wmrKSEP': - i-rrvmv wnwrn-s wwwwsw ... 'TTTwmmmmtmmmwmfvrwn qqppppmiiu 1 1 1 it mMiviMiipijjiiii,. 5r"iHP,T,&vn' ' s. -&' ' .;'i'T-J J 'vsi; a- if T;rywvjfik V ,M V'W y TiKfMWH ' p..; 'nvrtCirfr. ' ; vi ' fwrnm" r " r Ifjn does hmnm nature 'tgfgffi uisier j thn atmn of ftcr and tragedg? Must it putf down all faved one in disaster? THE BREAKING POINT 1 By Mary Rcrfeerts Rimehaiflt " . uther e "Dangerous Days," J'K," "The Amatlng Interlude," and many ether striking and successful novel. Copyright, ldtt, by Geerge II. Deran Ce. , Cm swtt Uentttg bf tot In geed? See hew thU throbbing story of mgsterg, regeneration, and love eelvee these preblem: f vms BE01NB THE BTORY ! Tit David Livingstone it, the old MfcmHtf doctor, of the quiet town of H, Living with him and hl$ V futttucu i Dr. Diek Livingstone, $ i a mystery tohieh envelops hint. lfi it deeply interested in Mtabcth K'VketUr, lovely daughter of a sub sub "itantiel resident of (he town. j "iM HERB IT CONTINUES V "Han!! Around" After Eltttbeth I rpllE Wheeler house was geed, modern t ll ind commonplace. Walter Wheeler nd bis wife were like the house. Just ns Bra and there among the furnlture 1 there was a fine thing, an antique iihbey. a Sheraton sideboard or some Sfwt b1m. "e they had, with n cer- 1 uln medlecrlty.thelr own outstanding XrtuM. They liked music, believed In thi home ns the unit of the nation, mit happiness before undue ambition, Jnd hatl devoted their Uvea te their children. , Fer many yeara their lives had cen a...j .hmit the children. Fer years 5er had held, anxious conclave about whooping cough, about small early dls-v ebedlences, later noeuc eunaay lenms. her steed united te protect the chil dren against disease, trouble and - eternity. ' New that the children were no longer J 'Alldren. they were sometimes lonely ?. still nnprciicnsive. xuey xearea wntercnr accmenis, and Walter 2 Wheeler lmd withstood the ejipenls utmi tnr n hnlf down rears. Ther fesred trains for them, and Journeys, and unhappy mnrringes, and hid their 1 fearfc from each ether. Their nightly ' erayeri were "te keep them safe and tv Btit thsv saw life rcnchlng out and , taking them, one by one. They saw them (till as children, but as children 1 determined te bear their own burdens. Jim fitnjeil out late sometimes, and considered his manhood In question if interrogated. N'lna was married and out of the home, but there loomed be fore them the possibility of maternity ind Its dancers for her. There re mained only Elizabeth, and en heritbey lavished the care formerly divided among the three. . It was their intention and deter mination that she should never knew trouble. She was tenderer than the ethers, mere docile and gentle. They saw her, net hh n healthy, normal girl, but ns something fragile and very precious. Nina uns different. They had al waja worried a little about Ninn, al though they had never put their anxiety te each ether. Nina had always over ever run her flresi nlleunnce, although she hid necr foiled te be sweetly penitent about It, and Nina had always placed , an undue emphasis, en things. Her bedroom before her marriage was clut tered with odds and ends, cotillion fa vors ami photographs, college pennants and mnll turn fee- purchases trophies of the gajcty nnd conquest li!ch were her life. " And Nina had "come out." It had cost a great deal, and it was net se much te Introduce her te society ns te put a family recognition en a fact al ready accomplished, for Nina had breusht herself out unofficially at six teen. Tlicre had been the club ball room, and ii great many flowers which withered before they could be get te tie hrsnltnl; nnd new clothing for all the frttt'.ry, and a caterer and orchestra. After tint, for a cold and tumultuous winter Mrs. Wheeler hnd sat up with the dettaRcrs night nfter night until ill hours, nnd the next morning bad let Nina sleep, while she went nbeut her . household duties. She had nged, rather, and her detcimlncd smile had grown a v little fixed. She was n geed woman, and she wanted her children's happiness mere than anything In the world, but she bad a fnint nnd sternly repressed feel ing of relief when Nina announced her engagement. Ninn did It with char acteristic sangfroid, at dinner one Bight. 'Don't ring for Annie for a minute, mother," she said. "I want te tell you ill something. I'm going te marry Les lie Ward." There had been n momentary pause. Then her father said : "Just a minute. Is that Will Ward's tyi?" JJYes. He'r net a boy." ell. he'll come around te see me Mern there's nnv engagement. Has t "ecuired te cither of you?" 'Oh, he'll be around. He'd have feme tonight, but Heward Moere is Jaunt: his bachelor dinner. I hepe he nefsn t lnnk shot te pieces tomorrow. pee bnihvlnr'thlngR ! We'd bet ter hne n dinner or something, mother, and announce it." Hump had been the dinner, with a Jlver leilng cup bought for the'occa the'ecca the'occa en, and therenftcr te sit out Its use Js dajs en the ShcrHteu sideboard. Anil there hed been a treusseuu nnd a wedding se expensive that a smnll frown ei anxiety had developed between Wal ter tt heeler h eyebrows nnd stayed there. Vei Nina's passion for things was inherent, persisting nfter her marriage, hie dNieuiiti'd her biithdiUN and Uirijtninscs h, adwince, coming iireunil je nis olfice n couple of months before IP" ""iter holiday nnd needing some seme tnini! Imillv. .."It'r.Jlk? N'1"- daddy." she would wy. ou re going te give me a check 'Pf . hrlttinns, anjhew, aren't you? Ann it would de me mere geed new. I ,,lnn Jy ,nn't go te another bnll." herc'H jour trousseau?" Its worn out danced te rags. And ft of date, tee." ..A ,' ' understand It. Nina. na l.cslie hue n geed income. wiuier nun l " 'Yeu didn't have any social de Binds. And wedding presents If one ero friun(j of mlnc ,R mnrlip(1 ., He would get out his checkbook nnd jrite n ilieck Klnwly and thoughtfully. ABd tearing it off would sny: ri..i .ew' rclc"'her. Ninn, this is for ,v.r,;mes' nen't feel uggrleved when from COmcs n,ld you hnve " Klft But he knew that when the time -unrgnret, his wife, would held 7-. u.uiuat OSftHirtBSMSSSSSSSSStnjAkWSSmSmL RlTdw Sf Mm Hi mmmVm& trnm - You'll have, te marry sometime, and It Isn't as though Wallte was Yeu Your in i no cm. nnd then Kiln Sn .Jeweler's nnd buy Nina some seme wne she s mply couldn't de without. e fair, he felt. It .V.".nsnt nit UeX;i . t?,i',lm,0f t0 Elizabeth. Par weularly te Elizabeth. l?h m,M ,10 l0nlci1 nt Elizabeth rtli,l!ittle.,I)rilyr in M heart, never hit. ue.' lmt 1Ife W0llll he ceed te a!M, ul Bl,ft mlht keep her illusions whM?r (lrenm,,i thnt the soundness and Jno t teinenesH of her might keep her iat m "", '"PPlness. Sometimes, ns she ShlSS"1!1" ,r sewing, with the light jttlnd her H liln ng thieugh her soft Imort'.aUlent? " purUjr tbat wa Je before !)i,.k had invited Klirabeth Ws??i.t0 Vlfi thentie when Margaret .. es. An. "j it. Margaret whim Ninn Pli 11(1 Vmi unrn tttAtli ut.l run of telstcring young Idiots. "no nnd hm . i. ," "J. '""' rifrlMgl8B,ei,8 '" t,,e Pnt'try nt the thl ir ,1alr" en the hMtli U"A el anit i ; ah' ''Kiu-nshcb my clgats Btr. innrcttf ever everything, nnd fTT internal spooning going en than ever seen in my life." He bad resumed his newspaper pu it aewn almost nt once. "What's that Say re boy hanging around for?" "I think he's in love with her, Wal ter.'' "Leve? Any of the Sayrc tribe? Jim Sayre drank hlmtelf te death, nnd this boy Is like-him. And Jim Sayre w'ssn't faithful te his wife. This boy Is well, he's an heir. That's why he was be gotten." Margaret Wheeler stared nt him. "Why, Walter 1" she said. "He's a nice boy, and he's a gentleman." "Why? Because he gets up when yeui come into the room? Why in heaven's name don't you enceuingij real men te come here? There's Dick Liv ingstone. He's a man." Margaret hesitated. "Walter, have you ever thought there was anything queer nbeut Dick Living stone's coming here?' "Darned geed for the town that he did come." "But nobody ever dreamed that David and Lucy had n nephew. Inen he turns up, and they send nim te medical college, and all that." "I've get some rclntiens I haven't notified tbe town I possess," he said grimly "Well, there's oemethlng odd. I don't belleve Henry Livingstone, the Wyoming brother, ever had a son." "What possible foundation have jeu for a statement like that?" "Mrs. Cook Morgan's sister-in-law has been visiting her lately. She bays uhe knew Henry Livingstone well years age in the West, nnd she never heard he was married. She bays positively he was net married." "And trust the Morgan woman te spread the geed news," he said with angry sarcasm. "Well, suppose that's true? Suppose Dick is an illegitimate child? That's the worst that's implied. ,1 dare say. That's nothing agnlnst Ulck bimscll. I'll tell the world there's geed bleed en tbe Livingstone side, any how." "Yeu were very particular about Wallle Sayre's heredity, Walter." "That's different," he retorted, nnd retired into gloomy silence behind bis newspaper. Drat these women, any how. It was like some feel female te come there and rake up some old nnd defunct scundnl. He'd btand up for Dick, if It ever came te a show-down. He liked Dick. What the devil did his mother matter, anyhow? If thin town hadn't, had enough evidence of Dick Livingstone's quality the last few years he'd better go elsewhere, lie " He get up and whistled or the deg. "I'm going te take a walk," be said briefly, and went out. He alvvujs took a walk when things disturbed him. On the Sundnj afternoon nfter Dick bad gene Elizabeth wns alone in her room upstairs. On the bed lay the sort of gown Nina would have called a dinner dress, and te which Elizabeth referred as her dark blue. Seen thus, In the room which was her own ex pression, there was a certain nobility about her very simplicity, a steadi ness about her e)es that was almost disconcerting. "She's the saintly looking sort that would go en the locks for tome mnn," Nina had said once, rather flippantly, "and never knew she was riilpvv recked. Ne man in the world could de that te me." But just then Elizabeth looked totally unlike shipwreck. Nothing seemed mere like n safe harbor than the Wheel er house tbat afternoon, or all the af ternoons. Life went en, the comfertnble life of an upper-mlddle-class household. Candles nnd flowers en the tnble and a neat waitress te serve ; little carefully planned shopping expeditions; line hnnd-6cw!ng en dainty undergarments for rainy dnys; small tributes of hooks and candy; Invitations nnd consulta tions ns te what te wear; choir prac tice, a class in the Sunday school, a little work among the peer; the volcano which had been Nina overflowing else where in a smart little heuse with a butler out en the Hldgely read. She loekcd-whnt bhe wns, faithful nnd quietly loyal, steady-eyed and serene ; net asking greatly but hoping much; full of smnll unvisunlized dreams and llttle Inarticulate prayers; waiting, without knowing that bhe was waiting. Sometimes she worried. She thought she ought te "de something." A geed many of the girls she knew wnnted te de something, but they were vague ns te what. She felt at these times that she was net being vcrj useful, and she hnd gene se fnr ns te lay the matter befere her father a couple of years before, when she was just eighteen. "Just what de jeu think of doing?" he hnd Inquired. "That's it," she hnd said despond ently. "I don't knew. I haven't any particular talent, ou knew. But I don't think I ought te go en having you support ine in idleness all my life." "Well. I don't think it likely that I'll have te," he had observed, drjly. "But here's the point, and 1 think It's Im portant. I don't Intend te work with out some compensation, nnd my family Is my compensntlen. Yeu just hang around nnd make me happy, ns jeu de, and you're fulfilling your economic place In tlie Nutlen. Don't jeu forget It, cither." That hnd comforted her. She had determined then never te mnrry, but te hang around, as lie suggested, for the rest of her life. Shu was quite earnest about It, and resolved. She picked up the blue chess und, standing before her mirror, held It up before her. It looked rather shabby, she thought, but the theatre wns net like a dance, and nn hew it would leek better nt night. She had been thinking about next Wednesday evening ever slnce Dick Livingstone had gene. It seemed, somehow, frightfully impor tant. It was frightfully important. Fer the first time she acknowledged te her self tbat she had been fend of him, dissipated e. anything like that" te ns ebe put it, for a long time. She had an odd sense, tee, of being young nnd immature, and as though he had steeped te her from some height; such as thirty -two years and being in the war, and having te decide about life and death, nnd se en. She hoped h did net think she was only n child. She heard Nina coming up the stairs. At the click of her high heels en the hard weed she placed the dress en the bed agnin, and went te the Window. Her father was en the path below, clearly headed for a walk. She knew then that Nina had been asking for something. Nina came in and. closed the deer. She was smaller than Elizabeth and very pretty. Her eyebrows had been drawn te a tidy line, and from the top of her shining head te her brown Ruede pumps she, was Exquisite with the hours of careful tending nnd careful dressing she gave her young body. Exquisitely pretty, tee. She sat down en Elizabeth's bed with a sigh. "I really don't knew what te de with father," "she said. "He files off nt a tangent ever the smallest things. Elizabeth, dear, can you lend me S20? I'll get my allowance en Tuesday." "I can give you ten." "Well, ask mother for the rest, won't you? Yeu needn't say It's for me. I'll give it te you Tuesday." "I'm net going te mother. Nina. She has had a let of expense this month." "Then I'll borrow it from Wallle Sayre." Nina said, accepting her, de feat cheerfully. "If it was an ordinary bill It could wait, but I Ien it at bridge lust night nnd it's get te be paid." "Yeu oughtn't te 'play bridge for money," Elizabeth said, a bit primly. "And if Leslie knew jeu borrowed from Wallace Sayre " "I forget 1 Wallie's downstairs, Elizabeth. Really, if he wasn't se funnv, he'd be tragic." "Why tragic? He has everything in the world." "If you use n little bit of sense, you can have it tee." "I don't want things." "Pooh! That's what you think new. Wallie's a nice person. Lets of girls are mad about him. And he has about nil the money there is." Getting no response from Elizabeth, she went en: "I wns thinking it ever last night. You'll have te marry some time, and it isn't ns though Wallle was dissipated, or anything like that. I suppose he knows his way about, but then they all de." She get up. "Be nice t8 him, anyhow," she said. "Hc'h crazy about jeu, and when I think of you In thnt house-! It's a wonderful house, Elizabeth. She's get a iniite waiting for Wnllle te be married befere 'she furnishes it." Elizabeth looked around her virginal llttle room, with its painted dressing table, its chintz, and its white bed with tbe blue dress en It. "I'm very me saiu. well satisfied as I am, While she smoothed her hair before the mirror Nina surveyed the room and her eyes lighted en the frock. "Are you still wearing that shabby old thing?" she demanded. ''I de wish you'd get some proper clothes. Are you geinr somewhere?" "I'm going te the theatre en Wednes day night." "Who with?" Nina in her family was highly colloquial 'With Dr. . Livingstone." joking?" Nina demanded. Are you ".Teklnp? Ot r mt ran tint Nina set down again en the bed. her eyes en her sister, curious and net n little apprehensive. x "It's the first time it's ever hap pened, te my knowledge," she declared. "I knew he's avoided me like poison. I thought he hated women. Yeu knew;. Clare Hessiter is " Elizabeth turned suddenly. "Clare is ridiculous," she said. "She hasn't any ribeive, or dignity, or any thing else. And I don't see what my going te the theatre with Dick Living stone has te de with her, anyhow." Nina raised her carefully plucked eyebrows. "Keallyl" she said. "Yeu needn't Jump down my threat, you knew." She, considered, her eyes en her sister. "Don't go and threw yourself away en Dick Livingstone. Bis. You're tee gooil geoil goeil lookiug, and he hasn't a cent. A sub urban practice, out all night, that tumble-down old house and two old people hung around your necks, for Dr. David is letting go pretty fast? It just won't de. Besides, there's a story going the rounds about him, that " "I don't want te hear it, if you don't mind." She went te the deer and opened it. "I've hardly spoken a dozen words te Mm in my life. But just remember this. When I de find tbe man I want te marry, I shall make up my own mind. As j'eu did," she added as a parting shot. She was rather sorry as she went down the stairs. She had begun te suspect what the family had never guessed, that Nina wfla net very happj. Mere and mere she saw in Nina's pas sion for clothes nnd arnvetv. for small possessions, an attempt te substitute them for real thines. She even sus pected that sometimes Nina was it little lonely. Wellle Sayre robe from a deep chair as sue entered tne living room. "Helle," he said, r'I was en the point of asking Central te give me this numner se I ceuiu get you en tne up stairs telephone." "Nina and I were talking. 'I'm serrv." Wnllle, in spite of Walter Wheeler's opinion of him, was an engaging youth with a wide smile, an air of carclesH well-being, and an obstinate jaw. What he wanted he went after and generally secured, and Elizabeth, enlightened by Nina, began te have a small nnxieutt f( cling that afternoon that what he wanted just new happened te be her fcclf. "Nina coming down?" he asked. "I suppose se. Why?" "Yeu couldn't pass the word along that you are going te be engaged for the laAl JUI11 ..UUk . "I might, 'but I certainly don't in tend te." "Yeu are ns hard te isolate as a as a germ," he complained. "I gave up a peifcctly geed golf game te see jeu, and ns your father generally calls the deg the moment I appear und gec for u walk, I thought I might see you alone." "You're beelng me alone new, you knew." Suddenly he lenned ever and catching up her hand kissed it. "You're se cool and, sweet," he l .... ...... M aaldj "I I wish you liked me a 1 liue. He smiled up nt her, rather wistfully. "I never knew any one quite like you. Bhe drew her hand away. Bomo Bemo Bome thlng Nina hnd said, that he knew his vway nbeut, came into her mind, ana maue ner uncomiermmc. .uai. .. , suddenly, wns that strange and mys terious region where men of, his sort lived their furtive mun-llfc. where they knew their way nbeut. She had no curiosity and no Interest, but the mere fact of Its cxlstence ns revealed by Nina repelled her. . "There are plenty like me," sne said. "Don't be silly, Wally. I hate having my hand kissed." "I wonder," he. observed shrewdly, "whether that's really true, or whether you Just hate having me de it? When Nina came in he was drawing; a rough sketch of his new power beat, being built in Flerida. . Nina's delay was explained by the appearance, a few minutes later, of a rather sullen Annie with a tea tray. "Put in a word for me, Nina." Wal Wal leo begged. "I intend te abk Lllznbcth te go te the theatre this week, and I think she is going te refuse." . . "What's the play?" Nina inquired negligently. She was privately deter mining that her mother needed a tea cart and n new ten service. There wet some In old Georgian silver ' " 'The Valley.' Net that the piny matters. It's Beverly Carb'sle." "I thought she was dead, or some thing." "Or something is right. She retired years age, at the top of her success. She was a howling beauty, I'm told. I never saw Her. There was some queer story. I've forgotten it. I was u kiiUthen. Hew nbeut it, Elizabeth?" "I'm- berry. I'm going Wednesday night." He looked downcast ever thnt, mid he was curious, tee. But he made no comment save : "Well, better luck next time." "Just Imagine," said Nina. "She's going with Dick Livingstone. Can you imaglne it?" But Wallace Sayre could nnd did. He had rather n stricken moment, te". Of course, there micht be ncthlnc te Sit; but en the ether hand, they very well might. And Livingstone was the sort te attract the feminine woman; he had gravity nnd responsibility. He was elder, tee, and that flattered a girl. "He'K net a bit attractive," Ninn was, saying. "Quiet, nnd well, I den t suppose he knows what he's get en." Wnllle was watching Elizabeth. "Oh, I don't knew," he said, with mnscullne fairness. "He's a geed sort, and he's pretty much of u man." He was quite sute thnt the leek Eliza beth gave him was grateful. He went seen after that, keeping up an appearance of gnyetv te the end, nnd very careful te hope that Elizabeth would enjoy the play. "She's a wonder, they sny," he said from the doerwny. "Take two hnnklcu along, for It, get morn tenrs thnn 'Eal Lynne' and 'The Old Homestead' put together." lie went out, holding himself ery erect nnd looking very cheerful until he renched the corner. There, however, he Mumped, nnd it wns a rather de spondent jeung man who steed some time Inter en the center of the deserted bridge ever the btnall river, and sur veyed the water with moody eyes. In the dusky living room Nina was speaking her mind. "Yeu trcnt him like a deg," she said. "Oh, I knew you're civil te him. but if any man looked at me the way Wnl lle leeks at you I don't knew, though," she added, thoughtfully. "It may be thnt is why he is se keen. It inuy be geed tactics. Most glrle fall for Mm with n crash." But when she glanced at Elizabeth she saw that she hnd net heard. Her eyes were fixed en something en the street beyond the window. Ninn looked out. With n considerable r.itfln of InnKft joints and four extraordinarily worn tires the Livingstone car was going by. Te be continued tomorrow V02ra?l ftTrfr,''1',;'' Yeu knew the wonderfully k'j'K ffl'H I 4P$M . invigorating effects of an h$$& mSgSIll W WVl alcohol rubewn. Yeu can Mfa f fflMSRh ffi ' JNI get real alcohol unfitted Kf PBSjp "-A Y ,lPa?pl or internfll use and fc'1!';!'' 'JwJl Vr ijj Rf i sfi improved for every external pjtffj ' v jTTgJT d$$h purpose by the addition of fe$??,'f? Sill 'J -'.drWai seething non-poisonous in- $$$$ f J - y-Sffil h && if yu insist en "&M I Ma'M 1 scnuine Mifflin AIkohe1 -w I wv - W Vi 1 Massage- ?thing Iike k i;? m JwwBg (jyl, 1 MO Pllw the bleed, relieve muscular r -!"!; iN! Jftiw iffllSf strain or tig"e. Just try I jf, '; JBfTHSWi lllllli 1 lip a tetde in veur locker- fe' TfHrliw ' roem,Insistonthegenuine- Wi ,11 I HsiWBft7 Miwun Chemical Corporation V1 W' TT Al iwtl'7 Delaware Ave. and Tasker St. I ' w I wl iff L K 0 H 0 L STORE OPENS t A. M. t LOSES AT lt P. M. STIIORBDAV, SEPTEMBER 14. ! nellenburgS V5 EBpCK?MKET naasTMCTS W 3 Big Savings in September Sale of Heusefurnishings & China Remarkable Values in High-Grade Cedar Chests MEW1 5 $16.98 Size 44x2816x18 Values up te $35.00 Sale COQ QK VJfmfJJU VWK Values up te $27.75 SSL, $19-95 Priced. Sizes arc from 38- te 47-inch lengths nnd 18- te 22-inch widths. $1.50 Thrcc-Picce Aluminum j Imported Chinese Baskets, Saucepan Sets at, 65c OVl. I with Tassels and Rings Assort ment of Celers 1. lVt and 2 quart sites. n $2.25 Mrs. Potts' Nickel Plated Sad Irons A S1.25 Set of stand. 3 and Steel Razor Blades Werth 75c Ufttd In Gillette Razor Qfiffly 29c Dez. 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Tastefully $45.00 High-Grade Cabinet Gas $2795 With full 16 Inch baking even and broiling even. fla burners en top. Sold en Club Plftn. American Porcelain Dinner Floral border decoration. Gold Geld line handler and edg. 50 Pieces, Regular Q QK $17.50 at av.vv Preserving Time Special! Sale of Masen Fruit Jars Pint or Quart Size, QQs Dezen Of clear crystal glass complete with percelaln-llned caps and best quality rubbers. Mail and phene orders tilled. DO Reg. $1.50 Clear Glass Covered Bowls for Refrigerator Use, Three alsei, one pint, ene and two quart Can be used as mixing bowls. $1.50 Fireproof China Custard Cups Blue under glazed decoration. Dezen 75c ur New and Enlarged Sewing Machine Department rJFei'D Tina Tim Vftrtr.. C,...r $55.00 New American a3&8!"45 Fully guaranteed. Oak finish. Easy run ning. Automatic lift. Excellent piece of cabinet work. Sold en Club Plan $3 Down $1.25 Weekly bNELL ENBURdS Third Fleer WWWMWWWWW Remarkabh Offerings in Fri4V Furniture and Bedding Yeu Can Purchase en the Club Plan $16.00 Library Rocker or Arm chair $9.95 Upholstered WW i til 4 if brown leatii- Xr rett seat. Ai - $2100 Oak Extension Table $14.95 Gelden Oak Polished American Leather Slip-Seat Chair Werth $4 $2.29 Hi $50 Davenport $29-75 A IlIuHtrnted Mahogany finish, covered In brown American leather, opens Inte bed. Tapestry ceerlns, $32 7B. Gray-&-BIue Breakfast atu!!,.5:p!c"si4.95 i 1 1 fjU F3-1 e BmmMcmmmmammMm $40.00 Oak PlU'OOII J S22.75 25, Large plank top bureau with roomy drawer space and large mir rer. 514.00 3-Pc. Single Beds and Springs, QQ A J? Complete.... Pt7 O Gray Painted Foldaway Cots, Formerly CO OQ S6.50. New v&.&V T r .H.. They can be used nn baite of a day bed, as twin beds or us an emerffency bed. The ends nre of one. Inch pests and can be folded up. Any quantity te dealers Nene C. O. D. Pads extra $1.78. $4 Brass Sample Q1 QC CestunwR Dl.i7e) Dull or bright finish, well-bracfl lees, with numerous hoeka. Slightly nhopwern let limited $20.00 Drep-Side Couches, Q1 "I rjfT Complete.. vXA.fD 0 Strenic Iren frame couches with wfth th.Uewlen.k inK c'emplet. sTnliUto'rCkdeul'1obed,ny " Ue01 "" $15.00 All-Felt and Cotten Mattresses $8.75 Itnll edge, strong tick. Geed 2000 $2.00 Pure Feather Pillows te Be Sold at, flfr Each , wt bNELLi:IJURiS Fifth Fleer . .'..H A :V It. 1 ', l rrrmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmn hi -. I vmmmmmmmmm :N. SNELLENBURG & CO; s4 , ' t N. SNELLENBURG & CO.: ftSt!15-t. - i 4i pti fAmu, ..ate. ml m. k KsjgV yliMMWy ' 'j"'l WXv3t& x t f 1 1 A "-- T. rS '3 .'? VKafr. .V f - J - v ?$ jiAxl1 A A . y ,- - t ja.-.. t, . A , HBSBHSsriBsjsBaaalHaMMissjiMasjMBsjisjM i i!j,j&4 IMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM. f wi,