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eoiforn] THE OMAHA SUNDAY BEE. [ouairse PAGES 1 TO » YOUR MONEY'S WORTH VOL. XXXVIII—-NO. 47. OMAHA, SUNDAY MORNING, , 1909, SINGLE COPY FIVE CENTS. White Goods, Sheets, Sheetings, Etc. Engraving Department Picture Framin : n 3 > v 3 Very atfractive special pric on high grade A list of generous underprice offerings for Monday. Nowhere else are like engraving. Graduates should be especially in values possible Bleached Sheating—:, arls terested. Work guaranteed to be of highest | Commencing tomorrow, we will take orders for = 1 de. “J It” brand, reg: o T pic: Gl =) e to r = - India Linon—50 pleces, all per- | Mand Bmbroidersd §wiss—I'ie Iy 30e, for | sest eoviatlie 1‘:.1:,;- ot Oove " b Copper Plate, L s e fect, regular §%¢c goods, yd. de ures, checks and stripes Aurora Sheeting—8 iards wide ' “ngrave ards in script wit opper 8;(’ count from regular prices of 25 per cent. This Persian Lawn—i6 inches, ja | tle mussed. were T 5 9c quality _ e or otfer Soed for obe o s Wl to aell tor 3. .";,"m’.'f?é‘ | oios Bap st vard. Bleasisd Sneetesixse. N ¥ 100 Engraved Cards in Old English, including g bbb it quelit mitls muslin, plate $1.98 | 500 sample frames from which to choose. . 3 e ) for . £9c t French Lawn_1s i best 320 | Wedding invitations, announcements, etc Bring pictures with 25 nisconn' i printed or engraved to conform with demands of you . . (4 | polite society—special prices (Art Department—Second Floor.) (01 12 yards for #c.) Blenchea Sheets— x9 veil Cotton Blankets—For sumier wortu 50c, for 3% $1.39 kind, pair... 93¢ Muslin—Cambric finish, 36 inch $1.25 kind, pair...... [ fine 1nd woft 10c quality 7e Balance of Big Purchase *40%45" Suits---*193..'25 Sweeping Dress Goods Clearance el any. s We say it again. Positively most extraordinary suit offer Summer goods are crowding out the woolen fabrics. We must have the table space for these new wash any w ot o4 ever made in Omaha. Monday the balance of our immense | dress materials. So for one week, commencing tomorrow, we offer purchase 1,000 suits will be offered. Not a poor, ""d“i'{’bl“ Our Entire Stock Woolen Dress Goods at Relentless Markdowns Styl? or S_hadCA'n the whole ‘h“c' ("?ats alfC tgc “e“" % 011§ Not a single piece has escaped—all those handsome spring materials you have seen on our counters; all the Stfalght line hlpless effects. So pcrfcgt y tai ored are they an beautiful new shades, the cream of the world's most fashionable weaves fall before the mighty onslaught of the the size range so broad that only the Sllgh[(“[ kind of alterations price-cutter—half price in most instances. Not remnants, not jobs, but our own regular stock—none finer in are necessary, if any. the West New Gray Suitings—No = Our $1.25 Dress Fabrics, = Plain and Fancy Dress | Our Highest Grade | Black Silk Volles—An- FINEST HARD.FINISHED WORSTEDS, LYMANSVILLE 00N DOBHIAR - fosde | “OBCEATHOR USBRINY - | coadechiVeR). ik | DFOMSUBOMINNE | “afie itesial WORSTEDS IN SOLID COLORS IN ALL THE LATE SPRING are shown In America. | Able 44 to 56 inch your plck ot §2 wud go0ods, weaves of every dred pieces season's $2.50 moods for 98¢, takes its place as one SHADES; WHITE SERGE SUITS; $ 950 ,25 They come in a wide kind, every new shade most desirable goods the chance of a life of the greatest bar- and ' Wanted—Alteration hands on women's suits quality, imported. Monday 230 P Must be experienced. Apply at once Cotton Suitlag—35 inch, ioéc grade vard .. ‘on i8¢ ONE PIECE FROCKS, ETC, ETC,, rangs of shades, too new rose, greens every new shade, plain time. Foreign and de gains on VALUES ACTUALLY $40 and $45 for Every piece real $1.00 gray, biues, also white weives S84 SHHA volor mestic productions, 50 quality—sold lots of serge suitings, some h o i to 54 inches wide, all them at that—some with black hairline ancy effects; goods best shades; most as- have new stripe de- America's best $1.25 that sold all season at tounding sacrifice ever $1.25 vard; comes in A Silk Petticoat Free @ iirmmrar s | | 355 ™| SR8 | W5 nlol | S| S ol again make this very liberal offer. Petticoats guaranteed best $5.00 values 0 AT Buy White Wash Silks Now | Monday Is Embroidery Day Probably at no time during the summer will you have a like Another shipment of new fresh 24-inch embroidery flouncings; 3 opportunity. Buy for dresses, waists and children’s wear very deep showy patterns on fine materials; also 35 pieces of 45- $2.00 White Waists $1.25 May Sale Undermuslins 30c waah ailks, et yard . @G | 89¢ wash Hike, 37 or Hlnat; | « fach Nlouncings, ectuat valtes T66; 95 ast Saturday was a day of tremendous selling| Entire Muslin Garment section a sea of eco- 50c wash silks, 27 or 36.inch vard .52¢ | matchless bargains at 3 il L C " 4 . nomies. Every garment sharply under-priced _yard 2 29¢ Also our fine stock of regular | Swiss, Cambric and Nainsook | Embroidery Match Sets, edges among these waists. Women pronounced them | ;0 "coar “new styles, worth to 45¢ for 256 69c wash silks, 27 or 36-inch $1.00 and $1.25 qualities broideries up to 16 inches 3 the greatest waist values they had ever seen— | oot (00l BU (00" worth to 30¢, for 35 vard . 43¢ at wide, also edges, insertions | 8nd insertions, values to and they are. We had thousands of them. Gowns, muslin, cambric and nainsook for 81,25 s bands ....9¢ | a vard, at, yard.......15¢ Plenty more tomorrow Gowns, cambric and nalnsook, $1.50 values 1 Popular Silk Pongees Anderéon's: Scotch GRBNEEETIDS Fine lingerie waists, pro- $ 1 25 Gowns, muslin, fine and values. ...59¢ Quite an extensive array, all the new shades are represented. | An offering record. Very fine sh soft silk voile, 43-inch, worth to ‘. /] nprecedented, evervbody knows these goods to be fusely trimmed with . Skirts, with 15 lace or embroidery flounces §1 The demand to day 18 very heavy. Nothing so dressy and dar- e ese g e lace and embroidery Drawers, 12 styles, values to 59 for 35¢ able for summer. We have genuine Rajahs, Satin Rajahs, Tussah | o5 2905 ) styles : fronts. Also Dutch neck |\Combinations, lace or embroidery trimmed Silks and Pongees— effects; 18 beautiful styles, $1.756 and $2 values A CLOSING OUT SALE URP NA STOCK |$1.30 %% ENAMEL TEA KETTLES, 69c ’ . i Jobbers SURPLUS CHINA STOCR | e % Bennett’'s Big Grocery sale brought out greatest crowds that ever attended a China sale in Omaha tles—Guaranteed perfect, regular price Oriental Rug Rt el e e e . R e v e i i BIPE | Smiits ieina ouft send.. 9. LowY etbe B e ¥ And Stamps. Flower and Vegetable Seeds .. 8%%0 stock rooms fill up the tables again for Monday. Lawn Hose—30 foot lengths, ft.10c, 12¢ and 13¢ | Bennett's Teas. assorted. Ib 4% | Rk L4678 thi H ciseesss 880 3 2. 0 I'50¢ / . : And 30 Stamps o ‘Stamp Thirty-one genuine Genza, Hamadan, | $5.00 s $3.00 $2.00 Jesr.0 ¢ > Elgin Sprinkler free with each length : And 10 Stamps. Beluchestan _and _other _Orlentai | China . 1| Shina 69c | &ina 90C | Enina 26¢ | . 10c 3 RS L R R by Baking Powder. .. e | Rub-No-dofe Soap ix for ... 35 Rugs, sizes 2x3 feet up to 4x6 feet— To add spice to the Monday sales we shall offer a large g Ta— Challenge.” 34.00 machine. Monday 8. Capitol . Extracts, bottle 180 N T regular prices $5.75 to $40. Our e Soreen Doors—All sizes, hinges free..$1.28, $1.50, $1.76 b4 . . Yot (4 Rub-No-More Wash Powder very fine 85teen DB p B £ . Amd 10 Stamps clearing prices. .. ... ....$3 to $20 new import shipment of very fi Screen Door Hinges 100—and 10 stamps | Schepp's Cocoanut, 1b P y i Carpet Tacks ....10e | Poul N ull rolls, sq 0 s . Pure Honey. pint jar We mention a few to illustrate Genuine Hand Painted French China | A 1 siaips T8 Smmal Joth st ey e coeRe. || BOPRILY, Plrbamhln Cubte s 2 . $06 And 20 Stainps $32.50 Genza Rug. 2-10x5 feet, $15.75 | m————————————————————— | L0 DGOT EOHNES. (0 €01 18¢ | And double ‘stamps RNE 16 Btame 10 cans 1. M. Pumpk v i ongi 99 for .. . . 5 These goods are of the most beautiful and agtistic designs, bought at a | p. o oo AW RAMIPS sc ana 90c | SPOTHEE Goods—Boys' Base Ball Suits | Capitol Corn. Country Gentleman Capitol Pure Maple & 1 & $1500 Hamadan Rug. 2-5x3-8 s’“ figure that makes most notable underprice sales. Poppy, goose black, straw- - And 20 at - | _tor ot a1 The s re 54 for 4 ... 60 for e TN QERR Y N g berry and rich gold decorations. Carpet Beaters. .. .10e, 150, 20c and 380 | BOYY and Girls' Rolier Skates Fo WP AR 10 Stasbe Quart ceee cii.. 380 $24.00 Genza Rum 3-2x4-§ s'z_“ Tscsfr;m Andp?u‘uflr Pllte; . $2.00 r.‘?c\hn‘u\» Dishes i ’ And 10 stamps., steel wheels 5 s Jell-O Ice Cream Powder. .. ... 10¢ Diamond m\-. u:ul Table Salt .... 10¢ AP P 0« = o 430 0 me 4590 i fancy Plates—i—wch . “ake Plates. open handie Flue Stops, each : inds. up from And § Stam nd 10 Stamps 40.00 Beluchestan Rug, 3x4, 2.50 Fancy Plates, heavy 7 emonade Jugs $1.68 Floor Brushes... A 4 stamps. Bennett's Capitol Sifted Earls Sterling Gloss Sta & 15 box.. 065 ’{m e sl"7s $3.00 Salad Bowls ..... hop Plates, extra large Two-hole Junior Gasoline Stoves. .$3.45 | Spalding's Tennis Goods of all kinds Peas, 13c cans And 30 Stampe. Wash Goods—Linens, Ginghams, Madras and Mercerized, in Yoi all colors, Monday 12%¢ LIRS Drokers: 2 o1 yebre, e 985308 wp $1.00 $1.25 $1.35 50 pleces plain and fancy Linen, 36-inch plain colors and checks and stripes, 50c goods . . 25¢ 1-Kiue,” In gray. That ‘llke produces hke' or the That the rule of an im ray | his class eight in 1906 Las r and the | shell in 19% and @ in the varsity four last t embassy which a4 Tu-K Itkeness of some progenitor, is one of the | parent being essential t e a gray | year before he stroked the varsity boats|yea is four wandered zigzag over the > the Moiperor of O % Famous 01d Color is Again Gradually | recognized axioms of breeding and atavism. | appiles 0 all sorts and Men Who Will Row in Five Varsity that finished second in a r and fouled Columbia. It was all due 2 or a relapse to the form, color and pecu- | horses and not merely t f Cornell Ha : Two Elghts, areless handling b e man ir riiest times the Turks we mote, is & fact known to the breeder of [ vertible proof. as there is not the <t the first varsity are Willlams, bow, | rudder pin ou at Wall 3 . every kind of stock | he caretully aceu Baokts 5. BenRas Sviba. & b Bailard, who stroked VARIOUS THEORIES ABOUT COLOR Teo Many Crosses. of the Stud book to support the view CREWS ARE NOW SELEOTED H frgpbed : sfroke. | three years ago and w ey Blood introduced into a pedigree can | investigations su. an be made all tel was boW ¢ freshman years ago. v ) e 8 et Thoroughbred Stalllon Gray Leg Do-| nover be entirely effaced, though the ef-|to the same direct Probably no one is Makeups for Regatta In Jane Indi- which finished last. He was four last vear. e S Making fects may of course be minimized by suc-|in & position to sreak more authoriatively cated by Present Boatings—Many 7 in as ar. Backus varzity eight s time o f M Herod Strain Popular and cessive crossings of other straine, and this | on such a subject Lord Middleton, for Bassaiatiine Avers s o was 2 > 1 n crew class of | Next alphabetfcally is Syracuse. Here will account for the Appearance now and | few indesd have such experience in Fedms s 191 varsity last season. |!¥ ® STeen bow four and a veteran stem | ., pe killed in battle was the then of animals bearing no resemblance | horse breeding or h voted more time 02 SNRERIMES. Banave. Boyos. and Holtster. alk they | Guartet. Armstrong. a valuable man who ¢ wi | to their more immediate parenis. In the |and care to the ma 0 less than six- - | bave et wasn't available last year, is bow of Among the followers of the turf and|same way good and bad qualities are|teen stallions of various breeds are kept| NEW YORK. May s—Alth the hunting field the gray horse ll!’l)nicqually transmitted, as well as form and | by his lordship at Rt.v:imn and in one sea- | era wassion ety be . oth » his. Stevens, although a s made his | €' A has been populr. and his practical dis- | color, and may likewise lie dormant for a | on they covered no less L1® marea. | s eyl [ itst appearance last sear as § in the var mam, & in lam yecs “nv. nian 3 Boicigr i : s vania, ¢ nbia and Cornell get a great | #ity. Clark made his class boat at 3 in| s . Fire wors whatever to do with what is termed ‘tele- | the horses required for the hunt are bred | geal of reshman cra 4 now guard ammed noble f warrior to d Breeders Study Theorle eternal reward g right along, have not At first they had no religion. 181 the been in first varsity com ons before rew Sulbord, 2, was in embraced § anism, an obscure for eight last year. He was a Chinese w mporting with their Siveiraiediiiom T’ restsniie-hes besn | S0 (0 GRDARE 1fter. Atsvim has:ngthing | A unique festure of this wind le. that egretted by all lovers of the thoroughbred. For generations the doings of the gallant gray have formed the leading theme in sporting song and story, and there are in- numerable Instances pf grays being the yrses of great sportsmen. Bxperience soon after boat racing in the se of their | 19% and last year was a varsity man, < = treauently | there MEIE ' Two seniors and two s make gony,” and though the two are frequenti ge days. In fact, all save Wisconsin's | ing seat 3. Horton, who stroked t confused the very existence of the latter Lord Middieton's Views men get plenty ompetitions outside va againet Pennsylvania last year, | > 'n t. Hemenway, 3 in 1908 € converts. 1 : man boat, was & in the varsities of 197 a phenomenon is not yet scienfifically recog-| On making inquirfes about grays Lord | the bIg regattas of the year. For instance, | was put in the varsity s at & when - = atral element nized and may have only the relation to| Middleton gave an information that he|the Columbla seniors row In the varsity | Coach ney had trouble with Bromies. | 4w ciema o ey Sumer, 6. WA | igions adopted by the former that astrology has to astron- | never knew the case of a gray produced boat, Cap Cerussi and Jordan have seen 1, Gavett and Weed i class FK'A in " and last yea gy it omy. It should be mentioned that in spite | unless either sire or dam were gra much service. In 196 they rowed not only e i pgty o was 2 in the varaity. Captain Fisher is shows, though. that as a general rule | o \o00y of gelentific corroboration many | that several gray stallions had been k against Yale freshmen, but aiso in the Har 5 I oM ised to T seat. He was 7 in the victorious rays are either very good or very bad breaders of experience are firmiy convinced | at Birdsall, Including an Arab. two gray - resatia l"';’ the race st Foughkeeps 5, Names, e g dlbg A o of the truth of telegony and the theory | Highland pony stallions and aiso some Mg 13 BRI ifhe. qewirs Barring Kelley and W thin fe L udeone . ¢ Ehampiia otroke } For fomentir rebel the inhabi- has many adherents, more eapecially in the | mares. The late lord also kept a gray “hich met Harvard and the Navy, be ear's freshman boat, as n the oo ¥ tants of the cit Hera 000 peopl e ill fated Holocauste, and perhaps he | . L s But in the case of gray |thoroughbred stallion, Bonnie Morn, by |4 taking part in contests on the Har % Poughi sl crew in Hf nd at § In las = g people, have been the winner's most dan; . Coantioless = lem. Jordan wasn't in the varsity eight ace a Khkeepsie fously enough, | boat. With voung Ten Bvek out | Were pu e sword within a week. For would have be: . - | horses we shall find on minute Investiga- | Chanticieer out of the famous old mare | S0- " OTCRY s rowing In exactly the same order as O 4 e the same offense at Bagdad an oo ous opponent. but for the fatal mishap. | \* 0 BT E 0T gt never reap- | Forget-Me-Not, the dam of many who made ig! pale I s amplin naturally becomes stroke B pr 98- a3 immanse At She esesnt Sims 18 1t matioed thet the | Last year they sat in the shells agains reshmen did last yea adley being | Wisconsin has some veterans. too. Stein- | PYramid ¢ eshly severed heads was v o A as well as in t and Wiechers The last named | berg. the bow car. was 4 in the freshman | ®rected s no God became Rebellion was freshman eight in 199 and o | brought two massacres e history It 14 a long time since a gary won the by, but in Flying Fox's year there was 4 : pears in subsequent offspring and is not | turf history. Bonnie Morn. however ‘", gray Is gradually making its appearance " s »f atevism. This fact | no \g in Yorkshire, as he was exported ¥l Ay e 2 : Seain on, the Brglish turf, and.on the [Turd’ye 10 the o Or EO O o] (3 the Cape of Good Hops when 8 years old FRAT s oul Ac Pimibetons. Do 700 be S TR o ity i el st rks descended on time the old color seems 10 be making |, . o tice be found if we Inquire into the | the stud book proves fairly conclusively | so that altogether thirteen races ‘ g . t ol b n neadway again. LeSancy, the sire of Holo- | = vl L " Lo T Ll horse we see, | that every gray must have had one parent | - y auste, has left bebind him in France a| o) i)er race horse. hunter, in the shafts | ©f that color it by no means follows that | association this year. This number of high-class daughters, some of | ..\ \po plow, has had one of its parents one desirous of breeding a Eray can | that a varsity oarsman gets a great deal them his own color, and for all wWe | o \v. particular color make & certainty of it by mating two #7ays | of work in the course of his training. By know there -may :be 8 son of his good The wonder, then, is not that now there | toether. We have aiready seen that the | the time he is enough to carry on the color in his own Kerr, 2 te s carried everything be ampion eight of thirteenth ceatury they was a substitute for the | Were masters of Asia Minor and were be. crew | for ell. Trane. 3. was in a| &inning to sea ished last. He was bow oar of | like seat in ear's varsity boat and 7| porus of Eu e four-oared crew which ran into the | his freshman eight in 197. Hare. 4,| In the early rteenth float while leading handily at Pough- | stroked last year's freshman boat Van | vasions of E across the Bos- rope begar rks con- keepsie last year. Weed stroked his fresh- | Loom. a sophomore, last year was Ineligible | quered during t Balkan man boat in 106 when Syracuse won from | for the boat. which he surely would have | peninsula, and the warlike temper of »ut of college he has done a are so few grays to race, hunt, to mount | UnioB of two firm old gray lines when | actual ra country any rate there was & worthy | .\ L. aigtinguished regiment, the Royal | United in the case of Strathconan and »nditions apply son of Le Sancy In Nabot. who proved | g.ois Greys, or convey the bridal party to | Perseverance instead of fixing seemed on | Columbia and Pennsylvania, be o : s g Pl his merit as a racehorse and that, 100 rch, but that there are so many, when | {i® Other hand to obliterate the color | Harlerm and A can Hen LML i - g dn W e of the | under adverse treatment in his youthfull o' o0 o pow easily the color is lost. | Nenceforth. As to further example to the | Harv races with two p men whom Courtney dismissed from | . ons Ny, Cornell and e t wing squad because some dissen- was 2in the varsity boat last vear Kraatz, much of Europe seat in last ve | o, man crew. Dinet. Iike Ceruss 1 oy bia. has been & stroke oar for thre Downpatrick, produced a chestnu r Ay He was in the freshman eight t . P o ? occupled a ik fays. So very few horses are destined 10 be uged | "AMe effect we find the gray mare Lady } " a Gray Leg Great Sire. at the stud and become fashionable sires | GT8ce. When mated with a gray horse e Nav e Crimson genera thers were atgd last year th rror of Christendom, the Turks took Constantinople. In England we have at last a high | ¢ connarison with mares that it would be ey r . ass sire in Grey Leg at the service of the | on the latter principally we must rely for | ®h® bred seven grays out of ten foals to [ r aga 8190 has nelocted 7 (our-00med | Lt ot ontn e 1907 and 1008 '_"” A solid foothold on Europe, which no public. and it is to be hoped that he | the perpeiuation of the color. horses of other colors. This is one of the |4 4 ' 3 D TI00hC . Inanon i g 2 will continue to court patronage by produ- Rasily O color problems that must be left to the yad steering which ake.—Pitisburg Press. erated. 2 vt g Wl | Cing more ot the class of Base Rock 800 L ua'see how readlly i o omierated, | STAS for elucdation. In other o : R Duen: tie-vor | WHO WA THE FIRST TURK? i o Gray Plume, both worthy scions of, the stances. particularly in the earlier days of reshman hree | ¥t & gray mare on being put to the mtud | .. '} orouenieed, the union of two gray by = e f ¢ E a was a varsity substitute A Dip Inte the Birth Statisties of Its a wonderful story,” says the pub- rage. He, moreover has. In the opinions of | goeq not produce & gray filly, or if her - W06 S . sher 1o the new author, whose mamy some breeders the extra recommendation | otk script has just been accepted, ‘b | gray fillles trom one cause or another are | .. o v o s class, and Lafferty, a substitute for of Light. ave falled in o cant ¢ direct male line through his stout descend- | fuuyily forever. Take the stud book for | many generations. . a nman boat, has seat 3 ant lon and thus forms a desirable out- | counle of years back and 1t y ogether the w i - d . dressed when the heroe first ¢ “The question of the regular tran | N 8 et g r. The sir is Crawford, who| Who was the first Turk? He calls him- |y e heroe first met he sular tranamission | - o Harvar . on Ma You'd belter write in & paragraph ahewi ross for mares already fult o completion | ynows about the descent of the coor im | of cotor v ere one. tho stitute for the el pe wo | self a grandso: Nosh I her clothes, b r ? I8 & very interesting hough a | o " legns Bt Patishksen t b ass eight © & r cloti but try avoid being con of the latter day all conguering and fash- | ooy horses. In the volume of 136 there satistactory explanation may not be forth- | ju+ “% ago. when he entered college and | Osmanil historians Dbelieve that more | Vent mal coming. Why, for instance, should the e ear's misguided fo than eight human beings were in the ark o apgenlous author knowing the same- mable Blacklock blood. It may be that|gre only twenty-eight gray brood mares| oS T O GRevaes. o vr‘““'e & eae of costum ku-u riptions in the e . p o st i . e of blood never produc ers and also knowing how to make an sray daughiters : ‘”‘ . ¥ ;4 horses will | ymong the 6000 recorded on its page: 2 Shastnut for TEnS SEOSrBiichs. Ao maat 8 g e earlier conditions made it aypear | Of Japhet, born daring the flood, and his | appeal 1o the feminine heart, wrote - again grace the cholcest studs of the land Iy about one mare in every 300 is of this | ter how stromgty Mmbred for mares mateg | 6N last vea o Ao ol red and blue i the tace. | name Wes Turk. they ssy. A rescendsn ‘Heloise floated toward him, garbed d recently we saw at Eaton & gray mare, | color. S T ) had a like seat in -the freshmen e ; - g i a._the 7ae g By ot & . a4 3500 dress, & $350 hat, with a $% 7 A ith them may be to that Impressive eolor? | which finished fourth at Poughkeeps be latest changes have pui Reeves at urk in the fo generation, one | tilla over a $37 lace coat ¥ hich more . . veh finished . Lady by name, which more than held It may here be observed St. Simon. for Instance, has never sired a He would have made the varsity shell [bow. He is a big w. who rowed in | Alindje-Khan, had two o her own in point of looks among the | strairs of blood produce horses 19%6. He would have mad y : picked matrons gathered there | coats are ticked over with white hairs, Why have the grays ceased 10 be com- | though in no case does the coloration hestnut. nor has his son 8¢ Serf, whereas | {n 197 and actually did row agal Har- | Penn's junior crew last year. Silles, who | Were named Tartar-Kba mon among our thoroughbreds? Is it 10 | amount to a real gray. Such markin ever been able to parents seemed to have the opposite effect, | POUShKeopsie division have the: o Wurst was 2 in the 198 fresh Noah's Ark Develops a Ray " | lections. The Ithacans are walting \ at y eroine was | The bow man in the Columbla best eight is Clapp. a substitute in Ivania has not the veteran collec- The additional person was the eldest son | other famous St. Simon horses yearly are | vard and the Na but parental objection | siroked the freshmen boat last year, is 2| Khan credited with a small portion of foals of | kept him out. He was at 2 in arsity | in the varsity. Bennett, 3, sat at 7 behing | TArAr was the father of : Your complexion as well that coloy eight whi ished second (o Byracuse ' Sijles last yea Hoagland in an alto-| Mogol was the father of the Mon be accounted for by the doctrine of the | for instance, are very characteristic of the | e A e 1 T R S| aether now mas Whe reeed Aesin Tao| Prshs and Menguls See this sl son. | 30 JOUT SlDNT I rendered survival of the fittest, Or can any more | descendants of Birdcatcher and Venison, | Safes: r Teeth, |in the freshmen boat last yesr this spring. Walton, who was 7 in the | Rected by birth, and the wars which . . ogent reason be given for their marked | both foaled in the same year, 155, 50 much | “Eat Lard food It vou wish o keap the | Lmey thive . Secnders, the 4 mar L e Coat (o g Y e ot hr e aaa . or! misasuble- R o d dicondasl deciine in numbers® Probably {rop the | so that the Birdcatcher “mark” has passed | teeth clean and preserve them.” 18 the | pig boat, was & in his freshmen boat tw ol gt b g ‘L reconciliations that speedily ensucd. had | I3 2 Ereat Influx of eastern sires in former | into & proverd. This pecularity is doubt- | advice of Dr. George Cunningham. who | rtre a0, when the crew was fourth. Last IR 2. | Seing-Aetied A A5 | BRSEIIRNR O et sas liver. By taking Chamber- days grays were very strongly represented | less a heritage from the original mare of | ias been conducting a crusade for the | sear he was 4 In the varsity shell. Rer e osbil b g .= ——— i Sar e ; L every tace mesting. to many of these | the line, 8o far s she is known 1o us. and | ireservation of the teath of Engltah chil- | Jiil "L has seat § in the varsity boat, | WP Showmaker, & ls the most veweran | Tue Turke wefs whe mo wenty r- | lain's Stomach and Liver imported Arab or Barb sires being this | is most commonly found In the descend- | 37¢n. The best of all bread. sald Dr. Cun- | o s in the 1910 (reshmen cight and egain el n Mo - gt tarens after as . | freehman boat at & in 196, being then in | other yielding to their arms. without the blets : ! ped o n 2 } S e e ot toe | ningham recently, was that provided in the | | Bl ! Table ou can imj olor; but each decade of the last century | ants of the “Sedbury Royal mare’ of th 5 in the varsity boat last 3 1 siann o690 35 the maclhs sall & i Lesmias menct L e 1o b prove | s. Mothers who had the interest for th found them fewer, and we think the reason | first volume of the stud book, she being o . Jack Ryan, who was a substitute for the | A ’ - 4 - o | ¢ - - J SRR T Seae MG IGAATARS , \r " lace |B® Was &t & That was the best varsity | usually left behind by wrangies amons| both. They cleanse and in- 1o be found in the physiological fact— | the tap root of Mr. Bruce Lowe's N 1 varsity boat two years ago, made & p boat Pennsylvania had since the days of | kinsmen. Not til the Christian era was y 8 -3 e - select & good crusty joaf ade from ry B or Which we can offer no explanation— | family. Thie mare was imporied into ENg- | seconds” flour, and not from the white | !45% ¥ear 88 6 and again holds that seal |y, Gardiners. It finished sevond. Shoe- | well advanced did the ethnolgical name | Vigorate the stomach and that apparently to produce a Eray and b haries wing to whet al oo milled. The crusts should be cut | PRIPS. Who paces the starboard side, Was | poyer was not in coilege in 1907, but last | of these children of Japhet appear in his one of K3 immeodiate parcnts must be a! great lengih of Ume individual peculiarities | . L0 ot mmn s the abiken s aots b e freshman boat iast yeafs P | yaar he came buck and had scat § in the | Wy, The Chinese caromicies, with caar. | iProve the digestion.