The Prince of Wales Has a j Great Run of Luck at Monte Carlo, I 1 ALWAYSBEATINGTHEGAME Sarah Bernhart, on the Other Hand, is Rather Picturesque. A BEADABLE BATCH OP FOREIGN NEWS. King Milan Kept Com tantlr on the Jorap to Avoid Bomb-Throwrr A Case of Talk That Wnn't Cheap The Dutch Kins Dying In a Turkish Bah Joachim's Jubilee Well Worth HaTlng Prodigy Joaef Hoffman Going to Work Again Mrm. Hcmphrey Ward' Independence With Her PnblUbers. The play and players at Monte Carlo con tinue to afford much food for gossip and reflection. The season is a particularly brilliant one, even for the greatest gam bling resort in the world. Bismarck's com ing visit to England is considered a sop to Salisbury. Queen Victoria is accused of learning the Hindustani language. France, they say, needs a CrOniwell to settle the Boulanger nonsense. Heir Joachim's jubi lee ras one 'worth talking about. A trav eler tells of his experience in' China. TBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. 1 IiOSDOir, March 2. Copyright Tonr correspondent writes very enthusiastically from Monte Carlo about the carnival, the yachts, and all the celebtations generally, and also sends some interesting facts about individuals. The Prince of "Wales is re ported in London as having spent an occa sional hour looking on in the Monte Carlo gambling rooms. As a matter of fact his royal highness likes sport of anykind, from prize fighting up and down, and is a thorough-paced punter. He has been play ing at the Casino nearly all the time, and has been winning. His system is to double that is, to pick out a column and stick to it until he wins. This pays 2,000 francs for every 1,000 wagered. The Prince, thongh he can afford it, has not gone in for playing the limit, as this sort of thing attracts a crowd and causes stories, irritating alike to mamma and the British taxpayer, bernhakdt's mjs or luck. Sarah Bernhardt has been playing at the same table "ith the Prince, namely, the big new roulette table, which has been fitted up between the trente et quarante tables, be cause of the tremendous rush of business. Bernhardt has been more picturesque than lucky, but on Saturday last she had a most remarkable run, having won, with her money full on, three times in succession, each time with a chance of 30 to 1 against her. The larce crowd which invariably fol lows her play broke out into applause, a very unusual thing in that gambling at mospherR. Kw-lfnke of Cambridge and his son, Col---onel Fitz George, have also been playing, and both losing, the latter very heavily. The usual Monte Carlo dramas are going on. Scr many people at Monte Carlo are losing and in despair or wildly exultant at their winnings that it is difficult for a peaceful man, going to bed in the Hotel de Paris to decide whether his next door neigh bor is getting drunk, HAYTXG A GASIE, or unsuccessfully trying to cut His throat Some people in the Hotel de Paris became so much interested in such a question two or three days ago that they broke into the room and found a young man and a young -woman who had just killed themselves. Unless these things are thus accidentally discovered, the public rarely hears of them. Another gambling house tragedy was necessarily made public, as a woman who had lost a fortune accumulated in a not over-scrupulous life, wound the whole thing up by jumping from the top of the stairs which led from the gambling room down to the railway station. Prince Alexander of Battenberg and his new wife, formerly the singer Xoisinger, have been lately mixing with, the Monte Carlo crowd. The girl is not particularly pretty, but she makes many friends. Arthur Sullivan is still on hand, playing and smiling in the wake of the Prince of 'Wales, and a friend of his writes me that his round little face is very red and his health much improved. THE SULTAN KOT SuTBEHELI HAPPY. Bla Creditors Harass Him to an Almost Unbearable Extent. rBT CABLE TO Till DISPATCH.! London-, March 2. The position of Snl tan, boss of the sublime porte, ruler of the faithful, would not be an agreeable one to the average sensitive man. The fact that he is able to go on enjoying life would indi cate that he is not very particular about the appearance of his balance sheet or what his creditors think of him. His ministers are harassed on every side with demands for money, and the Bussian Ambassador stays -on from week to week, deferring his visit to St. Petersburg, and dunning the porte about unpaid war indemnity. The British and French representatives object to allowing the money to be raised by a license tax, un less theirshare of it is guaranteed and. se cured to them. Even the little windfall of 27,000,000 francs which the Turks have managed to recover from Baron Hirsch. and which would have kept the Sultan harem, etc.,- going on very comionaoiy, nas oeen matched from the poor Turks. The grasp ing Bussian minister has sequestrated it, and is quarreling with the other ministers, who would also like their share. JOLANEEPT ON THE JDMP. He- Has to Travel Id Foreign Countries Where Nobody KnoTrs Him. rBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. IiOKDOic, March 2. King Milan appears to be much worried by numerousalleged discoveries of plots against his life and throne, of which I have cabled you at in tervals. He does not consider his life safe in his .own country, and will very probably before long resume his travels in Austria and other countries where the people do not care enough about him to try to blow him P- . r- Prodigy Josef Hoffman to Work' Again. tBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. ' London-, March 2. Josef Hoffman is , going to work again. His father will bring lim'to London in the fall, and -then to a tour of the provinces. 'The prodigy will be a2 years old next June, end he has been fotudying hard during -his , -retirement, and lias composed nan a dozen new pieces. i CtmiOUS COTJNTEY. Thibet a Qnccr Place. If Returned Travelers Are to be Believed Xo Encourage ment There (or the Wicked Some of the Customs. tBT CAULE TO THE DISPATCH. London, March 2. A Chinese traveler has been telling of his experiences and the things he has seen in Thibet, and his tale is printed in London to-day. He has be held the cloud-piercing temples of jade, gold and other precious metals. At Shassa there are four temples in which Jalai Lama lives. In ulterior Thibet the p Teshu Lama rejoices in the possession of three temples." One is a nine-storied pagoda, con taimnga statue of Buddha. The Chinese trav eler describes the pagoda in a manner that inclines one to believe that he has seen the New York Tribune building. These two distinguished Lamas are most useful citi zens, as they can tell all about the future or the past, foretell births and deaths though that seems a rather useless occupation and are very much believed in. The Thibetan salutes his superior by un covering his head and sticking out his tongue three times. The country, suppos ing that this traveled Chinese is thruthl'ul, is the hottest kind of a place for the wicked. When a man is arrested his limbs are tied together and he is thrown into a dark room, in which he is tried. He is almost always sentenced to death. If the natives haveany shooting match for the drinks on hand he is tied to the pillar and used as a target for muskets and bows. If not, he is put into a cave where scorpions are plentiful, and stung to death by these willing executioners, or else presented to cannibal savages of one part of the country to eat Burial is an uncomfortable operation. The body of a dead man is put into a leather bag and hung up to dry for seven days in his own house, while the priests, whose business must not be a very.agreeable one, walk around chanting. After that the re mains are taken to some mountain peak and buried in two fashions. The flesh is cut up into slices and given to dogs to eat. The truthful Chinese traveler declares that they call this earth interment. They then grind up the bones into pills, which they feed to eagles, and this is called sky interment. There is very little business for the doctors, because sick men, no matter what ails them, are smeared all over with butter, and put out in the hot son, for better or worse. COALS CARRIED TO NEWCASTLE. An American Express Company Formed Where Xono is Xeeded. IBT CABLE TO TnE DISPATCH. London, March 2. Another American express company, the United States Express Company, has just organized itself for work in Europe, with agencies in London, Paris, etc, and will commence about April 1. It is impossible, however, to establish an ex press service in this country on the American plan. The parcel post, with its wonderfully cheap rates and efficientserviceTwould crowd the enterprising expressman out of the field. Instead of jamming parcels into mail bags and crushing them out oi shape, as in America, the parcel post is a separate de partment, has separate post wagons, and packs things in large baskets, in which they are transported withont danger, and so satisfactorily that an express company, working at a third of American rates, could not coinpets. If General Harrison's new Postmaster General wants to make a name for himself and does not mind knocking the American express business to pieces he cannot do better than to import the English parcel post system. A SOP TO SALISBURY One of the Reasons Why Mountain Bismarck Vititts the English Mahomet. tBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, March 2. There is more, talk of Bismarck's coming over to England with the young Emperor "William .this season, and preparations for a military display are already on hand. It will be difficult, how ever, for England to get up anything in the way of soldiers that will be interesting to a young man so well equipped as William IL The most interesting thing is, of 'course, not the Emperor's visit, bnt that of Bismarck, about which there is a good deal of specula tion. Such a palpable case of the mountain coming to Mahomet was probably due not to any desire of Bismarck, but partly as a gratilying sop to Salisbury for having S roved so docile a tool in the East African usiness, and also to keep an eye on young William, who, when allowed to go off to Bussia with only Herbert Bismarck as a mentor, seems to have talked a little bit more than was good for the Chancellor's plans. NOTHING SUCCEEDS LIKE SUCCESS. Hint. Hnmphrey Ward Able to Dictate Her Ovrn Terms. fBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, March 2. Mrs. Humphrey Ward has-written another book. Which will soon be ready for publication, and the man ner in which her representatives have set about disposing kof the right to print this work is calculated to make the average poor writer very envious indeed. Instead of writing to offer it for sale at a certain price, Mrs. Hnmphrey "Ward communicates with varions houses, telling their sgents to send in tenders for the book before 12 o'clock on the following day, or run the risk of not getting it A Government with a dozen big post offices to build could not address the hum ble contractor in much different language. But Mrs. Humphrey "Ward is right, which is shown by the fact that the publishers have obediently sent in offers, as com manded. BIDDING AGAINST THE SHAH. The Tandcrbllts Haven't Clear Sailing; for Their London Residence. BY CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, March 2. The Dnke of Suth erland, whose marriage "with Mrs. Blair has brought him into ill repute with the Queen, and consequently with the. court generally, will probably live permanently abroad. If it be true that the Vanderbilts tave opened negotiations for renting his London residence, the historical Stafford house, they will have the honor of compet ing with the Shah of Persia for whom, if possible, this house is to be secured 'when he comes to London in the summer. If the "Vanderbilts get the house it is to be hoped for their1 takes Ithat his majesty of Persia will not occupy it for even a short time before them. Unless he is a very much abused monarch he is certainly a most undesirable predecessor as' a tenant. A JUBILEE WORTH HATING. Herr .Joachim's Friends Show How -They Appreciate His Genius. IBY CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, March 2. A jubilee worth talking is that of Herr Joachim, which was created at Berlin yesterday. The par ticular thing celebrated was the great violinist's debut as a player. A large num ber of players sent a gold medal, and some business-like friends who know what an artist needs, gave him 100,000 marks in cash. " Some less practical admirers in Bonn have bought the house in which Beethoven used to live, will turn it into s sort of a Beethoven museum, and let Joachim be President of the concern. PATH'S SERIES OF FAREWELLS. Her Present Encasements Carry Her Well Along Into 1SS1. tBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH.' London, March 2. Simple people who are constantly in a state of rushing off to at. tend Patti's real -genuine -lasfcj' farewell, aC no matter the expense, may set" their minds at rest Mr. Robinson, editor of the Daily News, has heard from Patti, who sends him a list .of her engagements, showing that her fare wells are arranged for well into 1891, and the supposition is that she is now arranging with eagerly competing managers for per formances after that. LATEST FAD OF QUEEN TIC. They Soy She Can Converse Fluently la the Hindustani. BT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, March 2. Queen Victoria is going away to Biarritz, next Tuesday, with her daughter Beatrice, and Battenburg, the sincerely-to-be-pittied husband, will follow them. The Queen's donkey and chaise have already been sent to the Villa Boche foucauld. In front of the Queen's villa passes a steam tramway of a very noisy and fast.description, and a movement has been set on foot by her loyal admirers to induce the company to stop running it, or go round the block, or do sometbing else while the Queen is'there. But the company, with an eye for the dividends and not for royalty, declines to make any arrangement. The latest achievement of the Queen, ac cording to the flattering court gossip, has been to acquire a marvelous fluency in the Hindustani language, in which' she is now pictured as conversing freely with her tur baned Indian servants, of whom she makes much. I am inclined to donbt this report of the Queen's linguistic ability. I have watched the progress of several American and other women of grandmotherly age try ing to learn French in Paris, or German in Berlin, and my sincere conviction is that the Queen would find it very difficult to talk Hindustani to her servants if they did not know exactly what she wanted to say. A QUIET TIP TO HARRISON. The English Press Hopes He Will Treat Great Britain Servilely.. rBr CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, March 2. The English press continues to remind us of onr shortcomings in relation, curiously enough, to the idiocy of that typical English gentleman, Xord Sackville. The announcement of Sir Julian Paunceforte's appointment as British Minister at Washington calls forth much admiration on the part oi the Tory writers for Lord Salisbury, and numerous regrets that the depraved American politi cians who rule the country just now will probably not apologize for their conduct to the gentleman, Lord Sackville, before in the office. This is coupled with a faint hope that Harrison will inaugurate his term of office in a better spirit, and begin by getting down on his knees to England, which is de scribed as the only power in Europe which can do much good or harm to the United States of America. THE LATEST BRITISH TRUST. Firebrick Makers Preparing to Corner' the Trade With 3,000.000. rBY CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. I Xondon, March 2. Another trust is about to be organized in England, if certain negotiations go through. This particular syndicate is seeking to corner the firebrick trade, and a capital of 3,000,000 is, if pos sible, to be raised. Young Lord Dudley's name, which will of course be an ornamental one, is mentioned as Chairman. This trust will be a very serious matter for the iron trade, as the syndicate proposes to commence by raising the price of fire brick 5 shillings per thousand. DUNG IN A TURKISH BATH. The Dutch Kiaff'Spendlng His Last Hoars in a Very Hot Room. - tBT CABLE, TO THE DISPATCH. London, March'. .2. The King of the Netherlands continues to fight off the final stage of his malady. .He is now kept alive by living in a room with an excessively high temperature, so high that the little Princess, his daushter, can't be allowed to enter it, while the Queen is compelled to re main in an adjoining room, only going in to see His Majesty at long intervals and for a very short time. The balance of the King's life is practi cally to be spent, according to the reports from Hague, in a mild form of Turkish bath. TALE NOT TERI CHEAP. A Tiennaeto-Printer's Boy Suffers for Being n. Little Too Gossipy. tBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. London, March 2, It is dangerous to be gossipy in Vienna, when great personages," dead or alive, are concerned. A printer's boy in that town expressed his opinion very mildly concerning the dead Prince Rudolf's character, relating one or to an ecdotes in support of his opinion, and is now undergoing a promptly administered sentence of six month's hard labor. POWDER Absolutely Pure. t This powder never varies. A marvel of pnr lty, strength and wholesomenesa. More eco nomical than the ordinary kin ds, and cannot be sold in competition with the multitude ot ow est short weight alum or phosphate pow ders. Bold only in cans. ROYAL BAKING POWDER CO, 108 Wall St, N. Y. i oc5-m4S-KW7SU WM. GRAB0 WSKY HAT MANUFACTURER. Our spring styles of LADIES' STRAW HATS are ready. The styles shown will meet the demands of our many friends and custom ers. Our pood work has established our rep utation as first-class and tasty Hatters. We will renovate your old fashioned Hat to any of our new spring styles, by our new electric process, rendering the Hats as cood as new In every respect Bring your Hat or Bonnet now. do not wait for the usual rash. The leading styles are all in. Always get your workr done at the reliable old business stand of WM. GRABOWSKY, 707 Penn avenueopp. Perm Building. jilUOMW aOYAi High - Pressure Living characterizes these modern days. The result is a fearful increase of Brala and Heart Diseases 'General De bility, Insomnia, Paralysis, and In sanity. Chloral and Morphia augment the evil. The medicine best adapted to do permanent good is Averts Sar Baparilla. It purifies, enriches, and vitalizes the blood, and thus strengthens every f unctionand faculty of the body. J"'I have used Ayer's Sarsaparilla, in my family, for years. I have found it invaluable as A Cure for Nervous Debility caused by an in active liver and a low state of the blood." Henry Bacon, Xenla, Ohio. "For some time I have been troubled with heart disease. I never found any thing to help me nn til, I began using Ayer's Sarsaparilla. I have only used this medicine six) months, but it has re lieved me from my trouble, and enabled me to resume work.;' J. P. Carzanett, Perry, M. "I have-leen a practicing physician for over half a century, and during that time I have never found so powerful and reliable an alterative and blood purifier as Ayer's Sarsaparilla." Dr. M. Maxstart, Louisville, Ky. Ayer's Sarsaparilla. r-EEPAEED BT Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass. Price $1 ; six bottles, $5. Worth $5 a bottle. DESKS A SPECIALTY. The Most Complete Stock in the city. BED ROCK PRICES. We also manufacture this wonderful combination Easy Chair. STEVENS CHAIR CO. No. 3 SIXTH ST.. jalO-Su PITTSBURG, PA J". DIAMOND, -Optician, 22 Sixth. Street, nttsturrfif. Spectacles and Eyeglasses correctly adjusted to every defect of sight. Field and Opera Glasses.Telescopos, Microscopes, Barometers Thermometers, etc. ARTIFICIAL EYES made to order, and warranted. Always on hand a large and complete stock. ja6-TTSSu 0 DIIIU I BIT Painlessly enred In lO to SO flUM HADIID&TS. Sanitarium or Homo Treatment. Trisi Free, mo wire. or i"ay. The Humans Rxhedt Co- La Fayette. Ind. .-seH-n29-sn - STEAMERS AND EXCURSIONS. H AMBUBQ-AMEK1CAN PACKET CO. The new twin-screw express steamer AUUDSTA-VIC'rOKIA Of 10, 000 tons and 12,500 horsepower, will leave i New York lor SOUTHAMPTON AND HAMBURG, May IS and J une 20. Apply to C.B. KICHAKD&CO., General Passenger Agents, SI Broadway, New York. MAX SCHAMBEKG. ,, feZ7 27-Su S27 SmlthHeW St., ttttslurg, Pa. K frig' ..TrvnT WHIM W jiiif" ' till I'HIlHIIiiiilliH I j " Received the Contract to Furnish the White House FOR PRESIDENT HARRISON, Could have filled the order promptly and in a style befitting the high station of -the Chief Magistrate of the greatest nation on earth, -and all this, without going outside of his new spring stock. You may doubt it, but t if you are open to conviction, a single visit to the Grand Penn Avenue Outfitting Emporium will prove how easily Keech could have substantiated his claim. "As a matter of fact 1 . People. Who. Intend ; to Moie or Go to Housekeeping 1. 1 will make a serious mistake, if they buy any Furniture or Carpets before having seen" '- Keecis magnificent new spring stock and his extra'ordijiarily low prices. And with what ease and comfort you can make your selections at this famous store. On every one of the six spacious floors the goods are displayed in a most pleasing and prac " -' tical ma7iner, enabling ,the purchaser to see everything at a glance'; the . light and ventilation in the building are most excellent, and all the surroundings look as clean and bright as a new silver dollar. . Elegant retiring r 007ns, too, for' both ladies and gentlemen, , "' . i are at the disposal of customers. In short, there isn't ;..''. -' another establishment in the city that can serve you '':-ui in every respect as well as KeecJis. And, v . -?.-? t heres another important matter: .' . 'T HowdVluch More Sensible it is to Buy Your Furniture and Carpets Now Than Wait Untilthe Big Rush Sets in Later On. ' . . Now you are at leisure, so are we Why not, then, come in and make your selections? Now the stock is complete, now everything is, at its.-best! You can r . select whatever you please, make a small deposit thereon, and we will have the " goods all ready for you on April 1. Isn't (Iris far more preferable to the run ning and rushing and hasty purchases at moving time? Don 't forget, too, that . . we sell E0E CASH,. 0B ON EASY WEEKLY PAYMENTS. 9Q3 925 Penn Ave. .NEAR NINTH SREET. Open Saturday-nights tall 10 o'clock WMmM Wr"iisPwffl wk '"isir $25,00Q. AUCTION SALE -or-. Japanese Soods. Sales daily from 9:30 A. M. to 12 M.,-and from 2 to 6 P. M. Satur days from 7 to 10 P.M. Private Sales at Auotlbn Prices at ailhours. Goods purchased delivered to all parts of the two citiea Parties so desiring oan pay on delivery of 'goods. r All goods must be sold by April 1 J. A.' ROBINSON, Auctioneer. 10 SIXTH STREET, NEAR SUSPENSION BRIDGE. mh3-su P -tie'ict t s O. D. LEVIS. Solicitor of Patents. 131 Fifth avenue, above Simthfleld, next Leader office. (No delay.) Established 20 years. se29-hlu RESORTS. Atlantic City. THE ROYAL ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Always open. Appointments first-class: steam heat, sun galleries, etc. fe22. W. H. REYNOLDS. TOTHKRGILLHOTJSE. ATLANTIC CITY, JD N. J. Located near beach. Perfect san itation. Steam heat.. ELIZABETH HART LEY, Prop. fe25-12-TTSSu ' ON THE BEACH. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., HADDON HALL EDWIN LIEPINCOTT. felS-M THE WINDSOR ATLANTIC CITY. Unobstructed ocean view. Cuisine and appointments of the best. Dinner 130 and 6:30. G. WATERS. W. E. COCHRAN.Chlef Clerk. mhl-TTSsn THE ISLESWORTH, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Ou the beach, sea end of Virginia avenue. Steam heat, electric hells. Will open Febru- ary9,.1889. jal3-72-MWFSU BUCK & McCLELLAN. , OLD POINT COMFORT, VIRGINIA.. HYCEIA HOTEL. 100 yards from Fort Monroe; open all the year, accommodates 1,000 guests; admirable location; delightful climate; thrilling historic surround ings. Turkish, Russian, Roman, Electric and HOT SEA baths, the latter especially beneficial in rheumatic troubles. Music by the famous Artillery School Band. Glass-inclosed verandas. Average temperature for winter 48. Absolutely free from malaria. All things considered, the most comforatable' and delightful resort at which to spend the winter months in the United States. Send for descnptivepamphlet. ' no27-y40Jrursu F. N. PIKE. Manager. E S C on 'April 1, KEECH i . RUBEN Presentslbr the Spring of 1889 the New and .Correct, RmT2BsisssssfiBs5Bss2SlBlssssH YOUNG GENTS DERBY At the following prices: SI 90, 2 20, 2 40, ?2 90, 83 40. If beauty of style, perfection of outline and superiority of finish go for anything, our new Derby will undoubtedly prove the seller of the season. Our famous factory prices have attained a popularity simply phe nomenal, and through them our es tablishment has become the hat dis tributing depot of; Western Penn sylvania, LET IT BE KNOWN that we are the sole agent, in Pittsburg for the Celebrated Miller Derbys and Silk Hats. All others advertising the Miller hat mislead the public. RUB EN, The Hatter and Furnisher, 421 AND 423 SMTTHPIELD ST. Mail orders promptly filled. mh3-100 EXCITEMENT -AT- SALLER&CQ.'S! AlterationSale NOW GOING ON. Men's, Boys' and.Children's Suits and Overcoats. Hats and Fur nishings. Ladies' Cloaks and Wraps. Everything at half price. COME WHILE HE FEAST LASTS. SALLER & CO., Comer Diaioi'ant- Siitliflelu Streets. mb3-uwrsu REMOVED TO No. 50 FIFTH AVENUE, Neab, Wood Street. KORNBLUM, OPTICIAN Telephone No. lCSd. f ol9-MTWTFSnwk 4 H 3 923, 925 Penn Ave. Sound A B O U T Solid Shoes: The most importanTand cuss in our advertising columns. Everybody wears- Shoes, heneij everybody is interested, from Out" to the thrifty workman business and professional man pjik.uiau. ui icucr titnicx wuu wuuis aucugui ana QuraDUity. iu - ijtj": of these neonle ran o-et inst wrijit thev want hv rnmino' tn 3C ' - J J w 4 w - - w b j VVU4S4Sfek . V 4i K A U FM ANNS Our new spring stock is the rrrost extensive ever exhibited in tluV . 'city, embracing, as it does, all kinds and descriptions of reliable footwear for men, women . and children, while our prices will be a pleasant revelation to our .customers. Our Shoe buyers, who have just returned from the East, are very enthusiastic about their pur-' chases. In Rochester, New York, -Boston, Lynn and Haverhill (the five great shoe manufacturing towns of America) they scooped ia many thousands of dollars; worth of fine Shoes at most favorable terms. These advantageous purchases place us in a position to un -dersell the entire retail trade. The following are but a few examples of what we are able to do for you: 2,300 Pairs Ladies' Fine Dongola Kid Shoes, VT "S s,. FOR $1 23 The only thing that's cheap about these Shoes is the price; the quality is excellent. They are made of fine Dongola Kid, have worked button holes and afe solid throughout.. The lengths run from 2 to 7; the widths afe. C and D. They're equal to any $3 Shoes offered elsewhere. 1. . 1,600 Pairs Ladies' Finest Bright Dongola Shoes vTSkm FOR $2 SO' These elegant Shoes are made of A. No. 1 Bright Dongola Kid, are warranted hand-turned; worked button holes; opera and common sense lasts; all lengths and widths; an excellent Dress Shoeln every respect, and superior to any 4 Shoes ever offered in this city. MOO Pairs Men's B. Your Pick .:. and St FOR $1 29 over 500 pairs of these Shoes have been sold since Friday morn ing. They are made of good tannery stock Calf Skin, are solid iq every sense of the word, and come in button, lace and congress, plain or tipped. The'best experts have pronounced them superior to any. $3 Shoes offered in this city. Come quick, if you want a pair. 1,400 Pairs Men's French Calf Dress Shoes, YT5m FOR $3 00 These- Shoes are as fine, comfortable and shapely as any gentleman. ; wants to wear. They are made of good French Calf Skin, have sewed bottoms and seamless sides, and will outwear any regular $$ Shoes bought around town. We have them in all sizes and widths. 900 Pairs Boys' Fine B& FOR $1 24 v This is one of the best Hoys' Shoes ever manufactured. They have Dongola Kid tops and fine Calf vamps, oak-tanned soles, very sub stantial linings, plain and tipped, and would be cheap at $2. In deed, most stores sell them at $2 50 all year 'round. The sizes of these Shoes run from 11 to 2. 1,050 Pairs Young Men's Waukenphast Shoes, Your Pick .:. TprT? 021 'TO .:. and Fit i? V-J-tti 3)1 (O These Shoes, which run in sizes from 2j to 5, have excellent Calf vamps and Kangaroo Kid tops, and are made on the improved English Waukenphast last 'No better Shoes have ever been offered in this city "at the price. lew; Spring Styles, -How- Eea In Eyery Department, . A. KAUFMANN EIETH ArVE. and - .i:-" ' ,...".' ta.$ar. Sense r- '. Shoes. wide reaching subject we can db3 the, society lady who wants, the "Latest! whose object is economy; '. from .tSSl who looks to solid comfort to tMBgfflt Calf Dress Shoes, Calf Dress Shoes, SMTHFIEIB ST. ;m ; -St . ;rw -?r -ft tr .-& & i ' ufiHR .. V ,rtemmsmmmi-iaii-ii jgi,:tj