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‘Omaha, Nebraska H ” “But what was the use of that? ALL THE ITIES x NORTH NORTH-EAST 4x NORTH-WEST fvansvilebTeretaueRR Ot our wall paper patterns are of the Cleverest men in the profession Therefore our designs are charming We aim to suit the paper to the wall and its uses. If for a parlor you want a good background for pictures and complete the beauty of the room, Not paper that will spoil their ef- fect. Let us show you our patterns. fi P. Pserenies. GPa D1 PILL, OSA NSVILLE, IND VILLE. TEN, PICTURE FRAMES ILLINOIS CENTRAL RAILROAD MADE TO ORDER, ‘Time Table to effect Jaly 8, 1806, LOUISVILLE AND MEMPHIS DIVISION Nomtu BOUND— No %2 No 4 Leave. New Orleans 720 pm 900 am fbsce, Bten go? arm 3 88 bem (DBAs... 7 BO arm 8 60 pm Jeon Tonn.10 % am 1085 pm L. P,. BALTHASAR, NO. 423 - + BROADWAY, Catro, Ml... 1048 am No. 16 Fulton... 12% pm it Cl am fa . Paducah ..# 06 pm 1 16am 90am < is No % No. 24 == Paducab,.....215 pm 12am 74am 400 pm S= arrive = Princeton... 34pm tam ¢em 600 pm * Rvansville ...8 00 pm 660 am ai Hopkinsville 190 pm if i Benen ot ‘ ara lores Brauch @ 62 pm $01 am 1 OF pan Owensdoro..*10 00 pm *? 00 am 80> pia Louisville . .10.00 pm 7.40.am 8,00 pun Cinctooatt TWaem lidem Sours Hoom— wi mt Teave Cinetnnatt 30 ams6 pm Yoruies te ‘bamvs pm = 8 3am +6 am * 1100 aia 12 eam 44) P™ | are particularly careful in the laun #iSam 930 pm ering of colored goods, handling ston 20 pm 4 am#900345 pm) each in such a way that even dyes a which are not waranted fast will not peep... 210 pm 3.48 am 110085 pm fade. No 181 220 pm 2 46 am 40 Negligee shirts, starched and plain. shirt waists. ties, socks, etc., cleansed ironed and finished by the Star Steam Laundry in @ manner which cannot full to please, 3.50 pm 6 08 am 700 p 000 pen 60 pm STAR STEAM LAUNDRY, J. W. YOUNG & SON, #20 pm § 1 am Proprietors. Blow Orieacs 120 North 4th Bt, —_ Leece Block ef, Louls DIVISION, — we m4 Leave Paducah aititem, ¢itpm| HE REJECTED THE POEM. a Tp im, 1.18 am mi”, Be, | Story of an Editor and Hie Wife's sem, #51 pm Arrive Paducab 26pm, 70am New Gown. yt shone marked) tory oi oft S By This is the st ry of a news} Nos 208 abd 24 carry lrullman baffetsieeping | man, @ rej ree Feclibing chair cars between Ula | 5.)/ t aan sleepers | S0late Wi ofa euchre py she te oth- ing to wea: ‘the * wspap tho deak t man presides over n poems sub- lis wife is an, who dresses 1 rare goC d taste. rey, Ni. Louis, oF, J, BY Paduea’ RY Exposition ML Lc alied is shieed anoier She pope her dress to y one evening last week, and elivered at her hush to be paid for, as she expected to be absent from the city for the holidays. Dressmakers are prompt when they have a new customer to serve. his JUNE 1 TO NOVEMBER 1 1898—— Best reached from the south, east and west by the one was no exception to the rule. WISSOURL PACIFIC RAILWAY) 82:0 coo ewe In ole t equipment, consist- man’s office ing reclining chair cars “M A. B. (esate freo of extra charge), “Your wife instruc Pullman buffet sleeping 8 and comfortable bigh-back seat coaches. REDUCED RATES FROM ALL POINTS DOUBLE DAILY SERVICE it to you and to present y yon tH ool The box was placed on a ol the bill shoved under the editor He glanced at it car and was on the point of reachir is pock- etbook, when the dre nose. Bee agent for tickets, time tables and ued: “Mra, A. B. ©, will look 1 eee fairy vin this dress. It’s a perfect R.T. G. MATTHEWS, T. P. A. | poe LOUIVILLE, EX, “For heaven’s sake, take it aw Take it away! I'll not pay fora poem! Takeo it away, I say! Jimmie (to the office thet) show y downstairs SAINT LOUIS Vln pay foe & poem A The maker was dumfounded EUROPEAN PLAN | «,, spected the newspaper man of Rates 75c and $1 per Day ttrying to beat her out of her bi Restaurant, Popular Prices which was not modest, and finally concluded that he had euddenly be- SPBCIAL 26C DINNBR come insane. A few hours be SPECIAL BREAKFAST AND SUPPER re the beginning the absent wife was no dress, but To of the euchre party returned. There o chops, potatoes, No.1 Reeteteal teaser ven abd Pe »| plenty of lamentitions and tears. No.2 n, LO ex, POLLS, ca go to the party without a new dress rt nd coffee A No.3 ‘chops th poiaions aad was out of the question, and the lit No.4 frake trout, butter aati, oak opwat | tle woman staid at home. She has 0 Sanat net buviermilk® | since received her dress, and the No.8 Pein, butte or tea. a ae"| modiste now understands Mr. A. B me ee biter 16] Os sudden rage ars direct to hotel heapest an farivet meres Fry european. Pl only pay for what ye dest “ Arithmetic Defied Storm. MILLER President, —__—— ere were 14 of us even mi PENSIONS! |i" Sees WAR CLAIMS! JAMES A. WOODWARD and Notary ‘ se oie clay, es Clark. What could he do, please Mocrasien co. Ky le married one e won himself, and married the six ¢ men to the six other wom “Aren't man and wife slow you are!”"—Indianap nal Undertakers and embalmers, ByreTelepnone tone «180 S TAI J, W. Moore, jDeaALeER IN Staple and Fancy Groceries, Canned Gootsiof All Ki Free delivery to all parts of the city Cor, 7th eed Adama, ? Tlow s Jour Rarity. “Oh, rare being!” cried the prince, passionately The dams el in the fairy he faltered, sighed much de Oy or i in these days, very many fairy tales have no damsel in them at all; notably, the fairy tales men tell their wives.—Detroit Journal, Great Landowners. The 12 largest landowners, as re- gard arce, in England are the fotlow ing: Duke of Northumberland, duke of Devonshire, duke of Cleveland, Sir, W. W. Wynn, duke of Belford, earl of Carlisle, Duke of Rutland, earl of Lonsdale, Lord Leconficld bad (a of Early Farl Brownlow, and : Tage te Metropeie STATE HOTEL, _Jor something in the “Dp. As YEISER, Wholesale A WRITTEN AT RANDOM. A Sunday school teacher was re- cently instructing ber pupils in re- gard to the blessed Saviour's career on earth. ‘There were only the apostles and Christ himself at the Lord's supper,”’ she observed. ‘‘Now who can tell me how many apostles there were ?'" One little fellow held up his band, and when called upon, promptly re- plied, ‘Twelve.’ “That's right,” commended the teacher. “Now who can tell me what Christ was crucified for?” She expected someone to say, ‘To save inners “There was twelve apostles and the Saviour at the table wasn't quoth one of the other pu- ,who had hitberto been unnoticed, “and don’t that make thirteen? guess he was crucified ‘cause thir- teen’s an unlucky number. The young man was promptly corrected and now the teacher is giving her pupils instructions against supersti- tion. ee A young lady who bad receStl been reading a great deal about ay pendicitis concluded to look it ap in the dictionary and ascertain what it meant. She took down all the vol- umes of encyclopedias, reference books and finally resorted to the dic- tionary, after every thing else had failed. No such word was to be found, however, and finally in de- spair she interrupted her big brother, and asked him what ‘appendicitis’ meant. “Appendicitis #"” he echoed, look in the dictionary for it.’’ “I did, but couldn't find anything about it’? was the reply. ‘Well, you looked in the wrong place. Look in the appendix,’’ the erudite brother rejoined, as be could not keep from laughing at his own joke “why T'wo cows happened to pass a milk cart the other day. The muley cow glanced askant at the cart as she 1, and asked: “Cousin Becky y is the milkman like my dear lit- tle calfy at home ?"’ “Give it up,’’ replied the other bovine. ‘Why?’ “Both get their living by pulling my udder,”’ chuckled the other. “Pardon me,’ retorted the other, 1 beard « man say yesterday that the milkman got his living pulling people's legs. a a An inquisitive disposition on the part of a police officer is often a pretty good thing, butsome times it doesn’t do to be tc> energetic in the enforcement of one's duty. The other night a night officer gathered a large bundle of oderiferous garments out near the **Y,’’ which is a rendez- vous of tramps and thieves and every other class of moral degenerates. The officer, in the darkness, thought there was perhaps hidden treasurers clothes, or per- haps they were new ones, hastily abandoned in the precipitous flight of some thief, So he tenderly lugged them up to the city ball, and there deposited them until Marshal Collins came down the following morning and could examine them. When the latter did get a little inquisitive about the garments, be found them to be a repository for an assorted variety of vermin from various parts of the world, There was an immedi- ate panic, and in fifteen minutes every man who had been near the clothes-was scratching himself sus- piciously, although they all claimed it was only ‘their imagination.’’ It is to be hoped it was. ie 2 8 ‘There is no little glee over the fact that the effort to inveigle a circus into a skin-game,—if it was a money making scheme, proved a fiasco last Saturday night. For several years it has been a profitable form of di- version for some of the subordinate officials to wait until a circus has been here all day and given its per- formances, and then arrest the mana- gers at the last moment and require them to execute bond for violating the license law. A circus man can- not afford to remain and fight the case and the result is he is compelled to leave a hundred dollars or two for, the officials to gobble up when as & bond it is declared forfeited, The circus Saturday, however, was man- aged by smoother men than the min- ions of the law, and when they got the warrant, no one could be found upon whom to serve it, and now there few disappointed and sorrowful If the latter were as ener- about requiring circuses to get before they give their performance as they are to have them arrested for failing to do it, they would oftentimes earn more by it, and at the same time prevent the idea from becoming general among outsiders that Paducan is run by a crowd that is out to ‘do’ every! dy at every opportunity, +t Mayor Lang has a very fine bird dog, and last night at the council meeting he was surprised to hi sowething tumble down beside his ebair. He found when he looked down that it was his dog, which had gotten away from home, and traced him every step he had taken since he left home, It was the first time the dog bad been in that part of the city, ‘and it was very amusing when it first arrived, to see the animal smelling ound the ball everywhere the mayor bad been during the evening until it Goally traced him to his seat and flopped down perfectly tented. nt. There seems to be a great deal of difficulty in getting homes for the people who are expected as delegates next month to the M. K. conference |which meets here. ‘Two young lady bear went on both sides of two of the principal streets a few days ago to procure homes, and not a sin- gle one could they obtain on either street. It was not only discourag- ing to them, but 15 @ sad reflection on the honpitality of the city. COCHRAN & OWEN Sell the best $2 winter shoe in the city for ladies or gents. Call and Jet ow them to you. 331 Broadway~ 50c may save your life—Plantation Chill Cure has saved thousands. NOURISHING PART OF MEAT. A Discussion as to the Nutriment io Beef Tea. It has been popularly supposed that beef tea or beef juice contained the real nutriment of the meat used in its preparation. But now the Dietetic and Hygienic Gazette is authority for the statement that the on portion of meat is the Hence beef tea, though: has no food value. “The only pore tion of the flesh of an animal that is ed of real nutritive value is part which has been alive and active before death. These living not soluble; if they nal that fell into water p of sugar. 1 amount of ution 1m Cir} ion in the body. After death, small amount of s e food ma- is rapidly converted into ex- nd asthe skin, reir action rapidly ty, 4 mulating, structures are nutritive material ir sol terial crementitious matte kidneys and 5 sonous su e within or cell ] lungs ceas stances h 8 appears that beef tea, as physician recently re- sa veritable solution of sons, The only p which has any rown n of t aking oular away in tt beef tea as a concentrated sh ment h ywever, become 80 ly rooted that s me t will be to rid the w but is im required | informatic I the 1b ninated; there t many lives are annually sacrificed by fi in the superior value of meat juices.” Creat is seienc But how much greater our faith if a so-called dis covery was not eo often negatived by a later discovery that controverted th first! A COLLECTION OF MEDALS. An Interesting Exhibit in Library of It was fort Hundred th at the he Five c medals were first v were cast in silver, which n 1 has been employed for the medals of al) the succeeding assem) sometimes round, at o times hexagonal ¢ have bee oblong ntag pearing the effigy of the sovereign or a republican emblem. In this collection of medals at the cham ber are also the medals struck in memory of the Peace of Amiens, that oronation of Charles X., the nck on the asion of t ne cha ambers tc > Paris fi es and of the centennial of of the modification of na! laws, and of the republic constit tions of the presidents ofdhe republic M. Grevy, M. Carnot, M. Casimir Verier, and M. Felix Faure. The off cial tumes of the represen of the people since 1789 will exhibited in the library of t he Palais Paris ( Bourbon.— ‘Twins Weigh 24 Ounces, , of No, 78 $ the prow Mrs, Charles Ormsh Oakley avenue, Chicag mother of twin babies that are such mites of humanity that together they might easily be concealed within the narrow confines of aquart cup, “The dear little thiwgs,” exclaimed Mrs Ormsby, “they are so small that I lay them across a hot-water bag to keey them warm. One isa boy and weighs 11 ounce the other is a 13-ounce girl. We will have them christened Josie and Josephine as soon as I can get out.”-N. Y. World. A Gigantic Fountain, Picard has decided upon a new fea ture of the Paris exposition of 1900, which is to consist of a gigantic foun. tain utilizing the hydraulic force ot 12,000-horse power Tequired for the machinery of the exhibition. The fountain is to be 34 meters high, and its volume of water over 1,200 liters a Tt will be illuminated by in every imaginable seco} electric lights color. Fanny, Isn't It? By some strange irony of fate aman never has greater confidence in huis own intellect than when hehaslearned to distrust the intelligence of his fel- /FAT WOMAN'S PREDICAMENT. | Squeezed Into a Trolley Car Seat But Couldn't Squeeze Out. During ten minutes of church time there was more of a crowd of chureh- goers outside the First Presbyterian church than inside. The center of interest was a trolley car which stopped in front of the church while the conductor and motorman tried to get a passenger out of an unpleasant predicament. ‘The passenger was @ woman of more weight, breadth and thickness than any person in this town. Where she came from nobody knows, but she came near staying here permanently. She had boarded the car at the northern end of the line, and she sidled carefully between an upright support and the arm of a seat and dropped back with a sigh of relief. “Let me off at the First Presby- terian church,” she directed the con- ductor. “Yes’m,” said that official, hoping that his car was built for heavy ton- nage. When the church was reached the conductor rang the bell and called out: “Here’s your place, ma’am. Step tight out.” “Don’t you hurry me, young man,” said the passenger. “I’m coming a6 quick as I can.” Unfortunately, she backed dut of the seat instead of going sidewise, and contrived to wedge herse be- tween the upright and the seat arm, where she struggled violently for sev- eral seconds, becoming more firmly fixed at every effort “Conductor,” she cried, “why don’t p me out? 8 conductor. “What—how—where’ll I take hold, ma’am?” “Take hold! Gracioussakes! Don’ stand there likeaninny! Pull tome way,” me out Very gingerly the conductor seized her by ack skirt and pulled. Cr-rt-r-ack! The fabric gave we the conductor turned pink and white. “Now you've done it. ‘Torn my best dress. You'll have to pay for T'll sue the company. Don't hand on me. I'll get out mysel Again she strove and struggl til her face became purple and d ful to eee. “You'll have ar the conductor wa doit. Wait till Ica “It would serve you r apoplexy, ma’am,” ned her. “Den’t the motorman.” ght if I should die righ car,” said the passenger, angrils What right have you got to have your spaces so narrow?” ma’am, you ace we ain’t all our passengers ain’t er—we mostly carry élen- derer people than you. “Am I going to stick here to be i sulted about my size?” cried t pes senger. “C down the post and let me out at onc By this time the motorman had come in and the crowd which had been diverted from the church entrance gave advice freely et a crowt rand pry oc 9 easier to F e up- right over.” “If we could get a rope around her she could be pulled out.” “Take off that coat, ma’am, and you can get out.” To all of these suggestions the vic- tim replied with disdainful sniffs An elderly and eolemn-looking man approached and after carefully look- ing over the situation said: fy advice to you, madam, is to seat e a deep bweath, and when the breath is expelled you will easily re lease yourself. ; ou’re an old fool,” said the vic tim, concisely. The elderly man departed looking solemner than before. “As if I could take a long breath without bursting!” said the y ger. Then, in frenzied tc mand to be released. pieces. ) “Take her to the ba ested the motorman. r out there.” “Don’t you dare more demand to be put off here Sut I’m losing time on my sche ma’am,” said the conductor don’t care, Put me off at onc ill not be dragged beyond this Iw apc Drawing a deep breath of deter mination, the conductor seized her dress in beth hands. There was a struggle pantin then as the cork emerges from the stra » groans a chamy ts of bottle neck so emerged the passenger from her predicament, sending the conductor flying off the rear of the car, while the crowd fi t its Sun day decorum and cheere an climbed off the ear and took inver tory—a dress torn in three places, a bonnet knocked out of bruised person and Ja make ‘em pay for as she hobbled away Then the crowd went ureh Y. Sun. English Taught in Japan. English to be 1 Japan. That Altered the Case. A young lady enters Notre Dame when a service is being held. She kneels on a prie-dieu, and when the verger passes the bag uts in one fraye. Verger demands two francs. “Why two frances?” “Thisservice is for the churching of women.” “But I’m not married.” “Whew!!! Vive francs, then.— Town Topics. the Desert. she | In the African oas low beings—Town Topics. ¥ uy. old. shel om of Tugurt about 600 artesian wells have been COLORED DEPARTMENT. Elders W. 8. Baker and Howard went hunting yesterday, Elder J. W. Hawkins is conduct- ing a series of meetings down at Me- tropolis, Ill,, tor Elder Robinson, of the Baptist cburch. Mr. Grand Reeves got his band badly bruised last week while at work, The Cumberland Presbyterian cburch, corner Ninth and Burnett streets, is preparing for a big Japa- nese supper on the 7th of November, This will be a unique and interesting entertainment and will no doubt be very largely attended. A gold filled or solid silver hunting case watch is to be given away atthe time. Mrs. Lalu G. Benton, Prof. T. D. Hibbs and Mr. C. W. Merriweather are on the program. The watch is on exhi- bition at Nagel’s on Broadway. An amusing story is told on a well known barber in the city. The in- teresting experience which came near beirg a tragedy occurred one night las week. The barber usually eleeps in the rear of bis shop. He was startled one night by a terrible rap- ping on the front door. It wasabout 2 o'clock in the morning: He asked what wes wanted and the answer was that they wanted to speak to him He slips to the dor and unlocks it as easily as he could, thea tips back, gets two pisiols in his hands. gets be- hind the last barber chair and yells “come in!’’ And to his astonish- ment, in stepped two men, evidently from the country, who said they wanted a shave. ‘They had tarried at tha cup t-o long and in their noc- turnal rounds had mistaked the bar- ber shop for some other kind of a shop more likely to he open at that hour of the night. When they were informed that they could not geta shave, which in fact they did not want, they quietly retreated to other localities perhaps more congenial to their condition, Whew! but that barber was scared. He is a member of a church, aad the thought of hav- ing to kill someone, coupled with the imaginable result following such a deed, was horrying in the extreme, and stirred his mind and heart to such a tension that his hair hasn't fellen yet. Editors Johnson, of the Christian Recorder, and Asbury, of the Odd Fellows’ Journal, of Philadelphia, have been appointed by the mayor of the City of Brotherly Love members of the press committee of the peace jubilee to be held in that city soon. Many have wondered why some of our boys who joined the 10th U.S cavalry have not come home on & furlough. One reason is that it is too expensive. ‘I'he government must bear the traveling expenses both ways of each member of the regular army when going home on a fur- lough, besides furnishing each with money to pay board while on the road, This is not the case with the volunteer army, and of course, when volunteers come home, jt is not at the expense of the government. Mr. Arch Hendon, of Campbell street, is on the sick list with an at- tack of typhoid malaria, Mrs. Laney Doty is on the sick list, Wanted—Colored cook, male -pre- fered. Apply at the Rivers infirmary, Sixth and Broadway. Don’t you kaow ? lantatic on Chill Cure 1s gt ed to cure you? “Unele vl Duly says he has vines that | grown two crops of pumpkine t!'s \ear, and that some of the first | € s large as the or- dinary wash tub. “Unele’? Duly lives at 1005 North Seventh street. Are you aware that when @ person doesn’t want to pay for a paper, he always tramp up an objection cast satisfies his own con- or his lack of one? If per ws to please @ certain class of rar k\ critics, that would be suffl- cient 1 ason for quitting the business, for what would please them would disgust the general public, ean which at science ae “Don’t ron, Mai you can whip the recsking!* rit that inspired k Estill to make that now famou vark at the base of Little Mou ‘sin, this state, found on in the charge of ted States cavalry on another ex} the Tenth L the} house at El Caney, State £0.) >, City of Toledo, } ,, Y numty FRANK HENEY makes oath that be is c J. CHE use of BAL PRANK J. CHENRY. refore ime asncl subscribed tn my vet day, Cararth Cure t pa in # direct!y on the b ood and faces of the system. Send for mn free, J CLEN BY & CO., Toledo, O. sol’ by D Hall's Fs » the best. Druggists will say they sell more Plantation Chill Cure than others, others, ABSOLUTELY HANDI ED IN BOTTLES for I. € the peasor AN “LA CREOLE" HAIR RESTORER A Perfect Hair Dressing and Re: If your Merchant doesn’t hand! get one bottle CHARGES PREPAID to a! VAN VLEFT- MANSFIELD DRUG CO, Sole Proprietors, torer. part U. 8. or MEMPHIS, 3, GILBERT this city iy KEO BY send $1.00 to us and get six bottles, Canada. TENN. , Local Agent. | OBERTS BEER Is rapidly becoming the favorite with the people of It leads ala PURE PADUCAH ROTTL! NG C0. F, J. Bergdoll, Propiieicr Telephone 101, Seda Pop, Seltz-1 W = son streets 11 p.m Everything New New Building, New Fixtures and an Entirely NEW STOCK GROCERIES OUR MEAT MARKET Is stocked with all kinds of fresu and salt meats ly to all parts of the city, P.F. LALLY Tenth and Trimble. Call and see our Goods del Teley vered pro mpt- new st one No. 118. Jas, A, Rupy, Pres. Rudy, J. R. Smith E. Farley, RI Paxton, Cast CITIZENS’ SAVINGS BANK RATED 226 BROADWAY CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $120,000 OIRECTORS Geo, O. Hart . M. Fisher, F. Kamle R. Rudy, W.F.P se’t Cash Wall lace, INTEREST PAID ON TIME DEPOSITS. OPEN SATURD AY EVENINGS ESTABLISHED: Miss Mary BR. E. Greif & Go GENERAL LN AGENTS. Telephone 174. URANC 1 I dl PADUCAH, KY SCIENTIFIC AND FIRST-CLASS BLACKSMITHING «1 REPAIRING be HORSESHOEING All work guaranteed. T. Ve Green EREE Tas MISSES BELL, 73 Fi ‘h Avenue, {Court Street 1 ONE TRIAL BOTTLE | 43 This Offer Almost | how age Belief An External Tonic A ‘Ski t. 2d and 3d. pplied to the in. Beautifies it as by Maris. THE DISCOVERY nc AGE A Woman was the thoy a Cor. 4th and Bros Invegtor, not produce e New York ity. away Eat Half as Much, Do you rend advertiseme think that you some of them? you w 1 much, Y of eating v reach will f Anew man Vn think g is very hard, but it is no! L ho has ld nk t it ex- rt a hor Il I tor —A Une Way of Doing It. Ify u mar It costs toruna Have You a... clean, ¢ Water Filter? If not, dont’t fail to see F.G. HARLAN, JR, AQUAPURA The easiest filter o | and se 122 Broacway n earth to e prices, Telephone 113 FOR A JOKE, OR FOR NECESSITY Batoon of Aluminium, tried a benzine motor, W in Berlin. It rose toaheight of a thousand feet, but could not work nat the wind, and soon ¢ own with a crash, It was 13 meters high by 45 meters long, weighed 75 hun- dredweight, and is said to have cost 200,000 marks, while the experiments preliminary to its construction cost 8,000,000 mark: 50c, may save your life. Planta- jhill Cure’has saved thousands- al, of er dog intluded making an credit for g Atchison G Suggestive Uncertainty, Frivolity last night. She-—Are they good? Ue—Oh, but they’re awfully elever. v the Dasher sisters at the 1 don’t know about that, ck-Me "~ | which theregis general interest is the subject | people who do not need them. all are interested. of “glasses. A subject in There are few May run great risk in not having them, wi other parties charge you §3. sight. do for your eyes. for, fit your eyes and give you better iF $1.00 for same quality » Us. You are pleased with what we I charge you $1.00 tacles to