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10 THE EVENING STAR, FRIDAY, MARCH 27, 1896-TWENTY PAGES. PARKER, BRIDGET & CO, Clothiers, 315 7th st. BOYS’ mr marked snecess in; have this we We shall retail Boys’ Clothing this seuson at the prices other clothlers have to pay at whe 3 special of duce the stoc 360 Boys’ Scotch Tweed Suits, with extra pair of pants, in a variety of 200 Boys’ Fine bination Suits, With extra pair of pants and cap to feb, strictly all wool, in black avy bi eviots and a variety ch mixtares. Cost you else- 5. Be Strictly All-weol Confirmation Suits of Wack Serge, with extra pair of cap to match. Cost BRIDGET & CO., Clothiers, 315 7th St. A Seeterteotesgetententongenetentontengegengeget ‘'Neckwear= (30 cents —You can count on anything ) Auerbach puts out as_ being ¢ thoroughly correct. You men < of taste will approve of our Eas- Neckwear display. CENTS is a magic price. ) buys much more than its worth > in neckwear this season—much ) more than ever before. and Cheeks are po we show everything feom the th plait k white. x pretty. com ‘A $3 Derby. Dunlop block, tan or black— and the equal in wear and qual- ity of any $5 derby made. (AUERBACH, ( Haberdasher, 623 Pa. Ave. OI IPS rn It Oy ee recognized. ‘The oodls Is supported fou of merit, reliability UL © of Spalding’s Sporting a tim founds Prices, sole D. gents for everything to figure the ben- Tappan’s, 1013 Pa. Ave. 20 ir is TIME wake up when we make 12 Photex. for 82.00. They're the 34.60 & RT COMFORT Hzed fn the made-te-your-measure sort— turn ont. 1 ._ ¥ Pe ned—and money b Frank Wells, 1411 Owners of Fine and _ Folks ¥ one In work nna. £ th Mainspring, Hutterly. 7 SILK HATS, ‘They*r the only a re id Taneh too little new spring blocks, SHAVED HATS Derbys stud Soft 1 nck aud Brown newest spring | styles and 3. R. C. Lewis & Son, Tigl NEW YORK AVE. £7 Yorma T-14ed With every tailor claiming to turn out the best work, it is difficult for you to decide with whom to deal. The reputation I have earned keeps me busy and I steadily maintain it. OWEN, tailor for men and women, 455 11th st.—Just above the avenue. mb26-16d LOSSES SOE POOREST Saks’ Easter Greeting— ‘To every pur- ehaser m our Boys’ Depart- ment between now and Easter we shall give one of these Jap- anese Magie Egz Tops. ‘There's lots of fun in ‘em, boys. 5 ‘Somelnside Fac A little forethought— mothers — ‘Il send you shopping for the boys to- morrow—and save you from the rush of Easter week. Do you appreciate that our Boys’ store—cause it’s as big as a store—offers a greater variety than all the “departments” in town put together. Nothing south of New York to be com- pared with it. Anda we give you all the advantages of bigness—big qualities— big varieties—big savings in price. You never saw so many novelties as are out for the boys this season. And you can't see “em anywhere else but here. We'd had a show of ‘em in our windows long ago if they hadn't been all torn up with the improvements. But come in and see em. You don’t have to buy because you come in. You'll find the handsomest rigs that boys were ever dressed in. Com- binations that are entirely new. Effects that are ex- tremely dressy. They’re Sailors and Middies—and Juniors — Reefers — and Brownies — and Jack Tars —but you haven't an idea of the clever construction —the touches of genius that make them different from anything that ever has been. We want you to put us down for quality. Qual- ity is what your satisfaction hangs on. We never of- fered such conscientious values as this season’s— from beginning to end— from the first grade to the last. Prices have turned to, and ran the other way. Better worths—lower prices! Sih a i Ss sth ss Wh Ss Ye wh NB a te AS SS es A A hs te es ts ts tate tO he ts ts to a a ts a a a te ee Be a ot ededeedententonten ‘You'd hurdly believe 98e. wonld, buy Gray or Brown Mixed Junior ‘nits—Iin all sizes—from 3 to 6 years. to be a good suit to be here. Well made—perfect fit They're & = $1.50 everywhere else. 3 ‘The $3 grade will give you an idea of how the qualities grow. AN of 25 styles of absolutely All-wool, two- piece Short Pants Suits, in light and % dark effects. If you know what oth- rs reckon a> good value et $4 and $4.50, that’s what these are. Just look Into the $5 grade a min- Ute—table after table—fall. A hun- died styles pearly—novelties _ and staples. Honest weol—experienced making—as good as nine out of ten stores In this country sell for $7.50. They're only the begin- ning of our stock. Short Pants Suits rur to. Long Pants Suits run to. ees % 5 $20. #25. Special line of confirma- tion suits. You know why we sell Star Shirt Waists—they're the very best. Children’s Hat Depart- trent is on the second oor now. Just received the third lot of Brownie Overalls. They sell most as fast as we can get ’em. 35¢. a pair. Saks and Company, Pa. ave. and 7th st.—‘Saks’ Corner.” 1t Slee are still Sky High. Peery eee ey eS ee ee ee oe Public Opinion —at the cycle show proclaimed CRES- ENT BICYCLES the most popular wheel in use—because they are HIGH GRADE and aire sold at a reasonable price— 975 = $50-$40. Xo other wheel is better, at any price ~few are as xox. Western Wheel Works. Wash. Branch, cor. 9th and H Sts. Harry S. Jones, jr., _Manager. fh27-f,m,w- “er iigh! at Siade Tailoring at the Minimum Cost. Only 7 Business Davs Till Easter. The mild weather of the past few da has had telling effect here. Men realize — that spring has come—and Easter Is alinost at hand. “We'll be busier as the week ad- vanees—hurry up. Spring 515 -*20-525 Suits, — - in a great variety of “smart”? woolens. Orders for Easter shontd he left this week. NO DEPOSIT REQUIRED. Morton C. Stout & Co., ferchant Tailors, 1112 F St. MORGAN WRIGHT TIRE ARE GOOD TIRES As It From the Detroit Tribune. “They froze me out.” “How?” “Why, they made It so hot for me," in Spoke. DS aa ea Ok Ok Oks Ok MS Oh kk A Os A A Sk, a a Sc A cs Ak tk, Ak tt tht tet tte th AO Oe ERI REE EE OOOO & IN A SPECIAL CAR Arrival of the Yale Law School Nine From New Haven. GAME WITH COLUMBIAN TODAY Result of the Great American Handicap Shoot. GENERAL SPORTING NOTES The Yale Law School nine arrived in Washington this morning at 4 o'clock in the special car of Mr. Chauncey M. Depew, who, being an old Yale man, placed it at the dis- posal of the members for their southern trip. The team will be here until Tuesday morning, and will occupy quarters in the car during their stay. They then leave for Baltimore. There are fifteen men in the party, and the team selected to play Co- lumbian University this afternoon is the strongest the outfit will afford. It will con- sist of: Burrowes, catcher; Holston and Buckingham, pitchers; Smith, first base; Beers, second base; Mederos, third base; Martin, short stop; Bizzell, left field; Ham- Un, center field, and Sanford, right field. The Yale Law School has not had a team since 18%8, waen an organization went to Chicago and made an enviable record there. All the men composing the team are re- Mable, hard-working players, who believe that team work {s far superior to star play- ing. They expect to win, or come very near victory, in all three games here. This morn- ing’s practice, however, was the first the team has had out of doors, as work has been confined to the cage. This is, of course, the first game of the season, and their adherents at home are anxiously awaiting tidings. The Columbian team which will go up against the Yale nine is the strongest that ean be secured from the large number of players who are candidates for positions. Cummings will pitch and Fugitt will act as the receiving end of the battery, his friends belleving that his work will be all that could be desired from his good show- ing yesterday. Greene will play first base, and Mills at second, Dalzell at third, and Ball at short, will make up the rest of the infield. Proctor or Goodfellow In left, Shaw in center, and Beard in right field, will make up the team. The men are all confident of a victory, and say they will play the game of their lives, in order to win the respect of the city for the new team. They will wear the new uniforms provided for the club, consisting of gray suits, with a dark blue sweater, and stockings with an orange stripe, the colors of the university. ‘The game will be called at 2:30 at Capitol Park, and extra arrangements have been made for seating a large number of spec- tators, Tomorrow the v! town University, University. isitors will play George- and Monday the Catholic MONDAYS COLLEGE GAME. Catholic University Nine to Play the Yale Law School. The base ball history of the Catholic Uni- versity will be inaugurated next Monday afternoon, when the team will meet the Yale Law School men. Because of the first appearance, and especially since it repre- sents that part ef the university which is not yet a year old, the interest concerning it is very great> There is every Prospect that the men will be in good trim, s8 as to show the curious ones the quality of the experienced men, of which the team is ecmposed. Practice has been steadily car- ried on on the grounds of the Washington Outing Club, just outside the university Property, and each man gives promise of playing a hard, clean game. The players have been for the most part decided upon, and Capt. McTighe has se- lected the following team: Center field, Quinn; catcher, Painter; left field, Procter; skcrtstop, O'Brien; third base, Twohy; sec end base, Cashman; first base, Burrough: pitcher, McTighe; catchers, O'Brien and adurray. However, several other men are still con- s‘dered. The uniforms in which the men will appear are brownish gray shirt and trousers. A monogram C. U. on the pocket of the former; black cap, black stockings, with two stripes, one yellow, the other white, and a white sweater, with yellow trimming. The game will at 3.30 o'clock. BEARD WAS” be played at Capitol Park ‘VINCIBLE, Only Two Hits Made Off His Pitching by Gallaudet. Columbian University and Gallaudet Col- lege played six innings yesterday at Cai tol Park, the mutes getting another shut- out by the score of 21 to 0. Beard pitched @ good game for the Columbian men, while Fugitt’s work behind was a great im- provement on his previous style. Greene and Dalzell led in the batting. The Gal- laudets were able to make but two hits off Beard, and made eight errors, while the "Varsity boys show a clean column in tnat regard. The mutes played their character- istic dogged game, but were clearly out- classed. The Columbian boys showed up in great shape in team work. They are all old players, and the combination as it stands now should prove a winning team during the coming season. The score follows: COLUMBTAN. GALLAUDET. R. D.Fugitt, Beard,p. eit necoocoom: 00000 0-0 ‘olumbian, 3. Left on laudet, 3. ' First buse on 3 off Sexsons, 2, Home ‘runs—Greene ‘a Dalzell. ‘Two-base_hits— fice hits—Beard, Hit by piteher—By Erd, 1. Umpire— ‘Time of game—2 hours and 10 min- WON THE DALY CUP. Dickey of Boxton First in the Ameri- can Handicap Shoot. The giand American pigeon shoot at Long Branch vas concluded yesterday af- ternoon and Orrin Roswell Dickey of Bos- ton, after a stubborn fight, won first hon- ors and the Daly silver cup. Simon Glover of Rochester took second place and G. W. Coulston of Brooklyn secured third horors. Eight men tied for first place, having killed twenty-four birds each, and under the rules of the Interstate Associa- tien, they had to shoot off, “miss and out,” to determine the positions in which they would be placed. These eight men, how- ever, before the shoot-off agreed to divide all the money coming to the eight highest guns, which amounted to $1,957, and each man received $244.70. Thirteen men tied with twenty-three | kills each, and they agreed to divide the remainder of the money, which amounted to $162.40, before they shot-off for posi- tions, and each of them received $ . The eight men who tied for first honors were Glover, Cubberly, Coulston, Cooper, Dickey, Thoinas, Heikes and Von Lan- gerke. Y THE CYCLE SHOW. Races Arranged for the Boys —To- might’s Program. The finish of the cycle show promises to be €ven more presperous and brilliant than the opening. The management gave the ex- hibitors a special matinee today, and the hall was well filled. Ladies. receive free boxes of candy this afternoon up to 6 o'clock. Tomorrew afternoon the children have a time at the show. They all come in for ten cents each, and the Road Club has purchased four thousand bags of good can- dy to give to them. The little ones are the future riders of the coming age, and the exhibitors are glad to please them. ‘Tomorrow the races will be more especial- ly for the boys and girls. There will be one-half-mile scratch, one-quarter-mile scratch, and a quarter-mile handicap race ‘waste—is apprcached by three dist for boys, and one-quarter-mile scratch race for boys under ten year@ of age. The little girls will also have a rter-mile race. Special girls’ wheels ant ing cycles will be put in by the trainers for these events. Every effort to make the day a pleasant one for the children will be made. Yesterday Messrs. ‘tesque, Powers, Daly, Browne and other stars of the male persuasion and the leading ladies of the three big companies n playing in this city were guests of the Road Club at the show, and they seemed to enjoy the occa- sion hugely. irae The boys’ race in the {afternoon resulted in Lang Shearer winning in 48 seconds. Last night's racing proved the banner event of the show. It was not until nearly 11 o'clock that the Taceg,were concluded. The half-mile-race for hoy$ resulted as fol- lows: Entries—G. Daly, L, J. Vogt, B. Nel- meyer, J. Biggs, T. Smith and W. Fergu- son. The winner was L. J. Vogt. Time, 19% seconds. The mile handicap brought out W. W. Matchett and C. S. Brush, scratch; Harry Ford, John Meyers, H. Gottkinny and C. Knott, eight seconds handicap, and W. H. Bowman and L. Moriarty, ten seconds handicap. Matchett won the finals in the good time of 1:38. The judges were W. J. Prince and T. P. Carter. Timers, George Smith, W. J. T. Tubman and BE. C. Kloman. Starter, R. Jose. Tonight another exciting contest at one mile with handicaps will be run, .also another boys’ race for half mile. The big sextet and the Tiffany wheels, together with the Powers boys’ trick riding, will be features of importance. CARROLL INS’ ‘KE ATHLETES, Many Aspirants for Honors Are Hard at Work. The gymnasium of the Carroll Institute is the scene of great activity. The mem- bers are practicing to win the first place in the contests, April 7, at their indoor athletic contests. There are a number of aspirants for hon- ors in all of the events, viz., high jump, bro.d jump, pole vaulting, putting the shot and wrestling. In addition to these, there be boxing by Ed. Roache and John Eckart. Instructor Joyce has srranged a neat tumbling act, with Cassin and McAvoy. Mangan, Daly and McClusky are to per- form on the horizontal bar. There are sey- eral other events, which will be drawing cards; among them are foil fencing, par- allel bars and the wand drills and flying rings. The events have been well ar- ranged, and promise to surpass those of former years. NEW ATHLETIC ‘PARK. Incorporation of a Company to Foster Outdoor Sports. Articles of incorporation were filed in the corporation court of Alexandria today by the International Athletic Park and Amuse- ment Company of Washington, D. C. The company is capitalized for $50,000 in 5,000 shares of $10 each. The officers of the ecmpary are Jacob P. Clark, president; Saml. W. Stinemetz, vice president; W. 8. McKean, secretary, and W. C. Clark, treas- vier, with following named as the board of directors: J. P. Clark, W. 8, McKean, Har- ry B. Parker, S. W. Stinemetz, Chas. Tay- lor Calvera and Dr. Henry T. Harding. Students Going to Old Point. Arrangements have been made for a par- ty of the Georgetown students to accompa- ny the base ball nine in their trip to Old Point Comfort, where they will play the Yale team Wednesday after Easter. Short Stop Scheibeck Detained. J. Earl Wagner has received a letter from Frank Scheibeck saying he had been seriously iM with the grji, and that his physician was of the decfded opinion that he would not be able to play ball befor May 1. While his absence will not ser: cusly be felt, as De Montreville will be piaced regu} short, it is unfortunate the spring practice. ——. THE GOLD ERA IN SOU 1 AFRICA, Rallway Construc: Stimulated by This Industry. From the Nineteenth Century, In measuring the advance of a new coun- try we look naturally in’the first place to the development of its public works. Tne establishment of the gold industry on the Randt has proved a,,most effective stimu- lus to railway construction in South Africa. Today Johannesburg—built 6n land which in 1886 was part of an absolutely barren t lines, which connect it directly with the four chief ports of South Africa, Delagoa bay, Durban, Port Elizabeth and Cape Town. Of these lines, the earliest, which traverses the Free State from end to end and links the Rardt with the Cape Colony, was not pened until July, 1892, The Pretoria-Delagoa Bay line was com- pleted in the autumn of 18M, and the ex- tension of the Randt railway to Cnarles- town, the connecting point with the Natal line, was only effected a few months ago. These, together with some subsidiary lin represent a total of 1,000 miles of railway constructed mainly under the stimulus of the gold industry in the Transvaal. To this total two considerable pieces of railway cunstruction, accomplished in the interesc of the gold industry in the Chartered Com- pany’s territories, must be added. Of these, the first extended the main trunk line of Africa from Kimberley successively to Vry- burg and Mafeking, in 180) and 18)4, and the second, the Beira line, by securing a rapid passage through the “fly country,” brought Salisbury into casy communication with the east coast of Africa at the port so named. Taken together, they measure 3 miles. It should be added also that the ex- tension of the trunk line from Mafeking toward Buluwayo is in process of con- struction. To have driven 1,350 miles of railway in six years is a remarkable achievement for a covntry in which the European popula- tion {gs still considerably under three-quar- ters of a million, and which has not hithe to been characterized by the rapidity of its progress. The telegraph has advanced further and more speedily than the railway. Here the chief gain has been in the vast regions northward of the Limpopo, opened up by the Chartered Company. The wires were carried from Mafeking to Victoria in De- cember. 1891; they reached Salisbury, 819 miles beyond Mafeking, In February, 1892, and today telegraphic communication has been established between Salisbury and Blantyre, in Nyasaland. a WHAT THE CHILDRE) MAY EAT. Wholesome Appetizing Dishes for Youthful Digestion. From the New York Times. Catering for the children’s cating is one of the most trying, as it is one of the mort im- portant, parts of the modern mother’s household duties. The word modern is used advisedly, for it Is only recently that mothers have realized that what their chil- dren eat is a powerful physical and moral agent in their development. Health, tem- per, and, to a certain extent, ability, all wait upon digestion,.and digestion upon whole- some living. The growing generation itself understands this. ‘“Senfime some whole wheat bread,” writes a college athlete to his mother. “I can’t train onrthis bolted flour stuff.” He was used to the:other, and missed its nourishment. £ How to give her childrén the food they Need, and yet satisfy the childish craving for various unwholesome edibles, is the problem that confronts i-the painstaking chatelaine every morning, when she goes to the kitchen for a talk about the day’s meals with the priestess of that domain. A few simple facts will ‘Help her. One is that cooked-over meat is most indigestible. It may be heated through in a hot gravy, or minced fine and rolled in a ball of mashed potato, but for youthful stomachs it should not be twice brought to the cooking point. Meat pies are most wholesome when made of fresh meat, and with a biscuit rather than a pastry crust. A vegetable ple is a dish children usually ike. To make it a deep dish should be filled with sliced potatoes, onions, chopped carrots and turnips, a few bits of butter put on top, 4 seasoning of salt, and a very little white pepper, and the dish nearly filled with gravy or stock. Cook the vegetables until nearly tender hefore put- ting on a biscuit crust. Tomatoes sliced and alternated with carrots, onions and macaroni, or mushrooms and potatoes, with a very little onion, or a potato pie with onions and apples to flavor it, are’all varia- tions of this dish. A pound of juicy, fresh steak, minced fine and: alternating with sliced potatoes, the whole covered with a thin crust, or a layer of grated bread crumbs, put on only long enough to brown Seeecee SSG SOOSQ00 pre will you find such a large v: We are fully prepared call the better for you. »Children’s Shoes. gS cy Prats Tan or Blac {2 and Patent Te + for the Habe ates cecasecee 50c, £ ~ New Tan Shoes. talf Laced, te toe ...52.00 4 different shapes, et ...§2.50 Ae ene Kid oe the softest, prettiest and ‘est an Shoes ‘oade....... DZeOO ) ae 1914 AND 1916 PEN) AVE. A Wonderful Week 3 SHOE-RE Will begin at our three always busy stores tomorrow morning. For three months we have’ been hard~ at work preparing for this sale—and as a result we are id to assert: “That nowhere in this or any other city made new Spring Shoes at the prices we are offering them for during this, our great “Special Sale of Easter Shoes.” Shoe selling we ever experienced—but the sooner you Wm. Hahn & Co.’s Reliabie Shoe Houses, 980 AND 932 SEVENTH STREET, Fretty Easter Souvenirs with Shoe purchases tomorrow. f TAILING ariety of as pretty and well- e i) © © © ®@ for 7 days of the busiest Ladies’ Shoes. ‘One “Heal” Kid and Tan Shoes, low or high cut. Best Shoes on earth for. Fine Hand-made Oxfonl Ties nd-sewed sol K or tan ki ag. 4 Shoes. New Patent Leathers. Zennine Imported Patent Calf Laced and rs, With kid or eloth ‘tops... equal- ing others’ $7 and $8 Shoes, at... 283 PENNA. AVE. S.E. The weather tomorrow will be fair and warmer. WHO WANTS LUMBER? WHO WANTS MILLWORK? W HO WANTS QUALITY? ' Ar LOW EST PRIGES! es) 0 UR PRICES FOR 1896 ARE MUCH LOWER. iP © IP ie \ [Ry 4-4 DRESSED, PEI PICKETS, WHITE PINE, 1), TER 100. PALINGS, 1X3--4 FT. SPEAR HEAD, PE WIDE FOR SUP FLOORIN BOARDS, THE BEST BOA) PER 100 FT.. $2.00 R100 FT LOOKS: on re Roor, PER ms 1 22H ‘oO Av q (@) (@) tL, a rey r WE KEEP EVERYTHING NECESSARY TO COMPLETE A HOUSE. PRANK Lib SASH, DOORS, BLINDS, Gth St. and New York Av BEY & 6O., UILDERS’ HARDWARE, enue. before being taken from the oven, is an- other nourishing and very appetizing pie. Green aalads with French dressing should be much oftener found in the children’s menu than they are, and fruit, raw, early in the day, but cooked when served at night. As to cake, rich puddings and pies, instead of the sweeping “never” of some mothers, the more moderate scheme of one recently met seems wisest. “I give the children,” said she, “cake and sweets just often enough to prevent their feeling aggrieved. I got the hint from my eldest boy some years ago, when he came to me one day with the plaint, ‘Why con't we ever have cake or pies? Other fellows do. I kear them say s0.’ As to candy, a not infrequent dessert with us is a dish of good candy, home-made, if possible, but pure, at all’ event: ee Increase of Russian Power. From the Contemporary Review. Would western civillzation be the gainer or the loser by an extension, amounting to predominance of the Russian power? The many amiable qualities of the Russian character, which, perhaps, no person is better qualified to appreciate than the trav- cler who has enjoyed Russian hospitality, lisirm those feelings of unreasoning an- tipathy which, when once they have arisen between nations, are the most difficult to allay. But the Russian government has unhappily precluded itself from appealing to the higher instincts of the cultivated Europ2an peoples. : Their ruthless treatment of the Jews, their cruel pan-Slavie policy, nay, the re- cent fersecution of that handful of Rus- sian ecicnists in Armenia who are religious exiles rather than colenists, debar them from such an appeal. Their commercial pelicy is not calculated to enlist the good will of the commercial classes in Europe; they have sealed up that naturai avenue of western commerce with Asia hy the Black sea, and the Valley of the Kur. In this manner they have themselves aiforded the strorgest and most realistic arguments to those who still see in the Russian em- pire a menace to all that Europe holds dear, and who quote the prophecy of the first Napoleon, that Europe would again be overrun and her institutions overturned by the barbarians of the north. SSS ee English or German Colonization. From Blackwood’s Magazine. During all th> long period when Great Britain was striving against Spain, Hol- land and France, and building up her em- pire in spite of them, the Germans were working out their destiny on a smaller scale, and in a mode which never brought them into collision with this country. From an electorate ef Brandenburg they struggled into a kingdom of Prussia; and when wiped off the face of the earth by 2 , they rose from their ashes with poreeed viece ard laid the foundations of a great empire, and consolidated {it at the expense first of Austria and then of France. Great Britain has welcomed its rise as a guarantee of peace, a_means of maintain- ing the balance of European power. It cannot compete. with England for world empire, It comes too late into the field; it has not the preparatory political training; it has other duties to accomplish; and its } geographical position forbids it. Fine Driving Weather Here now and open car- Tiages and traps will saon be in imperative demand. Having lain by all winter your summer carriage will probably want some spruc- ing up. Let us work a transformation in its ap- pearance. We know how. Estimate for the asking. Andrew J. Joyce’s Sons, 1028-30 Conn. Ave. | at We've moved to 14 h the Robin» Comes tiie Spring. ‘has arrived—and .gen- 2 second. You want 2 PIT. of course. Leave your meas- eck, and it will be done by SUITS of English Woolens, tafloved by Washington tail: ors, aud sitisfaction smaranteed. Hasiett & Pistel, 3.02" Golf Suits — For Athletes. We have a splendid line of choice Chev- fot Suits, cut in the moxt approved style. Prices, $5.00 up. See alzo Sweaters, Stock- ings, Cups, ete. All of the best, hr Stinemetz 24 mh26-20d 1237 PENNA. AVE. It’s New-Shirt Time Almost every man replenishes his supply of Shirts in the spring. NOW Shirts to measure. We assure a 5 perfect ft and absolute satisfac- tion, Lots of new and pretty goods here. P. T. HALL, 908FSt. troubles by having us make your ahi7-16l 5O900860000 en Bon Marche, $14 and 316 7th St BIG DAY Saturday! Spring has been backward and we can wait no longer! Special prices will prevail. We have picked the following items throughout the store as best calculated to attract an im- mense crowd tomorrow. SKIRTS. You cannot buy the cloth, linings and trimmings for the prices we ask for the completed skirts. That Is accounted for by the manufacturers buying in immense quan- tities at wholesile and making up the skirts by the thousands, Figured Brilliantine Skirts... .$1. Striped Boucle Skirts. -$1 «| Black Mohair Skirts. $2.98 igured Mohair Skirts. -$2.98 ne Serge Skirts. - $3.48 j Figured Mohair Skirts. -$4.48 Plain Sicilian... nese sss O50 Novelty Cloth Skirts. . - $5.48 Brocaded Mohair Skirts... ...$8.98 Brocaded Silk Skirts..........$9.98 The above remarks about Skirts equally apply to Suits. It is extravagance to make them at home. Save your fingers, eyes and your movey by letting us sell you your Suits. Women’s Fine All-wool Serge Suits, for street, mountain and seashore; reefer jacket, ripple back, percaline lined and velvet bound. Would be grand value at $10. Special $7 5 price .. 5 5) Stylish Tan Covert Cloth Suits, with box coat, ripple back, mandolin sleeves, skirt Poeod. "speal pree...---- DOsOS Women’s Bicycle Suits & Outfits. No ‘need to go to a tallor or “exclusive” stores and pay the extravagant prices demanded for Bicycle Suits, for we can fit yeu in Just the style you like at one- half their prices. This filustra- tion shows our “Star” Bieycle Suit, with full Ai vided skirt, making blew This Suit is shown in 8 variety of slcths and patterns. We have a large variety of other Bicycle Suits in plain cloths, checks, plaids and also in linen duck. Suits made to measure with- out extra charge. Prices of Suits include leggins. $8 to $18. SILK WAISTS. The popularity of the Separate Skirt is in creasing the popularity of Silk Waists, for the two make an exceeedingly stylish and comfortable street suit. AS a special to- morrow we offer 250 Exquisite Light ored India and Japanese Sik W dainty Dresden color effects, with \ lars and cuffs of a con- $4.98 trasting shade. Worth $6 to $7.50. Special price. 30 or 40 of the Daintlest Spring Capes ret brought to Washington, and no two alike. Having secured these under price we propese to sell them under price—about two-thirds. ‘Tan and Black Spring Capes, with vel- $4 values. mt $2.48 Stylish Covert Cloth Capes, trimmed with small round pearl buttons, in tans, Havana browrs, blacks, &e. Value S. 4 98 ° $7. Special price Exeeedingly Stylish Capes at $10 and $12.50. VESTS, 5c. We aball place on sale tomorrow a special purchese of 500 dozen Women’s 8 Vests, low neck and slee full sizes. At the special of HOSIERY. ‘We shall place on a table dozen Children's Seamless 7.50, $8.50, Ribbed Fast Black Hosier Sizes 6 to 10. Ibe value Special price: . ‘1 Gloves 68° We quote of one item, yet a half dozen deserve equal publicity: 140 dozen Ladics and Misses’ 4-button Dress Kid Gleves, large pearl buttons, new spring shades of tans, mode browns, and also black, in elf a embroidered lacks. We have beretofere been glad to get such a glove 68Cc ° to sell at $1, Special price tomorrow . - Waists, 56c One big <alesroom, 30 by 100, ix filled with Shirt Waists. Here is how we propose to crowd this department togorros : Stylish Laundered Shirt Walsts, new style yoke back, new style big sleeves. This sea- 14 under son's patierns, Never 56c. MARCHE, 314 & 316 7th st.