HmHI HHHflH9KHKHHHfljregyK7l BDJSit PITTSBURG DISPATC, !SSIp8rL0 bread ice cream was served molded in exact imitation of such a loaf, the dark crust be ing of caramel cream. Makqaret H. 'Welch. FASHIONS FOR THE SEASON. There is no golden mean in evening robes this winter. You may either look delight fully simple, girlish andunassuring, or par ticularly magnificent, regal, impressive. That is the beauty of the Empire. If de sired, no style can be made to look richer, handsomer, more overawing; but if you yearn lor sweet simplicity, behold it in the Empire, with its soft, fine effects. Xever did I see this more strikingly ex emplified than at the moment when I looked at two evening toilets, lying side by side in a fashionable modiste's. Both had an Em pire touch, and yet one was lightness and delicacy, the other all splendor and mag nificeuce. The first was in pale water green satin, cut low and square, and fitted close to the figure. -Over it hung loosely or floated as they say so much more expressively in French a tunic of cream lace. The deli cate ed;e of it stood up above the decollete corsage, and just beneath lay a band of rosebuds; the buds went up over the shoul ders as well, and around the edge of the lace at the foot High standing, short lace ruffles lormed the sleeves. The second was velvet, rich black velvet, aud was cut in a deep, rounding point at the neck. Immense shot velvet puffs for sleeves, and a long, full train added to the rich eflect, which was slightly toned, how ever, by an Empire cloak in cream lace that partially covered it. The cloak was fastened to the low-cut neck in lront. but then swept away on either side so completely that none ot it could be seen in front save its large scalloped edge. It covered thetrain, how ever, almost completely. A dull gold pas sementerie belt clasped the black velvet The modiste showed me another, cut in the style of 1830, which is also being suc cessfully revived. All. we seem to care about at present is what onr great-grandmothers wore, and proceed to copv as closely as possible. It is to be hoped that we confine ourselves simply to copying gowns. For if we ever take to the quaint old bonnets of those days, woe be unto us! The 1830 dress was very youthful look ing. It was a dinner dress lor a very young girl, and was made of light China blue ioularJ. Three ruffles in mousseline, ae soie, finely embroidered in gold thread, adorned the skirt The ruffles were so far apart that the top one came within 12 inches of the narrow gold belt, that had little pendants of wrought gold at the clasp. The ruffle at the edge was a tiny one; the one about 12 Indies above was considerably deeper I should say about 6 inches; so n as the top one. A berthe of this same lace went around the low neck, and the short bell sleeves had lace ruffles also. By this time I was so interested in even ing gowns that 1 wanted to see more, ana so I betook me to another plice. Having expressed my harmless desire, there was brought out for my inspection a beautiful ball dress that I tell quite in love with. It was pale corn vellow. made ot bengaline, and in a particularly simple style. At the edge of the skirt there was no adornment, a lact that I noted with a little bui prise. The yellow was simplr turned in a deep hem. At the top of the hem, however, was a gar land of roses, strung alone, with no stems or leaves. These ere very pale just a touch ofjyellow in their centers. The roses Lung in scallops all around. At the edge of the bodice they were laid, also: this bodice was cut off periectly straight, lroin shoulder to shoulder, bark and lront, but not very low, and had short bell puffed sleeves. The yellow belt.which was simply ribbon knotted and hanging in streamers in lront, was covered at the kuot by more roses. I saw a brocade dinner gown, too, that impressed me wonderfully. It was a green, and a fine gold thread outlined the palm leat design m it It was cut princess, and had a lace lront that was cathered closely together at the top of the decollete bodice, but spread out wider and wider as it fell over a rose-colored satin front. Velvet sleeve puffs, the shade ot the gold in the brocade, were caught around above the el bow bypearl embroidered passementerie.and threestrings ot pearls adorned the bodice's front, caught up in the center by a gold clasp. The dress was most lovely. Eva A Schcbeex. who remonstrated a little with her royal spouse in the matter. The next day a bot tle of hair dye was sent to his dressing room with the Queen's compliments. The King said nothing, but at breakfast the following morning he appeared with his French poodle under his arm. his fleece a rich hue from a plentiful use of the hair dye, while his own whiskers and hair remained un touched. The use of hair dye is happily not nearly so prevalent as a generation ago, but there arc still plenty among us who watch with dread the multiplication of sil ver in their locks, and not a lew who still, foolishly, resort to imitation color to re place them. At one of the forthcoming November fairs, which always blossom out in expecta tion of the holiday season, the cutting of silhouettes will be one of the attractions and presumably noticeable receipt-swelling elements. A skillful young woman does the cutting, and a second young woman se lected especially for the purpose holds the head of the sitter !' the proper pose. The pa trons of the sterner sex, who expect to spend about so much at one of these affairs, will be like v to squander a considerable portion of it for these portraits and the experiences that go with them. "I think," said a woman the other day, "that we are goiDg to become a race of specialists. I have recently undergone a trifling operation, and while I was still con fined to my room from its effects, I developed a disagreeable, not to say alarming, cold. The surgeon was still visiting me, and at his next call I told him of my condition. He questioned me rather stupidly, I thought, aud finally blurted out: 'Posi tively, I don't know what to do for you; better send for Dr. Blank. To tell the truth, when I can't use the knife, I'a ;ut of it' "What is true of the medical profession is true of almost all other departments of life nowadays. It is noticeable at the 'Woman's Exchange how this and that worker develops superior excellence in one I become so extensive, that to'give even a so called simple luncheon or dinner has be come a formidable and expensive affair. Naturally, roanr people of moderate means are debarred from entertaining, and, as nat urally from accepting hospitalities, which they cannot return, One of the means pro posed by a member of the erouo as satisfy ing and wholesome, but simple and inex pensive, was clam juice, hot and strong, as a first course; lamb chops and peas, or beef steak and mushrooms; as a Becond course, with a dessert of baked apples and cream, and a plate of sweet wafers or small cakes. This daintilv served and congenially eaten would afford an agreeable function within reach ot many persons who must now shut themselves away socially. The achievements of Lasker, the eminent chess player, bring out anew the fact that the subtle intricacies and problems of this game have never been prominently mas tered by women. It is essentially a man's game, and a man with a clear bead and a fondness tor mathematics. There are almost nr nf the essentiallv feminine charac teristics which find expression in a game of chess. A dainty trifle for a baby's cift is a clover sachet, which is a bunch of sweet clover, flowers and all, pressed between two squares of fine silk muslin, edged with lace. Many dinner hostesses prefer to change the glasses at every course, where wine is served, to prevent the formidable array upon the table. Umbrella clasps of gold and silver are among novelties in small silver. A shoebpx seen at a woman's exchange was a box like an ordinary soapbox, which bad been fitted with pigeonholes, and enameled with bine enamel paint inside. A flat cushion of blue and white porcelain cloth, to be had at Japanese stores, was fitted to the lid, and a valance, leaded at the bottom, lell around the box. The nov elty ot the box was in the pigeonhole idea, which is better than throwing shoes and slippers all in together, as is done in the usual shoebox. Of a venerable lady, probably the most THE WOMAN WHO CAN COOK. rWMTTIN TOR THR DISPATCH. 1 Mr. Theodore Child, in a very interesting article on ".Relish and Seasoning,"tells bow bis Gaulish cook won his confidence by a simple remark that she made the first time he has friends after she bad entered upon her duties. "Monsieur," she said, "I am very pleased to see that none of the gentle men Inst night touched the salt cellar. I could not desire a finer compliment" 'If , or my guests," said Mr. Child, "bad found it necessary td ruffle the smooth surface of the salt cellar, and add a pinch to any of the dishes, it would have been proof that my cook bad not succeeded in season ing her dishes to the point." The gentleman above referred to has "been recently described by Mr. Dana, in an edi torial, as the Englishman living in Paris who knows so much about art that he can make conversation on pictures more easily than most ot us can on weather, and whose mind is so widespread that he has written a sort of a book on eating. The habit, common to many cooks, of tasting food direct from the kettle, is not, to say the least, a very refined one. When cooking by rule is established tasting is not necessary. However, there is a dainty way of testing the seasoning which must at onca commend itself to the fastidious coot each member . ly frying hh own cake and eating . (. spot, allowing no time to be lost betw ' the griddie and the mouth. In greas'flfg the griddle whioh must be hot use the smallest quantity of fat, and be careful not to have the fat settle in pools. If it should do so, the cakes will not brown evenly, nor will they have that flann1-1ilrA ia-rlnvm fvtiinli la nnA nf thA nt- tractions of the griddle cake. Always grease the griddle from the center. A practical cook in speaking of the meth ods of the French, says that a secret of their success is Jn having a knowledge of the variety of food, plenty ot time to prepare it, and a slor fire. With meals cooked so rapidly as we are in the habit of doing by hot fire the juices do not hare the oppor tunity to cook instead of being cooted they are baked, and thus rendered tasteless. A clean kitchen table is the pride of a neat honsekeeper, and nothing can be more annoying to such a one than to have it serve as meat board and chopping tray; or as a resting place for hot kettles and greasy pans. To protect it during the process of meat-gettinsr, cover it with white oil cloth. This should be thoroughly cleaned and well dried before it is laid away. A good plan is to have one end of the table neatly covered with zinc, upon which the hot vessels may be placed. In scrubbing the table observe the rule of using the brush in the grain of the wood never in any other direction. To keep the table white and to remove grease spots use sand and cold water. The excessive use of soap makes the wood gray and dingy. The kitchen table should have its corners rounded. By taking proper care of soiled linen the SIMPLICITY Ef EVENING DRESS. GOSSIP FOR THE FAIR. rwniTTES FOR THE DtSrATCItl The position of the chaperon in fashion able society in New York is not one of un mitigated bliss. A paragraph recently printed told of the growing fashion to ignore these paid vouchers of respectability, ex cept so far as their presence is permitted, and cited the) case of a young woman, accompanied by her chaperon, dining at a restaurant with a gentleman, and both pay ing not the slightest attention, by word or look, to the refined and dignified looking duenua, who made the dinner good form. A still more flagrant case came under the personal observation of the writer recently, w hen such a trio went through a long course dinner, with only two active participants. The chaperon was a silent, unemployed as sistant, as dainty after dainty was brought bv the obsequious waiter and partaken of with relish br the young woman and her escort Not even at dessert was an ice offered to the gray-haired, well dressed woman of thoroughly good ap pearance, WHO maue a miru ai the table. That she could preserve a calm and unembarrassed demeanor through this trying ordeal, showed that she was pluckv, and accustomed to the situation. When" the dinner was oyer she followed the pair to a waitiug carriage, taking a place on the forward seat, after the other two had louneed back among the cushions of the back seat One cannot fancy a man treat ine anv lady in that outrageous fashion, but men in Xew York, who pride themselves on form, sacrifice every other consideration to preserve that condition. A pretty story is told of the royal pair of Italy which is not without a moral for some women. The King's whiskers began to grow siy, which fretted Queen Margherita, PBINCESS DINNER GOWN. branch of the same class of work. One em broiderer 'makes a specialty' of initials, an other of French dots or buttonholes, and a third of filling in. One woman excels in jellies, but can't be depended on in canned fruit, and so on. It is one of the -signs of the growing excellence of all standards of work that to do one thing well is enough, and that the measure of well-doing is little short of perfection." A novelty in fabrics this season has a tonch of real poetry in it This is the rain drop silk, which is shown in white and col ors. The most realistic is that of a cobweb gray, with the raindrops, big and little, splashed all over it. One often wonders w ho is responsible for the peculiarly apt designations of the various materials, and more particularly the colors and tints of the passing season. Toreador, for instance, a bright orange, that suggests an amphithea ter, Soanish senoritas and lowered horns: Niagara, a dark blue, with a touch of green, that is like, and only like, that deceptive, tmootli, clear water that seems to pause just at the brink of the cataract; old straw, a greenish yellow, and the rest, new and old, that anybody can recall as most fitting ly put The wedding bell, floral curtains, horse shoes and the like for backgrounds or cano pies for a bridal pair, are not now much seen. An arch of roses is a late fancy, and at a recent wedding a huge fleur-de-lis of roses and lilies of the valley, with smilax aud asparagus sprays stood across the cor ner where the pair were receiving congratu lations. Teachers are beginning to realize the im portance of voice culture as a part of their reserve capital. The commonness of a pecu liar throat affection among women teachers led a specialist in throat diseases to investi gate the matter, aud he found a chief cause of the trouble to be the wrong use of voice, rather than the overuse. The health giving value of the proper use of the voice is now an accepted fact A recent writer goes further and asserts that "the tones of the voice produce mental growths, not only with the speaker, but with his auditor." To speak calmly when we are excitsd as sists us to calm ourselves and similarly and more comprehensively than can be said in a paragraph, the cultivation of sweet, clear, refined tones, promotes a development of graces other than those of speech. Several women were discussing recently a question ot reform in hospitality, and all agreed that there was need of it People of wealth and fashion give such Lucullus feasts, and emulation in that direction has I widely Known woman in America, it is told that on one occasion she was expected home and a cabman had been sent to meet the train. He returned to say that there was no such person at the station. "No one but an old washerwoman." The husband of the lady in question stared at him in dismay. "Go back this moment,' he cried, "and get her!'' It is now 13 years since, as dealers justly complain, jewelry "went out" Still some of , the necessities of a lady's toilet have, in the meantime, come to be of gold or silver or precious stones. Costly hatpins and hair pins and "stickpins" abound. 'So it is the fashion to wear laced shoes; laced shoes come untied; ergo, there are at once silver, buckle-shaped lace-fasteners offered for sale. Each want brings its own. finery in its train. No trnism is trner than that usually ex pressed as "we never can tell what we will do." A tactful and gentle woman thus re tails an experience: "Word was brought me of a terrible calamity I must break to a ser vant I hurried to the kitchen, and, catch: ing her by the arm, I cried, excitedly 'Mary, two of your children have been drowned. Take off your apron and go home,' Of course, she stared blankly at me. I spoke more impatiently: "Don't youiear what I say? Two of your chil dren have Deen arownedj taice oil your apron!' As though that were the one im portant thing." Two or three pairs of boots, worn change and change about, are most economical and best lor the health of the feet as welL Low shoes we are told by authority should ba preferred to high ones and laced to"" those that button. Cold feet, an infallible sign of poor circulation, may be prevented, not onlv by attention to the general health but by brisk local treatment witli a fleshbrusb, which, in time, will remove both cause and eflect An ingrown nail may be treated by cut ting a Y shaped hole in the center of the nail, or paring the same place, thin with a sharp bit'of glass. Painting the "side of the nail with iodine has proved ben eficial. A hard corn may be removed by frequent soaking in hot water, ,or by rub bing with salt-petre, or by acetic acid care fully applied. A soft corn is a more seri ous matter but will yield to tincture of iron. A plaster of lard and iodine is'said to reduce the painful n ess of a bnnion. From the large spoon used for stirring pour a little ot the soup, or whatever it may be you are cookiug, into a dessert spoon, and taste from that. Many persons, if they bad the least suspicion of such a habit, would not under any circumstances par take of food prepared at such hands. The fryingpan has a warm advocate in the man who protests that we cannot altogether do away with it, else what would become of ined chickens? He says, "You could not find many who would be willing to admit that this is an unwholesome way of cook ing a spring pullet" A few years ago the formal dinner was a very tedious function, and doubly so when the servants were not thoroughly well up in the dinner drill. The dinner of the present time, by the omission of many courses, which is regarded as sensible, is more rapid and consequently more successful for "Festivity to be successful must be rapid." One can never be over-confident in mak ing a souffle a very simple dish, appar ently, and one that can be-made on short notice. Bub there is skill required in mak ing this dainty, and it merely consists in knowing when the oven is at its best If the temperature be too high or too low the souffle will be a failure. The cook who values her reputation will not depend upon the treacherous souffle for a dinner party. The moment it has attained the fluffiness it is capable of it must be seived, and that, too, in the baking tin. "Like time and tide," says an expert on the subject, "a souffle waits for no man." When once it ceases to go up it begins to go down either in or out of the oven. Pierre Blot, an eminent authority in matters of the cuisine, accuses the Ameri cans, especially the poorer classes, of eating labor in the laundry is decreased. All articles, although soiled, should be folded and placed at once 'in bag or hamper. Soiled table linen should be kept in a bag convenient to the dining room. Soiled wearing apparel should be kept as remote as possible from sleeping rooms, and do not convert the closets of the house into dens of filth by storing away in their corners the family wash. Towels should be. used legitimately never for dusters, wash cloths or lamp cleaners. There is nothing, so convenient about the house as a good supply of dusters, and no room in the house is complete with out its duster. These useful articles should always be hemmed, and it is important that they should be washed and ironed regu larly. Cheese cloth, calico and old dress linings make good dusters, and the value of cast of! stockings minus the feet cut and sewed together cannot be overestimated. These are excellent for fine furniture. The care of dusters, tea towels and dish cloths is a particular occupation. Set aside an afternoon in the week for washing these necessary articles, and let it not bs on the regular washing day for if these are al lowed to come up in the rear at such a time they are very apt to go 'without the care they deserve. Ellice Seeena. to neutralize the acid, and rinse in . two clear waters. A solution of oxalic acid will Temove iron rust Saturate blood stains with kerosene, 'then rub in tepid waier and with soap. Cheap soap and soap powders are "a snare and a delusion," and are sure to make clothes yellow. An equally fine polish is obtained by adding a little spermaceti, lard or kerosene to boiled starch, but nothing will impart as much stiffness as a teaspoonful of borax added to a quart of cold starch. Woolens should not be dried out of doors is freezing weather, but in a room of about the same temperature as the water in which they Vera washed. The texture ot.all fabrics is injured by drying out of doors in freezing weather, and the practice should be avoided whenever possible. C. E. B. MISSIONABY WOMEN IK CHINA. The Ladles Have to Submit to Many Start ling Experiences. English residents in China have recently directed my attention to a new phase of the missionary question, namely, the fate of many English women engaged in certain fields of mission work, says a writer in Lon don Truth. One correspondent sent me a startling picture ot the experiences which many young Engiishwoman undergo in close as sociation with the natives on steamboats and in other similar circumstances. I hesi tated to pnblish his facts and still more his inferences without stronger evidence; but there can at least be no doubt that mission ary women are compelled to sutler a great deal aud to see a great deal in China for which they can hardly be fitted and for no good purpose that is apparent To take only one aspect of the matter, a recent China paper comments strongly on the death of a lady attached to the China Island Mission, and only lately arrived in the country, who had died of heat apoplexy daring a voyage in a native boat to Yang chow, on which she had been sent when the thermometer was at 101 in the shade. This is condemned as a willull and purposeless sacrifice of human life, and I do not see what other view can reasonably be taken of it CHHTA'8, BACKED LILY. It Springs From a ringer Bowl Filled With Pebbles and Water. One of the most interesting of the newer varieties of flowers is the Chinese sacred lily, which need only be laid on the topf a yy .DELICIOUS-, 153 HaYorinii little heap of clean, beautiful pebbles in a transparent glass dish or finger bowl, half filled with water. It shoots up large, bright green leaves and strong stems which are crowned with great bunches of lovely white flowers. These make especially good table decorations, as the glass dish may so easily be set in the silver jardiniere just before dinner; and they are particularly good drawing-room plants, as the bowl mav be put on the most delicately emDroidercd cloth with perfect safety. xfract NATURAL FRUIT FLAVORS Of perfect purity.) Of great strength. Economy In their uso Flavor as delicately Vanilla." Lemon Orange Almond Rose etc and deliciously as the fresh fruit For sale by Geo. K. Stevenson & Co., and a first-class grocers. Q4-0OQ-00C'0 Chas. Pfelfer Dyed 25 years aco and is still dyeinj. Tel. I 131 Smithneld street. 39 I 100 Federal street, AUeshenv. 1261 1 1913 Carson street, Soutliside. Absolutely the Best. It is richest in pure cream of tartar; It. is strongest in wholesome leavening poweri It has the best keeping qualities and is the most economical; It contains no alum, ammonia or other deleterious substance. All the ingredients used are published on the label. LEVELAND SUPERIOR BAKING POWDER. WASHING DAY HINTS. WRITTEN FOR THE DISPATCH. 1 It is more economical to use borax, am monia or some other harmless cleansing agent, than to expend one's strength and wear out fabrics by vigorous rubbing on a washboard. "While there are several ways of washing successfully, there is only one of assorting clothes before commencing operations, and that is to have at least two grades of soiled linen, one of colored cottons and one ot SOME FRIEZES Are so monotonous that they offend the eye. Examine our new designs, which apparently avoid repetition of pattern. FIGURE ORNAMENTS Have been used to advantage in next season's wall papers. Nota ble novelties are the "Floren tine," the "Moorish" and the "Greek" treatment of side wall decoration. WM. TRINKLE & CO., WOOD ST., COB. SIXTH AVR Send for onr pamphlet, "Mow to Paper." oc20 DPQEfei ALL KINDS $5 UP. tLOlwi LargeS;zaRollTop3$2HIrt THE FAVORITE FOLDING CHAIR, 5 in one; 50 posi tions. A home necessity.Pleases everybody,old or young, sick or veil. Lawn and Wheel Chairs and Invalid goods in stock: Discount prices. STEVENS CHAIR CO., iitsSSI?5, jeS-sa irmL m JIETIST AND PHOTOGUAPHEH. 16SIX1USTBEET. Carilnets, 83 to SI per flnzen; petite, trl per dozen. Tele ilione 1751. apS-f 4-Mwrsa THE URGESTm LfUUIG MIUMEDr HOOSEn WESTERI PEmBT- The mania the decline. for massage is said to be on Excellence.beauty, deft ness, elevated and refined taste, exaltation of pro gressive ideas, all these attributes 'elegantly and faithfully defined in our high class, Artistic Millin ery, not only so.but, com- JFEffl AN EMPIBE AND AN 1830 GOWN. too much pudding and pie, many for econ omy and others tor convenience. The for mer, he says, are mistaken and the-latter are blamable. Mr. Blot says he took the trouble to put questions about thejise of pastry to over 309 mothers, wives of me chanics or of emploves at a comparatively small salary, and that more than 90 per cent gave about the same answer: That they make and cook cakes in one day, enough to feed the family for three days, to save the trouble of cooking every day. Mr. Blot cannot see where the trouble can be for a good wife and mother to prepare her husband's and children's dinner. If to save labor he suggests the cooking of such articles as beans, hominy, boiling meat, ham, potatoes, rice, oat meal, etc., instead of cakes and pies. These cold, frosty mornings are suggestive, of griddle cakes. To eat them in perfection At a luncheon the other day the brown I it would bewell to revive the old cuftom of woolens and colored stockings. The latter, whether woolen or cotton, should be washed and rinsed iu iresh water Fruit, ink, blood and other stains should be removed before the clothes are wet iu suds. ' Tea, coffee, wine and nearly all fruit stains can be taken out with clear boiling water, it not, they will yield to borai, am monia, chloride of lime, or the fumes of burning sulphur matches, held under them. Fresh ink stains can often be removed by covering them with salt, dampening, and allowing them to remain several hours; if they cannot, soak them in warm milk or vinegar and water. Soak old ink stains in turpentine or in a weak solu tion of citrio or oxalic add. If the latter is.uaed, wash in ammonia and water, vles or rihg, housing drivi INCOMPARABLE CIO bined with our wonderful Low Prices, form such a magnetizing septenary aggregation of attractive ness that is utterly irresist ible to the cash-buying, intelligent, well-dressing ladies from near and far. ja We've got a great many more special drives in Wraps than we've either space or time to bring before your notice; will therefore only mention a few to-day and content ourselves by saying that no matter how many and varied the excuses put forth for selling at a loss, right at start of season, we can't afford it; don't know how it's done, if 'tis done; we always sell with a wee bit profit. But this we will say without fear, with fullest confidence and a thorough knowledge whereof we speak, thit, no difference what shape or quality of garment you want, we'll sell it for much less money than elsewhere. How can you do so? you very naturally ask. Easily enough, and with a little margin for ourselves at same time. The end. of season for making up winter garments is past and gone. Many of our best makers have bigger stocks on hand than they bargained for. Scarcely a day passes that we haven't offers for stocks, for spot cash, at our own figures. One man comes along; he's had good enough trade, but too many left. If he could only sell, then he'd be "right in it" for spring trade. Another is in the same fix, but has loads of money, only he's afraid that the styles'll alter so much next season he'd lose more money by hold ing on than by accepting our offer. So thus it goe3. We buy first-class stocks at our own price. We sell them to our customers for less money than elsewhere, and make a little4 money to ourselves a sort of tri-cornered reciprocity, don't you see? A most elegant imported $25 Whipcord Reefer Jacket, 34 inches long, lined clear through with heavy, rich silk, finest pearl buttons, a magnificently stylish, fashionable S25 Reefer. Our price, long as they last, J 15 each. Next comes a most beautiful $16.00 Chevron, Watteau plait back Coat, 34 inches long, half satin lined, large pearl buttons, a most comfortably elegant $16.00 Chevron Coat, And we'll sell 'em for $10.00 each. The next lot deserves extra special mention. Entirely new lot of Children's Cloaks, 2, 3 and 4 years; there's only about fifty of these pretty $9.00 Coats; they've got triple capes, full sleeves, made from imported material. Long as they last $5.50 each- Still a few of those handsomely elegant $2.50 Wrappers left. Come and get your pick for $1.24 each. OUR FAB-FAMED The Center of Monty-Saving, 1,000 Felt Hats they're $1.50 and $2 mm salons Economical, Stylish Attractions. Hats, mind in all colors, for ladies, misses and children, This week for 74c and 98c each. Another lot of those wonderful, richly handsome, 50c, 3-inch Moire Antique, All-Silk Ribbons, all shades, Again for 23c a yard. We have got the prettiest and handsomest selection of Fancy Feathers that even Danziger's evei had trie pleasure of exhibiting. Our assortments of Aigrettes, Wings, Tips, Felt Braids, Buckles, Fur Heads, Fur Trim mings, Fur Pom Pons, and, in reality, everything that is required in the composition, architectural construction. beautifying, adorning or embellishing Headwear for ladies, misses and children are here in a most extravagant prodigality of profusion, and are uncomeatable anywhere else, either for extent of variety or lowness of price. loraini Hats nnj Bonnets a Yery Special Feature 11 Us. Mourning Veils All Lengths ALWAYS THE CHEAPEST. DANZIGER'S SIXTH ST. AND PENNAYE. . itoU-M
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers