The star-independent. (Harrisburg, Pa.) 1904-1917, February 11, 1915, Page 6, Image 6

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    6
(itttahluhtd in 1876)
Published b-
TMB STAR PRINTING COMPANY, "
Btar-lndapa-ident Building,
' R-10-22 South Third Street, Harrisburg. Pa,
Svary Evening Enoept Sunday
OftieertDirectora :
BUMAMIM F METERS, L. L. KCHK.
Presidaot.
W. WAISLOWER, _
Vtea President w * *
WM. K METERS,
Secretary and Treasurer. WM. W WALLOWER.
WM" H WARNER, V. HUMMEL BEBOBAUS, JR.,
Business Manager. Editor,
All communications should be addressed to STAR INDEPENDENT,
Business. Editorial, Job Printing; or. Circulation Department
according to the subject matter.
Cntered at the Post Office in Harrisburg as second-class matter.
Benjamin & Kentnor Company,
New Vork and Chicago Representation.
Raw York Office, Brunswick Building. 225 Fifth Avenue.
Chicago Office, People's Gas Building. Michigan Avenue.
Delivered by carriers'at 6 cents a week. Mailed to subscriber?
tat Three Dollars a /ear in advance
* THE STARTKDEPENDENT
The paper with the largest Honu Circulation in Harrisburg anu
*earby towns
Circulation Examinee by
THE ASSOCIATION OF AMERICAN ADVERTISERS.
TELEPHONES BELL""
Private Branch Exchange, No. 3280
_ . _ „ CUMBtKLAND VALLEY
P™w«toßranchExclianga, ... No. Z4S-246
Thursday, February 11, 1015.
FEBRUARY
Sun. Mon. Tues. Wed. Thur. Fri. Sat.
1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13 '
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28
MOON'S PHASES—
Lasf Quarter, 7th; New Moon, 13th;
First Quarter, 21st.
r
WEATHER FORECASTS /"
Harrisburg and vlnicitv: Fair and GjTKgj
warmer to-night and Friday. Lowest
temperature to-night about 40 degrees.
Eastern Pennsylvania: Fair and
warmer to-night and Friday. Fresh d
south winds. I » V
YESTERDAY'S TEMPERATURE IN HARRISBURG
Highest, 32; lowest, 14; 8 a. m., 14; 8 p. m., 27.
»
SPARE THE POOR BRIDEGROOM!
Perhaps Representative Lee Smith, of Fayette
county, has a good reason for wanting to make it
cost more for couples to get married in Pennsyl
vania, but, so far as we have learned, he has not as
yet confided it lo the public. Perhaps he will do
so when—or if—the House gives serious considera
tion to his bill requiring the Clerk of the Orphans'
Court to receive S'2.(JO for every marriage license
issued instead of SI.OO as now, but until he does trot
out some convincing reason for increasing the high
cost of getting married we must conclude that he
wants to put an unfair handicap on the operations
of the little god of Love.
Of cnurse a dollar more or less will hardly stand
in the way of a youth contemplating matrimony.
When a fellow gets his heart set on marrying he
generally goes ahead and does it, whether it costs
one dollar or two. Our American youths, especially
in the happy state of bridegrooms-about-to-be, are
just that earnest about getting married that they
don't care how much it costs. Or, even if they do
figure the expense, they can go to Hagerstown, get
the knot tied at bargain rates and enter the cost
of the railroad trip on the debit side of the honey
moon expense account.
Yet while an extra dollar may not reduce the
number of marriages, is it fair to take advantage
of a youth, in the blissful state of love, who doesn't
stop to think of expense? Prospective bridegrooms
are a helpless lot. They are living in a carefree
state up among the clouds where things financial
never enter their brains. Yet they are a noble
band who deserve protection against financial im
positions during their temporary state of love-sick
irresponsibiliy.
Indeed this is if time when the State, rather than
to force prospective*"husbands to dig further into
their pocketbooks, should pass a law to help them
conserve their funds. Those dollars will come in
very handy in a couple of years when the bills
begin to come in for pasteurized milk and pacifiers.
If the idea of Mr. Smith's measure is merely to
increase the public revenues, —which we are told
will not be sufficiently large to meet the various
law-makers' demands for their pet appropriations,
•—he ought to find another way of doing it. For
heaven's sake don't let us take that extra dollar
out of the poor defenseless bridegroom!
Just to show just how unselfish we are in this mat
ter we are willing, if Mr. Smith will withdraw his
measure, to advocate that a per capita tax of ten
per cent, be placed on the salaries of editors which
exceed SIO,OOO a year.
OPENING OF RUSSIA'S GRANARIES
There is promise that the Allies will be able to
relieve much of their own privation in the report
which came yesterday from London that it was
decided at the conference in Paris of the Ministers
of Finance of Great Britain, France and Russia to
sell and convey to Western Europe the great sup
plies of cereals now stored away in Russia's gran
aries.
The plan is to carry the food by rail to Arch> .
angel; on the White Sea, and to Vladivostok, on the
Sea of Japan, from which ports it can be shipped
to Western Europe. The supplies will have many
miles to travel over land, but the Russian govern
ment has promised to make bargain rates for the
occasion. The crops in Siberia are abundant, and
the low cost of food in the Empire, together with
reduced, rates for transportation, should be the
/
s _ 1 ■ II II I
S \ ••' ' ." ' • ' ' ' ' V' \ * x
' . •v- "*'■■' • .. ■•' ; ■ v " v; ;"v ■■;" • > /}. \'* * ' --; v •; \•; ..
HAttPTyRTrrm STAR-INDEPENDENT, THURSDAY EVENING, FEBRUARY 11, 1915.
means of providing England, France and Belgium
with grain at very reasonable prices.
The ports from which it is proposed to ship the
food are icebound at this fieason of the year, it
appears, so that the Allies cannot expect immediate
relief through Russia by the suggested method. The
grain can be transported to the seaboard towns,
however, and be held there in readiness for ship
ment when the ports open at the approach of warm
weather.
Wheat has been in abnormal demand in Europe
because the usual supplies from the Black Sea ports
have been cut off. There is plenty of the grain in
Russian store houses, however, for Russia's crops
of wheat are larger than this country's. The trou
ble has been that the food has been kept in storage
while multitudes have tyeen in waut. The release
of the grain, even though it may not at once benefit
the war sufferers, will no doubt be the means of
preventing starvation in the future. And, of course
will relieve this country of some of* the responsi
bility of the feeding of Europe which it has been
undertaking.
The statement from Rome that Italy's military
preparations may now be regarded as terminated,
points to the unlikelihood of that country's inter
vention in the war, unless of course a contingency
not yet anticipated arises. The season is not favor
able for an Italian entrance into the conflict, and
certainly the present war situation gives no prom
ise of changing very suddenly. What may happen
later depends largely on whether fti.v of the bel
ligerents tread on the toes of Europe's boot.
The disinclination of Italy to plunge into the
fight has surely changed the aspect of things some
what. The German Admiralty had been led to hope
for the aid of Italy's fleet in the Mediterranean,
judging from the assurances of the Berlin foreign
office before the war that the co-operation of the
kingdom could be expected if hostilities broke oiit.
It is not clearly explained how Italy's hostile atti
tude toward Austria was reconciled at the time with
the expectations of the German foreign office.
Italy evidently is partial, but it had better, for
its own good, remain peaceful. It is not being
compelled to fight, and had better rest its interests
with diplomacy than with war. It has had enough
of trouble with its earthquake.
It is easy enough to introduce an appropriation bill but
not always so easy to have it passed.
It looks as though the anti-junket bill will be buried in
committee, at least until the junkets are over.
Instead of making it cost more to get married, as pro
posed by a bill before the Legislature, they ought to pass
a law make it cost more to remain a bachelor.
The Legislative committees that are to handle the ex
travagant charities appropriation bills will have an oppor
tunity to swing the axe on them and save Governor Brum
baugh the trouble. <
Those inclined to criticise the national law-makers for
all-night filibusters at least must concede the Washington
solons put in longer working hoofs than the recess-loving
members of the Pennsylvania Legislature.
TOLD IN LIGHTER VEIN
ON THE CORNCAKE LINE
If wheat keeps on soaring, the bread line may presum
ably have to be changed to the potato line, or to the spa
ghetti line, or the bean line. —Kansas City Journal.
THE HAEPOON IN THE DRAWING ROOM
"The whaling industry is dead."
"Yes," replied Miss Cayenne. "Throwing the harpoon!
is now classed as an indoor sport."—Washington Star.
ADVANTAGE OF HAVING WINGS
"I would I were a bird," she sang.
"I would you were," said her husband. "You would go
south for the winter without its costing me anything." I
—Life.
HOW HE DOES IT
"Jones is making money fast these days. How does he |
do it!"
"The time he used to put in kicking about being poor
he's now putting in working to get rich."—lndianapolis I
Star.
BY WAY OF SUGGESTION
Jack —"You and Kitty seem to prefer billiards to I
bridge." «
Tom —"Yes; every time the balls kiss we follow their
example."—Boston Transcript. *
LIBERALLY INTERPRETED
Teacher —"Katherine, what do you know about the
orchid familyt"
Katie —"Please, miss, mother has forbidden us to in
dulge in any family gossip."—Boston Transcript.
THREE THINGS IMPOSSIBLE
"Just a word."
"Weill"
"Bo you think you could ever learn to love met"
"No,' said the girl, "nor limburger cheese, nor spa-1
ghetti."—Louisville Courier-Journal.
WOMAN'S ADVANTAGE
"Women have all the best of it."
"How now?"
"A woman will drink two coojitails, cat a lobster and a
hunk of plum pudding, and then blame her headache on her
nerves and get away with it."—Pittsburgh Post.
CHANGE IN PETTICOATS
Fashion certainly does go from one extreme to the other
with the most astonishing celerity and we learn from an
authoritative source that the girls are even now engaged
in leaping from their present' meagre surroundings right
into three petticoats apiece.—Columbus Journal.
THE MUSICIAN'S TASK '
"I call your attention to a most exhausting performance
over near the piano."
"What do you mean J"
"One lone man is trying to hold up his end of the con
versation against three women."—Birmingham Age-Herald.
LEGACIES
Lives of famous mon remind us
We may make our lives sublime.
And departing leave Behind us
Coat tails up which they may climb.
—New York Sun.
ITALY'S INTERVENTION UNLIKELY
Tongue-End Topics]
More Game Wardens Asked
tiy a bill recently introduced in the
Senate tihe number of game wardens in
the State is to be increased from thirty
to sixty—or just doubled. The ad
ditional men are needed,.it is contended,
to keep watch over the game, that it is
now conceded is rapidly increasing in
this State. This is tlttribijtcd to a num
ber of things, but chiefly to the vigor
ous way in which tihe laws are enforced,
particularly those forbidding the killing
of any but buck deer, the forbidding of
unnaturalized foreigners to carry guns
and tihe closed season for game birds.
Elk Increasing in State
Secretary Kalbfus, of the Stato Game
Commission, say« th'at t'he elk intro
duced in tiliis State several years ago
appear to be increasing in numbers.
Four calves were reported as bom last
year ami fully twice t'hat numiber are
reported as iiaving\been seen. A cow
elk was shot bv a Centre county farmer
in his grain field and was found to be
with calf. Seven elk were reported to
have been killed last year. Possibly
some of them were destroying crops. It
is held that wild deer and elk found
destroying crops may be driven off with
guu« and dogs, if necessary, so long as
no permanent injury is inflicted, but an
irate farmer with a gun who sees wild
anmiaJs destroying crops is not always
going to be too careful when he shoots
at the destructive animal, and he
doesn't care very much whether he
wounds it or kills it.
* • *
Reimbursing the Farmers
In an orchard near Alexandria, Hunt
ingdon county, wild deer ruined a thou
sand trees, and the owner had no redress
at law. It is proposed to use the hunt
ers' license fund to reimburse farmers
for damage thus done.
Work of Huntingdon Reformatory
The thirteenth biennial report of the
Pennsylvania Industrial Reformatory in
Huntingdon, submitted by T. B. Patton,
general superintendent, is a most in
teresting document concerning the
workings of an institution that has
done a world of good for younger crim
inals in the way of working a reforma
tion and fitting them to become useful
citizens. At the close of the year 1914
there were 751 inmates of the Reform
atory, but 1,210 had been eared for
during the twelve months. Dauphin
county had forty-three representatives
during the year who cost tihe county
$3,704.05, and Cumberland county had
three at a cosii of $277.20.
* »-*,
Causes of Juvenile Crime
Of the many reasons given by the
inmates for the commission of crime.*
that caused their incarceration, fifty
five give no employment; 578, bad
company; one, reading bad books; eigh
ty-six, intemperance; five, home en
vironment, and 195, ha I no excuse to
offer, lu the two vears embraced in
the report 35'/!. per cent, of the in
mates received have served time in
other institutions, and 694 of them
were born in Pennsylvania. Regarding
t'heir nativity, almost every country in
the world is represented. There are
23S out on parole, four fi*oln Dauphhi
county. All but forty of tie inmates
had attended school ait some time. Of
the paroled ones 117 were returned for
Various causes and 476 were absolutely
released by the courts. The cigarette
users numbered 579 and 300 of them
indulged more or less in intoxicating
di inks.
Restrictions on Eel Fishing
Fishermen along the Susquehanna
and Juniata rivers are much interested
in a bill introduced in the Senate by
Senator McConnell, of Northumberland,
regulating the use of baskets. The
bill makes the open season for the tak
ing of eels in such baskets from Sep
tember 15 to November 20, from 4
o'clock in the afternoon until 7 o'clock
the next morning, and 110 eel basket
shall be set in a stream known as a
trout stream. No wing walls of any two
eel baskets shall be within twenty feet
of each other at the upper end, when
side by side, or extend beyond each
other at the upper end, or reach from
main shore to main shore, or extend
over more than three-fourths of the
width of a stream, or occupy so much
of the stream as to prevent the passage
of canoes or boats or fish at either side
of the stream, or be constructed of any
other material than .loose stones.
Must Destroy All Baskets
No basket shall be set within a quar
ter of a mile above one already legally
For Pile
Sufferers
Holds
tal troubles. In the privacy of your own
home. 600 a box at all druggists. A single
box often cures. Froa Mmpls for trial with
booklet mailed free In plain wrapper,
if you send us coupon below.
FREE SAMPLE COUPON
rYRAMID DRTTO COMPANY.
619 Pyramid Hldg., Marshall, Mich.
Kindly send mo n Frco sample of
Pyramid Pile Rauady, In plain wrapper.
Name
Street
City State
DO YOU SUFFER
-FROM BACKACHE?
When your kidneys are weak and
torpid they do not properly perform
their functions; your back aches and
you do not feel like doing much of
anythirg. You are likely to be dospond
ent and to borrow trouble, just as if
you hadn't enough already. Don't be
a victim any longer. •
The old reliable medicine. Hood's
Karsaparilla, givos strength and tone td
the kidneys and builds np the whole
3ystem. Get it to-day. Adv.
located. The bottom of the basket
must be made of well-rounded wooden
slats. All baskets must be destroyed
within one week after the closing of the
legal season. No person shall operate
such baskets except the owner or a
member of his family or a bona fide em
ploye. Besides eels the owner may catch
carp, suckers or mullets, but no other
fish. No basket shall be erected within
a quarter of a mile-'Of any fishway,
chute or opening in a dam, all raceways
and mills excepted. A license must be
taken out before such eel basket is con
structed, the county treasurer issuing
the license, but the bill does not state
how much the license shall cost, if any
thing. A violation of the law subjects
the offender to a ifine of SSO and for
feiture of all his fishing appliances and
boats.
PEOPLE'SCOLUm
The Star-Independent doea not
make Itself responsible for opinion*
expressed in this column.
/ Lines on a Stray Kitten
Editor the Star Independent:
Dear Sir—After reading an article
published in your journal a few days
ago, in which you recited a lit'tle inci
dent t'hat. occurred in my vicinity in
relation to a poor, stranded little kit
ten, J sat down an.d wrote off the fol
lowing few stanzas:
JUST A LITTLE FELINE WAIF
Just a little kitten, who perhaps had
strayed away.
Was chased by a cur dog and ran up
our alley way.
She quickly climbed a pole, just fortv
a j ~_f ept in height,
And then that cur looked up and bark
ed with all his might.
He tried to climb that slippery pole.
Ori mischief he was bent,
kvery time he got part way up, kerflop
that old cur went.
i hen kitty crawled up higher and sat
on a long arm
That dug he oould not reach her and
®ne was free from harm.
The rain came down in torrents and
the sleet began to fall.
When a man came walking by and
lie aid poor kitty's squall.
She had braved the wind and rain, just
one whole day and night.
In the morning she was rescued, just
in a tearful plight.
Then Constable Harry Emanuel soon
hove in sight;
Said he: "That kitty must come down,
to leave her 'tis not right."
They called up Mayor Royal and thus
to him did say:
"Please send a good pole climber and
that without delay." t
"He need not come on horseback; Just
wear his boots and spurs.
Poor kitty seems played out; they say
she never stirs."
Then Crozler, being an expert, soon vol
unteered to go.
The pole was very slippery and that
lineman sure climbed slow.
At last he reached poor kitty and took
her in his arm.
They both came down in safety and
kit was saved from harm.
Now all you little kittens, sure this to
you I say,
Just play in your bax?k yard and never
run' away.
MORAL
That was a sad catastrophe. N'ow this
you surely know.
If yq*i want to climb a pole, just go a
little slow.
Vessels large may venture more, but
little boats must keep near shore.
This little kit is satisfied and sne will
roam no more.
Composed and written by J. R. Miller,
aged 82.
How to Become Rich
'"My early difficulties taught me
some thrift," said Mark Twain once,
"but I never knew whether it was
wiser to spend my last cent for a cigar
to smoke or for an apple to devour."
"I am astounded,'' observed a
friend, "that a person with so little
decision should have met with so much
worldly success.''
Mark Twain bent his head gravely.
''lndecision about spending money,"
he said, "is worthy of cultivation.
When I couldn't decide what to buy
with my last cent I kept it and so be
came rich."
i
Botanically Speaking
Do you think a woman should re
gnrd her husband as an oak and 'herself
as the clinging ivvt"
"Well," replied Miss Cayenne. "I'd
rather take a chance 011 being a cling
ing ivy than a wall flower."—Washing
ton Star.
OUCH! LUMBAGO!
RUff PAINS FROM
SORE, LAME BACK
Rub Backache Away
With Small Trial Bot
tle of Old "St.
Jacob's Oil"
Back hurt you? Can't straighten
up without feeling sudden pains, sharp
aches and twinges? Now listen!
That's lumbago, sciatica jh maybe
from a strain, and you'll get relief the
moment you rub your back with sooth
ing, penetrating "St. Jacob's Oil."
Nothing else takes out soreness, lame
ness and stiffness so quickly. You
simply rub it on your back and'out
comes the- pain. It is harmless and
doesn't burn the skin.
Limber up! Don't suffer! Get a
s/nall trial bottle of old, honest "St.
Jacob's Oil" from any drug store, and
after using it just once, you'll forget
that you ever had backache, lumbago
or sciatica, because your back will
never hurt or cause any more misery.
It never disappoints and has boen Rec
ommended for 60 years,—Adv.
"THE QUALITY STORE"
RARE BARGAINS
FOR FRIDAY
EXTRA SPECIAL Our entire
stock of Ladies', Misses' and Chil
dren's Coats—all this season's styles
are offered, without reserve—Friday
at ONE-HALF PRICE.
An extra lot of this season's Coats
for small Ladies and Misses—regu
larly $lO to sls values. Special
for Fridayat $5.00
One Marmot Fur Coat—4o inches
long—size 40—an elegant coat and
was SBS. Special for Friday at
Children's and Ladies' Sweaters—
Angora and knitted styles—fine line
of colors to select from. Special for
Friday at ONE-FOURTH OFF.
Ladies' Waists of black taffeta
and brown chiffon—splendid quality
and nicely made—were $3.50 to
95.00 values. Special Friday while
they last at <j* J
oxl2 Fibre Rugs (only 3 of
these), very good dosigns—durably
made—regularly SO.OO. Special for
Frlday at $5.00
One Oxla Axminster Rug (slight
ly soiled), was regularly $25. Spe
cial for Friday at sl2 50
100 pairs of high-grade Lace Cur
tains—in white" and ecru—s2.oo
and $2.50 values. Special for Fri
day at, per pair <|»-£ bjq
. 15c, lOc and 25c Colored Bordered
Curtain Scrim—36 and 40 inches
wide—Very pretty designs. Special
for Friday at, per yard, ....
40-inch Silk Poplins in a dozen
shades—sold regularly at $1.25.
Special for Friday at, per yd.,
»fl-inch soft chamois finish Long
cloth, splendid serviceable quality
for all around use-i-our own special
brand in 10-yd. pieces—worth loc
per yard. Special for Friday, per
Piece, 79^
Sfi-inch white Dress Linen, fine
even cloth—all pure linen, medium
weight—worth 45c. Special for Fri
day it, per yard 31^
Large double bed size Comfortables
filled with clean white cotton and
chintt covered on both sides. Special
for Friday—
s*..7s kinds at ffij 39
$2.00 kinds at
"BERKLEY 00" white
Cambric, SO inches wide—perfect
and full pieces. Special for Friday
at, per yard, . . . , 10^
L. W. COOK
MISS LANDERS IS THE STAR
Brilliant Woman Will Give Y. M. C. A.
Star Course Initiative Entertain
ment To-morrow Evening
The first number of the Y M. 0. A.
Star Course will be given to-morrow
evening in Fahnestock Hall at 8.15
o'clock. The artist will be Miss l„u
--cile Landers, of Boston, in one of her
best programs. Miss Landers ranks
high in the lyceuni profession. This
will be her first appearance in this city,
but her reputation as an artist has pre
ceded her, for wherever she has ap
peared in the large cities her reception
has been most enthusiastic.
Doors will open at 7.30 o'clock.
Sii:gle admission tickets may bo pur
chased at the box office. Ali lovers ol'
ljceum entertainments will 'embrace
the opportunity of hearing one of the
best reciters now before the public.
The program follows:
Part I—Reading, (a) "Bv Cour
ier" (b) "In the Koyal Garden," O.
Henry; Scotch folk songs, "She Is a
Winsome Wee Thing," Turner, and -'I
Love My Jean," Downing; recitals,
"The Elephant's Child" and "The
Woman's Wednesday," Kipling; song,
"His Lullaby," Bond; play, "Janice
Meredith," act 11, Ford.
Part II —A "Penrod" story, ''Uncle
John," Tarkington; sketch, "First Aid
to the Wounded," Montague; piano
logues (a) "God Remembers When the
World Forgets," Bond, (b) selected;
poems (a) "The Lfttle Grey Lamb,"
Sullivan, (b) "The Conservative,'' (c)
''Comfort," Service.
Life in the Open
Men who ride to hounds learn much
more than the technique of a sport.
Observation, a quick eye, judgment and
a number of other qualities are devel
oped. From the bridge of a battleship
I have seen a hunting landsman pick
up torpedo boats at night before the
lookout man saw them. If you can
brown your skin nerves vanish. Sun
beams are good for old bones and
young. Hot batihs and constant shade
inultiplv emotion and increase fads
and flaccidity. Yet life in the open
tends .to become for town dwellers an
expensive luxury for the few.—A.
White's Essays.
The Fertilizing Rain
Prolbaibly few students of agriculture
realize the fertilizing qualities of tropi
cal rains. In the Annales de Geogra
phie M. Guillaumc Capais, who has
chemically studied the effects of rainy
weather in French Indo-China, says
that lightning produces large amounts,
of nitric acid. In the thirteen dis
tricts of the Tonkin delta of Indo-Chi
na, where thunderstorms "ftro frequent,
M. Capus asserts»that the lightning
annually produces an amount of at
mospheric nitrogen equivalent to 181,-
390 tons of nitrate of so*la, or 137,510
tons of sulphate of ammonin, the val
ue of Which is nearly >20,000,000.
Trimming
The old fashioned woman who used
to trim her own hat now has a daugh
ter who trims her husband for her
hats. —Cincinnati Enquirer.
Large size double gray Cotton
Blankets with neat blue, pink or
gray borders—perfect in every way.
Special for Friday—
SI.OO values at, per pair,
$1.25 values at, per pair,
values at, per pair,
$1.17
81x00 Bleached Seamless Sheets
of medium weight—3-inch hem—
even cloth—good, serviceable sheets
—worth UOc. Special for Friday
at
Good staple Apron Ginghams In
all the best styles and colore—colors
absolutely fast splendid, even
cloth—regularly 7c. Special for
Friday at, per yard,
HB-inch Unbleached Muslin, fine
even cloth of medium weight. Spe
cial for Friday at, per yard,
411-inch Bleached Pillow Tubing—
a splendid cloth for general wear—
worth lfic. Special for Friday at,
per yard ll 1 /^
Men's Stiff Bosom Shirts with de
tachable cuffs—neat striped and fig
ured effects—an odd lot in sizes 14,
and 17 only—regularly SI.OO.
Special for Friday at, each,
Men's 50c Colored Negligee Shirts
in sises Mi, l«»g and 17 only. Spe
cial for Friday at, oath, . . . 19^
Ladies' Boutounieres, little but
tonhole novelties and an odd lot of
neckwear—'Jsc values. Special for
Friday at, each, . , 12*4*
Ladies' All-Linen Hemstitched
Handkerchiefs, worth from '2~>c to
50c. Social for Friday at,
or S for 50c. ' '
Ladies' Oh?mois-Suede Gloves in
white, gray, tan and black—all
sizes but not in every color—regu
larly :50c. Special for Friday at,
® er pair 25c
An odd lot of Corsets of such well
knovai makes as Warner's, Royal
Worcester, C. B. and also Ferris
Waifts—regularly SI.OO to $:!.()(».
Special for Friday at ONE-HALF
PRICE.
An odd lot of Waruer's Brassieres,
worth 50c. Special for Friday at
Ladies' low neck lace trimmed
Chemisettes—all white, also plain
tuck with flare collar—a good 25c
value. Special for Friday at, each,
I The Daily Fashion Hint.
A smart straw hat, witli accompanying
white bordered black veil. The hut is of
j Milan hemp, the white flowers are of kit);
; narrow white hand and facing. Beauty
I spot embroidered on veil. White crfpe de
j Cliiuc tailored blouse.
Not the Place
"Why don't you write to this paper
; for what you want to know? The od
i itor says his columns give a few wrin
[ kles on every matter."
"Not for mine. I want to know
how to keep my complexion youthful."
—Exchange.
Willie—"Paw, what is flattery?"
Paw —"Flattery is tolling a woman
the nice things she has always thought,
about herself, my son."—Cincinnati
Enquirer.
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