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8 THE EVENING STAR, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1898-14 PAGES, Picknew’s. ; 933 Pa. Ave. A Cigantic of Goats Latest and sr-7rtest effects from New York, Paris and Luado How can you afford to show — such an immense assortmen t of coats and where do all / these differ- ent styles come from is the —_ oft-re- peated ques- tion of our ¢ us tomers. No one can realize whata colossal col- lection we are showing until they are brought face to face with it. Here are hundreds of dash- ing new styles in Jackets and Capes from New York, Paris and London, affording ample variety to suit all testes and pocket book Come see what Washington’s smart set will wear the coming season. Doubtless you are aware that we fit every jacket and guarantee satis- faction before we ask the customer to accept and pay for it. Just see what a wide choice you have in coats and capes: Here are Ladies” and Misses’ Light, Dark and Medium Taa Cents. at $7.50. $10. ». $15. $16.50, $18, $20, » 2.59 un te $40. Then in Ladies" we show ell style $12, Cloth Capes from $5 to $50. We show the $13.50, $14, ¥ new Galf Capes at $8.50, 0). $18 and $2). Jackets, $18, vat Capes, $25 to Capes, $8 to $18. W.H. McKnew, 933 Pa. Av. te $95. mr 234 STORE | EST. WELL GOODS UNTIL THE HOLIDAYS. | Giant values vs. dwarf prices. Among the most prominent of recent arrivals in onr carpet department are the following leaders: The ual 75e ade of Tap- Ha ee A choice gathering of Beauti- ful Tapestry Brussels — to “ll 6Qe for A select line of Axminster Carpete—worth $1.85—t0 sell $1.00 other @ gs The Houghton Co., Worth $1.50—to sell for 1214 F St. PEOPLE SOOO OHO PHDE HP HL DOEMM BO POD od BDIUPPEOROU SEL OE MOO SE GOLONGGH SELODD ¢ Ps 4: leoo PAGS HITD EFS ESS Great Reduction in Hair. Switches $2.50, formerly $5.00. Switches. $6.00, formerly $10.50. Gray Switches, $3.C0. formerly ee Gray Switches, $4.50, formerly $6.50. First-class \ttepdants in Hairdressing, Shampoeing, ete. Imperial Hair Regenerator for restoring’ gray bair. Never falls. S. HELLER’S, 720 Seventh St. N.W. _8e2-200t it Sema peek Eee T et ie muenceaensense nies 3 § DIRT, 5 4 SMOKE, 5 £ COAL, & Fi TROUBLE, % ~ Gas Heaters § ey're inexpensive, simple, Will beat a room in & Cost from $1.25 up. Gas Appliance Co., 1424 N. Y. Ave. cleaned or dyed perfectly. LADIES’ COATS dyed navy blue, brown or black. PORTIERES cleaned or dyed 1} colors. WHEATLEY, 1068 Jeffernos ave n.w. Wagon calls. co23-lyr.1¢ Established 1831 A Scent F OUR XTR Wil convine CTS you that its equal cannot visewhere for less than de mes. OUgbE to be Be, but it by the wheelbarrow loads, nts for cur low p sees Ogram’s, "3°" A remarkable Tea is Burchell’s Spring Leaf at Goc. a pound. Fragrant in the cup, delicious to the palate, it compares favor- ably with any tea imported. N. W. Burchell, 1325 F. DREAMS WHICH COME TRUE People Who Are “Warned in a Dream.” “Dreams are true while they last, And do we vot Iive in dreams There are people who believe that every dream has some peculiar and personal significance. Whenever they dream they consult a dream book to find whether the things dreamed of were favorable or unfavorable to their fortunes. There are other mat- ter-of-fact people who refer dreams to physical conditions, who ascribe | them as did Solomon to “the multi- tude of affairs,” or in a more modern spirit to a deranged condition of the stomach. These people have a dream Look, too. It’s title is the People’s Common Sense Medical Adviser. { And when they dream they turn the pages of Dr. Pierce’s famous work to find out what the cause of the dis- turbed condition is, and what they must do to correct it. They realize | that healthful sleep is a dreamless sleep, and in so far as the sleep is broken by dreams, so far there are physical conditions unfavorable to health. A pathological considera- tion of dreams would reveal that in certain cases dreams of a related character are associated with certain specific forms of disease. Severe stomach derange- ment with its complica- tions involving the diges- tive tract and the liver, will frequently breed dreams of violent struggle, such as the illustration portrays. You dream that you are on the slippery, crumbling verge of a precipice, grap- pling with all vour strength against some madman who seeks to hurl you down to death. You wake in a pro- fuse perspiration, your heart beating violently as from the effects of an actual struggle. If you consult THE SCIENTIFIC DREAM BOOK, it will tell you that your dream was a sign that your stomach needed instant attention, or it might be fulfilled in a fearful wrestling match with the monster Disease on the edge of the precipice of death. The trouble is that people in this condition are often content to seek some palliative, some tablet or other, which will relieve the immediate trouble. This merely hides the symptoms. It temporarily stops the manifestation of disease but it does nothing to cure the ailment. A man might as well suppose that he could stop the flight of time by stopping his watch, as to imagine he has stop- ped disease by stopping its symp- toms. The need in such a condition is a radical remedy, a remedy which will begin with the cause of the trouble and reach out to the various effects. The need is of a remedy which can be counted on to cure, and in curing to re-establish the entire system on a sound basis of health. To provide such a medfcine as this many physi- cians have tried and one physician kas succeeded. It has been the pleasure of Dr. R. V. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the Invalids’ Hotel and Surgical Institute of Buf- falo, N. Y., to have devised and placed at the service of humanity that healing preparation, Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. The success of this medicine in curing diseases of the stomach and alimen- tary and nutritive system, places it above every known remedy avail- able to the sick and suffering. The action of this remedy is entirely phil- osophic. Its ingredients, carefully sought in years of patient experi- ment and compounded with the most exact skill, are chosen with regard to their alterative properties, prop- erties which give the “Discovery” the power to alter or change the morbid or unhealthy condition of the several organs upon which the health of the entire body depends. Experiment and experience have established the fact that a large percentage of dis- cases have their origin in a deranged condition of the stomach, the organs of digestion and nutrition and the blood-making glands. It was found that affections of the liver, the lungs, the heart, the kidneys and the nerv-. ous system, were not cured when the organs specially affected were di- rectly treated. But when the treat- ment was directed to the alteration of the conditions of the stomach, the digestive and nutritive tracts, and the blood-making glands, these remote diseases of heart, liver, kidneys, lungs and nerves, were cured as the stomach was cured. On this experi- ence was based the axiom first formu- lated by Dr. Pierce. ISEASES WHICH ORIGINA’ TOMACH MUST BE CURED THE STOMACH.” This would seem to be a self-evi- dent proposition. Take an illustra- tion in the flower garden at your TE IN THE THROUGH home. There's a rose for example. Its leaves begin to curl, its petals to droop, it does not grow. You know that the life of the plant comes from the soil. It’s in the soil you must look for the cause of the failing rose tree. You can give the rose a sup- porting staff, a crutch to lean on, but while this supports the rose it won't save it. It still droops and weakens. Go down into the soil, search out the cause at the roots. It’s from the soil that the flower gets its nourish- ment, its life, its strength, its color. In the soil lies the secret of its dis- case. What the soil is to the piant the blood is to the body—the source of vitality. It is from the blood that come the strength of body, bright- ness of brain, clearness of complex- ion, which are the supreme signs of health. And the blood out of which the whole physical fabric of the body is built is manufactured in the lab- oratory of the stomach and its asso- Gated organs, and depends both as to quantity and quality on the con- dition of these organs to properly provide pure blood. It is here that the healing proper- ties of “Golden Medical Discovery come into play. It restores the power of assimilation so that the requisite nourishment is provided for the sep- arate parts of the body: nerve, mus- cle, blood and bone. It pushes off and casts out the inert and useless matter which poisons the blood and clogs the system. It makes new blood, pure in quality, abundant in quantity which pours a healthful tide through the whole circulatory sys- tem. It makes sound flesh, and healthy fat, not the flabby fat and loose flesh which result from the use of the nauseous preparations of cod liver oil, and their mitigated emul- sions. “THE BLOOD IS THE LIF Moses said it. Science affirms it. We have never gone beyond that simple definition of physical life. shall. When life falters, we must look to the blood. When life fails we must find the cause in the blood. What then will strengthen life? Nec- essarily pure blood. It does not matter where the assault of disease is made, the requirement is the same; sufficient pure blood to build the walls of the body in strength against the invader. In its action on the blood-making giands Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery fills all the requisites of a perfect medicine for the blood. It supplies the weak lungs with new blood, and pure blood, and puts them in a condition to throw off disease. It supplies the various organs with the required pabulum from the blood, and they grow strong and do their work per- fectly without strain. Then work be- comes pleasure and sleep is dream- less. The general signs of a dangerous disturbance of the stomach and its affiliated organs are uneasiness and fullness in the region of the stomach, impatience, irritability, depression of spirits and anxiety. The appetite fails, food doesn’t “taste good,” there’s a bitter taste in the mouth, the breath is offensive, the head aches, the sleep is disturbed, the complex- ion is sallow. Not all these symp- toms will be present in any indi- vidual case, but any of them mark the proximity of the sufferer to the danger line of disease. Whenever these symptoms appear, the sure, short way to regain health is to com- mence the use of the “Golden Medi- cal Discovery.” “T am happy to say that your won- derful medicines have saved my life,” writes Mrs. Bettie Jaco of Pine Mills, Wood Co., Texas. “I suffered near- ly three years. Words cannot ex- press what I endured. I had pains through my chest and all through my body. I also had pain in back and head. Was so nervous at times could hardly go about. No one can imagine what I endured. I felt We never | every morning when I got up that I could not live to see the sun go down at night. I had two of the best doc- tors our country affords. They atten- ed me for six manths, but did me no good. I only took four bottles of Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discov- ery and one of ‘Favorite Prescrip- tion,’ and two fials of the ‘Pleasant Pellets.” Nowsmy health is better than it has been in four years. My weight was 115 and now I weigh 141 pounds. I have recommended Dr. Pierce’s medicines to many of my friends, for I believe they will do ail that is claimed for them. The medi- cines saved my fife when I had given up all hope. Tt appeared that I could see death staring me in the face all the time.” “I can say to you, one bottle of your ‘Golden Medical Discovery’ has cured me sound and well, after suf- fering two long: years with stomach disease,” writes- W. H. Braswell of McAdenville, Gaston Co, N. C. “My health is worth all the world to me. TI will praise you as long as I live.” There is positively no drop of al- cohol, whisky or other intoxicant in Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Dis- covery. It contains no opium or other narcotic drug, neither sugar nor syrup, which are sometimes in- jurious to weak digestions. With- out any of these ingredients the “Discovery” preserves its pleasant flavor and healing properties in per- fection in any climate and under all conditions. Profit is paramount with some dealers. It is profit only which leads them to substitute other and inferior, untried medicines for Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery with its splendid record of cures. Sensible people will decline to experiment with strange medicines. The “Dis- covery” is a remedy proved and tried. Anything is “just as good” for the dealer if it pays him. Noth- ing is “just as good” for you unless it will cure you. No medicine has so great a record of cures as Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. Therefore refuse all substitutes. Ve are “fearfully and wonderfully made,” yet how ignorant we are of the intricacies of the marvelous mechanism, of the body. Every day sees men and.women take the first step in the path of physical suffer- ing and mentaf itijsery for lack of the one warning word of wisdom, which would reveal,their danger. That 1 word timely in‘ itsutterance, clear in its meaning, complete in its compre- hensiveness, 1s what the “People’s Common Sense. Medical Adviser” has for every'man and woman, old or young. This-great book is given away by the’ author, Dr. Pierce, without any cost whatever to the recipient except tlie expense of mail- ing only. Semd:21 one-cent stamps for the paper edition, or 31, stamps for the edition if cloth. “Addréss Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N.Y. 'riends of the Birds To the Editor of The Evening Star: In the notice of the meeting heré of the ornithologists, presumabiy in the interesis of science, it is announced that they will consider means for stopping the “terrible slaughter of birds for use on women's hats.” ‘That there is and long has been a terrible slaughter of the innocents for use by thoughtless women no ene wiil deny. But that has not been the cnly means of de- | struction, f.¢ hundreds of thousands more have been killed by these same s -called scientists, or their paid agents, from mo- tives almost equally puerile. Ind-ed, among the number of names announced as belonging to the “friends of Igrds” are sev- eral pertaining to gentlemes who hay lke the ancient worthy of biblical tim slain their thousands and tens of thou. sands! I can recall two at least who are indirectly guilty of this offense. One who has sent hired murderers to almcst every island of the West Indies, where they hav. all but exterminated not only the ra and finely plumaged birds, but the sw songsters as well, the mocking bird as well as the beautiful humming bir They have committed offenses against ciety in those islands which in any more civilized communities would be punished with imprisonment cr expulsion, Another gentleman, also ranking high in ornithological circies, had a dispute many years ago as to the specifie differences of two of our most attractive terns, or sea swallows (those graceful sea birds which used to form such a delightful feature of some of our seaside resoris). Well, he and his disputant took their guns and ‘went to an island where those terns lived during the summer months, and shot scores (I believe hundreds) merely to satisfy their contention! This is but one instance tending to the causes that have operated toward the* ex- tinction of our birds. A’most any one can get a certificate from some ignorant “se- Jectman,” town c!erk or counciiman show- ing that he is cellecting birds, egys and rests for “sctentific purposes,” and under ihis protection he can quite exterminate the feathered inhabitants of any locality. If you will read the “ornitho!ogical maga. zines” you will find them filled, from front page to last, with advertisements of eges and skins at prices ranging from a tew cents to dollars. These “sclentific collect- ors’ masquerading under the same pre- tense of working in the interests of scl- ence! ‘Their motives may originally be the same as those of their more distinguished fellow- workers: To properly list and differentiate the birds of our country. But it is not long befpre they degenerate into collectors, simple and valear, Whose only purpose is to fill their pursés. ‘Equally to be detesttd and exposed 1s ‘fhe Iman who, from pride in his collectiot—de#iring to’ possess the largest, the finest, or‘the most complete in rare birds—engages f¥en and boys to shoot for him what hi Murderous aim can- not reach. I ini mind a taxidermist in eastern Maésacfusetts who has for many years pursue@’his nefarious calling unmolested under the protection of a license to shoot 8n‘ the interests of science. He has killed al? thé“lovely birds, such as Baltimore orlole#, céilar birds, even blue birds and robins;: in that locality for miles around. And the wofst of it is, he makes, or made, no préte: of doing anything but a business irf the“trade of their skins. ‘Well may the finocént feathered visitants here pray to “bé delivered from their “friends!” Let ‘the *pseudo ornithologists but stay their Hands! as well as strive to enact laws agaifist the ignorant natives of other lands who ccmmit a crime against civilization for which these more enlighten- ed men have ‘no excuse, in the pursuit of a livelihogd. Let them desist from their slaughterings and turn their attention to ornithotamy, simply, and restrict thefr in- vestigations to the English sparrow! Then, perhaps, they will have made some amends for the evil they have done. ‘November 15, 1898, ORNITHO. Temperance Lectures. Mr. Lou J, Beauchamp, temperance ora- tor, will fill.an engagerrent with the Good ‘Templars, beginning ‘tonight at 7:30 o'clock, in Grace M.‘B. Church, corner of 8th and S streets, and ecntinuiag there each night up to and includipg- Monday. Four additional addresses will be delivered at Dumbarton Avenue M.. ©.- Church, -Georgetown, the evenings of Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday of next weeks«< E BIRD PROTECTION Theme Before the Congress of Orni- thologists. FASHION NOT FAVORABLE 70 BIRD LIFE Report of Chairman Witmer Stone Submitted This Morning. OTHER TOPICS DISCUSSED Bird protection was the important sub- Ject before the congress of the American Ornithologists’ Union at the session: this morning in the hall of the National Mu- seum. Chairman Witmer Stone of the com- mittee having that matter in its care sub- mitted his report, showing tHat fashiom has not yet decreed in“fayor. of bird life, The attendance, whérf Vice Président Merriam, in the absence of President Ridge- way, called the convention to order, was not as large as upon yesterday, but, hap- pily, the hall was warm enough to be com- fortable. Vernon L. Kellogg read a ten- minute paper on “‘Some Parasites of Birds,” and William Palmer contributed a long paper on “Some Characteristics of Mosop- tiles.” Vice President Merriam said that the latter paper marked a new era in the special study of the subject and that it was @ contribution invaluable to the union. Theodore Grie read a ten-minute paper on “The Generic Names Pediocoetes and Poo- coetes.”” Chairman's Report. Chairman Stone's report stated that there is a corstantly increasing interest in bird protection. The committee pr>pared a mod- el bird law to serve as a guide for those who should undertake reform in their state laws, Early in the year a meeting of game Wardens of Wisconsin, .Minn2sota, Michi- gan, Illinois, Ohio and North Dakota was held in Chicago for the purpose of drafting uniform game laws for their states. Mr. Decne of the committee appeared before them and, with the assistance of L. Whit- ney Watkins, succ2eded in securing the model law's adoption for presentation to the respective legislatures along with the game law. Much important work has been accomplished during the year outside the committe, such as the establishment of the League of American Sportsmen, Mr. Hornaday’s report to the New York Zoolog- ical Society on the “Destruction cf Our Birds and Mammals” and Senator Hoar's labors in behalf of his till in Congress to prohibit the importation of wild birds’ plum- age for purposes of ornamentation. “Senator # is’ bill," says the report, “strikes at the root of the whoie question of bird millinery, for so long as it is permis- sible to impcrt “aigrettes’ and similar feath- ers it is almost impossible to prove’ that dealers are violating the law and selling American plumes, as they insist that they are all imported. With the importation stopped the traffic would be practically ai an end. Senator Hoar writes that his bill passed the Senate at the last session with but one dissenting voice, and now awaits the action of the House. “The establisaent of the League of American Sportsmen is a matter for gratulaiion. Though its work is prim: Girected toward Ure pro birds also come in for t tion, and we look for me from co-operation between thi ation and the bird protective soeie Birds for Millinery Trade. The report then says: In regard to the Killing of birds for the millinery trade, there is apparently litt!e done to better con- ditions within the limits of the United States, though in Florida the slaughter of the remaining egrets seems to go on in spite of laws: The killing of small in: ovous birds for game or sport largely 1 eration. Nearly every state has laws intended to protect the birds, though many ly framed 2 even good laws are usual only a few states di make it their busine: of the bird laws. The wide for the protection of the good. The report noted that there had been a decrease in the number of smal! birds brought to. idermists’ shops to be mounted. This is particularly the case in the north, but it ems much more @ifficult to obtain like results in the south, owing to the fact that small birds ye there been regarded as legitimate game for gen- erations. To the educational side of the question the members of the committee have ée- voted themselves during the year, ana the S have been encouraging. Seve 5 ow with a combine? while some fourteen state socie membership of over , 90,000 leaflets and pamphlets have been dis- tributed, The status of the bird m remains practically as it been, no ar- gument being able to pre against the fashion ieaders of the traffic in American birds h to a minimum, the use of imported species goes on practically unabated. Afternoon Session. The afternoon session was held in Central High School hall. Papers, trated by lantern slides, Frank M. Chapman, Tho: William Dutcher. The evening s be held in Cosmos Club Hall. ee “Royal Limited”—A Handsome Outfit. The Baltimore and Ohio, Philadelphia and Reading and Central railroad of New Jer- sey, forming the Royal Blue Line between Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia and New York, have recently had two new trains built by Pullman’s Palace Car Com- pany, to be known as the “Royal Limited.” These trains, exact counterparts, will, after November 20, leave Washington and New York at 3 p.m. daily, arriving at des- tination, 234 miles, at 8 p.m. Properly speaking, the Royal Limited {& a dual train, composed of observation, par- lor, cafe, smoking and dining cars. The parlor cars are finished in vermillion wood, with an inlay of Persian design. The ceil- ing is of royal blue, and the upholstery of the same color, except in the ladies’ toilet room, which 1s of dark olive green, the ceiling being decorated to correspond. The drawing room is finished in harmony with the main parlor of the car. A beautiful effect 1s given both to the exterior and in- terlor of the cars by oval windows, with opalescent glass placed in the toilet rooms and passage ways. The cars are seventy feet long, with every modern improvement and appliance, including wide vestibules, with anti-telescoping device, empire deck, steam heat, Pintsch gas and air pressure water system, and have a capacity of thirty-four seats. The observation, cafe and smoking cars are’of the same general ap- pearance in the exterior as the parlor cars, except that the observation end is recessed with a deep platform. The capacity of this car is thirty-three seats, including four- teen chairs in the smoking compartment. ‘The buffet is also one of the modern feat- ures. It is provided with daintiest china and cut glass. The dining cars are of the very latest pattern of the Pullman shops. They are known as the “Waldorf” and “As- toria.”” The service is under the direct con- trol of the passenger department of Balti- more and Ohio Railroad Company, —_—_>———_ Said It Was a Joke. Richard Lewis, a colored janitor, who is employed at 503 D street northwest, was sent to the home of his employer on an errand, and while in the house, it is charg- ed, he took $11 from the coat pocket of Richard Greenfleld.. The coat was hanging in the kitchen, where Lewis waited for an answer to the message he delivered. He purchased “some articles of wearing sp- arel and a scalper’s ticket to New York. tective Mullér found him~at the depot last night about.to take the train, and arrested him. TMs morning when Lewis appeared in court on a charge of larceny he tried to make the court believe that he had played @ joke on Greenfield. Just where the joke came in the court could not see; and the Penalty was $20 fine or sixty days in jail. x the illus- LLM MMMM MMM LAAT Soafoegecnfongectoagecteteeteroetoe | ALL AI OL L LALA DLL LLM IPL PILED ELLA LPI LLLLLLLLLDWLLLLILLL LLL LID Watches given free this week with every cash purchase of $10 or more. $10 for Suits. $10 for Overcoats. Worth $15 & $16.50. We got enough ‘mill ends” to make 2,000 garments. As a result of our enterprise we can offer the most successful styles of the season—in both Suits and Overcoats—at $10.00 instead of $15.00 and $16.59. Sale started yesterday—and wiil probably last until Saturday night. The Suits are plain blue, black and fancy worsteds— cheviots—homespuns and tweeds. The Overcoats are tan coverts—and blue, black and brown kerseys, friezes and cheviots. We did the making ourselves—so you may be sure that they fit right and are made right. $1.00 for Men’s Hats. Choice of all $3.00—$2.50—and $2.00 broken lines of Men’s Derbies and Fedoras at $1.00. , Some of the season’s best-selling styles—ana still marked what they sold for—$3.00, $2.50 and $2.00. SEMAN BROS. Soegeegeogecs eS a 0 Os GOR.7 ann E Serdoneneegeedeteatoadongoeceegecteteatondeneneteeteateatentendendecieeaseagendeegeatoadeadeogeatoadeadeegecetondendee OO OUR THANKSGIVING tN 0 POTN PN NN RR OFFERING TO MEN. $18.50, $15 and $18 NGS STYLISH ALL-WOOL FINELY TAILORED For this For this week, week, Made to your Made to your measure, measure. OUR THANKSGIVING SALE Begins today, and will continue until Saturday night. All garments ordered during these five days can be made in good style for your Thanksgiving festivities, From our immense stock of winter woolens we have chosen 300 Choice Suitings For This Thanksgiving Sale. We want you to wear one. of our suits or an overcoat from the hands of our skilled workmen, and offer you the choicest line of fine serge cloth and all-wool plain and fancy cheviots, made to your mcasure at a less price than you will pay (ir an ordinary ready-made suit. We devote an entire buflding to merchant tailoring, and you can be assured that you will get a tinely-trimmed and genuinely tailored garment. Fine Nobby Overcoat | Top Coat : MADE TO YOUR MEASURE. Heavy Black and Blue Meltons and Kerseys, Beautifully Trimmed. Regular Price, $18 and $20, MADD TO YOUR MEASURB. Some of the | Prettiest Styles of | Covert Cloth you Ever looked at. | Regular $15 quality, NN NN NN NN NN, ( aoa “10° “A PERFECT FIT IS THE SECRET OF OUR SUCCESS.” Cor. 11th and F Sts. N.W. SISHFHPODFE3F9 98S 0965956009 Adainty $ Gilt Clock, Just the thing fur boudoir or room or when traveling. Wish we could show you a sketch of it, or, better still, have you call and see it. It is Chin Ce Lovers of Fine China will find at our establisbment the largest and most complete erbibit of choice articles in ey ees = Porcelain and acceptable gift for Wedding, Crystal : ey, Sadana ieee! Gla to be found anys ’ Jewelers, 88 where. Goldsmith’s, oi Pie. i 02-330 Fifth Avenue and 30th St., Rew Work. Go to Siccardi’s —— FOR BARGALSS IN HUMAN Hal ate Buitubes at Great a 150. . 00 Switches reduced to $5.00. AVE yon visited the ‘ite Uair reduced in same proportion. Mme. Siccardi, ‘Til 11th st., next to Patais Boyal. and te rooms for shemeoring, a7 In the Klondike Region. Rev. S. Hall Young, who is just from the Gray amt magnificent new jew- elry store on F st.? You're always welcome! ys Victor E. Desio & Co., Successors to Geyme Desio, 1107 F St. N. W., Klondike, will describe the condition of trings at that famous mining mee = “0 inmatnctarta Seoabiee etek: uae = rvice at the Church of t fowe + Govenant tomorrow. Mr. Hall is | { 0c20-2m-24 bric-a-brac. NR ae Covenant tomorrow evening. the guest of Dr. Sheldon