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Our Prices are sometimes imitated, but when it comes to quality, they cannot match us. Right from the original packages we sell All Best Teas 25¢ Ib. Best Coffee 20c Ib. Try our CEYLON and ORANGE PEKOCE TEAS at 250. You will get better flavor and cup quality than that for which you Pay up to 60c for siscwhere. United Tea Importers Co,, Franklin Squars, up one flight, over Somers Bros. £eb24TuThS Stationery Supplies BOX PAPER, TABLETS, CARDS, ENVELOPES, INK, GLUE, MUCILAGE, PENCILS, PENS, FANCY PENCIL BOXES, SCRAP BASKETS, KNIVES, SCISSORS, ETC. WAS. EDWIR FAY, Franklin Squars (Written Specially for The Bumetin.) sorts to make a world.” _ “It takes all Io}‘rmmmlmmm‘mm own immediate nefghborhood, is con- could get along with one sort mean the” sort who are SO beastly selfish that they can’t see be- yond. their own hatbrims, nor feel out- cerned, T less. T 8ide of their own padlocked pockets. _ When 1 taught to who thought a young ide: based was that of an selfishness.” whipping. But I don’t have to believe everything I'm told, now, nor even pre- tend that I do. And I declare, right here, that I do not accept selfishness of any kind, “enlightened” or be- nighted, as a worthy or even an ex- cusable’ motive for human action. The fact that most men and women are selfish_doesn't make the thing com: that most men and women have hollow teeth make decayed molars the proper thing in the mouth. Once, mot long ago, | read the care- r'll"{ written defense of a certain big ‘business man against what he consid- ered the abusive attacks of rivals. In it he declared that he had always sup- posed that the mam who attended strictly to his own bDusiness, looked after his own affairs, took care of his own family and paid his taxes was doing: about as well as 8. man_could. His own affatrs, his own family, his own_taxes—there you have it. Not a ‘word about his neighbors, not a word about his town, not & word about his country, not a’ word about the weak and the blind who, lacking his_sight and his strength, were constantly be- feb24a Bas been forced upon us by the pres- furg of public approval. Because we knol how to buy and to sell goods so satisfactorily that they absolutely fly eff our premises. J our _stirring ‘way of keeping and LIQUORS ©p to the mark. We expect to stir harder than ever soon, because of the extra good value of our new stock. Come in before the cream’s off the top. Geo. Greenberger, 47 Frankiin “Street, Norwich, Conn. Telephone §12. febld Building THIS 7 ¢ so you should consult with me and gt prices for same. Excellent work at reasonable prices. C. M. WILLIAMS General Contractor and Builder, 218 MAIN STREET. *Phone 370. jan17a GEO. A. DAVIS Good Books are always desirable. WE NAVE A SPLENDID ASSORT- MENT OF COPYRIGHT FICTION, ALL POPULAR TITLES, WERE $1.50, now 50c each. BOOKS IN FINE LEATHER BIND- ENGE, 80c. Good for Easter gifts. WEBSTER'S COLLEGIATE DIC- TIONARY. INDIA PAPER WITH IN- DEX, $350. A very bandsome book. THE BOSTON COOKING SCHOOL COOK BOOK— 365 Breakfast Dishes # 385 Desserts B 365 Dinner Dishes. This is 2 fine Series of Cook Books ana are only 50c each. Y. & E. CARD I¥OEX COOKING RECIPEZ. OXFORD BIBLES. AMERICAN STANDARD REVISED BIBLES AND TESTAMENTS. PRAYER BOOKS AND HYMNALS. GEO. A. DAVIS, 25-29 Broadway feb22daw A. D. 8. ing run over by the chariot of his sel- fishness. That man has made much money; he has acquired the standing which ‘'a_sycophantish soclety accords to bank accounts; he wears the sinis- ter red halo of success before the eyes of the gold-worshipping. But he is, Iz{ own statement— which he infended as a boast, not as a contession—convicted of being ethical- Iy allled to the swine more closely than to real manhood. Wihen the Good Samaritan was journeying from Jeru- salem to Jericho and saw the victim of ‘enlightened selfishness” lying robbed, beaten and half dead by the wayside, he didn’t stop to consider his own business or his own family, but lent a hand to help the poor fellow. The priest and the Levite were better stu— dents of political economy, but the best Exemplar of the highest manhood the world has ever known, with the same breath which gave the neighborly Sa- maritan an_everlasting inheritance of glorious fame, cursed their memories Into an eternal reek of infamy. It isn’t, however, because selfishness is ethically wrong ‘and akin to beastli- ness rather than manhood that I won- der at its prevalence. We are all prone to evil as the sparks fly upward, and in and wrong and weakness are not surprises in any of us. But what does make me marvel a little s that men and women don’t see, won't see, can’t be made to see how foolish it is. Lots of men think they are both honest and “smart” when they say of themselves that while they may not be saints they are not fools. I've known men to tase it @s a compliment when thoy were styled “tough,” but I never heard of a man feeling flattered when he was calleq @ fool. Yet the consistent, per- sistent, day in and day out practice ct selfishness as the gulding motive of life is the sublmated essence of idiocy. T don't care whether you zon- sider its reflex action upon the seifish man_ himself, or its direct and visible effect upon others, it's not only wrong but it's bad policy. That is the reason I wonder at it. We're having a pretty “snug” winter up here in the mountaine. The snow has been an almost daily visitor: the thermometer has been very lowiv- minded, indeed, most of the time; and the wind has been rather higher-spirit- ed than usual. The other day I had occasion to drive to @ neighbor's two miles away on business. Most of ‘he distance the sleighing was fine. Sut on a little flat near the village, with nine occupled houses within forty rods of it, I came to a drift. It was about twenty feet wide at the base and about five feet high at the apex. It was the only one near by. The road is a fre- quently traveled one, yet for a week all teams, light or, loaded, had de:n compelled to go through an opening in a fence, drag across fifteen rods of fall-plowed ground, then out and back into the road through another tori- down fence, where the ditch. made sv~n return safe. All this because the sma!l wa being shoot by ‘those wise elders they knew it all the axiom on which- they instructed me that all business and economic life was “enlightened I never did like hogs— didn't then any more than now, end I couldn't see why the imitation of hogs should be defended as a. proper main- spring for human action. I had to take it, then, because if one of us boys dared to differ with the dogmatic old professor he was promptly rebuked for is “captiousness” and given a tongue lashing which hurt worse than a horse mendable, any more than dces tie fact) =xhibit it in What They ~How Farmers Inconvenience ! pon a Little Neighborly Co- operation— [ he Would Wonld Be Better if Genu:- osity and Good Fellowship Oftener Prompted Action. Consider in Dodging a Little Work, town force was ousy on other roads which were worse drifted, and not one of the nine able bodied men who lived Bands Sug wsed he rosd every day would @o twenty minutes’ work with a shovel in unpald highway opening. They would rather suffer daily incon— venience themselves than do a Mttle for thelr own comfort—which might also help others, because it wasn't on their Jand and was legally the road commissioner’s business. Now, never mind the adjectives which might properly be used to describe the moral and ethical spirit of those men; just stop and think what folly they showed. Contrast their action and its result with what would be the result if not only, they but all others in similar conditiotis would jump over their own .barnyard fences occasionally to help out. These men not only drove around their own little drift whenever they came to it and made everybody else do the same, but they also had to drive around other driffs which were piled adjacent to other houses, which other housenolders had left undug. In my eight mile trip that -day I had to scratch over plowed ground or drive over road bank stone heaps or strug- gle through hedgerows of brush three times, becausg small drifts barred the straight xaaséfihzse fellows who left their drifts untbuched had to do the same. ~ Yet, if they bad each, when the storm cleared and the drifts showed, done about twenty minutes work for the public service, they would have saved themselves all this trouble—and saved even more to other innocent passers from a distance. The cost of repairing one “pair o' bobs” which had smashed under the strain of taking a load over one stone heap on the road- side bank at the end of a drift would have more than paid for making good zoad through all the dricts L met that y. “Why should | do nobody else do nothin’ of the sort.” ‘Well, suppose there won't; how does that let me out? Must I work with a hole in my boot becausé my next door Deighbor is too mean to pay for a tap on his? Am I in any way required to| do mean things because some one else does them? Does it excuse me even one little bit when I act like a fool to point out that Jones and Johnson also act like fools? Perhaps they may not know their own folly; this is always a poasibility, if not very probable. But I do know it, and what sort of excuse is it for my own wrong or folly to plead that I'm no worse than they? The very fact that I appreciate at its true val- uation and understand the real charac- ter of my weak or wicked neighbor's action is the most peremptory mandate that God and nature can issue forbid- ding me to imitate it. Dear friend, it is better to be lonely and to be laugh- ed at, better to be sneered at as an “impractical theorist,” better to be co1 sidered a crank or an “easy mark. than to amputate your own neighborli- ness and public spirit because your unfortunate eritics don't possess any. t? There won't Three miles away from me are two farmers ‘who, some years ago, bought | their grass séed of the same adulterat ing dealer. In the resultant crop ap- peared on both farms a lot of “blue devil’—a destructive and diabolical weed. One of these farmers, as soonm | as he discovered the pest, summoned | help and went over the whole field dlg- #ing out and destroying every plant before it could seed down. Right over the line fence the other farmer's lot is now hairy with the stuff, and he won't | touch it. He happens to have land| enough o he won't miss it if a single; field is ruined. He is also getting on in years and is too mean to care for posterity. He is lazy, as well. And so from this field the birds and the winds are carrying seeds in all directions and | other farmers are to be made needless expenge or to lose valuable Jand be- cause this one is too selfish to do a little work in behalf of public safety. are only illustra- tions, tri f you please, of a spirit which works in other and more important matters. Nobody defends it openly; why should anybody practice it? Wouldn't this be a mighty sight better world all around, not only for the other fellow, but for us, too, if we| would all act out the famous four rules of Edward Bverett Hale: “Look up, and not downj Lok out, and not in; Look forward, and not back; and LEND A HAND!” “Oh, yes' you say, “very fine: ‘if’ all would do {t; but they won't, and why should we? Why? Because we wan to be better men than those we de- spise; because the things we see to be ubworthy in-them are unpardonable in us who appreciate the wrong; be- cause we are not silly sheep who just follow their leader, but men _with minds and souls of cur own, able to see the right and follow it, though we live and die alone in that’ seldom-traveled track. That's why! THE FARMER. YANTIC HAPPENINGS. . Visitors Here and Out of Town—F. A. Tracy Better—Personal Notes. Miss Anna B. Parke is spending the day in Franklin with her cousin, Mrs. Charles Parsons of Ottawa, Canada, who is spending some time with Mrs. Louls H. Smith. Mrs. Arad Manning is spending the @ay in New London. Miss 1dith J. Mather is London today. Miss_Olive Jane Ladd is spending a few days in Norwich Town with her grandmother, Mrs. Jane Perse. Mrs. Smith of Massapeag and Mrs. in New callefs on Mrs. Friday. I H. Stoddard on Unclaimed Letters, Unclaimeéd letters in the Yantic post- office for the month endinz February 25: Thomas. Crocker, George A. Kel- vin, Clarence Smith and a card for Mrs, M. A. Kelly. Mrs. Howard Bishop is spending ‘with more consideration.than he does his family should live in the barn. A pup that is constantly joked with makes a poor fool of a dog—ditto boys. I've known farmers who had $500 ‘worth of apples in the orchard never to get $76 in their pockets for them. An ola felt boot leg is a good leg- ging after the boot has worn out and been cut off. If Alvira wants to grow posies, don’t be frightened, for it may help her to continue her smiles. % A hired man who comes home at night drumk isn’'t much better than a measly dog just in from a skunk hunt. “The man who never prunes his fruit trees seldom sees the use of having a hajreut. The farmer who thinks that his fam- ily is all wrong cannot be all right ‘himself. Old Jim Sling never had time to comb his hair or.to brusn the nests of the cankerworms out of his trees. They say gold won't rust, but it is wearing away when the mowing ma- chine is stored in the open pasture for ‘winter protection, Bill Bings runs his Jersey milk through ‘a keparator and sells the cream for 20 cents a pint, and the res-i-dew for 9 cents a quart. He makes profits the Prophets will .not commend, Mrs. Sally Slanter hasn't learned yet that frowy butter is classed two grades below renovated butter and that a renovator will get the profits she dught to. The farmer who mopes all winter hears the dinner horn quicker than he hears the call to work in late March. There are some farmers who like to tell hunting stories better than they do to read tme farm-help column in the home paper. ‘They think it is more profitable to hunt woodehucks than to hunt for information. JOB JOLT. MUSIC AND DRAMA St. Louis is proud of its Symphony orchestra, which has been in existence some thirty years. The Shuberts have given up the Hartford opera house and it is to be turned into a moving picture place. The “Chantecler” craze has already hit ‘vaudeville in the form of a sketch called “A Crisis in the Chicken Coop” Miss Billie Burke is to play a new one-act comedy by Alfred Sutro named ‘The Bracelet,” at @ benefit In New York next month, The Colonial theater .in Boston will be devoted entirely to musical comedy next winter, “The Dollar Princess” be- ing the opening attraction. Henrietta Crosman opens her #oston engagement at the Hollis street theater on February 28 for two weeks, and | then plays four weeis in New England territory. Even the New Amsterdam theater, the largest regular playhouse in New York, is proving too small to accom- modate the immense throngs anxious to witness “Madame X.” Lew Fields has announced that his new review for next summer would be called “The Summer Widowers” It will be written by Glen MacDonough and A, Baldwin Sloan. Margaret Anglin has a violet farm in Illinols where with a partner, she raises violets for the Chicago market. Every vear the partners draw a sub- stantial revenue, from this source. Nellie Melba has sailed for Europe after a tour of Australia, which be- gan at Melbourne last March, and during which she was heard in seventy different towns. This year she will tour Canada. Lilllan Russell is touring the south in a new play, “The First Night” un- der the direction of Joseph Brooks. Digby Bell is @ new member of the company. Miss Russell will play in Texas and Oklahoma before she re- turns east. The members of the New theatér company, New York, are deep in the rehearsals of “Sister Beatrice” the Maurice Maetterlinck play which is to recelve its premier on the night of March 14. This is the drama with music in which Edythe Matthison will make her debut as a member of the organization. Critics and the public generally have remarked on_the realism of the first act of “The Nieger,” in which blood- hounds are beard in pursuit of a flee- ing negro. As @ matter of fact the au- dience really hears the baying of Knoxcraft and Beele. two of the most famous bleodhounds in the world. They are owned by Dr. Knox of Danbury, Conn., and are both prize-winners from the Tmperial bloodhound kennels. When the New theater wished to reproduce on the stage the sound of hounds bark- ing on the trail, they sent expert pho- nograph men to Danbury where Knox- craft and Belle were induced to cry on several days in Waltham, Mass., with her sister, Mrs, Sarah Schlough. Frank Allen Tracy, who has been ill with a severe cold for the pass. two months, is able to get around again and has returned to work on the Gilbert Lamb place, Miss Maria M .Allen has returned to Lebanon after spending a week Henry LaPlerre of Greeneville were with relatives here. the trail of a fox. One Productive Garde: Intensive garden culture yields large returns. Mary Garden receives $200. 000 a year without being intensely cui- tured, either—Kansas City Times. TAB day.” LE TALK: « Put plenty of Ceresota Bread in my lunch basket to-morrow. There wasn’t half enough to- 7 prmcipal of B T in ite and Speaking of lecture courses reminds us that the teachers’ association is do- ing a little in that line the present sea the star lecturer having been udge Ben interesting narrative of.juvenile reform .work. The judge s a good writer and thinker and a leader of the work he related to the New Lomdon wudience, but as an orator he does not shine as brilliant as some of the world-wide ¥nown. lecturers who spoke in New Lon- don years ago In the Citizens’ course of lectures and entertainments, under the management of George F. Tinker, the proceeds being devoted to a. bread fund for the poor of New London. ‘While the Citizens® course was in full swing there came to New London an active Methodist minister, pastor of the. Federal street chi the Rev. John Gray, small in staure dut gigantic in resources. In addition to his min- isterial dutles he instituted and man- aged the Star course of lectures and entertainments, practically in Opposi- tion to Mr. Tinker's re; course, and as another side issue he chartered el- ther the City of Boston, the City of New York or the City of Lawrence, of the Norwich line. and managed excur- sions to Martha's Vineyard and Cot- tage Clty, of several days’ duration. That these ventures pald was demon- strated by their continuance as long as he remained in New London. Rev. Gray was o good preacher and & bang-up corsiet sololat, therefore took part in.the musical as well as the strictly devotional exercises in the Fed- eral street In advertising him- self he advertised the church. and the attendence was materfally increased. Rev. Mr. Gray some time afterward left ‘the Methodist church and became an_ Episcopal cle: and hes now passed beyond the memory of many of is former aequaintances. Mr. Gray left New London, but Mr. Tinker re- mains and has established a permanent bread fund for the poor of the city. Brisbane of New London jour- nalism is evidently back at his desk, his home-coming being denoted by short, crispy black-face editorials and an_enlivening of the editorial tone of one’of the newspapers, and the resur- Tection of a lively and interesting free- iance column. Then, too, there is bold- ness in matters of political interest from the standpoint of one who forced | recognition from the party ledders by | reason of his newspaper Influence, and | Who was not backwand in demanding | what he considered his political rights, and usually recefved what he demand- ed. He did not imitate Micawber, but what he wanted he went after, and usually got it. There was a report cur- rent at one time that he wanted the nomination for governor, and at anoth- er he was said to be a candidate for cor from the Third district, but he dld not seem to have the call on either of those occasions. Indications now dre that he has de- cided to withdraw from politics for the present and perhaps devote his time to his newspaper interests, and perhaps regain his political prestige. He hes proven himself to have been the most successful man that ever ploughed in the local newspaner field and, from surface indications, has rev olutionized the newspaper business in New London. His time may come to take a lead In matters political; he may be brought out prominently in the public spoalight and shine in chief executive of the State or repre- sent this district in the halls of con- gress. He has plugged his way to prominence and deserves all that is said-of him in praise. While the officials of Providence and every other city in Rhode Island, through city councils, boards of trade, labor and other orgamzations, are tak- ing active measures to influence the state legislature to grant a charter for | the Grand Trunk raliway company to make entrance Into the state, with ter- minal in_Providence, there does not seem to be anything doing along that Line for the advancement of New Lon- don, where this company now has a terminal. It has been said that if the Grand Trunk gets into Rhode Island New London will be the first city to be adversely affected, as the business now here would be diverted to the Rhode |1slana capital, provided there be fruih to the advanced talk of ‘the railroad | officials eager to clutch the charter. It the Grand Trunk is really con- templating an extension of business at tidewater, it would perhaps be well for Mayor Mahan and his committcc to get busy and assure the officials of the company that New London is still on the map and with natural marine ad- Yantages that do not prevall at Prov- ence. | The ordinancegprescribing the dutis of sealer of weights and measures, which was _presented by Alderman James F. O'Leary two months ago Is of too much imzortance to be side- correct welghts and meaures can b8 assured under the existing state stat- utes. If the latter allegation were true citles in the sate inuch larger and smalier than New ‘would not have such rigid local laws. and the Capitol City, wherein the stato laws enaced, would not be classed ag the del city in the state, 80 fiP. a5 KOCS supervision of welghts~. measures, True, the generl staths glve the citles uathority to enact ordls nances relative to the measure and pro- Vides the standard welghts and incas- ures, and in a few specified instances demands evidence of correct welght, for example, in the matter of butter supposed to be put-up in pound pack- nges. Bach city has the power to regulite the duties of its officérs, espeolally thut of sealer of weights and measures, and in New London the office hax existed in name only for nearly half a centu- ry, and now the court of common coun- cil is asked to protect its citizens, sell- ers as well s buyers, and give thent guarantee tirat all weights and meas- ures used in the city are at the stand- ard. This is a measure that #hould be favored by every honest merchant or business man where weights and meas- ures enter into the business. There has been a public hearing on the ordinance and no opposition ap- peared, and now there is public -de- mand for protection in this matter. If the members of the couneil act for their constituency the ordinance will be adopted without opposition, and not be pigeon-boled for somie fancied and perhaps personal reason. Aldérman O'Leary has done his tull share in en- deavoring to serve the people by giv ing them a square deal in their busi- ness dealings, and if the measure is turned down, the Fourth ward alder~ man of Montauk avenue cannot be. ac- cused of fallure of duty in Bonest en- deavor to get this needed ordinance adopted. For several s there has been a mutual aid_socisty composed of em ployes of The D. E. Whiton Machine company and it proved such a succese and of incaluculable benefit to the members that the employes of The Brown Cotton Gin company have now formed a similar organisation and starts out with 2 membership of 288 of the 375 employes, with assurance that every employe will becomé a member, There was & meeting Thursday even- ing and the large atiendance hanifest- ©d earnest Interest. The name of the new organization is The Brown Cotton Gin Mutual Benefit and Ald association, and these officers were electad: Franklin Plerce Goff, president; Howard Hethington, viee president; Alvin 8. Darling, secretary Malcolm Scott, treasurer; J. T. Sher win, Thomns Hollwell, Willlam Drum- mond, Peter Dyer and George Humph- ries, executive committee. The initiation fee is fifty cents and there are ten grades of membership. The wenlor e will be assessed 15 cents & week for each case of sick- ness and $7 a week will be paid the bemeficiary, and ths death benent is $50. The juniors are taxed flve cents, the benefit 1s $3 a week and the death benefit ks $25. The minimum sum to be in the treasury will be $200 and whenever ne¢essary a special assess- ment will ba levied to keep that sum on hand for use in an emergency. The Brown Cotton Gin company and The ‘Bakcock Printing Press company, com- bined, will pay 25 per cent. of the reg- ular and special asscssments. The charter list will be kept open for thirty @ays and it is expected that before the expiration of that period cvery person that is eligible will be enrolled In the membership. Buppressed Emotion. A St. Louls paper has a young wom- an who Is shopping in that city against time. Just what the St. Louis hus- bands think of this innovation might not look well in print.—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Leads to C A Syracuse (N. Y.) sentenced to ten years in jail for steal- ing a ham. which shows another result of the high cost of living.—Detroit Frea Press. e. man has been Appreciating a Big Man. Texas republicans, booming John W. Gates for the governrorship, appreciate the advantage to & biz state of a man who can bet « million.—N. Y. World. The Important Problem confronting anyone in need of a laxa- tive is not a question of & single ac- tion only, but of permanently bene- ficial effects, which will follow proper efforts to live in a healthful way, with the assistance of Syrup of Figs and Elixir of Schna, whenever it is re- quired, ss it cleanses the system gently yet promptly, without irFitation and will therefore always have the preference of all who wish the best of tamily lazatives. 3 The cembination bas the ‘approval of physiciane because It is known to be truly beneficial, and because it has siyen satistaction to the millions of well-informed_families who have used it for many years pas To get its beneficial effects, always buy the genuine manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co. only. tracked to satisfy the jealousy of some Sldermen or on the crusty ground that | Lot —x; in great variety—regular 2bc lat 17¢c a padr, 3 for Soc Lot 2—At 29¢ a pair Women's $1.50 $1.98| Women’s Sample Hosiery THREE LOTS AS FOLLOWS 'Women's Black Hostery. & Mitchell Co peal to everyome. Saturday shoppers will find unusual values on every floor, in every deparimen! COME TODAY ! MEN’S STORE SECOND FLOOR Some Great Bargain Winter Garments at ( Oppo» tunities ance Prices 790 Mem's Coad Sweaters in] 9800 | Women's Win value | plain gray and in gray withl vajue | cluding n . $1.00 | fancy borders. $10.00 | conts ur $1.10, | Men's 1 Sweaters in cout| ' e » vaiue | style, some plain grey and| 9600 | Women's ¥ 31.50 | some fancy styles. wvalue | Inches lon 39c | Men's Samitary Fieecy-linea| #1250 | fas mixt value | Bhirts and Drawers—at 30¢| $7.98 | Women's | §00°-1 walue: S walve | In black an 630 | Men's Natiurval “Wool Shirtsl $15.00 | lisn fas ana Drawers—at §5c, Hair Shiris WOMEN F Drawers—at 95¢, value $1.60 4 i fho $R780—for $406.00 ¥ MEN’S WINTER OVERCOATS $32.60—(or 360 At'$ 6.50—reduced from $10.00 45 At 81 educed from $16.00 $46.00-10r 3 At $1; reduced trom $18.00 At $16.50—roduced from $26.00 MEN’'S WINTER SUITS WOMEN'S FUR LINEC At § 650—reduced from $10.60 At $11.80—reduced from $15.00 At 92498 At $14.50—reduced from $18.00 At $16.50—reduced from $20.00 At $39.98 MILLINERY--Another Deep P Today we offer a choloe Figh le Dress Hals and_our own Model Hadis. $1.98 as $12.50. Materfals alone ure wort ask for the Hats all trimmed. rice Cul A MANUFACTURER'S STOCK AT ONE THAN USUAL PRICES Wide Taffeta Ribbon ant Taffets hes wide oringe- 1 ofr ot Be o yur THIR 1—At 17 a pair, 3 lor 50c 8o ius B mbroidered and plain col Hosieryl 160 Fine Imported Hosiery in | inchen black and a splendid xnuun|" of En | and al ¢ ibroidered Hoslery == regular L0c Hose | Ings—regu iery at 29c a palr. | 1 a Lot 3—At 69¢ a pair vas | oam wide I This lot comprises the finest kinds of] 19¢ 1 colorings —r n Imported Hoslery — Including some) Ribbon at 18¢ a very fine quality Stk BEmbroidered| at 69c a palr, value | Inches wide in a 9 | regular 260 qualis - Women’s Neckwear 1% | Beautitwl MOIR ALL AT HALF PRICES value | Ribbon, . 120 | Women's Embrolde: 20 | in & handwon value | Coll | inge—rogular F »tyle: worlk, square | 1% a ard. [ corners, s} perfect woods] o, Bt Shadilh Women's Fanc 1% colorings and vk lars and Jabots in & splendid S assortment of wstyles—rog qua My —cug e lar 26c Neckwear at 13%ec. ot 200 & yard “Women' Fapcy llod("(‘nt 190 | Handsete D» lars and Jabols in all the) ue | —benutitul Mo wtyles, of the senson —regular) velue : ? :"“ - 500 Neckwear at 25c I:' il e At Baby Ir 1 choose M 0o Duteh ! qualty at 18 iT KE NE' oR nd Coat Sets eclwear in regular 76c 0 $2.00 Lace C lars at S0c each, SEE DISPLAY M | EASTERLY WINE Our Annual Sale of Kilchenwar WILL CONTINUE TODAY. THIS I8 A GREAT CHANCE FOF EPERS, HOTEL MEN, BOARDING HOUSES AND RESTA VER BEFORE HAVE WE BEEN ABLE TO OFFER SUCH DINARY VALES. rHREE PRICES: 29c 39c 49c Make it A point to v our Kitchenware Depariment Todw Gloves Gloves Small Wares 79¢ | Women's Gloves — comprislas jo—mkirt Binding Tra value | ing Z-clawp Kid Gloves L 10 8 ook hedkanid $1.00 | in black and all the wanted x colorings — 1-clasp Chamols| Gloves In a broken assort-|At 2c—Velveioen | . ment of sizes—regular $1.00 ple in oolore—a | Gloves at 79¢ a palr. wive 300 and I At 3o 1-finish White Goods g g FROM AUCTION. 26c yards of 26-Inch Wiite t 4o—Kia Halr Curle value | Linen Suiting — good waight c a package, W > 42¢ and soft fAinish—regular 42 | quadity at 26c o yard. At 19c—Women's Blastic & » 0 At 89c—Women's Carriag Boys® Clothing e ey tou, i At 24c—Boys’ Winter $4.00 At ~53.96 Thie Porteous & Mitc Capn, wmal) aizes, vadue 50c. At S0o—Girly' White Mobair Tams, SOIAEY 00008. Bis $1.96 | Boys' Junfor Suits, sizes(At " an value | three to four, at $L95, value $4.00 | 84.00, $1.85 ¢ Twoeplece Suits with|At 7o -Munyons W vadue | Kilekerbooke: Teousers. at 1o u cake 32.60 | aines § to 18, AL Be—Four-ounce wo 3 e Ut Mpdvogen . @ 0. Winter Qv 13 t0 6 and 10 | yalue up to 7.8 hell Co.