8 THE SCRANTON TRIBUNE FRIDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER - G, 1896. GARBONDALE, (Reader will please note that artvertise tueuts. orders (or Job work, and Items (or lutilcatlon left at the establishment of S.mnui.a Co.. newsdealers. North Main street, will receive prompt attention; 01 uce open from a. tu. to 10 p. m.) FINE ENTERTAINMENT. . Social Catherine of the Ladies For eign MisNioaaty Society The Ladies' Foreign Missionary so ciety o the Methodist church were entertained on Wednesday afternoon by Mrs. T. R. Evans. An Interesting order of exercises had been arranged. Selections were read ly Mrs. H. B. Jadwin and Miss Pascoe. Then Miss Sudie Miller rendered a voral solo. Af ter this programme was finished, re freshments were Berved by the hos- tl'SS. The occasion was much enjoyed as lieinir more of a social and entertain ing character than the meetings which have been heretofore held in the church. PAVINQ WORK STOPPED. Ilelraont Street Residents Now Look I'pon a Sea of .Mod. The rain has deluged the Important work of paving Uelmont street. The dwellers upon that thoroughfare look out upon a sea of mud. A great deal or excavating and ploughing has been necessary and this makes the condi tion far from pleasant to those who pass that way. There will only be a short delay until the weather is more favorable. NICE HOME FOR THE PRISONERS. Needed Improvements in the City Station House. The old jail npartments have been improved and put In order in accord ance with perfect sanitary conditions. The floor bns been concreted and two windows added on the north side of the building so that needed light will be afforded. it Is now possible to heat the cells, as two radiators have been placed In the men s compartment. This improve ment was much needed. Saturday Chnrch Sale. The ladles of the First Presbyterinn church are anxious to raise money (or needed church purposes, and for this purpose will have on sale In the Palace creamery every Saturday afternoon and evening various articles to assist housekeepers iu furnishing their Sun day dinners. LOCAL AND PERSONAL NOTES. Miss Mary Alice lloran is seriously ill at her home on the South Side. Albert Crane and Itussell Jones spent Wednesday evening in Scranton. Mrs. John Maize received news yes terday morning announcing the ser ious lilness of her sister, Mrs. B. I, Rus sell, of Waterhury, Conn. Misa Maude Wheeler, of Chestnut avenue, entertained her Sunday school i lass at her home Wednesday even ing. Mrs. N. Peters, of Wayne street, who was recently operutcd upon for.cancer, Is doing very well. Miss Julia lloran, of JTyde Tark. is visiting her parenjts, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Hornn, on liordan avenue. Mr. and Mrs. James Harrett have re turned from their wedding trip, and for the present will board at the home of T. H. McAvoy on Lincoln avenue. Mrs. William I. Jones, of Washing ton street, Is entertaining Mrs. Mary I.umbach, at Freeland, Luzerne coun ty, and Mr. Davis, of Hyde Park. Mrs J. J. CutnmingH, of Olyphant, as a visitor at the home of Miss Mary B. Burke, tut Main street. The little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Connor, of Gordon avenue, is ill with diphtheria. Miss Ida Taylor, of Philadelphia, is visiting her parents in this city. The Chrysanthemum club enter tained their young lady friends at the home of (ieorge und Irving Avery, of Garfield avenue, lust evening. tieorge Meriitt, it Mill street, and May Johnson, of Seventh avenue, were married at noon Wednesday, by Ilev. William Kilyur. at tho Methodist par sonage. Providence. Mr. und Mrs. I. V. Writer, of South Church street, are entertaining the lat ter's sister, Mrs. C L. Campbell, of Kastou. Mr. und Mrs. Andrew Wyllle- nnd daughter, Lizzie, ure visiting In New York city. Tile social of the P. W. Nolly club, vhkli will be held in Burke's hall. Thanksgiving evening, promises to be the event of the season. The proceeds, wdl go to swell the fund for the relief of the released Irish political prison ers. Honjamin Franklin Spangenbtirg, who has been sick nt th hospital in this city for the past month, died Wed nesday evening. Miss Milliccnt Tirnwn, of Hones dale, and brother, Fred, of Blngham ton. are visiting their sister, Mrs. Ar thur Howell, of Seventh avenue. Frederick Hamenstun has accepted a position in the general store of W. R. Moon, Belmont street. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bryson, former ly of this city, but who have been re siding in Pittstcn for some months, have returned to this city. Mrs. Foster, mother of Photographer Foster, is seriously ill. William E. Watt was a Visitor In Wllkes-Barre this week. Mr. and Mrs. John Boylen returned from their wedding trip Wednesday evening and have gone to housekeep ing in their newly furnished home on Pike street. Miss Gertrude Raynor will entertain the members of the Young Ladies' Cooking club Saturday evening. BULLET IS A HAILSTONE. The Missle Was Fired InfoSpace and Come Down Encased in Ice. From the Chicago Chronicle. Colonel Clark R. Westcott, of London. England, who has been spending a couple of months in Chicago and the west, in the interest of a syndicate which owns considerable mining prop erty in this country, is responsible for the following account of a singular nat ural phenomenon. His story is as fol lows: "One hot day a couple of weeks since I was riding along a mountain Toad in Colorado on my way to a mine in which I am Interested, when I noticed high atiove me, soaring in majestic circle, an eagle. I had a 45-90 Winchester CARPETS FOR FALL TRADE All the latest, from a 20c, In grain to tlie best Wilton. Oil Cloths and linoleums, all widths and prices. Window Shades and Curtains, all the latest novelties. Fancy Hocking Chairs, iiphol tered in plush, tapestry and broc atelle. Also a tins collection of cobbler seats, nnd our price al ways the lowest. J. SCOTT INGLIS, Carpets, M rr. a J Drr . . 4i . aj slung across my back, and It was but the work of a moment to unsling the gun and fire at he blrd.whlch appeared to b directly above me. The shot was a clear miss, and not caring to waste any more cartridges, I was about to ride on, when I was startled to hear what I took to be the dull Vhung' of a stone thrown by an unseen hand, which fell into a little gully partly filled with leaves, within twenty feet of me. I looked carefully about me In all directions, but could see no sign of a human being, and then dismounted, and, scraping back the leaves, was as tonished to find a piece of ice as large as a goose egg, and about the same shape. Upon close examination, I was further astonished to discover my rltte ball firmly Imbedded in its renter. I have speculated a great deal over this phenomenon since that time, and the only solution I can see is that the bull In passing through the cloud gathered the moisture and held it by its whirling motion, so that it was frozen at a high er altitude and fell to the earth as I have described." ERO A.VD HIS FIDDLE. An Unsuccessful Effort to Gloss Over a Ureal Historical Crime. From the Washington Post. One of the later phases of modern civilization is a generous effort to vin dicate the so-called "monsters of in iquity" of ancient times. More than one accomplished lawyer has volun teered a defense of Judas Iscariot. They contend that he was not hanker ing after the thirty pieces of silver, that he had no treasonable intent to ward the Master, but in the most loyal and loving spirit aimed to furnish Him an opportunity to display his divine power by confounding his enemies. The plea is ingenious and creditable to the legal acumen as well as to the hu manity of its authors; but it has not yet made great progress toward set ting a convention that has had almost nineteen centuries of growth and solid ification. We are apprehensive that the noble effort of Lane la ni, the distinguished antiquarian authority on ancient Rome, to whitewash Nero, will be even less successful than the attempts of the legal profession to transform Judas from traitor to saint. Litnciunl, taking up the charge that Nero burned Rome and fiddled while the (lames of the great conllagarution were raging, docs not deny either the burning or the fiddling, but admits, and essays to Jus tify both. It was not amusement that Nero sought If this authority is to be credited but the welfare of his poor subjects. The lire was mainly conlined to tho wretched quarters where the Roman populace abode in squalor. The "sky-scrapers" of New York and Chi cago are less tall than the long rows of tenements on narrow und crooked streets, some of them only twelve feet wide, where Rome's poor abode. Lanclanl shows that those wretched tenements were crammed from cellar to attic with human beings, and that the buildings would frequently topple over. Inmates and all. Nero, wo are assured, desired to change all this. He planned and managed the burning with such consumute skill that. In a contlagaratlon greater than Cnleago's, not a life wns lost. When the lire hnd done Its work Nero laid down his fiddle aid the bow long enough to order "the architects to erect no hasty and irre gular building, but to open public squares insteud of the filthy quartets, and to limit the height to double the width of the street." With every inclination to do jus tice to the memory of Nero, whose de votion to music we have always ad mired, we are not yet quite ready to be lieve, in its entirety, this carefully con structed plea in his behalf. Had the life of the famous tiddler been blameless in other respects, had his record come down through aces unsullied by other crimes, we might acquit him of evil In tent in the lire episode. But the man who caused boys to be poisoned, who had his mother assassinated In order to please his mistress, who caused his wife to be put to death, who furiously per secuted the Christians such a mons ter was merely filling out his record in a natural way In burning the habita tions of the populace, und fiddling while the flames rolled on. The generous people of these progressive days will regret their inability to accept Nero, but his case Is too hud to admit of any hope of u reversal of the old verdict. UAU.STEAD. Charles Herkimer la III. The Baptist Young Peoples Society Cliristiuu KndeuYor. will hold a sociul ut the home of C. A. Bogart on Mam street this Friday evening. Mrs. William McLoud was in Blr.g humlon on Wednesday. Miss Mattle Millard lias returned home after a two weeks visit with friends in Scranton. Warren Preston spent part of Sunday In New Mllfotd. TIIK I'Ol lt MINDS. The wind o' the West 1 love the best; The wind o' the East 1 love the least. The wind o' the South Hum sweet In its mourn The wind o' the North Sends great storms forth. Taken together, all sorts of weather. The four olj fellow? me ru 1 to bring Hurry and .lurry, rush and scurry. Sighing und dying, and Hitting and Hy ing Through summer and autumn, und win ter and spring. Margaret E. gangster. of the "Kln," an opera by the authors of C4l H1IIIIC. The above pend upon getting the prices all the time and 357 $1.25 BYER Recollections of hosco? Conkling. The eighth anniversary of the death of Roscois Kunming in tides mine iv iieviiuiot on a career wiiich, in tue buy rush of events in tne interval, Ka become almost lorgottrii. 1 recall how, in 15 is, when Ueiiry M. Hoyt was running tor governor ot Pennsylva nia on a hard money platform, benutor Cameron induced ltoscoe Conkling, tut'ii the tun-most member of tue l lined States senate, to come to Phil adelphia to make a plea on nuance lor the republican ticket. Conkling's ap pvaruuie at tne Academy oi Alusic un that occasion was greetea by one of the finest audiences ever assembled here to listen to a political speecu. lie liud seldom been in Philadelphia since he had become a great ligure in national polities, nor was he ever here after that event. He was then forty-eight years old, and in the fulness of ills mental and physical powers. From all over the country he had drawn atten tion to himself as the ablest politician that New York state hud produced since he death ot William H. Seward. There have been many Impressive and majestic tiBurea on the stage of the Acadmy ot Music. But It is doubtful whether any. even with all the acces sories of costume and scenery, ever captivated an audience as he uid dur ing: the two hours in which he deliv ered a speech of rare force, with an eloquence manly, luminous und grace ful. It Is not often thut an actor caus es the English languages to fail on the ear witti such music as Conkling's diction, set off with a voice like tne tones of an organ, and delivered with the mien of a man master among men. !l il II , As he left the stage to go througn the green-room to the street, he wound a rich silk handkerchief around his neck and carelessly placed a soft hat of th KosKUlh pattern on his head. With the blonde peaked beurd. in which the silver was mingled with the Bold .the eft'e-t was not unlike that of one of the old Spanish grandees In the court of Charles V. The broad shoul ders, the erect currlage, the ample fore head and tin keen eyes which lixed themselves on un object with a light like the shining steel, all made up a royal presence. New England in the olden duys called Webster the "god like Dan," ana It Is not to be wondered that some of the New Yorkers who ad mire the choice mental gilts and the public chastity of this man became accustomed to speak of him with a cer tain awe. '! !l ii The udmiration which he then excit ed was contlned to a comparatively small circle of men In New York. When he was at the height of his power he did not carry on his political transac tions with the small grade of poUtl ciniis. He was In the habit of Hnpart l,nr Vila inn ililence and giving his In- ! Kt ruction to a few bright men like Ar ; thur nnd Cornell. The idea of mixing ' with the crowd wasalways abhorrent to ' his tastesand inclinations. Forthls roa I sou the muss of the people looked on Conkling as a vain and poiiipous hum Mi rat. with the pride of a Corlolanus. His proud, imperious temper was sometimes the chl-f obstacle to his ambition. When he addressed tne I'nited States senate, he made Its in ferior members feel as if they were scho.d l.ovs. Wh.n he condescended to go into a' political convention, he made the delegates feci that they were drilled soldiers. No one who witnessed the proceedings of the Chicago convention of 1SS0 v?U ever forget the loyal sub jection In which, by the sheer force of genius for civic command he held the Mii together for six days nnd caused them to feel irotid of their devotion. That achievement Is without a parallel in our modern political history. lie walked out of that convention day uf ter tluv. cool, serene, Intrepid, nuignltl cent in his beuring. When he Jumped up on n reporter's tabic on a Saturday night to place Grant in nomination, af ter Jtlalne had been buugliugly nomi nated by Joy. of Michigan, the Blaine men. with nil their bitter feeling on that occasion, sighed In vain for such a tender. There was not the slightest sign of premeditation about that fa mous speech. $t was delivered to the sliotitiiiM, howling, crazy mob of llo.Wn poile with the culm force of a man sublimely confident of his cause. It was one of those rare examples of the pivr of oratory muter the most In spiring and yet. at the same time, try ing, conditions that an orator count have, iiuil n convention since that time has witnessed an thing like it, with the single exception of I'otirke Cock run's superb eloquence In the Chicago con ventlun of 'ttJ ut 2 o'clock in the morning. 1- '! II If fuiikllnsr hud bn-n tempted to look out fur liimsilf. he might in the Until brcak-un have come out where Uarfleld did. I tut no suggestion of that kind o Gripe When you take Iloml'i Pills. The his?, nlri-tnsh-loneil. sugar-coated pill, wliieh tear you nil to liicers, ure not In it with Hood's. Easy to take and easy In nicrate. is true of Hood's rills, which are tip to dale III every reaped. Safe, certain und sure. AH Pills UriitfKisti. '. I. Ilenil (t Co., Lowell, Mass. The only Tills to take with iluou's SarsapanlU. Hoods $1.00 Misses' School Shoes 75c. Child's Shoes for 50c. 1,000 Pair of Babies' Shoes Hen's $2.00 Shoes Men's $1.50 Shoes Boys School Shoes are only a few of best shoes for the lowest money in our store. We are cutting selling- goods lower than any other house in Scranton. DAVIDOW'S LIk<AW MisZA AVE, ever had the slightest effect on him during that stormy convention week. His stubborn devotion to the Grant cause was proof against every tempta tion. It is that kind or unninchiug in tegrity which made all his many small faults of temper forgiven by his admirers. Nor would he permit any of his friends and followers to matte terms with the other aide. When Arthur was finally nominated as a concession to him. he treated this olive branch with contempt, and, in the convention, advised Arthur to have nothing to do with the vice-presidency. It was then understood that Arthur was to go into the United States Senate In the following win tar as Conkling's colleague, and Conkling wished every body who was his ally In the conven tion to come out of It with clean hands, and without even a suspicion of having dallied with the Garfield intrigue. A little more than a year later Arthur was In the white houe. and refused to satisfy the wishes of his patron, be cause he lacked the temerity to brave the public opinion which then regarded Conkling as something like an arch conspirator, an assassin, a Machlavelii, an instigator of Uulteau. a second Aron Burr, and so forth. Arthur was not an ingrate he was simply a coward in that test of his friendship. He lucked the courage to do what Conkling had done for him when he was hounded as collector of the port of New York like a common scullion. !! '! Ii But after all. the most remarkable feature of Conkling's career Is that not even the suspicion of an accusation was ever directed against his Integrity and that no enemy ever sought to attack him on that point. His enemies in New York long before he retired from public which by any Ingenuity could be perverted into a suspicion against him. When Grant offered him the chief justiceship after the death of Chase, he Is said to have observed that Conkling was a man whom no money could buy. When he left the senate there Is no doubt that he was a poor man. It Is especially to his credit that he was never in the habit of telling people that he had a fine sense of honor on this point. He never preached cant, and the trace of a hypocrite cannot be detected In his moral composition. Con kling should he remembered ns the leader of a great party, who sat In con gress for eighteen years and came out of n great era of Jobbery and rapacity with his hands as clean as a child's. It Is such things as these thut gave him a right to have his small fallings con doned and to hold at a distance the fellows who think that the proof of a great man Is when he allows them to slnp him on the back. CHURCH EXTENSION BOARD. (ienernl Session of the Society of the .11. K. ( Imreh Held ut Pittsburg. I'lttwburtr, Nov. .".The Kencral board of church extension of the Methodist Ki'laeopal church met in I'ittsuuri? to day. The work of this lionid Is one of the most important and effective In the machinery of the church, hu villi; for CASTORIA For Infants and Children, 1 vat lag I ilmila 11 m mi llgutait it W ELEGTi.IG.TY !S IflHO. DR. GREEN'S ELECTRO-THERAPEUTIC INSTITUTE 607. 603 AND 609 MEARS BUILDING Corner U tisliinj;ton Avenue anJ Spruce Street, Scranton. Pennu. The Inte ROBERT BARTHOI,OW PRO FKSSOR of MATKRIA MKUICA, GTOX EKAL THERAPEUTICS, and HYOIKXE of JKPKKRSON MEDltAb COLLEGE of Philadelphia, said In his last work on mejleal electricity: "The lime is not far off when electricity for medieul use will take the place of many drug with the .eirne phenomenal fuccess that hits marked the piW'-esf of this selenee In the moving of cars liKhtinff of streets an.l houses and for ireneral motive power. It was In 11M that U-VLVANl discovered the action f Knlvanlsm on the nerves by experiment Ins "on a frog. Fur luti yeurs snilvunlsm ,;,s continued t0 Srow 1,1 prominence as a cure I KT IT PF. THOROUGHLY tTXDER STOOP that Dr. Green Is a Rrodiiate in medicine nnd pharmacy, he has prescribed for thousands of patients who have never had nil application of electricity, l.nt ex. perlenee and study has convinced him, as It has Marlon. Rockwell, Massey and oth ers of prominence that electricity is the KING OF MEDICAL REMEDIES. Hear in mind that proper electrical treatment, with tlrst-tluss appliances, Is NOT PA1N Fl'L. If vou wish to know the result of Dr. Greeii's treatment for RLheumatlsm write to K. E. Bostlck, 2047 East Cumlierlunl street, Philadelphia. Pa., or care Seubury & Johnson, New York. Dp. Green's Elecfro-Therapetific Insfiiiife, 607, 608 and 609 Wears Building, Scranton, Pa. Elevator Day and Night. Open from o a. m. to u m.l I p. m. tog p. m. j 7,30 p.m. to 9 p.m. our great bargains. SHOE Its object the erection of church build ing and aid to at niggling congrega tions. Since Its organization 31 years ago the board has assisted in building ten thousand churches. Busiurss sessions of the board will occupy the time today and tomorrow. Friday evening the thirty-first anni versary of the founding of the board will be celebrated. Monday the gen eral committee un freeman's aid and southern education will meet and con tinue in session two days. TAILORING. We Are Still at IL Making suits at prices the people of Scranton never heard of before. Our trade increases from week to week for these reasons : We sell cheaper. Our fits, in even the cheapest suits, are not surpassed in Scranton at any price. We cut, fit and make all our own goods right here in Scranton, and we are the only people making garments at any where near our prices that do this. Suits froni $11.00 to $10.00 Pants from $3.00 up. Wl DAVIS ? Wyoming Ave. UJWIO, Xrcaue Building. THE DDI POWDER CO., BOOMS I AND 2, GOI'LTHrLVB, SCRANTON, PA. SIISiNS AND BLASTING POWDER MADE AT M009IC AND RCsVB. DALE WORKS. LAPUN RAND POWDER CO'S ORANGE dUN POWDER Electric Patterns, Elnetrin Exploiter far a plodlug blasts, Bufety Fuse, and Repanno Chemical Co.'s explosives. The best of references, no charge for con sultation, an Institute equipped with the latest achievements of Morton. Edison, Kanney, Rockwell, MoUrlde, Mcintosh and others. Electro Static Machines. Gal vanic. Farndie, Sinusoidal (Magnetic) Galvano Vauterles, and electrodes of ev ery description. We have the finest X-Ray apparatus made. With electricity as n basis of treatment we are successful In eases of Rheumatism Gout. Paralysis. Eczema, Tumors, Sklri Trouble, Indigestion. Dyspepsia, the Wasting of Muscles. Poor Clrcu jatliin. nnd all Nervous Diseases for which electricity Is doliiK ho much of late. The hlood elot cnuslnir Apoplexv and Paralysis can be dissolved nnd curried away by prooer application of Galvanism ami Faradlsm. Cures of Catarrh are being made, by the Inhalation of ozone from the Kleetro-stutlo machine. We Rilh'ht mention hundreds of troubles which are aninnhle to electric treatment but space will lint permit. ' Dr. Oreen treats all cases amenable to electrical treatment. Is a graduate and ex perienced practitioner of medicine, has the best of references, and will charge noth ing for consulatlon. Those who ca-not call should write for Information. for 59c. for 15c. for $1.29. foK 98c. for 75 Cents. You can always de 1 1 iJUu HOUSE InfPTlfiTP yj iyj -. ' : ' J v OF MAGNIFICENT ORIENTAL Having determined to retire from the Oriental Rug business, (on account of poor health), I have decided to dis pose of my entire collection of Antique and Modern Turkish and Persiau Rugs, Carpets, Hall Rugs, Draperies, Teakwood Cabinets and Pedestals, Antique Bronzes, Fine Bric-a-Brac, Pottery, Cloisenne, Etc. The collection of Rugs and Car pets was selected with much raft fnr n finp tf oil frn1 an1 you will find hundreds of very Hum, iiwuy ot mem rare gems oi tne unental Weavers' art. The collection of Bric-a-Brac and other Oriental Art Goods from Japan, China and India is so large that we cannot go into detail in describing it, but a personal visit during the exhibition days will more than repay you. A dsscriotive cataloo-ite of the R 11 crc ran Ka Tiarl rvn on. t 4 O plication at our store. kxnibition, Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. ' 2, 3 and 4. Auction Sale will commence Thursday, Nov. 5, at 2.30 p. in. and 7.30 p. m. and continue each day at the same hours until the entire stock is disposed of. Seats will be reserved for ladies. By order of R. W, WESTCOTT, JR., Importer of Oriental Goods, 503 AND 502 UCKAWINN AVENUE. COR. WASHINGTON. KERR'S Our Bargains for this week are great in Carpets, Rugs, Draperies, Upholstery Goods, Window Shades, Easels, Screens, Linoleums, Oil Cloths, Mat tings, Carpet Sweepers, Etc. Largest Stock. Finest Assortment. We Invite In spection, We Urge Comparison. Read all of the bargains advertised, then come to our establishment and you will find everythiug here, quality for quality. AT LOWER PRICES. S. S. KERR, SON & CO., ftTSSi.. 408 LACKAWANNA AVENUE. THIRD NATIONAL BANK OF SCRANTON. Special Attention Given to Business and Per sonal Accounts. Liberal Accommodations Extended According to Balances and Responsibility. 3 Interest Allowed on Interest Deposits. aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiuiai Watch Us MONDAY Big Bedroom Suit rw Bargains. mm M lllilllillllHINIlIlllS DOLLARS ROLL Your way if you invest in the "ECONO HY'S" Clothing. MEN'S All Wool Cheviots black, blue with Itnl an clot li ud mohair, cut iu giiaranu-ea DiiuWe-BreaHted Hack Suit, nil wool, lined with pure wool Italian rloth, latent style, full back, wortu Block (.'lay Worsted Cutaway, lined with heavy drip Ital ian cloth, Htripuil once on the edge, all wool, pure dye. A particu lar font lire of this suit in the "iudispeiisible protector" fur the 01'-? OQ sleeve liulnj; of the arm hole $LOJO OVERCOATS. "The McAllister," all wool Kersey, top coats, black, blue and drab, well trimmed, with mohair serges, satin sleeve lining, three lengths to choose from; perfection In tit All Wool lilack and Blue Kersey and Melton Overcoat,Iined in best manner, with the "indmpeusible protector" at the arm hole: broad velvet collar, double stitched and Hat seams, the new I length, full back and easy Uttere You're not obliged to pay the amount of your purcbae at once a little at the time will suit us. wear your clothiug In the meanwhile. uiiiiiiniMiiiiiiiiig 3 Rooms Furnished) Completely $87.50. Cash Oi Credit. r -rw B a m-ui-m wjeming Henna. -nnuiUHUiuuuuiuuuiuiiuiiiiiiiiiiiB, AND ARTISTIC POTTERY. M um tA V lU silky antique pieces to select O MM VU ULT- Established 1873 3 Did You See s Our a 3-Room Outfit for $87.50. Siiiiminiiiiiuiiiiii SUITS. ami mixture., well lined. the very latest fashion; S 8.40 S 9.49 elsewhere; Here.... $12.49 810.98 , uuuiniuiuiiiuiiu THAT Bedroom Salt Bargain Will Be Worth Tour I&tCulnf.