cars. Without change between Minne apolis, St. TV.ul and Chicago. For tickets, rates, berths in sleepers and all detailed in formation apply to the CITY OFFICES. Minneapolis—No. 19 Nicollet House Block, corner of Nicollet and Washington avenues. F. H. ANSON. T, XT Northwestern Passenger Agent. St. Paul—No. 178 East Third street, Merch ants Hotel Block. C. E. Ross, City Ticket Agent. F. N. FINNEY,- JAMES BARKER, General Manager, General Passenger and -Milwaukee. Ticket Agent. Painless Dentists. Dr, W. J. Hurd, Manager and Prop. 37 Washington Ave. S. First-class workmen, low prices, aud the only pain-1 less establishment in the city. The White is King! Th3 Great Double FeedSswingMachme WHITE THE rs A Beautiful, Keliable, Quiet. Light Run ning, PERFECT SEWING MACHINE, With its Automatic Bobbin-Winder, New Patent Vibrator, Perfect Belt Re placer, Double Feed and Elegant. At tachments is the Best Satisfying Sew ing Machine in the WorJd. Repairing all makes machines a 1 specialty. Call and see us. 4 F. W. BARRETT, 314 UI00LLET AVENUE. \f