Evening Star Newspaper, October 11, 1894, Page 11

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THE EVENING STAR, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1894—TWELVE PAGES. PO LAR SHOPPING PLAGE, 416 7th Street. n° the Public. EMODELED, REORG. t nn arket prices. je—noe unnecessary boast- ° PLAIN FIGURES. letter and otherwise wished k CHARLES BAUM. We 7 ” wn amd Black, inch China Silks at as Changeable striped, with’ east’ figures.” ia 6 epociok . ite Satin TE worth $1 1% cents ie ine ik Satin Striped Grenadines, well At 50 Cents. A fall assertm of Black and Fancy Silks at very low prices. Dress Goods Department. All new and desirable Dress Goods, such as are retalied at 50 cents, Only 35 Cents. coie Surwect Fecston Mastin Gee tee coeees eavtan eahieg: Sn: New’ Weck at tri on A Special Offering in Blankets. 11 § Warranted All-weol White Blankets, with fancy borders, at $3-50. - ae : 6 — the best value ever offered. At 7} Cents. g Linens. 5 Damask, geod value at 75 cents, Qur Price, 58 Cents. in 4 Damask Towel, knotted fringe, large size, At 22 Cents. partment. A special bargaie De Our work in this depart- call who never bave visited best uaterials, at astonishing iS oUF petro We guaraute Our Cloak and Suit Department - fll Rew and desirable goede. Please o corr + und Misses" Cape, With vely leader in New rments. Our Price $9.50. u Serge Ali-wool Suit, made with long cutaway Our Special Price, $7.25. Sis NIT offer apectal bargains from day to da: july. sur mm nae © HOOK DEPARTMENT hes been changed from the front to the Come aml see the new Encyclopeedic Dictionary, volumes, ® inches wide, 11'y inches k with 3.000 filustrations, at $2.00 a Volume. DEPARTMENT fs now moved int ms ear, Corset and Infant Departmen All we ask, please in. fou O00 V and 3 Inches thick, MILLINERY a new annex. 1 Vad bas been moved on lower floor. UO M? NM iA\ 416 7th Street. Qrresroedentontndeetentententoct sS-sS-agendongondeetenconteegenteets Marriage Licenses, x Marriage Mcenses have been granted to Pu bl ic the foliowing: Thomas F. Norris and Sarah F. Beddoo; Alpha W. Parham and Jessie Callow; S. rgess of Montgomery Benefactors= = county, Maryland, and Mamle Washington | of this city; William Halleck and Georgie Nr Johnsen; Guy Arthur Camp of New York | | clty and Susie Juliette Fillmore of this city ) Mounments— | Charles J. Simms and Nellie Bernhard; ibis iis aap Wad ais Frederick D. Casey of Caseyville, Ky., and Catherine J. Emery of Baltimore, Md.; homes happy. Make mortals com- | Brederick Saunders and Alice Payne; fortable. Take off the rough edges. August Bruno Schmi4t and Mary Ella Ea- 5 * | Wards; Carlton M. Cook of Baltimore, Md., f—with emphesis on the Be and Madeline Rood of Winter Park, entry Johnson of New Brighton, Pa., ~give* You have only to ask to ra P_ Washington of this clty: Geo, sad ta deaaren ak avd Faura C. Creaser; Willlam aM hn Bevel and : . P A. Robertson and at Frank Dorian and Equitable j Mary Charlotte Clayton; George H. Keys : jand Mildred Roberts; Samuel M. Arnell, jr., Credit umbia, Tenn., and Hattie Runnell of ind. stem. Ir was never kno id ro » to torn a deat day from & single honest request. It | her parents, who reside in Baltimore. De- ves po clase. ‘The man with her found her at the house of ¢ rian withont stand a friend of her mothe M street south- { footing In the eres of | where had been stopping for ‘ iy, 4 month. Her mother, who came for her, forgave her and took her ——~___ Wants a Divorce. Henr t a sult for to whom, January 3 that his med him = he may also ” ir two children, bs ° Sa A ewe { Fouse & Herrmann, 3| 9:7, 919, 921 and 7-9 > le fonfe dose aToazoa shore eo dioateete odraatodpontedey retooled epee ie SPN p AA DIP EDN SS PIED PINE DI ODI I PID DP PP POD PD +? we ti ere eee en Away. customers ts of Shoes FRED oe sell for $2.65 wil ONE ENJOYS Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant and a ee ores oe acts nily vet promptly ou the Kidneys, peat and Bowel. cleanses the nabs tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind ever pro- cost you $3 or $3.50 Today. woes, sizes 1 to 3% sell for $2.50 to $4), Only $1.50. os at ERARATARTECSETALRY® PRAAVAAADIY FE DIG® | The Warren Shee House, | duced, pleasing to the taste and ac- 42a GEO W. RICH, 919 F ST. ceptable to the stomach, rompt ia 2 * meeocsaaesaesenes | its action and truly Dereffial in iw — - | effects, prepared only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most ae remedy known. “p iDo You Use “Sugar Loaf” ro Sed She for sale in 500 Hi Nie otal Tt GO yoetoare™eet p] ond 81 bottles by all leading drug- § - a gists. Any reliable dru; who - taay not have it on will cure it promy for any one who wishes ay my ie ack acace any substi" ute. no. B. LEARY, PROP., ng iat, ua istst. sw CAL'FORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. YS eee | Washin FOR CHEAPER BREAD A General Public Demand for a Good Loaf at a Reduced Price. THE BAKERS’ MAKESHIFT NOT APPROVED es The Logic of the Figures Demands a Reduction. = WHAT “STAR” READERS SAY fin etnentann ea cr 182—Flour, wholesale, 0; bread, 5 cents, 18%4—Flcur, wholesale, 3 bread, 5 cents, The citizens who are demanding a reduc- tion in the price of bread without conse- quent lowering of the quality now call at- tention to the fact that the bakers them- selves admitted that under present condi- tions they might reduce the price of bread one-half cent a loaf. They argued, however, that to do this would not benefit the con- sumer, as the grocer would profit by the half-penny decrease. Since the publication in The Star yester- day of the law bearing upon the weight of bread and the interview with the Dis- trict officials, in which it was intimated that the law would be construed so that no baker would be prosecuted for making over- weight bread, the question is being asked why should not the bakers furnish a twen- ty-ounce or twonty-two-ounce loaf for five cents. They could thus divide with the People, it is claimed, at least a portion of the profit which now accrues to them by the reduced price of flour. The attempt of the bakers to evade the ery for cheaper bread by paiming off an inferior quality at a reduced price has al- ready received the stamp of pubile disap- proval, although the new scheme has been in operation only two days. Investigation discloses the fact that there is compara- tively no sale at all for the new four-cent loaf. The bakers themselves admitted to- that there is no Jemand for this qual- ity of bread. One exp situation is that the people a yanted to ay the poorer quality of bread have been getting it heretofore from the smaller baker ently, the innovation of the wholc- was nothing new to them, and they probably continued to purchase ‘their four-cent loaf at the old stand ple who bought the new loaf, were doubtless those who had previous been getting the best bread. One day’s ¢: perience with it was enough for them, and a decided repudiation of the shoddy’ leat has been the result. How Bakers View It. Strange to say, the bakers profess to view with complacency this public avowal of dis- like for the new scheme. They claim that it shows that the people are satisfied with the bread they are now getting and don’t vant a different kind.1t is probably true that the people are, as a rule, tolerably well satisfied with the quality of the present loaf, but there is a general denial of the claim’set up by the bakers that Washington gets better bread than other cities. Thou- The peo- therefore, ly sands of people will be found here to testify that the same class of citizens in other cities, with those who buy the best bread here, is get a quality equally as good, and in cases betier, as well as cheaper, ‘the point which the citizens maintain, d which the bakers try to obscure in r argunzents, is that the bakers were naking the same quality of bread three years ago when flour was $2.50 per barrel Ligher than it is now, and wages were the same. The contention set up by the bakers of excessively high wages has been contro- verted by the workmen themselves. Mr. Louis Rudloff, seeretary of the Bakers’ A sembly, has ft contradicted the claims of the employers, He demonstrated at a meeting of the Federation of Labor that in © of the large bakeries instead of the run’ es with 7, as represented by the employer, the scale was from $10 to $18, with an average of $14. The majority of the jJourneymen bakers in the city get $13 per . and this is what they received years ago, before the price of flour began to fa! The workmen have not received increas of wages in proportion to the decline in the vrice of flour. he journeymen bakers also deny that, ‘ton is an exception to other cities’ in the respect of possessing a strong bakers’ union tending to keep up the scale of wages. It was shown that there are 17 cities in the Union where bakers’ labor unions flourish. Every fact brought out in The Star thus far has tended to prove conclusively that the bakers are now making their bread at @ cost of from twenty-tive to thirty per cent cheaper than they could two or three years ago, and yet they will not sell their bread at a reduced price. Mathematics Applied to Bread. To the Editor of The Evening Star: ‘The question of the 4-cent loaf of bread is a matter of very easy solution, The bakers can sell the same kind of bread, made, as they say, with lard and milk included, at 4 cents, and make one-fifth of a cent more than they have been making. The 5-cent loaf. Here it is One barrel flour.... Expenses per barrel or 250 loaves, at 5 cents. The 4-cent loaf: One barrel of flour. Expenses per barrel at 3 and 4-5 cents, f this let us hear no more that it can- not be done, ig Star: + is one statement made by and on alf of the boss bakers of Washington in with the current discussion of jon of the high price charged for which might be important, if but which, if not true, had better be from the discussion. It is, in so ds, that the bread furnished s of Washington is better tha i by the bakers of other cities. 1 think not. Iam not a nor yet an expert; but 1 am som of a traveler; 1 think I know 1 when I eat it, and I do not hi andard or means of com- parison, is the average of bread supplied to Washington not better than that found in most other cities, but it is actually not as good! The question of good gnd poor bread ts, Iaknow, largely one of tagte, but since the Washington bakers have set up the claim as above for the excessive price they charge, it is well enough to see upon what foundation it rests. For one, I maintain that it does not rest on tenable ground, and I believe that the majority of travelers will am wrong, perhaps the bakers of Washing- ton will be able and willing to point out with exactness wherein and why their pro- duct 1s superior to that of their brethren elsewhere. Unless, and until they do this, their mere assertion will not count for much OBSERVER. October 10, 1804, The Milk and Lard Excuse, To the Baitor of The Evening Star; In your “Price of Bread” article in The Star of October 8 “one of the most prominent bakers" gives as one excuse for the present S-cent price per loaf that more costly in- gredients now enter into the superior qual- ity of the bregd furnished to the clty pub- lc, saying that his bills for the “last quar- ter for milk ($1,216), lard ($500) and sugar 260), amounted to ‘$1,976. As he says, he makes about 13,000 loaves per day, and call- ing the “quarter” ninety days, he would make 1,117,000 loaves in a quarter, using, say, in round numbers, $2,000 worth of milk, lagd and sugar, or 117-200 of a cent, or less than 2-3 of 1 mill per loaf, At a broad calculation, and this with the fractions all in favor of eo = 5 rena worth of lard, sugar and milk is eno for over @ barrel of flour, FIGURES TELL. To the Editor of The Evening St Now that The Star has fastened its tow-. line to the proposition to have cheaper bread, it is to be hoped that it will not stop until a loaf of good bread can be had for 4 cents, In other cities a person who buys a dollar's worth of bread tickets will get cheaper than will the person who Kays for a loaf at @ time, not so. Not only @ the bakers charge a price that is not wgrnented by the present rate of wages and price of flour, but they often get the advantage of their customers by furnishing large. tities of compress- ed air in the form es, varying in size from a pea to a walnut. If the bakers will not deal fairly with ‘the people, I suggest that co-operative Bakeries be established. May success crown your attempt to give the people cheaper bi »in which case all people who love jystice and fair dealing will rejoice. : L. B. N. A Tax on the Poor. To the Editor of The Evenipg Star: Among the scores: of benefits you have conferred upon thé community your re- cent movement upon the baker barons is certainly the mest laudable, more so than your active supervision of the post office building, for there were persons charged with the duty of looking atter that. Since we have lost our city councils we kave no organ to volce our complaints, and must depend on the press, not only, Indeed, to express them, but to discover abuses and wrongs. As a contribution to the Iterature of the subject let me say that there was once in this District an “assize of bread,” and I well remember that sixy odd years ago, in Georgetown (then the court end), Jos. Mountz, clerk of the corporation, published monthly his decree, stating that the price of flour was so much, and the loaf of bread must weigh so much. It must have been inconvenient to change the weight of the loaf every month, but it was done. Speaking roundly, the excessive price is @ tax levied upon the poor, Well-to-do families all bake their own bread, and cer- tainly get it for half the price paid by the poor. They should bless you. SINEX. ——_—_ AFFAIRS IN ALEXANDRIA, A Narrow Escape From Drown! Miss Lizzie Green of this city and Mr. H. C. Talbert of Washington were married at the residence of the bride's parents, on Upper Prince street, at half-past 8 o'clock last night, before a number of intimate friends of the family. After the ceremony refreshments were served, and Mr. and Mrs. Talbert left on the 1:20 train for a northern trip. Mr. Wallace Christian ef Rich-nond fs in the city on a visit ro friends. The condi of Rey. Dr, Minnigerode, whose {lln been mentioned in The Star, is no be ping the rt While ath Fairfax street, yester- , Miss May Allen was seized “and fell in con- n the gutter. The gutter at the time i with dead leaves, and contain four inches of water. When th lady was discovered by friends the ¥ had risen up to her nose, and in a more would have been the c leath by drowning. home, and regained consciousness in a short while. Dr. Betchell is bemoaning the loss of a pocket case of surgical instruments, two or three books and other articles, on ac- count of mispiaceT confidence. Yesterday a man calling himself Andrew Grant, and claiming to bea physician, called at the doctor’s residence and asked for assistance. The doctor went to another part of the house to get something for the man, and when he returned found that he pad de- parted, taking with him the articles men- tioned. Dr. Betcheli notified the police, and later Grant was arrested by Officer Grady. The members of ‘the Brotherhood cf St. Andrew, who are in convention in Wash- ington, will be entertaine? at a lunch, to be given by the brotherhood of this city in Christ Chureh lecture room on Monday next, the loth instant. It is expected that fully five hundred guests will be present. After lunch visitors will be shown through Chris rch and the other points of historical Interest in’ town, and many of them will take the electric road for Mount Vernon. Extra cars will be run for the benefit of the pariy. No business wes’ transacted in the cor- peration court terday A number of Alexandria sports will go to Alexander Island ‘tonight to witness the opening of the Eureka Athletic Club's new club house. The bouts are to be be- tween Jack Bolan of Cincinn Addison onroe. mer Arrowsmith was delayed on her arrival from the lower river yester- day on account of the storm of Tuesday night. The Norfolk boat was also delayed for the same reason. cards are out for the marriage of Carter H. Smith and Miss Fannie E. Steiner. The ceremony will take place at Christ Church November 1. Arrangements have been made for Capt. P. H. McCaul, the republican candidate for Congr from the eighth congr district, to speak at the Opera House in this city on the night of the “1st instant. it is more than probable that Representa- tive E. E. Meredith, the demoeratic candi- date, will be asked to meet him in joint discussion. Wythe White, manager of the Alexandria Telephone Exchange, has returned from Richmond. Company B of the Richmond Light In- fantry Blues won the first prize in the military drill at the state fair, the Norfolk Light Infantry the second and the Monti- cello Guards of Charlottesville the third. The Alexandria Lisht Infantry did not enter the contest. The work of rebuilding the Catholic Church fs going on nicely and when com- pleted this will be by ail odds the nand- fomest structure in the city. Several Alexandrians went to Charlottes- ville this morning to attend the wedding oo aa ‘Thomas I, Waters and Miss South- al ‘The steamer Howard Cassard brought $2,500 at the sheriff's sale yesterday. She ssional Was knocked down to George anks of Baltimore, vice president of the Arrow Navigation Company, which succeeds the Monumental Construction Company. The Cassard will be completed according to the original plans of Robert M. Fryer, the in- ventor, which were abandoned about two years ago. “= SWAIN om PANAGEA ~~» = CURES ~ DISEASES OF THE BLOOD Scrofula, Rheumatism, Eczema, Tetter, Ulcerous Sores, Boils, Carbuncles, and-ali forms of BLOOD POISON. Fach bottle ig Labeled with # portrait of m. Swalm. 113 Sonth, 71 St... near Sensom, Phila, Pa Sealed Books Malled Free. DURAND JAQUETT, For Sale b:; ‘ y F. A. Tschificly, jx., 475 Penna. ave. 4y19-th,s,tusze , — sla In Washington Is invited to eal and make our gequaintance—see our store and learn our tis cm metitods of conducting We want to dimopstrate where- In i's to YOUN fatereat tots i GROCERIES and TABI LUXURIES of @g, i Our stock is9THE LARGEST x prices are and freshest—awd the VERY LOWES s . Moreover, We sell only fellable goods—and charge no more than many charge for the “tnferto; C'Should purthiees prove un- Satisfactory at any time we wil) hot only refund your money, but thank you for bringing the matter to our attention. G. G. Cornwell & Son, Table Luxuries, ol 412-1414 Pa. Ave. Get the Best. THE CONCORD HARNESS. LUTZ & BRO., 407 Penn. ave., adjoining National Hotel. but here it ts 1 ranks, Satchels and Leather Goods, mb2o 4y7 to octT LATE SPORTING NEWS | en@: Harding, left tackle; Wooters, left guard; Welker, center; Wharton, right guard; Rollins, right tackle; Blackstone, right end; Harris, quarter back; Compton (captain), left haif back; Harrison, right half back; Lewis, full back. Mellison, Ful- ler and Beale, substitutes. Cadet Skinner manages the team this year. The team of the Maryland Agricultural College has arranged the following schedule of games: October 13—Western Maryland College, at College Park. October 17—Central High School. October 20—Washington College, at Ches- tertown, Md. October 27—St. John’s College, Annapolis. November 3—Norfolk Y, M. C. A., at Nor- folk, Va. November 7—Johns Hopkins, at Washing- ton, D. C. November 10—Baltimore City College, Col- Park. November 17—Ealtimore Athletic Club, in ING THE SEASON. Georgetown's Eleven Defented Kendall Greens. The Georgetown College foot ball team yesterday afternoon defeated the team rep- reserting Kendall Green by a score of 16 to 0. The game occurred on the Kendall Green grounds. The Kendalls played well, but were too light to make a very formid- able showing against the heavy George- town eleven. On a long run made by Mike Mahoney around right end, and another by Gutlien through the center, Georgetown scored two touchdowns tn the first half. In the second half Bahen le two more touchdcwns. The teams played as follows: Kendall. the Georgeto Position. Baltimore. Kelly. Left end. EER Calla! Lett Bicycle Records Broken. Two world’s bicycle records went down at Agricultural Park, at Sacramento, Cal, yesterday afternoon. One was the one- quarter-mile flying start, unpaced, class A, | the record of which was 281-5. N. 8. Up- Nelson Mahoney son of the Sacramento Athletic Club Wheel- ca men covered the distance in 273-5. The other record lowered was the quarter-mile, unpas class B, tandem record of 26 1-5, which T. 8. Long of the Olympic Club Wheelmen and Tony Delmar of the Garden City Wheelmen wiped out by beating the mark at 243-6. Referee, Mr. Welch; umpire, Mr. Troughs, and linesman, Mr. Shields. A $4,000 Match Race Arranged. The Cumberland Park Association of Nashville has arranged a match between Robert J., John R. Gentry, Hal Braden and Joe Patchen here, October 19, for $4,000. YESTERDAY’: Scored Against Yale. The Williams College eleven yesterday made a record by scoring four points RACING. against the Yale team. This is the first <r game in many years in which any foot ball Alexander - team, except those of Harvard. oe ur ‘a ri First race, half mile—Mary B., first; |#nd the University of Pennsylvani ¢) Low T. ff Cloverdale, second; Black Child, third. | S®oPed against the Yale players. as Time,. .52. rae Second race, five furlongs—Benjamin, first; Meadows, second; Little Charle, third. Time, 1.03, % Third race, six furlongs—Belle Blackburn, first; Tedd Cregg, second; Ronald, third. Time, 1.20 1-2. Fourth race, four and one-half furlongs— Prices Talk of the Town. ; Dollars or Kicks for women, ac- Verse, first; Smoke, second; John Duffy, Q cording to New involees arriving daily, ‘Thousands third. Time, .59. | or all shades, all all styles. Fifth race, seven furlongs—Lady Gay, whether veume weceend ™ first; Fi third, ezer, second; Cold Wave, Strictly all wool. Low tariff price, $7.50 a Suit. ‘Thousands of Suits, Single and Double Time, Morris Park. First race, five furlongs—Stoneneil, first; Applause, second; Lady Violet, third. s ‘Time, .58 3-4, in a breasted Sacks, Silk and Sergelined, Long- Second race, six furlongs—Urania, first; . cut Regent, satin and ‘Ttalian Hating. Strict- aaa ; ‘ sensible way. If the aan zette, scond; Deggett, third. Time, y. y yn on Os an use Pearline, it means good, hard dollars saved. Pearline is economy. Ail that ruinous rubbing that makes you buy linens and flan- nels twice as often as you need to, is spared, to say nothing of your time and labor. See the troubles that women have to endure with other ways ofwash- ing. There's that hard, wear- ing-out rub, rub, rub, or the danger of ruining things ‘with acids if you try to make it easy. Washing with Pearline is ab- solutely safe. as 3, pyte, x.y, Third race, Hunter handicap, 1 1-4 miles— Beldemere, first; Baroness, second; Light- foot, third. Time, 2.12 1-4. Fourth race, Country Club handicap, 11-8 miles—Dorian, first; John Cooper, second; Roche, third. Banquet far back. Time, 1.56. Fifth race, mile—Nero, first; Bassetlaw, second; Leonawell, third. Time, 1.41 3-4. Sixth race, six furlongs—Derelicty first; htiead second; Mayday Filly, third. Tite, 13, the best grades. Low tariff price, $10.00 a Suit. CHILDREN’S SUITS. Strictly all wool, two and three plecss. Low tariff price, $2.00 a Suit and Upward. BOYS’ SUITS. Strictly all wool; ages 18 to 18 years. Coat, ‘Vest and Long Pants. Low tariff price, $2.50 a Suit and Upward. lege Eleven, The Maryland Agricultural College foot ball team yesterday at College Park defeat- ed the eleven of the Orient Athletic Club of this city by 30 to 0. Touchdowns—Rollins, 2; Compton, 1; Harrison, 2; Lewis, 1. Goals kicked—Harris, 4. Compton was badly injured and will not be able to play again this season. The team lines up as follows: Bannon, lett AWAY. HROW IT seaz| MAN. | weror & anurs which ive cay peril rect ; 10 Per Cent Clothing House, His Afflictions And Disabilities. His Doctor Should Be cure, inflict great injury, inducing strangulation and death. HERNIA fiistse’ 8 matter of how long or of what size, is 927 AND 929 TTH ST. N.W., CORNER MASSA. CHUSETTS AVE. STRICTLY ONE PRICE. miserabie forebodings, doubt, disability, fears and embarrassment. No other ailment is #0 discourag- ing or demoralizing, the sufferer loses ambition permanently cured without Open i til 7, Saturday until 12 See ee Gonsersative Surgery | Specialist. An Expert.| .: Tigges ses “TUMOR! ORGANIC WEAKNESS, with all its train of TUM RS, veiation, wines tee pera and energy and realizes that for him iife bas lost i lag Giseases of lower bowel, its charm. without or resort to the knife. ‘This condition Is speedily cured by the scientific §' in the oe meted and advanced methods of treatment I employ. STRI Of urinary passare $2 | Discascs, Blood Polson and Taints, affecting the cutting, Abundant References, and Pamph- | Body, Nose, Throat, Skin and Bones; Mucous leta,on a discases, sent. in ‘en | Patches in Mouth, Ulcers, Tumors, Warty Growths, jm oe =a ee velope, 10 cts. (stamps). WORLD’s Varteocele, Piles, &c., radically cured by my unfail- | 0 ne tees ee Booed sary Association, Buffalo, N.Y. | ing method of treatment. ane ar Cups Gay tua tay Gane the cash to par in lump make a grievous mis- If you are @ victim of kidney or bladder Kidney and Bladder take. Lots of people who COULD pay cash as Aiftcaity, you will tind Br. ABarid Rennety's. Pe: Ailments, as Painful, Difficult, Too Frequent, | Well 88 not buy here on credit—because there are i ‘Cured: thousand ‘tering from ‘these’ disenses: | Milky or Bloody Urine, and all matters relating to | OtBeT Ways in which thelr money cam be eum ployed to better advantage. CREDIT WITH US IS ONLY ACCOMMODATION. We have but ‘one price—cash or credit—and ‘that price ts as low as simflar qualities are sold for ANYWHERE. We don't ask anybody to sign @ note-or to pay any interest—we're satis- fied with « plain, honest promise that you will Urinary Passage, promptly cured. Don't waste precious time—consult Dr. Carleton. His long residence in this city and his brilliant record of cures effected in apparently hopeless cases entitle him to your confidence. Dr. Carleton, THIRD YEAR AT 507 12th St. N.W. 2 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE. CONSULTATION FREE. Hours: 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 7 to 8 p.m. Saa- tay, 10 to 2 70,th-tf Bargain In Hair Switches. $2.50, Was $5.00. $4.50, Was $6.00. $6.50, Was $10.00. In all shades; also large re- ductions in Gray Switches. Hair Dressing, Cutting LARA | PAE ta a tle money weakly or mow. Gar and Shampooing in best!) FOur Tables )) tse on samo rnc em. manner by competent cai ee a ae artists at —— Boe SPLENDID BRUSSELS CARPET, 50e. PER YARD. ed with RELIABLE INGRAIN CAPPET, 2 MADE AND LAID FREE OF COsT, SOLID OAK EXTENSION TARLE, $3.50. S. Heller’s, 720 7th St. Bargains eee aS oie - 40-DCUND HAIR MATTRESS, SEPT I TE PT CSSE CCE SESE ESETIOO VASES, FIGURES, OR! ENTS, &C WOVEN WIRE A few of these articles a tly defective, YOURS VOR A PROMISE TO Pay, and can be bought for a mere sung, comparcd with their real value; but the greater part of them are serviceable, ‘perfect goods. ENGLISH VASES. were $3.50. Special pwice $1. POINTONS VASES, were $6, $5.50, §3. Special price, $2, $1.50, $1. AUSTRIAN VASES, rich decoration, $2.50 and $3.75. Special price, $2, RIAN VASES ‘white nnd gold, $13.50, .75. Special price, $5, $1.50. RIAN Ess $9.59, 37, $2.25. Special }, $3, $1. s ‘ASES, §14 and $9. Special price, $9 ai . RENCH VASE, $10. Special price, $4. AUSTRIAN FIGURES, $2. Special price, $1, ., Was $3.75. Npectal price, $1, was $5. Special price, $1, ase, def., was $4.50. 1 price, $1. a. = Vase, def., was $3.50, price, Potntons Vase, def., $5.60. $1.50. ‘Many others with poate oe Ege Se M. W. Beveridge, 48a a Phosphatic ‘About That : ?$3.50 Trunk. One thing we want to impress upon you about that $3.50 Trunk of ours. It is not. the regular $3.50 Trunk, which you can buy at all the department stores. We make these ourselves—they are strong and verviceable—not as serviceable as our $5 or $6 Trunk, but twice as serviceable as others’ $5 Trunks. A trunk strap and your name on it free. GROGAN’S MAMMoO1rNn CREDIT HOUSE, (619-821-623 Tth Street Northwest Between H and I streets. Kneessi, 425 7th St. PPHEOO ESSE SEF S90F36SS 90S E008 POT OEE STOR CTE STRESSED OOD DOWNEY’S BOO80OOOO0H9OO 090048 Liebig COMPANY’S An invaluable product, made from the finest beef the world POTTERY AND 1215 F and 1214 G sts. Hotel for Horses Emulsion Extract of Beef. Fireproof throughout. Perfect drain- age. No draughts. No rats. No mice. Horses receive every atten- tion. (> Many persons having stables of their own find it far cheaper in the end to board their horses HERE. Call and inspect the premises-glad to see you any time, 1622-1628 L. St. N. W. ‘804

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