Indianapolis Journal, Volume 50, Number 315, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 November 1900 — Page 13

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, BUH DA, flUVISIlJJEIX 11, lUUlV

12

this country, lately died In an English workhouse, miserable and penniless. lie was not o many years ago one of the Ieatilntr agents in Knglaml. and Dicken c.rtMertl him a most excellent and competent man. Ills fall bean wtun he had fozr. dlMieulty with Hans Von Bulow, v.hin ho managed In a tour of England. There was stur.e trouble about the di.-po-fjiion of certain funds, the fiery pianist "- rtir. ;c that Dolby had spent money that uA net btlor.g to hli.i. Alter that tt waj ciir'.KuIt for him to gel along, arid he went iru:.i Kid to worse, finally landing in the What If the days are dreary? Whaflf farlh wears r.o Fmlle? A Kate will ci'tr. outward In such a little .while. I!. L. . Beers. "Tlre 13 plenty cf room at the top," Faid the poet, a tritt erratic; And he chcrtlrd with glee As he said: "Don't you wo, That's the reason I live in an attic" Philadelphia Record. If O-o-u-K-h spells Gott. One cannot b? o badly off Ills orthographic trolley if lie makes b-i-g-h rpell bl.f. Detroit Journal.

IITERABY NOTES. Richard Le Galllcnnc, the poet, was one of the most Inter sted listeners at a lecture delivered in Buffalo by Ernest SetonThompson the other niht. A pathetic anecdote related by Lord Rosebery deals with "L'Aiglon." Gourgand prented Napoleon with a bouquet, pretending that It was offered by order of his sun. Hah!" said Napoleon, "the King of Home

think? no more ;f me than he does of you!" The new Canadian writer, Ralph Connor, who.e books. "Black Hock" and "The Sky Pilot have placed him in the front rank of Canadian writers, Is the Rev. Charles w. Gordon, i astor of the young and rovinK Church of St. Stephens, in WlnniXtg. He came of Scottish stock. Mr. Seton-Thompson. cf "Wild Animals I Have Known" fame, has become the lecture IJoi of half the women's clubä in the country hw much so one may deterir.ine, says a New York paper, from the fact that his price per lecture is $250, just ttn times what the clubs ordinarily pay is all they ever dream of paying a woman lecturer. Mr. Thompson has more dates than he can possibly rill at his own figure. The Literary World says: "Mr. W. D. Ilowells has returned to New York after a busy summer at Kittery Point. Me. This winter he is to live downtown at the Westminster Hotel, in Irving Place, a quarter of the town that he especially likes. Like Mark Twain. Mr. Howells has lately made a life contract by which all his new work goes to one. puolisher, the Harpers being the publishers." A writer In the New York Tribune makes these pertinent remarks: "A book without an index is a flagrantly mischievous Invention. To be sure, there are some thin era worse. A book with a bad index Is lit food for the names. But we are content for the moment to remark upon the bad policy of ignoring the index altogether. Jt requires skill In the making, great skill, and not only education, but iiatural taste. Yet the cost should not be very great, and there are certainly many writers who could be found to do the work. The publisher who announced In the public prints that he never brought out a book, that was not a novel, without an Index, would win great and lasting glory." Mr. Gilbert Parker, says a New York paper, has been more successful than several of his fellow men-of-letters in his struggle for a seat in the House of Commons in the general election jast closed. So he Is now Mr. Gilbert Parker, M. P., winning where Dr. Conan Doyle failed, and Trollope and Thackeray before him. Mr. Parker is a master of the written word; but can he ppeak, fis Disraeli spoke, and Bulwer Lytton? Dr. Conan Doylo would certainly never have made a publis speaker. Ve know this, for he lec

tured h re some years ago. Anthony Hope, who withdrew before the poll, is a very shy man. entirely unlike what one would expect from the author of "The Dolly Dialogues." Mr. Winston Spencer Churchill's career will be well worth watching. If only for the rake of his meteoric father's memory. Mr. Gilbert Parker was born lr Canada on Nov. 13. and educated at Trinity College, Toronto. He became associate editor of the Sydney (Australia) Morning' Herald fn 16, traveled extensively ainon;? the South sea inlands and In Canada, and published his first book in 1S&8. WISDOH OF CURRENT FICTION.

What follies one. may commit on paper: The Last Refuge, There is nothing greatly attractive In mere exact justice. The Last Refuge. Women cannot love their kind, but only Individuals of their kind. The Bacillus of Beauty. Deathbed repentances should be followed bv deaths. Life tries them too hard. The Mantle of Elijah. A homely girl starves on bread and water, while a pretty one wallows in jam. The Bacillus of Beauty. She said it was a good thing to be a man, but the worst possible thing to endure a man. Her Boston Experiences. It is not always ourselves who arc responsible for the prood or evil we may do in our lives. The Muster Christian. I don't know exactly what a girl Is at eighteen, but I do know that a fellow of twenty-live is an ass. Robert Orange. A fanatic is a man that does what he thinks th Lord wrid do If He knew the facts iv th care. Mr. Dooley's Philosophy. She had a voice, a hand, a carriage, that lovelier women had often envied, discerning In them those subtleties of race and personality which are not to be rivaled for the asking. Eleanor. It is the weak, effeminate creature who wishes to control women. Men of character respect women of character. These fel lows who ueclare that they will be masters in their own house are masters nowhere else. Robert Orange. In their heydey young lovers think each other perfect, but a nobler love comes when they see the failings also, and this higher luve Is so much mure worth attaining to that they need not cry out, though It ias tc be beaten into them with rods. Tommy and Grizel.

"Alice of Old Vincenne." From Maurice Thompson's Book. As he was turning to go. a shimmer of brown hair, streaked with gold, struck upwi his vision from Just within the eloor. He pnus-d as If in response to a military command, while a pair of gray eyes met his with a Hash. The cabin room was lil-Iighted, but the crepuscular dimness did rot seein to hinder his sight. Beyond the girl's figure a pair of slender swords hung crossed aslant on the wall opposite the low door. Beverley had seen in the old world galleries pictures In which the shadowy and somewhat uncertain back-gp-.;r.d thus furred Into strongest projection the main iigure. yet without clearly i. ::nir.i: It. The roof frame of the doorway pave just the right sotting to Ali'.e's costune, the moM striking part of which w a gray;-!; short gown ending just ahiv. her f ringed buckskin moccasins. Arc her head she had bound a blue kerchief, a wide corner of which hung over her ero.vn like a loose cap. Her bright b air hui.g free ut'on her shoulders In tumbled half-cur Is.

THE NOVEMBER METEORS

ASTRONOMICAL. STATIONS READY TO TAKU OBSHIIVATIO.NS.

Considered loIbe that Expected Shower of Last Year AVI 11 Appear Tili 3Iontb.

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To a Passing: Mrangrer. A s'-:"o cr r.-i ev3 i.i the street A 1 !v;-ry A ia-o t. ,. a:c. t , i SW(Ct, T- u I to bat srtrui j. A f '.cc t:-..-i t v. I'd rev- nr.- re knew, 'Ih-:-h :t .:; n. it- tri;.. That ,:?, (,fWit li.e .i.-e:- t-. hue. Ah. iter. "w flfn, ... t tri care. T- :t lie sdr.c-t has U.a..o tao kr. prayer la i ny of you. An '.v, !;. Well. !n Llrplncrtfa.

The Journal' Uediic-tltm ! Price I Periatuic ul. A wrong lrr.pres.--io: seems to rrevnll amor.- c-rtain of the subscribers to the Journal, namely, that the recent reduction in the subscription price of the paper was or.iy temporary, ar.d that a return to former rates would tak? effect when the cam,Fu .cl','J- 'bis is an error. The present pooUsh.d price of the japer will be periitiently maintained, and i's high standard v..:l !a i.o way be irnp..ird. Send in your pu.cnpiier.j, to us at th- published rates or nave the paper delivered to you by our Z'-nt in your locality.

CAMBRIDGE. Mass.. Nov. 10. The most Interesting astronomical question just now Is whether the great meteoric shower which was due In November of last year.

but which did not then appear, much to the disappointment of astronomers all over the world, is to be given up as lost, or whether It has merely been delayed a year beyond the calculated time, and will take place in Its full glory next week. The attitude of the Harvard College Observatory in this matter Is probably typical of that taken at most astronomical stations. While admitting that the chances of the fehower appearing are less than A year ago. Professor Pickering and his assistants have not by any means given up hope, and though the preparations which have been made for recording it are les extensive than they were last November, they are still sufficient to take full advantage of the situation in case the shower occurs. The November shooting stars are, of course, a recognized institution, and are due on the 13th and 14th of the month each year. They are known as the Leonids, from the position of their cenual point in tne constellation of the Lion, and the number Been in ordinary years would range from fifty or one hundred to eight hundred or one thousand. The Harvard observatory noted some eight hundred, for example, last November. But what was expected last year, and is hoped for next Tuesday night, is a recurrence of the magnificent displays which were seen in lljj. and 1S6G, when not hundreds but thousands and tens of thousands shot Into the earth's atmosphere. In 1S3 a competent observer in Boston calculated that the number had amounted to 240,000, seeming to tho eye to fall as thickly as the Makes in a snow storm. It may tasily bo seen how such a elisplay would rank with a total eclipse of the sun as the most spectacular of the celestial phenomena. IRREGULAR MOVEMENTS. The Interval between these great meteoric showers, aa may be noted from the dates Just given. Is thirty-three years. But the nature of the shooting stars is such that they are peculiarly liable to perturbations, so-called, caused by the attraction of the planets. Within the last l.SOO years, indeed, they have been swung out of one orbit and into another by the influence of the planet Uranus. During the last period of thirty-three years, it seems, they nave been especially liable to perturbation, and some astronomers who look for the great shower to taka place next week, ascribe the delay to this cause. It is necessary to understand the Leonids as a stream of small particles, no larger than grains of sand the debris, perhaps, of a comet flowing continuously in a mighty orbit, which annually, in the middle of November, intersects the orbit of the earth. Through most of the length of this belt the particles are only sparsely scattered, but in one place they are congregated in a vast swaxm, with relation to

which the others may be regarded only as stragglers. The Leonids complete their orbit in thirty-three years time, and once in thirty-three years, therefore, when wo enter the part of the great swarm, we may look for such a display as that of 1S33 or 1S6C. In other years wo see merely the "stragglers." In time, of course, tne particles will be scattered more evenly through their orbit, since the outer ones tako more time to complete the circuit than the inner ones, and tend constantly to fall behind In the race. But this is a matter of millions of years, like so many other operations in astronomy. LEONIDS ARE HARMLESS. In passing through the orbit of Leonids wo teo only the particles which are ignited Ly entering the earth's atmosphere, some löö or 00 miles distant. No Leonid was ever known to reach the earth, the terrific heat to which they are subjected burning them out before they have approached nearer than fifty or sixty milc3. They are to be distinguished entirely from the sporadic meteorites, which from time to time appear as fireballs in the sky, and .sometimes fall to the earth, before they are burnt out. In masses weighing thousands of pounds. A shower of such as these would be disastrous, while the Leonius are quite harmless. In the lio3 shower one observer likened the appearance of the sky to a vast umbrella. This was due to the fact that all the Leonids, seeming at first to be darting in every direction in the heavens, radiated from a certain fixed center, the so-called radiant, alluded to before as being In the constellation Leo. As a matter of fact, the course of the Leonids in the sky is parallel, and the appearance of radiation is due to perspective, as in the parallel lines of a railway track, which seem like the Leonids to originate In a single point. The radiant, however, is only approximately fixed; and it Is an Important point, theretore, to establish It more exactly, since, from the position of the radiant, astronomers are able to calculate the direction In which the Leonids are moving. Photography, it is hoped, will do a great deal to settle this point. Photographs taken with the Harvard instruments, both here in Cambridge and at Arequlpa, Peru, have very sitisfactcrily recorded casual meteors crossing the field of vision. On one in particular, where three shooting stars of a single system had been recorded. It was observed how exactly the point of radiation could be defined by the convergence of the three paths, especially in comparison with a visual observation of the three meteors which was fortunately made at the same time. If next Tuesday the great swarm reappears, therefore, and if the weather conditions are favorable, the Harvard Observatory hopes to secure on its photographic plates complete data for determining the radiant, and consequently the direction, of the Leonid swarm. PHOTOGRAPHIC CONTRIVANCES. Some of the photographic appliances to be used always supposing the swarm reappearshave been especially devised for the occasion. The most remarkable, perhaps, Is a swinging camera, for securing stationary images of the Leonids. It Is like the swing of a pendulum in a state of balance at either end; moving faster, comparatively, than the shooting star at the mieldle, but at some point between, on the rise or the fall, exactly corresponding to the velocity of the object which it is all this time photographing. Besides getting the image at rest in this way. it will be easily possible to calculate the speed of the meteor by ascertaining the position of the camera in Its swing when that image was secured. Another interesting Instrument is fitted with prisms to photograph the spectra of the Leonids, from which it will be possible to learn their composition. The only spectrum of a shooting star ever secured by photography was obtained at the Harvard station at Arequipa four years ago, and shows by its lines the presence of hydrogen. Stili another photographic instrument has a rotating disc over the aperture, revolving thirty times a second. In the disc is a hole which, passing over the aperture, records the path of the metecr in a series of dots. Any difference in the distance between the dot? would give an indication f a difference in the rate of movement of the meteor. The Vnnttainable.

One ni.zM tfcc hesven shon supremely ranJ) A little ch!hl looked u; at:J questl.-.neJ wlijr He ir.i;:.t not tcuch a tit cf that fcriiht fkj-, IIcM one fair star within Ms eager hanl. He could r.ot coer.t them; thicker tlian the aad Alone some- er.Jlfs waV.c of sea they Ii, And yet fo far ansy, so very high Deyond his rearh. lie couM net understand. And as I listen to the chlllish longing. It f.nJs a reaty echo In my heart; Dreams Lorn of wild desire ccme madly tarongirar In v.hlrh I nv no flectinj rhare mr part; Ari like little chilj I cannct se Why to much Lrlshtnes shines too high for mt iUry Bow aula Taje, in Llitncotfi.

Indiana's Greatest Dry Goods Emporium

ESTABLISHED 1853

U WiiL JJ

Cab b fTf iii

SOLE AGENTS FOR BUTTERICK PATTERNS

Indiana's Greatest Dry Goods Emporium

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MOM!

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O y-7 O no

FasMoH mA Waraitl

1 i'S..i)t.ilK

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ASHION has this season given to individuality a freer rein, and we are prepared to show the choicest of originality in every department Cloaks, Suits, Dress Goods, Silks, Tailored Garments, etc. Never has there been

such an assemblage of beautiful styles for autumn and winter wear.

Useful as 'Well as Oroamenta'

Are our Cloaks, Jackets, Tailored Gowns, in that, when one wears one of them they are doubly comfortable in the assurance that the dress is up to date and in being protected from the wintry blasts. Never before have fashions followed the dictates of both taste and common sense so completely as they do right now. You may be assured that you are getting the best of the foreign and domestic marts when purchasing here.

v. ,- st9 -''j ivK-) ' fr JrA:i I Li v.-ri

Our Ladies' Fur Jackets Are all made of choice skins and beautifully lined. Electric Seal Jackets $25.00 to $55.00 Persian Lamb Jackets $150 to $195 Beaver Jackets $165 to $195 Alaska Seal Jackets $200 to $350

Choice Velour Model Jackets They are trimmed with mink, marten and Persian Lamb furs some prettily braided and jetted. Special prices on them this week; come see them. Ladies' Tailored Black Cheviot Suits Made with the double-breasted tightfitting jacket and with the flaring gored skirt. Those all-silk lined are . . ... $25.00 Those with percaline-lined CfT E5fk skirts are QJH.OU

Ladies' Winter Coats and Jackets Short, medium and long, colors and bjack, prices begin at $3 and advance by easy stages to $35. Millinery Prices Lowered for Monday A beautiful line of stylish trimmed hats, some French pattern hats, too, that have been all season $15 LfO to $20, for Monday ipiU.UU Trimmed hats, not so elaborate, CO Hfl that were $10, for All our pattern hats that wereCE rjf $7 and $3 go Monday for J3J

In medium-priced trimmed hats we have pretty ones that have becntfo fC selling at $: and $0. Monday f or.H Special made street hats, the kind you usually pay $1 to $7.W for.j: CL Monday, they are iji Chic trimmed turbans, so stylish Cl 4 7S and pretty, Monday for kj Look at the draped felt hats and the new pancake shapes in velvet and felt we are making special prices on. Roses and Ornaments A very pretty line of French roses at 69c, 98c and $1.75 Hair ornaments, in the popular Gl Cfl

f ML J ß Second Floor.

butterfly effects, at

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lar Ore

WOOLEN MATERIALS IN CREAM

For the new cream wool Waists that are so much In vogue now. Every conceivable material in cream color may be found in our department, that all stylish dressers may have this latest fad waist fabric. The prices start in with the all-wool cream twilled flannels at 59c a yard, and from that up to the ladies' and broadcloth in cream at $1 to$3 peryard. A range of values hard to equal. All-wool 45-inch Henriettas, in all the shades of blue and red, a 7oc value for 69c Fifteen pieces silk and wool Geiman Plaids, in new combinations suitable for children's dresses, a yard 85c Our three leaders at S1.50 per yard can't be equaled in this city. 45-inch French Topi ins, in two shades of castor, four shades of blue, three of red, green, golden, biown and silver gray and tan, a yard $1.50 48-inch French Venetians, in medium weight for general wear. There are fifteen different shades in this line; a yard f .'....$1.50 54-inch very heavy diagonal Cheviots, all wool, in the shades of green, blue, brown and wine. This cloth requires no lining, and the greatest value made for the money; a yard $1.50 Fifty different shades in French Venetians and the celebrated Ktsselkaul Broadcloths. The most popular and satisfactory cloths made. They come in rose, gray, tan, mode, castor, in fact all the new colors used this fall; a yard $3.00

BLACK FABRICS

44-inch all-wool Matelasse Cheviot, a new cloth for separate skirts; value 75c, for, a yard 50c 50-inch all-wool fine Storm Serges, in a dollar quality, for, a yard 75c 46-inch high finish satin Soleil; 50-inch heavy Venetian cloth; two of the most desirable weaves of the i-eason, and good value for $1.25; Monday, a yard $1.00 A special bargain is an English Cheviot, id inches wide, heavy enough to do without lining in the skirt; will make a substantial tailor suit, $3 the regular price; Monday, a yard $2.25 West Aisle.

6. Persian Silk 'Square

Second Shipment by Express for Monday Horning. Fifty dozen more of thoe beautiful Persian Silk Squares that created such a furore last Monday, the entire lot being closed out by 12 o'clock. All in handsome Oriental and Persian designs, crescents and dashes of color forming an

gles that you'll admire. Choice art tint& and pastel shades. These squares being

about one yard in size can be utd for so many different purposes that as the holidays

draw nearer you would gledly pay 1 for the same article for Shirt Waists, Dress

Sacques, So a Cushions, fancy Pillows, Hat Trimmings, Sash Curtains, Fancy and Men's and Ladies' MufHers. On Center Silk Counter at, each

Orders by mail ill receive prompt attention. Mention ground colors desired only. Center Aisle.

olidays A TK

Merwear

Hosiery Stock

The New York Store Underwear and Hosiery more sought for than elsewhere. Why? Because people know that in our buying, quality is the first thing considered, and on account of our buying in such quantities as we do, prices are always the lowest, as a careful reading of the following items will prove: HOSIERY FOR EVERYONE Ladies' fast black, full seamless, fleece lined Cotton Hose, with double heels and toes, at, a pair... 9c Children's fine ribbed, fast black, full seamless Cotton Hose, with double knees, heels and toes, a pair 10c Ladies full fashioned fast black Cotton Hose, the silky fleece lined kind, with elastic ribbed top, double soles and high double heels, a regular 25c quality, for a pair 17c Children's heavy weight ribbed Cotton Hose, with double knees, soles and heels, fleece lined, at a pair 17c Children's fast black fine ribbed Cashmere Hose, all sizes, 5 to SJic, special, a pair '25c Ladies' full regular made, fleece lined Nermsdorf hlack Cotton hote, ith white or split feet, never sold for less than 35c, special, for 25c Ladies' heavy weight, full regular made, fast black, three thread Cotton Hose, with high-spliced heels and double soles, should be 50c a pair, Monday 3 pairs $1.00 Men's all wool fast black Half Hose, with double merino heels and toes, a pair 12c Men's ' full regular made Hermsdorf black and tan, black with split feet, Cotton Hose, selling daily at 25c, Monday 7 3 pairs 50c Men's fleece lined Cotton Half Hose, fancy striped lisle and cotton, natural wool and camel's hair, plain and fancy striped cashmere; also extra heavy plain cotton, fast black, 35c and 50c qualities, choice, a pair 25c . . UNDERWEAR . . Did you ever try a Union Suit? If not do so. You'll never wear anything else. Children's Undervests and Tants, Jersey ribbed, fleece lined, sizes up to 34, from 10c up. Children's heavyweight, fleece lined Jersey ribbed Union Suits, any size, a suit 45c Indies' ccmbed Egyptian Jersey ribl ed Vests and Pcnts, fleece lined and extra heavy a garment.. 25c Ladies' heavy weight PgAptian fleece lined Union Suits, perfect fitting, silk trimmed neck and with bust opening, at a suit 69c Ladies' half-bleached, extia heavy weight, fleece lined or silver gray wool Union Suits, with bust opening, a perfect fit, at a suit 98c Two Specials in Fast Black Underwear Ladies' Swiss ribbed Mercerized Vests and PphIs, warranted fast colors, a garment 49c Ladies' all wool fast black Vests and Pants, ell sizes, a garment $1.00 Ladies silk and wool silver gray perfect fitting Union Suits, with bust opening- 2.50 Ladies' fine, full regular made, all wcol Union Suits, with bust opening, very sjecial value, at 2.98 Ladies fine fast black Cashmere Tights, ankle length and closed, the best made..... 2.50 Men's Jersey ribbed fleece-lined Undershirts and Drawers, a special, at a garment 39c or a suit 75c Boys' silver gra), Jersey-ribbed, fleece lined Union Suits 45c Men's fleece lined Underwear, all sizes, two colors, at a garment 49c Men's 75c all-wool fleeced Underwear, in fancy mottled and black striped effects, at a garment. ... 59c Men's camel's-hair, natural wool, medicated scarlet Uudershirts and Drawers, any size, a garment 1.00 Men's fancy tan colored all-wool Underwear, all sizes, a garment 1.25 Kast A: sie.

Sof sis

IViiect fchoes at a popular price in Viel Kid, Box Calf, Pate.it Calf, Enamel an Russian Calf. Street and Dress Boots.

ONE PRICE..

g S ..ONE PRICE

Don't ask for your size; ask to be fitted. Rear Main Floo..

For the Alen Men's wool-lined Astrachan gloves, Monday, a pair OOC Men's fancy-trimmed nightshirts, SSfl,, a new lot of extra good ones, at.. Men's colored shirts, in lomr or short bosoms. In new, stylish patterns, Qttp our own make zt7U Men's oatinfr rlannol Pajamas, all sizes, in assorted stripes and checks. QQ. at. a salt VOC East Aisle.

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Gloves For Cold Weather

The VJuliette'.our real French ff kid glove, in all colors, a pair. Ladies Mocha gloves. In gTay, black and brown, at, a pair, from $1.00 to $1.50 Ladies fleece-lined kid gloves and mittens, at, a pair $1.00 to $1.50 Ladies' Mocha fleece-lined gloves and mittens, a pair $1.00 to $1.50

Ladies' Scotch woolen gloves, a flr pair OUtWarm double Saxony mittens, for the ladies, at, a pair, from 25c to 50c . Center Aisle.

Flannels and Blankets November suggests blankets so a word about ours. You will And here the best assortment to be had from the very finest down to the best cheap ones trade, and the kind that will always give satisfaction. Specials for Monday:

Outing flannel remnants, In 5 to lfryard lengths, at, a yard Best quality of outing flannel, the 12Hc kind, a yard

All-wool flannel skirts. In scarlet and plain black. qualities, $J00

6c 10c

Ask to see our woven skirts, in one piece of best all-wool cloths. 10-4 Cotton blankets, a pair

60c and 75c

:.$1.19

11-4 Tan and gray cotton blank

ets. extra heavy, a pair ...

11- 4 i-ignt frray cotton blankets, 42--j rv were 5L.75, for, a pair pl.OU 12- 4 Tan cotton blankets. werei :s $2. for. a pair .4JI.UJ A full line of plush robes, square and shaped blankets and sleeping blankets, all sizt s and colors. Basement. Linens All lined hemmed Doylies, open ifiwork. 12-inch squares, each 1UC Colored stand covers, with knotted n fringe, washable, were X'c, for....-UL S-4 Colored table covers that will wash, some 52.25 ones that are slight- T SO ly soiled, each pi.ov 8-10 and S-12 sizes, were S2.T5 and iC.23, for, each-

Hemstitched huck and damask

Initial

of letters, a CCc quality, for 4

Basement-

Towels, with a full assortment O-.

10c

$2 and $2.50

Remnants of Organdies and Swisses that are slightly soiled at one-half their marked prices. All-linen fringed huck Towels, 0r were ISc, for, each

Stoves! Stoves! Stoves! Heaters for coal, wood cr gas or the three combined. Ranges and Cook Stoves. See our line; we can save you money.

5 or C-Inch stove pipe Joint for

Stove zincs ? to lc Th Popular Washing Machine, .Amplest machine made; guarantee with ev-ry on: 11MV movement anitT no washes clean; each vJrJ Triplf-coated bine enaniflfd Tm Kettlf-s full klze, range hape, wer Sic, fcf 22, for Hartz Mountain Canaries, Jl.tt each; In trass cages, $2-25. tt Trunks, fine quality, canvas covered, 22 to 2S-Inch sizes, with line trimmings, from $3.75 to $7.00 10c C Bars Fairbanks Lion soap 23r KlTnlrd Water Tallk. one to 1f)r a customer, for New Basement.