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Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 20

Star Tribune from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 20

Publication:
Star Tribunei
Location:
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
20
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

(12) TAGK EIGHT -f THE MINNEAPOLIS SUNDAY TRIBUNE: r)ErErII)ER 0 1017 "Having to go and live in Sved i't such a pleasant fate neither," Morris observed. "Say!" Abe exclaimed, "therej only one thing that a Russian revolutionary dictator really and truly worries about." "What is that?" Morris said. "Losing his voice," Alio said. (Copyright, 11)17, by the McCInre 'Syndicate.) The next article in thin scries will be "Potash Perlmutter Discuss the Sugar Question." second Nijni-NovogoroJ infantry, and a regiment composed of contingents from the Ladies'Aid Society of the First Universal church of Minsk, Daughters of the Revolution of 1003, the Y. W.

II. and the Women's City club of Odessa. Twenty minutes later, he is on board a boat bound for Sweden, and after looking up the Ganeves in his stateroom, ho comes up on decis and spends the rest of the trip making Socialistic addresses to the crew, the passengers and the cargo." A MINNEAPOLIS ARTIST AND HER ART I lit 1 M- i at ANCHOR Minneapolis Shown 1 L' Painters' Paradise while past experience as a street car conductor may give the necessary endurance, it don't help out much when it comes to systematizing the day's work of a Russian dictator. For instance, we would say that he goes into office at nine o'clock with the heb of the 101st Kazan regiment, six companies of Cossacks, and the Tenth Poltava Separate Company of Machine Gunners. After making a Socialistic address to the survivors, he washes off the blood and puts on a clean collar, or in the case of a Bolsheviki dictator, he only washes off the blood.

"The next thing on the program is to ring up a few flag and bunting concerns and ask for representatives to call about taking an order for a few national flags. They arrive half an hour later, and after making a Socialistic address, y'understand, he picks out a design for immediate delivery, because even a few hours' delay will make a design for a Russian national flag as big a sticker as a 1910 model runabout- "When he's got the flag off his mind.he next interviews the Russian composers, Glazounow, Eor-odine, Arensky and Scriabine, and after making a Socialistic address, he invites them they To Live Long! A recipe given by a famous physician ffff long life was: "Keep the kidneys in good order! Try to eliminate thru tho skin and intestines the poisons that otherwise clog the kidneys. Avoid routing meat as much as possible; av too much salt, alcohol, tea. Try a milk and vegetable diet. Drink plenty of water and exercise so you sweat the skin helps to eliminate the toxic poisons and uric acid." For tliose fhnst tniddlo life, for tho.

easily recognized symptoms of inflani matioii, as backache, scalding "water" or if urie acid in the blood lias caused rheumatism, "rusty" joints, stiffness, get Anurie at the drug store. This is a wonderful eliminator of uric acid and was discovered by Dr. Fierce of Invalids' Hotel, X. Y. If your druggist does not keep it send 10 cents to Dr.

Fierce for trial package and you will find that it is many times more potent than lithia and that it dissolves uric acid as hot water does sugar. Many Women of Our Home State Would Testify. used Dr. Fierce 's Favorite Prescription to hlp me during expectancy and can say that it," is all that is claimed fjr it. I also ioois the l'leas- r.u,.

i' i llim HI the same time and initiif innv nrn f' "plemlid purga- five. I have four ehildnii iind we are all in perfect "The pcople'is conimon sense medical adviser is a great help to me in bringing up my family. I gladb' rec ommend Dr. Pierce's jedies to those who need them. "Mrs.

J. Allen, N. Front Street. bend Dr. V.

M. Pierre, Buffalo, X. 10 cents for trial package of the tablet'. Advertisement. Karat.

Seamless Gold offer you are heavily inn 1t tu Karat Li seams to tar- fUFi nifh and become black. Maukato, Minn. fifi! ill i il I it i tr Until Dec. 21th we will allow round trip railroad fare, within 100 miles'of Minneapolis, to all patients having a reasonable amount of dental work done at our offices. Don't overlook this chance to TRAVEL FREE and do your Christmas shopping in Minneapolis, by having your Dental Work done by us.

ITy $J- I Bridge White or of I Work IK -Gold Per Tooth. 1 Crowns. 41 RIVER FLAT5 1 JfXJV The 22 Crowns we IIP VVC-S VI. 7 LSijf.A $10 value should submit a new national anthem, the only requirements being that it should contain a reference to the fact that under the old competitive system, the workingman did not receive the whole fruits of his labor, and that delivery should be made not later than 12:30 p. m.

He then goes over to the mint to decide upon models for a new g6ld coinage, and to confiscate as much of the old one as they have on hand. After making a Socialistic address to the director of the mint and his staff, y'understand. he agrees that the old cleanshaven Kerensky designs shall be altered by adding whiskers, because you know as w'ell as I do, Mawruss, when it comes to the portrait on a gold coin, nobody is going to take it so particular about the likeness not being so good, as long as it ain't plugged. EMERGENCY ADDRESSES. "He then goes back to his office and prepares a Socialistic address to be delivered to the duma, a Socialistic address to be delivered to the army, and three or four more Socialistic addresses with the names in blank for use in case of emergency," Abe continued, "and so one way or another he is kept busy right up to the time when word comes that his successor has just left Tsarkoe-Seloe with Thirty- 1 If ADA NVOLFE.

Potash and Perlmutter Revolution Business (Continue From Page 2.) the listeners get for trying such ideas out are very, very private." TALKERS KEPT BUSY. "At that, them talking Social ists which is takincr shifts with each othfi running the Rus. alan government mit ue put- i i ii i i iing in a pretty Dusy time, iuaw-russ, because there's a whole lot of detail to such a job, and OUT-OF-TOWN PATIENTS We have every convenience for your comfort when visiting our offices. We will take impression of your mouth in the morning, and have your set ready game day, where desired. Get our estimate before having work done.

We will ae you money. 20 Year Guarantee, I iv I ('ola Fillings 91 I Free Examination reeth cleaned sei Wf Administer Nitrons Oxide Can for Painless Extraction. EASTERN DENTAL CO. 526 NICOLLET A EN UK. SECOND FLOOR.

Open 8:30 A. to 6 I. M. Sunday 10:00 to 1. Open Wednesdays and Saturday) Lntil 9 1'.

M. Lady Attendants. a.sNJ KEEPING (SEtTSE DOWN "stood guard all afternoon just inside her picket fence, afraid we might turn to painting that. But their lack of hospitality doesn't lessen the attraction down there to a painter." Minneapolis architecture is suggested, too, for there are a strongly painted view of tlie Art institute on a sunjiy day, and an attractive study of the high domed white buildings at the fair grounds. The- bath houses and their surrounding crowds furnish bright toned studies of strong sunlight.

Difficult Subject Shown. Standing cut from all the others for its faithful depicting of a difficult Fiib- inct, as well as for the unusual choice of material, is a large canvas picturing a table set with gold banded china, grape fruit and glasses of wine at each place, and a white clad woman pouring, all ng.iinst a mellow-toned tapestry background. White linen and china, the yellows of the gold and fruitrand tho reds and purples of the wine td.ln-ing through the glass make the composition a striking handling of a most complex problem in painting. "I spent three weeks on that study," admits Miss Wolfe. "After I started it I couldn't let it go." And the difficulties met and overcome in the time devoted to that one study may be guessed when one learns that in the two weeks of her Dulutli trip she painted more than two dozen studies of Superior.

Winter cold and summer heat have not possessed any terror for her, for interesting studies of snow covered hills- and roads re there, as well as canvasses clearly suggesting the hot suns as well as the brilliant colors of the harvest peiiod. Studied in New York. After studying under Hubert Koehler 5n the Minneapolis School of Art, Miss Wolfe went to New York, where she worked under Chase, his school then being the largest iu New York. Frank Vincent Pumoml and Luis Mora also were her instructors. Unlike most students, Miss Wolfe was little affected permanently by any of her masters, ac-tpiiring art undainetitals from them without developing any deep tiou of their styles.

"I think I gained more when I studied here at the Minneapolis school in Gustav vou Schlrgel'8 classes than with anyone else," Miss Wolfe says. Mr. Yon Schlegel, a Minneapolis man, who this summer gave up his position in the St. Louis Art school to graduate from the first officers' training cam), taught to years here just after his return from a long stay in Faris. "He taught me how to think more clearly about color and composition, as well as how to handle my medium better," Miss Wolfe explaWis.

She admits her belief that Rembrandt is the greatest of all painters, and, surprising as it may seem after Her cnoie of old masters, says she likes Cesane originator and leader of the modernist movement, best of all artists of the present whose work ohe has studied Hard Work the Solution. "I am not sure whether 1 am a modernist," she says. "W'c never fee their work out here, and it is hard to judge from reproductions, but they seem to think they have found something iu art that all the rest of us have been looking for, a freedom and breadth of expression not reached before. I believe the only way to get it to keep right on working as hard and as fast as one can; maybe then it will come, but certainly no other way." And she certainly practises what she preaches, for it is 'believed no artist in the city has accomplished so much in the last 10 years as has Ada Wolfe, quietly, but persistently painting everything about her thus revealing to others beauty spots in their home town that hitherto have been unpictured and unknown. The best isinglass comes from Russia.

It is made from the giant Rtur-geon, which 'abounds in tho Caspian sea and other waters of that country. Mrs. Harrison L. Smith of Snco, has a Killarney rose hutth which, in spite of frosts, continues to bloom. mf I BSXmSZBESXXaBBBXSS runt rif 1 LilLli iJ" to Canvases by Ada Wolfe Reveal Scores of Unsuspected Feauty Spots.

By ELIZABETH McLEOD JONES. Minneapolis ofleis a vanctv of j-aiutal-ile plai't'S," Aiia Woltc. '()nc docs not linvr to jn to l'roviiiee-town or Murlik'lx'ail or onv ot tliose artists' colonics on the Atlantic const to ect slictclmirr fvervtlimc cue ncciis is near Miss AVolfo 1'iovcs licr assertion at licr first exhibit, roproscntuijr 10 gears' jiainting iu and around the city, wliirli is now on. Most persons think of MiiinfioVi9 es a commercial ct-htcr, l.nt Miss AVolfc, even more than others in the of young artists now at work licre, lias found unlimited opportunities for her brush within walkinj; distance tf the various car Vnos. The exhibit is now on and lasts tntil December V2 at 4U Sixth street Konth, open each afternoon, including todav, and is free to the public.

Great Versatility Shown. Miss Wolfe, who has taken the state art highest prize for painting, is a frequent exhibitor at city and utato shows, but never has exhibited lone. It remains tor this showing to pi've 'proof of the- versatility and pvo-1'iSfc output, of her trush. X'siially thouglit of a a flower and Still life painter, with occasional portraits and summer landscapes exhibited, her collection contains examples of her art never suggested to the exhibit visitor before. iTl(P persistence with which she has fought opportunity to express herself on' canvas is shown by the or more canvases which rernescnt work of the decade, in spit? of the fact that, like most artists, she has bcea busy keeping "the pot boilinff" and earning the paints and brushes needed.

All done in one medium, oils, the pictures fall into half a dozen classes at once. Strongest of them all is a group fif marines, the big surprise of the col-lection. Enthusiastic Over Lake. Miss Wolfe spent, a fortnight on a nketching trip iu the vicinity of Iu-luth, and the beauties of the great lake roused her enthusiasm. Superior in many moods sunny, calm, rough, cold, Its rocky, wave-beaten coast and fishing emacks," whalcbai ks ami pleasure craft all are painted con amure, as the musicians say.

The strong appeal of the lake to the painter makes itself felt at once to tbos viewing the pictured scenes. Like most young artists, Miss Wolfe mee went through a "Whistler period." It is represented by a group possessing delicate beauty of coloring and distinctive composition. That t-he has left that period far be-rtiltd is known to all who have followed Iter work in recent years, for the modernists have affected her to the extent of revolutionizing her feeling for color, end all of her newer canvases are in the brilliant hues and high key which is the most marked trend of American ert today. Much Material Here. These efforts at expressing herself in livelier mood fall into series whii easily prove the abundance of paintable material around Minneapolis.

The country around -fort knelling, always popular with artists, has been pictured repeatedly; the Minnesota and Mississippi rivers, bridges and paths, quaint old Mendota, the rugged anl Tucturcwjue bluffs all are to be found in the collection. The Bohemian flat along the river ank frequently have, been visited, and Miss Wolfe has had several weird ex-fericnecs because of the reluctance with which the inhabitants permitted ler to depict the little fur, igu settlement. old woman," Miss Wolfe tells-. An Editor Recommends -DROPS" nneumatic ufferers Mr. L.

1 HilI.oditm'EntCTpriM.Eniley, wni: "I want tll you that 1 tuiv been living in tlua dialrict foi th pt 21 Tears and there no man that bciu known than I am. I u-il you tint boctitiM I want yon to know that 1 an no StranKHf to tiia Dwiple. About twt ty riairol wadownonm bark with th wur cat ot rheumatitm and I Iman to your medirine and to atxiut week I at so ny feet arain. I'eoula all over llirrai iKha-n and tutipy wereaatonithed to aeatneiret well aoumck ao1 ntnl to know wht nwtiicma I I told and every mm who bat the thoumauim knuwiut yiurniluineiii tat ttoey will uta it, I ug Ullir.n awry one of th virtue cf Tour remedy nd I km iure it will incroM th mlr uf nmt." burh rvHjcnco tbi hoiihi ufticU nt to prove to any twnon the vfclu of "fe-Dropi" In rheumatic trouble. "4-Drripi" il eold by the ladin Ant.

giu in every part of Uie Uuited Stale) and Canada. FREE A Eample bottle wfl! be rnttd'id tree, it you WUJ wnte to The Swansan Compmy. WW "Look at all those people! Where in the world arejthey all I haven't seen so many different kinds 6f people for a long time; in fact, I never thought so many en- tirely different types of people lived in the city. estidn? 1 0 Indig Troubled With Nervous Dyspepsia, Weak Stomach, Catarrh of Stomach, Heartburn, Hyperacidity, Water Brash, Sourness, Fermentation, Relchinj; of Jases or Acids, Windy or Bloated Stomach, PulTed or Flatulent Feeling, Eructation of Undigested Food, Distress or Heaviness After Eating, Poor Appetite, Foul Breath, Bad Taste, Coated Tongue? "Look' at girJ And those make those stylishly dressed young ladies! My, but that is pretty! Wonder where they all can be going? ook at that well dres-sed young man! I wonder who two girls are he is with? My, but he a grand movie actor! "And look, too, at those middle aged folks! WHERE can they all Let's follow them and see. I haven't seen so many ladies on Fifth Street since I've lived in Minneapolis.

"And they all seem to have their husbands with them, There certainly must be 'something doing' some place. khow that was For goodness "Oh, I beg your pardon, Mr. Smith, I didn't you. almost passed. you in the crowd, sake, Where ARE all the people going?" Just take, after raliliK, 2 or It Stomach Tablets Make your stomach happy in Vi to 5 minutes! A new, wonderful, different remedy.

H'-KO STOMACH TABI.KT8 contain right dinercnt injrreclietiU, tsklll-fully jiroportiuned, sdentlflcnlly coin-pounded. Finch liiKreiilent of unquestioned valu; for Its particular purpose. Contain no Injurious clement Rlmtever. An opiate or unrcotic, fur Instance, udfrht "kill" stomach pains, by dead-entjifc' the nervet, nn unnntiiriil iind tleei-pflve result. HucU tlilliKH lire neither curnilve nnr corrective.

Not used in Jp.Ko, lieciiiise this Is truly nn rcniiilv: proitnees hiiiiest result; really Niiture In aud uiuintiiiiiliii; liunmil coiull- M.inr ot the It YMluahle InnrcdifnU. It In well kliiiWii tluit Cliarcoiil is lis mi IiIim.I liCIlt Of StOlllllr ll ii.l l.mvi iiinl an antiseptic hoiiiit. I' aefiil In fhiluleiit ilyspepsln, tiiKtratii, epidemic dysen-ti ry. fenniMiiaiinri, bad brentli, pic. I Ugliest pnule wllloiv clnircoal used In li-Ko.

I't-jmin. Miiolher Inureilient, lum lunj; prperllied by physicians In nc uf ih ficieucv In the uiilurnl iliesihe of the aloiniieli. l'nr-llculiiily ns diucMtiiiit of ul-fiiitiiiimliK ns tilirlii, white of t-eu. etc. Tlire nlno I'owilrrrit In Iji-Ko.

This la ivcoKUlaed a IP-KO irmtefiil stimulant to diKestivc orgsns. Kxeelleiit for expclllnif wind, for prompt relief In nuusea, grlpluK, 1 eollcky pnins, fliituleuce, etc. Much used in dyspepsia, or where any portion' of the alimentary canal is enfeebled. Oil of Mieiirmlnt, another Important Inureilient, Is also valuable as stimulant to weakened digestion or appetite. Hag beneficial effect on nervous system; particularly helpful in nervous dyspepsia.

i I'romote Appetite and Pixestloo. These lncredlents uivc some idea of the value of the Ip-Ko formula. The oilier four ingredients are of equal merit. Without describing tho special action of each ingredient, sufflco it to say these tablets are well designed, to exert a favorable influence upon ill-P'Slion and appetite, to allay stomach distress, give strength and tone to organs of digestion, to overcome digestive derangements generally. Only Ihree or four of the intJyedleuts contained in H'-KO would have made remedy of real merit.

Vet it would not have been quite "Rood enough." The intention wns to provide a highly efficacious remedy that could be taken by any one, young or old, for tiny disorder of the digestive tract, with nothing but good results. A remedy In tablet form, so harmless, so palatable, It eould be ealen quite freely, like caiiilv. Get box of ll'-KO today-see what wonderful relief it will bring t.i Just a few minutes. J'llee of IP-KO STOMACH 35 cents. If druggist bus none in stock, nsk him to get some from ills wholesaler.

There's nothing "juxt lis good." Among thoso who sell and recommend ll'-KU are: Minneapolis Voesell Hr. rni Ktorrsi M. K. Washburn, IH Ilenne-pin sM-nuei It. Ianlln, 2J rntrul avenue northeast.

M. Tanli 7 Corners Iro Co.t H. Murtln Jolinaon, ourtll anil St. l'etrr t. "Why, didn't you hear?" says Smith: "The Minneapolis General Electric Co.

is holding the Grand Opening of their new building, and is making a wonderful display of electrical appliances for 'Xmas Gifts. They it's the brightest spot in town." A j..

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1867-2024