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THE EVENIN NG STAR, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1898—14 PAGES, Sete s & Sons. | W. B. Moses & Sons. Moses’ Grand Exhibition of Rare - Oriental Rugs OPENED TODAY. see toniesfon oleetentons Senieint We've gotten together one of the finest collections ever < shown under one roof. You have never before had an op- ¢ portunity to sce such a showing. Gems of rare beauty and x great worth—beautiiul soft. rich colorings—woven in dis- 23 tinctively oriental designs. It’s a rare treat for lovers of = these niost beautiful of Carpets. To give you an idea of & iat you may expect to see, there are fine, all-silk Orien- %& igs. from the grandest collections in the country, : we rth $1 .oco apiece. Beautiful Kirmanshak Rugs, worth + : from S1co to $300. Also Antique Sineh, Mossuls, Kara- % = bagh, Bokhara, Daghestan, Shirvan. Anatolian and many + z other fine pieces—Rugs of merit. Over 2,000 pieces in all. 3 During the exhibition special prices _ will prevail $ 4 throughout the department. See the window for an index to = = the va t = So E verybi uly is invited. $ = < : Bs : W. B. Moses & Sons, } D3 ° ° 9 $ ‘3 : Rs iF St. Cor. 1ith. | Storage,22d &M. } z SS a nee a eae ee ee ae a a ee a Be ee ee Canapanan fs Bro. TABLE LINENS. This is an opportunity to buy your fall and winter supply of Table Linens. Special for Tomorrow Only. 15 pieces of 68-inch extra quality bleached Irish Damask in five choice patterns, S) Never sold for less than ©9c. Sea os Hebe eee bh bbbbbehhhe Cc. Yard. Table Linen. | quality EEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEELELEEEE ER EEE ELLE EERE EE Fite, Gu-inch extra heavy Halt. | ; ah rE ra Ramat SGC, yee | SUOD MN arf, ty 2 h superior quality — Silver-bleached Damask Napkin: ; : Garman Damask Se SOc yd | SIQ5 vzen We are osvering inch extra he quality Half. Damask Napkitt, in Meached Irish Damask. Spe- erns. “ : 50c. yd. $1.50 wren We are offering 9 Full Damaake “toes spats LS Weryd-| cen ee ee | bebe debe dedbbbebeb deb bbe bbb bb inch Ext heavy quality Undressed $2 eo are offering a Full- sapensee 09c yd- | VS en ine eee extra quality perior | offer chalice vin Hamat” Se FOE, yq. | S2SO open, We, wre omering » choice ality finish Irish Satin Dees Napkin. oR BOC. yd. | $3.00 tzenawe a Damask apkin, in a choice selection $2 doz. $1 yd. qvality Soma. ese Tener 4 Napkins to ma $3 doz. | 2 eaten Pi © 45e. tp xs se Date $1.25 yd. | $4 doz. | t quality Cotten Di ment Lansburgh .& Bro., 420, 422, 424, 426 7th St. EEE EERE EEE EEE EEE EEE EEE EEE BEET EEELEEL ELE match Ast floor. Th J EEEEEE EEE EEEEE EEE EE EEE ERED BF EEE EEE EEE EE EEE deleted bbb TING. FOR ANY CASE ANNUAL ME NESS, wenk st w. of the District to Convene the 20th Instant. The Woman's ¢ fan ‘Temperance bt = aos Union of the District cf Columbia will hola he its twenty-feurth ann meeting October by Dr. J. G _|20 and 21 in the Chureh of Our Father, = ~ | 13th ani L streets northwest. According APPAIRS IN DRGETOWN. | to the program twenty departments of work to be re ted, first to be ecnsidered wi ment of legislation and pet t of which is te keen the society the laws of the Dist and prospective; also to 1 on blanks wher u—Real Estate I Lodge Visitat Sates—Urier depart upon quested by In the neticnal a jation this department aims t secure prohibition by consti al and st: tutory law in ev- state and territe nd also to se hibitory amendment to the national tion, and to petition legislative ies and influence leg.station. There ari many bills before Cengress in w a Ribborers interested, and for which ds of petitions have been sent yin, such as “To raise the age of protection ‘for girls in the District,” which has passa nate and in a medited form is pend- the Dill forbidding tra or descriptions of priz by mail or interstate com- mere ich has been favorably reported: uso Senator Hoar's ill forbidding kineto- representations of prize fights in the association sold to Carl B. Kefer- | ports, with the Anti- in Weaver's subi- } port of its bill inte an unnamed ¢ prohibitory (0 names on papers reposing in the Capitol archives, Te The W. C. has also interested itself : in many other bills perding in the Senate named and House. north side Other s' ts to be discussed and re- ported on by the officéss and committers the forthcoming meeting will be the of wine in the Cong 2 | taurant, the sale of liquors to s | the District of Columbia, p in | Alaska aad the canteen question at. the military camps. he meeting will be one | of unusual intersst z White Ribboners. Some of the princip trict gov- nd importance to ihe 1 features in addition to the ual reports will be the annua d- } Gress day at 4:45 of the retirmg president, Mrs. M. B. Platt. who, with this convention, severs uer official relation with the District W. C. T. U. “An address at i dasgetous, ele iced: inthe p.m. Thursday on the “Legal Status mouth of the alley on the south side of P se Women in the District of Columbia” by street between S4th and 35th streets. Mrs. Ellen Spencer Mussey; the election of There has been erable complaint officers and delegetes Friday morning, and over the condition of the sidewalk on the the memorial service and discussion of EMPLOYING FEMALE NURSES Surgeon General Stemberg States His Atti- tude. Opposed Sending Them With Troops in the Field Engaged in Active Operations. Surgeon Geners1 Sternberg has written a letter to the commission investigating the War Department in regard to the employ- rent of female nurses during the war with Spain. and to his attitude toward the American National Red Cross and other relief organizations. “It has been repeatedly charged in the newspapers,” says the surgeon gener: “that I have refused to accept the assist- arce of the American National Red Cro: in the care of our sick and wounded sol- diers, and that, as a result of this refusal, there has been unnecessary suffering. These charges are without foundation, except in so far as I have objected to the sending of female nurse’ with troops in the field engaged in active operations. We have a Red Cross hospital corps in the army, of enlisted men whcse duty it is to render first aid to the wounded upon the field of battle end to care for the sick in our division field hospitals, and I have been of the opinion that female nurses would be an incumbrance to troops during active op- erations; but so soon as serious sickness developed in our camps and it became necessary to treat typhoid fever cases in our ficld hospitals, I gladly accepted the services of trained female nurses for the division field hospitals, and in our general tals we have employed them from the The general testimony from the sur- sin charge of these hospitals has been their services have been of gre Very many of these trained n been obtained through the kind sistance of the Red Cross Society for Main- tenance of Trained Nurses, Auxiliary No. 3, and I desire to express my high appre: tion of the valuable services rendered to the medical department of the army by this organization. * * * “A committee of the American National Red Cross Association called upon me in my oftice in Washington some time in a Fa that value. have vance of the landing of our troops in San- I re- go, making an offer of assistance. ceived them most cc them to use their re hospital ship, telling them that a hospital ship was now being fitted up for the use the medical department. but that it wi not ak t an emergency ould overtax our re- that in such an event a hos- n fitting up a pital ship properly ng on board a corps of di would be a most y “Furthermore, the American National Red Cros: ation has had full author- a agents and supplies to all ou 1808, and if there ering for want of needed supplies share the responsibility with medical department of the army for such suffering. * * © “There has been a on with great deal of mis- reference ta the sup- furnished by the government, grow- Ing out of the fact that medical ‘officers in the field have been very ready t cept supplies from relief i tions, which Were freely offered and even urged upon them, rather than to make requisition for The volunteer medical officers es- ippezr to have had a great re- > an: property respon- i : receipts ae governme them, to g them lief Boeke in ample amounts at a field supp’ in the immediate vicinity of their he agents furnishing these supplic rred from the fact that they readily accepted that they could ve been obtained from the govern- mosquito Ts, cots, clinical thermometers, and many other a hich are upon our supply table, een very liberally supplied by these ssociations, although it has been the department and all other articles nec- - of our sick, and there nee the commencement war when they could not have been l upon a telegraphic requisition sen” surgeon general of the for any reason, a sufficient on hand at the fleld suppl ss RAILWAY Capitalists Interested in and ¢ peak » Railroad Company; J. Pierpont Morgan, the Vanderbilts cl many other capitalists who are interested in railway enterprises in the United States have formed a company called the Ameri- can-Chinese Development Company, which prop to construct what is described as one of the greatest railroads in the world. ‘The entire route will be over 900 miles in length, and the line will traverse the rich- est portion of the Chinese empire, touch- ing in turn at all the various native and foreign points in the country. Mr. H. V. Colter, one of the principal civil engineers in the employ of the Chesapeake and Ohio E: Company, been selected as chief engineer for ‘the ruction of the new route, he has already left for China. A gentleman who is interested in this new enterpris id he did not think the road would difficult to construct, as from maps and information received on the subject the company beliey ie count through whic e read w 5 few real obs There is o1 Dy ‘one moun- tain along the entire route laid out, and but few hilis. He said he did not eve it would be as difficult as the construction of the Chesapeake and Ohio railroad in A. 3 tolter ex about two wer months in t for laborers s to reach Shang spend seve arrangemen on the work aft arted. Chinese laborers will be almost altogether, not oniy y are the cheapest, ployment of natives will promote favorable sentiment China toward ad. After leaving Shanghai Mr. Colt iang rive Kow, which hag been sel atarting point, and which ts situated clos to the Russian and German influences in the empire. From Han Kow Mr. Colter will proceed south, traveling through the rich section where the English are in great strength, and finally reach Canton, on the edge of neh interests. A great Pitalists and bankers from a number of cities are behind the scheme, most of them New Yorkers, where the idea originated. Portsmouth and a DEY Dock. To the Editor of The s I see in the arti turday night's Star on “Li mouth, N. ace ack of Dry Docks,” that Por H., is represented as being a for a government dry dock. sh to inform the writer of thi that he is laboring under a great mistake. Two years ago Secretary Long visited said yard and reported that its machine shops stood second to none in the country in his «stimetion. He also sounded the Piscataqua river, finding the channel to be over sixty feet deep in the narrow part at low tide, near the navy yard a hundred feet and’ half a mile above or at the Portsmouth bridge he could not Ba bottom. It is a known fact that at one time the ships of the Greely expedition lay at anchor in the harbor. This summer the two large commerce destroyers, Columbia and Minneapolis, en- tered the harbor, went half way up to the west side of 35th street_ between Prospect and N streets. The pavement ts covered with mud. while in the space between paving and the building Mne there is a growth of grass and weeds. The dipper is broken from the pump at the northwest corner of 3ith and Q streets, according to the palice report. ae A bronze bust of Edgar Allen Poe, the poet, is to be set up at the University of Virginia. ‘The trial of Capt. Duncan of a Kansas regiment for grave robbing has been post- pened in the Fairfax county courts. Colonel W..J. Bryan has declined to at- tend the Chicago peace juilee on account of his military duties. resolutions Friday afternoon. Among the reports that of the Y branch and the department of work among sol- diers and sailors will be particularly inter- esting. Friday morning will witness the presenta- tion of the prize banner to the union hav- ing gained the largest per cent of mem- bers during the past year. This will be one of the last official acts of the retiring president. Luncheon will be served each @ay by the ladies of the Church of Our Father. navy yard and anchored. AS far as it’s being expoged to attack from sea, the government has just been to the expense of fortifying old Fort Con- stitution, which controls the entrance to the harbor. Although I arz-not a native of Ports- mouth I have spent sany delightful sum- mers in the gid city by the sea, and am, therefore, much interesied in its welfare and the benefit resulting from a dry dock there. BARL K. CHAPMAN. October 16, 1898. ——— oe —= The Dowager Duchess of Sutherland lost Dr. Bull's Cough Sarap will make @ satchel containing Jewels valued at $150,- |, nent cure in all or cold on ooo yesterday on a train going from Parls to Calais. perme! cases ‘ef cough chest or I It will cure whea other remedies have failed. Poysiclang xpcommend it, erm arm Dollars Are. Making Long Journeys at the Busy Corner. TheyTe traveling further than anywhere else in town. This snappy weather is rushing business—see that you aren't left out in the cold with regard to these special values for Wednesday's selling. Costumes for Women. Stylish garments don’t stand attention very long here. They march on to take their places in wardrobes of tasteful ponien MORE OF THOSE FINE ALL-WOOL, COVERT AN oN OF, THOSE FI TWILL D VE TH a E_ALL-WOOL SP CE For SCS. Wika WITHOUT. SLUR INTE Cnr WE SHALL AT THE SAME OLD PRICE OF, BLCADET AND, MILITAIRE AND TAN BLOUSE SUT H ANDARD $22.50 VALI IIPORTED SAMLLB SUITS, XO Two ALK 2. THEREFORE GUARANTEED TYLES. COSTUMES MADE TO SELL FROM $45.00 TO. $8.0 HERE AT $38. 00 and $29.50 The Latest Report BLUE}. HA A ACK ACU ne Gee TIL an THE con 2 Bae ayes IN THE Norte IP MAY REACT . AND IT MAY NOT. NE! BLT % IT ARE YOU RS S WITH “ ITE WINTER TAS SEL BOTH IN READY-KNIT GOODS AND MATERIAL BY THB Y Knit Underwear. Ladies’ Fleeced Ribbed Cotton Vests. Worth 20c... 5c. ea. Ladies’ Fleeced Ribbed Cotton Vests and Pants; vests finished with pearl buttons, crochet edge and satin ribbons, pants full : 2 ste 2\c. ea. and large. 29c. quality Ladies’ Fleeced R Vests and Pants, heavy fleecing; vests silk crochet edge, self fronts, pearl buttons and silk tapes; pants full and large. Worth 35c...............-¢ 25¢. €a. Ladies’ Ribbed Fleeced Cotton Vests and Pants, Ecru and Gray; vests silk crochet neck, pearl buttons and silk ribbons; pants 39 perfect fitting. Worth 5oc. Salosieais se ee ents Cc. Ladies’ Fleeced Ribbed Cotton Combination Suits. ru and Gray, glove fitting. Worth 50c 35C. €a. Children’s White and Gray Cotton Combination Suits, nicely fleeced. Worth 35c.......... 25¢. ea. Children’s White and Gray Fleeced Cotton Ve e ts “and Pants, vests crochet edge and neck; silk taped; pants made with elas- 19c. ea. tic bands ” Fancy Random Fleeced Cotton Shirts and Drawers—shirts self fronts: pearl buttons and silk bound; drawers satteen " 48 : Cc. €A. fronts and pearl buttons. Worth 75c........... FIRST FLOOR- LAST AiSLE—RIGHT. Flannels. Good Quality Outing Flannel. . Indian Head Good Quality Canton Flannel.......... 5c. Champion White Shaker Flannel............... Amoskeag Outing Flannel, light and dark styles, and plaids. Worth 8jc......... Eee anne eas 25 White Wool Flannel, } wide... “ Cee 15c. All-wool Red Twill Flannel. 3 1034c. Domet Skirt Patterns, stylish border, crochet edge. 5 19¢. All-wool Flannel, Black, Light Blue, Pink and (Ger, » 25¢ suitable for skirts and sacques.........0..00.00e000e 3 = ae, Cream Eiderdown, all wool, extr quality. . Yard-wide All-wool White Flannel. . Talbot Red Anti-rheumatic Flannel............... For the Little fo * TOMORROW’ FS) VALUES. Infants’ White Silk Caps, made of good quality China Silk, neatly embroidered and finished with lace and pom- pons; regular 50c. quality... 5 Infants’ White Silk Caps, in three different style One style made with the new effect of tucks and iull ruche around face; second style made with tucks and lace edge around face, and pompons; third style made of faille silk and trimmed around face with 50c. Silk and beautifully embroidered ; full ruche: finished daintily 85c¢ with bunches of baby ribbon; regular $1.00 quality......... 2 swansdown. These Caps are good value at 6gc. Special. . Infants’ Long Coats, made of Bedford Cord, trimmed $ 1 95 rE: Oc. Infants’ White Silk Caps, made of best quality China’ with ribbons and silk braids; some with capes and others Gretchen style; regular $2.48 quality. Special........ Infants’ Long Coats, made of good quality Bedford Cord, trimmed with baby ribbon and silk braid; full width; $2 06 some have trimmed skirts; regular $3.98 quality. Special, 2) SE ND PLOOT aS ET WING, Silk Petticoats. Not cheap—but far from costly—Does your wardrobe boast the posse ssion of one? Perhaps you've held out, waiting for just such a bar- gain chance as this. If that’s the case, waiting was far from procrastina- tion, for every price here means a doliar or so less to us on every gar- ment. Tattet violet. Hilae and green— made wit! Regular $ qnality. 5 feta SUK Petticouts, nl extra dost rufite. . red and black jar $8.98 quality with umbrella and small corded rufiie In change fects of gre old rose and beown, and in plain navy and $7.48 Tp all the newest sha am black my. — Made with full um finished with a « that French bynds. — Some pd three small raftles. Fach with two rows of cord- featherbone. Splendid value ut $12.00..... ' $0, 08 Tie te Priced Ribbons. They're always that way here, but this cut is so markedly usual prices that the emphasis can’t be strong enough. 1,000 pieces of Black Double-faced Satin Goods. Every thread silk. Gc. a yard, or 8c. for 10 yds. of No. (ic. a yard, or $1.00 for 10 yds. of No. 13c. a yard, or $1.15 for 10 yds. of No. t6c. a yard, or $1.40 for 10 yds. of No. 19c. a yard, or $1.70 for 10 yds. of No. 15 cartons ef Linen-back Velvet Ribbons—t; to %-Inch wide—10 yards Ait tinish under all 5. 7. for. Satin td Gros Grain AILsilk Kitben, A new Hine of Teiubens for 23 1 silk. patterns, ery known color. ... last season, cribabie Bayaderes. erful plaids. Oj thi Satin ard They're wide—full 5 inches. Corsets for the Fat. Of coutse that word “fat” grates on your nerves—and you'd give anything to get your walst- line nearem te the proportions of the Venus de Milo, But, what a torture the ordiaary coset infliets? Tt makes a Spols preferable to weariig ‘em. We don't believe in ordinary corsets for reducing stout Tole nods, that'll give you comfort and be imaklag your. waist alter ‘Three «tem offered for tomorrow: rhe wow W. C. C. Company—in long waist, extra long walst $2 Se 32.50 and short aist—white, drab or a The "7 self-redicing ‘no ciher store has ‘em)—in white, drab and black “Her Majesty’s'’—the best English mshe—worn by Queen Victoria.......... Another Embroidery Sale. This time it’s Cambric Edgings. A magnificent lot, with fast scal- loped edges and extra wide margin. All sorts of new designs. In- ciuding handsome Irish Point effects. The conditions of their buying have influenced prices to the point of usual cost. Lot 1—8c. value for 4c. Lot 2—2oc. value for r2jc. Lot 3—35c. value for 16c. S; KANN, SONS & 8th and Market Space. 9 “The Dependable Store.” 924-926-928 7th st., running through to 704-706 K st. Outdistancing all competition in silk selling. The master-hand of the silk buyer guides our silk departmet far in the lead of competition brings vou the best silks at prices t are appreciably less than any other house asks for ne same gor qualities. Others may name lower prices—but go behind that ar you'll find quality is missing—and without that satisfaction is missing Our silk seHing has reached. its present h plane by the offering of just such values as these mentioned for tomorrow. Look around town to your heart’s content—you'll find nothing to equal them. 75¢. taffetas, 50c. yd. svch taffetes 2 nee aaa e and see t y w wouldn't thin of taffeta. the extra bi nd chungeable effects, . apple green, mode. gray, Just think of it s these s quality ee and en's gree The bes: new b and frech—without a blemish of any sort hy them at Suc $1.25 peau de soie, 98c. Another coup of ering of the nies a yard. yd. et clase lA that will sen thrifty buyers in x plenty ine French lmpcited peaa de ale tack ness aitke—22 i wide, genuine Lyons dy the reversible sort absolutely pure silk. ‘The quality perior excetlenc mellow tinish that is so desirable. A perfect black Stays black ax hre It’s a quelity that you bave nev paid less than $1 it tomorrow at 8c Take yerd Important dress goods offerings. Special values have been prepared for tomorrow's buyers in dress goods—which coming with the cold weather are most opportune. You can now get your winter costume at very much less than you ex- pected to pay—for prices are marked down surprisingly. You know our dress fabrics are stamped with “bestness”—so buy freely, know= ing satisfaction goes with eve ry yard, no matter what the price. 59c. dress fabrics, 29c. yd. Fine English cnrl crepons, newest wattle tifted checks and choice silk and wool bow the iost attractive dress stuffx of the season in a variay of the most beautiful coloring such as new blue, garnet, brown, green, helictrope, ete. ¢ They are tull 40 inches wide—and worth from Ne, to a yard. Selling the * yard makes every yard a separate and distinct bargain 75c. diagonal serges, 59c. Tomorrow we will offer those fine Euglish worsted diagonal seng yd. the leading colors that bave been stamped y Dame Fashion army blue, Royal bine, new brown, hanters” green, olive pure wool fabric—extra fine weight—fully versible. Th such a quality anywhere for less. Here tomorrow at Sie, surd Ladies’ and children’s merino underwear. We can claim the mest compl ity le stock in the city is indelibly stamped « nobody water variety than h the prices pisers, wated every you'll find Qui seem too cheap at times. Our prices are lowe saving—let you have the benefit of every trade opportunity Ladies’ plush-lined ribbed vests ai pants, shrinking woel ribbed vest full cut ahd perfect fitting —far. be : value for 80K r ter than the ordinary 25c. kind—for.. 23€- 6c. Ladies’ silk: combed Egyptian ribbed vests Children’s heavy and drawers. all” grade—special price tomorrow “Little for good linings. claiming to sell Hnings at lowest prices, bers are plush lined shirts ta who are you to belies n look at these prices you'll T idea = [who HON 10c. Nublan fast blac og Extra heavy alldinen canvas, back Joe pecnlion wee oe 5}c only, regular Ise. gr 1 ep Finest French sa Regular he. tla a suitable Vining, will not si T5¢- for skirt w: quality. 5 ima : Rlack © finished strip and th skirtings, in fast colors, for Fosc. Cail their f quality Headquarters for art embroideries. We are direct imjrrters of fine knitting wersteds and art embroideries thus saving you the middieman's profits, We are headquarters —draw upon us for your supplies freely Best ir ported Berlin Zephyr, 2 and 4-f Clark's crochet cord, white and colors, Se. 4e. lap. spool impxrted Berlin Saxon Ge. hank. Best wash embre rmantown, Se. hank, bank % M = a ss) « vi =r = @ N ae) mi @ At alf times we extend an open invitation to all to buy We make no “special” credit offers. here, with the privilege of paying at your conve- nience—a little money once week or once a ‘month. Such an accommodation costs you “nothing, for we sell on credit at prices just as low as can be found in any cash store. Where other houses charge from 5 to 10 cents a yard for lay- ing carpets, we make, line and lay them abso- 3 lutely free, and there’s no charge for the waste % in matching figures. Re = Mammoth Grogan’s Credit House, 817-819-821-823 7th St. N.W. Between H and I Streets. Soesooseelontoneeey Sef oc 7-T5d, ortortortontonsorconterce Siheesseasseeeweecveseouesesreeeeeeeeesoseesephpeneeeey BROKEN PLATES, = Artificial Teeth Repaired Strong as New y is especially equipped f kk. and the skill of expert Gerat Reduction in Hair. Switches, $2.50, fo:merly _ $5.00. Switches, $6.00, formerly $1050. Gray Switches, $3.¢0, formerly . Gray Switches, $4.50, tormerly §6.50. First-class attendants in Hairdressing, Shampooing, ete. arial Hair Regenerator for restoring gray | Never falls. - HELLER’S, Ltt Seventh St. N.W. Save Toney & Trouble. GET THE BEST, “TheConcord Harness,” Trunks, Bags, Suit Cases and Leather Goods. Our Laborate Dental repair pera tors assures a bandsome and strong-as-ever job, All branches of Dental work. Odontunder Dental Ass’ n, Jno. Ruszitz Lutz & Co., |FurSor.NeY. fur garments in the for us. Sealskin Jackets in (he newest styles tn stock and made to erder at various low pric x" NEW gad wuntry—tmake our furd 497 Pa. AVE N.W. = (Next National Hotel.) P. 8.—Trank Repairing bj bands, ring by skilled TF The celebrated HATS fer Indies are sold in D. Pow Cams “te lari NEMETZ & SON, A FACT. Burchell’s Spring Leaf Tea sold at 50c. and a war tax of Ioc. a pound gives more satisfaction to the lovers of good tea than ‘many kinds sold for one ‘dollar. "ages B.- BATIERS & FURRIERS, 1237 PA, AVE, Go to Siccardi’s FOR BARGAINS IN HUMAN BAIR. Hair Switches et Great B: .00 Switches reduced te $1.50, Gray and White Uair reduced in same proportion, Mme. Siccardi, Pi tua se peat co Palais Rept